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THE DAM,AH HERALD, TUE9!AY MORNING.-AUGUST SO. igfci, THE DALLAS DAILY HERALD tnunii at lufM-lfUN at DaUat. Vmntul VI au MatUir fOUT5, ELLIOTT A HALL. VOTE 3T"Ort TlIOllP'S SPRINGS For the main Unt ralty of Texan wlthnu the Meil 1 Department. Three atona-bullt culeirt-s have heen planted here, rumole from elites. Hue the rnivermiy in North Carolina, nvon n "lean, iiraveltv autl. near "springs of pure cold nu eri" amid line eenery, .iuu "inner, own ami proirrt-sa int marked lliolr or-Mr." Til 'T ''in dtl I pnKrts ami Im.iHilt lIik stLa University. We il i net offer to hHoiIl-ui away, hut w. will Kll" me x-.rsa or land upon Wilton in aiiuaie me urn varsity of Testa, .. CKIZESS OR" HOOD. TYI.EE I a a candidate for the location of ilia University of Texas, except tlii rai'.lli' il d.-parlinnnt, nud respect fully wiiii'lU tun voici of ilie people at an elee'tl'iu to bo held on Tuesday, Mepieuiber 6, ISSI. For the IJuivcrslty ofTtxas. BTlie pnoptenf ri are aaknd to vote for lt locttiiiual vVnu benau-a of it cenlrallty j throe r Mm ul ureas there aortal noil iiiomI lollti moehoon hictlvotonood Be.Uuola, ntteHted by Ha uumenmi aouoola now in iuccessiui operation, (rood UhhIiIi, w itrr. will, i-.llinate, Iiroduetiveneaa and cheapness of living. :leclltfn Plrat I'n"iy in Hept .If 1KHI la a candidate for the location of the Main llnincti of the The University of Texas, And raspeotfully solicits the votes of the people at an eleotlon to be held on Tuesday, Baptemberflth, 1HS1. VOTE POTi GALVESTON TTAl-7-x-sity r To: Beoause hsrlarte lliapltnla afford unrivaled advantage for inakln fraclloal Doctora. COAL LllD-TWO FINE BAfUIIE PLACE. Lot of 111,000 acrea In Stephens can ity, at fixed p Ira uatll September lltli. Iluiic.ua In Jack county, 4, Mil acres, fresh water on two Idea, and one In Palo Pinto county, with five BprlUK. Inapeci Ion and puronaae lnvlt-d. Apply only to E. S. GRAHAM, tiraham, Texas. INDICATIONS. &ut gulf: Fair uiaathtir; northtrli tcirutt; tattonari leuperature . HVI (lulf nnl given. Dr. Buas will hava honestly named the title of a "great bore" if he kcopt on tun selling and rnkinji hsfta into the president' body and yet nver finds the "lead." Bomk pcoplo are to few fully disnrjronsblO and captious that it it not pleasant to ask them even a civil question, but we wonder il Dr. Btiai would fly off at the handle, as bo sometimes does, if bo wore aiked if the lilies bulletin il worth near as much as'tho bullet in tho president's body. Soms pcoplo ara alwavt ov er eritlc.a1. Wo are now advised that in cur Sep'ombnr edi tion we were auilty of a great omiibiun in our census table in not givinK tbo number of males and the femalcs.and in omitting to state that of the former somo 00 pi r cent, had be come learned dnotor since tlio wounding and durirR the illness of the president. "Ws ire daily asked if il is pcusiblo that the city council seriously and really proposos to burden the tax-payrraof Dallas with debt of $125,000, to build wator works, with out so much as lubmittinR to the tai-pater the question whother such is or is ncr the1.' wish. We really cannot answer, but ocr'.aip. JV this water question clevatinc our cuun cillors to prominence. We rcmcmhorread lDg somewhere in Xudymlon the foilotting satire utterod by one of tho characters : "I must say it was a grand Id. a of our kinur. makir" thomsolvoi sovereigns of the i at, The gruaWr portion of this plan'it is water so we tbui al one become a first-rale power Till president appears always to bain A good humor. A dispatch last nls;ht says ho remarked to the doctor in relation to his re lapse, " I wender how many more sthtions I will havo to stop at." This recalls hi. speech to Dr. DIUs some nights since : "Doc tor, isn't it about time for you to tuck mn In my little bed t" At another time obeorvbg a reflection of somo sunboams thrown from the watr of the aquarium on bit Tokay wire in his glass, be said: "Neither art nor science can catch and bold that color, and new in order that ttnymny not havo this as a lasting rebuke to their inefficiency, l'l driok It." "Bt some awkward oversight a tract of land embracing 3,800 fqusro mllos of the publio domain belongs to no