Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 33, Number 15, Jasper, Dubois County, 24 December 1890 — Page 6

IR1LAND.

IN

Umh:kI nsuihllnunt mm!

VtfarihH ltflHBP SvcmhAm

enter m Um

PaiMt HMto1 iUatm

Wmuli IMbilAjJ ik njr af I I ill a wee Smeewns maw os evBa ew

Baixixakux, Dm 'lT. Mr. DavRt, accompanied ljr Father O'Hnlloruu, arrived 1 the City Square yesterday and addressed the crowd. There were cheers and counter cheers, mid various partaaan ahouta from the member ot the various factions and much disorder. An Dnvitt began his speech a wagon wttk Wnt. Redmond and Father Kyna and other Parnellttes drove up to the kwr iert of the pork. Kedmoud began sneaking stsuultanoomdy with Dttritt. Another crowd hooded by Mr. Timiwr and several priests also appeared on the MOM) about the Mime time and the eonwu idttsribable. Ju tH midst of the uproar Mr. Parnell and a large party of hi supporters made Uwir appearance. They wens greeted by shouts ef: "Tally hoi Die fox, behind Kittys akirUi," and other offensive cries from the antt-ParaeUitoK, while the Parnell faction replied with equally violent attacks ufKm their enemies. Mr. I'nriHsll addressed the crowd in his vicinity, saying that he wouhl not insult any body unnecessarily, but in regard to Uennesey, be was a man who went to Parliament in Mfil as a Tory aad supporter of Disraeli, ami now -wanted to go as a'Liberal awl supporter of Gladstone. In 161 llennossy defended, in the House of Commons, the evictions then proceeding throughout King's County. Yelk of "To hell with himv" Would Kilkenny take as her representative a nana who advocated the extermination of these people? Cries of "Never." The disorder increased continually. While Mr. Parnell was speaking; at this p4t there were many fights gping on in the square. The melee became almost general, blackthorns and. ashplant sticks being, used vigorously. Mr. Daritt took prominent part in the fight, and soon started for the wagon from which Mr. Parnell was speaking. He received many blows and was pretty badly need up before he was competed to desist from his purpose of meeting Tarnell face to face, lie. shouted: "Men of Kilkenny, I came here to defend the right of public meeting and liberty of speech, but our opponents send their htaebgnards to interrupt us. But we have .beaten them hack. I sever was struck by aa Englishman in my life, but I have been struck to-day many times by our own country-

His remarks roused his partisans tc renewed denBoastrations of anger. The noliee finally dispersed the combatants. The Parnellite party drove to Castle Comer, and Daritt and Tanner soon made their appearance in the latter place also. They at once began to address open'air meetings, dilating upon Mm events just occurred at liallinaIriH, and asserting- that Mr. Parnell had brought a mob of hsraHugs to attack them. Mr. ParBelt's carriage, while passing, wan

aad Perm seat went to ParneU

a he would com aad stand by Man

(Bavin) he would guarantoa him a unseeable heurmgr, Mr. Parnell replied: t mm not fat a pontoon to treat; I, am omjr in a position to' fight." Then ad-

small audience he said he val-

. the quality and not the quantity of

Ms hearers, lie expressed confidence that the voiee of Kilkenny would be for htm. He spoke in aa impassioned vein, - declaring that he would not assail any one, nor would he ask permission to apeak from a cook-sparrow like Tanner or a jack-daw like Daritt. A body of DavHt's partisans oommg up another row occurred. During the scrimmage, some miscreant threw a hag of lime at Parnell. It struck him full m the face, and the lime filled his eyes, blinding htm and causing him intense pain. His carriage wan just driving away when the lime was thrown. After riding some distance he was obliged to alight at a laborer's cabin in a stating; condition. A doctor was called, but ooukl do little to assuage the pain, and urged that Parnell should be driven immediately to Kilkenny for treatment. The start was made, but Mr. Parnell was usable to endure the agony, and another step had to be made at a hotel on the road, where another doctor endeavored to relieve the sufferer by applying castor oil to his eyes and attempting to scrape on the lhme with the point of a lead pencil. Some slight relief was afforded, aad Mr. ParneU finally reached the Victoria Hotel in Kilkenny where he had to he led to a

