Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, November 06, 1899, Image 3
14 What's in a Name?" Everything, when you come io medi cines. c 4 sarsaparilla by any other name can never equal Hood's, because of the peculiar combination, proportion and pro cess by which Hoods possesses merit peculiar to itself, and by vohich it cures <when all other medicines fail. Cures scrofula, salt rheum, dyspepsia, catarrh, rheumatism, that tired feeling, etc. DROPSYSSIS^ Mass- Bo.ik of testimonials and 10 days' tieatmant Free. Dr. n. H. QUEENS BOMB, BOX B. Atlanta, Q*. Deafness Cannot Be Cared ltv local applicatiooß.as they cannot reach the diseased portion ot the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and thutls by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in- ! lamed you have a rumbling sound or imper ect hearing. and when it is entirely closed )eafness is the result, and unless the Inflam mation can bo taken out, and this tube re- Stored toits normal condition, hearing will be estroved forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Bend lor circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY A Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pillsare the best. We think Piso's Cure for Consumption Is theonly medicine for Coughs.- J HNNIK PINCK ABD, Springfield, Ills., Oct. 1,1894. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first dav's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.R.H.KLiNE,Ltd.U3I Arch St.Phila.Pa. The income from the Monte Carlo {amlng tables for the past year reaches 5,620,000. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Hawaiian t'ommoro*. The Hawaiian islands are an exam ple of commercial development under a close or protected system. It was in 1866 that the islands first touched an Interest of $1,000,000 in our import trade, chiefly through the whale-fish eries, as they made a convenient stop ping place for American whalers. The interest was not doubled until the reci procity treaty went into effect (1877), and sugar became the great article of commerce, with rice as the second in importance, but representing only one tenth the value of the sugar. The granting cf free entry into the United States for these two products was equivalent to remitting to the Ha waiian planters the sum of $1,000,000 a year, every dollar of which acted as a bounty on production. It was na tural to find that so liberal a gift was soon appreciated, and the energies of the islands were directed into laying out plantations of sugar and rice. As rice proved of uncertain profit th e cultivation for export has not pros pered, although the domestic consump tion increased through the influx of Asiatics. The exports of this grain were 2,250,000 pounds in 1876, attained a maximum of 13,684,200 pounds in 1887, and are now about 5,500,000 Dounds a year.—Harper's Magazine. A Burglary story. They were telling "burglary sto ries" on the veranda in front of the grocery store in a down-east town. •The man's hand was thrust through the hole he had cut in the door," said the star talker, "when the woman seized the wrist and held on in spite of the struggles of the man outside. In the morning the burglar was found dead, having cut his own throat when he found escape impossible; but the brave woman had not known he was dead, and so had not released her grasp on his wrist all night long." "Huh!" growled the skeptic in the corner; "why didn't she feel of his pulse?"— Buffalo Commercial EVERY woman suffering from any female trouble can bo helped by Mrs. Pinkham. This statement is based on sound reasoning and an unrivalled record. Multitudes of America's women to-day bless Mrs. Pinkham for competent and common-sense advice. Write to her if you are ill. Her address is Lynn, Mass. Absolutely no charge is made for advice. "I suffered Km seven years and would surely have died but or your help," writes MRS. GEO. v(/(/AIwCL BAINBRIDGE, Morea, Pa., to Mrs. Pinkham. r* arm mm " If' s with pleasure I now write to inform you that I am now a healthy woman, thanks ■ Hff rWf to your kind advice and wonderful medi- WWUIvmL.BW cine. I can never praise it enough. Iwas ' ————' a constant sufferer from womb trouble, and leucorrhoea, had a continual pain in abdomen. I could not walk across the floor for three or four weeks at a time. Since using your medicine, I now have no more hear ing-down pains, or tired >_ji feelings, and am well and — —— Jsvlll ' MRS. M. R 77 1 months' trial of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I can not sa.y enough in praise for it. I was a very sick woman with womb trouble when I began its use, but now I am welL" Are Tou Using Allen's Foot-Ease ? It Is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting Tired, Aching. Burning, Sweating Feet, Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot- Ease. a powder to be shaken into the shoes. Hold by all Druggists. Grocery and Shoe Stores, 25c, Sample sent FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmstead, Leßoy, N. Y. So much German beer is being sold in England that British brewers fear they will suffer by the competition. Xducate Tour Bowels Wltn Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. O. C. fall, druggists refund money. Nearly one-third of the world's sav ings are in the 980 savings banks of the United States. pMpi | PillS Look atyourtongue I If it'scoated, I I yourstomachisbad.yourliveroutof I I order. Ayer's Pills will clean your I I tongue, cure your dyspepsia, make I your liver right. Easy to take, easy I Ito operate. 