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PLATT8BURGH SENTINEL, PUBLISHED XTBBY FRIDAY MOB WING, la Sentinel Block, Brfnkerhoff St., By W. Lansing A Son «rm»,»l .50 per Annnm Rates of Advertising, k $100 \ Oneiqwoelweek, $1.00 Onesqweaweeks, 1.60 One square* weeks, 3.00 Ou square 8 months, 860 One square* weeks, 3. Out. square 8 months, 8.60 One uqnaw> 6 monthsSOO 8 months 8.60 6 months.S.OO square 1 year, $8.00 Jrf ooluran 1 year, 89.60 X column 1 year, 45.00 % column ly«ar, 69.00 Onecolumn 1 year,100.00 proportion. Twelve lta« or uare pre- taken to write on one tide only of ^»wi?iatoiide a for Insertion m™*J* hentloated by the name and address of the writer. JOHN B. H.IJL.I2Y, MOUSEY AND COUNSELOR AT : i. WuULtew'tSlocJc, Plattsbnrgh, N. Y. H. JP. fc ^. wa i OIT THE PEAOB.-Offlce J Court House, Plattsburgb, N. Y. Y AN . JOHNSON. TTOBNBY AND 00UN8BLOB AT LAW.- Plittsburlrh, N. T. Office. Wlnslow's Block, tS HouWquart, opposite the P.O. W MYA L OOBB1N aSfiSSS JL.. FATTI88ON, A TTOBNBI AND 00U8BBLLOB, GlJXTOH BWXJK, FLAIWBUaOB, N. Y. Beckwlth, Barnard 4 Wheeler, WILLIAMS HELSEY, Practical Slate Roofers! Slating done in the best man- ner, in any part of the coun- try, at Lowest Prices. OOEBESPONDENOE SOLICITED. Office o n Clinton. Street* Yard a t the Hock. No.lOHoDonougbSt. No. 87 Margaret Bt. 67 .WATSON.Jr, A TTOBNBT8 AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW.- attend to causes in all tb» Courts ox tbe state ana «***•*. «****••..— : ^ WB to collections and wttle- fnrrog»te'B Court, to., fco. ». S. MOMA.SXB3IMS I A HOWT L AW AND C©L.MSCT1O*I OFFICE*, REAL ESTATE. INSURANCE &FINANCIAL AGENCIES, OH: AS. H. MOORE, attorney and Counselor at Law, 11 Clint** St., Piattafenrfh, W. Y. 18 KOTABY PUBLIC. HAS A S1AI* u in aU the Court* promptly an* oar«fuU7 PHYSICIANS. ». S. KELLOGG, M. B., Offloe, 59 fttanjaret »tr«et, PLATTSBUBaH, N. X. HomcDopathicPhyaician, PLATTSBURGH, N. Y. MTOfloe and resideBoe corner ol Briakeraoff •aft oak Streets, souta of High School Building. Ftattatotrgh, AprU ai, 188a. _____________ DE. EDWARD A. CARPENTER, t uiiEAi||Oambridge> Mass., [|*TKIT OAK BE CONSULTED BT LETTER. Medielsu sent by Mail or Express DENTISTS. DR. J. F. BAILEY. DENTIST, PLATTSBUBGa, N. Y. Office, Sentlne aildlng, B.T.MOONEV. D.0.8. Bentml Room* in winm»w« Block, Brlalterhoff St., Pinit»tmrffh, Where ail work pertaining to Dentistry •eat and thorough manner, and wan MoaltothebMt. LIVERY. R. K. BROMLEf, LIVERY STABLE! OOOD TOURNOUT3 ALWA1S IN READINESS AIM* * larjra line of Now and K«c*ud- ld Clage*, t*ka«toa* an d e»ue« far *a.lu. florth Side of Oourt Hoase Park, OOBKJtB Or BITBB ST., fI,tTT*iH(IU«ll. N. V. Lumber & Shingles 1 Dimension Timber. Stone Boat Plank, Sled Timber, &c, FOB SALB BY FRANK M. PURDY, MOilUISONVILLE, N. Y. Or4er. by m»lt or by Ulephone to FIBBOE't Store, will reoelTe prompt att«atlou. ^ FEANK M. PtTODY. Mrtll«, Jnn« 4. \m*. ISM CUMBERLAND HOUSE BARBER SHOP, BJJATTBBUKGII , N. Y. BH hma •ntlrely refitted; eyeijOilujf new; only BUSINESS CARDS. T. T. FERGUSON, Architect and Builder, OFFICE AND WORKSHOP IN OF FOOTE'S STOKE, Pittsburgh, N. Hans and Bpelifloatlans forjll kinds of buildings ^r^r^Wkind s of build-in the bast manner, as I keep none but the best workmen, and from Jong experience in the business can guais aatee to give to all entire satisf aotioa. G W.W. UTTING'S - TO BUY YOUR - Milk Pans, Water Coolers, Freezers, — AND OIL STOVES! M. P. MYERS & CO., [yers' New Block, Brldfe Street, Deftlew in Heavy and Shell Hardware! IRON, STEEL, NAILS, Paints, Oils, &c,&c, t»r Terwllllgor * co»»« 8«f««. PLATTBBUBGH, K. « CO AIL! H AVING 8E0UBBD A PEB8H STOCK of the best D. & H. Goal, of all sizes, and best Smith's Coal, at the lowest prioes it oan be bought for cash, we are prepared