Bloomington Progress, Bloomington, Monroe County, 27 June 1894 — Page 3
the Magic Touch 6r
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Ton smile at tho Idea. Bo if you ate
sairerer rrom Dyspepsia
. And IfullffAntiAn a hnMU .1
' fore yon have taken halt &
J doses you will think, and no doubt
ZClalm, "That Just hits it!" "That
MMJ
1'S Sara-
Cures
soothing effect b a magic touch I"
rtlla gently torn B
and strengthens, the stomh and dlgestlta organ Invigorates the Urtii,
creams a natural, nealtay desire tot
moo, gives retresning sleep.
Hood' Wiln are prompt aid mstent.
K Kggs as a Toaic.
Y A raw gg is an excellent tonic with
iWhlc to begin these warm spring- days, lit is strengthening and tends to nra
pent that tired feeling so prevalent at
pais season 01 tne year. 11 prepared In She following way it is really dllicious drink: I Put the yolk ol an gg Into a dish Jwithateaspocmfuiof white sugar twfd 'a teaseoonfdt f orani'A litmnti
jjuiee, and beat lighty together with a
' rw tne wattes on a plate and mU pine -f t'.t; then, with a broad-
pow, s lightly as nossible, nix all tcSgeteerin the dish; taett as llghtlv Ptransfer it to a clean tumbler, which ft Twill nearly fiU ff properly made, sail
Iwoon oewmee liquid and loses itMnowy look. Any fruit juice may be used in place of orange or lemon, or even branfly if the doctor has ordered ft.
ww home WOrld. . THE INDIES. ; f The pleasant effect and perfect safety with Js-hloh ladies may use tie California liquid laxative. Syrup of rigs, under all conditions, niaJtestt their favorite remedy. To set the rueamdtaaineartiol9. look for the nam of the California Fig Syrup Co.. printed near ('bottom of the paekagav t Tin . It Water Weeds. : That strange water-weed, the blad-ffler-wort is carnivorous, like some of fthose sinister tropical plants which seek what meat they may devour. The Wny bladders attached to tbe leaves sand leaf-stalks ore each furnished with a door, tbe Whole acting- on the jeel-trap principle. Any small waler--creatana that ventures to peep in is seized in the clutches ot the murderwas plant, aaa straightway is swal-
iwwea ana assimilated.
I
Hants.
The large majority of plants are Scentless, and probably not one-tenth of the hundred thousand flowering hlants known to botanists are odorous.
Of the fifty known species of the mignonette family only tho one so highly
prized in our gardens is fragrant, and only about a dosen of the 100 species of Violets are scented. In manv larva
fereaer the scentless varieties ara a
ilOO to one.
I It does not follow that because a thing is hard to learn it is worth remembering.
JMcretia O. Putnam, of Forristdale, Mass., was utterly miserabls and sick. . Her spine, liver, heart, and brain .wareall diseased.
The weight of her body caused terrible pains in her back, and it was sometimes several hours before she could dress. This woman's trouble was in her womb, affectine her
wnpje constitution. ( ' She found new life in Lydia E. Ptnkfiam's Vegetable Compound, ' She says : "lam like one raised from the dead. I was sick so long I thought I never could get well "The suffocating, gasping attacks and awful bearing-down feel- ' ing left me, my appetite returned, and my friends wondered at my improved looks. I believe Mrs. Pinkham's remedies are a sure cure for the misery of our sex."
DR. KILMER'S
Roorf
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ovon an. M).3taiBk.eiiMMv!tJ
FREE ! FICE CLEJ3
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btv.ch nil. mad am anlaail aB
trtcaha, flai;l, , thrtlailataia.
aja.5TiaiMllliallialliail J ill 3
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fcHArTER IX. Continued. Scarcely were tho words well eut bf his mouth when from the tecesses of the hut a rollicking French voice was heard, thrilling out moi-rily: ''Quand on conapi-re, Quaud aaus frayeur M Without waiting- for more, tho Shadow seized Felix's arm in an agony Qf terror. "Come away!" h cried, hurriedly, "oomo away! What will become ttf S? This is h'oi-fible, hornbte! We have broken taboo. We have heard the pod's voice. Tho sky will fail oh us. If lvs Shadow were to find it out and tell my people, ray people wOftld tear us limb from limb. Quick, quick! Hide away! Let us run fast through the forest bofore any man uiscjpver it." The Shadow's voico ran doojJ wilfch alarm. Felix felt he dare not trifle with thi superstition. Profound as was feis curiosity about the mysterious Frenchman, he was eompellod to bottle up his oao-orness and anxiotv for the moment, llld patiently wait till tho Month of Birds had run its course, and taken its convenient taboo along with j it. These limitations were terrible. Yet he counted much Upon the information the Frenchman could give him. The ma had been some time on the Istana, it was clear, and doubtless he
understood its ways thoroughly; he might cast so:ue light at last upo& the Korong mystery. So he went back through the woods With a heart somewhat lighter. NBt far from their own huts ho mot Muriel and Mali. As thev walked home together, Felix told his companion in a very few words the strange discovery about the Frenchman, and the impenetrable taboo by which he was at present sur
rounded. Muriel drew a deep sigh.
"Oh, Felix," she said fof they wore naturally by this time very much at home wfth 'one another, "did vou ever
snow anything so dreadful as the mystery of these taboos? It see&s as if we should never get really to the bottom of them. Mali's always springing
some new one upon mo. I don't believe we shall ever lie able to leave the island we're so hedged round with taboos. Even if we wore to see a shiri
to-day, I don't believe they'd allow us to signal it;"
.There was a red sunset: a lurid.
tropical, red-and-green sunset. It boded mischief.
Thev were Dassinir bv some lints at
the moment, ana over the stockade of them a tree was hanging with small yellow fruits, which Felix knew well ihFeji as wholesome and agreeable. He broke a small bunch as he passed.
and offered a couple thoughtlessly to
Muriel. &ne tooic them in her nnsrers,
and tasted them gingerly. "They're not so bad," she said, takinsr another from the bough, "They're very much like gooseberries."
At the same moment, Felix toopned
one into his own mouth, and swallowed
it without thinking.
