Decatur Democrat, Volume 35, Number 38, Decatur, Adams County, 11 December 1891 — Page 7

11 I LittoiWl 9 a .S9r/Mw7f /fA Keep out disease by keeping in healthy action the liver, stomach and bowels. There’s a pleasant and a sure way df doing it. It’s with Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They’re the best Liver Pill ever made, and a prompt and effective remedy for Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all derangements of the stomach, liver and bowels. They cleanse and renovate the system, quietly but thoroughly. They regulate the system, too —they don’t upset it, like the old-fashioned pills. These are purely vegetable and perfectly harmless. One “Pellet” a dose. They’re the easiest to take, and the mildest in operation—the smallest in size, but the most efficient in their work. 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. Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cure. The Greet Specific for “Bright’s diseaHe,” nriuary troubles, kidney difficulties, and Impure blood. IF TOG have sediment in urine like brick dust, frequent calls or retention; IF YOG have gravel, catarrh of the bladder, excessive desire, dribbling or stoppage of urine. IF YOG have torpid liver, malaria, dropsy, fever and ague, gall stone, or gout; IF YOG feel irritable, rheumatic, stitch in the back, tired or sleepless and all unstrung; SWAMP-ROOT builds up quicklx 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, oOc. Size, SI.OO Size. "Invalids' Guide 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 if 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 SI.OO. If your Lungs are sore or Back lame, use Shiloh’s Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts. DONALD KENNEDY Os Rahiiy, Mass, says Kennedy’s Medical Discovery cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep Seated Ulcers of 40 years’ standing, Inward Tumors, and every disease of the skin, except Thunder Humor, and Cancer that has taken root. Price si.so. Sold by every Druggist in the U. S. and Canada. ? the Salle? pkl tS J • TUTT’S ® •tiny LIVER PIELS• • have all the virtues of the larger ones; equally effective; purely vegetable. _ Exact size shown in tliis border. ■ ■■ ta ANAKESlSgiveslnstant I K V relief, and is an INFALLI- | V BLE CUKE for PILES. Bta ■ ■ ■■ Price. *1; at druggists or ■ by mail. Samples free. L_ L U Address “ANAKESIS,” ■ ■■■■■ ww Box 2416, New York Crrx. ’» « FIT FOLKS REDUCED lift Blf Hkk * d<l Women, from any ailment Wr nil whatever, send lor a HEALTH HELPER, Mil-fill vbee. Dr. J. H. DYE, Butvalo. N. I. IVORY SOAP 99- Pure. m Kiuegnoy jnnrosK

7: ! . v’-f ■*’’ ? * '■ ’.s-?< .. <t ~ ‘ '• >■' X ’ ?.< THE CARPET INDUSTRY. DISASTROUS EFFECTS OF THE M’KINLEY TARIFF. Brilliant Promises End In Failure—Wage Reductions—Bill McKinley and His Bill —Wages and Profits—Tariff Shot. Etc. What Carpet Men Think. According to their owb admissions the carpet manufacturers raised a fund of $300,000 to assist in the election of Benjamin Harrison to the Presidency. In return for this benevolence they were promised additional protection. Some of them wanted free wool, others lower duties on carpet wools which are not raised in this country, and all were in favor of higher duties on carpets. A fact which in part explains their desire for hi,-, her duties was this, that at that time they were making arrangements to form a cast-iron agreement to limit production and raise prices, and in this way get back from consumers the money they had raised for campaign purposes. Those who asked for lower duties on carpet wools were disappointed, for the duties on carpet wools were raised so high and such onerous restrictions were imposed on their importation that many kinds could no longer bo imported In this way the cost of the materials used in carpet manufacture was largely increased. McKinley, however, granted the carpet men a liberal advance in duties on their products, the purpose of which was to give them full control of the homo market Now, what has been the result? The carpet manufacturers have been forced to pay higher prices for their wool, all of which has to be imported. As a result, they had to raise the prices of their carpets. The peope refused to pay these advanced prices preferring to follow the ad>ice of Jay Gould to the farmers and workmen in regard to their clothing, “to get a ong with one suit where they would otherwise have two. * The old carpets were left on the floors. The result of this is that one of the largest carpet firm in the country, that of Alexander Smith & Sons, has been