I PLATTSMOtfTlt WEEKLY IfERALl), 'TI!tMSDA JULY SI, 1887. I 1 FLORENCE AND SOME NOTABLE FORENTINE8. (BY UKV. U. O. OHAS8MUKCK.) A great city is a great poem, a poem whose utory unfolds through tlie ages, and whose characters are striving ami suffering human hearts. Unheard often amid the rattle of its busy streets there aro plaintive undertones of rarest music Beneath its outer life there is an inner one in which tragedy and passion, pity and enterprise, wrong and sorrow, are the daily actors. If, moreover, the city has a history, if it has passed through those sharp transitions which wring the hearts of nations as they wring the hearts of men; if it kindle with the memories of a glorious past, or, amid present sorrow, glows with the prophecy of a more glor ious future, the future, the melody be comes more audible and strong. With this intent let me lead you for a while to what, until lately, was the capi tal of the new kingdom of Italy beauti ful for situation, affluent in annals of the former times, far renowned in song. There are some pictures, world-wide in their reputation, the first sight of which disappoints the eye, and it is only by the study of their various parts that you grow into perception of their won drous beaty. Of such is Florence. Its river is the" golden Amo"only by a strong poetical license, and its narrow streets, Unfinished churches, and massive prison like houses, look sombre to the stranger oftcr the artistic symmetry of Milan, and the superb palaces of Genoa. Each day's Bojourn, however, lessens the impression of disappointment until it is not difficult to emulate the Tuscan enthusiasm for "Fircnzc la bella." The loveliness of . Plorcnce does not consist so much in sep arate gems as in the extiuisit harmony of the whole. If you wish to see it to per fection, fix upon such a day as Florence owes the sun, and climbing the hill of Bcllos Guard o, or past the stages of the Via Crucis to the church of San Miniato, look forth upon the 6cene before you. You trace the course of the Arno from the distant mountains on the right, through the heart of the city, winding along the fruitful valley toward Pisa. The city is beneath you, "like a pearl set in emerald." From the midst of it rises Brunelleschi's dome, high above all the minor spires which flash back the noon tide rays. The hill behind the city is Fiesole. This is where Milton and Galileo met, neither of them then blind, but both lieirs of such darkness as only purges the the vision of the inner eye; patricians of tlie nobility of Genius, whose meeting wasrander than that of monarchs on some field of the cloth of gold. On the extreme right, dimly discernible, is the sanctuary of Vallombrosa, hidden in its wealth of beecli and pine some twenty miles away. Far to the left is Pistoja, with the pillar of Catiline, and the ma jestic Apennines close up to view. All colors are in the landscape, and all sounds arc in the air. The hills look almost heathery. The sombre olive and funeral cypress blend with the graceful acacia and the clasping vine. The hum of in sect and the carol of bird chime with the blithe voices of men; while dome, tower, mountains, the yellow riyer, the quaint bridges, spire?, palaces, gardens and the cloudless heavens overhanging, make up a panorama on which to gaze in trance of rapture, until the spirit wearies from the exceeding beauty of the vision. Florence is said to have sprung out of tle ruins of the ancient Fiesoli. It is supT056 haye been originally the place whei e tlie markets of Fiesoli were held, the co tnmercial spirit of the age being now slo w to perceive that there were few er facilities for barter on the mountain Enmmifc t uan on the fertile plain. In pursuance of the wise policy of the time, upon which after aes have been unable to improve, it was speedily colonized from Rome. The dwellings of the trad ers gathered other dwellin round them It was politic to dwell in co mpany, both for accommodation and for dt'fense- By cultivation, also, the earth is cleared from many noxious vapors, th' ftir is purified from the kindling of hous ehold fires, and so places formerly unhealthy become fitted for the habitation of man- In the sixth century the new city was destroyed by Totila, king of the Ostro goths. It remained in ruins fr two Lundred and fifty years, when it was re built by Charlemagne. From this it grew in number? and influence; not rapidly, because of the oppression of its many rul ers. Its history for a long series of years is but a record