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PEFFER’S VIEWS.
THE ALLIANCE SENATOR FROM
KANSAS SPEAKS OUT.
Policy of the Allanee as Regards
the Issues of the Day.
W. A. Pefiter, the recently elected
United States Alliance senator from
Kansas, speaks to readers of Frank Les¬
lie’s Illustrated Newspaper as follows:
“The farmers’ alliance and industrial
union is made up of farmers and rural
working people, with country preachers,
school teachers, physicians and editors of
agricultural papers. Primarily social,
women and young persons oi both sexes
over the age of 16 years are eligible to
membetship. It is, also, semi-religious,
for every member must be a ‘believer in
the existence of a Supreme Being,’ and all
the meetings are opened and clos: d with
prayer. Its intention is—‘On earth peace
and good-will toward men.’ And while
the first of its seven declarations of pur¬
poses is ‘to labor for the education of the
agricultural classes in the science of eco¬
nomical government in a strictly non¬
partisan partisan spirit’—which discussions means that no
councils of the order—still are permitted in the
the alliance is
intensely political. It could not be oth¬
erwise and attain the objects sought.
Proposing to educate its members in the
science of economical government, it
must discuss all matters pertaining to ad¬
ministration of the laws. Its second dec¬
laration asserts a demand for ‘equal rights
to all and special privileges to none.”
“It was noi intended originally, nor is
it now, that the alliance should become a
jrvAi pfrcttl" pntjy TJUl ib oiiUu’tl Torra n
nucleus about which a party should col¬
lect. It was expected that all the re¬
forms demanded by the alliance could be
and would be wrought out by the machi¬
nery of existing parties, or that a new
party would be born.
parties “Appeals in were but made to attention leaders of the
paid them, power, no W0 -
to and the alliance members
set about seriously to build up a party of
the people, to be composed of voters who
were agreed upon a policy to bring about
the changes needed, these voters coming
from other bodies of organized labor
and from all existing political parties.
The result in Kansas was the people’s
party. In other states different methods
of proceeding were adopted; in none of
them, tinct however, was a separate and dis¬
advocated party formed, though the principles
and the objects sought by
organized farmers in all the states arc the
same.
“The alliance membership arc agreed
upon a few fundamental propositions re¬
lating to land, labor, transportation and
money, and they want legislation upon
Wahl tne
10 issue people all the without money the directly, f« ' of
to the t»J «nt
interest-charging agencies; and put
money made plenty thel-> o ov wn
rates of interest; they want
ment to take charge of the monel 01 nm
country, so that its ben< fits may\ ter*™ De and en¬
joyed by the people upon fair
on equal terms —the same rate of m
the same amount of money fo* tlle
on they want fiDuis
same length of time; governV>ent
uortation controlled by the
in the public interest, burdens so it may and be chpp, bjf ne
safe and equal in its
ms ’
K stcI SiA in speedily and disposed of to
-
TOT^ers alien under ownership the homestead law; abolished they
wans of lands
in some equitable way; they want to
secure for the people the largest po sible
measure of benefit from the unused lands
of the will country; they want legislation
that cause vacant lands to benr their
full share—acre for acre—of the public
burdens resulting from taxation; they
want homesteads protected in the interest
of citizens and their families; in short, ns
to these great matters first, and as to all
related matters afterward, the Alliance
wants such legislation as will equalize
burdens and benefits of government, af¬
fording equal protection to all the eiti
zemp dest roying, the influence of (he
against freedom of trad*, and placing the
debtor on terms equal with his creditor.
“This uprising of the people comes
from a belief that the universal depression
in agriculture is directly traceable to
vicious legislation; that our financial
Dolicy is ruinous to the masses • that ns
its legitimate fruit the rich are becoming
richer and the poor poorer, while the
wealth of the country is fast passing into
the hands of a comparatively small num¬
ber of persons. One-half the tilled
lands of the civilized world are
of mortgaged the to less than 1 per cent
adult male population; eighty
per cent of German farms are pledged for
debt; one-third of American farms are
under mortgage to non-resident and for¬
is eign capitalists; half the city real estate
encumbered in the same way and to the
same extent: half the municipalities—
coumits, cities, townships—in all the
west and south are under mortgage to
bond-holders. The country is mortgaged
to pelled death, and 63,000,000 people are com¬
to get along with a money circula¬
tion of $10 per capita. It is believed that
national banking law intrusts a dan¬
is gerous known power that, to banking corporations. It
while the act was passed to
•provide a national currency,’ tne banks
fere $82,500,000 retiring that currency at the rate of
a year, and that no provision
has been made or proposed by our law¬
makers to restore that amount, or any part
«>f it, to the circulation of the country.
