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About The Daily journal. (Salem, Or.) 1899-1903 | View Entire Issue (July 26, 1902)
-W-JSf "WHI" U1 f ' " LJgTgSj SiMBAwmi UfIMM KKJ3B ?i s? K jt '. SV r?v iatfyUUllW r ' TAfa Big A bar of Diamond "C" laundry soap is 4 4 inches long;2J4 Inches wldo and U( inches hitch. It costs a little more or n little less than five cents a bar doponds upon market condition and tho cost of the tallow used In Its manufacture. A bar of Diamond V Is enough for a week's washing for a family of fivo. 8AVB UIAMOXp "C" WKArPEIIS-We rfdown tliemfor ll orln of nful ftnl ttrrtlTe rtll Iliiirti wlt bowinz over J00 premium given for wrpir wnt on re yum A potl -will lrlnit It Premium Depb, The Cudahy Packing Co., So. Omaha, Neb. tnHlilHillllllllUIIIIIIIHI ...CHICAGO PEOPLE'S BARGAIN HOUSE. 1 Reckless Slaughter offor odd lots, odds and ends andromnnnls Also odd numbers In hos iery and underwear at sacrluco prices. Out they have to no, o be In time if you want your sharo. Head on 75c calico wrappore JlBc .16c corset covers, bartcain . . . 10c J.adlos' T2 00 whito skirts beaU tleS .............. fl'-" $l.r0 tnffotn clllc waist 2 CO 8J$o embroldory 2 In wldo. . . ..'Ic ijita twilled crash towolllug ..3Jtfo Ladles' lPo stockings 4c 05o whits bod spreads .OCc Ladlos' 20c fast black stockinet Mo Children's 15c fast black hoao..lOc l()o suinmor underwear ....... .Bo 20o summer underwear 1-,'vC Men's Bo aox 4c AlcEVOY BROS., court street. 44 I IIIIIDIIIIIHnil WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Koclie Harbor Llmo. Host brands Portland Comont. WOOD; sawed or full length, All kinds ol building material, tnnil, K'avol, lath, hIiIiikIh, olo. D. S. BBNTLBY 181-183 Oom'l Ht. A Juicy Morsel for Breakfast Or dinner you can enjoy from ono of our tendor and delicious meats, steaks, lacib or mutton chops, voal cutlets or pork, Our meats aro all cut from tho fattest and nrimostcattlc, and we can supply your table with (rosh, nutritious and wholosomo moats at bod rock prices. E C, CROSS SALEM OPB Phon 201 Gambrinas AND good isTirmsaEacaEa-r Everybody is welcome at THE NOBLB ALEX CORNOYER TODAY OREGON Harritt & Lacdrencb Old Post Ofilee Grocery. Monday, Tuesday . Wednesday, Thursday Four moj&iday.s in which to buy anything in our carpet stock at ; 20 Per Cent Discount The House Furnishing Co. 30 Oqiu'I it., uext to Post attlco. Bterco st Rlm and Albany s TET El STORE... i Of prices for Krldny and Haturdny only. For tliuBo two ilnya wo will inn wniio ii pk men inwomiK..vii l'JJtfc dotted swiss. yd . . . . 7&c 12WeIlnencoloredapnliiiioytl7Jc 'Mo sailor hats, host " Uhlldron's 25c sailor hats . . 15c .164 beat suiihonnetR lo Ohlldren's ft made np dresses 4Ui' He Hwlss caps 5e Ohildr en's 3Uo overalls IDs Men's 45c Balbrlggan undorw'r 'iHc Men's :()c neckties lfic Men's 2ic fliisputiders 15c IBo crash hop gloves 5c 6 Valenciennes lsco '-'o 200 yard spool thread '-' Proprietors. Salem, Oreeon IHIIIHHII 1 1 H4-4- 1'hoiio lilll Main Cor. Htato and Commercial 'Phone, Main HI. STRAWBERRIES GREEN PEAS CABBAGE At Easter Time is when the building hustafM wIM ta in lull twiuK. If yHi ttavtw't jtfven vr orders for your lumlkir re)ulwwt l will pay yH to get )t4matej lrm Uoodattf I.Nmltfr On., fw sty and all ktudi w luiMlMr (or out ur IhMv work lath, shiagk, msIi, doors, bllod an evrytWB eiW in Utt lit. Goodale Lumber Co. Nr 8. P. IWr. dpot, Pltooa Ml 1 by Sj"' Beer THB THE DAILY Members Northwest Afternoon News paper Leafjue. BY HOFER BROTHERS. Dally One Year, $4.00 In Advance. Dally Three Months, $1.00 In Advance. Dally by Carrier, 50 Cents Per Month. Weekly One Year, $1.00 In Avance. AN HISTORIC REVIEW. Last December The Journal began a'fltntltiK the proposition to put all state ofllelalB on a Hat salary, and have tho feos and earnings of each office placed directly In the state treasury. Many of the newspaper and public men of the state took up tho matter for discussion, and hundreds of able drtlcliM and communications were written on the subject. The county conventions In Match and April of - all parties adopted row)- lotions demanding tho enactment of this reform, and candidates for the legislature ttxprewicd tliamstdVfB In favor of It. No ono opposed it. Tim Journol nddroMori letters to the candidate for governor, and