Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 6, Number 225, 20 September 1881 — Page 2

i

4 i, PnnsnwwT

. These! are

flf tTTTTTTTTTTt

Iblta a the Poatofflae.

TDXSDA.T. 8XPTBMBKR 20. 1981. TO ASTEHTUEHm TIm rreaUalaa ef tae Pallavdlam. Hair mm Wneklf Is atare tbsn

laaMa LBSU at Uf tUer ppr pak

vara Caaaty.

Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage, the sensa

tional Brooklyn Tabernacle preacher, la now the editor of Frank LttliJt Sunday

Mcujaein. An nn married lady exhibited a

ipatchwork bed quilt at the Iowa State

, a r.. . p ca t. ad mu l.... mum v. -... .v

.15,400 pieces.

Ifitrrr mad UTerwtrk Nineteenth Cantnry.

Overwork ia impossible so lone aa the

effort made ia natural. The use of 6tim-

ulants in aid of work i. perhaps, one of M

the commonest forms of collateral infiu 2 ence suspending tlie warning sense of 3

exhaustion. When the laborious worker,

overcome with fatigue, "rouses" himself

with alcohoL coffee, tea. or any other

a?ent which mar chance to rait him. he

4does not add a unit of force to his stock

THEr C1LLE1 11 IM CALAMI! 1",

Hut lie Kasve Ilia Life la aa Knter-

ffeacy ay aua lUefaeal Oratiaai

fipcru-ocV "inward holiness" H- m. i

I multitude of people into devout living;!" and to those men and women of devout life the consciousness of personal renew1 al of heart was a uracient answer to all T

KNCLLENBfRC

BUI Nye !n Laramie Booownsg.

Calamity ia the name of a man who

lives at the gold camp of Cummins City. J He has another name, but nobody seems 1 to know what it is. It has been torn off

doubts. The tide of scepticism rt-t Jt

- J.

i-.v'to. Aim uuc 'i Kt'iurm 1-efore a wave of consentrated

emotion

-The number of hog, packed at Chi-of energy. He .imply narcotizes , thef , "Va man of singu-

, . ' . . Tu rs.iar niind and eccentric construction.

Sonllx-m Tinker I.nd. New York Tribune.

An article recently published in a New j

'drueeed. lie appropriates me

Turn death of Ueneral Uarneld on

Monday night, though mot unexpected, cast a gloom over the entire country. He

had struggled ao nobly and bravely through eighty days of suffering, and the hopes and prayers of the whole people for his recovery were so earnest and

sincere, that it was hard to believe all should end in disappointment. He had

cacro since March first is estimated at

" . - . .. H

.c.ioo.uw as against i.iw.wu iur iue xv fn.ntl. th .min,

Icorrespcnding time last year. Atifled by the very intensity of the mo

I Secretary Blaine's face ia unchangedtftive power or impulse. Ambition, zeal,

fin iU expression of force and acutnes6,rPe, sometimes fear, will carry a man

ned 1 1 - - vj Kmntter what anauends the functions of

fso rapidly during the past tummer that4the axd t at the threshold of the re-

he looks much older. serve, if the residual stock ia touched j John W. Bradshaw, a native of In-Utwo consequences ensue, waste and deI.. ... . iJiirwinfinn Without a reserve of mental

dianapolis, ana for long years a promi- . , pAn nn m()W

. Sine most norctable feature about Ca-

i

tinent and active business man of that

energy,

the healthful

can

exercise

t r - "-ii.uv"i xAiuiBitna a in timber lauds creates cnidcrabie com- 3 ment in the Southern press and brings'! out many interesting estimates of tufi

lamity ia his superstitious dread of mus-ialae of the forest of other State. 0rir cutar activ.ty. Some people will not rhtre 8X6 ew Southern States which doU tackle any kind of business enterprise on inot large areas of wild landa Friday. Calanltty is even more the vic-i-,carcelT touched as yet by the axe of thf ff

;tim of the vague superstition, and has afIQmDerman- 1Ile ue of thtse lands J 'dread of beginning work on any day of I1 ure to aeaae from year to year,?!

tne wetai, lor fear that some disaster's'" ,ar" uviisumia or tnej may befsil iSim. Last spring hcl?reat pineries of Michigan and Wiacon-

bad a little domestic trouble. anJE'm m,le8 lumber dearer, and the timet!

prouauij out iar uistant when theje

OPENED.

recent Iarge Purchases

J MAJ

AND

of its functions.

