Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 1 November 1894 — Page 2
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THE REPUBLICAN.
Published by W. B. Montsomkbt.
•EKRNFIELD INDIANA
CAPRIVI QUITS.
37he German Chancellor Tenders His Resignation.
the Crisis Caused by Cabinet Dissensions —Th« Kaiser's Dilemma.
For some timo past there has been a difference of opinion in the German court regarding the policy that should be pursued in dealing with the Socialists. Von Caprivi, the Chancellor,favored conservative measures. Count Bofcho zu Eulenberg, president of the ministerial council took the opposite view and advocated the most radical ideas. It was said that at the recent meeting of the Prussian council, held to consider the question of the repressive measures, a majority of the ministers supported Capri.vl's ideas, but whether it is true or not is merely a matter of conjecture. The differences finally culminated in the resignations of both Caprivi and Eulenberg. Emperor William
WHS
Tho troops commanded by Colonel Sato, after the Chinese had retired, set to work upon the demolishmcnt of the fortifications of Fushong. Inside tho fortifications they found two hundred Chinese dead. The Japanese also captured a number of prisoners, among whom was a Chinese officer, who stated that the position was held by eighteen battalions of Chinese troops. The Japanese, escorting their prisoners, then marched in the direction of General Nodzu's main body, with tho intention of rejoining it. The number of Chinese wounded is not known. The Japnnese lost live officers and ninety men killed and wounded.
FOREIGN,
4 Tho French Chamber of Deputies convened Tuesday. Prime Minister Nicolaievics, of Servia, has resigned.
Canada and Australia are to be connected by a submarine cable. Friday's dispatches from Livadia state that the Czar is apparently much better.
Costa Rica has succeeded in.negotiating in London the loan with which she intends io complete her railroads.
The Chilian government has granted amnesty to all persons accused of political crimes prior to Aug. 28, 1889.
Count von Caprivi will enjoy a pension as ex-chancellor,but his army ponsion will be canceled. After a visit to Geneva ho intends to take up his permanent residence with his niece in Bradenburg.
There is a great feeling between Conservatives and the Liberals in the Unitod States of Colombia. The former, or Catholic party, are said to be well armed and prepared to resist the uprising believed to be imminent. ..
Tho Senate at Hamburg, Saturday, published a decreo prohibiting the importation of American live cattle and fresh beef, O'l the ground that two cargoes which have just arrived contained several animals suffering from Texas fever.
The Czar lingers in about tho same condition in which he has been for some time past. Officials are said to be much dissatisfied with Prof. Zaeharin, tho
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loth to
accept Caprivi's resignation, but finally did so on Friday. Eulenberg's resignation has not been accepted. The Emperor gave an audience to Caprivi, Friday, at Cologne Castle, and endeavored to induce him to withdraw his resignation, but the Chancellor was obstinate, and refused to do so. The Emperor remained at the Castle hall until a late hour conferring with Eulenberg, Dr. Miqiiel and others. The question of who will succeed Caprivi is the subject of general discussion everywhere. In addition to Dr. Miijuel both Zu Eulenberg ana Dr. Von Bennigson, leader of the national liberal party and goveronor of Hanover, are mentioned, but it is believed that the new Chancellor will be a compromise candidate.
A CHINESE ROUT.
Japanese Again Victorious at the Ya-Loo River.
A Chemulpo cable, Oct. 26, says Dispatches from Wi Ju, dated midnight, give details of the battle fought between the Chinese and Japanese across the Ya Loo river. Gen. Nodzu, the Japanese chief of staff, it appears, succeeded in getting the main body of the Japanese army across the Ya-Loo river without mishap before daylight on Thursday. Then Col. Sato was sent forward at the head of a flying column on a reconnoitering expedition, and discovered tho enemy occupying a fortified position near the villago of Fushong, on the right bank of tho Ya-Loo river. In spite of the fact that ho had no artillery at his disposal, Col. Sato immediately attacked tho Chinese, and a fierce fight followed. The Chinese fought desperately and stubbornly. The attack began at 10 o'clock in the morning and lasted until noon, when the Chinese began wavering, broke and eventually retired in .j^eat disorder, falling back upon Kulienchas.
