Newspaper Page Text
FOli ALLIAiNCFMEN.| '
Notes and Current Comment Regarding
the Great Reform Movement.
a pew words on government owner-
SBIP OF RAILROADS—SNAP SHOTS
BV THE REFORM TAPERS.
Out of . $10
every of wealth created, ■
the wage-worker gets one dollar ami
twenty cents. It may not be out of place
to remark that “that is what is hurting
Mannah.’ .
*% !
It is a satisfaction to know that the St. '
Louis platform has something in it worth
’■busing. Most of the political plat’orms
>re “cuss”’em.—Ex. so meaningless that you can’t even
j
i
The Fort Worth, Texas, Advance re-
marks that “legalized robbery is more
dangerous the than highway robbery, because
robbed are robbed of their ability to
prosecute the robbers.” i
The Indian who, told by the white J
j
man that feathers made a soft bed, took
one and, after laying on it all night, got
up and said “white man heap big liar,”
would make a fit companion to the man
who declares tlie reform movement is a
failure because Jerry Simpson has not
brought financial prosperity to the coun- !
try, says the Iowa Farmers’ Tribune.
!
*
aifSssrJaiaS:
’ s nct i n0n
and vt it g ti ,
I;.,, i.ai.idu.l 'S3 rel'is' I
must not be abridged. nro Economist. nghu
i
Washington, Recently, the editor of Kato Field’s
said: speaking of the Alliance |
“Even though the forms the
movement takes at first are crude their
esscnce is substantial, and a class of men
who have heretofore let politics almost
alone are coming to feel their own
strength. History has told us what th it
means; aud experience warns us that it
will be wiser to open a few straight chan- ,
Dels for the coming flood than to try to
dam it with obstructions which will only
thenTawav ^ WhCQ lt lmally swee P 9
”
***
The Arkansas Farmer (Little Rock,
Ark.) says: Tho lsnd loan bill ns intro-
duced in the United Statei senate is not
advocate l by the b armers’ Alliance. It
opens the gap entirely too wide for the
abuse The alliance of corporations demands n^d bill monopolies, j
a with restric- •
tions as to the amount of land and
amount of money nnv ono can offer and
lecurea loan up >n. The measure is in-
tended as a relief of tho people from tho
oppressions of mortgage and trust com-
panies, and not for a monopoly of the !
government credit. j
The *%, J
Arkansat Economist (Searcy, 1
Ark.) says: If there is an < verproduc- !
tion of cotton, why aro cotton goods not !
cheaper? Why are so many suffering for j j
the want of sufficient clothing? If thero
is an overproduction of wheat, wby is '
not flour cheaper? Why so minyhuti- j
gry people in the land? Is there an ■
overproduction of meat? If so, why bo J
much want and starvation? Why island
so is cheap? Why is labor so cheap? Why
stock so cheap? Don’t you suppose
irarcity of money has more to do with it
than anything else?
**
Stick to your plow and let politics
alone has been the cry of the court house
politicians and ring lawyers for twenty-
five years. Stick to your plow and t) i-
will run the political machine. This hus
been the advice of the leaders for twen¬
ty-five years, and the people followed tho
advice U ntil two years ago. Now these
same “great Unconstitutional lawyers”
are very much disturbed over the situa¬
tion, aud now they are very anxious for
the farmer to desert his plow and flock to
town to hear those “politicians for reve-
nue only” tell him what to do.- Ex.
**«
The great divine, T. DeWitt Talmage,
said in a recent sermon: “The greatest
war the world nas ever seen is now going muf-
on between capital and labor. The
dle classes, who have hitherto held the
balance of power and acted as mediator
between the two extremes, are diminish¬
ing, and, at the present ratio, we will
soon have no middle classes, for all will
be very rich or very poor, and we will be
divided between princes and paupers,
between palacas and hovels. Monopoly
has the Republican party in one pocket
and the Democratic party iu the other
pocket.”
*%
The Western Advocate (Mankato,
Kan.) says: Talking with a banker
a few days ago he informed us
that, in his opinion, we could not hope
for good times heavily in this state until the
farm- that are so mortgaged pass
out of the hands of their present owners,
and are taken by new comers who have
enough to pay for them and a little
money left to help them along. In other
words this banker thinks that in older
that a certain class may have good times,
the men and women who have turned
this state from a desert waste into a pro
ductive garden will have to leave the
homes they have spent years in making,
and see the fruits of their labor and
privation pass into other hands. What
an encouraging outlook t r the people
wno nave mint up our western civiliza¬
tion! What an incentive to further
effort 1
.%
The Caro New Era (Caro, Michigan,)
says: The government encourages every
in ij)fit that of agriculture, and
then tells the farmer he ought to be
proud of the prosperity in general, be¬
cause when pt ople have lots of money
they wants lots of potatoes and turnips,
and the farmer ought to feci grateful
that he can cotne in at the tail end of
the procession and be allowed to swallow
the dust of those ahead of him. lit
must sell wnere ne can ana lor what they
will give him. He gives the merchant
his price for what he buys, and when he
asks the merchants to look at the pro
auce he has for sale, does he fix the
price? "No; he go-s to the merchant
like a whipped hound and tpitiousiy asks
him whst he will give. When you sell
yru take what is given you. when you
buy you are taxea oy a tariu on every¬
thing von need.
