Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 17, Number 42, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 1 January 1896 — Page 2

THE NAPPANEE NEWS. BY G. N. MURRAY. NAFrANEE, : s INDIANA. The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. CONGRESSIONAL. The Proceedings of the first Session* In the senate on Saturday the president’s message on the financial situation was discussed, but no action was taken. Adjourned to the 24th In the house Speaker Reed announced the standing committees. The president’s financial message was read and referred to the committee on ways and means. The senate was not in session on the 23d In the house Mr. Dingley, chairman of the ways and means committee, stated that he hoped to be able on Thursday next to present to the house some measure looking to the relief of the treasury as suggested by the president. Bills were introduced to levy and collect duties on wool and cotton; for the protection of agricutural staples and American ships in tlie foreign trade, and to relieve the United States treasury and to familiarize the people of this country with the advantage of a silver coinage. The senate on the 24th repealed the proscriptive disabilities bill passed at the close of the war against the services of ex-con-federates in the United States army and navy. A resolution was introduced to coin the silver in the treasury and another urging the Latin-American union, in whiyh all the republics of the western hefnisphere would make common cause against Kuropean encroachments —ln the house a bill was introduced providing for a duty on certain grades of sugar. There was no session of the senate on the 2Gth —ln the house a revenue bill was passed, the operation of which is limited to 2V 2 years, and which is designed to raise $40,000,000 for the relief of the treasury. The vote was yeas, 205; nays, 81, and was on strictly"party lines, the populists voting with the democrats against the bill. DOMESTIC. The American national and Union national banks at Omaha were consolidated, the business of the formed being merged into the latter. Willie and Eddie, sons of Mrs. 1\ Lauerman, and Jimmie, son of Lawrence Kinney, aged 13, 10 and 32, were drowned at Morris, 111., while skating. William Helm, alleged to have-been the leader of a gang of cattle thieves, was assassinated by vigilantes at Chappel le. Neb. Mrs. Tennie Whitard, of Bismarck, Mo., her infant, and her sister, Ada Hardage, while attempting to ford Forcliee creek wore drowned. The president will issue a proclamation January 4 next, declaring Utah a etate of the union. Seven brick buildings, with stocks :>t 17 firms, were burned at Kossea, Tex., the loss being SIOO,OOO. The president signed the Venezuelan commission resolution and it is now a law. Charley Jones, aged eight, his brother Robert and sister Maggie, aged 21 and 20 respectively, and Ida Ball, aged 10, were drowned while skating near Denver, Col. Joel Davis and his wife, of Coggou, la., died of poison due to canned tomatoes and other members of the family were very ill. Andrew Johnson and his three chil dren were burned to death in their home in Philadelphia. At a cabinet meeting in Washington it was decided to make arrangements for another sale of bonds for gold at the earliest practicable moment. Barney Brown (colored) was Ijuichei by a crowd of negroes at Wrightsvilf3 Ark., for assaulting a negro woman. One of the three buildings of Spaulding, Jennings & Co.’s steel'works at “West Bergen, N. J., was burned, the loss being SIOO,OOO. State Mine Inspector Sampson in bis annual report to the governor places the output of gold for South Dakota at $3,500,000%f0r 1894; $5,000,000 for 183.'). and gives an estimate of $7,000,000 for IS9G. The agreement by which the trolley strike was declared off in Philadelphia fell through and the strike was resumed. Dispatches from St. Louis say that the Mississippi river rose 22 feet in two days, and the Hood in consequence covered the Mississippi valley from tne lowa line to Cairo, 111. The troops in New Mexico were ordered j*y Gen. Miles to pursue the Indians dff their reservations, and if they would not return to kill them. 4 *owney,” the postal clerk’s dog, arrived in New York from China, I;living completed the circuit of the globe since August 32 last. The Bank of Farmington, located at Farmington, 111., failed for $20,000. A break in the La Marsh dike near Pekin, 111., flooded thousands of acre's and thousands of dollars’ worth of dam age was done. In the District of Columbia supreme court a decision was rendered holding that 490,440 acres of land valued at $4,000,000 and claimed by the United States belongs to the city of Las Vegas, N. M. The supreme court of the United States adjourned until January 0. In a railway collision at Cardiff. Tenn., J. S. Brewer, a brakema-n, and three unknown tramps were killed. 4 Perley Ellison and bis family wero murdered by Apaches in lower Pleasant Valley in the mountains near I’ayson, A. T. The Indianapolis directory for 1890 places the population of the city at 154.000, a gain of 49,000 since 1890. Whittle, Hanrahan & Cos., dyers and bleachers ai Providence, It. 1., failed for $315,000. The Merchants’ and Manufacturers' national hank of Columbus, 0., was authorized to begin business with a capital of $350,000. John McKnight and Daniel McAllister were killed and seven other men were severely injured by a dynamite explosion on the drainage canal near Romeovillc, 111. The visible supply of grain in the United States on the 23d was: Wheat, €9,398,000 bushels; corn, 5,789,000 bushels; oats, G. 408,000 bushels; rye, 1,15<V €OO bushels; barley, 1,204,000 bushel*.

