Pike County Democrat, Volume 26, Number 24, Petersburg, Pike County, 25 October 1895 — Page 7

OUR FOREIGN TRADE. | We Pay for import* with Not with Moae;«UI Tmd« tl Darter. The only resort left lor the protec- j tlonist organs Is their claim that by 1 encouraging foreign commerce the : Wilson tariff Is '‘seuding all our n*oney 1 nut of the country.” In order to make j It appear that this has been the result of the new tariff, these papers are publishing statistics showing that the imports during the fiscal year ended June tO, 1SW, are larger than those for the previens fiscal year. And the fact that there has been an increase in the total ▼aIre ot imported goods is made the basis of the charge that the tariff reform policy is ruining the country by bringing^ in more goods than we caa pay for. To this attempted protection argument a correspondent declares there are two conclusive answers. The first is that while imports were larger durlug the past year, they were nearly $100,000,00® less than in 1893 and more than $60,000,#00 less than in 1892 or 1891. Comparing the statistics <©f imports under the first year of the Wilson tariff with those of the last year under McKinleyism, when owing to the high tariff panic the importation of all kinds of goods had greatly fallen off, is a fraudulent pjreteuee that is easily exposed. The' proper year for comparison is the first year of the McKinley tariff, when the imports were $844,916,190, over $60,000,000 more than last year. So if the Wilson tariff is ^bringing -ruin, the official statistics iprove‘that’the McKinley tariff was for more ruinous. Friends of low tariffs could well afford to rest satisfied with this rejoinderto the cry of increased imports. But they do not believe that even though tariff reform did cause larger imports, it would be an injury, or that the sending of money abroad Ss a loss to this country. If foreign manufacturers are willing to exchange their products for the gold and silver produ4$* of our mines, why should we complain? Gold and silver are not sent abroad as money, but as commodities, and require labor for their production, just as much as oil or wheat. Nobody complains when we sell pork or cotton to foreigners. If the latter continued for any length of time to sell us goods and take nothing but what the protectionists call “money/’ they would soon find that they had parted with valuable products in exchange for metal that they could neither eat, wear, or use to satisfy any rational desire. The only way in which their stores of money could be made useful would be to'send it back to this country in exchange for food, cotton, oil, etc.

iTOiecuomsis ao noi seem w uuuerstand that foreigners, as well as Amercans, only want money in order to exchange it for goods or services. The idea that a country wonld get richer by hoarding up metal of any kind is a delusion which belongs to the centuries when men believed that money was the only real wealth. If it were true that sending money away for goods was an iujuvy, it would apply as well to domestic as to foreign trade. * It would be just as hard to send money from Vermont to Georgia in payment for cotton, as to-eend it to Canada to pay for barley. In both cases money is exchanged for goods. The fact that one country is under a different government does not alter the real nature of the transaction. All trade is barter, and the more trade the better for all countries.______ FLOODING OUR MARKET. Why a Low Tariff Stimulate!* Woolen Inj portatlon. In order to show how great is the “flooding” of American markets with foreign woolen goods under the new tariff the Textile Manufacturers’ Journal takes the first six months of the five years from 19C1 to 1895 for comparison. By this method of working commercial statistics an enormous increase in imports of woolens is exhibited. But as everybody understands, large importations of woolens were withheld from market in the latter months of 1894, so that they laight be brought in under the reduced rates of duty after the first of January, 1895, when the new schedule on waolens went into effect Had not the new tariff been passed at all most of these goods would have been admitted in the months of October, November and December, 1894; and American consumers would have paid the exorbitant McKinley duties on them. - »

A\o iriena oi ine ue.v luriii preicnus to dispute the tendency of the new tariff to stimulate import trade. It was perfectly natural that there should be an increased demand for certain classes of foreign woolens when the extravagant McKinley duties of nearly 100 per cent, on these fabrics were reduced to W per cent. But there is no “flooding*5 - of American markets with foreign fabrics to afford any justification for protectionist clamors. On the other hand, rthe imports of wool, hemp, flax and other raw materials of Ameri.can industries since their removal to •the free list have increased vastly beyond the increase in the iimports of foreign fabrics of these materials. Compare the imports of raw wool during the seven months ended July, 1895, with the same period of 4894. In the seven months* of freedom-the imports amounted to 141,762,92s pounds, valued at 819,063,151* against #€,‘907,704 pounds, valued at 84,020,669 in the former period under the McKinley duties. No one can mistake the significance of these comparative returns of trade. What enhances their significance is the fact mat since wool was put on the free list the hulk of its imports consists of the qualities for making clothing. Under the McKinley tariff, on the other hand, the wool imports consisted mainly of the coarse grades fit only for making carpets. Thus in the seven months of 1895 under consideration the imports of clothing wool amounted to 87,667,016 pounds, valued at $18,990,745. In the corresponding seven months of 1894 the total imports of wool amounted to 36,907,704 pounds of the value of $4,0*0,669, and of these imports *6,272,660 pounds consisted of coarse carpet wool, valued at 12,205,6*6. The little rem

