Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 24, Number 2, Jasper, Dubois County, 9 December 1881 — Page 6
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uKMtT or roxniAiTUMiiiBa 1L JaM WAMIt'OtO, fm fnltowne an lOMM of Iktlwd. log features of rctilotMoMral MMt report: Tm total eipsodttur whsf Ik aval mr ceded June 9. Ia were ta,i,7W .est total revenues, $T.lf7.T Kxoeaa ai exien4ttaee, tMm.; to. oa nooouat of "bed debta" aad auras lee" seeouats, 1T9).SS snaking Um total excess of upndltum, 91,481,199.9b. The auaeber of pstT-stamse, portal eardt, stamped envelopes, etc., Issued dur btkirwM UMlWUS. amouating ta vales to !., iSJ.Sl, against a total value durlag'tee prerteus ttoal roar of a,tfl,9Ue. 11m total amount of soUg oedleeted dur-tag-Us year os aewtanpers and ywtodloaU tailed to rotular subscribers frost known oSscs f publloatioa aad from aaws aim tee, at two osats por pound, wa 9MW,(MSM, aa Imimm eg mn.sma.Sa, or a little ew M per Mat. The weight at oaooad asset matter Mailed wu ,&M.ua pounds, a Jt.97e toss. Th umber at potnosBcss at which th matter vat mailed was 4.891, as mereaee of Mntr Ik number for the previous year. dbajd urrrma, B csresul reostoelag baaed upon aa actual seoat ausde la wry pos-o9os lata Unit od Staiea dartaf th art week la Decern bcr, 1S99, It baa boot ascertained that tba whew n timber of letters nuUod la tab eoustry fa tea last laaai year waa 1.M6, W.,Wk The anaabar roaeatag ta Deed Letter (MM during the auaa period wat MAWL, ar oao la twery Sift. Tba total mn'SneeewieOjg sssal MwtrtlW Jnewal 01 Jfc(MSlynJCp! 9ig09w wort of smsaefcmt value to be recorded aad filed, received during the year ended June ), 1981, wm t, 874, 90ft, aa iecreaee of r th anaabar lecetved daring ta pcweedltsg yaw. For aoavealtao of troat aaoat tbey war elaartaad at follows: Un oJaiawd domostle letters 9,791,090; hold for stealage, fll,M misdirected, MSW (not lasdudlng 11,184 foreign Mtter wha imper snot or arroaeoua aaaroaiwi ; without aay Bapsrtertptioa whatever (ta majority of heat bestriag tatap to par poet age), 9,473; leStart addremed ta foreign countrl, aad articles (oote. Jewelry, ate.) i iarblddoa to a aaat km tba Intera, 1,99s; letters of foralgn ori gin, 994,197 (of which ,1M wort saatto Itw Dad-Lttr Offtoe oa acoooataf arro a am or kaaarfoct iddraaaai); foraiga par aaJa (naapaaad). laVatt t aad doaaottie pack affp,ftt,atL Of 0m letters aad paokagat opeaad, 19, n? wera foead to eoauta atoaey amount tag to HO,07.8O; Hftll contained drafts, aaoaqr ordart, eaaekt, notes, ate., the ax gregate fan ralua of which waa $1,990,063 .51: 87,978 contained raeatpta, paid aotea aad flsaoeled obllgattoaa of all aorta; S3, 731 eoatataed pbotorapk njK4 contained ataall raoafttaaoaa of postage-stamps ; aad la 75. US there war found valuable artldoi of third aad fourth class nutter la oadloaj arlety. The aaaooat of atoaoy teparated frost iLaad lettori for whioh ao etaUaaat ooald bo found wa 6,964.40, which wu deposited la the Treasury. Tao amount of postage ooflected vpoa short-paid matUr forwarded to doaUaaUoa, aad upon unclaimed packages of third and fourth el at matter returned to owners, was 18,100.84. Th record of the Department show that .SIM IS regta tared letter aad peak age ware amalled In this aouatry daring the rear. Of this number only 1414 reacted tb Dead-Letter Otflce; aadfof these i, 131 were finally delivered to the owners, to halaaer beta piaaed oa Ate awaittag idoa ttteation by tba partJea Interested. THE POSTAL MOVKT-OaOCa OTSTKM . The operations of the money -order srstem ara roulttplyiair yearly under the impasse ot prosperous trade sad the Influence of Imml gratien, with ta rapid development of the newer tttate and mtorioa, and the demand for additional moans of intercommualestton aad exchanre. At tae cotninencemeat of the last flson rear the total aunther of pcwt-oaltMs authorised to issue and to Snrl f aomestie money-orders wu 4,. irlns th year 341 additional money-order ken war estabfitbad. aad seven w. r dtsemitlntted, fearing ft. MS la operation on the H dsy of June. 131. Mnce then m aaw odcea hare been esUbiisbed, making the whole number of money-orvler ofleoa la operatioo at date of this report a,4M. The number of domestic monevorders issued darin the year wa 7IB4R, of the agzre gate vslaa of Uoa.