The Middleburgh post. (Middleburgh, Snyder Co., Pa.) 1883-1916, August 03, 1893, Image 3

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    L first manufacturm enterprise) In
erica fiast factor Jamestown.
t
fnrr" cured Hold Irn
ns -
fl, owner of A hair lenscsii as ''""''7.
rtfud a showman offer of I5WJ for
ft
L,, thrt eured atone b? llsteVa Unl-
f,,..-h Hrrup. eents at driwtf'.s's.
KNOWLEDGE
Itrlim comfort and Improvement nnd
tend to personal enjoyment hen
rightly used. Tho many, who livo bet
ter than others nnd enjoy iifo moro, with
less expenditure, by raoro roniptljr
'adapting tho world'n best products to
the. needs of physical bein, wMl nttest
,thn valuo to health of tlio ptAo liquid
.laxative principles embraced in tho
I remedy, Fyrup of Fijra.
Its exerllencc h duo to It preenting
in tho form most ncceptablo nnl plena
i ant to tho fciste, the rtf reshlrjr nnd truly
I beneficiul properties of n nrlect lax
I stive : effectually cleansing tho system,
dist UinR cold, heailaehes and fevers
nnd permanently curing constipation.
It has civen satisfaction to million and
met with tho approval of tho medical
profession, because it act on tho Kid
nevs, Liver and Ilowels without weak
ening them and it U perfectly free from
every objeetionnblo substunee.
Hyrup f Fip i for sale by all drug
pNt'tin WHs and bottles, but it is man
ufactured by the California Fig yrup
Co. only, hose name in printed on every
packape, also the name, Syrup of Fig,
and being well informed, you will nut
accept auy substitute if ottered.
P.N I' 31
THE KIND
rj THAT CURES
MRS. REV, A. J. DAY,
Ko. Eutoii, N. T.
SCROFULOUS ECZEMA
FOR 20 YEARS I n
PAriu.4 C" , ij
PlV t.. l u.Vtl'MI'TloV, hitD
BN IA Akl'.N. My if li.-allh Baumiiual:y gtul
n
PJi nn,- i:i7.i;M A (.ii titarly til prl (. lh' n4
i atonr liiii k ik i ui iitan.icKni mm ii iu rr
Irniinri1 f.fr IftO THP ill Intuit n-tf(l
iCuilon ina Itrhlns buKt uiiuj.
DANA'S S
sa:
RSAPA1ULLA ii
K Ult.l till I
a-:M
rwitN ,uil Imir rfMit, l.i. I ItAN A & hVIChA.'A-"
MIUl.l.A nn.v.-l w( iflttitl In
tt.l lit M-liiMt g n.2
(1 h( Hn I.AQ
Ml u il. ,.1
r of 1.( 7. MA hi.(
VP'ionof iVrrrdi! !!, fri.U that my wifr rrt.
prcvnitM lHu la lt iorr tiim b!rM.nLlk3
kinJ JFtwirt-n(r upon ip utr. ?
1 Ukrn rn U-ttit Rtvw.f nnd fled It bm
M4plrti1ia AltrrntUc. U
II llMmi-thir. HEY. A. 2. DAY. f.-.t
a
.a
D Only or.e Sitttpirllla (old on tho " NO?
gBENEFIT-NO PAY " p'an. Onlf on( could D
, slintf tht (!!?, end that ono Ii 0ANA'S.j
B REME24EI.Il THIS. i
M Dona Sartoparllla Co., Billml. Maine. Q
rutPhifloo mil l." '
110 Road Cart
Buiflv llarnai
..eis liar f-(5"
.ttJT jit org n
n Oaddlrtl.OS ' itoFrta,
OUQOV&CARTCO
UnrtMt M., (itlnill
I SEtLCY'S HARO RUBBER
o nnnu nuDDcn
RUPTURE,
II ruharo
CURE
term
1 rmtuif ni ut jii.pttira mn6 rrtc 1.11." Addrrao
L k. bUXK A CO, Si S. 11th aU, l,UUt.deli,ti,F.
v NT I.. A
i ft
Do Not Em T)m1vm1
I Wltlt la(tM Pnhmla a.t.l liH k.i-1. -i
6 I'll. Injur the Iron t.iM hgrn rrd.
Tttu Hkaiklia Ulin bli.va I'. .It. I. ... ....Ill a. A..
. Durnlilr, nnd thn copfti.iher iifj for bu UQ
w ! i'rr urci 4. JS.
cures Rising
BREAST .-.
