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Altoona Tribune from Altoona, Pennsylvania • Page 2

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Altoona Tribunei
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Altoona, Pennsylvania
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2
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2 MOIiNJLNO TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY 23, 1896. Mtta Advertisements. AH OPEN LETTER. Mr. E.

A. fan Yalkenbnrg of the Wells-boro Republican Advocate Speaks. A BUSINESS HAN FOR SENATOR pork, lard, short ribs, dry salted shoulders, short clear sides, J3.503.62; whisky and sugars unchanged. Chicago 111., September 22. Cattle-Receipts, market steady.

Common to extra steers, stockers and feeders, cows and bulls, calves, Texans, western rangers, $2.253.75. Hogs Receipts, firm and 5c higher. Heavy packing and shipping lots, J2.803.30; common to choice choice assorted, $3.30 3.40; light, 2.853.40; pigs, $1.50 3.30. Sheep-i-Receipts, market slow and steady. Inferior to choice, $1.75 3.00; lambs, East Liberty, September 22.

Cattle market slow. prime, good, tidy, common, common' to good fat bulls and cows, $2.003.10. Hogs Strong. Prime medium, $3.55 heavv Yorkers, Yorkers, pigs, 2.753.25; heavy hogs, good roughs, $2.753.00. Sheep Steady.

Prime. good, fair mixed, common, culls, choice lambs, fair to good lambs, veal calves, $5.00 6.50. money for all hands. Wellj. that's a very charming programme, but if everybody is to get his money before going to what' 11 be the use of doing any work at all in this country? What will be the use of bothering ourselves with labor of any sort? We can just "lay back" and buy everything we need from foreign countries which haven't got the sense to see that the proper thing to do to insure prosperity is to distribute your money among your people first by means of free coinage, and then buy" things afterward.

This is a great scheme, and it is a wonder that some other nation hadn't tried it before this year of extreme political grace and wisdom. Mr. Bryan ought to get out a patent on this idea. All that is necessary to national prosperity is to open your mints and coin your dollars. Work is a matter of secondary importance.

If you have got the dollars, you are all right, and to get the dollars you have only to open your mints. It "used to be thought that to get a dollar it was necessary first to work for it. But Mr. Bryan's programme is to secure the dollar first and talk about work afterward. As we have said, who would work afterward if he could get the dollars first? wise young man, Daniel come to Thus do you annihilate the primal curse of labor and by the simple device of opening the mints assure a glorious future of wealth and luxurious idleness to this great American nation.

Who wouldn't vote for such a generous prophet of good thingB.for such a lavish promiser, for tiuch an ingenious concocter of great financial schemes? Come, let us eat, drink and be merry, for when Mr. Bryan's mints onen we shall all be wealthy. Free Eye Examination. We supply Glasses that give you perfect sight and develop such brain power that thousand could not purchase from you. The Cost Is Slight.

Ask your doctor about us and we think he will tell you that your eyes will be safely fitted by our'Spcclailst. IJT ALTOONA EVERY THURSDAY, 1318 11th Avenue, 2nd Floor, (Next door to Gable's.) All glasses guaranteed. If you have headache, pain in the eyes, blurred vision, you should consult him without dolay. H.E HERMAN Limited Uilliamsport, Pa. Formerly with QUEEN of Philadelphia.

Richardson Boyutou Co's. "PERFECT" Hot Air Blast Furnace for Soft Coal. Fitted with every Modern Improvement. furnace work Hoofing, la Tin, Sheet Iron undiCopper. VI.

f. Fraker, 1002 ChestuutjAvenue. Bell Telephone 642. JIVERY AND BOARDING STABLES. Having bought the brge livory stable known as tho ''Ueovge Stroll Stable," 1 am prepared to give first clans accommodations in HOARDING HOUSES and In general livery business.

In connection will run the Excelsior Cab and Baggage Express. Moving of housi hold goods a specialty. Trucks for piano moving. Satisfaction guaranteed, tilve mo a call. HAKRY WISE, Eleventh allt rear of 1318 Eleventh avenue.