stato or organ ized territory. It lies north of the 1'at.bai.dle of Text, It one lurdred and sixty miles Ions: and thirty miles wide, and is bounded north by Ksnsat and Colorado, cast by In dian Territory, south by Texas ai d weal by New Mexico. It it marked "publio land' on the land office mapt, but kow it escaped government turvey it a mystery. A survey Of it has Just beeu orderod." The foregcinn which we quota, we clip from the McKlnney loqulror, which psper, we suppose from the looe'.lty In which we found lt,ok it fiom some other paper, one of the floating it mi that no the rounds now and then. The tract of land referred to is what Is known II Greer county In this state t (.fttta la4"..y by by longrait been given to Texat. We lay taoltly, becaute while there has boen no act of ni'4 Tt an.1 rocogntzlriit la ordor W ? " w'n tira ' hasbonnmidot In . enumerating in regular order lt umlu of th. tbectDllol. After'f"1" wnuumiiunu.., . . , fuUhsd and orderly walUt I wt doairmit to Upon Innulrl I D9CT058 ASD DOOrOB1. I Doctor coining f rotn the latin word dooeo toteach.lt a word, a title that in itself in spire respect, admirat'or, faith. It it but human to look up to and to revere one whom we believe kcowt more than we do; whom we belie vo bit the power to do ut good, to direct us, to benefit u. Hence it it thai doctors, in the common uso of the word, the gentlemen of the modical profes sion who prescribe pills and potiona for our ailments, who fuel our pulso and look al our torgiict when wo aro sick, and designate: the msdlcinee tor u, Hnrd so high iu our esli nation, command so much of our faith and are to neresiary to Uf, and for whom wo al I think Khen dUaae hat us in its clutches, tha w j can never do enough, for whon wo get well, 3ot nf gleet in too many in stances, tidly, when healttt It restored. Tho pretident't cotdition has excited counu'ii' and remark not only from oau end of tbu union t tho other, but evon iu Europe, aa W learn from llie paper, and the phyeicians Who havo clia'r(;e of hid oace huve boen ciiti cUod must harshly by a.l tlaspts of penplo. an 1 especially bjjplijsiiiai.s. It would ap. per, judgii g from the remarks heard and roal, vli it we arc a r.Hlion of doctors. Vut it is a lamentable fuel lhat of tho science of melicino, if indeed it be a science, .lets Is kaiwu '.by the people at large than of any other branch of learnining in tho ci.r. ric ilum of general and (pecial informathn, if we may be al'owed to to pbraso iU Even the physicians themselves, as the. most learned and reliable of them admit, ura in great measure at aea. They only know that certain epeciflcs, as experience and obsorva t;ou has demonstrated, cure certain com plaints, and further than this all it experia ment, each case furnishing material for Bpe cial study. The St. l.ouis Globe-Democrat n a late issue says : " There are 180,000 med ical practitioners In the civilized world, and, perhapi, not any two of them would pre cisely agree in a cato out of tho common order, it is computed that 120,000 volumes and twice that number of pamphlets or about one-thirtieth of all literature have been writton about medicine and surgery and yot the points that may bo considered definitely settled do not extend much be- yoid tho rudimentary Bnd commonplace. The doctora are continually falling out ; the therapeutic reports are changeablo as the decisom of a country justice of tho peuce; and new diseases and new remedies aro de veloped with the frequency of altorod fash ions In millinery. Wo have in the United Ktatos alone 05,000 regular physicians, one for every 770 inhabitants, a proportion sur passing that of any other nation ; and yet in spito of our sunny skies and abundant g'od air, wo are uet at healthy a peoplo at thoeo of France, where thore it but one phy sician furovery 10,000 inhabitants, or evon as those of murky and gluttonous Great Urit al.i, whero tbey gut along with one physician for every 1,200 persons. With all our array of medical learning and exporieucn, there looms still to bo room for conflict of opinion ammg the very ablest ot the profession over tho mode of troa'.ing au ordinary plstolsbot w jun'l." Thero is a deal of wisdom, and ulns a dual of truth in tho conclusions of the G.