Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 1, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 September 1887 — Page 3

IMPORTED LABOR.

Public Opinion Steadily Crystalizing in Favor of its Restrict ion. N. Y, Tribune. \ Missionary work is one thing, imrnigraiioipinothcr. Worthy and able men have confounded the two, and failing to see that a life-giving influence cannot go ont from this conn try. to elevate those who walk in darkness in other lands, if we permit the foundation to be poisoned by t the degradation, on the ground that it is the duty of Americans to welcome every opportuni tydio uplift' the oppressed and the ignorant who come to us from other lands- t Yet public opinion has been steadily in favor of some restriction. Men of the highest virtue and worth, men as devoted as any in the work of the Christian Churches, have come to see that restriction is a duty. This feeling finds expression in the resolution adopted by the Ohio Convention, during the last week, and its reasons should be fairly weighed. Opposition by Eastern men to the exclusion of Chinese immigration has been of no avail, because it has been felt that the unanimous appeal from citizens of the Pacific States and Terri tories ought not to be disregarded by others far removed from the evils and dangers they depict. But now the question concernsa kind of immigration much sought by managers of some corporations, who want to get the cheapest labor they can, and do not care for the final influence upon the social, civil or moral condition of the country. In their behalf the argument will be urged that, if we permit the free immigration of Hungarian or Italian labor, even the most ignorant, the uplifting of Christian civilization will be brought to bear upon men and wotnen who could not otherwise be reached.

Some years ago a great strike occurred in the Connellsville coke region, and employers., determined to get cheaper and less independent labor, imported an army of Hungarians. The world knows what troubles have followed, what strifes and violence, what cruelty and injustice on one side, and what dishonor to the cause of labor on the other. Exactly the same thing has been done by oth-' er corporations, in other localities, and settlements of workers from Hungary or Italy or other lands, as far removed as possible in condition and character from the level of American citizenship have -been formed about, many mines, mills and workshops. It is the lesson of experience that these immigrants, brought in mainly under contracts to labor, and always for the purpose of laboring at a rate of wages below that paid to tree American citizens, do not form a valuable addition to the population. They work for wages which make it impossible for them to live as the citizens of a self-governing Republic need to live. They learn nothing of our laws or institutions. They are powerfully y AnarcElSts arRF •ocialists, but not visibly influenced at all by the Christian civilisation about them, to which they hold the attitude of enemies, nor by the’ spirit of this free Republic which they do not comprehend.

Civilisation helps a man when it begins by opening to him higher possibilities of life. Give him the means to live decently, to enjoy the comforts of a home, to mingle with neighbors and fellow workmen who live and think as free citizens should live and think, and th-n the work of elevation will begin. But when a so-called civilization brings a mag here to make a brute of him, and depr.ve him of the means of living decently,.or associating with free citizens, or educating himself or his children, that is another matter. The uplifting process does not begin. The Christianizingof people whom a Christian civilization condemns to exist as beasts is hot possible, and the gatherings of such labor become plague spots in our Society. To us they do incalculable harm; to them we do no appreciable good. Indiana State Fair. The experience of thirty-four years will be brought t<s bear by the management in their efforts to excel in, every particular. with the coming State Fair, commencing September 19th, being one week earlier than usual. They realize the importance of sustaining their reputation which has become national in its character, having been the pioneers by introducing the principal features of the Model Fair «f this day and age. This is no vain boast, as facta will prove, and letters of inquiry from different State’s and Territories show that the Indiana State Fair is a credit to the State. It was the first to offer premiums without limit ‘ open to the world.’’ The first State Association to own its own Fair Ground and other property. The first to adopt the system of paying awarding committees. The first t& create the Superintendent of each department from the memheraof . the Hoard. The first to abolish the sale of liquor on the fair ground The first £p abolish the offering of premiums on machinery without actual tests. The first to create and erect a large Exposition building in connection with the State Fair, and last but not least the first to organize a Woman’s Association to take charge of that part of the Fair, which has proved an immense success. The Board has distributed over a quarter of a mi tl ion of dollars in premm ms, and has about $200,000 in fair ground

