Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 36, Number 47, Jasper, Dubois County, 3 August 1894 — Page 7

A GREAT TIN FAKE. w the MrKinley Tariff Vrotcrta Infant IllilUfttrlr. Sinco tho veracious VAl IVrklns visited those tin mines at Harney Peak ami overtaxed Ins very elastic itnajrluation in a written description of their fabulous wealth, hcnrooly anything

has been heard of them until now, when home rather titfly lej,rnl proceedings brings them once more before the public. If our memory Jervcs us, KU went to llarncy I'ealc as an titfcnt of the American Protective Tariff league. He was unable to make a thorough examination of the vast deposit! of metal because the tin lyinjr on the surfaces overan area of about suty fcqticre miles, was so dazzling in tho bright Dakota sunlight that bin power of vision was injuriously affected. His truth-telling faculties were not paralyzed, however, for his rport was as daziitf as the resplendent surface of the frreat tin deposits had been when he gazed tit them. If wo recall accurately the substance of his report, ho found that sixty per cent, of the surface of the earth in tho neighborhood of Harney Peak was pure tin. The Harney Peak Tin Mining-, Milling and Manufacturing company has hail a hard time of it trying to utilize the vast deposits that burst upon the enraptured vision of Perkins. The company is ten years old, but it has frold no tin in eonnnercial quantities. There was a time, wo think, when u few small bricks of metal were made and distributed as specimens or manufactured into campaign badges for the followers of Mr. Henjamin Harrison, l'.ut no pile of tin bars was ereete I in the Illach hills in order tnat the president and presidential candidate might rest one hand on it, and, in that interesting attitude, make a few remarks about the beneticenco of the McKinley tariff. It was reserved for the Knglish

owncr.Hof the great San Jacinto tin mine in California to make such a contribution to the history of McKinley symbolism, but where is the ban Jacinto tin mine now? Where is the Harney Peak mine, for that matter? Where' is tho tin the dazzling sheen of which almost blinded Mr. Kit Perkins? The S'.n Jacinto mine is stored away somewhere with the Harrison campaign banners and badges and torches of lb'J'2, and for the latest information nhout those marvelous deposits nt Harney Funic we must refer our readers to 'the suit brought against tho company and the olllcers of it by certain stockholders in Kngland. The lawyer who represents these plaintiffs

tersely describes the condition of the concern, as it appears to him, in the following words,: , "Twenty millions to its debit; a lot of introducing and abondoned alleged ininiug properties to its credit.

one cent in its treasury."

interesting chapter of the ... " 11. 1 .11

company s History may oe uiscioseu oy these proceedings. The plaintiffs, who have already procured the appointment of a receiver, assert that S15.00Ü.ÜÜO in stock and SI,S50,000 in bonds were issued upon mining properties valued at only S2Ä3.0J0. Other curious allegations are made on that side, and the defendants tell an interesting story for their side of the case. It is probable that all the facts will come out before we hear tho last of the suit, and that we shall know what has become of that principality of tin ore, sixty per cent pure metal, that also blinded poor EH Perkins when he incautiously looked at it.

and not

A very

bluntly that ha Is a ford to part with

his money, the man who by uo pyv sibility can benuilt by ihe alvloo ho gives, is regardad as an unctny, as a swindler, as a man employed by somebody to keep tho fanner from en joying the benellts of the jjreon-i.'ooils game. The onYj way tho republican fanner can be protected, from loss is the illegal one of punishing tho bunco men. Tho latter are working 1c tho interest? ol morality and good government, as well as their own. To beneilt themselves

they are engaged in finding out what men have saved up money, with the object of swindling their neighbor? by purehasingcouuterfeit bills. Tiioy steal from him this money to bo used in crime, sending him a package of sawdust or green wall-paper in place of the expected counterfeit money. Tho republican farmer would uso till., money paid to tho bunco man in buying tools for a burglar in backing any other safe-criminal operation as quickly as ho would invest it in counter

feits, and to deprive hira of this money for criminal purposes is n meritorious aet, a public service on the part of tho green-goods men. So far from closing the mails to tho green-goods men. tho government would be on the side of morality if it encouraged them in every possible way, and it would uot go far afield if it should even pay them for their work. It aids in every other branch of the government to dotect and punish criminals except in this matter of finding out the men who wish to purchase counterfeit money. Hut there are so many of these republican farmers that it assumes all are willing to cheat their neighbors, and It prefers to save them

