The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 02, 1882, Image 4

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    GUITEAU’S TRIAL,
So —
At the opening of court on the BoHy-toronth;
Guitean acoso, and in a pretentious, ora
manuer goad the following statement:
a intend no disrespoot to this bonorab ie
eon. 1 desire no controversy with this hon
arb’ sontt, In general I am satisfol with
the law an proposed by your honor. But I
ave & 88] Lrouder view of the law, which 1
your honor. to follow, to wit, that if the
fons Ble! that I believed chat it was right
© Hig {0 ramove the President becausd I had |
ial Divine authority so #9 do, and was |
goveed to do Tt by the Deity, they will acgnit
ye on the ground of franatory mania. Sie a.
MacPuriapd and Hiscock [meaning Cole] were
Joguitted on the ground of transitory mands, |
8 my speech, published vesterday in all tho
Jeading newspapers of the country, apt which,
yoasons fir asking your hopor ¢ 10 Shure,
Mr. Road made » brilliant and Jawyerlike pl
Yor the defense, and Mr Sooville is making a
argument on his theory, Dat neither
Mr. Read nor Mr, Scoville peprosents me in
this defense, 1 am Bore ssamy own counsel,
and have been from the beginning, No one
nts me to this jary. 1 know my feel
ngs and inspirations in removing tho Presis
dent, and 1 have sot it forth in my spoech yos-
terday; and I ask your honor jit the name of
Justice, in the name of the American judiciary,
mn the name of the Americ. n people, to allow
me 10 address that jury of my hy en in a
vase whore my life way bo at stake,
tipon that jury has a doubt as to his duty to
ROQRIt me, my spoech will prob ably settle it in
my favor. Therefore, in i
hon, it is of the greatest importance that
the jury should fo me In my
fens,” Judgo Cox sald he woula
sider Guitoau's request to add rose the
3
Uo
jury.
dofen
tod with what he called the real !fefonse
wf the assassin's mind, Mr, Sooville contended
{hat the aan: in objecting to tho intro.
tinction of cortain evidence by the defense, had
not shown a spirit of fairness.
tritioised Lawyer Porter and Distriol
Corkhill for the manner in which the case for
$he prosecution had been ‘conducted. Porter,
he said, had prostituted his mind for money te
hang an insane man. Gui tean suffored from
chronic insanity, and
fours ho was simply a peripatetic madman,
had got
imminent from Senator Chandler, of Michigan.
The way he was affected by that doa showed
that ho was insane, and the steps by which his
mind was lod from that to the concept ion of
the assassination farther proved his fusanity,
Guitean ocvessionally interrupted his counsel,
smong other things saying that he had receive d
Bove checks for
banks, aud was in a position to pay his board
bills,
in a quict tune, difder ont in every respect from
the one which he sos when he makes his usual
morning speesh: “1 hape
me to address the jury alter Mr,
through.” Judge Cox repliad
consider the A of thie
Scoville bad Hui his speech,
then began the third day of his ad 1iress to the
ary. Nearly th
day consist ad of a discus
of the political
mind before the
that but for sertain ressons
oution Guiteat would never hive boea
od
a
2 of the influence
ash om al he assassina-
atl he died.
ok
taken to an imsano a
tiem of Gaxzield and key P
Continuing, he sald vel Se
this prosecution is so :
10 conten i aga
will feel the Pre
with this cas
this pan (pelatis
Back of him is th
and 1 arraian bell
who are crowding
pe: sons high in an
without fear, $8
tion are those pod
own infamy by
man. I say
Grant aud Artha
oat jusu x
they have s
Shut = ale of §
BOL me rely
to the aistriet
ith their
lo went
i To-
soc rdanes
Xr Seow
counsel and t
into this
marking tha
when he open
oted a fair ay
iad doneh
mented
goapesoat ©
any Tosiing, ut
ic power sho
scramble for of
Garfield. Hos
death had been =o prot
of him, were ready be
last to trample him
down in obscurity
it eovid be dong
baud, Referring t
fense tad injored fn Cad
prisoner vpon the witness stand,
ealded sitention fo the fact
the faculties of i 0
a8 sbarp snd shrewd
sane persons, That had
by the testimony of the experts.
tos growth of the delnsion on th P
mind, It was jo:t as impossible to get rid o
the idea that he must kil the President
was for Paul when he cried: “How shall 1
deliver me from the body of this death?”
believed that the prisaner had tried to shake
off the idea but had Giled, because he was
sick and weak ville farther reviewed
the evidence, apd particalaly commented ad-
versely upon that of De, Gray. The prisoner
made comparatively faw interruptions.
twice called out that the New
appeals on the preceding Tv
& decision thet fav
Bel fa to
8 Ba
8
fG 3
15% me 0 =
to the
I Was € aki it
st 1}
ee 8d
»
persons
as those
been
+f
i
York court of |
eaday had rendered |
theory of the de- |
nsanity,
oredd the
fense in his case as fo §
of Mr. Sourille s address
r, who,
Ar of
comes with so much force at the present
moment that 1 Jesire {0 call attention fo it.
comes with great grace from the Empire Stale,
from that grand old Btite of the republic, the
State that sends forth the bruins, the mo ney
and the commerce of the nation. It is 8 great
step forward in the law of insanity. Hitherto
were opened by
on the defendant; bot the court of appeals, wit
grand megnanimity, says that the Ri of
proof is on this prosecution, to prove that the
man not only eommitied the act, but also that
he was sane at the time he committed it. In
the name of justice, and in the name of the
American lo, snd in the name of tho
American
gentlemen of the conrt of appeals of the State |
of New York.” Mr, Boe
position opposite the jury box. and in his cus-
a nt weariness from bis efforis of the past
a. days, again addressed the jury. Ho
ney, who arrested the prisoner, to show the
incidents which foliower
President—the arrest, the removal to police
headquarters and the seareh of the prisoner's |
for papers. These incidents, Mr.
ille claimed, showed that the
was perfectly composed at the time
the arrest, entirely free from
citement.-8 state of mind which was in-
consistent with the idea of sanity, do
denounced Colonel Corkhill with great bit
torness several times, declared that if Goitean
had been of 8 revengefol spirit he would have |
done to Johm H. Noyes, of the Oneida Commu. |
nity, many years ago, for wrecking his life,
what he did last July to James A. Garfield, and
insisted that neither revenge nor love of noto-
riety wonld account for the crime, becanse
there was no proof of the one and the other
wa: inconceivable. He dwelt also on the fact
that Guiteau had made no attempt when vis-
ited by the experts at the jail to feign insanity,
, Beoville said that he was noi peaking so
much to save Guitean’s life, to do his duty to
is wife, Guitean's sister, or to save the erodit
of the Guitesu family, as to prevent an injus- |
of
ex.
