I i PLATTMOIITH rttiftnui xrfUlibDAY, 0,CTOnKr: 11, lb8S. ' -i ! ! P I 7 QhHxmouih ffleehln "SraU KNOTTS BUOS., Publishers & Proprietors. THE PLA.TTSMOOTII HERALD Is published every evening except Sunday and weekly every Thursday morning. Kegls tered at the postofnce. I 'lattrmouth, Nebr.. i.s itenond-claHii matter. Office corner ol Vine and Fifth streets. Telephone Mo. 34. TERMS POK DAILY. One copy one year In advance, by mall. One copy per month, by carrier, One copy per week, by carrier, .?a oo . 60 . 15 TERMS FOR WEEKLY. One oopy oue year, in advance One copy alx months, in advance.. 75 NATIONAL REPUBLICAN TICKET. FOR 1'KEHI DENT, BENJAMIN IIAKIilSON, of Indiana. FOR VICE PREHIDKNT, LKVI P. MOHTON, of New York. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. FOR GOVERNOR, JOHN M. THAYER. FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, GEORGE D. MEIKLE.IOIIN. FOR SECRETARY OF STATE, GILI1ERT L. LAWS. FOR TREASURER, J. E. HILL. FOR AUDITOR OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS, THOMAS II. BENTON. FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL, WILLIAM LEESE. FOR COMMISSIONER OF PUI1LIC LANDS AND BUILDINGS, JOHN STEEN. FOR SUPERINTENDENT OF TUBLIC IN STRUCTION. GEORGE IJ. LANE. CONCRESTIONAL TICKET. FOR CONGRESS, (First Congressional District.) W. .1. CONNELL. COUNTY TICKET. FOR STATE SENATOR, MILTON D. POLK. FOR FLOAT REPRESENTATIVE, JOHN C. WATSOM. FOR REPRESENTATIVES, N. M. SATCHEL, EDWIN JEARY. FOR COUNTY ATTORNEY, ALLEN BEESON. FOR COMMlSsJONEU, IsT. DIST. AMMI is. TODD. FOR SURVEYOR. HERMAN SCHMIDT. Hurrah for Harrison, Morton, Polk. Satchel, Jeary, Todd and Beeson ! The ticket is nominated and it is a winning ticket. Now let every repuhli can in Cass county do bis dufy, and let the miiffwumn nencil stay at home. No O . L .scratching this year boys ! Cleveland Leader: Business pros pects are made bright by the hopeful feeling which prevails regardiug the future of trade. Anticipations of pros perity have kept apicfl with hopes of republican success. Money w"'U feel safe under a safe man like Harrison. JI stand for Harrison, happiness and health; while M is for Morton, wiih ability and wealth; P's for Protection, Pie, Plenty and Pelf; and together they're all for Pork? Potatoes, Peaches, Preserve.?. Fotpie, Pudding and a whole lot of ;ood things, that the emigrant comes to jirotected AiaTica to get. Thousands of votes are lost even election by inconsiderate removals, whicl by a littlt; forethought on the part of th mover, might be prevented. It is a whole some law that requires a residence of ; certain time before election day to enabh one to cast a vote. Find out what Hih' ttime ia, and don't lose your vote. Stoj snoving until after November 6. .Since the 1st of January 126,247 per sons L'aye left Great Britain aud Ireland to setttfi in the United States. Would it not be well for some ablj democratic orator to explain how it happens t?'at s many people are disposed to forfeit the alleged advantages of free trade by com ing to a country in which protection is the established policy? Glole Democrat. Gen. Tiiateh has addressed an open letter and challenge to John A. MeShane and his hirelings (n the Omaha Herald, and the confodrate Calhoun aud the iet of the paid tradncers on that McShtine sheet may just as well understand first as last that the braye old covernor is no mjre afraid of that kind ofwarfare now than he was in 1S01. Gen. Thayer will Maud by the corrupt gang of the Herald until it is snowed under in November, and that concern need not doubt it. Jud'E Newell may well fell proud of the ovation tendered him by the county convention upon the occasion of hi? de feat for the nomination of state senator, such a reception is as great an honor as a nomination could have been; and Mr. Newell's manly, hearty acceptance of the situation was exactly what was to be expected of that gentleman, who has always been the staunchest of the sUunch and one of the ablest republicans of Cass county. His candidature was marked by a manlv. straightforward course, and he has lost nothing by permitting his name to go before the convention. OUR TICKET. Tnc republican convention, which nominated the winning ticket in Cass county at Louisville on Saturday last, was a harmonious and enthusiastic gath ering of the representative republican of Caas county; and, although