People's Pilot, Volume 2, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 December 1892 — Page 2

The People’s Pilot. RENSSELAER. » t INDIANA.

The News Condensed.

Important Intelligence From All Parts. DOMESTIC. In the future the Carnegie Company at Homestead, Pa., intends to treat with its employes as individuals. Each man employed is required to sign an agreement in which he pledges himself to refrain from belonging to any labor organization and to be governed entirely by the rules and regulations of the company. The Order of Amitie, a beneficial organization in Philadelphia, has made an assignment. It had seventy lodges, 8,000 members, and has existed four years.

The Keystone bank robbers at Erie, Pa., who shot Assistant Cashier Koplcr October 3, were sentenced as follows: John Courtney, fourteen years; Charles W. Hawley, seventeen years in the penitentiary. A bulletin from the census office shows that out of a railway mileage for the world of 370,281 miles the United States has no less than 163,597 miles, or 41.18 per cent of the whole, and that the railway mileage of the United States exceeds by 3,493 miles the entire mileage of the Old World. Miss Lola Barnett and Mr. Kennecutt, both popular young people and engaged to be married, fell through the ice while skating near Nebraska City, Neb., and were drowned. John Volvosak was fatally injured and his wife killed in a runaway near Nashville, IIL At the national assembly in Champaign, 111., of the Farmers’ Mutual Benefit association resolutions were adopted favoring the free and unlimited coinage of silver, a graduated income tax and the election of United States senators by direct vote of the people. At the close of their annual meeting in St Louis the Knights of Labor adopted resolutions favoring the restriction of immigration to those with funds sufficient for a year’s support; restricting the ballot to those who can read and write; and that money should be issued by the national government only. On a kite-shaped track at Stockton, Cal., Stamboul trotted a mile in This beats«the world’s trotting record for stallions.

The annual report of the pension bureau says there are 865,087 names of pensioners on the rolls, an increase of 179,928 over the preceding fiscal year. Sylvester Critchlow, on trial at Pittsburgh for murder in the Homestead riot, was found not guilty. The Dubuque (la.) lumber mills have closed for the season. The cut of lumber, 66,000,000 feet, is the largest on record in that city. A lumber camp near Marshfield, Wis., was destroyed by fire, and two men were cremated and three others terribly burned. Flames in the large furniture factory and salesroom of Otis Corbett in New York caused a loss of 8500,000. Miss Libby Miller, of Elkhart, Ind., and a guest, Miss Josie Franklin, of Middletown, were struck by an engine at a crossing near Elkhart and killed. Mrs. Minerva Wright and John Hutchison while driving at Richmond, Ind., were struck by an electric car and fatally injured.

Fuller’s livery stable at St. Joseph, Mo., was burned, and twenty, horses, one % trotter valued at $15,000, "perished in the Hamess The historical Unitarian church at Plymouth, Mass., was destroyed by lire. In the belfry was a bell cast by Paul Revere in 1801. Ohio odd fellows have decided to build an orphans’ home to cost about $75,000. Robert Geradtng, an amateur bicyclist of Denver, Col., broke the world’s track and road record for 5 miles by 45 4-5 seconds. His time was 12:07. Flames among tobacco factories and other buildings in Lynchburg, Va., caused a loss of $150,000. The Hotel Zinzendorf, at Winslow, N. C., recently built by the West End Land Company at a cost of $140,000, was destroyed by fire. Three men and a boy were drowned at Lewiston, Wash., by the upsetting of a boat Jonasen’s jewelry store at Omaha was robbed of diamonds and watches valued at SIO,OOO. At the leading clearing houses in the United States the exchanges during the week ended on the 25th aggregated $1,108,600,048, against $1,398,798,448 the previous week. The increase as compared with the corresponding week of 1891 was 9.1. 'The works of the Michigan Forge & Iron Company at Detroit were burned, the loss being SIOO,OOO. In the United States during the seven days ended on the 25th the business failures numbered 203, against 210 the preceding week and 295 -for the corresponding time last year. James Fox, aged 12, and John and Kennedy Cotton, 11 and 9 respectively, were drowned while skating on the Fox river at Green Bay, Wis. Cashier B. J. Martin, of the Webster bank at Eupora, Miss., went into the vaults and helped himself to money and securities ranging from $15,000 to SSO ,000 and skipped. A panther made its appearance at Bopkins’ trading post in the Cherokee outlet and killed an Indian child in the presence of its mother. May Sams, a chambermaid, shot and instantly killed Capt Ransom Sampson at the Planter’s hotel in Cairo, 111., then fatally shot Sampson’s bride, to whom he had been marrifed but a week, and then shot herself fatally. Jealousy was the cause. Miss Agnes Beers poisoned her brother-in-law, Joseph Haunder, at St Henry, Minn., and then took her own life in the same manner. No cause known.

