Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, September 28, 1896, Image 3
Health Is impossible without pure,healthy blood. Puri- I fled and vitalized blood results from taking ■ Sarsaparilla The best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier, j Hood's Pills for the liver and bowels. Jsc. . — | "One Primary Money Mass." j Bv restoring silver to its formor I place both metals would become in j effect one 'metal; one primary money mass, both would respond to the de- I mand of debts and business, and to support with broader basis the credit fabric of the world. Says a French writer in 1881: "I'ho law, by placing the yellow metal and white metal on the samo basis by establishing n fixed ratio between them, hat made them really a single money."—Sterling (Run.) Democrat. A Trust Director fur Vice-President. Garret A. Hobarc, nominated by the Republicans for the Vice-Presidency, is a lit and proper person to represent the party of monopoly. As a director in the American Cotton Oil Company, the official name of tho cotton seed trust, he is personally interested in restoring the McKinley law. That tariff imposed a duty of twenty-seven per cent, on cotton seed oil. The Wil son tariff abolished the duty, thus de creasing the power of the trust tc charge higher price.s to American con sumers than to foreigners. If McKin ley is elected the duty on cotton seed oil will bo restored, lor the benefit ol Mr. Hobart and hie trust associates. How will that help tho millions who will have to pay higher prices for oill "Business lieu."' In common with miiltoDs of our fel low citizens, we contend that when the money qnestion is considered from a "business" standpoint (and that is the standpoint from which it should be considered) every business should have fair play and an impartial hearing, and that no few specinl calling should arrogate to themselves tho right to be considered the only "business" worth figuring in the promises, and the only onos which have within them intelli gence enough to say how our mone tary systems shall bo formed or of what our money shall consist. The gold handler and those who agreowith him may demand gold exclusively, but other men engaged in different pursuits, whose business is crippled by adhering to the gold standard, have just as much right and better Teason for demanding a broader and less monopolistic system, one which will givo thorn a better showing and, in their opinion, tho country more prosperity. Before the Dajs of Resumption. When was it that hovels were trans formed into houses, and houses into palaces in this country ? It was dur ing the latter sixties, before "resump tion" was thought of, and its baleful shadow was not compelled to pay back a dollar twice or thrice as valu able ns tho ono it borrowed.—Austin (Tex.) Pitchfork. A Veteran Financier lor Silver. The opposition to tho free coinage of silver is a crime—a miserable, crazy notion. If I had tho doing of it there would bo no room for a goldbug in this country. Tho gold standard would ruin the country—positively rain it. I havo seen in my time silver superior iu value to gold, and its depreciation has been caused by its demonetization. Tho silver dollar was the unit of value until 1873, when there was a 3 per cent, premium on the metal. At that time the value of silver was 3 per cent, more than that of gold.—Jay Cooke. CAN'T HELP TELLING. No village so small. No city so large. From the Atlantic to the Pacific, names known for all that is truthful, all that is reliable, arc attached to the most thankful letters. They come to Lydia E. Pinkham, and tell the one story of physical salvation gained through the aid of her Vegeta ble Compound. The horrors born of displacement or ulceration of the womb: Backache, bearing-drnvn, dizziness, fear of coming calamity, distrust of best friends. All, all —sorrows and sufferings of the past. The famed "Vegetable Compound" bearing the illustrious name, Pinkham. has brought them out of the valley of suffering to that of happiness and usefulness. P N u 37 90 ,km Ifeet Lough Syr up. Taatcs Good. Use : BRYAK'S ELOQUENT PLEA | HE SPEAKS FOE FREE SILVER TO ! FARMERS AND WORKING MEN. . f The Gifted Nebraskan's Magnificent I Address to an Immense Audience at Hornellsvllle, N. Y Asks j Some Questions of Sliver's Foes. J William J. Bryan, the Demooratio I champion of free silver, spoke to an I immense audience of farmers and workingmen at the Hornellnville (N. I Y.) fair during his tour through the j State. Mr. Bryan said: ! Our opponents have no policy on I the money question. They don't say I that