Newspaper Page Text
VICTORY fOR REPEAL,
Free Coinage Defeated in M House liy
a Vote of 239 to 110.
The Bland Amendments Wer/All Toted
Down liy Large Majorities.
Seventeenth Day. —At the close of
tb.. routine business of . the ,
morning
senate, 1'relay, which comprised no
matter of public interest, except the
jireseiitafions of department, communications adverse from to
tlo- treasury
any special legislation in regard to the
P Hill eai,t addressed I < : s on . the J? e chair ' is'<y and was rec- ' 'i
ognized. He yielded, however, to Mr.
Vest, who sent to the clerk’s desk and
had read, a communication from the
director of the mint giving statistics
floor The announcement that Mr.
Hill was to s . )fcak once morfc
made the senate chamber the
focus of public interest. He There upoke j :
for something over two hours.
was accorded him the strictest atten- .
tint from the start to the finish. Since !
his sensational support of Peffer’s j
resolution there has not been consul
crable curiosity as to his real position,
lie declared himself to be on the deni
ocratic platform, and in favor of un
conditional repeal. The pledge to H- j
metallism was more than empty
words " Now was not the time !
for . , , , ,, :
experimen.a eg 13 The '
discussion of ratios.
ate, he predicted, would repeal
the Sherman act as soon as possible.
There would be no filibustering. He
said congress should adjourn as soon
as the repeal was enacted. His speech
was admirable in argument. There is
no denying its strength or its effect,
Eighteenth Day.—T he question of
tbe the right rirrh* of nf the the governor I'overnor ot of a a state state to to
appoint a senator to fill a vacancy
" term, and and not not happeiitog happening by* i>y rS'na- resigna
tion or otherwise, was decided by the
senate Monday m the negative. The
final vote in the two cases from Mon
tana and Washington deciding Mantle
and Allen not entitled to seats was 32
to 29. There was no vote necessary
to be taken in the third of those cases,
that from Wyoming, Mr. Beckwith
having resigned his appointment
more than a month ago. The remain
der of the day’s session was occupied
in the conftiiieration of the hill allow
ing national banks to increase their
circulation up to the par value of the
bonds deposited by them to secure
circulation. The amendment which
Mr. Cockrell had offered some time
ago to allow the redemption of the
825,000,000 2 per cent bonds,.and pay
merit for them in a new issue of legal
tender notes was rejected by a vote of 1
23 to 29.
Nineteenth Day.—I n the Senate -|
Tuesday. Air. Voorhees, chairman of 1
the finance committee, reported back :
to the house the bill repealing a part
of the Sherman act with an amend- ;
ment in tbe nature of the substitute,
He asked that the bill be placed on the
calendar and gave notice that he should
ask the senate to take it up immedi
ately after the morning business from
this time on until final action is taken. ;
When he called it up, Mr. Teller oli
jected to its immediate consideration
and it went over until Wednesday.
Mr. Stewart’s resolution, inquiring in
to the condition of the treasury, was
then taken up. Senator Gordon, of
Georgia, had the floor an hour on the
silver question. He spoke in favor of
unconditional repeal. He also declared
himself in favor of free coinage. If
the friends of bimetallism, said he,
were strong enough in the senate to
attach free coinage to the pending
bill they would lie strong enough to
enact it afterwards. He was opposed
to delay tho repeal by a contest over
free coinage. During the delivery of
his speech Senator Gordon was given
close attention by well-filled and
crowded galleries. He explained his
position by stating that the Sherman
law was not the friend but the insidi¬
ous foe of bimetallism.
the hoi st.
