Plattsmouth weekly herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1882-1892, September 15, 1887, Page 5, Image 5

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    PLA0.T6MOUTI1 HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1S87.
7 fthiknwiith IVcslhj TprM.
Pul!!:,h?rs Proprietors.
PARN ELL'S TWO ACtNTS.
Arthur O'Connor, tho Ablest Man
of Affairs In tho IrisJi Party
at Present.
Clr Thoma3 Crattan Esmondo -A
Thorough Logician and a Por-
foct Spoakor.
Tie two null whom Mr. Parnell lin
S' l: :kd t ) vinit tin; Unit 1 States thn
yi-;ir, A: tlmr O'Connor and Sir Thonian
Henry (ir.'.tt.'in EMiionde, Baronet, arc
l( -oonally l.:.s.i Known among their coun
trymen than inLiiy liiemhuiH of tho nat
ionalist party, inferor in ability and per.
r.onal interest. They are of totally dif
ferent diHrne.teri-.tie. Tho interest at
taching to their mission arisen not mere
ly from the positions they respectively
hold in tin) house of commons, but from
tho public future which id believed ta be
waiting for both when Ireland once
again cin boast of a parliment. In the
case of the younger of tlu two, the talis
man of the great Grattan'M ininio will
doul'tles.s act as a charm to bring audi
ences to see and hear him. Arthur O'Con
nor is, by confession of all his colleagues,
tli2 ablest man of affairs" in the Irish par
ty. Likes a very celebrated but not
long-lived ministry in the pnrlimentary
interesta of England, the Irish nationa
list party is a party of "all the talents."
Tn porportion to the totality ot its num
bers it contains more notables men than
were ever grouped together behind any
other leader. It contains orators, poets,
lawyers, doctors, engineers, literary men,
journal i,-ts, farmers, tradesmen, s-.vcral
of each; yet in Arthur O'Connor it pos
sesses its prominent man of affairs. lie
id not an orator like Sexton, nor a writer
lili" Justin McCarthy. He is a capital
spe-ikci 1111 '-1 an iccumteand concise mas
ter of the ,)Cn- Neither Sexton nor Mc
Cartv ror a' "v '-'zon f 'heir associates,
should thevcons'oliaatethcir knowledge,
could furnish thi. solidity of attain
ments, tht minute
Hcquriintanec with
public bir iiirs-i, that roau.
:ncss of resource
in promv-cous matters, th. tlZ
fund of preeis;; and comprhr.ns've f'"
tail of infu ination with which -Tthur
O'Connor is equipped.
lie is the least sensational man of the
party. Perhaps that j? tho chief reason
why he remains so littJo known up to
thu hour in America. lie has never had
a quarrel in tie- house, lie has never
:Vid'! a scene, lie has never defied any
body, and "nobody has ev r ins;dted him.
He is. neycrtheles?, the most eva-9Icl'at
ing man in the house of commons, not even
excepting J:ig:car; and his exceptional
distinction in this respect is due to the
ingenuity and depth of the mental mo
by which he has always warred upon hi1
enimies. I lo has never broken the rules j
of the house; and tlierc is not u man of j
temper in either party, when combined
against the Paruellites, who would not
have gladly broken Ins head a hundred
times. He has not only broken no rules
himself, but he is so apt in their intrica
cies that he ha3 rendered tli3 official life
of two of tiio ablest speakers the com
mons has ever known, miserable by his
inexorable fidelity to them. Lord Har
rington on a famous occasion drew at
tention to the fact that Arthur O'Con
nor had made twenty-rive spocches and
asked only two questions' while- pro
longing the debates.
It is this delicacy and breadth which
have made him the reputation of being
the first man of affairs in the Irisli party.
