Decatur Democrat, Volume 35, Number 39, Decatur, Adams County, 18 December 1891 — Page 2
* IMP. The very .latest discovery is the odorless brand of whisky. It grikes a deadly blow at the clove trade. Maxy people think there’s a strange inconsistency between trying to adopt a secret ballot and giving women the right to vote. If Louisiana /prohibits carrying revolvers to school how does she propose to teach the young idea how to shoot? Will they try the putty blower? A Chicago man was fined 875 for beating his wife bver the head with a base bill bat recently. This Is the sort of indoor base ball which should not be encouraged. We suppose one of the hardest things in the world must be to collect doctor bills when the patient dies. When a man dies, the relatives are so apt to believe the doctor killed him. Gen. Booth of the Salvation Army • proposes to give a supper to 600 of London’s most notorious thieves. In some cities that could be mefitioned Boards es Aidermen would attend in a Ixxly. There is a surplus of pennies In the New York sub-treasury and the officials don’t know how to get them into circulation since the Gotham millionaires have finished making contributions to the Grant monument. The announcement which comes from Shelbyville, Ind., that a diet of fat young puppies is being tried in a case of consumption, is full of encouragement. If it does not cure consumption, it will tend to diminish the number of useless curs in the community. ••American quail are being introduced into China,” says an Eastern paper. We congratulate China. The proper introduction of a good American quail, nicely cooked and seasoned, • and-accompanied by toast of the right shade of brownness, is a thing that lingers long and tenderly in the memory. Western irrigation problems all center in saving water when it is present,* for use when rain never falls. This can be done by making reservoirs in the canyons, and drawing therefrom as the occasion requires. In other words, If the people of the extreme West will not waste the water, they can water the waste. ’ This is a great, grand and glorious country, but iKlooks as if there had a cog slipped •when we read that “in 1 Chicago there are 10,000 children who ' cannot attend school because of insufficient clothing.” Will the Board of , Foreign Missions kindly drop that , far-away look for which they are fa- ' moos and glance around the heathen- , ism in our big cities? If the reader wants to settle in a • wide-awke community, all he has to 1 do is to look at the A wide-awake, well-supported home ' newspaper is always associated with good schools, churches, active business, and intelligent people. It never 1 fails. No business man or pioneer in 1 any community makes any better in- ' vestment than in the dollars he gives to the support of a good home news- : paper. * The English sparrow is nocredit to us. He is ' voracious, antagonistic, presumptuous and impudent. If any bird could be carnivorous, he would be. He has the disposition of anjtn- J archist. But it is questionable , whether the proper way to get rid dr ’ him is to encourage the small boysjro . murder him. It is quite possible that after the sparrows shall have been de- ‘ stroyed the increased viciousness of ( the small boys will offer a problem much more difficult of solution. Because William Dean Howells ’ says “the short story is to be the . story of the future” is no reason why 1 it is true. A story too short is as in- • sipid as one too long is tiresome. 1 Writers go from one fashion extreme '• to the ether. If a story isn’t partic- 1 ularly good the briefer it is the tyet- 1 ter. The best short stories in cur- ’ rent literature are found in the news 1 • columns of the daily paper. No fle- < tion can approach them—excepting. such as reporters see fit to embellish 1 them with. i Kate Field’s criticism of the Boston ‘'mudless” costume is entirely ' aesthetic. She wants to know why the ankles of the wearer should be concealed by boots that fold into creases, when knickerbockers would be more becoming. Miss Field Illustrates the great danger that always 1 awaits the advanced reformers of her sex. Sooner or later they run np against good taste and are ’overthrown. Miss Field ought to know i that the question of ankles should not enter into a discussion of a matter of utility. “Let us be appropriately clad,” say the reformers, and when Miss Field comes in with her “Let us also continue to be pretty,” she spoils the whole scheme. . If the disembodied spirit of “Land Bill” Allen, of Ohio, is able to reqd > the newspapers it will be pleased to learn that citizens of the Buckeye State still think enough of the old man’s efforts to give every one a home tocollect subscriptions for a monument over his grave. But If that