Seventeenth Day -Priday was the
second day of tlio debate under the
five minutes-rule in the house. Noth
ing sensational transpired. Aside from
the speeches delivered by Mr. Burrows
and Mt- Springers there was none
that commanded the attentian of tho
members; and, indeed these two
speeches were not listened to with the
interest they deserved. Kiev day was
» day of calm—a precursor of the
storm to be precipitated Saturday. A
large number of members addressed
the house, but for the greater part
they wasted their eloquence on empty
benches. The silver debate was be
guu promptly l>y Mr. Feudleton, dem
ocrat, of Texas, who expressed his in
tention to vote for the free coinage of
silver at any ratio that had been sug
Rested, but at the same time he held
the purchasing clause of the Sherman
act responsible for the pr«*
cut hard times. Others " °
spoke were Mr. Bowers, repub
lican, of California, for free silver;
Mr. P-iggott,democrat, of Connecticut,
spoke in favor of repeal; Mr. Dockery,
deuvoeratjof Missouri,for free coinage;
Mr. Cobb, democrat, of Alabama, for
free coinage: Mr. Marsh, republican,
of Illinois; Mr. Joseph, democrat, of
New Mexico; Mr. Mooney, democrat,
of Mississippi, ull in fnvor of free coin
age. At 5:45 o’clock the house took a
rt cess until H o'clock p. ni., when the
debate under the five minutes rule on
the silver question was concluded.
Eighteenth Day—T he galleries of
the house were full of spectators
Saturday morning before tho hour of
meeting’, attracted by the of announce- the
ment that the last day great
silver debate was to be signaled ■ by a
battle of the oratorical giants of the
house. The chaplain, in his opening
prayer, aaked GcxTb blessing on
*
the day's proceedings, Under the
hour rule, ho said, the time in favor
of the bill would close with the mem
her from West Virginia (Mr. Wilson)
and the time in the opposition to it
by the member from Missouri (Mr.
Bland). The first thirty minutes was
assigned by Mr. Wilson to Mr. Clarke,
democrat> of Alabama He believed
the duty of congress to fix the ratio
‘
betwefcn si i ver and gold at
jg ^ j yj e was followed by
Tom Reftd o{ Maine, tbe giant * J f
the republican party . Mr . E ed waH
never in better trim, aud has never
delivered a speech to equal this one.
He demonstrated a broadness of views
and a generosity of interest which
has seldom been heard from him.
al re P efll> and then Mr. Williams, of
Illinois, ,. who opposed repeal. Then
c ? m ? ITivate John Allen, of Missis
a jP pi > ’"' ho del ivered one of
‘ he ,“ 08 l , tumorous speeches of
^ hf ®- He «rfued for free coinage,
Mr ’ Tehran, , the lammany orator,
then took the floor and made the
greatest speech of his life and by odds
the strongest argument which has yet
“ade in either house of congress
in favor of the unconditional repeal of
the Sherman law. Mr Bland fol
lowed Mr. Cockran. Several oth
er brief speeches were delivered,
a fter Mr Bland’s and then
the debate was closed in a strong
twentv minutes’ speech thJ bv Mr Wib
’ Jf West Virginia ^ author of
‘be repeal } bill, ms most significant signmcant
utterance was that the administration
would, after the repeal of the Sher
man law, endeavor to enact legislation
looking to the continued use of silver
as a money metal. At the night ses-
8 i° n there were a number of good
I - nrincinal ^ one
R grit > -
fcw
York orator, , and the b debate was
• Free Coinage Defeated. j
Eighteenth DAY.-The public gab
lories.of the hall of the house of rep
resentatives were filled before ten
o clock Monday morning, and many
members w-ere in their seats on the
floor at that hour. The surrounding
corridors and lobbies of tbe floor were
also filled with a throng of people,
When the speaker commanded order
at noon, nearly every seat in
the hull was filled, an un
mistakable evidence of general
and individual interest in the matter
on hand. After the reading of the
journal, Mr. Weaver, ot New lork,
appeared at the bar of the house on
arm of his colleague, General Tracy,
and was sworn in by the speaker.
