Bloomington Courier, Volume 15, Number 27, Bloomington, Monroe County, 27 April 1889 — Page 3

FOR EASTER.

SflaEoisQil l QfrJ Cures

1 -

AT IRCGGISTS AIfl 1)SAL1BS,

THE RI3EK CHRIST AXD MEMORUES OF HiS COMING, Thorns Are Cast Aside and JftoWers Substituted Fragrant blossoms Should Make Hemes Redolent. Ifcsv. Dr. Talmage preached at the Brooklyn Tabernacle, Sunday. Subvert "Aromtics for Easten' ffeki, Luke v,,l. Hesaidi Encfaaaiihfc work have T before me

i

.1.

ELY'S CREAM BALM

IS worth .l.cOj to ....... any". Man, Woman or Child Suffering faom -

AntOv TWin into esch notU ELY fcKOS. 56 Warren St.

G RATEFUI. COMFORTING.

EPPS'S

COCOA

BREAKFAST. j- tfhttii&kacmltds of the natural law VilA gmrn the operations of dlpes tiou and rmtriftKffl, and by a careful application of the fine propertica of well-selected Cocciv Mr. Epos has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured ber--erag which may save ua many heavy doctors billa. It ia by the judicious use of such articles of diet that

a constitution may be sxaduauv buiit ud nntil atrona

non-

enpngh to resist every , tendency to disease.

dregs or subtle maladies are floating around no ready

tu atxacK wuerever vn

tnnnx&bloftfi ami ttfonrlv

Made, simply wltn boilinar water or

r Sold

'IfcS? tinp- b Grocers, labelled thna: JA.UESt.PFC ot O.. Hcraccopatnic Chemists - London. England.

Magee's Emulsion

ti St.

tfe

So other proprietary medicine has the endorse nisnt of fhysicians to the same extent. iene is used in Hospital practice .with so large percentage of .satisfactory results. No other resaedy has cured ao many oaaea of Consumption and other Pulmonary Disease Scrofula la entirely eradicated from the system by Its use. It Is as easy to take aa Maple Syrup or Honey, andean be retained by the most delicate stomachs without nausea. , IP YOU'haw a CoU, Cough, Bronchitis, vvspepsia, or a generally run-down svstem, you era regain health and strength quickly by the use of

Magee's ? Emulsion

Aalrour Druggist for tt and take only that J. A. MAGEE k CO Lawrence. Mass.

STTKE'S Sure Cure : , - v.

THE GREAT REMEDY FOR

CATARRH

The large number of ctnlfloaes received oi the virtues of this preparation in the treatment of tnia unpleasant disease, abundantly attest its efficacy. It Is without a rival. It is the onlymedicine now on the raar&et adapted to Catarrh, that performs what it promises and effects not Vnly speedy relief but a permanent cure. Unlike rcany nostrums now before the public, it does uot dry up temporarily the -Basal discharges, but eradicates the producing canse, thus leaving the ftjstem In a sound and healthy condition.; Ask your drugglstsffor a bottle of fekea Sure Cure lei Catarrh and you will be healed of the malady : Tot sale by all Druggists. KOSS GOSDOST, Xafavyette, Ind, W&ole.

.4?

BiEiEn? A r n r ij

by return mail, full descriptive circulars of

Miirs HEW TAILOR STSTtH

OF DRESS CBTTOIB Any Tady of ordinary intelligence can easily and Quickly learn to cut and make any garment, in any style to any measure for lady or child. Address

MOODY & CO.,

Ciectab, O.

i

f i

-

, w j m vfk-i, niw nut with a disease for which doctors had no name The nails come oil hia finders, and the fingers came oif to the middle joint. Jb'or 3 years be suffered dreadful v; is now getting wclL and I am a atfsficd Swift's Spccilla is the chief sauso cf his improvement. . - ' ' JonxDrmx. Jan; 12, 1583. Pern, Ind. POISON E DBYACA LF-My Traeboy l-roke oat with sores and

olcerSttr i result of the saliva of a calf coming in contact wj a cut finger. The ulcers were deep and painful and aowed no inclination to heaL X gave hint BwnVi 3pecmc; end h3 13 now well. Feb. 1S, SX .Jons P. HcAnn, Aubura, Alfc Send for books on Blood Poisons & Skbn Diseases, bee. . Swift Seecttic Co.. Atlanta, Ga.

HELP

FOR THE

II YEARS EILERT'S

EXTRACT OF

olUVTAR-tWILD CHERRY

Bee cured all coughs, colds, bronchi U,

relieved asthma and consumption or eC who have used it. Is not this en evidence of He merits and reliability? It is a ur and sas medicine for all bronchial troublee, end never fells to give satisfaction. Try it under a full warrantee. Price. 60 cents and SLOO per bottle. Prepared by SmBf PboranxaJiT Co.. Chicago. TJL

'4

BABY

f!flRRIfl(!P?!

uniiiunuisva Wc make a specialty of mannfacturiiiKBaby Carriages to ell all rcct co private part lea. Ton can, therefore, do better with us

ie'j-

4

t

S -3, '

than with a dealer. We send Car?

nsaes to ail oolnts within 700 miles of Chicago free of charge Send

xor catalogue.' CHAS. RAISER, MfrM Cif boBTR Itc. Chieago. I1L

DR. W. H. 8ARBCR, Gives his snedal attention to eB

PRIVATE DISKASES of Mali 'and Female. Regulating reme

dies furnished. Cazfczse DOsitive

ly eured without the knife. Rut .tusk, no cure, no pay. Piles f

guaranteed. Fistula, Fissure,

ivatorrnea, imootency. Hter

ifitv. Gonorrhea. Rvohilis and

siu:cefi8fullv treated and Dositrniv

cored. Call on or address. DR. BARBER. bBX ft

III. 9t.t Indianapolis. Ind. All letters contsdnlat

anawcred ana meaicinea sent 10 oraotv

sskK. mwjner

other ills

4V

CHILDREN are IRRITABLE Feverish, eometiracs craving food and eating ra--vcnousW again refusing wholesome diet, tossing resrlsssfyin sleep, moaning and grinding the tcth, iher: roi may know Woriss are sapping at their i'.o unless prompt mwfs-r-s ore taken, soasms " - 7r.n.i:iy death v fU lollow, B. A. JFAHIOSy.tOCK'S VJER3f ILUsiE MEVER FA3X8 Jtvi. 'Xzrrjti sec icrycuzseli,i- hus stood -Jis tcsi O'H. 60YBARS.

