Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 1 August 1896 — Page 3
One Lost Day
is not much out of a lifetime, but. to a business man it rany mean tlie loss of a valuable opportunity. When temporarily crippled with any pain or weakness, for which an active and effective external remedy is needed, nothing is so trustworthy ns .TohnsonV Belladonna Plaster. It tnuelifs the spot and gives the w.'lroTii'' p'lii f. It is mnde. to sueeeeri—- not, merely to sell, l.ook f»r tho iled Cross on all the genuine. .TOIIN^ON .V JOHNSON,
Munufacltiriiii! Ciii-niir-tB, Xnv York.
jmliaimpolis \\:ire \yorks.
THOMAS II. (iACK, I'ropriotii!-. ...Manufacturer of...
WIRE GOODS
Of every description. Dank and ofiler railings, tlevator enclosures, window and counter guards, wire trellises, vasos, siitie.-, moss ba-'Uots, (lower stands, Oni-.-, S Circle St., India nap -I!", I no
to
I will sell S'2" '-JIII: tug liar:n-ss for 821. $20 chain liarnti-s for sl(J.
Wool face collars for §2. Best canvas collars
T-'M-IS.
Sweat pads for 25 Horse clippers for Si. Hall-bearing flippers S3.---Good leather halters for 7"H
IS.
Rope halters for 12^•ct*-. Burlington "stay-on-1 blankets for 75cts.
B. L. Ornbaun
The Harness Afaii.
North Washington Street.
Get the
Best
and
Save Money
not buy until you have
I read the ATLAS Catalogue. Write for it to-day. ATLAS ENGINE WORKS,
P. O. Box 7 1'-. Indianapolis, 3 ml, ..
PARKER'S GINGER TONIC
flb&tea Lung Troubles, Debility, distressing stomach ami female Ills, and is noted for making :urcs when allothtr treatment fails. Every mother ami invalid should havo it.
N
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM Cleanse® and beautifies the h&Ir.| Promotes a luxuriant growth. I Never Fails to Restore Grayfl
Hair to its Youthful Color. Cures scalp diseases & hair fulling. 60c, and $1.00 at Druggists
HINDERCORNS
The only pure Ctirc for
Corns. Stops all pain. Makes walking easy. 10c. at Druggists
JOT 11' TO NON-HKSIDIiNTS.
State nf Indiana, .Montgomery County: ill tlio Montgomery Circuit Court, .May term, ISflli. Henry Ilowoll vs. Helen Howell. Com|il:ii 111
Ko. l^'-M Conies now tlio I'lnintitT by Johnson Jt .Tohn-on, his Attorneys, anil llh-s Ills complaint liorein, for divorce together with 1111 affidavit that said defendant, Helen Howell, is not ,i resident of Indiana.
Notice is therefore hereby given said del'ondnnt that unless she be and appear on the 1st day of tho ne.\t September tvrm of the Montgomery clri nit Court for the year 1MHi, the same tiffing the Tth .lay of September. A 1). 1S5I0. at tho Court. House in ('rawtordsvii .. In said comity and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the sama will bo hoard and determined in her absence.
Witness my name,and the seal of said Court, alllxed at Cniwfordsville, this Kill day of .luuc A. I)., 1H9IJ WAI.I.ACK SI'AKKS,
Clerk.
J^OTICIilTO IIKIUS, ('UKI)ITOIfS, Kl'C.
in the matter of tlie Estate of Willard Goit. deceased. In tho .Montgomery Circuit Court, May tern lSHB.
Notice is hereby given that John U. Slirum, aa Administrator of the estate of Willard Gott, deceased, has presented and llled Ills accounts and Vouchers In final settlement ol said estate, and that tho samo will coiiioup for the examination and action of said Circuit Court on tho 101 li day of June, IgllU, at which time nil lielrs, creditors, or legatees of said estate are required to appeal- In said Court and show cause if any thero be, why said a counts and vouchers should not bo approved, and the heirs or distributees of said estate are also not 1fled to bo In said Court at tlio tl.no aforesaid and make oroof of heiMhip.
JOHN I.. SIIKUM, Admin'sti-alor.
Dated this -'.Mb day of -iy, ISflli.
I An A TINNER.
I don't do anything else, and therefore am fully equipped and prepared to do the most satisfactory work in
Slate Roofing, Tin Roofing, Glittering, Spouting, Etc.
Also general tinning and repairing. I.et me turntsh you estimates for contract Joijs.
