Newspaper Page Text
ITS MERIT IS PROVED
KEC 0 RD QF A GREAT MEDICINE
A Prominent Cincinnati Woman Tolls
How Lydia K. pinkham'e Vegetable
Compound Completely Cured Her.
The great, good Lydia R. Plnkhnm’s
Vegetaluc Compound Is doing among
the women of America Is
toe attention of many of our tending
scientists, find thinking people Rcncr-
ally.
s;
m it
LO ■ 9 k 5 ? I '
.
IL-:
• •* i.p
s Airs. Sara Wi/son
rp i , n© lot . .. low . j off . letter is t only one of
Tnanv rhoiKwiid.s w/iich are on file In
he lnliftRm 6ft)cc f and fro to prove
toe.vond question Hint Lydia R. IMnlx-
lain s Wpetftble (omjiouhd must be a
rw-mnly of grenv mprit, otherwise it
coal.! not produce Mich marvelous re-
suits among sick and ailing Women.
* **1 ® I’ibid.nrii:
»K° I W«*agreat suf-
forur wlu womb trouble, which caused —
WHW.B twin extreme nervousness and fre-
y .ailed 1 '"'it neadaehoa, relievo from which the doctor
to me. I tried I.ydia E. Pink-
lumis Vegetable Compound, and within n
short time felt ts-tter, and after taking five
liottlesof it I wo* entirely cured. I therefore
iKMtrtlly recommend yoiir Uotnrmund as n
|»riods aplendid r^ula-end uterine tonic. It makes tho monthly
without pain ; and w hat
a bltwsfrjr it in to Had such a remedy after so
«o miuij commend doctors fall it to to all help suffering you. lam phased
r* women
T's Sara Wilson, 81 Hast Iki Htroot, Cincin¬
nati, Oliio.
If you aupprefined or painful
menstruation, weak ness of the filom-
ff»eh, flooding, indigestion, bloating, leuoorrlnea,
faintness, nervous prostration, <li/./.i-
xlr.SS, •* dont-eure ” and
“want-to be left-alone " feeling, Jibes,, cx-
.citabllity. backache nr the bln.
are sure indications of female weak-
nosa, ovarian spine derangement of the uterus
•or trouble, in such cases Micro
y one tried ami true remedy—Lydia
K. I’inlchuiu'fi Vegetable Com pound.
Around the World
f, I h«v« u*c<t your Fish
Brand Slicker* for Islands years
in the Unwnlian
find found tliem the only
Article that suited, f am
now In thla country
(Africa) and think n great
ileal of your coat*/’
(namk on application )
HIGHEST AWARD WORLD’S FAIR. 1901.
The world-wide reputa¬ Water¬ tOWEI
tion of Tower's Vs
proof Oiled Clothing of
assure* the positive the worth buyer of
nil (in- ir;n m T.«h‘ 'bfljwP
A. J. TOWER CO., Boston, U.S. A.
TOW HR CANADIAN CO., LIMITED.
Toronto, Crniadn.
v
■.'-j
/) m
P
CORN FIELDS
ARE GOLD FIELDS
to the farmer who under¬
C stands how to feed his
1
.to crops. Fcrt i 1 izers for Corn
must contain at least 7
per cent, actual
Potash
Send for our books—they
tell why I’otash is as necessary
to plant life as sun and rain;
sent free, if you ask. Write
to-day.
~ GERMAN KALI WORKS
New York -Off Nassau Street, or
Atlanta, Ga.—»), South Broad St,
Malsby & Co.
4| Soulb Forsyth St, Atlanta, G&.
iS Ut 1 atj
portable and Ntall,.navy
Engines, Boilers,
Saw Mills
AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY
Complcti lina carried in dock for
IMMSDIATS
litt Mubloarr, Uttut Fries, and llsst Tank.
Write us for catalogue, prices
«tc.. before buying.
DYSPEPSIA
XkflWtekMl but numerous oihsr so-c*U*d re medics
without aval) and 1 find that Caacar*t« rol!a?«
frould Jn* ^ 1 taken
(James M.cfjuuo, Mercer 8t., Jersey City, N. J.
Boat For
M kwwjmte dhc Bow«l» ^
cahov cjcrmimc
w 0RXWHIlEt°“
•old jjflMMilt. * Tho potent. Tost* e'tRtr,peA Orv°d^DoOoo<L $*0 Q*
Qumtu in bulk. *:«uutne
ntoo-'i to cure or >our maxitf l>*ck.
