The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, October 25, 1895, Image 6

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LAt OD NI , I T , . .
FREE TRADERS HAVE NO USE
F FOR SUCH INSTITUTIONS.
' Regard Them as "Dangerous" to Cheap
'
Labor and Monopoly Ideas-Approve
Free hnpnrte of Focoi n Prison DIado
Goods. .
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We reproduce elsewhere a report of
the last general annual meeting of the
members of the Cobden club , which was
held in London Aug , 17. I ord Farrar
seems to have been spokesman of the
day and lie noted with satisfaction an
appoach to free-trade in the Australian
colonies and the United States. At the
same time however , Lard Farrer found
it necessary to "strongly advise all free-
, traders to keep a careful watch upon
Lord Salisbury's doings , " as he "wished
to have protective duties upon foreign
manufactures in order tha better to
light the foreign tariffs : '
We are not surprised to find Lord
Farrer regarding trade unions as "dan-
gerous , " because they always must be
in free-trade countries where the sole
desire of the manufacturers is to depress -
press the value of labor and make men ,
y , i 8 V1 .y -
g
a
tionists for funds to aid them in the
-dissemination of their destructive literature -
erature in , this country. We" arvery
sorry to say that many protectionists
hav. unwittingly aided their enemy.
Iron arado and Frca 'trade.
Some interesting statistics are furnished -
nished by Ryland's Iron Trade Circular ,
publlshed' Birmingham , of Aug. 24 ,
They glye the condition of the iron industry -
dustry at Southi Staffordshire , England ,
under free-trade. The result hardly
shows conditions that would justify the
enforcement of such a policy in the United -
ted States , that Is with the Idea of benefiting -
efiting the American iron industry.
The construction of. new furnaces
stopped is 1878 , and the number of furnaces -
,
naces in blast in South Staffordshire
decreased from 108 in 1871 down to iS
in March , 1895 , and 19 last June. With
the reduction in the number of furnaces
in blast the output per furnace per
annum increased from 6,720 tons in
1871 to 14,360 tons in 1894. The' total
output of the furnaces , however , fell
off from 725,716 tons in 1871 down to
considerably less than half-315,924
tons in 1894.
The history of the puddling furnace's
is somewhat similar. Between 1871 and
1887 there was a falling off of nearly
1,000 in the number erected , and between -
tween 1882 and 1893 a decrease of 642 in
the number working. The production
of paddled iron reached its highest
point , 718,200 tons , in 1883 , and fell to
389,013 tons in 1894. It can hardly be
said that the policy of free-trade in the
United Kingdom has been beneficial to
the iron industry of South'Staffordshire.
Moreover , itis never likely to be.
I
Egg and Poultry Value ; .
Will you kindly tell me the value of
the eggs purchased in this country an-
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Join , " , ; . 20Ti11. r1" 30111111. 4Olilil' ' , SOi111 ; , :
- Pounds ( rounds Palnds : Pounds : Pou s
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endir Julie 20 ; I89 ' cfJ 1 95
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women a children work for the lowest -
est possible wages. A tendency was
noted in England among the workingmen -
men to "stop foreign importation , " and
when this tendency was united with
that "of capitalistic producers to try
and get protection for themselves there
was no knowing what mischief might
have been the consequence. "
From one who regards trade unions
as dangerous" it is but natural to find
an opinion favorable to the free use and
importation of goods made by prison
labor in other countries , Lord Farrer ,
saying that "the stoppage of the sale
of prison made goods was wrong-eco-
nomically , socially and morally. " The
free-trade branch of the Cobden club ,
which has its headquarters at the tariff
reform club in New York , has not yet
dared to go as far as Lord Farrer in
advocating the free importation and
sale in this country of goods made in
foreign prisons.
A radical member of the Cobden
club , Mr. J. S. Leadam , urged "that the
free membership of the club should be
maintained so that they might protect
a ministry favorably , disposed toward
free-trade against the assaults of their
' own misguided fallacies. " Wlhile the
Cobden club greeted approvingly ( Hear !
