n?w7 j ESTABLISHED ISA. She (JoUuuMa gcmorrat, JTABLISIIED 1(:3T. CONSOLIDATED 1868. .-rCBLisniD BY EL WELL & BITTENBENDEB EVKHY FRIDAY MOHNINQ At Bloomsburg, tho County spat ol Columbia County, Pennsylvania. TtRMd: Inside the county, fl.00 a ycarto ad vance; fl.&o If not paid In advance outside the county, i. a year, strictly In advance. All communications should be addressed to TUB COLUMBIAN, Bloomsburg, Tn. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 189a. DEMOCRATIC TICKET- For President GROVER CLEVELAND, of New York. FOR VICE PRESIDENT ADLAI E. S TEVENSON, of Illinois. STATE. FOll CONGRESSMAN AT I.AROK. UKOKGE A.ALLEN, Erie. TUOMAS P. MEHHITT, ilerks. FOR SCPRRMR JITOK. CHRISTOPHER UEYIHUCK, Venango. FOR II.F.CTOR8 AT I.AROI. MORTIMER F. 3LLIOTT, Tioga. JNO. C. BULLITT, Philadelphia. TUOMAS B. KENNEDY, Franklin. DAVID T. WATSON, Allegheny. FOR DISTRICT KLICTOHS. Samuel O. Thompson, Adam 8. conway, W. Hedwood Wright, John O. James. James Duffey, K. W. Trimmer, Azur Lathrop, Thomas Chultant, P. II. Strublngcr, Joseph I). Orr, Andrew A. Payton, Michael Lelbel, Cornelius W. Bull, J. K. P. Hall, Clem't U. Walnwrtght, Charles 11. LalTerty, (leorge H. Guss William Molan, Charles l. Breck, Samuel 8. Lelby, T. C. Hippie, W. D. Illnimelrelch U. B. IMper, Charles A. Fagun. John D. Braden, Thomas McDowell, Wm. G. Yuengllng, John Conway. COUNTY. For Congress, S. P. WOLVERTON, For Representatives, E. M. TEYVKSBURY, ANDREW L. FRITZ, TAXES ABD PEOSPEEOT. HIGH TAXES FOR PROSPERITY AN EMPTY DELUSION A MONUMENTAL FALLACY Faom the Media (Pa.) Hcord, Ind. Rep. The recent speeches of Governor McKinlev. nf Oriirv anA rvi.,l ;j ' " J "'III i MrClnrc nf Prii1aHlr,r,;-i Vi.. u. I - rrivo, 11IC first as a champion and defender of the tariff act whirh hpnr hi nao iiij imiijc, and the last nan.ed as an exponent of iree raw materials ana tanrl lor reven ue, have revived an interest in the chief issue of the presnt quadrennial canvass. There can be no mistake of the trend and tenor of Mr. Mc Kinley's speech; he is very evidently a Kali',, . .1 . 1 . 1 . utiicvct in mc uugma mat me nign er people are taxed the more pros perous do they become. He believes the highest mission of civic government is to be paternal in its nature and attributes, and to coddle infant in dustriesnot alone during their infancy but just as long as the dear people can stand the coddling process. The more coddling and the more paterna lism the greater the tax rate and the larger the prosperity of the people taxed. This is the McKinley theory, aud the sublime picture of peace, happiness and prosperity which he paints as the inevitable resultant of such a fiscal policy is charming if it were but true. No man. no community, no nation ever became prosperous by exceosive taxation. If the reverse were true Russia and Turkey would be the most prosperous countries of the world. If taxation means prosperity then from 1861 to 1865 was the most prosperous era within the history of the United States, for then it was that the exigencies of a gigantic civil war rendered high taxes an imperative necessity. Would Governor McKinley rate that period an era of prosperity? His panacea of high taxes was of necessity the fiscal policy of the na tion, and yet it is a matter of history that the country was never so near bankruptcy. Its credit was so low that its Treasury notes were depreciated at times some sixty or more per cent. The McKinley dogma may do as a campaign cry, but it couldn't fool the money markets of this country or of the world outside of it. Mr. McKinley's high tariff panacea a a producer of prosperity is an empty delusion. If it were true that the shackling of trade and commerce for that is the, inevitable con sequence of a high tariff for the sake of UrirT was a great public benefit, then is it passing strange that so smart a man as Mr. McKinley should not have adopted precisely the same ...ilis... 1-... ....... 