Czar's phy
sician, and lie is charged with incompetency. The Japanese have gained a decisive victory at Kiuren over 17,000 Chinese. The enemy fled towar Antung. The Japanese captured a quantity of booty, thirtyguns, and 300 tents, as well as a large quantity of provisions. 3* A dispatch from Yokohama says that three thousand houses have been destroyed by a succession of violent
Earthquake shocks. As far as known 250 ^Ives have been lost, and a large number of people have been injured.
Information has been received at tho Vatican that a number of mission stations £n China have been destroyed and their Inmates massacred. Other Christians Also have been threatened. The powers VllI be requested by the Vatican to take pteps for the protection of its workers in tho Chinese mission fields.
"Farewell, George," she sobbed, th« tears streaming1 down her cheeks. "Don't take on so, Alary," he soothing' ly replied. "I'm only going down to the office,.six blocks distant" "Yea, I—boo-hoo—know," slie wept afresh "but you are going oa a cable car."
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A
TIIK HEWSOFTIIE WEEK
Washington has a smallpox scare. President Cleveland and* his family returned to Washington, Thursday.
The bituminous coal mines at Staunton are running day and night to supply orders.
A consignment of anti-toxine serum, the new remedy for diphtheria, has arrived in New York.
High tide, followed by a ground swell, has washed away much of the beach at Coney Island.
The Hawaiian government will probably purchase a residence at Washington for its legation.
San Diego and other Southern California towns were shaken by a series of earthquakes, October 23.
It was rfound upon the Luciana's arrival at New York that two of her deck stewards had smallpox.
Peter Cline, captured at Winfield, la., for theft, has been wearing female attire for three years to escape arrest.
All of the inmates of tho White House have been vaccinated because of the Bmallpox epidemic at the capital.
The Carrie Furnace Company, of Pittsburg, has advanced the wages of day laborers from ?1.05 to $1.20 per day.
Secretary Carlisle has decided not to take any part in the campaign, alleging press of public bnsiness as an excuse.
An epidemic of typhoid fever is raging at Bera, Union and Waeo villages, in the eastern part of Madison county. Ky.
A lynx is prowling in the woods near English. So far no armed man has succeeded in getting in range of .the beast.
Apple and cherry trees, strawberry vines and other plants are in blossom in many gardens in Elgin, III., and vicinity. 1 Large sums of money are missing from the vaults of the National Bank of Omaha, Neb., and there is no clew to the robbers.
A severe snow storm prevailed throughout Nebraska, Oct. 29. In the northern portion of the State stock suffered considerably.
Two tons of dynamite exploded near Chippewa Falls, Wis., shaking the country for miles around. One man was killed.
The Alturus Commercial Company, of Hadley, the largest commercial concern in Southeastern Idaho, has applied for a receiver.
The United States Court of Claims has rendered judgments in favor of IDS lettercarriers for time served in excess of eight hours a day.
Legal authorities have decided that President Cleveland has no right to vote in New York. His failure to register is thus accounted for.
Justice Jackson, of the Supreme Court, is in failing health and will not sit on tho pencil any more this term. He will spend fhe winter in Florida.
The Ihmen Glass Company, Pittsburg, has resumed work in its green and anther lottle factories, giving employment to a J'lrge number Of men 8iid boys. ii Thirty head of line cattle, affected witii tuberculosis, belonging to Jonas II. Van Dusen, have been killed at Elmira, N. Y., by order of the State officials.
The beautiful residence of J. S. Coxey, near Massilon. Ohio, was burned to the ground, Sunday. The fire is believed to have been of incendiary origin.
E. F. Stapley, a wealthy resident of London, England, after twenty years' search, has found his brother James, poor and sick, at Kansas City Mo.
President Cleveland failed to register while in New York, Thursday. This action is believed to indicate that he means to stay at Washington on election day.
Mrs. Cleveland has consented to christen the steamship St. Louis of the International Navigation Company, which will be launched from Cramp's shipyard, November 12.
A veinof cement 100 feet has been struck near Williamsport, Pa, New York assayrs say it is the best in the world. A plant will be at once built to turn out 1,000 barrels a day.
The Great White Spirit Company, capital stock §50,000,000, with *5,000,000 paid up, has been incorporated at Trenton, N. J. This is believed to indicate the formation of anew whisky trust.
Many of the Connecticut savings banks lave given notice to depositors liavine more than $10,003 to draw clown their ieposits, so as to relieve tho banks from the operatian of the income tax law.