P. M. DAVIS,
206 S. Walnut St., r.oxt to wont (Mitrnniv ui Davih? I.ivory Stahl»».
N
OTICE OK A I'I'OINTM KXT.
Estato of Nicholas Schendorf, deceased. Notice Is hereby given that tho undersigned lias bflen appointed and duly qualified as" Ad. minU'.rator, with tho will annexed, of the estate of lMchoias Schendorf, late of .Montgomery county, Indiana, deceased. Said estato is sup. posed to bu solvent.
OTTO SCHLI5MMKU.
Administrator with will annexed.
Dated June -.".Hli, lHWi.
A railway is to be made across the field of Waterloo.
WHAT AiLED M'CUEt
Me Tri *1 to Itreak a Ram of the Habit of Frightening the Ladle*. Jim jMcCno, rancher, politician, philosopher and horse doctor, walked on tho ferryboat with a crutch the other daj'. Ho also had ono arm iu 3 sling and his head bandaged. "What's tho matter, .Tim?" inquired two or throe acquaintances. "I'll bet any man in tho crowd §20 bo can butt harder and longer than tiny rnm or billygoat in tho state," responded Jim irrelevantly, "but I guess I've broken him .f it. "You look as if you had been broken some yourself," suggested ono. "Well, to toll tho truth, I did get jammed around a littlo. I've been breaking a ram of the butting habit. This rain was raised a pot, and that's what makes him so sassy. He knows who to tackle too. Ho won't touch a man, because ho knows he'd get a fence rail frazzled out over.his head, but a woman he will butt clear over into the next pasture. "Tho other morning this ram jolted a lady friend of mine clear across the field and through a picket fence, and I thought it was about timo to euro him of tlio habit. I put on an old calico dress, tied on an old sunbonnet, and, concealing a sledgo hammer under my apron, sauntered down through the field. "Tho minute tlio ram saw me he. dropped all the business ho had on hand and citiue over to have some fun with mo. Ho squared off, shook his head and inado a run forme. When I stepped to ono side to get a good swing at him with a sledgo hammer, the blamed old dress tripped mo, and I fell down. I started to get up, but that ram was bohind me, and I turned two somersaults before I hit tho ground again. I didn't stand any chance at all. Ho just kept lifting me up until he got mo over against tlie fence, and then ho lit into me. Ho jammed mo down against ho fence, then backed off and hit mo another crack, and then another and another, till ho thought he'd broken every rib in Iny body. Finally ho jammed me clear through the bottom rail, and I managed lo crawl to the house. "But I got oven this morning. I had tho hired men tako it green oak log, dress it up in woman's clothes and set it swinging from the limb. That buck lost horn tho first time he hit it, and it wasn't long till the second went tho Earuo way. When I left it, ho was meeting it half way every time it swung back at him, and I wouldn't wonder if he ain't worn down pretty close to tho tail by this time. "—San Francisco Post.
:V:V LITTLE CUT AMBER NOW.
A ripe Mouthpiece Three Inches Long Worth From 8S13 to SXTi. "Is that real amber?" asked tlio man as lif3 hold up a pipe beforo tho dealer. The pipe was a handsome brier wood one, and it had a clear amber mouthpiece nearly three inches long. Tho price mark was sjii. 50. "Yes, it's real amber," said the dealer. "That is, it's as real as any amber jou can get nowadays in a pipe. It is not cut from a piece of timber, but is made by a melting process. Ninety per cent of that mouthpiece is amber. The other 10 par cent is a composition used Jo harden it and make it stick together. Some years ago ajnber was plenty, and a pipe like that would have a mouthpiece of amber cut from a block and never melted. But the amber mines have practically given nut, and you can't get anymore big pieces. A piece of cut amber as long as that on the pipe you have there would be worth from $12 to $15, and it wouldn't be it bit better than the manufactured amber. It wouldn't be so durable and would not feel any bettor between the teeth." "I was in England a year ago," said a man who had listened to tho conversation, "and one of the largest pipe manufacturers there said that there had not been a pieco of amber as long as tbreo inches in the market for five years." "That's so," said tho pipe seller. "You may get .» pipe with a genuino cut amber mouthpiece in some stores in New York, but if you look up its record you will find it was made eight or ten years ago and has been in stock. This composition is used today in expensive meerschaums as well as in brier woods." —New York Sun.