In addition to all this, our railroad com¬
panies times are much in debt to stock and bonds five
as as they are worth, and the
people are compelled to pay, in exorbi¬
tant traffic charges, the interest on this
excessive indebtedness besides dividends
to the stockholders. Briefly, rich men and
great corporations are gambling on the
substance of the
an¬
swer is pregnant, but it is plain and im¬
perative. The people must take charge
of their own business. All public func¬
tions must be exercised by agencies ap¬
pointed by the government. The issu¬
ance of money and the transportation of
property hen are both public functions.
/ let the government issue all the
people’s lic money and supply all their pub¬
transportation. Abolish banks of
■‘-sue, let money go from the govern¬
ment to the people directly, and let the
- Marges for its use be no more than what
it actually costs to handle the money.
1 hat is the rule in postal matters, and in
all other functions of the government.
I bat would bring interest rates down to
what the people could affordto pay, the
rate* would be uniform in all parts of
the country, and it would be to the inter¬
est of every owner of money to keep it
in circulation promoting productive in¬
dustries. Instead of investing in mort¬
gages and draining out the substance of
•he people, owners would put their mon¬
ey at work to make it jay its way,
just as men do with their farms and their
ships. “Transportation of the produc¬
is part
tive force of the people, and for that
reason it must be made cheap and uni
form. As it is now, we pay from five to
ten times as much for our transportation
as it would cost if the people owned
their own means of conveyance. In that
case the cost of the “plant” would not
figure in the estimate of cost of trans
portation any more than the cost of a
public road or a court house is charged
up to the people every time they use
these things, which were made for their
convenience.
“The Farmer’s Alliance is striking for
that equal liberty and exact justice They to
which the people are entitled.
want burdens and benefits justly distrib
uted; they want to destroy the influence
of the money power in legislation; they
aim to get rid permanently of every sort
of gambling in the products of labor;
they will wage relentless war on all class
legislation, and they will hot be content
until trade among our people was free as
the air we breathe and the water wo
drink. The Farmers’ Alliance lias s« t
out to dethronc money and emancipate
'sh 01- -
________
ALLIANCE NOTES.
NEWS OF THE ORDER FROM
ALL SECTIONS.
Items of Interest to Alliance
men Everywhere.
The Orange Conn tv Pbwwuw, nf T\ ,,t
.Tarvis. N. AL, - thinks that the Farmers’
Alliance^ and all the eiher organizations
of farmers, are giving the politicians a
deal of uneasiness, and adds: “That is a
good sign. Let the work go on. Farm
ers must meet and talk over their griev¬
ances, and demand reparation, They
must not only demand it, but they must
go the polls and get it. It can be se¬
cured in one way, if not in another.”
***
The Reedy Fork Alliance, of Green¬
ville county, 8. C., have resolved to
“plant one-third less cotton this year and
raise more supplies,” and have asked the
president of the Slate Alliance to recom¬
mend that the members of every sub
Alliaucc shall adopt the same policy.
Several County Alliances in Georgia have
passed similar resolutions, and the feel¬
ing in favor of this policy oppears to be
wide-spread.
***
State Alliances are now rapidly in¬
creasing, some as entirely new organiza¬
tions, while others, ns in Arkansas, come
from the consolidation of other State
fan nr-n l r»
low not UncT.a, 1 ...........
gratifying-that covered the Grange, which has
most of these States to the ex
elusion of all other organizations, does
not seem to weaken in its membership
by the progress of the Alliance eastward,
This means, probably, that the Grangers
who join the Alliance remain in the
Grange also. Then the Alliance gathers
up a great many who have never been in
the Grange.
Senator John ***
B. Gordon/lias been
initiated as an Allianceman. The exer¬
cises took placea few days ago at the
Allie— ason’s crossing in De
Ga. The hall was crowded
with members of the Alliance and a few
prominent visitors. After the initiation,
the General made a conservative speech
ih which he declared, “that the objects
and aims of the order were such that
everybody principles. and anybody could endorse its
He had advocated them for
years and he expected to continue to ad
vocate them. He felt perfectly at homo
among the Ahiancemen and pledged
himselito do all that was in his power
to better the condition of the men who
spend their lives in toiling on the farm.”