to sell the same as low as any good, olean Goal can be offered. With tfn offloe over town, in Winslow's Blook, soales and weigh offloe at the Delaney Goal Yard, a conveni- ent ptaoe to load, careful men to screen and load teams, close attention to all de- tails in delivering, and fair dealing, we re- speotfully ask a continoanoe of all old OUB- tomers and a fair trial from new ones. Give us a chance to deliver when ooalis dry and soreens best, and we will give olean coal. 1519 WILLIAMS * WILOOX. T.H9LLJJXD. J.F.THOMSSOW. HOLillVD & TBOMPSON, And afaDufaoturers of and Dealers in High and L«w Pressure 8tean Heating Apparatus. On the mot* Modern and Approved Plans for Heating with Steam, Ohiirch&, Pri- vate Dwelling*, Hotels, Factories, and Green Houses. HEATINB FAOTDRIEI IY UHAOST STEAM I PLIMIIN8 fc QA8 FITTIR% SPEOIAITY. OOBBBSJPONDKKOH SOUOITBD. 217 River St., - - TROY.N.Y. SEAMEN'S FBIENB SOCIETY OF NORTHERN J^EW YORK. OBJKOT:-Gospel Work AmongSeamen. MEANS EMPLOYED:—1. Loan Libraries. 3. Per- sonal Missionary Effort. L. L. SHEDDEN, PBBS. AdOress communications to REV. C. A. BRADFORD. COX. 8*3. 18S1 PXSU, N. Y. STOVES, STOVES. W. W. HARTWELL, Hartwell & Myers. S Has the largest and best selected stock of HEATING & COOKING -STOVES !-• INOLUDINfl THE CeiM6i Stewart Heating: AND DIAMOND AND ACORN COOKING. Call and examine our stock at the Old Stand, East side of the River, before you purchase elsewhere. W. W. Hartwell, No. 87 iJKlDGE BTI1EET. PLATTSBIEH SENTINEL. FKIDAY MOKN1NG, OOI\. 31, 18&4. ROTHESAT BAT. [Mrs. Mulock-Craik.3 Fu' yellow lie the corn-rigs Far dbun the braid hillside; It is the bra west harst field Alang the shores o' Clyde— And I'm a puir harst-lassie That Stan's the lee-lang day Sheering the cbro-rigs of Ardbeg Aboon sweex Rothesay Bay. 0 I had ance a trtie-loTe— Now, I hae none ava; Add I had ance three brithera, But I hae tint them a'; My father and my mither Sleep i' the mools this day. 1 sit my lane amang the rigs Aboon sweet Rothesay Bay. It's a bonnie bay at morning, And bonnier at the noon, But it's bonniest when the sun draps And red comes up the moon: When the mist creep o'er the Cumbrays, And Arran peaks are gray, And the great black hills, like sleepin' kinjj^ Sit grand roun' Rothesay Bay. Then a bit sigh stirs my bosom, And a wee tear blin's my e'e— And I think o' that far Countrie What I wad like to be! But I rise coiftent i' the morning To wark while wark I may I' the yellow harst field of Ardbeg Aboon sweet Rothesay Bay. ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS 8vme Bits of Information Worth Paitlug In Your Serap-Book. [Robert J. Burdette.]* Westward Ho—Certainly, son; go to Cali- fornia by all means. Glorious climate. First six months of the year they pray for rain; t'other six months they climb trees and run away from floods. Spiritus—No, we don't know who said: \The good die yung.\ But if you are no bet- teT than your spelling you will have to cut your fourth set of teeth and see a president elected without a scandal. Melville—Your drama covers too much ground, like a Colorado cattle company. It reminds us of a \patent insides\ newspaper, which contains in one column interesting and interwoven articles on \Spring Work in the Garden,\ \Summer Bathing and Directions for Treating Persons Rescued from Drown- ing,\ How to Collect and Preserve Autumn Leaves,\ and \Household Christmas Decora- tions.