Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 26, Number 20, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 20 July 1904 — Page 2

THE NAPPANEE NEWS. I G. N. MURRAY,' Publisher. NAPPANEE, : : INDIANA AMMO All the News of the Past Seven Days Condensed. HOME AND FOREIGN ITEMS Sews of the Industrial Field, Personal and Political Items, Happenings at Home and Abroad. THE NEWS FROM ALL THE WORLD DOMESTIC. James Vogelony, aged 22, shot his 15-year old sweetheart,, Anna Underanskv, five times with a revolver, causing instant death. The crime was committed at Hocking, la. Vogelony killed the girl because she refused to marry him. Judge J. M. Jones, one of the best known lawyers in Ohio, died suddenly at his home in Clevleand of Bright’s disease. He was a brother of former Upited States Senator John P. Jones, of Nevada. Fire at Covington, Ga., resulted in the destruction of property valued at $125,000, with $60,000 insurance. Haley Gipe was arrested, suspected of having murdered Mrs. William M. Starbuck and child, near Greensboro, Ind. Senator W. A. Clark, of Montana, made public the announcement that he had married his ward, Miss Anna E. La Chappelle, in France, in May, 1901. strike. During a cloudburst In Wheeler county, Ore., Mrs. Bethune, aged 90 years, and Martin Smith, 91 years, were drowned. Twenty-eight houses in Mitchell were destroyed. Catholic educators representing nearly every diocese in the United States are holding a conference in St. Louis for the purpose of devising plans for establishing a uniform system of education in parochial and training schools. The bureau of agriculture reports crop conditions generally favorable. Rust affects grain in some sections. Samuel M. Jones, known throughout the United States as the "Golden Rule” mayor of Toledo, 0., died as the result of a complication of diseases. Highball, the American derby winner, broke his leg during the running of the Seagate stakes at Brighton Beach. The horse was injured so badly that he was shot.

Tony and Jacob Martin, farmers living near Flannagan, 111., shot and killed Perry Myers, of Gas City, Ind., while the latter was burglarizing their farm aiid farm buildings. Frederick Lauensteln, Sr., owner of the Evansville Democrat (German), dropped dead in that city just as he was boarding a train, to start to St. Louis. Apoplexy probably was the cause of death. He was 60 years old. Simon Riggs shot and killed his wife at Clinton, la., and then committed suicide. Despondency is given as the cause. Marshall Alger and wife, of Wheeling. W. Va.. were drowned while attempting to ford Short creek, three miles east of Portland, O. The Berkeley Arms hotel, at Berkeley, near Seaside Park, N. J., was destroyed by fire. Loss, $75,000. Fifty thousand packing house employes in the nine big meat distributing centers go on strike and a prolongation of the struggle will mean a shortage of meat and high prices to the consumers, if not a widespread meat famine. Thirty-one persons went down with the steamer Nemesis off the coast of New South-Wales. John H. Schnettier. a former, member of the St. Louis municipal assembly, pleaded guilty in the St. Louis circuit court to a charge of bribery in connection with the passage of the city lighting bill. Sentence has not yet been imposed. A negro was lynched at Clayton. La., for assaulting Jesse Hilliard, a sawmill foreman, with a spade. Hilliard's wound Js dangerous, but not necessarily fatal. William P. Scott, candidate for president ofthe United States on the national liberty party ticket, was arrested at East St. Louis, 111., on account of an unpaid fine imposed as a penalty for conducting a disorderly place at his saloon and summer garden. The fine and costs amounted to $149.80. He paid SSO and was given time to pay the balance. The heaviest order of canned meat to cross the pacific has been sucessfully delivered on the Pacific coast and loaded aboard the ship Shaw mut for transportation to Yokohama. The shipment consists of a rush order for 1,000,000 pounds of canned beef for the subsistence department of the Japanese army. Phillip Bermono, a weathy farmer, was murdered by robbers at his home near New Herlinger, Mo. Rev. Dr. Lemuel Moss, D. D. LL. D., one of the foremost Baptist educators and divines, is dead at his home in New York after an illness of more than one year. He was born in Kentucky 75 years ago. Over $75,000 Is the ioes estimated from fire which destroyed J. Eisman & Co.’s clothing factory and damaged a number of adjoining business houses at Portsmouth, O. A Big Four freight train went through a trestle at Sharon, 0., and Fireman Metzger, of Delaware, 0., and Brakeman Casead, of Osborn, 0., were instantly killed. Charles Hintz, of Milwaukee„was sentenced to 14 years in state’s prison at hard labor for killing Mrs. Augusta Pinkie at Muskego, Wis., last August.

