Richmond Palladium (Daily), 20 September 1899 — Page 2

RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 20. 1899-

1

Richmond Palladium.

WEDNESDAY. SEPT . 20 1399.

PiMished every evening (Suo'lay excepte-l) ty THE PALLAMCM CO.

TERM3 Or Sl'rMCKIPTION.: One year tJ mail. poa- fle paid On month - - - . One week, by earner -

t3.tti

Til K OTHER HIRE.

8amael W. Allerton.one of the most prominent citizens of Chicago, had the

following communication in yesterday's Chicago Tribune: I wu down in the country last week

and an old farmer asked me this question: "How many of the professor

and orator who were apeaking against trusts had ever built np any industry

that crave labr emcloyment and pro

moted interest which made thia great

nation?"

He said be had always noticed when railroida aid manufacturers were so.'--ee-sfol the farmer always fcot a (rood

price for hia rattle and hoea and kb -

era! farm products. If a bandrei

manufacturers ere in hot competi

tion. the only one who succeeded

wonld be the one who was most able

ti reduce wages to the lowest point

As long as the country la prosperous it would take a preat many prof est ors

to convince the farmers that organ) z u

capital and labor were an evil.

There is a deal of good horse sense

in what that farmer aaid. There are possibilities of evil in trusts and what the outcome of the present trust boom may ba no one can fort-tell. Bat there is oothini? to be gained by a

blind and unreasoning stampede. It

is undoubtedly a fact that a large pro

portion of the men who are at the head of these combinations, called trusts, are the same men who have

built up the large industries of this

country and who have given and are still giving the bulk of lucrative employment to its laboring element. It

is no do bt true, to . as the farmer

suggests, that the merciless competi

tion 'between manufacturers had the tendency to cut down the

price of 1 .Lor and that com

bination will have the tendency

to hold the price up. To accomplish

this end ia claimed to be the prime

object of these industrial combinations and up to the present date there has certainly nothing occurred to disprove their claim. That the promoters themselves expect to mar money goes without saying. They are not poking a mere philanthropists. Richmond has furnish d a tt iking illustration of the fact cited by the farmer that the organizers of these combination') are the men who have

built op the industries of thia country

an 1 made thia a great nation in which labor receives the hi ht st reward in the world. We refer to Daniel G. Keid who is at the head of the great tin plate industry which gives employment to many thousand of men at wages ranging from $2 to $14 per day. A comparatively few yeara ago the money that is now being paid by this combination to American workmen went into the pockets of employes in foreign factories and money was drawn out of thia country besides to pay for imported tin plate Now the situation is reversed. This great industry has been enabled not only to give lucrative employment to an army of American woikiug men but alo to force its goods into European markets in competition with their own production. Mr. Keid who ia at the head of this bo called trust is a fair sample of the men who are leading spirits in all of them. lie has made a fortune and ia richly entitled to it. In making it he has distributed many fortunes among working men and has maintained hundreds of happy homes.

No Goubt he Las accomplished far more good for this country than all the anti-trust screamers in the Chicago conference together. And he has cot done this without taking chances and sustaining losses that would have discouraged small-bore financiers. He unk tbousanda of dollars right here in Kichmond trying to promote local industriea while carb. tone bankers who bad more money but less public spirit and philanthropy btood by, with their hands on their pocket books, and croaked. Of the money he has sinoe made he has given more to Kichmond ebaritits and philanthropic enterprises than all the local croakers together, notwithstanding the fact that he is no longer a citizen of our town. Such facts it would be w?ll for vhe public to consider at thia time when it I. ., KAA.tmA , i rw-irodar fad tr Hnvl

UOO KT V V. lii V I -, ...... ..... .v "

Hence Trof. Ault will be a father-in-law. Frank and Harry Ault of Chicago are here for a few days' yieit to the old home. Dr. Shiitceck waa on the aiek list

last week.

Tom Murray' child waa baried latt 8unday. Aged four months. Ketr. Warbingtun in hia sen on last Sunday referred in strong language to a gambling den carried on in our town. George Dick will rebuild hia mill that waa bnrned down last spring. HOME STORIES.

S. W. Cillilan.

HADN'T HEARD OF DEWEY. There is in this city at least one person who is none the wiser anal none the prouder for the great feat per

formed by Admiral Dewey and his fl et in Manila bay on the first day of May, 13'JS. That person is a woman

in one of the humbler walk of life

Some daya ago a gentleman who was conversing with her, let fall the remark that he would like to be in New York

Citv when Dewey arrived.

"Dewe ! What did he dot" asked

vhe bewildered woman.

"What!" said the gentleman, "don't you know about Dewey, the man who blew np the

shio in Manila bay over a year agot

"He did!" What they goin t' do

hang him fur itt" And the man went away disoour aged, and muttering: "Such is fame!" THE FCNERAL EMBLEM BOY.