5 TON WAGON SCALES,

. Loyvrs. StMl BmiIbs. m Tm las satf S4a Bs

S -HP , 4.-:

net

J0HB3J b p47 llf MlSOt fee 69

rtiea List mcatioB tan ppnjw

jflt s or e jRWRnia

ffZV OwStTtstm. m

I prescribe and fully en dorse Big 1' aa the onlj specific for the certain cur oj thla disease. ' o. ix. ikgSaham, m. d.. Amsterdim, N. Y We have sold Big Q I o; many years, and U bar

gven tne oesx or aatifcctioa. - . B. DVCHK A CO..

Chicago, us 84,00. nmiffisi

co c women ui tut) wuu urougut aroma tics to the mausoleum of Christ, I am going to unroll fraufcincen3e and ottar of roses and cardamon from the East Indies end odors from Arabia, and when we can inhale no more of the perfame then we will talk of sweet sounds and hear from the music that shall wake the dead. Having on other Easter described the whole scene, I need only in four or five sentences say. Christ was

mnp: flat on his back lifeless, amid!

sculptured rocks, rocks over him, rocks under him, and a door of rocks all bounded by the flowers and fountains of Joseph's country seat. Then a bright immortal hayine descended from heaven, quick ana flashing as a falling meteor, picks up the door of rock and puts it aside as though it was a chair and sits on it. Then Christ uuwrap himself of his mortuary apparel and takes the turban trom his nead and folds it up deliberately and lays it down in one place, and then puts the shroud in another place, and comes out and finds that tne soldiers who had been on guard are lying around, pallid and in a dead swoon, their swords bent and - nseless . ..fhe illustrious prisoner of the tomb is discharged and five hundred people see him at once. An especial congress of ecclesiastics caUed to pay a bribe to the resusitated soldiers to "say that there was no resurrection, and that while they were overcome of . slumber the Christians had played resurrectionists and stolen the corpse. The Marys are at the tomV with aromatics. v -,, Why did not these women of the text bring thorns and nettles, for these would more thoroughly have expressed the piercing sorrows of themselves and their Lord? Why did they not , bring some national ensign, such as that of the Soman eagle, typical of concraesi? No, they bring arcmancs suggestive to me of the fact that the Gospel is to sweeten and deodorize the world. The world has so much of putrefaction and malodor that Christ is going to roll over it waves of frankincense and sprinkle it all over with sweet-smelling myrrh. . Notice also that Christ's mausoleum was opened by concussion. It was a great earthquake that put its twisted key into the involved and labyrinthine lock of that tomb. Concussion! That is the power that opens all the tombs tbat are opened at all. Tomb of soul and tomb of nations. Concussions between England and the thirteen colonies, and forth comes free government in America, Concussion between France and Germany, and forth comes republicanism' for : France. Concussion among the rocks on Mount Sinai, and on two of them was left a perfect law for all ages. Concussion among the rocks around Calvary and the crucifixion was made the more overwhelming. Concussion between the United States and Mexico,

and a vast area of oountry becomes ours.

Concussion between England and France, and most of this continent west west of the Mississippi becomes the property of the American Union. Concussion between iceberg and iceberg, between bowlder, and bowlder, and a thousand concussions put this world in

to shape for man s residence. Concussion between David and his enemies,

and out came psalms which otherwise would never have been written. Con-

cossion between God's will and man's

will, and, ours overthrown, we are new creatures in Christ . Jesus. Concussion

of misfortune and trial for many of the good, and out comes their especial consecration. Do not, therefore, be frightened when you see the great upheavals, the great agitations, the great earthquakes, whether among the rocks or among the Nations or in individual experience. Out of them God will bring best results and most magnificence consequences. Hear the crash all around the Lord's sarcophagus and see the glorious reanimation of its dead, inhabitant. .Concussion! If ever a general European war, which the world has been expecting for tne last twenty yews should come, a concussion so wide and a concussion so tremendous would not leave a throne in Europe standing a 3 it now is. The nations of the earth are tired of having their kings born to them and there would be an Italian republic and a German republic and a Russian republic, and out of. the cracks and crevices and chasms of that concussion would come resurrection for all Europe, stagnation, ia deathful; concussion is

Messianic.

.Notice also what the angel did with the stone after he had rolled it , away from the mouth of the Savior's mausoleum. The book says he rolled away the stone from the door and sat upon it. All of us ministers have preached a sarmon

about the angel's rolling away the stone,

but we did not remark upon the sublime fact that he sat upon it. Way? Certainly not because he was tired. The angels are a fatigueless raoe, and that one could have phouldered eveiy rock around that . tomb end carried it away and not been hes weated. B e s?.t upon it I think, to fhow 3 ou and to show me that we may make every earthl y obstacle a throne of triumph. Thti young men who get their education easy seldom amount to much. Tho3e who had to struggle for it come out atop. There is no end of the story of stud yihg by pine knot lights, and reading while the mules of the tow path were resting, and of going hungry and patcked and barefoot, and submitting to all kinds of privation to get scholastic advantages. But the day of graduation came, and they took the diplomas with a hand nervous from night study and pale from lack of food, and put their academic degrees in the pocket of a threadbare coat. Then, starting for another career of hardship, they entered a profession or a business where they found plenty of disheartenment and no help. Yet saying, "I will

succeed; God help me, for no one else will," they went on and tin until the

world was compelled to acknowledge and

admire them.. The fact wtis that the

obstacle between their, discouraging

start ana tneir compiere success was a

rock of fifty tons, but by a resolution, nerved and muscularized and reinforced

by Almighty Gnd, they threw their

arms around the obstacle, and with the

strength of a supernatural wrestler.

rolled back the stone, and, having be

come more tnan conquerors, they sat upon it. Men and wonien are good and great and useful just in pro

portion as iney nao to over

come obstacles. You can. count upon

the fingers of your one hand all the

great singers, great orator?, great poets;

great patriots and great Christians who

never had a struggle. The angel that

made a throne of the bowl der at Christ's

tomb went back to heaven, and I warrant that, having been bom in heaven and always had an easy time. He now speaks of that wrestle with the

rocks as the most interesting chapter in

all his lifetime. O, men and women

with obstacles in the way, I tell you that those obstacles are only thrones tbat

you may after a while sit on. Js the obstacle in your way sickness? Conquer it by accomplishing more for. God during your invalidism than meny accomplish who have nevdr known an ailment Are you persecuted? By ycur uprightness and courage compel the world to ac knowledge your moral heroism. Is it poverty? Conquer it by. being happy in the companionship of your Lord and Master, who in all his life owned but sixty-two cents, and thf.t he got from a fish's mouth, and immediately paid it out in taxes to the Roman Assessor, and who Would have been buried in a pot' far Hftlrl had rmf JniAnlt nf Avitnaa.

