Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 37, Number 20, Jasper, Dubois County, 25 January 1895 — Page 6
THE HORROR GROWS.
Later Nf from Ilm Srono af Uottc'e Awful lll.;i.iT Hut AiI.U in tlx 1'iirtiirr KiM'lMU Neurit One lliitnlr.-l IVrxuii Alrrnly Ili:til Some Itiulli-i .itin' to llv Ht'n riiumril In the I l.tiic A Irl:to S;iic:;c-If. lUm-:. MmU. .Ian. Iß.-Investijra-Uon but adds to tlie horror ot last night's terrible accident. The brilliant ßlure of the skies f mm the tlames of the hunting buildings have jussed awnv, only to K sueeetnled by the gray of early morning, tluw giving to the awful seiMie n Utting canopy. Never did a lambeape bear more impressively the unmistakable record of tlie great destroying force of powder than the gloomy, blood-stained wreck which appeared in the tirst faint light of morning. Nearly all the dead bodies .-f the men had been recovered, init the mammoth heaps of debrK the charred remains of buildings, warped and shattered fire engines and maimed bodies of dead horses, were Mill reminders of the terrible work of the fateful night. In addition to the siekening slaughter of human beings the destruction of property is great. Where vast sums of money were represented in wellfilled warehouses nothing remains but blackened ruins, and the streets of the city sparkle and glisten with broken glass. Kutte has more the appearance of a besieged city in days of war than that of a business center of commerce tn times of peace. A relief meeting was called together by Mayor Dugau at 11 o'clock this morning. lamage to plate glass windows in the city amounts to several thousand dollars. A number of persons reported killed have turned up, among them being Julius Jacks, Oeorge King, Wesley Wan! en and Mrs. George Filer. Some of the bodies are supposed to have been entirely consumed in the tiamc-s. The fire is supposed to have been of incendiary origin, as there was no tire, so far as 3;nown, about the place. One body taken from the ruins this morning was identified as that of Chief Cameron of the fire department The head, arms and legs were burned o:T. At 0:-l5 a. m. it was estimated that seventy-live to one hundred persons were already dead. It is likely that many will never be identified. A DASTARDLY OUTRAGE. 1lnOanl Wlframl Iliutfflitrr shot In Their II ii me by Outlaw. ItPKor.r.K. I. T., Jan. 10. At S o'clock last night French and McWH Itams, the two bandits who roldcd 2sshstore at Fort Gibson Monday night, rode up to Joe Gludd'a house, between Tahlequah and Fort Gilsou. and called to Gladd to get p, that they wanted to see him. Gladd stepped to the door, and upon recognizing French and McWilliams. at once locked the door. The bandits then began a fu dlnde through the door with their Winchesters and left without entering. Gladd was shot in the left forearm, hLs wife in the right elbow and his daughter in the forearm, calf of the leg and fleshy part of the thigh. The father and mother will soon recover, but the condition of the daughter is .critical. When the news of the shooting of 'Gladd and family reached Tahlequah a rarpe posse of citizens and Indian sheriffs left for the mountains in which French and McWilliams arc said to he hiding. TAYLOR'S BONDSMEN JBrrosnlzn Their Iteapomlblllt j Es. Gor. Jlrll.lte Will Surrender 111 Property to the Mute. "CiurAOO, Jan. 17. All the bondsmen nf Defaulting Treasurer Taylor, who had been in the city, left yesterday excepting ex-Gov. Mellette. Mr. Mellette said the bon-lr.tnen had talked with Attorney Tenncy, Taylor's confidential friend here, and did not agree xvith him that they were not responsible on account of their bonds. II added that he intended to turn over his property to the state. Mr. Tenncy said: "I would not tell where Taylor I., if IMtnew. because it would Ik a breach of confidence, lie knows no foreign language, and I presume he is in this country trying to make a living until this trouble is straightened out. He told me he had none of the state's money, and he probably told the truth. If I had believed he was a criminal I would have had no intercourse with him. He was simply swamped by putting money into schemes which failed." HARRY HAYWARD'S NERVE Iil Not Tall I Ilm In the l'reenr ol Catharine tiliic' Double MlXNKAl'01.1. Minn., Jan. 17. Harry Hay ward's nerve did not desert him when the state's attorney brought the supposed murderer of Miss Catharine Ging lace-to-face suddenly with Misi Julia Ging, of Auburn, N. Y., the twin sister of the murdered woman. The meeting was arranged for the purpose nf trying the nerve and conscience of llmywnrd, no intimation being given him. The prisoner looked up calmly in his cell, bowed, and said: "From appearances I should say this was Miss Julia Ging. Is not this Miss Uing?" The woman gave a nod of affirmation only. Ilayward went on to protest Iiis innocence, and declared he could convince Miss Ging if he could have a long talk with her. SPRECKELS IS OPPOSED To llu- IVrnuinent Mnliiteitiiiiee ot n Wat ship nl Honolulu. Hax Iiuncisco. Jan. 17. Claus Spreckels Is opposed to the permanent maintenance of an American war ship in Honolulu harbor. In an interview to-day he called the Hawaiian government a sham republic, and declared that those who are concerned ara working the matter as a speculation, hoping to sell their rea'. estate at higher prices. Mr.Spreckels stated that there was no danger of the IsUndi feeiBg taken bra foreign nation.
