Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 6, Number 213, 6 September 1881 — Page 2

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TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 6. 1 881. TO ADTEHTHERH. f tit, FsUlstalam. Weakly fta mm Oum at aaf ataar pn aak ta WafH Caaaf r Sutich were held throughout this and other States to-day, at which special prayers wen offered for the recovery of the President. Latkb reports throw doabt upon the general massacre of General Oarr's command at Fort Apache, Arizona. It is now thought only one officer and ten or twelve men were killed. A Lohdoji dispatch says Mr. Jefferson Daris reached Liverpool on Sunday. He is not in good health, and is not by any means the hero in the eyes of the British public that he was some years ago. Tn country will be glad to know that the President is safely oat of the White House at Washington, and is now amid the healthful sea breezes at Long Branch. The removal is described in our dispatches of to-day. Loho B&AJtCH will now become the centre of attraction, though too late in the season to allow visitors in great nam tiers. But if the President is benefitted by the change as all hope he may be, it will not matter if the hotels axe not. A oommuhicatioh in to-day's Palladi um on better railroad facilities for this city ought to be carefully considered by our citizens. It states tome facts of im portance and urges a course necessary to maintain the present and add to the fu ture prosperity of Richmond. Give the communication a careful reading. Tn President's great anxiety to leave the White House, makes the removal absolutely necessary, even if attended with considerable risk. It would perhaps be a greater risk to compel him to remain. All day yesterday he talked about getting away, and was restless and anxious bout it. Under such circumstances, the doctors could do no better than to have him taken to the sea-side, where he so much wishes to be. All preparations were completed last evening to remove the President this morning to Long Branch. A car has been arranged for the purpose, and a special says, on the way from Washington to Baltimore, Superintendent G. G. Wilkins, of the Baltimore and Potomac rotd will have charge of the train. From Baltimore to Phil adelphia he will be assisted by General Agent William Crawford, of the Pennsylvania, Wilmington and Baltimore division. From Philadelphia, Superintendent James McCrea, of - the New York division of the Pennsylvania road, will run the train to the end of the journey, and the road will be kept clear for its movement. The distance Is as follows: To Baltimore, 43 miles; to Philadelphia, 99; to Monmouth Junction; 42; to Kloeroo, 04; total 838 miles. If iuo Maui wb run u bvci nc ua uihtcu miles an hour the journey would require something like fifteen hours. But rail way men aay it will run more smoothly at the rate of forty miles an hour, and ' that the latter speed will perhaps be better, thus making the time of transit last about six hours. Our dispatches to-day state that the Journey was made this morning successfully, the President being apparently none the worse of the re moval. Tn Common Council last evening had the water works question again under consideration, and Mayor Bennett made a long speech, advocating the erec tion of works by the city, and not to permit it to be done by a private com pany. The Mayor is undoubtedly cor rect in this postion. The works should, if built at all, be owned and controlled by the city. Statistics gathered from all the cities of thla country where water works are in use show that the cost of the water supply to the people is less than half as much in cities owning and managing such works as in those cities where the water is supplied by private companies. There ought to be no two opinions upon this point. If we have water works, the city should own and control them. - The Council fixed the 3d day of October for an election by the voters of the city to decide whether or not to have water works. This action is premature, we think; it will require a vote before a great many of our citizens are ready to give it, and thus endanger the success of the movement to secure a water supply. Our people axe cautious, and it is right they should be; the ex penditure of a quarter of a million dollars should be carefully con sidered before being ordered. The value to be received should be well de fined and determined before hand. .VamM Vw waiWl until tVi Nnunlt. ing engineer about to be engaged could have visited the city and made his report When the plan to be adopted is thus agreed upon, and the people know just what is proposed to ba done, then they can vote intelligently ape the subject, otherwise they can not. We know that Council propose to do all this

between this time and the election ordered, but the time is very short for such

