Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 16, Number 44, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 16 January 1895 — Page 2

THE NAPP.WEE SF.\TS. BY G. N. MURRAY NAFI'ANEE, : : INDIANA The News Condensed. Important Intelligence -From All Parts. gongressio|al. Proceedings of the Second Session. Ok the Btb the conference report on the military academy appropriation bill was agreed to in the senate and the house bill for the relief of homestead settlers in Wisconsin. Minnesota and Michigan was favorably reported. Senator Lodge's resolution calling for information why United States ships of war had been withdrawn trom Hawaiian waters was discussed In the house the generiil debate on the Carlisle currency bilj came to an end The feature of the day was ttffe speech of Mr. Sibley (dem., Paj who made an attack on the president and arraigned the democratic party generally for drifting away from its traditional moorings. A currency bill was introduced j by Mr. Wadsworth (N. Y.), the principal feature of which is the Issue of 2 per cent I bonds payable in fifty years. In the senate on the 9th the urgent deficiency bill was reported without amendments The bill for the relief of homestead settlers in ■Wisconsin. Minnesota and Michigan was passed.... In the house the diplomatic and the post office appropriation bills were passed. An orfSffr to close general debate on the Carlisle currency bill was defeated by a vote of. 129 to 124. On the 10th a bill was Introduced in the senate providing a pension of S6O per month exsoldiers for the loss of one arm above the ©}bow or of a leg above the knee, and of SOO for the loss of an entire arm or leg. The income tax was discussed. Senator Hill Introducing an amendment to test the constitutionality of the /act —ln the house a bill was passed to define the crimes of murder in the first an& second degrees, and manslaughter antf’Tape, mutiny and desertion, and providing punishment therefor, and-to abolish the death penalties on other crimes. The District of Columbia appropriation bill ($5,891,107) was passed. NearljT tiie entire session of the senate on the 11th was occupied In the discussion of Senator I-Illl's amendment to the urgency deficiency to afford an opportunity to test the constitutionality of tho income-tax law. Senator McPherson lntrcfcduced a bill providing for the issue of 3 per per cent, bonds for the purpose of carrying into effect the resumption act of 1875 —ln tho house a bill to pay the heirs of William .Johnson, of Payette county, Tenn., fer $13,000 worth of stores confiscated during the war was discussed. An attempt to pass a bill granting a pension of SIOO a month to Majv Gen. John A. McClernand caused a heated debate, in which Mr. Springer (dem.) and Mr. (dem.) berated southern men for anti-union sentiments. The bill was withdrawn. A Bii.L was Introdued in tho senate on the 12th tq.regulate the issuing of licenses for the ®ale and manufacture of intoxicating liquors In Alaska. The urgent deficiency bill was further discussed In the house the oleomargarine bill was considered and the Indian appropriation bill was reported. Eulogies upon the life and services of the late representative George B. Shaw, of Wisconsin, were delivered. DOMESTIC. The celebrated stallion Bashaw, Jr., . owned by Isaac Munger, died at Washington, la. lie was 23 years old. The Huntsville (Ala.) female college was destroyed by fire. All of the £irls were safely got out and most of their belongings were saved. Judge GbOsscui* refused to quash the indictment against Debs and his associates of the American Railway union and they were taken from Chicago to the McHenry county jail. Thomas Davis and Thomas Ward, miners, were crushed to death by a cavc-in at Wise Bros.’ mine, north of Rice Hill„Mo. Gold in large quantities was discovered on Green mountain, a few miles south of Dead wood, S. D. The court of appeals, in Washington affirmed the decision of the lower court denying a mandamus to compel payment of sugar bounties. The Green Brier boom at Ronceverte, W. Va., broke and 11,000,000 feet of lumber went with the current. Ex-Deputy Marshal Swain shot and killed Carl Vincent, in a fight at Purcell, I. TANARUS., and was then killed by the latter’s son Charles. Mbs. Eliza Cra craft, aged 75 years, fell with a lighted lamp at Sharpsburg, Xy., and was burned to death, and her daughter, who witnessed the seefie, died from fright. Mrs. Andrew Johnson, of Racine, Wis., committed suicide in the pres ence of her husband, four children and a friend. Ivy Boro (colored) was hanged at * Friars Point, Miss., for the muMer of his wife.’ lie confessed on the gallows. The first snow in two years fell at Mobile, Ala. Mrs. Edward Kuhn, her mother an! two brothers were indicted at Shelbyviile, Ind., for poisoning the former’s husband. While attempting to save a raft of sawlogs in Salt River, Ky.. W. S. Bowman. Tom Maclure and Willie Brentwood were drowned. Burglars robbed the safe of the Merchant’s bank at Defiance, 0., of $25,000. A bill was introduced in the Michigan senate providing that no person tvho'is not able to read and write the English language shall be permitted to vote in the state. William Benz was killed and his wife and child fatally injured at a railway crossing in Bloomdale, O. Henry M. Burr & Go., one of the largest wholesale and retail millinery •tores in Boston, failed for £IOO,OOO. jyiLLiAM W. Taylor, treasurer of South Dakota, was said to have absconded with $350,000. The bank at Redfield, of which be was president, liad closed its doors. P. 0. McLoughlin, an old and highlyrespected member of the Chicago board of trade, dropped dead on the Street. The governor’s message, submitted to the legislature of Oklahoma, declares for immediate statehood. At Lewiston, Pa., Wesley Pauldipg •hot and killed his wife and 4-week-old child and then went to the barn and hanged himself. Orson W. Rollins and his wife were found dead at their home in Minneapolis under suspicious circumstances. Gov. McKinley sent a car load of provisio is to the starving miners of the Hocking valley in Ohio. The Wyeth horse collar factory was burned at St. Joseph, Mo., the loss being §150,000.