all the prominent aspirants for nomina tion, except Mr. Furnish warmly de clared for this reform, and promised, if nominated, to stump for It. Without ever personally Hollcltins; a single ilolegato to favor Hat solar lea In the state platform of a single party, all three political organizations pledged themselves in favor of this reform In the clearest nnd most ex plicit language. The one state candiduto who would not go on record no favorable to Hat salarios. cm the merits of the ques tion, was defeated. That Is tho whole history of this mntter up to the pros nut writing. o- THE GREATNESS OF HAMILTON. Oertriule Athorlon's new book, "The Conqueror." Is a remantic: biography of Alexander Hamilton, tho wonderful conservative, constructive genius of the constitution, as Jefferson was Its prehistoric draughtsman. In tier volume Is laid hare the urn-rot InllueuceH thnt made Hamilton. How his 111 st teacher was a Juwohh, his Hist recitation the decnlog in Hebrew, and how ail his surrounding wete aristocratic Is fully told. The author refers to his us "the most popular name In our annals." This may be, excusable In the Idolatry of hoioworshlp, hut it will not Htand In the cold light of history nor of present-day fact. In his day and until .Ineltson came mi the stage, Jefferson completely eclipsed Hamilton. In numerical pop ularity It Is doubtful If he Is romum liered with tho horn of New Orleans. Hut he and mnny other groat and able stutosmon suffered n moat ruin cms obscuration when Lincoln roso above the hnrlxoii, and became of a truth (he giontest. name in our an mils. Today Lincoln and Jefferson are mimed a thousand times to that oi Hamilton once, and more frequently than that of Washington. TRACY LITERATURE. It Is a safe gamble that ulno-toutlis of the newspaper stuff about the out law Tiacy was manufactured. It Is possible that he was playing the Washington o Ulcers with decoys, while he was far away. It Is certain the storv about Impn slug a farmer to shave him was man ufactured by a utMHHr reporter who was on n fals scout fur a week, but was under contract to deliver so much Tracy stuff per day. While rival rvpoitew were hand ing lu copy from an opposite direction he was dally pouring lu hot ami thrill lug account of what Tracy was doing, where he took his lust meul, and how he terrorised the family to get It. The paper he was on printed his re ports for svml days, only to rind all the other paitera aRreed on a different t'kiM of yarns. Then there was hot Imste to iet that you nit man Into telo phiiuluft distance. Hla report were hi or readable, and Just us reliable as ma that were printed dully by the greet metroKlltu prww of the largn cities. Tracy liter al ur ptovea that the world loves the MiiHrhitHtett tale an much as ever o SOUTHERN OREGON EDUCA CTIONAL FIELD. Im the iiUMleet umouut asked by the Southern Oregoit Normal School, that Institution, at Ashland, occupies a vast Meld. It has received ten or twelve thou mud dollars at tfae last to bleuuial OMluMa, and for this small sum it fur uUfce teachere to a lame part of Ore gou,' and similar Institution In the stale. Over oito-tuinl of the state Is dl rerlly tributary to that school, and It tea been doing excellent work Ua faculty la wade up entirely of joung and vlgurotw wen and women, who lwitiat enthusiasm in the work. Aakland Is an education! city It oeoole support a Onautaaqu. The uky usftlMniM u high school. It has a large element of eathiulMMlc friends at education, and a splendid climate and scenery. Then thing give the Aahiaud nor WNl a eeortt thnt enable It to turn out the wry boat teacher. This Is roruuMue toe thnt large eectlon of connirj dependent locally upon it WOfK. The new provide. Stute Senator B r. jiumej. w rwa county, is a man known all over the stale, and he Ic IMUlMg hin beet ettgrflmi ami the beet year of km lite into the ujtbulldinx of the school In every wiiy. J o . I .ow, air. Tracy U cottapteuoua only his absence. JOURNAL DAILY JOURNAL, 6ALEM, ORB66N) PAY THE REWARD (Coast Mall.) I fha net Inn of the authorities at I Salem Iti refusing to pay the reward ,. r Morrill'a body, has tnr tho return of Merrill's body, has stirred up somo talk of abandoning thi chase after Tracy. This Is not to bo wondered at. If the State of Oregon sets a precedent of