Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 33, Number 52, Jasper, Dubois County, 11 September 1891 — Page 2
1 ' J ' "ZTL iil-ii ataicas UHeas ajMiilwJ lifciiiiii WiiwBMi be JeW-nr Wu I feet Timm MmU and hf no "?' . apeae Knee.
sets neat M lUftaaet Mta-WK Urn-1 itn te Minpml amni Aiiiflsnr il ir jut In Tmiiinrn'T- -r I um the .Mwatle It WW lit At i ( Urn
A iMinmarr JaueaaHas abet-The I
hi tH XfeaUe It WW lit
tN Twtj Pays--AM
Kmw Yeux, Sort. A special
Valparaiso to the World, dated August SI, say: Malusaaeda is eeppoeed to have been endeavoring to from Sm Am teala m the Almirauta Ceadel. whleh ww aeea off that pod, thin morning. The KMserulda aad Aeoaague ave gee oa to intercept the Cornel. It k frHppoaed that Hslmseeda's lateatkm is to met tke Imperiale at Taltmhaao, mm sueoM to Montevideo. All the hospitals km are full of wounded, aad jHrivata kousea ure being used temporarily. It ki estimated that there r 4, flee wounded now ia the eity, Tke property of the BalmaeedisU will be eonfeeated to pay off the paper mm of the dtotutor. The busks hate boon temporarily closed for the inspection of their books, in order to ascertain the
amounts to the credit of Balnaoetia and his satellites. The city is quiet. The merciless slaughter of rioters and incendaries has effectually suppressed all disturbances. Although the congressional forces are weakened by the departure of the troops sent to Santiago to restore order there, and under Col. Canto to lake formal possesion of the capital, the citizens' guard and the American, British, French and German marines remain on duty, and there is little likelihood that the peace of Valparaiso will be again broken. No foreigners were hurt or killed in the riots. The congressionalists are determined to repress all treasonable utterances by word and in writing. They have made an example of Leon Lavia, the editor of the Balmacedan newspaper, the Journal ao Comercio. He was shot for issuing seditious pamphlets, and his fate will be that of any partisans of the lost cause who seek to inflame the popalar mind against the visitors. The explanation of the riots at Santiago is that when Balmaceda delivered the capital to Baquedano, who was charged with handing it over to the congressionalists, there were not sufcicient troops in it to maintain order. The populace, enraged by the severity of Balmaceda's rule, under which they had chafed, abused the liberty which came to them with the change of power, and the mob let loose all its pent-up fury. It would
have rose hard with Balmaeeda if ko
had fallen into the hands of tke rioters.
Ilk heti.3 was burnedand sacked, as
also were the houses of his partisans,
aad tike railroad station was wrecked."
t SERIOUS CHARGES.
Nkw Vwk. Sent. I. Tke amils
Ckiua oml Japa wkWi kit Ynhshasoa Augast l( oa Umi CaaaeHsji Faolie a road Co. 'a stoamer Kmpreos of Japan, aad which arrived at Vaaeoavor, K. C, Auuet St, wore earried aerots tko Amerieaa oontlnent by special train in the abort time of eitfhty-eigfat hoars, reaching the Grand Contra! depot at 4 a. as. to-day, and wove immediaUly Iraaaferred 19 wagon la waiting aad drivea rapidly to too Iama dock, where they were plaood on board tke ateaasekip City of New York, wkkm tailed at S a. m for Qwasastowa. Tke City of New York is ee to arrive in Qiicenetown next Wodaesday, the ftk Inst, so that, barring accidents, tke uiaila eaa be delivemi ia London that night or at the latest Thursday morning, making tke whole time under twenty-oao daya, a feat
never paralleled in the kktory of the -oat otBce. The malls were brought
(mm Morriatnwa. M. I., to mm
eity by a special tram, which started M soon as the Ca
nadian Pacific train had arrived at
llrokville. and the rittila kad beea fer
ried across tke St, Lawrence. The
train was in eharjff lf Aseietaut 8permtendent Bradley ot tko New York Central. Fast time had hooa made by the
Canadian Pacific train, and the Central
people started out to do bi tter if pos-
sih. The ninetr-five miles from
Utica to Albany were made iu
nineir minutes: Pouirhkeoftsie to
Cold Snrliiirs. twentv-ose miles, iu
tweatr minutes; Croton to Yonkers.
