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About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (April 23, 1896)
THE SC'JII COUMfY JOURKAL L. J. ilHXOXi, Froprlc- HARBLSON, Every period of life has it peculiar prejudice; who ever w old age that did not applaud the pant, and condemn the present times? Everybody la your neighbor whom you can injure or shield from harm ac cording a you cultivate or neglect purity In your home-arrangements. Endeavor to keep your conscience always aoft and sensitive. If but one in force its way into that tender part of the soul, and is suffered to dwell there, the road Is paved for a thousand Iniquities. Gen. Weyler reports that It will take at least two years to suppress the Cu ban insurrection; but the probability is that he will find reason within a much shorter time to announce tbnt the task is an impossible one. We are not sent into this world to do anything into which we cannot put our hearts. We have certain work to do for our bread, and that Is to be done strenuously; other work to do for our delight, and that Is to be -dune heartily. Neither U to be done by halves and shifts, but with a will: and what is not worth this effort Is not to be done at all. Only three countries in the world build ships amounting to over 40.OXJ tons a year, and the United States is one of the number. In lto the United States turned out & tonnage of 4,877, or about the same as that of Germany. The British yards floated 950,967 tons, which is equivalent to saying that England in this line Is first and the rest nowhere. At the recent annual meeting of the fruit-growers of Connecticut a report on peach culture was read In which It wits estimated that 750,000 peach trees ace under cultivation In the State, and that 150,000 more will be set this year. The Connecticut peach orchards are given a high degree of care, and are found to be far more profitable than when the attention they received ended with the planting. If we would establish any real and enduring power over others, we must cultivate their trust in us. We must be so honest that they rely on our In tegrity, so sincere that they never doubt our truth, so Just that they con fide their interests in our bands, so truly kind and generous that they are sure we will do them good and not harm. It Is power such as this that en ables us really to belp or to benefit our fellow-men. The most infamous denth to which Minneapolis spite has gone, according to recent exposures by the St. Paul press, has been reached In an attempt by the weather bureau in the former city to wipe out the name of St. Paul and substitute that of Minneapolis on the weather maps which are distribu ted throughout the State. The gov ernment has made Minneapolis stop It St Paul has Just as much weather aa Minneapolis so there! According to the latest statistics, the public debts of the European nations aggregate $23320,000,000, or about f 64 per capita for the whole population. The heaviest per capita Indebtedness, $100, la In Portugal, France comes next wtth $135. England's rate is about $108. Switzerland's Is the smallest, $5, This tremendous burden upon the peo pie of Europe Is largely due, of course, to the maintenance of formidable armies and navies; but there are also heavy civil charges that are too often overlooked In the discussion of the sub ject It la certainly a reflection upon the Intelligence, good sense and good feel lng of any one that be frequently com plains of meeting uncongenial people. The best thing for such a one to do la resolutely to turn round and cultivate congeniality with every one be meets. He may rest assured there is something in each that will respond to the effort, some element In character which will command his respect, some quality of heart which will gain bis regard, some disposition worthy of Imitation, some habit which he would gladly make his, knowledge of which be Is Ignorant something, in fact, which will reward him for the trouble of cultivation. There are laws protecting Innkeepers as against guests, but no laws protect ing fuesta aa against Innkeepers. It is evident that the various Legislatures hare a duty to perform In this respect The Innkeeper and all of bis employes are not In equity, the masters of a hotel; they are the servants of the guests. The innkeeper should be placed in the attitude of a manager to the guests and made to serve their In terests. The guest In law Is a house bolder. In law, be should also have all the righta and equities of a house holder. At present, he has no redress against bad food and service, although he pays for the best of these. Al though the guest mast pay for all the comforts and necessities of a home, he must put up with all the discomforts and even the lack of necessities which fall to his lot the same as If he were invested with the former. It is time that the public, living In hotels, sought the Legislature for relief. It la reported eoatract have been ' nade for Um