BOLD DEMOCRATS.
Tru.i.. i..iuir. et latuti t.Mn. rr . Their i'ttUiii-t.fsAOH of tin tji.t Wee. t loll. Signs do not point to a cessation of tho tariff discussion. It Js far more ;
likely that the two great parties will, new foreos gathered under our Iwnner. In l!il. W divided, as never lefore. on an erganiv-atUm that could not become this question. A few day ago the New ; a machine to workout some bosses England Tarifl Reform league declared j will, the plan must be based on the against tariff protection of nil kinds, demoenitio principle of recognition nnd tin December the executive commit- ,f i,ome rujt, ty tjlc majority. It must tee of the Minnesota Democratic nsso- j lHjjt on tjK, hnVM Kl 0'f the rank elation, in an address to the democrats j nm tile of the party, each stage of miof the state, givine its views as to the i perstrueture beim; built by that becauses of the defeat of the party at the i,)W, until it forms one connected and last election, came out openly and related whole, from the precinct comIvoldly for free trade and direct taxa- mittee to tlie national committeeman, tion. It is unlikely that the national ti,c. iatn-r not an autocrat, but a rodentoeratle platform of ISthJ will assent sponsible and representative head. t such radical declarations, but it will , "Thus equipped the democracy of harm no one to understand the argu- Minnesota can enter on a new and vigments of these dare-devil Minnesota . orou campaign, armored in invincible democrats. Here U the address: j risj,t. ami with forces marshaled for ef"A magnificent victory has been f..etive eflfort. It can make its mission
turned into an astounding defeat. A grand opportunity has been worse than frittered a way. A great party sits to-day in humiliation because its representatives refused obedience to its commands. When we measure performance by promise, wc of the great rank and hie, the helpless victims of tiinnltty. cowardice ae.l treachery of a handJul unfortunately placet! where tney con lit manipulate tue ncitn, must aoiuu the justice of the punishment, roug-h and indiscriminately applied as it was. Wo promised and our leaders would not perform, and the people cast us out. "It is well to accept facts, because they teach, and it is useless to indulge in recriminations which teach nothing. It is only useful to trace effects back to causes, if we would use the knowledge gained for further efforts. We face the future, not the past. Democratic principles are not destroyed. The great mass of the party is more loyal to them than ever The nation never saw the day when there was greater need of the ascendancy in government of democratic policies based on democratic principles. "Amid the causes of defeat three stand out prominently: "Tlie panic "The failure to redeem promises solsin nly made. "Hossism. "For the first we are without fault or responsibility. It was the child of republicanism laid on our doorsteps and its paternity maliciously charged on us. That lias passed. That lias passed. The other two causes remain. I f democracy ts to regain Its lost station it must address itself to the task of removing the cause for which it is responsible. It must be honestly democratic, and being so will remove both. 'Why was the pledge made at Chicago not redeemed? What was the pledges? To eliminate protection from our tariff system and lay taxes for revenue only. We attacked protection and won by convincing the majority o( its wrongfulness1. We did not win le'ause we had presented and exnlained and defended our poller of a revenue tariff; we had no precise poller to offer; we dm ply attacked the other position. NY? could offer none, because a revenue tail if. is incapable of precise limitation. Concepts of itareas various as the men who form them. It is a rngue. misty, meaningless expression. That is why the pledge could not be redeemed. We were a party of aggressive opposition without an aggressive, definite policy. "When congress met to reform the tariiT there was no unanimity of purpose or action. A tariff for revenue covered the ideas of men as far apart as our own Free Trade Hall and Collars-ami-Cuffs Raines, of New York. This was inevitable. A revenue tariff is a protectee one as far as it goes. The virus of protection lurks in the system and is ineradicable. The result of all this diversity was the haggling of compromise, the mo-al mushlness of conception. The outcome was a protective tariff act. enacted by a party pledged to destroy protection. It burned our candle at both ends. It drove away the protectionists in our party and the free trade repuoueans .ve have converted, and it attracted no -ne. "What lessons does this teach us? Is .t not the oangcr of an indefinite ..oliey, one incapable of precise definiI.in- tin. !ilijYtftt ni-tl nf mlntttln'r one -hat is both precise and democratic? .Ve cannot nraxn ivin by merely opposur protection. That is dead, uepublteaus will not da.e make its resurrection an issue. We have got to present a nolicr of our own. one we can argue and explain and defend as democratic and right. A revenue tariff is not these or either of them. It is not democratic to tru; men on what they consume and excÄpt all other forms of property. There Is but one thing to do. We must declare openly and bold ly for free trade under which no import will le taxed except its like is taxed for internal revenue. We must accept frankly the resultant of a direct tax levied as provided in the constitu tion of the United .states sufficient to compensate for the tax removed. "Wo must take up the work of edu cation again. e tntisrht the people that protection is wrong. We must teach them that free trade is right It will be the easier task. It will be an appeal to the conscience of the na tion to recognize a right so inherent in nv conception of freedom that it is a larvel that it can be doubted or dea in nied, the right ot a dollar to buy with m:iu who earns a it what he will where he will and of whom he wilt, without its being tolled by or through Mie government. U offers to the manufacturer materials at their normal ivst; to the buslmv man, cessation of injurious agitation that attends rhanircs in the tariff rates; to the farmer, the purchase of what he needs in the same open competitive market . . . in which he must sell, anil to the lalorr fnr wages, the right to buy in t!m same .IcC market in which he now bells 1,1 lator. "It Weaks s.way the barriers which iditt our rroducts in more than they keep joreijia products out, and relieves the home congestion that results in idiLt. Jf:d combinations. Hut