Bfiat ol 1 CMOS,044 pounds, trained a% $1,815,041, was imported lor making clothing To any one who can read had 'understand these comparative returns of wool imports under Meltinleyism and under the auspices of free trade mark an industrial re volts tion. The Textile Manufacturers' Journal asserts that the promise.! of ‘‘diversified” production under free wool remain unrealised. As a professed organ of the woolen trade it can perceive “no tangible confirmation of these elaims in the actual experiences of the past few months*” What, then, is the meaning of the vast increase in the importations of the finest fleeces in the world’s markets and of the corresponding decline in the imports of coarse and cheap wool? Do not these facts demonstrate the promptness and decision with which American manufacturers of woolens have seized their opportunity to enter the world’s markets and select the best, varieties of wool in order to diversify and improve their production? It is not necessary to trace the fleeces of Australia and Argentina from the custom house to the mills where they have been converted into fine clothing, rivaling in quality the best products of European looms In regard to this industrial revolution the Record confidently appeals from the organ of the woolen manufacturers to the manufacturers themsOlves, who know whether or not they have used the great varieties and increased quantities of imported wool for diversifying and enlarging production. In presence of the beneficent change brought by the genius of commercial freedom the woolen manufacturers of the United States are threatened in republican party conventions with a restoration of the McKinley duties on wool. If the republicans return to power they are to be shut out of the markets for the best varieties of foreign wool once more by prohibitory duties and driven back to the coarse wool whence they may be able to sort a small quantity to mix with the domestic product in making clothing. Such is the “diversified” production that is promised them under a restoration of the McKinley act. In order to reconcile the 'manufacturers to a reactionary policy portentous of disaster they are offered the lure of a revival of the extortionate McKinley duties on woolens, with a return of the era of smuggling and fraudulent under-valu-I ations. But even if the great mass of j American consumers be left out of the i account the American manufacturers i of woolens after enjoying the policy of i free wool will never consent to itseur* ! render.—Philadelphia Record.

SUGAR PRODUCTION. The Industry Should Be S»lf*Ss«t»lnlnf— No Bounties Necessary. The country was sufficiently warned last year that the beet sugar industry was practically ruined by the substitu- ' tion of a low duty for the bounty that \ had existed for four years. But dispatches from the sugar beet counties of Nebraska show that the business of raising- beets and of making- sugar is flourishing beyond all precedent. In spite of the withdrawal of the bounty and of a great increase in the amount of beets produced, the price remains the same as last year, S3 a ton. Although sugar beets involve more labor than most other crops, yet at anywhere from ten to fifteen tons of beets to the acre sugar beets at $5 a ton or even a good deal less would be th^ most profitable crop a farmer who had suitable land could raise. While $5 is the price paid for beets immediately delivered, the sugar manufacturers at Norfolk and Grand Island are offering more on a sliding scale for beets delivered during the late fall and winter, the highest rate being §5.40 a ton for beets delivered in February. In the Norfolk district are 4.000 acres of beets for which the farmers will receive well over $200,000, and possibly near to $300,000 in.cash. There will be about the same beet production in the Grand Island distriot Thirtyfive thousand tons of beetsiis the least amount expected, but as about 4,000 acres have been cultivated, and ten tons to the acre is a rather light yield, and farmers who have taken particularly good care of their beets are estimating twenty-five tons to the adre, it is more likely that the erop will be 45.000 tons, for which the farmers will get more than $5 a ton, if they do not insist on selling the entire crop at once. Farmers around York and Lincoln are taking steps to secure sugar factories in their vicinity. The Norfolk factory will run 100 days and 100 nights on the beets now in sight and turn out 7,000,000 poc>udsof granulated sugar, and the Grand Island iactory will run day and night five or six months, and make the greatest run in the history of beet sugar making ia America.—N. Y. Journal of Commerce.