forced to sell its sto -k of over $2,000, OjO at auction at what it will bring. At the opening of the saie Walter W. Law, the sellers’ representative, said to the gentlemen of the carpet trade: “The Alexander Smith & Sons’Carpet Company Oder you to day an unparalleled opportunity for supplying yourselves with their fabrics at your own price We have no hesitation whatever in inviting you to put your own value upon every piece we have in sto k, ex- < epting only the few patterns which we have prepared for the spring of 1892. With the removal of these accumulations, the only serious problem with which carpet manufacturers will have to <ontend is the high price of wool caused by the McKinley bill and the still more severe interpretation of its meaning by the Treasury Department. Remember, high prices for wool, mean high cost to manufacture carpets. Gentlemen, this is your day, ours wi.l come later.” Nor arc Alexander Smith & Sons alone in showing the blighting effects of the McKinley tariff on the carpet industry. The actual situation could not bo shown better or clearer than does the following from Mr. Arthur T. Lyman, the Treasurer of the Lowell Carpet Company, the largest establishment in New England. Mr. Lyman said: “That the McKin'ey bill increased the cost of carpets; that the prices of carpets were increased in consequence of the McKinley bill; that they would not have advanced if the McKinley bill had not been passed; and that if wool had been made free the cost and prices of carpets would have gone down are facts that cannot be disputed by anyone who understands the carpet manufacture and trade and its conditions in 1890 and 1891. ” In every industry there are four classes of persons interested: (1.) The producers of raw material (2.) The manufacturers (3.) The consumers of the manufactured articles. (4.)_ The workmen employed in turning the materials into finished product ’. The McKinley tariff on carpets has certainly not been of any benerit to the first class in this country, for no carpet wool is grown, or would be gtown, here under any tariff. Instead of benefiting tha manufacturers, it has positively injured them as their own testimony shows. The third ciass, composed oe" the consumers of carpet-, did notask for increased duties, but resented the enforced increase in the price of carpets by refusing to pay it Noone would claim in viewxif this that they have been benefited?®}- the tariff. Anu, finally, have the workmen employed in spinning the yarn and weaving the carpets been behqiited by the McKinley tariff? Have more workmen secured cmployme ,t? Have wages been raised? The answer to both questions is the same. There is no evidence of a iy increase in wages or opportunities for work. On the contrary, wages have been cut down. When Alexander Smith & Sons had finished their auction sale, they went back to tneir factories and told their workmen that the men must accept a cut in their wages or the works would be shut down. The men preferred the former, and waxes were reduced, No interest, therefore, has teen benefited by the McKinley tariff on carpet wools and carpets. Why. then, should it stand, sin e it works nothing but injury to all concert ed? The Just as in its effect on the wages of workmen, on the prices of the finished products and on trusts in other industries, the McKinley tariff is rapidly vindicating itself in-the glassware industry. We have shown how the manufacturers of glassware took adv antage of the increased duties and formed a trust under the name of the Unit d states Glass Company last July; how this trust promised not to raise prices, but trained ately did so, and at the same time threw manv workmen out of employment, and now comes the announcement of another reduction in wages. The Crockery and Jllass Journal publishes the following: “A dispatch from Anderson, Ind., Nov. I°, says: The glass-blowers employed at the Pennsylvania Glass Works, which has been considered o-e of the most prosperous in the city, struck this morning and walked out of the factory because the Board of Directors at its meeting yesterday ordered a reduction of 25 per cent, in their wages. The company is a co-operative and non-union factory, and last year paid a dividend of 61 per cent. The Halin made by the management is that the pre ent state of the glass market compels this step. The men didn’t see it that way, so they quit. The works are now deserted, but the management will endeavor to replace the strikers with new men.• Surely the editors of the New York Press, the high tax tariff organ of New York, wore right when they said some time ago that the McKinley tariff was passed to make profits b'g. While in Fall Biver the writer has learned one thing about the wages of cotton operatives that must be interesting to the public in general. An old English weaver, who has been several times across the ocean, has just returned from Burnley, England, one of the great k til J Ji

