Marshall County Independent, Volume 4, Number 32, Plymouth, Marshall County, 22 July 1898 — Page 6

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THE WEEKLY INDEPENDENT. Q W. METSKER, Pub. and Prop. FLTMOÜTH, - INDIANA, Minor Happenings cf the Past Week. EVENTS OF LAST SEVEN DAYS. Political. Religions, Social and Criminal Doing of the Whole World Carefully Condensed for Onr Readers The Accident Record. St. Petersburg Advices received here report that on July 1 an insurrection occurred in Kansu. the most northwest province of China, arising from dissatisfaction with the new taxes. Terre Haute. Ind. The men at the shops of the Vandal ia system have been put on eight hours, instead of nine, and with a half holiday on Saturday. Chicago In an endeavor to rescue his brother Arthur from the lake. Walter Sems sU encircled by the arme of the frantic youth and both met death together. Evansville. Ind. John G. Ritt committed suicide by shooting himself through the heart. Minneapolis. Minn. George Alfred Pillsbury, of the firm of Pillsbury & Co.. president of the Northwestern bank, and one of the best known men In the northwest, died here, aged 82 years. Mount Sterling, Ky. Gen. John S. Williams, ex-United States senator and a hero of the Mexican and civil wars, died at his home near this city. Washington. Ind. James Cole, colored, shot and killed his divorced wife and shortly afterward killed himself. Muncie, Ind. The annual interstate meeting of the German singing societies h"re attracted about 2,000 visitors, mostly from Illinois. Indiana and Ohio. Newcastle. Ind. At the conclusion of a ball game here Charles Presnall and George Bramble became involved in a quarrel over the ownership of a bat. Presnall finally struck Bramble on tht head with the bat. killing him. Terre Haute, Ind. F. A. Debridg. student and physical director at Iake Forest University, haß accepted the position of physical director of the Terre Haute Y. M. C. A. Clyman. Wis. Frank Kiefer was sunstruck and may not recover. Falrbury, 111. A fine rain relieved thi section of drought. The chinch bugs are working ruin in the oats and corn fields, and the oats yield will not be as heavy M usual. Jeffersonville. lnd.--Moxie Clune. held for burglary, made an ineffectual attempt to escape jail by entting tb; ,h the walls. Clune is an old offender, known throughout the country. Williamsport. Ind. A gravel train and the west-bound local freight wer In collision. Th cars were piled up. blockading the track for many hours. The trouble resulted from a misunderstanding of a time order. Wabash. Ind. Joseph Kai-r. for thirty years a resident of Wabash. wa found dead in the Wabash river at tbe Big Four railroad bridge. The body was lying face downward in two feet of water. It is thought he became dizzy and fell forward. Anderson, Ind. The Wagoner Flint Class Company, operating plants at Ingalls and Krankton, and the McCollough Company, operating plants at and near Marion, announce that they will reopen their plante at once and emplo. nonunion 1 bor. Many other union concerns will follow. St. uis. Mo. Edward Raw ley and wife were struck by a Wabash train at Brooklyn. 111., and killed. Jeffersonville. Ind. Delaney Perry, once wealthy, has applied to the trustees to be admitted to the county poor asylum. Jeffersonville, Ind. Bishop Bowman presided over a meeting at New Albany in honor of the eighty-first anniversary of the dedication of Wesley chapel, the oldest church In Indiana. Guthrie, O. T. Two laborers on the St. Louis & Oklahoma railway. Aaron Gunter of Packerton, Ind., and J. A. Shanhaltzer of Centralia, 111., were murdered and robbed of all their wages. Washington. -Major William G. oore. for the past twelve years superintendent of police, died here, aged 69 j-ears. Washington. The navy department has asked for bids for two floating docks, the two to cost not exceeding $?.'.(. 000, as .-ecently provided by cong es.--. lxndon. At the Newmarket meeting the D'illingham plate, 5K) sovereigns, was won by James R. Keene's 4-year-,Ui bay colt St. Cloud II. Dallas, Texas. New wheat Is rolling into Dallas by wagon from the farms within a radius of fifty miles. It is estimated that between this date and Aug. 1 the receipts will exceed 2.000.000 bushels. Bloomiugton. Iii. Dr Ls Allen, a pioneer resident, is dead, aged seventy. was one of the first to practice dentistry iu Illinois. Chicago. - Scott Moore. 28 years old, while crossing the Rock Island tracks, was struck by a northbound suburban train and fatally injured. Peoria. Ml The product of the Pe oria Mad tag twine factory has doubled in value sin e the opening of the war From 1'4 ents the price has advanced fi 2l& cents per poind, and there is ihe possibility of a famine before the hai SSSl over. This :s due to the Itatf of affaiis at Muoiia.

