Democratic Sentinel, Volume 14, Number 34, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 September 1890 — Page 7
IN SPITE OF CLARKSON.
MR. LEONARD BROWN, OF lOWA, IS OBDURATE. Specious Casuistry Wasted by the Postoffice Mogul on a Dissentient from the Infamous Legislative Enactments Proposed by-the Republicans. [Des Moines Cor. Chicago Herald. 1 Some interesting correspondence showing the trend of public sentiment away from the Republican party in lowa has just been published here. The first letter is from First Assistant Postmaster General James S. Clarkson, written to Leonard Brown, of this city, remonstrating with the latter gentleman because he had denounced the Harrison administration for its autocratic tendencies, and the Republicans in Congress for defeating the free coinage of silver and for urging the passage of the Lodge force bill. Mr. Brown is a prominent figure in lowa among the industrial classes. He is a writer of force upon industrial questions, and an orator of rare power and genius. Clarkson recognized his strength when he took him East in the Presidential campaign and kept him on the stump continuously all the time in the doubtful States. Fully aware of what effect his defection will have on the Republican party, Mr. Clarkson has written him a letter full of flattering allusions and praise of that organization. He begs Mr. Brown, when he raises his hand and voice to strike at President ' Harrison, “to remember that he had a boyhood of poverty; that the best blood of America came down to him through men who proved their patriotism in every time of the country’s need; that he went to the war for the Union and offered his life; that he has remained poor despite his large legal practice and his public office —he is notworth 810,000 to-day.” But Leonard Brown is obdurate and fails to be convinced by Mr. Clarkson’s pathetic appeal. He quotes from Mr. Clarkson’s own paper a serious indictment of the reigning powers at Washington, wherein it is charged that the creditor class control legislation and that the executive officers of the administration are in line with this policy, interpreting the statutes to the extreme limit in that direction. He then contends that the free coinage of silver was demanded by the platforms of all the political parties, and was defeated in Congress by the threat of a Presidential veto. With regard to the poor peoplp of the South and the Lodge election bill, Mr. Brown says: We are treading on dangerous ground when we would take the ballot lx>x out of the hands of the people. Capital menaces labor to-day. The capitalist who has be3ome a millionaire cares nothing for the rights of labor. He cares nothing for the rights of the poor man. He' cares nothing for American liberty. That is the rule, to which, to the honor of human nature, there have been and are glorious exceptions. But the love of money is still the “root of all evil.” It Is true that the “less than a quarter of a million of persons” who practically “own the American Republic” own the courts, own Congress and the President. Our government to-day obeys implicitly the commands of the rich men. and is deaf to the voice of the people. The petitions of the toiling millions, white and black, go unregarded. Under the pretext of “protecting Industry,” it enriches the few. Under the pretext of “paying off the public debt,” it pillages the Treasury, buying in its own obligations at 127 per cent., thus making a present of hundreds of millions of dollars to millionaire bond owners, until, after twenty years, the amount of our national debt — though 60 per cent, of it has already been paid—measured by thenumberof days’ work, bushels of wheat, bales of cotton and barrels of pork that would be required to pay it, is as niuch now as it was in 1868. This accursed policy has resulted in piling upon the fa-rms of the Mississippi Valley mortgages amounting, according to General Butler, to 54.500.00C.0U0 and reducing prices of farm products below the cost of production. Under the pretext of “Increasing the currency,” it stops the coinage of silver, creates a money “as good as gold” to the usurers, but that will not pay a mortgage debt “when otherwise especially stipulated” in the mortgage, which is already being done by the loan and trust companies, and opens the way for indefinite currency contraction by “booming” the price of silver to where it was prior to 1860, above par with gold. Under the pretext of “preserving and protecting the freedom of . the ballot” it aims at the destruction of popular liberty by taking the ballot-box from under the control and supervision of the people and placing it under the control and supervision of irresponsible agents of an irresponsible power in the election of a Federal President and representatives, placing the nation above the States, as England is above Ireland, centering the powers of government in a junta of dictators for life and destroying the power of the people. The Lodge bill is a bad law. It is the culmination of a series of bad laws. It is the dagger plunged into the heart of the American republic—not accidentally but designedly—the result of a conspiracy of plutocracy to destroy democratic liberty. It is tfae winding up of American liberty and the inauguration of an autocratic and plutocratic despotism. Before I will see the ballot-box wrenched from the hands of the trustees elected by the town meeting and handed over to the tender “gdardianship” of United States marshals, appointed by a for-life-appolnted “supervisor,” appointed by a for-life-appointed judge, appointed by a President elected at a “supervised” election, I will give up willingly my life upon the scaffold as Sir Henry Vane did his. as Sir Walter Raleigh did his, as Robert Emmet did his. 1 love my country as intensely as did Warren, so I believe. 