Pho'nix Telephone 14 seplti-lm NOTICE to trespassers and stock owners All persons are hereby notified not to trespass In any manner upon property under control of the subscriber, and a charge will be made of twenty cents for 'each trespass for each eow, horse or mule, and ten cents for every hog. S. MAKER. ap20-Cmos FURNITURE, STOVES, BEDDING. We are Sole Agents in Blair County for the Cinderella CooTriuht.

it RANGES the little mothers of the slums," said a charitable, woman worker in the slum districts, where she knew every part of tenement life, and the mipery of it all, to a writer in the New York Times. "These little children," said she. "begin life with every possible handicap, from inherent traits and tendencies to which poverty subjects them. Before they are scarce beyond babyhood begin to be mothers to their little brothers and sisters, and, if not to them, surely to neighbors' children. In most cases they take more charge of the- children than their mothers, who are either workers by the day, and go out, or drive at piece-work from early morning to late at night.

What these little girls, and sometimes boys, suffer with the most sublime patience is pathetic. "I have seen among them examples of endurance that would put many a better-conditioned child to "shame. The other day I was passing along East Broadway, and came to a child not over 6 years, Bitting in the broiling sun on the first step of a stoop, holding what appeared to be a bundle of old woolen cloth, but which proved to be a little sister. Here she had been sitting all day with nothing to eat, because the mother was away at work and the father at home a raving drunkard, and to protect the child Bhe kept it out of doors. Fearing to go home, she went without food but had a bottle of milk for the little one.

The poor little creature was four months old but Beemed scarce one, so tiny and puny it looked. It lay so still, cuddled in the arms of its little mother who watched it with an anxiety that was way beyond her years. When I gave her some pennies, to get something to eat she said. she would get milk for the baby, as it needed it more than she did the food. What sacrifice was this, and not an isolated case, either for I am finding just such all the time.

"Sometimes the little mother has to do all the housework. In some cases she even helps in the sewing, if work is done at home on clothing contracts, sewing on buttons and hangers being her part. Children of 5 years are found doing any work which will add a few cents to the day's income, and when school can be evaded they do it even more regularly, and have the work laid out for them. I couple a boy and a girl, kept indoors waiting to be called upon to pick out basting threads, run errands and the like. Play is an almost unknown joy to them in many of the worst homes.

But to the little girls who care for the baby of the family my heart chiefly goes out," and the speaker sighed before she recited how their hardships might be mitigated. "The compulsory school law and close watching by inspectors help them some during the school year. The late tenement investigation and its good results, too, will bring better sanitary conditions to them, but there will still be a side of the suffering to which only individual aid can bring relief which is the conflict with ignorance. A 'mere tot' has no ideas of the laws of health, her little charge is wrongly fed, kept all too closely wrapped in old shawls and woolen rags, and often the very hugging of the baby by the tired little arms is its keenest suffering. "How to aid these little sufferers is a question so frequently aBked by philanthropists that it is no longer a question, but a statement demanding constant attention.

The death rate of babies in tenements during the hot summer is something appalling, and during the year has averaged in the First ward over 204 in 1,000, and in one of the houses recently ordered to be destroyed the death rate in 1888 was 325. "These figures tell a story of the child life there which should make every mother in the land endeavor to send aid to these little sufferers. What it means to be a sick baby in a garret, where -old and young are huddled together, striving for air from the small apertures which cannot be dignified as windows, or lower down, in the crowded one-room apartment, or on the street in the arms of a little sister or brother, whose own strength gives out under the burden of weight and heat, only those who work there among these people know," said our good Samaritan. "Everywhere where little children are found there is the little mother with her patience, her motherly care, her self-sacrifice, and her endurance of privations and neglect, her prematurely old, wan and pale face, showing half-fed nature, inherited disease and ignorance, which.to overcome, would mean the complete taking away from such environment and causing a metamorphosis in every line. But this is impossible, and we may only strive to lighten the burden by giving advice where we can and teaching where we may." For Over Fifty Years Mrs.

Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used for children teething. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the beet remedy for diarrhoea. Twenty-five cents a bottle. sep24-dAwlyr For forty years McDonald's Giant Liniment has been the standard and reliable remedy 'of the household, farm, workshop, mine and lumber camp. A great healer and pain subduer, it never disappoints.

Don't be deceived by other so-called Giant liniments. Insist on having the old-time standby of the last forty years, and particularly see to it that it has our name and guarantee. None other is genuine. Sold everywhere. Large bottles, 25 cents.

jyl6-tf ELY'S CREAM BALM is a posltlvecure Apply into the nostrils. It is quickly absorbed. 6(1 cents at Druggists or by mail camples 10c. by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 6S Warren Hew York City bined corporate influences, had not the constitution in its wisdom placed in the hands of the chief executive a veto power that the rights of the people might not be usurped; that he might Btand guardian over their welfare and when their liberties and prosperity are threatened strike down the forces that would enslave them.

