Newspaper Page Text
*■
Some Clever Smuggling.
One of ti e most clever frauds ever per-
pi tr&te l upon the revenue was practiced
by a diamond merchant in New York”
For years he •■.as known to ba smugs/ling
precious tlve* sti he costom’s dettc*
could catch h in. Every time
he returns. ii turn pc he was e.r fully
searched, and L ss> ever provef that be
did not swallow ids diarm uds before go-
ingnsbore, l>uf never was anything f u'd
except a few inferior stones, and tlusehc
did not attempt to conceal. Trap* were
set to captu'c th>- w ly old culprit, but
without avail. At last a detective learn¬
ed that, wh- never one of die members of
the suspected firm arrived in New York
upon a certain steam! i, eaot' er rn' inber
of the firm ■ r at) stoic to..k the same
state room upon its return trio. It was
further learned that i e invariably took the
entire state room, so lint he was aloue
upon a voyage This led to the discov¬
ery of the iraud.
It apj, .rs that the importer, when on
hi* way fro.n Fur pe. would cut a small
piece our hi« of the hooting and, unoer the car-
pet ‘t of ot stateroom, after con real-
l:,g the '.Urn >tid oe smuggled, would
put back ti.o flooring and replace the
la'pet. Who , he left the l h... he left
the diamonds, i"->. in theii piace of con¬
cealment, aud of com the detective
never found anv in his possession,
A few days afterwards, when the ves¬
sel was about to sail for Eufop the
other m*mtier of its firm e.r '.s agent,
having secured would tue Btate-ronrn for the
pmied return trip, go on board ccom-
by hU confcdera ? 'l’ne latter
would /hen remove ihe diamonds, and
go ashore perfectly tie. There were no
custom officers oe active duty when
vessels wore d p.rttng.
Fact* Worth Ksowijiff*
Q. U Alabastinc expensive?
A. No, it is the cheai>e8t article for the pur¬
pose on the market.
Q. How is that ? Cannot I purchase keIso¬
mines at a few cents per pound ,f
A. Yes, kalsorninc-i can be purchased it
almost any price
Q. A. Why In the then If Alahastine less expensive "*
first place a package of Aiabastin*,
costing surface a that few cents package more, will k&l&omine cover double tin
a of will.
Q, What other advantage lias Alabastiuo
that kalsomines do not possess?
A. Alabastine is entirety different from ail
kalsominea. It is manufactured from a base in
iiacR a cement, and when upfiitedto a wail bct»
Q. How do kalsommcs differ from this?
A, Kalsommes are made from wiiiiing, elay«,
chalks or some i -ert iN*wder for n base ami are
entirely the wall. dependent on animal glue to hold them
on
Q. What ur* the result*?
A. In one case the Alai marine being a cement
hardens with age. and the kalso win eg as soon
“Ji“ quality, uecais. rutjn and ETiii?‘ scale* es off, a* it has
nothing to hold it on the wall.
V f /•**.- Aialwi-l j;.,: reooatiny? require washinu and
acrapiuKoff No, txdoiq
A. Alatadi/if! wl a nnro epitlic-d to a
clean gurtac.- c.l.i u- n- ,,.-<1 for any length of
tin)/ without baidnu to wash or scrape the
writs.
Q- A Does this feature count for much?
Ask anj- I r., f.c;ii hous,.kecper, who has
heel, driven from home to have wrilt washed
and scraped, whether it will lx» desirable to
haveaD of this overcome, ami walls ,i nt/rm-.d
instead oi p . 4 by //.it! ii.it them.
<2. How can t «*-; AI i.iabtiiie
A. From your . - a P?imt dealer. If be does
not lh.lv keep./ V:, tn itttek, aiitl trl&g to gell you -- •Ii;.--
. teli hi »i)i. you are determined to trv
Alatastiuc. an;, if be will not keep it you will
get It the .
Did Not Fill the Hill.
Old L%dy —‘‘There is one thing I no¬
tice paricuUrly about that young man
who rails to see in**. He sterns to have
an unborn, instinctive resfiect for woni/in
He treats every woman as th ugh she
were « being f'om s higher sphere, t > be
approached only vith the u m st deli¬
cacy and deference.'’
Granddauffhter (sw-et eighteen) —
“Yes, he’s horridly bashful.”—New York
Weekly.
>’o Heirlooms.
Mrs. M&iflour (after proudly s no wins
her familt treasures to new neighbor’-
little daughter)—“Have you anv such
heirlooms at homo, my litt'e dear?”
Little Dear (» i h dignity)—■ *N .’m, I
guesi obr folks w s always rich 'nougli
to trow away their old things an’ bit.
ones.” ‘
new
For impure or thin Blood. Weaknes*. Mala
ria V-vra.gia. Brown's JndieeMIon. Bit and Biii« u nes**.
take iron er»~ii gires strength,
making o^d perwon* t^el young—aud young
peraona tOroLg; ie-a-am to ta^e.
We must tramp on our feelings when prin¬
ciple is at stake.
m
w ivr?
