The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, March 18, 1897, Image 2
lbarrfson Journal. BO. O. Ci0, Editor ui rrep BABBI30X, . NEB. The final relegation of the horse to Iswurity might poawibly be delayed a few j earn by proridiug hltn with rub ber shoes. The courts have derided that a drug tore la which hU water Is sold h not ft place of public accommodation aud Amusement. There is a man in Congress who was once a ueuslioy. Everything indicate that a good uewsboy was spoiled to make a l-oor Congressman. Richard Hanliug Davis must be pret ty near the pinnacle of literary great ness. A liahy wolf in the Huston Zoolog ical garden has been named for hiin. Gov. Tunnel, of Delaware, cays the public iustitutluuri of that State have been run into the ground. We hope he will follow up the derelicts, even if he does find it a great lore. The barbers of New York City have asked the Slate Legislature to pass a bill changing the name "barber" to "tonsor." This change may satisfy the bar! ers, but how will the "tonorial an lsts" regard it? M .'dif-al scientists are now puzzling over the case of a boy who can hypno tize himself. 1'eruaps this furnishes an explanation of the financial peculiari ties of several banking Institutions which have collapsed lately. Accident Insurance companies refuse to grant a tollcy to the "bicycle girl." The reasou Is not that hhe is supposed to ride worse than the "bicrcle boy," but that her claims for trivial and email injuries are too persistent. Now, what a splendid guarantee of good faitli and repentance it would tw it England were to try a little arbitra tion with the kingdom of Itenin liefoe proceeding to make the massacre of six Englishmen a pretext for the compiest and annexation of that lM-nlghtcd but desirable land! IvOuiville Courier-Journal: The pa pers of Chicago tell us that I'rof. H.ir ner, the celebrated student of monkey language. 1ft in that city. Well, what of it? Has not Chicago, according to Its own claims, become a "literary cen ter?" And a man who has been able to master the monkey language ought to be able to do something with the Chi cago language. A product called "wire-glass," which, It la asserted, presents an effective bar rier against tire, consist simply of a mesh-work of wire embedded in a glass plate. Even w hen licked by flames and raised to a red heat it does not fail to pieces, and it not only resists the heat of fire, but also the shattering effects of cold water poured over it while It is yet glowing hot. A writer in a recent Issue of the French paper La I'atrie was recciuly greatly shocked to find an advertise ment in a London daily asking for a "second-band guillotine in good condi tion." lie will, however, probably ac knowledge that, the joke is on himself when he learns that "guillotine" is the technical name f a machine used by bookbinders for cutting the margins of books. Theobituaryaddre-sse delivered upon the occasion of the death of a member of Congress cost the (overnmeuf a good deal of money. I'sually 1:2,0m copies are printed, with a steel-pl.ie portrait of the deceased, fifty of which, bound in full morocco with gilt edges, are for the famiiy of th ? dead Congri-ss-man. The cost of obituary volumes In the Fifty-first Congress was over $50,000. It Is related as a fact that about a year 8go a house in Wichita, Kan., was entered by a burglar and a pocketbook containing some money was ntolcli! A few days ngo the owner of the purse received a letter through the mails In closing a $10 bill and the following note: "A year ago I stole a pocketbook from you containing $i0. 