Newspaper Page Text
Ja!t River, the Famous Political Water
ing-Place.
This famous old-time Kentucky water
ing-place opened for the fall and winter
season on Wednesday last, the fifth in
stant, under the most favorable auspices
imaginable. At this writing several
thousand distinguished guests are regis
tered at the Grand Republican Hotel,
while thousands on their way
from various States in the Union. The
season promises to be of the gayest
in its history. The hotel is being rapid
ly enlarged and improved to meet this
unprecedented and unlooked-for army
of visitors, and hundreds of gottages
are in course of construction along the
banks of this beautiful stream.
The climate is warm and delightful,
as the Democrats have made it pretty
hot for this latitude. The roses and
honeysuckles are in bloom, also magno
lias, lading the refreshing atmosphere
with their fragrant perfume. Tempting
and luscious oranges hang on the trees.
The walls of the city are of jasper
and the streets are of pure gold. The
waters are as clear as crystal, and as
cold. St. John is delighted with it and
pronounces it of a superior quality, as
do also his vast army of admirers.
Workmen in boring for salt water
struck a vein of pure Nelson County
whisky, and it flows at intervals of
twenty minutes about ninety barrels
daily. Other wells will be put down at
once in the vicinity, and it may be a
sufficient supply can be obtained to
meet the home demand.
There is game here in great abun
dance, especially raccoons, of which
an unprecedented number have, from
some unexplained cause, flocked to this
immediate neighborhood. Coon hunt
ing is therefore one of the most popular
amusements.
The new and elegant steamer Flora
Lockwood arrived this morning bring
ing a vast number of visitors from
Indiana. She leaves this evening for
Pittsburgh to bring some 5,000 waiting
transportation from New York. Mrs.
Belva Lockwood, accompanied by Hon.
Benjamin F. Butler, arrived to-day.
Mrs. Lockwood journeyed all the way
from Washington on a machine called
a tricycle, and Mr. Butler from Mass
achusetts on one called a bicycle, a
feat never before accomplished.
The grand opening ball of the season
was given on Friday evening last, and
was a grand success in every sense of
the word. The entire company par
ticipated, and waltzed to the music of
the Cleveland Democratic band, on-
f 'aged at an enormous expense especial
y for the occasion. The costumes worn
on the occasion were elegant beyond
description. It is simply impossible to
get a complete list of them at this writ
ing. Among the most prominent, how
ever, I noticed the following east of
characters, “a la bal masque:” Hon.
James G. Blaine, as the Mexican izer;
Hon. John A. Logan, as the National
Cuspidore; Hon. Steve Elkins, as the
Manipulator; Hon. .lay Gould, as the
Associated Press; Hon. B. F. Jones, as
Old Money Bags; Rev. Dr. Burchard,
as Rum, Romanism and Rebellion. Hon.
Chester A. Arthur paid his friends a
Hying visit and impersonated “The
Lone Fisherman.” He returns to his
friends, George W. Curtis apd Roscoe
Conkling, who prefer to spend the win
ter in New York.
The only thing to mar the pleasure
of the evening was the breaking of the
platform upon which they were danc
ing. Subsequent investigation revealed
the startling fact that several of the
planks supposed to be perfectly sound
were rotten and that it had a bad
foundation generally. The party ail
fell, and great was the fall thereof.
Hon. James G Blaine is badly hurt. It
is feared that he is fatally injured.
Hon. John A. Logan, B. F. Butler,
MMrs. Belva Lockwood, Hon. Joseph
(PMulhattan and ex-Governor John P. St.
John, all fell by the wayside, receiving
injuries of a less serious nature than
Blaine, and they will all recover. The
Cleveland Democratic band have gen
erously agreed to furnish them with a
new and better dancing platform,
where there shall be joys for ever
more, dancing to the sweet strains of
the grand old Democratic band, which
will play old familiar tunes to their de
lighted audience.
I would say to all those who contem
plate visiting this delightful Kentucky
resort to take the Republican star-route,
and you will be sure to land here safe
and sound. It is the best and cheapest
roiite to both Salt River and Delusion.
