Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 17, Number 29, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 2 October 1895 — Page 2
THE NAPPANEE NEWS. BY G. N. MURRAY. NAPPANEE, : : INDIANA. The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. DOMESTIC. While attempting to arrest a desperado named Owens, Dear England, Ark., Deputy Sheriff Harris and Officer Slaff were both shot and instantly killed. At the close cf the Western league baseball season the percentage of the clubs was as follows: Indianapolis, .645; St. Paul, .59 <*; Kansas City, .584; Minneapolis, .520; Detroit, .472; Milwaukee, .460; Terre Haute, .410; Grand Kapids, .306. Ninety Russians left Topeka for their native country. This is tho fourth Russian colony that lias left Kansas for Europe. Mrs. Henry L. Dudley, a mulatto, was murdered at Stamford, Conn., by Mack Simpkins, a colored plumber, who then committed suicide. James McGinnis, a railway brakeman at St. Joseph, Mich., received word that his only brother had died in Cincinnati, leaving him §750,000. Over 300 of the 700 negroes who left Alabama last February, for Mexico were either dead or missing, and others on their way home were stranded at Eagle Pass, Tex., in a starving condition. The twenty-one Cubans held at Wilmington, Del., for violation of the neutrality laws were acquitted by a jury.
liip Sing Lee, a wealthy Chinese merchant at Los Angeles, Cal., offers a half interest in his extensive business and §5,000 in cash to any reputable young American who will marry his daughter, Moi Lee. A special train created anew record between Albany and Syracuse on the New York*?Central, making the 149 miles in 134 minutes. Tiie report that seven persons lost their lives by the sinking of the schooner E. R. Williams off St. Martin's island in Lake Michigan was erroneous. Samuel F. Wilson, a Kansas City saloonkeeper, shot a woman passing as his wife and then killed himself at Dallas, Tex. Farmers in Livingston county, 11L, have lost §IOO,OOO by hog cholera. Walker & Sons’ paper mills at Montgomery, N. Y., were destroyed by fire, the loss being §125,000. In a snowstorm near Livingston Mont., William Checney lost his way and was frozen to death. Near Arena, Wis., two children and the farmhouse of Henry Slauson were burned. ißisn leaders from all parts of the country met in Chicago to advocate the establishment of a republic in Ire-, land. Fire that started in Philadelphia in a building occupied by Charles J. Webb <fc Cos., dealers in yarns and wooleps, caused* a loss of §250,000. The first annual meeting of the international deep waterways convention met at Cleveland. It is expected that the fourth-class postmasters, 05,000 in number, will be put under the protection of the civil service law* before the close of the present administration. A famous Chippewa Indian chief named Wyaquayezich. aged 10S years, ■was drowned in Beaver lake at Cumberland, Wis., by the upsetting of a canoe. The three receivers of the Northern Tacific road handed their resignations to Judge Jenkins, of Milwaukee. AT Meriden, Conn., three laborers were killed by the caving in of the side of a sewer trench. Col. W. C. Jones, for many years chairman of the democratic state central committee, was thrown from a cart at lola, Kan., by a runaway horse and killed. Patrick Brennan, James Sutherland, Patrick Maher and James Roerke were probably fatally injured by the falling of a derrick at Troy, N. Y. A valuable -mica mine was discovered on Kettle river, 2 miles above Kettle Falls, Minn. Four members of the Gilbert gang of river pirates were sentenced to two years in prison each at Hannibal, Mo.', for robbing Burlington railway cars. TnE non-partisan silver convention at Raleigh, N. C., adopted resolutions in favor of free and unlimited coinage of silver and calling on all bimetallists to oppose gold monometallism. The Boone County Milling and Elevator company’s elevator, containing 99,000 bushels of wheat, was burned at Columbia, Mo. Loss, §IOO,OOO. Michael Boyle and Benjamin O’Neil were burned to death at Hartford, Conn., while drunk. The annual report of Commissioner of Indian Affairs Browning to the secretary of the interior shows progress in nearly all directions. Robert Fair, an insurance agent, 40 years of age, shot and killed his wife, Maggie, aged 35, at their home in New York and then killed himself. A quarrel was the cause. The monthly statement prepared bv the commissioner of internal revenue shows the total receipts of his office in Washington during July and August of the present year were $25,742,522, against $51,925,404 during July and Au gust, 1894. The net decrease for the single month of August was §14,203,650. The nineteenth annual convention of the American Humane society met at Minneapolis with nearly every state represented. Patrick Farrell, Michael Craig and Howard McCann were killed by the cars at a crossing in Chicopee, Mass. Thirty buildings, containing most of the wealth of the city of jßelle Fouche, 8. D., were destroyed by an incendiary fire. nA Hublbut, Ward & Cos. wholesale druggists at Dee Moines, la., failed for #115,000.
