Greencastle Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 31 January 1884 — Page 7
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THE NEWS.
A'€niii|>N‘t<- KejMtrt «>1 tJu* N«‘>vx ■» ami Incident of the Week..
I.
i
lIINfc EXPLOSION.
A terribli 1 explosion oeonrred ut Cres-
. ted Batte, Quuoij-o' oonnly, Col< redo, at 7 o’clock, Thursday morning, in the CtetiUd Butte cjuI mu o, in which from twenty-five to fifty miners n-e believed to have been killed. The explosion blockadeo the entrance to the mine so that the full < xteut of the ilisiiBtor nt present is . unknown. T1 e mine- wnn owned and operated )> the Cidorndo CohI and Iron com; any of this city, and employs from eigb'y to ninety miners in the shaft. No
deb are at present obtainable, Later dispatches state that there were
ten men at work in chamber No. 4. These escu; ed unhart, except one man who was in the passageway just outside of the gkamber. Be is badly burned, but will recover. Fifty seven nun were at work in chambers 1 and 2. The-e are all thought to have perished. The explosion was of such force us to completely barricade the main entrance, and the ap- ‘ plianees for supplying air, located near, were badly wrecked, and the roof of the
tramway blown off. The citizens geoer-
^ ally worked hard to rescue the men, although it is thought none can possibly eecn; e alive. The town hall was prepared for the reception of the dead. As soon * as possible h fan was repaired and put to
prl. pnmpiugiut into the mine and men )to wi ik t > remove tte obstructions
SO as to reach the chambers and get the bodies out at ome if pc ssiblo. The town ofCrestod Butte is in mourning. Crowds of women cluster about the entrance t i the mine praying and wringing their hands and crying piteously, presenting e. acem- most heart rending. It is said that at the time of the explosion there wore ten kega <^f bind; powder In the chambers
one nr two where tbs men were working,
and where the explosion is supposed to bare taken place. The mine has three mile- of drifting, and so it is impossible todefinUelv locate the accident until the rescuing parties can gain i.dmitt <nce. It * has 'eng been e nsidc red dniigerous by those acquainted with it. While one of thi best prodn mg mines in the country, its operation lots always been attended with more or less apprehension and real
danger.
So far fifty-seven bodies have been recovered from the Crested Butte coal mine, only two remaining. The testimony adduced at the iuqust goes to show that the clamity was due to the criminal reckless- _ of the miners themselves who presisted in using naked lamps, even after being
warned to take tho safety lamps. FIIKD DOUGLASS MAHKIED.
. Bon. Frederick Douglass, the distinguished colored orator, Beg is ter of Wills of the District, was married ut W’asbingpn, Thursday, to Miss Emma Pitts, a wing white lady. Mr. Douglass is 73 feuis old, and has children older than his bride. She was a cler k in his office, and lias served us his private secretary.
THE ENC1LIHU STORM.
A London dispatch sa>s: Beports of damage and injniiea caused by Wednesday's storm continue to arrive from many parts of the kingdom. At Cork many roofs and walla were blown down. The most serious damage caused there was the deetinotion by the gale of the spire of Ht. Patrick's Cathedial. At Belfast a granite monument in a cemetery was overturned. A. woman was killed by the falling of a wall, and a child was blown into the Lagar river. At Over-Davin, Lancashire, a man was buried and killed under a falling wall, and at Liverpool a man was blown down and had his skull fractured. Near Manchester the tall chimney of the mill nt Bury was blown ova. It deal dish 11 the ra of of the building, and terribly injured many of tho operatives. Three women were killed outright, and it is feared that the injuries of some of the others will prove fatal. 