Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 36, Number 2, Jasper, Dubois County, 22 September 1893 — Page 3

NEAL AT NEWARK. The Ohio Democrats Inaua-urata Thoir Oampalfirn.

Mm Meetln at Newark, at Which Lairy" Neal. tli CaaUlitam'fer tioenter, wna the l'rliiclfr Hpeaker. Nrwaiuc, 0., Sept. 15. Tho ilumncratic cuiupuiKii opened heru with 11 hirffo utteiulnnccvir By a misunderhtandinp there wns no committee at tho depot to meet the' upenUer of the day when the train arrived, und Mr. Neal, the pubernatorial candidate, witli his Chillieotho escort, were driven up town in carriages without any demonstration whatever. , Tho weather was threatening and sultry during the forenoon, but cleared up bomewhat toward noon, when there was a very creditable parade Larffo delegations were in line from the rural districts. Tho main speech of the day was made by Mr. Neal, after a ßhort congratulatory and introductory speech by Chairmain Veach. Mr. Neal said: Mil. Prehidknt and FKM.0W Citizkhs: I havo no apodal claim to urco to-day. I come before the jmjoi1o. und It U not lnapproprlato that I should plead their causo In this place, whoro nearly 100 vears ago. In 1707. were married my Krandfather and grandmother, children of patrlotH and soldlor. who, In resistance to unjust taxation, for almost woven Ion years, endured the hardships and encountered tho dingeis of tho treat fitruKlo for freedom and frco uovcrnmsnt, by which Imlopsudenco was nchlored for themselves und for us. Two ciucstlotis of rent public Interest, ono temporary In lis character nnd effects, hut illsustrnim In tho highest decree to tho business of tho country, tho other farther reaching In its Inllueuce, fraught with tho hnpplnessand prosperity, or tho political oppression and slavery, not only of tho generation, but of generation yet unborn, now commnnd our most thoughtful consideration, That which was prophecy has becomo historic. We nro now reaping tho bitter harvest of republican leidv latloiu Tho Shennaji silver law and tho McKinley tariff law underllo tho feelln? of want of confidence, whn.li at this time provado Iliumclal circles. These two acts nro nlono responsible for tho prevailing stagnation In business and trade, thu closing of our mines und factories, and the general depression In agriculture, and a conditio of prosperity can only bo restored by us, ns n pcoplo, by our adherence to tho democratic faith in tho matter of both currency and tariff reform. Mr. Neal, after demanding the rcpelil of the purchasing cluuse of the Sherman silver law, and giving the declaration of principles adopted by the Democratic state convention at Cincinnati, his personal indorsement, said: The greatest foo to tho prosperity of tho pcoplo Is McKinleylsm. So long as the fedtaul ttystem of protcctlvo taxation Is continued wo can havo no general and pcrmaucnt prosperity In this country. To regain such pros rlty wo mustapply the ax to tho root of tho ovll with VP ""CMHC"' and vigor, niji.l forever destroy tho McKinley plan of taxation. The law In tho name of tho rcpuoltcan party of Ohio, which was passed by a republican congress and received tho slgnaturo of ft republican president, and Is now declared to be tho successful embodiment of republican principles, presented for tho first time of our government, naked and undisguised, tho question whether taxes shall be imposed for tho payment of tho expenses and obligations of iho government, or for tho purpose of creating nnd maintaining manufacturing establishments owned, operated aad conlroled by private ladlvlduaU, private corporations, trusts and syndicates Tho protection of favored enterprises was stado to override all public purposes; and in this attempt to diminish the revenue, and aid auch enterprise, by such increase of duties'. additiMial taxes to the amount of more than K.0OJ,00U per year wcro Imposed upon articles that are absolute necessities, essential to tho dally comfort and well being of tho people. Tho claim of Gov. McKinley that the tariff tax is paid by tho foreigner Is utterly falUclous. He must admit that tho foreigners pay no part -tof tho l,000,l),000 that go every year os u ( bounty to tho foreigners. Ho docs not make any such claim, and yet he could make H with as much reason as tho oao ho does -make, that the tax upon the imported goods It paid by the foreign manufacturer or merchant. It Is as plain as that two and two make four that your merchant simply advanced tho taxes to tho government, and that consumers not only repaid them to him. but repaid them with his SSbr 50 per cont. profit added thereto. It is Just as plaia that the taxes, though Indirectly paid, more than doubled the cost of the goods to the ultimate pin-chasers. Tho whole burden of taxation under such a system rests upon tho consumption of tho people. The property ana wealth of tho country pay no part of Its taxes. Thin destroys that principle of equality, which Is nn essential requirement of a Just method of taxation. Tho rich nnd tho poor nro not placed on an equality in their contributions of taxes under such n system. Tho taxes paid by them nro not in proportion to their ability to pny. The very fact that consumption constitutes the basis of tho tax prevents equality In tho payment of it, and docs so to tho dlsadvnntago of tho poor man bocauso tho consumption of the rich man docs not bear tho samo relation to his Income that tho consumption of tho ioor man liear to his earnings. Tho trim principle of taxation would Impose the highest duties upon articles of luxury nnd tho lowest posslulu duties upon tho necessaries I llfe.but tho McKinley net rovorscs this principle und adopts tho contrary one. The alleged protection to American labor by sUch legislation Is Just m much a Hctlon nnd a fraud as Is the miserable pretext that our tariff taxes aro paid by foreknew whoso goods wo buy. Tho protected l arons, whoso sclHstincs.i and greed havo erndlcnted from tholr very nature tho common Instincts , of humanity, euro not for tho welfare of tho laboring men of this or any otuor country. ThcyboUevo in freo trado In liion. Cheap labor Is with them as esscntlnl a part of their protective system ns high tariffs: nnd th" profession of a dcslri by them to securo protocttvo duties In tho Interest and for tho benefit of tho men who work In tholr protected Industries Is a dishonor, concealment of their truo motives and purposes. Tho history of Urlff legislation proves this to bo truo. Another Mlgnlllcnnt f.nct that can not ho controverted Is that tho wages of men employed In different protected industries bear no pro'portion whatever to tho duties upon tho articles In tho inanufacturo of which they nro severally employed. More potent still is the fnct that men engaged In llko Industries nnd protected by tho same duties, bu employed In dlficrcni secuous or tno country, do not receive equal compensation for tho satni amount of work. Hut. again, thnt tho law of supply nnd demand, rot protection, is tho principal clement in tho cujustmcnt of tho wages of labor 1 further attcited by tho fnct that tho wages of sonprototicd laborers, both skilled and unskilled, nr, ns n rule, us high and In many cases much higher tthan those received by men ostensibly protected by tho hlghost of tariff dutk-s. The theory of 'protection for American latmr nifnlnst tho paupor Ubor of Knglnnd and Kurope," which Is tho lnlcst pretext for tho maintenuncoNif tho protective yslein, was conceived in hypocricy iindlniuil. It was Intended ns an nppoal to the prejudices of ignorant nnd untiilnkln people. It lias no foundaUon urwm which to rest. U will not stand tho test of honest Investigation. After comparing Ike wages of foreign workmen with the American waget'iiniirs, Mr. Xeal Raid: Weranst remoialicr In consHAerlnsr tho welfare of thoAmcrleaa laborer that steadjr employment I not ocond In Importance to hluh waue. Cet,i zx:m and costJnutts eaploy-