purpose and it is entirely possible they msy fail to accomplish it. The city Engineer presents four different sources of water supply, and an estimate of the cost of each. All the&s should be considered, the advantages of each fully inquired into, before anv decision is made. All this takes time, and more time, we think, than the Council have allowed before the election. We repeat what we said the other day, don't harry the matter, go slow, giTe plenty of time to inquire into everything, that all dif ferences may as far as possible be re moved and the people united upon some good plan, and then all turn in and vote for water works. To DAT all through this State of Indiana, and in many other of the States, those people who believe that the hand of a divine Providence guides and di rects the destinies of men, have been gathered in prayer to Almighty God that the President of the Republic may recover from his long and grievous illness. Indeed, ever since the crime of Guiteau was published throughout the land, and the life of the President known to be in danger, all Americans who believe in prayer Protestants, Catholics and Jews have been praying earnestly that that danger may be averted. No man has ever been so prayed for before in the history of this country. And have these prayers been a useless waste of timet From the disciples of Ingersoll the prompt answer comes, "They are folly and superstition. From "the advanced scientific" a denial of their usefulness or availability except as they may "relieve the emotions of ignorant people.' But is this all! Even if the atheists are right in denying God and the agnostics wise in ignoring him, is there no good in all this praying? The President we know is neither an atheist nor an agnostic, he may be ignorant and superstitious but he believes both in God and prayer. Through the long weeks of his feebleness and pain he has known that millions of his coun trymen and countrywomen have been praying for him. This has been to him a constant support, it has given him hope and heart to battle bravely for life, and has done more to prolong his life than man's skill oould do without such faith and hope. In this much at least prayer has done good and is doing good. It may all seem foolishness to Ingersoll or Huxley or Darwin or Spencer, but there are millions of plain people who still stick to the old fashioned notions, and who will continue to cheer and strengthen the President in his desperate conflict, and who believe there is a Supreme Ruler who is a very present help in all trouble. Tn publishers of Rev. Dr. Robinson's Spiritual Songs for the Sunday-school" have just issued a little book containing only the hymns of that work, and sell ing for one-half the money. It will be a most desirable supplement to the large book, greatly increasing its usefulness, and placing it within the reach of the largest mission schools. The new edition is prettily bound in flexible red cloth. and costs but twenty cents. The com plete tune edition, bound in stiff boards, covered with red cloth, with red edges, costs forty cents to schools in quantities. It is said that the sales of the latter work have mounted up into the scores of thousands since its issue, a year ago. PERSONAL AND GENERAL. Bishop and Mrs. Simpson are to be the guests of Mr. William M' Arthur, Lord Mayor of London, during the sessions of the Ecumenical Conference. Princess Dolgorouki, the widow of the late Czar, has been visiting the Aus trian Emperor and Empress at Schonbrunn. She is now at Carlsbad. Sam Cox is on his way to the Holy Land. His perfect knowledge of the Bible enables him to travel through it without guides or guide-books. Mustapha Bey, the ruler of Tunis, spent in his stay in Paris the trifle of $140,000. He carried home two hun dred gold watches a ad ten thousand pocket-knives. The present Princess of Egypt, the Khedive's only wife, is a cultivated and liberal-minded woman. She received a European education, and her children are brought up by English governesses and in English ways. A German farmer named Meining, living eighteen miles from Detroit, Mich., while fighting fire in one of his fields, Wednesday, was overcome by the heat, suffocated, fell in the path of the ad vancing flames, and was burned to death. He was an old man and leaves a family, Dagmar of Russia has been showing in unusual interest in the military maneuvers this year. She has often been seen at Krasnoe Seloe lately, walk ing in and out between the guns with her two young sons, watching the effect of each shot, and congratulating the successful marksman. At Birmingham, Alabama, Saturday, three thousand persons gathered to wit ness a fight between two bull dogs and a wild cat. The fight was a most desper ate and savage one, lasting twenty min utes, and resulted in a decided victory for the cat, it having completely blinded both dogs. Queen Margaret of Italy looks worn and older than she is, but she is always handsome. Since the Neapolitan attempt upon her life the poor lady has been so nervous that even in the mountains.