icitv. will shortlv remove to Minneapolis, lithan a fiabbv mnacle without tonicity can

been called by the vote, of the people toll which lace he propySsea to make respond to the stimulus of strong voli

lihi future home. il. tY A"" 3

John F. Hartnell, of Boston, won caUlie or condition which most $1,000 and the championship of NewJcommonly exposes the reserve of mental

iumuin? energy to loss and injury is worry. Tne

hrn t.n'tone strength of mind are seriously

t ' a fii'npaired by its wearing mfl

tne head of the Republic, to become its

Chief Magistrate and ruler. In the brief naif year since be had assumed his offi

cial duties, he had not only retained the confidence of his political friends, but,1 more than any other President before

him, had won the esteem and respect of Ij

his political opponents. When the fatal M.

bullet of the aaaaasin struck him down

on that Saturday morning in July, all

parties and all classes of the peopW

were shocked and pained, and grieved as for a personal injury. It was not a partisan chieftain who had been wounded onto death, bnt the friend of the people and the President of the country. It

is in this character that he is most mourned to-day not as a party leader, not as a wise and profound statesman,

not aa a brave general battling for the

Republic, though he was all these but for the true, noble, upright man who has fallen in our midst does the great heart

of the Nation bow in sadness and lamentation. This is not the occasion to enter upon

a review of the career of James A. Oar-!

field; that can wait; it is written upon the brightest pages of his country's history and will remain for all time. In the first shock of our grief we care less for.

worldly wisdom and worldly honors than

for the noble nature who could stand in

the midat nf ttim nitiwn . ,i mu

T ... 1 F '"'flnounces that

mvia ax ainanees, or neighborly friend-,,

ship, of political confidence, of public SUDDorL that fw ITIAn tlAVA aninviul

. ...... jj k J

Lngland, Saturday last, in a

UMIA.U. Ill but. U1U IBIUIUOI UtkS, 3.- . . , . . .

and Jump he made thirty-three feet and gtiZ tbJ .1 ji,m a : .1 t.j; js i t. I.- x(felty adn t go away. He i

jumps thirty nine feet and two inches.

standing destroyed. It sets the organism of

ijthought and feeling vibrating with emo-

a j -it y,a pm!.tiuoM wnicn are noi consonant wnu me

uuuuoJ . !,., ..1 i:v.: ;

luakuiai iiucmkii'u va vuej aaa

his wife made complaint that Ca

lamity had worn out an old long-handle ?hovel on her. trying to convince her

about some abstruse theory of his. The

estunony seemed rather against Calami-

gty and the miners told him that as soon

as they got oyer the rush a little and had

the leisure tljey would have to hang

turn, l ney hoped he would take ad van

age oi tne hurry of business and go

away, becauseN didn't want to hang

But Calam

ity didn't go away. He stayed because

it was easier to stay than to go. He di

notn ra 1 liKarafinn T Annrrr in axrrlr

i ... i 1 -i a 1: .14uui nwuu v. vmmB.j u w av

aent s oaa or umucay uay. becoming wKThe whole machinery is thrown out of

the Chicago Inter-Ocean, on five out of the gear, and exercise, which otherwise

13 Sundays, bis condition was regarded ywonld be pleasurable and innocuous, be-

aa .rood- on three he was better than on!icon8 P"ui ana even destructive.

the Saturday preceding, and on

A

.'route business, is not domiciled, as re-1 i.j. i ; i- .

l i ... luucuj me iracrg u uu longer a gioca

fjportea, m ijanaaa, to escape any cnmi-win abeyance, and it ceases to give stabil nal proceedings which may be broughta'1 to mind; the rhythm of the men

i the Ui

two his

t condition, though unsatisfactory, was not

materially different from any other day

of the week.

The literary societies of the Indiana

State University, Bloomington, having

elected Colonel Bob Ingersoll orator for

commencement, the matter has created a

Ibit of trouble, owing to the fact that the

faculty refuse to permit him to come and

M

J fulfill the engagement The students 'threaten to hire a hall outside of the col-.

while the whole subject threatens

develop into a big quarrel.

Mr. Thomas J. Brady, late Second

k : . . r ..... n l .

gXLEBlu&ul ruBluiluu;! ucucibi, nuuncuaiucjj : l .1 : i .. : . i. i. .

I iletre.

aa "

ri.

