The tribune. (Beaufort, S.C.) 1874-1876, February 10, 1875, Image 4

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A DIFFICULT SOCIAL PROBLEM. The Poor That We Hare Always with Us. No thoughtful reader of the proceedings at the session of the State Charities Aid Association, of New York, the Times says, could have failed to be impressed with a sense of the great difficulties by which all efforts for the elevation of the degraded are beset. And by degraded, we mean not only, or chiefly, those who are suffering the consequences of crime, or of vicious habits; but those who have been brought into want and misery by accident, or circumstances for which they are not responsible, and who have been kept down until they have lost selfrespect and the spirit of self-help, and seek only to get, by hook or crook, what their mere animal appetites require from uuy w> aay. xne numDer 01 sucn persona witli us is yet comparatively small. In the older countries of Europe, they bear a very considerable proportion to the rest of the community; and even with us their ragged ranks are visibly recruiting. What to do with this class is nowfelt to be one of the gravest and most perplexing of our social problems. Criminals we can imprison?even put to death; the insane and the idiotic we can shut up in asylums; but what aro we to do with that miserable body of our fellow-creatures?and, alas, of our fellowcitizens?who live from year to year in want and wretchedness, trembling on the verge of starvation, vacillating between starvation and crime ? This question is so perplexing, in great measure, because of the hopeless incapacity of a large majority of these people. They are without energy, without self-reliance, without self-denial, without purpose. They are poor, weak creatures, the worst of whom are capable only of petty crime, the better of begging, and the best of silent suffering, but who are utterly incapable of what is called in a good homely phrase doinjz for themselves. Now the problem is so to lielp those people that they may be saved from crime and from suffering, while at the same time they shall not be reduced to moral imbecility, and become mere dependents on public alms. This has hitherto been found to be almost impossible. The effort to save those who are perishing has the effect of dragging many of the , class just above them down to their lower level. They see something to lean upon, and, being just able to stand and to stagger, they catch at the support, and, instead of being strengthened, become weaker, and soon fall into the ranks of professional pauperism. This has been the r#mlt of much of the poor-law legislation and the private charities of England; and the moderate improvement that has lately taken place has been brought about only by the persistent labors of wise, self-sacrificing, philanthropic persons, who for a time have worked almost against hope. Even yet the failure in some directions is very disheartening, and it is particularly so in regard to the female members of this class. The attempt to unite education with, almsgiving was a natural one, according to the present views of most people as to the moral effect of education. JBut, as we learn from the report of Miss Schuyler, the president of the association, the system of work-house schools for girls in England has proved a miserable failure. Of 670 of these girls whose lives were traced after they left the workhouse school, only 79 were reported as "good," and 146 as "fair," 188 were "unsatisfactory," and 78 were "bad;" oi the remaining 180, as to whom no information could be obtained, it is safe to assume that the large majority also " went to the bad." This is a sad exhibit of the results of mingled education and alms-giving. It is not unreasonable to suppose that of the 670, quite 79 would have turned out well, and 145 fairly, without any education at all. Moreover there was another great difficulty, which