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irilHtr iff numnPiSir I 2 c. per Copy, j $ 5 per Year. 1D THE LARCiEST DAII.Y NEWSPAPER IX THE CITY. THE CABRINGTON PtBUSHISG CO OFFICE, -tO STATE STREET. NEW HAVEN, CONN. MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 1, 1884. NO. 228. VOL. LII. nil nil nrsr ifk'ii ikw nria n 0 1 : lil In 11 1 I ' o j ' ,' f.l i selling Blankets are cheap erthan the other stores. MY ANNUAL EXCURSION TWICE A WEEK TO SAVIN ROOK FOR THE COLLECTION OF LAUNDRY WORK Will Commence After Julyl WAIT FOR THE WAGON. If you are going out of town FOR THE SUMMER MAKE ARRANGEMENTS AT MY OFFICII To have your Collar and Cnfft Sent by Mail, Thus Saving You Trouble. THOMAS EORSTTH, 641 and S78 Chapel Street, New Kumberi. Works near Neck Bridge. Horses and Carriages For Sale and To Let. Carriage Making in all its branches. Repairing and painting a specialty. Anyone wishing to buy or sellan outfit will find it to their advantage to give us a call. U LLOM Ac CO. Wltf 108 FRANKLIN STREET. REMOVAL. We have removed to ournew Building Nos. 821-823 Grand Street, Which is very spacious, well lighted, and four en tire floors on which to display our new styles of Furniture of all Kinds. We are now carry a very large stock and will be ble to meet the demands of our constantly Increasi ng trade. THE SAME LOW PRICES And liberal Terms as have here tofore been the feature ot or this establishment. P. J. KELLITT & CO., Nos. 821 and 8130 GRAND STREET. 3y9 STRAW HATS 50c to S2.O0 MACKINAWS, MANILLAS, ALL THE LATEST. MEN'S FUBNISHIN6S. TRUNKS. TRUNKS. KILBOURN & CO'S. 816 Chapel St. GEORGE W. BUTTON, ARCHITECT. Frnft, Foreign and Domestic, WHOLESALE and RETAIL. m3tf 1.U75 Chapel street. OKAY'S SPUCIF1C MEDICINE, rnADZ MARK Th Cheat EfOtrnTRADE MARK curt for Seninftl Wk neat, Sjrmi.U.rrhtE, Im potency , and mil beaaea that follow m Baqneoee of Self-Abase i a lost of Al emery, Unhrerml La titude, Pain In tb WCK. Dimat-uot V'lmlon.Prvma- tur Old Age, anil manr other diieaMitbatlMwi to Ia&n!tv or Conaumtloa -Hknit TAE1B0. n.-.BdraJTirtlwmti to refund mocy. when drtinrlcta froc trhoin the medicine l bought o cr MmoJ W 5nr yo to w Buuia&cttmra, and Uu rolremtnt n mh UMt tbay an UUM, mwum, complied with. See their written fnarantM. A trial of one eta On aeeoauit ufcovBtarfelto, we hare adopt! the Ytllow Wtnpfari mUto ereryoM. &T Tbe Spevidc MediciiM U aoid by all dnV' mt $t per paAae,or iixwrxfcaRCfrMf ww!llwteatnw by snail 4- T-he Cray Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. Y. KOUD llY RICHARDSON Ss CO riT iurxK. coin, VAULTS AND CESSPOOLS. Be sure your Vaults and.Ceu neols are In good condition be fore iiot weather sets here. Send your address to A. N. FARXHAM, P. O. BOX 375 CTTY, OR BU.Y BE LEFT AT R. B. BRADDEX K JJ. o, wo omwj wrewi, audi VEITCH & SOW 8, Vi4 unapei street. mia FIRST-CLASS GROCERIES. TEA. COFFEE. SPICES, , i . rwl. FMiif .11 k-inrta riailv. lt 1 7uUyneorsa Food all kindb in their season. Prices as low as the low efiOrders taken and Roods deUTered. - EDWARD V. DFRAND. 860 StAte Street, eor. Clark. au2S The School ofModern Languages "VfTILL reopen Wednesday .October l,a. m. Please ff apply to - Tn. ttniwwss, 236 Crown, corner College Street, aul2 Stawtonovl New Haven, Conn. SCHOOL FOR BOYS (HI It. CiIl.E'S.1 mHE Fall Term begins Monday, Sept. 1. For eir- 1 culars. information. &c call at the school. No. 7 Insurance Building, (first floor), from 2 till 4 p. r... aulfleodtf A Training Class for Kintergart iicrs. Will otien in New Haven. Conn., September 23. For circulars address MISS ANGELINE BROOKS, 15 Home Place, New Haven, Conn. jy3 gtaw, tham8m CffHSERVATORYOF MUSIC. MUSIC. Vocal and Instrumental and Tuning. , A 11 T. Drawing, Painting, Modeling and Portraiture. ORATOBYi JUteratnrn and laognMU' IIOM, Elesrant accommodations for 600 lady students J'ALL TBM begins Sept. 11th. Beanuralll IU 4 .I..H.t fro AiiAraoa K TmTn.I17.1S. niMrCtor. -1 fbauxun square, boston, mass iiiiiTOnlii.iiiJinmnww tmsmomm m iijuf jn m No. 847 Chapel street. Fall term begins Monday septemoer 1st. uay anu evemuK kwuu. m-ppv for circular giving full information. aull WEST END INSTITUTE. "I TBS. CADY'S School for Young Ladies and 1VI Mieuw ftnrt lTinHerMrten for Little Girls will commence the fifteenth year on THURSDAY, Sep tember 25th. Pupils not otherwise connected with the school may enter the classes in French, Paint ing and Elocution, or may receive private instruc tion. Mile. Tournier, an accomplished French lady, will have charge of the French. Circulars sent on application at the school. No. 99 Howe st. a23 3m IMC XT S I F. A. FOWLER, TEACHER OF. PIANO, ORGAN and HARMON x. AUSTIN BUILDING, Si7 CHAPEL STREET, Rooms 8 and 9. A correct touch a specialty. au30tf Fannie C. Howe. CULTIVATION OF THE VOICE (Italian method) and PIANO INSTRUCTION. - diaries T. Howe, FLUTE AND PIANO INSTRUCTION, 108 CROWN STREET, NEAR TEMPLE STREET. sel8tf Greenwich Academy. Usual Literary Courses, with Musical Institute and Commercial College. Founded 1S02. Both sexes. Influences decidedly religious. Home care and comforts. Charmingly located on Narragan. ett Bay, and on direct route from New York to Boston. Grand opportunities for salt water bathing and boating. Terms moderate. Opens Sept. 1. Catalogue f ree. Rev, O. II. IFEKNAJLD, A. HI., PrlncI- pal, JKat t.reen wic n, it. j. SHORTHAND ! EVERY person should be able to write short hand. It is becoming indispensable in business in our courts and in newsoaoer offices, besides being a valuable accomplishment in every day life. It is the best capital a young man can have. For young laoies it opens a neia ooin pieu-sa.ni. aim pruiiu&uu;. We will teach you by mail at reduced rates. Send for our "Compendium of Self -Instruction" and learn thisart at home. Hundreds have done it. You can do it. 81.00 post paid. Circulars free. COGSWELL'S SCHOOL OF PHONOGRAPHY, SEW HA VEX, COXX. Jy28 ' YALE BUSINESS COLLEGE. New Haven, Conn. BANKING DEPARTMENT. OPENS MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1. For further information call at the College. Office No, 37 Insurance Bulletins, Or enclose three two cents stamps for new illus trated catalogue giving full particulars. Address 8. k J. M. Blair. 