The Price of Wool. Andrew Kull, of Lake Genev*,, Wia., iiS wool grower dt thirty consecutive | years’ experience, writes to the Amerijean Wool and Cotton Reporter, giving1 ] twenty reasons, from the wool grower's standpoint, why wool should re- ! as a in on the free list. He reminds that j the price of American wool declined j from three to five cents per pound ) while the McKinley tariff was in oper- ! ation, and concludes by saying that 1 “now'that wool is on the free list and ; prices .advance the world over, even : the wool grower is getting his eyes i open to >the fact. Right here in Waft- ; worth county prices have advanced 88 I per cent, within a few months, and ; more of the same is coming.”. The ReI porter editorially questions the figures i that represent the increased slaughter i of sheen an this country, and quotes I very high authority in support of the ! ground that they are not warranted by the facts the case.—Boston HerAMer Light. The Buffalo Commercial (rep.) saysi “What the people want to know is not i what started the business boom, but ! what is going to keep it up.” The re* 1 publican organs are much exercised by | the fear that the prosperity the eoun* ; try is beginning to enjoy will last no- | til the presidential election of 18ML—V I Y. Telegram.

FARM AND GARDEN. SHOEING THE HORSES. •Knell US.CDMI la Cnuaed by Improper Performance of Thle Work. Ill doing farm work it is not usually necessary to keep the horses shod, but on the road it becomes essential. Some horses have much tenderer feet than others and cannot be driven on a rock road even a short distance without becoming lame. But much lameness is caused by improper shoeing. Unless in special cases it is of no advantage to have large, heavy shoes. Generally shoes cannot be too light if they give sufficient wear. Large, heavy shoes tire an animal unnecessarily* so that the width of a shoe need be no more than is necessary to cover the bearing surface. More than this is adding to the weight unnecessarily. -All shoes should have a level bearing on the foot, extending from -the toe to the heel. Carelessness in this respect is a frequent cause of lameness. * In preparing the foot for the shoe only so much of the horn should be removed at each shoeing as is necessary for the proper fitting of the shoe. Cutting away or burning the hoof unnecessarily is a positive injury and should never be allowed. The frog should take a bearing on the ! ground, but no other part of the hoof should be weakened to give this healthy action. While quite a number of different plans have been devised for fasten- J ing the shoe to the foot, nails are the most secure and simplest fastenings for horse-shoeing, and a properly driven nail never does any harm. The most important requisite in horseshoeing is the adoption of a correct system rather than the use of any special form of a shoe. It is not a good plan to try experiments; have a good system and carry it out. The ground surface of a shoe should follow the form of the ground surface i of an unshod foot, which has traveled ; on a level road. For every-day use ; on the average horse no better form of j shoe exists than a narrow one, made ! thicker at the quarters than at the heel and toe. It is a mistake too often made to permit a shoe to remain on too long. Ordinarily no advantage follows the retention of shoes on the feet for more than four weeks, as the growth of the horn in that time produces a disproportionate hoof.—St. Louis liepub* lie.

GREAT LABOR SAVER. Low Rack for Handling Bulky Forage or Corn Fodder. In handling grain, hay or green com ■fodder, a low rack, similar to the one^ shown in the illustration, is a great saver of time and labor. One man standing on the ground and simply drawing the corn toward himself can lay it upon the table of the cutting machine without stopping, «r raising it

up simply to lay it down again. Tfeo top of the rack is 7x14 feet with 6-foot standards. The stringers sire 4x6- inches 19 to 20 feet long1. They are hung from the front axle by means of a lengthened king bolt provided with a nut and washer. From the hind axle they are suspended by three-fourth;inch tods with nuts and washers below and hooks above to go over the axle. The sringers * should be 20 inches apart in front-and 32 inches behind. A short wrench 'keeps the hound from tipping up. I :Jind This rack very convenient. As short a turn can be made with this as 'with a 16-foot rack.—Orange Judd .Farmer. COOKING APPLES. Apples cooked in the following manner will be found far superior to theordinary apple sauce and really quite as easily prepared: Page them, and instead of quartering them shave off thin slices, as you would potatoes. Put t them in a thick saucepan, porcelain 1 lined, and with just a little water to keep them from burning;, first dissolving the same quantity ®f sugar in it. that you would use to sweeten the apples were you stewing them in the ordinary way. Cover them with a closefitting lid and cook gently on a moderate fire until you can run a straw through t he fruit. Don’t stir this while ■it is eooking. If there.isany danger of •the apples burning, remove the sauce;pah to a cooler part of the range and put an asbestos mat under iL, Remove any iscum that may form and turn the ap-; pies out in a dish to cool. 'When cold j eettOn the ice until needed. The fruit will be of a beautiful golden (.color and retain its form of slices, although it axil; be almost a jelly. It witl keep for same days and is delicious with cold meats or served as a preserve with cake. Surrounded with a border of whipped creauaa, sweetened, it makes a most acceptable dessert.—Providence (2R- I.) Journal.

