Marshall County Independent, Volume 1, Number 3, Plymouth, Marshall County, 2 November 1894 — Page 6

CAPITAL YS. LABOR.

WHOM WILL YE SERVE. GOD OR MAMMON ? the Spirit of True Christianity So Pervades Society Everywhere that It Overleap All Cr?e! Omaha Platform in Harmony with the Ten loimunntlmrnts. All Interest I Isury. This war now ra-jinp between capital and labor is an "irrepressible conflict " Here is the philosophy of the question: Labor works for waes; capital works for per cent. In the production of wealth the world recognizes the law or just.ee that the "laborer is worthy of his hire;' that his wayes on one end of the scales must balance the product on the other end. Hut when we einer the domain of commerce or exchange this law of justice and ripjlit, this law of (Jod, that "in the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread," is ignored and disregarded. All commerce is based on per cent. Labor in the pro lu tion of all wealth bovs to (Jod arid Iiis law; but capital in earning on commerce bows to the dollar, and recognizes no law but the law of per cent. Don't you see at a flaute, reader, that these two methods of doin' business an diamctri ally opposed to each other? The law that labor rcc.j;nizes is the law of thejjreat Father above; the law that capital works by is mammon worship. "Ye cannot serve God and in itiuiion." The nivrchants marks the seilin.4 price of hU goods so as to make a given per cent, lie takes no account of his labor now; the dollar is god u far as do rig basin s is concerned, and per cent. th,' law that governs th case. m what grounds is he exempt from (i:id"s irst law, "in the sweat of thy fac?." etc? On the ground that money cau grow and produce other money by drawing interest. The railroads levy charges for freights and tares high enough to cover all exp .rise , and make the desired per cent, dividend. The railroa 1 magnates, if they work at all, it is not for wag s, but per cent. The capitalist who runs a foundry or factory rocecJs on ti.e snne line. Wages are cut down to the starvation points that capital can draw it per tent The law governing commerce all over tne civilized wo.ld is mammon worship. Money is the god of commerce. AVe may sneer at it, or deny it, but the fact rema ns. Now, the question up for cttlement is, which shall iu e the world, God or mammon? An 1 it will not down. The men who think they can make the world wag on under the old re gn of mammon worship, a? our blind socalled stat- sri.cn do, are a ladly mistaken set of demagogues. Mammon worship is slawry. The world groans and writhes tinier it. It is contrary to the true impa'ses of the human heart. Let :om.' great calamity befall a community, such as the .Johnstown Hood or the great tins of the Northwest, an J the i pulses of man's better nattre rise al ove the law of p.T cnt , and money and suiplies aie p tried out without stint. True socialism asseits itself in such emergencies. Ti e wor d is one great family. "An injury to one is thy concern of all." The ma-ses beir-n to Yaich on" and understand this question. What a laborer produces or earns by labor l.-eion- t him. To take it ficrn Irin without giving him an equivalent is to rob him. This is exactly what p r cent, docs Jt tlcvates money above man. No system of reform can a nount to very much which admits n-ury into its mae-up. Land monopoly aid every other monopoly is the result or fruit of mammon worship. T.m II:nMy. How are wo to obtain the remedy? How is the world to be emancipated from the slave: 3' of mammon worship? Ylvit agency can accomplish the work? Tin cli ovli ought to do it. It is ,tht ( Sod-ordained agent to do it. l.ul it cannot do it now because it will nut. The church he-lives in interest or us .ry. The rreent perverted sy.-tcm of Christianity has been taught for ages and "where are we at?" A bad system ii the hands of good men (if such a thing be possible) will have the sa 1 c effect a it would in the hands of lud men. It will take as many paupers to make a millionaire out of a Christian (if such a thing could be done, but it can t) as to make or e out of ;:n atheist. There is more true Chris ianity in the labor organizations, m far as civil government is c. ntvriici, than there is in the church. 1 don't know of a church that doesn't believe in and practice ntercst taking I don't know of a labor platform, either national or State, that do.ift tondcnin usury The spirit of true Christianity so pervades society everywhere that it overleaps all creed-. My fellow co tntrymcn, the lines arc drawn, tlu i-si:c is before you. You cannot dodge it. Whom will you serve, (Jod or Mammon? The time is here vl en the " Jod of Heaven is gong to sc?, up a kin;dor:i (lan. Ü, ver. 44; that shall never be destroyed. " Wiil y u aid in this Heaven-ordain d w rk? We are living in the most interesting period of the world'? history. This conflict I etween the true worship of God an 1 Some form of idolatry has raged throujh all the age. Mammon worship is the last form of idolatry. It is U13 most refined, the most subtle, and most worldwide, and, withal, the most powerful form that ever existed. Jhit its end is near. It is doomed. It will die hard, but it must die. Header, don't you want to have a hand in killin? It? Kev. I). Oglcsby. tailed t I'ruvt It. Cleveland and his anarchal cohorts failed to prove that any striker in-

