The tribune. (Beaufort, S.C.) 1874-1876, February 03, 1875, Image 4
LOBBYING. IN WASHINGTON.
Wlint Sam Ward, the Kin* ol tlio Lobby,
told tho liiVFstiKatinft Committee?Hood
Dinner*.
Sam Ward, noted as tho "Lobby
King," was before the committee investigating
the Pacific Mail matter. In his
evidence he said he received $500 as a
retainer in the case, and was to receive
$5,000 more if thoy succeeded in getting
the subsidy bill through. He said he
retained all the money given him, and
uvdded : "I must say that it was a very
liberal compensation for the moderate
amount of work which that subsidy
seemed to require."
When asked to state the nature of the
services rendered by him, ttye witness
replied : " Simply stating on all occasions
where it was proper to do so that I
was in favor of tho measure; that I
thought it a good measuro," etc.
.L/urmg ins evidence tlie witness wild :
This business of lobbying, as it is called,
is as precarious as fishing in the Hebrides.
You get all ready; your boats
go out; suddenly there comes a storm,
and away you are driven. Everybody
who knows anything about Washington
knows that ten times, aye, fifty times,
more measures are lost than are carried;
but once in a while a pleasant little windfall
of this kind recompenses us, who are
always toiling here, for the disappointment
of tho session." I am not at all
asliamod. I do not say that I am
proud, but I am not at all ashamed of
the occupation. It is a very useful one.
In England it is a separate branch of the
legal profession. There they have Parliamentary
lawyers, who do noother business.
There tfie committees sit all day
to hear these lawyers, and they sit in
Parliament all night; whereas hero committees
are onlv allowed to ait on
hour and a half, and so it is very hard to
get through 4,000 bills in a session. Tho
disappointments are much more nulnerous
than the successes. I have had many
a very pleasant "contingent" knocked
away when everything appeared prosperous
and certain, and I would not insure
any bill if I wero paid 50 per cent, to
secure its passage. That is the general
rule in tliis subsidy matter. I think
that the gentleman (Mr. Irwin) paid
more money than, he need have paid.
Mr. Niblaok?And he distributed it
rather badly ? A-?I am satisfied with
what I got.
Mr. Niblack?You got much lees than
others got ? A. I do net know. I was
retained, I suppose, because the
*' King's name is a tower of strength,"
and I am called tho " King of the Lobby."
But I am not tho treasurer of the
lobby; tliat is certain. If you were here
for entertainment I could entertain you
with histories of well-concerted plans
which all disappeared just at the crack of
one member's whip; perhaps a matter of
caprice, perhaps a matter of accident,
you oounot tell which. Wo who are of
the regular army know when we are
whipped, but gentlomen of little experience
come down here and peg and peg
on till the end of tho session, and never
understand why they had better go
home. To introduce a bill properly, to
have it referred to the proper committee,
to see that some member in that com
.u?wc uuucinuuiun its merits, to attend
to it, to watch it, to hare a counsel to go
and advocate it before the committee, to
see that members of the committee do
not overstep themselves on the morning
of important meetings, to watch the coming
in of the bill in Congress day after
day, week after week, to have your men
on hand a dosen times, and to bsvethem
as often disappointed, to have one of
thoso storms" whfch spring tip in the
Adriatio of Congress until your men are
worried and worn and tired, and until
thuy say to themselves that tliey will not
go up to the capitol to-day, and then to
have the bird suddenly flushed and all
your preparations brought to naught?
these are some of the experiences of the
* lobby. Another point?the question of
entertainments?is spoken of. There is
nothing in the world so excellent as entertainments
of a refined order. Talleyrand
says that diplomacy is assisted by
good dinners, but at good dinners people
do not talk- "shop;" but they give
people who have a taste in that way a
right, perhaps, to ask a gentleman a civil
question, and to get a civil answer; to
gov luiuiuuuvu wiiion 1118 clients wont,
and that can properly be given. Sometimes
a railroad man wants information;
sometimes a patentee wants his patent
renewed; that is a pretty hard fight.
Then a broker wants to know what the
Treasury is going to do abont a certain j
measure. Sametimse a banker is anxious
about the financial movements in Congress,
or a merchant about the tariff. All
these things we do constantly, and we do
not make any charge for them. We keep
up a certain circle of friends, and onoe in
a whilo an opportunity comes of getting
something that is of real .service, and for
which compensation is due and proper.
