7 1X7 0 PLATTSAIOtJTIl TVEEk::, ififih., -jr-rimSbAV, SEPTEMDFJR 13, 1SSS. U'WMIIB KNOTTS BROS Publishers & Proprietors. TIIK l'LATTSMOOTII J1KRALI U PUDUsiioti every ubllsliptl every eventnir cxceiit Sunday and Weekly every Thursday morning. Kegls- lZr!'' ?l.i,.,e l!V,,nioe'.,?,7ill",",ouM,l r,'r-1,7 HtM-oud-clANN matter. Oltlce ccuuer of V ine and Filth ttreeti. TKRMS FOR DA1I.V. One copy ono ear In advance, by mail ? oo One copy per Month, Iy carrier fto One copy per week, by carrier la TF.NMS FOR WKKKLV. One oopy one year, in advance One copy six mouttis, in advance. . 1 .V, 75 NATIONAL REPUBLICAN TICKET. KOlt I'KKSIDKNT, BENJAMIN", HARRISON, of Indiana. VOIl VHK rilKSinKNT, LEVI P. JIOIITOX, of New York. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. FOn OOVKK.NOII, JOHN M. THAYER. I'OK LIEUTENANT OOVKKNOR, GEORGK I). ME1KLEJOIIN. FOIt HErilKTAHV OF STATE, GILBERT L. LAWS. FOR TREASURER, J. E. HILL. FOR AUDITOR OF PU11LIC ACCOUNTS, THOMAS II. 15ENTON. FOR ATTORNEY OENERAL, WILLIAM LEESE. for commissioner of punLic lands and BUILDINGS, JOHN STEEN. FOR SUI'ERINTENDFNT OF rURLIC IN STRUCTION, GEORGE B. LANE. The republican gains do sound a little 'fishey" up in Maine. The democrat are badly disappointed with the result in Vermont. Hurrah for Vermont ! She is as solid republican as her eternal hills. Under the present administration " Public office is a public snap." Watermelon colic, cholera morbus and pleuro-pncumonia is about what ails the democratic party. Ninety-five days, and no letter from Brother Cleveland yet. When it does appear. it ought to be a monstrous tine effort. Tom Reed, the stalwart protectionist leader of the house has been heard from in his district in Mainn nnd thr J Stand nirilt bV TIlom:i?. I .... I C 7 m I The true meaning of Mr. Cleveland's $10,000 contribution to the democratic campaign fund is the same as if Clove- I ninei uau saiei: -1 want a second term 1 J V- I - ' 1 II T . -. bad enough to pay $10,000 for it." TnE same comparative gains for the republicans in New York that was made in Vermont would give Harrison and Morton 12.",000 majority. It looks as though Mr. Morse wasn't much out of way. Republican. TnE Minnesota republicans tleclare in their platform that they are "uncompro misingly in favor of the American sj-stem of protection." They ask for a careful and discriminating revision of the dutia ble list, as all sensible republicans do. The northwest is sounel on the tariff question. Now let the philosopher of Arbor Lodge, Otoe county, in the state of Nebraska, be forwarded to Indiaua or New Jersey. The republican party only needs the frightful example to be placed before the people. Mr. Morton's work in Maine has yielded a bountiful harvest. The best form of retaliation against Canada and Great Brrtnin is that of main taining a protective tariff sufficiently high to prevent them from gelling their products in our markets at prices with which American labor cau not compete except by a reeluction of 20 to 50 per 1 cent in wages. Globe Democrat. " I ir is announeea irom w nslnngton that the business of the post office department ior tue past nscai year snows a Uaudsome increase ui reeuue. i ms is a strong " e ti , i nrgumeDt ior tue reduction ot postage to one cent, which was called for by the Chicago convention. Every voter who wants one-cent postage should vote for a republican congressman this fall. I Arkansas still remains a part of the solid south; but the heelers have done nobly. They have loosened the tie that binds her, to one extent which promises our early deliverance from the evils which impede her progres3 and injure her reputation, and the Herald congrat- ulates them most cordially upon their I It cvide-nt ability to carry the state in the uext election. I Down in Arkansas the lallot boxes are disappearing rapidly, ami they are having a regular old democratic time, and if the situation remains unchanged much longer there will be no evidence left that they ever had an election. Thk republicans did not commence thia campaign with a forced hurrah nnd 1 a strained elfort at noise and cheap effect, but they will close it witli a tremendous, solid, far reaching boom that will draw victory in its rippling and luminous wake. Lincoln Journal. " I'm not sure that this is not a plan to accomplish with votes what they couldn't do with the sword in the south. No one who had anything to do with this tariff scheme, from the president down, ever struck a blow to save the life of the