"Tho Christ of the Rig Muddy. "Tho Christ of tho Big Muddy, also known as "Potter Christ," was a misguided individual who preached up and down the Missouri river about 25 years, particularly in the vicinity of Council Bluffs, la. Ho claimed to bo the "Messenger of tho New Covenant" as prophesied in Malachi, see iii, 1 also "The Deliverer," Romans xi,20 "Everlasting Father," Isaiah ix, (5 tho second Adam, the Lord from heaven, I Corinthians xv, 45. Besides the above hn claimed several other divine titles, among thom "Shiloh," "Morning Star," "Prince Michael," otc. He published a book entitled "Revelations Given by Inspiration of God For the Salvation of the Wholo World." have no record of what finally became of this eccentric individual. Some authorivies list him among tho "False Christs, but none that I havo consulted tolls where he was born or when and how ho diod.—St. Louis Republic.
Origin of the Term Card." Hero is an extract from a letter of C. W. Ernst: "Boston has added' many words to our mother tongue. 'A card' meaning a personal statement in newspapers, is a Boston term and dates back to early times, when men paid their compliments to objectionable crown ministers by printing a 'card' in the newspapers. The idea took immediately, and is still popular. When Robineon & Jonea give their workmen a Chnstmas turkey each, the workmen are upt to put a 'card' in the local paper. This odd use of the word originated in Boston before the Revolution. Like all Boston inventions, it is oonvenieot and 'real oute.' "—Boston Journal.
A Gentleman of the Old School. President Kruger lives up to his Puritan principles. When in Paris, he refused all invitations to go out on a Sunday, and I
HI
thought tho costunios worn by
ladies at tlio opera or parties very immodest. Ho said ho could not think how any lady who respected herself could look at. a ballet. Tho only hooks he had ever road besides tho Bible we.ro the "History of tlio Princes of Orange," "History of tlio Thirty Years'War," Hoiley's "Histoiy of tho Dutch Republic," Macaulay's writings on William of Orange and "Tlio Pilgrim's Progress." lie f-aid that in tlio Transvaal when a boy was sent to school ho was pro\ ided v. itli a gnn and a pound of amnmnil kni. Ho could then bring home a bag of game and defend himself against the Kaffirs, hut (he parents fried, nevertheless, to make these self reliant' boys understand that tho meek shall inherit fho earth.
Another story told of President Kru'.'.^r is that when he got homo from his visit, to Europe ho said England was well enough, but tho land seemed to bo all owned by somebody. Ono con Id not even go out into the country and sit down under a free to smoke his pipe but somebody would eonio along and say that he owned the land and ask what the smoker was doing there.—Buffalo Courier.
Ducking Stools.
Ducking stools are noticed as existing formerly at Chester, Cambridge, Rugby, Sonthani, Coventry, Nottingham, Southwell (Notts), Retford, Grimsby, Scarborough, Hull, Beverley, Morley (near Leeds), Ilkksy, East Ard.doy, Craven, Manchester, Liverpool, Pres.on, Kirkham, Burnley, Dorby, CheHi or field, Kingston-on-Thames and Leicesler. Extiinples of the actual instrument seem still to bo preserved at Leominster, Ipswich, Scarborough and Leicesler. The latest recorded use of tho ducking s'ool (tho designations cuokiug and ducking were, of course, synonymous in the days of Queen Elizabeth) was in 1809. It was at Leominster, when a woman named Jenny Pipes, alias Jane Corran, was paraded through the town on the ducking sfool and ducked in the water near Ken water bridge by order of the magistrates. In 1817 another woman, called Sarah I.eeke, was wheeled round tho place in tho samo chair, but not duckod, as, fortunately for her, tho water was too low. The instrument of punishment in question has not been used sinco then.—Notes and Queries.
A Soi.tlilng Car Ride.
Tlio latest cure for insomnia is cheap. The remedy was suggested by an old doctor to whom a despairing young man had gono for advice. "Of course," said tlio doctor, "I could givo you drugs that would put you lo sleep, but in the case of a young man that is to bo avoided. The reason yon cannot sleep is your nerves aro unstrung. That does not necossarily mean that you must put your nervous system to sleep by tho use of drugs. What you want is a mild excitement, that will lift your nervous system out of tho rut it has fallen into. The best thing in fho world to do that is a trolley ride. Don't try to settle upon a particular route. Just jump on any car that, comes along. Don't even ask tho conductor where tho car is going, but just go along with the car. It will surely eomo back some time to the point where you took it. If tho routo is eight or ten miles long, so much tho bettor. One thing is certain—you will either deep during tlio rido or as soon as it is over."—Philadelphia Record.
Most I'opniar Novels.
