. . . . . . . . . . . . t , h D OLD PARTY. a THE SAME GOLD IN THE SAME SACKS RETURNED , ivlthtlratrn lrrom tire Tronnnry and Used ' to Buy Bonds-OhL Sohllers Had to Go-Soiving the Seal S'roblom-Mr. 1lllson'ic Bare Gift. "Boardtnl ; GtrllL" ' .I'he chief excuse advancer ; by the administration fore its infamous bargain - gain with the i y lock syndicate , whereby it gave that grasping concern - cern a bonus of more than X10,000- 900 on a bond deal amounting to 62,4(10,000 , is that general distrust 'of the safety of our currency prevailed - vailed at that time and that vast amounts of gold were withdrawn in exchange for legal tender notes to be { ahoarled" for a premium. If any additional evidence were ' needed to prove that practically all the gold withdrawn from the treasury' ' prior to the last bond deal was taken by rho New York members of the Shylock syndicate it is furnished by the figures sent to the senate by the secretary of the treasury in response to a request for information on that subject. These figures show that from December - cember 1 , 1594 , until January 16 , 1895 , the total amount of legal tender notes presented for redemption at the treasury was X42,523,762 , of which 40J9a.140 was in the form of greenbacks - backs and only l,52S,582 In the form of treasury notes of 1390. From January 17 until February 13 the total amount of legal tender notes redeemed in gold was X38,262,540 , of whlcb 36,572,200 was in the form of greenbacks and only Sl,690,340 in the .form of treasury notes. The largest record of redemptions in any one day was on January 25 , when it amounted to $7,156,046 , but R on several other days during the 1)eri0d' under consideration the redemptions - demptions exceeded w3,000O00. Of course Sub-Treasurer Jordan of New York knows very well that these heavy withdrawals were made by the hcw York bankers who have profited by the latest bond deal , says the Denver - ver Republican , but as he was parti- cels criminis in that transaction he will not take the public into his confidence - fidence regarding this subject. The gold thus withdrawn from the treasury - ury so rapidly was taken for the ex- p1'eSa purpose of forcing the administration - tration to sell more bonds , and it is a met attested by some of the New York newspapers that since the latest lJond deal was effected the same gold in the same sacks has been returned in payment for the bonds. This very effectively disposes of I ' the absurd theory that it was the Peo- pie and not the banks that withdrew I the gold from t he treasury for tit > , purpose of "hoarding" it. The very tact that nearly all the legal tenders i presented for redemption in gold were greenbacks is conclusive evidence on this subject. The banks of New York hold a very large proportion of their legal reserve in greenbacks , and un- ( lei no circumstances will they con- scut to keep treasury notes of 1590 or silver certiticates if they can help it. 'They had the greenbacks in their reserves - serves and they Pres9nted them for ref - f dcinption in order to force the administration - istration to make the bond deal , and j they succeeded. t : The administration is to blame because - cause ilZ aided this conspiracy to make such a vast profit when it could have avoided that public calamity b offering - ing the bonds for sale in the open market. If this course had been pursued - sued there is no doubt that the price 1 received by the government would j have exceeded 120 , whereas the syndicate - dicate obtained the bonds at 104 ; through the favoritism of President Cleveland and secretary Carlisle. When this whole transaction is fully understood by the American public talc condemnation visited upon the : administration will be deep and last- : in : r. It was the most .infamous ftnan- ciat transaction ever attempted by : any American administration , and that will be the general judgment of , : mankind upon it when all the facts are fully compiehended. . .li ring the Seal Problem. Zf the authorities at Washington should finally determine to anticipate the work of pelagic seal hunters and i order the extermination of the seals of the Pribylov islands , as was urged in a bill introduced by Congressman Dingley , it would probably prove in the Old an economic measure. The unsuccessful - cessful attempt at the protection of the seals has alr'caly cost the country nearly or quits as much as it ever re- , ali od from the seals. It has been the steady policy of the English government - ment to exterminate the seals wherever .fouud. This it has done on the Greenland - land and Newfoundland coasts. on the Magdalen islands , in Labrador and in -the Southern seas-in fact , the world .over , wherever the rich fur-bearing .aniinal could be found. In their hunting - ing of the seal , the English have been reckless as savages , , as greedy and gruel as a pirate and destructive as a vandal. For several years their seal Jiunters have devoted their time to exterminating the Alaskan seal , the finest in the world. The Paris tribunal - bunal that -sought to arrest this do- _ _ trnetion but whettel the British appetite petite for more of it. Uncle Sam coai caforce his rights in Behring ' sea uy an aupeal to arms , but the game would be hardly north the can1 1 .dle. There is material other than cal itin by which he back can be kert warm. Possibly Mr. Dingley's : sohriion of the vexed problem is the I bcst after all.