The Darlington herald. (Darlington, S.C.) 1890-1895, April 01, 1891, Image 4
•'5 A.
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THE LABOB WORLD.
Chicago plasterers want $4.
Iowa railroaders will federate.
Omaha fights convict labor goods.
Boston has an Electrical Exchange.
A Textile National Union is coming.
In Chicago thousands of laborers are idle.
New York has an Italian Tailors’ Union.
J The International Bricklayers have S4000,
A secret society of cocks has been organ
ized.
New York will hold an eight-hour confer
ence.
Jersey City Heights, N. J., has a work
men’s free school.
Carriages!akers and wheelwrights will
form a national body.
The Greensburg (Penn.) coke strike in ten
days cost a half million.
New York Government laborers recently
struck against nine hours.
The Operative Painters' Union, of New
York, was Organized in 1842.
The Flint Glass Workers’Union hasTCOO
members and 190,000 in bank.
For the loss of an eye by a shuttle $1051
trer. awarded at Dover,’ N. H.
PiTTSBCRG’a builders’ society talks of
working with the men’s unions.
A bill preventing the employment of per
sons under fourteen years passed in Ohio.
The Lehigh (Penn.) Iron Company has re
duced the wages of its employes ten percent.
A bill before the Massachusetts Legisla
ture fixes the number of cars for each brake-
man.
".he Knights of Labor decided to send
4T5.IKI0 to the 20,000 locked out clothing
workers at Rochester.
The strikers in the coke region of Penn-
-syivania have been defeated, after sacrific
ing nearly $1,003,000 in wages.
The Lords of the Admiralty have granted
nn i :crease of wages to employes in the
■Gccerument dock yards in England.
In England, the average annual produc
tion of each employe is M90, of which the
laborer receives $298 and capital $200.
Over 280,000 miners, metal workers, and
other organized workmen will strike in Bel
gium ou May 1 to gain the eight-hour work
day.
There are about six hundred woman ty pe-
Betters in New York. They are employed
chiefly in the publishing houses and on ths
afternoon papers.
Fieteen conductors on the Michigan Cen
tra! Railroad have lost their places by show,
ing sympathy for penniless unfortunates,
who turned out to be “spotters.”
In a suit for wages tried before a Justice
at South Bethlehem, Penn., the fact was
bi-'-ught out that a carpenter was receiving
$S a month and board, and a blacksmith $10
a month and board, and that their hours of
labor were from 5 o’clock in the morning un
til 8 o'clock at night for the carpenter, and
from the same hour in the morning until 7
o'clock in the evening for the blacksmith
for every day tn the year.
PROMINENT PEOPLE.
The Queen of Denmark is a fine pianist.
Prince Bismarck has bought a news
paper.
The Sultan of Turky is deeply interested
in the World’s Fair.
Qceen Lii.iuokai.ani. who succeds Kata-
Iraua on the Hawaiian throne, is fifty-two
years old.
General Mahone is preparing to build a
town at the mouth of Cove Creek in Taz»
well County, Va.
John D. Rockefeller, of the Standard
Oil Company, has given nearly $2,090,093 to
educational institutions.
George Francis Train, of N cw York, is
ns agile and muscular as he was twenty
years ago, and walks With the same brisk
energy
Horse and camel raising affords the Kiu»
of Italy amusement and profit, and lie has
large and choice herds of them on his estate
at Pisa.
Senator Pepfer’s eldest (laughter has
been taught to set type, and hi? three other
daughters are skilled in stenographv, type
writing and bookkeeping.
General Deodora de Fonseca, who has
just been elected President of the Brazilian
Republic, is fifty-seven years old. All his life
since boyhood has been passed in the army.
LI illiam H. Macy, the blind poet of
Nantucket, Mass., is dead. He was a native
of the Island, and spent his early life at sea
in the whaling service, relinquishing it to
join the Union Army of 1862.
' James R. Randall, the author of “Mary,
land, My Maryland,” has been for the last
quarter of a century the editor of a Georgia
newspaper. He is a writer of great power
and originality and a most scholarly mau.
James Gordon Bennett, the proprietor
o' the New York Herald, is a naval veteran.
He was a Lieutenant, and commanded his
own yacht, which was armed and commis-
siouedas a vessel of the United States Navy
Lady William Nevill, one of the famous
beauties of Irish society, is a handsome
Spanish woman, with dark hair, dark eyeo,
and a clear olive complexion. Her face is
sweet and expressive and she is very clever.
Chevalier George D. Epinois, who
took part in the battle of Waterloo, and
formed a part of the guard of honor which
welcomed Leopold I. sixteen years later, is
now, at the age of ninety-seven, burgo
master in the village of Epinois les Binche.
Mrs. E. D. E. N. South worth, the novel
ist, is still writing, though over seventy five
years of age. As to her full name, which is
Emma Dorothy Eliza Neuettte Southworth,
she says: “Wlien I was born my people were
too poor to give me anything else, so they
gave me all those names.”
In the hall of the West Virginia House
of Delegates Governor Fleming presented to
Lieutenant R. M. G. Brown, United States
Navy, on behalf of the State of West Vir-
ginin, a handsome sword as a token of ap
preciation of his performance of his duty
during the great Samoan hurricane t wo
years ago.
i frestchagin, the Russian painter, will
ma.;e an extended tour among the Sioux and
other Indian tribes. His design is to secure
data for a great work on the red man as he
exi-ts under Government control in the
United States. The general impression is
that he has an imperial order far the work
and that it will be the effort of Us life.
“That’s the Way I Shoot.”
An officer in attendance at a shooting
rompetition noticed two men firing with
anything but precision. Approaching
them he exclaimed angrily: “You fel
lows don’t know howto shoot; lend me
the rifle and let me show you.” Bang!
and the target was missed. A broad grin
overspread the features of the two pri
vates, but the officer was equal to the
occasion. Turning to the first, with a
frown upon his countenance, he re
marked: “That’s the way you shoot,
air!” A second attempt, and a similar
result. Turning to the other he con
tinued: “And that’s the way you shoot,
sir.” A third shot, and au inner was
fluked. With pardonable pride the
worthy officer returned the rifle, trium
phantly adding: “And that’s the way I
shoot.” The men ever since have enter
tained a very high opinion of him as a
marksman.
The test of every system, political or
educational^ is the men it forms.
REV. DR. TALMAGE
Spring
Is Here
When nearly every
body needs medicine
to purify the blood and
tone up the system.