NEWS 10LD !H PARAGRAPHS

CASUALTIES.

Centralia, 111. The only son of Aid. L. E. Thomas was drowned while bathing in Crooked creek. He was a cousin of W. J. Bryan. Pana. 111. Robert Kruhen. 10 years old. was run over by an Illinois Central train and killed. Cleveland. O. The bodies of the ten remaining victims of the water works tunnel disaster were found by a rescuing party. Quincy. 111. James Scott, owner of a string of running horses, was fatally injured by a kick from Trilby Slippers, a rurming mare, at Baldwin park. Nashville, 111. Charles Lowry. the 9-year-old son of William Lowry. of Ashley, while standing on the Illinois Central tracks watching a passing freight train, was run down by a switch engine and crushed to death Valparaiso, Ind. Will Lipscomb, a brakeman on the Elgin. Joliet and Eastern Illinois road, fell off the train at Porter, this county, and was killed. Eldora, Iowa A. J. Springer of Whitten died as the result of a joke. He was pushed off a porch In fun by a relative, and immediately became paralyzed. Rhinelander, Wis. Anna Burns, aged 15. slipped into the water from a raft upon which she had stepped to gather water lilies in Bass lake and was drowned. Franklin, Ind. W. T. Hougham, Jr., was killed by a runaway team. Dayton, Ohio David Appenzeller fell from the railroad bridge into the Miami river, a distance of thirty feet, and was killed. Portland. Ind. Fire damaged F. Bimel's spoke and hub factory and the electric-lighting plant belonging to the city. The city is in darkness. Mount Carmel. Ill At Bellmont an Air Line wrecking train struck and killed Mr. Emmerling, an aged resident of that village. Benton, 111. A 9-year-old son of Canada Rea was drowned in a pond on his father's farm near Christopher. His body was recovered. Portland. Ind. The Bimel hub and spoke factory was partially destroyed by fire. Loss. $12,000; no insurance. The city electric light powerhouse was also burned. Loss, $2,000; fully insured. Rockford, 111. Mrs. Anna E. Gray was burned to death by the explosion of a gasoline stove. FOREIGN. London. Irvine Stephen Bullock died at Liverpool. He was a lieutenant on the Alabama during tbe war of secession. London. The British government has formally consented to arbitrate the boundary dispute between Chile and Argentina, if the matter is not mutually settled by Aug. 15 next. London. The house of commons passed the report etage of the Irish local government bill. Paris The French chambers have adjourned. Lima. Peru. The Peruvian congress, in secret session, approved the protocol between Chile and Peru by a voie of 115 against 27. Paris. Major Comte Ferdinand Walsin Esterhazy.the alleged author of the bordereau in the Dreyfus case, has been arrested. Shanghai. The North China Daily News says rioters have attacked the Catholic and Protestant missions at Chung King Fu and killed several natives there and elsewhere. Vok( hama. Another plot at Seoul, the capital of Corea, against the government has been disclosed. Several prominent officials have been arrested on a charge of complicity. London. The National Artillery association has decided to send a volunteer team to take part in the Canadian competition. The team will sail on July 20 and will remain abroad seven weeks. CRIME. Nashville, 111. Mrs. Wiiemena Denning of New Orleans, La., committed suicide by jumping int oa cistern containing twelve feet of water. LeMars, Iowa Because he swore at her while he was intoxicated, Mrs. L. R. Wasmer horsewhipped L. M. Caldwell, a leading business man. Carlyle. 111.- Ernest Kuhlman. a farmer of Hoffman, was arrested on a charge of arson. His house and barn were recently destroyed by Are. ! .aPorte, Ind.- At North Judson burglars entered the office of H. E. White and secured $4.000 in notes. Bstyton, Ohio H. B. Sortman. aged 58. a contractor of No. 208 Detroit .street, tootl his life by hanyng himself in a neighbor's stable. A ilia, Ind.- A tramp tore down an Amerh-an flag at a farmhouse east of A ilia and beat the fajrmer's wife, who remonstrated. He was attacked by en rased elttsena and nearly killed. Madison. Wis. Dennis Casey, a printer, committed suicide by jumping into Lake Monona. Milwaukee Wis. Hugo Hertting. committed suicide in a saioon by swallowing carbolic acio. Mason City Iowa Mrs. Edwards Hllghei has ber bound over to the j-iand jury or. the cnarge of murdering her husband. 'olumbus. Ohio Charles C. Scott, colored, a convict who has been cook ing for the warden's family at the penitentiary, has escaped. Columbia City, led. At Plerceton white taps administered fifty lashes with a biacksnake whip to William K'ller. for beating his wife. St. Paul Mrs. 1 N. Barber, principal of tbe St. Pan! school of fine arts, committed suicide, at Mendota, where she was in charge of the summer art school. Moulton, Iowa Ezra Abernathy blew out his brains Id a fit of mental depression.