I'MHEf S FRIEND" OrtXt
iiiiu-wiro lor many yearn, and in uh cafo
.ere "Mother' Friend" hkUtK'riiiiM.d It lu
acinpliahid wniiiler amt relieved much
Jhll"""'. '"tiiohest rr-nicfly lor rllr.p of
Ii-V"' """i n' worth tl. rrtce forlh(
alone. Mlu,. M. M iiK.Tn,t
MuutKouuti)', AlA.
f!!mt,,,.rT,,N""rh,rKe prepAld, on receipt
if price, lixo per lioule.
,B?ADFIELn REOL'LATOR CO.,
kWU Ij AU dmsuiaU. AlLAJCTA, OA
WE . i'. V.'mk :!&eii'Airri s A I
IT!
Mum
1
Id
n
n
d
UK
i lie ii at nt v tra D
THE COUNTRY S COINAGE
HI8TOBT OF TH1 LKOISLATIOtt
Oo th BubJ.ct. Th Actiof 18SS and
1873 and th Bcatona InduolnR Tbtm.
7b second change of Importance k
Oar coinage tyetcm was the reduction
made In the weight of the fractional
liver coin bv the act of February XI,
158. ny the law of 17UJ they had
contained the proportional part of a
dollar, 412' grains rtom weight after
1837. Dt tho act of 1M3 they were re
duced In weight to parts of U8t grains to
the dollar and coined only on Govern
ment account. The provision for the tree
coinage of the sliver dollar was not
changed. The effect of this act was to
restore the subsidiary sliver coins to
circulation. From 18M4 to 18.V it mar
be remarked that but about l.lOO.ooo
silver dollars were coined, and from IHfiS
to 1871 about tt. 000,000. making a total
alnce 17U8 of less than 6.000.0(H).
Purine the same period, however, about
I1U5.000.000 ot silver subsidiary coluf
Wav Issued.
The Civil war led to the suspension of
specie payments and the disappearance
of gold and ailver coin from circulation.
The place of the former was taken by
the United States treasury notes known
as greenback, and the national bank
notes, and of the lat ter by tbc postal and
s'mall note currency, or note of less value
than one dollar. In his report In 180U
the director of the mint urged the restor
ation of silver coin. ice for chanre In lieu
ot the postal and small note currency at
the cm strptowarJandao important aid
to a general resumption of Kcie pay
ments. A year later he (pressed the be.
lief that the product of sliver In Nevada
and Colorado would be aurtlcienl to meet
the demand, tie proposed a very much
more debased kind of coin than that
formerly in use in order to aui'e Its not
being hoarded for Its greater value than
the small paper enrrency and so that it
wouli drive out the latter. The ilratt
of a bill embracing his liieas
was Introduced by Mr. Sherman
in the Senate April H, lf7o.
It pasted that body January 10, 1871.
and the House discussed it exactly one
vear later nnd recommitted it. On Feb
ruary 0, 187!4, it was again introduced.
Its 16th section provided for a dollar
coin of 3N4 Krains of silver 0-10 Hue,
making It a subsidiary coin in harmony
with the silver coins of less denomina
tions to secure its concurrent circulation
with them. Itwasstated In the debate
that the oftlce of the sliver or subsidiary
coins was to supply the public want for
mall chance. They were to be made
tokens of vuliie, not ihe vain; Itself and
were designed only for exchange and
circulation at home up to. but
never in excess of the requirement'
of trade. The House panned the bill May
147, 17S, bv a vote of I Id to IK. It was
not till January 17, 187:. that it passed
the Senate with amendments. A Con
ference Committee came to an agreement
and the biil became a law.
A month or two Dcfore the final passage
f the act of 1873, tho Secretary or the
Treasury urged such alterations In It as
would prohibit the coinage of silver lot
circulation in this country. He held that
ho attempt should be made to Introduce
the use of silver as currency, but that the
coinage should bo limited to commer
cial purpose and designed ex
clusively lor commercial uses with
other nations. Silver at this time had
begun to depreciate and It use as cur
rency had been discontinued by Germany
ana sot oiaer countries. ia nucoiuamv
with tJ.Secretary's Idea authority was
lncor poftteti 1'h be bUlpf .ti ii f ac t u re
the "Trade dollar." Kcctu'T'Jst.of the
bill provided that any owtkir of s'j'tx
bullion might deposit the same at any
mint to b i lormcd into bars or into dol
lars of tho weight of 4S0 grains Troy
and no deposit ot silver for other coinage
should be received, the charges simply to
be the actual cost. It was made a legal
tender up to fit, but this provision was
repealed July lid, 1870. Still as many
of these coins were made alter
this date as before. From lh7H to 1875
they cost somewhat more than ( 1 each to
manufacture, and no ono could use
them to advantage here, so that it was
only bv exporting them to I'hlna and the
FaM that the expenses of their coinage
could be met. In 1870 and 1877 they
cost less than a dollar to manufacture,
ind as the public continued to receive
them at their face value, holders ot bul
lion found It profitable to have it minted
into them. Of the total amount coined,
a.YUo,03 1, one-tilth was redeemed at
Its face value In exchange for standard
silver dollars or sulisldlarv coins under
the act of March 11. 1 887. Nearly all tho
remaiuder has been permanently ex
ported, so that as far as our country I
coucerned the trado dollar has becoino a
thiug cf the past.
