Newspaper Page Text
THE BATTLE OF STOMXGTO.N.
How the American Army was Supplied with
^olia Shot in 1814.
at een gallantly repulsed from the
if-itco Mo ncr W Dailey and VP**** her flannel year “petti- ^>y
coat, were seen to leave their anchor
age and proceed down Fisher’s Island
bound. It was at first thought that the
object of tlieir attack was to be Newport,
but they came to anchor ofi Stoning ton
harbor and a boat was sent to the shore
^ .^ r £ truce. The people were
j “12^ , , e place was about to be
shelled. ti .a 1 he , bombardment was delayed
until 8 o clock m the evening, when a
bomb was sent into the streets. From
that time until midnight the firing was
contmued, and was replied to by a small
company of volunteers behind a breast
work on shore, who worked a couple of
18-pounders for all the cannon were
worth. Next morning the artillery prac
tice was resumed and continued all day,
except when the besiegers were sending
polite commumcations to the Warden
and Burgesses, asking pardon for the
impertinence of shelling them. To these
messages the Warden and Burgesses re
plied that they appreciated the stern ex
gencies of the occasion, but insisted
00I lt “ U e bo ™ v,ar(lme ^.
which had entertained , - the villagers and
cordmgly renewed for a few hours, and
then another boat-load of emissaries
were sent to the Burgesses Kindly ask
mg permission to withdraw their vessels
from the harbor. To this request a
rigorous refusal was returned, and the
b °n b
By this time portions of several . ... l vol- „ i
unteer regiments had reached Stoning
H I K lllte notlce ^ as forwarded
to the Captain . of , one of , the war vessels
to send a delegation ashore. He com
plied with courteous alacrity, while the
volunteers, who had spiked their can
non once and afterward drilled out the
vents, rattled the two 18-pounders
through the streets to greet the visitors.
As soon as the approaching boat got
Within range it halted till the vohmteers
could take steady aim at it. They fired
and missed and the boat obligingly
moved over to another point of the vil
lage, from which it was thought the sol
diers on land would have a better range,
The 18-pounders were drawn hastily to
the point, and by the careful connivance
of the hostile parties a solid ahot \yas
plunged directly through the middle
Of the boat, sinking it. The Stoning
ton men then went out in boats and
helped save the enemy from a watery
g rave - this ... incident . the , bombardment
After
was resumed and continued at the rare
intervals when the hostiles were not ex
Changing compliments, until the next
day, when the fleet, contrary to all the
rules of international courtesy, sailed
away without a word of explanation to
the Warden and Burgesses. At this
time the houses, village of Stonington of consisted
of 600 and 60 tons metal were
fired into the place; yet so careful and
accurate was the aim of the British gun
three ners that four they dwellings. managed t° Thihpuly m i® 8 ft U l°ss but
or
of life was the killing of a goo ' of
4t -kvihjl• *.....o.e’-ly ■
while celebrating the event several weeal
afterward. The goose was a pet and its
owner was highly incensed. He inquired
with pardonable surprise and profanity:
“What the British Government meant
by sending a squadron 3,OOOmiles to kill
his poultry?” The si }t were gathered
up and turned over to t.*o troops.
A Great Cranberry Patch.
EIGHT THOUSAND ACHES IV PENNSYLVANIA
TO BE RECLAIMED AND CULTIVATED.
Within the last month a large tiact of
upland, forest and swamp, about 8,000
aeres, lying in the towns of Shohola and
Blooming Grove, Pa., has been sold to
H. Herbert Thompson, of New Thompson York,
by Wm. H. Kempt. Mr.
has made a thorough examination begin of
the tract and will at once opera
tions for its improvement. The laud ad
joins the celebrated park of the Bloom
ing Grove Association on ODe sideand the
Kilgour Blue Stone the Company on the
other. Included in tract are the fa
mous Shohola Falls, one of the most
picturesque of Pike county’s many fine
scenes, and the Shohola Creek. The
purchaser intends to drain the swamp
that supplies the creek with water. The
plan proposed is to cut down the crest
of the falls and deepen the channel above
the precipice for some distance.
