Decatur Democrat, Volume 36, Number 28, Decatur, Adams County, 30 September 1892 — Page 3

X py*——i —" ft i) lu »T sunken K\ . '] o“4'Tlon't al way* / v 7 // £Mn that a woman's *1 ,/<«y bld. Half tho time. y-A^C-—“\ they only show that / Ip » \ she'd overworked or // J. ->-% I ) suffering. To such 17 f ,' s women, to every wozj / — L A man who is tired or ,xf| it IVVI Z l alllictod, Dr. I’ieroo’s V ff/ Y* L I Favorite Prescription \ 1 ' I safely and certainly rf/ff \1 |■ —x brings back health ’/w anc * strength. It’s a • legitimate medicin* that corrects and cures; a tonic that invigo-' ' rates and builds up; a nervine that soothes and strengthens. For all tho derangements, irregularities and weaknesses peculiar to women, it is tho only guaranteed remedy. If it doesn’t benefit or cure, you have your money back. It won’t do to experiment with Catarrh. There’s the constant danger of driving It to tho lungs. You can have a S effect and permanent cure with Dr. age’s Catarrh Remedy. OR. KI U M E !R» sT-ZT kocß* Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cure. Rheumatism, Lumbago, pain in joints or back, brick dust In urine, frequent calls, irritation, intlnmation, gravel, ulceration or catarrh of bladder. Disordered Liver, Impaired digestion, gout, billious-hcadache. SWAMP-BOOT euros kidney difficulties, L<t Grippe, urinary trouble, bright’s disease. Impure Blood, Scrofula, malaria, gcn’l weakness ordebility. OnaraNtee—Um contents of One Bottle. If not benefited, Druggists will refund to you the price paid. At Druggists, 60c. Size, (1.00 Size. •Tnvrilds’ Quid, to HeriUi”fre®—Consultation tree. Db. Kilmkb & Co.. Dinghauton, N. Y. . -r That Thousands ofodelicate women and girls doing Pan cS n cr- housework, or employed Dearing in storeSi millSi facto . rx ries, etc., where they are LrOWFI continually on their feet, suffer terribly with disreeling ferent forms of female diseases, especially "that bearing-down feeling,” backache, faintness, dizziness,* etc. Lydia E. Eink- ' ham’s Vegetable Compound will relieve all this quickly and permanently. It has permanently cured countless cases of Female Complaints, Ovarian Ky troubles, Organic Dis- Yi'/ei eases of the Uterus or ’KT vj? Womb, Leucorrhoea, I/Ck ?/ Inflammation, Kidney AU Complaints, etc. Its , success is world-famed, f All Drawl H* Mil It, or lent t? ' cj|l by mail, In form of Pills or Uoseures, on receipt of 81.60. Liver Fill*. 8«c. Corre- x - - •pondenca freely answered. Address in eon tide nee. < ' Lxiux E. Pin tn am Max Co., mw- — Lynn, Mac b. iftb Be’ riNF < I take IB*®* THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND »V COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My doctor soys It acts gently on tho stomach, liver and kidney A nud ts a pleasant laxattve. This drink Is made from herbs, aiul Is prepared for um as easily as tea. It is called LAKE’S HEDICIHE All drngglrta mH It at 50c and |! par package. If yen cannot It, send yoor addreia far a free sample. Laao'a Family ■t*dieia« I aaavae the be wait each day. In order t> b« healthy, thia li uec«saary. Addroaa ORATUK k WOODWARD, Laßoy, N. Y. F Bileßewis Small. Guaranteed to cure Billons Attacks, Sielfc Headache and Constipation. 40 in eaak bottle. Price 23c. For sale by druggists. Picture “7, 17, 70” and sample doee free. J. F. SMITH A CO., Proprietors, HEW TORR “Mothers’ Friend” MAKES CHim BIRTH RSI, Colvin, La., Dec. 2,1886.—My wife used MOTHER’S FRIEND before her third Bonfinoment, and says she would not be without it for hundreds of dollars. DOCK MILLS. Sent by express on receipt of price, per bob lie. Book “To Mothers ” mailed free. BRADFIELD REGULATOR co., ton Mis ar au. osuoairre. ATLANTA, QA. Ely’s Cream Balm HPSjraa WILL CURE KPATARAVo] IPrlco El* jf i Apply Brim Into eich nostril. BuMSky 1 ELY BROB. M Warren St.. N. Y. MESgiy A .Al. --- M The African Kola Plant, dls/ASTIUTIa 0 vered in Congo, West Africa, le Nature's Sure Cure for Asthma. Cure Guaranteed or No Pay. Export Office, I 61 Broadway. New York. F r Large Tidal Case, Free by Mall, ajdreea KOLA IMPORTING CO, 13» Vine Bt, Cincinnati, Ohio. should be without them. Sent prepaid ■ 4 I upon receipt oi One Dollar. Lb W foiTDAA Room &0, No. 24 Stat* Street, New York, N. x. |M»T FOLIBH IN THE WORLD. | aiK staia the hands, injure the iron, and burn off. The Riling Sun Stove Polish is BrllUaLt, Odorless, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin or glass package with avary purchase. HAS AM AMKUAL SALEOFS.OOO TONS.I . s ; . --*r. ■ *' . .• ’ •-j . • ’• ■’•"•r' s’ r--