'Tbc silver dollar ftir or.ie years prior
to 1878 had been worth about 11.03 In
gold. Since the passage of the gold coin
bill of 1834 the fine silver In a silver dol
lar had been worth somewhat moie than
the U.oj gralus of fine gold In a gold
dollar and as a consequence the silver
dollar bad not circulated In this country.
It was seut abroad or used as a con
venient portion ot silver in the lab
atory of the chemist or hoarded as an ob
ject of curiosity. The average amount
annually issued from I8:in to isnu was
only a little over 100,000. Of the total
B.oai.L'.'H) Isnuca between 17U'-i and 1873
nearly one-half were made subsequent to
1805 and were manufactured
almost exclusively tor export.
In 1804 when it became
apparent that these coins were not used
to form tiart ot the currency, but were
exported to the West Indies, the adminis
tration saw tit without the sanction of the
la w to discontinue their use. In ISTOlhe
officers of the government recommended
imply that authority to manufacture be
withdrawn, and it was so enacted in the
bill of that year, which also diivcted the
discontinuance of the coinage of the silver
halt-dime and three cent pieces. The pro
vision in the act discontinuing tho coin
age of the silver dollar has since been
bitterly assailed as a conspiracy to de
monetize sliver, ainl It is said the bill was
clandestinely enacted. As the above
history shows, however. it was
under discussion for lour years.
The great decline in silver
which subsequently took place could
hardly have been anticipated and the
history of the coinage of the silver dollar
certainly seemed to warrant the belief
that it ha not a necessary part of the
coinage.
Frof. Woodford, from whose excellent
article on the use of silver iu the United
States in the July number of the AnnaU
cf tht American AemUmy much of the In
formation herein has been drawn, say
the act of 1873 appear to have been an
attempt to remonoiize rather than to de
monetize silver. By the act of 1834
silver as compared with go.d had been
undervalued in our coinage and a a
consequence the people had used a gold
currency una had practically de
monetised silver. The only monetl
sation took place under the act of 18X3
debasing the fractional silver enrrency
and limiting the right of manufacturer
by abolishing free coinage and creating
the Government monopoly. The pro;osi
tion was made in 1MW to res'ore silver
to its position as a subsidiary co n. Any
rxceis in the silver nroduct of the couu-
try for export waa to be tn the form of
the trade dollar. An American liver
coin had t.ever been the chief component
of American currency, but had been lone
used for ubldlarv coin. It remained
then to bring the dollar into harmony
with the fractional coin, or to retire It
trom circulation. The latter alternative
was chosen although the former had been
recommended. 1'rovislon was made at
the same time for the manufacture ot
coin ot convenient form with quality and
quantity marked upon each, which could
be used In trade with countries having
silver currency. ....
The Important effect of this law and
the provision of the revised statutes of
1874. whlcn deprived tb e Oliver dollar of
legal tender quality, was that they pre
vented a use of silver which would have
Inevitably followed the fall ot the value
of silver In 1870 and tho failure ot the
Greenback movement. Whether or not
this was a desirable result ha been a
much disputed question.
A TRIPLE TRAGEDY.
TWO CHILDREN AND A HOTHEB
Murdered. The Flood Then Tried to
Cremate His Victims.
A fearful triple rngdy took place .Inrlne
the early hour of Wednesday morning at
rittsburg, 1'., two children and mother
meeting their fate at the hands of somt
fiend.
It wa about 1:30 when the Fire Depart
ment was CAlled to extinguish slight fir
In Ihe house of John Rouse, who lived on
Oak alley, co the side of the hill. There
wss but a slight fire and the men had no
difficulty in extlnjuishlng it
Home of the members of the department
In looking about the house were liornliisl
at the sight of three dead bod es lyln close
to on another. They were thoe ol Smss'i
wife and two rina',1 children. There were
three ugly deep dents In the poor snmin l
hesd which showed that she nl fir-t been
strut k A deadly blow from behind, then the
fearful work wus finished with some blunt
initruiiient, either s hatchet or a hummer.