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
grows more and more
popular every year for
it is the best
Spring
Medicine
The Brooklyn D Ivine'i
Sunday Sermon.
fr*x
riff a
9 N. U 13
^Tkti "Tt shall not surelj/ die.”—GenSib
. That was a point blank He. Satan told it
“> Eve to induce her to put her semicircle of
white, beautiful teeth into a forbidden
apricot or plum or peach or apple. He prac
tically said to her, f ‘Oh, Eve, just take abite
of this and you will be omnipotent and
omniscient. You shall be a« gods." Just
opposite was the result, It was the first lie
that was ever told in our world. It opened
tpe gate for all the falsehoods that have over
alighted on this planet. It introduced a
plague that covers ell nations, the plague of
lies. Far worse thau the plagues of Egypt,
for they Were on the banks of the Nile, but
Oh the banks of the Hudson,on the banks
of the East River, on the banks of the Ohio,
end the Mississippi, and the Thames, and
the Rhine, and the Tiber, and on both sides
of all rivers. The Egyptian plagues lasted
only a few weeks, bat for six thousand years
has raged this plague of lies.
Thera are • hundred ways of telling a
A man s entire life may be a falsehood,
while with his Hps he may not once directly
falsify. There are those who state what is
positively untrue, but afterward say “may
be” softly. These departures from the trutn
are called “white lies:” but there is reellv no
such thing as a white lie.
The whitest lie that was ever told was as
black as perdition. No inventory of public
crimes will bO sufficient that omits this gi
gantic aborhiilation. There are men high in
church and state actually useful, self-denyiag
and honest in many things, who, upon cer
tain subjects and in certain spheres, are not
at all to be depended upon for veracity. In
deed, there are many men and women who
have their notions of truthfulness so thor
oughly perverted that they do not know
when they are lying. With many it is a cul
tivated sin; with some it seems a natural in
firmity . I have known people who seemed
to have been horn liars. The falsehoods of
their lives extended from cradle to grave.
Irevarieations, misrepresentation and dis
honesty of speech appeared in their first ut
terances, and were as natural to them as any
of their infantile diseases, and were a sort (if
moral croup or spiritual scarlatina. But
many have been placed in circumstances
where this tendency lias day by day and
hour by hour been called to larger develop
ment. They have gone from attainment to
attainment and from class to class until they
have become regularly graduated liars.
The air of the city is filled with falsehoods.
They hang pendent from the chandeliers of
our finest residences; they crowd the shelves
of some our merchant princes; they fill tho
sidewalk from curbstone to brown stonj
facing; the.y cluster around the mechanic's
hammer, and blossom from the end of the
merchant’s yardstick, and sit in the doors of
churches. Some call them “fiction." Some
style them "fabrication.” You might say
that they were subterfuge, disguised, delu
sion, romance, evasion, pretense,fable, decep
tion, misrepresentation, but, as I am igno
rant of anything to be gained by the hiding
of a God defying outrage under a lexico
grapher's blanket, I shall call them what my
lather taught me to call them—lies.
I shall divide them into agricultural, mer
cantile, mechanical, ecclesiastical, and social
lies.
First, then, I will speak of those that are
more particularly agricultural. There is
something in the perpetual presence of
natural objects to make a man pure. The
trees never issue “false stock.” Wheat fields
are always honest. Rye and oats never more
out in the night, not paying for the place
they have occupied, dorn shocks never
make false assignments. Mountain brooks
are always “current.” The gold on the grain
is never counterfeit. The sunrise never
flaunts in false colors. The dew sports only
genuine diamonds. Taking farmers as ii
class, I believe they are truthful and fair in
dealing and kind hearted. But the regions
surrounding our cities do not always send
this sort of men to our markets. Day by day
there creak through our streets and about
tho market houses farm wagons that have
hot an honest spoke In their wheels or a truth
ful rivet from tongue to tailboard.
During the last few years there have been
times when domestic economy has foun
dered on the farmer’s firkin. Neither high
taxes, nor the high price of dry goods, nor
the exorbitancy of labor, could excuse much
that the city has witnessed in the behavio,-
of the yeomanry. By the quiet firesides in
Westchester and Orange Counties I hope
there may be seasons of deep reflection an i
hearty repentance. Rural districts are ac
customed to rail at great cities os given up
to fraud and every form of unrighteousness,
but our cities do not absorb all the abomina
tions. Our citizens have learned the import
ance of not always trusting to the size an 1
style of apples in the top of a fann'-r’s bar
rel as an indication of what may be found
farther down. Many of our people are ac
customed to watch and see how correctly n
bushel of beets is measured, and there arc
not rnauy honest milk cans.
Deceptions do not all cluster round citv
halls. When our cities sit down air
weep over their sius, all the surrounding
countries ought to come in and weep with
them. There is often hostility on the part of
producers against traders, as though tl:
man who raises the corn was necessarily
more honorable thau the grain dealer wh
pours it into his mammoth bin. There ouglu
to be no such hostility. Yet producers oft«
think it no wrong to snatch away fiomt'n
trader: and’hex sav to ths bargain maker
“You got your money easy." Do they get
it easy) Let those who in the quiet field
and barn get their living exchange, places
with those who stand to-day amid the ex
citements of commercial Hf6 and see if they
find so is very easy.
While the farmer goes to sleep with the
assurance thnt his com and barley will be
growing all the night, moment by moment
adding to his revenue, the merchant tries to
go to sleep conscious that that moment his
cargo may be broken ou the rocks or dam
aged by the wave that sweeps clear across
the hurricane deck, or that reckl-ss specu
lators may that very hour lie plotting some
monetary revolution, or the burglars be
prying open his safe, or his debtors fleeing
the town, or his landlord raising the rent, or
the fireskindliug on the block that contains
all his estate. Easy! Is it? God help
the merchants! It is hard to have the palms
of the hands biistere 1 with outdoor work,
but a more dreadful process when througli
mercantile anxieties the brain is consumed.
In the next place we notice mercantile
lies, those before the count-ran<l behind the
counter. I will not attempt to specify the
different forms of commercial falsehood.
There are merchants who excuse themselves
for deviation from truthfulness because of
what they call commercial custom. In other
words, the multiplication and universality
of a sin turns it into n virtue. There have
been large fortune.: gathered where then
wasnot one drop of unrequited toil in the
wine; not one spark of had temper flashing
from the bronze bracket: not one drop of
needlewoman's heart him! in the crimson
pluah, while there are otli-r great establish
ments in which there Is not one door knob,
not one brick, not one trinket, not one thread
of lace but has upon it the mark of dishonor.