57, 59 &61 ORAMEST, FURNITURE DEALERS AND UNDERTAKERS, Have the finest Painted Bedroom Suits in the city. New Parlor Suits, Walnut Bedroom Suits. The best Spring Bed for the money. Splint, Rattan, Cane and Rush Seat Chairs in great variety, as low as can be bought. UNDERTAKING promptly attended to, night or day, with care. DUUlfS urtsoei veu wuikmii icc 111 vims inrsi. jnamioi. Also Sole Agents for Washburn's Deodoring and isinf ecting Fluid. A new lot of Folding Chairs and Stools to rent for paruesruneralj TRUNKS. TRUNKS, TRUNKS BAGS ! BAGS ! BAGS A complete stock of Tourits' Articles. Tlie only exclusive trunk store In the city. Trunks, Bags and Sample Cases made to order. Repairing a specialty. Old trunks taken in exchange. Good Goods at Low prices at CROPUT & CO.'S, S3ZLO Cliapel Street BELOW THE BRIDGE. ELECTRICITY IS LIFE. Whv will people cling to the absurbidea that they must take medicine? Electricity will reach where medicine nas laiiea, as i- years- experience nas oroved. If vou are troubled with Catarrh, or Nenral- jna, or Rheumatism, Throat or Long Troubles, Gen eral ueumty, neauacne, jviujit-j jiskhums. ELECTRICITY. Go and see Dr. Cummines. His method differs from all others. His success is wonderful. Ladies treated successfully. Ladies can consult with the Doctor's wife afternoons. Consultation free. DR. J. W. CUMMINGS, Vo 4 Church Street. oc13 WOOD'S BLOCK. HENRY A. DANIELS, M. D., 144 LEXINGTON AVENUE, NEAR 29th STREET, NEW YORK. Hours. 8 to 1 and 5 to 7. Diseases of tho Nervous system. Genito Urinary organs, impotence ana sterility. moaawron C. A. DOUGLASS, TEACHER OF PIANO, 295 Columbus Avenue. au20 lino REMOVAL. THE NEW YORK BRANCH LOAN OFFICE NOW PERMAFENTL.Y LOCATED AT 42 Church Street. I 0IET L01IED. Liberal advances- made on all kinds of personal property. Unredeemed Pledges For sale at low prices. - Square Healing With All. SOLOMON FRY Nervous Debility fUlt Axacj,lB Vottoa St., K,T. mm 'II!' I -r. A f Ail W People's Dry Coois Store m BLANKETS FROM AUCTION. We have received another Auction, and shall ofTer them on MONDAY MORNING at prices which we will CJITARAXT EE to be Ti O W Et 'H. than equal value can he bought for elsewhere in this city. A comparison solicited. A GRAND EXHIBITION of tine Turkish Rugs, Portias and Embroideries of Pal ace Work sold at less than AUCTION PIIICES by native Armenians from last but a few weeks. Ask hundred years old Rugs. PROCTOR NEW HAVEN. UNRIPE FRUIT, Impure Water, Unhealthy Cli mate, Unwholesome Food, Malaria, Epidemic and Contagious Diseases, Cholera Morbus, Cramps, Fains, Indigestion, Diarrhaja, Colds, Chills, Simple Fevers, Exhaustion, Nervousness, or loss of Sleep that beset the traveller or household at this season, are nothing to those protected by a timely use of BANFORD'8 GINGER, the Delicious Summer Medicine. AS A BEVERAGE, with hot and cold water, sweetened, or hot or cold milk, or added to Ice water, lemonade, effervescent draughts and min eral waters, It forms a refreshing and invigorating beverage, unequalled in simplicity and purity by any tonic medicine, while free from alcoholic reac tion. Avoid mercenary dealers, who for a few cents extra profit try to force .upon you their own or others when you call for SANFORD'S GINGER. Bold by -wholesale and retail druggists, grocers, tc. everywhere Potter Irng avnd Chemical Co. Boston. .1 1 S I OUT ! THE STAR CHORUS BOOK, FOR Conventions, Choirs and Musical Societies. By W O. PERKINS. Price SI; Per Doz., $9. The Star Chorus Book is one that a choir or soci ety in want of good Sacred and Secular Choruses ...111 1 ,1 .,.-. U Lti,, nP TTAmr Will COCIIJ' uuupii, tN liiu ucirvuuun cm; via. mo mj best. 168 pages, large octavo size. 36 Choruses about half Secular, half Sacred. Organ or Piano accom paniments. For Mixed Voices. Among me &acrea pieces win otj lounu xiitu 11 s Glorious is the Kinc;" Mendelssohn's ""I waited for the Lord," Handel's -'Hallelujah," and Rossi ni's "When Thou comest." Among the Secular Choruses are: Benedict's Home," Stewart's "Bells of St. Michael's," Verdi's Storm King," and Hatton's "Stars of the Summer Night." THREE KEW music BOOKS C horal Wtorshlo ($1, or ?9 per dozen.) By L. O. Emerson. For C'uoirs, Kinging Classes ana Conventions. Sons Worship. (35 cts., or $3.60 per dozen). By Lt. o. -fcmerson ana v. i . snerwin. rorounaay Schools. Xle ITIodel Singer. (60 cts., or $6 per dozen.) ny w. . r-erKin.! anu u. ts. x owner, ror Ding ing Class and Conventions. Any book mailed for retail price. OLIVER DITSOIV CO., Boston. auGtf . SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY AND STORAGE WAREHOUSE. 32 To 38 EAST 421 STREET, (Opposite Grand Central Depot.) New York. A BUILDING FD3EPROOF THROUGHOUT Now ready for the transaction of business. Boxes rented at from $10 to $300 per year. Silver, Trunks and packages stored under guarantee. Private entrance, Reception and Toilet Rooms for iaaies. Vault. Coupon, Reception and Toilet Rooms on the ground floor and directly accessible to the street. Rooms or space in the FIREPROOF WAREHOUSE for Furniture, Works of Art and Merchandise rented by the month or year. Trunk stoarge Specialty i. si a txf.M in xamw. THOS. L- JAMES, A VAN SANTVOORD, Vice President. J. R. VAN WORMER, Superintendent. President. J. H- B. EDGAR, Secretary, PEACHES, Ornnses. Lemons, Bananas, water melons, Citron melons, Apples, Tomatoes, Sweet Potatoes And EverytUlnz kept In a first-class Grocery. HARRY LEIGH, 670 Chapel Street Telephone. auli I. S. MILLER, M. D. iiis (joapei street, between or ange and Church Streets. Residence, - - Tontine Hotel SEW HAVEN, COXN. OFFICE HOURS 8 to 12 a. m., 2 to ( p. m, 7 to , m. . , . tJNDAY 9 to 10 a. m.. 9to6p.ni. mJ 3m rllir cl fim .'ill Via ilnUWl Wculnuil.v 'A OT from 8 a. m. to 6 p. m. to enable our clerks to hold their Third Annual Picnic at Pawson Park via steam er ivemia. PEACHES. PEACHES. Peaches are verv hieh. we receive about fifty baskets daily, and when thev are cheaner wn shall handle more. We are selling' as low as possible. If vou want some come and see us. We sold about 700 baskets last week. 100 fine cutting Watermelons at 30c each large uize. Fine Ripe Tomatoes only 4c quart. Evergreen Sweet Corn,. large ears, only 13c doz. Lima Beans, natives, only 50c peck. New Sweet Potatoes only 35c pk. New Earlv Rose Potatoes only 85e bimhal 25 Boxes Bright Juicy Lemons, onlv 10c a down Cereal Flakes, a very nice article for Summer use, at l ie a package z ior asac Mixed Candv at 12c a pound. Wait until we advise you to buy your Peaches for canning, ana yvu wiu bbvc uiuuey. D. M. WELCH & SON Nos. 28 and 30 Congress Avenue auS7 Notice Notice front the far East. This sale will to see the three and four PREPARED with the utmost skill from IMPORTED-GINGER, CHOICE AROSIATICS and the purest and best of MEDICINAL FRENCn BRANDY, from the world-renowned vintnors, Messrs. OTARD, DUPUY & CO., COGNAC, SANFORD'S GINGER Is vastly superior to all other " Gingers," all of which are made with com mon alcohol, largely impregnated with poisonous fusil oil and strengthened with cayenne pepper. AS A PURE FRUIT STIMULANT, for the aged, mentally and physically exhausted, care worn, or overworked, for delicate females, especially mothers, for those recovering from debilitating dis eases, and as a moans of reforming those addicted to an excessive use of alcoholic stimulants, it Is unequalled in the whole range of medicines. Be ware of imitations. SANFORD'S la the finest ginger in the world, and, notwithstanding the high cost of Its ingredients, is the cheapest family medi cine. Sold