Hut the entertainments are proportioned
- to the business of the session; when the
business is gyod, so are the entertainments;
and lfrhen the business is not
good, the entertainments are meager.
Mr. Irwin told me a story of a king of
Spain who was lost in the woods with his
hunting party; ho ordered one of his attendants
to climb a treo, and see whether
there wiis any building in sight; the man
saw a chateau on the top of an adjacent
1:111, and the king said, " Let us go
there." T^y went, and were received
at the door of the chateau by the
grandee with his he;vd nncovored. The
king announced who lie was, and said
the party wanted dinner. The family
had dined mi honr before, and the servants
lind consumed everything that was
left. The cook was sent for, and said
his majesty would be served in an hour's
time. They had A very pleasant dinner,
ami the king was rather surprised at the
taste displayed in some of the dishes.
After dinner, commending the excellence
of the repast, he asked what it was
composed of. Luckily it was not Friday.
The grandee sent for the cook,
who came in and said, " Your Majesty,
no animal has contributed its life to your
dinner," and he went to the window and
showed the king 52 pigs with their ears
all cut off. Said the king: "A man
who can make bucIi a repast as that from
the ears of 52 pigs, Rliall be made governor
of a province."
Mr. Niblack?Is there not a great deal
of money wasted on good dinners.
Witness?I do not think money is ever
wasted on a good dinner; if a man dines
badly he forgets to say his prayers going
to bed; but if he dines well he feels like
a saint.
The Chairman?Were you aware Mr.
Borrett, in point of fact, had received
81U.UU0 instead of 87,000 / A. No, I
did not know anything about it until I
saw it in the papers. It is quite right;
ho probably did more work than I did; I
was satisfied with what I got.
Mr. Ward gave his testimony?or,
rather, delivered his humorous lecture
?standing at the cud of tli table with
his eyes twinkling, liis fa. o beaming j
with good humor, aud liis whole person \
presenting evidence of If i being, not j
only in belief, but iu praci e, a disciple !
of the gospel of gastronomy. He kept
the members of the committee and a
numerous audience in constant laughter.
United States Revenue.
Members of the Ways and Means committee
and the Secretary of the United
States Treasury have been in frequent
consultation for several weeks on the
subject of the imperative necessity of
adding to the revenue of the government
at least $45,000,000 a year. The increase
is needed for the expenses of the government,
and the manner in which it is to
be obtained has been the question which
the Secretary lias endeavored, in connection
with tint committee, to solve.
It was proposed by the President and
the Secretary to increase the tax on
whisky 10 cents per gallon, but a majority
of the Ways and Means committee j
are opposed to any increase for two '
reasons?first, because it will revive tliat
most mischievous of combinations, the
whisky ring; and second, because, having
had advance information as to the
probable recommendations of the President,
the whisky manufacturers have
added so largely to their stock that there
would be little revenue derived for a year
or two, and it wonl'd be very difficult to
collect the tax on whisky now on hand.
The Secretary favors the renewal of the
finfrir rvn ?ao. nn/1 nnffm. nr?-l 4-V*A 1
? WM WM.V* WUVX'I (?UU liUd Ui
the act of June, 1872, which reduced the
duties on certain articles 10 per cent.,
known as the " Horizon till reduction,"
and a dispatch says this will no doubt bo
done. A bill is now being prepared at
the treasury for the object stated, which
will reduce the free list by restoring the
duties on manufactures of flour, india
rubber, kryolite, etc. Members of the
committee, after carefully examining the
subject, believe that if all the sources of
revenue suggested are increased, not
more tliau $20,000,000 per year additional
will be obtained for the coming
fiscal year.
The Commerce of New York.
The Journal of Commerce published
the aiftual statement of the commerce of
that port for the year 1871, and remarks:
It is not as encouraging as the one we
presented a year ago. The imports have
fallen off about one and three-fourths per
cent., and the total exiiorts less than one
per cent. But to make up the aggregate
of the outgoing shipments, the exports
of specie have increased nearly thirteen
millions, making a total of $61,232,228 in
gold and silver for 1874, against $48,659,661.
This difference is more significant
if wo compare both sides of the specie
statement. In 1873 wo imported $18,605,611
in coin and bullion, and shipped
$18,659,661, making the loss of specie to
the country only $30,054,050. In 1874
we imported but $6,407,571, and exported
for the same time $61,222,228, making
the loss 354.814,657 for the lout year.
