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“'Maryan d,M ) Maryland.” s Protty wives, Lovely daughters and noble men.'’ My farm lies In & rather low and ml. u-ll‘-tlc trituation, and My wife " “Who 7" “‘Was a very preity blonde!” Twenty years ago, became “‘Sallow!” “Hollow-eyed!" *‘Witheree and aged!” Before her time, from *‘Malarial vapors, though she made no particlar complaint, not being of the grumpy kind, yet causing me geeat unea. -siness, ““A short time sgo I purchased your wemedy for one of the children, who bad » very severe attack of billousness, and It occurced to me that the remedy might help my wife, sa I found that oar little girl 1'}',7“ recovering had *‘Heor sallowness, and looked as fresh s & new blown daiay, Well, the story 1s soon told. My wife, to-day, has gain- od her old time beauty with compound Interest, and is now as handsome a mat- ron (1f I dosay it myself) as can_be found in this county, which Is noted for pretty COUNCIL BLUFFS, ADDITIONAL LOCAL, 0IVIL LIBERTY THE DAILY BEE-- SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1885, CAPITAL CALCULATIONS. Europe, and preserve to them not only thelr faith, but their liberties and their rights, This work she accomplished, and yeot her task In behalf of the human race as not yet complete. It i trme there was a lall in the storm. She saw In the gathering storm-clouds one which was His Gripon a Fat Offce. An Eloguent Review of What the soon to bresk upon Earope in & tornado Catholic Ohurch Has Done in Its Behalf. At the Cathollo chureh, Thuraday even- Ing, Rev. Father Scallon, ef Yankton, delivered an eloquent lecture to *‘The Relstions of the Oatholic Church on Olvil Liberty,” the following belng the greater part of his discourse: I have proposed to speak to you this evening on the Inflaence of the Oatholio church on civil liberty. We should, of courte, approsch_this subject with a dis- tinct understanding of what might be consldered liberty at one time and under one set of circumstances, at another time, and under another set of clrcumatances, might be looked upon as a specles of des- potism. Liberty consldered In Its trae sense always excludes two extremes: Firat, the absence of all liberty which is despotism. wom>sn Aad I have oaly Hop Bitters to thank sor It. “‘The dear creature just looked overmy shoulder, and says ‘I can flatter equal 1o the dsys of our courtship,’ and that re. minds mo there might be more pretty wives If my brother farmers would do as 1 have done.” Hoplng you may long be spared tod good, 1 thankfully remain, O. L, Jaues, Beltsville, Prince George Co., Md. May 26th, 883, Kone genulne without & bunch of green Hops on #ho white Iabel. Shun all the vile, poisonous stufl ‘with “Hop" or "*Hops” in thelr namao. BOSIEITERY + SELEBRATED 60\ Tn order to earich the blood, and thus impart frosh vigorto an enfeehied aystem stimulate _flagging Gigotion with tho national favigorant, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which, by infuriog energy into porationsof the ach, promotes iostures thor- digastion and pilation, and conseqnent | nuti- tion. A gaia to ap- potite, vigor and lesh, i3 iuvarisbly found to follow a courte ofthisdeeery- cdly, popular toio which is, moreover, areliablo preventive of malarial fover, ' For salo by all Druggists and Dealers generally. BITTERS, sppatitingue_ ot ssquisite Larer, .CAPITAL PRIZE, 75,000 “T1CKETS ONLY $0. SHARES IN PROPORTION Louisiana State Lottery Company ““We do hereby certify that we supervise the ar rangements for all the Monthly and Semi-Annua Drawings of the Louisiana State L«lrfll‘Cum}'fl_ny and in’ person manage and control the Drawings themaelves, and that the same are conducted with ty, fairness and in_good faith toward all par- ties, and we authorize the company to use this cer- tificate, with fac-similes of our signatures aitached 0 its advertisements.’ COMMISSIONERS, Tnoorporated {n 1863 for 25 years by the leglalature for educational and oharitablo purposos—with » caltal of $1,000,00—t) which & reserve fund of over #6550 000 has since been added. By ar_overwhelming popular voto Ita ftranchise wasmade a part of the prevent state constitution adopted December 2. A. . 1879, Tho only lottery evcr voted on and endorsed by the people of any state T4 nover cales or postyof Ite grand single num monthly. A BPLENDID OFPORTUNITY 70 WIN A FORTUNW, Firri GRAND DRAWING, CLASS K. 1X THR ACADXMY OF MUSIO, Nuw ORLEANS, TURSDAY, MAY 12, 1885, 1R0th MONTILX DRAWING. CAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000 100,000 Tickets at 85 each, Fractions, in Fifths, in proportion. L8 oF PRizNS; nes. er drawings take place 9 76,000 10,000 12,000 10,000 10,000 10/000 26,000 2. 26,000 APTROXIMATION PRIZRS, 9 Approximation Prizes of §750 9 do do 500 9 do do 1967 Prises, amounting o ... 