Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 33, Number 16, Jasper, Dubois County, 2 January 1891 — Page 7
RECIPROCITY AT DINNER.
,4h TnmI Ike Tf4e. Tha New York Ckawfcerof Commerce RM always lee a rather liideUousd rtUHiHt organisation. At w an Hual dinner there nan usually Woh a jary amount of fwotetloitlt Kpweelc makiatf. lutachaiu?aeiHs to lie bohiiN ever this eonaervat ve old lwxly, The ncfdletM hardship which Uih two McKlnley laws the tori law ami tlm cHfttoMH administrative law have laid upon commerce eeem to liav made the membera of the Chamber of Commerce ojh'H to other and better ideas. At lt annual dinnor jut held reciprocity waa the keynote of the spwehes. The gentlemen comprlmnir tho ChamWr apparently feel with lllaino that "the United iJtates has reached a po nt whore one of it highest d title is to unjarge the area of its foreign trade." Chauncey m. IJepew, who m nn as!iant for the Republican newntnat on for the Presidency, made the first speech and dilated upon the beauties of reel woeity with the Spanlshpoakinfr nations of South Amurloa. with Canada and all American nations or colonies. His reference to the recent money cr'.wls In London, and the way in which tho Itank of France oame to tho resouo of the Hank of Kngland by lending it S15,(XW.CHW at 8 per cunt, when tho current rate was six. Th's, he said, was "ntfrnational reciprocity of tho broadest ami most benntlcont character." The most remarkable speech of tho evening was made by Carl Schurz on foreign commerce. Ills concluding1 words wero as follows: "I miii ikeptv coiiviicil. If we w.h to prvft-lonr ci WMrou over the world anil n vhe our meiclt nt fleet, we mit st stt touea H vlt.il point. An tin. N.iuli i..-.-.!. a ttin abolition nf litv ry to ill loo to her oil herpcHlullitles of prosperity and (freatneM xootir IndiiHr e and our cou.m r.o, J-i ortt"r to intt-r up m a nw and l mill ;-. career t pr'xrriiv Ueve nnmeiit, nt d only the Uriakln- of the chains wiileli Imti-PT thi-m Ah. Kentleinen, It it. utu r all, in the nlr of fr-, d m that the gmiua of Vmui.a moat giaRdly unfold, it row r. ll.y of iktaKepHiille. nlv lut im hav.t an rgrlcultnri relforrd oftlieanlffclit Unrdeim puiHpoqii; h ni9nu r ng . U.Hlr, llli. tint d f tlie taxi.n which tniko prndur-lli n rody j roltiMifree fi m tvt Hlilpn.and corrrli? nieiebHdl-"' dial enlaf t lie nmi. plltlea 6f tie world let hi In.ve a inw II -Manila fair fha'-ee for AiiktIihii .-iiti-r-Hr!s. Ibr and nvi-Hilon, ami tli i K'-pu'-. lie wl ait only r-nmln one of i'ho I'rit Cnmarifi d Jhe erth, hut dv.uico with Klant Hridea to Ii -jhi the yrimti-M Indus t'lu ninl (irnifMicI l niitl iii of tho a;t aye, tin- t'rwitcRt tli world htevrki own." At!1 the conclusion of the regular Rfeeches e.v-l'resident qjt'volnnd was referred to Mr. Depew's address as to -j lows: H'c havekeard that reciprocity would be k g od In ng inctwe h hi and tlm Sp.inMi. t.Ki-ktfia p-epJe, Now.it oernra to inn. If it would ha u itoort thina wKh the Smwilth-rtr-fefiij peorl'U vmill ti wlih thu pc". r w-hft-peak Kiirown I m-fiiaxe. hv fci'r Ihit our ln-s'!Mnff-i x Hi-ri th witu-r an I that thu people over tlr r need tliiu and ' hat hh-nn n on-rkt-t Jor tliom rreiiti-u.diH-a k HtX? pplni"t I have lirard that a lUrd In t lit; hand a w rlh two in the tuh. and It 'cnr to me that If w ilrmadv barn a ttmrkft frr i nr pro tct It Illicit In well toi iiltlvat - It liistt-H.J of iry. nt t uiaaufaelu e anoih-r. W hav haril tt- n'xht ho K K'and and V(i! en have wjthm a ,tw dac- roahel to lurrescaa In n flnant-lal wiiy, prompted thrrtrotiy