Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 38, Number 20, Jasper, Dubois County, 24 January 1896 — Page 2
"Taken by sjRpmsE. 1 mcHicAGoma
The Itinult of the KiuliHciiu Cttuen In Slt Lulu- llulli fr'ai-tluu, Sur f tiur , Vlolitt It u- spirit of tlu Call uitw Vitrei' to Makv tint ntit lllniUii;JiMlr llrmtu titrrlr HIT Uli l'rli'. Salt Lakk, I'tah, Jan. 10. The result of the republican eaucuh Tunsdny nlg-ht hy which ox-Dclejjato Frank .1. Cannon ami Arthur llrown wore nominated (or United .State senators, was a tfreat Mirpri.NC. The call for tho caucus exprcsy stated tliat all that was expected of those who ttlgnoti It was. that they uttond and that no Lirislator would ho bound by any action taken. It was this condition tht.t induced the supporters of Col. Truuibo, Juiltfo Goodwin and C. S. Variau ta atteuil. However, as (Joorge Q. Cannon and his son were tim only Mormon eantlidates, and as the former withdrew yesterday afternoon, it was proposed to go through the form of nominating Frank. This was purely perfunctory, as there was no opposition. When it was done the supporters of Judge Hcnuctt and Arthur Brown, in violation of the call, sprung their contest, as each side was coutideut of a majority, and, by unanimous consent, it was decided to vote and make the action binding No time was lost, and on a secret ballot brown received Si votes and was declared the candidate, lSennett receiving 19. The legislature ...ill . . i . i 1 will not ballot until next Tucsdav. aud there is a strong sentiment in favor of ignoring the nominations except as to Cannon. Arthur llrown is :3 years of ago, and was born near Kalamazoo, Mich lie spent his boyhood on a farm and after an academic education graduated at Ann Arbor, afterward taking the law course, lie practiced law in Michigan, with much success, from ISG'i until 1879, when he came to Utah and at once took a position as one of the leader. of the bar. He was one of the founders of the republican party in Utah, and has been active iu politics since the division on party lines in 1891. He is aggressive and fearless and will champion ths free coinage of silver at the ratio of 10 to 1. , Frank J. Cannon, the junior senator, is a Mormon, the son of George Q. Cannon, of the first presidency of the Mormon church. He is under forty years of age and was born in San Francisco, but spent most of his life in Utah. He took up journalism when a very young man and was connected with the San Francisco Chronicle. Afterwards he became editor of the Ogden Standard aud his home is at that city. ONLY AN INCIDENT Of the Awful llarlmrlty Which Civilization 1" Tin It In Armenia. Cuicaoo, Jan. 15. Mihrau K. Serailian, an Armenian student at the University of Chicago, learned yesterday that his father bad been massacred November 30at Kaisarea by the Turks. and tliat his mother, sisters and brothers met the same fate or were '
driven apart to starve or freeze in tho ! uut tnu forty members of the gang esmountains. Serailian, who is training ! caped with three exceptions, and flv to return to Armenia as a teacher of ' t0ns t,,u outfit was shipped to
his fellow-countrymen, is prostrated by the terrible news he received from an Armenian student in tho Philadelphia medical college, who was Iiis classmate in the missionary college at Kaiserei. The town was almost destroyed by fire, and the father, who lived with I his family of wife and five children over the apothecary shop where he made his living, was dragged out and put to death by torture. The. women and children who escaped death returned from the mountains to the site of their old home to find all ruin aud eveiythingof value taken away by the murderous Moslems. Nothing lias been seen of Seraban's mother, sister and brothers since the outrage, aud he mourns them as dead. BOASTFUL BRAVES Krudy to Scalp KnglUhitioii and to Accept a Vrrwut of lllaiikeU. Washington, Jan. 10. The secretary of the interior yesterday received a letter from two Indians in Oklahoma territory, offering their services to tho government should war be declared with Great llritain over the Venezuelan boundary question. The letter i unique in expression and ohirography It reads: ' Q-As-A-Po-C-Ka and Ted, Kickapoo brave, and No-To-Sa-Qua, a famous $u: and Fox scalper, desires the good father to know that if the british llorj insists on a piece of Venezuela, they stand ready to march through the frozen zones of the Ksquimo and scalp the British as they go. "I do suggest a present of a pair of blankets that the impending blizzard may not chill the ardor of their patri otic blood." ALLISON RENOMINATED ily the Joint Kopiihliran Caucus of the Jowa LeRlilature. Dks M0INE8, la., Jan. 1(5. The joSnl caucus of republicans of the house and senate was the only interesting event in the legislature yesterday. It was to nominate a candidate for United States senator, and Win. 11. Allison, senior senator, was nominated by ae ciamntion to succeed himself. Senator Allison was in the city, and was escorted to the hall by a committee, lie was given an ovation and introduced to the caucus as the next president of tho United States. The Mekong Ilontidary. Paws, Jan. 16. The belief obtains here that, by tho terms of the settlement of the Mekong dispute, the government of Great llritain agreed upon the Mekong river as the boundary of british and French territory, from tho north of Shim to the frontier of China, and that there .shall no longer he any question as to the buffer state, the un per Mekong and Siam becoming th sole buffer between the territory of Great llritain and France. This settlement Is regarded as proof of the friendly relations between Franco snd England.