1 have been sick, and remorse has been gnawing at my heart, so I send you $ 10. When re morse gnaws again I will send yon some more. Ilurglrr." John Campbell tells a story about the rross-exn initiation of a bad-tempered female in his court. She was an Ama zonian person. Her husband, obvious ly the weaker vessel, sat sheepishly lis tening. The opposing nttorney pressed a certain question rather urgently, and he said angrily: "You needn't think to catch me. Von tried that once be fore." The lawyer said: "Madam, I have not the slightest desire to catch yotl, and your husband looks as If he was sorry he did." The evbpcr'ptlon for (he benefit of the wout.di i! and sick In Cuba which the Madrid luiparcial has opened has passed the one-hundred-thousand-dol-lar mark. Lx Empress Eugenie sent one thous"iid dollars, each ambassador of the Brent powers, one hundred dol lars. The Ituptirclal remarks that the access of the subscription Is all the more noleo"tl.y, as the French pa pers could not obtain more than nine teen thousand do Wars for the wound d hi Mndngascnr durinK several months. Big sleeves blocked an Important Part tuoroujUfare the other day. A wotuaa u sailing down tbe Ru Richelieu by the Bihll.it he. pie Na tion le, taking up Uiot of the sidewalk, when a polite oil gentleman, to make room for her. stepped into the sir-et directly iu front of a passing cab. The driver pulled hi horse up to avoid run niug over him, when the beast fell down, and iu two minutes there wai a solid block of omnibuses, cab, bicycles, and delivery earls, filhng the street for over an hour. India is a very uuisunfortable coun try. This year is worse than common. Draught makes every rosid a river of dust; oth-r rivers are dried up. drain is poor as well as scarce, and garden products are napless. If the traveler eats meat or fruit, he Is threatened with cholera; if grain or vegetables, he is reminded that the hutmuie pest I which Is the fatal "little sickness" of lioinbay) chiefly affects vegetarians. Fish I forbidden by taste as well as by prudeni-e. Milk must be rigorously eschewed, and butter is not less Ijate ful. Itr.-.id ami tea are tth poor In India, and water is always dangerous. The first f;!tai accident due to a horse. los carriag- has to lie recorded. On the road from Monte Carlo a horse at tached to a light carriage, seeing a motor vehicle ap.-oaching, tixik fright, and the conductor of the latter turned his carriage from the road In order to avoid a collision, thereby driving It against a stone wall. He was thrown violently forward, receiving a concus sion of the hraiu, from which be died. The friends and heirs of the victim ! have had the driver of the horse ar rested. The case is Interesting, as it will probably establish the Matus of a motor carriage on French highways. Care dues not seem to shorten the lives of Uriii.-h premiers. Mr. Clad ptone, by completing his eighty seventh yar, has broken the record of modem times whi-l, ha 1 ,eeu held by Adding tou. Lord Sidmouih, who died at over S;. Earl Kus-ell died at Si!, the Duke of Wellington at SJ. Lord I'almerstoii and Earl tlrey at si. Of the other prime ministers of IJtieeu Victoria who are dead the Earl of Ileaeoiisneld's age was 77. the Earl of Aberdeen's fi. the Earl of Derby's so, Viscount Mel bourne's (V.i. and Sir Kobert Peel's Mt. (ilaristotie and Sir Koliert are the only two premiers who were not peers or did not accept a peerage from the IJlleetl. "'he London IVouomist gives some figures which show how great has been the "slump" in South African mining securities, l-'or ten representa tive South African companies the fall from the highest point in the year amounts to no less than M.iK!l.(lur almiit $17:'.','K'0. The decline has been equally marked in "Kangaroos," as the U'estraiian shares are dubbed by way of distinction from the Afri cans. Ten companies show a depre ciation in the market value of their shares which reaches the Hanling stun of ?2.'.So,iXKi. Here is nearly S200.(HXi.fwK which has been hist to tile shareholders in a few enterprises. When we consider the great number of j these corporations, ami that most of them arc largely capitalized, it can i easily be seen that the "slump" has lieeij big emuign to cause the most seri ous alarm. St. Paul I'ioiiecr-I 'rests: It is prob ably fortunate for the people of Illinois that. Just as their Legislature Is called upon to consider a proposition to close the workshops In the State prisons, in order that the millions of fr-e working men may no longer suffer-a dema-gogm-s tell them i hey are suffering from the competition of a few hundred luisntl)b convicts, the great Suite of New York presents such nu object les son in the matter us k does to-day. There the busy shops have been closed; the convicts an- idle; and the spectacle of utter misery which they present is such as to rouse the sympathy, the lu digmi'ion. the loud protests of almost the entire community against the shocking barbarism of the enactment which has brought matters to such a pass. l'n!