***
THE CENTRAL COMMITTEE.
The National Farmers’Alliance is mak
bomercnce tn rTuftiiTry; 'i^3r‘ . m^iV/il
g a Alliance is doing Us part. 1 ho Gcor
gia central committee composed of one
from each congressional district, has been
appointed and will soon get to work. A
few days ago Colonel L. F. Livingston
received a letter from C. W. Macune,
chairman of the executive board appoint
ing T. L. Gantt a member of the uationa
committee. In the letter which contained
the appointment Dr. Macune said: “You
will see that it is my duty to appoint one
man in each state in behalf of the alliance
who shall be ex-officio chairman of the
executive or state central committee in
his state, and shall appoint district chair
man, and who in turn appoint a county
chairman. This means to organize the
demands state thoroughly during for the discussion of our
the coming spring. State
and national delegates are elected by appro
priate and representative meetings held
for that purpose so that the supreme
council next November shall have full
authority and an active disposition to
cal coniercace in s)2. By virtue P of ^- his
R. Krap , Swain.
boro, Emanuel county.
Second District—W. W. Webb, Mars
Lowndes county. ’
Third District—W. A. Wilson, Ameri
cus, Sumter county.
Fourth District—J. H. Traylor, La
Grange, Fifth District—C. Troup county.
T. Zachary, Me
Donough, Henry county.
Sixth District—Alexander Atkinson,
IT C ° D T
Fayette, Walker county ’
’
Fii/hth Dist irt—T it a
Elberton, Ninth District- Elbert county.' ’
T. A. McFarland ’
Lavinia, Franklin county.
Teuth District — Martin F. Calvin,
Augusta, Richmond ’
county.
WORSE THAN EVER.
The Czar Redoubles the Anti
Jewish Penalties.
A London cablegram of Tuesday, says:
Since the London mansiou house meet¬
ing, which expressed sympathy with the
Hebrews, and resulted in sending, through
the lord mayor, a memorial to the czar,
which was returned unread, the severity
of the anti-Jewish penalties has been re¬
doubled in vigi r. When written laws
are inadequate, arbitrary laws replace
them. The commissiou appointed to deal
with the question is composed chiefly of
Indophobes, and in view of tho persecu¬
tion* abi tit 100,000 of the poorest classes
of Jews have embraced Russian ortho
doxy, but the baptized Jews i;rc sub¬
jected to the same restrictions and dis¬
abilities ns the others.
HOUSEHOLD MATTIES.
HTOTS TO ONION LOVERS.
If onions are to be used lor sauce,
stuffiing, or te be boiled or baked, taka
off the outer skins, and let them come to
the boil in water in which as much car
bonate of soda as will fill a saltspoon has
been dissolved in a quart of water. After
eating onions that have not been care
fully prepared, rinse the mouth with a
little permanganate of potash. Aout fif
teen grains of potash to one ounce of
water would lie the proportion with
wh ieh to riQSe the mouth __ Yor l
World. ’
__
NOVEL RENOVATORS.
If . get machine oil
m sewing you on
your gcods, dampen with rainwater,
11 ud cover with cooking soda. It will
clean the fabric and not hurt it. I sup
pose you know the sharp acid of a toraa
to will remove almost any stain as readily
as lemon juice. A tablespoonful of coal
oil or turpentine will whiten clothing if
put into the water while they are boiling,
Rubbing a tin tea kettle with a cloth
saturated with coal oil will make it
bright as new. It is also splendid as a
cleaner of furniture; also if mixed with
blue ointment and applied to a bedstead
that is infested with vermin, it is a sure
remedy .—Daughters of America.
RECIPE FOR COLD CREAM.
To make an excellent cold cream take
white wax and spermaceti, of each one
ounce; almond oil, three ounces; otto of
rose, as much as you please, Dissolve
the wax and spermaceti in the almond
oil by means of heat, and when a little
coot, pour tne mixture into a large mor¬
tar or bowl previously wanned and con
taining about one pint of warm water.
Stir briskly until the cream is well
divided; add the otto of rose, and sud¬
denly pour the whole into a vessel con
taining about two gallons of cold water.
Separate the cream by straining through
muslin; shake out as much water as pos¬
sible and put away in small jars.—Dd
troit Free Frees.
PERFECTION OF SALADS.
