Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 March 1879 — Page 4

g[hc (gazette.

The DAILY GAZETTE is published every afternoon except Sunday, and cold by the carrier at 30c. per fort night, by mail. $8*00 per year $4.00 for six months, $2.00 for three months THE WEEKLY GAZETTE is issued every Thursdry, and contains all the best matter cf the six daily issues. THE WEEKLY GAZETTE is the largest paper printed in Terre Haute, and is sold for: One cory per y®ar» $1.60: six months, 76c three months, 40c. All subscriptions must be paid in advance No paper disoontinaed uutii all arrearages tre paid, unless at the option of the proprietor. A failure to notify a discontinuance at the end of the year will be aonsidered anew en gagemcnt.

Address all letters, WM. C. BALL & CO. GAZETTE. Terre Haute.

THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1879.

THERE is a faint glimmer of a prospect that the Indiana Legislature will finibh its labors this week.

IT has been decided by the Supreme Court of Georgia that raffling is a violation of the law against gaming.

IT has been decided by the Democratic congressional caucus to use every effort to make the extra session a 6hort one.

ENNIS has challenged Rowell for another six day9 walk. Rowell has accepted and the match will begin on the i6th of next June in London.

NEVADA is agitating the question of establishing a State university, one of her announced reasons being that her future great men may write their own speeches.

THE Democracy of Terre Haute will inaugurate the municipal contest by the nomination of candidates this week. With judicious selections of candidates and a harmonious convention nothing can beat the party.

A CITIZEN of Natchez, with the sportive name of John Revolver, 6trange to say, is a very peaceably disposed individual. He is no intriguer but is noted for his singleness of aim from which he can not be turned.

GOLD ha9 been discovered near "W ichita, Ks., and a wild rush has been made for the diggings by the National Fiatic leaders and orators of Missouri and Kansas. It does not seem to them as if gold was such worthless dross as they said it was a few brief months ago.

OLD Simon Cameron has perhaps a livelier appreciation than any other man in the land of the expressiveness of the phrase, "hanging on the ragged edge of despair.'' He i6 also a connoisseur in the matter of "Caves of gloom." In time Simon will be a man of experience..

IT was a French theatrical manager whe stooped the aggravating feminine practice of wearing broad and high bonnets in theatres, to the total eclipse of the stage for all rearward mortals. He begged on his play bills "that all goodlooking ladies would remove their hits for the accommodation of the rest of the audience, the aged, the bald, and the plain not being expected to comply with the request." After that there was no excuse for the most exacting male to further cry "hats off." The attention of the managers of our Opera House is called to this simple advice for giying everybody a glimpse of the stage.

AN UNDESIRABLE EXODUS. Next May a National convention of colored delegates is to be held at Nashville to consider the political, educational and social condition of the colored {population of the United States. In connection with this prospective convention Hon. P. B. S. Pinckback, of Louisiana reappears on the surface of events. He i$ an active promoter of the enterprise. Senator Windom'6 scheme for transporting Southern negroes to remote reservations he very vigorously opposes. So far from agreeing with the Senator, he does not hesitate to say, and vigorously too, that the convention will unite with him in opposing any colonization scheme. Admitting that the idea may be popular for a time with the colored masses, he asserts that it is impossible of realization because of a lack of money. In this Pinchback is probably right. Colored people as a rule are the very ones whose imagination would be fired by any scheme for going to a new

