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C. T. U. COLUMN. btto: "God and Home and Native Land bhn P. Squire, president of the a n P. Squire & Co. Slaughtering Curing Establishment, Gore St., t Cambridge, where eight hun 1 men are employed, says: "My brvation of the effect of no-license fambridge leads me to affirm with- any qualification that the charac- jand habits of a good many of the employed by us have shown a ded improvement since it went effect. Before no-license the sa as and tippling shops were nuraer- in the vicinity of the packing- Re where tne men worKea, ana ky of them lay between the pack house and the homes of the men, were a constant temptation to V . -m 111 t. t pi. jnow tnat tney nave Deen ariv ut of Cambridge and resort has to bad either to the kitchen bar ms or to the saloons in Boston, a It many of the men refrain entire J-om patronizing either, and the It is that drinking among the men tvery largely decreased. As a nat- result, the men do more and bet- vork, with less waste arising from lessness or incompetency; and post of production has correspond Y decreased. I think I may say the change in these respects is noticeable since no-license was blished in Cambridge. In con- ion with the packing house, we a grocery and provision store, hich naturally a good many of the trade; and, if no other way ex ; to compare the workings of li 3 and no-license, this would be gh to warrant any one in prefer the latter to the former, for it is jctly evident from an examina of the accounts there kept that amilies of the men have a great more spent in provisions and bries than they did when the sa- were running in Cambridge. I hformed that the same is true of lothing and shoe stores. loosider Chamberlain's Cough Remedy a re foTcroup. It is very pleasant to take, ts onof the most important requisites co-ngh remedy is intended for use b children. I have known of cases of where I know the life of a little one lived by the use of Chamberlain's Cougb ly." J. J. LaGrange, druggist, Avoca, 50 cent bottles for sale by H. C. Pierce. L Perry was a Southern gentle - exceedingly polite and a very erate man. One day he met an fxintance, who called out: "Hal- erry! I was just going to get a t. Come in and take something." nank you," said Perry. 'I don't jfor anything." bt," persisted the other, "come Id take something, just for socia- s sake." Ivant to be sociable," answered . "I am anxious to be sociable, can't drink with you." 11 right," growled the friend. "If Idon't want to be sociable, I'll sro iut drinking." : two men walked silently along minute or two, the sociable man tate of great irritation, until Per- Idenly halted in front of a drug- am not feeling well to-day," said ith a pleasant smile,"and I think in here and get a dose of castor jWill you join me?" hat!" exclaimed the other. "In 3 of castor-oil?" ?s, I'll pay for it." h!" cried the sociable man, h wry face. "I hate the stuff." It I want you to take a glass o f ith me just to be sociable, you k-on't do it." jdeed, my friend," said Perry, ly, "your sociable whiskey is p distasteful to me as my oil is to Don't you think I have as much h to be offended with you as you vith me?" sociable man saw the point; and bid be money, healthand morals if the lesson could be firmly im d in the mind of every young pi the land. JUST FOR FUN. troubled with catarrh for seven years is to commencing tne use oi Jtiys Balm. It has done for me what other d cures have failed to do cured me. ect of the Balm seemed magical. e L. Huff, Biddeford, lie. hvere very much edified the other L- hearing an intelligent man who ken the Keeley cure for tobacco, ?s himself most emphatically t the habit. He spoke in de- bf the rights of those who did e the weed, and especially did end the wife of the tobacco us- nce this man has stopped the he has discovered how offensive L those who have not contracted bit. He sees, as a matter of tght, that those to whom tobac ffensive, should not be com- to suffer simply to gratify a habit. If those who use tobac 1 stop to consider how distress s for a non-user of the weed to hpelled to breathe the smoke of o, they will understand why we t. Think of a pure clean woman obliged to breathe tobacco or smell the breath