This great and good governor saw his opportunity and determined to strike ere the flood tide was passed. He gathered around him all the powerful and dangerous elements; he used the people's money to create new forces: with his right hand stretched to the west and his left hand to the east, he formed a cabal so strong that the hosts of right trembled before it. Then summoning the corporation chiefs before him he proudly exclaimed "Who is there so powerful as Behold the people's power is in chains their resistance is futile. All this I have accomplished in a few short months; make me your leader and ere I lay aside the cloak of office I shall have builded you a machine, dedicated to your interests, so powerful that nothing can prevail against it." They did not doubt his ability and this is why they deserted Senator Quay. All the municipal rings, all the corporate interests and monopolistic forces are powerless to pass legislation unless they have the aid of the chief executive; thus he is the omnipotent agency for good or evil.

His willingness to betray the trust imposed in him was the breadth of life to the combine. His consent gave it being; his opposition would have caused its death; he was the very head and soul of the combine; take him away and there was no combine, only a mass of chaotic and discordant elements without power to create or maintain. The history of the fight is fresh in our minds. How, when the mask was torn aside, disclosing the splendidly organized, equipped, disciplined hosts of the combine, and they beheld riding at its head on monopoly's richly caparisoned steed, the stalwart form of their newly elected governor, the people for a time were dumb with astonishment and fear; yet as they gazed there arose out of the horizon what seemed a small cloud; though it grew larger it did not climb the zenith, but seemed to spread out over all the land. Then they knew it was not a cloud, for they could hear the tramp of feet and the din of marching thousands, and as they looked again they beheld a transformation when a clamoring mob gave way to equipped and well drilled forces, officered by new and trusted men.

But there was one man around and in whom the hope of the people centered; it was he who directed the movements of the fiieds; whose words of encouragement and unerring advice gave cheer and confidence. It was Senator Quay who bore the people's banner and gathered together and harmonized the elements of popular wrath until it rose and broke in a mighty wave that hurled back the hosts of wrong and sent them shattered and broken from the field. It was the people's triumph; it was Senator Quay's victory. He was the uncrowned prince of Pennsylvania. He had won the greatest of all political contests, and best of all, he had won it despite the agencies that usually render men powerful.

He won it because his cause was right. The people rejoiced. It was the dawn of better things in politics. They had found a leader worthy they would uphold his hands and they were safe against the intrigues and machinations of a governor humiliated, disgraced and repudiated. Thus the very vitals of the combine were paralyzed.

But a change came, and one day in a moment of forgetful-ness or madness Senator Quay made a pilgrimage to the governor. lie invaded the chief executive's private office, dedicated heretofore only to corporate lobbyists, and gave the governor the "glad hand." What promises, what charms, what mighty conjurations he used I do not know, but from that moment the head of the combine, the living and positive agency for evil, has been first in the councils of Senator Quay. One by one the combine chiefs have rallied around him until every member of the governor's cabinet have been included and with their return have come all the great corporate interests that opposed Quay last summer. Overtures have been made to the local organizations of Pittsburg and Philadelphia, but they still remain out of the fold with little power for good or evil. I have no prophecies to make, no protest to enter, but will leave to your own good judgment as to where and what the combine is.

There must be unity of purpose or the re-establishment of friendship among these forces will be of short duration. Two forces with dual purposes cannot work in harmony. There will be war, or the stronger will absorb the weaker. Quay's friends proudly allude to hi rn as "a whale." Governor Hastings has long borne the cognomen of "Jonah." It will now be interesting to note whether the whale swallows Jonah or Jonah swallows the whale. "Am I yet a Quay man?" is asked by those whom I have fought with under the Quay flag, but who are apprehensive that the dickerings of Quay with his enemies means the exclusion of his friends and his departure from avowed purposes.

I am a Quay man, with this reservation, however. I shall support him when he is right and oppose him when he is wrong and shall insist that the title of myself shall remain in me. Politics, like business, cannot succeed without a head. We must have leaders, and there is none I would as soon follow as Senator Quay if his leadership be right. We have followed him in the past when it was a choice of evils, but that is no longer sufficient.