jured any one, or destroyed any property during the Chicago strike. lut proof was produced showing that railway managers hired men to burn cars. Comment is unnecessary.

Note of Indmtrr. Germany runs textile schools. California has Chinese farmers. Uaron Ilolkctt is a single tixer. Detroit waiters have organized. Chinese soldiers get $1 a month. Kalamazoo bootblacks organized. Detroit oil peddlers have a union. England has l,:!:7,öi7 union men. Lexington reports a tailors' strike. Detroit stove workers won a strike. Omaha jays $3.."0 for a ton of coal, lrovidcnce hackmen have organized. Philadelphia has a singlc t jx weekly. New Haven jewelers have organized. Ualtimorc has a socialist labor p irty. Cnclc Sam has 50,000 union printers. Cincinnati has a Russian night scho jl. Chicago has a woman's Fec'eral u nion. Knights of Labor have invaded .la pan. Toronto has a union. builders' laborers' have a single-tax girls' bookbinders' Alabama is to colony. Toronto has a unn n. Cardinal Gibbons unions. Cincinnati has a indorses labor German trades council. Chicago claims l."0,000 trades unionists. Murphysbo:o (111.) miners held reunion. Milwaukee retail merchants have organized. Alameda (Cal.) unions run a free labor bureau. Brotherhood carpenters have 800 local unions. P.attle Creek (Mich ) has a co-operative colony. A New York bakers' union runs a labor bureau. L'oston garment-workers will run co-operative shops. Washington railroad laborers get ."( a day ;:n 1 board. William Waldorf Astor's income is v, OO.üOO a year. A Pitts! urg street railway is selling six tickets for a quarter. Oldham. Kngland, co-operative societies have 11,000 members. Cincinnati Parbcrs' Union will try to exterminate nickel shops. Grand Rapids furniture workers aie kicking against reductions. A clergyman addressed the Socialist-Labor paity or' New Haven. Chief Arthur is opposed to government ownership of railioads. It is sai i that ,000 women in Ihiffa o :eceivc less than L0a week. Salaries of oilicers of the Detroit Typ graphical Union have been cut. Only thrcj Nashville merchants h ive refused to sign the early closing agreement. Orj m'r."'. 1 he day of tho usefu'ness of the strike is passed. A mob of naked savages with clubs might just as well attempt to opi ose a disciplined army witli all the improved implements of modern warfare as for workmen to attempt to better their condition by the strik?. You tried to starve Pullman into submission by the strike, and while the workers did not have en ugh saved ahe: d to feel on lor a single month, Pullman had suilicient rations, the kind bis average employe's family subsists upon, to last him .".00,000 jears. or m rc th::n eighty times all the number of years that have elapsed between Adam and Grover Cleveland. To strike against such social monsters is absurd, especially when the workers have another weapon by which they can make such unnatural products as Pullman impossible, for where Pullman has 01. c vote his employes have 1,1; 00. --: "" It is by the ballot, and only by the ballot, that the workers have any chance to better their couditiou. Put by the ballot they can tike possession of the government; can mike all monopoly government monopoly, thereby turning these vast revenues into the public treasury. With th'so revenues they can guarantee every child a complete c lucation; they can guarantee every citizen continuous employment; they can give every age I man and woman a pension not in t lie form of charity, but as a just reward for a life of useful labor. This proposition is just us businesslike, and even more than the oJTers made by our great insurance coinpan es, because the experiments of li-m irek have proved tb it government insurance can be made a grand success. The tlrst duty of all workers is to unite. Priiey Tax Poverty. The idea of the old parties is to Viz poverty. They proi ose to force tho I o r laborers and producers to support the government, and let plutocracy go free. Shack i.kto.v (in the diamond business) "1 had a man in my place th s morning who had a wonderftd eye. He could tell how much a diamond neighed by just looking at it" Wibberly "He must have b en my iceman." Ihooklyn Life. Theuk has been an afternoon party for women only every day this week. The women will need the assistance of the men, however, a little later, when the fall hats begin to arrive. Atchison (J lobe He Do you think your father would object to my marrying you?" Jhc "I don't know. If he's any. thing like me he would." Life. It is a cold day when the iceman brings a big lump. St. Louis Republic.