The Batavian bank,of Janesville, Wis., has been merged into a national bank and has increased its capital stock from $200,000 to $400,000, with SIOO,OOO surplus, making it the largest bank in Wisconsin out of Milwaukee. Chicago banks report that no call has been made from the west for money to move the crops, and the movement is not expected to start before August. “Closed shop” contracts between labor unions and employers are declared unlawful by Judge Ludwig in Milwaukee, in a decision against the tailors’ union. The New York supreme court declared that decree of divorce granted Lillian Nordica valid and dismissed allegations of fraud and collusion. President Roosevelt’s seretary explains, in connection with the failure of a miners’ delegation tosee the president, that Appointments are required. He says the president was unaware of the intention to visit him. "• Final reports of the New Y'ork police place the total number of dead by the Slocum disaster at 958. Big packing centers report the industry tied up by the strike. Supplies of meat are sufficient for a week or more. The funeral of Mrs. Samuel L. Clemens, wife of Mark Twain, was held at the home of her brother, Gen. Charles J. Langdon, in Elmira, N. Y. Belated reports ofthe losses caused by the heavy storms in various parts of the state of Oregon now show that the damage will amount to about SIOO,000. A movement is on foot for the erection of a monument in Mount Vernon, 0., to the late Daniel Decatur Emmett, author of the song “Dixie,” who died a couple of weeks ago. The finest aquarium in the world, it is reported, is to be established in Golden Gate park by Henry Tevis as a memorial to his father, the late Lloyd Tevis. There will he no change in the costumes of the Igorrotes at the St. Louis exposition. Charles W. H. Carter, a wealthy Brooklyn manufacturer, died in a cab while riding with a mysterious woman, who disappeared without disclosing her identity. Union leaders and packers held a long conference in Chicago, but failed to agree on conditions of arbitration. Union men fear an effort to disrupt their organization, but will make another peace offer. Serious rioting occurred in the evening. Chicago & Eastern Illinois railroad officials, after an investigation of the wreck at Glenwood in which 19 persons lost their lives, say the blame rests on Engineer Hoxey, of the freight train, into the rear of which the excursion train crashed. It is charged that he violated a general order in backing down a track in the wrong direction without a special dispatch.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. A number of Bryan democratic leaders, who are dissatisfied with the presidential nomination made by the democratic national convention, will hold a conference soon to decide on some line of action during the coming campaign. President Roosevelt, Senator Fairbanks and National Chairman Cortelyou at Oyster Bay discussed plans for the campaign. An authoritative denial is made in Esopus of the report that Judge Parker had telegraphed Hill about a gold plank and that Hill had held up the message. Dr. C. A. Alfonso Smith, associate professor of the chair of English at the University of North Carolina, has declined the offer of the presidency of the University of Tennessee. The national democratic campaign will be largely conducted from Esopus. Actual plans for the campaign have not been completed. Judge Parker will advise on all questions of importance which may come up during the campaign. In a statement Bryan says he will support the democratic ticket because on some issues the platform and nominees are preferable to the republican; charges that the nomination of Judge Parker was secured by “crooked and indefensible methods,” and that Wall street is in temporary control of the party. He declares that immediately after the election he will begin a movement for reorganization in preparation for the campaign of 1968. Judge Parker declines to comment on the statement issued by Mr. Bryan. Mayor Cyrus W. Davis, of Watervilie, was nominated for governor of Maine in the democratic state convenheld in Watervilie. Judge Parker, democratic nominee for president, made a speech at Esopus to nearly 1,000 persons, but avoided politics. FOREIGN. Gen. Oku, with an army of 60.000 men, is reported advancing from Kaichow and strong Japanese forces are converging on Siadiama, half way between Kaichow and Tatchekiao. The czar of Russia, by an imperial decree, has abolished exile to Siberia by administrative process without judicial trial. u, One thousand seven hundred wounded Russians have been brought into Port Arthur since July 8, according to reports brought to Chefoo. A Mukden dispatch says the Japanese attacked positions near Port Arthur and were repulsed with enormous losses, caused by Russian mine*, 20,0(JU men being killed or wounded. The electors met at Mexico City, Mex., and announced the election of Perflrlo Diaz as president of Mexico and Ramon Corral as vice president. The election took place two weeks ago. The term Is for six yeras. The Russian and Japanese eastern armies are face to face at the Lianlc river, 28 miles from Liaoyang, preparing for a desperate battle when the isianderj begin crossing.

