Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 36, Number 41, Jasper, Dubois County, 22 June 1894 — Page 6

THE SUGAR LYQUEST.

Tho Examination of Sanators Alphabetical Order. in AVhlrli II I llllwtl Wilt Urine Out Vlnl Truth in All C--TIip K' tuiiliiutloii of Si'iiutor Itrlrc i;niiltittlc DfiihiU. the V vsiiixiiTOX. June 16. The senatorial Sugar trust investigator started in u'-sterdajr on what is considered the j most direct anil, therefore, the most , iiiMMrtunt brunch of the inouirv. It is V branch that consists in the exami nation of the individual members of the senate in alphaWtical order as to their knowledge of or connection with dealing's in sugar stock or the sugar legislation of the tarilT hill. The com-nutU-e has made excellent progress, examining each of its live members and all the senators, with few exceptions, from A to Ii inclusive. Prior to loginiiing the examination of their colleagues the members of the committee heard the testimony of Theodore A. Havemeyer. of the American ugar Henning: Co.. but nothing new was developed from his answers. The examination of senators was b.'iM'd on a number of carefully-prepared question-, so framed that the committee to a man Indieve that no senator who has ever touched sugar stock or had anything to do with the members of the trust in connection with legislation to make even a technical denial or evasive answer of any sort without putting- himself in a questionable position. The-e questions are as follows: 1. Have you leen in attendance at the present -ession of congress, during the pendency of the tariff bill in the senate? J. Have you given any information, directly or indirectly, to anyone interested in sugar stocks, socalled. or in the stck of the American Sugar Hefining Co.. that was intended or calculated to affect its value? ... Have you bought or sold, directly or indirectly, since the beginning' of V session of congre, any socalled vuar stock or stocks, or stock or eert ti ntes of the American Sugar Iledn-I-ig i '.".' I Have you leen concerned with a; one interest, direct or indirekt, contingent or otherwise, in. any operation, whether by purchase or sale of said stocks or certificate-? Ha- anyone bought or sold for your account, or in your interest, any if such stocks, or speculated in any siu ti st-cks on your account, or given vou to understand that you would hare in the profits of any operation in -u h stocks, or placed any money to your credit as the proceed of the purhxv r sale of such stocks, or promised or agreed to place such money to your credit? i. Has any memlKT of your family, nr any person in your employ, or any clerk employed under the laws of the I nited States in your service, been, to your knowledge, interested, in any of the ways indicated in any of the precedingquestions, in any transaction of sugar stocks or oertifleates during the period mentioned? 7. Have you, or has any nietmVr of your family, or any such clerk, owned jr held certificates of the American Sugar Refining Co. during1 the period heretofore mentioned? s Have you. at any time. Wen connected with the American Sugar Itefining Co.. or have you. at any time, been in its employ as attorney, agent or otherwise? The members of the committee namely. Senators Gray (chairman) L'li Isay, Davis, Lodge and Allenwere xamined before the alphabetical Iii. was legnn, and each answered each question in the negative with the exception of the first which from its nature required some explanation. .... , ... ; m t. .. , i ne most interesting u nui me most, important testimony of the day was that of Senator Calvin S. Hrice. The examination of Senator Hrice was not made on the questions given, localise Jther witnesses had brought in his 'name in giving their testimony. Senator Ci ray read to Mr. hrice the statement of Correspondent Kdwards in the Philadelphia Press, alleging that Senator Hrice was a speculator in sugar stocks, and then put this question: "I ask you. senator, whether this statement, which means to impute that vou ami others have been-enabled to it -uiuulatc wealth upon the probable oursi of legislation, is true, and to state whatyou have to say iti regard to it?" "he fore or since entering' the senate?" asked Mr. hrice. "Since entering the senate?" "hut I may as wel answer as to the whole time, both Im fore or since, "said the Ohio senator, "that I have never iM'cn concerned in any speculations or investments or interested in them, the result of which depended upon leglslatiou4i' congress or elsewhere. Since entering the senate I have not been concerned in any way. directly or indirectly, in any property, securities, stocks, investments or speculations in any tiling that Is mentioned in the tariff bill, from the first line to the end of the free list, with the exception of some local manufacturing establishments in Lima and adjoining towns in Ohio. Nor have I sought to accumulate wealth in any way by investment or speculation sirce J entered the senate, in any of the things which lMmve mentioned. In other words my investments anil the thing's with winch I tu eonccrneii nnj not connected with or affected by tlfW tariff act. except as the general property of the country is. There is no trull i whatever in it so far as i am concerned. The Chairman It is stated in the article to which I have referred, and it has been in testimony before the committee, that you were present tu the Arlington hotel in the room of a Mr. Terrei. with Mr. Huvciueyer, president of the America.! Sugar Uciining Co., and ..oniu other iHrson or persons, at which time the matter of vatue of ugnr hUf'x wuj discussed, and the ef