"When he rises to speak on his perch in
the Parnellite row nearest the wall, the
lazy, the rude, and the impatient leave
the house as stealthily as possible; the
lazy, because they know he will compel
their attention; the rude, beeaTjss they
know he will elude their insole: ace, and
the impatient, because they In kve been
taught to feel that thoy cannc t hasten
lus pace. But tho studiou3 lis ten with
eagerness, tor tne- nro sure U acquire
new knowedgo; the courteous., because
he is a pattern of courtesy; tho belliger
cnt, because they are certain he: -is going
to discharge a park of small artillery
with slight resonance . but with, deadly
leffect, and the sharply partisan, because
experience has taught them th at when
Arthur O'Connor has taken up a subject
he will inevitably damage tho tide to
which he is opposed.
His manner in speaking is precisely
liKe nis mma cairn, simple, "Janquu
firm and forcible. He is of medilam fig
ure, slender and trim; dresses wi',h unos
tentatious propriety, and bears himself
with the gentle unaggressiveness of a
scholar and a v-ll-brcd mr.n. Ilia head
is growing bald, but what hair ho "has is
dark; his face is pal.?, his features are
regular and tine, his eyes the deep blue
which, as in so many Irish faces, seem
black, and a dark beard, carefully but
rot foppisjjty barbercd, lends a liint of
age greater than his own to Arthur
O'Connor, who is -43. He stands erect
and composed before the house, some
times letting his head droop slightly to
ward his breast as memory wanders off
forborne distant argosy of facts and
speedily brings her craft into harbor, her?!
arrival being signalled in the rifling f
his head and the llasing of the clear day
light m his eyes. Generally ho has a
handful of notep in the closed left banc;
ho rarely U:;cs them except to read col
umns of fctatislics cr to calculate perenn
aires or to touch off nomo new fuse thfit
will lead to a concealed mine of dat
with which a minister's upcech aud a di
partmcnt's c-timatcs will be blown out
of de bate.
Menronsidcr him a perfect pattern of
the parliamentary speaker. The standard
therefore, is tho one rigidity and compos
ure, excluding gesture, elocution, im
agery, fire. It is true that the great par
liamentary speakers have cast this stand
ard to the wind. Pitt gesticulated.
Orattun was theatrical, like Pitt. Dis
raeli was given to wild clocutionarj
orgies, Gladstone is as dramatic as Gar
rick would have been with the same sub
ject matter, Sexton indulges in poetic
conceits, and John Redmond flashes like
i moving planet when the house is in his
oratorical orbit. Storey, the radical, and
Joe Cowcn, the most delightful period
turner in the house when he is in the
mood for it, are all exceptions to the
standard of perfect parliamentary speak
ers. Perhaps the fame of Arthur O'Connor
is duo to his ability to hold the house
without'any of the graces of the forum.
His power lies wholly in the grasp of his
sudject and the clearness, the precision,
the thoroughness, and tho completeness
with which he expounds it. His voice
is not remarkable for any quality. But
it always carries distinctly every word ho
utters. His face is not trained to antics.
But his fine clear eye holds liko a spell.
His arms arc generally crooked at the el
bow, but his single gesture, made with
the fingers of his right hand, is all ho
needs to point a sentence or to clinch a
fact. Interruption never disconcerts;
howls never ruCle him. Questions de
signed to perplex servo to turn a laugh
upon an inquirer. His manner is suave,
but serious: his temper is perfectly unr
control; but in his heart he is a man of
passion which would be ns dangerous in
secret e...i ,i. .. ' ':! i hj the
long and bitter struggle which h been
fought against formidable obstacles with
tho weapons of peace. It is doubtful " if
he ever employed a figure of speech. It
is certain that he never wearied an audi
ence.
Unlike most of the Irish party, he has
u voted his lime and. intellectual unpar
tisiu'ship to all subjects of human inter
est upi.'u which legislation is had. It is
this which in large part has made him
the object of admiration among his own
party and of dread among his enemies.