i above' these coiiMtieron ts ot policy j
stands out the simple truth that freedorn of trade ts as ritfht und essentia as freedom of speech. Hand in hand with the new gospel of democracy should g in our state the work of Or tratiiutlon. To make elective the to lie the pathfinder to lead the national democracy out of the wilderness and the bogs of a false economy onto the solid ground, the fair uplandsof an economy based on natural right, and into the sunlight of a large freedom for man." The address is issued by order of the executive committee, and signed by V, Smalley, secretary. j I'rlept f Woolen. At midnight on December "1 the i McKinley tariff breathed its last ! breath, and its terribly high rates of ' duty on all imported manufactures of wool will be greatly reduced by the Wilson tariff. I The reduction of the tariff ought to effect and must soon effect a considerable reduction in the prices of all manufactured articles of which the hair of the sheep is a component of chief value. As the new tariff gives American manufacturers free wool, they will be able to make better and cheaper woolen goods than formerly, and thus better able to compete with imported woolens. Foreign goods, therefore, will certainly meet a very powerful rival in domestic fabrics. The foreigner will have to tax his ingenuity to the utmost and be content with slim profits if he . expects to sell his products in our mar- " kets. Home-made goods will have an equally hard tight. The competition will le fierce, indeed. , But consumers "will fare better than they have ever done. They will get better goods for less tnnnoy. If American manufacturers are to hold their own ground in the home market, they must have their coal and other raw materials free of duty. N Y. Herald. i Tom loltnxin Vii Klclit. On Christmas ere the Carnegie Steel Co. closed a contract with the John sou Co., of Lorain (near Cleveland 0., by which the Carnegie Co. acquires a large amount of land adjoining l.lack river, opposite the Johnson plant, on which large steel works, to employ -V 000 men. will be erected during the coming year. The Johnson works, not yet completed, will be even larger, This looks as if the steel industry had been ruined by the reduction of duties. IJails sell for less and more will be made. Labor benefits by this as by all other tariff reductions. It will be remembered that Hon. Tom L. Johnson, of the Johnson Co.. said in congress that there should be free trade both in ores and in manufactured rails. He said free trade might hurt the trust but it would bless the workers and thr country. Steel hull l'rlre. A conference of steel rail manu facturers, recently held in Chicago, fixed the price for heavy sections of rails, for mill delivery, at S22 per ton The minimum price for street girder rails was placed at SC!. The new tarill law is partlr responsible for this drop in prices, it reduced duties from si..-ii to S7.SI per ton. Under the new duties Sua is the highest price obtainable without danger of importation into some of the southern states and into the Pacific states. The lieneficial ef feet of the reduction is already eri dent. Itradstreets sars: "lhese are the lowest prices ever known, and nl ready a good deal of business has been booked at the mills for early delivery n the new year, and more tonnage if under consideration." I i A I'rotertlimlHt l'iir.tdox. I he Ilouon ( omtnercial liullctm rei marks that labor is cheaper and raw cotton costs less at the south than m 1 the north. Here are two factors to drive the cotton industrr of the latter section out of existence. If we may be lieve our protectionist friends, it couh not contend against one of them in foreign country without government aid, even with all the advantage o transportation across the ocean both i wars in its favor. Yet the cotton in- ! dustry has maintained itself in the north with signal success. W hy not admit that capacity and skill on the 1 part of those engaged in manufactur ing is the chief key to success, and that the rate of wages plays but a subordi i nate part In the comparison? Hostor Herald. Shelter TnuU That' All. A new steel company is to be organ ir.ed at Pittsburgh, with a capital of S1,M,)00, There appears to be pros pectivo profit enough in the iron busl ness to attract loose capital, notwith standing the reduction of tariff rates, ! There is no remaining doubt that iron cm w Nuuiaui mi.-, nnmn .u 1 1... .,.,1nnnil in I 1 1 . lf niitnil .... prices which defy foreign competition lariiis oniv serve as a sneuer ior com binations arranged to pluck the home consumer. They arc no longer needed to prevent importations. -Philadelphia Kccord. Shy of tho Ineoine, The income tax remains the law of I the land, and will be enforced. Ilig !l. it i. .1 1 capitalists and great corporations do not like it. but it commends itself to the common people. The' politicians are afraid to touch iL They would like to please the monej power but there are the people behind a law that taxes in protwrtioti to the ability o the taxce to pay. It is very amusing to notice how shy the politicians have become. Ca vu i; a Chin!
THE ÖÜNDAY SCHOOL.