205,600 ‘Application for rtos to clubs should be made oply 40 theofioe of ths Company in New Orloans. For further nformation write addroes. POSTAL NOTES, Expr Now York Fxchange in’ordinary lobter, Ovrrency by Kxpress (all gums of §6 aud upwards &) our ex. prase) el 2 M. A. DAUPHIN, Or M. A. DAUPHIN, New Orloans, Ta. 007 Seventh B4., Wumn‘; . Make td('l. Money Orders payabl Roglatored Lotbors to NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK Now Orloans, La, ES JAMES PYL THE BEST THING OUT FOR Washing & Bleaching In Hard or Soft, Hot or Cold Water, Baves Lason, Tius and Soar AMazinGLY, and gives univorsal satisfaction. No family rich or poor should ro0ere. llt‘lll'h‘lh!mlhflflnl' Ul d TV ONLY A €iog Compound aud aiways bears. the above bl sad ot “JAMES PYLE NEW YORK. oo, Gt of yo udence using Premature Decey, Nervou fi‘, Lost SRS Bitiag lad 1 Yol evers uown » remody has discoves xnpl&fl-&lfilul‘ UL i Secondly, the absence of all restraint which might be sapposed to exlst among the untutored savage, but in reality hes no existence at all. Now, we are not to suppose that the Catholic church has for ita subject to deal only in political mat- ters. Her divine founder did not come to sclve the problem of human govern- ment, His was a higher and holier alm and misslon. He Indlcated certa'nly that the pro- mulgation of his doctrine would lead to the liberty of man when He said, “‘You shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free. Beyond this he has said nothing with regard to politioal questions except what we find in his apprehenslve answer to the Pharlsces, *' Render ye therefore to Cavsar the things that are Cusar’s and to God the thinga that are God’s.” As the church goes f miesicn we find that her Influence has been a two-fold one. We find that 1t has been heretical and practical. ies the human race to respect the liberties and rights of man by her ex- ample. This government of the church differs vastly from all other forms, Itls a more comprehensive form because it has to deal with many things very dif- ferent from those that clalm the atten- tion merely of human government. It has been well defined by the old Arch- bishop Spaulding, of Baltimors, when he said that It is an electivo mon- achy, an arlstocracy without merlt, and democratle without party facilon. Golng back to the very begin- ning of her exlstence we find that she and her government did not exist forany particular class of people. She s not confined to a kingdom or an empire ner to any one of the natural divisions of the earth. She exlsts for all men, and her government is not equal to the task of dealing with every claes of the human family, therefore we do not find her seek- Ing the friendship or approbatlon of the powetfal ones of the earth. Before her advent men of power had been delfied by thoee whoflattered them only to galn thelr friendship. But she sets out on her misslon amongst the poor and lowly of the earth. She Is like her dlvine founder. She at onca placed the emperor, the princes, the peasant and the begzsr vn the same level before her altar. They are there all alike, and men who before the days of her influence had looked upon their slaves as Inferlor creatures found themselves kneeling side by slde with these rame slaves, listening to the same dootrine taught by the same lips, and taught that they must be governed by the very same law; that she veaches no sepa- rate law for the ruler and his subject, but the one diyine code of falth and morality is equally binding lo all. She does this both theoretically and practically. Every one who has studied history must be aware that there never existed a more degraded class of beings than the slaves of pagan Greece and Rome. Thelr state of degradation had reached such a point that at our time we could acarcely form a true idea of 1t, snd yet these were the individuals that she firat gath- ered into her fcld, Her eyes were at once turned toward them, and she not only sought to ameliorate their condition but gave them places at onca among her officers—among the clergy. She even raised them vo hjgh positions, and car- ried thit work to such an extent that Calistes, the first, the Roman conquerer, a slave, & man who suffered many times under the hands of & tyrant master; who had belonged to that de- graded class upon which thelr mighty armles and refined Greeks looked as beasts slmost., And yet the Catholic church, Chrlstlanity if you will, for she was the only form of Christlanity thst then existed, she did not hesltate to take up a man for his merit aud place him on the chair of St. Peter, Emperors and princes might come and kneel at her altar, they might humble themselves so far as to go down Into her subterranean chapels in the catacombs, and there adore , the true God, whom they had learned from her to know, bat they must go forther. They must lesrn what they are to a stlll greater extent, and must acknowledge the former slave as their equal n the victory of that God upou earth, Now, with all our boaste this 19th century, what natlon has ever Evenour own country which we love s0o much—whose {ustitutlons we must admire—what has iv done for any one of the emancipated slaves of the south compared with this sct of the Catholic church towards that How has this republic dealt out to the slave of the abundance oy, Roman slave! that 1t had to glve? of destruction, and delage the conntry in | payard's