The novel or story which has probably enjoyed the largest term of popularity is "Robinson Crusoe," by Daniel Defoo, published in 1719. This novel attained great popularity from its first, appearance and is one of the very few that havo continued to bo popular down to the present day, or for more than 175 years. Dofoi- died April 24, 17511. The next most popular works of fiction were the Waver ley novels of Sir Walter Scott, published iu 1814-liS:ii. So successful have these novels been from then till now that no fewer than 80 mon have been uninterruptedly engaged by ono Edinburgh firm for the last quarter of a century in producing them. Of Harriet Beoeher Stowe's novel, "Uncle Tom's Cabin," published in 1851, more than a million copies in English havo been sold.—Philadelphia Times.
Independence of Janitors.
The young man in dinner jacket has forgotten his keys—left them in the pockets of his afternoon dross. Ho is pulling with all his might the bellknob in the midnight air, saturated by rain. In the basement drawing room tho janitor is surrounded by bine spirals from his cigar, as blond as tho hair of a fairy princess. The janitor's wife is reading The North American Review. Their daughter, Ada, whose neck is swanlike, Is playing a "Roverie" by Chopin on the grand piano, painted in delicate ropronentalionsof roses on alight green background.
In time tho young man will break the bellrope.—Exchange.
The Lone Juryman Not Unanimous. In the trial of a caso i?i Powell county not long ago the attorneys objected to all tho jurors who had been summoned savo one. As no others were at hand, it was agreed that tho action should be tried by the one remaining juryman. After the evidence was heard the judge told tho lone juror to retire and make up a verdict. He retired, and, after staying out for over an hour, came back and reported solemnly that the jury had failed to agree upon a verdict. —Louisville Courier-Journal.
It is the old lesson—a worthy purpose, patient energy for its accomplishment, a resoluteness undaunted by difficulties, and then success.—W. H. PunBhon.
The ivy leaved lettuce opens its leaves rod flowers at 8 o'clock in the morning ind generally closes again by 4.
Man's Best Friend.
"Hev dog, miss?" says Bob Jnkin Wisely. "They'rebetter friends nor any Christian. Lor, it's a tine thing to hev a di.nib brute fond on yon it'll stick to yi m, and make no jaw. Georgn Eliot, wici' as showas, never wrote anything
WI.MT,
and her wisdom is still in
fashion, even in these fin do sieclo days. What docs Jerome say? And tlio chronicler of .Muntmorency may bo supposed to know of what he was talking: "They are much superior to human beings as companions. They do not quarrel or nrguo with you. They never talk about, themselves, but listen to you while yon talk abnut yourself, ami keep up an appearance ot being interested in tlio conversation. Tney never make stupid remark?-:. '.i hey never observe to Miss Brown aeioss a dinner table that they nlv.ays understood siio was very sweet on Mr. .I.JDCS (who has just married Miss Rt'bin.o:i). They never mistake your v, U'e'ti c'.:n. in for her husband, and i'.i: :'y tint you are tlio father-in-law. And never as' a young author With I Uagedics, comedies, 7 farces and a couple of burlesques in his desk why lie di'OMi't write a plav. They never say unkind things. They never tell us of our faults, 'merely for our own good.' Tney do not, at, inconvenient uiouiont.1. ln'ldlv remind us of our past follies and mistakes." Gentleman's Magazine.
run For Hunk Clerks.
A London merchant has a portrait of himself engraved on his checKs c? that when he pays a bill his creditor has tho satisfaction -if gazing upon tho counterfeit presentment of tho payer. These checks go to different towns and pass through various banks and cloaring houses.
When tho gentleman who thus advertises himself iias his deposit book settled at the end of the month and gets backbis canceled checks, it is a question whether bo is pleased or vexed.
The portrait on each and every cheek is ornamented in a manner that is, to say the 1 e-t startling, and the more banks the check has passed the greater tho change
The lir.it clerk through whoso hands the paper pusses will adorn the picture with a ficrco mustache, the next will add a beard, the next a pair of goggles, and the next may change tho aquiline nose to a retrousse.
All the changes capable of being inade nre rung, and by tho tinio the check gets back tho self advertiser doesn't recognize his own photograph.—London TitBits.
First Tronscrs.
Tliero is an old and truo saying to the effect that a little boy's first pair of trousers always lit if tho pockets are deep enough. That this and similar truisms do not exaggerate the degree of love entertained by youth for its first wee trouserlets was well ovidonced by tho remark of a Franklinvilie youngster who had recently attained to tho dignity of "real pants." After exhibiting them to a large cirole of envying acquaintances and friends ho returned to his fond mamma with the question, "Say, ma, do angels wear 'em?" Ho was gently assured that tradition and Biblical history bore out no such wild supposition. "Oh, well," Freddie1 replied, brightening up after a resulting fit of abstraction, "I guoss wo don't all have to go to heaven, do we?"—Philadelphia Call.