iJv nnliiH Mt-ntlmnt t of H-cIpto'-tty. If ttipy art-n u-IMn and i.Hd to ex-ti-iul tho hand of r a tie In flnnncl.il matters, hi would It Uf to Klve tli. H a chnnce la ccmmmkl and other mutter-? Applause.) FRANCE TAKES A HAND. Sh Will Trettt Ci to a I)ee of McKlnley lam. The French aro trying their hand J0W at high tar ft" maring, moved to do K partly by tho example of our man j McKmley. The commission having tho ' fftSlttAf In li a n rl Oa d thai nno 1 I. motives which induced it to propose a preat increase of duties was "tho examples given by different foreign countries," The foreign country whose tariff legislaton has awakened mo?t opposition In France is tho United States with her two Mclvinley laws. First canio tho McIC nley customs law, which went Into vJIect August I, and which places great and unnecessary difficult es in tho way of our trade with foreign countries. This measure was intended and framed with the direct purpose of lessening our purchases in foreign markets by putting artificial and unjust restrictions in tho way. What are somo of thoo dl'Hculties? Dntiea must be paid not only on foods but on tho boxes or other covering-, and on nil charges on tho other ide in transporting tho goods to tho K'a ports; tho goods must bo accomranied by a sworn statement from tho manufacturer glv ng tho cost of each component ptrt of them, and nothing Is to bo allowed at the custom houses for breakage and dninago at sea. These barliariom actions have had a very unpleasant effect on the Fronch manufacturers, and when this measure was first parsed by Congress last spring there was much talk in Franco about retaliation. KlTorts wero made tu gut ail the principal GovernmejiWof Kuropo jo agree Upon a common plan of retaliation upon us; but theso ofTorts wero unsuccessful, the hostllo and jealous nations of tho continont not being ablo to pull together, and England, tho groat free trade merchant nation nf tlo u-orld. I't'ing opposed to anyschornofor raising up barriers against trade. Meanwhile Franco had to a certain extent taken matters into her own hands, and had adopted a moasuro of pirt al retaliation against us. Early tho summer the grain tariff was roed, a duty of 83 cents a bushol being hnpofcedon our wheat, while that of ether countries was allowed to cotno in at IS cmus; and Indian corn, hitherto jw, was mado dutiable, Tho moasuro has already resulted in restricting our Xports of these commodities to Franca for the nine months ended September U IMK), w mm Franco 4,890,000 bush- ' k of corn against fOrtO.OOO for the "me time lan year. ,lt the summer passed, and It becertain that the McICmtey tari "HI would bceome a law. Tun tl tariff I ,en.rh K'rded up thou loins and dee that something mors must be ino to show that tariff mak.ng is a M'rie tiut two can play at. Accordingowwhwloa was appointed to uroo
pwe a ur.tf UIIL Thin mmmlm on hu Prepared the flrat draft ef iu bill and will peeeeat it to the Chamber FeWt. -in !W f. 0,8 Provlilwi of this bill will be of intent to oup UtmftrH M ahowlng how they will be hurt by It A new and striking feature of the bill Is the fact that It will inipoM a minijnum and a max mum duty, the latter iHtMg about ont-(jUHrUT higher than the former. Tho maximum dutle are Intended for nations whoso tariffs do not give Franco favorable trade oondltiona. Of counts the maximum is intended for us as the chief tariff offender. It is a countwr-irriUnt for Mclvluloyism. Here are a few specimen duties of ipeelal interest to American farmers, tho rates g ven bolng the minimum duties. Franco imposes at proaent. a tariff on live Uio'vom of ?7 85 a head: u Trotood duty is about $11,50. Salted beof nays now about four-tenths of a cent per pound; tho duty is to lie raised