ponurlous quibbling over tho paymont of the offered reward and sneaks out of It on a technicality, It will have a de- moralizing effect on any orrorts to catiture escaped criminals. fim rwnnl was offereu tor me capture and return of tho outlaw, allvo or dead. Tho woman has returned tho outlaw, dead. Tho fact that the woman did not kill him hersolf 1b no good reason why she shouldn't got the reward. It Is all the same to the snt of Orneon. True, the woman found the body accidentally. A man might run across Tracy accidentally. If he then effected his capture, would the state refuse to pay the reward? Supposing Tracy finds hla capture Inevitable and commits sulcfdo. Will his Diirsuors be euchred out of the rewaid becauso they only find his dead body? Tracy's body, stil lwarm, would be of no more practical valuo to the State of Orogon than Merrill's body partly decomposed. As the Mall has remarked, if some of the pet Portland detectives had found the body there would have been no thought of refusing tho reward on a technicality. No one Is going to got out and hunt outlaws for his health, for It Isn't a healthy occupation; unless ins love of excitement bo abnormally uovci- oped, he won't do It for fun. In such cases, rewards should be paid In spite of technicalities. This net on tho part of Supt. Lee-, In refusing to pay tho reward does not redound to tho credit of the state and .. Is to bo hoped that (lovornor Oeer will order tho reward paid to tho wo man at once, and assure the authori ties who are after Tracy, that there will be no quibbling In paying tho re wind for his capture. It would do no harm to go ono better nnd add another $1000 to tho standing reward. Such action, as refusing to pay the reward, can hnvo none but n demor alizing effect upon those now on tho verge of cnptuilng Tracy. Human society demnnds thnt such an honora ble debt ho paid without parsimony. The penurious Idea lingering In men who hold trusted positions Is abomin able especially when tho demoralizing effect on society Is taken Into con sideration. It can but ndd mote Tiacys to the already large army of outlaws. ON A PAR WITH FOREIGN LA BORERS. President Mltchel, of the United Mine Workers lu his address to the public says: "Tho total number of persons em ployed lu nnd around the anthracite1 coal milieu Is 117.500; they are em ployed never to oxcoed 200 days lu any ono year, and they receive as compen sation for their services an average of $1.1 for a ten-hour work day. It will thus bo noted that they earn annually lees than $300. Such pny may supply a living on a par with somo classes of Uuropean laborers, but who will say It Is sulllclent to support American cltlxenshlp or to enable parents to wducato and maintain their families? True It is that a 10 per cent increase In wages was granted by the coal op erators as a strike concession two years ntw. hut It Is also true that a large proixiitlou of this 10 per cent was paid hack to the coinKUiles to buy tho suppression of uu old powder grievance. Moreover, according to reliable commercial agencies, the cost of living has Increased, particularly in tho purchase of food stuffs, from SO to 10 per cent, so that the purchasing uower of a minor's earnings is less than before the strike of 1900. o Christianity In India. A return has Just been issued by the Indian census commissioner deal ing with the number, race, denomina tions and distribution of the Chris tians In India. In the census of 1901 he total numtwr of Christian re turned was J.ttia.Stl. of whom l.all.Bv were male and 1.4UJO0 females. According to the census of IS01. the Christians numbered 2.2SI. aSfL so that there bus been un Increase during the decade of tf.1S.8tJS, or alauit IS Hr cent., a growth much greater than that of the general population, say the London Times. Out of the total for 1901. IkJ.TSD belonged to llHroueau and allied race, while SI.I&l were Ifiuraslans and ItkSl.Uu were native. Tkeie were only a trivial increase in the number of Ku ropeau Christ Jau during the decen nial period, and the increase in Hu raalan were ouly about i iter cent. Native Christians, however, showed an Increase of no lens than 11 ter cent. Keutlvely to the whole impu tation of India, the Christian popula tion la only 1 per oent. Under favor ble conditions the