Many of the present guests have not
been here for twenty-three years, and
they are surprised at the vast improve
• ments made by the Democratic pleasure
seekers in that period. Quite a little
city has been built, and the former oc
cupants leave it very reluctantly, as
they have sorter become attached to it
from a long residence. They are all
leaving for the city of Washington as
the others come to take their places.
The chief amusements at present con
sist of hunting for Republican majori
ties—it is exciting sport, as the game is
scarce—fishing for Irish votes, eating
crow, dancing to the strains of the
Democratic party, studying astronomy
by the star-route, wondering if the
Government belongs to the people
or to the Republican party, and
if it is possible to steal a few
Presidential chairs without being
caught, and whether Blaine is really a
bigger liar than Joe Mulhattan, ‘or
whether the whole thing is not one of
Joe’s lies or a dream Oh, it is a
dreamy, blissful existence here. We
are so charmed that we don't know
whether we are ourselves or our grand
mother’s ghost, or our own mother-in
law, Belva in tights. Butler, the clown
—but Salt River for us forever. We
love the charming name, dear, darling,
ducky Salt River—so full of fair, fat,
freedom, and Rum, Romanism and Re
bellion. The land of me and Blaine,
Butler and Belva, so solemn, sad. sug
gestive. Come into the garden of Eden.
Maud, and tarry with us. Come, all
good Republicans, Prohibitionists,
Greenbackers and Drummers. Come.
Come to the Salt River fountain, and
drink without money and without price.
Come and enjoy its pleasures forever
more. Sic semper tyrannis, flat justicia
mat coellum, ignmn vitae , cross-cui saw.
—Joseph Mulhattan , in St. Louis Repub
lican.
—Over 100,000 pairs of roller-skates
are now in use in New England.
A Pernicious Harangue.
During the last campaign of our civil
war, and when its result, so far as fight
ing was concerned, became daily mure
certain, Englishmen who ha 1 been anx
ious to see the disruption of the Union,
and who had predicted that event as
inevitable, began to talk in a different
strain. It was true, they said, that the
North might overwhelm the South by
brute force; but the South would never
be reconciled to the. JS- ortii; the Union,
if continued, would be, to one side at
least, a hateful one, and its continuance
a source of misery, such as all loveless
bonds between either persons or nations
must forever prove.
Americans who happened to be in
England at that stirring time know how
strongly this view was insisted upon
there, the social tone in many circles
far transcending in bitterness even that
of the Times and its many followers of
the press. But Americans everywhere
know how these unfriendly auguries
were falsilied. They know how the
key note struck by General Grant at
Appomattox was followed by fraternal
harmonies. And all the world knows
how is has been possible, despite of
precedent, and despite of malignant
prophecies that were designed to pro
mote what they foreshadowed, for a
gigantic civil convulsion to be followed
by universal accord, so that a new and
far stronger Republic has been born of
the’ Republic of the past.
How was this auspicious and, outside
our borders, this unexpected, end at
tained? Was it not substantially at
tained by kindness, by moderation, by
following the manly and patriotic course
which General Grant, happily for his
country, indicated in the hour of his
triumph? There can be but one reply;
and it is because of that reply, and be
cause of all on which it rests and all
which it implies, that we greatly regret
the spirit and the statements of Mr.
Blaine’s speech made at Augusta. We
do not intend at this time to discuss the
details or figures marshaled by Mr.
Blaine. There is much to say about
them, but the discussion is foreign to
our present purpose. That purpose is
to point with emphasis and with regret
that Mr. Blaine’s spirit is not the spirit
of General Grant at Appomattox; that
if the evils he complains of exist they
have existed during a score of years of
Republican rule; and that patriotic
Democrats, and especially patriotic
Southern Democrats, have assured us
with the utmost solemnity that, howev
er hard it might be to cope with some
existing evils in the South in previous
circumstances, that they would and
should melt like mist before the rising
sun after a Democratic success in a Pres
idential election.
