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ALLIANCE LITERATURE.
Matters o! Moment Which Concern ine
Order and Its Members.
Can you gather figs from thistles?—
Then why expect any reform legislation
when the Rothschilds and their Ameri¬
can chums have their hands on the throt¬
tle at Washington?
•**
A (reform) exchange advises 1 hust¬
ling” to keep unions in a healthy condi¬
tion, It claims more labor organizations soci
rust out than die. It advises il pro¬
grams made up of songs, music, essays or
speeches. Thi3 is the idea. Pu3h it.
***
At a reeent meeting of the county
Farmers Alliance of the third congres¬
sional district of Michigan, held at Gro
verville, the following resolution was
passed: district, “Resolved. condemn That the Alliances
of this any movement
to the end of contraction of the currency;
also of not providing for its exparsion,
as at present, by tbe purchase of 4,500.
000 ounces of silver each month. Also
of further sale of bonds for the purpose
of raising credit money, believing that the na¬
tional would be as well sustained
by the issue of bonds, and the result
would be of less burden to the taxpayers.
Further, we condemn the wholesale sys¬
tem of appropriation, like that of the
Nicaragua canal; also of any favor to
national banks in the issue or circulation
of our currency.”
*%
THE MILLS COMING TO THE COTTON.
The Textile World, of Boston, in its
report of the growth of the textile indus¬
tries of the United States for 1893, shows
that during the year seventy-three new
cotton mills,employing 13,315 operatives,
and running 953,800 spindles atui 17,218
looms, were established. Massachusetts
took the lead in the construction of new
mills, with nineteen new mills, followed
by North Carolina with s xteen new
mills, and South Carolina with eleven
new mills. In .be tail,,™ Sl.te, thl,.,.
nine Dew mills were established,as against
• ::XZ nna nrates. n ™ m '" S ‘ n th6lSewEn S
In the number of new mills North
Carolina occupies tho second place, but
the figures show that in the number of
operatives and spindles and looms, bouth
Caroliua really stands next to Ma.sschu
setts. That is to say, in the development
of its cotton spinning and cotton weav
ina ®" industries Smith r’lrvilin ? . i lo leads irU lu the
South; a and is the second m mufacturmg
otate in tbe Ameucati Lmon. Last year
as many new cotton mills were e.-tab
lished in South Carolina as m the states
of Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee and
Texas together. This year the improve
The The mills m!)Is are are coming to the cotton.
*%
FROM THE OTHER SIDE.
The following is gn extract tr-.ni a
brotherly letter from the pen of Hon. W.
L. Peek, of Georgia, which was pub
lished in the Nalional Economist, under
the above caption:
* * * Tbe very first declaration of
purposes of the Alliance is political, “to
educate the agricultural classes in the
r cieuce of economical government,” not
ed ucate them how to increase the
Kinds tajiS mat con of wheat, oats, corn, oGc* pump
.. a
have more of these than the world needs
can consume in. or destroy before tho next
crop s» comes „„boa," To educate the farmers
» pOitica!
may see the corruption of such methods,
and tbus throw off the fetters of
fastem-d on them and to hurst the bonds
with the power of tbe ballot, was the
great aim and object of the Farmers’ Al
dance. Li ray mind it was a child
the necessity, born iu due time, inspired by
great and Omnipo'ent, who saw before
we saw, opened our eyes to the un¬
fairness of our condition. These facts
are recorded in Heaven and on earth, so
indelibly that one or trvo campaigns will
not erase them : 30 plainly that our op¬
ingly ponent, though a fool, may read, so glar¬
as to blind the eves of one who
would apologize for its c miug.
Men may write with straddling pens,
ood use alt the sophistry of a Nicaragua
gain canal favor lobbyist to position deceive, with (0 appeaser to
or those we
fought and are fighting ou the great ia
sues of the day. but the fact still remains
that the Alliance is the father of tab
great revolution now going ou ia Ameri¬
these can politic?. Now, [ want to say to
writers, if' »they expect for ua to
succeed in getting our Alliance demands
enacted int > laws, they must stick to
their text. No man who is first on one
side and then the ether, can wield the
influence of one wh i is like Davy Crock¬
et, “first su e he’s right, then go
ahead.” If we have ever been right we
nrc right now,
THE ALLIANCE in I’olith s
K»u., oe«*v, *. lYiioci.,
of soy. the 11:1 Alliance: reg.r? to the iiulitical ini,
sion
A great deal is just now being said in
regard to the future - f tl.. ^“'0 \ii=urV»
Home contend that the Alii,race
into musJno, politics.” while the'matter others ins frcm^Jne st that it
side, the latter Viewing ciniuenlly
is correct; but
glancing at it from tbeother, it is wrom?