-Cincinnati Times-Star. i near Rrlpo9. i I Mr ; William S. Holman , who is in a arctiring frae : of mind just now , ha3 ' reach ti .ha conclusion that no young - x'yT i'6 + sTa ysa man ought to enter public life , and says that after thirty-five years' ex- per cuco ho finds there is "nothing in it. " The ' veteran objector's feeling can easily be appreciated , and there is no question that they are shared by a large number of other Democrats who were elected to stay at home last No- vember. ' Speak Eng1Isb. The more wo think of the matter the more we are pleased with the dc- cision of the St. Louis judge who says he will refuse to naturalize foreigners who do not possess an intelligent knowledge of the English language. If there is one farcical feature in the method of government in this country - try it is afforded by our naturalization laws. The ballot is the birthright of the American citizen and it is the privilege of the foreigner who has an intelligent appreciation of what it means , and who exercises it with patriotism and loyalty. But the foreigner - eigner who does not know how to ask for his ballot in English has no business with any ballot. The idea is too prQvalent that when a foreigner - eigner buys his , ticket in the old country he buys along with it the right to participate to the affairs of the country to which ho comes. It is for the American people - ple themselves to say who shall have a voice in the election of men who shall administer their affairs , and the people of this country have just as much right to be protected against au ignorant and therefore harmful participation - ticipation in their affairs as they have for protection against any other kind of foreign invasion. The foreign-t or who does not care enough .for the right of suffrage to learn to speak the language is not fit to exercise the right and if he is too ignorant to learn the language the necessity for his exclusion from participation in the , affairs of the country is all the more apparent. There is no country on the face of the earth where foreigners arc granted 4 such wholesale privileges as here , and it is high time that some curtailment - ment was effected. We only wish that every voter had to possess an in-t telligent knowledge of the institutions - tions of this country and to show that he has some conception of the dignity and the higher meaning of the elec 1 tive franchise. But the St. Louis judge has taken a step in tIm right direction , and vvo hope to see a more general application of the doctrine. Ohl Soldiers had to Go. Secretary Carlisle admits that 135 old soldiers have been turned out of their places in the treasury department - ment since ho became secretary , and that the vacancies thus made were filled by 135 new appointments. And. though he deniol the right of congress - gress to call for such information , he deemed it advisable on his own part to comply with the request made to toll why the veterans were removed. He says they were bounced for the purpose of promoting the efficiency of the public service. If this is so the department must have been in a bad way indeed. If all the old soldiers having places there wore incompetent - tent for the performance of their duties it would necessarily be inferred that the representative veteran is very much of a no-account fellow. The secretary declares that in making ing new appointments he has obeyed the mandate of the law by giving preference to the old soldier , with the qualification that he has given due regard - gard to the "physical and mental qualifications" of the applicants. And here , again , he must have run afoul of a bad lot , for the places were invariably - variably filled with others than former wearers of the blue. Now and then an applicant put in an appearance who was suitably equipped both mentally - tally and physically to add up a column of figures or empty waste paper baskets , but it chanced that only those who had preserved their vigor of mind and body by voting the Democratic ticket were found to fully fill the bill. But it all amounts to just this , that the department has been used as a dumping ground for the hungry constituents - stituents of Democratic congressmen , contrary to the rules of the civil service - ice law , just the same as all other de- partments.