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The Cleveland gazette. [volume] (Cleveland, Ohio) 1883-1892, December 29, 1883, Image 3

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83035386/1883-12-29/ed-1/seq-3/

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* NBWIM»AW£R I<AU».
«®«l*rty from th,
Bosto’-ce whether directed to his name or whether h<
Is a MiMcrtber or hot-le responsible for the nay
The courts taw decided that refusing to take news
papers and periodicals from the post-office, or removal
and leaving them uncalled for, is prima facie evidence
Of INTSNTIOMAL VKAUD. r
General News Summary.
Interesting Home and Foreign News
domestic.
Dispatches of the 23d state snow to
the depth of about twenty inches fell dur
ing the past few days all along the Ohio
Valley. Railroad travel has been delayed
by the heavy snow, and the recent
rains have caused considerable fear
or floods along the Ohio and Allegheny
rivers. Dispatches from Chicago report a
very heavy snow storm in Southern Illi
nois, Indiana and Michigan. Reports flora
the East and New England States say the
weather- is very cold. At Booneville, N.
Y., the thermometer reached thirty-six de
grees below zero. In New': England the
thermometer ranged from ten to thirty de
grees below zero.
Celebrations of the. anniversary of
the landing of 'the Pilgrim Fathers occurred
at New V ork, Philadelphia and many New
England.cities and towns on the 22d. Pres
-I?®°Participated in the celebra
tion at Philadelphia.
S. Gilbert & Co., extensive grain
dealers, with worehouses' at Utica, Buffalo
Rock, Ottawa, Wedron and Grand Ridge,
in Illinois, suspended the 22d. It is said
t&eir liabilities will reach $309,000.
■ George Williams, a notorious crook,
was caught in the act of robbing a store at
Trotwood, seven miles west of Dayton,
Ohio, early on the morning of the 22d and
shot in the breast by the clerk, Ulysses
Schenck. He was lodged in jail. His
wound is serious.
Henry Curtin, a clerk in a store at
•Petersburg, Ind., was murdered and robbed
.while on his way home on the night of the
22d. Charles Harvey, a hard character,
was arrested as the murderer.
While John and Jacob Novely were
ut gunning with their father near Read
ing, Pa., on the 22d, John slipped on the ice
and his gun was discharged, killing Jacob
instantly.
• A dispatch from Billings, Montana,
on the 22d stated that Jack Myer had dis
'cavered the bed of the Lost Cabin Mine in
Montana, which is said to be immensely
rich in gold. This is the mine which three
old miners discovered in early Territorial
times, two of whom were murdered by the
Indians and the survivor became insane
and could never trace the trail. Since
then the discovery had passed into Terri
torial tradition.
A large number of Gentiles, of both
. political parties, held a meeting at Salt
Lake City, on the night of the 22d, for the
parpose of endorsing President Arthur’s
recommendation for a legislative council
for Utah, and also for the purpose of en
dorsing Governor Murray’s stand for laws
and good government.
A dispatch from Gadsden, Tenn.,
on the 22d states that great distress exists
in that place from a small-pox epidemic.
Out of twenty-six cases fourteen died, and
an appeal is made for nurses and virus.
Notice has been given for closing
indefinitely the Philadelphia & Reading
Coal and Iron Company’s rail mill at
Reading, Pa., on January 1. Three hun
dred men will be disemployed. Cause,
dullness of the iron t^ade.
Mrs. Christian, who is said to have
murdered seven men, was arrested at San
Antonio, Texas, on the 23d.
Bob Younger, one of the notorious
Younger brothers and companion of Jesse
James, was arrested at Warrior, Ala., on
the 23d.
The resident miners of the McCon
nellsville (Pa.) coal regions have made
war against the Hungarians. On the 23d
notices were posted throughout the district
stating that the foreigners had no intention
of < becoming citizens and were crowding
miners and laborers out of employment
and homes; that their morals were of the
lowest class; that only five per cent, of
them could read and write; that they re
resisted all attempts to elevate them in the
moral and intellectual scale, and that they
were a blot upon the Commonwealth that
would not be endured. They state that
American labor as well as American man
ufactures must be protected and the Hun
garians must go.
F. C. Breckenridge, a nephew of
Captain Nutt, and one of the three men
who witnessed the murder of Nutt by
Dukes at Uniontown, Pa., has lately been
receiving anonymous letters threatening
bis life. The following is an abstract of
one of the letters: “Curse you! I’ll
'have your heart’s blood. Your days
are numbered. Dukes is dead, but
his avengers live. There are no paupers
in'Dukes’ family. They never lie or beg.
Tell Lizzie Nutt to sell her piano and let
the paupers move out of the brick house.
Good-bye until we see you in court.”
• Breckenridge is the principal witness for
the defense of young Nutt, and it is believed
the letters were written for the purpose of
intimidating him from testifying.
A special from McDade, Texas, on
the 25th, says that Henry Pfeiffer, Wright
McLemare and Thad McLemare were taken
from a saloon there on the night of the 24th
by fifty well/irmed men and carried a mile
into the bush and hanged to a tree. Thad
McLemare was under arrest at the time,
having been taken early in the evening, on
a charge of burglary* preferred by 8. J.-
Walker, of that place. The other two
happened to be present when the lynchers
arrived. Pfeiffer was under indictment for
horse theft. In the evening six armed men,
friends and relatives of those hung, came to
town and picked a quarrel with Tom Bish
op and George Miller, and a fight with
shot guns and six-shooters ensued. Two of
the sextette, Jack Bailey and Asa Bailey,
were killed, and a third, Hayward Bailey,
was wounded. The remaining three es
caped. Willie Griffin, an estimable young
citizen of McDade, while assisting Miller
and Bishop to defend themselves, was shot
through the head and mortally wounded
by Hayward Bailey.
Willie Shaefer, aged about nine
years, was struck above the right eye by a
stone thrown by another boy recently,
making a gash from which lockjaw set in,
resulting in death on the 25th.
William McCoffery, a prominent
politician and Assistant Superintendent of
Markets of New Orleans, was shot and mor
tally wounded in a gambling saloon by
Bad Renaud, one of the proprietors of the
establishment, on the 25th.
Charles Harvey, of Petersburg,
Ind., who murdered Henry Custin, Jr., was
taken from the jail on the morning of the
24th and hung to a tree. There was no
doubt of his guilt
While a cage containing twenty con
vict laborers was descending the shaft of
the Pratt mines at Birmingham, Montana,
a few days ago, the engine running the cage
became unmanageable when the cage
went rapidly to the bottom, 200 feet, re-
IxHisding sixty feet. Most of the men fell
out. Joseph Phelan, colored, was killed,
and two whites and eleven negroes injured.
