A ecntnry hence large wild game
Will Vie pracUoall^Mihanateil^
A Herman doctor may*: Lire per¬
petually in <lrnftH%nd yon won’t take
cold.
The Chicago School Hoard f* din
cussing putting typewriter* into the
public school*, .and teaching the pu¬
pils to use thn&
Trotting hors.* are dirt cheap in
Nrir York, av< th the Atlanta fion^ti
tntion. At a apsenI auction a blooded
trotter sold for 410.
—
The Clucagw'Jb raid *ays that if the
method* of thoOhicago schools do not
improve the uBpil* will never g< l far
enough advanced to bo able to road
the neu'spnpaH,
Keep your feet dry, i* the admoni¬
tion of the Obicego Herald. An emi¬
nent wpcciuliKt that city eay* that
*Hhe bent chest prub tor U worn on
the *ole of the fool***
'
It is xaid that thpc fourths of the
money «mt to f^nostantinoide for the
rf lief of the gsrtbqtiftke nn/Terer# was
Hjtphed by t lift Turkish Government to
restore the d*m*ge»l monquea.
It ir. cftlculgjtcd ihat about fifteen per
cent, of the \|h‘ a crop will be fed to
animal* in Onto, Michigan, Indiana,
Kentucky, Hliooia, Kanaa* and Min
aouri it the iiraacut condition* of low
jiricfd wheat and high priced ’ corn
i
eon ti ntic. ,
I
A Chicago judge has just decided
that the wife i« entitled to all the wed¬ J
ding presents, if it can be found that ! I
they wen. made on account of
popalarity. Kvcrything goes to hei|
no matter whether it is for feiniiiina
vusc or not.
Our export meat trade with Ger* !
Tunny in insignificant** compared with
that. W 0 enjoy with England. We have ;
abipped 300# raUlb*, valued at
7Ui to . (xvnuauv, .. while , ,, onr exports , to .
Eugland for the »*ra« period , brought ,
u» nearly 917,000,000.
It is estimated by the Chicago Record
that there arc not less than 10,000
people in New York Uity who habit
Hally stay away from the poll*. Home
of them do so in order to avoid jury
duty, the'registration as tbe panels are mado up from
lists.
The world ia growing smaller and
■■■ the kinship of humanity doner. Tin,
death Qf the Emporot Of Russia iaah»
ci'fd/ niournad In every civilized
country, sad, strange*! phenomenon
of ail, moot in th" two im.qt,)«aal{«i.
public*, the oountrie* whoso Uovern.
mcBts havs * iUi I
*
.InntiK
IfldiG wRSk i*ni(H*d, that ntvmrdifig
to Urn Han Fratioia^o Ghronieto many
oontpaniaa are unable to replace their
worn nut rail* Th, Pital prodnetion
of steel rail* to Ortober 1, IHttt, was
only 160,00(1 ton*, not oue-tlftsenth »»
great an output am iu some year*.
With it* mixture of race* and
tongue* Hwitsorlaud U a >rt of mod
era KtM At Wallenstadt, a few
day* ago, five men were on guard at
the reeruituig station. The lieiiten
mil spoke German only, th » sergeant
iipolM* Italian only, the corporal spoke
Ureach am) Hpanufi}, one of the two
private* spoke French nnd Gertnxu nnd
the other French and Italian.
A new depiftlure in public night
school* h»* been made in Philadelphia
by devoting one if the school* to a !
Conroe of lecture* on the history and
‘rking of our political aytdeni. Na¬
tional, Stale and municipal govern¬
ment will be taken up in turn. Three
lecture* a w eek w ill be given, intruded
more particularly for young men, but
free to all who choose to attend.
There ia much grumbling in Queena
County, New York, over tin regu la¬
tiou prohibit! the uae of loaded
vragoun with i arrow tires on their
new macwdamiied roada. “Thin
all wrong," maintains the A merman
AgrieulturuiL "Tfinr. i« no tease 1
shy farmer* an.) other* who um the '
road* for heavy loa.1* *hotii,I not at
onee ooiuply with the S»w, It j* m
their interest largely that the law i«
made aud it should lie cheerfully
obvv* d. We should have a general
law compelling the use of broad tire
all over the State It would a woo*
tierful help to the Po*dm**Mut* and to
the road** 1 *
A review of the mater
tnen! of the V mth m the New V TK
Herald coat a i S ro many interesting
fact* that th Atlanta (Vmatituiioa
think* i »* worth summonz The
cecum» i 1870, ■ared » that
»how< decline tu the u
OR VOidi «>f Southern pro per tv of
Th census of J •
gam in n year* of 9,1. t
000,000, aud ti of 1890 • i of
$3,899,000,000 5 •t that of 188a.