r ■« 111 11 11111 Hi _ 111 TRADE OII'Sj’RUCTIONS. TOLLS. TAXES, AND TARIFFS THE CHIEF ENEMIES. S»<l Roads, High Mrolglits, Kto., Ara Minor Hindrances-Mow the Farmers' Warnings Aro Dopiniltod In Custom Huusos—Tlio Sugar Trust Supremo. Enemies of Industry. - The typical protectionists aro a queer let. From McKinley down, they all sontlnually cry, “Wo must protect American industry;" as If they alone, Mid not all Americans, wore in favor of my and every pdlicy that will protect ind benefit our own people and country In preference to all other peoples and oountrlcs. But, at the sanfo time, it is sloar from their actions—when they oome to substitute notions for words—that they have no correct idea of what Industry Is. Doubtless, some will suy, “What an unfounded and Impudent assertion!" “What a freo-trale lie” But let us reason about it u little and see wherein is tho truth. Industry consists ot two factors, or there are two elements in it. Ono is production (derived from two Latin words—pro, forward, and ducore, to lead)—meaning, in this connection, tho drawing out of materials or products from natural resources, and the other Is exchange, ot* tho selling of tho things produced; anti Industry ean’t get along without botli any more than a man get along with only one leg. For example, if a farmer grows 10,000 bushels of oom, and needs only 1,000 for himself, family, and animals, and ean’t exchange or sell the other 9,000, he might as well not have raised it. He can eat corn, burn it for fuel and make whisky of it, but he can't clothe himself with corn husks, plow with a cornstalk, wear corn shoes, and the like.' To get these other things he must sell or exchange his surplus 9,000 bushels; and he must be stupid who does not at once see that the greater the facilities afforded him lor exchange, such as good roads, bridges, horses and wagons, cheap and swift railroads and steamships, low tolls, freights and taxes, the greater will be the opportunity for exchange and trade to advantage. On tho other hand, poor roads, un bridged streams, few or no railroads or steamships, and high tolls, freights, and taxes all tend to restrict or destroy trade and the opportunity to sell his 9,000 bushels of corn to advantage. A 20 per cent tariff tax may fairly be considered as the representative of a bad road; a 50 per cent, of a broad, deep river without proper facilities for crossing; a 75 per cent, of a swamp bordering such river on both sides; while 100 per cent, duty, such" as is levied on blankets, window glass, cotti n ties ,and the like, can only properly be compared to a band of robbers, who strip the producer of nearly all he possesses and make him thankful that he escaped with his lite. In short, there has never been a case in all human experience when the removal of restrictions, natural or legislative, on trade that did not result in the oxtention of trade to the‘mutual advantage of the great majority of the people concerned. The man who can get a law passed that will enable him to tax trade or exchange, always sees an advantage to him self in the restricted trade that will result. Ko also does his brother-in-law who sits behind a bustuon the road, with a gun, and tells Iho farmer who has sold his surplus of 9,000 bushels of corn, You can’t pass unless you give mo a big part of what you received for it in exchange. But I fancy some farmer protectionist saying: “There is no one Bitting behind a bush for me. I don’t see him.” Nevertheless, he is there, all the same. Our farmer sells his nine thousand bushels of corn in England, And, as he Vants tilings rather than money, and as many things are cheap in England, he concludes to take his pay in hardware, woolen clothing, blankets, starch, paints, oils, glass, salt, cordage, hats, crockery, cotton ties, and other like articles, and starts for home byway ot New York. There is no man with a gun behind a bush on the wharf to lie in wait for him, but there is. another man, armed with something better than a gun, who tells the fanner that he must give up more than half the value ot all the things he has received in payment for his corn before he can come into possession of the other half. If he does not pay quickly or if he makes any fuss about the charges, this other man .will take the whole, and not unlikely put the farmer in jail, If the farmer could pay in things instead of money, and had taken salt in exchange for his corn, then for every hundred bushels ho would have had to bring and give up seventy-three additional bushels. For every yard of the cheapest carpet he would have had three-quarters of a yard cut off, and if he had cotton ties, each tie would be shortened to the extent of 90 per cent. If ho had taken the commonest kind of china plates or cups, then in order to carry a dozen of them home he would have had to pay for eighteen. And so