i'hc Alliance is a school for the farmers
nothing more nor less. In the u,P(Wm<v«
questions of more or Tb less £ imnnrtnrer. Z 71
oe discussed and educed n
come more or less upon
topic? under consideration. In this great
good may result, provided the right top
ics are taken up— if
taining to the welfare of the f„rm"
the Alliauce meetings, but. there nre
C|uestioiiB of more vital importance in t
P“Sul,r thsy can be honestly and intelligently
handled. Thev must be taken un he
farmeis theuiselvts and discussed and
. 4 ^ 1 ;;',:;;, /■“?:,....... •
‘ink t lower uni owe, n, ., Tsrz , 'V
'xzxtzi r r iXsrzjz:
already bearing them down
ior fcilSwT,' “ “I lf “ V ' f " ct !U| 'bow who
! VUT 8 b -“ v# ‘V
“
il . „j.,y la, » „ 1 Ue^lux iirleaV? , B H f ’
Ruiiii.l— ' 1:1,1
it,, ,,,1 , | U ‘ 1 ‘ 1 J IJl>
»m-i? «.:.’,.mn|„t!. In-mol ■ il }„!?„«,, ibi„ if** f
■hi Jv v*»t
■bars’ t in,. imito.inn i. Ifffilutiou i
4
upon the people (hat is sipping away
the life-blood of this republic.
The people cmnot be taught the les¬
sors they must learn through the old pt
litical papers, because they bow to the
splendors of the rich and betray their
readers by cleverly constructed sentences.
They strive to keep the great plain peo¬
ple in subjection and ignorance, rnther
than to assist them to learn the truth.
Then again the Alliance is the remedy,
and the Alliance must go into politics,
not ns a political party struggling for
office, but as a school of politics where
the truth may be taught regarding all the
great political questions constantly com¬
ing on.
THE ALLIANCE IN SOUTH CAROLINA.
The Cotton Plant, Columbia, S. C.,
commenting editorially upon the good
i fleets of the Alliance in that State, says:
The continued mcces* that, attends the
efforts of Gov. Tillman and his assistants
in behalf of the people is a matter of «s
pedal satisfaction and encouragement to
the farmers, and it shows the capability
of that class of people in managing t ic
affairs of tbo state, when they take an in¬
terest in and inform themsdves on the
questions at issue. Those measures are
of great importance to nil classes of our
people, and it does seem that all should
take an equal iuteiest in all measures
looking to progressive reform; but such
has not been the c sc. Of course we
duly appreciate the assistance given by
men who were not farmets, and we honor
them the more for having put aside class
prejudice and incurring the deep dis
pleasure of their fellows by boldly taking
rhe side of the farmers because they were
right.
Led by the News and Courier and the
weeklies that icbo its sentiments,
a everything portion of undertaken our citizens have opposed ad¬
by the present
ministration with unreasoning bitterness.
Fac's have beeu distorted and every
i ffort has been made to mislead the peo¬
ple is to the merits of the questions in
dispute; every question of right or justice
has hern subordinated to partisan b ter
rst. When the courts of tbe land and
j the jury of voters reversed the decision
i" .i 10 !)“,,(£"it,"- miners .he <mif
tliev howled in concert with rage and
disappointment. Rut they thry have not
mended their ways as should by the
experienced | gaintd; that the press is no
0Q „ era moulder of public sentiment,
a „d their defeat has only added venom
t i. p hittpri-ccs of th.ir'ittnnir,
'
Tbc statements retard mede bv the omrosi
t i 0 n in “ ” to tim ,^ Coosaw .* Stlte u
n rauroau ; lro d t iHX x cases, rcf reiunning di the the State
debt and other equally important mat
„. rs is 8tiil fresb in the minds of our peo .
pi e and their attitude towards the dis
pensary law, the railroad law and other
matters is evidence that the tight on the
measures advocated ? bv Vsrne the burners is to
bc contillU d on tbe line as hereto
fw ’ We <-' a11 attention lo this for the
encouragement of our people and caution
them to be careful of how much ere
dence thev give statements made bv r
D artisan > 88 that has been rendered
desperate by continued defeat. Frog
>>- f s>s bc.ug made by those we have
placed in charge of the government to
wards progressive reform, which is ad
m kted by the opposition by their wails
and lamentations. When you stand for
%S® 1 he h Alliance /j 1 . rf £ t, t has bou h been nd ‘‘‘.F the 6 ” orgamz-t- 11 * .
.,j . ! hat ^ 3 ,his possible.
