Newspaper Page Text
its early stages.
r The New York Commercial A elver
tiser maintains that even those with
defective sight can see “business is
improving.”
The Chinese outnumber the Japan¬
ese ten to one, and yet the latter
drive the former. The Rural New
Yorker asks, Why? and then explains:
Organization and skilful discipline.
When Americans boast of their an
cestors coming over in the Mayflower,
the Chicago Herald suggests, they
should give a thought to Swami Yive
kanada, the Brahmin high priest, who
can trace his family records back for
more than twenty centuries.
j According to the Medical Press, in
Germany a man who loses both his
hands in an accident can claim the
whole of his life insurance money, if
he bo insured, on the ground that he
has lost the means of maintaining
himself. A loss of the right hand re
duces the claim to from eighty to
seventy per cent, of the total.
A Boston druggist claims to have
discovered a subtle compound that
will deprive a e$t of its voice without
impairing the mental, moral or phy
sical powers of the animal. If this be
true, observes the Detroit Free Press,
hi discovery should at onoe be dedi¬
cated to the publio and a feline de
voealization commission established
in every progressive city. The world
has fought caterwauling with boot
jacks and profanity too long as it is.
The knowledge that nearly all clay
contains aluminum, and that alumin¬
um is every day becoming of greater
importance from an industrial stand¬
point, tempts one to look with greedy
eyes upou each clay bank he passes
and make mental estimates of the
wealth waiting to be shoveled out.
The difficulty of obtaining tho metal
from clay, however, adds the New
York Mail and Express, renders it
prohibitive. Its chief source is
bauxite, a mineral occurring in quan¬
tity in Arkansas and the southern Ap¬
palachian valley, but the continu¬
ity of tho vein has not been deter¬
mined. There is a fortune waiting for
the man who devises a commercial
method of reducing aluminum from
clay. _____________
I The Atlanta Constitution observes:
"A young man of even the most brill-
that will support him. In this coun
trv there is such an overproduction of
literature and so much competition
that every literary man will find it
more satisfactory to have somo regu¬
lar occupation that will make him a
living. He can then employ his leis
nre hours in writing, and if it brings
him no money ho will have something
elae to sustain him. AVe believe that
men who are not dependent upon tho
earnings of their pens will do better
work than the half-starved writers
whose daily bread depends upon the
acceptance of an article. There is no
good reason why a story writer, his¬
torian or poet should not follow some
profession or business, and do his lit¬
erary work at night when the spirit
moves him. Such work then becomes
a recreation, and it is likely to be of
better quality than when it is forced
every day as a regular task. These
views nre not new by any means, but
tho young writers who are giving np
their best chances in life while they
are writing for the uncertain rewards
of literature should give them due
consideration.
The Atlanta Journal maintains tha.
tho importance of the horse among
civilized peoples will never again be
as great as it has been, Mechanical
inventions, the various applications of
steam and electricity, have greatly re¬ I
duced the practical value of horses,
and every day the uses to which they
are pnt are becoming fewer, Tho
horse car has almost entirely disap¬
peared. It has vanished from the cit¬
ies, and even the towns and villages
now have their electric cars.
cles are becoming more popular,
They are no longer used merely for
pleasure or exercise, but business men
and women and suburban residents
IS a power O
against the horse. Another agency
that is driving him out of use is the
suburban train with its frequent trips
and low fares. A horse is too slow
and expensive to compete with his new
rivals. The decreased demand for his
services has had a paralyzing effect on
his commercial value. The snbetita
tion of the cable and the trolley for
horse power on street cars threw many
thousands of good horses on the mar
ket and consequently the price of
horse flesh has fallen very low. It is
surprising to see how cheap horses are
in Atianta and in every other big mar¬
ket. A horse can be bought for $50
which is as good as any horse that
twice that sum would have purchased
ten years ago. Frequently owners of
horse advertise that they w-ill let any¬
body have them for their feed until
thev can get a better offer. The
of the horse has departed.
THE BALTIMORE PlAN.
A SCHEME TO PERPETUATE
BANKRULE.
The Government to Print and Guaran¬
tee the Money; but the Ranks to Own
it. Inflating or Contracting at Pleas¬
ure.