Bulgarian insurgents used dynamite to wreck a train on the Salonica-Con-stantinople line. Twenty persons were hurt. A cloudburst over the hills northeast of Manila caused a flood which has destroyed San Juan del Monte. Two hundred lives were lost. The damage to property is estimated at $2,000,000. Paul Kruger, former president of the Transvaal republic, died at Clarens, Switzerland, from pneumonia and supervening heart weakness. Bad weather continues in central Chili, says a Herald dispatch from Valparaiso. Floods have destroyed 37 houses and caused the death of nine persons. The report that the mikado had lost 30,600 men in an attack on Port Arthur is declared to be a Japanese hoax to draw Kuropatkin’s army south. Anew rumor saying that 2,800 Japanese were killed caused renewed joy in St. Petersburg. Yinkow, the port of Newchwang, has been occupied by the Japanese, the Russian garrison fleeing.

LATER. The body of Kent Loomis, an American envoy to Abyssinia, who disappeared from an Atlantic liner. June 20, was washed ashore on the English coast. Peace negotiations between' the packers and the strike leaders in Chicago were broken off and a long and bitter struggle seems probable. J. A. Cook, the Benton Harbor, Mich., manufacturer, killed Burton Grissoid by striking him with his fist. At Oliver’s construction camp, near Manchester station, Ind., Sarah Simmons, aged 20, colored, fatally shot James Smith, 30 years old, also colored. After the shooting the woman dressed herself in male attire and attempted to escape, but was arrested. The giand jury, which has been investigating the murder of Miss Sarah Schafer, at Bedford, Ind., found no indictment. Rufino Lopez, of Irapuato, is dead in Mexico City, Mex., at the age of 107. He was in fair helath almost to the day of his death and his faculties were unimpaired. Senator Charles W. Fairbanks has gone to Mackinac, where he will rest for a fortnight. Fire completely destroyed the plant of the Alabama Rift Flooring company, at Montgomery, Ala., entailing a loss of $200,000. The post office safe at Calhoun, Ga., was blown open by unknown parties, and about S2OO in money and S6OO worth of stamps taken. New York bank figures show a big gain in surplus reserves, deposits and bank holdings. Justin Snyder, a business man of Morrison, 111., wai drowned while swimming in a deep hole one mile east of Fulton, 111. Karl Kirschner, aged seven years, died at Terre Haute, Ind., of lockjaw, the result of a toy pistol wound the Fourth of July. Fire at Cleveland, 0., partially destroyed the plant of the Forest City Bedstead company, causing a loss of SIOO,OOO. lon Perdicaris will urge France to make Raisun governor of Tangier to prevent civil war. The brigand chief alone can restore order, else 10,000 troops will be needed. , Edward Cox, the eight-year-old son of B. D. Cox, who was assassinated two years ago at Jackson, Ky., accidentally shot and killed his four-year-old brother Tom. Ex-Senator Henry G. Davis, democratic nominee for vice president, does not expect to make any formal speeches during the campaign, but will follow the McKinley porch policy and receive delegations. The price of all kinds of meats was raised at Rochester, N. Y.. from $1.50 to $3 a hundred pounds at wholesale horses. The remains of the late Paul Kruger will be buried in the Transvaal. The village of Kimball, Mich., including the Kimball & Clark mill, a large stock of lumber and nearly every building in the village was destroyed by fire. The loss is estimated to he $75,000. Four persans, were drowned in Spring river, 18 miles east of Pittsburg, Kan. The funeral of Mayor Samuel M. Jones was the largest ever held in Toledo. While the body lay in state at Memorial hall it was view by 100,000 people. Edgar T. Washburn, a member of the grain firm of Heathfield & Washburn, on the Buffalo. Y., board of trace, killed his wife, his daughter and himself while temporarly insane. • A Shanghai calegram says that the Chicago Daily News’ dispatch boat Fawan has been seized by the Russians and towed into Port Arthur. At Mount Holly, N. J., Aaron Timbers, Jonas Sims and William Austin, three negroes who confessed to assaulting Mrs. Elsie Biddle, of Burlington, were sentenced to 49 years each in state prison. The French government has conferred upon Secretary Hay the grand cross of the Legion of