Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 31 October 1878 — Page 4
I
J^he $m<ll! gazette*
The TASSLY GAZETTE is fcttUishe -every aft xncon except Sunday, and sold by the r/ier at 30c. per fortnight, by mail. $8'00 per year, $4.00 -for six month ,.$2.00 for three mo th? THE WEEKLY QAZtTTfi is istard iflvery Tkur&dry, and contains all the best matter of the tax daily issues. THE WEEKLY GAZETTE is tV-e largest paper printed in 1 erie aute, .and is sold for. One copy per year, $1 50 six n&onthb,.75c three months, :40c. All subscriptions must be paid ki advance. No ,pa,p?r discontinued until all arrearages are a d, less at theoption of the proprietor A failure
Ao notify a discv/ntinuan eat the end of the ar will be considered anew en gagtm nt
Address all letters, WM.C.BALL&CO. GAZETTE. Ten Haute.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER. 31, 1873.
Alfonso has been congratulated on bis escape from assassination by Secretary Evarts.
IN Minnesota potatoes are selling at ao cents per bushel. The crop up there must have been much better than it was here.
Frkmch subscriptions to the yellow fever sufferers have amounted to
The item ot hint proouce in the United States is no insiguiiicent one. By competent authorities ii is estimated there are in this country
trees,
r':f^'7:'j^
*W* i^n
$24 000
to date, which speaks volumes lor the liberality of America's staunch and only friend in the revolutionary "struggle,
ZACHABIAH CHANDLER is making speeches in Michigan, and gorgeous lunar rainbows have been visible from a number of towns in the same State. These are mentioned as separate facts, and have no connection whatever with one another.
GENERAL POPE IS not to be asked any more to lestif) before the board now in •estigating the Fitz John Porter case, What his reason is for declining to attend does not clearlv appear, but thfs is evi dent: Without him the investigation w.ll be a farce.
AND now it appears that Secretaries Evartsand Mccrarv will visit Baltimore with the President to-morrow everting. From their anxiety to awaj iruni Washington on the slightest provocation, it seemb strange that they should baye ever made any efforts'to get thereon the first place.
AFFAIRS on the NKjcicun border are reported to be in a salubrious condition Tnis is explained by the news that more bruisers make raids from Texas into Mexico than greasers from Mexico make incursions into 'ltxas. Our expoits of raiding roughs exceed the imports, which, in such itfiairs, is» con»idered. a iavorable balance of trade.
It appears iuut iul 1.0..i.u-, th- no'orione desperado at tue soutui rn uu.utiir\, tans jwu gtr b.otutr w*.o o.a t« emulutu uis CX.kiupit. '1 Uo y*. uugv It is au iuui»k 01 the .tform vliuu. utiu .. terror to ilie (.Ulcers. Ttav police wa# iKit.llut, eat 1 day h^ hu hud uia.ub.8 scip. from Plau.fi.id.—| indiau puts Eveu.ug
This paragrami may prove of interest to the readers of the GAZHTTE tor the field ot the elder Kouiter's operations was in and about Terre Haute. Tnis younger brother is not invited to visit us.
112,000,000
28,000,000
peach trees.
apple
pear trees. 112,270,000
141.260,000
grape vinei-, and
that 'he value of the fruit crop for this year wilt be
$178,216,700,
or about one-
hilfol the vaiue of the entire wheat crop of the United States. Great quamitien Of American truit are now shipped to England.
I.J Still he lias not settled down. It is now announced that President Hayes has accepted another invitation, which will take him awav from Wa-hington
It is fiom prominent officials and citizens pf Baltimore, innting ftina to attend the fair of the Medical Institute, to be held in that ci^ on Tnursday next. He wilgo. One ot two things is evident. Either a President hasn't much to do, or else President Hayes has a remarkable faculty for dispatching business when he is in Washington*
Am
ist newspaper in Mecklenburg, two in Baden, and two in Saxony, have been prohibited from publication. It is evi( dently Bismarck's intention to crush ou an organization, which, if it does not teach assassination, succeeds at any rate in numbering among its members those persons who practice assassination.
THE capital stock of National banks, for taxable purposes, is to be determined ereafter by deducting from their stock the price paid for their bonds less thg acciued interest at the time of purchase, the banks will be required to specif) their bonds by the loans to which they belong and dates of purchase in making their re1 urns. This is suppo to be a Detter way than by taking either the face or maiket value of the bonJe as a basis. No application for a rebate of taxes on account of thi6 new interpretation af the law will be entertained by the treasury department.
