Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 37, Number 49, Jasper, Dubois County, 16 August 1895 — Page 2

THE GOLD RESERVE.

Uitr.-inliirt Kelt Ihrr Unt-rnt Hmvy Slilali.cut .lliriil What Will tin llnml Jjiiliratr l ? .tclliic ?.ot:rr t"urll .' No Cu f.ir .Warm MIit. However, Not So aasuliix Hour Will the Tlilo Tl,r" ; i Washington, Aiijj. 9, -Tlit' ittience prcraiUug- among- eertairiireasurjlotS clnls when tliey are approached on1 the' Mibject of the couiUtloa of the gold re-M-rvb ami their absolute refusal to offer any opinion ais to what this out How ofjruhl of the past two weeks .sinifictv, leads to the conclusions in. some ouartt-rs that tlio treasnrv deuartment i uneasy about the .situation. It in hyndicalo vill Im compelled to prore i whether it considers its contract ful- J filled, or whether it feels constrained to assist the government in maintaining the reserve. The rapid diminution of the reserve, the speedy descent from more than S107.OO0.0O0 to a very little margin over the amount the reserve U required to ba, has shown Itow easy a raid, even tinder the guise of the ordinary course of business, can be conducted. Treasury oßlclals an emphatic in their statements tnat this loss of gold is due to legitimate business, ami point to the character of the hotim taking it out to show that it is not the result of speculaticu. Whatever may be the cause, the loss is felt, and will be felt to a still greater extent before the week is ended. There was an intimation at 'tho treasury yesterday that notice would be given to-day of a withdrawal for export Saturday, and officials do not hesitate to admit that the indications point to the further loss of an equal amount if not greater than that which was shipped on yesterday's steamer. At the close of business yesterday afternoon the reserve stood at the S10t.llS.tJC2 mark, a loss over Wednesday of S.UU.H2. The S1.0O0.O0O shipped yesterday had not been reported to the treasury in the otlicial balances from New York, and did not, therefore, appear in the reports until to-day. The actual condition of the treasury, then, finds the reserve amounting to only S103.ll5.Gtj?. Tills shows a lossof S4.50Ö.OOO sine? the syndicate made its payment. July 5, and sent the reserve up to S1O7.50O.203. The gold reserve was not nearly so low as this on the 27th of July, when the syndicate felt called upon to increase it At that time the reserve had dwindled down to n little below S1O5.5OJ.001. and by -Monday it had been swelled to a little more than 51O7.U5O.O00. Some treasury officials who discuss the matter privately assert that unless the syndicate again steps in and fills the gap that has been made, the pubVc will be warranted in believing that the syndicate considers its coutract to have been completed in its entirety, and it is not longer morally bound if not by the disputed meaning of the text of the contract to maintain the reserve. Acting Secretary Curtis said yesterday that he did not know what the intentions of the syndicate were, but so far as the treasury situation was concerned he saw nothing in it now to justify any feeling of alarm. The gold that was going out was sent abroad in the payment of debt, and within a few days, he lelieved, there would be a llow in this direction. Meanwhile the gold continues to go out, and no official expression of the proper interpretation of the bond contract is made. THE LAST OF THE BAND. Tlie Orlslnitt .Ilm Cutiunliir Mft a Violent Death. Tliu Clixlnc a I.njT llccortl .V Mrml.rr of Juant rrir IJ.nd of fturrrilU, II Aftmraril llrramr On of tli Mint l)cpernte l'olloirur of tho Outlaw Jmr Jame. St. Loi:h, Ang. 0. The man known as James Clark who was assassinated on the streets of Telluride. Col.. "Wednesday night, was the original Jim Cummings, the desperado whose red record has lived and grown since the opening of the civil war. Ycsterday n telegram was sent from Telluride to Mrs. Mary Cumtningt, tho aged mother of the desperado, at Independence, Mo It was signed by J. L. Glenn and read as follows: "Jim was killed yesterday. What shall I do with the body." Mrs. Cummings was not jn Independence, being on a visit to relatives in Kansas City. Cumtnings was a member of Qnantrolls band t ,,, , , . of guerillas during the! -war, and was one of the most desperate members of the Jesse James gang of outlaws that later operated from Minnesota to Texas. When pursuit became hot lie went to the mountains, and has since been known as James Clark. He was accustomed to hay that after death his wife would find material in his memoirs that would make her fortune with anv publisher. As town marshal of Telluride he made an enviable record, but strange stories have been told at times about his disappearance and return with large sums of money, supposed to have been acquired in some distant holdtip He must not be eon fused with Wiltrock, who assumed the alias of "Jim Cii minings." robbed the American Hxpres Co. o2 S70.000 on a Missouri Pacific train, and was captured in Chicago. The death of Cutnmlngs removes the last of that band of despurato men who set the exumple of bold robberies, followed later by many imitators. NO TRUTH IN IT. Tho IlothtrhlliU II.ivo Sot l'urclimctl tU .ii:ito:iii.t Copimr -Mluei. Nbw Youk, Aug. 0. The Tribune lays: Several newspapers have announced that the Rothschilds, tho well-known financiers of London, were either tiiMVutlfi tit,.- t t " 1 . w UUI UIIIUCU t negotiations fop U,c purchase of tho ! famous Aimiwnd J 1 " j'i'vr unites 01 Montana. James II. llaggin. one of the owners of the Anaconda mines, denies tit? published statements with considerable emphasis, lie says there Is not an atont of truth In it