\ Aristophanes—Your joke about the bathing suit being so small that it was carried in the pocket-book is good. It is too good to use. It will keep. At least it has kept all summer, and this cold weather will not impair its vitality. What we particularly like about it is its air of newnoss—its unmistakable flavor of originality. There is no f eneer or imita- tion about it. It is original. So was tho ark, Aristophanes, so was thjark. Dreamer—You must indeed be a dreamer. Want to know where you will find a poem containing the line, The melancholy days have come, the saddest of the year. Never heard of such a poem, and if the line you quote has any existence at all, it must be in the airy cobwebs of your own dreamy brain. Dream out the rest of it, and we'll pHnt it for you. Send the MS. to the business office, they're offering special rates for melancholy poetry in car lots this season. Nicotine—The custom of making genuine imported Havana cigars of brown paper and wrapping them with leather had its origin among the Connecticut cigarmakers in the hard times of eighteen hundred and naughty five, when *the tobacco crop failed and the most rigid economy had to be practiced by manufacturers and consumers. As you say you are only 19 years old, it doesn't make any difference to you what cigars are made of. You can get just as sick on burnt leather as you can on tobacco, and you'll enjoy it just as much. • Young Theologue—Yes, we think you might class \gosh dum\ and \dad bing\ as profane swearing. \Gaul ding\ may also be considered a swear word, \I'm swizzled\ is another. All these words bear the same re- lation to thoroughbred, sky-blue profanity that the pale-pink lemonade of the Sunday school picnic does to the raw whisky of the target company's excursion. They are the outgrowth of a terribte struggle, a theolog- ical compromise arranged by our Puritan ancestors, who recognized with a faultless spiritual vision and worldly acumen the necessity of a purs life and a sinless vocabu- lary, and at the same time the utter impossi- bility of flowing a New England stone patch without a class of words designed to relieve the overburdened mind and astonished fool* ings every time the plow handles broke a man's ribs and extorted every last drop of vital breath from his panting body. Lincolnshire Dialect. [Hartford Courant.] Our American custom of calling the prong of a fork a tyne is a Lincolnshire peculiarity, and came over with our fathers. The more general word prong is indeed driving it out, but a tyne is understood in Lincolnshire alone. The older men here distUfbtly remem- ber the pronunciation of nature and creature, natur and critter, just as they were pro- nounced in New Englatod fifty years ago. Perhaps the most amusing of these local pe culiarities is the old-fashioned Lincolnshire way of calling a cucumber a cowcumber, which toe older readers of The Courant will promptly recall as common in their child- hood. So, too, the quaint archaisip which many of us so well remember of calling a cow a caow, and a pound a paound, remains in full force not only in Lincolnshire, but has extended throughout England, and may be called the accepted pronunciation of the diphthong ou. I hear it not only in the cathedral pulpits, but on the lips of the shop- boys. It has survived in Philadelphia and perhaps elsewhere with us, but it has mainly been laughed out of New England. But to me the most interesting connection between Lincolnshire and New England pro- nunciation is the little word \been.\ It has long been a wonder to me how and why that word should be pronounced not only in New England, but throughout the United States, so differently from what it is in England, and all her many colonies. In England, Scotland, Ireland, Canada, Australia, Nova Scotia, South Africa, it is made to rhyme with seen and between, whereas in our coun- try it is made to rhyme with sin und din. It was all explained when I came to Lin- colnshire and found that the old local usage there was to call it bin, and that it is not en- tirely driven out to this day. I have not been able to trace that other old-faHhioned