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UNDER BONDS.
A Tilt ol Advice to a Defeated Presidential
Candidate.
“Mr. Cleveland’s administration is
under bonds, 1 ke his party,” says Mr.
Blaine, in the New York Tribune. Yes,
bonds of union wiCh the people's in
terests, which it has cheerfully assumed
and which it has not the slightest in
tention of breaking; bonds of friend
ship with every measure that tends to
promote the public weal, and bonds of
confidence with the Nation which gives
it such unstinted support and encour
agement. The American people knew
too well the flimsy nature of the bonds
Mr. Blaine was willing to furnish in
order to get into the White House, and
they preferred the more substantial
guarantees offered bv Mr. Cleveland.
The correctness of their judgment has
been proved already, although the ad
ministration they chose is scarcely more
than a week ol I. Economy has taken
the place of wilful waste of the people's
money, and although Mr. Blaine
affects to sneer at the good work
in this direction which* has been
inaugurated at the White Hou o. it
has received general commendation
and hearty indorsement. Economy,
in Mr. Blaine's eyes, is nothing but “po
litical clap-trap, or a device to escape
the provisions of the Civil Service act”
While he may be excused for his ig
norance of something so foreign to his
notions of the administration of public
affairs as economy, he should not insult
the intelligence of the people by sneering
at it and giving it a false interpretation.
I >ne would eonclude from liis ill-natured
flings in the Tribune of every appoint
ment made by the President or lus Cab
inet that Mr. Blaine has made up his
mind not to be pleased with the new
Administration. This is to be regretted
solely on his own account, as he must
be prepared to be unhappy for a very
long lime, in fact, for tiie period of his
natural life. The people will not be
inclined to change from a Democratic
Administration, having found it so ad
mirably suited to tlrem. He can get
along without a crowd of hang
ers on in sinecure positions, and
how every one in the public seiwice
should be expected to earn his salary by
honest work. His waj’ would have been
so different had he the handling of the
people's money. No reduction of cleri
cal force for him; no regard for the
National treasury as a sacred trust
Hence his incessant fire of objections in
the columns of the Tribune. As his
friend Burchnrd has just been retired
with the soothing title of pastor eme
ritus, can not Mr. Blaine be induced to
remain in the obscurity assigned him
by the Nation under the appropriate
designation of scold emeritus? We
have gently reminded him several times
that this is Mr. Cleveland’s administra
tion, not his. But he will insist upon
flinging himself every day into the col
umns of the Tribune. It is a sad sight,
especially as there is no padded cell in
politics to prevent a defeated candidate
from doing himself grievous injury.—
Albany Argus.
A TWO-EDGED SWORD.
The Charge of Unequal Representation
Had Better Not Re Ur egged.
In their frantic endeavors to convince
the country of the necessity of depriving
the South of her rights of representa
tion in Congress, Mr. Blaine’s friends
are constantly stultifying themselves.
The Philadelphia Press, for instance,
calls the electoral and representa
tive inequalities between the North and
the South “monstrous injustice,” be
cause the North, with more Ilian
double the vote of the South, lias only
one-tliird more representatives. It says
that in tho North the average vote for a
representative is 34,507, while in tho
South it is only 24,747. Tho table
which the Blaine organ publishes to
prove its statements contain certain
statistics which are not commented
upon by it. For instance, in tho Bc-
Rtiblican States of Rhode Island and
evada, the average vote for a repre
sentative is 1ti,375 for the former Slato
and 12,693 for the latter. According
u> its logic the State of New York, with
its 1,167,153 voters, should have double
its present representation in Congress.
In its blind zeal to carry out
Mr. Blaine’s leveling views, his
organ would obliterate State lines
and place all tho power of the
Government in the hands of the more
densely populated States and deprive
others of the right of representation.
In such a case a great many Republican
districts would suffer, and a great many
of Mr. Blaine's friends would be left out
in the cold. This crusade against the
South is indefensible from any point ot
view. That section can never forget
the misery and suffering it endured
from the carpet-bag Governments
foisted upon it by the Republican party,
and it knows that its only hope in being
allowed to pursue its present course of
industry and development is through
wise, patriotic, Democratic influences.
