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reac ane Mere pleee eee epee Your Children Are constantly exposed to danger from diseases peculiar to the Jungs. For such ailments, Cherry Pectoral, promptly adminis- tered, affords speedy relief and cure. As a remedy for Whooping Cough, with which many of our children were afflicted, we mort f during the past win- ter, with much satisfaction, Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. For this affection, we consider this preparation the most effi- cacious of all the medicines which have come to our knowledge.— Mary Park- hurst, Preceptress, Home for Little Wanderers, Doncaster, Md. My children have be: uliarly sub- fretto attacks of Com sad I failed to nd any effective remedy until [ com- menced administering Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. This preparation relieves the difficulty of breathing and invariably cures the complaint. — David G. Starks, Chatham, Columbia Co., N. Y. I have used Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral in my family for many years, and have found it especially valuable in Whooping Cough. This medicine allays allirritation, prevents inflammation from extending to the lungs, and quickly sub- dues any tendency to Lung Complaint. —J.B. Wellington, Plainville, Mich. I find no medicine so effective, for Croup and Whooping Cough, as Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. It was the means of caring the life of my little bor only six months old, carrying him safely through the worst case of Whooping Cough I ever saw. -— Jane Malone, Piney Flats, Tenn, Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, Prepared by Dr. J.C. Ager & Co., Lowell, Mase. Bold by all sgista. Price $1; six bottles, $5. KASKINE V QUININE.) No badettect No headache No nausea No Ringing Ears Cur's quickly Pleas’nt pure A POWERFUL TONIC that the moet delicate stomash will bear A SPECIFIC FOR MALARIA, RHEUMATINM, NERVOUS -:- PROSTRATION, and all Germ Diseases. nary Hospital, N. ¥., ‘Universally suc- jal, Every patient treat- 8t.Francis Hospital,N.Y. } ed with Kaskine has been disch’gd cured Dr. L. R. White, U.S Examining Surgeon. writes: ‘‘Kaskine is the best medicine made.’’ Dr. L. M. Glessner, 360 Kast Ifist., New York «ity, cured over 2 patie with Kaskine after quinine and all other drags have failed. Hesays: ‘‘Itis undoubtedly the best medicine ever iscovered.’* Prof. W. F, Holcomb, M. D. ,54 East 25th st... N.Y (late Prof. in N.Y Med. Coll.) writes: **Kaskine is superior to quinine in its specific | pen and never produces the slightest injury the hearing or constitation.’’ Rev. Jas. L. Hall, net te Albany Peni- fentiary, writes that Kaskine has cured his fe, after twenty years suffering’from malaria and nervous dyspepsia. Write him for particu- ‘Thousands upon thousands write that Kaskine has cured them after all other medicines had failed. Write for book of testimonials. Kaskine can be taken without any special medical advice. $1.00 per bottle. Sold by or sent by mail on receipt of price. THE KASKINE CO., 54 WarrenSt., New York ‘oughs, Golds, Pleurisy, Rheumatism, P: Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, "Rackodhe and other ailments, for which Reason" Capcine Plasters are admitted to be the best remedy known. They relieve and cure in few hours when no other application is ofthe least bene- fit. Endorsed by 5,000 ph: and drug- gists. Beware of imitations under similar sounding names. such as ‘*Capsicum,’’ **Cap- pet ae th Ask lor Benson’s and er. Examine .carefully w! bay. All druggists. wisi meshoa SEABURY & JOHNSON, Proprietors, New York. then particulars senton application. 41 West Sist St. New York. Nat. WIRE ‘ FENCING Beware of old stole bassy netting. patent URFLEXIBLE netting. wit Semaliel einer me , Re Sags between posts. Shi Teady made. Tolle; oF license, model’ wire wea tools’ for home-made netting or picket fence fagnished. Before buying smooth or barbed wire, irom posts, gates, farm, city or graveyard fences, write or my prices and free catalogue. Send stamp for private agency terms. . G. HULBERT, Qt Olive st., St. Louis, Mo. ins AG CORSE . quick salen. i anced, DR SCOPT, O41 BI Row & §TE. No oN. ¥. ENTS Senses | Vest on Woman Suffrage. | Wh.