Pike County Democrat, Volume 26, Number 22, Petersburg, Pike County, 11 October 1895 — Page 7
OHIO DEMOCRATS. 'Ex-Gov. Campbell Opens the State Campaign. Th* VUm BUI BcmItm HU WumS and He Predicts Defeat tor the MeKInler Tariff Tinkers.
The Ohio democratic campaign was opened with great* enthusiasm at Columbus on the evening of Saturday, September 28. A parade of democratic adherents seven miles in length was one of the features of the event. ExGot. Campbell made the opening speech and among other things he said: “I congratulate you, citizens of Columbus, upon the remarkable growth, prosperity sad thrift of your cltr- Never has labor been ao fully employed or at more remunerative wages, and the money ao earned bow nurehasea & per oent more of the neoessartes of life than ever before. Never have so many manufacturing establishments been pressed beyond their capacity with lucrative eontraots. But not alone Is Columbus to bs congratulated. The whole state of Ohio is sharing in this even distribution c* prosperity, happiness and wealth. “Not only hi the city of Columbus to be congratulated, not only is the state of Ohio to be congratulated, but tbe whole country rises up and calls the Wilson bill blessed American carpets are selling in Ax minster. I hold tn my baud a piece of cloth sentto me by the American consul at Bradford, with the words: “ 'I inclose you a small sample of the American goods sold here at fifty cents a yam, and of which I have ordered a suit' “Bradstreet't says.that the recent advance In the production and price in iron and steel is 'the greatest boom in tbe iron and steel trade In our history.' and. as early as July «. printed the following rogardlug the Increase in wages up to that date: “ *The extent of the full voluntary advance In wages reported within a month or two has outgrown the resources of voluntary statistical bureaus, which have endeavored to keep track of them, latest advices being that more than 1.000.000 industrial workers have reoeived an advance averaging about 10 per cent “The Iron Age recently contained a glowing account of the steel works of the states of the central west, and says: 'The tremendous pressure to get orders filled at the mills has never been equaled and the demand far exceeds anything heretofore known, and it is utterly out of the question to meet the demand * “Dun s Review reports a general and rapid Improvement iu markets aud prices in all directions. and says that 'it has come now to be the only question in what branches. If any, the rise in prices and the Increase in business may go too far.’ “Another high authority notes almost phenomenal improvement In the sales of dry goods, clothing, boots and shoes and other staples which the country buys freely when prosperous, but scantily when reverse conditions prevail. “Tbe iron dealers and manufacturers of iron structural work at Pittsburgh are complaining dt a car famine. The iron industry has so revived that cars cannot be secured to remove the goods. The Carnegie company has been forced to begin the erection of an immense car factory in which to build end repair its own cars. “The voluntary increase of wages to the employes in the copper mines of a single county in Michigan amounts to $000,000 a year. Even some of the republican newspapers in Ohio have discovered that the country is prosperous and happy, under the Wilson tariff, and the Cincinnati Commercial Oazette of September 8 has the following: " 'The voluntary increase of wages still joes on iu many of the manufacturing centers, and this is an excellent indication of a tendency that cannot be accounted merely,temporary. The indications displayed for several months are being confirmed by these voluntary increases. und the news of the enlargement and strengthening of lines of business. “in tbe face of all this the republican nominee for senator said in his Springfield speech: •To begin with, the whole subject of the tariff will have to be revised on protection lines.’ We are moved to ask who are the 'tariff tinkers!’ ^’ho would tear down and destroy tbe prosperity of the country? Who. for the purpose of temporary partisan advantage, would again unsettle business as they unsettled'it by nhe tariff act of 189J and throw the country again into an industrial panic? It is not the republican party of the union which threatens existing prosperity, because the great leaders outside of the state of Ohio have forever repudiated u return to the McKinley bill or to any legislation akin to It. It is not the voice of the entire republican party of Ohio which clamors for industrial destruction, for the Sandusky Register, un ably-edited and leading journal of this state, in a recent issue blurted out this truth: *"We have reached a point in our career when the great majority or republicans aud business men generally, whether republicans or democrats, will oppose ‘ any sweeping changes tn the tariff.’ And further says: *We may as well face the, music aud the facts first as last*