The whole number of immigrants that arrived in New York during December was 11,100. Os this number 166 were debarred entrance as paupers and fifty-three as contract laborers. Rev. W- E* Hinshaw was seriously and his wife fatally wounded by thieves at their home in Belleville, Ind. The Fidelity Loan and Trust company at Sioux City 1 , la., passed'into the hands of receivers with liabilities of $4,200,000. Asa result of eating poisoned cheese twenty-seven people of East Bradford, Pa., were sick. The Godley flourmill and an elevator containing 20,000 bushels of wheat were destroyed by fire at Seottsville, N. Y., causing a loss of $125,000. Gov. Ur ham sent his first message to the Wisconsin legislature, discussing various state questions. Sixteen thousand election clerks were found inefficient at New York and will receive no pay. Exchanges at the leading clearing j houses in the Uni fed States during the week ended on the 11th aggre- | gated $1,030,136,951, against $944,978,348 the previous week. The increase, compared with the corresponding week in 1894, was 4.2. Actuated by insane jealousy, Louis Gross shot and killed his wife ana himself during a quarrel in their home in New York city. A treasury statement shows the expenditures so far this month exceed'receipts by $0,213,743, which makes the deficiency for tht? fiscal year up to date $33,778,204. _ - Gov. Rudd was inaugurated at Sacramento, Cal., a parade oUJcivic and military organizations preceding the ceremony. John E. MpoitE, landing agent at Ellis Island, N. Y., in liis report for 1894 says that during the year 92,561 cabin passengers and 188,164 steerage passengers landed at Ellis Island. ‘•Buddy” Wooden and George Mappe, both colored and murderers of Marion Ross, were hanged in the jail at Chattanooga, Tenn. Twenty buildings were destroyed by fire in the mining town of Foster, la. Resolutions calling for the revision of football rules to. prevent brutality were adopted at a meeting in Chicago of presidents of northwestern universities. Gov. Matthews read his biennial message at a joint session of both houses of the Indiana legislature. Samuel D. Peterson, of New Ulm, Minn., was given a verdict for SIO,OOO against the Western Union Telegraph company, which transmitted an anonymous libelous telegram. H. C. Frick retired from the presidency of the Carnegie Steel company at Pittsburgh, Pa. John G. A. Leishman is his successor. Gov. Upham, of Wisconsin, placed exGov. Peck on the retired list of the national guard with the rank of com-mander-in-chief. The Norwegian Lutheran seminary located in the suburbs of Minneapolis was burned to the ground. There were 420 business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 11th, against 350 the week previous and 474 in the corresponding time in 1893. William Taylor (colored), who murdered Squire David Dotty in Madison county on Pecember 2 last, was hanged at Richmond, Ky. N. 1. Tuttle' and Will Creitner, of Company C, and Jacob Penhoif, of the post band, were drowned at Niagara-on-idie-Lake, Ont. '