Almost before they knew what had
happened, with tho same extraordi
nary rapidity as in the case of the wedding) the people in the cottages ran out, with every sign of fear and ap
prehension, and. seizing the branch
from Felix's hands, began upbraiding the two Shadows for their want of at
tention.
We couldn't help it," Toko ex
claimed, with every appearance Of
gui.t and horror on his lace. "They were much too sharp for us. Their hearts are black. How could we two interfere? These gods are si ouick!
They had picked and eaten them be
fore we ever saw them."
One of the men raised his hand with
a threatening air but against the Shadow, not against the sacred person of Felix. "He will be ill," ho said angrily, pointing toward the white man;
and she will, too. Their hearts are
indeed black. They have sown the seed of the wind. They have both of
them eaten of it. They will both bo
ill. You deserve to die! And what
will come now to our trees and plan
tations?"
The crowd gathered round them,
cursing low and horribly The two terrified Europeans slunk off to their huts, unaware of their exact crime, and closely followed by a scowling but despondent mob of natives. As they crossed their sa -red boundary, Muriel cried, with a sudden outburst of tears,
"Oh, reus, what on earth shall we
ever do to get rid of this terrible, un
endurable godship!"
The natives without set ud a exeat
shout of horror. "See, see! she cries!" they exclaimed, in indescribable panic.
"one has eaten the storm-fruit, and
already she cries! Oh, clouds, restrain yourselves! Oh, great Queen,
mercy! Whatever will become of us and our poor huts and gardens!" I
Ana lor hours they crouched around, 1
beating their breasts and shrieking. I
That evening, Muriel sat up late in
Felix's hut, with Mali by hor side, too frightened to go back into her own alone before those angry people. And all the time, just beyond the barrier
line, they could hear, above the whistle
of the wind, around the hut, the droning voices of dozens ot natives, cower-, ing low on the ground, they seemed to be going through some litany or chant, as if to deprecate the result of
this imprudent action.
'What are they aoine' outsido?" I
Felix asked of ihe Shadow at last,
after a peculiarly long wail of misery. 1
And the shadow made answor, in .
very solemn tones. "They are trying ! to propitiate your mighftness, and to
avert the omen, lest the rain should ,
fall, and the wind should blow, and the :
storm-cloud should burst over the , island to destroy them. I
Then Felix remembered suddenly of :
himself that the season when this
storm-fruit, or storm-apple, as they called it was ripe in Fiji, was also the season when the great Pacific cyclones most often swept over the land in full
fury storms unexampled on any other
sea, like that famous one which wrecked so many European men-of-war a few years since in the harbor of Samoa.!
And without, the wan camo louder
and clearer still! "If you sow the
bread-fruit seed, you will reap bread-
trult. It you sow the wind, you will reap the whirlwind. Thoy have eaten the storm fruit. Oh, great king, save
CHAPTER X. REAPING THE WHIRLWIND. Toward midnight Muriel began to doze lightly from pure fatigue. "Put a pillow under her head, and let her sleep," Felix said in a whisper. "Poor child, it would be cruel to send her alone to-night into her own quarters." And Mali slipped a pillow of mulberry paper under her mistress' head, and laid it on her own lap, and bent down to watch her. But outside, beyond the line, the natives murmured loud their discontent. "The Queen of the Clouds stays in the Kins- of the Ham's hut tonight," they muttered, angrily. "She will not listen to us. Before morning, be sure, the Tempest will be born of their meeting to destroy us. " About 2 o'clock there came a lull in the wind, which had been rising steadily ever since that lurid sunset. Felix looked out of the hut tloor. The moon was full. It was almost as clear as day wtthhe bright tropical moonlight,
silvery in the open, pale green in tho shadow. Tne people were still squatting in great rings round the hut. just outside the taboo line, and boating gongs and sticks and human bones, to Koep time to the lilt of their lugubrious litany. The air felt unusually heavy and oppressive. Felix raised his eyos to the sky, and saw wisps of light cloud drifting in rapid flight over the Kcmldinp moon. Below, an ominous fog bank gathered steadily westward. Then brie clan of thiindei- rent the skv. Af
ter it banie a deadly silence. Tho moon was veiled. All was dark as
pitch, The natives themselves fell on their faces and prayed with mute lips. Three minutes later tho cyclone hail burst upon them in all its frenzy. Such a hurricane Felix had nnver bofore oxperiencpri, It tmprtry was awluV, Round tlie palffltrebs the wlhd played a frantic and capricious devil's dance. It pirouetted about the atoll in t ho mad glee of unconsciousness. Here and there it cleared lanes, hundreds of yards in length, among the forest trees and tho co.oanut plantations, The noise of snapping and fulling trunks rang thick on the air. At times tho
cyclone would swoop down from above
upon the swaying stem of some tall and
stately palm that bent like grass be
fore the wind, break it olr with a roar
at the bottom, and lay it low at once
upon the ground, With a crash liko
thunder. In bthor places, little playful whirlwinds seemed to descend from the sky in the very midst of the dense brushwood, where thoy cleared circular patches, strewn thick under foot with trunks and branches in thoir titanic sport, and yet left unhurt all about the surrounding forest. Then again a special cyclone of irigantie proportions would advance, as it were, in a single column against one stem of a clump, Whirl round it spirally .ike a lightning flash, and, desertinp- it for another, leave it still standing, but turned and twisted like a screw bv tho irresistible force of its invisible fingers. The storm-god, said Toko, was dancing with tho palm-trees. The sight was awful. Such destructive energy Felix had nover even imagined befdre; No wonder the savages all rd.md beheld in it tho personal wrath of some mighty spirit. For ill spite bf the black clouds they could see it all both the Europeans and the islanders; The intense darkness of the night was lighted up for them every minute by an almost incessant blaze of shoe) and forked lightning. The roar of tho thunder mingled with the roar of the tempest, each in turn overtopping and drowning the other. Tho hut where Folix and Muriel sheltered themselves shook before the storm: the vory ground of the island trembled and quivered like the timbers of a groat ship before a mighty sea at each onset of tha breakers upon the surrounding fringe-reef. And side by side with it all, to crown their misery, wild torrents of rain, descending in water-spouts, as it seemed, or dashed in great sheets against the roof of their frail tenement, poured fittully on with fierce tropical energy. In tho midst of tho hut Muriel crouched and prayed with bloodless lips to Heaven. This was too, too terrible. It seemed incredible to her that on top of all they had been called upon to suffer of fear and suspense at tho hands of the savages, the very dumb forces of nature themselves should thus bo stirred up to open war against them. Her faith in Providence was sorely tried. Dumb forces, indeed! Why, they roared with more terrible voices than any wild bea3t on earth could possibly compass. Tho thunder and the wind wore howling each other aown in emulous din, and tho very hiss of the lightning could bo distinctly heard, like some huge snake, at times above the creaking and snapping of the trees before tho gale in the surrounding forest. Muriel crouched there long, in the mute misery of utter despair. At her feet Mali crouched, too, as frightened as herself, jut muttering aloud from time to time, in a reproachful voice: "I tell M:ssy Queonie what going to happen. I warn her not. 1 tell her 3he must not eat that very bad stormapple. But Missy Quoenio no listen.