“The h> n-t <•* •) ,r i n. ■ ,
country represents its bone an i sinew,
and must be encouraged to pursue its
avocations. If relief wire not afforded
un versal bankruptcy would ensue and
industry would be stopped and govern¬
ment would be paralyzed in paralysis of
the people.’ I hese were the words of
the late Justice liradloy at the time the
Shylooks of the country were seek¬
ing 'to destroy the legal tender
character ot the “greenback” and
burn it up in their steady
march towards a single gold standard,
The people saved $316,000,000 of these
“greenbacks,” )ifierent but they were too help-
\ 8S aa( j i n( to their own interests
to defeat the schema of tho money-
changers. The single gold standard was
reached over the prostrate form of the
people, end hence the words of Justice
Br idley, though not >o intended,-bore a
prophetic character. “The debtor inter-
est," “the bone and sinew of the coun-
try,” has not been “encouraged,” and as
a consequence “universal bankruptcy”
and “paralysis of the people” is immi-
nent.
***
NOW WE SEE IT.
Some years ago the mechanics in the
gradually cities of the spread north begin to organize. the country, 1^
all over
Down south the organization—Knights
of Labor— was not a success. Naturally
the rich men of the north opposed detectives the
organization, Pinkerton the
hounded the men. The big papers,
organs of the leading plutocrats, gave Of
the organization a very bad name.
r, ^ t, r r i "V p '"-
posed from reading the reports that
If" j. n,lt S r .»?“"r aawnod on 111 .
sacrificing. Perbans a few rascals and
unreasonable anarchists fell into the
ranks . b,lt or( l rr has be en purged.
T °- da y it' s apparent that tho mechanics
n, ’ ,i cit y laborers organized condition none too
f ’ 00n < ** ad they not, their to-
da 7 wo “ 1(:l Ilave been worse than ever ne-
8 r0 slaves endured. Ii is self-defense
tliat bas induce I the mechanics and
farmers to organize. They must stand
together, vo'e together, suffer Farmer. together
and die together.— Progressive
***
government ownership of railroads.
When any one asks you why th > people
should own the railroads of the country,
you wpuld do well to quote as an answer
the indictment contained in the report of
the late Pacific railroad commission. The
railroads “have combined to tux the
communities which they served, and
forced the consuming classes in all sec-
tions of the cotm’ry to contribute to the
payment of iuterest aud dividends on the
fictitious capital they created. They
have increased the cost of livimr. Thev
have laid proprietary claim to the traffic
of large sections of tho country. They
have constituted themselves the arbiters
of trade. They have charged all that
the traffic would bear and appropriated
a share of the profits of every industry
by charging the greater part of the dif-
ference betwoen tho actual cost of pro-
duction anti the price of the article
in market. They have discriminated
between individuals, between local-
ities, and between articles. They
havo favored pirticular indviduals aud
companies. They have destroyed possi-
bio competitors, localities aud the then iujury built up par-
ticular to of other
localities until matters have reached such
a pass that no man dares engage in any
business into which transportation large-
ly enters without first soliciting and ob-
taing the permission have of a railro id mana¬
ger. They sphere departed from their
legitimate a9 common carriers and
engaged in mining articles for transpor
tation over their own lines. They have
exerted a terrorism over merchants and
communities, thus interfering with the
lawful participated pursuits of the people. They have
in election contests. By
secret cuts and rapid and violcut fluctua¬
tions iu rates they have menaced business,
paralized capital, development.” and retarded invest¬
ment and
Don’t you now candidly think that the
time has come for tho people to deter¬
mine whether they will own the railroads
or the railroads own them?—Reformer in
National Economist.
FERDINAND WARD
Will .Soon lie Released from Sing Sing
Prison.
Ferdinand A New York Ward dispatch will of be Sunday free sat s.
soon a man.
For nearly eight years he has been an in-
ina’e sentenced of Sing Sing prison. In 1884 he
was to in ten years’ imprisonment
for his part wrecking the firm of
Grant & Ward, involving $14,000,000
and the good name of the man who had
been commander of the armies of this re¬
public and twice its president, and inci¬
dentally in dragging down any number of
Wall street firnD.