annual Incremeut of the Indian population equal the whole number of the Christian in the country. While the llrltUh provinces contain nearly four-hfth of the total population, they contain lees than two-thirds of tho total Christiana. The stronghold of ChrfaHiaaUy In In dia. It appear. I Madras, Including the native state under the Madras government. Thw nreehloury In eludste l.Mi.tio. or nearly two-third of the CbrinUMitti ef India, and of the total increaee oMSSJ In the last ten ywuv Ml.eVl ntHt bo assiKned UMrtta o . Of emtree our Of eonree our Salow mlwairea are not wearing Panama bat. They cannot afford those luxurlo. IAtURpAV, JULV fr, My "WHAT IS THE USE nf H,irr.rlntt from Indigestion if you cat Vhat you wont ..or of BtonrtaB your- self to avoid such distress? Ackers Dyspepsia Tablets taken after eating will digest your food perfectly, and free you from all tho dlsagreeablo symptoms of Indigestion ond dyspep sia. Eat what you like at auy time, and take an Acker tablet afterward. Positively guaranteed. Your money will nlwaya bo refunded if you aro not sat isfied. Write to ua for a free sample. W. H. Hooker & Co., nunaio, a. i. JOURNAL X-RAY3. Perhaps they'll catch him somo time honcc. And then perhaps they won't. For no ono yet seems equal to Young Mr. Tracy's stunt, So lot us nelthor shod salt tears Nor fret, nor growl nor chafe; Hut rather give our praorful thanks Hecause the posse's safe. Mart Sloan semis The Journal a beautiful poem. Who Is Matt Sloan? A woman should bo so wlso that she does not bollevo all her husband tells her. ond so clover that she never lets him know It, Hoth prizefighters In California arc confident of victory, so it is certain that tho confidence of some one will be shattered this week. While John I'icrpont Morgan re mains In Germany there will remain a great doubt as to whether he or tho emperor Is the bigger man. The paste-pot and shears, When used with Judgment good Fill up much vacant space, And furnish mental food. And there Is Poitland. preparing to spend $2500 on pamphlets to send ICast. When Portland wakes up It Is tlmo for every other town in Oregon to rub its oyos. Kiigono dunnl. Mary Machine, tho Unite, Montana, freak authoress of a freak hook, hns received numerous proposals of mar rlagos. Always find a few fools when there Is a freak around. N. Y. Sun. m A Massachusetts glil had her own way and wont up In a boloon against the wishes of her people. She camo down with two arms, two legs, hor collar-uono and Jaw bono broken. That's all. The Hat salary edition of the Salem Journal Is attracting considerable at tention. We notlco two or three of them pasted up whore people can rond them. We shall see whether tho He publlcans carry out their platfoim pledges. Ilalnler (laette. It will require Ingenious leasoulng to refuse tho $1500 reward for Mer rill's body, dead or alive, to the woman who has gone to Salem to claim the money. He certainly Is dead, and It was not nominated In the bond that the taker of tho reward was himself or herself to do tho killing. Portland Journal. o Statement of Flat Salaries. (Dayton Horald, Hop.) The Daily Journal of Salem. Sat urday, July 5th, in nu article on Hat salaries to state otllcers und tho sav ing to people of the state by paying ottlcluls a stated salary, gives these tlgures and the possible savings under Hat salaries: Executive, present ex pense $0,950, Hat salary $5800, saving $1150. Secretary of stato, present expeii80$22,3fi(l, Hat salary $9800, sav ing $12,552. Treasurer $9712. Hat sal ary $0900, saving $2312. School Su peilntendent $7827. Hat salary $1800. saving $3027. State Printer $15,989. Hat salary $l7,S0o. saving $28.1S9. Total present expense $92.83u, Hat salary $11,800. saving $1S,030. The following Items aro given on Hat sal ary expenses: Oovornor's salary. $1000. private secretary $1200, stenog rapher $(W0, total $5500. Secretaiy of State $1000 three clerks $270o, auditing clerk $2500, stenographer $000; total $9800. Treasurer $4000, clerical aid $1100; total $0900. Su IHtrintondent of Schools $jooo. cleri cal aid $1SOO; total $1SOO. State Printer $8600. annual expense of printing on commercial ImisIs. wime as biudlng Is now done. 915.000. Total estimate for live state oillcers on Hat salaries $11,800. The two political parties Republican