An explosion of g- s caused by a leak in the pipe fn the rooms of the White Dental Manufacturing Cotnpany at —: -*.• . I—-—— the establishment Tt was feared that forty-eight miners had perished from hunger and cold in the mountains east of Snohomish, Wash. In speaking of the southern posts of the Grand Army of the Republic Commander Weissert says colored soldiers must be recdgnized. The building of the Indian industrial school at Clontarf, Minn., was entirely destroyed by fire. The forthcoming report of A. B. Hepburn, the comptroller of the currency, shows that the number of banks in operation October 31, 1892, was 8,788, having an aggregate capital of $693,868,645 and total resources of $3,510,094,897. The circulation outstanding shows a net increase for the year of 810,487.226. The residence of A. H. Austin, treasurer of Harrison township, 0., was entered by burglars, who blew open the safe and took 81,500. The Northern Pacific overland express was held up at Hot Springs, Wash., by three masked men who relieved the passengers of cash to the amount of $1,500.

“The Breakers,” the elegant and costly summer residence of Cornelius Vanderbilt at Newport, R. 1., withits valuable contents, were burned, the loss being $400,000. Dispatches received from various parts of the United States indicate a general observance, in the usual manner, of Thanksgiving day throughout the countrv.

A whirlwind swept over California, carrying destruction in its wake. In the harbor at San Francisco a dozen vessels were destroyed and orchards in the interior of the state were ruined, causing a loss of over $500,000. All towns in Ohio using natural gas were greatly aroused over the unmistakable evidence that the supply was slowly failing. A fire that started in the cigarette factory owned by Vaios & Co. at Havana, Cuba, caused a loss of $150,000. Henry Banks, a colored farmer at Clarksville, Ark., who had been absent from home, returned and found his wife talking to Joseph Per-y, a neighbor. Banks pulled out a razor and literally carved them to pieces. Four men lost their lives by the capsizing of a boat near Newberne, N. C. Ten business houses at Dunkirk, Ind., were burned, tho loss being 8100,000. Sheriff McGinnis, of Gordon county, Ga., was killed while attempting to arrest two desperadoes at Plainville. The criminals, Jester Scott and William Morrow, were lynched by a mob. The secretary of the interior transmitted to the secretary of the treasury the estimates required to pay pensions for the next fiscal year. The sum of $166,831,350 will be necessary. The treasurer of the United States, E. H. Nebeker, in his annual report says the total receipts for the year were $736,401,296 and the expenditures 8684,019,289. Of the aggregate stock of money at the end of the fiscal year $771,252,315’ was in the treasury and mints, leaving $1,603,081,736 in the hands of the people. The holdings of the trcasary increased $50,000,000 and the amount in circulation $100,000,000 during the year, In the heat of passion Kate Green, a colored woman at Louisville, Ky., killed her 10-year-old daughter because she told a lie.

The trial of Prof. Charles A. Briggs, of Union seminary, on the charge of heresy, was begun by the presbytery in New York. A consensus of opinion of the mem-bers-elect of the Fifty-third congress on the question of an extra session shows that seventy-two favor it, seven-ty-eight are opposed and thirty-eight are non-committal. The lumber firm of Bills & Koch at Toledo, 0., has failed for $150,000. Alice and Clifford Vessey, the former 3 and the latter 6 years of age, were burned to death by a fire at their home in Chicago. James Stone and William Blakenship were arrested near Anniston, Ala., while making counterfeit nickles. The damage suit of G. W. Herrick against the Lake Shore railroad was decided at Norwajk, 0., the 7 plaintiff getting $9,000. The case had been on trial eleven years and Herrick has since died. While on their way to school at Madison, Neb., Ambrose Malone and Ridgley Wagner, each aged 15 years, attempted to cross a mill pond and they were drowned. ca* Prairie TfFes near Aberdeen, S. D., started by sparks from railroad locomotives, spread over a large territory, burning out several farmers. In the United States the visible supply of grain on the 28th was: Wheat, 70,765,000 bushels; corn, 12,032,000 bushels; oats, 8,037,000 bushels; rye, 1,288,000 bushels; barley, 2,743,000 bushela

Three men and two iromen, um-brella-menders, were burnecl to death in an old barn at Middletown, Conn. Mr. and Mrs. D. Manus, aged 90 and 86 years,, respectively, two well-known and influential German people living near Freeport, 111., were suffocated by coal gas. A large number of non-union men have left the Homestead (Pa.) steel works, being convinced that their places are to be given to old men. A freight train struck a buggy at Foraker, 0., and Miss Andrews was killed and Miss Fry fatally hurt The horse was also killed.