Ibis solidly Democratic because it has
experienced only spoliation, bankruptcy
and degradation under frhe reconstruc
tion methods of a Republican adminis
tration. The charge of inequal repre
sentation is a two-edged sword, which
Mr. Blaine's friends had better not
handle, lest they hurt themselves more
than the South.— Washington Post.
GENERAL JOHN A. LOGAN.
One Republican Foliticlan Who Is Alto
gether Too Fievious.
General John A. Logan has had a
good deal to disturb his equanimity
within the past few months, but in view
of the fact that he is still running for
office—or is supposed to be, for he still
has feeble hopes of being returned to
his old seat in the United States Senate
—he should restrain himself. If not
too previous he is too impulsive, as was
instanced in his spitting tobacco juice
in an opponent’s eye during the, to him,
exciting Presidential campaign. And
now, in a public meeting in Chicago,
lie has denounced Mayor Carter Harri
son as “a vile, infamous liar, a poltroon
and a coward.” The professional pur
ist, more sensitive on the subject of
good Knglish than General Logan
is credited with being, would object to
“vile” and “infamous” as superogatory
prefixes to “liar” and would con
aider poltroon and coward superfluous
lv synonymous. But General Logan
was so pleased with the richness of
his vocabulary that he repeated the re
mark, so that “the press might get it
correctly and he might not be misun
derstood.” Meanwhile, at another
meeting, Mayor Harrison was repeat
ing his charges against Logan and
reading an affidavit from a member of
the Legislature in corroboration. The
general public knows I-*tlo and cares
less about the dispute between the
Mayor and the ex-Senator, but the pub
lic has reason to congratulate itself
that John A. Logan—whether or not
he succeeds in securing his seat—will
not be the presiding oll'ujer over that
body of gentlemen, the United States
Senate, next winter, and it is surmised
that two or three more cool seasons
will come round before he is.— N. Y.
World.
REPUBLICAN SPOILSMEN.
Not Posted or Making False Statements
Knowingly.
The Republican organs are endeavor
ing to give the impression that the rush
on Washington' by the Democratic of
fice-seekers is quite unprecedented. They
are simply not posted or are making
false statements knowingly. Lincoln
and his Cabinet, it is said, were so
bored and badgered that they hardly
had time to eat and sleep, and Mr.
Lincoln, oppressed with the feeling that
tiie country was on the verge of disso
lution, tearfully exclaimed: “I seem to
be sitting in one end of a great temple,
importuned to let apartments, while
the temple is fiercely burning at the
other end.” It took the battle of Bull
Run, with its train of disasters, to drive
these hungry hordes of Northern Re
publicans out of Washington back to
their homes. When they thought the
rebels were advancing upon the city
from the South this gang of office-beg
gars made a masterly advance due
North, where there were none to molest
nor make them afraid. It was Repub
lican office-seekers that cost poor Gar
field his life, and _ Republican office
seeker who conm itted the bloody deed.
Grant was nearly worried to death by
the same old crov. d that nearly drove
Mr. Lincoln into the Potomac or a luna
tic asylum, and poor Hayes stood aghast
when the crowd camo who by lying,
fraud, perjury and various kinds of ras
cality had finally forced him into the
Presidency. Colonel McClure, of tho
Philadelphia Times , is good authority on
this point, and he says: “Any who can
recall the Republican revolution of 1861
must justly appreciate the exaggerated
pictures drawn by discomlitted organs.
Tho rush for office now exhibited in
Washington docs not approach the Re
publican rush for place in 1861. Even
when civil war was imaging, the city, the
Departments, and every available nook
and corner of Washington, were filled
with the most importunate spoilsmen.”
