Western news-Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1898-1900, October 06, 1898, Image 2

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    Stanleys Last Journey to Africa
Henry M Stanley made a journey
Into inner Africa recently which was
perhaps even more remarkable than
his search for Livingstone or his ex
ploration of the Congo basin He trav
eled in a palace car from Cape Town to
Buluwayo a distance of 1000 mile in
a little more than twenty four hours
This incident illustrates in the most
Btriking manner possible the marvelous
growth and development of Africa in
recent years Chicago Tribune
A Sensible Young Wife
How do you like my cooking Corner
now give me your honest opinion How
does it compare with your mothers
If you want my honest opinion I
will say your cooking is very fair but
it is not quite equal to mothers
I did not expect It would be quite
equal to your mothers but I wish you
to remember that your mother had
many years experience before you were
capable of forming a judgment of her
cooking
By Jove you are right I never
would have thought of that though I
assure 3rou I would have made no com
ments on your cooking if you had not
iskedf or my honest opinion The point
you have made Is a good one but it is
sntirely overlooked by young married
men
It is and unfortunately It is not
thought of by young wives The Idea
Df any man saying to a girl just a year
ar two out of school You cant cook as
well as mother and never taking into
consideration that mother has had an
sxperience of forty or fifty years Sup
pose the young wife should turn round
and retort Youre not half as skillful
a workman as my father
And1 I wonder she doesnt Its a
poor rule that wont work both ways
And so it is when you come to think
of It Saturday Evenincr Post
Court Knew What Was Poker
Paul Milliken who is one of the most
popular men on change was yesterday
on the floor rehearing the latest poker
incident It is unnecessary to say that
he secured a great many auditors as
there are numerous admirers of the
great American game there A private
game had been broken up in a small
town which was very religiously in
clined and the players arrested and
taken before the county judge The
first prisoner was told by the -judicial
light to rehearse in strict honesty what
was going on when the officer appeared
Well had just dealt It was
a jack pot said I Open it but it will
cost you 2 to come in The next
player put up the needed amount and
said Well it will just cost 5 mora
to be In this play Jhe third one ad
vanced it 3 more and when it came
to me I looked at my hand and found a
pair of threes I had been lucky and
concluded to go in the jack pot an
did so
Prisoner is dismissed cried tin
1udge interrupting him in his story
Well whats the trouble said the
atter looking about alarmed and
studying the judge in surprise
Why simply this You are charged
for -playing poker and your own evi
dence shows that you were not re
plied the court Cincinnati Enquirer
I
Pure Blood
Good Digestion
These are the essentials of health Hoodi
Sarsaparilla is the great blood purifier and
ftomach tonic It promptly expels tin
impurities which cause pimples sorei
And eruptions and by giving healthy ac
lion to the stomach and digestive organi
tt keeps the system in perfect order
Hoods Sarsaparilla
it Americas Greatest Medicine si i5t for s
prepared only by C I Hood Co Lowell Mass
UUUU Pills re tne only pills to tak
with Hoods Sarsaparilla
sife
BHiSW fHt m
THE EXCELLENCE 6F SYRUP OF FIGS
is due not only to the originality and
simplicity of the combination but also
to the care and skill with which it is
manufactured by scientific processes
known to the California Fig Syrup
Co only and we wish to impress upon
all the importance of purchasing the
true and original remedy As the
genuine Syrup of Pigs is manufactured
by the California Pig Syrup Co
only a knowledge of that fact will
assist one in avoiding the worthless
imitations manufactured by other par
ties The high standing of the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Co with the medi
cal profession and the satisfaction
which the genuine Syrup of Pigs has
given to millions of families makes
the name of the Company a guaranty
of the excellence of its remedy It is
far in advance of all other laxatives
as it acts on the kidneys liver and
bowels without irritating or weaken
ing them and it does not gripe nor
nauseate In order to get its beneficial
effects please remember the name of
the Company
CALIFORNIA FIG SYKUP CO
SAN FKAXOISCO Cal
JLOUISVILLE Kr NEW TOKIT N V
AGENTS1 i
iriZZZ7Z T - T mZ
Minnesota i res Plants riot
I Complete outfit best
trooda Brmm trnnri
paid weekly farm Seeds
ammnM fin tfrht nu
-
make BIG MONEY For particular write at once
THE JEWELL NURSERY CO Lake City Minnesota
PENSIONS agr
Trite Cast 0YAS2SLL Pnun Af ntWaiaiaftea S0L
W1WW - -
VALUE OF
GOLD AND
COINS
SILVER
It is interesting to note that while
ftur forefathers succeeded in giving le
gal tender equality they also made the
attempt to give commercial equality to
our two kinds of coin by statute law
