THE SCTT ANTON TRIBUNE-SATURDAY. DECEMBER 31'. .1808. ii THE BROTHERHOOD OF THEBLACK HAND ONE OF THE TEIUIOBS OF LIFE IN PORTO HICO. Masked Marauders Who Execute at Night Their Kudo Conceptions ot Justice One of tho Transition Features In tlu History of a Beau tiful Island. John H Timelier In Harper's Wctklj.. When you have obsere-d In tho New Yoik imperii that n town In l'oito Klco has been burned by bandits, and, later, have seen tho mall-coaches between San Juan and Ponce travelllnK for a large nait of their Jc Jrney under an armed Kunrd, you will no doubt form your Idea of tho chutactor of the coun try accordingly, and Btialghtway wish to protest ugalnst tho removal of tiuop from such a lawless and dlHorganlzcd Loinnumlty. When you also hear tum ors of a dreaded secret brotherhood, with the name and Inslcula of the "Black Hand," holding under a reign ot terror the mountain towns of Ad- Juntas and 1'tuado, you will tie-ihuus consider the expediency of returning to Its fotmer owner teirltory o uniest f ill and unpaclfled. This, It will bo undei stood, Is your conception of the situation us a result of your bioad obsetvatlon fiom tho Hotel Inglaterra In San Juun and the I'lnzu Cafe In I'oncu. Your expetlence with the shopkeepeis, moreover, may tend to couflrin your com lotion that all Horlnciueim nit lineal descendants of tho buccnneeis. This deduction, lioeer, will bo mod ified when ou comp to know the I'uei-torlqueno-s of the mountains. They aie not, you will find, bandits by piofesslon and law-broakeis by choice, but a do cile and gentle folk, whose kindly ways mako your ponderous nim "Volt" seem as useful and apptopii.ito for tiuvcl in their count! y as would be a dress waist-coat or a silk hat. The friendly "bueno' dla," from the door of every cocoa-thatched hut, Is not merely h gieeting, but n frank expienslon of good-will The hosp!lnllt of the na tive of the mountains is as exuberant as the foliage that suiiounds bis door. The louily offeilug of fiagiaut coffee and aguacates or bananas Is us spon taneous as it Is acceptable. Outside of Ponce or San Juan, whole, bj-tho-way, the shopkeepers nre l.ugelv Spanish bs blith or sjmpathy. one finds the until e? not onlv hone-t and law -abiding but peaciablo to a degree that Is tun prising, when one considers the fleiy sugar cane rum which is their daily bevel age A CONTUAST. A chain e stianger is .somewhat puz zled having this knowledge of the kindly natuie of tho Moilnquen. to i-ee In the town of Adjuiua and tlie sui rounding countiy a 111010 sinister nplr it eIdenced by the smoking ruins of plantation-houses and acres of coffoo bushe.s nit i lose to the ground, hi cat tle humstrung and loft to die by the wav-slde and lamllies Hot-lug with tlu-lr household goods to places ot safety t)n an occasional door 01 wtoii fiont aiipeais a single black pilnt of a human hand If tho native lie ques tioned, he lesponds with a Hldelong glance and ringer on his lip ' El Alano negro." he whlspeis. A photograph nl the sjilni .eytnlml Is obtained only ai'ti- much diplomat ic negoliations with the ownei of the house, w ho Is not eager to appear In the light one beat Ins 'vliloncr against the- shadowy Presense. oiio learns that the dieaded token on the door Is the piooureor of a maskd band coming by night to loavo a record of Its isit with torch and mac hole Ho heats of a woman awl child hacked with knies anil loft for dead on the J,aios ltoad; of a plantation owiur aged and :nflrm. beaten ond tort ired. his ears cut off, and finally. Hi the piopenco of his sun, hanged fiom a rafter In the house. He seo-j tinees of plilnge and arson. All the. signs of ioIence, though dlrplilthur to the solitary traveller, need not change his estimate ot the people formed In his flist ride over the moun tains. These ci lines will later assume? their proper place in the poispective of history. Some ot thorn aio u pint of the outlawry that must needs at tend the dote of the war. Tn most rass, however, what ho sees is meto 1 a rudo unbalancing of accounts. The Items on one side have boon m cumulatlng for some four centuties, and it Is not -surpilslng