Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 23 August 1890 — Page 4

DAILY JOURNAL.

PabNstied Every Evening Except Snnday

By T. H. II. McCAlN.

oPKICS-r I .v 7 South Urf»on Street.

TERMS OP 8C KSCKI PTION:

Per annum, payable In advance 15.00 Per month of 4 weeks "*0 Per week. payable to carrier 10 Single Copies 01. Saturday Double Edition 0.

Weekly Journal, per year, 91.25 outtddo of heeounty, 91.35.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 23, 1890.

KErUItLICAN T1CKKT.

For Congress—JAMES A. MOUNT. For Judge—E. C. SNYDEH. For Prosecutor—W. T. W1UTT1NGTON. For Representatives—T. J. ARMSTRONG.

For Joint Repie?entutivt—THOS M. BUCK For Aud.tor-JOHN C. WINCSATE. For Treasurer—A. F. RAMSEY. For Sheriff-FRED C.HANDEL. ForSurveyor-JAMESM. WACGH. For Coroner—GEORGE W. TUCKER. For Commissioners— •,'d District—MICHAEL PKICE. 3d District—AOUlLI.A W. GROVES.

This Date in Eistory—Aug, 23, 13U0—Str William Wallace. hero ot Scotland, executed at the n^e of .15. l&il—The city of Mexico surrviuletvd to Cortez, and the empire* of tho Montezumns became a

Spanish province,

1628—Ueorgo Villiers. Duke oi Buckingham, prollik'nto and wit, assassmatvd at Portsmonth. England, aged 176S~~Birth of Sir Astley Cooper, eminent sue peon died 1841. 1S4C—Santa Fe captured by Americans and New

M«ycico annexed to the United State**. 1850—Peace congress met at Frankfort, Oer* many. 1662—United States gunboat Adirondack wrecked near Abaco. ISG4— Fort Morgan, Mobile bay, surrendered to the Union forces. 1806—Holstein and part of Schleswig coded lc

Prussia by the treaty of Praguo. 1878—Cholera at Vicksburg, Mis*. 400 cases and CO deaths.

ROBERT PURVIS.

Aug. 4 a distinguished citizen of Philadelphia, Robert Purvis, celebrated his eightieth birthday. His naino is familiarly enough known even to this generation .is one of the original American abolitionists, of whom he and the poet Whittier, along with Harriet Beecher Stowe. are almost the only survivors.

It is generally supposed that Robert Purvis is a negro. This is a mistake. By his mother's gule ho is the grandson of a beautiful Moorish woman and a Gorman Jewish baron. On this side is the warm, impassioned oriental blood. On his father's side ho is pure English, fighting Anglo-Saxon: and Purvis has the two natures well mingled. Not in feamre, manner or appearance has he any look of the negro. He has, The Philadelphia Press says, "a slcia so fair that a Spanish beauty might envy it a manner so gracious and cultured that a scholar and poet might desire it a history so remarkable that many of the greatest men in this world would gladly exchange it for theirs could the records of time be changed."

Purvis' grandmother, though a Moor, was betrayed into slavery by a companion, an Arab girl. Thence she was bought and rescued by kind people who were struck with her remarkable beauty and stately manner. Purvis himself was born to wealth. Ho might, if ho had chosen, asserted his white blood, and been one of the first men socially and otherwise in the country. Instead he knowingly and deliberately cast his lot with those who sought to free the slave, and has born to this day the odium of himself being a negro. His impassioned oratory and remarkable personal beauty at once attracted the attention of all the early workers for anti-slavery. Along with Garrison, Lucretia Mott, Wendell Phillips and the rest, Robert Purvis was mobbed, catted, threatened and his life 60ug"nt more than once. All of these lived to note that whenever there is tremendous opposition to a cause in which no radical immorality or wrong is involved, that cause triumphs very quickly. Of some of his thrilling exjierlences in slavery times Purvis remarks: "There ara momenta when any man, no matter who he is, cares nothing for his life."

AN IGNORANTQUEER.