Five hundred negroes will sail for Liberia the latter part of the week to find homes in the African republic. They jomprise the first part of a party of 3,000 negroes who will sail during the month of November. 6 Dr. H. T. Helmbold, of extract buchu [ame, once a millionaire, died in the insane isylum at Trenton, N. J., Oct. 25. of apoplexy. He has been confined in different isylums intermittently for the past fifeen years.
President Cleveland and ex-President Harrison both arrived in New York City, Wednesday. Mr. Harrison will probably make a number of speeches in New York State in behalf of Mr. Morton and the Republican ticket. (SSpecial Agent M. B. Herely, of Chicaeo, who has been on the Pacific coast for several months, engaged in investigating Chinese certificate frauds, intimates that there are fully 4,0C0 fraudulent certifiates in California.
Posters issued by the juniors of Johns Hopkins University, forbidding freshmen to smoke, carry canes, or enter tho gymnasium, and ordering them to make* obeilance to upper classmen, brought on a tight between the two classes, in which icvcral persons were hurt.
The coffee bark, Dom Pedro II. arrived it Baltimore, brings word from Rio Janeiro that over sixty persons were killed by the explosion of dynamite in an insurgent magazine, upon which government soldiers were making a raid. ICapt. Howgate, the defaulting chief of tho Weather Bureau, recently arrested in New York, was arraigned in the Criminal Court at Washington, Saturday, and pleaded "not guilty" to all indictments entered against him in 188L
Official Government Statistics just compiled at Tacoma show that the low price of wheat has developed the pork-packing interests in Washington, and placed the number of hogs being fattened on wheat in Whitman county alone at $75,000. Only from eighteen to twenty cents a bushel is realized by'the wheat farmers, y-Q
L. H. Lowe, a farmer living near Hoi comb. 111., and a man of considerable
wealth, committed suicide by fastening a log chain around a beam in the barn and then to his neck, hanging himself by jumping from a wagon. No reason is assigned for the act. 6 Col. A, A. Pope, of Boston, the manufacturer of the Columbia bicyele, has announced that the price of tho 1895 wheel will be $100. This will be a reduction of 830 on each wheel, a fact which will bo received with joy by the patrons of this celebrated wheel.
A company of Chicago tanners has purchased 5,000 acres of land in the San Joaquin valley, California, on which to grow canaigre. a weed of the yellow dock family, which yields 23 to 33 per cent, of tannic- acid. Large factories will be erected and employment given to many men. 2 The attorney-general has rendered an opinion in the South Carolina dispensary case presented by Governor Tillman, in which he sustains the opinion of tho treasury department, holding that the State hasno authority in the Jaw to enter government bonded warehouses for the purpose of seizing whisky.
The Interior Department building at Washington was closed Friday and Saturday, to permit a thorough fumigation. Jas. L. Parker, of Indiana, a law clerk in the department, was taken down with smallpox, Friday. All the cases in Washington have been traced to this department. There is a panic at the capital.
A pile of about 18,000 tons of soft coal belonging to the Pioneer Fuel Company, Duluth, Minn., is burning, as a result of spontaneous combustion. The fire department dares not throw water on the coal, as that would make matters worse, so the pile is being reduced by moving the coal in wheelbarrows.
The Northern Pacific has completed arrangements with the Tacoma Land Company for the latter to build a two-million bushel wheat warehouse, 750 by 200 feet, two stories high, at Tacoma, Wash., to be completed at the commencement of next season's grain shipment.
When Secretary Smith was asked what lie should recommend to prevent permanently the lawlessness and reign of terror that now exists in the Indian Territory, •he said: "Abrogate the treaties, abolish the tribal relations, establish a territorial government and extend the jurisdiction of the.United States over the whole Territory."
The body of Colonel A. «T. Williams, who was killed in the battle of the Wilderness during the rebellion, and buried near Selma, was exhumed for re-interment in another cemetery, Monday, and was found in a perfect state of preservation, the features being unchanged. Hundreds of old friends and soldiers who fought under him viewed his remains.
In excavating near Colonel Cottrell's farm, at Cumberlaud Gap, Ky., seven feet below the surface, workmen found a case containing twenty-five Enfield rifles. The case was stamped "John H. Morgan, 1S(3," indicating that the rifles had been buried there thirty-one years ago by the famous Southern guerrilla. They are in pprfect state of preservation, and arc not eyon rusted.
