Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 38, Number 4, Jasper, Dubois County, 4 October 1895 — Page 6
FIGHTING IRISHMEN
Anxlctu lit I.IImt.!- Iba Irren llt lir lltw oliltliMi 'I'Iik Ttiu fur .luIt.tlKiu llitl l'aavril. mill Now Iii Nworil H illii-r t litu l.CUIittlvi l.u,t incuts Mu.t ln .Ijipt'Mlril lo ..In II'Diiiiu Vau Ki. C'rtiwii -"Sit. 1" In Drin ml, Ciuc.voo, Sept. 20. "Revolution." written ni big, llatiti nr letters, was the text of ycsierduy'si proceedings of the Irish iiiiiionul convention; ami, when the body adjourned last evening to await the reports of the committees un resolution und way und ineaih, there did not remaiu a 1 ingenue, doubt tu the niiiul of a single delegate regarding the exact purpose and policy of tho-e wIiono ea'l had .summoned them to Chicago. There was no heating about the bush, no veiling in honeyed phrases of the object of the gathering. It was boldly declared by Irish-Americans from different parts of the countrysome of them men of national reputation, that, no matter what the he ut i incuts of the American government, or the American people, the time had arrived for the Irish in America to abandon constitutional agilnUun, to take up the .sword, and to seeic the independence of their isle by the use of weapons rather than through' legislative enactment. Theorgunfzation of a standingarmy, I ready to do battle whenever the opportunity should present itself, was advocated amid frantic enthusiasm which culminated in a wild scene when a 2ft w Yorie delegate named the chairman, e.v-C.ingressiutm John V. Finerty, as the tir.st president of the Irish republic of the near future. Hatred of England and of every thing English was expressed iu vehement language in every speech, und the cheers, and yells of app oval were interlarded with hoots, hisses and groans for the powers that be the Atlantic. across As to the matter of ways and means it was msirUed that the delegates and these behind them had been iu.-trti-meutal in securing the greater proportion of the huudred.s of thousands, of dollars thut have been collected and forwarded to the Iri.sh parliamentary party riuriug the past live years, and that ten times the total thus collected wi nid he contributed by the Irish race in America upon the pledge that the mones would be Used in preparing (or a tight iu the open. Maurice V. Wilhere, of Philadelphia, and OTfeil Kyuu, of St. Louis, the recognized Irish-American leaders of their respective states, and O'Donovau Kdssa. who was introduced as the "World renowned and unconquerable , Irish rebel." and was awarded the ovation of the day. Were the principal speaker, ana when the convention adjourned by limitation of time, two-thirds of the delegates were yelling for the appearance of P. ... Tyuau. the "So. 1" of t!ie Phoenix park tragedy. They were pacified only with the icomlsa thathe would appear iu the programme to-day. CONSOLATION FOR JOHN BULL. Aa Amrrlcitn Sailboat Itfiateu ! an EtiCllsh Competitor. Cr.XTUK Island, X. Y.. Sept, 20. Lust night for the second time since the trophy known as the America'. cup was brought to this country in 1851, a Hritish boat has won a yuclit race from an American b.at. Spruce IV, has captured the second of the Seawanhaka club's challenge series for small boats, defeating Ilthelwynn, the defender, by a narrow margin of twenty-three seconds in a twelve-mile race over a triangular course of two miles a side. The contest was fought out in a wind o strength varying from nothing up to eigtit miles an hour, and which shifted to nearly all po.nts of the compass. 1 lie battle royal wa- fought during the lifth and sixth legs of the course. or from the beginning of the eighth to ' tin end of the twelfth mile. On the I ttfih leg the racers were most of the J time squarely before the wind, with j sp nnakers to port and bjonii to Marboard, gelling wind from the south- i eu while west of them sailing craft luv I strong ea ilerly air. It was a strange "pocket" of wind, au I when it linally broke and both boats trot the prevailing breeze and rea died the rest of the way to the lifth j mark, the advantage was with Ethel ' wynn by four seconds, as the timing, proved. I On the final two miles home it was windward work in the best air of the day, and while the American boat followed the traditions of the shell-backs of Oyster l!jy and vicinity in working against the ebb tide to the finish at Center Island buoy. Mr. lirandt peraisled in short tacks, which gave him frequent chances to get some advantage of the unfavorable tide, an exhibition of judgment that linally landed him a winner by & small margin, depite the traditions of the watermen hereabouts. It was an exciting race from the start, for at various times i during its progress over each side of ! .1... 