Tho clamor at that time made by the
Republicans was unutterably disgrace
ful. If an officeholder was a Democrat
ho iiad to get out. Colonel McClure
concludes as follows: “Of the many
more than 100,000 Federal placemen all
are of one political faith, and most of
them holding place as a reward for
active partisan efforts. There are a few
exceptions, but the Democrats in Fed
eral place in any community are like
angels’ visits, few aud far between.
Now they have triumphed over the
party that has relentlessly proscribed
them, and as Dcmocratie and Republic
an human nature are about the .same in
quality, tho Democrats will clamor foi
the spoils, but they must far surpass
any demonstration of placemen yet
made to equal the eruption of the im
portunate placemen of 1861.” Indiana
Stale Sentinel.
COMMON-SENSE REFORM.
A Few Forcible Remarks upon a Much-
Mooted Subject.
That there is a crying need for Civil-
Service reform none but the blindest
spoilsmen will deny. Not mere party
loyalty, but faithfulness and capability
are in demand in every branch of the
Government. Tho purpo-e of the
civil service is to serve not a party, but
the people without regard to party.
But while this is true, indeed, because
it is true, it should bo known that
Civil-Service reform does not mean the
retention in oflice of oliicials who sim
ply happen to be in oflice at the time
of a change of Administration. For
the retention of a horde of partisan
Republicans, who were given public
otfiees without regard to their special
fitness for the discharge of the duties
with which they were intrusted, would
be a gross violation of the first princi
ple of Civil-Service reform—efficiency.
In tho South, in particular, has effi
ciency been notoriously disregarded,
and the Federal offices throughout this
region are filled to-day by an army of
appointees who, with fare exceptions
exceptions so rare that they can hardly
affect the just judgment that must be
passed upon the whole body—are unfit
to bear the responsibil ties of public of
fice. To think of keeping these men in
plaee for no other reason than because
they happen to be in place would be to
give real civil-service reforn# a stunning
blow from which it would be liable in
many years to recover. Such a policy
would not only be fatal to the success
and the usefulness of the Administra
tion, but it would effectually discourage
thousands of honest and earnest sup
porters of reform. If years of steady
and persistent efforts to rid the South
of the heavy and in quitous burden
of an office-holding class composed
of inefficient partisans were to
be requited by the perpetuation
of the power of an element so offensive
to the general public as the present Fed
eral office-holders in every Southern*
State, the effect of such unjust and un
reasonable action would be to paralyze
the patriotic energies of hundreds of
thousands of our citizens, and to dash
to the ground the long-sustained hopes
of purer and more serviceable govern
ment. To outrage in this manner the
popular will and to commit the act un
der the cloak of civ 1-service reform
would be to make the very name of re
form “a by-word and a hiss ng.” But
we feel sure from what we have seen
and heard of the character of the Pres
ident that his strong common sense
will forcibly show itself in all bis pub
lic acts, and in none more than n those
involving questions of Civil-Service Re
form.— Richmond {fa.) Slate.
CRUSHED TO DEATH.
#
Tottering Walls Play Havoc With Pitta*
burgh Firemen.
Two Men Fatally and a Number Seriously
Injured.
' r.TTsnensr?, April 27.—8 y the collapse
of a building during a fire on Third Avenue
at 11 o’clock to-night two men were killed,
four seriously injured and number of
others slightly hurt About 11 o’clock the
four-story building, No. 90 Third Avenue,
occupied jointly by James Peters & Co., as
a paper warehouse, and E. E. Edmunson &
Co., furniture storehouse, was completely
gutted by fire, entailing a loss of
about $60,000, fully covered by insur
ance. The fire started on the third floor,
and owing to the combustible material
with which the building was stocked, spread
rapidly. The Fire Department worked
heroically, and had the flames under con
trol before midnight, when the walls gave
way under the heavy weight of the water
soaked paper, and came down with a ter
rible crash, burying nine firemen in the
ruins. Their Nelson Woods,
John Goetzinger, William Carroll, John
Killian, William McKolvey, Fred Neutz,
Jno. Jones, Charles Stick and Gus DotL The
w T ork of rescue commenced at once and at
least one hundred willing hands plied vig
ordusly for over an hour to remove the
debris, which completely covered the un
fortunate men. All the. men but Nelson
Woods were taken out. He is still in the
ruins, and probably dead beneath the
walls. Goetzinger presented a pitiable
sight. He had sustained a fracture of the
skull, and had several ribs broken. He
will die. Carroll was internally injured,
can not recover. Kilhan was taken out in
an unconscious state. The nature of his
injuries, w r iiich are supposed to be serious,
have not yet been ascertained. Others
were badly, though not fatally, injured.