It was discovered that counterfeit money was being made in the state prison at Jeffersonville, Ind., and that it was being circulated by Henry Patton, foreman of the Patton Manufacturing company, located in the penitentiary. John R. Gentry paced a mile at Dubuque, la., in 2:03%. To save the life of her baby boy aged 3 years, Mrs. William Dickinson, suffered herself to be trampled to death under the hoofs of a runaway team at Neenah, Wis. Gov. Culberson, of Texas, called an extra session of the legislature to meet October 2 to make provision for preventing prize fighting in the state. Rev. Dr. Talmage, of Brooklyn, has accepted the call toJae co-pastor of the First Presbyteriajr church in Washington. * Martin Ada fa was hanged at Columbus, 0., for causing the death of John Ohmer bv poisoning his beer. The Cooperative Banking association, capital stock §IOO,OOO, suspended at New Orleans. The bank had but few depositors. At the closing session in 'Chicago of the Irish national convention an organization was effected to be known as the Irish National Alliance and having for its object the securing of the independence of Ireland by any means within its power consistent with the laws and usages of civilized nations. By an explosion six men lost their lives at the Belgian mjne near Leadville, Col., and four others were badly injured. Joseph Reniscii, a pressman, and Delia Bolin, his sweetheart, committed suicide at St. Louis. Federal officers at San Francisco were notified that all British sealing vessels were carrying arms contrary to law. At Weir City, Kan., “Paddy” Purtell and Johnson, the “Terrible Swede,” were sentenced to one year each in the penitentiary for prize lighting. Tiie village of Haskins, 0., was almost totally destroyed by fire. The Western Baseball association closed the season with the Lincloln (Neb.) club as The percentages were as follows: Lincoln, .626; Des Moines, .582; Peoria, .568; Rockford, .519; Quincy, .504; Burlington, .500; Dubuque, .419; St. Joseph, .381
William Gideon, a farmer near Montpelier, ()., shot and killed his wife and then shot himself. Gideon was despondent because of foreclosure of a mortgage on his farm. A riivsiciAN in Cincinnati, who has made a study of the diseases, claims to have found a remedy which will absolutely and permanently cure diabetes and Bright's disease. Forty thousand people celebrated in Atchison Kansas’ 400,000,000 bushel corn erop in one of the biggest and noisiest carnivals .the west , has ever seen. I White caps took William Massey, of Fulton, Mo., charged with abusing his family, out of his house and rawhided him within an inch of his life. •Over 10,000 persons were idle at Hazleton, l’a., because of a water famine. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 27th aggregated $997,924,422, against $1,081,801,381 the previous week. The increase, compared with the corresponding week in 1894, was 20.8. A cyclone which passed through Crown Point, 0., destreked* much property and severely injured three persons. By a collision of trains near Tunnelton, W. Va., one person was killed two fatally injured and several others seriously hurt. The state department at Washington was advised of the payment in London of the Spanish draft for the Mora claim, amounting to §1,449,000 in gold. Corwin C. Hayword, of Warren, 0., died suddenly from accidental poisoning. He ate toadstools in mistake for mushrooms. Tiie oldest counterfeiter in the United States, W illiam Norris, of De Kalb county, Ala., was convicted at Birmingham of making and passing spurious coins. He is almost 100 years old. The body of John Kuttler, a farmer living near Barada, Neb., was found in his hog pen, partially eaten by the hogs. While attending the “apple carnival” at Glenwood, la., D. U. Reed, of Blue Springs, Neb., secretary of the Nebraska State Horticultural society, was run down by a fast mail train and killed. There were 216 business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 27th, against 213 tho week previous and 235 in the corresponding time in 1894 The world’s pole team trot record was broken at the fair grounds track at Springfield, 111., a mile being made .in 2:12%. Tiie state department at Washington announces the death in Corea of Ye Sung Su, the Corean minuter to the United States. He had been absent from his post for about a year. He died of cholera. Henry Giles, a Monroe county (Tenn.) youth, tried to kill his mother because she objected to his marriage. He failed, then shot himself to death. Much excitement wascaused in. Jewish circles in Boston over an order by the police board that they must hereafter close their places of business on Sunday. At Caldwell, Kan., James B. Sherman, a relative of Gen. Sherman and a former comrade of Col. Cody and Wild Bill, was acquitted of the murder of Mayor Meagher, of Caldwell, twentyone years *go. At Dayton, 0., Clarence Ward, of Buffalo, N Y., a steeple climber, fell 100 feet to his death. By a fire in the Cincinnati Leaf Tobacco company’s storage warehouse 2,775 hogsheads of tobacco were deotroyed, entailing a loss of $300,000. At Salyersville, Ky., Judge William May, while hiving bees, was stung to death.