MISCELLANEOUS. j Waukegan. IL The soldiers' reun- : in committee has decided to hold the annual reunion of Lake county soldieis and eailors at Gray's Lake, on Aug. 31 and Sept. L Eldora, Iowa A. J. Springer, a pio- ' r.per, is dead. Sullivan, Ind. William H. Blue of i Merom was found dead in bed. Seattle. Wash. The Minnesota editori-.: excursion arrived here from

ictc 4a. St. Louis. Mo. It is reported that Fred W. Baum hoff will be the next postmaster of St. Louis. Monroe, Mich. The remains of Capt. Jo'in M. Gutmann. company M, 31st Michigan volunteers, have arrived here. Kankakee. 111. The people's university property a communistic colony founded by Walter Thomas Mills three years ago in Pembroke township, was sold at master's sale for $245. New York Ex-President Benjamin Harrison, who has been here with his wife and baby at the Fifth Avenue hotel, has gone to Old Forge. Gen. Harrison's cottage in the Adirondacks. Racine. Wis.- Henry Fischer, aged 82. is dead. He came to R;ieine in 1855. Marion. Ind. George Sweetser, vicepresident of the Marlon bank, was appointed receiver of the Indiana Traction Company by Judge Brownlee of the Superior court. Pittsburg Captain Hubert B. Montreville. one of the best-known newspaper men in this city, is de?d. He had been ill five weeks with tubere-olosis. Lostant. 111. Thomas Phillip, a pioneer, is dead. Mr. Phillips nearly half a century ago manufactured the first bricks made in his section of country, the plant being located in the historic town of Magnolia. Putnam county. Saratoga. N. Y. The seventeenth annual national summer meeting of Fniversalists. which was called for Oak Orc hard, N. Y.. July 30 to Aug. 8. has been changed to Saratoga on the same dates. Victoria. B. C Thirty Klondike:--arrived here by the steamer Cottagl city with between $700.000 and $1.00'' -000 in gold and dust. Seymour. Ind.- Republicans of the fourth Indiana congressional district will hold their convention here Aug. 18. Dünville, HI.- Notice has been 8 rved on the contractors of the national sol diers' home by the employes that unless an Increase in wages and a reduction from nine to eight hours a day are granted a strike will be declared. Manitowoc. Wis The Sorg Wagon company has made an assignment. Freeport. 111. Judge John Coaies. who had practiced law here fsfiy-one years, is dead. Flora. Ind. John McManus. a prominent fanner, formerly editor of the Delphi Times, has become violently insane. Benton Harbor. Mich.- A beet-sugar factory, to cost about $300.000, is to be tablished in this city in a short time. Providence, R. I. John H. Mason & Sons, one of the oldest cotton mann tacttiring firms in this eity. are financially en harassed. The liabilities are placed above $500.000. Montreal, Que. Bishop Louis Francois La Floche of Three Rivers is dead. St. Paul. The first district republicans at Rochester renominated Congressman .lames A. Tawr.ey by gcclamat ion. Columbus. Ind. A telegram received here announces that Charles O'Neal of Nashville, Brown county, twenty miles west of here, was killed in the battle of Santiago. Denver. Colo.