that the lower class of rueitorlquenos should wish to make a few additional entries befoie the United States closes the ledger per manently, A DIFFICULT TASK. It has been the business of tho Sixth Massachusetts legiment to ruppicsa this persecution of the Spanish resi dents, und the task has been by no means an easy one. By the terms of the protocol enly such territory could be occupied by the Americans as was de fucto In their possession at the tlino hostilities ceased. The practical result of the agreement was that a hazy boundary lino was drawn between tho Ameilcan and Spanish outposts. This unceilulnty left u HtUp ot country some eight miles broad entirely without piotectlon It i3 in this district that most of tho out rages huvo occurred. Alhoug'i these hao been committed to a largo extent by Iriebpons'ble negroes and the lower class of natives, there has been some n'ldence of an oigmdzed effort to drlvo the Spanish sympathizers from the Isl and. The secret society called for its picturesque method of warning Its vie-tlms-tho "niaek Hand." is a uoiltical organization known to have existed In the Island befoie the beginning of tho Amerenn war with Sp-iin it had Its origin, as did the Mafia and Cu- DUST THE.REST- , WASHING POWDER moira, of Sicily and Naples, in the necessity for tho existence ot Individ ual action against tho evils of oppres sive foreign government. It Is known that members of the prevailing polit ical party belong to It, but it Is of course difficult to nscortnln whether It was nctlvely Identified with cither side of the question of autonomy which came beforo the people nt their last election. It Is certain,' however, that Its energies nre nt present devoted to the business of making the Island an unprofitable place for tho residence of plantation owners and small mer chants who have been associated with Spanish inliiile In tho past. Tho plan tations and stores that have been at tacked In and about lUnatlo have nil belonged to Spaniards, but one 1'uer torlqueno having so far requested pro tection. Tn the district ntound Isa bella and Qucbradlllas theio have been attacks made on both nntlvo and Span iard, but It Is supposed that these arc tiot attributable to tho"HHck Hand being beyond tho mountainous legion which appears to constitute Its juils dlctlon. Wi:i,li AUAPTHP. Tho countiy between Adjuutas and 1'tuado Is admirably adapted to tho purposes of brigand. ige. Beyond Ad juntas tho loads mo little more than mountain trails, and It Is said that a man can stuit on foot from the latter town and nirhc ot I'tiudo befoie a well-mounted llder can make the same distance. This fact, together with the oxl"tetice eoiywhoro of dense tiopical foliage reaching to the summits of the mountains, i outlets pursuit of the out laws linpiactlcablc- for American troops. Some twenty-seven details, each con sisting of from two to ten men, have been sent out from Utu.ido to gunid plantations ;ind make an ests. Only two of these hove had filing to do, in eacli of which cases the bandits were in the distance and offered no lertst nnco. Those details uie sent out when requests aio made of Colonel nice for piotectlon and hotses ale lurnished to enable the men to loaih the planta tions threatened. The conditions pre vailing have made it necessury to in stitute a system of 'sweating," by which suspected ineinlwis of the band nie onllned fvpaialely and examined as to their connection with the organ ization I'p to the "Oth of September, thlit-thiee suspects have been con fined In tho cauol In t'luado, and a laige number of native pilsoners have been held for tilnl befoie the alcalde ot the town since; so far as possible theio has boon no Inteifeionco with the cill laws of the community. The Ameilcan olllcers hae found thi"-e pie llmlnaiy examinations befoie the mu nicipal judicial los to bo significantly lenient. It Is thought ptolmble that tho influence- of the 'Black Hand' 'has lilt eiod into tlie chll administration and couits of justice of tlie Hand, so that in many cases the alcalde, and even his common council, aio members of the soclotj. BOYCOTT. In