Bloomington Telephone, Volume 14, Number 22, Bloomington, Monroe County, 30 July 1889 — Page 3

SIX TIMES COURT-MARTIALED, AaA Four TIum Sentenced to Plftmlesal from tte Arnijt but Still There. In the case of Captain George A. Armes, U. S. A., retired, sentenced by general court-martial to be disiriissed from the service, the President, in consideration of the good service which this officer has rendered and of pome mitigating circumstances, has com muted the sentence to confinement within such limits as the Secretary of War may prescribe and to deprivation cff the right to wear the uniform and insignia of his rank in the army for five years. The charges on which Capt. Armes was convicted were : Publicly and maliciously assailing Col. Gibson and Gapt. Bourke, and, "without provocation or justification, making a cowardly aod disgraceful violent public assault upon the person of his Excellency James A Beaver, Governor of Pennsylvania, in front of the Biggs House on March 4." Capt. Armes was one of the aids in the Inauguration Day procession, and his conduct was such that Adjutant General Hastings ordered him to be put out. He considered this an insult, and later he met Gov. Beaver, the Grand Marsnal, and assaulted him. The Governor drew dack and raised his crutch to strike the officer in defense. He paid no further attention to the assault, and characterized it as that of a crazy creature. Capt. Armes is used to court-martial. In January, 1868, he was tried upon charges in connection with his conduct in the Department of the Missouri and was acquited. Six months later a number of charges were preferred against him, but the court-martial found him guilty of only one offense, and for this he was reprimanded. He was next tried for conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentlemen in March, 1870, was found guilty, and dismissed from the army. By a special act of Congress he was restored to the army in 1878. A year later, in October, 1879, he was tried by court-martial and found guilty of depriving the enlisted men of his company of one-half of their meat rations, after having obtained the full rations for his command: of publicly degrading and arbitrarily punishing subordinate officers without cause and without trial; of compelling sick men to do duty, and of seeking to coerce men in his command to make false affidaits concerning the matter of short rations. The sentence was dismissal from the army, and President Hayes commuted it to suspension from rank for one year, with forfeiture of one-half pay and confinement to the limits of his company's post for that period. While he was serving this sentence Armes was once more put on trial for disobedience of orders and conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman, and for the third time he was sentenced to be dismissed from the service. In this case President Garfield commuted the sentence of suspension from rank for six months, loss of onehalf pay, and confinement to his company's post for that period. This sentence took effect July 18, 1881. Under his present sentence he gets full retired pay. A Monraent to La Salle. Mr. McLane, ex-Minister of the United States to France, has communicated a letter to President Carnot, informing him that an American Mr. Lambert Tree intends erecting in Chicago, at his own expense, a monument to the celebrated French explorer, La Salle. This is very handsome of Mr. Tree, and it is a wonder that the'Americans did not think of La Salle before. Those who have read Mark Twain's aLife on the Mississippi" will recollect the encomiums which the American humorist lavishes on the French explorer, who well deserved them. It was La Salle who, in the seventeenth century, explored the verdant valleys of Ohio and Illinois, discovered the estuary of the Mississippi after long and laborious navigation, and finally gave to France the fervile province of Louisiana, which she was destined to lose by the Treaty of Paris. As Mr. McLane points out, Chicago is in the center of the magnificent region which the genius of La Salle had recognized instinctively as destined for a brilliant future, and which is nowadays covered by the flourishing cities or capitals of ten States, which are as so many little kingdoms. La Salle, in landing on the shores of Lake Michigan and founding settlements in Illinois, conceived the idea of uniting Canada with Louisiana, and thus forming a vast French colonial empire, bounded on the north by the Polar Sea and the Atlantic Ocean, and on the south by the Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific, La Salle's magnificent designs were, however, frustrated just as were those of the French settlers in India, and to-day France, while still possessing a foothold in Pondicherry in India, has not an inch of territory in the Western world. Strange to say, La Salle has been almost as much ignored by his fellow-countrymen as Gen. Dupleix, the rival of Cfive in India; and few Frenchmen trouble their heads about the explorer's eventful history which M. Pierre Margry has set forth in his book on "France in the New World." La Salle died in the wilds of America, and his tomb is unknown. Paris letter. Method of Photographing Stars. When we place in the iocus of the telescope a highly sensitive photographic plate the vibrations of the rays of light throw themselves assiduously on the plate and steadily apply to the tasfc of shaking asunder the molecules of silver salts in the gelatine film. Just as the waves of ocean by incessantly beating against a shore will gradual y wear away the mightiest cliffs of the toughest rock, so the innumerable millions of waves of light persistently impinging upon a single point of the ftlate will at length effect the necessary decomposition, and so engrave the image of the star. It will be obvious that this process will be the more complete the longer the exposure is permitted, and thus we see one of the reasons why photography forms auch an admirable method for depict