He is self-committed to better things, and must in the future be right or forfeit the confidence and support of his true friends Unfortunately for Senator Quay, he is surrounded by certain vicious influences; he listens too much to the counsel of bad men; it rests with him to strike down these human leeches who live in his shadow and prey upon substance. If we would have better politics we must have better men in politics. The political stream cannot rise higher than its source; the results cannot be better than the men who produce them. E. A.

Van Valkenburg. Wellsboro, September 12. Some Vigorously Indignant Denunciation of the "Combine" With More or Less Incidental "Boasting" of Gov. Hastings. MR.

QUAY'S VICIOUS FRIENDS Mr. E. A. Van Valkenburg, businesB manager of the Wellaboro Eepublican Advocate, always a staunch supporter of Senator Quay, has written an open letter to his constituents concerning state politics, of which we reproduce the greater part, chiefly because of its significance as coming from a Quay man, and because we heartily endorse its closing suggestions concerning the mistake which the senator makes in standing by certain vicious individuals who are a disgrace to the politics of the state. There are some other statements in the article which the Tribune does not wish to be understood as unreservedly endorsing.

Mr. Van Valkenburg says: With scarcely an exception, three questions are asked, Who is my choice for United States senator? What is the status of the combine? and ami still a Quay man? First I am for some man for United States senator who possesses the eligibility of location a Philadelphian that great commercial centre, with one-fifth of the population of the state, with ever increasing republican majorities, that has never been accorded a United States senator since the formation of the party has claims paramount to all others. I am for some man who was not identified with the "Combine" in last summer's fight. For a man who possesses in the greatest degree all the requisite qualifications and whose selection would best serve the interests of the state, the party and the nation. A man of the highest intellectual attainments and moral attributes.

One who is sound upon the questions and issues as reflected by the republican masses of the state, a pronounced protectionist and an apostle of a sound and honest currency. A man, who by experience and insight has learned the needs and rights of labor and capital. A business man who is both the unalterable foe of a system that breeds want and desolation, and with capacity to find methods and ways to win back prosperity, to a congested and paralyzed industrial condition. I want an American broad and uncompromising. A statesman of no uncertain qualities and abilities.

An able orator, who upon the floor of the senate can present the claims, protect the interests and defend the rights of this great state. A man who is the exponent of no faction; who is big and broad enough to do absolute justice to all, and at all times to uphold the honor and the dignity of the The cooibine as we knew it in last summer's contest is a thing of the past. AH the same forces and elements will never again battle under its black flag, but whether it shall become a "horrid nightmare of the past," as was promised, or shall under new "cloak and plume" become a living dominating and controlling agency of oppression to thwart the will of popular government the future alone will tell. The people who with righteous indignation dealt the "combine" such crushing defeat, who are eager to still pursue and harass the fleeing columns as the Cossacks did Napoleon's army on the retreat from Moscow, until they are eliminated as factors in Pennsylvania politics, are confronted with a novel if not an unhappy condition. We find the "master genius" who marshalled the forces of a wronged and a betrayed people and led them to victory, to-day surrounded by the most dangerous leaders of that unholy compact, and the most objectionable of these elements now revolve about that "master" in a constellation of vicious elements so powerful as to detract if not wholly prevent his mission of good.

The combine was the culmination of combinations and conditions gathered together by a cohesive force, rendered powerful and potent by our system of government that allows the people to 'delegate so much power to one individual without reserving the right to withdraw that power when their interests are threatened or betrayed. At the inception of the combine fight I urged it as the duty of every citizen of whatsoever political creed or faith to give loyal and untiring support to Senator Quay, maintaining that no matter what had been his attitude in the past he was forced to fight the people's battles because all the powerful corporate and monopolistic interests that had been his bulwark of strength in the past were arrayed against him. Subsequent events verified that statement. Tfue he had never offered them affront; he had in no way been inimical to their interests.they did not doubt his willingness to serve them still, but new and powerful elements had come into being; elements that owed their very existence to the pleasure of Senator Quay; emboldened by success and maddened by the ambitious thirst for power, believing Senator Quay's advanced age would soon retire him from active leadership and seeing the machinery drifting into the hands of certain lieutenants whose whole aim is power and profit, the corporate interests for the first time feared Senator Quay, not for what he had done, but for what he might not long be able to do. Then a Moses came who could lead them safely from the wilderness of fear and doubt.