propferty. They, have this season expended SIB,OOO in improvements and extension of the fair grounds. The main building has been re-roofed and remodeled, with a thorough painting inside and out, and the grounds put in complete order. ■ At present the indications are that some of the exhibitors in their delay of applications for space and stalls and pens, “are going to get left,” SPBCIAL FRKMIVMS OFVBKBD. • The American Jersey Cattle Club offerin competition at the Indiana fctate "Fair SIOO for the best herd of registered Jersey cattle, consisting of one bull and four females. The Holstein-Friesian Association of America offer as a special premium for Holstein-Friesian cattle SIOO to add to the first premium of $l6O, for the best herd of milk breeds in competition. The American Clydesdale Association offer a silver medal to the owner of the best recorded Clydesdale stallion, also same for best recorded Clydesdale mare bred in Indiana, on exhibition. The American Pereheron Horse Breeders’ Association offer a gold medal, to be awarded for the best Pereheron bred in Indiana. The Oxford Down Breeders’ Association offer a silver medal, for the best breeding pen of six recorded Oxford Down Sheep owned in Indiana. Pen to consist of one ram and five ewes, any age. Alaskan Lore. Indianapolis News. “The island up there is.not a pleasant habitation,” said Mr. Ryan to a News representative, fanning himself with a palin leaf. “It is a pile of rocks, more than anything else. There’s not much scenery lying around loose, a coarse grass and moss beds constituting the vegetation. Not even a thorn bush adorns any of the Behring Sea islands. “There is not a great deal of mystery eonnected with the sealing, although it differs from ‘sucker’ fishing in White river. They are driven over the rocks to a place where they are slaughtered like hogs. On St. George’s island 16,000 seals are killed annually for their skins. The law prohibits the killing of anv under three or over five years old, and the slaughter of females is prohibited.

“The sea otter is an animal much more valued for its fur than the seal. The Aleuts (natives of the Aleutian islands) deem this animal their especial ‘meat.’ but unless the government protects the otter as it does the seal it will become extinct before many years. ’ “Anybody who hits upon the islands of the north for a sumdier resort will find the inhabitants first rate company. On St. George’s there are 112 people, or were when I left. On St. Paul’s, forty miles away, there are 240. These Aleuts resemble the Japanese to a certain extent, and it is not unlikely the tribe is remotely descended from the ‘Japs,’ who live la. the-southwest. They are superstitious and cowardly, and fear the white man’s stern, cold look. They are a little ahead of us in one thing—there are no desperadoes among them, and they don’t know what murder means. The Aleutian language is comprised in a few words, and the lawyer who would sit on the veranda of a hotel on a July afternoon conversing with his landlady while he looked at the icicles on the eaves would run no risk of being talked to death. They have poor health, being scrofulous and inclined to consumption. School is maintained by the Alaska Commercial Company eigh months of the year. There is a church of the Greek persuasion which the Aleuts attend about ten months. They are worshipful through fear instead of Ipve, and this has not tended to make them better .eitizens.” _ . , Ameri«anr». English Railway Speed. Lqpdon Standard. There is an impression on this sidg of the Atlantic that railway accidents in America are tuainlv due to the craze for swift travel which characterizes our cousins in the new world. In realitv the American trains travel, as a rule, much more slower than ours, and with a less average’of aasualties than is yearly put at the doors of the Unglish railway companies. For instance* the express trains between New York and Albany average only twenty-nine and two-eighth miles per hour, though the track is almost level, while the “Flying Scotchman” averages fifty miles over a considerable part of the distance between London an dEdin burgh Between New York and Boston the speed is rarel over thirty-two and two-thirds miles an hour, though the course is much easier than that between London and Manshester, which is sometimes traversed at the rate of forty seven and three-fifths miles ah hour. This speed is, indeed, only attained by one American line—what may be called the “Limited Mail,” between New York and Chicago, which •barges a heavy extra fare for the accommodation afforded. Taking themall round; the best English trains exceed those of America fully twenty five per cent, in speed.