It

is easy to see how this must be. The longest note in music, the most i toady and persistent ray of light to use an old-fashioned expression, the tonic muscular contraction are all, we know.

produced by a rapid succession of,

minute motive impulses or acts, like the

explosion and discharge of electricity from alternately connected and separated points in a circuit in fact, a series

of vibrations. Mental energy doubtless;

W .... . U .1 1 . f il 3

mo uuxutyc uu 'Rdom, and holding

the obtrusion of some independent source

of anxiety, or if, out of the business in

hand, the mind makes a discord, confu

jsion ensues, and for the time being bar

momous action ceases. Working under

these conditions in obedience to the will.

the mental organism sustains iniurv

which must be great and may be lasting. Si

iuc iuucuud oi tne warning sense is bus

A Washington special an-:

jtal forces is interrupted; a crash is always

simpending, and too often sudden col

llapse occurs. The point to be made!

clear is this: Overwork is barely possi

he is in that city, and that

i tne big trout aoor or nis nospiiaDie

ffhome on Farragut square is opened forBble, and seldom, if ever, happens whileif Qay EiK .. Sthe mind is actine- in the wav prescribed hi

nuramaiuuiuj people." XI 18 tneFl n

vuiH umuu, sua mmu neiguuor, me; l

guuu ciuaen ana tne great nearted man

upon whose bier the tears of millions of

the mnntA a.ra stitfwl trtA m w

1 j ' rii,vi i.o;...! a.r., i.- k

j j vuaoi.(m.u wobuiuaj loat J

Kv nnn.;.: : .u . i

. ju. rwLu., Vl xuuiniiB, -amodes of mental exerci

It

The moment I

young physician of good social standing,, jhowever, the natural rhythm of work is

a son in-law of the late Hon. Samuef broken, and discord ensues, the mind is Buskirk, of the Supreme Court, was pub 0Iike an engine with the safety-valvei

not, of coursaaJAne for the notoriety of

being the first man hung in the young

camp, but ratuer than pull up stakes and

move away from a place where there

concluded to-stay aid meet death calmly 3

in whatever form it might come. One

vening after the work of the day was

done, and the boys had eaten their sup

iters, one of them suggested that it

would be a good time to hang Calamity.

So they got things in shape and went down to the Big Laramie bridge. They got things ready for the exercises to be gin aud then asked the victim if he had anything to say. He loosened the rope ground his neck a little with one hand

nso that he could epiak with more f rec

tus pantaloons on

with the other, said: "Gentlemen of the

convention, I call you to witness that

this public demonstration toward me is

entirely unsought on my part. I have

Inever courted notoriety. Pluireine

along in comparative obscurity is good

enough for me. This is the first time I

. 1 1 1 mi . - a, a

ever auuxe&seu an auuience. inai isei

why I am embarrassed and ill ci

at ease. Yon have brought me lien-H

to hang me because I seemed hanhti

and severe with my wife. You have

entered the hallowed presence of my home-life, and assumed ths prerogative

of subverting my household discipline. It is well, do not care to live so long

as my authority is questioned. You will

ave already changed my submissive

to an arrogant and self reliant wo-ii

man. Y esterday I told her to go out and if grease the wagon, and she straightened!! up to her full height and told me to troi

is

South will find in the forests of itsS mountain sides and its sandy plains a tj source of immense wealth. The rusgedfS

uua uu vBiirjs 01 ei Virginia, riastern Kentucky and East Tennessee abound

m oak, chestnut, ash and maple, and at

me rate ine extermination ot tne black.:

walnut is advancing in Ohio and Indi

ans, will soon be the only source of su --'

ply of that fashinnab'.e and overrated1, wood. A great deal of valuable hard

wood JJimber is also found in Northern

T-f?ia and Alabama, and i jv Western

1ESS GOODS

HAVE COME.

flj Arkansas.

lie ltt'u' Take.

Mr. Hendricks has not impressed his

party by his declaration of the ferocieusy

courage which he would have exhibited

in 1010 11 ne naa naa a i nance Mot a Democrat has felt moved to rise, and!

pointing at Indiana's only original states

man, to shout: "There he stands! There! is the man for us in 1884!" Nothing of.

tne kind nas been said, and there are no

signs that anything of the kind will be, said. The truth is that Mr. Hendricks isi

a bygone. If he will absorb this fact he?i

will have a much more peaceful old age

A PhiladHlnhlA irpntlpman utltn o vnar

ago, btught 2,000 shares of Hannibal &S llick St. Joe, sold it last week, at 110, making? 186,000. Another, who lost tl30.000.rT ' m

pumped off a sound steamer and w Jdrowned.

J. T.

srw m

.!n:. .1.. - ... , Cius"""K nfj"1"1""' oi gear a

Jambs A. OaB4iKUis dead, ji LUO l,us,J Vl lUBaaim oeinbreak;aown may occur at any ti

me. The

worry, and they

COAL A WOOD.

COAL & WOOD.

$10,000 irorth 0 treh

Goods added to our J)resA

Goods and Silk Stork, tchich

now represents the choicest.

novelties in the market. He call esjH'dal attention to our Silk Goods, includ

ing several grades of colored

Silks, the jtopular Surah

in all the leading

and the choicest

Gros Grain Silks. $1.00 jer yard up-

icards ever ojtened in Jitri-tnond.