25c. All druggists. I [Want your moustache or beurd a beautiful t brown or rich black ? Then use 1 BUCKINGHAM'S DYE |J HEADACHE "Both ray wife and myself have been using CASCARETS and they are the best medicine we have ever had In the house. Last week my wlfo was frantic with headache for two days, she tried some of your CASCARETS, and they relieved the pain in her head almost immediately. We both recommend Cascarets." CHAS. Stbduyord. Pittsburg Safe & Deposit Ca, Pittsburg, Pa. M CATHARTIC TRADk MARK R.OISTTRIO Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c, NIC. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sti-rllD. 1!rn...!. Co.p.n,, Chle.K", Montr...!, New Tori. SI7 Nn.Tn.RSR Bnld and enaranteed by nil di uv- HU- I U-OWVI Hints to < VKK. Tobacco llablt. A modern Instance. The wonderful advance made in the science of farming during the .last few years Is one of the best examples of American progressiveness. A little incident recounted by the Ashtabula (Ohio) Sentinel is characteristic. One evening, a short time ago, a society in Jefferson needed a gallon of cream. The committee called up by telephone the proprietors of a milk farm two miles north of the town, and asked if they could furnish It. The reply was that they could as soon as milking was done. In thirty minutes from the time the call was made, the cream was de livered. The milk had been drawn from the cow, put Into a separator, the cream extracted and sent to town by a man on a bicycle. A few years ago the committee would have had to send a boy in the afternoon, "yesterday's milk" would have had to be skimmed, and if the boy had not treed too many chipmunks on the way, he might have got back in time for the festival. A Gentle Hlut. A singular custom prevails among the Tartars or Kurds. If a man loses his cattle or other property he pours a little brown sugar Into a piece of colored cloth, ties it up and carries one such parcel to each of his friends and acquaintances. In return he is presented, according to circumstances, with a ,cow or sheep or a sum of money. THE PANIC OF 1893. HOW THE PEOPLE WERE MADE TO SUFFER FOR BANKS. The Sherman Law Had Raised the Price of Wheat and This Vexed England Into a Plan to Secure Its Immediate Repeal—History of a Crime. The distraught leaders and aspirants in both the great political parties of the country begin to feel the working of the yeast of knowledge on one sub ject above all others, for the plain reason that it is beginning to be under stood at last that the monetary panic and consequent demoralization of all business industries was due to a fixed purpose rather than to any chance combination or mesalliance of events and circumstances, and that the plan was as much a deliberate conception, undertaken with cold calculation, as any Echeme of a band of wreckers to get possession of a treasure ship in the ofling of a reef-fringed ocean Island. The order Issued to the 3,700 national banks by the management of the associated system on the 12th of March, 1893, for the purpose of secur ing concerted action for the objects in dicated in the circular, was the signal gun of this nefarious war. It recited that "the interests of national banks require Immediate financial legislation by congress." It declared that "silver, silver certificates, and treasury notes must be retired, and national bank notes upon a gold basis made the only money." This, it further stated, would require the authorization of "from $400,000,000 to $1,000,000,000 of new bonds as a basis of circulation." The banks were therefore ordered to retire their loans. Then this cold blooded and piratical order said: "Be careful to make a money stringency felt among your patrons, especially among influential business men." And it di rected them to advocate an extra ses sion of congress for the repeal of the purchase clause of the Sherman law, and to act with other banks in getting up a large petition to congress for its unconditional repeal, according to a form accompanying the circular. And it affirmed in conclusion that "tho future life of national banks as fixed and safe investments" depended upon immediate action, "as there is an in creasing sentiment in favor of govern ment legal tender notes and silver coinage." Here stands the plot re