-Kansas City Journal. 5 a W neon's Bare . Gift. We are indebted to the cuckoo New York "Times" for this bit of inforina- ! tion regarding the character and ability - ity of the new postmaster-general , William L. Wilson : "Above all , he is a party leader with unhesitating trust in the 1)ranei-1 - I pies of the party and a rare gift for enforcing them. " r It is true that fir. Nilson has an "unhesitating trust in the principles of his party , " but isn't it putting it on a little thick to speak about his rare."gift of enforcing them" ? We recall two very conspicuous occasions - casions upon which Mr. Nilson exer 1 cised this rare gift of his. The first was when he tried to make the senate take that tariff bill. The second was when he tried for re-election upon a platform embodying the principles in which he feels such an "unhesitating trust. " The result was that the senate forced him to take the Gorman bill , and his Democratic constituents' ' retired him to private life with a unanimity that could not be qucs- ' tioned.-Philadelphia Inquirer. iai Great "Wilt Power. " "I nin not stubborn , " says Mr. Cleveland. Nobody , we believe , has accused the president of being stubborn - born , though the opinion is quite freely expressed that he is egotistical and bullheaded. Very j'ucll , Dive. 'hp trouble about building a new party on "the ruins of tale 'dominant parties" is. that one of the dominant parties hasn't any ruins , and isn't i going to have any. . _ . . . 7 iF(177 ! 3 1dTYF'r"-'J LP1'T ! L "K : : HE TALMGE DER 1I N THE GREAT PREACHER DENOUNCES - NOUNCES DIVORCE. "What Therefore God ITath Joined To- getlter Let No Nan Put Asunder"- Congress Should Look After the Several oral State Laws. i l' to JLV - , 9a"a t' i ! . Ij .1 , a Nl HAT THERE ARC hundreds and thousands - sands of infelicitous homes in America no one wilt doubt. If there were only one skeleton in the closet , that might be locked up and abandoned , but in many a home there is a skeleton in the hallway and a skel- eton in all the apartments. "Unhappily married" are two words descriptive of many a homestead. It needs no orthodox minister to prove to a badly mated pair that there is a hell ; they are there now. Sometimes a grand and gracious woman will be thus incarcerated - cerated , and her life will be a crucifixIon - Ion , as was the case with Mrs. Sigour- ney , the great poetess and the great soul. Sometimes a consecrated man will be united to a fury , as was John Wesley , or united to a vixen , as was John Milton. Sometimes , and generally - ly , both parties are to blame ; and Thomas Carlyle was an intolerable scold , and his wife smoked and swore ; and Froude , the historian , pulled aside the curtain from the lifelong squabble at Craigenputtock and Five , Cheyne Row. Some say that for the alleviation of all these domestic disorders of which we hear , easy divorce is a good prescrip- tion. God sometimes authorizes divorce as certainly as he authorizes marriage. I have just as much regard for one lawfully - fully divorced as I have for one lawfully married. But you know and I know that wholesale divorce is one of our national scourges. I am not surprised at this when I think of the influences which have been abroad militating against the marriage relation. For many years the platforms of the country rang with talk about a free- love millennium. There were meetings of this kind held in the Cooper institute , New York ; Tremont temple , Boston , and all over the land. Some of the most prominent in women who were that movement have since been distinguished - guished for great promiscuosityof affec- tion. Popular themes for such occasions - sions were the tyranny of man , the oppression - pression of the marriage relation , wom- en's rights and the affinities. Prominent - with short women nent speakers were curls and short dress and very long tongue , everlastingly at war with God because they were created women ; while on the platform sat meek men with soft accent and cowed demeanor , apologetic for masculinity , and holding the parasols while the termagant orators - tors went on preaching the doctrine of free love. That campaign of about twenty years set more devils into the marriage relation - tion than will be exorcised in the neat fifty. Men and women went home from such meetings so permanently confused and husbands - their wives as to who were bands that they never got out of their perplexity , and the criminal and civil courts tried to disentangle the Iliad of woes , and this one got alimony , and that one got a limited divorce , and this mother kept the children on condition that the father could sometimes come and look at them , and these went into poorhouses , and those went into an insane - sane asylum , and those went into dissolute - solute public Ire , and all went into de- ' struction. The mightiest war ever made' against the marriage institution was that free love campaign , sometimes under one name and sometimes under another. Another influence that has warred upon the marriage relation has been polygamy in Utah. That was a stereotyped - typed caricature of the marriage relation - tion , and has poisoned the whole land. You might as well think that you can have an arm in a state of mortification and yet the whole body not be sickened , territories polygamh- as to have those zed , and yet the body of the nation not feel the putrefaction. Hear it , good men and women of America , that so long ago as 1862 a law was passed by congress forbidding polygamy in the territories and in all the place where they had jurisdiction. Twenty-four years passed along and five administrations - tions before the first brick was knocked from that fortrss of libertinism. the inaugural Every new president in tickled that monster with the straw of condemnation , and every congress stultified - tified itself itself in proposing some plan that would not work. Polygamy stood more entrenched , and more brazen , and more puissant , and more braggart , and more infernal. James Buchanan , a much-abused man of his day , did more for the extirpation of this villainy than most of the subsequent administrations. Mr. Buchanan sent out an army , and although - though it was halted in its work , still he accomplished more than some of the administrations which did nothing but talk , talk , talk ! At last , but not until it had poisoned generations , polygamy has received its death-blow. Polygamy in Utah warred against the marriage relation throughout the land. It was impossible to have such an awful sewer of iniquity sending up its miasma , which was wafted by the winds north , south , east and west , without the whole land being affected by it. Another influence that has warred against the marriage relation In this country has been a pustulous literature , with its millions of sheets every week choked with stories of domestic wrongs , and infidelities , and massacres , and outrages - rages , until it is a wonder to me that there are any decencies , or any commonsense - sense left on the subject of marriage. One-half of the news-stands of all our 1 cities reeking with theefilth. "Now , " say some , "we admit all these 1 evils , and the only way to clear them 1 , out or correct them is by easy divorce. " Well , before we yield to that cry , let us i Snd out how easy it is now. I have looked over the laws of all the 1 states , and I find that while in some states it is easier than in others , in every state it is easy. The state of Illinois - nois , through its legislature , recites a long list of proper causes for divorce , i and then closes up by giving to the courts the right to make a decree of divorce - vorce in any case where they deem it ex- pedient. After that you are not surprised - prised at the announcement that in one . . . 1nom. - - - county of the state of Illinois , in one year , there were 883 divorces. If you want to know how easy it is , you have only to look over the records of the states. In the city of San Francisco 333 divorces in one year ; and in twenty years In New England 20,000. Is that not easy enough ? What we want In this country and in all lands is that divorce be made more and more and more difficult. Then people before they enter that relation will be persuaded that there will probably - ably be no escape from it except through the door of the sepulchre. Then they will pause on the verge of that relation until they are fully satisfied that it is best , and that it is right , and that it is happiest. Then we shall have no more marriage in fun. Then men and women will not enter the relation with the idea that it is only a trial trip , and if they do not like it they can get out at the first landing. Then this whole question will be taken out of the frivolous into the tremendous , and there will be no more joking about the blossoms in a bride's hair than about the cypress on a coffin. What we want is that the congress of the United States change the national constitution so that a law can be passed which shall be uniform all over the country , and what shall be right in one state shall be right in all the states , and what Is wrong in