on. If our Government needed to impose and collect such taxes in order to meet its necessary expenditures, there would bo some justification (or such procedure. Butrevenue was not the object sought for in tho enactment ot the laws which authorize or require them, but the restrictions of trade, to prevent the farmer from selling his products to the best advantage. In short, carry out logically and to their fullest extent McKinley’s views about Industry, and you would have every man trying to produce a good deal and sell as little as possible. —David A. Welle, in American Journal of Politics. Keep McKinley on the Stump. McKinley spoke in throe largo cities in Vermont this year, and “was received with the greatest enthusiasm” by great audiences in each city. To show their appreciation of the Major and his blessed tariff law, these cities this year cast the following vote as compared with the vote in the corresponding election in 1888: , 1888. . / 1892.—. Rep. Dem. Rep. Dem. Brattleborol.oui 450 802 403 Rutlandl,39B 920 1,285 983 Burlingtonl,4ol 1,014 1,016 l,loti Total3,Bol 2,390 3,113 2 492 If the Major could have been induced by tariff reformers to have twenty speeches in Vermont it is safe to say that it would have gone Democratic. It is a curious fact that tho farmers and laborers of this country, tax-bur-dened and hard pressed /s they are, will not consent to shift their taxes upon the poor foreigner And there is no surer sign that there is yet left something of that American manhood and independence that made them as unwillhig to pay England's taxes in 1776. as they are now to have England pay their taxes. Justice, no more and no less, is about their size and McKinley cannot change the fit by to their sellish instincts by asking them to tax the helpless foreigner; that Is, providing they believe that, his scheme will work. MgKinlcy is the only stumper that is entirely satisfactory to both parties. He should be given double pay and asked to make two speeches a day until November. Andrew Jackson's Prophetic Words. •The corporations and wealthy individuals who are engaged in large manufacturing establishments desire a high tariff to increase their gains. Designing politicians will support it to conciliate their favor and to-obtain the means of profuse expenditure for the purpose

II II ' ■■■■!■ of purchasing influence In other quarters. ♦ • • Do not allow yourselves, my f> How citizens, to be misled on this subject. The Federal Government cannot collect a surplus for such purposes without violating the principles of the constitution and assuming powers which have not been granted. It is, moreover, a system of Injustice, and, if persisted In. lead to corruption and must end in ruin." —Jackson's FareweD Address. High I’rlcoN to Be Advanced. The greed of tho bugar Trust is unbounded, Aided by the duty of Jc per pound, which McKinley left on refined sugar for no other purpose than to swell tho profits of the trust, which would have been enormou i without any duty, this combine, as its power has extended, has meroilessly reduced tho price of raw and raised the price of refined sugar. At present there appeals to bo no relief from its oppression. A few months ago the wholesale grocers of the United States, who had been in league with the trust, and had been receiving a rebate of J cent per pound for handling “trust" sugar only, bei ame dissatisfied with the advancing prices, and threatened to erect a big refinery in Brooklyn. It now transpires that tho trust people have again established friendly relations with the grocers by slightly extending discounts to them, and perhaps by making other concessions unknown to tho public. As is evident from the following notice sent out by the trust on Sept. 10, the monopoly is stronger than ever before: “We inclose herewith invoice of sugar of even date, on which a commission of one-eighth of a cent a pound has been deducted, in addition to our usutl terms of one per cent, cash in seven days and one per cent, trade discount on ,100 barrel lots, the understanding being that with your remittance the certificate be-, low is to be returned duly signed by you' as a voucher." [Copy of the Voucher.] THE A. S. R. CO. “We hereby certify that we have not sold, nor will we sell, nor has any employe, salesman, or agent sold in any of the territory specified on the back of this certificate, either directly or indirectly, any of the sugars for which we are now remitting, for less than your daily quotations, nor on more liberal terms as to credit or cash discount.” The only independent refinery in the country is the smalbone of Nash, Spaulding <fc Co., at Boston, that can have no effect on the market. The