Bloomington Courier, Volume 13, Number 16, Bloomington, Monroe County, 19 February 1887 — Page 3

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TENSION Bllili VETOED.

5

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i the ?Mirv or" health : therctow, to keep

purity Ibe.btooii iv inking Hood's Sintfrtaritl. j This metiiein? is peculiarly -dcsignccVto act upon j the blood, and through, that upon alt the organs ; a ad tusuesof the body. Tt has a senile action, j

a&o, upon the secretions and excretions ami assists nature to expel from the system all humors, impure panicles, aud effete matter through the lungs, liver, bowels, kidneys, and skin. It effectually aids weak, imp urcd.and debilitated organs, invigorates the nervous system, tones the digest vc oralis, and rmparts new life and energy to ail the functions of the body. A peculiarity of Hood's SarSaparilUi is that it strengthens and guilds up the system while it eradicates disease. ' "I think Hood's arsnparilla an excellent medi

cine for the blood, and from debility arising from

yspepsia and catarrh. We keep it constantly for

fcimily use, and niive not found any remedy so, beneficial." 2f, . Clf.vDSEY, 10 Courtiandt St.. Providence, it I: . . . Hood-s SarsapariUa

on rinmxiat -si siv tor so. -rrepanxi

5.

Sold by all druggists. 1; x to ?. he a f ROOD & CO.. Apothecaries, Lowell, uuv.

1 OO Doses One Dollar.

9 ?

i riw Gre4t Cure on Earth for Pain." W&fl " eli9T a more QUt&Iy tium any otter kxv-wn rem3 Swellings. Stiff Jieck, Braises, irti iTYi Bums, Scalds, Cuts, laml-g ' b2r5C3 drufeta. Caution. Hhe (Ten-1 F ;st?5 . taB Salvation Oil bears oorH . tt:j5D rceiateivtt TraJe-Mart:, aad ourB ,is!Jrri!a atonatnr A. a Meyer A Ch, BoleB

BOLLT mm SYR8P !Of theCHTB of Conghs, Colds, Hoarseness, CroiatV, Asthma, Bronchitis, HThooplug Cough, Incipient Coa5ns&ptfcn, and for the relief of con n motive persons la advanced stages of the disease. For Sale by all Dra& prists, PncewS5eat&

it

The heat and saxestBemedy for Cure of

all diseases erased by any derangement of j.

tvo liiTer. Jkiuneys, scomacn ana rvowtjs. Dyipepsiat Sick Headache, ConsUpatir n, Bilions Complaints and Malaria of all kinds

yield readily to the beneficent influence of

it' f

iirrrsiia . . -. - . . .- .... ......

1

It Is pleasant to the taste, tones up the

system, restores and jweserves health.

It is purely Vegetable , and cannot feu to prove beneficial, both to old and yonn. ' As a faood. Purifier it is superior tt all others- Sold everywhere at $1.00 a bottle.

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Haikesville, N. J., 1 October 15, 1886. j E. T. Hazeltlste, . . Warren. Pa. u

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I -was taken with a very severe eoul last Spring, and tried every care "we had in the store, and could-get no help. ' I had orir village doctor prescribe for nie, bat kept getting worsen I saw another physician irom Port Jefvis, N Y.t and he told me &e asel Piso's Care for Con--gmnption in his practice. I &2ght a bottle, and before I had taken all of it there was a change for the better. Then I got my emplover. io order a quantity of the" medicine and keep it in stock. 1 took one more bottle,and my Cough; was cured. Respeetfully, I

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CURES WHERE All Ek.SE FAILS.

r'BeatCoiiifhSj

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15 a

Will purify BtOOO recnlsta tlift L1VP ar.d KIDNEYS end

itgaroae the HEAI-.TH and ylO-

Tnd:utsrf:ii-IJlck of

olacelj e4r Boi;ej, tans-

ana nerve T3vif i force. Ealfvens thp .niud pml :tir.Uej Brin Power.

"TSiifftirinK from complftlntetiw?

f r t n t hoi r SfeX Will DQb in liXk

safe, speedy enro. ttvee.

Ali&uempts at cucnu iiivlu. not. Ariorir:

r. iMBrrmc i IUCO PILLS

Hiaeae. Bamvre i)nsciud Dream Bockl

WW. HARTER HDJC1HS CC-. ST. 10U1S, fca

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DISCOVERY.

WhoUyimllkeArtJficlalSystemsareofjffiaWaafieri mrAnv book le&mod In one reading. Heavy y- t

dueilons for postal classes, Frospecius, witnopmions of air. Proctor, the Astronomer Hons. W, W Astott, Jotah p. Besjjjus, Dra. JUjfOR Wood and QAeVtsenxpodt FEEE,by

DOMESTIC. Throat diseases are raging over the entire country with a malignancy heretofore unknow n. High water is doing considerable damage in Chicago, southern Michigan and western New York. Four firemen were fatally injured during a hre at SanFrancisco, Thursday, in a Japanese fancy store. Edison, the famous inventor, is said to be a hopeless invalid. He has lately become a convert to spiritualism. Thirty-two persons were killed and thirty-six injured in the Vermont Central bridge disaster last week. The low lands adjacent to Nashville, Tenn., are overflowed ,and many families have been run out of their homes. Chicago socialists contributed $2,200

in four davs to aid in the election of a socialist candidate for the German reichstag. :i. The winter has been the severest for ten years in Montana. The loss of cattle will be large, and many persons have perished in the snow.