-D You may ask a ton year old buy or girl ut tonding tho priv it : or public schools of tho land about the planotary system and rcceivo correct Htiiwera as to tbe name of the stars and tho cntiBtellKtionS, and any one of them can work out abstruse mathematical pro bl"ms, while tho more advanced scholars can I'll you the (lis1 line ' of tWr loslar, can nil. cuiate the oibits thereof and forutoll by the sa ne means tho return of comot?, tbuir t'..n, o c , c:u read as they 'o tbe plftlncal Krgliih, thn dolicalo tracory of na tures wiori hand in tho geology of the earth in fact cm lay b.'iro tho secrets efenture, as though it was nn upon book, bat a) to a knowledge of the human frame, the laws of dianeu and of With, tho prevent u for and cure of htman ailuuht,tho world at larr;n is as ignorant as a Hottentot is of tho Chaldeo language, tit a Sioux ludian it of tho significance cf thn hieroglyphics on the Eypliaa monuments. Hut only is lb is trtp of the general public, but as wn said boforo, even tho members . t lha medieal pro fcesoon aru in Kraut moasuro, looping in darKness. Thero is more of mastery sur rounding the tvieatie and thn practice of mudiuino than of any other of tlio pursuits of life, or of th i branches of learning. Thil it due In great ti.casuro to the doctors thorn' celves. Tuuy write their proscriptions in a lidigur.g' unfami'iar to tho gnneral public; thev detiunato dineact lu a nomenclature bart eric In Its sounding, puzr.ltrig to every body not In tho profession, and this Invents the practice ot medicine with a wierdnets that lo'plros awe in tbe minds ot the woll and of the sick and It it a loophole through which charlatanism and quackery enter into tbo business to do their pernicious work. This li tbe fault ol tho faculty Itself, for it could Jutt at well use a language and doai in terms that all the world can understand, as to cling to Hi bloroglypbici. Became medicine It not in truth a iclenco, became it has scarce advanced beyond the cruditiot of the days of lllppocratet and of Galon, there are various schools ol medicine. Tho dead pie of sllopalhy having discovered thai cer tain methods and remedies lead to cerla'u results la corlain classei of tales, ho cou- tondl that allopathy it the science ot modi olno. Because the himeopalhist, studying the dozmai of Usnnrman, and becoming enamored then of, telievfl Id tbe pronunciamento, limllla timilibut curan tur, he contendi that ouly tomoopi- thv It tho ivicc4 of medicino. Aud tho hydropa'.blst who found virtu In cold water hat discovered thai it is useful for other Luroosi s iban nsvigition, and that by pack Ins. douching and pouring, il will produce perspiration, braes up, at Watt temporarily tha n.rv.)u tvttom and ctuie tbe rk'o to break out In numerous to ot. be It clatua routlnbla atier.toni that only hydropathy It the science of medicine. And further, tb uncerlaintlri of aedlcite at a tcleme, lu poTMly in fajt, In tbal respect, ctu t deluge of patent medicines, legalized, cure tilt, tpeclSct for all the ills that miserable mtnit heir to, an entailment that followed, Adam's lovs of apples, and Eve's flirtation with a snake. There is no empiricism in the science of geology, of astronomy or in any of tbe other fixed and well defined sciences and It is limply because tbey sre fixed snd well, defined. Wo mean no disratpoot to lha re gular physicians, no maltir of what school tney may be members. Thora is no class of o.ur iiil'zens for whom we have a higher re gard, a more exalted esteem than we hav for the regular physicians of the land. They hm a noble band, striving honestly, earnestly in tho cause of humanity. In urshino and rain; in day time and night 1'ine at all bourr; in cold weather and i'i hot weather, they answer tbo e.a'ls made npm them by tho rich and the po T Mike, and it matters not where suffering s, whether in a palace with all the rich sur rounding aud comforts that money can com ma id, or in a hovel, where only tqualidness and want is found, thero they go and do as best they e-n to allovialo tbe pin and tl e distress tbey find, givirg (heir liino, their knowledge, their labor, phyicd nnd montnl, in boha'f of their lU owiuen. With hearts aching for the woes nf thoio they