If what is said of her is true, Queen Victoria is actually one of the most ignorant persons in her realm today on subjects of vital interest to the English nation. Reason why: She is not permitted to read newspapers. The plebeian touch of common newspaper paper must not oorao in contact with the hand of royalty. A member of the queen's household good through the journals daily, cuts out what is supposed to interest her majesty, puis it upon «illr and places it before the royal eye. If any contain a criticism of the royal actions or anything that would be unpleasant for tho queen to see it is carefully cut out.

No wonder kings and queens never learn anything! The stupidest kind of a literary diet would become after a time tliat which only contained praises of one. We learn far more from our enemies than from our friends. If we do get on a little in the world, if we do improve our characters by cultivation aa the years roll on, it is because other pecplo—those who dont like us mostly —have pointed out our mistakes. We are apt to remember mistakes pointed out in that wny. But Quoen Victoria has not even the pleasure of getting a wliack bank at those who abuse hor. She did

Dot

know of any dissatisfac­

tion in her favorite Second battalion of Grenadier Guards till tho time of their banishment to Bermuda, though everybody else was familiar with it and the oppressive discipline which was claimed to bo ita cause.

THE NOVEL OF THE FUTOBB, .'i..i!y, in The Foruai, regards tho aridity with which novels are read in our time us proof that they arc what the public wants and that it is in this shape it prefers to take its mental pabulum. Therefore the importance of making tho novel just what it ought to be.

As a work of art the novel has two conditions to fulfill. It must awaken the pleasurable play of man's emotions and mental faculties it must appeal to us as social beings. Tho novel that tills these two requirements can be said to be artistic, and in proportion as fiction is constructed on these principles is it successful. Life, howevor, tho manifestation of man's emotional nature, is infinitely more complex than it was in tho time of Walter Scott, even, therefore the task of the novelist is infinitely harder than it was then. With the evolution c-f man evolves also art, and tho novelist must meet the constantly growing demands of work.

Tho tendency grows to mingle social questions with novel writing—that, too, because it is a demand of tho hour. Those writers are the greatest who deal most successfully with the individual in his relations to the community, its customs, ideas, dominant ide-its. Such writers are Balzac, Victor Hugo, George Sand and George Eliot.

Along with tho tendency to analyze human nature grows tho inclination toward realism, representing real lifo in fiction. Tliis is all very well, and as it should bo but Mr. Sully reminds the novelist that there are two kinds of realism, tho good and the bad. This evidently many popular novelists have lost sight of, and flatter themselves and their readers that they are realistic when they show up the merely bad side of man. Tho lopsided result they thus bring about is exactly the opposite of realism. No creaturo was ever wholly bad OJ wholly good, and those alone are the masters who represent man ns he is, a mixture.

Tho novel of the future, in tho judgment of Mr. Sully, must take ns away from black pessimism into the realm oi the rosy, tho happy, the beautiful, the good and the healthful. Wo arc sick of supping on horrors. Show ns, O Messieurs Novelists, not this lifo of pain and disorder. Wo know it already better than you can tell us. Look about you in tho world and show us the happy. Set your imagination at play and give us a deliverer from our sorrows.

FEELING WAITEHS,

Amencau railway restaurant and hotel prices are high enough in all conscience, without the wayfarer's being required further to hand out the last of his silver change to sleeping car porters and waiters. Tho following, from Tho Philadelphia Ledger, will commend itself to travelers and victims:

It If not mentioned that the convention of hotel keepers just adjourned at Saratoga, and now styling themselves a "national association," took any action with regard to "tips." The constant dripping of silver coin required in some hostelrics does not appear to have been even Introduced for discussion. Yet this requirement is serious defect In tho otherwise well managed hotel, where the traveler would like to know that the toed cost per diem or ,-'r week expressly relieves him from all •'extras." It is a lud and very old world custom that has no business to be naturalized here. Hotel services and the deck chairs oa steameru ought to be furnished free. Tho "jpiest" at a summer hotel ought riot to have pay for his clialr ot the dinner table, to head waller and deputy both, any more than a member of a well oonductid private club has to pay for personal •ervieo tlicru

AS TO NEVADA.

