The Forest Republican. (Tionesta, Pa.) 1869-1952, August 06, 1884, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    EDITOR.
WEDNESDAY SIORMNG, AlC.fi. IS84.
Jtepublicnn Ttflccf.
NATIONAL.
FOB FRKSIDENT,
HON. JAMKS U. 'BLAINE, of Maine.
' Fob Vice President,
GEN. JOHN A. LOUAN, of Illinois.
8TATK.
WX1KK8.S-AT-I.ABOE.
GM'i E. 8. OSBOKNE,
of Luzerne County.
I'OVNTY.
Congress,
A. C. WHITE, of Jefferson County.
Assembly,
TETER BERRY, of Howo.
Associate Judfte,
LEWIS ARNER, of Kin-jsley.
Prothonotary fce.,
CURTIS M. SHAWKEY, of Tioneta.
Sheriff,
LEONARD AG NEW, of Howe.
County Commissioners,
J. R. CMADWICK, of Tioncsta.
UEO. W. OSGOOD, of Kingsloy.
County Auditors,
Q. JAMIESON, of Tionesta Twp.
JAMES A. SCOTT, of Jenks.
Jury Commissioner,
HENRY O. DAVIS, of Tionesta.
The patent mud slinging apparatus
of the New York Post has beeu Sud
ani thrown out of eear bv a Chica-
tzo man. who showa up the reallv-too-
eood-for-anvtbire-lioraco White as
an expert in the very corruptions with
which that paper charges Mr. Blaine.
The presumption, not all violent is,
that the charges had their origin in
tha enmity of just such speculators as
he is, because they could not use
Blaine to forward their schemes.
The situation is indeed becoming
very alarming with the Democrats, it
being freely talked now to pu)j Clove
lrnd off the ticket and substitute the
mummy of Grametcy. The following
from the Blizzard will throw some
light on tho subject:
Viewing the matter from a demo
; cratic standpoint, the object cf a
, number of professed democratic pa
pers in New York state seems to be to
cut the throat of the democratic par-
ty under the guise of doing it a ser
vice. A double leaded letter in the
Bun, entitled "Never too late to
inend," is responsible for a considera
ble portion of the discussion now in
progress concerning the advisability
of taking ClveVani'a name from the
ticket and putting Tilden's in its
place. The discussion of such a pro
ject by the press of his party is not
likely to aid Cleveland's chances for
presidential honors and the papers
dUouasing the matter mu3t know that
' even did Tilden ullow his name to be
used in the case of the withdrawal of
Cleveland the success of the party
would not be at all assured. The cir
cumstances would hardly warrant the
party giving the managers the hearty
: endorsement of a full vote and the
mere fact that a change is talked of
in high places will undoubtedly act as
a damper on tha democratic enthusi
asm of the campaign. The democrat
ic party has selected Mr. Cleveland
as its standard bearer and should be
prepared to stand or fall with him.
It is not enough that the Springfield
Republican sbonld charge the Republi
can papers with "assailing Cleveland's
private character." Democrats and
Democratic journals have done this,
and done it with a circumstantiality
which precludes disbelief. The thing
' the Republican should do is, to prove
the charges untrue, and lose no time
about it. The men who have made
these charges are net unknown, and are
cot hiding. Harrisburg Telegraph.
The Press says: "We are author
ized to state that the platform com
mittee of the recent New York and
Boston TransceDdentalist Conference
inadvertently omitted one important
plank, viz. :
" 'That any man who goes to the
polls without wearing white kid
gloves and a white waistcoat offers an
insult to American citizenship.' "
Andrew D. White and Theodore
Roosevelt where in all the kickers'
-camp are there two men of purer Re
1 pablicaaism, stronger devotion to
houest reform or more patriotic inter-
est in the cause of clean government?
Their practical work in behalf of
better administration and their man
ly declaration for Blaine and Logan,
should mantle the cheeks of men like
Schurz, Curtis, Beecher and Horace
White with the tingling Llubh of con
scious shame.
J. E.
The Democratic New Orleans
Picayune sarcastically remarks that it
hopes that the resolutions in the Dem
ocratic national platform pledging
ilin nrtv to a free voto and fair
i
count will insure the poople of Lou
isiana a relief from the "breech-loading
ballot box dovised by our modern
machine styling itsolf Democracy."