1 1 r-. . j".n.jr ucmccii me several states of the Federal Union. These various States have prospered in varying de gree not because ot the tariff taxes, but in spite of them, which is but a strong proof of the immense natural advantages and resources of the country. If high tariff, and per sc, high taxes, breed prosperity, how comes it that intelligent citizens continually appeal against excessive appraisement of their property; that the economical man agement of municipalities is warmly commended as contributory to the public welfare; and that one of the chief advantages of Republican rule is its simplicity and inexpensiveness? If Mr. McKinley be right, then trad ing between States and nations is a delusion and a snare; commerce is a mere sham, and the whole theory and superstructure of belief in the virtue and superiority of a republic, because of its economic administration a monumental fallacy. Mr. McKinley's peanut policy would dwaifthis nation with its collossal resources into a race of clams, whose chief virtue would be to crawl into their shell as the highest culmination of their national destiny. A sound fiscal policy cannot be crowd ed into sucn pigmy proportions: the true and only line of progess fr this nation of seventy millions of freeman is a fiscal policy which shall truly foster and not handicap its own in ternal resources, by the admission, free of duty, of all raw materials as enter into the material necessities and com forts of the people. Under such a regime, Americans could command their home market and at the same time successfully compete with foreign manufacturers for the trade of this continent and elsewhere; our com merce would be restored and the manufacturing interests of the country be largely increased and stimulated. These axiomatic truths were ad mirably illustrated in Editor McClure's able address, which is well worthy of careful perusal by every citizen of the land. There is no mousing or equivocation in Mr. McClure's address and even those who cannot concur in all of his propositions can but admire the candor and frankness of his de claration. Such a course is more than refreshing in these days of evas ion and subterfuge to gain temporary partisan advantage. But the time is nigh when the truth must be told, and when told and heeded will insure to ihe prosperity of the people at large. What Strong Proof. Is needed of the merit of Hood's Sarsaparilla than the hundreds of letters continually coming in telling of marvellous cures it has effected after all other remedies had failed ? Truly Hood's Sarsaparilla possesses peculiar curative power unknown to other medicines. Hood's Pills cure Constipation by restoring the peristaltic action of the alimentsuy canal They are the ) est family cathartic. Heroic Fire Protection. The legislature of this State, at its session of 1889, passed an act for the better protection of lives in case of fires in tenement nouses, schools, seminaries, colleges, academies, hospi tals, asylums, places of amusement, &c, more than two stories in height. No objection can be urged against proper and necessary protection ; life should be properly protected against all possible contingencies of fire in the classes of institutions or buildings named, but there is such a thing as unnecessary protection, and the act in question, if laterally carrried out would in every reasonable person's mind be classed under that head. Imagine for example, in every teachers and and student's room in the Normal, on the third and fourth floors, "affixed to a bolt through the wall over the window head inside, a chain at least ten feet in length with a rope at least orie inch in diameter of sufficient length to extend to the ground ; and each such rope to be coiled' and kept in an unlocked box, in an unob structed place near the inside sill of the window." With such means of egress from stairways &c , as the Nor mal has, what need could there be of special escape in each room, without saying anything of the appearance of the window with its chain and rope? Lata Election. A state election was held in Georgia Wednesday. The republicans made a fusion with the people's party and confidently eYrwrtH tn ,loiV, , ,u democratic candidate for Governor. The result so far heard from indicates that the democrats have carried the state by about 40,000 majority. The latest returns from tliA .l;n held in Florida, Monday indicate that we ucmocrats nave