Such a thing has come to pass. The
opportunity for that completed reconcil
iation, that cemented and solidified
National unity that till patriots desire is,
in the estimation of a large body of our
countrymen, before us. The Democrats
have elected their candidate. Let them
now serve the State as they have eager
ly promised they would do if the people
gave them the chance. To seek, out of
disappointment, to thwart them in ille
gitimate ways, to stir up sectional ran
cor, to revive animosities long laid
away to be forgotten, jnay be fit work
for a partisan; it is not fit work for a
patriot. The time, moreover— apart
from lofty and general considerations
of the public good—is not a good time
to prick and goad popular passion.
The closeness of the election, and the
heat and personalities that have disfig
ured the canvass, have within a few
days brought the community close to
the edge of dhnger. Prudent citizens
of whatever party have been well aware
of this, and have been ready to join
hands heartily fo assure public tran
quility. For this reason, while waving
the minor questions of grace and
delicacy involved in a defeated candi
date’s taking such an attitude, at such
a moment, those citizens will agree
with us, we take it, when we express
our hearty sorrow that Mr. Blaine
spoke the words he did speak at Au
gusta.
Let us add, without going into the
discussion now, that Mr. BJaine
throughout his remarks, and particu
larly so far as he indulges in auguries
of the future, seems to us to overlook
one consideration, and a most impor
tant one. ' It is this: That the South, no
longer subject to slavery, is rapidly ac
cepting and establishing all those agent s
of an industrial civilization which
characterize modern society. It is vary
ing its agriculture, opening mines,
building railroads, constructing fac
tories, and, in a word, rendering itself
more and more homogeneous with the
North. Very soon the same iniluences
and tendencies, which mold opinions,
must prevail throughout the whole coun
try. The ascendency of a particulai
class, or of a particular race, which has
been a matter of local self-defense, and,
as we may say, accidental and excep
tional, must give way to the more gen
eral influences. Parties must divide
there as they do here, and the phrase
“a solid South” become a memory of
times of transition, and not a permanent
distinction.— N. Y. Commercial Adver
tiser ( Rep .).
—Lieutenant Ludovisi, of the Italian
army, who slapped and insulted a broth
er officer, and shot him dead ifi the duel
wjiich en jued, lias been tried
martial for the former offense, and con
demned to two years’ military seclusion
and the forfeiture of his ‘commission.
The court-martial took no cognizance
of the duel: for, while the penal eodtrru
gards dueling as a crime, though a very
venial one. the regulations of the Italian
army compel an officer to fight with
any one who insults or challenges him,
on pain of expulsion from the army.
—While “the oldest voter” is on pa
rade, Brooklyn puts in her claim to off
set the Susquehanna freeman who
counts an even century of life. The
poll list of the Seventh Ward bears the
name of James Friel, aged 101 vears,
who has lived in the State fifty-nine
year’s, and in the ward and election dis
trict twenty-five years. He lives at No.
446 Park avenue, near Franklin avenue,
and does not require a coach to go to
the polling place. Brooklyn Eagle.
—Beaver fur will be the fashion thi3
winter. Owing to the great demand
the price has advanced ninety per cent.
Seal is not as popular as formerly.—
Chicago Journal .
HOME AND *VRM,
—Cover plants with a newspaper be
fore sweeping. Also put a little am
monia upon them once a vveek.
—-Hemorrhages of the lungs or
stomach may be quickly stopped by
small doses of salt or half-teaspoonful
loses of powdered charcoal every half
hour. —Toledo Blade.
—To feed potatoes, carrots, beets or
parsnips to horses, cut them into slices
not more than an inch thick and sprinkle
them liberally-withbran, to-which. a
little salt has been added.— Prairie
Fanner.
—Fodder that is properly saved and
fed in combination with clover hay and
grain is of equal value with timothy
bay by weight, says Prof. Sanborn; but
such fodder is very different from that
which is exposed to frost and bleaching
rains. —Troy Times.
—Apple Johnny Cake: Take one
pint of white Indian meal, two table
spoonfuls of sugar, a half teaspoonful
each of salt and soda, one teaspoonful
of cream tartar, milk enough to mix
quite soft, and three apples, pared and
sliced. Mix in the order given and
bake in a shallow cake-pan thirty min
utes. — The lions hold.
—The fine ci from much (raveled
roads has considerable manuring prop
erties.. Some farmers have used it as a
divisor to more evenly distribute phos
phate in drilling grain. It is excellent
to cover hen droppings, as it absorbs
the ammonia which would otherwise
escape. —New England Farmer.