everywhere. Potter Xkrug and Chemical Co., Boston. Downright Cruelty, -To permit yourself and family to "Suffer!" With sickness when it can be prevented and cured so easily With Hop Bitters! ! ! Having experienced a great deal of Trouble!" from indigestion, so much so that I came near losing my Lire! My trouble always came after eating any food However light And digestible. For two or three hours at a time I had to go through the most H.zcrnciating pains, "And the only way I ever got" "Relief!" Was by throwing up all my stomach con tained. No one can conceive the pains that had to go through, until "At last!" 1 was taken! "So that for three week I lay in bed and (Jonld eat nothing! My sufferings were so that I called two doctors to give me something that would stop the pain; their KiTortH were no good to me. At last I heard a good deal "About Hop Bittere! And determined to try them." Got a bottle in four hours 1 took the contents of One! IJext day I was out of bed, and have not seen a "Sick!" Hour, from the same cause since. I have recommended it to hundreds of others. You have no such Advocate as I am." Geo. Kendall. Allston, Boston, Mass. (Jorainbus Advocate, Texas, April 21. '83. Dear Editor: I have tried your Hop Bit ters, and find they are good for any com plaint. The beet medicine I ever used in my family. H. Talener. None genuine without a bunch of crreen Hons on the white label. Shun all the vile, poisonous stuff with "Hop" or "Hops" in their name. jySeod&w Elastic Hose. KNEE CAPS, ANKLETS AND ARM PIECES. Silk Abdominal. Supporters. For the relief of corpulency, enlarged veins and weak joints Since we commenced the manufac ture of the above, using only fresh imported stock, we are able to furnish the best fitting and most dur able goods that can be made. A fact that our regu lar customers do not fail to appreciate. ; - OUR STOCK OF TRUSSES, Manufactured es peciauy for our retail trade, in eludes almost every form of Truss of any value in market, which with our facilities for making to or der special appliances and long experience' in the treatment of Hernia, enables us to guarantee relief and comfort to every one needing support. Personal attention given to the selection and roper adjustment of all appliances. -' E. L. WaskMin, M. D., 04t AND . ox BENEDICT BUILDING. DEPOT CARS PASS THE DOOR. ; JfeW "Wells & Gunde, Watchmakers and Jewelers. Sole Agents in New Haven for the Rockford Quick Train Watches 266 CHAPEL STREET. REPAIRING OF ALL KINDS jyio - - PROMPTLY DONE Whatsoever a Man Soweth that also shall he Reap. Selfishness, Dishonesty and Low Grade of Groceries and Meats Cannot be found at J.A.WRIGHT'S, 748 State Street, Merwin'sRlock large lot of Blankets MAGUIRE k gfrg gottrretl vlu& &auxizv. The Oldest Daily Paper Published in Connecticut. THE CABEINGTON EUBL33HINQ CO. V SINGLE COM KS TWO CENTS. Deijvkrkd by Cabbbbs in the City, 12 cents a Week, 43 cbnts a Month, $5.00 a t Year. The Sams Terms By Mail. Bates or Advertising. SITUATIONS WANTED, one insertion SOc; each subsequent insertion 25c. WANTS, RENTS, and other small advertisements occupying not more than six lines, one insertion 75c; each subsequent insertion 25c. - One square (one inch) one insertion, $1.30: each subsequent insertion, 40 seats; one week, $3.30; one month, $10.00. Yearly advertisement at the following rates: One square, one yeas', $40 r two squares, one year. $70; three squares one year, $100. Obituary notices, in prose or verse, IS cents per line. Notices of Births, Marriages and Deaths, 50 cents each. Local Notices 20c per line. , Advertisements on second page one price Sid a half. Yearly advertisers are limited to their own imme diate business, and their contracts do not include Wants, To Let, For Sale, etc. Special rates furnished on application for contracts covering a considerable length t time, or a large space. - z - THE WEEKLY JOURNAL 13 PUBLISHED Etbsy TmomDAY Mornino. Single Copies 5 cents -. $2.00 a year Strictly in advance, - 1.50 a year All letters and inquiries In regard to subscriptions or matters of business should be addressed THE JOURNAL AND COURIER, New Haven, Cenn. Notice. We cannot accept anonymous or return rejected communications. In all cases the name of the writer will be required, not for publication, but as a guarantee of good faith. REPUBLICAN IVOMINATIOXS. FOB PRESIDENT, JAMES G,BLAINE,of Maine. FOB VICE PRESIDENT, t JOHN A. LOGAN, of Illinois. State Electoral Ticket. ELECTORS AT-LAROE, Theodore D. Woolsey, of New Haven. Charles A. Williams, of New London. DISTRICT ELECTORS, 1st District I. Luther Spencer, of Suffield. 2d District Joseph: E. Stt.t.iman, of Chester. 3d District James S. Atwood, of Plainfield. 4thDistrict Frederick Miles, of Salisbury. For State Officers. FOB GOVERNOR, HENRY B. HARRISON, of New Haven. FOR LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR, LORRIN A. COOKE, of Barkhamsted. FOR SECRETARY OF STATE, CHARLES A. RUSSELL, of Killingly. FOR TREASURER, V. B. CHAMBERLAIN, of New Britain. FOR COMPTROLLER, LUZERNE I. MUNSON, of Waterbnry. A SENSIBLE PROHIBITIONIST. Many good people have been grieved by the lack of wisdom displayed by the prohibi- tioniBts in their political action in this and other States. With what has looked like strange perversity they have done all they j could to help their natural enemies the Dem ocrats. Many of them are going to do the same thing this year, but we are glad to see indications that some of them understand the situation. Thus, Judge Crosby, of Law- ell, Massachusetts, one of the ablest and most devoted temperance advocates in the State, has written a letter urging friends of temperance everywhere to vote the Republi can ticket. He fears that the cause will suffer in the general breaking up of parties and the formation of half a dozen smaller parties in place of the two large ones. The tem perance party and especially the prohibition ists have been mostly Republicans in princi ple, but have been divided upon the method of procuring a law. But the Democrats are a constant menace to the interests of tem perance, and Judge Crosby fears that the prohibitory ballot may do infinite harm and cannot do any good by throwing the power into the hands of Democrats. Every ballot taken from the Republican side and given to St. John will count two for Cleveland, and may overcome small majorities in doubtful districts, "so as to give electoral majorities to make a Democratic President, Democratic senators and representatives, and thus inau gurate a Democratic administration, of all things in this world the worst which could happen to the cause in Massachusetts, in all other States and in the world." Judge Crosby sees that there is not much hope of lessening the evils of rum by so voting that the vote will be counted for the Democratic party. He adds: Rum now con trols the Democratic party in interest, faith and practise; it is king, as in