Private advices from Paris, Ark , on
the 25th, says: While a family named Gray,
consisting of a man, wife, child and two
middle aged ladies from H’inois, were
"roMing Pettit Jean Creek, near Paris, they
were swept away by the swollen stream
and ali drowned.
Hrs. Olive Gunter, aged eighty,
daughter and grand daughter, were mur
dered in Chatham Church, near Moncure, ।
M. C., on the 24tb. The weapon used was ;
an ax, AU three were struck several j
^Jows. There is no due to she murderers, j
A Chippewa Falls, Wls., dispatch
of the 25th, says that a flouring mill at
place was burned the day previous and a
large warehouse badly damaged. The mill
was owned by George N. Ayres, of Rut
land, Vt., and was partially insured.
A terrible tragedy occurred at Ya
zoo City, Miss., on the night of the 24th.
John T. Posey, of the firm of Williams &
Posey, a most estimable young man and
highly connected, was insulted by John
James, a negro butcher. Going off and
getting some friends, Posey returned to
the corner of the street where James was
last seen, and without warning some party
fired upon them, and John Posey, Carnot
Posey and Jasper Nicholls were riddled
with buckshot and instantly killed. H. C.
Gillett was dangerously and Fritz Hullder
slightly wounded. The negroes were or
ganized, and i\nder cover of the intense
darkness shot down these gentleman, who
refrained from shooting because the streets
were full of boys and men who were not
connected with this difficulty. To have
fired would perhaps have been to kill many
innocent men and children. James was shot
and killed while resisting arrest the next
morning. The City Council at a meeting,
the Mayor presiding, resolved, after inves
tigation of the causes leading to the trag
edy, that the difficulty was the result of a
personal altercation between Posy and
James, and that the friends of both parties
were drawn into the conflict, but neither
politics nor race prejudices actuated either
party.
Mr. Buckner, chairman of the Com
mittee on Banking and Currency, is pre
paring a bill to introduce when Congress
reconvenes, which provides for issuing
Treasury notes without legal tender qual
ity, to take the places of the bank notes
going out of existence. The purport of
the measure is the same as that of the bill
introduced by him the first session of last
Congress.
The announcement is made that Reu
ben R. Springer, famous for his gifts to the
public, has bequeathed to the Cincinnati
Art Museum his valuable art collection;
also the pictures willed to him by his niece,
Mrs. Mills. It is also stated he has given
SIO,OOO more to the College, of Music for its
new buildings.
The officials of Coast Survey state
that in consequence of the growing demand
from the several States from persons
interested in scientific pursuits, trades
and manufactures for accurate and re
liable standards of length, weight and
capacity, they will need an increased ap
propriation to carry on that branch
of their work during the coming fiscal
year. The agitation of the question of in
troducing the metric system, which is
gradually gaining ground wherever the
old and new systems are compared to
gether, has had some influence in creating
the demand for standards of weight and
Further particulars of the terrible
disaster at the Virginius mine, near Ouray.
Col., on the 22d, have just been received by
a special messenger to Montrose. Immedi
ately on the receipt of the news a party
consisting of thirty-one men left Ouray to
bring in the dead. The journey to the mine
was made in the face of great perils, as
a terrible storm was raging. Having cared
for the wounded and improvised sleds for
tho bodies, the party started to return.
When the Cumberland basin was reached
a second snow slide descended, but
being on the lookout, all succeed
ed in reaching the edge of the ava
lanche before it struck them, and thus
escaped instant death. The sleds contain
ing four dead bodies, however, were car
ried two thousand feet down the mountain
side and then hurled over a precipice five
hundred feet high, where they must remain
till spring. The party finally reached
Ouray, nearly dead from exhaustion.
Two non-union men named Thomp
son and Williams, who took the place of
strikers at Oliver & Roberts’ wire mill,
Pittsburgh, were attacked and badly
beaten on the night of the 26th.
A freight train on the Burlington,
Cedar Rapids & Northern Railroad was
wrecked at Columbus Junction, lowa, on
the 26th, and five cars derailed. Mark
Fisher was killed.
In a collision of trains at Louisa
Court House, Va., on the 26th, a farmer
was killed and an engine badly damaged.
The House Committee on Appropri
ations held its first meeting on the 26th and
decided to prepare, if possible, the pension,
fortifications, consular, and military ap
propriation bills during recess so as to be
presented in the House when Congress as
sembles.
Henry" Moneis, an ex-policeman of
Philadelphia, was convicted on the 26th of
of robbing the Kensington Bank in 1871.
Information is just received that a
family named Boss, consisting of the par
ents and seven children, were drowned in
the freshet at Hardis Creek, Ky., on the
night of the 24th.
Saloon keepers of Lawrence, Ks.,
have given up their fight on the prohibitory
law and all have closed their back as well
as front doors.
Two young men named Strange and
one named Hewitt were killed and several
wounded in a general fight at Allendale,
8. C., on the 26th.
The amount of grain in warehouse at
New York on the 26th shows a decline of
373,000 bushels as compared with a week
ago, but there is an increase of 4,967,700
bushels as compared with a year ago, the
total being 14,517,339 bushels divided as fol
lows: wheat 7,735,572, corn 2,503,687, oats
3,246,413, rye 440,631, barley 400,405, and
malt 109,621 bushels. The increase com
pared with a year ago is as follows: wheat
830,025, corn 109,402, oats 2,312,055, rye 239,-
722, barley 332,606, and malt 59,120.
A colored emigration association
for the purpose of helping colored residents
of the South to immigrate and locate and
buy lands in the West has been formed at
Washington. Every head of a family is
entitled to locate on one hundred and sixty
acres of Government land, and shall, upon
paying ten dollars to the association, re
ceive help for getting to his place and have
assistance for one year afterwards.
Several persons connected with the
Nutt murder trial, whfch will come up for
hearing at Pittsburgh soon, have received
threatening letters. The object of the
writer is to prejudice the case of young
Nutt.
Near Coal Creek, Tex., on the 26th,
an engine, while switching, collided with a
hand-car and slightly injured a contractor
named E. P. Lewis, killed two employes,
names unknown, and fatally crushed an
other named Henry Bentley, colored.
A freight train ran off the track
near Elizabeth, N. J., on the 26th, and
Fred Peneo, the engineer^ was killed. The
train was thrown over a high bank and
totally wrecked. The accident was caused
by snow and the track spreading.