mom uiu uacn essential to tno proaperl tv of lalior. Hut we look In vala tor such employment to labor even In tho protected ludus'rlw under the McKinley system of taxation. The lndependente of labor Is destroyed by such legislation. Tho tyrannical will of capital become supremo und It restricts add limits the employment of labor both as. to terms and timo. Ucductton In wages, strike and look-outs become tho order of tho day. Enforced Idleness results; you know tho rast The hpeaUor then referred to the fanner thirty years ago and the farmer of to-day. Said he. In IHJO they owned one-half of all tho wealth and property of tho country. They had during tho preccdlR ten years, when McKinley was unknown, more than doubled their wcalth.CTho increase in tho vnluo of their property had boon over ioo per eerU, but to-day, aftor moro than thirty years of ioeil tlmo and harvest, representing long hours and duys und weeks nnd months of slavish drudory and toll, they rind themselves poorer Instead of richer than thoy wero in IKQ. What a commentary upon tho beneficial influence of this cunnlngly-dovlsod and revolutionary use of tho powor of taxation. How great the tribute paid dirlng theso thirty-three years by the American furmor to the American manufacturer. Mr. Neal nppcaled to his hearers to vote the democratic ticket and closed by saying: Whether tho party wins or losos tfio election In Ohio this year. It will continue this light for tariff revision, reduction nnd reform until It shall break und destroy the strong hold of tho monopolists and protectionists upon tho th'outs of the people and give us n system of taxation which, just and equal In Its provisions, will blot out nil discriminations between ono citizen nnd another, nnd secure to each and all alike freo dorn from taxation to tho fullost oxtont consistent with a pure, honest, wlsa and economical udmlnlstratlon of tho government. YELLOW JACK AT BRUNSWICK.