carried the state by about 25.000 mai ority. Judjzine from the returns nf th elections held in Arkansas, Vermont, Maine, Fbrida and Georgia, we are pleased to announce that the people wm insist mat tne next president must be a democrat and his Grover Cleveland. Nothinn does the work 60 well Mr. P. Hvrd of New Grand III., writes : 'Beine exnosed tn nil sorts of weather I am more or less liable to have pains of some kind. I have tried a number of different so called remedies, but nothing does the work so well as Salvation Oil. It is the best liniment I have ever used." ' Mock Protection to rarmirs. THEY PAY TARIFF" TAXES ON ALL THEY BUY AND GET NO PROTECTION. When Governor McKinley began his campaign in defence of his new tariff policy in Pittsburg, he taught the industrial people engaged in the pro duction ofMron and steel that tariff taxes upon these products prevented cheaper foreign iron and steel from coming into our markets, thus in creased the price of American prod ucts and enabled the manufacturers to pay largely idvanced wages for labor, in this campaign Mr. McKinley seems to have been assigned the very diffi cult task of teaching the farmeis that tariff taxes cheapen everything. After informing the iron and steel workers that h gh protection increased the cost of their products and thereby increased their wages, he is now engaged in tell ing the farmers that high tariff taxes have cheapened the iron and steel for their plows and other agricultural im plements, and that they are now reap ing the beneficent fruits of the highest war taxes ever levied upon the neces saries of industry and life in time of eace. Let us see what Gov. McKin ley has done for the farmer by his tar iff, lie has increased the tariff taxes in the name of protection on all, or nearly all, the products of the faimer as follows : Tnriff McKinley ofiS3. Tariff. Barley, per bushel :o .30 Corn, per bushel 10 .15 Wheat, per bushel 20 '2$ Oats, per bushel 10 ,15 Totatocs, per I ushel 15 .25 Hops, per bushel 08 .15 Umier, per pound 04 .06 Cheese, per pound 04 .06 EgK'i l'cr doren I'reo .OJ Uny, per ton $J.c 4 CO Looking at the figures this would seem to be immense protection to the farmer, but in point of fact for nearly all of thee products the farmer is compelled to look to the foreign mar ket for his surplus, and t.txes upon im ports amount to just nothing at all, as nenner tne tarmer nor the people buy the imported articles. What a mock ery of protection to the farmer is pre sented when we glance at our table of imports and exports for the last year as shown by the official report of the Secretary of the Treasury as follows : Imports. Export. Wheat flour $43,200 54.700,000 Wheat 432,000 51,420,000 Corn i,6oo 17,600,000 Cheese 1,338.700 :,40o,ooo Butter SS.500 2,200,000 ' ... 5,000 405,700 Kye 98,200 212,000 'P 63,300 H4.500 Eggs, doz 363,000 8, 200, ceo It will thus be seen that in nearly every important product of the farm on which the McKinley tariff levies increased tariff taxes, ostensible for protection, the farmers has just no protection whatever, as he is without foreign competition and has to seek foreign markets for the surplus of every important article that he pro duces. The fanner thus has no benefit whatever from the increased tariff taxes while everything his been done that could be done to make his foreign market, that he must have every year, as unfriendly as possible; and in no instance has the McKinley tariff given the farmer an increased price for a single product of his labor. Mr. Blanie told the truth as he was struggling for months to force Mc Kinley to accept reciprocity as a feature of his tariff, when he declared in an open letter to Senator Frye, that the McKinley tariff would not furnish the farmer a market for a single additional barrel of pork or a sack of flour. Everything that the farmer produces is governed in prices by the law of tupply and demand throughout the market of the land, and entirely regardless of tariff duties. Last year when there was a general failure of the crops abroad and a bountiful harvest in our land, wheat commanded the highest price of the last decade, and the farmers were told that the