(r&,'maj; number of or den paid. 7.67,710. amount! a in value to 9l04,l1ni.ga: to which must he added the amount of orders repaid to remitter f?K,Mt.tS, asaklag a total of H(M.Mt,8M.6l; tba exaos of Imnas over pavmenU wm fta9.91ft.74t tba total amoaat of fee paid bjr th -pahli to pwtmaaters for the hwu at atoaMNittaatdata was t9M.7tl.7ft. Stventy-teven eases of allegad lost rem it -taaoi of surplus money -order fundi aaarattagto9n,7oB ware nador Investigation durtag tha year, aad claims war filed ta thirty-six eeawe on soeouat of alleaad improper payatewt of money ordars. The aateaat of all thaw elaimi wa 9767.07. Their number, aompnred with tha total number of parntnti aaade during tha yar hiMono tofSllSI. Nraety-alas easasof alleged improperly paid money order, amounting to tt.us.49, werslavesthrated during the year. Ia thlr tftbreo taidaaoas tha ammints, the total of which was 9477. 75. warn recovered by post edbs laapetora aad paid over to the right fa! owner: la even eases. In which th atden abogetaor smouatadto UM.15, th ag pmtmaatan were, after due larastl m. held repHilble for the erroneooj pay meats; la four, where erroneous nay mmt waa directly attributable to oarelaM aaat aa the part of remitters, payees, or la downs, they wera required to sustain th wet, n 194$ ta nine, the 99 alto gather, was amumed by tha Department, the Kmg posunaater nsnag oeea nana not at Its and ta eleven It was aeeertelned that the ordon, amountiaa; ta 9998.69, had beta ajatmaliv pail to tba proper pereoai. Tmrtv-fvs etslms, involving the payment of 9991. m, war pending at th etona ot tba year. ffha amoaat of unclaimed money ordart, dementia aad forelra, at the close of the faml year h estimated by tba Auditor at fMW.dge. "There Is no provlaion of law watea in is uaowimea aaoaey can be of. It waald seem to b axaedt. aMtbaaaaarttoa of It akoald ha turatd omr to the Treaaury for the sarrioe of th Deoartmewt. The saaertataa. tkeaaWie7c--ner tyatem sufrteU aukf be wall te mam MtbabStatt aaamWiaHML tWmmmWmWmW afakW flksft fsthfaaa ssimfwsssmsfsa s smsavssaagw ewaa wawej es'SJs'eTaaT that It waul or tan Aaaataat Ttaaaiat far th oner thy aervKa a aam aoaal to th afaHaamald moaer-ordVr. durtag
kwi wml a aaeaay.order aaat taaa fra imara oM at affaaastad far partaaat, If daaawl oayadtaat, la tba laasraataf aayooa of ayardra, a taagar aartaa. far aa
aatght bo tiaa-bf m aamaatat aay at hnvoad whioh tba ajaouot of all order naaadd waoid aeoraa ta Untied Stataa. H iliaitwk Am miimt nrrtnr fiitalli armnr iwasoaahlaaaaeotat4aoaf raaaitlar aaa paraa where the amount aaat la aosalderawa. a strong and crowing dsmaad has arwoaslaea tba withdrawal of tracttoaal omrany from eireulatioa far aaaw dertoi by which aaaouata under five dollars eauld be trans mitted by mall at lam aaat than atpreasot. I deeireto anil peetsi attontloa to the paaa proposed by the huparinteodaat for tba traasBussion of sums lass than five dollar by mean of aa order of a aaw form, ta lie termed " postal-order." ta whioh th writ tea appiieeUoa and the advice, which a tba chief eiemeut of expense aa wall as of security, ara to be dispensed with, aa that these orders may be Issued more expeditiously sod at cheaper rate than moaey orders." tub aTAaouTi anavica. arc The Poetma-ter-GcMra! is of the oplaloa that "the country ha reached that stag la tba progreee of its material development where an effort ought to be made to bring the credit and debit tides of the Departmeat's balance sheet nearer together. All or aaarlv all the long sad expensive Starroute have beea superseded by railroad service. The cost of the Star- ervice aught, therefore, to rapidly decrease in the Western State aad Territories. A careful aad Impartial examination of th ntar-strvto made during the pant summer satisfied tha Department that larg reducUoat eauld be made wit ttout causing any iaconrenisaes to the sections of country supplied thereby." "A minute investigation into allseed abuse la tha 8trroute service w a Instituted by direction of the lata