of one who lit finished his cigar or laid aside e. lmon cold should not be neglected. Elixir will cure it. "Where are you going to spend the summer?" "Somewhere where I shall not have to spend anything else." Did the term woolly west originate from the unpleasant fact that many an investor has been fleeced there? "Mary" asked Charles, "what ani mal drormfid from the clouds?" "The rain, dear," was the whispered reply. The time appears to be at hand when a man who is referred to as sil ver-haired wall regard it as an attempt to depreciate him. After trying many remedies for catarrh during the past twlve yeas. I tried Ely's Cream Balm with complete success. It is over one year since I stopped using it and have had no return of catarrh. I recommend it to all my friends. Milton T. Palm, Reading. City Sportsman: "Have you seen anything worth shooting at around here?" Farmer: "Well, no, not till you came." Mother Horrors! How did you get so muddy? Small Son Runnin' home home to see if there was anything you wanted me to do. "De singin' ob birds is sweet," re marked Uncle Eben, "but de cackle ob er chicken on your roos' has a heap mo' expression in it." Teacher What is the meaning of self control? Boy It's when a teacher gets mad and feels like giving a boy a black mark and doesn't. You can never measure the spiritual welfare of a congregation from tne height of the church steeple for which the members have paid. Hood's Cubes. In saying that Hood's Sar- saparilla cures, its proprietors make no idle or extravagant claim. Statements from thou sands of reliable people ot what Hood's Sar saparilla has done for them, conclusively prove the fact. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures. Hood's Pills act especially upon the liver, rousing it from torpidity to its natural duties cure constipation and assist digestion. Clara Why are you so bitter against him just because he proposed and you refused him? Maud The wretch! He said he would never ask me again. She Who is that strange old man in the next box? He seems so terribly depressed. He Why,that is Mr.Long head, the author of this comic opera. Your son is a very clever lecturer, Mr. Henpeck, does he inherit his tal ent from you? Not by a jugful, said Henpeck ruefully. He gets the lec ture habit from his mother. Colonel, I hear that you were a so cial lion in Washington? Yes, sir! Loaned three congressmen $10 apiece and got a chance to pay a senator's hotel bill. Bcckxen's Aenica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup tions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay re quired. It is guaranteed to give perfect sat isfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For Sale by H. C. Pierce. First World's Fair Visitor Then there are places where you can get 25 cent lunches? Second World's Fair Visitor Yes, you can get them all round here by paying $1.00. Clergyman (lately come to the par ishYour neighbor, Smith, says my sermons are rubbish. Farmer Ah! You needn't mind 'im sir: 'e's merely a mouthpiece for other folks. "Why do you not eat your apple, Tommy?" "I'm waitin' till Johnny Briggs comes along. Apples taste much better when there's some other boy to watch you eat 'em." Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. "I don't like your milk," said the mistress of the house. "It's dreadful ly thin, and there's no cream on it." "Arfter you've lived in the city awhile, mum," said the milkman, encourag ingly, "you'll git over them rooral idees o' yourn." "In this building," said Mr. Anothy Brady, who was showing his guests the sights of Albany, 'is one of the largest electric-light plants in the country. I'd like also to show you our largest gas-works, but the legis lature isn't in session." The wind sometimes cuts very queer capers. An old colored woman in the upper part of Madison county, Ga., owns a large wash -pot which she claims was turned inside out by a cy clone. She says the pot is as good as ever, only the legs and handle are on the inside now, and pesters her when she stirs the clothes. Let one man tell a dog story, and every other man in the room feels he wants to tell a bigger one. There is a story going I cannot vouch for its truth, it was told me by a judge of a man who