addition to the moic violent meth ods of harassing the Spanish lesldents, a piocess of Isolation or boycott Is used agalnt't them, by which they aie pie vented from procuring a sufficient nuni bei of Inboieis to woik their planta tions As tho piesont month Is the sea son for picking i offee, tlie deaith of plantatlon-workeis Is soeiely felt. How effectively a native boycott is may bo understood tiom the fact that a steam laundiy elected by the Btltish consul In Areclbo Is now a lusting pile of neglected machinery as a result of thin foim of organized opposition on the part of the natives. In some cases tho poisecution takesthe form of black mail, demanded by letteis written under the seul of the "Black Hand." When the town of I'tiudo was first occupied bv our troops the older was Issued, as usual, that alt arms should bo taken from tho citizens of tho town and fiom tho Inhabitants of tin- sur loundlng country wherever weapons wore encountoted. It was found neces sary to modlly this older, nf tho Span l"li resident, would be without the means of defending their lives and propoi ty from the attacks of the out laws, momentarily expected. Arms vvc-ie therefore allowed In the posses sion of those citizens whom the Ameil can oillceis had reason to bellevo were in need of protection. To those was nh given the secuilty which tho pres ence of Ameilcan soldieis always in sines, Till: YANKKH WAY. The ability of a handful of Ameil cans to caie for two bundled or more outlaws has been fiequently demon strated. Notably so In the case of Pri vate IWwauls, of the Flist Kentucky leglmeut. He was assigned to the duty of guarding a plantation house alone, and pioved himself amply capable of doing so. A patty or some hundred aimed men upmoaehed the houpe and was met in the toad by tlie American, w ho, after an unnoticed challenge, set tled the matter quietly and expedit iously, and without unnecessaiy waste of time- or ammunition. When the "Black Hand" representatives with drew, they loft three of their number on the giound pierced with bullets, and one, with n bayonet-thrust In tho neck received In a hand-to-hand encounter. Theie was no need thereafter for guards at that lmitli-ulai- plantation. It Is to be hoped thut Filiate Kdwoids letelved his chevions. Since the withdrawal of the Spanish troops fiom the island, and tho as sumption by the American foices of tho entire lesponslblllty of maintain ing older. It is teasonablv to bo ex pected that fuither acts of violence on the pait of the "Black Hand" will not bo attempted Considering tho fact that tho country presents a combina tion of geographical and moral circum stances highly favorable to lawless pur suits, there has been, on the whole, a u-inaikahle fieedom fiom those con ditions which aie naturally to be ex pected at tho close of a war. Tho "Black Hand." with a spirit behind It ns bitter as uny that existed in the South at tho close of the war, has been guilty of no such lecord ns had the Ku-Klux in Louisiana and Georgia. Sunday School Lesson for January 1. letrodmictfloe to" Jolhie's BY J. E. GILBERT, D. D LL. D., Secretary of American Society of Religious Education. INTUODUCTIOX. The title given to this lesson by the International com mittee, "Christ, the True Light," Is em carded, as being Imptoper. It rovers only tho ninth verse nnd Is Inndequato to express the thought ot the ontlro passage. These fouiteen verses consti tute the Introduction to tho fourth gos pel, nnd they have been so eonsldeied bv all scholars. Matthew, Mark and Luko presented brief outlines of tho life ot Christ, giving most prominence to the cvcntit of Ills Onlllecan minis tty, nnd leaving their readers to infer from the nnrrntlves what their purpo ses weie. l!ut John, who wrote near tho close of tho first century, began with a stntement ot what was thm be lieved In tho church concerning tho nature of Christ, and he selected his materials, chlotly fiom the words of tho Judeaii ministry, to conllrm and II lustuito that view, Tho Intioductlon should therefoio be t Hulled In Its e-n-tliety. that the interdependence of tlii parts may bo soon, and tlie foi eo ot the whole may bo felt. 1HVIN13. The first thought of Chi 1st here presented (A'eises 1 to ."