Honor in recognition of the services rendered during the last six years by the American department of state toward the maintenance of the peace of the world. Four hundred thousand dollars’ worth of property-was destroyed by fire at the Omaha docks and warehouses in Duluth, Minn. The first payment of $500,000 on the government loan of $4,600,000 to the Louisiana Purchase Exposition company has been deposited in the subtreasury in St. Louis. A hitch In the peace negotiations leaves the Chicago stockyards strike no nearer settlement than it was when the effort began. Judge Bradford at Trenton, N. J., granted a preliminary injuction forbidding distribution of Northern Securities assets., Gen. Samsonoff defeated the Japanese on the road to Yinkow, according to a report from Liaoyang. One thousand Japanese are said to hve fallen.

THE MEAT INDUSTRY STRIKE EFFORTS TO AGREE ON FLAN OF ARBITRATION FAIL. A Serious Outbreak in Chicago—Meat’ Riots in New York—Prices Continue to Advance. 0 Chicago, July 18.—Chicago and the entire United States now face one of the greatest industrial strikes in history. Peace negotiations in the great stockyards strike are at an end, and the packers and their 80,000 employes are preparing for a prolonged struggle in the nine cities in which strikes have been called. The break came in Chicago Saturady afternoon, when at the end of a three hours’ joint conference it was announced that a basis for arbitration eould not be agreed upon. The reinstatement of the men now on strike was the rock upon which the negotiations went to smash. President Donnelly and his associates insisted that all of the strikers should be reinstated within seven days. The packers replied that they could not agree to discharge the men who have been employed to take the place of the strikers. All other details for arbitration had been arranged when this obstacle arose. Now that' arbitration negotiations have been abandoned it seems only a matter of time till 14,000 other employes of the stockyards houses go on sympathetic strike. The central body of the mechanical trades employed at the yards voted to strike when asked to do so by President Donnelly of the butcher workmen. Prices of meat continue to go up, although the packers insist that there i3 plenty on hand and that there will be no appreciable shortage. Fulton market commission men say that if the strike continues they can supply the Chicago market with 60 per cent of the normal consumption of meat. The effect of the strike was keenly felt in the east, where the advanced prices and the scarcity in the fresh meat supply make it a luxury to the poorer classes. In Greater New York on the east side purchases were made by ounces. The increased demand for poultry, eggs and vegetables resulted in a general advance in prices, and the hotels and restaurants were charging more. Many of the butcher shops in the poorer sections of the city were forced to close, owing to inability to get supplies. Chicago, July 15.—Rioting and bloodshed signalized the progress of the packing house strike Thursday night. While the packers and the strike leaders were ending a downtown session in which they had failed to reach a basis of settlement, hundreds of workingmen and their sympathizers gathered in Paulina and Forty-fifth streets, near the New City police station. When the police attempted to arrest a rioter the mob assailed them with stones and sticks. An answering volley of bullets was fired by the patrolmen and one of the strikers was shot. “Three policemen also were wounded, while several other rioters were injured. New York, July 16. —A meat riot occurred at Forty-fourth street and First avenue Friday afternoon, in which 500 East side kosher butchers and striking employes of the big packing houses took part. It began when several butchers persisted in buying meat from the packing houses, after they had pledged themselves not to pay the exorbitant prices demanded. As they emerged with their meat they were attacked by the butcherswho had held to their agreement and by the strikers, and had not the police interferred the unfaithful butchers would have been killed. As it was they were severely beaten. Hundreds of the rioters were bruised and battered by the night sticks of the police. It was the first trouble that has occurred since the beginning of the strike.