it was soon found to be a failure From
the very nature of things this kind of
equality in value that is in the ex
changeable of commercial value never
can be and never has been maintained
with precision by ourselves or any oth
er nation of the world for any reason
able length of time Truly this kind of
equality in value which is exceedingly
desirable can be maintained with ap
proximate precision for many years as
we can cite the experience of the
French nation using a coinage ratio of
155 to 1 from 1803 to 1874 But let us re
member that the legal tender value was
at the same time maintained with ab
solute precision Let us manfully face
the well authenticated historical fact
that the commercial value of gold and
silver coins at any given ratio was al
ways liable to vary from month to
month from year to year and from de
cade to decade However when Con
gress is in session it has the legal right
to follow these variations every day
and make the childish effort by con
stant changes in the weight of our
coins to have them conform to this
daily variation This attempt was not
made by our nation as we have reduc
ed the weight of gold coins but once
1834 during our national existence to
ward this equalization while we in
creased the gold 1S37 by a mere trifle
solely for ease in mint circulations
while the quantity of pure silver in our
standard silver dollar has remained un
changed since the first organization of
our mints On the other hand Con
gress can and did regulate and main
tain the debt paying value of both
coins under our flag with absolute
precision from 1792 to 1873 While this
was an act of precision the other was
merely an attempt at precision Please
note this as a very important and vital
distinction The lawful debt paying
value of coined money always has and
always will have a powerful effect in
tending to maintain the approximate
equality but never can maintain the
precise equality in the exchangeable
value of money made of gold or silver
when put under the hammer test or in
the melting pot As an advocate of the
restoration of silver at the existing
coinage ratio of 16 to 1 I firmly hold
to the opinion that when we restore the
full legal tender power to our silver
dollar its value as bullion will rise
and gold will fall Many of the com
mercial nations of the world would in
all probability soon follow our exam
ple and the wide and mischievous
chasm now separating the two metals
would be bridged by our financial lead
ership Some difference will always
exist as the history of coinage always
has shown but it will not be so mis
chievous as to cause a disastrous fall
in prices as our present system has
done The existing commercial value
of these two metals is now very far
from being a fair test to the proper
coinage ratio while in 1792 it was a
fair test This is mainly on account of
silver having been so extensively out
lawed by so large a portion of the com
mercial world for the last twenty five
years The assertion so frequently
made that silver has fallen in ex
changeable value when compared with
gold on account of the relative annual
over production of silver is false as
can be readily seen by a reference to
the official and universally accepted
statistics of the relative production of
these metals in the world during the
past 100 years It is a mathematical
question concerning which there can be
no fair dispute The comparatively
great stability in the relative exchangi
able value of our coined money from
1792 to 1874 was secured simply be
cause the United States permitted this
legal tender value to remain as a sa
cred and potent regulator given to us
by our forefathers and happily we also
had the co operation of almost the en
tire commercial world as our mints
as well as theirs was open to the coin
age of both metals on equal terms
When Congress commenced to tamper
with this full legal tender function of
silver in 1S73 by making the gold dol
lar alone the unit of value and
stopped the further coinage of full le
gal tender silver and on Tune 22 1874
demonetized all our existing full weight
silver coins as debt payers except to
the extent of 5 the mischief was then
commenced and has never been entire
ly corrected and most unfortunately
the commercial world has followed our
vicious example As a leading nation
let us always remember the world
spells our name in large type John
A Grier
Houest Investigation Demanded
For the sake of the good name of the
nation for the consolation of those
who have Icshjlovcil ones in the war
for the instruction of the war depart
ment and army for the sake of the rep
utation of those who have been bitterly
assailed it should be determined
whether politics incompetency ne
glect conspiracy or rascality has made
the brief war with Spain needlessly
sacrificial An investigation for politi
cal Iftec t will not do An investigation
for whitewashing purposes will not do
The Republican Way
Captain Robley D Evans has been
relieve of rlie command of the battle
ship Iowa lie tlfas been assigned to I
duty as a member of the naval inspec
tion board and he will assume his new