SENATOR BLANCH ARD

Would I.H. to Knmr llw Lnticthe Compl roller of tin. Trt-uMiry II.i l'onf miI tint t'rrjr .linlii'lal t'utit-tloii to Pa I'piMi ili ('iii(ltutlitinlllr of tlit Art of tlir lUnlr tli.it Crrutcil III Oltlrn ' Aixtuiimt on tint Susrur lloiiut y IIo)l-L'ji Washington. Avg. l,In the course of the argument of the kug-nr bounty question in the ofliee of the comp troller of the treasury. Donator ltlanehanl, of Louisiana, took strong ground in objecting to the cotir.se of Comptroller Howler in basing- his rc fttal to approvu the payment of the bounty money appropriated by eouj greas on constitutional grounds. Senator fitanrfuirtt. of lA'uietnnn. Senator Blanehard. for the canesugnr producers of Louisiana, addressed the comptroller, under three general heads: First That the comptroller of the treasury is without authority to question the validity of an act of congress. Second Tint t the appropriation called in question is of constitutional warrant. Three That if it be not constitutional, strong equities exist, justifying congress in making the appropriation, and that congress has equitable jurisdiction. Mr. Klanchard in! dressed himself more particularly to the first of these propositions, touching ouly in a general way upon the other two, leaving j it to his associates to amplify theargu- j ment upon them. i The attitude of the comptroller is one of apparent resistance to the orderly execution of an act of congress, he said. An extraordinary spectacle is here . , t presente-z. iiiree gentlemen who. as i benatnrs of the United .States, actively participated In the passage of thebonnty appropriation through the senate, two members of the house of representatives who did tho same in that body, are present at this hearing. ita for what purpose? To present before a subordinate official of tho : treasury department reasons why he I should execute the law of eonsrress. i Upon what degenerate times havi wo fallen that high executive oiliccrs of the government feel competed, in the discharge of their public duties, to appear personally and urge that effect be given to a law of the land. It would seem that their duties do not end witli the enactment of a statute. They must follow it up into the executive branch and see to its proper execution. What is the nature of this office ol comptroller? What are its duties, powers, jurisdiction? Can he organize himself into a court to try the question of constitutional ity, decide against the constitutionality of the act, and thus set it aside as being in his opinion no law at all? Is not an act of congress a rule of conduct for him to follow In the discharge of his duties until it is judicially declared by a proper tribunal to be unconstitutional? The answer to these questions is of the gravest and greatest importance. It involves a consideration of high and heretofore-undefined powers claimed as belonging to public otlicers in Withholding action in cases where specific duties are imposed on them ty posi tive statute. It involves a consnlera tioa of the extent of legislative power. I anil o: the means by which that authority may bo enforced. It involves the expunging of an act of congress from the statute book. If there be in the treasury department a subordinate legislative otllcer witli powers so supreme as to set aside at will an act of congress, it is time for it to become fc-;nerally known, for its consequences arc far-reaching indeed. The constitution provides but one fcource of veto power that of the chief executive. Is it possible that another source of veto power has lain dormant all these years, to spring into I ..-v- . .... . . ... . m ,-, .IMIIUII W I t i. mM ,t l!n nnil fiftttrift -met t t llii .-.isi....... fr : troller of the treasury? The president, it seems must approve an appropriation act as a whole or veto it as a whole. He can not, by the constitution, approve certain items of appropriation in the bill and veto others which do not meet his approval. Not so the comptroller. These pretensions of the comptroller I deny utterly. They must be repudiated by all sound opinion. An act of congrevs, approved by tho president, properly authenticated and reaching the comptroller through tho proper channels, must be regarded by him as a law. Uccause the comptroller takes an oath to support the constitution, gives him no authority to question the constitutionality of nit net of congress, that power rests w ah another branch of the government. Senator Mlnnchard devoted himself for the remainder of his time to a presentation of legal propositions and authorities bearing upon the case, and, in conclusion, said: "The principle of bounties was not at all involved in this appropriation bill. That was in the Melvinley act. Congress made the present appropriation because-of strong equities existing hi favor of the producers of sugar in coueqiicticv of a governmental nolicv a t change which came upon them sud- j denly and produced great disaster. It ! . . ,r W e tin this, becaiifie it ww for congress to as mit strictly in I line with justice. I Tnat congress has full power to do ; Du-uce oy ciuzensoi the renuDHc. that i It has equitable jurisdiction in to nr- ' vent the despoiling of its oil izcns.noDO