An unsuccessful attempt was made .to hold up a train at Indianola, Miss. Two passengers were wounded by a fusillade from the would-be robbers. Three men while on tlie lookout for burglars in a New York flat building* were suffocated by gas. Over a thousand love letters from young women in every state were found in the trunk of George Streephy, arrested at Youngstown, 0., for a post office robbery. Eight persons were injured in a panic caused by a falling floor at a church funeral at New. Haven, Conn. Tiie schooner Justine foundered in Deception bay,‘off the const of Washington, and her crew of fifteen were drowned. One hundred firemen were frostbritten while fighting a conflagration in Bradford, Pa. Many, buildings were destroyed and $150,000 damage done. The home of J. H. Baldridge near . Jefferson, la., was destroyed bv fire and his nine children were badly frostbitten. Mrs. Betty Page, 80 years of age, died at Lynn., Mass., after having fasted forty-seven (lays. Her malady was a stomach can ecu. Mrs. Alice M. H artmAn, who;MlAd Senator M. D. Foley last found guilty at Iteno, Nev., tenced to eleven years in prison. The committee of seventy has prepared a bill to the legislature which | Will wipe out police courts in New York j city. > * Two masked men cntere(Fthe express 1 car of a Burlington train at Chilli- j cothe, la., and after tying the hands of \ the occupants robbed the safe of about SB,OOO, Bill Cook, the leader of the outlaw band which l>ears his name, was captured at Fort Stanton, N. M. Northwestern - Ohio was shaken by the explosion of a nitro-glycerine magazine near Gibsonburg. Houses in Ihe latter place were wrecked. A new counterfeit $lO United States legal tender note was discovered. The note is of‘"the act of March 3," 1863, series of 1880. check letter B, W. S RoSecrans, register; K. 11. Xebeker, treasurer, with a*portrait of Webster, having a.small pink scalloped seal. Both the United States and Italy will demand satisfaction of Morocco for the boarding of the bark Seutuiaby pirates. * The Gunning block and a number of other buildings were destroyed at Barnesvilje, 0., the loss being $125,000. A train struck a sleigh containing a party returning from a wedding near Lebanon, ind., and Jacob Moss and Miss Mary Overlce.se, the groom and bride, killed.

A canvass of the Hocking valley in Ohio disclosed 1,200 families in urgent need of aid. J. Iv. .Palmer killed 95 out of 100 birds in the sfyppt at Larchmont, N. Y., winning the amateur championship. Eliza Mohney, aged 66, and John Mohnev, aged 67, after a married life of forty-five years, and having tern children, were divorced at Halrrison▼ille, Mo. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Gov. Mclntyre was inaugurated at Denver. Waite, the retiring governor, kissed his hand at the close of the ceremony. Dr. JonN Newton Waddell, one. of the most prominent educators and theologians in the south, died at Birmingham, Ala., aged 83 years. The one hundred and nineteenth legislature of New Jersey convened at Trenton. For the first time in twenty-five years the republicans organized tho West Virginia legislature at Charleston. J. H. Frencit died at Beloit, Wis., aged 75 years. Flo was United States treasurer under IJueoln. Both branches of the Thirty-ninth general assembly of Illinois convened at Springfield and effected a permanent organization. Rev. T. DeWitt Tai.mage celebrated in New York tlieJKkl anniversary of his birth. \ Gen. Alfred W. Ei.uot, a prominent figure in the war of the rebellion, died at El Dorado, Kan. V The Illinois legislature joint session canvassed the vote for suKo-oflkmrs and declared the republican candidaGw elected. The Indiana legislature met in fiftyninth session, Senator Newby being made president pro tern, of the? senate and J. C. Adams speaker of the house. Stephen B. Elkins was nominated for United States senator by the republican legislative caucus at Charleston, W. Va. Col. Ulysses G. Scheller-Deboue, a former member of Gen. Grant's staff, died at Galena, 111., while at breakfast. Carey B. Moon, for a generation the manager of Moon's lake house at Saratoga lake, died of heart failure in Saratoga, N. Y., aged 82 years. * FOREIGN. A fire that started in the Times ofgee in Toronto, Can., destroyed a block of wholesale buildings, the damage being $600,000. One life was lost. A heavy shock of earthquake took place at West Meath, Ont., lasting thirty seconds. Alvin L. Dennison died at Birmingham, England, aged 83 years. He was known throughout the world as the father of the American system of watchmaking. He \vas born in Freeport, Me. French cruisers bombarded the Hova positions outside of Tamatave, indicting heavy losses. The Japanese army under Gen. Nogi captured Kai Ping after four hours’ fighting. Two hundred Chinese were killed. The French steamer Acanis foundered 3 miles off Cape. Caveau during a cyclone and thirteen persons were drowned.

