Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 9, 19 August 1884 — Page 2

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Richmond Palladium

x'ablished every E railing, (Sunday excepted,) ff 18AAC JEJTKISMH. Offloe, Nog. 831 and 833 Main it , corner Ninth, TUESDAY, AUGUST 19. EaUnJ m Bacons-Class Matter, a the PoctJ ... - office, Richmond. Indiana. THE DAILY PALLADIUM. TE.V CEXTH A WEEK. HItm the latent news y telegraph. Tb UtM( nuirkrt report by toleKrapn. All tho (eaeral m4 aalecella a bcwi of the day. Call assd H pleto local mwi of tbo city, and la th newt and (hnipful uwipapfr li era Indiana. REPUBLICAN TICKET. FOB PRESIDENT, TAMES O. B LAI HE, OP MAINE. ' FOR TICK PRESIDENT. GEN. JOH1T A. LOGAN, OF ILLINOI3. STATEJTICKET. MTUHOa, ; WILLIAM H. CALKINS, La Porta oonnty LrjEDTKNAKT GOVKBMOR, -EOGEKE H. BUKDY, Henry county. . - KCHRTAJ4T OF STATB, ROBERT MITCHELL, Gibson county. ' ATOITOB OV BTATB, BRCCE CARR, Orange oonnty. THKAHTTRCa OF STATS, ROGER R. 8HIEL, Marion oonnty, , i , , ATTOBJCBr oBHaaAL, . li WILLIAM C. WILSON, Tippecanoe oonnty. JT7DOB OF IUFUXI OOCBT, FIFTH DISTRICT, EDWIN P. HAMMOND, Jasper oonnty. REPORTER 1UPBKKI COURT, WILLIAM M. HOGG ATT. Warrick oonnty. S CP KR INTEND KNT fDBUO INSTBUCTIOK, BARNABAS O. HOBBS, Parke oonnty. fob congrssii, THOMAS M. BROWNE. COUNTY TICKET. " JlJlOISLATUR I, JAMES M. TOWN BEND, JOHN B. MAUn Prof. Lanqley-, Observatory will co tember Century a the spots on the illustrations, many ings by the author, nrst m a scries, e Astronomy," of seve, tides, fully illustr: popular and graf most interesting in tha heavens. A CORRESPOND phia Iff ss, writin, Vhece Mr. Blaine stfys ' of his" action against the Sentim Blaine's course in th eided upon in tho moi honest indignation in, the scurrilous paragra nel, without consultati friends or political where, and without a th tff.'pt. of iMtlipis 3 libel o his political f r5. He in becoming V4 candidate for a great office, he sacrificed none of his rights as a citizen or as the head of a family, and is prepared to defend those rights and the good name of his household in all honorable ways now as heretofore." A Democratic exchange says "the atrocious calumnies about Grover Cleveland, the circulation of which has led to this retaliatory measure, (the Sentinel's charge against Mrs. Blaine,) if they did not eminate directly from Blaine, were at least within his control and could have been stopped at any time by the merest hint of his disapproval." This then is admitted to be a retaliatory measure, not published because it is true but in revenge for something else done. On the low principle that one lie justifies another. The charge that Blaine originated or permitted the publication of the Cleveland scandal, is so directly contradicted by the well known facta of the case that only the most reckless of newspapers could insinuate such a thing, and none could expect it to be believed. The first publicity given to the charges against Cleveland was by a Democratic paper at Rochester, New York, whose editor resigned his position rather than support his party's candidate. But more general publicity was given the same charges at the Democratic national convention where they were urged as .tvason why Cleveland should not be put in nomination. They were afterwards put in form and with more particularity published by the Buffalo Telegraph, the Cincinnati Enquirer, and other papers not one of which were ReTaWioao. It is a bold challenge of tha truth then for the Democrats now to claim that Mr. Blaine had anything to do either in originating or making public these charges against Cleveland. And then there is the further difference in the stories themselves, that the friends of Mc Cleveland admit the truth of the substantial points made against him, while the Sentinel's story against Mrs. Blaine, has no foundation in fact, and was never published by any other raper. It is the sole assertion f