Mrs. Mary Murch dropped dead in the Presbyterian church at 'Findlay, 0., while addressing a missionary meeting. The street railway strike in Philadelphia was finally ended through the .f----forts of John Wanamaker, who was aided by members of the Christian league. l’eter Berio at New Orleans took 12-sth seconds from the world’s bicycle record for a mile, placing the record at 1:40 3-5, instead of 1:42 2-5. Frank Forbes, the actoi* proprietor of Forbes’ Dramatic company, who murdered his wife at Grand Ledge, Mich., in September, was sent to prison for 25 years. Strickland’s livery barn with 40 head of horses and 200 vehicles was burned at Burlington, la., the being $50,000. Halt and Ilenry Arnold, sons of a preacher at Frankfort, Ivy., who were reported drowned, were said to be with the Cuban army. The Lawrence reduction works at Victor, Col., were burned; loss, $125,000. John H. Baulsbaugh and his wife, who reside near Swatara, Pa., were found dead in their room from the effects of coal gas. The president tendered places on the Venezuela high commission to Edward J. Phelps, of Vermont, and Robert T. Lincoln, of Illinois, both ex-ministers to England. At Greenville, N. TT., Mrs. Joseph Fagnant presented her husband with a pair of daughters, and wijli this Christmas pre.seut Fagnant is the father of 27 children. Incendiaries burned the covered bridge over the Scioto river at Chillicothe, 0., entailing a loss of $109,000. Ella Scott and Lena Thomas fought at Puerta Gorda. Fla., w ith a pistol and a dagger over Henry Cassidy, whom both loved, and both were fatally wounded. The Exchange bank at Ewcn, Mich., closed its doors. The Levels Investment company made an assignment at Des Moines,, la., w ith liabilities of $420,000. At Nashua, N. 11., Mrs. Sarali Lovett died, aged 100 years. A brother died a few years ago, aged 105, and of 11 brothers and sisters all but one lived to bO* over 90. . At Eldorado Springs, Mo., the home of William Jones was washed away by high water and lie and his wife and ‘three children were dropned. A rise of 35 feet in the Usage river in Missouri made the entire Osage valley for 400 miles a scene of desolation and ruin, hundreds of families iosing everything. Albert Walker, 25 years old, shot his wife in New York and then killed himself. No '-iiuse was know n. The 90th anniversary of the birthday o i the Mormon prophet, Joseph Smith, v.as celebrated in many cities, towns and hamlets in Utah, Seven thousand people were given a Christmas dinner by the Salvation Army in Chicago. John Winningcr, a laborer, shot his wife probably fatally at Ottumwa, la., and then blew out his own brains. Jealousy was the cause. Lord Dunraven, who came across the ocean to make good his allegations of fraud in the Yalkyrie-Defendcr races of last September, arrived in New York. In the 32 Adirondack counties of New York the number of deer slain during the open season this year was 5,053. The entire Ohio valley for 24 hours was swept by storms .of rain and sleetand telegraphic service to the east, fcouth and southeast was badly crippled. The downfall extended from Vicksburg, Miss., to Montreal, Can., and as far east as Washington and New York. Warden George, of the state penitentiary at Frankfort, Ivy., discovered a nest of counterfeiters in the prison. The Salt Lake City mining and stock exchange was formally opened. Charles Dunn, at Youngstown, 0., confessed to robbing anc| burning four schoolhouses. The Porter Bros, company, the largest dealers in dried fruits on the Pacific coast, failed at San Francisco for over $1,000,000. A. B. Payne, postmaster at Longview, Ala., was murdered by Jasper Nabors, his nephew. The Union Traction company, ow ner of the street car lines involved in the great strike in Philadelphia, consented to arbitrate the differences with its employes, and the strike was declared off. Albert Neeland, a photographer of St. Louis, who already lias three wives, wjis arrested in St. Joseph, Mo., when about to marry the fourth. Twenty-nine miners lost their lives in the Nelson mine near Dayton, Tenn., by an explosion of fire-damp. Two youths, aged respectively 15 and 20 years, the youngest named Blount and the older Fourche, engaged in a duel with pistols near Pontotoc, Miss., and both were killed. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 20th aggregated $1,185,207,039, against $1,129,7GG,288 the previous week. The increase, compared with the corresponding week in 1894. was 15.9. Fire in the Riche block at Denver caused a loss of $125,000. There were 377 business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 20th, against 388 the week previous and 349 in the corresponding time of 1594. The third floor of the Tulace clothing house in Minneapolis collapsed under n heavy load of wall paper, killing Gale Walters, a clerk, and doing damage to the extent of SIO,OOO. M. M. Packard & Cos., dealers in spices and teas in New York, made an assignment with liabilities of SIOO,OOO. George Wolfe shot and killed Mrs. William Kattledge, with whom his divorced wife was staying, shot and fatally wounded his w ife, and then committed suicide near Castana, la. During a freshet near Old Monroe, Mo., John Heitinnn, August Longneckar, Ilenry Longnccker, W. Meadows and wife, and a stepson of James Blankinship, named Martin, were drowned.