A DISPATCH f.om Berlin states that B.yard Talor, American minister to Germany, was recently tapped for dropand tourteen litres of water were extracted from him, effecting a complete cure. During the series of banquets given him ju'at before his departure for Europe, Mr. Taylor absorbed a vast amount of beer. It was never mentioned hat lie drank any water. The inyster ous feature of this operation is that it j? was water and not beer that was
traded. Will some scientist please explain how Mr. Taylor came to h^ve so m«ch water aboard.
THAT interminable Newfoundland fisheries question likely to again come up for discussion between this country and England. It seems that Newfoundland has pas ed laws for the regulation of herring fishing inside of what is known as the three mile line. It has been nought by the loctl authorities to enforce these laws on American fishermen. St crctary Evarts demurs, declaring, in a letter to Minister Welsh to be delivered to Lord Salisbury, that no 6uch authority was given them by the provisions of the Washington treaty, and suggesting a high joint commission.
tbc gov ru
able and right.
1
interesting trial is iu progrefci a' Salt Lake City, involving the legality of polygamous mairiages. One Miks,a much married man, is the defendant. One of the difficulties of the case aiises from the inability of the court, so lar, to secure the records of the Endowment house, where Mormon marriages are secretly solem nixed. President John Tayler, the present head of the church, has been ordered by the court to produce the records, but it remains to be seen whether he will compiy with it or not.
In pursuance of the ami bocialist law passed by the German Reichstag, ]as week, one association has been dosed in Baden, two in Brunswick, four in Wtstphalia, and five in Saxony. One social-
.Chicago is enjoying a sensation in the investigation now going on before the Uni ed States Grand Jary in reference to alleged crotkedness in the construction of th$ custom house, which is being erected in that city. It w#s originally started on the strength of information chiefly furnished the treasury department by assistant district attorney Thomson. When the case was presented to the jurv by Bangs, the district attorney, he excluded Thomson from the jury room and refused to permit him to assist in the preparation of the case, which he started and which he knew all about. For this he gave as his reason that he had received indirect instructions •o da The Chicago papers have got wind of this and are raising a disturbance, This has created a sensation at Washington, and Secretary Sherman and Attorney General Davi* deny all knowledge of such instructions. The question now is, who told Bangs to suppress the investigation by excluding the evidence ot the only man who knows anvthirg about the fact6 ot the case? Or is Bangs lying?
Turkey, which enjoys the beauties and the benefits of a cheap currencv something similar to that which a
30
eiitti .d acted Sily.it would »rb as will as m_ii.—j Kv-
hav- ofulV'l dulliint as will
ausviiiti Alomibg wu It would afford the GAZETTE great pleasure if its able and influential contemporary would elaborate the idea contained in the extract above quoted from its editoiial columns. What does the Courier mean by drafting dollars, and, if it pleases, how would it proceed in drafting them? There is a lull in political discussion just now,and the GAZETTE would be delighted t© sit at the feet
01
its contemporary and" be instructed on this scheme of raising revenue, "whereof by parct Is it has something heard,but not intentivelv
AT last the official returns from Iov a of the election there, have been received. Hull, the Republican nominee for Secretary of State, received a majority over all of
9 3S9.
The rest of the ticket is
about the same. This is a heavy failing ofl in the Republican vote. In the matter of the October election for Congressmen being invalid, Secretary McCrary has expressed an opinion. He say6 that it was a legal election and will be so held if Congress follows its own precedents. In 1871 the Republican House admitted the Democratic delegation from Tennessee wheie just this point was involved. It was helj by the House that it was bound to accept the interpretation of State officers as to the.meaning of State constitutions. In Iowa the State authorities held that the constitution required the election to be held in October, and such decision, be insists, must be held by Congress to have been correct, if it follows its own precedents. This seemt, to be both reason-
Month ending September
$15,508,339
1878,120.525,267
September
771
923,703.
1878,
amounted to
par^-
that once exuted in this countrv and this county wasted to afflict our country,
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE
does not seem to be enjoving the blessing. One hundred piasters in gold cost three hundred and forty 6even in paper, which means that paper ig three and a half times ascheap as coin. Debtors can pay off their creditors a» about
cents on the dollar. There
ought surely to be enough of it to trans act the business of that country. And yet some way or another bu&ines* does rtot thrive. Tui key is not referred to as a magnificently prosperous country. Labor is not all employed. Things do not boom, bo to i-peak. In fact everything is in the most deplorable condition imaginable.