Canaan. Highly colored promises have seldom failed to deceive the colored brother. He entertains a fraternal feeling for such illusive prospects. But with the flight of years he is beginning to learn something on this as on all other subjects. Many have changed thtir habitations. Many more know of the disastrous results of such migrations. In almost every case

those who have moved about have illustrated the maxim that a rolling 6tone gathers no mo6s. Promises of high wages or successive bad crops have conspired to induce considerable numbers to migrate from Virginia to Georgia, fiom Georgia to Arkansas, and from the pine lands of North Carolina to the alluvial bottoms of Mississippi. Much disappointment has usually attended these migrations About a year ago a hot Liberian fever raged in Georgia and South Carolina but it cooled after a little while and the memory of it, perhaps, still lingers. Within the last few weeks hundreds, grossly deceived by promises which were lies made out of the whole cloth went to St. Louis expecting from that point to be furnished transportation by an unknown company to a land which never existed. After paying such costly tuition fees in the school of experience it would indeed be strange if a little common sansedid not begin to manifest itself. As a matter of fact—and whites as well a6 blacks should learr. it—the negroes are more progressive and highly civilized, more useful to themselves and to the productive interests of the country, where they live and labor side by side with the white population, than they are likely ever to become in colonies by themselves. In some of the Southern States the whites are beginning to realize that the black is a necessary and very important factor in the growth and prosperity of the country. Only the other day the Georgia Legislature testified its appreciation of the value of the colored population to the State by imposing a tax of ten dollars on erery person soliciting colored emigrants. Other States will be likely to imitate so sensible an example. In thij way, perhaps, the last vestiges of that old and obnoxious color line may be obliterated. When it is numbered arcong things of the past, people will wonder how their predecessors could have been the prodigious asses on that subject which the records make them appear to have been.

FARMING.

Farming is now not only a orofession but a science. The farmer needs to be educated as widely as the lawyer, and in his special department. It has become, generally acknowledged that ignorance can no more wisely guide a plow than it can construct one. Soils can be worn out, or they can be renovated and made fat. Ignorance does the one educated skill the other. Not only must the farmer know how to use his soil, but he must know what the soil is made of. It is not enough to say it is clay, or sand, or loam or gravel but ot what chemical ingredients is it composed? For what crops is it adapted what will render it suitable for the desired crop? In this way a knowledge of chemistry becomes essential. Success in agriculture involves also some knowledge of meteorology, although the constant improvements in machinery render the movements of the farmer more and more independent of the weather. In Indiana at least, geology becomes something more than an namental branch of a farmer's education. It has decided the wealth or penury of scores who have sold out to speculators mines of coal or quarries of valuable stone with no knowledge of their worth. The fact is, the mere clod-hopper, whose onlv idea of culture was to sow and reap, is being crowded out by a new race of men educated partly by the spirit of the age, by the press, and by available science, to a more skillful an profitable management of the soil. The crude and primitive methods in vogue not only were wasteful, but rendered farming a distasteful drudgery. As soon as the public school system quickened the ambition of the boys, they rushed to the villages and cities. This tendency is row reversed. Farm life is growing to be more and more attractive. The bovs find'J the pittance which they can iay by, after enduring the hard work and the harder life of the city, less attractive than the competence and independence which are sure to follow industry in agriculture. It is simply all that a young man can do to secure room and board, without a single comfort, on the salary of an Ordinary clerk ^Statistics show that they are beginning io understand this. But the most marked change already wrought in farming is the crea tion of a class of men of intelligence equal to their industry, who are exercis-

ing an important influence on public af-

lairs. The yeomen are unquMtionably

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the ruler,, and are destined to become |'tr*8 m'gmtade of the MM. mrolved in more and more Thev I'the Actions. Another question growing and more influential. They are brought into contact with the world by the net work of railways that run into nearly every county of the United States. They are the supporters of the daily press as well as of their own agricultural organs. There is not to be found a keener class of thinkers than among the husbandmen. That information may not be so thorough in departments, but it is general. The progress in this direction has been re-! markable within the past half score of, years. It is within the memory of the middle aged that all that can be called scientific farming has grown up. The psoper rotation of crops, the intelligent economy -4s nl

THE TERKE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

of means, the preservation of manures, the use of labor-saving machinery, belongs to this generation. Of course th^re must still be a great many of the old 6tagers left whose hav is dried sticks. Political farmers still believe in the moon more than in, machinery and chronic officejseekers have not time for science except in breeding fast horses. The tend?ncy is to slough off these, and to create a thoughtful and invaluable class ot citizens.