quarantine regulations due to the cholera scare have caused the price of raw sugar to advance A cent per pound. Taking advantage of the situation which practically prohibits the importation of sugars, for a few weeks at least, the trust has advanced the price of refined sugar i cent per pound, and authorities say that prices will go still higher. The following quotations show clearly the effects of the trust upon prices: 96 deg. centrifugals. Granulated. DitT'oe. , Cts. per lb. Cts. per lb. Cents. Dec. 31,18913*s 4 H April 11.18923J6 4% May 25,18933 1-16 4% 1 5-16 Sept. 10, 18923 9-16 ' 5 1-16 154 It should be remembered that there were several large refineries outside of the trust until last March. When these had all been gathered in, prices of raw and refined sugar began to diverge. The cost of refining is about J cent per pound. At present prices the trust is making net profits of more than SIOO,000 per day or $10,000,000 per year, and every additional difference of 1-16 of a cent adds $2,500,000 to this amount. Twenty millions of dollars of these profits are extracted from the people by means of the 4-cent duty, and helps to swell the pockets of the rich refiners. None of it finds its way into the coffers of the nation, though a few thousand may get into circulation through the medium of the Republican National Committee. That Free Breakfast Table. Whitelaw Reid said, in his speech of September 10, that, by coupling together “protection and reciprocity," his party had given us “a free breakfast table,” which the Democrats propose to destroy by “restoring the revenue duties on coffee, tea and sugar.” The only thing the Republicans did to give us a free breakfast table was to reduce the duty on refined sugar from about 2J to TJ cents per pound. For this we would have been thankful if it had not reduced our revenue by nearly $60,000,000, to give an opportunity to impose more onerous duties upon other articles of food and clothing—duties that would not, like the sugar duty, put almost as many dollars into our treasury as it took from the people, but that would take three dollars from the people, one of which would reach our treasury and two of which would be caught on the fly by the “friends” of the administration. No, we have not free sugar yet for our breakfast tables; the 4 cent duty must be paid to the sugar trust. It is this duty that the Democrats propose to remove, and that they would have removed months ago if a Republican Senate and President had not blocked the way. As to tea and coffee, they have for years been on the free list. The only possible effect of “reciprocity" upon them would be to rclmpose duties and to tax them, as has been done by de- ■ roe of President Harrison in some cases. For such a “free breakfast table" we are not especially grateful to the protectionists. Benighted Greenlanders. The Arctic explorers aro back, and bring with them much interesting information in regard to the strange inhabitants of the northern portion of Greenland. It appears from Lieutenant Peary’s reports that these Greenlanders have very tow of tho ordinary comforts of life. Their tables are but scantily supplied with , apples, oranges, watermelons, potatoes, sugar and other ordinary fruits and vegetables. Even wheat, corn or rye bread is almost unknown there. The people are also backward in dress, and could not tell American shoddy from English all-wool goods; in faot, they pay no attention to Parisian fashions, and do not even wear collars or cuffs. They have no railroads. electric lights, eels-binders, hand organs or world’s fairs. What is tho cause of this sad state of affairs? The lack of tariff protection. They have no Major McKinley there to teach them the art of levying duties on imported products, so that while producing any article to advantage in any climate and soil they could at the same time build up home markets, provide increased employment at advanced wages, and collect their taxes from tho commercial foreigners who might seek Greenland’s markels. Benighted inhabitants! Let them st nd their statesmen toc.ur World’s Fair next year. McKinley and his trained assistants may possibly have a school there, where instruction will be given In McKinley government, religion and morals. / If taxing imports encourages wealth production then geographic boundaries cannot stay the beneficence of high duties. Pennsylvania ought to grow still richer were Jersey's products shut out Where is the protectionist who dares follow his logic?—St Louis Courier.' , The trap with the bait labeled "protection” is being set for the Eastern workman. The same cage, with reciprocity as the lure, does duty among the hayseeds.—BL Louis Courier.