An equestrian statue of Major-General George B. McClelland was unveiled on the North Plaza of the City Hall, Philadelphia, Wednesday. The General's widow and their son, Colonel George Is McClelland Governors Pattison, of Pennsylvania Werts, of New Jersey Reynolds, of Delaware McCorkle, of West Virginia, and Fishback, of Arkansas Major General Schofield, Commander-in-Chief of the Army, and other equally distinguished persons were present.
A mysterious plague has suddenly broken out in and about Wardner, Idaho, in the Cour d'Alene mining country., and within the last few days several hundred people have been stricken, most of whom are miners. The local physicians are baffled as to the origin or nature of the epidemic, and Spokane physicians have been called to go to Wardner for consultation. No deaths are as yet reported.
The collapse of the "discretionary pools" at Pittsburg started inquiries in Chjcago, and the result of the investigation is startling. It reveals tho existence in. Chicago of a large number of such concerns which are doing a rushing business. It is said they have taken in $4,000,000 ot* ?5,000,030 during tho year. There are fifteen or twenty concerns located in the back offices of buildings in the Board of Trade quarter running what they call "speculative pools." Many of them, it -is said, have been immensely successful to those in ch arge.
Fourteen persons were burned to death in a hotel fire at Seattle, Wash., Friday night. The details of the casualty are of the most appalling character. The flames broUe out so suddenly and so fiercely that the occupants were taken by surprise, and there was a wild panic, men and women jumping from the windows in all manner of attire, A sharp explosion was heard in the kitchen in the rear part of the second story, by S. F. Butler, son of the proprietor, and immediately the flames began to spread rapidly through the dry inner timber of the corrugated iron building.
Custom house officials at Port Townsend, Wash., have discovered a schema whereby it is estimated that 500 pauper Japanese have been admitted this year. The only restriction to importation is that each applicant for admission must possess $30. It now develops that when a party of pauper Japanese arrives in Victoria they are met there by agents from this side, who supply each with $30 and a ticket into this country. Upon arriving here the Japanese are taken to tho custom house, examined, and, as each has tho requisite amount, the party is passed.
Before starting for interior points the money is returned to the agent, who crosses the lino again to await another party.
Richard Goerdler. tho New York crank who challenged Emperor William to fight a duel some years ago. called at the residence of Dr. Bryant, in New York, while President Cleveland was there, Oct. 25, and demanded to see the President on "business of national importance." He A\as persuaded to leave. Goerdler told Dr. Bryant that he had been trying to se« the President for two years in order to wipe away the stain which was put upon him by incarceration in a lunatic asylum in Germany. He said he challengd Em* peror William to a duel, but the lattei was a coward and had pnt him in an asylum. President Cleveland was the only man who could wipe away the stain now resting upon him. As he left the house floerdler promised that he would call again.
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U0HENL0I1E VON SCKILLIUGFDERST.
That Is tho Name of the New Gtrmai Chancellor,
A Berl'n cable Oct. 27, says: Princ Hohenlohe von Schillingfuerst. who was called by Emperor William to succeed Caprivi as Chancellor, at first declined, I ut at 9 o'clock this evening it was announced that he had accepted the position. He will fill also the office of Prussian Premier, made vacant by Eulenberg'! retirement.
Ciodwig Carl Victor Hohenlohe, Princ« yon Schillingfuerst, who has been chosen bear the burdens of state that havt trained tho shoulders of Bismarck and aprivi, is seventy-three years old. He is !i native of Bavaria. He entered thi Prussian diplomatic service but resigned to enter the diplomatic service of Bavaria dm becoming possessor of the family estates of Schillingfuerst, 1
St37 he became Bavarian Prime Minis- *. nd also undertook to fill the office o) Minister for Foreign Affairs, He at once, [it the latter capacity, became the opponent of Prince Bismarck's plan for Gerinan unity, and was even thought to be rfranizi.UK a Southern rival to the Noctb j| errnan Bund, llis election in 1869 to th* Tiost of Vice-President of the Customs parliament of the German Confederacy was supposed to be a direct slight to Bismarck. Prince Hohenlohe is a Catholic. ince 1S35 he has been Stadt-holder oi yovernor of Alsace-Lorraine. It is announced that tho new chancellor will make no change in the policy of tho government.