f -, a mnnrlanA will — * wUCIsBIJt? IL TCilfNTv ness that the gratitude of the Ohioans was not great enough to save “Land Bill” Allen .from dying in the JisfllF house. Stocking an island off the coast of Washington with black cats for the sake of their fur is the- latest freak for keeping up the market supply. This is a scheme that certainly should ipake the fur fly, and it certainly has no parallel in the category of historical incidents. Whether the cats will be accompanied and cared for by some puss-loving old maids is not stated. IT the colony succeeds in getting planted, what harrowing music the Chinooks of Washington will be enabled to carry into the interior. Did you ever notice the night sounds in your neighborhood? There is usually an old man who draws a fresh bucket of water before going to bed, who is as regular In his habits as the man who splits kindling wood for morning. There is usually a woman, also, who puts out the cat for the night at nearly the same hour the year ’round; about once a week it happens that the cat is not in the house to be put out, and then the woman appears at the front door, and calls: “Kittie, kittle, kittle.” In every neighborhood there is a woman who closes her shutters at about the same hour every night, and in nearly every neighborhood a familiar drunken man may be heard staggering along the sidewalk. After its bluster and bullying the Government of Chili admits by tacit confession that Boatswain Riggins was killed by either the bullet of a Chilian, rioter in the streets of Valparaiso or the ball of a Chilian policeman. The question is no longer whether he was killed by a Chilian. No matter what answer may be reached to the question as now under investigation, responsibility is implied and reparatlonmust lie made. Tardy as is this acknowledgement, the Montt Government has been forced to it in the face of the brutish opposition of a savage mob and auntie obstruction by the British diplomacy. Revolution In Brazil matfat any moment spread over the bordeF and Peru take advantage of new opportunity to revenge ancient spoliation and frequent insult. An American gunboat may yet be desirable refuge for the Montt who is President of, the new Chilian executive as one was for his cousin, who fled from the wrath of Balmaceda. It is not likely that the approaching apology and undertaking to pay damages will be inspired wholly by abstract justice. The little ruffian Republic has been taught a wholesome lesson in equity and courtesy. ' Is there not something for Chicago to consider in the action of the citizens of Boston regarding the limitation of the height of buildings? The situation in Boston prior to the enactment of legislation upon the subject, was very much what it is in Chicago at present. Just as Chicago is the only city In Illinois to which the question applies seriously, •,so Boston was the only city in Massachusetts which felt that public welfare demanded restriction. Boston went about the matter very sensibly. Recognizing the evil of increasing the patronage of the Common Council, and believing that that body had already too much rather than too little power, certain public-spirited gentle, men quietly went up to the State House while the Legislature was in session, and secured the appointment of a Commission to be selected by the Governor. This Commission was instructed to study the question of restricting the height of buildings in the State. It was also instructed, if it found that legislatson was necessary, to present to the Legislature a draft of a law. The result was the passage of a State law which placed a limit upon the number of feet to which a building might be erected. By doing this not only was all temptation removed from the Commoc Council but tho city was given the best possible protection, inasmuch as a State law is a more effective defense than a citv ordinance. Some of Boston’s lawyers have, it is true, questioned the constitutionality of the law. But any argument of such a character which will weaken a State law will weaken doubly a city ordinance. It is interesting to note also that no one has yet found It worth while to contest the law in Massachusetts. Jed*e Political Proverbs. ’Taint always the man as gits the most votes as is the most deservin’ of the offis. Some statesmen with Na 6 heads gits soffenin’ of the brane tryin’ to fill Na 8 hats. Most politishans air nacheral borif trimmers. The talrif coverith a multitude of sins. Polliticks can’t make good craps ner plenty of them. The Prohibition party ain’t a goin’ to be a suckses tell it mixes licker with its politicks. You can’t cut tucks and flounces to fit the ballot-box right. A first-rate farmer can’t be a firstrate pollitfshan. The Ammfcin eagle only sings one chune. Unde Sam ain’t afeard of nothin’ on God’s footstool.—Free Press. Never forget the day of judgment. Keep it always in view. Frame every action and plan with a reference to its unchanging decisions.
