Dade County weekly times. (Rising Fawn, Dade County, Ga.) 1884-1888, July 16, 1884, Image 4

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Wliat About Mr. Conklingl Tho report. is gaining considerable currency in the newspapers that, in re turn for the a'd by Messrs. -Cornell, l’latt, Smyth and I’ayne, for Mr. Blaine, in this Stale, the Republican Presiden tial candidate has promised, if elected, to recognize Mr. Conkling s claim to be restored to the leadership-in-chief of the Republican party in this Common wealth. This claim is said to involve several agreeable.and considerable par ticulars. Mr. Conklin" is to be per mitted to dictate all the Federal ap pointments to be made in New York State. The absolute mastership of the State Committee is to be restored to him. The heads of all his Republican enemies are to be given to him on a charger. He is to be elected as his own successor to the United States Sen ate. The telegram, condensing but compote bending all the particulars herein re cited, is also said to be based on the declaration of Collector Robertson^ The Argus is in no position to know whether the telegram is correct or not. It is published with approbation in Re publican newspapers. The substance of it has for some time been talked of among Republican politicians. The Tribune and the Philadelphia Press, notable for the nearness of their relations to Blaine, repeatedly declared that Mr. Conkling was in favor of Mr. Blaine’s nomination and against that of President Arthur. Some of the men closely connected with Mr. Conkling and aforetime powerful lieutenants ot his, were openly active for Mr. Blaine. They declared that their action w r as sat isfactory to, and approved by. Mr. Conkling. The “reconciliation” of Conkl ng and Blaine has been reported and enlarged on for weeks. A Repub lican, very near to Mr. Conkling, has possession, he declares, of facts which wiil soon result in a visit to Mr. Blaine by Mr. Conkling, and he states that the Bepublican candidate will go out more than half way to meet Mr. Conkling, and to welcome him back to the fold. The parable of the prodigal son, accord ing to this gentleman, is to be solemnly parodied on the coming occasion. In referring to those reports, the Argus desires Its readers to remember that they are made on Republican authority in every case, and that no Re publican newspaper lias either vouched for or contradicted them as yet, though many have shown that they believe and hope they will be true. Meantime, Mr. Conkling lias made no sign. The frequency with which he contradicts other reports about him shows that he punctuates retirement with close read ing of the papers. He is, tl erefore, not unaware ol' what is being alleged con cerning his intentions. No deijlal ap pears lrom him, though, to be frank, silence in such cases does not give con sent. A public man has a right to let reports about himself pass by, and no one has a right to presume that they are true, merely because lie does not notice th,eln. Reserve may simply comprise a policy of letting time refute allegations or letting the ,tenor of the life be the contradiction to specific assertions. And it should be added that the gossip ing press has created against any state ments it makes, affecting public persons, a presumption that the statements are untrue, until other events have corrob orated them. Events have shown that Mr. Conkling opposed Arthur and supported Blaine against Arthur. That much of (he pre vailing report is true. Utterance or events will soon enable the public to learn whether tho rest of it is true or false. Till then, the Democratic and Independent Reform Republican oppon nents of Mr. Blaine can contentedly wait. —Albany Argus. The Plumed Knight’s Loyalty to Bis Chief. A class of Republicans, who stylo themselves Garfield Republicans, are conspicuous as the particular friends of Blaine, on'the ground that he was the special friend of Garfield, whose memo ry it is their peculiar duty to protect. That Blaine should have the credit of having been Garfield’s friend, in the sense Garfield Republicans represent, is an anoma'y. There has been no such delusion in the recollection of the pres ent generation. Blaine, instead of be ing the unselfish, self-sacrificing friend of Garfield he delights to be trumpeted, had purposes which, had they devel oped, would have exposed him in an other light. Had Garfield lived, the world would have learned how true this was. The relations of the two men were admirably calculated to give play to Blaine's great powers of. dissimula tion, aud at the same time develop the sense of dependence which was peculiar to Garfield. Blaine's pro'essed devo tion to Garfield was the measure of his devotion to selfish schemes which he carefully kept out