SSORKKS BEWARE.
Nemesis Awaits Your Future Solos.
A Fort Wayne dispatch to the Indianapolis Journal. Oct. 28, says: A tragedy Out of the ordinary, and one that will give heartless paragraphers along looked J' "opening," was enacted in the Catho!ic Hospital of St. Joseph early this looming. At 3 o'clock the sisters in charge of the hospital were thrown into a state of excitement by a shooting affray that took place in one of the large, wards. HuJierti Ailes and Jonn Hoffman, over sixty yours of age, and employed for tho past i:!ii years as assistant janitors, occupied the ward with four other old men, inmates of the institution. Hoffman procured a revolver and secreted it for the purpose of shooting Alios because he snored so loudly Hoffman was unable tc •.ioep. Last night Alles snored louder than usual and Hoffman, in a rage, fired, the bullet entering the back of tho nccli below the right ear, coming out under the right jaw. When Hoffman realized whal he had done he turned the revolver on himself and fired. Tho bullet glanced of! and lodged in the wall, but examination developed that it had fractured his skull, lie regained consciousness long enough to tell the frightened sisters that he had shot Alles and then himself. Both men are Mnking rapidly find can !ivo but a short time.
FURIOUS FIENDS-
A Hungarian boarding house at Laurel Run, Pa., was blown to atoms by dynamite, Satnrday night. Three of the in(nates were killed outright and four fatalfy hurt. The fiends who planned the explosion did their work well despite the f?.ct that part of tho plan failed. They placed about twenty-four sticks of dynamite under the building, each being about nine inches long and weighing about hall a pound. A wire connected the stick! with a battery about fifty yards away. When the signal was given only aboui half a dozen of the sticks exploded.
They were sufficient, however, to completely wreck the building, not a beam or a
plank
of winch was left standing. Sev-
crai of the inmates who occupied beds on the upper floor were hurled sixty feet in the air. Some of them escaped fatal injuries by alighting on the trees near by. Half dazed by fear and sleep, they managed to hold on to the limbs until they recovered their senses and were able to reach the ground. Tho track-walker, who arrived on the scene shortly after the explosion, says it resembled a battlefield. The cries of the injured were heartrending. Some of them were in the trees others were lying on the ground and unier the debris of the wrecked building. One of the boarders who escaped injury made his way to a neighboring shanty and awoke the inmates. Blankets and bedding were carried to the scene and the injured made as comfortable as possiblo. No clew has been discovered to the perpetrators and their motive is unknown. Michael Bellakovitch. the proprietor of the boarding house, was arrested and sent to jail. The authorities say they want liiin as a witness. He had money in his possesion and on Saturday last told a friend that he was going to the old country on Monday.
AMERICAN BEEF REJECTED.
1 The action of the German government In prohibiting the importation of cattle ind fresh beef was not entirely unexpected jy the Agricultural Department. The Government will cause a thorough invesigation to be made of the cases of alleged Texas fever on which the German government has seen fit to act in such summary fashion. No doubt is felt hero that these alleged cases will turn out to bo founded a mistaken diagnosis, for if there is any sattle disease that the German veterinarians know little or nothing about, that lisease is Texas fever, a purely climatic, ion-infectious.fever, peculiar to Atnerica.
If the departmental examination, as expected, results in disproving tho existence if cases complained of, tho United States wili enter a vigorous protest against the iction of Germany and seek to make it :lear that the reason assigned for the deitruction of this country's meat trade is iisingenuousiy stated, which fact is not i.x pec ted to influence Congress very favoribly toward the rectification of the sugar tchedules of our tariff act, sought so urtently by the German government, Satirday the following telegram was sent to .he Secretary of State: "Referring to your communication in •egard to the prohibition of American catile and fresh beef by Germany, please represent to the American ambassador that Texas fever is not communicated by distased cattle, so that if the reported dis•overv of this disease is true, there is no iarige'r to'German cattle. Also, that the ueat of cattle effected by this disease has lever been shown to bo dangerous to the •orisnmer. Thi3 Government inspects all neat exports, and certifies that the cattle vere tree from disease when slaughtered. igorous protest should, therefore, be entered against the proposed action. "CaAi&vs W. DAdirer. "Acting
Secretary
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MISCELLANEOUS NOTES.