PEOPLE WHO DON'T VOTE. The problem, What becomes of the American voter? is as intricate as the the other, What becomes of all the pins? On the 30th of June, 1870, there were in the United States 9,439,206 males over 21 years of age, of whom 8,425,941 were citizens, native and naturalized. At the Presidential election in November, 1S72 two years and a half later the aggregate vote polied, including fraudulent votes, was only 6.500,000 leaving about 23 per cent, of the male voters not voting. Who are these nonvoters, and where do they reside?

It is course impossible, to give more recent figures no census having been taken since 1S70. Any comparison with more recent elections than those near to' the time of the last census, would' be full of fatal defects, owing to the un. known increase«of population. There is, however, no reason for doubting that any dereliction that may be shown to have existed within this decade exist now. If people failed to exercise the franchise then they do not probably exercise it now.

The general deficiency in the ^ote of 1872 can be seen by a comparison of several States. We give the number of male citizens entitled to vote in June, 1870, and the number voting in November, 1872.

No. of voters Actual

Htates. in '70. vote,'72. Maine 153,' 60 126,818 Massachusetts 812,770 102,600 New York 981,687 829,492 Pennsylvania 776,345 672,426 Ohio 692,350 E20,C83 llinols 642,883 429,076 Michigan 274,469 217,861

In the above list we giye the vote for governor in Maine and Pennsylvania, that being largely in excess of the vote for President. Here is a non-voting population of 26,000 in Maine 120,000 in Massachusetts 152,000 in New York 104.000 in Pennsylvania 72,000 in Ohio 113,000 in Illinois and 57,000 Michigan. and this does not include the increase in the voting population from 1870 to 1S72.

A further comparison shows that this non-voting population is resident in large excess in the cities. We give a few citations of those counties in which large cities are located:

CltJzen Actual

Counties. voters. vote. 188,276 134.205 118,110 51,9flP 32,200 Hamilton (Cincinnati).. .... 66,180 44,900 Baltimore City .. 54,7K2 44,150 Cook (Chicago) 66,677 50,209 77,685 29,670

In these seven cities the non-voting population was 181.300 out of an aggre gate in 1S70 of 634,00, which, added to the natural increase, showed an average 33 Per cent, of the legal voters who did not vote at that election.

A similar comparison in rural di* tricts shows that the per cent, of legal voters who neglect to exercise the right is not over 15 per cent, or less than one halfwhat it is in the cities. If account be taken of the frauds which can be and are practiced in the cities which cannot be and are not practiced in the counti this disproportion in the per cent, of non-voters in cities and the country districts will be increased. In the large cities the non voting class is ma up largely of mer chants and their clerks, all of whom are engaged at business remote from their residences. Another class are the mechanics and laborers, who live in the outer wards, and who are at work in shops and elsewhere at a distance from their voting places. These men leave home before 7 o'clock in the morning, and, after working all day, have no time, even if they had the inclination, to go to the polls at night to vote. Another class are those who look upon voting as a personal struggle with the professional voters, and avoid that struggle by not going to the pools. To these must be added the aged, infirm, and invalids, who. it they feel any interest in an election are not able to attend All these classes may be generally considered as

a it a in if re he be at

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wh'!:h

out of this non-voting by such a large proportion of the public is, do those who vote fairly represent those who do not vote? or, in other words, would the result of the elections be changed if the whole population entitled to vote did actually vote? The bad, and the worst effect of not voting, especially in large cities, is that the selection of candidates and their election is left to those who follow that business for a living, and whose interests are be*t promoted by the election of corrupt governments, lecal as well as general.

AN infant child of Mr. M. Daniel*, of Youngstown, was buried yesterday.

THE COLO

THE MAJOR AND NEL.