—After the crops are all harvested,
the wood lot should receive attention.
Trimming off the low branches of trees
intended for timber, and euttingout the
lower underbrush, will admit more air
and light and promote a quicker
growth. A good part of the supply of
lire wood may perhaps be thus obtained
which otherwise would be mostly
wasted.— N. Y. Herald.
Two-thirds corn cake: Sift together
twice (so as to get it well mixed) two
cups of Indian meal and one cup of
flour, one heaping teaspoonful of salera
tus, one of salt. Beat one egg lightly,
mix with one-half cup of molasses and
three cups of new or skimmed milk;
into this stir the meal and flour as
above prepared, and pour into hot gem
pans or into common pans, cook in
sheets and cut in squares. — Boston
Globe.
—lt is well understood by farmers
that there is a joint worm that attacks
barley, and often makes it light weight.
It is similar to but distinct from a joint
worm that attacks wheat. It is be
lieved, however, that the barley joint
worm also, under some circumstances,
attacks the winter grain, and hence is
suggested a caution against preceding
wheat with barley, which is quite com
mon in winter wheat growing locali
ties. —Exeha nge.
—Housekeeper’s Weights and Meas
ures: Two gills make half a pint. Two
pints make one quart. Four quarts
make one gallon. Half a gallon is a
quarter of a peck. Two gallons make
one peck. Four gallons make half a
bushel. Eight gallons make one bush
el. About sixty drops of any thin
liquid will fill a common-sized teaspoon.
Four tablespoons, or one-half a gill,
will fill a common-sized wineglass.
Four wineglasses will fill a half pint
measure, a common tumbler, or a large
coffee-cup. Ten eggs usually weigh
one pound before they are broken. A
tablespoonful of salt weighs one ounce.
REPPED FABRICS.
Three Varieties of Imported Goods Frtm
Which Stylish Costumes May be Made.
llepped fabrics are largely used in
imported costumes, and-are shown here
principally in three materials, viz.,
Sicilienne, gros-grain, and Irish poplin.
The Sicilienfe is silky and soft, alike on
sMes, drapes beatifully, and is
now shown in the single widths that
cut advantageously for dresses. It
comes in all the dark rich colors for the
entire dress, with elaborate embroider
ies wrought on the material or else ap
plied for the trimming. The plum and
dahlia shades are particularly stylish in
Sicilienne dresses, and bluuk dresses of
this material are very and are
liked more especially by elderly lJlies.
Gros grain, faille, Bengaline andwicto
rienne are the pure soft silks so Fiuoh
used by Worth in
figured or with plain There
are elegant black gros grain or faille
dresses now made with their only or
nament pinked flounces of the material
laid on pinked bands of velket. For in
stance, the round skirt ■ has the short
apron drapery and long back drapery
of plain black gros grain, while across
the front and side breadths covering
the space from the apron down are
three gathered ruffles of the silk pinked
in leaves two inches deep, rest
ing on straight black velvet three
inches wide that is pinked in simi
lar leaves. The silk basque has
a plain postilion back, but the front has
a pleated vest, with the inner pleats
falling on two pinked velvet bands.
This simple design is repeated in all
dark silks, and affords a relief from the
elaborate combinations so much used
at present. Pym’s Irish poplins are
again in the market in all the stylish
shades of brown, dahlia, and smoky
grays, and are also used in London
dresses in bright shades of poppy red
and in navy blue. The striped poplins
are in great favor abroad, especially m
red with green, blue, or brown, and are
employed for skirts, with a basque of
the solid-colored poplin in either the
bright or dark shade. There are also
pretty house dresses imported in very
light shades of poplin, such as ecru,
fawn, pearl, gray, or the palest sky
blue. These are made in the quaint
yet simple-looking styles that young
English women have adopted, with the
round waist folded in front in surplice
fashion, and gathered to a belt, while
the skirt has very long and graceful
drapery that nearly covers ftiefounda
tion, requiring only a ruche or narrow
ruffles at the foot; this in thi
golden brown shades is worn by bru
nettes and blondes. It is thought
sufficiently dressy for an afternoon re
ception, a short mantle is added of vel
vet of the same shade, and the toque—
which partakes both of a bonnet and a
turban in shape —is made with a brim
of blue velvet and a soft crown of the
poplin.— Marver's Bazar.
