The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, December 20, 1893, Image 2

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    There lire fewwr farm mortgages re
latively in Utah .than in nojr .other
'n'"
' A mountain ell im recently Shot at
Bneyrns, Kan., although there are no
mountains in the state, and elk were
never plenty there.
The 44 United Htntes owe, eolWc
lively, 224,O00,OH(J, and they pay to
ihe holders of staAo securities 810,
000,000 n year ns interest.
Wrecks in Southern' waters are less
fatal than others, heeimie, explains
the New York Telegram, owing to
their temperature nearly all who can
wim or hold on 11 naJJy reach the
Lore.
In order to prevent "rear-end" col
lisions n Western railroad has issued
an order that every nwieiiger train
must have a flagman on the rear plat
form constantly, and this flagman
must not leave his post to eat or sleep
nntil he is relieved by some one capa
ble gf standing watch.
A Texas jury struck for fees which
amounted to fifty cents apieeo. Tho
Court ordered the fees paid and then
fined tho jurors j.A0 each for con
tempt. The jurors really seemed to
come out losers, Imt possibly, suggests
the San Francisco Examiner, the satis
faction they acquired was cheap at 82.
According to tho senate committees
on immigration the Itulians in the
United States send home $20,000,000
every year. And yet Italy complains
of a scarcity of money 1 King Hum
ltert ought to encourage emigration.
Ho gets more out of the immigrants
than he does out of the stay-at-homes,
taking man for man.
The latest statistics show that there
are 821,400 men engaged in theopera
tion of railroads in tho United States.
This implies a force three-fourths as
large as the army of France, almost as
large as that of Germany, six times as
largo as that of flreat Britain, ond more
tlxin thirty times as large as that of our
own conntry. "It isundiably the most
intelligent and effective labor clement
in tho world," avers the St. Louis
Globe-Democrat, "and it is al, as it
deserves to bo, the best paid, its an
nual wages being twice as great as
those of tho samo class of workmen,
or in fact any other class of workmen
anywhere else under the snn.
The Czar of all tho Russia understands
how to propitiate popular favor when
he travels nbroud, oliseves Frank
Leslie's Weekly. On his recent visit
to Denmark his baggage, which filled
about fourteen cars, consisted of three
hundred large trunks, one of which
contained nothing but imperial pres
ents, which were distributed with lav
ish hand. Danish functionaries of all
sorts and grade's wero decorated with
orosses and ribbons j tho assiduous at
tentions of tho police were rewarded
by diamond rings ; gold wutches and
chains wero bestowed on the tele
graphers and station-masters, and a
special largess of ten thousand frnnci
was distributed among tho servants oi
the palace in which tho Czar tempora
rily resided. Tho poor, too, wero re
membered in gifts in' largo sums oi
money. All this is delightful for the
recipients of the imperial bounty, but
possibly these extraordinary display!
of generosity would not be necessary
to overcome a popular dislike if the
Czar wore a little more liberal in hi
methods of government and in hie
conceptions of individual rights.
Australia has a Chinese question
which seems to be giving considerable
trouble at present. The uortherrj
part of the vast island which lies with
in the tropics is settling up very slow
ly, and there is a disposition to foret
muttors by encouraging Chinese to
enter upon the lauds, which are suiO
to be very productive. There are
now three Asiatics to one European
in tho section mentioued, and the
Sydney Herald says there is nothing
in the existing state of things to prom
ise an' alteration in the ratio with the
growth of population. Nuturally
these facts cause apprehonsion, foi
there is a belief that if the Asintio gctt
a good foothold in the north he will
inevitably overrnn the sourthern pari
of the island. Tho remedy proposed
to overcome tho diflioulty is federation,
but, strange to say, the spirit of ex
periment, which is so rife in Australia,
makes such a inovemeut almost im
possible Each colony is working out
problems of government, and most ol
them have for their object the ameliora
tion of the condition of tho laborer.
But while they are experimenting John
is crowding in, and the first thing the
experimenter know he will have
crowded all the aveunoa of labor and
make a reform without revolution iw
iiossible.
AMONG THE MOORS.
8CLTAN MI'LEY IIAMAN'S BAR.
nKIC KMPIBB.
Morocco Steadily Retrograding, tho
Rifts Tlelns; the Terror of
.the Land Komnnoe of
the Present Whereof.
TIE throne of the
Emperors of Mor
occo is their horse,
and their pavilion
is the sky." So
boasted Sidi Mo
hammed, the father
of Mnley Hassan, tho present Sultan.