foot of i he Url'Y legislation upon t tu .same, uml in which the particular ebedulr Uoiretl h.v the Sugar trust, called, was considered. Senator Hrie 1 was never present at any conference or meeting where any such subject wa.s tlieitseil. 1 was at the Arlington hotel on the evening of the Tth of March last, in the room of Mr. H. h. Terrell, of New York (for the pat thirty years one of my most intimate friends). 1 called at Alt. Terrell's room for the purpose of meeting

him and a common friend, a New ork lawver interested in rnilwav matters, Jlll4i not connected with or interested in the tariff bill in any way. We spent perhaps un hour, or an hour ami a half without any other person being present. Mr. Terrell, with whom I had for many years business interests, but with whom" I hail no interests whatever in any way for more than six year- last past, said that he was interested in sugar, and discussed the question of the effect of an ad valorem as compared with a special tax. about Vilich I was concerned. Mr. Terrell said that Mr. Henry Havemeyer was in the hotel. 1 requested that he send for Mr. Havemeyer. that I might get Mr. Hnvemeyer'sstatement, presuming him to lie the K'st-informed man in the country on that subject, llecame. and after a few minutes talk on the sulject The Chairman Let me ask there, were you previously acquainted with Mr. Havemeyer? Senator Hrice If I had been at all acquainted with Mr. Havemeyer, it was no more than a familiarity with his face. He went back to his own room and brought from tiiat to Mr. Terrell's room some ten or thirteen cases of sugar of various kinds of both raw and refined, and discussed the manufacture of sugar, the different kinds of sugar, the prices in various markets, and the effects of specific and ad valorem duties, for some time, possibly threequarters of an hour. I -aid to Mr. Havemeyer that there was a strong feeling- against a tax on sugar, and agnin-t any additional tax on refined sugar. and that 1 had great doubt whether the senate and the house would not put sugar. IhUIi raw and refined, on the free list The Chairman The house? Mr. Hrice And the senate I said lioth the senate and the house would not put raw and refined on the free li-U TO FORM A TRUSJ. Tin(insulins Stott- Mitntifucturrr to I'll It - hi it Combine. Ci.KVKi.AXii. O., June Pi. A combination of manufacturers of gasoline stoves is now considered a certainty. The project has been fostered by several convention-, and only the details of the consolidation remained incompplete. The executive oilicer of the concern will be lion. 0. A. Dangler, of this city. Emerson McMillin. president of of the Laclede das-Light Co.. of St. Louis, ha- obtained options on a majority of the stock of the ga- and gasoline stove manufacturing companies all over the country, as a preliminary step to the formation of a trust in these two industrie. with a capitol stock of Mr. Dangler returned from a conference in New York yesterday, and eonfirms the reported formation of the trust. Mr. Dangler said to a Cnited Press reporter: "The organization has not yet reached a state of perfection, but we feel assured that a consolidation will lie effected. The capital. with bond issue, will be $10,000,000, and the manufacturer.- of these vapor stoves which have a lurge sale in the west, think that they can 'save a large amount of money in expense- by doing- business as one concern. The new consolidated companies will probably receive a charter in Illinois, and the organization may Ik completed very shortly. There are six large manufacturers of these stoves in (. levcland, Cincinnati, St. Louis and other cities in the west. It is proposed to get them together in a working' arrangement." The principal firms to Ik. merged into the trust are: The hingen QuickMeal Co.. of St. Louis; (ieorge M. Clark, of Chicago; and the Dangler Stove Co., of Cleveland. CONSUL POLLOCK At Sun Sal:olor tllw Aiiiertcim Farmer a l'oluter. Washington, dune 10. The state department has matle public the following extract from a report of Consul Pollock at San Salvador, dated May II: "I learn that the customhouses at the seajiort stations are closed, and that it is wry difficult, if not impossible, for our steamers to secure men to handle their freight. Tlie r-volution prevents the planting of corn and beans, which must be done before the rainy season sets in. It li too late now; and in consequence these too staple food products, which form almost the sole subsistence of the common people, will have to lie imported from the United States." ArrhltUliop Tnrtin of Manitoba At the Point of Itattli. Nkw Yomc, dune lft. A Times special from Winnipeg;, Man., says: His grace, Archbishop Tache, who for more than forty years has been tho head of the Homnn Catholic church in Manitoba and the Canadian northwest, lies at the point of death. Archbishop Tache is the most widely known of the Canadian Catholic prelates. An II1:iIImmI Strike Kuril In a I'lzlc. Cincinnati, June lß. -The carpenters strike luis been officially declared off by n majority vote of the men engaged in it. The strike was inaugurated May 'Jl been use of several cuts being made in tlie matter of wages on certain classes of work. One thousand men went out on the first order, but many desertions followed within a week, and Up to the present time fully WO have returned to work. The republican of the KItthieenth Ohio (fix. trlct nominated ex-Ojaurt'Jt'Uiian Lorenzo Danlord for onsresv

