Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 43, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 November 1891 — Page 6

CHILI AND UNCLE SAM.

ORIGIN OF THE HOSTILE SPIRIT TO THE UNITED STATES. Strength of the Two Naval Fleets-Dls-ad vantages Under Which Out Own Government Would Fight— Possibilities or Outside Help for Chlll-Our Commerce Would Suffer. The Whole Story. The Chilian difficulty has assumed A serious phase, and l'entente cordiale

threatens to bo ruptured at any moment. If our arrogant sister republic continues to refuse reparation for ohc murder of American sailors, it will 1 become the duty of Uncle Sam to teach her a lesson. The

PRESIDENT MONTT.

State Department may have acted wjth promptness and vigor, but the Question arises, What are we “going to do about it?” The unfortunate affair which is the Immediate cause of the threatened trouble occurred in the streets of Valparaiso on Oct. 10. A party of sailors from the United States cruiser Baltimore, which lies at anchor in that harbor, were attacked by a mob while on shore. The Chilians were aimed with knives and pistols, while the American sailors were unarmed, as became men whose present acts and Intentions were peaceable, in the fight Charles Iliggin, a boatswain's mate, was dragged from a street car by a mob and shot to death. Five other men were dangerously wounded with knives and bayonets. One was wounded so severely that he afterward died. Thirty-five other sailors were arrested by main force, dragged through the streets of the city and locked up. There can he no doubt that the attack was the result of the hatred of Americans and the United States that has been growing afresh among the Chilian populace ever since the tide of affairs in the civil war turned against Balmaceda. It is apparent now from the proportions which this feeling has attained that its spread had not been measured by any one in

THE CHILIAN HOUSE OF CONGRESS AT SANTIAGO.

the United States. It is this feeling that gives the affair a national import. There can be no doubt that the very proper refusal of our Government to recognize the belligerents when their forces were arrayed against Balmaceda was the immediate well spring of this feeling, and no

doubt, too, there were man}' smaller things that contributed toward the result. Perhaps the Chilians did not understand the motives that guided the course of the United States. It is certain that their anger was causelessly aroused to a high pitch when the false report was spread about that Balmaceda had taken passage to the United States on the United States steamer San Francisco, the flagship of Bear Admiral Brown, who commanded our squadron in Chilian waters. Again, the impression obtained among Chilians, with equal lack of real basis, that our flag in Chili gave improper protection to the members of Balmaceda’s party against the justice or the vengeance of the Junta. So the Junta came into power with feelings of mistrust toward the great republic and of ill-will toward its citizens and traders resident in Chili. This, however, can not be considered an excuse for Chili’s course in regard to the outrage upon our unarmed sailors. The attack on our sailors was followed by a demand for an explanation by the United States Minister. The reply of the Junta was expressed in strong language. It practically amounted to a refusal to accept responsibility for the affair-and assigned i the matter to the civil channels of >, decision and adjudication. The tone of the reply was a great surprise to this country. At the same time the Intendente

CAPT. W. S. SON?EY NOW IN COMMAND OF THE UNITED STATES NAVAL FORCES ON THE CHILIAN COAST.

____T - ‘ , 01 Valparaiso refused to guarantee the safety of market boats coming to that city, early In the morning from tbeCaited States warship Baltimore, or the safiJty of the officer# of that

vessel coming ashore at night. This amounts to a practical boycott on the Baltimore, and none of its sailors are allowed on shore. It became apparent, when the reply of the Junta was received, that even in the State Department at Washington the feeling

that a peaceful settlement would be obtained by Chili doing all that was asked of her was changed. Uncle Sam began to look about to see what he could do in a fight if war should be declared. But, in addition to the immediate

CHILIAN TORPEDO-BOAT ALMIRANTE LYNCH.