McKinley tariff had brought them large market and in creased prices. This year the crops are reasonable good abroad; the foreign demand for our surplus is greatly deminifhed, and the farmer is to-day receiving no more for his wheat than he received before the passage of the McKinley bill. The farmet is now, as he ever has been, the hewer of wood and drawer of water for protected industries, and it was bad enough to put a moonshine protective tariff on his products, as did the tariff act of 1883, but it isjan insult to his intelligence to increase tariff taxes on his products which he can never realize, and then claim that he is protected under our tariff laws It assumes that he is utterly ignorant of his own interests, and that he is the mere prey of political demagogues who impose taxes upon him which he must pay for the benefit of others, and attempt to reconcile him to this needless exaction by in creased moonshine protection under the McKinley tariff of 1890. From JUc Chive's Speech. Distemper is dangerous and often fatal in winter when the horse can't get green food. At this season Buli's Head Horse and Cattle I'owdet is in dispensable. Price 25 cents per pack age. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorla. WASHINGTON LETTEB I Washington, Oct. 3, 189a. j "Richard is himself og.iin." Once more the door to Mr. Harrison's private office swings obligingly open to 1 the wily republican politician, and in I side the just hi wily dispenser of patronage smiles upon his visitors and ! makes the attempt of his life to thaw I into something like geniality. There will be no new boss of the republican ! machine, Mr. Harrison will steer the ' old and worm eaten craft into the most crushing collision of its existence, ' unless another change for the worse ! should take place in Mrs. Harrison's I condition, and that every body sin cerely hopes will not occur. Mr. Harrison realizes much more : fully than do some of his associates I and would be advisers that he is I managing the most desperate fight in- ! to which his party ever started j that the drift of intelligent public senti ment is against the very key-stone of the republican structure high pro tective tariff, and that the task he has undertaken is herculean in its pro portions, but he is fighting for political life, and he proposes making the best of a bad cause with the hope small and faint though it be, that he may win by a scratch. Mr. Harrison's ability as a political manager ha never been properly appreciated by democrats, outside of the state of Indiana, where so many of his fights have been made. Of course it is undignified, unusual and all that sort of thing, but all the same it is a fact that his office in the White House is now republican head quarters and from it will go the orders upon which he most relies lor suc cess, while the unimportant orders will be sent out from New York by Tom Caiter. Democrats will do well to keen a careful watch upon the republicans in their neighborhoods known to be in touch with Mr. Harri Fon. Checkmate them, and you defeat him. A handsome C'eveland and Stsven- I son banner now swings above the heads of passers by on Pennsylvania Avenue, a square below the Treasury Department. It was hung out by the District of Columbia democrats central committee, the headquarters of which are opposite. The pictures on the banner are really good ones, con sequently they have attracted more than the usual attention given to such things. Door keeper Turner, of the House ot Representatives, who when he was elected a member of the House in 1888 became widely known as "Tur per, the ice-man," is credited with be ing always well posted on the con dition of political feeling in New York city, especially among the rank and file of the various organizations which support Tammany Hall in city politics, therefore his opinion was eagerly sought when he ran over to Washington for a few hours rest. He said of the situation; "There is a good feeling in our ranks about New York The only cloud visible is the threat of the Grace faction to run an independ ent ticket, and we are not much wor ried over that. We are not solicit ing any but straight