A guleUtr Feeling Aftor a Night of Terror anil Wild Humor. Savannah, Ga., Sept. 15. A special to the Morning News from Brunswick last night says: "After the wild rumors of last night, matters have assumed a normal quiet and people are not leaving the jlty as they did before. Many are going to St. Simons to spend the night with their families who will return to their business during tho day. A number of stores recently closed are being kept open. At the board of health meeting at noon, two cases of fever were reported, the Cox child reported last night and Mrs. Turner, in the northern part of tho city. Other cases that had been reported, on the streets, after examination, wero declared by the physiciansnot to be yellow fever. An important question was presented at the board of health meeting. Who Is in charge of matters, the government or city authorities? One or the other must assume the responsibility, or great confusion must exist. s Dr. Guiteras said this evening that it .looked very much like an epidemic is threatened; but he thought the slow appearance of the disease a hopeful sign. Each death has been complicated with weakness from other illness. Camp Haines will be inaugurated by nc.t Monday when Surgeon Magrudcr will take charge. The people have little hope of escape now till after frost, however, matters may turn. The following "bulletin of tho board of health explains itself: TO THE PCBT.1C. Tho board of health nnnounccs that thoro are two cases of yellow fover now iiuder treatment In tho efty und that it doc not dcou It has nssumoil tho form of an epidemic. Signed . S. C. r.rrru'i'trxn. L. C. Domett, Chairman pro tern. Secretary. While there is cause for apprehension, the facts are decidedly more cheerful than the rumors. A few days, however, will decide what is to be the upshot. The man who died at the hospital was a confirmed consumptive who had been removed from a sailor's boardinghouse because of pulmonary trouble, and after being placed in the hospital was up and down until Sunday, when he was reported worse. At that timo he showed symptoms of fever but not a suggestive type. Dr. Hütts had not been with him during the last days of his illness. The autopsy showed, however, that he died of yellow fever. NEWS FROM SEALERS. Arrival of the Clrnrvii at Victoria, 11. C Drstructlvu t'rn nt Kliioolth Nun. VtCToniA, H. C, Sept 15. Tho sealing schooner CSencva arrived from Copper island Wednesday bringing ,o0 skins; 4,52'J of which vere taken in .lapan seas and 41111 around Copper island. The captain declares that neither the Annie C. Moore nor Annfu K. I'ayno were seized, lie fpoke the former on August till. She then had 1,100 skins. He also spoke four other vessels, the Walter Rich with l.CiO; V mbria with 'J,100; Mary Allen with 1,401 and Enterprise withi,20:2. News of the burning, Sunday, August !',. of twenty-live houses and a new church ut Kineolith Naas, was brought by the Geneva. Over thirty families were rendered homeless, nnd provisions were becoming- scarce. llishop Ridlvy says the fire started during tlie afternoon services. Archdeaeon Colliseon. who was in the chancel, noticed the smoke among the Indian houses and giving the alarm thu Indians rushed out, bnt it was impossible to save tlve houses or tho church. The mission house was not touched. The i.loss is estimated at SUO.OOO; no insur ance. DAN , COUQHLIN May Jföwr Krnpn on Aeraunt of tho Liack of Stato WlltiesspM-t. Chicago. Supt. 15. Dan Coughlin, the ex-detective, convietöd of complicity in the Cronin murder in 1881), and recently granted a new trial by tho supremo court, may escape with no more than a sham legal battle for the sake of legal technicality. Many of tho most important witnesses nro dead or next to impossible to locate. Tho evidence against the other defendants can not be Used ajrninst Coughlin. Home of this indirect testimony hud much to do with weiivlng the webwlilqh finally landed Coughlin in .Toliet, and iW absence may assist him in escaping the legal penalty for .Iii allegüd wrongdoing. Tho dfid td; of a man was found ea Jwuber In a tar at St Joaep, Ua.