where she is now staying, a dozen special attendants surround her carriage, and

drive away the pople whi approach ber. In Maine no medical student can be graduated unless he has bad regular prac tice in a dissecting room, and no bodies can be lawfully dissected except those of criminals which have been executed; and capital punishment has been abolished. That is almost worse than having laws on the statute book and violating them; for here, if the law is carried out it must be violated. By the census figures it appears that State indebtedness has increased very little in the last fifteen years. But in the Bame period municipal and county in debtedness has increased over a $ 1,000,000,000, or nearly 60 per cent, of thd national debt. For the next ten years there is a crying need for economy in this particular, in order that our cities and coun ties in their prosperity may grow up to the burdens that are laid upon them. m m m STATE SEWS. James Hodge, a pioneer merchant of Muncie, died at San Diego, CaL, on Friday, aged 80 years. The blanks for returns as to acreage of crops and occupations of women were sent out on Saturday afternoon to all the Townships in the btate. Articles of association of the Madison Building and Loan association, capital f500,000, were fi.ed yesterday with the Secretary of State. Asbury University will realize between $20,000 and $25,000 from the Meharry estate. It got about $15,000 during his lifetime. Burglars entered the office of the New Albany woolen mill ware room Friday night by a rear Window, secured the keys of the safe, which was opened and robbed of $125 cash. A man by the name of Wm. Scutter, living two miles below Florence, during a fit of temporary insanity, walked into the river and was drowned, at 5 o'clock Saturday morning. The General Christian Missionary Convention, the Foreign Christian Missionary Society, and the Christian Women's Board of Missions will meet in Indianapolis, beginning Octolier 18. James El wood, of Peru, and Robert Jordan, of Putnam county, both under nineteen years of age, and undergoing sentences of two years for minor offenses, were pardoned by Governor Porter, Monday. Friday afternoon Pleasant Elliott, a young man of seventeen, while bathing in the river at Williamsport, with a younger brother, was seized with cranps and was drowned before help could reach him. The friends of Governor Porter in New Albany have secured his consent to deliver in that city, on Wednesday night, his address on "Indiana and Her Dawn," the proceeds to be applied to the building of a public hospital in New Albany. Fifth-eight counties have now been supplied with the laws, and twenty-six counties have returned receipts. Clark, Blackford, Howard, Delaware, Laporte and Starke counties were supplied yester day. W. J. Scheider, a freight brakeman on the L & St. L., was killed at Sanborn Monday, while coupling cars. He stepped into a cattle-guard, and before he could extricate himself was run over. His remains were taken to Union City, where his parents reside. On Friday night, between 11 and 12 o'clock, Dick Burrell of Browns town, without any apparent provocation, cut the throat of Lynch Alves, son of William Alves of Washington county, with a knife, inflicting a gash some three inches long, and just missed cutting into the windpipe and jugular vein. A warrant is in the hands of the officers for Burrell's arrest, charging him with assault with intent to commit murder. Burrell was tried in Jackson Circuit Court a few years ago on the charge of murdering Town Marshal Havercott, but was cleared by having as good legal talent as the State afforded. What Arthur Would Do. New York Special. In view of the still critical condition of the President, the following will be of interest as presaging the course of General Arthur should circumstances seat him in the Presidential chair: About a week ago when General Garfield's death was hourly expected General Arthur sent for an ex-editor and politician of this State, long since retired from active service, but whose name is as familiar as a household word in political circles for half a century. With this gentleman, who has long been his political mentor, he counseled as to his proper course should he be called to Washington by the death of the President. After due deliberation he determined, should the members of the Cabinet tender their resignations, to return them with the request that they retain their portfolios. It was thought that all of the present Cabinet, with possibly the exception of Secretary Blaine, would be willing to do this. In the event cf his determining to request that his resignation be accepted. General Arthur was to oiler the Secretaryship of 8tate to Mr. Free ling h uy sen, of New Jersey. It was thought that this action on the part of General Arthur would bring to his support the Conservatives and the great mass of trie Republican party, as well as the business men of all parties, who it is known are extremely adverse to any political changes or quarrels that tend to unsettle mercantile matters, though it would cause him to be denounced by many of his warmest supporters, some of whom have urged him to go to Washington and declare that, as President Garfield is clearly unable to perform the duties, the constitutional inability exists, and the office is his by right. General Arthur turned a deaf ear to this advice, and will wait the logic of events. Bad far New Orteavaa. Major BenyaunLof New Orleans, while at the mouth of Red river the other day, mad observations which satisfied him that the Mississippi is cutting for itself a channel to the gulf through the Atchaf alaya river, which will in the - near fu ture become its outlet and leave New Orleans on a shallow stream.