of the alternate triumphs and misfortunes of Guelph and Ghibel line, Bianchi and Neri, Cerchi and Dona ti. As we read these stormy Florentine an najs, and remember that those of other nations can f uruish pa rallels, it is humil iating to think how long great nations linger in the swaddling-bands and prim ers of their childhood. The logic of the fist is a very juvenile branch of study, and is resorted to only until boys and nations become wise enough for the logic of the brain v The history of Florence does not need ' to be followed until about the end of the fourteenth century. Cosmo de Medici awDeared upon the etatre. lie was born day of St Cosmo, in the year 1 s early years were full of troti' , . tIo discipline prepared him for t' 3 ; :rnment. He learned in cap tivity t: uile the prudence which gain ed Iiitn a fortune and enabled him to wield an influence over a distracted state. admired both by friends and enemies for his consumate skill. He was as gener ous as he was wealthy, and as moderate as he was powerful. At the head or the state he remembered that he was of the people, a mighty ruler, he had sagacity to see that the strength of his power lay in the discretion with which he used it; and amid a people so given to change as to be proverbs of inconstancy, he held his position until a generation had faded by his side. lie encouraged the learned to make lForcnce their home, fur he had that prescient wisdom which foretold by how much the glory of letters transcends and will survive the glory of war. Some of his sayings are notable as indicating a sprightly mind, with some portion of the gift of prophecy. The rebels who had been banished gave him to understand that they "were not dreaming," lie said he believed it for he had "robbed them of their sleep." Rinaldo, his great rival, to warn him sent the enigmatical mes sage that "the hen has laid." His only reply was that "she did ill to lay so far from her nest." After his own return from banishment he was told by some citizens that he was injuring the city by driving out of it nobles and monks. His answer was "it is better to injure a city than to ruin it; two yards of rose-colored cloth will make a gentleman, and it re quires something more to direct a gov ernment than to play with a string of beads." In his later years he suffered much from bodily infirmity, and from apprehension lest the glory would de part from the Florence which he loved so well. As his illness increased be shut his eyes as he quaintly said, "to get them in the way of it;" and so died in the zenith of his power, leaving a name honored by princes and people, and justifying the proud title of the "Father of his Country" which the people inscribed upon his grave. The state of Florence, during the long years in which the Medici governed her, was in the main peaceful and pros perous. There were many conspiracies, of course, and all the rulers were not equally competent, but Florence became a power in Italy under their ambitious rule. Of the character of Lorenzo de Medici it is not easy to speak, so conflicting is the evidence upon which any opin ion must rest. His detractors are loud in their censure, his admirers indiscrimi nate in their praise. An air of romance attaches to him and his doings through whose brilliant cloud one can hardly see him as he is. Judged by the light of his age, he must have been one of the Ana kim, alike in thejfaults which were charg ed upon him and in the qualities which add lustre to his name. Intent upon the aggrandizement of his family, and dread ed for his overshadowing authority, he made Florence a city of palaces, her neighborhood a garden of delight, so that he seemed to rise only with the rise of the commonwealth, and was at once trusted by the citizens, and the friend and counsellor of princes of ancient blood. With consummate address he rescued himself from the jaws of a conspiracy which lrad assassinated his brother, and won over, by his eloquence, the whole city to his side. With like address he concluded peace with the King of Naples, cajoled the Pope, courted the clergy, strengthened himself by alliances among the nobles, obtained diplomatic relations with other states, and had a son in the Roman conclave, a cardinal of the holy church, not yet fourteen years old. . In his 44th year, when the impetuosities of youth are commonly over and the infirm ities of age are yet afar, when the speed of the spirit is not that of the breathless, when the eye can look calmly forward, nor