A rf.lger.ff.
AC 'r'j
0
;v
■X W
M tllie %mbrook
toa or
Wayor Tilibrook
fif McKoosport, P»., Cured ot
Scrofula in the Neck
Hy Hoad's Sarwiparilhi
•rt.irsi.’iK.s^ktotiuis:
eaaaafi impurefilooiL stioifld mul the ful-
Ma)'or°of *
the
«c. i Hood 4 (M>., Lowcii, Mas
“My little boy Wllite, now tlx year« old, tw»o year*
ago had a
Bunch Under One Ear
which the doctor eald wat Scrofula. As n com In-
ued to grow he finally lauced it and it discharged
for some time. We iuen began giving him lloo Vs
Sarsaparilla aud be improved very rapidly until it
healed up. Last winter It broke out again aud was
followed by
Erysipelas
we a»»io *»r» him Uouj , w»h most
excellent rrault. «na lie tax taud no fartlier
trouble. Ilia cum • due to tk. um ot Hood's bar la-
parlUa. He baa never been very robutt, but now
•eerna bealiby and dall^ (rowine atrongrr.
The doctor seemed quite pleaw i at hla anpearain-e
andsald he (eared at one time that we should
lose him. I have also taken
Hood’S Sarsaoar lla
tnr»-l( and am .a laflfd that I have been helped by
it" M as J. w . Tiu-HRw*, mts ave . McKeesport.
Hood's Pillo arc vuicif vige'ablc. pcrfcctlf
kacmlcM. do not gr.pc.
1
yon have no appetite. Indigestion.
A ^ down” Flatulence. Sick-Hcadacbc, rao £jf)
®r losing flcgli, Like
•Tuffs #Thcr Tms PHIs @ •
tone up the week strianch mi.i
WW buudnpthoiu^^m WW_ V W w W W ^ W
KEYSTONE Ravi 8 a Dm, .’dm ‘V'vr“mra
in Uiy- ,-tiyn • ahe, light i
A I draft. ™»VGS Send fordeaert tio.t j
LOADER 0 .,
—-StfrtinB, tit. !
$65 iStewi; nma I
I THOS. E. WATSON.
( n iivtui trim flr>* |
they did at Port Royal. IT. did
destroy any business as thev the
Truck iid Melon trade. They can
take all the prefits from the Lumber-
inun, the Cattle Kaiser, the Coal
Miner, the Cotton Kaiser or the
Manufacturer.
Fueling this, mine owners have
combined with the rail roads aud the
combination dh vU e tribute tiiey
exact from tho consumer. The oil
producer dot s likewise, and a giant
monopoly, destroys burden all competition
and lays its upon every home
in the land.
In i. few years the opportunity to
resist u. ' have passed by, and we
will Lave- a dictatorial, insatiable
' steal ot consolidated rail roads
before which courts, and magistrates
and legislatures will be utterly
helpless. do
.ate Commissions not control
ates and never will.
National Commissions do not con¬
trol rates and ne\ei can.
Onlv tb. wilfully blind refuse to
t ee this.
The prof - u de sUitcsmei; i.eVl*
said tlie onlj 'tion is Govern¬
ment ownership.
The best authorit. spoil economic
questions av the - run. Ling.
The people do must wn prefer irbe owned. The
Which you i
choice is yours.
ONLY ONE WAV.
Why does ^t coal miner go int
partnership tnth a rail road ?
To share the profits anil to escape
the danger.
Why does the (standard Oil Com¬
pany do it ?
For the same reasons.
Then if it he such a good thing
that even the coal kings want some
of it ; if the danger be so great that
< even the Standard Oil Company fears
) it, should not, every citizen profit by
! the lesson ?
The onlv w;tv out of the trouble it
i fOF .* fill n li*G 4 v pGO ,, , plG 1 1 4 to do \\ luit li iGW
have done. Let all the people 11
| through their . Government , , buy these
'
roads . All*! , participate their
1 in maii-
agemem. people
In this way ail the and
every business will have escaped the
danger the coal kings avoided.
In this way all the people and
every business will equally share the
advantages the Standard Oil Com¬
pany vas sharp enough to acquire.
Our plan is to put transportation
in>t where the powers of Taxation
and of coining money were placed—
in the hands of all the people—the
Government. They are too danger¬
ous to trust to individuals.
Every argument which convinced
our lawmakers that rivers should not
become j ri ate propertv applies to
transportation lines.
In the evolution of modern com¬
merce, the railway bears the same
relation to the people which the
Highways ’ ami the Rivers formerly
1 had.
THE NEGRO.
1 ut the Bourbon who learns noth¬
ing aid forgets nothing lifts his
a!o >g voice aud says “What about
tl.e m-gra? ” -
Well, «•, what * —me about him .“■» sure .cmiugu, enough.
j " uo has managed tue color ques-
j tion during ail these years ?
j sternly We did. drove back The same men who
the alien control
! and fitted the State to the possession
of its own citizens can take care of
| that We question today.
ca n do it ju-d as well as Bul-
i lock’s solicitors can do it.