causes as named above, the hostility of Chili to the United States is of long date, and has been greatly fostered by the intimate relations of the little nation with Europe. More than seventy years ago American merchants, and sailors had bitter reason to complain of Chilian barbarity, and in these later years a thinly veiled hatred of Americans and all their institutions has been conspicuous in Chili. The steady inflow of foreigners of wealth and talent has led Chili to believe that it is the center of the world, and that all other nations are provincial. The arrogance and presumption of a native Chilian, even when he is a man of cultivation, must be seen to be appreciated. As for the United States, Chili firmly believes that she could annihilate that nation of boasters in a fortnight, and has more than once seriously discussed the project of taking San Francisco. The aggressive spirit of Chili has been greatly fostered by England, and she found it to her interest to encourage the building of a strong Chilian navy. She furnished engineers for it. gave it a practical schooling, and it came generally to be understood that Chili was an outpost of England in the Pacific, and that the Chilian policy was certain to ho dia-

THE BALTIMORE, NOW IN CHILIAN WATERS.

metrically opposed to anything favored by the United States. As Chili (although a tiny nation of only two millions in 1865) waxed strong she began to look about her for an extension of territory, and nat-

urally the excellent navy which she had been enabled to build came into play. Trouble arose between Chili and her next neighbor, Bolivia, about the nitrate beds and guano deposits which had attracted foreign capitalists in swarms. The mines were in Bolivia, hut Chilian capitalists, operating, doubtless, for foreigners, were working them under treaty stipulations. Bolivia imposed export duties on the nitrates. Peru was supposed by the Chilians to have instigated this action, with a view to suppressing the competition of Chili in the nitrate and guano trade, which in Peru was an immensely profitable Government monopoly. Chili’s protest against the export duty was listened to, but shortly afterward the Bolivians confiscated the Chilian mine property, and war was imminent. Arbitration was proposed, but fell through, and Chili went to war with Peru and Bolivia, and whipped them both. The little nation crowed so loudly that she was heard in Europe, and England gave her much praise. It was in connection with tne settlement of the peace between Chili and the beaten countries that the United States first got a revelation of Chili’s aggressiveness and ugly spirit of opposition to everything favored by Uncle Sam. This country has witnessed with regret the demolition of Peru and dismemberment of Bolivia. In the first country there were important American interests to be protected. Furthermore,- the American Government was not disposed to see Chili, which was little else than an oligarchy, republican only in name, assuming dictation in South America, with John Bull looking over her shoulder. The decided discouragement shown by this Government to the schemes

MURDER OF AMERICAN SEAMEN BY THE CHILIAN MOB.

U. S. CRUISER SAN FRANCISCO.

of territorial aggrandizement set foßth by Chili brought Chilian hatred of this country to white heat. Wc admitted Chili’s right to a war indemnity, but not to annihilate her late enemies. During the ten years since 1381,

Chili has grown more ana more aggressive, and had it not been for her internal troubles would already have tried some coup to diminish the gradually reviving influence of this country in South America. The vainglorious dream of Chili is that if she could draw the country into a fight, she could quickly worst her In a naval encounter. She would then, during the negotiations for peace, demand a foreign protectorate, would throw herself into the arms of England and Germany, and would thereafter be free to operate as she pleased against the policy of the United States in South America. Thus those nations which have most interest in checking the development of our policy would gain their point,