These statement*, it must be remembered,
apply only to the port of New
York. In former years we have imported
about two-thirds of all the foreign
goods brought to this country, and
slxipped henoe about forty per cent, of
the exports. But the proportion of the
latter has been increasing within the last
two or three years so that New York now
sends nearly half the total exports of the
country, exclusive of specie, and by fai
the largest portion of the latter. We
wish, the editor suys, that we could
promise a more favorable statement for
the year to come, but we see nothing in
the prospect to warrant such a prophecy.
A party of famished immigrants from
South Carolina arrived at Dallas, Texas,
tlio other day. The starving mothers
could hardly hold their half dead infants,
and tho wailing of the children for
warmth and food was piteous in the extreme.
Heart Disease.
Many persons suffer with heart disease
without knowing it?suddenly they drop
off, and their friends are astonished, on a
pout mortem examination, to learn that
they died of heart disease. The heart,
like tho brain, is tho seat of life?its diseases
are of several cluiracter^ The most
common are valvular disease, fatty degeneration,
and functional derangement.
If tho liver becomes deranged, and digestion
is impaired, tho heart, through
sympathy and juxtaposition, Incomes abnormal.
'Die following symptoms indi
i care approacmng disease: palpitation,
J giddiness, faintness, nervons prostration,
deranged digestion, vertigo, cold extremities,
etc., etc., for which the old
school will administer iron, opium, antimony,
mercury, and many other mineral
poisons. Heart disease is a blood
disease?purify the blood; remove obstructions
to a limpid circulation by taking
that vegetable alterative, Vinegar
Bitters, and you will be a sound person
in two or throe months.?Com.
Foreign Population of a City.
It is said that the population of New m
York city is represented by every nation
on the earth. A Frenchman writes:
" The First, Second, Third and Fifth
wards are the portions of the town do- m
voted to business; they form the southern ^
and lower part of Now York?the down _
town.' In the Fourth, Sixth and ~
Seventh wards, between Broadway and
the East river, swarm the Italian immigrants,
piffcrari, and the greater part
of the dangerous classes of that city, "
peopled by so many different tribes. i
m * m The French occupy almost entirely
the Eight ward with their cafes S
restaurants and shops. Our tongue is
1 ' ' >
luuiuiiu ij djai&cu uwre. ivH Dieacners, |
bakers, manufacturers of artificial flowers, |
our countrymen are engaged in sundry i 4
little trades which do not lead them to 1 "
wealth. The Eleventh ward is full* of
Germans and Irish, as numerous in New 1
York as the native Americans, and for- i
ever settled in their adopted country, j
There ike streets are crowded with clnl- j
dren. The Germans have imported their ?
musical societies aud beer gardens, tho
Irish their fighting proclivities. The I ?
Lord Mayor of Dublin, recently enthu- 1 'J
siastically welcomed iu America, eon- I Iq
gratulated his countrymen, and observed m
that New York was, after Dublin, the (
city that contained the largest number j
of Irishmen. He might have added ; a(
that, after Vienna and Berlin, that city j he
numbered tho largest Gorman popnla- j ?
tion of any city in the world." ] A
401
: I Hi
Forgiveness of Injuries. ^
An editor of a weeklv paper, published ^
in a little village in Missouri, called nt
the White House, and wns admitted to I I
Mr. Lincoln's presence. He at onco ,
commenced stating to Mr. Lincoln that
ho was the man who first suggested his
name for the Presidency, and pulling
from his pocket an old,-worn, defaced
copy of his paper, exhibited to the Presi- (
dent an item on the subject. " Do you
really think," said Mr. Lincoln, " that i 1
announcement was the occasion of my [ ?
nomination?" "Certainly," said the I 8
editor, " tho suggestion was bo oppor- j
time that it was at onoe taken up by i
other papers, and tho result was your oJ
nomination and election." "Ah! well," oJ
said Mr. Lincoln with a sigh, and assum- A
ing a rather gloomy countenance, "I
fim orlti/1 fn can vrnti mwl 4-rv W/vw* K..A ?
0?.w vw uvvr JVU IMU ?rV MiiUtT ixun, UUt "*
yon will have to excuse me, I am just ?
going to the War Department to see S
Mr. Stanton." 4 Well," said the editor, _
441 will walk over with you." The
President, with that apt good nature so "
characteristic to him, took up his hat /
and said, 44 Come along." When they u
reached the door of the Secretary's jg
office, Mr. Lincoln turned to his com- ?