President, and to still being; prosecuted. The Post office Depart meat hat oooprated, aad wilt eoatlaue to co-operate, with the Depart meat of Justice la this investigation. No one who baa not beea directly concerned ia the matter can fully appreciate the magnitude of the uadeitakiag. the mass of record evidence sx a mi nod. the difficulties af a personal iavaetlgatioa la tparaeiyaettted territories, and the results attained by th patient aad intelligent labors of the Inspectors of this Department. There can be no doubt, from the facts already ascertained, that tba existing statutes leave the way open to great s buses, aad that there I abundant ground for Mklttg a Judicial invesUgatioa of tha transactions of the last few years. M The one serious difficulty tn th way of bringing back the Department to a selfsustaining basis is th consUntly-Increasing cost of the railway mail set-rice . Thi increase during the past fiscal year wat 487,446. I retrret to say that there is a deficiency of H78, 155 for this branch of tba service for the fiscal year ended June SO, 18K1, which must be provided for, and ato that there must be an laereased appropriation for the same service of $1 07,319 for the fiscal year ending June , lfcftj. The estimate for tha fiscal year ending June go. 1S8S. forth railway service is 10,8i5 000. There ha recently been an unprecedented growth of railroads, and this accounts largely far the enormous Increaae of the cost ot tha railway service." The actual payment for the rail way -mail service during the year was 111,411,190.90. The cost for the current fiscal year will be J 1X06,601, and tha estlasate for 1888 are 13, 181,001. The enormous growth of rail, roads ia 19ft) aad 1881, and their anticipated iti crease of mileage ia the near future, will account for a great portion of the augmented ooat for the service. Then ware 461 streets made during tha year for violation of the Postal law. Of this number 494 ease wore prosecuted la tha United States Courts, and thirty-seven la the courts of the several State la which tba arrests ware made. Of the former, 188 parsons ware convicted, twenty-six were acquitted, three escaped, fivs forfeited ball, twenty-four prooeedlaca were diemlssed. one wa killed while resttiag arrest, and 177 await trial; thirty highwaymen were arrested aad prosecuted la United States Count. the cmi-mnci qi-kstiox. H Careful observation in this Department aad elsewhere has hut confirmed my conviction af the great public benefit to be derived from conducting the puMIc business on business principles. Some method of relief must be provided from the overwhelming pressure for ai-potnttnent to clerkships and other subordinate positions, aad from the equal pressure for the removal of capable aad experienced assistants to make room for tboe who are not nvre compe tent. Tha public service Is public trust ; to w men every enuen may property aspire, and the public interest plainly demands t bat admission to It should not dapead upon personal favor, because such favor can not well be impartial, and because a system of appointment by mere Influence may be readily perverted to the promo tion of private interests and personal ambition. Appointment by Influence naturally results in making; the tenure of oflee de pend, not upon fidelity and efficiency in the discbsrga of offlcia' duty, but upon the assiduous cultivation of the favor of a patron. Such a tenure la incompatible with the self respect of the incumbent, aad th service must necesssruy suffer from the decllae of Its melts'. Bat the evil consequences cannot be limited to the public service; they affect all potlttaal action, the purity aad vigor of th Government, and the National character itself. The question, therefore, is on ot far higher importance than that of the eoasparatlva fitness of clerks In the employment of tba Ooverameat, aad really eon earn the character and success of republic an institutions. " The first step, la my Judgment, toward tba relief of the appointing officer sod the promotion of the grester efficiency and economy of tba civil service would be a method of minor appointment, which should be independent of