The National Banking assoc i of
Baltimore a few weeks ago proposed
to perpetuate bank rule by an amend
ment to the banking act containing
nine sections. The amendment pro¬
vides for the repeal of the provisions of
the national banking act requiring the
deposit of bonds to secure circulating
notes and in lieu thereof to allow the
banks to issue 50 per cent of their paid
up capital in ordinary times and 25
per cent additional in cases of emer¬
gencies,to bo determined by the banks.
The government is required to manu¬
facture and print circulating notes for
the banks to issue and guarantee their
redemption. A tax of one half per
cent is to be paid on the average cir¬
culation of each bank. For this service
a ?uarantee fund is to bo created by
the payment the first year of 2 percent
upon the circulation received and
thereafter one half of 1 per cent until
the amount reaches 5 per cent of the
entire outstanding circulation, after
which the tax is to be suspended, to be
resumed when the comptroller shall
dee “ i* necessary. In other words,
the banks P a V the government one
-
half of 1 per cent for manufacturing
and printing the circulation, which is
probably as cheap as can be done by
private parties; and tlio banks are to
pay the government 5 per cent for a
guarantee fund, after which the banks
retain the government’s money with¬
out interest.
These so called bank notes are really
government money. The government
prints them and guarantees their re¬
demption; but the hanks own them
and are at liberty to charge such in¬
terest on them as avarice may dictate.
The banking capital, according to
the report of the comptroller of the
currency, amounts to nearly seven
hundred millions. This would give
the banks three hundred and fifty mill¬
ions of government money to loan to
the people. It is further provided
that the government shall furnish the
banks 25 per cent in addition to the 50
per cent of their capital stock as emer¬
gency circulation. This 25 per cent
the banks are authorized to put out
and retire at their discretion. In other
words, they are to have the power to
expand and contract the currency as
will best suit the banking business
and the business of the speculators
connected with the hanks. A more
complete surrender of the sovereign
^Ifi - -^overnmeni “to coin
government have a go^licYwecn to loan
its money to the people and retain all
its profits? If government money is
to be loaned, why Should not the gov¬
ernment have the interest.
But why loan it at all? Why not
issue it and put it in the treasury and
save that much taxation? When it is
paid out for current expenses it be¬
longs to the people for them to nso in
their business.
This gratuity to the banks, although
enormous, nnd the power conferred
upon them to expand and contract the
currency, are not the worst features o
the scheme. The treasury, under the
ruling of the secretary, is now bank¬
rupt. All the obligations in the United
States, except gold certificates,are pay¬
able in either gold or silver coin at the
option of the government, but the ad¬
ministration has surrendered that op
tion to the holders of government paper,
and such holders take nothing but
gold. There are 1,100,000,000 of paper
nnd silver in circulation, which ac
cording to the ruling of the treasury
department and contrary to the stat¬
utes, must be redeemed in gold with
only about 60,000,000 of gold with
which to redeem it. About 200,000,000
of the paper consists of national bank
notes, which, although redeemable in
the first instance in greenbacks, are
utimately redeemable in gold because
the greenbacks are redeemed in gold
at the treasury department.
It is proposed by these amendments
to increase this national bank circula
tion to one half of the capital of the
banks—350,000,000—or, if the banks
desire, to three fourths of that capital,
or $525,000,000, and more whenever the
banks increase their capital stock. If
none of the paper now outstanding is
retired and the banks should elect to
issue the full amount there would be
1,425,000,000 of silver and paper which,
according to the ruling of the treasury
department, the United States would
be liable to redeem m gold.
The impossibility of obtaining suffi
compelled to pay Europe more than
#230 000>000 per annntn gold intereston
borrowed money. Our exports must be
^ d j n Europe at gold prices to pay this
interest and to pay for all we import,
Our exports are already insufficient for
that purpose, and the government has
been compelled to go in debt $100/80,
000, and pay 5 y - cent thereon during
the current year. How much the
people have borrowed to pay interest
on borrowed money during the same
ADVERTISE
IN THIS PAPER
IT WI T JU PAY YOU.