io aoout two cents. In 1SSB wo sold Franco SO, Ma,0U0 pounds of lard; this year the amount rose to 44.OiW.O0O pounds. This lard all entered Franco freo of ilutr; but it is now proposed to tax lard nearly two cents a pound Theso duties all bear heavily upon our farm products. Tho Mclvinley act was passed to protect manufacturers; tho retaliation for that measure strikes tho farmers. Do they want that kind of thing to continue? COTTON WEAVING, A C'omtilnoto K.-.-.r,, I'rlri Nnt withstand-Ina-it Cut la V :(. mii.i th Orent ( ntioH i ri'i - I'rnnu of tli .Mill. A late number of tho Now York Dry Goods Economist furnishes, all tineon. w ousiy of courii(, a CUrit)US illustration 1 nf ,, ,', "nuu ; o t,,R fo "X ,aml uwlosanew of a duty on COtton Cloth. In a column of V;nMnn goo Is notes'' it prints tho folliwin;' Uem: Th rotton wvrv r In L ntilalMt I , havo r- etved a imtice o' a I'ut.doWii, They wrn K'-Uihk .'. ci-nts nn ii fifty-yard loni ut, bul v y d ad I ,iV on J, "e" Kt. ,d w nc 7Vt.VHt 7n c"H a o.,t THp Vau" U.o.-d almut r u.u h. iwisawdu Hon ot more Hi m cne-hlrd n wax-s. ! ... t) aam lni, .,, , P ,ef say!-: "The largest crojw of cotton the world has ever grown are In sight; the price is low and may grow lower, still manufacturers are doing tholr best tc make water run up-hill In thoh en deavors to maintain the price of eloth at a given "figure." This was said in reference to the "combine" of most of j tho Fall Uivor and other weaves to j prevent sales of printing cloths, us.-d to make calico jn-InK at loss than 3.1-10 PP yln Bro",'" ! wh,lCh ''f l,M .... wi nrjm iiu.n i biFTf taiiuui iuv idVb mat raw conon nas uecuneu m pr.co nearly 3 cent a pound Hlnco August. So much forono column. In the ery next column the Economist prints an article entitled. "Fall River Dividends." The Fall Ittver cotton mills have just held their annual meetings, and the reporls for the year were handed in. This article gives the more striking facts from those reports. The general net earnings of a few of those milla are as follows: Tho Flint mills earned WT.77S, or 11K per cent. The Stafford mills $llii,000, or 18 per cent. Tho Xarragansatt mills SGI, 009, or 13 per cent The llargraves mills $03,009, or nearly 16 per cent Tho King Philip mills $1SI,000, or 18 per cent Tho dividends declared by those mills were In each case considerably less than tho net earnings, tho balance of i ' ' the profits being added to the surplus. orelso put into improvements. From a all Illver paper it is learned that the dividends paid out by another mill amounted to 12 per cent, by two others to 14 per cent- each and by the Granite mills to 19 por cent Tho Mclvinley duty on tho kind of cloth that tho combine is keeping up to S ,V1 cents a yard, is 1i cents a yard, or the same as 04 per cent ad valorem, and is of courso a prohib tor3 duty. Do tho American pcop.o think that this duty is necessary? Do thoy think it fr-asonable? Lower wages cheaper cotton both wages and cotton, too, cheaper than In Europe and yet those men are granted prohibitory duties. How long will such things continue? Ati KxiiHiptH nt llomr. Prof. James liryce, of England, the eminent author who wrote "Tho American Commonwealth," said recently in an address in Hrootlyn, N. Y.: ()n of tni! niot dlPCournxinK maalfetatloni of tho National spirit in Kuropn la the ilt-slro of peop'cs thre to vail thrmielvci In and i-rcct b irr ers bet ween i-ach other by tarlffa and otli.