grace to America. If it were possible for the
3
+ rd mob law, let them do so. He argued |
that the prisoner Tad no possible ill-will
toward the President, and no motive for shoot-
ing him, and all the “ireumstances showed ho
yeas insane, He defied the prosecution to show |
& caso in history in which a man had committed
such a eritne merely to gain notoriety. During
the day several wordy encounters fook place |
between Mr. SBeoville and Colonel Corkhill, and |
Saommente,
. Beoville concluded his address, which |
tieth day of the trial. He exhibited diagrams
10 show that one of the doctors who testified
for the ecution lied when he told the jory
that a diagram representing Guitean’s head as
metrical was correct, He averred that the
of homicides Souinitted by lunatics which
Jit introduced by Dr. Gray bad been pre- |
od for this case, and he read from the offi- |
- vial tables of the Utica asylum to show {hat
four oo cares, which
had been omitted from
ron tables. In conclusion, he
that the erime of a lunatic must not be pun- |
in the same way as that of a sane man-
Je asserted that capiial punishment had a de,
naalizing | influence, and, in his opinion, |
erimes wor Bld be diminished by its abolition, |
As on the previous day there were several al- |
tercations rn Scoville and Corkhill. There |
Dr, |
Mr. Sroville concluded his speech. Guitean |
strike one of the officers in charge
of hy while leavivg the court-room at the re-
goss. Hestopped to speak to Mr, Scoville,
when the baili attempted to push him along,
He grow angry, and when the pressure was re-
mewed he drew back his hands, locked as they
handcuffs, tried
the officer. Another officer
his hands and he was then quickly |
out, page Cox iy to let Gut. |
deliver his speech to the jury, saying thal
ne of his brethren had very serious doubts
ether in a capital case the prisoner could be |
the right to address the jury. Guiteau
, when he gave out his epeach: for pub-
Bes in od a Ta |
no approved by Judge Cox's
‘He said he would deliver the sams |
and
apecch that he had alesly & given to the pross,
{ but he wanted to wait until the next morning,
a8 his mind was not clear,
drew their objections to his speakin
Guitean seomed mollified by what he cal
unexpee od courtesy of Sorkhill,
A tremendous crowd was prosent to hear
Guitoan speak in his own behalf ou the fiity
fioat day of the trial, Upon entering the room
Guitean took a soat in the witness box, remark
ing, as he Imad out his papers: *1 sit down
beoansa 1 ean speak botter; not that 1 am
atrald of being shot, Thin shooting business
18 getting pt aved out.”
Judge Cox the prisoner careful iN ATTRBROK his
and, with a flourish, began to read
oript as follows: Ihe prosecution
pretend that { am a wicked man, Mr. Seoville
aod My Res d think I am a lunatic, and 1 pre
anne you think 1 am I certainly was a luna
3 when 1 fives 1 on the President
l Americ an people gene Tally , and I pro.
ime vou think 1 was, Can you imagine any
Ming more fpsane than my go ng to that de pat
and whoa g the President of the United States
Yau. ax to say whother 1 was sane or
fnsane moment 1 fired that shot, You
wg to do with my cundition before
shot was fired. You must say by
sane or insane at the mow
ho = vas fired, 17 you have
at tht moment vou must give me
that dou al nd acquit me, That
wy doubt whether 1 fired that
nt of Daity, If 1 fived 1
£1 was sano If 1 fired 38
elf | the agent of the Deity 1 was
on must soquik Thi the law
ent deoisi u the Now
It row gos the
stop forward in the
thy this age of mail
i eit
led the
glasses,
from Bl an
ha ie
al the
or since tl
{your ve
¥
:
Pmy sanity
th
EAN BA
as tha ie
i Of MY OW At
¥s
tho
posing mw
2 8 LS
wl
o and
grand
Lt is wat
Nate of
hesitation in saving that it is & special
in my favor, and 1 sak this tv urt
wer It Some of the
wink me the groatost
SRE 8 Rrowiag.
on sind that P Oo OY dey
od the nation am rWar
in detail my defen
the
bost
¢
ne
all ¢ 3
morning,
his = honey
hen le
ice to express my indebte dnees to the
can \ are ful way
now
£) deli
:
press for th
gona
: open wy 3
me with all batteries last
Ju ge they did pot uow my motive and
insy Naw that this trial has developed
My me Motive and inspiration their bitiorness has
some editors are doable he aded, They
curse you to-day and bless you to-morrow,
thoy Suppose that publio opinion is for
Sguins} ¥¢ 08, which shows the low grade of thed
1 dea sire wo th ank my
BOONE
1
gone,
i counsel ample fo i ) Beoville,
a stanch man and a haro, and { commend
to the great Ro thirest as & fine lawyer and a
swntleman, We have iffored as to
. He has his ive oi and I have
mit Md him to work his theory as he
thought best, and he has dove it 1n a splendid
way and I commend him for it, Considering
hit experience as an advocate } WON
if 3 a man of marked resou In
words, you cannot teil in
man until he has a cha me
| men never have a chance, and go down in
| obsourity. There are plenty of brains in this
i world, Not every has a chance to de
velop his brain. It is in and opportunity
nader Providence that makes a great mAL i
ho manshal an il
uC hristing
18
»
rier 10 Bi
is
DO
DOO.
man
th ) superint
the ward
Oy ne
od me,
14
patient nt
on
aw services ren-
yonorable
and bright jury for their long and
th I am not here
: am here as a
lows: I read
¥ 0 pris ner ten
us
ntion to t
or a lunatic
i patriot, 1 my speed
i from the New York ile
1 sodedd to read his s oh as
In & b Soclamatory manne ae
ch hig the pap
od
@ air above hus
fer in bon: ls as a
kis voice
wera
his wg
mother
ne
€ y
a lovi
complotely,
rodeo v
50 nm
» of the more
IL Was &
. A
WisOner
t would
ion that
fe for him tO wall
i Washington or New
1 om his mail
IK.
yming ane
day,
way,
insg }
which
"He
insed
his pieased smite
district attorney, who
ich followed the read ding
Reaching that partion of th
an abstract’ from his ad:
American people is in.
sated, he Dlded up the paper, took off
bis gi 4 and squaring himself in
chair proces led to repeat the extract from
| memory. In doing this he sssumed his most
oratorical style, modulating the tones of his
voice, using bo th arms to aid him in cmpha-
zing his dramatic utter tances and as far as
pusit ble acting the extract. Coming down to
| his quotation from “John Brown's Body,” he
| threw back his head and sang a verse from
{ that old song, much to the amusement of the
spectators. He read from his speech:
dy in the groom you wi il; that is all
! san do. Bat thes eafter 168 a day of
i Teckaning. The mills of the gods grind slow,
but they grind sure, and they will grind to
atoms every man that injures me,” and supple-
| mented it with the remark: “As sure as a
{ hair of my head is injured this nation will gO
down in the dust, sod don’t you forget it.’