Nothing is better for an appetizer
than a nice, fresh, cold salad, unless it
be two nice, fresh cold salads, But to
make up a delicious entity everything
must be perfection. The salad plants
must be clean and dry, the oil direct
from Lucca, and the vinegar the purest
that can be brought forth from clean ap¬
ples and a new press.
If one is a bit dainty, rather critical,
almost exacting, and feels the need of a
stomach tickler, a Russian salad is the
thing par excellence to acc cal UsR
><•< i quan
(led, and
rseradisb
tyonnaise
thls T^^^komplicated
pepper and salt.
A Swedish salad is more wheinjyish okvou hav«
and is a good thingto eat of
already got an appitite and a bigmt getnL up.
something. This is the way to of
Chop up nearly the same quantities a
cold potatoes and boiled beets, put
couple of teaspoons of the water in
which the beets were boiled, and two
pickled lierrmgs minced, a raw apple, a
pickled cucumber and an onion. Covei
the whole business with sweet cream,
and when you feel just like eating, pitch
in and hope for the best.— Neu> Orleans
Ficayune.
MACARONI—VARIETY IN SERVING.
At this season, writes Mrs. E. R.
Parker in the Courier-Journal, macaroni
is a very acceptable addition to the din
uer-table, and as it may be served with
variety quite a number of dishes may be
prepared from it.
Bakcd r> i i Macaroni-Boil m „ •. i half a pound •>
f a,acar ° IU ln salt and water, with two
bladcs of raac e and half a shced ouion !
cook tender, . drain , off the water and add
a spoonful of butter, half a pint of sweet
milk, a teaspoonful of mustard, one pint
of canned tomatoes, one beaten egg,
te^er. jiut
grated cheese, and set in the stove until
k b rAwn ™' VU . C n ° PVO lVC Wlth sUoes 0 y na of f cheese v
’ '
Boiled Macaroni—Boil two ounces of
macaroni in a little salt water, drain; put
one ounc -' e of butter in a saucepan, mis
with one tablespoonful of flour, moisten
with four tablespoonfuls of beef stock,
one gill of cream, a little salt and pepper,
let heat, put in the macaroni, let boil,
and serve while hot.
pi a : n i Macaroni Macaroni—I Poor our « a pint „r of boil
• five
"S “ver ounces of macaroni,
kettte !*?*““* ° Ue h Wltb °"\' . boiling dra l a off milk; - P llt cook !u , a
’ c ‘ >V( ; r
tender > drain; pour over n teacup of
cr cn,n > add a ,a Mespoonful butter,
with . pepper and salt, grate cheese over
tho t0 P
Italian Macaroni—Put two pounds ol
beef and two chopped onions m ' a cov*
ered kettle, set on the back of the stove,
let simmer, add a quart of tomatoes, let
co k g ? tly for th ™ h oure ’ season with;
salt u and pepper. Boil , six ounces ol
lt “ *»P, in the „.n taowa.
Steamed Macaroni—Parboil half
P ound of macaroni till tender, strain off
water. Take the yolks of flve eggs,
dlu whites of two, half a pint of cream,
a teacup each of chopped veal and lean
ham, with three tablespoonfuls of grated
cheese, season with suit and pepper, and
set over the fire, mix in the macaroni,
put in a buttered pudding dish and
steam one hour.
Scolloped Macaroni—After boiling a
i° f ifc alter :
natei y Jn a dish with grated cheese and
Jokers, blt s ° f but sprinkle ter spread with the pepper, top with salt cheese, and
.
aad , bake , m . a ( ulet ovea until brown.
l
Macaroni With Tomato Sauce—Melt
two tablespoonfuis of butter in a sauce¬
pan, put in one chopped onion, one
stalk of celery and a small bunch ol
parsley, let simmer slowly. When th(
onion is brown, put in a quarto? canned
tomatoes and let cook one hour; strain
into another saucepan, and boii until
thick. Season with salt, pepper and
butter. Parboil half a pound of mac¬
aroni in salt water, drain, place a layer
in the bottom of a buttered dish, cover
with the tomato sauce, then another
layer of macaroni, until the dish is full.
Cover the top with sauce. Set in the
oven ten minutes and serve.
Among other advantages the Emperor
of China lias over the ordinary run of
mortals is that he has ten men in his em¬
ploy whose sole duty it is to look after
Aiis umbrella.
The oldest inhabited town in the world
is said to be Damascus.