SENATOR HILL'S SPEECH. | A Strong liidor.ent.at of D.tnoorncy and tli. I’nrty Nomino k. Senator Hill’s Brooklyn ppceeh is a itrong and telling argu i.eut in behalf of the Democratic parly and its nominees —Cleveland and Stovenhon. Having stated the historical differences between Democracy and Its opponent, whether the opponent was tho old-time Federalist, tho Whig, or present Republicanism, Senator Hill addressed himself to the two gn at, questions of‘ this time—the tariff and tho force bill. The Senator Is clear and cogent in hio presentation of the Democratic position with reference to the Republican fraud called protection. He demonstrates the position which Democracy has long held and will continue to hold with reference' to the raising of revenue at the custom-j houses. He assigned good rea-ons why a Democratic convention denounced Republican protection as a fraud, 'these ho enumerated as folloo's: 1. It ta aecured by a pripabjc abuse of the taxing power of the government. 2. It fnurea to the benefit of the few at tho expense of the many. 3. It la baaed upon fovoir iom of the worst , species. 4. It tends to create flotltlons prosperity, to be followed by subsequent business depression. 5. It is deceptive in its promises and unsatisfactory in its results. 6. Its principal beneficiaries constitute a privileged class, and their importunities for governmental aid lead to public scandal and demoralization. The Senator showed that there is no purpose upon the part of the Democratic . party to do other than raise its revenue substantially in the manner employed at , present—l hat is, by custom house duties. > There is no purpose of establishing free ' trade, an idea inconsistent with the ex- • istence of custom houses. He quoted I Justice Miller of the Supreme Court: ■ “To lay with one hand the power of tho I government on the property of a citizen , and with tlfe other bestow it upon favored individuals, to aid private enterprise and build up private lortuncs, is none the less robbery because it is done under tho forms of law and is called taxation.” He quoted Judge Cooley: “Constitutionally % tax can have no other basis than the raising of revenue for public purposes, and whatever government has not this basis is tyranni- ' cal and unlawful," He stated Jas the | Democratic* position belief in revenue with incidental protection, and not in protection with incidental revenue. So far as the tariff is neces' ary to meet the needs of the government it may be imposed, and any other benefit which may be legitimately derived from its imposition may and does necessarily accompany it. When the Democratic party declares in favor of a tariff for revenue only it means that the proper, main and only lawful and direct purpose of the tariff is the raising of revenue alone, a logical and correct position which does not conflict with the idea of such incidental advantage as neces-arily and inevitably may* ibe received through a revenue* tariff. For illustration of what the Senator says let us assume that a purely revenue duty is imposed upon coffee, which is not grown anywhere in the United States. Would that.afford any benefit incidentally? It certainly would. The price of coffee being increased by rtsson of the tariff tax imposed upon it, just as the price of sugar is reduced because the customs tax imposed upon it has been repealed in part, the consumer would look for substitutes for coffee. These substitutes would have the benefit through enhanced price of the levy of a duty on coffee. The Democratic party stands to-day upon this question of the tariff where it stood in 1876. It is no more a freetrade party to-day than it was when Samuel J. Tilden received more than 256,000 majority of the popular vote. Senator Hill quotes pointedly and pertinently from the celebrated tariff message of President Cleveland directed to Congress in December, 1887. What the Democratic position would be to-day were it in control of the Government of the United States is best indicated by the latest full tariff bill presented in 1888, and by the separate tariff bills passed by the present Democratic House of Representatives and received contumaciously by the Republican Senate. It is not possible to make a tariff bill in a platform, nor can one in a dozen statesmen or publicists or writers formulate a bill. That must bo done in the Committee on Ways and Means of the National House, but taking its latest efforts at legislation—the Mills bill four years ago and the Springer bills of the present session—and, as the Senator indicates, they show what would be the Democratic position—1. That the necessaries of life should be substantially free. 2. That luxuries should bear the heaviest burdens. 3. That there should be free raw materials for tho benefit of our manufacturers. 