Ep. Mullen and Frank Long, oil
men, of Bradford, Pa., were drowned in
Duck Creek on the 26th while trying to
reach Marietta, Ohio, in a skiff.
The firm of A. D. Smith & Co., ex
tensive cotton manufacturers of Provi
pence, R. 1., made an assignment on the
26th, with liabilities at SI,6GO,<XK> to $1,800,-
060.
A passenger train on the New Sha
mokin, Sunbary & Lewisburg Railroad
was thrown on a trestle work by a mis
placed switch, near Sunbury, Pa., on the
26th. The engine, tender and baggage car
ran off the end of the trestle, but the first
passenger car stopped when half over. The
train was crowded with passengers. The
fireman was slightly hurt
A desperate attempt at murder was
made in Harrisburg, Pa., on the night of
the 26th. Daniel Mackey entered the house
of his sister-in-law, Mrs. Sallie Mackey,
and asked if he cool 1 not be accommo
dated with a sleeping room. He was per
mitted to ociiupy n lounge, but was not on
ft long before be approached his sister-in
law and informed her that he felt like vom
iting. She handed him an earthen spittoon,
when he startled her with the informa
tion that the object of bis visit was her
murder. He knocked her down, tramped
on her body, and broke the spittoon into
fragments in his attempts to kill her. Sub
sequently he assaulted her with a heavy
stove lifter, and she is now lying in a pre
carious condition. She says Mackey de
clared the attack on her was made for
alleged ill treatment of her husband, who
has been dead for several months. The
would-be murderer escaped.
A snow slide occurred near Montez
uma, Col., recently, which carried John
Headstrom, John Ahistorm and John Ling,
three miners, half a mile down the mount
ain, apd Ahlstrom and Ling were found
afterwards badly frozen, and will probably
die. Headstrom is missing, and must be
killed.
Proceedings have been instituted
against the Dismal Swamp Canal Lottery
Company, of Petersburg, Va., with the ob
ject of testing the company’s right to sell
lottery tickets in the State.
Mrs. Martha Staves died in a
church pew at Moriah, N. Y., recently,
while the congregation were singing.
^John H. Diehl, formerly Collector
of Customs at Philadelphia, was found
dead in his bed at Delanco, N. J., on the
26th, having been suffocated by coal gas.
At Guilford, Me., recently John
Goulding and his wife got drunk, and their
little son, aged seven, was given liquor,
made drunk, and sent up-stairs about nine
o’clock in the morning. At three o’clock
in the afternoon he was found frozen stiff
on the floor. The father and mother were
arrested for causing the child’s death by
willful neglect.
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
Friends of Second Assistant Post
master General Elmer state that he will
soon resign and start a Trust Company in
New York, having for its object the guar
anteeing of the bonds of Government offi
cials and persons in positions of trust who
are required to give bonds.
Ex-Senator Bruce and Fred Doug
lass have declined to sOrve on the National
Colored Men’s Executive Committee, to
which they were appointed at the recent
meeting of the committee in Washington.
Ex-Senator Spencer was acquitted
of the charge of contempt of court in the
Star route trial by the Criminal Court at
VVashington on the 22d, because the sub
poena was irregular, being in the form
used in civil instead of criminal cases.
Ex-Governqr Lowe, of lowa, died
at Washington on the evening of the 22d.
Gen. McKenzie commanding the
Department of tho Gulf, is very ill with
brain fever and it is feared will not recover
sufficiently to resume command.
General McKenzie, commander of
the Department of Texas, has been tempo
rarily relieved from the command on ac
count of nervous prostration, which dis
turbed his mind. The affairs of the depart
ment will be directed by General Scho
field. a The condition of General McKenzie
causes grave apprehension to his friends.
The wife of General Rosecrans died
at Washington outlie 26th.
General Thomas L. Kane, one of
the most prominent citizens of Pennsyl
vania, died at his residence in Philadelphia
on the 26th. During the rebellion he was
Colonel of the famous “Bucktail” regiment
of Pennsylvania. General Kane was a
brother of the famous Arctic explorer.
The issue of silver dollars was
$415,500 for the week ended the 23d.
Secretary Folger has recovered
his health and resumed his duties.
FOREIGN.
Cable dispatches of the 23dstate)hat
England and China have entered into a
secret treaty in regard to affairs in Ton
quin. England is to engage to offer media
tion with France, and in return will be
ceded the Island of Hainan.
By the burning of a .Jewish school
and synagogue in a suburb of Constanti
nople on the 22d thirty students were cre
mated.
The Spanish Government, according
to dispatches of the 23d, is about to pay
over to the United States .$460,000 as indem
nity to American citizens for losses sus
tained during the Cuban insurrections .
An Orangemen procession at Harbor
Grace, N. F., was attacked by a mob on the
26th and three men instantly killed and
several more mortally wounded.
Dr. Beatty, the Coroner of Lamber
ton, Canada, while holding an inquest on
the 26th on the body of Mrs. Gibbs, who
had been murdered, died suddenly.
LATER.
The number of schedules in assign
ment filed in New York in 1883 was 343.
Liabilities $20,857,843, actual assets $9,374,-
541.
About forty professors of modern
languages from the principal institutions
of learning in the country convened in New
York on thp 27th ult. President Carter, of
Williams, was chosen chairman, and reso
lutions were adopted to the effect that it
was the sense of the meeting that no col
lege should grant the degree of B. A. to a
student who conld not read well French
and German.
Cold weather and snow slides are
proving very disastrous to life in the far
West. Besides the nine men killed in the
Mendota mine, near Tulleride, Col., recent
ly’, five others were seriously injured at the
Virginius mine, one man was buried in the
snow at Clement Creek and cannot be
found till spring, and two others were car
ried 1,500 feet in a snow slide near Ironton,
that State, and when rescued they were
frozen from the waist down, the flesh open
ing in seams. They cannot recover.
The horses attached to a sleigh, con.
taining four couples from Roaring Creek,
ran away at Rocktown, Pa., on the 27th ult.»
dragging the sleigh over a precipice.
James Smith had his leg and arm broken,
Henry Green an arm broken, and Mary
Krohner internally injured. The others
wi re slightly injured.
John A. Clark was hanged in the
jail at Bozeman, M. T., on the 27th ult. for
the murder of Thomas Rogers in June last.
Archbishop Perche died at New
Orleans on vhe 27th ult.
A State Convention of Ohio Liquor
Dealers met in Columbus on the 27th ult,
for the purpose of formulating plans to
secure favorable legislation.
Gambling has become so common
among army officials that a bill has been
introduced in Congress to prohibit gam
bling in the service.
General Grant slipped on the ice
in front of his residence in New York re
cently and fell, sustaining injuries which
confined him to his bed for several days.
It is thought his injuries are not serious.
Petitions requesting Congress to
prevent the importation of foreign laborers
under contracts made abroad are being
circulated throughout Pennsylvania and
Ure receiving the signatures of many
workingmen.
William H. Kirk, a Cincinnati horse
dealer, was found in the willows along a
creek in Cumminsville, a suburb of the
former place, on the 27th ult., with at rope
around his neck and dead. He had been
murdered for his money.
John Thoma, of New York, quar.
reled with his wife recently, went to the
grave of bis child in Greenwood Cemetery
and shot himself dead. He was found
lying across the grave covered with snow
by a police officer.
Are Cross-Eyes Contagion si
At the Philadelphia Polyclinic Dis
pensary, at Thirteenth and Locus
streets, yesterday morning, a small pa
tient, a boy, was brought in by his
father to be treated for an affection ol
the eye. After an examination by the
physician in attendance the case was
pronounced one of “strabismus” (cross
eye). The father said in consterna
tion:
“You don’t mean it, doctor? About
three weeks ago Jhonny and some
other boys were playing on the walk in
front of my house. Suddenly one oi
his companions cried out: ‘O, boys,
here comes the cross-eyed girl!’ ami, as
I afterward found out, they ranged
themselves on .the sidewalk and tried to
look cross-eyed to annoy her. That
evening Johnny sat opposite to me
at the supper table, and in asking for
something he looked full at me. I
nearly choked with astonishment. The
boy was cross-eyed!”
“Well, he has strabismus.”
“Isn’t it terrible? Can it be possible
that ’bismuth is contagious? It looks
to me ” and here the axnious father
glanced toward his unfortunate child,
who had one eye fixed on the doctor
and the other on an Italian peanut
vender on the street. The parent rose,
and, receiving the prescription, moved
toward the door muttering, “Don’t it
beat .”—Philadelphia Times.
An Interesting Incident.
The unwritten history of Lord Cole
ridge’s recent tour in this country
would probably be far more interesting
than the daily chronicles whic’’ were
furnished by the press. The fouowino
is told in confidence and with bated
breath by the inhabitants of a flourish
ing city in Western New York. The
Chief Justice was entertained at dinner
one evening by a local magnate. A
caterer well known in that part of the
State furnished the refreshments and
the china on which they were served,
which, by the way, was a new and
beautiful hand-painted set. During the
course of the dinner it is related that
Lord Coleridge said to his charming
hostess: “You will excuse the com
ment, but I really must compliment
you on the exquisite beauty of your
china.” My lady calmly appropriated
the compliment, and gracefully replied:
“Thank you, my Lord. It is used for
the first time in your Lordship’s hon
or.” Then the dinner moved on to a
successful close. Judge of his Lord
ship’s surprise when, at a breakfast
given next morning by a legal lumi
nary, he was confronted with the same
beautiful set of china. But his surprise
was augmented when, on the following
lay, the banquet in his honor, given in
i rival city, ninety miles away, was
graced with the hand-painted china
ised for the first time in his Lordship’s
lonor. —W. Y. Post.
- - •
The Meadows of Maryland.
Springfield, Prince George’s Co., Md.
Mr. Cbas. G. Addison, of the above place
states: “ I sprained my right knee, caus
ing intense suffering, and the use of
crutches for several weeks. I found no re
lief in other remedies and finally tried the
miracle of cure, St. Jacobs Oil. In a short
time I could bend my knee—which had been
as stiff as an iron rod—laying aside my
crutches and was able to walk as well as
ever.”
It is noted as a curious misprint in one
of the great dailies the othei’ day that a
doctor felt a man’s ‘‘purse.” Nothing
very queer about that.— Chicago Tribune.
Wisely Adopted by Dairymen.
The adoption by most of the prominent
dairymen and farmers of the United States,
of the Improved Butter Color made by
Wells, Richardson & Co., Burlington, Vt.,
is a proof of their wisdom in a business
point of view. Nearly all winter butter is
colored in order to make itmarketable, and
this color is the best, in regard to purity,
»trength,permanence and perfection of tint.
The editor of the Topeka Capital has
found out that “the best thing to do when
you go shopping with the ladies is to take
notes.”
Dr. Pierce’s “ Pleasant Purgative Pel
lets” are sugar-coated and inclosed in glass
bottles, their virtues being thereby pre
served unimpaired for any length of time,
tn any climate, so that they are always
fresh and reliable. No cheap wooden or
pasteboard boxes. By druggists.
A German paper offers a Limburger
cheese to each new subscriber. It could
hold out no stronger inducement, certain
ly.— Troy Times.
I have known and watched the use of
Swift’s Specific (S. S. S.) for over fifty
years, ana never have known or heard of
its failure to cure any case of Blood Poison
when properly taken.
H. L. Dennard, Perry, Ga.
A woman can darn things without get-
Sing excited, but just as soon as you hear
a man darning things you may know he is
out of temper.— Philadelphia Chronicle.
I have had Catarrh ■ for years in its
worst form. Before I had used one bottle
of Ely’s Cream Balm droppings into my
throat had ceased, pain and soreness in my
bead was removed, as well as deafness. It
gives me immediate relief for cold in the
head. Mrs. J. D. Hag adorn. Union, N.Y.
It was a Detroit girl that married at fif
teen so as to have her golden wedding
when it would do her some good.— Detroit
Free Press.
Gen. John A. Logan has used Durang’s
Rheumatic Remedy for rheumatism with
splendid results. It is taken internally
and cures at once the worst case. Ask your
ri uggist for it or send for free pamphlet to
R. K. Helphenstine,Washington, D. C.
A person begging alms of Lord George
Gordon said: “God bless you, my lord!
you and I have been in all the prisons in
London.” “What do you mean?” cried
Lord George. “I never was in any prison
but the Tower.” “That is true, my lord,”
said the other, “and I have been in all the
rest.”
A young man who dropped in unexpect
edly upon his girl the other evening found
her iu tears. Poor thing, she had been
peeling onions.— Exchange.
Song of the tin kettle: “Hum tea!
Dumb tea.”— Detroit Post.
That was a triumphal appeal of the
lover of antiquity, who, in arguing the
superiority of an old architectu e over the
new, said: “Where will you find any mod
ern building that has lasted so long* as the
ancient?” .