“Another republican newspaper m uaio rebukes the attempt to divert attention from • “Coxism' and legislative corruption by saying that the people ‘will listen to no demagogic vaporings about great national issues, and they will turn with impatienoe from all appeals to mere partisanship ’ “The few men, candidates for office in Ohio, who have declared for a return to the McKinley law, for a tinkering of the tariff and au ebbing of the tide of prosperity, will go down to defeat at this year's election in this state, and their hobby will be relegated to the rear in the next national republican convention They are the^ kalamity kroakers' now. Howpitiful and how ridiculous they look as they ait croaking in the sunshine, their feeble vpices drowned by the joyous whistles of reviving industries! “What a farce it all was—that pretense at the Springfield opening of the republican campaign that the country was suffering under the Wilson tariff! But the screaming part of the farce, which convulsed the entire people of Ohio with mirth, was the pretended reconciliation between the two gentlemen whom the Zanesville convention had nominated respectively for United States senator and president of the United States. So far as Ae nomination of United States senator was concerned, it is possible that the convention 'may not hare exceeded its jurisdiction, but the nomination for president of the United Stales by the character of men who dominated the convention may not necessarily be binding upon the next national convention. nor upon the state and district conventions which will select the Ohio delegation. “There is one question upon which Bushnell and Arid Asa Jones seem to be a little reluctant to express themselves. That is the subject of coinage. The national democratic platform of 189* was the last enunciation upon this somewnat vexed subject by the democracy of the nation in council assembled, and until they an3& assemble, as they will in a tow months, to lay down the principles which shall guide them in the next national campaign, it is the duty of every democrat who loves his party and believes in it, its earnestness. its sincerity and its intention to do right toy the people, to stand upon that platform. If there be any who differ from the declaration of the platform of 1893 it is their right and privilege as democrats to appeal to the national representatives in 1896 for recognition of itheir views, and then, like true democrats, acquiesce in the verdict, whatever it may be as I myself shall da “it behooves us as patriots, looking to the future welfare of one country, aside from what may be purely partisan questions, to take •peedy and decided action upon a subject uow confronting us as a nation. More than seventy years ago President James Monroe issued a message which officially committed the United States to the doctrine that any attempt by a foreign power to obtain further foothold in the western hemisphere would be treated by thU Ration as an sot of hostility. “To-day the gtieen of Great Britain claims and exercises jurisdiction over territory larger than the state of Ohio, whieh is the
lawful and tor many yaara undisputed prep* arty ox our sister republic at Venezuela. The Question at to whether we propose to maintain and assert the Monroe doctrine confronts us there. In the near future the same question will confront us in our own dominions, for Great Britain has actually, although covertly and aeaeefully. Invaded, under claim ot right, territory purchased by ns from Russia and included In the boundaries of Alaska. Is is pleasant to read, in a recent issue of a New York paper, that *Mr. Olney intends to plant himself firmly upon the Monroe doctrine and stand there while he remains at the bead of affairs. He believes that the action ot Great Britain in this Venezuelan boundary question is a flagrant violation ot this doctrine, and that a halt must therefore be called.'