Presidential Bes and His a sea of blood. She eaw the coming battle for the liberty of Earope. She saw the g:utheling hordes of Mahomet, and then arope not {" recovered from the strug. gles she had passed through under the Influence of the church, battilng for her very exlstence with the Northmen, not yet recovered, only enjoying abreath- ing spell—a perlod of rest. She threw the hosts of Earope Into the heart of the enemy's countr: compelled P; of Earope, thos glving to Earope an op- Junder dem ndan portunity, while she defanded herselt on L eat el0? the very ground of the enemy, to strengthen and prepare for forcos at|%eems home; and this policy alone saved Ea- |thing after all, though he has been war. rope from a atate of slavery more dsgra ing (as it would in all probability ha been) than that from which had rescued the slaves of Pagan Greece and Rome, the Christian princes of Earope, and by [last year, and had come uniting them againtt the common enem she did away with domeatic feuds and |. ¥ otty warfare at home, taught mon to m.ll sympathies as the everlasting hill Becto something beyond thelr Immedi- | will be not a little surprised, as well a ate surroundings, and to learn that there | amused were greater things 10 do battle for than their own petty principalities, and that thoy were not only to defend themselves, their own personal rights and interests, Appointments—The OConsplen. ous Isolation of Nebras- kans—Some Remin Iscences. Speeial Correepondence of Tz B, Wasmiveres, Aprll 28.—Fred Doug tlon to d Fred Donglas' Opinions Mellowed by and for two centurles | 188 seems to be quite charmed with the o to be the battlefield | future prospecta for the emancipated race judglog from a speech lately made by him. He [the president is a candidate for re-eleo- to think democracy may be a good | tion, d-|ring agalnst It for forty years. Those "g who have noticed his Inflexible devo- , at the mellowing Influence of the Cleveland administration upon oar frlend Dougles, through the lucrative office which he now holds, registrar of She d freedom of but that it was thelr duty, also, to extend their arms for the common defenso of She gave them to un- derstand and led them practically to feel and act on the principle that they were a one their fellow men, common family—children of family—children of one father—that they had common interests at stake, and that the Interests for which they were to battle werenot personal, were not thoss a Duchy, or principality, or a kingdom, but for all Earope, and all orward on her | these expeditions, organized and poured into the enemy’s country were organized under the supervision of the Roman Pontiff, under the direction of these very men who are too often stigmatised by the descendants of these men whom they saved from slavery, as despots and the frlends of despotism and tyranny in thelr own time, f they were incllned to des- potism why exert themselves for the libertles of the peopls? They did 1t be- cause it wasa principle handed down to them from the very beginning of the charch. Let us go to the esst and there we find hrysostum in all his elequence rebuk- Ing “and centuring the vices of an em- prese, publicly denouncing the wickedness of the courts and the wrongs heaped up- on the people. Andalthough his life pald the forfelt of his boldness, it was the povple that ralsed m monument to his memory. The Mohammedan power did not glve up at once their cherlshed idea of con- querlng Eorope, but wherever they arned the church was always the barrier they had to mect. It was she that thought her snflaence banished the Moors from Spain, and when they had advanced 8o far as to come Into France, it was under her influence that Catholic France and her Cathoile king drew the sword In defense, not ot Franca alone but of Christlan Europe, and crashed thelr power forever. When they had overruu the Mediterranean sea it was a Romsn conqueror that sent forth a fleet that banished them forever from those waters. Every one of these battles that was fought, every sword that was drawn and every blow that was strack, was a stroke for llberty, and in behalf of the eacred rights of mankind, and every one of these blows was given under the influ. ence of the Catholic church. Scotland under Cstholic influence eostablished and msintalned the rights and liberties of her people, caused England to go home, withdraw her forces and mind her own business, but England found & means of subduing her, snd under the Influence of the glorlous refor- mation, robbed her of her faith, She became Protestant and becume the basest slave that ever sat at the foot of a des- pot's throne, England sought to enslave Ireland as well as Scotland bus has failed to succeed. She does not look much ubdued country to-day. England as tried every means in her power t> make the Inhabitants of Ireland a race of slaves, but has made a complete fallure of her efforts to rob them of their faith. That Is the hirst and principle thing to which they cling under every trial. They neem to foel it intuitively that as soon as they glve up their falth they forfeit