the The drainage wettest is portions completed, of the_tract, will be after used
fpr a large cranberry marsh. The bog
and soil are particularly which well fitted is ajready for the
growing of this berry,
found in considerable abundance to the
land. Many hundreds of acres, now
too wet for tillage, will be made dry,
and the deposits of leaves aud sedges
for hundreds of years have turned into
the richest plant food that can be im
agined. When drained and turned up
to the sun it will make a perfect soil
for the growth of onions and potatoes,
the fertility of which will not be ex
hausted by many successive years of
tillage. cranberries raised these lands
The on
will find a ready sale valuable in Philadelphia and
New York. Much oak and pine
timber now out of reach in the depths
of the bogs will be secured for market,
thus insuring the buyer another and cer¬
tain Source of revenue. The streams
and lakes in the vicinity are full of fish
and in the swamps and forests there are
plenty of deer and other game. Phila¬
delphia and the New higher York portions capitalists of have Pike
looked over
county to find suitable locations for ac¬
commodation of persons who are afflicted
with hay fever, as a large portion of
Pike county is 1,700 f ret stove the sea
level, and the upland plains are swept
by winds laden with the balsam of pine,
spruce and hemlock. It is an ideal sec¬
tion for persons troubled with catarrh or
pulmonary complaints.
A Bad Way.—A Boston rascal got a
living for a while by hanging be around the
Post Office, pretending to give a clerk,
and inducing silly people send to in him the
moneT they wanted to registered
letters. He toldthem that “under a new
rule” they would get no recc-ii/
STRABISMUS c AND JUSTICE.
THE MAN WITH THE PECULIAR
OR BS*
-
Once in St. Paul, Minn., I met a man
with eyes of cadet blue and a terra cotta
nose. shape, His but eyes while were not seemed only peculiar
in one to con
stantlv probe the future, the other was
apparently ransacking the dreamy past,
While one rambled among the glorious
possibilities of the remote yet golden
ultimately, the other sought the somber
depths of the previously.
He told me that years ago he had a
mild case of strabismus and both eyes
seemed to glare down his nose till he got
restless and had them operated on.
Those were the days when they used to
fasten a crochet hook under the internal
rectus muscle and cut it a little with a
pair of optical sheep shears. The effect
of this course was to allow the eye to
drift back to a direct line, but this man
fell into the hands of a drunken surgeon
who cut the muscle too much and there
v>y weakened it so that it gradually
swung past the point it ought to have
stopped his at, and he saw with horror that
eye was going to turn out and pro
trade as it were so that a man could
' ang his hat on it. The other followed
suit and the two orbs that hod for years
looked alongthe bridge of the terra cotta
nose, gradually separated, and while one
looked toward next Christmas with
fond anticipations, the other loved to
linger over the remembrances of last
fall.
This thing continued till he had to
P eer into the future with his off eye
closed and vice versa.
it is needless to say that he hungered
for the blood of that physician and sur
geon. He tried to lay .violent hands on
liim and wipe up the ground with him
and wear him out across a telegraph
pole. But the authorities always pre
vented the administration of swift and
awful justice.
Time passed on till one night the ab
normally wall-eyed man loosened aboard
in the side walk up town so that the
physician and surgeon caught his foot in
it and caused an oblique fracture of the
scapula, pied his dura mater, busted
his cornucopia and wrecked his sarah
helium.
Perhaps lam in error as to some of
these medical terms and tlieir orthog
rapliy, but that is about the way the
man with the divergent orbs told it
to me.
The physician and surgeon was quite
a ruin. He had to wear clapboards on
himself for months, and there were
other doctors, and laudable pus, and
threatened gangrene and doctors’ bills
with the cemetery looming up in the
near future. Day after day he took his
own anti-febrile drinks and rammed his
busted systeirr and full of iron and strychnine and
and beef tea Dover’s powders
hypodermic squirt till he wished he
could die. but death would not come,
He pawed Ahe air and howled. They of
fed him his own nux vomica, tincture
rhubarb and phosphates and gruel, and
brought him back to life with a crooked
collar bone, a shattered shoulder blade
and a look of woe.