and Democrat in their 1902 platforms demand that offlelals be paid a reasonable salary, and that no fees he allowed them The expression of the general public la pay state and all public otWcers a stated salary and allow no", fees. Predlets a Shortage. According to government report the wheat crop will be short Mar kets continue to tdtow no uaHh-i.i, change, from a local standpoint the absence of any export butine of mo weni anu the winding up of the oal year detracting from interest in the situation, says the Weet Coast Trade There was a certain amount of strength developed in ibMn, g,,. laUve cntr on the baals of a w harvest and reported foreign crop shortage, which were redected in W cent better prieos by exporters who now quote W cenu for clab and tfc fw bluo-Uem. but the prlncl Ule course of apot bneinees Is oa mm. Iub aeeount The bulk of blueetem suitable for mliNng U wU cleaned uu Uroughout the Padic Northwest, and a heavy premium baa been exacted irum ia mim wnien seek to pick Up a supply sufficient to keep them la operation until tho new crop u har, vested and available. All sort of SS- i zZZZIm upt0 700720 at the ,W Dascd upon the go BiproxI- report, Indicating a yield or an Scly 350.000.000 bsh lnterionti Era r7 xz iss irr ,,,,a, n inst season fl ouipui returns on las stu onCi Still the yiom " 0 nd with corn am oa nearly norma, me- r---!: .itirlnc the season i-"n i nnlMB foreign shortages should no reasons to nniic-u...". ,,n,1101i "o fairly satisfactory figures obtained 1 ... -I- 10111 from tho crop m ' Grain Sacks and Twine, f Kugeiie Ouard.) PlEht cents a piece for sacks' Tds is the price the farmers are ... ... ...... fur sucks In which compeno. o - --. nJ)1 lmrlcy to nut Uien ii""- , , 10 ' . ,. .,. i.ivi,t. flauro asked crops, ami ; ; - nra Thc for them for "" '""" . price started nt seven cents a few Ucks go and Immediately after to Immense crops an over -"""" .. .., ,ivntippd to eight cents. tnc price n " , The farmers have to have mcU cut tho number consumed ei - cut the number consume w Six cents Is a good price for grain bags. In fact they have sold for less and thc dealers were making a good piollt from them. ..,-.u.... ,...,. Ima nlso advanced to DIUIIIUK V""i' "- . fifteen cents a pound which Is the . . i i.. ti.tu niin. highest It has ever neen try. Dufur Dispatch. We frequently hoar the term "rub ber neck" used, but how many have n .ifini,. iiniinrstutidltiK of Its meaning? Not many, certainly. For tho benefit of any who may be In need or n tien Mm, wp will suv that a "rubber nek" Is anybody who Is trying to get next to somebody's affairs. A woman Hint keens looking out of the window to see what her next door neighbor is doing Is a "rubber neck." Hnvo you over seen a man trying to read u letter over another mnn's shoulder? A good place to witness such n scene Is at the postolllce whon the mall Is being dlsti United. Well, such a fel low is n rubber neck. He's stretching his neck lo get Into something that's none of his business. Those gawks that hang around church and opera house doors, to see who goes with this young lady, or If that girl has a beau, aro ever present specimens of tho creature. How about tho "tele phone rubber neck?" The party who. every time the boll rings, grabs tho rocolver to learn what their uelghbois are talking about. Has Dufur any? Oh no! Just twist the crank on your 'phono a time or two and find out. "Rithlior neck" thy abiding place Is on tho Dufur 'phone. A Great Coffee Crisis. Tnconm News.) Among the subjects which were dis cussed at the Pnn-Amorican congress, hold at the City of Mexico, last winter, was the production of coffee, one of th most Important products of l.atln America, and. Indeed, of the Western hemisphere. The congress appointed You Can Escape From Trouble Hy takfi.tr your linen and colored ehirts, fancy veslf, duck or linen troueere to a first-class laundry, where tatislsclion Is guaranteed, We launder your ehirts, collar?, cuff', "klrts and curtains, ami alro ladles' Miirt waista, in a manner that defies competition by anyotner laundry In Orf son. Try our work on your Summer garments and it will save you from faying cus words. Salem Steam Laundry COIONXLJ 0LM8TKD, PB0PHIETOR. DO nOUS D. OLHSTRD, MOD p"one 111 2W Liberty Rtreet The Fountain of Youth" And