Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 17, Number 1, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 20 March 1895 — Page 2

THE NAPPAXEE NEWS. BY O. N. MURRAY. NAPPANESi. * INDIANA The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. DOIOESTIC. Nine Italians, charged with murder, were shot dead by American miners in the Walsenberg (Col.) district, and a race war was reported to be in progress. A bill granting women the right to vote lor certain township officers was defeated in the Illinois senate by one rote. The indictment for embezzlement standing for two years against ex-Gov. Ira S. Chase was discussed at Kokomo, Ind. A POWERFUL pool of all the coal railroad companies in Ohio and all the corporations in the state was organized at Columbus. Miners of the Pittsburgh district were successful in their strike for an advance in the scale and all but 6,000 had resumed work. Flames in Kansas City destroyed buildings occupied by the English Supply company and the Western Newspaper union and the Great Western type foundry, the total loss being $300,000. Factions in the Polish Catholic church at Sheeley, Neb., fought for possession of_the edifice and two persons were fatally shot. Christ Fisher, the oldest miller in northwestern Ohio, assigned at Wapakoneta.for the benefit of his creditors. The business portion of the city of Waupun, Wis., was nearly wiped out by fire. Over 1,000,000 feet of lumber was burned at Griffin, Ark. Mahlon P. Reisinger, a farmer, was robbed of S9OO by four masked robbers, who forcibly entered his dwelling near "Willshire, O. Leroy Fernald, awaiting trial at Alfred, Me., for murdering his mother at East Lebanon, starved himself to death. Officers raided a backwoods den near Carle ton, Minn., and found three girls who had disappeared from West Superior, Wis. Ex-County Treasurer Kennedy was arrested at Antigo, Wis., charged with embezzlement. His shortage was alleged to be 540,807. The Gerry whipping post bill was defeated in the New York assembly by a vote of 53 to 57. The St. Louis Sabbath association has begun the prosecution of storekeepers who keep their places of business open on Sunday. A BILL to prohibit the wearing of high hats in theaters was killed hy a committee of the Illinois legislature. John W. Patterson, acting teller of the Traders’ bank at Strathroy, Ont., was missing with $5,000 of the bank’s funds. Three persons were burned to death and four others fatally hurt in a hotel fire at Mackeysville, W. Va. Ex-Postmaster General James was elected mayor of Tenafly, N. J. Three men attempted to rob a bank at Roanoke, Ind., and were pursued by citizens of the town, but escaped. In his attack upon the income tax before the supreme court Attorney Choate said It smacked of jobbery. At Cherokee, la., Judge Ladd decided the petition of saloonkeepers was void, and every saloon in town was closed. The world’s standing hop, skip and, jump record was broken at Danville, Ky., by Thomas A Hendricks, who made 30 feet and 4 inches—s inches over the record. Two little girls were instantly killed in Baltimore by coming in contact with a fallen electric wire. A NEW electric gun has been patented at. Springfield, 0., that will fire a thousand shots a minute. A terrific windstorm near Eufaula, Ala., swept away buildings, trees and fences, causing a heavy loss. Judge Wilderman, at Mascoutah, decided that matrimoaial brokerage is not a legal business 1 in Illinois. Winchester, Va., was under military control, trouble having arisen over an attempt to lynch a negro. The gold exportation during February amounted to $1,565,194 and the importation to $5,632,197. For the eight months ended February 28 the exportations of gold amounted to $58,394,767, and the imports to $16,025,325. Holt, Schaefer & Cos., tobacconists at Lynchburg, Va., assigned with very heavy liabilities. John Milligan, who murdered Gabe and Hannah Clark November 3, 1893, was hanged at Oklahoma City. It was the first legal hanging in Oklahoma territory. An express train on the Vandalia road was wrecked and the cars burned sear Terre Haute, Ind., and several persons were injured. The number of immigrants arriving In this country during February, 1895, was 9,608, against 9,602 during February, 1894. For the last eight months the total was 136,129, against 199,129 during the same period last year. The Connecticut legislature haa repealed the last of the blue laws of that state. Fire in a building at Hartford, Conn,, occupied by Charles R. Hart & Cos., dealers in house furnishings, did SIOO,000 damage. Wreckage of the Chicora, which! went down during the winter with twenty-four persons on board, was washed ashore at St. Joseph, Mich. Careful estimates place the amount of fish killed by the February freezing in the shallow bays on the Texas coast south of the mouth of the Brazos river at 35,000 tons ThE attorney for the defense of Harry Hayward, under sentence of death at Minneapolis for murder, announces that new and important evidence has been discovered.