(s-f employment In speedily found for them, great numbers of con victs will go crazy in their enforced idleness, and win have to be transferred to the lunatic asylums -unless, Indeed, the prisons are themselves changed to lunatic asylums. .lesse Potneroy, of Boston, has been so long in prison, from which he lias just made a daring and desperate effort to escape, that the particulars of his singular case have almost faded out of public memory. lie jss been shut up for twenty-two years, being only i.j when the prison door closed upon him, 'lis sentence belcg for life. From his earliest years he was possessed with a demon of cruelty and ferocity the specilic acts leading to his imprison ment being the mutilation and torture of children smaller than himself. In this long interval occasional efforts have been made to procure bis pardon, but they have fulled, as they well de served to do, and as his own e.nleavor has just failed. lie was and Is a nat ural and congenial monster, and any effort to restore him to society, what ever Its Is'tievoleut and sentimental disgtiiHcs, was an attempted crime against society. It could not lie ex pected to succeed unless the official guardians of the latter had taken leav? of their senses. Now that his attempt to escnpe has been discovered attd thwarted, a safer cell will no tlonbt be found for him, and be will bit more carefully watched In future. When Rruwulnv 1 The horse, when browsing u. Gilded ! entirely by the nostrils In Its choice ' of proper food, and blind horses are ! never known to wake mistakes in their (jlt.t 7 FOLLY IS EXPLAINED. COIN REDEMPTION ACCORDING TO DEMOCRACY'S IDEA. ciavplr tbe Swapping of On Dollar for Aaother-Trua fced mptiou la the Deceiving of Money in Ex change fur toaaanoditice or fScr-Ticea Five Logical Oblect ona. The Democratic party teaches that paper money, iu order to be good, must be baaed upon, or redeemable iu, coin, at the option of the holder. Their Idea of redeeming money is eiuiply to away one kind of dollar for auother. Our contention Is that the true and only ueeded redemption of money la to re ceive It in exchange for commodities or services. Money is redeemed every time It pays a debt, or pass from hand to hand. It U constantly being redeemed by the people In property and lator, and by the (iovernmetit In receiving It for tasc and other dues. I offer the fol lowing objections to the coin redeine tion theory, as advocated by the Dem ocratic party: 1. It Is a fraud and a swindle on the face of it. for the reason that the amount of coin In existence ii entirely Inadequate to red.-em the amount of pajK-r money ue-ded In business, even if it were desirable to do bo. 2. It is theoretical alxsurdity. Inas much a It would inflate our paper money when we had more coin and d d not need It so badly,' and when our specie Ini'ji was deei-cHto-d, and we needed more ipcr money. It would have to be also decrease! In the same proportion. 3. It Is contrary to the lessons of ex perience, since nations have always had to abandon the coin redemption pollcy In times of war and disaster and fall back on legal tender paper money, coin Invariably disappearing on the ap proach of danger. 4. It is a prolific source of panic and commercial disturbances. At one time the specie basis Is larger, more credit money Is In circulation, and the volume of business Is greater; then a failure occurs riomewhere, people become alarmed, the banks are besieged, mi l lieing unable to redeem their paper in coin they suspend, and the result In a disastrous panic. Pi. It offers a plan by which sicculn tors may raid the treasury at their wish, deplete the redemption f'jnd. and com pel the Government to Issue Ismds In order to replenish It. This process might lie repeated from time to time, and theendiiws chain would work very much like It now docs In the present effort to maintain a gold reserve. ltincrcT find National Hanka. The Democratic party now declares against national banks. This declara tion, however. Is