Dentist’s sign—Drawing, music and
dancing./— Chicago Tribune.
Poor George: Mrs. Brown—“ Why, I
thought Washington was dead.” Mr. B.—
“And so he is; he died before the centen
nial.” Mrs. B.—“Whv, I see here in the
paper a heading: ‘General Washington
Dispatches.’ ” — The Judge.
A BADLY in love young Pittsburgh man
was the recipient of such a contemptuous
smile from his adored one the other even
ing that he shrank away, feebly muttering:
“Thou art sneer and yet so far.”—Phila
delphia Times.
Mr. Gladstone, it is said, dislikes to put
on a new suit of clothes. Well, it is a
nuisance to have your friends stop and ask
you where the fire was last night.—_V. K
Graphic.
On the contrary—A mule.— The Judge,
“ I am going to plant my foot down,”
iaid the lady of the house, in tvratbfnl
tones. “ What ’yer going to rajs*, cornar’
interrogated the man of the nouse from
behind his paper.— Pock Ia nd Courier-Go
retts.
A Fatal Mistake
Would be not to take Dr. R. V. Pierce’s
“ Golden Medical Discovery” if you are
bilious, suffering from impure blood, or
fearing consumption (scrofulous disease of
the lungs). Sold by all druggists.
The older the dog the more cur-age he
has.— Boston Post.
Functional derangement of the female
system is quickly cured by the use of Dr.
R. V. Pierce’s-“ Favorite Prescription.”
It removes pain and restores health and
strength. By all druggists.
A very unsatisfactory sort of bread—
—The roll of fame.— N. Y. Mail.
I am cured of Catarrh and deafness by
Ely’s Cream Balm. My aunt was deaf in
one ear. After using the Balm a few times
her hearing was restored. F^ D. Morse,
Insurance Broker, Elizabeth, N. J.
A leaD’ng feature at a horse show—the
halter.— Tornado.
I have been using Swift’s Specific (S. S.
S.) and find it to be the best remedy of the
kind that I have ever been able to get, and
I have tried them all.
John Tischer, 3d U. S. Cavalry.
When a train of cars is telescoped it is
generally the result of a collideoscope.—
Lowell Courier.
The gain on a flock of sheep may be
called a wether profit.— Chicago Times.
The Throat. — “Brown’s Bronchial
Troches” act directly on the organs of the
voice. They have an extraordinary effect
tn all throat disorders. Sold only in boxes
The Mormon question: “Dearest, will
you join my aggregation?”— Boston Tran
script.
Walnut Leaf Hair Restorer
Is entirely different from all others. It is
as clear as water, and as its name indicates
is a perfect Vegetable Hair Restorer. It
will immediately free the head from dan
druff, restore gray hair to its natural color,
and produce a new growth where it has
fallen off. It does not in any manner af
fect the health, which Sulphur, Sugar of
Lead and Nitrate of Silver preparations
have done. It will change light or faded
hair in a few days to a beautiful glossy
brown. Ask your"druggist for it. Each bot
tle is warranted. Benton, Myers & Co..
Wholesale Agents, Cleveland, Ohio, ana
C. N. Crittenton, New York.
Ernest ReesE, of Hannibal, Mo., says: “Sa
maritan Nervine cured me of sick headache.”
A child that wakes with croup should
have a dose of Piso’s Cure.
Blood Poisoning;-An Alarming; Discovery.
Half the people are suffering and many
die from this fatal complaint. Diseases of
the kidneys and liver are the principal
causes. As a cure we can only recommend
German Hop Bitters.— Journal of Health.
Hale’s Honey of Horehound and Tar
Allay indications of consumption. Pike’s
toothache drops cure in one minute.
VV e often hear of a poem having weight:
but certainly a great deal depends upon
its measure.— M. Y. Independent.
Look Well to the Name.
Theonly genuine German Hopßittershave
the word “German” blown in the bottle.
Pimples, pustules, and all skin disorders
are cured by using Samaritan Nervine.
Brown’s Teeth’g Cordial will cure your child
of every disorder peculiar to children oniy.
If afflicted with Sore Eyes, use Dr. Isaac
Thompson’a Eye Water. Drug-gists sell it. 250.
THE GREAT GERMAN
REMEDY
For Pain!
Relieves and cures
RHEUMATISM,
Neuralgia,
SCIATICA, LUMBAGO,
BACKACHE,
Headache, Toothache,
SORE THROAT,
QUINSY,DWELLINGS,
SPHAINS, (1)
Soreness, Cuts/Bruises,
FROSTBITES,
BLKXS, SCALDS,
And all other bodily aches
and pains.
FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE.
Sold by all Druggists and
Dealers. Directions In 11
languages.
The Charles A. Vogeler Co.
'gocecMors to A. VOGELER * CO.)
Baltimore. Md.. U. 8. A,
BaiM
Free Information
About The South-West.
Kansas, Colorado. Utah, New Mexico, Arizona. Cali
fornia and Old Mexico offer the best field for Farmers,
Fruit-Growers, Stock-Raisers. Capitalists Merchants,
Miners and Mechanics of all trades M >ps, papers and
pamphlets, giving detailed information mailed free on
application to C. It. SCHMIDT, Commissioner oi
Immigration, A. T. & 8. F. K. R., Topeka, Kansas.
11 v e endorsement
, ym. from eminent phy-
slcians, and has long
occupied a foremost
rank among stand
. aiir a rd proprietary
-remedies. Us prop
jjr eni.s as an altera-
K&J&XugS&tp&C' J* pig S tive of disordered
? condi tlo ns of the
stomach, liver and
bowels, and a pre.
ventive of malarial
diseases are no less
■ — wtSWiaw renowned.
ZS) whom apply for Hor-
QlgF W E H tetter's ^ lmanac for
Poison.
Mercury and potash have made more cripples than i
war, pestilence and famine combined.
FOR LADIES.
I have been using fur a month or two In my house
hold. S-vift’s Specific (S. S. S ), the greater portion of 1
it having been consumed by the female portion of ray
family, and with the happiest results. It acted like a
charm ou uiy wife, who hud been in bad health for a
long time, andfor whom 1 have paid h ndredsof dol
lars for doctors and medicines. It began to build ii r
upfromtlie flrstdose. Another female member of my
family took it with equally satisfactory results. It is
certainly the best tonic for delicate ladies that I have
ever us -d, and 1 have tried them all. 1 have no doubt
that want of exercise, close confinement in poorly ven
fitted houses, sewer gas poison and malarial poison
often produce sickness among our wives, daughters
and sisters, and I believe Swift’s Specific Is the remedy
for all tills sort of blood poisoning.