'Ihree men were drowned in Plymouth by the swamping of their boat. ANOTHHK ENGLISH STORM. The wind blew a hurricane all dunday ^ night. Much damage was done to this -city. Many persons were injured. The glass roof of the Westminister Aquarium was demolished during a performance, t A panic ensued. Several persons were hurt. A prio'i.ig office at Haymnrket was unroofed and a boy killed. Many vessels were wrecked and a large number of live-i were lost. Telegraphic communi ieation with the continent, also the Atlantic cables were interrupted for several hours. The storm raged in Paris, Railway and telegraphic communication is broken in all directions. The wires are prostrated. There is much damage in the suburbs. Many persons were injuied in the strt ets. An immense number of win • down atd lamps were wrecked, trees uprooted, and chimneys demolished. The Free Thinkers' Hall at Portsmouth was destroyed. No boats were allowed to leave Portsmouth. At Bastings the theatre had to close. At Monmouth, Wyeand Morrow the rivers hurst their bounds and tl.'oiled the highway. Southhampton ami East Bourne suflered severely. Railway traffic is greatly deranged. At Torquay there were many cnBiialities; a mail cart was overturned by the violence of the wind. Many boats were swamped The iron ohapel)at New Castle w< nt down. A falling roof killed a woman and two children. At Leeds the roof of a dwelling collapsed, injuring two occupants. A mail train between Durham and Darling, ton was twice stopped by the gale. Two shops at the Isle of Wight closed early. A lady was knocked down by tho wind and had a leg broken, AtNewry, Ireland,
many houses were unroofed. The police barrecks were made untenanle. and the police compelled to take refuge in the couit bouse. The bark Nokomis, Captain Murphy, from Londonderry for Baltimore, anchored in Long Foile, parted her cables end was driven to sea. It is feared the veseel and crew were lost. RepxuD from all parts of the kingdom agree that the ga'e was of unparalleled so verity. I be railway station at El ms well was bulled aerots the track. Seven bodies were washed ashore at Hythe. The steamer Frisia, at Plymouth, reports tremendous seas. A bark was towed into Denver with its masks literally torn out of the deck. liHXKItAL. A thorough investigation of the sinking of the City of Columbus will benia ’e by tlie United fctaUs treasury department. The house committee on poet offices and post roans bus agreed to report favorably Mr. Maxey’s bill, fixing postage on sec-ond-class publications,deposited in letter carrier’s office, at two cents per pound. The internal revenue leceipts for the fiist half of the current fiscal year weie, in round numbers, £00,500,000,or at the rale of 8121,000,000 for the year, as against §147,000,000 for the last fiscal year. The senate confirmed the nomination of Emory Speer as Unit d states district attorney for the northern district of the State of Georgia. The debate upon the subject was a long one, and some nnrtizanship was displayed in the discussion, but senators on both sides voted for the confirmation. The resignation of Hon. John C. New, as assistant secretary of the treasury was tendered the Pr<Bident Monday, and the President toi k the matter under consideration before accepting, hoping to prevail uj on Mr. New to reconsider. George S. W ise, of Virginia, has pre pared resolutions w hich he will introduce in the House. They cito that United States officials were illegally employed during the recei t elections in that state, and the govemmt ut illegally used to prevent an honest count, and ask an investigation. The Speaker laid before the Bonse, Tuesday, a communication from the Se3rttary of War in response to tho resolution calling for information as to the ave age number of commit s oued offioeia iie the army be ween the *th of March, 1857, and the 4‘h of March, 1861, and between the 4th of March, 1H77, and the 4th of March, 1881, etc. ’Ihe Secretary states that in the first period,, the average number of commissioned ofliesrs was 1,CG6 of whom sixty-seven were tried by court martial and thirty nine convicted; in the second period the average number was 2 477, of whom 150 were tried by court martial and 122 convicted.