of sight. Apart from the sensation natural to the shocking tragedy of the Garfield murder Blame suffered a deep disap pointment, which he kept to himself. In Garfield’s probable death he saw all his plans perish. And still he clung to them. W hen Garfield was lying in the White House the object of sympathy literally world-wide, Blaine was scheming. Without waiting for the death of Gar field, if that was to be the end of the tragedy, or his recovery, if that was to be, Blaine devised a plan for seizing the Presidential office by declaring Gar field’s inability and bringing General Ar'hur to Washington to “run the Government,” with Blaine, the Secre- tary of State, as the master spirit. Blaine erroneously presumed that Aiv thur, almost overwhelmed as he wa? known to be by the circumstanc s at tending the tragedy, would be willing to co-operate in such an arrangement, and virtually hide himself under the protecting wing of the Secretary of State, to whom the spirit of Garfield would descend, and who would person ate the dead President to the end of the term. The Vice-President’s position would, according to Blaine’s plan, satisfy the uncertain requirements and intentions of the Constitution and that was the role assigned to Arthur. Such a plan Blaine elaborated and cautiously unfolded to the members of the Cabinet pi irately. His intention, in case it was well received, was to call the Cabinet together and formally pro mulgate the scneme and set the machine in motion. Secretary Hunt, of the Navy Depart- ment, gave the plan his earnest en dorsement. Secretary Lincolu, kf the War Department, was at first favorable, but subsequently withdrew from it and opposed it, as dul all the other members of the Cabinet. With this failure of his plan for per petuating Garfield in himself Blaine re tired for a season to Maine and never saw him alive again. Blaine's hopes of dominating Arthur and his supplications to bo permitted to remain in the Cabinet are known to whoever was cognizant of the events of the time. Ever since then Blaine has schemed for the Presidential nomina tion, as he would have done had Car- Held lived. The stage in the canvass lias not been reached for showing to Garfield Repub licans how great is their delusion in re garding Blaine as Garfield’s friend, and for that reason entitled to their love and earnest support. There has never been a time when the chapter in the Garfield period bearing on this question could with propriety be written, or when a sufficient motive for doing it existed. There are Republicans to whom the title of Garfield Republicans would ap propriately apply. They, it is under stood, will supply the missing chapter by showing what Blaine was about from the moment he entered Garfield's Cab inet, who were working with him, and for what purposes Garfield anil bis Ad ministration were used. Garfield Repub licans will be made to understand how great is their delusion as to Blaine.— N, Y. Hun, Blaine’s Outrageous Private Circular. Ex-Governor Harris M. l’laisted, of Maine says that, to his personal knowledge, James G. Blaine is the au thor of the circular inserted within this article. The circular was employed in the 1875 political campaign by the Re publican State Committee of Maine, and of that committee Mr. Blaine was then the Chairman. It was used in the Fourth Congressional District of that State, and thousands on thousands of it were sent to voters, under the orders and by the hand of James G. Blaine. This is the circular: Do tho Protest int Democrats of the Fourth District desire to be represented in Congress by a Homan Calhol c? .lames C. Mndigan, tho Democratic candidate for Congress in the Fourth District, is a very zealous Homan Catholic. It is believed by many that ho is a lay member of the secret order of Jesuits, just as tho late Senator Casserly, of California, was. Casserly was elected to the Senate by Jesuit money—slo >,OOO contributed -by that or ler—and the fact being discovered, Casserly at once resigned his seat rather t! an stand an investigation, aid thus expose the workings of the order. In Ohio and other States the Catholics are striving to destroy the only av enue for education loft open to the chi (Iren of the poor. They say: “We wi 1 have church schools instead," and thus let loose the Worst of theological quarrels all over the land. U is a great gain to the Catholics to get these promincut men in Congress. They have now four members of the United States Senate, one each from the States of. New I ork, Missouri, Virginia and Florida. The whole energy of the Catholic Church is now expected to in crease its power in the Congress of the United Statefs. Tne Papists every whei e are watching the result of Madigan’s campaign in this dis triot, and it will be