from loss bv arresting those who

would prevent their crime by stealingtheir money. The federal courts protect them from being swindled out of the mono;,' they have saved for crime by prosecuting those who would deprive them of it. Tho only waj to "protect" tho rw publican farmers from the protection bunco stcerers is to prosecute the latter. It cannot be done by a ny appeal to their own intelligence or common sense. If they had the faintest spark

i of intelligence to appeal to they would

! know that they were lied to when they

i were offered protection on wool, corn

or potatoes in exchange for protection on iron, steel and cloth. Hut even

when they lind out that they havo been

lied to, it makes uot the slightest üii-

ferenco to them, provided the lie is snmethhn? thev want to believe. As

one republican farmer said uot long

ago in the World: "I prefer to be lied to by a republican than tollsten to tho truth from a democrat." That is tho

kind of a man a republican is, and the democrats should not expect results

from eonversion. It is not enough to

show him tho truth. Ho does not care

forthat. If he did, he would not swallow the contradictions of the re-

tiubliean newsnancrs. in which there

is neither honor nor decency. The only

wav he can be protected from the pro

teetion bunco-steerers is by punishing

them for false pretenses. Tariff Mule

in X. Y. World. COMMENTS OF THE PRESS.

FARM AND GARDEN.

MARRIAGE MAXIM.

REPAIRING ROADS.

at

KiiMTleiir of One of tli Clierncrrs

Yaton County. X. Y. We have a great many different ideas of working roads here in Yates county, N. Y. Euch town has a road commissioner, and he appoints an overseer for each district, and the appointed man must lay his plans and pick out his.hhuile trees for the men to sit

under and work out their road tax,

and the man that can tell tho best

The alarm of republican organs

for fear the passage of the income tax

measure will work the defeat of tho democratic party is fast approaching the intensity of hysteria. Detroit

Free Press.

It is becommir more and mora

I evident every day that at the Denver t nu'othnr of the republican league theV

The American people have a bone to ( raiuiu a football of Mr. Harrison.! pick with the promoters of this com-. cmerjrenC3- and kicked it outof bounds.

- . k T 1 1-

nanr. out tiicv can more easny reacn

the senators and representatives who rivaled Perkins in their descriptions of the richness of the Hatney Peak deposits, and the great political party that, under the influence of these senators and representatives, imposed upon tin, the metal, a duty of four cents a pound. The arguments to which the makers of the McKinley tariff yielded when they loaded this duty upon tho raw material of many important industries were those of certain legislators who covered pages of the Congressional Uccord with stories of the fabulous wealth of the Harney Peak company's mining claims. Some of them even asserted that these deposits would soon "supply the world" with tin. We have yet to discover how theso persons were induced to tell these stories and just what motives impelled them. Hut every manufacturer who uses the metal knows what the effect has been. In the ten months ended on April SO these manufacturers and the consumers of their wares paid nearly S 100,030 in duties for tho "protection" of the Harney Peak tin mines, so called. The sum would have been much larger if a groat quantitv of the metal had not been im

ported before July 1, lSOll (when tho j s0t McMi duty went into effect), in order that cryt ,jenu

the tax might be avoided. Our normal rate of consumption requires from 40, 000,000 to 45,000,000 pounds of the mettal per annum, and this would involve a tariff tax of from 31.COO.000 toSl.SOO,000. but the import last year rose to CI, 000,000 pounds, for the reason just Riven, so that about a six months' supply was curried over. In the pending tariff bill the metal is on the free list, from which it ought not to have been taken and where it would have remained if Eli Perkins, tho protectivo tariff league, and a little group of republican senators aud representatives had not demanded tho imposition of r. duty for tho protection rf Hie Harney Peak company. -X. Y. Times.

FACETS

ABOUT PROTECTION.

Republican farmer Iluppil tj .McUlnloy Huneo-Sterror. Tho republican farmer has not sufficient intelligence to protect himself from the groan-goods swindler and bunco-steerer. No uinttcr how carefully the yamo is explained to him. no matter how plain tho swindle may bo made, as soon us tho stocrcr offers him a share in tho plunder hu believes everything the thief says aud nothing an honest man may say to dlsstiada him from buying. Unable- to judge of motives, ho believes only those who attßr him. The rnaa who tells hira

X. Y. World

McKinley carried the r publica

onnvnntion at Denver. Hut Denver li

too fur west for the holding- of the

next national republican convention

vrhSoh will nominate a presidential

candidate. St. Louis Republic

The Illinois democrats promul trated a solid truth when they con'

demucd republican partisanship for

prolonging the business depression by ifhtfntr a reform of the tariff. On

this proposition their platform says:

'We condemn the contcrapunie pani

sanship which seeks to prolong for party advantage tho period of financial depression." Kansas City Times.