lay dying. The pastor of the parish, a good and pious man, came to sit with him, and, thinking to cheer him up, told him an anecdote about a dog. When the pastor had finished, the sick man sat up, and said, "I know a better story than that. I had a dog once, a big, brown, lop-sided ." The effort had proved to much for his strength. He fell back upon the pillows, and the doctor stepping for ward, saw that it was a question only of minutes. The good old pastor rose, and took the poor fellow's hand in his, and pressed it. "We shall meet again," he gently said. The sick man turned towards him with a consoled and grateful look. "I'm glad to hear you say that," he feebly murmured. "Remind me about that dog." Then he passed peacefully away, with a sweet smile upon his pale lips. It is courage, more than anything else, that the world has need of at the present day. It has brains enough, but not enough of valor, and for the lack of that valor much of the world's best thought goes to naught. It has will enough, but not enough of the heroic spirit. Too many men still fear to battle for the truth. They palliate their cowardice by naming it "prudence," "conservatism," "discretion." Discretion may at times be the bet ter part of valor, but the worm7 reatest benefactors have oftenest found valor to be the better part of discretion. The poet says that "faint heart never won fair lady;" the historian proves that faint spirit never won truth's victories. The golden age of which all the world is dreaming is realizable, but not thro' dreaming, but through do ing, not tnro' wisning, dud tnrougn daring. Dare, and it is thine. Dare, and chains fall and prison walls crumble away. Little girl Was your folks poor when you were a little girl? Grandma We thought we were, my dear. We were pioneer farmers, and lived in a log cabin; but it was large and comfortable; the floors were warmly carpeted; we had plenty to eat and plenty to wear. But we raised everything ourselves, and made our own cloth. We had no money to go to stores, even if we had been near any ; and so we felt very, very poor. There were two things we were all fond of, and. oh, how we longed for them, and how we wished we could afford them; but we could not, and it made us feel very misera ble to be so poor. Those two things were salt mackeral and store molas ses. Little Girl Ooo! Why, what did you have to eat then? Grandma Nothing but beef, mut ton, chickens, venison, quail, squir rels, wild ducks, brook trout and such things; and as for molasses we hadn't anything but maple syrup. A physician, who is a specialist in nervous diseases says that women should sleep at least nine hours at night and one hour in the daytime. A woman will plead that she hasnt't time to lie down for a few minutes in the daytime ; and she will infringe upon the hours of the night, which should be given to sound healthy, needed sleep, in order to finish some piece of work which could as well be completed on the morrow. She wTill rush and hurry all day long; and then, when the household is hushed in slumber at night, she will sit up and read the daily paper, thinking she will not have to pay for the time she is stealing from the health-giving sleep that comes be fore midnight. WOMEN HAVE NERVE. One of Them Masters an Unruly Lion "With lioth Muscle and Looks. Few of those who saw Miss Johnstons at tbe evening performance at Hagen beck's knew that just a moment before she appeared smiling in the arena she had gone through an experience which she v.Till never forget. At the perform ance of the animals she puts a lion through an net in which the animal rides on the hack of a horse. The lion is called Black Pri-nce. He is a big black maned aniu;r.l. ui:d of Into he has developed a temper. A week ago he made a- slash at Miss Johnstons with his paw, and she narrowly vr-, ;ped. Since th.it time lis has been sovuug worse, and it required ; firm hairs! to make him go thro;: ;b the performance. L :te yesterday Black Prince came in contact with another lion called Prince. They immediately began to fight. For 30 i:ecoui.:s it was a battle royal. The powerful brutes struck and bit each oth er. avA it req uired the united force of the trainers t separate them and get each one into-a