Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 April 1902 — Page 9
X the INDIANAPOLIS NEWS, SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1902.
SPRING Housefur-
nishings
N’T it about time you gave your order far Awnings? We can promise pmptness now, whkb yrt not when the ru^ it <m. XU the new
_ are here. We use fixtufesYhat work like a charm and keep work from being marred. Send o» a request by phone or mail and we’H hie* •> sum oa th* spot ready to talk businesa—he will come with
^ ^ tainplea And aahmit estimatct.
the'
Mm^CAliTS
Kitchen Fnrmtnre
We think we have the best kitchen Cabinet made; it has every convenience that is needed — Flour Bins, , Spice Drawers, Molding Boards and large Working Table.
Price
4.50 to 8.50
^BH^H^ggiRRAen yeeterdsjr tibaa See the carts and llPpei^J^aaa. to 50.00
Mtciien TdUes, Kkch«a Chairs. Khchen Cupboards, Bathrofmi CdMnets, Bathroom Mirrors, Bathroom Rugs...,. Members Merchants' Association
iS'
;er furniture comp’y INDIAN APOLIS
ONE FAMILY OCCUPIES A BUILDING OF EIGHTY ROOMS
STRUCTURE WAS ONCE USED AS A HOTEL, AND IS A RELIC OF BOOM DAYS A STATION THAT WAS NEVER USED Jt SCHEME THAT BROKE CAPITALISTS AND SENT A MAN TO PRISON
r;-:
mJ
Wlhi. ENTER ON TRIAL ^^^'^’^TEWART and CA8SADAY.
NililiTON WAS CONVICTED ':‘-C --f
charged with killing John E. Seay, last December, will be set for trial In a abort tinioj
ENGINEER GETS A FORTUNE.
Will
tion Holds That Hamilton Sk the Blow and His AtaoRemoved Dying Man.
^ [AfWdal to The Indlanapolto N*w»,l ^^^NVILLE, In<L, AprU 5.-The trial of Stewart and Fred Casaaday,' with the murder of Wlllla at CoatsvIUe, last November, will Hendricks Circuit Court MonCharles Hampton la serving B Jlaan4tnca in tba Mlcbtgaa City prison far Usriime crime. The theory of the ftt^a la that Hampton struck Haynes In ^ baoh room of a Coatsvllle drug store. klM that Stewart and Caesaday helped to oaarg tSm to the lumber tihed, where the holy hpaa found the next day. The deftilM udtt uodertaks to show that Stewa|^ and Caasaday were not there at the tbna Charles Rics, a witness for the State, who Aurnsdi up suddenly during the trial c.S'Asa he was said to be missI hopmstaat witness In the aihni^, trlat He has left the county M ssid to be In Indianapolta ofegr ^Mtheasos, from whom importapt sre said to be miasliiTi A tp^^l venire of twenty-five men has h*ihi 4Ea«ti from which to make up the CA^t FENDINQ NEXT TERM.
Hhmtfiftn County Circuit Begins AimK Term Next Monday. nhpsslal to The Indianapolis Newa] -NO^JWVILLE. Ind., April «,-The Ajnril tsflh of the Circuit Court will begin MtonBaii;. S^ a number of important cases BdU lasCffV op. One will be the trial of C. Bi^rn« chArged with murder. Auditor Tipton county, will be tried on the ^ ting the affections of B tsal^’S wife. The Caihoun-Dunham hrsoch of proniiae case Is to be heard. ^B^tfbhdant is nearly eighty years old, tM plaintiff, who Is about sixty. elAilW' that he broke his promise to iparry her and married a girl twenty years aid. Tlie trial of William Fodrea,
Remain at the Throttle While
Life Lasts.
[Special to The Indianapolis News.] EVANSVILLE, Ind., April L-Wuilam Seitz, one of the oldest engineers on the Louisville & Nashville railroad, received wonl a few days' ago that a relative in Kentucky had died, leaving -him 150,000. Bcltz will claim the estate, but he says the wealth will not prevent him from keeping at his work, as he hopes to be an engineer as long as he lives. Seitz Is one of the best known railroad men here.