, being imams to use Ms eyes. A

fiMTTINQ HULL'S DCATH.

that all m Urns m

eyes, hut that Mr. ParneU m still suffering greatly aad will probably be disabled for a time. He anticipate that the results will not be serious. As Ages Couple's TerrlWe KspedMteR m Chamlottbtoww, P. K. I., Dec 17. Last Krkisy night an aged couple named H far Win left here with a teem, during

violent snow-storm, for their home about three miles from here. When

within a half mUe of their resklence'

thav ilmr into aanow-baak. and.

becoming stupefied with the intense cold, were unable to extricate them

selves. They were missed on buwlsy, uul frtwiul bv a ssnrehimr nartv. Mrs.

Hiffgins' legs were frosen solidly up to ik knees, and she died shortly after

lteing discovered. Higgins' haade and

feet j were irocen, ana nave seen amputated. He m denrhms and unable

to tell the story oC nis aunertngs. ''(rV Jen 1'RrWensaadle Burr.u.o, N. Y., Dee. 17. The en

neremiMit of Lee and Kohert Howard,

traaeee performers, was brought to an

abrupt ami unpleasant close at n on

derland last evening. They performed

the deriagtMexiea ladder trapeze act."

Upon the bar of a trapese was a long

ladder. At one end ef it 'ran a small

trapese utkhi which Kohert performed

while hk brother at the foot acted as

balance. One of the ropes broke and.

both performers fell to the stage. Koh

ert esesned with stkrht mfories, but

Lee struck the stage on hh hack am k bedlam jure.

the lleeedeil KttMsc

MtMsa Men,

aVaannMSaaenn nanna tfs VPfiaaaa aaan alnaan rneuurisnum eeTat anjnsnnaaa a aeW esnj snannn

im mm U Arrxt Hmm Tfce

Itaat was Whurt sea unsrp MMtmc ' Mane Mrtrml l Ueana l, wlh Ttemii tm Tnetr TreU. STAxntue Kock Aajsxcv, X. D., Dee. IT. The fight at sitting Mnp oetueiwil about :46 Monday morning, and for half an hour was of the ot desperate character. Bull had Vn informed of the omwmg of the Indiaemliee, aad be and his immediate followers' were fully armed with Winchesters, scalping knives, revolvers and clubs. The Indian police did not get an opportunity to demand the old medicine man's surrender, bat firing began from the Indian tepees immediately upon the appearance of the ofiieers, and three of the latter were killed outright, two wounded so seriously that they died before they could be moved, ami three others slightly. The police then opened fire upon the savages, at the same time dispatching couriers to the rear to bring up the cavalry under Captain 1'ouchet. Sitting Hull started to run up the river and was captured, but his followers made a desperate effort to rescue him, aad he was shot -twice once in the left shoulder and again in ,the region of the heart. Hull's son. Crow Foot, was killed, together with Hlack Hear, Catch Vird and from five to seven otliers.

FO FRII WOOL

it Wi

fMMN Vwec-

rajMMr Wants rve Wm4

SUtif BuH. The body of Sitting Hull was secured by the cavalry and was carried to Fort Yates. The point at which the battle oeoarmd is forty-two miles below the agency. It is estimated that ISO warriors are in the band that escaped up the Grand river after the fight, deserting their camp and families, ami this number is likely to be increased by other bands. Lieutenant Casey with a troop of Cheyenne scouts, and Captain Adams' troop of the First Cavalry are headed for the north end of the Powder river range opposite the mouth of the Box Elder creek. Captain Fount

ain's troop of the Eighth Cavalry, with pack transportation, which left here

this morning for White Uuttes, will

probably intercept the band before it reaches the Little Missouri. If not, Lieutenant Casey and Captain Adams will do so.