Pete Keddiuger and Henry Kurtz were killed in a Lebanon Valley (Pa.) furnace by being covered with red-hot cinders. A tank full fell over on them. George E. Dexter, a prominent citizen of Chicago; III., was accused last week of bastardy. He was sixty years old, and iied Monday of worry oyer the charge. The jail at Murfreesboro, Tenn., burned Sunday, and Moses Maney, Jack Irwin and Dilse Lyon, colored, cremated. The first two were train wreckers; the third a forger. The New York strike of 'longshore men and freight handlers resul ted in the complete defeat of the strikers. Business has resumed its normal condition, with aew men at all the docks. The marriage of Miss Annie Randall, daughter of Representative Randal l,and Mr. Charles Calvert Lancaster, took place Tuesday afternoon, at the family residence, on Capitol Hill, at 3:30

o'clock. ...,.." A small farm house occupied by a man named Lucklum, near Oefterson,

-.Iowa, was entirely consumed by fire, Wednesday afternoon, and Lucklum's aged father wife and sou were burned to death. When the ice gorge from above reach' ed Loekhaven, Pa., the pressure was so great on the boos that upward of 2,000,000 feet of saw logs were forced out and carried away. The logs will be a total loss, as no booms are hung belo w, W. J. Gallagher, Joe Mackin's alleged partner in the Chicago fraud of 1884, Wednesday pleaded guilty to forgery of water rebates on the city treasurer ot Chicago and was sentenced to the penitentiary for one year by Judge Anthony. It is reported that negotiations are pending between the Adams Express company and the Baltimore & Ohio railroad by which the Adams may acquire control of the Baltimore & Ohio express business. No details can as yet. be obtained. Newton Watt, baggagemaster on the Rock Island train, on which Kellogg

Nichols, express messenger, was killed

and robbed last year at Morris, 111., has been arrested for committing the deed. Brakeman Sch warts, already in custody

on suspicion, criminated him. A fire in a livery stable at St. Louis, Thursday, caused a loss of $150,000. Four men lost their jives under falling walls, and two or three others were injured. One of the vehicles burned was the hearse in which the remains of the martyred President, Abraham Lincoln, were.conveyed to their lastrestiug place. The hearse had not heen used since. Bradstreet's makes the following estimate of losses, the result of strikes in this country since Janrary 1: Wages sacrificed by strikers, ,650,000; loss of wages to employes thrown out of work by strikes of fellow-workmen, 1350,000; losses to trade and through the increased price of coal, etc., $4,280,000; total, $7,280,0)0. The Law and Order club of Leavenworth, Kas., is engaged in a conflict with the saloons, and much excitement exists. Carl Mueller and F, M. Anthony, two of the club's representatives, were assaulted Saturday night, and one of them shot a gambler named Ryan in

j the leg.. Further bloodshed is feared

and gamblers and roughs will be ordered to leave town, Bradstreet's review estimates hat the cjscrease in the value of domestic trade

j at the nprj; of New York, due to strikes indicated by e$(? jfork bank clearings, may he placed ftt fif$$, and that

the strikers have reduced the total yalue of foreign trade $8,380,000 at least within two weeks, and that the strikers have lost $3,000,000 in wages, and at New York alone have entailed $900,000 extra expense on employers and the public. There was a heavy snow storm, Sunday night, extending though northern Montana, from norfch of Fort Assinaboine to Fort Shaw, F?om four to eight inches fell, making from iovpetem to

twenty-five inches now on the level. The cattle are suffering terribly. The fuel famine coniinues at Fort Benton. Coal is $60 a ton and is extremely difficult to obtain even at that figure. Wood i3 scarce and is selling at a high figure. The Indian commissioners have been

snoy b.Quml at Choteau since January 28. . ,' Since January I 8f,6Qd men jiiave struck throughout theeountry,as against 47,200 during a similar period Jast year, Besides these, 16.300 workers in factories are idle on account of lack of coal, or 104,000 in all. Out of eight of last year's strikes four ended in favor or the 1,170

men employed. During January ninety

strikes ere started, involving 78,000 men. Of these thirty-to have ended. Twenty-t-p were successful. Nine lailed, involving 5,200 men.

to attack Russia before tho latter has j completed her preparations on the lower Danube. It says: "War is inevitable, j

and it is better to begin the lighting before the Balkan atates have been Russianized. Austria would thus secure an alliance with Servia and Bulgaria, giving her 100,000 additional troops." In the Commons Monday night Mr. Parnell moved the following amendment to the address from the throne: "The relations between the owners and occupiers of land have not been seriously disturbed in the cases of those who granted their tenants such abatements as were demanded by the prices of agricultural and pastoral produce. The remedy for the crisis in Irish agrarian affairs will be found not in the increased stringency of criminal procedure, or in pursuit of such novel, doubtful and unconstitutional measures as those recently taken by her Majesty's government, but in such retorm of the law and sysiem of government as will satisfy the needs and secure the confidence of the Irish people." This he supported in a calm and dispassionate speech. The Attorney-General, Hugh Holmes, said no part of the amendment could be accepted. Mr. Gladstone has promised to support the amendment. The debate will probably last a week.

President Cleveland Vetoes an net for the llcliet of Dependent Parent and Honorably Discharged .Soldiers and .Sailors Jlriof Tit of a Long Messago.

AGRICULTURE AND DAIR Y.

PreHident Keall Delivers an Address Calculated to Make Capital Turn Pale. The eighth annual convention of the American Agricultural and Dairy Association began at the Grand Central Hotel New York Wednesday morning. The meeting is an important one, and will transact business of general interest throughout the country. The convention met, with President Real in the chair. At the afternoon session President Reall delivered his annual address. He said the association had brought about good feeling between farmers and railroads, and secured the first recognition of fanners by Congress in the passage of the oleomargarine bill. Continuing, he said: "The workingmen are your brothers, aud demand your interest, and sympathy.

They are resisting, under the leadership of that pnre-minded, honest, unselfish, wise man, T. V. Powderly, the tyranny of capital. I have studied the principles and nature of the Knight of La

bor, and they are truth. The men who

would swindle you are the men they contend with. Armour led the

fight against the oleomargarJne law in

the interest of fraud, counterfeiting and robbery of the poor. He fought the

last, battle with the Knights of Iabor in

Chicago. We demand fair pay and un-

trammeled markets for the products of

our labor. So do the Knights of Labor;

nothing less, nothing more. Together

we may save the country from impending ruin. They and the farmers comprising a large majority of the people,

and it remains for us to act together for

the good of both and achieve such results within this year as will astonish the world. I have found capital selfish, dishonest, ignorant; it sucks the life blood of the element upon which it depends lor sustenance. In its unscrupulousness it will destroy the foundation of its life and strength. It is without

principle and mercy, and if it cannot

corrupt man, it will, if possible, destroy

him. It is unfeeling, unwise, more grasping and inconsiderate than the grim monster death." Mr. Reall said neither the tariff nor the revenue laws should be disturbed now, and business should not bo continually menaced by threatened changes, "Pay oft the public debt," he said, promote agriculture, encourage American shipping, establish schools of art and science, which will take up all the surplus in the Treasury."