A SUGGESTION* IX THE 1NTERE6T OF PEACE. To the Edltcr of the GAZITTB:

Nothing can be more grainy ing to your readers, Mr. Editor, than to see you throw yourself between those wordy combatants the "Colonel''and the "Maor," and end eavor to restore that "entente cordials'' which has been so rudely ssvered. 'Tis true the controversy has not yet reached what Touchstone calls thq seventh degree, viz the "counter-check quarrelsome,"' but it has gone through the preliminary phases beginning with the "retort courteous" and there is no telling where it may end if allowed to run on unchecked. Now although every one appreciates voar motives and kindness of heart, in endeavoring to pour oil upon the troubled waters,—so to speak,—I fear that your efforts ll be unsuccessful, and that a mere civilian is hardly a suitable mediator between two battle-scarred-veterans when the honor of either is questioned. I t'nereiore, with con siderable diffidece, offer a suggestion which may meet your approval and bring about the desired reconciliation. I propose that General Benjamin F, Butler, the hero of Dutch Gap and Fort Fisher, be summoned to act asgarbitrator between the high contending parties,— that is,—as scon as the Oliver-Cameron case shall bet from the docket, and the General has ceased to worry that interesting widow. There seems to me to be an eternal fitness of things in .such an arrangement which must co mend itself to every unprejudiced mind. They are all military men as well as experienced financiers. Either can set a squadron in the field, or deliver you a two hours' lecture upen the money question. The General has been grossly caricatured in the wicked Harper's Weekly, and there represented as the mother of the rag-baby but then the Major 16 the reputed father, and the Colonel has acted as the wet-nurse of that hapless waif.

They all believe, or profess fo Delievet that government can by an act of Congress usurp the prerogative of divinely commissioned labor and create value that it may say to a worthless bit o^ paper, "be thou one dollar, or one thousand dollars!" and straightway it becomes as valuable as a gold dollar, or a thousand gold dollars, which derive that value from the toil and sacrifice expended in mining and smelting the ore, and in refining, assaying, and stamping the metal 01 which the dollars are composed

They all believe, or profess to believe that the hard times are owing not to a lack of employment of the capital new in the country, but to a lack of currency, in spite of the fact that until within a few months, money in New York could be had on call at two per cent., that many of the National banks have reduced their circulation because there was no demand for it, and that men who have means purchase four percent, bonds in the absence of any other investment that wil' pay them as well. '7

They all believe, or profess to believe, that there is a combination of the bankers and capitalists of this country whose object is, not to restore prosperity to trade whereby the value of their investments and loans would be enhanced, but on the other hand, to destroy the industries of the country, and to plunder and impoverish the laboring man, for what purpose, God only knows.

They all believe, or profess to belieye that the resumption act is a dead failure that resumption cannot be maintained ninety days after it was inaugurated, and that the direst calamities will come upon the country unless it is abandoned and the little squad of office seekers, facetiously known as the National party, shall be given the control of the government,—or in other words,—unless the tail shall wag the dog. fc'

In short, upon all questions of genera* interest this trio of patriots is a unit, with possibly this one exception: Each man is willing to admit his own claims to, and qualifications for any office in the gift of the people, but denies that his colleagues have either. Hence the origin of the rupture of the friendly relations existing between the Colonel and the Major.

In spite of this obstacle, however, I am inclined to the opinion that the cock-eyed man of destiny will be able to bring about a restoration of amity, and heal the wounded honor of this brace of heroes' and in that belief I submit the subject to your consideration. *.

A COW GIVES BIRTH TO 56 CALVES. From the Cincinnati Enquirer.

A cow, the property of J. N. Sawyer who lives about six miles south of this city, yesterday gave birth to fifty-six calves. One of them was fully matured and still lives the other fifty-five were about the size of small kittens and with the cow, died. It is one of the most curious freaks of nature that has ever taken place in this country.

A 600D ACCOUNT.

"To sum it up, six long years of bed-rid den sickness aDd suffering, costing $200 per year, total, %l,S08—all of which was stopped bv three bottles of Hop Bitters taken by my wife, who has done ber own housework for a year since without the loss of a day, and I want everybody to know 11 for their benefit."