will have the hurdihood to deny.

THE HORROR GROWS

A t he Nnmlirr or I In- .MWtlui; l'uiit.witly I uri SiMrcliliis tili iliilnt for llio Itrail Who IVrltluil hjr In ii1Ihi of nil i:icttt-Mor)' Itullilliii; In w York Jrn IIimIIim t-otiud ml .Mull)' Wt toll Ai-i -ouiiti'il For. Ni;v Yoiik, Aug 0. The horrors attending the coliap.se of tho eight-story structure at the corner of West Broadway and WeM, Third street yesterday were not lessened, but intensified, today by the finding of three more bodies, making .six dead us far as known. And to add to the calamity, not all the missing have been accounted for. As a result, many anxious friends and relatives hover near the scene, with just u grain of hope to relieve them of the dreadful suspense. The ordeal is a terrible one, ami not a few stout hearts trembled in the faco of so much distress and misery. The work of removing the debris is necessarily slow, owing to the heavy weight of iron beams, braces, brick ceilings und mortar. The workmen have not yet readied the spot where most of tlie bodies are supposed to be lying. The workmen who lo.t their lives are believed to have been in or near the center of the 1 1 ! . uu uuing Wien the crash came. and most of the bodies are expected to be found near the center of the pile of debris. That there are many bodies beueath the ruins there is no doubt. Rut one of the men thought to have been lost has reported himself alive, and it is believed that there are at least nino bodies which will be discovered bforo the ruins have been turned over by the workmen. The work will continue without a momeut's intermission until it is completed. There will be a day gang and a night gang. It is thought that several of the bodies will be found before nightfall. The coroner's inquest, at which an endeavor will be made to tlx the blame for f.w disaster, will be held on the 15th inst. The jury will be composed of civil engineers and business men. At noon to-dav it was learned that Michael Karrell.of Rutherford, X. J.. who was supposed to be iiinong the missing, had reported all right. He escaped from the building as it fell. Th I.i.t of tht niNtlns Coiitlntir to tIro.r. Xi:w York, Aug. 10. All night, under theilamingliglit of gasoline lamps, the gangs of men who were clearing away the ruins worked in the shattered building. The list of the missing has grown, so that, although seven bodies have been recovered, eigiit more are still missing. The seventh body taken from the ruins was uncovered by the workmen shortly after 11 o'clock last night. It was that of Augustus Phillips, the truck driver, whose horse and truck had been found in the street outside the building after the crash, and who was believed to have perished. DEATH OF BARNEY ROLLO, Tho You ii ItiilUn Whom llnlillnc-t'p CaiMeil tho .serine Yallry Itlot. Pki.nceto.y, III., Aug. 0. Rarney Rollo, the Italian who was held upon the public highway about 1 o'clock last Sunday morning, and, after being roblnjd, was shot three times, and which affair was alleged to be the cause of the murderous assaults on the colored settlement about noon of the same day, died to-night at