The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, April 17, 1890, Image 2

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p^-'' 1 rpilE T10RIIY TjERALD, Published Every Thursday, By 5FRB HBRALiD PUD. GO., Conway, S, C% STANDARD (OTTON l?\< KA<ai3. T. \\\ Daggett, of Conway, K. Alliance. proposes (he following plans to make a cotton package ? and a little eominon sense advice to Fanners. 1st. lio-cnuct the law on false packing, and amend it to include cotton, and make false packing punishable with line and iuprisoiiment. It will be found on page lb'-?, section 11, Chapter ( 111, revised statutes of Ss<111 1 ll ( ' I l*. J i i i 52ml. Knuct a law that every cotton gin must brand the name and place of the gin and the name of the owner of the cotton on each hale of cotton packed at the gin, also the weight of rope or ties and hugging usi'd on each hale. 3rd. K1 eeI or appoint cotton inspectors for each count) who should be bonded and sworn oMicers, who shall inspect with a ragged bayonet, and brand each hale with its (trade, weight, date and place of inspection, also the name of the inspector in full, all of which shall he plain and distinct. Make the neglect to comply fully with this law punishable with fine and imprisonment. 1th. All cotton cloth used for haling cotton, and all ropes used for ties and handles to lift Bales, to In; soaked at least six hours in a strong solution of alum, using not less than X'O pounds of alum to 60 gallons of water. To be perfectly dissolved and repeatedly stirred while using, before being used as baling or ties on cotton '.o be put on the market for sale. Make the neglect to use this precaution against fire punishable with fine and imprisonment, and the gin owner liable for damages resulting f i. ' < I t VIII BIICII IH'glPCI. 5th. Make (lie standard weight of a hale of cotton to he 150 pounds. To measure 86 inches long, 18 inches wide, 21 inches high. To have a rope loop at each end by which the bale can be lifted and carried from place to place, lo have a Map on each end, that can be opened without cutting the bagging for the purpose of inspecting. 6th. Make it a misdemeanor, punishable with tine and imprisonment, to use Hooks, or other devices, that will tear the bagging in handling cotton packed as above described. 7th. Knact a law regulating the drawback to be allowed for bagging, ties, dirt on bagging, or water in bagging. See that you have honest work done by the ginner, picker, packer, and inspector. Then demand the same of tho consumer. We all know that some pickers will sand the cotton while picking to make their day's work weigh heavy. We know that water has been thrown in the press while packing. We know that gins have been run at too high a speed, and the cotton thus gin cut packed in the middle of the bale. I'se every precaution to stop these, and U...U aim you will tlion be in u position to demand that justice which you will he entitled to, and will receive it from all honest consumers. (live and take is a good rule to live by, and one that usually brings success. The farmer need not antagonize himself with all other callings or professions in the world, lie cannot succeed without consumers of his surplus products, the mechanic to construct his tools and houses. The manufacturer to manufacture his cotton, tobacco, wheat and other products, the stiller to put his crude turpentine into a marketable shape by manufacturing it into spirits and rosin. The miller to put his corn, wheat, rye, rice, &o., in shape for the consumer. The saw-mill man to put his timber in marketable shape for home use and export. The steam-boat and railroad to move his produce to a consuming market. The doctor in his hours of affliction of himself or family, (he preacher to point out the road to future happiness, the school master to instruct, his children, the printer to give him the news