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago ar N.Y. 59a
ANNUAL SALE. TEN MiLUON BOXES
« UClftl CARD TRICK. Flvs <«r 0 « h,I.t
“ Uio lip* of ft rigors ln*t*i>tly from
cards Uunc dcilff**. <1 lately froflnctM} F«l} lustruflilbOtaAbl asntu by #qj umU
l« rfoi mor havrB,Tav»m.Pl«.
AddlosF, d.ll.YnRdn
Heat Co Uifa Asyrup. Titatm Good. U«<?
I d lima. Sold by UnttfiiM.
CONSUM
NOT MlJCft TO IT.
"No,” said the doctor, "I can’t
make anything out of his case at al)
It bothers me.”
"Why,” rojillod his wife, ”1 thought
It was only a simple cold.”
'‘Exactly: That’s why I can’t mttko
anything out ot a.’’--Philadepbia
Ledger.
FIT8 permanently cured. No fit* or nervous,
be*Haftor Norvidte»toriT,*ftrlalbottleand flr.d <lav'„ use of Dr, Kline’s Croat
! I treatise free
Hr.K.l(.Kuna,Ltd.,911 Arohttt ,Phil*.,Pa
Switzerland's Income from tourists is
said la be about *23,00fi,000.
] Tsytor’s Cherokee ltemedy of Hweot (lnm
and Mullen is Nature's great remedy—Cures
al7,hroj2nrb»nTCbles: bH AtX«C
20e,. 60(i. sad tl.00 per bottle.
____
1 bluet Japnnese oflirers ami many of tho
men can speak ltussiua.
DISFIGURED BY ECZEMA
Wottclorful Chanicf In a Nlglits-In h Month
I’h«’« War ( I»*ar a* Kvcr-Aaotfalr
Cure by C Utica r A.
i “i had eczema on the face for flve
months, during-' which time I was in the
I care of phfiiciuna. My face was so dis-
/inured I could not go out, and it wa* going
from had to worse. A friend recommended
Outjcura. The firnt night after I waahed
| wy f,„, with Cuticura Resolvent .Soap, and it used changed Cu-
tieura Ointment and
wonderfully. From that day I wa* able to
out) and in a month the treatment had
removed all scale* and scabs, ami my face
lvas clear as ever. (Signed/ T. J. Soth,
r il7 fitsgg 6 Street, Brooklyn, N. Y."
Balter color in made from analino and
the jsh.idc is railed “azo.”
A (Jtiiir«nu*(dl Cur« l f or IMtfe*.
Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding
Piles. DruggifllK will refund money if Pazo
Ointment fulls to cure in C to 14 days. 60c.
The Siamese capital is the terminus oi
four lines of railway.
Mrs. Winslow’s HoothlngHymp for children
teething,softon thogurns, reduces in/lamma-
^^."^yapnliJ.curcawIniloollo.afe.iibotW©.
The entertainment of royalty costs Brit*
>*li society $10,000,000 nnmiaPy*
ri * 0 '* r,in ' lf4 ihehost mcdleine wo over used
xt(T.««tlor.s -Mhro ,t and lungs—W«r,
, ! ' V " 1 ' 1 " to1 ’* ,0 * IJ °°’
; and Dtirabl. day, 1 i brick, rers-nt. formed Scottish of eiiipiied invention. granite
: n
* -------- —
To Cure it Cold in On© l>«y
Take Tiftxatlvn Itromo Quin Ino Tablets. All
dnitftflsLy refund money If It fnll» to euro.
K. \V. Orovo’a Hi/rnujuro Jh on box, 35o*
Sarah Bernhardt fy lo make a South
African lour next May.
Hull cured hi 30 minute# by WooHonVs
Sanitary Lotion. Never Fail*. Sold by all
druggists, $1. Mail orders nromptly idled
by |)r. K. Delchon, OrawfortWiile, ind.
A locomotive consumes forty-five gallons
of wafer for every mile it runs.
IN THE FRUIT UELT.
Visiting Swell—-Introduce mo to
some of your society buds, will you?
Native (of St Joe)—Wo have'nt
any. They are ail peaches over her(4
—Chicago Tribune.
llerlln has counted up hor suburbs
and graveyards and found that, she
has a population well over 2,000,000.