Intcr utlonal I.mson for January '-ii, IfiPJ Thetirr:tt'ocfvio'.oii- Mail. ll:t3'"3, ISiecially Arranged from Pclor.betVN'iuci.l CUiut.s TaxT Thou art the tlirbit, tto iua f thehvlmrU.xl.-Matt. I 16. Tiiiu sunua?r of A. l). Ä. A few ve';i fter lUe last lesson, ami about tittie mouths before lUo erudliion. l'mcii-Oa the way o the Mount of Transflsu ration, in thu rcirlon arouiul t ;e.kroa PhiUiml Thi city vra- httuateil tuv-.uv-nve or dim ralle nurtheaht of the .sea o O.lJeo. :r tin head waters of tho Jonl.ui. uuout our lies east of IXin, tho northernmost town t Valetta !) roiier. It wat at the foot of tho lofty 1 erraott irtluo thousand feet hutu). in tho lost lil'iuru-MUu l"rt of l'aleuine. it was uanie.1 of ier Camr and Hero.t I'liilip. J t ;.v - About thirty-two ami one-half jesra ohl . in tho third year of his mtnbtry. Tin: .XTEttvisitHU Stukv After tho tllsotin.0 rrmn.; trnm mo nurvie r,i tue loaves. many ot the followers of Jesus forsook 11. in John C Ö3-7I). Then emissaries from Jerusa lem renroivMie.l Ulm far disresanhni: tUu tra ditions of tho elders (Matt. 15:1-. Th opi!.t;i.n la Ualtleo hail tU uwvn m h'.roi; that Jesus wont away Into tho vie nity c f Tyro unl sUlon und ot:cr restons arouud 'iahle-s (Matt. 15.21 to 1U:12. luuilnx ml UMdiin;,. Leaving tho sea of Galileo, tuey jouriHyeu northward into tho reslou of Caarea PUtlippl untl ua the way the words of to-day's U-oa iv ri '.ton. run Ni w Kpocu Tills journey marks a turstuijt iRMH .r new era la tho education or ho disetpios. jcaus reveals t) them utoro Ivarij Ins aturo r. tuo Messiah, und tor tro llrst tisie sIiovs them tho uccesdty of His suffcrir.,:nnd tloata tlrst hy Ills teachlnc ami then ly tho transflguratloa scone, "o alio he ms tho organized church lays tho tlrai stones of thoVtrueturo upon the ;;reat bed-roc'.; louaihitlon. IXSSOX NOTKS. That Jesus is the Messiah llecoinea the Settled Conviction of the Apostles. Vs. 13-17. 13. "When Jesus came:' in His journey from llethsaida northward, along the road east of the Joran I.Mark "Into the coasts:' re gions or borders, "of Cesarea Philippi." Yo learn from Luke this that tins new era or epoch began in prayer alone with His disciples. "He asked Ihsdisiplcs." His object reems to have been to draw out the faith of His disciples, and to reveal to them more full; His nature and His redeem ing work, lie would put and :ave them put into dentate form what they had been gradually learniug from His words and works that He was indeed tho Messiah, the .Son of Hod. "Whom," in modern hngish who. as in lt. V "do men say that I. the Son of Man, am?" The Son of Man was a title lie frequently applied to Himself (see Dan. 7:13-11). but it is never applied to Him by the apostles. t cxpi'vsjscd His human, visible side. Ic would know what they had found the popular impression to be concerning Him. how far they understood His nature and His work. 14. "Some say lohn the P.apttst," returned to life. mong these was Herod (Matt. I4:l-t'l. Some. Klias," i. c., hlijali, the fore runner of tue .uessiait. wno nan vrought some great miracles, and had turned the tide of the nation from icathen worship to the true! 2od. "And others, Jeremias." the drcel: form of Jeremiah. "Jeremiah is placed first, because in Jewish canon he was placed iirst among the Old Testament prophets," and was regarded as among tho greatest. Perhaps, also, because of the character of his preaching, mint ing denunciation with hope. "Or one of tho prophets," I. c, "that one of tho old prophets is risen again" (Luke 0:19). 