John and William Noonan and Ed ward Mulcahy lost their lives in a plan-ing-mill fire at Ashland, Wis. The body of Harry T. Hayward, who was executed December 11 at Minneapolis for the murder of Catherine Ging, was shipped to Chicago for cremutioh. Most of the business portion and many residences al Ryan, I. TANARUS., were destroyed by fire. John 11. Hnsted, worth $500,000, committed suicide at Denver through an insane fear that he was about to lose his fortune. Mabel Harris andLilließaptiste were drowned at Sturgeon Bay, Wis., while skating. Tweiitj'-three federal prisoners made their escape from the United States jail at South MeAlester, I. T. Indians, driven to desperation by hunger, ambushed and killed three Americans who were working in the gold fields in the state of Sonora, N. M., and cooked and ale their bodies. The building in Baltimore occupied by the firm of Oehm & Cos. as a clothing store was burned, the loss being $300,000. Seven persons were drowned in a freshet near Sterling Cit}', Tex. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Capt. J. W. Luke, state railroad commissioner of lowa, died at Hampton. Frank Mitchell (colored) celebrated his 102d birthday at Akron, O. Mrs. Margaret King celebrated her 109th birthday anniversary Christmas day by giving a dinner to 100 of her descendants at Greensburg, Ind. FOREIGN. Advices from Panama say that the city of Santa Marta was nearly destroyed by a tidal wave and tliut many lives were lost. Mustafa Pasha, commanding a Turkish force, captured the town of Zeitoun and murdered the 12,000 Armenian residents. A hurricane sank a large number cl boats at Hankow, China, and over 200 persons were drowned. The steamship Nansemond collided with the Spanish, steamship Mexico near the island of Aruba. The Nansemond sunk and Capt. Lasky and seven persons were drowned. Sergius Stepniak, the well-known refugee and author, was accidenta'ly killed by the cars at Chiswick, Russia. The Cuban insurgents were rapidly advancing on Havana-and-'great excitement prevailed in thaLcity. The coasting schooner Victory foundered off Cabot island, N. F., and 27 persons perished. The Britsli ship Moresby was stranded near Dungarven, Ireland, and Capt. Coomber and his wife and son and 35 sailors wcTe drowned. The government of Venezuela ordered that tlie national militia be recruited from all classes-of citizens. The cruiser Kwaii-Ping, one of the warships captured from China by the Japanese during the recent war, was wrecked bn the l’escadore islands and nearly all her deck officers and 00 men were missing. Advices from San Salvador say that soldiers, who were dissatisfied with their treatment, shot and killed 24 officers. The British steamer Bellerophon collided with and sunk the French steamer Emile Selsise at the entrance of the harbor at Algiers and 30 passengers of the Emile Selsise were drowned. The Manitoba government positiverefused the proposal of the Canadian government to establish a system separate schools in any form. LATER. Leslie Combs, the largest tobacco grower in the world, and his father-in-law, .Daniel Sw igert, the most successful retired breeder of l thoroughbreds in America, failed in Lexington, Ky., for $300,000. The last saloon in St. Joe, lnd., was wrecked by unknown persons. Prof. Charles* 11. Thompson, principal of the colored schools at East St. Louis, ill., shot his wife because she would not live with him and then killed himself. Efforts to enforce the Sunday-clos-ing laws at Niagara Falls, N. Y., Jailed, the juries releasing all prisoners. The schooner Edna M. Champion, which sailed from' Philadelphia on October 12 for Port Tam pit; Fla., with a cicw if nine men. wa.; given up as lost. H. JJ. N'inis A Cos., one of the oldest book concerns in Troy, N. Y., made an assignment. Bart Tormcy, Andrew' Lawrence and William Girard were instantly killed by an explosion of dynamite at the Miinesville (Pa.) colliery. Judge Jackson, of the United States court at Parkersburg, W. Ya., held that pension money could pot be attached or levied on for debt. The fourth earthquake shock since October 31 last was felt at Charleston, Mo., and vicinity. Twenty-four persons were smothered and trampled to doatli in a panic caused by a false alarm of fire m the Front Street tlieater in Baltimore. Two others were fatally hurt and ten more were seriously injured. Samuel Friedman, of Dayton, 0., a wholesale fruit dealer, was robbed by highwaymen of S7OO. Washington, Dec. 28.