be dazzled by a broad sweep of vis ion he was called to sicken and to die When he died all Italy grieved, as though smitten by a common trouble. One of the sacred spots which no stranger in Florence should omit to visit is the church of Santa Croce, where are grouped the cenotaphs of the illustrious dead. In this "temple of si lence and reconciliation," the Westmins ter Abbey of Florence, lie or are com memorated some of the greatest names in the history of the fair city. Alfieri, the sweet poet, Lanzi, the historian of the arts, Raphael Morghen, the engrayer, Aretino, the illustrious scholar, live in company on the walls of this hallowed shrine. Here also is the monument of Galileo, sturdy Protestant of the pre-Pra-testant ages, whose "Yet it moves, "utter ed in the moment of enforced recantation, startled the conclave who had condemn ed him, like thunder out of a clear sky. Boccaccio has his tablet here, whose De cameron is among the classics of Italy. nere also, by the effort of an English nobleman, is perpetuated the memory of Nicolo Machiavelli, who has had charged upon him, as the tempter, political crimes without number. Niccolo Machiavelli, "out of whose surname," says Macaulay, "we have eoined an epithet for a knave, and out of his Christian name asynonyon for the devil." Here also, mourned by the three sister arts Architecture, Sculp ture and Painting is the tomb of Mich ael Angelo, the site said to have been chosen by himself, that when the doors of the church were open it might be in sight of the cupola of the cathedral. Here also the remorseful gratitude of Florence, swelling like the tide about a stranded wreck, too late, has given to the memory of Dante a moment, something less than a grave. Modern Florence is not backward in her recognition of the memory of Dante and this is a name so illustrious that we may not pass it hastily by. In the nar row Via Ricciarda, a marble slab over a modern Gothic door tells you, "In this house was Alighieri born, the Divine poet." In the cathedral is his portrait, placed there by decree of the Republic in 1463. In the Palazzo del Podesta, which has an ancient chapel of its own, there is a fresco by Giotto, which with Vandal barbarism was covered with whitewash, nearly two inches, and with equally Vandal indifferene was so suffer ed to remain for years, until English and American liberality subscribed to reveal it. In the centre of the piazza of Santa Croce, on the 12th of may 1863, six hun dred years after his birth, and on the spot where, just before he came into the world, the Florentine republic was pro claimed, his statue was uncovered amid flaunting of banners, and salvos of can non, and vivas of an enthusiastic people by the King of a free Italian kingdom, holding his court in the Florence which the passionate exil love d so long and so well At the time the poet politician was born, Florence had become a considerable city. There were 100,000 inhabitants within its walh. Few cities exerted so imperial a command, and but for the in testine strifes which distracted it, it might have climbed to well-nigh unapproacha ble renown. There was much in the as pect of affairs, in a past of tradition and legend, in a present of tumult and hope, to fire a youthful imagination witch pa triotism and valor. With the romantic love, all free from passion, which filled him for the Beatrice of his dream and song, he had no room for meaner attach ments, and the young Guelph partisan rode iu the forefront of the battle, and was a trusted counsellor when victory had purchased peace. So great was his reputation for wisdom, even in eraly life, j that he was nominated to many foreign embassies, and indeed it was during his absence on one of these that the wheel of fortune turned his adversaries upper most, and he was summoned to appear before theprodesta within forty days, and pay a fine of 8,000 livres. The charge against him was that he had resisted the pacific J mission of the French prince, to which was added an unworthy innuendo that he had misused the public money. We can fancy the high-souled scorn with which he would treat an accusation like this. Failing to appear at the summons he was declared a rebel, and banished from the city for ever. Then began those long and regretful wanderings which ended only with his life, and which caus ed him to lament over the bitterness of the bread which is eaten at the table of a foreigner, and the weariness of the feet which travel up a patron's stairs. There were many