If AW VDUT MAIKY JJijSW SKriATOKS. I AGROUFOFSBVCNTBEN IN THB ’ UPPKR HOUSE. . Wwn-mthe oC th* Senate ASneltteel In . East Two Tone* An VipweilwiHil Jn- [ Eton vt Wear Mon—Tho Xiwnnm PleJ Snivel ta Portrait* aaS FMagraph*. ’ Mew Blood ami Brain*. I At the opening of the Fifty-second I ConsreM the Senate received seventeen , new member*. Two year* ago but six new men took seats Later eight Senators ' of toe incoming 'tales of North and i South Dakota, Montana and Was dntrton , appos ed Thon followed the admission of Idaho and Wyoming. Mahogany had > to be telegraphed for; the Senate cabl net- , maker worked nights to keep up with i the call for new desks and chair/. In two years this staid and continuous old ' body has been renewed to the extent of two-fifth* of it* number by men wholly untried in it* form* and method* of legislation. wholly reckies* and fearless of 1 it* tradition* or It* dignity. i The new Senator* represent a good , deal of diverse talent. At Jea«t one is a millionaire, another is a phymcian, sev--1 oral are printers, one is a clergyman, i and a number are lawyer*. They represent all shade* of belief. A more motley crowd in this respect was nevei before seen. The Congressional Directory will , classify the new recruit* a* follows: Republican* s, Democrat* 9, Farmers’ ’ Alliance 3, The Senate therefore stand* Republicans 48, Democrat* 37, Farmers’ Alliance 3. Some of the brightest of the young men come from the West, anti two of these are so yon ng that they are hardly out of their *hort clothes. Dubois o t Idaho and Hansbrough f of Dakota are the bablesof the Senate. It wS Is all Dubois can do to W raise a mustache and dHk g Hsnsbrouth does not y 7 look to be over thirty. Zk Still both of them have/Mrabs been in the House, and Hansbrough was editing a paper at Devil’s wS® 105“ r l^ a^( , when the state ofy hansbhovoh. North Dakota was adn> it ted, ad he became its first congressman. Both Dubois and Hansbrougb were born In Illinois. Hansbrough’s parents were poor and got he bis education In the printing otlige, He left Illinois after learning hi* trade and went to California There ( he pub Ished a dally / + xHM at San Jose a d "SQBF worked for a time on tou_ vfiF tbe San Francisco w - Chronicle He was n *' w ’ editor of the Chronicle In 1879 and x t 0 8° t 0 Wlscon7 \ / jj sin to edit the Baraboo Bulletin. From ' Wisconsin he went to r. t. uvnais, North Dakota about nine years ago, and he comes to the Senate as the successor of Col. Gfl Pierce. He still owns bls paper at Devil’s Lake and varies bls Congressional work by writing editorials for It. Dubois is a younger man than Ilansbrough. Dubois’ parents were well-to-do and he rece ved a good education. He went to school at Vale and he wa* there noted as an athlete as well as a sMidbnt For four years he wa* the catcher of the base-ball nine of his class. IHs ambition grew with bls muscles, •nd after hl* graduation he found Illinois too small for him and he moved to Idaho. He put his muscle Into politics, and during bls first Congressional campaign be spoke in ery settle ! ent tn Idaho, traveling over Itsn.’>,ooosquare miles of mounta nous territory on mules and in stag) coaches and being at times nearly a month away from the railroad. His indefatigable energy enabled him to beat the older politicians ol the State, and this will make him one of the bard workers of the Senate. Senators Blair of New Hampshire and Hearst of California are succeeded by two men who served together In the House A N o f Representatl ve s. BL y These are Dr. Jacob eSKBA Ga' inger and Charles WB Fe ton Gallinger is aM. aJ I bright-eyed, black mon- N 2aßgi tached, semi bald little A man, whose frame is packed full of jjp. activity, he is a smart 'J politician and » ready "g speaker. He began life 3 - oalmnokn. poor, and has been a printer, an editor, and a doctor. He has made money tn all bis trades and professions, and he 1* now a we.l-to-do man. Chanles Felton also stated In life with nothing and he la now a rich man in that State of rich men, California This means that ho is a millionaire. He owns mining stocks, ra I road stocks and bonds, and owns the water works of one of the best suburban towns near San Francisco. He is very modest with all ghls millions, and he I* ono of the most earnest