thelr nationality. When your forefathers thrilled every liberty-loving heart on God’s foot-stool with that famous declaration of inde- pendence who came to thelr assistance when they sought their lberties and rights as men? Their great enemy was protestant Eogland. Protestent to the heart's core. She had been trying to rob her nelghbors of thelr liberty and would have robbad this country but in that hour of trlumph it was Catholle France that came to our assistance, And when the Immortal Washington found 1t necessary to organize a navy he placed it under the control of sn Irishman and a Catholic. He knew that in the day of battle there was not any part of his srmy that he could trust more impllcitly than the old Maryland Line, and they were all Cath- olics, The teachlogs of the Catholle church are teachings that we must turn back to when we wish to set forth our rights as menl and above all as clt!sens. real the full import of the words of the truth shall make you fros.” et As Feen Oure for Sore have At last, when the church had ga'ned | thelr good reputation. an ascendancy and could make her infla- ence felt, we find that every step was a step toward bottering the condition :! the the people. She brooght them into fold and taught them christianity. not only did away with paganism tdolatry, but she introduced be ——— Settlement of the Valeria G, Contested Will Oase, tter forms | yesulted in & dissgreement of the jury, has Then we Ohlfst, *‘Ye shall know the truth, and Throat and 'BROWN'S BRONCHIAL Troomes” thoroughly tested, aud maintain Stone BostoN, April 30.—Ths well-known con- She | tested will case of Mra, Valeria G, Stone, of Malden, the trial of which & few months ago deeds for this distrlct, and which he will no doubt contlnue holding. It might ba rogarded a3 uucharitable to suggost that, possibly, the holding of this office by Mr. influencing his views and fe favor of Mr. Cleveland and his adminls- tratlon, If so, HE CANNOT BE REMOWED T0O SOON, It would be the highest grade of oclvil torvice to remove a man who would mod- ify his views, or suppress them for the snke of helding on to an office. Mr Douglas may think the tenure of his office sure, or that his recent expressions may make it sure. But 1t looks as If he will have to vacate. The late commls- sioners of penslons, and the late chiet of the forelgn mail service, regarded them- selves as the very last to be clsturbed, but they were the first to go. The found thetr calling and electlon in no wise sure, Secretary of State Bayard is one of the elevated, high toned, democratic states- men, In popular estimatlon, supposed to be too far removed above the common herd to be actuated by politiosl scheming, or to resort to the ways of political parti- sanship. He is frequenily menttoned ss the *'Courtly Bayard, and as a devotee of civil service reform, but jast where the reform comes in, ic is difficult to determine. He s contalnly showing his famlliacity with the ways aud practices of the pattisan politiclan. He I8 no neophite In the business. He recognlizes the value of political support, and bears ia mind that it is only about three years to the next presidential con— vention. He Ia certalnly making good use of his opportunities, for, thus far, nearly all of the forelzn appolntments have been of those who were THE SUPPORTERS OF BAYARD for the presidential nominatlon a yearago. For one, who soars above the ‘‘broker- ehip of office,” he ls proviog himself an adept in the eecuring of political advantages. For one, who places his finger and thumb upon his political proboscis, walks on tiptoe, and shies around the grovelling influence of gross partisanship, the courtly Bayard develops in a marked degree his appre- clation of the quatnt maxim of *‘putting a thiog where it wlll do the most good;” " and hence, he is placing his political patronage where it will do the most good, or rather where he thinks it will. Although it is a long way ahead, he may be booked for the race, for when the ambition to be presldent once finds & lodgement it never leaves. It is difficult to find when and where Bayard has even risen above mediocrlty; but fgreat pre- tensions have been and will be made in his behalf, and he will have a large fol- lowing, When the time comes thatie- cession speech made by him in 1862 will *‘bob up serenely” to confront him. The writer has been looking to see the Hon, J. Sterling Morton gazetted for some po- sition in the forelgn service, as he was an original Bayard supporter. The writer hos boen so_often dissppointed in openlng tHe moroing papers, hoplng to see some recognition, however slight, cf aplacs on the map known as Ne- braska by this adminlstration that he feels sore in spirit, oppressed, go to speak, with a senso of the wrong, the injustice Infllcted upcn our young state by such indefensible neglect. He feels hurt, absolutely hurt, by sach frigid in- the copper-bottomed, iron-cased, bigh- thouldered democrats of Nebraska. Long, though not patiently, have they waited for the coming of what was to be to them the millennlal time, Thelr party has won the possession