hailed everywhere as a great triumph for the ( a holies if a New En gland Protestant district sends a Homan ( ntholic to represent it in Congress. Arc the Protestant Deuaqcrats of the Fourth District willing to aid in building up the 'Homan hierarchy? Answer at tho polls on the ldth of September, and if you do not feel willing to vote for Genera! Planted, at least cut Madi gan’s name off your regular Democratic tick et. Remember that you oweSnoro to religious sentiments than you do to your party: and the proper rebuke to your party for asking you to vote for a Homan Cathode is to sup port General Connor lor Governor and Gen eral Plaistsd for Congress. I’ItUTKSTANT P^MOPPAT, This circular written by Mr. Blaine, and signed in a deceiving and untrue manner, according to ex-Governor Plaisted, was issued against Mr. James C. Madigan, the Democratic camfidate for Congress in that district. He was American born of Irish parents, a re spected lawyer and citizen. His relig ion was Catholic. The candidate op posing him was Hon. Harris M. Plaisted, already referred to. The appeal made to prejudice in the c’rcular elected Plaisted and defeated Madigan. It will be recalled that Mr. Plaisted afterward left the Republican party, and in 1)580 became the Governor of Maine, elected on a fusion ticket. 11c everywhere bears the reputation of a truthful man. He says that Blaine wrote the circular and that he saw him do it, Mr. Blaine has made no deni d of the alrbgacion. It will be impossible for him to deny that he franked thousands of copies of the circular to voters, for they received them, and many of his franked en velopes are preserved. —Exchange. “Budes ami Pharlseees.” Connecticut has caught the anti- Blaine contagion from Massachusetts and New York, and the insurgents there are organizing against the'ticket, too. In New Haven about two hun dred Republicans have joined in the movement, and the number includes many of the professors in Yale College. ! The fact that the insurgents aga nst the Republican ticket are to be found chiefly in the cities and the vic'nity of colleges in the East, aud that the lead-' esn are chiefly scholars and students, has provoked the Western Republican press to deride them as “dudes” and “Pharisees”—names which impute hypocrisy and a deficiency of popular feeling. But an important earnest movement was never yet defeated by epithets. It is absurd to apply the terms “dudes” and “Pharisees’* to such men as Sehurz, Curtis, Aloosevelt, Schultz aud Barlow, of New York, President Eliot, Colonel ftlggin son and ( olonel Codman, of Boston, and President Porter and Profs. Sumner, Dana and Whitney, of Connecticut, They are scholars, thinkers and influential who have deliberately made up WKjjr minds for good reasons not to support the Republican ticket. And they are not men without authority. It has been proved that they are leaders and Jmolders of opinion. They have no place in the Democratic party, and they desire none. But they are 'under obligations to punish their'own paru, if possible, for nominating a ticket with an obnoxious name at the head of it, and they have a perfect right, in the execution of {this duty, to vote for a Democratic ticket, provided it presents two unstained names. And they will a complish their pur pose. Blaine and Logan will be beaten, the executive authority of the Govern ment will pass out of Republican hands, and the lesson will teach that party that it cannot safely defy the counsel of it? wisest and most upright ruembeus.-- Exchange* HOME AND FARM. —Pigs should always have access to shade. —Chicaqo Journal. —A full grown apple tree extends its roots over an area of from fifty to sixty feet in diameter. Rye Muffins: One cup of flour, two cups of rye meal, one pint of sweet milk, one tablespoonful of sugar, p neb of salt, one teaspoonful of soda, one and a half teaspoonfuls of cream tarlar. Bake in muithr rings.—A’. Y. Times. —The best and only way to grow cheap corn, says an exchange, is to in crease the yield per a re. There is t fixed cost in growing an acre of grain let the yield be vyhat it may, and even bushel that, can be added to the v’eh per acre reduces the cost per bushel in the same ratio. —Rations composed entirely of tim othy hay, though not so good for horse as those mixed with clover, yet are preferred by horsemen, and t,lear tim othy commands tho h ghest price. Therefore, if hay is to be soil, timothv alone should be sown: but if wanted for home use a mixture with clover it no detriment. Troy T.mes. —Baked Beans: Take one quart of beans and soak in cold water all night. Next morning parboil till the skin wrinkle. Then put into the bean pot with a very little mustard, pepper and molasses. i’ut on top a haif-poune piece of lean, salt pork; fill up with warm water, and put into the oven. But in more water as it boils out, let ting them get dry toward the last.