Hear ! ) this suggestion of protection for
an administration "favorably disposed
will it Como to ribs ?
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ell
toward free trade , " there was not one
word said in favor of protection for
English industries or English wage
earners.
The suggestion that the club should
.adopt and support he principle of bt-
metallism was frowned down by the
chairman , as it might "lead to differ-
_ _ _ cnces in the club. " It was evidently
thnught advisable to leave the money
question In the hands of the American
branch of the Cobden club , the tariff
reform institute at New York.
Editorial criticism from the Manchester -
ter Courier indicates that the free-
c traders are hard up in Engand : as well
as in New York. "They are unable o
maintain their publications , as 'a question -
- tion of funds' prevents them. " The
same trouble exists here , but "the
placid old fogies" of the Tariff Reform
Free-Trade. club appealed to the protect -
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nually ? If you have not the exact fig -
urea please give it approximately.
J. E. JONES.
St. Louis , Mo.
No account was taken of the hen
product of this country until the census
of 1880 , when it was found that we had
approximately 100,000,000 fowls in the
United States , laying nearly , 475,000-
000 dozen eggs. During the subsequent
ten yearsthe number of fowls had more
than doubled , though the increase in
the egg product was not so great , doubtless -
less because of the greater consumption
of broilers. The exact figures are as
follows :
Geese , Ducks ,
Census. Fowls. & Turkeys. Doz.Eggs
1890 . . .258,47,155 26,516,545 817,211,146
1880 . . .102,65,653 23,234,657 456,875,080
Inc. 156,206,502 3,581,858 360,336C66
The increase in the number of fowls
was 153 per cent. between 1850 and 1899 ,
and of eggs 79 per cent. Estimating the
value of our eggs as being worth twelve
cents a dozen on the farm the year
through , we would have the egg supply
of the United States worth $55,000,060 in
1879 , and W9S,000,000 in 1859. This is ,
perhapsa high estimate for the 1893-4
period under the threat of free-trade.
Taking the farm value of the fowl at 25
cents , we should have $64,618,039 as the
representative value of all American
hens. Adding , this to the $98,000,000 for
eggs , we get $162,618,039 as the value of
the fowl chop of the United States. This
is 150 per cent. greater than the value
of all American sheep this year , and
$6,000,000 greater than their value in
1590. Our imports of eggs have largely
increased under the Gorman tariff ,
hence the value of the American hen
may now be lower.
A Srdo issuro Shelved.
The outlook is becoming clearer. The
attempts made to concentrate public attention -
tention on the currency question have
failed signally. It would have gratified
free-traders to have sown strife among
the protectionists by creating new is-
sues. Such strife might have undoubtedly -
edly weakened the protectionist cause
and enabled free-traders-to accomplish
their aims stealthily. But the patriotism -
ism and intelligence of the people have
saved them from any such misfortune.
Protectionists are 'earnest , active and
united. They are strong in numbers .
and are gaining in strength all the time.
They are refraining wisely from disputes -
putes over details and holding firmly to
the broad principles on which protee-
tion'to home industry is founded.
Why the west Grows.
Protectionist sentiment continues
strong and active in the great West. In
the South it is also developing more
and more. Why ? Because the value
and benefit of manufactures are better
known and understood among places
.
T -
1 that have Ten or no factories than in
the industrial centers of the East. The
resolute , energetic pioneers who arc'
building , up states such as Montana ,
the Dakotas and Washington , regard
the establishment of new industries as
the only sound basis of prosperity. Such
men study practically the growth of
commonwealths , and become , as the
result , active , zealous protectionists.
Protection Increase ; Exports.
Protectionists desire earnestly an expansion -
pansion of our export trade. Their
The British Llort Feasts.