HOME WITHOUT RENT

PAPER TITLES AS VIEWED BY A NEW RECRUIT. Something: Radically Wrong-Paper Title Were Horn of (ireed and Itiute Force Fverr Man Has a Klht to a l'ortiou of Mother Earth. iiettln? Ills Kyes Open. James Houston m the Topeka Advocate sava : Believing there are others thinking ulong tho same lines as myself, I come now offering a few crtute thoughts, expressed perhaps iu cruder phraseology, hoping to draw from abler pens than mine a better expositiou of the views herein advanced. I have always been a Republican, and am now, to the extent of indorsing, as an eiitirity, the principles of the party, but havo come to believe tnat the party is not progressive enough for the limes neither is the Democratic party. Lack of suilicient progression in these parties have caused thousands upon thousands of these restless, discontented voters and tho number is constantly tmd rapidly being augmented. This .state ot unrest arises from a deep-seated and well-founded conviction that turo is ".something" about our Government either in its administration or fundamental principles radically wrong. What is I ha: something? Is it tobe found in any outs or more of what we are pleased to term the great political issues of the day V Had our revenue, currency ami other laws, which are brought forth periodically, first one and then another, as "issues," been at all as nearly perfect as it were possible for human ingenuity to devise, this feeling of discontentment would not have been stayid beyond the present time, because the true cause of this feeling does not lie directly or indirect Iv in iinv one or more of these Kmics which are raided for the purpose of fomenting party strife and creating sectional hatred to such a degree and to the end that the minds of the masses may be kept from iiucstions the solving of which would drive abject pov erty from the land and at the same time dispossess the classes of their unjust powers and ill-gotten gains. Men, through passion and prejudice, are often blind to their own interests. Leaders of 1 olitical parties are well aware of and relv on this fact hence "issues." Is is not about time the masses realized this and stopped to think for themselves, and to discover that tho great and real evil of to-day and yesterday is to be found iu our land laws? Ignoring 1 taper titles and recognizing only those of occupancy and actual use, real poverty would be a thing of the past. Are paper titles of divine origin? l)id the Creator place mankind upon tho earth, some with paper titles and others without? No. l'npr titles were born of greed and brute force and continue to he Porn of the same parents, even unto this day. Every man has a natural and inalienable right to a portion of mother earth on which to dwell and make a living. Laws interfering with this right should be set aside, and by force if necessary. The contrary cannot b maintained if we concede, as we must, the principle tha every man has the right of self-preservation. Without paper ti les ther would le no tributes in the way of rents to society leeches. Earnit.gs and piotiis would go back into business or eis go toward bail iing homes and providing comforts of life. What keeps the merchaut, tho farmer, the mechanic and the laborer poor? Do they have mere than a scanty living left after paying their rents? The amount paid in rents is appalling, and is extorted from the actual producers of wealth who should be and are edti led in natural justice to all they produce. How long would it bo before the masses would have homes of their own could they use their money in buying material for mm me instead of paying rent? There can bo only one conclusion. Tli k 1.4 a Free Count rv. You have a right to be born -if you pay the doctor. You have a right to go to school - if you pay the school book trust. You have a light to wear clothes if you pay the monopolists. You have a right to use sugar if you pay the sugar trust tribute. Yon have a right to use other food if you buy the right from tho various monopolists. You have a right lo live in a house if you buy the right from a laud grabber. , You have a right to travel on a railroad if you buy tho right of the kings. You have a right to get married if you buy the right of some ollicer. You havo a right to use money if you buy the right of the bankers. You have a right to make whisky if you buy the right. You have a right to manufacture tobacco if you buy tho right. You havo a right to die and bo buried if 3011 or your friends buy the right of the colli 11 trust. There is no end of rights in this free country but I have never seen any of them that did not havo to bo purchased. A horde of blood-suckers tap your veins at every turn and live in idle prolligatenoss on your labor. Freo country? Well, just a few. It All C'OHtH. oov. MeKinley, of Ohio, has been making speeches in KSnsas. There are two or three letures about his campaign that should bo thought of for a moment. Ho traveled on a special train, had a special car which trailed a flat car with a cannon which was lired off to attract tho crowd. Ho is reported as having made thirteer. speeches in ten hours. Who do you suppose paid for all these ex enses? And what did thoy pay it for? Is it not queer that the railroads are always at the disposal of Republican and Democratic voto kerderj? Do you