as of sterilised air In the lisaayui Istlini of meaat, fruits, etc, jkl It ki axpactsd this will obviate the M4 far t maotormnt of lea la the : rf naTiaUMs toed prod acta. The new process will be operated on line of fruit steamers plying from New Orleans to other ports, and it la also In tended to ue It in the trade between Australia and the British Isles If war ranted by the success attained in the other trials. Theoretically tue Idea is a good one. Its practical value must be determined by comparative cost as well as by actual efficiency. The process of decomposition in meats is akin to fer mentation, and results from the multi plication of minute germs. TheM are contributed by the atmosphere, which Is charged with microscopic entities working for the disintegration of or ganlc substances. The breaking up of the more complex organic compounds Into simpler ones largely depends uion temperature and the presence of sutil cleut moisture. The first has been kept down by artificial refrigeration to a point below the Inferior limit of the range of temperature within which de composition usually occurs. The malt ing of meats has long been In use for checking the process of decomposition. Keceutly the air has been excluded by a coating of material Impervious to it Borax is the latest of these appliances, and is claimed to be the best, being not only effective In excluding the air, bui having only a mechanical action and being easily removed.' Large quanti ties of meats coated with borax have been shipped from the United States to Europe In the last few years, and the material has the same advantage of cheapness The sterilized air process, by which the unwelcome germs are to be excluded from the air surrounding the food products, will have to compete with this mode of preservation. Per haps It will be found superior for some kinds of food, and may be relatively cheap for use In countries where borax Is dear. The value of the new process, however, will depend upon the com pleteness with which unsterillred air is kept out of the vessels, as a small portion of It Is sufficient to vitiate the contents. "How use doth breed a habit In a nianr s e are the children of custom and do a thousand things and bold to . t w .i n.l tM.lltlnn. . 1 ., ....... . our fathers did the same. We are not I like the Greeks, as the apostle de scribed them, constantly striving after some new thing, but we stand rigidly upon the ancient ways. In nothing Is this better exemplified than In our gen eral hostility to the adoption of the metric system of welghu and meas ures, not because we have a rational ground of opposition, but because it makes a radical change In our meth ods. That system, like the decimal sys tem in coinage. Is the only scientific system that has yet been conceived, and it lias been adopted by every civ ilized nation in the world except Great Britain and the United States. We owe to Jefferson the adoption of the decimal system of counting money, but that we obtained this boon was probably as much owing to the gen eral scarcity of coin among our an cestors as to the persistence of Jef ferson. If pounds, shillings and pence had been as plentiful with the people a hundred years ago as .aey are in Great Britain to-day the system might never have been changed, and our great grandfathers wonld have clung as ten aciously to it as the British do to-day, cumbersome and unwieldy as It Is. Our old-fangled, uncertain and Indefinite method of welghU and measures we hang onto as If It was bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh. We have two different weights of ounces and pounds, a half-dozen different kinds of bushels, several sizes of barrels, two different ton weights, and many other like dis crepancies, and yet we stumble along rather than adopt a few French terms that Invariably mean the same thing both In weight and measure. In 1860 Congress passed a law making the use of the metric system permissible and legal In the United Btates. but It was tried for about a week on the Chi cago Board of Trade and then aban doned. An act Is now pending In Con gress making the system compulsory on the government after July 1, 1897, and upon the public after July 1, 1899. It is a question of wide interest and Im portance, and the people should con sider It with earnestness. No Danger of That Fate. It is related in the Bookman that at a New York theater one night recently, some one pointed oat to Mrs. Cralgle ("John Oliver Hobbes") a lady In the opposite box as being a well-known American novelist who, like Mrs. Cral gle herself, writes over a masculine nom de guerre. Some details were added as to her intense snd vivid na ture. "Why," said the Informant, "the other day some one asked her whether she had decided how she would prefer to die; and she answered that she bad long ago made up her mind on that point Said that she bad-decided to be kissed to death r Mrs. Cralgle put up her lorgnette and took a long look at the lady. "Ah, I see," she said, after a short Inspection; "she evidently Intends to be Immortal!" To Reaaeore. A Paris paper relates that at a pri vate party, at which the composer Mas senet was present, a lady was asked to sing something of Monsieur Massenet's. The lady made many objections snd protestntlons, evidently chiefly for ef fect, and at last went forward to the piano. "I wilt sing the grand aria from the Cld,' " site said. Turning to the composer, she added: "Oh, sir, I am ao afraid I can't sing!" "Never mind," answered Massenet; "so am I, too!" Prof. Bchusllch I don't know what's tba Batter with roe, doctor. 