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4 THE DAIL BEE THE OMAHA BEE.| Published every morning, excopt Sunday. The ‘only Monday morning dail RS BT MAL. One_Year.........810.00 | Throo Montha Six Months. .. 5.00 | One Month. . TR WERKLY BIER, FORLISITED RVRRY WERNRADAY. THRMS POSTRAID. One Year $2.00 | Three Manthy Bix Months, .. 1.00 | One Month American News Company, Sole Agents N ors in the United States. foomnesroxpRNOR. A Osmmunications relating 85 News and Bditorial mattors should be addressed to the Epiron or Tim Ben. | $ 5o 2 WUSINRSS ARETERS. All Business Tetvers and Remittances should be addressed to Tuk Bk PoRASHING COMPANY, OMATIA Drafts, Checks and Postoffice orders to bo made pay- ble to the order of the cempany. THE BEE BUBLISHING C0, PROPS, E. ROSEWATER, Editor, Ir will not be o casy -to lie in the mayo's nost as it used to be. Mz, CraxnLer may rule the seas, but e can’t ¢ mtrol a New Hampshire logis- lature. THE unanimous comment of our heavy tax payers on the injunction suits, is “Push them through to the end.” They will be pushed through for all that they are worth. Tar New York Zribune announces positively that: under no consideration will Mr. Blaine consont to be a presiden- tial candidate next year or to return to public life in any capacity. TEx press has probably suffered least of all from the telegraphers’strike. What news happens to be current in the coun- try has been promptly furnished the papers, even to the exclusion of commer- cial business. Tae Secretary of the navy, who is now busily engaged in electioneering for the senatorship in New Hampshire, is needed at Washington. The United States steamer, Pinta, after 100,000 worth of repairs, succoeded in attaining a speed of six knots an hour and breaking down on her first trip. Mas. N1ckersox has been heard from. He has taken a pleasure trip to Europe from which safe distance he writes that the intrusion of the public aud press into his domestic affairs compels him to_retire to private life. For brass and iniquity combined, Major Nickerson is certainly eni led to the prize. I the seven weeks the East River bridge hus been open, the receipts from tolls have steadily fallen from £100,000 the first week to 2,507 the Ist. A gain is expected as soon as the railroad begins operation, and the coming of cool weather, will also have a tendency to increase travel. The ultimate income from the bridge, it is thought, will be about $400,- 000 a year. ““IN one word,” says Rigolo inthe New York Sun, ‘“with the excellent crop pros- pects all over the world, it seems that humanity is prétty sure to have plenty of cheap focd for another twelvemonth to come.” This is the main point that the public are anxious about. Speculators may be everywhere worse off, but the public care about the speculators just as little as the speculators care abont the publie; It is fully time that the poor man should have his field day, to AMERICAN naval officers have been so much annoyed by .the changes in their uniforms that the recent order making another sweeping alteration was received with a groan of disgust throughout the service, - It has now been at least tempo- rarily postponed, and a large loss to the officers will, therefore, be prevented. Those persons who imagine that naval officers get their food and clothing from the government will be surprised to learn that an officer's mess bill averages thirty dollars per month, and that his clothing costs double what it would in civil life, and both expenses come out of his salary, except an allowance of one ration a day, equal t0 nine dollars a month. —— Some foolish complaint 15 made be- cause vacancies have not been created in the several departments at Washington #0 that, the civil service rules could be applied at once in making new appoint- ments. It is said that the administration has taken pains to fill up all the vacan- cies, and that, therefore, the new- civil system cannot. be putinto operation until there !fi' 8, - Tesignations - or re- movals. In the rush for place in Wash- ington vacancies never remain open long ment of pl:lub b merely for the sake of trying the new experiment. If the new civil service system hasmuch merit, and we do not believe it has, there will be op) enough in the future for putting it in practice without unduly pressing its operation. SE————— Tue_official statisties of emigration from Europe for this year show a consid- erable decline in its tide since last year. In 1881 the total number of immigrgnts was 009,431, in 1882 the number was 788,992, und in 1883 it has fallen to 599,114, This is 100,000 less than last year, and 70,000 less than the year be- fore. After the tremendous inpour in 1882 a reaction in immigration was nat- ural enough from an exhaustion of the sources of supply without seeking any further for the, cause. Although the mw' from y hus - dealind from y ,000 in , the #s great as that of the Irish, Next to _continues to furni ‘ i that of most of the countries of Europe. Beot- -|ed trustwerthy or accurate. TRENGYH, President Arthur is a candidate for re- nomination at the hands