Also magnificent lirocades

and the new effects in Otn

bre Shaded Goods lor trim

wings, jterfertlg elegant.

Silks,

colors,

jlf you suffer from Dyspejwia, use

Burdock Blood Bittkrs.

if you are afilfcted with Biliousness, use

BtmsocK Blood Dittkms.

I If you are prostrated with Sick Headache, take Bukdock Blood Bitters.

iff your Bowels are disordered, regulate

them with Burdock Blood Bittkk&.

If your Blood is impure, purify it with

Burdock Blood Hittkks. If you have Indigestion, you will find

lan antidote in

Burdock Blood Bittkks, f you are troubled with Spring Complaints, eradicate them with , - Burdock Blood Bittkbs. If your Liver is torpid, restore it to healthy action with Burdock Blood Bitters. If your Liver is affected, you will find a

fure restorative in

Burdock Bi.ood Bittkiis. If you have any species of Humor or Pimple, fail not to take Burdock Blood Bittkbs. If you have any symptoms of Ulcers or Scrofulous Sores, a curative remedy will be found in Burdock Blood BrrrKRa. For imparting strength and vitality to

the system, nothing can equal

Burdock Blood Bittkks. For Nervous and General Debility, tone

up the system with

Burdock Blood Bitters.

ki:ad what

THE

WM. DECKS.

Yard and office on North A. near Old Pearl itr t

Charoh. f

Give its a.

Uliese goods.

Special Call on

-1U KIKM or

Geo. H. Knollenberg.

aprHiISrw

and grease itmyself. I have always beenp

sni t nt'?i . ...

Jetting Priin3tdij2ic

"Eever on the verge or a catasiropne; 11 nr-aue

a J l. -11 . 3 : . r .1. r- . - . i

I ' -"o "Ull i. -V ir

erican people, sinre tne noorwto ca the matter 8tiu further j msti iJeacapes, the marvel is not at his strength

whanr.h nnwawaa flasheM alOHET the! !. ... i ...,.! In f.a q, to! rat him vlof intellect BO much as his 2K)d fortune.

, i iluuuK cniumm i'iin.ci.uu.5 b 3 . .. : , . .La wires, on the morning of the 14th day offj iiorrT dl8re.r' however induced and Jft AnriL 1M5. announein the asMSsinationk" ,: t, ohm n-m J1dl.80rderly w.0rk, abbo,r .teil.

kind and tk

had to go u;

after firew

1 ne storm w

iard and Soft Coal

- .mm

r.. . -idb euairmau x ?of nature, which leave it wboiiy witnoutjajwith ita wide waste of eternal calm and H of the late lamented President hincoln.fl ,. g Central Committee addressed. lremedy. The energy employed in indus aita shoreless sea of rest is a elad relief toll

a ltttcr to the Chairman of the ltepubn-atry earned unaer tms conauiou is "v-mine. 1 go, but 1 leave m your miasi aj

ie Uished in producing a small result, anoijakittish and able-bodied widow wnowiii;

' ...Vl ..li.ncta.1 miuirvA rnmin i i , i. ,. 1 r l .... . ..... V4 V . .

... , . - .:x?uccuii tAimui "- .v.-.. . t IILJllit; IWU16 UUW1. J, V. VI UtlIU ULI w

. .. Mnt(mt HfinniTinn 1 1 1 - - . ...... ... u

v.. ilinto play very early in tne task, and tne

to not open thefacuity of recuperation is speedily ar

the Demo Ifrested. Sometimes loss of appetite an-

nil kA Ammat-in rt mitriti.tn nthor

Scan State Central Committee, proposing,

view of

in

and to-day, as then, a Nation is bowed down beneath an awful load of sorrow,

irrief and mourning. The great heart of

the Nation could not save tne rre8iaeni,v Pregidcnt Qarfield,

the prayers of the people availed not fc?8peaking campaign and that at th hmnA at death, and now we are! I . T;n:.,

aTllT . th- completed work C""" P"f W" T.B" Z.Z , wise the sense of hunger present in the

T 7 - vrtlip uiscuBB.uu, v "-1 system is for a time pret-rnaturally acu

-13 President. The Kepuoncan cemmrawir.j mftrka the tact that the demand is

to write of it and mere words are P-Pdeclined the proposition and will pursueaoccasioned by loss of power to appropn nrlw to eznress the deep feeling of sor-lf. trminillfate. instead of any diminution of supply

row which now fills the mind and marks!! e.,:": :4 .it f h.-llThe effort to work becomes daily more,

" a f jupoo, ociievuiK " " lllaborious. the task of fixing the attention

me countenances evjuo - "!party, whether the President lived or8row8 increasingly difficult, thoughts about exclaiming in tones of Hdiei to sUnd by, express and maintainflwander, memors fails, the reasoning

sadness, "The President is dead; the worktheir principles. W.pov. er is enfeebled; prejudice tlie shade