vealed. After such a showing, it looked well to see the Eckelscs and Hamllns of the treasury department sounding their alarm gong that free coinage men were guilty of disturbing business prosperity by destroying pub lic confidence. First, they overturn and undermine all the normal condi tions of the country's finances them selves, and then they turn and de nounce those who seek only the res toration of what maintained the coun try in its course of prosperity. And these are the men who assume to guard our finances and govern our policy. The distinctly declared purpose was to create a monetary panic, or at least "a money stringency." which was to be charged to the exportation of gold in amount sufficient to determine the necessity of an extra session of con gress. The object of an extra session was to establish an exclusive gold basis for our currency. Then, to procure such legislation as would retire all ex isting forms of paper money, and give to the banks power to issue the only money outside the metallic limit. Fin ally, to load the people with a heavy debt, payable principal and interest in gold, which debt was to be the special Interest of the banks themselves, by furnishing them with a bond basis for this paper currency. And all obviously to gratify tho greed of foreign money lenders hungering for another thou sand million United States bonds, re deemable only in gold, which these same foreign money lenders had per suaded us to accept, discarding consti tutional silver, as the exclusive money of this country. The work was done according to the design. All the na tional banks of the country proceeded to withdraw a third of their circula tion from business use, solely in obedi ence to the order from the money cen ter. Then they called in one-half of their loans, which at the time aggre gated not less than $1,000,000,000. Si multaneously they served notice on their customers that fur ther loans and discounts would cease, and that all obligations then outstanding must be met as they came due without further ex tension. The result was exactly what the conspiring money power had cal culated. The money market became stringent instantaneously, no one could tell how or why. Failures were precipitated right and left. The banks themselves went down by the whole sale, the explanation adroitly given for so unprecedented an occurrence being that the falling banks had been doing business on unsound principles. In or der to more fully understand the method, purpose and spirit of this purely predatory conspiracy, having its long tap root in England, in Lombard street, in a mere handful of powerful banking houses in London and on the continent, we must next proceed to observe the effect of this bank order in the way of contraction, since strin gency was the thing aimed at in order to force a call of congress and compel Its favorable legislation. First fol lowed, as stated, the abrupt retirement of one-third of the bank circulation. Then, upon the repeal of the Sherman law, the monthly purchase of about $3,500,000 of silver ceased. Next fol lowed an additional contraction of $50,- 000,000 from the purchase of new bonds Issued to hold up gold resumptions. And to cap and crown the whole, the banks began to hoard gold for the pur chase of bonds as their diminishing re serves might require under the law. The gold received by them in daily balance goes into New York safe de posit vaults. Against these deposits clearinghouse certificates are Issued, to be circulated among the banks only, and to be counted as part of the week ly bank reserves. Ever since the re peal of the Sherman law this hoarding of gold and issue of clearinghouse cer tificates has steadily gone on, and only the banks themselves know the amount of gold that has been boarded and taken out of circulation. And the rigidly righteous comptroller of the currency winked at this wholly illegal practice, while . he notoriously would make precipitate haste to pre vent the people, instead of the banks, from employing a similar currency to ward off their ruin. The subterfuges, misrepresentations, misleading state ments, and actual falsehoods invented and uttered by the associated money power and its obedient and subsidized press to make the public believe the situation was due to natural rather than to wholly unnatural and inde fensible causes, form a very substan tial part of the history of this ill starred financial panic, confessedly more purely unnecessary and iniqui tous than all similar distressful events since the country had a national be ginning. The banks turned and braz enly accused the people of hoarding the money and thus making it scarce. Then they charged that the country banks kept it back, and refused in the timidity of ignorance to let it out into the customary channels of circulation and use. It is a well-authenticated statement that when the panic had reached its zenith there was 