of the promised land, but to them the gates do not open, —they are not even ajar, There stands the great Buffalo giasticutus,like cerberus at the gates of the Inferno, saying to them, you cannot onter in till you settle your quarrels and feuds, love each other, a8 brethren and be harmonious,” But THEY WILL NOT HARMONIZE, Think of Dr. Miller, Morton, Bo‘yd the Redicks, Orelghton, Brown, Vif quain, Castor, and the other great lights of democracy meeting In fraternal em- brace. human eyes. It must be torture to our democratic friends to be permitted to look at the good things and to behold the they stand shivering and hungry without even a taste, cinelty, The writer tende; sympathy. hen Sunset Cox visited Europe and the esst some two yearssgo he passed some tlme at Constantinople. heartfelt sentatlve to Turkey Douglas may have something to do with ollngs 1n | his difference as has been manifosted towards Ob, ye gods! what a s'ght for|Dan had to make a pilgramage all the various offices fllled by republicane, while This s the finesse of hi Gentlemen, plesso partake. | th General Lew Wallace was our diplomatic repre- at the time, the succoasion to Olevelsnd, he belng in Cleveland's cabinet, natarally raises the question as to what the purposes of the president may bo in this respect. There has never yet been a prerident who did not desire a second term; and It can hardly be expected that Mr. Claveland will prove an exception. I this connec- tion, another thought arises: Is It advisable for the president to pwt Into his oablnet those who were competitors against him for the nomination, if ke In- tends to be a ocandidate for re-eloctlon? President Polk ex. acted from the members o his cablnet, before they took office, an assorance that they would not be candl- dates for his successlon. A cabinet of- - | ficer, who is a oandldate for tho prosi- dency, it may be safely concluded, will use the patronsgs of his office to advance his own politieal fortunes, though ho may try to think he fa loyal to his chlef, When and & membir of his ocabinet Is a candidate for the same position, == SUSPICION, JEALOUSY AND DISTRUST must be the inevitable results. Bayard e In polnt. It now comes out the republioan party, from |that he almost forced Phelps upon the By doing this she united |its organization down to and Incluslve of | president for the Eaglish misslon, which to regard him as Y | firm and invincible In regard to hiw polit- as been 8o much criticlsed by democrats aa well as republicans, 1t was to reward Phelps for glrt!!nn fealty and partisan service for him that the secretary of state instated upon the appointment. So much for purs, courtly, high.-minded statesmanship. (1) Mr. Lincoln took into his cabinet his two principal competitors for the nomi- natlon at Chloago in 1800, Ssward and Chase, Both were candidates to succeed him, using the influence of thelr dopart: ments to compass it. Chase was an In- veterate, per: nt, insatiable candldate. He seemed to regard the presidency as by & sort of divine right, and to look wpon himself as born to be president. He avalled himself of every influence he could reach. He had a vast amount of patronage at his disporal, which he placed ‘‘where it would do the most good ” He was not & friend of Lincolo, for during all his service in the cabinet, he was undermin- ing bim, strlviog to supplant him, His ambltion to be prerident was a consum- ing firo, and it was constantly fanned by his equally ambitious daughter, Mrs. Spragne, who as strongly believed she was born to relgn in the white house. Mr. Lincoln was too shrewd an obzerver not to be aware of Chase's purposes, and his faithleseness to him, and deeired to be free from him, for the wasa thorough reader of men, and he well knew that Chase would on'y brlag to him trouble. BUD HE BORE WITH HIM for he recognized his great abllitles, and his transendent services of secretary of the treaswury, for, to Mr. Chase must be awarded the credi’, in the main, of being the author of our present system of fi- nances, which 1t is not too much t> be- lieve, will lnst a8 long as the governwent shall endure, and wiil stand as a perpeta- al monument to the wlsdom, the patriot- {sm, and the glory of the republican party. Lord Beaconsfield, in a conversation with an Amerlcan gentleman not long be- fore his death, eala: *You have, in your country, the grandest financial system this world has ever seen.” And Glad- stone, in an article in the Fortnightly Reviow, some three years ago, pro- nounced a similar encomlum upon it. And 80 has Bismarck. Itis the result, to which the republican party can point with unmixed satisfaction and pride, as one of the beneficent fruits of ita pollcy, one of the noblest ashlevements of mod- ern times. Upon his eervices as a financler the fame of Chase will rest; but his record Is marred by the betrayal of principles, and of the party, through which he had risen to pesitions of power and of honor. So much of a disturbing element had Chase become in the cabinet, that Lincoln, to be rid of him, made him chief justice of the supreme court, though he did