Floods in Michigan. A Lyons, Michigan,dispatch of Friday, says: The flood here is simply terrible. A panic has seized some of the people, and t is impossible to get estimates of losses. The water in some places is four feet deep in many residences, and the same state of affairs prevails in many storerooms. Everybody is moving or preparing to move. .Last night was the most exciting the village has ever experienced. Up to last night three buildings had been washed away and demolished,and many others were badly damaged. Alexander McFarlane's family are sick and cut off from assistance. At Muir the 'same serious conditions prevail and merchants have abandored their stores. Specials from other points are io the same effect, but Lyons seems to be the worst sufferer.

$7 Fifth. Avenue. Brew York.

.LeifirHo: 1, 04$ 1 30, 1 35, 333v1 61. For &s.le by-a! Stationers, THE -EBTE-aS&OO 3TEEL PEM CO., ; Ibss: Camden. N". J. .. 26 John St., New York

3 m 5 Ta l l e l S CPA ! l s 7 ma Bervt Umgii Synin. Tastes g-ood. 58

Kobled of ?,060. Jacob Miller, a wealthy Quaker of Iebanon, was robbed in Atlanta,, Ga., Thursday night of $27,500. He stopped over night at a hotel, and upon retiring, placed his clothes containing the amount over the back of a chair. In the morning the wealth was gone, and no trace of it has yep faeen found. It consisted of 33,500 in cash and certied checks on Ohio banks for- $24,000. ' lie ' claims to be able to lose it. Ilia purpose was to purchase land to establish a Quaker colony. Twenty-five cadets, and officers were arrested at. St. Petersburg 3Sundayf for complicity in a conspiracy against the goyerhinent. Tfie iscoverers of the plot have evidence to show that the grand general's staff at the military academy, the students in nearly all the military and naval schools, as well as several

university students,nre implicated in the conspiracy. Tli e Now York Strike. District A ssembly 49 Friday called out

engineers employed on the steamship and railroad piers, but the call was not obeyed in a Bingle instance. It is conee.ded by the strikers that the strike has

j failed,, Hid tho purpose was to extend it

reyasal of

The Italian ministry have a resigned. Mr. Goschen, chancellor of the ex

chequer, was Wednesday" elected to i all over tlie country, imt the

parliament from St. teorge's, Hanover the engineers to comply may require a

square, Lopdon . " . .

The President sent a message to the House, Friday, vetoing the dependent pension bill. Its reading produced a decided sensation. The bill was passed by the House on Jan. 17, under suspen

sion of the rules, the voce standing-

yeas 180, nays 76. It was passed by the Senate, on Jan. 2;J, without a division.

The larce anirmativo vote obtained ior

the bill in the House encourages its friendsto hope that they can again pass it, notwithstanding the President's objections. The chances for its passage in the Senate over the veto are considered slim. The message is very lengthy, too long for publication in these columns at this time. The President calls attention to the fact that this is not the first bill passed granting pensions for service alone. Similar bills were oassed for the benefit of soldi ere in the revolutionary war in 1818, 1828 and 1832; for sold lean of the war of 1812 in 1871, and for Mexican war veterans in 1887. These laws of course embraced only comparatively few persons whose circumstances, dependence or disability were clearly defined and could be easily fixed or whose extreme old age was deemed to supply a presumption of dependence and need. He then presents

statistics of enlistment and of pensions to show that the number of beneficiaries under the act would reach avast number, hardty to be computed, and argues that the provisions of the bill as to proving dependence and need would afford practically no defense against mendacity and greed, and says:

I am of the opinion that it may fairly be contended that under the provision of this .section, any soldier whose faculties of mind or body have become impaired by accident, disease or age, irrespective of his service in the army as a cause, and who by his labor only is left incapable of earning the fair support he might have, with unimpaired powers, provided for himself, and who is not so well endowed with this world's goods as to live without work, may claim to participate in its bounty; that it is not required that he should be without property; but only that labor should be necessary to his support in some degree) nor is it required that he should be now receiving support from others.

Believing this to be the proper interpretation of the bill, I cannot but remember that the soldiers of our civil war, in their pay and bounty, receive such com

pensation foi military service as has never been received by soldiers before since mankind first went to war, that never before, on behalf of any soldiers, have so many and such generous laws been passed to relieve against the incidents of war; that statutes ha ve been passed giving thein, a preference in all public employments; that the really needy and homeless Union soldiers of the rebellion have been, to a large extent, provided for at soldiers' homes, instituted and supported by the government, where they are maintained together, free from the sense of degradation which attaches to the usual support of charity, and that never before in the history of the coun-

try has it been proposed to render government aid toward the support of any

of its soldiers, based alone upon a military service so recent, and where age and circumstances appeared so little to demand such aid. Hitherto such relief

has been granted to surviving soldiers,

few in number, venerable in age, after a long lapse of time since their military . . " - v e

service, ana as a parang ueneiacuon tendered by a grateful people. I can not believe that the vast peaceful army

of Union soldiers, who, having contentedly resumed their places

in tne orainary vocations oi me, cherish as sacred the memory of patriotic service, or who, having been disabled

by the casualizes of war, justly regard

the present pension-roll, on which appear their names,as well as on a roll of honor, desire at this time and in the present exigency to be confounded with those

who, through such a bill as this, are will

ing to be objects of simple charity and

to gam a place upon the pension-roll

through alleged, dependence.