How It Assists Nature. «■ Scranton Truth , _ “I regard the use of beer as the true temperance-principle. When 1 work all day and am exhausted nothing helps me like a glass of beer. It assists nature, you understand,” said Remspn to BensonL “It makes a fookof me,”Benson replied.—“Justso;” exelaimed Itemson, that’s wbat I say; it assists nature.”

CAR-LOADS OF MONEY.

Figures About the ofMoney in the National Treasury. ' ~ Washington correspondence. Few persons, perhaps, who read the frequently published reports of the fiscal operations of the Government give any consideration to the vastness and significance of these operations. We read of the hundreds of millions of gold and silver in the Treasury, but what few persons have intelligent idea of what is embraced in the jiine figures required to describe the liabilities and assets of the Government? It is only when the auriferous contents of the Treasury vaults are weighed and measured and placed by the side of articles and commodities that are daily handled by the masses that an intelligent comprehension can be obtained by the people of the financial btrength of the Treasury and the great extent of the Government’s' fiscal operations. I find by reference to the latest published statements of Treasury assets and liabilities that among the assets was $281,096,417 in gold and nearly $150,000,000 in silver, including 34,000,000 of trade dollars and fractional coins. Taking up this $281,000,000 of gold and placing it on scales, I find that the gold held by the Treasury weighed 510 tons, and if packed in ordinary carts, one ton to each cart, it would make a procession two miles long, allowing 20 feet of space for the movement for each horse and cart. The weighing of the silver produces much more interesting results. Running this over the scales I find its weight to be 7398 tons. Measuring it in carts, as in the case of tlu gold. the 'Silver now held by the Treasury would require the services of 3306 horses and carts to transport it, and would make a procession over 21 miles in length. The surplus about which so much is said in the daily newspapers amounts to nearly $47,000,000, an increase of $5,000,000 since July 1. Counted as gold this surplus would weigh tons. Counted as silver it would weigh 1685 tons.

Each million of gold adds 3885 pounds to the surplus, and each million of silver adds 58,930 pounds. Applj iug cubic measurement to the Treasury gold and silver, and piling the two metals on Pennsylvania avenue as cordwood is piled before delivery to the purchaser, I find that the gold would measure thirty-seven cords and the silver 400 cords, and that both would extend from the Treasury Department to Four and One-half street, or from the Treasury to the Pension Office in a straight line, and forming a solid wall 8 feet high and 4 feet broad. Extending these calculations asd computations to the interest bearing debt, equally interesting results are obtained. The public debt reached the highest point in August, 1865—juat 't'wehty-two 'years' ago—when it was $1,381,580,205. The general reader will better appreciate the vastness of this sum when informed that it represents 70,156 tons of silver, which would fill a procession of carts that would extend from Richmond, Va., to a point twelve miles north of Philadelphia, the distance it would thus cover being 266 miles. The interest bearing debt is now (not including the Pacific Railroad bonds) $1,001,976,860, showing the sum paid has been $1,379,553,445, or more than one-half of the total amount, and representing 40.637 tons of silver dollars, which would extend 154 miles if packed in carts epntainine one ton each.

Reducing these .figures to a basis where they may be intelligently comprehended, and that the rapidity with which the Government has reduced its bonded debt may nfe fully realized by the general reader, I find that the reduction has been at the average rate of $62,7i 45 975 each year, $5,225,581 each month, $lB4 186 ea«h day, $7,258 each hour, and $120.47 for every minute of the entire twenty-two years. Pursuing the calculation to the smallest divisible space of time, the bonded debt of the United States has been de creased at the rate of $2.09.7 for every second, or for every swing of the pendulum, for the entire period from August. 31, 1865, to July 31, 1887. This is an exhibition of recuperation and material progress on the part of the country, and of sterling honesty and integrity on the part of the Government ahd”people that is without a parallel in the world’s history. Bathing His Children With a Hose. Loa Angtlca Tribune. A novel bath w»s witnessed in L/s Angeles a few daj s ago. A father had stationed his whole family of children on the lawn in order, from the shortest to the tallest, each of the youngsters clothed in a big towel, and when all was ready the hose was turned on, while the youngsters dance I with delight. After fifteen minutes’ brisk application the herd was driven to the rearof the house, where they were dried and redressed. “Yes,” said the paterfamilias, “that’s the way I do it, and you See it saves an immense amount of

