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The Clarion: Wednesday, February 7, 188 NOT A1.W4VM W IVI I II. Fom. The Ci.is.iox. The snow y flakes are falling And the air ia Hull my pet, And chill are the banks of roaet And the fragrant mignonette. While the clover patht in the meadow Where once we loved to stray, Are Inst in the wintry whirlwinda That ahaiow the dreary day. The houri that were ao freighted With prom's- when first we met; Like the barren woods are f bcerleaa And full of care my pet. And the home our fancy pictured, Like a joy too bright to laat; Ia atill a far off vision A day draaaa of Uta paet But youth and health ar faardaaa, Too atrong to fail any pat; And the ahadowtd hours too flatting To be apaot In rain regret. For it cannot be'alwaya wtntor Ami love ia true we know, And as sure in the end to triumph Ak the rosus ones to blow. Ho wear the kiaa I iavu you A a token and sign ray pot, That your betrothed will never His hist fond fC forgot. For it cannot be always winter. There is spring and harvest for all ; And through the rift in the storm cloud Will fortune's sunlight fall. It cannot be always winter And winter nire conies my pet, To tin- heart of tin- leal mid steadfast Where love his seal has set. 80 patiently wait my darling The world was not made iti a day ; Aud tliii home we long and pruy for, Will not prove so fur awny. Dee. 28, 'Si -A. SENATOR BECK ON THE TARIFF He Ventilates the Present Bill Before the senate On a Far With the Tariff Commission's Report. lNKI.tlKNCB UaD BY TUB I'BOTKCTIOIT 18T9. Congressional Record, Jan. 23. Mr. Beck Mr, President, I am will ing to meet as early ami nit as Into as the chairman of the committee may de aire in order to facilitate the discussion of this bill; hut whenever saggestiooj lire rustic as to limitations ol debate, I shall object to any iutimation which tends to prevent Senators from being fully and fairly heard on evour item of it. We are only on the threshold of it an yet. Wo have gone through two schedules; we are hanging on another, a little one, now, us to wool. The great schedules are yet untouched. What have we done 7 We have gone ovor item by item tho schedules which re late to chemicals; we spent a week on it, and the final result was a reduction of about n million dollars, 9826,000 of that is upon two items relative to anil ine dyes and caustic soda. Wo spent two or three more days in going ovor the glass schedule, and tho result of that has been an increase upon tho present taxa tion of about 1748,167. After ten days, nearly two weeks spent on the threshhold of this bill, the Senator from Vermont has not suved money enough yet to pay the Halladay claim. We are now about to consider an important schedule, the schedules on metals; and it will be made apparent as we iliscu-s that schedule that there Is not only no real reduction of taxes below the present rates, but an absolute in crease of burdens. If we can not reduce that schcdule.lthere will be little or, no hope for reducing the schedules Oil woolens or cottons or anything else. From the best calculat ion I am able to make, Instead of the promised reduction on the cotton schedule, there is an abso lute increase of nearly, if not quite a million dollars in the carefully arranged proposition laid before its In regard to these articles. My Investigation in regard to the metal Schedule would make the incrou.se even more than the Bureau of Statistics made it in the report of investigations furnished me the other day, the olosins scmk'iicc oi w men reads: " Tn so far as relates to iron and steel ami manufactures there..,, tin- duties on which under (be present and under the proposed tariff pan be stated, the amount of dutv collected under the present rate was $22,SK8,7;S 2ti, and un der the proposed rates it would have been ttofiMMb 82, both being comput ed upon the basis of imports during the year ended .Tune 30, 1KX-J. This shows an increase under the proposed rates of 17.88 per cent. "Very respectfully, vouts, M j eph N'i m mo, .1 u !hief i if Bureau. "Hon JaMKS BBCK, Senator lnited States.'' a r i-i , - - ' It is, I believe, conceded, at least it will hardly be denied, that the purpose of the Tariff Commissioners was to in crease on the average the rules of taxa tion in the iron schedule, though thai purpose would not be discovered bv rending