persona! or partisan influence. Ia some important Govern meet eafieea of which I have had personal knowledge, such a system 1 already M operation. Ia thee office minor appoint menu ar determined solely by proper quallfica'iom, aa oertalned by impartial tests open to alt applicants upon equal terms. The great sue osst which has attended this method of selection proves na practicability, while th good results, both la the service aad ta tba character ot the officers thus selected, dam onstrates it value. The extension af this method under uniform conditions Is earnestly to be desired, both to correct familiar evils in the public service Itself and to remove tba attfl graver ariw whioh spring from la mr opinion, the stum eatsarai aria tnpiet should govern the mbottoa Bad retention ot amployet la fab Iepanatent. Tae public la bast served by honest, exneri. enotd L aad eamneteat uflleert, aad ehsnges. therefore, ihoiild he made earefullr and only for reasons affecting oelal conduct. My views upon this tubteet are tba result ot proloaged oflcial experienea, and I sat per mMtadtltat the practical saplicsiloa oi tlwM artnetplea would panataeSaabHa laer
Our Young Baaderse
BE CABMFl'L OF TOl'M WOMBS. Keep a watea oa your words, aay aarttaaa, Por nures am wo-4-rful thine : fa aresweot. like he toes freak hooey - Uke the baoa. Uiey hare terrible attnars: They aaa Mesa, Uke the warm, giad sunshine, Aad br ghton a I or ety life; They aaa eut, la the strife of anger, Uke aa upon ton engad knife Let them pass through your lips uaeaallenged. If their errand a true aad kind If they oume tu support tae weary, To comfort aad help tee blind; If a Mtter. revenaeful spirit Proms the words, lot them be unsaid: . They may aasntbrouan a brain like Uerutalag, ur feu oa a neart una Keep tk.a book, if they are cold aad cruel, Under bar aad look aad seal: The wounds they make my darting. Are always aiow to heat. May peacs sruard your lives, and ever. From tae time of your eany )'uta, May the words that you dally utter ae i the words of beautiful truth. The Aauty. TMKWHITTACEP BEAR. Tba daar old grandmother who ao often told me this bear story has been twenty aavra ia bar grave. Sba waa eighty whan aha died, and tbia bap panea to bar when the was only tea yean oldShe lived with bar father aad mother in one of tha pretty village in Eastern Massachusetts; but they wart not very well off, and the family waa large, and they grew poorer aad poorer every year, until at laat bar father and mother thought they would leave their , old home, and go away off in tha northern woods where they could bare more land to raise food. So, with half a doaea of their old neighbors, who were aa poor as tbemtelvea, tbey want up among the green New Hampshire hula. There were no railroads in tboae days, and it took aa long to journey over the hundred miles as it would now to make a Journey to Europe. Tbey were almost two weeks going to their new homes; but at laat, when they were beginning to be thoroughly tired, they oaate to the place: a broad beautiful table-land shut in on every aide by lofty mountains, just growing green in the bright spring sunshine. Here, on the bauks of a lovely little lake, they made their homes, and not very near each other. At first thiv bad pretty bard titnea, and tbey eould not help bein lift 1m hnmaaiolr wlwn tlusv tttmicrtit nf tha klna aiiarlrtinur ua tltfcl. tit wTui 1 teen every day of their lives until now. I The mountains seemed to abut them in 1 from their old homeia and together with the men-folk, and the clearings grew larger and larger each year. Tbey raised cow and sheep, and at laat each family owned a yoke of ..TW " .eid endmotw .nft K.r she alwavs re began to warm m her narration, "we thought ouretme pretty forehanded. There waa only one churn in the neigh borhood, and that belonged to Mrs. Craig, who lived on the river road about a mile from our house. One night when father went over to borrow the churn, Mrs. Craig told him to be sure aad bring it back sometime ia the morning, aa she wanted it herself. So mother hurried round and got the cream in before sunrise, and came to my bed and told me if I would jump up