Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, December 11, 1886, Image 4

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DAILY ENQUIRER - SUN • COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SATURDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 11. 1886. (Coh«ul)U50;nj)nirrr§im. ESTABLISHED IN 1828. 58 YEARS OLD. Daily, Weekly and Sunday. The B.VQUIRER-SUN Is Issued every day, ex ■apt Monday. The Weekly Is Issued on Monday. The Dally (Including Sunday) Is delivered by Carriers In the city or mailed, postage free, to sub aorlbers for 75c. per month, $2.00 for three months, $4.00 for six months, or $7.00 a year. The Sunday is delivered hy carrier boys in the •tty or mailed to subscribers, postage free, at $1.00 a year. The Weekly is issued on Monday, and Is mailed subscribers, postage free, at $1.10 a year. Transient advertisements will be taken for the Daily at $1 per square of 10 lines or less for the first Insertion, and 50 cents for each subsequent insertion, and for the Weekly at $1 for each in sertion. All communications intended to promote the private ends or interests of corporations, societies or individuals will be charged as advertisements. Special contracts made for advertising by the year. Obituaries will bo charged for at customary tates. None but solid metal cuts used. All communications should be addressed to the Bhquirbr-Sun. Edmunds is revenged—they are still Blinking hands with him in the senate. Secretary Manning’s report has been severely criticised, but lie docs not seem to mind it. The democrats seem to have alt the underhold so far as Blaine is concerned. He may not be nominated but his organs will kill the republican party if he is not, and if he is nominated the democrats will wipe up the earth with him. Tub millers of Minnesota are combin ing to see if they cannot olevate prices a little. They ought to have done busi ness in the south just before the close of the war when Hour was selling at $300 a barrel. Ok the seventeen Massachusetts cities whicli had their local elections Tuesday, thirteen voted for liquor licenses, three for prohibition and one did not vote. Last year the same cities voted thirteeu for liquor licenses and four for prohibi tion. Tub whole world has been led to be lieve that the south is as sunny as it is solid. If there is any comfort in the thought our northern friends who have been so terribly liarrassed are informed that southern roofs are falling in on ac count of snow and ice. A locomotive ran into a street car at Springfield yesterday, demolished the car and injured live of the passengers. The motive power propelling the vehicle was uninjured, of course. It was of the braying, long-eared character, and who ever heard of a mule losing a hair in a railroad accident, an earthquake shock or a cyclone? Their life is a charmed one. Hy Jansen, a Chicago wife murderer, proposed to cheat the gallows by starv ing to death, but the other day his jailer had prepared for him a palatable con coction of brandy, sugar, milk and eggs. The dispatches proceed to stale that Jansen refused to partake of the con coction, but as the scene is laid ill Chicago we are not surprised that the Courier-Journal exercises the right to doubt the dispatches. No Chicago man ever had to have his nose held to get a mixture like that down his throat. Our news this morning shows that liiddleberger wants to raise a rueket in the senate. And why should he make a fuss about, the appointment of a page. Mr. Canada)' promised him the first va cancy; and the candidate that he named was appointed. Is not that enough? Why should he go into conniption fits at learning that Mahono was credited with the same appointment? lias the United State* senate fallen so low as to take into consideration whether the credit of the appointment of a page should go to one man or another? Very earnestly do we warn t he democrats to let Mr. Riddle- berger row bis own boat. He is not a safe commodity to deal with. Tin; secretary pays his compliments to the “protection” theory in an eminently practical and arithmetical fashion, lie demonstrates, by actual computation, that of the 20,000,000 persons engaged in gainful work in tms country only 5 per cent, are subjected to foreign compe tition, or rather whose employers are so subjected, tariff or no tariff; that last year $193,000,000 was the increase price paid on imported commodities, which indi rectly benefited 1,000,000 of people and oppressed the remaining 19,000,000. The secretary thinks the proposition to make this unequal incidence the actual pur pose of our taxation is not a proposition to do what the constitution requires, “to levy and collect taxes for the general welfare,” nor does it conform to the spirit of the law that “all duties, imports and excises shall he uniform throughout the United States.” And in all this a very large number of peop'e will agree with him. Political Topography. Senator Mahoue says he hears a good deal of Hill talk in Virginia. There is in deed a large amount of Hill country all through the United States.