It is due, 'no doubt, considerably to the
circumstances of his youth, as well as the
cast of miiul required from a distinguish
ed father. Di'. O'Connor, for many years
head surgeon of the London Free hospi
tal, was reasonably hure to bring up a
clever son with a bent for science and a
Pj inpathy with suffering. The education of
ti,e college at Ushaw, from which Arthur
as?J with honor, is deeply classical,
and in logic, as severe as inai oi any oiu-
fashioncu scnooi in wnscu nuiuiaeuia
combated Aristotle with dialectic foils.
The fat.her w."V3 too humane to die rich,
and the s on cat ried on at a public com.
petitive examination a valuable post in
the war offi'ce. where ho learned ouicai
routine with a thoroughness of which Ire
land will have the benefit in her first
home rule government, for Arthur O'Con
nor is accepted without question as the
man upon whom w:U devolve the heavi
est detail duties in Mr. Parnell's cabinet.
His years in the war office gave him
leisure for general study of public affairs.
Xo man in the house is better posted
than he, and few so well on the applica
tions of public moneys, on the official
transactions of ministers, on the manage
ment of great public institutions. lie is
an authority on prisons and charities, as
well as upon the orders sent to generals
in the Soudan and the discretion given
to emissaries m South Africa. He is the
deadly foe of official slovenliness. He
can explore with microscopic closeness
the conjectures of departement heads,
and dissipate the illusions of which from
time to time motions are pressed for ap
propriating public money for improper
or fraudulent purposes. It is this facul
ty which renders him so universally ob
noxious in the disscussions on the esti
mates; and this, coupled with hi3 alert
ness and smiling patience when showing
that he was in order, drove two speakers
into insomnia in fruitless efforts to 6hut
him off. Biggar, when he obstructed,
would leeringly show that " his object
, "as to obstruct. Other Irish speakers
tli;. cover by carelessness or inaccuracy,
by t edious iteration or heedless fights of
rancc rhetoric that they are only ob
structs ig. But the best informed men in
the hou ie cannot stop Arthur O.Connor as
lon-asb'c chooses to talk, because his
discourse M so germain to the topic.
He is unquestionably the be?t man Mr.
Parnell has , w&r sent to the United States
to giyc general and exact information
upon every pnvctictil phase f the home
rule question. He will not set audiences
w ild with flashi ng generalities. But he
will givereasoni.ig tn&nfood for thought
and everv honest omid weu-aiebsea ar
gumcnts for home .rule.
His young companion will seem a miu
iature of old Henry Grattan to those ft
miliar with the great patriot's faca
There U the same genial, nmiling, boyhh
mouth; tho same lop forehead, with tho
hair falling carelessly down upon it.
Sir. Thomas is of slight figure, rather
handsome, extremely polite and deferen
tial among his elders and ladies, is tho
product of a Catholic college, and, there
fore, after their manner in the old coun
tries, well up in old learning. He U
frank and cordial, gay but manly; would
never be charged with arrogance, but
has' that something which, like it as men
may, distinguishes the lucky born heir
of breeding and culture from the ordina
ry youth who acquires both in spite of
hard fortune. "We has some slight mu
sical accomplishments, is a fair athlete, a
a genial rather than an entertaining man
in conversation, and is anexquisite danc
er. If there were nothing more to 6ap of
him Parnell would not send Sir Thomas
to the United States. Invitations poured
in for him from all over ths states from
the time of his first election to parliment;
for there was eclat in the reappearance of
the old name in tho lists of Irish patriots;
and there was a touch of revolutionary
pathos in tho voluntary cntranco of laud
lord baronet into the party whose funda
meuual principle is opposition to the
traditions of landlordism.
Nor will the youth for he is only
25 disappoint his countrymen in the
United States. Not being a genius like
Pitt, ho will not have to plead the crime
of being a young man in extenuation of
political audacity, lie has been very
modest in the house, and spoken only
when in accordance with Parnell, s dis
cipline, helias been authorized or request
ed by his chief. Whether he will develop
into an effective extemporaneous orator
is for time to tell. Thus far he has found
memory a safer friend than invention.