Carriage Bor tor*.
guishing The popular title from hansoj j| its Mr. distin- Han-
1 ;
som. SB
by The the brougham, famous Lort vj J |Ho, f:r to- " : k i;s *
title from that city nobf -JI a the
Landau, a wad was
locality in which h the
of vehicle bearing t)
Hacks originally ■»., ", B
coaches, because tfc t by
hackney—a name ^
safe William pacing horse* A H W^becoming
England/ IV., wK iH Hfche,
king of Duke of
Clarence, gave th„ nnm« to his f«
vorite mode of c, WrigNvas
The old fas'hie-y peculiar' given that
name from motion., its jumping being taken and
rocking French the wffrd signifying jig,
from the gigue, a
or a lively yance.
The te coach is derived fr«m the
French Latin conchula, cfchc, a diminutive shell, in form which of form the
a
the body of such conveyances was origi¬
nally fashioned.
Coupe is French in origin, being de¬
rived from the verb couper (coopay), to
cut. This was considered an appropri¬
ate designation because it greatly resem¬
bled a coach with the front part cut off.
The particular form of carriage known
ionable, as the tilbury—at one time very fash¬
but now seldom seen—was so
called from a sporting gentleman of Lon¬
don who rejoioed in the cognomen of
Tilbury. if the omni¬
bus Seldom, ever, those is limbering full term vehicles.
applied characteristic to
With the brevity of Eng¬
lish speaking races e title has been
changed to bus. TbAV were first seen
in Paris in 1827, inal name being
nothing more than thefLay^ {• word signi¬
fying “for all. applied wheeled
The word sulky, as to a
conveyance, had its origin in the the fact
that who when it it considered first appeared that person but
saw none a
sulky, selfish man wot'id ride in such an
affair, which afforded ; accommodation to
but one individal. ' The strange title
changed. ;
was never '
Cab is an abreviation of the Italian
capriola, which is changed to cabriolet
(cabriolay) in French. Both words have
a common derivative—cabriole—signify¬
ing a goat’s leap. The exact reason for
giving it this strange appellation is un¬
known, unless because of the lightness
and original springiness form.—Detroit of-ihe vehicle in its
Free Press.
To Tell the Age of Horses.
The agricultural editor other of The Times
Democrat says: The, day we met a
gentleman from Alabama, who gave us a
piece of informationss *it to ascertaining the
j age of a horse after has passed the
’’’’“h ftnd will -year__jyhich be, was quite new to us,
we are sure, to most of cur
readers. It is this: After a horse is nine
vears old a wrinkle comes in the evelid,
-
dltoedTri^Te at the u PP er c °ri>er of the lower lid", and
for'Leh ^
thrJe / ' , ^ ° h h ‘ 8 i hus gC
wrinkV H ’ ^ ♦ e i VC a . , ?™ c .
thirteen Adil the 1 JCr ’<■ wrinkle 3
‘
tn nin „ j gCt 8 -?
S avs neve? the «™>nHem»» re is - confident * it
'
wdl fail
Progress.
It is very important in this age of vi
2h . w ma
' ''' ■ '
- eye, easily taken, accept'
\ \ o.omach and healthy in its nature
anu effects. Possessing these qualities. Syrup
of Figs is the one perfect laxative and most
gentle diuretic known.
If it wasn’t for its light nohody would ever
find out that the sun has spots on it.
Ladies building needing should a tonic, take or Brown’s children Iron who
want up,
Bitters, it is pleasant to take, cures Complaints, Malaria,
Indigestlon-Biliousncss the Blood rich and and. Liver
makes pure.
A good many people would say more if they
didn’t talk so much.
Bln Inducement <~cr Druggists.
The druggists specialty throughout handling the Hawkes’ country are
making tallized a Lenses. They of write that they Crys¬
make
more money, in proportion, out of this line
tine than glasses anything have else been they advertised carry in sto extensively k. These
for many years, approved and. received the en¬
dorsement best citizens and of PafiSW %e‘cGcl£wearcrs n/ JJjfp
eral cvery’tvnere, merchants and it wil? pay druggists and gen¬
to put it, astock of these goods.
Exclusive sale is given to one lirm in each town.
The trade can be built up, and the entire
spectacle monopolized business with of a large section can ho
St., the e goods. Factory, De¬
catur and salesroom, Whitehall St., At¬
lanta, K. Hawkes. Ga. For Whitehall terms and prices address A.