HORRIBLE SCENE.
Finding: till* foriwin of the Victim, of A
Muon-Slldp.
Denver, Col., April 27.—The rescuing
party which left Leadville early yesterday
morning for the scene of the terrible calam
ity at Homestake mine reached its destina
tion at eight o’clock. Several excavations
were made before the cabins could be lo
cated. The first one found con
tained provisions, etc.; no bodies were
found here. The bunk-house was next
reached,! where eleven bodies were found.
One body stood erect, with the head thrown
forward as if listening, the whole position
indicating apprehension. Near him lay
one of his companions in the bunk, face
downward and arms crossed under the
head. Several logs lay on the body.
Three bodies were found in the upper bunk
clasped in each other’s arms, and so strong
ly interlocked as to require the efforts
of six men to separate them. One
man was found beside his bunk in an at
titude of prayer. In another part of the
cabin were two bodies crushed between
fallen timbers. The other bodies were
found lying about the cabin as if thrown
from the bunks by a shock. Owing to the
fact that all of the faces we're covered half
an inch with mold the features could not
be recognized. No doubt death was
caused by suffocation in nearly every case.
A clock and watch were found which
had stopped precisely at half-past three.
From letters and papers found it
is believed the slideoccurred about the 29th
of February. The report that some of the
men had been seen a fortnight ago proved
to be without foundation. The bodies were
brought to Leadville. The victims are:
Martin B. Borden, Sylvester Borden, Hor
ace W. Matthews, Joseph Matthews, John
Lock, John Burns, Chas. Richards, Christ
Harvey, Robt. Campbell and John Burnes.
V ■«'
TJ>e of Postage Rates.
Washington, April 27.—The Postmaster
General has issued a circular to cover the
new law applicable to the reduction of
postage on second class matter, and the
increase of the unit of weight from a half
ounce to one ounce on first class matter.
That is to say, on and after the Ist of July,
1885, all domestic first class matter sent
through the mails, including drop letters
at letter-carrier offices, nisst. be charged
with postage at the rate of two cf its per
ounce or fraction thereof instead [>f two
cents per half ounce or fraction thereof.
Drop letters at other than letter
carrier offices to be charged at the
rate of one cent per ounce or fraction
thereof. This change in the standard of
weight will also apply to first-class matter
addressed to Canada, but not to matter
addressed to other foreign countries. To
provide for wants that may arise from the
change in the rate of second-class postage,
the department has decided to issue a
newspaper and periodical postage stamp
of the denomination of one cent, the de
sign and color of which will be the same as
those of the present series of newspaper
aud periodical stamps of the denomination
of from two to ten cents. Stamps of this
aew denomination will be ready for issue
by June 1.
Another Fight Reported.
Brussels, April 27.—The Independence
Beige publishes, under reserve, but from
an excellent source, a report of a fresh bat
tle between the Russians and Afghans, in
which the former were defeated and re
tired, having met with heavy loss.
London, April 27.—The St. Petersburg
correspondent of the Daily News says: “I
am informed on good authority of another
engagement on the Afghan frontier. Of
1,700 Russians who engaged the Afghans
nearly all were killed.”
Delaware Peach Crop.
Wilmington, Del., April 27.—Specials
from all over the peach-growing districts
af the Peninsula concur in predicting an
unusually large crop, unless some unfore
seen or unexpected disaster shall occur.