BIcknell Retires From the Tribune. [Special io The Indianapolis News.] TERRS haute, Jnd., April 5.-C. F. Bicknell has retired as business manager of the Tribune and may buy a newspaper in another city. Mr. BIcknell sold his interest in vae Tribune to Messrs. Barcus A Golding about two years ago. Mr. Golding recently Nold his holdings to Mr. Barotis, and then Messrs. Golding & BIcknell tried to buy the property from Mr. Barcus, and at one time the deal was about made, when Mr. Barcus decided he would hold the paper.
Muncle. instead of at Torktown. but this Idea was opposed so vigorously by the people of Yorktown that It was abandoned. When the Bubble BurtL An immense dam was built across Buck creek and an artificial lake, several acres in extent, was formed. A large boathouse and dancing pavilion were other Improvements. When all these things were in readiness and the town was growing rapidly, the bubble bursL Warner, who was a fugitive from Justice, was captured and sent to prison, and the bottom fell out of the whole thing. Men who had Inv'ested capital, lost It, two of the factorlt!l were burned doatt and the rest moved away, large residences became the abodes of owls and bats, and -several large storerooms were without tenants. The dam, which ft is said cost JIO.OOO, -was washed out by high waters, and the artificial lake destroyed. It is said that nlore than 160,000 was expended on these imprewements. Deals Fell Through. When the Union Traction line was built, an attempt was made to buy the large hotel and the groiunds surrounding It, but
vytaT 'riiff’IciE^
DALEVILLE, Ind., April 5.-West Muncle, a relic of the boom days, is now little more than a name. Ten years ago It -was a scene of industrial activity and bade fair to become a summer resort of some importance. Two large glass factories were located there. The town was planned and laid out by the We3t Muncle Land and Improvement Company, headed by an ex-banker and promoter named Warner, from New York. Several Muncle capitalists w^ere Interested with him, the intention being to build up an Industrial city of large proportions and at t^ie same time open up a summer resort that would be one of the most attractive on the Indianapolis and Cleveland line of the Big Four rail-
road.
With this end in view a big hotel was built at a cost of many thousands of dollars. This building is modern in every respect, contains eighty rooms, and most of these were elegantly furnished. It was never filled with guests, however, and for years it has been occupied by but a single family, that of George Love, who owns
the building,
Station was Never Used.
About the same time that the hotel was built thie station, shown In the picture, was
also constructed at a cost of $3,000. It was years It has stood unoccupied. It is now also built by the Land and Improvement asserted that the Big Four has let the
vVfe.SJ nilHclL sSTA'T'IOri BliSifiLSS BL0Ci\
company, and the use of It offered free of contract for the removal of the building terms could not be agreed on, and the charge to the Big Four railroad. But it to DalevHle, where It will «be used as a road was built half a mile north. Several was never used as a station. All these station. The railroad company first gave other attempts have been made to buy the
out that it v(rould move the Yorktown station to Dalevllie, and stop trains at West
KIDIIEY DISUSE I
Some Rules for People Sedentary Habits
How to Detect This Approaching: Trouble and Nip It In the Bud
building and devote it to the uses for which It was Intended, but all have failed.
Sedentary habits cause kidney trouble*. People who are obliged to «lt all day long. stenograi^ers. telephone and telegraph operators, seamstresses, milliners, Mjoemakers, tailors, bookkeepers, clerks who stand over a counter, engineers, firemen, conductors,brakemen and others on steam and electric railroads are all more or less affected with disease in the kidneys. Long hours In a sitting posture cramps the kidneys, bowels and other organs in the pelvic regions. You will find that nearly everyone of these people has constipation, and a great many more of them have kidney trouble* and don’t know it. Often incipient Bright’s disease will fasten luelf upon a person and the only indication of anything wrong that the layman can discern Is a slight aching or tired feeling across the small of the b^k. This goes unheeded because it In itselr is apparently of no great consequence. Let the knowing physician examine the water when these symptoms are manifest and he’ll find a clouded, discolored, albuminous