I weaving centers. He says that a weave! ‘ | wording sis y-fonr hours per week in that town makes 613 yards of doth, for ; which he receives 57 04, or £1 9s. per week. The same weaver in Fall River has to run eight 100 n machines instead of four, as ia England, sixty hours a » week, and weaves 3.3 >4 yards for. a little 1 more than 89. In other words, nearly four times as mu- h work is done in th s city for one quarter more per week. To add to this difference, every weaver in > England is allowed a helper.—New ’ York Times Tariff Shot. 1 ’ The period from 1846 to 188 tis the ! one to wh ch the high tariffites of to-day refer as our “free trade* period. They do this because the tariffs during tins ’ period were revenue tariffs, tie operation of which put a 1 producers on a plane o! equality and gave special privileges to none. The farmers therefore ' got the full value for all of their products, while the manufacturers wete un--1 abie to combin and could not therefore exact a tariff bonus ftom the .armers. ' In speaking of thf ; period Mr Blaine says, in his “Twenty Years of Cen gross:” “The rinciples embodied in the tariff of 1846 seemed for the time to be so entirely vindicated and approved that resistance to it ceased, not only apiong the people but among the protective economists, and even among the manufacturers to a large extent. So general was this acquiscence that in 1856 a protective tariff was not suggested or even hinted by any one of the three parties which presented Presidential candidates ” The-reason why the people, especially the 1 armers. were satisfied with the tariffs of 1846 and 1857 was because they got the full value of ther products The reason why they are not satisfied now is because they do not get. the full va ue of their corn, wheat, oats and otner produ e. brom 1*47 to 1861 the average price of corn in New York was 69.7 cents per bushel, represented by After our years of high protection the the price of corn in New York from 1577 to 1891 averaged 54.1 cents perbu hel,°or During our revenue period from 1847 to 1861 the price of anthracite pig iron at Philadelphia, according to James M. Swank, of the iron and Steel Association, averaged $36.25 per ton, represented by During the past fifteen years, in spite of great improveme.its in production, the price of the same quality of pig iron averaged $33.15 per ton at Philadelphia. or Under our revenue tariffs it took 37.6 bushels of corn to buy a ton of pig iron, or this Under h’gh tariffs, however, it ,has required 40 9 bushels of corn, or nearly 3 bushels more to pay for a ton of j>ig iron- W n This comparison is not open to the charge th it there have been great improvements in the mach.nery used in raising corn, and none in that used in producing pig iron. On the contrary, tae reverse has been the case. The truth of this charge of shot is that the corn producers have not been, nor in the very nature of things could they be, protected; on the other hand, the tariff on pig iron has kept out foreign competit on and thu; enabled the iron men to combine to keeps up prices as high as possible. To this extent high tariffs have affected the corn producer in that it has required nearly three and one-half bushels more of corn to buy a ton of pig iron during the past fifteen years than it did from 1846 to 1861, a period which the high tariffites of today derisively call our “free trade* period. McKinley and His Bill. Last week Major McKinley was the principal guest and speaker at the banquet of the Home Market Club. In his speech after the dinner was over he made a new departure or, rather, he added a little more to his old st vrotyped speech on the tariff. Os course, he said that the foreigner pays the tariff taxe; and that his bill was passed to raise the wages of workmen, utterly igno ing the fact that all the important industr es, cn the products of which duties were increased by his bill, the wages of the workmen have been cut down. The new feature of his speech was that portion of it in which he to d the people of Massachusetts how much they suffered under the revenue tariffs from 1846 to 1861. Concerning h.s statements the American Wool and Cotton Reporter