Wliu lite ncuuuTutlr Nutloiml CoiiVf ntloc lijr a StTAtt h, Willi Suliu l.niiU m CIom tMTiuut I'rnt tloallyH llKht Hi t m ie Iii ll-.nl -Moiuy Koro unit Um Frt Hlvel .Men -July 7 hck't'trtl u llio Uato ui Comcutluii, Washington', Jan. 17. Tho democratic national convention will bo held at Chicago on July 7. Such was tho decision reached on the twenty-ninth ballot by the national comutittoo yesterday, after a spirited contest." iu which Chicago won by a bare majority, with St. Louis only two votes behind. It was practically a tight between the free .silver forces on one hand and the hard money men on the other. This statement cannot be taken as literally correct, for several silver men
llnally voted for Chicago, while several 1 other vote were cast for St. I I hard money men. As a matter of fact, tho vote which ' Chicago received was, as Mr. Smalley, ! of Vermont, expressed it, "a natural one," inasmuch as it was cast by the ' states lying within the group known "s the middle west and the east. St. Louis' vote might also be called equally natural, hincc it came mainly from the I OlltllWtst mill tili rt , The free silver men, who were bit- ! terly hostile to New York, made .St. ! Louis their rallvinir point, and throughout the entire 29 ballots tliev . 1 ... .. - v were loyal to the city of their choice. The splendid showing made by St. Louis surprised the best-posted politicians at the Arlington hotel, as it was believed Wednesday night and yesterday morning that she could not rally to exceed 15 or IS vote, that she would then drop out of the race, and that the tight would narrow down to Chicago and Cincinnati. That she did stay in the race, and in the concluding ballots steadily increased her strength, shows how admirably her forces were disciplined. 2s ew York's poor showing did not surprise any one who was familiar with the situation. It was not that me eworks camnaicn was not cleverly managed, for her delegation neglected no argument that could secure her the support of the committee. It was obvious Wednesday afternoon that she could not win, but her representatives pluckily stayed in the tight. THE CREEN GOODS INDUSTRY. The Mint Complete Uuttlt Ever Captured Taken hy the Jvrey City I'olloo. Nkw Yohk, Jan. 17. The most complete green goods outfit ever discovered was captured Wednesday night. Tho outfit, comprises 20i,000 circulars, :.0,000 addressed envelopes. Si,' 000 names of possible victims, 70 state and 70 Urudstreot directories, together with 15 books furnishing the key to the system of operations, formerly the property of the McNally gang, which until a year ago operated in Jersey City. The outfit figured in a raid by the Jersey City police a year or more ago, llrtdgoport. Conn. This was chiefly in I circulars. The rest of the stuff was stored in a liroadway warehouso in ! several large cases. As storage was ! not promptly paid it was sold at rmc(Hon and bought by a man named I Hoodeenbeck, who did not know what tke boxes contained. Some of the gang heard of the sale of tho croods and : opened negotiations for their purchase ' vlnch leu to the seizure of the lot. WITHIN ITS LEGAL RIGHTS. Moderation of the Government ef thi t Tranivaal Republic I London', Jan. 17. Sir Hercules Hobinson, governor of Cape Colony, lias telegraphed to Mr. Joseph Chamber- : lain, secretary of state for the colon ies, stating that the persons arrested at Johannesburg and taken to Pretoria for trial, were accused of treaI son and also of seeking to subvert the government of the Iransvaal, and that they would be tried by the high court of the South African republic, but j that the date of their trial had not yet I been fixed. Gov. Robinson said that tho government of the Transvaal republic seemed to be acting within their legal rights and added that upon leaving Pretoria to return to Cape Town, lie urged President Kruger to observe moderation toward the accused men in order that he and his government might not alienate the sympathy which they now enjoy. Counsel acting in tho interest of the government of Great Britain will be present and watch closely the '.rials