Settlers who are aware of-the move-

of the troops arc hut little

as the weather k such that in-

telligesce of disturbances and of move

ments, travels rapidly and H k well known that the troops are so distributed as to hare the situation in hand.

A general outbreak on the Sioux Res

ervation is not feared, and those disaffected bands which are now giving

trouble will soon be placed where they will cease to be a cause of alarm for the

settlers. The Sioux Reservation k sur

rounded by troops, thoroughly equipped for a winter campaign in the most diffi

cult country. All are in eommunicatioa

with each, other and department head

quarters.

No outbreak can become general fat

the face of the precautions already

taken, and the wild rumors which have

caused the population of entire valleys

to fiy for their lives are malicious aad groundless. The arch villain is dead, and hk followers will soon lose the enthusiasm necessary to follow hk teachings. Troops are hot on their trail, and

before another sun has set Sitting Hairs celebrated crowd of dancers will he good Indians or prisoners.

The Deatb ef mtttos; Belt CassmtA. Wasmixstox, Dee. 17. The followiag

telegrams throw light upon the killing of Sitting Hull:

St. Tmtl, Minn., Dee. J. XAJOX aSNBRAX. SCHOriBLB, WASHIXSTOR:

CommMdlngoiSeer at Standing Hock tele, avapm to General Kueer as follows: Courier )at la from Captain reebet reports eavalry

tsree miles from snting nun eamp ane suaalatr on. Indian noHoe bad arrested SU-

Mac null neeet eefUftat, wnea statin Hutf s

trigs Si attempted to rescue, mtttsg Hull was

led killed. At ease M became gen

eral. A number of the be policemen ere reported killed and probably a number of others. The courier who brought the word

was In the neat, and saw rttlRg Bull on the ground and Is sure he Is dead. lolleemeti reported out ammunition, but the cavalry undoubtedly reached them

within halt an hour after reeeirlsa- the

word. There are one hundred eavalry with ene Motebkiss and one Gatlhia- xn, eom. mended by Captain Feehet. I will move out with two eemuaniee of Infantry this after

Soon as fur aa Oak Creek, tearing CapMh

Miner with hla company te guard the peet.

Information was received that &lttlMr nun was preparing to leave, and orders had been Iven to secure his body. Sinned. Milss, Major-Genera). ftr. Pacc, Dee. M.

MajokGrsekal ScuoFHtr.i), Wasmixotox:

Captain reehet arrived In ool time at the seene of the Indian ashr. Drove the In

dian away. Me reports tMUlmt Hull, his sen

Mack Mini, Cateh hear and four others killed; also seven police killed. Me reports

fee baa the body of MMIne: nun: algae Mtt.se, Meter-General. rurther Ieta4M rf the right. St. Yxvu Minn., Dec 17. In Mon

day's fight between the Indian police

and Sitting Hull's followers, the firing was heavy and deadly; nearly every

man who was hit was killed. In the

furious f usllade Sitting Hull fell out of

his saddle, inereed by a Imllet, but it k

not known whether it was fired by the

charging party or by one of the police.

The son of Sitting Hull was Main al

most at the fSret volley of the police.

The hostile lirt.d with deadly accuracy, and sktwly drove the polke from 'the

field. If the eavalry had not arrives

the nosse would have beet aanihilstsa.

The Houtoa Journal af Commerce is a high prelection paper wales does not bieve in a duty en wool. In a rseent nttmear U esmasente on the westward

at papulation as ah own by

"an exempli lea lion of the coutm of settlement sad development of s eouaTha and d Telopment it JssoHbes in words which It quotes Item eemcbody as fellows: "After the hunter, trapper and prospector, the herdsman follows, and for a time the raising of tattle is the chief industry. Ai settlement becomes less parse, this U followed by agriculture, which, in its turn, as the population becomes more dense, is succeeded by manufactures." The Journal makes this the tsxt from which to read the wool grower a brief lesson. "Here is an expression of a fact." It says, "that is entirely Ignored by the wool-grower in hk struggle against the i Heritable course of natural events. He is made to believe that pioneer occupations earn live and thrive by the side of those that are fostered by density of population and a more civi

lised order o( surroundings. It is beeausc of them false Ideas that cause him to be constantly clamoring for Government protetioa against the inroads ef natural forces that denote social and industrial progress."