country.'' Cheers. Hen liutler. Now what will Messrs. Rarnuni nnd Brice do for "a sensation," the "fat wom an," the "bearded boy," and the "old Roman," are all played out. Let us have a Chinaman now, an almond eyed, pig tailed, rat devouring, domocratic Chinaman, and let the millionaire- Scott jine the stranded circus and exhibit it. The country demands. that the show ex hibit. The fact that very few pension claim have been adjusted during the last two or three weeks may be readily accounted for. A large corps of the clerks of the bureau have been engaged iu the prepar ation of a campaign document designed to show how Cleveland has benefited the country by his severing vetoes of the claims of the disabled union soldiers and their needy wives and children. Mil Mourisky notifies Gov. McShanc nnd his newspaper, w hich has commenced throwing mud at Gov. Thayer, that the democratic c andidate will be permitted to run his own paper into the ground if he insists upon eo doing, but that he must attend to his own business and not attempt to fool with the democratic buz saw of the World. Mr. Monisey has hold of the lever on that lo-co-fo-co en gine. Wf. will venture another gill of butter ,n'lk that lJoor ol(1 Mr- Thurman, as sick as he was at Newark, N. J., the other ev ening, amused the democratic ear when he apostrophized that party as " the great democratic party founded by Thos. Jef fersrn and upheld by Andrew Jackson." All that was needed for this brief shetel of the poor old concern was to have added " and pocketed by Grover Cleve- land Mi:. V ilas of Mr. Cleveland's cabinet male an aPPel the other da-, to tlx brewers ot Wisconsin to stand by Grover and D.rrid IJ. Hill of New York is ,3 -v t: i. t .i ms iiinnuw oones leiTfflllr tile whisky trust of New York to save him from political banishment. These men represent a great political party which has been charging the republican party with the crime of being a "free whiskv party". Poor old democracy! Mr Thurman will probably inform the hungry democracy of New York " hat the negro is a prolific animal:' Mr. Thurman is famous for his prehistor ic statesmanship, if for nothing else. That political discovery together with its double, that a tariff duty is nothing but a tax, seems to be all the old man has with which to cheer and incite the democ ratic party on to deeds of daring. Franc old man! Oregok set the example, early in the sjason, of surpassing all previous re publican majorities; and Vermont has followed it with her usual zeal in good and patriotic works. All the other northern states maybe expected to do likewise, according to present indications. The republican party was never more united, aggressive and enthusiastic than it is this year, and its prospects of suc- ce?s biighten eyery day. Globe Denio- crat. Th: Toledo Blade very truthfully If the condition of the workirj"- sa3s: men 1:1 tu,s country was not better than hl an-v otl,er is 5t ISkely that they would i i . , i .. y u Uls uPon lts shores; i acs arc most convincing of all argu n . !-! Alf -. Tl. I 4.1. i!. 1 1 1 n i . a ucv it u ww iw.iL wiey receive better wages, have steadier employment and live more comfortable here than any- wher. else on the face of the earth and that is the reason they are constantly swan.,ing thiiljer. Free trade would in evitably change this staic of thirds. Mn. Me Shane's obituary appears in Mr. Morrisey's column of the World, yester day, H ves a good way to let Mr. Mc Shane down on the cougresjqnal matter to place him on the gubernatorial &ide track. It was a good tiling for Mr. Mc Shane and hard on the hotd of boodlers who infest both parties, ami who would have again demanded his money or his blood had he been nominated for congress. is bad for the democratic nnel republi- can boodlers in the " Big First " that Mr. McShane is no more, The manrr in which the democratic party of Nebraska is howling over the fact that the late republican Convention Con cluded to recommend "Submission" to the people of Nebraska, furnishes another stiuking evidence of the inherent dis honesty of that party of retroaction, poor old concern! Mu. Tiilkwan again doubled up at Newark, N. J., and had to be "doctored" in the middle of his "greatest effort" with the "greatest show on earth." The colic took the old gentleman immediate ly upon his proposing that wormy chest nut tiiat the "Mills bill didn't reduce the tariff duties more than 7 per cent." The average democratic editor cant even pro pose that fashood any