Recent personal observat ion and ex

perience constrain me to refer to another result which will inevitably follow the passage of this bill. It is sad, but never

theless true, that already, in the matter

of procuring pensions, there exists a wide-spread disregard of truth and good faith, stimulated by those who, as agents, undertake to establish Claims for pensions heedlessly entered upon by the expectant beneficiary, and encouraged, or at least not condemneu, by those unwilling to obstnnrt a neighbor's plan. In the execution of tjua proposed law, under any interpretation, a wide field of inquiry would bo opened for the establishment of facts largely within the knowledge of the claimants alone; and there can be no doubt that the race aiter the pensions offered by this bill would not only stimulate weakness and pretended incapacity for labor, bt put 4 further premium on dishonesty and mendacity, The effect of new invitations to apply for pensions, or of new advantages added to causes

for pensions already existing, is sometime startling. Thus, in March, 1879. , large arrearages of pensions were allow-1 ed to be added to all claims filled prior

to July 1 , 1880. For the year, from July 1, 1870, to July I, jj$q? there1 were filed 110,673 claims; though in the year- immediately previous there were hut B04 832 filed, and in tho year following but 18,455. Experience has demonstrated that

estimates of a pension list can not be relied upon, and always fall far behind the real number. The passage of this bill would utterly prevent any relief from war faxes now demanded by the people, and it cannot bo approved.

WASHlNGTQtfThe Senate has agreed to the House substitute for "the Senate C iunese indemnity bill. The Senate passed the bill prohibiting off-shore mackerel fishing during spawning season. The Senate has passed the postal appropriation bill, with an amendment giving a subsidy of $500,000 for service to South America in American vessels. W. II. Calkins, of Indiana, is urged by Messrs. Randall,Morrison, Matsoii, Voorhees and others for a place on the interState commission. The bills assed by Congress Monday appropriate $20,000,000 fornational defense, $6,000,000 for rehabilitating- coast fortifications, and $14,000,000 for guns and ordance. It was reported Wednesday night that President Cleveland had intimated to members of the House Committee on foreign affairs that he doesn't want any action taken on the proposed retaliatory measures pending in Congress. The rejection of Matthew's nomina

tion to be recorder of the District of Columbia was by a vote of 31 to 17. Nino Democrats voted i'or j ejection. Senator Ingall's reply to the President's communication accompanying the nomination, say 6: "The confirmation is opposed, with substantial unanimity, by the citizens of the district, without regard to color, politics or occupation." Undoubtedly the Mormons have spent a great deal of money to defeat the ultimate passage of the bill now pending before Congress, and which uproots the veiy foundation of their church. There aas been and is now the most bold and anscrupulous lobby employd that 'jould be secured, and it has gone right h on the floors of both houses and even

inirpf; r. ' irjvacy of the conference eom;i.j corsidering the cora-pruiaL-i- Jt is asserted openly thatth 5 Jisve a number of mera?,v.vi ;uw ' nutors at work for them, and that every man who can roach a Senator or member has been employed, if possible. The Mormons have a vast

amount of money at their disposal, and a

great deal more of real estate. All this will go to the winds if this bill goes into law, which it will do unless this "influ-

tfpfWT TOU WORRY." How Shrewd business Men Have Solved a Great Problem.

ence" is overpowering, which threatens to be the case. At any time during the day and it has been true for rnonths--oneconld see these lobby ists, In the out-otthe-way crannies of the Capitol, taliking to members and Senators. They have shown a zeal which indicates that their pay must be large and contingent upon final success. This measure has had more money

in its opposition than all bills which have been before the Forty-ninth Congress, uot excepting the many measures affecting corporations. The Mormon

Church, however, may be rightfully termed a corporation and more, it may be called a luonqpqly. It has a "corner" on the souls of hundreds of thousands of people in the Territories, aud it looks as though they were determined to close out the deal. Legislators who either oppose this. measure openly, or assist in deferring or delaying it on the quiet, will be held responsible for what they do, and will rest under the ban of suspicion of being bought,

Odds And EnlLs. (Sood Honsokeeplng. Iri, is marvellous what a difference there is in housekeepers and cooks in regard to utilizing or wasting the odds and ends of food. In a household where proper attention is paid to this matter there is no. waste, and a pleasant change of fare can be made daiy. It cannot truly be sai4 that the care p,f remnants and their preparation for- the table am sligM matters nevertheless, if a house keeper looks into her larder each morning, and avails herself of the opportun itiesshe mtds to make little dishes of the bits of food which she sees before her, the work of caring lor remnants may be prevented from becoming burdensome, ji housekeeper should exercise all the taste at her command in cooking these little dishes; greasy messes are not a desirable part 'of the family fare. An ISightIUllon-Dwlliir Suit. At Columbus, Qhio, Friday, President John y. SJiaw, of the Columbus, Hocking Valley & Toedq railway, sued Stevenson Burke, M. IL Qreime? CJiarJes Hiekox, Charles H. Hicfcox, William J. McKinnie, Chaunoey Andrews, John W, Ellis and the Ohio Central railroad company, and Judge Bingham granted an injunction restraining the defendants from selling their stock and to compel them to account for their indebtedness to the company for both stock and bonds. The individvjai defendants were directors of the corporation, and the voluminous complaint, in effect, charges them with conspiracy, by whjpii they secured g,090,QPQ of the ijou-pay's pro: perty, stocks and bonds, without the expenditure of a (teat. Shaw" wants it turned over to the company again.

4fs there a fatalioy among our prominent men" is a question that we oiten ask. It is a question that perplexes our eading medical men, and they are at a Joss to know how to answer it. We sometimes think that f the physicians would give part of the energy to the consideration of this question that they give to combatting other schools of practice, it might be satisfactorily

I answered.

I The fights of "isma" reminds us often 1 of the quarrels of old Indian tribes, that were only happy when they were annihiiating each other. If Allopathy makes a discovery that promises good to the race, Homcepathy derides it and breaks down its influence.