The little children lisd ihe appearance ol
having been smothered to deutii, though
their onr bodies showed murks of violence.
1 1 eir clothing wss also burned a little,
though had they been living when the tire
taried they woiil i hnve hud no trouble in
getting sway from the small hlii.e.
The husband whs aI once surrnuudpj by
Die lireiuen and the police were sent for.
He (old a siory to the effect that he had
been sleeping on the floor down stairs, hut
was awukencned by smoke und rati up
stairs toextinguish the fl inf". It was then
he said, thsl he first ditcovered the dead
bulies of his wife and two eln.dren.
Tho police, however, have a different Idea
of the crime nnd at once p.acvd Sonne umtel
arrest. They were eonlhiriit a triple mur
der bad been commuted, mid say Hint the
murderer set fire to the house to conceal the
crime. House is laborer, yvsrs of uge,
end iipparvntly very Ignorant.
There was one more child in the family,
hut by some means tho little one escaped
the general mancre. The bodies of the
victim! were token to tho morgue and Sotie
was locned up to await an investigation by
the roioner.
The child who was raved I only 4 year
old, but the weeftng hoy lol l the police
Hint his father killed his mother, "lie hit
her on the head three times with tb
hatchet," sobbed the little fellow.
EXECUTED BY EEOBEES.
Auburn Jail's Apparatus IlreekaDown,
And Convict Tsylor 1 Killed by
the ileotrlo Light Dynamo.
At Auburn. M. Y.l WllllimO Taylor irso
only executed on Thursday by the second
attempt. .
r -J'A"heifai Was ready the signal wa given
and the current turned on. Taylor's power
ful frame sliotjkick and up in the chair un
til the strops creaked, and siiiiuiliineourly
there was a crash. The strain upon the fool
rest broke and the iinderinpiii3 ot Ihe
chair gave way. The body sunk to a re
clining posture, with the victim's foot rest
ing on the floor. The sprc'utors were star
tled, but did not more, .'t wi,s supposed
Taylor was dead from the effects of the
hock, when h striate noise wus heard,
lie In gun to gusp for l.rt .illi ami siiiva
exiidisl from his inniith.
"Turn on the curr.-ti'," w is the comtnnnd
from Hie warden mul Matt- Kicctr.ciiinl'ivi"
tried to ohrv. led was diimfoiii.dcd to find
no response to the turning i.f t Ik-lever. Hit
dynamo hud hn ken duu n.
The liilii,rd tin-atiiing of Ihe ei-nvict con
tiiiued and lilt In rc and It'll eoiiv.il
sivi-ly, l'.ivis lin-tnifd o:itside to ti e
dynamo to hsci rtain the 'rouhle ar.d font d
Ihe armature burnt out. It co'ild be ui-d no
inure lo-dnv. J'nyior, who wnsiiowgiup
ing and groaning uio:td. was unbound,
placed Uioii a tot und carried into Ihe ad
joining room. His imlse grew stronger tim!
ho endeavored several tunes lo rise from tin
cot. I'iiysieiiiiia sad he win inicoiin ioiH,
precisely in the condition ol n man stricken
with nisipiexy. He would r.-eover. tiny
thought, and the only w av to curry out t tic
sentence of the law whs to again place him
in the ( liair. I.ii.etueti iinckly connected
ihe prison apparatus with the e'lectiic Imlil
plant, and in mi hour all was ready lor the
eeeoml electrocution.
Taylor loiiiinued fo grow itronger ami
was given an injection of morphine. A
small dose of chloform was ao administer
ed, lis was then carried bodily to tin- te
paired chair. Mini strapped into n s.lt.np
tKisture. The cm rent was turned on. the
body trsiuhteiied up ai d for half a minute
1,'JPI volts coursed through Taylor's uu
conscious form, nnd he wss pronounced
dead. The lilsi electrocution look p.uio ui
It! IS and the second at 1:V,
Tavior anil Snloiuoii .loh:i:-on, whom l.r
murdered, where hol.'i s cmid t-rni pr:oii
ets. Ju.-l he I ore the execution Taylor hand
ed the warden h pnoer for i lib icntnui.
Therein he apologized for doubting tus ut
tor-iey's character during the trial and sav.
1 1 got tim idea in my lieinl that I, being n
nigro and a convict, and the victim being n
white, the trial would be in thing hut n
farce. 1 shall not die as 1 thought I would
ut the time of the crime, anil of my triul,
hut instead of hHting everybody, I shall
h ive pity und sympathy lor all i t-nple. lot
1 have learned that I lay ali iiet-'J it und are
worthy of it,"
TEltniBLE FAMINE IN 811 AN SI.