'Inch ''.. . :'bd the Vffi’h for
damages’ because the sidewalk was im
perfect, and the wild-eyed man with the
inflamed nose got on the jury. done,
I will not explain how it was but
there was a verdict for defendant with
costs on the Esculapian wreck. hand- The
man with the crooked vision is not
some, but lie is very happy. He says
the mills • of the gods grind slowly',
but they pulverize middling fine.—Bim>
Nb.
Some Good Advice.
In his address before the Wisconsin
Editorial Association, Colonel N. Smith,
of the Janesville Gazette, gave the fol
lowing excellent advice:
In speaking kind words of tho people
it is better to err on the side of charity
than to fill the paper with criminal gush,
or to crush a human spirit, or to dis
honor a home. If misfortune strikes a
ma n down, although he may him not be
wholly innocent, do not kick because
he is down, but rather try to lift him up.
If slander, a thing which never slumbers
nor sleeps, should hunt a woman, re
member the crowd that was dispersed
by the chilling rebuke of the Master,
“He that is without sin among you, let
him cast the first stone.”
Give young men, who are industrious
and worthy, and who are struggling
hard for success in life, the influence of
yonr positions, and when a kind word in
print will give them encouragement and
promote their welfare, cheerfully and
generously help them, in discussing
Deal heavv blows impor
tant questions when heavy blows are
just; and above all things have the cour
a g e 0 f your sober conviction, but never
be harsh in your judgment, nor unmanly
toward vour bretliren, nor unfair toward
the public ever remembering that a true
scholar and a real gentleman can no
more be a blackguard in print than out
0 f it. Let us do these things and the
press of Wisconsin shall be exalted in
tone, strengthened in influence, and in¬
creased in power.
My brethren of the press, it is doubt¬
less the experience of many of you, es¬
pecially of those who have been in
editorial work for years, that your writ¬
ings become more justly and wisely
tempered under the softening influence
of time. When the years take us to the
topmost hill in life, and we begin to
tread the downward side—Our faces
toward the setting sun—we feel more
than ever before the weight of the re¬
sponsibility "then resting upon us. Serious
reflection admonishes us that we
shall be in earnest, that conscience shall
be our guide, and that honor shall be the
touchstone of all our motives, so that
when the final shadow shall have crossed
our path, and life has vanished, no influ¬
ence shall be left behind ns that it is
not just to ourselves and a benefit to
mankind.
“How 13 it,” asked Mrs. Fogg, “that
you take so much interest in other
women’s faces and dress and none in any¬
thing that belongs to me?” “When
you go to a stange city,” all replied the Fogg,
• ‘you run about to see places of
interest, but you never think of visiting
the lions of your native town.”
BEST BUTLER’S SPOORS.
The General’s Account of the Origin of
Famous Story that ha9 Been so Often
Told.
latter one day the origin of the silver
spoon scandal."
“While I was in New Orleans,” replied
Butler, “there were a number of coin¬
plaints brought to me of private houses
being entered by soldiers and plundered
of fine plate, pictures and any other
valuable adornments that struck the
fancy of the marauders. I referred
these complaints to a young officer on
my staff with orders to investigate them
strictly. He reported to me exaggerated, that *tlie
complaints were greatly
and had originated from the impudence
and trespasses of private soldiers. Com
plaints continued to come in, and,on in
vestigation were similarly disposed bad of.
One day, while I was in a rather
lmmor, a prominent citizen of New
Orleans came to my office and renewed
fhe old cry. His house had been iuva
ded and stripped of all its valuable or
naments, and he came to me to recover
them. ‘If the United States,’ said he,
‘has sent an army of robbers down here,
and robbery is their object, very well; I
can put up with it; but if robbery is not
authorized, then I want my ‘ property re
stored.’