Tho suggestion to takeaway statehood from Nevada and return her to tho territorial states until shi gets some more population thus stirs up Tho Nebraska State Journal:

The proposition to unstato Nevada and relegate her back to a territorial condition comes from the east Tho east, hou-uver, had better not play with cutlery of this kind. When the general government begins to monkey with the autonomy of states actually in the Union trouble will begin. They might conclude that the little patch of ground known aa Rhode Island ought not to compete with such giants as New York is now, and Texas and Nebraska will be soon, and attach her for statu purposes to a neighbor.

Then Slaine and New Hampshire and Vermont and tho nsit of the small holdings in tho northeast might bo comiieiled to consolidate with MoKsochunetta for want of re«iui.sit.j imputation and area, as they are falling behind In the mcc for empire. Then thero are Delaware and New Jersey, little potato patches on Uncle Sam's farm. So telling where the tiling will end if it ouce gets a start.

lp, as our free trade brethren so vo ciferously allege, tho New York Mail r.nd Express asks, why are the importers rushing in such vast quantities of foreign goods npen which theMcKinley bill imposes a higher tariff? The mod haste of the importers to get the goodH into the United States before the Tariff bill becomes a law looks very muoh aa though they didn't take mnch stock in. the Ireo trade doctrine about tariff taxes. But perhaps our Demooratio friends will say that they aro aotuited solely by motive of the purest philantlirophy in the matter and they are merely

trving

to save tho publio from paying tho tariff tax.

Wouin it not bo a good iaea to introduce a resolution nt the next State Convention deprecating the practioe of candidates for State offices making a tour of the State for the purpose of "setting up tho pegs?" There are many reasons "why this practice should bo discontinued. It is of comparatively recent origin, and is in direct conflict wi»h the spirit of election reform.—South Bend Times,

A praotico littio lefia objectionable is that of the some candidates attempting to use the Stato press as a kind of a free horse on which to ride to glory. If notices from the press arj worth, anything they aro worth paying for.

L\ IiuOoIEIlDOJl.

Interesting Ocourronoos in Indiana Cit es and Towns.

Natural Gas l'luylnir Out.

INDIAN.U'oi.is, Ind., Aug. '.'3.—The yeoloffieal section of tho American Assoiation of Scientists nindo' itself very interesting to tlio homo people Friday when it turned its attention to the subject of natural gas. l'rof. Edward Orton, the Ohio geologist, led a discussion on the probability of exhaustion of tho supply of |ar and said, greatly to tho discomfort of the peoplo who enjoy this modern comfort, that the gas supply is not only exhaustible but is rapidly and suroly vanishing'. Every man conversant with tho facts, ho thinks, agrees with him. The gas is not now being generated, and every foot that escapes to tho surfaco leaves tho quantity remaining for futuro uso just so much smaller. Tho pressure of wells in Indiana and Ohio is -steadily diminishing, tho diminution bavin? already amounted to between JO and 40 percent. Ho urged the imperative necessity of cities and States taking action to restrict wasteful use of gas. hut even the strictest regulations, he says, can not prevent the exhaustion of the supply in a few years. To-day tho scientists will make an excursion into the Indiana Held to view displays of gas at different points. Tho general tiold-work was bogun Friday when four sections of tho association wont to Terre Haute to visit points of interest.

Uneasiness Among ltullroad Mori. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Aug. 2K.—Thero is a growing restlessness on tho part of the railroad employes in this city, and it is now an open secrot that the officials of all tho linos excopt tho Big Four rogard a strike as likoly to take place at any time. Within the past few days several men, presumably from Now York, have been minglinrf with tho employes. The Cincinnati, Hamilton & Indianapolis freight handlers want an increase in wagos the Pennsylvania employes aro restloss tho Vandalia switchmen have not received tho advanco asked for, and tho Lako Erie & Western switchmen have boon refused an increase. Not a pound oi perishable freight is being handled for tho East, and shippers of other freight aro promised nothing when making application except that the company will do tho best it can. No promises as tc prompt delivery in any direction are being mado.