WHAT FIFTY MILLIONS OLD AMOUNTS TO.
cn
"Tl
m
m v
ri
1150 . 000 . 000 .GOLD, j
m IM /
H iMMA ijjJJ
% *
/
This picture is made to stimulate
speculation and to fill the soul with
wonder. Recently orv noblo country,
as a result of Grover Cleveland's serious
thinking, borrowed 850,000,000 in gold
to replenish the national yellow hoard.
Men’s mind’s and the newspapers have
been full of the yellow fifty millions.
Each has his own sweet dreams, usual¬
ly seeing in his grasping eye rows upon
rows of vaults piled up with yellow
gold. Fifty men, questioned by New
York World reporters, guessed strange
guesses about the size of a $30,0tfb,000
period is unknown, Every dollar bor¬
rowed adds to the fixed demands upon
the government and the people. Every
dollar of new money, whether issued
by the banks or the government,which
is liable to he redeemed in gold, adds
to the burdens of the government and
increases the necessity of borrowing
more money.
But it is suggested—the London pa¬
pers have advocated it for more than
a year—that the greenbacks and treas¬
ury notes amounting to about 8500,
000,000 must be retired to relieve the
government of the necessity of redeem¬
ing them in gold. This would pro¬
duce violent contraction, great reduc¬
tion in prices, and a collapse of busi¬
ness. But the greenbacks and treasury
notes now may be held as reserves in the
banks in lieu of gold, if they were
retired the banks would be compelled
to hold their reserves in gold, and
their notes would have to be redeemed
in the first instance in gold. There
would then be nothing with which to
redeem bank notes but gold. Interest
on foreign obligations would continue
to absorb the gold. The banks would be
compelled to reduce their circulation
or become bankrupt, and leave the
government to borrow money to re¬
deem their outstanding notes.
We have already E arned by experi¬
ence that the government can not per¬
manently replenish its reserves by
issuing bonds so long as there is any
outstanding paper which can be pre¬
sented t.o the treasury for payment In
gold. We are a debtor " vd
■
■- ...------------- •• -•••. ■_ \ J -;.v:
.. -
must be empty. th
of bonds issued in e ne
five years would not maintain in the
treasury $100,000,000 of gold as a per¬
manent reserve. The policy may bo
pursued until the nation is bankrupt,
but the gold will flow out as fast as it
is taken in.
England is differently situated. The
world outside of tho United Kingdom,
according to Mr. Gladstone, owes tho
United Kingdom ten thousand millions
which, at 5 per cent, produces an nn
nual income of $500,000,000. Fully
011c half of this vast sum must be paid
by the government and the people of
the United States. The folly of sup¬
posing that we can get England’s gold
while we owe her ail the gold we have
and all that we can borrow is too plain
for comment.
Every attempt to our
lating medium on the gold basis must
result in disaster. The people can
have no confidence in tho ability of
the government to obtain gold for any
considerable time by borrowing gold
to pay interest on gold obligations.
There must lie more money with which
to redeem. By money I mean real
money, not a substitute for money, to
be redeemed in some other kind of
money, or there must be less credit
money to he redeemed. The former
would restore confidence and pros¬
perity, the latter contraction, falling
prices and ruin. The government
must either coin and use both gold
and silver without discrimination or
suffer inevitable disaster. Fateh works
and make shifts are no longer possible.
It is suggested in an evening paper
that the President is contemplating a
recommendation that a percentage of
taxes be made payable in gold. This
will only make the matter worse. It
would be a discrimination against the
of the government, and would
certainly send gold to a premium as
did the dishonoring of the greenbacks
in 1802 by refusing to receive them for
customs due. That wicked act sent
gold to a premium and created the
gold board in New York which was a
more formidable foe in the rear than
the enemy in the field. The fathers of
the republic made no discrimination
between gold and silver. Both were
used as money on equal terms previous
to the mint act of 1873. That un¬
fortunate legislation destroyed one
half of the metallic money of the
world, and the hard times which now
afflict the country attest the folly of
that crime.
W. M. Stewakt.
5k FEET w- £T.