their report; Indeed a very pro nounced reduction would be expected. I hope that each item and change, both of rated classification, will now be ex amined bv Senators who desire reduction of taxi, and that all the fact will be placed upon the record. I trust that they will not be deterred by suggestions that time is consumed by discussion. Tiiis bill, or rather some bill I fear a good deal worse than the bill which passes: the Senate, will in all probability piss ooth Houses before the 4th of March ; if so, the facts now placed upon the permanent records of the country will constitute thin justification of those of us w ho vote against it. not onlv for our votes, but for any future effort we may make to obtain the relief which the country demands,, but which I feel as sured thU) Congress dom not propose to give. I think it will soon be apparent, if it is not so now, that the real objection ol the men who control legislation heie through the Taritr Commission and thb projKiwd revision, was to secure higher protective duties on cotton-tie, wire Tor tenet s, tin idates. and many other im portant articles now entered oh unenum erated products of steel and iron at thirty and thirty-five per cent, ad valo rem, the values of which for the year 1K82 amounted to $10,29,891, and the duties paid amounted to t3..'k0.28.r. The bill under consideration more than double, on the average, the dutiea on tne articles winch now go to make up the enumerated product -. Of course I do not believe that the revenue received from them at the increased rate of taxa tion will lie doubled, the object being to make the rate so high as to prevent im portation, and increase tho cost of tho total consumption of them in this coun try up to a shade under the foreign price with the tariff tax added, and thus en able the manufacturers to pocket the whole tax which they induce Congress to compel tho people to pay by prohibit ing competition from abroad. That is, of course, one way of reducing the reve nues of the country. Total prohibition would be more effectual and equally honest. This bill tak a a long stride in that direction. I have a very faint hojo of sucee.s in making valuable or important reduc tions, and if we do, I have still lew of having them retained in the bill which will become a law. The protectionists are .ill looking to the all-powerful con ference Committee for the results they desire. Four men at last will frame the bill, and they will be Mir.- to give the men who ndy on legislation to enrich themselves, all they can. On all pro visions of Importance to the monopolists which the Senate has increased or kept In better Shape fOT tho protected inter ests than the House has, the House con ferees will concur in the provisions of the Semite amendments, and having done that much to oblige the Senate the Senate conferees will of course recipro cate their kindness by concurring in such Increases and adjustments as the House conferees can show that their action has made in the same direction. Thus the bill will be made more oppressive than . il In r House would make it. I expect, in short, to lie called upon to vote, as a w hole, without the right to amend, alter, or even protest, for a worse bill than either House passes, and therefore pro pose to give my reasons for demanding reductions now while we can consider the items in detail. I propose to appeal from Congress to the country, ami to make Up the record now. Of course one of the three conferees of each House will be a Democrat anil in favor of reduction of taxes, but he will not be heeded .L t ' , in me couierence ami need not, even the report. sign If we fail to vote for any bill, however oppressive and unjust, that the confer ence committee agree on, we will be de nounced as opposing all reduction of taxes; and if it passes in spite of us, no matter how oppressive its provisions may ie, and we venturo hereafter to seek relief by legislation, we will be loud ly denounced by the able and well-paid press of tho monopolists as agitators and disturbers of the business of the coun try. We may all as well make tin our ueiense as we go on. We will be told that Congress was pledged by tho ap J... a r pointment of tho 'laritt'Couiiuission to accept as a finally the bill passed on its recommendation, and every man and woman in the employ of the protected