and l^ooks to read, the lawyer to prepare titles, leins, mortgages, Ac., and the much antagonized merchant as a convenient man from whom supplies and accommodations are to he had. In fact all honest professions and callings are auxiliary to the farmer, worthy of confidence. Fight the man who anticipates the production of anything and sells futures. Ho destroys the law of trade [supply 1 The 13 | and demand]. Fight til?extortioner' and trust* who combine to purchase your products below their value and obtain from you unjust prices for necessary articles. Those are the parties you want to ally, or combine to fight. Don't let ambitious demagogues use you to elevate themselves i to places or positions they have not the ability to till, and under the cloak of great friendship use you as stepping stones on which they are trying to climb to positions they are i not qualified to till, "Look before' you loop." "He sure you are right then go ahead." Til K Sl?( ITLKSK ST \TliS >1 \ N. A Short Itceord of t lie l*ublic <>r (li<> Incorrupt ililr Snintir I ,1. liundnll, of IN'II IIS> I\aiiiu. I 'it i pa pki.rii i a, April 13.?Xowm of (lie death of Samuel .1. Kandall cast a gloom over the various Dom. ocratic clubs in this city. At most of them llags were hung at halfmast, and at a few of the prominent j club houses mourning drapery was displayed. SI'KA K I". It It A X I? \ l.l.'s CAKKKK. Samuel .1. Ktndall was a son of I Josiah Randall, a man well known in his day and generation and whose memory is still fragrant in Phila- j delphia, where he lived and died. Samuel .1. Kandall was born in Philadelphia October 10th, 1828. His education was academic, and it was his father's intention to make him a merchant, but he had a distaste for mercantile pursuits, and although lie commenced life as a clerk, and ( was afterwards a partner in a hard-1 1 ware business, he soon found him-, self at the foot of the political ladder and actually taking a stop on it. Thcw first round in this case was a I seat in the city council. He was elected to that body as an Old Lino Whig while young, and served four years. In those days he was '-hail I fellow well met" with everybody, and became a great favorite with the voters generally. When a vaicancyin the Stato Senate beckoned \ I him a step higher, he accepted the j .imitation with alacrity. For this j place he ran as a Democrat, having j | changed his political relations iir 1850, when his father came out for | Pennsylvania's candidate for the Presidency, .lames Buchanan. While ( lie was in the Legislature the war broke out. The call for ninety days men was answered by Senator Pan - j dall in person. He was a private in j the 1st City Troop of Philadelphia, ('apt. .lames commanding. Private Ivandall came back from the war as . Orderly Sergl. Ihimlall, and Sergt. Ihmdall was, in ISb'i, elected a Kep: resent alive in Congress, and has been elected to every Congress since. M I I.I PA It Y KKCOKI). While n member of Congress he was culled upon to don his uniform again. On the 25th of May, 1882, j (JovornOr Curtin ordered Major (Jen. I Patterson to muster tho military force under Ins command to protect the Capital of tho country. On the following morning ('ornet Randall, for the Congressman had been promoted to that rank dispatched a note to the general commanding the division, tendering the services of th^ \ troop. Karly tho succeeding (lay ; Cornet Randall, in obedience to or- i i i dors, reported by letter to the com- j manding general, and on the lirst j intimation of the advance of thv ; Southern army north of the Potomac lie proceeded to Ilarrisburg to make I arrangements by which the troop; could go into service. He proceed- | od at once with his troop to Harrisburg axd on to Gettysburg, and as! cornet commanded the troop during I the war and down to 180(1. While at Columbia he was appointed proi vof-t marshal