FL. JONES. J. P . Quitman. Ga. 1
Our treatise on Blond and Skin Diseases mailed free
to applicants. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., j
Drawers, Atlanta, Ga
CatarrH
Bwhen applied by
the finger into the
nostrils, will be ab
sorbed. effectually
cleansing the head
of catarrha virus,
causing healthy se
cretions. It allays
inflammation, pro
tects the membrane
of the uasal pass
ages from addition
al colds.completely
heals the sores and
restores taste and
smell. A few appli
cations relieve. .4
Uiorompi treatment
■ ■ A’V-rirw/c'o um iMSiUrely cure.
I rEiv & n Agreeable to use.
Send for circular. Price 50 cents by mai lor at
druggists. Ely Brothers, Druggists,Owego,NA.
“THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST.”
SAW EMEG THF-Em
MILLS,
•Forallisecttonsand ) WriteforFr« Pamphlet
and Price* to The Aultman A Taylor Co., Mansfield, Ohia
HATEBITO KO PATENT, NO PAY!
7* U I SC.SI Sa R- S. 4A. P LACEY. Patent
■ •• ■ ■ w Attorneys, Washington, D. C.
Fall instructions and Hand-Book of Patents sent free.
urn vp v wrapped up with every bottle.
Flunul “Positive Cure." $1; o forts.
Fhila. Botanical Medicine C0.,511 Chestnut St.,Phil*.
UCAnOUARTERS for the Unmarr ed. U>
lILHU t rlynew. Send for prospectus. Ilk. Im
portant. ROYAL, TIP Broadway. Nzw Yozk.
VI * IPS iFire* switi’.o.B. any where. Whole.
M& 9 3*^'l h- v t: - ’l s PXAran
RMllKtewd BC.ST&XBLX37 Wataaii-sir^Uhicagn.
V <^£VER FAIL^>jL Spasms, Convul
sions, Palling
Sickness, St. Vitus
Dance, Alcohol-
Optam
Scrofula, Kings
( u EDU C Ugly B lood
|HE nI E Diseases, Dyspep
. । ■ ■ I' 1 "U , \ Nervousness,
iPwllwfi 111 E M pic* Headache,
Ivl Illi heu mAtism,
Nervous Weakness, Brain Worry, Blood Sores,
Biliousness, Costiveness, Nervous Prostration,
Kidney Troubles and Irregularities. $1.50.
Sample Testimonials.
“Samaritan Nervine is doing wonders.
Dr. J. O. McLemoin. Alexander City, Ala.
“I feel it my duty to recommend it.”
Dr. D. F. Laughlin, Clyde, Kansas.
“It cured where physicians failed.”
Rev. J. A. Edie, Beaver, Pa
FirCorrespondencc freely answered
THE DE. S. A. RICHMOND MED. CO., ST. JOSEPH, Ml
Sold by All Druggists.
LORD, STOUTENBURG &CO., Agents, Chicago, Hl
CONSUMPTION^.
I have a positive remedy for the above disease; bv its
use thousands of cases of the worst k nd and of long
standing have been cured. Indeed, so stroug is my faith
tn its efficacy, that- 1 will send TWO BOTTLES FREE, to
gether with a V ALUABLE TREATISE on this disease, to
any sufferer. Give Express and P. O a ldress.
DR. T. A. SLOCUM, 181 Pearl BL, New York.
83 H is B CROUP, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS,
isim itul nifi
gS S 3 S S 3 EotS M 818 (f or Internal and External Use) will in
i''! M 8 Is*^ Koi gB HU® Ri B B stantlv relieve these terrible diseases, and
Ki Hl ® M El BM Ki $» E kSMh W ‘>l positively cure nine cases out of ten.
RIO Hl ER9 M IS KL-. Bi 9 H ETkS Information that wiil save many lives sent
BMF B H Bfi Li BN KSI HHHI H free bv mail. Don't delay a moment. Pre-
vention is better than cure. JOHNSON’S ANODYNE LINIMENT CURES Influenza, Hoarse
ness. Hacking Cough, Whooping Cough, Diarrhoea, Dysentery. Cholera Morbus, Kidney * rroubles, ana
Lame Back. Sold everywhere. Circulars sent FREE. I. S. JOHNSON A CO.,
Sin nApp«mniHs
Ufi Wil This Offer good till March Ist, 1884, only.
GRAND'CAPITAL PREMIUM OF SIO,OOO IN CASH.
Last year the well-known and reliable publiahnra of TH E HOUSEHOLD JOURNAL OF NEW YORK
gave away $60,000 In Cnromos and other Picture, to aiihacribent, and attained the enormous circulation of 185,000
paid anbacrlbers. Tula vear. realizing the fact that people have about all the pi turea they need for the present, they have
decided to give away SSO 000 valuable Presents ranging In .slue bom 50 Cents to SIO,OOO. Every Sells*
•eriber gets st Present. There sire no blanks.
snd we will enter your name on our subscription book for sir months and
SjKwlwUf vVz XXKnlw I^9 .end von s numbered recelpr,which wilt entitle yon to one of tn-M AG
NIFICENT ANO BEAUTIFUL PRESENTS be •'*»v “" r GRAND CARNIVAL
BALL AND WORD CONTEST MARCH Ist, 1884. Each receipt *Uo eutltlee the uoluei to an
admission to tue CaRNIVAL AND BALL.
LIST of PRESENTS to De AWARDED OUR SUBSCRIBERS.