Ills I'aracliute Opened Too r.tttr. WEST LEBANON, Ind., Aug. 23.—Will iam P. Dennis, of Terre Hauto, ono o! tho most celebrated aeronauts in th« country, met a horrible death Friday. When S00 feet from tho ground ho at tempted tadescond with a parachute, bul the ropes become tangled and hodroppeq over 700 feet. Tho parachute opened about 100 feet from the ground, bin Dennis had gained such momentum thai it availed nothing. Uis body was hop ibly mangled.

Con.ul-General Sweeney1* Rntat-b. COLUMBUS, Ind., Aug. 23.—Consul General Sweeney, at Constantinople, whoso home is in this city, with his family arrived at New York Friday. Tho Consul-General has a leave of ab 6nnce for sixty days. lie will not ontei the race for Congress against Georg* Cooper in the Fifth Indiana district, a* has been announced.

f'olltlcn).

PLYMOUTH. Ind.. Aug. 2S.—The Republicans of the Forty-first judicial circuit held their convention here Friday and nominated for judge M. L. Essick, of Rochester, Fulton County, and for prosecutor S. J. Hayes, oi Bremen, Marshall County.

Shot Himself.

BHAZII, Ind., Aug. 22.—A Seoleyvillo (Ind.) miner named William Postorious grew despondent after his wife died and left him with threo chlldreE and shot himself Friday. lie will die.

FROSTS IN THE NORTHWEST.

Immntureil Ctops in .Some Carts of MIn. ncsotii and North Dukota Killed. ST. PAUL. Minn., Aug. 23.—Killing frosts aro reported in Kittson, Marshall, Norman and I'olk counties, Minn., in all the border counties oi North Dakoto and in Manitoba westward toMinnedosa. where the temperature reached 28 degrees. In Northern Minnesota, around St. Vincent, ths mercury indicated 30 degrees, and all iimnatured crops are said to bo killed. Whether wheat in Northern Minnesota which ha not yot been cut is injured is a question which It will take two ot three days to decide, Tho frost was so severe that it is feared that grain that was still soft will suffer to some extent. Tho frost line oxtended southward over Moorhead, in this Stato, and thence westward to Huron, S. D.

Killed HI* Conductor.

ST. LOUIS, Aug. 23.— Pullman Car Conductor lJeardsloy was 6hot and killed by Harrison 15. Jordan, a Pullman porter, here Friday. Tho men were on the same run and had frequently quarrelod.

Heat the Itocord.

CHICAGO. AU^. 23.—IN tho trotting match for 86,000 at Washington Park Friday Palo Alto dofoated Jack in three (straight heats, the last beinjf mado in 2:13, tho fastest limo on rocord in a match.

A I-lttlo Girl Accidentally Killed. LANSINO, Mich.. Aug.23.—Ida Miller, 6 years old. was accidentally shot and killed by her 14-yoar-old brother Friday.

Capture of a Kentucky Dcspsradn. LOUISVILLE, Ky., Aug. 2a—Captain uaithor, of the company which is protecting Judgo Lilly's court at Hazard Perry County, reports that Joe Davidson, a loader of tho French faction in the Frenh-Eversolo feud, had boon capturod. He says Davidson is the worst desperado of all, and his capture

has struck terrpr Into the lawless bands.

DEATH WAS PILOT,

A Train Dashes Down Mount Peon, Near Reading', Pa.

FOUR OF ITS PASSENGERS KILLED.

Seven Lives Lmt In Similar Accident* In California and Colorado—Many Victims of. Other Disasters at

Homo and Abroad.

A IIUNAWAY TIIAIN.