- :aa w rrv 1 7 rl An-(wm.. .-r c rt a naat rwrona.-

sion takes the place 01 judgment; pbys--

uses

kicks my

hat on the i

She does n

me is onl

-AND

ughtful to her. When shef

intra rnn rmlih n f nrintari'

, my coat shielded her from;

ile I sat alone in the cabin i

nnv it itn PU T Mrknlxl n u nu C M

,V,

f unse-lfebnfss on ruv'vTO.. " Jr,.. 3

y smoking tooacco, anan - - i

veneorse up iuiu ulJi M

ost unlooked for occasionalj mronasers oi u,imy yam to have privil- 1

t love me any more, and life Je 01 anr ev deaire at my

a hollow mockery. leath,t""

PEOPLE SAY.

this camp. She is yours, gentlemen. She

lis all I have to give, but in giving her

to vou 1 feel that my untiniuly deatn

See me before auKvdtf

mking contracts.

WICCINS A CO.

AHEAD

With the Finest Assortment

J

ora

will always be looked upon in this gulchil

comers

I VjSLLORS - rxCURSlO.NISTS 1 CINCINNATI - LX POSITION

upon this aw-jl

11

An AlfectiDK Mcrne. t . . . . . . . t rT'l T . J ' .. 1

nvw fi i? 1.- n. 'Tir 1 ' ill. jHwrnrifi

. - , r. 1 T - 1 .

tne days ana weeKs 01 pain mu D""cl,"Kjfextra says: At

of the t fn""'" ia accomplished. lheu

end came at last and grim death closed

with which our beloved Chief Magistrate

- .nni. nd- crowned withwown. and watching with anguish unut

. . , ftnrtthl h fnar vanishinT sands of life.?

honor, with a name and a fame rarely ti

equaled but never surpassed, he has gone down into the dark valley, crossed the black, turbulent waters and is now in that land where the weary are at rest and where sorrow and trouble are not known. Rtquimemt im poet.

the President s bedade,.

holding his poor, emaciated hand in her

Chbstkk A. Arthur, by the death of

President Qarfield, is now, having already taken the oath as such, the President of the United States. We firmly believe, in the light of his most excell

ent conduct during the illness of the

President, that he, as much or more than ist one. deplored the act which has

ar a thus placed him at the head of the na

lion. All testimony goes to the estab-j

liahment of the fact that Mr. Arthur is In every way qualified for the discharge of the hiffh trust which has been, in the

providence of God, thrust upon him.

and now it should be the duty of all to

stand by him and sustain him to the end that the laws of the country and the will of the people may be judiciously administered.

Tam great big heart of the nation is

beating in full sympathy to-day with the

grief-stricken, heart-broken wife of the murdered President, who, almost from

the very day of her entrance into the White House, has known only trouble and norrow. May God in his infinite

mercy give her strength to enable her to

safely pass through the last and most try-

ing ordeal of alL the death of her dearlyR

beloved husband.

Tot reunion of the Army of the

Cumberland is now in progress at Cha!

taaoosav Tens., and the city is full of

old soldiers from North and South. - On accosmt of the death of the President,

appropriate memorial services

held at the several

UIO 11UU11U1, UC1VW.U " " . V. v. ... "

closing hours of the Presidents career. Around him were other weeping friends and physicians, lamenting their power-

iTessness in the presence of the dark an-

. ... . . . a

gel of death. Toward the latt tne miua 3

of the sufferer wandered. He was oncefj

more ba k in Mentor amid those scenes j

ical nerve or brain disturbance may suervene, and the crash will then come

suddenly, unexpected by on-iooKers, per

haps unperceived Dy tne sunerer nimseu.

This ia the history of "worry " or disor

der produced by mental disquietude and detraction, occasionally by physical dis

ease.

. . . . mi 3 II

as a dire calamity. 1 ne aay win

when vou will look back

tul night. and wish that 1 was

K.,fr nriW ha t"l lutt

will be far away. My soul will be in as;

1 j i j . ;,!::. . 1 l.li

tana wnere uomeuuc uiieuenj uu iuiu..

feet can never enter. Bury me at theM

foot of Vinegar UiiL where the sage henj; and the fuzzy bumble bee may gambol!!

-j er my lowiy grave. ga

When Calamity had nmsned, an im-7.

... 3

uromoiu caucus waa tuouc uu 1. noo.

adjourned Calamity went home to

cabin to surprise his wife.

She has not yet I uuy recovered

jher surprise.

nr. llKmmond'a Prediction I'erlflrd.

