People's Pilot, Volume 5, Number 29, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 January 1896 — Page 3

THE MYSTIC FOR 1896. I * r-&i& t r -* ±.-« - -~ / ' \ - iwkf T 7 *- * ■ X-~X Every part is made on honor and 'we guarantee it IT is a model of beauty, strength sprocket is worth $25 to any wheel. J and ease of management. We use and yet we charge nothing extra for only one class of material—the high- this construction. est quality obtainable. Our large sprocket is changeable. Our mechanics work by the day, and our handle bars can be adjusted and thus reduce poor construction to J to suit the rider. almost nothing. | Our wheel weighs exactly twentyOur improvements are all the most ! four pounds, but" we challenge any careful critic can desire ■ ■-' twenty-pound wheel to run easier. We build for future reputation, not , I The reason why we make the wheel for the benefit of to-day, J j twenty-four pounds is, we know it will Our are dust-proof. Our j j stand any country road. The Mystic tubing is the finest English tube i 1 costs to build 30 per cent more than made. L job wheels. We can not compete in Our ends are case-hardened and I ! price with any wheel not made with made from our own designs. f j the same care and accuracy. Our chain is the easiest chain in the [) Do not buy a low grade wheel, as it world. It is practically without fric- ; ' will be a poor investment. tion, does not stretch, and needs no I Before you buy see a Mystic, and oiling. Our new small sprocket is ' ( thoroughly examine its parts and gencut to relieve the draft of the chain 1 eral construction. from the sprocket tooth by a device We court inspection. We take no between the teeth. This chain and back seat to any wheel made. Our Exhibit at the Great Cycle Show at Chicago, January 4 to 11, is booth No. 103, Send for Cataloges. Write for particulars. Calif or agencies. MYSTIC CYCLC WORKS, MUKWONACO, WIS.

IgOUTHSIDE | | Warner & Collins, | Three doors south of McCoy’s bank, Rensselaer. \ REMEMBER OUR STORE when \ I you want GOOD BARGAINS I i in anything in the grocery line. We carry J hthe best goods on the market, and prices \ t are as low as the lowest. L HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR BUTTER AND EGGS. \ {CHAMPION and Reapers. \ i Binders, Mowers B| IAIfEVE \ and Reapers. DUviXEh T Eta : j and other Farming Implements. | Buggies, | § Wagons. \ I w/inchester Kepeatin g< » Shot=Guns RIFLES, ■a ft Best iin the World. "JwSKIBiIF * rawing arKsco. . WiNcndTER Ave. New Haven. Conh. < . • 1 I * C 4 - ■ ', ,'

THE PEOPLE’S PILOT, RENSSELAER, IND.. THURSDAY, JAN. 23 1896 i - ’

European Bargain Store. Copper Wash Boiler No. 8.52.25 Parlor Matches, doz. boxes. .15 5-Gal. Oil Can with Pump. 1.15 Copper Tea Kettle, Nickled 1.15 Tubular Lanterns 50 Corn Knives, from 25 to .. .50 Cottage Serving Machine. .20.00 100-lb. Grindstone & frame 2.50 Largest Zinc Tubs, 85 to.. .95 C. E. HERSHMAN, KZNSSELAER, INI) New Meat Market CREVISTON BROS. Rensselaer. Indiana. Shop located opposite the public squ ire. Everything' fresh and clean. Fresh and salt meats, game, poultry, etc. Please give us a call and we will guarantee to give you sat isfaction. Remember .the place. Highest market price paid for hides and tallow. Isaac Clazebrook Scientific /gk Horseshoeing Mol AND GENERAL Blacksmithing. Repair, agricultural implements and all kinds of machinery. Wheelwright inconnection. Shop on Front street near Saylor’s Mill. Rensselaer. Ind. " Thurston’s PILLS A re perfect health jewels, nevu3j Cl A Aizv RM! erknownto distress but infolr liblo to relieve. When everygjfgaXoNPiDe Asg® thingelso has failed to bring you relief for headache, b>lws<kss\OnlOlonsness, stomach and liver complaints rF"ASK YOITH druggist for Tin uston’* -0A11’11,1.8. By mail Xi ccnt» Dev package. For Sale by Frank B Meyer. I have 1920 acres of boitom land in the Pan' Handle district which will sell at a bargain or trade for property nearer this locality. For information address i Anson Stewart, Rensselaer.

MISCELLANEOUS.