? anion and said, 441 shall have to see (
[r. Stanton alone, and you must excuse k
me," and taking him by the hand he a
continued, 44 Good-bye; t hope you will ^
feel perfectly easy about having nomi- in.
nated me ; don't be troubled about it; "
o forgive you."
The Dog Star. t
The observations of Sirius, the dog <?
star, have been made by Mr. Wilson, of
Rugby, whose results vary materially ^
from those heretofore obtained by Auwers on
the continent. Sirius revolves about i|
a faint companion star whoso mass, oc- ^
cording to Mr. Wilson, is nearly equal _
to that of our sun, while the mass of ^
Sirius is twice as great. The minute appearance
of the companion is not due so
much to its inferiority in size, therefore,
as to the superior brilliancy of Sirius? JL
200 times greater than that of the sun? {?!
caused by its higher temperature.
Western Railroads.?Unless the Ri
Legislatures of the various Western "
States speedily modify the laws for the
regulation of railroads passed during the ?
last two years, there is a prospect that, gt
ui a Hiion umo, a Utacago paper says, ?
all the smaller local roads will be out of
existence, and will be swallowed up by
the large roads. Several of them have A
already gone this road. First, they neglected
to pay the interest on their bonds, /
and then, one after another, they were II
absorbed by old and wealthy corpora- _
tions. a
For alj Female Complaints 1
nothing equals Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip- 1
tion. It is a moot powerful restorative tonic, 2
also combining the most valuable nervine fl
properties, especially adapting to the wants I
of debilitated ladies suffering from weak back,
inward fever, congestion, inflammation, or m
ulceration, or from nervousness, or neuralgic *
pains. Mr. O. W. Seymour, druggist, of Can- ?
ton, N. Y., writes Dr. Pierce as follows: The
demand for your Favorite Prescription is won- v
derful, and one man stated to me that his wife 0
had not done a day's wore in Ave months, ^
when she commenced taking your Favorite I
PrAH/>rint-inn fwo ? >'' ? ? ?
?tt?? M/VUOO (UIU in UUW UU
the third bottle, and in able to do her housework
alone and milk fourteen cowb twice a day."
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is sold by all
dealers in medicine.? Coin.
A clergyman writing to a friend says :
"My voyage t> Europe is indefinitely poet- | J*
noned. I have discovered the 'fountain of ca
health' on this side of the Atlantic. Three *'?
bottles of Peruvian Hyrup have rescued me JTJ!
from the fangs of tho fiend dyspepsia." DyH- po>
peptics should drink from this fountain.?Com. r'?
12
The most stylish collar that is worn tu
now is the Improvod Warwick. It fits better I u
than any other on a low cut shirt. All the I ?
edges being folded, aud the surface looking so | C
much like linen, we recommend all to try it. > ?
Ask your gents' furnisher for tho Improved 1 au
W arwick. ? Coin. | ^
Wfi received a very pleasant letter of ; I
thanks from our old friend Kendall, since his j 5
rflfjim hftmA tr%T ? W*ln of ' ' ?
, uvvtiv UI fFi/l?(r0V(l 0 *17VMiyiU"
Liniment which wo gave him, and which he
Have ha* entirely cured him of tho troublesome ,
and dangcrou* cough ho bad when bore.? Com.
On the death of one of England's most
eminent physician*, all his affect* were sold by
auction, and among other things wa* u sealed
packet marked "Advice to PhyHiciana," which j
Drought a great price. The purchaser on opening
the packet read as follows: "Keep tne
head cool, the bowel* o]<en, and the feet warm."
If physio is nece*sary, nee Parsons' I'ttrgatioe
Pills : they are the moet nciehtilically prepared
pill that has appeared in tho last hundred : **
years.?Com. 1
On arriving at Calais on her way to
ake the grand tour, an English lady
as surprised and somewhat indignant
> being termed, for the lirst time in her
fe, "a foreigner." "You mistake,
adame," said sho to the libeler, with
ime pique, "it is you who are the
ireigners. We are English."
DC AIW "{y CHAMPION BOOK OF THK BXASON.
for THE GREAT SOUTH.
R F N T Q Seo Specimen Pago* In SORIBNKR'S
^ MAGAZINE, for November, 1874.
BOO PACES, nnd GOO ILLUSTRATIONS.