the gold standard is "good. No party iu the history of the United i States ever said that the gold standard I was good. And yet, my friends, parties j have existed here, parties have written { platforms, parties have nominated , candidates, parties have carried on campaigns, and yet no party from the beginning of our history unlil to-day hao ever said'in a National platform that the gold standard is a good thing for tho American poopie. No party would dare to say that and then go forth hofore the people, who for twen ty years have suffered beneath the bur den of a gold standard. But what does tho Eopublicuu plat form say? Why, it says we pledee ourselves to get rid of the gold stand ard nnd substitute the prinoiple of bi metallism. Doesn't that mean that bi metallism is better than a gold stand ard? There can bo no other construc tion placed upon it, and after having declared that bimetallism is better than a gold standard, that same plat form says that until the leading com mercial Nations shall consent to an in ternational agreement we must bear tho gold standard. Now, if tho gold standard is a good thing, the Republi can party ought to have declared iu favor of its permanent maintenance. If the gold standard is a good thing j the United Sta.es ought to have it. I If the gold standard is a bad thing j no foreign Nation should be permitted ' to force a gold standard upon the peo ple of this country. How long does { tho Republican platform sav we must endure the gold standard? For a year? It doesn't limit it to a vear. For four years? It doesn't limit'it to four years. You know that platform insubstanco declares that we mnst submit to it for ever if other Nations insist upon our doing it. There is not in that plat form, in that money piank, a single rav of hope. Are you satisfied with your condi tion? If you are you want to keep tho gold standard. if you are not satis fied with your condition are you will ing to submit to present conditions until other people take pity on us and come to our rescue? That, my friends, is the position iu which we are placed in this campaign—no party defending the gold standard and yet a great party willing to surrender the right of self government, willing to place in legislative powers in other Govern ments tho right to legislate for tho people of the United States. Ido not believe the American people will ever :onsent to reoeive their inundates from icross the ocean. Our opponents do not attack one of the strong planks in our platform. We declare against tne issuance of bonds in times of peace and the traffick ing with syndicates, that are thern ielves out for a high price, to look af ter our Government. We denounce that policy. Does the Republican party denounce it? No, not* a word in its platform denonnoing it. If the Republican party succeeds will it stop that policy? No, because every mau who is interested in that syndicate, every man who profits out of the Government's extremities, is iloclariug that tho Republican ticket must be elected this year in order to save the country. And yet when our opponents come before the people, to wnom do they appeal for votes? Do any of the Re publican speakers turn to tho money changers and Bppeal to them to vote tho Republican ticket? No, it is not necessary, my friend, to waste time on thom. They appeal to tho ones who they think will require tho most per suasion. To whom do they appeal? To the laboring men of this country. They tell the laboring man that they are so afraid that something is to happen to him. Well, now, how can you tell whether these men who stand at the head of tho gold crusade, and yet do not have the courage to say so, are going to help the laboring men or not? Judge the future by the past. We have scriptural authority lor the assertion that the tree is known by its fruit. These trees have been bearing fruit for twenty years, and there has not been a thing on a single tree that a laboring man would have in his house. These are the men who by tho for mation of great trusts have stiffed competition, driven the small com petitor out of business. Will thoy at this late day turn around and cham pion laws for the special benefit and protection of the laboring men? Show me the man who has tried to break down labor organization and I will show youa mau who to-day is sweating blood for fear some laboring man is going to have his wages cnt into. Now, my friends, tho policy of the anemy is to divide and conquer. Whenever there has been an effort upon the part of the laboring men to secure any legislation needed by them, where have they found