t he contest for senatorial and legislative honors was close and exciting the best feeling pre vailed and the nominations were unani mously and enthusiastically ratified. For state senator, Milton D. Polk carried oil the honors, not with a unanimous sweep, as was once suggested by the late lamented General Strickland but fairly and successfully; his majority being but one vote over his competitor Hon. "W H. Newell who has always been and still is a host in Cass connty politics. Mr. Polk is a young man and fairly represents the young blood of Cass county politics He was born in the close state of Indiana in 1857, hence he is not unacquainted wiin closely contested contacts. lie is well educated having attended the pub lic and high schools of Greensboro, Ind., during his boyhood and the Nebraska State University, where he finished his studies. He is the son of one of Cass counties leading citizens, lion. John F, Polk, now of Greenwood. Mr Polk is a lawyer by profession and a successful business man being now one of Platts- mouth's heavy real estate dealers and tlie proprietor of ,our gas works. Mr. Polk or "Milt", as he is fayoritely known, has always been a staunch republican, was chairman of our county republican central committee during tiie past two years, is a young man of irreproachable character and is well and favorably known throughout the county; he posses ses the ability and will represent our peo pie in the next legislature in a vigilect and able manner. Milton will be elected and the people of Cass county will have no cause to regret the action of Satur day's convention. Hon. N. Satchel and Edwin Jeary were re-nominated for the house, one a resi dent of Weeping "Water and the other of Salt Creek Precinct. The people of Cass county are well acquainted with both of these gentlemen and the fidelity with which they served their constituants dur ing the last session of the legislature they are straightforward, honest, able men and bring with them the much needed legislative experience. air. i. u. i octet was unanimously re nominated tor county commissioner. There was no one wanting Mr. Todd's place, because he is the right man in the right place. East and west, north and south, Mr. Todd was the choice of the republicans of Cass county; and, we be lieve of the democrats also. He has served the people faithfully and ably as county commissioner for four years and possesses an intimate knowledge of county affiairs (which a new man could not have without long and dilligeut ser vice) which peculiarly fit him for the position he will be called upon to fill for another term. Mr. Allen Beeson, our able county at torney, was complimented with a uuonimous re nom:ration whleo l de serves. He will have very nt!.,,r an7 opposition for the place he now fills. Mr. Beeson is a strong, able, lawyer, an honest man and a pains-taking public servant and tells a story or tries a lawsuit as well as any man in this judicial district. With such a ticket who will say the epublicans of Cas3 county have jiot icted wisely and well? It will be elected and these lucky gentlemen will be con gratulated over their election, with Har rison and Morion, the morning of tho 7th of Novemb'.-r npxt. Sekator Hale's resolution touching the confidential political order issued by Brigadier General Benet, with the ap proval of Secretary Endicoot, 13 timely. It calls upon the war department to furn ish all the facts that made the issuing of the order necessary, why it was marked "confidential," and what changes have been nvi"le 1 puiifiBce of it. These are just the facts wii.T U the aetats and the people of this country wau. lo s"", and they have a light to the fullest formation. Of course, the democratic senators would not let such a resolution pass without objection, but they made no attempt to explain or justify the extraor dinary proceeding of the chief of ordi nance and his superior. Mr. Endicott is. to be sure, placed in a humiliating posit ion, and the strong probability is that the opinion that has been held concerning him must be revised. The political at mosphere of Washington has been too much eyen for him. N. Y. Tribune. Here is a significant item which ap pears in t he Deficiency bill of congress: " To pay Wil iam Cramp & Sons for wharfage for monitor Terror, $3,350." It means simply that the Terror was tied up at