seems to be felt now, as to girls who are put to household service the world over, here no less than in Europe. The mistresses complained that these girls " did not know now to do the work of a small family." Does not reiteration of this old complaint show that the education, the proper education, of these girls had been neglected? They had been taughfto read and to write, perhaps to cipher; they had received certain religious instruction ^J)ut they had not been taught to sweep and to take care of bedrooms, to cook, to bake, to wash, and to sew. In brief, they had been taught what was of no particular service to tliem, and of that which would have made them good ! household servants while they were sin- i Kle, and good housekeepers if they were married, they were left ignorant; that was supposed to come to them by nature, or they were supposed to be able to do without it. Do without, however, they could not; and so they became bad and unsatisfactory; for they had been taught just enough of other useless things to stimulate their sense of luxury, to increase their lazy dislike of honest labor, and so to lead them to seek by vicious mean as life of ease, which meant to them a life of laziness. But household duties cannot well be taught in work-houses and alms-houses, and for this and for other reasons the effort now is turning in the direction of the placing of these people ?male as well as female?in private Knnona fKin anlnfi/vn rv# culty the sentiment of the aaeociation seemed decidedly to incline. Bat the very important question then oomes up ?who and what manner of people are they that will take vagrants and paupers and members of the dangerous classes into their households f It is of prime importance that the households into which persons of the sort in question are placed for the purpose of elevating them, should be those of respectable and self-respecting people. Now, such people in the humbler conditions of life are the ery ones who will resist with strongest revulsion and greatest sense of shame any intercourse with those who ere de graded, and particularly those whose degradation has brought them into the hands of public authority. We must confess that this seems to us an insuperable objection to the new scheme. We heartily trust that it may not be found to be so, for the need which it is suggested to supply is one of the greatest felt by modern society. The new movement is, we are inclined to believe, in the right direction; and it would not be surprising if the issue were the establishment of small public reformatory schools in the nature of households, in which the teaching should be trades and house keeping rather than reading and writing. The Colorado Gold Mines. A letter from Denver (Col.) tells the following story: Several years ago James C. Fngnn drifted westward, and although he labor- ! ed hard he fared as badly as the poorest of gold hunters. But he persevered, and at length was moderately successful. His next mining venture, however, proved disastrous. Then ho began to look about for other mines that indicated "pay." In 1864 the Kansas Colorado Company paid 8200,000 for 300 feet on tlio Kansas and the same extent on the Camp Grove lode. Thejr expended $100,000 of work ing capital ana men auanuoneii tlie place. Tlie mines had failed to pay. To resumo work when Mr. bagan came upon the scene was regarded as a | hopeless venture. Owing to the barren ground that had been met with in many mines at depths of from 400 to 600 feet, doubts existed in regard to the continuous nature of these gold veins, and many affirmed that the '' bottom of the couuti-y had dropped out." But years of experience had given Mr. Fagan a thorough knowledge of mining, and he was convinced that these lodes would pay. He purchased the property and invested all the money he could raise in getting it in order and in sinking through the "cap" rock to reach the ore that lias since