aro trying toBmve, forgetful of their own health and their own safety, without thought of re muneration, they toil on from yoar'a end to yeir's end that they may do good to othora As individuals they may have thoir faults nd foibles and short comings, and every man has, but, from our humBn standpoint of justice, if the regular physi cians of tbo land have not on the credit side Or the ledger in the hereafter, of tho deeds dune in the body a long page of entri'is to offset the debit side, then we don' know who ought to have. We never sue or muct a physician that we do not foel in our heart an emotion of reverence, of love for him; for the name of every one of them must be roorded in the book of human life along with Abou Bon Adhem's, "he loved his follow men." We have been led to those reflections and remarks by tho criti cisms made and being made upon the presi dent's pbyaicians. PRESIDENTIAL 0FFI0E COMPLICATIONS. Some aarioua questions have often been asked and considered as to what would be the effect of the president's death upon the administration of the government, such at first, who would become president? Sec ond, as to the necessity for the oinveiiing of congress in extra session. In rspon60 to the question wo have examined the constitution and legislation of congress pertinent tboroto, and Una that par. 0, tec. 1 ot art. 2, of thn constitution provides: "In cae of tho removal of the president from ollice, or of his death, resignation, or inability to dichargo the duties and powors of his ofHce, the same shall devolve upon tbo vice-prosidont, and congress may by law provide for tho case of removal, death, res. ignation o; inability of both the president ai d vieo-presidont, doclaring what oltlcer shall then act as presidont, and such ollicor Shall act accordingly until such d'sability shall bo removed, or a president shall ho eloai"d." This is tho only consiitu-' tional provision that we find on this subject. In execution, of the power bo delegated, con grues did, in Murh 1792, enact tho follow ing, which is now section MS of the lUvitcd Statutes "In cuso of doath, re moval, resignation or inability of both tho president and vice-prosidml ot lb) Unittd SUleii, tho prisidantof the senatu,r if there is now, then tho spoakor of tho houso fi r tie ma belli!.', ah ill act as prosident until the ithbility tj rjin wed or a president elected.'' This ii a3 fir as any legislation provides, ao far h ) have ben able to ascertain. The legislation ti.ea means thir: that if tbo prem ier t d e tho viM-pro.i lord Bhall succeed for un'xpirod term; but if bjth die thon tbe sidout of tip toa'.o or jpuakor ol the house, bo C140 liny b.i, hoi Is ( Ilioo only for a iimo until a now eloclion for president an t ico-pr.i'idonl shall bo held. Tho provisions for thia elecXio.i nro recited in section! 117- 1 18-1 l'J. 150 of ths U wised Statutes, which sec tions aro tal.on from the act already referred to, viz: March, 1792. There may arie.i the contin'oiK of the death of all those named by thoso a ctions for tho succession, und in such event anarchy might ensue. To avort the possibility of such thing, it would be woll to increase thn number of those to sue. ceod, and the attention ot cor.grosa should bo directed to'.lhe supplying of what is to be con tiderod I. very matorial defect. Oo tbe soc- ond point II is to bo observed that tho pros! nt la cU-ihed with ample power to convene in an emergency both boutca of congress, or either t them. Section 8, article 2 of iho constitution provides among other things that "ne ( ho president) may on extraordi nary oci asiono, convene both houses or eithor of thorn." As for the calling of tbe senate oietbor although there would be no actual noowsily, yot there would be an emergency thil would nikko It a very reasonable and proper acfon, Tbe conetitution pro vider, par. article 2, section 2, that "ihe pruidont i'i!! bave powor to fill all vacancies that may happen during the recess cf ihe aenato by granting commls tlons whicn ehall expire at th end of thoir next sesnioii." It will be teen from this cl use lhat the povorof the senate In tho cor.firina- lion would not have to be exorcised for tbe cont'nued administration of tbo government While Dili Is true tboro it a ronton and cf the itroiigeti cogency why the aenato ahouM be convrno-l in extra session, and this reaion is to be f und in the fact that Mr. Artbur'i pmnirtli 1. 