The 3ritish ard French ministers, friends of the Porte, nave recommended to Safoet Pasha Grana Vizier, that he constiiute a commission of foreign merchants and bankers to v-evise a plan to ttop the depreciation of the currency. But the Julian, who s?ems to be an extraordinarily, itupyi ruler, has declined their proposition, and so down goes the paper, lower each and every dav.
A Natural &equtNcfc rg
The period of crime and that of disease ought to go together, as they do in the United States. They both date from 1S6S, and they have coincided with some other events, if indeed they do not stand to them as effects stand to causes. In
1868
ex
Grant became President. He accepted presents and appointed those who gave them to rich offices. The bribery was as monstrous and* mutual: His cabi net members 6tole the public funds. The President made himself the crony and confidant of thieves, adventurers and blacklegs, Men the knowledge of whose rascalities was as prevalent as the encasing air, were crammed into collectorships, minisotorships and consulships. The most miserable breed of scoundrels in. the history of mankind were kept in power bayonets in the South. Along with his civil seryice abomination, went tt subsidy legislation which squandered
$266,
ono,ooo and an area five times as large as that of New York State on the railroad rings. Then came the crew of "Christian statesmen." That banks, insurance companies, manufacturers, commerce, mercantile quarters and churches should experience a deluge of rascality, and that, there should be a period of defalcation in money and morals beyond calculation, was natural. Government exampled the people, and when the people recovered and ordained a change ofruling influences, the ireumbent thieves stole the Presiden* cy itself.
OUR EXI'ORTS. 1
Nothing hasbeen more marked in the industrial progress and business developementof this country, during the past year or two, than the increase pf our exports. From being smaller at one time than our exports, and for' several years very much smaller, they have gradually increased until now they, show a large and gratif\ ing excess. Liquidating this balance of trade in our favor, large numbers of our national, state, municipal ar.d corporate bonds are coming, home and being held in this country. From the monthly statement of the chief of the bureau of statistics the fo'lowing figures showing the excess of exports over impoi tef merchandise is taken:
30, 1877,
month ending September
months ending September
$208,130,489.
30,
nine months ending
30, 1877, $54,460,334
nine
30, 1878,
The excess of imports
over exports of gold and silver coin and bullion, af pear to have been as follows: Month ending September
30,1877, $756,-
month ending September
30, 1878,
The excess of exports over
'ports of gold and silver coin and bullion daring the nine months ending Septem. ber
30, 1877,
amounted to
$24,706,780.
but the excess of imports over exports of gold and silver coin and bullion, during the nine months ending September
30,
$321,960.
THE EUROPEAN SITUATION. The Pall Mall Gazette declares the Btrlin treaty a failure and says concerted European action must compel Russia to keep the place.
The St Peters Golos, the leading paper there, says the Russians ec pi are in tavorof renewing hostilities, beleiving that the Balkan peninsula can be re-or-ganized in no other way. It is also repot ttd, as showing Russia's beiigerent attitude, that the government has offered active a-sistance to Sheere Ali, the rebellious subject of England in India, and that Russian volunteers are starting for Afghanistan, and that torpedo boats are being distributed among the Russian war ships. It must be understood that if Russia assists the enemies of England in India, either openly or secretly, that it will bring about a collision between those powers, and that the scene of the conflict will be transferred to Europe and Asia^Minor, and to the .waters of every sea where the flag of eithei nation floats. It will be more than likely to involve the other nations of Europe and may light the fir*»s ot a general war. Turkey would, certainlvbe included, and indeed it is said that the Porte has already inquired very particularly
0f
Rns*ia
H&r.
her reason for re-occupying the places in Roumelia recently evacuated in accordance with the provisions of the Berlin treaty. England also has insisted upon an explanation of this s»me thii.g. and has culled the attention of Austria to ir.
In India active preparations for hos*.i ities are in progress. Orders have been issued for the collection of stores and'"- transports for 12,000 men at Pesbaur, and the Begum of Ghohal has offered to place her army at the disposal of England.
Baron Von Prcstiscagnodohasgivenup the formation of a new Aus.rian cabinent as "a bad job."
The trial of Moucasi, for the attempted assassination of King Alfonso, is progressing. He is now kno to have had no accomplices. It is thought that the King will commute the death sentence, which is certain to be pronounced, to penal servitude for life. Eighteen cans of dynamite, found by the police in Chamvel, a place near Madrid, has caused a sensation, as indicating a diabolical plot. Some arrests have been made.
THEYELIOW FFA'ER.