General Rubicund Roskciuns, a
good Democrat, by the way, when
character counts, finds that the nomi
nation of Cleveland and Hendricks
has "chilled two classes of workers,
tho industrial classes and the sol
diers." RosecraDS is old enough to
know that his party doesn't care a fig
for these classes. What it wants is
more mules and offices Phila. Press.
Grover Cleveland's speech to the
notifying committee was a magnifi
cently cautious utterance. People
reading are in doubt whether Cleve
land regards the nomination as a pan
nf taffy for a picnic er a stale pie,
which, if eaten, will keep him awake
o'nights wondering why he should have
bteu made a victim. -Press.
Re-Writing Hendricks' History.
The game has fairly begun, and Tom
Hendricks is to be written up in cam
paign history as one of the most loyal
men in the country during the war,
and close and special frieud of Presi
dent Lincoln. Yesterday's Philadel
phia Times cotaius the first installment
we have seen, and it is a gusher.
The
oaly trouble with the writer, (a special
corresponant from Inbianapous; is
that ho gushes too much. He is like
. ..r.. T II- -1 II
a writer lor "et. dacoos on, or
"Warner's Safe Kidney Cure." Nev
ertheless, the records of the time exist
and it would be as easy to prove that
the Democratic convention of 1864
did not denouce the war as a failure,
as that llond rick's was not there en
dorsing its action in a speeck ia the
evening, in which he asserted that the
polls were over awed by soldiers and
that we had no elections. He is not,
as we have had many occasions to see,
the only one by many who have sought
to rewrite their personal history of
those days. It will take more than
the doctored stenographic reports of
convenient papers like the Chicago
Times to free him of the odium of
having at that time said that "they
would rise and crush out abolitionism
and hurl the smutty old tyrant at
Washington out of political exis
tence." It will require more than the
authority of a hired patent-medicine-advertisement-writer
to make the
country believe that Hendricks, when
in the United States Senate, was a
war Democrat aud enjoyed the confi
dence of President Lincoln. The
man who sought and received politi
cal preferment from the party which
declared the war a failure, denounced
the loyal administration as tyranical
and the President as a gorilla, and
whose journals constantly said all
they could to discourage the Union
sentiment and encourage tho enemy,
will have to furnish something more
than gush and falsehood to be able to
pose as a friend of Lincoln and run
for office upon his credit. In all the
history of revolutions and treasons,
has any impudence been recorded
equal to this? The memory of the
great Senator Morton is to be assailed
on) his honor impeached to screen
liw.iiricks from the consequenc of his
disloyally, is it? How much credit do
these tradueers suppose their stories
will receive in a country that remem
bers the services of Senator Morton
in those dark days, and remembers
that Senator Hendricks opposed all
the measures the patriot Senator ad
vocated? llarruburg Telegraph.
Mr. George William Curtis was
tbe chief figure ia the Democratic De
pendent Conference and read the formal
address of principles, but he left some
things unexplained. He did not ex
plain why he himself now intends to
vote for Mr. Hendricks, whom in 1876
he denounced as tbt ally of slavery,
aud a candidate acceptable only to
Confederates, Copperheads, inflationist
hypocritical reformers. He did not
explain why he, the acknowledged
leader of Civil Service reform, should
desert the party which had followed
Mr. Eaton's advice and enacted the
first practical measure for reforming
the evils of the Civil Service, He did
not explain why he should desert that
party the day after it had adopted in
National Convention a Civil Service
plank framed by his own hand. lie
did not explain why he had gone over
to the Democratic party, after haviug
- repeatedly denounced it as incapable
of accomplishing any practical reform
or of scrvinglany useful or patriotic
purpose a party that is"very hungry
and, us you may well believe, very
thirst? " auJ"?&"LTul together only by
greed for spoil and" the hope of plunder
Ha did not explain why he had
bolted a nomination which ho himself
bad helped to make the unanimous
voice of the convention. Finally, he
did not explain the real Bucret of the
bolt, which he had confided in May
last to Mr. J. A. Kitzmiller. "The
Independents Are anti-protection, and
whoever we do elect must favor rev
enue rei'orm."
Titat correspondent of the New
York Sun, who nays he does not like
the word "exclusively" in tho tariff
plank in the Democratic platform, and
unless its authors, "Hewitt, Hurd &
Co.," and the candidates, coucede
that it menus "fair protection to
American labor and production, they
will loco many vote?, does not go to
the riht quarter for his concession.
