Decatur Democrat, Volume 39, Number 33, Decatur, Adams County, 1 November 1895 — Page 9
">. > ■ ,i ■ Business Directory, mm Sl bank. DBCArmt. -\ INDIANA. 1 CAPITAL STOCK, *IOO,OOO. ©PKICEKSi-P. W. Smith. President; J II Hoi.thoi'hk. Vico-Pre*ul\*n»; 0 A Do *an, Oashivr; B. X. Biiimokh, A*»leiani Cashier. DIKECTOHB-P. W. smith, Wm. A. Kukbt*H, J D Hue, l». G M. I’hoitt. 11. Bobhock. C. A. liuou, Jmhn H. Hoi.tiioiimk. Thin bank doe* a ireiioral biinkli g business. Loans money upon approv'd security, discounts papo , lUHtutunlb-oihvis. mjihl- monoy »*o any points. buy* county h-i(I oily order*. Ltjnterest given on money deposited <m time The Old Adams County Bank AL. tiao.WW. KSTA BLIBH.BD/IH7I Officer*:—W. H. Niblick, Pros.. IKjtifelnoaker, Vloe-pres; Hulun K. Alilfwm.wHßcr. 8. 8. Niblick. Ass’t Oushler. Tt Do a goiicral bankinir buslnes*. ColloctknA made In all paJUt or the country. County, City and Township order* bought.. Foreign and Domostlc.Exohange bought and •oM. Interest paid on time deposits. Paul G, Hooper , Attorney at Law Bmaliir, Indiana. i . T. rHANCK. J T. MBItHYMAN FHA.M'K A MKKKYMAN. Attorneyai"«t-Ij»w, ' Offioe:—No*. I. t and 3, over the Adams Oountv Bank Collections a aoteialty. J. R. 8080, tTASTEK (W.IIIIIINMOMKH ANI» ATTOKNKV-AT-LAW, V Heal Ksrate and Collections It. K. Kitty IX. Yijttoriioy-ftt-Ijftw, tioom 1 awl 2 Niblick & Tomiellier [lecafur. Indiana. K. OICKHItNON, attorney and Notary Futolio. Pension cl»lm* a specialty Heal estate and Collection agent tisnsva, - - Indiana. Office and residence one door north of M. K. sburch. Diseases of women and children a ipectaliy. A. fi. HOLLOWAY, Physician and Surgeon. Office over lloiffon store. Residence no ess the street fr m his former h"tne. 38—-31tf ~r7 sTPETERSON, AttorlSTey at Law IIKCATIIR, - INDIANA. )9ioe Booms 1 and S. A. Hcflthousp Block. O.J. ERWIN, Physician est: Surgeon. calls promptly atteuded dar or ni«hr. Mtiee over Journal uffli-e. corner of Monroe nd Third street Kesldcnce on Marshall tre>t near Third. * . jjrnmmmjmmmammtimmmmwmmmmmmMmmmmmm—mmmmmmm—mmmmmmmmJl ] J. Q. hbptdnxi, 1,,'. VII' . NOW 1 oca tec over iiulLuoum* s shoe store, i prepared to do all work pertaining to the entul profession. %Gold tilling a specialty, tir the use of Mayo’s Vunur he is enabled to nract teeth without pain Work guaranteed. 3-0 TO H. M, ROMBERG Pox' Your LIVERY, i* Bast Rigs and moat Reasonable Price*, lit! ENSLEY & MESHBERCER, i —Dealers In—- : Building, Derrick, Curb and Flag :• STOIM33. Linn Ov*ve, Indiana. tsT~Come uq. before you buy. nadison Street Gallery. ■ISSJULIA BRADLEY & BRO., Props. ■ (Successors to 11. B. Knoff.) pbinets, Tintypes, Photos, Groups ■ Done in the latest style of art. ■All work guaranteed and price the lowest, nllery on Madison street, north of court ■mse. 38-31 t.f ILook Here! I I am here to stay and can sell bus nd Finos ■ oheaper than anybody else can afford to ■ sell them. 1 sell different makC'6. cleaning and repairing ■“done reasonable, Bee me first and save ■ money. I I. Ti COOTS !*»■,■ atur, Ind. f. D. HALE. K.. V DEALER IN mQrain , -> Oil, ■seeds, Coal, pFoot Liine, ' Fertilizer a, ■•r. ‘" 1 ‘ -."if ■ ’'levators on the Chicago & Erie and Bver Leaf railroads. Offioe and Retail ■re southeast corner of Seoond and ■Person streets. Ip-YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED K*
'os m i comm Daughter of Millionaire R. fl. Schmidt of Chicago Elopes. ' ROMANTIO AND YOUTHFUL i - She Was Only Ju.t Past Eighteen Tears of Age—Papa Schmidt Takes the Mat. ter Philosophically and Says That tlie Young People Must lie Content With the Lot They Hsve Chosen. Chicago, Oct. 26.