Vermont republicans let a whole

arrav of cats out of the political bag-,

In their state platform they denounce

the democratic Wilson tariff bill be

causa it "increases the tax on the poor

man's breakfast table." At the same

time thev say tho bill "decreases the

tariff on luxuries." And so the great

tariff for the "protection of American

labor" is, after all, a "far on the poor man" according to Vermont republic

ans. N. Y. Post

The tariff bill has bean sent tc conference after a vain attempton the part of the republicans to delay action. - . . . . 11'!.

The conferrees oi tue noiisc aro n

Hin, Turner and Mont-joni

cry, uemoerats, ami ikecu, jmua and Payne, republicans. This is a committee that is likely to insist on

democratic principles against Gorman

ized McKinleyisra. Clmirmnn Wilson's ringing speech was full of both courage and hope. X. Y. World. If by anv spiteful decree of fate McKinley should be made president and he should administer the affairs of the nation as he has those of Ohio, the work of foreclosing a first mortgage on the entire country would bo in progress by tho timo his term wasntan end. There is uot enough money in tho Buckeye treasury to keep "tho administration in postage stamps for political correspondence, to say nothing of an indebtedness that is chasing people out of the state. Detroit Free Press. Is not the sentiment of tho people of the United Statesgrowing moro and more favorable to lower duties? We think it is, and w know thatop'nIon Is held by many republicans of national reputation. The pcopleof this country expect tho republican party to reform tho tariff and to make t'o duties as low ns possible. Had tho party dono this nfter tho election of the ground would have been cu'. from beneath tho feet of tho democrats nnd they would have had no campaign ammunition for the election o' 16D2. Cincinnati Tribune (rep.).

story gets tho most praise, 'tnat is

one wav.

Then, in some districts we have road

machines. Thon tho overseer gets

two or three teams hitched to one and starts out with four or live men following after to throw out stones and Micks and turn sods over now and

then: and when they get through

there is a ridge in the center of the track! Of course a team can be driven

with one horse each side of the ridge,

but with a single horso one wheel will will be in the ditch and the other on

the ridgo which has been left by tho

road grader that is, by the man'h

lack of judgment in running the grader. If this is the only way a

wheel scraper is to be used they had better stop the manufacture of them, as every person riding over such a road needs a bolster under one side of him to level him up.

I was talking with an overseer in

the first part of April who had just been putting his district in the shape

just mentioned, and when I remonstrated with him and told him it was

too earlv to nut fresh earth in the

road he said it was all right, as you could not work roads too early in the

spring. I thought at the time it would be work thrown away. In what con

dition would the highway be after the

spring rain? As the sod is clay.

there was no earth to grade up with when tile weather became settled.

That is the wav the work goes on in

the different districts; and the bicycle rider comes along and wishes to make

war on tho farmer, and I do not blame

him in some respects, for a great many

do not care whether the roads are

worked or not

As 1 have been overseer in the past,

and there are about 130 days m our

district and one-half of that paid in

cash. I have managed in the following manner with good results:

The first thing after the frost is out

in the spring, I hire a man with a good team and plow furrows on tho side of the road where it is necessary, nnd then, after the plowing is done; clean out all sluice ways and tho last

furrow; then, when the road is dry

enough to scrape, we go over it with

the old lug-scraper, which is a sawblade bolted to a log. This will smooth

off the ruts. One man with a team

can do it. And this is all that should be done early in the spring; if it gets rough again, go over it again, and

keep on doing so until it is time to use the wheel-grader. When I start with that I manage to have three teams, and that makes a power that

will keep the wheels turning. 1 set the grader blade to take furrows that

were plowed early in tue spring, anu move the earth nearly to the center of the road, and go twice around this way. Then adjust the blade to move it to the center; then go to the ditch again and take all uneven places down, so that the water can run freely; when this is finished, move all loose earth to the center of the track; then adjust the blado again so as to movo this ridge, and have teams driven so as to move it from high to low places. When this is all done, I clean out by sluice-ways where we cannot go with the grader. Then, with a wagon, draw off all loose stones, and do not throw thum back to the side, to be scraped up in the road again next year. Xow, if gravel is wanted on the road, havo two teams for three wagons nnd men enough to load as fast as the teams can draw. In this way we have built our roads, and they have given good satisfaction, and no one gets credit for labor when sif.ting under shade trees. Cor. Country Gentleman.