been found beneath. The crevice at length opened out, and $41,000 was the net yield of nine months of the past year. Previous to reaching this body of ore ho had expended $23,000 with no returns. One year ago he leased the adjoining 1,150 feet east on the Kansas and Burroughs, also long ago abandoned as nonpaying. After eleven months of development and constant expense, a wide vein of enormously rich ore was cut. The richer ores are usually found wedged in between the country rock or granite in narrow seams or veins, while broad veins are generally composed of less valuable material. The latter are mined more easily and cheaply, often proving more profitable than the richer but more narrow lodes. But the Kansas and Burroughs have proved both wide and surpassingly rich at depths of 500 feet and over. There seems to be no limit to this four or five foot vein of ore, wxiiuii yieiuMirom enu to ^iuu oven in tlie wasteful stamp mills, and still higher at the smelting works! The total expense foots up but 89 per ton, and thousands of tons can be raised monthly. Work is carried on through four shafts iu the Kansas, three of which will sood be 600 feet deep. With the recently leased claims Mr. Fagan now controls 2,950 feet of mines, employs 200 men and 100 stamps, to crush trie 100 tons of ore raised daily, and is the heaviest mining operator in these mountains. The OphirBurroughs, leased by Fagan <fc Co., is 800 feet deep, has a history much like that of the Kansas, and gave a profit of 8100,000 in the last eighteen months. This and one or two other like ventures have so! /ed the problem of deep mining. Pay ore is not only found at great depths but in larger quantities than ever before. , Abandoned mines are being reopened in ( every direction, and double the present amount of mining will be carried on j next summer. The average yield of the profitably worked mines around Central la from ?1fi * V*v '*-? v*-1 IWHi XUUt Ul tilt} Kansas is over $50, and the profits are j immense. A Wife's Devotion. The reoffer by Lady Franklin of a reward of ?'2,000 for the recovery of the records of Sir John Franklin's expedition, reveals once more the story of wifely de- j votion which the world has so long listened to with pride, that there was so much good in hnman nature. This noble, kind-hearted, grand old kuly, weeping still for a husband who was taken from, her many years ago, is a pic- ! tore of devotion that will ever linger in history. What a lesson her pure and ' devoted life to the frivolous wifo of the period, ready to forget her dignity at the beck of each popinjay, and regarding her husband as a sort of necessary encum- j brance upon whom to vent her spleen. ; Above all this petty class stands those j numcu U1 wuuui JJUUjr 1' rmiKllII 1H me type?rich in the possession of noble hearts and the world's respect. Heart Disease. Many persons Buffer with heart disease without knowing it?suddenly they drop off, and their friends are astonished, on a pott mortem examination, to learn that they died of heart disease. The heart, like the brain, is the seat of life?its diseases are of several characters. The most common are valvular disease, fatty degeneration, and functional derangement. If the liver becomes deranged, and digestion is impaired, the heart, through sympathy and juxtaposition, becomes abnormal. The following symptoms indicate approaching disease: palpitation, giddiness, faintness, nervous prostration, deranged digestion, vertigo, swtl/1 aw+ramifioo ol/* Ia? AL wau V*HVUUMOQ| UVl/t ) 1U1 WUIUll blio old school will administer iron, opium, antimony, mercury, and many other mineral poisons. Heart disuse is a blood disease?purify the blood; remove obstructions to a limpid circulation by > taking, that vegetable alterative, Vinegar Bitters, ana you will be a sound person in two or three months.?Com. SOVEREIGNS OF INDUSTRY. Their Platform and What They PrtfoM to do?Figarea nod MtatUtlra