longer without having a severe attack of "the botts." With a gain of o.OOO in Oregon and 7,000 or more in Vermont; with both H ...... ..us. ..,,, since the war, and all this after the peo ple have discussed, analysed and weighed the cobden taffy offered by Mr. Cleve land, and in the face of the fact that ev ery democrat in these states was permitted to shout and argue and boodle and vote unintimidated and unscared, our common enemy, the English contingent, with Mr, Cleveland at its head, may now conclude that Calhoun free trade will not be adopted by that section of this American v...... -"utuuaiu, is peimuiea 10 r t-s ion I. n i.w.t.t C rr r. i -i I .w ia .,,, VL murage xreeiy anu tilI1'y- Closing an address at Burlington, Vermont, on the eye of the late election. Mr. Edmunds said: " I only have this to say: I have just, come from Wash- ington for the purpose of voting the re- publican ticket, not because it was neces- sary in this state, but because I know that if the Vermonters strike as hard tomorrow as they are able, it will be about the last blow that will be neces sary. I he information that we have at Washington, coming from democratic as well as republican sources, privately, make it clear that unless something en tirely unexpected and unforeseen hap- pens the victory for Harrison and Montor is already won. The democrats know it just as well as we do. It is a pitiable spectacle to see the na tional democratic committee attempting to stav the tide in ?wnv YmL- vi ltl. poor " Old Roman;" old, infirm and fee- ble; so that his nitiable condition is ar- .,,1 ii . . ... i aue.li ueiore ine nooting, yelling gangs of paid rouuders, who are employed from the sluni3 of the five points to give effect before the country to the meeting. Mr. Thurman has more than once announced to the country that old age and physical elecay had admonished him that he must retire from the arena of American politics; yet we behold him in a fainting condition. exhibited by the managers of Mr. Cleve land's lest cause, attended by physicians who administer nostrums on the stage, to keep life in him until lie can be carted to his Ohio home. If this is not robbing a graveyarel to boom a political campaign. we wouldhke to know what to call it. Grover Cleveland's long anticipated letter of acceptance is published, and while it delights republicans on ac count ot its stalentss and the appoloetic manner in which the great egotist of the White house attempts to maintain him- self on the celebrated "free wool messa"e it casts a corresponding gloom over the domocratic leaders at Washington. The document is an insipid rehash of the lamented wool message. The dispatches describe it as "simply a lot of platitudes "anel the falselto voice of the nnvwump "and the politician is read plainly "between the lines." The letter is weak argument maele to bolster up the incurable blunders of the president and is based on a false statement as to the real surplus remaining in the treasury. It is the last card played in a loosing game by a desperate demagogue who can prevail no longer with the people by his practice of false pretenses. " Chickens come home to roost," is an old and trite proverb. The republican party was placed " between the deyil and CCP se " in New York, ia 1S84, by the man that always " hangs the jury;" the mugwump independent, whose mis step is to control the majoiity. ThislsS3 that "critter " is la the "other camp in New York, anel is swearing that Dayid B. Hill, the real choice of the New York democracy, shall not be nominated, and that if the majority in the coming demo cratic state convention, insist upon his renoniiuat'on , some 0O.O0O mugwumps and independents, will bolt the ticket. This is as it ought to be; yet Gov. Hill will be nominatied. There will be a sharp click of the democratic machine, a siietdoii hysterical scream, the blinds will be hauled down and Governor Hill will be proclaimed the Moses of the empire democracy; after which, the usuil mug wump caterwauUing will be carried on, on the back shed. It will cost the demo cracy 38 electoral votes in New York- yet D ivi 1 B. Hill will be nominated all ,' the same. THE DEMOCRATIC CAMPAIGN. A democratic exchange is wishing that Cleveland and Judge Thurman may take the stump together. It thinks that they would awaken great enthusiasm and that the " plain, straightforward words of tho president, and the simple, old-fashioned eloquence of the Old Roman would do much good in the campaign." No doubt of it. The fact is this coun try is just leaning forward in it3 chair, and with oie hand behind its ear, i i t . wuuing oi eauucssiy nr mem to begin. When .Mr. Cleveland and the Roman get out on tliis tour a report of one the meet ings will read like this: Mr. Cleveland then stepped forward and spoke as follows: 'A, the first of the vowels and the lirst letter of all writ ten alphabets except the Amharic or Abys siuian, of which it is the thirteenth, and 1.,. 