- D INCREASE. F3RITISH SHODDY FACTORIES DOUBLE EARNINGS. Olio Concern Started Thh Year 'with BGo00,000 of. Ordcm-Our Woolen Mills Being Steadily Clotted Down- _ _ _ Ilrltlsh Manufacturer Delighted. . ra No two Bradford houses are better known In the United States , either among our dry goods houses or consumers - sumers , than those of Messrs , A. & S. Henry & Co. , Ltd. , and Messrs , Lister & Co. of the famous Manningham Mills. The former , simply as merchants and shippers , the latter as manufacturers , are regarded as the business leaders of Bradford. Were it not far the enormous - ( ' ' mous trade that Henry's do with us , I and the substantial slice that Lister's have secured from American manufacturers - facturers , they would to-day still be but "common fry. " As Henry's house is the king of Bradford's Anglo-American shippers , let us note what this present tariff has done for them. The chair man of the company , Sir Henry Mitchell - ell , speaking at its annual meeting less than 'a month ago , said : "When the shareholders assembled twelve months ago It was at the close of a very trying and very difficult year , and the directors had to put before them business results which were considerably - siderably less than the average for a number of years past , and even less than in any year since the company was formed. He was very glad to meet the shareholders with a very much more satisfactory report and very much better - ter results ( hear , hear ) . As they would' see from the balance sheet , the net divisible profits were about 46,000 more than they were last year , and nearly 20,000 more than the highest amount realized since the company was formed. He 'hoped that the results would be considered satisfactory. Then , speaking of the genaral prospects of trade , he said those shareholders who were at the last annual meeting would remember that he held out some hope of improved trade , and stated that the company had orders on their books of upwards of 500,000 to commence the business of the year. He was now very glad to be able to say that at the present time the orders amounted to nearly 1,000,000 ( applause ) . So that their prospects , at any rate , were somewhat encouraging for the new year. " The first year of our Democratic Tariff in the free raw material of our woolen manufacturers has enabled a British woolen manufacturing concern ' 10 record profits of "the highest amount realized since the company was formed. " It also began the second year of our free trade experiment with orders - ders in hand that amounted to nearly $5,000,000. No wonder the .British stockholders greeted these remarks of Sir Henry with "applause , " as they compared the two annual reports of 1r Qrr o1lIM Nc t i l1i ; t r , 0 .IIB9 2 ( l gcl ' _ r _ _ 1t3Rti ; 4 5daPrwlld ! SQP2I 200 . a. r , f . > 0 ( - ( ° lif \j 1 ilia. (3 51.60 / _ ' ua ; : i' 9t4o n d : - - : 1 u'rtc 01.20 l r sYu St.9D + sd ! _ .8tt r i ,9 , r % : yoc : . : : . . . : . , : ' ItaIKI _ _ : . ; , - I . . r 60 Sc Sd b l + c tO . , ; 5 is ) . % u rc ; : i < 111C lij ° Gorman 1594 and 1895 , a digest of which is given .k In the following parallels : j ; A. & S. HENRY CO. , LIMITED , BRADFORD. Annual Report , 1894. Profit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . .63 , 10 - Dividend. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 per cent " Reserve fund . . . . ' ,000 Carried forward 910 , ' . ; . Annual Report , 1895. t Profit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95,708 Dividend . . . . . . . . 7 per cent Reserve fund . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100,000 , , 4 Carried forward . . : . . . . . . . . . . . ' f16,708 1'1 irA } a. H . Although only a seven per cent. dlvi- dend was paid , yet the chairman ex- plalned that the company had really earned 12 per cent. , but that this was one of the yesr3 when it was prudent'to add a large sum to the reserve fund. But what have Lister & Co , done ? Although they cannot present so roseate a statement as their neighbors , yet their 100 per cent , increase in dividend Is considerable , Here Is the balance sheet also : LISTER & CO. , MANNINGHAM MILLS , BRADFORD. Annual Report , 1894. Profit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15,223 Dividend . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 per cent. Carried forward . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Annual Report , 1895. Profit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73,382 Dividend . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 per cent. Carried forward . . . : . . . . . . . . . . 4,682 * The profit of 15,223 being insuffl- cient to meet the payment of a dividend - dend , the Directors took 34,43715s. 5d. from the reserve fund so as to cover 15,43715s. 7d. deficiency. This enabled them to pay 2 per cent , dividend fet 1894. 