Tte Ptnt4est'i Jourur) . Chicago Intrr Thntsn The country is about to hnik on a eectacle never before presented to the American eople. Rail a ay trains drj ed in black have passed from the East to the West carrying the remains of loved and honored men, but we have never looked upon a car bearing the shattered body of the chief magistrate, still instinct with life,away from Wtshingtoouin a desperate search for renewed vitality. The physicians of the President have concluded that, dangerous as may be his removal, it is the only hope and that the desperate chance must be taken. To-dav

or to-morrow,should his symptoms be no more discouraging, the attempt will be made and the malarial atmosphere of Washington exchanged for the invigorating air of Long Branch. We believe there is a general feeling of gratification at the resolution of physicians. The attempt may be attended with danger, but the risk will not be regarded as half so great as that of remaining, when the President himself is discontented, and where there is reason to believe the air is a direct prevention of his recupera tion. Heroic remedies are, nine times out of ten, the successful ones, and it will be the general feeling that this is the course to pursue in the President's case. Then, with the facilities afforded, it hardly seems possible that the shock of the proposed journey will be such as to invite serious consequences. Every precaution againbt undue noise, against the unnecessary jar of the train, and against the or dinary fatigue of such a journey are provided for. The President has lain in the White House, flat upon his back, for eight weeks. Almost any change must be welcome. The very movement which the physicians fear may be beneficial. In case ol the slightest symptoms of fatigue, the car can be placed upon a side track, and the patient be allowed to rest as quietly as in his own room. Every attention will be given and every facility afforded to make the journey safe and easy, and, looking at the matter from an unprofes sional standpoint,the movement seems to be expedient as well as wise. There need be no fear of interruption or annoyance from -he crowds gathering on the line of travel. Once let it be known that the President's life depends upon the maintenance of quiet, and the people, though they may reverently gather to see the train pass, will stand mute at the spectacle, aud scrupulously refrain from disturbing the sufferer, even by murmurs of sympathy. The physi cians need not le afraid to trust them in this; there will be no annoyance from such a quarter. Ilowgate'v llrazeu Career in Wanhtnglon Chicago Tribune. Captain Howgate is a fugitive officer, late in the employment of the United States in the Signal Service Department. He has left the service and the country at one and the same time, in company with a woman not his wife, and has abandoned his wife and family, leaving them in utter destitution. He has stolen from the United States Treasury $500,000, and left his bondsmen $40,000 short. It now appears as a wonderful thing, of course, that he could have stolen so much money without being detected. The authorities stand with eyes aghast, as if it were something marvelous that a man who was his own disburser and auditor could have taken so much money without exposure, though the most ordinary and dunderhcaded thief in the world, who had no checks upon him, could have accomplished the same feat just as easily and skillfully as Captain Howgate. So the furtive Captain took half a million dollars, and might have taken more had he been so disposed or had there been any more to take. Having taken the money, he proceeded to dispose of it by setting up an elegant establishment for a mistress in Washington, where he spent his time, to the neglect of his wife and children, who were left to shift for themselves as they best could. He made no concealment of his shame, nor did the mistress upon whom he was lavishing the stolen money, nor did he think it unmanly nor she unwomanly to taunt the wife and insult her by denying all her claims upon her husband and his support. At last, after a long and