contributed a place, for he who had not where to lay his head during his life had a borrowed pillow for the last slumber. There is ho throne that you are sure to keep except that which" you make out bl. vanquished obstacle. "An ungrateful republic at the ballot box denied Horace Greeley the highest place at the Nation ftl Capital, but could r ot keep him from rising from 1 he steps of a New York printing ofiice on which he sat one chilly morning waiting for the boss printer to come that he might get a job, until he mounted the highest throne of American journalism. He rolled back the stone and sat upon it. Yet do not make the mistake that many do of sitting on it before it is rolled away. It is bound to go if you only tug away at it. If not before, then I think about twelve o'clock noon of resurrection day you will see something worth seeing. The general impression is that the resurrection will take place in the morning. The ascent to the skies wilfirjiiy occur immediately. It will takeVmne hours to form the precession say w&rc, aud we wiil all want to take a look at this world before we leave it for

ever, and see the surroundings of the couch where our bodies have long been sleeping. 6a that Easter morning the marble, whether it lay flat upon your grave or stood flat iu monument, will have to be jostled and shaken and rolled aside by the angel of resume 'ion, and while waiting for your kindred to gather and the procession to form your resurrected body may sit in holy triumph upon tnat chiseled stono which marked the place of your protracted slumber. On that day what a fragile thing will be Aberdeen granite ami column of basalt and mortar which will rattle out of the wall of vaults that have been sealed a thousand years, aud the Taj built for a queen in India, a sepulcher 275 feet high and made of jasper and cornehan and tur quois and lipis-lazuli and amethyst and onyx and sapphire and diamond, and which shall that day rain into glittering dust on groves of banyan and bamboo and palm. And all under what power? Ponderous crowbars wielded by giant? Nc. Thunderbolt cleaving asunder the granite? No. Battering ram swung against the walls of cemeteries? No. Dynamite drilled under the foundations of cenotaph and abbey? No. It will, be done by music. Nothing but music, sweet, but ah penetrating music. The trumpet shall sound! You say that is figurative? how do you know? But, whether literal or figurative, it means music anyhow. The trumpet, the stirring, incisive, mighty instrument, with a natural compass from G below the 6taff to E above, blown above Sinai when the law was given, blown around Jericho when the walls tumbled, blown wfc?n Gideon discomfited the Midianitea, blown when the ancient Israelites were gathered for worship, to' be blown for the risinng of the dead in the last great Easter. The mother who, when the child must be awakened, kisses its eyes awake, does well. But the trumpet, which, when the dead are to be aroused kisses the ear awake, does be';ter. Be not surprised if the dead are to be awakened by music. Why, this is the way we now raiBe the dead. Take the statistics, if you can, of the millions of souls that have been raised from the death of sin by hymns, by psalms, by solos, by anthems, by flutes, by violins, by organs, by trumpets. Under God what hosts have been resurrected by Ira D. Saukey, by Thomas Hastings, by Wi lliam D. Bradbury, by Lowell Mason, by motherly lullabies, by church doxologies, by oratorios! If we raise the dead now by music, be not surprised that on the last day the dead are to be raised by music. The most of people are dead. The world, is a house of two rooms -a basement and a room above ground. The basement has two to one, three to one, four to one more occupants than the superstructure. Sickness, war and death have been stacking their harvests for near six thousand years. Where are those who saw the Pilgrim Fathers em

bark, or the Declaration of Independ

ence signed, or Franklin lasso the lightning, or Warren Hastings tried, or Queen Elizabeth in her triumphal

march to Kemlworth, or William, Prince of Oranee. Jand, or Gustavus

Adolphu8 crowned, or Jerome of Prague

burned at the stake, or Tamerland

found his empire? Gone! Gone!

But the trumpet shall eouud. Music

to raise the dead. Oh, how much the

world needs it. You take a torch and

I will take a torch and we will go

through some of the aisles of ihe Roman

catacombs and see the expectant epi

taphs on the walls and right over where the departed sleep. You know that

these catacombs are fifty or sixty feet underground, and if one loses the guide or his torch is extinguished, he never finds the way out. So let us stay close together and with our torches, as we

wander along a small pare ot tnese nine hundred miles of underground passages,

see the inscriptions as they were really

chiseled there on both sides tne way. On your side you read by the light of your torch: "Here rests a bandmaid of God who out of all her richeB

now possess but this one house. Thou

wilt remain m eternal repose of nap-

piness, a. xj. 3su." un my sine 1

read by the light of the torch: Aurelia,

our sweetest daughter; she lived uiteen years and four months, A. D. 326." On nniiv n'a irnii -ranr "WoTO not ll VlQQ n

VUU1 DIUD )WU JEUUi "QJU UUVU

laid a sweet spirit, guileless, wise and

beautiiul. Buried in peace, A. D. 388

O.nmyside I read: 4You well deserv

ing one, hem peace. You will rise. A

temporary rest is granted you. Piaucus,

her husband made this. On your side

you read: "Nicephorus, a sweet soul, in

the place of refresnment." On my side

read: "In Chrisfc, Alexander is not

dead, but lives beyond the 6tars. and

his dead body rests in- his tomb." On your side you read. "Here, happy, you

find- rest bowed down with years."

"Irene sleeps inGod." "Naleria sleeps in peace." "ATethusa sleeps in God."

"Navira in peace, a sweet soul who

lived sixteen years, a soul sweet as hon

ey; this epitaph was made by her par

ents." ., But let us come out from these cata

combs and extinguish our torches, for upon all these longings and expectations

ot an nations tne morning 01 resurrec

tion dawns. The trumpet shall sound. And the Booner . it sounds the better. Oh, how we would like to get our loved ones back again! If we are ready to meet our Lord. . Our sins all pardoned, what a good thing if at this moment we could hear the resounding and reverberating blast! Would you not lik e to see . your father again, your mother again, your daughter again, your boy again, and all your departed kindred again? Roll on sweet day of resurrection and reunion! Under the hoofs of the white steeds that draw our chariot

we strew Easter flowers. Would it not be grand if we could all rise together? You know that the Bible says we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed. What if we should be among the favored ones who never have to see death, and that while in the full life of our body we'Bhoulo hear that trumpet sound and these mortal bodies take on immortality? Oh, how I would hasten to two places before the close of such a day peaceful Greenwood and the village cemetery back of Somerville. And I would cry aloud: "The hour has come, the trumpet has Bounded, the resurrection is hero, father aod mother. You were the best of all tne group, now lead the way?" The earth pinks out of sight. Clouds under foot. Oiher worlds only mile-stones on the King's highway. We rise! We rise! We risel to be lorever

with the Lord and forever with each other. May we all have part in that first resurrection.