—Albany Times. THE TRKASl'KKR'S REPORT. The questii. ns of taxation and labor are among the most important with which we have to deal. It is therefore gratify ing that tlie head of the financial depart ment of the government should make a report singularly clear and able. Secretary Manning’s report has already been given in the columns of the Enqui rer-Sun. It opens witli an elaborate presentation of the silver question, sketching briefly the attitude of foreign powers towards it, and summarising the policy of this government as clearly in favor of discontinuing the purchase of silver as “our only choice, oilr duty and our interest,” and lie answers the objec tion that it will cause a fall in its pur chasing power with the assertion “t at no prospective fall can be so harassing to the treasury as the perpetual itipour of a coin made full legal tender for its face, yet not worth its face, which the treasury is expected to employ like gold, as if it were worth its face." In his report the secretary has taken occasion to refer at. considerable length to the question of taxation. The public attention will chiefly be drawn to this, especially with reference to the wages of labor. He addresses himself to a discus sion of a reduction of our present sur plus taxation, referring at length to the policy of the party in power as contained in tlie platform upon which it received public indorsment. The secretary shows that we have now a “prolonged war tar iff,” being within a fraction of the high est tariff enacted during tlie war. He suggests various remedies in the way of reduction, but dwells with great force upon the absolute necessity of at once abolishing the tax on wool, as upon all raw material. He shows that we pay to labor the highest wages in Jhe world, and that highly paid labor and cheap production are correlative terms: that high wages mean efficient labor al ways, and that tlie bugbear of pauper la bor lias no significance for us. But be further demonstrates that nil the advan tages we possess are multiplied “by our self-imposed disadvantage of tariff taxed raw material, with which our labor is in- wrought.” We are thus compelled to compete with other manufactures where no such incubus is felt, and in addition the necessary result of the two combined, our war tariff and our policy of taxing raw material, “has needlessly increased the cost of clothing, shelter and food to every family.” The secretary respectfully recommends to congress that they con fer at once upon the wage earners of the United States the boon of untaxed cloth ing, and that to this end they immediate ly pass an act “simply and solely placing raw wool upon the free list.” The repeal of this duty, he states, would, of course, “require a compensating adjustment of tlie duties on manufactured woolens, whilst our manufacturers are learning the lesson that with the highest paid and most efficient labor in the world, with the most skilled management and the best inventive appliances, they need fear no competition from any rivals in the world in home or foreign markets, so long as they can buy their wools free, of every kind.” Whether or not congress will see proper to act on the secretary’s sugges tion, or whether any steps whatever will be taken in that direction, does not by any means appear clear. Tlie matter is being talked of in congress and resolu tions have been offered, but what does it mean? No one knows. It may be that in the sixty or seventy working days of the short session no general bill will be discussed and enacted, but there are cer tain oppressive features which can be reached, and such palpable errors as have from time to time been pointed out ought to be corrected. iieatii ok rev. /. h. uouiion. Rev. Z. H. Gordon died yesterday after a comparatively short illness, near Good- water, Alabama. He was nearly 90 years old, and was the father of the present governor of Georgia. Rev. Mr. Gordon whose life was pro tracted many years beyond the natural and allotted span, was ever alert to his duties as a Christian and a Citizen, and tlie fruits of his good works sprung up behind him like flowers after tlie rain. As a husband, father, friend, and in all the manifold relations of life, he was faithful and just. If he was not brilliant, lie was not brittle in character, and when lie bent at all under the carping pressures of life, it was like the bending of the never-yielding oak, which stoops in one storm that it may stand to face another. Rev. Mr. Gordon was a minister of the Missionary Baptist church, and it is ow ing to the energy and Spartan probity of a few pioneers like him that this great denomination in Georgia gained tlie foot hold in early days, which was the germ of its splendid growth and maturity to day. Mr. Gordon’s young manhood was cast in troublous and untoward times, but times whose very hardships stiength- ened and multiplied the virtues of tlie people who endured them for the sake of tlieir posterity. In company and com panionship with Rev. J. H. Campbell, of this city, and a number of other veterans of the cross, who have long since “fallen on sleep and are not for God took them," Mr. Gor don preached Christ to the earlier settlers and pioneers of