In other words, Massachusetts wants

free wool for her mills, for she is smart enough to see what a great boon to her industries free wool would be. The recent election in that State, which re

sulted In a Democrat'e majority in the

Congressional delegation ol the State for the first time lu more than thirty

years, is nn emphath expression of the

New England demand for free raw materials, above all for free wool.

It will be only a few years before

wool is entirely free, and then the 63,000,000 people of this country will at once have the advantage of cheaper and better clothing an advantage with

which the entire wool-growing industry

of the country does not fora moment deserve to be com pared. The wool product of the country does not amount to more

than two per cent of our agricultural

products; and our native wool Is considerably less than half of our yearly consumption. In regard to our woolgrowing industry, the one question which always hits the bull's eye is, why should M, 0e, 000 people be made to pay a high tariff tax on wool for the benefit of the Insignificant number who

grow wool?

The Ken toe Journal of commerce is

right; the duty on wool must go. Hut

the Journal as a protectionist paper and

on protection grounds, can not mane out a strong ease against the w solgrower. The latter has a perfect right to the same protection that the Journal

demands for the manufacturer, aad

when the grower k put on a bask ef

competition with the whole world he

will not be thought na reasonable II he

asks that the manufacturer should surrender some of his protection also.

When the Journal cries out against

the wool-grower for "eonstantlj clamor

ing for Government protection against the inroads of natural forces," it must

remember that the wool-grower is not alone in that clamor. The tend

ency of the maw is lowara tne

eheapealag ef all manufactured, products aa the result of invention and

proved methods oi manufacture ana

transportation. When our manufacturers ask to he exempted from the play of this cheapening tendency, they, too, are "clsmor.sg for Government protec

tion against the Inroads of natural forces;" aad it is only a matter of simple

Justice that when the emancipation ef

industry commences the good work should go forward along the whole line.

Let us have she a per wool; but let us

also have cheaper costs and no fear that these e beeper eoeta will "necessa

rily involve a cheaper man and woman beneath the coat," as our wise Preeliest has expressed it

THE LEAD TAX.

These

A Case eg siahm gr the raw

Far the Maay Mealsmlatiaiis C Trusts and Mtes-riees WMefc

The Xew York Pre prints the fel

lowing in aa editorial to show the bene

flclal sfieot ef the MeKinley tariff en

'At Socorro, N. X, a town that

was ruined h free trade in Mexican lead, three hundred extra men have

been alaoed at work at the smelter and

the laghn lead mines (this mtao has

been shut down for three years) at Lie ar dsr. aad tsm result k but a

sample of many other pi sees. A very

eeuesrvative estimate pi sees the sum

Iter of most in Aritcaa and Xew Mexico, that wars idle when the MeKinley

hill wss patsed and are new employed.

at tt.OM. and that the output of their

labors will swell the production to amount of 7,50t,MO annually."

Whereupon the Pfoes remarks: "The

MeKinley bill is working out praoweal

results la suite of the election."

Let us see what moss "praetiesl results" are in the eats of lead. In the old tariff law there was a duty en lead ores, 1ut no duty on the lead contained in sliver ores Thus a large quantity ot lead ores earns in from Mexico In silver ores, these ores being smelted in vast quantities in Kansas

City and other places, sad givlni

Woynwut to thousands ot men.