fluid that tells as plainly as a picture that Inside of these delicate and important organs there exists a condition or disease such as to need quick and powerful treatment In order to preserve them from decay and save the life of the owner. Always be on your guard for the slightest pain or soreness across the back. Don’t let It go unheeded, for at that very instant your kidneys n^ay be In an awful condition. When healthy they perform an important function, that of filtering and purifying the liquids that pass Into your system. Tney do it so carefully, too, that not the most infinitesimal speck of foreign or disease-breeding matter can get into the vitals of the body. While they are healthy, they do more toward keeinng you well than any other organ of the whole anatomy.When they are Impoverished and weak, unable to.stand as the barrlef against disease, it’s like throwing down the protecting walls and picket lines of a great city and letting the enemy, uninterrupted, walk In. Think of these precious organs becoming enfeebled through want of nourishment. Think of them instead of being plump, vigorous, healthy, of being thm, lifeless, almost bloodless,eaten full of holes and secretion, a pus that would make you hold your nose, could you see It. Think of them m their struggling attempts to obey nature, pouring uds filthy and disgusting mass into your lungs, heart and every'where over the body, on account of their inability to eject it through the proper channels and out of the system. Does this appear to you as being healthful? Y'et you, though not suspecting it, may be In this very position. If you have a running sore on your arm. you would bathe It carefully with warm water to cleanse it, then tenderly cover It -with some healing lotion. This much to protect it from the poisons in the air, and to assist your internal medicines to act more thoroughly. Your kidneys need washing as much as your arm. You neeil to flush out that pus and secretion and assist nature to restore healthy action. You need something known to go direct to your kidneys through the blood and that has a healthy effect. “Blood Wine” will do this
and so marked is Its action on the kidneys that you can actually feel It Working on them within a few minutes after taking a
dose.
It give* them Just the kind of bath thev need and It heals up the sore. It take's away the smarting, burning, painful, dragged-down, all-gon* swuwtions, as if by magic. It takes sediments of all kinds out of the little nooks and oorners where they lodge and cause brick dust, gravel, stone In bladder, inflammation, etc. It you have any of these troubles, or even if you have any <rf the lightest •yiBptoms of kidney disease, you ought to protect yourself. It is easier to prevent than to enre any disease, A bottle of "Blood Win. ' costing fifty cents, will often stave off aserious trouble and spare the patient'
otw ■
life, to say nothing penile and long sufferi
saving great
Read this expression gratitude from a Worcester (Mass.) woman who has h.4d an excellent chance to make a careful hivpstlgation of "Blood Wine." lira Ann
p. Stocking says:
MRS. ANN P.
3KINO.
liE DMTOWN SIMNGEE KM PEAtSA
LY LESSON IN POIEI
"I live right here BgMie city, wher^ 'Blood Wine’ la made.^^ave seen with’ my own eyes the cures Tf^as effected all about me. and I have been cured myself of a very stubborn case of kidney disease. I suffered for several years, had all Iht symptoms that ever accompanied such a: trouble, and tried about, every remedy recommended. ‘Blood Winh* was the la^. I took it only after being convinced that it was a truly wondrous medicine, and It cured me. 1 went to the Louis Daudelln Company and volunteered this statement, because I knew them to be honest, upright people and deserving of success. ,*Blood Wine’ will cure any form of kidney disease. and do it quickly and thoroughly. Anyone so affected, should try this gru.a medicine just as soon as they can g.-t-their hands on a bottle." Qo to yo'ur druggist and look into it carefully; read the literature and ascertain for yourself just what It will do. It contains no wine or opiates. "Blood Wine” costs fifty cents a bottle, but you can sample It free of chaiwe at Henry J. Huder's, Washington and Pc sylvania streeta
?enn-
** Tonus Bod; Time in Itm Flight,** U A If 11^ ■«*]? <ii>‘nilDCC
HAT
A Sitting with Bill Bloodgood, The Lucky Short"Card Player
{Copyright by Robert Howard Russell.)
« lOBt OP BATTII ORIlK’t MMOUS Pllf$lOtiUI| MAVi PtRPCOTEO A TftCATMNT THAT If OltAtm TNOIlAAROt OP CASES TN800MT IMCU»All.t.