;oa as “J 8 * ® success
jji^aucatiDg the farmers in the science
That organization gives
" tlle iJBffy opportunity to save ourselves
fbe Gov*, fate a'bio.n'SF:assume control u of *t
value—the AUlVuZ
— ao-operation
cr ? aDtl the power that intelligence
wi elds that in have political affairs. The°suc
cesses been achieved in South
Carolina is an indication of what can be
d° n e> and should encourage every man
to push with renewed vigor his search
for knowledge and to maintain his inde¬
pendence and act as his intellect dic¬
tates. Every one must join hands ia
the work and put their shoulders to the
wheel if we are to succeed; the more
dead weight we have to carry the harder
it is to make progress. Take reform pa¬
pers, patronize your co-operative insti¬
and tutions, when attend the next your Alliance opportunity meetings,
will take comes
you another step towards ac¬
complishing workiog. the euds for which we are
lo ’ *
THE BROTHKIWOOD IN THE SOUTH
EitN STATES.
Dear Buethhf.n:—I am reliably in
loimea that an attempt will be made in
the near future to divide the Alliance on
sectional line*. The appeal is to be
made to the South alone, and will be
made on what, is knowu »s a Xt non-uarti
san issue. I am not poited
nlan’ • ^ren^rM I reparation for this ^ has g T been ral
made, and is being festered by trying to
create the impression that there are two
tact ions in the Alliance on the question
of Lon-partisacehip; that the dominant
faction are in favor of trying to coerce
W! illr ' "
tru *' ‘ < e Y ft!) y onu ,0
, . t„. record . anti , show ; where
such attempt made any
ever was at anv ses-
8,00 ° f ? u P reme council eitbcr by speech
? r resol,ltlo ”> or to any prominent Al
u?f on^ch which we ” were more ^
7 un un ‘t ed than th another, it is that the
ThiTu 11118 > 8 0 !^ loo 011 sentuncm, ^ Id remain I uni “non sure, partisan.” of
one of the present oftictis. every
f the 1 know it is
° executive commitiee. The move
g en ” ineem! those who
“™ " arU3ar “
’ ‘ lUMr,J v| :ig me
I-tier oi the ,, Alliance b. dividing -
us
once U10re °o sectional lints. T want
ft ^ l° St °V Uli A1:iancc
-
,,i«i l f 1 in m n ” ie fcoulh \vh ? will resent the
-5 s&zrsizi
siSrr ki ow how earnestly your 1
' f T r ‘ SCDt atlv es plead with us to burv the
bl8 blrt , ; to fili up the ghastly ebasin
.
« »
The
yl , °’ y ° f B,otLer Polk’s life, WBS th^
biethren in tbe *outh, full of brotherly
SptlS ooih, u D o g condUlonaUv S W UoiJ” fnt Witt
tb “ but as the
you C0BI ® nt tbat hi « grand work shall be
destroyed Our for partisan purposes?
opponeute in tbe north claimed
«ud insisted that the objects of the
*,°' lthc r" Alliance, a« they called the F.
A, *nd I. was to mislead (he north-
ern Allisncemen away from their repub¬
lican moorings that the democratic party
might come into power.
We know that in our work we pressed
our principles regardless of the effect on
political parties, but the result has been
to the advantage of the democratic party
as predicted. disruption Should succeed, the it present would
scheme of
confirm the claim that was their object.
Consider this well, as it affects yourselves.
You need the aid of your co-laborers in the
north and west. We have had not only to
meet the contention that we are a
“Democratic aid society,” but that it
was a Southern Alliance, officered and
managed by Southern men. We re¬
sented the insinuation, question knowing fitness well
that it had been a of
for office, and not of location. Now,
when the hand of death has removed
him whom we delighted to honor, and a
nun from the Northwest happens to
bo elected your president, should di¬
vision come it will place us in a doubly
embarrassing positions God knows,
and your delegates at Memphis know,
that I made no iffort to secure the place.
I asked Brother in Ellington, nomination, of Georgia, with¬
who placed me He and other delegates to
draw my name.
from the South insisted that I should
not. In* deference to their wishes I
accepted. Should the blighted ambi
tion of one mao or of a thousand men
ing it are committing a crime ranks, against
humaniti. Close up the we are
in the fight to win. Men are nothing,
the cause we love is fraternally, everything.
Yours
H. L. Loccks.
ssr
PROMINENT PEOPLE.
The Czar of Russia disposes of 49,000,000
annually.
Senator Colquitt, of Georgia, is seventy
years of age.
The King of Wurtemberg, it is stated, is
the only crowned head that wears the mono
cle.
Gladstone has cut down a trea nearly
every day during a large period of hi? adult
life
ST* Senator _ “•“* Warren, ... of Wyoming, com-
1
FifhsriesCommS Senator Stockbridoe Chairman of tha
gler himself.
Chile is going to sell the Government
nitrate Colonel rights, North’s which nitrate will kingship, pus a quietusupoa
Henry Villahd’s name, it is stated, was
ori "‘ Qally aud he took LincoT his ore-sent
one from an intimlte triend of °'
^ancisG. New lands, of Nevada, will
t. be the only member ot the next House ot
Representatives who was elected on the
straight-out silver issue.
Ok those who served in the United States
Senate with Blaine seven remain to-Jay
u ’
M ’ Momll and Ransom.