The Hlinois supreme court has declared unconstitutional the section of the eight-hour law relating to the employment of women. Plans have about been completed for the colonization of 14,000 old soldiers in Georgia on 100,000 acres of land. Unknown assassins murdered Mrs. Kolinski and her daughter near Greensburg, Pa. The victims were returning to Hungary. James Foster was killed and three other persons injured in a fire at Laramie, Wyo., ivhich destroyed property worth SIOO,OOO. Because negroes have been admitted to the Federation Os Women’s clubs the Georgia Women’s Press club has withdrawn. Judge Rourke, of Fort Wayne, Ind., decided that corporations were entitled Under the law to discharge employes who belong to labor unions. Tiie exports of merchandise during February were during same period, $58,326,352. For the eight months ended February 28 the excess of exports over imports was $91,967,932. There were 266 business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 15th, against 234 the week previous and 264 in the corresponding time in 1894. A. B. Snelling shot and killed Charles McCullough near Helena, Mont., and then shot his own head off. The men had been drinking and quarreled. The bodies of three men were found in a lumber camp near Ingram Wis. They were supposed to have been accidentally poisoned. A bill passed by the Nebraska legislature prohibits the manufacture or sale of cigarettes or material for cigarettes in the state. The firm of Cushman Bros. & Cos., manufacturers of window shades at Boston, went into insolvency with liabilities of $150,000. Benjamin Jennetta and his wife were shot to death by Arcangelo and Nicholas Cristilli, two fellow Italians, in a trivial quarrel at McGregor, Minn. Erastus Wiman, the New York financier convicted of forgery and sentenced to the penitentiary, has been granted anew trial. The H. C. Frick Coke company of Pittsburgh notified their 1,600 employes of an advance in wages averaging 15 per cent. Charles Heasley, a school-teacher, and Mary Boyd, aged 24, while crossing the track in a buggy at Milburn, Pa., were instantly killed by an express train. Secretary Gresham notified the Spanish government that immediate apology must be made for firing on an American ship. A promise not to do so again will also be required. Mrs. Sarah Lambert, a poor widow living near Crown Point, Ind., received notice that she and her children had been left $1,000,000 by a lately deceased relative. The business portion of the village of Devine, Tex., was burued. Ambassador Fava called the state department’s attention to the killing of Italian subjects at Walsenburg, Col., and requested prompt punishment of the murderers. While resisting arrest at Batavia, N. Y., Pat Nugent, a rag dealer, shot and instantly killed Sheriff Harvey Johnson and afterwards shot himself. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 15th aggregated $898,639,277, against $1,002,852,773, the previous week. The increase, compared with the corresponding week in 1894, was 5.7, Amos Gibson (colored) was lynched by a mob at Forsythe, Ga., for criminal assault. ■’ By the burning of an express car on the Vandalia road near Terre Haute, Ind., $300,000 in gold and silver coin and bank bills were destroyed. Bradstreet’s reports few favorable trade features throughout the country and predicts continued small business and quiet demand. Secretary Smith decided that Buffalo Bill was the only showman who could take a party of Indians around the country this year. Mrs.'Frank Sumner and Miss Nellie Closson were fatally burned by an explosion of gasoline in a St. Paul house Walter I. Chapin, aged 79, and Mary A. Chapin, aged 78, lovers who were separated in youth, were married at Wilkesbarre, Pa. Wash Strong (colored) was hanged at Hawkensville, Ga., for the murder of Johnson Duncan in a dispute over cards in December, 1890. Four mutual insurance companies in Toledo, 0., were ordered to cease business as a result of an examination of their affairs. The Waukesha Hygeia Mineral- Water company in Chicago went into the hands of a receiver with liabilities of nearly $1,000,000. The building at Cleveland, 0., occupied by the World and the A. N. Kellogg* Newspaper company, was the total loss being $150,000. W. B. Thomas and W. H. Morrison, counterfeiters, were captured with their outfits and spurious coin by St. Louis police. Nine murderers held up the county ’iiler at Seattle, Wash., and escaped. Three men,were killed, one fatally and ten seriously injured, and property worth SIOO,OOO destroyed by the burning of the Wabash roundhouse at Toledo, O. Several persons and hundreds of cattle were drowned and great damage done to property in Alabama by violent wind and rainstorms. The storage warehouse elevator of Hugh Rogers <fc Cos., of St. Louis, was burned, with the contents, the loss being $200,000. Joseph Millett died at Holbrook, Mass. He had taken no food for twen-ty-eight days and no water for eleven days, Jacob Goldberg and his wife were suffocated by natural gas at Indianapolis. i Burglars murdered L. D. Reynolds, of Carey, 0., and secre-ed the body in some place not yet dithovered.