Vi e love tho State quite as well as
j those good Democrats who helped
; Dominate Grant.
When every city in Georgia was
more or less helpless under the rule
of Carpel-baggism tho very country
people who are now being taught
patriotism by Bullock’s solicitors bore
the principle of Home Rule to the
front and held it there.
today? Why cannot these men be trusted
Do they love their homes less
dearly? Do
dearly? they love their rights less
i
Do not think it for one moment 1
M hy should not a colored farmer feel
| the need of the same relief as the white
farmer?
I Why is not the C\iioml Tenant open
i:° boat as the white tenant; »«<• the i.«* colored same
| ,a ^' ' er Can w,th Bot the t be white cause of one ? be made
tbe cause Of both ?
" by would this he da u^crous
1 can see very well where it is tlan-
gerous to King Kule, to Bofe>ifem, to tbo
. ,ro:, ^le of the Money
r Power, but 1
R u see no reason wiiy r ant any less a
white man—irut to my color, my right s.
"’. v principles— simply because the
black people are convinced Unit our
pi„,, “ .. d . I-.ir Otic, Rlld VOfe lor mo
opOU it.
Tie* man who alludes to Social Equal-
Itv in that connection, insults the in-
telligence of those to whom he talks.
bocial Kqualityis a question which
' Very citizen settle* for himself. The
Inw never did, and never can, interfere
with it.
Isolated,and mistreated, the south
lias stood without a ftind i'ortwenty-
five years.
o,. 8 HlOSt iUCKV , Providence, ,, . . we arc
,
power. Already the centre ofpopula-
ion has ct --ed the Missouri River
rheei ,, tb and Influence will
f ° ,i0W ' 1Ue *° ,lavt ‘ oi
ll8 * Th«*y harp the same grievance and
the same hopes as we.
By joining them now, wc link the
South to a section, which Government' in the
future will dominate this
joining them In the great ,»ruc- com-1 i
w c become thej;
win their eoutiseli. I j
our way r,>
gn aud its results i
i tbua win back for your ' '.steamer i
; I your people,.... i !K’6 fUid pOW !
I . ! hf* couosols I'; t~ t iUtnb\ |
T istrfc! i. , the
I she w or to
• ’
P&fet C.r tilt* fa fun
0(Kf i bnrie to rev* r
tn a coni tit’ a _ J a co Hi ma o .o
.>n . t ntre. the
tVe: and tin Ml ■ .a e nation:,',
friend WDOM . good will guar-
antev the most S|, iaid results lot
hot li.
Where is lUe, patreir In Geurgia ho
>iiil nut admit that this hope i -reason¬
able, IS (! nrnendable ami is a magni fi¬
le/. - possibility ?
’lb ? u. , c other features of the Bt.
Ljuis l'iuii irm w bii ii f have iu fhe
sp.t! ■' i dlscm/s : the Land Loan l'lank
for example. 1 bis is on the line of the
Suh-Tri ;y urn! the equal di.crihu
tio/i of money and needs no separate
U:: JUlciOU f.I ibi - t. ...i .
• xtlfA II
Iu my jou, line die Piatfonn to be
au opted by t ie’s Tarty at Oma-
ha ahoiiid aii Lbese great esseti-
tial Priimipi pon'v> Iiieh we have ed-
ucaxed the 3 J /. ew ideas should
■
tie 4 ir> ed ■ id ones forced
i
The election of BenatorH -.
' 1" 1 i
■
ple is a sound proposition ami essential I
to our final su f'f'f-s ’ -b-uid be glad !
to nee the C.ml * . »n restore if
to our Plato j ..
The soldier Hesoiutic * part oi
our plauorni, nor should i H be made
so.
IN CONCLUSION
Let no man be afraid. Ler no man I
give way to doubt. If Truth be on our
side,all the powers of hell cannot pre¬
vail again:' us.
The weak man go» s down under SiStt-
ler. The strong an throws it off and
lives it down
No falsetto i ever yet could live ij
the presence of him w did not fea I
t
to face it and strike it like a man. I
Tr:’It , moves on forever! . ,
•
, . . |
The eternal logic o’ tl.c In ts
her- On* Strength Of all pure . .-/s
,, r.- .. 1 p<>'-i ...... •)! ‘t tine
me , , ue * n-c*.
and women arhers.
81 tml'/r mt y gather round it as the
mists gath r hbont tfiv liiih. Their out¬
lines me be I os I tl the hills may
Bet m to 5 rn • <■ ; fit fore the mists.
I ■ is ii'jL • fe¬ I s never so. It will
never he so. i'he :rt;i may last for a
dav i f a nionth,or a > ear,hut when it pas-
sfsaway, as it mu.-; do,tl e everlasting
hill are where God put them to Slav,
and the mists arc gone as He said they
should go.
Giye me men armed with this faith
and we will Conquer the world, the
flesh and the devil.
BE PBUDENT AND EARNEST.
The cause of the Itight is hurt by
by mistakes like all other causes. It is
helped forward by human wisdom
like all other causes.
