Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 16 March 1895 — Page 2

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FOB SALE.

13 acres choice land, within corporate limits of city,

Fur le-s money than any other lit u«-e in (i reenlleld. Call aud get our prices and be convinced that we are the cheapest.

DON'T FORGET PLACE

Melton & Pratt,

Additional Local.

Mrs. Inez Crane, oi Trinidad, Co1., who was here visiting her sister, Mrs. J. A. Slifer, left for home Thursday night. She was in the big Yandalia wreck near Terre Haute. Her mouth was bruised aud her false tei-rh were broken, but •otherwise she was not injured. Her sister in-law, Mrs. Silas Crane, of Trinadad, aud lier three children who had been visiting at Fortville, were somewhat shaken up when the two engines came •together, but were not hurt.

Look out for an irrepressible female who is canvassing this city selling pauts buttons. She snaps one of her buttons •on the pants of a married man and he is compelled to buy a box in order to explain to his wife where he got that button. In some instances she will clip oft two or three buttons and the victim is compelled to buy a box or go around holding up his pants. If you should'happen to see a female peddler, light shy, for she may prove to be the pants button fiend.— JEvansville Bulletin.

The reception of tin Ladies Society of the Presbyterian church held on Thursday last at the home of Mrs. William A. Hughes on Walnut street was a very enjoyable occasion. About 75 ladies and gentlemen were present and all report a good time. Refreshments were served, consisting of minced ham sandwiches, cakes, coffee, etc. Music was furnished by the orchestra. A severe snow storm prevailed during the afternoon, which, no doubt, compelled a great many ladies to remain at home, gj. F. McCord, one of Vernon townships successful teachers, was in the city today. He renewed for the KKPUBLICAN and will thus be able to read the Life of Napoleon by John Clark Ridpath, and the Life of Lincoln by his law partner of twenty live years, YVm. Herndon. Both of these will begin in the issue of April 4th in the weekly REPUBLICAN. No teacher or pupil of the common schools in this county should fail to real the lives of Napoleon and Lincoln which will be published exclusively by the REPUBLICAN in Hancock county.

lSeware Of| Ointments For Catarrh Tliat Contain Mercury. As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. ^Hall's Catarrh Cure manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous .surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's •Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally and made in Toledo, •Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. jjggTSold by Druggists, price 75c par bottle

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JOHN CORCORAN,

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l/nle^s 3"oti want to bny your Tinware at hard-time prices. ,:, an: prepared to make any ami all kinds ot Tinware.

Uoofiiisr. GiillcriiK' inn! S|i»nlii!g

No. 1C North Penn. St.

'War Burnett's-old stand d&w

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AS FITTING A SPECIE THE "N.

W. S. MOVi'lfOMEUY, Editor and Publisher.

Subscription Kates.

One week. One year..

10 cents Sr.uo

Jintered at Tostottice as second-class matter

TIIK United States moved along magnificently and prosperously until 1873 with both silver and gold as primary money for redemption. In 1875) silver was surreptitiously demonetized aud the single gold standard adopted. From that "cime until now values of all commodities have been shrinking. Restore silver to .its original use and thus assist n» re-es-tablish values. People are not getting enough for the products of their labor. They should not only be able to make a living, but to lay by something for a rainy day.

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Marriage liiccnso*.

Henry

J. Campbell and K-ivia. Alford.

Don't Fool With.tlie Fir.- Appmatus.

The public is hereby warned that any one springing the on the depattmcnt's harness or molesting other fire apparatus in C. K. Kinder barn will b.1

prosecuted. Cosb\ 9^0 Chief Fire Department. New IIif.

And I.i-l] desires to announce that lm has opened an office in the Odd Fellows building, where lie will be pleased to take your measure for a suit of clothing. He is connected with the W anamakei iSr Brown Clothing Co ami has a fine line of samples to sel-.-r from. 89tf

Yminj I. xiic-i t'lill).