There ia in thia office and attached

thereto a boy with a fad. This ia not a common case of a common boy with a common fad; but an uncommon case

of an uncommon b,ry with an nn common fad. The fad is not the col

lection of stamps, tobacco tags, coff-o wrappers, post marks or anythin? of

that mud, civilized or educational na

ture. It is rather one of gridy, un

canny, shivery order; ne that would make the common devotee of the com

mon fad shiver as if a cake of ice had

been droDDed inside his shirt. This

bov'a fad ia the collection of et ffi i

ornaments and tae decoration of every

thing within reach with the ghastly

tokens. There are little

nickled sheavea of wheat reap hooks, bunches of lilies of the valtev, crosses, crowns, broken wheels.

etc.. fastened all over all the compost

tors' cases and everything in reach of

this cheerful horrifier, and even his own suspenders and lapels are gaudy

with the suggestions and reminders of

unhppiness. There is nothing of irreverence or foolhardiness in the spin

in which the collection and dibarsement of these hair-raisers are made,

but the boy gathers and treasures

them with ail the zeal and earnestness ard cheerful sariousness of a society lady hujrging her pet dog while the

nurse takes care of the baby.

If anyone knows of a worse fad than

this, now is the time to subscribe.

CENT ERVILLE.

James C. Dearth and family

let1

Mor day to spend the week in Indi" anapolii. Sinuel Sell has bought of 0ca Paddock his eiht acres of land or.e half mile north of Abington, paying 1700 cah. Ikirs. Florence Vogel of Indianapolis spent Sunday with friends here. Will Dunkle has moved his jewelry establishment into the room lately bought of Bob Wharton. A'so, Dunkle & Bertscb have moved their laundry into the same building. Robert Wharton will moye to Cam bridge City thi3 week. O. S. Hill has bought of Solomon Morgan hia hack line running daily betw.cn here and Richmond, carrying freight and passengers, leaving Centtrville at 7 a m., arriving in Kich mond at 8, leaving Kichmond at 11 and arriving at Centetville at 12 m.

All business entrusted to Mr. Hill will

be carefully attended to

O. K, Dunbar is taking iu the state

fair. CentervLle k tting rink opens Sat urday iiight waa full bill of atfrac

tions. Good usic, new skates; every

thing will be conducted in first-class style under the management of Albert

Cappeller, Cale King and Billy Mat thews. Glen Hogcett, son of Mr. and Mrs

Martin Uoggett, is Berioualy sick with

typho'd fever. Dr. C. J. Woods ia on the sick lit Judge W. A. Peelle and hia dangh

ter. Miss Mattie, will ep?nd the winter

in Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Jenkins cle

brated their fiftieth marriage anniver

sary Tuesday.

Jacob A Gates was kicked by ahorse Thursday, and is suffering from a

broken rib as a result.

Five new members were added to

the M. E. church congregation Sunday

night. His Lite Was Saved

Mr. J. E. Lilly, a prominent citizen

of Hannibal, Mo., lately had a wonder ful deliverance from a frightful death. In telling of it he says: I was taken with tjvfaoid fever that ran into pneu mania. My lungs became hardened.

I was so weak that I couldn't even sit

ap in bed. Nothing helped me. I

expected to soon die of consumption.

1 heard of Dr

i:...:.,.i -h.f .- el! i wnen i neara oi ur. ivicg s .ew

.,, .'Discovery. One bottle gave great re trusts. fehow me yotu company and ; lief , conti3ued to ase it aad no

211 tell yon who you are," is an old am well and strong, I can't say too and a wise adage. In estimating the much in its praise." This marvellous probable injury the country may sus-' medicine is the surest end quickest . . , , . cure in the world for all throat and tain from the .-e industrial com binaticns , . ., L i - -,- lung trouble. Regular sizes oO cents it i but reasonable aud sensible to take and $1. Trial bottle tree at A. G. into account the character cf the men Luken & Co.'s drug store; every bot-

at the head of them.

tie guaranteed.

rreble

The Dreyfus incident ia about!

County Fair Kicursions via

Pennsylvania Lines t- . v i-i - i & - nn.L r ,

closed. After his pardon Dreyfua will , Pw inciuwe. , , A. , " low rate non-transferable escarsion no denbt retire to England where tickets will BOid to Eaton from there U comparatively no anti-eemite Hamilton, K chmond, etc.for the fair.

feeling.

HAGER5TOWN.

:e are

Prof. Clark issJer ana w u

here on a visit. Rev. Warbington is building a barn on the lot he recently purchased. Will Wimmer will close out his stock of groceries and start a cigar factory. Frank Weaver, a brakeman on the Lake Erie, ia at home caring for & mashed hand. It waa caught between the bumpers. Florence Knaup, aged 14, waa taken to Indianapolis to be operated on for a tumor. Sha died a few hours after the operation. - Two of our leading people will be piarried on Tuesday, September 19th.

good returning Saturday, September 30. C. W. Elmer, Passenger Ticket Agent.