their friends? They have found their friends upon the farm, and not in Wall street. And now they appeal to the laboring man to come with the' money changers and help them dofeat the farmer because he wants a higher price for his pro duct. They want the laboring man to be lieve that the free coinage of silver it going to hurt him. My friends, I would rather risk the laboring mau to decide what is good for him than to leave his interests in the hands of his ancient enemies. And what do tho la boring men say ? It is only a little more than a year ago that a petition was sent to Congress asking for the immediate restoration of the free and unlimited coinage of gold and silvor, at the present legal ratio of 16 to 1, without waiting for the aid or consent of any other Nation, and it was signed by the leaders of every prominent la bor organization in the United States. Who can best be trusted? The men who have led the labor organizations in the fights in the past, err the mon who iu the past have used their pewer to defeat tho only protection of the laboring man, namely, his organiza tion. Now, why did these laboring men demand the restoration of silver? Because they know that when the dol lar goes up property goes down, and thoy know that when property is fall ing all enterprise is retarded and stag nation follows. They know the gold etandard encourages tho hoarding of money, instead of the expanding of it iu tho development of the resources of the country, and now this policy of hoarding i 3 driving thousands and tons of thousands and huadreJs of thousands of workingmen out in the streets, where they beg for the privi lege of working for their daily bread. These workmen know that thovcan not separate tnemselves from the till ers of tho soil. Theso laboring men know that there can be no prosperity in business in this country unless the farmer is selling what he produces for more thau what it cost him to pro duce it. Now, I want to suggest these ques tions: When you meet a man who is opposed to our platform, you find out what busiues he is engaged in. Find out whether he has any p3ouniary in terest that will lead him to take a po sition against us. ABk him if he is in favor of a gold standard. If he says he is, ask him if it is not queer that, there never was a party in tho United Staces that was in favor of a gold stan dard. Tell him that he is a man with out a party iu the United States. If he says that ho is opposed to a gold standard,audjis in favor of bimetallism, you ask him how much he is in favor of bimetallism. If ho aajshe wants other Nations to help, ask him what other Nations ho wants to help and what chance he thinks of their doing it. You ask him whether he thinks that a creditor country, whose rulers profit by tue rise or tne value of the dollar, whether those countries ore very good people to expect to come and help us to stop the thing that is doing them good. If he says that lie' does not think this country is large enough to have a financial policy of its own, ask him what he thinks this Nation is large enough to have. If fio says that we are not able to legislate for ourselves on the greatest question that can come before the people, ask him what right we had, anyway, to declare our independence a hundred years ago. You toll him tha. under free ooinago the dollar will be the samo sizo that it is now, tho same weight and the samo fineness. It will be a legal tender better than it is to-day. because while ihe silver dollar to-day is a legal ten ler, unless somebody contracts ugainst it, the new silver dollar will bo of legal lander no matter whether mon heie- Uter tries to demonetize by law what Ihe Government calls money. You ;ell hitn that if a dollar is worth a hundred cents to-day, bocauso you can j>ay taxes with it, and pay debts with it, and buy property with it, how ho snows it is going to bo less whea you nake it better than it is to-day. If he says that when you molt that lilver dollar down it ib not worth more ;haa 03 cents, you tell him it is be :auso the law says that if the dollar aelts you cannot have it coined again, But must use it to mako spoons out of, But you intend by law to soy he can :ake it to the mint iind havo it re itamped again just as ho oan take a joid dollar to-day aud have it ro itamped if it melts. General Distress. Can it bo that these gentlemen who roll iu weulth—and who oonstituto the power of the goldbug movement—are ignorant of tbe fact that the condition )f the laboring element of this Nation is hardly susceptible of being rendered ivorse? Do they not know that wages >ie now down to the starvation notch; that multiplied thousauds are unable to obtain a day's omployment at any price; that a very large percentage of those who havo positions aro working on one-half, and even loss time, and that the prices for farm products have been beaten down until the farm has ceased to pay ? Can it be that these gold standard advocates are so blind that they do not see that distress, more general and severe than perhaps ever characterized this fair land before, is now the portion of her people?