one of the wharves of the Cramps' for 335 days at a cost of $10,000 a day to the government. She was brought to the Brooklyn navy yard a few weeks ago, and is one of the vessels whose immediate completion Secretary Whitney considers so necessary that the law which prohibits the increase of force at the navy yard within sixty days of a general election must be suspended. Nev York Tribune. ONE MO RE OF MILLS: FALSE HOOT)S. Roger Q. Mills declares that the price of pig-iron h about $18.72 a ton, and that the duty on that article, which is $.72 a ton, is clear profit to the .manu facturer. Mr. II. A. Crawford says that thousands of tons of pig-iron have been sold in St. Louis, within the past three months, at lot-s than $15 a ton. Further more. Mr. Crawford says that pig-iron makers would be very glad to take $1.50 profit, or less than oue-fourth of the sum which Mr. Mills declares they are making right along on that product. There is considerable difference be tween these two statements. They con flict on all points, and conflict o radical ly that it is impossible to harmonize them. If one of them is right the other must necessarily be wrong. An inquiry, there fore, into the character and qualifications of the witnesses will be necessary before an intelligent opinion can be arrived at as to the relative value of their testimony Who is this Roger Q. Mills? Why. this Mills is Roger Q. Mills, of Corsicana, Tex. Who is H. A. Crawford? Mr. Crawford is president of the Sligo Fur nace Company, of St. Louis. Roger Q. .Mills lias never been in a furnance, a foundry or a factory in his life perhaps never saw one while II. A. Crawford is at the head of one of the biggest furnaces in the Mississippi Valley. Mr. Mills does not know whether pig-iron is a natural product or a manufactured commodity. For all he can tell of his own personal knowledge pig-iron may grow on trees, like apples or persimmons. Mr. Craw ford, on the other hand, is recognized from San Francisco to New York as an aulhorjty on questions of this nature. Mr. Mills has solemnly declared at least twenty-five times, and in as many places, that the labor in a ton of steel rails amounts to just $3.75, while experts men who are in the business, and know from years of practical experience what they are talking about, put the labor cost at from $13 to $15. A careful in quiry made a few weeks ago in Pennsyl vania placed the cost of the labor in 2240 pounds of steel rails, at present rates, at $14.85, or almost four times as great as the Texas 6tatcBm3n's estimates The Globe- Democrat has pointed out at least a dozen falsehoods made by Mr Mills in his speeches at Richmond, Ind. and East St. Louis. They are not only falsehoods which any intelligent person could discover on inquiry, but they are falsehoods M-hich cut the ground com pletely from under him, and prove that the scheme which he advocates is as vicious and iniquitous as the methods which he employs in advocating it are diereputable and dishonest. All this trickery and mendacity, of course, is tell ing disastrously on the fortunes of the democracy. In fact, Mr. Mills' with drawal from the stump in the north to go down and save himself from defeat in his own district is the severest blow which the republicans Lave received in the present canvass. Globe Democrat. Major McKinley's ten-dollar suit ha been matched in the following advertise ment in the Washington Post: "We invite the Congress of the United States including the House and Senate aud their constituents, comprising the entire population of America, to our exhibit the best chevoits of American make, con verted by American free labor into sack and frock suits, (better made and better fitting than any Lomtoii-Bjftdc clothes that we have "ever seen.) that we arc selling at $10 suit! Forty-three styles on exhibition n one of our mammoth show windows, any .one of. wjijfh will knock sky-high the suit recently exhib ited on the lloor of the House of Repre sentatives. Think of it! Iu EuglLh fab rics we have the lluddersfield single yarn goods, that have sold all over Lon don at forty-two shillings($l0.50) a suit, and we witi sell ypy a suit of the same material for $10, made fcv us rjght in the Capital-of America; but we frankly say to you they are not so good for wear or style as other suits we sell at the same price made from fabrics