what are called nuxtng

needed in mstting oar dry

Moot ef our ores are dry

ores, and all the owaers of mines prodeeisf suoh'erse were very anxious to have the Mcstoan fiuxmf ores continue to come ia fiee. There is, however, a smell hut power

ful eiicoe in Coloraio, known as .wnrhonaes ring,'' who own what

calkd thm Carbonate Load Mines.. It wo lm Ike interest of this ring to keep out the fluxing ore. In order to seeste tfek result they oontributod In ISM a oory large amount of 'fat" to Quay and IbtdleyVblooks-of-five" corrupUom fund, it being understood by eu tamers that the ring was to be duly

paused when the new Admluteten-

Mnv9 JIWeHf onrw TolawnsVMaHm' asW

This is what actually happssea. Atvr the Harrison Adminintratien eawe in there was a squabble on the part $t the carbonate ring to get silver-lead ores put oa the dutiable Ust by the Treasury Department. A decision was given by Secretary Ti indom which restricted the importation of the Mexican ores, and the pries ef lesd began at onotgto advance from the old figure of S!Teset s pound. Last Msy the paragraph is the Mb Kintoy Mil imputing aMuty ef IK eento a pound on ail the lest 1eil ver-lead fluxis ores brought in from Mexico was passed in the House, after s sharp debate, and the ring became confident that if a tariff law should be enacted it would impose such a duty. Thereupon the pries again began to advance. J ust before the vote on this paragraph the price in Chicago and St Louis was K to 4 cents. Ths following week it was 4H cents. It is now about i cents. Now the question for such high tariff organs as the Press to answer is this: Where is the profit to the country at large in paying SJf osnts a pound higher for its lead in order that a few hundred or thousand miners in Arisona and New Mexico may get higher wages? Is it economy? Would any intelligent farmer or business man conduct his affairs oa such a principle? The duty on lead played directly into the hands of the lead trust Hy causing a scarcity of lead it enabled the trust to put up prices. There was actually a lead famine. On October 4 the New York Engineering and Mining Journal said: The lead fam'ne still continue, and that It In owing to the ahortneas or supplr In the United Sluta ot aultahte smelting material and nuxtasr or. there I no question ot doubt Iio:m the state of again now i xUtlnx In leadrllle. CL Th s OUirlct when the dlucuMlo wjSKolnston as to whetnerMex. lean fluxing ore were admitted or not, was represented hy thnse oppoaln r the admission as belns: eapaWe of furnUulnu not on.y aumclent for lis own smelting IndHttiy but a large surplu for Smaller etalIHaed etnewhere. Now ladvllle I actually Im. porting Mexleati guxlng ore In spite ot t Ion haul nnd hlgH pil;, to keep her own smelters going! In recent years there have been scarcely any importations of pig lead, the old duty being prohibitory; but now that the home market price has gone so higb, importations have again set in, notwithstanding the duty ef two cents a pound. For the week ended November 15 about 450, 000 pounds were entered at New York. The lead duty is bearing its legitimate tariff fru t in building up trusts. A recent number of the Metal Worker says: T in lead Iwstre'S ef the country Is rapidly ilrl'tlng Into tttM control of a fw orga.lzatun. The evidences of suae s of the load trust, the combination ot thn white lend Intneits, with two smelling plants and oaereflnery nltled with It, hat given en enragement to ethers. It ii true that thngtand centralization si h -iae of the other smeltt-ra and riflners felt through completely, hHt slnee then th t two trading Montan i imelt lag works at Great Falls nnd t. Helena hve combined, and faa-d w,th them Is the lrge new refinery which M Jast being completed at Chleagn. noire of lh g'oup of capital

let who are In lontrol of thU cembln tlon

wn also the Co lor a If, Smelting Com paay it rueble ad poetess Hilalag property In that

stale. Others are very largely .d'litteee

wnb mining laieritets la Meaiaaa aad tho

CsterCAtenc region, la Idaho.