St
$50,000,000. GOLD. h- Cn
-n
m
m
fa £
lump of gold, Some thought the
lump would be ajkt ns of big the ns the mark. city
hall. All wcrrjf ide
Tlio pitiful fa< j are these: A man
with $50,000,000jl 1 If feet a hunk lie
of gold five and hail j lid enough square, to fill
would not
even a small ll om. llis nugget
would not bejfe ?gcr than a small
piano. Here behold Cleveland
with a sphere ,,T’ )in side and a cube
on the ot,'.er . ,§5 *.rg or cube, if made
of solid gold w> I Jhrtli 850,000,
000. Grover ?i{| olnnd, if made of
1 MAN TALKS
JOHN SI!
HE CRITIC i SOTH HARRISON
AND- VELAND.
>n
8nys the lloiul nipalrrt tlio Pullllo
Credit—UalijB •rlsou ami Clovo
laud for Ttyfij j I head o d ness—Too
Koch "Self-all!
The Cinoin SMnuirer publishes
an interview L\viI!i Senator
John Sherimi Hinaueinl and
political con tits, from which the
following ls are taken:
“What i^dj ilticulty with this ad
ministration pmg up the gold ro
serve?” r
“In tlio fi [place, tlio President's
one idea sc ti o of destroying the
tariff has la him without adequate
revenue to i [si expenses. In tho
second, he t j uglily mistakes tho re¬
lations of hil ice to his secretary. Ho
is not the raj of the country, as he
thinks, bu President. The word
president, > rator, presidin', defines
itself, lie] lifno business to be doing
executive a (Instead of his secretary
of the treipsl ig, who is responsible to
congress, le breaks the law almost
every day: rrison did the same. I
would not “Tk-d under Harrison
ten days q Itary of the treas
n ry. Myi fi in of a president is
____
far differs M at of a suspicious
and jealj gQ-er with his cahl
net. I v President Hayes
Vadfi liberty of
; .’d' ■ out tm conercbl' Jf j
could a
lluaml ■ Hni turn, T had good
suborl m 1 let them alone, to
MCI | ti it lives Intelligently and
not fears I suspect that Carllslo
and this cabinet in general feel that
full responsibility is not secure to
them.”
“Are the times worse now than when
you were secretary of tlio treasury?
“No. There was 110 worse panic than
that Mlqyvlng Jay Cooke's failure, it
was a panic without much money in
tho country. This is a panic with
plenty of money. I told 1’resident
Hayes that he did not go away enough.
He did go several times—even went as
far as California, You know that
Jefferson, and Madison, too, would
leave this city and go to their respec¬
tive farms and stay [there for months.
Air. Cleveland and Mr. Harison before
him misconceived the nature of their
office, which is social, assuring, out
looking and ceremonial.”
“Does the President know much
about flume ■ and trade?"
“I doubt it. In the nature of things
the secret a ry of the treasury must work
iiard. Now, the only serious point
against n Uing bonds in times like
these is that, it to an extent impairs
the cr Om Rsft of tho country. But the
first mistake was Mr. Cleveland’s one¬
sided del- rmination to celebrate the
de traction of the tariff. He cut off
his read 1 B* mid llis agent, the seere
tary, hJ O spend his assets for eiir
rent ex Be, Jt is inevitable that if
a rich ltwivlilual spends more than his
income, ho iniiat go to ruin. He can
sell hia ’.and to save hirnself. Wo can
also sell our credit. That is what they
are doing now. As I have said, it in¬
vites attention to the state of our
credit.”
“D O f. 1 think the 1’resident has any
great occasion to reorganize our cur
rency, or, as he calls L, to reform the
currency?”
“No. He is not probable to better
it. He must commence at the other
end and restore our revenue, and then
his specie reserve will not l»e poached
upon. Cleveland made the situation
which Carlisle staggers under.
“Carnegie says this is a great mis¬
take of* icveland— to reform the eur
rency?
“I think Carnegie U a good deal of a
humVzu^ He assisted to bring Here
land ba* k upon ' us by starting a con
flict . wifa ... his . labor. . _ „
“Thq, say that Harrison was beaten
by the bbor imstility to Kcid?"
solid gold would be worth almost $50,
000 , 000 . The 850,000,000 cube would
be live and a half feet square. The
850,000,000 would be six and ft half
feet in diameter, These statements
are based on calculations that would
needlessly worry the usual mind. They
are accurate.
