Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-1902, June 26, 1891, Image 4

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THE AMERICUS WEEKLY T1MES-REC0RDER: FRIDAY. JUNE 26, 1891. THE TIMES-RECORDER. t>ally and Weekly. Thk AmeuiiTs Recorder Estahlishkd 1979 Thc Ameuutm Times Established 1890, CvKnoLIPAl fcu. AI'RIL, 1891. Sl'BsCKiniON : Daily, One Year. 9G.< Daily, One Month. ! Weekly. One Year. • • l.( Weekly, Six Months, For Advertising rates address IUhcom M v rick. Editor and Manager. THE TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY, Americus, Ga., Juno 26, 1891. Bryce and Payn< vorkof little MeKinl t a peace-maker. Pavne will make Ex-senaimi: Mi Dm home in Indianapolis died at hi , .Sunday. The only proper coat to be worn at fashionable evening poker parties is the Prince Albert. Baiidm.ev too severely, more if then ‘ should not be condemned He would have carroled had been more in sight. Young Kaiser Wilhelm rebukes his Uncle Wales! It is more than probable that Wales may next he heard of as ‘“cut ting a king.*’ John Sh human and William McKinley would have made a good pair to travel with Yellowstone Kit in the before taking and after-taking act. A shout poem in the New' York Her ald makes the word “more” rliitne with “show.” This is a certain indication that the author is a southerner. FINK POLITICAL PLOTTING. Some of the southern papers find cause for alarm in certain bold statements re cently made by the Boston Traveller, which go to show that the northern re publicans are planning to take a hand in southern politics, with a view to disrupt ing the democratic party. Using the sub-treasury scheme as an entering wedge, they would split the solid south, ami on its ruins re-established negro government. .Such, at least, would he the ultimate outcome of the success of such a plot, for if the republicans should find themselves a little stronger in con gress than they were last winter they would be pretty sure to pass a force bill, and then there would he u-general count ing in of negro voters and a counting out of white voters. According to the Traveller the enemy lias been running his mines first under the old palmetto state, and claims to . have been largely instrumental in bring- j S 1STER-IN-LA WS PENS ION. The democrats of the country, and probably some of the republicans also, have been-perplexed to understand why the president should allow himself to be scandalized by the retention in office of that marvel <*f official crookedness, Green B. Katun, commissioner of pen sions. For a year or so the countiy has been bearing of the dishonorable and j forced dishonest methods employed l»y him and | Com his sous for increasing their incomes j of the from the government servioe. and the wonder has grow u that they were net dismissed from the service long ago— and the impression has gained ground that there must he some special con- sideration that causes the president to stand by the Baums through all this evil report. Public euiioMty icgardiiig this mat ter is at last relieved by the discovery that Baum has been engineering a hand- J likely to attract some job through his office for President j It goes on to r ing about ti 18<K). But a> the solidify « ocrats in tliei tics, it does : Englander gan affect Carolina dem- uatiOnal poF- appear that the New l*(1 anything by what relati Mu. Clkvkla nii is too honest to ac cept the democratic nomination on a platform with a free coinage plank, if he should be opposed to that policy. Herr Most, the anarchist, gets a year in prison. IBs mouth in tfie meantime will get a good rest, but how it will break out when his sentence is up! Judging from the poll of the Georgia editors taken by the Atlanta Journal, the Hill boom in Georgia is very nearly as large as a pea.—Chattanooga Times. Thomas O’. Pi.att authorizes the affix ing Ids autograbh to editorials in the Now York Recorder after the most ap proved watering place correspondence style. A short cotton lyop would ho a bless ing in disguise. It would bring just ns much money as a full crop, and the cot ton now on hand could he worked off at better prices. The Chattanooga Southern railroad lias been completed and is in operation from that city to Gadsden, Ala. It is seventy-two miles long and runs through a fine section of country. The state fair seems to he afloat just now with no place to rest its head. At lanta, Macon, Augusta and Rome are bidding for the fair, but it will hardly be removed away from Macon. Tpk trustees of Wesleyan Female col lege have found it necessary to pass res olutions condemnatory of a speech made .by Colonel John II, Seals before the Alumneau association, because Colonel Seals advocated progressive ideas so far as women were concerned. Census Pouter wants to resign. He has spent all of an appropriation of more than six million dollars provided for tak ing the census, and as there is no more money in the treasury ho wants some other fellow to shoulder the responsi bility of finishing up the job. A census bulletin, just issued, shows that in 1889 Alabama produced 010,020 cubic feet of sandstone, valued