200 DIE BY CLOUDBURST. Awful Disaster Occurs in Philippines —The Damage Will Reach $2,000,000. Manila, July 14. —A cloudburst over the hills northeast of Manila caused a flood which has destroyed San Juan del Monte. Two hundred lives were lost. The low-lying districts were inundated. The homes of Americans and foreigners are isolated. Transportation through the streets is carried on in boats only. Rain fell for 27 hours, totaling 17 1-5 inches. This is unprecedented. Disastrous Forest Fires. Vancouver, B. C., July 16.—Owing to the long dry period forest fires along the Columbia coast have given unusual trouble this year. A bush fire is now raging at Wulffsohn Bay, a large area having been burned over. Settlers at Roberts Creek have barely escaped with their lives, all their property having been destroyed. ¥ Charged with Larceny. Boston, July 16. —Charles M. Hatcher, a member of the brokerage firm of C. M. Hatcher & Cos., was arrested Friday night, charged with the larceny of $4,700 from Dr. Pennyman, of Worcester. Catholic Educators Meet. St. Louis, July 13. —Catholic educators, representing nearly every diocese in the United. States, assembled in convention Tuesday at St. Louis university. The conference's for the purpose of devising plans fo“r establishing a uniform system of education in parochial and training schools. Sent to Prison. Waukesha, Wis., July 14.—Charles Hintz, of Milwaukee, was sentenced to 14 years in state’s prison at hard labor for killing Mrs. Augusta Plskie at Muskego last August. __