Cannibalism Practiced andPeoplo Dying
by Tbouiands.
The "Hupuo-' Vancouver, H: C, nya thai
terrible accounts of distress prevailin g in
Hbanii on account of Ihe lumine in that
province, have bueii brought to Nir.gpo by a
man who arrived thence in the steamship
I'ekin. The man in question hud with hi in
two girls iiged respectively K und II yeuri;
whom hu i ii. lie lul l b -ught at Chung
Kahao Hansi lor 10 strings of copper, The
peopl of the distressed province are dy.ug
by thousand. The Besh of the urine and
thighs of the poor wretches who sink down
with ixhaustion are frequently cut off by
those who have still strength to du to und
eaten.
("a it t 'has l is HYhANf, a veteran sea
dog was found dead in his room in I'liilii
delphio. I s. He wus thought poor, bill
1 00,000 were found Among hi effect.
A Fol Tirn mt Luck.
TO ! jeua ago Joxqoio Miller
mat to California and bought a tract of
land roll east of Oakland peopl
laughed, writes E. Y. Bok. Aad for
number of yeara tho poet himself Al
most believed taat the people were right.
Miller bought at that time what wm
probnblf one of tho moot unpromising
plecci of propertt la California. Tht
tract cotuUted of 100 acre, and nearly
U of it lay on a tteep and (tony moun
tain tide. Taa eccentrlo poet went at
the cultivation of hi new possession with
will. And he did mostly all of hi
work alone. Soon the property bean
to (bow the hand of progress. But it
required work of the hardest kind. Add
during all tbla time the land was fast
proving, even the poet almost believed,
the worst type of an "elephant." Now,
bowever, the land is almost a park of tho
tnot picturesque ordor. On it tho poet
baa planted 23,000 fruit tree, hundred
of olive trees, and miles of rare roses.
Spring were introduced; trout brook
were stocked; walka and drives were
made. Wafer is plentiful on tho place,
and that counts for everything on a Cati
forniaa pUcj. The poet is now, I atn
told, beginning to lee tbo rewards for
bis labor. He ships his rosr to Den
ver in tho winter, and four weeks ago
one of his fltst shipments came to the
New York market. The rose sre of the
fined specimen, command good j ricci,
nd from this brancli of bis possessions
alone it is not unli'.tely that Joaquin
Milltr may ooa acquire a o;st little in
come. His p ace is la the direct grow
ing I'ne of Osklaud, and the c:ty u
gradually approve jing the poet s habita
tion. He dors but httlo work with the
pen, but devotes nearly all hit time to
the further cultivation of his place and
the development of the industiics possi
ble from its product Nw Yorit Ko
eorJrr. Tim Vole.
A. TT. McriierKoti, in tho Zonli-pi ,
Quote mi itilert'rtltl pAn;;o frm.i
Aristotle to allow thnt the grent phi
losopher was ak well in-quaint. 'd as wo
arc with tb" peculiarities and linbitsof
the Held Vole, whoso ilestruetivelieHN is
a cnuso of tnneli tnlmlat mti to fttrtturs
in Scotland as well as in the I'elojion
nese. lie s)iesksof tiicir ib'prciiiitioti
na "so sct'ioiir that some small farmers
bavins on mio day idn.ervt d that their
corn Mas ready for luirvest, when Ihoy
went tho following Uny to out tluir
corn, found it nil i u'cu. Tin- manner
of their itihAppouruaof, nlco," ho con
tinue!', "is iiiiiii'i'i'iiiitiildo, for in h few
daya tbry all vanit-i', although before
hand they could Hot bo exterminated
by sniokinj etid dijreine; them out, nor
by huntine; them und turning w in
eaiotig them to root up tlu ir runs.
Foxes uImo limit thom out, and wild
weasels arc very ready to destroy tlu-in ;
I'Jt they cannot prevail over their
numbers and tbo rapidity of their in
crease, nor, indeed, can anything pre
vail over them but rnin, ami when this
eoiuca they liiAiuesr verv soon."
Mi jar I rum touuu &cji!.
MV .a.U . t a.
a loro part of
the population of tho gbbo with cloth
ins, seems to be almost without limit in
its usefulness ii-marks a iclcatidc au
thority. From the need a VAluablo oil Is ex.
prttsed, whilo the hunks form an article
of food for cattle ia the shapo of cakes.