separate cage. Tbe fight took place a very few mini ates before Miss Johnstons' turn came to go on and give her performance. There is a door at the back of the cages and a narrow passageway that leads into the big cage in the center of the arena. It is the practice of the performer to stand by the entrance- while the lions are let out and then; to- follow them into the per forming, arena. As usual, Miss Johnstons was at her post. It was just before the 7 o'clock performance, and the light at the back of the c ige was dim. j When the floor of the cage was opened. Black Princj sprang out with a savage I roar. When he saw Miss Johnston, she j paused for a moment. She saw the dan- ! gerous look irs his eyes and changed the j whip from the- right hand to the left, j An iron rod. lay on the floor between her j and the angry lion. The situation was I trying. Black Prince crouched ready I for a spring... As he lowered to the floor ; Miss Johnstons bent down and kept her j eyes on the lion. Not a word was spoken, j A cry would have meant death to the ! imperiled woman. Slowly she advanced toward the irom rod. Black Prince saw the move and knew what was coming. Just an instant before her fingers clutch ed the rod the lion sprang. But Miss Johnstons saw him coming, and with a courage and coolness that make heroes she sprang close up against the wall of the cage, and the brute brushed past her. Before he could turn she had the rod in ' her hand. The baffled brute turned with a savage roar and started for the woman. This time, armed, she held her ground. The rod descended with a sounding blow on the head of the brute. For fully two minutes it was a battle for supremacy. Miss Johnstons won, and driving the brute into the arena she followed and smiled to the audience, which applauded her though she had just stepped from her tlressing room. Once only during the performance did the lion show his temper. That was when he was ordered to leap from the pedestal to the horse's back. Miss Johnstons was behind him, and as he was stubborn she struck him a light blow with her whip. The lion turned fiercely and struck at her, and in doing so fell off the pedestal. He crouch ed to spring, but the daring woman marched up to him and made him cower with a look. Chicago Record. SPRING OPENING At the Barton Furniture Store. Chamber Suits form 18 to $50, Consisting of Bass, Birch, Maple, Ash or Oak. A great variety of Iasy Chairs, Lounges, Bed Lounges and Couches. A good line of Jiedsfeads, Bedsprings, Mat tresses, Pillows, Feathers, Wire Cots, Odd Dress ing Cases, Com modes and Stands. Lyndon Savings Bank, LYNDOHVILLE, VT. O F F I C E II S . I.W.SANBORN President. C D. BIGELOW, Vic-Presilnt. I 8. PEAlxL, Treason THUS T E E S . I. W.SANBOIiN, I.W.COPKLANU, II E.FOLSOM, J.C. II. F.PIIXKBUKY. O. T). liKiKI-OW, f. F. KU'il.LK- . EATON. I have a big line of CARPETING of all kinds. Parties wishing to purchase Tapestry Carpeting will' Snd here a good selection of the BEST as well as the cheapest grades. Window Shades from the cheap Holland to the Opaque. fringed 26.50 This will buy you a first-class ticket to Chi cago, and return, good lor 3 months. We will give you a written guarantee with every ticket. 34 World's Fair tickets sold last week. Write for information. BIGElOW & HOLBEOOK, Drggists and Ticket Brokers. NEWPORT, VT. Jit good line of Door Draperies and Table Spreads Soon to be opened, and a good line of Undertakers Goods Always in stock. My neighbors have adopted the cash plan. I have to pay cash for all I buy, to eat, drink, and to wear ("and don't beat the parties down either") so shall expect the cash for all goods when delivered. NOT1JUST IS THIS MOTTO. Thanking you for past favors, I am very truly yours. Liberal, Progressive, Solid. The Conn. General Life Insurance Co., OF Hartford, Connecticut. Buy no Policy till you have examined their Jat-est. Chas. Graves, Agent, Barton, YL G. H. Smalley, Turlington, YL J. P. BALDWIN, Mar. 10, '93. b , Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat ient business conducted for MOOCRATC FEES. ! Our. officx is Opposite U. S. patent Ornct , and we can secure patent ia less time than those i remote from. Washingten, J Send, model; drawing or photo., with