says: “Major McKinley was, of course, the hero of the hour, and made an eloquent and interesting address; but while he was deploring the condition of th * country in the fourteen years of tariff for revenue cnly from 1816 to 18:51, the Democratic Treasurer of the gr at Amoskeag Mills, who sat upon the platform and approved the proceedings, could have told the Uhio statesman that the period from 1846 to 1861 was not characterized by Such una'loyed poverty and distress as some would have us believe. In 1846 the Araoskeag declared dividends of 35 percent, in stock and 10 per cent, in cash, in 1847 it declared 25 per cent, in stock and 5 per cent, in cash, and in 1849 it declared 30 per cent in stock and 3 per cent, in c sh, and there were but few years from that time to IS6O in which it did not pay semi-an-nual dividends. A panic occurred in 1857, and the Bay State Mills at Lawrence faded; but so did a panic occur in 1873, anti in 1889 some very important mills fa led. “The following great textile corporations were started betwei*n 1846 and 1861: Atlantic mills in 1849; Lyman mills, at Holyoke, 1854; Naumkeag steam cotton mills, at Salem, in 1847} Pepperell mills, at Biddeford, in 1852; Bates mills, at Lewiston, in 1852: Hill Manufacturing Company, at Lewiston, in 1855: Franklin Company, at Lewiston, in 1857. “Furthermore the cotton manufacturing industry of the United States lias not chanced to be as prosperous sine* the passage of the McKinley bill, as it was for a year or two before that measure became a law. The great Merrimack Manufacturing Company, at Lowell, has recently reduced its semi annual dividend to 3 per cent It paid 3 per cent, semi-annual in 1890 and 4 per cent semi-annual in 1889, and in 1891 the shares of the company sold for just half what they brought in 1881, viz., $2,000 in 1831, and $1,030 in 1891.” And yet in spite of this McKinley wi 1 go on asserting that the years during which we had revenue tariffs were disastrqns, just as he continues to declare that “the foreigner pays the tariff tax—you don’t* even though he knows that it is not true. A yellow-pine trust in New York State is the latest development tn the trust world. The promoters of the enterprise are already < alcn ating the exact size of tho diyidends they expect to declare. The fact that the lumber-buy-hig community will have to pay these fine dividends is not especially dwelt on, it being considered immaterial.—Philadelphia Record. Thoroughly dry salt intended for table use, and mix it with a small proportion of corn starch, if you would overcome the tendency it has, in damp weather, to pack solidly in the salt-cel-lars or shaken.

-* " - r The **we GenSieWMMU n True gentlemen are to be found la r every grade of society. The plowman £ with his broad sun-burnt hand, his t homely dress, and his open, honest “ • countenance, is oftoner found to be , j possessed of the real attributes of the f gentleman than the enervated man-mil--9 finer, who is much more careful of his > gloves than his honor; whose shirt 1 bosom must be as pure as a virgin’s ' form; and who, if one curl of his glossy wool were displaced, would be immediately thrown into strong convulsions. , The blood which flows in a rich and r generous stream through the heart of a r Russian serf is as pure in the eyes of j God as the life current which eddies - round the princely fountain of the highi est of England’s noblemen. It is a • false, illiberal idea, that because a man ' cannot claim alliance with the proud and wealthy his name should be stricken from the list of gentlemen. We are all 1 created alike—our mothers suffer the same pangs; and shall the one who is ushered into life upon a silken couch ■ spurn him whose lunbs were first laid on a truss of straw? Which class from time immemorial has shed honor and glory on the earth—the proud aristocrat or the poor peasant? Whose names ■ are enrolled on the pages of history—i the gentleman of fashion or the gentleman of nature? Whose voices are most heard, and to most effect, throughout 1 the world? Why, those of men born in poverty, but clothed by truth with the jeweled robe of honor. Does the mere fact of a man’s being able to make a bow with scrupulous exactness constitute him a gentleman? Shall the 1 children of one another be divided beI cause one portion are gifted with grace- [ fulness of action and coxcombry of demeanor; while the others will not ' cringe at flattery’s fawn, or waste the hours given them by heaven to in the useless study of the puerile forms I of fashion?