4t.. ft .... t 1...., 1.. ..!..... mu ii Lilian; um ni; Liiuii niv; vrwiiui v. the little llyer.s was ahead. Bt-llo Fouri-lir. S. U., Swrpt lir Finnin. I)i:.viwoot, S. I)., Sept. !21 The business part of the town of Helle Fourehe, S. D., was almost entirely hwept away by fire at an early houi yesterday morning. About thlrtv business houses were burned. The loss is about 3)9,000; Insurance, only Viirtial. FITZS'.MMONS HURT. llio L-s itf tlm riiuilUt lorn Sir Mil Vti l.ioil. Fitz-! Atlanta, fla., Sept. 21. Hob 1 biiiitnotis stoppe l lere last night and gave a sparring exhibition at the Co - lumhtn. His cub lion came within an are of knock --ng him out before the curtain was raised. FUxshnuions was feeding the brute when he turned on him. Out; claw closed on a leg and puLed away some of thoilcsh and hall of the garment. Fittslmmons wai nainfulK hurt, but nut seriously In
FROM THE ORIENT.
Tlio hol.-r.i i:pMrnitf HnyMIr M1.iltlnit In .Ikjihii ViiUtilimui rrellvUjr ', ,,f Ii I iviril of n nuiiilrcil Arrel for i'nniphi-iiT In Kiel Iwj Micrr, liulii.lliiE Ho l.c4iWr f III" Veset. V.vxcouvKit. H. a, Sept. 24. Thu steamship Empress of India arrived here Tuesday evening, eleven days from Yokohama. Advices by mail from Japan indicate a decrease In the number of cases of cholera, the number of new cases in Tokio daily having increased from forty or fifty to only nineteen, lie fore the "ship sailed from Yokohama the disease had almost disappeared, and marines were freely allowed ashore there. A Foo-Chow correspondent of the China Mail states that upwards of 100 persons have Wen arrested for complicity in the ICu-Cheng massacre, including the leader of the vegetarian and his two chief lieutenants, for whom a reward of S'JOO had been offered. The trials are proceeding slowly, but out of the twenty-seven who "have been tried, twenty-three have been convicted, and there is strong evidence against thirty-one others. A Cheng-Tu report says thatTW taeli is to be paid as an indemnity for the damage done to Hornau Catholic missions during the riots. The king of Corea has granted exclusive mining rights in the province of P.vonsr an Do for twenty-live years to an American trading company. The company is to pay one-fourth of iti protits into the royal treasury. The Japanese press condemns its countrymen for want of enterprise in allowing themselves to be thus forestalled by Americans. The marked growth of America's silk purcha-es from Japan during the past ten years is quite a feature m tue lannnese trade. These purchases increased from 10,500,000 yen in 1SS3 to 25.500,000 iu 1S9 1. MARY DAILY CROOK. Dralh of the Wliluir of Otn. tJporso Crook Their Itomaiirt'. Washixotox, Sept. 2d Mrs. Mary D. Crook, widow of lien. (leorge Crook, United States army, died at Oakland. Md., at 5:30 o'clock Tuesday morning. The remains will be buried at Arlington cemetery beside those of the general. There is a decided romance connected with her courtship by Gen. Crook. .She was a south theru woman, born and rally atliliated with her ! bred, and natu relatives and many friends on the ; other .sid-V Notwithstanding this, the brave Union soldier wooed her during the war and finally won her. In February, 1SC3, while she was visiting her sister near Oakland, and the surrounding country was filled with confederate troops. Hn. Crook made a desperate effort to see her, with the resul that he was captured by the enemy uear her house and kept a prisoner for several weeks, when he was exchanged. He renewed his suit at the first opportunity with so much ardor and success that the couple were married soon after the close of the war. and his bride accompanied him to the west, and was always near him in his Indian campaigns. Her tact and good MMise made friends for both of them at h time when friends were needed. QUALIFICATIONS ro He rinl 1jt Consular Ontccrt Under Ihf w Onlrr. Washington, Sept. 20. To give effect to the president's order of providing for the examination of candidates for consulates, the secretary of the treasury has appointed a board, consisting of the third assistant secretary of state, the solicitor and the chief of the consular bureau, to examine the candidatcsas they are nominated by the president. The examination will be severe, but is especially intended to ascertain the fitness of the candidate for each particular vacancy, of which there are now eleven. It will cover general education, knowledge of languages, of the particular country to which the appointment is to be made, functions of consuls, treatment of United States vessels