But if we are indeed earnest; if we
are indeed loyal, patient and fearless,
out of our own mistakes we will find
the way of wisdom. Out of failure it
sel f success can be made.
Let every man feel that this fight is
his. Before he condemns his neighbor
let him he sure tiiac this duty has been
done. Before-he loses heart in the final
result, let him be sure that his eontri-
button toward succeeds comes up to the
fuil measure of duty.
it is no time for squabbles over
details ; no lime to fall apart into
jealous, discordant factions because
we all cannot have the Platform, or
the Candidate just lo our notion.
Tho time has come when unity
must run ii -is golden link* from man"
to man, from Lome to home, from
county to comity, from State to
State, or the cause of Reform is dead,
and i om-i•uitmiiRt Liberty dies
With it.
fiCl* AND DOIN'.,
Never will tlti-i ganerution have
Mica another opportunity.
Never was time and tide both so
ready to bear us on to fortune.
# Necessity urges, justice calls, hope
inspires!
Seise the moment while it is youidi
to choose!
Fail t“ do this ami you will join
that, groat band of unfortunates,
wh UM' lifter knowledge of what they
threw mvay, finds no expression
more late!” saddening than the words “Too
M hat I have written is for your
gooti and mine.
OCli LOTS ARE CAST TOGETHER.
fi ou can have no hopes that J do
not share. No affliction could befall
you from whioh I would not suffer.
My home My Is with you and will al-
wav s le. kindred are among
yours and will always be. My inter
osts are as yours and wiil always bo.
If there is any other thought in
my mind except for the common
good of our Common Country, may
the Master lay my plans low and
cover them \\ ith eternal shame !
Then let us be up and doing! We
have counseled together and our con¬
clusions are fixed, fifi'e have rea¬
soned together, aud our thoughts are
agreed.
Now it’s time for action. Let
him who will tight, put his armor on!
Let hint who is afraid, go home
and hide under the bed.
Let every earnest, true man aud
woman, put the house in order and
come forth and help us.
“Has around’ from the
movntuind to the Seu !
Let every citizen who loves his
home aud the Cause, lay his baud
upon Ids heart and say “Here is
one man who knows his duty and
will do it; who sees the way clearly
and will walk it; who will go ou,
right on, till the end is reached ; who
™ 11 WOrk in l, ‘ e lca(1 °, r in xhc ’ ran ks,
^ P^t and . nshme^throflgh .
m m su
^ - aud ^ AWi
through tile morning of and through
ilia In at and burden the day—
well knowing, that when be the evening
comes, there shall the radiance
and the rest that follows duty nobiv
01 is the sunlight follows tin
ttifl iu l Thus. K. Wa'i .
PROMINENT PEOPLE.
Fre£II)£.vt Cabxotm oneot the very i'o.t
Fi ucotmien who never j,«t axeito,!.
SvNATon Sherman', of Ohio, is about to
1 viil.i a mansion in Washington to cost
?H)0,000.
Ex-Be.navoh Eoutsus, of Vermont, take*
omy ttass of import mee, and his smallest
The late w. }f, Smith, the Tiondon ii,i>vs-
man who ueeame a british Cabinet Mimsuer,
lei t « 20,000/11)0.
John i>. RooKEFEt-r.ER'g income from bis
Standard Oii intorests is probably nearly
f?, 000,000 a year,
Ex-Goverwor ThaTEB, of Nebraska, lias
decided to contest anew vhe right of Gover¬
nor Royd to his offic.-.
banker jJ.vhos and Hmsca, friend the wealthy Prince of Austrian IVaies,
of the is
just suty-one years old.
TiiEtJreenof bad Gretce is at preeen, hi n
very state of health and causes her ke
band and family much alarm
Ex-Ssnato. 1 I-vaAr.LS is reported to hive
declined an offer o£ StO.OOQ a year to edit a
Kansas City tSio.i eveninc paper.
Prince George ot Walks now an
annual allowance nmuuntiug to $75,00u a
Tear. Previous to rlie death of his brociitr
t;e bad $23,o00ayear.
Few people are aware that the late ?v -
gelist, iir. tSpurgeoa was never ordained,
lie began and ended his remarkable ru:u-
i»‘ry as a Jay preacher.
Ex-Rresiuint Cleveland and Governor
F.owr, ot New York, were guests for u ft ?
days of the New York Rod and Gul Club at
their club house on Spesutia Island, Md.
BissfAKCK sprinkles his conversation,
which is at all times interesting aud some-
tirms epi^ramatic, with choice and pertinent
extracts from Shakespearo, of whoso works
1 «* is especially toad.
. we lai'geb.* salaries receired by my
l.s:. his eouatrt is X. drawn i^rriuiional by U. A. Nav:' Gris*
l* L'i 2 io£of the ?i -
' x-t^puia, Demi.,
- year.