From the liut which c.lina t tho seed
af'ir it hits pacd tiirmili tho "jclii"
folt is made, whilo the oil exf i clcd from
toe teed ia applied to cjuilo a largo num.
ber of purpose. H it, according to tin
llritisb Consul, Mr. Ports', of Zmr.ibar,
Africa, cotton seed Is also ctipiiblo of
yielding tugar. A procc.'s has been dis
covered for cxlractiuc; lupnr from cotton
iced meal, and, thou-h tho details of
Ibis process bavo not been disclosed, it
is laid that tho product obtained is of
Very lur.crior grade, being; fl-teen litues
sweeter than enc m.-iraud tweuty times
more to man suprar niado Irani beut.
This indicates that twcctnci is not duo
to rar.c (u-ar, but to ioiuu other chemi
cal. fc'cieutific Americun.
llulllag Main- iu au turelope.
"My wifo a:id I." says a traveling
man, were ouco iu a lutcl where we
couldn't get aoy boiliti water. After
we had discussed tho situatiou my wifo
asked tue if I hud u cnvulopo iu my
satchel. I got one out, when she tolil
me to till it with water aad hold it over
tun gas jot. I hesitated, but finally did
it, and expected to ico tho onvolopo
blaze up every m mient. C it it didn't
blaze. The cuvelope tooU on a little
soot but that was all. Tho water boiled
in time, and the euvelopc was o good at
over when the experiment was at uu end.
I don't know the chemistry of tho pni
cesi, but try it your.-elf and sen if it
will not woik." L'lucn'o Herald.
.lust So .last Hn.
The subtle line dividing genius an 1
inauiiity ia so delicate thitl Iu many In
bUiticen It cannot be iletlued, it enn only
bo felt. I. von the deep researches of
phynlo)ogical-ptychology sr.) unable to
ileHignate principled on which the Judg
TUint ouii depend for logical deductions
on the eubject, end the soiuehing uiiAly
bum ami argumeniH of many erudite
students ami philoophit s are as liicom
preheUHlble nnd meaningless to the or
dinary mind am the vain VApoilngs of u
mind unhiutied. New York Mu.l and
Express,
IT is one iniDg to ten u man tie
can't aing, and uuotlicr to muko lilui
believe lt
RICH RED BLOOD
" 1'iir feelliic tf ilesrl
nessof the limb-, enlist I
pallniiaiid puor circula
tion of tie- b o'mI. llotd's
I... I ..... 1
ntsa-ur uu ni.a mi i ..
My blunt was in reiy
uuir eoiulltliin. Kline
takhie Hood's rropsr-
1 1 n hive fiiixl.r eh. red
ili.mi.sild d' t.ot bh'Stss
I used to. HimmI's arss
i.isrllla has proved lis
merit lo m as It wl I lo all w ho take t fair
ly " Mrs. M. r. TOM'. Nlanlio. fi.
HOOD'SSAWSA P AWILLA CURE.
Head's fills Curt tlwk Uesdaftie. ttoli-
rer's
Djiepi! rrrenlat!T.
Aa txpor.encod Dhriiclaa Ia ersdlfAd
by tht Western Itural with tht following
gratuitous proscription. fAlthful mt of
wnicn, no avert, would do away with
dyspepsia elevon times out of twelve i
Teopie not habitually crest ester
re guilty of sellout Indiscretion In the
time and manner of taking food. Half
the people I know bare violent attsoVs
of indigestion because they persist in
eating hearty meals when In an exhausted
condition. Tuty teem never able or
willing to realize that there are timet
when the system it in no fit state to
grapple with a full meal. They come
In tired and hungry, almost lavenout,
not thinking that maybe a good deal of
what they contider hunger it gattrio
Irritatioo, then tit down to a tablo and
overtax the already (trained vital power.
At a rule no persou should eat when
very hungry. The wiie thing to do it
to drink a cup of water with three or
four tablespuonfula of milk in, sit down
five minutes end then begin slowly to eat
and eat verv tparinclv."
At Chicago
Royal Leads All.
As the result of mv tests, I fnnl the
ROYAL BAKING POWDER superior to all
the others in every respect. It is entirely
free from all adulteration and unwhole
some impurity, and in baking it pves off
a greater volume of leavening gas than
any other powder. is therefore not only
the purest, but aso the strongest ponier
vth tvhich I am acquainted.
WALTHR S. IIAIXHS, M. I).,
'. tf Cfifmkln, A'usi .'.. ;.' CWsgr,
Coiv.uItiii"; Clicniiit, C!ik;ie; Hoard of Health.