GIGANTIC FRAUDS In ttii Wu- of IiiiIUii l)iiri-Utloii Claims ttatil to IIa- llft-H t'tu-urtlieil by tlie Senate Suli-CoHimtltri Hewlett by Kenn tor Kjle. of South Ihikottt-Korty-t'our .Million liMulvi. Y.siii.nToy,June la. -Senator ICyle, of South Dakota, chairman of the siilcoinmittee on Indian depredations, has succeeded in unearthing a series of the most gigantic frauds ever attempted to be perpetrated upon the government, They involve in the aggregate nearly SH.WMMttU of Indian depredation claims, representing more that 11,OeU cases, the majority of which are either without any basis whatever or have but a llimsy case, and are supported by totally inudcqua'.o evidence. Not more than per cent, of them are legitimate. Tlie.se claims have been railroaded through the court of claims in large numlicr.s upon, meager exparte evidence, and with the connivance, it is lielieved. of government officials. Whether this connivance has lieen criminal or merely represents the efforts of over-zealous officials to make a record, only the most thorough investigation will disclose. The Indian depredation claims now on file in the department of 'justice are supposed to have their origin in the unlawful acts of trilMs which, in addition to lieing wards of the government. are lacking in amity with it: thut is, upon reservations and under laws and regulations prescribed by the government. The depredations are of the nature of stock and crops stolen, houses and barns pillaged and destroyed, and in some cases are based upon injuries received in defense of property. All the claims an supposed to Ik? made by citizens of the United States.

CAUSED BY POVERTY. tiporutIlrork Kill lU Wife, III 7 -YearOld 1 toy ami Itlnixelf. HoiiliKN, Ind., June l.i. The finding of three decomposed bodies near here yesterday revealed the sad story of a family tragedy. The bodies were identified as those of George Hrock, aged 45; his wife,, of .the same age. and their son, aged 7. Tho surroundings showed that hrock: had killed his wife and child by shooting them with a shot gun and then committed suicide. The crime is lwlieved to have leen committed .Monday night, and the preparations show that it was deliWr.ate. Hrock had built a pen -Monday in a lonely glen nearly a mile from town, to prevent stray hogs devouring- the bodies. In the evening he persuaded his wife to accompany him to his mother's home, and on the way killed her. Tlie child followed and was next killed. Then Hrock dragged the liodies into the pen and covered them with clothes. He then laid down beside his wife and fired the shotgun with a stick, blowing his own head off. The ImmHcs were found yesterday morning by two elder brothers of the child killed, who were searching for their parents. Their homes was at Spesds, a settlement near here, and the family was respectable but poor.' Hrock had been out of work for some time, and his poverty Is believed to have lieeti the cause of the tragedy. FIVE THOUSAND PEOPLE Rendered 11 oniric by the. I'nnam Fire, With a !. of Nearly .OOO.noo. Panama. June IS. The greatest calamity that has ever befallen this city was the fire which started Wednesday afteriKMin and burned fiercely for nine hours before it could be gotten under control. At o'clock this morning the llames were subdued after destroying over 300 buildings in the most thickly populated section of the city, including the prefecture and Chinese quarters. The loss of property amounts to nearly 83,000,000: The insurance is estimated at only about S:.'00,ooo. One-third of tlie area of the city is devastated and fi.OOO persons are rendered homeless. The fire burned near ly every building on Lastablas, Juan Ponce. La Stlemas, Sahfuedas and Lv panadas streets. The city market was saved. A HISTORIC SPOT To He Miirketl by a Monument by that Son of the American Itevolutlon. Nkw Yohk. June 1.".. The New York society of the Sons of the American devolution laid the foundation stoneof a monument at Dobbs Kerry, designed to mark the spot where Washington had his headquarters in 1783. Tlie monument is to stand in front of the old Livingstone house in which the York town campaign wis planned, and in which the American and llritish com manders arranged for the final evacua tion of American soil by the Hritish, and opposite which the llritish sloop of-war fired the first salute ever given hv Great Hritain to America. THE CRISIS IN MOROCCO. Thr I'onrrH Ajgrer to Art In Concert to 1'rrvint 'UII War. M. nun), .luce l.'i. The Correspond encia says that in reply to Spain's request that the powers act in concert in Morocco in order to maintain the statu quo and avert civil war, Italy has agreed to the principhi .'of the request, but expressed the desire." that the pow crs should act with prudence and de liberation. (Jreat Britain, it is added, has accept1 ! 11. -1 J . , eu .-spam suggestion wan reserve, ami Ocrmnny has doW'tlm'same. France, as already cabled, has. acceded to Spain's request. A Costly ll4 FVy. St. Loi'is, Juno HmTIic establish ment of James .Sharp aV'Co., pork pack ers and provision dealers at 1)01-012 South Second streert, was glittet! by fire, entailing n loss of SW.OIll) or 8:?0,000. The building, n two-story brick, has a 100-foot frontage on .Second street, ami runs bade 2tKl feet to llisley street. It was filletl up with hams and lard from cellar to roof, and the flumes swept it from end to end. After the fire had lven gotten under control the alley wall toward the rear caved out, catch ing three firemen, and Injuring two of them severely