,.a Walter Fhelrs, tho Unli-tj
f.iiister, returned *>ypt, to enjoying Berlin,Germany, splendid
is He trip to good form
j. says • -'eala in ?ei
afterhisvec
-jxandeh Ribct. t-cLic T French Pi* c*
is ju»t two weeks c tv fll-jy years oi
He is sometiLVG ca youtlifa
* niers, and he has iiati a i„wtt^ric career ir
politics during the last ten years.
r 1 . he TT united .. J C States . . Army , now* carries ou
it^ retired list thirty-two Brigadier Generals
’ud lour Major Generals. The quartet of
‘iajor Generals J. is coinpossJ of Jonn Daniel Rope, E.
^ Carroll, C. Robinson aud
'Sickles.
Congressman Stone, of Kentucky, owes
bis life to his w.fe, who, when a youns girl,
wound him lying daugcrously wounded alter
•otic rhe battles of tue Uivi 1 War, aud tal;-
Lim to her father's „ouse nursed L.'ca
btek to health.
Mrs. Harrison, wife of toe FresiJeuv, ii
r ; ortori to hare made great progress in be*
evt F.ud; : e v , to wbirh she has devoted much
time /.ur.ngr.li her occupancy ot the Whin
Hons, 1 . Sna iiLz oecoiud espsciaiiy skilful
hi ivater-eo.&r wura.
Senator Voosalls, of Indiana, is a de-
\ .ed a.iinirer of er':, sent is often to ba seen
iu tho Corcoran Gallery, in Washington, paintmg
standing before soma favorite or
statue iu evident dflight. He it said to be
aa able critic in the matter of art. and quite
NEWSY GLEANINGS.
Cun A has a lar<e su?ar crop.
Frozen yas is now uset for tush
Thfre are 15,000 lepers in India.
There is a grain blockade in Kansas.
Scotland insists on having Home Rule.
A revolution is in progress in Venez¬
uela. \
Denver, Cj 1„ is to have a belt line rail¬
road.
Maine packed 1,500,003 tons of ice this
se i>o:i.
Russia anl Austria are drawing on ua
for got /.
Morocco. France is apprehensive of a war with
Ohio will notraise naif the average wheat
crop this year.
The spring sowings in Russia give promise
of good cross.
There is $7,000,000 in cash in the United
States Treasury.
Cotton continues on its way toa doubt¬
ful bo. tom price.
Extraordinary shipments of bereals am
being made in Europe.
There are fifty million dollars in the
s.ivin !.• banks in Maine.
CHtgvGO iiai a hleyoie electric railway.
Cars are run uaaue rail.
Five mylliox dollars’ worth of vessels are
bei ’,1 j bunt on the lakes.
Nox OR-HODOX churches are being closed
where. r lias Czir reigns.
iv v.ktauy Foster says silver is tue
burning qaesrion abroa l jusii now.
A tin outfiow of the precious metals has
again assumed large proportions.
Thk losses of cattle and sheep by the late
Uizzard m Texas reached $s403,0tM.
Cincinnati is to have a sixth bridge be¬
tween that city and Covington, JKy.
Op Newfoundland the (430 fishermen caught in the lost. storm
oil twenty-five were
In many parts of the Madras Presidency,
in India, famine has been u varied by-raius.
Exhorts of broadvnits contimis enor¬
mous aud shew wonderful increases in
value.
A syndicate is going to cultivate tobacco
on a large scale in the Congo Free State,
Africa.
GUITEAU, President Garfield’s ass assin, is
declared to have beeu drunk when he waj
executed.
Senator Stanford, of California, has re-
l'uied an offer of $110,000 for the stallion
Advertiser.
Eight thousand unknown dead were
buried in the Potter’s Field of New York
City last year.
The coal agents of New York have ad¬
vanced the price of chestnut coal twenty-
five cents a ton.
A wood-chopper at Redding, Cat., shot
a stranger tae other day ‘‘tiaeauso he was
putting on too much style.”
A man iu Iowa starved himself to death
through grief lor his wife. They had been
married seventy-four years.
It was reported that the it cost legalizing $3,000,000 to
securo the passage of act the
Reading combine by the New Jersey Legis¬
lature.
Carnegie, Phipps & Company, of Pitts¬
burg. Penn., have a 110-ton steel saw whioh
will cut through nickel steel armor plate
twenty inches thick.
'Adulterating Tea.
Tors are not adulterated by ititer-
mingling the leaves of other plants, us
tho leaves of the tea plant be gathered itself, if
quality is not considered, o;tn
in unlimited quantities. Nor are leaves
that have le n already steeped ever
mixed with fresh t< a to be sold again, it
being eheaprr to pick tho fres’t leaves.
Adulterants are only used to give color,
i■; order to please tiie eye of the con¬
sumer. and their use is a practice would that all
connected with the business v. ii-
ling'.v discontinue. The Japanese, some
veers since, sent over largo from consignments coloring
of suu dried leaves, free
matter and often- unsalable good quality, until they but they
proved to l>e were
colored, which was reluctantly Umm by
tho merchants here.—[Now Orleans
Picayune.
fiance anti Spain.
