Decatur Democrat, Volume 35, Number 32, Decatur, Adams County, 30 October 1891 — Page 3

- r P<jt/ f caHNffltt>a&a» * ' As good as new —that’s the condition of liver, stomach and bowels, when Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets have done their ■work. It’s a work that isn’t, finished when you’ve stopped taking them, either. It’s lasting. They cure, as well as relieve. And it’s all done so mildly and gently! There’s none of the violence that went with the old-time pill. One tiny, sugar-coated Pellet’s a gentle laxative — three to four act as a cathartic. Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the stomach and bowels, are prevented, 'relieved and Cured. As a Liver Pill, they’re unequaled. They’re purely vegetable, perfectly harmless — the smallest, cheapest, and easiest to take. They’re the cheapest pill you can buy, because they’re guaranteed to give satisfaction, or your money is returned. You only pay for the good you get. Can you ask more ? That’s the peculiar plan all Dr. Pierce’s medicines are sold on. ' DRKILMER’S Ffocßf Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cure. The Great Sped tic for “Brlsht’a dlKca.o,” urinary troubles, kidney difficulties, and impure blood. IP YOU have sediment in urine like brick dust, frequent calls or retention; IF YOU have gravel, catarrh of the bladder, excessive desire, dribbling or stoppage of urine. IF YOU have torpid liver, malaria, dropsy, fever and ague, gall stone, or gout; IF YOU feel irritable, rheumatic, stitch in the back, tired or sleepless and all unstrung; SWAMP-ROOT builds up quickly a rundown constitution, and makes the weak strong. Guarantee- Use contents of One Bottle, if you are not benefited, Druggist will refund to you the price paid. At Druggists, sOc. Size, SI.OO Size. 'lnvalids* Gride to Health” sent free-Consultation free Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. SHILOH’S CONSUMPTION CURE.' The success of this Great Cough Cure is without a parallel in the history of medicine. All druggists are authorized to sell it on a positive guarantee, a test that no other cure can successfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home in the United States and Canada. If you have a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for it will cure you. If your child has the Croup, or Whooping Cough, use it promptly, and relief is sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for SHILOH’S CURE, Price io cts., 50 cts. and fl.oo. If your Lungs are sore or Back lame, use Shiloh’s Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts. DONALD KENNEDY Os says Kennedy’s Medical Discovery cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep Seated Ulcers of 40 years’ 1 standing, Inward Tumors, and every disease of the skin, except Thunder Humor, and Cancer that has taken root. Price si.so. bold by every Druggist in the U. S. and Canada. Catarrh CREAM IS worth wCATARHVnI SSOO to any man, gJAY Woman or Chib Buflbtlng from / / * " »»’'*’«“• [5 AY*FEVER A particle is app iediin each u>sml and is agreeable. Price 50 cent nt Dr gg. u, . by mail. ELY BROTHERS 56U <■ • , Street. New Yort._ a% ■ ■ ■■ rite ANAKKSlSglvesinstant I I I reliet. nd is an INFaLLII V HI.E UkE for PILES. ■ ■ ■■ W Pr.c-e.SI; at druggists or ILLu S ■ Boxailfl, Naw Yom Cm, IVORY SOAP . 99- Pure. THE BEST FOR EVERY PURPOSE. .... ■ ■