and under his orders strict military rule was established and the sale of intoxicating liquors was prohibited. When the finergoncy passed the Cornet resumed his seat in Congress. K A III. V flAVS IN I'llVllllHNS. Me wuh u very c]uiot member at first ami spent a good while in getting accustomed to his new surround- ' ings. During his first term he was 1 a member of only one committee, that on public grounds and builditfgs; in Ins second he served on three, all ; I. . important committees, viz: llank- i ing and currency, retrenchments, | and expenditures in the State de- j partmont, and in his third ho held i his place in eacV. of these three and ' j was also honored as a representative j of his party on tho special committee on tho assassination of President; 1 .ineoln. 'flie Democrats were in a hopeloss minority in those days, and all that Mr. Randal! could do was to make his mark as an efficient committee orry Herji] mm. It w?n not until the minority ?rmr strong enough to have confidence in itself that he made u profound impression upon the House as a ready debater, an expert in parliamentary practice and a fighter who fought until tie was whipped and then snapped his finders in the fa.ie of defeat. In the list Congress ho was a useful member of the committee of elections and of the joint committee on retrenchment. His next advance was in the -12nd Conj/rcss, when his parliamentary skill brought him forward as a member of the committee on rules, the other members heino Speaker IMaine, Kx-Speaker thinks, < Jen. flarlieid and S. S. Cox} but he c mtiuued to serve on the old committees, whos.i duties lit* had thoroughly masterc ]. rni: i i'.n i a?;ai\sr riiK 1'Ouok hii.l. Then came the 48rd Congress, which gave llie member from the 8rd Pennsylvania district the opportunity of his life. He was not slow to seize it. The occasion was the attempted passage of the famous Force bill, a desperate device of tlio liepublicans to avert th"ir fast coming decline, at the expense of the constitutional rights of the State and in reckless contempt of the spirit of the free institutions. Still in a minority iti the Mouse of Representatives, the Democrats scarcely dared hope to defeat this bill; but Randall took the lead, made their fight aggressive, instead of defensive, and the whole party seemed to catch the spirit. .For days and nights he opposed parliamentary tactics, ready strategy and invincible pluck to a compact Republican majority, with all the machinery of '.he Mouse at its back. In the end bis apparently forlorn hope was victorious and Randall was uv common consent the hero of the con test. At once and thenceforward Samuel .1. Randal1 occupied a prominent position in the eves of the nation. AS A UKKOK M Kit IN TI1K tlOlSK. The appointment of Randall to the chairmanship of the uommit.ee on Appropriation* gavo him a chance to impress his ideas upon legislation, in so far as a Republican Senate would allow it. Randall surprised overylx dy by his mastery of details in every deparlnient of the (iovernuient husiuess. The reforms that tie proposed were so sweeping as to cause alarm; but he was prepared to stand by every figure in his budget and to show that it was the riyrht one in the right place. His idea was that the diibfronce between the legitimate cost of running the (iovernmeut and the amount that was paid therefor under Republican estimate* was ?38,010,98120, and this enormous balance ho proposed to cut oil ami charge to the account of Republican rascality and extruvagaxce. The party which hud been holding the keys of the treasury for so long was naturally loth to admit that its trust liad been abused to such an extent, lien, Garfield, the I chairman of the old committee on appropriations, under which extravagance had been accumulating, wns particularly bitter fn opposition; but there was no withstanding Randall's conclusive