pronunciation of the same word, \ben;\ I could not find it in Lincolnshire. But many words which the older people will rememlwr «a now mostly gone by, such as put with a short u, pretty pronounced puhty and purty, hoard pronounced kewd, I mad well remem- bered in Lincoln and Boston. Ho w Would It Work. [Norristown Horald.] At the Philadelphia electric exhibition an organist plays an organ 130 feet away from his instrument: If a street organ could be thus manipulated, it would be much safer for the Italian who agitated the crank—but what would be the fato or his organ? Bitting Bull spreads his napkin on a chair and »it» ou i t Tho Federal nEuatei-JSoIlii. The muster-rolls of the United States army and navy show that in tho war between the states there were enlisted 2,064,000 men. Nearly a Hundred Volume*. The Rebellion Record, whioh is now beixg issued by the government, will coitat d uiaety-«ix volumes of 800 pases each. MIDSUMMER NIGHT. How the Miserable Sleep in the City During the Hot Season. Condition* of Caloric Utterly Un- bearable—Asleep i n the Gutter— New York Mfud-K^w Children Herd. DR. DAVID KENNEDY'S [New York Herald.] Listen to the story of the gutter, a story utterly foreign to the understanding of peo- ple who live in comfortable homes, and known to the denizens of the roofs only by hearsay. Twenty thousand people on the hot nights of last week snored upon the stoops, sweltered in ash-bins, slept in the gutters of New York's streets. Within an eighth of a mile of the city hall are many huge buildings called tenements, in which scores of families live, breed and die. Dirt and squalor are their normal conditions; •\ untidiness, foul odors, and indecency are things familiar to young eyes and the everyday surroundings of old age. In winter time it is possible for the degraded creatures who burrow in the kennels to exist, because the more crowded they are the warmer they are, and in the winter the two things most needed are Bheltor and heat Utterly reckless as to ap- pearance, careless of what n>ay happen to one another in the way of immorality, with no prejudices in favor of clean faces or tidy linen, these families hive together as bugs do, literally rolling one over the other, content so long as their lowest physical ne- cessities are even partially met. In the sum- mer all this is ohanged. Shelter, to be sure, is desirable, but there are conditions of caloric utterly unbearable, which even these people, Unaccustomed to ease or comfort of any sort or kind, insist upon so far as they are able to control affairs. It requires no Very great stretch of imaginations to under- stand that the close, unventilated houses in which these people burrow, where children are born, the sick are cared for, the dead lie waiting burial, where cooking and washing and a thousand and one domestic economies necessary to every household, however humble, are carried on, cannot be very desirable places for anyone to Bleep in during the frightful nights of torridity. What, then, must they be when not only one, but a dozen, are expected to find nature's sweet restorer, balmy sleep, in the contracted, foul-smelling, almost loath- some places in which these people stay! • They can not go to the roof, it is already! occupied; sd they swarm upon the streets. First come first served is their motto. As soon as the evening shades prevail these creatures emerge half-clothed, dirty, com- fortless to the last degree, and wind their way through the crooked passages, down t&e: stairways to the narrow street, The steps are soon taken possession of. Every point where a person can rest his weary head is occupied. Far in the evening hours, when children of people in moderate ciretnnstancea are asleep, these streets are noisy, echoing with