of the prisoner.. AN UNRULY LAD. BometklnK of tho Family lllntory of President KruRor. Indianapolis, Ind., Jan. 10. President Kruger of the Transvaal republic has six nephews residing in this city, all of them engaged la business here. Through Andrew Haywood, one of them, It was learned to-day tliat President Kruger's mother came to this country from Germany when a littlo girl and settled in Pennsylvania, where the future president was born. He was an unruly lad, and ran away from home when 12 years of age. His mother died in Philadelphia in 1890 at the age of 103 years. A sister died here seven years ago, nnd a brother was v well-known contractor In this city for SO years. FOR FALSE SWEARING Jacob OraMmuck la Liable to Haarjr Pmaltle. Cuicaoo, Jan. 1G. Jacob Grassmuck, who was chosen tho fourth juror in the Nicholas Marsen murder case, iu which a jury is hard to get, wns excused by Judge Smith yesterday morning, held to the grand jury la t300 bonds aud sent to jail for three mouths for contempt of court. lie an s we red the state's attorney falsely ia swearing he had never appeared la the criminal court as a defendant, at thou ah he wasacauitted at the time.
' I AN mUAHAULfc UUNUKtbS. TRANSPARENT SHAMS.
Hhmilu tho Kl('ro. lie lVrinltte.l to Entr Armt-iili . The True Story of tin Makuliere Would Im I.riirsicil hy Creill lue Wltitt'SMe anil Ihr Moil At riiclinm Oiitrij;t' In .Modern UUtory llecoiue tienerally Knonii Ahrmtil. I'lTTsnt no 11, Pa., Jan. 17. Mr. Ueorge Kennaii, the celebrated traveller, in talking 'ibout Armenia yesterday said: "it is absolutely improbable that tho Ked Cross will seek to enter Armenia to relieve the enormous distress thero for two reasons; the sultan has for bidden it, and, quite justly, our government will oiler Clara barton and her band no asslstanco. Supposing the Red Cross should carry their good Samaritan work into the districts where these massacres are reported; the results would be tliat the reports would give full detail of the atrocities committed by the Turks on the doicusetess Armenians, it is these re ports that the sultan fears, and it is to evade broadcasting them tliat he denies admission to the lied Cross." The country, he says, is now in tho midst of a rigorous winter; it is very mountainous, and the roads at best are hardly more than bridle paths. This would make it impracticable at this season for the members of the society to carry on their work in Armenia. The sultan would never permit tho necessary military escort to guard tho supplies from the attacks of the Kurds, who infest the mountain highways, and the sufferings of the lied Cross people from these causes can only be imagined. Mr. Kcnuan thinks the recent massacres in Armenia the most atrocious in modern historv. ALL ALONG THE LINE SpanUh Victoria Reported Kverywher No Caue for Alarm In Havana. Washington, Jan. 17. Senor Dupuy do Lome, the Spanish minister late yesterday afternoon received the following dispatch dated yesterday, from thedukeof Tetuau, minister "of foreign affairs at Madrid: "Gen. Vnhlez met and disbanded Gomez, killing and wounding some of his men, who were left on the field. Col. Molina defeated a band in tho jurisdiction of Colon. The column of Jorror also defeated the enemy In the Glariera plantation. Col. Marti also met and defeated another band In Sautaie Spiritus. There have been other small encounters, also to the advantage of the Spanish army, hut without great result because of the policy of scattering adopted by the insurgents. I telegraph to you the news with perfect accuracy." Tho Spanish minister declares that tho alarming news published yesterday is without foundation. Gomez is trying to return to the eastern part of tho island, and has had several engagements in Ceiba. Quibiean, (luanajaj and Uejucal, trying to break the Spanish line and pass to the province of Mntanzas. There is no more reason for alarm now, ho says, than two weeks ago, when the insurgents approached Havana, and the Chicago Associated Press recorded the capture of the city. DAIRYMEN IN CONVENTION. The War on Oleomargarine Kx-CongrcM. man llntcli