at variance w ith their record for the last thirty years, l'rior to the war Democratic national plat forms bristled w ith declarations against national banks. Since that time no sin ii declaration bus appeared In any of their national platforms except the one re cently adopted at Chicago. On theoth ,.r ,aI1j ,,. ,,ave Kivi.n unmistakable ,.vu,n.e f thelr friendship for these inK.U1tioiis 1. National bankers have stood high In the councils of the Ieui(y-ratlc party. Among them may lie mentioned Man ton Marble, W. H. English. Calvin p.r.ce, Senator (lorman. Samuel Tllden, V. C. Whitney, Samuel Randall. Crover Cleveland, Daniel Manning, Secretary I'airehild. Thomas Itayard and many others. Most of these men were bank ers, and all of them utrongly favored national banks. '1. When the question of rechartering the national banks came tit) In Con- j gressln 1SS2 eight Democratic Senators ! voted for It, and sixteen dodged It by being absent. Had they all voted I against the bill It would have been de- feated. In the house an amendment was offered providing that the batiks ' be rechartered for only ten years In I stead of twenty; seventeen Democrats I voted against It. 3. During Cleveland's first adminis tration the (Jovernmetit loaned alwiut- m,(St to the national hauls with out any Interest whatever. This was done by a Democratic President and Secretary of the Treasury, not only without warrant of law, but lu direct and iro violation of law. This money was a part of the surplus, which be longed to the people. The banks were thus permitted to Isirrow the people's money without Interest and loan It back to them at a high rate. 4. In the Fifty-third Cnngre a prop osition was made to re.-luce the tax charged the the banks by the (iovern ment from 1 per cent, to one-fourth of 1 per cent, per annum. Thin remark able piece of legislation in the Interest of an already greatly favored money monopoly was voted for almost solidly by the Democrats. It was carried by a vote of V) to 41. .in a house that was largely Democratic. If this indicate that the Democratic party bates na tional banks, how would you prove that it loves them? TnrifT lor Krvenne Only. The Democratic party favors a tariff for revenue only. 1 contend that the tariff plan Is not a proper method of raising national revenues. I say that It is wrong In principle and pernicious In its operation. .1 am equally opposed to a protective tariff. Tariff Is a method of Indirect taxa tion. It was originated by despotlr govertimetils In order to raise exorbi tant revenues to cover their extrava gance, knowing that tbe people would revolt against It If levied directly. Wl'liafii I'ltt said In the House of Ixu'ds In England that It would not do IO ",KP uireci taxes too utgn, tor u P!'1" woul11 n,,t ' '" he mM ,1'nt yo" emll,, u,k th- ln',t g off tu'W ha,'k ""1 ,l,e ,Mt n",n,el of fo01 tr'"h tb,'lr m,,uth" without a murmur against high taxes, provided It Is doot by plarlnf a tariff upo many lit'Ie sr ticbn of daily ue so that they wouid pay It without knowing- IL J that caw they mijfht erumble aliout karJ times, but tliey would ml underwaui the real cause. And yet the Demo cratic party, the pretended friend of the common people, in this the twilight of the uineieeata century, still advo cates this plan for humbugging and robbing tbe (topic. I'nder the tariff idan money Is extort- i rd fr.mi the people not only In au Indi rect manner, but to au extent mat is sometimes outrageous. They have to pay a great deal more than they would if they contributed directly for tbe sup port of the government. It Is estimat ed by some that the amount thus taken from the people is alsiut four time as much as actually go-s to the Govern ment. Ai-cording to our present tariff sys tem the Government virtually levh a tax on one man's property and makes another man pay It. Of course, tbe first man d pay It at the time; but he re imburses himself by adding that much to the price of bis goods when he sells them to the consumer; so that tbe latter ultimately liears the burden. Thus men are taxed upon what they consume instead of upon what they posses. They have to pay according to their necessities, an I not according to tiieir ability. A lior man with a large family often pays more for the support of the government than dm-s the millionaire with no wife or chil-dren.