Democratic Press, Volume 2, Number 58, Decatur, Adams County, 21 November 1895 — Page 3

A WsteMM T» returning p*Ati- > y rtuy «ntl ■ t nicht la AMrildAtl by il» rheumatic p». tlrnt who »»« the». hlrvaluga to ILwitll.r'a Htoinaqh Bitter. iHm't drlay th. u»<> <>t thia Hua anodyne fi>t pnlu and imrlper us tile I'h’twl an Inataui I» »oh! the |mlnt n hvu the dltohta.’ mahlfeala ll«e|t Klitlley l..>uhie, dyapepala. liver ■ ntw|iliuin In grippe ano Irregulnrlty of the buwrh are relict j and cured by the Ulttora. Ixtuking <>la«a In a C'oftln. (hie of the antient custom* cunDucted with Swedish funeral* wan tu place a small i- . i in the cullin of au unnnu ietl female, no that when the last trumpet sounds she might be able to arrange her tresses. It was the practice for Scandinavian Waldens t*> wear tluir hair flowing looselv, while the matrons wore it bound abound the head and generally covered with some form <>t cap. Hence the unmarried woman was imagined as awakening at the judgment day with more untidy lock.* than her wedded shters and more in need of a glass. Mr», Burnett’s Frivolity, ••I was a great admirer of Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett,” says a < hicugo Woman. **l had read all her hooks and waaactua’lh crazy to meet her; so while 1 was in Boston I was offered tbv opportunity 1 long hud sought. 1 think I was the most disappointed person in all the world Mrs. Burnett I impressed me as being wholly absorbed with society; she was overdressed, and it was clear to me that she used cosmetics freely. During the half hour I spent with her the talked only of het self and of the little society frivolities of which she seemed to be completely enamored.”—Chicago Record. A STANDING arm\ gives its supporters little time to sit. ; A NOBLE LIFE SPENT FOR AND WITH SUFFER* INU WOMEN. A Life’s Work Perpetuated through a Faithfol Buchter, and Records of Priceless Value. Untui to oc» MM What a vast amount of misery and suffering has been prevented by the clearheaded foresight of one noble woman! She had struggled, labored, and sacrificed for the welfare of her sex. The eyes of the women of the world were upon her. ft jJtWK I jR? ipl r As she recalled the past, and tried to penetrate the future, a smile of supreme satisfaction passed over her lionest face as she remembered that her life's work would be perpetuated. The room in which she sat contain’d hundreds of volumes of records; aud, turning to her daughter, she said, — ' “My daughter, this room, as you '.veil know, contains the records of my life's work, in which for many years you have so diligently assisted me. “ By earnest application you have compassed my method ; and it is a happiness to think that when I leave, the glorious work will, through you, go on. “ The mission Is a noble one. Do as I have done: never permit a woman's appeal to go unheeded. “ These records tell of every case ever submitted to me; and it is my wish that the facts they contain shall in time prove a much-needed education to the women of the world.” Thus did Lydia E. Pinkham hand over to her daughter. Mrs. Charles 11. Pinkham, what may be termed the salvation of her sex; and that wonderful remedy, Lydia E. PMtharu't Vegetable Compound, which ail druggists consider as standard as flour, goes on redeeming hundreds ot women from the fearful consequences of female diseases. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discover?.! in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit Is always experienced from the first bottle, and a'perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious It will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Ear the best you can get, and enough of it Dose, one tablespoonful .in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. Best Cough Syrup. Taeles Good. Use HI In time. Bold by dnigylaL". PJV sEwiiSCTbOg