considerations which hindered the early popularity of his works. Men could hardly read poetry while its most tragic scenes were being enacted around them. The poet had mingled too sternly in the strifes of the day to be favorably judged by all. Turn we to another shrine. In the Via Gbibellina is the Palazzo Buonarotti, the house, the veritable home, of Michael Angelo. It has been preserved inviolate, and much of the furniture is as it was in the artist's time. Here, in a snug little closet, are the table at which he used to write, his inkstand, his sandals, the sword which he took on his journeys, the crutch handled walking-stick which he daily used, notched with strong iron ferules, to prevent his falling on the slippery pavement; many of his original drawings; the model for his "David;" his sketch for his greatest work, "The Last Jugd ment;" his autograph correspondence with Vittoria Colonna; an early sculpture, chiselled before he was sixteen, the bronze bust of him by John of Bologna, his favorite pupil. He was born at the cas tle of Caprese, in Tuscany, of a good family, and his father was greatly cha grined at his son's attachment to art, for no amount of argument could teach him the difference between a sculptor and a stone-mason. The astrologers had cast the nativity of the young Buonarotti, and had predicted for him great distinc tion, because at the hour of his birth the conjunction of Mercury and Venus took place, and they were received into the house of Jupiter with benign aspect. After this starry prophecy his father could not brook the idea of his following a pursuit which he deemed fitted only for the lowly born. Genius, however, is not always to be restrained, even by par ental authority, so the youth won his father's reluctant consent that he should be placed in the studio of Ghirlandago, that sculpture and painting might con tend for the mastery. Here he devoted I himself to art with an assiduity which I soon led him to distance all competitors and was even bold enough to correct his master's errors. Tlie death of Lorenzo, after three years of friendship, affected the artist so much that hu retired to Ca prese, brooding over his loss uutil lie became misanthropical, but was softened at length by the tender preachings of na turo and by the wise patience of the healer, Time. Pietro de Medici, Lorenzo's unworthy son and successor, was one of those feeble princelings whose rank is so much larger than themselves that their small souls crouch behind it. Though his taste was corrupt and his manners overlcaring, he had just wit enough to know that a great artist would be an acquisition to his court. Hence he invit ed Michael to return, and lodged him in the same departments which he had oc cupied during the tim-; of the Magnifi cent. His estimate ol his guest, however, may be gathered from his recorded boast: "I have two extraordinary per sons at my house; the one a Spanish run ning footman who is so rapid on foot and so long breathed that I cannot get before him when riding at full speed; and the other is Michael Angelo." Upon the later years of this great man we may not longer dwell.. His paint ings in the Lestine Chapel established his fame as a painter. His conspicuous share in tlie building of St. Peter's as sures his architectural reputation. His works, as master of the ordnance in Florence, are monuments of his engin eering skill. Michael Angelo lived through a. pilgrimage of ninety years, and then, in his will, committed his soul to God, his body to the earth, and his possessions to his nearest relatives, add ing that he died in the faith of Jesus Christ, and in the firm hope of a better life. In the church of San Marco is tho. pul pit from which Lavonarola spoke in in thunder; in the adjoining convent is the cell iu which he wrote, and in the Piazza Gran Duca the fountain of Nep tune stands upon the spot where his soul went out in tire. Just a generation after the ashes of John Huss had been given to the waters of the Rhine, he was born at Florence. He was early steeped in the works of Aristotle and Plato, Daute and Petrarch; the masters of Grecian philos ophy, the masters of Italian song. In early life also he entered a Dominican convent. After a seven years' novitiate he entered upon priest's orders, and as the brotherhood of the monastry felt that the reputation of Friar-Jerome reflected honor upon the order, they encouraged his desire to preach, and he accordingly essayed in the church of San Lorenzo at Florence. His own