1894.What What American woolen manufacturer can present so favorable a statement of his last year's trade as either of these two British concerns ? And still the Democratic adherents profess to believe - lieve in free trade and , by their professions - fessions , try to make others believe that they are Americans while they practically place orders of five million dollars' worth of goods , with but one British manufacturing firm , as a starter for its new year's trade. A Sugar Trust Prophecy. John E. Searles , Jr. , secretary of the American Sugar Refineries company , said : "I do not think any party would dare to do anything that would materially - ially disturb the prosperity of the country. The country is too great to allow the upsetting of any of its industries - dustries , and the party that attempted it would come to grief.-New York Sun , November 11 , 1892. JU . YJ ! . US'SOyftI 1 I , f yl . , r rt r ' In : ' l r 'i"I ' ; { i , tti II'I ' , ' , + rI ' / - I.I , 'll , jll I d , 1 I w - . V t I fl , 9 r ' 6 l , ' , rf . ' ; ' it .ff. p While Mr. Searles did not fathom the depth of degradation of the Democratic party , to whose campaign funds his sugar trust contributed liberally in New York state , yet he was a true prophet. . The party that did attempt to "disturb the prosperity of the country" has "come to grief. " Japan Manufactures Cotton. Japan appears , to be the only country - try that is buying more cotton from the United States than a year ago. Last month she took S,100 bales , as against 1,550 bales in January , 1895 , every other country buying less. The freight rate on cotton , in carloads , from Houston , San Antonio and some other Texas points to Yokohama has been $28 per ton of 2,000 pounds , including - cluding the cost of compressing , or $26 per ton exclusive of the cost of compressing. The rate from San Francisco - cisco to Yokohama is quoted by the Southern Pacific company at $10 per ton. The rate from New York to Liverpool - erpool , February 1 , was 3-16 cent per pound , rather less than $4 per ton , and from New York to Bremen at $5 to $6.25 per ton plus 5 per cent prim- age. At present the difference in freight is heavily against Japan , which will afford some protection to American manufacturers. Democracy Will Get There. The old legend , "Pike's Peak or l bust , " which used to adorn the canvas covers of emigrant wagons in the old das , has been succeeded by various signs appropriate to the changed and changing location of the boomers' par- adise. A .big prairie schooner passed through Osborne , Kas. , bound east from from Oklahoma last week , bearing the inscription : "Oklahoma for starvation , Kansas for desolation , Texas for devastation - tation , Nebraska for damnation. Going - ing to Ohio to sponge on wife's rela- tion. To hell with Democratic admit- istratioa : Where the Trouble Lies. The performing of labor makes a nation - tion rich , while importing the product of labor makes a nation poor. In those 1 few words lies all our tariff troubles. -Fibre and Fabric. What Free Wool Did. Free wool brought us more square yards of foreign carpets than in any year since 1880. . 4 , , , b YOUNG FOLK'S CORNER GOOD SHORT STORIES FOR BOYS AND GIRLS. The Doll That Nancy Broke-l Spunky Sohoolma'amA Christlike Decd - ] lobby'e , Composition on Parents-A Touching DeathBedScene. . aT r AM the doll that Nancy broke ! Hadn't been her's a week. One little squeeze , and I sweetly spoke ; Rosy and fair wai ; my cheek. Now my head 'lies in a corner far , My body lies here to the other ; And if this is what human children are , I never will live with another ! I am the book that Nancy read For fifteen minutes together ; Now I am standing here on my head , While she's gone to look at the weather. My leaves are crushed in the cruelest way , There's jam on my opening page ; And I would not live with Miss Nancy Gay , Though I shouldn't be read for an age ! I am the frock that Nancy wore Last night at her birthday feast. I am the frock that Nancy tore In seventeen places at least. My buttons are scattering far and near , My trimming is torn to rags ; And if I were Miss Nancy's mother dear I'd dress her in calico bags ! VJe are the words that Nancy said When these things were brought to her view. All of us ought to be painted red , And some of us arc not true. WO sputter and mutter and snarl and snap , We smoulder and smoke and blaze ; And if she'd not meet with some mishap - hap , Miss Nancy must mend her ways. A Spunky Sehonlma't n. Some two or three months ago , when Miss Blanche Maynard was appointed teacher in the Maxwell district school , near Sodus Point , New Jersey , some of the parents and guardians of the neighborhood - borhood expressed doubt of her ability to manage the school. Not a few of the boys in attendance were big , healthy fellows , not easily governed , even at home. Miss Maynard is a little woman , weighing something under 125 pounds , and so the citizens shook their heads when they compared the teacher's physique - sique with the stalwart proportions of so many of her pupils. An event which occurred the other day has served to