—Ex change. —Your horses will enjoy a good bath as much as you will yourself if it is given in a proper way. The water should not be cold enough to chill them, and a good, large sponge is the best thing to use in bathing them. Ihe pleasure thus afford the horses is not the only benefit derived from such operations, but the hair anti sk n ctn be better cleansed in this way than in any other. It is a good plan to rub them thor oughly dry after the bath.— Cleveland Leader. —Rose cakes or cookies are made of the whites of two eggs, one large cup of milk, one cup of sugar, half a cup of butter, twd scant teaspoonfuls of bak ing powder, llavor with rose, use Hour enough to make ath ek batter; butter small tins, and put the batter into them until they are half full. Rake in a quick oven, while they are hot; before you take them from the tins dust pow dered sugar over them. — N. Y. Pas'. —Cherry Preserves: Choose sour ones, seed nea ly all with a cherry Stoner, allow an amount of sugar equal to the fruit; sprinkle half the sugar over the fruit and let it stand about an hour, pour into a granite iron kettle, boil slowly ten minutes, skim out the cherries, add the rest of the sugar to tho syrup, boil skim and pour over the cherries; the next day drain oft’the syrun. boil and skim it, add the cher ries, boil twenty minutes and seal up in small cans. —N. Y. Tribune. Good in Gooseberries. The gooseberry is beginning to rise tc its deserved place in popftiar estima t on. As the tine English sorts, like "European grapes, can not endure tin; trials of our climate; and as our native gooseberries in their wild .-tape, are too uar.sh with acidity, !*nl with prickles, not only upon the bush, but upon the fruit itself, to be taken into gardens in their unconverted state, wc have almost lost knowledge of what good there is in gooseberries. Gradually, however, im provement has. shown itself. The old bweetwater was tolerable; Houghton had decided merit; the Mountain -cod ling was better ?.s a bush; Smith’s a larger fruit; and Downing’s quite an approach to the English sorts. Now wc hear ot capable growers taking up the gooseberry as a subject of liybridiz iuitndgstry, with notable results fol lowing. .tames Dougall, of Gntario, has distinguished the evening years of a long anti busy life by originating some very distinct sort* full of promise; seme of which have been sold for prop agation at handsome prices, showing that people, are rea !y to welcome im provements in this line. lam sorry I can not now lecall the/aame of an American culturist who if said tojiava also developed valuable new /ross breeds of this fiu't. The geo eberry is peculiar in b«mg at its b ‘st fos ctilim tv use when s ill green, taking the place of j ie-j lant wiicn that begins to f lil, and with a great deal more piquancy of flavor; a flavor so penetrating aud so appetizing as to make one quite willing to wait for the full maturitv of t e strawberries whioii comes next in the cideof fruits. Green gooseberries, like their to acids, the cranberries keep so well, that I efore, anything was known of the present p: aetice of canning fruits ai d vegeta b es they used to be put into bottles, toe s| a 'es filled with 1 oiled water, i.sed cold, and so sealed up, for it e at any time. A pound of green goose erries requires, it is true, a pound of sugar to render them exquisi e as tarts or sauce, bu these two pounds have vastly more gustator al vim than two pounds of sugar alone possess. Jhe pricklines of gooseberry 1 u hea, their irregular and crowded natural growth, and the consequent ease with which they become choked with grass or weeds, soon expel them from the gardens of the indolent. Yet they a e very easily managed if time be taken by the forelock. A boy or girl can \ cry ea ily manage them, and near town markets m ght readily earn pocket money from their culture. This de mand*, first, good sorts; next, go d soil, or liberal mulching with manure; 1 ut if the soil is already rich, the mulch may be tan or coal ashes. If a bush has bcco re c owded the weaker shoots are snipped out with shears, and some old rags or paper stuffed in to keep others from springing up. Cut out weak shoots of last year and very old exhausted ones. All over the bush the snoots should be. as evenly as pos -ible, six inches ap rt, to let light into the heart, aud to have limit rn the entire head. It is well to use the shears some as soon as the fruit has been picked. Tie in or } rop up shoots that wander or crowd others. With gloves and good shears a boy will take pleasure in the work, and will have learned the prinoipjes that apply to the pruning of orchard tpyes. Cor. /V. Y. Tribun:. Bird-Charming