of the republi- tial race of 1884, No estimate of pro- babilitiesfor the coming campaign, which | ing political strength of the president | thronghout the country can be consider- | For more | than a year General Arthur has been | ed a political impossibility is now one of | the strong probabilities of the immedi ate future, | No man entered upon the discharge of his duties as president under more trying circumstances of weighted down by graver disadvantages than Chester A. Arthur. To a large portion of his own party he represented an element to whose | factionalism and disregard of public sen- timent the disintegration in the republi- can ranks was chiefly attributed. The bit- closely by the national sorrow in the as- sassination of President G a sombre background behind President Arthur as he took the oath of office. President by an accident, identified as vice-president with the encmies of the administration, his appeal for republican support and public sympathy was 1 under circumstances which rendered im- possible the unreserved confidence even of his own party. It is impossible now not to acknowledge the wisdom, the | manly dignity, the conservatism and the practical which have marked the two years incumbency of the presidency by Genoral Arthur, He has gained steadily in strength from the day when he firat assumed office in the midst | of a crape clothed people. Little by lit- tle the country has learned to understand that the president has had but one aim and that that has been to prove his fit- common sense ness for the office to which he succeeded by assussination. Shak- ing off tho objectionable nssociations with which The® was surrounded during his earlier career, he has adminis- tered the presidency with dignity, and exhibited 'an earnest desire to consult the best public sentiment, both in the mapping out of his policy and in the se- lection of: his appointments to office. President Author’s record for the two years past is his chief strength as a can- didate for 1884, He has done much to- wards healing party dissensions with a tact and judgment whigh is worthy of all | praise, and has given to the’ country an honest and clear handed, if not a strong administration of public. affairs. He will come to the next republican conven- tion with a large and a determined fol- lowing, and the republican party might gom Y further and fare worse than in selecting him for its standard bearer, Two St. Joe doctors had the audacity to advertise their profession, andthe con- sequence has been a ‘regular’ cyclone which has greatly disturbed the medical atmosphere down in Missouri. An at- tempt, which very sensibly failed, was made by the society to reprimand them and the music is stilly playing. Public opinion is entirely with the physicians who s no reason why they should be prohibited any more than a civil engineer from bringing into notice their profes- sional attainments, When it.comes to advertting, the majority of physicians uphold the code which upholds dead beat- ing on the part of its members, but does not forbid any amount of free puffs of surgical operations or cancer removals, OTHER LANDS THAN OURS, The affair at Tamative, Madagascar, where the French admiral so defiantly disregarded all internjtional obligations on his insulting oppression of the Eng- lish residents and the English fiag, con- tinues to excite British ire and irritate the diplomatists, Although President Ferry professed to doubt the truth of the reports of Admiral Pierre's conduct, the news this week from Madagascar has fully confirmed the first dispatches, It is assorted that after the capture of the town by the French, a British vessel was not permitted to receive the consular dispatches for transmission to England until after she had cleared her docks for action. Some $500,000 worth of British property was destroyed at points along the coast where seven-tenths of the com- merce is in the hands of English mer- chants,. Centinental opinion is unani- mous that the outrages are so serious as toleave Firance no option but to disown Admiral Pierre and to offer full repara- tion. This view seems finally to have ‘been: adopted by Challemel-Lacour, the French minister of foreign affairs, who on Tuesday, in the chamber of deputies, declared that unexplained events could not impair the present good relations be- tween France and England. The utter- ances in the British parliament on this subject had been moderate and courte- ous. Challemel-Lacour added that if a grave error had been committed, or pas- sion manifested, the French Government would not hesitate to fulfill the obliga- tions imposed by a sense of justice and the interests of the country. The Min- ister's remarks were received with cheers. The opposition in England to Mr. Gladstone’s agreement with DeLesseps continues at its hoight. Tho agreement was provisionally to lend M. DeLesseps £40,000,000, at 8} per cent, to build a canal paralel to the present one; that the tolls were to be reduced in a sliding scale profits, and that the coatrol of the canal was to remain substautially as at present in the hands