democratic Votes in New York. If any republicans want to vote our ticket they can do so, but they are rot being run after. Tammany is solid for Cleveland and he will be elected by the stalwart demoracy of the empire state, and his majority will be somewhere between 1 a.coo and ao.ooo" Just before he re turned to New York Mr. Turner said "Perhaps you may think I am a chaser of rainbows when I say that our chances are good for carrying New Hampshire, but all the siroe it is true. The republicans have got to do some lively work to get New Hamshire electoral votes, and I predict that they will be cast for Cleveland." ''Drowning men catch at straws." The republican party is, figuratively speaking, a drowning man, and it is frantically catching at every straw that comes along hoping thereby to keep afloat. Indeed, it is manufacturing straws to catch at. One of these manfactured is the Treasury state ment just made which shows an in crease in the Treasury balance of about, ?2,ooo,ooo, Fence the last statement, Sept. 1. This statement will be caught at by republican speak ers and editors and enlarged upon, as showing the prosperous condition of the Treasury. As a matter of fact it shows no such thing If all of the matured claims against the Treasury which weie properly payable in Sept ember had been paid during that month tho statement would have shown a decrease in the balance. It is well known that it has been the policy of the Treasury for months to defer all large payments as long as possible and that under that policy properly audited accounts are held back on the I flimsiest pretext, and that the amount of this class of government indebted ness has been steadily increasing un der this policy, which is maintained in order to prevent a deficit until after the Presidential election. 'Mrs. H. E. Monroe finished her course of illustrated Lectures at the Presbyterian Church, Cor. Arch and 18th. Sts. on April 25th. She has lectured 39 nights in this city, 59 in Pittsburg, 16 m New York City, 15 in Washington, D. C. besides being in most of the large towns of this state, during the last 16 months." Phila. dehihia Methetd'mf z.v tin. " J j la Momoriain Your committee appointed to pre pare suitable resolutions on the death of Sister Gordon respectfully submit the following: Again has the grim messenger death invaded our Grange Home and taken therefrom a faith ful, much loved and loving Sister, Sarah A. Gordon wife of Brother J. N. Gordcn, this being the ninth one this Grange has been called to follow to the silent city of the dead in its short history. Sister Gordon has been a sufferer for some time with heart trouble, yet alwayn cheerful and contented, her seat in the church and Grange never vacant, her hands never idle when work was to be done, if at all able to be present, her acts of charity never paraded. Truly she hath done what she could. In view of the above be it Jusoived 1 si. that thoiiiiii our loss is great, we want to realize that God is too wise to err, and too good to be un kind, therefore our loss must be her gain and do submissively bow to this dispensation ol Providence. Resolved 2nd. That we tender to Brother Gordon and son our sincere sympathy in this their sore bereave ment, bidding them seek comfort in the Religion their dear one so faith fully exemplified in her life. Jiesolced yd. That at our regular meeting October 1st. one half hour beset apart for suitable, memorial services. Jiesolved $th. That as a token of our esteem for the deceased, our charter and Hall be draped in mourn ing for sixty das. : Jietoleett $th. That these resolut ions be entered on our minutes and a copy proffered the Town papers and farmer's Friend for publication. W. J. Bidi.eman, Bloomsburg Matilda Mensch, V Grange, No. 322 Savina Hess, ) P. of II. Com. THE COLUMBIA CELEBEATION IN NEW YORK. TAKE THE EOYAL EEAUINO EAILKOAD. The 400th anniversary of the dis covery of America by Christopher coiumDus, win be celebrated in New York next week from October 10th to 14th, and the parades both by land and by sea and all the other events going to make up the Columbian Celebration will be on a scale both extensive and magnificent. Ihcre will be