- The wife of ex-Gor. Albert W. Mclntyre obtained a divorce In Conejos county June 2 last. The grounds of the divorce are not stated. Princeton. Ind. Dr. Shelton H. Shoplaugh Es dead, Waukegan, 111.- The new city dock has been formally dedicated with a grand celebration. Dayton. Ohio The Lehigh Carriage company has assigned to Charles J. IfcKee. Estimated liabilities $115.000. assets $140. ooo. Rock Island. 111.- Augustana college has received a gift of $12.80' from C. J. Ericsson of Boone. Iowa. The money is to be applied toward purchasing a college campus and park. LATEST MARKET REPORT. CHICAGO. Cattle, all grades $2.20 5.40 Hogs, common to prime. 2.25 $4.074 Sheep and lambs 2.00 Ca G OO Corn. No. 2 2fJ .33 Wheat. No. 2 red 74 (a T'.' Oats. No. 3 white 25 .26U Eggs .12 Butter 11 .1(1 Rye, No. 2 .48 ST. LOUIS. Wheat. No. 2 .71 Oats, No. 2 fash .23 Com. No. 2 cash .51 Cattle, all grades 2.00 05.25 Hogs 3.75 93J6 Sheep and lambs 4.00 fa 0.00 TOLEDO. Wheat. No. 2 cash .77V Corn. No. 2 mixed .:2Oats. No. 2 mixed Aft Rye. No. 2 eash .45 Cloverseed. prime cash. . 3.00 PEORIA. Rye. No. 2 .. Oats. No. 2 white .24 Corn, No. 2 "1 KANSAS CITY. Cattle all gradea 1.75 05.25 Hogs, all grades 3.00 (a 4.05 Sheep and lambs " 00 frCOO NEW YORK. Wheat. No. 2 red 9 Corn, No. 2 3K'4r,; M Oats, No. 2 .27 MILWAUKEE. Wheat. No. 1 northern.. .0?i Oats. No 2 white ttH Barley, No. 2 .29 f 39

REPUBLICAN CLUBS. Annual Meeting of ttie League In Held wt Uniuha. The National League of Republican clubs held its annual session at Omaha. President L. J. Crawford, in his annual address, favored the war and extolled the policy of territorial expansion. Robert W. Shingle of Honolulu was elected as delegate from Hawaii. At the second day's session of the League of Rep dican clubs a motion to hold the next convention at St. Paul was tabled, and the matter left to the executive committee. A resoluion providing for the change of plan of meeting from annual to biennial sessions was adopted. A resolution providing for the admission of women as members and delegates was also adopted. Col. George Stone, of San Francisco president of the California State League, was elected president of the National Republican league. D. H. ratine of Newport. Ky.. was elected sec-

retary by acclamation, and M. D. Young of Pennsylvania treasurer. NEW VICTORY FOR DEWEY. Four Hundred Spaniard and Much A in ii.ii i.i : i.. ii Captured. On July 7 the Raleigh and the Concord of Admiral Dewey's squadron at Manila proceeded to Sublg, and after a few shots from the Raleigh the strongly fortified Isla Grande at the entrance to the bay was unconditionally surrendered by the Spanish colonel with 400 men and 40,000 rounds of ammunition. HAS SAILER FOR SPAIN. Couiiuodore Watson Sets Out With a Formidable Squadron. The "raiding squadron" under Commodore Watson has started for Spain. The fleet includes the Oregon and the