2sotc that this variety of opinion shows that the people were thinking and discussing, but had come to no certain beliefs. None of them speak of Jesus as the Messiah, for His appear ance was in too great a contrast with their expectations. 15. "Hut whom (It. V., who) say ye that I am?" deserve "ye," plural, and by position in the Greek exceedingly emphatic m contrast with the discordant popular opinions. The question is addressed to all. and Peter answers as their spokes man. hist as ho docs in many other cases. 10. "And bimon Peter an swercu. His original name was Simon or Simeon. Peter was an addi tional name conferred by Jesus to ex press his nature and work in tlie church (John It 41. 1'-'). Simon Peter was ono of tho quickest to perceive truth, and the readiest to utter it. Jesus nues tion was like a match to powder, and the convictions within him, condensed in a compact form, burst out from thu fullness of his heart. ."Thou art tne Christ," the Anointed One, the Mos sinh. "Christ" is the Greek and "Mes siah" is the Hebrew for "anointed." Anointing was the method by which kings, nnd sometimes prophet, were set apart for their work. "The Son of the living God." The Son of liod in tho highest sense, which could be asserted of no other being. God is here styled living God, because lie is the author of all life and existence; hence, self-ex ü.tcnt, eternal. The Son of the living God was one who partook of that liv ing, self-existent and eternal nature 17. "Messed art thou." Üecause thou hast opened thy heart to the truth; because thou hast broken from tho bondage of Jewish prejudice and worldly vision; because thou hast such firm confidence in such a Saviour, laith, knowledge of Christ as the Son of God, almighty to save and infinite in love; a heart in which truth finds a natura Boil; a character in harmony with Jesus; broader outlooks Into truths all arc exquisite blessings. "Simon llar-jona;" i. e., son of Jonah, liar is Aramaic (the Syr'iac Hebrew then in use) for son. Jonah should begin with a capital .1, as in the U. V. "For llcsh and blood:"' no man, no weak mortal hath revealed this unto you. It has not Its origin in the mere human knowledge, in the workings of the human mind. "Hut my Father which ia in Heaven." iMtAcTicAh st;o(ii;sTtoNS. What think ye of Christ? is the t'reat question of life. "Of nil Ideas, none nre so iiniKjrtnnt as the religious. Of all religious ideas, none are so impor tant us the right idea of Christ." Thomas. V. IS. llie trim church Is sustained and built up by those who have a llv ing faith in thejDivine Son of the living God. Christ Is the great rock founda tion on which the apostles rest, but they are rock foundations for tho structure nbove them; and wc, resting on them, may be foundation stone tat those who cotnn after us.