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policy is to establish firmly home industries -
dustries and let American ingenuity
and enterprise do the rest. Thus , the
manufacture of watches at Waltham ,
Mass. , Elgin , Ill. , and elsewhere has
been followed by the export of-Amen-
can watches to Europe , Mexico , South
America and Atistralia. This export
trade is due' primarily to the success
attained at home under protection. If
we did not first make good watches at
Waltham and elsewhere we could not
have encountered Swiss competition
abroad. What is true of the watch industry -
dustry is true of many others. It
would apply to a great many more in-
dustrles if they had received , in the
past years , the encouragement to which
they are entitled. This country ought ,
for instance , to be exporting tin plate
in large quantities instead of buying it
from GreatBrtain. , The flippant writers
who clamor for the development of our
export trade by opening the gates to
foreign products of all kinds do not
know how American manufactures
have with difficulty acquired a footing
abroad and retained it. Protection enabled -
abled them to do it.
That "Planner" Day.
Carried away by its free-trade enthusiasm -
siasm , the New York World said recently -
cently : "Yesterday was the banner day
of the custom house. The entries for
customs were 1,519 and the receipts
were $43S,265.95. No day in the history -
tory of the customs at New York , under
the McKinley bill , approached these receipts -
ceipts within $50,000.
As for ourselves , we would much
rather hear of "banner days" at American -
can factories , on which more goods
would be made and more wages paid
than ever before. There is something
absurd in this boasting of the influx of
foreign goods at a time when many
worthy people are out of work and many
more are working for low wages.
Time McKinley bill can stand the implied -
plied sneer in the above paragraph. It
did not destroy foreign commerce as its
opponents held it would , but it held in
check foreign imports that competed
with home industries. It was not
framed to create a "banner day" at the
custom house.
When Free imports 'icrn La.gest.
From the last report of the Bureau of
Statistics we are enabled to present a
summary of our imports during the last
I
six years , as follows :
Year Free of
ending Dutiable. Free of duty.
June 30. duty. Per ct.
1590 . . . $73,641,780 $265,668,629 33.66
1891 . . . .475,674,844 366,241,352 43.35
1892 . . . . 369,402,804 457,999,658 55.35
1593 . . . . 421,856,711 444,544,11 51.31
1894 , . . . 275,199,145 379,796,006 57.93
1895. . . . 363,729,601 363,228,274 49.62
In 1890 , when the McKinley law went
into operation , only one-third of our total -
tal imports were free of duty. During
Capturing the 3ltrkats of the World.
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the fiscal year ofi894 nearly two-thirds
of our total imports came in free of du-
ty. But in 1S95 , the first year of the
German tariff , less than half of our imports -
ports were free of duty.
The democratic Macon ( Ga. ) Telegraph -
graph says : "It would be an exceedingly -
ingly useful lesson to some big-headed
politicians for Kentucky to elect a republican -
publican governor this fall. " Republicans -
licans have said the same. If they
elect a republican in Kentucky , ho v-
ever , they will likely seat him and not
do as they did down in Tennessee. The
time is coming when the people south
of the Ohio will grow tired of the party
whose dishwashing and boot-blacking
they have done for the past quarter of
a century.
.
TWO MOTHERS ,
lJcrcavcmcnt Brlns Truth home to n
Tormented woman Thorough Her Child.
Wildn the well-to-do boarder's little -
tle boy died she tailed in the woman
who swept and scrubbed halls , attended -
ed to the furnace and did scullery work
in general about the place and showed
her the iittle'fellaow as lie lay in hIs
flower-decked coffin , so sweet and pretty -
ty in his 'last peaceful sleep.
The scrubwoman had a boy of her
, own just a few clays younger than the
dead child , and when the well-to-do
boarder's message came she hastily
grabbed up her baby and took him in
with her.
The' two women stood over the tiny
casket for a time in silence. At last
the mother's self control gave way and
she bowed her head over the body and
bathed the little cold face with the
tears that blinded her aching eyes and
scalded her thin , care-worn cheeks.