Agricultural hints ARTESIAN DRAINAGE. WKhaul Thoraaghneaa the Work Caaaat 8a Mad a aaecrsa. I learned something about drainage last year which has htecn of great service to me this taring-, and may be to others who have a similar problem to solve. The drainage of springy laud is often very difficult The ditches put through the wet place are found to drain only imperfectly the surrounding soil. I have seen water stand on the surface of the ground with tile buried three feet below all clear and free and in good working order. The reason is the water is forced out of the ground by an upward pressure, and comes through little seama and veins distributed through the soil, many of them near the tile perhaps; yet the water will come nearly or quite to the surface before it works ita way to the tile. The condition producing this state of affairs is illustru.cd in the cut A .hows upper stratum of wet soil, which is often peaty or mucky; 11 is a layer of hardpan or tough bowlder clay or marly clay; 0 shows the gravel water-bearing stratum; D E P are the minute natural water channels from latter to surface. The tile is generally laid directly ob iho hardpan, as shown at G. If conditions are favorable, this will dry it sometimes. To cut deeper into the hardpan is useless unless you can go clear through, and this is often impossible. I have done it, however, with the very best results, hast year I took up a tile ditch which had failed to benefit the ground, and by sinking it a foot or two deeper struck the loose gravel, and drew the water out from under all the surrounding region. Hut to go clear through the hardpan is often too expensive and even impossible. I have cured very difficult places by taking a post-hole digger and sinking a small hole through the hardpan down to the water-bearing gravel, as shown below G in tho cut The water will generally rush up and flow off through the tile. This should be done at intervals of about a rod. One ditch in which I worked this spring was par

ticularly difficult. The banks caved and slipped in together so that part of them had to be shoveled out twice. Then when I tried to bore down through the kardpan it was a very tedious job. I jot down abwtt three feet and everything as dry as could be, and was discouraged and about to give up when I saw the gleam of water, and with another effort passed clear tkrovh the hardpan into the gravel, The watet rose surprisingly fast, atsd flowed out in a volume that half filled a four-inch tile. As soon almost as this stream started other small streams that wero coming up by the side of the ditch ceased to run, and now it is all as dry there as can be desired, although it would have mired a duck before we began. Thoroughness in tile draining is es sential. Ilettcr not attempt than to. try and half Buccced. J. E. Wing, is' Country Gentleman. POULTRY PICKINGS. Bsauma eggs are said to be darkest in color when the pullets commeace laying late In the fall. Somk of the most successful poultrymen sell the early hatched roosters for broilers and keep the pullets for layers. There is no ecoaomy in having the poultry so wild that they cannot be handled readily at sway tine that it may be necessary. A duck acts like it was always hungry and for this reason it is nn easy matter to overfeed, and there is nothing gained by having them too fat Filtk from allowing the droppings to accumulate is, perhaps, the most direct cause of disease. There hould be a regular time for cleaning up and it should lie strictly adhered to. When the hens have a good range they are able to pick up various kinds of food and so have a supply of all the elements that' go to make up tho eggs that they produce, but when confined this variety must bo supplied. As soox as the weather begins to get cool a safe rule in feeding, especially with the laying hens, is to give a warm feed in the morning and whole corn at night giving the latter just beforo the fowls fly up on the roosts. St Louis Kepublic Keaplng- Fralt "Wit hont Kujrar. Writing from Grayson, La., a correspondent asks how to keep fruit without using sugar; Cook tho fruit in a poreclaiu lined vessel or a bright tin one; and cook it by placing tho vessel containing the iruit in another tin. vessel set on the stove and containing enough water to nearly reach tho top of the vessel containing tho fruit Keep the latter vessel closely covered. Fill the fruit jars with the fruit and seal then while the fruit is boiling hot Tho fruit can bo placed in the tin cans and theso placed in the water. After sealing stand them in cold water. If it is desired to can fruit so that it will look exactly natural tho fruit used must be only half ripe. Farmers' Voice. The CaMwa Worm. When the white butterfly, the pareat of the cabbage worm, is busy, it will pay to go out daily and destroy ns many as powribi. which i aot as difficult as it ma appear. Tke destruction of one butterfly means the prevention of many worms in the cabbage. Dusting tho cabbage with insect powder is one of the best remedies. The use of kcrouno eatulfcioa is resorted to by some, but there is a liability ef tho cabbage being irapreguated with the odor i