The most magnificent work ever published In this
iintry. Agent* wbo ckn sell a Rood book, can obtain
rritory on most liberal terms, by addressing
AMERICAN PCllLlSlllNG CO.,
Hartford, Ct., and Chicago, III.
This new Truss is worn
r Kf T (TH ?l?ht 'and day. Adapts
J JSli A o 1 IV HS {<, every motion of
T BUSS. jfw the body. retaining Rnptarn
under the hardest
exercise or sornmst strain
B until permanently cured.
M Bold cheap by the
Elastic Truss Co.,
No. 683 Rrondtrny, N. Y. City,
id sent liy mall, flail or send for Circular, and he Cured.
'.>J 1 I>uilv to AkciiIh. 8.3 new articles and the
*" Iwwt family Papor In America, with two A5C0
immos. free. AM. M'FO CO., 8<M> Broadway, W. Y.
'he Cincinnati Weekly Star!
eluding pontage and the finely Illustrated Htnr Alniinc,
81 per year. Anli-.tloiiopolv The
rnnncr'a Pnpor?containing 8 large pages of exUont
reading matter. Tho farmer, merchant and
ecbanic lu any part of the oountry will find this the
at of the weeklies, to say nothing of the low price,
tents ar ) offered inducements superior to anything
re to fore attempted. Bpoctmen copies free.
Addreaa. THK HTAB, Cincinnati, Ohio.
, FINK FA It .11 of 3RO ACRKH FOR HAI.F.
L 1 mile from Kenton, Ohio, on the C. 8.1 C. R. R.
I in Cultivation and Pasture. Good House and Tenant
ansa. Barns, Orchards, Stock, Water, Good Timber.
Ill divide Into two or lonr Farms. Will give possession
e first of April. Price, *IO<1 per Acre, or 83000
snt for the coming Year. Address,
JOHN PtAVI.OK. Box 4. Kenton. Ohio.
The Oneida Community,
. 1 I II.CJ. A.,sop.-" Are much pleased
with yonr Bea Foam." The
best ont,
A. HeFarlnnd, Cofre ?t .hiri
miiM.Hrringfxrld, Vs., say.Your
vs Sea Foam la excellent. My Ouatomr7
UUn|] 1 era most and will have it. Ues Sea
. I ABBr I I j Foam and yonr table will charm
111,1 delight yonr guests. Your
Grocer.II obliging, will get It for
I Ir^aeavil i,?" It eaves MllK, Kggs, Ac., and
WAViSyg makes the moat delicious Bread,
1 Hlscult and Cake von ever saw.
Bend for Circular to GKO. F.
OANTZ A GO.. 178 Dunne Bl.N.Y.
OA A a month to agents sverywhe;*,. Address
'dSUIJ KXCKLKIOR M'KG CO.. Buchanan,Mich.
treat Bargains in Band.
kOOO Maryland Farms, for Rale Cheap, In a beantlfnl
luntry. Descrittlvo Catalogue sent free. O. W.
IKROI.L, Kast New Market. Dorchester Co.. Md.
[gents wanted
tllng book ever published. Bend for specimen pages
d our extra terms to Agents.
cATlONAI, PUBLISHING CO., PhlladelphU,
7K A WF.KK.I Agents wanted everywhere. For
O onttit 15c. Fbitch A Walkvu. Dayton, Ohio.
We can give tho NAMES of our AGENTS that ere
aklng over $12.uj A M fl mi Rill Vpr da-v- Mrn an>l
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the Tsfton MAxrrscTrnrnro Co.. New Britain, Conn.
3ETSTT "PT?.-RTtl
Book exposing the mysteries o( TtT ATT arp
d how any one may operate anc- W ALJJ 0 A
safully with a capital of ^o() or $1000. Complete
itructlons and illustrations to any address. TI'Mk1
IX> k \ CO., Bamkeub and BlOIUi,3 Wall
reel, New York.
A MONTH?Areata wanted emirw
1 where. Business nonorable and firatclaaa.
Particular* aent free. Aadrvs*
WORTH A CO.. Hi. Lamia, Mo.
OK PKIt DAV Commlaalon, or SSOaweek Sailer)
ary and Kxpeuaea. We offer It and will pixy
Apply now. t?. WKBBKR A CO.. Marlon. O.
>u can Save Money, Health and Life, by having
e latest and beat Home Doctor Book, by Dr. Beard. It
ee oauara, aymutoma and Reliable Remedies for even
own dieeoae. 1067 pares. 111. M.00. Agents Wanton.