nST THE TRUTiENT FREE
II fsaiF^AIN’T easy to say why It Should be so," said old man Oreenhut, as be put his feet oh the window-sill, “but somehow a man mostly plays poker better when he’s to home nor he does when he’s among strangers. Sort o’ like a cock al’ays fights harder on hts own hiU. ’Pears like he' has more confidence. I have reckoned sometimes that mebbo Uiat's why nobody don’t never, get the best 4>’ the Arkansas Glty contingent wlien they comes here to do up the town. Mostly they comes with their tall feathers spread an' a general appearance o’ great prosperity, to say nothin’ o’ confidence, but when they takes the boat after a few siUln's at the game, you can’t walk too close behind 'em without steppin’ on them same feathers. 'Pears like they don’t do so well here as they’t’e sort o’ got In'the way o’ doin’ among players they know better'n they do the Arkansas City talent. “Just naturally, all that has a tendency ti^make a citizen of Arkansas City a bit vainglorious so to speak, an’ kind o' puffs him up. There has been times when I've maintained it myself, that there wa’n’t no poker played anywhere else that was quite equal to the game the boys plays here when some o’ thfem same strangers lights la an’ sets out to do ’em up. 1 ain’t a Bayin' now but what that’s as nigh the truth VU the average men Is likely to get, on a rainy day, but I’ve had my doubts as to its bein’ so all-fired right ever since Sam Pearsall come back f'm Vicksburg an* told his experiences with some o' them Mississippi sharps. Pearsall Is one o’ the best all'round playera they is In town an' If they is one on ’em that mought ha’ been expected to git back hum with his kick lined with velvet,^ Pearsall’d ha' been picked out as one 6’ the likeliest. All the same he took a deck passage home on the first boat that come up the river after the
game broke up..
“Things had been tol’able quiet here to home for a spell- There hadn’t been no strangers u sloppln' oft what had speculatin’ tendencies, an* consequent, the boys was gettln’ a bit niokly, ab' Sam, he . reckoned he’d take a trip as fur as New t Orleans an' see If. he couldn't clean up enough on thi way to pay hts expenses (for Mardt Gras, 'n' mebe fetch home some llUl* margin toward payin’ off the mort-, i gage he put on his place the day after i wlnterbottora an’ him played their big freese-oul. i says to him afore he went ! that he wanted to watch out an' not get ) into no strange game* whll^ he was away, j but he on'y laughed an’ says poker was {good enoui^ for him, an’ he reckoned he Iwere old enough to play poker with anybody he'd be likely to meet down tf^e
A Combination that Could Not Beat the Run of THE Cards.
HAIR
HEALTH
jQnlckens and renew* ^*^11 AMU [growth. Bring*backyonth-IJAM|l
■fnl _colt>r, qosntitr and ibesaty. Notadye.ni||^ I Send 6c. post. fornUrr >FRBB trial botUo**''* ■
to PHILO BAY 00., 229 Lafayette aL, Newark, N. J. hagd BOCii bottles at dranlsts •
W.LDOUQLAS $3.60 SHOES r.'Sr. ▲ trial win eoai W. L, Pogfbu sbon am tki feMtlithswarlt. ^ INDIANAFOLIt STORK • 4 East Wisbiiftoi St.
\
I
W
" 'TWA’N’T MORE’N A MINUTE AFORE WILSON HELD UP TWO FINGERS, SO SAM KNOWED THE ; GEEZER HED TWO PAIR.” '
seen him. ^an' the two of ’em got into a game with some o’ the other passengers that panned out first-rate. 'Twa'n’t reely a big game, so to speak, but Pearsall an’ this here Wilson sort o’ understood each other putty well, right from the jump,
- . . an' did some tol’able judicious play river, 'a I thought he was, so I wa'n t j tween 'em that cost the other fellers about no ways oneusy about him. .nor there! four hundred dollars. There hadn’t been wa’n’t none of us that was. j nothin’ said, but Wilson hunted him up , “When he come back, though, there! *fter the game broke up, an’ offered to
Mmdr Iwa.mM* di«xnreriss that prwdsr iwalth j ne tdegraph message come In ad- go halves, him havin’ took a hundred or siTiiRAl^ *«. A* tits sgs of » h* u ss ■ yancts callin’ for a brass tend to meet j so more'n Sam had. O’ course. It wan*
by the
The aksv* to * P*r«^ of Ur. J. If. P«M}l«s, who tbMMigh itty .eean of «meriiBent*tton and
Tlifr. wa’n’t no fireworks i cottoned to him some
W^kleefiii •rsteMk'S* treatneat’ irf^CedL TiM yuu the key maw sad ksppineik Anusag the ^ «aai$ iHgrst by (hts wonderfai *ysM trik the paiaiytie. also those BHght'* di*ee«». < ccasonuSten, Sad aewe) teouMM, aMvows Alsrtsa femMe imuMWsigla. hfesdd^ troable, dropsy. 'i«r», pttea astbma. is fact. 'Rs awre is-tha Dsetor owt
aP ckroato dt****** mst^iffs of wMeh
She jus^ tied up at
the le\'ee. after dark, an’ Sam, he snoke ashore when the mate wa’n’t lookin’ an lost hlsself among the rousterbouts for a minute or two aa sort o’ fciuid htsaelf a little liter makin* tracks for home without huntin’ up no«< o' hi* friends, even for
<me drink.