nineteen milee, in sixteen minutes. The
transfer bv wmtoh across New ork
city was made at breakneck apeed, and
the Inman line had to hold tn steamer
only ten minutes lator than her sehe
duled time. Tlje Canadian raetae ieo-
plc will be satisled with a record of
twentv-one davs Irom loKOuama vo
tf
London, but they hope tne aetuai me
will be twenty days.
BADLY SHOCKED.
The Fresideafs tUafoslekMi act Jo
talk polities om kis Jleaaiaireoa wiP wasaoTpreof against the tomftatlem offered by an aadkmeo of workiaga at Troy, X, Y. "1 a that you roalise kore in a large 00gTOttiMbeaoaUofanoliey "
the American msmtmc w m worxmoo." TkU eWeited apedaaee, ,am wbetaor it eamo from tke omuekohtsw ka the oroed or from the wockiagmon thoMMolTes is mot statod. If tko workaaea from the Troy shops SMlMded the presldont's remark they did so boeaaso they had beea. misled by interested parties. There kt no poHoy that koops th Amerloaa market for the Ameriona wockmea. There never has beea amok a nolier in this eowatry. and
the praoideat ahoukl have boon aware ot the fact A market in a place where men hay aad mIL Workmea. like othor people, dosire both to bay aad sell, and, unlike toiiH other people, their ealos aad pmrehaeea usually balaaee, or nearly so. They are as much interested in having a favorable market to bay in as to sell in. Under the policy advocated by If r. Harrison and kia nesoelatos neither m so favorable to the workmea as it would be under a system less restricted and artifieial. What the workmen kas to sell fa his labor. TkU he sells in a free-trade market, in competition with .11 4V wnr1il Thera k no tariff oa
l-iT-vt-iioa. of labor. There is
Tf Ohio ronnUkmna wtu
il- - 4Ur4 nr their
they will perform a torrioe to their opt. nvih-K-h and errors have
!iokmor weight with fdtttona oapabw r . -rmii-inilae' a stats meat
. Lt4 Hnnsk th anchor of
ireiUr bill crowds satteHMit er
ror to nullify any truth ho might have
tumbled on. aipsakmc din tariff Mr. MeKlnley soya:
Mr, see m
a aolthrnoh Msaolomi and
Mtmeve a steaM . miwU. it toiw-m tac I asm
trtM. it
im iiMtM MMMlVie.
mm for ferelfa aad -tmiaUaes t
it la far IM feieira
-i -niMt tae Amsttesa sae. 1 awM
merk fee eele Ur a4 takes H fron -.lw itwa-iaaMlieatasiacletfvMM
AmerkM fmraaee raW.W w eat.ardsh tk.t mv Wre. eaUis ear Ur weeM
Mrit m tee seme wees ae tae leeer ef semeetIh (WMtrlea. laeerHtaw( eeeeeiMdte
kMtlt everv eiker aetloa taae eer eers.
TUkm the UVWMBt BSd h X-
Kinler and his friends when the
maed w made that the boot aad shoe tiuiastrv in thm eoaatrr thonhl have
it-. l-mftt of free trade in hides. The
meeommiakment of that reenlt lighted
i the Sres that had ae oat under the
absurd rale of protection in every UaBrr in Xew Eaglaud. Oiviny tha la
borer raw material at lower cost, the
nritm nt hoots and shoea of the lower
rrades thus affeeted was deereaeed,
with the effect of iajreasinr the power
of eoasumption and the eouseqaent de-
i nas in
0kdotheea
K aroperiy varnhmod any good aieeativa.