B. Tit HAT, PakUalitr.gOa Ilread way.N. Y.
trtTkrifTI n*a IVewI WWr or Mtytache PromotrUil
JL er u?l/u yon want your frianda not to
aw yon. for a single case will force a heavy mnatache
grow upon your faoe In 30 daya, without Injury, or your
ney returned. Price 36 cents. Order only of the
neral Agent. K. W. HARRIS. Palatine. I1L
TLES.SIIOT-GPHB. PISTOLS^* KKYOLTTBS.
any and every kind. Bend etainpw^^^^lnjBSl
Catalogue. AMru Braat Weatava Sea
a rlaUl XVarka. ^
x P COO 1'KR DAV at home. Terra* free. Ad'
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HOQTRIHGEK
Hardware Dealer* Ball Tbam.
BH|p ^^ 1 Circular# frta. Addrc?
H. W. HlUtOO. Paaataa. Ill
bw)k agents wanted
^ new'booktell it all
h^jgkhs^stjs
h b om" "txrience by* bin the hidtlcn lift."
B^B ?eecret doing!, etc. of the Hormone a* a
|M<S ?a?li< woman trtt (Arm." Dricht, Pure
shh2s&.j:
women
^gfibasba&sfejs
The Ways
of Women,
P*T<,,^Vi.C" 8MrT".M-r>-? ?'be meet remerkeble boeke
" W>e Amertcee preet. Dr. Hell un. -Ermer
*n " -A. >,e" " "fMKiTiM.* The New York
WU MTe. ITM 4 BOOK TOLL Of BOUND IDrOeUerioa FOB
r,? iim." l>r. ifoih?,lb?c*UbraUd F ranch *J>?.trUii
IK raoe n thi chirr u utaiM*,^ A mil ?ptaalty
for acanta <? make moaayt WHT BIT 8TII.I, comlalnrefherd
llmaet Tbla Wok will eelL Band for circulars 1
rr real. rriTIH. OILMAN A (XX. Hertford, Ceaa.
r AWPV mn.le ra/iiilli/ with Htoncll A Key Check
LVfi^Ia A ((units. Catalogue, aa tuples and (till par
olara Frf?*? H. M. Run'EH, 117 Hanover St.. Bowog.
nil CDQV or FITS cured liy Ihaunool IIors'
ni_C.ro I Kpiljcptic Hkmfdikh. Trial l'ackaaaMBBMawa
age f*". K?r circular*, evidence of
jceaa, ale.. aMrwa fttlRS HROH.. ltlclimimd. Iiul.
:ASHIONS!
8TYLE3 md SELLS P*M?
iplendld premlom.
HA. BIG OFFER,
Ulul OVERSKIRT, with
'"viSttES^H mlum. to the person who will
ecrlption to the "BAZAA
k*"' "grangers
" Smith's Instruction
IO Cents, Catalogue
Address, very
tw l*crniiu? p... 11.1 A* ^
IL'SC.'T1. * "? ?*?" rw" P. O, Box 5055.
u.rfV^., cuo mXi bq Ct, * a*
s ?
llll
AjIwiiiVif'llllliiCjL
Dr. J. Walker's California Vinegar
Bitters are a purely Vegetable
preparation, made cbieily from tbo native
herbs fonnd on tbe lower ranges of
the Sierra Nevada mountains of California,
tbe medicinal properties of which
are extracted therefrom without tbo use
of Alcohol. The question is almost
oauy asuea, wnat is tno causo or the
unparalleled success of Vinegar Bitters!"
Our nnswer is, that they remove
the cause of disease, and :ho pationt recovers
his health. They are the great
blood purifier and a life-giving principle,
a perfect Renovitor and Invigorator
of the system. Never beforo in the
history of the world bos a medicino bcco
compounded possessing the remarkably,
qualities of Vinegar Uittkrs in healing the
sick of every diseaso man is heir to. They
are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic,
relieving Congestion or Inflammation of
the Liver ana Visceral OrganB, in Bilious
Diseases.
The properties of Dr. Walkee^
Vihkoar jBittkrs are Aperient. Diaphoretic,
Carminative, Nutritions, Laxative. Diuretic,
Sedative, Counter-irritant, Sudorific -Altorv
tivA and Anti B 'lions.
r. ii. Mcdonald a co.,
Druggists and Ocn. Apt*., Sun Francisco. Cnliforuio.
and oor. of Washington nnd Charlton Sta, N. X.
told hv nil T>rnc*l"t? nnd tValrn.