; The Cunard Line steamship Cephalonia has been floated by means of pontoons and tugboats. The Cephalonia, which sailed from Boston Dec. 21, struck a rock at South* Stack, near Holyhead, early on New Year’s Day. The Des Moines Register calls upoa the legislature to provide the death penalty for grave desecration, and the editor announces that he will personally join with other citizens in tearing down brick by brick any medical college which persists in receiving stolen bodies. William McKinley closed his second term as Governor of Ohio Monday, and General Asa S. Bushnell of Springfield was inducted into the office of chief executive. A remarkable revival meeting is hi progress at Kingsbury, Ind., where, it is said, as a result of the work of evangelists, all but two persons ih the village of 300 inhabitants have professed religion. The prohibitionists are making arrangements to hold a large number of mass meetings in different parts of Indiana from Jan. 20 to 25. Ex-Governor St. John of Kansas and others will address the meetings. The object is to create interest in the principles of the party preparatory to the state convention, which will be held at Indianapolis in February. • M. Kostieky, the Russian minister to the United States, arrived in New York on the La Champagne and left for Washington. Dick Moore of Minneapolis and Paddy Purtell fought to a finish in a barn in Kansas City. Moore was knocked out in the fourth round. George Shockley, a United States prisoner, sent from Louisville to serve in the Jeffersonville, Ind., prison tor passing counterfeit money, died suddenly in his cell. Ohio’s state university has received the telescope donated by Emerson McMillin, of New York. It has a 12-ineh lens, 16-foot barrel, transit, and spectroscope on the Lick observatory model, though on reduced lines. The Dubuque, lowa, Ladies’ Literary Association held its twentieth anniversary celebration. The guests of boner were Mrs. Anna B. Howe, of Marshalltown, president of the lowa Federation of Women’s Clubs. The democratic joint legislative caucus at Frankfort, Ky., nominated Senator J. S. C. Blackburn as the candidate of that party to succeed himself in the United States senate. Considerable excitement has been caused at Gravelly Run, three miles south of Crawfordsville, Ind., by the discovery of an unusually rich deposit of gold. Nuggets of pure gold have been found.

TELL OF ANOTHER MASSACRE.

Fifteen Hundred Persons Butchered by the Kurds at Gurun, Turkey. Boston, Mass., Jan. 9.—A letter from a reliable correspondent of the Foreign Missionary society conveys the startling intelligence of the butchery of 1,500 people in Gurun, Turkey. From a total population of 9,000 Armenians at Gurun it is stated on good authority that 1,500 are killed. All Gregorian and Protestant houses were looted and twenty-seven also of the Catholics. Of the houses sacked 1,000 were burned, including the three Protestant chapels. Three priests of the Gregorian church were killed and another saved his life by accepting the Mohammedan faith. Girls and boys were carried off to serve the vile purposes of the murderers. It is said that mothers, to save their children from this fate, threw them into the river. Contributions to relieve the suffering thousands of Armenians in Turkey continue to pour in in this city. Yesterday the $9,000 mark was reached, and organizations are just being got into working order all ovpr New England. It is .expected that SIOO,OOO will be raised.

Oklahoma Statehood Convention.

Oklahoma City, Ok., Jan. 9. —As soon as the statehood convention met yesterday a fight was opened. It was over the question of forming a state of the territory alone or with the Chickasaw nation added, with a provision to admit other Indian nations on application. Finally, after a long wrangle, the delegates from the Chickasaw nation were recognized. At 8:15 at night the statehood convention came to an inglorious end. At that hour, the committee on credentials being unable to report, owing to the strife between the “single staters” and the “double staters,” Chairman Hensley declared the convention adjourned sine die. This, it is believed, will end all organized effort to secure statehood from the present congress. »

Bank Director’s Trial Begun.

Council Bluffs, lowa, Jan. 9.—The trial of Isaac Dickerson, director of the defunct Bank of Cass Csounty, began yesterday, was brought here on a change of venue. There are fifty-two witnesses. The bank wa.s.wrecked in 1893. J. C. Yetzer, president, was tried on a charge of fraud and acquitted, A. C. Dickerson was convicted and la in "the penitentiary. Deposits to the amount of were lost. • The assets did not reach 25 per cent. Isaac Dickerson’s defense will be that he had nothing to do with the management of the bank and was first to apply for the appointment of a receiver.

Nevada’s Governor Seriously III,

San Francisco, Cal., Jan. 9. —Governor John E. of Nevada is dangerously ill in this city, whither he came for medical treatment two months ago. A recent relapse has left him in a critical condition, and his recovery is uncertain. He is suffering from a complication of stomach troubles.

These good pMple are In need of one of Warner-4 Sons’ stoves to keen them from freezing. N. WftRNSR S SONS, RENSSELAER, IND. STOVES. This season finds us enabled to offer some great improvements in stove mechanism. The inventors have not only been very busy but they have been veiy successful and the result is a number of excellent new candidates for public favor, and a substantial improvement in the merits of the older makes. Prices are even lower than before. Moore’s Air-Tight Heater Is one of the new marvels. It takes of the base burner at a much less cost. Burns less coal, is more easily handled, responds quickly to attention, and is equally as handsome as the high priced stoves. Forty Kinds to Select From. We have the the largest variety qf stoves carried in this part of Indiana, and can sell a good heater at from $5.50 up. HEAT THAT BED ROOM with one of our $5 hard coal burners that will keep fire all night with a hat full of coal. Hit And these chaps arc freezing because they can't stay in house with those roaring furnaces.