The house then began to vote on the
Bland free coinage substitute, fixing
the rath) at 16 to 1 at 12 o’clock, and
it was defeated—yeas 123, uavs 225. j
Sixteen to one is believed to be the
strongest substitute. The majority
against 16 to 1 was at least 30 votes ;
higher than the anti-silver men
claimed. The 17 to 1 amendment was
defeated—yeas 100, nays 240. On a
vote at 17 to 1, besides the loss
of populist votes, the members of that
party withholding their votes, there
were several negative votes from those
who voted in favor of the ratio of 16 to
1. The 18 to 1 free coinage amend
ment was rejected. Yeas, 102; nays,
239. The 19 to 1 amendment was re
jected. Yeas, 105; nays, 237. The
20 to 1 amendment was likewise re
jected. Yeas, 119; nays, 220. On the
substitute reviving the Bland-Allison
act, the vote was, for 130, against 213
—majority against, 77. In the final
vote to repeal the purchasing clause of
the Bherruaii act, the Wilson bill, the
vote stood 239 against 110—a majority
of 139 votes for repeal. After Mr.
Catchings had given notice that he
1 would call up the house rules Tuesday
the house, at 3:30o’clock, adjourned.
Nineteenth Day— In the house,
Tuesday, after a little routine business,
Mr. Catehings called up the report of
the committee on rules reporting rules
to govern the house of the Fifty-third
congress. Mr. Reed twitted the demo
crats upon £ their partial approval of
the ru 8 of tho fifty-first congress, but,
j n a bum orous vein, contended that
they had not gone far enotlg h. He
j then, in a more serious manner, argued
iu favor oi the rigbts b of the ma j or ity,
right , had been firmlv m aintied
‘
in tho fifty.first congress. Then for
the first time this session the speaker
took the fluor> baving ca i le d Mr. Kich-
8r(lBO n of Tennessee, to the eliair, and
replied to the criticisms of the gentle
man £rom Maine. The debate was
contitmed by Me88r s. Springer, Boat
m , r and Hooker of Mississippi, who
contended that the membership of the
comm j ttee on ru i eB sbou ]d be hicreas
, gd Mr l^ ck l er> republican, of South
Dakota, agreed with NIr. Hooker on
tlljg pojnt Messrs. Cumming, Hep
burllj o{ [ow)li and Brvau a ] KO
jn , h(> dlgeussioI , Then the subject
wa s dropped and Mr. Springer intro
dlIced a b yi to provide for the coin
age'of the seigniorage silver in the
treasury. Referred. The house at
5 ; f5 o’clock adjourned.
. ——— --_
Reassuring Neus from Brunswick.
The Brunswick board of health an
nonnoed at noon Thursday that there
j were no new cases of fever of any
kind. Harris died at 11 o’clock Wed
nesday night. The child, whose ill
ness was reported as suspicious, is
convalescent, and it is denied that it
js a ease of yellow fever at all. The
situation is encouraging and reassur
ing »o the public at large.
-
To °P en ,he Cherokee Strip.
The president Tuesday issued hi:
proclamation opening the Cherokee
stirp to settlement at the hour of 12
o’clock, noon, central standard time
Saturday, 16th oi September,
QfinTIIti'RM OUU I UUllil NFW? illilllJ JiUlllu.
The Drift of Her Progress and Pros
perity Briefly Notes,
Happenings of Interest Portrayed in
Pithy Paragraphs.
The board of health of Wilmington,
N. C„ met Friday and declared quar
antine against Atlanta and Columbus,
Ga., because of the number of refu
ges at those places from fever infected
ports,
A Nashville, Tenn., special of Sat
urdavsays: J Without taking a vote on
the proposition, the employes of the
Nashville, Chattanooga k St. Louis
railroad have, through their author
ized representatives, accepted the re
'r.
comes from Sevier county of a terrific
freshet Monday. Pigeon river rose
fifteen feet in two hours, and water
flowed two feet deep in the streets of
Sevierville. Growing corn along the
river has been greatly damaged.
Colonel Louls j. Dupree, one of the
best kuowli newspaper men in the
BOllth; aIul American consul to San
Salvador under Cleveland’s first ad
ministration, died at Memphis, Tenn.,
Monday night. He was sixty-eight
years old and until his late sickness
baB been editor 0 f The Memphis |
p edger _
The Columbia, „ , „ . „ S. C., Clearing ™ . _ House
Association held a meeting Saturday
and perfected arrangements for ,
1S8Uin g clearinghouse certificates The;
]an adopted waK to igBU e certificates
f or two-thirds value of securities de- | I
ited with tbe association, and to
tbe amoun t Q f 20 percent of the bank
. - tal
4n n Austin, ... re lexas Q d dispatch - n .„ b Rnvfi save. .
