western news-democrat. (valentine, nebraska) 1898-10-06 [p ].€¦ · stanleys last journey to...

1
Stanleys Last Journey to Africa Henry M Stanley made a journey Into inner Africa recently which was perhaps even more remarkable than his search for Livingstone or his ex- ploration ¬ of the Congo basin He trav ¬ eled in a palace car from Cape Town to Buluwayo a distance of 1000 mile in a little more than twenty four hours This incident illustrates in the most Btriking manner possible the marvelous growth and development of Africa in recent years Chicago Tribune A Sensible Young Wife How do you like my cooking Corner now give me your honest opinion How does it compare with your mothers If you want my honest opinion I will say your cooking is very fair but it is not quite equal to mothers I did not expect It would be quite equal to your mothers but I wish you to remember that your mother had many years experience before you were capable of forming a judgment of her cooking By Jove you are right I never would have thought of that though I assure 3rou I would have made no com- ments ¬ on your cooking if you had not iskedf or my honest opinion The point you have made Is a good one but it is sntirely overlooked by young married men It is and unfortunately It is not thought of by young wives The Idea Df any man saying to a girl just a year ar two out of school You cant cook as well as mother and never taking into consideration that mother has had an sxperience of forty or fifty years Sup- pose ¬ the young wife should turn round and retort Youre not half as skillful a workman as my father And1 I wonder she doesnt Its a poor rule that wont work both ways And so it is when you come to think of It Saturday Evenincr Post Court Knew What Was Poker Paul Milliken who is one of the most popular men on change was yesterday on the floor rehearing the latest poker incident It is unnecessary to say that he secured a great many auditors as there are numerous admirers of the great American game there A private game had been broken up in a small town which was very religiously in ¬ clined and the players arrested and taken before the county judge The first prisoner was told by the judicial light to rehearse in strict honesty what was going on when the officer appeared Well had just dealt It was a jack pot said I Open it but it will cost you 2 to come in The next player put up the needed amount and said Well it will just cost 5 mora to be In this play Jhe third one ad ¬ vanced it 3 more and when it came to me I looked at my hand and found a pair of threes I had been lucky and concluded to go in the jack pot an did so Prisoner is dismissed cried tin 1udge interrupting him in his story Well whats the trouble said the atter looking about alarmed and studying the judge in surprise Why simply this You are charged for playing poker and your own evi- dence shows that you were not re ¬ plied the court Cincinnati Enquirer Pure Blood Good Digestion These are the essentials of health Hoodi Sarsaparilla is the great blood purifier and ftomach tonic It promptly expels tin impurities which cause pimples sorei And eruptions and by giving healthy ac lion to the stomach and digestive organi tt keeps the system in perfect order Hoods Sarsaparilla it Americas Greatest Medicine si i5t for s prepared only by C I Hood Co Lowell Mass UUUU Pills re tne only pills to tak with Hoods Sarsaparilla sife BHiSW fHt m THE EXCELLENCE 6F SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the California Fig Syrup Co only and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy As the genuine Syrup of Pigs is manufactured by the California Pig Syrup Co only a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par- ties ¬ The high standing of the Cali ¬ fornia Fig Syrup Co with the medi ¬ cal profession and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Pigs has given to millions of families makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy It is far in advance of all other laxatives as it acts on the kidneys liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ¬ ing them and it does not gripe nor nauseate In order to get its beneficial effects please remember the name of the Company CALIFORNIA FIG SYKUP CO SAN FKAXOISCO Cal JLOUISVILLE Kr NEW TOKIT NV AGENTS1 I Complete outfit best trooda Brmm trnnri i weekly farm Seeds ammnM fin tfrht nu T - i-- w- Minnesota i res Plants riot make BIG MONEY For particular write at once THE JEWELL NURSERY CO Lake City Minnesota PENSIONS agr Trite Cast 0YAS2SLL Pnun Af ntWaiaiaftea S0L W1WW - - VALUE OF GOLD AND COINS SILVER It is interesting to note that while ftur forefathers succeeded in giving le ¬ gal tender equality they also made the attempt to give commercial equality to our two kinds of coin by statute law it was soon found to be a failure From the very nature of things this kind of equality in value that is in the ex- changeable ¬ of commercial value never can be and never has been maintained with precision by ourselves or any oth- er ¬ nation of the world for any reason ¬ able length of time Truly this kind of equality in value which is exceedingly desirable can be maintained with ap- proximate ¬ precision for many years as we can cite the experience of the French nation using a coinage ratio of 155 to 1 from 1803 to 1874 But let us re- member ¬ that the legal tender value was at the same time maintained with ab- solute ¬ precision Let us manfully face the well authenticated historical fact that the commercial value of gold and silver coins at any given ratio was al- ways ¬ liable to vary from month to month from year to year and from de- cade ¬ to decade However when Con- gress ¬ is in session it has the legal right to follow these variations every day and make the childish effort by con- stant ¬ changes in the weight of our coins to have them conform to this daily variation This attempt was not made by our nation as we have reduc- ed ¬ the weight of gold coins but once 1834 during our national existence to- ward ¬ this equalization while we in- creased ¬ the gold 1S37 by a mere trifle solely for ease in mint circulations while the quantity of pure silver in our standard silver dollar has remained un ¬ changed since the first organization of our mints On the other hand Con- gress ¬ can and did regulate and main- tain ¬ the debt paying value of both coins under our flag with absolute precision from 1792 to 1873 While this was an act of precision the other was merely an attempt at precision Please note this as a very important and vital distinction The lawful debt paying value of coined money always has and always will have a powerful effect in tending to maintain the approximate equality but never can maintain the precise equality in the exchangeable value of money made of gold or silver when put under the hammer test or in the melting pot As an advocate of the restoration of silver at the existing coinage ratio of 16 to 1 I firmly hold to the opinion that when we restore the full legal tender power to our silver dollar its value as bullion will rise and gold will fall Many of the com- mercial ¬ nations of the world would in all probability soon follow our exam- ple ¬ and the wide and mischievous chasm now separating the two metals would be bridged by our financial lead ¬ ership Some difference will always exist as the history of coinage always has shown but it will not be so mis- chievous ¬ as to cause a disastrous fall in prices as our present system has done The existing commercial value of these two metals is now very far from being a fair test to the proper coinage ratio while in 1792 it was