Misses Flo Fry, Flo liorrey, Bo-gin Barnaul. iura and Ka-ny Moulden, Ora Bragg, 'l'illie New and A-amie \!o -re met at the home of Mi-.s Boivey, la-t evening arid organized a young ladies cinch c!u'". They will meet every two weeks, ml once Mich mouth will elite: tain young u'eaf-lemen lr.ends.

(.itril ot I lia Us.

Wc de.-dre to thank the friends and neighbor-* \vh were so kind during the sickness and after the death of our wife, daughter aud sister, Mrs. Fanny Stutsman. -We shall evi-r gratefully remember your kindly attention. \V. P. STUTSMAN,

M. M. ADAMS & FAMH.V.

A T.mptM-am-«: Kcvival at .Maxwell.

Thursday night, March 21, a temperance revival, conducted by J. B. Stanley, of Loeansport, will be begun in the M. E. church at Maxwell. He is lemau who conducted such a uccessful tempeiance revival at Charlottesville recently. People from Maxwell claim that their town is sadly in need of temperance work.

The Court of liui Hnr Organized.

Last night B. E. Hayes of Crawfordsville, and Arthur Simpson, of Indiauapc1 is, organized a court of Ben Hur at the Red Men's Hall, with 18 members. There are ten to come in. The work of this order is said to be very bea'utiful. -^r-v Hayes aud Simpson may go to California to organize courts

there.

A Ollicc.

Dr. N. P. Howard, Jr.. can now be found in his new office No. 14West Main street over the Citizens Bank aud desires to nnuouuee to his frienls that he can be fomul at the office at all hours unless professionally engaged. We were shown through the office and found that it was very conveniently arranged and ins all the latest improvements for surgery work, etc.. The office is fitted throughout with antique oak furniture.

THE LISTENER.

Gladstone has just written the preface for a Bible. Mr. Quay is credited with being one of the best listeners in the political world.

Tom Oallaglier, tho hermit of St. Clomen to island, in too Pacific, lives almost as lonely a life „s lio'..' tsou Crusoe.

John Fox of Zee! J, Mich., is totally blind, but makes !uu.. :r- of repairing sewing machine ..-ui th jad a needle quicker than quick.

Richard Rockwoode the choss player who can handle 1^5 at once without difficulty, can no more i-iy a 13 game, series than he can swim vy i.igara falls,

Dan Emmctt, author of "Dixie," is to have a receution and testimonial soon from the Confederate vets of Washington. He will be 80 in May and first sang the song in 1843.

Representative Sulloway of New llampshire favors silver and greenbacks. Sulloway is teet tall and has a stentorian voico. He married a Salvation Army woman.

Harry M. Payne of Southold, N. Y., is the champion bread eater of Suffolk counI ty. Tho other day, with his hands tied behind him, he ate a large loaf of dry bread in less than five minutes.

Signor Cavallotti, tho opposition loader in the Italian chamber of deputies, has roceived nearly a dozen challenges from aggrieved ministerial journalists. Ho has referred all the would be duelists to tho

law courts. I James J. Corbett says: "Inside of two I years there will not be a club in the country, and pugilists will be fighting in barns and fields for purses of $100 and $300, just I as they used to. Tho newspapers aro responsible for it." I State Councilor Joseph Zemp, who has I been nominated president of tho Swiss

Confederation for tho year 1895, is tho first Conservative Catholic who has been appointed to the highest ollico of tho little republic. Ho is GO years of ago. I Mr. John K. Searles, Sugar King Havomeyer's right bower, is one of tho leading I Methodists in Brooklyn and has boon for years the superintendent of a Sunday school. He has a remarkably kindly faco and a manner as gentle as a woman's.

Theodore D. Weld, ono of tho original antislavery agitators, died recontly in Boston, aged t) 1 years. He had a national career, having boon contemporary with John Brown, Wendell Phillips, Charles Sumner and William Lloyd Garrison, and had survived them all.

John L. Wilson, tho now sonator from Washington, is a email man, with a very large voico that can bo heard distinctly above tho din of and uproar on tho lloor. Coupled with this voico ho possesses a keen sense of tho ridiculous and a somewhat riotous disposition.