Extraordinary. There IS a gentleman in Paris who has discovered a remarkable secret, by means of which he can make any cage bird settle on a tree after a few minutes of mysterious coaxing. To prove his power over the feathered tribe, the gen tleman-in question recently drove from one end of Paris to the other in an carriage, in the center of which a smalt shrub was set up. Round about this shrub some dozen canaries fluttered-and 1 hopped and chirped as happily as if they were unconfined, and yet with no more idea of making their escape than, if they had been confined in the closest boundary of a cage. The miraculous bird-charmer is prepared at any time to take charge of a couple of offices in the Bois de Boulogne, and to promise that they shall be inhabited by birds for any length of time, without the birds making the. slightest rUteiupt to quit their leafy prison.— Whitehall Review. A Rich Little Girl; •the richest little girl in the world is the seren-year-old daughter of Captain George H,‘ Perkins, of the navy, who is well known in t his city. She is worth $7,000,000 in fie* own name, the amount having been left her recently by her grandfather, William F. Weld, of Bos ton. Mr. Weld was «*he father of the little girl's mother, anu when he died four heirs, including the child, came into possession of the bulk of nis for tune, $28,000,000, which was' into four portions. The sum of ,SAO,Ov 0 and a valuable residence in Boston weie bequeathed to Mrs. Perkins, wife of tl.’ e Captain, and $20,000 annually to De used in caring for the little millionaire heiress until she reaches the legal age and claims her million*.— Washington Republican. —A prisoner, condemned to solitary confinement, obtained a copy of the Bible, and, by three years’ careful study, obtained the following facts: The -Bi ble contains 8,586,489 letters, 773, words, 31,173 verses, 1,189 chapters and 66 books. The word and occurs 46,277 times. The word Lord occurs 1,855 times. The word rqverend occurs but .once, which is in the 9th verse of the 111th Psalms. The 2lst verse of the 7th chapter of Flzra contains all the let ters of the alphabet except the letter J. The finest chapter to read is the 26th chapter of the Acts of the Apostles, The 19th chapter of the II Kings and the 37th chapter of Isaiah are alike. The longest verse is the 9th verse of the Bth chapter of Esther. The shortest verse is the 35th verse of the 11th chap ter of St. John. The Bth, 15th, 21st and 31st verses of the 107th Psalm are alike. Each verse of the 136th Psalm ends alike. There are no words or names of more than six syllables. Tho Record of the Fairs. The superiority of Wells, Richardson & Co.’s Improved Butter Color over all oth ers made, is again demonstrated by its record at the Autumnal Fairs. The test of practical use is what tells the story, and the groat value of the premiums given by the Agricultural Fairs, lies in the fact, that the judges in these cases are regular farmers, who know* what their needs are and what will supply them. Wells, Rich ardson & Co.’s Improved Butter Color,, which has taken first premium at all fairs where exL.bited, is put up in a vegetable oil so prepared that it can not become ran cid, a most important property, the lack of which is fatal to so many of the Butter- Colors offered for sale. It does not color the butter-milk; it imparts a bright natural color, which is unattained by many others; and wing tho strongest is the oheapest Color in the market. "A revenue officer entered the store of ft merchant who never advertised and ae rested him because hs kept a still house.— Chicago Tribune. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound is a most valuable medicine for ladies of all ages who may bo afflicted with any form of diseaso peculiar to their sex. Her remedies are put up net only in liquid forms but also in Pills and Lozenges in which forms they are securely sent through the mails. ♦ It is a singular contradiction that when the mosquito visits ; you he stays to hum. Commercial Bulletin. “ Rough on Corns.” 15c. Ask for it. Com plete cure,hard or soft coims-,warts,bunions. Five couples accepted Mrs. Jones’ cards for her hop, and the paper said there was a good a-ten-dance. “I used Swift’s Specific on my little daughter, who was afflicted with some Blood Poison which had resisted all sorts of treatment. The Specific relieved her permanentlv, and I shall use it in my practice.” ’ W. E. BRONTE, M. D., Cypress Ridge, Ark. Is IT better to have something constant ly on the mind, or have the mind constant ly on something? THE MARKETS. Cincinnati, July 14,1884. LIVE STOCK—Cattle—Commons 2 50 @ 3 50 Choice butchers 6 00 @ 5 75 HOGS—Common 4 25 @ 4 90 Good pflekers 6 10 @ 5 35 SHEEP—Good to choice 4 00 @ 4 75 FLOUR—Family 4 35 @ 4 70 GRAlN—Wheat—Longberry red 90 @1 00 No. 2 red 86 @ 86 % Corn—No. 2 mixed @ 5414 Oats—No. 2 mixed (ft 34 Rye—No. 2 @ 65 HAY—Timothy No. ] 1100 <(41150 HEMP—Double dressed @ 8 50 PROVISIONS—Pork—Mess 15 75 @l6 00 Lard—Prime steam @ 7 3714 BUTTER—Fancy Dairy 14 @ 16 Prime Creamery 16 @ 18« FRUIT AND VEGETABLES— Potatoes, new, per barrel... 