— City and Country. I - Embroiderer’s Cramp, tbe Latest Malady. lam rather interested tn the latest j malady, which has been called embroid- ‘ erer’s cramp. It seems to be something . after the nature of writer’s cramp, and can only be removed by perfect rest and care. The elaborate altar cloths, stoles, and vestments, tho embroidering of which has become quite a craze, are, of course, accountable for the greater part of the damage. While on this subject rumor has come my way that tatting is coming into fashion again, and I should think would be rather popular. Our grandmothers used to possess elegant shuttles, sometimes jeweled, so possibly the jeweler of to-day will find a new tax upon his ingenuity, compensated by a new source of profit.—Ladies’ Pictorial. I A Chamber of Horrors. The apartment to which the unhappy wretch is confined by inflammatory rheumatism is in. deed a chamber of horrors. Appalling are the tortures inflicted by this agonizing complaint., 1 and those endured by persons suffering from milder forms of it are severe enough. Obstinate as it in its mature development, it is surely remediable at the outset with Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, an infinitely safer as well as more effective remedy than the poisons often used to subdue it. Always should it be b rue in miud by those seeking relief from rheumatism, that, though conquerable in the incipient stage, it is not only stubborn but dangerous when fully developed, on account of its tendency to attack the vital parts. This consideration should lead to the early adoption of curative measures. The Bitters will overcome malarial, kidney, dyspep. tic and bilious trouble. Ohio's Coat Product. Ohio produced in 1889, according to the eleventh census, 9,976,787 tons of coal, valued at $9,355,400. This was an increase of more than 50 per cent, on the output of 1880, which was a little over 6,000,000 tons; but the increase in value was much less, as the average price at the mines was $1.28 per ton in 1880, and only 94 cents in 1889. The coal companies of the State hold 66,697 acres of land, besides large tracts under lease, the whole valued at $9,027,64a They have over $14,000,000 of capital invested, the number of their employes in 1889 was 19,343, and they paid $6,730,778 in wages. Russian Wine. Russia most people are accustomed to regard as a very cold country, and so it is in the northern region, but it has a large area in the southern zone. It will surprise many to learn that it has an area of vineyards amounting to about 458,250 acres, the average yield of wine from them 55.300,000 gallons, of which rather more than half is grown in Caucasus. These is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pro. nounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly firiling to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from ten drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. JKS“SoId by Druggists, 75c. The Philanthropic Shoe-Man. Irate Customer—Those shoes I bought for my boy last week are half worn out already, and I found a thick piece of pasteboard in the soles. What have you to say to that? Dealer—My dear sir, the pasteboard is put in to keep the feet from touching the ground when the leather wears out. You wouldn’t want your little boy to catch cold and die of consumption, would you?—Street & Smith’s Good News. —— -Ji- A ■ Beauty Shows. Beauty shows are, it appears, not quite a novelty. There was one held at Paris in 1655. In remembrance of the oldest competition of the kind, the prizes were golden apples. The first prize was, of course, awarded to the Queen of France, and the second was obtained with 1,723 points by a Mlle. Semure. Most of the prizes were given to ladies from Normandy. DESERVING CONFIDENCE.-There ia no article which so richly deserves the entire confidence of the community as Brown’s Bronchial Troches. Those suffering from Ashmatic and Bronchial Diseases, Coughs, and Colds should try them. Price 25 cents. Thebe is one crop that is pretty short thia season—the hair crop. Kill the Cause Os Catarrh and You Have Permanent Cure Dlmmm of lon* atandint require peraiatent treatment to effbet perfect cure, end this is perticulariy true otOetarrh in the head. This ia a conatituttonal fiiaeaM and therefore requires a Constitutional Remedy like Hood’s Faraapartdl. Local appUcatlona. like nuOr and other tnhalanta. can'at host cite only temporary relief, aa they reach only the raani* and not the comm of the diaoaae. The latter ia found ia the impure taint in foe blood, which Hood's Sareeparllla reaaovaa. and thua the benefit from thia medieino is permanent. Many people testifii to cures of OaiarA hy Hood'a fiazaaparlfia. H.B. When youe-kfor Hood's Ssrssparilio ft** ko