Mrs. Lottie Smith, while playing with a revolver at Columbus, 0., fatal* ly shot her friend, Mrs. John Hally. Jonathan R. Jewell, 92 years old, one of the most picturesque characters among the mining men of the Rocky mountain region, was run over and killed by a train at Great Falls, Mont W. Lander, a prominent attorney at Green Bay, Wis., committed "suicide by hanging. No cause was assigned. Samuel Yates, a miser, who had a vast board of money secreted in his residence near Milan, Tenn., was burned to death in a fire which destroyed his house.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. William McKinley, Sr., father of Gov. McKinley, died at his home in fUwton. 0.. aged 85 years. f The non-pariiaanA Of iaffepenaents, hold the balance of power in the California legislature and can name the next United States senator. The official vote of Illinois gives Cleveland a plurality of 29,178 and Altgeld, for governor, 22,480 plurality. The official count of the vote of Rhode Island shows the following result: Harrison. 27,069; Cleveland, 24,335; Bidwell. 1,565; Weaver, 227. Plurality for Harrison, 2,734. The official vote of Minnesota gives President Harrison a plurality of 21,270. Nelson (rep.) for governor has a plurality of 14,967. The official canvase of the vote of Connecticut shows the following result: Cleveland, 82,397; Harrison. 77,025. Bidwell, 4,025; Weaver, 806; Wing (socialist labor), 329; scattering, 245; total, 164,825; Cleveland’s plurality, 5,370. The republican majority on joint ballot in the legislature is 14. Thomas Pembridge, 80 years old, and Mrs. Sarah, von Storch, 70 years old, were married at Scranton, Pa. The groom is a well-to-do fanner of Spring Brook.

Edward Daniel Boler, for over forty years at the head of the Mount Lebanon (Pa.) Shakers, is dead. He was 90 years old. The official returns from the recent election in Tennessee show the following vote: Cleveland 136,477; Harrison, 99,973; Weaver, 23,633; Bidwell, 4,856. The democrats elect eight congressmen and the republicans two. The official vote of lowa for president was: Harrison, 219,378; Cleveland, 196,408; Weaver, 20,616; Bidwell, 6,322. Ann Davis, who was born in Wales in 1791, died at the Schuylkillhaven (Pa.) almshouse. She had been a widow for fifty years. The official vote of Kentucky at the recent election was: Cleveland, 175,424; Harrison, 135,420; Weaver, 23,508; Bidwell, 6,385; total, 340,732. Mrs. Abby Hutchinson Patton, wife of Ludlow Patton, died in New York. She was the last survivor of the famous Hutchinson family of singers of New Hampshire. The corrected vote of New York by counties gives Cleveland a plurality over Harrison of 45,981. The official vote of Pennsylvania gives Harrison a plurality over Cleveland of 63,747.

FOREIGft. William O’Connor, champion oarsman of America, died in Toronto, Can., of typhoid fever, aged 29 years. In a gale off the Japanese coast a number of boats were wrecked and nineteen fishermen drowned. Eighty soldiers were crushed to death by the falling of a temple at Changchow, China. Eighteen miners were killed by a cave-in at the Borda mine at Pachuca, Mexico. At a bull fight in Arteaga, Mexico, the enraged animals broke from the arena and charged the crowd of spectators, sixty persons being injured and one killed. Jenner’s silk store at Edinburg, Scotland, was burned, causing a loss of $500,000, and the damage to adjacent buildings by fire and water was $750,000. J. J. C. Abbott resigned the premiership of Canada and Sir John Thompson, minister of justice, is his successor. The health officer of Berlin reports that there have been in Germany this year 19,647 cases of cholera, of which 8,575 were fatal.