This was in the spring of 1884.
Ward was only thirty years old, but he
was known as his the influence “Napoleon” of finance.
So great was in Wall street
that when James K. Keene failed for
some $10,000,000 tho market was stead¬
ied bv this young man’s calmness. A
few days later the firm of Grant & Ward
went down with a crash that is yet re
membered. Then followed the panic in
which the Metropolitan bank went to the
wall. George I. Seney and others failed.
John C. Eno became a defaulter for mil¬
lions, and for days Russell Sage was be-
seiged in his cifice by frightened holders
of his “puts” and “calls.”
Waif street will never forget those
few days. and The rest can be quickly told.
Ward his partner, Fish-, were final y
arrested, trie 1 and after some delay im¬
prisoned. Ward got ten years in Smg
Sing, Fish seven years in Auburn. Fish
was pardoned allowing several for years ago. Ward’s
terra; commutation for go d
behavior, will expire in June, and the
ex-Napoleon is already preparing to come
out.
Tarn Mills Burned.
At 3 o’clock Tuesday morning fire de¬
stroyed the yarn mill of E. B. Wool-
worth & Co., in Oriskany Falls. As eoon
as the fire found its way through the
roof it was impossible to check its pro
gross, as the floors were soaked with o...
About fifty hands were employed. Onlv
the walls remain standing. ‘Loss |50,-
, Lartnquake in Cal fornia.
A San Frau cisco dispatch savs:
worst shock of earthquake since the
memorable one of 1868, occurred sb >rt, v
before 3 o’clock Tuesday morning The
shock was terrible in Savannah and Oak
reported. land, but no In damage of anv character is
the city of Vacaville, sixtv-
five miles north-east from San Francisco
the disturbance was most severe.
Th« Reasons Why.
tVeeallit Alaba-.tine, as it is manufac¬
tured from alabaster rock.
beautiful. The people use it because it Is durable and
The sanitarians endorse it because it is of
a sanitary nature, aud contains no poison¬
ous material.
We advertise it as we want all to havean
opportunity to be benefited by ita advan¬
tages.
Wall paper firms fight it, as it displaces
their poisonous products.
Some dealers talk against it, as they can
buy cheap posted, kalsomines, and where the people
are not sell at Alabastiue prices,
thus making more profit.
Kalsomines must go, as they are only
temporary and spoil t£ he walls.
Alabastine has come to stay, as it posses¬
ses merit, and has the unqualified endorse¬
ment of those who have used it for years.
Alabastine has stood tho test of time, anl
now stands higher in public favor than ever
before.
Prot. Kedzie, the eminent sanitarian of
Michigan, says: “Have carefully tested for
arsenic or copper; none could bo found.
Find no traces of poisonous or injurious ma¬
terial .”
Dr. De Wolfe,tho health officer o£ Chicago,
says: “l’be perfect wall for domestic habita¬
tion is the material which resists decomposi¬
tion in every form. It seemes to mo that
Alabastine is admirably adapted to the pur¬
pose.” The Good Health Publishing Co., of Battle
Creek, Mich., writes: “We will, probably,
use Alabastine as long as it is in existence.”
We are located at Grand Rapid-, Mich.,
and will cheerfully answer any communica¬
tions in relation to our guo U.
A Man in a Thousand.
S ra grr—“Are you the gentleman who
caught a bi /, burly bnrg’nr, and heid on
with bull d«g tenacity until he ceased to
struggle, and you w re able to bind and
gag him?”
Gentleman— ‘Yes. AVhat is it you
wish?”
Stranger—“I culled, sir, to ask if you
would not accept an agency for some of
the long-felt want) which we manufac¬
ture and which no family should be
without.”—New York Weekly.
An Easy Way to Break Up a Cold.
A brisk walk is recommended for
breaking up a cold. The person threat
ened should put on t x ra e othing, and
wa'k hard aud fast until he is in a free
perspiration. Then, while s’ ill heated
■up. he should go home, quickly undress
and get into a warm bed and take aglnss
of hot wnttr or li t, lemonade. Where
this course is pursued the chances are
many that ail the threatening signs will
have disappeared the following morning.
—Hal’s Journal of Hen th.
m
,3 ’vi*- 1
'v **
A «n§ / / ipx
m iLT -V Hr 1
c. W
Mr. Warren I). Wentz
ot Geneva, N. Y„
Is given the highest endors vnent for honesty
and integrity by all who know him. For
years lie lias worked for Mr. D. P. Wilson,
the harness maker and member of the Gen
eva Board of Health. Read the following
statement of his terrible sufferings from
Dyspepsia
And his cure by Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
“I waa taken sick last October with gastric fever,
and my recovery was considered almost hopeless.