and churn I might carry the chum home. It was about ten o'clock when I started lor Mrs. Craig's. It waa a warm, ovely spring day, and the churn waa ight in my sturdy little arm, aad 1 enoyed my walk, which lay along the lanks of the little river, now swollen with the late spring raine till it rushed foaming and tumbling over the atones. I went happily along, now and then slopping to pick a violet, till juat as I got about half war there I heard a grew noise oi cracannj( Duanes.aua men, . . a a." a a a .a ruros in we pain oeiore me, ensue a great black bear with a white face. He waa dripping wet, aa if he had just come up out of the water, and be seemed surnriaed to aee me, lor he stopped and looked at me, aa much as to say, 'Well, little girl, where did you come fromf Bui he didn't offer to touch me. At tiret I waa too frightened to run, and I only stood and stared ai him. I suppose this must have saved my life, for since 1 have often heard that a wild beeat never attacks aay one who haa the courage to look hint steadily in the face. Anyway, the bear didn't offer to touch me, and by aad by I began to think I might get away. So I set the ... .... churn down carefully, and then begaa to go backwards, all the time looking tralght ai the bear, who aat down like a big dog and looked after me, but did not offer to follow. ( "At iast a turn in the rotul hid him from sight, and Men I ran as faet at I eould. Father was at work in a Held only a little way off, and I ran all the way there. He stopped working when he aaw me coming, and 1 suppose I must have looked singular enough, for I bad lost my bonnet, and mv hn;r was flying in the wind; and I jumped right over tae low leeoe, ana ran an to him and nut mv arms round alsn and bswan . " to cry. "Why, Betty r he said, what1 1 the Boauerr But I eould n't speak. Betty,' h cried, ball na what is the matter? Are the or year mother siek or dead r I shook my head. Ho,1 quick ahiMrea I manageci to aay, ' it a the bear. " The bearr he exclaimed, looking quickly around. Why, child, there s nothing here! Did you think you taw a bearr "By thia time I had grows a little calmer, and I said, 1 did see one. Mother sent me to oarry the ahara keeaa, aad Jhjts aa I got the Bead, I himiMl a amsaa. satst a inMasti ugmmr mmmr swsassa we sawawsu tsaaa aa pjajavsesew tassssssasaBk, aysnt
imnajuahl v
neighbors, and it was bard work clear- d " K? d ll dowa ing the land, planting and gathering in '" hile. "d 1 Mln 1 dare to dtauropa: but women and children worked ! ty either of them; so I went and lay
999 sb tae "Oa. sow talker toagbad at Way, ItsKty,' be siM, there aa er waa a bear with a wnite faoa. It fra oalv Mrs, (Traig'a blank aheap; yon know that baa a white face.' " 'Dal 1 know it waa a bear,' I paraieted, gad it sat right down juat Ilk gJUSssfVg eSSenei (faSaawriss9s9ma eVAem s9ew9j Cjs asflPJaateW ' Well' said father. I a' pose I must go with you aad see about it: bat 1 gueae ou'U find It was nothing but a heap,' and he laughed again. I said nothing, but took his hand and we went back to the road. " Wall,' said father aa we came in eight of the churn still standing where 1 bad left it; well, Hetty, therra your ohura, but Where's your bear T I don't know where he ia now; but he sat in the road the other aide of the ohura when I ran off,' 1 answered. " Father want up to the churn, still holding my band, and, stooping down, lookedat the ground. When be got up, be was not laughing, but he held my hand tighter than before, as he said: A bear sure enough, and a big one, too! Why. Betty, child! Where were your ejea thai yon didn' t aea him before f " Why, he came out of the bushes, ' ISeid. " Father looked at the track again. Well, he' gone off into the wood now, and I guess you aad I bad better carry this churn home, and then I'll see you safe back to mother.' " So he picked up the churn, and, , atill holding me tightly by the hand, we went on to Mrs. Craig. Why, Mr. Croes? cried Mrs. Craig as she saw na, 'did you leave your work to bring that home' Now, that's boo bad. I thought one o' the children could do it, or 1 shouldn't hare aaid a word about its being brought home this morainV "Then father bad to tell her about the bear, and finished by saying 'She was so frightened that she really thought it bad a white face.' ''Weil, it cH have a white face.' 1 cried. Mrs. Craig laughed. 