1. tho presidency loavoa thi in tie wUhi 'i! a presiding otThcr. Tho peak ersiop i( ti e house became vacant with the exp'rali. f the forty-sixth congress. Tho f-irty'-iv --I congre-a Is not yet organised and tl.wr In the ovonl of the death, res Ignition . r Inability ot bo'h Uaruold d Arthur thero la no Qicer i.a o-l by law to execute tbe powers nd diictm gt the duties of the exacutlyt oTce. Tho strongest reason therefore for the convening of the senate U that aire td suggested, v'z : the election of a president pro tempore. It Is the earnest wish ot ll patriotic citizens that no such painful con. lingencies as those referred to in this article shall ever arise, yet as they are wihio the range of possibility it Is well for us all to be advised of the consequences and to bope for early and tlDcient action lhat would avert them. THE PRESIDENT ABD HI3 PEOPLE. All dy ytaterday,on the day previous and on Saturday, numbers of persons throughout thia city, democrats and republi can', r'ch and rojr, mala and female, vUited the IIkrald office in iniemest eagornees to read tho late'l bulletins and loarn by read ing, nnd rereading the la.t received par ticulars from the lory tick president, whose critical condition now make, i vory bosom a home that sorrow doth inhabit. Every at tache of thiii paper as Lu walked hit rounds was stopped hero and there and cvury now and tuuu by partie' solicitous to know "tho very latest." A sympathy so universal in its extent, so unanimous in its unstrained qimiity wo have randy known to oxist for anyone ur.t of close personal friend ship or kith aud kin. We doubt if ii people mourned more when the black wiuged mes sengor of death cropt over tho vital forces of the father of his country than they grieve to day a1 '..) baro thought of Gaifio.d dead. Tho v.i . Imosphore) has seemed nuturattd with b. one sentiment, aud that wts that "some near one and some dear one" was lying nigh unto doath. Not a feeling has found lodgmout in the breast of publio man or private citizen, northman or sout'iman of any other character than euch i s waa bottomed on honest hop tor the final tri umph of a man who has lain on tbe t ed of aflliction and pain for wearisome weeks in tho very face of the king of terrors; fur a manly man who when ho received his murtyr wound because in power through his people's trust rofueed to appoint a bad man to prom nent position, bore it as a hero that braves the battle's blast when bullets thickest fly, and has borne hit pais with a patience and a nerve that adds lustre to even the chief head of a chivalrous nation. In all Ibis torture of body and anguish of mind, no expression has escaped his lips that admiring frior.da would have recalled as being unworthy of thoir exalted choice : not a murmuring word from the ambitious toiler that had worked his way up from tho barge boat on the canal to the White House in Washington, the ex ecutive seat of the country ; not a word of censure nor reproving phrace against even hla would-be murderer. This is of the conduct and theso are of the things that have fastened Juntos A. Garfield, the bravo and courtly gentloman and the hon ored preBidunt, doep down into the affections of a people thai admire true courago and of a civilized world that assesses the proper value upon tbo quiet dignity of character that under tho pulsating pressure of ovory Irritt lion preserves its poise and equilibrium. That an uneasy feoliDg as to the possible consequences of his death does exist, is not to bo gainsaid, but '.hat it is not an ingreitient in tbe general wish for bis recovery is as positively and solidly true is that the nation's grief is no surface grief for tho bravo S"ul that, wh n told ho "had one oimnco to live," responded "well T will take that one." That the cri-is in thv .'ate of bo exemplary a character will soon cloeo with life at the topmost mast, and the nation's heart, now at half mast, bo unftirlod in joy that he did indeed "pull through all right," is a temimeot wo aro catieliod breathes throughout rill this sympathV.ieg section. f riiHlieil t'oeil Oajfl, c?rn and baaley crushed, is econo mical, healthful and bettor for horses und cows than whole gruin. (Jorn meal, Graham flour, hominy and griti, manufactured at Follon's corn trill, Patterson avenue. MBit ,bapr rs.Kre zzd THE GREAT bUlBEH RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frottod Feet and tars, and all other Pains and Aches. Kft Preparation en raitk eipials Ft. JiroM Oft im a fftri, .lire, nfrtipfe and rAertf F.xtertinl ltni-.ly A trial enntiln tHt th. ciminttntllvi'ly IiiiHuk niiiUv of fiO Ciaili. and every mi tinVrlmr villi piktn ran havo ch.