vigor that has been touiiht for to eagerly could be found in Salem beer. The best way to lemaln young is to keep up your coti'titutional strength with a good, pure and invigorating beer like that brewed by the Capital Bew ery. Io hot weather it is both food and drink, and is slvmi palatable. Capital Brewery Co. Mrs. M. Beck, Proprietor. mi in 1 1 1 ,-miH-f ournal Voting Contest jj CJ FOR The Most Deserving: and Popular Young Lady in Salem. wtrri,ini!i,'pivfl,9wi11 bB K,ve ,,ee "d uoket to - Hotel with owl:, beanl a"d ,rue Wn.6nt at the Bay View ; ; Bturd.y, ABgu loq,. rm .mtrmPanyiD8eOUp0nwl,,berecettl.i8oQke. and re- t "ii oj ballot aaiKHinced from d,B ,... T - ' w u JOURNAL VOTING COUPON Vote for Miss. for one week's free . August 16th. i..i,, rr the study of tho pro Suction, distribution and consumption coffee, which will meet in tho city Noi York on next October. Tho ommlsslon consists of delegates rep rolentlng various American conn- Ile8 who have technical or expert Knowledge regarding tho coffee Indus- rv and who aro believed to becompo- tent to study the causey that hnvo pro- .lured the crisis through which this iatrv Is nasBlnK. nnd to pro- I pose p.actkal means of preventing ,r dlmlnlsiiing ii. just what the "coffee crisis" 1b will probably Ho news to most of tho con lumen of the precious berry In the United States. At tho congress In the City of Mexico last winter. It wna de clared that almost all the republic.) of I ntln Ameilca were suffering severely In their commercial rolntloiiR, as a con sequence of the "coffee crisis." Flf toon of thc American republics pro duco coffee, nnd tho other four con unie It. There has been a fulling off In the price of coffee, which has dimln iHbed considerably the revenues of some of the Ameilcnn countrloH, and It Is said that the c ause of somo of the revolutions which have recently uf dieted several of the states of Central and South' America tuny be attributed to the decline In the price of coffee. It Has caused widespread poverty and misery In some of these countries, nnd led to revolutions, and thus the prob lem which the "coffee crisis" presents la declared to bo not only n commer cial, but nlso an economical, political and social one. The International llureau of the American Republics hns prepared In advance mi extenslvo report on coffee, to be presented to the commission when It nssomblc-B next October. The report embodies nil the data obtainable In i elation to coffee. Tho principal dif ficulty with regard to coffeo seems to be that as an article of commerce It has fallen completely into speculative hands, a fact which exposes It to great fiuctuatloiiH In pi Ice, and seems to cause largo pecuniary Iossch to coffee growers, regardless or the result which rollowB the speculation. The exaggerated lluctuatlons In prices have been disastrous. The commlsBion will undeitnke to devise a practical plan to remedy tho dllllculty. The world's production of coffee In 1901 was 1G, 100,000 bags of 132 pounds each. Ilinzll yielded foiir-HftliH of this enormous crop. The United States Is the heaviest consumer of coffee In the woild. Our ImportH of coffee In creased from 500.000.000 pounda lu Hint) to more than 850,000,000 pounds In Iflol, and during eleven inoiitliH of the llsenl year 19112, we Imported nioro than one billion pounds of the liiBcious berry. With such n growing market .. seems stiauge thnt tho coffee grow ers should be poverty stricken. We sell the greatest of blood purl tiers, Acker's Blood Elixir, under a pos itive ctinrantco. It will euro nil chron ic und other blood polBons. If you linve orimtlotiB or Horns on vnnr lindv. or aro pale, weak, run down, it is Just wuai you ueeu. wo roiumi mouoy u on aro not satisfied. CO couta and 100. I). J. Fry, druggist. o iirp r.nnp por on p.q Itching Piles produce moisture and cause itching, this form, ns woll as lllliul, Hleedlng or Protruding Piles nre cured by Dr. Ho-san-ko's Pile Rem edy, stops Itching uiid bleeding. Ab sorbs tumors. !ioc a Jar at druggists, or sent by mail. Treatise free. Write me nbout your case. Dr. Uosanko. Philadelphia. Pn. For sale at I)r Stone's drug stores h u 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 ii h ii 1 1 1 1 1 Uie hU88 fr ne week beinn,ng seaside qutlne at New- HHH4mHm lllllllllllllllH4t m