notice any courtesies from monopolies to People's party speakers? Can anything be plainer to you than that the

monopolies are oeuma tne two old parties, is furnishing them with funds, and for a purpose? What oince pays honestlv a salarv that affords such campaigning? If salaries are so large that for the mere chance of getting it campaigning can bo such exnensivo paid for, is it not timeto cut them down? If this be the effect of laro salaries, men is it not eorrnntiny fin.l

gathers in rogues instead of competent suar, with about sixteen gallons of public servants? If the salaries will water, is tlrst put into a circular copjustify these extravagances, is it not ' rer boil r, about live feet in diam te; plain the people are to bo robbed in !iQfl about three and one-half feet in other ways to pay them? And does it height. Inclosed around the sides not strike you as queer, exceedingly ; and bottom of the boiler are a numqueer, that Kansas, that same Kansas ber of coils of steam pipe, which, that gave 80.000 Republican majority ' when turned on, caue; the material should require a McKinley to try to to boil and form itself into a sirup, persuade the people to vote the lie- ' Water is also applied to the sides of publican ticket? Poli ios has raado ! the boiler to prevent the sirup from some wonderful somersalts in the last ! sticking. eight years, yet the great mass of voters j After the material has boiled for do not seem to realize it. about one-half hour, it is mn off Main Truth. through a number ot line sieves at

XoiiTU Dakota Populists absolutely refused to combine with the Demo - PortLISM in Kansas has re.imWI th tax lew the lowest in the historv of the state. " Only just think of -H cent cotton, and thousands of people in rae. If that is riht, vote to continue it. Thj: Democratic majority in (leoria fell trom lO.OUU m lJS'.'li to ,000 or less 1w, 1 r iiii 111 lb'Jl Democratic frauds lnclutled. fr lirr: reform movement looks for suecess through the education of the peo pie. tiohloeracy lives on the ignorance of the masses. (ioLD standard must be driven from the land, or the American republic will decline and fall as surely m did Home and Uabylon. Tin: people are tired of many things, but they are weary of this Yanderbilt domes! ie rottenness. In the name oJ Hoke Smith, saw it oil'! Tin: sugar and whisky trusts are ot the opinion that the present tarill' bill is better than the 3IcKinley bill. It is a hundred million better to those trusts. . Tin: colonists only left Hunker Hil! when their ammunition tfaYe out. Many labor armies have retreated' from the same cause. Moral: Fill up our treasuries with munitions of war. Mrs. Fakmki:, did you have anj tro dle to support vour familv and