^te „ ^uniar^cTrcumstances rugged pta£
wis His *
on the bench a life position.
A cast obtained of Bishop by Pnillipa sculptor Brooks's Bartlett face
was the im
itele^mbWtTthe'‘original‘is^exeflfenfc
j0HJt D . rockefeller, the many-time
millionaire, is a deacon in the Fifth Avanua
Baptist Cnurcb, of N.;rv York City, and
passes the contribution box every Sunday.
Blaine's will, which has been filed for
probate Teetotal gives the whole property Limiteda unrasarv
wl vI’luTls “tout
$1,000,000.
King Humbert, ot Italv, has made Verdi,
the cognition composer, of Marquess of I Busseto, merits of ia re- his
the success an
lasb.opera. “Falstaff,” Milan, first produced tbo
1 j^ ievaning at
| .rolle. Stevens, our minister to Hawaii,
VSIZUXSOh)*’ - “» «*
M. Eiffel wore the rosette of the Legion
of Honor as he appearel on the witness
stand in the Panama scan lal trial the other
ing day. He is described as a small, wiry look¬
man, who from time to time puffed or
stroked his snort gray moustache and beard.
The Rev. Francis Wdlle, the most cul¬
tured and famous of the Moravians in this
country, died at Bethlehem, Penn., the other
day at the age of ssv.-ncy-five. For twenty
years he was tbe principal of the Mu-avian
during Seminary for Young Lidies at Bethlehem,
which time he wrote a series of works
on authorities. entomology and botany that are standard
^ THE LABOR WORLD.
Edison prefers women machinists,
Colorado mine laborers are refusing
work for 43 a day.
A bureau of labor statistics is to be
tablisbed in California.
Armour will employ 0000 men In his
Peeking factory at Kansas City, Mo.
The new organization of railroad
P loyes P ro P°ses to do away with strikes,
Two hundred and seventy-two
wer e erected in this country in 1892.
The Toronto’(Canada) working girls have
^rmutualprotoc
THE Swif3 Government has appropriated
410,000 * to senl a delegation of workingmen
from that country to the World’s Fair,
The Order of Railway Telegraphers owns
and operates the largest printing establish
“‘entwestoCChicago, at Vinton, Iowa.
Tasmanian Government is providing
KSJ 8 &T«l& 25 .'S®aS. ”
Belgium has a new Jaw regulating
and child labor, according to which children
under twelve are no longer allowed to work;
tne hours for women are limited to fifty.
fiv « perw f ek ’
kas been given by the Brooklyi
.
twenty cept conductors percent. and drivers, will be /educed
In Switzerland in the year 1891, there
“}ents, were altogether having 2359 mechanical establish
waVwa^Tial a total_ Ttoat motive power of 83,
^tr7d£’ ’ ’ ^ aQd34J
Acrowd of shoemakers recently marched
and up_to protested the Japanese House of Representatives
*5'^5 against show. teaching soldier? to
Not having given
’ybom 20,(JW) ssttsrisi voted at the laat tars election’f'or
then-own candidates. During the last ten
D “^
m.boiler iawiSaaHsS and engine work, bridge,’ elevated
raff eral road, car and locomotive building, and
8 e “ Sundry and machine work.
s^^srisars:
^ » ndd ‘ iiable '? a “‘.' orphans ani a* a |
^
Au Age Gage. L
A T*»o«**ee inventor paUutad a
tbo age of bor.es.
/ h ° d f Ti ®* c .°“* l * u ot * f 1 ** 1 l’ 1 *^. >-»v
jug n at apt-red body edges portion, beiuy. marked oue of by its
io « tgtire? By applying the scale
“* *• »'t-eih of a bone, I, appioxi ..ate
•» In U>
QUAINT A1 ►US.
The ostrich is t ftest runnet
known.
The price of pari louth Amor¬
ica is only ten ceah
An Indian girfl al Haskell,
Kan., institute is Jenny Quo
Feather*
One»fourth of thl II surface ot
the globe is occu’i by English
speaking people. *
The wide skirt, under |the name of
fardingale, first appeared in 1580 at
the court of Francia L 1
It has been discovered that Smiles,
the female rhinoceros in the Central
Park menagerie, New York, has two
perfectly developed tougues.
A dog at New Haven, Conn., being
the object of much abuse, committed
suicide a few days ago by jumping out
of tbe third-story window of a fac¬
tory.
The word “preface" used in the be
ginning of books was originally a
equivalent to “Much good may it do
you.”
There are 300 depositors in the
Boston Five-cent Savings bank with
auma raging from $25 to $2800 who
haven’t been heard from for over
twenty years.
A deaf and dumb book canvasser
sold seventy-six books within four
days recently in three small New
Hampshire towns, with commissions
amounting to $150.