• r TiX IFTliat_Way. Lowell Citizen. A contemporary thinks the saloon should taken out of politics. Just for a starter, we will suggest that the politicians be taken out of the saloon. , What everybody eave must be true. Hall’a Catarrh Cure la the only poeiti.ve cure for Catarrh in the market. Price 73 esnta.

Snatching Knowledge. Brooklyn Eagle. “Yes, sir,” repacked Mr. Roundtry), “I am a poor man, and th : only fortune I can give my children is an education, and that they have. Edward is entitled to write D. D. after his name, Alfred and Clara each write M. A. after theirs, and little Timothy is an A. B. All mv children are university .bred.” “Is it possible?” exclaimed the new minister, looking at the children in amazement! “Yes, indeed,” replied the father proudly. “Harvard, Mr. Roundtrip?” suggested the new minister. “No,” said the father, “they took the four-weeks’ course at Chautauqua.” It is So Everywhere. Supt. ol the St. Louis Poor House. Visitors to the institution of which I have charge always express much sympathy for the old men and women who are classed as paupers, and are inclined to pity the friendless and forlorn condition of the aged men. If these visitors knew how many of these feeble and broken-down charges upon the city have healthy and well-to-do grown-up children in the city, more than able to care for them, they would consider much of their sympathy wasted. The law governing the admission of “paupers” to the poor house is not rigid enough. A Home Delicacy. Puck. Mrs. Catesby is giving a small rockparty at Nahant, and the footman has been left in charge of the luncheon. Mrs. Catesby—“What is it, Michael?” Michael —“It’s this way, mum. Mrs. Grill, thot leddy from Chinchinatty, kem up to th’ wagon an’ axed me had Oi annyham. She tuk th’ whole, wan, ma’am, wid knife an’ for-rk, an’ dishappeared in th’ thicket, ma’am, axin’ me to tell yez she jfdn’t care fer anny oonch.” In many localities Hood’s Sarsaparilla is'in such general demand that it is the recognized family medicine. People write that “the whole neighborhood is using it,” etc. Particularly is this true of Lowell, Mass., where it is made, and where more Hood’s Sarsaparilla is sold than of any other sarsaparilla or blood purifier. It is the great remedy for debility, scrofula dyspepsia, biliousness, or any disease caused by impure state or low condition of the blood. Give it a trial.

On the edge of dis-pair—about to become divorced.—Texas Siftings. Thftv Wlll Not Do It. Those who - once take Dr. Pierce’s “Pleasant Purgative Pellets” will never consent to use any other cathartic. They are pleasant to take and mild in their operation. Smaller than ordinary pills and inclosed in glass vials; virtues -unimpaired. By druggists. In the drama of life,, the clerk plays a counterpart. All sufferers with such chronic ailments as liver diseasi?, dyspepsia, blood diseases, cough, consumption (scrofula ff the lungs), and kindred diseases should know th at Dr. Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery” is their best friend in such deep affliction. It. comes to soothe, alleviate and cure. A cool thousand —1,000 pounds of ice.