After 7 weeks the fever slowly left me, but I could
not eat the simplest food without
Terrible Distress
It seemed that 1 had recovered from the fever to «11e
of starvation. I took pepsin compounds, bis¬
muth, charcoal, cod liver oil and malt until my
physician confessed that he did not know what else
to try. Everything I took seemed
Like Pouring Molted Lead
into my stomach. 1 happened to think I had part of
a bottle of Hood’s Sarsaparilla that had been in the
house for two or three years, that I found had bene
fited me previously for dyspepsia. I began taking
it aud soon began to feel better. I have now taken
a little over two bottles and can truthfully say 1
feel well again and can eat anything without
distressing me, even to
Pie and Cheese
which I have beeu unable to touoh for year*. The
English language does not contain words enough to
permit me to express (he prnlsel would like to
give to Hood's -Sarsaparilla.” XV. D. Westz, 18X
Castle Street, Geneva, N. Y.
A Good Vouchor
“I have known Mr. Warren V. Went* for many
years andean vouch for him as a man of veracity
and one well known about here I have sold him
several bottles of
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
during the past few months.” M. H. Partridge,
Druggist, Geneva, N. Y.
Hood’s Pills euro Liver Ills
Young ioihers!
He Offer Tou a Remedy
which Insures Safety to
Life of Mother and Child .
“MOTHER’S FRIEND”
Robs Confinement of ita
fain, Horror and Risk.
After usfnjjonebotlteof *< Mother'* Friend” I
Suffered but afterward llttie.uaiu.aud usual Uld uot such experience that
weakc.-x* la cases.-Mrs.
Asjub Gacjk, Lamar, Mo., Jan. 19th, 1 >S 1 .
Sent $1.50 by express, bottle. Chartres prepaid, on mailed receipt of
price, per U- >-*k to Mothers free.
BHAU! Ilil.O RMUILATOK CO.,
ATLANTA, GA.
BOLD BE ALL DRUGGISTS.
DR. S. C. PARSONS,
FEMALE REGULATING PILLS,
Made tor women and the
I diseases peculiar to her sex.
Th.v regulate the men-
stnnl flow, arc safe and re¬
liable, have lxen gold fur
year-;,a!Kl cure all discharges
it v and inflmiraations of the
womb.
- Sold by druggists and
f yse.it bv mail.
Price $1.00.
V Dr- S. C- Parsons, “Family
Physician” tc'ls how to get well and keep well;
400 pages, profusely illustrated. For pam-
phlets,quest;o” lists,or private information free
<f ebar. e, address with stamp,
l>K. S. T. PARSONS. Savannah, tin.
| »J is H SOll »
,1 S
WoildOF THE GREATEST
Boftii Vegetable Introduction
' fw8.
I: is a Ii finch R an. Prolific, Sweet, Rich
Flavor, good for the Tabl and fine for Forage,
, combination Snap, Lima «nd Butter Bean.
25 "’ ce« to
,nr Seet *
MARK. W. JOHNSON SEED CO.
35 S. PRYOR bt. ATLANTA. Ga.
SOUTHERN PROGRESS.
The Industrial Development in the
Week Ended April 16th.
Correspondents in the flooded districts of
Louisiana and Mississippi, report that the dim-
age is being rapidly repaired, ami that the
loss will bo considerabl y chitlly affecting the
railroads, however, The increase in the stocks
of iron has a depressing effect on the market,
but nearly every furnace in the south is in
blast; unless some recovery ocours pois.ble- in prices, The a
further reduction in freights is
lumber markets show a slight improvement and
an advance of 50 cents per thousand h s been
made textl in vellow pine, with an improved full demand. A
The e plants continue in stimulated operation.
ghght advance in cotton has trade,
and general business shows a shade of improse-
nieir. One of the sign fleant features of the
week was the shipment by steamboat of 1,000
barrels of sugar from New Orleans, via Cairo,
to the Tennessee valley, opening up, thereby, a
n.,v chann 1 of commerce via the Mussel
Shoals canal.
Sixty-six new industries are dur reported as week; es¬
tablished or incorporate! ng die
among them being brick and tiL works at Do-
then, Ala., Lewishurg, Temt., F atonia and
Kosse, iexas; canneries at Harrisburg,”Ark-,
El’.aville, Ga. Owensboro, Fla , and Florence,
S. C,; electric light plants at LaGraoge, Va., and Ga.,
XIairiman, Tenn., and Culpippe Luli-ig, , Grain a
dpv.-lopment compa iy at •• exss.
i levators will be built at HirroW an 1 Iowa
Park, Texas, fence works at Griffin, Gl. and
Texarkana, Texas, and flour and gr st mills at
Knoxville, Tenn., Lebanon, Kv., and San An¬
toni), Texas.