Hor take hor own way, then storm
come clown upon us." And Felix's Shadow, in his own tongue, exclaimed n.ore than once in the solf-samo tor.o, ha"f terror, half expostulation: "See now what comes from breaking taboo? You eat the storm-fruit. The storm-fruit suits ill with the King of the Rain and the Queon ot the Clouds. The heavens have broken loose. Tho sea has boiled. See what wind and what flood you are bringing upon us." liy and by, above even tho fierce roar of tho mingled thunder and cyclone, a wild orgy of noise burst upon them all from without the hut. It was a sound as of numberless drums and tom-toms, all beaten in unison with tho mad energy of foar; a hideous sound, suggestive of some hateful heathen devil-worship. Muriel clappod her hands to her ears in horror. "Oh, what's that?" she cried to Felix, at this new addition to their endless alarms. "Are tho savages out there rising in a body? Have they come to murder us?" "Perhaps," Felix said, smooth inc her bair with his hand, as a mother might soothe her terrified child, "perhaps they're angry with us for having caused -this storm, as they think, by our foolish action, l believe they all set it down to our having unluckily eaten that unfortunate fruit. I'll go out to the door myself and speak to them." Muriel clung to his arm with a passionate clinging. "Oh, Felix," she cried, "no! Don't leave me hero alone. My darling, 1 lovo you. You're all the worla there is left to mo now, Flix. Don't go out to those wretches and leave mo hero alone. They'll murdor you! thoy'll murder you. Don't go out, 1 im Idoro yon. It th ey mean to kill us, ot them kill us both together in each others arms. Oh, Felix, I ara yours, and you are mine, my darling!" It was the first time either of them had acknowledged the fact: but thero, before tho face of that awful convulsion of nature, all the little deceptions and veils of life soomod rent asunder forever as by a flash of lightning. They stood face to face with each her's souls, and forgot all else in the agony of tho moment. Felix clasped the trembling girl in his arms liko a lover. The two Shadows looked on and shook with silent terror. If tho King of tho Rain thus ombraced the Queon of tho Clouds bofore their very eyes, amid so awful a storm, what unspeakable effects might not follow at once from it! But they had too much respect for those supernatural creatures to attempt to interforo in their action at such a moment. They accepted their masters almost as passively as they accepted the wind and the thunder, which they believed to arise from them. Felix laid his poor Muriel tenderly down on the mud floor a;ain. "I must go out, my child," ho said. "For tho very lovo of you, 1 must play the man, and find out what these savages moan by their drumming." He crept to the door of tho hut (for no man could walk upright before that awful storm), and peered out into the darkness onco more, awaiting ono of the frequent flashes of lightning. Ho had not long to wail. In a moment the
sky was all ablaze again from end to
end, and continued so for many sec
onds consecutively. By tho light of tho continuous zigzags of fire, Felix could seo for himself that hundreds and hundreds of natives men, women, and children, naked, or nearly so,with thoir hair loose and wet about their cheeks-lay lint on their faces, many courses deop, jtist outside the taboo line. Tim wind swept over I hem with extraordinary force, artd the tropical rain descended in great l!oodg upon their bare backs and shoulders. But the savages, as if entranced, seemed to take no heed of all these earthly things. 'J hey lay groveling in the mud before some unseen power: and beating their tomtoms in unison, with barbaric concord, they cried aloud once more as Felix appeared, in a weird litany that overtopped the tumultuous noise of the tempest. "Oh, Storm find, bear us! Oh, great spirit, deliver us! King ol the Rain and Queen of tho Clouds, befriend us! Hb angry no more! Hide -vmi! Wrath from yOiii- people! Take iiwayyour hurricane, and we will bring you many gifts. Eat no longer of the stbrm-applo the seed ol the wind and we will feed you with yam and turtle, and much choice bread-fruit. Great King, we are yours; you shall choose which you will ol our children for your meat and drink: vou shall sup on our blood, Hut tike your storm nwaV; do not utterly drown and submerge Our island!'' As t hoy spoke t liey crawled nearer and nearer, with gliding serpentine motion, till their heads almost touched the white line of coral. But no man of them all went one inch boyond it. They stooned there and cazcd'at him. Folix siffned M them With his band, ttild pointed vaguely to the sky, as
much as to say be was not responsible At the gesture tho whole assembli
burst into one loud shout of gratitude. "He has heard us, he lias heard us!"
they exclaimed, with a perfect wail of
joy. Ho will not utterly destroy us. Ho will take away his storm. He will bring tho sun and t ho moon back to
us. Felix returned into tho hut, somo
what reassured so far sis the attiude
of t he savages went. "Don't be afraid
of them, Muriel." he cried, taking her passionately once more in a tender embrace. "Thoy daren't cross the the taboo. Thov won't come near;
thoy'ro too frightened themselves to
dream of hurting us." (TO BE CONTINUED.
SUPERSTITIOUS CLERKS.