this and adjoin ing states. Many of his spiritual children went ahead of him to the “Continuing City,” and many still remain to mourn his departure and weave amaranthine* for his memory, which lingers with them yet like a precious ointment. The white haired and holy old man is not dead, as people say. He is only transferred from the pnrt of the church that is militant to the part that is triumphant; and he can still singas he loved to do— “Our Father and our Clod. At whole command we bow; Part of the host have crossed the flood, And part are crossing now.” Eternity, momentous and appalling as all itH issues ure, hud no terrors for him. On the contrary, it only uncurtained to his “weary, longing eye” the sweet rest- fulness and peace which is at once the heritage and the benediction of all tlie “dead who die in the Lord." “Blessed are tlie dead that die in the Lord.” They feel their way through the dust to the stars, and the sweet fields they find beyond the gushing flood are worth the struggle it takes to reach them, even if the journey does lend along a highway of voiceless silence and through a valley of shadows and corruption and worms. Witli men like Rev. Z. 11. Gordon death is neither a misfortune nor a defeat. It is tlie crown of life in this world and the beginning of life in another. Rev. Mr. Gordon was well known in. Columbus and in Russell county, Ala., he having resided in both places for a number of years after the war. He never recovered from the shock given him by the deatli of his youngest son Walter Gordon, who was the Benjamin of his old age, and whose untimely deatli oc curred only a short time ago. And well he might grieve for him. lie was a golden-hearted gentleman as well as a loving son. This aged patriarch was in deed blessed in his children. There was no traditional “ black Hlieep” in his fam ily. And even his last days of suuset and sorrow must have been lightened by the consciousness that lie left one boy— always a boy to him—hut who is Georgia’s most honored citizen, and whose splendid fame is the common and precious property of all the American people. It required a man in whom there were mighty, if hidden qualities to be the father of John B. Gordon. Rev. Z. H. Gordon preached the gospel of the son of God to three gen erations of men, and when at the sunset of life and in the shadow of two worlds he coine to face the last enemy of man, the grace he had recommended to others was sufficient for him. His gray hairs were but an almond tree that Was blos soming for the garden of the Lord. And when he died yesterday, his going away was not like the paroxysm of astrong man but like the going to sleep of a little in fant. Nature took him by the hand and led him gently out of life. Like a candte that burns out in its flickering socket, or like a shock of corn that is fully ripe for the harvest, he was gathered to his fathers. He Bhook off his infirmities with his cumbersome mortality, and he is no longer an old man now. For his wrinkles are smoothed away and his re lit eyes have looked at last upon the “King in His beauty and the land that is very far off.” Everybody who knew Bob Watt will most heartily endorse the following tribute to his mem ory by the Montgomery Dispatch : It is seldom that Montgomery is called upon to mourn the loss of a nobler sou than Robert L. Watt. In tiis lamented death a great light has gone out. A true man has fallen. A faithful heart has ceased to beat. Measured by tile qual ities that make men good and great, he was natureis own noble.nau. Without those im pulses warped by narrow conceits and contracted prejudices, his was a nature adorned with the loftiest qualities that ennoble and beautify hu man character, and in every station of life did thut nature reflect the lustre of those gills whose charms spread a halo of light and beauty around those who knew and loved him. A gentleman remarks that “Eufutila now sup ports two excellent daily papers.'’ This will per haps be news to the proprietors. In addition to being tlie editor of the very best newspaper published in Early county, Will Flem ming is a married man. He has been in the business about three weeks. A cotkmporaby having boasted of the fact that ex Qoveriior McDaniel has laid aside the robes of Georgia’s office and modestly gone to work in the ranks from which he was called, the Mobile Register remarks: It ought not to be n very remarkable thing to see a Georgia ex-governor at work like other men. We have several ex-governors practicing law here in Alabama. Not long ago we saw ex- president Arthur resuming his le.w practice. We have no privileged classes in America. The man who doesn’t work, whatever his position, is not respected in this country. The Montgomery Dispatih “v»ry much regrets the action of the house in reconsidering its action on the retail liquor license. If there was any fault to find witli tlie rate agreed upon the day before tf'250) it certainly was not remedied at all by the reduction of the tax and robbing it of the uniformity with which it applied to the retail liquor dealers of tlie state. The Dispatch favored higli license first as a legitimate