Senator Gordon In his eloquent lecture, "The Last Days of tho Confederacy," is lavish in compliments and profuso in praiso of nearly all tho leaders on both sides of the groat war, excepting Jeff Davis. The namo of the president of the Confederacy is not mentioned. I Dr. M. N. Kclm, Sr., who rode 18,538 miles on his hicyclo last season, is 50 years old and is ono of tho most enthusiastio wheelmen in tho Quaker City. Ho began riding in 18811 and has always been notod as a long distance rider. Last year ho rode I on an average 59% miles a day.

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SIX BILES DISTAMT

I Windows in Buildings Were Broken by the Shock.

MIGHT HAVE BEEN FAR WORSE.

Fhreo [Thousand Founds of Nitroglycerin

Explode and but One Man Was Killed.

Nearly a Magazine Containing 05,000 Pounds of Dynamite Was Wrecked—Not ail Ounce Kxploitnl—Loss, Small. Hori.HTox, Midi., March JO.—About 3,U!'0 pounds of nitroglycerin exploded at tho Hancock chemical works near Dollar buy yesterday. Ail the buildings of the company were wrecked. It being dinner hour only 0110 mail, Dominick Christian, was killed. {Several were injured by Hying debris, but none seriously. The cause of the explosion is a mystery. Christian's duty was to attend the mixing of acid and glycerine, lie was in the nitroglycerin vault when the explosion occurred. Not even a particle of his remains could be found.

Carl Ulrieli, who was in the mixing house only a few feet away, miraculously escaped by being wedged between tho acid tuins, which were covered by an iron frame. In the packinghouse nearby, were large quantit ies of dynamite, and in a magazine adjacent was stored Go,000 pounds of dynamite, but not an ounce of it exploded, although tiie buildings were wrecked.

The property loss is about $.",000. This is the third explosion at these works with a total loss of 10 lives. Windows were broken in buildings at Lake Lingeu, six miles away, and in Calumet, 10 mill's to the north, glassware rattled in the houses and the explosion was distinctly heard. At Houghton, three Hides distant, it was scarcely heard.

PREHISTORIC REMAINS.

In a Kentucky Cavern Four Petrified Human ISodies Found.

CINCINNATI, March 1(5.—In a small rocky cavern on lands owned by Dr. Terril, 10 miles from Cleves, O., in Boone county, Ky., sitting upright in a close little group, have been discovered four petrified human beings of some prehistoric race.

The bodies are small in stature, dark, and in features aud general contour much like the mummies taken from the crypts of the pyramids of Egypt. They were partly wrapped in bandages of material resembling cloth. The folds were even, but perfectly distinct, and when crumbled to dust at a touch disclosed smooth, fleshy marble. One of the most striking observations is that the eyes are wide open, and in color and smoothness area beautiful brown and white agate.

For years it has been known than an antedeluvian burying ground existed on the Terril farm and from time to tunc bodies similar to these have been exhumed. Many of the farmers' wives in this vicinity, ignorant of the historic value of these specimens, have used them to ornament flower beds and garden plots.

Doctors and curiosity hunters from Lawreuceburg, Aurora, Cindinnati and other places have visited the farm and searched its wilds for more of these strange relics. The finding of so many of them seems to sustain the theory that this section of the country at least was inhabited by a peculiar race of people, now extinct, long before the appearance of tho red men, who were in possession when the country was traversed by Europeans.

TRUE LOVE REWARDED.

Tlie IJride of Convict. Finally Secures His Pardon.

CHICAGO, March 1(5.—After the jail wedding of Miss Lulu Keiver and William F. Bagley Jan. 25, the bride promised her husband that she would do all in her power to secure his release before the expiration of his term. Cover nor Altgeld has now pardoned Bagley and as soon as the formalities can be carried out lie will be free to thank his wife for her fidelity to his cause.

Bagley was a Hyde Park jeweler who ran away with watches left to be repaired. He spent a few days in Cincinnati, was arrested there, brought back, indicted, tried and sentenced. At the time of his lapse, from the right he was paying court to Miss Keiver. After his fail she refused to renounce him, anil they were married in the jail. Since that time the young bride has been working to secure her husband's pardon, and Friday her efforts were awarded.