Cotton , planters tell a doleful tale j
about the condition of cotton, which i
« suffering for rain, and they assert
that they will not make more than a bale
to six acres. Buyers are promptly pay
inrr fA fnr ,„.^ oil nffowd f^; (■>,,, mfddlinff rnHmv 8 T,ricp
bp fi B Many
to take this and haul
ho m e to hold for higher I
”
1
The Fourth National v n t; OIln1 Bank EnTlk of of Lou Tnll
lsville Ky., one of the five Louisville
banks to suspend payment during the
• 1 1 J - "
chants’ National will also resume
within a, tew days. An informal imse
mg of the stockholders of the Iven
tucky National bank will be held to ;
discuss the matter of re-opening that
institution.
The liabilities of the Buchanan
River Lumber Company, of Wheeling,
W. Va., which failed Saturday will
reach 8200,000, with assets that will
more than cover that amount. The
creditors are principally banks that
hold the company’s paper. The con
cern was one of the largest in the state
and employed $1,000 men. It is
thought an arrangement can be made
with the creditors to permit the works
to resume soon.
a Jacksonville special of Tuesday
ga y S: The damage done by Sunday’s
cyclone was general throughout the
c jty and on the east coast of Florida,
bu t there was no serious loss at ahy
one point. The unroofing of the
Presbyterian church and the opera
house in Jacksonville and of Lynn’s
hotel, at St. Augustine, were the most
serious results of the storm. The loss
Jacksonville will not exceed $25,
000, and this is distributed probably
among 500 people, in various amounts,
A Montgomery special says: Josiah
Morris & Co who suspended payment
twQ weeks a „ 0 resumed business
Monday morning, and from the hour
' busi
of 0 in „ unt ji c l os i ng a heavy
ne8B WaH done ’ the old customers of
th<j bank comi ng forward to make de
poBits and ope n their accounts with
{ he finn This incident in the bank
iu „ history of the country is almost
wi th out a parrallel. The entire com
mlmit y rejoices over the resumption,
: 1 }loves J* of the East Tennessee,
- •
_ T . . J
lrginia ani reo g i
» 8 e F«' al » ,as8 “f ** l
lenn., > a un ay ‘b 1 1 ' b bl
! Rropoaed cut m salaries as ordered . by ,
‘Fa. receivers. 01
^ of f ,. . ,
P was OB finally n ono appointed man . f “ to wait upon
the receivers and ask the road to take
then; salaries as a loan or state some
«P eclfied time aa to when they would
he restored. The committee was m
structed to consult with the employes
at Atlanta, Macon and Selma, where
the road has other large shops,
1 The New Orleans Clearing House
Association met Thursday and took
action on the proposition made to is
sue clearing house certificates for
small sums to take the place of cur
rency. The recent action of the banks
left the planters without tbe money to
move the crops and a plan to over
come this state of affairs was thus xen
dcred advisable. After discussion tho
following plan was adopted: Issue eer
tifieates of deposit to persons having
j money on deposit, payable to them
selves or bearer,, in sums of $5, $10
or more, and make the certificates
payable through the clearing house.
Ravages of Cholera in Russia.
A supplementary official cholera re
port issued at St. Petersburg, Russia, .
Thursday gives the following statis
ties of the ravages oi uie disease in
affected governments during the
???* ' Grek uew cases 64 1 , deaths
‘ osaacks 01 the 1 on, new eases
498 > deaths 202; Ivoorsk, new cases
296, deaths 103; Viedimir, new cases
156, deaths 52; Lomza, new cases 52,
deaths 22; Moscow, new cases 72,
deaths 24; Yiatka, new cases 47, deaths
22; Voronezh, new cases 30, deaths
, 23.
WHILE IN THE WAR
%
fr 1
. j
Mr. Tfheeler.
troubled with my old complaints." Jas. A.