Kea-alar deatiag
er cloth ahoeM
alHtht sweet asL fonHy
romovo the p ernes tiaa X. Y. World.
Helk Cake: Break
two
Jl the eon with
can of sugar, on and a half
mi flour, on toaauoonful of arena tar
tar-ad half a teaeaona of soda. rarm
ma
tahieenoona of
M mand for labor m aroduction.
te impomuo- - - j , inekUnt k ore.-tlrown the en
togisiattoa vo enecK , rl"m(.Ht tectioaisC But
laborers. To racv.aoor j aad ulH wlll nQW W
toemenuoaea s u -F- ;'r hTjwd look at the result of free
weu weowa va,v, i.w - -- . w Admittedlv the
violate or ovaoeu oy imm PF - . j
minion, ot protection. It . ZJTZtZZl
mtBW8 01 . " .7 IT I The price ha, been reduced and
irom , 'enezred ite manufacture, Again
WTroTab i kas free trade lighted lire, that had
,li " " Li . . . 1 . hjjUo. to j-toad ft"- oat MBar protootum. an. wu 'irrriril l MTcKiley tell the Pe that this
rrrr;,;,;; lrUr. coti- beeaa employes in sapw reHaerms
I," ZZZ'Z In .rV have b3en willing to "woriattb
Tk. PMteeXetila Hear ef MereaMtMe
AMtrotefirM CMrcerf with Deliberately
UefraweiHc the State uu Ineivleeal.
Phii.adkt.pmia, Sept. S. City Treas
urer W. E. WriBht lias forwaraoa n
lettar to Auditor General McCamaat,
askia: that he join with' him ia the dis
missal of Mercantile Appraisers r.award N. Pat ton, Allert Crawford, Sam
uel F. Houseman, Harry Hunter aad Jamos F. Hell, constituting tke present
board of mereantile appraisers for th
eiLvuaad oouatr of Philadelphia, aad
make tke following charges against
them:
1. That the appraisers have regularly and
tlterfltely. tor the parpui J : usiran 11119 tit :. as43l aetltlons perMM an
thou - frew wUiihumi payment of uiereaii iiIh taxM was or con Ul U? cxuetu.
1. That thv hnve rejtalarly exempted
irom the itavtiient of taxes those who rr
u!W.t to and norlaetlv able to pay It.
s. That ther have Krossly unJsrrated
mitay ttiiHtlreu of prominent merehante.snd
dMlttrs (er purposes best krowh ki .hi 4. That thav sent otat notlees ef assess
Meat elteine certain tus-wayers in a high
claM while thsy have returned them te title department hs aMMmi! In a lower claae.
tnes enabling third parties te celtect fro
tax-payer Uttflarxer sum while the smaller
amount tmly was -pitiu to me irrawry aim
tee eSate ttefrauded of the dlnVrenet).
&. rht tlielr ulan as to reduetlom and ex-
eeptleat hai heen a syatnmatlc scheme of twiBdllHg which haa resulted litvartauly Ih
eppre!H to th citizen, In lost to
state ana in demor-IUatlua to tee meaHy. SHOCKING TRAGEDY.
Lightning" VMti theCraad Arnay aad Seas
or Veter-a' KNMHpHWit at area isUhU, Neh., Striking Teat aa Severely AfceektMfC Several rerewas. Omama. Xeb.. Sent. DurVafr a se
vere rain-storm at Grand Island, where the state Grand Army aad Sons of Veterans' reunion is being held, a lightning bolt struck the camp. Two lieu-
tenants and four sergeants 01 cavalry,
Troop K, were seated in th first sergeant's tent- Lightning struck the tent.
scattering the splinters in all atrections.
Nine men were struck. When the alarm was given, the two lieutenants and four
sergeants were found lying flat in the
tent with tbctr heads buried m the de
bris. The guards were found lying; oa
the ground. The injured are as follows:
Sergeant Leubea, knocked senseless
and severely shocked.