Under new postal regulations government officials, especially congressmen, are given more privileges in the matter of franking. A burglar chloroformed George Pros ser and wife, who live near Moville, la., and robbed them of SOOO. Passengers on a steamer which arrived at Key West, Fla., from Havana said that the Spanish gunboat Arcedo fired into and sunk an American schooner off Puerto Pacjro and that the crew of thd,vessel, numbering sixteen men, perished with it. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Mrs. Agnes Harrison died at Jeffersonville, Ind., aged 100 years. Capt. I. U. Shepard, chief of the revenue cutter service, died of pneumonia at his home in Washington. Prohibitionists and other reformers met at Pittsburgh, Pa., and took preliminary steps toward the formation of a national party. JonN P. Leedom, a member of the Forty-seventh congress, died at Toledo, 0., aged 47 years. Charles E. Laughton, ex-lieutenant governor of Washington and Nevada, died at Tacoma of heart disease, aged 47 years. Arthur P. Peterson, attorney general of Hawaii - under the monarchy, died in exile in San Francisco. The populists ot the Tenth Georgia congressional district nominated Thomas E. Watson for the seat vacated by the resignation of J. C. Black. Dr. John A. Broadus, the celebrated Baptist divine and scholar, died at Louisville, aged 71 years. Henry C. Thom, chairman of the republican state central committee, died at Madison, Wis. FOREIGN. The Spanish cruiser Reina Regents was believed to have sunk off Tangier, all of the 420 persons on board being drowned. . A steamship which refused all information as to her destination was seized at Gravesend by the British government. - *- The 51st birthday of King Humbert was celebrated throughout Italy. v The Fiji islands were swept by a terrible hurricane, much property being destroyed. The Hawaiian government will push cases against abettors of rebels who are in America. Rev. George Conkling Knapp, for forty years a missionary in eastern Turkey, died at his home in Bitlis. Sir Robert William Duff, governor of New South Wales, died at the age of 60 years. The American ship Meteor, from Mobile, was seized by Nicaraguan authorities at Bluefields. She was suspected of carrying arms to insurgents. Angus Gillis, the oldest resident of Cape Breton, N. S., died at the age of 108 years. There was no doubt that the Spanish man-of-war Reina llegente foundered during a recent storm and that 400 men were lost. Spanish troops engaged the Malay Mussulmans at Mandano, killing many of them, including the sultan and his son. The Spanish ministry resigned, owing to trouble in the chamber of deputies, _ > The bootmakers in England went on a strike. Two hundred thousand men were affected. " ' The rebellion in CubaAvas spreading, the insurgents having captured many strategic points. Russia and England were said to be planning a concerted demonstration of naval strength in order to frighten J apan. LATER. Spain's readiness to apologize to the United States for the Allianca affair was said to be because of * domestic troubles. The country was on the verge of a revolution. Window glass manufacturers of the United States will meet at Pittsburgh and form a trust. Charles A. Dana, editor of the New York Sun, was held for criminally libeling Frank B. Noyes, of the Washington Star. A negro shot two brothers named Pattingim at New Orleans, killing one and fatally wounding the other. President Cleveland and Secretary Gresham celebrated their birthdays. The president was 58 years old and Mr. Gresham 62. Tiie National bank of Kansas City suspended with liabilities of $1,050,000 and assets of $1,880,000. Mrs. M. E. Holton, living alone on a ranch near Butte, Neb., was outraged and then lynched. Cattle rustlers were suspected of committing the crime. A SHORTAGE of $700,000 was reported In the United States mint at Carson, Nev. Amos Townsend, a member of the Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth and Forty-sev-enth congresses, and a merchant at Cleveland, 0., died at St. Augustine. Fla. Great Britain sent an ultimatum to Nicaragua demanding $75,000 because of the expulsion of Minister Hatch. Henry CiiERHy, his wife and two sons, Raymond, 10, and Henry, 3, were