Whbeler i, 19,0 Division St., Baltimore, Md.
U JrinFjC! JL S SarsU,,. 1 vUlvv
paf
pau .oie lTverliSriUcenu per box.
— i - - ■ " . j....
How to Clean the Face.
Theatrical people, know that oil
cleans the skin better than water.
Generally other people do not. If ac
tresses undertook to get their makeup
off with water, they would need soft
They used once cocoa butter Now they
use cocoa oil, which is a better prepa
ration of the same thing. Drugstores
keep it. Some keep it fresh, and
some keep it rancid. Take care not
to patronize the second class, and in
coc ° a 0l1 5™ wl11 have the most d f
^kt.tul ot all emollients for the oil
ba ;“
If want to how effective _ ,. it .,
you see
1 . \ c » m e m fr ° m a railway journey on
a hot day 1 when the windows have
been up and you have Imd as much
benefit of the smoke and soot as the
fireman. Take the most vigorous bath
vou can devise or endure, then spread
gome cocoa oil on the face and rub it
off The blackened towel will tell the
tale of failure for the bath and tri
um ph 1 f or the oil.— Boston Gazette.
last Word.
A young girl once heard a bit of
wisdom from the lips of a very aged
woman—a woman who had rounded the
full term of , ninety years, and , with
eyes still bright and clear looked out
upon the inrolling waters of eternity,
Thegirlwasimpressedbytheempha
sis with which the venerable dame said
to her, “Bessie, never insist on having
the last word.” The determination to
have the final word leads to more
quarrels and more bitterness offeeling
st boine tban a i mos t anything else in
domestic life. The fact is, that one
^ control her to and her
|[ thBt fthe allow her opponent 'Snclud
t e p j easure of tbis CO veted
ing thrust and yet placidly retain her
^X own opinion, and in the homely, col
parlance of the upcounty,
wbere one finds strong-willed people
livi J toget S h e r in | great peace with the
mo F BOUDced iverof cbarac .
terist <«do as she’s a m"ind to.”
Dainty Splashers.
In a summer cottage quite the effec¬
tive feature of every bedroom was the
washstand splasher. A wide piece of
cottage drapery, shirred on a slender
gilt rod and suspended by white rib¬
bon bands, formed the background of
the toilet stand, falling to the floor
and coming well out on both sides.
The protection of the delicate wall pa¬
per was perfect, and the graceful ban¬
ners imparted an airy effect that add¬
ed much to the prettiness of the
rooms .—New York Times.
A Polite Dog.
Mother—“Did you thank the gentle¬
man who carried yon across the crowd¬
ed street?”
Wee Son—“I tried to, but I didn’t
know what to say—the words wouldn’t
come somehow; but I guess it’s all
right, ’cause iny dog wagged his tail
enough for both of us. ”
Stock From Roasts.
Just before the roast is done pour
into the pan in which it is cooking
about a pint of hot water. Remove
the roast and turn the gravy into a
dish. When it is cold, there will be
found a supply of pure, rich meat
stock ready to flavor sauces or to im¬
prove soup stock.
A Wide Choice.
Guard (at tbe Wold’s Fair)—“I building ad¬
vise you to go to your State
and make tbat sort of a beardquarters
for receiving mail, writing letters,
resting, etc. What - state are you
from?”
Drummer—“Well—er—which State
building is the most comfortable?”
Little Dick—“Papa, didn’t you tell
mamma we must economize?”
Papa—“I did, my son.”
Little Dick—“Well, I was thinkin’
that mebby if you’d get me a pony I
wouldn’t wear out so many shoes.”—
Street & Smith’s Good News.
For Summer Cookery
Royal Baking Powder will be found the
greatest of helps. With least labor and
trouble it makes bread, biscuit and cake
of finest flavor, light, sweet, appetizing
and assuredly digestible and wholesome,
j
$ [ 1*170 -T 7 £
Do Not Be Deceived ;
with Pastes. Enamels and Faints which stain the
hands, injure the iron and burn red.
The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor¬
less. Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin
or glass package with every purchase.