IßBKTOI J-5-HOOGAN. jCTW? S ACutLOri COW R.R.HIT7. J 1 1 I ik r I THE HAWAIIAN ANNEXATION COMMISSIONERS.

Massachusetts, the protected cruiser Newark, the auxiliaries Yankee. Dixie and Vosesaite, sis colliers and a supply ship. AtvlBtTiON REALIZtD. A Trip on the Lake Which Was Fleas;tttt Bcyssd Descrlpt ton autl Cheaper Than Staying t Home. w'Mie in CbieSgjo recently vre found thnl a. l"tur dsjTB OUttng? coulti be lakfn n ihe elegant passenger Bteatner Sheboygan, belonjcins to t;e flood rich Transportation Company cheaper than we could remain in the .ity. on Wednesday at p. m. pre left t lie docks of the company at the foot of Sflchlsan avenue and was amly v II out iu thj lake before We began to r'-ali.- ihe treat in store for us. v- were MSlfroed a comfortable state room and provided in every way with all of the COinfortfl and netssaries Incident to a Brat-claaa hotel. During the .our. which took in ail of the principal points along th vvsi Bhore f Lake Michigan, we touched at Milwaukee, Sheboygan, Manitowoc, Sturgeon Hay, Green Hay City, Marinette, Menominee. Tin meals furnished were !" the very beat, any hiph rade hotel not exceeding them in quality. After four s pleasant days us we seer spent In our Uvea we arrived at Chicago on Sunday afternoon, and what ; you suppose the total and entire expense of thi.'- charming lake tour smounted to? Only die $ti charged i-y ihe Goodrich Company for ur ticket. This Included every possible want f any reasonable person, and surely no one having a life-long ambition to make a lake journey. ;is Wt had. can plad the expense as a reason for not making it. This same company has ether xt earners engaged In the touring business, and one can tret as short or as Ioiik a irip a lest suits their purse. Any nie desiring a half day long er jourtu y and to po further north can secure a lieket on the Chicago, srhich leaves on Thursday evening, visit all of the places named, and Bscanaos In addithri. and returning anive In Chicago on Monday afternoon, the expense being but SIS. If ne has the time and Inclination he can make the trip last for ix days, vi;dt a'A Of the points named ar.d in addition ko to Menlatloue, the northernmost point en Lake Michigan. This fip can be made on the new and elegant Bteamef Georgia. She leaves on Saturday evening at 8 o'clock and returning arrives on Frt113. All of these nips include meal, state room sad ;" possible necessities -in short, you need not take your pocketbook along. Lifii.i.K. Not Afraid of the USSOS. Assurances have been received that Ihe medical corps is fully able tc cope with yellow fever should it become prevalent in Cuba. Spain Make foolish Charges. Spain an uses us of using incendiary projectiles, thus explaining th ourning of the Spanish ships al Cavite and Santiago de Cuba. Yellow Fever In Our an p It i annoum ed that there are fourteen case of yellow fever in the Atntriau camt at Santiago.