What wonder if, some day, u hand of toil
that had been wrung and worn out and blis
tered until the skin came off should be placed
against tho elegant wall paper, leaving its
mark of blood—four fingers and athumb—•
or that some day, walking the halls, there
should be a voice accostiug the occupant,
saying, “Six cents for making a shirt,” and,
flying the room, another voice scould say,
“Twelve cents for an army blanket,” and
the man should try to sleep at night, but
ever and anon be arouse), until getting up
on one elbow, he should shriek out, “Who’s
there?”
One Sabbath night, in the vestibule of my
church after service, a woman fell in convul
sions, The doctor said she needed medicine
not so much as something to eat. As she
began to revive in her delirium, she said,
gaspingly: “Eight cents! Eight cents!
Eight cents! I wish I could get it done; I am
so tired! I wish I could get some sleep, but I
must get it done! Eight cents! Eight
cents!” We found out afterward she
was making garments for eight
cent* apiece, and that she could make
but three of them in a day! Three times
eight are twenty-four! Hear it, men and
women who have comfortable homes!
Some of the worst villains of the city an
the employers of these women. They beat
them down to the last peunv, and try to
cheat them out of that. The’woman must
ueposit a dollar or two before she gets tin.
garments to work on. Whenthework isdone
it is sharply inspected, the most insignificant
flaws picked out, and the wages refused, and
sometimes the dollar deposited not given
back. The Women’s Protective Union re-
portsa case where one of these poor souls,
finding a place where she could get more
wages, resolved to change employers, and
went to get her pay for work done. The
employer says, "I hear you are going to
leave me.” “Yes,” sbesaid, “and I am corao
to pet what you owe me.” He made no
inswer. She said, “Are you not going to
pay me?" “Yes," hesald, “I will pay you;’’
sod he kicked her down the stairs.
There are thousands of fortunes made in
commercial spheres that are throughout
righteous. God will let His favor rest upon
every scroll, every pictured wall, everv
traceried window, and the joy that flash^
from the lights, and showers from the inasij
and dances in the children’s quick feet, pat
tering through the hail, will utter the con
gratulation pf men and the approval of God.
A merchant can. to the last, item, be thor
oughly honest. There is never any need of
.'a'aehood. Yet how many will, day by day,
roar by hour, utter what they know to oe
wrong. You say that you are selling at less
chan cost. If so, then it is right to say it.
But did that cost you less than what you ask
for it? If not, then you have falsified. You
•ay that that article cost you twenty-five
dollars. Did it? If so, then all right. If it
did not, then rou have falsified.
Suppose yon are a purchaser. You are
"beatindown” the goods. You say that
thdt article for which five dollars is charged
s not worth more thau four. Is it worth no
nore than four dollars? Then all right. If
t be worth more, and for the sake of retting
A for less than its value, you willfully de
preciate it, you have falsified, You may
cull it a sharp trade. The recording (tngel
writes it down on the ponderous tomes of
•temlty, “Mr. So-au.i-so, merchant on Water
.treetor in Eighth street or in State street,
or Mrs. So-and-s c, keeping house on* Beacon
street or on Madison avenue or Rittenhouse
Square or Brooklyn Heights or Brooklyn
Hill, told one falsehood.” Yon may coiuddei'
it insignificant be cense relating to an
insignificant purchase. You would dmpise
the man who would falsify in regard to #omo
great matter in which the city or Whole Coun
try was concerned; but this is only a box of
buttons, or a row of pins, or a case of
needles. Be not deceived. The article pur
chased may be so small you can put ft in
your vest pocket, but the siu was bigger
than the Pyramids, nud the echo of the dis
honor wifi reverberate through all the
Riouutains of e'ernity.
You throw on your counter some specimens
of haltdktrehiefs. Your customer asks:
“Is that all silk? No cotton in in?" You
answer, “It is all silk.” Was it all silk? If
io, all right. But was it partly cotton?
Then you have falsified. Moreover, you
lost by the falsehood. The customer, though
no may live at Lynn or Doylestown or
i your sign
and say: “1 will not try there I That is the
place where I got that handkerchief.” So
that by that one dishonest bargain you
pick your own pocket and insulted the
Almighty.
Would you dare to make an estimate of
how inlny falsehoods in trade were yester
day told by hardware men and clothiers and
fruit dealers and dry goods establishments
and importers and jeweler.- and lumbermen
and coal merchants and stationers and
tobacconists? Lies about saddles, about
buckles, about ribbons, about carpets, about
gloves, about coats, about shoos, about
hat*, about watches, about carriages, about
books—about everything. In the name of
the Lord God Almighty, 1 arraign com
mercial falsehoods as one of the greatest
plagues in city and town.
lit the next place I notice mechanical lies.
There is no class of men who administer
more to tho welfare of the city than artisans.
To their hand wo must look for tho building
that shelters us, for the garments that clothe
us^ for the car tuat carri-s us. They wield a
widespread Influence. There U much deris-
lonofwhatis called “Muscular Christian
ity,” but in the laiter day of the world’s
prosperity I think that the Christian will be
muscular. We have a right to expect of
those stalwart men of toil iho highest possi
ble integrity. Mauy of them answer all our
expectations, and stand at tho front of relig
ious and philanthropic enterprises. But
this class, like the otiiers that 1 have named,
has in it those who lack in the element of
veracity. They cannot ali be trusted. In
times when tho demand for labor is great it
is impossible to meet the demands of the
public, or do work with that promptness
nud perfection that would at other times be
But there are mechanics whose word can
not be trusted at .any tim \ No man has a
right to promise more work than ho can do.
Thereare mechanics who say that they will
come on Monday, but they do not come until
Wednesday. You put work in their hands
that they tell you shall he co:npl»tedin ten
days, but it is thirty. There have been bouses
built of which it might bo said that every
nail driven, every fo-it of plastering put on,
every yard of pipe laid, every shingle ham
mered, every brick nurtiivd, could tell of
falsehood connected therewith. There are men
attempting to do tea or titteen pieces of
work who have not the tiui! or strength to
do more than five or six pieces, but by prom
ises never fulfilled keep nil tho undertakings
within their own grasp. This is what they
coll “nursing” the job
How much wron ; io hi- soul and insult to
God a mechanic would-.0 . if he promised
toily so much as ho exp ■ i t > he able to do.
Society has no right to a >’ of you impossi
bilities. You (Mnoo -u.vays calculate cor
rectly, and you in:i , foil o *c nco you cannot
f it the help that y : a.iiv pate. But now
am speaking oi i ■ c.ib ui making of
promises that you kuo v yo i cannot keep.