Tbe* astouudtn, figores are the re
suit of a develop! ricuiturai,
inieg and mat cturing reat*urcea
um qn ion of the
•Ihiii e it tu tiia
bifcU'I t Ilia WOCliL
A NEW DECLARATION.
WE MUST OET COMMERCIAL IN¬
DEPENDENCE.
Fnfilitnd Mfnit fit- \ anqiihihett at F.»<*r/
Point The En^rojr of hllv*r In a
Tmlt/ir to III* f omitrf Th** Torle* of
To-Day.
When, in Die course of human
event*, it. w*<:otnci4 n«cefcwiry for the
producer#, the manufacturer's ami
working people of the United State*.
to hhhert their financial independence
<»f Great Britain, and to aasumc among
the power* of the earth that equal and
kc pa rate financial a tat Ion, to which the
laws of nature and of nature’a God en¬
title them, a decent respect to the
opinions of mankind the dupe* and
victim* of the money power and a
hireling pre*#—-require that they
hUould declare the canoe* which Impel
them to aK#ert their independence.
We hold these truths to be M*lf evi*
dent; that in a free government the
producer* and wage laborers should
have a voice in determining the price*
*h«7 *“ ' for tl,e fru, [ ,,f
their labor; t hat their representativea
m congrcs* shoultl not be allowed to
openly and fiefiantly vote for measures
ruinou* to their interest*, Otherwi-f
republican government i* a failure and
a farce.
U hen a long train of abuse* and
uMirpatlona, pursuing invariably the
same objeef, evlne< a dcHign to reduce
the ma to an a>)v,oltiie Vwindage
under a ,,U),U ’> i ,ow ' r d< spot ism, it \.%
''d' 11 * '* 1 ’ " v ’ 1
ricnccalily, fit this |iolls, if may be,
‘ • ’ the
forcibly, jf need . be,- ■ against
American agent* of auch pUd ocracy,
Though great have been the u ffvr
logs of our people, they arc still pcacc
ably disposed; but as the long train of
ir ue!r -, briberies of
gnd robbery of the people
eft u*e the spirit of all true Americans
to revolt, they will certainly, before
submitting to financial and Industrial
slavery, provide new safeguards for
their future security
^ * ,f history of the conspiracy of tin
-
K' ,1,! " f r,rcut h ' " 1 ”'' nr >’
of rciicutud 1 Injuries and uMirpatioiiH,
nil having Indirect objeet , , the ,, t u 1*- ,
1Wim „ ut wf lltl u ,, w ,i„to money power
tyranny over these states
To prove this let facts be submitted
to a ,. nll ,i;,i world,
The British trust, composed of
money lenders and bunkers of Europe,
has acquired its present world wide
organisation during the past, titty
yearn, with this purposi in " * *'
absolutely control the gold of the
win id and to make g 1 *ld, in which it
demand* i’» debt* paid, the scarcest
coin.
this period it ha* so conaol
itatea Ha power a» mot only to have
....^iveil the people of Kgypt, Ireland.
Am>trm, Argentina and Aiistra
it ^, hut It la rapid I v. Ii.v the eingl" gold
ataWtard, oowfiaeatiin D” 'Uv-L' *
ami con
mKpTmT ferlratt
ftlfiec the cruel fix tlofi
tn the aublloly "f the kcuret demone
uation of silver in 1*73. when John
!S j jerl|inn UH n,e agent of the Uothn
( , hlWlt . lrui , u the silver dollar from
th „ w |, m(r< , ctlll ,,, rendering him
^|f infamous a* Benedict Arnold for
„)J time to come.