interests will be threatened With reduc tion of wages or dismissal from service if they do not join in the hue and cry that will be raised by those who seek to perpetuate their monopolies. Mr. Maxey Suppose we have a con ference committee, its majority being gentlemen whose theory is that the rariff should be laid for protection with revenue as an incident, what chance would the tax payers have? Mr. Beck I want tin- Senator from Texas now to discuss this bill item bv item, so that he can show to his people iii the permanent records of the country what the facts are. Wo may as well look the facts In the face and speak plainly. The ultimate decision is In tho hands of the Chair man of the Committee on Finance in the Senate and of the Mouse, each with the most reliable supporter he can select from his committee to sustain him, in a .-eeivt committee of conference, where those four are omnipotent in regard to all questions of difference bet ween the two houses. Each of the Chairmen regards himself as the father of the pro tective system, and each can establish about equal claims to its paternity, The Senator from Delaware may be at the tail end of the Senate committee for form's sake, and Mr. Carlisle, of Ken tucky, may be on the House com mittee ; they will both he imwariMa. The Commission they obtained was selected because each member of it win inter ested in maintaining the highest protec tion and the greatest privileges for the monopolists he was chosen to advocate; each had to sustain all the others so us to secure his own; and the friends of each made up lite schedules they were interested in, so as to obtain all n'ossible. ami when they were thing together into a bill, the combined forces ot protected wealth and monopoly rushed to Wash ington, anu have night and day beuoged Senators and Representatives, urg ing them under all sorts of pretenses, i was about to say by promises, tlatterv and threats to sustain what the Com mission had done for them. Yet we are told that the Tariff Commission and its recosunendatiqns are entitled to grave Consideration because of their careful, Intelligent and impartial investigation. I do not care to speak about their action, or to read all the letters I have seen, but here is one dated August 10, 1882, signed "Duncan F. Kenner," showing how mat ters were worked up. calling on one of his friends to come and aid him. The letter is short. I will hand it to the reporter, as I do not caro alwut taking time to read it. In it the writer states that he can not appear as an attorney where he has to act as a judge. ' j For chUdi rn Vwing in t.-nemeM kouttt and crowded citica, where thuy cannot get the bt iufitof pure. wthUaratttg. Iiasrttlipkine country air and travel. Da. Moffrtt's Tk i Tn IN A ( TetUt inn I'oiedere) it invaluable, i or sale by Byron Lerolv. A MYSTERIOUS CHARM OF MAN - HER. The Gift Which Is Sometimes Better for the Possessor than Great Fortunes. Kdmond Yates in London World. Just as there are certain indelible traits in the British national character, so there are hundreds of Knglish fam ilies whose members are mutually con nected not more by ties of kindred than by the common possession of some pe culiarity of physiognomy or deportment. Extremo urbanity is the tradition of one house; a certain almost brutal bruaoue ness is the patrimony of another. No body lielonging to the ancient race of Carabas was ever known to bo ablo to eat cold totiguo with comfort. Tho ri val house in tho next county is equally liable to bo nausoated by the taste of honey. The n.wte and upper lip of tho Cavendishes have been famous over since the days of liess of Hardwick. Tho present I Hike of Wellington is an almost exact resemblance of the hero of Water- 1'm, with the socaewhat important excep tion that he has none of his sire's devel opment of jaw. Nor are demeanor and little tricks of manner handed down from father to son and one generation to another in a less degree. There i- one noble family in Kngland which accom panies an hereditary cast of the left eye with a singularly accentuated elFcmin acy of bearing. A second might be named each son and daughter of which SJW troubled by chronic brevity of breath. There is a third whose distinguishing peculiarity is the attribute which the world calls "such a charm of manner.'' This peculiarity of grace has been in