WHO PAYS THE TARIFF? IT IS NOT PAID BY. THE FOREIGNERS. The Lessons Taught by the Duties on Crockery—Complete Refutation of McKinley’s Assertion That the Foreigner Pays the Tax-Facts for Farmers to Consider—Tariff Shot. The Tariff laaTax. In a recent spee h which he delivered in Ohio Major McKinley said: “Don’t you be ieve those wicked Democrats when they tell you that the tariff is a tax. The foreigner pays it; - you don’t. • And then without proving his assertion, he asked, “How, then, can the tariff be a burden to the people of this country?" When Major McKin ey was in Congress he was the special representative of the pottery and glass trust, whicn had many factories located in his district. During the tariff debates he always had a lot of chinaware upon his desk, to show his fellow Congressmen and the visitors in the galleries that his desk was the stand and he the champion of the pottery combines. It is to be presumed, therefore, that when McKinley says the foreign manufacturers. and not the consumers in the United States, pay the tariff tax, he has in mind that upon crockery ware, with which he claims to be thoroughly conversant fcuch b ing the case, lie cannot dodge the following facts, since they deal with his own particular hobby. The time is past when mere assertions of general principles regarding the tariff, no matter by whom made, will be taken as gospel truth. They must be backed up by facts. For over thirty years we have had very light duties upon crockery and earthenward. During this period combines have been formed among the manufacturers on the one hand to keep up prices and on the other to cut down the wages of the workmen employedin their factories. These pottery combines charge for their goods all that the tariff will allow, as is shown in the following table, which gives for first quality white granite ware the net wholesale prices as charged by the East Liverpool and Trenton manufacturers in this country and by the pottery manufacturers in England, from which the greater part of our imports come. The prices given are absolutely correct, being taken in each instance from the price lists and discount sheets. In the table the first column shows the foreign price per dozen, the second the American price, the third the amount which the American price exceeds the foreign price, and the fourth the amount of duties charged on the foreign ware when imported into the United States. English E.Liv- Higher prices erpool in East Articles. per prices Liver- Duties Plates flat — dozen.' pr. doz. pool. paid. 4 inch........ $0,167 $0.28 $0,113 SO.oUIB 6 inch 263 .44 .177 .1446 8 inch .859 .60 .241 .1974 P.ates deep—--6 inch 263 .56 , .297 .1446 8 inch .359 .54 .281 .1914 Bakers’ - 6 inch. /479 .70 .221 .2634 8 nchß63 1.40 .537 .4746 l‘J inch 1.438 2.35 .912 .7909 Bowls — 365319 .50 .181 .1754 245..479 .74 .231 .2634 Cover Dishes — 7 inch- 2.013 3.20 1.187 1.1071 9 inch 2,588 4.00 1.412 1.4234 Dishes - Cinch .335 .53 .245 .1842 8 inch 479 .80 .321 .2034 10 inch.B63 1 44 .577 .4746 12 inch 1.438 2.52 1.052 .7909 16 inch 3.163 5.76 2.597 1.7396 Teas— Handled .383 .666 .283 .2106 Unhaffiiled... .319 .C 66 .247 .1754 Handled.,,... .444 .8 0 .356 .2142 Uuhandled... .383 .7,0 .317 .2106 Butters Cjvered—cinch 1.725 2.810 1.075 .9487 Total 22 doz. assort’d ware $19,122 $32,042 $12,920 $10.5162 Add to the duties as given above on the ware alone, the duties on the packages and charges, and the cost of importation, the above figures show clearly that the pottery combine charges American consumers all that the tariff will allow. What, in view of the above facts, becomes of the assertion of McKinley that “the foreigner pays the tax; you don’t?” A Dead Loss. The standing bids for American tinplate are still unanswered, as the entire “output” seems to be required to supply the Republican campaign committees with badges which all sensible people are ashamed to wear. In the meantime the canning business is being very seriously cramped. Before the tax on tinplate was increased, small canning factories were beginning to spring up through the West, relying on neighborhood supply of fruits and vegetables, and making a living profit both for themselves and the farmers. The business, of course, depends wholly on having tin cans plentiful and cheap. Otherwise these small factories cannot preserve the food at a profit, and it is left to rot in the fields. The farmers of Howard county, Indiana, had such a canning factory at Kokomo, as a “home market” for their surplus vegetables, but the McKinley bill forced an advance of over 25 per cent, in the price of cans. The result is the demoralization of new industry, which was one of the few the East could not take from the West “The farmers of Howard county planted hundred of acres of tomatoes,” says the Kokomo Dispatch. “The crop is excellent, and every grower stood to realize from $35 to SIOO per acre There is no chance of this now. To-day the Kokomo Canning Works refused to receive another bushel of the vegetable for au indefinite time. The reason given is that cans for packing the tomatoes cannot be had. Thousands of bushels are rotting in the yards at the works Tons unon tons are decaying in the fields. The loss to Howard County farmers cannot be ebunted in less than five figures. No w on der they are asking for the whereabouts of the ‘infant tin industries ’ ” The loss here is a “dead loss. ” The tinplate combine does not gain it. They get their profit under the tax in other directions. Here this food, which under fair trade would have been marketed to feed the poor of the cities, is lost to them, and the labor required for its production is likewise lost. Where plenty is created as a natural result of labor and trade, artificial scarcity is produced by the tax on trade. The result is a dead loss, in this case as in every case of taxation levied to produce artificial scarcity.— St Louis Republic.