If be will go to Randall, Converse and
company, they will concede that it
means all the protection ho wants,
Hewitt. Hurd & Co., are the oracles
who are to comfort the other fellows
those who want it to mean free trade.
It is a perfectly impartial plank, and
straddles in the way it does, on pur
pose to reach all shades of political
opinion. We are afraid if this corres
pondent is not willing to roako bis
share of the concession and let the
free traders have theirs, there is noth
ing for him but to let the candidates
"lose a great many votes, among
them his own. He can vte for
Blaise and Logan with entire cod6
deuce that ho will not be fooled bv
anv iugglerv. There is no straddle
in the platform they stand on. Be
side, tbe Uepubltcau platform means
something, that party has always had
a habit of carrying out its platform
declarations.
DIED.
MONG At the homo of his parents in
Tionesta township. Ann. 4. 1H34, of
diphtheria, Richard Fulton, son of Mr,
and Mrs. Joseph Mong, aged 7 yoars.
MARRIUD.
RICE REED At the homo of the
bride's parents, by tho Rev. L. W
Barr, Mr. W. B. Rice, of Brookston,
Forest countv. Pn.. and Miss Lydia E.
Reed, of Brinkerton, Clarion county, Pa.
GREAT REDUCTION! $180 A YEftR.
rjr:'
1" 7
i
Located on the N. Y., P ct O. R. R.,
CHAMBERLAIN INSTITUTE
AND
FKJIAI.K IX'STITUTB;.
RANDOLPH. N. Y.
Ills a largo and thoroughly equipped
SeniiUHrv tor with sexe9. i-.stHblistied in
ltviO. Property fren from debt, fclOH.OOO.
Now Boarding Hall with steam heat, etc.,
erected in 18X1 at the cost of J13-01KJ. Ex
cellent Board and hoinu-likearrangc.ments
throughout. Total expense for board,
furnished room, steam heat, light, wash
ing and tuition for 14 weeks g.V.i.70; for
one year ?1H0. Fall term bcirins Septem
ber 2, ltiril, ends December 6th. Winter
term opens December 15th : ends March
20th 1KS5. Spring term opens March 31st,
ends July 2d. For Circulars or Cata
logue, address. PROF. J.T. EDWARDS,
D. v.. Principal. Jul 2IWit.
Heaver 'ollm' mid Mimlrul JiikIHiic
For Yonng Ladies.
First Session Opens September 0, 1R84.
IScautifullv and Heathfully Located, ex
tensive buildings, pleasant grounds,
choerful rooms, three Literary courses,
superior advantages for music and Art.
organs, including pipe oruau. Thorough
work, homo-liko ckre. moderate latk
Send for circulars to Rev. R. T. Taylor,
I). D iteavcr, Pa. ju!25 4m
CTCI M C H P I W C Clay aud Ore Pans,
OILHill LilUIUUHoistinu Eimines
and Machinery a Specialty. Second hand
Enirines and lioilcrs on hand. Send for
Stock List. THOMAS CARLIN, Alle
gheny City. augfl ly.
S. V. Corner Penn Avenue and Sixth St.
THE LEAPTNO NORMAL SCHOOL
AND l'.USINESS COLLEliE
OF F1TTSBUKG1I.
25 INSTRUCTORS, OVER (!50 STU
DENTS LAST YEAR.
Course of Study includes all the Com
mon School Studies, Modern Languages,
Hiifhor Mathematics, Penuiaiibbip, Elo
cution. Drawing and Music.
Send for Circulars, containing Speci
mens of Penmansliipaud full information,
to , J1AKMUND. W1L1JAMM.
1 Business Manager,
or IIS. CLAKK WILLIAMS, A. M.,
Pn ;ipal, n.
asmmm
mmmmmm
wmw mm.si
OUR STOCK IS
Wo call special attention t our stock of
M 33 55 C 3S3T 3 S 55
this Spring as 1 ioi 1115
SUPERIOR TO 1YTSII WE EMI OWIED!
We NEVER kept a Finer
We have the Tinest Assortment of FINE
nt Low Trices. Don't
-1 LA U.'K ASSOltTMK.XT OF
c-
EXTRA SUPER, ALL WOOL
-PLY CARPET
3-PLY CARPET, all wool. BEST..
iftinte ijiisrEs of
Especially in Mack Goods. We bought a Largo Line of Black Silks that
wo will sell at FORMER WHOLESALE PRICES!. Call
aud seo our Stork.