1 am per petually limping to-day. Ia It loco Botor ataxy, I wonder Doctor Why, prsfissor, you are walking with one foot on the enrbntoM and the vtber U Us gutter, Luang Blaettsr. Jahaay Ball rtatag Lokdom, April 17. In the boose commons yesterday Kt. Hon. R. W. H anbury, financial secretary to the treasury, stated in reply to a question by Mr. Patrick O'Brien, member for Kilkenny City, that the pestm aster-general was at the present time in com munication with the postmaster-general of the Unite! States, in regard to the future transmission of newspaper matter from the Un;ted States to Eng land, solely by American vessels, and was now awaiting an answer from the pottorfice department in Washington. But," he said, "it should be remem bered that the po-tm aster-general of the United States has the liberty to make his OTn arrangements." At 4:25 fir Michael Hicks-Beach, cnancellor of the exchequer aroae, amid conservative cheers, to dt-liver the speech introducing the budget. He be gan by saying that despite the fact that the expenditure of the lat fiscal year had been larger than that of any year since the !aat great war. the surplus in the treasury was the Urgent that bad ever been known and the credit of the country was never so high. The yield of consols to the purchaser, he said, was just about half what it was a century ago, and a larger f utn bad tieen applied to the reduction of the national debt than had ever before been applied to that end within a similar period. The dejiosiU in savings banks and perma nent accounts in ordinary banks bad amounted to an unprecedented point, md the production of g.ld throughout the world has been the highest ever k'lown. The amount of bullion in the Ban' of England was !M9,0qp,000. and the reserve fund in the bank, in propor ti jn to its liabilities, was the bight on reco'd. Continuing, Mr. Beach said the position of the working cbsees ha 1 never been to satisfactory and the issue of produce stamps supplied the best possible measure of ascertaining that business transactions had never r-ached a volu.,ne: . lwelner. ne sata, me pan year, nan oeen won- lerful one. Mobla Work Done I'J tha Kd Cron Washington-, April 17. Private ad vices received here from ConsUntinople lute that the Red Cross is doing a great work in Armenia. No one is interfer inir with them and the porte has de clared in writing both to the English Mid American legislations that no one ihall interfere with the great chariUble anderukinz. Every permit hag been granted. The lied does agents tre in the heart of the recently dis turbed district and frscial protection is given them. Boston, Mass., April 17. The Sew England Armenian relief committee has received from ConsUntinople a die patch from Mies Clara Barton aa fol lows: , "Send.5,0O0 immediately, cae Peet. Our men are reporting very successful work." The Boston committee remitted $2,000 yesterdy snd the treasury is empty. The committee says unless friends of distressed Armenia rally in this emer gency they fear the work will have to be suspended. Brown Brothers & Co., No. 50 State street, Boston, are the treasurers of the fnnd. A Sanaatlon In Co art. CutCAOO, April 17. Julius Msnnow startled Judge Horton and sent the re volvers snd red peper plots inta toUl eclipse by getting up and declaring that he and Joseph Windmth were guilty of trie murder and robbery of Carey B. Birch, cashier of the West Chicago Street Railway company on June 23 last The court informed the prisoner that he must not feel too certain that his plea would secure leniency for him. Walj rath's attorney and friends pleaded with him to have him also admit his guilt, but the prisoner refused to do so, claim ing that be was innocent and would never make such a plea. In hisconsession Mannow involved a third person, Albert Schalk. No at tempt will be made to prosecute Albert Schalk fo conspiracy to rob, aa he has become a witness for the sUte. When it wss ascertained that the ef forts to have Windrath plead guilty were futile, Judge Horton ordered tha trial to proceed. Will lutpaat Horm. London, April 17. In consequence of the report of the Liverpool commis sion, representing that the spread ol glanders in horses in that city is due to the importation of Canadian horses, the government will probably order the inspection of horses upon their land ing at Liverpool