-t man can without aversion | turn trom the blessed memory of that dear old grandmother, or the gentle | words and caressing hand of that ' blessed mother gone to the unknown world, to face in its stead the idea | of a female Justice of the Peace or a township constable? For my I want when I go home—when I | turn from the arena where man con- | tends with man for what we call the prizes of this paltry world—I want to go buck, not to be received in the masculine embrace of some female | ward politician, but to the earnest, loving look and touch of a true wo man. 1 want to go back to the ju risdiction of the wite, the mother, and instead of a lecture upon finance or the tanff, ur upon construction of the Constitution. I want those} blessed, loving details ot domestic love. * * * What we wantin this countrv is to avoid emotional suffrage, and what we need is to put more logic into the public affairs and | less feeling. There are spheres in | which teeling should be paramount. There are kingdoms in which the heart should reign supreme, That kingdom belongs to woman—the the realm of part realm of sentiment, loye, the realm of the gentler and holier and kindlier attributes that make the name of wite, mother and sister next to that of God himself. I would not, anc I say it deliberate- ly, degrade woman by giving her the right of suffrage. I mean the word in its full signification, because 1 believe that the woman as she is to day the queen of home and hearts, is above the political collisions of this world and should always be kept above them. Indicted by the Wrong Jury. Jefferson City, Mo., March 15.— Last Saturday ten of the Taney county Bald Knobbers were indicted by the United States grand jury tor conspiring against and intimidating homesteaders on government land. This mormng the cases were called in the United States district court when District Attorney M. E. Ben- ton stated that the parties had been indicted by a grand jury from the central division of the district (the original district having recently been changed by a congressional act) when they should have been indicted by a grand jusy taken trom the orig- inal district, as provided by law. He asked that the cases be continued and a jury be be drawn from the original district to dispose of the matter. The court granted the con- tinuance and each ot the parties was placed under $1,000 bond. Two Results of a New Law. Speaking ot the Inter-State com- merce law, which goes into effect on April rst, a railroad official said this morning: ‘‘Itis going to stop all the third-class theatrical com- panies. It is almost impossible for some of them to live with the pres- ent low rate of traveling expenses, and when the Inter-State pill comes into effect they cannot possibly bear the expenses. The law will teach the American people to understand how to appreciate the low rates they have had. Last summer I sold tickets from this city to Chicago for fitty cents and people stood in front of the office waiting to see if they couldn't get a ticket tor twenty-five cents. They don’t know when they have got a good thing.—K. C. Star. We have added the nhme of Wil- son Arnold, recently of Appleton City, to our dead beat list, he hav- ing tailed to pay up his arrearages to this paper. Men of this charac- ter, who will subscriteSfor a paper and then leave the country without paying for it, are more despicable and contemptibie than the thief who clandestinely puts his hand into your pocket and steals your money. If Mr. Arnold has any friends, we hope that they will torward these eulogis- tical remarks to him and perhaps they will serve to make him an hon- est mar in the future —Osceola Ad- vance. Pretty rough on Arnold but served him right. Ifa few more dead beats | were served the same way it might do good. The Dakota tegislature is about ; to pass a law fhnmiting the rate of in- | terest to 12 percents | EES city girl writes: “It 1s a fond dream ot » ne to become a farmer’s wite and meander down life’s flow- ery pathway” Ah, nice thing; but when your husband meanders off, and leaves