one state will be wrong in all the states. How is it now ? If a party in the mar- rlage relation gets dissatisfied , it is onlyl necessary to move to another state to achieve liberation from the domestic tie , and divorce is effected so easy that : the first one party knows of it is by 'seeing ' in the newspaper that Rev. Dr. Somebody on March 17 , 1895 , introduced 'in a new marriage relation a member of the household who went off on a pleasure - ure excursion to Newport or a business : excursion to Chicago. Married at the 'bride's house. No cards. There are 'states of the Union which practically put a premium upon the disintegration of the marriage relation , while there are other states , like our own New York state , that had for a long time the preeminent - eminent idiocy of making marriage law- 'ful at twelve and fourteen years of age. The congress of the United States needs to move for a change of the national - tional constitution , and then to appoint a committee-not made up of single gentlemen , but of men of families , and their families in Washington-who shall prepare a good , honest , righteous , comprehensive - prehensive , uniform law that will control - trol everything from Sandy Hook to the Golden Horn. That wI1 put an end to brokerages in marriages. That will send divorce lawyers into a decent busi- ness. That will set people agitated for many years on the question of how shall they get away from each other to planning. how they can adjust themselves - selves to the more or less unfavorable circumstances. More difficult divorce will put an es- toppel to a great extent upon marriage 'as a financial speculation. There are men who go into the relation just as they go into Wall street to purchase shales. The female to be invited into the partnership of wedlock is utterly unattractive , and in disposition a suppressed - pressed Vesuvius. Everybody knows it , but this masculine candidate for matrimonial - menial orders , through the commercial agency or through the county records , finds out how much estate is to be inherited - herited , and he calculates it. He thinks out how long it will be before the old man will die , and whether he can stand the refractory temper until he does die , and then he enters the relation ; for he says : "If I can not stand it , then through the divorce law I'll back out. " That process is going on all the time , and men enter the relation without any moral principle , without any affection , and it is as much a matter of stock speculation as anything that transpired yesterday in Union Pacific , Illinois Central - tral or Delaware & Lackawanna. Now , suppose a man understood , as he ought to understand , that if he goes Into that relation there is no possibility of his getting out , or no probability , he would be more slow to put his neck in the yoke. He would say to himself : "Rather than a Caribbean whirlwind with a whole fleet of shipping in its arms , give me a zephyr off fields of sunshine - shine and gardens of peace. " Rigorous divorce law will also hinder women from the fatal mistake of marrying - ing men to reform them. If a young man of 25 years of age or 30 years of age has the habit of strong drink fixed on him , he is as certainly bound for a drunkard's grave as that a train starting - ing out from Grand Central depot at 8 o'clock to-morrow morning is bound for Albany. The train may not reach Albany - bany , for it may be thrown from the track. The young man may not reach a drunkard's grave , for something may throw him off the iron track of evil habit ; but the probability is that the train that starts to-morrow morning at 8 o'clock for Albany will get there , and the probability Is that the young man who has the habit of strong drink fixed on him before 25 or 30 years of age will arrive at a drunkard's grave. She knows he drinks , although he tries to hide it by chewing cloves. Everybody knows he drinks. Parents warn , neighbors - bors and friends warn. She will marry him , she will reform him. If she is unsuccessful in the experl- ment , why then the divorce law will emancipate herbecause habitual drunkenness - enness is a cause for divorce in Indiana , Kentucky , Florida , Connecticut and nearly all the states. So the poor thing goes to the altar of sacrifice. If you will show me the poverty-struck streets in any city , I will show you the homes of the women who married men to reform - form them. In one case out of ten thousand it may be a successful experi- ment. But have a rigorous divorce law , and that woman will say : "If I am affianced to that man , it is for life. " A rigorous divorce law will also do much to hinder hasty and inconsiderate marriages. Under the impression that one can