s:17 o'clock. The wonl spread very rapidly through the city, and the Italians seem to be much affected over the death of the young man, who was popular among them. Early this morning ten colored men and forty-five whites were placed on the police force as specials, and under these circumstances the Spring Valley Coal Co. resumed operations, nnd the colored men and their famiÜeN most of whom had taken refuge jh f-uaionviue, six nines uisiant, returned to their homes in Spring Valley. Up to 10 o'clock to-night no firearms had been distributed among the business men. The ten colored men who were appointed have armed themselves mostly with large horse pistols, and they arc considered sufficient to protect the colored .settlement, provided the- arc kept together, as the Italians of Spring Valley have never been known to attempt an attack on any well-armed body of men. either lanre or small The whistles sounded to-niirht for work to-morrow and unless some commotion is caused Jiy the news of the death of Mr. Rcllo, about 1,003 men will goto work in the mines. Nothing has been done as yet in tho way of making arrests. COUNTERFEITERS BOUND OVER Anil I'hireil In .Tall it Mttln Kock to Await Trhtl. LiTTi.K Rock, Ark., Aug. 10. Deputy Marshal Sappington yesterday brought up from Arkndclphia two negroes. Mack and Craig II inkle, who were arrested there Wednesday for making and passing counterfeit money. Mack Illnkle ?s an old hand at the trade, und has served two previous sentences for infringing on Uncle Sam's prerogatives, and Capt Vick says that he is one of the most expert men in the state in the art of raising bills. Ills finest work was in making a S20 bill out of a 81 bill. Roth were bound over In the sum of $1,000, and are now in the iKHiitentiary awaiting trial. THE LEAVEN IS WORKING, Ami thn Cclottl.il Corortininnt In Ite. pomlliii; to OutOili- I'ri-Mtirr. Loxno.v, Aug. 10. An official telegram received here states that imperative orders have been issued from I'ekin to the viceroy of Knieten, directing hltn to instantly despatch troops to Kit-Cheng to protect tho remaining missionary buildings. He was also inhtructed to inquire into the origin of the outrages there and to arraign tho Pnilty persons as quickly as po-ssiblc. i he viceroy obeyed the order as i ooa

tu it was received.

FARMERS NOT BENEFITED. TarlfTn of I.tttlr or Value to agricultural ImliMt rlrt. Kealizlng that the ohl "homo market'' cry will not again fool tho farmer into votiug for a restoration of Melvlnleyism, the protectionist organs ara now trying to devise a scheme for a high taritr on farm products. In spito of the fact that our agricultural industries have been established from one hundred to two hundred and fifty years, the professional "friends of the farmer" are working thu same old "infant industiy" dodge which they used eighty years ago in regard to manufactures. According to those protectionists we have been reading our histories all wrong. Instead of the generally accepted theory that agriculture was the first industry of the country, it appears that the reverse is tho case. When the first settlers lauded on our