Feed Boxec for Horses. A great many horses form a habit of slobbering their feed around. Seme will root it out or take a large mouthful and then look around, thus wasting considerable. The moat effective method we hase tried is to nail boards up both sides and the front end of the box. Board it dear up, high enough to keep the horse from getting its head over. Where horses get in the habit of taking too mueh in their mouths at a time Ajutfl are liable to choke, put a couple of litatIe rocks into the box; get nearly round ones a little bigger than your fist. —James Pearson, in Farm and Home. We desire to repeat advice sometimes .before given, that when egg shells are fed to hens they should be crushed so that the habit of egg-eating mar not be encouraged.—Western Sural.

He Didn't Haiti * Be was one of those unruly youngsters who make the life of apublie school-teacher a hard one. He was in the primary grade. He <aae in one morning with dirty hands and face. The teacher looked at him severely. “Johnny!” “Yes’m.” “Have you washed your face and hands this morning?” “No’m.” “Why not?” “None of the folks is home, an’ I don’t haft to.”—Syracuse Post CONSUMPTION AVERTED. From the Herald, Peoria, IQ. More thr«n four years ago Mrs. Cyrus T. Ciug, of Williamsfield, Illinois, was taken tick and for three years treated with five of tho best physicians of Peoria, 111. None of them seemed able to understand the nature of h«r aliment. Finally one physician declared she was suffering from a tumor in the abdomen. This^he took medicine for until It was dried up, but still there was no improvement in her condition. “Finally,” to use Mrs. King’s own words, “My condition became such that all of my friends declared it was-a mere matter of Lime until my death would follow. All thought I had consumption. I was compelled to lay down two or three times during the duv even if I did not work at all and I was abre to do only the lightest. One evening-1 was sitting in a chair while my husband was lying on tbo lounge reading a magazine. He read the advertisement of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, and turning to me said, ‘Jennie, you ought to try those pills. Goodness knows you are Kle enough. The next day I tried to get a x at the drug store in town but they had none so 1 sent to the firm for them and got half a dozen boxes. I had no more than taken one box until an improvement was noted in my condition. It was but u very ibort while until 1 was able to take up my work again and I began to rapidly gain fiesta. My blood which had been like water became healthy and strong and I never felt better in my life. I forgot to say that while first sick I had ruptured one of the inner walls of the abdomen. For three years I hjad been compelled to wear a truss and bandage. That I think had considerable to io with my weakly condition. I bad not taken tho pills more than a week or ten lays until 1 took the truss end bandage off iud it has not been necessary for me to wear it over since. 1 hud weighed but eighty-five pounds when sick but in a short while my weight had increased to ITS. I am fully souvinced tjhat I owe my life to the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. “Not only myself has been benelitedby the pills but many of my neighbors who took them on my recommendation are now enjoving perfect health where before they could hardly do their work. I was the first in this neighborhood to get them but soon many of the surrounding farmers were sending for them and now the local druggist always keeps a good stock on hand.