without making open war on our trade. It is natural that the Congressionalists should feel somewhat bumptious just now, and at this moment they are ready to fight the United States rather than to admit that killing and wounding American sailors is an offense which must be apologized for. This party will have abundant moral support form those European powers anxious to see the United States get a substantial set-back in South America. The active army of Chili comprises in normal times 940 officers and 0,071 men. The ‘National Guard, which can readily be put into the field, comprises 42,120 infantry and 8,970 artillery, so that Chili can easily put 00,000 troops into the field. As Chili would depend almost entirely on her navy in case of a fight, a comparison of her naval force with that of our own may be of interest. CHILIAN VKBSELS. BATiLE SHIPS. Ton 3. Knots. Capitan Prat h.wo 20 Almirante Cochrane 2,500 13 Huascar 1,800 15 AliMO ED CBCISERB. Presidents Errazurlz 2,1’50 19 Presidents Hnto 2,089 19 Eemtralda B,O'JU 20 TORPEDO CRL’BEIt . Almirante CondeU 759 20 Almirante Lynch 750 20 ooiivet.Es. Abtao 1,050 10 Chacabuco 1.100 ]1 Magellanes a k) 12 O’Higgins * 1,100 10 Pilcoinayo ooj 11 OTHER BOATS. Amazonas ......Dispatch boat Gunboats, five of Torpedo boats, eleven of , " 90 Torpedo boats, two of [ 59 UNITED STATES VESSELS TURRET BATILE SHIP. . . Tons. Knots. Miantonomah 3,990 10 PBOTEUIED CRULSERS. Philadelphia 4.324 jgai San Francisco 4,083 20 Baltimore 4.000 19 is Newark 4.083 is

HARBOR Of VALPARAISO, THE CAPITAL OP CHILI, ON WHOSE STREETS THE AMERICA SAILORS WERE MURDERED.

i harleston 4,04fc 18 Chicago 4,50 r 14 Atlanta. 3.181 154$ Boston 3139 15}j GUXB >AT3. Yorktown i joj 17 Petrel ........ ..>.... 1.700 IK Concord 1 703 17)* Bennington.;.: j.TCO 17V, Dolphin i 1,485 15)* dynamite cruiser. Vesuvius. ~y...-. 725 21)j TORPEDO BOAT. Cuthing no 22)6 The San Francisco has been ordered

THE CHILIAN CRUISER ESMERALDA.

to San Fraricieco from Callao, Peru. She 'Will be clocked and repaired.,,The Charleston Is In Chinese waters. . Tfoe

Boston and Yorktown are on their way to Chili. The Petrel is expected to sail for the Chinese station In a few days. Were a war declared it must be an aggressive one. The United States would be forced to carry hostilities into the enemy’s territory, and Chili would act solely on the defensive. The latter is a simpler method of warfare, and one in which an inferior force can successfully cope with a superior one. So it is not to be presumed that the United States government, would have an easy time in carrying war into Chilian territory. The task of conquest would not be an easy one. although there can be no doubt as to the ultimate result. Chilian torpedo boats are so numerous that a hostile squadron would have a hard time, indeed, to keep up a blockade along the coast. The United States would be at a great disadvantage, too, in supplying its ships with coal in the event of war. A naval officer says that each ship would have to be accompanied by a collier and take coal from it at sea—a difficult operation, which could scarcely be performed except in good weather. In case of trouble the destruction to our commercial interests which a well-manipulated Chilian navy could cause can scarcely be estimated. On the Pacific coast the United States

has 843 sailing vessels, representing 238,628.61 tons, and 531 steam vessels representing 183,779.96 tons. On the Atlantic coast there are 13,049

THE YORKTOWN, ON HER WAY TO CHILI.

sailing vessels, representing over 1,542,118.70 tons, and 2,800 steam vessels, representing 817,108 tons. That is a total of 17,243 vessels of all descriptions, with a total tonnage «f 2,781,646, all engaged in the coast trade. The tonnage engaged in foreign trade is about 715,908 tons. A fine Chilian cruiser, like the Esmeralda, could have great sport, no doubt, in operating on this commerce.