“Kl US nope (Bat, in pursuance oi uu Uodable purpose, he will also call a halt la (he aggressions of Great Britain upon our own territory In the northwest. “The Monroe doctrine was la Its origin distinctly and especially a democratic doctrine The Monroe message was submitted to Jefferson sad approved by him. and the question therein raised declared by him to be ‘the most momentous since that of Independence' Let u be understood that we. as the followers of Jefferson, are as aggressively, as earnestly and as defiantly In favor of the Monroe doctrine as he was. and that the United States of America stands ready with Its army, its navy and Its treasury to uphold this doctrine at all hazard.}. •T call upon you. my fellow countrymen, whether you he democrats or republicans, to rally to our standard in this fight in Ohio. It | s not the fight of a party or a faction. It la the fight of a people. The men we oppose are j not republicans The Coxea. the Blisses, the Kurtzes. the Majors are not the lineal descendants of the Chases, the Garfielda. the Wades and the Glddlngses who created the republican party of Ohio. Every republican who believes la tbe history and traditions of ' his party, or who loves his country, should Join us tn driving such people not only from their own party, but out of politics forever. “We see before us a divided, demoralised, faction-ridden foe. torn by internal strifes, and rebelling against its bosses. To Ibis halfhearted and disorganized host we .present an unbroken front There are uo dissensions, no bickerings, no murmurings. Every man Is eager for the fray. As 1 look Into your earnest faces 1 see that which we already breathe in the air and feel tingling in our' blood—the assurance of oertain and glorious victory.” FORCE WOMEN TO BETRAY MEN. With the Paris Police Efficacy la the Chief Thing in Catching a Criminal. The Parisian police have of late given proof of extraordinary activity. Some weeks ago it undertook to “cleanse" the Bois de Bologne, the llois de Vincennes and the outer boulevards from .the gangs of vagabonds that infested them. Hundreds of homeless individuals were arrested and turned over to various reformatories; or, in the case of “wanted** criminals, to prisons. Within a few days the central police brigade has succeeded in arresting a large band of thieves, burglars and shoplifters. The band was thoroughly organized and worked under the direction of a man named Corbeaux, who possessed a carriage and pair, as well as a town and country residence. Once fairly caught, Corbeaux, or “La Morue” (Codfish), as he was generally known, informed against his subordinates, hoping thus to escape punishment. He was disappointed. He was condemned to fifteen years’ hard labor, and his associates to shorter terms pt the same punishment. The police owe their success in this instance to the application of the famous principle, “Cherchezla femme,” which for a century past has been the keystone of the Parisian detective organization. The method of procedure is as simple as it is efficacious. When doubts are entertained as to the means by which a given individual earns his living, or when a known criminal is “wanted,” the police look out for and arrest (when found) the woman with whom the man in question is most intimate. What happens afterward depends largely upon the character of the person “wanted.” Sometimes the police will arrest a woman conspicuous among the man’s associates, Who, in order to obtain her release, will usually tell all she knows about the life and antecedents of the apprehended criminal. Information so obtained is not, however, directly used against the prisoner, but is employed to induce him to confess; or, if he prove obdurate, as a clew for the researches oi the detective departs meat. Attempts have repeatedly been made to abolish this system of criminal investigation, but in vain. In France the supreme aigument of efficacy overrides all other considerations.—N. Y. World.
Beyond Doabt. Among the many pood thing’s told some years ago of Col. Utley, well known as a Wisconsin editor and also the hero of more than one military story, is a little incident which illustrates his ability to make a goodnatured joke. During the war, while Col. Utley was in command of a Wisconsin regiment stationed in Kentucky, he attained some notoriety by allowing his men to harbor and protect a poor negro boy who had escaped from his master. The boy came north and the master brought suit for his value against Col. Utley. One day the colonel went from his home to Milwaukee, and while there he met a friend who asked him how the case was progressing. “Very well,” replied the colonel. “I think I shall win it, although I have the smartest lawyer at the Milwaukee bar against me.” “Why, he isn’t our smartest lawyer by any means,” said the friend, with evident surprise. “Oh! certainly he is,” responded the colonel, with conviction. v“How do you know,” persisted the friend. “Know! Why, man alive, he acknowledged it himself!” — Chicago News.__ The South African gold fever is still raging in London and Paris. It is estimated that 100 men have made £500,000,000 out of the sale of stocks. Mr. Depew, who has just returned from Europe, says this money has come from the masses in England and France, and predicts that a worse wave of ruin will follow in its wake than has been experienced in a generation. The effects of the collapse may be felt ou this side of the Atlantic. “Silkn'CK is golden” when you arc milking. Milk first and discuss pel?tics or other subjects afterwards.