Like the great Grattan, he can practice
on written paragraphs until he knows
every line by heart. He will make good
tlies that will delight popular assem
blies. His voice is light, clear and mu
sical; his manner timid, but not faltering;
his matter sound his logic lively, ne is
at a disadvantage in parliment among
men of more robust type and more ripe
experience. But he has held his own
from the start,
His mother wsa the fourth daughter
of Henry Grattan. It is from his father
he gets his title from Col. Sir John Es
monde, the tenth baronet of a title coined
away back in 1(528. Sir Thomas is a
bachelor, and has a rent roll of $10,000
a year on paper. But his tenants are
land leaguers, and he is content not to be
very exacting. Telegraphic in the Oma
ha Herald.
tTheScene at Lincoln's
Nomination.
The following is from tho September
installment of The Centuary's Life on
Lincoln: "Though it was not expected
to be decisive, the very ballot foreshad
owed accurately the final result. The
'complimentary' candidates received the
tribute of admiration from their respec
tive states. Vermont voted for Colla
mer, and New Jersey for Dayton, each
solid. Pennsylvania's compliment to
Cameron was shorn of six votes, four of
which went at once for Lincoln. Ohio
divided her compliment, 34 for Chase,
4 for McLean, and at onco gave Lincoln
her S remaining votes. Missouri voted
solid for her candidate, Bates, who also
received a scattering tribute from other
delegations. But all of these compli
ments were of little avail to their recipi
ents, for far above each towered the ag
gregates of the leading candidates: Se
ward, 173$; Lincoln, 102.
"In the ground-swell of suppressed ex
citement which pervaded the convention
there was no time to annalyzo this vote;
nevertheless, delegates and spectators
felt the full force of its premontien; to
all who desired the defeat of Seward it
pointed out the winning man with uner
ring ertainty, Another little wranglo
over some disputed and protesting del
egate made tho audience almost furious
at the delay, and 'Call the roll!' sounded
from a thousand throats.
"A second ballot was begun at last,
and, obeying a force as Euro as the law
of graviiation, the former complimentary
votes cime rushing to Lincoln. The
whole 10 votes of Collamer, 44 from
Cameron, 6 from Chase and McLean,
were now cast for him, followed by a
scatter of additions along the roll-calL
In this ballot Lincoln gained 79 votes,
Seward only 11. The faces of the New
York delegation whitened as the ballot
progressed and as the torrent of Lin
coln's popularity became a river. The
result of the second ballot was: Seward,
184J; . Lincoln, 181; scattering, 09.
When the vote of Lincoln was announced,
there was a tremendous burst of applause,
which the chairman prudently but with
difficulty controlled and silenced.
"The third ballot was begun amid a
breathless suspense; hundreds of pencils
kept pace with the roll-calL and ner
vously marked the changes on their tally-sheets.
The Lincoln figures Bteadily
swelled and grew. Votes came to him
from all the other candidates, 4 from
Seward, 2 from Cameron, 13 from Bates,
18 from Chase, 9 from Dayton, 8 from
McLean, 1 from Clay. Lincoln, had
gained 50$, Seward had lost 4$. Long
beforo tho official tellers had footed up
their columns, spectators and dolegntcs
rapidly made tho reckoning and knew
the result: Lincoln, 231$, Seward, 180.
Counting-tho scattering votes, 405 bal
lots had been ca6t, and 233 were necessa
ry to a choice; only 1$ votes mere woro
needed to make a nomination.
"A profound stillness fell upon tho
wigwam; the men ceased to talk and the
ladies to flutter their fans; ono could
distinctly hear the scratching of pencils
and the clicking of telegraph instruments
on the reporter's table. No announce
ment had bcon made by the chair; changes
were in order and it was only a ques
tion f seconds who should speak tirst.