A governor had been elected by a majority much too large; his services had been brief but bis achievements great; in five months from the day he took the oath of office he had subjugated every branch of the state machinery; he was not only the executive power, but the legislative as well. He passed and signed more vicious legislation, he served the interests of monopolies better, he truckled to the bosses and ignored the people more than all the governors since the formation of his party. He had "won his spurs" and they were willing he should wear them. This is an age of monopolies, and this Etate, with her two great cities, one in the east and one in the west, would be constantly at the mercy of their com OUR MOTHERS USE CINDERELU AND THEIR CLEANLINESS LESSENS LABOR. AHEAD SAW IT IS.

The History of the Settling of a Question of Pronouncing a State's Name. From the Philadelphia Ledger. Office Secretary of State, Little Rock, September Mr. S. E.

Simmonds, Philadelphia, Pa. Dear Sir: Your letter of the 7th to the Philadelphia Ledger making inquiry in reference to the correct pronunciation of the name of this state was forwarded to Governor Clark, and by him handed to me for reply. For many years there was contention among even our best-informed citizens as to the correct pronunciation of the name of this state. Most persons pronounced it as it was spelled, while others, especially the early settlers and their descendants, pronounced -the name as if spelled Ar-kan-saw, following, as they believed, the pronunciation used by the Arkansas Indians, the aborigines of the country, from whom the territory derived its name. From 1844 to 1848 our state was represented in the United States senate by Mr.

Chester Ashley and Mr. Ambrose Sevier. Mr. Chester Ashley, a New Englander by birth, and probably the brainiest senator we ever had, always pronounced the name of the state phonetically as it is spelled, Ar-kan-sas. Mr.

Sevier, a Tennesseean, the grandson of Colonel John Sevier, the hero of King's Mountaih, and the governor of the state of "Franklin" as Tennessee was then called, always gave to the last syllable of the name of his adopted Btate the pronunciation of the broad as if it were spelled Ar-kan-saw. At that time as you know, Mr. Dallas was vice president, and made the greatest and most courtly presiding officer the senate ever had, Aaron Burr excepted. Mr. Dallas, in addressing Mr.

Ashley, always said, "The senator from Ar-kan-sas," while Mr. Sevier was always the senator from Ar-kan-saw. The opinion of the people differed on this subject, as did the opinion of our senators. Finally, to settle the disputation, the general assembly of 1881 appointed a learned and able committee to investigate the whole subject. This committee made a critical and exhaustive examination, and, based upon the report of this committee, the general assembly unanimously adopted the following concurrent resolutions: Concurrent resolution declaring the proper pronunciation of the name of the state of Arkansas.

"Preamble: Whereas, Confusion of practice has arisen in the pronunciation of the name of our state, and it is deemed important that the true pronunciation should be determined for use in oral official proceedings; and "Whereas, The matter has been thoroughly investigated by the State Historical Boeiety and the Eclectic Society of Little Rock, which have agreed upon the correct pronunciation, as derived from history and the early usage of the American immigrants; be it therefore "Resolved, By both houses of the general assembly, that the only true pronunciation of the name of the state, in the opinion of this body, is that received by the French from the native Indians, and committed to writing in the French word representing the sound, and that it should be pronounced in three syllables, wifh the final silent, the 'a' in each syllable with the Italian sound, aud the accent on the first and last syllables, being the pronunciation formerly, universally and now still most commonly used, and that the pronunciation with the accent on the second syllable with the sound of 'a' in man and the sounding of the terminal 's' is an innovation to be discouraged. March. 1881." This closedthe Everybody now pronounces the name of the state Ar-kan-saw, and it would be little less than high treason for any one to pronounce it differently. I send you a report of this office, containing a short sketch of the state's early history, which may prove of some interest to you. Hoping the above explanation is satisfactory, I am, yours truly, H.

B. Armistead, Secretary of State. A Specimen of the Boy Orator's Logic. From the Baltimore Sun. In one of the speeches delivered in this city Saturday Mr.

Bryan said: "Our opponents say that it is not money we want; we have enough of that now; but what we need to restore prosperity is to open our factories instead of our mints. My.friendB, it is no use to open our factories until the people have money to buy what the mills produce." The logical inference from this is that when the mints are opened to unlimited coinage money is to be distributed free to everybody. The new dollars would be any easier to get- than the old ones if they had to be worked for, bo the natural inference is that Mr, Bryan's idea is that the mints are to be opened bo as to provide people easily with the medium of exchange. Mr. Bryan tells hia followers that it is no use to provide employment for labor "until the people have the money to buy goods," and, therefore, that the first thing to do is to set the mints running to their full capacity and coin plenty of THEIR ECONOMY SAVES YOU MONEY.