THE EAST. The Albany Iron Works of Troy, N. Y. re timed work Monday giving employment to 1,500 men. Walter Phillips, president of the Grand Haven Fruit Grower’s Association, arya his truit is all right. George Aiken, who has a faun further from the lake, saysall fruit but peaches are safe. Thomas Gardner, of Troy, created a sensation in Trinity TM. E. Church, Sunday, by declaring himself a messenger fn m Jesus sent to convert the world. 'Ihe lower bonse of the New York legislature Thursday passe 1 a bill providing for (he burial of honorably discharged soldi) rs who die in poverty. The nomination by Governor Hoadly of ex Governor Cbas. Foster an one of tne directors of the insane hospital at I Toledo was rejected by tho Ohio senate. Monday night twenty -seven men met | at Greensburg, Pa., and formed n seemt, ' oath-bound brotherhood not to bay | French goods and to boycott all dealers | selling them until the embargo on pork is taken off. The Columbian manufacturing company, Boston duck [company, Thorndike nulls, Coraia mill, Palmet mill, Otis company, Warien cotton mills, all New England establishments, in consequente of low prices, have begun half time, until the market so improves us tojust fy them in running full time. t A letter is published from J udah P. Benjamin to the Biitish consul in New York, written in January, 1860. in which he proposed that the south ehonld resume its allegiance to Great Britain, and establish an aristocracy. Benjamin was at that time U. 8. senator from Louieana. The letter was found among Thurlow Weed's papers. THE WEST. Two men were hanged by a mob for murder nt R isita, Col., Monday. One convict was burned to death in the Minnesota penitentiary fire, Saturday. Joel Fowler, a desperado, was 1 anged by a mob at Socorro, N. M. Wedneiday night. Crop reports from California give bad indications. It is the driest season in seven years. The thermometer marked thirty de greos below zero in some parts'of eastern Ohio, Saturday. 'jSmce October 30, to date, Chicago packers have slaughtered and salted 1,772,005 hogs, against 2,066,000 for the c ureeponding period a year ago. Louis Boedickcs, and wife, an aged couple living near Fenton, Mo., wire discovered in their house by their neighbors Wedn'sJay, horribly butchered. Their house had been robbed. No due to the perpetrators of the crime.
The St. Louis iron-works are all closed or running on half time; the glass works are closed, and there is great degression in all branches of building. Eight thousand workmen have been discharged in the past two months. Franklin Davis, fifteen years of age, while walking to school oti tin C., H. .V D, railroa l truck near Camden, discovered a broken rail on a bridge and stood by it with the theimometer thirty degrees below zero, till tho mail train appeared, whioli he eigimil".! to stop, and thus averted a frightful accident. The Jones boys, sent oc- d to tie banged in Jackson, Ohio, Febnrary 23J,'escaped from jail and were pursued oxer the hills by a great crowd. They were armed and fired upon their partners. The fire whs returned and Luke was shot through the breast. Then they surrend-
ered.
A grain firm in Chicago has advices that a very high average is maintained by winter wheat, which is generally well covered with snow. There appears to be a very large percentage of soft and low groin corn throughout the west, ond in Illinois the hogs are evidently being held back to consume it. In making confessions of his sins in a Methodist revival meeting in Caldwell, Kansas, William King told of having tobbea a store in 1863, of S30O worth of goods. Tbe next day he called upon the propiietors, and paid them that amount with interest for the intervening twenty years. He has since beta arreste-t for the theft and is now lying in jail. Early Saturday morning flie broke out in tbe stale prison at Stillwater, Minn., and in spite ( f nil efforts all the buildings were destroyed. All the prisoners, including the Younger brothers, were taken out and placed under a strong guard in the yard. Tlie loss probably ia half a million dollars. A substantial pledge of peace has been offered by the Apaches of the San Carlos agency, in ;ttie persons of fifty-five et their children, who left Wilcox, Monday, for the Carlisle training school, in Philu delphia, in ohargeof Dr. O. G. Given,the school physician, accompanied by Agent Wilcox, and four chiefs of the tribe, who will visit Carlisle, Washington, and tbe Indian school of Hampton. A mi veil I rain on the Lake Erie A Western road was wrecked ne&r Bluff ton, O., Friday morning by a broken rail. The passenger car turned over and took fire. The conductor saved the lives of the tmssengere by extinguishing the fire with suow. He then went to Blnffton for a carriage to convey the wounded to a hotel, freezing Ins face during t he trip. The brakeman had both feet frozen. 