a fair test This is mainly on account of silver having been so extensively out- lawed ¬ by so large a portion of the com- mercial ¬ world for the last twenty five years The assertion so frequently made that silver has fallen in ex- changeable ¬ value when compared with gold on account of the relative annual over production of silver is false as can be readily seen by a reference to the official and universally accepted statistics of the relative production of these metals in the world during the past 100 years It is a mathematical question concerning which there can be no fair dispute The comparatively great stability in the relative exchangi able value of our coined money from 1792 to 1874 was secured simply be- cause ¬ the United States permitted this legal tender value to remain as a sa- cred ¬ and potent regulator given to us by our forefathers and happily we also had the co operation of almost the en- tire ¬ commercial world as our mints as well as theirs was open to the coin- age ¬ of both metals on equal terms When Congress commenced to tamper with this full legal tender function of silver in 1S73 by making the gold dol ¬ lar alone the unit of value and stopped the further coinage of full le- gal ¬ tender silver and on Tune 22 1874 demonetized all our existing full weight silver coins as debt payers except to the extent of 5 the mischief was then commenced and has never been entire ¬ ly corrected and most unfortunately the commercial world has followed our vicious example As a leading nation let us always remember the world spells our name in large type John A Grier Houest Investigation Demanded For the sake of the good name of the nation for the consolation of those who have Icshjlovcil ones in the war for the instruction of the war depart ¬ ment and army for the sake of the rep ¬ utation of those who have been bitterly assailed it should be determined whether politics incompetency ne ¬ glect conspiracy or rascality has made the brief war with Spain needlessly sacrificial An investigation for politi ¬ cal Iftec t will not do An investigation for whitewashing purposes will not do The Republican Way Captain Robley D Evans has been relieve of rlie command of the battle ship Iowa lie tlfas been assigned to I duty as a member of the naval inspec ¬ tion board and he will assume his new duties after a brief vacation The next commander of the Iowa will be Captain Silas Terry now in command of the receiving ship Franklin at the Norfolk navy yard He will take the ship around South America and over to Honolulu in company with the Oregon and some colliers Captain Evans is a Democrat and made a brilliant record at Santiago but he offended the Re ¬ publican prize money grabber Samp ¬ son by saying that he would not accept plunder Captain Terry is a Republi ¬ can Chicago Dispatch Rothschild and Hanna The Interstate Commerce Commis- sion ¬ in advance sheets of its annual re ¬ port just issued places the outstand- ing ¬ debt of American railroads at 10 639074000 says the Journal of Agri- culture ¬ After Wall street secured the panic proclamation against silver from President Cleveland a majority of the roads representing this enormous in- flation ¬ of over ten thousand million dol- lars ¬ were thrown into the hands of re- ceivers ¬ While their stocks and bonds were thus forced down to the lowest point by the Presidents attack on sil ¬ ver they were bought heavily by Eng ¬ lish capitalists operating through the New York syndicate of which J Pier pont Morgan is the leading represent- ative ¬ Morgan has since been actively at work reorganizing with English money the railroads which were so skillfully bankrupted by the foreign speculators whose influence secured the panic proclamation against silver As the agent of the Rothschild syndicate and other foreign investors Morgan now represents a greater power in America than the Goulds and Yander bilts combined With Hanna of the Steel Trust Havemeyer of the Sugar Trust and Whitney of the Standard Oil Trust he is the supreme power in shap ¬ ing the policies of the McKinley admin- - istration The amount of the stock and bonded debt of the reorganized railroads of America now held by Eng ¬ lish speculators runs into the thou- sands ¬ of millions It stands for an in- flation ¬ of from two to five dollars on every dollar of actual cash originally invested but the foreign speculators who force us into panic to bear our markets not only demand payment of dividends and interest on the full face value but they demand it in gold When we attempt to remonetize silver so that we can have money to do business with at home while our gold is being drained to England to meet their ex- actions ¬ they call us cranks an- archists ¬ and repudiationists And finding that these epithets lose their po- tency ¬ they employ agents to lure us with promises of military glory and of opportunities to join English Tories in schemes of oppressing and iffebing the helpless of the earth Work that Counts Every workman ought to say to him- self ¬ every day of his life Ill never cast a vote for a man big or little unless he has proved himself honest and a friend of labor He ought to live up to that on elec- tion ¬ day The men who do the work of this country can run it if they will They can be rulers It is all in their own hands If they will kill jealousy show faith in their own class reward in their un- ion ¬ principles intelligence and a good record always bombast never they will soon change the complexion of the country When we say a freud of labor we do not mean merely the advocate of union with an O K label in his hat and on his loaf We mean especially the friend of the man who works as opposed to the do nothing We mean the man who cares as much for Samuel Gompers as for George Gould and as much for the humblest shoveler as for Goriers The first is easy to find The second is not so easy New York Journal Paymasters as Bad as the Rest It becomes more evident every day that in many instances the regular and volunteer soldiers of the Uoiited States army have not been paid for their services During the glamour of the campaigns in Cuba and Porto Rico the soldier cared little or nothing for the sight of Uncle Sams gold but since liis return to Gods own country where the full pocket makes the stomach easy the lack of well earned cash be- comes ¬ a sore grievance It is sad in ¬ deed to have to hold the paymasters department up to the same opprobrium as attaches to the quartermasters and commissariats but that is precisely what it is proper to do New York Her ¬ ald The Surprises in Vermont The election in Vermont has set all the Republican organs at work to find an explanation of the phenomenal re- sults ¬ reached by the popular vote It is a surprise party and no mistake The Democrats increase their poll for governor by a very respectable figure The Republicans lose to a degree which in aless sure state would mean defeat while in the Legislature the Democ- racy ¬ makes what is a stupendous gain in representation comparatively con- sidered ¬ Boston Post Cheap Men or Cheap Dollars Shall we have cheap men and dear dollars or shall we have dear men and cheap dollars Shall the man go up and the dollar go down or shall the dollar go up and the man go down Shall manhood triumph over money and labor over loans or shall money Inn voke misery and the dollars of Shy lock triumph over the souls of Gods deserving poor These are questions we should ask and answer before wo think of voting for a single gold staizd ard Nonconformist The Maine Election Closely following Vermont the re- sult ¬ of the State and Congressional