THE TRADE REVIEW. rsqal Midsummer Dullness Prevail tn R. G. T in & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: "Industries and business are at the naturally lowest rcint of the year. The decrease in output of pig iron is mostly due to usual stoppages for re-

' rn ' Tt. o little afnwr Till- 1 T tc r- i 1 1 pta.ii- et in ur uriui r . i i . i 1 i r rm i between seasons for wool, but the demand for woolen goods is better, though prices for some have been reduced. Cotton has been steady in spite of good crop prospects. Failures for the week ended July 7 were $1.854.394 in amount. Failures for the week have been 215 in the I rited States, agaiust 263 last year, and in Canada twentythree, against twenty-seven last year." SANTIAGO SURRENDERS. Gen. Shatter Now Has PoHsessioa of the City. Gen. Shafter and his staff entered the city of Santiago July 17 and took possession. Transportation facilities to Spain will be required for between 22.000 and 25.000 men. thei being that number of troops in the capitulated district. I.a CroBM. Wis., corchnl. Fire destroyed the sash and door factory of Segelke. Kohlhaus & Co. at La Crosse. Wis. The large barn of the John Paul Lumber company was also burned. The entire less is $150,000. Fire at Sterens Point, Wis. The Wisconsin River Pulp and Paper company's mill at Stevens Point was destroyed by fire. The loss will be between $150.000 and $200,000. End of B. Y. F. V. Saoslon. The eighth annual convention of the Baptist Young People's union of America closed at Buffalo July 17. Three Uvea Lost at Uaeine. The total number of lives lost in the j Rat ine Malleable and Wrought Iron ! company fire at Racine. Wis., was three. The dead were: Hollister, j A del Pert: Keefe. Jf-hn: Kratzske. Gus- j tave. The money loss foots up $100,000, with total insurance 5,000. Not Afraid of Yellow Fever. New cases of yellow fever continue to appear among our troops in Cuba, and folly 600 are now under treatment, but the disease is of a 'mild form and the physicians say It is now well In hand. Porto Rico Expedition. It is announced that the Porto Rican expedition will be embarked and at sea in three days unless in the meanI ime Spain sues for peace. No Meet l tic I'laee Chosen. No place was chosen for the next j triennial meeting of the Congregation- j al council, but Portland, Ore., will probably be selected. Will Ue Tweiity-üven Regiments. In the Porto Rico expedition there will be twenty-seven regiments. Including practically all of the regulars now with C.en. Shafter. Gold from the Klondike. The steamer St Paul has arrived ! from St. Micha l v. ttringing between , $f..(HK,000 and 7,000,00Q from the K londike. KnM And art ritigee Taben. About 7.000 'ifles and 000,660 cartridges wee tal-en at Santiago. I Keeking ! ; A n.rniber of the Spanish cub ne1 asserts that the government is seeking an honorable peace with 'be United States. Gen. Rlanro Attempt .. h Utr. It i said (Jov ren Blanco attempted to commit suicide when he learned beyond doubt that Admiral Cerveva't Squadron hau been annihilated. feirkrkei. wi h Yellow Fever. There Is a report that Maj. Webb ot the Thirty-third Michigan volunteers, j Btephen Crane, the writer, and Burr Mcintosh have yellow fever. Hu Nulled for I lie 1 hillpplnaa. Tht fourth expedition to the Philip- ! pines sailed July 15. Two thousand t n p n,et 6 set t.

FROM TORONTO TO GUEBECfc Something About an Attract Plsmsar Trip and How to Make It The famous Canadian corporation, the Richelieu and Ontario Navigation Company, has issued a Cuide Book, entitled 'Niagara to the Sea," which may be had by writing to the general offices of the company, 2S8 St. Paul street. Montreal, Canada, and which anyone who may be thinking of making a pleasure trip through Lower Canada this summer will find it advantageous to consult. The handsome and commodious steamboats of the company traverse a route which for picturesque beauty and historic interest is not surpassed, is barely equaled by any water highway in the world. Toronto, the western terminus of the line, a handsome, prosperous, bustling city, in itself is well worth a visit, is easily and expeditiously reached from Niagara Falls, and from there the sail across Lake Ontario and down the St. Lawrence River, past Kingston, Brockville. Prescott and Cornwall and other well-known places to Montreal and Quebec is distinguished by a varied and abiding charm. The tourist passes among the farfamed Thousand Islands, and. although he must not expect to see the best of them from the deck of the boat, he will be able to get an idea of the secret of their singular attractiveness. If the season Is propitious that is, during the months of July and August ne will experience the peculiar sensation known only to those who have shot the Lachine and the Long Sault Rapids, and when he reaches Montreal he will find himself in a city which combines many of the graces of the Old World with all the energetic progressiveness of the new. Should he continue his journey to Quebec, he will feel as though he had crossed the Atlantic and arrived at some ancient European capital. Montreal is in most thines a modern as New York, but Quebec, although by no means wanting in the eonveniences of life, seems to belong to a, bygone century and to another world. It is essentially foreign an all the varied aspects of its life. From Quebec it is but a short journey to the Saguenay River, which, in the wild and awful sublimity of its environment, is beyond compare.