Chlcaso Inter Ooan.

a Althoueh Dr. Hammond has

M .

'nt...J n-ith trannal Bill t".A a.nii limfpfl

. a . ' 1 " r . a-La ai- - w a

wnere tne nappiest nours oi nis ute were, .n- his comments noon the

a. IT . I T J 1 -,rtJ-I -.y-"- - J J a I

spenw u.i in ui ur m uicp have been remarkably

again, with the loved ones around nim,l. . nTfjic.tinn. have been ful-

nisaged motner so proua 01 net mg&m with surorisin accuracy. When

boy, the faithful wite, tne beloved cnu-sf). irharo we nooh nooh

1 w . f a . a. 1 a a wau sja y om m r r

dren. It was a diissiui uream mat roo g. - . !an rr n.mmnnH

....... . J U1D B T. WiM K.UH. "

UQU UcHUI VI 1U9 Kiiuio, auu il-i .

from!

II:ii-iics ' buddies,

S'ollarw,

Itrill,

Brushes, Elcflcure me.

A Fall Line of-

-A

SHOULD NOT FIU TC LEAVE

THEIR MEASURE. MY STOCK IS d

NOW COMPLETE VlTH "HE LA-

TEST FALL AND VHNTERGOOD3. 9

Wed ui M Lap Soiss, m ajllal aaai m mm fc '

LUKfcNj 1 Ht TAILlfl, fi

144 MAIS STSEET, 1EAE FCJSTH.

Horse Blankets & Covers.

Mrs. J. O. KolMii-tson, TitUburg, Pa, writes: "I was suffering from general

debility, want of apetite, constipation, etc, so that life was a burden; after us

ing Burdock Blood Bitters I felt better than for years. I cannot praise your

MBit tors too much."

It. Giblw, of Buffalo, N. Y., writes: "Hearing your Burdock Blood Bitters favorably sioken of, I was induced to

watch their effecla, and find thatrin

idnvys. 1 fiMii rrn n r r i .i i

narked with succsa. lUXLtT

myself w.th the best results, for torpid'ty of the liver; and in the case of a friend of mine suffering from dro,y, the effect was marvelous. " Bruce Turner, Rochester, N. Y.,writri,1 have lxx-n for over a r h:. ... '

7OM d'f'rder of the kidneys, and was often unable to attend to buxinesi " procured a bottle of your Burdock Blo, Bitters, and waa relieved before half . little was used. I it.,i .7l 7

?uh fi-Cnfident thRt th will entirelj

E.

Asenith

writes:

: .i ...

wieu a auil nair

1 1 . . -

nu snouider.

nith Hall, Binghamton, N. Y.. 1 suffered for several rrw.r.tl..

in through my left lung

CUte and color, and could with dirBcnlt ijaeep up all day. My mother

ine dying man xura muiucut uuwuwiuuoa,

of the cruel rending of his once vigor-a

nn framfl t li at waa constantTv POIHB on. fa

IThe moan of the restless ocean mingled

with the sobs of the loved ones as the;

!l amp of life flickered and went out for

ident clung to hope till the last, and re-i fused to credit the approach of death' until the shadow deepened, and the de-J

Qlrnr'i rsrfifwne-f rnnlii he no lonser Un-

f elt. The Bags hang at nan mast irom pf .

J

everv house on ocean avenue, ana uie

sravetv of this favorite watering place is

followed bv the deepest trloem. The

struggle is over, and death is victor.

ia?

pronounced it a most dangerous symp

tom, and predicted all that occurred in

3us development. He has held to the py

-a ... , ,

i mic theory, too, an along, ana a weex

?o told a newspaper reporter that every

ivmptom pointed to a dangerous condi

: n tha V.1 vhirh vnnlrf not lw

li U . .u. v.wu. . . ....... 3' -elieved until it had disturbed the lungs,S

vnd Derhais the other organs of life.

When Dr. Bliss was telling us that thei

President's coughing was caused by mu eons in the throat, Dr Hammond said:

The poison has reached his lungs, and

tie ohvsicians in charge know it better

ban I do, and they will be compelled to

tonfesa the fact before many days.'

Tbey Want valteau. Nkw Yokk. Sept. 19. A Long Branch

correspondent of the Brooklyn Eagle savs: "It is ascertained from the Sheriff

of Monmouth county that if the President dies here, Guiteau will have to be

brought here at once before a Coroner s

jury. The Coroner can view tne ooay nH lot it tm hnt (Initean must be pro-

jf duced at once. New Jersey law is very

,strict on that point, and the Jerseymen

evidently want Quiteau."

A strange religious order called "The

V is found in the dis

trict of 6aratow. Russia. The members

Br A '..11 MAAa.m A.ltfi. anKtAmnMn n?A.