elections in Maine show enormous Democratic gains The Republican political sharps as usual attribute their reduced majorities to the old fic- tion ¬ and excuse of an off year and light vote This is folly The same causes which produce a light Republi ¬ can vote produce a light Democratic vote The inofficial but probably cor- rect ¬ reports from Maine indicate a Re- publican ¬ plurality on Governor of 20 000 against a Republican plurality of 48377 two years ago Speaker Reed loses 4000 of his majority in 1896 and has his smallest vote since 1S92 Sil ¬ ver was the only question discussed in his district The other Republican candidates for Congress suffer a sim- ilar ¬ proportion The Democrats have made marked gains in the legislature Silver at 16 to 1 has won a glorious vic- tory ¬ by the gains Samuel L Lord the Democratic candidate for Gover- nor ¬ who reduced the Republican ma- jority ¬ in the State 60 per cent is Mayor of Saco and was a Republican until 1872 when he joined the Greeley movement As the fall elections of 1898 come nearer the marked change in the political sentments of the country become more apparent At the spring election in Rhode Island and the June election in Oregon the Republicans held their own as compared with the elections of 1896 Though few speech ¬ es were made Maine was flooded with silver literature and the Democratic papers discussed nothing else Noth ¬ ing at all was said about the war or the abuse of the soldiers No definite charges could be made and the Demo- crats ¬ did not lower their cause by trumping lies An Evil of Protection If the natural law of free trade were restored there would be less drift from the farms to the cities and less loafers in the cities All honest able bodied people would become bread winners and bread consumers Idle people eat and ultimately it is the farmer who feeds them Obliterate class legisla- tion ¬ and there would be a movement to the farms for the unemployed urban laborers would find plenty to do and would earn plenty to eat and wear If the shackles are ever struck from American agriculture the economic problems of America would not be dif ¬ ficult of solution Dallas News Whichever Wins the Public Loses The sugar trust alias Havemeyer and the coffee trust alias Arbuckle have begun a duel to the death Have ¬ meyer is going to sell sugar and coffee at less than cost and Arbuckle is go ¬ ing to undersell Havemeyer When the duel is over when Havemeyer or Arbuckle is financially dead or what is more probable when peace is patch ¬ ed up who will repay to Havemeyer or to Arbuckle or dreadful thought to the allied octopi the millions spent in the fight New York World Plutocracy Abroad Last week the Hannacrats suppress- ed ¬ a Porto Rican paper for denouncing Spanish cruelty Tuesdays dispatches to the Globe Democrat report that find ¬ ing the government of the Cuban town of San Luis was in the hands of the Cubans themselves Shafter had the Cuban flag pulled down This is im- perialism ¬ The Globe Democrat wants a hundred thousand men to maintain it It will take five hundred thousand Mississippi Valley Democrat Spanish and American Blunders The mistakes made In Cuba said a speaker reported in yesterdays papers are not to be blamed on the army but on the politicians at the head of the government The remark sounds as if it might have been made in Washing- ton ¬ but it was not It is a pant of Gen Weylers speech in the Senate at Mad ¬ rid It merely goes to show that the mistakes in the Cuban campaign were not all on one side Philadelphia Led ¬ ger Alserism Merely an Effect The brethren who are now crying aloud for emancipation from Algorism simply have the wrong sow by the ear They are mistaking effect for a cause Algerisni is merely one of the miserable outputs of Hannaism It is a little more disgraceful than usual but this is main ¬ ly because its performances have been of a public nature Atlanta Constitu ¬ tion Tired of an Old Humbug3 The grand old party racket has been Avorked to the point of exhaustion It has served often to confirm the machine in power of diverting attention from the present to past history It will not work this time The people have caught on to the sham and can no long- er ¬ be deceived by it Philadelphia Press Rottenness at Home and Abroad The sister republics of France and the United States are both profoundly stir- red ¬ by government scandals that mean revolution if they are not investigated and revolution if they are In both cases too the same official rottenness Republican government will have to put some raw beef on this black eye Houston Tex Post The Three Greatest Crimes The three greatest modern crimes against humanity are the monopoliza- tion ¬ of natural bounties the forced in- crease ¬ of debts and the periodical shrinkage of values Nonconformist One Suffering Frenchman Frenoh justice may not overtake raty Du Clam but he is in the clutches of the editorial punsters Let us pity Paty Kansas City Journal L The yearly output of cigars from the Philippines is 140000000 The cheapest bread in England la worth V cents a pound loaf There is more machinery made in Philadelphia than any other city in the country British publishers last year put on the market 6573 new books of which 2677 were novels Washington D C Central Labor Union appointed a committee to look after union soldiers families The man who establishes a branch of the International Brotherhood of Blacksmiths is paid 10 The cotton crop is the largest single export in this country nearly 230 000000 annually The next largest is wheat Alabamas latest industrial enterprise is a 1000000 steel mill It is to be erected by capital that comes from out- side ¬ of the state The Baldwin Locomotive Works re- cently ¬ shipped forty locomotives for the Chinese Eastern railway and twenty five more are being built at the works for the same road The Bethlehem Iron company South Bethlehem Pa has been asked to bid on the forgings for the engine and shafting of a torpedo boat to be built in Japan for the Imperial Japanese navy A plant for the manufacture of Port ¬ land cement from furnace slag is be ¬ ing erected by the Clinton Iron and Steel company of Pittsburg adjoining their furnace The buildings and ma- chinery ¬ will cost 150000 One of the largest blooming mills in the country is to be erected at Lorain O and Pittsburg manufacturers will furnish the plant It is to be built by the Lorain Steel coinpanj and will be ejected as soon as possible The largest establishment for the manufacture of felt in America and the most modern in the world is now nearing completion in Chicago 111 It will be run as one of the departments of Armour Co for the purpose of utilizing important by products Organized labor in France is in a flourishing condition According to the last report of the French Labor Depart- ment ¬ there are 2253 trade and labor unions with a membership of 422777 Forty nine municipalities have boards of arbitration and mediation and intel- ligence ¬ offices whicii are maintained by the government the municipalities and the labor unions The exposition of 1900 at Paris is having a good effect on the working men of the whole country The city refuges for laborers which are usually crowded during the summer months have received a great thinning out as everybody seems to be working at something for the exposition and the free one night lodging houses are hav ¬ ing an unusual rest From all reports it seems that every man who is willing and able to work can find employment is he is honest and industrious Eighty girls employed in the Diamond Match Companys works at Oshkosh walked out in a