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-JOHN WEKES, Botler, N. Y.»

MARRIED WOMEN.

THEIR RIGHTS AND PRIVILEGES AS PROVIDED FOR IN THE NEW LAW. The following is the married woman law. Section 10 was put in by the Honse. A conference committee consisting of Messrs. Menzies and Harris, of the Senate, and Messrs. March and Dailev, of the House, wese appointed over this section. Judge March announced that the whole bill should fail, or this section be attached. Under these circumstances the Senate members were compelled to yield rather than see the whole measure defeated. AX ACT CONCERNING MARRIED WOMEN

Section 1. Be it enacted by the Gen eral Assembly of the State of Indiana. A married woman may bargain, sell, assign and transfer her separate personal property the same as if she were sole.

Section 2. A married woman may carry on any trade or business and per form any labor or service on her sole and seperate account. The earnings and profits ot any married woman accuring from her trade, business, service or labor, other than labor for her husband or family, shall be her sole and separate property.

Sec. 3. A married woman may enter jnto any contract in reference to her scp arate personal estate, trade, business, labor or service, and the management and improvement of her separate real property, the same as if she were sole, and her separate estate, real and personal, rball be liable therefor on execution or other judicial process.

Sec. 4. No conveyance or contract made by a married woman, for the sale of her land or any interest therein, other than leases for a term not exceeding three years, arid mortgages on lands, to secure the purchase money of such lands, shall be valid unless her husband shall join therein.

Sec. 5. A married woman shall be bound by the convenants of title in deed of conveyance of her real property.

Sec. 6. A married woman may bring and maintain an action in her own name against any person or body corporate for damages for any injury to her person or character the same as if she were sole and the money recovered shall be her separate property, and her husband in such case shall not be liable for costs.

Sec. 7. Whenever the husband causes repairs or improvements to be made on the real property of the wife, with her knowledge and consent thereto in writing delivered to the contractor or person performing the labor or furnishing the materials, she alone shall be liable for materials furnished or labor done.

Sec. 8. A husband shall not be liable for any debts contracted by the wife in carrying on any trade, labor or business, her sole and separate account, nor for improvements made by her authority on her separate real property.

Sec. 9. Whenever a judgment is recovered against a married woman, her separate property may be sold on execution to satisfy the same, as in other cases. provided, however, that her wearing apparal and articles of personal adornement purchased by her not exceeding $200 in value, and all such jewelry, ornaments, books, works of art and vertu, and other effects for personal or household use as may have been given to her as presents, gifts and keepsakes, shall not be subject to execution, and provided further, that she shall hold as exempt, except for the purchase money therefor, other property to the amount of $300, to be set apart and appraised in the manner provided by the law for exemption of property.

Sec. 10. A married shall not mortgage or in any manner encumber her her separate property acquired by descent, devise or gift, as a security for the debt or liability of her husband or any other person.

THE PRICE OF CORN. "No," the honest farm remarked in tones of deepest dejection, "the big crops don't do us a bit of good. What's the use? Corn only thirty cents. Everybody and everything is dead set again the farmer. Only thirty cents for corn. Why, by gum, it won't pay taxes, let alone buy us clothes. It won't buy us enough 6alt to put a barrel of port. Corn only thirty cents! By jocks, it's a livin', cold-blooded swindle on the farmer, that's what it is. It ain't worth raisin' corn for such a price as that. It's a mean, low robbery."

Within the next ten days that man sold so much more of his corn than he intended, that he found that he had to buy corn to feed through the winter with. The price nearly knocked him down. "Whatl"he yelled, "thirty cents for corn! Land alive—thirty cents 1 What are you giving us? Why, I don't want to buy your farm, I only want so.ne corn! Thirty cents for corn! Whv, I believe there's nobody left in this world but a set of graspin', bloodsuckin' old misers. Why, good land, you don't want to be able to buy a nations! bank with one corn crop! Well, I'll let my carnage horse run on cornstalks all winter before I'll pay any such unheard-of outrageous price as that! Why, the country's flooded with corn, and thirty cents a bushel is a blamed robbery, and I don't see how any man, looking at the crop we've had, can have the face to ask such a price."—Burlington Hawkey.