“Being out of temper I answered him
rather gruffly, and told him I did not
believe a word of his story; that I had
had numerous cases investigated with
out finding thought any truth in the reports,
and that I it was a system of
lies to annoy the Union force, and at
tempt to awaken sympathy. In consid
erable passion I then ordered him away,
and said I did not want to hear
more such tales. To my surprise he
said he did not care who I was or what
I thought; that his valuables had been
stolen and he intended to complain
whenever it was necessary. He was so
much in earnest that a thought struck
me, and I concluded to test him to the
utmost.
“‘Get out of my office,’ said I, in
feigned passion, ‘and stop those lying
complaints or I’ll have you taken out
and shot,’
“ ‘You may shoot me and be hanged,’
responded the indignant Creole; but I
shall complain as long as a Baud of rob-.
bers and thieves plunder me.’
“‘Orderly!’ I cried, and an officer
appeared. ‘Take a file of men and shoot
this rebel immediately.’
“The orderly went out and soon re
turned with a file of men. In the mean*'
time the Creole was expressing liis opinion
of the Government, its troops and my
self in language so earnest and sincere
I could not doubt the truth of his
complaint. had He continued it even after and
the orderly roughly seized him
was pushing him along him to execution. back, dis
At that moment I called
missed the file, and, explaining the n»
ture of the preceding investigations,
asked him for minute details as to the
robbery of his house and told him I
would investigate it myself. who
“He identified the hackman had
brought the robbers to his residenci
and removed the booty, and, acting*
this clue, I soon found the hue 1
and compelled IT "JsfliaeU him Anat....... to tci’ ’’
rtuih.
the officer and soldiers to a number .
houses on similar errands, and finally
took me to a house where the plunder
was stored. It was overflowing with
fine pictures, plate, silver spoons, vain
able ornaments and bric-a-brac. He
then told me who the plundering officer
was, and to my surprise it was the young
staff officer to whom I had intrusted the
investigations and in whom, up to that
moment, I had imposed every confi
dence. He was tho son of a man I
knew well. I bad tho plunder removed
to my warehouse until it could 1»'
claimed and restored. Then the staff
• flicer was arrested, tried, sentenced and
shot. I never sent any word home as
to the manner of his death, and his
family thought he had died or was
kilted in service.’’
‘ ‘Why have you never told this story
before and cleared yourself of the offen¬
sive charges ?” asked Senator Beck.
“Oh,” said Butler, relapsing into his
usual humor, “they would get up some'
other lie on me if I did. ”
A Pleasant Visitor.
A New Orleans paper says :—Those
very serious nuisances that afflicted and
troubled ns so much a few years ago,
the ephemeridse. or, as they are popu¬ have
larly called, the blind mosquito,
again put in tlieir appearance. At about
8 o’clock last night, just as the steamer
New Camelia reached the landing at
Milneburg, a cloud of these mosquitoes
put in their appearance on the wharf
near Trisconi’s, absolutely cuttiug off
the excursionists from the cars. Tin
visitation was far more serious and
tr ublesome than any that has ever af¬
flicted New Orleans before, and it is im¬
possible for any one who was not present
to conceive of the billions on billions of
these little insects hovering in the air
or circling in a dense cloud. Tto first
idea of the looker-on was that Trisconi’s
was on fire, and it did seem as if a heavy,
dense, black smoke was pouring inspection from
the building, but a closer
showed that it was only an almost solid
mass of mosquitoes. The crowd stopped
and hesitated, and then one more adven¬
turous man, shutting his eyes, closing dashed his
mouth, and concealing his face,
through the mosquitoes. The whole
crowd followed, and without serious loss,
but shouting and laughing, dashed
safely through the worst of the cloud
and reached the cars in safety, with a
very earnest prayer that this blind mos¬
quito epidemic would not last long. It
is generally of very short duration—not
over two weeks or so, and even shorter,
if a north wind comes up and settles or
raises the lake.