DISASTROUS DISEASE. Um Katar and Prop Trateal 4 Gaas la Tewla. This disease often destroys whole broods of young chicks. It is caused by threadlike reddish worm?, that live in the throat or windpipe of the poultry. These cling to the walls, sucking the blood of the purts. One worm will produce 2,000 to a.OOO eggs. The hiftflflftg of the egg oomirs only when it is kept constantly moist and at a temperature of abont OS degrees Fahrenheit Uifcbti tomperature is below 60 degrees ime eggs wtyl not hatch, but will Vüin their vitality for a year or morprovided they are kept moist Wha;'the affected fowls gape and cho-for breath some of the worms are ejected into the water troughs where thefpls frequently congregate, evidently,, jtrying to allay the inflammation -ip .Ute windpipe by drinking copionsiy. Y ejected worms or eggs are grefiy taken by other fowls p-jeseat.Ar .the water containing them is drunJtua spreading the disease and in..lige flocks producing a veritable cpiiiue. The best remedy is prevention.

'Keeping fowls on dry permeable solL Feed generously, incdug chopped onions or garlic occVsWQ ally. Wash out the water trough or pan daily with boiling water. In'Ms is present among the fowls, separate tho sick ones, add to each quaa"f drinking water four fluid ounces woi s solution of salicylic acid, made bjfieissolving sixteen grains of the dry acid in four fluid ounces of clear boiled rain water. The pen in which the; sick fowls are kept should be as dry as possible, and the ground should bo I Sprinkled twice daily with water, to each quart of which add four fluid ouades ef commercial sulphuric acid. Where only a few fowls are affected a bit of ,6amphor about the size of a grain ofmhoat may be forced down the throat ofceaoh and will by its odor kill thu Worms. One drop of turpentine dropped (into the throats has given good results. Powdered asafetlda, ten grains- rper head, may be fed in a mash of corn meaL Chopped garlic or strong j,s,melling onions will.also be found beneflcjal. Turpentine rubbed on the outside of the throat will sometimes cause the worn to let go their hold. The ustf, of a small feather or hair loop, dipped n turpentine and thrust down the .jvbidpipo of the sick fowl, is often effective. The worms may cither be withdrawn or else coughed out by the chick. Gerald McCarthy, in Farm and Home, f VENTILATION OF HIVS.' Hew to Keep the Bees In Good CottdlMea la Winter. Bees like other living creatures must have fresh air, the right temperature, r right degree of dryness TL2 ueh,fpo4 as nature has provJcti for them tp perpetuate the numerical strength pf th hivo and, lo keep them in good wording ordor. A writer In the American. Hce Journal says: It is instructive to, rp.ad and ponder on the various opinion, of bee-keepers on different topics pertaining to the business. I would lijco ,to call attention to the matter of ventilation in winter. Some advocate bottpm, some top, and others think because .tjio bees in their natural state close up all crevices with propolis that ventilation is not necessary. I recollect a few years ago a friend of mine jol. a colony of bees on shares. The box was about eighteen inches high, and ioout twelve by twelve in other dltncrisiluis. This box was placed on blocks of wood about one and a half inches high', fm thu bench on which it was placca'änd there it stood in summer and winterin -the same condition for about ten 'or , twelve years, the colony always being among the first to swarm in the spring. Some sevcaor eight ycarjs agt thla same man had three top swarms conta & at the samo time, and cluster together, aad nothing but a loj-hrAlbc'jOr log-barn to hive them in, but ".he thought of an old salt barrel, Svlflch he got and, placing sticks across ff lie hived the bees in It They filleÜ' tha barrel about two-thirds full the! "first season, and the next season filled ;t?up. The following spring a neighbor bought It paying twelve dollars for it, and I helped him remove It There were several cracks in the barrel that a nian could run his finger in, and we liao to do it up in cloths to keep tho beWr'in. In both of the above cases the' bees wintered nicely. I noticed thb' past winter the older and more oprfffmy hives wero the fewer bees died, slid as a rule are better than most of those" in close hives. HANDY FEEDING COOP. -k , Sew to J'rovent the Heat from EatlHg tho Chick' Kation. As the chickens begin tobe fetl' 'outside the coop, the old fowls aro apV to bo on hand and take up all the choicest bits before tho youngsters can, 'get thetn. To get around this difllctilty I take some 1 by 2 inch pieces and'tphke a framj 2 feet high and 4 feet square. On this I nail strips crosswise, &6ihp coop when finished looks like thc'üccorapanylng lliustration. Thin style bf a feeding coop is much preferable' to tho ones made with slats runnttig up and down, as the chicks cannot get caught in the spaces. When the chicks jirsf becoaae too large to pa& througH"th spaces readily, posts can bo nailH'to the corners to ralc tho coop" off 'Iba ground, allowing the chicles to ran'ttndcr the bottom slat Many of thb seVinus deformities found among chickens come from their squeezing between plckctc and through the incsnerf'bf coarse wire netting. When fcedfrfg nt an early age this may be prevcntoH'by some such feeding device as this bile F. E. Dawlcy, in Farm and HomJ.' '" It is a good time bow to feed amVfatten the old hens for market. This can be done better now than later, yitore is no gain in keeping them any longer