it reluctantly, as he did not think Chuse deserved the appoint- ment at his hands. Cbase accepted the position, but he had no longer any sym- pathy with the admiaistration or with the republican party. His defeat for the preeidential nomination in 1860 and the utter annihilaticn of his hopes by the renomination of Lincoln in 1864 soured his whole nature. The divergence of Andeew Johuson and his followers from the republican_party led Chasa to be- liove that the last republican presldent had been elected; that the mlesion of the party was ended, and o must, therefore, look for other fields that were new and pastares that wero green. He was in sympathy with Johnson In his betrayal of the republicans, and be finally landed in the democra‘ic camp, seeking a nomi- pation from that pacty. At last the lamentable spectacle was witnessed of Salmon P. Chase having hls namo pre- sented to the national democratic con- vention in Tammany Hall in the city of New York, (when Seymour was nomi nated) as a candldate for it nomination for the presidency, and recelving ONLY ONE-HALF OF ONE VOTE, while hia daughter, Mrs. Sprague, who attended the convention in the insane de. lusicn that her father would racelve the nomination, looked down from the gal- lery upon the humilitating scene, and saw the last hope, 5o long nursed, > fondly cherlshed, disappear dream. It was, the pitiable finale to & vaulting amb tion of both father and daughter. 1t is sald the president, and Dan Man- niog, who is the political manager of the anministration, do noc feel quite at ease in regard to demooratic prospects In the empire state the comiog autumn; and way to Albany to look after a oclty elec- tion; of course, all in the Interest of civll service reform. J. M. THAYER. ————— BKIN DISEASES OURED, By Lv, Frazier's Magio Ointment, Oures if by magio: Pimples, Biack Heads or Grub Blotehes and Eruptions on the face, leaving e skin clear and beautiful, ~ Also cures Fich, il Rhou, Soro Nipgle, Sore Lips aad old, Obatinate Ulears™" Eald by drugslew,'of te Ul wmailod on roceipt price, 80 csata, Kuha & Co. aad O, ¥, Goodman, THE CHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAHA TO BUY oefieN = ol=fek Is AT DEWEY&STONES’ One of the Best and Lnrgest Btocks in the United States To 8elect From: NOSTAIRS TO CLIMB. 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Gon, Agt, for Nebrasks, Dakota, Colorado, W Office Uor, Farnam and 13th St. Over 1st Nat, Detroit, Michigan, W I ALLEN, oming and Utah ank, Omaha, Nob = Who Could Blame Him? 5 Upon my arm she placed her hand, So soft and white, I longed to seizs it, Would I offend? I took it, and What could I'do but gently equeeze it? 1w Her walat was then within my reach; And when #0 near tome I found it T spent no precious time in speech, But softly put my arm around it. ., This brought quite near her ripe, rad lips. Sweet lips! Could mortal man reaist 'em? 1 trembled to my finger tipes, And drow thom nearer and T kissed ‘em. Boston Conrler. — —— GULARITIES, A long-haired elephant, larger and more perfect than any specimen hitherto secured, 18 being extricated from the ice at the mouth of the Lena delta A Plymouth Rock hen in Altoona, IIL, laid an Laster egg that mensured 9a7§.inches, long and short circumfersnce, and weighed 7§ ounces, A Mexican who lately arrived at Middle- ton., N. Y., had in his_possession a strange animal havine the head and face of a cat, the back and hind legs of a rabbit, and the tail and forelegs of a dog. skin resembliog that of the native dog of Mexico. A San Francisco hen, having lost sever: her brood of tender chickens by the depred: tions of rome hungry rats, seems to have laid a plan to catch one of the sly robbers. Feign ing indifference, she waited until one of the rats became bolder than tne others, where- upon she pounced upon him, caught him by the back, and carrying him to a tubful of water dropped him into it, where ho was. drowned. On the L4th of last month a strawstack at Sheboygan. Mich., was blown over, and £oon after A beautiful peacock was missing from the yard. Not connecting his disappearance with the falling of the stack, a thorough search was made, but no trace of him could be found, On the first of April the straw was removed, and nearly in the centre of it calmly reposed the ‘missing bird with drooping plumes, but to all appearances in good health, and he very.glad- Iy partook of the food that sparingly adminis. tered at first, At a recent sale in London an historical wax. taper sold for $30. It was declared to be the identical one carried in penance of Henry IL. to the shrine of Thomas a Becket, in Oanter- bury Cathedral. It was-found in the year 1773 in the shrine, and by some means was 05+ tained by Dr. Menish, of Chelmsford, in whose museum it remsined for many yesrs, until it passed into the hands of the late owner. Whether it is the identical taper may be a question, but it 18 remarkable that it should bear the atms of England embossed upon. it, — —e———— STOP THAT OOUGH By using Dr, Krazier's Throat and Lung Bal- sam—tho only sure cure for Conghs, Colds, Hoarsoness and Sore