of the Order. A report just made says that it wasfirst intended to make the " Sovereigns of Industry" a part of the Grange movement, but after deliberation a separate organization was decided upon. The objects of the "Sovereigns of Industry" are tersely stated in brief paragraphs prefacing their constitution : It iB to improve the material, social, and intellectual condition of those who work fqr wages at industrial employments: First?By presenting "an organized resistance to the organized encroachments of the monopolies and other evilB of the existing industrial and commercial system. Second?Bv endeavoring to "eetabliali a better system of economical exchanges, and to promote, ou a basis of equity and liberty, mutual fellowsliip and co-operative action among the producers and consumers of wealth throughout the earth." Third?To do this in part, it is proposed to concentrate the trade of the members through their several councils, local, State, and national, so that tliov may, as far as possible, deal with " tirst hands" direct, and do away with all unnecessary "middlemen." Tn nill*Rlin.nra> of t.bono nurnnuu if o,l_ mitfl all persons above tlio age of sixteen, who are actually engaged in some ' wage-receiving occupation, on payment j of a fee of $2 for male and of SI for ' female workers. It rigidly excludes all lawyers, and aims also to keep out all persons known as professional politicians, and all such occupations as may be classified under the term " speculative." No war iB made by the " Sovereigns' on individuals or classes, but it is in vigorous opposition to what its originators regard as a false system of exchange and commerce, which practically benefits the exploiter at the cost of the producers and toilers. It is opposed to strikes and similar machinery, and has therefore in some localities been reprobated by trades-unionists, while in others it is seen to have no antagonism thereto, ex- j cept Buch as may arise from a wiser i mode and policy. Starting in Massachusetts in 1873, the report says the order now extends to 1 twenty-five States, including Massacliu- j setts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Penn- I sylvania, Illinois, New Hampshire, IVIaine, Vermont, Missouri, Delaware, i Ohio, Now Jersey, Wisconsin, Kansas, New York, and Indiana. There are about 600 councils and some 90,000 members. One of the objects set forth is to buy goods at first hands and sell to the members of the order at low prices. They claim to sell goods at then: stores at 10 per cent, advance on cost prices. The report says that in New Haven quite a j sharp contest occurred over the pur-1 chase of coal. One large dealer con- | tracted to supply the council with 700 j tons. When tne fact became known the j pressure brought on him from those in i the business was so great that he asked ! to be allowed to withdraw from the con- i frflpf Tito onnnnil nr>r?nllo/1 if un<l I sent an agent elsewhere, who succeeded in buying the coal and shipping to the purchasers at a considerable reduction. The Centeunial. The governor of Pennsylvania in his message alludes to the centennial exhibition, and says; Philadelphia is enlarging her accommodations for the entertainment of guests, and the neighboring cities afford innumerable opportunities of a like kind. The extensive park, where the centennial buildings are located, is every day adding to its natural beauty with the contributions of art with which public and private liberality is adorning its avenues, and the welcome accorded to those who attend the exhibition will be in keeping with the traditional hospitality of the people of Pennsylvania, and we trust will reflect honor on the whole nation. A flock of sheep belonging to an inhabitant of Belchertown, Mass., was beset by dogs and badly scattered and damaged one night last week. The bulk of the flock, to the number of eighty, nrnu fnnn/I flin r?owl mA?v>in/w " nw>? av/nuva