{ He then proceeded to read his speech to 8
{ close, his final sentence being. When the
| President was shot his esbinet telegraphed to
foreign nations shat it was the act of a mad-
man, “and it would be far belter every way that
it be finally decided that it was the act of a
madman.”
Guitean began the proceedings on the fifty-
second day by saying: “I spent yesterday in
examining my mail soveral enn Jettors—
a fe od many ‘of them from las lies, and seversl
of them very tender. 1 desire to express my
| sympathy snd thanks for those tender lottors
f recaived from American ladies, Ope otter
suggests that President Arthur give me
| Cabinet appointment. I do not desire any
office from General Arthur. Uf would not be
prope r, and if it would 1 don’t desire it. I
also wish to say to Judge Porter that he is to
{ have the final close on this case, and that if he
{tempts to mislead that jury about the law or
about the facts my counsel and myself will
{ stop him. He came into thia case lastOcto-
| ber at the instance of Geperal Arthur under a
misapprehension, and Judge Porter doesn’t
represent the American peopls or the
{ government of the United Staten. In
this case he represents himself,” Judge Por-
ter then began the closing address to the jury
| in pressnce of au audience that crowded the
court-room to snflocation, In a voice that was
rather weak —for at had been sick several days
— Mr, Porter said: “1 deal only with the eri.
| dence and the facts and the law.’ During
i most of Mr. Porter's address Guitean cither
{ read a newspaper or wrote autographs. Mr.
Porier said he would say, in justice to the
i ria wer, that, of the three arguments which
| bad been made for the defense, the one most
free from objection was that delivered by the
| prisoner himself. Aside from the impiovsness
i of his stater ents, it was free from the deliber-
ate misstatements and perversions of testi.
mony that ran through the arguments of his
associate counsel, especially of Mr, Scoville,
Describing Guitean's characteristics, Mr. Porter
said: “This man showed his idea of merey to
others when vn one occasion he turned 6 you
and said that that God, whose name he has
i 80 often blasphemed, would interfere to strike
! down one of your number before you should be
{ able to convict him, This is the man who in-
| vokes the tender and mereiful consideration of
his case—a man brutal in his instincts, in
| ordinate in his love of notoriety, eaten up by a
thirst for money which has gnawed at his soul
like a cancer, a beggar, a hypoeriie, 8 canter, a
swindler, a law yer, who with many years’ prac-
tice never won a case. Would yon know why ?
| No court, no jury failed to sce that he was a dis.
| honest rogue, and such men cannot win
cases—a man who has "left his trail in
varions States ; a man who has lived on other
people's funds and appropriated them to his
own use in breach of every trust; a man who is
| capable of aping the manvers of a gentleman;
{a wan who as a lawyer had this notion of
morality, that when he had taken debte to collet
and collected them by dunning the debtor, held
them against his client, and chuckled over the
success of his scheme : a man who gold oroide
he read
suse a laugh a
dently enjoyed
for the
was 100 much fo
i joined in the laugh w
of the extract.
| speech where
to the
i which
£vi-
Qn the €
I
2
i dress
Ad his
&
falsehood and misrepresentation.” (The pris
oner—** That lie seems to stick in your throat
Porter.”)
| fiend. Then he highly eulogized President
Garfield. Mr. Porter reviewed the history of
the case, the purchase of the pistol, the pris-
| oner’s practicing by the river side, and the va-
murder. In regard to the incident of the prac-
ticing at the river side, he said: *“ Who was it
at the bar ? Who fired at these osiers? Who
| Who hit them? Who fired twenty times in
to the
it should wnat stun him when
| dered the President?” As to
being restrained from the murder by the pres-
|
i
| report of the pistol, end
ence of Mrs, Garfield on one oceasion and that
of the two boys on another oceasion, Mr, Porter
and yet he firmly believed that this statement
of the prisoner was as false as anything else he
| had said. He had been restrained by nothing
but cowardice on all such occasions. Mr, Por-
¥
tor aii elbrind to the vanity which made the |
rather
hat a black one, that it might bear his name
and fame “thundering down the RR! a and be
more conspicuous in the p tent of
cused Mr. Beoville of making
misatatoments and porverting the tes
My, Scoville interrupted him at one point,
correct the gpoak 4
i
sin
ng he desired to
evidence. Mr Davidige
tions, amd Mr, Beoville
boan interrupted 147 times
touched upon the question
concerning Guitean, Mx
took au exception to staten
denying what Guitean himself }
to the tone of the pross and th
was a lealy tly In whi
and Juuge Cox said My
what Guitean had said,
positive statome nis 4&8 10 wh
NOWSPAPOTR Or priv
not well amd was oblige
early m the afternoon
As Mr, Porter rose to me
on the fiftvthind day Guitesu
the dock: *' Some crank signed
letter in one of the papers thi
pudiato that d of bu
atand that two an ks
ing, and that
around sing
am in charge
any body
will be ah
that.” ndgy
address to
the defense
shiected
retorted that
When
letters
i
i
Mv. |
y BLE
i §
tie
osu
Kin SiNess
» poo)
en
Hi
Knew it
all day, sometin
sg
FORTY.SEY E NTH CONGRESS.
Sennie.
he inex)
1
the
tween
me nts and ¢ na
Al AVE is i
fanding
San'shury
ing Sapren t
by a vote of 41 yeas to 14 nays,
Of respect
to the memors
} prose nied
all: aguae, i
the dead senator we
Hamj Ed:
Harrison,
tor
num fr mn a
James W Mc
Iowa,
re vised statn
io make th
ive 0 departn en
on of checks by the
r the better prol
tions as between rs
railroads eng
Pi
aged in inter-State trans
House.
A bill was introduced for the
United States court-house at Bosto
was reported for the sale of the hn
als
A bi
a ‘of a
i
made on the subject of metric coinages. ,..The
report of the committee on rales, proposing an
increase in the membershi
tees, was further discussed
The day was chiefly « in the discus
sanied
i
regard to enlarging the committees of the
House; the report was finally recon
a vote of 159 to 90.
