People's Pilot, Volume 2, Number 36, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 February 1893 — McKinley’s Loss Increases. [ARTICLE]

McKinley’s Loss Increases.

\ oungstown, 0., Feb. 21.—Tl.te amount of Robert L. Walker paper bearing the indorsement of Gov. McKinley will be *85,000, instead of SOO,OOO as reported. Cleveland, 0., Feb. 2L—Gov. MoKinley still remains in Cleveland awaiting developments in the Walker failure at Youngstown. The liabilities of the ; governor now amount to about $85,000. j The governor’s friends account for his | being so heavily involved by saying i that he supposed many of the notes he j indorsed were renewals of others Which I had been taken up, and that ne at no time believed he had loaned his credit for more than 120,090. __

A Fab-Fetchxd Stoht.— Willie Wilt—• ••What do you think of our friend Spynne’s writings! Don’t you think he carries realism too far!” Maid Marian—“ Decidedly. He told me the other day that he had had to walk tlfirty miles to nnd a publisher.”— Truth. Market Reports— Pens and paper are stationary. , Cutlery is very dull. Cheese firm. Butter strong, but inclined to be slippery. Hops lively and active. Gunpowder Inclined to be rising. Jackson— “ Burton’s new house was completed to-day and the builder turned it over.” Mrs.-Jackson—“Oh. how dreadful, and to think of having to have, it all built up again.”—Chicago Inter Ocean. Mrs. Mcbcavado— “The Newyiches are people who don’t know who their grandparents were.” Mrs. Rockoil—“Oh yes, they they hope that no one else does.”

“THig will do for the present,” as the young man remarked when he paid for a box of oheap candy for his sweetheart’s birthday gift.—Philadelphia Record. When a man inherits a portion of a goodly estate he« has no trouble in finding people ready to “take his part.”—Yonkers Gazette. The “hew and cry” is generally raised by the,boy who has to chop up the stove wood. —Cleveland Plain Dealer. The economical housemaid Is an artist to a certain” extent. Sh'o “draws the purse strings.”—Boston Courier. When a man unexpectedly steps into a fortune, lie cannotbe upbraided for having put his foot in it—Puck. “A brush with the enemy,” as the fox remarked when he loft his tail in the trap.— Puck.