H0SE8TY AND IN TE LLIGKBNC V.

Thomas F. Scanlon, doing business as the New England Piano Co., with offices in BoBton and New York, has failed and assigned to Godfrey Morse. Liabilities, $200,000. The "Robert Elsmere" collar is one of the latest things out. The critics will proceed at one to take the $Urh emt ftfit.

It pays to be honeBt, you say. Granted. Yet how many di3honest through ignorance, expediency, or intentionally. One can be dishonest and yt say nothing. A clerk who let-3 a customer buy a damaged piece of goods, a witness who holds back the truth which would clea r a prisoner, a medical practitioner who takes his patientV money when he knows he is doing him no good, all are culpably dishonesty Speaking of the dishonesty of medical

men reminds us tha t only the past week J

there has come under our personal observation a form of dishonesty which is almost too mean for narration. It is generally known tbat doctors bind themselves by codes, resolutions and oaths not to use any advertised medicines. Now, there is a medicine on the market which, for the past ten years, lias accomplished a marvelous amount of good in the pure of Kidney and Liver diseases, and diseases arising from the derangement of these great organs, we refer to Warner's Safe Cure. So wide spread are the merits of this medicins that the majority of the dootora of this country known from actual evidence that it will cure Advanced Kidney Disease, which is but another name for B right's Disease. The medical profession have put themselves' on record as admitting that there is no cure for this terrible malady, yet there are physician? base enough ard dishonest enough to procure Warner's Safe Cure in a surreptitious manner,put the Bam e into plain, four-ounce vials, and charge their patients $2.00 per vial, when a sixteen-ounce bottle of the remedy, In its original package, can be bought a any drug store in the world for $1.25. Perhapy the doctor argues that the cure of the patient iustifies his dishon-

4 , esty yet he will boldly stand up at the next county medical meeting and denounce Warner's Safe Cure as a patent medicine, and one which he cannot and will not use. The fact is that the people are waking up to the truth that the medieal profession is far from honest, and that it does not possess a monopoly of wisdom in the curing of disease,' doctoring the many symptoms of kidney disease, instead of striking at the t-eat of disease -the kidneys themselvei, allowing patients to die rather than use a remedy known to be a specific, simply because it has been advertised, and when patients are dead from Advanced Kidney Disease, still practicing deception by giving the cause of death in their csriificate as pneumonia, dropsy, heart disease, or some other accompanying effect of Bright's Disease. All this is prima fmie evidence of incompetency, bigotry and dishonesty, We speak but the viuth when we say that Messrs. H. H. Warner & Co, have done a moBt philanthropic work for the past ten. years in educating the people up to the knowledge they now enjoy, especially of mahidies growing out of diseases of the Kidney and Liver, and are deserving of all. praise for their honesty and straightforwardness in exposing shams and dishonesty ot all kinds. THE NATIONAL OAPITAI. During the first three weeks of the Admi nistration little was done with the

Postoflices, owing . to the pressure of

other matters of greater importance, but for the fourth, fifth and sixth weeks Mr, Clarkeon ha broken the record. Four yeara ago First Assistant Postmaster General Stevenson made changes pretty rapidy, but Mr. ClaTkson has distanced all his competitors. In the fourth week of his administration of the office of FirBt Assistant Postmaster General he appointed 719 Republican postmasters, and the next week there were 687 changes. Week hefoie last, which was the sixth, the record was badly smashed, 95:3 postmasters having been appointed, making in al, for the three weeks.2,829. There were four hundred appoinlment s last week, and there are no indications of a lull in the pro ceedings. Representatives; .... Houk and Alfred Taylor, of Tennessee, have asked the President to amend the civil service rules so as to pennit the restor ation to the service of mem who were diumisaed for political reasons by the last administration without regard to the length of time since they were dismissed. The President said he would give the mattei very careful consideration. The President, Wednesday,appcinted Robert P. Porter, of New York, superintendent of the census and Major W. H. Calkins, of Indiana, to be Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Wasnington Territory. MORMONS KOTJGHIiY HANDLED. Information comes from Dales county, Alabama, that five Mormon missionaries were severely whipped and driven from the county last Monday night. These men had been holding" meetings among the ignorant clashes of the country and had formed a colony to go to Utah. This had been carried on against the judgment of the better class of citi2;ens, but no action to atop it was taken - unt il the last issue of the Ozark Star advise d the people to tar and feather the Mormons and drive them away. . This was enough. Monday night some forty of the so-called best citizens in the northern part of the county, without

me sngntest attempt at disguise, surrounded the houue of Gid Irons, a recenr, convert, who wait entertaining tho fiv missionaries. Without delay they were brought out, stripped to the waist and tied in a row. Tjaen each of the regulators, with a long switch struck each prisoner a sound ing blow. By the time the last blow was given two of thd men had fainted and the others were wet with blood. Afner the whipping the men's legs were given a thick coating of tar and feathers, and they were warned to leave instantly or suffer dea'h. Irons was told that if the Mormons were found in his house again he, too, would be whipped.

A MONSTER FIRE. The biggest an d fiercest fire New York has witnessed in this generation swept the east bank o:f the North River clear Friday evening,, from Fifty-ninth Btreet to what would be Sixty-fifih street if that street ran to the river. It destroyed more than a million and a half of property belonging to the New York Central Railroad and at least $500,000 worth of lard, flour aud the like belonging to other parties, notablv N K. Fairbanks,

the gn.at Chicago lard merchant. The flames destroyed the two big elevators, A and B, of tbo Yanderbilt iryetein, a big brick building stretching from Fiftyninth street to Sixtieth street, and occupied jointly by the Fairbanks lard refinery and the Rossiter stores, and wiped out the dock property of the New York Central Railroad system from Fifty-ninth to past Sixty-fiftS street. At least one man was killed in .has headlong flight from the fire at the first outbreak. A number were injured by jumping from the windows of the burning buildings, but in the wild terror of the conflagrationno account was kept of them. The total loss 1s ful y ?3.ft0O,0tO. The JJre b'smsd A?e hoars,