In a few days at the farthest the GAZETTE hopes to be able to drop irom it8 telegraphic page the record of disease and death which it has grouped, fjr two weary months and more, under the ominous head of "Yellow Fever." Heavy frosts at almost ev«»ry point in the south have killed the fever 6( ores, and made the atmosphere pure and invigorating once more. All the indications point to a speedy termination of the pestilence which has scourged our afflicted brothers with scorpion lashes.
The number of new cases reported is now very small, and at same of the points where it raged most violently none at all are announced. The change in the temoerature has also hid a favorble effect on those already stricken down, soibat the death rate has been very greatly reduced. For some time, however, there will be a few deaths re ported, and it may be two or three weeks before the last patient shall have died or recovered, and it can be announced that, the great plague is a thing of the past.
What a dark and dreadful past it was can never be fully known in all its details. Broken families and ruined homes will remain as monuments to this colossal epidemic. Hundreds and thousands of households weie rudely invaded by the arch destroyer, and where the flowers of hope and happiness bloomed there sits despair mute amid the wreck. Husbands and fathers were taken from thos whom they protected, wives ana mothers from those "they ed ar.d cherished. Orphaned dren, and childless parents mourn and refuse to bv comforted, bccause thoee whom they loved live no niore. And he re are social circlcs from the midst of which whole families were blotted out. Time's effacing fingers will anoint the wounds ot bereavemcn with lethean waters, but scars have been received which nothing but death itself, which made them, can ever fullv heal.
lovchil-
An indication of the improved condition of affairs is to be found in the fact that the quarantine has been raised at various places and once again the fettered wheels ot business have begun to turn. News comes from St. Louis that the first through sleeper, for New Orleans, since the fever was declared an epidemic there, left that place last night, by the St. Louis & Cairo Short Line. On it were many refugees return ing to the homes from whi^h they fled when the besom of destruction swept t.ieir streets. In a few days the busy hum of indust-y will begin an.i will bring relief to mind as well as body, for the best panacea for mental troubles is steady occupation, and the harder the better
THE EFFECT OF MACHINERY ON LABOR. At the August meeting of the Vigo Horticultural Society the subject for dis cuss ion was the effect on labor of machinery. The question is not a new one It is a* old as the introduction of laborsaving devices. Within the la&t few years it has come into greater prominec than before. For this the easy reason i1 to-be found in the multiplication of ma chines. Within the history of the hu man race no such activity in inventions has been witnessed as of late. And particularly js this true in the4United States. We are a race of inventors. Yankec ingenuity is proverbial. First applied to the inhabitants of New England, ir has sihee bfecome applicable to our whole people. Everybody devotes his spare time to working out some contrivance or other' Then there are professional inventors, who make the discovery of new things a life business. Edison is not the only one though the most successful. His name is legion, and he live? in every state of the union,
Whatever may be the effect on the world at large of this multiplication of machinery, everybody evidently thinks it is a good thing for himself to hold the patent of some such invention. And the eagerness with which they are adopted and the wide-spread use to which myriads of them are put would argue tha. the peop.e are not averse to being asis'.ed by them. It would be a great pity
therefore, if thi* immense activity was exercised in d.scovering new appliances the effect of whi. wa« hurting rather than helping the laborers of the country
For itself, the. GAZETTE believes in labor-saving machinery. It believes in it, because the effect is not to rob laborers of employment, but to supply the whole body of the people with comfort* and convenience* which would other wise be possible of attainment to only the favored few. It does not so much diminish the amount of work to do, as it enormously increases the amount done. Not fewer hours ol labor, but more results, more and better food, mo.e and nicer clothes, better houses, finer furniture, soiter beds, the transformation of luxuries into necessities and the general elevation of mankind these are the effects, the beneficent effects, of machinery.
011
1
In Scribner's ^fagazine for November ib published an article by James Richardson, which discusses one pha.*e of the question. He argues that labor-saving ma chinen, by reducing the price of the things it makes, creates a demand which is really greater, compared with what existed before, than the reduction of labor eflected by the invention, so that the net result of it is to require more men working with machinery to produce the needed supply ofgiven articles than were employed before without it. His argument
this pjint is ingenious, fortified
by statistics and is, to Our thinking, correct. He says: "The aint that machi 1 robs the laborer of h.s only capital is entirely unfounded. Machinery never lessened the amount of work to be'done, though it has constantly changrd the character of the work. The labor-saving machinery employed in agriculture is almost entirely the product of the inventions of the past thirty years. In no par: of the world has the intr duction of such machinery b«.en more getieml or more rapid than in the growing states of the West The result it shown in the census reports. During the ten years ending in
i860
the farm
hands of those stales increased in number more than fifty per cent. During the next ten, in spite of the losses of the war, the increase was about thirty per cent. During the same twenty year*, the population of the country as a whole increased only sixty-seven per cent.