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A HEW COISTITtTIOJI. We publish to-day a second oomnrunication from C. W. Osborn": on the sobiect of conBtitational convention. A Mr. O-borB gubstarrtiaHy abandons his first position, admitting we were

correct, and assumes a new position not in controversy, we might properly leave the question as he now states it. We started out to show how a convention to frame a new constitution could be called ; and we answered. By the Legislature. Mr. Osborn disputed this unless such power was expressly delegated by the constitution itself. His language was : "All power lies in the people. If they have, through their constitution, delegated to the Legislature the power to call a convention to make a new constitution, they can do it; if otherwise, they certainly can not." Mr. Osborn thus denies the power of the Legislature to call a convention to make a new constitution without express authority; but he now admits that the Legislature has such power in the matter of amendment where the "constitution makes no provision for its amendment." That admits all we asserted ; for if the Legislature can make the call in the one case without constitutional authority, it can also in the other. s I We will repeat what we have before asserted, that the Legislature can at any time call a convention to frame a new constitution, notwithstanding the existing constitution makes no provision for such call or such convention. But if the- Legislature intends simply to amend the existing constitution, then the method provided by the constitution for such amendment must be strictly followed. We did not start out to discuss how an amendment might be secured, but how a convention to make a new constitution could be called, and if our friend will consult 69th Indiana, page 51S, he will find that the Supreme Court of our own State has decided both these points precisely as we stated them. Mr. Osborn seems to confuse himself by confounding thecall of a convention to male a nh-" NtuJv "ith the Jl of auch ci V 1 the libitiohr mryeulogies of the prohibiuocSuse in Democratic papers , it concluded to support it. Democratic . papers which are mostly read by Democrats, are adding largely to St. J ohn's followers by their editorials in favor of prohibition, and as is seen even changing some Democratic papers. This is a result they were not expecting. The Indianapolis Sentinel complains that Blaine has commenced suit against it. when the same matter had before been published in other papers. The same matter did not appear in any other paper, the Sentinel was the only paper that made any charge against Mrs. Blaine, and it was for that Mr. Blaine promptly and properly ordered a ' suit for libel, and for this prompt action he is generally commended by all respectable people. The C'a-nvtitatiannl Convention nee Mere. To the Editor of the Palladium : The Palladttm, some weeks since, in answer to. the question whether a constitutional convention can be legally called, and if so, how. answers that it can be through the legislature. That neither our present constitution, ! nor that of 1S1G, made any provision for a new constitution, yet the legislature of 184!) called a convention which framed a new constitution the one we now have. In last week's issue I showed that the convention of 1S50 was called by a vote of the people in strict occordance with the article n amendment, except as to time, and that the work of the convention was the constitution of 1S16 amended or revised. I further stated that the power of the legislature is that delegated, to it by the people through the constitution. To this you reply by bringing legal authority showing that where a State constitution makes no provision for its amendment, the legislature has the right to act in the matter, which I suppose no one doubts. This is not the question in dispute. Nor is it whether we need an essentially new constitution as regards its subject matter; as a very large majority of the people of the State will agree with Governor Porter in his message to the legislature et TS?1, where he says, "The provision of the present constitution are, in the main, wise and satisfactorv to the people." Nor is the question whether the 900,000 people of the State in 1351 tried by that constitution to unduly bind the millions of their posterity. 'For here again a majority

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jof the people will 'agree with the Gov