the cries and sports, the fights, the broils, the romps of wretched little children, whose dirty faces are stained with tears, to whom a crust is a bouquet, and a pillow an unheard of lujcury. There is something about New York mud which defies analysis. It has a peculiar, pungent, sickening odor to which the frightful smells from Hunter's point and Barren island are like the pref umes from a lady's boudoir. There are streets in which this mud has grown gray in the ser- vice. It nestles in the gutters, it hides beneath the stones, it rises in foul vapors from the roadway and is as familiar to every one of the boys and girls and babies on the block as the rap of a policeman'club or the yell of a vender of fish: A walk through one of these streats at 11 o'clock of a frightful September night would do much to allay the discontented fever which eats the very hearts of so many of New York's well-to-do people. Children art seen there by the hundreds who haven't been in bed for weeks, who haven't changed their clothing in mqnths,, to whom a good wash would be a revelation more absolute than the most startling sentence in the apocalypse. Curly-headed boys and girls, with bright eyea and sturdy figures, literally romp in the street and pelt each other with its dirt. Miserable, big headed, weak eyed, pallid faced, wasting babies lie upon the laps of slatternly women and roll their heads from side to sidain pitiable weakness. All manner of costuttt.x;an there be seen. Barefooted men and women, half-grown boys and girls, with but a single garment be* tween them and the outer air, disappointed' looking men and disheartened-looking women form the motley groups of every possible age and every imaginable condition of trouble and distress. Recently the very acme and zenith of physical discomfort and distress was reached. During the late days of 'excessive heat, with no left up of any consequence at night, the gutters of New York's tenement district* presented a sad and dolelpl sight. On nearly every corner an attract™ e glare shone from a gin-mill. Men who can not afford an extra dollar a week fOK a home, apparently found no difficulty in raising a nickel every hall hour or so for a pot of beer. Old men and women, fathers and mothers, children and babies, one and all, partook of the foaming beverage from time to time. Little by littl« the weary children, tired with crying, recog- nizing the utter uselessness of asking foi comfort, spread themselves upon the side- walk, curled up in gutters, rested where besi they could, and fell asleep in positions at comfortable as it was possible to get. Groups upon the stoops followed suit Now and then, with a cry of \Here comes the cop!\ the children, startled from a feverish, slum- ber, would rise and run, but knowing by esc perience that they had done nothing to de- serve more than a gentle tap or a rough reprimand, they soon returned and resumed their sleep. There was no air stirring anywhere those nights, save on the roofs of some very pala- tial warehouses. It was a terrible night foi people who could go to the seashore, but were compelled jby stress of business to re- turn by the latet boat or train, and seek re- freshing rest in their own comfortable homes. Many a rich man sighed for ait while he sat the sole occupant of a spacioui chamber. How, then, was it in the streets rumtag from ferr/ to ferry, how in the nar- row highways and byways called \places/ how in these enormous human hives when the poor of every name and nation ar« crowded more closely than Mr. Bergh per- mite hogs to be herded ou their way to th< slaughter house J The heat is no respecter oi persons. It starts the fever in every vein, whether that vein be in the body of the rich or poor, the sick or the well. «» REMEDY For the Cure of Kidney and r.lrer Com. plaints, Constipation, and all disorders arising from an impnre state of the BLOOD. To women who suffer from any of the ills pecu- liar to their sex it is aa nnfaDing friend. All FEARFULLY COMMON. Kldnvy Complaint Among- both \ox. ••and £««•—A Brillian t Recovery . Tbere Is Bomrthlnji startling i i the rapid iuc of Kidney diseasj-B amoi.g the American p within a few years past. Maty cau.