Malt Sacks That Have Been in nil Accident
Are Sought After. A grotip of railway postal clerks,
just iii from a run, stood in the transfer office at the Pennsylvania station the other morning waiting fdr the cubie car to start up in order
to get home. 'Tell you felt a bit scary on this trip," observed one of the men as he knocked tbe ashes from hi - pipe and glanced at the clock. "Whet was the matter, inspector on the car?" asked one. "Fiat wheel?"' queried another. "Worse than that. Forgot my red. Left it in the office. First time for six months." "Where did you get yours'r" asked the tall wan with the sandy beard. 'I've had it for a lornr lima Cub
gave it to me, and he got it from the
'Fat Iiancy' wreck," w.is tho reply. Just then the whirr of the cable become audible in the clear morning air, and the mail-sliugersmade a run for the avenue. "What's a red?" was asked of a cleri who was still lounging in the room. Forreply he opened his valise and
drew out a dingy red mail sack. It was a plain canvas pouch, such as is useti for mail matter of the lower classes, and, save for the color, did
not differ from anyone of the hun
dred thousand or so that the govern
ment owns. "Once in a while we have little
sma5h-ups, you know," he said, "and occasionally some of the boys get
hurt, or worse. Oi'r cars are pretty
dangerous places in the event of an
accident, and, if there is any damage, why, it is usually felt most in the mail or express car. It : isn't
often that they arc serious, but now and then one of the boys gets smashed, and then there ia natur
ally some Wood around, and it gets on t he mail sacks. In the old days the Government very considerately used to put such sacks out of use, i'or
you can't get the staiu out. Then some genius conceived the notion of
dying them led, but that only served to mark them. "Every business has its superstitions," he continued, "and I guess we are no exception, for some of us have an idea that it is lucky to have a red in the car. I don't know why, I'm sure, unless it is on the principle that the same sack will not be in two bad accidents. So when one comes our way we freeze on to it, and try to keep it handy. Of course," he continued, rather shamefacedly, "it seems like a queer kind of feeling to have a reminder of that sort around, but it's all in the way you look at it, and there are lots of things just as foolish that other people do." Washington News.
Martha Washington. Mrs. George Washington, although an heiress and beauty, and for many years the first lady of the land, never disdained the homely, honorable duties of housekeeping. She considered it a great privilege to look after the details ot her household and regarded the "state days" as lost. In her home at Mount Vernon, as in all large Southern mansions, a workroom was set apart, and here every morning Mrs. Washington could be found, surrounded by many of her servants, superintending and assisting in their work.
Copper. In India copper is almost entirely used for religious purposes, except where the worshipper is so rich he can afford silver. Ail the requisites for Hindu worship tho shrines of the gods, the platter with its floral patterns, the pedestal on which the idol is placed (luring the sacred bath, the vessels for holy water all these in a Hindu temple are of copper.
Tho Hut. There is a very strong dislike to tho bat among the peasants of South Germany. A feeling of disgust and fear takes possession of tho farmer who finds bats in his chimney, not only because he believes the creaturcc will feed upon his pork that hangs in the smoke, but because bats are ngarded as unlock', and bring poverty and misfortune.
A. Yoe can't believe anything Longbow says. 1 wonder how ho camo to be so untruthful? B. He was once a weather prophet, and I suppose the habit sticks.
Lady at the menagerie That seal always looks as If he were shedding tears. Keeper Yes. A lady came in here a minute ago wearing his longlost brother.
WHEAT AND SILVER.
THE PRICE OF ONE DOES NOT AFFECT THE OTHER.
Statistics Which Show I lull the ilcnionc tizatltld of Silver is Nul llin Cause? ol the Decline in Wheat lirover t'leiclaiiii RB a Wealth Destroyer.
First be sure you're right; then don't be too sure of it.
Would F.i:l I hp l-'urm t. In as far a tho speech made by Mr. Chaplain, a member of the Salisbury ministry, tends to strengthen belief in a rational bimet illisin, founded upon and made possillo by i;it,;riiati mil agreement, well and go id. But in as far as it helps to deepen tho entirely erroneous impression that the fall of wheat prises and the decline in the market valuo of silvflr are connected as ca ii-o and effect, it is t be deplored, and requires a. statement of tho faots of the case. Not a few sane men in this country have been led into the silver camp by this fallacious argument. They have seen wheat prices declining until the farmer's profit has been eaten away. , TJiny havo taen told again and again by the sj ecial pleaders Od the silver side that the demonetization of silver was the cause of this; and although thero is neither rhyme nor reason in tho argument, their fear that wo may bo inu. iug o .r ugriculiu al intorest and "helping Great Britain leads them to take every chance, and field to a policy of financial dostrudtioh if by so doing we might, haply, givo a lift to agriculture and cut Kneland oil from a cheap food supply.