-■ # ♦
—“Hello, old man, where are yon
bound?” inquired the conduetor of an
acquaintance in the smoking-car. “Go
ing back East,” was the response,
rather sourly. “Have you quit rail
roading out in Idaho?” “Yes, I have.”
“What’s the matter?” “Oh, I don’t
want to run a locomotive in a eountry
where towns die off so fast that in the
place where we get our dinners one
day the next day we stop as usual and
look all around, but not a shanty is to
be seen. I like my dinners regularly, I
do, and no more Idaho ia mine,
please.”— Chicago Herald,
~ -A Yf lid-eyed man entered a Chatham
street pawnshop and wished to see some
pistols. “I sells you dot pistol for two
dollar,” said the clerk. “I’ll take it.
Load it up, and before another sunrise
I’ll put an end to my miserable exist
ence.” “Vat? You shoot yourself mit
dot pistol?" “Yes,” said the wild-eyed
man desperately. “Mr. Isaacstein,”
called the clerk to the proprietor in the
back room, “der skentlemans vants a
two-dollar pistol to kill himself mit.
Vat shall I do?” “Seharge him five
dollar.”— N. Y. Sun ,
The St. Louis (Mo.) Post-Dispatch says,
that Mrs. Phoebe Rice, 1208 Madison street,
a sister of Hon. H. Clay Sexton, Chief St.
Louis Fire Depart., had been a sufferer
from inflammatory rheumatism for seven
years; the muscles of her hands and limbs
were contracted and she used crutches. By
a single application of St. Jacobs Oil she
was benefited instantaneously, aud Anally
completely cured.
You may suppose that tremble Is brew
ing when everybody is mad as hops.—
Chicago Tribune.
No depressing effects from Red Star
Cough Cure; no nausea; no reaction* no
constipation. _
WnY is an escaping prisoner like a mu
sical cat. Because he scales the waul.—
Golden Days.
* * * * Delicate diseases of either sex,
aowever induced, radically cured. Address,
World’s Dispensary Medical Association,
Buffalo, N. Y.
■ »*
There will be three Quakers in the next
Congress; undoubtedly they will be great
Friends. ~
Pike’s Toothache Drops cure In 1 minute,2sc.
Glenn's SuliJhvr Soap heals and beautifies. 25c.
German Corn Remover kills Corns s Bunions.
“ They’re wearing wagons now” was a
Vermont little girl’s way of announcing
the exit of sleighs.
Woman’s Face.
“What furniture can give such finish to
a room, as a tender woman’s face,” asks
George Elliott. Not any, we are happy to
answer, provided the glow of health tem
pers the tender expression. The pale,
anxious, bloodless face of the consumptive,
or the evident sufferings of the dyspeptic,
induce feelings of Sorrow and grief on our
part and compell us to tell them of Dr.
Pierce’s “ Golden Medical Discovery,” the
sovereign remedy for consumption and
other diseases of the respiratory system as
well as dyspepsia and other digestive
troubles. Sold everywhere.
A LAND slide is the most significant
movement in real estate. — N. 0. Picayune.
Best Goods are Put in Smallest Parcels.
The old proverb is certainly true in the
case of Dr. Pierce’s “ Pleasant Purgative
Pellets,” which are little, sugar-wrapped
parcels, scarcely larger than mustard
seeds, containing as much cathartic power
as is done up in the biggest, most repulsive
looking pill. Unlike the big pills, however,
they are mild and pleasant in their opera
tion—do not produce griping pains, nor
render the bowels costive after using.
[ Goat’s milk ought to make good butter.
- ~St. Paul Herald.
Yonng Men, Read This.
The Voltaic Belt Co., of Marshall, Mich.,
offer to send their celebrated Electro-Vol
taic Belt arul other Electric Appliances
on trial for 30 days, to men (young or old)
afflicted with nervous debility, loss of vital
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curred, as 60 days’ trial is allowed. Write
them at once for illustrated pamphlet, free.
p Where time is money—at a watch fac
tory.—Boston Post.