JuMMPi V 4k twvv *• . V _ cident that threw me back for a while but I pot six boxes of* the pills and am now feeling just as well as ever.” The four little children of Mr. and Mm. King, two bovs and two girls, are strong and healthy looking and the mother says they are kept so bv takiug pink pills. I>r. Williams’ Pink Pills contain, in a condensed form, all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, irregularities and all forms of weakness. In men they effect a radical cure iu all cases arising from mental worry, overwork or excesses of whatever nature. Pink Pills are sold in boxes only at 50 cents a box or six boxes for f^.50, and may be Hhd of all druggists, or direct by mail from Dr. Williams* Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. _ _ THE MARKETS. NkwYokk, October 21,1895. CATTLE—NativeSteers..... 9 S 60 a* 4 90 COTTON-,Mlddllng FLOOR—Winter W <ct •M Wheat.. 3W a 4 50 a 68* a 38*4 a a 10 zb &xa .? | 36V,a 800 9 4 75 4 75 3 85 3 *0 3 35 3 15 62* a* 17 Vi 38 800 PH 8 75 6 WHEAT—No. 2 Red CORN—No.#... .... OATS—No. 32...... PORK—New Mess..10 00 st. Louis COTTON—Middling... 8X75 REEVES—Fancy Steers. 6 20 a Medtura.. .... 4 20 a HOGS—Fair to Seftct. 3 50 a SH EEP—Fair to Choloe....... 2 25 a FLOUK-Patents..,.. 3 25 a Fancy to Extra do.. 2 75 a WHEAT—No. 2 Red Winter... CORN—No. 2 Mixed.—. OATS—No.2 .. RYE—No. 2. —. TOUACCO—Lugs.. Leaf Barley....... 4 50 @ 12 00 HAY—Clear Timothy. 9 so a t3 00 UU TTER—Choice l>atry_... 16 a 18 EGGS-Fresh . 13V4a PORK—Standard Mesa..—... 8 62*4a BACON—Clear Rib . 5xa LAKD-—Prime Steam..—. a CHICAGO CATTLE—Shipping .. 3 25 a HOGS—Fair to Choice.3 35 @ SHEEP— Fairto Choice....... 2 75 a FLOUR—Winter Patent*..... *00 & Spring Patent*.. 8 is a WHEAT—No. 2 Spring. 59Xa No 2Red...—. 60*® CORN-No 2. 30*a OATS—No 2.. a PORK—Mess (new).... 8 37V4® * KANSAS CITY CATTLE—Shipping Steer*.... 8 75 a HOGS—All Grades. .. 3 25 a WHEAT—No.2 Red...—. 63 @ OATS—No 2. a CORN—No 8... 22Via • NEW ORLEANS. FLOUR-HIgh Grade_ 3 25 CORN—No 2. OATS—Western. . HAY—Choice. 17 0J POHK-NewMess .. BACON—Sides. a COTTON—Middling.. 9 a LOUISVILLE WHEAT—No. 2Red (new) ... 67*4a (.CORN—No 2 Mixed.. 32 a OATS—No2 Mixed.. 21 a iPORK—New Mess.. 9 00 a .BACON—Clear Rib. 6*a vSOTTON—Mddliog.-. a 5 00 3 95 3 25 3 50 3 50 »<>X 63* 30* 18* 8 50 5 10 3 80 6* 16 23 a 36 a 25 a 3 65 36 25 V4 a >8 50 a 9 00 C9 32* 21X 9 26 6* 9

Absolutely pure

No Eicum for Not tirttlnt Well“Uncle Allen,” asked the caller, “do yon know of anything1 that's (food for a cold?” Uncle Allen Sparks opened his desk, took from one of the pigeonholes a large bundle of newspaper clippings tied with a string, and threw it into the other's lap. “Do I know of anything that is good for a cold?” he echoed. "My young friend, I know of six hundred and twenty-seven infallible ways of curing a cold. I’ve been collecting them for forty-nine years. You try those, one after the other, and if they don't do you any ifood come back and I'll give you one hundred and sixteen more. Bless me!” added Uncle Allen, with enthusiasm, "you can always cure a cold if you go at it right.” He dug a bundle of yellow, timestained clippings out of another pigeonhole and the visitor hastily coughed himself out—Chicago Tribune. How to Unpack the Woolen*. 1 With the chilly autumn days the housekeeper will look to her woolens which have been carefully stowed away in camphor and tarpaper during the summer months. * Every garment must be carefully examined and brushed, so that if even one moth has survived the summer season he may be, at once destroyed. The furs that are to be made over or dressed are laid to one side to be tent to the furrier's; the flannel underwear is looked over and every tiny rip mended and all buttons tightened, that the warm clothes may be ready to put on when necessary. Coals and heavy dresses that are to be also donned with the arrival of severe weather should be hung on the line out of doors for several days, always being taken in at night. Two or three daj-s of such airing as this will effectually dismiss all odor from the thick folds.—Chicago Tribune* Baked Orator*. Large oysters are very nice baked in the shell. Dip them in melted butter, sprinkle with a little parsley chopped very fine, and put in the shells. Add to each a little lemon-juice and a covering of fine breadcrumbs, set the shells in a quick oven, and bake until the crfimbs are browned. Serve in the shells.—N. Y. Post. The Skill and Knowledge Essential to the production of the most perfect and popular laxative remedy known, have enabled tho California Fig Syrup Co. to achieve a great success in the reputation of its remedy, Svrup of Figs, as it is conceded to be tlie universal laxative. For sale by all druggists. A question' in geography—Aro the Scottish lochs fitted with quays} — Boston 'Transcript.