'I don't wonder you thought ao. child,' she said. Whv, it scares me to think of it.1 'Then father went home with me, and mother waa frightened enough when she heard the ttorv. 1 shan't dare to let one of you children out of mv aiarbt strain.1 she said; but she. too. laughed a little over the white face. i . upP J moat have been a little crow boot Ms )' lom 001 to SaV again MM It naa a wniie lace. little, but I kent savins- to mvaelf. 'It did have a white face, i Know it did!' "Well, it waa not long before everybodr in town knew that Betty Cross had" come pretty near being eau-n by a " - -Ij Z thought it had a white face: and of course everybody laughed at that. I didn't say anything, but I knew I waa right; and oh. how 1 did hope somebody would kill the bear, and then others would know 1 waa right. ' Well, one day my eldest brother came home from the milt, where he bad been to have some corn ground. He waa greatly excited, and as eooa aa he came into the bouse he exclaimed: Well, Hetty's in the right on't! The bear did nave a white face. I've jutt seen Burn who lives the other side of the river, aad be saw the bear. He aays it's the greatest wonder Betty wasn't killed, for the bear waa ao hungry that he tackled one of hta two-year old steers and would have killed it if he and his hired man hadn't drove him off with pitchforks, ami the bearapraug into the river and awam acrosa, and must have come right up in front of Betty, for Mr. Burns says it waa close by the I5end.' VMe un, how I clapped mv hands: and T crieU: ... ko4w lt' -bed a white face, 1 v.. u u.,iti Mother didn't aay much then: but when 1 went to bed that night sho kissed me and said: 'Thank God, my little daughter is safe at home;' and i knew she waa thinking of the lear. " We heard a lew weeks after that the '.ear waa killing sheep in the other part ot the town, and there all the men turned out nnd had a grand bear-hunt, and at butt tracked him to his den in the woods, where be was soon killed. He waa an immense animal, aad almost everybody went to aee him, but I didn't care to. 1 thought I had seen him all 1 needed to; and 1 have never since . u ," ,"1 seen nor heard of a white -faced bear. " I - - A Eehake Frew a iesiea WaH-r. Boston is the center of so much Intelligence and knowledge of the proprietor anil exaotnea of speech thai even the hotel waiters talk like so many Lindley Murray and appear a animated aa first fruits of the science of orthoepy. An evidently foreign gen tleman was at breakfast ia one of our leading carnvansariea the other morning, and seeing salmon oa the bill of fare ordered some, nut he was unac f i. L. .uattainted with the correct pronunciation of the word, and so, ia aay ing, 'Please bring me som salmon,' ' gave the "1" ia the name of the fish in rail force. The waiter's oountenanoe waa agitated by a spasm of pain, but he soon recovered himself enough to say: "Salmon, sir! Sammon, air: summon, sir? Te. air," and glided in a stately way to tha kitchen, waving the foreign gentleman ataring blankly after him, aad wondering at the am axing cheek ot ths Boston waiter. itom JonmmL These as but one thing m all Ike Mrverae ta wlh a man IssAwslwIth laL aasd Wawem ha narhi fawaasta. aad
with a wnite
oown m my trunaie-ueo, ana l oneu a
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WMthtr aff oftet Mr. TosjSvtne. ittlester of the meal district, brsataht of wtrooue turn to the Uuned iSsenal Osaear. and ba the last aeattetaee shown the beautiful asteauAe Isatra ments for tteatirin;suM eMaatmiatag tha various ehauaaa and eussdltlossa of th weather. PuJutJet to the etandV am tnersRomater ae espiainea v me, T. the uses of the heat aaoee, waetaupoa ilr.T. snuxudr iuqulred If ha "hadn't nuOier uu to spare sseh a alee jnerehine to sot the weather la hay In' and harvest time." Hts leasee tK of tlic aerouM-ter ur wind measurer evoked the expression: "Wouldn't the be the racket to ran tna sua mill with." The barometer waa cite