A BUNCO GAME.

Mw Protection Hot the Americas X"v uueer or Hl l'rotit. 'The republican farmer is ijjnorant or vicious, usually both." Thin may Round harsh, but it is true, to tno farmer, protection offers a bunco . .. 4 ll .. iV jriitne; to tlio vicious inrinor u ouum groen tfoods; to tho honest fanner it offers- -nothing. It has no use for In telligent men, or honest men. it renounces them hnpnrtiallyus 'hlrcling.s bought by llritish gold." Tho "bunco" garaa which protection played upon tbu bimple-niiiuled repub lican farmer would not Jiavo deceived an intelligent child. It was called tho home market, Tho fanners in löisü raised twenty-five per cent, more food than could bo eaten in this country; the manufacturers produced SÖ0Ü.OOÜ,000 less than enough mill goods to sup ply tho demand. Tho farmers numbered '2,000,000 in excess of tho number required; tho mlll-ownors employed 200,000 less than tlie number of hands required. Tho demand for tho SUOO.000,000 mill poods was suppllca by farm labor, the surplus products being exclmng-ed for foreig-n mill goods. Tho mill-owners said to tho farmers: "What you require is a 'homo market.' Ynu loso by Bonding your product abroad. America for Americans. 1- orcigners must bo shut out. Foreign pauper labor in foreign countries is ruining' tho United btatcs. Keep out tho foreign product and wo will mako it hero and you can feed our workmen instead of tho foreign workmen. Then you will bo better off. You fight for a homo market,' we will light for a 'homo market,' and everything will bo lovely when wo get it. Yon will not have to export; wo will bo nblo to sell hero all wo can make." Tho republican farmer did not stop to think it would have been useless to havo done bo, because ho did not know how. But here and there an intelligent farmer, a democrat, did, and ho recalled these economic truths: 1. All products of American labor most bo enjoyed here by tho producer, unless he goes abroad and takes them with him. 2. The exchange of product's among man cannot affect this xn any way, Whaterer a farmer may exchange his corn for whether greenbacks or a coat becomes by the exchango tho product of his labor. He may make fifty exchanges before ho reaches thr final exchange for the thing to bo usi or enjoyed, but that last thing is th product of his labor and the final payment for his work. 3. Iby no juggling can any profitablo or business exchange of products with a foreigner pass any product of American labor out of tho country or pass any product of foreign labor into tho couutry. When corn is. exchanged (sold) for something tho foreigner has, tho corn ceases to bo the product of American labor. What it has been exchanged (or sold) for becomes tho product of American labor, and is enJoyed by tho American a 'tho fruit of his toll." Foreigners givo us nothing, and no American can got possession of any product of foreign labor except by stealing it. Tho protectionist who talks about our use of tho products of foreign labor assumes that wo aro a nation of thieves, und thut what wu import is tho result of piracy. 4. What wo may lawfully enjoy as Americans must bo tho result of American labor only. The joint labor of all produces the total of what wo cat, what we drink and what we use and enjoy. All tho mill goods wo use may not be made in this country, hut to get them we must make something elsefarm products of exactly their valuo to a cent, which we exchango for tho mill products, and the farm products, passing out of tho country, become, by tho exchnngo products of foreign labor, whilo tho mill products, passing in, become, by tho exchange, tho products of American labor on our farms, taking tho placo of what our farm labor produced in exchango for them. The intelligent farmer could sec that thoro was in it no question of foreign labor; that it was a question of farm labor or mill labor, and that tho only thing to be considered was whether it would pay him to give up Ids foreign trade. Why could the mill-owners not compete on equal terms with the farmers iu supplying tho demand for mill goods? Why did they require protection, for their assertion that they comficted with foreigners was ft palpable to? The only competition they had wm in the exchange ol the surplus tum rodueU for mill f oode-eurplu