Afraid of the United States.

Washington, Jan. 15.—The United States seems to be looming up »in the minds of the Germans as the country most to be feared in the future as their campetitor in the world’s market. United States Consul Warner at Cologne, Germany, makes this trade rivalry the subject of a special report to the state department and he quotes freely from the German newspapers and technical papers to show that the Germans are thoroughly alarmed at the outlook. The German government, owning the railroads, has been warned that it must do everything possible by cutting rates on raw materials and export goods to aid the German manufacturers or see the foreign trade suffer at the hands of America.

More Charges Against Bolln.

Omaha, Jan. 15. —Henry Bolin, the ex-city treasurer of Omaha, will be rearrested on two more charges of embezzlement as soon as the complaints can be filed. The new complaints, filed by Assistant County Attorney Day, charge Bolin with the embezzlement of $2,500 from the school fund, and $3,000 from the city fund. The first embezzlement is alleged to have been made July 28, 1893, and the other April -23, 1895.

Mexican Soldiers Fire on Americans.

Laredo, Tex., Jan. 15.—Information comes from Carisso, Tex., to the effect that a party of Americans —James H. McHane and son, A. J. Blevins, and Walter Strickland—starting from Eagle Pass on a hunting trip, were fired upon by Mexican soldier's forty miles below that place on Sunday. The party is on its way to Laredo to complain to the government authorities.

County Treasurer Short.

Elwood, Neb., Jan, 15.—Gosper county’s treasurer, W. E. Aldrich, is short from $5,000 to SIO,OOO. He has left the country.

WASHINGTON NOTES.

Unless the Turkish government makes prompt reparation for the burnng of the American mission buildings at Harpoot the indemnity of $400,000 demanded by this government will be collected by force. The seizure of the mstom house at Smyrna is talked of. In the senate Thursday Mr. Baker, the new republican senator from Kansas, introduced a resolution that the Monroe doctrine is the policy of this government. No reference was made to Venezuela,, but its plain meaning bears on thip dispute. Mr. Livingston as Georgia introduced a red-hot resolution on the boundary dispute in the bouse which, if adopted, would result in most serious complications. The resolution referred directly to the reported advance of Great Britain on the territory of Venezuela. The subject of the annexation of the Hawaiian Islands was broacl'.cd in the House at Washington Wednesday by Mr Spalding (R„ Mich.) in the form of a resolution. Senator Caffery of Louisiana has made a letter public written to him by President Cleveland the night before the bond issue was made. The president admits that he had taken steps to inform himself of the best methods of selling bonds, but he indignantly denied that any arrangement whatever ha<| been entered into with the Morgan or any other syndicate.

ELIMAX & kfy PUREST I Vand best LESS THAN HALF THE PRICE OF OTHER BRANDS 4- POUNDS, 20+ 4HALVES,IO*QUARTERS,S+ SOLD IN CANS ONLY FEMALE PILLS. ’“■’<l by over 80,000 -Invigorate® these For sale in Rensselaer by R. E. Eendig. REV IVO /gfrfck RESTORES fewr’Sk VITALITY. fc. TjL Made a riist nay. II Ma< of Me. THE GREAT 30th bay. FRENCH REMEDY F reduces the above results in 30 DAYS. It acts powerfully and quickly. Cures when all oth< . • f i'. Young men and old men will recover the . y rithful vigor by using REVE'O. It quick! 1 :d surely restores from effects of self-abuse <. • ’ ess and indiscretions Lost Manhood, Lc ’ , . iity, Impotency, Nightly Emissions, Lc • • uwer of either sex. Failing Memory, Wastiii,; Diseases. Insomnia, Nervousness, which unfo. ■ ■ ,’t>r study, business or marriage. Itnotonh ■■■ cs by starting at the seat of disease, but is . Croat Nerve Tonic and Blood-Builder ’."d restores both vitality and strength to th i "iiscular and nervous system, bringing ba*.. ’’’O pink glow to pale cheeks arid restoring tH ti'-r of youth. It wards off Insanity and Con •.’imption. Accept no substitute. Insist on ha*.’ •g RE VIVO, no other. It can be carried in ve'i goc.kct, By mail, SI.OO per package, in plai’. orslxfor SSOO, with a positive writ •I guarantee to cure or refund the money ii. -very package. For free circular address •tOVAL MEDICINE CQ,, CHICAGO, ILS Bor sale by Frank B. Meyer.

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