at $43,905. If the builders of houses would only use native stone instead of importing a foreign article no better, these figures could be greatly increased. As it is, wo are exceeded by fourteen states. The Bristol Courier gives these sta tistics: “Two-thirds of the church members of this country are women, and out of 45,000 convicts in the state prisons more than 43,000 are men.” And yet there are men who rise up in the dignity of the superiority of their set to make a habit of belittling wo men. Secretary ; o?tkr is going to ap point as female representative on the immigration board Miss Rose Cleveland, sisterof Ex-President Cleveland. She has heeu highly endorsed by almost every female organization. The posi tion ic, without doubt, the most impor tant ever held by a woman in this country. . Sam Small says: “I a in no duck pad dling around in the puddle of imperso nal placidity.” We don’t know whether it was a “puddle of impersonal placidi ty” or not, but it is evident that the Rev. Sam Small has been in some sort of a “puddle” for quite a while, and there is little prospect of his getting himself out soon, unless lie mends his ways. Lieut. Gov. Jone.», ot New York, is very anxious to get the gubernatorial nomination, and speaking of his fitness for the place said that the people knew that he was not a great man but that he ^ras honest. Mr. Jones Is a curiosity as a politician, because the majority of them think they are so great that Julius Cfleaar would appear as a pigmy hesido them. they may have done. The causes which led to the election of Tiilmau and Irby were so deep seated that outside influ ences could hardly have affected the re sult. But if the Bostonians, in their eagerness for mischief making, saw fit to contribute money towards Tillman’s we may be sure that every dollar of it was thankfully received. The Traveller openly avows that “Bos ton took a hand in South Carolina poli os last year, through the judicious use of money and influence.” and that object was to encourage the alliance movement and split the democratic party, in the expectation that “it would tend to break up a tyrannical solid south.” According to the same authority, “much more ex tended preparations are being made for the next campaign- in South Carolina under the skillful leadership of ex-Gov. Long at the Boston end of the line, and of J. Hendrix McLane of Columbia, S. C., at the other end.” Mr. McLane is to he supplied by the Boston patriots with money “for the organization of alliance clubs.” With a candor which could not he surpassed, the Traveller says: Mr. McLane’* alliance tendencies would shock his Boston associates under ordinary circumstances, »>ut they are willing to Join hands with him and tolerate the crudities of the alliance to h»at th«* democrats. These Boston mor«* ists 1>e lave tha* while republi canism "pure aud simple” will never prove acceptable to the southern democracy, their organization can easily b« disintegrate I by some other po.itieai force like ha . of the alliance. This moral plot of the “Boston moral ists” is almost as bald as that which re sulted in making a tea-pot of Boston har bor. The Traveller’s brazen avowal of it ought to ho placarded throughout South Carolina. “Crudities of the alli ance” should he printed iu capitals. These Bostonians regard the alliance with contempt, and they hold the sub- treasury scheme as sheer madness. They feel sure that the alliance will never car ry its points, but they would use the numerical strength of the alliance to deal a staggering blow at southern dem ocracy. With their thirty pieces of silver they would induce the alliance men to betray their own political party and dig their own political graves. The Traveller deserves thanks for having laid bare this diabolical plot. “The Sleeping City” is the rather suggestive title of a “comedy melo drama” dealing with New York life which has just been completed by Oota vus Cohen, managing editor of the Charleston (S. C.) Daily World. The play is said to abound in thrilling epi sodes, including a lunatic asylum ou fire, a gambling house scene, a steam ship wharf, a newspaper office and the rescue of a child at the Park Place sta tion of the Sixth avenue elevated road. Mr. Cohen is loyal to his profession, and has made his heroes, the city editor and sporting editor, respectively, of a large (imaginary) New York daily newspaper. Mr. Cohen will endeavor to secure a New York, Chicago, Philadelphia or Boston production for “The Sleeping City.” A bad condition of affairs has devel oped out in Kansas, where the legisla ture passed a law making it a crime ou the part of employers to work their em ployes more than eight hours per day. The asylums, orphan homes and like in stitutions are compelled to have more hands or stop business, and as the ap propriations were not increased, the lat ter alternative seems inevitable. The manager of the asylum has notified the governor that he must haw more money, or send the lunatics home. Even an eight-hour law should he tempered with discretion. ditical earthquake of! Harrison, the special beneficiary