4. That the tan it upon manufactured articles should as a general rule be larger where similar articles are manufactured in this couutrf* than where they are not. 6. That the tariff imposed upon all manufactured articles (other than those which for good reasons are placed on the free list) should equal the difference between the rate of wages paid in this and foreign countries so far as labor enters into the .cost of their production. Incidentally, Senator Hill calls attention to the shifting positions of the sophists who maintain the fraud called Republican protection. Five years ago they were crying that the tariff was not a tax. Now they are endeavoring to show that they have relieved us from taxation by abolishing the sugar duty. He exploded the sophistry about the protection of infant industries, a phrase which every citizen of his age has heard from his earliest years, and he suggests that it is high time that -the fostering care of the Government should bo withdrawn and the infant industries permitted to mature. A verdict upon MeKinieyism was rendered two years ago by the people of the United States, but the Reptiblfcan party has refused to obey the popular verdict. A Democratic House of Representatives has attacked the worst features of MeKinleyism by passing a free-wool bill, a free bindingrtwine bill, and various other measures, but the will of the people, expressed by its representatives in the House, has been ignored. It is true, as Senator Hill says, that the Republicans insulted the people by asserting that the popular verdiet had been produced by misrepresentation, that the people did not know their own mind, and it is true that we must appeal agaih in this election to the people, and ask them to renew their expression of disapproval of the McKinley law. The speech of Senator Hill all respects creditable to that and helpful of Democracy and of the canvass for Cleveland and Stevenson. It will be helpful not only in New York, which may now be reasonably counted upon for Cleveland, but It will also be of greffit advantage to the Democracy of the West. This anti That. Whisky flies to a man’s head and finds’ it empty. In tho present Dolly Varden state i of the fashions it may be expected that the Wall Paper trust will deal in big figures. If some persons were to bestow one-half of their fortunes in learning how to properly spend the other half, It would be money extremely well laid out Not only is it difficult ttf say the right thing in tho right place, but far more difficult still to leave unsaid the wrong thing at the tempting moment

That near OKI Word, <7®o<l-by. Is * mighty «.id one when it la the parting salntatlon between frlcnde Whotn thousands of miles ot salt water are about (o separate. Mariners, buyers in foreign lands tor heavy houses, commercial travelers who have made many trips across the stormy Atlantic, think little ot an ocean voyage, but to the first voyager the Initial trip Is a momentous affair. Sea sickness is to be expected as a matter of course How to prevent it? Tho finest remedy and preventive of tho-nausea provoked by the toesing of a vessel, the jarring motion of the screw of a steamship, or of a locomotive train, is Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, pronounced by sea captains, ship doctors, tourists, travelers, and emigrants tho finest stomachic and best defense agalnrt ailments of the bowels, digestive orfans and liver in existence. Malaria, rhenmaIsm, kidney trouble, and debility aro remedied by it. In Holland. In tho strange little country of Holland tho three principal cities aro Amsterdam, Rotterdam, and The Hague. These cities aro a peculiar medley of canals arid streets, trees and masts, bridges and boats. Amid their apparent disorder there is more or less of symmetry. Amsterdam Is a semicircle, Rotterdam an equilateral triangle and The Hague a square. Tho difference between tho three cities socially has been aptly put: "At Rotterdam, they aro consolidated; at The Hague, they are spent.’’ Not the Kight Way. The attempt to follow the right without absolutely breaking with tho wrong is what leads to many disastrous failures 'on the part of half way Christians. There can be no real success or progress 1 In the service and knowledge of God un- ! less there is an attachment to it, a long--1 ine for it sq deep and strong that it en- | volves what the Psalmist stoutly calls ' perfect ‘‘hatred’’ of them that hate God, ! which means not only all persons, but ' all influences and habits that are against God’s will.—Christian Union. .7. C. SIMPSON, Marquess, W. Va., rays: •Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me of a very bad casa of catarrh." Druggists sell it, 75c. Animals with a “Poll.” The shelless limpet pulls 1,984 times its own weight when in the air, and i about double that amount when im- | mersed in water. Fasting fleas on an i average pull 1,493 times their own dead weight, while the Mediterranean cockle, Venus verrucosa, can exert a pulling power equal to 2,071 times the weight of its own tody. So great is the power possessed by the oyster that to open it a force equal to 1,319.5 times the weight ot its shcllcss body is required. God Has a I*l an for Us. God knows what He wants to da He will shape and use us, if we will submit ourselves to Him trustfully. Luther calls attention to the faetthat the invitation in the Psalms, “Rest in the Lord and wait patiently for Him,” is in the Hebrew, * “Be silent to God—let Him mold thee.” If we aro not what we ought to be, it is because we resist God’s effort to make us so, and prefer our plans to His.