of the French board. But England now refuses to ratify the pro- posed bargain, It insists on having & substantial control in the administration in the tolls, and it protestsiagainst an en- i o g s b i, of the cannd nd & substantial roduction | an overwhelming succes determined by the ingrease of the net | ormous advance of English capital to be |and the outlet for the trade is Kordofan, Mr. Glad. | where spent by a foreign company. stone is certain to be defeated in the | can party, and a leader in the presiden- | commons when the issue of ratifying the | g, ensy a matter as the English officers grant comes before that body. A notice | from Lord Salisbury that the tories fails to take into consideration the grow- | would oppose the scheme was greeted | with loud cheers from both conservative: and liberals, Jut it will not need a second ¢ t of the ministry on an issue which it has| steadily advancing in public confidence, | made its own, to give evidenco of the de- | The civil service will be reformed, « and what would two years ago havescem- | cadence of the power and influence of the | cial erime will be strictly punished premier, Mr, Gladstone has announced asecond parliamentary programme differs little from the first, and wh by its composition admits that little or no real work has yet been done by the ses- sion. The Parnellites are gaining ground in every election, Redmond's return from Wexford borough over the liberal candi date being the latest. .The Irish party is devoting itself energetically to preparing for the contest in every constituency in England, TIreland and Scotland, which terness of the Conkling episode followed |affords the opportunity, -and the Zimes admits that if successful in only one-third field, formed |of the seats attacked, Mr. Parnell's fol- lowing in the next parliament will num ber eighty-four members. The movement in ontirely systematic, the candidates are | chosen with the greatest care, and the in | dications in every part of Ireland point to This means that the balance of power in the noxt par- linmentary session will be entirely in the hands of Mr. Parnell's following, and that his support must be sought for by cither of the parties which hopesto carry through any measure of importance. The news from France during the week relates principally to the Tonquin and Tamative affairs. ~ Chambord still lingers along in his sick bed at Frohsdorff, and the excitement over his expected death has. entirely subsided. So far as the guarded utterances of M. Challemel-La- cour can_be interpreted by the protests of M. Paul Cassagnac, Franco has re- treated before China, The original pur- pose of the French government was the occupation of Annam under the thin veil of a protectorate, using the treaty of 1874 as a protext. As China. like France, claims a general control of An- nam, this involved a direct collision be- tween the two countries. Now France only proposes to complete its occupation of Tonquin and *‘chastise” Annam, or, to be more accurate, its ruling sovereign, Tu-duc. This China can fairly allow, as it is to the double interest of Chinese sea coast, while the internal land trade of the empire is certain to be increased if the mouth of the Hong Kiang passes in- to strong hands by the occupation of the Tonquin delta. As a whole, the result is more creditable to Chinese than to French diplomacy. China seoms, however, disposed to backup di- plomacy’ with arms and 7,000 troops have been dispatched to the Tonquin frontier. In Madagascar, the French occupation of the northern coast seems torfbe complete. The Macgassy envi are not indisposed to grant two of the essential points in dispute with France— the demand that French subjects may occupy land in freehold, and the demand for the payment of a war indemnity of 1,200,000 Jrancs. But they are sternly hostile to yielding the main point, viz, a French protectorate over the north- western districts of the island, opposite ghe French island settlement of Nosi-Be. This concession, which is the os of French demands, Admiral Pierre is de- termined to enforce at all hazards. The ministry finds itself in the extremely un- comfortable position of being sure to have its action at the Madagascar en- tanglement misconceived, whatever it does. To refuse an apology er tender. an insufficiont one to England will leave tho republic absolutgly without friends or ac- tive allies on the mavp of the globe; to grant the apology is open to the sneer that the republic dare not continue in its active colonial policy when it crosses the ‘mbl\ of England, At any time this would be an awkward dilemma; but it is par- ticularly disagreeable when France is sensitive over the advance of English in- fluence in the Mediterranean during the lust year, The cholera is advancing with silent tread through Egypt and is now before the gates of Alexandria. More than 4,- 000 deaths from the scourge have taken place since the 20th of June, Cairo is now infected while the death roll at Da- mietta foots up the astounding total of 1,600 victims, ° Steps are being taken to isolate Alexandria but fow hopes