shores they found here a number of kind capitalists with factories all ready ' for operation. Reing truly benevolent, as all manufacturers are, these capitalists took pity on the settlers ' and gave them work. After awhile ' some of the settlers heard that land hud been invented in England, so they j sent over for u few ship loads, and ! spreading it out. proceeded to grow I crops on it. The crops grew so well 1 that they decided to make some land . -. .... immiiiiij "' - geinous succeeded . a short tunc in manufacturing a large quantity. In tho meantime the number of factories having increased there was a demand for some more land to put them on. lf til t. iv, vil l.rtc,i il tuiiti I nnliiMnlli. I.i l - ... . - ."I . 1 . atives. In this way the fannini' in - dustry has been gradually built up. so that it is boli(vid flint, n nmtitSi' i - tifif? ...I..... , ...,ll .... 1 1 I 1 ,,1 t.lI! J Youldlead totheinipor ationandpro- . . vi. ..i.&k, tuiiuu. wu; ii uuti uce& ' auction of large areas of land. As America already exports great quantities of all these staple products, it may at first sight seem doubtful where the benefit to the farmers will come in. Skeptical free traders, who believe that thirty years of protection nearly ruined our farmers, will very likely sneer and say that to talk of helping agriculture by high tariffs is all humbug. They will claim that in the long run the prosperity of any country depends on the condition of its farmers, and that to attempt to protect an industry which sells its surplus products in foreign markets is the silliest kind of nonsense. And thev will also assert that it was the great agricultural industiy of this country. established without any government pap, which was the foundation for all our prosperity. Hut then is no use in arguing with these theoretical free trfders. The facts are all on their side, and, anyway, they never could be brought to see the wisdom of making everybody rich by taxing everybody. Let the good, unselfish protectionists stick to their doctrine that the way to help the farmers is by killing foreign trade, and in the course of time they will b'i regarded as merely innocent victims of a harmful superstition. A CALAMITY. Work for thn ur Knclaml Horn Market f'lub-It It Hn Vlsllitnt. According to the Textile Manufacturer's Review a great misfortune to the cotton industry of this country is impending. This is an invention just completed by Draper fc Sons, of Hopedale, Mass., which will nearly double the number of looms that each operative can attend. This improvement in weaving machinery consists of a device which supplies tlie loom automatically with from fourteen to twenty shuttles at a time, so that whenever the weft breaks a new bobbin is supplied and the thread is connected without stopping the loom. This does away with the necessity for stopping and sturting of looms through the breaking of weft or exhaustion of the bobbin, and it is estimated that with the new contrivance weavers can attend to sixteen looms as easily as thoj" can now attend to eight. Tlie result will be that for weaving the same amount of cloth now produced by our cotton mills only one-half as many weavers will be required. Strange to say, this new machine is theproduction of a protectionist firm, which, of course, like all high tariff concerns, is firmly opposed to free trade cheapness. Itut what will bo the effect of its general adoption? The price of cotton clothes will fall, and American women will be able to buy clothes cheaper than they do now. Not only that, but thousands of weavers will be thrown out of work. And all through this diabolical device of some Yankee machinist Rut it must not be. If such a machine has really been invented it should be at once destroyed by the good protectionists of the Roston Home Market club. That organization has for years been warning tho country, and especially New Kngland, against cheap goods. It has ulso been claiming that protection is a good thing because it makes more work. Yet here is an invention which makes things cheaper and with less work. Smash it, kind protectionists, by all means, lest it convert our people to the evil doctrine of getting goods of all kinds, as well as cotton cloth, as cheaply as possibly, and witli the least possible work. What the country needs is to have things scarce and dear. Then we can all work fifteen hours a day, and not get an much for our labor as we do now. Down with this invention of the evil one. Cor. In a rrntrrtnl Imliutry. Under the heading "Women Toiling in. Iron," the New York Press publishes u detailed account of the employment by the Monoiignhcla Tin Plate Co. of a number of women to assist in making tin plate. Had this been in Wales, or Jiugland, we should have had from tho Press denunciations of the terrible effeeLs of free trade in driving women into such disagreeable occupations, lint as tt is in Pittsburgh, the chief manufacturing city of Pennsylvania, und as the industry is a pet one of the protectionists, we suppose it Is all right. How do American working men like the ( idea of their wives r daughters "tolling iu iron?''

t GOOD RESULTS SEEN The I'nttazf. of tili Wilton Milt Mm llroucht i Yiiliuilury liier.. of Witt-r.