Whilo everyone was leaning forward
with intenso expectancy, Mr. Carter
sprang upon his chair and reported a
change of four Ohio votes from Chase
to Lincoln. There was a moment's
pause, a teller waved his tally-sheet
toward the skylight and shouted a name,
and thon the boom of a cannon on the
roof of the wigwam announced the nom
ination to the crowds in the street, whore
shouts and salutes took up and spread
the news. In tho convention tho Lin
coln river now became an inundation.
Amid tho wildest hurrahs, delegation
after delegation changed its vote to the
victor.
"A graceful custom prevails in order
ly American conventions, that the chair
man of the vanquished delegation is first
to greet the nominee with a short address
of party fealty and promise of party
support. Mr. Evarts, the spokesman for
New York, essayed promptly to perform
this courteous office, but was delayed
awhilo by the enthusiasm and confusion.
The din at length subsided, and the
presid ing officer announced that on tho
third ballot Abraham Lincoln, of Illi
nois, received S64 votds and 'is selected
as your candidate for President of tho
United Stnt-s.' Then Mr. Erarts, in a
voice of unconcealed emotion, but with
admirable dignity and touching elo
quence, speaking for Seward and tor
Now York, moved to make the nomina
tion unannmous,
BOB BURDETTE ON THE FLAG.
Tho Unfon Soldiers Opposed to
Either Suttlors cr Politicians
Misusing It.
It. J. Bur-letto in the riiiladeli.hla Tress.
Sir: It seems to me that the hostility
which tho old soldiers exhibit toward the
combinotion of President Cleveland and
the United States flags is easily explained.
It is simply an emadnation of the 8ldi r
spirit; it is the soul of a soldier's life and
habit obedience to orders.
Along sometimes "endurin' the war"
the mob of camp-followers and specula
tors who followed the Union army for
gin and plunder got to using the United
States flag as an advertisement. It fio-.t-
ed over and in front of every ?hoddy
store in Cairo and Memphis, and painted
accoss the stars and stripes was tho name
of the firm that was making 2 on every
bill of fifty cents it sold. Tho flag dis
honored by greedy robbers who loved
the soldier only for what they could
make out of him and wayed the fiaj
over his head whilo thoy went through
his pockets. I think it was Grant a eol
dior naturally thinks that every good
thing that was done during the war was
done by Grant possidly while he was
commanding the military division of
the Mississippi; at any rate it was some
Union genlral who issued an order for
bidding the desecration'of the flag. It
was a symbol of honor; the emblem of
our noble and glorious cause; every star
was sacred to the soldier, the banner was
his hourly inspiration; daily he braved
death under its folds an4 he prayed that
it might be his winding sheet when he
died. To daub upon its azure field the
fat face of some civilian who never spoke
a warm hearted word for tho Union un
til he found there was some profit to be
made out of its defenders to scrawl across
its silken folds the name of Borne trader
whos greedy hand was plunged into the
soldsera' pocket; to use the flag as an
advertising shoet for a pack of camp fol
lowers, was a disgrace, an outrage, a
shameful dishonor. And so tho general
commanding ordered that all such signs
should bo taken down by the provost
guard and that no man should ever again
dare use the flag ot our country to adver
tise himself and his shoddy wares, while
daily it was made more 6acred than ever,
baptized in the. blood of brave men.
The thought, the feeling, that inspire tho
order was born in tho heart. of the6oldier
and the army applauded it. !
WelL now, the old soldiers have not
forgotten that order, and to this day the
Grand Army hates to see the flag used as
an advertisement for dry goods, for clams,
for salt fish, for tar, for gimlets, for trea
cle, taffy, popularity, votes, or any thing
else. No man's portrait has any right on
the United States flag the president's
or the post guttler's or even P. T. Barn
um's. The flag was never meant for that
purpose, it wasn't intended, when it was
designed, to be a national picture gallery.