The whits lend trust hat also been

advancing the price ef white lead, which is used in making paint About

she first of October the price ef white

lead was cents a pound against seats in Eagiand. Under date of No

vember 11 ths trust sent out n circular

announcing "an increase in prices." It gives the rate of white lead purchased

m kegs la lots of lees tban I, sob pounds,

at 7X cents net (that is, without any

trade discount). If bought in -pound tin psils, cents per pound; if in

t-pound tin cans 0H cents. The price

of white lead in the Unltod states at

the present time, if in kegs, is, therefore, per cent in excess of the for

eign pries; if is 35-pound tin-psils. 10K

per cent., and ir in 5-pound tin cans over IM per cent, less s fair allowance for the difference in the cost of the tin. in this country and Europe. And in answer to facts like the) the protectionist organ points us to the fact that 'three hundred extra men have been placed at work" at Socorro, N. M. Would it not be a good thing to turn

loess s few bloodthirsty fool-killersini

this country?

"A SLY DIG.-

PJjdJ t9eMruu7uwfr SestdJ 0aRda'4 as rrtldbeYroi a4ttav

XeKtotejr Mm to Ve lata Hk Keserta. The State Department at Washing

ton issues every month a stout pam

phlet en titled, "Reports from the Con sols

of the United States." James O. Hlaii

being now Secretary of State is respon

sible for what gees into these resorts.

The present attitude of the secretary to bis party' tariff policy lends a curious

interest to ths report on the new Kus-

siau' customs tariff decree, which w,

eat to the State Department by George W. Wurts, secretory of ths United

States Legation at St Petorsber.

Tats report is printed, svidentiy with

the approval of Mr. Blaine, in a recent

number ef the Consular reports. In big report Mr. Wurts saysc

"Tne new tariff will be regarded; Abroad

mprehwHory f r a number of xrticies already enormously taxed at the KuftSM.t mtern houee. and many ot them auch as

sin ensue prftdtto, or, It , of a euality so Inferlm aa at arcs y to be maretabe; seek.

f.r exmpTe, s wine, many anteies i luxury, considered by thj eda.-aUd etnse as

nrewtaerlee, Hnd other. Kutsia caa not yet produce all Iter necessaries; and to practically exclude them hy Increase ef t-ir.t la a aestlnnabtc polky in a country sogttMtly

dependent upon Importations from abroad." Im condemning ths tariff decree of the

Csar in Russia Mr. wurts plainly condemns the MeKinley tariff put through

hy ths "American Csar." which is built

entirely on the Russian principle of exclusion. Did Mr. Blaine permit these

words to go into the official reports in

order to express the same contempt for

MeKinleylsm which he expressed se

forcibly last spring when he crushed in

hk fine silk hat sad dashed it against

the wall?- Mr. Wurts svidentiy knowt

Maine's opinion of McKlnleyism. A MaMtete Intent todeetry.

Lard, pressed meats, vegetables and fruits preserved in tin all go up in

nrios. The children's appetites are

taxed that a Pittsburgh syndicate msy

have the chance to think over whether

thsrs is enough, in it to start a plant

and import allw hundred Welsh iRheo

mKsMM City Thme

Wias Atvsae

4 ffiteres iU cWS&nm '"tt

Awans irom cover to cover, whim sw tvue and ths dlseardment of columns

give the panes a very fresh sad attractive took, and we learn that the uiogaaiae is atmaatlv salaraeJ. to one hundred

pages. Leading attractions Include a new Peppers serial by Margaret Kidney, the promised railroad serial, "Cab aud Caboose," by Kirk Muaroc, "Drawing the ChlW Pigure," the first of twelve pictorial drawing leaaon papers (with monthly prises) by Miss Caroline Rl miner, daughter of I)r, Klmmer, the art-anatomist and soulutor. and "Marietta's Mood Times . an

Italian serial by a well known Hasan woman in Boston. The short stories, patters aad poems (and there is a full treasury of them, waking a Christmas etocking book lu factf are by Bailie Pratt McLean Greene, Kmma Sherwood Chester, Graham R. Tomton, Kthelwyn Wetlierald, Charlotte M. Vail, KUiabeth Robins l'eniiell, Rev. George Whyte, Miss Hawley, John u. Carpenter, Margaret Ky tinge, Miss Poulssou, Mrs. CbVmn and ProfOtis T. Mason. A special feature k the fac simile reproduction of Mrs. Ilemana's original manuscript of "The Landing of the Pilgrim Kh thorn," which waa brought to America by James T. Fields. The pries of Wipr Awakk will remain at It.-wayear, only 9n cents a number. D. Lethrop Compsny, Publishers. Hoston.