ernor in ine same message wnen ne Bay: .By the simple means provided in th constitution itself ample facilities are furnished for amending that instrument, as each amendment may from time to time be deemed necessary." The debates in the convention of 1851 on - the articles of amendment as well as the instrument itself, shows they had the fullest regard for the rights of posterity. James Kariden, a distinguished member of that convention from Wayne county, said : "I suggest that when the work of this body comes to be acted upon, and it should be found to be defective, whether it is not the part of wisdom to provide a mode by which it may be amended without the expense of calling a convention. I am inclined to believe that the expense that the people have had in calling this convention will have the effect of inducing them to endure much inconvenience rather than undertake to make amendments where the mode of making them is so troublesome." ' The constitution provides that amendments shall pass through two successive legislatures and then be submitted to a vote of the people, and in no other way. Now, the question is this: Can the legislature of Indiana, taking an oath to support the constitution, call a convention to amend or revise it or authorize a vote of the people on the subject? Where is their authority for it? I fit is held that the articles on amendment are not binding, why are they in the constitution ? If they were ever obligatory when did they cease to be so? What is the need of courts to decide on the constitut ionality of statute law if the law -makers are not expected to obey the constitution? C. W. Osborn. Faded nalr Beauties. London World. 1 The faded Adonis of 50 ha- found the unusual heats of the season this yeai tell upon him severely. Until the middle of June he 1ot' up bravely; but the two or three weeks of warmth and sunshine which then supervened were too much, and he sighs for Buxton or E ants for Homburg. It may be that if e takes sedulous care of himself he will for several seasons remain fairly ; personable; but just now he does as unwisely in showing himself in his club or in the park in the gaudy glare of the day, as mature matrons, whose complexions are indebted even viore to art than nature, do in failing to eek subdued lights, or in lingering kt festive gatherings till the last satband has been danced in the hall. Twenty years ago the male ln-auty, who is to-day in a state, of temiorary prostration, was a remarkably handsome man. His way with women was what elists call caressing. His couversawas made up of insipidities, but red in a tone which was winning, bcarceiy a tributes remains, j The not acquired the age outfit to tituted for his ner a feebleare sugges- . Something ained by the mug arrangenery or the qiusite has uek. The r ability to s generated tion as of lelf to take ably shiverhout being nt swards of ;al in its orits effeots. ous to witness which seem to epilepsy in tnem, made male beauty to assume his society and to ply his vanl arts. No one would grudge him e sort or success tnat occasionally aits upon his efforts. He uiduws a widow of quality to accompany him to the altar, or ho imposes upon i the credulity of the proprietress of a less experienced heart. The relics of heavy swelldom have their marketable value, and it is lucky for the gentleman to whom they constitute their sole capital and stock-in-trade that the stuttering imbecility which years have brought is not always regarded as a disqualification. " Sbe Vnderniood Politics. The Judge.l "Now, let me see if 1 understand thl presidential election in Chicago," said a blushing bride at Niagara to her spouse, as they gazed at the Niagara falls, aftr they had enriched the hackman for life: 'Blaine and Cleveland were chosen, were they not, my deary pet?" ''They were nominated at Chicago, my sweety sweet not elected." "Wheu will they bo elected, my angel lover "Only one of them will be elected, dove.' "Then why were they both nominated at Chicago, my petty pet?" "You see, my dear, one is a Democrat and the other is a Republican." "Then what is the use of having two men nominated at Chicago if they can't both be elected? I know there are always two men on the ticket. There were Tilden and Hendricks and Hayes and "Wheeler. Pa told me so." "Yes; but you must understand that there is a vice president." "Oh, my darling of darlings!" exclaimed the bride, reproaching herself for her doubts; "I see it all now. Cleveland is to be president and Mr. Blaine vice-president. ' Then the husband mortgaged a farm of his and took his bride for a drive to Whirlpool Rapids in a hack. i Novel l ie t a Tombstone. . Exchange. A Providence. R. I., lady went into a market one day recently and called for corned beef . The market -man took the stone for holding the meat down in the brine from the barrel, and laying out two or three pieces of beef for her examination, turned to wait upon another customer. While he was thus engaged her eye fell upon the stone that the market-man had taken from the barrel, and she read: Susan- . , Died -, 1S49, Aged 8 months. The beef in the barrel had no further attraction for her, and with a remark that expressed to the market-man the horror she felt at the use to which the stone was applied, she left the store. As she went out he remarked: "I dont generally keep that on beef; it belongs in the pork-barreL" Butte, Mont, is advanced enough support a manicure. to

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PHOTOGRAPHING MOTION.