An Irish newspaper onoe said, in announcing an accident: “Our fellow townsman Mr. Hooligan fell out of the second-story window yesterday and broko his neck ana suffered internal injuries. His friends will be glad to know that the latter are not m? rlous.”—Harper’s Bazar. A Big Regular Army. The mightiest host of this sort is the army of invalids whose bowels, livers and atom* achs have been regulated by Hostetter’n Stomach Bitters. A regular habit of body is brought about through using the Bitters, not by violently agitating ana griping the but by reinforcing their energy intestines, _ and causing a flow of the bile Into its proper channel. Malaria, la grippe, dyspepsia, and a tendency to inactivity of .the kidneys, are conquered by the Bitters. „ Tracurr—“Are there any exceptions to the rule that heat expands and cold contract j I” Tommy- “Yes’m. The ice-man leaves a lot bigger twenty-pound chunk since it got colder.' ’—Indianapolis Joor^ak^ Hall's Catarrh Cur* Is s Constitutional Cure. Prioe 75a We bare more power than will; and it Is often by wav of excuso to ourselves that ws fancy tilings are impossible.—Rochefoucauld. How Mr Throat Hurts!—Why don’t yon use Huie's Honey of Horehound and Tarf lake's Toothache Drops Cura in one minute. Sedition is bred in the lap of luxury, and its chosen emissaries are the beggared spendthrift and the impoverished libertine. —Bancroft Beecham's pills for constipation 10c and 25c. Get the book (free) atyour druggist’s and go by it Anuuul sales 6,000,000 boxes. I never think ho is quite ready for another world who is altogether weary of this.— U. A. Hamilton. I can recommend Piso’sCure for Con sumption to sufferers from Asthma.—E. D Townsend, Ft Howard, \Vis., May 4, HU. In solitude, where wo are least alone.Byron. World’s Fair 1 HIGHEST AWARD. IMPERIAL: * Granum 1 : Is unquestionably a most; ivaluable FOOD & sick: room, where either little; one or adult needs deli-i cate, nourishing diet 1! Sold by DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE I John Carle & 5ons. New York.

Sue]} ills as SORENESS, STIFFNESS, and the like,

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Water —nothing1 but water. That’s all you need •' with Pearline. Don’t use any soap with it. If what we claim is true, that Pearline is better than soap, the soap doesn’t have a chance to do any work. It’s only in the way* Besides, some soaps might cause trouble—and you’d lay it to Pearline. You’ll never get Pearlte’s very best work till you use it just as directed on the package. Then you’ll have the easiest, quickest, most

economical way of washing and cleaning. 47?

Sarsaparilla Sense. Any sarsaparilla is sarsaparilla. True. So any tea is tea. So Any flour is flour. But grades differ. You want the best. It's so with sarsaparilla. There are grades. You want the best. If you understood sarsaparilla as well as j^ou do tea and flour it would be easy to de termine. But you don’t. How shoidd you ? When you are going to buy a commodity whose value you don’£ know, you pifck out an old established house to trade with, and trust their experience and reputation. Do so when buying sarsaparilla. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla has been on the market fifty years. Your grandfather used Ayer’s. It is a reputable medicine.. There are many sarsaparillas. But only one Ayer’s. IT CURES.

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THE K1SIN0 SUN STOVE POLISH la cakes for general blacking of a store. THE SUN PASTE POLISH fora quick after-dinner shine, applied and polished with a cloth.

lone isro»., rrope^ canton, jsuue., li.s.A. WANTED-SALESMEN ■ ■ Local and trareling. Good pay. Permanent. Experience not necessary. Apply quick. Established ©rer tO jears. HWMI tMittlfo.lwUll.llMah|<ai,a OPIUM i&wlU*^NS^^slI3f A. S. K B.1S70. nn vsmxs n uvutnuBt puui