-r urtlrlclat menna It wai uppoai-d that hi-n power had bum taken from the KIiik nnd pl.iccd In thohamlaof thu pei plo and thi lr rcpraentt voi that I Kla'ntlvo and repreintat vo bullm Mould not bo ao powt-nully Influenced by Nmlonal hi I rod a and prJtidicua, and that thev wont I ba more open to rcaioti and the welfare of th people nt lnrtv Not to, however Kuropi'im Ielalaiurea Wi'ro paaainir prohibitory and r. talMory tnrlgi, and the Kuropean tuitions were ai-ci-ptl ig them under the t'lief that In I lorn.itlonnl trade one nation'! K:ln was anotln r nuitonN lo They tlicroforotlionxht that by preventing outside nations from Kiilnlngiiny thlnx from them thoy eoild W er th benefit nt home by a tar , and enh inco their power pro-p-rouily by whuttlnic ti.i-lr dio ri, ln.ti-nil of nee tu ud poilt c.il i-rouoin Nti eu, that uiuiuul trade l mutual pr api'rliy " Thin excited enthusiastic applause from tho eager and enthusiastic audionce, who saw that theso words had a meaning for us in McKinleylsnj. It Heliellta VuiMinHt. Iho-bountj on sugar appllos to the maple-tree product as woll as to the bcot stigar and cane sugar. How to gel tho bounty on maplo sugar is told in our market notes. Tho crop being the product of a tree which takes years tc grew, It is easy for tho maplo sngat prolucors to co-operate in making and marketing their maple sugar, so as tc prevent over-production, preserve a well-regulated market, and obtain fair prces lor an article that will entitle them to the highest bounty. Farm and Home. iiix I ii if tli-.j l'oor. Tho tin-plate taxes are a sample of tho Mclvinley tar ft system which layi most of the burden on tho classes of articles uwal 1h the poor au'
UNUSUAL AND ENTERTAINING. A WickpoM) (It. I.) mr recently killed eleven out of thirteen quail aX a tiaffle dkehartfe of hWt fowling pk. A fUASTXHKKof LoflfflaUndHiditopen n old family elieat, and in a fab hottorn dUveovifred twenty dtaod8 valuexl at S10,000. A man eonneekMl with the life-saving tUtkwi at Smnll I'oiat, Mo., has collected enough hwonla of tl aword-fihh to build a piekttt feaoe forty feet in length, A max who hit on the idea of popping eom in an attractive stall in the buaioet part of Fulton street, New York, in full view of the hhopplngarowd, k making1 lots of money. A Nkw Vohk mechank! has solved tlie problem of making a penny go a long way. He rolled a copper cent into a riblton three-quarters of an Imih wide and eighty-four inches long. ArrKR beinjf cbaiwd a couple of miles by hunters and ti pack of selected hounds, a Georgia wolf showed up, lunched off the leader of the pack, disabled several others and retired in fine fell nie. In a St Louis police court the other day a blind man recognized a thief who had robbed him by his voice. He picked him out from a number of persons who were brought in and said "good morning" to him. The prisoner confessed. An amusing typographical error occurred in a recent issue of the Denver Graphic, by which that jwper was made to say: "Wo know of a good newspaper plant in n Colorado town which can Iks liought for St)r0,0O0 cush. It is worth J1,00." A Toiionto man, a few tlaya ago, while examining an old musket, which he did not know was loaded, "touched a lighted match to the nipple." The gun went off and the nhock threw th man to the floor, Whvn picked tip he was dead, and it war, said that his death was due to fright. A woman lately wrote to tbv; Gov-crnor-of Kentucky that she was tho mother of Mjvcn stalwart sons -of various ages, all born on the Sabbath day. For her part, she thought she ought to have a separate and distinct pension for each Sabbath-bom son of them, and she desired to know how the idea struck the Governor. THE PUBLIC SCHOOL.