manufactured in this C-QuHti'V: I'SP n nc' window and . -"-ftcci tiiui f Gi? i-W (iqtl right here, be con ' . - , j - i 'uks of the nation s in the shadow of the r uaprioi, xne oest ?iu suit or cioines . be found in any city in this country, or in any country in the world. HE WON'T ENDORSE HILL. While petitions are being s'rgned by thousands of New York patriots beseech ing Grover Cleveland to come out of his hole and endorse the regular democratic nominee for governor of that state, and while Dan Lamont is stiffening his neck and refusing to let any such endorsement go out, the administration democrats are trying to secure the sacrifice of Dave Hill as a sin offering on the ltar of "Destiny" who seems inclined to turn her back on her favorite son by circu lating pledges among tho faithful to the effect that they will work and vote, tooth and nail, for the presi dental ticket and will not vote for Hill for governor. The state of the democratic party, if these things go on another month, can be as easily imagined as described, if not more so. David has already endorsed Grover, but he is a bald headed and slick old statesman, and every thing he writes has a string attached, the end of which, is under h!s pillow. 'Lincoln Journal. THE REFURLICANTARTFFBILL The reduction in the government's an nual income which would be caused by the Senate's tariff bill, if it should be enacted, is placed at a little over $73,- 000,000. About $42,000,000 of this cut would be made in the customs list and $31,000,000 in the internal tuxes. On the customs schedules nearly $28,000,000 of the reduction would come from thu lowering of the duties on sugar, $8,000, 000 from changes iu other imports,' and $t5,500,000 from the entire abolition of duties on certain raw materials. About $21,500,000 of the cut in the internal taxes would come from tobacco and $7, 000,000 from idcohol used in the arts. The heayiest reduction in rates which the bill provides for is in sugar. Ou the average, taking all the grades together, the cut on sugar is about 50 per cent. The changes in the wool dutii s are slight. On some grades they are increased in a small degree, and on others they are low ered. The same is truu of woolen manu factures. The duties on ready made clothing, when altered at all, are in creased, while those on earthen, stone, crockerv and glass ware are re luci d. There are sonic changes in classification made in iron and steel schedules, but the modifications in rates which the measure effects is generally toward a lower range of duties. Steel rails, upon which the present impost is $17 a ton, would come in for about $14 a ton if this bill should become law. The duty by the Mills bill is $11 a ton. The reduction of the in ternal tax on tobacco permits a reduction to be made in the duty on that article without injury to the domestic industry, and the duty, therefore, is lowered. The senate bill is neither so compre hensive in scope nor so radical and sweeping in the alterations which it pro proposes, so far as regards the customs list, as the Mills bill. The duty on no important domestic product which the tariff has adequately developed or which it can develop is reduced below the pro tective point. "Wool, lumber, salt and other leading articles of domestic indus try, which Mr. Mills and his friends put on the free list, are either untouched b the republican measure or touched but slightly. The article from which th senate.strikes off all duties are generally those not produced In this country at all, or produced in very small quantities. The reducton in the government's reve nue which the bill would bring about is about $3,000,000 greater than that pro vided by the house bill. That meausure takes $50,000,000 from the customs schedules $30,000,000 by lowering du ties and $20,000,000 by removing duties altogether and $20,000,000 from the in ternal tax list. No more carefully drawn or sensible revenue revision bill than that just reported in the senate stands any chance of passage in the present congress. Globe Democrat. HIGH WAOEH IN ENGLAND The administration organs have been trying to defend free trade by asserting that wages are higher in unprotected Great Britain than any other part of Europe. This claim was or is based on statistics several years old, and dos not apply to the existing condition of afiairs in England. If