also the Butler wing of it, so far as temperance is involved, while the Republicans are strongly with us in general sympathy, and have been in the past by legislative protection, while the In dependents have hobbies of their own, but do not adopt temperance. It is necessary for us as wise philanthrophists to seek aid from those most amiable and congenial to cooper ate with us, and with whom we can best affiiliate. From local exhibi tions of Democratic rum rule in our villages and cities we should take warning of nation al results in the whole country, when filled with grog shops, almshouses and prisons. Rum rule wherever rampant introduces the lowest heathenism in domestic cruelties, ig norance, poverty arid crime. Our great fight is against alcoholism and onr next is against the party which sustains it. Let not a tem perance man vote in the dark or in doubt; if he knows one way is better than any other for his cause in the long struggle to banish mm, let him vote and stand up till his vote is placed in the right box for temperance and the law. This is sensible. While the Republican party does not maintain just that attitude towards the traffic- in intoxicating liquors which the prohibitionists do it, is the only party that has shown any disposition to help in the temperance reform. It is entitled to the thanks of the prohibitionists, to say the least, for what it has done. EDITORIAL NOTES. Yesterday was a good enough day to keept" . Farming in Dakota is cheering business this year. There are many fields of oats av eraging seventy-five bushels to the- acre. Wheat fields are turning out thirty bushels and more to the acre. The Hartford Telegram mournfully asserts that the refusal of Governor Waller to ac cept a renomination is a bad thing for the Democratic party. - It is a good thing -for Governor Waller, though. The apple crop in this country promises to be larger in quantity and better in quality than the average. It is expected that the crop in Europe will be smaller than usual, and the prospect is therefore good that ap ples will be worth something here. . The truth that the getting of money is not all that is to be desired receives fresh illustration in the death of Richard Tweed, son of "Boss" Tweed, penniless and deserted in a madhouse in Paris: It would, probably have been better for the Tweed family if they had never become rich. - : The foolish Italian nobleman who wagered that he would cover 31,050 miles on French railroads in thirty days "has won his wager. un ms trwenty-eigntn oay ne was seen by a gentleman who describes him - as having I been "completely exhausted and palsy- tricken, like an old man." He had been going backward and . forward between Paris and one of the southern cities, and it is be lieved that he has obtained the stakes at the expense of his health. 7 The canvass in Mississippi is expected to be made very lively in the second, third, sixth and seventh congressional districts. In these four negroes have been put in the field and will contest Democratic supremacy in all but the third the shoestring district, now represented by Jeffords (Rep.) Chalmers, in the second district, will have to divide the negro vote with a colored man named John son, which makes Jndge Morgan's election certain. In the third a colored man named Reeves will contest with Jeffords, and in the sixth John R. Lynch runs against Van Eaton. Hill, the colored collector of internal reve nue, is running against Barksdale in the sev enth. The first and fifth districts are hope lessly Democratic, and will not be contested. Watertown, Massachusetts, furnishes a sig nificant straw. Last year such great efforts were made to get out a full vote that all but six of the voters in town" cast their ballots. The result was: For Butler, 590: for Robin- i, 5611. Some time ago four of the eight members of the Democratic town committee resigned, including the chairman and secre tary. The other evening about two hundred more met with these bolters under a call which concluded with these significant words: From Grover Cleveland in the White House and free trade for goods of foreign manufac ture, good Lord deliver the working people!" The meeting was enthusiastic and zealous. Before it adjourned there were one hundred and sixty names on the rolls. The indica tions all point to a rapid increase in num bers. The result will be that the Democrat ic strength of last year will be split in two fairly equal parts while the Republicans will poll a nearly solid vote. The Cincinnati Enquirer believes that Cleveland would be stronger in Ohio if he had not referred to the civil service in his letter of acceptance, or, "in referring to it, had been explicit in assurance that a Demo cratic administration would mean the rout ing from public place of all those belonging to the mal-administration party, against which a great majority of the people are in dignant." The Enquirer further says: "Too much tenderness toward the Republicans in the matter of civil service and a strong ten dency toward a class of aristocracyin office holding recently retired a Democratic United States senator from this State, and Gen. But ler no doubt told the truth at the Chicago convention when he said not a man there be lieved in civil service reform on the school master plan." This indicates the real atti tude of the Democrats toward civil service reform. It is a little singular that the New church, founded upon the revelations of Swedenborg, has little recognition in the city of Stock holm, which was the birthplace of the great seer and scientist. In fact throughout Swe den the church and its teachings are less known than in either this country or Eng land. A movement has lately been started to give Stockholm a suitable place of wor ship, instead of the workmen's hall wherein the followers of Swedenborg now hold their meetings. An American clergyman, Rev. J. H. Hinckley, of Brooklyn, has taken a lead ing part,, and has been in Sweden for the purpose. At a New church conference in Birmingham, England, a few days ago, liev. Mr. Hinckley reported that a site for the Stockholm church had been selected, and with the. building to be erected upon it would cost about 428,000. The conference adopted a resolution commending the sub ject to all English New churchmen. So many vague statements have been made concerning Professor Koch's views relating to cholera that the Berlin correspondent of the British Medical Journal thinks it wise to give his ideas as printed in the official re port. The spread of cholera, he recites, is caused by personal contact, and not by goods and other objects, except damp, infected linen. The infection is not in the air, but in the ejections of the patient. It is only dangerous in a moist state, and .dies very speedily when dry; air cannot transfer the disease. The bacilli do not, as in smallpox, produce spores, which may dry up only to