Onio raises by taxation $7,000,000 for school purposes. f Tub schools of Massachusetts cost overSTvW.OOO a year. Slojii has been introduced in all the primary grades of Itoston schools. 4 1I.LINOI3 appropriates 81,000,000 as a j State, and raises by local taxation ).- 300,000. j Iowa raises its school money by counties. More than SO.WW.OOO is raised annually. TiiKitE arc 2,50D pupils in the cooking j department of the New York City scnools this year. Waco, Texas, employs a lady for superintendent of schools and pays her an annual salary of 3-, 000. About live thousand children who are entitled to admission in the public schools of New ork City are forced tc remain at home bacausc school accom modations are insufficient Philadelphia is having trouble over the color line in the public schools. There is a strong prejudice against mixed schools for the races and it has resulted in the establishment of a large number of "colored schools. A law has been passed in Kansas by which the districts may select and own such text-books as they choose. A quantity of text-books will be purchased for the schools anil placed at the (lis posal of the pupils, thus virtually making books free TO BE READ BEFORE MEALS. Don't find fault awl pick about your food. Don't talk with your mouth filled with food. Don't commence eating as soon as you are seated. I on't soil the table-cloth with bones, parings, etc. Don't laugh loudly, or talk boisterously, at tlie table. Don't detail all the slanders you can think of ct the tabic. Don't take tames np in your fingtjrs to eat tho meat from them. Don't call attention to any little rub tako which mav have occurred. 1 THE MARKETS. Nkw Yokk, Dec, 77, to. GATri.K Jfatlve .teH 3 Tu 5 10 CI IT I ON Miilillllllf. ....... . . . r KUU'lt Winter Wheat.... ... aid W1IKAT No. 2Hed 1 tX'KN No. 2 OAT! Western Mlxeil 4 ItlltK New -Me-w 11 tM m yr. i.otfis. COTTON MiddlliiK. .. ....... tVf IIKKVKS K.port Meow i "& snipping, a "5 IlOtJS Common toSelert.,,. iim w MIKi:r-r'MirtiChoIi-e....... :;.'. H.Ot U-l'Htent I fi-i X.N 10 Ch ilee 2 lie WII HAT No. 2 Ked Winter... 5 "i 1 07i l',j .W 12 0) it s ir. 4 10 a m 6 2.'. 4 ;i Sf 4ij 4 If" iH y (i ii m VI l'.Hj tt S7 , Mi u 1 to h ir, 6 :5 5 IXJ 5 :i iii? 4S 7 S7's R M nr. wli it 45 ITOIfN No. 2 .Mixed,, 4.VtW OAT-Ni.2 UVK-.Vo. -i ... . . ....... TOll.U'CO-I.inot (Mlnionrl) . I.. Hf Hurley IIAV-CliarTiniothy Ill TTIill-ClHtk-e Duiry.... ... i;i,it l-'relt . ItHtK flimdnrd Mess..,. .... IIACON Cleat lllli. .. IVIID-I'rhne Meuni,,, ....,, NOOlz-ChoieeTub.. ' uiue.uio. CATTI.K MilpplnK Ilot.s tiiHid 10 Choice Mli;i:i (iood to Cliolee ..... ri.nl' It Winter Patent..... SnrliiK l'ati-iit ... iW 2 m A 15 MM It 1 a 4 4 25 4 W 4 m WIII:aT No. spring W4r initN No. OA'I'.- No.2 White.. ...... fVtW 10 UK Mamlard AU-hh . 7 " ' KANSA.n 01 TV, CATTI.i: SlilpplHK Hm'tn ... S to ll(i4-AlHirih:-- .. . . 3W Hi; AT N0.2l!ed,. .... !0 o I N". 2 ...- COHN Nii,2...... -.. . 15 ni:w om.iMNS. I-I.oril lllKh tirade 4 M i iikn- U liiti: , ... M la r r w 5 25 St KWI U OA'l Cholee Wi-atcm .... (-liiiU-e . 16l IliHhNeM- Mi-f? Co'i'TON MlddliMX, , k LOCISVILLl.'. WIII:AT No.2lted,..,. 4. t OUN-.N.2 .MHed, 1 i.T No, 2 Mixed .......... .4 ciiKK Mcf- - ..I..' ,... it Vl'ON Ch-iil- ttib ........... H ) 11 ON 31 lurtlt ng .!... 11 At 1 1 I le.ir uih...... ... . w 47 H .... .... ... I" Vim
QOLD FROM FARM-LANDS.