A little boy looked over the back
fence and saw another little boy eating
bread with jam on it; so he began to cry
bitterly, and running into the house de¬
manded that he, too, should have some
bread with jam on it He got the “jam,”
but it wasn’t on any bread.
Sam Tit.fun is now accnsed of having
sold turnips for horse-radish when a toy.
A greater insult could not be offered.
HIS WIFE'S HUSBAND.
AN INCIDENT IN A MAN’S LIFE NOT TO
BE FORGOTTEN*
A Young Lawyer Starts West Thirsting
for a Case and Gets One—He Marries a
Woman Who Turns ont to be the Former
Wile of tlie Man he Prosecuted,
Judge Shickleton relates au interest¬
ing reminiscence of the early clays of
Arkansaw. “I carno here,” said the
judge, “just after I had been admitted
to the bar in a Northern State. Like
the average young lawyer, I was poor
and actually thirsted for a case. Shortly
after I arrived, I weut to a mountain dis¬
trict and stopped at a small town where
there was considerable excitement over
the trial of a young man who had been
indicted for murder. The older lawyers
were the loth to engage in the prosecution?
so working young Prosecuting Attorney was
single-handed. I met him when the,
second day after my arrival, and
he learned that I was a lawyer he
said:
“ *1 am a t present prosecuting for
murder, a young fellow* named Dawes,
He is guilty *s guilty can be and should
by all means hang yet I fear with sc
ranch opposition, that I will not be able
to assist justice to a proper punishment
of the terriblo crime. Now, what I
want you to do is to assist me.”
studied the case carefully.
made every point so clear that I'could
see the jurymen shaking their heads
when an illustration was strikingly vivid,
The counsel for the defense, composed
©f old lawvers whose fame had lone
a j uoe \ men established, looked at me in
astonishment. They mot me and wanted
.compromise. Finally the case went to
the jury Within live minutes after
ward a verdict of guilty was rendered.
young man was hanged. I moved
to another part of the State, where 1
soon established a good practice,
“One day about three years after
war a j me t a t a Northern watering
place, a beautiful young woman whose The
husband was dying of consumption.
consumptive grew worse rapidly, would but his
wife .till lionefnl for he talk
of what he intended to do when he ro
covered. One night about twelve
o’clock I was ‘ summoned to the poor fel
low’s room. He lay gasping for breath,
arK i hi 8 w jf e cven beautiful in grief, sat
holding his hands. The end soon oame,
aB( ] i saw } lt , r bow her magnificent head
despair
“I did not see Mrs Deluro the fair
widow funeral for some few days after the
Then she came’ to tell mo
n-ood-bv AViien
■> the memory of your hus
l-and affords a melancholy pleasure, in-
8 f e ad of a deep grief will you uot write
* ‘ G me?’ I asked.
“‘I don’t know ’ she replied. ‘I don’t
f ee j as i though I shall ever again feel dis
p 08e( to write, but I thank you for the
interest you have taken in again.'’ mo,
an J hope to some day meet you
‘ ‘I returned to Arkansaw and resumed
r, rn eliee image but business cares did not
remove the of that beautiful face,
Two years passed and I heard nothing
from Ella as I had learned to think of
or . ^t last I determined to go again
watering ’there placo. a' One days, evening
*had been few I was
r , on t i( , mountain when I
, stroll near Delure’s grave. .K
if?. a ,hg Voices < sj-IfrottoFio.;
I aloud behind a trae. The moon came
out and I saw Mrs. Delure And a man
8 ittiiig near the grave, you,’ she said.
■■ .[ cann ot marry
.you glcatlv have been very kind to me, and
jj ave aided me in getting my
gc ) lo0 ] but I cannot marry you.’
“‘Do you ever expect to marry
a „ ’Icj a j n y } ie asked.
<q ou ’t know. There is one man
whose memory I love. Ho was with mo
when- my husband died. If I were to
U y ( ,nmarry any one I would marry and him.
j promised to write to hire, have
a dozen times, but tyich letter
se emed like a love letter.’