When Walter Hunt invented his sewing machine in
1838,
his wife
protested- that it would throw all the sewing women out of employment, and persuaded him to suppress it. Howe's and Singer's and no end of other machines have come since then, and yet there is work for women to do. Notwithstanding the thousands of family machine* in use, the number of persons earning a living with thr sewing machine in this country is to-day much greater in proportion to the population than was the number of tailors and sewing women before the invention cf the machine, which a recent pretended lab«rlover has classed with the steam engine as one of the two worst evils that ever befell mankind. In noticing its influence upon labor, we must not forget the
20,000
or more n.echanics employed in our sewing machine facte ries, and the thou* sands of others engaged in mining and making iron, cutting and sawing the lumber, and in transporting and preparing these raw materials for the machines and their cases nor the men employed in making the machinery used in the construction of sewing machines, and in transporting and selling the finished product. Counting these, the invention appears in its true light as a great creator of ab?r and the average wages of the persons directly or indirectly employed by the sewing machines is doubtless four or five times that of the old time sewers
It is but a little while since a metropolitan paper of 2igh rank-pointed to the shoe business as furnishing a forcible il lustration of the disastrous competition of machinery with men. The truth is that, while within twenty years, not less than eighty-five per cent, of the work done on factory boots and shoes has been turned over to machinery, there are to-day more men at work in shce-tac tories than then, and more than wonld now be employed except for machinery It is but another illustration of the old industrial paradox. Daring these years of rapid progress in invention, the cost of materials has advanced, wages have nearly doubled, and the quality of factory boots and shoes has been improved twen-ty-five per cent. yet the cost of manufacture has been so much reduced by new and improved machinery that American shoes have not only excluded the foreignmade from our market, but have successfully invaded the markets of the whole world. As a natural consequence, many more shops are required not only in New England, but throughout the middle states and the west more workmen are employed in shoe' factorieshigher wages are paid and a great multitude of other men are furnished with employment in tanning the additional leather used, in packing and transporting and selling the additional product, and in making shoemakeis' machinery and implements."
Mr. G. T. McKnight, of Chicago, was
in town last night.
THE PAUPER TRIBE. •1 From tbo Sclent fie American. The difference between poverty and pauperism, though wide ai the world, is too often overlooked. The b^st of men may become poor, may honorably reach the point of destitution indeed it has not unirtqently happened that the world's best benefactors have experienced ex-tren-.e poverty, sometimes by resolutely pursuing the course which has ultimate ly brought them 10 the Uighest financial and induxtrul, as well as moral success. No combination of circumstance*-, however, no matter how disastrous, .could make such men upers. The pauper is made of very different material. He is what he is too olten by preference, very often by inheritence.
Last year, Dr. jyt, secretary of the New York state board of charities, visiiod sixtv-four poor-houes, containing 13, 00 public paupers Less than one-fourih were of American parentage. In fiftyfive cases investigated the pauperism extended to the second genera inn on the father's side, and in ninetv-two 10 the third generation on the mothers side. Three hundred and ninety seven had pauper fathers one thousand three hundred and rixty-one had pauper mothers and soon. Their paunerism was hereditary. The close relation of criminality with inherited pauperism—those more forceful members of such families prefer! ing to seize what they want raiher than beg for" it—shown in the history of the well known "Juke&" tamtlv, which,, in one hundred and fifty ytars, furnished this state with tight hundred and thirty criminals of. oaser types, betides many imbeciles, lunatics, anJ other undesirable characters.