Xkvtr taunt with a pat mistake. Nkvkr both be angry at the mum timo. Never meet without a loving welcome. Never allow a request to be repeated. Lkt self-denial be the dcily aim and

practice of each. Never let the sun go down upon any anger or grievance. Never talk at one another, clthci alone or In company. Nrgixct the waole world besides rather than one another. Lkt each one strive to yield oftenest to the wishes of the other. Never, make a remark at the expense of the other it Is meanness. Nkvi:h sigh over what might have been, but mako the best of what is.

Nevkk part for the day without lov

ing words to think of during absence.

Never find fault, unless it is perfect-

Iv certain that a fault has been com

mitted and always speak lovingly.

Tun very nearest approach to domestic happiness on earth is in the culti

vation on both sides of absolute unself' ishncss.

The

Best Things to Eat

ODD CORNERS OF THE EARTH.

In Japan they don't throw flowers or

wreaths at an actor. They give him drop-curtain.

Fashio.vaiiu: young ladies in Japan,

when thev desire to look very attract

ive, gild their lips.

I.v Australia it is the fashion to keep the bodies of the dead till Sunday in

order to insure a larire attendance at

the funeral.

Tun Egvptians were hard drinkers.

Their first dish at the table was boiled

cabbage, served with salt meat to stim

ulate their thirst

Ir an Egyptian desires a divorce nil he has to do is to repeat three times the words "I nut you from me," nnd

the legal separation is complete.

A typical southern African house-

hoh' described by Olive Schreiner has an English father, a half Dutch mother with a French name, a Scotch

irovcrness. a Zulu cook, a Hottentot

housemaid and a Kaffir stable boy

while the little girl who waited on tho

table was a IJasuto.

FUTURE PRESIDENTS.

"Wnv.UK, do you and ever fight?'' "Yes, fiir." "Pa."

your brother 'Who whips?"

THE MARKETS.

Skw Yoiik. July 2. K. CATTr.K Nntlr- Sleors M 1 61 5 00

m a i n

.V. w. &H

... 4'

11 )

4 no 1 10 rt .1-, s oil

I TO

4

40 4 SO 7 Ol P Ui 12

0. tfi Hi ti. rt ft

PRACTICAL EVIDENCE.

Ctrri"!-MihUlni;

Ff-orir Winter Wheat. .. WHKAT No. - Uou COItN-No.2 OATS .V. - . POUK New Mess

ST. I.OÜIS COTTnV-MiiUlhnj: HKUVKS-Sliimmi? Steers. .. Merit mu HOGS Pali to Select MlKKl'-rnlrtoChulee Kr.OL'K-1'atentN Fnncv to Kxtnt lo. WHKAT No. 2 Kurt Winter.. . CORN No. 2 .Mixed OATS No. 2

UYK-No.2 TOMACCO-Lus t-oaf Ii'irler. HA Y-Clc-ir Timothy HUTTUU-Oholce Dairy HUGS Fresh I'OIHC Stnntlard Mos (new). HACON-ClearKlh !,AltU-l'nme Steam CHICAGO CATTM: Shlpptnir. IKKIS-Fnlrto Choice SHKKI' Fair to Choice FLOCK Winter Patent. .... Sprint. Patents WHEAT No. 2 Spring No. 2 Ked "OKN-No. 2. OATS No. t POKIC-Mess iiic-V)

KANSAS CITY. CATTLE Shlnnlni: Steer. ... 3 ffi

Hcx;s A'.I Grades .. t

WHEAT-No.2Ked OATS No. 2 COKN No. 2

NEW ORLEANS. FLOCK-HfchCirnilo 2 TO CORN' Na 2 OATS Western IIA Y Choice f POKK-NewMcss HACON-Slile COTTON MiilJHnt; C?"