Join tho Itlihy. Cuicaoo, Jan. 17. Tho National Dairy Union convention concluded its labors yesterday afternoon. The time and place for meeting next year will be decided by the executive otiieers. Ex-Congressman W. "W. Hatch, of Missouri, was elected president; D. W. Wilson, of Elgin, secretary, and George W. Linn, of Chicago, treasurer. Most of the former otiieers were re-elected. llesolutious were adopted instructing the secretary to advise tho butter dealers in cities over .0,00O inhabitants located in states having laws regulating or prohibiting the sale of oleomargarine, that the best way to reduce its sale is to form organizations, employ detectives and n lawyer and make cases with the assistance of the state department whose duty it is to regulate the sale or manufacture of the article; also instructing the officers of the union to petition the secretary of agriculture regarding the necessity for purity in agricultural products and to use Iiis iniluenee to huvc the recent ruling of the treasury department as to trade marks and bibles on oleomargarine reissued, sustained aud enfored. The union also expressed Its sense of loss at the defeat of President Hatch for re-electiou to congress, and appealed to the voters of his district to return him at the next election in the interests of agriculture. President Hatch announced that he, Dairy Commissioner Adams of Wisconsin and Congressman Howes, of llaltimore, were a subcommittee on legislation, and tliat ho would proceed at once to Washington to got before congress bills to carry out the objects of the union. Tho next convention will probably bo held In Washington, D. C. Shot at a Negro and Killed Ilia Friend. Havaksah, Gb., Jan. 17. A special from Waycross.Oa., says: "Dr. Henry Collier, representative in the Georgia legislature, was shot and killed Wednesday night, in Statenville by Walter Miller. Miller attempted to shoot a negro and Collier stopped In the way. Miller left for Florida. Ha and Collier were fast friends. CLUB AND RAZOR. Atteaapted Wlfe-Mardrr an4 Halclde at Wllllamaharf X. Y. Nkw York, Jan. 17. Louis Scholl, a wealthy boss mason, who lives at 28 McKlbben street, in Williamsburg, made an unsticccssf ul attempt to murder hin wife with a club early yesterday morning. Then ho cut Iiis own throat with a raiior and la now dying. The couple, who are both 70 years old, lived in apparent hnpplncss and no reason can bo assigned for the deed etiler thun temporary aborratioa of mind
UUtroHgluc Iftrapaclty of tho llejtuhllraa IlltUXI'. The president urged congrens not to take a holiday recess without making provision for a pressing llnnnclitl emergency. Congress did not adjourn. It recognized the need of action at once if there was to bo action in time to do any good. The house piu-sed a tariff bill ami a bond bill, neither of which wns of any use whatever for the purpose of meeting the emergency. Now we are told, after nil this show of alacrity on the part of the house, that 'senators feel there is no necessity for them to nuiku haste," because "neither of these measures can pass for many long weeks and perhaps months." I hereforo senators proceed in the most leisurely way to complete the organization of their house as a republican body and then talk of ad journing for u week without attempting to do anything in response to the president s appeal. Thus we have a complete and dis tressing demonstration of the ineu paeity of either house of the present congress to act rationally in u situa tion which demands prompt action. Tho one thing to be done was to pro vide for the maintenance of gold payments at a time when the gold reserve was liable to be exhausted in the ubfieneo of power to replenish it at once by borrowing. The president asked authority to borrow on the most favorable terms nnd to protect the reserve against further raids hy canceling the redeemed legal tenders or at least holding them in the treasury so they could not bo used again to empty the gold vaults. Tho house responded by passing a tnriff bill, knowing perfectly well that it could not be passed and put into effect in time