duties after a brief vacation The next
commander of the Iowa will be Captain
Silas Terry now in command of the
receiving ship Franklin at the Norfolk
navy yard He will take the ship
around South America and over to
Honolulu in company with the Oregon
and some colliers Captain Evans is a
Democrat and made a brilliant record
at Santiago but he offended the Re
publican prize money grabber Samp
son by saying that he would not accept
plunder Captain Terry is a Republi
can Chicago Dispatch
Rothschild and Hanna
The Interstate Commerce Commis
sion in advance sheets of its annual re
port just issued places the outstand
ing debt of American railroads at 10
639074000 says the Journal of Agri
culture After Wall street secured the
panic proclamation against silver from
President Cleveland a majority of the
roads representing this enormous in
flation of over ten thousand million dol
lars were thrown into the hands of re
ceivers While their stocks and bonds
were thus forced down to the lowest
point by the Presidents attack on sil
ver they were bought heavily by Eng
lish capitalists operating through the
New York syndicate of which J Pier
pont Morgan is the leading represent
ative Morgan has since been actively
at work reorganizing with English
money the railroads which were so
skillfully bankrupted by the foreign
speculators whose influence secured the
panic proclamation against silver As
the agent of the Rothschild syndicate
and other foreign investors Morgan
now represents a greater power in
America than the Goulds and Yander
bilts combined With Hanna of the
Steel Trust Havemeyer of the Sugar
Trust and Whitney of the Standard Oil
Trust he is the supreme power in shap
ing the policies of the McKinley admin-
istration The amount of the stock
and bonded debt of the reorganized
railroads of America now held by Eng
lish speculators runs into the thou
sands of millions It stands for an in
flation of from two to five dollars on
every dollar of actual cash originally
invested but the foreign speculators
who force us into panic to bear our
markets not only demand payment of
dividends and interest on the full face
value but they demand it in gold When
we attempt to remonetize silver so
that we can have money to do business
with at home while our gold is being
drained to England to meet their ex
actions they call us cranks an
archists and repudiationists And
finding that these epithets lose their po
tency they employ agents to lure us
with promises of military glory and of
opportunities to join English Tories in
schemes of oppressing and iffebing the
helpless of the earth
Work that Counts
Every workman ought to say to him
self every day of his life
Ill never cast a vote for a man big
or little unless he has proved himself
honest and a friend of labor
He ought to live up to that on elec
tion day The men who do the work of
this country can run it if they will
They can be rulers It is all in their
own hands
If they will kill jealousy show faith
in their own class reward in their un
ion principles intelligence and a good
record always bombast never they
will soon change the complexion of the
country
When we say a freud of labor we do
not mean merely the advocate of union
with an O K label in his hat and on
his loaf We mean especially the friend
of the man who works as opposed to
the do nothing We mean the man who
cares as much for Samuel Gompers as
for George Gould and as much for the
humblest shoveler as for Goriers The
first is easy to find The second is not
so easy New York Journal
Paymasters as Bad as the Rest
It becomes more evident every day
that in many instances the regular and
volunteer soldiers of the Uoiited States
army have not been paid for their
services During the glamour of the
campaigns in Cuba and Porto Rico the
soldier cared little or nothing for the
sight of Uncle Sams gold but since liis
return to Gods own country where
the full pocket makes the stomach
easy the lack of well earned cash be
comes a sore grievance It is sad in
deed to have to hold the paymasters
department up to the same opprobrium
as attaches to the quartermasters and
commissariats but that is precisely
what it is proper to do New York Her
ald
The Surprises in Vermont
The election in Vermont has set all
the Republican organs at work to find
an explanation of the phenomenal re
sults reached by the popular vote It
is a surprise party and no mistake
The Democrats increase their poll for
governor by a very respectable figure
The Republicans lose to a degree which
in aless sure state would mean defeat
while in the Legislature the Democ
racy makes what is a stupendous gain
in representation comparatively con
sidered Boston Post
Cheap Men or Cheap Dollars
Shall we have cheap men and dear
dollars or shall we have dear men and
cheap dollars Shall the man go up
and the dollar go down or shall the
dollar go up and the man go down
Shall manhood triumph over money and
labor over loans or shall money Inn
voke misery and the dollars of Shy
lock triumph over the souls of Gods
deserving poor These are questions
we should ask and answer before wo