13 St., Atlanti.
A Girl Worth Having,
After having Mr. Gray's experience iotho
plating tne business, l sent $3 to the Lako E:ec
cleared *21 , in week. Isn’t r this a plater, an l
for girl? There a is tableware t pretty jewelry gOo
plate a house; an 1 1
at be every thou, whv should aa •
person poor or nut of omplovmont with such
an opportunity at hand. A Subscriber.
Ito You Ever tSpeciiliue f
Any person sending us their naina an l ad
dress will receive inf< irmation that will lead
to a fortune. Beni. Lewis & Co., Security
Building, Kansas (Jit j-. Mo.
Lee Wa's Chinese Headache Cure. Harm
I«F6in (ffect, quick and positive in action.
Fmt At c)irACo.,S22'\Vyandotte prepaid < n r< ccipt st..KansasCity,Mo of *1 per holtle
Laities,
If troubled with any Female Complaint,
Particulars by mail sealed, loo pagre v**r»k an
FITS stopped free by Dit. Kline’s Grew
Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
Pee. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $'J trial
little lree. Dr. Kline. 881 Arch St.„ I’hila., Pa.
Timber, Mineral, Kansas, Farm Lands and Ranches
In Missouri, Texas and Arkansas,
lought and sold. Tyler & Co., Kansas City,Mo.
Oklahoma Guide Hook and MXp Kansas sent any where
on receipt of 60cts.Tyler & Co., City,Mo.
Prepare
For Spring
By Building up
Your System
So as to Prevent
That Tired Feeling
Or Other Illness.
Now Take j
Hood’s
Sarsapai rilla
NO ajassss*'* cepted 11 on their Cierlu from Articles subscribers ao*
only. Sam PBffincor^SttaKire, Md -
KsrKniaut HOME @w.°ksk
CARRIAGES. jjp
YV. II. OKA Y, *3L Wooster St., N. Y. Cltj'. i
A Bundle of Facts.
An English astronomer states that the
oldest historical record of a solar eclipse
is in Homer’s Iliad (xvii. ‘HI.)
The organs of smell in the turkey vul¬
ture and carrion crow are so delicate that
they can scent their food for a distance
of forty miles.
The period of “a generation” has been
lengthened; it used to be thirty years and
was later increased to thirty-four; now, a
scientists says the average term of human
life has increased in the last fifty years
from thirty-four to forty-two years.
in the photograph of the heavens,
course of preparation in the Pans
atory, it is calculated that 64,000,000 of
stars will be represented. In the nebulae
the naked eye 4,800 stars.
The sun gives 600,000 times as much
and (hirty-six mi.iioa times as much as
all the stars in the heavens combined; in
size the sun equals 1,800,000 earths, but
owing to its smaller density its weight
equals only 600,000 earths.
Many persons household are broken down from over¬
work or cares. Urown’s Iron Bit¬
ters rebuilds the system, aids digestion, re
moves excess of bile, an t cures malaria. A
Splendid tonic for women and children.
Canned and potted meats and game increase
in variety year by year.
flow's This f
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for
any case of catarrh that cannot be cared by
taking Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & t o., Props,, Toledo, O.
Cheney We, the for undersigned, the last 15years. have known F. J.
business and believe him
perfectly honorable in ail transac¬
tions, ligations anil financially able to carry out any ob¬
West made Tkuax, by their Wholesale firm.
do, O. & Druggists, Tole¬
,
Whole3ft fe
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally act¬
ing faces directly of the system. upon the Testimonials blood and mucous sur¬
Price 75c. bottle. Bold by sent free.
per nil druggists.
HOW TO GET WELL
is a question of vital importance,
but it is equally important that you
use some harmless remedy;
many people completely wreck their health
by taking mercury and potash mixtures,
for pimples and blotches, or some othel
trivial disease. S. S. S. is purely
vegetable containing no mercury
or poison of any kind. And is at the
same time an infallible cure for skin diseases.
Treatise on Blood and Skin diseases free.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. A tlanta, Ga
SEVEN SEVENTEEN ._
SCVENTV CURE Biliousness,)
Sick Headache,
This J. Picture, Pa: .cents. Malaria.