-ii .nil pusliir. irotf uf Its ilaliut. I'lrrcllons In l.leen Ijni(naNl. BOLD BT ALL ruitORI8T8 AND MALEU3 IN MKDIOINE. A.VOGELER& CO., nr,r . r. a. 4. Notice to) Railroad Contractor. Sfto mill t r adr tn let, nn the Taxos ft Ht l.nnii r.llwav, in Arkansna. I'r'n for K'aillnR. lf cents to 17 cents. Ul.arlnt and uriiVililnii f ill o tit ner aora HiiecirloHtiKiia and nroilles ran lie seen at otrie. nf the chief enidnnor, II. I.. Cobb, sit i, line noes, rim , nr Mew uanri'i, .vio. Semi bldi tn meat Ne'f M drill, Mn., or cor of - im anil nn street. e'. u-uu UKO. H. lltttrtARD , Chief Coutiaotor, n-.'t Ell. la A. PEAHSOM" CD C ; : . .a. i. - CO o 'MX . 7!2 mm street, Dallas, Texas, is the place to buy ALL THE I.ATKSif SiTVI.I'Si OF BONNETS AND HATS THOSE OJET" I023r01-'S. AND ALL KINDS OF PINE MEjSJ- SHOES, In French, Kid, Moroeeos and Calf: Hummer Mhm. n.f..i u...v. ...... , low quarter shoe In bund or machine sewed, LADlh' tsJrlOES. The Flnent ..f Hiiml-Mndti nadl-s' Uutton Shoot of a.11 the Celebrated Makes Jnsi received a aplendld assortnienl of Ladles' Sandals, Newport., llutuiu Ties and Plain or worked Opor Slips, the nicest In theolty. They aro very oouilVirtahle tills h t weather. A LEON BLi3L3E3C3Xr,'fi&, 604 ELM STREET A fall ssortiiientof STRAW ;IIAT.S 'AND Ml LER& STEPHENSON Direct Importers, No ?I(KEY IP SOI HATlNFACTUfllY. A UcaulifulGoId Ilniid GliiuaT a Set, 44 Piccey, onlv 87.50. AT.woly 3Ioss tow Chiiiii Tea St, 44 Jieccy, onlv 87.50. iJt -i t A nit' i'i (Mi. ('Jnitia 1iimii', Elrt' .lilii.Ht uim! 'JTfit Mfts. ISii Ii?'t'N, only ,1S 01. CBeauliliil erat(d 4 hi it a crt coinhiiu'.l, IIoms iloe, or Wild ESosr, only itoa:jts- tkipli: ilatkd silver wake Por DozKnlvos 1.50; Forks $7; SKND ORDUUS DIEECT. ST. LOUIS ii kntlemkn t i it su aUsrLoat frominoAraltlebUitf dDtomn to mi. A vwitttoa of month did not Hnm maoh nlM, but 00 lit contrAry, wuh follnirod of InoratktMlprostrftUonnDdfmsxiivrctilllt. Atthijttm) lbtnttieiiMiofyour IuonTonio, fnm which I rv kJiieii itlmoot Immcdiitt od woodajriol wwulU. Thaotd rnergr rttumcd ud I fonoi thnt oit nMufl fore wDotirmaaiantlyattti(L I titvr uwd thre bnltlMof th Tonic Hino uttinoll I h.ie d(iDAtwir tb itv bor thitt 1 Tnr did In tha Mm ILn durlnn my Uloesa, and with double the ottM. viiUi th tranquil or and Uttf of body, hu ooina also cUmronai uf lhOQgbknrr bnfora ojoynd. If th Tonlo baa Dot dona iM work, 1 know oolwbal. Iguall uinrwitt. ffThM Iron TonA n I tojridm of iron, fvyw wnrmnarntion of nan ar mna mom 1 nhatmm, oHnfd I tciih th Vffjrtabl I A ratnaticm. Mi rnvrrrm I frri u vMrMOH wherv I In Tallin stai tttniMru.M VDUFACTUllt II I'll DR. HARTER MKDICINK CO.. 10. Ill I0HIN HAIR IIKUr, II. UUl Timken Spring Vehicles 1(101 S t. Charles Street St. Louis, Mo 4 o ; wl - ex ta " 5 Mi i': ii y as ft - 5 Mi s S M M m 4 ... STYLES ' v......,., ...wuium-u biiu I'riuce Albert i Bt prloee from S2.30 up. VENTILATOKS. Hiid STETSON'S full 111). Of Middleman's Profit. Jlnuor, SSrenkl'stKt uml Tea Table Spoons $7; Tea Spoons p. CATALOGUE FUHNISUKD. MISSOURI (Kmr9 and rrom al prefm4ont form iebilitu mn f- uar. Want of TitaUU f.oit. anf raHraf--f ofdMVomfwirtrf! to tuob tva eitnt ihi mt Inhnr wnfMCMillDtilylittl j. I'. wiTtum, I'Mtnr rhriatun chnrrtt. imr.w. Ar now sold nt the rata or 1WO0 per ni'-nth. lliev re the moM nyllah, lliey t' linilirr an 'lc s-nals-r, and ere at well Hdnp'rd to Ihe . .iimh cnnntty Md aetotli line driving parkr the eltv. They nri niHiiuInn' nr.vl hy all th leading c:mlai(e hullder. throiilioUl theconntry, III.i;V TIM K EX, llnllilcrurrinernrrlnsra " Munri rnelii.or nrTlmkrn Pniass Bprlofa, Oanrs tttsd Bottle. tern ' )