are en- tertained of their success.” Almost a panic is prevalent in southern Europe and all the countries along the Mediter- ranean have adopted the most rigid sani- tary measures. So far no well authenti- cated cases have appeared on the conti- nent, The Turkish government is having a dispute with its Greek subjects, which though now being conducted amicably enough, is likely to arouse a bitter- ness which will prove a very serious mat- ter to the Ottoman empire. The Greek gfirinrcl\ has ever since the conquest of ‘onstantinople by the Turks been allow- ed the privilege of administering the roperty of dead Greeks according to the w of the Greek community, which is based upon the old Roman law. The government now wishes to abolish this privilege on the und that religious communities should not have special laws contrary to the common law of the land, This seems a reasonable and proper osition at first sight,—but not s> when t is remembered (itt the Turkish law of succession is founded upon the koran. To insist upon the proposed change therefore would be to force upon the Christian subjects in Turkey a law based upon a religion they detest, and even the suggestion of such a course is caleulated to make them smart under the sense of Mohammedan intolerance, There may be grave danger for Turkey in this mat- tor; its Christian subjects number nearly one-fourth of its population and repre- sent its greatest in(u‘ligmwu and educa- tion, and Turkey can by no means afford to alienate them now. The latest news from the Soudan is that Hicks Pasha will not b his final campaign against the the false prophet hofore November, and, of course, that the chiefs of Senaar are continuing to send in the submissions, The reason for this delayed action is doubtless the terrible heat, 118 dogress in the shade being ap parently a common temperature, Added to this the troops ave forced to consume foul water and bad food, and naturally they are suffering greatly from diarchea. An additional interest 1s given to this contest by the announcement that it is practically a war against the slave trade. All the rebel chiefs are said to have a large number of slaves among their followers, trade to avoid a direct collision on the | the Mahdi has retreated, and where he will doubtless be finally dis- | posed of by and by, theugh it may not be wish it believed. Peace is at last declared in Peru. It| seen dearly bought, but the country in such a demoralized condition that it | st be had, no matter what the price. | ts at reform will be very prum{rfly Foreigners will be permitted to ens at the end of one year. nade. become 1, mili- | tary service will be made obligatory and | a public school system will bo established. | These measures all augur well. The | promise of citizenship held out to aliens | will draw foreign residents aud foreign | L”“"""l and_insure the stability of the | | country, The common peop! igno- | rant and debased and schools greatly needed. Though so deeply humiliated {and impoverished by the war, Pera has | still the elements of extrac y wealth | and pros . Great satisfaction is felt | |at the rapid pacification of the country, land the withdrawal of the Chilians Everybody is heartily sick of the whole affair, and the advent of peace is warmly | welcomed, ral very important towns |in the north have been evacuated |are now in the hi appointed by Tglesins, while in the inte rior and on the coast the Peruvian flag is flying in places where it has not been seen for months, Frencharmy ha since the close of the terrible war, probably the most effective land force at the disposal of any European power, it is not 8o well known what ex- traordinary advancement has been made in supplementing French strength on the land with a formidable force at sen. Iron | and rtecl vesscls are admittedly the most formidable implements of offense at sea. Of these marine monsters the French navy now counts twenty complete and ready for action, and twenty-four others building, but not at p grand total of fort | whole English navy of like ch completed and uncompleted, only counts forty-five vessels, whoso thickness of armor and weight of guns are of an in- Whil oceur now between France and England | the latter country would have no_ advan- | ago in offensive force upon the sen, To | us mation, 1t may in some measure ac- count for the readiness of the French Government in undertaking schemes of conquest in distant parts of the world. i 5 | The relations between Japan and China [have been delicate for some years, and | there has repeatedly been danger of a . But the statesmen of Jupan just shown_excellent judgment by refusing to enter into n war-like alliance with France against China. Nothing could be more dangerous to the indepen- dence or ruinous to the interests of Ja- pan than to be plunged into hostilities through such an alliance. The people of Japan are in the way of progress, and peace is of the utmost importance to them. (CAL AND DRAMATIC. M Brooks ls engaged Ristori for six months in America. The talented Hyer sisters aro engaged to sing in & coucert in London, England, next