; SMITH & CO., BM
Makers of “ Bile Beans,”
& 2 57 Gr eenwich St., N. Y. City
j aJL
TEH POUNDS
I
u SN
: TWO WEEKS
pWMlTHIHKOFIT! As a Flesh Producer there be
j . question but that can
no
) i l SCOTT’S
: ! UL
j Of Pure Of Cod Lime Liver Oil and and Hypophosphites Soda
j is without a rival. RSany 3
j gained a pound a day by tb
1 CONSUMPTION,
SCROFULA, C0I.DS, BRONCHITIS, COUGHS AND
AND ALL FORMS OF WASTING DIS
J EASES. AS 1‘AI.ATAHIK AS MILK.
i lie sure you yet the genuine as there are
y poor imitations.
i
pplivri ELY’S CREAM RAJL>I Quickly ^
>> into Nostrils Ls jj|£C
bsorlwd, Heals ClcanOTB the Head,
the Sores and Cures
*
Restores Taste and Smell, quick¬
ly Reliev'd* Cold in Head ixixd
Headache. 50o. at Druggists.
KLY BROS., 56 Warren .St, N. Y.
■’wexaCTBC -.viA
BEECH AM’S PILLS
ACT LIKE MAGIC
ON A WEAK STOMACH.
25 Cents a Box.
OF ALL DRUCCISTS.
jh m
• t
About enoaokment rinos wo desire to
make an announcement.
We keep a large assortment of these indis¬
pensable articles in stock, either with or wiih
out precious stones. We can furnish you just
the correct, thing and at prices that will make
engagements a comparatively- inexpensive
luxury. Pall and consult us. J. p. Steveus *
Bro., 47 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga. Send for
cata. ovue.
fv9^ «■ 'M-S|or C0MBINING 5*«TicusY
ffl *** furniture . V
I r li»tSALI OWS
...Li
1C WHEEL hairs/# J
We retail at the 'owoat ........ Aatomauc Rrube
6i.‘is,5aiS <i @s™i ilUa
XfURtTHG MFG. CO., 145 lOtb
BAGGY KNEES POSITIVELY Greely Pant REMEDIED Stretcher
-——-
Let’s reason together.
Here’s a firm, one of the
largest the country over, the
world over; it has grown, step
by step, through the years to
greatness—and it sells patent
medicines!—ugh!
“ That’s enough! ”—
Wait a little—
This firm pays the
papers 1 good money (®pen
• Work, , this ,, • adVertlSing , ■ • !) . \
Sive
to tell faith the b people that they they .ell,
what
SO much faith that II they Can t
benefit or cure they don’t want
Their -guarantee
IS not indefinite cind rCldtlVC,
but definite and absolute — if
medicine ].-„•„ doesn J t help,
your money is “ On Calif
Suppose every sick man
and every feeble woman tried
these medicines and found
them worthless, who would be
the loser, you or they ?
The medicines are Doctor
Pierce’s “Golden Medical Dis¬
covery,” for blood diseases,
and his “ Favorite Prescrip¬
tion,” for woman’s peculiar ills.
If they help toward health,
they cost *$i.oo a bottle
each! If they don’t, they
cost nothing /
Have You a Cough?
Have You a Cold?
Or Consumption?
n. Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of
Sweet Gum and Mullein
WILL CURE YOU!
Ask your Druggist or Merchant for it. Take nothing else.
r* i 0 0 m ft c 111 If
Cures Best where Cough all Medicine. else fails. Recommended Pleasant and agreeable by Physicians. tho 25
taste. Children take it without to CTS
objection. By druggists.
w O N
Diamond Brand
^
j/T Ladle boxes £L°SJu 6 K" a °« sale. allio
*5* Ml run in pMlclw.nl Lxe.,Tinktn5^.^^niwTOM"ou’^teJrcu)i! “MoZgeufir iXl a.
Every CHEAPER Farmeriiis own Roofer
than Shingles, Tin or Slate.
Reduces Your INSURANCE, and Perfectly
Fire, Water and Wind Proof,
m s^STEEL KV CORRUGATED ROOFING,
1 It
o': CtOpC. 100 ir r, ycniYii CO;
V; two
Our Roofing Is ready formed for the Build! ing,
and can be applied by any one. Do not bny
nny Roofing till you write tons for our Descrip¬
tive Catalogue, Series B. AttEHTS WANTED.
The anivernnl favor ao
corded Tilunohast’s Puobt
Sound C’nbbag e SeedB leads
me to offer a p, 8. Grown
l Onion ,t he finest Yellow Globe
\ in existence. To Introduce It
I U* Sjj and show Its capabilities 1
wlU pay $100 for the best
It yield obtained from 1 ounce
b of seed which I will mall for
“ eta. Catalogue free.