Let the poor man rejoice. The man
with 850,000,000 has ntst so much gold
after all, and isn't it funny that a
nation full of brains with 80,000,000
inhabitants thinks it needs a yellow
cube five and a half foot square to
make it solid?—Now York World.
“Correctly, too, I think. But llarri
sou himself was responsible for that,
lie did not want Mr. Morton. And 1
firmly believe that if Harrison is nom¬
inated again he will he beaten again.
His administration and Cleveland’s re¬
semble each other in their self esteem
—wanting to rule instead of to preside.
As 1 liavo already said, I would not
serve ten days in the cabinet, of either
of them.”
“You have many friends still who
favored you for President.?"
“I wouldn’t take the nomination on
a silver plate. I am too much attached
to my fireside at. my time of life. The
office is a very thankless one, but our
later Presidents have made it harder
by their want of reciprocity and bon
liommie. ”
PEACE DAY PROGRAM.
The Michigan Woman’s Press asso¬
ciation has prepared a program for use
in the public schools, Dee. 17, the
birthday of .lolin G. Whittier.
The degeneration back toward
savagery that ls being manifested by
the organization of public school
pupils Jlnto military companies, etc.,
receives a rebuke In the patriotic and
peaceable quotations of this program.
It opens with a song, “The Watch¬
word of tho Time is Arbitration.” Then
comes responsive readings, stating
briefly tho chief causes of war, auger,
revenge and strife for territory.
In the program are thoughts cuough
if digested by the children of the
schools to make them forever peace
makers instead of destroyers.
From ' ji.re pr inted
rnont ,' '
peace u iiweajwMHul ooiujiMMrt <'Vory
wrong, Brown ul Aaawatomic," who
would tli not have tho priest in slavery’s
pay pray for him, but rather tho
slave mother who had been freed.
Poems, “The Peace of God, the
Ocean Cable Hymn” anil “Hells of
Peace.”
Tho readings are from such men as
Charles Sumner, Benjamin Franklin,
Longfellow, Thomas Jefferson, Glad¬
stone, Tennyson, Whittier, the genllo
Quaker poet, and even the great war.
riors. Grant mid Napoleon, all of
whom believe as Napoleon had to con¬
fess In his exile that war is futile, and
creates nothing useful or durable.
Peace is the leader of civilization.
The women, God bless them, always
favor peace, and they are alarmed at
the effort of plutocracy to teach In tho
schools the vilest, savage instinct,whore
should be taught the higher, nobler
mind and soul, “pence on earth, good
will to men."
War is unchristian, unmanly and un¬
civilized.
Wore half tho power that fills tlio world
with terror,
Were halt the wealth bestowed on camps
anil courts,
Given to redeem tho human mind from
error,
There were no need of urnermlH or fort*.
Tho warror’s name would ho a noma ab¬
horred !
And every notion that should lift ognla
Us hand against a brother, on Its forehead
Would wear forevermore tlio curse of
Cain.
Down the dark future, through long gensr
aligns,
The echoing sounds grow fainter and
then cease;
And like a hell, with solemn, sweet vihra¬
tions,
1 hear once more the voice of Christ . say
ettce ‘
Peace! aud no longer from It* brexen j*>r
tain
The blftftt of war h groat or#an shake*
the Kkieti!
But beautiful an song* of the IrmnortalM,
The holy melodies of lnv«, biIho
honfet olio w.
Tub total indebtedness of the people
of the United Ktatiss, national, state,
county, municipal and private makes
an average of about $600 to every man,
woman and child in the country. How
' M they pay it? If nil the mom y in
wonl.rstiH require all the land in the
country J to pay the balance.