Ex-Queen Liliuokalani was said to have forwarded a petition to President Cleveland for a life annuity and for annexation of Hawaii to the United States. j A THBRIfic gale, accompanied by a heavy Snowfall, swept over Great Britain, and traffic was delayed a#ad several vessels wrecked. LATER. " Senator Sherman introduced a bill in the United States senate on the 14th providing for carrying into effect the international arbitration resolution adopted by congress in 1890. Speeches of Senator Gorman, of Maryland, and Senator Hill, of New York, on various tariff and financial situation at times were full of keen personal criticism and satire directed at each other. In the house the resignation of John C. Black as representative-at-large from Illinois was tendered. The oleomargarine bill was discussed and a bill for the enlargement of the judicial system of Indian territory was passed. Mrs. J. P. Blue lost her life while trying to rescue her two children from a burning house at Buena Vista, Ga. John Harris and wife, who lived near Paxton, Neb., ended their lived and that of their baby with a razor to avoid starvation. Bf.Ksg defeated oh an order of the day in the French chamber of deputies the Dupuy cabinet resigned. Lava from a volcano on one of the Jsew Hebrides islands flowed fifteen Tniles to the sea, devastating many villages. The dredge Mount Waldo was sunk in a gale in the Gulf of Mexico and nine of those on board were drowned. Tiie destitution among the people in St. Johns, N. F., was said to be dreadful. The relief officers and soup kitchens were*surrounded by hundreds of persons. Michael Patsko and John Minisha were fatally stabbed in a miners' fight at \JJilkesbarre, Pa. It was believed that, the British losses through the bond swindling operations of J. M. Pierce, of South Dakota, would aggregate $8,000,000. David Pagen, 90 years old, froze to | death in his cabin on King's mountain, | near Abington, Va. Tiie fourth session qf the Washington Legislature cohvetoed at Olympia. Joseph 11. Meeker's sugar refinery near Lecompte, La., was destroyed by | tire, the loss being $130,000. ! All the trolley lines in Brooklyn, ; with one exception, were tied up by a Strike of their employes, Who numbered | nearly 6,000. 1 Ald. John Walsii, of Vicksburg, Miss., was indicted for illegal voting, not being a naturalized citizen. ! The Rhymes and Roberts families, near Douglas, Ga., had trouble in a lawsuit, and Mrs. Rhymes and two daughters stabbed the three Roberts girls.