CONDENSED STATE NE WS. Carlisle wants a banki Connersville is thriving, Muncie will have base ball. Marion wants a city charter. Lebanon sighs for water works. Kankakee duck choosing has closed. The oatmeal truBt has goue to prices. Rockvillo ciaims to be a live-stock ceutei. Peddling prairie dogs ia a Laporte industry, Crawfordsviile has revived roller skating. New Albany is a mecca for eloping couples. New Albany has siixty frae public schools. Waveland is organising a military company. A Terre Haute paper has a love letter department. Huntington will' purchase a police patrol wagon. Clark county fruit growers complain of dry weather. Black sucker fishing is a favorite pastime at Hartford City. Wm. Williams settled in . Morgan county in 1819 and is still there. TorUaud has organ izod a Wind Engine Company. Capital etc ck $300,000. Lee Miller, aged 10, of Evansviile, was carried off by GypBies, it is believed. An epidemic of throat trouble among hoTses prevails in Vanderburg county. Tipton is elated over the report that the L. E. & W. shops will be located there. Mrs. Meivania, of Cory don, . injured her hand on a catfish ,n and died trom the wound, Dre. A.Smithapd Louise F. Jessup, of Wabash, were united in marriage Thursday. "Favory," a famous Clydesdale stallion, valued at $10,000, died at Rushville, Wednesday. Six mad does have been, a large at Olive Hill, Wayne county, and consternation prevails. George Perkins, of Cementsyille. tied a bell to a cow's tail and the animal was

frightened to death. It cost aim $70. Willie Poterbaugh and Johnny Beadle, boys eight years of age, were drowned at Rockvillo, Friday, while boat riding. Among the losses by fire are W. C. Davidson's barn near Sugar Grove with seven horses, aud Mrs. Hardin's barn near Bluff Creek, with four horses. Jonathan Coleman of Elkhart county, aged eeventv-three, the past winter split ten thousand pickets and two hundred fence posts, and also chopped twenty -five cords of wood. , Rev. C. G. Hudson, who: had been Secretary of North Indiana Conference for the past fifteen years, is a dextrous short-hand writer, an accomplished musician, an able preacher and he can talk in seven languages. . Russell Rice, of Scot t county, has a cat which gave a mother's care to five young squirrels which Mr. Rice found in the woods. The squirrels are now halfgrown and have been placed in the Court House square at Scottsburg. Jo6hua Coons, while employed in running an edging saw in Gen ford's mill, near Windfall, Tuesday, fell across a rapidly revol ving saw, arid his body was ripped through from the thigh to the neck. Death was instantaneous.

The William G. Fisher Manufacturing Company of Cincinnati will remove its plant to Kokomo, a contract having been signed to that elfect. The CDmpany will manufacture cooking and heating apparatus and wilt give employment to a large number of men, The fiouring mill at Washingtoia, owned by the Hon. Clement Lee and leased by Messrs. Toomey and Swing, burned to the ground, the fire originating in the roof. Fifteen hundred bushels of wheat wens destroyed. The entire loss is $25,0C0. of which $2,500 fails on the lessees. Mr. Bee carried no insurance. Mrs. Scott Williams, of Russiaville, claimed to have been insuli ted by Dr. J. C. Wright, a dentist, while she was in his office, and her husband 'meeting Wright upon the street, pounded him until he was unconscious, Mr. Williams was fined, and it is said that the doctor's brother not only paid the fine, but ga ve Williams five dollars in token of his appreciation of what had been done. The State Board of Educat ion, before adjourning decided to require from the contractor who may agree to furnish all of the text hooks needed by the school children of Indiana a bond "of $250,000, and tbat the amount of liability for any contractor supplying one or more books shall be proportioned in ratio to the total value of all the books needed as to make the aggregate of such bonds

1300,000. Quincy Makepeace, of Anderson, a few years ago inherited $150,000 by the death of his father, which he appears, to have wasted in headlong dissipation. Tuesday suits were filed on his behalf against several parties, alleging that he had been defrauded of his rights by sharp practices. One of the suits involves the Madison County Asylum property, which was purchased from him by the county Commissioners, . Sylvester Grubbs was hanged at Yincennes, Friday, by he sheriff, for the murder of his sweetheart, Miss Gter trude Downey, at a county fair, Sept. 18, 1888. Miss Downey had discarded him at the solicitation ot her mother and refused to see him. Meeting her on the fair grounds, he shot her down in cold blood. An attempt was made to lynch him but he washurried away and protected. Strong and futile efforts were made to have his. sentence of death changed to imprisonment for lite. A queer incident is reported at Peru. Twenty eight years ago W, Kasote was married1, and after twenty years roan and wife, mutually agreed io a sep oration, and a. divorce vras obtained. One year later they remarried, and within twelvo months again separated, and were the second Km a divorced. Kasote married another lady, and nothing was heard of his former wife until Monday, when she. appeared at Peru, accompanied by Alexander Hunt, of Indianapolis, and asked the privilege of being married to Mr. Hunt in the home ot her former husband. This was granted and the marriage followed. All the parties. are advanced in years, Samuel J, Carpenter, the Senator from Shelby and Decatur, unseated py the State Senate for bribery in the late election, was acquitted by a Federal jury at Indianapolis, Friday. The de-

jennanc expiaineo rus various monetary transactions with Democratic voters hy saying that he simply paid them for work done in his behalf. His methods of payment were peculiar. Instead of handing the money to the "person it was meant for, Mr. Carpenter would remark that if the person would look in a feed box in a livery stable where the conversation occurred, he would find something that he might take without hurting anybody's feelings. Under these vague ln&troctionu Tbaddeus Major lool el in a feed box and found. $35 aud later, on the same day, Charles A. Houee found $10 in a feed box. Defendant explained t hat this method was adopted because Major and House wanted to bo able to say to their. Democratic brethren that they had not received any money from Republicans. Their tender consciences positively refused to be silenced until eome such course was employed. Mr. House was placed upon the stand and among other anBU ers to

question told what work he had done that led Mr, Carpenter to forward $10

to him by the feed-box route. At the conclusion of ail testimony the attorneys

made no argumente. J udge Woods then informed the jury that the Government

had mm m m mi usgAUse $ ftsi! mi

shown that anybody was bribed to vote I

eence of Sir. Carpenter could not be de6ided by this jury, because if he had used bribery it was cleat he had purchased votes for himself alone. That is a matter which the State courts mutt fiettle. Whenever it is shown that the election 0 a Congressman has not been interfered with, the Federal Courts, has ao jurisdiction. Judge Woods therefore instructed the j ury to find the defendant not guilty. It is not believed that the State courts will take the case up at all. Under Indiana laws, a man who is bribed . is a Criminal as well as the briber. The evidence against Car

penter must come chiefly from the men who received money from him, and that

would doubtless be exceedingly hard to get if the witnesses knew they were endangering themselves by their testimony. Iu hiei instructions, Judge. Woods said he believed elections would be purer and freer if it was made unlawful for a ma 1 to hire any one to work for him in the campaign.