Maafttfi KxaerlBwaU at the I'ni- ' versify ef Pennsylvania. , PkUadeiphia Record. i Interesting experiments in instantaneous photography are beinsr made by Edward Muybridgeat the university of Pennsylvania. A space on the college grounds has been set apart with a high loard.fetiee surrounding Uxree, aides it thelnofosurt; tae fence fcas.eea paint! a bright white. On the fourth side there t3 a shed covered with black material, while the ground is covered with an inch of coal dust. "This is the background and directly opposite is a little structure, with an open front, containing twelve cameras. Saturday the lenses were covered with double rubber shutters, and each was held in place by a latch. Each of these latches was, connected with a wire and so arranged that the closing of an electric circuit would liberate the shutters and for the thousandth part of a second permit light to shine into the camera. A splendidly-developed young student, a member of the university crew, stripped to the skin, was photographed in various attitudes. He took his position in front of the row of cameras. At a signal he seized a bucket of water, raised it in the air and tossed away the contents. The insfant he moved. Mr. Muybridge touched an electric button. A series of sharp clicks sounded as in rapid succession the shutters of 'eweu camera were freed. As the last click sounded the water was falling to the ground, and twice photographs had been taken of the young man, representing twelve phases of the movements through which his body went while lifting the pail and emptying it of water. Even the water itself was photographed as just leaving the pail, again as falling, and again as reaching the ground. , ... The young athlete was also photographed, pulling a rowing-machine, climbing a ladder, striking a ball, ' aud other movements designed to bring his muscles into full play. The actions and motions of two cripples were successf ully transferred to plate. Studies were made of a nude female model. Instead of a rOw of cameras exposed in succession, six cameras were concentrated upon the model's figure one in front, one behind, and four others so as to give side views at different angles and all were exposed simultaneously for a fraction of the second during which she was making the specified movement. Mr. Muybridje's experiments are under the supeision of a committee of the university faculty, composed of Provost Pepper, Professor Harrison Allen, Dr. Leidy, Professor George F. Barker, Professor Marks, Professor Huidekeper of the veterinary department, Professor Aikens of the academy of fine arts, and Dr. Dercnm. Photographs will be taken to show the consecutive phases of motion of selected men and women while performing muscular exercises and different ; mechanical operations, as carpentry and blaeksmithing; the movements of persons suffering from palsy and diseases of the joints, showing exactly how the gait is affected, and analyzing accurately the abnormal action of the muscles; the movements of horses, dogs, and other animals at different rates of speed; the aerial locomotion of birds on the wing, and the methods of propulsion of marine mammals, aquatic birds and nsn. Tbe Sac ret of Breeding Kace-If orses. IBeU's Life. J . While the purchasers of Lord Fal mouth's mares most be thinfcihg. of what they must do in the future ifrmay not' be amiss to say a few word's respecting the great success that baa attended the Cornish nobleman as a breeder of blood stock. It is admitted on aft sides that his success in tilts department has betn unrivalled, and that even t6e achieve ments of Sir Joseph Haw ley and Mr. Mtrry cannot be compared with the efforts of the noble lord during the period he has devoted to the rearing of race-horses. It is my purpose to sav something on the theory practised h) Lord Falmouth, which perhaps explains more than anything his unexampled success. The late Dr. Shorthouse always demanded as a sine qua non in the pro duction of a really first-class racer tha, the stout and really excellent bloo should preponderate on yie side of tin dam, and fw a stud-horse vice versa, i. e., that the stouter blood should be 01. the sire's side. On this principle ha Lord Falmouth acted, and by means this principle all his greatest successe. may be explained. The tap-roots of th now scattered Mereworth stud are Sil verhair, Hurricane, and Queen Bertha, and all three were racers of some merit. These mares, it should be noticed, wer. very stoutly bred, and their stout bloo: largely predominated on the dam's side, and this is a desideratum in a bn; mare, although a great drawback and preventive of success in a sire. I have no space in the present article, but will some time endeavor to show that where male members of a certain family have been great failures at tht, stud, as in the cases of King Tom. btockwell, Rataplan, Melbourne, Or lan do, etc., whose sons were mostly conspicuous failures, their daughters were, on the contrary, great successes. On tht other hand, the sons of Newminster, as a rule, did very well at the stud, but very few of his daughters produced animals of any merit. Excellence of blood is maintained in the female line for a considerable length of time, and to this is due the success which has attended Lord Falmouth as a breeder. J Whit the Pan Whisper, j : Boston Times. Young girls fan themselves rapidly in church, as if to say: "I'll catch him. I'll catch him, I'll catch him," while matrons are more calm about it, and teach their fans to softly murmur: "I've got him, I've got him. I've got him," while fans in the hands of widows tell the sad story as plainly as possible: "I'-v-e 1-o-s-t h-i-m, T-v-e 1-o-s-t h-i-m, T-v-e 1-o-s-t h-i-m." How Straek Little Jehnny. New York Graphic. A little boy asked his father the other day, after some Boston people had left, "if Boston people were born grown up." Plantation Philosophy: De man carried erway wid hate is like de stan carried erway wid love. It is mighty seldom dat he's tempered wid good sense. Hisjht lm Style. Philadelphia C1L -John Say, George, you really ought to Enow better than to scratch that way in public George I scratch because I itch; and. ftiore than that, I am proud of the itching. "Shameless fellow 1" "Shameless? Not a bit of it. I am night in the height of style. Them's 1 a-day -summer-resort mosquito bites. "