—Edna Schmidt, youngest child of K Q. Schmidt, the millionaire brewer, knelt by her mother’s grave in Graceland cemetery last Tuesday morning, celebrated her 18th birthday that afternoon and next day eloped with the coachman her father had discharged throe weeks before. | Ernest Wahl is the name of the yonng man who has made the Schmidt house hold sad. Not much can be told of him, except that he was of siedium size, well built and fairly good looking; blonde, about 25 years old and only slightly Americanized after a year in this country. Wednesday morning she attended to her household duties as usual. Wednesday* afternoon she left the house, saying she was going shopping downtown. That was the last any member of the Schmidt family saw of her. The first intimation the family had that Edna had eloped was when a note was found in Mr. Schmidt’s room wnich ended as follows: “When you read this, 1 shall be married.” “I have seen no marriage license published,” said Mr. Schmidt last night, “so 1 suppose they went to Milwaukee to get married. I have made no effort to stop them and shall make none. Edna came of age yesterday, and of couise could do as she pleased. They must be content with the lot they have chosen. ’ ’ . COMPACT WITH ENGLAND. Report That Spain Will the hie do Pinen lo (ireat Britain. 'j Minneapolis, Oct. 26.—The member of the Cuban junta now in the northwest yesterday declared that there was a secret compact between Spain and England, which accounted for the seizures of filibustering expeditions in the Bahama islands, by which Spain is to turn over the Isle de Pines, at the southwestern end of Cuba, to England iu return for promise to prevent the fitting out of expeditions from her West Indian dependencies. The Isle de Pines would give England an immensely valuable naval station, commanding the only channel to the Nicarauguan canal not now Control led by England. He asserts that Cuba will soon have a modern navy of live vessels under command of Admiral de Mello, the Brazilian sailor. Two ships are to come from" Brazil and one from ChMi. He admits that an effort is soon to bo made to float au issue of $20,000,000 of Cuban bonds. i Early RMOKnitlon Possible, t Tampa, Fla., Get. 20.—The Spanish papers received bore from Hatetna say Minister Do Lone reports that the Uuited States will soon recognize the Cuban insurgents. Canovas says should the American government appoint a committee to study the Cuban question he will not allow them to land ou Cuban soil. Engagements are reported as having occurred at Caovas, 12 miles from Matanzas, on Thursday. General Oliver with 300 regulars engaged 400 insurgents under Varona and Castillo near the city of Remedios." The regulars retreated to the city. The losses are not stated. Near Baraooa, Colonel Francisco Zamora. with 400 regulars, met 400 insurgents. The engagement lasted several hours. At nightfall the regulars returni ed to Baracoa, their losses being seven. PRICE OF SUGAR LOWER. Rumor That Some of the Refineries Will Soon lie Cloned Down. Philadelphia, Oct. 26.—A1l grades of sugar dropped 1-8 of a cent yesterday on account of dullness in trade and large accumulations of refined sugar. It is rumored in this city that the National Sugar Refinery of New York will shut down on Nov. 1. Very little sugar is j being shipped west by the eastern refin- | eries on account of the large quantities of New Orleans sugar, whioh can be landed in the west at. much cheaper rates. The owners of the local refirn •- ies will neither confirm nor deny the current miners that one or more refineries in this city wiH also close down on Nov. 1. Sxtolll to He Made a Cardinal. London, Oot. 26. — A dispatch from Rome says that at the consistory to be held in ' November “tlie pope will create the following cardinals; The papal nuncios at Paris, Vienna, Lsibon and Madrid, the archbishop of Ancona and Monsignor Satolli. „ Suicides at His Mother’s Grave. Franklin, Ind., Oot. 26.—Charles H. Frame of this city committed suicide yesterday at his mother’s grave. Mi. Frame for 20-yeara has been a prominent citizen and business man of this plaoa He leaves a widow and son. Election For Supreme dodge. .Springfield, Ills., Oct. 26.—Governor Altgeld yesterday called a special election in the Sixth judicial district for Deo. 18 to fill the vacancy on the supreme bench caused by the death of Joseph Meade Bailey of Freeport. IVI inning Girl Found. Richmond, Ind., Oct. 26.—Myrtle Basson, who mysteriously disappeared from her home last Sunday night, has been located in Cincinnati. She was ordered detained at that place, and yesterday her father wont after her. 81. Louis Wants tho Convention. St. Louis, Oct. .26.—^The Business Men’s league of St. Louis yesterday afternoon appointed a committee to canvass for a guarantee fund of SBO,OOO to secure the Republican National convention for SL Louis iu 1806.