The Art of lilamtfaoturing; Spectacles Reduced to a Science. The art of making spectacles, says the Popular Science Monthly, has been reduced to a science. The bit of glass to be formed into a lens is fastened by means of pitch to a small block of hard rubber so that it may be more readily handled. It is ground by being pressed against a rapidly revolving metal tool, whose curvature is ef}ual and opposite to that desired in the lens. This is known as the “rough tool” and is made of cast iron. It is mounted on a vertical spindle, and is kept moistened with emery and water. Several grades of emery are used in succession, changing from coarse to line as the grinding pnv ceeds. As a result of this process the glass has a rough surface and is nd longer transparent. It is now transferred to the “fine tool.” This is made of and has Its surface as true as possible. It is compared from time to time with a standard curve in order to insure accuracy. lirthis second grinding the abrading material is rouge (carefully calcined sulphate of iron). Finally the lens is polished by being pressed against a piece of cloth powdered with rouge and fastened to the rotating tool. The glass is now loosened

from its block, turned over, and the reverse side of the lens ground When this has been accomplished thr lens must be cut down to the propef shape for iihoiihting in the spectaclcframe. Itf‘ is - placed on a leather cushion and held firmly in position by a rubber-tjpped arm while a diamond glass-cutter passing around ar oval guide traces a similar oval of the glass below. t The superfluous glass outside tb< oval is removed by steel pincers, the rough edges are ground smooth on Scotch wheels, and the lens is ready for mounting. ‘ The glasses for small telescopes, microscopes, burning glasses and the like are gtoand in the same fashion. Honissty is th 3 bast policy, but insurance agents c sf(\ fom trying to force it on you

THE CHILIAN BATTLE-SHIP HUASCAR.

HOW LENSES ARE MADE.

BALLOT-BOX STUFFERS.

the California Vigilance Committee of 18."><J Dealt with Them. William T. Coleman, Chairman of the Vigilance Committees of 1851, ’sfi and ’77, writes as follows on this topic in the Century: “The next important work was the action to be taken with regard to notorious ballotbox stuffers and other desperate characters. They were a curse to the country. Every one admitted it, but no effective action had been taken against them. In many cases they held the polls at election and attacked, maimed and terrified those voters who were opposed to their friends. If arrested, such was the dread they had inspired, and so great their influence with the courts, that , conviction was almost impossible. This Immunity from punishment increased tKelr Insolence and violence, and it was evident that no reform could be made while they remained in the State. What was to be done with them? They could not be hanged; they would be a source of expense and trouble; safe and satisfactory imprisonment was plainly impracticable. It was therefore suggested that if, after fair trial, the charges against them were proved, no course would be so satisfactory and safe as banishment, with a warning never again to return under pain of death. This was adopted, and a black-list was mad? of alj these notorious characters. Evidence was collected, and orders were soon given for the arrest of these men wherever they could be found in the State. They were tried, convicted, sentenced and deported, many of them as first-class passengers, by sailing ships and steamships, at the sole expense of the committee, and in a style far above their desdrts; this was *ot appreciated, but flattered and exalted them to the belief that they were important personages and had suffered great damage, and they brought suits against the committee. Singularly, or perhaps naturally, these suits were only brought by those who were best treated. Those who were shipped in the steerage never brought suits, and were never afterward troublesome.”

BULLETS OF WATER.

An Oriental Fish that Goes Hunting with HU Own Deadly Gun. The archer fish is a unique product of the Indian Ocean, says the New York Morning Journal. There is jome talk of getting him for the Giants for next year. They think he could develop great speed with a ball, for he can shoot water with precision and force. When he sees a fly he wants he doesn’t lie around wait-

THE ARCHER FISH.

ing till he can jump after him; he just swallows a pint of water and then discharges it at the fly, which generally falls at the first shot. The archer fish can make a bull’s-eye on a dragon fly at six feet, and not perspire, either. The bullets of water leave the mouth without any noise, so that the victim receives no warning. It is said that the Central Tark authorities are trying to get a speciman for the aquarium. Jersey folks want him planted in their rivers and swamps, believing he would soon diminish the mosquito crop.

Took a Lion by the Tail.