Tiiti tiipGinutie negotiations betw*-,i
Germany and Spain have lately seemed
lo look . ward the cot summation of
reciprocity treaties which si, slim
era* cc ou from ur -omnicr rei,
uons with the Castifhii; nionareay. I '.8
opposed tint vicli n result would have
hcci very and pie v an t to »he Qtteea R**ge-->»
-uri.iitia the S,.a'fi-a premier, Sen ,r
siistillo. But it could not be worked
s ifelv. I ra »cu n die best customer Lost
! (Spain has, and though in time Germany
n ight have stood in somewhat the same
rila ion, it vim dangerous to exch ugeii
oettaiuty fora ru re po i liiity. The
Bp.wish'premier has therefore instructed
*S» ‘0™ 8ll . ,M«i„
conunorcial trentv or by a temporary :il
agreement. Of course. France v
promptly ami cordially accept those ovi
tures, md Germany, for i e preseiit st
least, ivill have to abund •.he effort to
connect Spain commersial with the
.
central nowe-s 1
Managin .... g a „ B 9f. Bab.
Tired Woman (in a fhiiway h<»U car
* Pieut,: will you piease m
; do
oaby awhile? lie’s crying so I can
"
HO'hiDg with him.” .
Mule Passenger—“Cm; what is he cry-
ieg Or?"
. iU »d,
me to take him V*
“Then he ll have something to cry
about.”
“Ob, he ill?”
“Y’es, sir. He’ll be crying for me
then, and th^ longer you hold hr--, the
-j'juer X presume hu 11},!. so. 11. ^
"les, sir. Then, wnen ... he is real , sure
it is only me he is crying for, I’ll take
h ; m and he’ll stop.”—Street <fc Smith’s
Good News.
Asbestos Cloth.
Asbestos rolled cloth packing is made
both with and without India rubber core.
Asbestos block packing consists of an
India rubber back upon which there are
built up edgewise a number of layers of
asbestos cloth. Sufficient elasticity is
thus imparted by the rubber back, while
great durability md protection to the
rubber is insured by the use of asbestos.
—India Rubber World.
Denfuess Can't be Cured
way to cure deafness, aud that is by constitu-
tional remedies. Deafness i c-us- d by an in-
flamed condition of the in jc; 03 lining of the
iicafucssVsibe^resuit.'and .rnmnlingtaS^cfimper.
«o^ftoT,Loi-,SfcVdU.om^fn^^ urUess'th^Intlam-
doet roved forever; nine cases out of ten are
“amed c^ith^f^he mncons^ f ^ au
^‘"d’-rinl^^an^b^crit'^hfthM 8 ” 7
cannot
Bend for circulars, free.
8oidbyDmf^t..^ Er&Co " Toieda0 -
The Only One Ever Printed.
CAN YOU FIND THE WORD?
Tdeie is a 3 inch display advertisement in
this paper, this week, which has no two words
ah do except one word, saine i 8 true o:
each new one appearing each week, from The
Dr* Harter Medicine Co. This house p'aces a
‘‘Crescent” on everything they make and pub¬
lish. Look for it, send them tho name of the
word and they will return you baok, beauti¬
ful LITHOGRAPHS or SAMPLES FREE.
quickly Coughs, relieved Hoarseness, sore Throat, etc.,
by Brown's Bronchial
Troches. They surpass al! other preparations
in removing hoarseness, and as a cough rem¬
edy are pre-eminently tin best.
sp!n5? n bilC e s, o^-s^UcTeia^ U B*
crotme will cure you promptly. Fifty cents;
drug stores.
One dose of Beecham’s Pills relievos sick
headache in 20 minutes. For sale by all drug¬
gists. 25 cents a box.
{“MOTHERS’! a( ««®®o°®e0ooees(5oee®eoe..e©oee..€
FRIEND”'
.. -
mm To Young
_ Mothers
.
(fi >k, \ 'V- % i
(Ik / 1 j :
*<- Y' ---- e
fes Shortens Ohiia ilrfh Labor, iasy.! | I
Lessens Pam, §
Endorsed by the Leading Physicians. ®
Book to “Mothers*>mailed TREE, g \
BRADF5ELD REGULATOR CO. | o
ATLANTA, GA
:
a German
William Syrup” McKeekan, Druggist !
at
Bloomingdale, Midi. "Ihave had
the Asthma badly ever since I came
out of the army and though I have
been.in the drug business for fifteen
years, and have tried nearly every¬
thing on the market, nothing has
given me the slightest relief until a
few months ago, when I used Bo-
schee’s German Sj-rup. I am now
glad to acknowledge the great reliev¬ good
it has done me. I am greatly
ed during the day and at night go to
sleep without the least trouble.” ®
Kennedy’s !
MedicalDiscovery Takes hold in this order:
Bowels,
liver,
Inside Kidneys. Skin,
Outside Skin 9
Driving everything before !t that ought to ) » out.
You know whether
you need it or not
Sold hy every druggist, and maaufaeturul hy
DONALD KENNEDY,
KOJXJH ItY, MASS.
