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Show , THINKER. tSADEEP mand more than the debtor agreed tc pay. It will go on until the adjustmeni is complete. If it be assumed that the increased production of silver and its decreased use by other nations has cheapened th( commodity to the detriment of th creditor, does it make it honest to demonetize silver and; demand pay ir gold? If a note was given to be paid ir wheat and in the year the note cam due .the production ; of wheat had doubled so that the note could be paid more easily than either the debtor oi the creditor had reason to expect would it not still be just to pay in wheat and should not the debtor profit by the increased production of the commodity in which he agreed to pay? Should th creditor be allowed to change the contract! by demanding spring wheat or fall wheat for his debt? If the. production of money increased after! th debt was made, is it not right that the debtor should profit by this increase? If the production of money had decreased, would the creditor have asked to change the law to include copper or iron in the circulating medium,1 because gold and silver were too scarce He would still have demanded his pound of flesh. If it is easier to pay than it was then supposed, he has no right to demand more than the pound.oi Whether silver is cheaper because increased production in America or because of the smaller use in Europe Cannot effect the equity of the case. When gold and silver were made money the debtor had the right to get 'them anywhere on the earth as cheaply as he , CLARENCE sj DARROW FAVORSK free coinage. Chicago Scholar Sees in It the .Redemption of the Wage Earn New Lights on the ing Classes "The Great j Subject. It woulfi perhaps be Impossible to determine why gold and silver are usee civilized na ior money.! The tions of the earth in this as in mos other customs, followed the barbarous nations, which tad generally come to regard these taetals as the best for purposes of exchange. In ancient times they circulated as because of the intrinsic tfieyldo value of the coins. It required a com to paratively large amount Of labor not produce the metals; they were iound in so greatj a quantity, and there fore they were valuable as compared ' with most of the other metals and products of the earth. In early days all exchange was barter, and all business was done for cash. When goods were sold an equivalent was given. It was therefore necessary to have some uni versal solvent that could be exchanged for any commodity the purchaser might desire. Gold and silver gradually came to be regarded as this universal solvent, and when commodities were boughj and sold they were simply exchanged for so much of those metals as were equal to the value of the goods In those days wfien commodities were rare, when business was limited, when transactions were all made in cash, it was supposed or assumed that the gold world were for some of about the right work. In these days, is infinitely greater, when distribution and exchange is the principal business of the world and inthan then, when all a different manner in done is business than in primitivel times, it is still asso-call- t s. to-da- ed y, ; , . i . could. When it is contended that the increase of silver makes money cheaper, it must be admitted that destroying silver and leaving gold. to do the work makes money dearer. It is deliberately contended that gold alone should pAy debts, and yet it la howhere proposed that the debts should be discounted to make up for the increased valuq of gold. The talk of "international agreesumed that there) is substantially the ment is only a delusion and a snare. right amount of gold and silver to do To urge that an international agreethe business of the world. No one ment should be had is to concede the has ever attempted to show how much whole case, and admit that the bimetmoney business needs or what are the allist is right. This controversy is "benatural laws that govern the use of tween the use of gold alone and the use money In the exchange of goods. It is equally of gold and silver, and neither is it was a thousand internationalism nor . ratio has any assumed the that precious bearing on the case. years ago, metals are found jancF can be found in If the American sends his wheat to the right quantities to satisfy the re- Europe he will not take silver unless the J quirements of trade, and also to fulfill silver Is worth more than the wheat. the other functions for which these If silver