135,000,- 000 more money in New York banks than at the corresponding period of the year previous! The bank reserves steadily increased beyond all previous record. Well may it be asked, it money is something for facilitating the business of the great body of people, or If it is merely an instrument of oppression and distress, to be put into the hands of a favored power for its enrichment and enlargement at the cost of the helpless sufferers. Hereto fore, when the money market became severely stringent, both the banks and the government came to its speedy re lief; in the present Instance alone has that relief, never so urgently demanded as now, been coldly refused, while the people themselves are charged with being the author of their own calami ties by their ignorantly willful hoard ing of money! It is nowise difficult to understand where the present financial troubles originated, the motive that in spired them, and the fatuity of expect ing any real release from them until the conditions which made them possi ble are wholly and thoroughly re moved. One thing is rendered prac tically certain by the direful experi ence the people are needlessly passing through: That a diminishing money volume cannot be made to answer the Increasing needs of our modern indus trial and business life, and that our growing civilization demands a medium of exchange adequate to the required stimulation of the universal productive power, rather than that of the wealth absorbing power of a limited class whose interests center almost entirely in themselves. When, as the national census tells us, 31,000 individuals own one-half of the country's wealth, it is time to turn the subject over and con sider it from its other side. And that is Just what the people are seriously engaged in doing now, for which they are derided and denounced by a suborned and servile press, with hin dering the general prosperity. GEORGE CANNING HILL. Sherman In 1878. Treasury Department, July 15, 1878. —Dear Sir: To that part of your let ter of the 12th Inst., in which you ask my views of the matter confided in the monetary commission, I have some delicacy in replying very fully. Dur ing the monetary conference in Paris, when silver in our country was ex cluded from circulation by being un dervalued, I was strongly in favor of the single standard of gold, and wrote a letter which you will find in the pro ceedings of that conference, stating briefly my views. At that time the wisest of us did not anticipate the sud den fall of silver or the rise of gold that has occurred. This uncertainty of the relation between the two metals is one of the chief arguments in favor of a monometa.*ic system. But other arguments, showing the dangerous ef fects upon industry by dropping one of the precious metals from the standard of value, outweigh in my mind all the oretical objections to the bimetallic system. I am thoroughly convinced that If It were possible for the leading commercial nations to fix by agree ment an arbitrary relation between silver and gold, even though the mar ket value might vary somewhat from time to time, it would be a measure of good to all nations. My earnest desire is that you may succeed in doing this. You are so well in formed upon this subject that it is not worth while for me to enlarge upon it. The statements and documents sent you by the director of the mint will give in authentic form most of the ma terial facts which bear upon the ques tion, and your own investigation on the silver commission will, I am quite sure, supply any deficiency. Very truly yours, JOHN SHERMAN. To W. S. Grosbeck, Esq., Cincinnati. Ohio. Ills Idea or It. Little Jamie —"I was a victim of cap ital punishment yesterday." Little Henry—"No. you weren't, because you are alive yet" Little Jamie—-"Yes, I was; I played with the Juniper boys when ma told me not to, and so she locked me up in a closet where she had a pound and a half of raisins hid from pa."—Chicago News. A mean Man. Jones—"l actually believe, my dear, that you think more of my dog than you do of me." Mrs. Jones—"l'd like to know why you think so." Jones— "Well, you never allow him to eat any thing you cook." THE SHIRT-WAIST. ON A PREVAILING S*VLK It sorely is the prettiest s:vle By fashion ere presented! We gaze, entranced, and muse the whllt On how it was invented. For ages it had dormant lain, Nor seer, nor prophet named it; Of what sex was the gifted brain That first evolved and framed it? For, whether made of silk or crepe, Of linen, lawn or satin, The sume grace it can deftly drape The slender and the fat in. We see It in more various hues Than ever rainbow sported Crimsons and yellows, greens und bluis All sorts, and unassorted. It lends a charm, familiar, dear To oven the stateliest woman; Twould make a goddess seem more nearj More kissuble and human. Neat, modest, saucy, simple, gay, Ohio, knowing, stylish, clever— The shirt-waist] It has come to stay, And may It stay—iorever! —Madeline S. Bridges, in Puck. HUMOR OF THE DAY. "What gushing letters Hortense al ways writes." "Yes; they say she uses a fountain pen." Percy —"If I marry that girl it will be just like finding money." Algy— "Yes—in your sleep."