ing the stia-s. We can give exposures of many minutes, or of one, two, three, or four hours, and all the time the effect is being gradually accumulated. Hence it is that a star which is altogether toe- feeble to produce an impression upon the most acute eye, fortified by a telescope of the utmost power, may yet I e competent, when a sufficient exposure has been allowed, to leave its recoril on the plate. Thus it is that photographs of the heavens disclose to us the existence of stars which could never have been detected except for this cumulative method of observation that photography is competent to give, Macmillah's Magazine. Why He Wanted the Police to Arrest the Monkey. The Ccunt di Spaghetti came inlo the North Harbor Police Station this morning with a long face and a dangerous glittor in his eye. MI want a da police." "Yes? said the Desk Sergeant. What's the matter now, Johnny?" aI want a heem to arresta da monk "Arrest a monkey ! You can't get a policeman to arrest a monkey." "Sacri sinia ! Sacr-r-amento !M howled the Coui.t, waving his fingers frantically in front of the Sergeant's face. "No arresta da monk' when he steal? I swear out da warranta," kA warrant don't go with the monkey, Johnny. What did he do?" the Count gave a groan. ttO, corpo di baccho! He was a very bad moo k You know Julio di Scala grinda da org'?" The Sergeant shook his head.

"He on-na da monk. Santa Maria! I killa h 3om soma day. Last night he coma into da wine shop, buy a fine bottlawine. He saya, 'I no gota da monV I saya, 'You no geta da wine, den. He saya, Tor da lofe of old Italia.' I saya, 'No mon,' no wine.' Den he putta da monk' oil da counter, and saya, 'You keepads, monk till I bringa da monV Da monk he looka ver' sharp, he dansa little bit. I know he jrorth raoch nion so I say 'Alia right, for da love of olfl Italia you taka da wine, and I keepa da monl.V "Den Julio he go out and da monk' he dansa yer' cute, and da shop fill up pretty soon. Plenta men buy wine, and I thinka mabe let Julio have da bottla for nothing. When O saerissima! I imrn my back, da monk1 grabba da" tweny-dolla gold piece, shin out da door, around da corner. I no catcha heera any more. He taka da mon to Julio di Scala. I losa do twenty dolla,' losa da Jine bottla wine maka di Spaghetti sick." "YouM better swear out a warrant for Julio," suggested the Sergeant, "if he's got the money." But Count di Spaghetti shook his head mournfully. "It v as da monk'. You no arrest heem. I killa heem or busta da org" "You'll get fined another twenty if you do," said the Sergeant. At thia threat Count Spaghetti darted out of the door in terror, and the rich strains of his choice Italian oaths could be heard echoing from far up Broadway. San Francisco Post. Economical Living. While some people who imagine they are poor are squabbling oer whether or not they cm live on $20 per week, others of whom I have knowledge are living on $3 a week. They do not stop to debate about the question at all, but go right ahead and do it. Really, it does not cost much to support life in a hearty, healthy man, if he has no pride or nicely about him. Ten cents will get him a bed for the night in a big, hot room with forty or fifty companions. Five cents will get him a bowl of oatmeal or cornmeal or rice in tjie morning, with a slice of bread, ten cents will get tim a plate of meat and vegetables at midday, and five cents will get him all the bread oi: corn cakes he wants for supper. All told, the man who lives in the cheapest lodging-house in town and boards at the cheapest restaurant spends only 30 cents a day for living expenses. Washing costs him nothing, for he wears no collars or cuffs, nd when his shirt needs soaking very badly he wrestles with it in the common bath tub and hangs it up to dry before the red hot stove before he goes co sleep. It is possible for him to save 90 cents a week. 'Longshoremen, towbojs, sailors out of work, and laborers of all kinds mingle in the cheap lodging-house, and there is also a large percentage of full-fledged or semitramps, and beggars, though most of the genuine tramps scorn to pay for anything and get themselves committed to the jail or penitentiary. Let it not be thought for a moment that the inhabitants of the cheap lodging-houses are homogeneous, They are divided into many classes. The young men go to one room, the old men to another, and or e of the strangest 1-hings found is the strong disposition of those who have fallen from propriety to drift together. I found in one house an exxnayoz of Brooklyn, an ex-surrogate, and a priest who was not so very long ago tie pastor of a large parish. Others ii. the same house were ex-iner-chantf, spendthrift heirs, and ex-actors. They are still aristrocratic, spending as much as 15 cents for their beds, and getting it, the Lord knows how. In their 'tunable reading room they discuss the world from the cynical standpoint of their wrongs, real or imaginary, and they would no more associate with the lodgers in other houses than Queen Victoria would accompany her hopeful eldesl; son to a London music hall. Drink has been the cause of downfall in almost all these cases. Brooklyn Eagle. The Most Valuable Metal. aIf I gave you a pound of metal and ordered you to make the most out of it, what kind of metal would you select?" asked a well-known jeweler. "Gold, of course, n was the prompt reply, "I'd prefer a pound of steel," said the jeweler, "and I'd have it made into hair springs for watches. A pound of such sprin S would sell for an even $140,000." Bvrf'alo Express. The time is not far distant when the only ''reservation" the Indian possesses will be a mental one in his mind