First tiergeant Seymour, of Milford;
terribly shocked and injured i the limbs.
Second Lieutenant Vosberf, of Lin-
cola; injured In the arms and legs.
Lloyd Ensign, of Lincoln; shocked ta
arms aad body.
.Inmcs Carr, of Staplehurst; injured
in legs and body.
a constant tendency toward proniouA. T 4 La I s-Siiiu'lM of
Se UrTara ueveYtwith aay-! to argu, solely fro-the results f free
wares as ia eomnsUar eouaries?t
Nor i? it necessary for a f rve trader
trade wherever it has been tried. He mar now challenge his opponent to
iiame a lockal reason why the sa
result wast not necessarily follow
every such experiment. Xo protectionist ia the country will hazard the declaration that labor kt to be bene
fited br aa- increase in the cost of the
tools with which work k performed.
No writer with a care for his reputa-
thing lew than prohibitory rates, and numerous instances may be cited whore the MeKlnley bill increased rates that were already virtually prohibitory, no doubt for tho purpose of offering premium for the formation of trusts. The republican party is very fond of tariff-fed trusts because corabmations of that kind are obliged to contribute ! , iti. ..: 1 ! tn -A P
a 1-1 .v.. uir other effect than to dimiaum use
I or um eennt ot wwigi, - , , . , Cnr. I wares ot labor ana eaptmt xaereta mm-
That they do not do ao snows - - ; ' AtTv w t-t.-at tv ... I their leasened cost of traasportatioa
vb -J - - " I, for -ariar somethinr to labor.
DlOTtr Utt (K ih emptuje. , , . . . We do not wish to be understood as Bt these were merely obstructions to
advocating the exclusion of foreign la, tram remove. m,i Fropmawou . .1 j ! mmore absurd than that tho erecaoa
iu 4t,u. n.t it wwu- & ! others eaa beneSt labor. XeKialey
Jrd ri. veJhliaaa ToHer" if that ' will kmra something before thU
policy were really what they say it is , pakfa is over. Let him have aear. when taer address themselves to tke kow he trifies with Jerry Simpsoa ia
-mrnm TWr ju!vfM-t a nolier ! debate. cnieago iinws.
of restriction, of exclusion of the
products of foreign labor. They re-
j strict foreign competition in products, 1 but thev leave competition in labor un-
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
lialscy Bromwell. of Milford; injured j This shows the
tltt
4 Dtsettarxed Kmpleye Sheets Hts Late Hmpluyer and Commit! Salolrf. St. Louw. Sept. S. A terrible trayetly was eaacted on the street in thin city this morning. Warren Callbeck, a former employe of the Madison (111.) Car works, but who bad been discharged by reason of his intemperate habits and general unrellabllity.ract Mr. George T. Anderson, the superintendent of the concern.at the comer of Second street and Itremen atenue. and after standing for a moment giariug at Anderson drew a pistol shot and dangerously wounded Audurson in the lmok. Hefore thtsc who wltnessetl tke deed conld recover from the shock sufficiently to Miize and disarm the apparently crazed man,
Callbeck raiwMl the pistol and literally
blew lna own head to piccos. Anderson was not serlouslj wounded and alter viewing and rcoogiiiilngthe body of hts aKsnilant sought surgical attention. Calljtcck is anid to have been a crank on religion, whose mind had become anactUed by hupposed wrougs, which he had brought on himself. He had often been heard to threaten to get even with Andern, whom he seemed to blame for losing his employment, and it was doubtless in one of Inn frenzied U that he committed the deed. Hi remains wore takon to the morgue to await the a.;thn of the ootoaar. The TeHHeaSe l.erhilatare. Xw-avr.u:, Tenn., Hept 3. -Both hoMMM of the genrral aftv'mbly met at 1 o'elock yestertlay morning and adjonuied lfore ntxm to meet at 10 a. ta. to-day, landing the action of the commtttce cotiiidering the penitentiary bill. During the session nothing was done of genera interest. The penitentiary committee of tho house aad senate are beginning todwouosia earnest tke eon vlet, penitentiary mmI lease system. All are anxious for 1 some solution of the vexed eouviet question, bat no plan meeting general uftfreval kas vet been suggested.
in hhoiihler.