farm labor. The reaso wu ttsy ta find. The profit In labor is in tho wages. Farming is normally tho most protlt

able when lai; may bo hud for tho tau ing. because tho total value of the product makes tho wages. There -is practicnlly no raw material to buy. What tho'farmer sells his crop for ho puts In his pocket it is tho wuffes he gets for his work over und above tho cost of food. The capital required and the actual expenses aro less than in any other business practically nothMill labor Is normally tho least profitable of pursuits, for tho total vuluo of tho product is mainly made up of tho cost of raw material, interest on plant and other expenses. Tho wages aro only n small fraction of tho product. In 15S0, in all manufacturing Industries, tho cost value of tho total product was S5,atl9.57O,101, while thu total wages it represented were much less than one-llfth, only Syi7,O5:i,705. This is tho reason why cooperative mills will never provo profitable tho wages or earnings aro too small for tho labor involved. If ull tho profit made In all our mills should bo divided among tho workers there would be no appreciable difference in their general condition. Tho division of the, profits among a very few mill-owners, tho employers, alono makes manufactures "pay." If the employes owned tho mills in equal sharos and did their own work, it would pay them less than any other investment of their money and labor. Tho profit in mill work comes from what tho employer can squeero out of 100 or 1,000 workmen, from S3 to 510 each per week, and from what he gets for tho "wages" of his machines. Divided among his workmen it would amount to but littlo for each; massed in his pocket it is an enormous income. N. Y. World. COM M ENTS OF THE PRESS. In spite- of tho smoko that hangs over the Held of tho tariff battle, it is becoming plainer day by day that pro tection is making its last tight. A few years henco we shall look back to this session of congress and sny that it marked an epoch a period rcmarka bio for events of great subsequent ia flucncc. lie shall then bo able to see clearly that tho present muddle was inevitable, that it was only ono of the many milestones along tho irresistible march to free trade. Fuck. Shaving and sweating gold coins seems to be establishing itself as an infant industry in which thcro is a good deal to bo made. Tho necessity of protecting it should bo called to tho attention of Mnj. McKinley. Detroit Free Press. If people hear a grating noise they cannot otherwise account for they may tnke it for granted it is a result of tho friction between Mr. McKinley's nerves and the persistency of Indiana statesmen in trying to keep their fore feet in the trough. IS . l. World. i. hero tlocsn t seem to Do any difference of opinion among business men, whether they belong to ono party or another, as to tho necessity of speedy action in the eonato on the pending tariff bill. It is a pity that republican senators should not in this respect reflect tho will of their con stituencies. The whole country from tho Atlantic to tho Pacific is sick and tired of deloy. Philadelphia Record. The Chioago Tribune speaks of the shortage in tho government rev cnucs as a "condensed statement of ten months of unadulterated democracy." Hut that Is just whero the Tribune makes its mistake. Tho do mocracy of tho country for tho past ten months has been a good deal adul terutcd, notably by republican fill busters, who stand In tho way of demo cratic rofornis which would givo the country sufficient revenues. Detroit Free Press. As the senate proceeds with tho nurchnso of votes bv "concessions" to protect interests wo do not see how tho pcoplo can foil to bo Impressed with the fact that the wholo system of pro tection is a system of bnben'. Even tho republican senators, In assaulting tho bill, charge that protection is given to certain interests in order to pay for campaign contributions, or for sncclal services to certain senators, or because certain senators are directly interested in the protected article. This is exactly on a lino with the fa mous letter of a republican senator vrhonroDoscd to "fry tne xat' out o ike protection beneficiaries unless they t jk . 1 1. i contributed iiDerauy xo.uie repuuuea eaapalff fund.-Ia41ipolia Seatlne.