reappear alive. Drying will positively kill them in three hours. The disease is confined wholly to the digestive organs. Contact with the patient is without danger if no contam ination from the digestive organs is received. The following convey infection: Infected drinking and washing water, infected moist and liquid foods, and especially milk. The Berlin hospital inspector stated that there was no need to be especially afraid of chd. era; it was mnch less dangerous than indig enous plagues. Dr. Albert Day publishes an article on medical delusions, giving as a notable in stance of these the wonderful cures which were effected in the New England States dur ing the last year of the past century by what were known as the Perkins metallic points. It seems that a certain Dr. Perkins of Plain field, Conn., made and patented metallic tractors. One part was composed of steel and the other of some metallic compound. The operation of cure consisted in uniting the large ends and then drawing the sharp points over the diseased parts. Letters are given from a number of professional men and prominent merchants, testifying to the mi raculous effect produced. The lame walked, the rheumatic were relieved of their pains, inflammations of alt kinds immediately sub sided, and even confirmed cases of cancer yielded immediately under the magical pres sure of the Perkins tractors. The inventor was not, however, able to ward off disease on his own account, for he died in the height of his fame in 1797. His son took out a patent for the tractors in England. There, too, the success at the outset was astonishing, and the younger Dr. Perkins quickly made $50,000. DRT. The milkmen of St. Johnabury have raised the price of their wares seven cents a quart "on account-of dry weather." Murder will out. Burlington Free Press. An Englishman made a red-headed girl awful mad the other day by asking her if she wasn't glad the rain had cooled the hair. Burlington Free Press. '. "Fish?" asked the waiter of a country vis itor at the seaside hotel. "Well, I dunno," was the reply; "wait till I get suthin' ter eat and then I'll talc with yer about coin fish- in'." Boston Bulletin. Fact is," said Brown, "there's nothing doing. Why, man, I've been unable to make both ends meet this summer." "So?" re plied Fogg: "yen should try green 'apples or cucumDers. " .Boston Transcript. "How do you dare eat so many onions?' asked- Gimlet of Augur. : . ' 'I don't care how many I eat," he replied. . "My wife is a long way off. She is in Buffalo." "Yes, but hve hundred miles isn't very far for an onion Graphic. "It's strange," mattered the circus men as the tent was blown down by a cyclone, "we cannot see the wind, yet its effects are. ap parent." "Yesfc that's so," chimed 'the clown; "itts'power is lay-tent." New York journal. Fish are said .to be getting more shy at Cane Mav vear after vear. It is all owing to the bathing, costumes, probably. The fish have been so' shocked that they couldn't stay there much longer and preserve their self- respect. Boston Transcript. Old girls at the- seaside twist a vrisp of common hay around their broad-brimmed hats and fasten it with fancy bows, and thus - impress dudes with the idea that they are in the hey-day of youth. New Orleans i"ica I yune. - . - .-- - r A new telephone instrument has been in- vented by which the crying of a baby may be heard at the distance of a hundred miles, and bachelors are beginning to consider whether it is better to marry or move out of the country. Cincinnati Merchant Travel ler. '. i ; Dr.; Allen MacLean Hamilton, who ap peared as an authority on nervous diseases in the Rhinelander case in New York on Wed nesday, laid it down as a proposition that a red nose is one sign of insanity. In this region the red nose has always been presumptive evidence or overwork at the bar. Richmond (Va.) State. lut Johnson went out hsiiing again . one day last week. He had a nice lunch fixed up, but upon arriving at the creek he dis covered that he had lost it, so he retraced his steps. Meeting a large, satisfied-looking negro, who waspicmng his teetn, iitr aslced: "Did yon pick up anything in the road?" "No, sah, I didn't pick up nuffin couldn't a dog naD tound it, and eat it up?" Texas Sittings. Milo, the wrestler, a Grecian of gigantic strength,being desirous of giving a convincing proof of his powers, undertook to rive in twain the stump of a gnarled oak, but his hands being taken in the rift he perished miserably of hunger and thirst. This anec dote teaches us the extreme folly of "taking the stump" when it is not absolutely sure how things are coming out. Life. WOITIEN VOTING ON THE PACIFIC COAST. How They Were Divided ou n Prohibi tion Issne JT ury Duty Distasteful. From the Chicago Tribune. The female-suffrage experiment now on trial in Washington Territory presents some interesting phases. In the first place, it has fair field for working itself forward into permanency. Women have voted m Utah for several years past, bat they were given the franchise by the Mormon church authorities in order that their ballots might prevent the possibility of Gentile ascendancy in elections. Women have also voted in Wyoming for a long time, bnt in that sparsely settled region of, cowboys and miners the female element is too small to play any important part in poli tics. Indeed, the suffrage was bestowed up on women in that Territory rather in a spirit of gallantry than from any expectation that they would exert any noticeable influence up on public affairs. In Washington Territory the case is different. This is a stable com munity, largely engaged in agriculture, where society is based on the family as much as in the East, and where women occupy no pecu liar position, either by reason of their scarcity or their religion. Civilization is compara tively recent, but its processes go on in the same orderly manner as in Nebraska or Da kota. Female suffrage here may therefore be supposed to be no different in its results from what it would be in Iowa or Illinois, and in this view of the matter the experi ment becomes peculiarly instructive to people in older communities. The Female Suffrage act was passed bv the Washington legislature last winter. It was not submitted to the people, but went into immediate effect. In Oregon a like act was passed soon afterward in the form of a constitutional amendment, but was condi tioned upon a ratification at the polls. The women were not allowed to vote ou its adop tion or rejection, however, and the men de feated it by a heavy majority. Here in Washington the first operation of the new law was at the municipal elections held a few weeks ago. All that the female suffragists had claimed for the influence of women at the polls, so far as producing good order is concerned, was borne out by these elections. The balloting proceeded eveiywhere in the most respectable and dignified