Secretary of the Navy Herbert has awarded to the Herreshoff Manufacturing company the contract for building two of the new torpedo boats authorized by the act of the last congress, the price being $144,000. k Capt. Armes, of the regular army (retired), was arrested by a column of soldiers at Washington and taken to the barracks by order of Gen. Schofield, the cause of the arrest being a personal insult to Gen. Schofield. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. An election in Rhode Island on an amendment to the constitution providing for biennial elections resulted in the proposition being defeated by a majority of 3,326. The New York democrats in convention at Syracuse nominated the following ticket: For secretary of state, Horatio C. King; attorney general, Horton B. Chase; state treasurer, Dewitt Clinton Low; comptroller, .lolm B. Judson; state engineer, Russell R. Stuart. The platform declares gold and silver the only legal tender, favors the gradual retirement of greenbacks, declares against the free and unlimited coinage of silver, and indorses the national democratic administration. The New Jersey demoerats in convention at Trenton nominated Alexander E. McGill, of Hudson county, for governor. The platform reaffirms the national. democratic platform of 1892 and indorses the administration of President Cleveland. \ The populists of the Eighteenth Illinois district nominated G. S. Culp, of Shelby county, for congress. Joseph Field, the wealthy Middletown farmer, known throughout New Jersey as “Uncle Josey,” celebrated his 103d birthday. FOREIGN. A constitutional convention was held at Najasa at which Bartolorae Masso was elected president of the Cuban republic. Cuban insurgents were said to be within 75 miles of llav&naj. Seven persons were drowned in the lake near GenevirrSwitzerland, by the sinking of a boat. Lieut. Cassarts,oX the Belgian army, who captured the murderer oL Emin Pasha, was eaten l>y cannibals in a remote part of the Congo state. The British schooner Beatrice was seized by the revenue cutter Rush for illegal sealing. There were found on board eighty skins which were unrecorded. The Rush has searched fiftyseven vessels since August 1. Forest fires along thefsouth shore of the St. Lawrence river east of Montreal had destroyed hundreds of farmhouses and other buildings. . l¥ was reported that China had rejected the British demand for the banishment of the ex-viceroy of Szechuen. One hundred lives were lost by a landslide which overwhelmed the village of Hudeya, in Arabia
Ottoman officials incited Mussulmans to raid a church at Varna and ten Armenians were Slain. Tiie German government has issued a decree setting forth that after October 1 no cattle or hogs shall be imported into Germany from any country without being quarantined. Premier Blair has dissolved the New Brunswick legislature and the general election will take place October 16. Ten thousand diamond cutters struck at Amsterdam, Holland, upon the refusal of the employers to adopt conditions upon which the cutters’ trades union insisted. Harry Payne, the famous pantomime clown, died at his home in London after a brief illness. ** LATER. Tiie percentages of the baseball clubs In the National league for the week ended on the 29th were: Baltimore, .667; Cleveland, .646; Philadelphia, .592; Chicago, .554; Brooklyn, .546; Boston, 543; Pittsburgh, .538; New Yorit, .508; Cincinnati, .508; Washington, .333; St Louis,- .295; Louisville, .207. ’ Tiie elevator of the Daisy flour mill at Superior, Wis., was burned, causing a loss of SIBO,OOO. ■ Edwin W. McHenry, of St. Paul, chief engineer of the Northern Pacilic, and Frank G. Bigelow, a Milwaukee banker, were appointed receivers of the Northern Pacific railway. Fire almost totally destroyed the town of Big Stone Gap, Va. Fire losses in the United States for the week ended on the 2Sth amounted to §3,084,760, as compared with §3,373,310 for the preceding week and $2,413,* 030 for the week ended September 14. Three inches of snow fell at Summit and other portions of northern Michigan. Mrs. Nellie W. llagel, of Illinois, ! fell from a balloon at Monrovia, Cal., a distance of 1,000 feet, and was instantly killed. Destructive gales swept lakes Michigan, Superior and Huron, doing great , damage to shipping. A monument to the late President Carnot, of France, was dedicated at Fontainebleau. Typhoid fever, due to impure water and impure milk, was epidemic in Chicago,,, I The Farmers’ and Citizens’ bank of ! Pawnee, O. TA NARUS., closed its doors with liabilities of §50,000. Lieut. Gen. . Schofield retired as commander of the United States army and Gen. Nelson A. Miles succeeds him. Prof. Louis Pasteur, the eminent bacteriologist, died in Paris of paralysis, aged 73 years. The big plant of the River Spinning company at Woonsocket, It. 1., was destroyed by fire,"the loss being §135,000. The Wabash (Ind.) Church and School Furniture company failed with liabilities of §IOO,OOO. In his annual report Director of the Mint Preston estimates the total stock of gold and silver coin in the United States January 1, 189.), at §1,700,219,251, of which the gold goin is placed at $577,182,792. This shows a net loss in gold coin for the year 1894 of $886,182,792 and only $5,889,541 of silver. The worlds production of gold for 1894 was $179,863,000, an increase of $22,668,000, while the 1894 figures for silver were $105,757,300.