A Book Free: on the Liver, its Diseases and
Cure. Dr. Sanford, 231 Broadway, New York.
Raisins are sometimes like prophets—
for instance, when they aro stoned.—
Lowell Courier.
If afflicted with Sore F.yes, use Dr. Tsana
Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it. 250.
' Acrostic —A rafter. Don’t give it away.
—Somerville Journal.
Coughs. For Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat,
etc., use Brown’s Bronchial Troches.
Sold only in boxes. Price, 25 cents.
m WARNER’S -p*.
TippecanoE
[ocpyriqhtid].
TONIC
THE CAMPAIGN TOKEN OF 1840.
[copyrighted,l
BITTER. S.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
H. H. WARNER & CO, Rochester, N.Y.
FOR
ALL STOMACH
DISORDERS.
*l.O 0 A BOTTLE.
H. H. WARNER & CO., Rochester, N. Y.
Rev. W. S. BRATHWAITE, Red Bank, N. J„ was
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Warner’s Tippecanoe, The Best.
FOR
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UNEQUALED.
*I.OO A BOTTXjE.
H. H. WARNER & CO., Rochester, N. Y.
HON. D. D. S. BROWN. Rochester, N. Y„ used
Warner's Tippecanoe, The Best, for stomach de
rangements. anu was astonished at the good It did him.
WILHOFT’S FEVER AND AGUE TONIC
®A warranted cure for all diseases
caused by malarial poisoning of
the blood, such as Chills and Fever,
Fever and Son Pains, Dumb
Chills, Intermittent, Remittent,
Billons and all other Fevers caused
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and best cure for enlarged Spleen
(Fever Cake), General Debility
and Period!"- Neuralgia. %W For Sale by all Druggists.
CHA3. F. KEELER, Wop., Chicago, 111.
CT JACOBS QI!
* 1
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gu, PjS Qj | H Rurkarho, Headache, Toothache,
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THE CHARLES A.VtM. KLLIi CO., Hnltimore,s!arvlftml,L\B.A.
MUSIC BOOKS
—FOR—
SUNDAY SCHOOLS,
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oonv WOrSnlpi Book of marked merit, ad
vanced music and words, and with the qualities most
esteemed at Chautauqua and other similar places of re
sort by prominent Sunday School Workers. Truly a
first-class collection of excellent new hymns and music.
By I*. O. EMERSON nnd W. F. SIIEItWIN.
Price, 35 cts., *3) per hundred.
Singing on the Way. and Dr. j'! P.Ylolbrook.
A truly worthy and good book for Sunday School or
Prayer Meeting, with 175 Hymns and Tunes of the best
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Price, 35 cts., $3.60 per dozen.
Eraeh ITlauiafc A Song Book for the Infant
■ 16311 riUWSfSi ChASSKSof Sunday Schools.
One may search long before finding so thoroughly
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hymnß and tuneß, not babyish. hut sweet, reverent
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By EMMA PITT.
Prtefi, 23 cts., $2.40 per dozen.
Other very successful Sunday School Song Books are
Eight and Rite, (35 cts.) R. M. Mclntosh.
Beacon Eight, (3)cts.) Tenney and Hoffman.
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White Kobe*, (30 cts.) Abbey and Munger.
Good News, (35 cts.) R. M. Mclntosh.
Any Book. Mailed for Retail Price.
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ipyiiFim
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toget her with a V A LUAftLETKE ITISE on tills disease
to an v sufferer.
DR. T. A. BLOCUM. 181 Pearl £t., New York.
DROPSY
TREAT flu FREE. I guarantee the removal of
at least two-thirds of nil symptoms In ten days. Rad
ical relief from first dose. Send for Trentlse. Testi
monials, etc., free: ten days’treatment free by mail
to all patients. 11. 11. GREEN, M. !»., 5o
.Tones Avenue, Atlanta, Georgia.
460/LADY AGENTS permanent
sSSB&Tm employment and good salary
) t selling C|ueeii City Skirt and
Stock ingSuppurterM. Sample
m JLM outfit fr«*c. Address Cincinnati
Suspender Co., Cincinnati, O.