set at rest all fears on this score. For some time the pupils have been getting more and more turbulent , presuming on the patlent manner in which Miss Maynard had endeavored to smooth over previous evidences of in- subordination. The spirit of disorder culminated the other morning , when George Hardy , a six-foot lout , refused to come up to the teacher's desk when ordered to do so. Miss Maynard , seeing - ing the time had come to conquer or meet defeat , walked straight up to the rebel , grabbed him by the coat collar , swung him into the aisle and dragged him to her desk. He was straightened up suddenly , then forced down rapidly upon the platform , until his teeth rat- tled. On his endeavoring to get up the dose was repeated. After school the teacher read the riot act to him and then let him go. With Will Dunbar and David Pulver , two other large lads , Hardy went to school before daylight next morning and made preparations to lock the teacher out. Miss Maynard could not get in , and looking through the keyhole called for a surrender and was laughed at. She secured a stick of cordwocd and made an onslaught on the door , which gave in. Another pupil - pil ran to the house of Trustee John Mason. Hardy tried to climb out of a window , but was caught by the heels and drawn back to the door. The teacher ordered the other boys to stay where they were or she wouhi break every bone in their bodies , if she had to follow them forever to do so They stood still. bliss Maynard then spanked Hardy with a ruler until he begged for mercy. By this time Trustee - tee Mason arrived and was put on guard t the doer , while the red-headed schoolma'am caught Dunbar and Pul- ver and gave them a whipping. The bell was then rung , school commenced and everything passed off serenely. Hafdy's father went to school and made his son apologize. Trustee Mason says the other two must apologize or be expelled. The teacher waives the apology and says she can handle the pu- pils. 'Phey are emphatically of the same opinion. A Christlike Deed. A touching incident , says the Rcgls- ter , occurred in New York recently : A little boy about ten years old was standing before a shoe store on Broadway - way , barefooted , peering through the window and shivering with cold. A lady riding up the street in a beautiful - tiful carriage , drawn by horses fneiy caparisoned , observed the little fellow in his forelorn condition , and immediately - ately ordered the driver to draw up and stop in front of the store. The lady , richly dressed in silk , went quietly to the boy and said : "My little fellow , why are you looking - ing so earnestly in that window ? " "I was just asking God to give me a pair of shoes. " was the reply. The lady took him by the hand and went into the store and asked the pra- nrtor if he would allow one o : his : ( 1 1 . 4 clerks to go and buy her a half dozen pairs of stockings. The proprietor as- sented. She then asked him If he could give her a basin of water and a towel and lie replied , "Certainly , " and quickI5 brought them to her. She took the little fellow to the back part of the store , and , removing her gloves , knelt down , washed those little feet and dried them with the towel. By this time the young man had returned - turned with the stockings. Placing .q pair upon his feet , she purchased an'1 gave him a pair of shoes , and tying up the remaining pairs of stockings gave them to him , and patting him on the head said , "I hope , my little fello.v , that you 'wtll feel more comfortable. " As she turned to go , the astonished lad caught her hand , and looking up in her face , with tears in his eyes , answered - swered her question with these words : "Are you an angel ? " Bobby's Composition on Parents. Parents are things which boys have to look after them. Most girls also have parents. Parents consist of Pas and Mas. Pas talk a good deal about what they are going to do , but mostly it's Mas that make you mind. Sometimes it is different , though. Once there was a boy came home from college on vacation. His parents lived on a farm. There was work to be done on the farm.Vork on a farm always has to be done early in the morning. This boy didn't get up. His sister goes to the stairway and calls : "Willie , 'tis a beautiful morning. Rise and list to the lark. " The boy didn't say any- thing. Then his Ma calls : "William , it is time to get up. Your breakfast is glowing cold. " The boy kept right on saying nothing. Then his Pa puts his head in the stairway , and says he , "Bill ! " "Coming , sir ! " says the boy. I know a boy that hasn't got any parents. He goes in swimming whenever - ever he pleases. But I am going to stick to my parents. However , I don't tell them so , 'cause they might get it into their heads that I couldn't get along without them. Says this boy to me , "Parents are a nuisance ; they aren't what they're cracked up to be. " Says I to him , "Just the same , I find 'em handy to have. Parents have their failings , of course , like all of us , but on the whole I approve of 'em. " Once a man says to me , "Bobby , do you love your parents ? " "Well , " says r , "I'm not a quarreling with 'em. " Once a boy at boarding school went to calling his Pa the Governor , and got his allowance cut down one-half. His Pa said he ought to have waited till he was going to college. Much more might be written about parents , showing - ing their habits and so forth , but I will leave the task to other pens.