and practical men In Congress He wa* born .In New York, and at seventeen went to California to make his fortune. He studied law. tried one case and then dropped the law and went into business. He has never been a candidate for c. w. m,T(iN. office, and bls pol.tical honors have been thrust upon him. Senator Felton is now nearly So year» old Next to Felton, the richest man of the new members is Cal Brice, who represent* Ohio, but live* in New York. Brice’s fortune, however, is a 8[ eculating one, and he is engaged in so many Xv th ngs that he does not know himself just how z rich he is Brice comes from Lima. Ohio, and he toes not look a day V. ’ older than he did ten wgr y J ear* ago. He is in I* forties and I* full - • of energy. He is a * "ho*man of considerable culture, and he spends a great i art of hi* surplus tn fine books, bric-a-brac and picture*. Be ha* a very bright wife, who is largely interested in charitable work. Senator David B. Hil ha* selected bl* winter quartersat Washington- Tie will live just over where AT \ Charles Sumner Used M \ to hold forth, and just B nfleflß aero** the street from tB where President Mad1» on lived after he Va left the White House, ■ Z Hl* quarter* are *" Ml bachelor nnes, and hi* ■Hk X. hotel Is the Arllngr one ot th ® grcA? char\CL X/ yyacters of the Senate. „ The discuslson of him n. n. bill u a p re# |<| en t| a | Mg. sibility and hl* posit on a* Governor of Now York have for the last five years mad* him one of the leading figures of the Democratic party, and the people will expeet more from him a* a Senator than they will probably get Men who have great reputation* before they get to th* Se*ato often fail there because they do not come np to public expectatfoM. End Bill will have to be a genius to make a groat figure during th* first
jroyeara The probability I* that ha Wfli Blttftlf VJIFW ffitldfe lint Ilf* in«lM*tww will make him a valuable man on committee*. and hi* power of managing men and working the political wires will hi* presence at Washington invaluable to hi* party. Hill to not th* only ex-governor among the new Senators. General Gordon ba* been twice Governor of Georgia, and General John M. Palmer was once the chief A executive* of Illino'a \ Both Gordon and Pal*mi* ® r ’’ are men of WstoWC , v n®*- Both served with W jgJL credit in the late war, and Palmer came out of -,dCWnl it a major general, havrn Ing been in some of the n°t®d battles, and having started in a* a colonel. Gordon enterJOBS a G<>KDOW. wr « vice a* a captain, and he rose to be lieutenant general, and he wa* commanding hi* troop* at the t‘me that Lee surrendered at Appomattox. He was shot all to piece* during the war and h’s handsome face bear* the scan that he received during ft* hattie* Gordon has had experience in the Senate In the past. He was elected to the Senate in 1878 and showed himself a brilliant speaker and debater. He T wa* re-elected in 1879, nml but resigned the .. \ 1 following on the ground* x, /y I that he wa* too poor to jUHHhJ remain In politics, and WXwkilfrlfr. went back to Georgia jB yBWm and engaged in railroading. He made a fortune, \ but reverses came and he x \ ' Fl lost it. Ho wa* elected jor* m palmsn. Governor of Georgia in 1888 and he has been in politics more or less all his lifeGordon is one of the fine-looking men of the new member*. Gen. John M. Palmer is a very popular man. He is the o dost of the new members, and with the exception of Merrill he will probably be the oldest man In the Senate. He was born in Kentucky just seventy-four year* ago, and he moved to Illinois at the age ot 15. He belongs to that pioneer school of politician* of which Lincoln and Douglas were the highest types. He was a friend of both. In 1864 he came to Washington a» a delegate to the Peace Congre *, He had Lincoln’s confidence, and rose to the rank of Ma or General of Volunteers. In 1872 he left the Republican party to support the Cincinnati platform and Mr. Greeley. He never returned. The two slmon i ure Alliance Sen ators are Judge William A Peffer, ot Kansas, and John 11. Kyle, of South Dakota. S.tor Peffer Is a Pennsylvanian, born In I Cumberland CoqQtyslxLty years ago At i(» ho f Joined the Argonauts and made a small fortune gold-hunting In JTreturned to Pennsylvania, married, and settled on