(jeorgc L. Oerr, of Milford; severely shocked. Frank Smith, of Milford; severely shocked. Wlica the alarm was sounded surywias hurried to the scene. Capt J. II. Culver of Troop KL transformed his headquarters into a temporary hospital
fur some of the injured, while the others ; were provhled for in an adjoining tent. Sergeant Leubln is the most severely iujurod, but the doctors believe that all will recover. The tent was wrecked, and it is believed that had it not been for the metal on the
pole many people in the surroanding tents would have been killed. On the
arms and logs of tke Injured there appear tfreat knots produced by the elec
tric land. The injured mea are suiter ing intense pain, but their comrade arc doing all in their power to relievr the sufferings.
A TERRIBLE ACCIDENT.
Ah lHvotnHtry ArranaHt'a Fall te Death
at tae Oawe-o (N. V.) Fair. Oswkho. N. Y., Sept. 3. The 1Q.09 persons in attendance at the Oswego fair yesterday witnessed a horrible acoldent. l'rof. John Frisbie, of this city, was advertised to make a balloon aseentlon and parachute jump, and much interest was felt In it owing to his residence here. When everything v.t in readiness and l'rof. Frisbie was about to take his seat on the trapese, the big balloon In some manner got
away from those holding the ropos. It shot upward like a rocket and the Hpectators were horrified to see a man who had inx'n holding the ropes, swept off the ground anil hang dandling between the patcchutc and the ground. When up about 1(K feet he attempted to drop, but his feet cattght in the ropes and turned him over, and he plunged headlong to the ground. He struck on his head and was Instantly killed. His name was John It. WootK and he came to see the fair from Union Square, thia county. He was $t years old. The balloon was recovered. Frisbie will again at!:mpt to make aa ascension to-day,
With Mr. Harrison as his Me Too.
Mr. Piatt k bohtg the Xew York re-
inftlneer- 1 publicans at a rreat rate. The Harn-
itv of the claim that their poller is die- 1 son administration m now catting a
tated by regard for the laborer. wider swath ia Xew York polities than There is no effort to keep tke Ameri- any other admiaUtrationhaadone since an market for American workmen to " the days of Folger.St- Louis Republic sell their labor in. Our workmen sell . The attempt of President ilarritheir labor in competition with cheap son to gain a renominaUoa through a labor from all parts of the world, ex- manipulation of the spoils kt a painful cept China. Go to the factories and confession that he realises his weakthe mines owned by the mea that are ness with the people. The presidency, allowed to write the monopoly sections won ia this way, kt a seer i See of honor of oar tariff laws and you will fad to base interest. St. Louis Pest Dfctthem filled with Hungarians, Italians pitch.
and other foreigners, lew ot wnom eaa President Harrwoa shows poor
speak our language, aad vast numbers , political judgment in taraiag his hack of whom have no intention of be com- J apM pMaeylvaaia to bid for tko supine American citizens. These men ort of Vermont. Harriabu rr will he
"Aunt Harah" ghros aa ens si Vent
weehm for cleaning Uvor. "Kuh the
silver with a piece of an old, soft nap
kin mofeened wnh a lMtlo oHveoll;
then rub it well witk enleined
afterward with n Hear, soft
X. Y. Tribune.
To restore ranokl batter to Ha orkr-
hualtaete. beat up a quarter of aponnd
ef mod fresh lime m a pan ot water.
Lot stand aa hour, pour off tae nme water carefully, aud in this wash the
batter thoreeghly. Wash afterward
with eoid apriagr water aad salt slkfhW
ly. Detroit Free Press.