THE LAST CHANCE. Mrs. Johnson Bad Only On® Chance to Save Her Lif e. Kow Dow tho Work of Three li«n|t
From the Lfiger, Mexico. Mo Mrs. Lucinda Johnson live* in Mexico, Mo. The Lmiyer has Just sncoeeded in obtaining *n interview with her. This is the substance of her story: In the winter of *92 and *98 Mrs. Johnson was, like many of her friends, attacked with la grippe. Yes, we’ve most of us hod it, and know its wrecking powers, when it gets in its work on a good constitution. Well, Mrs. Johnson, along about Christmas, was prostrated. Ail the medical aid here in the city only “brought her around,” as an “herbs mid roots” females\ mpathizer expressed it, and she was left in a debilitated and exhausted condition * ami experienced a constant pain in her left side. She waa wholly unfit lor her domestic duties and was unable to do any work about the house, even after the la grippe fever and its characteristic Bbe “ & consistent member of the cTuTbch, and on® Sunday, between the- Sunday school and church services, being barely able to be conveyed tberb, she beam of a miracle that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People had performed and she resolved to try them. It was like the drowning man grabbing at the last straw. It was her last and only chance to save her life. She procured one box of these pills from the south side druggists, French & Garrett, in this city, and by the time she had used half the box she and her watchful frieuds noticed a marked improvemeut in her condition. Taking the rest of the box of pills and one more box she recovered remarkably in an exceedingly short time. Before she had used the first box she resumed her household duties and has been steadily at work for the last eighteen mouths. I took only a few boxes, perhaps five or six, to entirely cure her. Siuce then she was attacked by rheumatism, caused from careless exposure, but by at once taking the Pink Pills for Pale People, she drove that paiufui and dreadful malady away. She told the reporter that whenever she felt that she was going to be ill, she took one two of the pills and she never got sick. Mrs. Johnson is |>erfcctly healthy now and promises to live to a ripe old age. Her friends have never ceased to talk about her almost miraculous recovery and are load in their praise of the Pink Pills for Pale People, and ail who have tried them say they would not be without them under any conditions. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are not looked upon as a patent medicine, but rather as a prescription. An analysis of their properties shows that they contain, in condensed form, all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the aftereffects of la grippe, palpitations of the heart pale and sallow complexion, and the tired feeling resulting from nervous prostration, all diseases resulting from vitiated humors in tho blood, such as scrofula, chrenie erysipelas, i etc. Thev are also a specific for troubles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, Irregularities and all forms of weakness. They are for sale by all druggists, or may be had by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine ' Company, Schenectady. N. Y., for 50c per box, or six boxes for $a.50 IN MANY STRANGE COUNTRIES. A priest was recently poisoned at the altar at Friedheim, in the Prussian province of Ppsen, by poison put in the wine in the chalice. The married women of China wear their hair in a coil at the back of the head; the unmarried women have the coil at the side of the head, and stick a white flower in it. According to Chief Ehama, the Bechuanas do not believe that Queen Victoria is living; they have mixed up what the missionaries have told them and “think that the queen is like God and the prince of Wales like Jesus Christ.” In dredging the harbor of Swinemude, on the island of Usedom, a church bell weighing five hundred pounds was fished out whole, with the broken half of another bell. From the inscriptions they are believed to have been stolen during the thirty years’ war and to have been sunk with the vessel that bore them. Angora goats were the object of Cecil Rhodes’ visit to the sultan last summer. lie then induced him to allow five hundred of the goats, whose exportation the Turkish government jealously forbids, to be sold to Cape Colony, where it is thought they will thrive in the barren karroo as well aa sheep have done.