a farm near Crawfordsville, Ind. It was not long before ho w. a. pkobh. )o«t the money ho made in Ca’lfornla ana emigrated to Southwestern Missouri, In 1862 he enlisted In the Ehhty thlid Illinois Volunteers, and served until the surrender at Appomattox. He derived the title of Judge from hl* • service as Judge Advocate during the war. This line of duty led him tortudylaw. In 1870 he moved to Wilson County, Kansas, where he took up a claim and tried farming Later he started the Coffeyville Journal and lived In Coffeyville till 1880, serving one tertn in the State Senate. Removing to Topeka, he took charge of the Kansas Farmer, of which I he afterward became the proprietor.'} When the Alliance movement began ho ’ went to work for It with a will. The new Senator from South Dakota, John H. Kyle, Is a bright, Interesting young Congregational. minister. He was born at Xenia, Ohla 38 I W years ago He graduated from Oberlin In I 7 1873, studied'theology Lfik In the Western Theo- wiWs [ logical Seminary at / Allegheny, Pa., where he was ordained 1882,and then preached for a year or two In a Congregational church in Salt Lake City. In a ’ "* isso he went to Yankton, S, D, and a little later became financial secretary of Yankton College. He has been a member of the South Dakota State Senate. The third Alliance Senator is Col. John Laurens Manning Irby, who take* the seat of, Wade Hampton. Hp comes / of old revolutionary stock long honored In ’W- ira South Carolina. He I >7/ was educated In the University of Virl w [ ginia and attended Princeton College for a rime. He studied at b,a home In South Carolina and < ~ WM admitted to the - J. M. IBBT. tjce( j govera | y ears Laurens but In 1878 abandoned the law to engage In farming on hi* plantation. He is a most energetic and progressive farmer. He had always been a Democrat until the Alliance movement began, when he joined In it* work. Col Irby is an eloquent speaker. A curious appointment was that of Senator Gibson, of Maryland. Gibson has been In Congress for several terms and he was about to open f SB a campaign as a can- W| did ate for the clerk- 1W ship of the present n A*v •V) House wnen he rereived a note from ' L Senator Gorman asking him to call at his house He went once, and Gorman told T him that Gov. Jackson intended to ap- c , H . oiisowT point him to the vacancy in the United States Senate, Shortly after this Gov. Jackson came in. The matter wa* talked over, and g Gibson said he would accept it. He then left Senator Gorman, and shortly after this Governor Jackson called upon him at the hotel and formally tendered him the appointment. Bls office will last only for a few months, a* the vacancy which ho fills I* only a short one. He is noted for hl* good »i* writs, fellowship, his hospitality and hie generosity, and hl* wife 1* one of the handsomest and most accomplished women at the capital. The Gulf of Mexico furnishes two new men to the Senate. These ar* White of Louisiana and Davidson of Florida Senator White is a lawyer, and / ’ is noted for hi* vitality L or, B and nervou* energy, u yM He i* six feet tall and has bfiK fW a robust frame. He is V f well educated, speaks French like a creo e, and I* very fluent a* a debater. He is quick F -ttot ’’ e P*ri®*» though nots, ■, «, nAvnisow. bitter In hl* ramark*. Ha is a sugar planter a* well a* a lawyer. and ha* a large sugar estate near
[New Orleaa* Be I* a bachelor, but prefer* hl* own home to a hotel, sad bo will prob»bly keep bouse at Washington with hl* sister as tbc female bead of th* house. Senator Davidson, of Florida, baa been tn tbe lower bouse of Congress so.« years. He is a man of fair, average ability, but with none of the elements of great statesmanship <w great oratory • about him. Be is well educated, and during the late unpleasantness be won Ms sours on the Confederate side, entering the service as a captain and coming out a lieutenant colonel. henstor Chilton, ot Texas, comes from the State of bold, bad men. He is a straight, fine-looking fellow, and wears when at home a great F ’ sombrero He is a / much stionger man wZSt hB riian the average, and iLi Am slartlog life with gJL Jww nothing, he has made vMßwf T • repurat on as a lawPJMMPJL yer and a speaker. He appointed to t h e Senate by his old ff J. friend Governor