Claimed to lie the Cook Gang. GUTHRIK, O. T., March (.—News of a daring hold-up and robbery comes from Washita. Near dusk the section house and men were robbed by two highwaymen. Section Foreman Woods was hit, the ball entering the right cheek and coming out at the right ear. It is not thought that the wound is dangerous. Mrs. Woods was also beaten over the head with a (5-shooter, receiving wounds' which are most likely to prove fatal. The booty obtained consisted of $722.85 in money and railroad checks and three gold watches. The robbers told their frightened victims that they were the remnants of the Cook gang. A posse is after them.

Shocking Double Tragedy.

PORT BYIION, N. Y., March 1(5.—Mrs. Perry Randall and daughter Mabel, were struck by a West Shore train at Weedsport yesterday and killed. The woman lived an hour with both legs and arms and collarbone broken, while the girl was ground to pieces under the engine.

May Abolish Untieing.

LINCOLN, Neb., March 16. The amended bill to abolish capital punishment has passed the senate. A canvass of the lower house shows that of the 100 members 37 favor it, 20 oppose it and the remainder are noncommittal. Governor Holcomb is said to favor it.

Church KioterM in Court.

OMAHA, March 1(5.—All the inhabitants of the Omaha suberb of Sheely were in tho police court yesterday, interested in the trial of the church rioters. After some preliminary work court adjourned.

Killed For Kidnaping:.

CONSTANTINOPLE, March 1(5.—Advices received here from Mooslx show that two Kurds, who were being pursued for having abducted an Ai'iuenian girl, were overtaken by their pursuors and killed.

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Action of the Italian Government in tho Walsenburg Incident. WASHINGTON, March lti.—The Italian government is acting with extreme moderation and consideration in the matter of the killing of five of its citizens of Walsenburg, notwithstanding the clamor of the Italian press for tho introduction of energetic measures. There has been nothing in the nature of a protest lodged with this movement nor a demand for indemnity and reparation.

The only communication received from the Italian government, save the verbal request from the iuarijnis Iniperiali that a proper protection be afforded to the Italians at Walsenburg, ctune yesterday in the shape of a short and dignilieil note from Baron Fava, the Italian ambassador, enclosing to Secretary Gresham a copy of the report of Dr. Cuneo. the Italian consul at Denver, stating the facts attending the killing and the names of the victims, ail five being, according to the consul. Italian subjects, and not naturalized American citizens. In transmitting this report the Ambassador expresses tho lvpe that tho Colorado authorities will rake the necessary steps to secure the prompt punishment of the guilty parties.

This note and report will be communicated to tiie. governor of Colorado by the secretary of state, and that is as far as lie can go in the matter at present. When congress meets again, lowever, it is probable that the president will feel constrained to request that an appropriation be made to indemnify the families and relatives of the murdered men for their slaughter.

In the case of the killing of the Italians in New Orleans four yeai-s ago, tho state department took the ground that an indemnity could not be demanded but nevertheless it felt bound to yield in comity and equity and on these grounds recognize the principle of an indemnity. The unfortunate incident at Walsenburg may seriously embarrass the state department in its efforts to protect American citizens, in foreign countries.

Justices Rest.

The supreme court of the United States yesterday took a recess until Monday, the :25th inst., with the exception that it will sit next Monday for the delivery of opinions and to hear motions. Before adjournment the court postponed the hearing in the Whito Cap cases of J. W. Todd, Allen Lights, George Simms and 10 others, convicted in the northern district of Alabama of intimidating witnesses, etc., and sentenced to imprisonment.

DETAIL OF POLICE

Guards a l'riest in Celebrating ..HIass in a l'olish Cituruli.

CHICAGO, March l!5.—About 200 angry poles, men and women, stormed St. Hedwig's church, at Nouifli Hoyne avenue and Kosciucko street, at 5:'0 a. m. yesterday. Five policemen who were in guard were cowed by the mob, but on the arrival of reinforcements the rioters were driven oh".