— Springfield (Mo.) Leader. A Frank British A 'lmission. England, as a creditor country, must receive goods of a certain value every yenr, or clso some of her debtors must declare themselves defaulters. Owing to the decline in the value of raw materials', it is no longer possible for the world at large to pav its an nual debt to them, and therefore Eng land now takes a certain proportion of what is owed her in the manufactured articles.—Loudon Spectator. Silver's l'lnce Is With Gold. The amount of real money, that is primary or redemption money, pet oapita in circulation in the world is stated to be 53.01, of which 53.51 is gold and 52.50 is silver.—Youngstown (Ohio) Buokeye Record. A REPUBLICAN ORGY. GENERAL PROFLIGACY UNDER HAR-! BISON'S ADMINISTRATION. Recent Statements of McKlniey Com pletely Disproved Republican Extravagance Mainly Responsi ble for the Country's Distress. To Mr. McKinley: In your letter of acceptance you say of the Wilson Tariff law : "It lacks the essential virtue of the creation—the raising of revenue suf ficient to supply the needs of the Gov ernment. It lies contributed to swell our National debt more than $262,- 000,000, and general business demorali zation is seen on every hand. * Confidence in home enterprises has almost wholly disappeared. Our men at home are idle and men abroad are occupied in supplying us with goods." In a recent speech at your home you were even more explicit. Xou said of the sound-money Democrats: "They * * "werechiefly instru mental in puttiug on tho statute books tariff legislation which has destroyed American manufacturing, checked foreign trade and reduced tho demand for the labor of American working men." In the same speco'n you character- I ized tho existing (Wilson) tariff law as: "Free trade legislation which has ; already resulted so disastrously to the American people and entailed upon the Government deficient revenues, j upon tho people diminished trade abroad and starvation wages at home." These statements and characteriza tions are not true, Mr. MoKinley. 1. The Wilson tariff has not "do- i stroyed American manufacturing" or "checked foreign trade." On the contrary, as you very well know, the exports of American manufactured goods, which amounted under your i own tariff law in the fiscal year 1892 only to $158,000,000, have so in- j creased under the Wilson law that for the fiscal year 1896 they were no less than $228,000,000. 2. When you assert that the exist ing tariff has "reduced the demand for the labor of American working- j men" you are under obligation to es tablish the fact. What proof have you that the demand for American labor is less under the present tariff than it was under your own? If your assertion is true you can easily estab lish it by statistics. You doubtless remember that in 1890 you asserted that wages in protected industries had advanced under your tariff, and yet upon an oft-repeated challenge you utterly failed to point out a single in stance in which any such thing bad occurred. Is your present assertion | equally without a foundation of l'aot? 1b it fair, is it just, is it even honest j to make such an assertion if you can- I not prove it? 3. The Wilson law is not "free trade j legislation," and von know it. You know that tho present tariff is higher than the Republican tariff of 1883, un- j der which labor was amply protected. You know that it is 50 per cent, higher j lhan tho Morrill war tariff. You know it is the highest protective tariff in the I world. Is it honest or fair to call this "free trade?" 