8everal passengers were injured. THE SOUTH. Louisville is threa’ened with a sinal pox epidemic. Harry Bronson and George Hardison were killed by each other in a strict tight at Austin, Ky. The killing had its origin m whisky an'd a family fend dating back sixteen years, when farmer Hardison, the father of George, killed Bronson's father with a broad-ax. Hon. Norton Mose writes that the fence cutters in Burnet county, Texas, are destroying fences by tbe wholesale. They cut the writer's fe-'ce down, chopped off posts and threatened personal violence if put up again. The names of several respectable citizens t aro given who have been ordered to leave the country under penalty of death if they refuse. The call issued by the colored men of 8t. Mary’s Parish, La., for a convention of leading colored men of the sugar producing parishes at New Orleans on Jan. 21, meets with a hearty lesponse. The object of the convention is to appeal to tbe American people, though Congress, in behalf of the sugar producers, and ask ^hat the tariff on sugar be retained. Tlie Democrats two-thirds majority in tbe Virginia legislature Monday passed two bills over the Governor’s veto. The bill passed to take from the Governor tbe power to appoint directors of the Lunatic Asylum. The Heuate resolution asking tlie resignation of United States Senator Mahonc was agreed to. FOREIGN. Two vessels loaded with sugar w f re abandoned off Haifax by the half frozen crews. An explosion in a Rhine province mine killed sixteen persons, and twelve were severely wounded. Herr Lnskel’s funeral, in Berlin, Manday, was attended by an immense concourse of people. Tnirte n children were drowned at Bona by tbe ice breaking and letting them into tbe water. Mr. Moody began a mission in Stratfordle Bow, and 6,000 people turned out in a storm to hear him. An explosion, Saturday, in Rondda valley, Wales, kilbd eleven miners. A rescuing party of three men, including the manager, was also killed. General Gordon, previous to starting for Khartoum, expressed misgivings of the success of the mission. He said ho feandit would prove a failure on account of not being sent sooner. An immense concourse of peasantry assembled, Tuesday, at Derryberg.county Donegal,the birthplace of Patrick O’Donnell, the slayer of Carey, and assisted in the celebration of mass for the repose of his soul. The killing of Detective Bloch, in Vienna, by an unknown anarchist of elegant manners and speech, has caused consternation am. ng theenl ire populace. Many prominent u.en are also .said to have bten marked for assassination.
Tbe ex-King of Naples, owing to poverty, sold hie villa near Paris, m ted as the scene of Dsudet’a “Roien Exile,” and now lives with the Queen on the third door of a house in P..ris, with a retinue of of three servants. The ships City of Lucknow and Simla, engage I in the Australian trade, were in e illision Sunday in the English channel, and the Simla was sunk. Seventeen persons were saved. Twenty-two of tbe crew of the ship Simla were drowned. The Email cit/ of Astorgu, Spain, was tbe scene Monday of religions commotion. A party of students under the | leadership of priests, made an a‘tack up- : on an Englishman and a native, hawking bibles. They even threatened to burn the Spaniard. Ihe v.otims unavailingly applied to the police for pro-
tection.
Ti e mission of General Gordon is in effect to complete the evacuation of the Soudan, inclusive of Khartoum, The knedive has appointed him governor of Soudan, with full powers, asd has strongly sdvise.l him to take mcasr.ies to secure the safety of civilians and Europeans. The Dutch expedition sent from Podang enily in December to the west coast of Acbecn to rercue a enpitive crew of twenty-five men, including an American, lost on the steamer Nistro, returned without success. Tho expedition destroyed several villages belonging to tbe rajah and the tribe. Tho crew was removed tv the interior, and the prospect Lb their liven will be taken.
INDIANA I i EMS. Farmers in some parte of northern Indiana are shipping copn from Kansas. Logansport is the only city in tbe State lighted entirely by electricity. It is said to be well satisfied with its illumination. John Anderson and Z iek Snyder were hanged at Mt. Vernon, Friday, for the murder of James Van Wye, last August. The parties to the crime and the victim were mere boys, the oldest being 23 years
old.