-fpH pecuil < certa n clashes tend to prod are and atftfravnte tbfse troubles-a», for example, careleos Jivjug, over work and exposure Dr. DavJ.4'Kennedy,' of Uoudont. N. Y., is often onffntnlntefl on the exoe,,n<,nablt BUrceftROf bi« ajecliclne oa!M FAVORITE BK*l- ED V In arresting Bnrl THd'Ciilly onrin^r thflfe mosi painful and daugeroafl d isorflern. Proof* of th1i, like the following, are constantly brought to bin at tcntion, and are published by him for toe rake of thoueanria of other onffsreis whom be desiiex to reach snd benefit. The letter, therefore, may be of vital importance to you or to some oae whom you know. It 1« from one of the best known and popu- lar druggist* In the fine and growing city from whioa ue write* -aiid donbtlewti where, those may find Mr, Crawford ar hl« place of business ou ier of Main and Uoiou streets: SpBruoriBLD. MARX., Maroh 22,18 Dr. David Kennedy, Rondout, N. T.: DKARSIB: For ten yearn I nad been uffltc'ed with Kidney disease in its moot aoire form. Want I suffered must be left to the Imagination—for no Me can appreciate it except who have gone through J reported to many physlomna and to many ifferent kinds of treatment, and spout a great de# of money, only to find myself older and worse than ever. I may Fay tbat I need 35 bottles of a prepar- ation widely advertised a» a specific for tV1n precis* sort of troubles; and found it entirely metetf!at leaot in my case Your PAVOBITE RBMEDY-I my u with a per- feet recollection of all that w»» done for me beside* is the only tblng tbat did me the slightest good; and I am h»pi y to admit gave me petmanent relief. I bare recommend«d FAVOBITE REMEDY to many oi'le tor Kldneto dineasf, and they all twee with e innaylng that DR DAVID KENNET)Y'd FA- OKITE REMEDY hae not it* equal in tko wide worM for this distressing and off>u fatal o mp'alnt. U«« this Utter as you aeem b«t for the benefit of others. Yonrs.eto., LYMAN GRAWFOBD. For years we have waited, In hope and in glee, Watching the billows, Scanning the sea, For our ship on the ocean, Laden with gold. To come and enrich us. TkotaJe is soon told; No longer we're waiting For sorrow's our cup; The ship has come in* But it's bottom-side up. —[Philadelphia Call New Idea In Coachmen. [Now York Journal.] It is perfectly clear in families where there are daughters to many that the present Htyle of coachmen is a mistake. He is too fascinating. His horse flense is too magnetic. He must be reformed. Now, how is this to be done* It is tho swell thing to have a handsome coachman with sweet whiskers and an Oxonican cut. Old and bald-headed coachmen would inevitably lower th« ton* of the family. An automaton horse engineer must be invented, an equine Apollo on wheels. ThU coachman might be wound up, like a olock, and so constructed that it auy young lady attempted to rim off with him W would explode or bolt to Cfcnad*. ead two 8c stamps to A$ ¥. Ordway *O» , tbn,Mass. t snd receive an elegant set of fency WhatStruckanOldSoldier \It will soon be twerty years since ihe wai losed.\ Under the hot ana of August. 