lipiidate debts when wheat sold for eighth inch iu thickness. The inj er bushel? And was that not at a ! terior sides and bottom also have a time when money was most j lentiful ' crystallized coating of about one It is crime to call at.ention to the ! inch wllilc the inferior part remains panic. It has been no crime to bring i a liquid form. it on. Kven tie old feudal baron rob- : The pots are Iben tri ken ouL of the hers denied the right of criticism. Hut ! hot-house, t lie plaster scraped oil",

criticism will ilounsh, and don't forget it.

If it be anarehv to oppose national ' hieltcd and littered and run into barbanks, oppose tho single gold stand- j T,'!s- to e sol(1 to it uor arid soda ard, Eiifrlish domination of American ! water dealers. The pots are then

linanees, Presidential control of tho militia and to u-dvoite free speech; then brand us with letters of llaniing lire as an anarchist of the most pro- . , A nounced type Money is made by law. There never was, nor can there ever be, any other kind. Hankers and trusts tell the people they can have no good money but gold, and the sillv llles do

not see the net that is impoverishing j For yellow lock candy the liquid m them. Coming Nation. j colored with hurried sugar. About Tin: man who has brains enough to j niu'hty pounds of suar and three support a crop of new ideas, is the fei- gallons of water is mixed together low who, by the babbling throng, is 1 and pla cd in a shallow circular coplooked upon as having herns on his ' Jer pan, abtr.t th.ee feet in diamhead. Hut there is one consolation : I ter and pla ed over a hot lite, wliecs

A "critter' with horns cannot be mistaken for a jackass. Living Issues. Till-: elections in Maine r.nd Vermont show how popular Clevelandism is. The northern states will all ndorse (.iroverism in about the same way. How ra; idly the Democratic chance is slipping away. One term of Democratic "chance" is enough for the peopie. Eminent economists have estimated that the the ea: acitv d' nnchanical and scientitic iiistrumentalites even other so now existing is suilicient, if thorough- I

ly utilized, to supply ail mankind with ; tendant turning ho pot upside dowp not only tlie nee-.-ss.ii bs of life, but ! and whacking t he sides wilii wooden also reasonable luxuriv-. - Western 1 mallets, cauin,' the candy to fall Watchman. down into a hc ip Ti e strings are Ixr.r.ratiKN r farm ts ar.i beginning i then sei arat.td fr.i;i each other and to learn that their only hope is in i weighed out ami pacKcd into from standing together. While they vote five to foity pound ho e-;. Twentyagainst each other in the interests of ! one hands turn out about lM.'i:N bunkers, lawyers ami professional poli- ; pounds of rock candy and lü(:,:;.j'.)gab ticians, th"v are only helping to make ! Ions of . rock candy sirup jcarly. The paupers of themselves ami slave of material is sold principally to cenTectheir children. , tdoners, liuuor dealers and g:oc:r& (iov. Ai.Toi;rd has called the atten- j JScientilic American.

tion of the State lioard of Fqualiza- ' lion io i no lax taniging proclivities oi the l'ullnian coiuj)aiiy and insists that tiieir assessment should he lit, 000,000 instead of only ?1.C'.5.."00 of only an increase of the neat little .sum of 11,001,500 or aliou: h'jO percent. AViikn such men as dude Lyman Trundjull of Chicago deserts the Democratic ship and announces it time for every American to have a care for his liberty, that it is threatened and iu serious danger, it is :mre time for men to think. It also shows the wonderful growth of the Populist movement when he enters the platform to assist it. Emergencies always produce men. A proposition in logic, lo he a proposition at all, must consist of two known points, from which a third can be reached. So a problem iu life must contain two known quantities, to be a prooiem tu au. aiiv prooiem eeniereu euiireiv uuont sen can increioro nave no thinkable solution. The o.her member of the proi osition must needs bo the neighbor. New Church Messe uger. IJuiTAlX, like the United States, has a noble navy to protect her citizens abroad, but has no protection for her citizens at home who arobeiinj starved by heartless 'landlords and monopolies. That is much like those ministers who preach n heaven of beautiful epuulity and peaeo after death to all who will submit to robbery, extortion and all forms of social injustice from the rich while they live. An ounce of protection from averioe at homo would be worth more than a thousand tons of protection away from home.