body after an hours notice The fumes arising from the sulphur is extremely injurious to the health of the employes It is said to be very bad for the teeth and when even the slightest cavity occurs in a tooth unless it is attended to at once the whole jaw will be seriously affected The dentists bills and loss of time in consequence of caring for the teeth make a great item in the yearly finances of the strikers The average wages of the girls was from 225 to 275 a week A Fault of Business Women A professional woman who has to employ a young woman assistant says that one of her greatest troubles is that her assistants are constantly trying to impress not only upon her but upon her patients that they are not accus- tomed ¬ to such employment but have been brought up to better things though she is aware of the fact that the young women have come from homes where there was neither cul- ture ¬ nor money It is one of the weaknesses of many nice girls that they do not feel sure enough of themselves in taking up em- ployment ¬ outside their homes but they must needs offer some excuse or reit- erate ¬ the fact that they are accustom- ed ¬ to something better It is a weak- ness ¬ which brings them little credit from their confidantes A girl enter ¬ ing a school for typewriting and sten- ography ¬ was asked by the other stu- dents ¬ why she had come to the school Are you taking up stenography and going to take- - a position just for fun they asked Why certainly not she replied It is too hard work I do not do hard work for the pleasure of it We are so glad answered her quer- ists ¬ The greater number of the girls here say they come just for fun and will take positions to pass away the time Chicago Times Herald Good Evidence Lawyer Why did you discharge that man arrested for scorching Judge redals Scorching That man wasnt scorching Impossible Why he only rode a last years model of a low grade wheel Now if he had been riding a Crackadoom as 1 do But right there the lawj er interposed and the same old endless discussion on the merits of different wheels was re- sumed ¬ St Louis Post Dispatch When women admit that a woman they dislike Iroks pretty they add for her GREEK CITY UNEARTHED JPrlene Discovered in a Remarkable State of Preservation Private letters bring news of most Important discoveries made by Ger ¬ man archaeologists excavating on tho site of the ancient Priene in Asia Min ¬ or opposite the island of Samos Years ago an English expedition excavated and studied the Temple of Athena the chief sanctuary of the city built at the crder of Alexander the Great The work was then abandoned and mean ¬ while the ruins have been so thoroughly exploited and wasted by the neighbor ¬ ing population that nothing Is left but a confused heap of stones In 1895 ther work of exploring the ruins of the city was resumed this time by Germans under the direction of the Berlin mu seum and at the expense of the Prus ¬ sian government The architectural work has been placed in the hands of the young architect Wilhelm Wilberg a former student and assistant of Dr Dorfeld The work has now proceeded far -- enough to determine its extraordinary Importance A buried city preserved In the completeness of Pompeii is com ¬ ing to light Up to this time no Greek city has been excavated that gives any clew to the arrangement of streets pub- lic ¬ squares monuments and public buildings or to the architecture of any considerable number of private houses Here we find a city to be sure of the Hellenistic period laid out with great regularity with streets crossing at right angles with shops colonnades market places theaters a council-house-an- d a great number of private houses preserved in such completeness as to display their general architecture dis- tribution ¬ of space use decoration ancV equipment South of the great square of the tem- ple ¬ alluded to above and closely ad ¬ joining It has been found the great market place or agora of the city which was surrounded on all four sides by broad colonnades of which that on the north side was peculiarly noble and stately Adjoining this at one end and opening a small square building con ¬ structed somewhat like a theaterwhich was evidently the council house of thej city It ismarvelously well preserved Sixteen rows of seats are still in place The walls doors windows platform etc are all preserved One of the side walls ends in a massive arch which as being demonstrably a work of the fourth century B C must rank as the earliest or at least one of the few earliest specimens of the arch in Greek construction The whole building rep- resents ¬ something entirely unique in the relics of Greek architecture There has also been found a small theater In which the stage structure the skene is still standing entire Three doors open from it upon the or ehestra and the proscenium with its row of columns and the architrave above them remains intact No Greek theater as yet discovered is so perfect ¬ ly preserved as this and in the future discussions of the stage question this structure is likely to assume a leading place Benjamin Ide Wheeler in Nev York Tribune Russian Forest on Ice One of tne largest forests in the world stands on Ice It is situated be ¬ tween the Ural Mountains and the Okhotsk Sea A well was recently dugi In this region where it was found that at a depth of 116 meters the ground wae still frozen Not Qnite a Conqnest Wugger is not going to marry thaV widow Couldnt he win her Yesrbut he couldnt please he son A SOLDIEES ESCAPE From the Democrat Message ML Sterling HI When Richmond had fallen and the great commanders had met beneath tha- - historic apple tree at Appomatox the 832 ennsyivania Volunteers prematurely I aged clad m tatters and rags broken id- - body but of daunt ¬ less spirit swung into line for the last grand review and then quietly marched away to begin lifes frayr anew amid the hillff and valleys of tha Keystone State Among the number Asa Robinson came back to the old home in Mt Ster ¬ ling III back to tha fireside that he had left at the call to a r m s four years nrovinitq TTo TronV The Soldiers Jieturn happy away a healthy farmer boy in the first flush of vigorous manhood he came back a ghost of the self that answered to President Lincolns call for 300000 more To day he is an alert active man and tells the story of his recovery as follows rheumatism almost from the time of my discharge from the army Most of the time I was unfitted for manual labor of any kind and my sufferings were at alX times intense At times I was bent al ¬ most double and got around only with the greatest difficulty Nothing seemed to give me permanent relief until three years ago when my attention was called to some of the wonderful cures effected by Dr Williams Pink Pills for Pale People I had not taken more than half a box when 1 noticed an improvement in my condition and I kept on improving stead ¬ ily I took three boxes of the pills and at the end of that time was in better con- dition ¬ than at any time since the close of my army service Since then I have neves been bothered with rheumatism Dr Wil ¬ liams Pink Pills for Pale People is th only remedy that ever did me any good and to them I owe my restoration to comparative health They are a grand remedy Safes outwardly resembling Iron ones but which are really made of tliiiJ boards are now supplied by various firms and are sold to people starting In business who want to make a big how He I Ont of the Woods What a happy look Mr Shadyslda wears remarked Mr Murray Hill His wife has finished her spring house cleaning replied Mr Beecb wood Boston Traveler V 7 A r r