in foreign ports, passports, treaties relating to tlie country, wrecks, wrongs to United States citizens, invoices and general business methods, knowledge of the consular regulations, and such other matters as the board may deem im portant in each particular case. THE CRISIS AT HAND Warfar-Tha Im Manltob. School l'rolnr ICrfmp to Comirim!. Chicago, Sept A dispatch from Winnipeg, Man., says: The crisis in the Manitoban parochial school warfare is close at hand. Sir McKenzie Howell, Dominion premier, came to Winnipeg last week to offer a compromise to Mr.Grcenway.thc Manitoba premier, hut the Manitoba government refused to consider any compromise measure. The belief now is that the Canadian parliament will le called together to pass remedial legislation overriding the school act of Manitoba and restoring Catholic schools, and that then an appeal to the countrv will be made. The election is certain to be the most bitter in tho historv f tho. eotnf trv. (Jrccnwny and his alliieren ts say tfiey will resist the ri.ovt iOuiKMitof the Catholic. schools in the face of an order passed by thö Dominion par liament. ORGANIZED ESPIONAGE In tliw Torta of erwany Tlirr Artut Alrrariy .Mal , London, fcepu -i ' Central Jiewa fro London. Sept. 20. A tlispntch to the in Hetriui says an ex nfllcer of the Kavnria army, tin inen l'falfTer, has been taken into custody In connection with the reVcnt arrest ologno espionage Tho progress of the
for
inquiry In the cases of thrt i;oiogns j poiiiicu'ns nu cuiiors tiu cuum uu. prisoners revealed a spy sysiein hav- ! occur has occurred. There is no need ,l.,g agencies It. every great) German j o Hgurc .and et PJo
reM. nnd 1'faifTcr Isnllcgcil to have ' '
M'KINLEY'S MISTAKE. Tk Champion of rrotictlnn Ignores All Utur Hut :t.t Tariff, 'llie speeches of Sherman and McKinley at SprlngHeld. 0.,nro not encouraging. Not a word was said by
either of them marking out a construe tive policv to meet the exigencies of the times. As of the democracy of out, their whole stock In trade consists of denunciation of the other fellows. without a hint of what they would do j to remedy a situation due, more than to anything eis, to their own enact ments. When McKinley said the tariff must be and is the Issue, the wish was wholly responsible for the thought, which hns no other foundation. What about the overshadowing financial question and the preservation of the gold value standard and the integrity of the currency? Hardly a word ieI yoad damning the administration for Us efforts put forth to rescue the naI tion from the most critical financial I position it has ever been in. ! Uov. McKinley did touch upon the i need of mora revenue, which is a matI ter to bo emphasized. Hut he would 1 simply malce it an excuse for advancing not the revenue duties, nut the socalled protective duties, which are debigned to check and not increase iiuty- ! paving importations. He repeated the j familiar claim that "at no time from j the passage of the republican tariff law of 1S00 down to the close of PresiI dent Hnrnson's administration did that ' law fail to raise all the revenue needed 1 to meet evcrv expense of the general i government, and during no part of that , period did the gold reserve lau below '- S105.tKW.000." What are the facts about this? The ' MeKinlev tariff did not go into full elTeet until Anril. 1S91. when the duI ties were removed from nv.v sugar. t The secretary of the treasury had ' meantime paid off a year's interest on the funded debt in advance, and things w.r. all cleared un for two years of generous existence for the treasury, i Tne results can be seen from this com- ! parisoa of the net cash balance and ! funded debt as they stood oa April 1, , 1S91, and March 1, 1S03, when the liari rion recrime ended: ! Total cash balance. Arr.l. 1S01 fl.-.C6.CJ I I'unJcU debt. April. I. l?öl JI3 'l-OJ' Tntnlrnvh liaimce. March. 1M3 U'l.lS'.O-T , Kum!.l djbt. Maren 1. 1W3 &W.C3I.I) The treasury in this tune had lost I S3-l,'.'97,0O ) iu net cash and reduced the ' debt bat S's,500,0JJ. The McKinley 1 act had failed by so much, at least, to provide the necessary revenue, lhe I gold reserve had meantime fallen from nearlv S130.WO.O,W to SIOJ.'JJO.WJ. öo ranUUv was the government beginning to run behind that Secretary Foster, in his report of Dessmber, ISO-, said that "thu revenues should bo so in creased as to enabh the treasury de partment to maintain a gold reserve of not- less than SirJS.Ooa.CKM." I f, as Goi .McKinley now says, tho McKinley tarilT act yielded sutlicicat revenue, why, after two years, was more revenue needed to keep up a gold reserve to S12j.O),000 when the act started out with a reserve nearly 