LATER. Census Superintendent Porter in his annual report to the secretary of the interior strongly urges that the Census office be made a permanent bureau of the interior department The cost of taking the eleventh census amounted to $8,203,693. Dr. John W. Scott, father of the late Mrs. Benjamin Harrison, died at the white house, aged 93 years. Mrs. Carrie Richardson, a widow, and her 8-year-old daughter Mabel, committed suicide lu Chicago by turning on the gas in their room. Graham N. Fitch, United States senator from Indiana from 1856 to 1861, died at his home in Logansport, aged 82 years. Near Enterprise, Kj , Carl Burgham killed his wife , by cutting her throat with a razor and then committed suicide by shooting himself. The total collections of internal revenue for the first four months of th a present fiscal year were $56,258,020, an increase of $4,332,752 over the corresponding period of the last fiscal year. The official vote in Ohio of the presidential candidates is as follows: Harrison 405,187; Cleveland, 404,115; Bidwell, 26,012; Weaver, 14,852. Harrison’s plurality, 1,072. Alexander H. Wyant, the famous American landscape painter, died at his home in New York of softening of the brain.

Returns from the recent elections in the various states indicate that the next United States senate will be a tie politically. John Noland, of Cleveland county, N. C., died of hydrophobia after chewing his tongue into shreds in his convulsions. The corrected vote of Wiscousin cast at the late election shows that Cleveland received 177,447 votes, Harrison, 170,973; Cleveland’s plurality, 6,474. The vote for governor was: Peck, 178,11’; Spooner, 170,445 f Peck’s plurality, 7,658. The prohibition vote was 13,064 and the labor vote 7,870. A mob at Hiawatha, Kan., lynched Commodore True (colored) for the murder of William Walthall. The members of the senate committee oh immigration in session in New York considered propositions that all immigration, eicept from North and South American countries shall be suspended for one year from March 1, 1893, and that nonimmigrant shall be admitted to the United States between the ages of 12 and 55 years unless he can read and write and possesses SIOO in money or its equivalent

PENSION LAWS.

Some Needed Changes Sugrested by the Assistant Secretary of the Interior. ' r ( Washington, Not. 24.—The annual. report of Cyrus Bussey, assistant of the interior, haj been received by Secretary Noble. The leport is summarized as follow* July 1, 1881, there were 5,0® appealed pension cases on file with the board, and tils number June 30, 1802, had been reduced to <348. There were 4,258 appeals filed during the year. Of the 48® cases acted upon during the year the decision of the commissioner was sustained in 8,865. Action was reversed in 464 cases, 201 were dismissed and 400 eases were reconsidered by the commissioner pending appeal There are several defects in pension legislation. Frem an early date in the history of our pension system there have prevailed under different administrations conflicting opinions as to the power to enforce the reimbursement of ■toney paid in excess for pensions in conformity with either inaccurate or Illegal certificates issued through mistakes, either of fact or of law, in the adjudication of claims by the bureau of 1 pensions. Consequently the government has been compelled to submit to serious losses of money, which, having ence been improperly paid either to claimants or pensioners, were irrecoverable under any established rule of departmental practice.

In the list of applications for widows* pensions under section 3of the act of June 27, 1880, my attention has been drawn to a number of cases wherein, according to the law, the claimant has been necessarily denied a pension because the soldier on whose death the claim was based, although serving “ninety days or more in the army or navy” as shown by the evidence, had not been “honorably discharged" prior to death, but had died while, for instance, on individual furlough and absent from the technical line of duty in the service. It seems that beth the spirit and the object of the act of June 27,1890, would be emphasized and observed by an amendment of this section that would be applicable to such meritorious cases of dependence and distress. The third section of the act of June 27, 1890, which provides pension for minor children who are “insane, idiotic, or otherwise permanently helpless,” properly provides that thepension granted to such children shall continue during the life of said child or during the period of such disability; but under the law as it stands, in order that such children shall be pensioned during lifo or during the period of such disability, it must appear that the father or the mother died prior to the expiration of the limit affixed to the pensionable minority period, viz.: 16 years of age, and therefore if, when the parent dies, the insane or idiotic or otherwise permanently helpless child is more than instead of under 16 years of age, a minor’s pension cannot be allowed. In view of this fact I respectfully suggest that the act should be so amended as to admit all insane, jldlotic, or otherwise permanently helpless children to minor's pension, regardless of the date of the parent's death or remarriage, at any period prior to and including the age of 21 years. I am gratified to be able to say that the pledge of the nation (expressed a century ago) that “if any person, whether officer or soldier, militia or regular, called into the service of the United States, be wounded or disabled while in actual service, he shall be taken care of and provided for at public expense,” has been redeemed with fidelity. In compliance with the provisions of the various pension laws, June 30, 1892, there was borne on the pension rolls the names of 865,087 pensioners, 179,928 more pensioners than were carried on the same rolls at the end of the preceding fiscal year, and 457,050 more than were on the rolls June 30, 1887. Gen. Bussey calls attention to tha fact that the appropriation bill for the Indian service is usually passed so late in the year that it seems impossible to let contracts for supplies in time for delivery before winter sets in, and this, especially as to blankets and winter clothing, has caused much suffering. He recommends that the appropriation for these supplies be made one year ahead.