—The tariff bill v.as received in the senate yesterday and referred to the finance committee after a long dbbute. Mr. Quay (Pa.) introduced a bill to increase the duty ou leaf tobacco. Mr. Hill (N. Y.) introduced a resolution providing that any bonds hereafter issued may, in the discretion of the secretary of the treasury, be made payable in United States gold coin or in standard .silver dollars, at the option of the holders. Without action the senate adjourned to the 39th. In the house Mr.Barrett (Mass.) introduced a joint resolution authorizing the president to arrange a conference between the United States and nations possessing territory on the American continent for the settlement of boundary disputes. The bond bill was discussed, but no action was taken.

NEITHER SUITS HIM. Secretary Carlisle on the Tariff and Rond Measures. Washington, Dec. 28. —Secretary Carlisle gave to a reporter his views on the tariff measure now pending in congress. He said: \ ‘I had supposed that very few could new be found who believe that our finan-ci-1 difficulties were caused by a deficiency In the ordinary revenues of the government, or that they can be relieved by increasing taxes upon the commodities consumed by the people. These difficulties are the necessary results of our financial legislation, and they cannot be removed, even temporarily, by tariff laws nor by any other measures which do not directly enable the government to procure the means necessary for the maintenance of gold payments.” ‘Do you think then that the bond bill reported in the house will furnish any relief to the treasury?” “I am satisfied that there is but one permanent remedy for our financial embarlassments, and that is legislation providing for the retirement and cancellation of the legal tender notes, but, recognizing the fact that such a measure would require time for its consideration, and for its complete execution if adopted, I had hoped that congress would immediately take the necessary steps to assist the government in its efforts to procure and maintain such a gold reserve as may .-be requidcr to remove the distrust and apprehension which have precipitated the present emergency. The bill reported by the committee on ways and means falls very far short of the requirements of the situation, and its passage will not beneficially affect the situation with which we now have to deal. •*Our difficulties were produced and have been prolonged and aggravated by the fear that, notwithstanding all the efforts of the we. may ultimately be unauTo to procure gold for the purpose of redeeming oui notes, and consequently be forced to a silver basis, and this fear cannot be wholly rehio\ ed until some action is taken by congress cVearly indicating a purpose to pay all our obligations in gol.l when demanded, by the holders. Although there is no substantial reason to distrust the character of our notes or other securities, or to doubt the purpose of the government to maintain gold payment?, the fact that there has been no legislative 'declaration upon the subject and that no legal authority exists to make them expressly payable* in gold, not only prevents the sale of our bonds for the replenishment of life reserve upon the most advantageous terms, but increases the demands for gold by the presentation of notes at the very times when we are least able to meet tln-m without injury to our credit. •'if it was not generally expected that the three classes of bonds already authorized bv law will be paid in gold at maturity, if demanded, they could not be sold except at an enormous sacrifice, but even this genoral expectation is not sufficient to altogether satisfy investors 'especially in times of financial disturbance About sl*l 000,000 in interest could have been saved to-the p-ople cn the last issue of bonds if congress had consented to make them e#pr*ssly pay-, aide in gold, instead ‘of. coin. This condition is not at all improved by the pending bill, which still requires till b>nds to be payable ‘in coin’ as heretofore, and confers no new authority except the power to issue anl sell three per cent, bonds, also payable in coin, after live years, with interest payable in coin semi-annually. At the present time our 30 year four per cent. 4x>nds, w : th