there is ar.y doubt on that point the following item from a recent Birmingham paper would dissipate it promptly: THE STRIKE IN THE OCX-LOCK TRADE. The Qpcrr.tiyco on strike in the gun-lock trade at Darlaston" decided on 'ecjeea day eyening to issue an apppeal to the general public fi!r support, in which they set forth that, after paying expeusesJhey were unable to earn more than Is. 2d. a day of 14 or 15 hours. TheT demand an increase of 2d. per lock, wh ch, if grant ed, would esb? the m to earn about 10s. or lis. per weec. Read this extract, American working men, and note that if these strikers of Dariaston succeed in securing the pitiful increase they ask for they will earn from $2.50 to $2.75 a week for working 14 hours a day. If wages are any lower in Belgium, God help fhe Belgians. San Francisco Chrofcjcje, Mr. Kacpfman, of Avoca; Mr. Finley, of Greenwood. (Salt creek), Mr. Young, of South Bend, and Rozzell Morrow, of Rock Bluffs, all first-class representa tive men, recfiyed strong, earnest support coaveutioil tturdiy5 anyone in t. . . , of these gentlemen CMild have bCCn a credit to Casa county had they received the nomination foF repipssntatiye. But unfortuately the late lamented apportiop raent cut Cass couty out of two represen tatives, so that but two of the gentlemen competing could be nominated, and Messrs. Satchel and Jeary held the lucky tickets in the uncertain lottery. Ix the editorial sanctums of the Boston nerald, New York Times, New York Post New York Commercial-Adcervlitr, and every leading democratic newspaper in the land, there is an editor charged with the special duty of critically dis secting every speech niade by General Harrison, in the hope that some "blunder" can be found in them, that can be used agaiDst him, and against the republican party. These men have worked hard and -they are skilled workmen. What haye they found? Well, that's just what those who pay their salaries would like to know. PROTECT AMERICAN I N T E R E H T S. If the people of the United States should adopt the free trade idea bhould conclude to purchase abroad everything they coiitihiie that ran be purchased cheaper than at home, is it not plain that two-thirds of our people would have no employment and, therefore, no mom-v wherewith to purchase Mipp'hs, tvi-n though llou;- Ik; worth but $1 per barrel and beef one cent per pound '. And is it not also pliiin that to the extent that wo Dii re base abroad such artich-s as ran be j produced id home a certain rejeji t i;ii Of Olir people imirt be i dt n I) d to i forcid idleness and. therefore. : povei t y, igii'trancc ,;nd dcgrad-iti'in. Th- p-.-opI- of the UnUrd St .!.s. like St .lis, inT ' hi t'l- Ml, the people of a.l iivib. il compelled to contribut to of government, and all tuo .. t tants of military age are under oblichtion to risk their lives in defense of that gov ernment in the event ef war. Is it not, therefore, both just and expedient that our own citizens be pytftned in our markets over foreiirueTS -not merely placed upon an aaHt; with them? (Jiv ing the preference to our own titiz-ns implies ne enmity, no h"ti!ity to the people of other rations, for we recognize the right of either nations to prefer tls ir people ov-r us; and even if we; elid not they would exercise that right have al ways done so and always will. Ohio State Journal. TIIE CHINESE MESHA IE. The ineist noticeable characteristic of the president's Chinese message is its length. It is safe to say tiiat if the pres idential election had not been upon us Mr. Cleveland would have found it con venient to inform the congress, with much greater brevity, that he hud signed the bill, and to suggest legislation on two points. But the voting is only live wee ks off today, ahd thi3 was a last chance for the deli vfry of a stump speech to the Pacific Slope which was not to be lost. No one can read it without being impressed with the fact that Mr. Cleve land is imitating his prototype, Mr. Til den, in the uncompjon anxiety with which he is seeking the presidency. Leaving out of cemsieleration the bun combe, the incemsislency and the disin genuousness of the president's attitude, there is no raelical defect in the nicssnge. The suggestion for an appropriation, fe-i indemnity for the Rock Springs massacre is proper. It is already in the deficiency bill, and is now in conference between