11 nomcepatby makes a discovery that promises lobe a boon to the race, Allopathy attacks it. It is absurd that these schools should fancy that all of good is in their methods and none in any other. Fortunately for the people, the merit which these "isms" will not recognize, is recognised by the public, and tins public recognition, taking the form of a demand upon the medical profession, eventually compels it to recognize it. Is it possible that the question has been answered by shrewd business men? A prominent man once said to an inquirer, who aaked him how he got rich, 1 got rich because I did things while other people were chinking about do:ihg them." It seems to us that the public have recognized what this fatality is,and

how it can be met. while the medica profession have been wrangling about it. By a careful examination of insurance reports we find that there has been a sharp reform with reference to examinations, (aad that no man can now get any amount of insurance who has rvhe least development of kidney disorder,) they find that sixty out of every hundred in this country do, either directly or indirectly, suffer from kidney disease. Henee, no reliable company will insure

a man except alter a rigid urinary examination. This reminds us of a little instance w hiph occtirred a short tme ago. A fellow editor was an applicant for a respectable amount of snsurance. He was rejected on - examination, because, unknown to himself, his kidneys were clis-

eased. 'The shrewd agent, however, did not give up the ease. He had an eye to business and to his commission, and

said: ."Don't you worry: you get a half

dozen bottles of Warner's safe eure,teke it according to directions. an$ in about a

month pome arqnnd, and we will hs.ve another examination. I know you will find yourself all right and will get your policy." The editor expressed surprise a,t the agent's faifch, hut the latter replied; "This point is a valuable one. Very many insu ranee age:ats all over the country, when they find a customer rejected for this cause, give similar advice, and eventually he gets the insurance." What are we to infer from such circumstancea? Have shrewd iusivwice me n , as w ell as othe r sure wd business men, found, the secret answer to the inquiry'? Is it possible that our columns

have been proclaiming, in the form of adertisements.what has proved a blessing in disguise to millions, and yet by many ignored as an adyertisenient? In our files we find thosands of strong

tesnimonials: for Warner's safe cui-e, no two alike, whjeh could not exist except upon a biisi of truth; indeed, they aye published under a guarantee of Sa,000 to any one who will disprove their correotnesa, and this offer has been standing, we are told, for more than four years; L ndoubtedly this article, which is simply dealing out justice, will be considered as an advertisement and be rejected by many as such We have not space nor time todiseuss the proposition that a poor thing could not succeed to the extent that this graat remedy has succeeded, could become so popular without merit even if pushed by a Vanderbilt or an Astor ISence we italje tpe liberty of telling our friends titiat it is a duty that they owe. to themselves to investigate the matter aiud l'6fieit pareiully, for the stati'inents published are subject to the refuiation of the eutire world, Hone have refuted them! on the contrary hundreds of thousands have believed them and proved them true, and in believing have found the highest measure of saiiisfaction, that which money cannot buy,

A Ijot of Pretty Girls. Washington Correspondence.

There are but few young men this season , but such a lot of pretty girls! Miss Sutterworth is an especially attractive belle who figures prominently. Miss Green, daughter of the new Gov

ernor of New Jersey, is a. fair

maiden, wonderfully self-conscious. She attracted much attention one night at the opera by her extreme self-possession as she stood in the front of the box and calmly took the stare of hundreds of eyes, f saw her at a reception one night in pale blue tulle, with a bouquet

as Dig as a peach basket. Her perfect!

sang froid was remarkable for so young a girl. The average society girl nowadays lias more nerve than John L. Sullivan. "Don't stand on the order of going" but go straight to the next corner and

buy a bottle of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup, if you want to cure your cold. Farmers and Horseman read this! I fiud Salvation Oil a most excellent liniment among'horses, and I take pleasure in indorsing it as a certain remedy for scratches. . James Thomas, Franklin Road, near Baltimore.

P We.

.-m

Rita1 way properly b called, a cat-ctll.

Wion Baby was ssck, ire gave W Cantoria -When the was a Child, she cried for Caatorla, Wlioa she hocame Miss, she clrnig W Casietlai

blonde she had OliUdnan, she gar them

'A'

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Johnny Composition on Medicine. ' kind yoaUub On and TUe first kind is th Soft, : Khd wliioh you take wl th a spoon while a man " hohls your head mdynn kick ami rfcle mm. ?

is tne Hard r - hardest of '

,1,... 1 . v.VO" vvt,m. wmjt

jvva utM umKe any ainerenee which kind youf . take when you get it took yon wish you had not ' v for it makes quite a . row in vouc stomach; and riots around' :

x.viaenuy jonnnt 'a exnerience in

r

( ...n U VH.1U-!, mi ani ino.otner kind : kind which ifi f-aljod pills and it Is the

me wuoie because if v ;n hnwl t

The dairymen cream oi things.

generally have the

?i v, uv-w pierces vfieasant Fuiganve v Fc-iiets, wnich are eaw to take and do their work' '

the WAY Or ,,Soft AtArl!oIni" diawvt iyka. :

Jxu:erj ' wmcn, though powerful to -cure all chronfo derangements ofthe liver and blood, is pleasant to. the taste and agreeable In it effects, c uenualed an a remedv for all scrofulous ' disiMses, -pirn pies,, blotches, erruptions. uloeis. swcl ed glands, goifre or thick neck, fever-sores aud hipTjomt disease. -"t5

Tl King of G re;9--Yad9liBe

It is said that a great many Englishmen are visiting this country this season. I asked Jinks what they came for. He said he supposed "to marry sof t pated, millionaire women, to talk the fellows out of their money, who want to bo fooled, and to lay in a supply of Dr. Bull's Cough S5Tup. j "The greatest cure on earth for pain. Salvation Oil; take up the strain. . Piety rhymes with societyonly during Lent. re Yon Aware

mat a simple cough often terminates in consumption? Why not be wise in time and use Allen's Lung Balsam which will stop the disease and prevent the fatal

consequences. Forsale by all medicine dealers, - - Franeesviile, Pulaski county, struck gas at a depth of 625 feet. Try it, Try it, Try it. Warner's White Wine of Tar Syrup, the great cough and consumption cure, will cure the worse cold in 24 hours. A il druggists sell it. The girl with the most chip requires the most cheek. . A VUy or Beautiful Woiu Detroi t, Mich., is noted for its healthy, handsome ladles, which the leading physicians and druggists there attribute to the general use and popularity Of Dr.

tiarier s iron t ome Who ever heard of sin stinking for more wages?