! WELL-KNOWN AMERICAN NAMES | Gen. Greely does not believe it posI sible to reach the north pole in a balloon. I Mrs. IIearst's valuable collection of j old laces in her Washington home is insured for fifty thousand dollars. It is given out, as a remarkable circumstance, that Pierre Lorillard, the tobacco king, does not use the weed in any form. It is said that Mrs. Edmund Yates earries her husband's ashes about with her in a little casket, which is fitted into* traveling bag of special design. Mas. William K. Vanderbilt has the reputation of being one of the most extravagant women New York has ever known. As an instance of this, it is said that she had an entire floor of a well-known hotel in Paris refurnished gorgeously at her expense for a stay of six weeks. AMERICAN STREET RAILWAYS. Instead of using train service this year several Connecticut peach growers shipped their fruit to the market by trolley cars. The Alley Elevated company of Chicago has leased to a company the privilege of putting bootblacks to work on its trains. Baltimore receives from each passenger fore on the street railways half a cent for the park fund, and the amount thus realized this year will be $235,000. Recent issues of the Journal of the German Railroad Union have an elaborate account of the Boston street railroads, including the subway now under construction. SOME NEW FACES IN WHEELDOM, A bicycle ambulance has been invented. The stretcher is supported on a wire frame, and thus the sick person may be gently conveyed to his d estina-. tion.
THE FARMING WORLD. BUTCHERING BEEVES.
a. Farmer* Car, Hava Good Meat AU Through the Whiter. With care in feeding' and butchering, the farmer can hare a supply of the best beef all through the winter. One advantage in raising and butchering your own meat is that you know exactly the kind and quality of the meat you are eating and this cannot always be said of what is bought dressed from the average country butcher. A two-year old heifer if kept in good condition, so as to be thrifty and vigorous, makes good beef and the carcass is not usually so large but that an average farmer’s family can use it to advantage. Cheaper beef can. only be had by fattening an old cow with good pasturage and corn. The animal should have nothing to eat for at least twelve hours before killing. as its entrails will not then be distended and it can be cleaned easier and the carcass will cool out more rapidly. The animal is best killed with a rifle ball, shot midway of a line from one eye to the opposite horn, or it may be killed by a blow in the same spot with a sledge or ax. As soon as it_lalls cut a gash square across the throat, severing the jugular vein. When proper conveniences are at hand the carcass may be run up at once or it may have the skin removed on the ground with very little ^trouble and the entrails removed, making the task of running up to cool out an easier one. Cut the hide from the throat along the brisket and central line of the belly between the thighs to the tail, and then, from this cut along the inside of the legs to the hoof. Commence at the hoof and skin down each leg and then take the skin from one side of the body. If the animal is lying on the ground spread out the hide and roll the animal over on that side and remove the skin from the other side. If the carcass has been run up after the hide is taken off the legs, the better plan is to skin round and down. Be careful not to cut any gashes in the hide, as this causes a dockage of from one-third to one-half in the price. Take off the fore legs at the joint and the hind ones about three inches below the hock joints. To remove the entrails, open along the middle of the belly and brisket, cutting from the inside, running the finger along ahead of the knife through the belly. Open the carcass and wash it out well with cold water, using a cloth, if necessary, to remove the blood. After cooling off split the carcass through the middle of the backbone with a saw, working from the inside. Use the saw for cutting all bones, as much neater work can be done. It can then be quartered and taken down and cut into convenient pieces for salting.—St. Louis Republic. Particularly Suited to the Needs of the The simplicity of the house illustrated commends it to anyone keeping a few hens near his dwelling. It is a plain yet neatly-constructed building. WINTER HEN HOUSE. Farmer’s Wife.
that will meet every requirement of a more expensive structure—just suited to the needs of the farmer’s wife. It can be built at a cost of $20 to $30, easily. The size depends upon the number of fowls kept; for say 30 hens, make it 30
by 20 by 6 feet. This will be found ample, and if properly lined with tar paper inside it will be snug and warm and be just the place for your winter hens. In the second figure is shown the interior, with nests and roosts.— John W. Caughey, in Country Gentleman. LIVE STOCK NOTES. Beets are unquestionably a fine food for swine, and the sweeter they are, the better. The brood sow does not require fattening food. Muscle forming foods are what she needs. If we would feed more clover hay to swine in winter we should find that our swine feeding was more economical. The farmer who is now breeding good eolts is sagacious, in our judgment. .. The horse will be here when the bieycle is gone. The boar in summer should have good clover pasture, with beans, peas or oats, and in the winter the same, except the pasture, with some roots or ensilage. A fly net and a darkened stable will do much towards preventing the horse wasting in fighting flies that energy which should be expended on his legitimate work. Corn is the cheapest fat producer, we are often told. As a rule it may cost less, but that is not always what we want. We should aim to produce the best pork and maintain the high-, est degree of health. Corn will not always do this. An English swine feeder was asked what feed he preferred to fatten pigs and replied: Barley meal is the best single food, but he preferred a mixture of barley, pea, maize and rice meals. We mention it simply to call attention of our persistent corn feeders to the fact that pork can be made out of other feed than corn; and better po|k, toa —Farmers’ Yoioe.