"It were nigh a week aforv ha showed hlssclf here, an’ H were a wee* longer
“When they come to Vicksburg. Pearsal! ’lowed he’d go ashore an’ take a look 'round, an’ when he got to the hotel, he found Wilson there. ‘Feared Wilson lived there, but he hadn’t said nothin' an’ didn’t know Sam was goliv’ to stop, for Sam didn’t know it hi* own self. Sort o’ got off on the Impulse o’ the momenL
after the boat stopped.
he just loafed ’round for a day
_ _ Well, - , afore he’d talk, even to me. but when hy | or tvro. an’ then Wilson, he hunts him up,
did, he told a movin’ tale. ’Peered like an' says he baa a openin’. He puts It up, - . - - - , fil 'd been ona o’ the rankest suckers that somethin* like this; "There’s an ole geezer more money for a spell till Sam looked ev« traveled,the river, an* yet. the way here that’s just arrove In town thus got ■ to see the floor jwvered. He told the ‘ ‘ ■ ’ mspuUn’ the more money with him than is any ways | *tory abwt selUn a store, an' said he
good for his health, an’ we’ll have to get I waa gotn down the river to Mardl Ores, it away from him. He's a uncle o' mine, aoin’ to tnir* th» K^t in about
an’ 1 can’t make no break at bhn single-
got eight thousand dollars in bills, right! him close, nn’ he see that the old man ui/his pocket. wa’.i't no preerhorn He fumbled the “ ‘Now,’ saysWilson, ‘Ihlsls what we can ; cards kind o’ clumsy to look aL‘but he do. I'll rut up the money for you an' me didn’t make no mistakes, ’ceptm’ those to set in with him In a three-handed game. > he made a purpoce, an’ he were a player. You don’t put in a cent. I’ll play till I’-m {Bet his hand like he knowed how, but broke, an’ then I’ll sot round, just lookin’. ■ that were all right, for Wilson had said an pipe off his cards. When he has one j he were a sport, .an’ Sam didn’t see nothpalr. I’ll hold up one finger. When he has in’ more’n he were lookin’ for. two pair, two fingers, three of a kind, j _ “Blmeby Wilson he stacked up s^'In
three fingers,
ble
spread oijen my hand. That’ll be enough j to play for you an’ wo can divide after.’ , " '
“Well, o’ course, Sam wa'n’t no toddlln Infant to be took in with no such
as that if he was to
money, but his fist, an
enough against any game with another man’s nroney, 8*> he went along to the S eezer’s room an’ Wilson introduced hlni. aid hlf. name was Babcock, or some-
tMn’.