fashion. The ladies were treated as considerately as though iuey una Deen at cnurcn. Jor their part, they handed in their tickets quietly and went home. In some towns they voted very gener ally; in others only a small fraction of them appeared at the polls. X ne common notion that the married women would vote as their husbands wished proved erroneous, and most notablv so in Seattle. the largest town in the Territory. There the ministers, the temperance acritators. and a few politicians started a movement to secure the election of officials who would more strictly enforce the laws against certain in fringements of good morals, and pretty voted the so-called law-and-order ticket against a ticket professing to represent busi ness interests. The women's ticket was badly beaten, nevertheless. Numerous 'family jars grew out of the canvass, and not a few men made the discovery that they were possessed of stubborn wives, on whom argument was thrown away. The affair was instructive, showing that the tendency of women to act together where they think questions of morals are involved will be shown in politics when ever they have the right to vote, just the same as m religious or social matters. In some towns in eastern Washington, where the feature of granting licenses to liquor sellers was at issue, the women were equally solid, but in Yokoma city they divided, forty-two voting a free whiskey ticket and only thirty-six a temperance ticket. ine voting ot women at elections did not appear, however, to disturb the harmony of things as much as the summoning of women to sit upon juries. Apparently the advocates of female suffrage had not looked forward to this disagreeable accessory of the franchise. Voting was easy enough, but jury duty speedily became a terror to them. In most counties the Sheriffs put the names of women into the jury box; in some where they neg lected to do so, the judges had the error recti fied. Ihe women had voted; now they must take their chances with the men. and not shirk the burdens of citizenship. The con spicuous women advocates of the new suf frage law urged heroism upon the victims of the panel, but most of them pleaded to be ex cused trom serving. Two of the territorial Ljudges were quite lenient, and accepted any kind of an excusr; but the third, Judge Green, insisted on the women serving unless they had the strongest reasons for staying at home. in one county, wnere Dy accident no names of women had been drawn, he set aside the entire panel, had the names of female citi zens put into a box by themselves, and re quired the ohentt to draw every alternate name trom that box. The difficulties of mixed juries of the two sexes became painfully apparent when eases came to oe tried ot certain classes not un common in courts where evidence is given unfit for ladies' ears. It was even worse in the grand- jury rooms. There the women showed the usual feminine tendency to jump to. conclusions and trust to intuition rather than evidence. They wanted to indict people on general principles. Especially was this the case where liquor selling or the social evil was involved. If they could have had their way unhindered they would have hustled hundreds ot people on: to jail without law or testimony. 1 he lawyers became alarmed at this new element in the jury room that sought to reform society by the application of the higher moral law witnout regard to any part f the statutes save the penalty clauses. They don't want to argue cases before women, not because they are not intelligent and con scientious, but because they seem incapable ot weighing evidence without prejudice. Newspaper Readers. From the London Standard. A good deal of character comes out in the way a person reads the paper. We can all tell the constant reader by the way he dashes into the heart of tiie matter at once, finding his place directly, and finding out all he wants to know in a minute. In contrast to this is the spectacle of some old lady looking for something in the paper, and wandering up and down the columns in a distracted and weak-minded sort of a way, looking for the theatrical advertisements among the births, deaths and marriages, or getting lost among the mazes of the Stock-Exchange. Down in the remote country villages reading the pa per is not a thine to be done with levity. The village politician would wonder at the extravagance or your town yonng gentleman. . : .... :.in V. .i -o i n ah k' i ti rr ' a Cmaa wiV who skips into the train at King's Cross with an armful ot papers, wmen ne nas picxea au the news out of long before he gets to Moor- irate street. All he wants to know he knows by that time, and he leaves the papers for the benefit of the railway porters, who are themselves rapacious newspaper readers in tbose brief moments winch are ironically known as their "spare time." Now in the country the paper is a valuable possession, treated with ceremony, and lent from one to the other, and every atom of news in it is discussed and debated again and again. Not until his work is done does the old laborer look at the paper; it is when the heat of the day is over, and the sun is well-nigh setting, that the old man asks for his spectacles to be reached down to him, and takes up his paper and his pipe, and sits in the chimney-corner in winter, or at the lattice window in sum mer, laboriously ' spelling out the news. chuckling now and again if the paper is live lv. takim? a few more- -xtliiffa nf tVia nin. n. pulls at the ale if the paper is dull. Light articles he does not Cam TWIll Vu-f anrl ha ia fvnnewhat iratA wlion in annr;.A finds the paper filled up with "writing about pictures and such like rubbish;" but politics fh lotro of v,ia heart, and he knows as Tripoli ont tiio interior workincs of Mr. Gladstone's mind as his forefathers used to know about the machinations of the .rope. Given a railway carriage full of people, all reading the papers, it does not need the eye of a magician to tell.pt once what part of the paper they will turn to first. That smart looVincr Tientlv-dressed vounsr man in the corner, with the square jaw and the obser vant eye, will look straight at the news of the Stock Exchange, which is to him 'the Alpha and Omega of life. Let the greatest nation al calamity have happened, the most fearful catastrophe have occurred, and my gentle man will pass it over until he has noted the gyrations of the bulls and bears of that mys terious region. Next to him sits a careless looking, prosperous man with a sheaf of pa pers in his hand any and every kind, he does not seem to have any strong predilec tions whatever. He is turning straight to the amusing parts of the paper and skim ming the social articles through. When he has got to the bottom of the page, if the so cial article turns over, it is nine chances to one whether he will take the trouble to cut for turn the leaf for the sake of continuing