And no man who loves it, as do the men
who marched and fought and suffered
under it, like to see it disfigured. They
remember the flag very distinctly as it
was when they carried it into battle, and
President Cleveland's picture wasn't
painted on it then; why should it be
there now? It is soldierly in the men of
the Grand Army to obey orders "For
ever float that standard sheet," bk down
with the advertisements.
Tho Verdict Unanimous-
W. D. Suit, PruggLt, Bippus, Ind.,
Wtifi' a: "I can recommend Electric Bit
ters as tho very best remedy. Every bot-
tlo sold has given relief in every cne
Ono man took nix bottles, and was cured
of Rheumatism of 10 years' ntanding".
Abrah .ni If ire, druggist, Bellville, Ohio,
affirms: "The best sellin r medicino I have
ever handled in my 20 years' experience,
I is Flectric Bitters". Thousands of other
have added their testimony, so thnt the
verdict is unanimous that Electric Bitters
do cure all diseases of the Liver, Kidneys
or Blood. One half dollar a bottle at F.
G. Fricke & Co., drug store. (2)
Visual Synchronism.
J. Harris Rogers, of Pan Electric fame,
has again brought'his nnmo prominently
before the public, lie has a new inven
tion, and, liko Keelev, of motor fame, he
is anxious to get capital ami leako the
subscribers to his Ktock company miilirn
aires. This new invention he culls visual
synchronism, and with it he expects to
revolutionize tha woild. According to
his statement, it enables one in effect,
though not in reality, to see by electricity
any number of revolving wheels, or mov
ing mechanism, thousands f miles away,
so mat absolute liarmonj', orsynchronism
H preserved to them all. The new HV.sttan
can bo used in many ways, where wheels
or moving mechanism may be utilized,
in telegraphy, electric locomotion, horol
ogy and printing. Rogers thinks that he
has solved the problem of electric com
munication, and that, when tho system is
put into general use, messages wi!l be
rendered so cheap, that lettlers will bo
sent by electricity, instead of through tho
mail; and that photographs, landscapes
1 1- 1 l .... .
nnu imi.uwming wui iQ transmitted by
wire. Demon'nt's.
Excitement In Texas.
Great excitement has been caused in
tho vicinity of Paris, Texas, by the re
markable recovery of Er. J. E. Corlcy,
who was so helpless he could not turn in
bed. or raise his hend; everybody said he
was dying of Consumption. A trial bot
tlo of Dr. King's New Discovery was sent
him. Finding relief, ho bought a large
bottle and a box of Da. King's New Life
Pills; by tho time he b-.d taken two boxes
of Pills and two bottles of tho Discovery
he wr.3 well and had g.'dned in flcbh thirty-six
pounds.
Trial Bottles of this Great Discovery
for Consumption free at F. G. Fricke &
Co. (2)
The natiirulist and hunter wll find
much to a:nuso and jji.-,tiue-l him in H.
P. Uffo.d's Beaver Notes in September
Outing. The writer i f tho article is a
careful observer of th- he.bits of animals,
and gives his information in a pleasing
manner.
Life is burdensome, alike to the suffer
er and all around him, whilo dyspepsia
and its attending evils hold sway. Com
plaints of this nature cfn be speedily
cured by taking Prickly Ash Bitters reg
ularly. Thousands once thus nlllicted
now bear cheerful testimony as o its
merits. 24 m 1
r p
S a
(SUCCESSOR TO
Will keep constantly on hand a
iifis and
edicines
Wall Paper and
DRTJG-G-IST'S
PURE LIQUORS.
AT
nnrou o nmn
"WE
housan
Six .860
QJP-
Last year, and it low price, -yill
this
LOOK AT THE GREAT CUTS IX ITJCES WE ARE OFFERING
YOU.