uitu uuaii u1uxUUUUb UVU miles from liome. For all Female Complaints nothing equals Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It is a most powerful restorative tonic, also combining the most valuable nervine proiiertics, especially adapting it to the wants of debilitated ladies suffering from weak back, iuward fever, congestion, inflammation, or ulceration, or from nervousness, or nonntlgic paius. Mr. G. W. Seymour, druggist, of Canton, N. Y., writes Dr. Fiercoas follows : "The demand for your Favorite Prescription is wonderful, and one man staled to me that bis wife bad not done a days's work in live months, when she commenced taking your Favorite Prescription, took two bottles and is now on the third one, and is able to do her housework alone and milk fourteen cows twice a day." Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is sold by all dealers in medicine.?Com. The most Rtvliah collar that is worn now is the Improved Warwick. It fits better than any other on a low cut shirt. All the edges being folded, and the surface looking so much like linen, we recommend all to try it. ahk your gents iurmsner ior me improved Warwick.?Coin. Wo reoeived a very pleasant letter of thanks fron oar old friend Kendall, since his return home, for a bottle of Johnson's Anwlyne Liniment which we gave him, and which he says ban entirely cared him of the troublesome awl daugorous cough he bad whenheie.? Com. On the death of one of England's moet eminent pbysicaus, all his effects were sold by auction, end among other things waa a sealed packet marked " Advice to Physicians," which brought a great prioe. The purchaser on opening the packet read as follows: "Keep the head cool, the bowels open,and the feet wann." If physic is necessary, Partem*' Purgative Pill*; they are the moet scientifically prepared pill that has appeared in the last hundred years.?Com. A clergyman writing to a friend says : "My voyage Kurope is indefinitely postponed. I have discovered the 'fountain of health' on this side of the Atlantic. Three but Una of Peruvian Hvn p h ive rescued me from the fangs of the fiend dyspepsia." Dyspeptioe should drink from this fountain. - -Cam TABLE KNIVES AND FORKS AND OHIO IN ALL Y, EXCLUSIVE MAKER And eiclualve maker*of the ' Patent Ivory" or Coll known The Handle* never get loo?c. are not affected "MKRIDKN CUTLERY CO.tll'AN Y" o* the and by the MKRIDKN CUTLERY CO., 4? Chamber* S U)W ACM CO, r?1 LA J> FASHIONS!.. STYLES >nd SELLS Pmtlei fe a tplendld premium. kBIC OFFER. tUul OVERSKIRT, with C gi^R mlnm, to the person who will ( ecrlption to the " BAZA AH niMr! " GRANCERS ' " Smith's Instruction H^H 10 Cents. Catalogue ^lcV Addreee, very p 3,15 ^ A. B Tk. - cui*a**? onnUit ? ~ Imst laaalad, b *U *!'?' V. DOX ilVt>b. WtM ttYuura, With CtaA Mafel SO OtS Bad for the Whale. Captain Spicer, of tlie New London whaling bark Nile, says that in the scalpbone of a two-lmndred-barrel whale, struck by his boat's crew, was found the head of a Scotch gun harpoon, mnrkod with the name of tnc Scotch whaler True Love, and the date 1861. The True Love has not made a voyage during the last eight or ten years, and this fact, taken in connection with the date stamped in the harpoon, would indicate that the whale had been carrying this ugly piece of iron around for not less than eight years, and perhaps twelve or thirteen years. The whale was captured by the Nile in Cumberland inlet, while the True Love's station was in Baffin's bay, so that he was something of a traveler. The harpoon head weighed between four and five pounds. , Fiiom a Cabin Bot.?Captain Eben Ward, the great iron king of the West, who died lately, was worth fully six millions of dollars. Ho commenced life on the lakes as a cabin boy on a small schooner, rose rapidly to be captain ; invested in navigation, then in iron, realizing wealtiijrnpidly. He was interested largely in the great railroad iron I mills of Milwaukee, Chicago