means of in creasing tlie revenues, and secondly t'o reduce the sale of liquor in Alabama.” Every body seems to have in mind a candidate for tlie Bulgarian throne, but we must insist that if Bulgy is looking for some one who will stay there, brother Carmichael is the man. Senator Jones, of Florida, continues to repre sent his slate in Detroit in preference to Wash ington. When asked tlie other day whether he Intended to occupy his seat in congress this win ter, it is said that he was much ruffled and that his florid complexion became Florida. Here is some satisfaction for his constituents. A noon mule in his prime, gentle and witli 1 excellent qualities. Sold lor no fault, and warranted to work kindly anywhere. This is a little free advertising, but a mule that is good enough to call forth the unqualified en dorsement of Brother llevill, of tlie Meriwether Vindicator, deserves all the advertising he can get. We trust this is not one of the kind that will be good twenty years to get to kill a fellow. Another Strike. Chicago. December 10.—A Times special from Denison, Texas, says: “At 9 o’clock last night the Missouri Pacific switchmen at this place struck and walked out of the yard in a body. The grievance was too much work tor the pay. The men called on Goldman, division superintend- ant, in the morning and asked for an in crease of wages to the same amount as given by the other roads of the system, and gave him until 9 p. m. to decide. As no reply was given at the time specified they quit. All orderly and quiet. Some of the conductors have been asked to do the work, but none have done so j et.” ALABAMA LEGISLATURE. Hillw I’lisfu-il ill the Senate and in the House. In the senate, on Thursday, the follow ing bills came up on a third reading, and were disposed of as follows: House bill 201—To repeal an act regu lating fine and forfeiture (und of the coun ties of Bibb, Fayette, Marion and Blount as far as the same relates to Fayette. Senate bill 89—To amend an act ap proved February 12,1885, entitled an act to regulate the fine and forfeiture fund of the county of Marshall. Passed House bill 497—To pay Robert Hasson, doorkeeper of the house, and W. J. B. Padgett, doorkeeper of the senate, for ar ticles purchased for the use of the senate and house of representatives. Passed. Senate bill 154—To enable planters, fanners and crop growers to convey by mortgage nuplu'uted crops, applying to the year iu which the crop was grown. Passsea. House bill 561—To authorize the commis sioners’ of Perry county to establish or abolish districts in which stock may be prevented irom running at large. Passed. The bill relnting to the separate statutory estates of married women came up, and passed by a vote of 18 to 12. Senate bill 102—To amend an act to in corporate the Alabama Baptist convention. Passed. Senate bill 102—To more effectually se cure competent and well qualified jurors in the county of Montgomery. Passed. House bill 62—To repeal an act entitled an act, “to amend and repeal certain sec tions of an act to organize and reg ulate a system of public instruction for the State of Alabama, approved February 7, A. D., 1870, so far as the same relates to Dale eouaty,” approved February 17,1838. Passed. House bill 90—To require any person who buys cattle in certain counties for the pur pose of shipping them from these counties, to file a descriptive list of the same with a justice of the peace or notary public in the beat in which they are purchased, and to require justices of the peace and notaries public to keep a record of the same for the inspection of the public, so far as said act relates to Washington county and the counties of Marshall, Coosa, Chilton, Tal lapoosa and Chambers. HOUSE. Call of members for calling up bills for passage was resumed. By Mr. Files, of Fayette—Senate bill to Incorporate the Birmingham college of business. Passed. By Mr. John—To punish the obtaining of money or personal property by means of false promise. Passed. By Mr. Jones, of Montgomery—House bill to regulate the sale of real property for taxes In the city of Montgomery. Passed. By Mr. Kyle—To amend the charter of Browneville, Lee county. Passed. By Mr. Norman—Senate bill to prevent stock from running at large in the several beats of Chambers county, and authorize an election thereon. Passed. By Mr. Patton—House bill to prevent false pretense In obtaining certificates of registration of cattle and other domestic animals. Passed. By Mr. McAdory—Senate bill to em power street railroads to condemn prop erty the same as railroads. Passed. By Mr. McBryde- House bill to author ize the city of Troy to sell its stock In the Mobile and Girard railroad. Passed. By Mr. McLeod—to authorize the voters In certain precincts of Pike county to hold elections to determine whether stock shall run at large. Passed. By Mr. Minge—House bill to confer on justices of the peace and notaries public with jurisdiction of justices of the peace, jurisdiction to try cases of cruelty to ani mals. Passed. The revenue bill came up. The liquor license was finally fixed at $125 in places of less than 1000 inhabitants, $175 Detween 1000 and 