1 love the flag of my country with as deep a fervor as did Jasper, so I fondly think; but “loyalty io the Government and the flag” will cease in my heart the moment the bal-lot-box has been wrenched by Federal usurpation from the hands of the people. As Jeremiah mourned the lost liberties of Judea, so would I mourn over my ruined country. But before I put on sackcloth I will fight. Like Kosciusko on the ramparts of Warsaw, I will do battle against the despot. I would take down the old flint-lock musket from over my cabin door that my great-grandfather, Daniel Brown, carried in the revolutionary war, and with which, under Stark, in the ranks of the New Hampshire mllitip, hefought the British at Bunker Hill, and I would rebel against this accursed tyranny and fight for my freedom till I die. If the star-spangled banner is to become the emblem of this kind of usurpation I would trample the stars and stripes under my feet as our fathers did the British flag when it became the emblem of their oppression. If the whites and the blacks cannot harmonize their interests and live together in peace, the history of the Indian on this continent will be repeated in that of the negro. But their Interests are in harmony and the two races will live together In peace if let alone. Extend, then, dear Mr. Clarkson, the great confidence and'faith you have in msn to the Southern white people. “A lover of fairplay and a believer In human nature,” believe that our white Christian brethren of the South “are growing better all the time” in their feelings toward their former slaves, as time's effacing fingers are rapidly wiping out the prejudices of the past, reconciling the people to the “new order of things;” so that the revolution that was of force is becoming Intellectual; which it must be to be permanent and worthy the name of revolution. Believe that our fellow-countrymen intend to ba good. They are our kinsmen. You have near relatives in the sunny South, no 4cuU; so have I. What, then, will we do
by our kindred In the southland? Why, let | them attend to their own concerns while we i attend to ours. Beware! Let not the stealthy, i cunning enemy, the money power, under the | specious pretext cf “protecting the blacks in their right to vote” rob the American ' people of free government, guaranteed by , the Declaration of Independence of 1776. i We of the North cannot “solve the race i problem” for the people of the South by , means of coercion. We may help them by : words fitly spoken. Those most vitally as- | fected can alone solve the problem.
THE "HOME MARKET” FALLACY
An Object Lesson for Our Agricultural ! Friends. [From the Detroit Free Press.] “Give us protection for tin plate,” say i the tin-plate men, “and the farmer cun 1 send his product to Pittsburg instead of ; to England, for the workers in tin will I bo transferred to the former!” This is the “home market” idea in the concrete. Put on the duties so as to enable the American manufacturer to compete with his foreign rival and the population of the manufacturing towns will Increase so much that the farmer will find all the market he wants here instead of being compelled to go abroad for it It is an attractive theory, and it is not to be wondered at that the farmer has been attracted by it The wonder is that he has not learned long since that it is only a theory, and that the facts do not support it. One would think he would have learned this, when, after nearly thirty years of experience with the workings of the home market theory, he finds himself still dependent on foreign countries for a market for his surplus products and for the price in his home market. Perhaps he has learned it—at all events there are some Indications this year that he is no longer following the home market theorists as blindly as he once did. But if he has not learned it, the indications are that the forthcoming census will open his eyes completely. Among the instructive facts whicb>the census will show are the workings of the “home market” theory in Connecticut. This State, as every farmer knows, has been one of the chief beneficiaries of the protective tariff by reason of the number and importance of its manufacturing establishments. Here, if anywhere, the beauties of the protective system and the resultant fruit of the “heme market” should show themselves. But, alas! for the “home market theory. ” From the figures already received the New York Evening Post has constructed a table showing that the. theory in Connecticut has proven a lamentable failure. In this table each of the twelve cities of the State has been selected as the center of the group of farm towns lying nearest it—the towns which should profit by the establishment of a “home market.” “In a large number of cases,” says the Post, “the farm towns selected adjoin the city, which is their natural market, and in no case are they more than a few miles away. The population by the last two censuses of these twelve ‘ farm groups,’ consisting of the three rural towns nearest each of the cities—except in the case of Hartford, the State capital, where four towns are taken — is approximately as follows: Population Population Group. 