GIVE THEM THE ROPE REPUBLICANS CAN HANG THEMSELVES BEFORE 00. U. <>. P. I'ntluwcr* May Find the DI.•lurveuble Le.stinx of I*lXl mid IMIW Set Before Them Attain Next November Ueoiorknlile L'onfVMiOun. ' Huetomt !•> Not Baes. Republicans cannot Im> blamed for saying tiiat their recent sweeping vic torlew make their success In the next presidential election certain. Yet even the most elate <>f them have n lianutlng recollection that they felt Just an certain In IBM and 1890. The conservative vote which tluir Blaine and tariff aud force bill debauch allvmitod has now no doubt returned to them; but there is time for it to be alienated again before next November. I<et them only give Tanner, Foraker, Chandler and McKinley, to say nothing of Platt. Quay and Sewell, rope enough, and the hanging of the party will be among the easy possibilities. Senator Sherman already threatens a duty on wool and a general and speedy tariff upheaval. He aud too many other leaders are deceived by the idea that the 1 country wants them to "do something.” But that is precisely what the country i is sick and tired of. Doing something is what lias undone one party after the other. As the Antlnomlan hymn says: "Doing Is a deadly thing, doing ends In death.” The voters of the nation are I prepared to hall a party which will i frankly say that It proposes to leglsi late as little as possible; that it la not ' going to Insist upon making everybody ! rich, wise and virtuous by law. All 1 the Republicans have to do Is to stand still and see their salvation. If they are too eager to help things along by going to war with England, or ripping up the tariff, or inflating the currency again, they may easily find the disagreeable lessons of 1890 aud 1802 set. them once more. —New York Evening Post The Cause of Bnaineso Troubles. Thinking that the people have such poor memories that they can be easily deceived as to the origin of the recent trade depression, the New York Tribune revives the old story that it was the fear of Democratic legislation which in 1803 closed mills and factories, and brought ruiu aud bankruptcy. If that I paper had been content with its bold I assertion it might have convinced its I partisan readers that it was telling the I truth. But when it proceeds to explain the closing down of many factories in ' 1892, while the Republican administration was still in power, by saying that the branches of industry affected were those in which It was expected that the tariff duties would be changed, it becomes ridiculous. The people are not so stupid as the Tribune Imagines. They know that industry of all kinds is carried on to supply human wants. They know that the total volume of exchanges which we call trade, depends on the ability of each consumer to find some oue who wants the things made by other men, and has something to offer in exchange. They know that business activity depends on the purchasing power of the masses, and not on high taxes on foreign goods. These are some of the simple truths on which the common people have got a good hold. With these principles in view the cause of business depression can be readily seen. If the people who are engaged in producing wealth of all kinds are robbed annually of a large share of their product, as was the case under the McKinley tariff. It is evident that they cannot buy as much of the proceeds of other men's labor as they need. ' Tlie loss of a portion of the goods they make means that they will be unable ' to take less of other goods. While each ' man's annual loss through high tariff robbery may be small, yet the total means an enormous amount, and the result is a generally decreased demand I for goods, and the consequent closing of factories. This is exactly wliat happened in 1882 and 1893. The consumers of goods needed Just as much of everything as they did a year or two years before. But they had been annually giving so large a share of their products to protected monopolies and trusts that they were unable to buy back the things they wanted. Factories therefore found that they had too many goods on hand, and were forced to close down and to discharge their employes. There Is no mystery about hard times. Factories cannot run if goods cannot be sold. The people cannot buy goods If their money is taken in high tariff taxes, and in profits of protected trusts. Under natural conditions each innn's purchasing power would exactly equal his power to produce goods, and panics and over-production would be Impossible. When Democratic principles are fully carried out, the prosperity which has followed their partial application will lie perpetual. Fnt Fryers nod Rnil Mnnufacturers. A calamity organ asserts that the reason ex-Congressman Tom Johnson wants no protection for his steel rails Is that they are “pioteeted by numerous patents.” If this be so, there are other manufacturers of steel rails who have no such protection. Mr. Andrew Carnegie is not crying for more protection, as the present duty on steel rails, small as it Is. Is in effect prohibitory In its operation. At the ruling prices for steel rails the manufacturers have no need of any protection at all, patents or no patents. But that Is not the question. What the manufacturers desire above all Is to be lot alone, in order that they may extend the markets for their industries nt home and abroad. The only ycl|>s for more protection come from the professional tariff agitators and rhe