you withaut wood, and you have to meander up and down the lane pulling splinters off the fence with which to cook din- ner, and when you meander around in the wet grass in search ot the cows you will find that the meander- yes, thar’s a | ng busines on the farm is not what it is cracked up to be. Peter Sellenberger, of Hartville, Ohio, killed a tat cow and tound in ‘her stomach a butcher knite seven inches long, with a keen edge and a sharp point. It had lacerated the coating of the stomach a little, but the cow had seemed none the worse for it. The knite had been missing since last September, when it was | probably fed to the cow with potato peelings. A citizen of Ioma, Michigan, rang the bell at a house when he called, a 2 | and then stood patiently on the iron doorstep until the slow servant opened. the door. Theh he turned pale and cried out that he was par- aly zed ; for when he tried to walk he could not move. He telt better just as soon as he discovered that his wet boots had frozen to the iron steps as he stood waiting. A man wh@ has : racticed medicine tor 40 years ought to know salt from sugar; read what he says: Totevo, O., Jan. 10, 1887. Messrs. F. J. Cheny & Co.—Gentlemen: Ihave been in the general practice of medicine for most 40 years, and would say that in all my practice and experience have never seen a preparation that I could prescribe with as much confidence ot success as I can Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by you. Have prescribed it a great many times and its effect is wonderful, and would say in conclusion that I have yet to find acase of Catarrh that it would not cure, it they would take it according to directions. Yours truly, L. L. GORSUCH, M. D, Office, 215 Summit St. We will give $100 for any case of Ca- tarrh that can not be cured with Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Taken internally. F. J. CHENEY & CU., props.Toledo,O. a@PSold by druggist, 75 cts. 141m ES te ae The department ot agriculture has $500,000 to expend tor the extirpa— tion of pleuro-pneumonia and will make a vigorous campaign against the contagion. Only seven members of the Rhode Island house of representatives voted against the submission of a woman suffrage amendment, Drunkenness, or Liquor Habit, can be Cured by admnistrating Dr. Haines’ Golden Specific. It can be given in a cup of coffee or tea without the knowledge of the person taking it, effecting a speedy and perma- nent cure, whether the patientis a mod- erate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. Thousand of drunkards have been made ternperate men who have taken the Gol- den Speciffc in their coffee without their knowledge, and to-day believe they quit drinkingon their own tree will. O° harmful effects results trom its adminis- tration. Cures guaranteed. Send for circular and full particulars. Address in confidence Golden Specific Co., 185 Race St., Cincinnati, Ohio. 49 1 yr. Ex-Gov. Smith ef Virginia obtain- ed the sobriquet, ‘Extra Billy Smith,’? by a demand he made on the government for extra compensa tion for carrying the mails trom Washington to Milledgeville, Ga. Another Art Craze. The latest art work among ladies is known as the ‘‘French Craze,” for decorating china, glassware, etc. It is something entirely new, and is beth profitable and fascinating, It is very popularin New York, Boston and other Eastern cities. To ladies desiring to learn the Art, we will send an elegant china plaque (size 18 inches,) handsomely decorated, for a model, together with box ot material, 100 colored designs assort- ed in flowers, animals, soldiers, land- scapes, etc., complete, with full in- structions, upon receipt ot only $1.00. The placque alone 1s worth more than the amount charged. To every lady ordering this outfit who encloses the address of five other ladies interested in Art matters, to whom we can mail our new catalogue ot Art Goods, we will enclose extra and without charge, a beautitul 30 inch, gold plated placque. Address Tue Empme News Co., 13t Syracuse. N. Y. HOW'S THIS. We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- ward tor any case ot Catarrh that can not be cured by taking Hall*s Catarrh cure, F. J. CHENEY & CO., Proprie- tors, Toledo, O, . P. S.