HE WILL ACCEPT. Col. New Intimates Such Regarding Harrison and the Presidency. Indianapolis, Ind., Sept. 30.—0n Saturday Hon. John C. New, a very close friend of ex-President Harrison was interviewed, at his own request by O. R. Johnson, a local newspaper man, who was vice consul general at London under Mr. New. In the interview* Col. New said Gen. Harrison was not a candidate and would not faVor either Reed or McKinley, if lie should be consulted. He said, however, that he had no hesitancy in declaring that Gen. Harrison w r ould accept a nomination for president in 1896. This belief he said, was not based upon anything that Gen. Harrison had said to him, but upon the unmistakable drift of public sentiment, as he was the man in whom all the interest in national politics centers. Col. New continued: •■lien. Harrison has been president of this country oneo and the position could hardly bring to him any additional honor and ho is not a candidate for it. By this I mean that he will not enter into a struggle for a nomination which could not bring him any more houor, but which would bring him more cares. If the republican party should find a man who it believes would be more acceptable to tao masses Mr. Harrison would che3rfully acquiesce in tho selection. If the sentiment of the country is for him he will accept the nomination. In brief, he will not put forth his hands to secure it. but if called to active leadership by his party ho will asyrtipac the trust as a duty, the highest to which a man can bo called in this country and one from which his patriotism would not permit him to shrink, no matter what might be his personal desires. There is another condition under which li--would adopt the same course, if the delegates to tho national convention should bo divided so equally among other aspirants that they could not make a choice without a protracted struggle, or if there should be bitterness through personal ambitions and aspirations, and Mr. Harrison should be chosen as a means of pacifying the factions, should such exist, then, too, b ; would accept the nomination,” Gen. Harrison, .after reading the interview, intimated that he reserved the right to speak for himself, although lie could not control the utterances of his friends. NO TRIFLING. Great Britain to Shell Chinese Ports Unless Demands Are Granted. •a Shanghai, Sept. 30. —Failing the entire compliance of the central government with the British demands, it is understood that a tleet of fourteen warships will make a demonstration before Nankin on Tuesday or Wednesday next. The British demand is that within fourteen days an edict must be issued degrading the viceroy of Se-Cliuen, or otherwise the British admiral commandingnvilL act. The wife and family and the treasurer of the viceroy of Nankin have been brought to Shanghai for safety. Rich Chinese merchants are coming here from every side seeking shelter. The British warships Rainbow, l’lover, Spartan. Swift and JEeolusare at ports on the Vang-tse-Kiang river. The Carolina, Undaunted, Edgar, Archer and Alacrity are at Shanghai. The British admiral is on board the Edgar. Peking, Sept. 30.—The British ultimatum in the matterof the Sze-Chuen riots has just been issued. Within fourteen days an edict must be issued degrading the viceroy of the province, otherwise the British admiral Commanding will act. Tiie American commission, consisting of the consul at Tien-Tsin and the naval officer, accompanied by Chinese soldiers and interpreters, are starting overland. The viceroy,pays the French indemnity of '940,000 taels. Li Hung Chang has been appointed a commissioner to negotiate a commercial treaty with the Japanese. London, Sept. 30.