“Babcock was standln* straddle of a trunk, countin’ out bank bills, ah’ Sam say* the heap were about a foot high, an’ bim still pullin’ out more Tm all the pockets he had. He sp<Ao pleasant enough, but kept right on countin’ out
two fingers, an’ he stood a bet o’ twenty dollars, but the old man’s two pairs was aces and tens. “Then Wilson didn't hold up nothin* an’ Sam had threes, so he made a small bet Just to scoop the ante, but the old man stayed, took one card an’ made a flush. By this time Sam had played away all o’ Wilson’s money, but knowln’ that the signals was cornin’ right an’ tnlnkln* to hlseelf that he wa’n’t likely to never get no better grime, an’ havin’ that eight thousand dollars In his mind, he just naturally went down Into his own kick for more. “Well, the game didn’t last much longer after that. Wilson he looked kind o' scared‘ when he seen what remarkable luck the old man was havin’; fillin’ his hands, but he sot as steady as a clock, givin’ Sam the signals just as he’d ’greed to do, an’ glvln’ ’em right every time, an’ Sam, he kip’ on playin’ his cards for w'hat they were worth, an’ gettln’ beat In the draw, till he were done up for fair. He'd played In his last dollar, but afore he had a chanst o’ sayln’ anythin' the old man pulled out a big nickel watch an* looked at It with a sort o’ start, an’ says he hadn’t time to play no longer, for he'd got to rush to get his boat. An’ he calls a nigger an’ tells him to get the trunk aboard, an’ says good-by, an' gets out, all In a minute, leavin’ Sam an’ Wilson lookin’ at each other like two dogs that’s been catched suckin’ eggs. “O’ course, there wa'n’t much to say. Wilson he says he’s awful sorry, an’ Sam, he cus.ses a little, an' gives Wilson a touch for expense money, but Wilson he says he’s broke, too. The two hundred he put in the game-Is all he had, but he's nice about It, ar’ tells Sam not to worry about what he owes In the hotel ’cause he’ll stand for that, but as for money he can't put up none, “So Sam, he kind o' loafs down to the levee, thlnkln’ what he can do next, an’ he finds a boat startin' up river. Just as fid's p’intin’ for the gang plank, trustin’ to luck to make good after he gets aboard, he sees the nigger that fetched the old man's trunk f’m the hotel, an’ he calls him. Feelln’ in his pockets, he finds a half dollar an’ he gives that to the nigger. ‘Who Is that old man Babcock that you fetched his trunk down from the hotel just now?' he asks the nigger. “But the nigger he grins, an’ he says, ‘Dat ar gemman’s name ain't Babcock, marse. Him name Bloodgood—Bill Bloodgood. He Tm New Orleans. All de white folks say he am de best short card player In de whole Souf. sah.’ “Well, Just naturally, Sam he seen a great white light just about theoi an' he knowed how 'twas the old man had such i rattlin' good luck In the draw all the time, but he knowed 'twa’n't no use goin’ I back to see Wilson, an' he come home j as I said. He’s give up the idea o’ seeing j the Mardl Gras this year, but I reckon j he’s kind o’ hopin’ that Wllson'll stop off I at Arkansls City, next time he comes up ! the river.” • ;
DFoken
k N
With Bright’s Disease—Diabetes? Do yonr kidneys or liver refuse to do their alloted work ? Are you gloomy and irritable ? Is there a dull, heavy ache in yqur back that hurts when you stand; hurts when you sit; hurts when you lie down ? You need complete renovatioiL Begin on the liver and kidneys. It is there the trouble lies. * McLean*s Linger and Kidney ^atm will bring the color back and drive away those racking paint. It acta on these organs at oil does on a rusty wheeL If yon are afflicted, it will cure you. Bay a bottle to-day. ^t.OO ext your Ma^ by Thg "Dr, J, If. MeLgan Modicin* Co*, St. Iaxuu, Mo,
DYSPEPSIA
p fingers. If he holds a full, i’ll dou- j Sam with a* outrageous bluff, an' , Sam up my fist, an’ If It’s a flush I'll i took his wad, gl\in him about two-fifty i The Orovsr ad oijen my hand. 'That’ll enough j to play with, 'for he'd won some fr’m 11* *o{d under idlin’ I ^ ^ck^hcre^ or^iuiy of litomecto dleorder. no ms storv ' ho*' chronic or «everts. The very flret doee
he was to nut iin his own ' f ^ Itobcwk 8 hand, an started , all dlatree*. tones the we^ stomach,
put up nw own , ij, givlu’ Sam the signals. ' —- —
Wilson give him a hundred In. “Well, he give ’em all right. Sam knowed he 'was ’■ man never seemed to tumble.
be toftr tt. there wa’n’t no disputin’ the .^Taet that he were a puttin’ up a good scitpKtflr game with everything in his » fur as he could see. an’ no rea-
son ie mbitrust nobody.
eari h« did putty well on the way river. The^ was a feller on lOat called hiSDself Wtlaon. a
ha^Kdcen ebag titat Pearsdll a tba w^ute be first
handed, for he’s desui sure to make trouble, him knowln' that I play for a nvlA'. but he’s a sport all right an' *U blow it. in somehow, an ‘twouldn’t be right ftw us not to get IL He’s just JkM a store o’ hia'a do'wa the street, sm’ he’s
and was goln’ to take the boat in about a’ hour an' a half. So 'Wilson be wunk at 8am, an’ be saya ‘Don’t you think we can have a little game for, say, half an hour? That’ll give you time enough,’ an’ the old man said be was wfWn’. *0 they
set in.