Color Frinttauroo Motata, A trondorful process for direct polychrome printing upon metalio surfaces has been exhibited, by its Inventor, before the French Society of Encouragement of Nationsl Industry. Mr. Josz, the inventor, calls his process metalloebromy. The metal is prepared for printing by the mechanical action of very fine sand. A fine and close grain is the result, which is cleansed by immersion tn several alkaline solutions. This surface thus slightly roughened has a velvety feel, and takes a lithographic Impression as well as paper and other fabrics. Directly after the printing the metal is moderately heated, the object being to cause the ink to enter tho pores. The impression, thereby, is printed in the metal itself, and is not merely superficial. The tests showed that metallochromic prints, covered with hot varnish and set by heat, presented the same appearance as enamel. Entitled to the Best. All are entitled to the best that their money will buy. so every family should have, at once, a bottle of the best family remedy. Syrup of Figs, to cleanse the system when costive or bilious. For sale in 60c and $1 bottles by all leading druggists. Enemies of Tobacco-Smoking. At the instance of several philanthropic ladies of high station “Enemies of To-bacco-Smoking” have been formed in St. Petersburg. Every member of such a “circle” pledges himself not to smoke and to discourage smoking in others. The money which such a member would spend on tobacco or cigars from the time he joins the circle to Sept. 1, 1892. he pays to the society, to be sent to the famine-stricken communities. Th* Magnetic Mineral Mud Bat**s> Given at the Indiana Mineral Springs. Warren County. Indiana, on the Wabash Line, attract more attention to-day than any other health resort in this country. Hundreds of people suffering from rheumatism, kidney trouble, and skin diseases, have been cured within tho last year by the wonderful magnetic mud and mineral water baths. If you are suffering with any of these diseases, investigate this, nature’s own remedy, at once. The sanitarium buildings. bath-house, water works, and electrio light plant, costing over $150,000. just completed. open all the year round. Write at once for beautiful illustrated printed matter, containing complete information and .reduced railroad rates. Address F. Chandler. General Passenger Agent. St. Louis. Mo., or H. L. Kramer. General Manager of Indiana Mineral Springs. Indiana. ______________ A Prompt Payer. De Blnks—One good thing about Minks. Although he’s a great borrower, he always pays promptly. He was in only *a few Moments ago and paid me the ten dollars he owed me. DeWink—Humph! He was into my place about art hour ago and borrowed S2O of me.—New York Weekly. A Practical Farmer. I received great benefit from the use of Swamp-Root. I suffered for some length of time with chronic kidney difficulty, accompanied by intense pain in the back and constitution generally run down. It is a great medicine and shall always be kept on my farm. I recommend it to all my neighbors. S. A. Jackson. Liberty. Ind. In Mashonaland. Out in Mashonaland, South Africa, butter is $3.10 a pound, jam and milk, $1.56 a tin; cheese, $3.60 a pound, and brandy has sold for $19.50 a bottle. And with this prospecting is very poor, no gold being discovered. A cure for nearly all'the common ills—what, doctors? Pshaw! Take Beecham’s Pills. For sale by all druggists. 25 cents. Still Young. Old Resident—Yes, sir, I’m 80 years old, and I walked thirty miles t’other day. Kin you do that? Average Man—N-o, not yet. I’m only 4a—Street & Smith’s Good News. First a Cold, Then Bbonchiti . Check the first with Hale's Hcnkt of Horkhouni> and Tab. Pike’s Tcothache Drops Cure in one Minute. Evens All Tilings. Father—My dear, this seems like a strange* marriage. He is but 18 years old and you are 38. When he is 40 you will be 50. Daughter—No. indeed. I’ll still be 28. —New York Weekly. The man who sells beer by the schooner is the one exception to the rule that no man can serve two-masters. Be careful how you deal with a man taller than yourself. He can always overreach you.

IKT A. IDA.Y. Lawrhnce, Kans., Aug. 9,1888. George Pattefson fell from a second-story IK window, striking a fence. I found him using I ST - JACOBS OXI. B He used it freely all over his bruises. I saw him next momingat work. All the blue spots “ALL RIGHT I ST. JACOBS OIL DID IT.”