__ _
CL- lSCftlNS—Mltc tod. Ftfi t nil SUIDUiSfics: ui di*
a- *r imuHv .he. *nimcK experience.
SONfli* Wtaie iOh WAtftt»t*rpoV. I a tvs At I>. XV. 15. A CSSSict^SAtU O. A
tWItSIc 30DS, BOOY’II, Ot O 111 i*UR
IMUD.VYDKK Bax }as«ou, lean.
An Untruthful Boy’s Work.
, etty Teacher (severely)—“Did your
mother write this excuse!”
Bad Boy—"Yes’m.”
! 1 much tty ‘Teacher—-“Humph! It looks
vei like one of your scrawls.”
i. t Boy—“Mamma wrote it; but,
please lua to. si.e hid sinter Jennie in one
mu, brother cryh.p* with a bumped head, and
fiVili.e .u the oiuei. with u cut
finger, and u lot of sewing on her lop.
j and she was rocking the cradle with her
1 knees, and so? had to write with her
toes.”
Pretty Teacher 'in the evening) “I
am hive ve, changed terry, L'r ''oorchapp, I shall out I
m- m'nd never
s.,.„
s.
_ ,
t'*, j „rt Boy- “Please, x rnaam, when it was
, nnmites tutor nine you got
here. M en we re late you always keeps
1 us a.te. school.''
Tea.ber—“. ery well, ou can all
ctay -..i-fc. an>- keep me after school, if you
fSmurt boy subside*.]
* "
oj.o t Eoor«^u«
-
shorten Stranger—“I New York see into it “York.” is proposed to
Gotham Host—“Oh, no need'. N’Yo’k
^
* OR Dyspepsia, iadip ,siP>D ana stomach
ar<*. 1 strengthens the musclcf*. A splendid ton-
-r wea k and dobtiitet. persons.
only p osperity balanc is to no weigh just^kic- adversity is the
e fritads.
. F | Tg d
Neb Restorer. plopped free No lty Fits b . after Ktnm’s Orkat day’d
use. Vf Marvelous cures. Treatise and tirst $2 trut
tottle free. Dr . Kline . 931 Arc l i 3t„ Phils... Pa-
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac- Thomp¬
son's Bye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle.
JK -JSsl ..... , m 'Vb V v :
§m ■—ifi & RSfi} h.
iiy
B
r
ONB ENfO'J©
Both the method Mr! «*rdf5 Wbf3
8 ® I
reirGSiUDg' V 10 tli0 lESt0, -id Ef kS
^
gently J yet promptly Bowels, cleanses tn the -idneys,
jlVjr uie
effectually, dispels cakia, head-
aches and levers and Ch.eS >.abltu&l
constipation. only remedy Syrup kind of Figs Is the
of its ever pro¬
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac¬
ceptable to the stomach, prompt la in
its action and truly beneficial its
healthy effects, prepared only from the most
and agreeable substances, its
many to all excellent and have qualities made it commend tbs most it
popular Syrup remedy of Figs known. is for Bale in 50o
and $1 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro- j
cure it promptly for any on3 who j
wishes to try it" Do not accept any
luhstit'dte.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP C&
SAN HIANCiSOO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KY. A c IV YORK. «-T-
W- P, WSSB&
v\
fPMgl IM r&
as
r - - :
DO with HOT BE DECEIVED Bnamei md Paints which stain
hands, Pastes,
Uie injure tho i. n. and burn off.
The Rising Sun Sto o!!sh Js Brilliant, Odor-
" les9. Durable, and tho ssumer pays for no tin
L- glass package with i - • y purchase.
A SainpieCako oi' Soap and i“i-
011 skm i iscalp, Nervous
O (7
FvfSI)“rinat/llogisL ^.^owjor^y. l w’
4id
^
itejEj. SW :U;I ilt a , ji P. V i!3
»vs tx» a W a
Mflchinery for Well- n. <h\; i, f/om 20 to 3,000 feet,
for Water, Oil or Lac. ur Mount*-«. Steam. work Drilling and
Portable Horse Fewer Machines set to in 20 minutes.
Guaranteed to drulfie ..and wiUi ilower than uny
other. Specially adapt a to dni Wells m earth ur
rock 20 to 1,000 feet Fanners and others are making $2r>
to £ 40 per day with our machinery and t-^ols Splendid
business for Winter o ' Summer. ter. We are the , .«n*i ‘in
largest Mnnufsctu,. : ;v i.« i-ne *m Im.di • . . .'.end cents
SLamps for illustrated Catalogue II. A • DURESS,
Pterco Well Excavator CJ«.. York.
Kiryc cotton
Buy or sell yoi.v Cotton on JOI^EB
$ 5-Ton Cotton Scale.
NOT CHEAPEST BUT BEST.
For terms address
/ONES BINGHAMTON. OF BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
•
«S_ .113*33-
m
»T
v: i
K: - fill
-•i K
1 iajiiB
ANfrSLLUIIG'ffiO'UBmS
Sold by till denier*. Accept no substitute.
THE COST ISTHESAME.