winte R. E. Graham, who was in Denve Minnie Palmer company, goes wi Mitchell next season, Five thousand persons attended the recep- tion congert of the saengerfest at Buffalo, Se euty societies were present, . Fanny Daveaport is still studying her part in “Fedora”, the production of which is looked forward co with considerable interest. Pauline Lucea is going to sing the title role in the new opera “‘Gioconda,” by Ponchielli, which will be brought out in Vienna in De- cember next. Maud Granger is on the way to California with a strong company, under the manage- ment of John A. Stevens. She will play “Her Second Love.” Lawrence Barrott will appear next season in Schiller's “Don Carlos,” translated and adapted to the American stage by the late Bayard Taylor. Adolf Neuendorff, for years the manager of German theatrical and operatic enterprises in Now York, has taken. tho loadenhip of Ar- buckle's orchestra, and gives one-third of his salary to the support of the children and the widow of the late Math. Arbuckle. The ambition of modern French composers, according to the Gegenwart, is to unite in one work the simplicity of the older style of melo- dy with the glitter of Italian music, the real- ism of the modern recitative, and the grand instrumentation of Berlioz and Wagner, Dullness prevails in eastern theatricals just now. Manngers are busy forming combina, tions and securing companies for next season The intense heat has closed many theatres which would have otherwise run plays far in- to August. Theatrical people promise next season to be abrilliant one, Miss Minnie Palmer's success in Europe has boen 50 great that her engagementis extended for ewe year, and during the coming season sho will play engagoments a tho Adelphi the- ater and Crystal Palace, London, returning to this country for the seuson of 1884-5, Miss Palmer drew the largest audiences ever known to the Royal Princess' theater, Glascow. Maggie Tom Burke, Take down the harp from Tarra's wall, Nor let it hang there mute; Thrill all its chords to freedom’s hymns ferior average to those that have been built by the French. Itis pointed out by English journals that if a war were to |{ his is an astonishing piece of infor- | e rupture between these two great Oriental | W with the | And sing her sons’ repute, "Mongst natious vanquished Niobe w\thpr uzl,Ir ho'r po"‘l.flu‘: priest, 0, pleading for her Iamished onios, Hueh fallon'as the Toat Though mundered fromm the ties of youth, H‘L‘Elullun‘u famo subdued, Banen St sl thore lingore el A heart with love imbued. 8 He loved his god, hia anciont falth, And nextthe Emeraid iulo; For her he lifted up his voice And labored for her smile, His warning hand, like Noses’ wand, d her ruthless foes. Still pointing toward Columbia’s star, ‘Where Erin's hopes arose. He prophesiod a Titau race, "Tho wond'ring world should see, Suatch Erin from her woful plight, Bright-crowned with Liberty. He mocked her libeler to scorn, To patriots weeted praise; For her he wept, for her he prayed, For hor hath rived his days, He roused her sons to noble alms, Their hopes revived The harp, the shawmrock and tho cross, His lifolong care and pride, The fire of genius lit his eye, ‘That flashed or wit or zeal, While from his lips outran a stream Of wisdom all might feel, Though Eriu mourns her loyal son, And nations miss his voice, Her hopes droop not, resigned to tears She waits Heaven's destined ehoice. Aye! while he pleads her cause on high, Hor million'd sons proclaim She must endure and must be free . Perpetusting Fame! ~~John P, Lonagan. “*OMAHA SATURDAY JULY 21, 1883, D-THOMAS Cures Rheumatism, Lum- bago, Lame Back, Sprains and Bruises, Asthma, Catarrh, Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Diphtheria, Bums, Frost Bites, Tooth, Far, and Head- ache, and all pains and aches. The'best inturmal and externai remedy in the world. Every bottle guaranteed. Sold by medicine dealers everywhere. Directions in eight languages. Price o cents and $1.c0, FOSTER, MILBURN & CO., Prop'rs, DUFFALO, N, Y., U. 8, A, IRMINT DROPS. The reason why hoopskirts are no longer worn i hecause the fair sox bel ay Gould o the wires for telograph lines and wolidate them, A Now York lawyer, after waiting in a res- taurant for more than & quarter of an hour for a dish of soft shell erabs he had ordered, went | to the telephone, called a district messenger boy, and sent him to hunt the waiter who had taken the order. A St. Louis police commissioner has actually resigned, Let the fact be solemnly recorded, The gentleman says the duties were not at all disagres wut the pay was not large enouch. He probably did not understand “addition,di- vision and silence.” A Ponnsylvania paper is the authority for the stozy of & beech tree growing plums on one sid ably now the Agriculture Bureau wil o to solve the problem of having o grow apple dumplings on one side and ce on the other.