!) Is liii essential Deity, tho slatting point and dominating tiuth of tho book. Ho Is called tho Wmil iGrcek, Logosv, a teiin used in the literature of that tint j to denote the absolute Reason, quite the same as wisdom found In ancient writ ings (Prov. ix. 1). John alllrms the ex istence' of the Logos fiom tlie beginning of time i ("Jen i. 1), declines his piesonoo with (Jed and asserts that he was God These statements ate Intelligible only In tho light of the doctrine of the Tiin lty (1 John v. T), the tlnee pel sons ot tho Godhead being each divine and all associated In unity. To give a dealer vb'W ot the Logos, one pet "on ot tlie Deity, John declnios that Ho was the solo maker of all things (Ps. xwlll. fi). This e ol I espuuds with tile ni-i nuilt of n cation by Moses (Gen. I. !i), where the wold of God Is employed, and with the asset tluns made bv Paul (Col. i. 111). Hl'MA.V. clult, just as shown, was a Divine poison, associated with other Divine poisons, existing befoie the ma teilal untveisi, calling all things into existence. John next ilcsltos his lead ers to know tlie l elation of Chi 1st to humanity (s. 4 nnd ,1). "In Him was llf--," that is, the souico of life wax in Him, so that every foim of lite on the globe piocoedcd fiom Him as a life-giving foice (John v. :;!). The llic of man was doiivod Horn Chi 1st at the be ginning (Oen. il. T), and Is to lie con tinued tlnouph Him (I John v. II). Her- is a solution ot the chief piob lem ol science, the origin and develop ment of life-. Moicover, John contin ue, this lito in Chi 1st furnishes to men that illumination which enables them to disci in the realities and Slg nllic.iiK .- of things. What the sun is to tho inatoiinl woild, Jesiis, tho Logos, tho Life, is to tlie moral woild. And yot o gtort was the effulgence pio ceedlng from 'Him, that while It pene trated the (l.ukiu-ss of Die pie-Chils-turn ages II was not coinpivhondod by tho benighted people (John ill. I'O W'rrXESSL'D. The Inability oi men, through their depravity, to eonipiohond the light of Life omlnatlng from thy Logos, tendered neiossaiy some method Tho symptoms of loleiu o on the part of the members ot this sec let society aie not to be taken as an indication of the Pueitoilqueno's unfitness for a place In the Ameilcan body politic. The better class apineiiates the truth of the observation made? by a local paper, that "outrage Is a two-edged swoid which may deprive us of our light to liberty. He Is an enemy ot Puei to Rico vv ho today attempts to dis turb the civilizing actions of the Amer ican people, appealing to violence and to Illegalities', when all the doois are open to us to obtain our aspirations for libeity and justice." A STRIKING CONTRAST. Country's Situation Today as Com pared With That of 1708. Fiom the St. Louis (Jlobe-Deinociat A compaiison of the teiritorlnl area and the national Influence of the I'nlted Stntcs with those of 179S will show the vast inatetial and moral advance with this eou.it has made in 100 yeuis In the historical books 179S does not 11 Kin i with any prominence, but In leallty It Is an lmpoitant landmark In the country's1 expansion. It was just u. bundled yeuis ago that the piovisious of til tieaty of peace with Hngland in 178.1 were fully and finnlly carried out. For fifteen years after that date tho United States, In its ondeavois to J secure the boundniies guaranteed in that ng! cement, was ohstiucted by two nations. Kngland and Spain. The Hiit Ish held possession of posts at Oswego, Niagara. Dotiolt and other places In United States teirltory on the northern frontier, until Jay's tieaty, which, among other things, provided for their evacuation, went Into operation In 1798, and even then the woik of abandon ment was carried on with a slowness which was exceedingly exasperating to the people of the United States. With Spain, however, tho I'nlted States had much more trouble In so cuilng Its tieaty lights under the agreement ot 1783 than It had with England. Then, as now, Spuln was slow In