army of figures. Beaten in the House the Republicans made a desperate stand in the Senate, and when the appropriation bills came back to the House there ensued a bitter discussion as to the decree to which tho Somite is responsible for tho raising of the revenue ami the disposition of it. The battle was won by the branch, and, thanks to Randal above all others, tlie Democrats in the Presidential and Con gressional elections of 1870 were enabled to show that although entrusted with only one branch of a single department of the government they ha<l reduced the burden of taxation to the enormous extent of $40,000,000, of which $80,000,000 was saved in a single session. KhH<TK!> NPKAKKlt IN TltyUHI.OL'B TIM ICS. Speaker Kerr died in the summer of 1870, and when Congress assembled in the following December it was necessary to elect his successor to (lie chair for the unexpired Congressional term. Mr. Randall was elected by the Democratic caucus over 8. 8. Cox, of Now York, a Democrat who had achieved a national reputation when hie successful competitor in this tight was only anienp her of the Pennsylvania Legislature. The vote stood: Randall, 78; Cox, 63. When the election took place the country was throbbing with excite ment over a disputed Presidential election. Tilden had been elected, and the conspiracy to count in Hayes was coining to a head Mr. Randall was chosen by the friends of Governor Tilden to go with other prominent Geiijoor&t* to Louisiana and have an eye upon the Diok(j of the returning board. While in New Orleans lie did much by Ins presence and counsel to encourage the Democrat s to tjglft for their rights before the returning board. >1 as 911 h;$ return that he was cleared fcfpea^eir, ami a contruling influence in flje choice was the general desire of the Democrats to have a clear-headed and quick witted man, not to be bullied, in the chair during the clectorial count and the proceedings preliminary thereto. This confidence Ld., Tliur^dii T. : ~ I in ltandall was justified. If tno ! white feather was shown by any : Democrat in that period of doubt and dread Samuel J. Hundall was , not the man who showed it, and it is said that if his advice had been followed neither htyoiie'.a, bribery or any ei^ht-by-seven com mission could have prevented the inaugura- | tion of Stinuel J. Tilden as l'resi- , dent of the I'nited States. ltKCORl) AH Hl'KAKKlt. His successive re-elections to Congress in l87t! r?..d 1878 followed by successive re-elections to the Spun- i kership of the House of llepresenta- ! fives, never without bitter opposition, i but always, it inav be j-aiil, without; disparagement of his rivals, with the approval of tr?e I himocracy and of i the oountrv at large. His oceupa! tioM of th? chair ??f the House was a standing guarantee of an honest ad ministration of its duties, without re- ( gard to personal or sectional considerations. He was u skillful parliamentarian and one of the most skilful presiding officers that has ever j occupied the Speaker's chair. In i 1S8I there wna a Republican majori' ty in the House, and Keifer was chosen Speaker. When in l8Sd the ; Democrats again oauie into control the j majority of the party was pronounced against the high-tariff views held l>v i Mr. Itandul!. and Mr. Carlisle was j chosen Speaker. Since then Mr. Randall lias thwarted the efforts of his own party at tariff reform, and was the acknowledged leader of the sirtall protection ring of the Demo| eratio party. A 8T.VI NI.KSK l'l'BI.IC ItKCOItO. After thirty year* of puhlic life, covering the most corrupt period in : American history, Mr. Randall died | a poor man, with nothing to show for j his diligence in business except an | honorable position and the plainly 'furnished little house in Washington where he lived during the (\jngres sumai session. 