I politicians who wish to fry mors ’’fat” out of the manufacturer*. It Is perfectly safe to pr<*dl<*t that not a manufacturer of stool will bo found In the lobbies of the next Congress bogging for higher duties. Philadelphia Record. ilow Protection Ila. Robbed Formers, in spite of the warnings of the Democrats that tin- protective tariff was steadily crushing the farming Industry <>f tin- country, the farmers eontioued to vnic for the party which was plum dering them by Indirect taxation. For thirty years previous to IsiH a high tariff policy has Ih’cii In force, and during all that time the Republicans have beeu telling the farmers that the "home markets" built up by protection was making them rich. The farmers themselves knew Is-tter, but allowed I their partisan bias to prevent them overthrowing the system which was responsible for their condition. Finally they revolted, ami in 1882 elected an administration and Congress pledged t<» establish a tariff for revenue only. With the repeal of the McKinley tariff the eyes of even the most bigoted protectionists were opened to the truth alsiut the farming Industry. It was then no longer necessary to conceal tin- facts, ami Instead of picturing the ! prosperity of the farmer. Republican ; pajx-rs begun to talk of fils poverty. A ■ consplcaoaa instance of this , hange Is found in the Manufacturer, the organ I of the Manufacturers* Chib of I'hila-. j ddphla. a body which Includes alxmt, oue thousand prominent Pennsylvaniaprotectionists. The Manufacturer is an ardent advocate of the most extreme McKlnleyisui, and favors practically the prohibition of foreign goods. Y'et in Its issue of Nov. 2 that pai>er makes the following editorial statement In regard to the American farmers: "The prices of farm stuff have been falling, almost without Interruption, for twenty years. But taxes have been advancing and the Indebtedness of the agriculturists has not Is-en decreasing. What is to be the conclusion of this remarkable movement? Is It not plainly indicated by tht-fact that between l.*<Bo and istsi. in this one State of Pennsyl- ■ vunla, the numlx-r of men working | their own farms decreased by 1 I.<mh», while the numlx-r of tenant farmers increased by 9,800? The Americans who cultivate the earth are becoming hirelings instead of owners. The land is passing from the hands of the men who till it. Prices for farms are now quoted witbiu thirty miles of this city, in localities nearly In touch with railroads. as low as S2O an acre, and even sls. This does not represent the value of the buildings aud other improvements. The land Itself Is given away more cheaply than in the patents of William Penn, or even the deeds of conveyance to him. signed by the Indian chiefs.” Tills is the deliberate assertion of a protectionist organ. If it bad lieen j made by a Democratic paper two or . three years ago. the Republican press t would have called it a free trade slan- i der. But coming from one of them- ; selves, how can the Republicans an- I swer it? They cannot say that the state of affairs described by the Manufacturer is due to the Wilson tariff, for the record of Increasing tenant farmers is taken from ten years in which protection was In full operation. And the decline in prices of farm products is stated to have been going on for the past twenty years. Certainly tariff reform had nothing to do with what oc. | curred under a high tariff. Ohio’s Busy Mills. Five hundred tons more to England? i The bats and owls do not appear to be I nesting in the chimneys, for if they try' to find one that is uot sending out tire and smoke they fail. Neither are cows browsing around the furnaces, as ■ they told us would surely happen. I There is uo use denying the facts any ! longer. When Youngstown industries. ! situated hundreds of miles from the I shore, can send their products by rail, under heavy freight rates, to the ocean and then across the deep to the Old World, it proves conclusively what tariff reformers have always claimed. The era of trade is just begun.