Bills were introduneed as follows: By Mr,
Clements, to apply tho procesds of 33 of
mblie lands o the education of the pe
Mr, Farwell, for the publishi wg of
ions have been refuse d; by Mr. Carpenter,
ns to all sol 1diers engaged in In-
to 1840, or to their widows;
and limit Chinese emi-
pois
to grant pensi
dian wars prior
Mr. Wellis, to regulate
gration;
bank act and to est ablish a national currency;
by Mr. Cassidy, to estab
and miining; by Mr. Hazeltine, to establish
uniform paper currency to be coined, issued
and regulated directly by the United States |
government; by Mr, Geddes, proposing a8 con
stitutional amendment whereby the appoint-
ment of public officers (except cabinet officers)
shail be nv sled in a commission of three, two
of whom shall be appointed by the President,
and the third shall be head of th department
10 which the business of the aj pointe ¢ belongs.
The sppointment must be confirmed or re
for four
anise 3 by
gr persons
officer
years,
Mr.
office
{
shall hold his
unless removed
Harmer, granting a grataity
or
i
|
{
years in the postal service of the United Blates,
or who, after ten vears’ of faithful service, shal
become physically or ments ly disabled ;
Mr. O'Neil, to admit free of duty a mo ane
to General Washington ; by Mr. Warner, to
reduce the salaries of heads of departments
fixes them as follows: President,
members of Congress, #4,000;
departments, $7,000; Chief Justice
States supreme Souzh) £9.500, and associate
justices, £0,000; by Mr. Be Itzhoove r, proposing
a constitutional amendment authoriz ing
supreme court of the United Btates, upon its
attention being daly called thereto, to declare
what constitutes presidential inability, aa
under the Constitution, to perform the
of the office; by Mr, Brumm, to facilitate the
payment of the public debt and to establish a
uniform paper currency... Mr. Robinson, of
New York, discussed the arrest of five Ame ri-
can citizens in Ireland under the eqercion ae
Mr. Orth, chairman of the committoo on ci vil
service reform, reported a resolution calling on
the President for information as to what action
has been taken by him to carry out the pro
visions of the act of Congress appropriating
£15,000 to enable the President to promote the
efficiency of the different branches of the civil
service, and if said sum is insufficient what
further amount is necessary for the purpose,
Adopted. ..." he fortification appropriation bill
was passed, It appropriates for preservation,
repair and protection of fortifications, £175,000;
for armament of sea coast fortitications, $100,-
000, and for torpedoes and their preservation,
$100,000,
ds of
hea
the
Who ever saw a woman use a hammer
a flat-iron was
There is something soft and tender in tho
fall of a single snowflake, but it always reminds
us to look after our bottle of Dr, Bull’s Cough
Syrup, our old standby in the days of coughs
snd colds, for we have always found if reliable.
{
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
| NEWS OF THE WEEK.
Zastern and Middle Statos.
Tux Hon A. A. Poltengill, for
years editor and pi f the
(
prietor o Mand
i had
nied
trioner
daily A
He
satan and
died at Oni,
OTe
Was Ochsis SOD
Hutaiook, of
he sidewalk
Ho was born
ON BUOCOs
sotta leginia
the
Fs towhioh
Nisto
6, and twice
Mion fo
VANDERBILT gt
8 new hb 1 Avenue,
did
finest
Daniel
by J
breaker
¢
a
stroyed by
New
to the
gughter at Spuy
an
sitention to the
South and West.
van wore drowy
From Washington.
Covoxxn Drprey, commissioner of pensions,
ess to the
if he
field as speci
in an addn House commitiee on pon-
sions, said had 400 mon to place in the
all
He
réecoely
al agents he could eliminate
three
al agent
Is within years’ time
¢ : i 4 should
1t £1,400 per year and expenses,
Tue national board of health has at its meot-
ba thi
inspecti been or-
the
deter
y declared smallpox to
ited Th
red of several of
epidemic in
Diates, nm has
most 1m
stations, to the rules and
of the roved the
November 14, 1881, are being prop
nine if
ons board,
j
SALA ESR
app by
Tar a
wing «
, hit
date 1 Irkutsk, Raseis, from
of the
Danenhower and
tary of the navy has reccived
lispatoh,
Engineer Mellville, loat Jeannette:
all
found
eleven men
Me
Iville returned to Arctic ocean:
i bo
s Long
‘
@,
cutter, Lieu
ontinued during the
3) No tidings of second
te Search
nant Chipp.
ymmandant of Bolun
| Iakutsk, under directions of
naieff, Word from Kolyma river that
{ had arrived to November 19,
oN
no boat
date, I am ac.
and request orders to remain, with
the search in March, Danen-
party are,
two men, to renew
hower and nine
States, Danenhower's sight partly recovered.”
4 tary Hunt replied, giving Melville the or.
cra he asked.
AN HNHICO0HS was made to wreck
Gould
aful attempt
a #pecial train on which Jay
worse |
roing northward
traction placed on the track was dis-
v minutes before it was reached by
A farmer was arrested for the act
1d stated that
od by trains,
his stock
ie attemptod to wreck
somo «
and that
§
i
}
i
Heavy rains
the (
tha
all sides,
Tenn., and
city on nearly
amberiand river at Nashville,
hemmed in the
Ten thousand families were driven
hom In many the
people wero imprisoned in their houses by the
flood and had to be
inundation
from their instances
rescued by boats,
COMMISSIONER O)
$160,680 for collesting and distributing month
Last yoar the appropriation |
was $10 000
ly crop reports
prposs
Knox has authorized the Hud
springfield, O., and the Mw
irk, N. } banks to
Each has a capital of $100,000
x
a, Mans
ia’, of
IMPTROLLER
the
anal
Duan , Bat
isilionsn
Foreign News.