and Detroit. { KJ WANTED for oar popular now book ittteFolks \n Feathers and Fur, nd Others in Neither, LIT* THORNS. Til. Iwl W>k on N.trr.' rj .T.r rotu. up, Amo.iho ud ImrmucriT':. noanoTl chnnnlnf. BMat'f.lly Illo.trnt ^ Jul til. thin, far vo?li. urf .M A .11'. ? ?' * i *?? ?1 log bookUnm>cutUM4l r. Dosotfalltossodfnrelrcalsn J and llltutratad milaw itou, VltBK TO ALL. Now la tbs uvr fo: BtriMvomn to vtktinntT. Addrrsa, DUBTIN. <JII.M AN * OO..Hartford. Com CDII CDQV or riTM cured by the gn of Rosa- J CrlLlirO 1 Kpileptic RKMBnim. Trial Hack . Son w 'r?. For circulars, evidence ol ' address ROS8 BROS., Richmond Jnd. | THE FAVORITES, FASII I.Y FAVOUITK. , Th. Title. iMlSrPACTrKKRS' FAVORITE.- Indicate OENBRAL FAVOUITK. 1 the Uses. | Kor full information respecting nnr Goods, or Agencies for aa.nie.nddr.dia \VKK1> NKWINIi rfACIUNK COMI'ANV at Hartford, Conn., or our Branch ] Ofllo^w in leading Citlo*. ' S JIMCS OF JOY! : i A NKW COLLECTION OF ETSraiKTS audi TTTMSS ! Especially adapted for Prayer and Camp Meet ingn, I Christian Associations and Family Worship. By J. H TenNKY. Hoards, 30 cent*; Flexible Cloth, 36 cent*. . Sent postpaid on rereipt of the price. 1.K1-. A- SIlfcPAItP, Ilowtotr. AOKNTS WANTED? HEW COtfBINATION TOOl ? la oao. one. f"lt """|3|^ii?Jf Olaas Cattar, sw^ Can Optarr^At^bsmpI*, by mall, SS oaau. Addrsat PI1ILA. NOVELTY UNO. CO., > sat rraaklla Strati, Fkiladtlpkia. fa | } ^"TOSOR'S ooMPOTiro^Mr-^ iruAii \ivu AiAVXIJU L OIL AND LIME.J . M illmr'n Cod l.lvrr Oil and l,linr.-rrrwn> who haye Iwn taking Cod Liver Oil will l? pleased to i loom that Ur Wilbor has succeeded, from direction!, of 1 several professional gsnUemen, in combining the parr oil and time in ouch a manner that it la pleasant to the i taste. and its effect* to long complaint* are truly wonderful. Very many peraooa whoa* can. a wore pronouncd hopeless and who had taken the clear oil for a long time without marked effect, hare been entirely cured by using this preparation. Be sure and get the genuine, Mann factored only by A. b. WILBOR, Chemist, Boston. Sold by all druggists. Wanted Agents family. Good Agents are making frntn (til to SIO per day. On receipt uf Ten Cents we will aend Sample of onr Oooda with Circular. Addreee, J. II. TOWXHBNlt A- CO., Hartford, Cairn. CATARRH ** ilon, 1'rlrolJsts, etc.. to bu. T.p. fiLM.T?ur miiei toiuntif. o (One box of Cary's Instant hk fewdw V irtu mats apt at of DERT BI,ACK IKK la avsmlnats*. ffl.16 per ds., ffl J6 by roalt. H. Q. O. Osay, SaossTtlls, O. f UX~JLU1TJL Habit Cured A certain and smre core, wlthmt Inconvenience, and at home. An antidote that stands purely on Its own merits. Send for my quarterly magazine (0 eottt you nothing), containing certificates of hundreds ' that here been permanently cured. I claim to hare discovered and produced the fibst, obioinai, aid j ONX.T STJR* OUBK TO* OPIUM BATING. DR. g. B. COtMllg. U Porte, lad. ^ ^ nAni-ncUBED at Home. Mo \ - A ? ? 1 Bfl rubllclty. Terms moderate. UrlUIHs?e"?J^riSSi'b?Js: ?OQ fwthwoalaH. Address Dr.r^.Marsh.Qulncy Jtlch. 200! 1 1 ?F ALL KINDS, lulold Knife. The muflt Dnrnblv White Handle by hot witter. AIwajm call for the " Trade Mfvrk %% blade. Warranted and eold by all dealer* In Cutlery, treat. New York. mith's Illustrated Pattern Bazaar." ?" if< run i c? n? or them. Only $1.10 ? year, with TWO of SMITH'S INSTANT DRESS ELEVATORS, un.l ti e 1'nttc n of this beaulloth ITlodel, wlil bo even FREE, as a l*rc3UT THIS OUT, atnl seuil it with their mbt." No po?taee on (lie IQacazIno next 1" send for onr term". Sample copy. 35 eta. Book, or Secret* or Drcie>makint,? mailed for one Stamp, lain, URDETTE SMITH, 914 Broadway, New York City. IPf m flu VTmf :illllira D/ 1. Walkers C-alifornia Vinegar Bitters are a purely Vegetable preparation, made chiefly from the native herbs found on the lower ranges ot the Sierra Nevada mountains of California, the medicinal properties of which ire extracted