A MONTH
kAA m our ftotKls. No capital required, balarv paid
monthly. Expanses in advance. Full par
ticulars FREE. We mean what wo Bay. fcjtantlartl Silver
Ware Co., Washington St.. Boston, Mass.
OAT A CSDRJ My son having tried various
ba BA El remedies and the most emi
nent physicians without benefit, finally used thlsslm
pleremedy and now Iscured. Wfllsend 1 package tree,
bv mall, for2sc. C. Rains, a Gates Av., Brooklyn,N.Y.
Sfk m A FATS for a Life Scholarship In the
IP il I| COLKMAH BUSINESS COLLEGE,
All 11 Newark, New Jersey. Positions
IB’TIj for graduates. National pat run age. Write
w B w for Circulars. COLEMAN A PALMS.
# R. U. AWARE
Lorillard’s Climax Plug
bearing a red tin tag; that Lorlllatd’s
Iloee l.enffine cut; that Lorillard’s
Navy Clippings, and that LorlUard’s Suulls, are
the best aud cheapest, quality considered ?
ASK THE OLD FOLKS WHAT IT MEANS.
[ It Is a well-known fact that most of the H H M■ jP Sara ■■mm ■■ ■ B |a | m
Horse and Cattle Powder sold in this conn- HHfU Ha H c| | fex KSB fj fiH If
try is worthless; that Sheridan's Cotnli- Elia ffl mS aLm |HLBi BL, MB wL H H CB
tlon Powder Is absolutely pure and verv Ipl II BKh H" B® Bug VA *
valuable. Nothing on Earth will |lfl 1 H BJE W [
make hens lay like .Sheridan’s I ■■■■■ BHi ■■■ll W Mill I
Condition Powder. Dose, one teaspoonful to each pint of food. It will also prevent and cure
jj |f\lf fC AS VA |J | ET D A H°g Cholera, Ac. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail for
—I VIV SEAeV wil vhCHHf 25 cents in stamps. Also furnished in large cans, for
breeders' use, price $1.00; by mail, $1.20. Circulars sent FREE. I. S. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Maas.
PI I gkl B’o. Jonathan’s Jokes
is ™ wi H Wpages,lllustrated Sent,
0 '.Co S 3 MB Postpaid,forTwelveCents.
KueUur l'obUahliig liouae, Z'J aI; Beekmaa St., New l ark.
Many a Lady
is beautiful, all but her skin;
and nobody has ever told
her how easy it is to put
beauty on the skin. Beauty
on the skin is Magnolia
Balm.
A Dangerous Case.
* * * Rochester, June 1,1882. “Ten
Years ago 1 was attacked with the most
Intense aud deathly pains in my back and
— Kidneys.
“ Extending to the end of my toes and 1
to my brain!
“ which made me delirious!
“From agony. ,
“ It took three men to hold me on my bed
at times! j
• “ The Doctors tried in vain to relieve me/!
but to no purpose. ~J
Morphine and other opiates/
“ Had no effect! ,
“ After two months I was given up to die w
"Whenmy wife ,
heard a neighbor tell what Hop Bitters had
bone for her, she at once got and gave raff
some. The first dose eased my brain and
seemed to go limiting through my system
for the pain. , ,
The second dose eased me so much that R
slept two hours, something’ 1 had not done for
two months. Before I had used five bottles, I
was well and at tvork as hard as any maa
could, for over three weeks; but 1 worked too
hard for my strength, and taking a lrard cold,
I was taken with the most acute and painlul
rheumatism all through my system that ever
wrfvi known.
■■j called the doctors again and after several
weeks, they left me a cripple on crutches for
life, as they said. I mot a friend and told him.
my case, and he said Hop Bitters had cured Ulrai
and would cure me. I poohod at him, but ho
was so earnest 1 was Induced to use them again.:
Ih less than four weeks I throw away my
crutches and went to work lightly and kept on
using the bitters lorftvc Weeks, untill becamo
as weii as any man living, and have been so
for six years since.