18s j. 1892. New Haven 2,UH 2.801 Hartford 6.010 5,412 Bridgeport ~G.21> i’,323 Waterbury 2,61 > 2.179 Meriden 3.767 8.3 17 New Britain 3,215 3,028 Norwalk « 3 927 3.498 Danbury 5.9> '• 5,195 Norwich 2,689 ‘-',‘210 New London 2,972 2,f03 Midflletown ........ 3,7.5 3.386 RockviUe 4.4 >7 4.010 Total 46,315 43,567 On this table the Post comments thus: “The decrease, subject to very slight revision in the final returns, during the ten years in these twelve groups is 4,748, or about 10 per cent. In the thirtyseven ‘farm towns nearest cities' which make up the whole twelve groups, two or three towns have been used twice over, in. cases where they adjoin two cities —a point <o which the ardent protectionist cannot object, as in that case the farm town is supposed ti receive ‘protective’ benefits from both its urban neighbors. It will be observed also that in only a single group of towns has there been a gain of population during the ten years, and in that but the merest trifle. The figures, however, derive their chief value from the fact that they test and vitiate the ‘truck-farm’ and ‘proximate-farm-town’ theory on the choicest protection ground—in a New England State, in towns close to bustling and prosperous cities, where the farmer may be supposed to encounter no problems of transportation, and where the competition—in ‘garden sass' at least —with other regions of the country is reduced to its lowest terms,” The Western farmer, who is being urged to demand the privilege of paying an enhanced price for his tinware in order.to sell more grain in Pittsburg, should take this little lesson to heart. Foreign and Home Prices. Much has been said about the fact that the price of farm machinery has steadily decreased under the protective tariff. While nobody denies the fact that the price has decreased, some have maintained that it was owing to other causes than the tariff, and claimed that the tariff has prevented the price of these machines from going still lower. To prove this they have claimed that our manufacturers have really sold and are now selling their wares abroad cheaper than they sei l them at home. This claim has been denied, but now it appears that tangible proof of its correctness has been found. The Ann Arbor (Mich.) Agricultural Machinery Co. advertises by publishing cuts of its implements, with the price annexed. These cuts have been published in both foreign and home papers. Cuts which are identically the same are published in a Spanish paper and in an American paper. The ‘following table gives the result of the comparison: Spanish American price. price. Advance plvw.. 8 9,02 $lB Adv* ice plow 4.0> 8 Hay tedder 32.’J0 .-5 Mower 49.62 65 Horse rake 17. J 25 Cumming feed cutter, No. 3.. 60.0 i <i > Ann Arbor cutter. No. 2 28.0 > ->0 Ann Arbor cutter, No 1 16 oj ts Clipper cutter 9.5 j 18 Level cutter. 4.2 ■ 8 Cultivator I 22.02 So Sweep 60.02 92 Or an aggregate difference of 8165.20. We do not publish these figures to prove any preconceived idea. They are facts, and are submitted as such. Northwestern Mail. An Urgent Question. “If reciprocity,” said Mr. Plumb, “is in the mind of auy one. why not make that reciprocity wide enough to take in all nations with which the Upited States could establish trade in products of which there is bound to be an excessive supply beyond the home demand?” That is a very urgent question, and no man on
the Republican side tn the Senate, or in tlflTHouse, who supperts the McKinley biff-dared to give a truthful answer to it. The real answer -4s that •‘ Reciprocity woujd expose to fair comfietltten wealthy men who depend on tariff favors for their great profits, and who are ready to pay for. these favors. There is absolutely/ho Other Reason. The thousands of manufacturers whose skill, enterprise, pluek, and business capacity would enable them to compete with all the world in a fair field are ready for such mutual trade; but the favorites of the tariff kiow that the moment this is undertaken their exactions, must cease, and they will fight it to the last. The people of the United States, however, are cofnihg,-di/by day--to see the facts as they are, and the time is not far distant when the power of these monopolists to bldA tlih progress of the country will be taken away.