f
—On the mainland yon see a misty camp of mountains pitched tumultuously; that one looming so long and large is Saddleback, and that point you see over yon low and rounded marge, like the loss of a sleeping giant’s targe laid over his breast, is Ossipee; that shadow there may be Kearsarge; that must be Great Haystack; Agamenticus, he glowers there to the north of us, wrapt in his blanket of blue haze, unconvertibly savage, and scorns to take the white man's baptism or his ways. - Lowell. 4 - —Alep Arslan was called The Valiant Lion from his daring in battle. Arioch of Assyria appears on the monuments of that country as. The Lion King; Gustavus Adolphus was known as The Lion of the North; Louis V1IL of France was The Lion King; Richard L of England was The Lion-hearted, and William of Scotland was so called, not from any particular exploits, but on account of tfie fact that on his helmet he bore a lion rampant. —*“Can you tell me, professor,” asked Grigsby, “what an 'extempore pianist’ is? I see that the performances of such a pianist are advertised.” “Certainly,” said the professor. “Ex, out of; tempo, time; an extempore piunist is one that plays of out of time!”—Boston Transcript. —Politeness has been deflned^to be artificial good nature; but we-^jpay affirm, with much greater propriety, that good nature is natural politeness.— Stanislaus. A SUent Appeal for Help. When your kidneys and bladder are Inactive they are making a silent appeal for help. Don't disregard it, but with Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters safely impel them to activity. They are iu immediate danger, and it is 1oolhardiness to shut one's eyes to the fact. Be wise in time, too, if you exErieuce manifestations of dyspepsia, maria. rheumatism, constipation or nerve trouble. The Bitters before a meal adds aest to it.
The only liberty that a man, worthy of the name, bught to ask for, is to have all restrictions, inwani or outward, removed that prevent his doing what he ought—F. W. Robertson. The End or the Vacation.—He (in leaving)—“1 think 1 have said good-by to you before, miss.1* She—“ Well. I’m always glad to say good-by to you.”—Truth. Despise not any man. and do not spurn anything; for there is no man who hatu not his hour, nor is there anything that has not its place.—Rabbi Ben Aiai. Wood you kill the weeds in your garden, plant it with good seed; if the ground be well occupied there will be less need of the hoe.—A. Fuller. Too can cram these words Into mine ears against the stomach of my sense.— Shakespeare. THE MARKETS. 9 #H a 370 ct a 37s 9 23H m, 10 -5 26W9 8* 5 SO 4 95 4 ») 3 S’. 3 35 3 15 • 50 15 <a New York, October 7.1995 CATTLE—NativeSteers.« 3 50 ©4 5 12)4 COTTON—Middling... FLOCK-Winter Wheat.. 2 7* WHEAT—No. 2 Red.. CORN—No. 2.. OATS—No. 2.... PORK—New Mess.. 19 00 S p. LOUIS OOrrON— Middling.. . BEEVES—Fancy Steers...... 600 Medium. 4 *0 BOOS—Fair to Seleot. 3 80 SHEEP—Fair to Choice. 2 2FLOUK—Patents...... 3 25 Fancy to Extra do.. 2 75 WHEAT—No. 2 Red Winter... CORN-Na 2 Mixed. OATS—No.2 .. RYE—No. 8. 38 TOBACCO—Lues... POO Leaf Burley....... 4 50 HAY—Clear Timothy ......... BUTTER—Choice Dairy...... EGGS—Fresh .. PORK—Standard Mess.. BACON—Clear Rib . LAUD—Prime Steam.. CHICAGO CATTLE—Shipping . HOGS—Fair toChoieeu... SHEEP—Fairto Choice__ 2 "5 © FLOUR—Winter Patents..... 