Every square mile of the sea contains i20,000,0°0 fish of various binds.
The sturgeon fishing this season in Oregon waters is reported to be poor.
Coal oil was first i^sed in 1826. The product is now about 40,000,000 barrels a year.
Of all conquering r*ations, Spain has treated those subjected to her rule most harshly.
At Rotterdam the poorer classes, who can not afford a fee, must marry on Wednesday before noon.
The discharge of one of Herr Krupp's big guns at Essen can be heard farther than the loudest clap of thunder.
It is claimed that the dress worn by the Romans under the empire was the most rational ever worn by civilized people.
A Jersey bull in Harrison, Me., twisted his nose ring in a hazel bush so tightly that he couldn't get away for three days.
Farm rents are ridiculously low in England. The Duke of Northumberland owns a farm of 130 acres in Surrey. There is a modern farmhouse, barn and two cottages on the land, and the rent is $300 a year.
By an Italian law every circus which does not perform every act promised in the printed program, or which misleads the public by means of pictures, is liable to a fine of $500 for each offense.
In Korea every unmarried man is considered a boy though he should live to be a hundred. No matter what his age, he follows in position the youngest of the married men, despite the fact, perhaps, of having lived long enough to be their father.
For a town not yet six mouths old, West Beach, on the shores of Lalcq Worth, Fla.,'shows a remarkable development. It became a community of nearly eight hundred people within six months of the time its first business structure was built.
Mecca was visited last year by between 250,000 ond 300,000 pilgrims, a much larger number than usual, as the principal day of the pilgrimage happened to fall on Friday 90,000 tame by sea, of whom nearly 10,000 died of cholera, while of those who went by land, most of them frora from British India, 15,000 perished. The mortality was 10 per cent, of all the pilgrims.
Small families are hardly the rule among the English "upper ten." The average is seven or eight. The Queen is the mother of nine and the Princess of Wales of six children. Lord Abergavenny is the proud father of ten, the Duke of Argyll ol twelve, the beautiful Countess oi Dudley is the mother of seven, th« Earl of Ellesmere boasts of eleven, the Earl of Inchiquin of twelve, the Earl of Leicester fifteen, and the Duke of Westminster of eleven.
In every city where the trolley car has been introduced there is sometvhere an accumulation of old street cars for which there is ordinarily no market. The Boston Transcript tells of a Cambridge man who had an idea and bought thirty-six such cars from the Cambridge railroad. Then he put one in a friend's yard and incited the friend's children to play in it. They did, and were charmed with it, of course, as was every child ?f their acquaintance. Thereupon the thoughtful speculator promptly sold off the rest of his cars at a large advance to admiring parents.
In Olden Times,
People overlooked the importance of permanently beneficial effects and jvere satisfied with transient action, but now that it is generally known that Syrup of Figs will permanently ure habitual constipation, well-in-iormed people will not buy other axatives, which act for a time, but inally injure the system.
A Clever Cat.
A private call for fire engines went rom a house in Willow street, Brooklyn, and the neighborhood was startled by the sudden appearance firemen, The occupants of the iouse were awakened, but failed to liscover any trace of fire, and the iremen went away angry. The ilarm had been sent out through one the district telegraph call boxes, he signals from which will summon messenger, a policemen or a fire ngine. Nobody in the house would) idmit having sent such a call, butj jresterday there was a developmeuU which cleared up the mystery. Thenj !s a very clever cat in the house, andj yesterday forenoon tabby was caujrh playing with the lever of the alarm box. The little ebony knob attracted her attention, and she pullt** it down with her claws. Tabby ha been locked in the room with 1h alarm box on Monday night an^ Tuesday morning. Beware ot Ointments for Cntarrli tin I
Cuntaliia.Mercury
bi mercury wi 1 surely destroy the sen'c smell and completely derange the whole isysleij when filtering it through the raucous sHrfsu:«» Such art.cles should never be used except prescriptions from reputable physicians, us ti damage they will do is ten-fold to the good
can
of Agriculture."
possibly derive from them. Hall's Cutari| Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co Toleoo, O contains no mercury, and is tak« Internally and acts directly upon the blood udj mucous surfaces of the system. In buyitii Hall's Catarrh ure be sure you get the guuuimi It is taken in ernally.and made in Toledo, Ohi by F. J. Cheney Co.