be easily released , people enter the relation without inquiry and without - out reflection. Romance and impulse rule the day. Perhaps the only ground for' the marriage compact is that she likes his looks and he admires the graceful - ful way she passes around the ice cream at the picnic ! It is all they know about each other. It is all the preparation for life. A woman that could not make a loaf of bread to save her life will swear to cherish and obey. A Christian will marry an atheist , and that always makes conjoined wretchedness ; for if a man does not believe there Is a God , he is neither to be trusted with a dollar nor with your lifelong happiness. Having read much about love in a cottage , people brought up in ease will go and starve in a hovel. What the church needs is not better preaching , but better practice. Red Blood I In the body of an adult person there are about 18 pounds of blood. The blood has as its most important elements - ments , small round corpuscles , red cud white , in proportion of about 300 red to 1 white one. If the number of red corpuscles becomes diminished and the white ones increased the blood is impure , thin , laeldng in the nutrition necessary to sustain the health and nerve strength of the body. Then That Tired Feeling , Nervousness , Scrofula , Salt Rlicunl , or others of the Imlg train of ills , according to the temperament and disposition , attack the victim. The only 11erznaIIeIit remedy Is found iii a reliable blood medicine like Hood's Sarsaparilla - rilla , which acts upon the red corpuscles , enriching - riching them and increasing their number. It thus restores the vital fluid to healthy condition - dition , expels all impurity , cures Nervousness , That Tired Feeling , Scrofula and all other diseases arising from or promoted by low stale of the blood. That these statements are true we prove Clot by our own statements , but by what thousands of perfectly reliable people say about Hood's Sarsaparilla. head the testimonial - menial in the next column front a beloved clergyman. Thou take Hood's I The Blood Purifier and 't'rue Nerve 'tonic. The Best _ Teacher in the world , is experience. The 3 s have been manufacturing tobacco cont111uously since 1760. Do you wish to profit .by this experience ? . f 7 The brand that for years has been the standard of high grade tobaccos. 'Tis a rich lasting and delicious chew. ' 9 4 ft's t i Sold everywhere. Ely's ' Cream R RF Ah 04 ? BAlF10 Cleanses the Nasal taRRJAEC6 ; , , Passages , Allays Pain ° toh NyE O and lnflantmatioit , v11ffEVlg 1 = Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell , Heals the Sores. Apply Balm into each nostril " ' ' t Et BItOS. , 6Warren St. N. Y. 2s + T J a Q 1'ce I . . A r rLeader. W Successful. Meritorious _ r Pamphlet Mailed Free Y D 8 & TRANKIN - BLOC. & MFC. CO. t Sole ) tanuOetcrers. 240.254 W. Lake St Chicago , III. w SCALPER 24 pages. 2c. All about making money In eraln and Stocks by " . the nmrket" .calpin on margins of t20 to tl.000. Beat method yet. All acalpers make money. Lxsr o S Co. , 112 Quincy St. , Chicago. o Thomas P. Simpson , Washington , D.C. Soattv'sferuntil i'ttentoU rained. Write forlnventor'sGuide. N 0 OR IAAIeEltfi 6VANTEr ) . Gener - f nl agents. Salary orconuuission. C'ltrtn kcal Fire Extiuuieher Co. laclnc , wig. "In view of the benefit 1 have had from Hood's Sarsaparilla I wish to give the follott - lug testimonial. I have several times been , . ! badly . Poisoned With Creeping Ivy. As the old school of medicine simply tried to remove the syulptonls instead of the sources of them , much of the poison was left in my system to appear In an Itching humor on my ; { body with every violent exertion in warm weather. At all times there were more or less I. indications of poison fu my blood , Up to it - t year ago but winter , when 1 Large Sores Broke Out on my body. I then ptu'cllasel a bottle of i hood's Sarsaparilla , and after using that and a half of another bottle , the sores and humor disappeared. I attended the Christian Eu- t . deavor Convention in Montreal and also visited the World's Fair in the hottest weather of the summer. Was on the go all the time , but I Had No Recurrence , of the burning and itching sensation which , had marred every previous summer's outing. , I have reason , therefore , to be enthusiastic in my praises of Hood's . S. iu r. it S. SCIINELL , pastor of Free Baptist Church , It y Apalacliin , N. Y. t tl II " COLCHESTER" 9 ' L p' . , BOOT. t. . , e , . ' 'I „ ; , r' BEST 1:0 : MARKET. ? ? t 1 „ II ee l Tx FIT. W BEST' IN WEARING QUAUTY. ) l r 1f The cuteror tap sole ex. tends the whole Ieugth t e 1 . " ! ( lows to taw heel. pro , ax i ; iteetiegthe bout fu dl ; . ; line and in