Yanghan'sNew Block, Has some decided - Bargains in IHrsUins Houses. , Has decided Bargains in Lots. Has decided Bargains in Farms. Come and see me I will do yon good. Have yon money to loan? ' I have some first-class secniitiee for yoo. Do yon want to borrow money? Come, and I will supply yon if your title and security is right. Insnre your property In my Agency. If yon have a loss, I wQl see yon are paid promptly. ' Renting honses a specialty. Come and see me. AI.VIX E. CROCKER. anglSdtf FRENCH FARMING. The Misery of the Poor in the French Agricultural Districts. A Conn try of ttnaa.ll Proprietors Ho the Small Farmers Live Childhood's First Lessons Farming ' Implements. . American Agriculturist France is one of the richest agricultural countries of Europe. Its 2O4,5o0 square miles of area, produce both temperate aud sub-tropical crops. The olive, the mulberry, and the vine flourish in the south, and In the uurth and northwest (the most fertile part of Europe), the wheat and beet root are the staple crops, l he hitter is most important product, as it is upon it that the sugar supply of the country mainly depends. Beet-root sugar first became known in France when the wars of the first Napoleon closed the empire to Im portations from America, lu manufae ture is now one of the great industries of the country. Unlike England," France is a country of small proprietors. The great revolution wrested the vast estates from their heradi tary owners, and threw them into the market. They were then broken up aud purchased piecemeal, and though many large properties have been gathered together since then, their number is small compared with that of the individual farms. The result of this condition of affairs. Is that while in Entrland wealth centers in the manufacturing districts,' and the great cities, in France it is generally ainusea over me wnoie country, in tnir land the farmer pays : heavy taxes and heavy rent. In France, he pays heavy taxes but no rent. lie saves money, and there are lew iarmers indeed, wuo are not small capitalists. The extremely frugal habits of the agricultural people of France aid in bringing about this result In England, as iu America, the farmer, thoudh he mav be a careful man, does not stint Tilmself of necessities. He lives well, and he educates his children. ' In France matters are differ ent. To the misery of the poor in the French a ari cultural districts, no mere descriDtion can do justice. Like the condition of the English agricultural laborer, theirs Is one of black, hopeless , privation. There are sections in which meat is an unknown ar ticle of diet to them. At best they get a scrap oi it, and tnat oi the cheapest kind, once a week. Bread of the poorest quality, ana potatoes iw.-m tneir staples of diet. The bread is generally baked in batches to last several weeks, ami is eaten even when bitter with mould. In the mountain districts of France, the agricultural poor sup ply tne place oi potatoes with fungus . pkked in the woods, which is of a kind too coarse for market. Thousands of the small farmers, however, live from choice, quite as poorly as i. : 11 'I" v , - . . characteristic of some of the people, They save at the expense of their bodies and their minds. All that they raise in a condition fit to eat is sold; the rest they live on. The agricultural districts of France are very wealthy in money hoarded away Dy people wbom one would not sus pect of being anything but beggars, if they were encountered on the high-road. The holiday suit often lasts a fanner a life time. He only wears it on occasions of show, and is not ashamed of his work ing clothes. The types of country life in. France are probably distinct from those of any otner country in the world. In some sections, the men and women dress according to their employments, so that you can distinguish between the field and the stable laborer, the dairy women, and the house servant at sight. In France, as in England, the first lessons of childhood are labor. The babies are made scare-crows of, and set to watching the geese; children of larger growth drive the lean swine, which look like dogs in their meagreness. and drudge in the barn-yards ana the fields. The various implements now in use on the finest farms in France, would be considered old-fashioned across the channel. In the best sections, the plow is little better than that which the .Egyptian uses to scratch the soil. On very many farms, the spade and hoe are made to do duty for the plow. . With small farms and cheap labor, such a method is possible, but it would make France a new country for the farmer, if it was plowed up from end to end like one of our great farms. "American tools find little favor with the French fanner ss yet. We once passed a group of fifty people gathered at a roadside in Normandy, to watch the workings of an American plow. don's Inner Circle Railroad. Scientific Journal The London Inner Circle railroad Is a niarvcloQS feat of1 engineering skill. It runs throughout its entire distance under the buxieet center of the largest city in the world, and the operations attending the excavation and construction have proceeded without serious injury to or interruption of business or traffic. Quicksands have had to be passed through, beds of old rivers spanned, lofty warehouses and massive - buildings secured while their fooodations have been undermined, and an intricate network of gas and water pipes sustained until supports had been applied to them from below. Added to this, the six main sewers had several times to be reconstructed. Day and night the work has been carried on for eighteen months, and now the engineers are able to announce that their tunnel is complete. The laying of the rails and the building of the stations are the only portion of the immense work that remains to be done, and in a very short time train will be passing over the whole of this wonderful subterranean rocd.