Quickens The Appetite Makes the j Weak Strong. AYERS OSjHH THE ONLY GOLD MEDAL m i Has Cured Others And Will Cure You. t Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral for Coughs. Cold In the Arabian Desert. 1 The narrative is that of Nolde’s exp©' : dition into theNefud desert of the Arabian interior, latitude 28 degrees north, ! altitude 8,000 feet, and tells of the l vere cold that he experienced there in February, 1893: “The days were warm ! and pleasant, but the nights cooled to 6 or 10 degrees below zero C., the changes of temperature being extremely sudden , * * * The cold and mustering wind caused much discnmffiH in traveling. ” ‘The greatest surprise that Nold# met was on Fgbwhen a storm clothed the Nefnoiar and wide with a sheet of ■now several inches deep, making it reeomble a Russian steppe rather than an i Arabian desert. The Bedouins, howevei. said that snowfall there was very up usual. —.Soieuce. 1 “While down in the southwestern part of the state some time atro,” says Mr. W. 1 Chalmers, editor of the Chico (('a .j KuDtprise, “1 had an attack of dysentery. Ilavi ing heard of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera aird Diarrhoea Remedy I bought a bottle. , | A couplt* of doses of it completely cured me. Now lam a ehaiiipion «.f that remedy for all stomach and bowel comp aints ” I For sale by Blackburn & Miller, druggists. o a i ' Yesterday one of the barges of the coal fleet belonging to Captain Duffy, lying just above Jeffersonville, was destroyed by lire. Loss about *6,000. 'I . ' ! Mr. J. K. Fowler, secretary and treasons ! -of the Corinne Mid, Canal and Stock Co, 1 of Corinne. Utah, In speaking of Chamber lain’s Cough Remedy says, “1 consider it ♦he best In Ihe market. 1 have used maiiy kinds hut find Chamberlain’s the most prompt and effectual in giving relief, and | now keep no other in my home,” When | troubled with a cough or cold give this ( remedy a trial and we assure you that you will be m re than pleased wnli the result . For sale by Blackburn & Miller, druggists. o Mark O. Waters and Miss Alice Fulton were married at Newcastle Sunday evening. Mr. Waters is one of the editors and proprietors of The Courier of that city. People Wonder. People wonder at the great results ob--1 tabled from the use of Dr. Marshall’s Lung Syrup. It,is a remedy:that has .given uni i versal satisfaction wherever usedr Mothers praise it as a medicine for children. #t can be given to children without danger. It is very pleasant to the taste, and children cry for it. This CouglrSyrup is a family medicine and should be in every house, You cannot afford to be without a bottle of l)r. Marshall’s Lung Rvaup. It is guaranteed to give satisfaction. By*dealers everywhere,%, 5u and sl. o _ . _ Mayor McHenry of Wabash has called a? meeting for Oct.'3l to express sympathy with the Cubans in their struggle for lib erty. Maver & Foreman have associated themselves together for the purpose of furnishing the people of Adams county with , first class brick. You will find them at the yard west ot Patterson & Pillars’mill. 6tf Ed Merenda, a Pennsylvania conductor, was badly injured by being struck by his i train at Jeffersonville yesterday, j Thousands of people attended the funeral of Clara Shanks, who was buried Sunday near her old home iu Parke county. : She is the young girl who was murdered and thrown into a pool of water last summer, and the Keller family, near neighbors, are under indictment for the crime. Corbett and Fitzsimmons, Hot,Springs, Ark., Oct. 31st.—For the proposed-contest the Clover Leaf Route will issue one fare excursion tickets and return from all stations, Oct. 20th to 30th, inclusive. Ample return limit. Cjover Leaf trains make direct connections in New Union Station, St. Louis, with Hot Springs trains via iron Mountain route. For further particulars 'call on nearest agent Clover Leaf route. The home of President W. H. Crowder of the Sullivan County bank, at Sullivan, was destroyed by. lire yesterday. Loss, #3,000; partially insured. The Indiana Duroc-Jersey Breeding Company, breeders and shippers of Duroc-Jersey swine, prices reasonable Inspection and correspondence solicited. J. C. Johnson, Sec'y. 30-4 Bloomingsport, Ind. FIVE HANDSOME forsale in Grant Railing’s addition. Enquire 3tf Grant Railing. Farmers Attention! I-am now ready to cry sales. Terms reasonable Satisfaction guaranteed. Address, J. W. Hill, , 48tf Pleasant Mills, Ind. I have lands n North Dakota and i Texas. 1 will sell or trade for lands Int Adams or adjoining counties and »in proper case will give difference ic money. 52t£ David Studahaker. Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder World** Fair Highest Award.