thousands of persons who will journey to the metropolis to witness this celebration, and the Reading Railroad will contribute to the success of the event by making a reduction in the regular excursion fare to New York. From Ostober Qth to 1 2th, inclusive, the Reading Railroad will sell excursion tickets to New York from all points on its system, good to return until and in eluding October 15 th. at a rate of one and one-third the single fare. This will make the round trip cost only a trifle more than the fare one way. The train arrangements via the Reading Route are so arranged as to be particularly convenient to all who visit New York. A Big Purchase Messrs. Browning, King & Co., are now probably the largest makers of clothing in the country. One order was recently placed by them, for piece goods to make up into garments for spring of 1893 amounting to $1,100, 000, and this it is said was not the en tire purchase but would be supple mented with several other ordeas. This firm is the inveterate foe of the odious "sweating system," everything being made in its own factory instead of being given out to dweclers in tene ment houses. Startling Figure, but Corroct Oui. After paying debts contracted, by the last Republican congress, amounting to 130,000,000, tho Democratic congreES. now about to adjourn, has saved several million dollars to the taxpayers of the country. Uad it not been for these Re publican debts it may be stated that the Democratic congress would have so ad ministered the government as to show a clear saving, over the cost of Repub lican rule, of between ftM.000,000 and M.OOO.OOO.-Raleigh State Chronicle. 7dia. Amanda Paisley For many yenrs an esteemed communicant ot Trinity Episcopal church, Nowburso, N. Y Jlwayi avj "Ttmnk You" to Hood's Bar- SiVV'-i'Sj1'". ears flow Kr.rma nii'l Mrrniulfi ikcm mi Vr lace, Imul and in i nor sight. it (ha buhhIso I her trleuUs Hood's Sarsaparilla case seiul to C. I. Hoou & Co'.. Lowell, J HOOD'8 PllLS - hand made, nd are per. (set lu euudiUeu, yrupetUja and avpearanca. gjM THEY'RE AIL TALKING OF r A Hcportor lnvr.llKicll rTn, I rocomiiit'nilii'ii.,.. ........ '""I - .,., IllllIt EVERY ' WORD TRUE More Words of rralse pokc t1u nn.i rxprnenccs wnicn imvc so f reni Z nppenred in tho variou fl.uivTI rxrltod tho crloalty of tho KJifnrT, AUmny A rgut. Determined to kn.. J 1 mo jrenuincncss or tho pulj,ue(j A ' mcnts, plnced the matter in th I...T1 one 01 ineir reporters, Mr. Male, the vctcraa foreman of VsnSlrtel Jlorton s Tobacco Fsetorv on n re1 A Is. .. i . 1; UnilMt A shown the following : u.iui ATom irn years auo i had a a . trouble with Rfaxie In the bladder im i T submit to an operation. But the old troit? ppred and I feared that anotl... IrouM tw neoesnarr. A friend , w. . "'' I try Pr. K.Unedy4 FaVrl", K,nW $ dmiL N.T., afur iista tha STcfi . 501 whlii. I found It waa rinln.mi T"0.". " u.'d Its uaa and am happy to , l ."S ourrd me. I take It whenever! f"d a llm "i of .aorta, and It always does nf. ..ioV 'M Biowy or urinary trouble of any kiui i .iW of Its curative powura, Mr. Male said cvorv word . . J and he would not bo without thBt able preparation, Mr. T. C. Brink, of Potigl.keepjle v wltnan fninniia v.nJ... . 1 . ' ' ( a rcrap ox Pupcr." i'lcklnJ Ufa TniKii.i.. jT a scran of pip up in the street 01, day. found It coo ta ned Dr. KH JicdysFavorlti Hcmcdy advertise meni, ana Mltpd tlculurly hit hid caw, nought tbsl mucucine and found ,tue ucip he h Mr. F. O. Drink. Deen nrav n for In answer as to the truth of the article iur. DnoK BHiu 110 was nnnji ineased biij a inju nviu 11-1 i ivuiu illUll'Uj - .i ... v.,..r , 1, j .ArA.i iA. . . , ..11 1- iprrnr into v minimum in inn s',.m.az-.... Uentlemen ! Keeewn many letter from n drmtlaf mrat prlnU-d in your paper, tfrlrutmr experience with lr. lTld Kenurdy'a Farortu K-medy, I uth to ay It was a plinun to arlre that recommendation lo Dr. Kft.u.