YOU And land of inexKauktilile fertility ami well watered, and at the same time easily worked, bein(f prepared by nature for the plow, you may reasonably expect to find farming ft profitable oocupatioa ami tlie farmers ia ouch a country making more than a bare living. Atrrieulture in such a country is like ralninfr simply taking gold from the soil in the shape of the finer grades of wheat and other cereals, and it posthe great advantage over mining that the amount of actual work necessary to make it pay U comparatively very small. Upon the great fertile prairies of Western Canada, where millions of acres of the richest land in the world are comprised within the Provinces of Maniitoba, Assiniboia, Alberta, etc., settlers, old and new, have simply taken gold from tho ground in the shape of magnificent crops for the season of ISM. Their gold is golden grain, but it yields as sure returns as any metal ever mined. The writer visited farm after farm in Manitoba the past season where tho yield of wheut averaged from 80 to 8 bushels per acre, and where oats yielded frequently 75 bushels per aero of choice grain. Upon one 1 arm of 1,800 acres, the crop of wheat and oats was close to 00,000 bushels, and of this tho first lot of '.'0,000 bushels of wheat was sold for 84c and SOe per bushel. Close beside this large farm was a small one from which the owner had taken his first crop. lie had started with no capital the year before, yet his crop of wheat was 1,000 bushels and the quality was so good that he got Soc per bushel for it, one cent a buhrtl more than his wei-lt'iy neiglilwr, which meant just S350 for his first season in wheat alone. With a climate peculiarly adapted to gTain-growing, and a population representing nearly every nation, Western Canada offers to tlie settler a most favorable chance to succeed among friends or fellow countrvmen of his own. Metaphysics always remind mo of the caravanserais in tho desert. They stand solitary and unsupported, and are, therefore, always ready to crumble into ruin. Talleyrand. Beware ef Ointment for Catarrh That CuHtnin Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system whoa enteriuK it through the mucous surfaces. Kuch article should never be used exceptou prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by V. J. Cheney fc Co., Toledo, O , contains no mercury, and is taken internally and acts directly upon Uiebkodand mucous surfaces of the systom. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure and get the genuine. It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Sold by Druggists, price Toe. per bottle. CcxsniER tho man who Is always punctualhow much time he wastes waiting for ouier people. -liimira liazette. Befokr the use of Prickly Ash Bitters became general throughout the .South aad west, it was a iearrui dose or "inue mm," aad dally doses of oulninef llmt was forced down the throats of sufferers from all ma larial troubles. Ia place of such obnoxious, harrowing curatives, Prickly Ash Hitters, with its mild, soothiue action now holds supreme away, und after one trial. Its use when necessary, is forever established. You who have sick-headaches, sour stomachs, diseased liver or k dnt-ys, can do BO ncuer man to give 11 a mat. irATA, wnv uo they call this census re port from Washlnpton a rough count!" "because it ha uot boon tiled ,yct, my son." Korna Ilawi with Innrmlt l .... Age finds its surest solace in tho benignant tOIlie aid afforded In- liOKtetter'a Klninich Bitters, which counteracts rheumatic and malarial tendencies, relieves prowmg inm;iivii,,v 01 mo Kiuucvs, anil is mo nnest icuimi.v uaimiil juruiyoruersoi incstntnHCii, liver and bowels. Nervousness, too with wnicn old people are very apt to be afflict ed, is promptly relieved by it. Or course there are exceptions to the rule "tlie good die young,"' but there aren't Hjauy ui uB.-ju.umra uaaecte. Tho most potent remedies for the cure of .11 o.n. n ...... I.j..... 1 ? 1 . . ui.mwiiiiiiim.'cii um.uYurii! uy Hcciueuu Tim M-ci, .l,t.cr nf Tl m W f . . . T 1.... I A .. . ; flntn fdw Vfulufla .a u u i.t ..i. UB , .. .w ...... I ment, to an old lady almost dving from the c,,v?v,s Kji .nniuii... uii i iiuin I14IIIIIU mjidl as a noison. One dim" ciirtHt her: and a single dose has cured thousands since. It Is the only known Antidote for the poison of A new disease, diphtheria of the eye, has appeared in Ikton. Strabismus of tho threat may be exjieuted next. Lowell Cour ier. Waili Hiillitny Httm. The WAIIAS1I LINE announces the usual LOW HATES f,r the Ilolidnvs. Piirticulars given by the nearest Wabash llcket Agent. F. CHANDLEIL O. P. & T. A. A man hired a room under a doctor's office so that the doctors miffht work over him lu case of an emergency. 1 WAS taken sick with ulcers on the lf t lung. Doctors gave me up to die, but a ineiiugoimesome nun s sarsaparilla and before! used one bottle 1 trot bettor, ami alter usinir it two months I am at work a nin. m. Mich. A. llrookins, Coldwater, It may bo said of a man who invests la a euarry that his let is a hard one. Bronchitis In rnrv1 W fruiu.! doses of PIso's Cure for ConsumpUoa. - - - . ....... n aivuiiii n nilK hu lo ilrnw n II,vj.a 1 1. 1 ... ... makingmusicand dancing. N O l'icayune. BRUISES, FROST-BITES. INFLAMMATIONS AND ALL HURTS AND ILLS OF MHN AND BEX3T.