NONE BETTER FEW AS GOOD StOVCS RailgeS Every One is Guaranteed to give Satisfaction. We offer special inducements to young folks starting housekeeping, to whom a reasonable credit will be given. It will pay you to come 200 Miles to buy from us. We pay all freights. HARRY WAYNE CO.

The Bargain Kings. The Price Wreckers. Elixir 18e Hand's Remedies 180 ay ne's Expectorant 680 Clark's Uiant Liniment 8o Kilmer's Swamp Root, 11 site T6e Warner's Safe Cure Me Woodbury's Facial Soap, reduced 40 Cutlcura Shaving Soap He Buttermilk Soap, to Pear's Soaps all reduced. zanmiv uvu iiuuui vuu, vuii lu ut i uuu.m get the benefit of the LOWEST PRIONS. Sod Castile Soap, Imported, Contl, per onnd.

1TO Cut Prices in Medicines at Irwin's Drug Store. The LOW PRICES at which we are selling Medicines have become very popular. The growing number of our customers are all well pleased at our prices and PURE, FRESH UOODS. Are yon one of them? If not, better try us this month aud enjoy the benefit of the lowest prices. We bTe THS MARKETS.

Range of Frioes in the Various Centres ol Trade. Altoona, September 22. Following are the local market quotations: Butter Good country, 1820c; creamery, 25c. Eggs Per dozen, 1518c. Potatoes Per peck, 10c.

Tomatoes Per quarter peck, 10c. Apples Per peck, 1520c. Grapes Per basket, 1520c. Watermelons Each, 2030c. Canteloupes Each, 515c.

Cauliflower Per head, 1015c. Plums Per peck, 50c. Roasting Ears Per dozen, 12215c. Beans Per peck, Peaches Per quarter peck, 15c; per basket, Squash Each, 5c. Egg Plants Each, 1015c.

Parsley Per bunch, 35c. Cabbage Per head, 510c. Cucumbers Each lc. Maple Sugar Per pound, 12J15c. Lard Per pound, 1012Jc.

Philadelphia, September 22. Flour quiet, unchanged. Wheat strong. Contract wheat, September, "6565c; October, 6565c; November, 6666c; December, 67J67c. Corn dull, firm.

No. 2 mixed, September, 26126c; October, 26327c; November, 27i27Jc. Oats firm. No. 2 white, September, October, November and December, 2526c.

Eggs firm, fair demand. Pennsylvania and western firsts, 16c. Other article unchanged. Receipts Flour, 5,700 barrels and 8,500 sacks; wheat, corn, oats, 1,000. Shipments Wheat.

corn, oats, 5,000. Chicago, September 22. Cash quotations were as follows: Flour firm. No. 2 spring wheat, 61562c; No.

3 2 red, 6405cj No. 2 corn, 2oats, 16c; No. 2 rve, 33 33Jc; No. 2 barley, 33c; No. 1 flaxseed, 6970c; prime timothy Beed, mess only space nere for a lew pointers: French Hlood Wine Mc Chase's Nerve and Wood Food 33c Hobb's Sparagus Kidney Pills 400 Doan's Kidney Pills 40c Williams's Pink Pills 40c Irwin's Sarsaparllla 60c Irwin's Fink Liver Pellets 10c Mellin's Food, 38c and 6ftc Horlick's Malted Milk, 38o and 75c Horllck's Malted Mlik, Hospital Site.

$3 00 Hall's Catarrh Cure 68c 1 a VdliOl I Ulv.ii mhiim mii vou We wish everybody to come to oar store and Water every day in the year except Sunday. AI. Irwin, Druggist. Cor. 11th Avenue and Htb Street, Phoenix 'Phone 116K; Bell 'Phone in J.

7VY. FRAKER, 708 Eighth Avenue. DEALER IN Novelty Stoves and Ranges. Boomer Hot Air Furnaces. Ideal Hot-; Water Heaters.

Steam and Gas Fitting. Plumbing. Worker in Tin, Sheet Iron and Copper. Roofing, Spouting and Repairing. Work done on short notice.

4 Mail orders receive prompt attention. Correspondence solicited and Catalogues mailed on application for Stoves, Hot Water and Hot Air Heating. LITTLE MOTHERS. The Children Who Care for Children in the Haunts of Poverty. "Of all the deserving charities in this great city, not one is more is need of being extended than that which will reach.

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