grasping the justice of any demand by any other nation, nnd In that par ticular crisis the situation for this country was rendered doubly embar rawdng by the fact that Spain was still one of the great powers of the earth, while the United States was only an Insignificant spot on the map and had no lights which any of tho great nations felt bound to respect. Spain contended that the Floilda legion which she gained fiom Knglund dining the wor of the American I evolution, and which extended west to thu Miss issippi, went ns far north ns the mouth of the Yazoo, ubout the parallel of 32 degree noith latitude, which would make the svnitheily line of the United States on tho Mississippi nd at that point. Both England and the United States. on the other bund, Insisted that this country's southern boundary went down to latitude 31 dogiees. At lust the protests and thijats of the United States and SpuluVi dangers in the Napoleonic wars then under way com pelled the latter to accede to tho Amer ican demands. Spain did this In the teatv of San Lorenzo tn 179i, which JOHN I. a-14. of introduction and explanation. For that purpose a man named John (John, tho liaptlsl), was sent from God v. C), This statement accords with history (Mutt ill. 1) and with prophecy (Mai. 111. 1). The Paptlsts had no other er randhe came only to be a witness (v. 7) to that light, his ono desire being to lead men to bellevo In that I lght (John 1. 38). It Is true that his zeal was so gieat. his life so holy, and Ms popularity so general, that many of Kls coutempoi alius thought the Baptist pleached concerning himself, and thu ruleis ut Jeiiif'-ilem (v. 19) sent a dele gation to Inqiihe whether that wns thu case, but he gave them a decided nega tive (Vs. l!l to 2a). So hoi is tho apostbv calls attention to tho fait and assorts that John was not the Light ubout which he pleached, but meiely a wit ness (v. S). DHSCUIBICD. To distinguish the light ot Life that was In tho Logos fiom the pet reived light that was In the 1'nptlst, tho apostle clerciibes the fotmer by three pattlculuis (v. '.i). First. It was a true light, not in tho sense we use that woid, as opposed to false, but oiiglnal, uudeiived and un failing (so the Gieek signifies), shin ing on forever1 by its own power, though all other luminaries polish. Sec ond, It ceiiiios into tlie vv oi Id It did not oiigtuntc hoie, but In another spheio and uiteied this fiom without (Such is the meaning ot the clause which modifies Light and not man, as many suposo). Third, It llgliteth ivory man, In eveiy age ami land, of ovoty dispensation. Tho light of the Logos sheds His benign rays over the entire l.ue. By these throe Items Its doilvn tlou. Its entrance Into this world, lis extended lnllllence we see that John has tin exalted conception of tho Per son of whom he vviote Moieovor. hi gh es In this voire teachings that meet the philosophy of all lellgluu". UUIKCTHP. Theie was another iousi,n for John's miaMiy uf witness to tlie Dlvlne-hunum Poison, who had llfo In lilmsell, whoso life was Die lllit of men, coming fiom nnotl-i woild to this to enlighten all men. This Per son, the Logos, had boon In the Woild all thiough its history, engaged In his benevolent mission, but unknown by the masses of men (v. 10) The light which had been leceiveil by them had been misunderstood and misapplied (Bom. I l'i-2i). insulting In all tho ab ominations of heathendom. And when, for the puipoo of making a fuller ell-,-closme of ilimsoll, Ho i-ntPicd Into a covenant with one family of tho rnco (Gen. Nil. 1-1), calling them His own people and visiting them in peculiar intimacy (v. 11) Ho wns i ejected again and again I Luke lx 141. Iloie we have pteionted the deplorable ooi- 1 dltlon of tho human family th- larger I pai t ignorant of that h-nlgn llgliti I which lights up the pathway, tho other j poitloli opposing the iliiluenee and I tinning avMiv Into darkness and death j (Piov. II. 111). HI-:Ci:iVi:i). The Ignorance and le joi lion just month nod wore not uu- vernal. Some of thi gloat hndv of lui- I inanity, outside the covenant, though living In deep darkness Know Him