It you want your windows to be
nice and bright, add a Irttle ammonia
to the water and wash thoroughly. Use no soap as H leaves the giaas of a milky color. You can not obtain satisfactory
resulte by wiping them off with a damp
doth but they must he wasnou wiut plenty of water. Dry them with clean
cotton dot Its, aad polish with a mots or soft paper.
One way of preventing delicate and
sweet-scented Sowers irom flagginc
to eat them with several leaves on the
a, and, when the nower head
placed ia water, to allow only this
head to leasain above the water, while
the leaves are entirely submerged; by
this means the leaves serm to help sup
port the sower, which will then last
for three days in a fairlv cool room.
A Good Lemon Jelly: soak one
package of gelatine in half a pint of
eoid water for two hours or more. Pour
on this one quart of boiling water, and add a pint of sugar. Set the bowl in a
paa of boiling water and stir until the
sugar aad gelatine are dissolved; then ndd half a pint of lemon juke, and
strain through a coarse napkin. Turn
into molds sad set away to harden.
Ladies' Home Journal.
Warmed-over Potatoes: An excel
lent war to warm over potatoes kt
put a lump of butter into a saucepan. As it melts add a tabloepooafal of Soar, stirring it so that H will not hum. Then pour in a cap of rich sweet milk (pure cream kt preferable), and season with pepper and salt. Keep stirring with a spoon so that tke ingredienta will be weU mixed, then put into this cold sliced potatoe. Let them boil up for a Jew minutes, then seed to the table hot Detroit Free Frees. Royal Padding: Cover a box of
gelatine witk water and let it dfamolve, ;
then pour over it a pint and a half of betting water, add a pound of assger, aad the juice of four oranges and three lemons, stir until the sugar kt dissolved. Strain, and set kt a cool place. Dip a large mold in ice water, cover the bottom aad sides with canned cherries; cover with the liquid gelatine, let it harden, fill up the spaee with more
gelatine, and set it to eooL Serve with vanilla cold sauce. Housekeeper. Among new home luxuries are tke shoulder pillows, which give comfort, combined with a bit of decoration, to a high, hanl-backed chair. The pillows are made efcht to ten inches wide aad twelve to fifteen in length, according to the skte of the chair on which they are to be ased. The material may be printed silk, china silk, plush or velvet,
embroidered or plain, bilkoiine m one of the prettiest of inexpensive materials. These pillows are used ia pairs by setting small, gilt riags ia the edges aad lacing them together with ribbons. -X. Y. World.
woman "run-aoae-
nro aad d. woeaaa that TV
ntnde
A
weak,
mntntad that 1 a
for. It given her health aad
All wosnnn s vraakneeset
it atianeato are cured
by it. It's a kfhimaU nMwictne-. sot a beverage ; an inyigoratinfr, re-
ncfsuri wan ana n snouting and trungthing; nenrise, fro from al. eoboi uad mjnrionn drag. It im.
parts tost mm ngor to the whok
system.
roe sa fajMUOoml irreeruUritiea.
nsrisdteal pnine, omnie displace.
moots ana ntenne dnenees, it's poaitiv remedy. And S fMnTwwlWn,onm. If it doesn't give tatisf notion, ia rery enee, tan ntoaey Mid for it i refunded. No other mediciae for women is sold oa tbeoe terms. That's huM notking else it juet at good.w Par haps the dealer will offer nomethiog that'i "better.' Ha mean, that it's be
rim You Tried it?
IF 3COT. Try H How! Go to your Dnirrist, hand
him one dolUr, icfl htm you
vma DottKof . . . .