Hogg. The two were boys to- » gether, and they slept nouAcx cwxutow. nndep ket. Now Hogg ha* become Governor, and he give* his old playmate the best office tn Ms power. Mr. Chilton'is 40 years old, and a native-born Texan. He began life tn a printer’s office as a “devil," worked up to the case, and finally started a small newspaper for himself, For years he set type, and supported hi* mother and gave hi* sister an education. The two ex-Cabinet officer* who com* Into the Renato attract considerable attention. Proctor, of Vermont, is a mild man, but he is fresh from the / great Department B of War, and there is fire in hl* eye. I-y "V I Vilas has been dl- I getting the postal schemes in the flwW9|| long walks which he has taken Jf about his Wisconsin home, and he will trot out J bills for the > 9 ' provement of the ' two great depart- msnraan mocToa. ment* with which he has been connected. The race between the two as to senatorial notoriety will bo equal. Proctor fs rather a business man than a speaker, S while Vilas ha* a great reputation as both- Senator Proctor ha« made a fortune by hl* business bra'n*. He was made receiver of the Vermont marble quarries and he managed them so that they have made him rich. He Is now about 60 years of age, He wa* born In Vermont and waa w. v. viuas. studying law at the time the war broke out. He left hl* studies co go into the army a* quartermaster and rose to be Colonel, when hl* health failed and he went to farming. He wa* farming when he became receiver of tue marble quarries, and ho still own* a big farm and run* It Senator Vilas’ father was well-to-do, He moved to Wisconsin from Vermont at an early date and young Vila* was given a good education. He went to school at Madison and graduated at the college there at thirteen, and at the ago of twenty he had won his first case before the Supreme Court of hl* State. He showed himself to be a good lawyer and ho ha* made a gieat deal of money at| I his practice. He has saved hl* money and Invested It, and hi* investments have . been particularly lucky one*. He made a fortune out of the Gogebic Iron region, where no bought a large tract of land before the mineral wa* discovered, and held It, thinking that the timber on ft wou'd some day bo very valuable, and that hi* children would realize out of it If >he did not. The Iron wa* found In large quantities and of the most excellent quality, and the lands became valuable a* mineral region* rather than for their timber. Too Long to Walt. — A German peasant family bad made all their arrangements to emigrate to the United States. The day before the family waa to take its departure, the eldest son, Hans, who was an enormous eater, intimated that he did not care to go West.” “Ha* some village maiden beguiled thee to remain behind?” asked tbe father. “Nothing of the kind." “Why, then, doeat thou not wish to go with u»?” “I have been talking with the schoolmaster, and • » “Weil, what did he say?” “He say* that when it i* 12 o’clock with us here in Germany that ” “That what?” “When it i* 12 o’clock here with u« that in America it Is 9 o’clock in the! evening." “Well?” “I don’t want to go to a place where! I have to wait that long for my dln-J ner.” And tbe poor fellow completely broke down at tbe mere thought! of it, - MI. Giles. St. Giles, saint, was born ati Athens, and died abbot of Nlames, France, in the year 760; he is said to have been so pious that he sold not only hi* patrimony, but even his coat, to enable him to bestow charity upon poor Christians. St. Giles became tbe patron of cripples, in consequence of his refuaing to be cured of an accidental lameness, caused by tbe arrow of a huntsman’s bow, lest he might not otherwise have sufficient means of mortifying himself. The churches dedicated to him have generally been in the suburbs; and at Cripplegate, in London, even before tbe Conquest, cripples used there to solicit charity, from the example of the lame man who begged alms of St. Peter and StJohn at the gate of the temple. StGiles is the patron saint of Edinburgh, and the High Church of the Scottish capital is dedicated to him. Many marvel* are gravely recorded of him, and he still retains the title of ■ patron of beggar* and cripples. taVNStNgAccording to a Rabbinical legend, sneering, as a habit, is only referable to the time of Jacob. patriarchal days no one sneesed more than once; for the sufficient reason that the shock was Invariably fatal. At Jacob’s intercession this law was abrogated, but only on condition that all races of men should thenceforth employ fit words of congratulation for the sneeser’s happy deliverance. A raiLANTKROPic farmer of Mt, Carmel, Conn., offered some time ego to "deliver free of expense during the month of October fifty bushels of apples to deserving poor femllles providing tbe members <4 those families do not us* Intoxleating liquor or tobeeoo or koop a dog." Fine got their apploa .t- ’ « r \.