During the last four months tho large family of Benjam-n Fulke, raiding near
been placed in a cold room. Martin went to the crib during the night and discovered that one child was dead and the other suffering intensely from cold. It, too, Boon'^pasaed away. Tho clothing was frozen to the infants. The parents are in good circnmataucea, and tho negligence and carelessness is most severely commented on by the community. The proposition to build a soldiers’ monument in Indianapolis received a boom, Thursday night, in a letter fr >m Senator Harrison inclosing SHrt) subs Tuition, and recommending that the work of securing subscriptions be intrusted to the G. A. R. throughout tbe State, and after snffnient subscription shall have been secured that the Lcgisuture lie called upon to appropriate the cost of a pedestal. There is on exhibition at Logansport a cienture resembling an eel more than any thing else. It is fourteen inches long. Just below its head it has two arms like those of a water dog, which are an inch long and end in four fingers, on which there are tiny finger nails. In the place of gills, the creature has frill like appendages on each side of the head which are divided into two parts, and can lie laid alongside the body so as, not to be distinguishable. Tbe animal can change its bead into various shapes. The eyes are so small as to be hardly uotiea bio, and tbe mouth is much like a sucker’s, only more fiat shaped. The only food i! eats is bread. It was caught a short time ago in a ditch in one of the out townships
King John and Chinese Gordon. The King of Abyssinia received his prisoner sitting on hn throne, or what ever piece of furniture did. duty for that exalted sent, a chair being placed for the prisoner considerably lower than that on which the King sat. The first thing that Pasha (Gordon) did was to eeize this chair, place it alongside that of his Majesty, and sit down on it; and next to inform him that he met him as an equal and would only treat him as such. That
. , somewhat disconcerted hie sable majesty
Montnoreneia, has Wen sorely afflicted bnt , on recovering himself, he said: "Do
with milk sicknis:!, and Tuesday evening tho sixtti victim, Mr. Fulks him*. lf,di. d, while se veral < there are bedfast and in a
critical condition.
Fireman John Bryant, on the O. & M. real was fatally shot through the lungs while passing through Mend ta on his engine Saturday night. The shooting is shrouded in mystery ns it is not known
that be had an enemy.
The commissioners of Park county have contracted for a levee along the Wabash liver fourteen miles long. Tlie estimated cost is $18,000, to tie paid by assessments on the property benefitted. One man will be required to pay $8,000
of the sum.
Martin Sellers, of Keudalville, was summoned to testify against C. C. Cain charged with murder, being tried at AI-, bion. He remarked that he would kill himself rather than testify. Shortly afterward he went to his room and shot himself, dying instantly.
you know, Gordon Faffm, that I could kill yon on the spot, if I liked?” “I am perfectly well aware of it, vour Majesty,” said the Pasha. “Do so at once if it is your royal pleasure. I am ready. This disconcerted the King still more, and he exclaimed: “What! ready to be killed?’’ “Certainly,” replied tbe Pasha; “I am always ready to die, and, so far from fearing you would put me to death, you would confer a favor on me by so doing, for you would be doing for me that which I am precluded from doing by my religious scrupples—you would deliver me from all the troubles and misfortunes which tie future may have in store for me.” This completely staggereff King John, who gasped out in despair: “Then my power has no terrors for you?” “None whatever, * was tbe Pasha’s laconic reply
Squirrel Scalping. Stockton Herald.
II. Dawley is in tbe squirrel-destroying business. He hires four men. His re-
One hundred and ten more employes
of the Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne A Chicago | war ' 118 11 ve bounty for each scalp,
railway machine shops at Fort Wayne
have been dismissed on account of dull business on tbe line. This makes two hundred and fifty discharged within the past week. The working force of the shops is now six hundred men. The large building owned by Louis Gould at Peru, and occupied as winter quarters for the menagerie department of Wallace A Anderson’s circus was burned Saturday morning. ’Wallace k Anderson lose a white deer, t wo hyenas, one lioness, a black bear, and a large baboon. Tbe animals were valued at
$3,000.
The jury in tho case of the State vs M: ay Warner, for the murder of Jacob Manduy, a saloon keeper, at Vincennes, last Sepiember, returned a verdict of twenty-one years in the penitentiary. A new trial will be demanded. Warner is not quite twenty-one years old, and has sneut five years in the Northern prison, having been seat there at the age of fourteen for shooting at a policeman in Indi-
anapolis.
The family of Jacob Heilman, of Wabash are suffering from triebiuasis. The members have partaken of raw pork nl-
pnid by the county. He assigns his men to different districts. He gives J, to the men a $1 a day and board for going over I their ranches. That nearly pays expeust s and tho bounty on scalps is largely profit. Dawley has a poison that knocks tbe squirrels out in the first round, and genj erally before they get out of their holts. He says he hassenlps enough on hand to j dear out the squirrel and gopher bounty fund. He presents bis scalps only as fast as there is money to pay the bounty. He J has $2.00!) worth of ecaljs, and is awnit-
] ing on increase in the fund.