CHINESE DOCTRINE. Mov Jin Kee, a Chinaman, addressed a Methodist Sunday school meeting in Harlem, N. Y., last Sunday. Among his remarks was a comparison of the religion of his nation and that of the children before him. "We worship," said he, "one Great Spirit and many Josses you a Great Spirit and His Son. Bat the Americans could learn something of my people. Confucius said that drink was worse than a rattlesnake—rattlesnakes don't abuse their own children. The Chinese think drinking very bad but they do something very bad too— they smoke opium. But the man who smokes opium doesn't abuse his children —he only hurts himself."

ORIGINAL.

The process adopted by l)r. Price in- making his Special Flavoring Extracts is original. By this new process he is enabled to produce flavorings of the finest quality, retaining the (rashness of fruit,» concentrated that a small quantity produces each characteristic flavor.

tit

uucura

THE GREAT SKIN CURE,

Infallibly Cures.

Thesuc -esi attending the use of this grea* remedT in the treatmentof Vffocti n* of the Skin anl Scalp with Loss .f Hair Is astonishing. Krom every part of the country come the most grateful acknowledgements what might be citle I miraculous cures. Me-sre. Weeks S. Potter ex eud then thanks to all who hav) spoken a good word for CrritTKA, and will thankfully receive repoita ot

new

cases wherever they occur.

re confident that this new and original renedy possesses greater healing properties than were ever before known to the medical profession. ,» .1 -v.

ECZEMA ON THE SCALP,

Breast, and Umbs Cored. Messrs. VVKIKS & POTTER: Gentlemen,—I cannot refrain from adding my debt of gratitude to you for having placid within my reach the wonderful CCTirraA, which has rend* red unnecessary all fuittnr experiment of physicians and in a remarkably shoi tspate of time has rid me of a loath11 dmease, dispensed with all physicians two rears ago, believing thev uid mo no good. Tne CVTICCKA has stopped this unsatisfactory expense—even if it were nec ssary and I had the courage any longer to follow their advice—and brought the loag-looked-for ure and happiness. 1 have been afflicted with Edema or Salt Rlieum on my scalp, breast, and limbs for five years, during which time I have been under tbe treat* ment of physicians, or at mineral springs, or takingsome kind of medicine. 1 have been tre ited by Drs. of —, Dr. of and visited SHlphnr springs and taken nu bcrsot patent medicines, all without the faintest approach to a cure. April first Ubt, I Itegan 1 he use of CUTICCRA, which was immeJlately successful in my case, entirely caring me. 1 have not.bad a clean scalp for 15 years until the use of the CVTICCKA entirely healed it and left It clean and healthy. The other parts of my body were affected in a more aggravated form, out are naw completely healed. 1 shall continue the CUTICL'BA HK80LVKKT as directed, for lis wonderful action on the stomach and bowels and cooling Influence on tbe blood. It will afford me pleasure, as I have done in HI an case**, to urge the afflicted to use these wonderful remedies.

Yours, etc, STEPHEN CROWELL. New r.odtord, Bept. 80, 1S78. CAUTION.—If procurable, use CCTICURA SOAP.

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P-

ei 7

CUTiflM RESOLVENT,

A Great Purifying Agent. Ulcers, Sores, Abscesses, Carbuncles,!Bo!IS, Milk Leg, Fever Sores, Erysipelas. Sores, Swelled Sore .Leg, Old Sores and wounds and such other manifestations of Scroful, are rapidly healed by the CUTICURA when all the salves, ointments, ami lotions of the profession fail. In such cases, however, tbe KKSOLVENT shjuldbe taken internally to neutralize and expel the corrupt poisons in the blood that appear on the surface in the foim of ulcers and sores.