2 25 @ 2 40 Apples, prime, per barrel... 1 50 @ 2 50 NEW YORK. FLOUR— State and Western $2 75 @ 320 Good to choice 3 65 @ 6 50 GRAlN—Wheat—No, 2 Chicago. @ 9314 No. 2 red 98J£@ 9914 Corn—No. 2 mixed 48 @ 60 Oats—mixed ." 37 @ 43 PORK—Mess .' @J6 50 LARD—Western steam @ 7 50 CHICAGO. FLOUR—State and Western $3 50 @ 5 u GRAlN—W’heat—No. 2 red...... 80<4@ BU4 No. 2 Chicago Spring ... 81 (a, 81'j Corn—No. 2 4*!4@ fiiv Oat6—No. 2 28 %<% 29 Bye @ a, PORK—Mess 17 00 @lB 00 LARD—Steam 7 05 @ 7 15 BALTIMORE. FLOUR—Family $4 25 @ 5 50 GRAlN—Wheat—No 2 96 @ 9314 r* Com—mixed 59 @ «) " Oats—mixed 35 © 38 PROVISIONS—Pork—Mess d»|7 25 Lard—Refined @ 91^ INDIANAPOLIS. WHEAT—No. 2 red $ @ 33 CORN—mixed @ 49 OATS—mixed @ 34 LOUISVILLE. FLOUR-A No. 1 $ 4 1.5 @ 4 25 GRAlN—Wheat—No. 2 red 30 @ 8.5 v- Corn—mixed 54 @ 55 Oats-mixed 33‘4@ 43 PORK- mess @l6 50 LAUD—steam @ 9^ “ Mother Swan’s Worm Syrup,” for fev erishness,worms, constipation,tasteless. 25c W'hen is a fortune not a fortv*ie?—When it is a mast (amassed). — Harjeer's Bazar. Skinny Men. “Wells’Health Henewer” re stores health and vigor, cures Dyspepsia,sl. Caji-toons make popular campaign mu sic to train by. Glenn's Sulp’aur Soap Renders a lady’s skin A'hite and soft. Pike’s toothache drops cure in one minute, The place tyo see the whirled is in a ball room. “ Bucliu-paiba.” Quick,complete cure, all annoying Kidney and Urinary Diseases, sl. The liveliest girl this summer is Polly Ticks. — till City Derrick. “Hough on Coughs,” 15c., at Druggists. Com plete cure Coughs, Hoarseness, Sore Throat. A tie game—Getting married.— Lowell Courier. Beware of the incipient stages of Con sumption. Take Piso’s Cure in time. A Th'RILLING STORY. A* Told by.' l Merchant In Troy, X. Y. —A Nnncierl Oj>* ration Avoided—How a Fath er, W |f« and Daughter £>cape(l aa Awful Doom. ' Of Uic hundreds of accounts of rcniorkalilc nrcs wrought by J»K. FA VO HITE REHIIOV, none havdi ppeared so purely-usumislr Ing as the following: TK' persons mentioned are among the most highly rcspe.' ste< l In the city of Troy, and the story as told by tho father will prove inter esting to all out readers.— Ed. Troy, N. T. Dr. Kennedy, Rofr<lWi(. .V. T.: * ~, Deak Stitt—My dartgWfevwa.s affllctte 8 *«vere growth of Fungus. To remove it we ha. resorted to almost every'reinedy and consulted the h, °st promi nent surgeons'and physicians. Dr. .of troy, said that a surgical .operation woifltl he necesSsO'. hut fearing fatal results I hesitated. Some of ihnfj.'vsi tians claimed that it was caused by one thing some by another. The Fungus was pneofnent aty disfigured her looks. Having heard of Dr. Kennedy's FA VOKITK KF.M Kit Y working so thotnsfglilv on the blood I determined to try It, lo see if tifL tßed ictr.e could do what doctors bad failM to do and sur geons bad hardly dared to undertake. I can savin truth that the.result- of this trial was the complete' cure of mV daughter of this dreadful malady. I)i. Kennedy's FA V<BHITE KUMEIt V alone effect ed if. We used nothing clsc.for other th'ngs had completely failed. My daughter to day enjoys vigor ous health, and to Favorite Rcmeffv alone is the credit due. MvWife also was In very poor health, due to some liver difficulty wi'h which she had suffered a long time until she bteame very mneh reduced in flesh. A trial of Dr- Kennedy's Favorite Remedy has resulted lit"the comt-We restoration. of herhdaltln. which she had not enjoyed for years. She hadgainetr in flesh and strength.and thus a"r u pmTrmbealHi, and this is m;E ESTIKKte.V TO «K. KEN SEDY’S FA VOKITK REMEDY. As formy self, being engaged in tliO giuct r Y commf Moa business, which makes it necessary ror me to test the quality of different artteles, like butte.', etc-, my sense of taste and my stomach were seriously “U’qt'ti. Ev erything seemed to nauseate me, and ftvrful of dys pepsia in Its most severe form, 1 tried XEDY'S FAVORITE REMEDY. Jlie first bottle afforded Immediate relief, and from tlte* <la X to this I rail sav that Fatorite Remedy has restt/'m me to perfect health. These are facts which I claim prove t hat Dr. Kennedy's r lueirlte Remedy is the best medicine In the world for those afflicted with the above difficulties. If any one in the city,of Troy doubts the truth of these statements let him come to me and I will prove them. I have recommended Fa vorlte Remedy to hundreds and with the same good results. ' Yours, etc., WILLIAM