Ladies' Good Grain Batten Shoe for $1.00. formerly sold for 1.73; Ladies'
neary Grain Button Siioe, the best wear for $1.75, formerly for $2.25; Ladies best
Milwaukee Grain Button Shoe, jj 00, formerly sold f r $2.50;. Wc are offering all
our $2.50 line of shoes for 2.00; Ladies' Fine Glaze Dongola Buttou and Tampetco,
Goat for $2.50. formerly S'rJ.OO. Men Heavy BooU for only $1.50. formerly $2.00;
Men's Best Whole Stock Kip Boots for $2.50, formerly sold, for $3.25; Men'a Fino
"WTiele Stock Kip Boot for only $3.00, formerly $4.0U; Men's Calf Boot, good and
solid, for only $2.50, formerly $3.00; Men6 Fine Dress Button Shoe for only $1.83
formerly ?2.50. , n
We also have a great many other "cash" bargains in Children's, Misses and boys'
that it will pay you to call and examine our goods and be convinced that wc arc
Belling cheaper than any other dealer.
Mm. Trlpheui Bovaus of Danbury,
Conn., is now In the 103d year of her
ngo-
Mrs. Juno Ryder of Orrington, Ma,
was 103 years old in January uml yet
able to help herself.
$2,000.007
TN GOLD!
VTiA kb paid roa
ARBUCKLES' COFFEE WRAPPERS
1 Premium, 81,000.00
2 Premiums, 6500.00 or
6 Premiums, i 8160.00
25 Premiums, 6100.00
100 Premiums, -J 50.00
200 Premiums, 8Q.0O
1,000 Premiums, 810.00
For full pnrtloulur otid AtrvtM-Mjf oO Ct&
tur la orory pound A Ajuoceljm' Owpw
n,
iiloan
usfang
Liniment
OTXXL330
8datloa
Lumbago
Barns,
Ecalds,
Stingy
Eites,
Bruise
Corns.
6cr&tcho
Sprains
Strain
Stitches,
EtiffJoints,
BackaoLo.
Galls,
Borei
Spavin
Crack&
Contracted
Mascloij
Eruptions,
Hoof All,
Scretf
7orm.
Bwtnney,
THIS GOOD OLD STAND-BY
oooompUcbos Tor orerytxxXy exactly what U olatnwl
tor It. One of thosoosoM tor tbocrcat popularity ol
Uia Mueuix Xluknent is found lulu universal
appllcakllKr vqrytxay nttmi acb a w dlclao
The IHkirnm DKxii it la ctum of oculdont,
"he nwir0Bcollt(ors-micraltamU7ua.
Tho Canaler needs It tor his teams and hU morv
The ESealutBie owda U lvi oa Ui Xii&
touch.
2" ho Miner needs n hi oaso of emergency
Vhe l'lonoerneedslt contgetalong without ff
The Farmer noods It ta Us iiousob bis atable
and bis stock yard.
The Steamboat man or the Boatman ooedB
It tn liberal (apply afloat and aaboro.
Tho Horse-fancier ncoda It It U bU best
friend and safest reliance
The Htock-grower needs tt It wtn soya him
thousands of dollars and a world of troubles
The Railroad man needs H and wnl nocd It SO
long as his life is a round of accidents and dangers.
The BackwoodMinan needs It. There Is noth
ing like It as an antldoto for tho dangers to lite
Cmb and eomfort which surround tho plonecs
The Merchant needs It about bis store amon
his employee. Accidents will happen, and when
these come ttie Mas tans liniment Is wonted at ouocw
Keep a BattU b ts Uoasa, "T2s tbe bes
economy.
Keep a Dottle In the Factory ItstmmedJata
qss In case of accident saves p&la and loss of wagoa
Keep a Bottle Albania. (As? ftAB3
BsV WfeJBB VSAt&iU . wri
J. M. RODEKT8.)
full and complete etock of pure
s,
a Full Lino of
STXIISnDIRaimS.
PUS i J
SOLID
ars Worth
SHOES
goods, we intend to eell more
year.
f-RICKE&CO,
Paints, Oi
0i
o