This should start, another “Million
Club" in Chicago.
A QUICK RECOVERY.
A Prominent Ofltoor or thn Rtbrcnu
Writes to Tlianh Doan's Kl.lnoy mils
Tor It.
Mrs. C. Id. Rmognrdnor, a Iocal ofBcer
of the Rebeccas, of #
Topeka, Ivans., Room
10, NI2 Kansas nvo-
line, writes: “I used
during Doan’s the Kidney past Pills J jl
year
for kidney trouble and «
kindred ailments. 1 a
was suffering from
pains in the bark and
headaehes, but found
after the use of one
box of the remedy wm i
that ually the disappeared, troubles grad¬ so Hi. : id v
that before l bad fin¬
ished a second pack¬
age I was well, I,
therefore, heartily en- 1
dorse your remedy.”
(Sign,all MRS. ('. K. BUMOAUPNKR.
A TRIAL FREE Address Foster-
Millnirn Co., Buffalo, N. V. For sale
by all dealers. Price 50 cents.
FILLING THE BREACH.
Miss Smythe (organizing a sub-
acriptlon dance)—I’m in despair
about our dance, Mr. Brown. So
many peopt have failed me. You’ll
come, won't you?”
Mr. Brown Really, Miss Smythe,
I'm not a dancing man. : don’t dance
at all!
Miss S.—Oh, that won't matter in
the least. You’d help to fill up, you
know!
Mr, B.—Ah—yes—with pleasure. I
wil look in about supper time.—Lon¬
don Punch.
VERY FEW. lb' ANY.
CIGARS SOLD AT 5
CENTS. COST AS
MUCH TO MANUFACT¬
URE. OR COST THE
DEALER AS MUCH AS
“CREMO
!F THE DEALER TRIES TO
SELL YOU SOME OTHER
ASK YOURSELF WHY?
10 , 000 Plants for 16 c.
k iloi-e and farms »re otber planted in to flQ m
■PAmetiotu A BwhIs i.h»» i& Miy for ihi*.
There wwon for the
Ti \v« tivu over ?s<®6 urruNtcfl soi<*8 *rrtU, pro-
J\lu •jrtiiftion of our ladttoo M U> try them, we
order to iho you following
» tnAko you uapits
I cvdenlmi often
For to Oonta Postpaid
Rnrty. iottj uir.tj’n,
Y'HK) Fine f
tooo CcJery.
VtAH» Kleii .\wuy Letcjcc,
. 1000 Htih ii.'IJ
} loovi ti.'eriewlt U»« LuvcioUd BrJlliant KiiUFcv M
1089 <■ 'orn.
Above seven ivnckefres cc*r.t%in ruffl-
ciont ptfvd to k’lfiw lo.000 pUnis. fur¬
nishing bushel# of brilliant choice
Sowvrt aui ft.no UM-sof
regvtables, t’cMS’elhe.r abeul wjihetirgrosl F!,
e*t*U*jjr, W 5 ung si) w er#,
JtoiMRs, or: ft.ii Fruit*;, et«?., *11 notice* for
L6c and (lilt
n 3*l lii*f e*lAk>K
f//J JOHN lc-lLo A* SAUER Cro»Be,Wi«. SEED CO,
(feODCpADS
jum /V Sig?
Cost Hilrl 1.0*11
■MOfA S II paper read before the
I )j Engineers* ('lull, of riillfl-
O delplila, (leu era I Itoy Stone,
director of the Office ol
^fO)T Hoad Inquiry In the United
States Iiepnrtmcnt of Ag-
rlculture, discussed “Various Phases ol
the Itoad Question," says Minilelpii)
r """ "' , ' 1 10,000 letters of f Inquiry
seal out from bis office, General Stone
didincd eertnln llgures, referring to
1 li<* average lenglh of haul from the
farms to market or shipping points,
the average weight of load hauled and
tho average cost per ton for the whole
length of the haul. The figures, tabu¬
lated, are as follows:
Orou/i o(8tnte% AjeMdAV ad iso. MWAVy _ m
Eastern.......... 5.0 | 2,210 $0.32 $1 .kit
Northern........ (5.0 I .27 1.88
Middle........... g.g ! ..31 *2.72
Cotton........... I’rairie...........I 12.0 j ) ,.’597 .25 .3.05
Mtn.j g 8 2.40!) .22 1.04
i’ae.Cost.and Whole V. S........| 23.15 12.3 j | 2,107 2,002 .22 .25 5.12 3.02
M iddle Southern
Assuming the correctness of the data,
ami using Hie census return of farm
products and forest and mineral out¬
puts, and estimating Incidental traffic,
(,'cncral Slone arrives at a total of 313,-
.3111,227 tons as representing the total
annual movement over country roads.