therefrom without the use of Alcohol. The question is almost iaily asked, "What is the cause of the inparalleled success of Vinegar BitcersT" Our answer is, that they remove ;he cause of disease, and the patient re overs his health. They are the great nlood purifier and a life-giving principle, I perfect Renovator and Invigorator If the system. Never before In the listory of the world has a medicine been >omp?nnded possessing tho remarkable |C?ljt:ea of Vinkoab Bitters in healing tha aoi of every disease man is heir to. They ire a gentle Purgative as ell as a Tonic, eiieving Congestion or Inflammation ol he Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilionf Pinoaaos. The properties of Dr. Walker'? viiteoak hittkrs are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, laxative, Diuretic, Sodativo, Counter Irritant, Sudorific, Alteraii ??. and Anti-Bi Vas IV. II. meuUiiAljII A> CO., Draff trials and Gen. Affta., San KrancUoo, California, j r__ ./-ry..... Cl.ar.toJi Cta JJ. Y. So 111 by iTli itrufsiaU and Denial*. nakluK over $12.00 a m flSTSTgfl lM'r dn-v- M?? *nd IVomen easily earn fl I" |? HI llll" Si Ou uch cvenlnir. &. cashN tHJ I \pB izi sglveD to each of""***1"" * *?our agents. Apply ASTHMA ? CATARRH. jFwrf'^ lUvlugitiujcKleil twenty years between life and v death with ASTHMA, I experimented by ocmj uoundlug roots and herbs and luhallng the madIrlne. I fortunately discovered a wonderful remedy and sura cure for Asthma and Catarrh. Warranted to relieve aavereal paroxysm instantly, so the patient cau He down to reat and &vJIWHKA sleep comfortably. Drugglsta art supplied with t?^ti9HHLr*ml'1*' packayrs for fbkk distribution. Bold by (iruKKi"tB. Package by mall H.S5. Addreaa P. LA^CfcLL, Apple Creek. Ohto. 2l^7PI A H'Kr.K. Ajrents wanted everywbore. For p i ?) oulfit 16c. Fmi-ch k Wsi.nrn. D?yt?n. Ohio. ?TTTHWI WARRANTED A PKK nllilJ a?S FKCT CURE f"T < " '* IISMiai ir?r.< /on*. .,/ {'II K?, Lip Run, He no ru Li. too WORM, OALT IlIIKUM, UAN* HM|BjariTTl cr.R. Cataiikh, Nkibaiajia, ."HWV'lj 1 RHF.hmatism. Asthma. llviW Dyspp.FSU, Kidnrys. and d^^NT4H nil rlfHlin of Ihr SKIN and MMK HlOOD. Kn'irrlu rrr/etabl*. M^^^LmJML-mJMtSM Money returned in all oases I lAiiuit . FT D. FOWI.K, Chrwiat, Knelon. Bold rerywhere. _B1 a liottle. Sund for i.ircular. MORPHINE HAOIT speedily j M {ffJP III ftfl ftued by Dr. fleck's only J ' il H ifl 9W9 Uuowu & sure lteuiedy. ?B B?B*I NO CIlAItGE for treatment until cured. Call on or address T?y- J q BECK. Cincinnati. O. This PA ieNT CABINET or jseawrewi I is ||Sf LETTER FILE la useful to every jfc tilK'-vo-^s business uian, to keen BILLS. LITPwi;dit.SC>?% TEKB or PABEH8 always Olaan tcruf and In alphabetical ordori holds 'Mlftiiril 4.000 J.etioid.c ia be used on a desk FScdl inllISfitl rr hum to ths wall. We prepay jTB l'Wl>Llf-l Expri t.0 c.iaryi'S. Bend for olronlor ' *" * and price list with 1JOOO references. Address O. A. WOK & (XX, Chios*a. III. AUKNTS. ilhans Chung sells si Ajylit. Necessary as 11or-on trro Ilhan? Hhanif M'fg t-!o., Boston. The Ways /? TJ-7 o/" rr omen, >7 Prof. J. V.C. RMITII, M.D.,?Bsoftha most naarfabltboata '? Wn4 from Uio Americas prwa. Dr. Hall UJI. "Eraar Cavrrsa is a area am or inroauinox." Th N?w York World M7>," It n a iom nu or aovao nmaMtTioMin OT* win.* Dr. Moths, tbscsUbrslad Froot!? physiclaa,007a, "EfiirriM riiu,mcnrrn msai?o." Arraad oppar unity for agrui# to mak* mousy 1 WHY 81T BTflX, complalnlngofhard tlmsat TkU book will roll. Bond for circulars j asar rasa. DU8TIV, OILMAN A CO., Hartford, Cooa. cm can Save Money, Health and Life, by having rhe latest and heat Home Doctor Book, by Pr.*P-..,??? Ires cauaea, symptoms and Kellahln Kt modiea tor cod mown disease. 1087 rases. III. *6.00. Agents Wante i. B. THKAT, PaWlTelicr, 8 >8 Broa(iwa7tN.Y Hf nVT?V mad* rapidly with Stencil A Key Check * UUHuZ Outfits. Catalogue, samples and foil parlenlars Prew. B. M. HrstfCKB, 117 Hanorer St., Boston.