think of voting for a single gold staizd
ard Nonconformist
The Maine Election
Closely following Vermont the re
sult of the State and Congressional
elections in Maine show enormous
Democratic gains The Republican
political sharps as usual attribute
their reduced majorities to the old fic
tion and excuse of an off year and
light vote This is folly The same
causes which produce a light Republi
can vote produce a light Democratic
vote The inofficial but probably cor
rect reports from Maine indicate a Re
publican plurality on Governor of 20
000 against a Republican plurality of
48377 two years ago Speaker Reed
loses 4000 of his majority in 1896 and
has his smallest vote since 1S92 Sil
ver was the only question discussed in
his district The other Republican
candidates for Congress suffer a sim
ilar proportion The Democrats have
made marked gains in the legislature
Silver at 16 to 1 has won a glorious vic
tory by the gains Samuel L Lord
the Democratic candidate for Gover
nor who reduced the Republican ma
jority in the State 60 per cent is
Mayor of Saco and was a Republican
until 1872 when he joined the Greeley
movement As the fall elections of
1898 come nearer the marked change in
the political sentments of the country
become more apparent At the spring
election in Rhode Island and the June
election in Oregon the Republicans
held their own as compared with the
elections of 1896 Though few speech
es were made Maine was flooded with
silver literature and the Democratic
papers discussed nothing else Noth
ing at all was said about the war or the
abuse of the soldiers No definite
charges could be made and the Demo
crats did not lower their cause by
trumping lies
An Evil of Protection
If the natural law of free trade were
restored there would be less drift from
the farms to the cities and less loafers
in the cities All honest able bodied
people would become bread winners
and bread consumers Idle people eat
and ultimately it is the farmer who
feeds them Obliterate class legisla
tion and there would be a movement
to the farms f or the unemployed urban
laborers would find plenty to do and
would earn plenty to eat and wear If
the shackles are ever struck from
American agriculture the economic
problems of America would not be dif
ficult of solution Dallas News
Whichever Wins the Public Loses
The sugar trust alias Havemeyer
and the coffee trust alias Arbuckle
have begun a duel to the death Have
meyer is going to sell sugar and coffee
at less than cost and Arbuckle is go
ing to undersell Havemeyer When
the duel is over when Havemeyer or
Arbuckle is financially dead or what
is more probable when peace is patch
ed up who will repay to Havemeyer or
to Arbuckle or dreadful thought to
the allied octopi the millions spent in
the fight New York World
Plutocracy Abroad
Last week the Hannacrats suppress
ed a Porto Rican paper for denouncing
Spanish cruelty Tuesdays dispatches
to the Globe Democrat report that find
ing the government of the Cuban town
of San Luis was in the hands of the
Cubans themselves Shafter had the
Cuban flag pulled down This is im
perialism The Globe Democrat wants
a hundred thousand men to maintain
it It will take five hundred thousand
Mississippi Valley Democrat
Spanish and American Blunders
The mistakes made In Cuba said a
speaker reported in yesterdays papers
are not to be blamed on the army but
on the politicians at the head of the
government The remark sounds as if
it might have been made in Washing
ton but it was not It is a pant of Gen
Weylers speech in the Senate at Mad
rid It merely goes to show that the
mistakes in the Cuban campaign were
not all on one side Philadelphia Led
ger
Alserism Merely an Effect
The brethren who are now crying
aloud for emancipation from Algorism
simply have the wrong sow by the ear
They are mistaking effect for a cause
Algerisni is merely one of the miserable
outputs of Hannaism It is a little more
disgraceful than usual but this is main
ly because its performances have been
of a public nature Atlanta Constitu
tion
Tired of an Old Humbug3
The grand old party racket has been
Avorked to the point of exhaustion It
has served often to confirm the machine
in power of diverting attention from
the present to past history It will not
work this time The people have
caught on to the sham and can no long
er be deceived by it Philadelphia
Press
Rottenness at Home and Abroad
The sister republics of France and the
United States are both profoundly stir
red by government scandals that mean
revolution if they are not investigated
and revolution if they are In both
cases too the same official rottenness
Republican government will have to
put some raw beef on this black eye
Houston Tex Post
The Three Greatest Crimes
The three greatest modern crimes
against humanity are the monopoliza
tion of natural bounties the forced in
crease of debts and the periodical
shrinkage of values Nonconformist
One Suffering Frenchman
Frenoh justice may not overtake raty
Du Clam but he is in the clutches of
the editorial punsters Let us pity
Paty Kansas City Journal
L
The yearly output of cigars from the