HE WAS WILLING TO PAY. But Waa a Little Too Foremost in Ordering the Help Around.— . A lively looking porter stood on the rear of a car in the Pennsylvania depot. A fussy and choleric-looking old man clambered up the steps. He stopped on the platform, Buffed a moment, relates she Cleveland Plain >ealer, and then turned to the young man in uniform and said: “Peter!” “Yes, sir!” “1 am going to St. Louis. I want to be well taken care of and can pay for it. Do you understand?” “Yes, sir; I hope—” “Never mind what you hope. You listen to what I |ay. Keep the train boys away from me. Dust me on whenever 1 want you to. Give me an extra blanket, and if any fellow has the berth above me, slide him over into another one.. I want you to—” “But, say boss, I—” * “Don’t talk too much, young man. Herd’s two dollars. Now I want to get the good of it. Not a word, sir.” The train was starting. The porter swung off to the platform. “All right, boss,” he shouted. “I’m powerful sorry you wouldn’t let me talk, but I ain't going out oh that train.” PLAYING GOLF # IN THE SOUTH Most Enjoyable Features of the Game Are Those of the Little Black Caddy. When you manage to bring off a more than ordinarily good snot it is a treat to note the expression on the face of your little negro caddie, says Country Life in America. The look of exuberant joy and pride and the triumphant glance at your opponent’s “boy” is followed by a series of soft, melodious chuckles which only a darky can do justice to, as much as to say that he, and he alone, had done the trick, to the utter confusion of the rival caddies. Some of these darkies make good caddies, but the majority are too indolent or uninterested to be more than mere beasts of burden, knowing little of the game and caring less. They tell a story of one—a novice—who at the end of the day’s play, after cheerfully following his employer through every hunker on the course and into all sorts of impossible places on the sides, rather startled him by guillessly asking: “Is you gwine to work to-morrow, boss?” Time to Watch Her. The Artist—Ah, she has such delicate curves in her mouth! The Cynic—Did you ever see her eat corn off the ear?—Chicago Daily News. Os Wide Interest. Breed, Wis., July 18—Special—Chas. Y. Peterson, Justice of the Peace for Oconto Cos., has delivered a judgment that is of inr terest to the whole United States. Put briefly, that judgment is, “Dodd’s Kidney Pills are the best Kidney medicine on the market to-day.” And Mr. Peterson gives his reason for this judgment. He says: “Last winter I had an aching pain in my back which troubled me very much. In the morninjz I could hardly straighten my back. I did not know what it was but an advertisement ■led me to try Dodd’s Kidney Pills. After taking one box I can only say they have done more for me than expected as I feel a* well now as ever I did before.” Pain in the back is one of the first symptoms of Kidney disease. If not cured by Dodd's Kidney Pills it mav develop into Bright’s Disease, Diabetes, Kheumatism or some of the other deadly forms of Kidney Disease. A Connecticut woman has just got rid of an onion which has bee* growing in her ear for 43 years. People can’t be too careful where they plant garden stuff; think of having to wait 43 years for a crop!—Boston Globe. The National Casket Cos. makes the Best and Most Elegant Caskets in the World. If you are furnished their goods, you may rest assured you get what you pay for. It is pretty hard to believe that woman will be able to take a prominent part in running the affairs of the nation while she wears a waist that buttons down the back. —Chicago Kecord-Herald. Fits stopped free and permanently cured. No fits after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. Free $2 trial bottle & treatise. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch st., Phila., Pa. We hear much of self-made men; little of self-made women. And yet to judge women’s faces— —lndianapolis News. I am sure Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago.—Mrs. Thos. Robbins, Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17, 1900. Better fail tid ing tOLdo right than succeed in doing wrong.—Chicago Tribune.

castor i a 4n

Tor Infants Signal mSjM TMrtyYears 0 (a/k'” ills KM Yin Hats Always Bought ~ the CENTAUR COMPANY. TT MURRAY STREET. NEW Vwßft •IYV.

DOMINION EXHIBITION JULY 26 tn AUGUST 6 WINNIPEGJMANITOBA THE BEST EXPOSITION OF AGRICULTURAL AND INDUSTRIAL RESOURCES OF CANADA EVER MADE. An aggregation of attractions never before presented at an exhibition of this kind. ** _ Ample Accommodation for visitors. Low Railroad Rates from all United States points. Particulars given by CANADIAN GOVERNMENT AGENTS or NEAREST TICKET A6ENT.

THE WEAK SPOT. A weak, aching back tells of sick

kidneys. It aches when you work. It aches when you try to rest. It throbs, in changeableweather. Urinary troublesadd toyonimisery. No rest, no comfort, untit the kidneys arewell. Cure them; with Doan’s Kidney Pills. Mrs. TV. M. Dauseher, of 25 Water St.,. Bradford, Pa., says::