1 ! r 1 1 !i T .1 .1 rati luu jiuuiu, ui wnieii it is iue unui. I ins 1 ........... ...... . . . . v, v v (l'ltltl.-l IW I - tlu(J t(J thfi fatt thjit h . . j x ably only original sound (ah ) is the most easily uttered of all sounds, being pro duced by a simple expulsion of the breath through the freely opened throat and mouth. Aa, the name of a number of small rivers in central and northern Europe,de rived from the Celtic arch, or Teutonica aa, llowing water. ' Aachen. See Aix-la-Chanelle -nark in. Tntlnnd n,.,;N,l f ll.f.L.f r the ame name. I " ni; i,.i, fr...:..i. born in Constantinople in 181o, died there September 7, 1871. The sou of a priest, lie entered the public service at an early age as a protege of Reshid Gilderlluke." The intelligent rander will of course observe that this is an extract from the lust chapter of the American Cyclopedia, Ir- Cleveland's favorite. As the campaign progressed he would probably work on over into the " B's," " C's," " D's," etc. Continuing, the account will say: 1 he Old Roman then s'epped to the edge of the platform and in a few well chosen words aeldresseel the audience. There was, he said, a tax on every man's shirt. This was not trood for thfi man nor the shirt. He doubted if there was au entirely free and independent shirt in the audience?. No man knew what it was to live so long as there was a tax on his shirt. It was better to have worked and got only fifty cents a day than never to have worn a free shirt. Better fifty years f a ,,aper collnr a,u1 our COflt ,JUtton d closc UiKler 'our c,im tll!in ccIe ot taxed shirts, (A voice: ' That's right.' Man removed by the police and restored to the institution for the insane, haviiv escaped from incurables' ward afternoon.) Continuing the judge said the taxed shirt must ro. He offered to read statist iu proving that shirts really were taxed, but elesisted owing to loud cries of 'don't. At this point the judge reached in hi? pocket, and with an effort exti acted his bandanna. Thuee cheers were given the bandanna, and during the confusion the judge was lost sight of, VERMONT. Hurrah tor the Green Mountain state ! The result in Vermont, the first of the northern states to hold an election this fall, will be received with a hearty cheer in every republican camp. It is an emphatic second to the motion of Oregon that Mr. Cleveland be taken at llis worcb an that his incumbency end Wlt" one term. 13 proof, positive and unanswerable, that the people of this country are in fa vor of tlie policy of protection to Ameri can hidustrics the maintenance of the wao, s ot American workingmen 11 sounds like the death knell of dem- cratic hope in New York, New Jersey ani Connecticut, and thus in the nation ermont has set the pace. Hu rah for tae ieen Mountain state ! Maine fol- ov,s uext Monday and it will do equally we". Omaha Republican, The workingmen of Great Britain are growing sick of the free trade policy of that country. They have a strong or ganization called the " Workingmen's association for the Defense of British In-dustrj-," whose cardinal doctrine is op position to free trade, on the ground that it oppresses them. One of their lcaiiets is on the subject of competition with the other countries, and contains the following significant words: in tue towns lactones are closed In the country farms arc abandoned. Vr tisans stand idle at street coiners watch ing the arrival of foreign goods which ineir sKUltul hands should have made. It nlso gives lists of manufactured and partly manufactured articles imported in lSSfl, which they should have made at home, amounting to S.OOO.OOO. Uulies are levied on articles they cannot produce, while the article-s they make are admetted free, and they are cut both ways. Employment is less and costs of liying is more. Are American working men ready to adopt this, policy. Tojdo Biado. TnERE is some difference between earyln Arkansas nnd Vermont upon a great industrial question: About the difference between an ilicit still and a school house. Vermont is a school