TUla trufet U»*, l«y Us baneful lultu
cm'" and sinister power, induced our
congress to sacrifice our whole eoitntry
west of the Mississippi, and by destroy
l«lf «»'er in clo4ug the mines of the
Rookies and mints of liu.nt lias re
dueed our farmers nnd miners to hope
And now it seeks to
mu try east, of the
father of water* in order to open new
market* for foreign capital m foreign
industries,
This greedy and terrible trust,
whose members are the lineal de¬
scendant* of those money loaner* and
usurer* who blotted Ollt Greece, Home,
the Netherlands and all civilisation in
the curly aud middle agca % now by Us
ainlater influence, by n Mihsidi/.cd
pres*, and by bull doling the la'v
making and executive branches of our
government, has* stricken down one
half the metallic money of redemption,
oomjH»lli«g our ople to pay twenty
billion* tnor value than was nomi¬
nated In the bond? nd reducing them
to such abject shivery that they must
labor like the serfs of Pharaoh to pay
forty bill lot of debt w ith five hundred
vuUUona ot gold.
This trust ha ■educed the prices of
our farm product* < jH'r cent, and by
the manipulation c silver has cstab-
11shod an average « price for wheat
m l ton w ive wo
farmer littie more the Indian
farmer, who Win nts a day.
Tli baud «( British conspirator*
which has a most potent weapon, a
terrible demon of •struct ion. eon
v-calcd in its nsuriov r cent in
tcrest table, >d i s devouring vh
world by the usury and extortion o
the gold bass nv tvk* to OOUfistCUb
the property railw
ms by bit* in, t
wkruptey,
reor
In this i £
N> >rthern P
New 1
itou
ADVERTISE
IN THIS PAPER
IT WILL PAY YOU.
m m FQr i 'fir 0>f 3
T Mk jl
'' r ' l&lFInky r Hi w' 7 / f ' 1 !
I 53tex )
m vSSMM / m
M y.
m £52 ov; mm |
; i. ilPi ■ "LJ lp.it f i 1 :■ hZ- w^m0m JlfP «i twm
‘ •vf 1® w ,'i ! I’ ' °\
*l!i 1 $ jm
/£ d Nm/A. KvmMkXJt/'ik
m i I :
m MX ■ l ■> ||yE o-s m ^ **Ui
•U to' . J <X’ :: ' < SSs r- i- B0NDr=
/. f V W i/i *// r/ii! /., in
m m /
7 i 1 :r V, I tl
?’i -'ll 7/ a
* I
m 8 ! iff i.i r r
:J ■^stomezar. f -u ? £tS+Ja SFr-ll ' /rir llilijjm
k *fJSL> I ' ~ ^ 5 --MJ ' r ": J/ (. < V I 1 mm if tl" m . Ml i ,m i
’ ‘Jtynf ■
-- " 1
!
I 1
8 1 the National Reform Preis Assoclalio*
l| tfV.ULUMRI(.
THE L the bond issue.'
stockholders oppressed to fisc verge of
ruin and then reorganized within a
year or two by the new "plan" of this
trust and their Wall street agent*.
'J hi* vast conspiracy of usurers,own¬
ers of the worlds g*old f who daily in
crease it s buying power by making it
more scarce to redeem credits, has re¬
duced this country to the condition of a
British province, so that Great Britain
make* the price* of our commodities,
and is virtually confiscating *>ur wheat.
cotton and all other products,!* forcing
into existence a commonweal arroy of
several million tramps; is driving our
farmer* to desperation; is bringing on
another gold scare by withdrawing
gold; is fostering a panic in wheat; is
Sinpoveri.shng Wall street, which can
not flourish while these condition* are
being brought about, nnd Is causing
nil the great railways of the country
to tie run at a loss, thus forcing them
into bankruptcy.
At every stage of these, oppressions
Oiln-farmers, producer* nnd w Bge pv o
pie hav*» protested and pleaded in
vain.
A povve whoHt* elm rue ter 1* thus
marked ||t Ml
m to dioiau* the financial polley of
thin ffveat nation, flowing as it is with
milk and honey.
The Hffents of the irold trust, in this
country have been deaf to the voice of
justice and consanguinity, ami by the
failure of all their prophecies as to the
blessings of the gold standard, have
proclaimed themselves unworthy our
trust and confidence.
Wt\ then, as the representative* of
the toUtnjr masses ot our poverty
stricken country of the United States
of America, appealing* to the sufireme
judge of the world fur the rectitude of
our intentions, do, in the name ot the
good pevple who toil for t heir exist¬
ence, declare that we are absolved
from all allegiance to this British gold
trust, and as a free and independent
people, all financial dependence on
Great Britain is hereby wholly dla
, dved, and that if driven to the last
extremity we shall demand the pay¬
ment of all debts due the British gold
t rust **in coin" as provided in the origi¬
nal agreement and not in gold of which
the trust has sole control. And for
the support of this declaration, with a
firm reliance on the protection of di¬
vine providence, we mutually pledge to
each other our lives, our fortunes and
our sacred honor.