The United States Government reports ROYAL a pure cream of tartar baking powder, highest of all in leavening strength.

"The Royal Baking"

tne purest and most reliable baking powder offered to the public." . Late United States Jj ff stOof Government Chemist. ROYAL BAKINO POWDER CO., IM WALL ST., NEW-YORK.

The first bank in the United States was the Hank of North America, chartered by congress in 1780, by the state of Pennsylvania in the following year, with a capital of $1,000,000. "WniTBortof a girl Is se!" "Oh, sha is s miss with a minslon." ''Ahl'' "And ber mission la Becking a man with a mansion." -Sketch. When tho suspicious man sees a balloon sailing away toward the clouds ho is justified in ttiluking there is something up. Glenn's Sulphur Scsp is a genuine remedy for Hkin Diseases. Hill's iialr and Whisker Dye, 50 cents. It is when a woman gets caught In a shower with a new hat on that you may realize what a rain of terror is. WasbiDcrton kar. THE MARKETS. Nr.w Youk. Sept. 10. CATTLE Kallvo Üleers Q COTTON M Ulillllitf M 1'I.OUU-Wlnter WlieaL 'I 80 L WI1HAT No.mtcü Ö COHN No. S MK OATS Western Mixed SS POItlC New.Mcm 17 0) ( ST. 1,00 IS. COTTON Middling & IIUKVKS-Miipptnjr Stcors... i 30 f Medium. IW $ IIOOS Fulrto Select 6 75 ift SHKHl' rnlrto CUotce 5! "5i I'LOUU 1'iitentn Slrt in l-'aticv to Extra (M.. H WHEAT Nn. sited Winter. - .... COHN No. 'J Allxcd t OATS No. S m ItYE NaJ...., I TOBACCO-Lims "W r.":if Hitrluy....... 10 OJ HAY Clear Timothy W IIO'lTEK-Clioli-eUalrr '8 ECU'S l''rcli . .. POKIC SUindurtl Mum (new) iirtiAJN uieiir in i .-. i': LAUD Prima Steam 4 CHICAGO. CATTLE Stilpplnff.. UM HOdS I'ulrlo Choice S Wl SUEEl t-'iilrloClioIco 2W l-'IAJUU Wlnlerl'iitoiiti S 75 S-irliitf 1'u.teiits. 3CI m WHEAT No. 2. Sprint; 67.W No. I tod 6B!4$ COItN No.2 .... OATS No. 3 'S!! PORK Mesa (new) I 30 to KANSAS CITY. OATTLK Shipping Steers.... 4 00 m H1K5S-AllOrutlci 5 40 WHEAT No.älted..... 57 OATS-No.2 , M COItN -No a 3BH NEW OULKANS. FfX)UU THuhGrndo 3 10 J COHN No. 2...., $ OATS Western,, A HAY Choice.. 10 W ft I'OltK New Mesi , IIACON Side. COrrON-Mlddllnc 8 W CINC1NNATL WHEAT No.2 Hed.... OK COItN No. 2 Mixed...., O OATS No. 2 Mixed 28 $fc (DICK New Moms & HACON-CIeur ltlhs l'-'Ü 6 COTTON M'dUlinu' V