to do any good, even if it would bring in any gold when in effect, and knowing just as well that it would bring no gold into the treasury except what was drawn out in exchange for legal tenders. It also responded by passing a bond bill depriving the president even of the power he now luus to sell bonds for gold drawn from sources outside of the treasury. In short, tho house passed two bills toembarrass the treasury, not to afford security. And the senate confessed its utter incapacity by placidly organizing ns a republican silver body and going to sleep with the president's alarm bell ringing in it ears. What sort of a congress is this to deal with a state of affairs under which it may become necessary to raise large sums of money? Fuppose war should suddenly break out between this country and Great Britain, how would we fare financially? New loans would have to be authorized, for the treasury department has no authority to issue bonds for war purposes or for any pur poses not specified in the resumption uct, Ilut no reasonable loan actcoulll be had from this congress. Even if the house should develop sense enough to authorize a gold bond tho senate would have none of it. If war should break out now about the first thing this congress would do would be to authorize a great lot of greenbacks and silver certificates against alleged seigniorage. SuspcnFion of gold payments would quickly follow. The currency would depreciate as it did during the civil war. prices would go up to correspond and the eost of the war would be at least twice what it ought to be. And the debt would have to be paid in sound money or the public and private credit of the country would be ruined. War would be a double calamity with such a congress in the saddle. With the possibility of war confronting them people ought to be able to see the importance of a sound and solid monetary system. They ought to see that the government never should exer cise the power to issue legal tender notes except to meet some great exigency, and even then should exercise it so sparingly ns not to cause depreci ation. They ought to sec that such notes should be withdrawn completely at the earliest moment after the passing of the exigency. UuL this congress sees nothing of the kind. It is far less capable of enacting wise financial measures than were tho war congresses of 1861 nnd 18C5. Chicago Chronicle. rrotrctlonlut Trlckory. There is much talk iu tho organs of the "revenue emergency bill,' as the proposed revival of McKinleyism on a moderate scale is called; and there Is an apparent belief on their part that the president can bo cajoled or bulldozed into signing the bill if the senate should pass it on the grouud that it is what be asked for. If it really were what he. asked for there would be some ground for the belief; hut it notoriously is not. Calling it an "emergency revenue bill," no matter how often repeated, cannot blind the intelligent public to the fact that It is nothing of tho kind. There is not tho slightest reason bej ond Dlngley's grandiloquent proclamation to suspect thnt it will ever be a revenue producer; and tbe grandiloquent proclamation is not supported by a single fact. It is absolutely certaia, mmover, that if it wer to become a law within the next six month' its first effect would bo to reduce revenue instead of increasing it, because just as soon as it seemed in any degtcc probable tliat it would pass, the market would be glutted with all the articles upon which the duty ia increased. It is about n naked a bit of protectionist trickery as the country ever witnesred, and it has witnessed a good many in tho past 30 j'cars. Detroit Free PreBs. Mr. Dlngley's gross blunder in the preparation of a new tariff ntcasuro which bo makes an abbreviated bobtailed McKinley bill Is gross even in a matter of detail, Mr. Dinglcy, chair man of tho committee on ways and weans, ought to have been well enough laformed to save his committee from a blunder which designates tho act as the act of August 17, 189, Chicago Ckraaiclfc
The Nraly Hi lirnu of Ilrimhllraaa fef ItrllovliiR the Trt-aaury.