... . . . - a .... 1., Mian rv ln.1 frfkAlw

tva. it nn brrul nd wttn. nurv ineirsuricaiKs

dead at nicht and tolerate no onion of

the sexes.

The colored aristocracy of Richmond, Yircinia. have decided to organise a so-

T). .1-k n . . will 1 hunll.

W1U 1 aornflT fnrnisheil: thtv will also have a

churches, in addition X billiard halL restaurant and reading

to tha other iaataxes of the jirograiBnQroom.

Boeton Herald.

Over 1.800 years ago Pliny wrote: "All

ears whatsoever are but heavy meat ua

fees boiled or baked," and it is probable

'that the pears cultivated at that early

date could hardly have been anything!

1 but small in size and bitter in taste. But

.hen Pliny recorded this famous opinion he wrote for his time, and the idea is as

little worthy of consideration to-day as

tie philosopher's real knowledge of thej fruit at the present day must have been limited. Pears are regarded at the present time as among the most wholesome i and nutricious fruits. Baking or boiling aav improve them for weas digestive

rreeiy at an

times thev are productive of fine blood

sad healthy skin. The amount of real nutriment they contain is hardly equal to that of apples, but the fine and delicate jiices are hardly excelled by any other fmit. Pears are coming to be regarded at one of the staple fruit crops, asd a geat deal of attention ia being paid to

gjtlair culture. j

. nam

hu.fi - " .

1 . . " a-

1 Lav H

1 f 1 U

J J-

Wealeya Victory ever Doubt. Hew York Trlbone. One of the most important of the pa

pers read at the Methodist Ecumenical

. - c .1 . .1 . T..

.joaienence, mat 01 iuu vacuji.

Daniel Curry, appeared last wee it aimul-y

beengtaneous with its appearance in London, If

in the Methodist, tad Uhirtui juaeocaur

and the Independent. This elaborate and careful esay considers the relations oft the Wesleyan movement to skepticism;!

and the outside observer may prontaoiy 1

i-r- .X.: i. I

11a 111a attention upon uiu uiusb .

suipeei 01 aietuoaism. in mguuu.au.. historical parallel that Wesleyanism wsej

born in the midst ot a very

dreary sceptical time, and that its first f

1'an -Conference is held while a new ana 15

more vigorous school of douot com-i

mands treneral attention. All tne nisw-iJkrwnand BaooeisfaltbTiicki.n .i..

rians are agreed that Methodism arrestedPha, made a life long study ottooa dim.

the march of unbelief in the last century. pacd the Diseaaea ot the f-kin8 Dayr -j-.j.

Every new Study of Wesley's age in-Lin the higheat rank, aa author those ajweiali

fcreases the estimates Ot his value as a a. ana aiusreaaicg aiseaaea. uoarae of hia

reactive force: he grows larger in thisf practioe he discovered what ire renowned

k 1 .i - -,nition of I. in medical practioe, via: aooamr, .

religion and the downward tram of kT" . i"- nri

speculation are examined. r . , V eoostantiy,

It ia nAp4;nn.i tr. ..h- iSv what meuiilr 1 m.

IIUUUK W J ffj T. I. . n.l.nl

iJohn Wesley arrested the progress of l , eT in prJ?l

adit is pertecuy ciear .iem toUowing apeclalil ZZ,

.aia answer to specuiauoa was uui euJJ-,rthT c( a trlMl b iui.. iU

t irni.t;n. n. van noithcr a Jo-I' r - ilM-J rl

" , mn vreiwi "pmHiJ w c headMiie H i 1 Kut shi h(3 . . . r CIle' M

vwi nor a aiuvu; , " -'a'nerroaa uaaasciia, uynpj)iac fae, nenralwaa wiser than the first and as practical jrmiyia, leepleneet, 4-

ias tne second, his power was uui t,Yoasne, aoa win cure any a

ureiKxxi iu tne terms ei aura. ..... oumvj u vuumuh,. '-ta - k..

doubt Weslev appealed to the con rfcDepo. IO6 North Entaw Bt, aV M . tv

- . . . . . . . 1 . W .1 . y. . ., : . J

trunks an'd ValisPR

A SPECIALTT.

WIGGINS & CO..