An iron mining company, with $2,000,(100 Va
cipital, is reported as c lariered at Br'st >1, ,
and one with $1,000,000 manufacturing eapi'al ^tGaveston,
T. xas, a ljoli and screw compa¬
ny at Eatonton, Va., plow woilts at Fo t
Worth. Texas a coal mining Va., eoiporation, marble with
$151,000 capital, at Rolf.jW. zed a $100 000 anl
quarrying company capital companies, at each with at
Atlanta, Ga.. oil and ga<
$100 000 capital, at Newport,Kv.,and Oil mills Win Ilendrson, e ing,
W. Va., and cotton s ed at
Texas, and Shr veport, La., the latter hav ng
$100,000 factory capital. at Louisville, Ky., and I’e'crs-
Shoe f.o.ory
burg ml Ettrickt, Va-, a clothing at
Durham N. C., cotton m Us a’ Bamberg, S. S C.,
c apital $1(10,000. at Dillon anti Clinto i, 0..
and Double Sh ai and Pin v ile, N. C-, fi re
works wth $1,500,000 espial Mobil at Ala- At anti, Ga.,
a id a hemp fact ry at y A s one
wo king plant is to be e-tablishe I at Eureka
Springs, Ark., and steel making works on a
large teal--aro in contemplation ut Birming¬
ham, Ala.
Among woodworking establishments of the
week are a $40,000 lumb r company at Litne
R-ck, Ai k., a box factory at Htrri burg, \V. Ark.,
a furniture factory a Buckhannan, Va ,
spoke and handle w >rk- at Lexington K '.,
an I saw anl planing mills at Cha tanooga and
Erwin, Tenn., C aiborne, Ala., and Laws, Tex
Water-works will be built at Car ol ton and
Ea’on'on, Ga., Hickman and Hopkinsville.Hy, C and Halletts-
Port Gibson, Miss., Alcolu, will S. ,
ville, Texas. Cotto ■ mills be onlarged at
Augusta, Ga, lJivlington and Bynum, N. C.,
uni MaryviTe,Tenn.. and the capacity. foundry at Tupe¬
lo, Miss., wi 1 be increase 1 in
Among ihe now buildings of too week are
b ink buildings at Pine B uff, Ark., and Cha’-
ta iooga, Tenn., business houses at It aim e,
Va., Opelousas, La., and Chattanooga, Tenn ,
a court house to cost $225,000 at San Antonio,
T xas, and one at Talbotton, Ga.; $25,000 r
lego building at Di-Lmd, Fla,, school buildings
at Milledgeville, Ga., a$75,000 hotel at Fo t
Smith, Ark., Ark.; and government Ala.. buildings Jacks at onville, Lit¬
tle Rook, Annston,
F a., Brunswick, Ga., Durham N. C., Liredo,
Texas, and Bedford City, and Newport Tenn.) News,
Va.—The Tradesman (Chattsiiocga,
A DESPERATE ENCOUNTER
In Which a Deputy Sheriff is Killed
by a Desperado.
A dispatch of Friday afte-noon from
Murphy, N. C., says; List Saturday
night auother of Bill Murphy’s victims
bit the dust. This time Charley flay,
deputy sheriff of Monroe county, Tennes¬
see. After killing his brother, Medlin
aud Martin, he sent the sheriff of Monroe
county word that he didn’t want to hurt
him, but he must not c >me and try to
arrest him. Tlie sheriff did not go until
a warrant was sworn out and placed in
his hands for Murphy’s arrest. Ho then
summoned a posse of fifteen men and,
with Cnarley Ray, his deputy, they went
to Jellico. It was after dark as they np
proached Tom Miller's house, where 1VU
Murphy and his brothers, Arch
and Jim, were. They heard
the crowd approaching and
gut out of the house in the chimney cor¬
ner. Sheriff McKean ordered them to
surrender aud they opened fire on the
posse with Winchesters. A hot fire from
both sides was kept up fora few min¬
utes, and Charley Hay, the deputy, fell
with a bullet in his brain. Then the
sheriff’s pos-e, except Dan Murphy, ran.
The sheriff was shot in she shoulder, but
fortunately for him the ball struck the
brei eh of ITs gun, >plintering it, and
saved his life. Tin Murphys which then
made a dash for the house again, door, and
is built of logs, with only one
begnn firing through the cracks. The
whole crowd then precipitately fled,
leaving the dead body of Kay where he
fell.
MORE trouble expected.