The Exclusive Briton and the Yankee
The following aneetote is told in re
lation to the unsociable habits of En
glishmen who travel. An old Ameri
can gentlemen was traveling from
Liverpool to London. Three gentlemen
in all occupied the carriage; and for an
hour after the train had begun its jour
ney never one exchanged a syllable with
another. At last the American bi’oke
silence, and said: “Gentlemen, lam
L D , I have come from ,
T have Been a merchant for fifty years,
and now I am living in ease. I am
eighty years of age, and I have two
eyes and one tongue, and, like a great
many of my countrymen, I take pleas
ure in using them. My eyes feel the I
period in which they have done me ser
vice, and I can not read for the motion j
of the train. Having introduced nay- ;
self, I trust gentlemen, you will not
look upon me as a pickpocket.” At
this one of the gentlemen drew out his
card-case and gave his card. This ex
ample was immediately followed by the
other. “What, gentlemen,” said the
American, “you do not seem to knyw
one another; let me introduce you;”
and with that he crossed his arms and
presented the card of one to the other.
This was the beginning of a warm and
long friendship.— London Echo.
At the Skating Rink.
“Never was so insulted in my life,”
said Mrs. Jones when she came home
from the Casino the other night.
“What’s the matter now?” inquired
Jones, looking up from his paper.
“Why, 1 put on roller skates for the j
first time in my life to-night, and I was !
skating beautifully, when some one
must have jostled me, for I felt myself
going down, and I just caught hold of a
lady who was skating near to save my
self. Talk about women standing by
each other!”
“They can’t on roller skates,” sug
gested Jones. “What did the woman
do?”
“Do! She jerked herself away and
screamed out so’s everybody heard her,
‘Take your hands out of my pocket!’
The idea.”
“Did you have your hand in her
pocket?” asked Jones, getting inter
ested.
But Maria gave him a withering look
and was silent.— Detroit Free Press.
—A gentleman who was traveling
through West Virginia went to a house
and got food for himself and compan
ion and their horses. He wanted to
make payment, but the woman was
ashamed to take money for a mere act
of kindness. He pressed the money
upon her. Finally she said: “If you
don’t think I am mean I will take one
quarter of a dollar from yon, so as to
look at it now and then, for there has
been no money in this house for a year.”
The little farm and barter at the store
had supplied all the absolute wants of
this woman.— N. Y. Herald.
*20,000 Gone!
San Francisco, Cal.—The Chronicle
publishes in substance the following mar
vel. Captain W. F. Swasey, the oldest pio
neer of the coast, makes a statement of the
intense suffering of his friend Colonel D. J.
Williamson, an Army officer of distinction,
and an Ex-U. S. Consul, who was attacked
in the winter of 1801-2 with violent rheu
matism. So great was his agony in after
years he became a helpless cripple, and
after trying numberless remedies, the baths
of other countries and spending a fortune
of $20,000, the disease seemed to assume a
more virulent type. Finally, he was per
suaded to try St. Jacobs Oil, the great con
queror of pain. It worked a miracle of
cure. In a letter to the Chronicle he con
firms Captain Swasey’s statement and adds:
“ I cheerfully give my unqualified attesta
tion to the truthfulness of the statement,
because I feel perfectly certain that a
knowledge of my cure by St. Jacobs Oil
will prove the means of relieving hundreds
of sufferers.”
A Connecticut woman sent a feather
cushion to cover a chair at Princeton Col
lege. She is the same woman who went
iuto a crockery store to buy a plate for the
front door of her son-in-law’s new house.
—Burlington Free Press.
About thirty years aero a prominent
physician, Dr. William Hull, discovered a
remedy for diseases of the throat, chest and
lungs, which was of such wonderful effica
cy that it soon gained a wide reputation in
this country. The name of the medicine is
Dr. Wm. Hall’s Balsam for the Lungrs.
A doubtful state —Wondering whether
she wall accept him or not.— Chicago
Tribune.