How erroneous tho notion is we propose to show by tho facts submitted. To begin with, Mr. Chaplain must not be taken too seriously. Ho is one of tho "outs" who want to become tho "ins;" and we know that people in that position are not too careful of their facts or their premises. Mr. Cleveland was an oxcollont civil service reformer when ho was a candidate for office. It pleases Mr. Balfour and Mr. Chaplain to toli tho British farmer at thir ti-no that tho demonetization of silver is tho came of his wc-os. Tho British farmer's case is de-pcra o. Tho competition of America almost drove him out of tho business: and now, in tho face of a competition which it puzzles ovon America to meet, ho is unab!o to pay his rents or to make his industry a living ono. It pleases a member of tho opposition to say that tho party in pbwer has done thi ;. It was the GUidstb:ie government that closed the Indian mints to tho free coinage of silver: and although that wus only in pursuauce of a policy from which neither Conservative nor Liberal has swerved in the past, it would be very satisfactory, in tho pro-en; e of an early general election, to make t :o British farmor believe that the ; ilvor policy of tho party in power was responsible for the low price of wheat. That is tho political milk in tuo cocoanut. Now for the fa Is. Mr. Matthew .Marshall has written a groat deal of imbecile stuff for tho A'ow York Sun: he has also prepared an occasional article valuable for its statistical information, for, whiie his theories avo of tho wildest, his facts are generally unassailable. Wo use the statistics presented in a recent paper as tho most conveniently i repared for tho absolute disproof of tho asserted dependence of wheat prices upon the market valuo of filver. Tne statement has been refuted over and over again, but it will boar ono more rating, as long as there are still those who cling to it. The fact is that there is neither a reul nor a:i apparent i-onnection between wheat ui.d silrer prices. As has been said aptly In this case, it is just as sensible to say that the mercury in the thermometer is the cause of cold weather. It is not true that the prices of wheat and silver havo varied together, sr even in the same direction. It is not true that an ounce of silver is tie equivalent of a bushel of wheat. In ISsu, by tho report of the Secretary Of the Treasury, wheat was w.irth tl.?o n bushel: and silver, by the Director of tho Mint's report."!. 14; per Dunce. In 1SS4 wheat was worth -t ;tents, and silver $1.0!!'. That is, rheat declined 39 cents while silver declined cents. Tho following table, laken from tho London Economist is aonelusivo: Wheat, Silver, peace, peace. giio 45 i-J JM 40 53 $9 55 17'-.. 38 's S3 1P W-i 31':; Any man who, after consulting these figures, can t:aeo a relation of cause nnd effect between wheat and silver prices is beyond tho reach of mathematical demonstration. Again, there U almost as great a fallacy in assuming tjiat the Indian wheat coin;otition is ruining our market. This has to be assumed, in order to make out a caso for silver; for tho argument is that Great Britain buys In liar wheat with Hi ver at its coinage value, which it has procured from us at its bullion value, pocketing the difference and cheapening tho price of Indian wheat by that au ount. As she could not, if the argument we:e true, play this game with ijny other country than her own deleudoncy, the argument aga'u falls to the ground as s on as wo examine tho ijiioat export figures. The St. Paul Pioneer Press showed, a few days ago, tliat the Argentine Republic was at p esent the most dangerous and depressing influence in tho wheat mart ot. Tho following figures, again taken from the London Economist, eiow iho wheat imports of Great Britain for the last five years. Tho ligures fiveu represent millions of buhols: 18. 1S90. 18J1. lsu-'. isa. Home-grown 73 73 64 69 J'J fiUSstft 42 38 IS) 8.li - Vnlted States 14 63 7J 106 102 Argentina 5 7 15.6 fldia 18 IS 26 12 ether oounuica 23 35 27 35.4 '23.f Totals 210 222 220 210 121 It will be seen that tho Indian im yortation ia, relatively, a trilling inatyir; that our exports to Great Britain lavo hold thoir own fairly well, while the Indian export last year was cut l) two: and that, as a matt ;rof fact, prices were rising in England while t ho Indian import was tho greatest, and tavo been falling off while it declined. For tho first four month i of tho present year wo havo sent to Knglaud only Si,(H)0,tHKl bushels of wheat in tho rain and as Hour, against .'!!,' 00,iylO bushels for the corresponding pei iod last year. In the same time Knt'land's imports from Rus-ia increased tjy moie than 4.000.000 bushels, from (jtfiili nea ly 1.0 .0.0 m bushels, from .rgontino nearly -, 0 000 bushels, ami iiom India H.lfiKUKH) bushels. It is tonsonso to seek in the dom uiotization cf silver a cause of a fall of prices so (ally accounted for by this kind of f;pmpotition. Wo may add that during t'o periol when silver suffered a loavy fall, between 1-Sl and isstl, tho t-sports of Indian wheat to Knglaud inclined, it is absolutory proved, by statistics within tho roach of any Oslo, that thero is no such connection a, has been assorted I otweeu the price o! silver and that of wheat. No intelligent man should become tho victim 0 such a superstition, which was invented solely to procure, by false pro tenses, the votes of tho farmers for hue coinage and cheap tnuuoy. A Wi'Hillt llesi r.iyiT. It is probablo that If the truth wore Imowii it would lm found that the Cleveland panic has cost the country ifc actual money loss several ti i.ot as SOjeh as did tho civil war. A few lurgo items will show how great and U4.ivor.-sal tho shrinkugo of vuluos has bjen. The bank clearances .for 18;;l, ai compared with those of isc, foil off $li),(iO0,OiH),( 0,1. Tho mind can no more geasp the idea of lhat amount of money than it can tho idea of infinity. Seventy-live ra lroad systems, representing nno-sixth of the railway milage of the United States, went Into ,
tho haitdH of roeel' crs gross receipts of ii'l raj fell off moio than $. hun Irod and ninety -eigj their doors. Tho tu;ml)i failures increased 50 pc twolve months. I)i rinj;preceding 1HIKI the agg ties in all tho business f I'nitiil States did not ifi'iiuryioO; in I8'j;i tl :i:il,tKli,()0).' These are1 largo item? which ca with a eloSe approach to hodolinito statement cut the L'siiieral shrinkage loss of wealth product! idleness of great ranl.it
the loss to the comriorci
the non-payment of wag general pari y.is of In
turns
Every pound of
boon clipped this year third of its value. Kv animal in the counv y h
down in prices. Every In has lost from cno fourtl of its fornrsr value.
shrinkage in values th arithmetically stated has even greater than the ag largo items given above. Mr. Cleveland in ore o refer; ed to manufacturer o-nploy tho protective sy forced tribute fr. ni the zpii-. " Vet. in loss than Cleveland's party, led ;
by him, bus lnCictel upo
losses pr.muoiy exceeui!i toetivo dti'ies paid by ththe foundation of the C Indianapolis .iourmit
The Deniocrill Ic I" Tho DjiiiuCi nllc partjr 1:: and fuliod. It lius linen rl of the Fctler.il Oovcrnmo demonstrated lis lncauacl Its pledges. Harper Wef 1 It was this same ineon cratic party that t!ao a i of Civilization'' did its b
pmvor in IS'.f.'. Like all
j trade organs it is now t ! Democrats in Congiess, t i cri pled the industries i first bv threats of rio t by a period of c xaspc ratin but for having failed utt.i j them with oho deeisiu j moving every vesiigc j The incapacity of tli s 1
ty grapple ith the in
; lems of the country was.
to t , inking men in i The C licag.) platform il
S the incompetency of th : denunciation of protect'!