The Fortune Hunt-r's Wooing. She told him that her heart was his, The man's response was terse: "I know," he frankly said, "it is, But how about your purse?" No-To-Bac for Fifty tents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c. f I. All druggists. "Why is the average man always wanting to do something he can't? Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally. Price, 7."c. You have lost a great many uml- -el-las, but did you ever find one? Coe's Conch Balsam If the olirst mnd l.est. It w ill troak up a cold qnlckc? than anything t-lse. It is always- leiiaLlc. Tr; it. Why are not women's rights and wedding rites synonymous? We will forfeit 1,000 if any of our published ;estimonials are proven to be not genuine. Tue Piso Co.. Warren, Pa. A man always imagines he wants the earth until he gets sick. A bath with COSMO BUTTERMILK SOAP, exquisitely scented, is soothing and beneticial. Sohl everywhere. Why wouldn't crying pomen make successful auctioneers? To Cure Conotlpatlosi gore-tat. Tak Cascarrts CSndy 'athartü . 10c or 2So. If C". C C fail to cure, drut'fiists rcf ucd money. Uncle Sam's boys will make excellent Havana fillers. Mr. Winslow'fl Floothlsg Syrup. For children lortalas. softeM th" stuns, r.-dues Inflauiuiutlun, Allays paiu. cures wlnicoilc. 25c al-uttle. Time hangs heavy on the hands of a clock. You Can Cet Tired By working hard, and tuen you can get rested again. But if you are tired all the time it means that your blood is poor. Yon need to take Hood's Sarsaparilla. the great cure for that tired feeling because It is the great enricher and vitalizer of t he blood. You will find appetite, nerve, mental and digestive strength in Hood's Sarsaparilla America's Greatest Medicine. Hood's Pills cure nausea, indigestion. 25c. TAPE WORMS A tape worm eighteen feet lone east came on tbe ecene after my taking two CASCABKTS. This 1 am sure has caused my bad health for the past three years. I am atill taking Cascarrts. the only cathartic worthy of notice by sensible people." OSo w JUuwles, Balrd. Mass CANOV TftAOf MANS aSeffftK0 Vleattnl. Palatable. Potent Pseia wood Do Soot!. ever Sicken. Weaken, oi Gripe MÜS 36c (Üj ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... jWSS T f y. Cfctoas. MB, &-w Yw. 813 "w I V'um m ist to CI SÄ Tobseoo Jiablt The only scale viit'i protested be. win;. Iso eaeek rodp, no frictioa on kslffl edpes. H Qui jf PerWWdifTerrut kinds, for all Ct! OtaiC sSSUGi purpose- Senu for Free Catalogue, llOKHKN l M,l k 4 Uke St r. . t . .! ;,, ANEW As prudent r.r . r sSusts his calves, uiiu narrm his pigs, so will 4 a1 niliry Wstch the Cs- a rtMvf man ciposis hi ."-lirt...l. pen l I t f I IX The Triumph vrll Vll ho Tr iimnh fTi A 1 C .. sionuer m i f."c0post- TVi t tnp or - I'h c Tb slip ' prob- I I II II for. at U-an solrd ALLER- I VVL.,ilWU. lo.vue. TON i MOM IK NAM KU't I

HOWE SCALES

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