The Hnltan, indeed, is nominal lord
of all, but iiirminal, not actual, aays a
writer in the Sew York Tribune. He
ets Governor over tho provinces and
wrings from hem such taxes as ho
will and thero the functions of his ad
ministration end. So long as they pay
lip-service to tho Governor and render
the tribute of gold that is required of
them the tribesmen may do as they
please.
These RifT.ins, or Riff's, who have
been making trouble at Melilla, form
such a tribe J and they are perhaps of
all the most independent, as well as
decidedly the most savage. Their
home is in El Rif, the rango of hills
that runs parallel with and near to the
Mediterranean coast, from the Mnluya
River to (Jape Spartel. They are the
Ishmaelites of that Ishmaelitish land,
their hands against every maa and
every man's hand against them. Woo
to tho stray traveler who foils into
their hands. IIo would fare better in
a camp of hostlo Comanches, or as the
Apaches' prisoner of war. Every stud
ied horror of torture will be his ; every
revolting outrage that savago passions
can conceive. Even the other Berber
and Moorish tribes have a dread and a
loathing of them and use the name of
Riffan instead of "wolf" to frighten
children into obedience. In appear
ance the Riffan men aoo fierce and un
couth, with tattooed faces often, and
long, unkempt hair and beard. Their
strength and endurance are marvelous.
They are tine horsemen and good
good shots, and in battle display the
WAZAV, THE nOT.Y
ntmost disregard of danger. The wo
men, unlike those of other Mohamme
dan tribes, go about freely unveiled,
their faces and arms tattooed with out
landish designs in many colors. Tho
women visit the towns and pnrchaso
such thingB as they and tho men need,
tho men never venturing to put them
selves so nearly within tho grasp of
what littlo law thero is in Moghreb-nl-Aksa.
As for law among the Rif
fons there is none, save to steal, to
torture, and to kill and never to die in
bed I
One is startled to find on landing in
Morooco, so closo to the centers of
European light and learning, a laud so
utterly barbaric Hero is an empire
of mora than eight million people,
with vast cities and a land of incom
parable fertility, with not a whoelcd
vohiolo save the ono coach which tho
Snltnn own 3 but never uses. Nor is
there any progress made toward better
things. On tho contrary the whole
Nation seoms steadily sinking deeper
and more hopelessly into the miro.
Nothing of Morocco oxin be hoped for
in tho way of great social progress in
thia country till the minds of the men
have bean raised and their estimation
of women vastly changed. In Morocco
rOH SH35KEEFA OP WAZAN,
the position of woman remains un
speakably deplorable. Morocoo is so
deeply sunk in the degradation of sin
that it is impossible to lay bare its
deplorable conditiou.
In this country the only vice whioh
pnblio opinion seriously condemns is
drunkenness, and it is only before
foreigners that any sense of Bhunie or
desire for secrecy about other vices is
observable. The taste for strong
drink, though still indulged compara
tively in secret, is steadily increasing,
the practice spreading from force of
example among the Moors themselves,
and as a result of the streuuous efforts
of foreigners to inculcate this vioe.
As yet it ia chiefly among the higher
and lower classes that the victims are
found, the former indnlging ia the
Srivaoy of their own homes and the
ttter at the low drinking deus opened
by the soum of the foreign settlers at
all the open porta.
One woman has, however, risen to
a commanding rank in Morocco and
still exercises a sway rivaling that of
the Junperor himself. This is the
TOTS TOrjUO SfnCREEF OT WA A.
Shcreefn of Wazan, an English woman
by birth. The shoreefs of Wazon have
ever been at least the equals, perhaps
the superiors, of the sultans of Fez,
to whom they are nominally subject.
azan is the holy city of Morocco,
and one. of the holiest in all the Mo
hammedan world, and its shereefs are
descended directly from Fatimo, the
Prophet's favorite daughter, while tho
Emperor himself is descended merely
from some collateral branch of Mo
hammed's family. So the Shereef is
reckoned the holiest man in all
Islam and his spiritual authority is
recognized by the faithful everywhere,
in Egypt, Tnrke , Persia, India. The
latest generations of these potentates
hove" been invested with not a little
romance. It is told tnat tne grand
father of the present shereef lived to
be more than 100 years old. At the
last, when he lay dving, the elders
asked him to name Lis successor ; for
there is no law of primogeniture in
Y azan. The old man answered in the
oracular manner in which his inspired
utterances had alwavs been made:
'The child that playeth with my staff,
he shall sway the sceptre." Now it
happened that one of his slaves, an Afri
can woman, waa standing jnst outside
CTTY OP MOROCCO.
the door and heard this, Sho, hearing
the old Shereefs words, instantly
seized, nnnoticed, his gold-headed
staff and placed it in her bright little
son's hands, and when, a few moments
later, tho aged Shereef died, tho Toi
bian elder came out to search lor his
hoir. And the first they saw was the
littlo mulatto ph-.ying with the staff
Wherefore they obeyed the saint's
command and bowed down before him
as tho now Shereef.