descrip i tion. We advise;, if patentable or not. free of charge. Our fee not due tilt patent is secured. ! A Pamphlet. "How to Obtain Patents." with cost of same in the U.St and foreign countries sent free. Address, C.A.SNOW&CO.) upp. KAHNTurncr, Washington, d. c. Scientific) American Agency for Ml 'ifCrnoi Em arks. (V'T-i'X DESIGN PATE NTS, COPYRICHTS. atoJ For Information and free Handbook wrttw to MUNN & CO.. a;i HitoAiWAV, New Your. Oldest bureau tnr Becurtng patents In America. Kvery patent taken out by us is brrmjrlit teforw tne pubiio by a notice given free of charge in tb Largest circulation of any sHentlflo parr In th world. plt:ii(liiily illuHtrated. No Intelligent man photild be without it. Weekly, ft.'J.OO ear; ll.frliiix months. Address JliINN A CO., PfBLisuiaia, a til iiroauway, Haw York City. FRAZER AXLE GREASE BEST IS THE WORLD. JtswearioR qualitiesare unsurpassed, actually mitlaatinir two box. of (inyother branit Kni efiscted by beak. ftsOEIlIKCilljlNE. FOR SALE BY DEALERS GENERALLY. Jyf When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. "When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. WLen she had Children, she gave them Castoria. ALL SORTS. Tapley's -'Bread Winner''outwears all other shoes. An awful story teller Zola. Dean's Rheumatic Pills absolutely cure rheumatism & neuralgia. Entirely vegeta ble. Safe. Jn a vial business Druggists. Lane's Family 3Iedlcine Moves the Bowels Most people need to use it Each day. Not given a bit to eat Horses. Coughing: Leads to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once Well-preserved men Mummies. Chocolate Biscuit. Take one pound of powdered sugar, six and a half aunces of dry sifted flour, one dozen eggs, and a quarter of a pound of grated chocolate. Separate the yolks from the whites, and beat the yolks and sugar to a cream. Whisk the whites to a stiff snow, then mix in the flour, the yolks and sugar, and chocolate. Put the mixture into little paper cases, dust over with fine pow dered sugar, place them on baking sheets and bake in a moderate oven. Tlie larinj; IUtle of a Newspaper Woman. "Ono of the most daring things that I ever did in all my life," remarked a vroinan journalist the other day, "was to ride in a Broadway car from Fifty ninth street to the Battery at the time of the strikes. Except myself, there was not a passenger in the car, and my com panions on the ride were several pistoled policemen and the nonunion driver. Lots of stones and stuff came crashing, through the windows as wo made our adventurous progress through the city streets, and some shots were fired.. I managed to escape these delicate little attentions by a skillful dodging and ducking, and if the policemen saw some thing coming that I did not. they would courteously warn me, 'Look out there! It was very exciting but I was rather glad to get to the end. What did I do it for? I was correspondent for a Phila delphia paper at the time, and I thought it would make a good story. It didtoo." New York Times. Coal, Iron and Steel, Blacksmith's Coal, Horseshoe Nails, Chains, etc., for sale Strictly for Cash on Delivery, ut J. W. MURKLAND'S, JJartoii, Vt., June 2G. FOIt SALE. N f II I W IS THE POPULAR SUB5TITUTE FOR LARD. Save Your Old Pens. Joseph Gillott, a member of the xrr : known firm of makers of steel pens. ; that a steel pen will last for months vii careful use. "If your pen gets scratchy and doesn't write well." he further v -serts, "don't cast it aside for a new That is folly. The pen is not x.-ozzi o-, but simply tired. Give it a rest i.:r u day or two. Then hold it in a gasli:.; for perhaps 15 seconds, not longer, an'd resume your writing. If you are net. pleasantly surprised at the results, Til set myself down as a poor prophet. " Philadelphia Ledger. His Bane. "He will never be great." "Why, his hair is as long and thick as can be, and he is impolite to the last de-' gree" "But yoa can read his writing." Truth. An Old Temple Uneartnetl. A very important discovery of ruins has just been mado near Ixtlan. A par ty of American and English archaeol ogists, while exploring that remote sec tion, came upon an old building almost buried in the earth. It is located in a dense forest and must have been undis turbed