— New York Times. Tin Plate. £ Tin plate was always admitted free until 1842, when it was taxed per cent., and that increased, to 15 pet cent, in 1846 to increase revfcHjie. In 1857 It was reduced to 8 per cent., and it was increased to 10 per cent, in 1861, and again increased in 1862 to 25 per cent, as a war measure, and reduced to 15 per cent, in 1878. In 1875 the duty was made specific at 1.1 cents per pound. In 1882 the tin, plate combine was formed that is now demanding the monstrous tax of over 815,000,000 per annum on the people for the benefit of a few monopolists, and it then appealed to Congress to Increase the duty to cents per pound. There was such a popular revulsion against it that Congress was compelled not only to refuse the demand of the extortionate combine but to reduce the tax to one cent per pound, and it has remained at that figure until now. If the tin-plate cannot be manufactured in this country with a tax of 34% per cent, on consumers, it should not be manufactured at all. It point of fact, it could be made here now at a fair profit, but that industry has been delayed solely to compel such increased taxes upon the people as would establish a complete tin-plate monopoly; and the whole battle now is for monopoly and greed against the hundreds of thousands of farmers who grow vegetables and fruits for canning and are general consumers of tin, and the nearly 800,000 workingmen now employed in the tin industries. There Is only one side of the question outside of Washington among the people who pay the taxes, but the national capital is besieged by a greedy and powerful monopoly, and the truth is seldom heard where truth should be mightiest in the cause of the sovereign people of the republic.— Philadelphia Times. Messrs. Quay and Hoar are fit representatives of the two wings of Republicanism. Quay is crafty, selfish, corrupt. monopolistic and daring. He is; out for plunder and he does not care whoi knows it. He is ably supported by the tariff-pampered trusts and combines, and by the jobbers of every description who' make up so important a part of the Republican Organization. Hoar is a pharisee, a hypocrite, a cheap retailer of sen-: tfment, a better-class aristocrat, a bigot' and, when occasion demands, a tyrant. Quay has fastened all his hopes to the 1 McKinley bill. Hoar is bound up in the federal elections bill. . Both of these measures cannot be passed by this Congress. One or the other must be sacrificed. Which one will go by the board? — Chicago Herald. Congressman Mason says: “I favor the principle of reciprocity, but do not} favor the agitation of the question at this time.” It is now, however, while there is something to reciprocate on, or never. Mr. Mason reminds one of that man who was in favor of the Maine liquor law, but opposed to its enforcement.— Chicago Tribune.
THIS AND THAT.
People who carry pistols sometimes quickly fight to a draw. Some weep .because tbevpart, And languish broken-hearted; And othe 8— O, my heart! Because they never parted As a general rule, that society where flattery is acted i=i much more agreeable than that where it is spoken. When life hath run its largest round Of toil and triumph, joy and woe, How brief a storied page is found To compass all its outward show! The American fondness for base-ball is seen in the fact that when they can afford it they add ballrooms to thein homes. A Chicago man got even with an enemy, not by shooting him, but by deliberately giving his name to a book canvasser. “Well, little girl, you are growing old very fast; you are almost seven. ” “Yes, I know it: I grow old much faster than sister Mary, who has been only twenty-two ever since I can remember.” A Good Boy.—Caller—ls the editoi in? Boy—No. Caller—When will he be back ? Boy—l can’t tell you. Caller—Why can’t you tell me? Boy —Because he told me not to tell you. St. Peter—“ Were you enumerated before you left?” St. Paul Spirit—- “ No.” St. Peter—“ Did you make any effort to have your family counted?” St. Paul Spirit—“No, why should I?” St. Peter—“lt was your duty. Just take a seat on that toboggan there and slide down below.” “Pbay what is your age ?” said ye census man sage; And ye da- sal spoke never a word. “Are you foolish, insane, deiaf, humpbacked, or lame?" And she smiled at a thought so absurd. •Do you powder or paint?” and her smile it grew Ist nt. “Do you snore, miss, and have y<u cold feet?" Ye damosel yet shs spake not. you bet, But ye man he liy uead in ye street. “Thank heaven!” said Shakspeare’s ghost, “and blessed be the cyclone!” “W'hy so grateful. William?” said the spook of Queen Elizabeth. “Because, your Royal Highness, the papers say that the cvclone has destroyed several Hamlets.” Who can set to a wo-d The least song of % bird? Or can lay claim to a thought, The faint ray we have caught Of the truth that’s above us. Beside us and under — That breathes through the calm And speaks through the thunder? With the exception of sheol and St. Louis the hottest region inhabited by sinful man is that part of Persia lying on the Persian Gulf. For months the mercury never falls below 110 degrees night or day, and not unusually rises to 130 degrees at midday. Sojne portions of Africa are said to be equally salubrious. ‘DuChaillu, the explorer, lived for weeks with the temperature at 130 degreaa
Safety from a Pestmential Scourge.