FARMERS’ WANTS.

Demands Made by the National Assembly of the F. M. B. A. Champaign, 111., Nov. 25.—At the elosing session of the national assembly of the Farmers’ Mutual Benefit association resolutions were adopted reaffirming faith~*in the principles of the order, demanding free and unlimited coinage of silver, demanding an increased circulating medium, recommending the establishment of postal savings banks in lieu of national banks, demanding that congress enact laws to prohibit dealing in futures on all agricultural or mechanical products and adulteration of foods and medicines, demanding an equitable system of graduated tax on incomes, and favoring the election of United States senators by direct vote of the people. The assembly pro vided for national and state lecturers and for resubmission of the amendment to the constitution providing for admission to membership of women and of boys and girls over 16 years of ago. »

The income tax is a favorite idea with the farmers, and it is understood a measure is now being prepared to be submitted to congress at its next session. The bill will provide for the taxing of all incomes in excess of $2,000 per annum. The amount of the tax will increase with the income, so that where the man with $2,000 a year will pay a merely nominal tax of §2 or $3, the possessor of an income of §500,000 or more will have to give up at least half of it to the support of the government The purpose of laying such a heavy tax on large incomes is to make it impossible for any man to accumulate such a fortune as that possessed by Gould, the Vanderbilts and Astors. While the inheritance tax was not formally indorsed by the assembly, ■it is not unlikely that such a measure will also be brought before congress. The idea of those who favor such a measure is to impose such a heavy tax on the transmission of large estates as to prevent the keeping of millions in one family from generation to generation.

All Gave Thanks.

Chicago, Nov. 25.—Dispatches received from various parts of the United States indicate a general observance, in the usual manner, of Thanksgiving day throughout the country.

Errors Corrected.

Indianapolis, Ind., Nov. 24.—The official table of the presidential vote in Indiana, published Wednesday morning, contains several errors. Jefferson county should have given President Harrison 3,135 votes instead of 2,549. Delaware county should have given Harrison 4,887 instead of 4,108, and Kosciusko county should have given him 8,823 instead of 2,823, thus making a total difference of d? 245 and bringing President Harrison’s vote in the state up to 256,174. Cleveland’s vote, unless errors shall be found, is 262,817, leaving him * plurality of 6,043 instead Of 8.888.

"Your Work in Life.”

A series of 13 articles by successful men in as many pursuits is one of the many Strong groups of articles which are announced in The YtmUi't Companion for 1893. “The Bravest Deed 1 Ever Saw” is the topic mcwct sems by 2 The prospectus for the coming year et fJu Companion is more varied and generous than ever. Those who subscr.be at once will receive the paper free to Jan. 1,1893, end for a full year from that date. Only 81.75 a year. Address The Youth’s Companion, Boston, Maas. Private Executions. Gresft Editor—‘'Send a man to that execution tomorrow, and tell him to keep it down to two columns.”

Three Blessings in One.

A triplet of benefits is comprised in the single word—vigor. This implies good appetite, sound sleep, the pewer to digest. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters endows an en. feebled system with vigor. It insures dL gestion, helps nightly repose, and Increases zest for the food it enables the system to assimilate. It is petent in malaria, constipation, liver and kidney complaints and rheumatism. Disappointing.—“ How did that tin mine you discovered pan out!” “It was aflat failure. It proved to be only the grave of a Harlem goat”—N. Y. Herald. A. M. Priest, Druggist, Shelbyville, Ind., says: “Hall’s Catarrh Cure gives the best of satisfaction. Can get plenty of testimonials, as it cures every one who takes it” Druggists sell it, 75c.