becomes plenty prices will rise, metals are employed. but this is the only effect, and this is on all certainly no reason why both gold and It is claimed hands that gold aid silver circulate be- silver should not continue to be the cause of their intrinsic value; that money of the land. Silver is a valu' these metals i are money, and that all able commodity used in every country other forms of currency are promises to of the world, and one of the chief prodpay money; that in the last analysis ucts of the United States. There is no all debts and, &11 exchanges must be more danger that America can have too paid in coin. It must follow1 frbm this much silver than that she can have too that the, greater the amount of coin much gold or too much iron. the less is its value per ounce or pound, - The question of ratio has nothing to and that it isj always to the interest of do with the controversy. So long as the debtor to increase the volume of money circulates because of its commoney, and to the interest of the cred- modity value all kinds of money should itor to diminish the amount.1 How the be of about the same value.- Gold and volume of currency affects those who silver have remained of nearly the same are neither debtors nor creditors is a relative value for nearly 100 years. It matter of piire speculation, as no one is possible that over long periods of has ever proved, or seemingly tried to time It is desirable that the ratio prove, how much coin is required to do should be changed. The exact ratio at the business of the world. The chief which two articles will exchange is a equities in the controversy over gold question not of theory, hut of practice. and silver are between the debtor and To enlarge the use of silver would nec' the creditor. essarily increase its value. It would It is practically undisputed that from likewise necessarily decrease the value the formation of the government up to of gold, as both commodities would 1873 silver held p.t least an equal place then be used to perform the new work before the law as the legal money of now done by gold alone. the land. Air debts were payable in so 1873 to silver and gold were Up many ounces of silver .or so , many coined on a ratio of 16 to 1; they should ounces of gold, 'as the debtor might be restored to that basis. If it is then sleet. All the gold and silver that could found by experiment that the ratio Is be obtained either by exchange or by not the proper one, as governed by the digging in the earth was available for laws of trade, the ratio should be the liquidation of indebtedness. changed for convenience, until It is claimed that the increased pro- float together,, but in making they the duction of silver and the demonetizatcred-tonor the debtor r neither the ion of this metal by other nations so change should be askedto bear all the loss. added to its volume as to make it no The silver dollar should be made larger longer fitted to perform the function of and the gold dollar proportionately money, at least equally with gold. smaller until they circulate together. The value of gold and silver, like that It is, however, not necessary that Jf all other commodities, is governed by they should 'be of equal value. Supthe law of supply and demand. A lit- pose the cheaper money doe3 drive out tle more than half the gold and silver lie dearer what of it? Not a dollars of the world Is used as America withmoney; the rest worthof gold will leave is used for other well-knofull equivalent v tin something. pifrposes. out A great increase in silver without an This is the law of trade. If It should snlarged demand mdst- decrease its all go to Europe we would get some-hin- g value. And, equally, diminishing the worth jnore to us than the gold imountof the circulating medium with we sent away,' and with this someIts use must1 increase thing and the productions of the counit3 value. If silver could be shoveled try we can buy It back if it must be oht of the earth as easily as safid it had. If silver should be cheaper propvould become cheaper. Under free coinerty would be sold and debts contractage the' owner of 412 on the basis of this money, and no ed could go to the mint and have grains a dollar mark harm could result. .That some conPlaced upon his coin and it must be tracts have been made In gold only laken to liquidate a dollars worth of shows how, the powerful nullify the debts. As silver grew cheaper, the law. To restore silver so that it will prices of all commodities would necesequally