Rr.ADiNii, l'a., Aug. 23.—A car containing eighteen passengers on the Mount l'onn gravity road ran away Friday morning and rushed down tho mo'nuain. a distance of five miles as the road runs, at the. rate of eighty miles an hour. When tho car re.vhed the station at the f«vjt of the plane it jumped the track and rolled down a llfty-foot embankment, where it lnndetf upside down, with the passengers imprisoned inside. The greatest excitement prevailed and soon a large crowd gathered. Doctors and the ambulance was sent fur and the dead an.1 injured removed. Four were taken out dead. They aro Charles Uettow, Edgar M. Levin and Misses liusa T'eifFer and Harriet Shinkler. Mrs. lliratn Shinkler and Mrs. W. A. II. Sohmel will dio. Among tho other injured are Sallio ltye and Mary Guthrie, of Wilmington, both badly hurt, and Willie Schmcl, this city, both legs broken.

MMILA.lt ACCIDENTS OUT WEi

EMIGUANT GAP. Cal., Aug. 23—A freight train became derailed from Its engine at Summit Friday morning and ran rapidly down tho hoavy grado at Cascade. Another freight train was pulling on to tho siding when tho runaway cars struck it. In the wreck which resulted Conductor ICingsley, of tho runaway train, and Conductor Connelly and two brakemen of tho other train were killed and two other brakemon badly hurt. The station building was thrown down a precipitous hill and tho snowsheds demolished for a considerable distance.

DENVER, Col., Aug. 23.—Threo men wore killed and threo seriously injurod by tho running wild of a stone train of so von cars in the vicinity of Lyons, Col., Friday morning. Tho train was on a down grado when tho engineer found ho had lost control of tho engine, whereupon tho wholo train started on a wild run down the mountain side. Tho train rushed on until tho dump was reached, whl'n all the cars wont over and piled up in a promiscuous mass of ruins. Tho killed are: E Norton, engineer Ferguson and \V. Gurker, car-repairers. Threo others were seriously injured.

OVEIl A UUNDltED DEAD.

LONDON. Aug. 23.—A dispatch from Geneva reports a fearful cyclone in tho canton of Vaud, in which 150 persons were killed and noariy ],000 injured. Tho stonn was furious, and mowed a swath of destruction through the center of tho canton. Several hamlets wero devastated and one is reported to have been completely wiped out. not a single building remaining to mark* tho sceno of ruin. Thousands of people havo been rendered homoless, and every thing in tho path of tho storm was swopt out of oxistenco. Forests wore torn up, vlnoyards dostroyed and houses leveled. Of tho injured many are fatally hurt, and tho doath list will be greatly increased. Particulars aro meager, and the people aro dazed by tho horror that has befallen thorn.

RAH13 STRUCK BY A CYCLONE. :.']••• PABIS, Aug. 23.—A cyclone of great violence struck St. Cloud in thesuburbs of Paris. It was of brief duration, but its parti wns marked with great destruction. Twenty houses wero iStterly demolished, the occupants being buried in tho ruins. Sovon dead bodies havo already boen recovered, and tho list will certainly bo increjs-d, as several persons aro still missing. One family named David is known to bo burted in the wreck of their house.

CHASlIKD Tllliouon A IlIIIDOE.

ATLANTA, 111., Aug. 23.—An accident occurred Friday morning on the Terro Hauto & Peoria road. A freight train went through a bridge on Sugar creek, three miles from here. Fivo cars and the caboose fell into tho creek. A bralceman nijmed Recvos was fatally hurt. Ono or two passengers in tho caboose escaped with slight injuries. incus TRAIN WRECKED.

KALAMAZOO. Mich., Aug. 23.—The first section of the llarnum & Railey circus trains was wrecked at Shelbyville, on the Grand Rapids & Indiana road by a coupling breaking and several cars (lying the track. Threo men wore badly hurt Two havo slnco dicd-

TOIIN TO FRAGMENT*

LONDON, Aug. a .—An explosion occurred in ono of tho outhouses of the Government powdor-tnlll at Waltham. Two men wore blown info fragments and several others wore injured.