And we agree, as brethren in the
same holy cause, to further aid each
other in the work of restoring pros
jH'rity and rescuing our country from
the curse of falling prices, by forming
American independence and silver
league clubs in those parts of the coun¬
try respect ively where we have our
homes, or the homes of which we may
have been robbed by the British gold
trust.—Written for the Bi Metallist by
Eugene Bloodgood Beebe.
Thk squelching of 1‘opulism in Kau
>i * and Colorado has increased the
value of property in these stales at
least 25 jH>r cent -t*U>bo Democrat.
Even If that .statement were not ab¬
solutely false, it would not benefit the
laboring men of those states whose
wage* are reduced immediately after
election
It will be a time fore the
cmocrats hare the ojuv tunity to lick
a pAxstagre stamp;
renu able how Umd they can
whistle
lr laborexaviu^j muiUm-s only fed
the laborers whom they ■save.
BE DONE?
Tiik ffr^romission to in
vest reafafl igabjH iman strike throws
tiie j; all on the railroads
and e.voaH the American Kail
ivay UisidH !wh.at? The courts were
against tfl the I’niteil States
t , n;
roops weg ■red out against it, and
thousands in are thrown out of
employing tl Bujso they belonged to
it. Railway If fl H&h of the American
1 ■ H&d been found re
sponsible have been thrown
into jail n ^n g on t you rhuge bee f
cutter of < lation and mete out a
like punish I to the generalthanag
agers judge* of of* . laihvaya, the corrupt
B*> and the man who
ordered oil | United States troops,
l)o it, or j £ that civilization is a
farce. ^
•fly poctinwmt*
Heart |Jtui» formulated the
biJKi Her to the sneers of
Lis en^rn Retractors in the rc
port on 1 of Agricultural
DepffH^j h ho recently pre
,.(■ o"
one of 4 . and best presenta
tiou* ever u no the senate, but it is
written in \f which is noticeably
in advance average report and
shows the ukdl of the practical writer.
Senator Pefler takes issue with the
secretary of agriculture at once. He
shows by long tables of carefully com¬
piled ststist.es that the question of
overproduction aud oversupply have
had little or nothing to do with the re¬
duced scale ,>f prices for farm pro¬
ducts. As a matter of fact, the crop
of the Unite, States has apparently no
connection whatever with the price be¬
cause of the freedom with which our
products can bo exported. In 1991,for
instance, th Crop was 25 per cent
above the average, but the prices were
much better than the preceding year.
The question of the crop of the entire
world ought to make more difference,
but the following table of the world's
production of wheat refutes this argu¬
ment oonipteely:
Y ear*. Bushels.
1884 ............ ......2,290,069,000
1885 ....... .. .h r. 7 8 ......2,104,034,000
1886 ............. ......2,198,997,000
1887 ............. ......2,227,115,000
1888 ............. ......2,213,843,000
1889............. ......2,085,505,000
iJfiKL . ......2,170,123,000
1 St* 1. , ......2,238.362,000
1892.... ......2,233,860,000
Average .. .. .2,197,912,000
Now wine tu* crop for 1S84 was
92, 5? 000 !s above the average
for the w bAt period anti Sfi.209,000
bushels ivfr than the* »p for 1862,
in spite met sc amt population
and eoi ;*■ inand, the
average expci ir ice of wheat dropped
from $1.07 in 1884 to $1.03 in 1892. It
.shown, therefore, that we must look
elscwhei t cause of our de
presaion.