The Rev, Dr. J. M. Buckley, writing of Spain, says: "Bribery :is general in Spain. Almost anything., can be done with a fee. Not more than forty per cent, of the taxes levied by the Government can be collected. Mayors of cities get rich in a Year. One at least of the most. I important cities is destitute of credit. No one will lend it any money. Spaniards bo distrust each other that money is not forthcomin g for great public workB. The English manage the water works, the street cars, and almost everything else."

BASE BALL.

Standing of the league and Association

Clubs wp to Bate.

THE LEAftCB.

Won. tot-

New York.

Boston M adelphlA.. Pittsburg Chlfego Tndittnapo i . Washing on ... Cleveland

THE ASSOCTATION.

Won. Lost

St lotus Kan iiis nty .. Baltimore Athletic .... Brookl' n C t'Clnnati .. Lou 6ville..... Columbus

NEXT GAMES AT BTOIAHAVOXJS. April 21 to i!7 with Cleveland. April 29 to Hay 2 with Chicago.

Man Wants a Ton lo

When there a a lack of elatittc energy in the system, mown by a sensation of languor anl unrest in the morning, frequent Aiming- during the day and disturbed sleep at night Hostctter's Stomach Bitters infu-es unwonted energy into th on fabled and nervous, endowing them with musfular miergy, and ability to repose healthfully, and dijffst without inconvenience. Nervousness, headache, billicusness, impaired appeti e aud a feabie, trou leceme stoma h, are all -and speedily set right by this matchless regulator and iuvigorant The nvneral poid ns, among them stry hlna and nux vomica, are never safe tonics, even in iniiuiteslmal dosw. The Bitters t anttwers the )urpose more effectually, and an be rel ed upot as perfee ly safe by the most prideir. revor and ague kidney troubles and rheumatism yield to it. It must.be very exciting for the insect world to see an antelope. HOW'S THIS? We offer Que Hundred Dollars reward for any ease of Oatwrh tha 0 in not ha cared by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J CHEN NY dt CO . Props , Toledo, O, Wo. the undersigned, huve known F. J. Cheney for the last 13 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations niadeby tbeit firm. Wbst & Tjhtax. Wholesale Dtruzeists, Toledo, O. Waldkn. Kiss ax A. MAavm, Wholesale Drngsisis, Toll do, O. E. H. Van Roesex. Cashier, Toledo National Bsnk, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is'takea internally, aoting directly upon the blood aud mnous surfaces of the system. TesMmoriiala sent free. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold bv all Druggiets. Do po!liceraeu belong; to the arrestocracy? The Diflleulty Exik neneel In takinur Cod ;Liver Oil entirely overcome in Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil and Hypophospuiteti. li is aa palatable as milk, and. the most valuable remedy that has over been prodnced for tho euro of Consumption, Scrofula and Wasting Diseases, Bo not fail to try it. A lawyer is never so blind but he can cite authorities. . Consumption duroly Cured. To the Editor. Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands ofhopelew caaea have keen-permanently cured. 3 shall be glad to send two bottles oi.my remedy fuee to any of your renders who have consumption if they will send aie their Express and P. O. address. Respectfully, T. A. SIX)CUM. M. C, 181 PearlSL. New York .

Probably 200 Indianapolis people have gone to Oklahoma ana Indiana adds may moire to the number. The man or woman who is profit blr employed is generally happy. If you a e not "happy It may bo because you have not found yor p-oper work. We tar e tly 1 Tge all m h persons to write to B F. Johnson Co., 009 Main S ., Richmond, Vs., and 'hey can show t on a wo 1c m which you can be happily and profitably employed . Editors are being recognized officially. The President is a pious .man, whe doesn't propose to see the writeous forsaken. . : , . :., CATARRH CURED. A clergyman, after years of sittfering from that loathsome disease, Chtarrh, and vainly trying every knowiu remedy, at last found a recipe which completely cured and saved nim from death. Any sufferer from this dreadful disease sending a self-addressed stamped envelope to Prof. J. A. lwrenoe, 8S Warren St., New York City, will receive the reruns free of charce. - "The Best Time on Record" Father Time. . When all so called remedies fall. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures. .,Wby does a man call his sweetheart honey? Because she is his bee-loved, Bradfle'd'a Ftmal Reyntatr. Should be used by the young woman she who suffers from .any disorders peculiar to her sex, and at change of 11 fej it benefits all who use it. Write the Brndfieid Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga., for further particulars. Sold by all druggists. ; ;

Ten families117 persons are anting one Anderson house.

ten-

GMldns Cry for Pltsitfs Sastoria.

When tftsjy was sick, we tmvu her Cawcrta, When she was a Child, she ciied icr Caiitoria, Whtn she became Miss, hs clung to Cwtoria, When the had Children, she itava them Osstorla

THE MARKETS.

Indianapolis, April PA 1B88. grain

Vheat

No.2Red... 84

No.3Red 82

Corn No. 1 White .33 No. 2 Yellow 32 Oats, White....29

LIVE STOCK.

Oattlb Good to choice.... 4.00(4.25

Choice heifers &363&oo Oorumon to medium cows 2.502.75

Good to choice cows .3.003.20

Hogs Heavy .0(g4.u Licht .....40V4.85 Mixed 4,604.75 pjga , 4.404.45 StrsEP .Good to choice. 4.2504.50 Fair to medium 3,504,15

SGGS, RUTTKR, POULTRY.

Hons ner lb 0t

Roosters 4c Turkeys lie I

Eggs 0c

Bn tter, creamery z-c Fancy country... 12c Choice country.. 2 Oc

MISCELLANEOUS. Wool Fine merino, washed... ..3336 unwashed mod .......... .2022 vftrv coarse... . .... .... . .17(18

Ha timothy. .12.75 Bun -9-fiO

Clover seed... 5.25.!

Chicago

Sngar cured ham 12 -Bacon clear sile 11

Feathers, srtwwe 35

Wheat (May ).,. 87

Corn " M

Porte. 11.66 Lard 6.86

Htb.M.uu, ... ...

Two hoods of style that's rather queir Two little maids with n night to fear. Except that either will rightly guess What t'other holds behind her drees,

They scan each other's faces fair. ; Then, in one voiee, they both aeclare "Hood's SarsanariHa! I can: tell: And ihatVwhat makes you lpokeo well."

IViakes

the

Weak Strong

If you are run down, or have, that tired feeling as a result of overwork or the effect of the changing seaion, you should lake that best of idl tonics and blood purifiers, Hood's Sarsapsrilla, It purines and en ri hes the blood, tones the itomach, rouses the liver and kidneyi creates an appetite and builds up tlio system. Thousands te tify that Hood's Sarspar:lla "makes the weak strong." Hood's SarsapariUa Sold by oil druggists, fl; six for 85. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries Low 11, Haw. IOO Doses OneDoliar.