MAKING ROCK CANDY. An Industry ConernInff m.leh Compum.

tiveiy i.ittie i Know,,. Kock candy is a crystallized sugar irup wl11. after boiling and being kepf at a (Crta:n temj erature, forms ,lseu oni strings suspended across I,he inler'or of circular copper pots. ! Tne ,Irst Process in its manufacture is tnc boiln t)f the sirup. About 1UU1 01 me 11 nest L'raue 01 1 the bottom, and passes down through ' A lotir-inch hose to the copper candy V: l,c!7. Thr I;tS dl Ci.r,'Ul;ir 111 fonn- "Cing about two leet in diaeter a-ross the top, and tapering down to one foot at the Pottum. The sides 01 each Pot are tierforated with ! small holes, ranirdn: from one half inch to one inch apart: through the-c holes a l ecc of cotton c ud is run. the ends of which are fastened to the ,lllf-;,i ., .,.,m , , outside by a small nice or p a-ter of i,.ir- rr,, . ,l f. . , . ! : J ans. Ine potsarc then hlle 1 up to lne l0p wilh tjie i;oi itlur sjnt?s which hol is ahDUt. live gallons :u;d of fortv pounds weight, and carried away by two attendants to what is railed Mi. h ithouse. This hotdio:;se is made entirely or brick, and is about fourteen feet sipiare and abuiit one foot in thi' k - nes. each side hein- lit ted ui with shelves, made of heavy plankini u , to the side walls, are a number o l-in h steam pips, which, when turned on, furnish the re juircd heat. ü be atten hints plae ' the heated jots .side by saloon these she!vs, where I they are left for two or three days in ! a temperature of a'oit Kio decrees. I the heat of which eau-es the best J art of the surar to crystalli.-.e ouio I the strings. I After the expiration of three days ; a crust of crystallized suar is formt. 1 on the top of each pot of about oneana the uncrystalli.ed pjuid pou ed off into into a tui. where it is reI taken and rinsed out with water to i i taue th sirup oil the andy. and ! then taken to the drainio-roum, j where thev are placed bottom up in 1 - , . ; . - an inclined position, one against an other, in a trouirh, and left to drain about one day in : temperature ot about 7( decrees, which dries and also tfives the candy a glossy appearance by toiling and conrant Stirling, H is allowed to gci thick. Ma k and burned When properly burn 1 it is taken out and pla-ed in a tub and lülut d with water, it is lheu run through Uue bia-s s eves, and is ready ' fov use, ! An intense smoke issues from the burninsugar causi'iir the attendants ; tc. wear respirators. T.ie red rock : candy is colored with :. 10 carmine; after draining, : heccntcnts of the pots j j are knocked out onto boardsabout two ! feet s.uare. This is done by an at Nitrety r Touch. It is a common opinion that machinery works with an exactness and steadiness of movement not to he ac quired by a al orer's hau .. This is j not really ti tie. Toe workmun can i suit his stroke to the needs .f the J case as no machine can do, and this ! is proved in the I immini; of rootlnirj elates. The sp ittin process is per formed with meat nicety by means j Df chisels, hut tlie."hap:n is more rema. kable, and cannot bo properly executed by any who have not been trained to it i mm youth. The wor -man sits on a stool with a pad ou one knee and a ledec by h s side lie lays the slate on thep.d on his knee, and allowing the part to be cut rest on the ledge, strikes it with a heavy knife, and separates it instantaneÜUS;y with lne gicatest accuracy. A Iori Name. An Knji.ish fanner has presented his Mrst-bom for christening at h s parish church with twenty-six Christian names scLcted from Scripture, ieprcscutin every letter of the alphabet. Only with the grcateso did culty could the clergyman persuade the farmer to content himself with the tlrst ami last of the appclatives proposed. The name of the unfortunate infant was to !uave been Abel Benjamin Caleb Daniel Ezra r'elix (Jabricl Haggai Isaac Jacob Lish Levi Manoah Nehcmiah OhaÄiah Peter ftjuartus Kecbab Samuel robiah Uz iel Vaniah Word Xvusius lechariah Jenkins.