11e did not figure <?n the memorandum I took of Oakos Amos, nor was ho on the pav-roll of Host {Shepherd, ami no lobbyist know any sure way to Mr. Kindull'si good graces. There is no middle 1 man whom he has enriched. It is! said that when the Central Pacific Midway Company had a bill before the House looking to the appropriation of Mart* Island for depot purposes, by a wanton sacrifice of the (joverninent's title to thai property, u life-long personal friend of Mr. lNndalTs went to him and said: j14 Look hero, Sam, 1 know you are opposed to this bill, and there is no use j in asking you to help us to get it through; but its passage will be $20,- i 000 in my pocket. Now, all I ask is thaty ou will favor me by not fighting it any more than is absolutely necessary." 4,l say, old fellow," was the reply, 4,l would rather lose my i right haul than have you b?se that ! fe-*, for 1 know yon neod the money, I and I have no better friend in the 1 world; but, by , 1 am opposed to i that bill; it is a steal, and I am go. ing to fight it to the death." He was as good as fiis word, fighting it | with all his might, and it was defeated hy one vote. Many similar sto ries illustrative of his unbending firmness and integrity are told, und | there ia nowhere a question of his integrity as ^ piil>1 iu man. A l'KM I'K'TURK OF THK MAN. Personally Mr. Kendall was a man who would attract attenion in any Cotnpany, and yet he was not a man | of ititpnaing appearance. He w#? | : perhaps a little aoove medium height, ; lint a slight stoop reduced his stature j to the average. He was broud-shouldered and loose-limbed. Wearing no board and being always close sliav 'en, Ins face was almost as smooth as a baby's. His eyes were small, black and piercing, but this effect was mol ified by the habit of squinting, which seemed to bo the result of trying to conquer "nearness of sight without tiie aid of glasses, hut his most 1 prominent feature was the mouth, which, wlrle inclined to smile and reveal a fine set of teeth, assumed the firmest sort of expression under the impulse of antagonism. NH\y YOUK IjKTTISII. (Itogular Correspondence,) April 14, I8ll(?. P. T. Btirnuni's creat and onlv I sliow opened it* American tour atI * tho Polo grounds iu this Haturday j night. The shew this year ii larger than ever before, occupying no lea* j than twenty-six tents of all kinds.1 I The grand torchlight parade took plaee on Friday night, and, it is needless to say, drew out an immense multitude of fcigtytseers who throngod sidewalks and street* altybg flu, whole twenty miles of tfye roult<. Twelve hundred people actually take ( nart in presenting each performance, 80Q qf yljnnj arc wtyai is known to the theatrical pfofeQifaty u| dp u pes," they being engaged to personal** *nidiers in Nero's triumphal entry into .Home. Many new features have been added this year, and during tho noxt three weeks, the show will certainly i ft # ' ;'v:' 'V&&- ?iSiiXh y, A_pi-il IT, be the central attraction for all the youngsters in town. I* X I)K KG ROt*N I) RAILROA11 >S. Some serious efforts in the direction of rapid transit are being made just now, and it is not improbable that New York city will soon have something of the kind worthy of the name. Not only are there two bills 011 the subject now pending before the Legislature at Albany, but Mayor Grant has also appointed a Rapid Transit Commission under the existing act of I x?r?. The probable outcome of these efforts will bean underground system of railroads throughout the whole eitv. hroad way and Fifth nv'emie below 59th street are likely to be exempted, though one of the bills referred to provides for an underground road on It road way which will branch t?fl* at Madisou ayenue. The bills also authorize the Commission to locate routes through the blocks between the streets, a plan which I believe would meet with approval as the routes would thereby be made much more direct, especially, in the