The Shereef grow up with rather ad
vanced notions. Ho took to traveling
in foroigu parts and thon paid long
visits to Eugland, Franco and Italy.
When he discarded sandles and began
wearing boots of French manufacture
the faithful opened their sleepy eyes
in holy horror. Then ho threw anide
the turban and was presently dressed
throughout in modern European
stylo. Worse than this he took to
smoking cigarettos and drinking
champaign. For a descendant of Mo
hamet to drink intoxicating liqnor
was an unprecedented apostacy. But
Mnley Sidi defended himself. "It is
true," he said, "that the wine in the
bottle is intoxicating. But when I
pour it into my gloss it becomes as
harmless as water 1" And this explan
ation was generally believod.
These eccentricities, however, were
only the beginning of the trouble
Down at Tangier tho holy man made
the acquaintance of a comely young
English women named Emily Keene,
who was a governess in the family of
the British Minister, and began mak
ing love to her. Well, he was a mu
latto, but a prinoo and very rich, and
she was ambitions. So she accepted
him and, after he had divorced all his
other wives, waa married to him in
good English fashion. And she made
him sign a solemn bond to take no
qther wife, but to conduct his domes
tic affairs on tho English plan ; and if
he broke this bond he was to give her
her ohildren and (25,000 cash down
and $5000 a year for life. And finally
she was able to sign herself "Prinoess
of Wazon. " To all this tho love-siok
Shereef eagerly agreed, and for a
number of years he kept his pledges
faithfully. Two sons were born to
them and their homo at Tangier was
an ideally happy one.
After uiuDy years, however, he broke
the bond. Ho married a Moorish girl
at Wazau, and tried to divorce the
English woman. But the English
woman had a mind of her own, and it
was a more clever mind than his. She
defeated his attempt to divorce her,
retained her title of "Prinoess of Wa
zan," kept her two sons, made him set
tle the succession npou one of them,
and foroed him to pay her the full in
demnity and annuity. Then, of
course, she refused to share his house
hold with the new wife, and so went
away and lived in a house of her own,
where she maintained prinoe.lv court
She did sot actually quarrel with him,
however, but let him visit her occa
sionally for a friendly chat, and her
two boys kept on the best of terms with
rT. C
him. A year or two ago Mnley Hid!
died. But, trne to his word he named
as his successor the eldest son of hil
English wife, Mnley Ali, who thus be
came Grand Shereef of Wazam. Thit
is a clever and promising youth, whe
inherits mnch of his mother's English
spirit, and, indeed, is still much under
her influence, for, as dowager shereefo,
sho is now a most important person
age. She educated him in European
style so far as sciences were concerned,
but in Oriental style so far as religion
and customs went. He was, even be
fore his father's death, greatly beloved
and reverenced and often consulted as
a prophet or miracle-worker.
Winter Millinery.
Importations of winter millinery
are made np of round hats with tho
Napoleon brims turned straight np in
front, introduced in the spring;
cocked hats, three-cornered and four
cornered, with the brim rolled book'
against the crown, and those with!
cleft brims ; nnd of bonnets in small,'
close shapes that add little to the size
of the head.
Velvet is well employed in millinery,
both for hats and bonnets, nnd satin,
satin antique and felt form the fouu-
ONV OF THB LATEST MODES IN HATS.
dation upou whioh is heaped the brill
iant trimmings and upon which is set
the startling price. Mercury trim
mings, Valkyrie garniture of marvel
ous wings, spangled stuffs, jet and
steel are employed in the decoration,
together with velvet roses and mink
or sable bands and tails. iho newest
veils are black, with dots or a border
of white.
Matabele Women.
Tho women in Matabele Land who
are thought to bo handsomest are those
who are fattest. The wives of King
Lo Bengnla and chief men are fed and
cared for with a particnlar view to
rapid increase in avoirdupois.
In their own conntry the Matabele
men will not work because of their
military training nnd the dread of los
ing prestige in the eyes of their Mas
hona slaves and "dogs," but in the
South African diamond mines far re-
MATARF.LB WOMAN.
moved from the influences which pre
vail at home, they have made the very
best workmen.