South End i. : r ! DRY GOODS, and XOTIONM, Mats and Caps, Roots an Slioas Groceries I ’revisions, R rod nee, Glasswn re» ct Oueenswnre \\ liiclt will In* sold at the low «st prices. Mr. Riley invites Very body to call and see him. THE BKST PUMP! IN THE WORLD. For a cistern that it will not purify in ten days. I am the agent for Kershner’s Water Elevator and Purifying Pump, which is not only a good machine to ruiae water, but is the best in the world for purifying it. For this reason it is especially adapted to cisterns, making their water sweet and pure. I will put the Pumps in anywhere on short notice, and at reasonable prices. In tins, as in all other cases, the lied is the eheuiiest, one of the excellencies of the Kersliner Pump being its durability. Jussi: Richardson. Greencastle. Ind. I refer to the following persona who are using these Pumps: (. W. Corwin, H. A. Hays, Win. Hri gee, .1. C. Albin, Dr. A. C.Fry. Ed. Huffman, Je.sie McCoy, C. J Kimble, II. II. Mathias. F. A. Arnold, .1. II. Torr, llobt. Lockridge Daniel Langdon, John P. Allee, Willis < ■ Nefl. Elias Gai nei. VU ent ll Day, Wm. M.Sellers, Wm. Fussier. F. Fee, Vol Smith, Wtn Tucker.
20-ut.
KIMBLE’S NEW Furniture Palace! West Side Public Sninro. Four skedJ puc full of new andstorid elegant goods, consisting of FUHNITUH PICTURES, RTsOULDIiNSGS, Engravings, Eooking-Ghii-see, Mattresses, Red Springs, Pillow Bolsters, Cloak Shelves, Comb Cases and Brackets. Call and see the magnificent dis-
play!
Clints. Kamblf <k' Son, U i-.> I -IM'. -ip'MIl-'. I ll ED. ACKERMAN Can make j on BOOTS ik SHOES That will vviiflr yo ns Erg ir two rdi nary pairs of those you buy out of llie btol'tS. R E P A I R I N G Is also neatly and promptly done by him. Cull on him, near the Engine Hon- e.
38-37
(Continuedfrom last week.) How Watch Cases are Made.
No Middle Name Wanted. N. Y. Sun. Two Christian names are one more than any man,even one weighed with the greatest responsibilities, need have. One Christian name is shorter, more vigorous, takes less time to write, has fewer initials to mark on a handkerchief, ond in our judgment, makes an altogether more sensible sort of a title tnan William P. Jones, or Thomas Q J. Smith. Moreover, of the seventeen men who have been elected to tbe odDe of President, twelve, beginning with George Washington and
ending with Abraham Lincoln, have had
uoet daily since December, and lost week (>u |y two initiate.
a disease, the 1
were stnken’down with nature of which the physicians could not I define. It is now proven conclusively to be triehinssin. Mrs. Heilman and one child are in n precarious condition, and
one child has died.
A terrible ease of destitution, nt Fort Wayne, was male public by tne discovery of a three-months’-old babe, in the family of John Schramm, freezing to death while the mother was out begging. Schramm, (ailing to get employment, left ths city to seek work. His family and two children were destitute, and i inoe Friday have had nothing to eat but raw eorn-menl, and that even became exhausted on Sunday. Friday night the large doublespan iron bridge over the Wabash river at Rich Tally, five miles east of Wabash, gave way without warning, precipitating the north span into the river, together with rwo men, Ephraim an 1 Milo Phearson, and a team which they were driving. Neither the men nor the horses were injure by the fall of twenty-five feet. The iron of the broken structure is rot-
ten and woithless.
At Liberty Mills, Wabash county, twin babies, three months old children, of Isaac Martin, were frozen to death in their crib, Thursday night, which had
Walter Thompson, a fourteen-year-old boy, has been arrested for stealing a horse at Terre Haute. He confesses to the stealing of the horse as well as to
•ther thefts.