poisoned, the twO former fatally, hy drinking water frOm a well near their home at Wichita, KanProf. Peter H. Vandeb Weyde, well known as a scientific writer and teacher, died in New York, aged 82 years. Gov. Sheldon announced that for the period of one year the importation of Texas cattle into South Dakota would be forbidden. News reached Key West, Fla., that the American schooner Irene was fired Into and dismasted by the Spanish cruiser Infanta Isabel. A large number of the Pullman (HI.) strikers of last summer with their families and others intend to settle this spring as a colony in the south. Mp.s. Abigail Adams Beecher, of Mishawaka, Ind., celebrated her 100th birthday. The visible supply of grain in the United States on the 18th was: Wheat, 70,874,000 bushels; corn, 13,439,000 bushels; oats, 6,350,000 bushels; rye, 292,000 bushels; barley, 1,004,000 bushels.

A WOMAN LYNCHED. Cowardly Work of ; a Thieving Gang In Nebraska. Omaha, Neb., March 39. News of a terrible tragedy has just reached this place. It occurred last Thursday in Keya Paha county, near Brocksburg. Mrs. W. E. Holton, who was living alone on her farm, was taken from her bed, cruelly outraged and then lynched. A neighbor discovered the deed the next morning when he passed by the house. She was found lying on the floor of her dwelling, surrounded by the scattered and torn clothing and the clothing of her bed. Tracks of many mens’ feet were found in the yard and in the house. No warrants have yet been issued, but a meeting of the citizens of the neighborhood was held Sunday and it was decided that prompt measures should be taken. "Several persons are under suspicion and these parties will be arrested. The body of Mrs. Holton was interred at Oakdale cemetery at Doty Sunday. Keya Paha county is noted for its lynchings by vigilants. There is no doubt but the crime was committed by rustlers who have been running off horses and cattle from the neighborhood, and who have reason to fear the vigilant committee. The latest report comes that a man named Hunt is implicated in some way with the lynchers, and it is thought he can be forced to confess. A number of the alleged rustlers were recently arrested and taken to Springview, where they broke jail and escaped to the reservation, where they were afterward recaptured and convicted. The proximity of the Indian reservation to the scene of the depredation makes it possible that a United States deputy marshal may have to make the arrests if warrants are sworn out. Mrs. Holton is said to have assisted in securing the conviction of the cattle thieves and this is their revenge. SATOLLI ACTS. The Ablegate Said to Have Temporarily Suspended Ban Against Fytlilanisin. Fall River,'’Mass., March 19.—At the instance of ii. A. Dalmgue, Esq., Dr. L. I’. De Granpre and. Dr. P. Eeollett, of this city, and Judge Chouquette, of Providence, Mgr. Satolli, the papal ablegate, it is said, lias issued a decree temporarily suspending -the edict of Pope Leo, relating to Catholic membership in the Knights of Pythias. These gentlemen returned from a visit to Washington, whither they had been sent by Lafayette lodge of this city to ask a hearing on the matter. They represented that one lodge of pythians in this eity consisted of 250 French Canadians and one lodge- in Providence included 160. They said so far as they were able to observe they could see no conflict between pythianism and Catholic doctrines and were very Solicitous for a suspension of the edict so they might perforin their Easter duty. His grace seemed very much surprised at the facts presented and was evidently much impressed with the manner of the men. He announced that he would suspend the edict temporarily and would issue a formal decree to that effect in a few days. He promised to bring tiie matter to the attention of the Vatican at the earliest moment. DANA ARRAIGNED. United States Commissioner Shields of New York Holds the F.ditor of the Sun. New York, March 19.