Attention wn.- called y tins paper recently to Rradstreet's rcjiort that more than l,oo;,ooi industrial workers have received voluntary advances in wages, averaging 10 pkr cent., within a couple of months. A republican organ correctly says that "nothing ilk this has ever before ben known. " It was not known during the four years the Melvinley law was in force. Wages were not generally advanced so.in after that law took effect, nor at any timo before its repeal. Such a thing as a voluntary hietvase of waues on a large scale was unheard of under that law. Reductions were made in every part of the country, but no advance ut nil of consequence except a few revelling froüi strikes. The Wilson bill was passed last August. Sections of it went into effect soon afterwards and other see ions later, some not until the beginning of 1S0.". It is worthy of note that the upward movement of wages had its beginning in September and has been growing ever since. It began in the woolen mills, one of the results of the placing of wool on the free list. It spread toother textile industries and then became general. A ...Mm nz tin. irmtAK t..w .-..-. i.itni.( lof advances in wages were received daJl rho list for" April inehuies ,J7 : in which tho increase was as much as i 5 ccnt , aU but t, , ; crea8e wah ,() CUIlt w . ( it vas 15 and , several ot, f to 1-0 per cent. In the case of the CmI . ..i..i i ..t clonal! eloakmakers, where 4,000 per sons were employed, an advance of 25 cent, was given. The wages of I l".n lllttllUKIUIIUUia Uli I.IU uds0a rIveP wcre incPl.ast.ti from 10 in iuui 1. ......... r.. ........... . .i. . to 2.1 per cent. One report for Anrii shows a 10 per cenL increase in tho wages of 25.000 employes and another a similar advance in the pay of 2,0'XL These wcre all mill hands in Massachusetts. Onaof the 1. percent, a Ivances mat month aitectea iu,ooo men in Youngstown, O. None of these employes are included in the 1,000,000 covered by Rradstreet's report, which goes back only a coupla of mouths. The total number whose wages have increased since the Wilson bill took effect is probably not far from 2.000,00.). And a conservative estimate places the average advunco I in iu per cqnu for every uonar received by these 2.000,000 wage-earners under the McKinley bill, SI. 10 is received under the Wilson law. If their aggregate monthly earnings amounted then to $103.000,000 a month an aver age oi s.iu per man mey amount now. to SI 10.000,000--a clear gain of $10,000,000 a month or $120.000.000 a year to the wage earners of the country. If the reduction of the tariff under the Wilson bill has not been a leading factor in this wage-advancing movement, why is it that the advances have been confined in the most part to our protected industries? Will some hightariff republican answer the question? SL Louis Republic The Tariff ami tlir Toni Imlattrjr. In spite of the fact that this country exports large quantities of bituminous coal the democratic proposition to put coal on the free list, so as to give New Kngland industries the advantage of getting their coal from near-by mines of Nova Scotia has been vigorously opposed by the protectionists. It was claimed that without the duty of 73 cents per ton the coal industry of this country would be ruined by foreign competition, and that to remove or reduce the tariff would close mines and reduce tlie wages of miners. The Wilson bill, as finally passed, cut down tho duty on coal nearly 0 per cent Was the result what the protectionists had predicted? On the contrary the out put of coal has been increasing during the past six months, and the industry is on a better footing than it has been for years. Under the high tariff wages of C03I miners were frequently reduced all over the countrv during 1691. 1893 and 1S93, and numerous mines wcre shutdown, throwing the employes out of worlc Now under a tariff which has stimulated manufacturing the increased demand for coal in the iron and other industries has raised wages and given more men employment Thus have the facts contradicted another pet theory of the high taritlites. 7 The South Still AKalnm I'rotrrtloo. Encouraged by the demand of the sugar growers of Louisiana for either a protective dutv or a bounty on their product, the high tariff organs have been claiming that tlie southern states were becoming converted to protectionist notions. There is absolutely no ground for the claim. Here and there a few men may be found who are willing to sacrifice their principles and the good of the whole countrv to their selfish interests. Hut the great mass of the people of the south are still firm free traders, knowing as they well do that they have everything to lose and nothing to gain under a high tariff. The main industries of the south need no protection and the few exotics which cannot exist without public support, ought to be allowed to die. Hatred of paternalism in all its forms is too deep rooted in the south to allow a change at this enlightened day, and there need be uo fear that the southern people will ever be found voting for Meivinleyism and all its evils. An Kiauiplf. New Zealand is evidently In earnest in changing her fiscal svstem to free trade, as it is understood and worked out in Kngland. A bill cutting dowa the customs duties to live articles, wine, beer, spirits, tobacco ami opium has passed the house. The revenue from these articles wdl be supplemented by an income tax nnd a land tax. The new plan reduces taxation, in appearanee.to nearly the least possible degree of simplicity. New Zealand will, of course, largely Increase her external trade. The success or failure Of tho experiment will be watched with interest; the effect of it will not be unfelt in other colonies especially in those existing under conditioui similar to those under which New Zea laud Is found. Mono tarr Times.