brilliant career in money - spending, after outshining any of the Washington Mulberry Hawkes. after flinging money about in the most reckless manner, it occurred possibly to some sage person to suspect, since the Signal Service Department was not a mint, that something was wrong. Then the au thoritiea began to unwind red tape, but before the tape was unwound, behold, the bird had flown and the mistress had flown with him, and all his property that he could convert into cash had flown also and his b iudsm :n were left to whistle for their security. He leaves behind him a wife and children in utter destitution, who will be the objects of sympathy, except in the fact that in the loss of Captain Howgate they have lost a depraved and worthless scoundrel, who had dishonored the service, dishonored himself and even sought to dishonor them. Hcrlcwiac I nion Soldiers. Madison Star. To pension able-bodied prisoners and add $10,000,000 or more to the yearly outlay on pension account is enough to make any honest, Eelf-helping man, soldier or civilian, prisoner or what not, heartily "cuss" the man who proposes it. No self-respecting soldier, who feels able to take care of himself, wants anybody to take care of him, and these are the men whose feelings should direct the legislation affecting soldiers. The superserviceable zeal of pension solicitors and officials, who seem to occupy themselves mainly in hunting out occasions and pretexts for getting into the Treasury to pension something or somebody, needs a good, hard rebuke, with an admonition to let the taxes take a little rest and the people a little comfort on the prospect of some time seeing an end of the discovery of new means and modes of wasting money. The Apacbe Warriaia New York Tribune. But after all the special and incidental circumstances are known which marked this massacre, there remains the one important and permanent fact which no one ever remembers or regards that the regular army of the Indians is more than twice as large as ours. We have an establishment of 25,000 men scattered over the entire continent. The Indiana have a population estimated at about a quarter of a million. Among the wild tribes every man is a soldier, inured to arms from his boyhood. His ambition from his earliest youth ia to be

admitted into the ranks of the warriors. All his training is directed to that end, which he at last accomplish after a long and terrible ordeal by torture. When hostilities begin, the Indian has every advantage. He choose his own time and place for attack. He is always in superior force for natural reasons. In fact, he has grown so accustomed to finding his forces more numerous than the white man's, that it is almost the universal belief cf the red warriors that the Indians are the more numerous race. They frequently say to agents who talk to them about our millions of i-aople.

"Why don't you send some of thtui out here, when we have a fihtf" They do not believe the stories told by their own compatriots who have visited Washing ton and New York. They call such stories, "bad med cine," and think their friends were drugged or charmed by the whites. They always find themselves on the battle field in the proportion of five or ten red to one white, and these statistics are more convincing thin any thing which can be told them. THE r.HK SEASON. List for tM of tli Count?, Dtatrlrt aud State lain of I ulrrnl to Indiana. INDIANA COUNTT FAIHS. (All dates are Inclusive Fort Wayne, September 9fith to Such. Hartford City, bepteinber Jth to i.fcl. Ioganaport, Ht pteiber tn to 34th. Charleston, September ton to th. Washington. Ooto'jer 11 tn to loth. Muncie, September ISth to It-to. Goshen. September 27th to Jutu. Rochester, September ibid to 24th. friti oe ton, September lirth to ifcfci. Marion. September 6th to Kh. La u ton, Octooer Sd te 7th. Cory don, September 6th to 9th. kokoiil.