A messenger was sent to Sweetwater
for medic d aid for the sheriff, and to
telegraph the governor for troops. More
trouble is expected, as Murphy will not
be taken alive. He I at sak*d off hia
grave by the side of his dead brother.
;HE “TECH” BURNED.
Georgia’s School of Technology Goes
l T p in Smoke.
Tiie Georgia Technological school was
burned to the ground at J o’clock Thurs¬
day morning. When the alarm was
sounded in the city the magnificent pile
was a fol d shiet of flime.
It required but a short while after the
alarm was given for the fire department
to respond, although th) buildings were
far out of tlie corporate limi's. When
they reached the school the machinery
hall and the engine mom were a mass of
flames and immeudiately a general
alarm w is turned in. Part of the hese
had to be stretched from the corter
of Marietta street and North avenue,
a quarter of a mile distant, an f
the delay occasioned by that added
to the control he fire had gotten. When
water was finally played upon adjoining the con-
fligrat'OB the building the
main building was doomed and the main
efforts were directed to saving the lat er.
Hardly a half hour after tho fire first
started a portion of machinery hall foil
in, and in the midst of the tn rce heat
the firemen worked all the harder to
check the course of the flames. The
building co.-t $65,000. The apparatus
cost $30,000. There were 199 pupils on
the roll.
Convicts Revolt.
hundred A Chattanooga dispatch savs: One
and twenty-five convicts em-
ployed at Durham, Ga., coal mines, six-
t en miles smith of C’hattanoog i, on
L okout mountain, mutinied Friday en
aeeoiiDt of change of bosses. For a time
things looked serious. Principil Keeper
Jo CS , who was summoned from Atlanta,
succ ode 1 in quieting the mob, and at
ust accounts everything was serene.
Hot Weather in Texas.
Telegram from Denis m, Texas, st ite
that the torrid wave has reached that
place. The thermometer at 3 p. m.
Monday was 80 degrees in the shade.
The weather is stifling and the most ex-
traordinarv experienced at this season iu
a number of years.
Got Up Head.
Mother (proudly)—“And class so to-day y u got ?” to
the head ot the spelling
Little Son—“Yes’m. The whole class
missed on spellin’ a word 'cept me.”
“And you didn’t?”
“No'm. There was only one way left
to speli it.”—Street fc Smith’s Good
No Hope for Statesmen.
American Boy—“Pop, we’re taking up
political economy in our school now.”
Pop (a local statesman)—“That’s all
righ*, my boy, but it’s no use. All the
book lehrniu’ in th’ country wiil never
git votes down to less’n two dollars.”—
Street & Smith’s Good News.
People Know a (lood Thin*.
that’s why remington typewriters are
IN DEMAND.
Some idea of the present wonderful
growth of the typewriter business may be
gained from the fact that the sales of Rem¬
ington typewriters for January and Febru¬
ary 1892, exceeded those of the correspond¬
ing months of 1S91 by *160,000. popular¬
The great and constantly gaining shown by
ity of the Remington is clearly
the fact that the business has more than
doubled within three years. The Remington
factory at llion, N. Y., employs 700 men to
dll the demand cr sated by the sales agents,
YVyckoff, Seamans & Benedict, who dispose
of machines at the astonishing rate of one
every five minutes.
flow’s This ?
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for
any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by
taking Hall’s Catarrh Cura.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, business and believe him
perfectly and honorable in all transac¬ ob¬
tions, financially able to carry out any
ligations VVEST & Truax, mado by their firm. Druggists, Toledo,
Wholesale
Walding, Druggists, Kinnan Toledo, & Marvln, Wholesale
O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act¬
ing directly of the upon the blood Testimonials and mucous free. sur¬
faces system. sent
Price 75c. per bottle. Sold hy all dru ggists.
Friends are like melons. Shall I tell you why?
To Find one good, you must a hundred try.
Bitown’s Iron Bi'ters cures Dyspepsia,Mala¬ Debility.
ria. Biliousness and General Gives
Slrcngth, aids Digestion, The best tones tonic the forMursing nerves—
cremes Mothers, appetite. weak and children.
women
Men are usually tempted by the devil, but
an idle man positively tempts the devil.
FITS stopped free hy Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
nee. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial
loitle free. Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St., Pliila.. Pa.
Sufferers from Coughs, Sore Throat,
etc., should try “Brown’s Bronchial Troches,”
a simple but sure remedy. Sold only in boxes.
Price 25 cts.
Tlie woist cases of female weakness Samples readily free.
yield to Dr. Swan’s I’astiles.
Dr. Swan. Beaver Dam. Wis.