3 0i © Spring Patents..... WHEAT-Nu 2 Spring. No 2 Red. CORN—Na 2.. OATS—No.2..... PORK—Mess(new)... 8 37)4© Kansas, out CATTLE—Shipping Steers_ 3 AS © HOGS—A11 Grades.. 3 80 @ WHEAT—No.2 Red.. 63 © OATS-Ntt 2 ..... 17149 CORN—Nu 2.:.. 2'i 9 NEW litUEANS. FLOUR—High Grade. 3 25 9 CORN—Nu 2.. 35 © OATS—Western. . 26 & HAY-Cboice. 17 50 9 PORK-New Mess BACON —Sides 5*4 18 © :y 9 8 oo © 12 <0 © 13 50 17 14 0 W» •M *>54 3 50 S»i 3 15 58*© ?9*® 31 9 5 60 4 3> 3 SO 3 50 3 50 «IS 31 <4 8 50 520 4 10 vf 2«14 3 51 35 86)4 18 50 » 12t, 6* 8\ ..-..-a 9 COTTON—M idling.. 834'A LOUISVILLE WHEAT—No. 2 Rod (new) ... 68)4© 6934 CORN—Nu 2 Mixed........ © 33* OATS-Nu2 Mixed. 21M® 21V, PORK—New Mess... 9 12)4© 9 5o BACON—Clear KiO. 7 9 7*4 COTTON—MtHUng,. 9 t%
It Seems So.—1“Papa,” said Harry, "will a boy keeps oa doing something wnaiM his own accord, hes willful. Isn't h# “Yes,” said Mr. Rigid. “Then if he doMtft do nothing of nobody else’* accord, behs won'tfui, isn't hei’^Harper's Round Tab— Wuetbkr or not sia dates from the apple-eatiug. it is pretty geneafcahy cow that new habits were acquired bv our — parents very soon after their indulges—ht the fruit of the apple tree.—Boston ~ script. She—“That was very pretty for Mr. la lia to kiss his bettor half after the race He—“Yes, it whs pretty; but remember was the other Han who won the Yonkers tf talesman. Best of AU To cleanse the sy stem in a gentle and truly beneficial manner, when the spriogtfia comes, use the true and perfect remedy. Syrup of Pigs. One bottle will answer far all the family and costs only SO cento; the large site fl. Tty it and be pleased. If—a factured by the California fig Syrup G*. only. More Earlt Histort.—“Yes, Isoeyosg— a new woman. Eve,’’ said Adam, “bat Pm take the risk. You haven't any past.’*—C—> cago Tribune. , , >v ,9 Kate yield In Owns Dexter. Sept. 10.—My Journey tram Chicago was over the Chicago, Burlingtaa & Quincy Railroad, one of the best rn— aged systems in the country, I should save judging by the civility of the employee, tl* comfort I experienced, the excellence of IK roadbed, and the punctuality of arrival. I actually reached Denver ahead of time. The Burlington Route is also the best to St. Paul, Minneapolis, Omaha and Kansas City® The statistician is not given to expression, notwithstanding he is gives expressing himself in figures.—Young* * Era. Hall’s Catarrh Cora Is a Constitutional Cure. Price 75c. Thovuht is the blossom, language the opening bud, action the fruit behind It.— Beecher. Beech am’s pills for constipation Me i 23c. Get the book (free) atyour druggist’s and goby it. Annual sales ii,00b,000 T Evert great writer is a writer of hlsteay^ let him treat on what subject he Landor. Cvrb your cough with Hale’s Honey of Horehound and Tar. Pike’fcToothache Drops Cure in one i How much will the average hotel __ measure from tip to tipi—Boston Transcript. After six years’ suffering, I was cured by Piso’s Cure—Mart Thomson, 99J{ Ohio Ave., Allegheny, Pa;, Ma£ch 19, *94. ■ No max can pass into eternity, forbe It at ready in it.—Farrar.
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