Some of our republican friends are still trying to delude themselves into the belief that the action of congress was a proper response to the president's request to do something to relieve the treasury. "J he house." we are told "prepared and paascd a bill to inercast the revenues of the government, taking at once the sure way of affording tho gold reserve protection," Did it ? On tho republican t Vory tho only trouble with the treasury was a lack of revenue. Tho Dinglcy bill was offered 'is the reined)'. "It will adt $10,000,000 to tho revenues ut once,"snld Mr. Dingley. Well, that is more hau enough revenue required if the repul. lican theory were correct. If tho only trouble was lack of revenue, and this bill supplied that lack, what more leg ishitiou is neceusury? Tho r"puhlleun.s, however, give the he to their own professions bv immedi ately proposing and pasnlug through the house n bond bill forth- very pur pose that the first bi'l was smd to be for. Itut neither Hie increased tariff bill nor the bond bill will accomplish the relief of the treasury. The om isn sham measure, designed to restore n portion of McKinley ism under f-ils pretenses. The other is an alleged im provement on the present law authorizing the issue of bonds to protect tho gold reserve. Hut the prospect of thu benefit that might result from a proper law authorizing a bond issue is swept away in advance by the provisions o the bill. In deference to tbe populist element in the republican party, the provis'on was inserted for the pay ment of the bonds in "coin, instead of in gold. Another clause forbUis the re' tirement of the greenbacks. The for mer provision will prevent tho sulo of the bonds for a high price. The second keeps up the "endless chain." The president has investigated and finds that there is no prospect of any helpful legislation whatever. The house is simply trifling with n growing situation; the senate, organized ne it is, cannot be ndled upon for any thing. Therefore, the president will proceed to use the means that the law authorizes, to maintain the credit nnd integrity of this country, ns he has done since March 4, 1S94, when the republican ad ministration nnniieii oer to nun n bankrupt treasury. There will be an issue of bonds soon, we tire told, under the law of 1ST3, to protect tW gold reserve. The republican congress simply passes two sham measures to relieve the administration. L tica Observer. A ROBBER-TARIFF. Dlasleylim Dealirna to Defraud the Anaerl ran 1'eople. The Dingley robber tariff bill (this title almost rhymes with tbe "Mc Kinhy robber tariff bill") which the republican house passed by an almost unanimous party vote restores wool to the dutiable list. The proposition is to again tax the people s clothing and blankets one of the most outrageous taxes that can be inflicted upon the consumers of the land nnd all for tho benefit of a few raisers of fancy sheep in Ohio. The people have been lighting for free wool for many years, and, now that they have secured it, they will not willingly surrender the boon. Tbe people declared for untaxed wool after n long and careful investigation, nnd there is no reason to suppose that they have changed their views. The attempt of tho republican congress to rqimpose nu outrageous tax on wool will result in t.lyj repudiation of that party at t lie polls next tail. Why did the republicans provide for a heavy tax on wool nnd woolen cloth ing in this Dingley bill? The real nheep raisers of tho country did nol ask for it. It will not benefit them. It will probably benefit a few men who nre engaged in fancy stock rnising, nnd who will thereby be enabled to rob the public of vastsums of money. Hut the general run of furmers who raise wool for the market will notonlv not be benefited they will be injured by tills outrageous tax. The American Wool and Cotton Reporter gave an interesting review ol the woolen trade of the United States It showed that during the past yen the sales of raw wool in this countrv aggregated 8C,000,000 pounds more than the sales of the previous year; it showed that American wool had increased in price during the same pe riod, precisely ns the advocates of untaxed wool had predicted it would; it showed, too, that a remarkable development of the woolen industry had taken place since raw wool was placed on tho free list. Good nil-wool clothes are cheap now, cheajier than e'er before, notwithstanding the increase in the price of nntivo wool. This is accounted for by the fact that the foreign wool which enters into the goods Is obtained without any tax. It has been demonstrated that a cheap coat docs not mean a cheap man under it. No good reason can be ossigned why the American people should wish to ga back to the days of taxed wool. The wool tax is an outrageous one. Dingleyism appears to be only McKinleyism behind a new mask. Illinois State Hegister. Unless the president's ndvioe is taken on the financial question, the republicans will find themselves face to face with n situation that will appall them. Can they be so blind as not to sec that In the present emergency the first thing to be don Is to make the credit of this country free from every suspicion, nnd to make our currency such thnt no mnn need look nt the eonriitlon of the gold reserve the first thing In the morning? The republican congress is plnylng a dangerous game. Utica (N. Y.) Observer. Stnco it hns been placed astrtda Die old tariff issue Mr. Mckinley's boom hn enjoyed something If its formercellcnt health nnd chipper dispptdth Calcago Record (lad.).