Tur Engl
off
drowned
A ri
ish schooner Weathorgage oapaised
Honduras, and eight passengers were
Ein a theater at Rotterdam, Holland,
and several persons leaped
} iB palo,
r the baleonies and were Injured,
London 7 in is*financial article,
of the excessive speouls
i in Europe 18 now
Austria has broken
The rising com
to the boy
Albania,
, extending
tonne
BITIAL Ary
wpa
rash the fnsurrection
Tuene has been a heavy fnancisl
Boarse
3
ried
panic
, Aud many ocses of bank
rapley
q
5
M
and much property was de
are | i
ined to death
1 by the
eapital of Roun
ANY men and horses wers by
strove burn
ing of a circus in Bucharest,
&, & society formed to coun
will be recoguized as a branch
rovinoes have
Austrian
of Aus
ten
bundy
FON Deal
which
loss
r tribe
HAVE taken
and th
Pel
a3
ais land .
ing Arabs were Killed
i ps In Arabia
1 says that the of
Mabom
SinNooy
ited
A New York Newspaper at Night,
“Hermit,” the New York correspond.
th a Troy Tim ¥, writes: The
g papers do much of their work
and few mo active scenes
und than at o ne ¢ {f these estab
Stand, for instane , in the
room of the HH d and see
artie sd groups of advertisers who
iing their slips in so as not to
next Many of these
people have just got through their day's
work, and improve this chance of mak-
ing their wants known to the world
Here are elerks and porters looking uy
situations, contrasted with cooks and
bonsemaids who are offering their sar
the public. Here is a delicate
oking lass,
re
ree
issue.
who with a modest blush
ds in an advertisement, asking for
lace, perhaps to tend baby, Her his
ry is tl ommon ot eity life of
werty driving families or rich and
¥alted 1 bread by hard labor
ortune is illustrated by the
ory of sewing 8, music
governesses, elo, which
mderstasd when reading
ing column, Here, L100,
finical youth inserting a “per
to some girl he has met, who will
pre bably never see the advertisement
while he will wait day after day, vainly
expecting an ISWer,
In the vault beneath
gine is resting y from i's
Just wi rked ¢ off one side
ani is being prepared
the The el gin Cer 18 ei ving it
thorougl atio Ita
must be in erect oy Fm for a break
down at midnight would be a
damage. Go up to the second story
.—
where editors and reporters are | t
8 10
Lo
1
BOOK
gir
ri one
8
some
. t
the mighty en-
labors, having
of the paper,
for the labors of
niguas. a
I €XAmit
A 1
COSLIY
bard at
work preparing matter, and every little
while mg the bell i
“copy’ up the elevator
posing-room. These men
duty nntil after midnight,
work as this telis upon the system in
the most exhausting manner. Ah, lit.
tle does the reader, as he lolls over a
newly-printed shoct, damp from the
press, think
effort of combined
paid aud worked
sacrifices of health and com
fort which gave it existence. We
may ascend stil! higher to the com pe
ing-room,"” where the types are set and
tle paper got ready for the press. Here
100 men are
general silence one hems the incessant |
click of type. One great difference be-
tween night and day duty in such an
office is that in the last hours of work
all “copy” is in manuseript.
“eolippings” have been cut up duting
the earlier part of the day,
como the thoughts from the fevered
J rk
to
will
vnd sue
intellects,
hard,
poorly
and the
paper has gone to press, put on their
coats hastily and go home,
house, which is
Some of them,
however, remain at work until morn
ing. The reason for this
they are out of-town men, living
Orange or Morrisania, and by
and stay all day.
it
in the morning
was a time when
evening.” Now,
to a large degree reversed,
work by night and rest by day.
day, however, is never a proper time
little
their coffee at euse, while criticizieg the
labors of that unfortunate class re-
AIA 55
Froarivg-Isuasp.—Make a cake with
a cup of sugar, cup sweet milk, a well
egg, little salt, two teaspoonfuls cream
tartar, and one teaspoonful of soda
Beat all
together reveral minutes, and pour the
batter, half an inch thick, into a com-
The
Bake quickly, Make
a soft boiled custard by heating four
cupfuls ef milk in a pail set in a kettle |
enpful and a half of sugar, and three |
teaspoonfuls of corn starch; then pour |
all together, and cook till it begins to
Lay your cake, |
over powdered sugar, and put a slice of
Serve by filling a |
wore inundated,
very heavy,
Tue bark
Indice, .
three miles gouth of Hatteras inlet, N. O,, and
cight of the ten men on board lost their lives,
A vance candy and cracker factory and seven
adjoining buildings in Atlanta, Gs., have been |
destroyed by fire, causing
One man was burnad to death.
Mus, Resecos Raxxin, a wealthy old widow,
living near Newcomerstown, Ohio,
and the pecuniary damago is
J
to Baltimore
becoming
poverty, arose in the night and hanged herself:
A oorrisiox between two trains on the
Charleston and Savannah raiivond, twenty-seven |
miles fiom the formor plaeo, resulted in the
death of two nou and serious injuries to sev-
eral more,
The Babylon [L. 1.] South Side Signal |
quotes from a Missouri paper Mr. Wm |
Quinlan, Crystal City, Mo., suffered
knees, for which he successfully tried St
Jacobs Oil,
EE ———
The keeper of a Chicago gaming
passed over the gaming tables of that
city $8, 000,000
re ——————
The Milwaukee [Wis.) Evening Wis-
consin says: “In all our experience we
reports from all classes as we have concern:
The waists of fashionable, convention
al! dresses grow longer and longer,
while those of msthetic dresses grow
shorter and shorter,
A REMARKABLE STATEMENT,
The Unusual | Experience o fs a Prominent
fan !
I RA BN I Lo I A Russa
WISE WORDS,
The sourest man is not wholly hope-
ine Impressions [Jubject ot Heulth
6 SREE TT on.
fo hoodwink the pu by to Rosetti
attainment, Vague Dior tks as to the eanses
{ Chrondele, of Rochester, N. Y,, is of so striking
& nature, and emanates from so reliable a’
souroa, that it is herewith republished entire,
In addition to the valuable matter {1 contains,
it will be found exceedingly interesting
he Editor of the Demoerat and Chronicle :
Bin s--My motives for the publication of the |
most unusual statements which follow are,
irat, gratitude for the faot that 1 have been
saved from a most horrible death, and, second.
ly, & desire to warn all who read this statement
against some of the most deceptive influpnooes
by which they have over been surrounded, It
is a fact that to-day thoussnde of people are
within a foot of the grave sud they do not know
it, To tell how I was caught away from just |
this position and tO warn others against near
ng it are my objects in this commuaniostion,
On the first day of June, 188L 1 lay ai my
fn this city surrounded by my friends
and waiting for death, Heaven only knows the
spony 1 they endured, for words ean never de
Aud yet, if a fow years previous, any
s that 1 was to be brought so
terrible a disease, should have
I had always Deon un
and healthy, had weighed
i Is and hardly knew, in my own
sarienos, what pain or si ness were, Yeory |
many people who will read this statement re.
alige at times that thoy are unusually tired and
sannot account for it, They feel dall and in
inite pains in various parts of the body and
y not understand it, Ur thoy are exceedingly
fay and entirely ‘without appetite
This was just the way 1 felt when
hh had fastened tec!