-Harper's Round Table. Chilrircn in : tfrica. A lady on a visit to one of the missionary - sionary stations in Eastern Africa has some curious and rather surprising things to say about the native children. These sons and daughters of the Dark Continent are not so much behind the rest of the world as one might have ex- pected. unless their extreme generosity be taken as a symptom of inferiority. Nothing strikes us more forcibly than the singular unselfishness of these poor savages , for both old and young share everything they get with one another. Sometimes when I have given a child a biscuit , I have felt really sorry to see the way in which the poor little thing has given a bit to all of its companions. till many a time nothing more than a crumb remains for itself. In the same manner , if an old pair of shoes happens to be thrown away , aad a child finds them , it immediately puts on one of them and gives the other to a companion , and thus the two hobble about all day , "one shoe off and one shoe on. " The next day the shoes are sure to be handed to two zithers , who , in turn , pass them to two more , and so they go on , till every child in the school has had its chance. Bishop Mackenzie's party found games of whip-top , humming-top , and many others as common among the Africans as among the boys at home , so that they could teach them nothing new. At last , in despair , they thought they would surprise them by making a kite. All the children assembled to see it ; but it turned out lop-sided and heavy , and would not go up. So one + of the missionaries remarked to them , "You never saw anything like this before - fore , did you ? " Whereupon a little fellow replied , "Oh , yes ; only the things we have are different from yours , for ours go up , and yours go down.-The Household. i A Toncltln Story. A touching story is told of three 1 young men who stood with tear-filled eyes by a bedside on which a white , still form was lying. "She has gone , " was the unspoken thought of all. i "Never three sons were blessed with a better mother , " said one. The closed eyes opened once more , anti with a look of unutterable lore the white lips spoke these words : "Never mother was blessed with better sons. " Mother's last words , and such words ! Will they ever be forgotten ? Years have passed , and amid the turmoil - moil of busy life the white lives of those boys tell that those precious words are not forgotten. The Angels Watching Cs. ! It was Rev. F. B. Meyer who said in a recent sermon that every one has at least one guardian angel , and that our track through this present life is followed - lowed , not only by angel eyes , but by the eyes of our own kindred whom we have "loved long since and lost awhile. " Max O'Rell says that in the streets of Buda-Perth and in the drawing rooms of Dublin he found the most haantlfnl tvnoa of wnman'a. + - 1.t 1 .t - - - - - - - - - - - - - The Origin of "Peach. " Few people are aware that the term "peach , " as tippled to girls of more than ordinary attractiveness , and considered - sidered atrocious slang by the ultra cultured class , can trace its ancestry back to a poem of perhaps America's most famous poet. He was' writing about Philadelphia , and the line in question would seem to indicate that in his judgment Philadelphia's girls were all "peaches. " At any rate , such a meaning can be extracted without the slightest assistance of the imagination. Henry IV. Longfellow is the poet in question , and the line occurs in his celebrated - ebrated poem "Evangeline. " In the opening lines of the fifth stanza of I'art Second the poet says : In that delkhtful land which is washed by the 1)elawuro's waters , Guarding in sylvan shades the name of Penn , the apostle. Stands on the banks of its beautiful stream the city he foundei ; There all the air is balm , and the peach is the emblem of beauty. -i'htladoiphia Record. English as She Is Spoke. The darkey is fond of long words. The meaning doesn't matter , so the words are long , as this absolutely true story will testify : On the M--'s plantation in Mississippi - sippi lives an old "before the war" darky , too old to do any work harder than throwing feed to the poultry. She has known no other home and is a char- acter. Visitors to the plantation always - ways go to her cabin , and to their question - tion , "Ilow are you this morning , Aunt Chris ? " never failing to receive the following - lowing reniv , ' 11'ell , honey. I'm kinder oncomplicated. De superfluity ob de mornin' done taken do vivacity oaten de air and left tue de consequence ob comprehension.