perform the function, of money rise. On the If other hand, the will increase the supply of money and sarily United States, both gold and sil- thus make . it cheaper. It will make ver as money, using should determine that gold cheaper while it enhances the Juver should no longer be coined, but price of silver. Sold must fill the In the history of the country gold Has place of both, then gold would been cheaper and silver has sometimes necessarily rise And the price of all other commodities pro- sometimes been cheaper, but business portionately fall. The full measure of was done the same. Man does not live this change would not be realized at by gold alone, whatever its advocates ince, but gradually the law of may imagine. and demand would enhance the supply In this issue there ought to be no value f the article that in this manner was chance for men to be deceived; those wCmpelled to do double duty until the who are .not for bimetallism are for prices had adjusted themselves to the gold. If we are to wait for England decreased volume of wait forever, and all financiers circulating me-uu- we must know It well. Both common sense and 3rcs dhl notjfall immediately upon a moderate degree of national pride the demonetization of silver in 1873. and independence ought to show the and and commodities have a certain folly of waiting for England. England been gradually given owns the bonds and credits of the , U8V tliat by the laws trade. To change world; the scarcer the money the more values in the absence of a panic she is able to demand. If we are bound 3 a slow, process, and the full effect of to follow England in dropping silver the volume of money could and taking gold she might equally comreached for years after the pel us to drop gold and take v comnienced to operate. Shut-steaFor America to wait for Engltnd to iS6 in a locomotive does consent to bimetallism could only have the l) I16 loaded train at once. This been paralleled by the slaves toin conjv masters the haS boen constantlY on south waiting for icr6 years- Every, going in this sent to freedom. tue creditor has been year CLARENCE 3. DARROW. able to de to-da- y, so-call- ed , nnd-conced- ed . j - , j I wn AFTERTHIRTY YEARS. Vast Quantities Eaten at Luncheon Without Apparent Evil Results. UTES THIS STORY. There, is a vast consumption of cofHow Fred Taylor, of the Gallant 189th fee and cakes at the luncheon hour over N. T., V. I., Finally Found in the German quarter. It is, indeed, ' What He Sought, the land o cakes, though not of' the (From the Ashtabula, Ohio, Beacon.) Scotch kind. Vienna is a famous town Mr. Fred Taylor was born and brought for cakes and pastry, and many of the up near Elmira, N. Y., and from there of residents German quarter are the enlisted in the 189th regiment, N. Y., V. I., with which he went through the war, from that city. Hence, doubtless, the and saw much hard service. Owing to rage for cakes. This rage, is confined to exposure and hardships during the, ser- no one sex or age, occupation. It seems vice, Mr. Taylor contracted chronic to diarrhoea from which he has suffered he the quarter is of one now over 30 years, with absolutely no mind general; this subject. You see the help from physicians. By nature he gravestpn Germans of gray spectacle. was a wonderfully vigorous man. Had he not been his disease and the experi- beards and vest bulk munching cakes ments of the doctors had killed him long at insignificant little cafes, along with ago. Laudanum was the only thing young fellows, and which afforded him relief, He had ter- shop boys, rough rible headaches, his nerves were shat- pretty girls. There is somewhere a tered, he could not sleep an hour a day theory touching the correlation of on an average, and he was reduced to a a skeleton. A year ago, he and his wife tastes, that teaches that when once to a genuine in a change of climate and man has settled down sought relief removed to Geneva, Ohio; but the adult fondness for beer, wine and to-change in health came not. Finally on bacco, he loses his joy in sweetmeats the recommendation of F. J. Hoffner, hut the German quarter is a standing the leading "druggist of Geneva, who was cognizant of similar cases which disproof of the etheory, for the cake Pink Pills had cured, Mr. Taylor was eaters smoke pipes and drink both beer persuaded to try a box., As a drown- and wine. ing man grasps a straw so I took the The number and variety of cakes dispills, says Mr. Taylor, but with no more hope of rescue. But after thirty