other hard r work. ASK Your DEALER I I fs . . . us i FOR 7'IIEM k 1- ' - : . - . . „ and don't ho pat o1 " ' - - . > with inferior goods. CO.CIIESTER ILUBBAIt CO. In our adv. two weeks ao we toll n5 our very superior a'1 I stacl hand and power feed cutler to teoaerel at $1 0 worth $ /4 / List wrek we told of the process of lvaniuns and its irdis lKUwblepresrrvalnequalute + . Nest week . esvili give you 1 the expcnenco of two represcntatve business firms ut lilu.os , one of rvhoci has sold ( ea and the other d 0 A.rmotcrs. The I week following we udl geolen I.rice mi the best pumps made ( hand , wind null and irngatli1 loner than was ever baton , dreamed of : and the week folioaing that rue shall talk to you of steel gaisanirnl lack , , , with Caen , + t the unheard of prim of 2 ; cents pergalion. This Is cheaper than wood. They do not shrunk , leak , rot , net or give taste to water. f The Aennotor Company treats the publle generously. While state legisiatures are passing laa + to secure repmrs for I farm machineryt re.smaLle price' , IT IS A rACr TIIAT T11R AEIInthT'On CO)11'ANY 11As FIIE T1S YYtlt 1h0 + IIEEN COnPELLEO TO RAISE ITS I'ItiCES ON ItEPAhRH IIEC.1t'sF : Sent : oi' ITS CJ S'fOfFiiS IIAYP 1EEN ! OROERISO INnIYIUt'AL I'1RT8 TO HARE I'i' rOUPLETE 11ACII1XLS , J1 e1NCF. IN TIIAT LVAY T11EY CO'LO ti1.T A DIATIi56 cIIEAPI a TITAN RY OUDEUlM IT ASSEAItLFT ) . l ople ' are notrompolal to tniy rearhhcry ; theyareroa. penal to bay refafra. r TAeAernolorC.mlanq waruit6iere + p'vtgen. ervcu fo a fault. It snlrl so low that cu. tomers eould Vj , buy the repans and assnnble a machine - chine atlessthauthe ' ' aeenbledma- china rvonldcost. But since it ryas not certain that they mould get the machine assembled in gs + ni shape , for the protrcuon of its own reputation , the A r mnhrCotvpanyhm raked the price ofcertaturepairs lust enough , toprevent * hia + in future. Fet anlyhastho lermotor Company always gir'enthebetgooisatthelow cstprice andrrfnsedtosell anor + rlehenHnv9ricehut II S it has now ESTAIILISIIEh TWENTYiII.l1CilhIOLTt&S fl iYAIUOtS PARTS Ili' / TIf1:0Ot'NTnYIN051)511 : TI ) ILtVRSOT ONLY I'rS ( iIOI ) ) EASILY AtCFSSI SW. SUT TO HAVE iTS nEi'AIIL3 WITifIN E.tSY t 1I1ACli. : It expects soon to greatly increase this number cf houses. Thfsis a matter of the greatest unlmrtance to thora who 1 arepurchasingmach.nerl. . Ac I , Acculcnt.rvitlhaphenand a wise man will look to it when he is buying an arti- cletliatrepauscanquick ly Ie Lad at rrasonable Cost. Our very low prim and high standards cn ererythin , r comiected with water supply and power gro.henon by wind , together with the accessibdityof a fall htnaof our gou.hand tcpairsWill Seapprccctrl. Aermotor Co. , a E v vu 'a a 1 IS7NE EE3T. ' ' FIT FOR AiINt' . $ S. C0lDOV.ea.N FRENCH&ENAMELLEDCALF. F 4$35 FIIEGA1f4iGi1fGA3Cf1 : I FOIICE,3soLEL i , 25g$2.WORKINGrii 0S - r1 vi J EXTRA FINE , i t , , , 6 YaSC.I1 tS5CE $ r LADIL 3. / Z 0 Ouv ° t EsT q , _ , fe " - Set1D FOR CATALOGUE JI - . . , - . ' ' tROcK'rorMAss. Over Ono Million Pcapla wear the Q YY a Le Douglas 3 & $4 Shoes I All ourshoe3 are equally satisfactor ' They give the best value for the money. I They equal custom shoes in style ard'fit. I ' Their wearing qualities arc unsurpassed. The prices are uniform-.stamped on sole. From St to S3 saved over other makes. if your dealer cannot supply you we can. JOENW.MOgtI.S , , \ 'aaaln L. : an . ; J ! . f. J l Successfuly Prosecutes Claims. Late Principal EaminerUS.Penalonnurenu. , tyre in last tear , ISadludicatiugcialu3 , utty sin , e. : ' 'u 3 n n i , If so a"Baby" Cream Separator will earn its cost for w you every year. Why continue an inferior system + - t another year at so great a loss ? Dairying is now the . only profitable feature of Agriculture. Pronerlycon- * ducted it always pays well , and must pay you. You , -it- need a Separator , and you need the 1I ST-the "Baby. " All styles and capacities. Prices , $75. . . , , upward. Send for new 1395 Catalogue. L I CO. , I c Branch OiBces : General Olfices : - ' ELGIN , ILL. 74 CORTCANOi ST. , NEY ! YORK. 1 Coughs and CoId : Sore Throat , Bronchitis , Weak Lungs , General Debility and all forms of Emaciation are speedily cured b y Emulsion I . Consumptives always find ' eat relief by taking b i t , and consumption is often cured. No other nourishment restores , strength so quickly and effectively , 1 ' t Weak E b a es asa Thin C made strong and robust by Scott's Emulsion when other forms of food seem to do them no good whatever , t " f The only genuine Scott's Emulsion is put up in salmon- I colore wrapber. Refuse cheap substitutes ! 5nrd for pampLlel on Scott's Emulsion. FREE ; Scott & Bowne , N. Y. All Druggists. 50 cents and SI. t 1 + h