house state and Arkansas isn't. iienj. jiAunisoN r,9. aimvEii CLEVELAND. Written for The Irish WorlJ. When we Was lightin' ft r the 11 1 In Southern liehls and thiekt t. There stood among the bravest there The man who heads our ti. ket; He donned the blue ami mulched away To buttle, as a jtrirntc. An' when the war had cleared awa As (at ral did suiv've it. He won his stars upon the IK-Id- llu never showed the feather; In light he was the Let to yh Id In any sort of weather. The wind might blow a hurricane. Or bring a storm of bullets - He feared no more the leaden rain Than crackle of the pullets. An' when the war was fairly done, An' sived the nation's banner, He put his old clothes on agin An' went to Indiam r: There he bt haved in such a way So high his faith an' tenet The Hoosiers jus' awoke one day An' sent him to tho senate. But now the tight to save the land Has got to be fought over; An' on the side that's English, now, As then, is valiant Grover. Too busy to deck the Union graves, lie tights the wild mos(uetoes, Out tishin' while the widow weeps over his pension vetoes. Dr. Blake Bioelow. Malone, N. Y. A WOKA'INGMAWS A IK! U M ENT AC A INST FREE TRADE. A number of farmers and workingmen were discussing the tariff, a short time ago, in a country store in New Jersey, and as it is a strong dc mocratic town all were pretty much agreed that Cleveland and free trade were just what they want ed. There was one, however, among them who aid that he couldn't quite ac cept the fret; trade doctrine. "Why not.'" they asked. "Shall we not be able to Ijtiy everything at a cheap er rate "Yes, I suppose so," he said; "but let us do a little figuring. If wool is put on the free list, we shall probably be able to buy clothing at about 0 per cent, less than Ave pay now." "Yes, that's so," they answered, "and who can object to that f "Well, then, wages will go down, too, won't thev?" "Probably they will." "And in about the same proportion?" "Yes, but what of W. Things will not be any worse off than they are now." I don't know about that. Let us see. I can earn $40 a month . Twenty per cent, of that would be $8. Now I get a good suit of clothes for .s20, and buy I two suits a year. So if I get them for '20 per cent, less I could save S." "Certainly. You would get them $8 cheaper. "But if I lose 3 a month in wages. that is J(J for the vear. And free tr:i.l.. would en ble me to save s?8 in clothes. but I should lose Z'JU in wages. I rather think under the circumstances protection would be better for us after all." Tariff. Let those who have been complaining of the wretched condition of the mail service up north be patient and hopeful. People down south have been indulmn" in similar complaints, and at length tl.cii prayers for relief have been answered. A double daily mail service has at last been obtained on the Illinois Central Railroad. Commenting upon the im proved mail facilities, "The New Orleans Tinus-Di-m ocra t' ' says : A single mail daily on as important a line as the Illinois Central, unitmir the great cities of New Orleans and Chicago, was good ground for popular indigna tion. Nearly every one suffered more o, less iiuin the.' deficiency of (lie service. :.nd the people along the road had amide reason to complain that they did not re ceive from the government what they were entitled to. We welcome the improvement as a great boom, but it is not all that New Orlear.? needs or is entitled to. Even with improvement which will come as soon as the cars are fitted up for the mail - there will be much still lacking before we get perfect service, for there are other lines upon which more fieouent mails are ncerled. We advise "the Tinvs-Demor rat" to be content with the improvement it has obtained and not to clamor for better mail services on "other lines." It must be careful not to overwork the postoffice department. L'p this way the cry to the uepaumeiu is not so much ior more mails but for the delivery on tima of the mails already Tribune. in operation. N. Y, A Voluntary Statement. The writer of this paragraph once had an elder and only brother. Brought up together, we were almost inseparable, hopeful and ambitious. Exposure plant ed the seeds of consumption in the elder, anel in a few weeks, in the month of May, "good store of flowers were stuck rounel about his winding-sheet." Every attention and every remedy that love coukl :iye or obtain were unavailing. Since that sad day, I haye learned, through the most trustworthy authority and from experience in its use. that a ! real remedy now exists, that of Dr. Pierce I Called the "Golden Medical Di.