I was taken ill with
nal disease and rheuma
tism. i went home and
was confined to my bed,
unable to help myself •
hears for & months. After ,
panion of machinist misery a ad com- vis- J
,
me to take Hoods
sarsaparilla. I got a
bottle and could quickly
note a change for the
better. Alter taking l1 T
!e3 Wa ’‘- S
have not ince been
If any one doubts ttiat
we can cure the must ob¬
BLOOD POISON stinate case in 20 to 60
days, let him write for
A SPECIALTY. particulars and in' vesti
trate - our reliab lity. Our
fw; andal backing is
$500,000. When mercury,
iodide potassium, sarsap irilla or Hot Springs fail, we
guarantee a cure—and our liatric Cyphilene is the on y
thing that will cur© permanently. Positive proof sent
sealed, free. COOK Rkmsdt Co., Chicago, 111.
Xngleside JE^ctreat.
For Disuses of Women. Scientific treatment for ladies and be¬
cures puaranteed. Elegant apartments Address The Resi¬
fore and during confinement. Nashville, Tenn.
dent Physi cian, ~.l-72 Baxter Court,
A. L. ibutyUve, ’i/S.
Good Manners in Children.
it is no wonder that there are so
ill ... , bred , and , ... the
many men women in
WO rld when one sees the lack of b pains
taken by parents to , instruct . , their ,, lit- ...
t[ e ones in forms of table and social
etiquette that easily ...... taught to
are so
the pliable 1 infant mind, ’ but which, '
left unnoticed, are soon supplantedby
ae G° ns that become bad habits in a very
short time.
Jt is no unusual sight to behold a
child drinking from its saucer with no
word of admonition from the mother
or nurse who sits near by. A thirsty
little one will drink from a cup in
which there is a spoon, and later years
will see no harm in continuing the
practice. Many a child eats with his
knife, and yet how easily could the
fork or spoon be substituted in its
place if the parents gave but a tiny bit
of attention to this branch of their
children’s education.
Selfishness is fostered so . easily
through a lack of watchfulness. The
gentler courtesies that count for so
much are not instilled in childhood,
and in later years the man or woman
is regarded as a bore. Good clothes
are not everything. Even good health
is not the one point desirable in a
child’s makeup. Good manners should
be added to health and atti?s in order
to gain a perfect ensemble that counts
for so much in the world’s judgment.
No one can estimate how great a
factor in life is the possession of good
manners. They are the open seasame the
to the best of society. They are
hall mark of the gentleman or lady,but
they must be acquired in infancy.—
New York Telegram.
Table Decoration.
All forms of table garniture are re¬
quired to be low. The tall vases are
used upon mantels in the drawing¬
room, the sitting-room and the little
reception room, but no longer upon
the table, where their height proves a
hindrance to dinner chat. The custom
of putting huge pieces in the centre
was never good, but so long as fashion
declares in its favor it held neverthe¬
less, and only very tew had the courage
to denounce it. Now, when it is the
correct thing to arrange tempting bits
of color as low as can be, the wisdom,
of the change cannot be denied, and
diners out gain an enlarged view of
their neighbors and vis-a-vis.— Ex¬
change.
Character In the Eyebrows.
Highly arched eyebrows are said to
denote vivacity and brilliancy, level
brows, strength of intellect; regularly
curved eyebrows express' cheerfulness;
square ones, deep thought; irregular,
fickleness, versatility, excitability;
raised at the inner corner, melancho¬
ly; joined over the nose, an unsettled
mind; thick and bushy eyebrows de¬
note physical strength .—Philadelphia
Ledger.
Over Many a l^eagnc
Spreads the infectious air poison of chills and
fever, a complaint to the eradication and
prevention of which Hostetter’s stomach
districts Bitters is specially periodically adapted. visited Vast by and this fertile
are re¬
lentless malady. it. Rheumatism, Fortify with constipation, the Bitters
and prevent
biliousness, liver trouble and nervousness
are conquerable in any stapre by this compre¬
hensive medicine, indorsed and commended
by intelligent physicians everywhere.