—The libel case against Charles A. Dana, of the New Y'ork Sun, which was brought at the instance of Frank B. Noyes, of the Washington Star, for criminal libel, drew a crowd of newspaper men and lawyers to Commissioner Shields’ room. Mr. Dana was represented by Lawyers Eiihu Root and Franklin Rartlett and United StateS District Attorney MacFarlane appeared for the people. The question at issue was whether the courts- of the District of Columbia had the right to demand Mr. Dana’s removal from this city to Washington. After hearing argument Commissioner Shields ruled that an order of commitment should issue for Mr. Dana to appear before J udge Brown, of the United States district court, and paroled the defendant in the custody of his lawyers. United States District Attorney MlacJ’arlano at once went before Judge Brown with the order from the commissioner, and the court announced that he would hear the argument upon the motion for a warrant of removal for the defendant to the eity of Wasliington on April 1. THIRD VESSEL FIRED INTO. Schooner Irene In Dismantled by tlio Infanta Isabel. Key West, Fla., March 19.—News reached here Monday that the schooner Irene was fired into and dismasted hy the Spanish cruiser Infanta Isabel. The news was brought to this eity by a vessel engaged in the cattle trade between this port and Mainland. The Irene is a small schooner owned in this port by Canary Islanders. She has been employed in the fish trade all winter, but within the past few days returned with a party of court officials from Fort Myers, where an important murder trial has been held. She afterward sailed for the fish ranch at Punta Gorda, where, it was reported, an expedition sailed for Cuba. This point lias been under surveillance by the Spanish cruiser, and the schooner was followed from here and fired into. BROKEN TIpT Dissatisfaction Causes the Dissolution of a Negro Colony. Atlanta, Ga., March 19. —A special from Mapima, Mexico, says the colony of 1,000 negroes recently established here is rapidly going to pieces. The negroes are leaving for their old homes in Georgia and Alabama in squads, embracing men, women and children, wno wilj attempt to walk the efitire distance, They are all dissatisfied, claiming that they were lured into making the change by promises which have not been fulfilled

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Is so important that you should be sure to get THE BEST, Hood’s Sarsaparilla has proven its unequaled merit by its thousands of remarkable cures, and the fact that it has a larger sale than any other sarsaparilla or blood purifier shows the great confidence the people have in it. In fact it is the Spring Medicine. It cures all blood diseases, builds up the nerves and gives such strength to the whole system that, as one lady puts it, “It seemed to make me anew.” If you decide to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla for your Spring Medicine do not buy any substitute. Be 6ure to get

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The Largest In the World. * iFrom the Chicago Inter Ocean. 1 How many people in Chicago know that with all her other great industries there is also found here the largest soap and washing powder business in the world, The N. K. Fairbank Company, with their factories in Chicago, St. Louis and Guttenberg, being without doubt, the largest producers of soap products in the United States. This great business is not of mushroom growth but tho result of persistent effort, broad business methods and intelligent and discriminating advertising. Many brands of soap are made in these factories, but Chicago is best acquainted with Santa Claus which long ago found favor with those who care for our homos. Gold Dust Washing Powder is known in every hamlet of the United States, it being everywhere recognized as the leading product of its kind. Announcement is now made that The N. K. P’airbank Company are about to take another step forward to turn another page in their history of progress by introducing another new soap. This will shortiv be advertised in a most striking and original manner, For twenty-five years this coirfpany waa likewise the leading lard producer of the world, and abandoned lard merely because anew world was to be conquered. With keen business perception they saw in cotton seed oil the basis for a still larger business In a more healthful, more economical and in every way more desirable food product than lard. When this new product was perfected and their plans carefully arranged they turn