and the disinfection of vessels upon which they arrive, but will not otherwise hamper the trade in imported horses. Inquiries on the part of the authorities show that glanders have always been prevalent in liver pool, but the persons making the com plaints upon which tSe health com mission's action was taken allege that Canadian horses arriving in Liverpool are often afflicted with pulmonary in fluenza, which weakens the English horses by contact with them and rend er. them more liable to atUcks from influenza. RoblMMt by Hit So. Dss Moines, la., April 17. Samuel R. Reynolds, a grain buyer of this city, has been robbed of 3,5O0 which be had secreted in the wall of bis cellar when bis wits died eight years ago. He im parted his secret to bis son, then thir teen years of age, and showed bim the seal which covered the hole where the treasure was bidden. Yesterday Mr. ReynoMs discovered that the mony bad disappeared. His son is now ol ,age and hat left the parental root. NEBRASKA IS FOR M'hlSLE. Delegate to Bt Louis Intruded by the State Ca v ntion. RE 0LUTI0NS AGAINST FREE SILVER N Julia L. Wabaier, T. V. Krnrard, Fatar Juh, sod a ' . Thumaoa ara Choui Delega a at I-arga. OwAiit, Neb., April 16 The republi can Mate conventi-ir, ca'iled for the pur- poe of selecting four delr-cates-ai-lare to -epreent NV rai-k at tl.e national ei'iven at S-L Ixxuc, n.ct ntko lint last ni(.'ht in the Colireir an.l aft-r an in leretinjj session adj .rn-d at 11 :15. John I- Webster. T. I". Kennard, Peter Jansen and G. 'I. Thnnnnel -sere ehcted delegates a latye ami O. G. Smith of Ki.ffa!o. C. B. Ilempe-er of Gi ge, L. P. Juild of ftoolie and A. C. Wright of Ciss wer clioben a a ter- na'e. Keolutins w re -.dop'ed .led tring ageinft the fre o n f silver. By a vote of to 410 the convention in-'wted the deb? te. t i "vote for William MrKinley on the- li'-t ballot and on each succeeding ballot nn'il be is nominated or his ran e withdrawn. The principal diversion of the session w..s the stuck Biii'ie npoti rnau-r Thurston by ex-Governor C.-ounse, who leuounced the venat"r ni a dicator in i leeolu'ion which the convention vottd down The date for the nominating conven tion at Lincoln was fixed at July 1. Miaaouri Iremorrata W mtSilvrr. Szkaua, Mo., April hi. r-e silver at 18 to 1. This tells the whole story of the democratic tftate roiivvniion. The ri-'g of the white m -al o th. musij to W!iit:h the democrat of M. ouri tmi-t umrch this fall. Kr-e si.vratil "Silver Dick" P.land for pres.d -nt. Never before was eotivnt 'on 1 etter organized liefore it wax -lle.i to order: never before was a convention more of one mind, and never before, did a con vention follow more abt-n'utely the lines mirked out for it by the tiiii'iai:er-. iov. William J. Stone proposed the indorsement of liicl ard Park Bland for the democratic nomination (or p'ei dent arid the conven -.inn indorsed bim bv acclamation. The debates did not know until the lan moment that this would be done, sb Mr. Biand has r. -peatedly said that he would not allow it, but when they saw it wb on the card they acquiesced witli a cheer. There was no wild soene. such as. some times marks such conventions, but r.everthelee a stro: ' round of applause. Everything went .8 every one knew it would go. A hand :l of sound nioney men caused a little -ipple in the silver? stream by announcing their position, but that was all. The resolutions were adopted as they came from the com mittee on resolutions an l they are strong enough to satiefy the mort en thusiastic silver man who ever shouted fir 16 to 1. Fifteen hundred persons werecrowded into Woods' opera bouse, with a seat ing capacity of 800 men, when the dem ocratic state convention to elect deh gates to the national convention was called to order by Chairman Matin at 12 :35. Vest, Cockrell and Stone were named as delegatee-at-large by acclamatii n snd George W. Allen, ex-mayor of m. Louie, was chosen the fourth delegate. Mora Lnd Open. Washisotos, D. C, April 16. The report of the appraisers of the aban doned Ft. McPherson military referva- tion in Nebraska, which has been re- reived at the interior department shows that there are 19,600 acres of land in the even numbered sections, except th military road, about 200 feet w ide and seven-eights of a mile long, which is not suitably subdivided for appraisal The secretary yesteiday directed the eo nmissioner of the l.ind office to call the attention of the local land officers to the fact that the odd numbered sections in his reservation accrue to the Union Hacific railroad by reason of their original &rar.t. He also approved in structions to local officers at North Platte river relative to disposal of these lands under the set of restoring the reservation to the public domain, to be di-posed of under the homesUad law to actual settlers at its appraised value, which ie about $1.25 per acre. Settlers now on the land will be given prefer ence right to entry. A Popular Ma. Nsw York, April 