AUGUST BELMONT.

His

Marriage to Comiuodor Pony's

Daughter Grew Out of a Duel A romantic story is told about the first meeting of August Belmont with the lady who is now his wife. As became her brave blood, the daughter of Commodore Oliver Perry, "the hero of Lake Erie," whik still a blooming Baltimore belle, had an intense admiration for personal courage. It was while she was on a visit to some relatives in New York that the active and sturdy young German banker, who had at once taken the place in metropolitan society due the representative of the powerful house of Rothschild, became involved in a famous duel. At the theater one evening he was among a group of young men, and between the acts one of the party expressed his admiration of the beauty of the ladies present in the boxes, among whom was Miss Perry. A noted Georgia "fire-eater" standing by, who was widely feared and avoided as a bully and a dead shot, made some remark reflecting on the virtue of women generally. There wa3 silence for a moment, when young Belmont, a slight, timidlooking fellow, to the dismay of his companions, faced the bully and said in distinct, deliberate tones : "The dog who could utter such a sentiment insults the memory of his own mother and is unfit for the company of decent men ! White with rage, the bully hissed : "You shall hear from me, sir!" It was before the war, in the good old times, and a duel followed, of course. Belmont's friends gave him up as a dead man. But when the smoke from the simultaneous fire of the two pistols had cleared away it was found that the bully had a bullet through his heart and Belmont had a ball in his left leg below the knee. He became the hero of the hour, and soon after he was able to get about he proposed to the beautiful Miss Perry and was accepted. He afterward confessed that it was her noble face that, nerved him to resent the imputation on her sex. To this day he limps painfully, but his wife is proud of his disfigurement. None Dead, Apparently. The number of original Harrisomaen in Washington now is only execeeded by the numbers of the "Third Iowa, liegiment, of which Secretary Noble was adjutant. Every man who was a member of that famous fighting regiment during the war, in quest of office, thinks that he had an especial claim upon the Secretary of the Interior, One day Secretary Noble, Assistant Secretay Bussey,who was Colonel of the Third Iowa, and Colonel Hassler the democratic appointment clerk of the In terior Department and a great wag, tfere in the secretary's office when the door opened and a gentleman from the wild and wolly West entered the officey He was welcomed by Colonel Busse. and General Noble, and the former said : Colonel Hassler, let me make you acquainted with Major Pickerel!, of Dakota, formerly of the Tird Iowa." Hasler and the major shook hands, and the former with great gravity said : "Mfjor, that regiment, I believe, took no part in the war?" "Well,, sir," replied the major indignantly, "I saould think it did. That regiment fought in some of the severest battles of the war." "Why, Hassler," said the secretary, "What "made yon ask such a queston?" "Oh, simply becanse so rnanX of its members are alive," was Hassler's reply, and the secretary appeciatiang the sarcasm, almost; fell from his chair in a . paroxysm of laughter. Was h ing to n letter. Fair Understanding. A woman in the near vicinity of 45, and weighing within a pound of 180, says the Detriot Free Press, occupied a seat on the train from Toledo the other day in company with a sacred-looking looking young man who probably voted last falf for the first time. As they mentioned Detroit and the fact that they were going to s top here, a citizen who had a seat ahead turned round and said he would be glad to give them any information he possessed. "Look-a-here," said the woman ;'in answer, "I want a fair understanding with you at the outset. Who do you suppose this young man is?" 4 'Your vour grandson, perhaps. w "No, sir." 'Your nephew, then." "No, sir." "Your own son." "No, sir." "Perhaps he is an acquaintance, "He is my husband, sir married yestsrday and I don't want any mistake made. A dozen different people have taken him for my grandson or nephew, and I am getting tired of it. He's my husband, sir h-u-s-b-a-n- d, and now go ahead and tell us where we can find a hotel with family comforts for about $1 a day. Where Woman Has a Grip. Typewriting is peculiarly woman's work. Fully 75 per cent, of the operators are of this sex. The reasons assigned for this fire varied. Some attribute the fact to the greater dexterity of feminine fingers and others to vtheir greater cheapness. Neatness is also assigned as a reason for employing women. As the pay of typewriting operators who are also stenographers averages about $12 per week, it will be seen that cheapness is not the least important element in giving preference to the female operators. Quite a number of the young women get as high as $25 a week, but they are exceptionally quick operators. The number who :receive from $5 to $7 a week is much greater. 0 hicago T ribune. He Had It. "In the coal business, are you?" "Yes, sir." "Discovered the way to wealth, I suppose?" "I have." "What is it?" "The weigh to wealth, sir, is 1,800 pounds to the ton I"