mind, altough it had largely freed itself from the errors of morality, was still, and indeed always, bound by superstitions of Doctrine. He stood among the ages, midway between two great periods, orphan of the old, prophet of the new, like Noah among the worlds of God. Under his influence the reformation of morals in the city was wonderful. Monasteries became pure, the churches crowded. The present state of Florence, and in deed of all the cities of the free Italian kingdom, is one of solemn responsibility upon the witnesses for God. The suc cessive blows which have been already struck at the papacy, and the bolder po litical changes which are sure to come, have of necessity brought with them much spiritual unsettle ncnt and inde cision. Among the people of to-day, there are few indeed, who have not heard of the merits of Prickly Ash Bark and Berries, as a household remedy. Teasand drinks have been made"of them for centuries' and in hundreds of families have formed the sole reliance in rheumatic and kid ney diseases. Prickly Ash Bitters now tnke the place of the old system and is more beneficial in all troubles of this na ture. (16ml) The Only Objection. Beatrice Express.. The discussion of the name of Senator Allison, of Iowa, in connection with the presidency, and the many favorable com ments upon his probable candidacy, are quite flattering. The country could do no better, perhaps, than to take a western man for the presidency, and none would fill the bill better than Senator Allison. His western location is the principal thing that will militate against him if he should finally go into the race. Saved his Life. Mr. D. L Wilcoxon, of Horse Cave, Ky., says he was, for many years, badly afflcted with Phthisic, also Diabetes; the pains were almost unendurable and would sometimes almost throw him into convulsions. He tried Electric bitters and got relief from first bottle and after taking six bottles, was entirely cured, and has gained in flesh eighteen pounds. Says he positively believes he would have died, had it not been for the relief afforded by Electric Bitters. Sold at fifty cents a bottle by F. G. Fricke & Co. (6) Misses laced serge shoes 33 and foxed 50 cents only, at Merges. 14tf COUNTY LOCALS. We want a numbrr of additional Correinndmti throughout the County. Can't you write us the news from your neighborhood f WAItASII. From tlio Item. Tho small grain is being rapidly har vested. The prospect for an excellent crop of honey is good. A h'irvost picnic to take place in two or three weeks is talked of. Miss Eva Warrcl has been attending the institute at Plattsinouth. Miss Etta Pipes attended the teachers institute at Plattsinouth last week. Valentine Hay, living about two miles south, has been very sick with cholera morbus, but is much better now. LOL'ISVILLR. From the Observer. Harvest is in full blast in this vicinity. Henry Milton has moved back into town. Joe Fitzgerald has the dandy pair of young coons. Mr. E. Palmer, one of our first-class merchants is considerably under the weather this week, we arc sorry to state. Elder Henry is holding a successful meeting at tlie upper church. Preach ing every evening. Come out and hear him. Oliver Ward accompanied by Jesse Livingston have gone to Greenwood. They were called to the bedside of Mrs. John S.iyles who is not expected to live. LYNN. Corn is looking fine. Tanners are very busy harvesting. The grain is all ripe and harvesters are run ning day and night. It is most too hot to pick up items for the paper. Tho thermometer registered from ICO to 113 Thursday. Well, our 4th of July picnic passed off with only one or two mishaps. Lis Aus tin sprained his ankle playing ball, and another fellow got his face hurt, but not by a ball. The R. R. bridge builders expect to finish their work on tlie Weeping Water bottom this week when we look for the tracklayers up here again. Is it not about time for tho candidates for county oflicrs to be abroad with ci gars in their pockets and bottles under the buggy scat (just for our friends, you know?) The surveyors set the corner stakes for a depot building the other day and we expect the mn along in a few days to put the building up. Then look out for a boom in our town and lots of subscrip tions for the Herald. Jakk. THREE GKOTKS. The harvesting is about half complet ed. Quarterly meeting was held at Union Saturday and Sunday last. Mrs. Doc Wiley went down to Nebraska City on Saturday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Kirkpatrick accom panied bv their daughters from Nchawka visited Three Groves on Sunday a week ago. James Wiley Esq. is out at York look ins: after the building of a dwelling to which he intends to move as soon as completed. The corn crop i3 looking quite well and promise a large yield notwithstand ing the dry weather is threatening it to some extent. Mrs. Edward Wiley has been quite sick the last few days. But she was im proving some yesterday; her recovery is somewhat doubtful. Miss Jennie Ruthford. living over on the Rock Creek side, has been quite ill the last few months and from all accounts she will not get up again. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cole lost their lit tle babe one day last week. The funeral services and burial took place at the Three Groves M. E. church. About all the self-binners are thrown idle through this section for the want of twine; some will have to fall back on to the old reaping machine to cut their grain. Mr. G. W. Worley from Elmwood has been down the lat week attending to some unfinished business. Mr. Worley reports times pood and crops looking well in his vicinity. Tlie sound of the locomotive of the construction train on the new rail road from Weeping Water to Nebraska City, can be heard quite distinctly in this part of the neighborhood. John and Frank Carrell will soon com mence to thresh, as they have bought a second hand machine lately and are pre paring to do up all the threshing in this part of the neighborhood this fall. It was learned yesterday that Murray, the great city of the west, has struck a boom. McStory and a Mr. Latta ot that burg, commenced there Monday morning to sink a hole for coal. They think it can be found at a depth of 300 feet. Something resembling coal sticking out along the bed of the creek has caused these gentlemen to set at work prospect ing. Reporter. WEEPING WATER. From the Eagle. Miss Minnie Iladsell of Tobias. Neb., was the guest of C. C. Iladsell, Monday Mrs. II. D. Travis is very sick with scarlet fever, n. D. ha9 had much sick ness in his family this summer. Misses Lucy and .Crecla Wolcott took the evening train for Lincoln, Monday They will visit friends there a week. Mrs. II. B. Fleming started for her new home in Colorado last Friday, she will visit her two sisters Mrs. T. E. Calvert and Mrs. Chas. Hunter for a few days. John Burnes has secured li is liberty. S. Ripley,; Dr. Root, Ashmun Bros., and I 4 , Dr. Butler, going on his bond of $1,000 for his appearance at tho Distrtct Court. Miss Cora Murfin went to Falls City, Monday, to visit her sister. She will b gone two weeks, the Y. M. who hhould have swung on the Q. G. was absent Sun day night. The firwt victim to bo caught in the cm brace of tlie mower this year, was Win. Sclleck, one linger was nearly severed from hi hand Monday evening. Who will bo the next? The ground plans for the new school house has been received, if built accord ing to them it will be a credit to tho town. The contract for its erection will have to be let soon, or the scholars will get too long a vacation. From tlie Republican. Dr. Butler talks of paying n visit to Indiana soon. A A. Miller's new residence is about ready for occupancy. E. E. Day will start for Ohio in a few days to return with his family. Mrs. Geo. Ashmun wus very sick for several days, but is better we are glad to note. Miss Jessie Saunders has been very sick with billions fever, but is getting along nicely at present. Mrs. Morse nnd little daughter, of Yankton, Dakota, are on a visit to her daughter, Miss La Verta, and sister Mr. Oscar Torrcus. E. T. Comer erected a w ind mill for E. E. Day last week on the Willow Spring farm, water will be pumped from tlie sping into a tank on the top of the hill at the rear of tlie house and a complete system of water works put in for tlie house and barn. The repairs on the Gibbon House are progressing nicely. When completed, the repairs, Mr. Cromwell says will have cost him $"00. On the out nde the limine is painted a light yellow and looks much better than ever it did before. Mr. A. II. Thompson, on Monday, be gan the erection of a lar ge boarding house for the Lime and Stone company at tlieir works. The building is to be 21x2(5, and two stories high. This company w ill also have a neat dwelling built for the family who will run the boarding house. Win. O'Brien will we are told do tho carpenter work on the latter building. The ii"w members of the school board took tie ir seats on last Monday. A ma jority of the board failed to acquiesce in the proceedings of the old board in tic election of W . T. Cline us principal, and the principalship was given to J. E. Wil son, of Alexander, Indiana, who arrived here a f w days ago. Miss hlla Worn -ford was elected assistant principal. The under t aehers are Miss Theo. Klcpser, Mrs. I. K. Wilson, Miss Maggie Clclaud and Miss Miranda Palmerton. Cleansod. Purified and Beautified r tke Cuticura Remedies. I'nr el.