—Youngs- , town tO.) Vindicator. Our ProxpcroiiH Woolen Trude. Not only have there been large ex portations of wool from .the United, States under the new tariff—an unprecedented circumstance—but the exportations of woolen goods have greatly inereastsl. In 1892 our exports of woolen goods amounted to about $367,000f in 1895 they reached S(I7O,<XM). The exports of earpets have risen from $9,000 . in 1892 to $161,000 in 181)3, while those | of flannels have doubled, and those of I other woolens have likewise increased. Statistician Ford declares that the woolen industry of the United States if now more prosperous than ever before I —Buffalo Courier. The Slid vini: of McKinteyisni. The efforts of Mr. Harrison’s frlem.s to acquit him of complicity in the MeKinley tariff Indicate a realizing sense upon their part of tin- enormity oi’ that) monumental blunder. It is quite safe to say, in view of the present tendencies of trade, that no party will dare to advocate a return to MeKinleyisni. The attempt to make the tariff again a campaign Issue lias signally failed, and the anxiety of the more level-head-ed partisans to drop the subject is simply a recognition of evident truth.— Philadelphia Times. Hnninesa Steadily Improving. The McKinley law found the country prosperous and left it prostrate. The present law found the country prostrate and helped it to its feet. To say that full prosperity n-turned at once would lie to talk nonsense, for business, when so grievously wounded, cannot recover in a day. But it is not too much to say that business lias been Improving steadily ever since.—Eoulsvills Courier JournaL

Highest of all in Leavening Power —Latest U.S. Gov’t Report ABSOLUTELY PURE

“The Republic Os Jones." “There was a government in existence within the limits of my State during the Ute war that I find no mention of in the histories,” said F. M. Holden of Ytlsaissippi, at the National Hotel, in Washington, the other day. "In the , early day* of secession the County of I .Jonas, through its leading < itireus, I withdrew from the Confederacy, de- , dared itself a free and Independent penpie, and organized a government, and adopted a Constitution modeled after that of the United States, called this new government ‘the republic of Jones,* elected a president and a full quota of officials, and refused to furnish men or money to the Southern cause. On the approach of Confederate troopa they would retreat to tbe swamps and other inaccMaible places and remain in hiding till the danger had passed. They kept up this queer attitude of hostility to tbeir own brethren, ao far aa I am informed, to the close of the war, but tbo republic of Jones passed out of tbe memory of men with the event of Appomattox, and the mention of it now in that locality is only a cause for smiles." Minneapolis Journal. Hlevenson and Carlyle. Robert Louis Stevenson used to tell this story of his early days: He was entering in aa absent-minded way the famous second-hand bookshop of James Stillie when lie ran into a fumbling old gentleman who waa leaving the establishment. The latter exclaimed in an angry tone: "Man, can you not look where you are going?” Stevenson a|x>logized for his awkI wardness, and was then confronted by Mr. Stillie, who was also excited. The bookseller exclaimed: “The creature has been trying to make out that an old book I sold him is spurious! He may be able to write, but he knows nothing about black letter books. He's the most disagreeable customer that ever entered my shop.” “Who is he?” asked Stevenson. “Oh, that's tiie great Mr. Carlyle,” was the answer. The Nickel Plate road operates a perfect passenger service com posed of first and second class dsy coaches, attended by colored porters. Excellent dining ears and through slo ping cars to Chicago, Cleveland, Buttal >. New York and Boston. Ri.t s always the lowest.

MM* - aaaa AAA aa AAA a aaa aaW NT •▼▼ • “▼,•.»▼•**’ ▼*»▼•> *““““V““““" 9“”* ■’ ■ vvw Vv. wwvvvvww vvvv v w v v : T*Los# of*opportunity is lifers greatest loss Think of suffering with T> I NEURALGIA Years Years Years H !’• When the opportunity lies in a bottle of ST. JACOBS OIL. It cures, tj ; E3w"»*w»~»»«C»»»»«»'»e»e«»ov»»'» •»♦♦.♦♦♦«♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦«♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦♦♦« ♦«♦■ nion’onsmr jJeJF S F PIIBk RS quick Consumption.”