Protection from the disease, not * medicinal agent which merely check! the paroxysms, ii the grand desideratum wherever the epidemio ■course of malaria prevails. Quinine does not afford this protection. The chief reason why Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters has won such immense popularity is that it prepares the system to resist the malarial pest. This it does by bracing and toning the physical organism, legnlating and promoting an equal flow and distribution of the animal fluids, and establishing digestion on a sound basis. Not only is fever and ague prevented, but the worst types of the disease are conquered by it. Such is the only conclusion to be drawn from the overwhelming evidence iu its favor. It is equally efficacious in dyspepsia, constipation, liver complaint, general debility, aud rheumatic complaint, and is a reliable diuretic and nervine.
Very Close to It.
I asked an old colored man who was rolling cotton in a warehouse in Macon if many of his race didn’t speculate more or le<s In the staple, and he promptly replied: “Heaps of ’em, sah.” “Did you ever buy any futures yourself?” “N —not ’zactly, sah, but I cum mighty clus to it once.” “What stopped you?” “De purleece, sah.” “But why?” “Kase I was gwine out of do yard at night wid 200 pounds of cotton on my back. ” — New York Sun.
A Great Surprise
Is in store for all who use Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Lungs, the great guaranteed remedy. Would you believe that It is sold on its merits and that any druggist is authorized by the proprietor of this wonderful remedy to give you a sample bottle free? It, never fails to cure acute or chronio coughs. All druggists sell Kemp's Balsam. Large Bottles 500 and sl.
A Frenchman, fond of literature, who died at Dole in the Jura recently, was buried, according to the terms of his will, with a French edition of Horace beneath his head, a copy of Milton at his feet, a Greek Testament in his right hand and an Elzevirian edition of Horace in his left. Under his back lay an English edition of the same poet. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0., Props, of Hall s Catarrh Cure, offer 4102 reward for any case of catarrh that can not be cured by taking Hall’s Catarrh, Cura Saud, for testimonials, tree. Sold by Druggists, 75c. A Nevaba City, Cal., man catches lizards for cages- q la squirrel—with a pin fish-hook baited with a fly. Fob washing flannels. Dobbins' Electrio Soap is marvelous. Blankets and woolens wanned with it look like new, and there is absolutely no shrinking. No other soap in the world will do such perfect work. No; it is not good form to refer to a society actress as ahamuteut.— H’as/itnpton UalcheL Parents you do yourselves and your children groat injustice If you faJ to give Sour children Dr. Bull's Worm Destroyers. ,auy little lives are saorilloed by such neglect. Ir is the man who is too full for utterance who never knows when he is loaded. —Boston Post. Beecham's Pills cure Sick Headache. A head of Time —the one that wears the forelock.
My Head Is Tired Is a Common Complaint Just Now. Both Mind And Body Are Made Strong By Hood’s Sarsaparilla oam enjoys Both the method and results when Syrup of Figsislaken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the cystem effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste ana acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup ot Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. BAN FUNCISOO. CAL LOUISVILLE, KY. HEW YOM, /I.Y. MQTHERy FRIEND makes CHILD BIRTH easy IF USED BEFORE CONFINEMENT. Book to “Mothers'* Maileikfree. BSADFUCLD KEOI LATOR ATLANTA.SA. Sold by all iMtuooisxi. ADVICE TO THE AC ED. Age brlngK infirmities, Mich an sluggish botrela, weak kidneys and torpid liver. Tutt’s Pills have a specific effect on these organs, stim • ulating the bowels, gives natural disrhargana imparts vigor to tho whole system.
Investments In the Senth.