5-5,003,O00 larger than that? Hut it will be said that the demo cratic victory in November, lSDi caused importations and revenue to fall off because of an anticipated re duction of the tariff. What are tho facts here'.' The revenue from cus toms after Mr. Cleveland s election m 189J were larger than they had boon in tho corresponding months of tho previous year that great and prosper ous republican year of 1531-, when tnc prospeet of a democratic victory had not come into being in the mind of anvbodv. In No?embcr, IS3J, for ex ample, customs receipts aggregated 514,200,000, against srTO3,oyo in tne previous year; in December, S17.2O0,000. against 514.300,000; from January 1 to March 1, with a democratic president and congress preparing to tnke their wiats, S37.C00.OGO. against S.11,100,000 in the same time the year before. And yet tho treasury was all this . . time running behind, and Secretary Foster had given an order to the bureau of engraving and printing to prepare plates for a new issue of bonds. Gov. McKinley's sincerity in asserting that at no time lid his tariff law fail to yield all needed revenue does not thine forth very brilliantly in the face of these disagreeable facts. And aH he can suggest by way of remedy for our present difficulties is a restoration of his deficit-breeding and debt-increasing tariiT. It is just as well to keep these f acU of recent political history in view. Tho people want ta see fair play. They are not greatly impressed just nnw with democratic capacity In gov- ! ernment, but they will not applaud this solemn-faced stone-throwing irora I ... . . , 1 .l-..lwwl 11 T-nniiiiiin-m nariv leaucr uüu"v. ... nrpr with n. record of financiering reck less and demagogic beyond anything known to the nation in years. Spring field (Mass.) Republican, Men are wanted. The activity in the iron trade makes it necessary to nil available men. To a free trader this situation is particularly jUsfetorv. Hriik trade and steady employment at good wages of all capablo workmen is just what the free trader considers an excellent industrial condition. This condition has followed r .reduction of tho tariff on iron and steel goods from thirty to thirty-five per ccnL Now, if the high protection ists in the McKinley school in I'enn nylvanin and elsewhere do not like this, and if the workingmcn Uo not like it there is n way to change iL It is simply to rccnact the Mckinley tariff Taw. There will be no more com plaint alnnit scarcity of capable men then. Uticr. (N. l.) Observer. The general fact of the steady depression of wages from 18'Jt to 1604 under the McKinley act cannot be de nied. The people know it. What the country is much more interested In, i however. Is tho rise in wages, the roof I duccrt cost of necessaries and the return of prosperity under tho demof cratic tariff. What all the republican
REPUBLICANISM AND LABOR. l)rprlnx Effert of Urpubtlmit I.rjcUU
Huh on ABierhiOi Industry. The fact that labor Is. prosperous ist source of much trouble to some of the republican organs of the country that nre constitutionally opiwou w rccutivir ingany such stateof affairs with ithecxistenceof a democratic administration. They do not have to accouut lor any new triumph of labor over capital, for it is the unmistakable lesson ot tno re cent past that the interests of capital nd labor are identical, anu mat one . . i cannot prosper without tue weuare of the other. They are not embar rassed by any better place which labor holds iu the economic system, lor tue position of labor has already been won, and is recognized in the statutes' of tlu state and of the nation, lint whal puzzles theso moldeni of party senti ment is to cpiam tue recovery i-v j labor of the place it held before the j crushing depression set in two years Labor has not only recovered tins i place, out has made it more secure and ) hns a brighter outlook lor the nmire than ever before in the history of tho country. The position held uy tnoso who work is a moru commanding one s than thev have ever before held, and the fact is largely due to their own ef forts. It was the voto of the wage earners mat overthrew .ncivunu;. iiu and established a tariff for tho people. Thev elected tho comrress that did away with the ruinous financial policy of the republican party, insisting that the dollar with which the workingman is paid snail oe n-, gwi a . i the dollar paid to the government bondholder. With this accomplished, and with a wise conduct of its nffnirs, the future of labor is assured. Industry is nourishing, wages continue to advance, the relations between capital and labor are, with a few exceptions, harmonious, and the republican spell binders are confronted by conditions , that drive them to subterfuge and misrepresentation. Detroit Free Press. PROSPERITY AND POLITICS. What tho Working reojile Are Mot In I crested In. The people can be trusted to rcmem ber the operations of the .McKinley tar iff and to observe the effects cf the nr,sent one. Thev know that there