Don’t You Kuow that you cannot afford to neglect that catarrh? Don’t you know that it may lead to consumption, 'to insanity, to death? Don’t you know that it can be easily cured? Don’t you know that while the thousand and one nostrums you have tried have utterly fail that Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy is a certain cure? It has stood the test of years, and there are hundreds of thousand of grateful men and women in all parts of the country who can testify to its efficacy. All druggists. - ' „ The best thing on record is the deed of a corner lot. Since the .South Bend women have got, on a Moxie muscle, husbands carry a very'weak air. The nine muses never began to enjoy Hie. popularity that is accorded the base bad nine.- - i fc hfimV < timberfc and faith tha rungsen vb. hi r-raised id i eavei. Every person is interested in their own affairs, and if this meets .the eve of anywne who is suffering from the effects of a torpid liver, we will: admit that he is interested in getting well. Get a bot-tle-of Prickly Ash Bitters, use it as directed, and you will always be glad you read this item. It ie a wi,e old i»w that kuovs who fill’d it latt. Ind nation re.nit* from a partial para yaia of the atom»ch and i» the primary <-aa e of » very larae maprlty of the ill. that humanity of h»i to The moet arr«ear4. and aXeadve remad ia Dr J. If. Mcb.aa i Little Liver and Ki'ney Pillala 21 eta. a vial. . Sick headache it the .a-.» of manv live*. Ta core and prevent thia vr-n »iuj co- plaint ur« Dr J. H McLean’s I it eLi’erand K duty Pilot*. They are atr enable to take nad g.ntlo in tbtir notion. 24 c. nt* a vial. _ 1* ATKNTS obtained bv Louie kujifer Jt Co . At--10 iii-.y, Waehinnton. ISM. Adrice tret. A burglar ranerally makes nia ueme ran after ba a ehrethe plate. >- Dr. I -I -V Lean'll S rei-gth •■uOK C r iial an 1 Blood Purittei, i.y 'a vlui a preperi'ee, rill brigh e.i a « h-eke. a <1 trana-or >1 ■> Ala, ! ag-ii-pi i <d wQuiaii into oueof oparkliar hoa th aLilbh-nti. tl per i- ttb-

An Effectual Treatment for Warts.

Tin Medical Pi ess. It is now fairly pstabli bed, says a writer in the M edir al Press, that the common wart, '.chich is so unsightly and often so proliferous on the hands and face? can be easily removed by small- -di ses of sulphate: of magnesia taken internally. M. Colrat, of Lyons has drawn attention to this extraordinary fact. Several children treated with three-grain doses of Epsom salts morning and evening, were promptly cured 11. Aubert cites the case of a woman whose face was disfigured by these excrescencesand who was cured in a month by a drachm and a half of magnesia taken daily.. Another -medical man re_ports a case.of very large warts which disappeared in a fortnight from the dai-' by administration of ten grains of salts

Stone.

luiliauapolis New?. Jhil Did you know that stone lias sap in it? When it is fresh-quarried we .call it ‘green’ stone. It is not fit be used until jit is thoroughly dried out. Stone fresh and moist from the quarry does not show its defects. If quarried in frosty or wet weather it should be left to thoroughly dry under exposure to the air. If no defects then appear, it can be used with safety, but must be handled with care. The reason that sd much stone cracks in buildings is that it is putin green. When the sap dries out the stone changes condition, and the pressure upon its various surfaces becomes uneven, and breakage results.

Improved Election Machinery.

St. Louis Post-Dispatch. There is not much fiss in inventing ballot-boxes that can’t be stuffed. Let some genius invent a more expeditious a ay of putting ballot-box staffers in the penitentiary.

When Baby was sick, we gave herCaatoria, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When sho became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria,