Isaac F. Tillinghast,
____La Flume. Pa.
AGENTS ONE are 225 Coining AGENT IN 15 DAYS Money SOLD
in February. „ . l,u<lic« , do ns well ae men. Koyul
Edition of the Peerless Atlas of the World, has large
maps in color?. Act-urate location of towns.cities, rail¬
roads. etc. Census of lfW. Everybody wantsit. Sells on
sight CROWELL AgenisClear lOOper ct. Fortermsnddress Piui&delphit,
MIST, & EIRE PATRICK, 927 Chestnut St. Pa.
ADVICE TO WOMAN!
For PAINFUL, PM OF USE, SCANTY, SUPPRESSED
or IRREGULAR MENSTRUATION, you must use
QRADFIELD’S
FEMALE
REGULATOR
After taking three bottles of BRADFIELD’S FEMALE
REGULATOR, she can do her cooking, milking and washing. N. L. BRYAN.
BOOK TO " WOIiN" MAILED FREE, WHICH CONTAINS VALOABLE INFORMATION ON ALL FEMALE DISEASES.
r„. w .h,S™r. ,ELD REGUL ATOR CO., ATLANTA, GA.
5
“German
Syrup”
J. C. Davis, Rector of St. James’
Episcopal “ Church, Eufaula, Ala.:
My son has been badly afflicted
with a fearful and threatening cough
for several months, and after trying
several which failed prescriptions from physicitJhs
to relieve him, he has
been perfectly restored by the use of
two bottles of Bo
An Episcopal schee’s German Syr¬
up. I can recom¬
Rector. mend it without
hesitation.” Chronic
severe, deep-seated coughs like this
are as severe tests as a remedy can
be subjected to. It is for these long¬
standing cases that Boschee’s Ger¬
man Syrup is made a specialty.
Many others afflicted as this lad
was, will do well to make a note of
tins.
J. F. Arnold, Montevideo, Minn.,
for writes: I always use German Syrup
a Cold on the Lungs. 1 have
never found an equal to it—far less
a superior.
G. G. GREEN, Sole Man’fr,Woodbury,N.J
.......
R DOCTOR
R
!A I l i’Si
1__
R
B
R E.
B
■ a Cold in a day. It will prevent Croup, relievo*
Dime. • Asthma, and CURE Consumption It taken In* 5
IF THE LITTLE ONES HAVE t
i WHOOPING COUGH !
I -Sri CROUP! B
■ it promptly.:
a 4 ^ WILL
• t TOW CURE:
r/^^raiH 8 ‘.«ord Y °to|
• -may A 26c. sava bottle the may |r save lives. If ASK 00 I^Doctor’sbn’lai YOUR DRUG-*
•
JOIST FOR IT. IT TASTES COOD.S
QnpsaaBaMBaB«aaaac*BiiBacaiiaBaaac)Baaaa«aV
PROF. LOISETTE’S NEW
MEMORY BOOKS.
Criticisms on two recent Memory Systems. Read}
about April 1st. Full Tables of Content* forwarded
only Also to Prospectus those who POST send stamped FREE of directed the Loisettl&n envelope. Ail
Of Never Forgetting. Address
Prof. LOtSKTTE, 287 Fifth Ave., New York.
PENSIONS cTeat is Passed. PENSION Bill
iOc.; best. 35c. Ls.Lil'^’sSiLK Riu. Little Ferry N.i
VASELINE
One two-ounoe bottle of Pure Vaseline, 10 eta.
- - -
: 18 “
One Ci ke ctf Vaeellns CAmphor loe, 18“
qfyasehae Soep, - • • - 10 “
un«centeil, . - 10 “
t
vx&ssaitoni SS3K?SS ortieie at fheXrie*
BORE WELLS! MAH.fi MONEY l
Our Well Machines are the most
RELIABLE. DURABLE. SUCCESSFUL!
They make GltKATKlt doMOHK W ORK and v7
They FINISH PROFIT. (f
Wells where
others FAIL! Any size, ‘Z li:
inches to 44 inches dia meter.
LOOMIS & NYMAN, |5 W& Catalogue
TIFFIN. - OHIO. FREE!
BET WF.I.T, ' ■ U ' l Wfr 1 J. SHllEBIE H. DYE, E<fitor.Uutm!M.fi
'
—f X 101! *yi oil &»tt*£|Q 0 f
T«t u. TUDEi xsT.jt.vf co.. rami .a 9
A. N. U....