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ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently Liver yet promptly on the Kidneys,
and Bowels, cleanses the sys¬
tem effectually, dispels colds, head¬
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. only remedy of Syrup its kind of Figs is the
duced, pleasing the ever and pro¬
to taste ac¬
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial b its
eflects, prepared only from the most
healthy ana agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have mado it the mosi
popular Syrup remedy of Figs known. is for sale in 50c
and $1 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL,
LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK.
Consumption carries off
many of its victims need¬
lessly. It can be stopped
sometimes ; sometimes it
cannot.
It is as cruel to raise false
hopes as it is weak to yield
to false fears.
There is a way to help
within the reach of most who
are threatened —careful liv¬
ing and Scott’s Emulsion of
cod-liver oil.
Let us send you a book
on the subject ; free.
Scott & Bowse, Chemists, s 3 a South 5 th Avenue,
New York.
Your druggist keeps Scott’s Emulsion of cod-liver
oil—all druggists everywhere do. $ 1 .
3*
August Flower”
‘ ‘ I have been afflicted with bilious-
ness and constipation for fifteen years
and first one and then another prep-
sr b „T“ AfrSa
tion in which I hold it. It has given
me a new lease of hie, which before
was a burden. Its good qualities
and wonderful merits should be made
known to everyone suffering with
dyspepsia and biliousness.' Jessb
Barker, Printer, H umbo ldt. Kas. .-i
••••••••••
It is for the cure of dyspepsia and Its
A attendants slck-headache, constipa
^ tion and piles that “
® Tutt’s Tiny Pills act® e
W have become so famous. They
gently, without griping or nausea.
5
Kerosene for Dandruff. B
The best thing to clear dandruff from
the hair is kerosene. Of course, if it is
used, it ought to be scented, and that
can be done. I made what little I own
on that discovery. It was when I was
running a little shop in one of the inte¬
rior towns. By mistake I put some on a
man’s hair one day, and he came back to
tell me that it worked like a charm. He
did not know what it was, and I did not
tell him. He said he wanted some more
of it. and I gave it to him. Then I
bought leveral gallons of it, scented it,
put it in bottles, gave it some high sound¬
ing name, and people bought it by the
dozen bottles. The demand was so great
that I was afraid the grocer in the town
would get on to me, and I st nt to Chicago
and bought a barrel of it. I sold every
drop of it for the hair. I got my start
in that way, and that is why I am row
in business in the city.—interview in
Chicago Tribune.
The Only One Ever Printed.
CAN YOU FIND THE WORD?
Thete is a 3 inch display advertisement In
this paper, this ueek, which has no two words
alike except one word. The same is true of
each new one appearing each weok, from The
Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a
“Crescent” on everything they make and pub¬
lish. book for it. send them the name or the
word and they will return you book, beauti¬
ful LITHOGRAPHS OrSAMPI.lrs FitEE.
There is a past which is gone forever. But
there is a future which is still our own.
Malaria cured and eradicated from the
f •iiej., by Brown’s iro > Bitters, which -n-
ricliu- t he blood, Uv ea the nerves, -.ids diges¬
tion. Acts like a charm on persona strength. in general
11! health, giving new energy and
But one upon earth is more beautiful and
better than the wife—that is the mother.
Is it sensible? Is it reasonable ? Is it economy
to suffer yourself and worry others with a head¬
ache when liradycrothio wiil relieve you in
fifteen minutes? It costs only fifty cents a
bottle, at drug stores.
The pleasant evattng ot Beeo’iam’s Pillis
completely disguises t lie taste wiihont impair¬
ing their efficiency. 25 cents a box.
FOR THE CHILDREN.
My little girl suffered for three years from a large Abscess on her hip, the result of
fall and dislocation. The Abscess was large, with six openings, all of which discharge
puss. I was induced by friends to give her S. S. S., an d hy the lime the fifth bottle wi
finished the Abscess was entirely healed, and the child was well and happy. Mrs. J. t
Wiegner, Slatington, Pa.
I had three little girls who were attacked with obstinate ECZEMA, or Bit
Trouble, which at first resembled heat, but soon grew to yellow blisters, some of them qt
large. One of the children died from the effects of it, but we got Swift’s Specific promptly, and g
to the other two, and they soon got well. S. S. S. forced out the poison
cure was wonderful —J. D. Rains, Marthavi/le, La.
S. S. S. has no equal for Children. It relieves the system promptly, and asi
nature in developing the child’s health. Our Treatise mailed free.
SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga
URBICCBRS
8
mm ALL DEALERS- 4
ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTE.