No opium in I’iso’s On re for Co»««mptioB. Cure* where other remedies fail. 25c Far bettor that the harsh treatment of medicines which horribly aripo the patient and dost , y the coating of the stomach. Dr. J. H. McLean’s Chilis and Fever Car,, by mild yet effective action will cure. Sold at fift cent-) a bottle. • urfr'endtbe inebriate states that there is nothin* lihe d.ink to premote reel fan. Undue exposure to cold winds, rain, bright light or ualaria, mar brine on inflammation and soreness of trie evos Dr. J. H. McLean’s Strengthening Eye Salve wlil subdue the inflammation, cool and soothe the nerves,and strengthen weak and failing Eye Sight. 25 cents a box... 1 Frequently accidents occur in the household whi-.h cause burns, cuts, sprains and bruises; for use in such cases Dr. J. H. McLean’s Volcanic Oil Liuini mt has fbi- many years been the constant favorite family remedy. Aprles are the yonth, new cider the middle age, end vinegar the old ape of humanity. Happiness depends very much on the condition of the liver and kidneys. The ills of life make but llttl - impression on those whose digestion is good. You can regulate yourliverand kidneys with >r. •I. H. McLean’s Liver and Kidney Balm. SL per bottle. ——-—— ■— It afflicted with Bore Eyes,use Dr. Isaac Tao *•*- son’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it. 25c. The ash man is a very in-lost-nons sort of aeitiz e r. Parsons who leal a life of ei.pesure are subjects to rheumat'S n, earalgia and lumr age, and will find a va'uable remedy in Ur. J. H. McLean’s Volcanic Oil Liniment; it will banish oain and subdue inflammation. Mild as the summer zephyrs a e, they invariably "Cometo blows A question of the da' -Shall we go to hear Patti at end me races or pay our rent. Eaios in th" small f the hack indicate a diseased con ;ime<i of the Liver or Kidneys, whlch_Jma? be easily r mo-ed by the use of Dr. J H. McLean’s Live: and Kidney Balm. »l er bottle. A tree easy expectoration is produced by a few doses of Dr J. fl. McLean’s Tar Wine Lung Balm, in all cases ot hoarseness, sore threat or difficulty of breathing -, Galls, Scratches, Cracked Heel. Thrust, ar.d all diseases of the feet and irritationsof the "skirt of horses and cattle quickly and permanently cured by the use of Veterinary Carh«<lissalv«.,’Uic. anil Usl at. Drxutsrists

, Tks beet nd annat Bcnedy for Care I all Mffi—ffff aaased by aay derangemeat of !tha Liver, Kidneys, mornaeb and Bowels. Dyspepsia, Bick Headache, Constipation, BiHoiu Complaintff and Malariaof all kinds yield readily to tko beneficent influence of arnsiis It iff pleasant to the taste, tones up the u ystem, restores and preserves health. It is purely Vegetable, and cannot &il to prove beneficial, both to old and young, s a Blood Purifier it is superior to all others. Sold everywhere at 81.00 a bottle.

I - 0 tl 11 the hardest storm. The new PUMMEL ST ICKER !■ a perfect ridiac eeat. aad l< ZJ TJ Ls Pi covers the entire saddle. B»wa'e of imitation*. ’None penufne wlthoat the rlah I Cllin’ Brand” t-id.-m.rk. Itinerated C.t.losn* frt*. A. J. Tow,r. Bmiou, Mam. DC AS WELL TOOLS, Sfc *»d Paa|M, Bailer*, ete. BxperiMteaa Jaiwt Cutter* from tfc* uil r«*ian*. ewwartste •utßta. *** WARRRM Eaffine, whMl £ a*fcn»wl«Raro4 by all driller* t* b« the beat. STEEL PULLEY AND MACHINE WCHKB I I II lllill lll ■lHilllllllHlimilllllll I IIIIIiIIIIMmMBMKMMBMBEBgBM iftblPl ILI for Infants and Children* aHMMSMMWHOMMMSHBBHMBBMMMMMBiMeMMMMaMMBH) ’ CaatoHaisso well adapted to children that I Caa torla cures Colic, Constipation, „ L recommend it as superior to any prescription I ®J?}V Stomach, piarrhesa, Known to me " H. E Ancura, M. D„ I U 1 So. Oxford Sb, Brooklyn, N. T. | Without injurious medic* Um Tax Cnrrxcß Comfaxt, 188 Fulton Stnut. N,X „