It has also cured my wife, who had been
sick for years ; and has kept her and my
children, well and healthy with from two to
three bottles per year. There is no need to
be sick at all if these bitters are used.
J. J, Berk, Ex-Supervisor.
“ Tha* poor invalid wife.
“Sister!
“ Mother!
“Or daughter!
“Can be made the picture of health I
“with a few bottles of Hop Bitters!
“ Will you let than suffer f’
tw None genuine without a bunch of growl
Hops on the white label. Shun all the vile,pois
on us stuff with “Hop”or“Hops’’in their name
Human Endurance.
It is an acknowledged fact that man
the power of endurance to a
greater degree than any of the lower
animals. Professional pedestrians havo
been known to walk an average of one
hundred miles per day for six consecu
tive days, which would be a wonderful
accomplishment for a horso, and sur
pass all the known records of that use
ful animal. Of course a man possessing'
the power of endurance to its fullest
extent must be in perfect health. One
who is troubled with weak urinary and
digestive organs, whose pulse is irregu
lar, whose heart palpitates, and who
feels a sdnse of burdensome fatigue
after the least exertion, would be very
unwise to compete in a pedestrian
contest. Should you suffer from a
want of endurance, you can regain ro~
bust health aud strength by using DR.
GUYSOTT’S YELLOW DOCK AND SARSA
PARILLA. This remedy has saved thou
sands of weak, nervous, debilitated,
rickety head-aching mortals to lives of
usefulness and the full enjoyment of
perfect health. Tt removes all blood
impurities, aches, pains, sores, pimples,
etc., and assists nature in controling
and supporting a harmonious routine
of bodily functions, so essential to
every one’s physical welfare.
- »
Worlds of Good.
Probably no other woman in the World
receives so many “ letters of thanks” as
Lydia E. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass. Mrs.
B ,of Enfield, N. H., says: “I will
simply say that your Vegetable Compound
is all you recommend it to be. It has done
me Worlds of good.” Another lady writes
from Ottawa as follows: “ I have just to
day bought the seventh bottle of your
Vegetable Compound, have used two boxes
of Pills and several packages of your Sana
tive Wash, and think it but right to tell
you how much good I derived from your
medicines. They are a regular God-sencL
All the pains and aches have almost disap
peared, my stomach is much stronger, too,
and I feel myself improved every way.”
lam an old man. For 28 years Isu (Tered with ulcer,
on my right leg as the result of typhoid fever. Ampu
tation was suggested as the ouly means of preserving
life. The doctors could do nothing for me, and
thought I must die. For three years I never had a
shoe on. Swift's Specific has made a permanent cure
anil added ten years to my life
Wm. R. Reed, Ga}n<4vllle, Hall Co., Ga.
I have taken Swift’s Specific for blood poison con
tracted at a medical college at a dissection, while t
was a medical student. lam grateful to say that It
pave me a speedy and thorough cure nfter my parent,
had spent hundreds of dol acs for treatment.
Augustus Wen del. M. D., Newark, N. J.
Swift’s Specific Is entirely vegetable. Treatise ooi
Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free.
The Swift Specific Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.. oT
159 W. 23d St., N. Y.
CLOCKS ESE&syg CLOCKS
(Ifirn A MONTH. Agents Wanted. 90 best
A/nil selling articles In the world. I sample FR KK.
vtUU Address JAY BRONSON. Detroit, Mich.
Yai inrr BAlan W you want, to become Tel*
J UUIIJ rntJII egri.ph Operators, and
be guaranteed employmeut.address P. W.Rea m. Aila.O.
nilTnnn Treated and cun% without the knife, j
l.ultl.F.n Book on treatment sent free. Adares.'
UniIUUU F.L.POND.M.D.. Aurora. Kane Co, 111,;
A.N.K—E. ~ 1028 - |
Men Think
ley know all about Mustang Lin
iment. Few do. Not to know is
not to have.