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Page 1: Western News-Democrat. (Valentine, Nebraska) 1898-10-06 [p ].€¦ · Stanleys Last Journey to Africa Henry M Stanley made a journey Into inner Africa recently which was perhaps even

Stanleys Last Journey to AfricaHenry M Stanley made a journey

Into inner Africa recently which wasperhaps even more remarkable thanhis search for Livingstone or his ex-

ploration¬

of the Congo basin He trav¬

eled in a palace car from Cape Town toBuluwayo a distance of 1000 mile ina little more than twenty four hoursThis incident illustrates in the mostBtriking manner possible the marvelousgrowth and development of Africa inrecent years Chicago Tribune

A Sensible Young WifeHow do you like my cooking Corner

now give me your honest opinion Howdoes it compare with your mothers

If you want my honest opinion Iwill say your cooking is very fair butit is not quite equal to mothers

I did not expect It would be quiteequal to your mothers but I wish youto remember that your mother hadmany years experience before you werecapable of forming a judgment of hercooking

By Jove you are right I neverwould have thought of that though Iassure 3rou I would have made no com-ments

¬

on your cooking if you had notiskedf or my honest opinion The pointyou have made Is a good one but it issntirely overlooked by young marriedmen

It is and unfortunately It is notthought of by young wives The IdeaDf any man saying to a girl just a yearar two out of school You cant cook aswell as mother and never taking intoconsideration that mother has had ansxperience of forty or fifty years Sup-pose

¬

the young wife should turn roundand retort Youre not half as skillfula workman as my father

And1 I wonder she doesnt Its apoor rule that wont work both ways

And so it is when you come to thinkof It Saturday Evenincr Post

Court Knew What Was PokerPaul Milliken who is one of the most

popular men on change was yesterdayon the floor rehearing the latest pokerincident It is unnecessary to say thathe secured a great many auditors asthere are numerous admirers of thegreat American game there A privategame had been broken up in a smalltown which was very religiously in¬

clined and the players arrested andtaken before the county judge Thefirst prisoner was told by the judiciallight to rehearse in strict honesty whatwas going on when the officer appeared

Well had just dealt It wasa jack pot said I Open it but it willcost you 2 to come in The nextplayer put up the needed amount andsaid Well it will just cost 5 morato be In this play Jhe third one ad ¬

vanced it 3 more and when it cameto me I looked at my hand and found apair of threes I had been lucky andconcluded to go in the jack pot andid so

Prisoner is dismissed cried tin1udge interrupting him in his story

Well whats the trouble said theatter looking about alarmed and

studying the judge in surpriseWhy simply this You are charged

for playing poker and your own evi-dence shows that you were not re¬

plied the court Cincinnati Enquirer

Pure BloodGood Digestion

These are the essentials of health HoodiSarsaparilla is the great blood purifier andftomach tonic It promptly expels tinimpurities which cause pimples soreiAnd eruptions and by giving healthy aclion to the stomach and digestive organitt keeps the system in perfect order

Hoods Sarsaparillait Americas Greatest Medicine si i5t for sprepared only by C I Hood Co Lowell Mass

UUUU Pills re tne only pills to takwith Hoods Sarsaparilla

sifeBHiSW fHt m

THE EXCELLENCE 6F SYRUP OF FIGSis due not only to the originality andsimplicity of the combination but alsoto the care and skill with which it ismanufactured by scientific processesknown to the California Fig SyrupCo only and we wish to impress uponall the importance of purchasing thetrue and original remedy As thegenuine Syrup of Pigs is manufacturedby the California Pig Syrup Coonly a knowledge of that fact willassist one in avoiding the worthlessimitations manufactured by other par-ties

¬

The high standing of the Cali¬

fornia Fig Syrup Co with the medi¬

cal profession and the satisfactionwhich the genuine Syrup of Pigs hasgiven to millions of families makesthe name of the Company a guarantyof the excellence of its remedy It isfar in advance of all other laxativesas it acts on the kidneys liver andbowels without irritating or weaken ¬

ing them and it does not gripe nornauseate In order to get its beneficialeffects please remember the name ofthe Company

CALIFORNIA FIG SYKUP CO

SAN FKAXOISCO CalJLOUISVILLE Kr NEW TOKIT N V

AGENTS1I Complete outfit best

trooda Brmm trnnrii weekly farm Seeds

ammnM fin tfrht nuT - i--w-

Minnesota i res Plants riotmake BIG MONEY For particular write at onceTHE JEWELL NURSERY CO Lake City Minnesota

PENSIONS agrTrite Cast 0YAS2SLL Pnun AfntWaiaiaftea S0L

W1WW - -

VALUE OF GOLD ANDCOINS

SILVER

It is interesting to note that whileftur forefathers succeeded in giving le¬

gal tender equality they also made theattempt to give commercial equality toour two kinds of coin by statute lawit was soon found to be a failure Fromthe very nature of things this kind ofequality in value that is in the ex-

changeable¬

of commercial value nevercan be and never has been maintainedwith precision by ourselves or any oth-er

¬

nation of the world for any reason ¬

able length of time Truly this kind ofequality in value which is exceedinglydesirable can be maintained with ap-

proximate¬

precision for many years aswe can cite the experience of theFrench nation using a coinage ratio of155 to 1 from 1803 to 1874 But let us re-

member¬

that the legal tender value wasat the same time maintained with ab-

solute¬

precision Let us manfully facethe well authenticated historical factthat the commercial value of gold andsilver coins at any given ratio was al-

ways¬

liable to vary from month tomonth from year to year and from de-

cade¬

to decade However when Con-gress

¬

is in session it has the legal rightto follow these variations every dayand make the childish effort by con-stant

¬

changes in the weight of ourcoins to have them conform to thisdaily variation This attempt was notmade by our nation as we have reduc-ed

¬

the weight of gold coins but once1834 during our national existence to-

ward¬

this equalization while we in-

creased¬

the gold 1S37 by a mere triflesolely for ease in mint circulationswhile the quantity of pure silver in ourstandard silver dollar has remained un ¬

changed since the first organization ofour mints On the other hand Con-gress

¬

can and did regulate and main-tain

¬

the debt paying value of bothcoins under our flag with absoluteprecision from 1792 to 1873 While thiswas an act of precision the other wasmerely an attempt at precision Pleasenote this as a very important and vitaldistinction The lawful debt payingvalue of coined money always has andalways will have a powerful effect intending to maintain the approximateequality but never can maintain theprecise equality in the exchangeablevalue of money made of gold or silverwhen put under the hammer test or inthe melting pot As an advocate of therestoration of silver at the existingcoinage ratio of 16 to 1 I firmly holdto the opinion that when we restore thefull legal tender power to our silverdollar its value as bullion will riseand gold will fall Many of the com-mercial

¬

nations of the world would inall probability soon follow our exam-ple

¬

and the wide and mischievouschasm now separating the two metalswould be bridged by our financial lead ¬

ership Some difference will alwaysexist as the history of coinage alwayshas shown but it will not be so mis-chievous

¬

as to cause a disastrous fallin prices as our present system hasdone The existing commercial valueof these two metals is now very farfrom being a fair test to the propercoinage ratio while in 1792 it was afair test This is mainly on account ofsilver having been so extensively out-lawed