the article. Opposite to him sits a grim te nrale in a coal-scuttle bonnet, also reading a paper not in the desultory way of her neighbor, but with an immense intentness. She is reading the Murders Innocent. As she looks Bhe revels in the details of the es capes and apprehensions of the various de linquents, and her mind is a perfect New gate calendar or chronicle of past crimes. Next her sits a pretty girl in a neat sensi ble dress, with a little bag of papers with her and a rather business-like appearance. The people in the train know her well by sight, for she comes up, like the city men, by a particular train every morning. She is a lady-clerk at one Of the town offices, and so punctual and so regular in her ways that the city clerk, up late last night and flying rapid ly up the Strand, knows by the exact place where he meets this girl in the morning whether he is in time or not. If he espies her as he goes by Holborn viaduct he knows it is all right; but if he does not overtake her till she is turning into Cheapside, he knows there will be an awful row at the of fice. This d'aintv little lady, with her dark brows slightly knit, is opening her daily pa per in a very business-like manner, and turns straight to a lengthy article on woman suf frage. She is evidently somewhat advanced in her ideas, yet not deeply, darkly, beauti fully blue. She prepares to immerse herself in the lengthy column, when suddenly a fashion article catches her eye. Her expres sion at this moment is good to see; she looks irresolutely from one to the other and the woman who hesitates is lost. She is only human after all; she will read the suffrage article afterward, but ten to one she will read the fashion article first. We began by classing man as an animal who reads the paper. We might now sub divide him into two classes the man who reads his paper in the train and the man who reads his paper at home. The man who "reads as he runs" is generally a bachelor to whom it would never occur to order a pa per in a regular manner; he prefers to buy a heap as he goes and fling them aside for the benefit of the railway porters. Reading the paper at home means getting up to break fast and having everything orderly and regu lar Some men are perfect autocrats m the matter of the paper. They like to find it neartly folded beside their plate at breakfast, and woe to the irreverent member of the family who should venture to look at it be fore papa comes down. They like it rresh r r - i t I?!-- ;x -.11 XT-l.;-.r and uncreased, anaxney use n iiuim.iB will induce them to share it with anyone by the simple expedient of cutting it in two. If the master of the house is a little man, he wtll Tmrtienlnrlv eniov the important aspect given to him at that moment when his arms have to be stretched to their fullest extent to turn the paper inside cut. His wife mean- while sits behind tne tea-om wuu uomiug tu read, and is dependent for news on the scraps that he throws her across now and then, not without a certain flavor of condescension and patronage. By a polite fiction it is generally understood that breakfast-time is papa's only chance of reading the paper, while mamma has nothing else to do all day long, .as a matter of fact, the mistress of the house gets little enough leisure before evening comes, and it is very likely that she will never have time to think of the matter again till the discovery of her entire ignorance of the de tails of some celebrated case brings down a reproof upon hr for her entire want of in terest in public affairs. MOROCCO'S MONSTROSITIES. Queer Scenes About tne dates of a City In Northern Africa. From the Baltimore Sun. Approaching the city of Morocco one is at once struck with the prolific, abandoned and agrant character of nature and the total absence of what some people rave over as Moorish art." Groups of hang-dog, thiev ish-looking Arabs, true types of eastern cracksmen, and cut-purses of the desert of Sahara abound. These are the gaily attired tramps of the Orient. Nomadic and qnarrel- e, blear-eyed and bloated, treacherous and licentious, are these much over-rated 'children of the desert." A dowar or tent of these marauders is seen in a hundred dif ferent places outside the fortified city of Morocco. These tents are often parti-colored in stripes, and amidst the dark and ugly dwarf thorn bushes that struggle and twist about the land like monster anacondas the effect at first is striking. The immense prai ries of glittering white sand in the distance, the colored and often iet black tents, the groups of fifteen or twenty blacker animated gipsy beings, anything but human, that oc cupy each tent, the tethered spavined horses of meager blood,the long and inlaid muskets, the extra ornamented daggers and ponder ous pistols, the excessively decorated saddles and bridles, the varied mats, goat-SKins, ine glaringly colored chests, the dogs, donkeys, copper cauldron and other implements, all more or less stolen,or,as they term it, looted, make up a picture that might charm a ue rome or rival an Oriental rag fair. We occasionally halted at several ot tnose tents, and found the women simply demoni acal in' expression and general appearance. Each group, of say twenty persons in each tent, is related by blood ties, and it is a wise mother,' to say nothing of the father, that knovs her own child. From the cradle to the grave, here and hereafter, they are all horse thieves and nars. w rule we were in one tent, or, rather, outside of it, for the stench within was simply terrible, a young black rascal of an Arab boy deftly picked my pocket of a tin box of wax matches, wmen he more deftly swallowed when detected. Save Yourselves. "Rosalia" in the Housekeeper. If housekeepers would only be willing to do just what they can do without getting so completely drudged out, there would be fewer sick women and happier homes. Study convenience in every household ar rangement, and perform evry duty with as few steps and as little labor as possible and do well. "We find good women every day who run from cellar to garret and back jigain before they can get together the necessary ingredients, tins, etc., to make a few biscuit or a dish of plain cake. Not two weeks since I found a farmer's wife (and one of the best women I ever knew, and with poor health) who went outdoors to the cans for cream, to the hen-house for eees. down cellar for butter, to the pantry for spices, then into another room for flour and carried them all to the kitchen to make a cake, to say nothing of calling together the dish, egg-beater, spoon and baking- tins. No man would do it and I honor their sense in that) and certainly no wo man, and espeoially an invalid, can afford to do- so. ' ' - ' I asked thi friend if she would let me alone in the kitchen for one hour after dinner, and witbTJerinission to do what pleased. I hunted '-the TiammeT'-and nails, some newsoaoers. -ana Dits or Doaras. nulled jthe kitchen, table away from he wall arid tacked my papers back of and above it, then drove up two rows of nails, on which I hung up egg beater, skimmer, large spoons ana soup dipper; roiling pin potato masher, cake pans, gem pans and small dipper, I put back the table and on the top ott set m a row a lar with cook ing salt (it was a cracked jar, but held salt all right), next to it a good one, a , gallon jar with graham flour, and another one with white flour, for these articles were used so many times a day. Then I put neat little board covers over them all. The spices, soda and baking powder boxes in a row next gave the dish pan a 'home in tltA irvnT Tina At the rieht hand of Ihe table I set a wooden soap box bottom side I it.' This held the water pail. I hung up. witn a roeee ox on uium iacu . 