The scrubwoman sat her baby on the
floor and foidect leer arms stoically.
"Don't , ma'am , " 'she said without a
quaver in her coarse , strong voice.
"You ought to give thanks with all
your soul. I wish to God it was my boy
lying there instead of yours. "
Tlhe boarder laid her hand over the
woman's mouth and interrupted the
impassioned speech.
"Don't say that , she cried. "You
don't realize the meaning of your
words. It might come true. Your boy
might die. "
The scrubwoman smiled.
' "There's no such good luck as that' '
she said bitterly. "It's always such as
yours that goes and such as mine that
stays. He's' never been well , and he
never will be well. He's a torment to
himself and to me , and to everybody
about the place. Itrs a continual
scratching to keep body and soul together -
gether , and if I should die what would
become of him then ? It ain't that I'm
xnnaturally hard-hearted , but pinching -
ing and scraping along makes brutes
of anybody. Anyway , he'd be better
off. "
"You'll be sorry some day , , " the other
replied , turning again to her little one.
The boarder moved away , and it was
three years before the women met
again. A few days ago the well-to-do
woman was going throughh a locality
'the ins and out of which had not been
familiar to her for many months , and
among the scrubwomen on the steps
of a large building she saw her former
charwoman of the boarding house.
"flow is Freddy , " she asked , the first
greeting over.
The woman's lips trembled.
"Freddy's dead , " she said , puttting
down her brush and drying her eyes
on the ccrner of her apron.
The boarder grasped her hand in
ready sympathy. "I'm so sorry , , " she
said simply.
"It just happened last week , " the
scrubwoman went on between sobs ,
"I've reraembered a thousand times
what you said about being sorry. It
was all true. There's not an hour that
I don't want him with me again. If
I only hadn't said it ! My poor little
boy-Chicago ! Tribune.
HOW SNAKE EATS FROG. I
As Soon as Serpcnt II is Captnre t Irlnd
I.e s , Gooi-1 > y Frog.
How a snake eats .rogs is worth the
telling. The writer distinctly remembers -
bers witnessing a dramatic meal of
this kind , in which , of course , the
snake came out the winner , getting his
dinner in excellent style and complete =
ly vanishing the frog. Though a snake
may seem at first sight an organism
that is extraordinarily slow of comprehension -
prehension , any well regulated ophidian -
ian knows , nevertheless , exactly how
to satisfy , 'the wants of nature in 1
the most approved manner. A snake
invariably grabs a frog by the hind
legs. This preliminary struggle is ore j
of the most impressive features of the
combat. With a well-defined natural
instinct the chief effort of the frog is
to keep his other hind leg far away
from the snake's mouth , in the hope
that he may speedily exhaust his ene-
my's strength , and also because he feels
that if his other hind leg is made captive -
tive he will have less power to fight. '
Once both .hind legs are within the
serpent's fangs the act of swallowing
begins. Inch by inch the struggling
frog is drawn further and further into
the yawning orifice that expands at
each gulp. The channel through which
the frog has to pass is gradually enlarged -
larged by slow efforts on the snake's
part , accompanied by fiercer and fiercer
convulsions of the wretched wiggler.
The gull'-et of the snake in its natural
proportions is quite large enough to
contain the limbs of the frog , but as by
frequent gulps the body is drawn fur-
I
titer and further into the gullet the i
difficulty of swallowing increases.
Gradually the ophidian's throat is distended -
tended , gradually the frog is compressed -
ed and drawn out. Finally the latter'
is double his normal length and half .
his circumference. As the process of '
expansion on the one hand and contraction -
traction on the other goes on , the frog
is worked down little by little , until he ,
starts in on his afternoon nap.
flow He , Iud wl ftsiractcr.
"So you want a situation ? " said- the
business man.
"Yes , sir , replied the applicant.