Professor Brewer, whohasgiven mi ch 6tudy to the pauper and tramp problem, is confident that whenever the geuesv of paupers is thus looked into there will be found abundant evidence of a pauper tribe well established among us and perpetuating its instincts in itn descendants. For this class no maWkiah sentimentality will answer they need strict justice. The class ks a class must he rooted out by resolute treatment. The chain of criminal entailment must somehow, be bicken, .in them wilt breed a moral pestilence. Against such outlaws, 'for whom,' as a contemporary has said, childhood has no sanctity, has no rafeguard, and property no rights,' only vigorous measures will suffice. Tneie is enough ol honest poverty, through flood and fire and sickness, to furnish occupation to the charitable without the burden of voluntary pauperism, the effect of which is too often to s'eel the hearts of the sympathetic against all poverty and distress. The honest seeker for .em^fovment is Confounded with professional trarnpe, of whom the mo charitable of communities are becoming heartily sick. In justice of the deserving poor—and there is always a large class which through no fault of their own, rny becoire poor—the pauper tribe shoulJ at least receive no encouragement
For marv years in this country the single fact that a person was netd of food or clothing or sheiur was held to be a valid 1 ea«ou for gi\ ing what was esked. Tne country became in const queuce a perfect pat adise for the pauper tribe. Tiey fared so well that multitudes brought by adverse circumstances to pov* firty were tempted o\er the line into pauperism and many otheis lingered 011 the Vtvge, pas-ing their time between U!^ willing l«bor, pauperism^ and petty criminality. Out ol these has grown a class of criminal vagrants, how by far the uort£d.sturb.tncc6of tl 6 pullic peace and the public moral hetilih.
Indeed, tfc Indian problem, bad as it is, is a trifle compaied with that arising irom the fcx stence of the pauper trije. The Indian is on the frontier: the vicioustramo is everywhere. And it safe to say that, year by yarj the liit and property destroyed bv the tramp tribe exceeds that due to Indian deprtdations. If we are justified in spending millions in Indian wais, in placing upon tetervarious and trying to civilize the one class of savages, much mote ju tifiable mus be 'he taking of measures national in scope and mag nitude, to contrcle and reclaim il possible the oilier Nothing short of this, we fear, will ever rid us of the pest.
A WIDOW A.SD HER CHILD," A singular instance ot taperstititm enme to lipht 1 ot 1 ngo net', «vbie bus related: Going into ucuhOoi 's hotia, ooetlmr lattw)k, I foun oue of the chii« reu suffering from severe tough, ana cx^'«»»ed my opiniou that »t was a aaufn th.ch medical ssa a nee fltioul be obtain* d. ho mothero the ooy *r'*etJt*at it was very ua», but said tb 1 before culling In a Hoc or she mUudedto try a.ure ibata»e hai iong used io similar cases, and ue»«r fjuod to fail. On t*in* presto. tj communicate the prescriptiD, she ^raveiy iuloriu 1 me that th charm *on ittou in h«lk's Honit ojk liOHKHOt' AND L'AR, ami that it ou b« ubt lined ot ul. tde urufgitts. Puce ce .tsa $1. Great saving by purchasing large Kite. Bom by ail «ruftKi»U.
Rock Falls, July S3, l£7(k
C. N. Critticwton —Dkar IB! I have b?cn using your Uau'8 Homy of UouhuD »b AND TABfor br ucbiHl affection, »u* i.ave be-n gfvbtly ieoefited by it, and would like fo in roduceilin our In tic wu as I can «be«rfully reoommeo'i it
10
a tin.e?
11 thai aresut-
feriug *om Lu. complaint, Coughs, 1 olua, etc. Whateau ou furnish .me ib.s meaisine by 1 he zen buttes or two uexon at itespei tiu ly yours,
W. W. ttBOWN, Hock Falls, 111.
Pixk'8 Toothache Dboto cute in oa minute.
THE ONLY ReMEOY.
Those who suffer from foul breath are open to thechargeof carelessle*s.. It is an ofnee that '••an be speedily abated, as a single boitle of be fragrant MJZOLONT will un~ mistaka ly accomplish tbc work. No toilet t*ble should be wiibout it. It wll preserve and keep the teeth white, and the breath pure and sweet.
Spalding's Glue, who *ould do with ait it.
Cliffera'* I is not a panacea for ali tne bis to wrucli ll„»ti is oir. We io not protean to bave hip covered a care-all, uUkWe confiueotiy recommend it to juu as a aui e, safe aiid speeuy cure tor all diseases aris nit fiom J4tLrta. I11 this class 01 diseases it is a »pec.flc it enters circnlaon and utterly d-.si.ioys tiie geim^ of the UU.MII it wiu puiiiiv aiiu ouilu up tueUetitated system iu a sborier time, a^d with more lasting benefit, than any Other anuwn remedy.
J.c.HICHAB»80N^ Pn p'r.
Far saleby alidiu-g sis, Bhliiiuli.
GIVE THEM A TRIAL
Any lady or ieutleman will give Dr~ Prict's Uaiqaejrerfumea a sing trial, will ire conrin.ed tiial for txquuute i«ee b«m and permaiitncv of odor, no peifume* lathis or any other counts can compare witii