“Iliad an almost continuous pain im the small of the back. My ankles, feet,, hands aud almost my whole body werebloated. I was languid and the kidneysecretions were profuse. Physicianstold me I had diabetes in its worst, form, and I feared 1 would never recover. Doan’s Kidney Pills cured me in 1896, and I have been well ever since.”' A FREE TRIAL of this great kidneymedicine which cured Mrs. Dauseherwill be mailed to any partof the United; States. Address Foster-Milbum C 0.,. Buffalo, N. Y. Sold by all dealers., price 50 cents per box. Stool Always Handy. While passing a pasture recently I saw a. cow with a rope tied to her horns about ten, feet long with a cedar block tied to the end. of the rope. I did not know what it was for,., and asked the owner of the cow. “That’sme milkin’ stool,” Faid he. “I milk in the. pasture and when I find me cow, me stool is. always handy.”—Bangor News. Evidences of Thrift. “Mrs. Mudgely is such a thrifty woman.”' “I know it. She worried herself nearlyc sick because her husband paid his life insurance premium two days before it was dues. It would have been just 4hat much good! money lost, she complained, if he had died, in the meantime.” —Chicago Record-Herald.. G. A. R. National Encampment, Boston, August 15-20, 1904. Very low rates via the Nickel Plate; Road. ’ A splendid opportunity to visit. Boston and its many historical points of.' interest. Elegant Dining and Sleeping Cars; affording every accommodation. Meals-, scried on the Individual Club Plan, also“a la carte” service. Coffee and sandwiches served to passengers in their seatswithout extra expense. Stop off at Chautauqua Lake and Niagara Falls will be allowed on return trip. An eastern exchange announces that theice is now out of the Mooselucmaguntie lake.. It might be thought this would liberate a-. Russian fleet or something, but it won't.. The Moos, etc., lake is in Maine. Very Low Rates to Boston and Returns via Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Ry. Less than one fare for the round trip.. Tickets on sale August 12,13 and 14. Return; limit may be extended to Sept. 80. Tickets, wlllbesoldviaNew Yorkifdesired. Fullinformation on application to L. F. Vosburgh,. G. A. P. D., 180 Clark St. Chicago, or C. F_. Daly, Chief A. G. P. A.. Chicago; Asa general thing when you hear of a girt who is said to possess a “classic profile,”* you can set it down that she is thin and! angular, and runs mostly to neck. —Oshkosh Northwestern. All Aboard for Boston G. A. R. National Encampment, Aug. 15-20viatheNickelPlateRoad. Tickets, on sale Aug. 12th, 13th and 14th, ’O4. Liberal', return limit. Stop off at Niagara Fa: is and. Chautauqua Lake. A special G. A. It. train will leave Chicago 8:00 a. m. Aug. 13th. For-l-ates, reservations in sleeping cars, etc.,calL on looal agent or address J. Y. Calahan„ General Agent, 111 Adams St, Chicago, 11L. Usually, when you hear a man complaining of “too much mother-in-law,” you mayset it down as a case of too much son-in-law. —Chicago Tribune. Don’t Get Footsore! Get Foot-Ease. A wonderful powder that cures tired, hot,, aching feet and makes new or tight shoes; easy. Ask to-day for Allen’s Foot-Ease.. Accept no substitute. Trial package FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Just think what hardship and suffering: would follow if the political machinists* should strike this year! You needn’t be* alarmed, however.

FREE to WOMEN A Large Trial Box and book of instructions absolutely Free and Postpaid. enough to prove the value of PoxtineToilet Antiseptic:

_ Paxtine I* In powder form to dieeolvc to water non.poisonous and fereuperior to liquid antiseptics containingalcohol which Irritates Inflamed surfaces, and: hsv.no cleansing properties. The contents, of every box makesmore Antbeptlc Solution lasts longer—- , goes farther—bee moreI usee fa the family and doeemore good than any antiseptic preparation yon can buy.

i

The formula of * noted Boston physician, and used with great successes a Vaginal' Wash, for Leucorrheea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts, and all soreness of mucus membrane. In local treatment of female Ilia Paxtine to invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash v challenge the world to produce its equal for thoroughness. Itisarcvclationincleansing and healing power; it kills all germs which cause inflammation and discharges. All leadingdruggists keep Paxtine; price, COc. a box; lfyonrsdoesnot'Scndtousforlt. Don's take a substitute—there Is nothing like Paxtine, Write forthe Free Box of Paxtine toalsf, B. PAXTON CO., 4 Peps Bldg., Boston, Hass,