"Hum-3o you ever go fishing ? "
"Occasionally. "
"When were you fishing last ? "
Day before yesterday. "
'Catch anything ? "
Not a thing. "
"You can come to work next Monday -
day if you like. If you keep on telling
the truth like that you may be a partner -
ner in the firm one of these days.
A cavalry corps , composed of women ,
has been organized in the Denver Sal-
vaticn Ar' } .
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Shells for wail Foclrats.
"I have often wondered , " said a fisherman -
erman , "that somebody didn't fix up a
lot of horseshoe crab shells and put
them on the market as wall pockets.
They arc commonly used for that purpose -
pose in fshermens' houses for catchalls
and for slipper holders , and very pretty
they are , too. The horseshoe crab
is in two parts , joined by a hinge across
the back about two tlirds of the way
front the front. In making a wall pocket -
et the rear part of the shell iscut away ;
that leaves the top of the shell as it
hangs , crescent-shaped. A hole is bored
in each part of the crescentfor the ends
of the cord or ribbon that is to support
the shell , which is backed with paste-
board. Some dye them with analine
dyes , but oftener they simply varnish
them , showing the natural color of the
shell , which is a cork brown.-New
York Sun.
e
Beware of Oin monts for Catarrh That
Contain arercury ,
As mercury will surely destroy the
sense of smell and c'rmpletely derange
the whole system when entering It
through the mucous surfaces. Such articles -
ticles should never be used except on
prescriptions from reputable physicians -
cians , as the damage they will do is tenfold -
fold to the good you can possibly derh e I
from them. hail's Catarrh Cure , manufactured -
factured by F. J. Cheney & Co. . Toledo ,
0. , contains no mercury , and is taken
internally , acting directly upon the
blood and mucous surfaces of the sys-
tem. In buying hail's Catarrh Cure , be
sure you get the genuine. It Is taken internally -
ternally , and made in Toledo , Ohio , by
F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
Sold by druggists ; price , t5c per bot-
tle. Hall's Family Pills , 25c.
Soon .llauacd lt.
A Liverpool merchant recently vent
to his head clerk and said ,
"John , i owe about C10,0o0 , and all I
possess is 4,000 , which is locked up in
the safe. I have been thinking that
this is the right time to make an assignment -
signment , but what plausible pretext
I can give my creditors , I know not
You have plenty of brains ; think the
matter over and let me have your decision -
-
cision in tltc mornintr. "
'I'he clerk promised to do so.
On entering the office the nett morn-
lug the merchant found the safe open ,
the money gone , nail in its place a letter -
ter which read as follows :
"I have taken the 1,609 and have
gone to South America. It is the best
excuse you can give your creditors.-
London 'lid-Bits.
rr ! T 5-.UlFitsstoppcrifrenhyDr.I + line'nreat
PerveRestorer. aornsaftertunczsuiay'suse.
Ilarvelouscm es. TrcatiscandS2trsalhutt6 Lti + tr
hhca cs , bead to Dr. Sline,931Iichta.rklla.,1a.
A Busy Stan.
high Tudor , of Dawn , Mo. , strives to
combine business with humor : On his
business envelopes is printed the following -
lowing iii one corner : "If not called
for within ten clays return to lfugh
Tudor , Dawn , No. , secretary of the
Farmers Mutual Insurance Co. of Livingston -
ingston County , and secretary of the
Second Congressional Cyclone , 'Torna-
do arci 11'ind Storm Co. , " and the following -
lowing additional statement appears in
another corner : "I sell insurance
against accidents , fire. Beth , wind
storms , sigh kloan s , tornadoes , loss of
slepe , lossof rent. poverty and 2d has- I
bands , and issue bond insurance. "
A La. .y ilu.bsuul.
A country , newsraper reports a brief
colloquy between a woman and her
lazy husband. She was busy , ' and the
l aby ; vas crying , and the man , so far' '
as appears , was doing nothing.