MAD MOBiLI) AT BAY Determined Ohio Sheriff lle.-oically Protects a Murderer’s Life. TWO LYNCHERS ARE SHOT. In.tant Dnnlh Dealt by lhn Gmi. of tlia Officer.—During a Lull In the Atlnrk the Prl.oner Wax Spirit.*)! Awxy to a Place of Safety— Militia Now Gunnllng the Jail. Tiffin, 0., Oct. 28.—This city has been shocked from center to circnmferenoe over the attempt to lynch Marshal Shultz’s slayer early yesterday morning. The mob came from an entirely unexpected source. The report was current that a crowd of farmers from Hopewell township was congregating and organizing on the outskirts of tho town and the attack was expected to be made by them. But instead it was done by fellows who had beeu circulating in the vicinity of the jail all evening. It was hardly supposed that they would dare to do such a thing, and the police made no effort to quiet them. Thus matters went on until about 1:15 a.m. Six men gathered about 50 feet from the jail, anil in a moment 30 others joined them Then a sharp whistle was hefted, and out of tho alley on the opposite sido of the street and a little west rushed folly 300 more, tho leaders carrying a rope and several sledge hammers with which to accomplish the’ir work. The sledges were procured at a stone quarry and the rope was thick enough to hang a dozen men. As the mob made the rush toward the jail a squad of policemen who had stationed themselves on the steps were whisked to one side its though they were so many straws. Officer Keiffer, who made a brave and fierce resistence, was struck on the head with a sledge and kicked brutally. He was carried home unconscious and is hovering between life and death. Officer Fisher was thrown against a brick wail and partially stunned and Officer Heuuessy was tumbled over in the grass and kept there by a ruffian who held a murderous looking club over him and threatened death if lie did not lie still. The other officers were treated iu the same way. The mob went direct to the side entrance and commenced au onslaught on the door with their sledges, not making any demand for the keys. Michael Schinidus, a powerful teamster, wielded the sledge and the door was krokeu in spliuters in a short time. Blier.fl”si 4>et«rmint'd Stand. When the entrance was gained there was a wild rush and the hallway was filled with excited men. Sheriff Vannest and three men stood in the oppos.te eud He appealed to them most bravely and strongly several times, asking them for (iod’s sake to disperse. It did nogood, for the men only grew fiercer. The entrance to the corridors is first protected by a heavy sheetiron door. The lock was broken off with a few blows and then, there remained the heavy grating. Then it was that the guards, who were in that portion, began to fire. At first they shot over the rioters’ head. A guard said the mob swore to kid every person inside, and to show their purpose, they began to fire at them. The guards said no shot was fired by them until the attacking party * had fired through tho grating lir ( st. Henry Mutsehler, the first man killed, was the one who carried the rope.' lie was shot through the left temple, the ball coming out ou the right side and lie died instantly. Then Christ Matz received a bullet through his heart. He was also picked up dead’. -This awful work and t lie determination of the "guards awed Hie wouldbe lynchers and they left the place, cursing and wilder than ever. While in the midst of the attack an Italian laborer named Viudone rushed upon a daughter of the sheriff and threatened to kill her. Another fellow held a revolver close to the heart of Andrew Greer, a one-armed son-in-law of the sheriff, and pulled the trigger, but it missed fire and the next instant Greer felled the would be assassin to the floor. The sheriff’s famiiv were upstairs and one of the mob seeing them rushed viciously at them, but someone threw him headlong to the bottom of the stairs. Prisoner Spirited Away. Between 3 and 4 o’clock in the morning, after the mob had moved further down the street, the prisoner was handcuffed,, taken through a side door and then to a side alley, where a carriage was waiting. Police Captain Falkuer and Officer Sweeney took him to Sandusky, where he is now lodged iu the couuty jail. Many people refused to helieve that the prisoner had been taken away, and at 10 o’clock a crowd numbering several hundred started to make another attack, but wiser counsel prevailed. Finally, to pacify them, one of their number who knew the murderer was allowed to Bearoh the building. He did not find the prisoner and SO informed the crowd, but they refused to believe it. Company E of the Second regiment of militia es this oitv iv-»a then anlleff to guard the building. In the afternoon the crowd again surrounded the place. They became so determined that a committee of six well known citizens again searched the building from cellar to garret, Among tho party was Mayor Rex, and when they had finished the searcji, he appeared oiflthe front steps of the ; building and' in behalf of the committee s>aid the man could not be found. Captain Falkuer, who had just returned froj# Sandusteyyou ll ly, spoke* to the crowd also. They could not help but be satisfied, aud the greater part dispersed. 11l response to Governor McKinley’s orders several companies of militia arrived early in the evening and strict guard will be kept for several days. Many wild threats to lynch the sheriff and kill his guards were heard, but it is believed there will be no serums trouble when the excitement lias cooled off. Adjutant General Howe and Colonel J. A. Kuert are hero with the nilitiu.