who J is tin- light of the woild, and many of was iiitiilod by the Senate in 1790. but 17'ij! auived befoie the Spanish flag wont down in Natchez, the most Im pel tnnt town In the toiiitoiy in dis pute, and the stais and stilpes went up Then, fifteen yeais after the tieaty of independence, and just a hundred yeiiistigo, the title of the United States to all its teiritoiy between the Atlan tic and the Mississippi and from the gloat lakes to tho Florida line was definitely conllimed. Ainci lea's situation In IM'S, materially and morally, makes a stilktug e outlast with that of 17PS On the day when Gayoso's foices low ei eel their lhig In Natchez and sailed down to New Or leans, the poison who stepped below the southoily line of Ge-cigla, Into tin low or end ot what Is now the sinte of Mississippi, or who ciossed the llss Isslppi river, would be In n foreign land. We weie sut rounded on tin oe sides by poweiful nations. England wn' notth of iif. as now, and Spain was south and West ol us as she hold Floilda. which compilsed the piosent state- of that name and a stiln westward along tin southerly line of what are now the studs of Alabama and Mississippi to the MlHslsslppl liver, und she had all w H&EiTKzal ...r !n.rnic.i Tr, ehnir nVivcii-al that they are a source of continual annoyance to everybody with whom they I come in contact. They feci that it is their unhappy lot to shun and bekuiyu-d , I by all mankind Do von know that competent authorities say tlut from eighty ti I ninety per cent, of our cntue population winsome degree tainted b) tbiffJ . .. .. in lit l.n.rl tV. fl .tlfTuf th-lC ! fUU !4lb U MUIU IU UUHVt HV .w. v j .. DR. AG NEWS CATARRHAL POWDER. It I on auual, absolute, unlading cure. All fonn$ of catarrh, hay fever co!j J i in the head vield quickly. It nivrt almost instantaneous relief it effects un t. must iiitMinflfiiv mre. From nil over the continent have come grateful, enthusi astic letters fiomsuflererswho had despaired of ever being better, but who mere' I restored to complete UeaUh by me couple of examples ; I. IJrown i C.A R. veteran cf 6 njeldeM I came acrott Dr. Aenew that dread maliii) oalirrh. To da It fuecdy cure In iny ce." hivtA, l'.dmUon. of Koscnealb, Om.i "I have luffeie from catarrh for yir-l)r. Anew' Catarrhal Podr Is the only remedy which ever gave m relief. It curoi ruo tntircl)." At ill druggists. Dr. Agnew s Cure for the Heart relieves heart disease In 30 minutes. Dr. Am,'.?!!,, iiiiiir,c. fnr an doses are the best. Dr Acnew's Ointment te- hevei in a d vv Lczenm. tetter & all skin RSi0 Tor Sale by .Matthews llros. nnil Gospel, the chosen people, to whom He catno In a special manner, received Him. As many as locclved Him, whether of tho stock of Abraham or of the gen et at family of man obtained through Him power, (or rather privilege) to "becotno the ftons of God," Thus was built up a household upon the one pilmiplo of faith, (v. 12) the members divided under vai loua names, (John x:16) yet recognizing a common Father. They nil iccelved a now birth, (v.lS) the bltth not of tho flesh, but of the Spirit (John 111; 5). This ptesentatlon of the doctiiue of regeneration Is unique. Standing in uch close l elation with the exercise of faith In a name It Is plainly evangelical, and yet, pre ceding all reference to the crucifixion and even the advent of Christ, It Is" the plain statement of tho doctilne as held under the old dispensation. The sons of God In any age are legeneinte. (Horn. HI. ?,v.) lNCAlcN'ATH. That a gieater num ber of men might know this wonderful Pcriun, nnd believe In Him and be come Sons of God, that He might also mote fully display His qualities, He must take on new form. Thus far He had boon In the works of nature In the light of life, and In tho snliltual approaches to men. Finnlly He became a man, (v: 14) To insure Identity of person John says thut tho Woid, the Logos, the same about which he had been wilting, wns made Me!h; and to convince all that this statement wna vvoithy of acceptance ho declaies that In fleshly form tho Logos dwelt among men who beheld Ills glory as Divine glory, and that, withal, He