" Men Were Chenper Than Quinine.
J. G. Acclos, tho inventor of the
rapid-firing gun called by his name,
was born in Australia, but was brought
to this country when a small boy.. It
is said that at one time he had a con
tract to bnild a fort for the Chinese
Government in an unhealthy locality.
He consented on condition that his
house should be built on stilts above
the malaria, which was done. He then
told the anthorities that unless they
would furnish the workmen with qui
nine they would die like sheep. They
refused to do so and instructed him to
go ahead, which he did with the China'
men dying all around. Men wero
cheaper than quinine, and a large per'
oentage of. them succumbed to the
fever. Chicago Herald.
Oh, 31 j Prophetic Baal I
African Traveler "Hal Here is a
sign of civilization at last I My Undo
evidently does business on this street"
-Hallo.
VLB
M W- WLW
GO DOWN WITH THE BRIDGE.
MOHE THAN 20 MEN MEET'DEATH
ythe Collapse of Steel Btruoture In
Course of Construction at
Louisville.
The middle span of iron snd timber
falsework of lbs bridge now under con
struction between East Louisville and Jeff,
nonvllle, Ind , collapsed Haturdny morn
ing, crushing to death or drowning between
20 and 80 men. snd ln)urlng ahont 20 mors,
soma ofwbom will die. Only six bodies
have been recovered. Those known to b
dead are:
Lester Oarlock, Frank Miller, Frederick
Miller, Frank Hums, Charles Murphy,
Chicago, C. V. Cook, Mantau, O., J. 1'.
lisrnt, Franklin, l's.
The mining .are: Henry I'laiss, New
Albsny; Frank (Simmons. Jetlersonville;
Russell Dertiinger. W. A. Hhsrp, A. Hoden,
J, Kregan. M. Hoden, 0. II. llenkle. U
Pierce. J K Wilson, J. Scott, 1'. bherldsn,
George'Lllly.
The injured are: Albert Moore, bolb arms
broken; U, W. brown, lrvmgton, arms
broken; I. E. Rheehsn, Greenup, Ky-; t. K:
Hall. Bristol, Tenn.; Harry l'ngli, Mercer,
l'a., both arms broken, back hurt and In
ternally iniured: Harry Lee. JefTersnnvllle.
cut about bead snd Injured by shock; Kl
ward Haben, Clikugo, slightly Injured; T.
K. tlnllawvy, I.ouiaille; ankle broken;
John Meyer. Lexington, Ky., leg amputated
Edwurd Ccheers, I'ittsbnrg, l'a,. will die;
Edward Hildebrnnd. Northampton, Fa .
spinal injury; U. Thorpe, injured , about
kneel and side; E. V. l'ard.
For weeks past a large lores of men hare
been at work on the big SOO foot span over
tbe middle of the river. The iron work was
all upand was resting ou a heavy frame
work of piling driven Into the bed of the
river and securely bolted and braced. That
afternoon tbe lust bolts were to bar bee 1
put In place in the iron superstructure and
the gigantic span would have supported i.l
own weight.
The foreman In beginning work thai
morning, noticed that during the night the
"traveler," a huge derrick used for placing
Iron In position, bad been worked loose by
tbe wind and be ordered it drawn back intc
place. The wind was high and the gentle
swaying of the fulse work gradually forced
tbe traveler oil tbe piles on which It wai
resting. When the end slipped tin
whole work trembled and the men. realis
ing their danger, started for the pier
Tbe central bent was tbe llrst to give wa)
and tbe men on this went down to be cov
ered by the mass of iron and timber of tin
other bents. Which fell almost immediately
carrying with tbem the workmen who fail
rd to reach places of safety on the piers
Tbe north bent, the one attached to thi
Indiana pier, fell 14 minutes after the flrsi
and tbe partial span five minutes later.
There were M men on the bridge. A few
succeeded in climbing to pi aces of safety and
were quickly rescued. Others struggled
hopelessly and were carried off by the cur
rent to sink almost as rescue was at band
Th ferryboats City of Jeffersonville and
C. W. Hitt rnd the life saving crews were
toon st the wreck, which completely block
ed one channel of the river. Men with
broken arm and legs were found clingini
to pieces of timber. They were pulled Intc
boats and hurried to hospitals.
After thecrasb the steamer Hotspur ran
up lo the wreckage and the crew saved nint
men, who were to badly hurt that they
could not have kept afloat live minutes.