—---------------
Tiik “black-and-tan repuhlieans , of .
the south have turned out to be dern
o-rats in disguise.
i
PRICKLY ASH, poke root
AND potassium
Makes
Marvelous Cures
in Bloa«1 Poison
Rheumatism
tVi.TJttux vtvt't j eaa«*«»A
and Scrofula
i’ " jinrUo t'.-.n Wittid. builds v.p
the
strungth to
diseases, piv
happlne feellnyn mIh'io .-it u.ict 4 *, provulletl. fflouijiy
ami lu if n<l ' first
‘
l'oi primary m*<r«.milary iiimI tertiary
syphilis, rial fur Isloml poifloolu!:. tivApopsia, mertu- and
nuilnrit.
l:» nil bl.to l jiml .“Kin cjlsrnfios, IlKo
blotrho*. pimpit'A. oU\ t'UionlO \i 1 oovh,
toitor. H<’qLi head, boll*, rryidpelns,
(•cwnin wo *n»y way, without. fear of
contradiction, Hint I*. V. I*, in t ho bent
blood positive, purifier In t ho world, and inn It 03
.speedy am! permanent euren
erh™.n«5^vlj. mm m tm
U.II.« r-temod
rtnd v?h.'A:>min
ltoot ami 1 ouiaalum .
~ 4 • T”’-. ____
yoer meiMelno from iny *dvn rMonal ”f
RtiowlodKO. 1 wninffeetod with heart
dlfW’ium. pUsurisy and r' « umatuwn for
3.-, yearn, wan t routed by t lie Very boat
phytdebinn omi spent hundreds «>f dol¬
lar* flniltiif? tried every relief. known 1 have remedy only taken with
out P. P. P.* and
one bottlo of your ran
L c 5;V[-T.o”o\':.' BprlngfloldfuroouOouDty^Mo. , ;. l L^ r .n«.^;!£ # tu *“
When fial'y was sick, wo pavo her Casterla.
W'lioii alio was a Chilli, she cried for CAHtorla,
Will'll Hilo Iiocamo Mias, slio ('limit to Cantoris.
Whan nho had Children, nho gave thorn Caslorla.
i
A DESPERADO’S CAREER,
Had a Record of Twenty-ono Hu
man Victims
M’lio man who told tlio story be¬
tween the pulls of hi* cigar was from
Texas, says tlio Kansas City Times.
“Clay Allison was a desperado. the ilo
lived in the Red River country in
panhandle), llis trigger finger was
busiest in tho early ’KOs. Ills record
was twenty-one llu boasted of It.
Twenty-one dead men, whose graves
were scattered from Dodge Glty to
Haiitii Fo. I myself saw him kill
Hill Chunk, a had man, who shot
people just for tho fun of seeing them
fall, Tho two men had no cause for
quarrel. They wore tho prize killers
of the same section of tho country.
Tt was n spirit of rivalry which mode
them swear to shoot each other on
"!r 1 • Their Licndsbot on the ro
Mini «T thCi'r ffret m*outre.
They met one night at a
Inn In Now Mexico and sat down at
tables opposite each other, with
tlioir drawn six-shooters resting on
their laps beneath their napkins. A
date of oysters on the shell had just
icon set before Chunk, when he
dropped his hand, in careless fashion,
and sent a hall at Allison beneath
tlio table. Quick as a leap of light¬
ning Allison's gun replied. A tiny
red spot between Chunk's eyes
marked where the bullet entered.
The dead man rollo I over on the
table and was still, with his face
downward In the dish of oysters.
“Allison was a largi cattle owner,
lfo wont on a drive t.o Kansas Oily
once, and while here fell In love,
married, and took tlio woman to his
home in the West to live, A child
was born to thorn—a child whose
face was as hcuilUfu! as the face of
cherub, but. whose poor little body
tt MS horribly deformed, Allison
loved the child with the gi«id love of
his passionate, nature. In tin* baby's
misshapen and twisted form Ins su¬
perstitious mind read a meaning as
significant as that of tlio mossngo
which the Divine hand wrote on the
palace walls of the King of old in
Babylon. God, lie thought, hud
visited a curse upon him for his sins
lie quit his wild ways. He drank no
inoro. No iiian ever 11.ff.cr the birth
of Ids child fell before his deadly
pistol. lie was completely changed.
Jo 1,ho now life which followed ho de¬
voted himself with absorbing energy
to ids business interests. lie be
cornu rich In time. Ten thousand
cattle on tho Texas ranges bore his
brand. A few years ago ho was
driving from his ranch in a heavy
road wagon to town. Tho front
| wheels jolted down into a deep rut.
I Allison was pitched head foremost to
j the ground. Ills neck was broken.
The team jogged into the distance
^^ |( f( j.j,,, j yin; - there (load and
! alone upon tho prairie."