—The Standard predicts a revolution in China and the overthrow of the Manchu dynasty if the government *at Peking is rash enough to defy the w estern powers. CHOLERaTn HAWAII SUBSIDING. Latest Advices Indicate T hat the Scourge Is Under Control. k San Francisco, Sept. 30. —The barkentine S. G. Wilder arrived Saturday and brought the first authentic aiLvices from Honolulu received for two weeks. Advices up to September 11 arc that seventy-two people have been attacked with cholera since the plague broke out. Os that number iilty-two have died. But two white people were among the victims. During the preceding forty-eight hours, but one new case developed. It is believed that the disease is in check and it is only a matter of a few weeks when it will be totally eradicated. Asa result of almost suspended business many Uawaiians are out of work and there appears to be real distress among them. A relief station lias been opened up at which all natives may secure supplies ofTood and raiment. CASH BOX EMPTY. Bank lu Oklahoma (loses—Liabilities, * iy 50,000—Cash in the Bank, 825. Perry,- O. TANARUS., Sept. 30.—The Farmers’ and Citizens 7 bank of Pawnee, a small town 30 miles east of here, and the same distance from a railroad, was closed Saturday morning by attachments by depositors. The attachments amounted to over $30,000, and the liabilities are nearly $50,000. The money in the bank found by the officers was $25. The bank was the depository of the Pawnee, Osage and Otoe Indians. The latest news from Pawnee is that 0. L. Berry, cashier and president, was compelled to leave town, and that an infuriated mob is after him with the intention of lynching him if caught. There are now on the rolls of tho legal profession in London about 15,300 solicitors (or attorneys at law, as they were called prior to 1873) as compared with some 10,000 or 11,000 some twenty years ago. A modern Greek-English dictionary, the first to deal with the Greek of today as a v living language, has been made by Dr. Jannaris, and is about to be published by Murray. Between 1850 and 1860 the wealth of this country increased 126.5 per cent.; in the next decade, between 1860 and 1870, it bad increased 85.5 per cent.
IN BUSINESS CIRCLES. Weekly Review of the Trade Situation by 4 Bun. New York, Sept. 30.—R. O. Dun & Co.’s weekly review ot trade says: “Tho full statement of about 2,800 commercial failures for the third quarter of 1895 will be published next. week, and will Rhow liabilities of about 530.003.000, of which about $11,000.liuvo been of manutacturing and $17,000,000 of trading concerns. In tho same quarter of last year the failures were 2,808. nnd the liabilities §‘29,411.196. of which $12,331,892 were of manufacturing and $15,181,230 of trading concerns. The wcelrs reports are highly encouraging as to monetary matters, although exports of gold still continuo and also as to the cotton manufacture, but not as satisfactory regarding Iron, woolen, leather or silk manufactures "The speculation‘in cotton has lifted the price five-eighths during the past woek and quotations here are so much higher than at Liverpool that free exports cannot be expected. it seems no longer possible to hope for a good crop, and Meill Bros. have Issued a circular predicting a yield of only 7.000.000 bales. The accounts of injury and loss grow more dismal each week, and while they may be somewhat exaggerated, the general outlook is decided unfavorable. But for the extr ordinary supplies carried over from last year, tho manufacturer here and abroad would be in trouble. But prices of goods rise each week, adding to the profit of mills, which, on Loth sides of the ocean, can use for some time to come only cotton bought at low prices. It is not clear how far the, consumption will support the manufacture at tho present rate and at present prices for goods, though the demand from dealers is nuturully urgent, while the market for tho raw material is constantly • rising There is still some chance of a strike in Fall River mills, though the rise in prices will make it easier for the mills to grant somo advance in wages. "Nothing is clear about the iron and steel manufacture, but some of the largest Pittsburgh concerns, professing to have orders for many months ahead, are bidding for small contracts in eastern markets at $1 to $1.50 per ton less than the quoted rate. Some say that it is done to depress tho market, and again it is thought that the object may no to buy materials, but contracts have been made at tho Ast for 250.000 tons of foreign ore.to be used in Bessemer iron making at eastern furnaces, and the termination of the Marquette strike sets free about 500,000 tons more of Bessemer ore within tho period of lake navigation. The strike of coke workers at Connellsville seems to have been avoided- Tho Iron Age reasons that nothing can explain the situation except somo large' movement in steel rails not yet mado known. For the lirst week in many months the average of prices of iron and steel products ehows no change whatever, though the demand for finished products U distinctly reduced. • The exports of gold, though not as large as they were somo weeks ago. cause some disquiet in view of the dis minding of the bond syndicate. Money has gone to the interior rather largely, and there is