for several hundred years. The strxicture is built of stone and is of largo dimensions. The roof is now almost on a level with the ground, and with but little difficulty the stones were removed and the interior explored. A large num ber of idols, pottery and weapons made of stone were found. In one corner of the main room was found a pile of hu man bones. It is believed that the build ing was used as a temple of worship by the Indians or a prehistoric race centu ries ago. San Francisco Examiner. Tlie Cape Breton Coal Syndicate. It is now stated that the Cape Breton coal syndicate has raised in various ways the sum of $21,000,000 on the property it has acqtiired. The stock issued amounts to $18,000,000, and besides this a loan of $3,000,000 secured by mortgage has been obtained. The purchases made by the syndicate represent an expenditure of $3,500,000. What has become of the balance of $18,500,000? Possibly verv llittle of the stock is paid up, and if f 'is the case the promoters have obi cd b vast franchise at a very slight outlay. 1 Toronto Mail. In Glover Village, the Wood Shop lately owned by C. S. Leonard, with Water Tower, Shafting, etc. A good chance for fotne one who wants a Shop for wood working purposes. MIIS. S. F. LEONARD. Administratrix. rj-u i Mf.ii'., -i - now Jhill! Uiy", fty (V7 4 tnction oi 15 lti., and I i m ich ttur tlit I wauld not Uk $I,00 nd bo put tuwk wa.r I -tt. I ni Ixith i!rj d nd proud f h ch.nif.. I rauaitim-x ion' lr.t.nrnt to til ii llr.r. tmm tbutity. WiU ituwit all ituuirin if tlauip U i.l..ad for reply." PATIENTS TREATED Y 'AIL. CONFIDENTIAL KarailoM, and with lUflm uniirenlDO, or tad allacU. rcr particular! addrvu, witli or til. .a lUuia, CI 0. V. r. SHYGEI. V VICXEK'S TlfLirCX. CKICACHtlL I ORLEANS TRUST COMPANY. Commenced luiii-a MaKch 10, 1R91, Statement at Close of Business Mar. 31, 1892. . , ft Ufn tracts. Loans on Vermont Mortgage, " ' Mortgages elsewhere, 21,.Vi.H " with Mortgage as Collateral, 8.504.67 " on Personal Security, 47,1H3.M ftoclcs and Bonds, 17,516.00 School Order, 4.V05 Certificate of Deposit, loans on Deposit liooks, 70. w " " National Bank Stock, 3,04.1.00 " " other Collateral Security, 2,727.0 Cash on hand, 1S.K18.68 Capital Stock paid in, Due Depositors, " State of Vermont, Taxes, Unearned Discounts, Mills Payable, Undivided Profits, 179,067.08 Lf ABILITIES. if-.V), 000.00 12tM.VI.7e 170.K8 ftTO.Kl 27.60 1,843.13 179 ,007 08 TuiH company receives deposits in turni of one dollar and upward, upon which it agrees ' to pay interest at the rate of 4 per cent, annual ! ly, which will be compounded semi-annually ; if not called for. ; This rate of interest is guaranteed by the ' stockholders who are holden in double the ; amount of their stock for the payment of all j deposits. ! Thisis a chartered savings bank and all j unis deposited with it to an amount not e ! ceeding $1,500. each are exempt from tHxntlon ! nf the depositor. Passumpsic Savings Bank, St. Johnsbury, Vt. 30th, 1893. and be sure that ycu get it . Made only by : i. X. FAIRBANK CO.. CH1CACO, and it 224 State Street, Boston. jyjJ f'TTOLKNEi r CoTTOLBNE f CoTTOLENE 1 Q I I O ' 'ottolene' 'Cottoi.ene Cottplbne j S TA TEMEN T: JUNE ASSETS. Loans in Vermont, Ixans Elsewhere. Municipal. County and School Bond at par, Vermont Bank Stocks, at par. Banking House, Other Real Estate, Owned, Interest and Premiums, Due from Banks, Currency and Specie, f.'29,8.10,R3 ,689,89 412.M2.75 52.700,00 15,000,00 3,2i0,8O 40.H40.R3 70,045,88 12.835.W It Shocked Her. Young Golight She said I was either W fool or a knave. Miss Hubb Shocking! Young Golight I should say so. Miss Hubb Yes, she should have said i-ther. Good News. i E 1 1-ii i 11 Mf 11 f y y & is w pyuaustED VITALITY. The rrors of Youth. Pimtnre Decline, Lost Man hood SAM I Diaeasea and Weakness of Man, from Shaver cause, veiiaanentlr and Privately i, ftoviit Tru tmesi. Io Failure. Consul- j tetmninrn l ter. Address Wm. H.Parker M D OTPeibody Medical Institute, No. 4 BnlflBch I Kt'reetL Boston. Mass. Prospectus and desenpttTS ' ppTdetclosoh; sealed, free to all. Bend now. ' LIABILITIES. Due 6.va Depositers, Surplus and Profits, 4HH23,60A,90 1753,606.90 70,01)0,00 tl23,60,90 EMERSON HALL, President. IM. S. BOYNTON, Treas.