was no increase m wagesto correspond , periods, and from which it is iuiossiwith tho increase in duties under the . blc to arouse him. The longest spell .McKinley act. They know, as "the 0f the kind lasted ninety-four hour, shopping woman" told .Mr. Heed, that i While in this comatose condition he is there was an increase in prices. They , to all nnnenrnnces lifeless, although
remeniber that Gov. Campbell and other democratic speakers vainly chnl lenged the republicans in the cam paign of 1S91 to name one instance ol an increase of wares in the industries that had received higher bounties in return for their campaign contributions. They remember the Homestead workers in particular actual reductions in wages. Other instances reported from time to time in the daily news, recently reprinted iu the World and never before questioned, hava been made the subject of quibbling denials as to the extent or time or causs of the reductions. Hut the general fact of the steady depression of wages from 1S91 to 1SJ under the McKinley act cannot be denied. The pcoplo know it. What the country is much more interested iu, however, is the rise in wages, the reduced cost of necessaries and the return of prosperity under the democratic tariff. What all ths republican politicians and editors said could not occur has occurred. There is no need of figures, and facts prove this. Tho people see and feel and rejoico in it- And this Gov. McKinley will find is to bo the main factor m the approaching elections, and especially In the more important one next year. The people cannot be de luded into denying the good tims nor into preferring politics to prosperity. They ask only for an era of peace in which to improve to the utmost, tne opportunity that has come to them. And they intend to have iL xWorld. PARAGRAPHIC POINTERS. republican enthusiasm for 1S03 is decidedly on the decrease as wie prosperity of the country is on tno in creaseChicago Chronicle. Them is renutable authority for statine- that the boom of every republican candidate for the presidency has been sidetracked, and yet It remains a moral ecrtalnty that a nomination will be made by tho national convention. Detroit. Tree rress. With tho addition this year. made or projee'ed, of eight hundred thousand spindles to tne cotton mius in the south, representing an invest ment of fifteen million dollars, doesn t Mr. McKinley see how illogical he Is as a presidential candidate? Y. World. Wool growers receive better prices for their wool than when the McKinley law was in force and about twelve dollars a year per capita is saved to the purchasers of woolen goods. The party that advocates tho restoration of McKinley duties on wool will be largely in the minority. Arkansas Gazette. Why don't those republican papers which insist that tho tariff is an issue in this year's politics be more explicit? People cannot be deceived by glittering generalities. In what way is the tariff an issue? Arc the republican campaigners going to demand the restoration of the odious McKinley law as soon ns practicable? Cincinnati Knquirer. Three years ago tho exportation of a few millions of gold and a corresponding shrinkage of the gold reserve would have attracted no attention. Hut now, since we have had a practical Illustration o' the evil effects that can result from a raid on the reserve through our beautiful system of paper currency, the fluctuations of tho reservo are watched in some quarters with anxiety. Hut thcro is no occaBion for any uneasiness whatever. As long as Cleveland is president and Carlisle secretary of the treasury the gold reserve, our national credit and tha people's money will bo protected.--Louiftvllln Courler-JoaraaL
PERSONAL AND LITERARY. Miss Irene Langhnrne, the fiancee pf Mr. ( I). Ulbson, is famed for lvliuess throughout the south, he isone of the four noted houthern beauties commonly known in Washington as "the Four Unices." Chief Justice Fuller of the United States hupreme court said the other day in the course iff an interview: "If we want to live to h green old age we should stay hi harness. The dry rot of aimlessness eats out existence." No meinlier of the duke of Argyle's family attended his recent wedding to his third wife. The new duchess, by the way. was once Wfore engaged, and hr boYothed died on the day fixed for the wedding. He left her a larg fortune. Steiuitr., the chess player, sometimes becomes so absorbed in consider-