A Remarkable S'.ory. A fair case for investigation by our Society fur Psychical Research is presented in a little book recently published in England, which professes to givo the true story of the discovery of the fate of the great Arctib explorer, ir John Franklin. According to this writer, Sir John Franklin's fate was the subject of a special revelation. Headers of arctic history are well aware that the British Government sent many search expeditions to find traces of "Franklin, but wi thout avail. According to Rev. Mr. Skewes, a child of 4 years, the daughter of a Capt. Coppin, of Londonderry, died in May, 1849, and for many months after reappeared in the spirit form to various memberj of her family. The Franklin mystery was being dismissed everywhere at this time, and a 7-ycar-old sister of the dead child, at the suggestion of her aunt, questioned the apparition on the subject. Thereupon, says the little book, "there appeared upon the floor a oomplete Arctic Sea, showing two ships surrounded with ice and almost covered with snow, including a channel which led to the ships." This scene, or chart, was copied, and, in answer to further questions, there aj.peared upon the opposite wail, in large, round letters, the following: "Erebus and Terror, Sir John Frankliti, Lancaster Sound, Prince Regent Inlet, Point Victory, Victoria Channel." Capt. Coppin is said i:o have forwarded this very definite message from the unseen world to Lady Franklin, who was so impressed with it that she insisted that Capt. McClintock, who sailed on the final search expedition in 1857, should follow the exact route thus laid down. This was done, and the result was the discovery of the cairn at Point Victory, in which a thin tin cylinder was concealed, giving the only written report that ever was found respecting the loss of the Erebus and Terror and the death of Sir John Franklin. McClintock returned to England, and was loaded with rewards and honors for having cleared up the mystery, but his success, according to Rev. Mr, Skewes, was entirely due to the fidelitv with which he stuck to the route