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Big Drives in Gloves, Hosiery, Underwear, Corsets, Etc

We ba?RIgDrlm in TABLK f X'TLERYlsVon. recent Bankrupt Nalen. Flags and Firecrackers At One-half the Price Usually Paid.

COOE AX1 NEE US

For Dishes, Glass and Tinware,

Fifty Fine Oil Paintings in Elegant Frames, at S3. ' KNABFS BAZAR,

may9dwtf TVTATTT

BOOTS ? --- ( SHOES. . to ill L

STRiasT. -MM

Ladies Hand Turn Soft Shoes; Ladies Hand Sewed Common Sense Shoes; $T Gent's Fine Fashionable Shoes; Boy's Fine Fashionable Shoes; Gents' all Calf $3.00 Shoe. J. M. WILLIAMS. tnaySdawtf

WM. H. BRADBURY & SON, Insurance and Real Estate! MONEY TO LOAN.

Notaries Telephone 134.

WE WTIX-X. SURVIVE! To whom It may Conoern : We would most respectfully announce that we are prepared to rive prompt attention to all orders in the line of Wire and Iron) Work, Ire f 'loth. Cheese fatfe. Fir., and If the Hardware awl Woodennare dealers, Arrhlleela, Builders and Mill Furnlnhlna; trade of the United Htates who do not succeed in bavin their orders filled promptly, win send them to as ws will endeavor to fill them without delay. aMrvatalogusa of Iron Fencing and other lines of goods free on application.

Detroit,

National Wire & Iron Co.