ot
reaidencs
and by 80
od at the idea
aly
ex
gry ole
ext
relentless malady whic
upon me first began, Bull 1 thought it was
that probably 1 had taken a cold
" BOON PRES AWAY Bhortly after
od a dull, and st times
a
¢
0H my hend, but as it would
be gone tue next, I paid bat
it 1H Ver, my siomach
and my food often fatled to
Himes great lnconvenienos,
a as a physician, that
ing serious or that a
becoming fixed upon
wight [ was suffering from
rad 1m yself socordingly
1 next noticed a peculisr
fluids 1 was passing
there were large quantities one day
y little the next and that a persistent
froth spd scum appeared yy the surface,
and & sediment suitied io the bottom. And
1 did not realize my danger, for, indeed
g these symptoms continually, 1 finally
ustowed to them, and my suspicion
di sATR od by the fact that 1 had no
r r in thelr vicinity,
#o blind I eannot
Hon Pe }
order
I, Causing at
I had no ide
things meant
wi
Yet even
thes anyth
1in0oRse Was
ten
lor about th
ttl
©
vel
{ ’
sosly
¢ ad
ily
ha
becam
was wh
nL
si & terrible future for all physical
negleot, and impending danger usually brings
a person to his senses even though it may then
be too late, I realized, st lest, my critical
condition and } myeel f 10 overcome it,
And nd Oh! how | dl! I consulted the
t med } wd, 1 visited all the
in Americas and
Bill 1 Brow
two physicians agreed as to my
Ove said 1 was troubled with spinal
BOErvous : RAD
ther, dyspepsia; ther,
{rin
{ prostration
BRIANA | an
aisense |
an
Rid ed b
r on of the base the Ain ;
on Lh rough alo fg ast of common
symptoms of all of which 1 really
this way several years passed, daring ali
h time 1 was steadily growing worse, My
n had really booume pitiable, The sligh
ma 1 at fire! ex) od were developed
rible and consls sorders--the little
fosin bad grow 10 « aks » of agony. My
i om 37 to 150
10 myself and
my
ther, pgoneral
of
ifs
cases, the
ad
Of win
TION
od
3 life 1 Wak 8 W rt ire
ction
Was un.
ently fell
i the oar.
une had Httle
For six
i premonitory
My urine was filled with
the pain,
dont
Disses
1 f¥ a call from
ing rector of Bt
falt thst {1 was
MITES of conver.
g thus I re
Yo
ari
his son.
To impress we must be in earnest, to |
To be deprived of the person we love
with one we hate,
Lot others do us they please; but do
i
$
of thy own judgment, and take heed of |
being self-condemned.
{
work, If this be cracked or displaced |
all the mechanism that stands on it will |
be jarred and disturbed and mad: in- |
effective,
i
his opponents, generally, he said,
they could judge me I should not be the |
man I am.’ ‘The barking of the curs,’
he said, * which follow us as we leave
the stable, proves nothing more than
that we are on horseback,"
Hope is a ruddy morning ray of joy,
latter is wont to sink
and « ‘usky shades of twilight;
bright blue days which the
promises, break indeed, but in another
world and with another sun.
snd the
the infallibility of
| fovent from the above
Jorsad in Relation to Hostetier's Stomach
Hiters, Only plain sabstantiable and reason:
ave been made in its behalf
That it is a reliable topie and anti billions
medicine, & prevetiiivs and remedy for malarial
nefleient corrective of ai
| and irregularity of the stomach and bowels
are facts which the American beta have had
sinple opportunity for verify (Sku the
last quarter of & century, the
mental despondoncy begotten x pial vie
Jy appe-
tite and sleep mi horongh
Hexuy Vigvanp is making srrangements to
bring to (his country 5,000 or 10,000 Beandi-
| navians 10 be employed in the construction of
the Northern Puclly railroad.
Is pure and
i
Dr. BR v ’ Saal Ba mye” Dear Bir
I was sick for six years and could seareely walk
abe ut the nonse, My breath was short and 1
suffered from pain in my breast and stomach
i
fever, or burning sensation, and ex-
d frequent smothering or
1 also suffered from
down across my bowels snd in my
foinal
pit bedi
i
world, The world talks mueh of pow-
erful sovereigns and great ministers,
and if being talked about made one
owerful they would be irresistible;
mt the fact is, the more you are talked
about the less powerful you are.
Pitiful that a man should so care for
riches as if they were his own; yet so
“Golden Medical Diseow
Very respectfully,
Devpran B MoMiitax, Ariingion, Ga,
It is naid that 20 000 sores of new vineyards
wire planted in Californis last year. The
vines planted are generally of the fleer foreign
Variety
apeers and Ok er Tam Tamers
treated with unuss access bY HOF Wands
farkionable
Bre
stamp for pamphiet,
Mothodist
Bavrmwore's most
when be might be happy in spending |
them he will bs miserable in keeping |
them ; and had rather, dying,
wealth with his enemies, than,
alive, relieve his friends.
————
Anmstheties,
Dr. John G,
recently read sn interesting paper
fore the New York Medico- Legal so-
clety on ** Apmsthetics,” The follow-
i
h
tor's statements
form inhaled in a sitting position in =
dentist's chair it conld no longer be
urged in behalf of the surgeon,
patient had been chloroformed out of
in 1853, who had
ihe death of a patient under chloroform,
mn whom he was operating without as.
a thet there was
the administration of ehiloroform.
For weak lungs, spitting of blood, shortness
breath, eons Amption, pight sweats and all
lingeriuvg coughs, Dr. Pieroe’s * Golden Medi-
cal Discovery ” is asovereign remedy. Buperior
to cod liver oil. By y droggists,
Tue rogues’ eallery of Parise contains about
f
ai
years sinoe the system was sdopled
“1 Can Ble nes."
Brascose, N, Y., Sept. 18, 1880,
H H Wasves & Co.: Sirs—Thanks to your
defiance to dissase a. ARMSTRONG.
oe
Or the 72,276,813 ‘bushels of grain shipped
{ to Europe last year, not one bushel went in sa
American ship.
ms —
The Science of Life, 0 or Belf-Prescrva 8
12 25 inval
VEGETINE is nourish
purifies the blood, regulates the bowels, quiels
pervous system, sets directly upon seerstions,
and arouses the whole system fo setion,
aged or old,
Peaf. Rice's great Music Teaching System has
no equal. Is forly times more % Fajad all others,
Deware of infyl ings ments, Bend stamp for three
free amvhlots. aa aaren) s Music, is,
Address 343 Btate Bt, Chicago,
ALLENS Brain F res Nervous Rr &
ed by the Royal Medico Chirnrgical
society laid down in 1564 the rule thst
anesthetics shonld always be given in
the recumbent position and never in
the erect position. The resson of
this rule is evident. In patural
ribs is prodneed
muscles, and the
thoraeie.
the influence of
by the
respiration is called
the anmsthetie, these |
paralyzed
und cease their action. The respira
tion is then kept up by the setion of the
diaphragm or abdominal raspiration.