At the average cost, $15.02 per ton, tho
grand nmiual cost of haulage on public
roads amounts to $0 Hi,411,00.7. Not
Including the loss of perishable prod¬
ucts fur want of access to market
when prices are good, and the useless¬
ness of cultivating certain products
which depend upon (lie markets being
always accessible, statistics of the eost
of operating foreign highways, and
(lie data obtained from the use of the
few good roads existing in this country,
would indicate that nearly two-thirds
of the above cost is directly chargeable
to bad roads. The enforced idleness
of men and horses during a large part
of the year is another item which
should lie charged largely to bad roads.
The negative or hostile attitude of (be
rural population toward all effective
legislation In Ibis direction is an obsta¬
cle also to road improvements in this
country, while another Is the general
overestimate of the cost of such Im¬
provement.
A few years ago the macadam roads
of New Jersey cost $10,000 per mile;
now equally good roads are being built
for $15000, even where railway transpor¬
tation of materials is required; and in
localities better supplied with road ma¬
terial, and where a narrower road is
deemed sufficient, $1500, or even less,
will make a mile of good stone road.
Experience lias demonstrated the fact
(lint In most country districts a single
stone road, eight or ten feet wide,
with a good earth road on one or both
sides, is more generally satisfactory
than a wider road of macadam.
Tho South in tho Van.
The Southern States are putting >o
shame tills great Umpire State'in the
matter of good roads. A recent
trip through (lie South disclosed
to me the fact that the subject
was being more generally discussed
and more work done to the end that
the highways for wagons should be
well constructed than in our own State.
In the Onroilnas, particularly, 1 noted
many miles of new macadamized roads
equal to the fumops turnpikes of Vir¬
ginia, Kentucky and Tennessee of the
ante-bellum time. This particularly
impressed me, too, in view of the neg¬
lect of roads in the old Virginia State,
which I observed at the time of the
maneuvres last fait at Manassas. The
magnificent road of old from Alexan¬
dria to Warrenton—“tho Wnrrenton
pike”~-I found had been so neglected
as to be no longer discoverable as a
macadamized road. Florida, Alabama
and Mississippi are all wide awake to
flic value of well constructed and care¬
fully maintained country roads. In
this State something is being done in
that direction, but in no measure com-
mensurate with the vast interests in¬
volved nor the wealth and ability of
the commonwealth to build, it is to
be Imped that the proposed measure of
issuing bonds by the State to an ex¬
tent. not exceeding $50,000,000, and
with the proceeds supplying half of
the cost of any public highway to
which tho county, the towns or private
- terests will contribute the other half,
will become law. Of course, a system
should be devised for the laying out
and construction of each road, and for
the economical and honest disburse¬
ment of the funds. The materials for
good roads in the State of New York
are to bo found on almost every mile
section throughout the State, and the
agricultural interest, as well as the
Interests of pleasure driving, are so,
enormous that it is difficult to under¬
stand the apathy that has left the
greater part of the highways iu a dis-
graceful condition. If the press of the
State generally would take the matter
up vigorously, a sentiment conld bo
aroused that iu a few years would
cause this State to lead in this matter.
as it does in most others.—New York
Town Topics.
1 nstrvirtion Trains.
The National Good Roads 'Assorts-
tlou has concluded arrangements with
lending railway companies for operat-
ittg good roads special trains in 1005.
The chief object is to arouse favor-:
able sentiment, organize local assoeia-
tlons, and to visit the thirty-six 8tal-‘
and Territorial assemblies to meet iu
1905.
A Valuable suggeMtor.
Many neighborhoods way havo good
road building material right at horn#
and not know it. A sample sent n
the Bureau of Chemistry, Department
ot Agriculture, Washington, D. C„ will
be examined and reported upon. It
may be that you can get goo 1 road -.
at a very slight cost.—I arm and Home.
Ants .10 the most brainy of nil area-
turest. In proportion to iis an
atit's brain is larger than that of .in.,
'
other living bein
SMALL TOWN IS BEST.
tflewo of the Advocates of More Na¬
ture and Leaa High Pressure Life.