Did you say tbutUml. dot should be mended,
that coat repaired, those bricks laid, that
harness sewed, that door grained, that spout
fixed or that window glazed by Saturday,
knowing that you would neither lie able to
do it youself nor get anyone else to do it?
Then, before God and man you nre a liar.
You may say that it makes no particular
difference, and that if you had told the
truth you would have lost tho job, find that
people expect to be disappointed, tint the ex
cuse will not answer. There is a voice of
thunder rolling among the drills an 1 planes
and shoe lasts and shears which says, “All
liare shall have their part in the lake that
burnetii with fire and brimstone.’’
I next notice ecclesiastical lies—that is,
falsehoods told for the purpose of advancing
Churches and sects, or for the purpose of de
pleting them. There is no use in asking
many a Colvanist what an Arminian be
lieves, for he will be apt to tell you that the
Arminian believes that a man can convert
himself; or to ask the Arminian what the
Calvinist believes, for he will tell you that
the Calvinist believes that God made some
men just to damn them. There is no need
in asking a pffido-Baptist what a Baptist be
lieves, for he will lie apt to say that the
Baptist believes immersion to be positively
necessary to salvation. It is almost im
possible for one denomination of Christians,
without prejudice or misrepresentation, to
state the sentiment of an opjiosing sect. If
a man liates Presbyterians, and you ask him
what Presbyterians believe, he will tell you
that they believe that there are infants in
hell a span long.
It is strange also how individual churches
will sometimes make misstatements alxmt
other individual churches. It is especially
so in regard to falsehoods told with reference
to prosperous enterprises. As long as a
church is feeble, nnr. the singing is discord
ant, and the minister, through the poverty of
the church, must go with a threadbare coat,
and here and there a worshiper sits in the
end of a pew, having all the seat to himself,
religious sympathizers of other churches will
say, “What a pity!" But let a great day of
prosperity come, and oven ministers of the
gospel, who ought to he rejoiced at the large
ness and extent of the work, denounce and
misrepresent and falsify, starting the suspic
ion in regard to themselves that the reason
they do not like the corn is because it is not
ground in their own mill. How long before
weahall learn to be fair in our religious criti
cisms! The keenest jealousies on earth are
church jealousies. The field of Christian
work is so large that there is no need that
our hoe handles hit.
Next I speak of social lies. This evil makes
much of society insincere You know not
what to believe. When jieople ask you to
come you do not know whether or not they
want you to come. When they send their
regards you do not know whether it is au ex
pression of their heart or an external civil
ity Wc have learned to take almost every
thing at a discount. Word is sent “Not at
home," when they are only too lazy to dresa
themselves. They say, “Tho furnace has
Just gone out." when in truth they have had
no fire in it all winter. They apologize for
the unusual barrenuussof their table when
they never live any better. They decry their
most luxurious (utertaiunients to win a
shower of approval! They apologize for their
appearance, as though it wore unusual, when
always at home they look just so. They
would make you believe that some nice
sketch on the wall was the work of a master
painter. “It was an heirloom, and once
hung on the walls of a castle, and a duke
gave it to their grandfather." When the
tact is that painting was made oy a man
“down east,” and baked so os to make it
look old, and sold with others for ten dol
lars a dozen. People who will lie about
nothing else will lie about a picture. On a
small incume we must make the world be
lieve that we are aflluent, and our life be
comes a cheat, c counterfeit and a sham.
Few persons arc really natural. When I
say this 1 do not mean to slur cultured man
ners. It is right that we should have more
admiration for the sculptured marble than
for the unknown block of the quarry. From
many circles in life insincerity has driven
out vivacity and entbusiaem. A frozen dig
nity instead floats about the room, and ice
berg grinds against iceberg. You must not
laugh outright; it Is vulgar. You must
smile. You must not dash rapidly across
the room; you must glide. There is a round
of bows and grins and flatteries and ohsl
and nhs! an I simpering and nambypamby-
isin—a world of which is not worth one
good, round, henast peal of laughter. From
such a hollow round the tortured guest re-
I ires at the close of the evening and assure*
his host that he has enjoyed himself.
What a round of insincerity many people
run Inorder to win the favor of the worldl
Their life Is a sham and their death an un
speakable sadness. Alas for the poor butter
flies when the frost strikes them!
Compare the life and death of such a one
with that of some Christian aunt who was
once a blessing to your household. I do not
know that she was ever offered the hand in
marriage. 8be lived single, that untram-
msled she might be everybody’s biasing.
Whenever the sick were to be visited, or tb*
poor to be provided with bread, she went
with a blessing. She could pray, or sing
“Rock of Ages’’ for any sich pauper who
asked her. As she got older there were day*
when she was a little sharp, but for the most
port auntie was a sunbeam—just the one for
Christmas eve. She knew better than any
one else how to fix things. Her every prayer,
as God heard it, was full of everybody who
had tronble. The brightest things in all the
house dropped from her fingers. She bad
peculiar notions, but the grandest notion
she ever had was to make you happy. Sb*
dressed well—auntie always dressed Well|
but her highest adornment was that of a
meek and quiet spirit, which, in the sight at
God, is of great price. When she died yc
all gathered lovingly about her, and as yc
carried her out to rest the Suuday-scho ,
class almost covered the coffin with japoni-
cas, and the poor people stood at the end of
the alley, with their aprons to their eyes,
sobbing bitterly; and the man of the world
said, with Solomon, “Her price was above
rubies,” and Jesus, ns unto the maiden in
Judea c ommanded, “X say unto thee, arise 1"
But to many, through insincerity, this
life is a masquerade bal’. As at such en
tertainments gentlemen and ladies appear
in the dress of kings or queens, mountain
bandits or clowns, and at the close of the
dance throw off their disguises, so in this
dissipated life all unclean passions move
in mask. Acror, the floor they trip mer
rily. The lights sparkle along the wall of
drop from the ceiling—a cohort of Orel
The music charms. The diamonds glitter.
The feet bouud. Gemmed bands stretched
out clasped gemmed hands. Dancing feet
respond to dancing feet. Gleaming brow
bends to gleaming brow. On with the
dance! Flash and rustle and laughter and
immeasurable merry making! But the
langour of death comes over the limbs and
blurs the sight.
Lights lower! Floor hollow with sepuh
chral echo. Music saddens into a wail. Lights
lower 1 The maskers can hardly now be seed.