the two houses. The suggestion that legislation should be had permitting Chinese to lunel who are already on their way to this country with certificates is undoubtedly a sound one. The number thus admitteel weiulel not be great, and the United States would thus be relieved frem n charge of bad faith. But if Mr. Cleveland had just been re-elected, how much less paper that message would have covered N. Y. .Tribune. "JiO'ODL E ZIcSHANE." It sounds very pretty and it is thor onghly democratic for the Omaha Htv ald owned by John A. MeShane, to tnlk common heme sty. If-McSliane and his gKHg had their deserts tlr-y would not today be running ioose and libi-Miny im-n like G v. Thayer. What is this McShauc that run for congress two years ago in this district and purchased a sat w.'th money, openly, fr z -nly, with the effontery of the very devil? We have heard the tooU of this corrupt man boast of boeulle they ijaye distributed at Ins request and under his directions to cor rupt the voters of this district. JI? i a man who openly puivhaseel an election to congress; who never made a speech or put iu va .".ppearance at a meeting and 'who is todiy 03 cciiipieie a ctrar.ger to the people in the first district oqt sida of Douglas county, a South Hea Inlander except they know of him as "Boodle MeShane." That is the sort of a man to be running a newspaper and calling old citLens dishcueat. 2r. HcShane and his gang want to understand tliaf t(ey have to face the record he made in thiu district as "a beodler" and that he can't again bamboozle fie public by throwing mud at old citizens and honorable men and his paid hireling Calhoun of th fferak v,- $nd, hfs before he h done with this campaign, Mr. II. W. Bcshnkll, of the Lincedu Call, nwle a neat aU(l eloquent speech to the delegates asse.aljled. i due fprrn, at Louisville on Saturday last. Jlr. liftsh nell talked good, strong, wholesome doc trine and the representative republicans of Cags cpunty in their delegate aud in dividual capcuy, ratified hj ser.tiruents with an enthusiasm born of conviction. Mr. John A. Davies also made a gooel speech 894 Stirred op the republicanism of the conventie.p. Detectives Wanted, to ferret out aud discover, if they can, a isingle case where Dr. Pierce's Medical Discovery has been used for torpid liver, indigesMon, impure blood, or consump tion in its early states, without giving immediate and permanent relief ; provid ed, of course, that the directious have been reasonably well followed. Louisville. R. P. Loucks is now in Kansas visiting his father. Mi s Agatha Tucker's fcistcr in tiow visiting n town. Rev. C. IL Gil more moves his family to Ebnwoeul Friday of this week. Mis: May Carr spent Saturday anel Sunday with her parents at Greenwood. Mr. and Mrs. Sutton nnd Miss I) "Witt were at Aihl ind Friday night anel Satur elay. M; nd Mrs. Jeihn Sayles of Green wood are visiting r litiws and frknd9 in t'n e-ity. N lee Ne!s.:i who has bee u MeJc lor a ; ;h.-i t ti in.-- died Sunday, and was buried ! Monday j. in. ' V !;'!.. tie- ci.-uty ev.uvt nti-n was v-ry ! entlui-i iMie it v.v s vi i y h;:r inonious. ; Veiy iitl le kii ! i.ur was ('one :iiid that ! r.;ti:e 1'roia m:; i i.f th'- li.'oliies be cause ' oi i; ii. 1 d 1 v.t;s!:' liell to See fOIIIO ! ol' the s!i !:!;!t s ilet'e.iied. Watson For Float Senator The repuoli; in deleg it s of Cass and Otoe counties mt I iu tin t e.-n vention at Weeping Water last night. A. N. Sulli yan, of this city, nominated General Job11 ('. Watson, of Nebraska City, for ll'Jjat representative. Wat sop was electt11 .oy iiee l.ninition without a dissenting, voico. Mr. Watson said he would glad' meet his eleinoeratic opponent, lliggin or Bnv proxy that he (Iliggins) niij'lit nanie on tie; stump to discuss the issues , 'ja campnigii. this meeting to be i1 any town in e ither eif tin; counties. P gen erally felt here that Mr. Watson's--nomination w ill add strength to the repuVA". cap tickets ef both ceiunties. Republican Central Committee. There will be a meeting eif the Repub lican Central Committc eif Cass county at Weeping Water, Monday, October 15, 1SHS, at 1 o'clock p. m. Every member is earnestly reepjebtcd to be present. Oklando Tkfft. Chairman. Wake up to Facts! Anel consult your interest without delay while an opportunity offers yet our corn iiumity which has neyer before been our good fortune