Clouds come high, but we must have
them.— Merchant Traveler.
THE MARKETS.
Cincinnati, December 8, 1884.
LIVE STOCK—Cattle-Commonfl 50 @ 2 50
Choice butchers 3 75 @ 4 50
HOGS —Common 3 25 @ 3 76
Good packers 4 10 @ 4 26
SHEEP—Good to choice 3 50 @ 4 25
FLOUR—Family 325 @4OO
GRAlN—Wlieat-Longberry red @ 77
No. 2 red @ 75
Corn—No. 2 mixed @ 3714
Oats—No. 2 mixed @ 28
Rye—No. 2 @ 54
HAY—Timothy No. 1 11 00 @ll 50
HEMP-bouble dressed 9 00 @9 25
PROVISIONS—Pork—Mess 12 25 @l2 50
Lard—Prime steam @ 8 75
BUTTER—Fancy Dairy 16 @ 18
Prime Creamery 28 @ 30
FRUIT AND VEGETABLES—
Potatoes, per barr.el 140 @l5O
• Apples, prime, per barrel.. 175 @2 00
NEW YORK.
FLOUR—State and Western. ...$2 30 @ 2 80
Good to Choice 3 60 @650
GRAlN—Wheat—No. 2 Chicago @ 8254
No. 2 red 80 @ 85
Corn—No. 2 mixed @ 56
Oats—mixed 33 @ 38
PORK—Mess @l3 00
LARD—Western steam @ 7 20
CHICAGO.
FLOUR—State and Western....s3 75 @ 4 50
GRAlN—Wheat—No. 2 red @ 74
No. 2 Chicago Spring 72 @ 7254
Corn—No. 2 3334® 36*
Oats—No. 2 @ 2354
Rye @ 5154
PORK—Mi '.. @1165
LARD—St i 680 @6 85
BALTIMORE.
FLOUR—Family $3 50 @4 50
GRAlN—Wheat—No. 2 7854 ® 70
Corn—mixed 4754® <8
Oats—mixed 30 @ 31
PROVISIONS—Pork—Mess .... @l3 00
Lard—Refined @ 844
INDIANAPOLIS.
Wheat —No-2 red $ @ 73
Corn—mixed @ 3354
Oats—mixed @ 26
* LOUISVILLE.
Flour—A No. 1 $4 15 @4 35
GRAlN—Wheat—No. 2 red (ft 78
Corn—mixed @ 38:$
Oats —mixed O. 285^
PORK—mess @ls 56
LARD—steam @ 854
Yoang Men, Reaid This.
The Voltaic Belt Co., of Marshall, Mich.,
offer to send their celebrated Electro-\ ol
taic Belt and other Electric Appliances
on trial for 30 days, to men (young or old)
afflicted with nervous debility, loss of vital*
ity and all kindred troubles. Also for rheu
matism, neuralgia,paralysis,and many oth
er diseases. Complete restoration to health,
vigor,and manhood guaranteed. No risk in
curred, as 80 days' trial is allowed. Write
them at once for illustrated pamphlet, free.
When is a base-ball bat like a society
girl? When it strives to make a hit at
every bail.
Judgment Day January 4, 1885.
We are prepared to prove it by the Word
of God. For information, address
O. B Kail or A. J. Rawson, Woodhull, ill.
Before the wedding—Wooed and won.
Five years after —Wooden one. —New York
Journal.
Pike’s Toothache Drops cure in 1 minute,2sc,
Olcnn’s Sulphur Soap heals and beautifies. 25c.
German Corn Remover kills Corns & Bunions.
An advance agent—The pawnbroker’s
clerk. —Boston Courier.
For Throat Diseases, Coughs, Colds,
etc., effectual relief is found in the use of
“ Brown's Bronchial Troches." Price 25cts.
A leading question —Dispute as to who
goes first. —Boston Post.
If afflicted with Sore Eyes, use Dr. Isaac
Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it. 25c.