u bkl tj,!lt i,tf will stand .tili Jn thu mosl crinvde(1 thoroughfare. It ,,, . 1,1.., that on one occasion ho caused such an obstruction that a policeman told him to move on. "Excuse me." replied the champion, absently, "but it is your move." Within a short time there will arrive in New York Hev. Maskazoo Tai, one of the most eminent scholars of Japan, who has come to this country to study the social, political and religious principles of American civilization. Mr. Tai is an Episcopal clergyman and belongs to what was known In Japan twenty-live years ago as tho tidier caste. -1 oston has a ighthonsc Uccpcm unuguicr wild, pcrnup, i'i "- lated Ida Lewis, yet she is an nccom- ; plished oars woman as well as n versatile writer. Miss Louise Lyndeii has lived with hrr father on that beauti ful headland for nearly fifteen years. and although a graduate of the Hosten Girl's high school in 1-570, has pre- ! ferred to keep herself on the Island summer and winter, ever since nor - . fatlier was appointed as leeeper oi tue : lfi.ht in is70. Miss Lvnden is an aci coimdishcd photographer, and many of her charming stwries arc illustrated ' bv her owupictures. A citizen of Traverse City, Mich., is afflicted with an odd and embarrassing physical peculiarity. At irregular intervals he falls into a trance-like sinte. which continues for uncertain 'usually he is entirely conscious or ! everything going on about him. The I doctors have been unable to help him, and while his friendsknow of his lia bility to the attacks, he naturally feels some nervousness about stirring far from home. No better instance of good fortune coming through sheer luck could lw found, perhaps, than in the experience of a prospector named Mahouey. near Kalispell. Mont., recently. Having nothing whatever to do one afternoon, he, out of pure fancy, as an idle boy would throw stones at a mark, drilled a hole into a projecting hunk of rock and put in a shot, intending to blowout a ton or so of it just to see things fly. When the blast was made he ound that he had broken into a treasure house. There was a big pocket in the rock the sides of which sparkled with almost pure gold. There was enough in sight to net Mahoncy a handsome sum. and if the mine proves as rich as the surface showing indicates he has struck a bonanza. "hümo r b u sT I took a header off mr wtwl An1 thrn wan forced to say. "Hetter titty years of Kur.Jwi Than the rycle of to-uay "Do you think you could learn to ?" "I don't know. George." in m Maud? Khe answered, softly. "I might, ipnnittd German once." Tit-Hits. His Collection. "Who are all .!... f,.lr..,l thu visitor. "Oh! Tho Uicrc . ....... -timm?" said the languid young man That's a collection of photographs of the only girls I ever loved." Indianapolis Journal. Very Important Kpochs. 'There are only two important epochs in a woman's life." said the observant bachelor. "Name them," replied Miss Giddcv. "Heforo fdic is married and after.'"' Detroit Free Hress. Mr. Mchw.it "Great Scott, Lobelia! What arc you waking me up in thi. middle of the nicht for?" Mrs. McSwat "I want to know, dear, if tne mosquitoes are biting you as badly as they are me." Chicago Tribune. Mamma "I had no idea there were nomany men here this reason." Daughter "Unfortunately, mamma, dear, there's not a man among them. It's only another lot of those terrible bloomer girls." Hrooklyn Life. "Did your wife say anything when you got homo so late?" "Not when I got home." nald the other man, sadly. "She waited till I got asleep, and Uvea jrot up about five o'clock to practice on the piano." Indianapolis Journal. A Speedy Change. He (about to propose) "My dear Elise, I do love you." She "You know, of course, I am poor." He "Yes. Miwi Elise, and I hope you will permit mo to be a brother to you!" Humoristische Hlatter. Von Hlutner (earnestly) "Old man, you have no idea how much it costs a man to send his wife away for the summer." IMankington "I suppose not" Von Hlumer "No. utrl Since my wife has lcen away I've lost twenty-Ave dollars a night oa the average." N. Y. Herald. She Apologized tor Her Father. "Angelina." aid the youth, hotly, as he entered the parlor, "It remains for you to say whether our mutual friendship frhafl continue or be ended here at nnw." "What is the matler7 askeil tho beautiful girl, opening her lovely nrli to their widest extent. "Ytuir father has iust ealled me a blasted idioU" "And you want me to apologise for htm?" "I do." "Then I cheerfully do it Father is altogether too frank. und I have of tea told him that even ths truth shoulda't always ba spoke." M. Y. TrtM.