interest payable quarterly, are soiling in the markets at rates which yield investors more than three per cent, per annum, and this fact should net be overlooked in determining*’whether or not a five-year three-per cent, coin bond could now be sold at par, as the pending bill requires.” Speaking df the second section of the bill, which authorizes the issue of certificates to meet deficiencies in the revenue, Secretary Carlisle said: “While there is no necessity at the present time for resorting to the exercise of the power which that section confers, and may not be in future, the secretary of the treasury ought always to have the authority to issue and sell or use in the payment of expenses, short-time certificates,. .or bonds, of the character described in the bill. Such authority ought to have been conferred upon him a long time ago and it ought to be made permanent instead of being limited to $50,U00,u00 as it is by the bill. Except ns to this limitation, the second section of the bill is a good one.” REDUCED TO ASHES. Mortal Remains of Harry Hayward, the Murderer, Incinerated at Chicago. Chicago, pec. 28. —The remains of Harry Hayward, the Minneapolis murderer, were incinerated shortly after noon Friday in the crematory of Graceinnd cemetery. Only Dr. Thaddeus Hay ward** .his brother, Harry Goodsell, his cousin, N. F. Warner, all of Minneapolis, and two attaches of the cemetery company were present, the rules of the corporation forbidding the admission-of more than five persons at one time. The incineration was pronounce-'l complete in a little more than three hours after tlie body was placed -n the furnace. The ashes will he interred ?n Lakewood cemetery, Minneapolis. LIKE AN EARTHQUAKE. Two Thousand Pounds of Dynamite Explode at Drainage Canal. Lockport, ill., Dec. 28. —The powder magazine at Smith & Eastman's section of the drainage canal near here, containing 2,000 pounds of dynamite, blew up at four o’clock Friday morning. No one was injured. The watchman had left the magazine, and supposedly an eirfber from the stove fell upon the floor. The shock was the severest ever felt here, and reports state that it was felt at a distance of 30 miles. Many of the buildings at the works were badly shattered. THREE BLOWN TO PIECES. Deadly Work of Dynamfte Explonion in a Pennsylvania Colliery. Hazleton Pa., L'ec. 28.—Bart Tormey, a miner; Andrew Lawrence, laborer, and William Girard, fireman, were instantly killed by an explosion of dynamite at Milnesville colliery Friday afternoon. There was no other person in the vicinity at the time and the cause of the explosion will never be known. A Woman’s Awful Death. Findlay, 0., Dec. 28. —A eun of crude oil which Mrs. Frank Strine was pouring upon a fire exploded, covering the woman with n mass of flames. She ran and rolled in the snow, but stitch of clothing she had on except her shoes and stockings were consumed. She died in a few hours. Railway Construction In 1895. Chicago, Dee. 28. —Railway building, according to the Railway Age, reached in the United .States this year a'lower point than in any of the last 20 years, the record for 1895 showing only 1,782 miles of track laid.

CALENDAR FOR 1896. • I

JANUARY JULY MT W T F S SMTWTFB 1 2 3 4 i nl 5 fi 7 8 91011 5 6 7 8 91011 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 80 31 .. 26 27 28 29 80 31 .. FEBRUARY AUGUST ..1 1 ..1 1 2345678 23 45678 91011121314 15 9101112131415 1617 18 19 20 21 22 16117 18 19 20 21 22 •23 24 25 26 27 28 29 23 ! 24 25 26 27 28 29 . .| 30 31 MARCH SEPTEMBER 1 2| 8| 4| 5 G| 7 ..1.. 1 2| 3~6 8 Olio'll 12 13j14 61 7 8 9 1011 12 15 16117 18 19 20 21 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 22 23j24 25j26 27:28 .20:2] 22 23*24 25 26 29 30 31[.. |27128 29,30!.. .. .. • ■ • •■I-- ■ APRIL OCTOBER ... .1. .1 1 2! 3| 4 . . . .1. . ..1 1 2 3 5 61 7l 8 Olio'll 4 51 6 7 8 9 If) 12 13 14 15 16 1718 11 1243 14 15 16 17 19 20:21 22 23[24j25 18 19 20 21'22 23:24 36 27|28|29|30|.. .. 25 20 27 28 29,30 31 MAY NOVEMBER . 1 2 1 2 8 4| 5| 61 7 31 4 5 6 <| 8 9 8 9 10il|l2jl3 14 10 ll|l2 13 14 15 16 1516 17 1849:20 21 17 1849 20 21 2-T23 22,23 24 25:20:27 28 21,-25j26j27j28,29j30 29j30 . . . .J. ,| v |.. JUNE DECEMBER ...I l| 2| 3 4 5 6 1 2| 3 .41 5 71 8| 910 11 1243 61 7 8 910 1142 1! 15 IIM7 1* 19 20 13 14 15 1647 1849 21 22!23121 25 26i27 20,21 22 23 24 25 26 28:29)30 27 28129:30 31 . J..