All other bakinjc powders are shown
by analysis to contain alum,
lime or ammonia.
n
.1
s.
1
al
Ml
If
I'
Ml
lr
a
flOVAL BAKtlf, POWDER
l
dy ,v'iWk1cWi cVi Cl iWi
Vh2n You Want to Look
-ass S SWWs.
Flower"
I used August IMnwcr for Loss cf
vitality aiul general t'.cKility. Alter
taking two liottlcs I gained (n) Ihs.
I have .sold more of your August
Flower since I havcliceti in business
than any other medicine I ever kept.
Mr. I'eter Zinville says he was made
a new man by the use ol August
1 iowci, recommended by me. I
have hundreds tell me that August
Flower has done them mure good
than any o'.hcr medicine they ever
took. Orouc.k W.- Dvk, bardis,
Maison Co., Ky. (s
An arrceaWe Ijtxaflvo m'Krxri Touta
Bold by Druggists or si.pt liy mi.il. u.,60u,
uud $i.O0 per pack sire, fur-plus free.
frfk WfS The l-'nvorito TOITH T0"X1
i 8 UforhiTahAUdUreAth.aia.
s Wonderful Patch Plate
new anil ndrmlflr pi Im lplr lor mriiff tuu
Tin. tim 'opM-i, I i on mul t.rmi. ti Imihi
I hi iinr tl n'il nr i ct t i nj. I in it. tn luu
(filiitf K' rruis will iiirriil In' nulumr) h ukn, t b h
ouli roait tit fa-i-Air lit un uri ni it h inun u, m
re nturisrh. Trier 1 .It inilt, i ftir 'J."i vvntm,
Ainbiif run U'e II. full tlm i. h wda i U ..!;.
AiMrfwYIIK PATCH I'LATi: ( O.,
Hi I 4 K u n u r I m n n h "r, I'll tin ili'l In. I'u,
.iARTifriTT6LrX(iiT.
Academy of Marietta Collcgv1.
Marietta College for Womnn.
I m iitiii lii all ilfpirtiiiMiif lii'ifiii- H'-i( i;Mli
r'rcatliitftif him I lufm tnaMon, i.iilici
Vrvn. slOIIN V MM MN, llHrlrun, O.
MMNH IS MIU-kKNA.
f r tc. li iy tMsti,. inrtror4
m r4jlii! iMiiliy risrr d irtnf M
jrrtif II If lie tnv to lfUif fro 4
fin 4i-sa. in f rl lor tun at4
I'M It 1'rtt . ti, f. It. jn o Mt fe
Utl fa. . t . Ac. Ad-lrt-s
fE N S I O N V" h "Lull" ".V r
f Successfully Prosecute Clnims.
Ts.t HrluAJtp! J- iaiuiiiitsr I S i'ei.kiun liurviau.
J(riMlU ft Ml, i.'ilijlltll UlHig fltlllUA, .tl lhl.
I A 'I'bV'IV TKAlKMAhKK. Kaetnilnailnn
A-l l ll I fc. Htlll lilMrr Is to I'UH'lllHllll IT
n( Invention. Hiid (or lhriitor ounli'.r linv to ic't
ill-aieiil. lAl UH K t)'r AKUKI.U U a-mimiti. i'.C.
MARRIAGE PAPER pant, snl i-urr,..p..n(lrnu
IjlN.NKLK' IlONTllI.V, TOLKUO, OHIO.
k f" t S To a'iSe ea ! mwle monthly
IC S-h I II I worslii lor B. F- Jotinaon A Co.,
9 JJJ Ae..s(uihllLUbb.Hkuva4.V
mm
frsser Asie urease.
Is new reeegnisetl as U Mm itard axle grenr
of tb V. 8. In told in every Hate ard inn My
In the I'nii n, ar.d In to day krlrAeWeriroi, Im
itations have been made, sll tie mine to be aa
freed na th I rrer, thus virtually admitting
Is sunerlortt. . Ev.rr vennlne I aekngn bears
the trsde mnrk. I ealers an I eon timers can
thns dlstlngiilait the genul ,e from thlmta
tloo, and pr itrut tlicmtlT.-s sunlual Iraud.
A veti r in of V2 year at Albany, K, Y ia
clearing farm.
U Car It a sine.
No mstter of how long standing. WrltA
nr fie tientlse, Irstlnioliisls, etc., to 8. J.
lollenswnrlh A Co., (lwtso, Tlofc-a Co., N. X.