"For a first-class spring Medicine my wife anft. f think highly of Hood's Sarsaparilla. Last year it did us a great deal of good and we felt better through the hot weather than ever before , I eured my wife of sick headKche, and relieved me. of a diray, tired feeling. We shall certainly take Hood's Sarsaparilla again this spring." JUBp

1 babcs, snips, wranite bj, o., mbo, .si. ix.

Hood's

parilla

Sold by all druggisti. flutr for 35. feared onlf;

IOO Doses One Dollar : v

s

THE EXPERIENCE OF MRS. PETERS.

Sirs. Peters had ills, Sire. Poters had chills, Mrs. Peters was sure she was going to die; ? They dosed her with pills, With powders and squills; With remedies wet, and with remedies dry.

Many medicines lured her V . v., But none of them cured tef,-,. Their names and their number nobody oonld , teUs w C " ' ,:r And she soon might have died; , But some Pellets " were tried, , That acted like magic, and then she got wettV

The magic " Pellets " were Dr. Pierce's Pleasant PurgatiTe Pellete ( the original Little Liver PiUs ). They are unequaled as a Liver Pilt Smallest, cheapest, easiest tc take, One tiny, Sugar-coated Pellet a Dose Cures Sick Headache Bilious Headache, Dizziness, Constipation; Indigestion, Bilious Attacks and all derangement of jhe stpmach ad bowels. 25 cents, by druggists. ; :

Copyrighted, 1888, by World's Dispensaby Medical A&sociaizon, Proprietors. . -

For " run-down," debilitated and overworked women. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription fs the best of all restorative tonics. It is a potent Specific for aU those Chronic Weaknesses and. Diseases peculiar to Women; a powerful, invigorating, restorative tonic ana nervine. lt inrparts new vigor and strength to the whole system. . - . " - - ' :.' "aTorite Prescription" la the onlyi medicine for women, soldny drufl-jrJsts. under

a positive guarantee of satisfaction in every case, or price ($1.00) refunded. This guarantee has been printed on the bottle-wrappers, end faithfully carried out fox many years. v;

or Ta tsmt Txuncons nr '.m World.

FEE

Ta But nowzv-BSHSBxae shot wjf.

la order tolntrodofe oaroodatW wiUsoUl fftr

iMAMtr.on or car umbo uobdic

t ieoMLtia mm tun uoout-w

'railed KhotOtin nadt. wa

raal 1 lo mkjcaUiUwdnrf(U oner for the reMoa Uiuoar roou f aols merit (hat. whnznoQ douchm them, is mar loflMftv, their

fkma ijirauU, and many poo pit purchase ; ft Urg and profitable tradefj

iwayi nraita. w can rappij iree omy ob perton dmcb locamr.. ThoM vrho writ at one, will mala nn of ihetr reward, whllo those.

who delay will (o thtchanc. BitGuo. Oraad Talwcopa, NopaoJ

mac

S expliiD further here.Tbo who write at one wia care protaptje-"" arary.iitaterraKpraei oWcid.lreea. 1 B Al.f.ETTJfcPia

lOerlf

-

A

J gA "1 " mY Tho mau who Uaa inrcsted irom three to five dollars in ft Uubbcr Coat, and at his first half hour's experience in a storm finds to his sorrow that It Is hi rdly a better protection than a mosquito nc tUng, not only feels chagrined at being so badly taken In, but also feds If he doea not look exactly like Xt tor the F1SU UltAND SuCKEB f

c-es not hftvo the risn bbaxd, send for descriptive catalogue. A J. Towaa, 90 Simmnns 8tM Boston. Mass

WET

HEN

aX. AfcT-A - w - JWt 1 T BTfcTsMSSM rirlrV "wA,,l,,IwA,pA!Piv we oiler the man who wanu servioa (not style) a garment chat wlB torn, t him dry in the hardest storm. It fe eaUed TOWBa?S FISH BitAKD M SLICKElt," a name famfflar te cretsy -Cow-boy all over the land. With these. , 7 the only perfect Wind and Waterprodf, .' Coat Is " Tower's Fish Brand SliekmV ;

and take no ctlter. If yctur storekeeper

I

rvatit & Stvatton OMoago Business QolUg. o-a(ni.n a vn rweriTiivii' a vn irvoT.ntT tr A rvrvn ar-wn rr t- .v err a nm AM

Dtvant I IrNBTITTJT Wm Catalojrue, 1 W-V7E llECOal

iNSTirlTCION and the XjiAX'tsmt xl CToarld. Fall inioroa&Mhi

Lie. icrmi, etc., seni r uiviu. a.aarwsi, n. . uniAni sua, rrop s. tausfjo,

rCVTT T ITTH fiYT T Wilt? TYi 1 1 ' W Hff A Ttlrufl UanKA. tkl. wm. M

i 3

Mention this paper "when yon write

Dom estic felicity is disturbed when a man has a wife and elixir. N. Y. World. Cousjlts, Hoarseness, Bore Throat, etc., qnickiy re,H red by Brown's Bronchial Troches. a simnle and effectual remedy, superior to all ott er a ticks for the same purpose. Sold only m bortSead Dr. Barber's card in another column. Ism well p eased wth Maoxb'3 Eutjlsxok. If 1 e sily t leer' aud digested, and unlike most muislnns, it pives litti or no offtts-a to the stomneh. A. P, Crinnell, Dean Unlversitf of Vt.p Burington.

ASTHMA cured . rveuiAU 1XTUIIA CUItsT

psstiMtj rehavee tha nost vjotaati ek; and

arLT?LR4ncr nnadhv inhklaiioB. Ibtftitinr is fro. I

modiste direct and eertmio. and a cure Is thai

i reittJt in ail caratua coeea. A nntw inn conlaiiiana tha matt akentloal Prfoa fiOo. aatl ALOO

i .a i i. -a c n o i w.

f.Si. raat

CHEAP HOMES

.".FARMING REGIONS o:f KKBRASilA. KAKSAB, COLORADO and WVOMIN6. Puke government and othkb LANDS. DESCKlPTtVE ClHCCUA ft

with Map. sk;t fkek on application to F. BUST1JS. a. P. A-Cfl.4 Chicago.

vuirurcTra tiur.l ISM

PENKYR0YAL PILLS

s4zWL

mi

Orlataal. beat, oaly aaine aad Kliabte t-lil fireala. Sem PaiL

Aak for CkicJuttsr't EnglM ninmnnA Bran. tared me

tallic ho;ss, acnici with blue ril

UruAalt4. Accept

r. Ail put ta paste

boa. Atlr

board boxes, pink rapers.are a dancer

vns coan wncii

t. Send 4r. (etampel tat

titQiara aad Relief fir Ladle, t

iv ntturn maJL 10.000 teatSV

l iftite.k.(iiBLMl ifcMn Kim. Pimp. .