How Thiol Wo offer One Hundred Dollars Rowan! for
nv euo of CaUrrh that cannot bo cured by Hall's Cuturrh Cure. F. J. Ciiunkv ä Co.. Props., Toledo, O, We. the uiulerslunud. Imvo known P. .7, Cheney for tho hist 15 years, and hellovo him perfectly honorable in nil business transactions and financially nblo to carry out any obligation mado by their llrm. v etil (C Tniax, Wholesale Druggists, i odo. O. Wuldinir. Kiiuinn & Marvin, Wholcsalo Dpigpista, Toledo, 0, Hall's Catarrh Curo U taken Internally, acting directly on tho blood and mucous jurfaecs nf tho svstem. Price, TSe. per bottle. Sold by aUDrmfgista. Testimonials free. Hall's Family l'Uls. ate. ortatvvini nflvs ho has scarcely slept a wink sim-o tins day he sold his vote." "Thoroughly ashamed or hinu-elf, elit' "Vep; lie's learned somehow that unuiher man gold :noro than he did." Tho Truo l.uiuttvo 1'rluclplo Of tho plants used in tnnuufacturhig tho pleasant remedy, Syrup of Fin, has a permaneiitlylietieiii ial effect on tho human system, whi'o tue cheap vegetable extracts nnd nei-.il solutions, tisii Uly sohl ik uieuiciims. nre periiuuieMlv injurious. Poing well In loniUM, ou will uw lim irun n-iiieuj uiuy. Manufactured by California Fig Syrup Co. X Hap ATTtcif. IJell "Was .Tones feaI..L- ,,,1,,. Poll Terrihlv! Wo wcro three hours ahead of the rceord iiteno time, and in- didn't take the sllgliicsl inter est in it. "Puck. Stillt tho IViiturr In Threo Tart-. And about one and a third of the last of ... ,1... I. .Kin . f ,,n,iti lntlt .' r f uiusu rviiiL-ruiii.- in . Hostetter's Stomach Hitters, tho most Idclily sanctioned and widely known remeuv in existence for dvspepsia, hu-k of stamina, liver complaint, cousupaiiou, norvuuauv-, incipient rheumatism and inactivity of tho kidnevs. Neither spurious imitation nor ttmiorhiind eomiM'tUlon has affected the sale of this genuine remedy. Pnr--"Vns vo hearin' thnt Joanln An derson's gettin' maini't'" Kirsty "Stupit creatur! Hoo Is she able tau keep a nianP' Punch. S3.00 to Catlfornhk Is price of double berth iu Tourist Sleeping Car from Kansas City on tho famous Phillips-Roek Island Tourist Excursions." Throufli cars on fast trains leave Kansas City Wednesdays via Ft. Worth und lil l'aso, anil r ruiavs via iseente nouio. v rue for particulars "to G. 1). Uacon, G. A. P. U., lUti .. -Ith St., t. Lotus, .no. Jons r-ciusTUX, u. v. iuicngo. Virnf or the Aztixs. An Aztec maxim roads: "Woe to tho man who finds himself the giddy people's idol." Yonkers (Jiwctte. rnr.cK Colds nnd Bronchitis with Halo s llonev of llorehound and Tor Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in ot.e minute. Aua "Is Jack Rouvrs a talltaMvcmanl" Helen "1 vo Uvn tvung fortv.o years to make him speak." IJfe. There's Hard
S9 O
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MM. SLE55
FOR ALL WOMEN WHO USE Clai rette Soar
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MAR Kf
MRKJAIRBMGQMPANY.ST.LOUIS.