their attention from the lard business, and with a courage born of the confidence that they had produced what the world had so long demanded-; viz., a substitute for lard, they launched “Cottolene.” The quick acceptance by the public of this really meritorious article attracted the attention of the ever-read y imitator and the market was soon flooded with imitations, sailing under colors of all descriptions. But Cottolene was first in the heart of the people and those who use it are not at all likely to go back to lard or accept an imitation. The N. K. Fairbank Company attribute their succcs# to the merit of the articles they produce; to the fact that their products are staple necessities of life, not luxuries, and to careful, thoughtful, persistent newspaper advertising, which they continue through all seasons, in hard times and in good. Surely this is a far wiser plan than the occasional blast of trumpets and spasmodic efforts often characteristic of others. In the advertising branch of the business they are represented by the well-known firm of N. W. Ayer & Son of Philadelphia, who purchase all their advertising space. Another fact that may not be generally known is that The N. K. Fairbank Company is conducted as one of the departments of The American Cotton Oil Company. This fusion of business forces was consummated for the sake of the greater facilities that ensue from a direct bonnection with the cottonseed mills to supply the public with the purest article at so much less cost. Surely no Chicago industry has achieved greater success than The N. K. Fairbank Company. LOW-RATE EXCURSIONS .April 2 and 30, 1895. On April 2 the IRON MOUNTAIN ROUTE will sell excursion tickets to all points in Arkansas, to Lake Charles, La., and to all points in Texas, except El Paso, at the very low rate of one fare lor the round trip (pius $2), and on April 80 at one fare straight for the round trip to points in the Southeast. Liberal limits and stop-over privileges allowed. For full particulars and illustrated' and descriptive pamphlets, address company’s agents or H. C. TOWNSEND, General Passenger Agent, St. Louis.

THE MARKETS.! New York, March 19 LIVE STOCK—Cattle $4 10 ft 5 70 Sheep 3 75 ft 4 GO Hogs 400 ft 490 FLOUR— Minnesota Bakers*. 200 ft 360 City Mill Patents 890 ft 4 15 WHEAT—No. 2 Red.... 6156 ft 61 *4 No 1 Northern 71 ft 71*4 CORN-No. 2 6l*ft 51 *4 May 50% OATS—No. 2 33%ft 3354 Track White Western.... 37 ft 41 RYE 55 ft 66 PORK—Mess. New 13 00 ft 13 50 LARD— Western 7 10 ft 7 12*4 BUTTER—West’rn Creamery 11 ft 19 Western Dairy 8 ft 13 CHICAGO. CATTLE—Shipping Steers... $4 00 ft 6 25 Stockers and Feeders 266 ft 4 40 Butchers’ Steers Dl3 80 (ft 4 CO Cows 150 ft 3 35 Texas Steers 300 (ft 400 HOGS 430 (ft 475 SHEEP 200 ft 480 BUTTER—Creamery 10 (ft 19 Dairy 6 (ft 16 Packing Stock 5 (ft 6 EGGS—Fresh ...r.-. 11 (ft lift BROOM CORN (per ton) 60 00 ftl2o 00 POTATOES (psrbu) 58 ft 69 PORK—Mess 11 62*4ft 11 87* LARD—Steam 666 ft 670 FLOUR—Spring Patents 300 ft 350 Spring Straights 210 (ft 275 Winter Patents 260 ft 26> Winter Straights 236 ft 250 GRAlN—Wheat. No. 2 54*ft 55* Corn, No. 2 4P4ft 45 Oats. No. 2 28%ft 29 Ryo 62*ft 5254 Barley, No. 2 54 ft 65 MILWAUKEE. GRAlN—Wheat, No. 2 Spring.s 68 ft 58* Corn. No. 3 44 ft 44* Oats, No. 2 White 32*ft 32*4 Rye. No. 1 53*ft ' 54 Barley, No. 2 5254 ft 53 PORK—Mess 11 95 ft 12 00 LARD—Steam 675 ft 680 ST. LOUIS. CATTLE—Texas Steers...... $3 00 ft 375 Native Steers 425 ft 5 25 HOGS 375 ft 425 SHEEP /. 335 ft 460 OMAHA CATTLE. $3 25 ft 5 60 Stockers and Feeders 226 ft 395 HOGS—Light and Mixed 4 10 ft 4 40 Heavy 436 ft 4 50 SHEEP 800 ft 485

“ I was all broken down in health, to weak and nervous 1 was hardly able) to be up. I bad severe pains in my side, and headaohe. I would often have to stop when going up-stairs on account of palpitation of the heart. I had no appetite and a distressed feeling in my stomach. I resolved to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla. I took two bottles and have not had a spell of sick headache! for four months, feel well, work all day and eat heartily. My friends remarla how well I am looking. I think all nervous, run down people ought to take it, especially nursing . mothers. 1 * Mbs. S. Ashworth, Eaton. Ohio. <?