—Hall i] AGENT AN EXTRAORDINARY OFFER. To All Wanting Employment. Energetic and Capable Agents y in the United States and cle of great merit, om having a large sale, pay- profit, having no compe- h the agent is protected in le by a deed given for each and may secure from us. With all to our agents and the fact that fat can be sold to every house- not be necessary to make an NARY OFFER” to Secure good agents but we have concluded to make it to how, not only our confidence in the merits of ur invention, but in its salability by any agent that will handle it with energy. Our agents now at work are making from $150 to $600 a h clear and this fact makes it safe for us to offer to all who are out of employ- y agent that will give our business a thirty days’ trial and fail to clear at least $100 in this time, ABOVE ALL EXPENSES, Can return all goods unsold to us and we will refund the money paid for them. Any agent or general agent who would like ten or more counties and work them through sub-agents for ninety days and fail to clear at least $750 ABOVE ALL EX- urn all unsold and get their money back. No other employer of agents ever dared to make such offers, nor would we if we d not know that we have agents now making unt we guaranteed; a ay would give a profit of over $125 a month, and that one of our agents took eighteen orders in one day. Our large de- scriptive circulars explain our offer fully, and these we wish to send to everyone out of em- ployment who will send us three one cent stamps for postage. Send at once and secure the agency in time forthe boom, and go to work on the terms named in our extraordinary offer. We would like to have the address of all the agents, sewing machine solicitors and carpen- ters in the country, and ask any reader of this paper who reads this offer, to send us at once the name and address of all such they know. Address at once, or you will lose the best chance ever offered to those out of employment to make money. RENNER MANUFACTURING Co., 116 Smithfield Se., Pittsburg, Pa. PENSES, can TF to be made. Cut this ont and return itto ue, and we will send you free, some- thing of great value and importance to 135 that will start you in busi- ness which will bring you in more money right away than anything else in this world. one can do the work and live at home. Either sex, allages. Something new, that just coins money for all workers. We will start you; capital not needed. This is one of thegentine, important chances of a lifetime. Those who are ambitious and enterprising will not delay Grand outfit free. Address Truk &°Co., Au- gusta, Maine.= Any THE CENTURY For 1886-7. Tue Century is an illustrated maga- zine, having a regular circulation of about two hundred thousand copies, often reaching sometimes exceeding two hun- dred and twenty-five thousand, Chief among its mary attractions for the com- ing year is a serial which has been in ac- tive preparation tor sixteen years. It is a history of our own country in its most critical time, as set forth in THE LIFE OF LINCOLN, BY HIS CONFIDENTIAL SECRETARIES, JOHN G. NICOLAY AND COL. JOHN HAY. This great work, begun with the sance tion of President Lincoln, and continued under the authority ot his son, the Hon. Robert T. Lincoln, is the only full and authoritative reeord of the life ot Abra- ham Linceln. Its authors were friends of Lincoin before his presidency; they were most intimately associated with him as priyate secretaries throughout his term of office, and to them were trans- terred upon Lincoln’s death all his pri vate papers. Here will be told the inside history of the civil war and of President Lincoln’s administration—important de- tails of which have hitherto remained unrevealed, that they might first appear in this authentic history. By reason ot the publication cf this work, THE WAR SERIES, which ha~ been tollowed with unflagging interest by a great audience, will occupy less space during the coming year. Get- tysburg will be described by Gen. Hunt (Chiet ot the Union Artillery), General Longstreet. Gen. E. M. Law, and others: Chickamauga by