JR wojw MJf Bufore 1 have used
vATAKnn»«e bottle of Ely’s
a Cream Balm I am cured
°f catarrh. I could
f n fkM BfV.A’.rii scarcely smell anything
WCA>r PllDreCQuila 1 ' 11 had a headache
Rn2MiClk. U IN I most < lf u ‘e time.-
uenky lili.v, Agent
W3 T^S C Oln r T w American Express to.,
FhSfEVER§- g A Oranailavem Mich.
SM i .have used Ely’s
Cream Balm dry ea
j tarrh (to wliiffc eastern
Kay / j persons are subject wiio
y ' come to live here.) It
Yjfej ias proved ft cure.—B.
Ir W££KB, * )euver ’
(ream II a 1 ua is ft
\ u _ U.SA. J remedy bast»d upon a
Z correct of
W||Y ""rfc. w fc-r? this disease and can 00
* depended upon. 50cts.
at druggists; 60 cts. Dy mail registered. Maniple bottle
bj wall lOcts. Ely Bros., Druggists, Owegu, N. Y.
Hr Lyi ngAgcn iscan’t KELT, and tel
lies on paper and sign if you darG
$60.5 ion
WAGON SCALES.
Beam Box. Tare Beam. Fi eight
Address JONES QF BINGHAMTQM
) BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
Pennsylvania Agricultural Works, York, Pa,
~ - Standard Engines t Saw Sills.
3 - Bond for Illustrated
’ .' i ■
""Add re? Ktinti
u. AWARE
Lorillard’s Climax Ping
bearing a red tin tag; that Lori llard’s
Rose l.enf fine cut; that Lorlllard’s
Navy Clippings, and that Lortllard’s Snails, are
the best and cheapest, quality considered ?
off VC ITGHiNG piles.
H 9 M® m Symptoms Moisture, Intense
a i ISr! ja itching, most at night.
A sure cure.
It Is EUUALLT EFFICACIOUS in CURING ALL
11 it*—— such as Pimples, Blotches, Kasli,
Y YVT Tetter, Itch. Salt Rheum, no mat
lj -ESW. J ter how obstinate or longstanding.
fm CT l © Box, hy mail, 50e Dr.
8 S f fr. A KaiSwAV.vEASox.Phlla.
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CONSUMPTION.
I have a positive remedy (or the above disease; by its
use thousands of cases of the worst kind and of long
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to any sutTerer A Give express and P O. addr ss.
DR. T. A. SLOCUM .181 Pearl St., New York.
Catalan u. A**. SanW or ks, Pit U!»urgE.fli?*iF
liAlir CTIinV For Young Men and Women.
HI Infll. O I ÜBI Thorough and praet: <■ a I in
t : - ’ i strnction given by mall In Book-keep
Bi WHlki mg. Business Forms, Arithmetic, Short*
hand, etc. Terms moderate. Send stamp for pant*
phlet to B. & S. BUSINESS COLLEGE, Buffalo, N. Y.
■ Ok a e% PAYS for a Life Scholarship in the
ftP ft || COLLMAN BUSINESS COM I LK,
Tkyl II Newark, New Jersey. Positions
£fl"v"U for graduates. National patronage. Write
*** ■ n# for Circulars COLEMAN <S» PALMS.
|9 ■ | B% U’ig/ut Wares sent, c.o.P.anywherc. Whole-
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ES MI llteed. B.C.Stp.ehl, 157 Wabash av.. Chicago.
ftfirn V MONTH. Agents Wanted. »0 best,
j \/ni| selling articles In tin-world. 1 sample FREE.
wiuu Address JAY BRONSON. Detroit, Mien.
Vntirwv BI«m M you want to become Tel-
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dm lt is a well-known fact that most of the SH ES |s| ■ K [33 H B BSS fj H jKjk Q Ha B
H Horse amt Cattle Powder sold in this coun- Bji Km ■'IS E fc* gs 4■ Mj HII
H try is worthless; that Sheridan's Condi- II M IL Ki-S jfes HeK \\ gS W
ration Powder is absolutely pure and very I BBS P |j"|s j|| '-A l] |gj| ■
If valuable. Nothing on Earth will ■ s|B WW Sm H |H B i?i ES ri B
H make hens lay like Sheridan’s ■■B El BE® SSI H H mtm *3 H ■ ■
H Condition Powder. Ilose, one teaspoonful to each pint of food. It w ill also prevent and cure
CM ftllfll A Hog Cholera, Ac. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail for
■ rl *Cr fa. Ci ■% #4 y%> cents in stamps. Also furnished in large cans, for
B breeders' use, price $1.00; by mail, sl-'2O. Circulars sent FREE. 1, S. JOHNSON A CO., Boston, Mass.