1-rlie l; by mail. II IV
Carp and eel don l inov so much as a tin
sll winter.
eMndents. Tenehera (insle or femalel, Clerarv
men and ol hers In ni islet ehanu-eof employ
ment, should not fivll to write tn II. K. Johnson
fo., Itli hmotiit, V. Iheir great mi cesi
slums I hat they have not the true Ideas sb'iiil
timklnn tti-mey. Tht-y ran show yuU how to
employ sld hours piohtiihly.
A resilient of llarton county. Mo., has A
beard seven feet I 'tig.
Ilerchsm's IMIs are better than mineral wa,
turs. lkts Lam's mi others, cents bvx.
The score of a basehnll game at Ilreii'i.tm,
Tex., was 111 lo 11,
5
-1
w
w
w
5
4
e
s- 1
Si
fx
r
jr.
O
l
w
K-1
CO., 101 WALL ST.(
NEW-YORK.
.wT-r, tWik7, c ptT.I J tWi
on tho Bright Sido of Things,
Use
jttats f
DRINK
EASIER MALE
THIS
IUC5SBL
Tlrncttcn. r'sttiorfl
n.tit. Am(.r.. ft mi UI. a. .
fin 'i'. ti..iit1 ah
r i ,. rl .,. ti. t tier Ask
t-.( i...ti eaatfr .(eftai ilr i;.
f ell ; .! rl.il t. '., I
(lao.'-t t.-r ait i- v ti.ii .r i
30u-et
' Ooola tht U.oci,
jOuenchfi 'i'li.
I A IdM littiin.
1 1 it t. r iW" .'-"i- I 'l'.in, in ftptrsa. pe. ptnt.f nnujr'i lo
li.aae Itiliti ft. ut. (Ai t.la i, take I i 17 iUi u
fnlKE E. hCUSHTcb7235 Waived. 'Bosl3n,Ki
mn at us"
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS
M1TH
ij THOMSON'S
j SLOTTED
CLSNCH RIVETS.
No tiefvi fiju r't. (miIt a (ttittitr iiiiltt to Urlv
n 1 c in b m 1 uittv ntl (jiurk.v, iwftv.iK the rliuch
1 utiy mn tlu Kniimn( ii't hn in M- miir 111
ihe-,1'nii.ef n,ir hur lur u K:rig. Tlmt rr ilroyv.
lutch aii'1 lnrnll. Mii.ijn new in uu. AU
ii ('. uniform r "o-rif-l. fm ftp hi (',
Ak vunr Uralvr lur llirnt, r nt-ii'l 4(c lo
ltiii.j' for bu nl .on, r.BurU'j iii Mau'tdby
JU0S0N L. THOMSON MFQ. CO.,
WAl.THAtt, 1AS.
Best inthe World!
Get the Genuine!
Sold Everywhere!
AN ll)tl.- F.. 1.1 1 I V I.1E.DICINE
I l-'i-r Inillat-Sllua. l.lieiitu-..
' llra.tU. ln , I 1.1 .1 IpHli'ie, lu I
-1 iimitli-llan, .lfru.li.- Ilrrnil.
fa- 'I a. lil 1,1. iilits ci U.s 1,101111.41,
.iHF,n-l Mi.wrls.
I . Wl PA NS TABt'trS
! ai-t ,'i-iiilt vri .r-iL,.l y. 1 tr -
t i'i .lion Ii-lies, M.t.rii"-, H'-iii
r t.y i!
ilniLru Nl, er ut I v ni
ll. l.
I 1 ur tm- sami.li'S sin'n-is I
Kll'aSa III MII'AI. 0.. e York, j
II, VIS , .,!!. IV kMr I Im1 1 1,
It t-nj 1. 1 ei rl'iulita thai
rr n i ur- tli m fctnh
fiit.in . ni ) tn 0
A SPECIALTY.
Uj m UtuUrn tnl inviMti.
N i 'r ii . i- icluh f li jr. our
1 s lhi 000. wiifn Mieunrv
Irx.hlr iwitAfff icm, nan.-ip irilln or Hi t A,rihi (ml, mm
iti tuiur cu n- ai,u tinr i if i 9ili i n a th (iniji
tfiir tl i.t w Uct.r. iMi-iiv.rntly, I' rwf ul
if biff I. In, i ikk Uk, an. i o., 'Uqko, IU,
CniTRT PllPCn S,sr,f"r HlrPririlRr."
PUIInCUUntUjN Klftn M. Ih-sillts.N. J,
nan' IUniMl) for t'Usrrh to hm
I Hi. Vl- n ffiid f 'iJap?t. I I
I Eg MfUi . UtuyHlvL vr klil Uf lUMll. I I
F.RAZER AXLE
GREASE
i
I