16. A Richmom., Va special aayi: The appointment of General Fitzhugh Lee as consul general to Cuba gives general satisfaction. "I accepted the position after mature deliberation," said General Lee Tues day evening. "My sympathies in the Cuban matter are entirely non-partisan, and I feel as though I were in a posi tion to report things on the island ex actly as they exist, and it will bean easy matter for me to keep in the middle of the road." It ia understood that Gen eral Lee's military training had some thing to do with his appointment, and, with his expedience In such matters, be will know a fight when he sees it. A rrrllmlnarr Htcaj. Nsw York, April 16. Chairman Al dace F. Walker of the Atchison, Topeka A Bant Fe, said yesterday that Judge Collier's decree in tho foreclosure case of the' United Bute -Trust company against the Atlantic A Pacific railroad was a preliminary step toward the foreclosure sale of that line. The de cree covers the property in New Mex ico, but no decie in Arisonn has set been given. Similar proceedings will be taken In other section. 1 ba Mlaaiaa ppl roama a ad Kara Pt. Pail, Minn., April 15. The Mis sissippi is on a rampage Irom Grand Rapids to St. Paul. The river has bees rising rapidly here for two days and is now eight feet higher than on Sunday. A further rise of two feet will drive the people on the west side flats to the hills. Roy alto x, Minn., Apnl 15 The Mississippi river bridge west of here, built six years ago, was swept aw ay yes terday. Platte river dam, at this place, went out alto. One Knoll dam went Sunday. McLean's dan, on Skunk brtok Sunday, and the mill dam at Two Rivers Mondav. It ie the biggest flood in years. The. Mississippi bridge went out during the morning and the river is out of its banks. St. Cu.cn, Minn., April 15 The sit uation on the river at this point, owing to;the high water, is quite serious, and the Great Northern railroad cllicials are co-operating in taking nuaures to pro tect the bridges. The dam is alej threatened by the great gorge of ice and logs that has formed and lodged in the Skunk Water. The lower end of the mil! pond in the river is still cov ered with ice, and through this the Jam has partially forced its way. While a dozen men were working on the ice in the river, just above the dam, early yes terday morning, opening a channel for the big gorge which formed there, they bad a narrow e ape from being swept over the dam. A sudden rise in the water broke up the ice, which mshed toward the game. All had to make their way to shore over floating cakes of ice and narrowly escaped with their lives. A PulitirUn H'or-a l St. Lous, Mo., April 15. J. Milton Turner, ex-minister to Liberia, politi cian, lawyer and national ceiebrity, is at the city hospital with a fractured fkull. A fight with his stepdaughter, Mrs. William Mason, Monday night, is the cause: There are two sides to the story. His wile says: "It has been my custom for years to spread his meals in his room, no matter wLat time he came home, at 1. 2, or even 3 o'clock in the morning. I was setting out his sapper, with which he expresied great dissatisfac tion. My daughter heard him coming nto the room. She asked him to keep still. He swore at her, telling her to mind her own busin-st. Then he told her to take the children and get out of the house. She said the children were n bed and it was too late at night to leave. Grabbing up a knife, he rushed at her. Picking up a broken pitcher from a shelf at her side, she hit him over the head." Turner's rtory diff.-rs materially from that told by hi! wife. He denies being drunk. He told his stepdaughter to get him something to eat, and a quarrel ensued. During the excitement she hit him on the head. Tnrnw: loudly be wails the girl's ingratitude. He rays he spent over $10,000 on her eduction. Her hushand will not work, he says, and Turner supports the whole family, in- luding four little girls. A Mad Mnrdernr. Chicago, April 15. John Lehman, a driver for the Chicago A West Division Street Railway ' company, killed hit three children, Clara, azed five, Bertha, three, and a four-uiontha-old baby lart night and then committed suicide. Lehman, though only thirty-eight years old, was pos-eesed of the idea that tie wai growing aged, and being in poor health, has been despondent for many weeks. He was fond of hia chil dren, and while be had over $1,500 in the bank, he wss afraid he would die and his little ones would not be proper ly provided for. Mrs. Lehman at the time was st a flat on Knoll street, to which the fam ily intended moving in s few days. She has been married twice and by her flnt husband hail two children, who live with ber. Lehman had no desire to kill bis wife's children by a former husband and befote committing his dreadful deed sent them out to find their mother. Taaamant Buraa. Chicago, April 15. Tenements of the Bartlett block, st Dsvla street and Chicago avenue, Evsaaton bad a close call from being burned