the family for generations. An ancestor of the present head of the house was a co temporary of Falkland, and eclipsed that accomplished and Interesting noble man toward whom the English public of the present day is beginning to enter tain something 01 the same kind of senti ment as was experienced bv the Athen ians in the case of Aristides In urban ity and all courtly and knightly vir tues. He was anything but an Apostle, but it was said of him that given half an hour's start, he could cut out any man in Kngland in the affections of a woman. Since then this mysterious charm of manner has never been wanting to any son or daughter of the race. It has ad hered to parents and children with a te nacity worthy of the gout. It has never found a place in any of Mr. (ialton's treatises on heredity; but it no more de parts out of the household than have hitherto done the family jewels or the silver spoons and forks. The scions of one ancient stock are born to good looks, of another to good luck, and every mem ber of a fourth rides a peculiar and dif feren hobby horse of his own or her own. The charm of manner is just as tangible an attribute as any other. It is a jewel above price; but its virtues are not without certain accompanying perils which are peculiarly their own. It is said of the present Lord Napier and Ettrick that when, at the height of his diplomatic popularity, he was asked who was the pleasantest man in Europe, ho naively replied, "1 tun." The con sciousness of such a reputation is a tre mendous burden ; and it is not givon to every one to bear it with the grace and ease of our sometime Ambassador at St, Petersburg and Merlin. The individual to whom the heritage of "a charm of manner" descends, learns from earliest year-, not that it is his or her duty to please, but that it is his or her destiny to please. On every side the set phrase is applied by parents, brothers, uncles, sis ters, cousins and aunts. Occasionally the youthful Alcibiades finds that be is not appreciated at his true worth. When he is at school rude youths ask hini what he is grinning at, wdutt he means by his confounded simpering ways, and why be always speaks as if his mouth was jull of plums? But when the strict ly academic stiigo is reached, all this is different, and the undergraduate exhib its in Unrestrained exuberance, that power ox attraction which is the admi ration of all men and the secret of few. Dentists Who Are Women. SBADTJATBi of pkxtaj, OOtLKWa hhhe AND IN PlIlI.AlHCl.l'MIA Wo.MKX DEN TISTS Q9 ROYALTY. New York Suu. Recent publications at i'hiladelphiaand New Haven speak of women dentists as a novelty, but there, bus been at loastone in New York lor move than twenty years. Her name is IMiillippine 1 Hclleii-baeb-TrueheKs. She has been in busi ness in West Twenty-third street for ten years. Her husband was one of the Dietfenbach brothers, who for many years were dentists in Canal street. One day Mrs. Dietlenbach's husband went to Europe, ostensibly to sell a patent for tne application ot vulcanized rubber in the making ot artittcial teeth. His wife and friends gave him a farewell-dinner. Shortly after his departure Mrs. CHeffen- bacli discovered that he had gone in company with another woman and had sold, or tried to sell, the business. Then she hud a long contest m the courts. Finally she got a divorce and possession of her share of the business, which she has since curried on. She says she was a practical dentist long before the IVr! tal College was established in this city. A reporter found her in her laboratory at work on a set ot artificial teeth. She a woman upward of 45 years of age. "You may think it n strange employ ment for a woman.'' she said, "but I have got pretty well accustomed to it in twenty years. When my tirst husband was with mo I used to work in the laboratory, be cause 1 liked to do 'it. I had mv car riage then, but I would rather work than ride." "Do you extract teeth yourself?" "Sometimes; but I prefer to let my employees do that part of the work. Sometimes I may be better nble to suc ceed with a child, but I do not pull many teeth, nlthough I have a license to do so," "Have you made a specialty of nnvi branch of the business r f Yes, particularly of taking impres- sions ot the mouth in wax for artificial teeth, and setting up the teeth. 