Flowers exchange their fragrance for a sick
ening odor, such as comes from garlands
thatnave lain in vaults of cemeteries. Lights
lower 1 Mists fill the room. Glasses rattle
as though shaken by sullen thunder. Sighs
eeem caught among the curtains. Scarf fall*
from the shoulder of lx>auty—a shrondl
Lights lower! Over tlie slippery boards, in
danoe of death, gli !e jealousies, disappoint
ment^ lust, despair^
Russia's Future Czar.
The eldest son of the Emperor of
Russia is called during the lifetime of
his father the Czarowitz, which means
simply “son of tho Czar.” The young
man who at present holds the title, the
Grand Duke Nicholas Alexandrovitch—
the latter name meaning “son of Alex
ander,” is now in his twenty-third year.
He has the tall figure and powerful
physique which have characterized all
the Romanoffs since that family mounted
the throne of Russia, but, as yet, little
is known of his personal qualities. Like
all European Princes, he has received a
niE czarowitz.
military training, and all his photo
graphs wero taken in uniform. That
from which the accompanying cut was
made was taken two years ago, when the
future Czar of all the Russians was more
boyish in appearance than at present.
On the day of his birth he was gazetted
Colonel of the Imperial Guard, and it is
said that he shows evidence of military
capacity. If this should turn out to be
true, it will bo a reversal of the family
traditions. The Romanoffs have always
shown bravery in the field, but Peter the
Great was the last of the family who
gave proof of ability to command an
army in face of the enemy. The present
Czar in the lifetime of his father held a
high command in the last Russo-Turkish
war and showed no disposition to shirk
either danger or privation, but as a
general he was a complete failure.
The Czarowitz is a nephew of the
Princess of Wales and of King George
of Greece. His mother, the Czarina, is
a daughter of King Christian IX of Den
mark and was married in 1866, four
years after the Prince of Wales had
wedded her sister. Her name up to her
marriage was Mary Sophia Frederica
Dagmar, but she was always spoken of
in public as the Princess Dagmar. Now
she Is called Mary Dagmar Feodorovna.
The young heir to tho Russian throne
has seen some stormy times in his short
life. As a child he was almost a wit
ness of the terrible dynamite explosion
which ended the life of his grandfather
end placed his father on the throne, and
more than once ho was near when at
tempts were made on the life of the pres
ent Czar, which, if successful, would
have made himself the autocrat, for •
time at least, of 80,000,000 of subjects.
—Chicago Pott.
WISE WOUi 5.
Stand behind the truth. -•*
No mau lives any higher that he looks.
Whenever you find a cross, die on it to
self.
Contentment is a full brother to hap.
pincss.
Be a worker 1 A loafer is never happy
anywhere.
The surest way to a man’s pocket is
through his heart.
The days are always too short for the
man who loves his work.
To have a big head and a small heart
is a very great misfortune.
Pray that you may not thiuk evil, and
then you will not speak it.
One of the saddest conditions in life is
to have nothing good to live for.
The man who looks at everything
through money can not see very far.
It is a great misfortune to be born so
that all the laugh has to stay inside of
you.
There arc. not many poor men who
would do a rich man's work for the pay
he gets.
The time to be pleasant and make it
count, is when everybody else is un
pleasant.
One way to drive the hoys to the bad
is to shut up the parlor and live in the
kitchen.
All that is needed to make a man hate
himself is for him to get a good square
look at himself.
One of the commonest of mistakes is
to look at people, through tho wrong end
of the telescope.
The greatest wrongs people commit
against each other are those of which
they are not conscious.
Every time tho soldier handles his
musket in drill it has something to do
with the way he will handle it iu battle.
There are people who would a good
deal rather be the whistle or the bell on
a steam engine tlinn to ho one of the
driving wheels.
When an engineer wants to stop an en
gine he doesn’t put a break ou the bal
ance wheel, bin. shuts off the power that
makes it run. When you want to quit
your meanness the work must begin on
tho inside.—TndianapoHt (M.) Pam's
Horn.
Indian Ideas of Future Life.
The Iroquois and Huron* believed in n
country for the souls of the dead, which
they called the “country of ancestors.”
This country lies to the west, from which
direction their traditions told them they
had migrated. Spirits must go thero
after death by a very long and painful
journey; climb many mountains and
cross many rivers; and, just aa the long-
sought haven appears in the distance,
the spirit must cross a long, narrow
bridge and fight with a monster dog
which stands guard at the west end.
Weak souls are not equal to this task,
and many of them are pushed over the
narrow edges of the bridge into the.rush
ing waters below, to be swept through
dark canyons and over immense preci
pices for ever. This road, according to
the ideas of the two tribes mentioned
above, h all on earth; but several of the
Indian tribes consider the light band
across ths heavens which the astronomers
call tho “Milky Way" to be the path of
the soul. The main body of the stars in
this milky path they suppose to be hu
man souls on their journey to heaven;
the smaller one to be the souls of dogs
and other pet animals which ate accom
panying their masters to the land ol
bliss. It is curious and interesting to
note that the British Columbian tribe of
the Shanakons have a soul belief which is
an almost exact counterpart of that cher
ished by the old Israelites. They be
lieve that every being has its double or
shadow, a thin, pale figure, seldom or
never seen by mortal eyes, which after
death descends to an abode beneath the
earth and there leads a sad and gloomy
existence. The Israelites called this
place Sheol; the Shanakons know it as
“Eotea.”
Some Arizona and old Mexican tribes
believe that the spirit is carried to the
moon by a coal-black, monkey-faced
owl; that upon arriving there it is met
by its thousands of ancestors, who come
with a long train of white donkeys; that
the spirit is then escorted to a large cav
ern in the centre of the moon, where joy
reigns supreme.—St. touit Pepublic.
Queen Yictoria’s Household.
It is not generally known, says a corre
spondent, that at the end of every year
the English Queen’s household expenses
are audited and chocked,and that copies
of them are printed with a view to
future reference. One of these having
fallen into my hands, I herewith append
• few facts and items which may interest
more humble people. The royal tea,
which is always bought at a quaint, old-
fashioned shop in Pall Mall,and has been
during her five predecessors’ reigns,
costs $1.35 per pound,and was for a long
time known as Earl Gray's mixture, be
having recommended the present blend
to Her Majesty. When she gives a
dinner, fish to the extent of $350 is
ordered, but for an ordinary dinner three
kinds of fish nre put on the table, whit
ing being almost invariably one of them.