1 and aU the lotn quickly

Will Lun

Golden Medical Discovery" will not cam person whoso luugs arc almost wasted, but Jt fa an unfailing remedy for consumption il taken iir time. All drnggasts. ;: ? - y ?

. Cream lnffd-Miik adyeriisententa. ? T Don't hawk, liawk, and blow, blow, dbratiae everybody, but use Dr. Sages Catarrh BeedyT i Kicked OatThe defunct footballist. 1;. ; : T have n list) or spect&clen it yoa in Af. ii n.McLeau'a SirenKthenfiig Eye Salvajit removea the lilm andscnm which accnmulatea oh the am 'Jballs, aacduoa iiidammation, coola and aootha tha irritated .nenrea, Btrengthens. week And faillax afght. -25c. a box. - rm

afoxie Nerve Food has proved to be the most romarkablo remedy, for nervous, exhaustion, tired out, overworked persons; ever produced, R gives relief at once with no reaction. It wllL beyoad doubt, stop the liquor appetite, and baa" createdmore excitement all over the countrv than all other discoveries combined. Chean lot' a-wonder. Everybody drinks it a : " " '

-aft. A Copy of the VStormCkarf or

ucv, 4ii it . ntcKs. ana j mailed free to any address, on.

JM7.4

Calendar for x$gf

rt-ceipiofatw

71 Pta9e stamp . Write plainly your N

The Dr. 2. H. McXn Medicine Co.

Missouri.

ImperfMt dlfreKtlon and aasimllatiba u4ndl ' ordered conditions of the system which grow Xio are confirmed bv neelt.t Tr. .1 w fir-i-I3C1r.

Strengthening Cordial and : Blood Pnriaer, hjka

o the stomach. S.oo or bottle. ; - - .

t If yau.y kidneys nre inactite, you - , will ' feel

uv Hiuiaii-u, oveu in inp most cueerxai aa and melancholy, on the jollieat occaatona. Dr.

tifeRui. i. w Dr DOE HO.- .... ;

aa4

i aet yoa

rick

Croupy suffocations.

conmioo affections of the t

relieved by Dr, J. U. McLeftft' &r

night conahs

roat and

Far pains

T.tviir and Kidney Pillets.

; 8ck headftche. female troubles, nenralgfe in the head take Dr. J. n. McLean's Litta

29 cents a -rial.-

In casos.of Fever ana Ague, the blood is as eSect UaliV. thoilffh not ao daneeroiiHlv nnlannrwl liv" tha

uiuuuuiu ui me aiuiuspnere aw

ucaauosi poison. vr.J.H. M

sever uure win eraoii

8'6em.

ounfd be br the

cLean's Chills and

eradifate this' poison from the

Tho best cough medicine i VteftY Outo for Con sumption. S$iq everywhere, $ cents. The edUoria1. strike-Strike out. "

Freaueutly- accident occur in the houat-hold

which cause burns, cuts, sprains and bruises; for nay in such cases Dr. J. H. McLean's Volcanic Oil

Liniment lias tor many years favorite family remedy.

r a i

9t MP?

TRiSATED FREE.

Specialists Tor Thivteen Vmjzff9 ' v -Have treated dropsy and ifcs coniplicatioiu with thrn ' most wonderful fiocceasi nae vegetable ramedhaVT : entirely harm less. Removed alVaymptoma of teS , in eight to twenty days, .v .:-!rz":- ' -!4 Cure patients pronounced helpless by the bast -physicians. From the first dose the symptoms ra&IsV ' -ly disappear, at in tendays at. least two-tnlrdi S all symiktsaa are iemoved. t,: " a Soe htar cry -'humbug without kno winy anythiaa"about it. Iteniember tt does not coat you snythlnaS "

been the constant

If you spit up phlegm, and hacking cough, use Dr. J. . Lung Balm.

ire truahled with a ifcean's Tat" Win

iy.

hps loves to ad-mlre.

himself. retr.elj

When you are constipated, with loss ot

headache, take one ot nr.

Kidney

take and will cure you.

Liver aud

appetite

is Xittle

J. il. McLean

ruiets. They are nleaaant io

Z5.:cents aiaJ;

If afflicted with Sore Ky

sou b Eye Water,

ore hvauc j

Or. Isaac Thomn-

5C. -

andimoney csiimot take away

Ererv person is intercstPd in their own ftRUin

and if this meeis tbe eye of any cno who is suffering from the e3Vct of a torpid liver, we will admit that he is i nte nss ted iu getrin well. Qct a bottle of Prickly Ash Bitters, use it as drfcctd. and Von will always be jjlad you read this item.

tiuia iHVMiwmuf oi uDuuBg a relieved t J: Pk f ? Iffr? bo urinary organs made to dlschtS ; -: M their full duty, uleep Is restored, the swelling ansT I nearly Kpne.the strength increased and annaiWiSv ,

gooa. v,e are constantly enring caws oritmgsta5-Infl-eaaes that have been tapped a namWrtSSt- M Ku SS1 1 ,ieclad to Uva iweek. V$ ' ZM full history of case. Name sex. Low lone hSiSSLm-- - how badlyswonenandwheal f. H ' - & have legs burated aud draped water. Send for f?Sa: ,pi pamphfet, containing tv?timonials, questions, ato; "vl TondaystivuientfnrtUhedlrwbym

.u. v. mi, cci hi iuii'imn i Tl uramna .

a, h. iikkn sow jf .; nn.rM etiaalroet. AtmutA. Ga. 9

mmmmt fence.