Gen. D. H. Hill; Sher- man’s March to the Sea, by Generals Howard and Slocum. Generals Q. A. Gillmore, W. F. Smith, John Gibbon, orace Porter, and John S. Mosby will describe special battles and incidents. Stories of naval engagements, prison life, etc., etc., will appear, NOVELS AND STORIES. ‘‘The Hurdredth Man,’? a novel by Frank R. Stockton, author ot ‘The Lady, or the Tiger?” etc., begins in No vember. ‘T'wo noyelettes by George W. Cable, stories by Mary Hallock Foote, “Uncle Remus,” Julian Hawthorne, Ed ward Eggleston, and other prominent American authors will be printed during the year. SPECIAL FEATURES (with illustrations) include a series of articles on affairs in Russia and Siberia, by George Kennan, author ot *‘Tent Lite in Siberia,’ who has just returned from a most eventful visit to Siberian prisons; papers on the rood Question, with ref- erence to its bearing on the Labor Prob- lem; English Cathedral:; Dr. Egghs- ton’s Religious Lite in the’ American Colonies; Men and Women ot Queen Anne’g Reign, by Mrs. Oliphant; Clair- voyance, Spiritualism, Astrology, etc., by the Rev, J. M. Buckley, D. D., editor of the Christian Advocate; astronomical papers; ‘articles throwing light on Bible history, etc. PRICES. A FREE COPY. Subscription price $4.00 a year, 35 cts. a number. Dealers, postmasters, and the publishers taxe subscriptions. Send for our beautifully illustrated 24-page cataloge (tree), containing full prospec- tus, etc., including a special offer by which new readers can get back numbers to the beginning of the War Series at a low price. A specimen copy (back num- der) will be sent on request. Mention this paper. ‘ Can you afford to be without Tue CEN~ TURY? SS3THE CENTURY CO. New York. WANTED ~~ | Corsets. Ser: | Territery z : | DR.SCOTT. | COCKLE’S-25.PILLS is old English Family Medicine i nse for 86 years, all over the w for Bile, Indigestion, Live CASTORIA for Infants “Castoria is so well adapted tochildren that {recommend it as superior to any prescription: knowntome.” HA. Ancnrr, M.D., 111 So. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. Y. Harness an and Children. Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Ae hag Eructation, 2 Without injurious medication, WFARLAND BROS. Keep the Largest Stock, Atthe Lowest Prices in. d Saddlery Spooner Patent Collar! —PREVENTS CHAFING “4 CAN NOT CHOKE A HORSE)! Adjusts itself to any Horse’s Neck, has two rows ot stitching, will hold Hames %a | place better than any other collar. SCHWANEF’’S 1 UTN0 Prevents braking at end of clip, and lo from tearing out. USED ON ALL OF OUR HARNESS SOUTH SIDE 8QU ARE BUTLER MO. (TEN PAGES) wz ON DOLLAR A YEAR. The following comparative statement of a number of the most prominent We published in the United States shows conclusively that the WEEKLY GLOBI OCRAT is from 2< to 50 PE T Sf. LOU M0. Weekls Republican, St. Louis M Weekly Tribune Chicago. Nl Weekly Times, Chicago, M1 Weekly Intur Ocean Chicago, M1 Weekly Enquirer, Cincinnati, O Weekly Commercial Gazette Cincinnati O Weekly Times. New York City Weekly Sun, New YorkCity,.. Weekly World, New York Cit R CENT THE CHEAPEST. ‘ {10 PAGES |70- COLUMNS i 8 Pages Columns - 8 Pages % 8 Pages 8 Pages Columns Columns Columns Columns “Columns Colurans Columns Columns Se Teor creer SREKTSK 14 Columns of Solid Reading Matterin Faver ef the @. BEFORE SUBSCRIBING, or renewing your renee tom to anv other paper, send tor a SAMPLE PY of theWEEKLY : GLOBE-DEMOCRA1. PRICE OF THE 01 HER EDITIONS OF THE GLOBE DEMO Daily, annum Tri-Weekly, per annum Semi-Weekly, per annum. Postmasters and Newsdealers are a: send direct tothe GLOBE PRINTING we y uthorized to receive subscription er. CO., ST. LOU B. A.F resent Pecelgerer we be bis own judge im one sense, ESTABLISHED Wal. St tepow: this medicine See p. Ithas been prv Ly mot of wcorms Lor #0 #5 ind to examine every bottie h not sufficient. He must look closely and carefully to see th. fied with notaing — New Frasxtry Howarp Co. Mo | Mesere J.B. Schwartz & Co. Pitteurg, Po “a Gentlemen—t have used some of th: medr. PB. A. Fahnestock's Vermit | J.B. SCHWARTZ & 66, WwW HUE B.A. F Kills Worms, gives eleep, and prometag@ .