too many for Toad vine, ami. look ing queerlr at the oflU-Ul, as if he wre utterly nonplussed and bank runt of wurda, aaid: FrsendLdsd yoa iwr have ths reumatiaf The abruptness of U qnuin surprised the ifllr, who replied, "Ho-Hsever. "What"- Evidently reeoUectinf himself, Mr. T. ttopped on the raggea edite of the threadbare remark, sod said: I only wanted to anuw.foru thia trap (pulntinc to the baroaseteti shown tiie cood air had weather afore it's time. It would be a bully trap for people wtth reumetta: tbey oooM. flank it every time, t'p mr oonauy lwn fulka haa II Ihev ase Sr. JaOOMS Oil. an' It's a powerful srsTnttmtatda rt-u mans u s ins upper utirfj us mm nht every time." with thanks far the utMXpeeted Information, the oS lal puliuly turned Mr. Toadvlne nvr n thf) ttthrr to ahow him to the street ear. while be, looking oyer hts ti-r, ruad : Mrs. T. a. urns, . I.l Walnut street. Philadelphia, Psw, writes: I had inflammatory rheamai Ism very badly. 1 u one fr and ankle u at-emed U have taken hold with the deu-nninatton to stay, and 'he mornIns I obtained the hr. J act. a On, I nMildnotput mj foot does to the floor, even for an instant. I used it that vvenina for thefiwtime. and the next nviroing for the secit4 time, and thai afternoon put my foot down for sevrrni xainutea. Ou the wiaday following I ounld stand up and walk a few step. On Tuesday could walk aUutmyroomaad went dwwu Malta ly h- .Mine on to the bantatera. Now I can walk quite well and there It very little pain left. Just think! one I-.til.- K'td a half, and lam almost free from pain! It Is a w nterfui mod if Use. It. JOII lUUt Sill's ToflicSimi FOR TMI CURE OF FEVER and AGUE Or CHILLS asd FEVER. The preprieter ef this celebrated medmiae fastly claims far it a supanarityaver aJlraat adies ever offered te the psbUe for the SArx, CXiTAIS, SPXIOr aad MaMAXXlTT tare sfAgna aad lever, ar Chills aad Fever, waetb aref shorter leaf ttaadiag. as refers te the satire Westers aad aeathera eeaatry t hear aim te times y ts the trath ef the aoosrtioa that la ae ease whatever wiU it fall te ear if the directieas are strictly followed aad serried aat. Ia a great asay easts a slag 1 dees haa beea u Aiat far a ears, sad waels famihee have bees eared by a stagl bottle, wiU a perfect reeteratlea ef th gesaral health. It ia, however, pradeat, and la every ease mat oertais te ear, if it aaa ia testiaaad ia smaller aeeeefera weeker twe after the ill son aaa beea ehacked, mere especially la diflaealt and leaf -ataadiaf sates, usaaily this msdleia will act ree.nire aay aid ttkeep the sewels la smed eraer. Iheald tba satient, hewever re eaire a eatkartie stedlciae, after sarlnf v three or fear dose af the Teal, a siaarie af ItJLL'S TEOITAJLX TAJtTLT KLU will be ssmsieat. Tae geaaia Sllinrs T0CsTatTPmaet have 91, J0KV BOU'S private stamp aa saeh kettle. 9K. J0K9J lULLsaly hat U Hht t msaufaatar aad sell th original JOX9J I, SMITH'S TOMICSTEU?, af laisvlU, Xy. Xxamint well the iabel as saeh kettle, navy private stamp is set ea saeh settle ae aat purchase, ar yea will ae steal ved. tj . ' Matnirtwetwrer and Veeiaar ef SatlTirS TONIC SYRUP, ULLS SARSAPARftLA, BULL'S WORM DCSTIWYt-t, The foeHtar aerwecUee of the Baty. 1 rriaetsml OwW.iniuia su, I4H hSTiLMt, Kt. f Tot iBr Cnr f -uirh t lU. H'r !-, Asthma, resN-aiHs. r.ip. Inrtu- in. Wh tfyt . uh. Inelpieat Coasuinpiiuu, , Itiit miijr mm orata aseow. is a a tab srr nest. AMEMCA' n nau I n mmiUIm &n S I II. SSItl.or Mit SM an i SvrS SaSMd n,n thl -..i,ritrtrsiu wiu-hrraft wl iott t7 Ka--itr,mnt. S .W.-lwiw mm Hi OmI Itmtmtr ailUriMi UirirnlitllaM Vmt9H - ! lll War mtmiU St4 rUfcTrkvnl7 Naianflral WmiMut'sl'nuaas- I rTr4l lunk of llfomlKHur Csimvar hasp- ftntrr mm tttoSMMS Inn I.IUkd U i am aeaaoin arr Ir. Tsaser rad. II fitmUon Uh-M.Mtem K Tlh ISS& tkrran ThaOMS lMM Itow- Whiinrv 'iCVtna (l! ASiiraas, torarcatats, TSramiMiiiai Itvjli mm Tkstrtatpr SlsiWl SMt4frB tL atafr a. laStvieMl niDeeoki ir aoueation, rtome. ao laweernentsu Oreea Lose. eeS, StO. mBimi&nilttt mr w v1asM ssxaaas is Meiklsf tkcaaasi laSssssrnssaioaiSM. 'Lj1'1 LANDS. ConsrsteS ami i aaa sua SSmx
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