to death or suffocated by a fire which gutted the building early yesterday morning. Archie Parks, who roomed on the sec ond floor, was awakened by a rush ol smoke into his room, and be was over powered several time when be tried to escape. When the flames burnt in he rolled to the floor by a desperate effort and crept out in the hall. Then he arouaed Miss Jennie L. Johnson, dressmaker, who lived serosa the hall, While the firemen were at work Cspt. John Sweeting severely cut hi foot and lost part of a finger by the fall of 'vlder on which he stood. Architect Gate B,SOO. Atchison, Kan., April 15. George P. Washburn of Ottawa, Kan., architect of Atchison county' new court house, will n ceive $2,500 for his services. If there are any defects in the work after the building i completed which can be traced to the plan or specifica tions, he agrees to make the defect good at bis own expense. Daatli In tha Blactrta Chair. Dannkmoma, N. Y., April 15. Tin eighth electrocution took place in th death chamber of Clinton prison yea terday morning, when at 11:43 a. m., Joseph Zlamel, marderer of Tessa Ka mora, met death In the electic chair This electrocution, like all previoui ones, was successful in every particular. Owing to Zlamel' strong physical de velopment, ft. new and ssceedlnglj stroag oak chair waa mad far tha oc casion. Nervous I'eople find jut the help they so ui tch need, in H' arsaparii!x It fur nishes the desired strength by purify ing vitalizing ami enriching the bl nxl, and thus build up the nerves, tee the stomach and regulates the whole system. Head this : I want M i.rn.e II h,.!' S..rspsr.... My health madowu. and I bad the arip Af;.-r that, o.y i.-:irt mA ii.-rv-.ua .ja-.ni were badly affected. . ibm ' "!'1 do my own work. Our .hvaj.ian e 'e .me help, but "hi uot cure. 1 deeded to try H.cai's Kanupariila. Sn I omM d .11 my own h..u..-w..rk. I Cured IC.wid1 with H.r S.ir.iipsr;ila. and they have l-.io- me much !. I will n-.t he w ith .ut them. I have taken l.'J bottles "f Hood' Sat.i.:irill. nd through the l.l.n-inK ..f i .d. it '-a cured me. I wnrked n hard ever the .ant ummcr. surf I nm Uiankfui to ay 1 n well. nd' l'ili" when taken with H.mhI's Snr.i.arii:.i help very mti.'b " Mhh. M. M. .Mr.!KM.K, Freehold, l'i nn. Thin and many '.'her cnr. -r .ve thjl Hood's Sarsa )arilla It the One True l!lrl fiirlfler. AlhlnicifUU. SI. rri-itfirwl only t.y I. U 'tA H ., I'Wll. Mk Hood'sPills ";. l"'1' lhc urealcst Mediuil Liscocry o' the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS,, Has discovered In one of our common, pasture weeds a remcJy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst bcrofula down to a common Pimple. He Im tried it In over eleven hundred, cases, and never failed except in two cases! (both thunder humor). He has now In his; possession over two hundred certifkatesi of its value, all within twenty miles of, Boston. Send postal card for beck. A benefit Is slwavs experienced from the first bottle, ind a'perfect cure is war-', tanted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are ar'fected it causes shooting: pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. I his Is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a weeK after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach U foul or bilious It will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you tan get, and enough of it. Dose, one tabespoonful.ln water at bed time. Sold bv all I moists. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR W. L. Douglas 3. SHOE beVor1dThe If you pay to M for ihuei, ex- fa amine tl W. I.. IiougUf M.oe, and at are whit a good ihoe you can buy fur w OVER IOO STYLES AND WIDTHS, CONGUEKS, BUTTON, and LACK, n.ada In all kln.la of the lx at arlrrta-d leather by k lllatl work man. Me rnaki and aril mora f3 Shot than any o t h a r aaanufart orrr In tha world. tiom genuine unlets name and price it ttamped on the bottom. Ask your dalrr (or our SS, 4, aj.so, eM.vo, ax.tn Shot, .80, BZ and 1 .73 (of boys. TAU NO SUBSTITUTE. If your dealer cannot supply you, send to fac tory. cnclotinK price and jr. cents to pay carriage. M..te kind, styie of toe (cap or plain), size and width. (Ir Custtm ipt.ill (ill your order. Send Utr new Illus trated Catalogue to Hoi K. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mats. Checks Bleeding:, Reduces inflammation.Quiets Pain, 3 s the Bicycler's Necessity. Sores, pimro Burn Piles, UUnLO .colds, Rheumatism, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Chilblains, Catarrh, Inflamed Eyes, Wounds, Bruises, Sprains, H ;adache. Toothache, etc. Use POND'S EXTRACT ifter Shaving-No Irritation, after Exerciting-No Lameness. POND'S EXTRACT OINTMENT is a specific for Piles, socts. f-OND8EXTRCTCO.,7 6th A v., N.Y. WE HAVE NOACcNTS, WW rS. Is r V aa hut ai i rt tctrea vnmr al ah!atf anaaa 'Ilia anratvn t. riaatt iiatt tir um. Jtaara th.iia aarranim. tSTlOO '! HaraaaaTal strlea Mama -azalea. Wrist lu aaui'vue. ELK n ART Mmcfe m