—Mrs. I Iy If G 51 $h i £ in h CONSUMPTION I Cures Where All Else Fails. BEST COUCH SYRUP. |l t.vte. «<»i»n. rse rx timw. hold by drcggistn. ijct l -. nly-aj-unz. XST'. ■ —; ■■■ ~ ■■■ "==M2W9J . -' i ——. '■- 1 - T You might just as well /\ try to blow around a weather vane as to help some 771 people by pointing out the right way. I hey __£ J)—- x\ won’t see it. Even if you n , .ITT \ prove to them that it's the !n — 1 x eas ‘ est wa y» safest, I £Lr~l H R ( and cheapest, they won’t walk * n it. ■ fa ~~~x. But this isn't so with all. It’s Z y- f >. only a few, comparatively. ' " ' Were not complaining. There are millions of women who have seized on Pearline s way of washing—glad to save their labor, time, clothes, and I money with it. Most women don t need much urging when they fully understand all the help that comes with Pearline, wo IN EUROPE." W 1 * //Wk A new BOOK BY JOS,AH ALLENS WIFE - I ' Agents Wanted o '^XT n ‘ Agents Wanted ♦a Kbvlhat Im J orta b Allen'-. Wlfellua Been to Europe. •'« went alone, and Baroa I de Urlmni. the fen -■ ' Vjl lowed them I'hey went to KiiKiand. Ireland, hcotuml. mid XXn,. uleo lo J!■ France German. et« | lie reaultaarc that we hate imw It. preaw satnan„77 Mdl IWSSwB > thu'a liie.i and rr-'ateat or nil lift hooka. trlllnu- the '•o.ir.inae ..nil til, 7<‘ ’ V.-A .k .Unirtul''atorvof their adrenturea hiairanse i ltne io.nl palm ■■■ ui.l 1/ m.'n . t the w»v N«'• ► The. nlao . Into-I tin l»uK ••! ' ' I •••■..»•. tSf/f ■%/ “Vv.iand Other»tl.er hwltn.-t ill the VWM-. I«hin 1 u Itaron <l. ..iln.m Bff Mt wSut'" inu mad' er Wo lUuatratton. of the I'ventr ot the trip, all n ahl< h will MEvkif»2K urK unpear In the hook With It. prolouud inierewt. >l> t>il. ot ..It, it/ fA I! WtfSt-. WRIMW lien ollie I. nn> or. nn.l .. on.i ri.ii..,..|my. .'nil, iin- i.....k »iu ... > i-. U if’Jß, A-. < Wttjr* “..fore ll Sol mlv Alnertran..hllt IMullah.<-ern«i.. I rmeh.nntl ' ll.' ' t ..lk '-JF are eager IO r- It A« many copies will lurety lie mid an were of all HimanHU WE,MMW'*ljwr»ii> tha t other hooka eonihlnra more than half nnillllon XX i.le-i... >.he i'lwtf' I Aho.it ?ll > MJ.<. turn. w|„, h ,, t , re ••/mode Jos.uA o Adn’.«omr Urcin' ll* * n 'h. '.T.'* , territory And Hot for the Holidays oowm ouf «of<i c<rrtring I hart .. |#l ia -| n a 1.00. ’ Write for term»and territory At (hire* viiA'w A i.e"!lhrht i,.l«"i'’ r '’' 1 ' **"* FUNK a WAGNALLS CO., Publllhera. 30 Lafa.atte Place. New York. It Was Before the Dav of SAPOLIO They Used to Say “Woman’s Work Is Never Done.” i

Shopman's Clever Reply. An English lady told of, In the | Hpoctator, who complained to a shop- I keeper that, in sending parcels to her, | he would address her as "The Honorable." "Don’t mention it, ma'am. It doesn't signify at all.’’ “I ut it does signify. My parcel* may go to the wrong person. lam not , ‘Honorable.’” "We, madam, have always found you j so. ’’ A CHll.lt HNJOYB The ple.'issnt flavor, gentlo action and ■ soothma ■ ■ffecta of byrup ot Figa. when In i nesd of a laxative, and it the tether or i Bioiher be costive or bilious, the most grati- f fving result* follow its use; so that it Is the I boat tamllv raniedy known, and every ta- I ily should have a bottle on band. The destruction of life in modern j warfare is something frightful. In the , Franco-l’ruiesian war (com Angu.-t 4. I*'.u. to August I*. 100,(MO Germans and French were killed outright, to say nothing of the many thousands more who afterwards d ed in the hospitals from their wound*. N ickel Plate road, low rates and perfect service are all synonyms. A through ! sleeping car servlci' between Chicago, Fort I Wayne, Cleveland, Erie, Buffalo, New I ■ York and Boston. Modesty is tired in self-reverence. Fine manners are the mantie of fair minds. None are truly great without tliis ornament. A. B. Aicott. Flannel next the skin often produces a rash removable with Glenn's Sulphur “Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye." Black ! or Brown, 50c. IN the war of the revolution Massachusetts furnished more troops to the army than any other State. Piso's Remedy for Catarrh gives immoI diate relief, allays inflammation, restores taste and smell, heals tbe sores aud cures the disease. The sick do not exercise all the patience. California | assengers should ask agents <>t tbe Nn kel Plate road tor rates and connections before purch: s.ng tickets else- | w here. Cold sunshide makes the most shiv- • cr9, FITS.— All FiUstorp’ d fre* bv l>r. Klinc'w (ste «t No Fite aft*r firwt <!ay x usp MarAfloiiM cure*. Trratite and $2 00 trial bottle free to Fit caaeb. bend to Dr Khne. USI Arch bt. I‘hiia. Pa. Triflrs make perfecticn; but perfection itself is no trifle.