Tbe lives of the workmen were insured foi
(1,500 each.
To whom must be laid the responsibility
for the disaster will probably never be
known. Jt is probable that it Is but one oi
thoss unforeseen accidents that occur In
spite of all precautionary measures. General
opinion ascribes the cause to the still' wind
that has been sweeping tbe river all day. It
bore with great force on tbe ponderous
frame work, which necessarily became loos
ened from the constant strain and swaying
of the timbers. Karl Manchester, a civil
engineer employed on the bridge, snid:
" i lie accident was caused by the wind. Tbe
piling was strong enough to bear double the
weight. 1 he bridge fell like a pnek of cards.
It became loosened on the Indiana side first
snd swayed gradually acioss to the opposite
side.
lliere were many narrow escapes.
Eighteen men were saved by being on the
great stone pier. To feet liigh.wbeu tliecrniti
came. A rope ladder was thrown up and
the men rescued.
The building of the bridge has been mark
ed by a series of disasters No less than oi
lnen'hava been killed and Injured in Itt
construction before the present accidents.
Three years ago the Masonic Havings Hank,
one of Ihe largest financial concern In the
city was wrecked by holding too much ol
tliehridge'a paper and tbe president of both
bridge and Lank, Jacob K Kreiger.
was ruined. Ho soon died
and worn was stopiietl, Pevernl
months ago arrangements wero made wl b
the liig hour and other railroads to furnish
he money to complete the bridge and the
work was commenced by the l'hoenii
Bridge Company of I'hoenlxville, l'u.,liii'b
contracted to have thi bridge up by
January 1 next. The accident will cost the
contractors 7.000. The loss of life hereto
fore has generally been in. the caissons.
SENSATION Ali WORDS.
The New Master Workman Clacuasea
tbe Conditions Between Labor
and Capital.
. A reception was tendered the . General
Master Workmen James H. Sovereign and
Thomas B. Magnii of New York, C. K.
French of Marlboro and Henry 11. Martin,
of Minnesota, the newly elected memberof
the general executive board of the Kulghts
of Labor in Faneuil hall, Uoaton, by tbe
members of the order in the city. General
Master Woikman Sovereign was the first
speaker. Speaking of the hard times, he
said:
"There lis wheel loose somewhere in
our social machinery and the rich
are growing richer and the poor poorer
and there is rank discrimination In the
law against the poor in favor of the
rich. .During tbe past twenty live years we
have raised two diktinct clasaea of society,
the tramp and vagrant and the dude and
dudelet. The tramp is across between crime
and poverty and the dude ia a trots between
no one and nothing. Society is now beii g
shaken from stem to stern by the labor
troublea of the present day. The Knights
of Labor are wording for the amelioration
of the working clasies. The workingmau
with his wife and children provided with
the necessaries; of life ia s very harmless
fellow, but when his wife and children are
starving then is the time to natch that muu,
for be u liable to do wrong, it is the Uuty
ol the government to make It easy lor tbe
peopla to do right and bard for them to do
wrong. Henry II. Martin; of Minneapolis
spoke next, and earneatly udviaed organi
zation and membership In the Knlghta of
Labor. Thomas U. Maguire of New York
spoks on the land question and hunioroualy
discussed the silver and tariff quemion.
This Lover Wasn't Fired.
Curing a quarrel at Chicago Charles Kroun
waa stabbed to death by Frank Jlilaki.
biltkl was calling upon Kronn'a dsugbter,
snd, being drunk, conducted himself in
such a manner tnat Kroun attempted to put
blm rut. llilskl drew a knife and stabbed
Kroun twice through tbe heart. When
placed nnder arrest by officer Casey be made
S slash si biro, causing s slight wound in
Caaey'e arm and In lb patrol wagon ha
drew s second knifs snd slightly wounded
Officer Pclanty,
The Lasso.
The cowboy's lasso ; made by cuk
ting a rawh de into thin strips and
half tann ng w.th the hair on. These
strips are then stretched over a block
and braided Into a rope, the strands
be ri pulled verytght. The lasso
Is then bur ed In sand for a week or
two, nnd absorbs mo sttiro from the
pround, which makes It soft and pli
able. When tuken out of the ground
It Is stretched out, nnd tho hair is
innd-i apercd o?. It :s then grensed
w th mutton tnllow and properly
noosed, when It Is ready for use. '
Tar;3 a I Ta xatlon.