1 lave j always taken pleasure in the artistic part of the work. i All the time she was nuking sne was hi nting and molding the wax, selecting the teeth, arranging them on the mold, and showing by her dexterous handling of the materials, that she was engaged in an everyday occupation. " Have you met with any opposition in your practice," was asked. "Of course my house and my shops are my own, and I can do as I choose. I have many customers among my German friends, and just go along and attend to my own business. It was very fortunate for me that I was able to do actual work when my first husband went away. I was somewhat annoyed once when some of the Dental College professors said there was no woman practicing dentistry in New York. I believe it was published in tbe Sun. Some of my friends wished me to contradict it at the time, but I did not care to do it, as there are very many of my customers and friends who have seen me work, and my license is my justification." "Io vou know other women dent ists?" ' "There are several in New York who carry on the branches, but I know of none who work at the practical part, as I do. There was a woman once came to me with recommendations from Berlin, where she had learned the art of dentist ry. 1 think she went back to Berlin. Then I heard of a Itiisssian woman who learned at the Dental College." Prof Batumi D. Weiss, H. I)., one of the surgeonsanf the Dental College in Twenty-thild street, said: "Since the establishment of this college, in 18bo, there has been but one woman graduat ed. Her name was S. V. Swiderski, and she was a countess. Her father was a physician of St. Petersburg, and her hus band, like the husbands of other count esses, squandered her fortune in gam bling. She determined to earn a living for herself and child by the practice of dentistry. She came to this city with letters of introduction go strong that she obtained admission to the class of this college. She was a lady of refinement, of prepossessing manners and appearance. She readily commanded the respect of the students, and went through the course without personal trouble with any of them. Her presence was ini doubtedlyfelt as somewhat of a restraint, and made it necessary to change some what the discussion of physiological sub jects, but the students generally liked her. She failed to pass at her first ex amination, but subsequently studied up and passed. She went to St. Petersburg, where, I nm told, she is practicing suc sessfully." "Have you had many applications from women to join your classes?" "We get one every year or two, but our policy is to discourage thorn. Wc tell the young women that the chances are that the association with students, such as is necessary here, is apt to be unpleasant. It has been found to he impracticable in most medical schools. At Harvard the sexes have been sepa rated, and tho conviction is prettv gen eral that that is tho best way. Isolated cases occur, like that of Mrs. Mary Put nam Jacob!, but such capable women as she is are rare." "Has there been any attempt to com pel your institutions to receive female st udents?" "Nothing more than articles in news papers. We persuade the young women that they had better not come, and they don't. There are several dental college's that do graduate women." The woman dentist in New Haven is Mrs. E. Jones Young, w ho has been practicing more than twenty years. She has an establishment in Chapel street, and has earned a competence in that business. The actress, Miss Adelaide Detchon, has a younger sister, Miss Jessie F. Detchon, w ho has just been graduated after S full two years' course of study in the Philadelphia Dental College She received the tirst degree granted by the nisi itution to a female. She has already established an office on (iirard street for the practice of her profession. She was a lilt.e nervous at first about studying 'done m a class of male students,' be cause some of them had threatened to make it too hot for her. Hut she was treated with courtesy, and when she was graduated said the young men were so nice mat she te t, us t ,o,rl, manv wwm were as real brothers. She has found her most remunerative work among women and children. She formerly studied medicine, but took up dentistry because it gave her the opportunity for regular hours of labor. There was a ( iermati woman who grad uated at the Pennsyvania