There has been trouble in St. Hodwig's parish for many weeks. Father Barzinski was driven out three weeks ago, and at that time the police were called upon to protect the church property.

Father Barzinski belonged to the order of Resurrectionist Fathers, and it was to this that the objection was made for some reason.

The police aires.ti (1 .Tosie Lowandowski and her son, Anton, who seemed to be ringleaders, and search is being made for the woman's husband.

After the church was cleared the priest celebrated mass under guard of a detail of police.

HORRIBLE DISCOVERY.

JJodies of Three Wolf-Hunters Found. Vrobabiy Murdered.

CHIPPKWA FAJ,LS, Wis., March 1(5.— A horrible discovery was made yesterday by a party of men hunting in the neighborhood of Ingram. Tlie dead bodies of Ed Duffney, John Hanson and another man were found in an old lumber shanty. From all appearanc.es they had been dead a number of days, the bodies being frozen stiff. Duffney anfl Hanson were formerly employed as woodsmen, but quit work to hunt wolves, using poison to kill them. The supposition is that in preparing supper they accidentally got the poison mixed with the food. Their dog was found dead in the same room.

Governor of New South Wales Dead.

SYENKY, March 10.—The Right Hon. Sir Robert William Duff, G. C. G. M., governor of New South Wales, is dead. Sir Robert William Duff was born in 18535. He was formerly a commander in the royal navy, a justice of the peace and a deputy lieutenant for the counties of Banff and Kincardine, Scotland. From 18(51 to ls9 5 lie was a member of parliament for County Banff. He was a lord of the treasury from 1882 to 1885, and was a lord of tlie admiralty in 188(5. He was appointed governor of New South Wales in 18!)i!.

Obnoxious to Interstate Laiv. CHARLESTON, March l(i. Judge Brantly, in the United States district court, handed down a decision in the libel case of the schooner Caroline, seized aud confiscated by tlie state for violating the dispensary law. The court says so much of the dispensary act as interferes witli interstate commerce is obnoxious to tho United States constitution and void, and the schooner Caroline, while engaged in such commerce, should not be legally seized.

Church Incendiary Confesses. BOSTON, March 16.—James A. Boherty, 17 years old, has confessed to Fire Marshal Witcoinb that he set fire to St. Peter's Catholic church the evening of Marcli 6. The marshal said lie had not finished bis investigation and would not make known the details of tho investigation until he had.

s® No Water I'rotcction. DRVINE, Tex., March 1(5.—An early morning blaze destroyed 10 buildings comprising tho business portion of this town. There was no water protection and the flames swept every house on the west side of tlie International and Great Northern railway track. Loss estimated at $50,000.

linttle With 'SliinerM.

MIDDLKSBORO, Ky., March 16.—Revenue officers raided two moonshine stills iu Knott county Thursday. Quite a battlo ensued, but the "shiners" were finally overcome and the stills destroyed. Five "shiners" were captured.

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REASONABLE. VANDALIA WRECK.

Several Injured and I-.arge Amount of Express Money l'urned.

Ti :K HAUTI:, In l., March K.—Van:press No. 7 was wrecked two miles east- of this city at :50yesterday. A head-end collision with a switch engine caused the accident. Both engines were reared high in air. aud the derailed cars caught lire and burned fiercely, as did aiso a dozen loaded freightears standing on the siding.

The train was made up of two baggagecars. a s.e.oker, ladies' coach. New York sleeper, an Evansviile sleeper, a Cineiiinai i.iiamilton ami Dayton t.'mciunati .-deeper, which, was attached to the train at rhis point. It also carried a local Indianapolis sleeper. Conductor Kalim, who was in charge, is a new man on the road aud was running extra.

Pat Dailey, one of the oiliest men on the road, a.irl who was in the wreck at Coaresviilo a few weeks ago, was the engineer. Conductor Kahm had a \vrisrsprained and Dailey and Iris iiieman, lianiey, w-ic l.uuley bvu'.M-d. Tlio express car was destroyed by lire and the be ueear partly bm tied.