¬

by so large a portion of the com-mercial

¬

world for the last twenty fiveyears The assertion so frequentlymade that silver has fallen in ex-

changeable¬

value when compared withgold on account of the relative annualover production of silver is false ascan be readily seen by a reference tothe official and universally acceptedstatistics of the relative production ofthese metals in the world during thepast 100 years It is a mathematicalquestion concerning which there can beno fair dispute The comparativelygreat stability in the relative exchangiable value of our coined money from1792 to 1874 was secured simply be-

cause¬

the United States permitted thislegal tender value to remain as a sa-

cred¬

and potent regulator given to usby our forefathers and happily we alsohad the co operation of almost the en-

tire¬

commercial world as our mintsas well as theirs was open to the coin-age

¬

of both metals on equal termsWhen Congress commenced to tamperwith this full legal tender function ofsilver in 1S73 by making the gold dol ¬

lar alone the unit of value andstopped the further coinage of full le-

gal¬

tender silver and on Tune 22 1874demonetized all our existing full weightsilver coins as debt payers except tothe extent of 5 the mischief was thencommenced and has never been entire ¬

ly corrected and most unfortunatelythe commercial world has followed ourvicious example As a leading nationlet us always remember the worldspells our name in large type JohnA Grier

Houest Investigation DemandedFor the sake of the good name of the

nation for the consolation of thosewho have Icshjlovcil ones in the warfor the instruction of the war depart ¬

ment and army for the sake of the rep ¬

utation of those who have been bitterlyassailed it should be determinedwhether politics incompetency ne¬

glect conspiracy or rascality has madethe brief war with Spain needlesslysacrificial An investigation for politi ¬

cal Iftec t will not do An investigationfor whitewashing purposes will not do

The Republican WayCaptain Robley D Evans has been

relieve of rlie command of the battleship Iowa lie tlfas been assigned to I

duty as a member of the naval inspec¬

tion board and he will assume his newduties after a brief vacation The nextcommander of the Iowa will be CaptainSilas Terry now in command of thereceiving ship Franklin at the Norfolknavy yard He will take the shiparound South America and over toHonolulu in company with the Oregonand some colliers Captain Evans is aDemocrat and made a brilliant recordat Santiago but he offended the Re ¬

publican prize money grabber Samp ¬

son by saying that he would not acceptplunder Captain Terry is a Republi ¬

can Chicago Dispatch

Rothschild and HannaThe Interstate Commerce Commis-

sion¬

in advance sheets of its annual re¬

port just issued places the outstand-ing

¬

debt of American railroads at 10639074000 says the Journal of Agri-culture

¬

After Wall street secured thepanic proclamation against silver fromPresident Cleveland a majority of theroads representing this enormous in-

flation¬

of over ten thousand million dol-

lars¬

were thrown into the hands of re-

ceivers¬

While their stocks and bondswere thus forced down to the lowestpoint by the Presidents attack on sil ¬

ver they were bought heavily by Eng ¬

lish capitalists operating through theNew York syndicate of which J Pierpont Morgan is the leading represent-ative

¬

Morgan has since been activelyat work reorganizing with Englishmoney the railroads which were soskillfully bankrupted by the foreignspeculators whose influence secured thepanic proclamation against silver Asthe agent of the Rothschild syndicateand other foreign investors Morgannow represents a greater power inAmerica than the Goulds and Yanderbilts combined With Hanna of theSteel Trust Havemeyer of the SugarTrust and Whitney of the Standard OilTrust he is the supreme power in shap ¬

ing the policies of the McKinley admin- -

istration The amount of the stockand bonded debt of the reorganizedrailroads of America now held by Eng ¬

lish speculators runs into the thou-sands

¬

of millions It stands for an in-flation

¬

of from two to five dollars onevery dollar of actual cash originallyinvested but the foreign speculatorswho force us into panic to bear ourmarkets not only demand payment ofdividends and interest on the full facevalue but they demand it in gold Whenwe attempt to remonetize silver sothat we can have money to do businesswith at home while our gold is beingdrained to England to meet their ex-actions

¬

they call us cranks an-

archists¬

and repudiationists Andfinding that these epithets lose their po-tency

¬

they employ agents to lure uswith promises of military glory and ofopportunities to join English Tories inschemes of oppressing and iffebing thehelpless of the earth

Work that CountsEvery workman ought to say to him-

self¬

every day of his lifeIll never cast a vote for a man big

or little unless he has proved himselfhonest and a friend of labor

He ought to live up to that on elec-tion

¬

day The men who do the work ofthis country can run it if they willThey can be rulers It is all in theirown hands

If they will kill jealousy show faithin their own class reward in their un-

ion¬

principles intelligence and a goodrecord always bombast never theywill soon change the complexion of thecountry

When we say a freud of labor we donot mean merely the advocate of unionwith an O K label in his hat and onhis loaf We mean especially the friendof the man who works as opposed tothe do nothing We mean the man whocares as much for Samuel Gompers asfor George Gould and as much for thehumblest shoveler as for Goriers Thefirst is easy to find The second is notso easy New York Journal

Paymasters as Bad as the RestIt becomes more evident every day

that in many instances the regular andvolunteer soldiers of the Uoiited Statesarmy have not been paid for theirservices During the glamour of thecampaigns in Cuba and Porto Rico thesoldier cared little or nothing for thesight of Uncle Sams gold but since liisreturn to Gods own country wherethe full pocket makes the stomacheasy the lack of well earned cash be-

comes¬

a sore grievance It is sad in ¬

deed to have to hold the paymastersdepartment up to the same opprobriumas attaches to the quartermasters andcommissariats but that is preciselywhat it is proper to do New York Her ¬

ald

The Surprises in VermontThe election in Vermont has set all

the Republican organs at work to findan explanation of the phenomenal re-

sults¬

reached by the popular vote Itis a surprise party and no mistakeThe Democrats increase their poll forgovernor by a very respectable figureThe Republicans lose to a degree whichin aless sure state would mean defeatwhile in the Legislature the Democ-racy

¬

makes what is a stupendous gainin representation comparatively con-sidered

¬

Boston Post

Cheap Men or Cheap DollarsShall we have cheap men and dear

dollars or shall we have dear men andcheap dollars Shall the man go upand the dollar go down or shall thedollar go up and the man go downShall manhood triumph over money and

labor over loans or shall money Innvoke misery and the dollars of Shylock triumph over the souls of Godsdeserving poor These are questionswe should ask and answer before wothink of voting for a single gold staizdard Nonconformist

The Maine ElectionClosely following Vermont the re-

sult¬

of the State and Congressionalelections in Maine show enormousDemocratic gains The Republicanpolitical sharps as usual attributetheir reduced majorities to the old fic-

tion¬

and excuse of an off year andlight vote This is folly The same

causes which produce a light Republi ¬

can vote produce a light Democraticvote The inofficial but probably cor-

rect¬

reports from Maine indicate a Re-

publican¬

plurality on Governor of 20000 against a Republican plurality of48377 two years ago Speaker Reedloses 4000 of his majority in 1896 andhas his smallest vote since 1S92 Sil ¬

ver was the only question discussed inhis district The other Republicancandidates for Congress suffer a sim-

ilar¬

proportion The Democrats havemade marked gains in the legislatureSilver at 16 to 1 has won a glorious vic-tory