When P. T. Barnum’s winter quarters were burned two years ago one of the lions escaped and entered the bam of Mrs. Gilligan, a widow living on Pequonnock street, Bridgeport, Conn., says the Pittsburg Dispatch. Mrs. Gilligan bravely entered the barn, grabbed the king of beasts by the tail.- and belabored him with a pitchfork handle to drive him out. Her pluck and courage were noted in the newspapers at the time, and she received many offers of marriage from men in the far West who needed brave wives. Mrs. Gilligan has again distinguished herself. She is a great poultry fancier, and her hennery is a standing temptation to the lawless tramps and toughs who make that neighborhood their headquarters. Recently she heard her chickens making an unusual noise, and, hastily dressing, she got to the coop just in time to see two men carrying off thirteen of her fowls. She followed them to their camp in the woods, and, jumping into the midst of the gang, she grabbed the chickens from the hands of the thieves, and gave them a piece of her mind. Then she sent for the police and made complaint against the men. They were sent up for theft, and Mrs. Gilligan was complimented by the court.

Tobacco and Fame.

An American woman who considers graceful smoking an elegant accomplishment has taken the trouble to accumulate a number of facts relative to the great men who have been addicted to this habit, and submits the following as the result of her investigation: Ben Johnson loved the weed and smoked habitually, describing every incident of his experience with his pipe with the gusto of the connoisseur. Hobbes, the philosopher, smoked after dinner invariably a pipe, amd not moderately. Glorious Milton, be, fore retiring, always indulged in a pipe of peace and a glass of water. Even Sir Isaac Newton was dreamily blowing wreaths of smoke from his mouth in his garden at Woolsthorpe when the apple fell that led to the discovery of the Jaw of gravitation. Addison was rarely seen without his pipe at Button’s. Fielding, the novelist, added to the habit of smoking the vice of chewing. Of the more modern poets Shelley never smoked, not Wordswlrth bar

Keats as far as known. Oolertdg« was an inveterate opium eater, but when cured of that he became addicted to snuff. Campbell had a tender affection for his pipe and never got over it. Sir Walter Scott smoked when riding and after dinner, loving both pipes ana cirgars. Byron sung perhaps more than any other poet the praises of "sublime tobacco," but it is a well established fact that he smoked very moderately. Goethe, like Shakspeare, did not smoke. Carlyle took great comfort from the weed for many years before his death—greatly to the disgust of his wife. Douglas Jerrold used to puff away between his jokes. Ol novelists of this century, Dickens and Thackeray were both smokers, and Lord Lytton indulged in a pipe at night but preferred cigars in the daytime. Moore, the Irish poet, eared very little for pipes or cigars, in fact, Irish gentlemen as a rule, smoking much less than the English, and the Germans more than either. The Duke of Wellington was a total abstinence man on the subject of tobacc#, as was also Sir Robert Peel. Disraeli dearly loved his pipe whei a young man, but grew sensitive in middle life and characterized it “the tomb of love.”

Hawaiians of Old.

In old days the Hawaiians seem to have been always ready for fighting, and to have set about it in a most deliberate way. As a matter of course every man was regularly (Trilled in the use of spear, javelin, sling and stone, and all other means of offense and defense. In time of war, says the Paradise of the Pacific, all were required to follow their chief to the field, and any man who showed any symptoms of cowardice had his ears slit and was led into the camp with a rope around his body—a measure which greatly assisted the nervous in overcoming their fears. Some of their war customs were almost identical with those of the Fijians, as, for instance, the boastful shouts of defiance, and the advance of scouts, or of a single warrior, deridingly carrying only a fan, as if to brush away harmless flies, and challenging the foe to attack him singly. Perhaps, in reply, a dozen spears would be cast at him at once; and those he avoided by nimbly twisting or jumping aside or stooping. Sometimes he caught them in his hands and hurled them back at his assailants. Truly, civilized warfare leaves us no such picturesque incidents as these. The Hawaiians carried no banners; ! but the idols, borne by the priests, 1 acted as rallying points and inspired the combatants with vigor. As flags of truce, they sent young banana trees, whose broad and long silky green leaves waved as they moved. | Then the chiefs and priests of bo*M tribes met, to decide on terms of peace.. This done, they sacrificed a pig and poured its blood on the ground, as a symbol of the fate that awaited the truce-breaker. A wreath of the fragrant maile was woven by the leaders of both sides and deposited as their joint offerings in one of the temples. Heralds were then sent round to proclaim peace. This happy result generally occurred when the opponents were well matched, in which case each acknowledged themselves to be luka lua —i. e., beaten. But if either party was victorious then the vanquished were treated as slaves and made to cultivate their own land for the conquerors. Some were sacrificed on the altars of the bloodthirsty god of war and their wives and children became the property of the victors.