A sirloin of beef is cooked every night,
and is put on the sideboard cold for the
next day’s lunch—the Queen seems, in
this instance, much like ourselves—and
the cheese, of which there are always six
or seven kinds, is invariably obtained
from one particular firm. The Queen
takes, after her dinner, one water biscuit
and one piece of cheddar; the Prince of
Wales eats a piece of gorgonzola with a
crust of household bread. The tea, as
well as the chees* and the royal bed,are in
variably taken with the Queen wherever
she goes. Her Majesty’s wine, which is
well known to he incomparable,is always
kept in the cellars of St. James Palace,
and is sent in basketfuls of three dozen
to wherever she may be, though this is
more for the guests and the household
than herself, as Her Majesty, when alone,
drinks very weak whisky and water with
her meals by the doctor’s orders. At
banquets, however, she takes two glasses
of burgundy. The clerk of the kitchen,
who always caives, receives $3500 per
annum, the chef the same, and the two
confectioners, who attend to all the
pastry, jellies, fruits, etc., get $1500
and $1350 respectively.—Boiton Tran
script.
Mighty Small Uut Mighty Expensive.
“What do you suppose is the most ex
pensive part of those incandescent elec
tric lamps which we see burning in that
shop window?’’ asked an electrician.
“You would naturally suppose it
would be the glass bulb, or perhaps tho
brass fittings for screwing it into tho
socket, but you would be wrong. Those
two little pieces of platinum wire,so fine
that you can hardly perceive them,which
pass through the glass stem up in the
base of the lamp, to which the fine car
bon filament is attached, enter more
greatly into the cost than any other part
of these now almost indispensable elec
tric lamps.’’
“Why don't they use some other metal
than platinum for this wire?”
“Because platinum is the only metal in
which the expansion and contraction are
the same as in glass, and a great fortune
awaits the man who can produce a cheap
metal or alloy in which this valuable
property of platinum can be preserved.
“The cost of platinum at the presetit
market price in London is $30 per ounce,
or about the same as gold, and the
amount used for this purpose alone has
grown to be enormous. This demand,
together with the increased cost of
production, has caused the price to ad
vance about 160 per cent, in eighteen
months. In each sixteen candle-power
lamp there are from four to eight grains
of platinum. If six grains are taken as
an average, one ounce will be used in
eighty lamps. Based on the increased
use of incandescent lights within the
last two years, it is safe to state that the
demand for sixteen-candle power lamps,
or their equivalent, in the year 1891 will
be 10,000,000. This means a demand
for 135,000 ounces of platinum, which,
at the present price, will amount to con
siderably over $3,000,000 for this item
alone.”—Washington Pott.
Hook* One Never Heard Of.
There is no doubt that there are hun
dreds of books in circulation to-day of
which the general literary public has
never heard books which have sold into
the hundreds of thousands and brought
their authors and publishers mints of
money. These books are sold by sub
scription and never penetrate into the
cities. They are sold to country families,
sometimes a hundred in a single small
village. Not long ago I came across the
list of a subscription publishing house
which ] rialed the number of copies sold
of the b >oks on their catalogue. Th*
figures were amazing. Of twenty-eight
books not one had sold less than 50,000
copies, and several had exceeded 300,-
000. Yet I had never heard of one of
tho titles to the bonks. I recall the
manuscript of a technical book on ma
chinery being handed in once into a large
publishing house. The firm declined it,
and it met the same fate at four other
houses. Finally the author sent it to a
large subscription house, and they
snapped at it. The publishers who had
resected the manuscript laughed. But
they lived to have the laugh turned on
them. I saw the author’s royalty state
ments on that hook about a year ago,
which showed a total sale of 70,000
copie* of that book in three years!—Ptvs
York Commercial Advertiser.
President Arthur was buried in Rural
Cemetery, Albany, N. Y.
Those who believe that Dr.
Sage’s Catarrh Remedy will
cure them are more liable
to get well than those who
don’t.
If you happen to be one of
those who don't believe, there’s
a matter of $500 to help your
faith. It’s for you if the mak
ers of Dr. Sage’s remedy can’t
cure you, no matter how bad
or of how long standing your
catarrh in the head may be.
The makers are the World’s
Dispensary Medical Associa
tion of Buffalo, N.Y. They’re
known to every newspaper
publisher and every druggist
in the land, and you can eas
ily ascertain that their word’s
as good ti3 their bond.
Begin right. The first stage
is to purify the system. You
don’t want to build on a wrong
foundation, when you’re build
ing for health. And don't
shock the stomach with harsh
treatment. Use the milder
means.
You wind your watch once
a day. Your liver and bowels
should act as regularly. If
they do not, use ez key.
The key is —Dr. Pierce’s
Pleasant Pellets. One a dose.
SCOTT’S
Of Pure God Liver Oil with
Hypophospiiites
Of Limo and Soda.
There nre emulsions and enmlstons,
and there is still much skimmed milk
which masquerades as cream. Try us
they will many manufacturers cannot
so flisffttise their cod Urer oil as to make
it palatable tn sensitire stomachs. Scott's
Emulsion of EVHE KOHWEGf AN COD
LIVEH OIL, combined with Hypophos-
phites is almost as palatable us milk.
For this reason as well as for the fact
of the stinmlutiny qualities of the Hyp6~
phosphites, Physicians frequently pro-
scribe it in cases of
CONSUMPTION,
SCROFULA, BIIOSCIIMT1S and
CHRONIC COUGH or SEVERE COLD.
All Druyyists sell it, but be, sure you yet
the genuine, us thi re arc poor imitations.
Unique Body of Troops.
France has in her territorial army a
unique body of troops for the protection
of her railways in war. Most of them
are men living near the eastern boundary
—among them 7000 forests and customs
officials—able to get in the field at a few
hours’ notice. Two weeks ago thia rail
way contingent was mobilized, so that
its efficiency might he tested. The mo
bilization was not very successful. Half
of the men could get no overcoats, be
cause there was none for them. The
Ministry of War is new planning a thor
ough overhaulihg of this service.—Bal
lon Transcript.
dole Survivor of a Famous Embassy.
Sir John Francis Davis, who died in
England recently in his ninety-fourth
year, was the sole stirvivor of Lord Am
herst’s famous embassy to Ohiua (during
the reign of George IV.) when the am
bassador and his colleagues were uncere
moniously hundtel out of Pekin because
they refused to prostrate themselves be
fore the Emperor, who expected them
to go tllfough the salute of “kootoo” as
a mark of profound respect for his
majesty’s person.—Pint York WUntii.