" - -1 SIMPLY DRIFTING. N. Y. World.

World's Fslr Medals. A cool deal of disturbance has lioen

Btcd und some scolding has been indulged in by those who iu tho compotltlvo exhibit of tlioir goods nt thu World's Columbian Ex. position won medals or dlnlomus uml w. now find by a strict construction of tho Jaw under which tho prizes wero awarded thev are liable to imprisonment iu the penhon. tlary If for thu Information or tho public they publish pictures of tho diplomas or medtil.i which tlioy havo won. u no jaw as iistauiH was drawn at the mir. goat Ion of Director tJenend Davis, who had no other Idea in making tho suggestion than tho jmivonting of exhibitors who had won no distinction bv their exhibits from claim, ing medals or diplomas, and thus deceiving tho public. Ho had not a thought of depriving any honest and successful exhibitor of tho full use and publicity of his advertisements of tho medals nud diplomas whh htho merits of his wares hud gained. Hut In drawltiK tho law tho mistake km madg of doprlvlng tho prlze-witmer of whatever benefit his diploma might bo to him in advertising his manufactures. Ho can huvc his diploma framed and lamp up in ms parior nnu can Keep jus weiiui locKed up iu his stdo to show to his friends, but nothing more. Such is, at least, tho emi. structlon tho attorney general puts on the law. H is outrageous to imputonny criminal Intent to thosu who have used for adwrtisinir purpose i no recognition uicir koous navo won. Huch uso has followed ouch expos!, tionthat has been hold, and it Is Whtand proper that the public should know who-ta goods entitled their maker to such rtv.ignltion. Tho crime, if thcro bo any, is only thu teci uiical violation of a elauso in a law with h was put there through an error. It J quiui likely that tho law will bo amended so that those who won prizes may let the world know It, giving such evidence of tho fact as ntav fairly bo demanded. Chkaao lleconi, Afnwt'V. '.'J J. Touching this matter, a neat circular ha been Issued by tho Whitman Agricultural Co., of St. Louis. This Company revolved tho World's Columbian Medal, tho highest posslblo award, on naitng presses ami a total of twenty awards on other entiles, but are of course, under tho law, restrained from giving proper publicity to lue lact. The remarkable addition to the strength of metals by the fractional mixture or alloy of other metals or substances is a notable feature of modern metallurgy. Copper having a tenhile .strength of 25,(iU0 pounds, by an addition of (5 percent, of tin may equal to 2S.00O pounds, but with the addition of 1 to 2 per cent of phosphide of tin and copper its tensile .strength is increased to 80,000 pounds or more per square inch. The addition of aluminum to copper in thu small proportion of I per cent, largely increases its tenacity, and at 7hl per cent, aluminum is equal to (50,000 pounds, and a 10 per cent, al loy IK),000 pounds per square inch, tho highest being a test at the Washington navy vard of 11 1.000 pounds of strength. Scientific American. r- 1 mm. r- -1 iji I i v To toll the world that Hood's Sarsaparllb Has saved, my lite. I had dizzy pe..s, nausea and pains In my side, caused by J-Jood's SarsaparilSa bad condition of my liver and kidneys. Soon after I com- ... nMMn.l . a. 1. n c ures UlUUUUll k It I U w w w w Hood's Snrsaparilla, I bogan to feel better i look our ooiues ami i now consider uiv self u well woman." Mrs. Paüijni Rurt, Hu.Tulo, Iowa. Get Hood's. Hood's Pills & purely vegetable. ic Big Four Route B9 TO THI MOUNTAINS MoSa lakes and SEA SHORE. EST LINE TO Niw York and Boston. ASK FOtt TICKETS VIA Big Four Route. c. o. Mccormick, d. . martin, CINCINNATI. O. Positively you have the genuine De Long Patent Hook and Eye if you see on the face and back of every card the words : Sec that hump? TUtOI Mi. tf. M Richardson k Vt Lone Brot., PhiUdrlphla. fr ION AND PORTABLE N GIN ES. mmThnsh andHor Powers. Wrlt fbr IDwrtOMWIr. M. RUM ELY CO LA PORTE. IN P. Mln.Scorrtwr.JSlbi. viiud Ith (1. ' mimI to my bloyel bo ill, rRrctlM prlc. Ct. tatlta Blcjcl C., K M ZW., U41mU. L.w'. BT am balm CURES Bfi fiViiiiiiia .1

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