-.twliii' the Kkin and Scalo of DiHUirur- tng Humors, for alia) ing Itch I g. Burning and intlaiiiitiatl n, lor curing llie nrsi sympioius m K;zeni:i. I'sori his. Milk Crust. Scaly Head, ui.it i.ther inherited Skin inn! Blood Diseases. Scroftil i, Cuticura, tlie great skin Cure, and Cuticura Soap, and exqu site skin Beautiuer, externa ly, and Cuticuka Kkoolvent, the uew Blood runner, interna1 ly. are miauiuie. A COM PI KTI! CP ItK. T have suflered all my life with skin diseases of different kinds and have never fund per manent relief, until, fv the advice ol a lauy friend, I used your valuable Cuticuka Kt ui- m km. I gave mem a morougu inai umuik bottles ol the Cuticuka Kkhoi.vkmt. two linYCM of itiiticii h A nnd seven cakes of l!uTl- ccka Soap, and the result was lust what I had been told it would be a romiiuie cure. BELLE W AUK, iticiimona, a. Reference. . W. Latimer, muggist, luch- moiid, a. KAIT K II KIM CUKKIK T wi troubled with Slt Rheum for a num ber of years, so that the skiu entirely came oil one of my hands from tlie fiiiKer tips to the wrist. 1 tried remedies aud doctors' prescrip tions to no miroosK until I commenced taking CU'iicuka ltKMKDiKs, and how 1 am entirely cured. E. T. PARK Ell, 379 Northampton St., li.ston. uai:(;(;iHTH kviouk thkm. Have sold a quantity of your Cuticura Rem- e.lief. iick of my customers, Mrs. uenry Kintz. who had tetter on her hands to kucii au extent as to came the kin to peel off. and for eiulit years glie suffered ureatly. as complete ly cuied ly tlie use oi our ineuicinea. C. N. NYE, Druggist, Canton, Ohio. 1TCRIXO. MCAJLV, PIMPLY. Forthelast vear I have had a enee'e" of itch UK. scaly and pimply humors on my faco to which I have applied a (rreat many methods of treatment without success, and which ws speedily and entirely cured bv Cuticuka. Mm. ISAAC PHELPS, Kaveiua, O. NO MF.(CIK LIKE Til KM. We have s 11 your Cuticura Rf.medieh for thela-t fix vars, aud no mediciues ou our shelves give better satisfaction. C. F. ATHEKXON, DruggUt. Albany, N. Y. Cuticcra Remedies are sola everywhere. Price : Ci th.i ua.Hi cents : Kksoi.vkit,1.0o ; Soap. 25 reuts. Pre i are d by tbe Fottfb Dru and Chfmical Co., Boston. Mans. Seud for ' How to Cure Wkin Iltea.ei." Gt-itttj-i Pimples, Skia Blemishes, and tlUij.Uaby Humors, cured by Cuti cuka Soap. Catarrh in its destructive force stands next to aud undoubtedly leads on to consumioion. It is therefore sin-.'Ular that those alllicted with this fearful disease should not make it an bjectof their lives to rid themselves of It. Deceptive remedies conoocteU to by ignorant pretend -rs to medical knowledite have weak-en-d the confidence of the great majority of eu3erers in all advertised remedies, f hey bo come resinned to a life of misery rather than torture themselves wilh doubtful palliatives. But this will iiever do. Catarrh uiust be met at every tage and combated with all our niiulit. In many cases the liea.se has asutn ed danjierous symptoms. The bones and the cartilage of the nose, the organs of b arinpr, of seeii.g and of taxiing so atlected as to be use less, the uvula so elongated, the throat so Ir ritated and inflamed as to produce a constant and digressing couirh. Samikokd's Radical Cvrk meets every phase ol Catarrh. fr-m simple bead cold to tbe most loathsome au t ii lru:tive stages. It is local and on-Mui ioual. Instant in re lieving, perm:irent iu curing, safe, ecoui-uiical rnd uever-f -.iling. Each package contains one bottle of tho tc apical. Cuke, ore box Catakkhal Sol VKNT. and an iMfiwvki) I.miaikk, with tr-attfe ; prb-e. 91. POTTEK DltUO AND CHEMICAL Co., Boston KIDNEV PAINS IN 0. U yt I I'TK, that weary. lifeies. all-gone sensation ever pies ent with those of Inliamed Kidneys, Weak Hack and Loins. Aching Hips and Miles, Cterine Pains, Weakness, and J i.-flamtiiati-'ii. is relieved :iiid hpe-d'ly cured by the Cuticura .ntl-Pain IMnwter. a 11 w oricimtl. elegant and inf i libb antidote to pain and lull limitation. Ar all rtruif?ist. : 11 vh lor $1.(i ; or of Poller Drug aud Chemical Co., Boston --7-7-lr.i. NiSGALP CDlSMDllOl f(4 1 JL A & w