H. J. H03PKI3STS & CO.
SMEARBAUGH
& CO.,
Dealers in
CLOTHING-,
NOTIONS, BOOTS:& SHOES,
HA.TS AND CAPS.
GROCEBIES!
TOBACCO,
CIGARS, HARD
WARE, QUEENS.
W A R E. G L ASS WARE,
TOYS, STATIONARY, WALL
PAPER, FOREIGN FRUITH, VEG
ETABLES, BAKERS BREAD, OYS
TERS, e.
Goods Always First-Class.
ELEGANT BOUND FAMILY DiELES,
82..r)0, J3.50, f 1.50, ?.5 and upwards.
HO, SF01T1IM1!!
I take pleasuro in tolling tho Sporting
Fiateruity that I have re-purchaed
FROM HORACE JONES, TO WHOM
SOLD IT IN 1871.
I
AM NICELY LOCATED at inv old
:o
all my friends, and tho
public generally,
who need
ANYTHING IN THE GUS1 VM
I bhall keep a perfect stock of a1". Kinds of
AMMUNITION!
And all kinds of
FISHING TACKLE,
I shall also continue, to handlo the
Wliitc" Rowing: Mnoliine
And the
CHICAGO SINGER SEWING MACHINE
Come and see me. You will hnd me
ALWAYS AT HOME.
Muzzle Loaders made to order and war
ranted.
JCffEE P AIR I N (i IN ALL ITS
P15 BRANUHES PE0MPTLY AND
rAITHTTJLLY DONE.
13. A . 1MLDWIX.
Tidiouto, Pa., Aug. 12,
NEW PLANING MILL.
AT
West Hioltory, Pa.
Having lust put in a new planing mill
at tins place I am prepare a to do all kind
of work in that line at tho niont reaonablo
rates. My planer will surface twelve inch
timber, so that I can till any kind of h
bill. Heing situated right at the Depot 1
have extra facilities for shipping to all
points. L. D. WHITCOMli. jul2 3m
CENTRAL HOUSE, OIL CITY, PA
J V. 11. ROTH, Proprietor,
The largest, Rest Located and Furnished
House in tho City. Near Union Depot.
A DDI7CSend six cents for postal
H I lilt, anj receive free a costly box
of iroods which will help all, of either sex
I to more money right away than anything
I cl.so iu this world. Fortunes await the
workers absolutely sure. At once ad
dress True iSi Co,, Augusta, Maine. Apr.
TR. FREASE'S WATER CURE ES
J-TAHLISI1M ENT A health iustitu
tion in its tiuih year. For nearly all kind
of chronic diseases, and especially the dis
ease ol woman, upeu at all seasons
Circulars free. Address, S. Frease. M.I).
New Brighton, Beaver county, l'a. fubltftS,
mzwmmm
COOTLKTX
7!
!E1
Lino of poods, Especially la
CLOTHING ever shown in Tionesta, and
fail to seo our Mock.
...-c.
... !Ke.
..$100.
dbess goods,
NEW LIVERY
At EA.NP HICKORY, FA.
Tho undersigned has now in operation
nt the above place a lirst-cluss Liverv,
where good rigs can always bo hired nt
moderate chariies. A back will bo run to
regular passenger trains on the W N. Y
t P. 11. R. J. W. 11 ALU PAY.
Buckeye Force rump
5s . e
3
cr-i
as O
CO
CT.
jm
Cfq
I
g
r Zfl
I r--
- O
o
1j V.
15
c
o
CALL AND (;ET PRICES,
IS ID. ZEE "L! 1 13 Uj
TIONESTA, PENN'A.
'iO,
A PLEASANT. SAFE ! EJ f-
for Wornrn in chiMrpn am! alultH, Faiiiilica wbo
have uwh! this rclluMf ri'inntly onco woiiltl not
ho without il. A hfK'kiTur couKh, t-tartniK i'i
hkl. rtjHtiKHinrtf inkl hUiiii tin' mouth. niltii4i
hrt-tta ami fovwihli, fo:itHl triiM. ih-hjiiir r"U
liiukiujr ut Uih iioHO, ro urn lnMiciitinij-4 of tlm
vn-M nc of woriiiH, ftii'l of the lie d ot ruch a
ltiuiMiviiH wvi:i:t wok.h i'ovil:k.