F. SCHAFER & LOCH’S HAEDWAES STORE. Hoftdqunrtcrs For STOVES AID RANGES. IFinter is nov\ close at hand and you will need a stove. YVe have an endless variety and a large stock to select from, and our prices are WORLD A Hi. 1 £• R°bes, Blankets, TTliips, lir VIArU At Slei s hs . Bu^ies - Surreys, "ill ulvMjll Vi Road Carts and the celeorated I unbul Wagons Is Unequalled in the City. i rerCall and see u-., 2nd street. Decatur, Ind.
BOY ATTEMPTS SUICIDE 1 ' ' v . * 1 Lodged a lin!let From a Revolver - Ijito His Brain. GETS TIRED OF LIFE EARLY. ■, •— motive Fire »t Oakland Cftjr—Workman In a Tinplate Factory Has His Eye Gouged Oat—Rev. J. U. Rartr r Di*** at .Minneapolis—Death Caused hy m Fall—The Gnu Was Loaded — Notes. Columbia City, Ind 7 ., Oct, 25. — ! Charles Crow, only lVyears old, living near Churubusco, attempted to commit suicide by shooting liimSelf. The bullet ; entered his head a’ oyh the eye aud lodged in the brain. He is still alive, ; bnt there is no hope of recovery. He Jest a note saving that he was tired of life. ' P.fT. J. I! Mhtnl Ranffrr ilrad. 1 Indianapolis, Oct. £s.—Rev. J. Hil- ' liard Ranger of this city died iu Minue- ! apolis last night tro:n pneumonia. Mr. Ranger, who was the rector of Christ s church in this city. had. been in atr tendance upon the Episcopal convention at Minueapons. He contracted a severe cold about a week ago and was taken to St. Barnabas hospital, bnt failed steadily until the end. The remains, accompanied by the Minneapolis clergy,* will start for homo today and will be i met in Chicago by Bishop John Hazeu White and personal friends of the deceased. Fire at Oakland ( City. Oakland City, Ind , Oct. 25. —Fire was discovered yesterday in the clothing store of Stillwell & Co. and before the department could arrive the adjoining building of C. F. Picker caught and was burned to the ground. Two other buildings met with the same fate. The total loss will amount to $45,000, with an in-r.ranee of $35,000. The four ! buildings were uil brick and iu the business portion of the -sown, making the j loss severely felt. ( They will be rebuilt immediately. His Eyb Was Gouged Out, Atlanta, Ind,, Oct. 25.— GeorgeStitz, a roller at the tinplate factory, was seriously hurt iu a peculiar manner. Two 4 men were playfully striking at each 1 other with a pair of tongs, when the tongs slipped from the hands of one of the men, striking iu the corn r of ! the left eye and gouging it out until it ! lay upon his cheek. The surgeon succeeded in replacing the eye in the socket, but the wound is au ugly and painful one. “Town of Trtilholt** Burned. Frankfort, Ind., Oct. 25. vil- ! lage of Pickard’s Mills, known to fame through James Whitcomb Riley as the “Little Town of Tailholt,” was almost I destroyed by fire yesterday. ISquire I Robinson and wife were barely rescued ! before the building they were in collapsed. The loss is estimated at $5,000. I Irjuries Terminate Fatally. Greenwood, Ind., Oct. 25. —John Me-J Cool, a well known and respected citi- ! zen of this place, died yesterday after I lying unconscious for 124 hours. He fell j and received internal injuries while j working in J. T. Polk’s dairy. Mr. Me- | Cool was 55 years old and a soldier in the last war. New «lall' For Kmh County. Rt Shville, Ind.. Oot. 25.-—The Rnsh. couuty jail, which has beeu in use nearly 40 years, has been condemned by the ! grand jury as an unsafe place for the detention of criminals, and a reconr j mendation is made ro the couuty commissioners that a stew building should be erected. Victim of the Faith Cure Idea. Elwoop, Ind., Oct. 25.—Mrs. William Wiggins, wiftr of a well kotfwu plateglass worker, is dead after suffering fearfully for several dnvs. She was j a devout disciple of the faith cure, aiul refused to take medicine or in any way j receive the attentions of a physician. Foreign Missionary Meetlny, Martinsville, Ind., Oct. 25.—The Women’s Foreign Missionary society-of , the Indianapolis district (west) will j meet at Waverly on Wednesday and j Thursday, 30th and 31st iust. Belle j Mansfield of DePauw University will j deliver an address. Thousands of bushels of apples are going | j,o waste in Spencer county owing to a lack | of shipping facilities.