¬

by the gains Samuel L Lordthe Democratic candidate for Gover-nor

¬

who reduced the Republican ma-jority

¬

in the State 60 per cent isMayor of Saco and was a Republicanuntil 1872 when he joined the Greeleymovement As the fall elections of1898 come nearer the marked change inthe political sentments of the countrybecome more apparent At the springelection in Rhode Island and the Juneelection in Oregon the Republicansheld their own as compared with theelections of 1896 Though few speech ¬

es were made Maine was flooded withsilver literature and the Democraticpapers discussed nothing else Noth¬

ing at all was said about the war or theabuse of the soldiers No definitecharges could be made and the Demo-crats

¬

did not lower their cause bytrumping lies

An Evil of ProtectionIf the natural law of free trade were

restored there would be less drift fromthe farms to the cities and less loafersin the cities All honest able bodiedpeople would become bread winnersand bread consumers Idle people eatand ultimately it is the farmer whofeeds them Obliterate class legisla-tion

¬

and there would be a movementto the farms for the unemployed urbanlaborers would find plenty to do andwould earn plenty to eat and wear Ifthe shackles are ever struck fromAmerican agriculture the economicproblems of America would not be dif¬

ficult of solution Dallas News

Whichever Wins the Public LosesThe sugar trust alias Havemeyer

and the coffee trust alias Arbucklehave begun a duel to the death Have ¬

meyer is going to sell sugar and coffeeat less than cost and Arbuckle is go ¬

ing to undersell Havemeyer Whenthe duel is over when Havemeyer orArbuckle is financially dead or whatis more probable when peace is patch ¬

ed up who will repay to Havemeyer orto Arbuckle or dreadful thought tothe allied octopi the millions spent inthe fight New York World

Plutocracy AbroadLast week the Hannacrats suppress-

ed¬

a Porto Rican paper for denouncingSpanish cruelty Tuesdays dispatchesto the Globe Democrat report that find ¬

ing the government of the Cuban townof San Luis was in the hands of theCubans themselves Shafter had theCuban flag pulled down This is im-

perialism¬

The Globe Democrat wantsa hundred thousand men to maintainit It will take five hundred thousand

Mississippi Valley Democrat

Spanish and American BlundersThe mistakes made In Cuba said a

speaker reported in yesterdays papersare not to be blamed on the army but

on the politicians at the head of thegovernment The remark sounds as ifit might have been made in Washing-ton

¬

but it was not It is a pant of GenWeylers speech in the Senate at Mad ¬

rid It merely goes to show that themistakes in the Cuban campaign werenot all on one side Philadelphia Led ¬

ger

Alserism Merely an EffectThe brethren who are now crying

aloud for emancipation from Algorismsimply have the wrong sow by the earThey are mistaking effect for a causeAlgerisni is merely one of the miserableoutputs of Hannaism It is a little moredisgraceful than usual but this is main ¬

ly because its performances have beenof a public nature Atlanta Constitu ¬

tion

Tired of an Old Humbug3The grand old party racket has been

Avorked to the point of exhaustion Ithas served often to confirm the machinein power of diverting attention fromthe present to past history It will notwork this time The people havecaught on to the sham and can no long-er

¬

be deceived by it PhiladelphiaPress

Rottenness at Home and AbroadThe sister republics of France and the

United States are both profoundly stir-red

¬

by government scandals that meanrevolution if they are not investigatedand revolution if they are In bothcases too the same official rottennessRepublican government will have toput some raw beef on this black eyeHouston Tex Post

The Three Greatest CrimesThe three greatest modern crimes

against humanity are the monopoliza-tion

¬

of natural bounties the forced in-

crease¬

of debts and the periodicalshrinkage of values Nonconformist

One Suffering FrenchmanFrenoh justice may not overtake raty

Du Clam but he is in the clutches ofthe editorial punsters Let us pityPaty Kansas City Journal

L

The yearly output of cigars from thePhilippines is 140000000

The cheapest bread in England laworth V cents a pound loaf

There is more machinery made inPhiladelphia than any other city in thecountry

British publishers last year put onthe market 6573 new books of which2677 were novels

Washington D C Central LaborUnion appointed a committee to lookafter union soldiers families

The man who establishes a branchof the International Brotherhood ofBlacksmiths is paid 10

The cotton crop is the largest singleexport in this country nearly 230000000 annually The next largest iswheat

Alabamas latest industrial enterpriseis a 1000000 steel mill It is to beerected by capital that comes from out-side

¬

of the stateThe Baldwin Locomotive Works re-

cently¬

shipped forty locomotives for theChinese Eastern railway and twentyfive more are being built at the worksfor the same road

The Bethlehem Iron company SouthBethlehem Pa has been asked to bidon the forgings for the engine andshafting of a torpedo boat to be builtin Japan for the Imperial Japanesenavy

A plant for the manufacture of Port¬

land cement from furnace slag is be¬

ing erected by the Clinton Iron andSteel company of Pittsburg adjoiningtheir furnace The buildings and ma-chinery

¬

will cost 150000One of the largest blooming mills in

the country is to be erected at LorainO and Pittsburg manufacturers willfurnish the plant It is to be built bythe Lorain Steel coinpanj and will beejected as soon as possible

The largest establishment for themanufacture of felt in America andthe most modern in the world is nownearing completion in Chicago 111 Itwill be run as one of the departmentsof Armour Co for the purpose ofutilizing important by products

Organized labor in France is in aflourishing condition According to thelast report of the French Labor Depart-ment

¬

there are 2253 trade and laborunions with a membership of 422777Forty nine municipalities have boardsof arbitration and mediation and intel-ligence

¬

offices whicii are maintainedby the government the municipalitiesand the labor unions

The exposition of 1900 at Paris ishaving a good effect on the workingmen of the whole country The cityrefuges for laborers which are usuallycrowded during the summer monthshave received a great thinning out aseverybody seems to be working atsomething for the exposition and thefree one night lodging houses are hav ¬

ing an unusual rest From all reportsit seems that every man who is willingand able to work can find employmentis he is honest and industrious

Eighty girls employed in the DiamondMatch Companys works at Oshkoshwalked out in a body after an hoursnotice The fumes arising from thesulphur is extremely injurious to thehealth of the employes It is said to bevery bad for the teeth and when eventhe slightest cavity occurs in a toothunless it is attended to at once thewhole jaw will be seriously affectedThe dentists bills and loss of time inconsequence of caring for the teethmake a great item in the yearly financesof the strikers The average wages ofthe girls was from 225 to 275 aweek

A Fault of Business WomenA professional woman who has to

employ a young woman assistant saysthat one of her greatest troubles is thather assistants are constantly trying toimpress not only upon her but uponher patients that they are not accus-tomed

¬

to such employment but havebeen brought up to better thingsthough she is aware of the fact thatthe young women have come fromhomes where there was neither cul-ture

¬

nor moneyIt is one of the weaknesses of many

nice girls that they do not feel sureenough of themselves in taking up em-ployment

¬

outside their homes but theymust needs offer some excuse or reit-erate

¬

the fact that they are accustom-ed

¬

to something better It is a weak-ness

¬

which brings them little creditfrom their confidantes A girl enter ¬

ing a school for typewriting and sten-ography

¬

was asked by the other stu-dents

¬

why she had come to the schoolAre you taking up stenography and

going to take- - a position just for funthey asked Why certainly not shereplied It is too hard work I do notdo hard work for the pleasure of itWe are so glad answered her quer-

ists¬

The greater number of the girlshere say they come just for fun andwill take positions to pass away thetime Chicago Times Herald

Good EvidenceLawyer Why did you discharge that

man arrested for scorchingJudge redals Scorching That man

wasnt scorching Impossible Whyhe only rode a last years model of alow grade wheel Now if he had beenriding a Crackadoom as 1 do

But right there the lawj er interposedand the same old endless discussion onthe merits of different wheels was re-

sumed¬

St Louis Post Dispatch

When women admit that a womanthey dislike Iroks pretty they add forher

GREEK CITY UNEARTHED

JPrlene Discovered in a RemarkableState of Preservation

Private letters bring news of mostImportant discoveries made by Ger ¬

man archaeologists excavating on thosite of the ancient Priene in Asia Min ¬

or opposite the island of Samos Yearsago an English expedition excavatedand studied the Temple of Athena thechief sanctuary of the city built at thecrder of Alexander the Great Thework was then abandoned and mean ¬

while the ruins have been so thoroughlyexploited and wasted by the neighbor ¬

ing population that nothing Is left buta confused heap of stones In 1895 therwork of exploring the ruins of the citywas resumed this time by Germansunder the direction of the Berlin museum and at the expense of the Prus ¬

sian government The architecturalwork has been placed in the hands ofthe young architect Wilhelm Wilberga former student and assistant of DrDorfeld

The work has now proceeded far-- enough to determine its extraordinaryImportance A buried city preservedIn the completeness of Pompeii is com ¬

ing to light Up to this time no Greekcity has been excavated that gives anyclew to the arrangement of streets pub-

lic¬

squares monuments and publicbuildings or to the architecture of anyconsiderable number of private housesHere we find a city to be sure of theHellenistic period laid out with greatregularity with streets crossing atright angles with shops colonnadesmarket places theaters a council-house-an- d

a great number of private housespreserved in such completeness as todisplay their general architecture dis-tribution

¬

of space use decoration ancVequipment

South of the great square of the tem-ple

¬

alluded to above and closely ad¬joining It has been found the greatmarket place or agora of the city whichwas surrounded on all four sides bybroad colonnades of which that on thenorth side was peculiarly noble andstately Adjoining this at one end andopening a small square building con ¬

structed somewhat like a theaterwhichwas evidently the council house of thejcity It ismarvelously well preservedSixteen rows of seats are still in placeThe walls doors windows platformetc are all preserved One of the sidewalls ends in a massive arch which asbeing demonstrably a work of thefourth century B C must rank as theearliest or at least one of the fewearliest specimens of the arch in Greekconstruction The whole building rep-

resents¬

something entirely unique inthe relics of Greek architecture

There has also been found a smalltheater In which the stage structurethe skene is still standing entireThree doors open from it upon the orehestra and the proscenium with itsrow of columns and the architraveabove them remains intact No Greektheater as yet discovered is so perfect¬ly preserved as this and in the futurediscussions of the stage question thisstructure is likely to assume a leadingplace Benjamin Ide Wheeler in NevYork Tribune

Russian Forest on IceOne of tne largest forests in the

world stands on Ice It is situated be¬

tween the Ural Mountains and theOkhotsk Sea A well was recently dugiIn this region where it was found thatat a depth of 116 meters the ground waestill frozen

Not Qnite a ConqnestWugger is not going to marry thaV

widowCouldnt he win herYesrbut he couldnt please he

son

A SOLDIEES ESCAPEFrom the Democrat Message ML Sterling HI

When Richmond had fallen and thegreat commanders had met beneath tha- -

historic apple tree at Appomatox the 832ennsyivania Volunteers prematurely

I

aged clad m tattersand rags broken id- -

body but of daunt¬less spirit swunginto line for thelast grand reviewand then quietlymarched away tobegin lifes frayranew amid the hillffand valleys of thaKeystone StateAmong the numberAsa Robinson cameback to the oldhome in Mt Ster¬

ling III back to thafireside that he hadleft at the call toa r m s four yearsnrovinitq TTo TronV

The Soldiers Jieturn happyaway ahealthy farmer boy in the first flush ofvigorous manhood he came back a ghostof the self that answered to PresidentLincolns call for 300000 more

To day he is an alert active man andtells the story of his recovery as follows

rheumatism almost from the time of mydischarge from the army Most of thetime I was unfitted for manual labor ofany kind and my sufferings were at alXtimes intense At times I was bent al ¬

most double and got around only with thegreatest difficulty Nothing seemed togive me permanent relief until three yearsago when my attention was called tosome of the wonderful cures effected byDr Williams Pink Pills for Pale PeopleI had not taken more than half a boxwhen 1 noticed an improvement in mycondition and I kept on improving stead ¬ily I took three boxes of the pills and atthe end of that time was in better con-dition

¬than at any time since the close ofmy army service Since then I have neves

been bothered with rheumatism Dr Wil ¬liams Pink Pills for Pale People is thonly remedy that ever did me any goodand to them I owe my restoration tocomparative health They are a grandremedy

Safes outwardly resembling Ironones but which are really made of tliiiJboards are now supplied by variousfirms and are sold to people startingIn business who want to make a bighow

He I Ont of the WoodsWhat a happy look Mr Shadyslda

wears remarked Mr Murray HillHis wife has finished her spring

house cleaning replied Mr Beecbwood Boston Traveler

V

7

A

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