lower part of the city. Something ought to be done very soon in this matter, as the present facilities of horse cars and elevated roads are entirely insuf ficient. Anyone who is compelled to ride up or down town mornings or evenings is made to feel in a very uncomfortable manner the pros nig need of improvement. \\ I \ IT.KKSTI NO KXHMMTIOX. The Fdison Inhibition at the Leno\ Lyceum, for the benefit of the Ne\> York Exchange for Women's Work, (luring Ilu? past, week has boon a great success. Lvcrything which I'M i son luul at the I'aris K.shihition can he seen here. The phonograph exhibition is truly wonderful. One of those instruments furnishes an orche-tentertainment of startling tidelitv. The little cylinder is set in motion, and the hearers ranged in front of it. by putting the connecting tubes to their oars can hoar selections from the latest operas performed by cornet and piano as distinctly ,mk1 perfectly as though given by Levy ami .losetTv in the same room. The electric lighting apparatus, the talking dolls, the telephone combinations, and a score of other ingenious and wonderful things arc here also, and the ladies are making a splendid success of the undertaking, besides a snug sum of money. ? ? Ct ? Many people habitually endure a feeling of lassitude, because they think they have to. If they would take Dr. J. II. McLean's Sarsapwrilla this feeling of weariness would give I place to rig;-,*ami vitality. Lor saio . by Dr. K. X orfoti. w . . Persons advanced 111 years feel j younger and ? tr?>???'; r, as well as freer fmin the iulirmaties of inn', by taking l)r. .1. 11. McLean's SarsnpHrilla. Kor sale h\ Dr. K. Norton. (>ne of Dr. J. 11. Me Lea ii s Lit tie Liver ami Kidney l'illets, taKOii at ni^rht before opinio to bed, will move the bowels; the effect will astonish you. Kor sale by Dr. K. Norton. r?r.--^r=rr? ADV Kin'IS KM KXTS. j CGNWAY LODGE. Regular Cuniinuuic.'itlnii of Conway Lodge No. 219, at Masonic llall second Tuesday night in each Month. ( '. S. ( \U SK.Y, \V . M. I'. K . 11KTII I. A Sect. ' UNUItCOlKOH^W - _ Oaf frtt>?pnrp rw n r.?T r*i pKrl1 MILES ""'PO * " n UmEm \ the world. Our ficTliti*. *r? |l IMf tfnlt I I unrquBl'd, BBd to Introdur* our ,.iU'jp V Ijll I I (u|?h?f |oo4i wi will Htilriiit 11*M k.1 IM t r" I too** rxieo* to Mtk lortllty, r/ EYjpylr L/ I utboti Ouly tbM* who null "t III t jlf [Ky [w i., u. .1 tnrrrii mtk? ?ur. ?f 'SlisL.- W V I?fc HSM" the rh.nc. All you h**? fo do in wpVtf<|F ?P iy BB rrtum io to .how oof rood. to PIP lho?* Who *?ll?jroxr oriffhborB TIZnr-XH&ir I ?nd tho?* ?round you Th* b?- j AYEMflHhVvif- ^ rtnninr of llni tdv.rtnirm*nt [TIUIIl. ihon (lie *nd of the tel*. , bout th* fiftieth port of lit bulk . It ?? b ftr.nd, double ?if? l*l?o. tui. n lor/e ? i? e??y to c?rfy W? Hill ?Uo?oow you how yoa r?n I.!?k? from !*:? to#IO d?y ?t I*b.i, ftom lh? .urt.w.th. out ipeiirx" llftter writ* ?t our* Wr p*y *11 t?pr*.? vb?r<?b AddieW.lt I1AI.I.KI I A CO.. It .. MHO. POKTLAHD M*l?? Salt* I infer Mortgage. STATK OK SOITII CAROLINA. < ol'iNTV OK HORRY. l ittler and bj virtu* of the power and authority i.i us \ sicd in anil hy a certain mortgage to us executed and delivered hy 15. 15. ^Vatts. on the sixteenth day of January, A. !>.. IStH. Which is of record in the otllc" of Register of Mr lie ( oil vc j auco of ilurry County ip I5p< |< of Mortgages, Vo'uiiip hjank, 1'ag". Jni) apt| til. We the underpin,eft will nffp* f<?r u.iln I...!..? /> tlio Court-house door : * Coidvay, S. within legal sale hours on Monday, the ftf h day of May, l8li(). All and singular, that certain tract of land situate in the County ami Htate aforesaid lying and being on the North aide of Mnolo Swamp, and la hounded as follow*; Commencing , at an agreed corner at Baxter Branch. Tln nce an agreed Hue to a branch thence with the run of said branch to W. II. IVivctts line. The same U ing a port of a tract of land cojitaini i 1tf,:l63 acre? which was granted to one Moses Floyd, A. 1>., 179?. l'ijn has^r to pay for p ipers. Terms of sale * 'ftnifMVMftf & OOM.IKB, ' ' Mortgagees. Jf. (1>. SC/ltfBO ATTORNEY A?0 COUNSELLOR, 4'j' ''AW, Conway. M. C. Will practice in Horry and adjoin lor Counties. 