One Result of Protection. ~“I have the authority of the American Economist (the organ of the Protective Tariff League) that in 1889 the number of people in the XJnited States who : owned their own homes had in twenty* five years fallen from five-eighths to I three eighths. How long will it take I them to fall to One-eighth or one-thou-sandth? History is not without lessons in. thia regard. and I quote from the Progress, published in Boston: “ ‘When Egypt went down 2 per centof her people owned 97 per cent of her wealth. The people were starved to 1 death. When Babylon went down 2 per cent of her people owned all of her wealth. The people were starved to death. When Persia went down 1 per cent of her population owned ‘all the land. When Rome went down 1,800 men owned all the known world.’ < “In 1850 in this country the capitalists owned 37 X per cent of our wealth. To-day they own more than twice that •mount of our wealth. Have they been i

more honest, more Indnstrions, more enterprising? Have they lived doser? Have they deserved better at ' the hands of Providence or of their countrymen than the farmers and wage workers, or even of the lawyers, doctors and preachers. ** —Gov. Campbell, at Ada. COMMERCE AND TARIFFS. High Tariffs Restrict, Low Tariffs Promote Commerce—What Lessons European Tariffs Teach—Shall the United States Be Classified with Russia and Portugal? No statement is more commonly made by the advocates of high tariffs than that our example has been adopted by many of the European countries, such as France, Germany, Sweden, etc. It is asserted that these countries have been influenced by the example of Great Britain to follow in the track of the United States, and, finally, that their action in this regard affords the best possible reason why the United States should continue in its high-tariff policy. A comparison of the imposts and customs duties collected by the leading nations of Europe will sufficiently show the falsity of such claims as the followers of McKinley are now making. Such a comparison is given in the following tab e: Rate Popu- Im- Customs ct. lation. ports, revenue, duty Countries. -Mill’s. Mill’s. Mill’s. ct. Belgium, 1888.... 6. 307.5 5.5 1.82 Switzerland, 1890... 3. 165. 5.1 3.39 Netherlands, 1889.. 4.5 508. 20. 3.93 U. Kingdom, 1889.. .37.3 21(0. 100. 4.76 Germany, 1890 48. 860. 58. 6.74 Aus-Hungary, 1888..40. 267.5 20. 7.49 Franco, 189039. 821. > 75. T 1.13 Sweden, 1890., 4.9 81. 10. 12.87 Norway. 1899 2. • 42.7 5.5 12.89 Italy, 189030. 235. 53. 22.55 United States, 1889.62. 745. 224. 30.00 Bussia iu Europe, 188988. 159. 58. 36.49 Portugal, 1890 5.2 41.5 19.5 47 00 The duties imposed by the McKinley tariff will raise the average rate in the United States to over 40 per cent, thus placing us next to Portugal in this respect. The McKinley tariff is regarded by its makers to be the lowest tariff consistent with our protective policy. Such being the. case, the United Stat 'S and Portugal are the only truly protective countries; while of all other countries Russia approaches nearest us in this respect. In accordance with the doctrines of McKinley, all other countries have free trade tariffs. li Germany and France, with duties averaging 6.74 per cent, and 9.13 per cent, respectively, are io be considered protectionist countries, how can McKinley justify an average rate on both free and dutiable goods of over 40 per cent, as but fair protection for the United States? The above figures give a conclusive answer to Mr. McKinley’s statements that a high tariff does not restrict foreign trade. The feebler European countries, as shown in the above table, have a combined population of 308,000,000 and import annually $5,588,000,000 of merchandise. The first four nations having strictly revenue tariffs, their combined duties averaging only 3.90 per cent., have only 16. per cent, of the population and over 55 per cent, of the total commerce. The next three countries, or Austria, France and Germany, with tariffs which are largely for revenue and but slightly protective, their combined duties averaging only 8 per cent, have 41 per cent, of the population and 34.8 per cent of the commerce. > , % On the other hand, Italy, Portugal, and Russia are, like the United States, highly protective, their duties averaging over 30 per cent., have over 40 per cent, of the population, and only 7.7 percent, of the total Imports. Briefly summarized, the amount of Imports per head of population is as follows: Av. duty. Per cap. First group 3.1 X) per cent. $60.58 Second groupß.oo per cent. 15.34 Third group3o.oo per cent. 3.53 Can any evidence establish more conclusively the destructive influence of high tariffs upon commerce? Leaving out of consideration the effect of high tariffs upon the advancement of nations in civilization, why should we follow the policy of Russia and Portugal, and restrict and pervert the development of our enormous resources? TARIFF SHOT. The Home Market for Wheat of Which Protectionists Boast. In March, 1890, the statistic an of the Department of Agriculture published a report showing the production and distrlnution of the wheat crop of 1888. In this report he “gave away” the home market, which protectionists boast has been established by high tariffs. The following are his figures, graphically illustrated: Total wheat crop in 1888, 415,868,000 bushels, of which 181,750,078 bushels wore consumed by the farmers themselves in the county where grown. ’ and 54,013,702 bushels were used by the farmers for seed. MBfiH Os the remainder, 88,600,743 bushqls were exported, o leaving 91,504,437 bushels, a part of which was held in reserve, a part consumed in markets claimed by no one to have been built up by protection, and the remaindc. consumed in home market provided uy protection. In 1888, or sixty-two years after Clay launched his “American System” to provide a “home market” for our surplus farm produce, we* find that the boasted home market takes less than 25 per cent of our crop of wheat, exclusive of that reserved for seed, while we continue to export over 24% per cent of it. For the Farmers to Consider. In its issue for Oct. 16 the American Economist, the organ of the Protective Tariff League, publishes a chart showing the price of wheat and flour under the low tariffs, from 1850 to 1860, and under the high tariff since 1860, which it points to as showing the triumphs of high tariffs. It shows that wheat went up tn price from 2.6 c per pound in 1850 to 3c per pound in 1860, or over 15% per cent. Under the high tariffs it fell to 2.3 c per pound <in 1887, or a fall of over 23 per cent This fall in price of over 23 per cent, is ascribed by the Economist to the high tariff. The gold coming back from Europe, over which the Republicans are cackling so, is brought back .by Western farm products dug out of the ground by unprotected Western work and sold under free trade. The products of the highly protected machines of the McKinley corporations are not bringing it back- Tne Plutocratic machine-owners do not trouble themselves to go abroad after gold; They content themselves, with taking it after it gets here. If the farmer, whose products brought it, demands his share, they call him a “crank” and a “calamity shrieker. ” The water of the central basin of the Mediterranean has been found to be warmer, denser and richer In dissolved salts than the western. While a white disk was only visible at forty-three meters, photographic plates were affected at 500 meters.