FATAL COLLISION AT SKA. 8T. NAZAIRE, France, Aug. 23.—The Fronch steamer Ameriquo on Friday ran down and sunk the English steamer Rod Brook off this port. Three porsonswero drowned.

NINE BURNED TO DEATH.

VIENNA. Aug. 28.—Thetown of Szany, near Oldenburg, Hungary, was destroyed hy fire Friday. Nine lives wore lost.

Lawyer. C'hoosa Otllcera.

SARATOGA, N. Y., Aug. 23.—At tho American Bar Association mooting officers were olccted as follows: President, Simeon E. Baldwin, Now HavenSecretary, Edward Otis Hinckley, Raltimorc, MrL Treasurer, Francis Rawle, of Philadelphia, Pa.

Destitution In Oklahoma.

WASHINGTON, Aug. 23.—The special agent sent to Oklahoma by Secretary Noble has returned and mado his report Ho confirms tho stories of dosti. tution existing thero and says holn should bo sent at once.

People in Northwest Wyoming aro excited over rich finds of gold in tho foiiguo river field and there is a starnpedo from Dayton and Sheridan.

EEPUBL10AN STATE UONVENTION.

Tho Repubhoaus of Indiana, and all others who will co-oporoto with them in tho ooming campaigu aro invited to meet in delegate convention in Toinlinsou hall, in the oity of Indianapolis, on Wfidnesday, September 10, 1890, at 10 o'clock a. m. for tho purpose of adopting a platform and nominating canidates for the various stato cllloes, to be vctoil for at the November election. Theoonveutiou will be oomposod of 1,820 delegates, twenty of whom will be from Montgomery county.

The delegates from the counties composing tho several congressional districts will meet at Indianapolis at 7:30 o'clock ou ti'e night proceeding tho day of tho convention, at such plaoes as may heroniter be designated, for the purpose of Kolectiug.

One member of the oommittee on permanont organization. I One member oi the oommittee on oredontiiils.

One member of the committee on resolutions. I Otio vice-president of the convention. I Cue assistant secretary of the convention.

This call is issued by order of the IloI publican state central committee. L. T. MIOIIENEU, Chairman. I FRANK M. MILIKAN, Secrotnrv.

Indianapolis, Ind., August 1, 1890.

ll-

CONGRESS.

The Senulc Cnntlnucn Ita Debute on the Tariff llill—Proceeding* In the Iluoise. WASHINGTON. Aug. 23.—In tho Sonate Friday tho resolution to prohibit tho salo of liquors in tho Senato restaurant was taken up, but in the absence of Its author it went over until to-day without action. The rest of the session was devoted to discussion of the tariff bill, a number of amendments being proposed and rejected.

WASHINGTON, Aug. 23.—In tho House Friday Mr. Henderson (111.) submitted the report of the committee on rivers and harbors in the Senate amendments to tho river and harbor bill. The House resolved itself into committee of tho whole, Mr. 1'ayson (111.) in the chair, for tho consideration of tho inoasure. After non-concurring in about one-half of the Senate amenduionts tho committee rose.

Mr. Hansbrough (N. D.) Introduced a joint resolution proposing an amendment to the constitution providing that neither the United States nor any Stato shall pass a law authorizing tho establishment or maintenance of a lottery or any schomo for tho distribution of prims by chance.

BASE-BALL.

Result of the Game* I'lavecl In Various Cities on Friday. Players' League games on Friday resulted as follows: At PhiladelphiaPhiladelphia, 7 Chicago. 0. At Brooklyn—Brooklyn, 7 Pittsburgh, 5. At Boston—Boston, 10 liuflalo, 5. At Now York—New York, 11 Cleveland, 5.

National League: At BrooklynChicago, 1 Brooklyn, a At BostonCleveland, 8 Boston. 6. At New York —Now York, 4 Cincinnati, 3. At Philadelphia Philadelphia, 12 Pittsburgh, a Sunday, tho outfielder of tho Pittsburgh National Leaguo Club, hag jolnod the Philadelphia club. Fielder Burke and Pitcher Day wore given in exobange for him.