A Temple of ITealtti Where viper, pood digestion, appetite, aaa nound repose minister to physical comfort Is the bodily structure which, howerer much its foundations have been sai ped by Ill-health, has been restored rebuilt, as it were by the. ercat renovatlnz tonic, Hostetter's Stomach Iiitters. Nothing Infuses strength into a debilitated frame like this saving medicice. which. In the vigor and regularity it imparts to th system, endows it with the suiest defense againt disease, and the be.t tuarai.ty of a

I long life and h ile old age. Woru-out men of business, tired mecliiuie. overworked mill hu!s, miners broken down by hardship and exposure to nalaria.maiir.erf end toi'ris:s all it' clare that it i th i 6t saf gucrd :gainst the influences of fatigue, brdily or mental, and of climate and temper dure, lnco'i -.pa -able for bilious, rheumatic, kidney, and utrvous troubles. Mk-.- Musir with Mis Iliflr. E J ward M. Cordon is a marksman who prolu -es nai-ie with his 1 i 'o. His e foi raance has b?en heard nightly at Tony Pastor's The iter, an I will b ' t: ansferred this weck 1 1 Proctor's Th -ater. His target is a xlyophono which is placed at tho back' of Die stae. Standing at tho front wiih his back to the audience. Mr. Gordon 1 ie3 0l1 mo notos wu.i a rit.o, Mrilun; 1 !,rn" m Pia;1 hT"hJo iwlet'Vl ! -America." "Swott M.n in ' nn,1 . oil tho notos with a rifle, t-trikin'r th m would rhich ha Home," c f that simple deWintion. It requires fori v-th reo shots for Mr. Cordon to merica. 15 we -it .Ma le. and others 1 1 Kn:cK o t cswect .v.urie. World. New York How's HiH? We offer One Hundred PolVirs Ucs-p.rd for any case of Catarrh that cu:ir.ot N? cured Ly HiUl a Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY ft CO., Props., Tol-do, O. We. tho un lerBfi:o 1. h ivo known 1". J. Ch--rey for tho last l'.ttcu y. :iro, an.i l"i:vf liiu ter.'ectly honoral!? in fill lue-ino-ts tram-a-tiorn 1 RC'l,aiIlc;'a!1yii ioto(ar. r. auy oiii-aiion wr.sr .v ih- kx, v, 'hr.waiim-:,-;.-ta, To:-d -.. Wau?. Rinnan a Mauun, W ualo 11:3. tiBts Toledo, (. Hall's l aiirrUCrsro i tc.':rn lute ruall v. a din-cTlv uii' ii tli-- 1: tr.i nid ci :;- :iu hrrfftcu js of tho BVHleni. l'ri ; IZc ). r ho'.tk Sold by nil l'ruijists. i 0 ls a ro ont 1 : ort to t!i0 nitei Sito Ifepartm dit of A-nculturo Mr. -vi. xmuor MeAd-.-e state? that, th- liability to damage by lii:lit;:i rtb crt a-es in thickly j) pulaied di.-tricts. the rik in tho country ' ei'iu'. in penora'. about iho times as reat as that iu the city. Tin: people of the United States pay more taxes thau the poo !o of any other nation on the g!obv The e -tdnated total of national und local taxation is !r(5 .o,t0 ,,0 . Hood's Is the Best Tall Medicine, because it pii rifies. vitalizes and rnriflie-i the l.loo-l. and tlicreforo cives strcii-ith lo resist b:id effects from Colds, C.itarrii, Kheuitiatisnt, I'neuruonia. Malaria, the. (irlp. etc. T.iK5 it low and avotJ the danger of serious ihnes. It may save you rnany dollars In d tors' bills.1 Ho suro to set IPm.u's a:d rniy IIcod'3. Mood's "I can truly recommend Hood's Sarsapnrilla as an exceiient laediclne. 