RICHMOND BUSINESS DIRECTORY MANlTAtTOHIIX KOBINBON A CO., ' Manufacturers of Portable and Stationery Kaginea. Horse Powers, Heparators, circular Haw Mills, Drag haw, Clover nailers, baw xaoies, Boners, uaaungs, etc. BANKS. Jas. E. Bbkvbs, Prest. J. F. Rbbvks, CashY I FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Richmond. Indiana Capital stock paid In tSOO.OOS surplus rand, aiwuu. rrompt attention paid to au eoueenons. Lyon's Drug Store Corner Hlxth and Main HI reels. angSd.wtf ODORLENM Excavating Company! Offlce Hatfield ft Taoghan'a Stables, No. 13 North Eighth afreet. I am better than everCprepared to attend an orders sor Vault, Sin! or Cess Fool Cleaiim! W Office eentralrv located fHATFTELD A VAUGHANU STABLE.) All orders left there will receive prompt attention. Prices shall be nnlformly low. JnneSdtf MIAMI SCHOOL FOR MS,' telaet Hams xznfnrt. fain as to ace. Careful personal anpervision. Mo better ennlpped school in A marina For eataXoama address Trafmnt sk Marsh, OUbrd, Bo tier Coonty, Ohio. rT " " CAMPAIGN UNIFORMSSend tor niostratsd Catalogue, with illaaiiiiiils. E. A. ARMSTRONG, Of Ke 1 K. of 1 I. O. O. F. And all other tsllnsii, Bocalla, Etc 309 ft 210 Jefferson, avrw, Detroit, MlrJi. ang7dawlm CwasBMirial aad RaOr! Print; OF ivxrt DEscarpnow, ., Done at the Padaditim Job Offioe.

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alii txxcl. Slattlm. ntroota. Public 730 Main street. Mich. DR. DAVID KENNEDY'S VJ 0 REMEDY For the Can mt Kid nay and Liver Cans plaints. Constipation and all disorders ariaine from an impure state of the BLOOD. To women who suffer from any of tbe ills paeo liar to their mi it is an unfitting friend. All Drnrf it. One Dollar a bottle, or address It. 1stm1 Kennedy, Bondont, M. If. AMONG RAILROAD MEN opnlarttjr a ant fjeorainewa nf Ir. Kennedy's Favorite Bnrer A Thrill, lag 1-elter from m Master Meefanaie. Masteb Mara turn's BnprganinfT's Omm, 1 Lowell Kkpaib Haopa. Boerosi a; Lowri.L, H'j V Lowell, Mass, March 25, lttttt. Da. David Kchitxdt. Bokdotjt, N. T. : Dsar Kir I think It is due to yon that I shorjld make the following statement, and I make it voluntarily and willingly : On the 4th day of June, ltctl, I was taken with what was celled paralysis of the bowels. The seizure was nnezpected and terrible. The stomach and other organs seemed to sympathize with it and to have lost all power of action. For a long time my Ufa was despaired of. but at length I recovered so far as to be able to ride out- By tbe advice of my physician I visited Poland Bprlnga (Vt.), hoping to benefit from the waters. Bat ttiev did me no good. Neither were the best physicians of Lowell and Boalon, whom I eoatafted, able to afford me more than transient relief. I gained no strength, and my ease appeared almost honsleea. Ia tha Pall a friend advised me to try KENNEDY'S FAVORITE KKMF.DY. and althoncb orroosed to natent madleioes, x meets toe via, i o mai Ions' atorw short FAVORITE BEktXDY. la my opinion. saved my life. I consider It tbe best imnn tion la the world lor stomach diffieultiee, aa well aa of tbe Liveraod other organs. I am glad to ay it is in general use """"g tho B. tt. men In this vicinity. roars, ete , A . J. GIFTORD. Mr. Gifford is ttas Master UMhi , Lowell division of tbe Boston A Lowall Ra.iini and his illness and recovery are known to many Use this medicine for all dissasns of tbe Blood, Kidneys, Liver, Stomach. Bowela and Skin. Ik may save yon or roars from pain and death. Address, if desired, JJr. David Kennedy, Rondoat, N. Y. JnJyaaoaon,wadafriAw tf AYER'S Ague (Dure WAltASTEB to core ail eases of malarial diaeaae, snch as Fever and Ague. Intermitaant or Chill Fever, BenrttZat Dnmb and Liver OomplamtTli ease of failure, after dae trial, dealers Tars to. tboraedby oar circular of July 1, l&Q, to reDr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Matt.

- ymr !

Sold by an Drngglrta-lolyl'U.wef-tta

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