Throat, and all diseases of the throat and lungs, Do not noglect & cough. It may prove fatal. Scors snd hundreds of grateful people owe their lives to Dr, Frazier't Throat and Lung Balsam, and no family will ever be without it after once using it, and discovering its marvelous power, It is put up in large family bottles and sold ox the small price of 75 cents per bottle. Sold Kubp & Co. and O. ¥, Goodman, L —— A Sign of Summon Why do the people wildly, stace? What are they looking at, With great amaze, And eager gazo, Asif they saw. the latest craze? Ah, there! ~ Again it shocks the air— It is a new sf hat e — A New Use for Cork, It has Do Lair, the | D A Misfit Qoftin, Barnesville (Ga.) Mail, ‘‘Ves,” ho answered, as he seomed to huddle himself in a heap, “I've beon there. That is, Ilve jumped from a rall- road train ranning at speed of forty— eight miles an hour, and I don’t say that I waut to repeat the expexlment.” ““Where and when?” ‘‘About thirty miles oast of Chlcago, on the Michigan Central, three years ago. ““What was the occasion?” “I was half drunk end did it on a bet of §6. The bet was that I daren't walk out on the platform and take the jump without plcking out my owa ground. As it happened, the ground was pretty clear, but & million doliars wou'n’t hire me to try it again.” “How dld you come out}" _“‘Well, it’s bard to descibe the sensa- tion. As Isprang from the step I ecemed to dy. I sailed along in ths air unttl my wings grew tired, snd shen I diopped to see the country, I'vegotagood palr of eyes, but I didn’t seo much. 1 was too busy turniog earthwheels and hand springs and somersaults. Somatimes I 1s 81l hollow, and s of it. 1t was my {ntention to skip all the mud puddles and avold stumps, but you can’s slways have your own way in this world. By and by Iirested my case. That ls, I brought up in a fence corner, and wolted for a first— class hospital to come along.” **Much hurt ” “Might have been worse. Broke an arm, two ribs, and had over a hundred cats and braises, and it was seven weeks before I could walk a rod.” “But you won tho $51" “Y-g-8; but there Is where I always grow sad, The stake holder sent 1t back tw me from the first town in the shape of a plne coffin, and it didn’t it my length {nto seven inches. I had to sell the con— founded thing for a misfit at half price.” e —— A CARD.—To all who are suffering from errora and Indigestions of youth, nervous weaknoss and decay, loss of manhood, eto. I will send a recipe that will cure you FREE-OF GHARGE. Thiss great remody wag_discoyerod by & misslonar to Bouth America. 8end sclf-addressed envelope Ruv. Jo- surn T. INmaN Station *'D " New York ———— Mrs, Garfield’s income Cincinnati Eoquirer, The recent repori concerning Mrs. Garfield’s endowment cf the Gatfield hos- pital, and other goul‘g’nbaul the widow of the martyr president, have created some curiosity about the lady’s financial condition. Anintimate friend of Mrs. Garfield, reslding in this city, gives the following desoription of her estate. The subscription raised through the in- strumentality of Cyrus W, Field sggre- gated, when Invested in government bonds, about §312,000. Gen. Garfield’s life was insured for $60,000, the pay— ment of which the companies for the sake cf the extended advertisement it would give them, if for no other purpose, promptly madv, Congress also voted her the remnsnt of the ealary which would have been due Gen. Gatfield ‘or the first year of service as presented, which amount. ed to $30,000. T'he little estate which Garfield left aggrogates some $30,000. This was all that he had been able to accumulate after a life of unsual actlvity. This makes her total estate, in round The success of the American make of | bumbere, abount 8$450,00iu money well in- “Linoreun” flson cloth is fally deserved, | vested, ¥rom this an income of probably It Is unexcelled for elegance in designs [ $16,000 is derlved. In addition 1o that, and colorings. Suitable for all classes of | she has from congress an annual pension dwelllnge, dining roows, halls, churches | of 5,600, which is now voted to wiaows. and hospitals, Inflerior foreizgn lmita- | of all ex-presidents. tions are on the market, but the super- e ——— fority of the Amorican make is beyond [ Physlolans and chemists certify [that controversy, All carpet dealers keep it. | Red Star Cough Cura s free from opi- ———— atos and[narcotics, Sleep baby, sleep; Base Ball News, no danger, BroOKLYN, Aupril 30,—Brooklyns 12, Balti- e — mores 1, Olovk Faves, New Yok, April 30,—Moetropolitans 1, | New York Tribune. jica 2 The manufacture of cheap clocls and atohes has coma to be one of tho great industries of the coumtry, In cenversar ton with an promlvent engrazer the other day be lu#d me th’ltciuvfnl years. 