Peculiar la combination, proiorllna mid proce, Uood'a Sarsapariila possesses ixrctiliar curative powers unknowa to any otlmr prcaraUon. This U why It ku a record of cures unequalled hi the history of medicine. It nets directly upoa Uie hloo4 and by making it pure, rich and healthy it cures dbeuse ntid gives good health. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is tho only true blood purifier prominently In the publle eyo to-day, tl 1 for t..
Hood's Pills SK haWtutt constlp Price cent. TUE LUXURY SECURITY IS FOUND IN THE DE LONG PAT ENT HOOK ANW EYE. "5 SEE THAT HUMP ? RtCMAHDSON -DS WHO BROS. PKlLADEiPtiU The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, of ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture wecJs a rerr.evi that cures every kind of Humor, from the '.vorst Scrofula down to a c Mnmon Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred c.i .!,:;, and ver failed except in two cases frith thunder humor.) He has now i.i his ( ; " ii -.sr...,.. possess., n over two nunun-u wiui. 'of i?s value, all within twenty miles of B? ton. Send postal card for book. A benefit is ..hvavs experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warrants! when the right quantity is taken. When ths lungs are aftected it causes shooting pains, like needles Passing through them; the same with he Liver o Bowels. This !s caused bv tiie ducts being stopped, and always disappears In a week after taking it. Head the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary, tat the best you can get, and enough of It. Ui-e, one taMeronrfuI in water at bcd time. Sold by all Drucgists. ESSMAKERS FIND THE ONLY ORICINAL ESIGNS PUBLISHED In This Csuniry IX L'Art ds La Mode, reoa res. wsduiter orenl lUjCrnta Hat riltin TAI Mf. St for tae Jsi .- tawr. THE MORSE-BROUGHTOfl CO., Had. nr t " ' 3 X3art lOtH ttxroot. Bt t. Cth Aw. Brusdwar. NEW YORK. D CATARRH Apply 'rtl'1? cf H ll lm nree.l 1W " tioitrlK Afttr n;-mi-i idrawsrnisbrta llirmu-li Ui- Ii". o ltin"Mlm-i1.f;r r.i-i 1 pr-' fired. nu iJlote retiring. El.rS CHE.VM BALM Otwn n.t clanw tli S1 !?. A'ly l'ln n.l liiiuwmiuun. - it mm a rÄÄ COLD lH HEAD Mutn, nuicur ESS ! f met once .- 7 u ,v.-,. c,,,-l V. vor. EI,V llltuniw.-" ......... . ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR THE BEST .Nursing Hothers.Infants CHILDREN JOHN CAHLU St SONS, Nw Yffc. BEST IN THK VORLD. I -W . ..... ..' "., T THf! fttMNO SUt STOVE P0UM ta cake for f' bltcklnc of s Hove. TUR SUN past; POLISH for s atrick her-dinner shin, prlled snd ppl iahed with a cloth. Bret rras, Caatoa. Mia.
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