Dental College who went to Austria and became the 0 twite dentist ol the Empress Augusta 1 here is woman in Hurt t.A f. t- .. . ... uv.ni, ..i.rt. j.r. tiulloek who is reported to be a skillful i-iacucai ucntist. There is a woman wutMijQ MUcagO, and another, Mis anna ruiey, somewhere in ( hio. Queen 'u"" o:is u woman dentist, Mrs I)r linliv I.' .1 .... .... ... v onoui. mere is a woman y e.u.s! ,n lenna, Mrs. Anna Van .k i iiimg, wnose practice is said to be 7' "f,oon a year. A widow of one n ine inettenbaeb brothers has s lone i. irr.ed on a dental business i Grand street. NeW York. American Millionaires. New York Star. It is a sorrowful paradox that the free republic of America, the home of labor ami the land of promise to the oppressed of all nations should lead the w rld in monopolies. What other nation on the face ot the globe can show a list like this: Van-lerbilt Gould Stanford Huntington.... Crocker Mr Hopkins. 8go Flood Fair ; Maekey ...$!0,mio,ooo ... 100,000,000 .... 100,000,0(0 ... 100,000,(00 .... 60,000,000 ... 50,000.000 ... 40,000,000 ... 40,000,(100 40,000,000 80,000,000 'Jo 000,000 ?ff tfETBLTT ao.ooo.ooo " DW .1l.0t.KI UK) toirr.-lt . nonruifv "r.rr" at.ooooon Il""n IS.oOO.OkXi fourteen men thus own 20 000 ftnn , T "J?u r miserable and medioinos l.av S . vt'' , not UP. bt fy Par- ACCIDENTS OF HISTORY. A Chapter on Trifles Which Have De termined Great Events. A cui ious volume might be penned on trifles which have determined great events. It was but a trifle which gave Spain for so many generations the lord ship of the New World, and enabled her by the wealth she derived from that source, to become the most powerful nation in Europe. It ia well-known that Columbus, dispirited by the refusal which ho met at so many courts, dis patched his brother Bartolomeo to ask aid from Henry VII., of England. But on the way the messenger fell into the handa of pirates, and by the time he reached London, ha was so destitute he had to try to earn the mouey to cloth himself in proper style before he could be presented at court. But by this time it was too late. Evan the fact that Fer dinand and Isabella supplied the funds to equip the expedition was mainly due to tho accident that Juan Perez de Mar chenal, tho queen's confessor, happened to be passing at the very moment when the weary mariner was knocking at the door of the La Habida monastery to beg a little bread aud water for his boy Diego, and was struck with the noble face of the dusty pedestrain. Had Bart olomeo Colon reached London in time; had Christoval been by any chance a little later or a little earlier at the mon astery door, the fate of Europe might have been changed and the destinv of the Anglo-Saxon nice altered. Three centuries later it was again revolution ized, for in 1806 the English held Bue nos Ayres, and it is DO secret that Napo leon was almost persuaded to abandon Europe as a field for his ambition, and try what he could accomplish in the way of carving out an empire among the dis satisfied provinces of South America. When citizen Bonaparte seemed little likely to sit on the throne of Louis Ca pet, he was on the point of offering his sword to the Sultan, as at a latter period, Von Moltkc actually did. It is curious now to speculate what would have been the present state of the Eastern question had Napoleon carried his intentions into effect, or supposing that Moltke had re mained in the Turkish service whether the Danish war would have been fought, or Prussia's supremacy established at Sadowa or Sedan. The cropping of Louis Vn's chin brought on three centuries of bloodshed; and a sarcastic remark of Frederick the Great on Elizabeth Petrovna, of Russia, roused that virtuous empress to take such a vigorous part in the seven years' war that at onetime Prussia seeuiod well nigh stricken unto death. It is hardly forty years since Louis Philippe threatened war against the Tex an republic, because ungrate citizon had shot the trespassing pigs of the French ambassador. As it was he prevented the Lose Star sovereignty from floating their European loan, and thus the Kiitg and the pigs combined hastened the anexa tion of Texas to the United States. The Dutch are said to have "jockeyed" us out of Malacca in exchange for Java, bv representing on the map, which our sim-pk-jiinded envoys took for granted, the one territory