-1)', kixl when I said I was cured of catarrh of ilm .. cti'rand chrouio kldniy disease, 1 wrote t.auW the truth. For yrnrs before I used tbla TahmblimHllclM, T suffered from urinary troubles, pun in mr Iw-k and a nervous, sleepless con.liunn. rrt before I had taken the fourth btth I wm cured, sound and well. I have replied to t hem l-ttm and am willing to do similar serT'ca M Ihow afflicted. But I umke this pii' le rtutr-mmt hopiuir it may reach the eye of the, nu(Terer, and Bare uie iwraonal rorrvapondence, furutuijrutt leuer wruaj is opto t mmy. Yours truly, M Thompson Street. F. C. Puns. Mr. Tcter Lawler. chief engineer of Mcs!-r. Crane & Co's Paper Mill, Daltoo, jiasa., said : " I don't look maeh tike a dead man. but 1 1 pretty over one. For fifteen yrnrn I suffered pains in wj siut. ray urinv- wna subject to Tirlunt sloppaices, and oftea linked w,th blood. I lost flaxh, appetite, and sir. n,-tn. 1 consulted seTeral pbyaiciana who raid 1 wa suffering from gravel and Tnflnm- aun ot tue si.ioeys r and that I could lle but a short time. Mr. -Jr field, learning of luy'iJft,? condition, raid" don t Mr. Fetor Ijiwler. bother with tho doctors, take lir. Parid Ke DMly's havorita Konietly and ba cured." 1st ouo sent for the same, and had taken only part of tue) bottle, when two pleura of stone pasMa niy bladder, and now am entirely weU. CostiTt. ne and rbeumetism trouble me no mors, sod I feel Hue new man. Thanks entirely U lit. Kennedy's Fa Tori te Remedy, Mr. E D. Parsons, bend book-keeper Wholesale Dry Goods Hou.ie of 8. J. A .... I .1 t. f AIUVIU Ik IV, Rochester, N. hod a similar ex perience. Heized one day with pals Is his back, next cams stoppage of urine, Medical advise was JT Ti 'JwiiiR "ought, and pro no $i ;it WQiS,unced It stone in tha WftklUAltflV Iblttdder. In writ- Avk'l4-iE--lng to friend he Mr. E. D. 1'arsons, says : I suffered beyond words to describe. None of tho means taken produced any benefit, until I began the use of Dr. Kennedy 'a Favorite Ken edy which dissolved the alone, the svmptntm befran to yield, the pain erased and from tbis time my recovery was complete. Can 1 alter this experience speak too highly cf thai wlwk saved uiy life t " ' I can speak in higher prnlsn than I hnve written," arc the words of every pr son I talked with, which proves the (.Teat popularity of this remedy, posscstiiing what no other medicine bus, tho power to save life. Jt can bo usd with safety by all ages. The worst cAsea of norvoua prostration, sleeplessness, headaches and ditresiiv troubles, yield to its curntlve power. Suit rheum, eczema. rhcumatUni, scrofula, or any iicAe HriMing from bxpuro blood, nro banished by this brain, nerve and blood tonic, Dr. David Kennedy's Favor ite lictucdy. $6.55 "?IIIT Beautiful book containing the latest vocal muslO tun sneet-musio pint, uanosome "'"i lueludliiK the rullowlus yew una- ArterwardR, to I've Worked Klifht Hours,' uuoy s i asr, Aaleen. 4(1 I Whistle and Walt, Comrades, so Love's Ooldea Vrveuu Uod DlesH Our Land, Old Organ Mower, Go Pretty Kiwe, M our Last Vuli7, Ouard tlu3 Klutf, 40 over the Moonlit Ken, in Kiu incirid, so nweel Katie cuuuei, Mary and John, 40 uut la Love, We give this book to Introduce to you K ROUT'S lUKINC. liivvpK.k And KltOVT'8 FLAV01I1NO EXTRACTS. rnmirix, awit fnr i'UBJTY ant STnUSGTH' Your irrocer will irlve vrua t'lreular coma'" Intr addll lonal Premium Llat with tull.partM- lur how to get them tree. ALUEUT KHOl'T, Chemist, Wlla- TO CONSUMPTIVES. The undersigned having been restored to health by abi-plu meuns, alter sufferim rej several yearn with a severe lur.if alleetloii, aua that dread Ulsoase (Vru-iimp'ioii, Is anxious to luiike known to bis fellow HUirerera the lueaM or cure. To thure who desire It, he will ilieef fully send (tree of ehuree) u coot of the pre"; crlptlon used, which they will tlud a sure cure tor Coiimunpiloii, AMhma. VahirrH, iw"'"' and all throat and lung Xahidir He hopes ' sutTerers win try hla remedy. as It Is Invaluai'HJ I hose de-lrlng the prescription, widen will "" them noiiiintr, aud ui.y prove a bleaolnif. please address, Kev. Ipwakd A. Wilson, Brooklyn. New VorH Hl-pt. I", i as yre I aSHL&a BO , $!'. o-1 y in.i r. , ,.v i mi. i-i I'r"i it .J"" "1 "' ''-''1' Kit l-ili'iii r.-4.,u.-l.' I.. , r """ afoMli J ,!" wwl- .hi i. ii.a.V.nii;, M"!. , VitHtX '.. KASIW . ,'l'KVl'l! V w SltrFK r-.ri.i!Uii mt. A-w'iff? - E-'-fsV 4 to,. IvtlUkHi U
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers