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' Hartford Republican Friday, Junk, 3, J894. THE WAYS AXJUIKANS STAR CHAMBER COMMITTEE OF UN-AMERICAN LAWMAKING. A Tlrlcf IfUlnry of ttic Six Southern Democrat Who Form the rrciiit Mnjorltjr Where Thry Itatl Ircim unit tho Tliry )Cr ir nrnt When tho Democrats camo into power in tho honso of representatives in tho Forty-fourth congress, they began to Bchemo for tho undermining of tho protective) fonudntiou of our industrial They failed Blgimlly for a number of yeans becau.o they were not ablo to accomplish iu tho wiynnpd means that which itww poslblo for them to accomplihh on tho lloor of tho house. When tho Fiftieth congress their plniw were completed, and they secured that long wished in tho organization of thowayn and means committee. First of all, let ua kco who constituted tho ways and moans committee of tho Firt wo had Mills of tho great agricultural state of Texas a Btato renowned all oAcr tho laud forthooxalted character of its citizens and tho of its Democratic majorities; of Breelciuridgo of Arkansas BreeMuridgo of Kentucky, Turner of Gcorgin, Wilcon of West Virginia ami Scott of Pennsylvania. Of tho entire Democratic majority on thi committee thero was just ono northern man Scott of Fehiisylrania. It is needless to nay anything a to tho Republican minority, for they wero entirely ignored by tho majority. No member of that minority eer paw tho MHN bill or knew anything an to its pioNioiMitinil it was ready to Ki sprung upon tho houc. Tho bill wiw entirely a outhern produetiou, after houthern ideas and born of souihern method-. Although tho 31111 bill failed in tho houo of its friends the Democrats worn not discouraged. In tho organization of tho Fifty-second cougioss which they next controllctl, .Mr. Springer of Illinois, a northern Democrat, stood in tho way of accomplishing tho full purpose of tho southern Democracy, and tariff legislation again failed, but with tho organization of tho Fifty-third congress tho southern scheme was again put iu operation. Tho organization of tho committee on way mid means being molded by Mr. CrUp iu tho interest of his southern friends wo find that a majority of tho 11 Democrats composing that corumittco nro southern mm, representing a houthern constituency, among whom thero emi bo found but little, if any of tho great interest?, which usually center in tho committee on ways and means of tho honso of representatives. Tho chairman of the committee, Mr. Wibiii, lives iu Charlestowu, W. Vo., a vulago of 2,:J37 inhabitants, separated by all the natural conditions of an agricultural country from the great manufacturing aud industrial interests of tho United State. Mr. MeMillin of Tennessee, whoso homo is iu tho village of Carthage, n town of -178 inhabitants, no doubt represents a fairly southern constituency, fo far as intelligence and thrift ore concerned, but they have neither industrial norcommeicial interests which would naturally impel Mr. to a broad or generous treatment of huch a question as u national tariff. Mr. Turner of Georgia comes from a great agricultural center of Georgia, ro biding in the tovui of Quitman, with a population of 1,608. Why Mr. Turner should bo sehxited as n member of the ways and means committee ceitahily cannot bo because of tho constituency that ho represents. It must bo tho theories that ho has advanced from tinio to time that have placed him upon this committee. Mr. Breckinildgoof Arkansas comes from tho little city of Pino Bluff, situated on tho White river, in northern Arkansas. If a comiuhion had gone in seaich of ono ho isolated by provincial surroundings as to mako it impossible for him to understand what the great needs of tho great manufacturing industries of tho United States are, a dweller of this town might fitly answer tho purpose, but equally ho may lu tho case of Mr. Montgomery of Kentucky, who is a resident of tho villago of Elizabeth-town, a place having a population of 2,2t0. Ho way 1x5 said to represent purely an agricultural district. Mr. Tarsuoy of Missouri resides in tho only city of importance represented by tho Democratic majority. So far as its freo trade proclivities oro concerned, Mr. Tarsuey no doubt was selected becauso of tho iewH which ho maintained, which wero in pcifcet harmony with thoo of Wilson, MeMillin, Turner, etc. These six gentlemen constitute a majority of tho ways and means committee and nro responsible for tho Wilson bill as it was brought forth and pressed tluough tin house of Tin ro never has hten a thno in tho history oi tho United States osiecially since the destruction of shvvciy, when tho great ways and means committee was placed in the hands of tho free trado element of the house by tho speaker, apparently with design, ns it was done iu tho present instance. Wo are leaping tho result in the business uiFairs of tho United States, and wo shall couttnuo to feel theeinbariMsmeuthof this sectional method of legislating Vthilo the solid south continues to dominate the housp of lenresentativeH. Tho finance commit tie of tho sen a to is compos d of six Democrats and five KepubllcaUR Of tho six Democrats four ate irom tho south and two from northern suites. Tho subcommittee placid iu rimi.40 of tho tariff bill was Vaueo of Noitji Carolina, Vest of Missouri and Tones of AiUansas. Here wero three full Hedged southern tree traders whoso it was to shape tho tariff measme so tli.it every southern interest might'bo fully satisfied. Fxom the timo tho bill came to tho senate until it was reported no lUpublleiui over saw It, and it Is doubtful whether nuy 1101 them senator had an opportunity to kugw what changes had becu nuulo hi the same, Tho people of tho 1101th ami vest, who control uiuoteuths of till tho industrial iuteiests of this (country, want to know aud shall continue to ask for information until some man wise enough and bold enough can explain why this great industrial measure should bo turned over to three men Mho represent tho least possible industrial interest tlut any states in the Union contain. Tho cry of tho south for 25 years has Ucu that they have paid tribute to tho north by reason of protection ever sinco too KepulilteaiiH came iu power iu 1801, Their open declarations to destroy tho protective system iu tho inteiot of cheap labor iu the south is the only answer known to exist. I'erly American limiiortnlN. Frequent efforts have been made to select a certain number of persons as representative Americans. Some of these efforts have been confined to literary men and others to those of all walks in life. Recently the Knights and Ladies of Harper's Young People's Round Table voted on the Potty American Immortals whose careers !)mtimmv" have been ended by death. Here is the list with the vote each received. George Washington, 8,294; Abraham Lincoln, 8,232; Ulysus S. Grant, 8,068; Benjamin Franklin, 7,660; Daniel Webster, 7,932; Thomas jeflcr son, 7 60S; Henry Clay, 7,530; Henry Wi Longfellow, 7,392; Willliam T. Sherman, 6,840 Robert Pulton, 6,742; Samuel P. B, Morse 6,720; John (5. Whitticr, 6,522; Washinton Irving 6,iHo; Patrick Henry, 5,946; Alexander Hamilton, 5,515! Ralph Waldo Kmerson, 5,190; Hoi ace , Greeley, 5,148; Henry Ward Ikccher, 4.944 Andrew Jackson, 4.554? James A Garfield, 4.536; . Nathaniel Hawthorne, 4,582: Win, Cullen Bryant, 4.4 o; John Adams 4,538; Phillip H. Sheri dan, 4.260; Cyrus W. Field, 4.230: James Russell Lowell, 4.1 28; Robert K.Lee, 4,038; John C. Calhoun, 3,-090; James G. Blaine, 3,942; Kli Whitney. 3,901; David G Paragut, 3,846; Winfield Scott, 3.786; George I Bancroft, 3,210; Oliver Hazinl rerry, 3,180; Charles Sumner, 2,892; Noah Webster, 2,886; John Hancock, 2,796; Udwin Booth, 2,706; J. Fcnimorc Cooper, 2,624; John JJuincy Adam?, 2,568. 'riuWti unit IVIiorefiire. There is nothing marvelous iu the fact that Hood's Sarsaparilla should cure so many diseases. When you remember that a majority of the disorders "flesh is heir to1 arcMluc to impure or poisonous condition of the blood, and that Hood's Sarsaparilla is an effective nnd radical blood the whole thing is explained. Besides its blood purifyingqualitics, Hood's Sarsaparilla also contains the best known vegetable stomach tonics, diuretic, kidney remedies and liver mvigorants, and is thus an excellent specific for all disorders of these organs, as well as for low condition of the system, or That Tired Feeling. One advantage with small fruits is that they can be raised while one is waiting for the trees to come into bearing. On new farms this is often quite an argmne'nt in their favor. "Is this hot enough for you?" is a silly question; but if you meet n man who complains of suffering from the heat, ten to one you will find, on inquiry, that he docs not use Aycr's Sarsaparilla to tone up his system nnd free his blood from irritating humors. When the ground is worked to, a fine condition the roots penetrate the soil more easily, secureagreater share of plant food, grovv mote rapidly than when but slight cultivation is given the soil. Careful cultivation thus increases the yield of crops by affording greater feeding capacity to the roots of the plants. At the fust indication of disorder, the deranged or enfeebled condition of the stomach, liver, or bowels, should be promptly rectified by Ayer's Cathartic Pills. These Pills do not gripe, are perfectly safe to take, and remove all tendency to liver and bowel complaints. Horses are cheap now, and farm labor is comparatively dear. There is no use in hiring n man to work with horses and then give him a team 'that will need to rest at every bout with the plow or harrow, A three-horse team will usually do one-third more work at either of these operations than will a team having only two horses. It is more important to retain moisture in the soil than td endeavor to get rid of it. Drainage is essential for removing the excess of water in the lower soil, but to retain the water near the surface for the use of plants is important, This may be done by kcepitig the soil constantly loose with the cultivator the fine soil on-the surface serving ns a covering, or mulch, and thereby preventing rapid evaporation, bookSeeping Shorthand and Penmanship. We have recently prepared Books on the above, especially adapted to "Home Study." Sent on 60 days trial. Hundreds have been benefitted hundreds of dollars by ordering our publications. Why not you? Should you later decide to enter our College, you would receive credit for the amount paid. Four weeks by our method of teaching book-keeping is equal to 12 weeks by the old plan. Positions Guaranteed under certain conditions. Send for our Free illustrated 96 page catalogue and "state your wants." Address J. F. Draugh-on, Pres't, Draughon's Practical Business College and School of Shorthand and Telegraphy, Nashville, Tcnn. 11 Teachers. 600 Students the past year. No vacation. Kuter any time. Cheap Board. N. B. We pay $5.00 cash for all vacancies as book-keepers, stenographer, teach ers, clerks,.ctc reported to us, provided we fill same. FATPEOPLE Park Obesity Pills will reduce your weight PERMANENTLY, from 12 to 15 pounds a month, NO Starving sicklies or injury; NO Publicity, They build up' tho health and beaulU fy the complexion lcaving'noWKlNK LER 01 fiabbluess. STOUT ABDOMENS unddifiiciilt breathing eurely relieved. SO EXPERIMENT but u scientific and positive relief ,adopted only after years of experience. All orders supplied direct from our office. Price $2.00 per package or three packages for 85 00 by mail postpaid. Testimonials and particulars (scaled) 2 cents. Ail correspondence Bincuy conn dentiul. FARE REMEDY CO., Boston, Maw. Sturatplc J'ersona AudtliOM troubled with nonromneM rciultlot Iromcartor overwork will be relieved pytaluaf llrown'H J von JUltter$ oenuim, Aiu trade mirk ta)crtvA'dredllaei oa MR. CKCll. JtHODES, Oaroor of a Typloil Eiifflloh Ruler In South Africa. lltgAtt u a tMlnrr In the Olunmmt rielil No Trttatlnn Without Itfirr4rnt itlnn VilfltU nflrrnt Influenco In the I'rumltr I. lie, ' Most conspicuous just now among Englishmen of the type of born rulers is Mr. Cecil Rhodes, whoso virile nnd striking figure bus boon brought very prominently before tho English-speaking world of lato by tho wnr in South Africa. Resinning ns an individual miner iu the diamond fields he showed groat tenuclty nnd energy, and rapidly developed that instinct for organisation nnd management which has now become bis great talent. He rapidly consolidated tho mining interests of his district into one great concern, which Is probably the most extensive mining company In the world. Jle bad the vulunblequality of inspiring men with confidence, not only In his judgment and ability but in hi jjreat schemes, and was speedily recognized ns u natural leader. Nine years ago it i sakl that In the oillee of a merchant he laid bis hand upon a map of Africa, covering the central portion from the Cape of Good Hope to the Zambezi river, saying: All that for England; that is my dream.1' And what bo did with the mining Interests he has now done with the race and international interests. He fcis convinced the English of the Capo aud the Root's of tho Transvaal that their interests arc idcntleal; and there is now In southern Africa but one party, the new Africander party, and Mr. .Rhodes is not only the bead but the creator of it. The war with has been almost entirely managed from the Cain. When the trouble began Mr, Rhodes declared that ho did not want n single redcoat and that he intended to erinh the Mntabeles without adding a penny to the burdens of the British taxpayer; aud now that tbU result lms been substantially accomplished he declares that the burden having been local the rewards should be local also. In other words, the English people at the Cape nrogolnK to manage their own affairs, and If England attempts to impose a policy from London upon them thero arc very frank intlmatious that the United States of South Africa may come into existence. Mr. Rhodes believes in the manifest destiny, not of the English sovereigns, but of the English-speaking race, to control the globe. He has the English love of order and respect for the law and the English hatred of anarchy and of license in nil its forms, flo believes profoundly In self-government, as Ids gift of ten thousand pounds bterllng to Mr. Pnraell suDiclently evidenced, and as his declaration to Mr. Gladstone that the day of taxed republics without representation in the taxing assembly has gone by forever sufficiently shows. He Is a KreaCpowcr dealing with rough conditions with o firm hand and apparently with a statesmanlike purpose. It U said of him that he cares nothing for money except as an Instrument to his higher ambitions. The Review of Reviews described him not long ago as having the face of a Ca?sar, the ambition of a Loyola and the wealth of a Croesus. A man of forty, who has made himself enormously rich, has practically organized a new commonwealth mid become its prime minister, who Jias built a railroad and is building u telegraph line from Cape Town to Alexandria and who has extended the border of I5ape Colony to the Zambezi river, is evidently a man from whom much may be expected. Outlook. Gladstone's First Speech. Mr. Labouchere has come Into possession of a photograph of Mr. Gladstone making his first great speech iu the house of commons in 1833. The sketch, which is said to have been drawn ut the time, represents Mr. Gladstone, then a member for Newark, speaking from the front bench below the gangway in the old house that was burned down the next vear. Mr. Gladstone's very first utterance in the house of commons was made, not from the front bench below the gangway, but f6m under tho gallery, where he was almost Inuudible to reporters; and, curiously enough, It was in reply to Rlgby Vason, then member for Ipswich, and father of Mr. Eugene "Wason, who now represents South Ayrshire as ono of Mr. Gladstone's stanchest. supporters.' Up and Down. Dr. Edward Pynchon, of this city, is the luventor of a flying machine which seems to have certain points of advantage over anything that the airy Mr. Pennington ever devised. Heretofore tho chief dlfiieulty with a flying machine has been to induce it to fly. Pynchon proposes to use dynamite. That certainly ought to send tho machine up nil right; it always bus been easy enough to bring the machine down. Cliieago Dlsuatch, STAYS AND STAMINA. American Women Put to a Curious Physical Tet. The American Woman's World prints the result of an Interesting experiment inado by a dozen young women under tho direction of Dr. Sargent to determine tho influence of tight clothing upon tho action of tho heart. The test was tho running of 410 yards iu looso gymnasium garmentt; and covering the same distance with the corsets on. Tho running time was 2 minutes and 30 seconds for each trial, and iu order that thero should bo no cardiac excitement or depression following the test the second trial was rnudo tho next day. Heforo beginning the running tho average heart Impulse was 81 bonis 'to the minute. After running tbu distance the heart impulse was 152 beats to the minute, the average nnturul wulst girth being 25 inches. Tho next day corsets were worn during tho exercise und the average girth of waist was Inches. The same distance was run In the t same tlmo by al)kund immediately afterward the average heart Impulse was found to bo 108 beats per minute. , Dr. Sargent nays that he never feels justified iu niUWiugnn athlete whoso heart hnpiiKe Is UK) heats per minute after u little exerWso to enter a running or rowing race, aud from this may be inferred the physiological loss entailed upon tho system hi women who force this important organ to labor under tho disadvantage of a corset. No! Available The Philadelphia Times has a droll storv about, n certain "funny man1 whose name i familiar to those who read the :oinie papers of the day. Ho was making a deposit of some cheeks at his bunk when the receiving-teller remarked: "Oh, well, Mr. U , I suppose the hard Mines don't affect men of your profession? People must luvvo poetry, I take It. "Yes" said Mr. 11- cheerfully. "Wo poets thrive iu bard times or easy times.' "I presume so," continued tho teller. "It must be a pretty good business. I imagine that a jHiem of yours must be good for a hundred dollar anvwhere vou please to offer It." said Mr. R f thoughtfully. "Oh, of Mure, of course," he added. Two days later he went into the bank again, and handed a deposit rllp to the teller. It read thus: ( fMlt .1. ...ft ...... .. .,... Chcckt 1'oL.r 1 um ;. ttM VO Hut Mr. 1J s bank-book showed a of only fifty dollars and ninety cents. Tried by His Peers. "It Is well for a speaker to know where his peroration Is going to end when he begins, said E. R, Harper, of Denver. "I heard a young lawyer make his maiden speech. It was iu defense of a fellow who was about arrested on the charge of stealing a hog, the young attorney having beoii' appointed by the court. His defense was that his clbut was an idiot, and unable to distinguish between right aud wrong. He closed a flowing speech with a peroration like this: 'Gentlemen of the jury, look at my client. That low, receding forehetA those hwterlets ivn, portend that he uu deprived by nature of the'powor to dlstlngtihh right from wrong, ignorant of the distinction which exists between his own properly and that of other. To him, as to the two-year old child, whatever ho wants and tan roach belongs to hlin; he knows neither why It does nor why It docs not. Hut, gentlemen of the jury. are the institutions of this our free n:d glorious country that mv client, idiot though be is, stands for a trial to-day by a jury of his p vts.' The crlprit got the full limit of the law." The Attractiwo A. Tho French novelists, who profess tn know more about the fair sex than anybody else, have come to a substantial agreement upon the proposition that woman Is at her moat attractive, and, therefore, most dangerous age when she has reached thirty. They laugh to scorn the budding chat ins of the young miss, and uro equally contemptuous of the wiles of th sirens of forty or thereabouts, but pin their faith upon the nil-subjugating power of the wouian of thirty. They argue that she U j tut at the right nge to claim the homage of oung men, who usually find their chief object of attraction inn woman older than themselves, and are flattered at being permitted to burn incense at her shrine, while at tho same thneshels near enough to the confines of youth to be very enchanting to the older generation, the boys of fifty or sixty. Tboy do not Insist upon the exact ago of thirty, but dechue that the age of attractiveness must full within a margin of two or three years on either side of thirty. N. Y. Weekly. HOimBsniCTiwirjft 1 una IVORY 4j 1 W 60AP &LJLA r '- - mm - v u 99fi f 1 - pwe i KT TOR CLOTHES. th pnocTcn a oamslc co, arm. 03ST jlark I tattler, The Pictures la lui Style ni Si. QrOld Pictures Copied prnl Enlarged A SPECIALTY. 108 Main Street. H7fl , 0YEMW0110, KY TABLER'S DUE BUCKET MJINTMENi: CUBES MOTMHHIMT HIES, known for f Btoab M th MIT i RIMIDY WOW FILM.' rum kt iaBPio Mucin co.t w. torn. immmmm m iifcumpn i,i biw ii i ii ; HOKE SMITH IS "SUCK." Why I,ocl IltmnN Aro No Longer lVr mlltrtl ti It'tln ApiillninN Tur rrmlmH. About the ilrst (mention of policy which Hoke Smith of took und'T htIouh consideration wart how not to do uuylliliiK In tho itiisiuii bureau, ht how to do just im lit tie an mid still have 101 cxcumj for im pointing hundreds of to tho nluco heretofore uh'cu to ex-Union nob diet. "It would, for illuMrntiou, look bad for tho bureau to IsMto a peiinion for only $0 when tho rating of tho local board wiw for i?U or to reject ono when tho local hoatd had rated for $S or $10 nor month. But if there bono rating of tho local Kurds in tho way tho whole matter of disability or no disability, mid if of disability of In with tho hoard, of medical in tho reunion ofdee, who nvo immediately under tho hand of thumb ministration, and pensioiirt aw tmued out or refund altogether, according to tho of the ntnuwphotv iu tho ih.ii tdon oulee no, the pension fnc7tr.,f Ho found a lino way to do thi, however, by a now oiiler limiting tho authority of tho local examining IhuhIs and prohibiting them frouunting applicant. "Thiit is entirely new. Always heretofore in tho hMoiy of the bureau tho local boards have not only given 11 niluutu nnd careful description of tho condition of tho claimants but with tho law them, tho schedule of rutin)? Hurt by thohutoau U'foru them, and tho man himself Ih'fore them, they h.ne gleu their opinion us to the degree of his disability. It has always till now beui thought by tho pension authorities tint the opinion of tho local Ixurd, with their better opportunltim for knowing the exact condition of tho applicant, being informed, as they are, by tho eye, tho greatest of all Instructors was to great weight in tlxhig the rate of iH'iwiou to which ho was entitled. Though not conclusive niton tho bureau, It lias always Uhii thought to lv the very IW light It had. In the wry nature of things it is tho lest guide they havo iu determining hero in tho oMce tho dogieo of that nianVdiMbllity, who is huudieds, lvrhaps thousands of miles away, mid whom no one lino in tho bureau has ever seen. Hat now tho only suigious who have seen the applicant and him aro forbhhk? to uiv nnvthiug about tho degree of his disability." A rciulou l 11 (VrttfU'iito of lluiitir. The Congressional Hecorrt thus reports a paago in tho hpetch of Dan W.engh cf Indiana in tho house: I want to say, hero and now, in my placo on this lloor, that I would rather In) tho iossespor of tho pen-don isMiiil to tho humhW of all Indiana soldiers than to bo tho pus!or nf tho liiglut conuuisslou issued iu thu armies of treason and agaiunt My country. ApphiUMj on tho Hi cau pide.l Of couimj the npphiUR) was "on tho Kepubllean side." Tho senrinteut was such that it could lo reeihed only with freezing ftilcnco on tho Democrat lo side, mt1 mt'iit nnd Wncr. Ponuvlvatda employs tneto K"ople in thoshops aud factories than the l.'E south rn htatis couibhurt. PeuuhanlapaK more wages to hdr than all tho stales of thosouth. uioutty iu wages than all the southern states combined, but lun but two votes In thu United States while tho MUithern states combined hao in;. Wliere tin Vnten Couu l'ront Ten iit cent of thoiaanufaeturing interests of the Uiiltirt States control 2P tnio trade votes In tho United States Pvnate, while Piiaisylvania, with tw vote iorproteetiui, lepresriitsagrealir amount of industrial interests. TniiisMirtHtIn. TI10 nearer producer and eynsumeraro brought together thu morn fw jiroflt to tho inortuccr, the less tho ct to tho consumer, aud the thopntfit t tho middleman. Tin True DiKtrliH' Trom tho earliest history iu tho nations thero is brought beforo our minds tho iuuuoital principle of protection. Society from thoU'ginning f' tho Idighting touch of tho foreign I. t ruder, 111 edhig protection against t he incursions of those whose only pnrposu wiw cheaiti'iiing men'rt opiwrtunities to themselves. Tho platform of tho Kepnhll m party iu lb!) explicitly sets foith tho doctrines that iilliutlcliM that cannot 1k pirxluceil in this country, except luxuries, should bo admitted freo of duty, and that on all imports coining into competition with laltor there idiould bo levied dutio njual to tho ditTerenco lictwccn wugcf nbroad and at home. Our nation began with such a law. Tho second pnhllo act of tho Jlrst congress was for protection For a hundred years as a nation wohav housed tho panpers of thu world and given employment to tho laborers from all tho eiowded cities of tho world, and In doing this wo have constantly increased tho demand for labor by thu possibility of Mug ablo to sell at a rcmuueiutWo pi lco tho product of that lalxjr. Get our prices on Tol) Wok before going elsewhere curt undOnlnmllAhlLl il ht huuiu WHISKEY U.M.W0OLLEY.M.D. OfflcolWIiWMteluaiBU We are manufacturers of Buggies, Carts Surries and Carriages, and deal directly with he consumer, thus saving him the per cent, usually'paid to, middle men. Our prices are reat onable, and we guarantee satisfaction. Respectfully, Owensboro, Kv Thai Hacking Cough if allowed to run, will destroy the lining to Throat and Lungs, weaken the system and invite the Consumption Germ. Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil, with hypophosphitcs of lime and soda, builds up the system, overcomes Chronic Coughs and Colds, and strengthens the Lungs. Physicians, the world over, endorse it. SCOTTG CMULSIOM U the most nourlihlne food known to scfcncu, Oil rendered palatable and oaiyto xmimilate. Prnparotl by 6oott A Cowna, N.Y. DrufrsUts sell It. :&EgsMammmmmmMmmmammmam HORSE SENSE IN A '.&mAl i Ul I V, I "fa. t'.tVSii i.jfty 1 - 3stftiwlMuJLjtjfteK. 1wUamim&te ;JW (ik Qj.j ii2K ,v:ykia a; ,1 Kj,,. JL 'ji j 1 k. v - tr. si, ISLT Si ! All ll'tfaA :c(Vni;k Reapers and Mowers arc built by iha HcCORMICK HARVESTING . . ". C CO., CHICAGO, arJ ae lor salo wherever grain cr grass 1: grown. Z. BUTLEK, A&'T, FORDSVILLE. Come to Hartford -TO t2tikffc7 sfi a,ax,4c . p SPRING OPENING OF C. L. Field's carol Buggies just from the Davis Carriage Company. He will bavo you MONEY by liuymg from HIM. Will ffll you 11 Htipcy, llnrnecs, Lap Duster nml Whip (mm ffiO.OO up lo fTR.OO. The Davis Carringo Company lms tho reputation o( huililing tho best Uiijjjry Cor tho niuucy o( any Factory in Cincinnati. So come and judge for yourself. WEE KLY - IAI S MMilALI rninr m mTj 1 FN 1 rl V y ' Y ' yC JFmjff T!T1 f W IV I CT IT f.i?!!!, Li . 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