Philippines is 140000000
The cheapest bread in England la
worth V cents a pound loaf
There is more machinery made in
Philadelphia than any other city in the
country
British publishers last year put on
the market 6573 new books of which
2677 were novels
Washington D C Central Labor
Union appointed a committee to look
after union soldiers families
The man who establishes a branch
of the International Brotherhood of
Blacksmiths is paid 10
The cotton crop is the largest single
export in this country nearly 230
000000 annually The next largest is
wheat
Alabamas latest industrial enterprise
is a 1000000 steel mill It is to be
erected by capital that comes from out
side of the state
The Baldwin Locomotive Works re
cently shipped forty locomotives for the
Chinese Eastern railway and twenty
five more are being built at the works
for the same road
The Bethlehem Iron company South
Bethlehem Pa has been asked to bid
on the forgings for the engine and
shafting of a torpedo boat to be built
in Japan for the Imperial Japanese
navy
A plant for the manufacture of Port
land cement from furnace slag is be
ing erected by the Clinton Iron and
Steel company of Pittsburg adjoining
their furnace The buildings and ma
chinery will cost 150000
One of the largest blooming mills in
the country is to be erected at Lorain
O and Pittsburg manufacturers will
furnish the plant It is to be built by
the Lorain Steel coinpanj and will be
ejected as soon as possible
The largest establishment for the
manufacture of felt in America and
the most modern in the world is now
nearing completion in Chicago 111 It
will be run as one of the departments
of Armour Co for the purpose of
utilizing important by products
Organized labor in France is in a
flourishing condition According to the
last report of the French Labor Depart
ment there are 2253 trade and labor
unions with a membership of 422777
Forty nine municipalities have boards
of arbitration and mediation and intel
ligence offices whicii are maintained
by the government the municipalities
and the labor unions
The exposition of 1900 at Paris is
having a good effect on the working
men of the whole country The city
refuges for laborers which are usually
crowded during the summer months
have received a great thinning out as
everybody seems to be working at
something for the exposition and the
free one night lodging houses are hav
ing an unusual rest From all reports
it seems that every man who is willing
and able to work can find employment
is he is honest and industrious
Eighty girls employed in the Diamond
Match Companys works at Oshkosh
walked out in a body after an hours
notice The fumes arising from the
sulphur is extremely injurious to the
health of the employes It is said to be
very bad for the teeth and when even
the slightest cavity occurs in a tooth
unless it is attended to at once the
whole jaw will be seriously affected
The dentists bills and loss of time in
consequence of caring for the teeth
make a great item in the yearly finances
of the strikers The average wages of
the girls was from 225 to 275 a
week
A Fault of Business Women
A professional woman who has to
employ a young woman assistant says
that one of her greatest troubles is that
her assistants are constantly trying to
impress not only upon her but upon
her patients that they are not accus
tomed to such employment but have
been brought up to better things
though she is aware of the fact that
the young women have come from
homes where there was neither cul
ture nor money
It is one of the weaknesses of many
nice girls that they do not feel sure
enough of themselves in taking up em
ployment outside their homes but they
must needs offer some excuse or reit
erate the fact that they are accustom
ed to something better It is a weak
ness which brings them little credit
from their confidantes A girl enter
ing a school for typewriting and sten
ography was asked by the other stu
dents why she had come to the school
Are you taking up stenography and
going to take- a position just for fun
they asked Why certainly not she
replied It is too hard work I do not
do hard work for the pleasure of it
We are so glad answered her quer
ists The greater number of the girls
here say they come just for fun and
will take positions to pass away the
time Chicago Times Herald
Good Evidence
Lawyer -Why did you discharge that
man arrested for scorching
Judge redals Scorching That man
wasnt scorching Impossible Why
he only rode a last years model of a
low grade wheel Now if he had been
riding a Crackadoom as 1 do
But right there the lawj er interposed
and the same old endless discussion on
the merits of different wheels was re
sumed St Louis Post Dispatch
When women admit that a woman
they dislike Iroks pretty they add for
her
GREEK CITY UNEARTHED
JPrlene Discovered in a Remarkable
State of Preservation
Private letters bring news of most
Important discoveries made by Ger
man archaeologists excavating on tho
site of the ancient Priene in Asia Min
or opposite the island of Samos Years
ago an English expedition excavated
and studied the Temple of Athena the