It should also betaken when the skJn is hot and dry, ttfe system feverish, the liver torpid, the bowels constipated, or when the constitution has been shattered by ma arial or anti-periodic disease.

CUTICURA SOAP

IVIcdicinal and Toilet,

Is prepared from CDTICURA in a modified form, HUCI is positively indispensable in the treatment of skin anil Hcalp iJiscases. We recommond it tor the perserv&tion of the Skins ol infants, for gentlemen who shave and are troubled with humors, for those who desire a alcan aud wholesome Skin and Seaip, and tor all purposes of the toilet, bath anri nurnery. its mediciual ingredients are so refined and purified that their presence is known only by eir grand curative effects, while its delightful aud refrtshlog fragrance equals or surpasses the Iluc6t Parisian Soaps.

We insist upon the use of CUTICUHA SOAP when possible to obtain it, because we know it will not interfere with a speedy cuie as other soaps frequently do. CUTJCVHA SOAP will be sent by mail to any address on receipt of price, vj, fi 4*

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&

Tbe CUTICCRA REMEDIES are prepared by WEEKS A POTTER, Chemist* and Druggists, 860 Washington btieet, Boston, aud are for sale by all lruggists. Price ot Cut small boxes, 60 cents large boxes, fl.

Baterlal

Price ot CUTICCRA,

DUIAI I IFUACS) UV WUIO* i.ige boxes, fl. RESOLVENT, $L per bottle. CCTICVRA SOAP, 25 cents per cake, by mail, 80 cents three cakes, 75 cents.

Its Victims

Are those who carelessly, and without thinking of the consequences, continue at their daily work or business, constantly hacking, coughing and spit-, ting, pain in the left side, night-sweat and sleepless nights, supposing all the time they can w-ear it out. But when the. family physician is called in. and pronounces to tMat husband, wife, son or daughter, it to be that dreaded ot all diseases, Consumption, then it occurs to the patient "How much better it would have been if I had taken this in time." Parents, be on your guard, and always ha**e in the house, ready for use, t'nat^ popular remedy known as ALB'S HONEY OF HOREHOUND AND TAR, an article which was used fcr many years in the private practice of Dr. Hale, a celebrated physician in Europe, for all Coughs,. Colds, Influenza, Hoarseness, Difficult Breathing, and all Affections of the Throat, Bronchial Tubes and LungB, leading to Consumption. It is now prepared according to the original recipe by' C. N. Crittenton, 7 Sixth avenue, New York City, who is now the sole proprietor. It is sold by all druggists at 50 cents and $ 1 per bottle. Great saving to buy large size. W#-

Pike'e Toothache Drops cure in one minute.

SEED WHEAT.

rare Ssed of the celebrated White B^lan Sprln Wheat, reported by many farmer* In Illinois. low Kansas. Nebraska, and New York, as the «»arll« and best yielding variety they ever grew. Als» Eldorado and Russian ryfe. Clover. "K'**. Hun.-

irlan. sad other Farm Seeds. Lumt^r Bnlldln* and Farm Supplies for sale 'he Wholesale Honse ef the Farmers' Lamber AssocIMlon.

FOB

or STONM skeaM r»U «M CHICAGO. WEEKLY NEWS, fer, beside* being an «n«ze«lM |i» end WEW8PAPIR, erety Jssae contains SIX CO it PL ITED BTO-

KDCS, par* In tone end rich In dramatis interest aa4 power. The CHICAGO WEEKLY KKWS le a large thirty-two coltuan paper, and eoets only BZVSHTTFIVE CKKTO ayear, postage Included. Address

TBI

CHICAGO WEEKLY WEWB, W nfth-»r., Chieage, QL, er hand yew sahsriptfoateyoarFe'

SALE—SODA FOUNTAIN—ft in: good attractive style and in first class condition and will be sold very cheap. Apply to W. A. 3beap, city.

SEE that advertisement in another column ef carriage sale to be had at Fouts & Hunter's stables next Satur-j* day.

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US!