Not Holt At All—“ And so she is a holy terror 1” “Bo; an impious virago.”—Yankee Blade. Jefferson’s Rip Van Winkle at McVicker’s Theater, Chicago, till Dec. 10. Dec. 11 Glendalough, a new Irish comedy in five acts. White to the Kansas Trust and Banking Co., of Atchison, Kan., for their descrintive price lists of improved farms in Kansas. Jealous.—Jsck—“Mamie, whose portrait is that in your locket?” Mamie—“Columbus’.”—Jewelers’ Weekly. A curb for nearly all the common ills— Take Beecham’s Pills. For sale by all druggists. 25 cents. It is a strange paradox that fast colors are colors that will not run.—Boston Transcript. A successful chase of the ideal often helps us amazingly in catching up with the material—Puck. Fortify Feeble Lungs Against Winter with Hale’s Honey of Horehound and Tar. Pike’s Toothache Drops cure in one minute. Took On Bomb.—“ Did Jimson take on very much at the funeral of his uncle!” “About a quart”—Yankee Blade.

Teacher—“ What are the two capitals of Rhode Island!” Smart Scholar (promptly) —“R. and L”—Kate Field’s Washington. It is always proper to call upon the superintendent of streets to “mend his ways.”— Boston Commercial Bulletin. Our Bewildering Language —The Count (whispering)—“EAh, mademoiselle, you ’ave sooch a beautiful hide.” “Cubebs are weaker,” says the market report But not in diuretic effect, understand. Life is short, and most people are short all through hife.—Somerville Journal. What kind of spice is most adulterated With peas? Why, pepper, of course. Time heals all things; but it does not heel a pair of boots.—N. O. Picayune. Writing materials—Brains, eyes and a hand (not for sale at stationers’). —Puck.

LOOK AT THE SIZE of the or- / A dinary pill. J \ Think of all the Z 7 \ /.of d j trouble and dis- ']£ I turbance that it can rah you. Wouldn’t you n we l CoDae somothing easier to J/Sw Itake, and easier * a .... jin its ways, if \ ‘J at the saqje time J it did you more good? That is the case with Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They’re the smallest in size, the mildest in action, but the most thorough and far-reaching in results. They follow nature’s methods, and they give help that lasts. Constination, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, Sick and'Bilious Headaches, and all derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels are promptly relieved ana permanently cured. “ If we can’t cure your Catarrh, no matter how bad your case or of how long standing, we’ll pay you SSOO in cash.” That is what is promised by the proprietors of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. Doesn’t it prove, better than any words could, that this is a remedy that cures Catarrh ? Costs only 50 cents.

“German Syrup” My acquaintance with Boschee’s German Syrup was made about fourteen years ago. I contracted a cold which resulted in a hoarseness and cough which disabled me from filling my pulpit for a number of Sabbaths. After trying a physician, without obtaining relief I saw the advertisement of your remedy and obtained a bottle. I received quick and permanent help. I never hesitate to tell my experience. Rev. W. H. Haggerty, Martinsville, N.J. ®

Self Torture! That’s what it amounts to, when you at» jr tempt to do washing and cleaning, / s now_a ‘^ a y s > without Pearline. And / t^ie stran S e part it is, that you f V & Fj should be willing to suffer, when it’s V V only for your loss and not for your \ W\ kt £ / £ a * n ‘ That needless back-breaking / \ F I rub, ru^> ’ ru k t sav i n g y° u an yA // thing. It’s costing you money. Il \/Z Ifi j a Vrt * s s i m piy wearing out the Inlluv I ‘ ll taat y° u ’ re washing. Mill II I \ Why would you rather do it? 'Wm ~—— II I That is what the women who ™ // ’ are saving their strength and their clothes with Pearline can’t understand. Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you, ■ ” lh,s is “ s°° d as" or “the same as Pearline.” IT’S An <VZ VY K-LA V FALSE—Hirline is never peddled, if your grocer sends you an imitation, be honest— tend it back. 360 JAMES PYLE. New York.

ON® ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy or its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in ita effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, ita many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 5Gc and $1 bottles by all heading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FItAXCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YOSK. N.Y. Babies are always nappy when comfortable. They are comfortable when well. They are apt to be well when; fat; they worry and cry when thin. They ought to be fat; their nature is to be fat. If your baby is thin, we have a book for you—careful living —free. Scott & Bowne, Chemists, 13s South sth Avenue,, New York. Your druggut keeps Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil— all druggists everywhere do. sl.

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