1 havo ures taken four b;tIes and I arn Letter than I havo been for two years rast. I was all run down, my Pnil s swelh-d and my blood was in a very bad cinlition. Now lam free from neura!i-i and better In every way." Miu II. I'm u i-.u. Hume, N. V. Hood's Pill 5 cure all llr:r ills, biliousness. Jaundice, liid'xestiori. sick headache. 25c. m Isq a 3SW IS THE EE ST. NO SQUEAKING. fS. CORDOVAN, FRENCH &ENAKEUED CALF. Soles. w 4 LTP FINE. " SZJiZ? BffßSCHKLSHCEa. fei ?mfr LADIES --r-C f2 ?l 75 -"'Dc3Tf30NGCM. F03 CATALOG LE You can tare rjonry by Yrrarinjj the XV. Ii. Donjas C3.GO Slice. r?eeane. tvo era t'." lor-st r'.ar.Tifacti.TPrs ct valu3 br stam;.! tho car.io'V aaaf tbisgradoof sVcs In t '.:o v . and pjiaranU-o their cid prko ca tho tif-'t Lit'h prloo3an 1 i ro::.i. o :r sik-os ciual custom wort in etr'.o, ca.y r.tl:n( m-1 vi'arit: qa-at;o. 7eh2vethera o!d cvrrywln ro Ml wer prices for tli valus clvon tlian cny otl-.or nnti'. Takenosul). sUtute. It your dealer i-aaa. a sul7 you, wo can. WALTER BAKER "& G07 Tl.e Largest Manufaeturers of PURiZ, HIGH CFIADE COCOAS A!!D CÜ0C01ATES frw ibvfT t .r- Cn thU Ccr.t:nc3t, have rcceiT! rtm -n mriiroT AWARDS on alt tlidr Coods at th CALIFORNIA unmix EXPOSITION. it J v'!':"''i- ""hi..- fio Datrh lVn-rf , ;. i i ' i.-t '.".idc iOici-it !.c uof Alk i'.ir ' I fc-i.,. ........ i .J. i . tjC iv Dun iui soluble. Kail coU Icu than cne tent a cup. 60LD BY CnOCEHS rVERYWHCRE. WALTER DAKEH ti CcTcbhCHrSTER. HAS3. METAL Of U k H An Urn c. y,. for vour t'&f. Any iz joa wart. 2) to Min high. Tire I to 8 in. wil but s to tit any alo Savct Cost many time in a pe&fn tv Lsvo rrt of lot? whpls t-. tit ycurwaRon forbsulin grain, fodilor. manure, bogs, Ao. No rpBPttiasr of tires Catl'g frea Addref V-.;--XKRY OXE WnO WEARS TIIB Owen Electric Belt Says: "They are the Dtst." Get a catalogue by writing The Owen Electric Belt Co. 209 State Street, Chicago, Ilu BIEMSIOMffiJSgSS?JS& Lata Principal Examiner U.B. I'aueloo burtoatt, 3 vm In Inst wr, IS adjudicating claims, attj aiucok MINTION THIS FA TOI wm im, ,mmuii, uUftW IilUllLl porrhasinff 1 ritii.kme on th ' New ork Stock Market and liavinir tlnra lntellti gently worked by A. W.BAKNAKU. Hanke, tio and Broadway. New York, hend lor lYonpectus. .Mr. U IimIow'h oothim( Stbup for Children teething: aottena the gums, reaucoa Inflammation. aUay pain, euro wind cUc 23 cent a bottl.

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