LOUISVILLE WHEAT No.2 Ued Ct KN -No. 2 Mixed f OATS-No.2 Mixed (New) it I'OKIC New Mos - 1 t" vIJACON- Clear Kit) thfs COTTON M UI d 1 1 tK ii

Are made with ROYAL BAKltfd POWDER $ bread, biscuit, cake, rolls, muffins, crusts, and the va- p rious pastries requiring a leavening or raising agent. Risen with ROYAL BAKING POWDER, all these P

Ü things are superlatively light, sweet, tender, delicious and wholesome. 5 ROYAL BAKING POWDER is the greatest of g J time and labor savers to the pastry cook. Besides, it g l economizes flour, butter and eggs, and, best of all, makes the food more digestible and healthful. n $l ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO.,10 WALL STp NEW-YORK. r-V-

Primitive W-pon In Cores. In the present Corean war the weap

ons used are almost as om ! mu.w

the Thlinklits or the Quiehias or the

Pataironians. consisting of clubs and

other missiles, bow and arrows, wooden spears and wooden cannon, showing that the ininroved armaments of the

modem period have yet considerable

spaces of the world to conquer. The one advantageous tiling about these

weanons is that a riven number of

soldiers will iro farther with them and

last longer many times over tlian witn the improved variety. Chinese com

manders and armies until recently relied a great deal upon noise in warfare and upon the exposition of large draro ms of toakwood and pasteboard, but have leared by experience against

foreitrn invaders to distrust the euicacy

of both and have adopted tlie arms ot

their enemies. The Coreans have similar lessons to learn: that their bows and arrows and wooden guns are what

are known as back numbers, and if they wish to shine in arms and conquest they must import the improved variety. N. Y. Tribune. Iont Give l'p the Ship! So say those who, having oxjericneed its benefits tbcajsclves. advise their despairing friends to use Hostcttor's Stomach Bitters for the combined evils- liver complaint, dvsneiista and Irregularity of the bowel. tVuittul of orient is lholiittcrs in malarial, rheumatic arid kidney troubles and nervousness. Use tho great remedy with persistence. Maitd "I want you to come over this evening aud meet Mr. Jingle. You are not acquainted, aro vouf (Jrace "So; we've only been engaged for a few month." Inter Ocean.

Nehhkr measure a man's Intellec' by in she. I hah observed dat line wino Is mos' ilus served up in small glasses, w'ile slopUser is invariably paraded in schooners. Arkansaw Tkotnos CaU

"Is that a real Englishman of title that 1 devoting himself to .Miss Goldcoin I" "Yes." "Can vou tell bv tho wav ho drops his h'sf" "No, bv the wa' ho tries to pick up v's and x's." Inter Ocean.

Tun desideratum in collirs Is something high enough to look uncomfortable and low enough to allow ono to turn Uie bead without swearing - Puck.

action

I?no, angrv eruptions yield to the nt t Minn's sSoltihur Koati.

Hill's llair and Wiiskcr Dye, 50 cents. rsrAi.Lv TiitK. She "What aro these

I pastels in prose f" Ho "It Is wit inwatcr-y ' celors." Brooklyn Kagle.

Gcxirs is madness without tho free aocominodations. Puck. Hall' Cntarrh Cur

Is taken internally Price 75c.

ft V & is -r.

fit

a 0. ft ft ft

-Mlsifl ... ft

.ttnr&

75 4 SO a ' 3 Ot 2 rr. s in n

Si it m a m oi

ft, li ro ffi M a

a n 37t

trip; tickets on sa!o July 'M and 1, good for return paisago until August ('., lfclM, inclusive. For tickets and full information applv to Agents Chicago & North-Western

tauway.

Wnnx a bov is vaccinated, he usually sees

tbo point.

6i 1 TT 5 a i 2 M 3 OI S2 I34 fll

12 05 ß I-

3 25 4 Ml 3 25 2 Ml 3 10

CT

05 fi

-l2Uf4

-I ßi 5 W 43 2ÖM 37

0.

3 0) "! 41

13 I

45

4f. m 13 25

Why

the SmmI Koiirt Movement Should He l'ojtulnr In tho South.