Calling a Kojj by Telephone. An intelligent hunting dog who had strayed away was found in New Hartford, Coun., recently, and the f»ider notified tho dog's owner in Winsted. The New Hartford man called up the owner by telephone to arrange for returning the dog, and while talking asked tho owner tho dog's namo. "Hold him up to the telephone," was the reply. Tho part of the instrument was put against tiio dog's ir, and the owner called, "Dash. The dog recognized iho voice, and set up a barking which showed liia joy.—Boston Herald.
The man who
stands idly by and sees the life fading out of liis wife's face, sees licr health going, sees licr becoming old and faded and wrinkled when she should still be in th'e perfect enjoyment of vigorous, useful health, is either less than a man or else does not know of the one remedy which will
bring her back to health and strength. Most women do not understand their own bodies, or the things that make tliein well or sick. The most frequent cause of sickness in women is the cause last looked for. A women will go to a doctor when she lias a severe cold, or some acute digestive disturbance, but she hesitates and procrastinates when the trouble is with the distinctly feminine organism. And yet the latter is infinitely more serious. It is the most serious sickness that any woman can have. It is the most dreadful the most dangerous. Its consequences are always serious, and serious right at the beginning because it is debilitating. It saps the life and strength and works on the nerves to such an extent that the whole body is disturbed. Appetite leaves, the color goes from the face and hollows sink into the cheeks. Irritability succeeds good temper and fretfulness takes the place of contentment. I.ittlc by little life becomes more and more miserable. The woman is killing herself with neglect just as surelv as if she were taking deadly poison, l'eiliaps her husband cannot persuade her to go to her doctor, because she naturally dreads the inevitable examinations and "local treatments." He can persuade her. if site needs persuasion, to take Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. This truly wonderful medicine has cured hundreds of women after the best physicians have failed. It has been in constant use and tested every day for 30 years. It isn't an experiment, there are no chances about it. It is a certain and infallible cure for all derangements peculi.ar to women. Those who care to know' all about it, and to receive the best medical work ever prepared for the general public arc invited to send 21 one-cent stamps to cover cost of mailing only and receive a copy of Dr. Pierce's thousand page book, Common Sense Medical Adviser." Address World's Dispensary
Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
1
Without liiU'lir
MI
ILs ingredients is
for BsifotiTits ^nd Children.
JlOTH ISRS„ Do You Know
t'i I»:itr"i "i Drop., (n^IFROV vot-iiml,
lllde and Beck.
A pastime in which all the cats delight is hide and seok behind tho pillows of a bed or sofa. In the drawing room there are some old fashioned divans against tho wall with several cushions sot upright, which havo been the playground of generations of' pots tho mothers liogiu by playing with their kittens, the kittens keep it np together, and teach it to younger sets. The point of tho game is which shall see the other first and surprise her by a cuff on the iiose, which stands for "I spy." When two play, it is simplo enough, but whou there are throe or four ono always remains outside tho cushions to seek, and by degrees the little pink nosed white faoes peep between tho cushions with the inimitable and provocative expressions of a kitten at play, and the-seeker is'surprised by a lap. If she be on the alert, tho hider some'times vanishes, and sometimes they try which can got within tho other's guard and give the first whack.
M'liss was partionlarly fond of hide and seek, and established a mode of playing it with us while wo were at dinner. She would hide on the window gill behind tho long winter curtains which are droppod in tho evening, and would peep out at one side or between them and mow, popping back again as we called, "I soo you. Sho never tired of this slipping unseen from window to window to vary tho surprise until we had more than enough of it.—Temple Bar.
Mrs, McSwat's Husband's Suggestion. "Tho Woman's club is going to discuss parliamentary law tomorrow evening, Billigor," remarked Mrs. McSwat, "and I don't think I shall go. I don't take any interest in it." "Parliamentary law, Lobelia," said Mr. McSwat magisterially, "is something you can't know too much about. You ought to familiarize yourself thoroughly with its usages. A clear understanding of parliamentary law," he went on, warming with his subject, "would be useful in all the relations of life. If I were asked to namo ono thing, Lobelia, that is calculated to add solf reliance to character, assist in solving tho problems that arise from day to day, and make tho burden of life less"— "Now, what is tho uso of your going on like that. Billiger?" interrupted Mrs. McSwat. "What good would it do me to study parliamentary law, I'd like to know?" "You would learn not to talk when you aro not in order," replied Billiger, burying himself in his newspaper again.