The John A. Salzer Seed Cos. have recently purchased the catalogue seed business of the Northrup, Braslan, Goodwin Cos. of Minneapolis and Chicago and have added this to their al ready large business. This gives to this wide-awake firm the hu gest-cata-logue trade in America,. The firm is in magnificent shape to take care of all seed orders as they are large growers of farm and vegetable seeds, own their own lands and have recently added a large and commodious seed store to their already mammoth building at La Crosse, Wis. If you are in want of choice seeds, this is the firm to write to. They mail their new catalogue upon receipt of but 5c postage. “An,” exclaimed the cannibal chief, smacking his lips, “what kind of a minister was that we had for dinner?” “Your ex : - cellcncy,” replied his companion, “I should say ho was a prime minister.”—Yonkers Statesman. State of Oiuo, City of Toledo, I , Lu< as County. ' f Frank J. Ciieney makes oath that he istho senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Cos., doing business in the City of Toledo, County .and State aforesaid, and that said firm Will pay the sum of one hundred dollars for each and every ease of Catarrh that cannot bo cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Ciieney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this Otli day of December, A. D. 1580. \ seal l A ‘ W - Gleason, I —) Kotary PnhUc. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send lor testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney &Cos., Toledo, O. Sold bv Druggists, 75C. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. Men are won, not so much by being blamed, as by being encompassed with lo ve.—Channing. In the year. 1894, the De Kalb Fence Cos., of Do Kalb. 111., doubled the capacity for producing their lines over 1893 which gave them an output of 20 miles per day. The demand for their goods has been so great the past season, that in order to be able to supply their trade, they have been compelled this year to double the capacity of 1894, which now gives them an output of 40 miles per day. This in itself speaks well for their product and merits the attention and inspection of readers and all that are in need of smooth wiro fencing of any kind. It will bo to your interest to write for their catalogue, which describes iu detail their goods, compi’isihg -the largest nnd most complete lines of smooth wire fencing now produced by any cno plant in the country. See their ad. elsewhere in this paper.

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Very Rich Indeed In the elements that supply the human system With bone, muscle and brain substanceis a circulation fertilized with the supremetonic, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which begets thorough assimilation and digestion, ana gives a healthful impulse to every function of the body. Dyspeptic and weakly persons give strong testimony in its behalf. So do those troubled with biliousness, malaria, rheumatism, constipation and inactivity of the kidneys. Mr. Crusher—“ You don’t think thfr young man you are engaged to will be jealous of me, because I am paying you attention, do you?” Miss Daisy—(after looking him oyer deliberately)—“No, 1 don’t think there is any danger that he will.”—Somerville Journal. “Remember that politeness always pays, my boy,” said the benevolent old gentlerian to the bootblack. “Mebbe,” replied tha practical boy, “but I’d rather have a niekel than a ‘thankye* for blacking shoes.”—Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegram. McVieker’s Theater, Chicago. “Rorv of the Hill,” an Irish comedy by Jas. C. Roach, is the attraction at this house. Seats secured by mail. Tourist— “ What’s the mean temperature around here?” Boomer—“ Stranger, thar ain’t any mean "temperature ‘ hyarabouts. It’s alius delightful!"- Truth. Peso’s Cure cured mo of a Throat and Lung trouble of three years’ standing.— E. Uady, Huntington, Ind., Nov. 12, 1894. It is a sure evidcuco of the health and innocence of the beholder if the senses aro .alive to the beauty of nature.— Thoreau. Rich Red Blood Is the foundation of liealtti. The wav to have Rich, lied, Healthy Blood is to tako Sarsaparilla Hood’s Pills euro all Liver Ills. 25 cents. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR W. L. Douglas 3. SHOE “WoW.dT m ‘ If you pay 84 to 8< for shoes, examine the W. L. Douglas see what a good shoe you can buy for M OVER 100 STYLES AND WIDTHS,

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