being event did not affect the president’s sister-in-law. It was an old and worthless claim which had been urged on successive administrations without avail for twenty years past. When Mrs Harrison’s •brother-in-law be came president the prospects of the claim were of course greatly improved. It only needed an unscrupulous man for commissioner to insure the allowance of the claim. No matter what the merits of the claim might he, he would allow it. And of course such a man would do many other tilings of a dishonest na ture, and a few of them happened to leak out and set the people to talking. The president and his sister-in-law must feel under lasting obligation to Commissioner Haum for allowing this claim, for it secures to the lady the neat sum of $8,239.93 in cash and an income of $2.3 per month during the remainder of her life. And what was the nature* of her claim? Why, in 1839, five years after the close of the war, her husband died of consumption, and, as he had served in the army, the widow conclud ed she ought to have a pension. Twelve years having passed without her obtaining any favorable notice of the claim, she concluded to strengthen it by maintaining that her husband's disease was contracted while iu the army. With this pretense ami all of General Harrison’s influence nothing could he done with the claim until Harrison ns president, by the aid of his tool, Baum, pushed it through. This Is but a sample of the manner in which the tax-pavers’ money is being squandered by the government. Almost any man from the north will admit that a small army of able-bodied men is sup ported in idleness by the nation, being assured of incomes sufficient to support them during the remainder of their lives. The abuses under the system are of the most shameless description. But It all serves the grand purpose of neces sitating high tariff taxes and insuring to the manufacturers protection j, Thc people cannot resist these extor tions, but they can punish such cases of individual rascality as Mrs. Harrison’s pensiou represents. Th? president has caused hundreds of thousands of dollars to he put in the dockets of his relatives, mainly in fat salaries. But the people will see to it that the Harrisons’ salaries are cut off early in 1893. FAITHFUL TO THK PARTY. The Memphis Appeal-Avalanche has not for the past six months been very friendly to Mr. Cleveland, but so un swerving, dignified and faithful lias al ways been his course, and never more so than during the adverse criticisms of the last three months, that even his en emies are disarmed, and are absolutely speak his praise, ntingona recent publication Mf the New York Dress, the Appeal-Ava lanche says: The New York Press, a publican newspaper, print recent- conference in New York between Ex-President Cleveland and Messrs. Gor man. Vilas, Dickinson. Brice, Whitney aim Laniout. Coming from such a source, the truth of the story may he question ed. hut as the Press prints it as a fact without any partisan trimmings it is me attention, te that-Mr. Cl raid of a eland and said . hat they a remun said that There will he a good deal less of Herr Most duriug the next twelve months than heretofore, as that bowing blather skite has heeu sentenced to a year’s im prisonment iu the New York peniten tiary. New York has a wonderful knack of jailing all such fellows as Ward aud Fish and Sharpe and Most that coula be emulated to good advantages by other states that are infested by such people. Editor Banksio.n of the Ringgold New .South jumped ou the alliance vig orously at the press association meeting the other day in Atlanta, and it is safe to wager that his obituary is being writ ten iu the Southern Alliance Farmer’s office for the next issue. Gov. James E. Camimiki.l defies ttie coterie of Cincinnati toughs that seeks his defeat for a renondnation, and right ly says that tlioy will not he allowed to control the destinies of the democratic party in the great state of Ohio. Gov ernor Campbell displays in this action the same boldness and aggressive char acter that gave him victory over Fora- ker in his splendid campaign of 1889. He is going to win the nomination in spite of the mechinations of his enemies within the party, and we hope will win the governorship in spite of those with out. If Governor Campbell is renomi nated, the best element of Ohio democ racy will be on top. The Foraker gang captured the republican convention. Tiie Atlanta Constitution is a staunch democratic organ aud a warm frieud to the alllarce, and our readers will atten- tivelyiisteu to any advice that it may give them. But one thing is certain: If the democratic party expects the sup port of the farmers’ alliance, it must embody our demands into its platform and then nominate a ticket that‘will command the confidence of the people. This is a year of education for our mem bers, and they want all the light possible thrown upon the great economic ques tions of the day.