Divorre In Burma. Divoice in Burma is free. It can be claimed by cither party for any good reason, such as incompatibility of temper, and carries no slur with it No lawsuit is required. They go to the village elders, in a town to the elders of the quarter, and a divorce paper is drawn op that defines all arrangements as to property and children. The law as to property is this: Each retains his or .her own property, and all property acquired jointly during married life, as by trading, is divided equally. But the claimant of the divorce must leave the house and all the household goods to the other. If it be the woman, the may remove her loom; if it be the mail, he may take nothing. Thus there is a c* nuin penalty ou claiming a divorce, but it is not a large oue.—Blackwood’s Magazine. Immersion aiul Isolation Advised. Air, water, milk, butter, oyster, mussels, watercress, foreigutfmit and kisses are all especially capable of conveying j infection. Cabs, cats,.dogs, cushions in | railway carriages, shaving at hairdress- ! ers\ clothes from the tailor’s, washing from the laundry, change, bank notes, books from libraries, forks and glasses at restaurant? aud mud upon boots and dresses are other mediums for the distribution of disease. Tins list is very imperfect. Civilized man, then, may only .expect to live an average terra of life by continuous immersion in boiling water, accompanied by absolute isolation. Beyond that, whatever be eats, drinks, wears or touches should be boiled three times before he comes into contact with it. It is remarkable that cur predecessors thrived despite the eternal, thongh iu their day unascertained, lav s of science.—;London Truth. To Save? One’s Isa con. “To save one’s bacon!’—-that is, to make a narrow escape—is supposed to refer to the Dnnniow flitch. For many centuries it was the custom at Duimiow, iu England, to present.a flitch of bacon to a married couple of 20 years’ standing who would make oath bn the Scrip-tures-tliat they had never -had a quarrel. * To come close to a quarrel without an actual rupture was, in the popul.u* diji--lect, “to save one’s'.bacon. ”* Mine- tic Pompadour. Mme. de Pompadour was not, accorffling to the* testimony of her couteinpora-" rics, a beauty, nor anything, more than a fairly good lookingwdngm. @lie gained her influence by her pleasing manners and her wonderful tact and address. Her chief beauty was her hair, which, to increase her apparent' height, she wore iu the fashion that has since borne her | name.
k| EWIS’ 98 % LYE L MTOSBM) ACT PESruaiD (PATEKTED) Thbstrongeet and pnreet T ya raaila. Unlike other. I,ye, It being a fine powder and packed In a can with removable lid, tho contents are always ready for use. Wli! make the best nrrfumcdHard Soap In 20 minutes wl|<limit boiling. It la One best for cleansing waato pipes, dt lnfistlng sinks, close washing bottles, paints, trees, etc. PEMA.SAXI' SIT’3 CO. . — | f Gen. Agts.. Phlla.. Pa. j ; > till I* /A ► m i*. 'I-SSI Si cfo s £ V\/a ' \// ® : || p • *500.00 fIBSpLUTELY f-lvA r, ,v, :,o. ; WiH not injure hands rr f i’- : . No Washboard needed, r/..;n use/.lard v,w" 1 same as soft. Full Direction? on i very packag :.* 8-oz. package for 5 cts. or 6 for .5 cts. Sold by retai.il grocer/ everywhere. “When the Hour Majid Points £O, Ulr.ts t Havo Your Washing on the Line. 1 ’