W. L DOUGLAS $3,™ SHOE
For gentlemen ia a fine Calf Shoe, made seamless, of
the best leather produced in this country There are no
tacks or wptc threat^ to hurt the feet, and is made as
smooth inside as a hand-sewed shoe. It is as stylish, easy
fitting and durable as custom-made shoes ooatlng from
$4.00 to $5.00, and acknowledged to be the
: Best in the World for the price.
fr 1 For LADIES.
For GENTLEMEN,
Genuine *3.00 Hand-
g Hand-Sewed. . Sewed.
*2.50 Best
QQ Hand-Sewed Dongols.
“ Welt Shoe. * 2.00 Calf and
SO Sf| Police Farmer.. and ib I Dongols.
*1.75 F "
s 2.50 Extra Value HISSES.
" i
Calf Shoe. For I0YS’ 4 YOUTH'S.
*2.25 Working- ®2 * *1.75
man’s Shoe.
S 2.0Q Goodwear P SCHOOL SHOES.
Bhoe. *
i
©dj^TAKE NO yourself SUBSTITUTES. and family, during * _ these _ hard
ST IS A DUTY you owe to You your economize in your foot¬
times, to get the most value for your money. can question, represent
wear if you purchase W. L. Douglas’ Shoes, which, without
a greater value for the money than any other makes.
A I BT1 ^ SR.I W'. L. DOUGLAS’ name and the price is stamped
I evilli on the bottom of each shoe, which protects the
consumer against high prices and inferior shoes. Beware of dealers
who acknowledge the superiority of W. L. Douglas’ Shoes by attempt¬
ing to substitute other makes for them. Such substitutions aro fraud¬
ulent, and subject to prosecution by law, for obtaining money undsr
false pretences. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
If not for mile ill jo = r place pend direct lo Factory, slating kind, sire and i wldlk
wanted, Pesiage tree. > GENTS WANTED, Will stive exclusive sale to shoe dcaleri
where 1 have no agent and advertise them free In local paper.
Cheaper than BarbWire.
HUMANE, STRONG, VISIBLE, ORNAMENTAL.
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H faSgzs « v fci 'M .AA7 \t ■
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i
HARTMAN WIRE PANEL FENCE.
Double the Strength of any other fence; will not stretch, sag or get out of shape. Hnrmless to
a Perfect Farm Fence, yet Handsome enough to Ornament a Lawn. Write for prices, Descriptive t j r ■
lar ant* Testimonials, also Catalogue of Ilartman Steel Picket Lawn Fence, Tree and Flower Guam*
Flexible Wire Mats, Ac. HARTMAN MFC*. Forayth CO., Beaver Atlanta, Fails, Ga. Fa.
SOUTHERN SALES AGENCY, 51 and 53 S. Street,
LIVER
< PILLS
31
mSSSS __
g Q w urai daily
action.
hloodl* 1 It 5[li?? by P urif r |n s
T ’”' rjr t« »»tt.. e <-■„
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DR. HARTER r ^I (SEOICINE 0U52,KX>k CO St. Louis. ' rnh “ mpIe Mo. '
.
MB j Pteo's Remedy (br Catarrh la th* BE
WI IU'st. Easiest to Use. and CheapeFt
Wm Bji b-old by druggists or sent by mail. ^
50c. * T Hazel tine, Warren. Pa
m JV. T. Fitzgerald,
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COpvr,oh, jgaj
Rather rUhj
— the offer that’s made by the pro¬
prietors of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh
edy. Risky for them. For you, if*
you have Catarrh, it’s a certainty.
Yon’ro certain to be cured of it, or
to be paid $500. That’s what they
offer, and in good faith — they cure
you, or pay you, no matter how had
your case, or of how long standing.
But — is it so much of a risk ?
They havo a medicine that cures
Catarrh, not 4?r a time, but for ail
time. They’ve watched it for years,
curing the most hopeless cases.
They know that in your case there's
every chance of success, almost
chance of failure.
Wouldn’t any one take such a
risk with such a medicine ?
The only question the is — are yo
willing to make test, if th
makers are willing to take th
risk ?
If so, the rest is easy. You par
your druggist fifty cents and th
trial begins.
m
L OL
| { 00 stith NOT pastes, BE DECEIVED Enamels, and l ™ Paints 1 - which stall*
I I the hands, injure the Iron, and bum off. ^.
The Rising Sun Stove Polish Is Brilliant, nous
| I less,Durable,and or glass package with the every consumer purchase. pars for
J complex™, rired rwiic f,
J '.riL.'uSr»r«
$50.00 A bright, energetic m* r-
woman w an tea to take
A home anti
seiA?s at
town or country- steady n
WEEK 90 darn and a "Bo
aft^r-ward. A Go*J
for the right perron.
jobs taken. are scare
J* W. oon
JONE8, Hanaiter, “sixtrtn^
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