"Doss alcohol affect ths blosdl" aahe.1

ths professor of the medical student "I

shouhi HttaK," repttea tne young man, -ibk it might havs some tendency to get into the

iag-ular vela." Washiagtoa PosU

The Battle af Urn. The true hero will endeavor to make the

meet of life, and to this end the first consideration in a robust constitution. Like a good general on the battle plain, who, when expecting an attack from the enemy, will entrench himself ia fortifications, so he, when disease is in the atmosphere or hovering in ambush smid climstic changes, will fortify his system sgsisst every encroachment the grim monster may seek to. make. Many a grand life has ended for want of timely precaution in the hour of need. When fever and influenza are abroad, when the damp chilly days touch the marrow bones, when effluvia aud malaria walk band in hand, then it ia that the system should be fortified by a use of that superb strengthening tonic alterative of Dr. John Bull's SarsaparlUa, which keeps the blood pure and the functions regulated, so that disease caa not enter the citadel of life.

A mam no sooner gets old enough to know

hew to talk well than he also learns the Value of not talking at all. Atchison Globs.

JaTsaJafidJ gseeGururs9mo There are knaves now and then met with

who represent certain local bitters and

poisonous stimuli as identical with or pos

sessing properties axm 10 loose oi ciosiebter's Stomach Bitters. These scamps only succeed in foisting their trashy compounds

upon people unacquainted with the genuine article, which is as much their opposite as ssy is to night Ask and take no substi

tute tor tne graaa renteay xor mmana, uyapepsis, constipation, rheumatism and kidney trouble.

That sovereign has n little mind

who seeks to go down to posterity by means of great public buildings. It is to confide to masons and bricklayers the task of writing history. Talleyrand.

m enai bjw

nV X KjaVTi isor an v.

Both the method and resulta heg Bjrup of Fig ia taken ; it k pleasant tad refreshing to the taste, audaek rentl j yet promptly on Uie Ki nej Liver and Bowels, cleanse tie in. tern effectually, dispels colds, besi acltes and fevers andeures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs m tie only remedy of ita kind ever pes. duoed, pleating to the taste ai;d as. eeptable to the stomach, prompt ia ka action and truly beneficial ia its effects, prepared only from the mo healthy and agreeable iubstaaces, Ma many excellent qualities eo. mend it to all find have made it the noat popular remedy known. Srrup of Figfi ia for said in GOt awd fl bottles by all leading dn. gists. Any reliable druggist bo amy Bot hare it on hand will procure it promptly for any cue wl wishes to try it Do not accept aayatibstitute. CALIFORNIA FI6 SYRUP CO. iiintiwtr. nr. new rofcr.

ABD0MI1

BAND!

wuTMftf, Comforti Heartti PftMnia GARMENTS Great HMTECTKM BOWELS and K KEYS. Noomi fiffard to p lit res 0J(l InNNktfcW's

sm siziajTUST, uu oiedolu

Jmm. Kosrru Camouna. July )th..M9t

Messrs A. T. Hmaixknsshsbs st Co. ItoabaaSsr. Pa. I enelose two dollars

for two beetles of your Malaria Antidote. The bottle you seat me a year ago I gavs to

esnew m mine wao aau cuius ior more m tares mosths. and takiar medicine

from the doctor all ths time without im-

rrevsmsst. Beferehshsd taken half tno betueef the Antmcte he wmsettrely cured.

Teem truly, JL a. cobaj.

' ThonputsWsa ef a man to like hla

shadow gigantic whoa It precedes him,

aad pigmy la its proper tiena when It isUsws. Talleyraad.

feriagfrsm Ceughs, Cetda, fierc Throat,

to., a heals try .Baowx's haoxcauL

Taocnssv sjmmwm

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