Y^OOD mLmiijiB PlCKETJ. LO
me i
if A ,
i*t ! a’fTSH toVitAKS. > fej kk ACTS Ft o Yzsua,
The Hartman Stee! Picket Fence
aETai.r LEX BALES AGENCY, HARTMAN M anU 5S S. MFG. Fury CO-jBenyert-U., tb Street, Atlacta, Oa, r«.
SOUTH
$
ij
•j
rs W9 >
I, copvRioKr 1091 w
Ought to >■ n ^
_the JGS great SfmKt'ntS orininrr
pill
te uciivr, Lr to wu, ‘o ?S„ 11 icy re bi?"'- Dig enough ,0 b>
htid maice good. trouble enough, to °(j(J
mo’e
r j .’ s just what Dr Piereo*
4 VZ>*
T>),.^. Ult Pellets do —mow.
instead 01 of weakening weakening thn tho system, .
thf T ren o vate >*i instead of up.
it—mildly, setting, they cleanse and regulatu
They’re the original gently, and LiverPifii naturally.
Little
tho smallest but most effective^
j purely and easiest vegetable, perfectly nannies!*
t. take. Only one
i i little Pellet for a gentle laxative Heal
three for a cathartic. Sick
«*~ **»»**. '■««*»•
b GStion, . Lilious Attacks,
i wlc ! 1 > 0
i ° f ^ Liv
and xSOWeiS «.
j otOmaOu are promptly
'relieved and permanently cured.
' buy, They’re they’re the cheapest pills you can
j satisfaction, lor guaranteed to giv e
! or your money is re-
turned. \ ou pay ’ only for the •’ good
L ou 8 et t.)., It 8 a plan __ peculiar to Dr.
-
Pierce’s medicines.
Fj &
ttkjfcr ^ LITTLE
^5 r : LIVER a
oe t- P 9 LL 8
m DO NOT GRIPE NOR SICKEtf,
Sure euro for SICK HEAD*
ACIiK, lion, impaired digestion, coiiEti-
j pa vital torpid glands. They arouwi
t zinesa. organs, remove nausea, diz-
2 0 ne^sandDladder. Matfc&l effect on Kicl-
2 Conquer ill-
0© ord’ us nervous dig-
5 rMer?. Daily E:tabli3h nat-
lirttl Action.
by purif5ln *
j,e-
PO.: .:L vu lead pencil. Business map's great
coil vettiu . c ■, Taker, easier than sugar. Sold every¬
where. Au penuine ^oocls bear “Crescent”
Send 2-ccnt crump. You get 32 page book with sample.
Hft8TEB ItE DICIHE CO, St. Loulb Mtt
0OLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878.
W. BAKER & CO.’S
(V- n'H Breakfast Cocoa
from which the- excess of oil
has been removed,
Hr® Is absolutely pure and
it is soluble.
f fj! /TM II ||\m Xo Chemicals
are used in its prepara’ion. It
j I | ||\-|i if IHI has strength more of than Cocoa three mixed times with the
4 If [,] [f'Vl Starch, Arrowroot Sugar,
i or
• p 11
i aod is therefore far more eco-
J I jjj j I nomical, costing less than one
jat UXi If l|{is B cent Jshing, a cup, strengthening, Itisdelicioua.nour*
easily
digested, and admirably adapted for invalid*
as well as for persons in health.
Sold by Grocers overyn uere.
V/. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass.
EVERY FAMILY.
School, Library, and Office
5-H-O-U-L-D
Have a Dictionary.
Care shoukl be taken to oi
GET THE BEST.
THE INTERNATIONAL,
New from Cover to Cover, “Unabridged, ’
Successor of tne
Iu THE ONE TO B'JY.
' 0 years spent revising. m
ICG editors employed, f j
@ 800,000 expended,
Sold t.y WEBSTER’S
aU Booksellers. INTERNATIONAL
G .& isCo. \ DICTIONARY J
P
Springfield, S A,
for fro*t ppoci
S*VW«s*---
*© -------------------------------- % <»<►©©■© o ©©<? o o e e» ««* -s ««« « « « •
j®*. purify the blood, are safe
/vjIPaJ iectual. The best general
• n' Bdlc i5 e for or Bilio Biliousness.#
MyXSt'
5 to perforin their proper functions. Persons given to
gover-oftting gea-ih are benefited by taking a TABULE bottle after
jdr©ssTiTLRIPANSCilEMICXIjCO.40SpniceSt.Jf.Y. meal. Price, hy mail, 1 p.tos 8?2; l 15c. Atl-J
profit. (
e A<enu Wonted; KI«HTY per tent ,
i*ooo#ro*i*voo«»flee»oaco®?o«oo*^*ff
S
Si
Conssnaptlvea and people
who have weak lungs or Asth¬
ma, should uso Piso s Cure for •i
Consumption. It has cured th
thousand4. It has not injur¬ take.
ed one. It is not bad to
It is the beet cough ayrup.
Sold everywhere. 2Kc. f
A. N. V... . ..... Thirteen ’92.