3000, $250 between 3000 and 10,000, and $300 in all places of over 10,000 Inhabi tants. The bill was extensively discussed and amended. The license in trade boats was $250 instead of $50. Another amendment was to make the tax on every man who runs a bucket shop or establishment to deal iu futures $5010 instead of $500. The bill was amended so us to abolish the drummers’ license tax. On the previous question the bill was put on its passage—83 to 24. By Mr. Long, of Winston—Seriate bill to authorize the filing and recording of cer tain deeds of conveyance therein named in the office in the probate courts of this state. Passed. By Mr. Reynolds, to protect lands in Buliock county from depredations by stock. Passed. SENATOR JONES STILL FAITHFUL. Nothing Can IVi-ati Him Front tlie Fnicination* ' of Detroit. Detroit, December 9.—Senator Jones, of Florida, paced up and down the marble floor of the Russell House this morning. He was musing and his stalwart form at tracted much attention. At that hour the United Senate senate, of which he is a member, convened, but ho was not there to answer the roll call. Taere has been much speculation as to whether the Florida senator would linger in Detroit through the winter, and exaggerated re ports of his romantic adventures have been telegraphed about the country. A dispatch from Washington yesterday stated that bets were freely offered, with no takers, that the senator would not make his appear ance at roll call. That question is settled, and the larger one, of, his prolonged stay here, also seems to be decided. Detroit is good enough for the distinguished Florida statesman, and he will remain here. To personal friends he has made this state ment positively within the last few days. As the senator paced the hotel office” the inquiry was ventured: “Do you intend go ing to Washington at the session of the senate?” The senator paused. His usually ruddy face grew several shades ruddier. 1-Ie was much annoyed. “Upon that subject I pos itively decline to be interviewed,” he re sponded, as he drew his ovqrcoat about I is portly figure and left the hotel. NO SENATOKSHIP FOR GARLAND. lie Thinks Hr Will Tnkc n Rest Alte His Cabinet Term Expires. St. Louis, December S.—A special from Little Rock, referring to the senatorial question in Arkansas, says a letter recent ly written by Mr. Garland to a friend in Little Rock, contains the following paragraph: “I am at present trying to sen e the whole country as an impartial adjunct to the cabinet, ; nd the question of whether or not I will bu a candidate for re-election to the United States senate two years hence is so far in tlie future that I have not even thought of the subject. However, I feel safe in saying that my official services will cease for a while at the end of my term as attorney general, be cause I long for the rest and quiet I at least merit at the hands of the good people of Arkansas who have honored me by political preference.” Failures fov the Week. New York, December 10.—Business fail ures occurring throughout the country during the last week, as reported to R. G. Dun & Co., mercantile agency, number for the United States 252, and Canada 22, a total of 274 failures, against 242 last week and 216 for the week previous. The in crease rises mainly in the southern states, where the casualties are far above the av erage in number, If not In importance. THE GIAHT OF MEDICINES. The Most Effective & Pop ular Remedy Ever Discovered. WHY IS IT SO EFFECTIVE IN SO MAN Y DIFFER ENT DISEASES> '’'■■■■■■""■■"■■■i ■■■■■’■ -■ yyr HY one remedy can affect ao many cases is this: The diseases have a common cause, and a remedy that can aftect the cause, permanently cures all the diseases. Unlike any other organ in the body, the Kidney when diseased may itself be free firom pain, and the very feet that It is not painful leads many people to dery that it is diseased. But Medical Authorities agree that it can be far gone with disease and yet give forth no pain, bedause it has few if any nerves of sensation, and these are the only means of conveying the seme of pain; thus unconsciously diseased it affects the entire system. We do not open a watch to see if it is going or is in good order. We look at the hands, or note the accuracy of its time. So we need not open the kidney to Bee if it is diseased. W# study the condition of the system. Now then, KIDNEY DISEASE produces any of the following common and unsuspected SYMPTOMS: Backache, unusual desire to urinate at night, fluttering and pain in the heart* tired feelings, unusual amount of greasy froth in water; irritated,hot and dry skin; fickle appetite; scalding se nsations; acid, bitter taste, with fhrred tongue in the morn ing; headache and neuralgia; abundance of pile, or scanty flew of dark-colored water; sour stomach; heartburn with dyspepsia; intense pain, upon sudden excitement, in the small of the back; deposit of raucous some time after urin ition; loss of memory; rheumatism, chills and fever and pneumonia; dropsical swellings; red or white brick dust, albumen and tube casts in the water; constipation, al ternating with looseness; short breath, pleurisy