Indianapolis, Inff., wmsts or an abun
dant supply o! natural ga*.
There is more catarrh In this ritfton of the
country limn all other tllKeases put together,
and until the last few years was supposed to
he incurable. For a great many years doctors
pronounc ed it a local disease, and prescribed
local remedies, and by constantly failing to
euro with local treatment, Jtfobounced it in
curable. Science has proven cataffh to be a
constitutional disease, and therefore requires
constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure,
tnanufactured by F. J. Cheney 6t Co., Toledo,
Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the
market. It is taken internally in doses from
lodrops to a teaspoorrfitl. It acts directly upon
the blood and mucous surfaces of t.he system.
They offer $100 for any case it faiu to cure.
iSenu for circulars and testimonials. Address
F. J. Cheney Ac Co., Toledo, O.
.Sold br Druggists, 75c.
Bridle the appetite with reason and sav
the stomach.
For Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Stomach
disorders, use Brown’s Iron Bitters. The Beet
Tonic, it rebuilds the system, cleans the Blood
and strengthens the muscles. A splendid ton
ic for weak and debilitated persona.
To change the name and not the letter
hnuge for worse and not for better.
A Girl Worth Haring.
After hearing Mr. Gray’s experience in the
plating business, 1 sent to the Lake Electric
Co Englewood, III., for a plater, and cleared
in a week. Isn’t this pretty g«*od for a girl/
There is tableware and jewelry to plate at
every house; then, why should any person be
poor or out of employment with sueh an op
portunity at hand. A SmisCMBEH.
Live leisurely unless you are anxious
iio in a hurry.
For impure or thin Blood, Weakness, Mala
ria, Neuralgia. Indigestion and Biliousness,
take Brown’s Iron Bitters—it gives strength,
making old persons feel young—and young
persons strong; pleasant to take.
rdjndav is the favorite wedding day h
d England.
FITS stopped free by DrT Klinb*s Gbbat
Nerve Ukstoueh. No Fits after first di
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and 22 tl
bottle free. Dr. Kline. Arch Jit.. Phi
If artbete 1 with sore eyes use Dr. I nom
son’s Eye wat' , r. Druggist sell at *35o pertw tl*
- JJ, ' ' - 1 .'g-a.-J-a l.Lii!g»
„ s’ Friend
WRTfl&LflBOh
'lesseemw
tending ft \
mm^ 0
Mother^Cb/ld.
II c. x ci: - ?
-q !«•
g g |
n £ 3 Z. *4.
I B S’!•■*'-J? ®
■y,
* p.?. 2 i —* --
WORTH ITS WEIGHT IN GOLD.
If a price can be placed on pain," Mother'* Friend” Is worth Its we.^l.t Ir
Bold. My wife suffered more In ten minutes with either of her other tw '
children than she did altogether with her last, having previously used tour
bottles of “Mother's Friend.” It I* a blessing to «ny one expecting to be
come a mother. Qeo. F. Lockwood, Carml, hi.
Write 'llio liiailfield regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga., for particulars Sent bj express, cliai t'-j
paid, on receipt of price, $1.60 per bottle. Sold by druggists.
This Picture, Panel size, mailed for 4 oentA
J. F. SMITH A CO.,
Makers of “ Bile Beans,''
159 4 257 Gmawieb St.. N. Y. City.
OUWE Biliousness,
Sick Headache,
Malaria.
BILE BEANS.
pEECHAM'g
^PAINLESS. ILSLa^ EFFECTUAL"
PILLS
effectual
EW* WORTH A GUINEA A BOX.'MS
For BILIOUS & NERVOUS DISORDERS 7
Sick Headache, Weak Stomach, Impaired
Digestion, Constipation, Disordered Liver, etc,,
ACTING LIKE MAGIC on the vital organs, strengthening .the
muscular system, and arousing with the rosebud of health
The Whole Physical Energy of the Human Frame.
Beeoham’s Pills, taken as directed, will quickly RESTORE
FEMALES to complete health.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
Price, 25 cents per Box.
Prepared only by TH0S. BEECHAM, St Helens, Lancashire, England.
B. P. ALLEN CO., Sole Agents for United States, 3(Ui A 307 Canal St., Nett
York, who (if your druggist does not keep them) tvill mall Beechnut's Fills on
receipt ofpriei—but inquire first. Ji**?” 1 **” 1 i! 1 ** PWu
99
“German
Syrup
We have selected two or
Croup, three lines from letters
freshly received from pa
rents who have given German Syrup
to their children in the emergencies
of Croup. You will credit these,
because they come from good, sub
stantial people, happy in finding
what so many families lack—a med
icine containing no evil drug, which
mother can administer with con
fidence to the little ones iu theif
most critical hours, safe and sure
that it will carry them through.
Bp. L. Willits, of Mrs. Jas.W. Kirk,
Alma, Neb. I give it Daughters' College,
to my children when Hatrodsbiirg. Ky. I
troubled with Croup have depended upon
and never saw any it in attacks of Croup
preparation act like with my little daugh-
It. It is simply mi- ter, and find it an in-
rmculous. valuable remedy.
Fully one-half of our customers
•re mothers who use Boschee’s Ger
man Syrup among their children.
A medicine lobe successful with the
little folks must be a treatment for
the suddeu and terrible foes of child
hood, whoopingcougli, croup, diph
theria and the dangerous iullamma-
tions of delicate throats aud lungs. ®
Kl-Y’S CBtfAM BALM
Applied Into Nostrils la Quickly I
▲morbed, Cleaunee the Head, 1
Heal* tiie Sores and Cures
CATARRH.
Restores Taste and Smnll, quick
ly Relieves Cold In Head and
Headache. 60c. at Druggists.
ELY DROa., 66 Warren St., N. T.
POIITIYBLY BEMKUIKD .
Grcely rant Stretcher
Harvard, Amherst, and othe.
_. provisional and business men every
where. If not for sale In your town send Jl.Vc- to
K. J. (JUKELY, 71A Washington fluet l, Huston-
WANTED- Local and Traveling Salesmen. Sal-
it urv $50 to $.100 per month. Outfit free. Busi
ness established :»5years. We give undoubted refer
ences. Send stamps for particulars. No postals
answered. MttttCBtt & COw Louisville, Ky.
Sfl AUCI I 9C Suspensory Bandages are best
rLRVCLL u for comfort. S >ld bu Drogitists.
Price, SILK Til HEAD -TO Ceuls.
Sent Sealed h* mau. upon receipt of price.