Impure Blood Manifests itself In hh-cs, plsiples bot', imd otha eruptions which datier iu. lace and cause pais and annovaum npurifying the blood Hood's Karsrarai comp etely cures these trouble and c.ean he skin H iod's Sarsaparilla overc n,e, tint tired, drowsy feeling no Kea . u a!

v-w aim gives strength and vi tgor Hood's Sarsapariiia Is the only true blood purifier pr rnlncntly in the public ejo to-day. l ; blx f ,r Hood's Pills (JE ftgjg . C3TLOOK FOR THIS LOCK BEST SCHOOL SHOE Hi BeS FOR 6 7V-SI.25 10 V-1.50 I 1! t 13!-S1.75 SU 1 to 3 - 2.C0 IF YOU CAN'T GET THEM FRCM YOUR DEALER WRITE TO HAMILTON-BROWN SHOE GO., rCT". T..OTTXS. DRESSMAKE FIND TH2 LATEST PAPiiS FASHIONS ixL'Art de La U.tlt. I Csixed Pistes. ttlrari kj Oir SpttUl Corp if PAKISUA IKTIsTS. Hr"Ordr It of yoor Newsdealer or send 33 ieats for laic.U number to THE MORSE-IROUINTOM CO., 3 East 19th St.. : NEW YORK. Beecnam's pills are for biliousness, bilious headache, dyspepsia, heartburn, torpid liver, dizziness, sick headache, bad taste in the mouth, coated tongue, loss of appetite, sallow skin, etc., when caused by constipation ; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. . Go by the book. Pills toe and s;c a box. Book FREE at your druggist's or write B. F. Allen Co., 36; Canal Street New York. Annual sale more iha 6.000.000 boxe POSITIVE CURE Mtafrrttt, Hmrilgia and htstmnia. Absolutely Safe, Prompt AND Harmless. prut Rrr.ruR size imi-k aki: f25c Ak toot drarcitl. or tni Wc I NUNERVO CHEMICAL CO. 111 Oliv SUMt, ST. LOCIS, MO. HKST IX TIIK WOKI.l). wry -( ft. THE Riswa 9m trove poush i cakes for Central blacklsff of s!ots. TttE SUN PAST! POUSH lor a ltiick after-diBBer shine, applied and polUhcd with a clota. Momut Xtrou. I'rnp., Cantnn. Mai., I'-S-V. tWCe ittWtfA ff:U rcn, ft. vrbaccMirA tu ktk sh. lni'iu1lL,,l!l)wua.UIU,H wlUkjH mC.U. II.. I't f.I-lt Clgtr iu rail Mir UoM t:x. jr jm UJ, turn 11 J tt n a t r a. .!k30 nrcvarartlre. '- ! fOTw. ty l-.H.f Mltrr rum tl". fr, tk Wihli J l:-ttktrr M t-rT trr til ., '"B H- CVISSIDi: CSUAR CO, lf A. IU UnuU i-O-.T. DRUGSTORE CHICAGO FflR Qil I? OR MIGHT TRADE FOR run OMLC cood farm. TOSE I IX OOIID MCATIOX, Sit YAT0RABLS LEASE, ASD TS .DE C&X BS STEADILY INCREASED. Oimer I not m!ni;M ami ha other bnln wfcl 4ma i all hl. Ilm. Pm!l ri.h f jmnt Ith irwl writ for l.lTitr. (Mr erttl. lairrt. fOf 1 '" filt. Vrtr ut tot. .Tri. A.lrtrr. M KRS fcraifiHt, Kill Ato. CM mtmt. Chtrco.ia

SCHOOL Jp

wrm tot'

if

-Ts

25c

Ik

TL

tfaaLaW

H Mat Co jjnTTtmmUooi. Vm H