400 IX IMtlZKS OX OATS AMI COHX
j.ust year we offered $200 for the bigfht j Jehl of outs, üit'j bushels Siher Mine Oats was the highest. This u Ur we olVer $200 more on oats, SloOcnhdver hing Hurley, a barley yielding iu 1M5 110 bushels jK-r acre, and Sluu oB Golden Triumph Yellow Dent Corn, tho corn of your dreams! What's Teosinte and Sand Vetch and Racullne ami Lnthyrus and Giant Spurry and Giant Incarnate Clover and lots of such tilings? They'll make von rich if you plunt a plenty. Catalogue tells you! IK VOl WIM. Ct.T THIS OfT A VP fTND it with 10c. postage to the .John A. Kalzer Seed Co., LnCrosse, Wis., you will get free 10 grasses and grains. 'above oats, barley, corn and their catalogue. Catalogue alone, 5c. (k) "On man tint ain't got iniDhi' tor dn,"Mitit Uncle huen, "Vopln tec kill time. giiiY.nlr needs mo help dan do boss ob n fuct'n.'' aihinslon .Star. Bcuciiam's mu.s for constipation lOr and CSc. Got tho bonk ( free) nt out drupe st's and go by iu .utiunl pales O.otM.O'X) ho .v. 3. You often hear a woman snv: "It's no UMj talking," hut she iloesu't think so all the same. Texas Siftingrs. Piso's Cure for Consumption lias saved mo many a doctor's bill.--S. 1. HAKhr, Hopkins Place, ISultimorc, Md., Dec. u, "IU. Onh part of knowledge co iMst in being Ignorant of such tilings as uro not worthy to bo known Crates, Feed The nerves upon pure blood, nnd they will bo your faithful acrvauta and not tyrannical masters; you will not be nervous, but strong, cheerful and happy. To have pure blood, and to keep it pure, take Hood's Sarsaparilla Hood's Pill cure all User Ills. cent ASK YOUR DEALER FOR W. L. Douglas 3. SHOE "WoUld1 If you pay 84 to SO for shoes, examine the W. L. Douglas Shoe, and 9 tee what a good shoe you can buy for m OVER 100 STYLES AND WIDTHS, COXGRESS, BUTTON, and LACK, made In all It 1 ml - of t he 1 wt t H crt f d leather hy killed workmen. We make and ell more S3 Shoea than mnj other unfannrer la the world. None genuine unless name and price is stamped on the fcottom. Aslt your dealer for our MK, 4. 3.RO. 2.AO, m-1.1 Shoes; 3.S0, S3 and S1.7S for boys. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. If yourdealer cannot supply you, send to factory, enclosing price and 36 cents to pay carriage, btate kind.style of toe (cap or plain), size and width. Our CuMcm Dept. will all your order. end for new illus trated Catalogue to liux It. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, of ROXBURY. MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple hnt triitl It In over eleven hundred eases,and never failed excertintwo cases I both thunder humor.; ncnasnowin nis no;;;ion nvpr two hundred certifirates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal enrd for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a p'crfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the luncs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through tnem; tne same wnn tue uiver o. Bowels. 1 his 5s caused ty tne ducts ceinir stonned. and aiwavs disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. It the stomacn is ioui or uiuous u win cause squeamish feelings at first. No chanpe of diet ever necessary, bat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tahlcspoonful in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. I See that hump? It's the feature of the DkLONG Pat. Hook and Eye. No matter how you twist and turn, it holds the eye in place. Send turn tent tarn with nam$ unU a mirtmm anil t'i wWlf mail ou Mother Gooae in neweiothti . .A.InJni.m f.n r-tJnr nlitltM ten OlnCK I and wMU picture t; and tot of lively Jingle RiCHAfcMOW A DIoso BMm., Thllada. rav a raMOTOK CO. 4eet batf the trorhr Windmill BHMMM, VKMm " .rh WIM fewer w iy ! . nd rvniin sum au -VSif. ,V , 1 .DrilffTWllvlvivi -. ....... , . othert. It mar Pumping n4 ;I.T;inrt ärinrln.Utft. T litis? . ... . 1 -1 tn- 1.. hiftfi. !lin f m vviij uifTtit'ia . .... .V m 1 ...I TmiM dt-ftal Mlltf KiW o.i wa 'iftr anil Frtd r ratitifSf cvTTi 't - Urlnuert. On appllcMlon It will nm om o .h... ttriM that it will turn h until aaaart 1st at 1 3 Ui uui price, u bihi n KST IM, RWkwtH Fiacre Stritt.. Cklcit W t AU jlSt f MLSItat Coach SrrvfbTMMa u ooa. vae
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