Those who have seen much of the
patients under the inflnencs of anms.
wi
sad
q
the operation or to pass an instrument,
Now, as soon as the patient comes fully
under the influenca of an anmsthetio,
LaLa
The weight of the upper portion of the
body comprosing the abdomen
preventing the diaphragm from acting. |
I think, with the present knowledge of
anmsthetics, that a surgeon
should administer chloroform to a
pationt in the erect position in the dent
tist's chair, with her clothes tigh- |
around her waist, and the patient |
is
{
t utter hopelessness of
marka
My improvement was oon.
; less than three
enty-six pounds in
m pain, and 1 be-
sant candition
vidney and Liver
onghly rein
sulties and
pad are
beratel
THAN
A
rr's Disgase or THE Kin.
i like a rash statement,
to fully verify it. Bright's
wotive symptoms of its own
lops without! any pain
ir their vicinity), bat
y every other kno wn
if die dai ly,
a s
popiexy,
“Hh he ne
othe Tr
t roality
B right 8 Disoase Kidneys.
ans, and fewer poople, realize the
is disoase or ite dangerous and in.
It steals into the system like
fosts its presence by the com-
ptoms, and fastens itself upon the
pfore the victim is aware. It is
joreditary as o sump tion, quite as
fatal. Entire families,
tor, have died,
ne of the number knew or realized
erious power which was removing
natead of common symptoms it often
brings death sud-
lly supposed to be
As ono who has suffered, anc
knows by bitter experience what he says, I im.
every one who reads these words not to
vogleot the slightest symptoms of Kidney
difficulty. Certain sgony and possible death
will be the sure result of such neglect, and no
can afford to hazard such chances,
I am aware that such an unqualified state.
ment as this, coming from me, known as I am
throughout the entire land as a practitioner snd
lecturer, will arouse the surprise and ble
animosity of the medical profession nd aston.
ish all with whom I am acquainted, but I make
the foregoing statements based upon facts
which 1 am prepared to produce and truths
which I can substantiate to the letter. The
welfare of those who may possibly be sufferers
such as [ was, is an ample inducement for me
to take the step 1 have, and if I can success
fully warn others from the dangerous path in
which I once walked, I am willing to endare
all professional and personal consequences,
J. B. HENION, M. D,
XY, Do comber 30, 1881,
¥
symptoms o
Hundr
burials are
people
by
it FRA
Few Pp
inheriting q
and yot 1
the
one
wossi
ROCIESTER,
Chinese Printing,
The blocks are all of the same size,
about eight inches by twelve inches,
and about half an inch thick Each
block represents two leaves of four
pages of the book, being engraved on |
both sides. The blocks for a complete |
work can thus be stowed away in a very
The cost of engraving |
setting up a page of Chinese type and |
preparing it for the press. Au edition
of one copy can be printed if no more
are required, and thus the expense of
| keeping a large stock of printed books |
had to be made, as is the case among |
ourselves, is entirely avoided. Any |
covered can as a rule be corrected on
A skillful printer can print by hand |
b, 000 leaves of two pages each in a day, |
using no press or machinery whatever, |
He supplies his own tools and receives
as wages about twenty-five cents |
a day. The paper ordinarily used is
white and of the best quality, although |
a yellowish kind is also made use of at |
a reduction of twenty per cent, on the |
gelling price. The books are bound in |
the usual Chinese style and fastened |
with white silk thread, They present |
an appearance which satisfies ‘the taste
of the most fastidious native,~ London
Natures hide
St. Louis claims to have the largest
and most complete factory for the pro- |
duction of coffins and caskets in the |
United States,
During the early ages
anmsthetics the knowledge of the
profession was ouly experimental.
That age has passed. The most dis-
tinguished men in the
lorg ago »
and the reasons for it.
experimentation h
justice of it,
all oar modern writers on
The courts have held over and
manslaughter.
Jeet,
i
i
of the profession, and if he deparis!
from them it is at his peril.
——————
Meat Versus Yegetable Diet,
The most plansible ary
seen offered against the
for some time is cont ain ed in a recent
number of the Boston Journal! of Chem.
It relates experiments of Pro-
fessor Hoffmann which tend to show that
a far greater proportion of a meat diet
is ak than of vegetable diet. |
t is said *‘we must consider not mere- |
é
f5lry.
the body,
there and how
Professor Hoffmann
much goes to waste.
half of the
been digested. The same man
next fed on beef, fat and
only one-fifth of the albuminons sub:
stance passed off as waste.
was
are quoted that gave similar resulfs
The writer then concludes that *the
results of these experiments by inde-
of nutriment
than with the latter.”
presented to refuse their tenets. But |
we would like to kn
be vegetarian,
The experiments referred to by the
Boston Journal of Chemistry are not
logica.ly conclusive,
the premises or lots of room for one,
Send forCireglar, Allen's Pharmaey 518 Pipstav,,
THE MARKETS.
NEW YORE,
Beef Cattle —Mod, Nat live wi
Poor to Prime Yeals...
Bhee a
lambs
Hogs
passer rnn
Live...
Dressed, city
Kx. State, good to fancy B60 @
Western, good to choice 590 @
No. 2 Red, pow, ...... 147° Ja
No. 1 White, new, ,... 1 43, 78
Rye Slate .
Barlev. Two- rowed 3 Ry tate
Corn— Ungraded West: Sulfixel
Southern Yellow
White State... .....
Mixed Western. .......
Prime Timothy
Flour
Wheat
Oats
Hay
Miraw
26
"18 0
State. ' 1881 .
Meas, new, for ‘export...
City
9
Qs 24
i 0 "wl 60
~Crode 6a ,
Defined _...
State Creamery...
Petroleum
80
20
27
12
9
Butter -
Wes wl
Fac
Choose Stat le FP acions
Verdun, saa RNTE ARES
Eges—Rtate and Penn... ...
Potatoes Early Rose, State, bhi
BUFFALO,
“EXirn...cconneness
Western . .
eastern .e
Good to Che ioe Yorkems.
L Ny Cr Na, 18pring 67
al. Hard Du lath.
No 2
No, 2 Mix. West, |.