A Riral of the Yosemite.

In the Sierra wilderness far to the southward of the famous Yosemite Valley, there is a yet grander valley of the same kind. It is situated on the South Fork of King’s River, above the most extensive groves and forests of the giant sequoia, and beneath the shadows of the highest mountains in the range, where the canyons are deepest and the snow-laden peaks are crowded most closely together. It is called the Big King’s River Canyon, or King's River Yosemite, and is reached by way of Visalia, the nearest point on the Southern Pacific Railroad, from which the distance is I about forty-five miles, or by the Kear-1 surge Pass from the east side of. the range. It is about ten miles long, half a mile wide, and the stupendous rocks of purplish gray granite that forms the walls are from 2,500 to 5,000 feet in height, while the depth of the valley below the general surface of the mountain ma£s from which it has been carved is considerably more than a mile. Thus it appears that this new Yosemite is longer and deeper, and lies imbedded in grander mountains than the wellknown Yosemite of the Merced; Their general characters, however, are wonderfully alike, and they bear the same relationship to the fountains of the ancient glaciers above them.—Century.

Lost His Job by Telling the Truth.

A preacher in lowa lost his pulpit for telling the truth. He was a forcible preacher, but deficient in educacation and occasionally committed some grave misdemeanors in grammar. 6ne Sunday while speaking rapidly he made a gross assault on. Bindley Murray. No sooner had the sentence escaped his lips than he stopped an<Tsaid: “I am aware that my education is deficient. I regret that I did not have the advantage of good schools when a boy. If I had been more fortunate I would now be preaching to a more intelligent congregation.” The minister told the truth, but it wqs the last time he preached in that church.—Boston Advertiser.

Saved All She Could.

A young lady went into a drug store at Belfast, Me., the other evening and purchased a bottle of very highpricedi perfume. She had scarcely left the store when she dropped the bottle on the aTdewalk, breaking it in many pieces. The mute look of distress which her face assumed assured the spectators of the state of her feelings. Kicking the pieces of the bottle in alh directions she took her handkerchief &>d mopped up as much of the perfume as possible and walked off smelling as sweetly as a flowergarden.

A Pleasing Sense

Of health and strength renewed and of ease end comfort follows the nee ot Syrup of Figs, as it acts in harmony with nature to effectually cleanse fte system when costive or bilious. For sale in 50c and SI bottles by all leading druggists.

A Big Mule.

Marshall, Mo.. is a great place for donkeys and their kindred. Besides selling 13,000 mules every year there has been raised in the vicinity a mu’e which is 8 years old and 20 hands high. A mule 6 feet 8 inches high is such a curiosity that they are taking it around to all the county fairs and exhibiting it as a sort of a side show, and the gate money in a single day sometimes amounts to SIOO. How to Do It. —A good way to get even with your neighbor whom you don’t like is to buy his boy a drum. The easiest way to get rid of a bad cough or cold is to buy a bottle of Dr. White’s Pulmouarla. It cures coughs, colds, asthma, bronchitis, croup, whooping cough and consumption. It is entirely harmless and pleasant to take. Artificial bitter almonds are now produced at a trifling cost, and with such deceptive skill that they can scarcely be detected when used as an adulterant of the genuine. They consist chiefly of grape sugar. This is flavored with a very small quantity of nitro-benzole, and when pressed in molds the product is jo resemble the natural seed very closely. BiddeFord, Maine, has a blind maii— Darius Perkins by name —who can kill a rat or mouse with his cane as quickly as a cat could attend to the job. FITS.— AII Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day's use. Marvellous Cures. Treatise and $2.00 trial bottle free to Fit cases. Send to Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St.. Phila., Pa.