' . .John , " she said , I wish you would
ruck the baby. "
"Oh , bother , " was the answer , "why
should I rock tine baby ? "
" \Vhy. because he isn't very well and
I have this mending to do. Besides.
half of hirn belongs tovou anyhow. and
you ought to be willing to itefp take
care of him. "
" 11 ell , half of him belongs to you , f
too , and you can rock your half and let
my half holler. ' '
' MOF'lG THE OL/S rfi. "
11 / ibli4 .
The Land of Big Red Apples , is an
attractive and interc ting book , handsomely
illustr ted with vows of South Missouri
scenery , incudtug the f-mous 0-den fruit
farm of 3,000 aere in Ilowell county. It
pertains to fruit raieiug in that great fruit
belt o ° America , the southern elope of the
Ozards , and will prove of great value , not
only to fruit-growers. but to every farmer
aad homeseehier lcuking for a faun and a
home.
Mailed fro : ,
e Addro = ,
J. Lot ; eon ,
Kansas City , Mo.
An important paper , "The Future in
Relation to American Naval I'ower , " ,
is contributed to the October Ilarpers
by Captain A. ' 1' . Mahan , U. S. N. , who
advocates the maintenance of a strong
navy , not only for national defence ,
but for the promotion of the interests
of the United States in the international -
tional complications which are certain
to arise iii the near future through the
growing importance of China and Japan -
pan and the approaching absorption of
all tire unclaimed islands of the sea by
± he great powers of the world.
The Tectir.
"Even absoiutely clean teeth will de-
: ay , " said a dentist , 'hntconstantcare 1
En this respect greatly prolongs the life
of a tooth The general health usually
has a good deal to do with it. People
used to think that it was a useless expenditure -
penditure to have children's teeth filled
before the arrival of the second set , but
more of them are being educated to
the fact that the longer the first set is
preserved the better the quality of the
second set will be. Every child , as
soon as he is able to handle a brush.
should have one and Le taught to use e
it regularly. ' '
b
Marriage is w failure whenever it is a dis- t
aprointment.
i
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The utt thor of uiJnnIo Tam 'S Cab1n. , "
Mrs. Harriet I3eeelier Stowc celebra '
ted her 83r d ycar some weeks ' , ago , amid' . , , '
'The
gen.
almost national rejoicings. of ,
oral health of the famous authoress a
it
"Uncle Tom's Cabin is better than - 1
was on her birthday last year ; heap
petite is exccllene , and her strength E
such that she is to be seen daily during I
fine weather wallting' about the pretty
neighborhood of Hartford , her Connec , i
ticut home. Mrs Stow e's physical Powers '
in view of her advanced - ,
ers arc remarkable , !
vanced y car. . , , audnodoubtherfondness
for outdoor life has clone much to keep
her in such good condition. ® 1
Like a Venomous Serpent
Bidden in the brass , malaria but waits ou f
at and fasten its fans
approucin , to spring
is however , a certain anti
upon us. There ,
whlclt rotultrs It power- - t
dose to its vt nom is t
' 1hlttOrs
less for evil. llustetter's tonsaoh !
this acknowledged and world-famed spec-
lie , and It is , besides this , a thorough curative - "
tivo for rheumatism , dyspeys.t. : liver cons-
plaint , constipat on , la ortopo and nervouS- .
ness. Lt convalescence and ago it Is yery .
servlceable. ' I
The discussion of the liquor questiOfl J
is an important feature of the North
American Review for October , ; Drs.