1882, tlae village of Dover, K. J , l*y still M the sphinx in Egypt, whlie' Elijah Sharp, of tbat place, al'iwly and softly spoke >f the past. \Yes he Bald, \I w»s in the army, I was anally discrged rom abity, icvuting from sunfttroke. I came home, mlaeroul* )n health and spirits; so enfeebled taht I took cold oa the slightest exposure. Life te rued -worthless to me;\ llvtd only in memory \ \That was sad enough,\ I said, dividing my last two RigarB. \That's* over it. Ontgr*w it? Not exactly. condition I began taking PABKCK'S TOSIO, Mid tny health commenced to improve right away. I was astonished at it, and no was my wife. I piled on the fl«ab. and could eat au>tbtii# My uubltion blazed up. I could attend to bu^iuws, nud now —excepting that I have, to take oare about expoi myself tn the hot sun-1 am as wel) SH I was day I enlisted What differences there. »r« ._ things-guns and bayonet* till; FAKKKH'IJ TONIC ~ive» \ This t>reparation, whMi hag been known as PAB- KEB'B GINGHRTONIC, willbere«.u*r beetled wimpiy PABXZB'H TONIC, AS unprincipled dealers are o'.in- stantly deceiving tbolr customers by mibseliuting Inferior a articles under tbe name of (/iiiK'-r, mid as ginger U really an unimportant ingredient, we drop the misleading word. There in no ohdnge, A<»»B«W, in thepre ittelf, and all bottles remaining In the dealers, wrapped under the name of PAHKXB'B GIN- OHB TOHIO contain tbe genuine medloine. If the fac- simile signatare of Hzsoox h Oo. Is at tbe bottom of tbe ontside wrapper. PILLS \THE OLD RELIABLE.\ 25 YEARS IN USE- The Greatest Medical Triumph of the Age] Indorsed all over the World. They IuoreaM the Appetite, and cause the body to Take o n Fl«ah, thus th tem Is nourished, and b th i the body to Take o n Fl tem Is nourished and GRAT HAr»or\ „_„ GLOSSY BLACK by a single application oi this DTK. It imparts a natural color, acts Instantaneously. Sold by Druggist*, or sent by express on receipt of $1. C—'co 44 Murray St., New York. THE GREATEST RALLY! Republicans and Democrats Both En- thusiastic ! THE TWO PARTIES IN LINE! Unite d Support on all Sides, and \by all Factions I THE TICKET SURE OF ELECTION. Tbe Bauer Flyiag, the IHualaaUsa Spl«n4M, to« Cheer tf Victory Lrag and Lta«! • \ Every passer-by on Margaret street in Plattsburgh, ne«r the Cumberland House, notices a large banner strung across - ^ ^ the street, with a clear and familiar portrait painted on its \ < face. Every voter as he goes by points *t it and emphatic- ally says, • • \THAT'S THE TICKET I VOTE!\ THE - WELL - KNOWN - CA1STDIDATE - IS CLOTHIER. AND THIS IS HIS PLATFORM: Protection of the farmer and worMngman's body and ^ pocket. Economy in the administration and honesty in pub*- lie dealing. . Tax the people for their wants ad lightly ,m* possible. ~No sumptuary legislation or paternal government, • except to induce the head of the family to keep thebo^sA dressed well at small expense. A fan 1 day's pay for a fair; day's work and good value for the least money. Build up the republic fast by making the expense of supporting and • clothing a family as light as possible. No interference with competitors except to show them the folly of trying to get a . commercial following unless they get down to Prices. A Few Planks in the Platform: A Fear-bottoa Cutaway. Corkscrew Suit, silk lined. . Fine Diagonal Black Dress Salts, satin stoere lining. - Heavy Harris Cassimere, business suits, - - - Fancy Trousers. ------- Whitney Fur Beaver Overcoats, satin lined. Elegant Chinchilla Overcoats, - - - WfH.made Business Suits, - - - - Splendid Variety of Workingmen's Suits, heavy, aeat and warm, - v - Boys' Suits, warm and well made, 25 This platform every citizen in the county can endorse. JSTo year has clothing ever been so cheap as now, by CANE, THE CLOTHIER. Notice the Banner! Don't fail to cast your vote for the Merchant who is now selling the best CLOTHING for the least money. NEVER BEFORE SO CHEAP I NEVER BEFORE SO ChOOHf I * At CANE, THE CLOTHIER. B3P Look at the Banner near the Cumberland House. f