R. Henry Taylor, who is said to
have invented baby carriages, was
found by the Waltham (Mass.) police
the other day in a starving and men¬
tally unbalanced condition.
At the table of the Regent Duke of
Orleans it was the custom for the
guests to drop a piece of gold in the
plate from which ho had just eaten a
dish whose taste lie fancied.
There is at present on exhibition in
the window of a well-known New
York jeweler the tusk of a sacred ele¬
phant from the east. The tusk is
said to bo one of the finest ever seen
in the United States.
The caves of Burmuli are rich in
woodeu carvings, glazed tile* and
images,as well as tablets iu terra cotta,
rnarbie, alabaster and other materials.
The relics illustrate the ancient nnd
modern phases of Budliist worship.
Quail love potato hugs as an article
of diet. Oae of these birds was re¬
cently opened which had 101 of these
farmers’ pets concealed in its crop.
It will pay the average potato grower
to have a flock <-~t trained quail among
hlS Other live l f ZP' ““******' --. ft. ~
— l *
Amo. S Curious facts relatiug to
liglit-v* s «els i« their mode of being
^ored Except on stony ground.
“mushrooms,” > weighing c, « uln » about auout two ‘WO
tons, Which bury themselves in Mm
mud, or sand, and form an absolutely
secure mooring.
Boston has an “Odd Gloves” So¬
ciety, the members beiug a coterie of
professional people who have “no or¬
ganization but friendship and a vow
recorded on their consciences to inter¬
polate at least one novel jollification
iuto each season’s experiences.’’ This
j ear it is to be a big ghost party.
The only mail in tho world who
lives iu a mansion built in the air is
Mr- Fay, an American millionaire.
The building in question is situated at
Guanajuato, Mexico. It i* over 800
feet high and is supported by massive
iron pillars. Access to the building
is obtained by a gigantic elevator, and
the communication with the town is by
telephone.
Alligators Are Tough Customers.
“An alligaior is a hard animal to
kill,” remarked Walter B. Wilson of
Jacksonville, Fla,, at the Lindell. “I
recently recently went went nn on a « trip down ,1 On the .,
tat. Johns River and saw over 400
shots fired from the boat at them « n d
only one was killed outright, and he
was struck in the eye. His brain was
penetrated and he never moved. It
generally ,, require* . alligator’s
an own
weight in lead before he is killed. A
man fires at him and he plunges off in
Hie mud, aud then the hunter imagines
that he is dead. But if he would wait
a little while ho would see him rise
fi-gaiu and look about as good as to
say: ‘I haven’t gone anywhere? try it
again.’ Some of the old rascal* rather
like to be fired at. They are used to
it, and being one of Florida’s attrac¬
tion* they try to do their duty by
affording amusement to the traveler,
while it doesn’t hurt them. There is
one alligator a few miles from Silver
Springs that lias been »hotat with pis¬
tols, shotguns, rifles and every other
tort of shooting utensil, except a can¬
non, every day in the year since the
war closed and he has never flinched.”
— [8t. Louis Republic.
A Prof'essloual Falter.
Iuthoin—Well, aoctor, how do you
find my neighbor, Skeamer, this morn
Ili”?
iJiitioi'—lam sorry to any, air, (hat
ho is falling. >
liuhom— Why, sorry, doctoilt' Tlmt
wextmlw to me like good new*, i
D u’tor—Good news P
liiihom—Ceriainly. 11*’* ;t*ii in
seveiul failures beforo andA| [tlwnytf
f’lUiti out boiler off.—-ffl oiM itr.
The Hawaiian Islands.
The total area of Alia islands which
compose the government of Hawaii is 6,-
840 square mites. There are eight islands,
rapping miles in from Kahoolame, an area of which sixty-three is the square small¬
est,. to 4,210 square miles in Hawaii,
which is the largest. At the time of Capt.
Cook’s discovery of the islands, upwards
of a century ago, the population num¬
bered 200,000. Sinco then the native
population has rapidly decreased. The
census of 1684 showed a total population
of 80,578—51,589 males and 29,089 fe¬
males.
The islands are to a great extent moun¬
tainous and volcanic, but the soil is
highly fertile and productive. Sugar and
rice are the staple products. The sugar
exported from these islands in 1889 wus
valued at 113,089,302.
The word Hawaii is pronounced by
Webster, He-wii-ee, the first syllable pro¬
nounced like he in her, and the accent is
on the second syllable. The government
of this country has been a constitutional
monarchy. In 1887 a new constitution
Was vested granted. The executive power
was in a sovereign and cabi¬
net of four members. The Sover¬
eign Queen, Lilinokalani recently sought
to replace the constitution with one ex¬
tending her own powers, but her cabi¬
net refused to concur, and immediately
the people rose in support of the cabinet,
and the Queen was compelled to retire
and yield to the pupular desire. A pro¬
visional government was formed and a
commission was appointed to go to the
United States Government and ask for
annexation.