laid down bv the Londonderrv appari-1

tion. Capt. Coppin's children are still living, and Mr. Skewes says that, though it happened forty years ago, the story can be verified in every particular. Thfc Psychical Society should lose no time in holding its inquest on this remarkable narrative. Boston Globe. First a Plfipruy Anon a Giant. We are too apt to r&gard a email ailment much M we would some pigmy, nnploas&nt of aspect and pranldsh Indeed, but incapable of serious mischief. We ignore the fact that it grows prodigiously, strengthens in proportion, and begets erU progeny. A fit of indigestion, a slight bilious Attack, sensations of unrest and languor when the system should have been braced by recent sleep, unaccountable nerroueneis, lnao tiTity of the kidneys or bladder what are these but the precursors of obstinate iuad serious bodily disturbance? In either of the above emergencies, common sense and experience unite in indicating flostetter's Stomach Bitters as the best preventive. Particularly should its use be prompt when the languor, ya.wniiig, chilUneas down the back, and feverishcess that precede a malaria! attack, manifest themselves. Incipient rheumatism grows apace. Don't neglect it. So with constipation and debility. Muskets and Bayonets in a Tree. One night, long since, H. T. Huff, a well-known coal-dealer oi: Atlanta, Ga., while cutting down a bee-tree on his farm, five miles from Atlanta, on the Sandtown road, made a strange discovery. The bees were in a hollow tree, and Felix Jackson (colored) was put to work with an ax to hew it down. "Lawd a-mercy!" exclaimed the negro, as he dropped his ax arid peered into the opening he had made by the light of a torch. The negro had discovered an arsenal whose implements of war were like the gun of Rip Van Winkle after his sleep of twenty years. In the hollow tree were eight old army muskets and two bayonets which had been stored away by soldiers twenty-five years ago. The stocks oi the guns had nearly rotted away and the barrels were rusted. The tree had grown about one of the bayonets and made it immovable. St. Loui Globe-Democrat h Our Girla. Kitty is witty, Nettie is pretty. Untie Is cute and small ; Ireno is a queen, Annette is a pot, Nell iB the belle oi the baU; Diantha is wealthy. Bertha is healvhy, And health is the best of all. Forfect health keeps bar rosy and radiant, beautiful and bloomhi?, sensible and sweet. It is secured by wholesome habits and the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Bertha takes it. and she also "takes the cuke." The ouly guaranteed cure for those distressing ailnents peculiar to women. Satisfaction or your money returned. For Constipation or Sick Headache, use Dr. Pierce's Pellets; Purely Vegetable. One a dose. A Western School Stranger (to Westerner) How long does the district school keep this year.? Westerner Well, the master's pretty tough. The boys can't seem to niako him give it up, the same's they did the litUe feller we had here last year. I reckon the school will pursue the even tenor of its way till the end of the term. California Colouration, The announcement of i;he "Chicago and California Colonization Company" will be read with interest by portions who contemplate going to California. The C. fc C. C. C. is a legitimate enterprise, and one which we are pleased to mention thus favorably. Wit undirected by bonevoleee generally falls into personal satire, the keenest iuHtrment of unkiudness. It is so easy to laugh at the expense of our friends and neighbors they furnish such ready materials for our wit that all the moral forces should be arrayed against the propensity, and its earliest indications checked. No soap has ever baen imitated as much is Dobbins' Electric Soap. The market is full of imitations, lie careful that yon are not deceived. MJ. B. Dobbins. Philadelphia and New York," is stamped on every bar. Red, white and blue must be "fast" colors to cover so much territory in a hundred years.

Shitting? the Blame. A little Jewess was one day slighted by the boys i .nd girls of Christian families with whom she was accustomed to play. Upon asking the reason for the sudden change of friendship, she received this answer irom the leader of tho majority : "Our parents sa.y you Jews co-used the death of our Savior." "Well, it nasn't my family," replied the little Israelite, "though, between you and me, I shouldn't wander if it was the Cohens." Time.

Com plimc ills Freely Exchanged. "Miss Clara," he murmured fondly, can you tell me why your eyes are like the stars?" "No. Why are they?" "Because they shine so brightly. "Ah! thanks. But you are like the stars, too, Mr. Dallv." "Why, may I ask?'9 "Because von stav until davbreak. " And shortly afterward his footsteps could have been heard, as they pattered along the board walk. Everything to nature indulges in amusements. The lightning plavs, the wind whistles, the thunder rolls, the snow flies, the waves leap, and the fields smile. Even the trees shoot and the rivers and streams run.

Quite naturally it is the man of seasoned intellect and ripe experience who does not soem fresh. Binghampton Republican. tr afflicted with Sore Eyes, uae Dr. Isaao Thompson's Eye Water. Druggists sell it 25a It is an unselfish policeman who prays for the coming of the mi.lennium.

Vigor and Vitality Art auickly giiren to every part of the body by Hood'a BiirsapariUa. That tired feeUng is entinily overcome. The blcod is purified, enriched and vitalized, and carries health inste.&d of disease to evitry organ. The stomach i i toned and strengthened, th appetite restored. The cidueys and liver sre roused ntxd invigorated. The train is refreshed, the nerves iitrengthened. The wh ole system is built, up by Hoc cf s Barsa pari. 9 . "I was an ru l down and unfit for business. I was Induced to tal:e a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla, and it built me rig ht up so that 1 wai soon able to resume work " B. W. Brate, 4 Martin Street, Albany, N. Y. Hood's Sarsapaiiila Bold by all druggists. $1 ; six for $o. Propped only by C. I. HOOD CO., Lowell, Mass. lOO Doses One Dollar

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OHIO

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CATALOGUE

LOOKS & HYIAH.