It Is our belief, says Field &
Stream, that In America we have too
many cities which tre too large and
a country which l3 too irteagerW pop 1
ulated. Wfe prophesy a Coming dialm
LegratlOn of massed populations, and
their distribution in a more sane und
industrially more desirable fashion.
The small town Is next to the coun¬
try. It Is a better environment for
the young man than Is the great
metropolis toward which so many
turn their eyes. Trolley cars, rural
deliveries, trade catalogues and mail¬
order periodicals have done very
much to changa the Isolation which
formerly went with life in the coun¬
try. It Is improving, and with It m-
proves the condition of life in the
small town.
Heretofore our young men have
left the country for the city. Sotno
of them were obliged to get there to
succeed in their chosen line of work.
For the young man who has a busi¬
ness career in view there Is possible
as good a success In a small city as
ho may hope for In a great one. If
he has not much money capital, his
personality, his character will more
readily atono for that In a small
town. This is especially true of the
professional man. Indeed, any man
of Intelligence may hope for greater
preferment In the small centers of
population than In the large.
As to social life and the general de¬
cency and comfort of passing through
this vale of tears as conditions exist
even today—and they will be far bet¬
ter lain years from now—a self-re¬
specting family has ten times better
chance In a town of 10,000 to 50,000
inhabitants almost anywhere ii
America, than it can by any possi¬
bility hope to have in a city of the
first class. The small town is a bet¬
ter environment in many ways. Not
the least of its desirable qualities is
tie fact that It Is closer to the out-
0 .-doors.
DEADHEAD TIMBER.
Recovered Millions of Feet of it from
River Bottoms.
Tho Monomineo River, which for
half a century has been one of the
most noted logging streams In all
Michigan, is being forced to give up
seme of the wealth that has been con¬
cealed beneath its waters. “Dead¬
head” timber representing much
money, says a Norway (Mich.) dis¬
patch, has been taken from the river
so far tills season. Crews of men
havo been operating through the Ice
between the ilrst and second dams
near the mouth of the stream since
tho beginning of tho winter, hauling
out sunken logs and piling them up
along the bank to dry. The men have
already recovered fully 3,000,000 feet
of timber in this manner, and before
the break-up in the spring the
amount will be heavily added to.
How many million feet of logs lie
on tho bottom of the stream It is
impossible to estimate; yet for the
past fifty years timber has been float¬
ing down the Menominee and always
a certain percentage of it has become
watersoaked and sunk, until there is
practically no limit to the amount
that will steadily be raised from now
on.
Tho “deadheads” are well preserv¬
ed and are really worth more now
than when they disappeared beneath
the waters, a poor quality of lumber
today commanding a better price
than did the best product years ago.
At the height of its record as a driv¬
ing stream, more than 700,000,000
feet of logs were floated down the Me¬
nominee in a single season, and the
amount has ranged down to probably
60,000.000. It is roughly estimated
that enough sunken timber can be
recovered to keep a saw mill in
operation continually for years to
come.
SLIGHT IMPROVEMENT.
Wiggins—I understand, sir, that
you said I was a fool.
Higgins—Well, I’m glad to know
that you are capable of understand¬
ing something.—Chicago News.
The most fashionable part of Switz¬
erland, the Engadine, is to have a
mountain railway.
THE SIMPLE LIFE
Ways That l*leanaiit and Paths That
Are Fence*
It is the simple life that gives length
of days, serenity of mind and body and
tranquility of soul.
Simple hopes and ambitions, bounded
by the desire to do good to one's nelgh-
Ihws, simple pleasures, habits, food and
drink.
Men die long before their time be¬
cause they try to crowd too much into
their experiences—they climb too high,
and fall too hard. A wise woman
■writes of the good that a simple diet
has done her:
“I have been using Grape-Nnts for
about six months. I began rather
sparingly, until 1 acquired such a lik¬
ing for it that for the last three months
1 have depended 1151011 it almost en¬
tirely for my diet, eating nothing else
whatever but Grape-Nuts for break¬
fast and supper, and I believe I coukt
eat it for dinner with fruit and be sat¬
isfied without other food, and feel
much better and have more strength to
do my housework.
“When 1 began the use of Grape-
Nuts 1 was thin and weak, my muscles
were so soft that I was not able to do
any work. I weighed only 108 pounds.