mm wm
The yleesaat fiaver, gentle aetkm sad eeUdmg elTeeta ef KyMw ef Jftn, wkti la Meed ef a laxative and If the fa44wrer wether be eottl ve or Wlieua Ute most gratifying resell follow its use, so that it U the beat family remedy ksowa aad every faaiily should have abeitle. "Wk nirtueas and you will be aemjr( as the young lady remarked to aer irMud. Lawrewee Aiuerk-ui Mii.uoi Af women use I)hWHs' Electrle 8oap dally, and say it is the best aad cheap, est. If they are right, y flight to use it. If wroag.wM ir M only will show. ou. Buy a bar of your grocer aad try it next Monday, AMA.Ndooen't have to understand mill tarv tactic to drill a hole. Ulrtulngiium Ledger. A ch!M cannot tell what ails it A shrewd mother will not Uko chances but will try Dr. Bull's Worm .Destroyers at once. Don't let your druggist sell you any other kind of worm candy. Bull's is the best
1 heki: are many idol words in the laa guugo or the healbeu. Pituburxh Cbrua ichs. Au disorders caused by a bilious state ef tlte sysutm can be cured by using Carter's LitUe Liver Pills. No ain, griping or diseomfort attending their use. Try then. It is a bright man that can tell the age of a saw by lookingat its teeth N,Y. Iedgar, Th ho at Diseases commence with a Couch, Cold, or Sore Throat. "JruwaV flrawentai TroeM"gl ve immediate relief. Aefd only U txw. Price 35 cts. Tmk anatomist is the mas who can give us the aurest "inside information." Puck. rTiFr Feeble Lungs Against Winter with Bale's Honey of florehound and Tar. I'ike's loothache Drops Cure ia one minute. Tnr. reason why a cow wears horns is berouse she's got two, Biughamton Leader. To reo ir i. at k tlie stomach, liver and bowels, and promote digestion, take one of Carter's Little Liver Pifie every night Try them. Thb more you jielt a tanner the better he likes it Pittsburgh DbpatclL
FOR FIFTY YEARS.
Swift Specific S. S. S. has a medicine. For over fifty years it has been curing all 4 sorts of blood trouble from an ordinary
Considered "Wonderful. Mr. Kesry V. Smith, tl BeJm&st, West Vkfmte, says: " He eensMcrs his curt ef Serfn4a by S. S. S., ne ef the most weeferful M reeerl Me had the disease
i the wersl type all
22 yars t4 age, and his whole youth was wnalHerad by if. Of oevrs he had all serfs ef Irnlmen!, but Mining benefited him permanently until he took S. S. S. which cleansed the perisee from his systom, and cured him sound 2nd well."
pimple to the worst types of scrofula and blood poison. Beeke ea Me mu Skin Biacasea Free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ca.
VASELINE.
Om too Moo bottk of Pari VttoiiM, 10 ets. Om too mmm bottle YkiUm Ptmaoi, 15 " Om jar ef VasM Mi Crtam 15 " Om stki f Vasetae Cemobor Im 10 If Toa hare orcw Ion to uh Viullf) In hit form l
erlelnal rtekngm. A irrt many druifjtl.t. ri frjlnir to jM-rMtude Uyrr to take AKKI.IM. ut ap by th phi. .NrTerTlM to.urh inua.lon.alhprtlfll an Imitation without YAlup. anil wilt not clr Tu tka
rrault yon riecu A bottls of HLl'K fKAL VASELINE U aald by all 4rwtmM Bt tea al.
CHESEBROUCH M'F'C CO.,
NO PAUPER LABOR MADE THIS. TTwJ&S" , . UnfBiieS-Wali,M lMy'itWavd, e.i lilt larl, 2ic; prunint, nc; bnudlng, He; grattisc, S ccnMi 7-luch Mt U;-I tlieam, to i-.nu. eiIM?lAl.
m r HfMaaaia.
nn BBBBUUsliaOsniiaaamilBB. unuw,imi ii,ici i?i Mr,
VXAMX THIS PaMBmv Mm i.ma pISO'S KKMEDY FOR
uucaiti. muwi is immeuiaw. j. cure is cerutiu. tor
void in uie m an u nas no equal.
it is an Ointnwmr nf whit, nostrils. l"rk, wc Sold by Address, B
ALLARD'S SNOW LINIMENT
SCIATIC." INFLAMMATORY IT IS THE MOST PEHETRATHS LIMIMEMT III THE RELIEVES mitt muthkksi M wanM BOILING WATER OR MILK. EPPS'S QflATKFUL COMFORTINQ. COCOA LABELLED U2 LB. TINS ONLY. EMORY in rMiliM. TtipnnlS (nim all lrt nf tha alolxi. Prtwiwctut rot a. iMttotia, an riKii at, ta Yok. HONES WANTED ! y . L . ;.T '. .rrr"1 ir a number aim a irJS' 1 " br,ht h.thJ w wViifs;;;; TT.. "Z e'-rj we gwmwnm Patents-Pensions-Claims. iSS WJ,,nte, m.