Waldo and Walsh describing iii the
light of English statistics the influenc0
of environmentin developing the drink
habit , and the lies' . Ur. F. C Iglehart ,
pastor of the Park Avenue Methodist'
Episcopal church in New York.city'nd-
vocatutg in "Tire Saloon and the Sab '
bath , " the enforcement of the , present
excise law in New York. ,
i
Not the Expected Answt'r. '
Jones asked his wife , "Why is a hus
band like dough ? " lie expected she
would give it up , and was going to tell l'
her it was "because a woman needs
him. " but she said it was because he
was hard to get off her hands. " 'Tien
the domestic entgnte cordiale was
rullled.-Boston Globe. "
© FV © - - -
11
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.
an
mood. - I
Arc inseparably connected. The for. .
mer depend simply , solely , solidly
upon the latter. If it is pure they , are j
properly fed and there is no "nervous-
. " If it is , fed
ness. impure they are on
refuse and the horrors of nervous I
prostration result. Feed- the nerves t
on pure blood. Make pure blood and
keep it pure by taking
'
Hood f
I l
E 1
a
I
The One True Blood Purifier ,
' the after tlinn. r iIII and ' 1
food's Pill"
, . ) family cahnrtic. 25c.
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h. World's Fair I IIhOHEST AWARD. r
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gun ' cs.-onab 7fI L g a most
f u n , n 111 sick 1 1
the , ,
where either little " .
or a dui 1 needs deli- t
ca re4 ltrU.1S-i i 0 < 7Pt o ! 0 1 1
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Sold by D12UGGISTS EVERYWHERE I
C Jolla Carle & 5ors , Ncty York. ' ,
n1 1SfSjl.raU V ulataRY [ taifL aiala4 a.Yfi [ a ,
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lLC2s.'v iLrt ,
mil cure
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f.
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and blood troubles , Eriglt'c dis-
case ' , inflantmatioa of Iidneys , I ,
, g o u t , neuralgia ,
backache , ! rea ( ' . clle , sleepless-
, anamiia , dizziness , etc , by 1
,
curing the kiclucy s
h Hub's tiia ! tires Fills G-i't r'
D. . Izobi13 s
Little Liver Pills i +
will cure
Stoniacli Troubles
heartburn , constipation , iadiges.
Lion , flatulence , tad breathpalpi-
tationsloss of appetite , etc , by s
gently acting on the liver and
bowels. Purely vegetableand the a
only liver pills that don't gripe ,
nrnad srtt t-r , .
Wrile fur free Lan : . ,
HOBB'S MEDICINE CO. ,
Chicago. San
Francisco , l
3 EOL. OL of p I
Jr EoRr trt f
s exrcnrnt frr all throat inG 1mmatioos and for I i
astbnla. Cousnmp. /
r .t t tc < will inrnriably ll
"
thrrre '
benefit from
+ " + t
, l its
u p use us it quickly
3r a11U' t ri ' ; , : + ) abates he cnegh , II
Jrenues ' peetora- +
r1 ; ] . t.ctt
' } d t. wry , w sting
nature in reelonn ; I 1
'k ti + crtedtisstt a
flu i' 'r
. re is a large per-
o + 4ccatageofthoetvbo
: sk _ s ppac their cases
k to be consumption
, v"o " are oily safIer-
k'I&c
fag from
old or deep seated coat , h , of en a'gra steel bye
.
catarrh. For catarrh . '
ne 1.1y's Cream Balm. Bok
emedies are pleasant to use. Cream I3 ulu. f /
' . , 5e > " I
' , , per
ottle I .
mcola I.ab am.c. at Drugists. In
ties of . gran- ,
; 2.sso will delver on receipt of amount
ELY BROTHERS , iw Warren St , New York.
t a ffic I
'C My sister was afflicted "Afflicted for wren r
years ,
with a severe case of scrof- with what appeared
to be a
ula. Our doctor rec omatetded cancer in the face , other
Aver , Sarsaparilla as being cured tteattnentbeinn of no benefit
the best blood-purifier within I tried Ayer's Sarsa pa.jlla , I
his experience. We gave her these The result is that in one year "
this medicine , and a complete all-trace of cancer has been
cure was the result.-W3. , removed. " _ llrs.
two.removed. Joux B , I '
0. JExxINs Deweese Neb.
, , Rivnrs , Manchester
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