PRICKLY. ASH
BITTERS
The Best Medicine known
for the CURE of MItllMtSlfevSUltf. urrvVwU'we ere mw u w p Al Mmmii if ttMtwt
ne npn-e nrnve-uv W v av s n-ere PURIFIES THE BLOOD, CLEANSES THE SYSTEM,
port
were employed beenuse their services beard from in the next presidential
eoald be bad at lower rates than those convention, while Bennington is no
of American laborers, and their pre- loarer en the man, politically speak
. ,t,na.. Im,. 1 a1 a Ik flu li I : m.!
i lag. viicagu Jam. -u i WU.'V V
GEMS OF AHT.
is tke claim
kept for
ence shows how baselem
that the American market is kept lor What's the matter with Secretarv
American workmen. J Foster coming before the national Now let us look at the other side of eonventioa of the republicans as the American market namely, the mar- Xapoieoa of inanee aad getUag ketia which the American workmea grat or second place? Tke great Wiabay their supplies. Is this regulated (Iofn himself eoukl not have done more for their benefit? Quite the contrary. thaa get aa extension of the bonds They must expend their wages, earned J wVKih the billion congress had not left in a free trade market for labor, in tke enough in tke treasury to pay. purchase of merchandise rendered arti- i Louisville Courier -Journal, fkially scarce ami high lr a tariff levied Tbt. reTH,blkaa newspapers are
lor tne beneot ch tncir employers ami . w good ot of
others engage, in protected imlustries. factttltQaar aad Dudley resigned thaa Oa all dutiable article they find , tJ other fact that the national average protection of about 0 per cent - them not to do so aad
nen mey expena i ot wieir w w nre wu of u,!th. so far
' as preambles aad resolutions were eoai eerned, when they Ineiiited on doing so. t The riddance, not the indorsement, kt
' what the republican papers llrooklya Eagle.
for dutiable articles they get only what $100 would buy abroad; the difference of 60 goes either into tk treasury or into the pockets of some monopolist. That is the sort of market that is pro
vided for the American workmen In which to expend the wages which they earn in competition with the labor of the world. " The claim that protection is for tke ( benefit of American labor has nothing to rest on except the difference of wages here and abroad. That difference existed Wore tke revolution, t
when the American colonies
Campbell of Ohio !
SMtrrh of Meat ueit Health. Cor.UMKUff. ()., Sept. 8. Gov. Campbell left last evening for Xew York. From there lie will go to some point on tke Atlantic coast to rest for a week. Mrs. Campbell accompanied him. Ik. Loring, kis physician, saki that tlte governor has malarial fever, with strong tendencies toward typhoid. isHeh illnew generally rans from ten to twenty-one daya before It submits to treatment. The governor has new lecn 111 twenty days, lb? fore leaving last night he said he wonld he back la Okb again one week from to-eav.
For m reason not yet explained Maj. McKinley failed la kk great opeaing- speech to refer to the fact that under his robber tariff on wool and wtMHca girl are making pantaloons ia Chicago for six cents a doeen aad sewing on cloaks at the rate of forty cents for ftften hours.
If ximttmiitum malt e waiM ht-kw Wrhat
w.M m V tc ic m - , . . - t . t
ui t.,!.!-,! i.- Uc m-rvl rt!-n Chkmgo sweatr?-Chiar Herald.
mnd the law of supply aad demand. It J President ilarron ha had an U tb on-nttion of tkk law and the su- I opportunity to increase hk knowledge
perior productiveness of American la- ? "tt of the market." WhrH bor that kave made it higher her, and tK qMt of extending the four and act protection. The advocates of the 4 o kalf per cent, bond was under disW,tJr. - wklUT--tlB-rlr cussion by the cabinet he expressed
tLtu. i.M.b. w-v-.-- ,liH.,ii 1 the opinion that the exchange eoa id be
tW r-B u tM.ttr.. tl, -.IraMtavMi I effected for bonds bfarlng one or one
Wseniova. wartl brr merseurinr the saa-1 & one-hulf per eent interest. The
wr of labor and hnrUvbr eivma him ! H adopted by the treasury
. u .vt..i. a .-- lu : department inereasetl this rate to two
serainrs. Louisville Courier-JouraeL per eent, and yet, although the obH-
Unless Secretary ISlatne
top to hkt Feansylraala hoow, he
act go beak to Washington as Harrison's seeretary of state. Ia his "renrenMiit" Mr. Quay ha become mere trenblescma to km parr thaa when at Ms hesd. Al Wary Argus.