Illinois-Iowa League: At Cedar Rapids—Cedar Rapids, 13 Jolict, a Ottumwa—Ottumwa, 15 Aurora. S. At Monmouth—Monmouth, 1 Galeaburg, a At Dubuque—Dubuque, 8 Ottawa, u.

Western Association: Milwaukee— Milwaukoe, 8 Lincoln. 1. At OmahaOmaha, 8 Sioux City, 3. At Minneapolis Minneapolis, 12 St. Paul,4.

American Association: At ToledoToledo, 12 Syracuse, 3.

A PLAN FORMED.

A Conference of ltepablloHD Bene tors Decide Upon an Order or llnslnes*. WASHINGTON, Aug. 23.—The conference committee appointed at Thursday night's meeting of Republican Senators, mot Friday afternoon and put into form tho resolution establishing an order of business which it is proposed to adopt. The resolution provides for closing debate on the tariff bill August 30, the understanding being that a final vote will be bad by September 5. Tho measures mentioned in the Quay resolution (including the puro food and lottery bills) aro to bo disposed of boforo adjournment. The election bill is to ho made a special order for tho first Monday in December, tho day when Congress roconvones, with tho understanding that a vote on it is to bo ordered not later than December 20.

A Disastrous Flro.

GIWTOS, S. D., Aug. 23.—sire caught in the kitchen of the Hotel Brunswick at clock I' riday afternoon and burnod nearly all of tho west half of tho business portion of tho town. Fire companies camo from Aberdeen, Redfiold, Andovor and Doland, and at midnight tho flames wore under control. Tho loss is about 8120,000.

Tli© Failure Record.

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failures occurring throughout tbo country during tho last sovon days numbor Lo spared with 197 last week. For tho corresponding wook of last year too figures wero 200,

When Bai/y was sick, we gavolier Outer*. When she was a Child, She cried for Oaaturl* When she became Miss, she clung to Caotorte, When she had Children, she gave them OMIortv

The wave of progress has carted over the Argentino Republic into Patagonia. This country used to bo described in the geographies aa a wild and desolato region inhabited only by ssvagc& peroua ranches and colonies sow occupy its table lands, and half a million Patagonian sheep await the first market.

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MISCELLANEOUS.

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is the time to lay Invniir -unn'r winter coal and Joseph Washington street, the man toorteltofl

DR. C. E. RANKIN,

(SuecessortoMiintairuei Itankin, Special attention given to the removai Cancers, tape-worms, hfimnrhoiiis. Offlceovcr the Corner Hoik Stotc: rv-i:.:J at Dave Lee's. 21.1 Kiist i'ike n.

HUMPHREYS'

DK. HUMPHREYS' SPECIFICSaresclentlflcttlrucarefully prepared prcsccJiiLkma used for ami yean In private practice with succmaud far oral thirty years used by the people. Every single 8M dAc a special cure for the disease nimtd.

Theee Specifics cure without drugging, peci tag or reducing the system, and are in fact idL deed tho sorer elcn remcdicnoftbeWirUj UKTOF RNIXCTPII NOB. CITIES] WCO 1 Fcvern,

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ChtldruierAdult*.

ft lT*ontery» Griping.I)i:fau*Coll%... CI CJbolera Morbus Vaulting .. 7 Coaahtft Cold, li.-/uchi:ic

Nenraltfln, Toothache,Focwidie 1 1lcatlacueM« Kick lit'^iacJn'. YerUtO ,i l»ynpcp»lut IUIUMS Mnjvach..... ... 11 Hnynrecjucd or i'utufal l'rrsodft. l'Z Wuftett* too Profuse IVrl *1*. ,'l 1ft Croup* Cough, Ditllotih lirt*nUuc»'

Halt Ithcuiii. Ervfr!i'ia.s_rruirtia 13 itt

Rhenmntisui, hbeiinxtio 1'Aia*,

?lies*

ever and ARUO, Chills, ilolarla Blind or Illcediur In the Head ... Ottfhi.