525

Old people suffer much from dLNtycdent'of the urin arv organs, and are always gtatifiod at the wonder, flit effects of Dr. J. H. McLeana Liver and KIAum

w o. , rea, 8uc.-; wo. a, rea, mfi. ; roiecte.1 .: from wagon, TOrasOc. . ...

Balm in banis,hug their troubles. 4H per bottle.

Ivdukapolib; Feb. 13. '887. Whkat, No. 2 Mediterranean 81c; No. a,

7C

uobn, no. i, wnite, wxfi. : NvV a. or 3 white, 37c ; - No. 2. yellow 35kc

Oais, No, 2, v?U,e, S4e. ; No. aS. do., Si: Nt. 2, mixp, .28q ; rejected, 27 Kay, choice, $.50. Hogs Heavy packing and shipping, $3.25i$5 40 light mixed packing, $4JJ5f4.85; pigs and hcav roughs, $3. '5$S.05. Cattlb Extra choice shipping, ; fl.6S 3i 80 good to choice, do., S4y.0?4.66; m&liiini fair and

goodj-do., 53.b554.40: common, do.. 8,00.65:

6,T st Garden, Poultry Yard lawn hhool Lot, Park and Cemetery Fences Gates! Infect Automatic Gate. Cheapest And NeatS Iron Fences. Iron and wit SumnkTHnasea, Lawni herwo-ework. Best Wire tretcS et and Pher. , Ask : dealers :rk rdware, or addrcaaL SEDGWICK BRCfe, Richmomd. Imdw

WANTED

GOOD VAJES. Best terras, BtoA aad ' specialties in ;ru business. Writ at onto i c

ALESMEN

' . n 5? 3 iSl

extra cnoic neuers. a54.w;RfyaKcnoiee,do. J3.60$S.75; mcdittm fsi eti wflimon, do., 00 (383.15; extra ohcutt 6bws 83.40tfS88.G5: good, tr

cholps. o., fa.w98.40; medium, fair and com

mon, do., 81.7583.00; veal calves, K50S5.gQ;cowr and calves 20.5(a845.00. SHKEr Extra choice wethew, 84.2584.60; good

to choice mixed, 83.:5r4;.25.; medium f air and

FviFcetiy ire aaVab-ysff'cto. NoTcrfUlisrWafTor J mwedy rrtaitt relief. " '"'"if-ir'it ' 4i. Wtkox SncMflo Co.. PhlUdelpkl. JP

4

:-r.J

pjiaiige of tactics.

A fXiXT'TQand those intending te AuXiii IDiu h -hould s n their

art as

addrpsa

for free tlon in AMERICAN ACC3IW BIBECTOKT, JO S. Cnriia SL, ClilcaffO. This directory contains the namea of y,W0 aeeots. lists qt reliable firm employing agents and valuAb'o

'iir-d niBw 3cu.-. ouujcriucrti nnnit io iwrgt? type f- Kcr50ent; Every ajaot shonjd have It. ' -

The Berliner Nacbrichten eay$ it has authentie information that General Boulanger, the French miniate of war, is preparing for a movement of troops to the eastern frontier. An active volcano in the district of Baker, the petroleum center of Russia, causes much consternation. For two nights the volcano threw a column of fire and mud 350 feet high, illuminating the country for miles around, The Buda Pesth JournaUirges Austria.

j)flllions for IfonaioitH. The eommissioner of pensions has started requisitions for $18,780,000 witfe which to make tho payment of pensions due March 4 next. This will be the largest payment for current pensions made in any one quarter in the history of the government.

is offer

with

price 75 cents a bottle.

$100 Reward

Cure. Taken

for anv caae of Catarrh that can't ha nnrarl

with nau'B uatarru

Internal.

For eight years Col. I. ,7. Williamson Quarter-Master, U. S, 4, (tnd 5-.T, Oonsul af Cailao, crippled wltli rheumatism. .! Fie got 'flo relief until be used St.' Jacobs Oilj which cured him.

No remedy on earth equals it. fo r price, fifty oeitsa bottle,

Whu Noxf The employes of Olotttman'a shoe factor)', Farmington, N. HM 420 in number, loft the shop Thursday because a man was discharged for whom there was no work,

Use Red Star Cough-Cure effectually. Dr, C. Fawcett, Union Protestant Infirmary, Baltimore, Aid, 8o depressing ef ec.

Obituary. Bishop William Mercer Green, I). D., L. L. D., the oldest Episcopal Bishop in the country, died at Nashville, Tenn,, Monday. Oen.'lisha V. avisdiedat Phiin-'el-phia, Monday. Mrs. Horace Mann, wife of the great educator, died at Jamaica Plain, Mass.. Saturday. Now Rid Ua ot Truac JoUwm. The bill providing fqr the redemption of the trade dollar has been passed bv jffie House.' For &x mo.nth trade dofc ar. will Uft received, U pr tor paymeut of dues, or will be exchanged ror standard silver dollars or subsidiary coins. An Odd Fellow Gono Wrong". Thomas M. Joseph, of Galveston, for

ten years treasurer of the? Grand Lodge I

of Odd Fellows of Texas, is short in hi accounts in a sum rangiug tdl the way i:om$lS,b(iO te $30,000. He bns disappeared. Fr!ght en?j nt Their Shadows. The pubUcation of a report t ha t French soldiers in Algiers have been ordered to re turn o France caused greitt excrement in Berlin. HoaUh nHti i retliiiie. IlesoJutiouQ were passed by b.ot

Uouseg p te Nevada, Lejjisiaturo Friday disfranchising Mormons In Nevada. It Ss a Curious fact Tkat the body is now more, susceptible to benellt from medicine than at auy other season. Hence tk& importance of taking Efood'o SarsapariUa n6w, when it will ub you the most good'. It is really wonderful for purifying amV enriching the blood, creating an appette, and giving a healthy tone to the whole system. Bfe sure, to get Hood s' SarsapariUa, bich is peculiar to itself,