The southern road congress, which met lately in Atlanta, brought out tho fnct of the value of good roads, and the pecuniary advantage of them was fully recognized. Among the cases cited was the experiment made in building good roads by the people ol Union and Kssax counties, N. J. The pecuniary benefits resulting from this work arc summed up in a report from the board of freeholders of the former cottntv, which states that the tota' outlay has been nearly 8350,000. and there" are now nearly forty miles of telford aud macadam road in the

country. Tho beneficial effect of the roads it seen in the fact that property in Union cminlv alone has appreciated in value

far more than the cost of the roads, as the assessment shows. The county issued S:50,000 worth of road bonds, the interest on which must be met annually, yet there has boon no increase in the county tax rate, because the increased assessment easily produces enough revenue to meet thl charge. Very few of these roads have been built more than a yenr and most of them only a few months, but already the people appreciate the advantages ilowing from them. Such practical evidence as this will certainly encourage roadbtiildtng in the south. The movement so far has made little practical advance here and has been confined t tainly to conventions, ete., but this is a step In tho right direction. It s truo that conventions in themselves do not accomplish miteh in the way of roadbullding, but they shuw how the work can best be done; they arouse the interest of the people in the mutter; they prove the value of good highways, and they will, in the course of time, arouse the south to the necessity of building them. X. 0. Times-Democrat-

KNOWLEDGE Brines comfort and improvement nnd lends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live hotter than others and enjoy life more, with in evrwnditure. bv more promptly

adapting the world's best producta to the needs of physical being, will attest On. vnbift to health of the pure liquid

laxative principles embraced in tho rnninilr StTlltl of FlCS.

Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant tn tUo rnste. tlio rcfreshiucand truly

beneficial projwrties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers nnd permanently curing cowtipntion. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical

profession, because it ads on the Kid iiiwR. Liver and Ikiwcls without weak

cmng them and it is perfectly free from vitrv fdiipctionflble substance.

Svrup of Fi is for pale by all drugin fiOc nnd'Sl bottles, but it m man-

ufjictured by the California Fig Syrup

alo the name. 8vmp of Figs,

and being well inform!, you will sot

accept any autxuivt u wuereu.

The man who sits down to wait for somebodv'soid shoes will need a cushion on Iii

chair before he gets them.

GOOD SPIRITS

2

Ixw Kntc to St. l'anl.

On account of the Anniial Convention of

tho Catholie Total Abstinence Linon of

America, tha Korth- esLcrti Lino will sell

excursion tickets to SsU I'atil, .Minn., anu ;V,r, h2.MhRnl hnninr. Is the im of u

return nt half rates ono faro lor the xouna i r4tion of medical srcnUcmeH. who bare-

follow (rood health, while low spirits, Avlancbolk, impaired uietnorr, morote. or lrritablo temix-T

icar or lmpena-

tag calamity ana

inoutana aaa

one derangements of todr and mind, reaulfc-

frotn pernicious. Kolitarr tirac-

tlccs. of ten lodulmt

In by tho younr throutrh ignorance of

their ruinous confl

uences. KervousucDii-

y. and less or rnnniy

csuR from such unnatural habits. ...

To reach, reclaim ana rraoiv wui uinuaiu

prepared a tntuse.wnoon in ptam du, cuwv languaffQ and treating- of the nature, symptoms and curability, by home treatment, of fcucb cUdOBBos. A copy ot talc useful book w. od receipt of this notice, with 10 cents ta stamp foe postaire, be emu!: securely Mied is a Jtfaisi envelope. Address. WoklbS DwpsmuMT

Milt fVltlQ Ps, chums, littles, ITAllX VsCLllOf, everything; which is used for milk, even down to the

baby's bottle these are things for which you need Pearline. With Pearline, they're cleansed movo. easily, more quickly, more economically, and more thoroughly, than with anything else known. The.people who know most about milk, say just that. We can't afford ta print all the testimonials we hold. They're free expressions of opinion in conventions, in papers, every

where where milk folks have a voice. Their enthusiasm about

Pearline is genuine. And it's natural. For all kinds of washing and cleaning, nothing equals Pearline.

UB.

Matilda. It was a good turn yoa did me -when yon told rae of Claircttc Soap. It makes the clothes whiter than any other, and save time and work. , . 4. Mary. XVs, and it does not injurs the handa or the oothea, CLAI RETTE SOAP. lal.Emtrs. Ma4 by THE N. K. FA1RBANK COMPANY, St. Lwü.

THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO QOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD 9E USED IN EVERY KITCHEN.

Frrnwnru

tvitk. lurm

0 mm ... u r livu If ri mm,

7 TJ

au. I

11.

1510.

nn vrarriMST aTMR

MM that jm taw