—S. S. Times. John A. Smith. Ligonier. Ind., had been suffering from severe backache caused, physicians told htm, by ehronic kidney trouble, and was all broken down in health. He began using Swamp-Root and is now able to do a good day’s work and considers himself a well man again. Swamp-Root did the business. Reconsiders it by far the best remedy he has ever used for Kidney Disease. Remarkable Pens. Weary Clerk—Have you any fountain pens that won’t blot when they are nearly empty? Dealer—Why, sir, I have fountain pens that won’t blot when they are entirely • stnpty—Exchange. Have You Asthma? Dn. R. Schumann. St. Paul, Minn., will mall a trial package ot Schiff inann’s Asthma Cure free to any sufferer. Gives Instant relief In worst cases, and eures where others fall. Name this paper and send address. Kin to a High Roller. “I’ve got a cousin in New York who Is one of the high rollers.” "Indeed! What is he, a stock broker? ’ “No; a guard on the elevated road.” —Philadelphia Record. Mb. Darics Waterhouse, Chattanooga, Tenn., says: “It costs but little to try Bradycrotine, and a trial is all that is necessary to convince the doubting thousands that It will cure headache.” Os all Druggists. Fifty cents. An Indication of Culture. Miss Bleecker —Miss Beaconstreet is such a cultured girl! Miss Weehawken —Yes, indeed! She always exclaims “rodents,” instead of ‘ ‘rats. ’’—Exchange. A Pbomit anti Pleasing Wat of Easing Asthmatic Wheezing. Use Hale s Honet or Hokeh ivne and Tab. Pike’s Toothache Drops Cure in one Minute. They (Sometimes Die b ut Never Resign. Wilkins—Our friend Jenkins, who has held a government office for years, has given up his position. Witkins—When did ho die?—Baltimore sews. A cults for nearly all the common ills—what, doctors? Pshaw! Take Beecham’s Pills. For sale by all druggists. 25 cents. Without tho fear of God great treasure is always sure to bring great trouble withit. f Swellings In the neck, or Goitre* caused me terrible suffering, and I spent an enormous amount of money for medicines, in vain. I began t o take Hood's Sarsaparilla and in a few weeks I found the swelling very much reduced, and I could Breathe Mrs. Blxelow. with Perfect Ease, which I had not done for years. I continued with HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA and am Permanently Cured." MSS. JENNIE BIGELOW, Fremont, Mich. HOOD'S PILLS curs liver ills, constipation biliousness, jaundice, sick headache. 25c. Baldheadedness A Disease. NO CURE. NO HAIR. -iK" NO HAIR. NO PAY. Ask yourdnigglst for Dr. Benner’s Anti-Chronic Cause autl Effect Remedy. Trice W cents and f 1.00 per bottle. Descriptive circulars in German and English sent free upon application. Address Thr Rkneca County Mmdical and Compounding Co..Tiffin, Ohio. _ of bad eatingicures Sick Headache; resToresCamplexlon: care.Con.t i pat ion. Sa. ht m> sww a uu- » Q FIT FOLKS REDUCED PATENTS! PENSIONS! Send for Inventor’s Guide, or How to Obtain a Patent. Send for Digest of I'enrion and Bounty Laws. PATRICK O’FAKKELL. Washington. I>. C. ct ko Iml IMa % wher<, ‘ Brfore ’ ou bUT ’ >| .OU. Stamp for cAUtofue t« RIFLES I2oo| ]■ H ■■■the PowhU Clement Co. WATCH ES wA wi ■ Viss s.i. su. ci.ei.o.u,a. — Oldert and Lsrewt Spencerian JZ) ,/Business College and ShortZ'ACz. , If hand School. Clewland, Ohio. /z/T Pyl/A Founded in 1848 . 31000 former z z LJfrCeJ'J ' pupil,. Elegant catalogue free. GOIWffTBUILD? Send for Illustrated Catalogues 'Containing 86

THF TRUE LAXATIVE PRINCIPLE Ot the plants used in manufacturing ths pleasant remedy. Syrup of Figs, lias a permanently beneficial effect on the human system, while t.ha ehoap vegetable extract* and mineral solutions, usually sold as medicines, are permanently Injurious. Being well-informed, you will use the true remedy only. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Matrimonial Item. Spoony Young Bride (to newly made young What would you do were I to die before you did? Young Husband—l should wait and see what you would do under the same circumstances and follow your example. - Texas Siftings. FTTH.—AU Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Kestoier. No Fits after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and 42 00 trial bottle tree to Fit cases, trend to Dr. Kline. Ml Arch fit., Phils, Fa. To know that it loves the law of God is tho soul's proof that it is trusting in God. Pimples AND Blotches EVIDENCE That the blood is wrong, and that nature is endeavoring to throw off the impurities. Nothing is so beneficial in assisting nature as Swift's Specific {S. S. S.) It is a simple vegetable compound. Is harmless to the most delicate child, yet it forces the poison to the surface and eliminates it from the blood. I contracted a severe case of blood poison that unfitted me for business for four years. A few bottles of Swift’s Specific (S. S. S.) cured me. J. C. Jones, City Marshal, Fulton, Arkansas, Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. Swift Specific Co, Atlanta, Ga. Ask your doctor what happens to cod-liver oil when it gets inside of you. He will say it is shaken and broken up into tiny drops} becomes an emulsion; there are other changes, but this is the first. He will tell you also that it is economy to take the oil broken up, as it is in Scott’s Emulsion, rather than burden yourself with this work. You skip the taste too. Let us send you an interesting book on CAREFUL LIVING ; free. Scott & Bownk,Chemists, 133 South sth Avenue, New York. Your druggist keeps Stott’s Emulsion of cod-liver oil—all druggists everywhere do. sl, A CLEAR COMPLEXION. Dr. O. P. Brown’s beautifies the, skin and HFRBAE. snefi.preventihgtheshrink*hich produces wnnTISSUE BUILDER lteT s “£b b which most skins, hungry for nourishment, absorb like a sponge. Druggists or by mail fl.oo. Send 10c for SAMPLE, with Lady’s paper illustrating Seven Ages of Woman’s Life, and devot-d to the care of Face and Body. J. GIBSON BROWN. 47 Grand Street, Jersey City, New Jersey. MUr All guessed about ” - life insurance may be wrong, PAY ou toe ---— truth, send for “How and POST" Wky,” issued by the PENN ■nc MLll AL LIFE, 921-3-5 ChestMut. nn t Street, Philadelphia.