18QO. ! Cu ilbevk ^obbov $ COMM ISSION MERCHAN FS**f IN I I^osin, Spirits T^tirpcn- ! tine enel Gotten. CC3STSia]MMEKTS SOLICITED 164 F it () N T 8 T B E E T% 7S 10W YOUK. 31 ly I W I Vvn? Or R I I W I BKW \ IBifc HlUILILMi ' j W HJT .fl l?HS,H r? Fertile New Goods that are now being opened at the Store of BURROUGHS & COLLINS. / Th.ey are ttoere in every -veirloty. Tlxey are ttoere toy tto.e tHousands. Tlney sire coming in toy tto? tens of thousands, "And Still Tlu'i/ Carrie!'' 1J1VRUY I'll I NO i X Til E DKY GOODS MNT1 1 VKHYTIl I NO I N THE NOTIONS UN JVEHYTIIINO IN THE CLOTHING LIN-l-J Everything in (lie Fancy Goods Line, Ev(H'vfh:iiit!i lei Um SHw Eycryt liini? Im?siina 1)Is?. nnd[ Evervlhinsi Else. '( is. 4 ' . ? v * < I < re i n Li il \ r of humanity about our store everyday who ?nrgerly purchase the - - o.)(L. I I,- y rush Tor them like a bereaved mother for hot last child. And why is thi ; !i is iinj?!\ because we hold out such great inducements to them, and hccuu ; they c.-.u huy tin- best -roe Is lor tlie lenst money hy coming to ns. uaii and Examine our Stock and be Convinced thai these ?ic Facts f 0?< >IJ<* I iV COLL.INN, ONLY $20 Hi? WA^NTtD ymu qdm 15 ?*YS TRIAIlUonHUM, ImfJjr m m lummmmnmm w.w.a (fS1'IJtI V JfFA -II] HoImUm ItUft It^ht-WII* nig R g H n i f* ^W'~V3?S3t f \ ) ?? *?, ?uis tli l?an?Uom?nt EJISbS Kill U 'SffittlS I ' 1 Z-*WV?3l\ ^"???-vrorU, >n4 Hmc.t rfilLrlBJ II ivmlSjig I YnPt i *rtof**tr??ss??Hw^n??. 1 jjKf | t|jEl'l fl |S\I I Don't p?f o|{*Mt? #55 or SINfiFR 1 "the cl*Ajiwu?i?^?^ <i_.irfUPa.lli ^r^JPt?i.::y?- 17 It. tilth St., Phtto., Pa. ti'h WORCESTER'S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY THE ACCEPTED STANDARD OF PURE ENGLISH. A DICTIONARY. THii LKAD1NQ PUBLISHERS. laM Imei A BIOORAPHICAL MAQA2INE8, AND NBWSPAPER8 Two now Dictionarioo DICTIONARY, FOLLOW WORCESTER. WORCESTER'S of over 13.000 per- NSW ACADERIC onagei, and DICTIONARY. A OAZF.TTEERNO Vtw ty go#mwUlnanoting over 20,000 WpROSST SB'S new All in ono maaaive w(lh or without Donltoa'o Patentlade*. TIcSSRr** olume of 2273 page*, ?whv?mi. containing thousands j always r? for rod to tkis wark (Woreoatar's Containing all tko n..k.u?ii<^ 1 Ziti, J ? ... ? .UUI.U nmuy matr ?? oiaaaara. rriMMlt MWMi W?r4l Ib tfco Dictionary. ELIOT, Harvard Gollef*, Oambridfo, Xtai. laiyHf*. Writ# to tho fubliahera for J. B. LIPPtNCOTT COMPANY, descriptive circular*. 711 and 717 Market St., TMUdolpUa. BUY ALASKA / jy _ [I _ll! DRY AIR REFRIGERATOR, IT IS ! I!??pj ? PERFECTS: ' ramByfPR Charcoal Filled, Superior Conetrwtien, II' PRODUCES BETTER S3! "til|l WITH LEAS ICE THAI AST OTHER, " M Call On Our Agent ZZsmsaftT*'-" Wr ^ The ALASKA REFRIGERATOR 00,,^% I ' - ? ?. " "i-" . S . ? iil.-.K<S .r arawaMaMiMHbuaaMMMa am We call attention to the novelty of its construction, it being composed of two shssts of paper with an interposed layer of water-proof bitumen or asphah, ths whole unites under pressure', making a sanitary iTuldew-proof sheathing far fh? J>44** apd Qdope of houses, that will last a i long *s the building Upon which it is apptlf^, " 4 * - *' Experience has shown that the oheap papers commonly used for sheathing hsusst 4# not protect a building for any length of time, but soon mildew and fall Is pieces, aeakiatf the house drafty and damp; these defects can then only be remedied at greet espeaee. A Oood Sheathing like the O. K. Building Paper, oen be obtained at a trifling cost, an4 it is a waste of money to use an inferior article. Tut up In rolls .10 Inches wide, containing f,000 square feet* S*"jaHleMito on application. Mica Roofing ! i ii i ii i??