WINDSOfi. Corner Canal and Mount .Streets, Troy, N. Y. • SI,OOO AtriLT, he paid to any one who will find a particle IV of Mercury. Potash, lodine, Arsenic, or any poisonous substance In Swift’s Specific S i “I have cured Blood Taint hy the use of Swift's Specific after I had most signally failed with the Mer cury and Potash treatment. '’ F. A. TOO.MKIt, M. D., Perry, Go. “Swift’s Specific has cured me of Scrofula of II years standing. Had sores as large as my hand, and every one thought l was doomed. Swift's Specific cured me after physicians and all other medicine had failed.'' It- L. HIGH, Lonoke, Ark. Our Treatise on Blootj and Skin Diseases mailed free to applicants. ' ' TnE SWIFT SPECIFIC 00.. . Drawer 3, Atlanta. Ga. N. V. Office. 159 W. 23d St,, bet,. 6th and 7th Ayes. Philadelphia office, 1205 Chestnut St. C'A-hissfe. u’lrxts israu-w TRUSS Has a Pad different from all oth ers, is cup shape, with JSelf-Ad crucioi r W justing Pall in center, adapts it wW loLt m s ,,jj lo positions of thebodv, TRUSS 4# while the ball in the rup presses Ifcar bac k the intestines just ao a * person does with the finger. With liprht pressure the Hernia is held securely day and night, and a radical cure certain. It is easy, durat/c and cheap. Sent by mail. Circulars free. EGGLESTON TRUSS CO. i €9 Dearborn St. v Chicago, Hi. tlf CURES WI^AUST bgtf Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good, pi [3 Use In time. Sold by druggists. |B| “THE BEST IS CHEAPEST.” ENGINES. THRrQMPQQ SAW-MILLS, Horse Powers' 11111.081 L.fiO Clover Hollers 1 Suited to all aud Prices to The Aultman & Taylor Co.. Mansfield, Ohio. Agents ! sew business ms a day? If so, send for our Illustrated Price-List, of staple goods. We want reliable, energetic Agents of either sex. Address NEW KMiLAXI) NII.VI K WAIU; 4 0., 4..5J Washington Street, BOSTON, Ha*,. pi n| y ragents ig 1 O ! ill ( Logan, hy J. C. RidprUh, LL. IK. |J Lrt II B Lthe eminent historian. Send 4,0 ct«. for complete Agents' Outfit, Extra libtrqlterms to Agents. .JONES Blifts. rV CO., Publishers, Cincinnati. Chicago, St. Lons. - mi “Anakesis ■’ |J9 Sj Wk an infallible cure for Pile*. W M ft w Price SI from druggists, or ■ IS| Ki V*. sent prepaid by mall. Samples if.: 9 js? 1L SJ free. Ad. '' ANAKESIS,” ■ B fifiH Etx3 MV Makers, Box 2116, New York £ A g\| TC FA—Agents for the Authorized Of ** 8411 E hibf fielal t'aini>:>ign HOOK, BLAINE AND LOGAN. Pro fusely llhtstrated with Steel and Wood Engravings. Outfit only sorts. Book sell; L rfA JifFor every IO copies ordered, will give as premium a complete Gaz etteer of the U. S. PEOPLE S PUB. CO., Chicago. d!CC A MONTH ui <1 board lor .‘1 live Young Men or Ladles In eecit cour. y, to take ordeis SKt BLAINE AKD LO6AN Address P. W. ZIEGLER & CO.. Philadelphia, Pa. e bo<w £re fpop lu m h abTt DB, 3, C. HOFFMAN, JEFFERS3N, WISCONSIN. R L A I NE •* r , l ' oft AN. Best steel Portraits, «« ■ b -txio. l.w. e»,-h: per liTi, hy mall Agents wanted. U.E.Ferine,PubT, 121 Nassau bt.,N.y, THE GREAT GERMAN; REMEDY For Pain! Believes and cure* RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, backache, Beadadu', Tooth^fe, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS, SPK.UXS, (1) Soreness, FROSTBITES, IIIKVS, StAUIS, And all other bodlfy ache* and pains. FIFTY KENTS A BOTTLE. Sold by all Druggists and Dealers. . Directions in 11 languages: The Charles A. Togelcr C«. (Bucocmoti to A. VOGELES A CQ ) Baltimore. Kd., TJ.S.A. Cheats!!! “It hasbecome so common to begin an article, in an elegant, interesting sty la “Then run it. into some advertisement that we avoid all such, “ And simply call attention to the merits of Hop Bitters in as plain, honest terrtis as possible, “ To induce people “ To give them one trial, which so proves their value that they will never use any thing else.” “The Remedy so favorably noticed in all the* papers, . . Religious and secular, is “ Having a large sale, and is supplanting nil other medicines. . “There is no denying tho virtuesof the Hop • plant, and tho proprietors of Hop Hitters have shown great shrewdness and ability * * “In compounding a medicine whose virtues are so palpable to every one's observation.’ Did She Die? “No! “ She lingered and suffered along, piping away all tho time for years,” “ Tbo doctors doing her no good;” “And at last was cured by this Hop Bitters the papers say so much about.” “ Indeed! Indeed!” “ How thankful we should be for that medicine. ” . A Daughter’s Misery. "Eleven years our daughter suffered om a bed of misery, “From a complication of kidney, livsr,, rheumatic trouble and Nervous debility, “ Under the care of the best physicians, “ Who gave her disease various names, “ But no relief, “ And now she is restored to us in good health by as simple a remedy as Hop Bit ters, that she had shunned fay years before using it.”