If. Y. N. U.-No. ?.
SOMETHING FOR YOU.--Send (tamp and get
it. Free to all. Addrnes
HDTlSTl OQ.,75 Xamn Street,New York.
go Ann A Yenr. Salary and expenses paid. Oat*
U fjt free. A valuable package sent for 16ota.
return portage. O. II. GURNKY.WttterboroCeatro.Me.
(One box of Oary'e loatent hk Powder V
will make a pint of BEST BLACK INK la Bro minute*.
$1.35 par As., $1 Ad by mall. B. O. O. Caav, EanssvUlo, O. f
CONSTANT EMPLOYMENT.?At home. Male
or Fomalc, H30 a week guaranteed. No capital required.
Particulars and voidable sample* eent free. Ad.
dreea.wlthSc return gamp, O. Ross. WMamsbnrgh.N.Y'.
APIV1H
\^Habit Cured
A certain and tare core, without Inconvenience,
and at heme. An antidote that stands purely on its
own merits. Send for my quarterly magazine (A
com you nothingy, contalnlnpeertiflcates of hundreds
that have been permanently cured. I claim to have
discovered and produced the viasr, oniourax ajtd
oxlt ivu ouu von opium xativo.
DR. 8. B. COLUMg, La Poartc, lad.
Jh|b|||ia HABmCQBED at Boma Mo
I S SJ Bel HI Publicity. Terms moderate.
WF I I HI Time short. Four years of un
^0 VI paralleled success. Describe case.
4QOUttmonlals. Address Dr.F.K.Marah.Qulncy. Mich.
AO A A and eiDcnaes a month to attcnta Address
IttvU A.L BTODUAltD. Jonesvllle. Mich.
WARRANTED A PERFEOT
CURB for all the
Kuril form* qf PlLKH, LEPao?r,
UcxoroLi, KinoWobm,
Sai.t Rhkitm, Cancer,
Catarrh, Nkdraloia,
Rheumatism. A b t u m a ,
C dyspepsia., Kidneys, anil
all diieaeei of the SKIN and
blood. Kntlrelv venetable.
Money returned in all casea
01 failure, tl. d. KoWLK. Chemhl. Boston. Sold
everywhere. ?l a bottle. Send for Oircnlar.
CATARRH
A?W?:
Pamphlet of lOO pager, containing lists of 30OO newspa
pern, and eatiroatea showing coat of advortiglnir.
mil amwiftSa'jK^jd
ISlsffl 9&&ssgj3zisat
?-awiSTYITl Ef to IM VilL Wo
-ilHmry Express ohdrgea. Bond for olrsalor
ana prloe Its* with ljOOO rafsrsnoaa.
iMM O.JL OOOXAOOw CiUos?o.
A (JKNTN WANTKI). Msn or women. 934 ?
i\ week, or $100 forfeited. Valuable eamvlre free.
Write ?t once to K. M. ItKKD, KlghMi Btreet. New York.
death with ASTHMA, I experlmested I>y compounding
roots sod herbs sod IdJsUii| the medicine.
I fortunately discovered a wonderful
remedy sad ears curs far Asthma sad Catarrh.
Warranted to relieve severest paroxysm to tantly,
so the pattest can lie dews to net and
leep comfortably. Drnxflata are supplied with
ample packet's for rsaa distribution Bold by
riruKClsts. Package by mail tl.M.
Address D. LMCELL, Apple Craek. Okie.
finilllJ MORPHINE HABIT ftpeeuny
il 1 III curcd ?>y L>r- HccU'B only
01 11M |W| known A kui? Remedy.
| lwlWB NO CIIAItGE
i lor treatment until cured. Cull on or address
DR. JT. C. BECK* Cincinnati. O.
Smith's lllustrTteOattmTBazaaT'
p> only Magazine that IMPORTS
srne of tl? ot u. Only f I. IO a l?f? with
TWO of SMITH'S INSTANT DRESS
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CUT THIS OUT, and send It with their lubR."
No portage on the magazine next
11 ** send for onr term*. Sample copy. 25 ete.
Book, or Secrete of DrMfinaklog,'*
> mailed for one Stamp,
plain,
IURDETTE SMITH,
914 Broadway, Now York City.