BEST IN , (JL. \ iwbfe ®THi: RIMMi ATOVI! F«LI«H <«kra lot blsc klnit ot a TMP SUN FAMM POLISH <:r , SJ.H-I sflrt dinner shtlk • Spllrd and mA* labtd with a cwK Mot»• ttros.. Props., X'snlon. Mass.. I’.S. A- -- -— r********* *••**•*•*»*»**« iFriend.sOats (Kiln Dried) Superior !ta¥l Rolled Oats2=pound Packages ( At All Grocers A MUSCATINE OAT MEAL CO. ft * MUSCATINE. IOWA f THE DOWN HILL ROAD! Ono give a dheaM* a start, and ths» mad frm health to stckni Hh Is sniolh.and - r.ipidW Sometime* just a little irregularity. just a UtUp drain, lust u faint ••hcßrlnit-down” feeling. £ tl h*enj always leads to the moat serious r<>nM"|ucMM. There are very few women in perfect health. Nearly always there is suine weakliest In the female organ* Neglect of thi si lift e thlM| is sure to push the aufferer farther down the hue to ftbeaae. Pul a stop to them. McELREE'S WIN OF CARDUI Win quickly stop and cure all displacements and and drams and weaknesses peculiar to women, it cures bv Imildlng up the whole systtmi. Disease can't exist In a strong, healthy bo.lv, Wlneof Cardui enables women to cur themselves. It enables them to keep sw-rets treat the doctor that lie must know it she goes to LUa for help. One Dollar a Bottle. Sold by all Druggists. GRAND TOUR OF OLD MEXICO. THE EGYPT OF THE NEW WORLD. On Tuesday, January 14, 1K96, Gates’ annual tour of Mexico will leave'luledo by special train at 11 a. m., via Wabash Railroad, and pass Fort Wayne about I:SJ p. in. Tiie lour tins season will far surpass all former efforts, several new features have been added. The Gates’ sjx-cial Pullman train will consist of vestibuled sleeping aud compartment cars, observation and library car, and a palace dining oar, also a baggage car, the entire train making the thirty day tour and covering ii.tiuo miles. .Mr. Gates will accompany the train, and give every detail personal attention. For a handsome book of the tour giving itinerary and much other interesting data apply to the following representatives Wabash’Railroad. C. 8. Crane, G. P. A T. A., St. Louis. Mo. Chas. 11. Gates, Tkt Agt., Toledo, Ohio. P. E. Domiiauoh, P. A T. A. Toledo, Ohio. R. G. Thompson. P. A T. A., Fort Wayne, Ind. R. G. Buti.kr, D. P. A., Detroit, Mich. J. M. McConnell, P. & T. A. Lafayette, Ind. MUWHHMg yll M I tttil Mr. D. M. Cobb, of 1034 Union avenue, Kansas City. Mo., under date of June 16, 1895, says: “For a number of years 1 have suffered from constipation in its severest form. My liver failing to act for » week, I have tried any number of specifics and have also had physicians prescribe for me, but only received temporary relief. During the early part of the past winter I had my attention called to Ripans Tabuics by a small sign on a telegraph pole, which said 'One gives Belief.’ I procured a box and was at once attracted by the neat form in which they were put up. Before 1 had taken half a dozen doses I began to feel the good effect, especially from the pais I would suffer when my liver was trying to act. 1 have now taken three boxes and have no more trouble. My bowels act regular aud free and as a result my health is much improved. (Signed) D. M. COBB.” Ripans Tabtilrs an* sold by drunlata or by matt W (hr price i.fio cent* a boi) Ib sent t«> rhe Hl pans ( han** cal Company, No. io Spruce Street. New York. Saiupia vial. 10 cent*. THE AFRMOTOR CO. «oos half the windmill biiKineßß, bocaow It iuw reduced the < oat of wind power to 1.0 what it wan. Jt baa many braacß _ u a . houtwM, and Riipr'itm lt» goods aud repairs al your door. Il can anddoee furnish • xs®*F<?fL better arucie for money the* oUiei-R. Il maker Pumping ana (p.artni, SUMI, dnivanixodafter’*uX**JlCompletion Windmills, THUbb and Hied Steel 'l owers, blrrl HuaiSew Frames, steel Feed (’niters and Feed MHk Grinders, on application it will t ame one * fit ‘ of these articles that it v-Ul furnish until January Set at 1/3 tie* usual price It hlao ir.akee Tanks and Pumpsnf ail kltrns. bend for cathlogue. Factory: I2tb, Rockwell r.nd (lllmorc Stmts,Chlcat» Cutler’s Carboiate of losing Inlialeutand Pocket Inhaler. Will poMUvrly rur. CATAHI’JI. IIRONCIUII* on ft ASTHV.A Give It a trial. I'r.ee. »l; by >u< I S 1.10. All llruirmirtx XV. 11. Mlill At fr.iprivtorx. 4<C4 Mlchltrsn St.. ItnlTaio. -New V o k. F. W. N. O. - - ‘ N”- 1 '' When writingto Ad vert liter, nay yon ■aw tbe udverti.eiHeut in tbi* paper.