7 . - V . 1 - J. T Vnnn ViO I ilirrnAf nTinvn it. I could not build the vif iw..u. nVa and make a sink, closets and all the convenient shelves and pegs of a model kitchen, but I coald gather those articles that were used so many times a day somewhere near each other, and save steps for a poor, weak woman. When she came out to see about the sup per she looked really pleased when she said, "Isn't this nice, to 3tand right still in one spot and get supper all ready?" WILCOX & CO. -ARE OFFERING- A VERY CHOICE STOCK OF BLACK GOODS IN ALL GRADES AND QUALITIES, -AT- UNUSUALLY LOW PRICES. Grapes aii Momi! Goods. A large and varied stock con stantly on hand to select from. WILCOX & CO. 767 3STID;W1 CHAPEL STREET. DECORATIVE PAPER HANGINGS PAIXTS, OILS, GLASS, ETC. PIATT & THOMPSOS, C4 and CO Orange St. and 5 Center St. 3yS3 I UNIVERSITY OF BUFFALO, Laboratory of Chemistry, Cor. Main and Virginia Streets, Buffalo, N. Y., May 2G, 1888. Messrs. A. Heller & Bro.: Gentlemen I have carefully analyzed the sam ples of Hungarian Wines submitted to me by you, and And them to be perfectly pure, unwatered, un fortified, unadulterated in any sense. They are, moreover, most pleasing to the palate, and possess qualities which render them very valuable as mild sitmulants. I am, gentlemen, Y'ours most respectfully, R. A. AVITTHAUS, A. M., M. D., Prof, of Physiological Chemistry, University of New York. Prof . of Chemistry and Toxicology, University of Buffalo. Prof, of Chemistry and Toxicology, University of Vermont. I am Sole Agent in the New England States for the importing house of A. Heller & Bro.. of Buda Fest, Hungary, and New York. HUGH 'J. REYNOLDS, Nos. 152 & 154 Crown St. Kcw Haven, Conn. auaa DR. DAVID KENNEDY'S REEI1EDY for tHe Cnre ot Kidney and lil-rer Com Vlaftnts. Constipation, and all disorders arising from an impure state of the BLOOD. To women who suffer from any of tho ills pecu liar to their eeac it is an unfailing friend. AU iraevists. une uoiiar a ooitte, or auaresa i. ravid Kennedy. Bondout. N. Y. THE NARROW ESCAPE Of a Massachusetts Engineer Timely Warning of IHr. John Spencer, Bag gagemaster of B. Ac A. R. R. Bleep after fatigue, and health after disease, are two of the sweetest experiences known to man. Fourteen years is a long time in which to suffer, yet Mr. Peter Lawler of Daiton, Mass., had led a miser able life for that period through the presence of stone in the bladder. That he sought in all direc tions for a cure is an almost superfluous statement. He did obtain temporary relief, but nothing more. L.ast January ne cauea on w. jjavia jvenneay oi Rondout, N. who said, after examination: "Mr. Trawler, vou have stone in the bladder. We will first try DR. DAVID KENNEDY'S FAVORITE REM- CJ oeiore riSKtiig an uperutiuu. a iev unja later the following letter passed through the Ron- Vut postoftlce: i 'Alton, mass., reuruary . Dear Dr. Kennedv The dav after I came home I passed two gravel stones, and am doing nicely now. PETER LAWLER. Dr. Kennedv now has the stones at his office, and they are sufficiently formidable to justify the claim that KENNEDY'S FAVORITE REMEDY is the leading specific for stone in the bladder. In his let ter Mr? Lawler mentions that FAVORITE REMEDY also cured him of rheumatism. The subjoined cer tificate tells its own story: Old Berkshire Mills, I 1 1 Dalton, Mass., April 27, 1882. f 1 I Mr pptAr rwler has been a resident of this town far thn riAjaf-. cnvftntMn vears. and in our emnlov for fifteen, and In all these years he has been a good and respected citizen of the town and community. He has had some chronic disease to our knowledge for most of the time, but now claims to be, and is, in apparent gooa neaitn. Dalton, Mass., June 9, 1884. Dr. Kennedv Dear Friend Thinking you might like to hear again from an old patient, I am going write you. It IS now tnrw ami a uau jrwuu wuw rst I went to see vou. As I told you then I was troubled with Kidney Disease for about fifteen ears, and had seven of the best doctors to ne rouna, at i received onlv temoorarv relief until I visited you and commenced taking your "Favorite Rem edy." I continued taking the Remedy according TjO your airecuuns, uau uow uuuemuvl- myBei a won man. Very graciously yours, PETER LA W LtHMt Our letter of April 27, 1882, holds good as far as Mr. Lawless testimony is concerned regarding his health. CHAS. O. BROWN. Dalton, June 9, 1884. aul4eod&wlmnr OFF DAYS. Thousands and thousands of men and women have their off days they are not sick enough to give up, relinquish their dutieB and go to bed, but as one describes it: "I feel so drowsy and weary my head aches." "I never did have a meaner feeling in my life." "My stomach does not feel right." "Don't know what is the matter with me. but I do not feel well." I have a hair reeling or nausea." "Too cold one minute and too warm the next." '"To use a slan& phrase, 'I'm all broke up.' " The above and hundreds ot similar expressions are heard daily. With some there is a known cause, others cannot account for the feeling. It may originate rrora ainerenc reasons, oui. uum whatever cause, nature requires assistance, and you can immediately render the assistance and dispel au tnese unpleasant symptoms Qy us"s """-"v-n-Blood Bitters. Take them immediately on the ap pearance of the unpleasant reeling. You will feel better in half-an-hour. Take it any time before or after meals. If before you will enjoy your meal better. .If after it will aid digestion. it i a medicine you can take at any time with go rSSVcinbe taken by the prattling chnd or the feeble and tottering old man or woman. Oom Ssedofroots and herbs. There is nothing in its o5iposition ihat will injure the most delicate con stitution pleasant in taste and effect; will do you good. Biiriock BLOOD Bitters. , si 6dlw : IF. B. T REWHELLA, MANUFACTURER OF MATTRESSES. Hair, Cotton, Husk Excelsior; also Feather Beds, Pillows, Bolsters, etc Renovating Mattresses a Specialty. Will call and deliver at residence in city. Prices the Lowest. 81 EASX WATER STREET, -, a!7d6n Mew Haven, Conn, Hi Vies mm