A building up of the entire system follows the use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It’s an invigorating, restorative tonic, soothing cordial and bracing nervine and a certain remedy for all the functional derangements, painful disorders or chronio weaknesses peculiar to women. It improves digestion, enriches the blood, dispels aches and. pains, melancholy and nervousness, brings refreshing sleep, and restores flesh and strength. For periodical pains, internal inflammation and ulceration, leucorrhea and kindred ailments, it is a positive specific—a guaranteed one. If it fails to give’ satisfaction, in any case, the money paid for it is refunded. No other medicine for women is sold on these terms. With an ordinary medicine, it can’t be done. That’s the way its makers prove their faith in it. Contains no alcohol to inebriate; no syrup or sugar to derange digestion; a legitimate medicine, not a beverage. Purely vegetable and perfectly harmless in any condition of the system. World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Proprietors, No. 603 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.

Taking butter from milk was known in the earliest times. It was left for our time to make a milk of codliver oil. Milk, the emulsion of butter, is an easier food than butter. Scott’s Emulsion of cod-liver oil is an easier food than cod-liver oil. It is rest for digestion. It stimulates, helps, restores, digestion; and, at the same time, supplies the body a kind of nourishment it can get in no other way. Scott & Bownk. Chemists, 13a South sth A venue. New York. Your druggist keeps Scott’s Emulsioivof cod-liver oil—all druggists everywhere do. sl. s. B p SH*O A NATURAL RBHCBDY VOit Epileptic Fits, Falling Sickness, Hysterics, St. Titos Dance, Nervousness, Hypochondria, Melancholia, Inebrlty, Sleeplessness, Dizziness, Brain and Spinal Weakness. This medicine has direct action upon the nerve centers, allaying all irritabilities, and increasing the flow and power of nerve fluid. It is perfectly harmless and leaves no unpleasant effects. PH p p-A Valuable Book ei> Nervous LULL Ditoasm sent free to any address, rKr r and poor patients can also obtain | |I La Li tbi. medicine free of charge. This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wayne. Ind„ since ISA ana Unow prepared under his direction Or the KOENIG MED. CO., Chicago, 111. Beld by Druggists at SI per Bottle. 6 for S 3. Large Size. 51.75. 6 Bottles for S 9. _ THE SMALLEST PILL IN THE WORLD! - TTJTT’S •tiny liver PILLS• • have all the virtues of the larger ones; HaoTly effective; purely vegetable-V Exact size shown In this border. ••••••••••• ■% ■ ■ MM SS ANAKESIS gives instant ■■■ § §1 relief, and is an INFALLI--1B || |_ BLE < UKE for PILES. |w ■ ■ ■■ m Price. 1 1 ; at druggists or a a by mail. Samples free, | ILL LJ Address "ANAKESIS, ™ W Royals, N«w Yoaz cm. AGENTS WANTED ON SALARY or commission, to handle the New Patent Chemical Ink-Erasing Pencil. Agents making tSSU per week. Monroe Eraser Mfg.Oo. LaCroese, Wls. Boa 83L DIM# Weak, Nervous, Wretched SIK and N|I,H Womzh, set well and keep weU. Hjalth ■ Plao's Remedy tot Catarrh la fee | Bey, Easleet to Use, and Cheapest. | ■ Beta bydrugnsiaer eeot by mall, I ■Be. K. T. Haialtliw, Warran Pa. ■