—Southern Alliance Farmer. called the gentlemen together he wanted to know exactly \ thought his prospects were for ination. lie is alleged to have if by remaining in the field he would eniharass the party in any way, he would signify his withdrawal at an early date. After sayiug this much, the Press reports that all the gentlemen were agreed that he was the man for next year’s nomination: Mr. Gorman saying that, as a candidate, he would not he weakened by his views on the silver question. After further discussion, Mr. Cleve land is said to have placed his political fortunes in the hands of the gentlemen present, giving them the liberty to withdraw him at any moment if they saw the interests of the party might be jeopardized by his candidacy. They all departed from the conference de termined to keep Mr. Cleveland to the front. It is a very pretty story, and, if true, reflects a great deal of credit upon Mr. Cleveland. He is just the kind of man to stand .aside if by so doing he may ad vance the welfare of the democratic party. Though he has held many public offices, lie has never appeared before his party or the people as an office-seeker. He has never shown any other ambition than to do well what his hand might find to do. He has been fearless and faithful in the discharge of every public trust, and his administration stands in glorious contrast to that of Mr. Harri son. The people of the south have al ways found him a friend in his public acts, and Jhere is no other way to judge a tree than by its fruits. His speech at Philadelphia a few months ago, in which he touched upon the depression of agri culture, should have won him the favor of every farmer in America.—Birming ham News. USELESS APPEALS. When Justice Bradley condemned, ns he did iu opening the new Federal Court of Appeals in Philadelphia, the too common practice among lawyers of appealing cases in which the law is clear, he struck at one of the most fer tile causes of delay in our courts of last resort. An appeal is justified only when the law is doutful or it is reasonably plain that the lower court has erred. Y'et ap pelate courts are constantly called upon to decide points that have been well settled by earlier decisions aud to hear appeals made on mere pretexts and quibbles. Hundreds of cases are appealed when any well iuformed lawyer can see that the appellant has no chance of winning. Such appeals are uot only useless, they are an abuse. ONLY THE WORKERS WIN. The following extracts from the ad dress of Gen. John B. Henderson, de livered before the graduates of the Columbia law school, are taken from the St. Louis Dispatch. They are solid truths for men, young and old: “When I see the briefless lawyer abus ing the courts and the judges; the un successful physician, condemning the world for its want of appreciation: when ‘l see the mechanic spending Hs sub stance iu the dramshop and clamoring for socialism as a relief from the ills of life: when. I see the thriftless farmer leaning upon the government instead of his plow for support, and the workman wasting his time iu organizing against capita 1 because it is not his own, and all of them complaining that the world is unkind, the words of Cassius to his friend come vividly to my mind: “The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, But in ourselves, that we are underling* “There is a sound, wholesome lesson in this paragraph for young men and wo men who are leaving the schools to en ter upon their iife work. The rules that applied in their educational competition apply in the wider and more serious competition in the outside world. The rewards go to the earnest and persist ent toilers, not to the discontented idlers ami grumblers. Complaining of the better advantages and opportunities of others will not hriug a singlb advan tage or opportunity to the complainant, whereas striving to improve those one has may do so. “There is discipline in patience and opportunity in waiting. Tl\e briefless lawyer has time to prepare himself the better for his work when briefs come, aud the patientless physician can employ his waiting period laying a firmer foun dation for success in treating the pa cients that he will get in the future. Organization is a good thing for work men. but it is an aid and not a substi tute for labor. Political reform can be of no value to the farmer who has neither land nor crops to profit by it. “The men aud women who join tlie beehive of the world will find there many wrongs, inequalities and difficul ties, hut they will find also that only work will right the wrongs, straighten the inequalities and overcome the eyili- culties. Successful reformers are work ers. and those who idly wait for reforms to bring them bread are generally re duced to beggary, theft or starvation.” The first section of the little railroad which is to connect Jaffa with Jerusalem has been completed, and tourists are now ahlo to travel by rail from Jaffa to Kamleli, about one-third the distance. It will not he very long before pilgrims to the Holy Land will he whisked in hour from the sea to* Jerusalem, to the great disgust of camel owners aud stage proprietors, hut it will ho very comfort able for tourists, who are thus spared the aches and ills which that notoriously had stretch of