fßeaaaeaeaeaaeaflfiaaaaedddddddDdddd “MOTHERS* FRIEND” I : To Young ;:• i i Maku Chid Birth Emj. i Shortens Labor, Lessens Pain, ; ; Endorsed by the Leading Physicians. ; ; fe“Jrot*er«»»matted jrBEE. ' BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. 1 ATLANTA, G*. BOLD BY ALL DHUOGIBTB. . —————————————a

OUR AGENTS EARN 575.00 A WEEK IndianapolisßusinessUniversitY SHtfMBWafIIML ><> HE^&WOTN > SpSSi. ■| HWa Itemed? fct Catarrh to ttM M . Onr i»»n»«d KmbroMerin* —- 1 I »»»».««

ttnOatp OmDwFrtafiafi CI—W VM tlkeWnrd? Thon to a 3-inch display adverttoMnent in this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same la true of each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a “Orescent” on everything they make and publish. Look for it. send them the name of the word, and they will returnyou book, bkautetull ltteoobaprs. OB SAMPLES FREE. Furpta. It Is often said that the old Phoenicians discovered the purple dye tn the murex shell by observing a dog which had eaten one of the mollusks, and thus colored his chops with a rich purple satin. Cur* tlus observes that the ancients were accustomed to hunt the murex by the assistance of pointer dogs. Some of the myths say that Heracles, by the aid of his dog, first discovered the purple murex. Tbebb is an Adlan in the milk business in Chicago. He is probably of the Chalktaw tribe. ** Two Bottles Cured Her. VI Cabboll. lowa. July. 1888. I was suffering 10 years from shocks in my head, so much so that at times I didn't expect to recover. I-took medicines from many doetors. but didn’t get any relief until I took Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic; tho second dose relieved me and S bottles cured me. S.W. PECK. Recommends It to Mtwy. Seymour, Ind., Oct. 1.189a My daughter became epileptic about five years ago through a fricht. AU physicians* treatment availed nothing, until I used Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic, which at once dispelled tho attacks. It is the best remedy lever used and I have recommended it to many of such as are suffering from this | FK F r aud poor patients can also obtain I lILL this medicine free of charge. is now prepared under bls dueotlon by the KOENIG MED. CO.. Chicago, IIL Sold by Druggists at SI per Bottle. StbrdE Large Size. 81.75. 6 Bottles for S 9. Vile cod-liver oil has lost its vileness in Scott’s Emulsion and gained a good deal in efficiency. It is broken up into tiny drops which are covered with glycerine, just as quinine in pills is coated with sugar or gelatine. You do not get the taste at all. The hypophosphites of lime and soda add their tonic effect to that of the half-di-gested cod-liver oiL Let us send you a book on CAREFUL LIVING free. Scott & Bownb. Cheaists, 13a South Jth Avwhm. New Ifork. druggist keeps Scott’s Knuilno.l of coddivar Tile Oiiftt Mfdicitu so tkt IVor Id is DR. ISAAC ’THOMPSON’S ■cription, and has been in constant use ter nearly a century. There are few diseases to which mankind are subject more distressing than sore eyes, and none, perhaps, for which more remedies have been tried without success. For all external Inflammation of th© eyes it is an Infallible remedy. If the directions are followed it will never tail. We parttouhwiy k CCk. TaorVN. Y. EstaUfahed 1787. 1... lUustratedPubUcations. with U L L describing Minnesota. nFF North IMkota, Moutana. Idaho. ■ ILL Washington and Oregon, tbe Free H “ Government and CH£AP pa N x% m ß.|imS Best Agricultural. Grazing and TtnibeO,ana<i now open to settlers. Mailed FREE. Address CHS. I. UMIttR. Laud Com. DATCMTQ Quicklv obtained. No fit'yW “Al CalW I O fee until patent is allowed. Advice x Book tree. CUBt HTtIT Itt T Wash, P.O. mfiarnni men to travel, wepaywao RAH I Ell. to 8100 * month and expenses. STONE A WKLUNGTON. Madlsou. Wi*. « -W/NT? i> Send SYMPTOMS to DR. DIUII I BROWN. New York City.

I W- i<xiNKKß.XijAW>cduugton 3t.Boauo.Mata. PRINTING PRESSI&m Hffl UDY NEEDS THEM I Dr. WUmn’a Fartils, used by eminent phydebana Write for Circular Free. Sample box, to centa DE. B. I. WILSON. Eoaadala, N. J. CKANOTH IN® FILLS. A SVBE CURB For tbe more obrtinate eama at RhewnaUem. Gout and Neuralgia. Nor mie by all draagiete. StatteMaU. Price. Mota. CKAEorwtiarM’y’aCo.. Wootar. (Me.