SQCIAIST DBMQNSTRAXlO;NS. TChe ZlHembb) U ng Numhers iu Clerk eni H, Lou u on, Loot a Few Stores cmd Are Jtaily Dsperaei Tea thousand Socialists met in Clerk en well Tuesday evening,and subsequently marched in procession, in defiance of the government prohibition promulgated he day before. Hundreds of mounted police weie cm tbe spot, but- IbeU prcs-

ence did iu$ pyp.vUt jbo speakers from

giving iitterance io most incendiary apeeohoa, An attempt on the part of Die .'socialists was made to light torches, preparatory t;o forming a procession, but the police mterforred and the mob dispersed., breaking in.to three parties and taking three di;0erent routes. Tis piee of si rat eg)' rendered the. nqlie the ground wioly aequate o control the entire number of Socialists, compelling the former also to. divide itself Into three parties. The Socialist contingent which inarched in the direction of the oil: y, armed thpmselves with pieces of granite, which were lying lor$$ in Uie street where they W61V needed to repair tbe pAment, and began smashing the windows of shops and houses on route. The crowd attempted to loot a butcher-sho'p but wove met at the door

by ownc, who. emptied a revolver

mto tho moo, driving them away bu doing nobody injury. riojters wore uiet at NeY:te by t .strong force of

i ppUce and quickly dispersed. Sevdtal

I It J... 1 ' .1 i J A H. .

y.(uf wio' MVWvftstrviYv. w ue iuod Wve atatl; fhe sections of the arkiual .nob which started west from Cltirkanwell sustained a gradual depletion of numbers before any damage was done, and disapjieaJfed, thanks to the ej:trem()ly cold weather and the abience of organization or ieadergjln in the rank3. T.j s - . .tt.riuiu Possibilities. MtRO,ertpoll3 Tribune." .A'iter the sleeveless bodice tfill come thesMrtlef:skrt, an teuood liOvd Oliver is.

common laiscd, fi:ft588.50: extra choice lambs

1.ouo.wm: ducks per neaa 9z.wa,u. Flour, patent, oxtr qiqcv, tidbit 84.25; fancy S3.75$3.fT; choice SMQ$8,60. Coal, aiuhraolfd, .00; Pittsburg, &00; BieU block, 8aS Eggs, Bima akd oui.thy Eggs, 10c; butter, fanor country, I4i5c, sells at I6l8c.; counter cboice I0jn2c. selling from store at 14SN5c, Poultry w In tir cblckens, 8c per pound ; hens alive, 6Kc 'per pound; roosters, Sc ; turkej hens, 7c; toras 6c; geese, fuU-featbereA J6.C0 per dozen : picked. SS.60; ducks te, vtfrao?' Pkovisions jobbing prlsswogar cured ham "eliftble,, brand; 11.; cottage 7c; ' EngUsb breakfast baetfn, lc; aboulders, 7c; bacon clear aldbS.So. - MiacKLi.NEorc green cow -tide C); Bteere, 0.1 n (mum ta1 Tn coltoR Aft SU tallnm

3Kc : wool, tub-washed, clean. SSesac ; medium-;

wasnei .3c; ciover seea. H.'.jm.60 pe jushel: Umolhy .9SW.0Q' blue ffHSE&cT' Wheat, 74: COPU, 35: ots, 24M; pork $13.60 lard, 6.92 : ribs, 86 O). Cartlebecm ta.eofl$545 atockers? S2L5fJ3:75 cnT i.WB.?S. Hoes light, to; rough packing, .85ft.io heavv cackfnif and abippiUK I6.ld45: -sheep 4 034.ia r

MACHINERY, BOLTS. ETC. f gSJft1 9 afblBe Works. -tHeavy and light macliiaery mad toorder. BridS - ; soot and trawbolM a specialty. O. R. OL$KN, JSk -

Krncured; at Home. .SSB sent on iriai end NO

uatd you are lenefltei n.rm.w'

MS

l! fl ft.' J IT S T

flUiHtiorms,

D Y "Book riuir; "ftrintn

nana, etc, tooronfifhlvtaiiactby mail. Clrcuhua free. BRYA CLVfegg; VOJieCiea, Frneauff Co. jiotaryi an attorneye Box 7, A na Arbor, Mich ' T.F?IXS kH- A letttr written with tnlS i-iiuk r&n br rsd only la a darkroom. Sand Ito.ta receipt to JA0K8GN A QG., g. Jfferton4 M. ' v 17 A ATQ onJaiues niTer.Va.,lnClaBaMI2 T JY XllUO Colony. Ill3itrftt4 OlnmlaTm

4

OPIUM."

55. Hrhia Saktt Csri la 1

w aay. Kreoo iooo ;

ausan. fir. Maraaj

I N V

887

; When writin "outer a favor

$5

S to Artverttaer read era

by raeniloiilnc this mmt.

- ----- a '

MS.-.

v..

TO, 99 ' A AY. Sample xrorth aLM. HKScJWwa not under the liorsa'sfeet, Wrttfl

'V,

EACI.E lyiAQHINE WORKS COMPANY, tndianaoolis

ALL SIZE SAW MILLS .-I :- Bund more saw mills than any house in the Wesii

Eagio atritw STACKERS, Portable and Traction Engines and Sep aratomv

errne soses

Ottya,PLANTS

FRUIT?" ORNAMENTAL TREES, GRAPE VINES

. ... .

or AJtrmmxG m thb nursery tssm. without first writint;

feronr Taluable FREE Oahiloime, the 1 21 LASCE GREEN HOUSCS

BEST weever Issued, containing the Bareat New and I 33d YEAR. 700 AO RES, ftplceste THE STQRRS 6r HARRISON CO, PAIHESmJJE 0W ;

A'

tor Infants and Children,

MClutorlab bo waa adaloehlldrBn that I Onaterla cures CoUa. OomtHpatlon,

t recommend it aa superior to any preacription

Sour Stomach, Diarrbosa, BruetaQ

Auia worms, givi tuwp, usu

gesaon.

Ul Bo. Oxford 8L Brooklyn, K, Y. I Wltnout injurious rne4ic : S ;