INDIANA STATE NEWS. —— j The General Assembly. Indianapolis. Jan. 11.—Senate—The was called-to order by Lieut-GowNye.-iJre.si-dent exofficlo of the body. The senators wera 1 sworn by Judge Mci abe. of the supreme court, j The senate proceeded to complete its organ iza- I tion by the election of Hollo B. Ojrlesbie. prin- ! cipal secretary: W. 8. Eannes. assistant score- I tary; It. S. Hatcher, waff' selected as reading j clerk: Albert (’.White, ns journal clerk, and C. J. Laugherty, as minute clerk, and were installed in their positions. A number of rcso- | lutions of minor importance were presented, j One referred tft the intended action in amend- j ing the law so as to make the statue permit j the appointment of eight doorkeepers instead > of three, as at present. A committee was appointed to act jointly with the house committee for the same purpose. House- It yus 10:10 o’clock Thursday morning when Secretary of State Myers rapped upon the marble in the house of representatives and declared the Fifty-ninth general assembly iV order. Following the invocation, while still standing. Judge Howard, of the supreme, court. administered the oath of office to those present. Adams was elected speaker, Robert A. Brown, clerk: Jonathan C. Wright, assistant clerk: David L. Wright, doorkeeper. These officers were called to the bar of the house and the oath administered. Committees were appointed to yiot.ify the senate and Gov. Matthews th*t the house was organized and [ ready fftr business. A resolution to the same effect was received from the senate. After further discussion of unimportant resolutions, the house adjourned. The republicans immediately went into caucus for the purpose of setting the time for a joint caucus for the election of a state librarian. Wui. H. Decay, of Marion, was made permanent chairman oT the house caucus. The joint caucus will be held Friday afternqon. Indianapolis, Jan. 12.— Senate Tim legislature met in joint session Friday morhing to hear the message of Gov. Matthews read by the governor himself. It required one hour and thirty-five fo* its reading. Senator Haggard introduced the firsCbill Friday afternoon, appropriating $175,000 Jot the suiter' OTdiers’ home at I afayette. H. A. Strohm. editor of the republican organ at Kentland. Friday appointed file clerk in the senate. B*d William Koons will serve temporarily as mimitc clerk. Senator Haggard late Friday aJtftVnoon introduced a resolutiefti for an invo&Lation of the amount of fees collected by the retiring attorney general. Greene Smith. His report to the governor show ed i72.W0 collected by him in four years, but it is charged by many that his receipts from the office for his own use was $250,000. Senator Hay introduced a bilk abolishing free railroad passes to members. House—The legislative caucus, Friday, nominated Mrs. Emma L. Davidson for state librarian, after four ballots, in which her chief competitor was Miss Nartcy Baker, of this city, a daughter of the late Gov. Baker. She has announced that her deputies will be Miss Lizzie Fitzgerald: of Madison. Ind.. and Miss Lillian • Welt-on. of Vi nceunes. A bill was passed appropriating •‘fICO.COO for the expenses of. the legislature, also u bill regulating tho number of employes. Representativc.Merri t. of Lagrange, introduced a bill appropriating $48,000 to relieve the governor of his personal ■ liability for the money borrowed to pay the • troops. Ft. Wayne saloon-keepers threaten to open c their places after 11 p. in., if the hotels and clubs are not compelled to close their bars at that hour. Hundreds of people have signed the I pledge at the Charlottesville temped- i ance revival. There is a skate famine in South | Bend. Dealers can't get enough to ! suppl v the deina n a nd. Albert Marheuky has been arrested ' at Anderson charged with stealing j two gokl baptismal cup?*, from the al- i tar of St. Mary's Catholic Church. Postmaster appointed the other day: 1 J. V. Reed, Fulton, Fulton county, vice | FI. M. Wood, resigned. At Belleville, six miles west of In- j dianapolis. Rev. W. F. Hinshaw and his wife were attacked by two robbers j at 2 o'clock the other morning and will ■ probably die. Mrs. Hinshaw died six- i teen flours Later in delirum and un- i consciousness with a pistol shot j through her head, and Mr. Hinshaw is i almost literally carved into strings. Mr. j Heusliaw will die. .Several fire hydrants at Madison burst from cold. There were .400 funerals in South Bend last years’. Os the Hi" deaths in Lagrange county, last year, 40 of the victims were 76 years of age and over. A hell that has been on the Presbyterian church at Elkhart for 33 years cracked the other day. Pike county will have a stock law in effect March 1. The Anderson Columbia rifles will come back into the I. N. G. The two children of Mr. John Lorain. of New Haven, six miles east "of Ft. Wayne, were burned to deatlr the other morning by a fire which de*. stroyed the houfce, the mother being absent at the time. Roy Miller, aged 25, employed in the sawmill of Unger Sc Cos., at Ijams- ‘ villi*. Wabash county, was instantly killed the other morning while at work in the mill. Miller attempted to step yyer a rapidly moving belt, and in some manner was caught and dragged along until he was carried under the bull wheel of the engine and crushed to death. The’ Lake Erie & Western railway depot a* 1 ! Spiceland was robbed of ,$42 other evening while the agent was across the street at supper. Entrance was obtained to the office room ■where the money was by means of a crowbar. F. A. Root, of West Superior^ 'hies taken options on nearly two thousand acres of land neffr New Cumberland and the price has advanced $2 per acre. This company guarantees the completion of the C., I. and E. railroad from Fairmount to Muncie by the 4th oL July. The company he represents is comprised of wealtjiy men. who will lay out anew town, which will be called Mailhfiws. A few days since the wife of John Wagner, who lives at Rome City, eight miles from Albion, gave’ birth to a baby boy that weighed but ofie pound and fourteen ounces. Through the efforts of Dr. Sheldon Jackson, who has had charge, of the government schools in Alaska for many years, a herd of over one hundred reindeer has been transported from Siberia across the Behring strait into Alaska; and they are reported to be doing very well. More than two hundred fawns were born last year. There used to be large herds of wild reindeer on the moss-covered tundra of Alaska, but they were all exterminated years a,go, and the walrus, whale and seal, which have since supplied tho natives with food, clothing and fuel, are getting very scarce!'