Scrofula Probably no form of disease is so generally distributed amcns oax .whole population as scrofula. Almost every individual has this latent poison coursing his veins. The terrible sufferings endured by those afflicted with scrofulous sores cannot ho understood by others, and ihfclr gratitude on finding a remedy that cures t’.ic'.c, nctootehes a well person. The wonderft;! p.-vmrot Hood’s Sarsapari’la in eradicating every form of Scrofula has been so clearly and fully demonstrated that it leaves no doubt that it is"the greatest medical discovery of this generation. It is made by C. I. HOQD & CO., Lowoll, Mass., and is sold by all druggists. 100 DosesjOne C A< A R R H ■ AND AY-FEVER K, CUKE. fcLY’S CREAM BALM. uaajApply Balm Into each nostril. FOR ALL DISORDERS OF THE Stomach, Liver and Bowels TAKE PACIFIC Hg BTRICTLY VEcvrrr a CVBB CONSTIPATIOU, iNDIOBffiOBr, DTSTWBIA. PiLss, Sick hbadachb, Lnrsn Complaints, Loss os’ appbtitn, Biliousnuss. XiironirMi, javn bicz. Etc. PRICE, OS *. PACIFIC MANUFAITVRINa CQ„ BT. LOBIB,HB. The ENTIRE SYSTEM TUT * T ATDTA ! QUICKLY CLEANSED ofljlilJu AXLJXL • K.FLESS’ Fever Tonic Is a sure and speedy Cure in the meet stubborn cases. It thoroughly cleanses the system of Malaria,making the euro oomplete. When taken m directed, A CURE IB GUARANTEED, and should it tail the Druggist is authorised to KuruXD thi Mokbt you paid for it. IWGrVXitaTRIAL! Be sure to ask your Druggist fer KRESS’ FEVER TONIC. Price, 81. pet hottie. KRESS’ FEVER TONIC CO., : ST. LOUIS. MB- - Buos. 4 Co Agents. [JOSEPHIGILLOTTS STEEL PENS GOLD MEDAL PARIS EXPOSITION 1373. Nos. 303—404—170—604. THE MOST PEBFECT OF PENS. One Agent (Merchant oniy i wanted tn every town The “Tansi’l’s Punch” 5c cigar <s fully up to all and m r i: ah yen r commend it to be. My cigsr trade Uss fully < o bb d W« snail soon want more. EL J. - rowE, Diuggist, Fdins, Mo. Address R. W. Tausill & Co., Chicago. DETECTIVES Wasted in every Ceuuty. Shrewd men to net under oui mutruetions in ow Seeret Servioe, ExperiencenotuMMsuy. ffeHotampferpartienUn. QRANNAN DETECTIVE BUREAU, U Arcade, Cinmnn.u. Q Tfj CURES WHERE ALL E L SEF AILS M Beet Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Ueo CH in time. Sold by druggists. pf IfSJgEigijamuM Newspaper for Sale. Democratic is Politics. In natural gas town and only Deisooratio paper in county. Good reasons f'-rsellinc- Less then H. OS. Address, W. H. Leedy, Business University, Established 37 years. Best place to secure a thosoughly practical and sound Business or Shorthand Education. Catalogue A Commercial Current, OO 111 RR -MORPHINE habit I Ivl cured in two weeks, I ask no pay until yon know you are cured. DR. M. C. BENHAM, Richmond, tnd. Mention this paper. HI By return mail. FuTl Deacriptios mlgfa b Moody’s New Tailor System of Dress riltfc CntUng. MOODY A CO., Cinaiuiati. ft nPIII M Habit Cured •MlafMtory befere any VI IU Ivl pyt J. M. BARTVI, tfth Ward, Ou I N II 37—JLNDPLS Wiieii writing to Advertisers readers wll confer » favor by mentioning thia paper. Morphine Habit Cured in IC. j ij Bkn 1° days- !\o pay till cured. Hl iWlfl Hr. J. fetephens. lartmuon. Ohio.