Scott's Emulsion of Cod-livor Oil, with Hypophosphitcs of Lim and Soda, is a constructive food that nourishes, onrichos ths blood, croates solid flash, stops wasting and givos strength. It is for all Wasting Diseases like Consumption, Scrofula, Anaemia, Miraimuij or for Oougbs and Golds, Son Throat, Broncliitia, Weak Lungs, Las of Flsth and Qtneral Debility. Scott's Emulsion has nooqual as Nourishment for Babies and Growing Children. Buy only the genuine put up in talmon-cotortd wrapptr. Stndfor pamplH 01 Salt's Emuttitn. FREE, ett tewne, N. Y. All Drug fists, to oents and SI.
Rheumatic Pains Return whon tho colder weather ccmes. They nro caused by lactlo ueld hi tho blood, which frequently etiles tu tho joints. This poisonous taint must bo ro-
J-Jood' g Sarsab pariiia Cures moved. Hood's Harmtparilla conquers rheumatism becauso rV U drives out of tho blood every form of impurity. It makes pure, rich blood. "1 suilorod with rheumatism iu my left foot I took Rood's Barsuparilla and the pain Is nil göno." Miss R, R. Hlake, Mills House, Charleston, S. C. Hood's Plllo prevent constipation. 0i of iiiy children had nl rcry bad dtecluiraefrum the. nwc. J'iicfcfiiH piwcrdfdj clthmit oenejlt. AfUrmlnyl Ely's Ovum if aim n thort I timcUif.dlscnscwiii rural I 0. A, Cury, Conifni. A. r. CATARRH ELY'S CHKAM BALM Opnnnilcle.ni'es Ilm Niiiil Pnn'iiuo-. Alln-j Pixm nml liitl.'ttiuniitlon. lletil. the sorn. I'roten Out Metulir.inu iroiu eoliU. Itc-ture tli Seil- of Thki nml Smell. Thu llulm lscjulckly oljuorbuitanj üitu tollof at once. A pnrtleleU nppltoit Intornrh notrll unit lssgrabio. I'ripw.'oc-i'iit lit Driitfti-mir hy mini. KI.Y HUorilKlls. Ui Wnrrun Street. Nuw Yorh. W. L. Douclas Ä O UAE1 ISTHEBEST. mi3 OnUL riTroR A KINO. 3. CORDOVAN, 43.5o Fine Calf &I(angarix 3.8PP0LICE.35OLE3. .9 UnPklMr,.. , . EXTRA rillCB0YSSCHQSLSHC2L LyVDIlZSürND FOR CATALtJCUC W'L'DOUGLA DRO Over One Mllltoa People wear the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory I'liey give the be-t value lor the money, ritcv equal cu.tuin shoes hi style and lit. t liclr weorinjc qunlitiesare unsurpasscJ. The prices ore unilorm, stamprü on sole. From St t 5.1 saved oer other makca. li your itiUi cannot supply yuu w can. Work on Hand when you try to wash without Pearline. Your hands show the hard work ; your clothes show the wear. Pearline is harmless to the hands or fabric. It saves the Rub, Pub, Rub that wears : it saves the work that tires. It is cheap, safe and convenient. Get the best,
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mi
when you get something to wash
with, boap has Deen due Pearline is.
Spare Pearline
Spoil the Wash HEALTH COMFORT WORRY WORK-WEAR.