TIFFIN. OHIO.

front i iww&2&r

IF rotr wish a, GOOD

R KVOI-VER

imrirbaae one of the eel

braied SMITH & WESSON arms. Tne finest small arms ever manufactured and ttie first; rhoioe of all eroerti

Mai mf actured in calibres 32 38 and 44-100. Sir -trie or double action. Safctv Haxnm srleaS SB.1

target models. Construct? 1 entirely of bee I alIty wrought nteel careiully inspected fjr wor tna:ieh:pand stock, they a re unrivaled for fith dni'nbl liry nnd ccava:y. IoiotbdreiTdby cheip malleable raHt-l ron tmlcatioa whics are often eold for the gen :iine artels and era not onr unreliable, ibut dantcerona. The SMITH ft WKSSON Revolvers are aJi stamped upon the bei rel wiih firm's name, addrMW ana dates of pttenta end are guaranteed perfect In very detail. In eistnpon having the erenuino fertile, end if your dealer cannot supply you an order senttc addrw below, will receive prompt and carefol ai&entioft. Det- erf ptire catalogs e and prices fr rniahed spmu ap Ration. 8MTi & WESSON, tW 'Mention this paper. HpTtiiffleIe lees.

OKCHwltBeet IF I

FMLrr eat

by return uaJL full detcrlptFrS ctrcoiais of

mrsinM TAiutsmu

rum ottim

JUarledyeford

can esudly and

quick! XeftOUt. cut an 1 Bx&fce any (areaen 1 1 any sty le to any measure fov lady r caUC

ddrem ICissjfeissJUO.

MMCTOIW FBIGB!

I FIRST-CUSS MACHINE! Warranted tor Five Year by the ataanfaoterat.

ALL OF THE LATEST ATTiCHMEiTS AN IMPROVEMENTS.

STTXJC ArfD FOLTIISH. Ornamented Head on :ron Stind. Dron-Leat T b e of Walnut, Oil-polis aed, with patent drop-Uat B ippcrt : Gothio Cover, with Venered Pat els. Case o! two Drawers, with L ck. Veneered FVontS Mk4 e eant Nickel-Plated Irop-Binc Handles. Each Machine is furnished with Out Ioot 'Hens n er, One Screw Driver Oi le Wrench. One Oil Can add C 11, One Gauge, One iauf e Screw, One Extra Threat Hate, One Kxtra Check Si ring, One Package of Need lee, Six Bobbins, and Or e Instruction Book. ATT AC ttMKKTS. In addition to tlte above list of scceevortea, w f lmifih with each BCacbine Ono Tucker, One loot 1 umer, One Set of Plata Hemners. nte diflareaS idthe up to of an inch. Oua Bindsn and Oaa 3 bread Cutter. A LIBERAL OFFER. We will send to any person tiut remits as a PosW e Ace or Express Money Order, Bank Draft or the awb in u HeKiHtered Leth r. for F l URTKKN POIVl.AKS,TH: CHICAGO LBIHSfiR everyweek l )r ONE YKAIt, and cne of ihe above-deecribi f ewintf Machines. The machtue will be carefully t acked in a substantial woodei orate, snipped by li-eiKht over the moat direct nute, ualetia ordered l Dipped by express. Every lady in need of s rood, tellable Sewinf H i Vine should take adv&nt Mfe of t His offer and fft'jO&e i t the manufacturers wholesali prtceliion oaa itot be obtained iu any 01 her msuner. W-lteName-t'own. County, an '1 Statfl plainly and addieea Tfitff HICAGO UKDGUB, 271 ITraukUit &UU .;nioa:o. 111. , -

X prescribe an& tally eav dorse 3Mg O as the aaly specifl( fortheortaiaoara of this dlaeaae. . Amsterdam, 21. I We bare sold Bi ej fist many years, and it hm m fftren the beat o natn faction.

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m' o & DAtal ml eaaataarfesate v PwiactwatoriQe,

VLTHKN WRITING TO t AOVKimBKtttL I please ear yoa uaw ta aslsiaieaiaaaaiat, Ja tale paper. ; V