Prayer is the language of the heart. Only
soul language is heard in heaven,
If your Back Aches, or you are all worn out,
good for Iron nothing, it is general debility.
Brown’s Bitters will cure you, make you
strong, cleanse your the Liver, and give you a good
appetite—tones nerves.
Don’t repent overanything you have done*
Don’t do anything to repent of.
Stat* of Ohio,Citv of Toledo, ts.
Lucas County.
Frank J. Cheney maker, oath that he is the
senior partner of the Arm of F. J. Cheney &
Co., doing business in the City of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, of ONE HILNDRED and that said DOL¬ Arm
will pay for the sum
LARS each aud every case of Cut arrli that
cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh
Cure. Frank J. Chknby.
i worn to before me and subscribed in my
presence, this tith day of December, A. D. 1386.
A. W. Glkason,
\ < •—’ SEAL f Notaru Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure istaken internally and acts
directly on-the blood and mucous surfaces of
the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. O.
PF~Sold by Druggists, 75c.
We Core Rupture.
No matter of how long standing. Write
for free treatise, testimonials, etc., to S. J.
Hollensworth & Co., s"o wego, Tioga Co., N. Y. ,
Dv.aa Ci. V.T- n..;i ci i
“Lau-h aud the world laughs laugh^Swith you.
Weep and the wor d at you.
Ladies needing a tonic, or children who
want building up, should take Brown’s Iron
Bitters. It is pleasant to take, cures Complaints, Malaria,
Indigestion,Biliousness and Liver
makes the Blood rich and pure.
Worry is the great ferti’feer of troubles. It
produces them and it maks them grow.
Beecham’s Pills correct bad effects of over¬
eating. Beecliara’s—no other-. 25 cents a box.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water-Drii"cr‘st> tf ell at 25<> per bottle.
* A
M
y
^3 %
1 mi
Brings comfort raowMxsj
tends and i ffl pro
to personal enjo
rightly used. The man^
iess ter ch expenditure, an others and enjoy ^ i?
adapting the world’s by bestl
the needs of physical bei P
the value to health of tC„ Jf
laxative principles emtewl
remedy, Its excellence Syrup of Figs. 'toit, J d
is due
in the form most aceepfcM
ant to the taste, the refresh,!
beneficial ative ; effectually properties cleansing of aid
dispelling and colds, headache J
It has permanently satisfaction curing „3 J
with given to
met the approval oi IS
profession, Liver because and Bowels*,! it actsrS
neys, perfaJJ]
enmg them and it is
every Syrup objectionable of Figs is substjJ™
for safe y
gists in 50c and $1 bottles JS
ufactured by the California,
Co. only, whose name is printed,
package, and being also well the informed,'wt name, Svnm!
adeept any substitute if ofeJ
66
My wife suffered with in J
and dyspepsia for yean, j
came a burden to her. PM J
failed to give relief. Ate
bottle one of of your August books, Flower. I puiclj ItJ
like a charm. Mywifereca
mediate relief after takings
dose. weighs She was 165 completely-' and]
now anything pounds,
she desires witk
deleterious results as was (J
the case. C. H. Dear, Prop';]
iugton House, Washington,
A ra*
mm if used \
about toa
S? the pairt
attend!
ChikMftj
n y an InMi
IV,
tobotimi
child. HU
dmpa I
paid.
©RADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Iff
McEL REES
OF CAR!
‘■wjj?
-j
Fra FsmalB Disei
MEND TOUR OWN
WITH
IS THOMSON'S! jffTi
U 0
SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVI
jRassaJSwSsS
tonrb and durable. MU-ioni n/j
lUmpi for a box of 100, assorted * uel '
JUDSON L. THOMSON MR
WAI.THAJI. mas*
isssassss iA
|5l|JlIon 5 f?U t om 0 neir'uK i Sold'®
falllliiliimW 1111 ' — •■ il| S* l! ” "* *
Or 9£^£i| use of painful, buraiw. P*,
our sc ience.
about our m
RUPTURE A um
NO
aOITRECUBEDglil Catarf-*
Plso’s Bemedy for &
Best, Easiest 10 1 ~ P 1 ami