■ T \ .< • , ••' . **’ - '>4 \ ’'‘s s * *• ? ' T-'S ■-V -Ks
Hom Ms! —BY—— J. & BOW3BS, The Leading Hardware ManHew * • to ’ ,owW * e TSUCELEBBATSD 6UUDM Anda full bn*of AU Binds of Stoves. He ha* also a toll stock of New Home Sewing Mechlnes AND HIRDWOE AM MUNN MATERIAL. 91.00 ONLY FOR A DECKER BROTHERS GRAND PIANO »m> nurt luucmrrwi TO TH. WEEKLY ENQUIRER A Pecker Bro. Grand Upright Piano, $650,00 A Gladiator Watch and Case SO.OO A Lemaire 24 line Field Glsm. .... go.oO A Holman Parallel Bible. 13,00 A Venice Parlor Clock 12,00 A High Grade Safety Bicycle, .... 185,00 An Elgin Watch and Bos* Case, , . . 85.00 •••*'» A Railway Watch in 14 Karat Case. 75.00 A Life Scholarship in Watters’ i « Commercial College i ’ ' ' A Six Octave Champion Organ .... 200.00 A Doable Barrel Shot Gon. 30.00 A Silverene Case 7 jewel Watch. . , 10,00 A High Arm Improved Sewing Machine,ss.oo A 15 .jewel Watch. Boss Case3s,oo A Five Octave Parlor Organ, .... 150.00 A Gladiator Watch, Hueber Case, , , 30.0 C A John C. Hueber Watch A Case. . . 40.00 And 82 other valuable premiums will be presented to yearly subscribers of tbe Weekly Enquirer in April, 1892. Enclose one dollar for a year’s subscription to tbe Weekly Enquirer, and GUESS what will be the number of subscribers in the five largest lists received from Nov. 1, *9l, to March 31, ’92. For same term last winter it was 2999, and the winter before waa 1405. Tbe premiums are to be presented to those whose guesses are correct or nearest correct. For fall list see Weekly Enquirer, now the largest 12 gage dollar a year paper in tbe United ENQUIRER COMPANY. CINCINNATI, O. AGENTS WANTED Good Solicitors Only. Lediesorx Gentlemen for Weekly Enquirers Profit* from to *B4» * dsy. ENQUIRER COMPMIY, CIKCIKNATI, O. The Cincinnati Enquirer and the Dsmocwav (me yo»r for SBSO. By sutacriMns now, you can have both papers through the great cam peignofJWS. TO WEAK MEN Bixi llSbßmllfllj Ft Ce FOWLKBw BE A MAN APOLLO WM A PERFECT MAN. * Ibc sll IM Ito fit WmEhmmb Bad > fiWlrttmrfMrBAatmdmMwmß wSwSSZsi
—»■■BiaaiMiMHMaaaMssaH m.mbbsb ByiWW OIIIIIEIIESS * Or liquor habit posHhrtiy awed and •’** If™™ 1 ! J™’* th* taate far liquor forever dMroy rd f \ without th* knowledc* of Patient by I ) fwlli • AiTHI AISIBI •«*« adminiMcring (M|||*| l*tt|f||, graattl tomwTlt* ** *sSi **** anUH Curo fn twv CwaJ'PrtoTla aad»h* hairdiMppearea* if by maui? ~&iF?s.ffX , sss KsaraKTOs.®® , age paM by w, "*» P»**» P«4 b7 «* w}* gwy eMgyy yd abyeef gVfIWAtKIN MAVTfFIIWFP F liuMßclilOiLOO HwtrimjlWlniATV IndianapolisßusinessUniversitY SB FW HJmMRi GrTMMIE* HEEB * OSBORNa FrauMmi '■ .. ,« ;,/• ; • I- t iMWIWB i . > ■-. ' .
LOOK HERE! I am here te sOsy sad ese **• Organs and Pianos SferrsJwSmSmSS * CLEANINS AND REPAIMM done reasonable See me Br*o and save T. COOffWfJDMMTONr* Jm4« r. sic*. s. nowmm aiiom BBovrarmras, —nSALSMOt— Blue lime Stone We kcef> at our quarry a big supply oT BTXAMXTX, ConMumptton gurefy Cured, «* Tun Bsraisi W*a*e tatam yew raMtav toa>> bee* * maMto* MM*y o*v too rose* smnd dMmwJFfi* nawEywtowwto of MpMms smm hem Ana a wimmUy mwd. IMlbsjM te sand tooboto*sofaromme<ymMtosnyet s-dw* wb« here wnmaipMoetf (toy w« mtomomrWXapwwanSP.aatMwe*. Xeepert MFe X.AF4XJoM,M.fcMiy*srtM,i.l. Flm Claaa NigM «®d Dey Srlrieo EAST ano WEST srrwzw Toledo, Ohio, St- Louis, Mo. Modern Equipment Tbroeghovt. Buff KT &LKKPINQ OAK 9 Betlt expreMly for this emtoe •« Art fa Moto do ToWo, H Looio I KommClfy I & Clover LEnr RowrE. Per further part I eulare, eaU eu ueMroe* Agent erf the Company, er nddreae C- O- JSNKIN9. TChgpq OHIO. REMEMBER We ar* always PNfaNd tod* ' • ■ J - ' . ■. •.X' : - FIHST-CLJLSS 1 BUM ON SHORT NOTICI BEABOMBLE HUOE&