road has always imposed. The Commercial Gazette headed its ! editorial on the work of the Ohio repub lican convention: “It is Finished.” It didn’t mean to say that after the nomi nation of such a candidate on such a platform the G. O. 1*. had given up the ghost, hut that will be the size of it when Campbell turns down McKinley next fall. Senator Stewart, of Nevada, is an other one. of the republican senators from the west who is opposed to the re nomination of the little man in the white house, and he expresses the opinion that the .next republican con vention will declare for Blaine whether he desires the nomination or not. Sen ator Stewart also charges that the pres ident has exacted from every man ho has appointed to office a pledge to work for his renoiuination. This confirms what the democrats have frequently as- asserted, and shows up Benjamin iu his true character of a political wire puller. Senator Vest has been interviewed. He is of the opinion that the democrats will nominate Cleveland and Gray next jear. The senator believes Mr. Cleve- lan to he mistaken in his views as to the free coinage of silver, but that he is right on every other question. lie inti mates that Mr. Cleveland might yield to the sentiment of the party as to silver. He denounces as false the charge that the democratic senators are working against Mr. Cleveland. Which views seem to stick in the craw of some folks. The fact that a prominent rolling mill man, Mr. Seddon of Birmingham, Ala., accompanied the Richmond and Danville officials on their recent trip over the Central road is taken to mean that con siderable improvements are contemplat ed, particularly in the track of the road. The Richmond and Danville is noted for the substantial character of its property everywhere. If Harvard College is as progressive as she would have us believe, why not abolish the “annex” for w omen and give thorn all the advantages of competing with the men? Why educate the hoys in a fine building aud only permit the girls to occupy the woodshed so to speak? If a thing is worth doing at all It should he done thoroughly. THE NEXT PRESIDENT. “Who will be the next president of the United States?” A prominent democrat of Americus. who has long held such position as to make him a good observer of the drift of events, says that he will be Leland Stanford of California. “The democrats,” said he, “will uot nominate Cleveland, because of the fear that he cannot carry New York, hut will put up Hill, or some other compromise man, who can’t carry Connecticut, New Jersey, Indiana and other close states, aud will, therefore, fail to elect their candidate. “The republicans have had enough of Harrison and will fear to nominate Blaiue, because the same causes that de feated him in 1885 may do so again. “Leland Stanford* is a man of ability, worth one hundred millions, and has a good record, is acceptable to the repub lican allianeemen because of his favor able position on silver, the tariff and the sub-treasury bill, and can carry every doubtful state. “Leland Stanford will therefore be the next president.” The news that II. Victor Newcombe of New York at one time a prominent Wall street operator and a reputed mil lionaire, had been sent to a private in sane asylum, was not a surprise to Ids friends, who have known that Mr. New combe had been in bad health, suffering from a mental disturbance for several months. He seemed to improve after his return from atrip to Europe, but the recent warm weather evidently caused a relapse and induced his family tu send him from home for better treatment. He is not considered incurable, aud his speedy recovery is hoped for. Alexander Boyd of Cool Springs, Pa., shot and killed his mother-in-law the other night, and when arrested he stated that he mistook her for a burglar It is true that there are hundjeds of men iu this world who would rather have a burglar in the house than a mother-in-law, but this thing of mistak ing a mother-in-law for a burglar and shooting her ought to he discouraged. It is getting to be entirely too comhiou and convenient. CAMPBELL IN THE FRAY. Gor. Campbell has convinced thi publicans, as well as the men of h| H party, that he is a fighter, and tha* i intends to wear war paint from the ginning to the end of the Ohio ca paign. The bitterly partisan speech McKinley on the occasion of his a 0fj nation has aroused tlie gallant crat, and he has taken the field plunged into the fray. Thursday night he made a sj.ee his friends in Cincinnati, in whici expressed his opinion of the croi ward politicians, headed by John Lean, in very strong language, also declared that the demo of the great state of Ohio would no? allow themselves to he controlled 1, small faction in Hamilton county. , U1 that county sent a number of deleea;, to the convention in excess of its quot that they would not be admitted tot] floor. Gov, Campbell then said that t! democratic convention would have ft delegates and he would be nominated f, governor and he elected. He seems to have no doubt of hi* abi ity to carry the state, ffecause with the single exception of Hamilton