No enjoyment, however inconsiderable, Is confined to the present moment. A man is the happier for life from having made once an agreeable tour, or lived for any length of time with pleasant people, or enjoyed any considerable interval of innocent pleasure.—Sydney Smith. “I suppose Newriehe’s new house is i sumptuously fitted up?” “Yes, indeed. He has everything you can think of Unit isT costly. Why, his fire-extinguisher is kept full of champagne all the time.”--Havper’s A Pleasantry.—He-r‘T never smoke a| cigarette without thinking what a fool J am.” She—“l didn’t know before that there was liny virtue in cigarettes, at all.”—Detroit Free Press. “Skinner says he has scarcely slept a wink since the day lie sold lus vote.” “Thoroughly ashamed of himself, eh?” ‘‘Yep; he’s learned somehow 7 Uiat another man got $2 more than he did.” “Does he know anything about art?” “Not a thing. Why, he doesn’t even know enough about it to lecture on it.”—Washington Star. “You’ll please look over this small bill,” exclaimed tho dun. The debtor took it; and then said he ; with weary smile: “I’d rather overlook it.”—Philadelphia Record. “Wiiy so glum?” asked liis friend. “Aren't you doing a roaring trade?” “Yes, I am,” admitted the basso, “but it is oil on notes.”—Cincinnati Tribune, To New Orleans tho Queoa Crescent Route is the direct line; 9ft miles shortest from Cincinnati. Solid vestibuled trains.

ER 1 S SW

KIDNEJ LIVER !S ■*? Dissolves Gravel Gall stone, brick dust jfn urine, pain in urethra, straining after urination, pain fn the back and hips, sudden stoppage of water with pressure. “ RrfgM’s Disease Tube casts in urine, scanty urine. Swamp-Root cures urinary troubles and kidney difficulties. Liver Complaint Torpid or enlarged liver, foul breath, biliousness, bilious headache, poor digestion, gout. Catarrh ot the Bladder Inflammation, irritation, ulceration, dribbling, frequent calls, pass blood, mucus or pus. At Drugglftts 50 cents and sl.<M) Size. “ Invalids’ Guido to Health ” free—Consultation free. Dr. Kilmer & Cos.. Binohamton, N. Y.

* WORLD’S-FAIR * I HIGHEST AWARD X . "SUPERIOR NUTRITION-THE LIFE 2 .

THEREAT AAEDIOINAI^ FOOD Has justly acquired (lie reputation of being The Salvator for Invalids The-Aged. An Incomparable Aliment for the Growth and Protection of INFANTS and <?I-I I LDREN A superior nutritive in continued Fevers, And a reliable remedial agent in all gastric and enteric diseases; often in instances of consultation over patients whose digestive organs were reduced to such a low and sensitive condition that the IMPERIAL GRANUM was the only nourishment the stomach would tolerate when LII-E seemed depending on its retention - And as a FOOD it would be difficult to conceive of anything more palatable. Sold by DRUGGISTS. Shipping Depot. JOHN CARLE & SONS, N:w York. ilpili your own and in a few years you will wonder why you remained in the cities and paid rent. TJTvSr&I Homestead Land government, FREE OF COST, along the line of tho Lake Superior division of tho CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY, in North ern Wisconsin and Upper Michigan, or you can buy at low prices on easy terms. Address C. E. ROLLINS, 161 La Salle St.. Chicago. 11l iPOfAfOES! Z America. The “Rural Ncnr Yorker” give* one ol X Y our earl/ aorta a yield of ?4*2 buahela per acre. I f Prlcea ulrt cheup. Our great Meed llook. 144 V V paicea,nnd aninplc 14-Ony Itadlah for 6c poatnue. f l JOHN A. BALZER SEED CO., La C'roaae. Wla. |