-coverv " I A thousand pities that it was not discov- j ered ages ago, but how thankful the! present generation should be that it cau j now avail it?elf of so potent a remedy. ' HURRAH FOR MAINE ! Republicans Elect Thoir Candi dates by tho Largest Majority oinco ISCO. THEY CARf Y EVERY COUNTY. Prohibition Cut3 But Littlo Figure. --All Congressmen Elected by Increased Mnjuritiei Tho Maino Electlo i Plil'l..M. Me., S pt. II --There tire ."07 towns and plantations in Maine; of these, ret ill lis ha ye been rtveiued ll'olil 1 I , which gave limbih (rep.) o'i.Ol'.l, Putnam (dcm.) 11, CIS, ('iishing(prhib.) 1 ,77 1, seattei ing !."7. The ame '.owns in S; gave the n publicit's 4!M'.M, eleinoerats :;:,()',)."", prohihitioni.-ts 1!,M, t-cattering 2. Burleigh's plurality is 1-1, :7;!, against lO.l'tio in liS'-C. The rep ublican gain is I, "OS. The '2C.C towns to hear from gave in lxsii, republicans 20, democrats 17,1!)1, prohibiti on ists l, l2(i. If the same ratio of gain nnd lo.-s is maintain! d tin: filial vote w ill stand : Beiuiblii ans S0.2o'J. democrats 00, Ho, prohibitionists 2, M0, scatterin" !i"7, total 111,101, with a plurality for , the republicans of 1!I,S07. In 1SJ the total vote stood: Republicans 7S,0i0, democrats 0S,'.r,.l; republican plurality 1!,7."5.". The labor vote this year is in cluded in the scattering, but evidently some of the scattering should be. assigned ... l i.t:.? . 10 me pioiiiiiiiion voii'. 1'uiir rei.re: tativesin congress are elected with cn-in- creased majorities. Thirty-seven towns and ciths in the First district gave H. il (rep.) lo.o-JS, Emery (dem.) IC.OOo. Betel's plurality is 2,5-1 :. The same towns in l.ssij gaye Heed 1.375 plurality. Al-oi-sta, Sept. 1 1. Chairman Mauley has sent the follow ing ti legiani: To Hon. M. S. Quay, chairman of the republican national committee. New York: We haye carried the state by a plurality of twenty thousand. Have i hosen the entire !(iig.-iti. in in congress. Kent's majority will reach 2,500. " The majorities for Din.-lcy, Botitelle and Miliki ii will exceed "six thousand, re spectiuely. Ve ll;lVe chost n every sen ator and nearly four-fifths of th: " repre sentatives in our legislature, ami have carried every county in the state on the popular vote. Blaine has telegraphed Ocnci'd Hani- son as follows: Ai ..rsTA, Sept. 11. (jeneral Bui Har rison, lndianopnjis, bid: Returns up to !) o'clock indicate that the rennhlienr, candidate will have more than twentv thousand majority over the deiiuiei-.tfir. candidate, the lar-st majority since 1800. The prohibition vote f'jills off everywhere. J.wriis G. Br.Ar.vi:. A large body of citizens, headed by a. band, tendered Govi rr.oi-cleet Burleigh a serenade, this evcninir to whieli h" re-, ponde.l in a b(;f-f i-pee, !,. The proces sion then called at Mr. Blaine's residence and in respons? he also made a congratu latory speech. Lkwiston-. S- pt. 11. l ti;0 s,.rf'(l district ex-Governor I)in2h-y Oepi jd re elected by neaily 5.000 pbiraiity oyer Allen (dun) and 3,500 majority over all, a republican gain of about 1,000 over his majority of lNS-t, uni than his m ijorsty in 18sj. 1,000 DlOllj Woman as a P.lartyr. History records the .sufi-nnu of count less martyrs, and we read of tlu ni with wonder and sympathy. But there are living today in our midst thousands of other martyrs who have far stronger claims upon our consideration women who are suffereis from those ailments peculiar to their sex. our wives, daugh ters ond .sisters, perhaps, w hose liycsare an unmitting round of sufferin". "Is there no relief " they cry. Yes" there i: Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription will remove that "dragging down" fe.-liug, will banish that backache, will restore, every function to its normal condition. To all sufferers from female complaints. and their name is Legion we say: get the "Prescription" at or..,-: It will "be worth far more than its weight in golct to vou. - vej. TH GfitAT IVom-alsia. FRESH TESTIMONIA THoa. MAarm. For 3 ?.rontlis. TiT-t.T. n v ! r.tnn " vu eurI B. T. BfJlTKEa. BO Minute.. IrrUgtoa. m., May , Prompt. Colnmbm. Ohio. MT is I w Bt. Jacobi Oil- it .irt.rr. icii. SOPHIA FrEtFEi. Sare tn ts htwl from ihiltliood, which yi. to tV i--iOU. O. W. EOWiEQ BOAS.trejgUu "' AT DBCOOrSTS AST) DEAIXM THE CHARLES A. V0GELEB CO.. Baltimori, U t I' u - I i t ! i ,' i I I ! ! e 1 i ! i A i 1 1 i I J