chief sanctuary of the city built at the
crder of Alexander the Great The
work was then abandoned and mean
while the ruins have been so thoroughly
exploited and wasted by the neighbor
ing population that nothing Is left but
a confused heap of stones In 1895 ther
work of exploring the ruins of the city
was resumed this time by Germans
under the direction of the Berlin mu
seum and at the expense of the Prus
sian government The architectural
work has been placed in the hands of
the young architect Wilhelm Wilberg
a former student and assistant of Dr
Dorfeld
The work has now proceeded far
-enough to determine its extraordinary
Importance A buried city preserved
In the completeness of Pompeii is com
ing to light Up to this time no Greek
city has been excavated that gives any
clew to the arrangement of streets pub
lic squares monuments and public
buildings or to the architecture of any
considerable number of private houses
Here we find a city to be sure of the
Hellenistic period laid out with great
regularity with streets crossing at
right angles with shops colonnades
market places theaters a council-house-and
a great number of private houses
preserved in such completeness as to
display their general architecture dis
tribution of space use decoration ancV
equipment
South of the great square of the tem
ple alluded to above and closely ad
joining It has been found the great
market place or agora of the city which
was surrounded on all four sides by
broad colonnades of which that on the
north side was peculiarly noble and
stately Adjoining this at one end and
opening a small square building con
structed somewhat like a theaterwhich
was evidently the council house of thej
city It ismarvelously well preserved
Sixteen rows of seats are still in place
The walls doors windows platform
etc are all preserved One of the side
walls ends in a massive arch which as
being demonstrably a work of the
fourth century B C must rank as the
earliest or at least one of the few
earliest specimens of the arch in Greek
construction The whole building rep
resents something entirely unique in
the relics of Greek architecture
There has also been found a small
theater In which the stage structure
the skene is still standing entire
Three doors open from it upon the or
ehestra and the proscenium with its
row of columns and the architrave
above them remains intact No Greek
theater as yet discovered is so perfect
ly preserved as this and in the future
discussions of the stage question this
structure is likely to assume a leading
place Benjamin Ide Wheeler in Nev
York Tribune
Russian Forest on Ice
One of tne largest forests in the
world stands on Ice It is situated be
tween the Ural Mountains and the
Okhotsk Sea A well was recently dugi
In this region where it was found that
at a depth of 116 meters the ground wae
still frozen
Not Qnite a Conqnest
Wugger is not going to marry thaV
widow
Couldnt he win her
Yesrbut he couldnt please he
son
A SOLDIEES ESCAPE
From the Democrat Message ML Sterling HI
When Richmond had fallen and the
great commanders had met beneath
historic apple tree at Appomatox the 832
ennsyivania Volunteers prematurely
I
aged clad m tatters
and rags broken id-
body but of daunt
less spirit swung
into line for the
last grand review
and then quietly
marched away to
begin lifes frayr
anew amid the hillff
and valleys of tha
Keystone State
Among the number
Asa Robinson came
back to the old
home in Mt Ster
ling III back to tha
fireside that he had
left at the call to
a r m s four years
nrovinitq TTo TronV
The Soldiers Jieturn happy
away a
healthy farmer boy in the first flush of
vigorous manhood he came back a ghost
of the self that answered to President
Lincolns call for 300000 more
To day he is an alert active man and
tells the story of his recovery as follows
rheumatism almost from the time of my
discharge from the army Most of the
time I was unfitted for manual labor of
any kind and my sufferings were at alX
times intense At times I was bent al
most double and got around only with the
greatest difficulty Nothing seemed to
give me permanent relief until three years
ago when my attention was called to
some of the wonderful cures effected by
Dr Williams Pink Pills for Pale People
I had not taken more than half a box
when 1 noticed an improvement in my
condition and I kept on improving stead
ily I took three boxes of the pills and at
the end of that time was in better con
dition than at any time since the close of
my army service Since then I have neves
been bothered with rheumatism Dr Wil
liams Pink Pills for Pale People is th
only remedy that ever did me any good
and to them I owe my restoration to
comparative health They are a grand
remedy
Safes outwardly resembling Iron
ones but which are really made of tliiiJ
boards are now supplied by various
firms and are sold to people starting
In business who want to make a big
how
He I Ont of the Woods
What a happy look Mr Shadyslda
wears remarked Mr Murray Hill
His wife has finished her spring
house cleaning replied Mr Beecb
wood Boston Traveler
V
7
A
r
r