as large and the other'as small, and among the most firmly rooted traditions of American diplomacy is one which represents the English commis sioners agreeing to the surrender of Ore gon, 'because a country in which a sal mon does not rise to the fly, cannot be worth much." Laws have been altered through acoidentf, because the queen's printer's boy forgot to deliver Lord Bea eonsheld g amendment to a bill. But if trifles have determined the fate 01 laws and nations, accidents equally small have caused men to follow pur suits the results of which have been not "inch less momentous to culture and civ ilizatmn. Cowley became a poet owing t()his.:r.;salotSpe,,cer's''Fairv(iueen," and Sir Joshua Reynolds had never thought pf painting until ichardso,.'s treatise fell into his hands. Shikes pear might have ended his life as a prosperous wool-comber had he. been a prudent young tradesman; Corneille Showed no hking for any i;w,.t,7.... m l V b "w iii?11 1,0 Ml if love anil lc t conii.el ...I f, n 1.1.. , ;,. r, iv .. m' M'c may so I'ocuy, ami .noiierc might have re ma.ned making tapestry had not lit ptndmother nettled hiXpride by wish I i ,:,ml.' , " actor like Mon- e re It', T 1 haVe dOV " 1 nad he not been anauo m . ,. ; :r. " '; ry to a tthe ,,, .uuceaiea irom h s creditors in n f..it .... v i n ... "R "ouiurs : .' ' " " 'am iMicis.lo's vessel and woii- , : " "aV "rt,: become w, i r ; ' ,,ir,r he teilCl.w'v'r. to proudly morcjirovniccstha,, his father had f nun cities. Iirnatiiis Ij.,.,.1 - UO 113(1 iriv.m l. ... te.ss h I- SSL " f-""cu uw tedium of im n.yawotmd while e Malherhe 80,ne ve of nev;; ,,.;,,. ,,, ' ; - K,d,y Mr have lost tne inestimable Z0 n ,Z ght fr.n for many years M1 discretion which tin lh2 wise w exercised in rtiMnm Y -Lr to Oliver Woldsmith W"K the,r diploma of Wakefild" a tT1P ?.tho "Spap . . , . erie.theu.othV'ii'Pr, child t!" One box of Dr. MoFFJTT's TkptiitITI Powdert) would have "aved her darling. "iA tadsd hnir 0d soft. silk " youthful color 'i.i' ii r rnn .. ,. mm oompoaod of ioothin rr? MaiS3 i -.fUmnmtiwi, mdiiutl. ,w i tu u IV IMP r.ovr a well m i...r"?'tleli Perfect, refular stool., S!?' b;..u ui y pounciasol d flcs-r EV.B.L.8nrP80VT omcc art 'i IteiptsFBEEWl, CURES WHEN ALL REMEDIES PAIL Alter being treated bv nhi loUr while in vain font tt,.,j x cured mj sell With 8. 8. is. U, Katcliff, Rtim uye seen 8. S. 8. atop th in.uug out in Buort time. w01 'u o omit or uiooil Dijen " . 11. ATTERBOX, D.U o. o. a. cured me of Sculp I in 11 OKI V 1 1 M anil Kara f,' . . oner fl known to the medical lraie.jrTi, .lw K 'e.... m.i ,.J . unm, ie . odm 8alamaao,j S. S. S. for Catarrh w aweciinj mo tviter an other treatment had J t. C. BuN8, Oreeocwle One gentleman wlio hs.1 to his bed six weeks with Mercnri mutism, has been entirely cured il B, (JU1LES & liKKRT, CalttBttft,! ijl,000 REWj Will be paid any chemiltwhoi ou analysis of 100 botiles S. 8.8... ticle of Mercury, Iodiie I'otMJiunJ mineral substauc. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Pn AtlanUj KOIM BV 4 IX nitliCififl MILL & FACTORY SUP OF ALL KINDS. BELTING.! and PACKING, OILS, I KINDS. IRON PIPE, FIT BRASS GOODS, STEAM ENGINE GOVERNORS, ic. Price-list. W. H. DILUNGHMl 421 Main Street, LOUISVILLE,! ang.l6,'82-ly. seeds m UKAIN.C! , i VKKlTia Wtm fprino Cctlaloout at FmM. (isrdm. 1 6eds and Plants. FK UK. S(I';WS.. "Klprise WUI on Sou thn OaidajM. H HIRAM SIBLEY & CO.. Seed! lUakcatarkX. Y. aa CUMial' iron m tomnm nf IuIvm. wlthmit ornfinDffl. Inn to all appneam about i;sti(ea. W0 illut.rnt;.m. Pj! descriptions au.t valuablfi lionar WOO yartBtlea of VewitaWe a4J5 iaily to Market Oanlonera. '"i.'fl'V Ml D. M. FERRY & CO. DETROIT dfc.20,'H2-i:!t. 1 ... Ir. iw. K. Hnrritigton Dr. .... Drs. Harrington & Bij OKI'KR TIlEtH PBOFESSIOS to t he people of JACKSON " KR TI1EIR PROrKSSKl.;' at tiikir liHi-r. Stork, in stats sitk Capitol Sqcahk. , Atnlirhl Dr. II wikinotoX can M ; wr; residence on HtsUi Wrect, anl Room 10, Kells ButldlnB. apr.ir.,'S2-lT. JAS T.. HARRIS. ATTORN BY-AT-LA; Ymrii.t. puicTrci'. in sen TV Kkderai. Coi'ktn. and in 1111 of Hinds mid adjoining Counties. MEDICAL OENSOBS f l-trvrii rv(lI.-W10'AI. will ?xnmine aiiplleatiti" '" ''"HJl ..nil .. ' at (lie (iiv ,,f .hi. k mm IM MJLM A Jib-1 -Qa H'OI . ter's Hair Hni. Hair BsT..n , Dy the " of Par. DR. R(iitri:ii DH. J. W. r. I apr.l5,'Si-ly. UJ