4. Tho Wilson bill, as you perfectly | know, has not "entailed upon the j Government deficient revenues." You j know that but for the Supreme Court's inomalous decision declaring its in come tax feature unconstitutional the Wilson measure would have produced imple revenues to pay all Government expenses and leave a surplus. You know that when that source of revenue was destroyed it was a Republican Congress which refused to increase the beer tax or do anything else to repair the deficiency. Is it fair, is it manly, is it wise, under existing circum stances, for you thus to misrepresent facts? But there is a broader aspect of this matter. In these assertions and sug gestions you challenge sorutiny of Republican crimes under Harrison. It is reokless and even a fatal thing for you to do. The very mischiefs whioh you charge to Democratic legislation and Demo cratic administration have been the necessary results, tho inevitable fruits ot that orgy which began with Mr. Harrison's inauguration and ended only with his departure from office after his orushiug defeat by tho peo ple. As you were yourself a promi nent and influential factor in the events of that period you must know this fact as well ns we do. Is it fair for you to ignore it and attribute to Dem ocratic legislation and administration results which were unmistakable con sequences of Republican misconduct? 1. You know perfectly well that when Mr. Harrison came into office Mr. Cleveland turned over to him a Treasury full to repletion, with a sur plus of more thau a hundred million of dollars, and with revenue laws pro ducing vastly more money than the Government needed. 2. You know that at tho ond of Mr. Harrison's term the surplus was ex hausted and that there would have been a deficiency apparent but for the juggling of accounts in the Treas ury department and the wrongful conversion of a trust fund to illegiti mate uses. 8. You know that this resnlt was brought about in part by the reduc tion of receipts created by your own tariff bill, under which, in tho name of protection, tho customs rovenues were cut down from $229,000,000 in 1890 to $177,000,000 in 1892 and $131,. 000,000 in 1894. 4. You know that it was in other part produced by the reckless squan dering of a Republican Congress of which in the House yon were the chosen leader. That body not only swelled expenditures to a billion dol lars, but fastened so many unjust per manent charges upon the Treasury as to make it impossible for succeeding Congresses to reduce this extraordi nary and extravagant total. 5. You know that whatever defi ciency there has since been in the revenue, whatever consequent embar rassment to business and whatever prostration to industry are in large part the fruits of recklessness for which the Republicans much more than the Democratic party is respon sible, and in whioh you yourself bore a commanding part. Why not tell the truth about these things? Are hon esty, candor, fair dealing and truth telling less imperative obligations to a candidate for President than to ordi nary men? But this is not all. Mr. Harrison was elected by a mi nority vote, even as compared with | that of his Democratic opponent alone. The majority of the popular vote was heavily against him. No sooner was he seated than your party set about securing his re-eleotion and preserv ing its control of the Senate in spite of anything the majority of the voters might decree. There were five Territories that could be depended upon to elect Re publican Senators and give their elec toral votes to a Republican candidate. By dividing Dakota a Republican Con gress made of these five sparsely pop- j ulated Territories six new Republican States, with twelve Senators, eight members of Congress and twenty elec toral votes. Not one of these States had a pop ulation fairly entitling it to admis sion. Not one of them would have been admitted except in aid of the Republican conspiracy to re-elect Mr. Harrison and to intrench the Republi can party in control of the Senate in spite of the country's will. Inciden tally this political crimo was expected to render impossible the repeal of any legislation the Congress that com mitted it might enact. It was designed to enable your party to fasten per manently on the country that system of bounties and favoritism and ex travagance which made possible and profitable the very wrongs and rob beries against which the freo silver craze is largely a misguided protest. Mr. Harrison and the Congress elected with him reduced the revenues, squandered the surplus, increased the i expenditures, swelled the pension list j until it cost more than any of the great European war establishments ind inaugurated a system of general profligacy which has alarmed and an gered tho country. In face of this record it is neithor honest nor politic in you to insult the intelligence of Democrats whoso suf frages you ask by attributing to Demo cratic legislation and administration the ills of which your own party was chief author. It was not the Wilson law, but the Republican crimes under Harrison, that laid the foundations for present distress and created conditions which threaten the country with policies of dishonor.