MARKETS INDIANAFOLU, A’linat—Moditeranean |1 (Hifir 1 OV Corn—Yellow la Mixed 47 Outa—White and mixed :i|@ 34 Hye 5t> Hay- Prime timothy Dm Proviione—H. ('. hums.. lay, Hreakfuet bacon II U-i.-uioe* 8'4 Clear b dee '.e. Lard, intiercog ln‘ 4 ' attle—l'i imo »lii|,.. .tig eteere |0U)#B6 r < Uai- i.i aood ehippintt steera. 1 i(Hi 70 Medium « to 6)5 i Blockers and fi-eders 3 21 »i 1 IX) 1’riu.H ouu-iitrccwH Aheifem « tin 4 7 Fair to Rood 3 7.0 H 4 m Common and medium 9 1 .< I Uor*.—Assorted heavy.. B ;o v 11 !VI llrtsvy packino ft Oil h 0 i tl lfl«ht mixed ft 40 a, ft 7u Potatoes^- per bushel 3S t* 4 I Hatter -Dairy 12 % 2B Couutr y. nhoioe I ft 111 Krr* 3 1 « 15 a CHICAGO. Wheat 91 Corn .1 Oata . 32 Pork 13 21 Dud 8 y5 TOLEDO. Wheat. No. 1, white Corn !4 Oats 38 Clover seed prime medium 5 88
This processor manufacture was invented
by James Boss, who started in business in 1854, mid the methods and toi l - u 1 in making these watch cases are eoven 1 hy [infills. This is Ihe only witch rn.-r i.t'ide vmlrr this process. For many years I ho introduction of these goods wci slow, owing to popular prejudice ao;ii nst “plated” goods, but gradually the public learned that the James Jioss' Gold ll'ii/r/i Cose was not a ehrnp gold-vashed or electro-plated article, but was made of genuine gold p’ ltes of standard quality and thichiit s. C iim ientious adherence to the determination to mfle® the best watch Oast* ever put on the- market, and the adoption of every impro\ uent suggested, has made the .1 s Jit Hold I Watch Case the sr'SHaiui. '7 ? «***
In this watch <: se the parti* 4»
most snliject to wear the L , crown, Aingei t thumb-catches, etc., are n ade <■; .-ii!.; n i.ol.L. Brad 3 rent to Keystone W utrii (:tv»* Factor lei ITii!** di-lpliin. Pa , for handMimr Illuutratc i l am|ihlK s’, in; how
Jaiut** IR.ss’ ami kryhtouc MntrU I rm *• art* luutU. • (To be continued.) a
TOBACCO CHEWER8
A REWARD
Of CASH, 1,000 Imported Novelty Pockot
Knlvoe aud 5,000 pounds of tho Great iO-ZOO CHEWING TOBACCO
TO BE GIVEN AWAY! t l.wtot.iith w)lOt'ii.tli Si.VItoMtOui7th, yiiu .. 'ii, *20 to wh. *10 t., nnh, S.5 t.i nth, 1.000 liiil'ortcd I’orUel Iinivi'M worth* 1 ciu-h. (III'I -1.000 1'oumln ZOO-ZOO I’luu Tolnu-co, hi !«• irtv« 11 ill rotation, the lario-st minils-r of tuu-s ro. Mm-, will receive tho Ihvt reward, «IOO Cn-.li, h. v n l Imrhc-t. KUO, and so on down hi a Us-t. iiIiir "I ZOO-ZOO tobacco Those Christmas ami New
r n-ear-la will bo distributed tietivoen 1), -*th an-1 January 1st. Chew this (lelUhtfi |the hosi over made. Save thotays and a by mail, between December luth and 3&tU t
f
Year n .\ ardrt will bn d Btributed between II . niuner 21.11; and January 1-1. Cli. w this dollRhtful to. lia.cn the In-si ever inn de. Have thetaRs and mini them by mail, l«. twe- u December ifttli and Hftth. to tha WILSON .V Met'A I.I, AY Toll W CO CO.
JIIDDLUTOU N. OHIO.
|!Z~ ) ut iiddn-NS out unit pnsti* on I'llVl-ln|le. This s THE FINEST POUND PLUG EVER MADE. ASK YOUR DEALER POR ZOO-ZOO. W1 nufst on having It and you will tuo no ..that
1