OsUcheatex Utemlcal tkMadU0B Sq.PhihuPa.

:!-

titer, bj

WEAK, NEIW0U8 PEOPLE. ?

JtKTIC BELT positively curop. ! itliRt ATlRxAErafiU.LlV-

Skb, KUISKf and exhansUac

I'cnroniootaeattesor wuismxmm.

contains s toioo qegreeaoa

latest imp arorpd. cbcsipeat. $0.. o wr rui. an .

none anawsetreenvo jsjumvvj.wv WOULD. Electric SnspenKoriea free with Mala J Avoid bosnn companies with. many eJfesHi anderorta--

lml Cation. ELEcroie tbrobs sua ninvea.

. W. J. flORNE, IHVEBTOI. 191 WABASH ftVCHlCaJsV

PENSIONS

We are sctivaly iogatf4 In the probation of pb sJon and other war claims, and raspaottuU solicit eorrespocdenoa. Cichteett Years Exparienoa, Caileot Olflcora' Accounts, Horae COalma. Panaiotts tooreased. Bejected oaaea re-opened. 12-psaT Pamphlet: ot Paaaion Laws sent fas Addrtae F. H. FTrZOKRAJLD, V. 8. CQalm Afaner. Indianapolis, Indiana.

dfPkT tf -Tr1rScS3afilaSsK Lmvr If a norao'aElectiMaaeUelialU IKsKSwi osSnI wXruta,oombinod. Qnaraateedtho $Sk!.-TS&V only ono in tho world Reneratias IwSHtflftsaslP. nconUnuoua Electric Va(m&tfa

SVV ?r?KVJ-- " -o.inn- nnroliT.

KL,PI

S5

TO S10 A DAY.

AGENTS WANTED!

r-CXXCULABI TS0DS

1JX0 BrewaterVi Safety Bala HoMes: eivon away to introduce them. ENf be, horse owj 1 ttr buys from 1 to 6. Llaac never under horses' feat. SecdoassB in stampo to pay potaae and packlnf for KieseV Plated Sample that asllsj te

IT Otittst Mieticik iHth World is firehaily " DR. ISAAC THOMPSON'S CELEBRATED EYE-WATER. This aruele is a carcruuy prepared pho Scum's pn sertptlOB, and has been In constant use t or nearly." century. There are few diseases to whi ih rosjikUHt are subject more distressing than soro eyes, ant nana, perhaps, for which more remedici have beea .. tried without success. For all e rtcrnal It irtamraatton f the eyas it Is an infallible remedy. If the dires - lions are followed it will never fall. We particularly Vt invite the attention of physicians to Its merits. For saaobyaUdrumrlota. JOm L. THOilPSOS' SOKB & Oa, Troy3. Y. Established 178.V v . '. . .,

Ovtr 0.000 cured. Bend Stamp foinmpntet

ALfiO ELECT RIO BELTS FOB 1I8EA8KS.

0. HORNE, inventob, 18! Wabash ave,Cmicaco.

Olilo IMPROVED Chesters IWarmaktkd CHOLERA PROOF. t!L.Z!Uxphbb8 prepaid. Win lav

PRUCa IN U. 8. A FORCIOM Coum

rR(Ka. 2 WEi JHCO 2806 LOB. flat mo roe ocaoRtrriON a raios or

Untirflf IIUAI UMH. ALIA VOWtB

(this company soli lai bwd (or bnHlJng purposes) tx

LB. SILVER CO, OLaVStND.O.I

ISSh. Sand for foots and tueaLUm Uiio paper.)

EIT.fi I

a 9 n v

?V" a.i.yamaABa,

law mnoipai Kxaninw, u. a. Pension Buroauttv

at law. wasb in a ton . s.

t snecessfully prosecutes clalma-orfctnaL, v ; aa. re-ratinsr. wiaowa', children's and depett -'o

dent rolanvos'. Experience: 6 years in last war, year in Pension Bureau, and attorney since then.; . -1 . nil CO luhiiip. Bleeding or Protruding - I Isa CaO Piles cured or money refunded Send for one box of Little's Pile Salvo. Mailed ta -. any addrees on receipt of price, 3 cter L.ITTLJB & COON, Box ISS, Troy, K. Y, , ' f a

m

M

li V I will send for I2 ents in stRnips a re ILIV ntrtn tA irtAnaA th.flnw nf milk in-

Cows 25 per cent It will DdiT. Sure. .'-'.Add 'M dress J A ..SNY0KR, Trenton; N. J." :

Mention this Pa per.

Whan 1 v mmi T nnf. TYiJH mftTi ta RtTt tham

fl...llim.i.rlllinit)l.nl 1SM KltT mrin I 111(11111 X

ratliijfll cure. I luive t ar.de. tha disaaaa of I ITS, JSPIL; KPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a life-long etady. f

ivarranv iny ivmciiy to euro iue wnnj. - iovu othara hitvn failed Is no rwason for nob now jraevivina I euro. :Seud at ouco for a tivatisoand a Freo BotUa of my in'allible remedy, Hvo Evpreas and Post Office. U. LlOOTs lU 0.. 183 Pearl St. Mow York.

7lj!rUTQt75 por month and exponas

nui.ii i v ...id .n. ..iin miAArwiuiuii ta mrii our irooas

WAIiTCnir rampia ml liva at home. talarjr.atM

ON

MM

proxnnSy and expeueee la advance. Fql 1 IMU

tioitU -k and laninle case iit. n n msaajui

what rrewr etittiAvi lvrwoira

9

find that Pieo Cure '' for .Consumption net only PREVKfcrS,- but ., also. CUKES llocxeeness. j- '&", .. ,.:

1HWF STUDY-:: J:&:

I wins, forms, r en mtus nip, &numeii. owwv. $ hand, etc, Uiorongh?y taught by M AIL. Circular free. Bryan taBHainesa Coll.'Bvis.to.S.'ir

nn lern ToleaTTiphy here (mdciiru1t

Oil help you to good situations.

eblean School TeAeeropliy, Madison,

Young M drees. Aineb

Ad uWisi

When . writing' to Advertisers reaem rtSI1confer a favor by mbutloning tills liajper.

LADIES

' - W. .'.1