Senutor Buffer takes up the ques¬
tions of option dealing, of the alien
ownership of land, the effect of trusts
and combines ijust railway charges
and all the •Ihcr evils which have
more or less ; nftuencc on our prosperity
as an otrdcaUural nation, treating
each one in a aterlv n ay. He closes
with powerful statement of the
monetary c» ndltloa of our nation.
which he afc vnclaoivc is more
responsible t 1 other cases put to
get her for th ?rty of farmers and
t ne total destruction <»f profits from a
rteuiture tie estimates that the pri
vate debt of the United States amounts.
to «M,000,000,000; the total public debt,
including state, county and municipal
debts, amount to 42,027,170,549. The
United States alone, then, has a debt
of gl8,000,000,000, while the total
amount of gold money in the world is
only *3,772,000,000. The reason for the
appreciation in the value of gold is
seen at once, Senator Fewer quotes
the statement that ‘Wall street
moves the money that controls the
affairs of the world,” and asks,
"Why should the bankers of Wall
street be permitted to ‘move the money’
that controls the affairs of the govern¬
ment of the United States and the
business affairs of tbe people?” lie
says that our monetary system is un¬
scientific, illogical and impracticable.
We are trying to do impossible things,
to do a business of 8100,000,000,000 a
year on a basis of $100,000,000, which
is equivalent to trying to do a business
of $1,000 on a basis of $t.
The remedies he proposes are to
bring the banking business under
government control, to restore silver
coinage, and give the issuing by the
government of full legal tender paper
■ty ■•■ irmly ioieisSMSMavnx t he lack of money. Long
tune
are also a part of the planum their
necessity is shown. Take it altogether,
tbe document is the ablest which has
been issued this year by any of the
senate committees, and is being eager¬
ly sought for by legislators all over
the country, because of the great
value of the statistics it contains and
for its clear, terse statements of facts.
The senator from Kansas is very much
to he congratulated.—Farm, Field and
Fireside.
810,000 for a Man’ii Life.
Would you sell your life for $10,000?
Oh, you wouldn’t, eh? let ns see.
There are 312 working nays in the
year. Suppose you get $2.00 a day
wages every working day of the year,
and have a dollar left after paying
the expense of living. Save these dol¬
lars and you have at the end of the
year 9313. The average human life is
only 35 years. You certainly do not
expect to work more than thirty
years. At the end of that time vou
will have thirty times *.312, or 99,360
Cl $640 , lftK less than $10.00tL-aud be ready A to .
die. l\hy not take the same price
now? But 82.00 a day is big wages
for these times. The average laborer
does not receive as much for his whole
life’s labor as was spent at the first
banquet of Grover Cleveland. How
are you voting?
Where th. Hi.me u...
The retmblican ; nartv is nrimarilv
— - <*
contraction. The party approved the
fraud of 1ST?, which struck the silver
dollar from the list of coins.and on all
o<*casions gave three-fourths of its
votes in cougrcss to keep silver de¬
monetized. The democratic party,
until the election of Mr. Cleveland,was
opposed to the gold standard and voted
for congress to restore silver coinage.
But Mr. Cleveland, after his election.
took lessons from Mr. Sherman, joined
the gold republicans and fought with
them; finally, iu extra session, by his
power and patron;,go, he brougkt over
from the ranks of the free coinage
democrats enough republicans to the
gold republicans to ratify the crime of
1813 and perfect tbs work establish¬
ing the gold standard, — Senator Stew
rL
Farmers should brcexl good stock
and vote for pure government.
I v l<90 w!Q come the battle of the
ballot*.
P. P ■ P IMPLES. BLOTCHES
1 a i hO DID SORES
PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT _ C&TfiBRH. BUM,
AND POTASSIUM KIDHET TBOUBIES
Makes and D 1 SPEPSU
Marveious Cures ftrf -entirely remofefl by P.P.^«
t&S?«
in Bloo d Poison earth.
peak Sirs—I bought a bottle of
.
Pih eumatjs m months’ getid three treatment bottles at C. the O. D. Hot springs.
and Scrofula Aberdeen, Brava CouDtr, wros O.
ari&3QHB|| Capt. J. 0. Johnston#
r* r
twe
For primary seonflary anil tertiary bo? m vain?nnt1!P. P. P- w »® '“***•
1 t“ , .l? , S«SK’ , !5-SSSt «k»n Cancer Cared.
SSSS5t5?.»~i»“A: iSSTSftKSt-sss F^r.'SttStoS ftrtbaoay A« ^ Hay or of Seguin^Tex.
1-1.11 M ts?rt?S;iS —1 have tried livJiHh, your' P.
cascr. ___________ Ga.-. „^«4 Otutltmtn IH
--- $*g £ a o?t r y
SSssfpSs'StKK ritarion from the seat of the Cleease
Koot and PoiBSsinm.^^^^^ t sa o?J. a ‘teSe"' re ttl% \ss« &§•
t
flpHiwoFiELD, Mo., Aug. 11th. 1893. mo from indigestion and stomach
S?SSw| fe£§SSfs« '®2ia
Book qo Blood Diseoses MM Free.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT.