Mustard as Medicine.
Few domestic remedies are of greater
value than common mustard. As a con¬
diment and agreeable simulant to the di¬
gestive organs, it ie found upon most
every table. Used in this form it will
sometimes remove obstinate hiccough.
The unbroken seed of the white mustard
is of some value as a laxative when taken
in tablespoon doses. Of more impor¬
tance is the use of mustard as an emetic.
A tablespoonful of ordinary ground mus¬
tard, taken in a cupful of warm water,
will produce copious vomitiDg in from
two to five minutes. On this account,
and because it is especially valuable in
emergencies opium in cases of poisonings by
or other narcotics, it is without
an equal as a domestic emetic.
A Start in Life.
Medical siudent—“People dou’t waut
young doctora. How on earth do they
got started?”
Professor—“It’s simple enough. They
just sit in their office and fret and worry
over tbe rent until their hair turns gray,
and then the patients come with a rush.”
Go West!
Right enough. But if you go to a malaria
troubled region, protect yourself against the
prevalent scourge in bottom lands and new
clearings. Bitters. How ? With Hostetter’s Stomach
The answer comes clear and unani¬
mous from thousands of new settlers and pio¬
neer has kept emigrants whom the great preventive
in health when threatened by mias¬
ma. Use the Bitters for kidney, liver, bowel,
rheumatic and stomach difficulty.
lslan Sixty persons Shall now inhabit. Robinson Crusoe’s
t. we annex it ?
An Important Difference.
To make It apparent to thousands,who think
themselves 111, that they are not affeoted with
any disease, but that the system simply needs
eleansing, Is to bring comfort horns to their
- beans, as a costive condition Is easily cured by
usinx Syrup of Figs. Manufactured by the
California Fig Syrup C o.__
Loss of memory and a slow way of speaking
flamed eyesor granulated lids without pain,
Priced - John R. Dicker Drug Co.. Bristol. Va.
ife. ft! a
&
[Mi'/
m
/f |
! Wa
-- KF* --
•
Mr. Harvey Heed
Laceyville, O.
Catarrh, Heart Failure, Pa*
ralysis of the Throat
“ I Thanh Ood and Hood's Sarsa¬
parilla tor Perfect Health."
"Gentlemen: For the benefit of suffering hu¬
manity I wish to state a few facts: For soveral
years I have suffered from catarrh and heart
failure, getting so bad I could not work and
Could Scarcely Walk
f had a very bad spell ot paralysis of the throat
*ome time ago. My throat seemed closed and
^ ooiilit not swallow* The doctofs said it
J?,!®
me of Mr. Josep ►h C. Smith, who had been
At Death’s Door
but was entirely cured by Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
After talking with Mr. Smith, I concluded to
try Hood ’ s Sarsaparilla. When I had taken
H O O ft ’ S paJmi CUCfiS
two bott i «"} felt very much better, i have
. 1
Hood's Pills do not purge, pain or gripe, butact
promptly, easily and efflclently. 25 cento.
RTi'kosutf Stove p
QLISH
with Pastes, Enamels and Paints which sUIn the
toM, The Durable, Rising Sun and Stove PoHsh^i/^Bri Ulant, Odor
the consumer pays for do tin
or gUuu peck ego with every purchase.
t£ ALZER5THREERAREHARQYFRUITN9VB.TIF.S5f) 4 l1 ’ 1 his THE ie truly G , REAT l| le greatest buffalo novelty berry. of the cen¬
.2ERS IUNEBERR' tury. This shrub grows 10 to 15 feet be.utifuf high,
covering itself iu early spring with
K ABRn. tlowera which are .ucceedcd by great quan
titles of luecioue fruit, ft ie hardy, as beauti
SHWa 1 'u »*» IHCturo. while I lie fruit le incomnarable.
w 1 k, row any and everywhere and forme a
BnitfiBk yre f'Jieii, mi 30(1.; addition Ill for to 81.25, our lawn poetpuitf and garden ehrubl.
(2) JUNEBERRY.
. - QB A efiriib of wondrout beauly; cover, itaelf
RSnM f " 1 egr.iil ll “ « great Mo.il,U,. man of 'I liure bee. white,dollolouely followed by
IBHMH l.rgc, .lark colored .re
tsune.eln, Reeb, 25e.; berries, l0forSl,25. exelleul for plea,
itBuffalo Berry I BSTMtCRAHB v nBKfil <a> TREE CRANBERRY.
er.?ted^m£’a ■HMy b.vn l.varybodv . elirub that le roml will of llourlah cranburrlee, and fitwr and w.
ulrojuwii . pro
„,■ eeaealiue diglouelylueveryeecllou of America. Kach.SN,
. ........'xasiwisr*'""""
Le e —■■ (>■• pUnl |T of i g obi'Ii /‘"I ^ “f ?|5W5 1 ■ il ; ; rl? f!uft^44ti*«Ui4Ml,Nr nt5i iu^ -ml daraag mib
Tried to Please Her,
Mistress—“I'd just like to know wbat
was the meaning of all that loud and an¬
gry talking down stairs last night."