7w■.if —m—M “German Syrup” Martinsville, NJ., Methodist Pan*' sonage. “My acquaintance with your remedy, Boschee’s German Syrup, was made about fourteen years ago, when I contracted a Cold which resulted in a Hoarseness and a Cough which disabled me from filling my pulpit for a number of Sabbaths. After trying a Physician, without obtaining relief—l cannot say now what remedy he prescribed —I saw the advertisement of your remedy and obtained a bottle. X received such quick and permanent help from it that whenever we have had Throat or Bronchial troubles since ip our family, Boschee’s German Syrup has been our favorite remedy and always with favorable results. I have never hesitated te x report my experience of its use to others 'when I have found them troubled in like manner.” Rxv* W. H. Hagoartt, of the Newark, New a saf a Jersey, M.E. Conference, April 25,’90. G. G. GREEN, Sole Man’fr,Woodbury,NJ, It Curea Colds, Cougbs. Ser* Throat, Ctobbs Influenza, Whooping Cough. Bronehifite and Asthma. A cerUiu cure for Consumption la firn stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Uha at once. You win see the excellent alfoot aftag taking tho first dose. Sold by oemsra sverywhsia. Large bottles. SU cents and il.QOi. ONLY TRUE fiSFIRON EfTONIC appetite, restore health aad vlgorofyouth. Dyspepsia. Indigestion, that tiredfeeiX lug absolutely eradicated. Mind brightened, brata power increased. suffering from eemplaiata peculiar to their sox, using It. find ■ a safe, speedy cure. RetUM rose bloom on cheeks, beautifies Compfoxtoau ..Bold everywhere. All genuine goods bear “Crescent-’’ Send us2cent stamp for 32-paga psunpulct. DB. HAOTER MEBiCIMK CO., St, Lfiuifi. Uta! GOLD MEDAL. FARIS, 187 S iw. BAKER & CO.’S Breakfast Cocoa from which the exees* St aS has been removed. i absolwtdjf 4* to aohthto. 4 1 No Chemicals are used in its preparattea. Ik has »<ore than thrss tisnst Ms U strength ot Cocoa mixed with R Starch. Arrowroot or Sugar, 11 and is therefore far mere eeo--11 nomical, costing less Maa saa cento c«p. Itirdeliclotw,acais miahing, strengthening! kabuY digested, and admirably adapteu for iavalMfi as well aa for persons in health. SoM by Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER&CO.,Dorcherter.Maaß. CinclO Wmuis SOLID VESTIBULE TRAIN Daily at *.BO p. m. from Chicago. New and *l*Gto* Q RATBFUL-COMFORTTNQ. EPPS S COCOA BREAKFAST. “By a thorough knowledge of the uahml law* which govern the operations of digestion and auteb tlon, and by a careful application of the One proper ties of weli-ss-lected Cocoa, Mr. Kpoa has provided our breakfast table* with a deUcately flavoured bevs eregewhtehnaay aura us many heavy dooton* bUto Itteby the judioiCHn use ot such articles of dM thataooastltutloamay Oe gr dually buUk ununtU strong enough to resist every tendency tedbeesa Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around ua ready to attack wherever there ia a weak poiab Wo saayeaoafle many a total abaft by keeplag oat* selves well fortified with pure blood and a MUfMAIg Douriahed frama“—“Oted fisrvtos Made simply with boiling water or mdk. Sold only in half-pound ttns. uy Grocers, labelled thue: JAMES EPFB to CO.. Homosopathte QhemtelO LONDQit. KuetANa, ■ ___ Mwi ROPSY THSOTED FREE.——• BfienMyCwtt«MMN|ateM«mfiMfi|tt Have emwd thcmastaA twiMA Cmv ritoVM fnwnukliMi fvwta hv nktoll If WEI OmSB itaißqfl.VNdß Affriooltand Wtak% ToriL Vto! FhMebar’a Standard KnglWaad Bair mu» . find for Oatetogee. restalih. FtetlnnsiT. > JQ