HkhI tlie fiillowniK ttiinoiiiuU:
Mv family has rwivl more lmncflt front
Swet't Worm I'owiter' th-'ii All other infl fiiif
evur xiftiA in my houo. and if inv tt-tiiiniiy hi
its rt'iueiUM I'tiwcra woult lw of any uw. I will
mot chwrfuuy hi it." .s'. lynild9tJuncof Oi
J 'tare, i'irui ('nitrc IVi.
I take iloarnro iu cert if yintf Hiat 8 wt Wonn
Powder' hHH workt-d womiorB iu my family."
Geo. M. Herring, A'rr UiU, i a.
Raxuple by mail, tf ftr. pri'JL rrpparod only by
E. K. THOMPSON wW.
H. C. WHITTEKIfJ.
Civil Engineer and Surveyor.
TIONESTA PA.
Land and IJailwiiy Surveying a Spcil(y,
Magnolic, 8!ur r Tiiiiniiil:itUn Survcv
i ti if . Host of InKtruir.eiiU and work.
Tonus on appllctition.
TEN THOUSAND
I1AK3WOOD
Farms in Michigan.
Eortaleby the GRAND RAPIDS & INDIANA
R. R. CO. Sugar maple the principal timber.
Advantage: Railroads already built, numerous
towns and cities, one of the healthiest parts of tho
United States, purest water, good markets, fine
fruit, good roads, schools, churches, larie agricul
tural population, best building material at low
figures, good soil, low prices, easy terms, perfect
title. For books, maps, charts, aud aft additional
information, address
W. O. HUGHART, W
Land Commissioner, Grand Rapids, Uicb.s
Or Sbptui KouutTS, Traveling Ageut,
nun;
Audits wanted for authentic
udition ol'hiHlifc. Published
it AuiruKtu. his home. Iarif
t-wt. IiaiK hiomoht. -lPHi-t. utssi. jfy mo
renowned historian and liioirrHpher, Col.
Conwell. vhoKlif of Uarlicld, pulilmhed
bv uh. outsold Hie twenty others I y llO.IMili.
Outsells eveiy hook ever publishud in this
world; many uumits Hreseiliny; nlty ilaily
Auent.s are niaUmtr lortunes. AU new
beginners 8iioc.es sful ; grand clmnco for
them. f?tl..riU nuido by a lady a;j;ent the
tirst dav. Terms most liberal. Particu
lars free. Uelter send lio cents fur postage,
etc.. on freo milfit. now ruadv, uicluilin
larui) nroM't'ctiis IxMik. and mvc valuablo
timo. ALLKN Si CO-, Augusta, Maine.
S1CX1) your Job Work to tho UKI'UJj
L1CAN Oilice.
i
5
POWDER
TIME TABLE IN EFKKfT-v..v iu tuci
West wind. I invKit'l)ivi"Mi'n"v."l VhZCZa
M.
A. V.
7 ro
I :w
tat
!i:i n
! A. M.
A.M.
8 4.ri
12 11
K OH
arri:lsbui gh iv
Parker
Fox burg
nr.. Franklin.. Iv
e. M.
8 20
11 64
12 40
ti ao
A. M.
4 :!X
I '.:7
12 'til
2 00
M.
. M.
r. m
I. M.I P. M.
i i : i 'j('
12 07 f -r'
1 1 r i t h .mi
1 1 s s 17
11 17 i Z
C. M. A.M.
ar...Oil City....!'
Hc'dpol i
...Fiuile Rock..
President....
Tlonosln
1 1 ickory....,
.. TrunUey ville
Tidioule,...
...Thoinpsnn s.
Irvineton ...
Warren....
!1 10 7 no
a 1"
i o".
tUHl!
: io 7 2S
:hl t7 n
4 00 7 4H
4 K 8 Oil
i ::2 1 8 ii
4 :t(ii 8 24
1 Ai
1 :ti io r,-j, k ji.-
tl -j-ji io :sj h m
1 10
io i;
7 r.o
! 4'.
!) br
17 '.' s
7 io
(i 1.-.
I r, i
; i:
5 ,"0
0 oo
1". M.
1M.
8 00
t41
12 .'!:.
It Oo
20
0 60
II
11 40
A.M.
A. M.
iv...lln.ua....ar
1". M.
I". M.