—Judge. "If you had a million dollars, what would you do?" "The Assessor, of course. Got any more fool questions?" —lndianapolis Journal. Lady —"A gentleman called, you say? Did he leave any name?" Par lor Maid—"Oh, yes'm. He said it was: immaterial."—Boston Traveler. Once, Delia says, she loved the moon, For when it shouo we'd stroll and spoon, Now 'tis approved on different ground— In moonlight burglars don't come rouad, —Chicago Record. "Gentlemen of the jury," said an eloquent attorney, "remember that my client is hard of hearing, and that, therefore, the voice of conscience ap peals to him in vain." "There's a] mountain of evidence against you," said the young lawyer to his first olieut. "Tunnel it, my boy, tunnel it!" oried the old sluice robber.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. "They carried poor Dick Gosling off to the hospital." "What was the mat ter?" "He| saw an automobile run ning away, and got out in the street and waved his hat iu front of it."— Puck. "As I understand it, au X-ray will go straight through a man's head. There is nothing else quite so pene trating, is there?" "Oh, I don't know. Did you ever hear my daughter sing?" —London Judy. Miss Howler, who sings (?) —"That gentleman you just introduced me to said he would give anything if he had my voice. By the way, what business does he follow?" Friend—"He's an auctioneer."—Patent Record. "Ever notice how a skeleton grins at things iu general?" asked the boarder who is cultivating his first mustache nnd pessimism. "I have," said the Cheerful Idiot, "though I don't see how he has the face to do so." "Take away your filthy luore!" said the hero. "I anticipated that re mark," said the villain, smiling sar donically under his black flowing mus tache, "All these bills have been carefully sterilizod." lndianapolis Journal. Henry—"Of course, it is no busi ness of miue, but since you have changed doctors the neighbors have noticed that your wife has beeu con stantly growing worse." Slapford— "l know, but then this physiciau is ever so much cheaper than the other one."—Boston Transcript. "Why is it, Mr. Bulwinkle?" he asked, "that you have never married?" "Well," he replied, "I have always felt that I was good enough for any girl that I would want to be my wife." She had intended to corner him, but after thinking the matter over for a few seconds she decided that there was really nothing further to be said on the subject.—Chicago Times-Her ald. The Way of Wisdom. Thoße who are familiar with the lit erature aud history of the world have learned that some things have beeu settled for all time by conclusive ex periments. In religion, in polities, in social life, in everything to which man has given his attention, hopeless essays have beeu made repeatedly by the unlearned and discontented to better their condition. They who are well instructed often at a glauce can see how hopeless is some well meant struggle. But they who have no knowledge of the experience of the past, reaching beyond the memory of u generation, reject the counsel of the wise, and suffer needless loss. The student, noting some new outbreak of this hopeless kind, knows that, if be goes back to the time when the fathers of the present generation were young, he will find the same phenomenon. To prevent this waste of energy, more knowledge is needed. There is a way out of or over every difficulty which besets human society. The right way is au easy way. It is the way of wisdom and understanding, and it is open to all who seek it,— Christian Register. Fortune-Tallin;* Teacnpi. A woman recently retured from London says that telling fortunes in a teacup was the popular fad there dur ing the season. Special teacups are sold for the purpose. These aro ab normally wide and deep and hrvo their insides covered with a perfect network of lines, and a border of the signs of the zodiac and various astro logical emblems. When the guest has finished his tea the hostess as sumes the role of seeress. She solemn ; examines the position of the tea loaves iu nouueetion with the liues aud signs and foretells the future ao cordiutr to "•sin.—;Chioaue Tribune. ii it/Mi The odor left by a highly-scented toilet soap is not agreeable to most people of refined tastes. A delicate perfume may be used after an Ivory Soap bath with much more pleasing effect. Ivory Soap leaves only a comfortable feeling of perfect cleanliness. Aurora, 111., has had 34 Mayors dur ing the last 40 years. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Mfe Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men ! strong. All druggists, 50c or 11. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co.. Chicago or New York. Tattooing is just now the popular j pastime of the leisured world. To Care Constipation Forever# Take Cascarets Caudv Cathartic. 10c or 25c. If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money- Extraordinary Case of fliood-Polsonlng. An extraordinary case of blood-poi soning Is reported by a Vienna jour nal. The victim was a young girl named Schwartz, aged 22. Some days ago she went for a walk wearing a green silk blouse. She became over heated, and the dye of the material ran. Unhappily she had sustained some trifling accidental wound under the arm, and the pigment got into the blood. Upon returning home she com plained of pain, but would not con sent to a medical examination. The injured spot became greatly Inflam ed, causing intense suffering, and on the following day the physician dis covered the cause. Remedies were Immediately applied, but It was too late, and after a brief illness the girl died. Pictorial Postonrd Craze. Some idea of the pictorial postcard i craze in Germany is given by the fig ures just published by our consul at Frankfort, says the London Globe. About 12,000 workmen are employed in producing these postal souvenirs, and it is estimated that every day about 100 new designs are published. Allowing for each card an issue of 1,000 only—and this is a modest esti mate —it means a total of 100,000 per day, or something like 30,000,000 per annum. Since the introduction of the souvenir card the number of postcards dispatched in Germany has increased by 12,000,000. The latest cards are a great Improvement on the earlier ones, and some bear etchings by artists of repute. Kidneys, Liver and Bowels /-leanses the Jystem tl D |s Jrr I OVERCOMES Vt <•* 1 I WC: "■Sid®" BW THE GENUINE - M&H'F O By (AUIvRINIA JTO SVRVPCS u '£y."-'K <,►" rod SAU 6Y All ORUGGiMh fWU SOt PER BOTTIC CARTERS INK It's good enoughjor Unflo Sam, and it's good qpbugh for you. While European Russia is suffering from famine, the crops in Siberia have been unusually good. lfo-To-Bac for Firty Cents. Guaranteed tobacoo habit cure, makes weak men atroug, blood pure. 50c, 91. All druggist* Saved Through Chess. j In 139G Mohammed Balba usurped | the crown of Granada In sptte of the superior claims of his elder brother Jussef. He was very unsuccessful, in his conduct of the war against the Christians and was at length aHsstesi nated by poison absorbed thrortgh' his j skin from a shirt. He entertained-a desperate dislike to the brother whom he had injured, and when he knew that his own fate was sealed he sent an order to the governor of the prison in which Jussef was confined that he should be executed immediately. When I the order arrived Jussef was playing chess with the chaplain of the prison. With great difficulty Jussef obtained a respite from the governor permitting him to finish the game. Before it was ended, however, news came that the i usurper had died of the poison. This j canceled the order of execution and | Jussef, instead of going to the scaf j fold, mounted the throne. Dried Fly Statistic,. I Among the exports of Mexico last year are to be noted two tons of dried , files. /'Drßull'sN Cures oil Throat and Lung Affections. COUGH SYRUP Get the genuine. Refuse substitutes. jM Vis sure/ ; Dr. Bulls nils curt Dyspepsia. Trial, so for pa W. L. DOUGLAS $3&53.50 SHOES union M Worth $4 to $6 compared with other makes. Indorsed by over 1,000,000 wearers. ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES Till GEM INK fcuve W. L. Doiflu' Tako no substitute claimed to be as good. Largest makere of $3 and ts.fK) shoes In the world. Your dealer should keep them— lf not. we will send you a pair on receipt of price. State kkid of leather, size and width, plain or cap toe. Cutulotrue C Free. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Brockton. Mass. ■ M | jP* 4% who suffer from uteres* Ifll 11 L va £* Dnl diseases... LHUILO ppen j Radically and Surely UUfi*L U I by usin Golden Hod Suppositories. Used successfully ten years. Reliable homo treat- JVS n A.V.ri, to f " r . information, confidential. CHAMBER* Ml IHCIM CO •„ 1 Fort Street W.-at, Detroit. Mich. golden" C ROWN ~~ LAMP CHIMNEYS Are the best. Ask for them. Cost no more I than common olilmuovn. All -Ictnem. | l-ITTsm HCi <ll.Ass <•<)., Allegheny, Pa. ARNOLD'S COUCH Prevents lo£Si KILLER JS&WMCIfc. Or. Ricord's Essence of Life nrd, ne\er-follinn remedy for all cases of nervous, mental, physical debility, los vitality and pre- I mature decay in both sexes; positive, permanent cure; full treatment #5, or $1 a bottle: -laiui for cirtular. J. JAuQUES. Agent, 176 Broadway. X, V. I ASTHMA POSITIVELY CURED. | CKOSII Y's S\\ I'IHSII ASTHMA t LHI l does this. A trinl ia . knge maih d ir.-e. & Collin.- Bugs. Memcink Co., Sr. Louis, Mo. I | Thompson's Eye Water RHEUM ATISM % 4 £SS ■'Alex anhvh Hi mm.v C0..:-i.; t, n-,-n vm j, St., N. V. p. N. u. 4i 'ay