-from the 'Kditors Drawer" in llaiper's Magazine for April. The Whole Teaching of Life. 't'he whole teaching of his life , indeed - deed , is to leave us free and to make us reasonable , and the supreme lesson of his life is voluntary , brotherhood , ita- ternity. If you will do something for another , if you will help him or serve him , yon will at once t egin to love him. I know there arc sonic casuists who distinguish here , and sav that you may love such an one. and that , in fact you must love every one , atd if you are hoed you will love every one ; but that you are not expected to like every one. This , however , seems to bee a distinction without a differcnce. Ii you ( lo not like a person you ii ( ) not , love him , and if tor do not love iuni , you loathe him. 'rho curious thing in coiner kindness is that it snakes von' ' love people even in this sublimated sense of liking. When you love another other yon have made him your brother ; and by the same means you can be a l.rother to all men.-\1' . 11. IlotveIls , in the April Century. Snap Plante. There are several trees and plants in the world whose berries , juice or bark , are as { rood to wash t , ith as real soap. ' In the 11'est India islands and in South America growsa tree whose fruit makes an exrelleut lather and is used to wash clothes. The bark of the tree which grows in Peru and of another which grows in Malay islands yields a fine soap. The corn tnon soap-wort , which is indigenous to Enriand , and is found nearly everywhere in Europe , is so full of saponine that simply rubbing the leaves together in water produces a soapy lather. I / , Motheri .L .Lr : Anxiously 'watch l declining health of their daughters. So many are cut off by consent1Rion in early years that there is real cause for anxiety. In the early stages , when not beyond the reach of melicine , Hood's Sarsa- . Iarilla wi1 restore the quality and quantity of the blood and thus give i rood health. Read the following letter : "It is but just to write about my daughter Corns aged 19. She was completely - pletely run down , declining , had that tired feeling , and friends said she would not live over three months. She had a bad Cough n r and nothing seemed to do her any good. I happened to read about Hood's Sarsaparilla - rilla and had her give it a trial. From the very first dose she began to get better. After taking a few bottles Bile was completely - pletely cured and her health has been the best ever since. " Mns. ADDIE PEGS , 12 Railroad Place , Amsterdam , N. Y. "I will say that my mother has not stated my case in as strong words as I ' would have done , hood's Sarsaparilla has truly cured me and I am now well. " CORA PECE , Amsterdam , N. Y. Be sure to get Hood's , because Hood'sr r iarsa aria t is the One True Blood Purifier. All drlioglsts. Si. i'repared nnlybyC. I. hood & Co. , LowcllM.ss. 1 are timely vegetable , re- Ii oed s Pills liable and beneficial. 25c. - e Polo are wasting money when you buy cheap binding instead of the hest Remember there is no "just as good " when the merchant urges a something else for sJ ! s ' s' Bias Velveteen Skirt Binding. Look for' S. H ° & M. , " on the Label and talc no other. Iii your dealer will not supply you we will. ' , Send tor samples showing labels and materials ; 1 } ' : o the S. H & lt. Co , P. 0. Box 699 , flew York Clty. 1 WE HAVE N ® AGENTS. Lot eel' direct to We con : sumoratwhr.lCSaleprlces i ship auywhcre for esamin- 1 atoon before sale. Every- , x thlnCwarranted. 100styles of Cnrrirre. , 90 styles of r itornrd + ,4tstylesPldinSsd , . . dlr writeforcataiogue. 1 ELKItIRT CARQi1GEB 11111- j KEss nra. co. , , w L' . PILtTT , Sccy. iD. " ; . .rr . ALABASTINEZ $ _ " iT WON'T RUB OFF. „ ' { FiI : § Wall .n apet is Unsanitary. > Lfi0.1S lt1iR IS ' t P . ? : ' IQ'i2gt Y , ROT 4,1tU r1GS OFF 3XD :4CLE J. ; d ' ( . 9 is a pure , permanent and artistic 1 - - - + . IS 1 y wall-coating , ready for she brush ' by mixing in cold water. + For aie by Paint Dea1cry Everywhere. I . Docror.'ono of , .rn Igyer [ A Tint Card showing 12 desirable tints , also Alabastine i [ h . , cover f l L Souvenir Hock sentfreC to any onementionint. thts paper. . bntcamutthri e. " ALAYiA1TEXE CO. , Grand Rapids , Mich. I 1 I tQluiIIi { IIIII1I { { 1I1I1111I1111f1ll11l111IlI1 [ { { tlidlllllJlllllil11111IfiI11Ie111 { - ' fat . _ - E I $ . ) 1 I , . . . . , rl Jt 1 + y' ! r F - G'M 1 1 H O 7 . . . ( i - r kI4441- : ri ! O f' a. t s. „ v ' y. . . . . very raj mOO h amce + r r W 1 y ' i : t { B I r i ont , s " - Battle _ compare x = - with o w sae to accos cow. _ 11 Battle u tt with best ' " , e e on / _ e narket f an you will 1inOtE + et or cents almost as much = r ' - u tt l "Battle _ as you o o other = 1 n s , rw grade brands 10 w or cents , - - _ - { iIIl11111111I111I1I11IlIhIIlhI'I ! { [ { II11111U1N119IIII { 11I111111I11ri [ LI1IhIIIlllll l { r r. . G. ; , , - + ------e. . . . - . . . - . . - E3