dustries as unci list i utioi false proten.-.os all ai'otii
I crats won the support traders and work ingrain that may soom. in its I
They promise I the freemove protection, i:n:l at ' i pledged themseho to compensation and stotn wuge-earncrs. The Free Trade s kr ' compli-h this dual purpi ; p.-issible as tomako :u ead yet they all. tho t.Uegc I Chili alien included, 1
i to the barefaced fraud a Now the Frej T adei-s w ! wroth buca 'so they ha.' ( been deceived. Thoy enough that tho Ai'iorie: crs should bo deluded j ished, but it is a terrible a Free Trade clique lievc ' vaucoinont of foreign irt
i But the alleged "icurn
ticm is riunt in saving:
era: ie pa ty has failad. to fail from the firs". It ; blo eha:iee to fulfill its i never intended to In fill I mean to wrock Aruuie; and it h s trie ! to do so i intended t raise the star ' or the stan lard of living j workingman. ! Evorv tariff bill so
! has aimed at retaining
tho industries of the Soi which do not eorao jreat ! tition with the priduc
whilo destroying those and East by opening :hoi eompetr ion of British fr free traders are dissatisf
cause they ai o after the to speak. Being ur.abk-
policy of do opt on any Democracy has Veen co i knowledge its failure, are lumping upon i t wi
They will stamp tho i.ifo fall. F.'x'ne; the R fspoie Tho responsibility for sutiar schedule in the So
which lays an annual tax ions on the American pc tracad to Secretary Car Cleveland's n an Friday business. Mi. Clevclar i f the Treasury tried, in before the investigating shift the odious lsurd
shoulders bv claim ng I I
ule finally adopted was n
drew up. Iho uead'y show how little there is put forward by Clt volai of the Treasury:
in 180. The read systems ',0iio, Five t anks closed ir of business r c nt. within the six years o,'ato liabilililuros in the much exceed icy exceeded soma of the
n bo stated
accuracy, but
I bo made of
f Caluis; the
on from tno
udes of men;
li world from
;s and from a
siness operaivool that has has lost oneury domestic is been scaled shel of wheat
to one-third
n short, the it cannot be probably been jregate of the his messages s as "men who stem to levy a ir fellow-citi-one year Mr. nd instigatod
n the country
; all tho propeople since overnment.
ililure.
s had its trhil tred In control it aad It has ,y to carry Out iy. inctent Demo-
isged "Journal
.ist to place in
be other Ireo nouncing iho .ot for having f tho count y ratio followed
uncertainty.
rly to destroy blow by roif protection, m cratic oar-
lustrial nrob-
as well known
it is to-dav.
silf b. st rayed 5 p rty by its n to homo in-
al. Through
id the Dorao-
of both freo as strange as ist campaign. :radors to re-
ho same ti ne ecuro higher Xfiv work for v th-it to aci.so was as imout of stones.
1 "Jo Trial of
came l.ai'ties
id deception, ax exceeding e themselves wore willii g in wago-earn-and impoveroffenso t ) fool ted to tho ad-orests.
nl of Civilii.a-
lat the Dome-
It was bound had m possislodges and it them. I tdid in indu trios, Hit it nover dard of wages of American
,r introduced rotoetion for th and West,
lv into c mpe-
ts of Europe, of tho North
n to tho direct
jo t: a do. Tho id. simply be-
i h le hog, so t ) carry on its lo.igjr, tho
pelled to acmtl its dupes
;h both feet, out of it next
ilillitjr. the nefarious iato tariff bill of many mill-
ople has beon
lsio, who was in the whole I s Secretary his testimony committee, to
en from his
it the sched-
;it the one ho
parallel will
in tho do'ense d's Secretary
The schedule adopted by the Senate l-'i nance Comiiiittet::
The
iKMited
On ts;n. tl
led an.
sumo
t)lltC.J
"On and after Jan. 1
IS-J5. there nhall lie levied, collected and
paid ou all sugars not
above No. lfh Dutch or, arc
ft indard in color, ondoma, on all tank bottoms, ;.iuico syrnps of cauo juice or oodcci
or ueet juice, maiaua, ooncre concentrated m.tlad i, drilled concrete or conceu-:of 40 p trutcd molasses, aent, ai duty ot 4 per cent, act above
valorem, and upon all it inda
sugars above Iso. li Hhall Dutch standard in col- or 45 p. or there shall be lev- out," e ieii, collected and paid, a duty of oue-eialith of; one per cfnt. per; pound, in addition toj the said duty of 10 per. cent, ad valorem " Comparing these two will bo seen that both j." trust all it asked. Botl time between the p.issi and tho 1st of January, 1 ing up froo raw sugar, a ports estimate wov.ld b' millions to tho trust H
cent, ad valorem i
Konedule proby Carlisle:
md after Jan. 1, ere shall be lev-
1 collected on all lot above Xo. 16
standard in colou till tank botsyiupa ol cane ir oi' beet juice, trated mclada, ;e and conccn-
molasses, a duty ;r cent, ad valor 1 upon ail snxars No. li Hutch rd in color there
collect ed a duty r cent, ad valor-c.
PC
sugar. Hie only taltoi'i tho two schedules is that valorem duty of Jo per sugar is converted into ad valorem duty uliis a is; i of I per cent, a pound. ( omnienting on this ch
York Sun says: "It :s for
tormine which of tho two ! is mo. o ben slieial t i tha
curiously we havo oi root
tarv's opinion that there . eal' difference between '.schedule." Si,uii m us it I land ndmini tration oai the responsibility of doi cnab o a h artless trust t the American people ui lurs which was to revvar
tributing to Hie Clerela
fund a half million dollar
folio lules, it ve the sugar gave it the jo of the bill Ht ."), for stock'avor that cxi worth fifty oth place a -.0 luty on raw nco between Carlisle's ad nt. on refined
a 4b per cent, locilic duty of
iirige tho New oxperts to deu rangemenU trust. Very nil tho Seereis no piactitho original lay t he Cleveuot got out of ljr its host Jo ) wring out of illions of dol-
l it tor c n-
nd eampai.ru
s.