played in bakeries and cafes is apyears of suffering and fruitless search palling to one imbued with the modern for relief I at last found it in Dr. Will- belief as to the unwholesomeness of iams Pink Pills. The day after I took the first pills I commenced to feel better sweets. You may easily count in such and when I had taken the first box I was in fact a new man. That was places thirty or forty different kinds of two months ago. Mr. Taylor has since cakes, besides zweiback, plain bread, taken more of the pills and his progress crescent rolls rye bread,-- , and several is steady and he has the utmost con- kinds of pie, though, pie is not a spefidence in them: He has regained full control of his nerves and sleeps as well cialty, is consumed in moderate quanas in his youth. Color is coming back tities, and is always eaten with a knife to his parched veins and he is gaining only, says New York Sin. The chief flesh and strength rapidly. He is now thing that saves the Whole German able to do considerable outdoor work. As he concluded narrating his suffer quarter from dyspepsia, in i's reckless ings, experience and cure to a Beacon consumption of sweets is tag fact that said she reporter to Mrs. Taylor is no such' thing as a quick lunca add her testimony in there wished over If a man eats only a half there: favor of Pink Pills. To the pills alone dozen of slices of cake or as many cres is due the credit raising Mr. Taylor from a helpless invalid to the man he is cent rolls with his noonday coffee, he said Mrs. Taylor. Both Mr. and Mrs. Taylor can not find words to lingers over it a proper time reading express the gratitude they feel or recom- the paper or a volume of, Goethe, or per mend too highly Pink Pills to suffering haps playing cards or dominoes with THE BUCKEYE STATE CONTRIB- 4 -- m. t .rec-gniz- ed m U-p- - Take, no Substitute for Royal Baking Powder. It is. Absolutely Pure. , if to-da- . i i j I All others contain alum or ammonia. Hebrew, Israelite and Jew.. Jew refers to the religion which the Jews profess. Hebrew refers to a language which they no longer speak and has consequently no meaning at the present time. Israelite, refers to a nation which they at one time formed, and it has at present no signification except when reference is made to the ancient nati6n. The Jews are a religious community and that is all that separates them or, rather, distinguishes them from their The Jews do not call themselves Hebrews. Jews who do not know any better may call themselves so but they axe wrong. Those who know what is right call themselves Jews, and that is the only correct name. Rochester Tidings. 1 fellow-citizen- s. Nothing: Succeds Like Success. The successes achieved by men and things are not always based upon merit. But a success, well merited and in the annals of proprietary unprecedented medicine, should these ever come to be written, is Hostetters Stomach Bitters, a botanic medicine, discovered nearly half a century ago, and the leading remedy for and preventive of malarial, rheumatic and kidney complaints, dyspepsia, constipation and bilionsness. Short reckoning makes long friends, and short pockets make long faces. After physicians had given me up, I was saved by Pisos Cure. Ralph Erig, Williamsport, Pa., Nov. 22, '1893. Some men mock at other peoples poverty, but a great many more make use of it. i j i I The world is full of lion fighters, but It is hard to find a man who wont run from a hornet. The Ladies. The pleasant, effect and perfect safety la!dies , with which may ufeej the California liquid laxative. Syrup of Figs, under all conditions, malqesj it thei favorite remedy. To get the true and genuine article, look for the; name of the California Fig Syrup Co., printed near the bottom of the package.' The farmers are now an alliance skim-milto feed city boarders on making and cold k baked beans. Influences Combi to Redues Many to the danger limit. The reviving health' of Parkers Ginger Tonic best overcome properties these 111a. Don t disturb me, remarked the editorial scissors, I am right in .the middle of an article. . i Knows How It la to suffer Everyone with to not Conducive corns, and they are graceful walkin g. Remove them with Ilindercoma. Manv a youngster keeps shady to prevent getting tanned. I . "HansoHs Llagio Cora, Salve. Aak Warranted to cure or money refunded. druggist for It. Price 15 cents. your In his loneliness the teamster tells his horses of his whoas. I ) i Be If the Baby is Catting Teeth. that old and sure and