lonsiderable increase in volume of commercial lojius. Stocks havc'slightly declined for railroads during the week, though the market shows much stubbornness, and trust stocks average 42 cents per share higher than a week ago. but are now growing stronger in tone "Failures for the week have been 210 in the United States, against *235 last year, and 50 in Canada, against 55 last year." DEFENSE OF GOLDEN GATE. Batt.ory of Dynamite Guns Almost Ready for Service. San Francisco, Sept. 25. —The United States government is now able to blow out of the water at a day's notice a whole hostile lieet that might attempt to enter the Golden gate. The baUtery of the big* pneumatic dynamite guns ordered lor the defense of this port a year or more ago has been advanced so far toward completion that two of the guns could be effectivldy tired with only twenty-four hours preparation. The two g-uns *now set up will be actually tired duringthe contractor’s preliminary tests within ten days, and it is expected that within six weeks some old hulks will have been blown to splinters -in official tests and the battery will have been turned over to the government. MICHIGAN’S GREAT TAX LEVY. More Than a Million and a Quarter in Excess of That for 1894. Lansing, Mich., Sept. 28.—The auditor general on Thursday issued the state tax levy for 1895, which is the largest in the history of tho state and more than a million and a quarter in excess of that for 1894. The administration has been struggling with deficiencies, which were a legacy from the administration of 1891, which amounted in. the aggregate to $760,000. The treasury balance was also impaired $257,000, and it is thought best to clean off the slate and put the tax levy hereafter upon the basis of former years. Passed Bad Money. Jeffersonville, Ind., Sept. 27. By the aid of Warden Hert, of the prison south, Secret Service Detective Louis Summers on Wednesday arrested Capt. Henry l’atton, foreman of the Patton Manufacturing company, located in the penitentiary, on the charge of circulating counterfeit money, which has for years been made in the prison by convicts. Capt. Patton confessed his guilt nnd was taken to * New Albany to be given a preliminary hearing before United States Commissioner Harrison, when he will be thken to Indianapolis. The money was manufactured by Convict William Alsop, who is serving a tenyear term for grand larceny. This is his fifth term in the prison south. Fumigated the Malls. / Washington, Sept. 20. Capt. 11. M. Brooks, superintendent of the foreign mail service, Monday received a telegram from Postmaster McCoppin, at San * Francisco, stating that the mails per steamer Gaelic, from cholera-infected ports, had been thoroughly fumigated in bulk bags, then opened and the contents fumigated a second time. Every precaution is being taken against the disease by the postal authorities, the fumigating being done in accordance with a standing order of the department. Six Are Killed. Leadville, CoL, Sept. 28.—Sixty-five pounds of giant powder exploded Thursday afternoon in the Belgian mine in Adelaide Park, 5 miles from this city. Ten miners were at work in the drifts at the time, and it is believed that a miner carrying ttfe powder from one drift to another let it fall, and the explosion caused a cave-in, resulting in the instant death of six and the fatal injury of two more. Help was sent from the city vrffh the report I of the explosion to hasten the work of rescue of the wounded and dead.
Kate Field In Denver. Dexter, Sept. 10.—My Journey from. Chicago was over the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, one of the best managed systems in the country, I should save judging by the civility of the employes, the comfort I experienced, the excellence of it, roadbed, and the punctuality of arrival, t actually reached Denver ahead of time. Tb& Burlington Route is also the best to Strain, Minneapolis, Omaha and Kansas City* Artist—“l painted this picture, sir, to keep the wolf from tho door.” Dealer (after inspecting it)—“Well, hang it on tho knob where the wolf can see it.”—Tit-Bits. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally. Price 75c. It Will Pay To make some provision for your physical health at this season, because a cold or cough, an attack of pneumonia or typhoid fever now may make you an invalid all winter. First of all be sure that your blood, is pure, for health depends upon pur& blood. A few bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla will be a paying investment now. Is will give you pure, rich blood and invigorate your whole system. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is tho One True Blood Purifier. Hnnrl’c Dillc are tasteless, mild, effec-* IIUUU tive AU druggists. 25c.
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