Nothing that I ate did me any good.
1 was going down bill rapidly, was ner¬
vous and miserable, with no ninbitiou
for anything. My condition improved
rapidly after 1 began to eat Grape-
Nuts food. It made me feel like a new
woman; my muscles got solid, roy
figure rounded out my weight in¬
creased to I2t; pounds in a few weeks,
m.v nerves grew steady and niv mind
better and clearer. me'look Mv friends tell roe
they haven't seen so well for
years,
"I consider Grape-Nuts the best food
on the market, and shall never go back
to meats and white bread again.’
Name given l>y Postuiu Co., Battle
Creek. Mich,
There's a leason.
Look in each pkg. for the little book,
“The Read to IVellviile.”
PE-RU-NA CATARRH THE WORLD OVER o '
f/'DwCsfi 3
cS
Id * r?"rZ>
vV i A. m m. |pi »»:
ts* ■ feiciia m '; ■:.= ?■ U*
4 ;\*v
kr;.;vV .
*\ j-tW;
7he Population of If
the Earth is
i ,400,000,000.
One Million \ \
Die |Annually of
Catarrh. ~T
*“
A IT. over the world Penma is
known and used for catarrhal
diseases. 'J'he Peruna Girl has
traveled ’round the globe.
Her face is familiar everywhere that civ¬
ilization reaches.
Universally i’ratseil.
From Africa to Greenland, from Man¬
churia to Patagonia, the face of the Peruna
givl is familiar Rod the praises of Peruna
as a catarrh remedy are heard.
Successful in \o rth and South•
Peruna crossed the Equator several years
ago, to find in the Southern Hemisphere
the same triumphant success that has
marked its career in the Northern Hemis¬
phere.
A Standard.
Peruna is a standard catarrh remedy the
world over. eradicating it from
It cures catarrh by
the system.
Permanent Cure.
It obviates the necessity of all local treat¬
ment and its relief is of permanent char¬
acter.
Without a Peer.
No other remedy has so completely dom¬
inated the whole earth as Peruna.
In Every Tongue.
In all languages its glowing testimonials
are written.
In all climes the demands for Peruna in¬
crease.
Wild Over the Wooly.
Two farmers were making pur¬
chases in a store. One had a team
of mules hitched outside. He was
negotiating for a pair of gloves cov¬
ered with bearskin. The other far¬
mer said to him that he would pay
for the gloves II t'w first would put
them on and go out and unbridle and
bridle one of the mules. The man
attempted .to win the gloves. At the
first sight of the gloves both mules
stood on their hind legs and start¬
er a boxing match with their owner.
It took four men to hold them until
the gloves were put out of sight. A
mule ha,s yet to he found that will
stand for anything with fur, especial¬
ly bear fur, on it. The owner of the
mules did not get the gloves.—Law¬
rence (Kan.) Gazette.
llow’.t Tills?
We offer Ono Hundred Dollars Reward’or
any case ot Oatarra that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Oatarra Ouro.
F. , 1 . Chskex A have Co., Toledo, F. O.
We, the undersigned, known J.
Cheuoy for the last 1 C years, and believe him
perfoetly Jiouorablo in all business transac¬
tions and financially able to carry out any
obligations made by their firm.
Wjssr A Tauvx, Wholesale Druggists, To-
ledo, O, Wholesale
Walpinu, Kixsam ,t Marvix,
Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hnil’s Catarrh Cure is 1 1 ksa 1 and internally, a b-
lngdtreetly upon tho bto ) muoouss ir-
faoos ot the syste n. Testimonials sent free.
Price, 75 c. per bfitle. Pills Soidbyatl Druggists.
Tako Hall’s Family tor constipation.
A Notable Japanese History.
The compilation of the “Kaikokj
Gojunen Shi," which is a history cov¬
ering the fifty years that followed
Japan’s entry upon friendly inter¬
course with Western countries, is
completed. The principal writers
were Prince Tokugawa, Marquises Ito
and Yamagata and Counts Matsukata,
Inouye, Okuma. and Soyejima. Of
these Marquis Ho dealt with the ori¬
gin and development of the Constitu¬
tion, Marquis Yamagata with the
military system, Counts Matsukata
and Okuma with finance, Counts
Inouye and Soyejima with foreign re¬
lations, &c. The book has been trans¬
lated Into English, French, and Chi¬
nese.—Japan Weekly Mail.
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