and bronchial alfcctions; yellowish, pale skid, etc. These are only the chief disorders or symptoms caused by a diseased condition of the kidneys. Now then, isn’t it clear to you that the kidneys, being the cause of all these derangements, if they are restored to health by the great specilic “WARNER’S SAFE CURE,” the majority of the above ail ments will disappear? There is no mystt ry about it. It does cure many bad stat es of the system precisely as we have indicated Now when the kidneys are diseased, the albumen, the life property of the blood, escapes through their walls and passes away in the water, while the urea, the kidney poison, remains, and it is this kidney pois »n in the blood.that.circulating throughout the entire body, affects every organ, and produces all the ab >ve symptoms. Therefore, we say confidently that “WARNER’S SAFE CURE” is the most effective medicine ever discovered for the human race. It is the common remedy which, overcoming the common cause, removes the greatest pussible number of evil effects from the system* Let us note a few of these diseases and how they are affected by kidney poison, aftd cured by “WARNER’S SAFE CURE” mMmilUPTTOM* * n a man y cases Consumption is only the effect of a diseased L4L/I10 U Irl l 1 lL/lAI • condition of the system and not an original disease; if the kidneys are inactive and there is any natural weakness in the lungs, the kidney poison attacks their substance and eventually they waste away and are destroyed. Dip your finger in acid and it is burned. Wash the finger every day in acid aud it soon becomes a festering sore and is eventually destroyed. The kidney poison acid in the blood has the same destructive effect upon the lungs: For this reason a person whose kidneys are ailing will have grave attacks of Pneumonia in the spring of the year, Lung Fevers, Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Pleurisy, etc., at all seasons of the year. Rectify the action of the kidneys by “WARNER’S SAFE CURE,” as many hundreds of thousands have done, and you will be surprised at the improvement in the condition of the lungs. IMPAIRF 1 !! Ti 1 VP Cl p irai . Kidne Y ac * d some persons has an especiil affinity llVli L I L kllulll . f or optic nerve, and though we have never urged it as a cure for disordered eye-sight, many persons have written us expressing surprise that after a thorough course of treatment with “WARNER’S SAFE CURE,” their eye-sight has been vastly improved. In feet, one of the best oculists in the country says that half the patients that come to him with bad eyes, upon examination he discovers are victims of kidney disorder. We have no doubt that the reason why so many people complain of failing eye-sight early in life, is that, all un conscious to themselves, their kidneys have been out of order for years, and the kidney pcison is gradually ruining the system. /^vpjTTTLi tt a p> T r PO . ft is ft wel1 kuown fact, recently shown anew, that opium, morphine, UriUlfl nilDllo . cocaine, whisky, tobacco and other enslaving habits capture their victims by their paralizing effects upon the kidneys and liver. In these organs the appetite is de veloped and sustained, and the best authorities state that the habits cannot be gotten rid of until the kidneys and liver are restored to perfect health For this purpose, leading medical authorities,. after a thorough examination of all claimants for the honor of being the only specific for those organs, have awarded the prize to “ WARNER’S SAFE CURE.” LTITTTM A • EveTy ^putable physician will tell you that rheumatism is caused liil Hi U jyi A 1 loiVl . by an acid condition of the system. With some it is uric aeid, or kidney poison; in others, it is lithic acid, or liver poison. This acid condition is caused by inactivity of the kidneys and liver, false action of the stomach and food assimilating organs. It affects old people more than young people, because the acid has been collecting in the system for years and finally the system becomes entirely acidified. These acids produce all the various forms of rheumatism. “ WARNER’S SAFE CURE” acting upon the kidneys and liver, neutralizing the acid andcorrect- ing their false action, cures many cases of rheumatism. “ WARNER’S SAFE RHEUMATIC CURE,” alternating with the use of “ WARNER’S SAFE CURE,” completes the work. BLADDER DISORDERS: Gross and other high medical authorities say that most of the bladder diseases originate with false action of the kidneys and urinary tract. Uric acid constantly coursing through these organs inflames and eventually destroys the inner membrane, producing the intense suffering. Sometimes this kidney acid soli tides in the kidneys in the form of Gravel, which in its descent to the bladder produces kidney colic. Sometimes the acid solidifies in the Bladder, producing calculous or Stone. “WAR NER’S SAFE CURE” has restored thousands of cases of inflammation and catarrh of the bladder and has effectively corrected the tendency to the formation of giavel and stone. It challenges com parison with all other remedies In this work. Buy to-day, BLOOD DISORDERS CONGESTION: Congestion is a collecting together