Indians Tracking
If was 11 inonf nnd inforoMt
injf <*xto huo tlio Indlttti rotid
all I ho wi#nH of tho difTefoiit animulH
in tho %ruHH or among t ho woods with
the* Httino orho as wo read an open
book. Tho hunt. diHiirrangemcnt In
tho grass or sticks, however small,
tt a s enough. Glancing casually at
it in passing lie would say: “Hear,
“ Yesterday. ” “Deer,
t | ljH |„ orn jng,” “V'ery old,'' “Guri
)llH , m „i,lh.” nnd ho on. I* was
wonderful to behold this instinct 111
a nrni.
I iiad for a long tune ln-wi foliow
: r .,, * this » rail of I lie moose which I
, j , u , r . ul , „ | K ,,t
sick of it, i’artridge and began to cross-examine
Mr. Big us to iiow fur off
our quarry wa likely to be. Big
Fnrtridge then allowed that lie was
sick of the imaginary moose hunt
himself and owned up. “<fid trail,
all moose nipoli”—tfiat is, dead. He
fiad only been leading me about in
this way to amuse me, knowing it
useless tlie whole time! Ho exacted
o*> for tliat day’s sport.—[Black¬
wood’s Magazine.
Whe.v young men sow wild oats,
they not only reap tho crop, but they
lose the use of tha ground in which
good Mtd »if ht hay* httn m»»,
PIMPLES, BLOTCHES
AND OLD SORE S
CATA RRH, MAL ARIA,
KIDNEY TROUBLES
and DYSPEPSIA
Ayo entirely removed by
—rrlchly Anh. Polio Root and Potoa
otur.i, ttio groateuc blood purifier ca
oartb.
O.. July 21, 'i q 0l.
Mesa ns Lippman Duos., Savannah, bottlo of
Ga. : I >sak Mips—I b'»u«hc a
U v,nr 1*. r P. r-t Hot Springs.Arlc. good than 1 >«ina ;rno
Ii.im (lanomo more tho HotSpr.uga,
month tronimontar- C. O. !>•
hJoiid throe bottles
ne £5w .tranj mnWT County, O,
Aberdeen, lirotvn
Ca^i. O. Job::*ton,
,nf*lor novcral yciirs wltn nn un*
«i r tuiy *iul <U: - »agr©oublo known eruption nu
j f j fried OV-'TY P. ivr ss;
• lnK la vnln,until 1’. I’, tvoaus
c ontlrcly eurod.
nn ,j lk .x\ now £>. .1 OhN9TON,
iilitruod W b l»V) J. DavanuaU. U«.
f'.kli?. iTanrcr
Testimony frc&Xht Mayor of &cqum,Te+\ .
Bkqtjjn, Pi'Y,, IT. j
ni.iiulinK, and .< tui«! »?reat refil l: 1C
-!.rTi;.?L /M»5 T^/iV-S
and feel eonlldent tint, another course
win i-ffccc c-tiro. it law a*»o relieved
SS.,Sg£ “ d Bl “
CAPT. W. M. RUST,
Attorney at Lav\
____
Dock on Blood nisenses mdiicii Red.
AM, MltmalSTS SEM, IT.
uppwian bro8 0
ntoraisTOBa.
Uci.iunn’. Bloch.ssvsnuali.Oa
DR. HARVEY MOORE.
OCIJ LIST
And Spci’itlisl in all Diseaso* ol'tlio
Eye, Ear, Throat, Nose.
Such as Cataract, I'lcrgimns. Cross
Kyes, IVcak, Painful or inllaii cd Lyes,
Granulated Lye Lids. Neuralgia, II :i«l
nelie, Dizziness, Nausea, Nervous Dys¬
pepsia, Chorea or SI. \ ilii: s Dance,
I lea Iness, ('alarm and Wl Inna.
Cross Eyes .Straightened hj Dr. Moore's
Painless Mel hod.
No loss of Mine. No ether or Chloro¬
form, No eonllnoinenl indoors. No
pain during or lifter the .......alien.
(1 rautllal( d eyelids euretl without
ellUHl les or I he kflilc.