81 "MATCHLESS”- FRANZ LISZT- "UNRIVALLED”
ORGANS UPRIGHT /3i§fe\
| AWARDED . ' PIANOS fulfil
HIGHEST gre at
AT EVERY GREAT 4
WORLD’S mMsj PUREST,BEST E £*ss
EXHIBITION musical VfW
FOR SEVENTEEN l|l TONES
ONLY AMERICAN ORGAN GREATEST | StTTJt 7/ I
AWARDED SUCH AT AN Y iSri CP A IUPC
JpFSS, 100 STYLESI ,»dßEagH EL -ANr»
$22 b s9oo ~#l|
if CASH EASy PAYMENTS.OH RENTED. %/mSkj
CATALOGUES &, PRICE LISTS FREE.
"MUSICIANS GENERALLY REGARD THEM AS UNEQUALLED ’’-THEODORE THOMAS'.'
I ORGANS and PIA NOS.
THE MASON X, HRMI l!M f!n boston new york. chicacoH
t 1 ni" ITfWtwUll O rIHIIIHIW wO ■ IS4TREMONT ST. A 6 £.I4LS SI UNION 50. 14? WABASH AVt, 1
The Latest Sunday Morning Sermons
OF
Rev. C. H. SPURGEON
—AND—
Rev. DR. TALMAGE,
Remsed bp them j a Portrait and Biography of some Eminent
Person: notes on the Sunday School Lesson; an Exposition
of Unfulfilled Prophecy; Anecdotes; an interesting Serial
6torv, and current events of the week from all parts of the
world, are published EVERY WEEK in
THE CHRISTIAN HERALD
i Nit Sill NS OFO l it TIM FS.
$1.60 per annum Sample Copies free. Agents Wanted.
Address, THE MANAGER, 63 Bible House, New York-
Also, can be procured from all Newsdealer!.
PATENTS Hand Book FREE.
TA I til I 5.cl
jO £ A MONTH and hoard for 3 live Young
An!l '* en or Ladles, In each county. Addre*.
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Tailor Cut Dress Linings.
Absolutely correct In shape, Jaecording ?<J
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Beware ot Worthless Imitation*.
New Music Books!!
THE SONG GREETING,
BvL. 0. Emerson. For High and Normal Sqiroox*.
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Send 60 cents (the ret ail price) for specimen copy.
*6.00 per dozen.
CHILDREN’S SONGS
And How to Sing Them.
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teacher will be at once captivated bv the charming,
genial character of t be songs which are 84 In number.
By Ws. L. Tomlins.
Teneher’* Edition, 15c., Sl.SOperdozcn.
Scholar's Edition, 30c., S3.tH» per dozen.
DOW’S COLLECTION
Of Responses and Sentences fo»
Church Service.
By Howard M. Dow.
Just the book 1 needed by every choir that, has short
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* Send st am 11 to Lvnn. Mas-., for pamphlet. Letters of
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PATTERNS OF ANY SIZE.
UNPARALLELED OFFER!
DEMOREST’S T
THE BESI
Of all tho Miiffiizines.
Illustrated toith Original Steel tlnejrfir
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Commencing with November, 1884, each Magadue will
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Send twenty cents for the current number with Pattern
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W. Jennings Dr-morest Publisher, 17 E. 14th St,, NewY irk.
Bold by all Newsdealers and Postuiastera.
11 A tfATin Treated and cured without the kpife.
I uni r K Book on tn'atnfent sent free. Adn-ess
UIU!UIJiI i' 1.. TIINII.M.II, Aurora. KaneCo.,lll.
A. B. FARQUHAR, Manufacturer, York, Pa.
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SAW MILLS AXD ENGINES A SPECIALTY."
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WHEN nniTINC TO ADVERTISER*
pieaae uy y ou ww lire advei U.euieul |q
thin gager.