to consult so high authori ty on the eyes, as is now at the Riddle House, Prof. Strassinan, who ia an Optic ian of Eminence, can tell you in an in stance as if by magic any ailment of your Eyes and Equalize glasses to all defaults and inequalities of the sight, in which attempt all otliers have failed. Give this your first attention, as the Prot. ser vices is called upon elsewjjere, Not a Pimple on Him Now Pad with Eczema. Hair all gone. Scalp covered with eruptions. Thought his hair would never Crow. Cured by Cutieura Kem edies. Hair splendid and not a pimpie on him. I cannot sy enough in praise of the Cuti rviiA. ltKMKiiiKS. My heiy, when one year of ai;e. was to bad with eczema that lie lost all eif hiit hair. Jtis se-alu was covered v. It h eiup tlons. which the doctor naitl was ncald head, and tlia' lii tiair would never grow again. Derail intr of a cur,; from pli ysiiann. I begUil the use of fa , itejt KnuKfMhK. and, J happy to cay, with the niont perfetct nuoceis. Hii hair is now si It rulid, and there is not a pimple on loin. I l 'on nieiifl the Outiccra "kmkdikh to me ther.t as the most speedy, tt economical and suth etire for all kin riiaeare 1 ef infants and childre n, and feel that every mother w ho lias an arlictPd child w'll thank me for ss doing. Mits. M. K. WOOilKUM, Norway. Me. A Fever Sore Eight Years Cured, I must extend to you t h thanks ui quo of ipy cust n'U!iS. who lis li-e( cured by nsini I lie t'lUiKUi ;i RciitfllH. or hu old sore, oaunea hy a l"ii spell i.f Kiekiies or rever eijrht years :.fro. Ilf- wa- . l;i(i Iir v;i fearful he would h tve to have his 1. t.' an piiCi't-d, but is happy to cay 1p- Ik how eu'irHv w.-ll. sound b a dol J ir. He r i eM e t use his name, which is M. II. Caso.v, merrh-n.r e.t this r.litce. JOHN V All VOU. elmpfflst, eialn.-b- ro, 1'enn. Severe See tp Di-eao CuVu. A few w cK Hj!., i: y wiff Miil.TPl ve.y much from a cut neoii dinea.p of he ea.! p and re ceive.! no i-lif from th- various einedies she u-eo until she met . iticuka. ,e disease luoiiii t y Wded to this treatment and in a short tune she w.-is enti .lv well. T' ere has been no return i.f tii--disease, and ruTTcun. ranks N l i - r est ijti:tt i-i, for d incase eif the 1 Iih sl i-i . lil'-V. . I'KIS- J ' Y '' A ''''ETX D From P-mpies to Scrofula Cured. CcTiexitA.ih-trveat slin cure. and tVKicuRA. oai it -pared from it. exteniallv an" e l Tl. i ka Krsoi.VKiT, the new blo...l pnrlfter. tei n:i! y. ire a p- itie cure for ev- "' f'ia of -kin and hi ;od eliseace. from i.im- p!e- to -. ful;i . 1 ro!ii i v rywiiere. Price. CrTiccRA. .V,c. .-; s p. t- ; Hki.oi.vknt. Si. PrrMMi cd h v u- y e-iid tor It.w to Cnra -kin Dieasei -i M pajfes.su Ulu.tratior-s. aud 100 testimonials. A"RY'S ,Sklnt.Bnl aip preserved and P.,-PJr.. beautified by Ccticura Mkdj- ( A i J-. I BOA ' Catarriasa hangars. To le i.eed irom vhh Ia,;g s o' feuifocattou .vliile lyin- down ; to b'eatpe freely,' sleep soundly and undituj oed ; to rise refreshed, hi-ad oieiir. brain at-tlva and free from pain r ache ; to know that no poUoncns. putrid mat ter defiles the l.re;.th aud reds away the deli cate machinery of lie sineil, taste find heating, to feel that the eyxteni does rot, through it veins and arteries, suck uu the i ois?n iha i s, fi 1,1 ,i;iderniipe nd dsrey, e LleiEjpglK-yond aH ol iter hunid'u .up.j-(u , To purchase Immunity from ucu a fate fboulel ba tbe object ct all afllicted. But those who have tried many remedies and physician des pair of relief or cure. Safos!i'h Kapical Cchk meets even pha of Caarr'.), j.-oj;, a fimpl Ue,ej ,oU i'j the most loathsome aud destructive stagesl it ia local and constitutional. Inctand In reliev ing, permanent In curing, safe, econirulcal and never- failing. diieeli"ii. and sold by all drupirlms for O' e 11 i'O'ITEK DiiL ti AM) CHtMlCAL CO Boston. No Rheumatic AJipu? VEq IN ONE MINVTJS u r. .ft The Cutlcara Antt-P.Ia Sciatic. Midden. Sharp ana ST vou8 i'atus. fitraing and Wenc esse. Tne first and only P(tin. stafitaneous. infallible, safe. A im 'ousA tidote to Pain. Inflan.inatlonVad We akue.'i au?5i vr,j" prt to iuMhV llasters. At all drm.'glsts. 23 cetiti : five for l Kai-Co,, Boton, SANFOKD S RAMCAT.ri'KK Consists of ppo LoUlj i,.f fhs JJai.Ijjai. CVK-fi. one pox CataJi' juiAtSoi-vVT . ope fmpfo 'eh fwWVr."" u wrnpiieu iu mc narnaKf. Willi nexilA , 1 r -i '4 (? i! r Jj V I J i f