“I could stand no more, and excluim
j pi^se ng> ‘Ella,’ I rushed from my hiding
and caught her in my arms. The
man looked on for a moment and turned
away. arrangements
“Our were soon com¬ and
pleted. Our wedding was quiet
simp^', jud immediately after the cere¬
, home in Arkau
mony we started for my
saw.
“We began housekeeping at once; and
I know there was not a happier man in
town than I. One evening while Ella
and I were sitting in tho twilight slit
said:
“ *1 never saw a man so little inter
ested in any one’s acquainted history as with you are.
You have been asked me a
long time, now, ami have never
anything about my former self.’
“ ‘Your present self,’ I replied, ‘be¬
longs to me; your former self did not.
I am never anxious about anything that
does not belong to me. ’
“ ‘Do you know tliat I used to live in
this State ?’
t. t Did you ?’ I asked in surprise.
( l i Yes.’ she said, in a saddened tone.
'] have been three times married. M.v
first husband was named Dawes, but In
was a bad man, and died by the hand of
the law. ’ had , , bung her , , hus¬
heavens, I ,
“Great
band. ”— Arkamaw Traveler.
Steam boats.
There is something beyond calcula¬
tion in the speed of steamers, according
to one of John Roach's experts. Tw<
boats may be built simultaneously ft on
the same model, with every effort t.
make them precise duplicates as to shaix
and machinery, and yet one will prov<
faster than the other. Why this is s<
no man can tell. The Mary Powell ha;
for fifteen years been the swiftest on the
Hudson River. During all that tim<
she never has been beaten. Time and
again an exact counterpart has beer
built, with everything copied as nearly oould
as'the best mechanics and facilities
do it, bmt none of these has turned oul
as good as the original. As the reputa¬
tion of unrivalled speediness is a vain
able advertisement for a passenger boat
you can see the object in trying to build
a second Mary Powell. Experience hae
been the same with yachtsmen. They
erder copies of the swiftest craft, 01
combine the supposed good of points of
several, and nine times ont ten art
disappointed in the result.
Engines, Gins, Sa-w Mills, Etc.
mil
mmm
; ■ ■•}
,,-u
PERKINS BROS.
-DEALERS IN
ALL KINDS MACHINE3Y.
\ JJ •9( 3 §M 11
ml %
m m
§ mu H5flB' X_
k v
ill i. R
i m
! 1 t
sAp*.
» The largest dealers in the South in Steam Engines, Bojlits, Savy m
I I Gauges, Mills, Cii’cular Saws, Steam Pumps, Boiler Feeders, Jet Punhps, Ste^m 8 '
Whistles, Piping, Wrenches, Shinglo Machines, Planing and 8 M
j Matching Machines, Water Wheels, Grist and Flouring Mills, Sopara
j I Plows, tors, Horse Powers, Cotton Gins, Feeders and Condensers, Presses, etc! 8
Brass Goods, Engine Fittings, Belting, Machinery Oil, H
|CBJ>" Second-hand Machinery low before) ■■x
at figures. Got our prices
1 ! buying. A
PERKINS BROS I
Eflftgfr atflBglSWiha.W^; L. . ATLANTA, CA.
t® EST WAGON
m HEELS
IS MAN tJFACTl)UBl) BV
h < - -ISM BROS. & CO.,
EACINE, WIS.,
WK MAKE UVKUY VARIETY OP
Fa, m, Freight and Spring Wagons,
l ml bv copr ; nin. our • >Viothing v*• 1 strictly but to one clivsa of work: bv employing non« bur, tho
of > i h’lUST-ObASS IMPKOVi.D MACIUNEHY uad the VEUY
Bi/' i 'iTI. v i r , k ,,l by » TIJuJioUGII KNOWLEDGE 0/ tho biHrtncsa, we have
)uhI!v euruu.i tmi ro{> ^fVMOON GSf- . r
reBponsfhiility, iLS.”