-, Eeptember lllh to 17th. Hantuiton, September ilst to 24th. Bensseiaer, Sei tember 13th to iMu. Yincennea.Ootober Sd to sUju laOrauge, September a 1st to -23d. Bedford, September I:itli to lrtth. Anderson, September 6th to Wth. rawfordavi.lt, September 5th to 10th. MaitlnsviUe, Octooer Sd to 7tn. Morocco, September 6th to ttth. Lugouier, Octot-er l fth to 15th. Home, October Sd to Bth. Petersburg, September 5th to 9th. Valparaiso, September ietix to Soth. New Harmony, September 13th to 16th. Greencaatie, September Ivithto 17th. Winchester. September Uth to 17th. Kuahviile, September 13th to lath. Shelby viile, September til h to luth. Angora, October lith to 14th. Tipton, September siuth to Jd. Terre Haate, September lith to lfith. Wabash, September lath to ltvth. West Lebanon, September 12th to 16th. Biaftton, September Jth to 43d. Columbia City, October 4th to 7th. Wan aw, September ioth to Sfiid. Noblesville, September 13th to 16th. D1BTEICT FAIRS OF INDIANA (AU dates are inclusive.) Dunkirk, September 7th te loth. Edinburg, September 'Joth to 24th. Covington, September 20th to IMd. I goutee, September 13th to 17th. Orleans, October 4th to 8th. Frances vllle, September 6th to 9th. Aurora, September 5th to luth. East Knterpnse, September 13th to 10th. Union City, Bepteaiber 2vth to 'd. Worth iiigtoti, October 4 th to 7th. AORICUXiTURAZ, ADD It RC&ANICAI, FAIHS. Cleveland, 0 September 5, 6, T, 8.9 and 10. Tolrwifi 1 Hentember 1H IS. 14. IS. 16 and IT. Jackson, Michigan, September 19, 90, 81. 22, 2S Indianapolis, Indiana, September 96, 27, 98, 39 ana 30. Waterloo, Indiana, October S, 4, 6, 6, T and 8. 8TATK AND INDEPKNDKNT FAUAS. (All dates are inclusive Peoria, September 96th to October 1st. Omaha, September 12th to 17th. Dayton, September 96th to 30th. Urand Kapids, September 96th to Soth. Lawrence, Bismarck, September 5th to loth. Madison, September 26th to Soth. Haadaw Mleeplng. Golden Kule. A person whose brain is wearied with intellectual work d urine the week, or whose nervous system is exposed to the strain of business or professional life, ought to sleep within an hour or two after his Sunday dinner, if he can. It is surprising how much like a seven-day clock the brain will work if the habit of a "Sunday nap" be once formed. Nature will take alvantageof it as regu larly and gratefully as she does the night ly sleep, and do ber best to make up lost time. People, on the other band, whose week of toil is chiefly physical, may will give their minds activity wile their body is resting. Two sermons and three or four hours of solid reading is a real rest to some on Sunday, while to others such a course amounts to positive Sab bath breaking. Sunday is a day of rest. not work, religious or otherwise. It is a day for repose, not exhaustion. But what the dogmatists on one side, and the illiberal liberals on the other are apt to over look in the fact that all men do not rest alike any more than they labor alike, and what may help one may kill another. England' !. by Had Crepii. London Truth. An acquaintance of mine farms 1,000 acres. He enters in a txok all expenditures and incomes of every field, and he has made the calculation that, if all onr land in corn has suffered during the last two years proixirtiocately as his corn land has suffered, the last two bad har vests have cost U3 150,0000,000 (750, 000,000.) I asked one of our m f t emi nent agricultural calculators whether he thought that this was an over-statement and he told me that the amount was probably greater. The work of demolishing the reservoir on Beacon Hill, Boston, ba begun. Butler University. THE Twenty-Beverth Session opens Tuesday, Sept. lnh. Professors, -5: Students. 31. Krery educational facility. Tuition lea than ft 10 per term. Board at absolute oost. . or less. Whole expense for forty weeks, a 10. For Catalogue, addresa, Freelde&tH.W EVEREST, auadawloi ' rrlrurtoo, lad. f CELEBRATED M-N .. . . -. V fc . Ztar IT" STOMACH Tbobcb Shaken In Ererr Joint And fiber with fever and agne, or bOioua remittent, the system mayyet be freed from the malignant virus with Hostetter's Stomach Bittera. Protect the system against it with thia bemflcent an ta -spasmodic, which ia furthermore a supreme remedy for liver oocn -piaint,nonBpatiop, dyspepsia, debility, rheumatiam. -kidney trouble aiid other ailmenta. For sale by all Etraggiste and Dealers generally.