—New York World. Some women are bound to be slaves; as soon as they lose- one master lliey hunt up another one. Uncle Billy Hubhell of Bath, N. V. From the Advocate, Bath, X. 1". Residents of Bath, N. ¥., have taken a great fancy of late to Lake Salubrln, which lies just outside tho village, and during the past two years a score of new cottages have gone up on its shores. Choice locations are becoming source ami the early settlers are I careful now to keep what dooryard they j have left. Your correspondent visited the Lake recently-nud dropped In to see "Uncle Billy" Hubbell in his comfortable cot tug under the pines. Mr. Hubbell eatubllshot himself at the Lake before the boom com meuced, and has one of the prettiest loea tions there. Sir. Hubbell snbl that this was tho firs' spriuc in twenty years in which ho had beet free from his old enemy, sciatic rheumatism He thought he had contracted this dlseast while rttuniug as express messenger on tin Erie and other railroads between 1849 am: 1859, although ho did not feel its aeutt symptoms until some fifteen years ltUer. Mr. Hubboll is now the second oluest expressman lit the United States and recalls many inter esting reminiscences of these early days, in 1875 he went to the Western frontier, and has suffered from sciatic rheumatism evot since. Speaking of the many efforts he hat) made to get relief from this painful ailment, he said that while in New Mexico he visited the Las Vegas and Hamas springs, and Inter he tried those at Manitou, Col., and Little Rook, Ark. Coming oast ho tried the White Sulphur Spring, Ohio. St. Catherine, Can., and Clifton and Avon, in New York, but without being able to got the slightest relief. As he advanced in age, his trounle became more painful. "Why," he exclaimed, point- I ing to tho furm house of William Burleson, ! about six hundred feet distant, "I would yell so when those twinges caught mo thai they could hear me down there." William H. Hallock, owner oi Haliock's bank, in .Bath, Is a nephew of Mr. Hubbell, and last winter he insisted that "Uncle Bl!- ly" should try rink Bills for Pale People fot bis rheumatism. Mr. Hubbell Is free to say that ho had no faith In the pills whatever, and only tried thorn because of tile insist ence of Mr. Hallock. He had already tried "more than a million remedies" before lie came to Pink Pills and ns none had rendered him the slightest benefit, lie was pretiv well discouraged. However, to please Mr. Hal lock, he got a box of Pink Pills. Since then (some three or four months;, Mr. Hubbell has not felt a single trace ot rheumatism, and Is now on his fourth box of the pills. He cannot explain bow this marvelous relief was effected, but feels sure it was tho pills which did it, and Is uow as enthusiastic in tholr endorsement as was his nephew. Mr. Hallock. Mr, Hubbell now comes into llaih almost every day, and says he could ride a bicycle if he only had some one to help him on and off. Subscribed and sworn to bofore me this 22d day of May, 1896. W. P. FISH, Notary Public. Dr. Williams' I'iuk Pilis for Pate People are now given to the public as an unfailing blood builder anil nerve restorer, curing alt forms of weakness arising from a watery oondition of Ihe blood or shattered nerves. The pilis are sold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price, 50 cents a box or six boxes for *2.50, by addressing Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenec tadv N V. Heart Disease Relieved la 80 Sri tin tea. Dr. Agnew'a Cure for the Heart gives perfect relief in all cases of Organic or Sympathetic Heart Disease in 30 minutes, awl speedily ef fects a cure. It is a peerless remedy for Pal pitation. Shortness of Breath. Smothering I Spells, Pain in Left Side and all symptoms of a Diseased Heart. One dose convinces. If I jour druggist hasn't it in stec-k. ask him to procure it for yon. It will save your Life. As Advertised. New Yorker—But you advertised that you had running water on both floors. Jayhawker—So we did, stranger; an 1 'twas a foot deep in the cellar, but we lialn't had no rain naow goLu' on a week to-morrow.—Exchange. Blodds—Here's a rather clever little book, "Don'ts for Club Men." Slobbs— It Isn't the don'ts that worry me; It's the dues.—Philadelphia Record. How*. Thii? We offer One Hundred Dollere Reward for any case ot Catarrh that cannot bo cured bv Hatha Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY * Co.. Props., Toledo, o. >\e, trie undersigned, have known F.J. Che ney for the last 15 scare, and behove him per fecthr honorable In all businose tranßaetlone and financially abltt to carry out any obliga tion mafia by their firm. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. WJLDIKO, RINNAN £' MARVIN, Wholesale Drugrcista, Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur racetof the system. Price, 7fic. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials tree. Hall s Family Pills are the host. Oatarrk sad Coldc. fa II to 10 Minutes. One short pulT of the breath through the Blower, supplied with each bottle of Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, diffuses this Pow der over the surface of the nasal passages. Painless and delightful to use. It, relieves in stantly ami permanently cures Catarrh, Hay Fever, Colds, Headache, Sore Throat, Ton ■ilitis and Deafness. If your druggist ha 3 u't it iu stock, ask him to procure it for you. A herring weighing six or seven ounces is provided with about HO,OOO eggs. AH who use Dobbins' Elertrlr Soap prafso it as the best, cheapest and moat economical family soap made; but If you will try it once it will tell a still stronger tale of its merits itself. J'lease try it. Your grocer will supply you. The first church on the site of St. Paul's, London, was built in 010. FlTSstopped freeand permnnentlycured. No fits after first, day's use of DK. KLINE'S GREAT NRRVKRESTORER. Free|3trial bottleand treat ise. bend to Dr. Kline, 101 Arch St., Phlla.. Pa. I use Piso's Cure for Consumption both in my family and practice.—Dr. G. W. PATTER SON, lukster, Mich.. Nov. 5, 189*1. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums,reduces inflamma tion, allays pain; cures wind colic. Hoc u bottle. Sword-fish as food is nfinitely superior t Balm on. There are soaps and soaps but only one Sunlight Soap which is the soap of soaps and washes clothes with less labor and great er comfort. Makes homes brighter Makes hearts lighter M* I> PO * Bros.. Ltd.. Sta., N. Y. K) "Battle Ax" bridges a man over Mi © many a tight place when his pocket- N$ book is lean. A 5-cent piece of " Battle Ax" will last about as long as M a J 0-cent piece of other good tobaccos. sg, This thing of getting double value for M your money is a great help. Try it and M © save money. vP; ' Don't Put Off Till To-morrow the Duties of To-day." Buy a Cake of I SAPOLIO - Gladness Cornes \ \\I ith a better understanding of the * transient nature of the many phys • ical ills which vanish before proper ef , forts—gentle efforts—pleasant efforts— rightly directed. There is comfort in • the knowledge that so many forms of [ sickness are not due to any actual dis ease, but simply to a constipated condi tion of the system, which the pleasant , family laxative, Syrup of Figs, prompt ly removes. That is why it is the only remedy with millions of families, aodia everywhere esteemed so highly by all who value good health. Its beneficial effects arc due to the fact, that it is the one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness, without debilitating tha organs on which it acts. It is therefore all important, in order to get its bene , ficial effects, to note when you pur chase, that you have the genuine article, which is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and sold by all rep utable druggists. If in the enjoyment of good health, and the system is regular, then laxa tives or other remedies are not needed. If afflicted with any actual disease, one may be commended to the most skillful physicians, but if in need of a laxative, then one should have the best, and with the well-informed everywhere, Syvupof Figs stands highest and is most iargely used and gives most general satisfaction. Nothing so Clean, so Durable, so Economical, - -""i* BIAS VELVETEEN SKIRT BINDINGS. You havs to pay the same price for the "just as good." Why not insist on having what you want—S. H. & M. If your dealer WILL NOT supply you we will. Samples mailed free. ' Home Dressmaking Made Easy," a new 72 page bock by Miss EmmaM. Hooper, of the Ladies' Home Journal, tells in plain words how to make dresses at home without previous training; mailed for 25c. 5 H. & M. Co., P. O. Box 699, N. Y. City. DROPsrif notinced From first dose symptoms rapidly Jlsappear. TEN jAVs'tEEAYMEHTPUR'MrSHEO FREE < taymalt UK. fl. It tillFf.N £ 3UNB, SveclalUu, AUeete. Se. PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHN W MORRIS, WASHINGTON,O.C. Late Principal Examiner U. 8. Peniion Bureau. 3 jrrs. in laat war, 10 adjudicating claims, atty. sinca. I' N I ;t7 fIDBIIIfI and WHISKY taabUeurod. Book mb 6 Ur Bum FREE. I)r. B. M. WopLLßl4_Aoanta.aa.