Hours ft lo I o'clock, daily building, except
Sunday Ufiil and :.‘nl Kisi r At¬
lanta. prompt
Cnrrespomlctico will receive
nltenf ion when iieeoiupitnleil by stamp.
^Always Caws.
•••••• Botanic Blood Balm
The Great RrmoJv for the sper Jy and permanent
cure of Scrofula, Rheumatism, l-.iiarrh. Ulcers.
SSW.-JiBin'XSII* lE5^fiwe r 3a&" p SS&'
from Hi • prescription <>f an eminent pnyt -'an i
who ufted it with mnrvelmi** aic* cs* for 40 years «
mi i Its * ontinmwl u*<’ for fiftren V'*Af v W *
smiJ* tif graM' I pi*oph* lm» ilemonstratccl that 1
It h by far the b«*it building up lonl* and Hlood ' 1
Purifier ever offered to the worlff- It in*il<es new 1 1
rich Mood, and possesse* almost mlraculoui' 1
healliij; properties.
, /<r WkITI! I’OR BOOK OP WONDERFUL
CURLS, nc.it free on on|,llcntl<m.
It net k('|'t tiy y.er I , .tl Jruggl'.t, send $r.oo ,
for a large bottle, or 11'at for nix botlles, and 1
inedh Inc will hr -."lit freight Paid by ,
BLOOD BftLM ?. 0 ., flwanta, Ga.
T “‘Qflmfé‘fb' ABE “ "
‘9‘ *-
4V 6’ ”I ,w."
Q m 6‘
ran I
DYSPFPSIA I
INUGCSTION I
ftu/OUSKFSs\
Sournes.i or *
S TO MM II
None Gehuinl Without The Likemces Ann
SioHATunr. Each orM.A.THEoroRB M.A-Tiecoronn cm tRonrC^ Mrn.<£'
Wrapper.
THE STANDARD.
DURANG'S
’ Rheumatic Remedv
It Ift fu|«tslu X f reputation f/ r \’ { jTnrft
n*i i«;J i*< tie# M*l , i i !ur<t ruined/ tot tue
<jiiick »* f 1 i r mu turn t titfi.’ • tt KfUrl irni
tis.n < i‘H It latl , ((v . in r.ll H* forms
, thousand* >1 I'tiyat
it in en-lo TH ' 1 h • / Eatle It t
elan*. 1'uL >!U flCfrt end
mifi lv vtnji tH'flo and build* t i.'iiU the
P lir d* Ir ii v* r full* to i'i
ft rnc' J* ait'? dollar n bo I or
v.ni for live tlolinrn, O
P i.bb’t Mail Address*.
v utiiaiig o niisuniBiro iwmoui v
> iSiG L Slrcpf.Wasmngtan, D.C.
R /ZM“ f.M'cr Pill:*
I > t null Til"V ,'! w il l a« 1.1
L ? raicn "9 C7.i szz- cox. or t r.txz 'j
! Gt I'Z'.X ?.Y BV30%I :
A, ■
n ftp! BVfET CL A jrn t wanted for now book*
y S|,11*M<!i<I “•■Ilf.'F. Knrc oppor*
timity f*u* nny urtivc ffiniftl. rnnis or No lady. $75
P<r month
»nnnt give a #^fr|UT d lc<Jt,ircd lull jii»tructimis. ’ at
Wf
He pay nnJ allow day*
credit. I>*t ins tell von about it. I*. W#
1870,1'hiladeipbia.Ba Zi«*g)<-r A: to., Box WANTED
COIIMC (IsrnT rtrv HE
ti Mtm j»U*h Vll
**imI u > your f-wn
T O 4 t,( <>th*-rH t'»u
OPIUM And MORPHINE
Habits CURED
withouf ntlrfiy suffering I»»fT«*r4-Ht or rt’itrtin' froiti *11 slloihur^ Method original NOz*L**ck, tnd
ontokf to ico»tituu*;U All desire dopldd ui ain't*.
TRIAL SENT FREE.
AddroM I HE TEMPLE REMEDY CO.. Wstatii, In*.
m3
'LasriVEMSH \
Sick on
/ \Ncnvnus- HtADACHC*
JA UNO ICE
/loss of
A r'pcrtrc