Loss to lii* Aii&ms impress -is'i'.vv „Mareh 1 .—At the olhcO of tiie Adams i-Jxpie.-s company it not known exactly the loss the company will sustain b\ tne burning up of its express car in the wreck at Terro Haute, Iud., yes!erlay. President L. C. Weir of tho company states thai while ho thinks the loss will reach -VIOO.OOO, it W,U probably not exceed that sum. "All the waybills of the contents of the two safes were (Jes!roved by live," lie said, "and an accurate estimate can not be made until we hear from all the points from which shipments were made. The only concentrated report was with the expivss messenger and was destroyed. The principal loss, however, will be in coin and bonds, as our line carries a great portion of the banking business between St. Louis and the Atlantic, coast."

WORKING UNDER GUARD.

No Change in the Strike Situation on the Orleans Levee.

NEW OKLKAXS, March 10.—In tho last 24 hours there has been no change in the labor situation in this city. All day long work has progressed on the wharves, but, as before, it was the negroes, or, at best, "black and tan gangs, half white and half colored, who loaded the ships on which the fighting took place on Tuesday, anil they were under the protection of bodies of state troops fully armed and prepared to suppress any outbreak of the riotous element.

Judge Moise of the criminal district court called the grand jury into court yesterday afternoon and charged that body specially to investigate Tuesday's riot. A large number of witnesses, principally white and colored screwmen and policemen, were summoned and their testimony taken in the grand jury room.

A number of men, arrested on the charge of instigating a riot, were arraigned before tilt recorders and were remanded for trial before the criminal district court or placed under bonds to appear for hearing.

The service of the police and troops were not required at any time during the day, even for so simple a function as the dispersing of little knots of men. All fear that the situation will be further complicated by strike* either trades out of sympathy with the screwmen has been removed.

PUNISHMENT FOR CONTEMPT.

A Kadieal l'ress Law Waiting Gubernatorial Approval. Piiiknix, A. T., March 10".—The bill curtailing the power of the courts in punishing for contempt is now in the hands of the governor. A committee from the Arizona Press association has waited on the governor, urging its approval. The bill acts to protect the press by disqualifying a judge from trying contempt cases against himself and the giving of a right ot' a jury trial and appeal. Tlie wide departure of this bill from all IMW^ on this subject and tho great interest manifested by lawyers, the courts and the press excites universal interest. The opposition of the bar and the pressure of the press on the governor makes its fate a matter of much concern. The governor is both a lawyer anil a journalist.

Commander Lawler's Tour.

RouKFOiit), Ills., March 16.—Com-mander-in-chief Lawler will introduce Senator James B. Gordon of Georgia, who is to lecture here March 25 and leave tlie next day for an extended visit to department encampments, including nine southern states. The commander will visit every department encampment held in the United States this year. re usury .statement *WASHINGTON, March 16.—Yesterday's statement ot the condition of the treasury shows: Available cash balance. $183,-3-16,2^2 gold reserve. $00,i:}2,NK2.

THE MARKETS.

lteview ol the ix-ain and Livestoelt Markets ,-v J-'or .March 15.

I'ittsburg.

Cattle—Prime, "i.")(/:." oO good, S!)@ 5 10 good butchers, $4 tiU rough fat, i")0(i34 20 fair light steers, a 60 fat cows and heifers, OOyiil 80 bulls, stags and cows, $2 2o fresh cows anil springers, #15 tKK^ 10 00. llogs— Philadelpbias, $4 75(^-1 80 best mixed, $4 65@4 70 Yorkers, #4 50(^4 65 pigs, $4 15(104 30 rough, $3 0054 25. SheepExport wethers, $4 f0@4 70 extra sheep, |4 iJOcj£54 40 good, *.'( 80(^4 00 fair, $2 50 3 25 common, $1 00(«,2 00 best lambs, f5 50@f 80 good lambs, 84 70(«!5 20 common to fair lambs, $2 60(^4 30 veal calves, |4 00(^5 50.Sps

Cincinnati.