LXe«°o“?W^v“ SS/i%i , i«T“S r ^sir” lippwian PROPRIETORS. bros.
Bprlngfleldforeea'ccmaty^Mo. Idppm.n. B.ock.Savannrt, 6a
CLEANING PARIS.
Hots the French Capital's Streets
are Kept Clean.
When it is said that the entire
surface of Paris is swept
clean every morning, and that to ac¬
complish. this only 3,200 men are em¬
ployed at most, nnd n large propor¬
tion of these only for a few hours
each day, it hardly needs saying that
the work of the street-cleaning ser
vice is conducted in a adopted most systema- is, how- j
tic way. The plan simple. For pur
ever, extremely the city has
poses of street-cleaning called
been divided into 1.10districts,
"ateliers.” Each atelier is presided
over by an official known as a “can
tonnier, ” who is held responsible his for
tl,e tXT nroner care s"cii. of all streets in
<0,™ o. ...borfin
ate employes and such machinery
and apparatus are provided as iho ex
perience has proved and their necessary, chief sub
"eantonniers” salaried officials at
ordinates are month;,
from 100 to 12n francs per
and give their entire time to the ser
vice; the other employes are paid by
the hour (strong men receiving ’’2 to
87 centimes, and “women, in i
and weak men from/2.« to./
times”), nnd, as a m empk
only during thqrtnorni' ll *) w '
bKalyof Die' *
«hv gweePimfR-toAC " 1 ^ 8 - /* .
y ^ -
brooaglSPdng The of procedure only suj is p’emFtrtsB* practicnilyl
o«Kr
the same in all purts of city and over
all kinds of pavements. Summer and
winter the work begiris at 4 a. m.
In advance goes a watering-machine
to settle the dust. This is followed
in narrow streets by a single ma¬
chine, and in wider ones by two or
even three machines in succession,
the foremost one nearest the centre
of the street. Such a cavalcade pass¬
ing up one side of a street and back
the other shifts all the surface garb¬
age of that street into the gutters on
either side, while a single man fol¬
lowing flushes the gutters, and di
rects all but the bulkier portions of
the garbage into the sewer openings,
situated at short intervals between
the hydrants. cavalcade is equivalent to
Such a
a small army of hanebsweepers, it
being estimated that each machine
does the work of twelve men—that is
to say, of t welve Parisians, each of
whom i.s supposed to sweep 500 square
herein an hour Fach cohort
of watering-carts f and sweeping-ma
chin0g hM of course , its definite dis
trietto cover, and so accurately are
these apportioned that all the differ
ent cohorts finish at practically the
same time. By about 8.30 the entire
city 1ms been swept, and the detritus
worn from the pavements by thou
sands of hoofs and wheels the day
nnd night before is being carried
harmlessly on through the great hurtling sew
ers to the Seine, instead of
favore( j citi es.—I Harper’s Weekly.
Whm Baby was sick, we pave her Castoria.
When she was a CSiiid, she cried for Castoria.
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria.
Wbenriwh ^ic3uklren,«h* gave them Castoria.
Indians Tracking
It ws8 a most strange and , , interest
ing experience to seethe Indian read
all the signs of the different animals
in the grass or among the woods with
the same ease as we read an open
book. The least disarrangement in
the gra-s or :cks. however small.
was enough, Glancing casually at
it in passing he would say: ‘Bear.
a week Id," Yesterday.” |>eer,
this morning.' Very old/’ Cari¬
bou, last month, and soon. It was
wonderful to behold this instinct in
a nun.
I had for a long time been follow¬
ing this trail of the moose, which 1
thought was a fresh trail, when I got
sick of it. and began to cross-examine
Mr. Big Partridge as to how far off
our quarry was likely to be. Big
Partridge then showed that he was
sick of the imaginary moose hunt
himself an! owned up. "Old trail
ill moose nipoh' —that ia dead. He
leading me about in
J it
He exacted
; ."»! for that day s sport.— . Biaek
tad’s Hagii.ne.
DR, HARVEY MOORE.
OCULIST
Speealist in nil Diseases , ot the
Au( j
Eye, Ear, Throat, Nose.