KNOLLENBERC.

OPENED. Onr recent Large Purckuea of AND HAVE COME. $10,000 trorth of Fresh Good. added to our lrena Goods and Silk Stork, trhich represent the choicest norelttc in the market. IVe call esH'cial attention to our Silk Goods, including several grades of colored Silks, the jpopular Surah Silks, in all the leading colors, and the choicest J Hack (Jros (I rain Silks. from $1JHt jter yard up wards ever opened in liichmond. Also magnificent Jirocades and the new effects in Om bre Shaded Goods for trim mings, perfectly elegant. Give its a Special Call on tJiese goods. Geo. H. Knollenberg. aprfldAwtf HARNESS IN THE FRONT ! With the beat assorted stoek of Linen Lap Dusters Cotton Lap Dusters, Worsted Lap Dusters (All of the latest designs). leather. Cotton ni Liases Fly Nets, IN THE CITY A fall assortment of JTAB.NESB constantly on hand. WIGGINS d CO.. 509 main Street. aprl7diwtf Foresman's ANODYNE Cures Plarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum. Cramp Colic, Flux and all pains In the Stomach. EVERY uniJ I D I tfF. " BOTTLE uuAUAiiiiiiil. FOB 8ALK BT A. C. Luken U Co. aoaUdlm FIRE ALARM DIRECTORY. The following is the oorreot location of the 1'trs Alarm Telegraph : 1-8 Corner of Third and North C 1-4 Wiggins' Tannery. 1-6 Corner of Fifteenth and North B. 1-6 Corner at Fourteenth and Main. 1-e Corner of Fifth and Booth B. Corner of Twelfth sad South B. 3-3 Smith's Coffln Works 9-4 Corner of Eleventh and Main. i-5 Corner of Tenth and Bomth C. i- Corner ol Eleventh and North B. 9-7 Comer of Seventh and Booth C 8-1 -City Mill Worts. 8- Robinson Machine Wcrka. S-4 Wayne Agrianiltaral Works. 8-5 Comer of Fourth and Booth D. S-e Engtne House No. 1. North Klabth. S-7 Vanneman, Head Co. a Fork House -l Piano Factory. 4- 3 Knopfs Pork House. 4 t Fast Oakland 4-6 Corner of Eighth and Main. 4- 6 Corner of Eighth and Booth E. 8-1 Kendall a Barnes' Oil MUL. 5- a Engine House No. North Fifth 8-4 Eariham College. 6- 1 Hntsool OofBn Factory. B-9 Booster Drill Works. 1-6-a Oesr. Seott Co. a Works. 95 TO 920

DRESS

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If you Buffer from Dyspepsia, use BrwxH'K Bixxo Bitters. If you are afQtcted with Biliousnesft, um BriuxtCK Blood DrrrKKA. If you are prostratl with Sick Headache, take Bl KUOCa BlXWD BnTKKB. If your Bowels are disordered, regulate them with Burdock Blood BrrrKKS. If your Blood is impure, purify it with liCKitocK Blood Bitteka. If you have Indigtvtion, you will find an antidote in Bckdock Blood Bitters. If you are troubled with Spring Oompl Hints, eradicate them with Bckdock Bixkd Bittera, If your Liver is torpid, rentore it to healthy action with Bckdock Blood Bitters. If your Liver is affected, you will find a sure restorative in Bckdock Blood BrrrKKa. If you have any aMviea of llunior or in in pie, fail not to take Bi'Rixx-K Blood Bittera, If you have any symptoms of Ulcer or Scrofulous Bores, a curative remedy will te found in . Bckdock Blood Bitters, Kor imparting strength and vitality t the system, nothing can (qual Burdock Bixxd Bitteia, For Nervous and General Debility, tota up the system with Burdock Bi-ood Bitteia. HEAD WHAT THE PEOPLE SAY. Mrs. J. Q. Robertson, Pittaburg, Pa., writes: "I was suffering from general debility, want of appetite, constipation, etc, so that life was A burden; after using Burdock Blood Bitters I felt better than for years. I cannot praise your Bitters too much." R. Gibbs, of