8 2 Dyspopsia, Diar-|880 officers of Ansonla Clock company, s of Todgestivas il | oame to him to know if o could not make. fiud imniediate relief and sure cwre by uvsing | an engraved yaper imitation of the French Angostura Bitters. The only genwaels | norceluin face that was used on thels " April 80, The Detroit-Buffalo [y, game was postponed on account of re | Sr, Louls, Apnl 30,—St. Louis 9, Chi- ——— nanufactured by Dr. J, G. B, Siegest & clocks, of clvli government founded on the great | heen settled by the parties interested and the moral law that her divine fonnder had | .5, withdrawn from the courts. Under the taoght her, and when she had spread | gii1oent William H, Wilcox is to bs ap- ““1 see,” said Mrs. Milkwater, “shat the holding the rank = of minlster, | yh of Persia never allows all of his 1. with o salary of 7,600, Mr. Wal- |wives tosleap abonce, Ian't that a stravge lace Is a great favorlte with the|custom?’ *'No, not very strange,” replied this influence among the natlons and was | pointed executor, and thera will be paid to golrg on in her work of clvilizlog and | the heirs various sums of money agregating enlightening the people of the esrth, a|#50,000. ’l;h;'ulduuol thl-‘lhnxa ";"'q‘.fi"‘.f‘fi: h came, snd in that crash, the Roman | Payment of the expenset of tie Bk, EAC e e g of Valeria G. Stone, and the charges of ad- empire that had sought her destructlon | pyinigtration, is to be applied to charitab for ceanturles Itsllil and ehe Al;ui Te- p“LM.“ ‘accordance with the provisions ined. t es over the sur- | of her wil savebue ‘owa work, That o must | o et it .10 CpatioL Judes marshall her hosts sgalnet the hordes of | j¢'Vieria G. Stone in reference to ber prop- northern barbarlans, and stem the tide | eriy and sl her gifts to collegosand persons, that must, if not stemmed, soon engulf | are confirmed, all Europe in ruln, The prl.ll.lahl aspect of the world was simply chaos. She alone was perfectly| New guaranteec ocure for worst oases calm and equal to the task before her,|without use of knife. There isno longer and over the troubled waters of that|any need of wearing swksrd, cumber- perlod, she rode quletly like srk of old, |some trusses. Send two letter stampy for bearlng in her bosom the seeds of clviliz: | psmphlet and references. quldu Dis- ation and religlon which at & later day } pensary Medical Association, 663 Main she was to scatter over the ocountries of | Street, Buffalo, N, Y odified, and establishments of ment, but to such charitable uses o —— Rupture, Breach of Hernis, Sultan, lllfd was -n-lblnd to F“t: Coxdun fi'.i;..‘fll":fii'p’ 5 “3‘[: K dare to let the best of terms with his Mohammedan PRk mbjony. Ho was o tauch pieased. that | e Mlkwair, [Hecaue 1y ot I o dorlog the next sesslon of congress after | yoof off of the harem.”—[Newman Indepen his retarn to . t‘;.\e Unlted States, :n dent, moved and carried an amendment to the diplomatic appropriation bill, raising the | Scrofala diseases manifost themselves grade of our misslon to Tarkey from that | In the spring, Hood's Sarsaparilla cleanses f minister to the rank of envoy extraor- |the blood, and removes every talnt of dinary sud minister plenepotentisry, but | scrofula, without increasing the salary, in defer- ence to democratic economy, to $10,000 to correspond with the increased rank. |iells you dot pistol for $2," aid the clerk Mr, Cox did not then ever expect to pos- )l take it, Load it up, and before another that mieston, but has recently been Iunwnna}'ll“p\l'xi‘tln ‘;m\:i :gwl‘n; x;\::lrml-::j‘ appointed to it Ho has published & book |tstence.” MVat! You shoot yaurscliof wlt entitled, “Why we Laugh.” It would |orbiiell "Xt "5l S0t 4 20EG " not be difficult now to see why Cox does | clork to the proprietur in the back room, *‘der not laugh when he thinks of the salary luchentleaans vants s §2 plstol to kill himselluf attached to his mission, [s' Yat shall Idot” *Sharge him 85.— Alludlog to Bayard, as a candidate for —— —— A wild-eyed m tered & Chatham street pawnshop and wished to see rome pistels, *'1 He speat several hundred dol- dare in the experiment and finsl'y gave it Illinols Circuit Judges. Nominated, |up in despair, through Inability to find Proma, April 50,—At the democsatic con- | paper that would answer the purpose. vention of the Eighth judicial circuit held | The company refused to lot him stop his here to-duy, McGreer oi Tazewsll, . B, |experiaenting, and he fiaally hit on » Page of Peoria, and 1. 2. Shaw of Lacon |&lezed and ensmelod paper which an- were nominated for cirovit judges. Hon. O, |swerad the purpose. © has made H. Chitty snd Woodford were nominated a8 | 12,000,000 t) 14,000,000 click faces for » contingent committer in the event of the | {0 company at & cosk of abut one cent bill noreasing (ho uussber of Judges pasmas | 16,00 B A O or Borotlain was & B eglabusn, dcllar, which is the present clock com- plete. Machinery has been rpecially in- vented for turning out paper faces, mentlon this clrcumstance as a falr fn- stance of American logenulty, persistency and lnvention, ons, i a— —ca— ‘When Baby was sick, we gave her Castorla, ‘When she was & Child, ahe cried for Casieris, ‘When sha became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When uhe b Chilldren, sie gave tham Ceatoris, e — Horsefora’s Acid Beware of Imitations, Imitations snd counterteits have agaln sppesred. Be sure that the word “Hoksrroup's” 1s on the wrapper. Nong are geouine without It.