—Philadelphia Chro- o thirsted for one fond look—she starved for a kiss denied,” says Ellen Wheelor in one of her poems, “fond Tooks" are street corner, and ‘'] anybody knows whe We have Jout from every not denied when y are wanted, it is d of “starving to death This poor creature Hartford Post. nmers” says: “Avoid bath- within urs after a meal.” This will plain why tramps lookas if they indulged too bad, in a bath only about once in six months, They don’t get over two meal; 1 But they get o lunch now and then, and if a farmer owns a cross dog they may also be furnished occasionally with a “‘cold” bite,”—Norristown Herald. They have curious causes for divorce in Cl Ine woman sets forth the hushand spit tuba RER e he Bt e he wanted to learn her to Dom fe in this count: broken up entirely if divorces are to be grant- ed women because their lords practice such little pleasantries upon them. A rather interesting snake story comes from Lock Haven T‘il& reptile in q ion was six feet seven inches in and one-half inches in “milking & cow when " This reminds us of the snake some weeks ago near Philadel- phia, When first seen it was trying to putona a pair of trousers left on & pond bank by a dude who had gone in swimming. The pants legs were so small that thesnake did not suc- ceed.—Philadelphia length and umference, and was A Happy Family. Pulled from the breast, squeezed fram the bottle, Stomachs Will sour and milk will curdle; Baby hallelujah all that night, Household humping head Don't deny, 'twas thus with Night was hideous without CASTORI Wh i oful slumbe ful tright. ““When you are in Rome you sust do as the Romaus do,” said an American_ tramp when he squatted on the steps of a cathedral in the eternal city and held out his hat. The movement in the east to abolish the vest has petered out. When n man takes off his coat at a Sunday school pic-nic to ladle out the ice cream lie wants something between the public and the knots in his suspenders. As a member of the Salvation army at Ad- rian was praying for a stalwart young sinner be grew personal, and used the ‘young man’s name very pointedly in his petition, There- upon the unconverted youth fell upon the peti- tioner and smote him hip and thigh. A good deacon not a thousand miles from 0il City, being late at church where it was his duty to hold services, asked the congrega- tion to excuse his tardiness, as he had been up until late the night before opening the finest lot of dry goods ever brought to town. "The report that the churches of New York had been invited to hold strawberry festivals to raise funds in aid of the pedestal of the Bartholdi statue was not fu\uu‘lml on fact. colored church did offes to give an apple dum- pling festival and cake walk for the benefit of of the pedestal, but that was all, At a recent Sunday-school picnic » thunder- storm came up, and the lightuing struck near. The good pastor called out assuringly: ““Don't be frightened | God will be with “us in the storm as well as the calm I “T know that,” remarked » young lady, with chattering teeth and trembling voice, “but I don't like to have him come so sudden.” A Western paper holds out this tempting inducement: *“If some gospel spunder, no mat- ter abont creed or color, will come along and give the boys little straight goods once a week we dare say the boys will chip in and soe that the G. S, gets (i square meals pes day, if nothingmore. Tho boys are liberal in these matters, and if the right sort of a fellow comes aloug we believe he will strike # bon- ansa.” Wilkesbarre, July 16.—The Catholic clergy of the Scrauton diocese, personally under or- ders from Bishop O'Hara, have opened warfare on all women membens of their congregations ho persist in wearing bangs and frizzes. Rev, er O'Horan, pastor of St. Mary's Catholic Church of this city, has notified all the Sunday- school children of his congregation that they will be sent home in the future if they enter the church wearing bangs or frizzes, “I think the millennium must be approach- ‘u&" remarked a Harlem man to a deacon. ‘What makes you think so?” asked the good old man, ‘“‘Because when the contrikution- box reached your ch yesterday, you dropped in a 85 gold piece instead of your ‘usual dona- tion of a nickel.” “‘Great Scott!” exclaimed the deacon, turning pale, “\Vh{, 1 thought I &Ill‘ in only a new 2-cent pimm hat I found on 0 streot the other day!" and the worldly in- vectives the pious old fraud heaped upon his own head would have made a hardened sinner shudder, ] THE GREAT GERMAN ! REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relleves aud cures RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Soiatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLIN ASPRAINS, Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, FROSTBITES, BUKNNS, SCALDS, And all other bodily aches S0 alus. 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One pound is equal to three pounds of corn, Stock fed with Ground Oil Cake in the Fall and Winter, instéad of running down, will increase in weight. and be In good marketable condition in the spring. Dairymen, as well as others, who use It can testify 40 ita merita. " Try it and Judge for yourselves. . Price 82500 per fon: 1o clirge for saoks. - Address od-eod e WOODMAN LINSEED OIL COMPANY, O nin, Neb