The Dull Thn«Mm% * It is evident that there will have to be a national party organized, perhaps a dynamite party, to annihilate the fiends who write for newspapers and everlastingly use the expression, “dull thud.** With these writers anything and everything falls with a dull thud, from the carcass of a man who is hung for crime to the sesthetio and fairy like maiden who experiments on roller skates. Every day for a month the dispatches have contained a “dull thud** or two, and the local writers of the city and country papers have described the falling of more things with “dull thuds” than would fill a box car. Th’e expression originated with a reporter for a paper published in Europe, many centuries ago, in reference to a man who fell off the highest pinnacle of a mountain, and struck several miles below, with a “dull thud.” It might have been an appropriate expression at that time, but during the hundreds of years that'have passed since the dull thud has-been worn so that it creates a smile when the wayfaring man reads about such a fall. The dull thud is almost equal, in amusement,.to the expression always used by new reporters in describing a fire, “the scene beggars description.” Many people have been driven to desperation by reading of the dull thud, and a stop should be put to it. Some newspapers make a rule that any person who uses the expression “dull thud” shall be at once discharged, but within a week the managing editor, or the proprietor of the paper will write something editorial, descriptive of a fall, and will unconsciously work in the dull thud, when, of course, the rule is suspended. There is no expression that seems to linger about in the recesses of the brain, ready to come forth unawares, like the dull thud. Dramatic critics, in speaking of some unusual bit of acting, -describe the heroine falling, swooning, into the arms of the hero, with a dull thud. If we could have a sharp thud, for a change, it would brace newspaper readers up so they could stand another season of dull thud, but nobody seems to take the responsibility of making the change. What it wants is a society of desperate men, men who would not hesitate to commit murder, who shall band together and be bound by a bloody oath. It should be their duty to read the papers and when they see the expression “dull thud” they should haunt the newspaper office until they have discovered the perpetrator, and then follow him to the free-lunch counter, and while he is firing the liver sausage down his neck, poison his beer, or choke him to death, and place upon the body a paper with a skull and cross-bones, and a warning, “This shall be the fate of all dull thudders.” A reign of terror could be inaugurated that would, after a few hundred dull thudders had been slain, wipe out the senseless practice of causing everything to fall with a dull thud. Let such a band be organized, and first man who uses the expression, “dull thud,” to fall in his tracks, by the hand of the avengers, with a dull thud.— Peck’s Sun.