Twovowad me,
Steers
Lambe
Sheep
Hog
Flour
Wheat
Corn
(ats
Barley
ee
1
»
1 56
6
50
90
Extra plate and Tani iy..14 00 @15 0
1i LA 7
8 @& Sy
A500 @1550
T6 @87
1 &@ "TY
58 @ 56
L100 @ 100
46
Extra Prime per bhi,
Spring W heat Patents. .
Mixed and Yellow, .
Oats E xtra White.
Rye
Wool- -W i d Gi omb & De inine Hye
Unwashed * 30 @@ C81
WATERTOWN (MASS) CATTLE MARKET.
Extra quality. ......... 670 @ 725
Live weight i @& |
1 ©
8 ©
.
loef
Sheep
Hogs, Northern, dressed, BY
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour Penn. Ex. Family, good 600 @ 600
Wheat _ 2 Red ansess 140N@ 1 4673,
Rye.-Siate,.. 9 @
Corn State Ye 60
Oats Mixed $9 ‘@
Batter Creamery Extra Pa. Ta
Choose New York Full Cream.
74
1336
Petroleum —Crade,
He fined.
1 G00D FAMILY REMEDY !|
STRICTLY PURE.
Harmless to the most Delicate!
its faithful use CONSUMPTION has been
CURED when other Remedios and Physi-
cians have fatlod to effect » cure,
Jenmyan Wwmeny, of Marion County, W. Va.
writes us that his wife bad PULMONARY Coxsrwy.
and was pronounced INCURABLE by their phy.
when the use 2f Allen's Lung Balsam nx.
crnEp nen. He writes that be and his
vars think it the best medicine in the world.
L Dears, Merchant of Bowling Green, Va,
April 4, 1881, that be wants us to know that
Nei Balsau pak Coenen His Morea oF Come
%, & He the physician bad given her up as
says others, knows hor case, have
and been cured;
e thinks all so
el A tain
al.
nlist of Cincinnati, was thought
p 5} ed SrTadEs OF CONSUMPTION » and was
fonds to try Allen's Lung Ib
ry a was shown him. We have hix jot.
it once enred his cough and that be was
his practice,
AM & Co. Wholesale IX win,
writes us of the cure of Mathias
wellknown citisen, who been
Eroxonits in 8 worst form for
The Lung Balsam cured him, as it
others, of BROXCRITIS.
AS ALSO
SUMPTION, COUGHS, COLDS,
ASTHMA, CROUP,
{| All Discases of the THROAT, LUNGS and
PUL MONARY OR ANS,
LB Vl RTIN Drugwist at “Oakly, Ky,, writes that
« think there is no remedy equal to Lu
or Urenp aud W Whooping Cough. oy
Mothers will find it a safe fe and re remedy to give
Noir children when affiched with Croup, -
3
probability been raised upon a miscel-
laneous diet, and their digestive pow- |
tarian,
| vegetables, and possibly it remains true
how much advantage of this kind is to
be eredited to meat diet it will be neces-
{
|
f
i
!
i
i
i
!
experiments upon fair specimens of
on the different kinds of diet and com-
paring the results. The animal king-
| dom furnishes abundant material for |
|
ticated animals, which field invites the |
desire to settle the gmuestion.—Dr,
| Footc’s Health Monthly,
A porkiin amount of opposition is a |
| great help to a man, Kites rise against |
and not with the wind. Even a head |
No man ever |
worked his passage anywhere in a dead |
calm,
IIR rt
On Thirty Days” Trial,
The Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall, Mich,, wiil
| trio Appliances on trial for Shing days to any |
yerson afilicted with Nervous Debility,
Vitality, and kindred troubles, guaranteeing
com eto restoration of vigor and manhood,
dress as ahove without delay
P. 8, No risk 1s incurred, as 30 davebtrial is
| allowed.
A great uaprovement has recently been
{ made in thdt useful product, CARBOLINE, a
deodurized extract of petrolenm, which is the
only article that really cures baldness, It is
now the finest of all heir dressings,
i
i
i
i
It contains no Opium in any form !
Kocommended by Physicians, Ministers and
Nurses. Re fact by eversbody who has given it a
It Nev er Paliete Bring Relat.
pectorant it has ne
SOLD BY ALL MEDICINE ‘DEALERS.
a an Exe
$5 oto $20 er ray at DOB &Conto
ves worth 83 apo.
rtland, Mai
ACODER on. i
I German
"Hie Fans 173 00 1 COLORS eT Eh
oe fo of Wi
knw in 4 the John
Fe 1
Ta hones § misled
aa never d
es fife, I had the rheumatic
{cond
go
#0 not get off the bed or
to the floor, WEA have boen there yok
17a friend had ended Br, Jacons
BOL PECOMID
tome, 1 hesitated pose tine before geting &
king it was another one of those
sed onary ag #8 :
trial, A
wit (01 rel anim faith was |
fog Ritvoen yy 3 cous Oui toni,
gh nly
ho doulds
Vogeine.
The Barks, Roots and Herbs
FROM WHICH YEGETINE IS MADR
For Killney Compiaing and Nervous
# 1 commenoed inking whe d
a we Was deified
| had ts the Ki
Adc nant
yw i
|e Em TEER
Seromula, Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia,
Rheumatism, Weakness.
edicine for
Liver ©
Wood, 1 ha er found 1s equal.
Vegatine 3am 3 and bave never had ous
Beptember 3 es
Yegerine io ou Se
1wilisend it & return
SOLD FOR
60 Cents a Package.
ility.
Isizsnono, Me,
Mz Srevess--Desr fir: 1 bad had St
Janes Complugt. and was very EE
ugh 1 on § haa one
T7okad Wes cis we 1 has ven elie” ay
be.
Dr. W. ROSS Writes:
Brevis, Boston :
a be been pragticiug m 8 and
wha
828 remedy for Weal was, at of
1 have
bottle returned. 1 would by
those in need of fa aE purifier,
Powder Farm sold by all deus,
gists and geperal Sores,
thean, incioss Die. iB
or #1 Jor two packages,
mall,
Vessiine
H R. STEVENS, posi Mass.
Vegetine is Sold by II Druggists.
DIPITIERIA!
JOHNSON'S ANODYXE LIX hi hh will
Be
vely cure nine cases
roe by Putian Don't delays
#. JoRN.
will save many ives, sent
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© STR VATCHIS HI
mam
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as of Thoms Who Kt Wl fos are PUBHABE
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5 cents for a sande ov
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This i= the only complete and fally Mustratod “Life
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JEN ICH BLOOD!
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Blood, and ” y Somes Snse yaks blood bin the
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formerly Banger, Me. - hy {ima
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on Teosint of two Three-Cen™ Bin
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The — u a
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ever
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