4 20 ly
A. M.
A. M.
io no
...P.radfonl ..nrl
1185
A. M.
10 (10
10 82
to ;;7
10 42
10 67
11 12
11 20
A. M
A. M
l'.M.
(5 1" ar...Kin.ua....lv
f 4!l Corvdon
r :u; ....Won' Run....
h I!l (junker lirldgo.
fi 17 ...Red House....
ft 04 ... Salauianca. ...
4 f:0 .So. Carrol lton..
4 41 ...So Yamlalia...
4 2ti Allegany
P. M.
11 :(i
il an!
(i 10
fi 32
11 05
10 17
10 42
10 2li
10 10
io u
It
!) '.'(!
8ftl
7 no
7 10
0 .V2
(' 1".
(1 4f
(1 51
7 05
7 21
11 fifi
141
V 27
i 20
7 35
7 4t)ll 37
8 02 11 52
8 10 12X0
P. M.I M.
fi 00
4 20 lv Ulean
e. M.I
.ar
A.M.
A.M.
Additional Tiiain Leaves Kinxun
II solium, Wnrrcn ::).'pm, Irvineton 2:!lo
pm. Tidiouto :t:54pm, Tionesta 6:20pm, ar
rives Oil City 7:00pm.
AiuiirioNAL 1 ha in Leaves imi cf
(1:10 am. Oleopolis (1:54 am, Eagle Rock
7:0'.'ani, l'residetit 7:15am, Tionesta 7:48mn
Hickory S::!7am,Trunkev villa li;04ain,Tid
oule 10:l.r)iim, Thomison Jl:(;(i, uirives
Irvineton ll:.'5pm.
PlTrs j Divkiov Trains leavft
Oil City 2:;'5, 7:00, 10:15 a. in., 2:15, 4:55
p. in., arrive Oil City 2:0(1, 7:15, P:45 a. m.,
2:20, ".:45, 8-:i() (). 111.
t Flag stations, stop only on signal.
Trnins run on Eastern Time, vt hu ll In 10
niinnlos faster than Buffalo timo.
Pulhnan Sleeping Cars anil Through
Coaches between Buffalo and Pittsburgh
on trnins in-riving Pittsburgh 7:50 a,
and leaving Pittsburgh 8:20 p. m.
'J'hroucrh t'oiichcs between l'ltt'-burgh
and Buffalo and Parlor Cars between Buf
falo and oil City on tn.ins leaving Plttnt
luin: 8. .".ii.iti., nrrivitig Pittsburg KOOp.ra.
"f Tickets sold and baggage rliekrt
to nil principal points.
tret timo t:bb s giving full luforraittoji
from Companv's Airents.
WM. S. BALDWIN. o n'l Pass'r A(r",
(ii:o. S. U ETC II ELL, tlcn'l Hut.
Nos. 41 fzA Exchange St., I'.urrnlo, N. Y.
J. L. CRAIC, AiK-nt, TioiiOKta, Pa.
GIVEN AYAY IN GOLD I II
20 HONORABLE AWARDS It
lit Award $5(1.00 In Gold t td. $20.00 d, $10.00;
411 $5.tHi 6th, 15 AnU of 1.00 each!
To mnj pCTioa nil on ft LUft enulDlDt the rrcatut a unbar
of Bugllib worda formM front m or mor4 letters ooataJMd
U th twoworda mKOVAIj HIE." All wupUuri bimI
mdhm irlclly to th fblluwlnic tuKm: tU No words ulmil
thftt oontaiQ ft rvpeafct4 ltter : for eiRmpif, ih word M hvjmX m
vould b tioludtNl. Had. No wnnli aitinliud that oontwlb lttcra
oifunad io ihttwo word ttojal ilaen forswpt, ft)
word Jiotd would b aac)ula. Srd. All tha word admlWnc
auit ba Mtnoud from tha mala column or iha mum Mr
f any DIoUouarlM. The follow tag Ul ba aicludnd: Word
frvm tha Dloiionarv Bupnlcmoui,' Koou of WcnJi, Propar aal
Ooip-phloal Name. 4 lb. AU eonifwUtort tnut porobaae mm
ttaelr Druft(liorUalaraHotUa oflCoral Wine walah "tneoda
Terythina aa aoUd aa ftUrak " and coal 30 eta. a BatUa. aiaw
Oat your Dealer to writ Ut folio win, on tfaa bark of bit baii
maaa eard and aifen hi name to it: "Tb bearer baa Uila dr
boucbtof ma a bottla of Uo al Gln.M Ia not fail la
aloac tbli card whan aQ1lu( Ul of word. th If your Draiar
haa do MK7Ml (tlue" on band, 1ml uca biio to atmd fw a
aampla doien to any wbolniala UrujtKlitor Dealar. 7th. AU
llau must ba maUnd aud tha wnrd arranged uwatty In alpliabat
leal oolomm. Hth. Ia caao of a Tie, urefereno will be given to
the list Ural mailed, aa shown by pom-runi. The Ion gait
lint wlue the Arat award, tbe uwxt loint the secoDd. and so on.