use remedy, Maa. well-trie- d Winslows Soothing Stscp for Children Teething- H t Bogus coffee is giving great grounds for complaint. y, humanity. Any inquiries addressed to them at Geneva, Ohio, regarding Mr. Taylors case they will cheerfully answer as they are anxious that the whole world shall know what Pink Pills have done for them. . Dr. Williams Pink Pills contain all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are for sale by all druggists, or may be had by mail from Dr. Williams Medicine company, Schenectady, N. Y., for 50 cents per box, or six boxes for $2.50. , THE WOMANS BIBLE. Prominent Women Who Say the Present On Is Dlscrlminatng. his table mate. The pale down-towne- tons daughter, and Mrs. Cliff BROAD TIRE WAGONS. Tnere Ig No Reason Why They Should Not Be Used Everywhere. While the subject of good roads Is being agitated in every part of the country those most interested in the subject are doing their best to make bad roads still worse by using narrow tires on their wagons. Heavy loads are drawn over our mud roads on these narrow-tire- d wagons and deep ruts cut into them, that In wet weather make them almost, and sometimes entirely, impassable. I have a sort of a pity for a man who urges his team along a muddy road, all the time grumbling about the badness of it, when he might reduce the. labor of his team from one-thito one-ha- lf by using wide tires at very little additional cost to himself and to the great saving of team and temper. It Is to be hoped that the first legislation looking to the improvement of the roads of the country will be in the way of encouraging the use of wide tires, for one narrow-tire- d wagon will do more damage than a dozen with wide tires if the roads are at all soft. No one disputes the philosophy of wide tires, and no one seems to have any good reason to offer why they should not be used. Our farmers simply follow precedent and go on using narrow tires because their fathers did before them. Lumbermen and freighters use wide tires almost universally and save money by doing so, but it seems that farmers do not care to economize in this direction. The condition of our roads costs us more than any other single Item of waste in this country, and the common use of wide tires would reduce this waste of energy to a large extent.- - American Farmer and BASE BALL . the crALL An American Engineer Tells a Thrilling Story ef Ills Experiences. John H. Houston, Tex., special: a locomotive Manley, engineer, who recently escaped from the coal mines, about eight miles from Monterey, Mex., I was is in the city. He said born in Lexington, Ky., where my father wHs well known. Years ago I went to Mexico as an engineer on the International road. About seven years ago we backed out of a riding and ran over and killed a Mexican peon. At the next station our crew was arrested and thrown into prison. We were refused intercourse with friends. Then, without any trial, we were taken to mine No. 9, near Monterey. There are still twenty or thirty Americans there. We could not commijajcate with the outside world. Onenight last January our guard got drunk on smuggled whisky and I took a chunlt of coal and smashed in his head, summoned my companions, Billy Hughes, my fireman Billy Clark, the conductor, and Frank Godwin and Billy Stilwell, the brakemen, all Americans. We slipped up behind another guard and knocked him in the head and dropped his body to the bottom of the shaft 222 feet. Taking the pistols of the dead guards we struck for t the mountains and traveled only by night, with stars as our guidS, avoiding all villages and railways. We walked three weary months, living off roots, herbs and an occasional rabbit, , About twelve years ago I saw John Reynold, a boy from Syracuse, N. Y., shot for having killed a Mexican in Some of the prisoners in mine No. 9 haveLbeen confined twenty years and none of them ever had the semblance of a trial. to-da- y: self-defens- THE FINANCIAL SCHOOL. i It f COINS FINANCIAL SERIES. money and statistics. Porty-si- x pages; 10 No. 3. Coins Financial School, by W. , Appearance Often Deceptive. Tramp Rlease, mum, Im almost GEORGE G.URRIBR, General Aenf, 194 S. Clinton St.; Chicago, III. ll i each. Tramp Yes, mum, but they was all boardin houses. rom Turkish cannon Plevna in 1S77. captured of Imitation trade marks and labelsi Costs no more than inferior package soda never spoils the flour, keeps soft, and is uniXT in the world. U versally acknowledged purest XT XT XT XT Hade only fcy CHURCH & CO., Hew York. . Sold by grocers everywhere. Writ or Arm and Hammer Book of valuable Beeipee FBEB. - at 0 new steel horse whim. Will On their common-sens- e hoist 25 tons of rock 300 feet each shift. Is just as safe aa and reliable an engine It can be packed anywhere a jack can go. No cog wheels or clutches to break. 