Mttnf Rnr.1.L Tl , ..... "

-. ""'"1 mooa UitUrs- I

s ulrecieu, and have felt :

nice nrst week aftr

m now quite welL"

took

no pain

using them, and

a-i-a

509 Wuln Street.

Foresman's

ANODYNE

hoe- Dy-ntery. Cholera MorbuaJ

iwuimin, uramp CoUe, Flux aod

t m. umj iiifin

'Mi. Noah R&taa u ..

tour yeara 7i hTT:"r..:- T"" : "Aln

Kl never fully rOTL m , do v. Jl'

age. do a tair andreaaTalto" iaTaSra

ie; r M arwi niriaM akt .1

HWW, BmV

1 recovered

grown rnddr

a 1 . 1

P' "O'ela mi "tTSLTV'

tUV m.institm " . -

aaaau iaj

erirrn Uvt

I better ilo-ti' r?-

yeara I have anflered rethT ZZU WJ ihelacbea. 1 115 .eorrln:

with the hr,r7. 7" d Blttara

In betw hni.'th fr .2 P? "r-ir

the ari tC

&a

UHTTZ-J1: write., "I ha

them tor an t-0" """otDmend

""" aiwMiua.

Wallaoe. Boffalo,

Da. C. W. BENSON, or Baroaa Ml

We give above a correct 111 of 4 wejj.

EVERY u

BOTTLE

GUARANTEED."

rOK BALK BT

1 A. G. Luken Co

acgisdlxn

FIEE ALARM IHRLCTORY.

V ar . . .

t. o. rw J a arvnrftn lor.

ve neonl. that thir world W&3 coming tla-

n k treneral de-

. u u .uvui Uldl two o . t

moralixation. He struck home V tnel.

common mind with blows that rcacnedt

Tko Hnnhtm stoooed r;

to consider ths effect of their preacn-v

ments; the sinners felt the sung ot

aelf-reproach and resorted to repentance.

Between the two classes a large body of well-meaning communicants of

Church of England stool ready

welcome an evangel ot experience

mail, two bcxes lor 11, or six

to

and

DR. C. W.

SKIN CE

Is Warranted t

ECZEMA, TETTE

INFLAMMATION, Ml

ALL ROUGH SCALY E DISEASES OF HAIR SCROFULA ULCERS,

mm

. a i a. a. , W .

ngnteousness and to co-operate wim 1 tender itchincs

evangelist. The movement maae ou body, it cuLt ue am in

great noise in the literary and political ijremow tm m bveaim. wnria. Kn. j, i;f in the regions i-CEin Tsx world.

wnicn letters ana H""""' UI-" j-snBcxtenultrettment. their inspiration. Wesley's theme "siAn jl-t ci imejptji heit. eaaenUally rital religion,' "conscious aejattdeodAwtf

BE Mb , N

4 Ml

ionsE

tT- SB

3C-- pi T and Ir H

cr tlie j H

ZZ-Z twos

1 u

The foUowtns ia th mtm 1 . ..

Alarm Tl,,h ui we tin

1 J Corner of Third and North & 1-1 WlfiKina' Tunw.

1-6 Corner of i irtmotfa and North B. 1-S Corner of Fourteenth and MalnY 1-S Corner of Fifth and Hon to B S-l Corner of Twelfth and Hotith R S-S-Smrth'a CfrfHn WorkT S-l Corner of FUerenth and Main. - Corner of Tenth aod Booth C - Corner of Eleventh and North H. S-7 Corner of Kereotti aod bemth C S-l City Mill Works. S-S Kobliiaon Maehine Worka. S-l Wavne Airwihiml w.. .

S-S Corner of Fourth and Soatb D.

-7 Vannenian, Kekl a Co. "a Fork

rimoo r mcwrf. 4-2-Knopfa Pork flooae. 4-S Eaat Oakland. 4- 6 Corner of Eijjhth aod Main. -Corner of Eighth and Sooth E. 5- l Kendall A Barcee' Oil Mill. 5- S En0o Boom .Na North Fifth 6- 4 Earlham CoUecn. S-l Hotton'a Coffla Factory. S--Hooaier Irlll Worka l-6-a-Ga, Heott mt Co. Worka. - baibxad aoooa.

I Mra. Ira MalhoDaDd. Albaov If- .. For aereral y eaT Temflar'fn, 1

bordoek Blood Blttara J ILfmiui,

M. MazhL BmraM w -

"at aommeoeed o.ici. roar BortoeM vJl?S?L. I troabtod with flatternSton of the heart. I f.i 1. -TT5 Pta-

a Bombneaa of ui wtth

I woohled ma. an ua.'

S5 TO S20ww

noBM. Sampiaai

a On.

Itoeaaacuto a f FOSTER

aelna

lay

tlOe, XnaU BtUa

FOSTER, niLBUBIf

CO,

BI'IIAI!.,r,

Wboieeaie and retail a.

J.UakiaJo.

E. N. FRE8IIUAN 0000

frwipaafr Aalvrrirf Mar a..

jOowaraaciax, Btraxttaa.

lAa aotfaotiaad to naarM 1

atper, EatiTnalm for&iabad ;

CM

366 S

In

U OBttttta.

J