uf;irr«irert« V. ■* ■ ibol! ‘D-d tbr* warmnty, but Agents iuay, vni their own pm
tho l in.. v.'.'.Taut; .vi; . each wa^on. if bo airrned:
n.Tf-Sjy WuriMis:- trrl KISH IIROW. W 400 N No.........to bo well mad'' In every parito
ula;■ 11 i oi ‘<t)od uiuf •!• ;i , .ml that lbo ftt.ron^ih »*f the Ptttno 1 » flufHcicnt for nil work wuh fair
i .»•'< bouid any fopnirs b caku/f occur within one year from this date by roaHon <4 defectlvo iituicml
<>r rvorhluuurthip. foe tho paiii-? will be furniHbed nt place of sulo, free of ciinr^c* or tii®
price *1 said repair*, a* per agent’s price list, will be paid iu cubh by S10 purchuBur protlucaii; a
1 '.uplo 01 ibo broken or dofactive part* aja ovideuce.
j.^ov^inL , w« can auit. you, wo solicit patroim:;c from every 'section of the United States. Send
for Friccs uiul Terms, v U »d for a zopy ui T UK KACfNifi AGRlCUL'/ imisT, to
FISH A CO., Karine, Wla*
THE BEST
OF ALL
LINIMENTS
FOB MAN AND BEAST.
For more than a third of a century the
Mexican Muntang Liniment husn een
known to inilllonH nil over the world hh
tlin only safe reliance for tho relief of
accidents and pain. It Is a medicine
nhove price and praise—fhe form of external best of pain Us
kind. For every
the
MEXICAN
Mustang I.iniment, Is without an nrjual.
It |»4!netrutes 11<sli aud niuarlu to
tin* very hone—making and Inflammation tho continu¬ impos¬
ance of Its pain clfoclH Human Flesh ami
sible. upon equally womha
the lirnto Creation are
ful. The Mexican
MUSTANG
TJiiirnunt in day by bringM norm-body in|
Dvury hoiiHG. Jivory n%vful scnltl hovvk ol |
iifxony of tt»» o»- Imr.i i
f-wbdiu < 1 , of rlieumotic valuable l»or*« martyr* i< J J
on:<l, or a this or ox
felV.I l by lbo healing i/Owcr of
LINIMENT* -I
which speedily cure* such ailments
Urn HUMANf 1 ,KSI1 an
itiinimntUm. Hwclllng*. Munclen, Sill" j!
Joint., 0<>i»tract*<l IS
1® .««! S.-nliln, l*»isoil Cuts, Hrultn into nmlxj •miff
Sprains, Ntmiic»«, on. I.nmc».-**, <>M
, StItir-K, F’rontbltc-n, Chill,la In- Itj
(j Sorcn, tflccrn, Vipplen. Caked Itreost. «>>'! >
Etnk'cd .-very form of external
' ;• *(-. It limit without scam.
For tho White creation li cures
| Spralnl, Swinny, fctitr Joint., t
P rounder, lfjirnrHH So ren. Hoot PC- 'j
!|. ,.n, foot Hot, Screw Worm, Wind- s.-i.n, HJ Kj
| |"f>ilH, Hollow Spavin, Horn, Tlir.r*|», Scratch**, Itinghonc,
Sold Sores, foil KvlT, Film ailment iipuiiH AW
a the Sight and every other
c to which the occupant* of the {;
■ I Stable The Mexican. and Stock Mustang Vai d arc I.iniment liable. jjl Jjp
j land always itls, cures positively, and never disappoints; fg
THE PEST
OF All
1 IMENTS
POE MAN OR BEAST.
hewHome
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•BAs NO equa l
f NEWHome^cHINEG
30 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK
ILL.
TOR SALE BY
A Last Resort. —“As a last resort I
will enlist in the army,” said a young
man of education, the descendant of a
prominent family, to a New York re¬
porter, as he had lost employment and
friends through strong drink, was re¬
duced to abject poverty, had to sleep in
the parks and subsist on free lunches.
This is only a sample case. The re¬
porter was told of a number of oases of
men of education, of experienced clerks,
of skilled mechanics, who have lately en¬
listed in the regular army or joined th»
marine,