-H. W. Williams. I lempt nm from Ttlon. The State of Mary'aud has a law ex empting certain manufacturing plants from taxation, and this ciaes of legisla tion tinds favor iu many other loi-abties, but no s.siiier Is the proposition made to exempt a home from taxation than ev ery plutocrat and alxiut '.si I-r cent of the homeless millions, Jump on to the idea as class legislation. Now, the fact Is, when the subject kt fully analyzed, there are but few laws that do not to a certain degree possess the character of class legislation. Turn through the statute Issiks of any State and you will discover this to be an obvi ous fact. The laws which apply with equal force to all do not by any means constitute the larger part of our legal enactments. Every tariff law that was ever passed la a m't notorious exam ple of class legislation. If such laws as exempting a home are to be so called. Our contention In favor of exempting the home from taxation to a limited amount Is a move that will settle more questions than one. Allen bind owner ship will cease to be agitated as an Is sue, for it will lie taxed to an extent which will destroy lis speculative value. Large holdings of land will !e placed on the market ami they will be sold to those wanting homes. The assurance that fixation cannot take away the home will encourage thousands to make an energetic effort, who now accept a position as tenants rather than face the possibilities of legalized robbery which modern systems of taxation afford. The Chicago Express says homes In that city which cost a few hundred dol lars have been taxed and covered over with special assessments reaching Into the thousands. Property held for spec ulation is relieved of it Just share of tax by methods too numerous to men tion. Assessors are bribed and assess ments are cut down. Every wealthy corporation keeps Its attorney ami equal izat ion boardsare besieged lu such manner a to secure reductions. The bumble owner, of a home lias neither time nor money to use In this way, nor would it be gem-rally successful If he single handed should make such an ap peal. Wealth exerts an influence that cannot Is- disputed, and its lulluence is nowhere more potent than lu assisting the tax dodger. No fair minded, thoughtful person should raise the objection of class legis lation to our plan of exempting, to a limited value, a home from tasf. The more careful this matter is looked Into the plainer It will be that It Is the true soInMou of the land question. The home owners an- the strength of a prosperous nation and landlordism Is the threaten ing menace of our advancing civiliza tion. f'lrnfta Knarlnnil. A Iondon letter, published by the Chicago Tribune, says that the sell--tion o; I.yinau Cage as next Secretary of toe Treasury 18 well received by the financiers of that city. This Is riot sur prising In the bist, for undoubtedly Mr. McKlnley was fully advised on this jiwint lefore he decided on making the appointment. Ixiialoti financiers an 1 their aueiits lu New York have dictated every net of financial Importance lu this country for a long time. They have had almost complete control of every department of our Government aud dictated the. nomination of the two old parties for years. (oudon flunn elerx have been perfectly satisfied with every act since the one brief period of Independent, patriotic action which cost Geii, Garfield his life. Most assuredly the appointment of Lyman (Inge Is satisfactory to loii don financiers. If St was not agreeable to them, It would not lie made. The man who w ill not shrink from the most Infamous crime to crush out the true Hpirit of American Independence prove himself Just the man, according to the London financier, for the mo.ii respoii sible position In connection with the American finances. The ability A s played by Lyman Gage In the late affair which drove W, A. Hammond to suicide ami wrecked the only thorough ly substantial lnink In the city of Chi cago was doubtless' the act which placed him In such royal favor mil secured for him this position iu Mc Klulr'y V Cabinet. Iondon financiers are happy, for the American people sre willing to renin in pood, obedient slaves for at least four years more. McKlnley has demon strated his loyally to those British gold bun by consulting their eveijr Interest B every select in for a Cs!t!n fvoal tloit. Cenaitdy it a-u tuj in i-C'hi-tao Expn-aa. Trylnw the imwma b . Senator IVffer. in the Foruia. ssy the trouble with our monetary system is that we ate trying ta do au lmjW ble thing. You might as we'd undertake to haul a ton of hay ou a bicycle as la do f l(st.