“Bill Doolan’s band has been captured in Oklahoma,” remarked the newspaper reader. “You don’t say so,” replied the man who pretends to keep posted, bus doesn't. “What was Bill’s band doing! Playing ‘Sweet Marie!’ ” Washington Star. Distinction. —Affable Citizen—“l guess you never saw the weather any colder than it has been this whiter.” Oldest Inhabitant —“No; but I’ve feltit colder.”—Detroit Free Press. Colonel—“ Are you one of the ‘advancedwomen, Miss Passe!” Miss P. (haughtily)! —“lndeed, I am not 1 was only twenty* three last birthday.”—N. Y. World.

Tha Great 1 @WAS{|P KIDNEY, O tfk. V LIVER * BLADDER CURE- I M J—L jTn At©ru*ei*U,6oeAsl. J| Advice ft Pamphlet free . Dr. Kilmer & Cos.. Binghamton, N. Y.

We would not liar® expended HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS doint galvanizing, for which w# made no extra charge, haft there not been merit in tt. Galvanizing consists in coating UmL strong but most perishable (in thin sheets) metal, steel, with, the almost IndeStruftible (even when very thin) metals, shift' and aluminum. If there were not great merit in falvaniziiiftJ no one would pay H more for galvanized barbed wire or shetfi iron than ungalvanized costs. If we were making iislnteft windmills to-day, we should furnish an Bfl for SIS Th*t i • l[<x><ft price for an 8-foot painted windmill. WE BUILD FOR TIIE AGES. WE MOULD MOT ALI TOD A POOR, PAINTED WHEEL, NOR ONE RADI Or ■EIAL GALVANIZED BEFORE BEING PUT TOGETHER, IF YOU WOULD PAY 18 DOUBLE PRICE FOB IT. We bull* the best wa know, and knowing that painted thin sheets arft practically worthless, we hava nothing to do with them. Thft enormous cost of preparing to do galvanizing, and of doing it well on a large scale, deters others. 80HK BUY GALVANIZED SHEETS ARB PUNCH ANB SHEAR AND HAKE THEM VP AFTERWARD WHEELS OR VANES HADE OF GALVANIZES! R JL BT OCT ril T AROUND THE RIVETS, JOINT* ARK THEREFORE, not so good a? PAINTED ONES. How any concern can get our prices for painted windmills and painted towers, or those mads up if galvanised nuiterial, cut, sheared and punched after the gaL Panning is done, can only be explained by the fact that people tchobuu them are ignorant of the value of galvanising. W# now galvanize everything after it Is completed, even bolt* and nuts, w# galvanize with the most improved processes and tag * the most perfect known and attainable manner. The process/ When a section of an Aermotor Wheelis aU riveted un completed and cleaned of rust and impurities, it ip immersed in melted sine and aluminum and left thereuntil it becomes Mias hot as that metal, and until every erode, ABgnSMEB cranny, crevice, porp molten metal, and "qaeA the whole tt pieces composing the section become soldered and welded together as one piece. then yon have some* thins that ie etrong, an*! during and reliable. It is expenlive to do, and small doers cannot afford to do it. keep GO tons of dneaaAl aluminum melted from one I V year’s end to another. Tks coating which I I file every pore and copers every portion of the A ermo- I I tor Wheel, Vane and Tower. Heine and aluminum when f I . tiefret put on, but after atime,forms wtihthesteel, I Ia chemical comiinationbr sZL ’ty-L, t anuot *"l.-1 msM tend is practical to a OUr mT*’ mfk viouß * d - w * Bnlkw<!| $ ™iVffiK E £* B ,S: i/i vl p E iu?z, Bl lsoLKcin THE OPKER OP IN AListe£l TMT k" NRX?S& *2„£ R,CK9 °°L AT * lO - OUB GREATRa ***** YOD SOMETHING OF STUB GREATER INTEREST. AermOtOT CO. v Chleag*.

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