Wheat 57Xc. Corn 46@47 c. Cattic—Select butchcrs, #4 75(^5 00 fair to good, #4 00(C'4 65 common, $2 75(«33 75. Jl0gS_yclected and prime butchers, $4 (55 (Si 75 packing, *4 45m4 60 common to rough, $4 00(§4 40. Sheep ?2 00(^4 50. Lambs—$3 00(^35 25.

Hogs—Good heavy, $4 50(t?!4 85. Sheep— $2 00(45 00 lambs, $3 75ufl6 00. Wheat— No. 2 red, 61c No. 3 red, 60c. Corn—No. 2 yellow, 48,'ic No. 3 yellow, 48c No. 3 corn, 47j'e. Oats—No. 2 white, 35jc No. 3 yellow, 35e No. 2 oats, 32c.

Chicago.

Hogs Selected butchcrs, #4 65($4 75 packers, #4 35iC4 65. Cattle— Prime steers, |5 75($6 25 others, $3 25®5 00 cows anil bulls, $2 00(^4 75. Sheep 12 25(3)4 75 lambs, $3 25^5 7b.

Now York.

Cattle—12 85@5 65. Sheep—12 25$4 75 lambs, 13 MhHH (X).

mm

Would Not Takt One IIu dred Dollars.

I

AM IX WHO CAN FIST IIV.

For tiie l*ri-e of One Dollar lie •viatcliod From tlie Presence of tiie Grim 3Ionsli i- and Kesiored (o

1

I'eifcM-r Health—Kcad ilarion Hj land's Test miony.

I was afflicted with typhoid fever two years ago last August. After lingering live weeks under treatment of a good physician, was restored, but in short time my left side became inll.imed, an ulcer appeared over the region of my heart. In course of time I Inn! if lanced. If continued to discharge a very dark poisonous matter for nearly two years. I was under treatment from three doctors in that time who doctored me for blood disease. Of I course they gave me some relief, but my I affliction seemed to continue about one 1 stage. I am mnv 60 years old have al-® ways been of a weakly constitution. Hav-

ing rtad tlu- testimonial of James 51.:#

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Deer, who was nfllicted like manner, at once procured a bottle of my druggists At the time I comnieucid taking it iny? side was discharging about a half pint of dark poisonous matter each day. tvas so weak that 1 was confined to n.y• bed: could not eat or eep, and to re.-o was impossible. 1 have taken one bottle of your Acme blood puritier. My sale has settled down, lias stopped running,-: has healed up and not a particle of soreness about it. I shall contiuue to tako the medicine for some time. I am cer-^' tain it has effected a permanent cure, -,' will take great pleasure in recommending" it as a blood medicine to all who are afflicted as I have been. I would not take. §100 for the relief I have had iu the past few weeks all brought about by the use of the Acme blood purifier.

You are welcome to us-) my siguature MAIUOK BVLAND. |1

St. Paul, Intl., March 20, 1803

Acme blood purifier is a great promoter of health when taken in the spring, to expel humors which are the system at that season of the year. Cleanse the: vitiated blood whenever you find its impurities bursting through the skin in pimples, eruption or sores, cleanse it when it is obstructed and sluggish in the veins, or whenever it is foul. Even where no disorder is felt, people enjoy better health acil live longer by occasionally cleansing the blood and enlivening its diminishing vitality. Its effects being alterative, it changes the action of the system, imparting fresh strength and vigoious health iu place of weakness, indicative of disorder and decay.

C. IV. MORRISON &™S5N7

UNDERTAKERS.

^'27 W. PvIAIX ST.

Greenfield, Indiana.

10 MUSIC.

Tlios. .J. On* the old a reliable music dealer,

js

lias put in a stock of

1 New and Second-hand Organs,

And wants people desiring any kind of an instrument to call and see liini. Money saved sure.

THOMAS ORR

West Main St., (ireenfield. 11 t6

THE

PLACE. 10 BUI!

YOUR

Groceries,

Fine Fruits,

Hiiiiic Made Mini

URIAH

44ilw

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Is at

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Special attention given to childreu. Kind reader, we: earnestly solicit a share of your patronage. Goods delivered free of charge.<p></p>GFTRRIS