was full of grace and tiuth. Col. I- 111) He speaks as an eye-witness of nil accomplished and commonly accepted fact. (1 John I'll Tills lefeience to the incarnation Is much moic delicate than that of th- other evangelists who mention Mary, (Matt 1: 20) the virgin mother. Hut John passes over all Intel niodlary mutteis and iccoids only the sublime tiuth that the- Divine wasclothed with human un til! e, and became visible, yet lost none of Its gloiy. (lsi M:G.) St'MMAHY. Such is the duotiinnl view, the ('(Histological conception, with which the apostle, tho beloved discipline, (John xlll. 2;!) Intioducos the gospel that be-in h his name. Tlie pro giess of his thoucht Is Instructive Uo begun declining that tho Logos exist ed prior to natuie, and that He was the author of nature. Ho next aillrni eel that theie was llfo in Him, the souico or all living things. He then declined that this llfo was tho illum inating principle among all men, that It had come to all men although many In daikuess did not eompiehend it, nnd some- who eii'ght to have known It re jected II, , hlle lithe-IP lecolving it weio lenewed In tholi natuies and be came sons of God. He Unally de clined that a mint was sent In advance to pie-pnie tho way, and that alter waid the Logos (lime In the foim of innn, that He was seen and Known by many who testified of his excel lence. This is the Jesus of the fourth gospol. As we shall ttudy this gospel together for six mouths lPt us remem ber what this Inspiiod man had said at the beginning, and see whether lie conti.ullc h or conllnns his woids. the legion west of the ilvei. Tho popu lation of the country was about 5,000, UOtl. The- Louisiana cession and all tho other annexations- weie still in the dis tance'. Nobody could have foiesoen at that time that the nanow stilp of pop ulated in en east of tho Alleghenles, with the scaicely less dlmutlvo stiitch of wildi-rnoHs between those mountains nnd tin Mississippi, would ever loach the Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific-. Much less could anybody have foie soen then that this countiy would an nex all of Russian Ameiicn, absoib all of the islands of value in the Gulf of Mexico, and tuqulic possessions scat teied thiough tlie Pacific extending almost to the continent of Asia. The p.iowth of Amet lea fiom an area of SJ7.000 square miles and a population of .1,000,000 in 17IIS to an inea of 3,800,000 squaii- miles and a population of S5 -000,000 In 1S9S, attended as It has been by a il.se fiom a position in which its enmity had no menace for even the feeblest of fmelgn states to ono in whh h Its file-ndshlp Is sought by the most powerful nations of the earth, lepresents a physical and moral ad vancement without parallel nlTprInr, Is nrldrc! the nainful fcnarlrdpe.f llfntl Iflll IKI I use oi mecjurmai powuer. nie Marshall St , Philadelphia, eays "By a mre Cunhal I'uder Ju great sutlerer feora tjlvei meuiuounded rleoureio Mate, for suiter- diseases. Cures piles In a to 5 nicbts. 3C 21 W, T, Chirk, Tho Kind You Huvo Alwnys In uso for over 30 j-uurs, (z&ZV&&&tf All Counterfeits, Imitations and SuhstHules nre hut 13x-lK-rlmcnts that triilo with and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Cnstorln Is n Buhstituto for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drop?' and Soothing Syrups. It Is Harmless and Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ngo is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and nllnys Foverlshness. It cures Dinrrluuti and 'Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy nnd natural hlccp. Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIAfALWAYS Boars tho OccaXi The KM You Have Always Bought1 v In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CCNTAUft COMPANY, TT FREE ONE TRIAL BOTTLE THIS OFJWK ALMOST SUlil'ASSES HELIHF. fin Eternal Tonic Applied fo the Skin Seaii fifies If as by Magic. A WOMAN WAS Thmi.nnis li,i, ti ii'il fiuiii time- Im-1 int-mutlui in iIImowi -nine i llli-.u imix Him-ilv fen urlnkles nnil ullie-r imi'i-li-ctloim m the rompl! lmi. hut noiu- h'nl ye-t suece-oileil tint II the .Mlh-.. f IJe-ll. tilt now faniDils eeimplcl'iii Spe-e-lnliHts, of 7S fifth Ae-mu- New Yenk l'lt. nfle-ie-il the publle tlu-lr vumli ilnl e'umplt-xloii Temle-. Tin reiiun o m.in fullt-il to lll.lkt tills ills-ene'l I'l-tnre- Is 1. In 1)1--r.iuse- thi-y Ii.im- not followed tin- Hunt priui-lpli'. I J.i 1ms 1'ti unit., f.otloni, cto , iieMT lme n Uuile e-ffeet upon tho xklii, lit lice Ihi fulluie-H Tin- MISSES HKI.lS f'O.MI'I,i:XI(J.V TONIC has a most t-vhlliir.itln1; eile-e-t uron the- e utli-lf, al-sothliiK anil e-aii,ltiR olf all Imiimltkx whlih the- hlooil b Its natiiial nitliiii Is (-oiiMiantl foteliar tei tlu hiiifacei of tin nlt!n It Is in tho sl.ln what :i ltullzliiK tonli- Is to the- lilooil ami nurvcH, a klml ol ne-w llli- that imnnillute ly exhllni.itrx and stu-iiKtlu as wluie-e'r applle-d Tth tonli' e-lle-i t is ft It almost Im mcell.itol. anil It spre-dlh haiilaht-s, fur-e-ver fiom tilt- Hkln fle-e-kle.s, plmpl'-s. hluckheads, moth p.iii-lu-M, ilnklt-s. IImt t-pnti, rouRluiPfes, iilllniHh e-iuptluiih, untl ellscoloratloim of anv kind. In order that all mnj In lienmlted bv theliKreat Dlcove-rj, the Misses u(. wm during the- pie-sent month. Kle to all call- flBWBEaf"' ? THE MISSES BELL, 78 Fifth Ave., New York City. The Misses Bell's Complexion Tome, Complexion Soap. ikm Food and Uepilo aie for sale in this city by MARTHA R. SCHIHPFF, 317 Lackawanna Avenue GOOD NEWS FOR TOURISTS THE CELEBRATED Sunset Limited Train . . . Will ope-rute botuten New Orleans, 1-08 Anjteles and Sun Fiane-lseo, Oil., eJui liitj the peutiun of 1S9S-1SQ9 TluoURli wltliout I'lmtiKP f'oi" thu Cresi ent City to the Oolden Gate rS hours to I.os AiikpIoh, 75 hours to Hau I-'i-nnrlKco. Fine Southern louto for Winter travel. Wiltu for tuutlciilars. E. HAWLEY, A. O. T. M., L. H. NUTTING, E. P. A., 34V Uroailway or i Uuttery I'lucc, HCW YORK, N. V. K. J. SMITH, AQT., A. M. LONOAOHE, T. V. A., 109 South Third btrect, PHILADELPHIA, I'A. PCklthntcr't KnjUih Dluntail Kraal. ENNYR0YAL PILLS Urigliii nd Oul ue nular, htt. UriTi rvllkbU. labics ik UruuUl tor Chtchttttft Khq!u Df t menu! Brand la lt-rd knd UyU builla dipi itklM with blue rlbboo lake oothrr titivtt danttroui lulitilu. la ttanvi for LtrtlouUri, tMlloncItU aa ltrlUr for T.wUt-inlitUr, ,, rUru r. onmns iuiuvii ifiiiiuniniii urnm rprt rhliilinari..-iUi..iiu m.Jt.. ti I fM I FV-J Iv f$ fi14 b U UceI DrujjllU. I'lULAlU.. T2. Bought, mid -which hns heen hns homo tho signature of . and hns hocn innrto under Ills per soutil Hupcrvlsion hltiejo its iiil'anuy. Allow 110 ono to decclvo you in this. Signature of MURRAY THCCT NEW YORK CITV. FREE of jr THE x m THE INVENTOR. 7iBiSKSai fyyt (is nt their linrlois one timl linttlo their l'oniili'lon Tonle alsoloei-ij fij and In onli i ili.it tl o- who e.-nnotj or who he- iii.i fiom New loik mi bt'iKlltid. the- will .send one botl am nd'liesT all e h.irires nrenald ol iteipt ol 'Si ' t ins (stamps in silver (iiM'l'cwt ol li.it liilu: and tit in rl.ik' nrlio of this woiidtifid tonle is SI etO ni bottle ami this libi l.il offer sh.juid b? einbiart-il b all Tlie- Missis ft-II lue jiiht published their N'lIU liUOK. "Sl.t'HliTS Ol' HlIAf'Ty." This ilnahlt woik Is freo tQ all de-slllm? It Tin- bonk tre-ats th.llis IImK of tlie impoitiuie of a f,nod rom plt'Nlon. tells how a worn. in m.i uo(inr beaut and keep It. tlpieial eh.ipie;rs on tlie ealt- of the hall" how to hu' luxuil ant isiowili. haimU-sM metluids of making the hill- pitstiet Us ii.it Ulal Ina'.HJ anil e-olor, i-vi n to nilxaneeil urfo Alio In. htruelliitis now in banish sup. ifhious Ink fiom tin- f ie ntfk ami arms without in Jen v to the el. In 'i his book will bu mailed It, ,lll lliillll ss nil ietUt si Klti:i.' Trial Uottlts of Wonderful Tom plexioli Touit lien at patlois, ur .' , cen'1 uost of piiikliii; and m.illnci to thoso at a illumine t'oircspoudeneo eordlally hohcltcd. Ail. d ess ASKFOlTHSKLET.ON! G1VC5THL BTTLLGITt,hneV(5RIP ANPl5AB5QIiJTELY5AFE FOR SALE QY THE SORANTOM STATION. i-ieiH llnv !ant.ulHH ur. ren lii -XH bourn .lilioiit lU'iiaveiilenrcutliciitiio, hi, MMrti . oimlUii. -i. mat ucin uno Iiile-clluns lull. WIS.0)ff sW jftWP" w MJ ffl)