Come to Stay. The terribly aggravated form of influenza, which physicians on the continent of Europe designate as **la grippe,* aeema to have effected a permanent lodgment thia aide the Atlantic. It makes its reappearance as soon a» the cool weather seta in, and not infrequently during the summer months. In the spring it is rampant. Nothing checks its flrat attack, or so effectually counteracts its subsequent ravages, as Hostetter’a Stomach Bitters. The fortifying, invigorating influence of that beneficent tonic protect* the system against the danger# which beset a feeble physique and a weakly constitution consequent upon abrupt transitions of temperature. It - iffuses a genial whrnith through the diaphragm, which is the best corrective Or preventive of a chill, and is a means of neutralizing the effect of exposure in damp or rigorous weather. In dyspepsia, liver complaint, costivencsa, rheumatism, malarial and kidney troubles it is never resorted to without good results. Typewriter Champion. Frank E. McGurrin, of Salt Lake City, claims the championship as the fastest typewriter in the world. He does not glance at the Key-board while reading copy. He covers the board with his hands and uses the finger movement, instead of the wrist movement His record is 124J6 words, exclusive of errors, from dictation, in a minute. On a single memorized sentence he wrote at the rate of 156 words in a minute. Miss Orr and Miss Grant of New York, are the only operators who approach McGurrin in swiftness and accuracy. McGurrin defeated Miss Orr by three words, and was afterward defeated by her. Miss Orr’s best record is 93 4-5 words a minute. A Mild Winter. , , A Milwaukee weather prophet predicts another mild winter, with no severely cold weather until the latter part of February. He bases his conclusions upon the direction of the winds at the time of the autumnal equinox, wh ch, he affirms, determines their prevailing direction for the ensuing three months. How’s Thia? We offer One Hundred DoUafa lot any case of catairh that cannot be cured by taking Hall’n Catarrh Cure. F. J. pHENEY & CO., Propc, Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last fifteen years, and believe him per. fectly honorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. West* Ttvax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Welding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Drugfists, Toledo. Ohio. [all’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 75c per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Wanted the Author. Author (of new play In far Western theater) —Hark! What’s that queer noise? Western Manager—Comes from the audience. “Eh? Is that their style of applauding?” “No. It’s the clicking of revolvers. I think they are getting ready to call for the author.”—New York Weekly. Fob some time I had been troubled with Liver Complaint; exhibited all the common symptoms, biliousness, headache, poor digestion, furred and coated tongue, bad taste in the mouth, etc. Swamp-Root cured me. Am having great sale on your Remedies. J. C. McCullough. The Druggist, Lawrenceburgh. Ind. The man who sells beer by the schooner is the one exception to the rule that no man can serve two-masters. Tbcrb is an Indian in the milk business in Chicago. He is probably of the Chalktaw tribe. Health I* tbs* state whan all the organs ot tho body perform their functions in regular and efltoient manner; and to remove any obstruction to SMh action is the proper duty ot medicine. Hood’s Sarsaparilla gives health by purifying the blood, toning the atomaoh and bowels, and invigorating the kidneys and liver. Therefore, if you are in poor health, take Hood’S Sarsaparilla. HOOD'S PILLS-Best Uver invigorator and eathartio. BiUable»ofitotivo,gentte. Frias Mo. ''Ms-nJi