Scott's Emuision of Cod-liver Oil, with Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda, —constructive food (hat nourishes, enriches tiie blood, croateSsgolid flesh, stops wasting and gives strength. It is for all „ Wasting Diseases like Consumption, Scrofula, Anaamia, Marasmus; or for Coughs and Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Loss of Plesh and General Debility. Scott’s Emulsion has no equal as Nourishment for Babies and Growing Children. Buy only tho genuine put up in salmon-colored wrapper. Send for famplet on Scott’s Emulsion. FREE. Soott a Bow no, 44. Y. All DruggiatS. SO cents and SI.

Rheumatic Pains Return when tho colder weather comes. They are caused by lactic acid in the blood, which frequently settles in the joints. This poisonous taint must be re* Hood’s ***•* I lvMt partita. moved. Hood’s Sar- £ saparilla conquers t rheufeatism because It drives out of tho blood every form olj impurity. It makes pure, rich blood. ’. “ I suffered with rheumatism In my left foot I took Hood's Sarsaparilla and the: pain is all gone.” Miss R. R. Blake* Mills House, Charleston, S. C. Hood's Pills prevent cOnslipatipn: ! The Greatest Medical Discovery, of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. SONALB KENNEDY, of RQXBDRY, HASS., Has discovered in one of our pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a fommon Pimpfe. He has tried it in over eleven hundredj cases, and never failed except in two cases (botli thunder humor.) Hthas now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused bV the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is sous or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No oliange of diet ever necessary. Eat the best vou can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists. W. L. Douglas ISTHEBEST. $0 AKINCv. CORDOVAN, ifjjp Vk FRENCH. CNAMCLIED CALF. mt. 4. 5 3.50 Fine Calf uKangaroi M' *3AP POLICE, 3 SOLES. W Bqys ' SchooiShoesl ©ROCKTON^AASa.

Over One Million People wear the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the best value for the money. They equal custom shoes in style and fit. Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed. The prices are uniform,—-stamped on sole. From $i to $3 saved over other makes. If your dealer cannot supply you we can.

WALTER BAKER & GO.

*.argest Manufacturers of fiE, HIGH CRADE AS AND CHOCOLATES On this Continent, have received HIGHEST AWARDS from the greet iidustrial and Food EXPOSITIONS i European! America. nlike the Dutch Proceee, no Alkeor other Chemical! or Dye* are ;<i in any of their nreparetione. Their deliclou* BKIiAKFAST COCOA U absolutely pure and and cost* less than one cent a cup.

SOLO BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER B AKER & CO. DORCHESTER, MASS.

General Blacking is unequalled. Has An annual Sale of 3.000 tons. WE ALSO MANUFACTURE THE -ja Mrmmr TOUCH UP SPOTS WITH A CLOTH MAKES NO DUST, IN 5&I0 CENT TIN BOXES. the only perfect Paste. Morse Bro strop’s. Canton,Mass: One of my children liad a BBBf £7 venj bad discharge from the nose. Physicians prescribed without benefit. .4/fcr using Ely' 8 Cream Balm a short BT y time the disease teas’cured. O. A. Cary , (Wing, N. CATARRH EliY’S CREAM BALM Opens andcleanneß the Nasal Pannages, Allays Pali and Inflammation. Heals the Sores, Protects tin Membrane from colds. Restores the Senses of Tasfi an<l Smell. The Uairn Isqulcldy absorbed and give relief at once. \ -‘a particle is applied Into each nostril and Is agree ble. Price fid cents n't Drusahsts or by mrfll. ELY BROTHERS. K Warre" Street. New York.