G. W. I lavei.i. & Bbo., S. y Street.
riitladclphl •. Pa.
PEBSIOHSSgj
titled to $ 10 a mo. 110 w'sen you got your rnonsv
, Aftr-WmAImUb. D. t.
$t|Ks£ 5s
^ ,• #
OiKHS KiSTjOYS
Both the method and result* when
Byrupof Figsistaken; it ispleswaafc
and refreshing to the taste, and act*
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys^
Liver and Bowels, cleanses Ibesya-
tern effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers nnd cures habitual
Constipation. Syrup of Figs is th»
only remedy of its kind ever pro-
dueed, pleasing to the taste ana ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action n.nd truly beneficial m its
elfccts, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances;
its many excellent qualities com
mend it to all and have made it
the most popular remedy known. >
Syrup of Figs is lor sale in 608
and it:, bolties by all leadingdrug-
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it ou hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do net scccpA
Bnysubstifiito. i
CALIFORNIA f/0 SYRUP COi
SA" MANCI5C0, CM,
Ufwsmie, ky rf if yobk, n r.
TRINITY E0LLS55new building**,
September I, 1891.
A College of Philosophy and A fU, A College of Cow*
merce: A College of the ScWfMtej; A Divinity
School; A School of Technology; School; A*
School of Political Science; A Aiedicat •‘'vhwoL
Send for catalogue to
JOHN K GKO WELL, A. B., President,
Trinity LoHeije F. V., N. C.
Trinity nigh School (Preparatory) iu Kaodolptf
•touniy, opcu August 1.
IHiDYi
■lot Coughs. Colds and Ccnramptlon. lt$*?ondI-
• querllon the greatest ol all modern remedies. ?
• II wills'.opa Cough inone night. Itwlllcheek£
• aColdlnadny. It »lll prs»entCroo(r, rollovof
{Asthma, and CURE Consumption It (ah*. In-
Itire. IF THS LITTLE ONES HAVE f
WH0QPIKG COUCH J
OR t
GROUP !
UsdiPiaapUT.:
*_>IT WILL cun:
AC, ©WHEN EVERY-*
thine ELSE;
-iT* J^IioFAILS.
S ’ can’t afford to*
• l * / be without B.”!
■ A 25c. bottle may save SICO In Doctor’s b[|li2
S—may save theif fives. ASK YOUR ORUG-j
-GIST FOR IT. IT TASTES 00004
TURNER'S
ANTI-BiUOUS PELLS I
ure Biliousm
low Ski!', D.v
A trial « ul piov,
—
Til K Tl.UNfclf
•;i, Sick IlcadttCbi^*
FJiitnleuce, HeorttMUTL
Price, "j ecu!?*.
•> S- t; Hi., York.-
MONEY INCIIICIiKN!*,
I or 2be. a lu>-pa a o bt»ok, exptnenoe?
ut a yradical poultry rawer durtofc
..ward, it teaches now to detent
; u,l cure diseases; u» 1 oed lot egg»
and tor latteuing; witici* K>wUtt>
•avefor breed mg, *•■.. Ac. Addre**
HUUK PUB. MOLSC, Leonard M., N. Y. City.
mm
are Coining Money
... February. I.artlra «l« «s well hh men. Royal
Kditlonof tlie IVet lesP Alia*of the \N urld, ha« »ara#
mapH in colors. Accurate loc«tionof towns,cities,r«tN
roads.etc. Census of 181)0. Everrhudy wantslt. bells <?»
aight A tfcntHflcar lOOporct*
IAST, CROW ELL & KIRIPITRICI. 927 Cheauui W-PkldehtoaH.
PROF. LOISF.TTE’3 HEW
MEMORY BOOKS.
Criticisms on two recent Memory Systems. ItoadT
about April IhL Full Table* of Contents forwarded
only to tboKF who send stamped directed envelope.
Also Prospoctu.* POST FREE of the I/?bettUHD Art
of Never Forgetting. Address w
Prof. LOIS KITE, 2J7 ,r«fth Are.. New YerlL
ROOFlNC
EVF.KY MAN IIIS OWN KOOFEK.
Two an 1 Three Ply Roofing, suitable for all roofs,
il i ory than other material and twice as dur-
itblc I-ire. Witi-i ami Water Proof, rattirbio for all
climates, and «..u >v> by any one. I
Catalogue with ininplcs oi . bifttot a-iw-l
n| !( jownn pMm r. I nlnts, sent on r*»|Uesf.
2 p"It w ii i. i‘at no!. - to w uith is.
JOHN AlOJITAliE. Kit Yg»
Every Farmeriiis own Rosier
CHEAPER than Shiiiqtei, Tin or Slate.
Reduces Y’dir INSURANCE-, and PcrfeeUy
Fire, Water and Wind Proof.
-tSTEELRDDrJHGl
CORRUGATED 4
// C l SEND FOFf I
tUaksfrao. JOStTBJLMUllTBIkJ
Our Roofing is ready formed for the Building',,
nnd can uo applied by any one. Do not buy
anv Hoofing tilt '"h write tons for our Descrip
live Catalan" sene’ U. AUFNTM WANTED.
-VASELINE-
FOK AON K-IXtl.LA tt llll.l.aentu, by m^f
we will delivt r, ireo oi all charges, to any person t»
the United Stales, all oi iuj (uilovviuj arctutej, oar**
fully packo »:
One two-ounco bottle of Pure Vaseline, - • Ifi'tJ.
One two-ounce bottlo of \ .useline I’oin.ule, • 15**
One Jar of Vaseline Cold Cream, 15'
One coke of Vaseline Camphor ice, • • - 1>
One Cake of Vase 1 mo soap, uiiacente l, - - l‘>'
OueCakeof Vaseuno Soap, cxquIsiielysceatod/Ak'
One two-ounce bottio of \\ idly Vusetiue, - *
*bl»
Or for rfStaq* sf/vnov r. *$v »«nrfli** at /;o; yri?»
named, tht no account >> • ,•».*/-»to aooapt Iro’n
your<lrugg\M am/ I'anelincoryreituratijn therefrom
unless labelled with our name, beo iuis i/ou loill oea
lainly receive an imitation which ha* little or no coins
CbeMubi'ouuU .Ulk. Cu.. Ai State St.. N. Y.
H ave You a Cough ?
Have You a Cold?
Or Consumption?
Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of
Sweet Gum and Mullein
WILL CURE YOU!
ycur Druggist or Morohsnt for It. Take nothing else.