MTSold by Druggist*, price 76c per bottle.
The Prince of Wales, wcare told, tnakot his breakfast on a slice of bread »nd sausage five mornings out of six, whici leaves 1t to be iiifefred that on the sixt# he Is hot at his worst.
A hone Is ritt good foi* taiiich untU he^ii broken. It does not follow, however Uiftt iijtto man's
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REPUBLICAN COUNTY TICKET
if STAMP HEBE.
JUDOK.
WILLIAM H. MARTIN.
PROSECUTOR.
ELMER J. BINFORD. REPRESENTATIVE, MORRIS HIGG1NS.
CLERK.
R. B. BINFORD.
AUDITOR.
WALTER G. BRIDGES. TREASURER. JOHN G. McCORD.
BHERIFF.
JAMES W. McNA\UCBL RECORDER. HOWARD T. ROBERTS.
CORONER.
DR. JOHN P. BLACK. SURVEYOR. WM. E. SCOTTON COMMISSIONER FIRST DISTRICT.
LEMUEL HACKLEMAW. COMMISSIONER SECOSD DISTRICT JAMES L. MITCHELL.
Republican
Township
ASSESSOR.
WARREN C. RAFFERTY. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. DANIEL MUTH.
DAVID BENTLEY CONSTABLE. GEORGE M. MILLER.
REASON FERRIS.
BUCiv CKiiJUK,. TRUSTEE.
JOHNW. GRIFFITH. ASSESSOR (LONG TERM.) DAVID J. GIRT. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE.
JOHNW. OGLE.
ALBERT B. C. DOUGHTY.
CONSTABLE.
FRANK HAZELY. JAMES BARNARD. ASSESSOR (SHORT TERM.) EDWARD CRUBAUGH.
CKKTUK, TRUsTEE.
JOHN K. HENBY.
ASSESSOR.
JAMES T. BODKINS. JUSTICE OF iHE PEACH. JOSEPH L. FRANKLIN. NEWTON R. SPENCER.
WILLIAM H. ALGER. CONSTABLE. SAMUEL S. BRADLEY. JEFFERSON C. PATTERSON.
CHARLES W. HUSTON.
TRUSTEE.
WILLIAM L. McKINSEY. ASSESSOR. GEORGE H. OWENS.
JUSTICE OF TUE PEACE.
MICAJAH C. GORDON. IRA ROBERTS. CON6TABLJS.
DAVID N. TRUE. JAMES M. COOPER.
JACKSON, TRUSTEE.
ALLEN HILL. ASSESSOR. DANIEL PEARSON. JUSTICE OF THE PEACB.
JOHN W. REEVES. SYLVAN US C. STALBY. CONSTABLE.
GEORGE BROWN. GEORGE JACKSON.
SVUAK CUUKK. TRUSTED,
SYLVESTER BURKE. ASSESSOR. WORTH B. HARVEY.
JUSTICE OF THE PEACB.
SAMUEL E. SMOCK. ADAM P- HOGLE.
VEHlf\J#. TRUSTKB.
CHARLES V. HARDIN. ASSESSOR. GEORGE O. KIMBERLIK.
JUSTICE OF THB PHAGE.
HAMILTON KINNBMAN. DAVID WYNNK. CHARLES F. FRED.
CONSTABLE.
WILL FAUHSKTT.
1
Perfectly t'onreniciit.
"Could you render a poor printer, out of work and destitute, a little assistanco?" queried a disreputable-look-ing specimen as he cauie, in a hesitating manner, into the sanctum. "Don't put yourself out," he added hastily as the editor rose with great suddenness "don't put yourself out." "1 won't," said the editor cheerfully, as he rolled up his sleeves "it i^n't myself that I'm going to put oufc "—Enoch., ^Nature's tenueucy ia mj i-eSlore baltace Srets "short" hi* *ace gets lon$.
mssmMim W00S&.
Ticket
BLUE RIVER. I TRUSTER.
JOHN F. COFFIN.
ASSESSOR. I
WILLIAM LAMB. JUSTICE OF THE PEACH. I ELI O. CATT. I
CHESTER TYNER.
CONSTABLE.
RILEY CATT.
MORTON ALLENDER.
BKAfibiWLVE, TRUSTEE. DAVID CONNER.
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