Domestic—“That was just me and me
husband, uium.”
“Your husband? You told rae when
you came that you were not married.”
“I wasn’t then, mum; but you com
plained about havin’ so much love makin’
in t.h’ kitchen, so I married one of ’em.”
—New York Weekly.
Mission Teacher—“What did Coluni
bue do?”
Gotham Waif—“W’y, der—’’
Mission Teacher—“Why don’t you say
‘the’ instead of ‘der’?”
Gotham Waif (with dignity)- “I ain’t
no Auglernianiiic.”—Street, & Smith’s
Good News.
The Royal Baking Powder is in¬
dispensable to progress in cookery
and to the comfort and conve¬
nience of modern housekeeping.
Royal is undoubtedly the purest and most reliable baking
powder offered to the public. — U. S. Gov't Chemist s Report,
For finest food I can use none but Royal.—A. Fortin,
Chef, White House, for Presidents Cleveland and Arthur.
The Wealth of Nations.
The wealthiest nation on the globe is
the United States, which has an assess¬
ed valuation of $47,475,000,000, next
comes Great Britain with $48,000,000,
000. France ranks third, with $40,300,
000,000, then Germany'' with $81,600,
000,000. Russia comes next with $21,-
715,000,000; Austria follows with $18,
065,000,000; and Italy succeeds with
$11,755,000,000. Spain is worth $7,865,
000,000; the Netherlands, $4,935,000,
000; Belg’um, $4,030,000,000. The as¬
sessed valuation of Sweden is $3,475,
000,000; of Canada, $3,250,000,000; of
Mexico, $8,150,000,000; of Australia,
$2,950,000,000; of Portugal,$1,855.000,
000; of Denmark, $1,830,000,000; < f the
Argentine Confederation,$1,600,000,000;
of Switzerland, $1,620,000,000; of Nor¬
way, $1,410,000,000; of Greece, $1,055,
000 , 000 .
Rights of the Child.
One thought more—one that every pa¬
rent should consider:'Children love in¬
dependence, desiic something that they
can call their own, hunger for a recogni¬
tion and a share in business matters.
Every child who has a lamb, a calf, a
crop of his own, has love for the farm
deepened, ami this feeling will last only
if the child is fairly dealt with when his
property is sold. You can make a child
love the firm by making home attract¬
ive, or lead him to hite it by making
him feel that somewhere else he will be
considered—not at home. A home when
the children are taught to look toward
one who will shnre their cares, and wli-re
they arc from infancy made partners in
the work, wi.l turu out-stiong-hearled
men and will rarely be fur sale.
Dog Language.
Little Johnny—“Dogs don’t need to
bark.” --”one can understand their
Visitor—“Can yo^
Little Johnny—‘ Easy as rollin’ off a
log. When my dog is at the door and
barks, that means he wants to get. in;
if he’s inside the door and barks, that
means he wants to get out.”
half Visitor—“Humph inside 1 Suppose he is
and half outside and barks,
what does that mean?”
Little Johnny—“That means that
there's a bigger dog than him in our
yard.”-- Street & Smith’s Good News.
VOUR ■ ^ ® HEALTH ® ■ ■ ■
™ I ings May depend which upot the gives. way you A treat 1 he warn
S. nature few bottles of
S. S. taken at the proper fherel time oreactatonce.forit may insure good
health for a year or two.
iS IMPORTANT
.... that nature , be assisted ... at the .... right time.fl|'3K2»H«* __
never fails to relieve the system of jm-HMKnBSjE| 1
purities, and is an excellent tbnlc also, *™""
He Wants to Add His Name.
“ Permit me to add my name to your many other
certificates in commendation of the great curative
properties certainly contained of the in best Swift’s tonics Specific I (S. used. S. S.) It
is one ever
“John W. Daniel, Anderson, S. C.”
Treatise on blood and skin diseases mailed free.
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga.
BICYCLES.
m£S Complete line of high, medium
dries *n I cheap of all grade kinds. Bicycle s. Sun
Immense llnraiiins in Sec
mntic rtnd Cushion Tired”/ 1 ^^"catalogue
and The Write
prices. only exclusively bioyclo house in the
No. 38 Peachtree Street, Atlanta, Ga.
■iiiiiNltiihiMmiiMimiBiittiaitimafeiMiiMiiiiiaaiiifiMiiuiMtiiiiniiinai yAN
IDEAL FA MILY M E D IC I NEi i
| land Complexion, all disorders Offenelvo of the Stomach. Breath, !