Tariff ilutlea and Internal revenus tnTM'ni
m lr.soais and corporations an rxdtiDir
pnMlc Internet, bat of ipiltn as mtHi Interest
arptuojj things which tix thn systmn and
require at oue an nxtrn il remedy. On this
'.lbjtsft. wltlt spetlsl r.).'-mmn l.itlon, Mr.
PlerenD. Itrown, UrldgKw.ttw, Sls., siys l
"In a-cllnuts from all kinds ot athlotls
ports, to redu-e sprains an I hrulsns. I hnva
used St. Ju-ojs Oil, an I alw.iy fonnl l( to
b most mllahl". A'an, Mr. V. II. S.tn.ls,
Mangnm. Oitla., writes; "I !my us I Ht.
Jai'oiis Oil tor sprains an I rluiimtbm nn l
v.ould not be without it for anything." Mr.
II. LedhHtsr, Dnton, Tax,i. siyt : "I lisvo
tisd m. Jaco'si Oil, an 1 It Is thn only thlu
1 evirsaw that wmiM com tontlisdlio ln.tn
minutes time," anl It Is u-itllv prompt ani
sure for frost blt. AM ortltes? eomraiinl-s-llons
ar,a ot recent data, showing uusbatol
Interest,
In the reign of Louis XII. a enmpan)
gained a monopoly in making tatitairrs.
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort nnd Improvement and!
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly used. Tho many, who live bet
ter than others nnd enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by moro promptly .
adapting tho world's liest products to
tho needs of physical being, will attest
tho valuo to health of the ptiro liquid
lnxntivo principles embraced in tho
remedy, fcvrup of Figs.
Its excellence is duo to Its prcppntlnj
In tho form most acceptable and plena
ant to tho tttste, tho refrohiii and truly
beneficiiil properties of n jierfect lax
ative; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headuches und fevers
and permanently curing constipation.
It lias given natisfuctioii to millions nnd
met with tho approval of tho medical
profession, hec:iu"0 it nets on tho Kid
neys, Liver and Ilowel without weak
ening them nnd it Is perfectly freo flora,
every objectionable sulwtiince.
fjyrtip of Fkm is for sale by nil drag
fist's in 6l lo nnill bottle, but it is man
ufactured by tho California Fig r-yrup
Co. only, whore name is printed ou every
package, ulso the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, you will not
accept any substitute if ollered.
I'NII 3 1
"August
Flower"
"One of my neighbors, Mr. John
Gilbert, lias been sick for a long
t i me. All thought him part recovery.
He was horribly emaciated from the
inaction of his liver ntul kidneys.
It is difficult to describe his nppear
ance and the miserable state of his
health at that time. Help from any
source seemed impossible. He tried
your August Flower nud the effect
upon him was magical. It restored
him to perfect health to the great
astonishment cf his family and
friends." JchnQuibell, Holt, Ont.
THI WONDERFUL MECHANICAL SftLLI...
PIANO MOVEMENT
BEAUTIFULLY FINISHED.
The Child's Ht Tcorher
lnve youwenitv oldi'i
folks will tlml It vert
amiiKlns. Winild you lik
one? FortU.OOwewlll
send it to your aililresa,
chiinre paid
KINDERGARfEN MF0. CO
020 Einum Street,
Philadelphia. Pa
ft THIS WALL PAPER MEKCHArt
VMITI1 THE BEST.
O till I II THE CHEAPEST
WALL PAPER
(iaori I'niier :. nxit.V- OuM I'mx-rs .V.,
ht; anil I0'. H.-tiil .V. -nniK. ' r nawillv.
HI WeuUHin-i-i. I l.isburah. l'a.
I A T I.' V'rul"lis UAHKS Ks'imluiitl o
S. 1 Ijis uiul mlvlt-ttitito psleumiil.ltv
ot Invention. Hfn! rur t iwul.f Oui.tu.or hnv I i -I
apau-ul. I'AI HICK o V AJllItl.l, Wasiiiiuto.1, D C.
PaiCATEtflfOMR.
Or DtblliUtsd Women, should uss
BRADFIELD'S FEMALE REGULATOR.
Every ingredient possesses euperb Tonic
properties and exerts a wonderful influ
ence in toning up and ttrengthening hc
system, by driving through the proper
channels all impurities. Health and
strength guaranteed to result from its use,
uMjr wife, who was brdrlildon for !(!.
( manias, atflvr us Is a; ruafltt
rtmaU Mr for 1st autalUa la
BatDWlD RsavuTO Co.. Allatiia, Ua.
kswl If IttugglaM M 1.W V" twill.
ws,7ivn.