0 Catarrh* Influcaxa, Co] O Whooplns C'nntrh*

FhyslcAlWeatnee

vlloleot

••I General J)ebllHv,Fli7$i 2? Kidney Jllaenwe 28 fTervonsDebility .1 9Q ijwlnawn ll'nn l^nfl 3*2 1)1

literal j)i .. Idney JliaenNe ^rvons Debility ........--- rinary wenknw.WrtttaglW. .. laeaaeaof I lie lieu rt, Palpitation 1.1 Sold by Druggist*, or Rmt t*tpal(l of price. DB/HCMPHUEYS' Su*riu Q« richly bound In cloth ami pl«l. mailed w. Hamphrey'MedirlneCo.i^'Fu^St.vY.

S E IF I S

TARIFF LITEBAIURE FOR ALL

The AMERICAS? PNOTI:CTIVETARRFPLEACL Is publishing a mo^t vuluablc Turlj documents. These are prop»re«l withavjc* to state tho fnctx and urgiin^'uts for IWKtlon, whether In the interest 4" i.tnKrs laborers, morchunts or proftsi'»nitl HKB-I Vlach Issue of the series hpj«h!s to ({Hjfed In separate Jndtistrltf.RndprcM'niJJ ilsputnble iacta—eomparinittf of of living, and other urguuiuuls Bbuwuih' W benettts of Protection. .*\

Any single one will be Fcntonrw/P*®? cents in stumps except Wiij/e*, uving Tariff," which will he gent forlco-i^

The whole list will lo sent for any twelve for 20 cents, or any uve IOT.J cents, iKWtoge paid. Order hy uumlxf. So, 1—" Wages, Living and Tariff." E. A.

NIR

PrlM Essay,

J|

2—"Tlie Advantages of a I'rot«vtlv«' Tan® |o tbo Labor and Industries oftb^ii.v titatea." First Prize KMgay* tjl _POM D. HENS I

Home Production lud^lH'n.Hable W JgJ ply, at Low Prices, of the Mwiufacta^J CommodlUes re^ulred forte

isss.

C.

4—" What are Raw MaterinU WoiiMFrM|Sj Materials be Advantageoust«i and Industries of tho Vn t?JnL3ll

First Prixe Essay. .M«w J| (-"Fallacies of ftee-Trado." K.1 ''Wfe I tt—44 Some Views on tho Tariff by an 3 aessMon." OKO. DnAiT.n. 7—"The Protective Tariff: It* AdvanU*« n'lloil the sooth." C. L. KDWAWJ*

The Wool"interwitiuiww»-

UI

&—M Protection vs. FrwTriwe. -A Review. D. 10-" The Farmer and tho Tariff CoL T«o*«

1(

XI—*4 Protcctlo?asa iSibiic Pollry."

.. H. P. PoitTWt... 1JV—"Worklngmenand thl» Turiff- inf. H- 'TheVluQ Question: Shall tries be^ Abandoned and Anwricaiuw ketsSurrendered? .. 15—Same in German, with Adjltt• \vArs." I Id—14 The Progress of one liundrtd l|

ROBERT P. PORTKII

1«— Protection for American nL,, The Tariff Not Tax." 10-" \vhy Irishmen Should I* rmt.vUoofcu ,• 20-M Protection." E. II. I 21—•• What is A Tariff Answers TO a ORKU*

4

1

inau's Question ... y"i h"AX23—"Tho American Wool Industry, t* 2?5—" Wucoa and Cost of I.ivinj.'," j. D. rxsi24—"Soutliern Farming industries. 2 26—" A

Short Talk to Workln«ni «. 'gjt* W— Protection and tho KanntT ^-"aI

4r

1!

Tho AMKRICAK BOOKOMUN-, a vrrvfcjy Voted Ui UJC discussion of all QuesUon. (2,00 per uunuui. hampl"^

Address ni»nv.M. HOIT. "N Vfutocllve Tariff League, iw W. tu

1V*