Inv a In itlna ltt'fo I ot us sco. Durii g il ministrati n no have ua ing invec. iga i ns: Inv Judge .tonkin.-, tho illumesor of Judge tiro luim, make men work whe;hei to or not at v t.gos ollorod gation of t o Carn-g c
frauds, the penalty m dent Cleveland in part which Mr. Carnegie ti written a loiter in wliich the miraculous lea': of Wilson hi I: the Miua t:'
tion, iiiid others of ii)Mi or at least loss Tho adniinlst ratio - see opciK d with inves-.igat.i cliu ices are geod for c same way. Be form sit I oen east in iinsueeir. sfu since the reform Congroi istration came into xmof the ' eoplo has been b ruforinoro. - Dos Moiuos 1
i in reform add the fellow's tic a ion of static suceesfcr trying to thoy wanted : the investi-
nrmor plate iv lieh I'resironi'ttod, for ems to hare he orfprni. d indorsing tho ist invo-tit'a-impo tai'co, prominence.
ins to havo mis, and tile lo-iug in the trs to have vay . Evor ,s and adminst th ! de ire r a reform of veg'stor.
SI.
The Royal Baking Powder is indispensable to progress in cookery and to the comfort and convenience of modern housekeeping. Royal Baking Powder makes hot bread wholesome. Perfectly leavens without fermentation. Qualities that are peculiar to it alone. ROYAL BAKING! POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
Asking for Information.
Da. Parry was quite witty, and always took tho laugh heartily when he got tho worst of a d'oke. On one occasion; in company with Drs. Mothershead and Bullard, he was returning from a call oh the Bluff road when a
sallow-faced, Ki-yeaf-Old boy stopped his work and ran to the fence to intercept them "Just look at that boy," said one of the doctors. VLeave him to me," said Parry. Mounting the fence tbe boy shouted: "How is that man?" (referring to the patient they had just left, ) "He's sick," replied Parry. ''I knowed tbat already," said the bov. "Well, then, why did you ask?" demanded Parry. Tho boy instantly rejoined: "Cause I wanted to see if you knew anything or was a durn fool." His companions laughed, while Parry hung his head, feeling that for once he had met his match. Albany Argus. To Exterminate Hooches, I tried every remedy I could hear of, writes a housewife, and I was always inquiring. They seemed to fatten on my poisons; at least, their numbers did not suffer diminution. One day I took ud an old almanac and idly turned
its tattered yellow pages, and on the
last tragment ot a leal came tnis: "Equal portions of corn meal and red lead mixed with molasses and spread on plates will destroy roaches." And
it did. I put it in several dishes and set them on the floor, and at 9 o'clock
stole softly out to see if they ate it. The dishes were so covered with
roaches that the mixture was scarcely visible. The next nlirht there were
lewer at the feast, add in a week not a roach was seen. I lived seven years thereafter in the same house ana never
Stallion Flfhta.
Stallion fights are not uncommon on
the pastures of Chlncoteague island,
where some hundreds of ponies run
wild. Each full-grown stallion leads a
band ot mares and colts, as tne
younger stallk ns approach full growth
tney are tne obeects oi jealousy on tne
part of their elders, and so frequent
and savage ere tne ngnts that tne
older stallions must, after a lew years,
bo removed from the pasture. The stallions of the Chincoteague breed are
considerably heavier than the mares.
and verv sturdy. They are excellent swimmers, and they sometimes swim narrow arms of Chincoteague sound to
islets where the marsh grass Is espe
cially rich and vivid. New York Sun.
Important Adrlce Wanted,
"You newspaper men know most
everything, don't your" asicea tne woman with the square chin, as she planted herse'f in a chair alongside tho editorial desk.
The editor dodged a d rect answer
by asking the woman what was the trouble. "It is jist th:s way," she said. "You see, I went to see a lawyer last week to see about gitt'n a divorce, an' paid him $25 in advance. Yistiddy the old man trot run over with a coal cart an'
got his neck broke, an'ofcourseldon't need no divorce from a dead man, an' I want to know if the lawyer can keep that money, or can I make 'im chip it
in ter the funeral expenses.'" How to Batter Thin Bread. "I like my sandwiches with the bread cut thin," said Mr. Googleby, "but I seldom try to make them in that way myself, for they always make me angry, 'the bread crumbles and curls up so when I try to spread it. Mrs. Googleby has no such trouble, however, and this mornin' I discovered why; she butters the cut end of the loaf before outtin' off the slice. Simple, ain't it; and Mrs. Googleby tells mo it's as old as tha hills." New York Sun.
A lieorj la Egg, Mr. W. L. Vaughn of Lawrenceville, has a queer age. In its appearance there is nothing peculiar about it It is about the size of an ordinary hen's egg, although not much over half as heavy. But roll the egg out of your hand on to a table, and then the fun commences, for as soon as this is done it begins, to perform the nost astonishing antic's!. It will dance around like a top for a few seconds, and then settle down -on its little end. Atlanta Constitution.
Single Life. The Australian aborigine adopts a summary process when weary of single life. He looks rvbjut for a partner and, finding one to his 11 king, stalks her, and watching his opportunity stuns her with a sudden blow, and carries her off to her new homo, where it is to be hoped, on her return to consciousness his aftor tenderness makes some atonement for his rough and ready way of wooing. Nothing Sorprlalnfr. Sir. Walter Pcott called ono day at the office o." Joseph Gillon, an Edinburgh lawyer. "Why, Joseph," said Sir Walter, "this place is as hot as ah oven!" "Well, and isn't it here that I make my bread?" retorted Gillon.
We all potter too much.