countv the democrats are aroused, united anc hard at work and the party will make great gains in the rural counties. Th leading democrats are supporting (;< Campbell warmly, and while they fully appreciate the fact that, the campai will be the hottest in the history of the state, they believe the democratic ticki will he victorious, because the secret ballot law will prevent the republican from buying votes by the wholesale they have done in the past, and in all tin manufacturing towns and cities tire law is sure to operate to the advantagi of tlie democrats, as the republican mill owners will he powerless to intimidate their employes, or to know how they voted. DOUGLASS GOT SCARED. The news from Havti regarding th recent conduct of Ilypolite, the black butcher who is the president of thelitt! republic, conveys tlie idea that be is crazy. It appears that when the dip!* matic corps called on Hypolite to pro test against the violation of the Mexican consulate as an asylum of refuge, that he shook his list in the faces of th diplomats and caused Frederick Doug lass, our saddle colored minister, to prow almost white with fright. The German consul, however, brought Hope- lite to terms, when he protested against his conduct aud stated that he would promptly report the insult to the German emperor, and the result was the president of Havti begged off and promised that it should never occur again. It occurs to the average Caucasian that the civilized na tions of the world ought to take steps to rid Hayti of such a savage as Hypolite. and we hope that the opportunity will soon he offered a United States man-of- war to drop a few shells about his ears. Iu the meantime, however, this govern ment should do something to give Min ister Douglass a stiff upper lip, because if his courage is not bolstered up the chances are that Hypolite will glare at him some day and he will take to the woods and get lost. Senator Carlisle has been as zeal ous and as faithful an advocate of tariff reform, a tariff for revenue for the actual needs and necessities of the gov eminent, as Mr. McKinley has been fora protective tariff for the sake of a favored few. In an interview* the other day the distinguished senator said that in hi* opinion it would be “exceedingly bad policy to permit the silver question become a paramount one in 1892.” He said that it was a question upon which there are honest differences of opiP'on in the democratic flarty, while there are other questions of equal or greater im portance upon which the democrats are thoroughly united. In his judgment it would be wiser to concentrate the whole democratic strength instead of dividing them. Dr. Talmadoe declares that “The Battle of Creeds” now raging is directly inspired by Satan. It is very gratifying to note that Dr. Talmage, who is usually regarded as sensational and ever ready to pitch headlong into a controversy, is just now acting as a bulwark against the flood of skepticism that threatens the church, and is raising his stentorian tones in pleading for the good old kind of religion he learned at his mother’s knee. The Central railroad machinists who went out on a strike iu- Savannah a few days ago have settled their grievances and returned to work, with the except tiou of one man. He cursed and abused the master machinist aud the latter re fused to reinstate him. < The New York Recorder, under the management of G. W. Turner, late busi ness manager of the World, comes out flat-footed for James G. Blaine for presi dent, its only regret being that Blaine’s health may preveut him from being a “possibility.” The Ohio republican platform mihilf ‘commends the patriotic services of our distinguished fellow citizen, Senator John Sherman, and his republican col leagues in the fifty-first congress. K has been the practice of former republi can conventions in Ohio to make speci* indorsement of Sherman aud recomrnen u him for re-election. Whatever mayj* said of Sherman, he is by long odds t « ablest man his party has in Ohio, and u was a shame that he should have re ceived this treatment at its hands at tb* behest of such a “fiy-up-tbe-creek ^ Foraker. Tiie Atlanta Journal took the coa census ^of opinion among the Desir ed i tors who went to Chicago. Out of t e eighteen editors interviewed, e ^ v f n were for Cleveland, two were for 1 1 ' oue was for “some western man aD four were non-committal. Nine rega ed tariff reform as the leading “ the coming campaign, two placed r * silver foremost, and seven consider them of equal importance. Go tell it, ye breezes, from desert ‘*0- The “Prescript on” lias triumphed, man is free! : 4 Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription the one princely remedy above allot -j Made expressly for women, It; l* aa P J to her special needs, and fulfill 3 e -| requirement. , No condi’ion so critical as todefV 9 -, No emergency *o great as to ouin« _ As a woman’s restorative and ? ^8 I tor, the * Favorite Prescription »* * J ter of the situation. Positively b J teed to give satisfaction in all ca» • money paid for it returned. l“ e medicine for women sold ou trial.