1 Cash Gift SIO,OOO 60 Hoys’Solid Silver Wutehes, 110 each S6OO
1 Cash Gift 8.000 60 Ladles’ Chatelaine Walches, 19 eueh 400
1 CeshGirt.. 1 000 200 SEWING MACHINES,«3O’aeh e.ooo
10 Cash GiftH of $ 100 each.... 1,000 i(M) He utilul Ahum th CKA 1,000
20 Cash Gih« of 950 ench 1,000 600 Elegant Photo^mph Albums lsooo
5 Elegant Lpri-ht Plunos S3OO each I.aOO 600 Floral Autograph Albumfl 1,000
10 Elegant Cabinet Organs $ 100 ench 1,000 600 Silver Fruit Knives 500
10 Beautiful Silver Dinner Sets, 7 piee-^ 1,000 500 Ln (lira* ami Genta* Pocket Knive5........... 600
20 Elegant Fuh Silk Dress Patterns, s.>O«*nch.. 1,000 500 Seta Silver Plated Tea Spoons. v 600
25 Ladies’Solid Gold Watches S2O each........ 600 600 Sets T ble Forks 5< O
26 Gents* Solid Gold Watches, S4O each 1,000 800 Oil Pictures 500
25 Ladies’or Genta’Diamond Rings, $50 # each.. 1,250 1000 Ludki and Ge t«»’Russia Leather Pocketbooks 1,000
Together with 94 547 useful and valuable artlclet worth from 50 COHtl to One Dollar> making a total of 100 000
valuable and useful articles t 0 l J « Riven toour Subecribera on March Isti 1884. ®° eAcll A,l<l every one who
•Übaciibes before that date will receive THE HOUSEHOLD JOURNAL months and a beautiful Pre-
beaidf*. The P;pTninn)B will be awarded la public at our GRAND CARNIVAL BALL AND
WORD CONTEST CIVEN MARCH Ist, 1884, IN NEW YORK CITY- Subscribers who can
not attend can have Presents forwarded to any part <f the United States or Canada- Printed lists of the
awards will be forwarded to all subscribers, « n d also published in t n jntIH.HM, Immediately after the
award. Person Hviug 111 T xas or CalifOruta wiil have as good acl aiice to get SIO,OOO a 8” parson living In N.Y. City.
THE'HOUSEHOLD JOURNAL Of I” mJt E BEAUTJut VpOPUEAB
MAGAZINES OF THE DAY, It contains Twenty Lnrge Pagrs, size of “ Harper’s Weekly,” and has an • h gantiy
ragrnved, illustrated and tinted cover. It isl replete with beautiful illustrations and choice literature. No
expense is spared to nuke thia publication one of the finest in the world. It is aifly edited, and contains an Jlltutrated
Fashion Department, fashion letters and notes. It contains stories, poems, sketches, statistics, useful information, household notes,
the kitchen, garden, toilet, children's department. Ribbath rea ding, etc..etc., in fact every thing that can be is done to make
this publication worth more than the subscription price, witbout regard to Premiums.
REMEMBER. WE MAKE NO CHARGE for tnese presents, the bn cents Is the regular subscription price
for six months to the JOURNAL. and some oneis.sure to get a Grand P’-esent worth SIO,OOO. OUR PROFIT
com-8 from our advertising patronage, which is very large, amounting to S3OOO monthly. We want 100-000 new
Subscribers before Much Ist, and as we have often received as high as 1700 daily we are sine to get th’-m.
Persona wishing to subscribe for a year wtH receive two receipts for $ I-00. entltHnu them to a year’s sub
scription and two presents. HO'W “W"JE! DO iff*. No doubt a Kreat many will went to know how
we can afTor I to give so much, and we will explain briefly. Our bnsin Ha last year amounted to NEARLY HALF A MILLION
DOLLARS. We publish three publication* and deal larce’y In all t‘>e articles we rive aa p emium* getting tlietn »t niauu
faetniera’prices. We have the CASH IKGW DEPOSITED in bank Bank to secure th- Gush Presents. It coats
$30,000 to give the Presents, and we spend SIO,OOO for advertising and other expenses. Our advertising pa
tronage in the JOU iltVAf- more than pays for printing it, so that we can give every present as agreed, and have
$lO 000 profit left besides your future patronage. As to our responsibility we refer you to any Bank, Express Company,
Newspaper or reputable Merchant in New York.
VAUD QIIPQnOIDTinM CDCT Ifynnwni get five friends to Join you and send »
IUUn OUDOUnIr I lUnl rnLC.. we will send Rix subscription* and six num.
bered receipts. Send 83.00. with the name of ten friends nr acquaintances, and we will send twelve sub
-1 scriptions and twelve numbered receipts, and so on, thus giving you an extra receipt and subscription for eve y five sub
i scribers yon send in. SAMPLE COPIES FREE. Money in sums of one or two dollars may be sent in ordinary
I letter ; larger sums should be sent by registered letter or Post Office order. Postage Stamps taken.
MnTIOFQ AC TUE* DDCQQ * l The Household Journal isone of our best literary and family Magazines. l9
ImU I IvCiO U" Inc rnGdO. —WORLD. ‘Weil worth SI.OO a Year In any family.”—HEß A LD.
| Readable, *n«trnctive, entertaining and spicy. The Journal Should be taken in every home.’*—TRAVELER 4 ‘ Its pro-
I prietors are men of means, who are able., willing, and always have done as they agreed."-^- HOUSEHOLD AND FARM We
could also give hundreds of teStimnn ale from subscribers did space permit. Send In vnur subscription and get a Club to
feUtyou. Address THE HOUSEHOLD JOURNAL. IO Barclay Street. New York.
CUT THIS OUT AND SHOW IT TO YOUR FRIENDS. IT APPEARS BUT ONCE.
THE SURE CURE
FOR ■»=——■
KIDNEY DISEASES,
LIVER COMPLAINTS,
CONSTIPATION, PILES,
AND BLOOD DISEASES.
| PHYSICIANS ENDORSE IT HEARTILY.
“Kidney-Wort is the most successful remedy
I ever used.” Dr. P. C. Ballou, Juonkton, Vt.
“Kidnoy-Wort is always reliable.”
Dr. R. N. Clark, So. Hero, Vt.
"Kidney-Wort has cured my wife after two years
suffering.” Dr. C. M. Summerlin, Sun Hill, Ga.
IN THOUSANDS OF CASES
it has cured where all else had failed. It is mild,
but efficient, CERTAIN IN ITS ACTION, but
harmless in all cases.
Cyl t cleanses the Blood and Strengthens and
gives New Life to all tho important organs of
the body. The natural action of the Kidneys is
restored. The Liver is cleansed of all disease,
and the Bowels move freely and healthfully.
In this way the worst diseases are eradicated
from the system. g
FBICE, SIOO LIQUID OR DRY, 80LD BY DBVQGISTB.
Dry can be sent by mail.
WELLS, RICHARDSON A €O. Burlington Vt.
jKIDNEY-WORT;
Sawing Made Easy
_ Monarch Lightning Sawing Machine!
5^ °9 jS A Great Saving of
p Leal Arial. Labor Money.
Abay 16 years old can saw logs FAST and EASY. Miles
Mvbr.i v.Portage,Mich., writes: • ‘Am mw’h pleased wit h
the MONARCH LIGHTNING SAWING MACHINE.
I sawed on a 30- inch log in 2 minutes. r ’ lor sawing logs
into suitable lengths for family stove-wood, and allsorts
of log-cutting, it is peerless and unrivaled. Illustrated
Catalogue, Free. AGENTS WANTED. Mtmtion tim,
paper. Address MONARCH MANUFACTURING
CO., IE3 E. Randolph St., Chicago, Xu.