(ssi.usi.ia worth of business em f Kst.issv"" wrrh of gold cola. The only way a gold standard can lie securely maintained is to use no more credit paper of any kind h.itsm ver than could lw red-emed In gold If all were presented for payment at oue time, and that, we all know, U utterly Impracticable. As le-fore stated, we have not gold enough to supply more than 1 per vnt. of our daily needs for money. We use $! worth of private cnsllt. $! worth of government credit and S'J worth of isiln in every $1"" worth of business we transact with the national banks. The aimple truth K we have long outgrown the metallic money sjstem, and we Khail have to invent something better. If men want to trade iu gold, let them do so. That Is in every way legitimate, for gold Is a commodity, and a useful one lu many ways. Hut. as the New York Hoard of Trade said lu a re. u; Ion D-c. !i. :;, "a sound credit system is a necessary element to the stability of (Mtiti len-e." Money. In whatever form, Is but credit coined. The wise thing for us to do Is to "es tablish a sound credit system." and there is no credit among us equal to that of the Government of the I'nited States. 'What, wis-dy used, is sufficient for ail monetary pm-pos.-s. In addition to Its simplicity ami naturalness. It would be a guarantee of loyalty next only to the ownership of their home by the people. 1h - Knter n" W-ilie. The practical l;iiiossibilily of adopt ing the best possible monetary system while a large iioriion of the people look upon tbe precious metals as money and do not know that It is the law which authorizes the stamp of the Government which makes them legal tender money ought to be a sullicli tit reason for taking one step at a time. We have often ln-ard It said by nu n who are deeply versed lu the principles of hcletititie money that silver is the only entering wedge which can be used to free the people from the intolerable calamity of the single gold standard. H.-s .b-s. ;f the mines would furnish an adequate supply of gold and sliver so that general prices would remain stable, ihere would Ik- no neisl of substitutliiij any other material upon whl"h to express the mandate of the Government. The mines are now reasonably productive, and the use of both metals would give immediate ami substantial relief. Sil ver Knight. !'opnlit Cnin. The heathen may rage and the gold bug tie wspaicrs Imagine a vain thing, but we notice that the Populist flirty Is getting there Just the same. In the present Congress they have six Sen ators and six Congressmen. In the next Congress that meets on March 1.1 the Populists will have double their present number of Senators and four times their present numlier of Con gressmen. Knights of LalKir Journal, Populist pfilntT. Let the banks give security or receive no deposits. Thump the place hunters as fast as they stick their heads up. it Is the men who Van money that de sire to control Its volume. (Iovernment should do all the govern ing and part of the banking. There seems to be a want of parity lictwecn "eoulldeiice" and "proq,er,iy." Educate the people on the principled of Populism aud the laws will follow. Thirteen persons committed suicide lu St. Ixiuis on the last day of the old year. If the Hepubliititis rail (which they will), why not give the Populists a cha nceV It Is not noise that convinces the judgment: neither Is It eloquence, but clear-cut logic. The dangerous person In Jiolitlos is the one who jiersists In calling things by their right nanus. The money power is more dangerous to the lilxTtiea of the people than all other things combined. j The way the national banks are fall ing don't look like ft was the 'best banking