Buffalo, N. writes: "Hearing your Burdock Blood Bittera favorably spoken of, I was induced to watch their effects, and find that in chronic diseases of the blood, liver and kidneys, your Bittera have been signally marked with success. I have used them tujtu-lf with the best results, for torpidity of the liver; and in the case of a friend of mine suffering from dropsy, the effect was marvelous. " Bruce Turner, Rochester, N. Y., writes: "I have been for over a year subject to a serious disorder of the kidneys, and was often unable to attend to business. I procured a bottle of your Burdock Blood Bitters, and was relieved before half a bottle was used. I intend to continue, as I feel confident that they will entirely cure me." E. Asenith Hall, Bingharaton, N. Y., writes: "1 suffered for avrKl with a dull pain through my left lung and shoulder. I lost mr anirit una. tite and color, and could with difficulty keep up all day. My mother procured some Burdock Blood Bitters; I took tnem as a i reeled, and have felt no mm since first week after using them, and am now quite welL" Mr. Noah Bates. Elmira. N. V writoa ikmi four years aao I had an attaek of MHnni fM and never fully reoovered. My digestlre organs wtro wcmneueo, an'i t wosia oe oompletely prostrated for daya. After osing two buttles of roar Bittera the improvement was so MaiMa that I was astonished. I can now, tboogh 01 years of age. do a fair and reasonable dar'a work." T.Walker. Bond at.. Cleveland. 0 writea -9rm the last twelve months I hare suffered from lorn oago ana general debility. I eomcneneed taking Hurdock Blood Hitters about six weeks ago, and now. havegreal jji sare in stating that! hare recovered ray appetite, tnr eomtlxkm baa grown ruddy, and feel better altoretlier." C. Blacket Bobitson. Proo. of the Canada Pm, byterian, Toronto, On., writes: "For several years I have suffered greatly from oft-recurring headaches. I need v-ur Kurdoek Kkvid Kltsim with the happiest results, and I now And myself in better heaitn than fur years past. I cheerfully reoogniae the sterling character of your preparaMrs.. Wallace. Buffalo. N. Y writes : -1 have need Burdock Mood Bitters fur nervous and tiUloas headaonea and have recommended them to my friends. I believe tbetn superluc to any other medicine I hare used, ana can reeociuaend them for any one requiring a curs for biliousMr. Churchill, machinist. Ohio St. Buffalo. H. Y-. write : "From some eaaae. 'I laid it to ehew ing tobacco,' I lost flesh and felt so badly that I reaotved to leave it off and try Bordoek Blood Bitter : stnee doing so I have gained steadily, and in a few days hope to kiek the beam' at say nsaal weighi." Mrs. Ira Motherland. Albany. N. writes i "For several years I have suffered from oft-recurring bilioos headaches, dyspepsia and son plaints peculiar to my aez. Binee a sing yoa Bnrdook Blood Bitters I am entirely relieved. J. M. Might. Bvraense. If. T. writes ! -When first mnmsDMd using voor Burdock Blood Ma ters I was troubled with flattering and palpitation of the heart. I felt weak and languid with a numbness of the limbs: slnee aalna. mv heart has not troubled ma, and the sensation la all gone." frtoe IUM, Triad Haul IwKta. FOSTEB, JHILBUKX CO f aoraisioas,' BcrrALo, "vt. Wholesale sad retell by A.O. bakanaOc. E. N. FRE8IIHAN & DR08 ffewspaiper AdTertiaina; Aenta, 072 . til a dav al I tore? outst tree.

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