of blood in any one place. If there is loss of nervous actii n in any organ the blood vessels do not allow the blood 1o circulate and it stagnates If this condition exists very long the collecting blood clots and . eventually destroys the organ. Many persons are unconscious victims of this very common condi tion. The heart, detei mined a«* it is to fonje blood into every part of the system, has to work harder to get it through the clogged organ, and eventually the Heart breaks down and palpitation, exces sive action, rush of blood to the head, distressing headaches, indicate that the Congestion has be come chronic and is doing damage to the entire system. Congestion of she kidneys is one of the commonest of complaints and is the beginning of much chronic misery. “WARNER’S SAFE CURE” will remove it. FEMALE COMPLAINTS' Whatwe have said about Congestion applies with par- ’ ticular force to the above complaints. They are as com mon as can be, and a9 every doctor can tell you, most of them begin in this congestive condition of the system, which, not being regularly corrected, grows into disease and produces these countless sufferings which can be alluded to but not described in a public print. Thousands have been per manently cured. ■. It is not strange that so many people write us'that since they have given themselves thorough treatment with “WARNER’S S\FE CURE” their thick and turgid blood, their heavy, blotched, irritable skin have disappeared under its potent influence. The kidney poison in the blood thickens it. It is not readily puritied in the lungs, and the result is the impurities come out of the surface of the body, and if there is any local disease all the badness in the blood seems to collect there. Our experience justifies us in the statement that “WARNER’S SAFE CURE” is “the greatest blood purifier known.” The treatment must be very thorough. Af'f-T • Many P ed P le complain more or less throughout the ijIUlVl/lLn . year with stomach disorders: Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Wa^erbrash, heat and distress in the stomach, sharp pains, frequent aches, want of appetite, lack of energy. Now, these are exactly the conditions that will be produced in the stomach when the blood is filled with kidney poison: People oose themselves with all sorts of stomach reliefs, but get no better: They never will get better until they give their attention to a thorough reviving of kidney and liver action by the means of the only specific—“WARNER’S SAFE CURE.” mXT^TIPATTnW PTI Thesc distressing ailments, more common among one l iUn ill l 11 JiN , r IjILO . c i ass than the other, are not original disorders, but are secondary to imperfect action of the kidneys and liver. The natural cathartic is bile, which is taken from the blood by the liver. If the liver fails the bile is not forthcoming and the person gets into a constipated habit. This, eventually followed by piles, is almost always an indication of congested liver, ami a breaking down of the system. Remove the congestion, revive the liver and restore the kidneys by the use of “WARNER’S SAFE CURE,” and these constitutional secondary diseases dis appear. »» P \ \\ \ n f.T r<vJ . RIan y people suffer untold agonies all their lives with headache. They l i HiilL i\_ juLo . try every remedy in vain, for they have not struck the cause. With some temperments, kidney acid in the blood, in spite of all that can be done, will irritate and inflame the brain and produce intense suffering. Those obstinate headaches which do not yield readily to -local treatment, may be regarded quite certainly as of kidney origin. J r n i 1 niui f i \ I ) ip sjr 1 IT? \T r P f I? If^ 1 1? A r ir P*J an( *> from the way we have set them ii-LEbE A11 ill bl.lEiN I it IE r AGIS, forth, it will plainly be seen, that the statement we make, that “WARNER’S SAFE CURE” is the “most effective remedy ever discovered for the greatest number of human diseases,” is justified. It is not a remedy without a reputation. Its sales for the past year have heen greater than ever, and the advertising thereof less than ever, showing incontestibly that the merit of the medicine has given it a permanent place aud value. People have a dreadful fear of Bright’s disease, but we can tell them from our experience that it is the ordinary kidney disease that produces no pain that is to day the greatest enemy of the human race; great and all powerful, because in nine cases out often its presence is not suspected by either the physician or the victim!. The prudent man who finds himselfyear after year troubled with lit tle odd aches and ailments that perplex him, ought not to hesitate a moment as to the real cause of his disease. If he will give himself thorough constitutional treatment with “WARDER’S SAFE CURE” and “WARNER’S SAFE PILLS,” he will get a new lease of life and justify in his own ex perience, as hundreds of thousands have done, that 93 per cent of human diseases are really attri butable to a deranged condition of the kidneys, and that they will disappear when those organs are restored to health. Ask Your Friends and Neighbors What They Think of “WARNER’SSAFECURE”