— The Parents. • Father is Getting Well. “ My daughters say: “llow much better father is sines fta used Hop Bitters.” “ He is getting well after his long suffer ing from a disease declared incurable.” “ And we are so glad that lie used your: Bitters.”—A Lady of Utica, N. Y. genuine without a bunch of green Hops on the white label. Shun all the vile poi sonous stuff with "Hop” or "Hops” in their - name. CAEN Health and Happiness. DO AS OTHERS < y&OTAJ HAVE DONE. Are your Kidneys disordered? ‘ Kid loy Wort brought mo from my grave, aait were, n Iter 1 hmi been driven un by 13 in Detroit.*’ M, W. Deveraux, r-echanic, lonia,Mich. Are your nerves weak? “KWntfr Wort curM mo from nervous weakness <tc..nttoi 4 I was not expected to live.” Mrs. M. M. B. Goodwin* Ed. Christian Monitor Cleveland, O. Have you Bright’s Disease? “Kidney-wort cured me w hen my water was Just lfke cli ilk and then like blood,” Frank Wilson, Peabody, Moss. Si xffering from Diabetes ? ‘'JQdnt y-Wort is tho nlbslffsiiceessfu] remedy I have fiver use i. Gives almost immodiafco relief.” Dr. Phillip C. Ballou, Monkton, Vt. Have’ you Liver Complaint? "Kidney Wort cured mo of chronic Liver Pisco**-* after I r,raved to die.” Hum T Ward, lato Col. 09th Nat. Onard, N. Y. Is your Back lame and aching? adrw-y-WA rt, U bottle) cured mo when I wasso lame i.had ta roll out of bed.” 0. M. Tallin.'lßC, Milwaukee, Wla. Have ’you' Kidney Disease? “Kidney- wort made mo>sound In l!vcr and kidneys after years of doctoring. Its worth SIU a box.”—t Hodges, Williamatown, West Vo. Are 'Lou Constipated? “Kidney-AYort causes earv evacuations and cured mo alter 10 year.* uso other mcdiumes ” s Jielson Fairchild, Bt. Albans, \t. Have \'ou Malaria? “Kidney-Wort has ,V no better than any other remedy I l.avo over u: P™*}®''-’’ Dr. K. Clark, South Iloro, Vt. 'Are you Bilious? ••Sidney-Wort has done n V n>oro good than any Other, remedy I have over t. Ven. Mrs. J. T. Gallo Elk Flat, Oregon. Are you tormented rvith Piles? “KidncV-IVort nermanmd]/ ru Vi ' me cf bleeding (OUes Pi, W. C Idlin'" rccoinrtwnn «a It to me. 000. H. E'jrst, Caahicr M. Bai.^, Myemown, Pa. Are You Rheumatism’, racked? “Kidney-Wort o. r < d me. after 1 np,t° die by "llatJtflLainc. Ladies, are you suffei'ing? "Kidnoy-Wor! cured Me h t ' cr ‘“*’V 4 aoverai years standing. f». “n'ls ore k P*n it.” Jim. IL Lainnrcauj, Isle 1* vl - If you would Banish DiseU se i and gain Health, Take The Blood Cleanser. PAPILLON HAY FEVER. Many mpmberfi of the Hay Fever Association of New England, have used I'aplllon Catarrh Cure with renfarknble results. Wc have numerous testimonials testifying to Its efficacy. Its curative powers are. so positive, aud the effect of It* use so pleasing, that when once used. It Is ever useft Unlike-every other lUv Fkveh Remedy, it Is not a"te-Wporary relief, but a permanent cure. No change of clliTnarte 1» necessary* where this remedy Is used. It stops the xnnlfles, the sneezing and the watery eyes. It permit, breathing through the nostrils, and cures the lnflanunatlon. Any one wishing positive evidence from this nianj who have and are recommending this remedy, ran procure a list of testimonials by sending us their*£■ dress by postal card. A prominent reporter on the staff of the Chicago* “Tribune" says: "I’aplllon Catarrh Cure has saved me: hundreds of dollars In expenses, and iponths of time.'" Mr. J. C. Emmons, Attorney, Ma -omb. 111., says: “1 have had more relief from one dose of Paplllon Ca tarrh Cure than from all other Hay Fever Uemedikb I ever tried; It cured me at once. I traveled among rag weeds during hay fever time, without a recur rence." It Is not a new remedy; it has been in use for nearly ten years, and never falls to cure Catarrh, Rus* Cold and Hay Fevjir. Use It by Insufflation or wit Ik sn atomizer, or any other way that will reach lhe sear, of the disease; it cures by healing the Inflameftmein branesof the nostrils, which Is the cause of tludlsr case. For sale hy all druggists. n«c of toll, or 1.,*, or 1:0 ,11, mil':r , ,-«n ~ IN FORMAT ION, CIRCULARS AND REFERENCES, address 88. F. L. POXD, Aurora, Kane Co., HI. 11l ID Wholesale and retail. Send for price-list, r >K Goods sent C. O. D. Wigs made to order. I’nil I E. BURNHAM. State Street, Chicago. EDUCATIONAL. USIOS COLLEGE OF LAW, Chicago, 111. The Fall Term will begin September 24. Torclrcular, address H. BOOTH. Chicago, 111. I FARM TELEGRAPHY, or SHORT-HAND and I cnnrc TYFE-WRITINO HERE. Situations fur l_nlshed. Address V alentink Bros , Janesville, Wls. YALE LAW SCHOOL. Fall term commences S-ptemher "Sth. for circular address JPKOF. FKVXCIS WATLAXD, Yale College. \c w Haven, Conn. A, N. K.-E. 1 r 967 WHKX WRITIXT. TO advertisers iHease wiv yon »»n lU# fttltei Uaeuioial lft