! liver and Bowels,
| act genUy ye?promptly.^Ferfect !
| digestion 5?l^ I ?FSi follows 8ts 861111 their by mail. use. Sold Box )
= J? Packagre r (4 boxes), $2. vhw' | s
■ I Fof free samples-address I
i
LI F| LO, “c* kh^ameand'addressof
n t L Seven Bots^World complete etories SSllla’rtWmS! in Feb. No, -
Samp.e copy for itamp. Bor.' World, Lyun, Mas*
I
THE WHALE OIL CO. WEST SU PE/ll OR. W!5.
/J u# C A OtD POSTtfiK STAMPS
wanted an curiosities of the War. I 1
l ay $1 each for some. HUNT UP OLD LETTERS.
tSeud to W. A. KKLSEV, Meriden, Con n.
Wf If ANTED—Local and traveling agents and promo
tors for the Maryland Building and Loan Associa
tion; liberal commiflsloti. For particulars address E.
G. Pritchett, secretary, Law Building, Baltimore, Md.
!
law’s This 5
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward cured tee far
ear oese of catarrh that cannot bo
UklngEaU’eCatarrh J. Cheney & Cure. Co., Props., Toledo, Ot
W.
Cheney We, the for undersigned, the last 15 have and known believe fi. him 1.
perfectly honorable in years, all business transac¬
tions, and financially able to carry out any ob¬
ligations West & Truax, made by Wholesale their firm. Druggists, Toledo,
O.
W albino, K inn an & Marvin, Wholesale
Hall’s Druggists, Catarrh Toledo, Cure is O. taken Internally, eat¬
ing faces directly of the upon the blood Testimonials and mucous sent free, sur¬
Price 76o. system. bottle. BoldJby.aU.druggiste,
per
“ ‘Brown’s Bronchial Troches’ are excel¬
lent for the relief of Iloarsenessor Sore Throat.
They World, are London exceedingly Eng. effective.”— ChrUtim
,
Fresh Air and Exercise.
Get all that’s
possible of
both, if in
need of flesh
strength
and nerve
force. There’s need,too, of plenty
of fat-food.
Scott’s Emulsion i
of Cod Liver Oil builds up flesh
and strength quicker than any
other preparation known to sci¬
ence.
Scott's Emulsion is constantly ef¬
fecting Cure of Consumption,
Bronchitis and kindred diseases
where other methods fail.
Prepfired by Scott (c Bowno. N. Y. All druggist*.
«rs German
Boschee’s Syrup” German Syrup is i 1
mors
successful iu the treatment of Con¬
sumption than any other tried.unjji remedy
prescribed. It has been
every variety of climate. In Ǥ
bleak, England, bitter in the North, fickle in MiddleStatffl damp Nflj
in the hot, moist South—everH tH
where. It has been in demand
every nationality. It has been eiHg
tion. 1 1n brief it W
by millions and its the only true and
reliable Consumption Remedy. $>
A Woman Has
Siiy unrn'ted to?*? c^'oTbm,
ther« has been no instance reported wher- snet!
’ ’ f’ oy tne use Permanently of sinsrie and box Pit OMPT I, #
- a or the Kenuine
’pi , S y wine!?tV"’®’ Mc L* SE 'fj LIVF.lt
£ £ p 1 ^ T a mafia ^o L b ;a P dd™ 0 the n rSpf„ S f'1S;
In postage stamps. Purchasers of these PUls should
bo careful to procure the genuine article. There an
several counterfeits on the market, weU calculated
to deceive. The genuine Dr. c. McLane’s Celebrated
Liver Pills are manufactured only by
FLEMING BROTHERS CG„ Pittsburgh, ft.
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS
WITH
THOMSON'S ’ v r rr •
SLOTTED mnd:
CLINCH RIVETS,
No tools required. Only a hammer needed to Mv$
anil almo’utely clinch smooth. them easily ILquiiing and quickly, ho leaving the clinch
he leather tbe Rivets. no e to be made in
nor burr for Thev are atronff,
touch and durable. Milhous now in use. AH
ensths. uniform or assorted, put up in boxes.
Ask your dealer i'or them, or send 40c. in
stamps for a box oi 100, assorted sizes. Man’fd bv
JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., *
WALTHAM, MASS.
Ifl §|| ▼ho CoDtanpllvei hav« weak Innc* and or people A$th- HH H
B mi, should use Piso’s Cure for B
B m Consumption. It has eared B B
B theaesmde. It has not injnr- B
®d one. It is not bad to take.
HD It is the best cough syrup.
B Sold everywhere. 86c. B
~
.
^£6REAT y SHILOH’S
- . 'TNElBrST J CURE.
ISOUGH CUReTO
532231^ rJ.
Throat# CnregConsnmption, Sold by all Coughs, Croup, Sore
Druggists on a Guarantee,
PATENTBfifeSSSES
a. n. o Eight, '93.