^aq M
Su< .}, as Cataract, Pterginms. iiinamedJi tq A, WjBW
\ V( . a t,-, painful or
<; ehe, r;l nulai. I >izziness, .1 Kye Nausea, I,ids. Neuralgu^pSfcpM h
a \ W
pepsia, thorea or bt.
Deal lies-. I atarrii and
1 ^,1 1^ mm
1>r -
f(jrni _ . ..... ' 1 "I"'
pa Un.m.lat^BPJ^ ; n during
cans',. ‘
lioue^—.' u t . d without
1 . ,
mu., n. 1; ^^ o’dnek, daily except
,t l(H Kis< r building 1 At
,
Wa\\ BpondfVU’.o when accompanied will receive by prompt
stamp.
: ^^Always Cures,
*h.mu,;u(imu jl/xovvi jl/miix. e'\
The Great RemeAy for the speedy Catarrh, and permanent
cure of Scrofula, Rheumatism, Ulcers,
Edema, Eating and Spreading: Sores, Eruptions,
and all SKIN AND BLOOD DISEASES. Made
from the prescription of an eminent for physician i
vfho used it with marvelous success *o years, 1
and its continued use for fifteen y«ars by th ou
sands of grateful people has demonstrated that
it is by far the best building up Tonic and tilooi
Purifier ever offered to the world. It makes new
rich blood, and possesses almost miraculous
healing properties.
WRITE FOR BOOK OF WONDERFUL
CURES, sent free on application.
If not kept by your local druggist, send $1.00
for a large bottle, or $5.00 for six bottles, and
medicine will be sent freight paid by
BL00D BALM ?.0., Atlanta, Ga.
Fop *3; W 3L \CaSTIVE//fSS
///digestion DYSPEPSIA j I , I I Nervous- Sick oh
B,UOUSNES S \ / Jaundice HEADACHE,
Sourness OF W' W\p iyj.oss / or
STOMACH Appetite
NoneGenuine WitmoutThe Liweness And
S'skatube orM./UTacDfCRU on FrontOt
E ach W^ pf jr, M.A. Tjt.DfOHn Mcd. S'
•<9
♦ G&fiT A h. V
♦ - g,’.* < >
« ‘ *........
DURANG'S |
♦ R n
^ |J |Jr!IRA/!"*'iP fc re! A b H J11 T M iVl T fl 11 V ' '
♦ j| }| * ? j * I I
4 <
f II iia i it= ation fr-r 18years i
♦ :* = rr- it 'i for
* t.i • '.(art' -I rvffiedv tb‘ <
t ick an 1 j>cr mane hi r-: >‘i Rhcuma < *
,our. Sciatica, cl< in jifi Its forms
0 . It is endorse 1 ey !ht- «i 1’b si
% iai fishers and Patitiiu- It
e pUT'.-i c r.ri'i ! sup from the < >
e fir.-r -i -s It n -v. r f t • to «‘urc ^ ►
e Pr‘. i- i e. i or ^ix * ►
♦ - ' r *»i (?< O :r it) pit: Pam- * ►
♦ phi-' so at Fnr* i*y Mail Andre--.
l Durang's 1316 L Street,Waslilngtoa, Rhumatio Remedy D.C. Go, ♦
♦ -
» nura ,.. t‘iat <..., mukt r n\ X
i cits;
'
♦ a PRICE 25 CT3 P£i EOI e : rerr: r02 *i 2
TOR ~£LZ 2T Dtr
_ LIVE ., ._ A sent w«xnte<l for new book#
Splenditl seller. Rare eppor*
tnnitv for any Relive mnn or lady- $75
per month easily e arne d. No expe
rience give A V^l CIVI’T Sk* ?i b fi'l L e d i * 1 red r.:ct ieo*. • M
we »» n« r
We pa> eipres-i a j i»! allow 30 days
credit. Let us tell v« \ s'.mut it. P. W.
Ziegler 1870, Philadelphia,Pa *k Co*. Box WANTE
GOING •os. yo
TO „«A*ire** /■ f fno
BUILD?
OPIUM [M Habits MORPHINE CURED
no’
VnlllTljr ftllereol f n all »U t$|9 w * k
-r-iWfHj *« ‘MB*
TRIAL SEMI FREE. %\ *v _ nd To6*f%
IJjXtv altO fTTffi
aiH 6 tewtg 8EME9TCO.. Watach. I