90 per cent. Is wrought imn and steel and will bend before breaking. Over 850 in se some running 6 years without one dollars expense. We make at prices, $25, 60, 75 100 $125 ft i. ....... - E17IS LYt 90 rcTrmzD and tzzxzxiz (PATENTED), The strongest and purest Lye made. ' Unlike other Lyei, it being a fine powder and packed. In a can contents ,wlth removable lid, thense. VVUI are always ready for make the best perfumed Hard Scap In 20 minutes without boiling. It the beat for cleansing waste pipes, washing disinfecting sicks, closets, bottles, paints, trees, etc. horse-hoist- - f PENNA. SALT MFG CO. and on up. Send for Bn illustrated circular to WHIM CO., 1222 Curtis St., Denver. Gen. Agents., Phil a- -. Fa. THE . A SURE CURE FUK PILES Itching Piles known by moisture like perspirstion, causa mtense itching when warm. 1 his form and Blind, ZUeed- mg or Protruding Piles yield at once to PILE REMEDY, DR. which acts directly on parts affected, absorbs tumors, ah Price rfnns, lavs itching, effecting a 1 hQggistt or ir..i i 1. fir. llsssiilio. hilada., OS 4, lurfidfrihUi per-aane- .a nt fi. ig. liaphael, Angelo, liubens, lasso The LINENE are the Best and Most Economical Collars and Cuffs worn ; they are made of fine cloth, both sides finished alike, and, being reversible, one collar is equal to two of any other kind. They fit well , wear well and look well. A box of Ten Collars or Five Pairs of Cuffs for Twenty-Fiv- e Examination and Advice as to Patentability of Invention. Send for Inventors Qjlde, or How to Get a. Parent. PATRICK OFARRELL, Washington, D.O. REVERSIBLE COLLAR COMPANY, Franklin St., New York. 27 Kilby St., Boston. Vt.N. L. Leaver. XU. No. C0-2- 3 When writing to advertisers,say that you saw the advertisement lu please tuVptpe Iron Crown. The iron crown worn by the King of Cents. A Sample Collar and Tair of Cuffs by mall for Roumania' is made from metal taken Six Cents. Name stylo and size. Address An i BE WARE Msast m starved. Housekeeper I saw you enter half a dozen houses before you got to this one, and you stayed a good while in j or-de- r, THE COMPANY PAYS THE FREIGHT Dr. Klein, F. R. S., lecturer on general anatomy ' and physiology at St. Bartholomews hospital, London, delivered a lecture on cholera recently, in which he said that the prevention of cholera was beset with less difficulty, than that of some of the communicable diseases which in town they had almost constantly among them. ! T e. To Prevent Cholera. i After May 1, 1895, all persons Coins Financial School or Up to orderlfig Datd,1 Coins Financial School Continued, in clof.ll, will get H. Harvey. Illustrated 150 pages and 64 illusthe two books printed together and bound in trations. It simplifies the financial subject So cloth for $1.00, sent postpaid. The two books an ordinary schoolboy can understand it. It is together make the most treatise on the textbook of the masses, absolutely reliable the subject of money evercomplete printed. as to facts and figures, and the most interesting and entertaining book on the subject of Our Special Offer ' money published. Price, best edition, paper, We send the following four books postpaid sewed, cover two colors, 50 cents. Popular edifor $1 00: Bimetallism and Monometallism (25 tion; 25 cents. Cloth, $1.00. Coins Band Book Fi(10 cents), Coins cents), EL 4. A Tale of Two Nations, by W. No. nancial School (50 cent edition), and A Tale of Harvey. A novel of 302 pages. A love story Two Nations (50 cent edition). for $1.00. that gives the history of demonetization and In ordering these, say Set No. $1.35 1, of 4 books depicts the evil spirit and influences that have We also .furnish for $1.00 Bimetallism and. worked the destruction of American prosperity. Monometallism cents), Coin's Hand Book A fascinating and instructive book. It holds (10 cents). Coins(25 Financial (2$ cent edi wonderful the reader with interest from begin- tion), A Tale of Two NationsSchool (25 cent edition), 25 ning to end. Popular edition, cents; extra Chapters on Silver (25 cent edition), and Up to quality paper, 50 cents; in cloth, $1.00. Coins Financial School Continued (2 No. 5. Chapters on Silver, by Judge Date, cent $1 35 for $100. In ordering