itth. The NaniM aiid Address of the Hnoctwsful ountaaiauts, a List
of the winning worda, aivd an affidavit of Che maauft
rer that thi-v bare not direolly or Indirectly In any manner
auUiod the SuecflMfol eontaatanu. will bo mailed ta your address
ir to anolosa Ave V-cent a tarn pa with your Met at Words.
Kith. As to our raapouaii'itlty aud intenrtty, we bap to refer na
to HradstnMt't or Iun Meroantila Ajrrnctes or any V hvleaala
IknknliitinthnUnlUMl tttatas. 11th. All lUt must be mailed
not lur than 8pt. lat, and the auaounoement of winner
will ba printed aud maUnl aa above tan day a afterwards.
J. U. O'MEARA & C0.wttKb?
Ryl Llovld tiln. sirnil, WimhI, OIkm. Crtw-kn-y, Cbln
In.tfaor, M.11 and KT.rTlti1nr )U Polid hook. nl VMM
O eta. . bottl.. Irajcli.ta. (iimrl tud Geasrtvl bUVM.
Sold b
' Mnea: 1
bail;.
it t'o., Tionesta, V: .
!? A ti
n-5'Tr7H 11
Lull iUU
ASTHMA'
AND
F (:-. J . l fK v n w f7..B
HEk3SDY.
llnvinu rlnii'u'd 'M years bclv.cen lil
aiid rialh unit A.tluna or rhnthihic,
lica'.e:! by cmiiiciit phi sii-ians, m.d rti-
inj; no benefit, 1 was compelled dnriiijr
lhn laiit live yt ars of my illness to sit on
my chair day and iii;;ht jraspiiej; for breath;
my Kiilleriii;.' wjis beyond licscrption.
Iu ilespair I e. periiiieiiK.il !i niy:-e!f by
eoinpoiin.liiii: roots mid beibsand ir.hai
in iho medic ion thus ubiaiued. 1 loitu
nalely discoveiled this Wonderful l ino
for Asthma and C'afarrh. warrantcil to re
lieve, the luost stubborn case of Asthma in
five minutes, so that the patient chii lio
dowii Io iet and .sleep comfortable. I'lease
read the io) low ini condeii'.cd CNtiai-ls :
Mis. V.'. T. lb ow n, .Monroe, Texas,
writes ; ''1 sulVered with Asthma 30 years.
Your p i eat. remedy has 'completely cured
ini. l'ublhdi this for tho bent til of the
uillictPil.
C. h. Clark, Wakotnan, O., -writes:"!
ceitainlv beleive vour remedy to bo tho
best Astlinia anif Catarrh euro in tho
world. 1 have tried everylhiiif; else, and
all failed but yours. 1 wish you worlds
success.
:. A. Hall, llashaw. Wis., wrilei:"!
received vour trial package and tiiul inval
aluablo, iloiiifr just wliat you claim for it.
H is truly a (')d-send to humanity, Js'o
one can lillord to do without, it who issuf
ferini? Willi Astlima or Catarrli.
Iiich are tho expressions of praise and
Km
1 w
'nuituilo it eeived daily, and in addition,
111 fctill eontinuo my former propos-
iiml J will forward you a trial package by
return mail, Freo of chargo. Full si.o
box bv mail, $1.00. fold by all driiKj,'ist.
Address, 1). LANiiKLL, Appleei-etk, O.,
Inventor mrd solo proprietor.
1 TIONKSTA, FA
M. CARPENTER,
- Proprietor.
ti
Pictures taken in all the latent styles i
the art. 1W-U'
JOlt WOUK of everv desi-ription execu
ted at thu KKI'UJIUCAN ollke,