The "Evansville Route" will sell tickets from Chicago and all stations on Its lines, on Sept. 9 and 23 and Oct. 14, at rate of one tare for the round trip, to points in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee and Texas. Tickets will be good for return passage 30 days from date of sale. Solid trains are run from Chicago through to Nashville, where connections are made In the Union Depot for through trains running to every city of any importance in the South. The great advances now being made in many parts of the South, the developing of Its vast agricultural and mining resources, the rapid increase of population In numerous localities, the continual coming into existence of new centers of population and manufacture in hitherto neglected territory, have attracted thousands bent on speculation, Investment und the establishing of themselves in business in prosperous communities. People of the Eust have apparently realized more fully these advantages, and to acquaint people of the Northwest with the opportunities offered these very low rates have been Inaugurated. Far pamphlets descriptive of the South or information as to rates or tickets, address William Kill. General Passenger and Ticket Agent C. t and E. I. R. R., Chicago.
A Useless Waste ot Matches.
Mildred was seated with her mamma on tho deck of Mie steamer. She was watching the revolving light in the lighthouse, with its flashing intervals. “Mamma, what Is that?” she asked. “The light-house lamp, my dear. ” “Who lights it?” “The light-house keeper." “With matches?” “I suppose so,” replied mamma. “Well, all I’ve got to say,” commented Mildred, “is that he wastes a good many matches.” — Harper's Young People. “Clean cookery Is a good appetizer. 1 * Good cooks clean their utensils with BAPOLIO. It is a solid cake ot BcounngSoap. Try it in cleaning vour pots and nans. Bronchitis Is cured by frequent small doses ot Piao’a Cura for Consumption.
mfeß I B M IlablL The only ccrtaiw [ IP| Uj Iwl ftnil cure - Dr - J -1* Vl I w BVI Stephens. Lebanon. Ohio. MENTION THIS PAVER m Kmnnu. PMMSS Colonel Superintendent. Graduates commissioned In State Militia. CIG fn COCH 00 A MONTH can ba made time to the business. Spare moments may be profitably employed also. A few vacancies in towns and cities. B.F. Johnson at Co-IDOBMsIn BL.RicLmond.Ya I AHnQ One hundred good residence LULL LHnuO [ots lying between Los Angef K f r les ami 1 asadena, California, given HLhLb away. For particulars, address, with stamp, KALrn Roobbs. 238 W. latst., Loa Angeles,Cal. 13 yrs iu last war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty since.
TH E POSITIVE CURE. ELY BROTHKRB, M Warren BL, Hew York. Price 60 cuJBEJgISLHU ■ DISO’S REMEDY FOR CATARRH.—Beet. Easiest to use. mm k cheapest. Relief Is immediate. A cure is certain. For Cold in the Head it has no equal. ' 4> WWIB "• «i asm > Ml M ■ It is an Ointment, of which a small particle is applied to the nostrils. Price. 00c. Sold by druggists or sent by mall. Address, B. T. Hazeltimm, Warren, Pa. ekchexrmus &dded tobhingscUanedAy is ihinyournextnouse-cleeJTingw’*' Even the little pig In the picture Is a more agreeable companion than a man with a dirty collar or a woman who presides over a tawdry house. But nobody wants the reputation of being a pig under any circumstances.