Commendable. AH claims not.consistent with the high character of Syrup of Figs ar* purposely avoided by the Cal. Fig Syrup Company. It acts gently on the kidneys, liver end bomels. cleansing the system effectually. but It is not a cure-all and makes no pretensions that every bottle will not substaatlate. Me Chanoe for Shirking. Stranger—How do you remember the names of all these foreigners? Contractor—We don’t try to. We number them. Chalk the numbers on their breeches. “I should think the chalk marks would get rubbed off.'* “If they lose the chalk marks they get bo pay, and they all understand it” “Humph! Where do you put the mark?” “Right where it will get rubbed off If they sit down.”—Street & Smith’s Good News. Happy*Baby I Because he is healthy. There is no baby comfort but in health. There is no baby beauty but in health. All his comfort is from fat. and most of his beauty. Fat is almost everything to him. That is why babies are fat. It is baby's wealth, his surplus What he does not need for immediate use he tucks under his velvet skin to cushion him out and keep the hard world from touching him. This makes curves and dimples. Nature is fond of turning use into beauty. AU life inside; all fat outside. He has nothing to do but to sleep and grow. You know aU this—at least you feel it. When baby is plump you are as happy as he is. Keep him so. ° But what if the fat is not there? Poor baby! we must get it there. To be thin for a baby, is to lose what belongs to him. Why should the little mortal begin his life with suffering. Go to your doctor. Don’t be dosing your baby when aU it needs is a Uttle management. A little book on careful living, of infinite value. wiU be sent free if you write for it to Scott & Bowne. Chemists. 132 South Fifth Avenue. New York. Scott’s Emulsion of cod-liver oil, at any drug-store. sl. Surplus Production. California has more than bountiful harvests this year. Not nearly all of her fruit can be disposed of and the potato crop is so enormously large that thousands of bushels are being allowed to rot iu the fields. A prominent grower says that in one district, near Sacramento, no less than 60,000 bushels of potatoes were not dug, because it would not pay to market them. Some of the growers plowed up the potatoes and allowed them to remain on the ground as a fertilizer for the other crops which were put in. It gives us pleasure to refer to the advertisement of Dr. W. H. Tutt which appears in our columns. For over twenty-five yeaife Tutt’s Pills have been before the public. and each succeeding year their valuable properties become better appreciated. • They now stand second to nene for the relief of that much abused and overtaxed organ, the liver, and for the removal of that cause of so many ills, constipation. They are used in every civilized country, ana carry with them voluminous testimonials of their safety and efficacy. Tutt’s Liver Pills should have a place in every household. Bell-Wind I ng. An exchange credits a watchmaker with a word from his trade to describe the amiable nuisances who talk too much. The watchmaker had been called from his work to hear from a customer a long story about the behavior of her watch, told several times over. “Oh dear!” said he; “I hate to have these self-winding talkers come in!” The Only One Ever Printed—Can Yon Find the Word,? There is a 3*inch display advertisement in this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same is true ot each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a “Crescent" on everything they make and publish. Look for it. send them the name of the word, and they will return you book, bisautis'ull lithographs, ob samples free. A Mistaken Horse, A horse at Santa Cruz, Cal., the other day mistook his mistress’ hat, which was trimmed with oats and clover-blossoms, for a particularly delicious mouthful of green, and he took it all in at one fell swoop. He was doomed to disappointment, for the oats were stuffed with cotton and the stems were made of wire. Longevity In English Almshouses.' There are apparently no localities more conducive to old age than the English almshouses. There are nine inmates in the Camberwell workhouse who have reached ages varying from 103 to 108 years.

• LOST TIME. • Newton, 111. From 1863 to 1885—about - 22 years—l suffered with rheumatism of the hip. I was cured by the use of v St. Jacobs Oil. T. C. DODD. • *‘ALL RIGHT! GT. JACOBS OIL DID IT. 1 * >

vafiloraat/omiU exio* jc area C<Masti pat ton. c'saasylvanla Agricultural Works, York, Pa. Farqahar’a Standard Kagiaea and Saw Milla. Sand tar CMalogua. Fortabia. SUUonary, TmcUoa /kA • wand Automata KMrtneaaatMwUlty Warranted equal or superior io g any made. M DON'T BUY JSrSCALES Until yen haaoeseu the Ohstram Catalogna and Prioa OSGOOD & THOMPSON, FREE.2HX*-™ "•*••• CEANOTHINE DuniuiTiPwnrrniT •nliayjhu uiuiylm liowa Tatia tyEniuHu hfILUIYIM nu ecu UQUI HIXB. A BURK CURB Mor the more obetinato amaa at Rh umatlnn. Gout and Cff*. UKANOTmUT* Aft k'G iTOOMXV* OulQi A Dog Without a Tail Mor Circulars free addreasonly JONES OF BINGHAMTON, Btoglwmaee, N.V. •ADENTD WANTED BMOTThY oroommißNic.B Io handle Uas Npw Pstant Cham oal ij^lsus , si.«ri!:sSK'iH"is'at

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About seven years ago I had Bronchitis, which finally drifted into Consumption, so the doctors said, and they had about given me up. I was confined to my bed. One day my husband went for the doctor, but he wa§ not in his office. The druggist sent me a bottle of Piso's Cure for Consumption. I took two doses of it, and was greatly relieved before the doctor came. He told me to continue its use as long as it helped me. I did so, and the result is lam now sound and well—entirely cured of Consumption.—Mrs. P. E. Baker, Harrisburg, Illinois, February 20, 1891. I have had Catarrh for many years, but never found anything that did me any good until I concluded to try Piso's Remedy for Catarrh. After using it a few times I. found great relief, and would not be without it now.—Miss Belle Woodruff, Lawler, lowa, July 21, 1891. W '■ " I ■ " ■—— ■ IndianapolisßusinessUniverekY nCKO wt UwßVrllwp WDpnWswk

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