gation to redeem matures on
ber 1, out of M fir -one million dollars of
these bonds only eighteen million dol
lars have beea offered to the secretary
for extension. So easy is it to late the forces that seatrol
J nak at ujm WDSrBrra ssnrv annBmvsnSBa ljra Magkv
ia a ail mnTammSni afa-maa SBSavHtt8 TS s an f asa BTaTunBTWS n n nrnrn-u rw nanr- ai m s a. a sanna aennra
'ine gaadiness, ligktness aad ffaal-
aesa which characterises all the femi
nine modes this season kt especially
marked ia parasols. Suck charming effects as are seen in lace, chiffon and
tulle in the most fetching colors, all puffed, rafted and shirred.
The handles, remarkably shorter
than those earried a season ago, are of natural wood or exquisitely earved.
many of them being perfect gems of art.
A very pretty novelty seen at one of
oar fashion able stores the other day.
aad pronounced one of tke most stylish
ef this season productions, waa purchased by a society belie for forty-I ve
dollars.
It waa one of those favorite models.
a twenty -two inch frame, covered witk
maiaeehiffon, having a rumeof pate
lavender around the edge, set off by n head of mock jewels which were n per
fect match to the mm. A handsome
bow of lavender silk velvet ribbon waa
gracefully fastened ou one side.
farther added to the charming effeetTke handle was of wood. heautifMlly
carved.
Another exquisite shade waa of
changeable -ilk. shading red and green, particularly attractive on account of
the handle, which was of pearl heauufally Jnkdd with gold, wrought kt a very She and artistic design and Yarned at forty doliars.
One of China silk, espeehwly dainty
aad much admired, was of a dellsate
heliotrope in color, handsomely embroidered in the fteur de lis pattern, and trimmed with a rale of saiffon, with similar embroidery. The hendla was of white hery, also decorated what
the near de lis. The price of taw thirty-are dellara.
A new shape ia trad need thm
bad every aHernate rib
effect was each that one ndght
tt had been eat in a gale. BreHu amm e ;S a unaa an u a 1 jbi aid ms w sj JPtW MtfJP nfmrWWW0m amw now imported, American mnanlaetaia
'lUSaflnJJ fBJPMa'n'eJsSren' ffJamBli it
. m jkLtu una? ansrV reiVTS
OOT-D MSDAIt. PARIS. 187S.
W.BAJtR eV CO.'S Breakfast Cocoi
frees wkMi the it oi tt kukHi raewTea, J eMfefy fmre mn4
U 0 0tuUe. Xo ChemncuU rt Media Ha prefamtea. H kM mera tn Mr Hrnet d' ttrtnfth ef Ceeea ulzee wlih
tterca, Artowroet r tmfw, amt le tawfere far aor -
BHat, fUng Um tn m wwfecwe. IttodeHrieee.aWfWfthx. atttacUM-tM, aatitT
meearsB, aea eealraMy atar t" ,of l"'u4 aa well aa lor yeteaaa te saaah. Sali aV fcasws tmj waats. W. BAXXR k 00.. DerehoeUr, Ka
1
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Water
Proof
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fi. J. TOWS, nf r.f Ssatea, rAass.
xroeaAsrez or c-nun xmvszs. j
ASTHMA
WX WILL SXXS TOU TBSTIStOlfT.
nOM. PIOPWS wa.u ; imin-iTOii. f
CUBED m CURED.;
P. HA MID HATH, M. -WTTAXO.K. T. ' HAY-FEVER aTWiniNVtmrjrs.'
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the fViUJn
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