And Mrs. McSwat went out to the kitchen and talked in a loud and oxpostulatory tono of voice to Bridget for the next lo minutes.—Chicago Tribune.
JIMUY
most Tor c-Iiil. I~tcl opium or morphine?
iiunk.,« morpiunx «i» -ti:|x»fyinR nnrcotlc poisons?
cr "'oit tlnig^i s! »rc not. pcrmitteil to Boll narcotics
Do_Y^2^_-_"™-y s.iouM not in riuit any mcdiiMno to be given your child unless you or
^nyi^ci.iu know of hm it is iiuLj.-i-(l'
Po You K.nov ..i ,. v'ustona is pun-ly vegetable preparation, and t""V'"i" with every buttle?
You Know ti,nt Cn-Uorla is tin4 prescription of ilie famous Dr. Rar.V'.C?.' Tlint it has been ill use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is lie
of nil other remedies for children combined
Po You Know that tho Patent. Office Department of the United States, and of Cither counti iex, have issued exclusive right to l)r. Pitcher and his assigns to uso the word Gastonti and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense
Yon Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protection wo3 because Cxstoria had been proven to bo absolutely harmless?
Yon Know thr1 35 nvorago Ooses of Cn-storin urn furnished for 35 cents, or one cent a dose
Yon Know that when possessed of this ]erfect, preparation, your children may bo kept well, and that you may havo unbroken rest
Woll, tlioso things are worth knowing They aro facts.
Tho fac-similo Hignatnro of
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.
ie To
That you wiil get the Best Workmanship and Reasonable i'ricesjat "the
tlint Paregoric,
so-culkxl Soothing Syrups, .»iu
rC
i» on every
(&4S wrapper.
CJity SSb.oe3h.op_.
3\V. S. 1UCHAKDS, Proprietor. No.
I
25 'W.jjMain St.
The Grand.
Style, Quality,
Fit.
TI-J.E GRAND.
Tlie Rigln Shade, the l^igbt Toes and 11 itrlit Prices at
A thousand wheels—but only one Shoe
Use the j,
"Ba!l=Bearing"
bicycle
For Comfort Fit and Wear. Prutt FustonerH hold lucus.
$hoe
4
TTTA DE-MARK
•UmpvJ on »«»rj
l.ratllHff have thctn* Booklet Freo 1 C. II. FAHCJO t'O. (Maker*), CHICAGO.
Not one part but every part of HIRES Rootbeer tends toward making it the perfect temperance and healthgiving drink.
Wade onlj by The Charle* E. Hire* Co., Philadelphia. A 2ic. package makes 5 gilloiit. Sold everywhere
PLENTY TO EAT
And all kinds of it at
Zeigler & Reiman's
East Main Slroet,.
The New Diiiinr Room
is new open. lee Crermi, Fancy Cakes and Confections for socials, partic?, etc., on short notice. 'J he largest, newest and best house in the city. Open at all hours. ISo. 21n217 E. Main St.
WANTKI):toScvi-t
ACTUM A
11ruM worthy pcin ii-nion or
indies trnvi-1 In lmlliina 1«1 iMiilli»kml, reliable liouso. S-l- ry $780 "ml .rxpenuos. Stonily position. Kii-.-losii lvlercnco nicl Mill m!drossed stii!ii|iM] i-iivi lopo. 'I lit- dominion Company, third iloor.Omnlin Hldg (.'hirngo.lli.
DB. TA'FT'S ASTHMALENE
HO I nmH-n |DCn"evcrrttils
Heml.is70ir
aridrcsB, wo will llUIILUinniltrinlbottle!"JJPfT The DR.TAFT BROS. M. Co., Rochcstor, N.Y.rlikU
GERMAN-AMERICAN INVESTKNT CQ
FOUNDED 1892.
52 WallSt,New
[Uudor supervision of Bnuklnp Deportment of tho Htiito os Now York.] Authorized Capital i\O0O,OOOi l'uid upCiipltal '4)0,000
Letters of Credit, Cherksand Drafts on Foreign Countries at cheapest rates. .-peclalty—Cablo transfers and all other monp.y transactions with Germany mid AustriaIlunpary. Foreign money, bank uoie -,'bonds, bought and sold. CU: bankers wanted us agonts In various'towui,