DR. HORNE’S ELECTRIC BELT i
Cures Nervousness, Rheumatism,Par-
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Kid
s UjlJ— »s w-.rlOßfl ney. Spine and Liver diseases,
JGoUt, Asthma, Heart Disease.
yffej’sECTrtlC BEIL-^fl t.rri’epsia.Obnstipation, F.ry
"7 ••Fem*. Catarrh, Piles. Epilep-
sv Imrotencr Prolapsus I’teri
Agents wanted in every town. Stud for Circular. :
Dr. W. J, HORNE, Inventor, 191 Wabash Av. Chicago, ill.
m HI" IT A make over ONE
mW I. * Sy S \ hundred per ceuL '
V’''K *w*">*V S W profit selling the
Reflecting Safety lamp j
which can be sold in everv family. Give*
more light than three ordinary lamps.
Kxmple Lamp sent for fifty
in alaiutwi. We have other '
FTSfeinit'fflnousehoidarticles. Setid for circulars, j
a MAKIN. C.nciß«aU, U.
lit relievesat onee Bur:,(’happedHandsor Lip- I
|| ores. Bunions, t^lds. Bruises. Soreness of feet band.- I
leyei.eu- ; lU-hingfromnny cause. Ask your drug I
Imm gist, or send to W Fulton Street, K. Y. mU
PATENTS.*!
Interferences conducted. Assignment, prepared. Copy
of any patent issued since PW> sent tor So cents, lllua
trated book ot patent law Fait. W. T FITZGERALD.
A 2 t ^ rney „ 1 006 F SITW '’ Wa»hlngton,D.C.
nil fft“MiWs"
■Ji ■ ■ B W tnfiUliale cure for Files.
■V | ■ ■■ Price SI. from druggist*, or
■ a a ■ sent prepaid by mats i-amp'ea
i W Ja Ml ww .Makm. Box 2416. KewYork
QI AAA » Year at home. T :-ais«tr.l toe '!y outfit
AhL’c»»M. A kUJ« W, CUoago.
Lay the Axe
to the Root
If you would destroy the can
kering worm. For any exter
nal pain, sore, w ound or lame
ness of mau or beast, use onhr
M EXICAN MUSTANG LINI
MENT. It penetrates all mus
cle and flesn to the very bone,
expelling all inflammation,
soreness and pain,and healing
the diseased part as no other
Liniment ever did or can. So
saith the experience of two
generations of sufferers, and
so will you say when you have
tried the “Mustang.”
la o w
•MO IS UNACQUAINTED WITH THE GEOGRAPHY OF IMIS CO UM*
TRY WILL SEE BY EXAMINING THIS MAR THAT THE
: 1 i
KMMb
CHICAGO. ROCK ISLAND & PACIFIC R’l
By the central position of its line, connects tho
Bast and the West by the shortest roc e, and car
ries passengers, without change of cars, between
Chicago ana Kansas City, Council Bluffs. Leaven
worth. Atchison, Minneapolis and St. Paul. It
connects in Union Depots with all tho principal
lines ot road between the Atlantic and the P-.oifto
Oceans. Its equipment Is unrivaled and magnifi
cent. being comuosed of Most Comfortable and
Beautiful Day Coaches Magnificent Horton Re
clining Chair Care, Pullman’s Prettiest Palace
Sleeping Cars, and the Best Line’of Dining Cars
In the world. Three Trains between Chicago and
Missouri River Points. Two Trains between Chi
cago and Minneapolis and St. Paul, via the Famous
“ALBERT LEA ROUTE.”
A Naw and Direct Line, via Seneca and Kanka
kee, has recently been opened between Richmond,
Norfolk,NewportLewa Chattanooga, Atlanta, Au
rusia, Nashville, Louisville. Lexington,Cincinnati,
ndlatiapolis and Lafayette and Omaha, Minneap
olis ind St. Paul and intermediate points.
All Through Passengers Travel on Fast Express
Trains.
Tickets for sale at all principal Ticket Offices in
the United States and Canada.
Baggage checked through and rates of fare al
ways as low as competitors that offer less ad van
^or detailed information,get the Mapsand Fold
ers of tho
. GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE
At your nearest Ticket Office, or address
R. R. CABLE, E. ST. JOHN.
Vice-Pres. k Gen’l M g’r, Gen l Tkt. k Paas. Agt_
_ CHICAen
—H— QO -4-3—
I 1 15 IhU P 010 ” 8 piaster is
fl tr famous for its quick
__ _ __ __ and hearty action in
K* I A ~T~ 1“ curing Lame Back,
■ I Rheumatism, Sciatic^
Crick in the Back, Fide or Hip, Neuralgia, Stiff Joint!
and Muncies, Sore Chest, Kidney Troubles and all pains
or aches cither local er deep^eated. It Soothes, Strength
ens and Stimulates the parts. The virtues of hops com
bined with gums—clean and ready to apply. Superior to
liniments, lotions and salves. Price 25 cents or 5 for
SI.OO. Sold by drug-1* a am was snaa
gists and country.! O, R , y 8 Al R
stores. Mailed on re- “ *
ceipt of price. Hop ;CJ I I B? CS
Plaster Company, Pro- OU V V Ca W O
prietors, Boe-on, Mass.
-H-
tsr The best family pill made—Hawley’s Stomach and
Liver Pllla. 25c. Pleasant In action and easy to take.
^^o^l jSL 563 ~
^^BLsewing machine
For s<B.oo.
ALI - sTTacMMnrru :
Biaek IV. Inn: I»r-p Leaf Tv
£’be.’draw i rs and cover box.
ImM Hundr-da of tube? artp lea
one-half usual prices. N-uj
fi r Circul'frsena /'ri’m-Zssta.
w CuicattoScauiCo.,Chicago.
CU»IS WMIII All UH FAILS. Q
Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes k<»
Use in ume. Sold by druggists. EU
' A MONTH? ’Agent, war.- i MheM
\/nl| “ . -ngar f :■ slnth-worid 1 sampleJ’RKA
WLVV Address JAY BRONSON. Dgno.at, Mu-n.
pOLOAg BIS I MisS COLLKCE, SJwlt N.J.
: V’Tenns.*U. roan.twn» for Kradinues ;»riu* tvrr rtwniaa
A. H. K.-C. 063
HPCITf.VG TO mVKKTtm ttS,
fleete y aM Jdterhs*

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