Take 1000 peopie to buy Dr. Sage' Catarrh Remedy, at 50 cents a bottle, to makt up $500. One failure to cure wuld take the profit from 4000 sales. Its makers profess to cur " cold in the head," and even chronic catarrh, and if they fail they pay $500 for their over-confidence, Not in newspaper words but in hard cash I Think of what confidence it takes to put that in the papers and mean. it. Its makers believe in the Remedy. Isn't it worth a trial ? Isn't any trial preferable to catarrh?
After all, the mild agencies are the best. Perhaps they work more slowly, but they work surely. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are an activt agency but quiet and wild. They're sugar-coated, easy to take, never shock nor derange the system and half their power is in the mild way in which their work is done. Smallest, cheapest, easiest to take. One a dose. Twenty-five cents a vial. Of all druggists. record enjoyed by no othei his lile until ht was For One Dollar Kat hjr Mtll. vi will tfflbfr, free ef all rhrre, lo hit ft ra la th VttUeA Matn, ll tH MIt1m artklnrarefillr packed la a mm tex: 0m eaka of VatoNM Soto. aMoeMted 10 oat. Om oko of VmoKm Sooa, sotuwi- 2S " Om hra ohmi botMo of WMto Mmomo 2S rhf tluap. UJth lar1lt. M ikfrlw. $1.11 partial to wpt oHliteiilnt(r(MIii tmtup Uyiw.Ui : 24 State Street, New York. r,".,rr.:vi ... rjrz,r,' . TKATKII i.iKxrai:E Maktrl Bro, SSSIrtet; TLEHe, Hie. CATAURIL - Bcst. Easiest to use . .malt ioUta I. " . W a dnigeMs or nerit by ll. K. T. llAZKi.T'Na, Warren, Ti. AND CHRONIC RHEUMATISM. WOULD! SOLO BY ALL DRUGGISTS. INSTANTLY. St., Mew Tmk. Price M cts. NOTHING nf F"t. "Im te jo 2..,2l"L.tt'l',, sea' pw. to ny THE PAX BY, tlM a yr. For Boy. and QIH. YjWfJi"1.. rr. rarlaiirm BA1YLAJTD.M cental year. For Baby. UJr;rir.lL0.n.V.0B 00., KWIOS. r.XAMC T8W PArMtmy nawjn.itt. itm irara k. rsir. BKE.VM (HlLKK. Thiiu4a af )n.a ' ,.1 umn la k U. B. X. IhritUn atB4ta.4rlalaMl Ut4rkipplmU) RM r4 tk.tr aly t la lafanry na I'hllalhMd bamt la KM 1. 1 Kmv4- R. OniMlu. M TaK U1MM Mil I9C 33 N tir WtHtl.HtCM PiFiy ft ieTiiyjoHNw-',( blTiOIWniWMkhlMBlaN. I). V- ' lucoeeefully MOSK0UTCS CLAIMS, lt TrMp ZztnlaM- V. I. rMla Burrm. Im la.t war. liUdJadlcMlnn elalMt.atty tu wiimk thu raraa wt Uaw tn na. C U 1 1 l S I CowpUtely crnl la four iy. 7,1c, m Vi2?Z I Ilerfcal. lUrm. fitWIn. Mi;J Ct F E. W lf ittrr. NoraloKw!. (iuIhIm or mm4H. liKOHUKKiMKLV FMakliB A(RU r, Sst. Uauit, M. miS WANTED .NKW IWwiki, ntnrn. Ai.wm, A K. K., B. 1323. TMBJf WKIT1X TH AHRTIRK rr.KtKI Halt that aw Ike A4(rlrratat la tak aaatf
S. S. S. xs PUXXLT UD IIKA1X. ;m TO THX HOST DELICATE CHILD.
i m