IF YOU CHEW TOBACCO HORSE SHOE PLUG IS WHAT YOU WANT. IT IS ABSOLUTELY PURETRY IT. THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS' SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN

lAN' cut SLICKER Tin FISH 1IKAKD CLICKER to wtmRtec mtorproof; ;ml will kttp tob d r? In tiio hiriitt t tion. Tbntw rOMJir.L BUIKCM l r. perfect rWInt eott, ml MTftrstfettnttrtsaMl. IUwm f lKtka. Don t a eet If th "rati rn.r H twt on K. IRtr. CMtew ft, a. J. Towr.K, a ma. Maw.

" M

Powder is undoubtedly The Injustice or i JubtI from a beer barrel blew- eK SNHt iiUM-Uy killed a Harrisburg man wfce atotti ia Msway. The coroner can hardly escsM veruici huai uiu man uit-a inw UM of liquor. Boston Herald. A Declaration" or IxDar-croK-xat. I Blaionbcrrie "Hut surely you won't r Airline like this after we are lnarrtesM1' Miss Manhattan 'Yes, indeed. Yoa i we Americans believe la 'Unloa sad erty.' "Truth. "how Khali K invMt thd mnnAr fiwmW "l don't know," said tho lady. "What sib you think of those Fluctuating stockst I uuonwuu a Krcai Beat ox money is in them." "CmuzATiox Is ruin in ar mv ssid the museum keeper. "Tue sapsljr sC wild men is Retting so low, I harely totftr wnere to tooic ior mem." aarper s j "Mt hair," murmured Van Anrät sal as ne strove careiuuy to conceal um s-Miton his head, "reminds meoXafesl his money." Puck. "That remains to be sees," as the aid when he spilt the ink oa tW London Answers. E. A. Rood, Toledo, Ohle says: "HaJTsv Catarrh Cure cured ray wife of catarrh Mtteen years ago and she has had so rstwi of it It's a aar care," Seid by Drafr gists, 75c. All k11 may be divided into three parts; but some fortusato individuals have -ear t&ioly repaired the fractures. Puck. "WaLL, 'Willie, did you master yi son to-day!" "Ko'si; 1 hi Used it." oar . 'August Flower' "Iim readv to testify wnder that if it had uot been for Aupufc Flower I should have died before: thl-;. Eight years ago I was take? sick, and suffered as no ose but' a dyspeptic can. I employed Ust-Ae of our best doctors and receive! no benefit. They told me that I heart, kidney, and liver trouble. Everything I ate distressed me a that I had to throw it up. Au Flower cured me. There is no medicine equal to it." LORENZO V. Sleepsu, Applcton, M?ine. CmmvbiMtm aad Mösls j who aar hi iimi or Ada ms, should iim PtM'sOarvferl ConiHmptlon. It has hi !&. It has .MM In far. I mi me uMieoataijrrt-p. eoia eTcrrwaar-j. . A. K B, 1408. Win WMTIN TS AHTHtTMERS CUM mmw sto ! t I

w sinewy esiarj. , , . . ' . i 'fir