THB VERY TSnra FOB CHILDREN
Doctor flares Pleasant Pellet. They're ao ttoy, as easily taken, ao easy and natural in the way they act no disturbance, no unpleasantness, no reaction afterward. They're made ot
nothing but refined and concentrated Tearetable
extracts sugar-coated. One of them at a dose is a corrective, a regulator, a gen tie laxative. Whan you feel " a tonoa of bllinutnsss " or Indigestion, take one of these littib Pellets. They go right to the spot. They absolutely and permanently cure Constipation, Sour Stomach, Dlastness, Sick or Bilious Headaches, and every derangement of the liver, stomach, and bowels. Almost nmr does Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy fail to cure the very worst cases ot chronic Catarrh. You can judge of tbe chances of it from the makers' offer. They'll
yvuruniK Mi in every
To Whiten the Teeth. A homely set of teeth will spoil tha prettiest mouth ever fashioned after Cupid's bowstring. On the other hand, a commonplace face becomes positively attractive when the lips open and disclose two rows of clean, well-kept ivories. They need, not be like dentrifice advertisements, and the "pearls" of the old-fashioned heroine are in this practical age but slightly esteemed, but there must be about tbe wellgroomed mouth a wholesome, cleanly look. Precipitated chalk will keep tbe teeth in fine condition. Have box of it always on your toilet stand and see what it will do towards fresh, ening up a dingy mouthful of teeth. New York World. Those Little Sieve! The kidneys, separate from the blood, as M passes through them, impurities for which tha final medium of liberation from the system la the bladder. When their function Is suspended direful reenlteensne. Amonc these are dropsy. B right's disease, diabetes and maladies which terminate in some one ot these. Hoe tetter's Stomach Bitters stimulates the kidneys, not as an unmedicated alcoholic stimulant would by Inciting them, but by gently impelling them to renewed action and perpetuating their activity and vigor. Thus the blood Is ono moreiir sured purification and the organs themselves saved from destruction. Malaria, oastiuatlon, liver complaint, nervousness, dyspepsia and rheumatism are all thoroughlyremedied by the Bitters, which is, moreover, a most thorough appetiser, general toulo aad sleep promoter. Use it regularly, not ssmtoccaslonally. The Cost of 14 Ting. According to some recent statistics of tbe cost of living an Englishman spends on an average 948 a year for food, a Frenchman $47. a German $42, a Spaniard $33, an Italian $24, and a Russian $23. Of meat the Englishman eats 109 pounds a vear, the Frenchman 87, the German 64, the Italian 26, and the Russian 51. Of bread tho Englishman consumes 380 pounds, the Frenchman 540, the German 560, the Spaniard 480, the Italian 400, and the Russian 635. Scientific American.
She (carefully questioning! Are yon a married man? He (carefully answering I don't know. My latest tel egram from Chicago says that the jury is still out. LES8 THAN HALF RATES TO COLORADO On June SSd and 24th The Korth-Westera Line will sell excursion tickets to Denver. Pueblo, and Colorado Springs and return al the exceedingly low rate ot S7.60 less than one fare for tbe round trip; tickets good for return passage until Jury 37, in elusive, Solid Vestibuled Trains. FaladS Sleeping Cars and Superb Dining Cars through between Chicago and Denver daily, via the Chicago & North-Western B'y. "o detailed information apply to agents of connecting lines, ur address W. A. Thrall. Gen era! Passenger and Ticket Agent. Chicago. Shocked Lady Do you know what becomes of little boys who swear? Lit? tie Boy Yes'm. W'en they gets big 'nough they kin earn two an' a halt a day drivin' a team. Nicksx Plate Agents at all points from Fostoria to Valparaiso inclusive, will sell excursion tickets to Fort Wayne, account Exhibition of Last Days or Pompeii at rat or one fare for the round trip. Bee Agent of that popular line for dates. M. C. Baxhb. Disk Pass. Agent
Women are more faithful to a memory than men. Alt of them cling as tenaciously and as long to their youth as they can, and yet with many of them it is a mere memory. Hall's Catarrh Core Is taken internally. Price 7S cents
The fault finder we have always with us. When Gabriel blows the last trump some disagreeable carper will complain that he hasn't hit the proper key. The wise physician knows how to put sunbeams in pills. Attkxe the Fort Wayne Business Collage.
The man who says "yes" only talks a great deal too much.
"Mt dear fellow, she Is an aageL How exquisitely lovely her complexion U. They say she uses Glenn's Sulphur Soap."
Every lean man thinks it would be easy to get rid of excessive fat. Shiloh's Consumption Core Is sold on a gear. aat. It curs Incipient Coasamptioa. It Is tL bast Cousn Our. 29 csats. ca ud SUt.
DO 10U LIKE TO TRAYELt , READ THIS ABOUT CALIFORNIA! The WABASH RAILROAD has placed' on sale low rate tingle and round trip tickets te all principal Pacific roast points, fixing a wlds choice of routes both going and returning, with an extreme return limit of Mine Months, Stop-overs are granted at pleasure oa round trip tickets west of St. Louis and tho Missouri River, and by taking th WABASH but one change of cars Is necessary to reach Los Angelas, San Francisco, San Diego, Sacramento and Portland, Ore. Remember the WABASH fa the peoples favorite rout and Is th only line running magnificent J.rs Reclining Chair Cars and Palace Sleepers fa all through fait trains to St. Louis, Kansas City and Omaha For Rates, routes, maps, and general Information, call npoa or adt rets any of the u Ddermerttioned Passenger Agents of the Wabash System. R. 8. SUTLER. D. F A., Detroit. Hle f. H. TRISTRAM. O. P. A.. Pittsburg, Pa. P. E. MNBAugn. P. A T. A.. Toledo. Old. R. C. THOMPSON P. T. A., Fort Wayne, la 1. HALDERMAN, at. P. A - 101 Clark St., Chtesfo, IB. fl. 0. MAXFIELB. D. P. A.. lndIsnspoTis,7nsl r. CHANDLER. Q. P. A T. A., St. Louis, if.
PATENTS. TRADE-HARKS.
Exsnlsatliw and Adfies as to Patentability of laveuttoh. Ssnd fur luveators' Oniils. or How te Oat a Psion. PsTaicx O'FakaiLL, Washington. D. &
XIDDEJ8PA8T1
r. w. s. ir. -
Smteuersnnsnss
s.awisHta
a PrfenSSm 1
rnsll. 8tosrllOa
Ko. SS-M
Whnn IVi-irlntv te A ilvtanrl
m- . . . iiiivi wvciw rscsij jwwspsass
XX. T. XX. 3MCo3lsea,XX!, I i i iiirn inn ifintiii-v mi 11 $
LI WCIl MNU KlUfiE. I UALI.I I
9
S ONI UOLIAK
S A BOTTLB.
pesrlets rsmsdy for diseases of th
uver, moneys ana urinary oigans.
LMamfMtmd by THE 4. H. MoLEAN MEDICI N 5 CO., St. Louis, Mo S