the edition), Henry G. Miller of Chicago 110 pages. A books contained in this last offer, say, Set No. book suitable for all thoughtful readers of the 2, of 6 books. ; 25 cents. money question. Paper only, For any of the foregoing books or offers remit No. 6. Up to Date, Coins FinanciIl In stamps, postofflee money order, express School Continued, by W. H. H arvey. Illusregistered letter, bank draft or .currency, 200 50 a illustrations. use is and but do not It trated, pages personal checks, as the banka history of Coin, the little financier, since de- - charge us for collecting them. We are the auj livering his lectures in Chicago It is dedi- thorized agents. Address cents. 16-year-- old rd Farm News. 5tjacobs oil! on tne who bolts the sweets of a quick lunch o o o in four minutes and hastens back to work, deservedly pays for his sins with Yf a disturbed liver and a damaged di- Field is lust wiiat all players call it, gestion. The German, who lingers thirty or forty minutes over his light ABOUT SILVER 'QUESTION. and seeming unwholesome luncheon, is of conscience. It good fat, rosy and must be said for the cakes of the Ger man quarter that they are as harmless as good cakes can be made. They are light to dizziness, not over sweet, and codked through and through. There is one other thing that helps to render the German immune frdm his terrible luncheon, and that Is that he seldom drinks with it anything cold. The quick luncher down town takes cold Do you want to understand the Science milk with his luncheon, doubtless because it can be gulped down without is plainly told in of Money? tea delay. The German has hot coffee, or chocolate, or hot milk, always with two or three lumps of sugar. Hot milk This is a glorious opportunity to secure one copy is a cure for almost any disorder cl the or the entire series, SENT POSTPAID. stomach, so that the Germans lunch1 No. our of series is Bimetallism and Mon- cated to the readers of Coins iFinanoial eon contains both bane and antidote. by Archbishop Walsh of Dublin, School, and should only be read by those who Of course, the German never insults his ometallism, t Ireland. Seventy-eighpages. An able docu- have read the School. Every voter in the 25 cents. United States should read it. inner man with ice water, and it Is sel- ment; edition, No. 2. Coins Hand Book, by W. H. Har25 cents; better paper edition, Popular 50 cents; cloth, dom served, save by request of un- vey. Deals with the elementary $1.00. of principles Scatcfi-er- d of England and the following of America: Frances E. Willard, Rev. Phoebe Hanaford, Rev. Olympia Brown, Mrs. Robert Ingersoll, Ellen B. Dietrick, Frances E. Burr, Matilda Josyln Gage, Sarah A. Underwood, In the cause of the new woman, Mrs. Stanton has felt that the worst foe to her advancement was the misconception of the present Bible, as regards woman. Some of the advanced women of New York felt as Mrs. Stanton did, and joined with her in the preparation of a new, version of the book of books. Mrs. Stanton said to the little group of women gathered about her when she first broached the question of a Bible for women alone: Sufficient attention has not been given to the position of woman in the divine book. The various revisions have treated with scant consideration those portions relating to woman, the Bible is constantly referred to, to show the inferiority of the sex. This being so it is absolutely necessary that the misconceptions as to the attitude of the Bible towards woman, arising from wrong translations and interpretations should be corrected. It is hoped the book will be completed this year. For Cure of Sprains, Bruises, v Woman, in the person of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, has laid her hand upon Genesis, the Exodus, Leviticus, ' the Psalms of David and the songs of Solomon, the script of Matthew and the word of the acts, and is about to bring forth from them and their companion qieces a new Bible. The revision or new translation is to be The Womans Bible. The version of the Bible ad' dressed to The most high and mighty Prince James, and the revision of the same, completed but a few years ago, leaves womans position in the Scrip, asserts Mrs.' Stanton, far inferior to man. Mrs. Stantons colaborers or apostles in the preparation of the new work are named to include Lady Hen- taught strangers. ry Somerset, Miss Frances Lord, Mrs. Stanton Blatch, who is Mrs. Stan- ESCAPED FROM MEXICO MINES. - s GERMAN FONDNESS FOR CAKE 77 PATEHTS, TRADEMARKS ' I . |