system lu the world." One of the tenets in the eri-ed of plu tocracy l that the man who dm-s the most work shall receive the least for It. Improved methods of production should shorten the hour of labor In stead of cr-atlng millions of Idle men ami women. The trusts and corporations prosper tinder Democratic and Republican rule, but the jsople would prosper under Populist rule. The so-called money of ultimate re demption Is a fraud. The only rctlcmp. tion money needs Is that in which It is received for the product of Jnlior. A still bunt canqstigij now for the next three ears will accomplish won ders. Every Populist should help ex tend Hie circulation of Populist papers. Hradstreet retoris losses by business failures for isisi at IFJIH.OOU.ooo, which Is aft Increase of Hi per cent over the year 1SHS. Aud the gold standard ml, I grinds on. When Marshal Herthler was iu Egypt with 'nMilcon lie was Insam ly in love wilh Madam Vlcoml, n, commuted so many atmurditlc that among his Inti mates be was knowu as Chef de la Faction ib-s Amoiireaux. Among bis other follli's was the erection of a tent, next to Ills own; he converted It Into a temple to the Madam; erected nil altar to her picture, before w hich he burned incense every morning. KfaaaUf wa M ! -a. T-lr,H:i,r of rwt u at a lotf ' ra ol lurnt aherevtr the lni ars well tecured on improved fsrnii is a ' rr:ug nel of the timet. M'wt of the greai ri.rod have tbuf refunded llur inDrtgige indebtedness, if indeed they haven't 'p d it out in whole or in ait by reorgiB cation pncee in.s. Many ritie are refunding tbnr loans at loaer rates. Now give tbe Isruier s cban. to do lik is-. He ha lietter reasons and I goisl or Ivetter seenrit r. pnng Is the season for new life in nature, new vigor in our physical sj stems. As the fresh Kip carries life Into the tre-, so our blind should give US renewal strength and vigor. In its impure s:ate it cannot do this, and the aid of Hood's Sarsaparlila is Im peratively lll-cded. It will purify, vitalize and enrich the Hood, and with Hiis solid, correct foundation. It will bu.id up g'sid health, i rente a good iq. petite, tone your stomach and digest. i c organs, streiig'l.eii your nerves and over come or prevent that tired f'-elitig. This has been the experience of thou sand. It will ! yours if yon take Hoc Sarsaparilla,:::,;,:!1 ritie mill moo.) l urll.er. s, 1 1 : y itriiKs'i:i 1. HfwiI'c Dillc "lf" iii'. I i"i il"ii. ,'i?.i- Unequalled, Unapproacfied. STANDARD OF THE WORLD. I00 ' " lika 0E Mro. CO., Hartford, Casn. Cataiofue free from deatrra j. . y mail fr one S-cnt aiamp. X1 1j 5 SLICKER WILL KEEP YOU DRY. or u"r rrwt. If yr (.t'Miirt' thai kt p ym Aty m ih t r J Siif kr If n'ft in Mi In your !n. rt- fr cj'iofc-u in Z It COMFOh T TO CALIFOKNi y.vry i Unn, lav f!rno"m lourij-i l''j'i'.fir ffcf for In. -r, t I akf iu, San rrn.ii f-iwi, and V'tt Aniw h aiMi tiu-.mU nnu I ttn-.iin vn lh luriiiietntt liouti-, in ran', hn? prt:i.: "! ud Ink itn.l i p:uvj.Jol wi,h turimi)-, ir-J'iiiic, tot ti-.f-ap fH' au t jj- r.t: ti-4 excur ion coiifl isfi'.r mm. a i nt f'r rn'l I'ti j I nm h fMrTr Mti j any 1 1 ttiroii.t. lu io I n ' ! ti t ftit. H hi).' t cttifr iici i'if Uunfi nor (n.? to ltwk t ft a (;' i-t(r. it 1 jui at iftK-'! it ri'lis in, r'fin. i.f u- kft ar linoea m i h triri ol a rri(i. h tOe i'U'M h I t (v-o, i only f"r lr.it'f ijiviiiif full r !.imi1! f iU lo J. mm in, (i n'i !' r Aff'-ut. Oinnh. b CURE YCHJ3SEIF! fa. ti ... ... .......I I. . t - ait., nwt alrm. 1I4 Uf ltrncrl.1. or a.M it, blnif, .fi. 'i . i '. l-.itl... ij 7 -1.I f. hi r.i fii.i. ( KTIvlt (IU kMI IIV (fl.ll. svaWoWATERPROCF.;;; Na ltl H J air It 4TTI.K. e,..i, . .!'? t ',"yS"',"l"".,"r 'larrroit walla, it . l"-.".l n in, n,r.,t i. :,,.. ISatil AH..4H ( J;i..J.' ALABASTINE PRJNf NI WUl COHIINQ. Alaliaallne ilom te.t rwinlroto ! taken off to ii,r. ,t,wm n,.i harlxir rii., but d-lroy tie-in. nrel nny i.win l,rui. li on, H"l't I f all paint rtal.-ra Wru fr.r rani wiik iiiplin. ALBillME CO , (.rand Si.'it, Mica. rs, irill'.M WKITIMt TO A l I IC I liKHS ' ' aaj fan aaar tna alarUaBiail n thla iwaaar. : s 3 & -,i .'. . v. ."v.-w-' s.a 9 I I Bast Cuatk Srras. l aaua Ouo4. Cm I I I la tuna. B-it4 dniMlat j 1 C-