CAT cm rAI r ULRO lai. Send to. for circular* and testimonials. Addre**. DK. «. W. r. BMYDBR* £M Sfot* Sb, CMMCaUU. Name thia patter when you write. DENQIhNQ OLD CLAIMS ■ EHwIUHw Settled under XEW Lsaw. Soldiers, Widow*, Parent* eend for blank application* and Information. Patrick O’Forrcu, Pension Agent, Waahlngtpn. P, C, __ PENSIONS! The Disability Bill Is a l*w. Soldier* disabled since the war are entitled. Dependent widows »nd parente now dependent whose son* died from effects of army Late Commissioner of Pensions, WMlilltTOII. I. C. f Eucnv Dcnfinii c » n h » ve ,m * n ,nd / CvCtll rCnOUR pretty feet by using a / simple, natural method, the discovery of a A noted French chiropodist. A lade write*: “I /\ have used two package* of PEDINE, «nd X A the re»ult I* wonderful. I wear a No. 2 *hoe /I/J now with ea*e, although heretofore requiring IffAr a large 3. it ha* exceeded my mo*t (anguine If/ expectation*.'' If you are IntereMed In the flv (unicct, »end for free Illustrated pamphlet. ># PEDINE Is safe, harmless, and unfailing, y By mall, securely sealed, 60 cent*. THE PEDINE CO., 268 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, < lEWK'9B s? LYE! qM I TOWDIMD AND PEBFUMSD. Ik3 (PATENTED.) ■ifJflrF'VA Tilo etrongeit and purest Tire BnJIX w made. Wifi make the BEST Perfumed Habd Soap In twenty minutes without boiling. It is the best to- clslnfecting sinks closets, drains, washing bottles, BB barrels, pointe, etc. PENNA. SALT MANUF’G. CO., .ZTLJIDt.w Gea. Agtr., Phlla., P*. M a- H RssnorssTae.Pts*M 1 “ gt: sad a h h g * i it M 55 ,ur * tibpropJJFJ srly msde. Accept -J- ' r/1 no «au>**rf*it. oi Jt, T< y / stafisr name. Dr. IZ'aAJff L. A. S»yw sate to JEJIfpC jaßwf 1 • '*dy of the ha»t- \ tonfspstientfcoA* f I \ ye" |><l<n w v l ' I «>•”>, l "®“«<*4 j ‘Gmirsnd’, Cra*m> *s th . I Wt h.nr -ul rfalltMSMnpesf ■nttooa." Fee sal* by *ll DraggM, and Fancy (foods Doatan te th* U. Fk* CanodM| and Europa. FEBD. X. HOPDNB, PK®t CQrut Jdbo-u*.*?
•■uw UjVl 1) Copyright, 1820, AU on ono tide—the offer th&t’e made by the proprietors of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. It’s SSOO reward for an incurable case of Catarrh, no matter how bad, or of how long standing. They mean what they say; they’re responsible, and the offer has been made for years. It’s all on your side—you lose your catarrh, or you’re paid 1500 for keeping it But it’s safe for them, too—they know you’ll be cured. Dr. Sage’s Remedy produces perfect and permanent cures of Chronio Catarrh m the Head, as thousands can testify. “Cold in the Head” is cured with a few applications. Catarrhal Headache is relieved and cured as if by magic. It removes offensive breath, loss or impairment of the sense of taste, smell or hearing, watering or weak eyes, and impaired memory, when caused by the violence of Catarrh, as they all frequently are. Remedy sold by druggists, 50 cents. PENSIONS WM. FITCH & CO., lOS Oorooraa Building, Waahlngtoo. D.O. PENSION ATTORNEYS ®/'joiiEß'\ / OF \ (BINGHAMTON) v& N. Y. a /
WM. W. DUDLEY. 3 lATB C. 7*t OUfttUtiiclu in the World li/rtMlf seriptton, and has been in constant use for nearly a eesswy. There are few diseaae* to which mankind are subject snore distressing than sore eye*. «m er tbeeyes it is an infallible remedy. If the direction* are followed it will never fail, we particularly invite the attention of physician* to it* merit*. For fsgMfrJaEg" Boß ' “° a RIIRRFRI“^’~-“‘” l ‘ nUDDLII Guaranteed wsteotlght. ■•ww ■*■»■■■■ Wrilefor Book Otrcular. Sample mailed free if you —— STATE sits or 8008. nf|f|r||k|n 6EO. E. 6LINES, hUUrINu <1 West Broadway, N. Y. —_*«■ X>«- UWK2T H FATlinit AocTlß, l»87, Improved July 30 JM9. All Rhsumatio Comv y 'WTplaint*. Lumbago, General Nervous Debility, Diseases, Nervousness, life* ttTMJnro Bumauui pabtuuTux bodatbteuu S&. IMSOLES sifSK&N. malywla »lala**.l*d ****)*.*■ Mratloa IMa paper. AddXMi OWM Kxxunxo ULT & APPLIANCE CQu 306 North Broadway, St. Louis* Mo, 826 Broadways How York City. fl I prescribe and fully sb* dorse Big G a* the only specific for the certain cure iMr 1 TO * ? a TN-jB of this disease. *1 O.H.INGBAHAM.M. D., *a***t , Mter*. • Amsterdam, N. Y. EB xrtMlybyO* We have sold Big G lor -ftsmlr-«w- many year*, and it has Mj|iTmCbsMicaiDa^ tlv -’ en ,>_ u b eit ol MUt . faction. Ohio. D. R. DYCHE A CO.. Chicaico, IIL Sold by Druggists'lfSby^r' 7)’’' . . WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, ** w tbe <• MMB