CHEAP POWER ■ y o n ■■■ FARMERS, MACHINISTS, MANUFACTURERS, PRINTERS, AND EVERYBODY ELSE NO DANGER of explosiom OR FIRE! THE FOOS Gas and Gasoline Engine. A 0 \ \W*S| r w 1. l u Bgaajglhk Just the Thing for Feed Mills, Spice Mills, Sausage Machines, Corn Shelters, Pumps, Wood Saws and Small Factories. Cost of operating from two to ten cents per hour, according to size. These Engines are made in sizes ranging from one to ten hor»e power, and can be set up ready for ase in three hours. After once in operation anyone can rim them with perfect safety. Unlike other makes of Gas and Gasoline Engines..tltey do not require the cylinders and valves should be cleaned every few days. They can be ruwfor meqsis without any cleaning or other Care than seeing that the bearers are properly oiled and oil-cups kept full. Write for circulars giving full particulars, prices and testimonials. FORT WAYNE NEWSPAPER UNION, General Western Agents, 76, 78 and 80 Clinton Street, FORT WAYNE, IND. Note.—Aß to our reliability we refer you to the publisher of th* paper in which" you read th is advertisement. FUKL WAYNE NEWBPAPEB UNION. ■ ■ Bar LOW’S IN Dico Blur, The Family Wash Blue, tor aala by Grocers. Zg ZA S iaifl w. >•. r.. n o . io-m ■ Bald by druggists or sent by When Writing to 0 Advertisers, say you Me. IT. nomlttaK Waneo (X H saw the Advertisement in this paper.

mb “August Flower” “ I am happy to state to you and to suffering humanity, that my wife has used your wonderful remedy, August Flower, for sick headache ancPpalpitation of the heart, with satisfactory results. For several years she has been a great sufferer, has been under the treatment ofemintnt physicians in this city and Boston, and found little relief. She was induced to try August Flower, which gave immedaite relief. We <cannot say to much for it” L. C. Frost, Springfield, Mass. 0 He Wabash R, R, Go, SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. -- Wait for tho Great Low Rato HARVEST EXCURSIONS to be run by the W ABASH | RAILROAD on August 30th, September 27th, And October 25th, 1892, to points West, HouthI west, and Northwest. Remember the Wabash Is the Great Through declining: Chair Car ! Route, and is the only railroad in the Stfttei of Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan giving its patrone Free Seats in these luxurious palace cars. Go West and enjoy a few weekn rest and recreation nt a nominal expense. For maps, time tables and full particulars, address the nearest Wabash Agent, or write to F. Chandler, Gen. Pass, and Ticket Agent, Wabash R. R., St. Louis. Mo. 1 ICoat WORLD! SLICKER The FISH BIIAND SLICKER is warranted waterproof, and will keep you dry in tho hardest storm. The new POMM EL SLR KEIL is a perfect riding coat, and covers the entire saddle. Bewareof imitations. Don t buv a coat if the “ Fish Brand” is not on it. Illuhtrated Catalogue ire**, A. J. TOWER, Boston, Nlass, SEWIS'9B%LYE S Powdered and Perfumed. y Li (PATENTED.) • ! * e an, l pnreat Lye m ode. mtA Lnlike other Lye, it being a fine A* A powder and packed in a can with lid; the contents are always ready for use. Will make perf Limed Hard Soap in 20 minute* without boiling. It is tho Ka best for cleansing waste-pipes, disinfecting sinks, closets, washftaL inn bott ee, paints, trees, etc. PENNA. SALT Gen. Agts., Phi la., Pa. Illustrated Publications, KStSaßffiWiTH MAPS, d-Milibinz fa Mianeseta.North Dakota. Montana, ■ HaKl £<3 Idaho. Washington and Oregon, th* FREE GOVERNMENT B ano LOW PRICE 3 ® i>»a LANDS #yThe beat AgTicnltnra!. Grating ard Timber Lands now open to eettlers. Mailed FREE. Addr«R3 ULIS. L. LAMBOKJi, Land Com., If. F. Ji. IL, Pm>l, • RIPANS TABULES njgulateJ * the stomach, liver ana bowels, puri-* * fy blood, are safe and effectual 2 t^e best medicine known for bilious- > •pc* Xj/ness, ccastipa-tion, dyspepsia, foul# Z breath. headacLe.mental depression, 6 Z painful digestion, bad complexion.# Z \EWjiHF and all diseases caused by failure or • * the stomach, liver or bowels to per- T • form their proper functions. Persons given to over-T a eating are benefited by taking one after each neol. r • Price. 12; sample. 15c. At Druggists, or sent bj mail T i • RIPANS CHEMICAL CO., 10 Spruce SU-New York. Z $40000,000” Earned by the Bell Patent in 1891. Your invention may be valuable. You should protect it by patent. Address for full and intellig -nt advice,/rae of charge W. W. DUDLEY & CO.. Solicitors of Patents, Pacific Bldg-, 622 F St. N. W M Washinffton, D. C« Mention thin paper.