“O’ esttrsei. Sam were a watehln* of
. V-. •
The old
an' he wa'n’t no wavs cautious about the way be held his hands, so Wilson didn’t have no ^(Rculty In seein’ ’em, an’ he held up his fingers like he’d agreed to, but the old man ’peared to have the almlgh-
tlest streak o luck ever.
“ Twa’n’t more’n a minute afore WIIson hrid up two fingers, so Sam knowed the geecer held two pair. He' skint hi* own hA«d an' see’t he had three nines, so he boosted It R>r fifty, afore the draw. Babcock, he come back with fifty more, an’ Sam h’isted it a hundred- Babcock stayed an’ they drawed. Sam didn’t better. but TVOson held up hi* fist clinched, an' Bam had to lay down. Twa’n’t no lie, for Babcock thrbwed hi* hand down, careless like, an* Sam seen he had filled on his one sard draw. ’Course, It were luck. “Next band, Wilson held up one finger, an* Sam had aces, am be played. Ketchln* fou» in the draw, he flggered that ace* up was goodi even tf WUson did bold up
Oraham Dyspepsia Remedy a poeiUve guarantee that
It will cure I>)rspepsla, Heartburn, Oastriti* I
no ntatter-l
re-:
. pre- i
vents fermentation and restors* dissstion. Br^ry 1 nerve and fiber of tbe body depends upon the stomach for its support. ‘Wbsn digsstloa ceasss , s slow form of starvation bsgins. and tb* vital organs, deprived Of their subsistence, become debilitated. Good digestion la essential to I health; premier aselmllatlcit of nourishment i means pure, rich blood, strong nerves, sound I sleep and makes life worth living. The most' chronic case of stomach disorder U Immsdlsts-
ly corrected by the
6R0VER 8RAHAII OYSPEPStt REMEOY which is prepared from the original UcDermott formula so renowned throughout Eqrope, and for which w* have secured the sole American
•fights.
FDFEl FDFFl “*• reekllng in p,ty of Indlanspolla who desire to test tbe wondorful aerlts at our rwnedy we will present a bottle absolutely free of~charge. Send In your name Sold by all druggists. Write for peunphlst and send a history of your ease for valuable advtoe. W« hard cured tfaouaaads of the most severe oeses and can cure your*. Ratmmbar. we guarastee eetlsfaetiaamj OKOVEK GRAHAM CO,. rSWRUKO, N. Y.
Full Quarts
3^'
Dircd Aom Dtftflter to Cofiniincr. Our sntire {ffoduct is «>ld direct to consumers, tfius avoidinf middlemen's profits and adulteration. If you want pure Whiskey, eur offer will
interest you.
W« wHI MMidfowr ImH RMrt botUgg of Noyner's Soveo Yeer-OU BooUe Cop^ DtetiliedR)!iMak«y Im* $3.20, T^xprewK PtreRaid. We eli^ fai plaiflifAiElcaKea—«o flMrfce to faNiilb cwrtMts. WhM yea apRi K eod test It isneiMtisIbctory retorwit •teor MlgPKM gadwwm
getanive#t3.20.
WKfTK TO NRARKeT AOCHIWM. THE HAYNER DISTILLING CO » aoe«»07 e. fayatht..
WHISKEY. for $^^*20 Express Chir^es Prepaid,
Our Distillery wss estalK Rshed ia 1866. We 1ml enjoyed 33 years’ confinual (ro!i^ unfit ws now have one hundred end slxty-%e thousend customers throu|^ out the United Ststee who are using Meyeer'w Whisks|r, whi» la an evideime of tfee. mortL We give you absohitov
ly fMre Whiskey at
posaibie cost. SuchWhl^ag^^ as we offer for $3.20 esgeet be purchased elsewhere mjf
leas than $5.00.
SefMeeese—1 •LtairfallMl •roayefWafj
.IlMiMTtsMui
M
eOO.OOO ^weoffenr J^or Oi\g Cent WiE, /iEWS
m