Is cften a wnrninsr tl at the liver Is lorjit or inactive. Mre serious rul Its may foilo--. 1'or a prompt, etKcitnt run; of ileaiaefce anJ all liver trcueki, take

IBafl Men Are Cowards.

Every Deperatfo Seems to Meet H.'s Match at Last.

ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

Hank Moore, noted Texas ranger,: 4-i'lare that the d-iHrado haa never lived bo was not at some time afraid of some other desju-rado, and there are bi.ick .jKts on the records of them all.j lis has a wide acquaintance with uit-a af the trigger, and in support of his; therv junta !! four incident in the lives;

of four of the mot celebrated killers the; Meiicau-American frontier has known, j Two of these men never saw the other , two, and yet the story of their defeats ; makes a chain. They were connected in ; a way, and if the spooks of them meet

la the half world and compare notes they will have an interesting time. The four concerned were Clint Ilaworth, Hill Lonley, King Fisher and Manuel Estrada. All of them died by teel or shot or rope, but they did not kill eacn other.

Clint Ilaworth is believed to have been;

a native of southern Mississippi, says a

?: j 1 -r& i ! M

fhe room. ine oarteeper naa ouatea under the counter, and two or three loungers had crowded into a far corner to be out of harm's way. Longley made no resistance. He said only pleadingly: "lou't do that, King: don't do that." t'isher reached under the cowed wretch's coat, took his six shooter from its scabbard, extracted the cartridges, threw the weapon on the counter and called to the barkeeer. with a laugh: "(jire me some wine on this here. It's the great Bill Longley's pistoL" He drank a pint of champagne slowly, looked at his foeuian and swaggered out. The barkeeper offered Longley the pistol, but he would not take it, saying that he was not man enough to keep it. Half an hour later, he was on his horse, weaponless aud headed eastward. He went back to the Sabine country and a year later was hanged for murder. King Kitsher owned a ranch in Uvalde county, aud it was just 30 miles from hia front door to the border town of Eagle Pass, then containing a population of l.riUO, not counting a small army post. Fort Duncan, which stood a mile south of it. Three miles west of Fisher's house the main county road forked. One prong rau by his front door, the other ran two miles to the rear of his home, making a considerable detour. They

joined again three miles farther on. At the fork Fisner nailed a board oo a tree

bearing the legend:

"Take the right hand road. The other

is King Ficher's road."

For two years he actually forced every

man in Uvalde aud Dimtuitt counties who traveled that route to go two miles out of his way. Violation of the order

meant shooting and probably death. Nor

was there any one oi this hardy frontiei population bold enough to bell the cat. One night in an Eagle l'ass monte room Lis luck had gone against him. and he was irritable. Finally he made some remark reflecting upon the honesty oi the dealer. Sitting next to him was a

Two Facts About

9

n

17

It has set the standard of quality for all competitors for the last thirty years- The strongest claim any competitor can make is that his coffee is "just as good as Arbuckles,.,,

THREE CONCLUSIONS

!

The best Coffee is Arbuckles'. The only Coffee to buy is Arbuckles The right thing is to insist on having Arbuckles'.

1 1 li'W'i ll

No. 72 A School Bag.

No. 74. Noiseless Spring

Tape measure,

sxty !ncrw loos.

nineties wide, 10 inches Jfp, alekl piud

wttmg. Sent rt-r!i ,t earned in lb Fv

cut from wrappers of Artucfcle ' 1 ictattirf't cut irta wruprt of

No. 76 Lady's Belt Buckle. Siiv p!m:ed anwtc dmiB. Seat rosiiwld receipt mf ' rest teres cat from nrippcri f

r

No. 73. Scholars' Companion. A mw useful article for acboot, cbildrra. HighlT

boi vrttb Iocs; i-mt lt. CJO-l-mmi Irani ;oci.. lvtld?r, iu euixl iubir. tent past. f r i d oa re. ceiftf 1 Iwi cent j4fitse Miicntit;-eii cut

truiu ..rai.ri.ir Arbuckles' Roaared CoSt.

No. 75, A Fifty Foot Measuring Tape.

A vry in tti

boii! it Mil

a t s t il Ihtf

Ikrni.

. 7 i-i. Ik'. ..t.r.

nt B.'ki-i t-t'itl o t-rriit of J real

tt an rrrr-lpt nf M2 rent Hsinc!j iri: Mnmi anc. ,i laa-

,wniinriof Artmciik-V Oo;?r-. J tar a V llo.Hta Collve.

V

No, 77. Telescope Drinking Cup. Thi article is prrvrated fnm fail'r. .t urrt hy its unt4L ranstnKtKo.

b U C I O in erutM.frdnirktl cover ro larvr ttto an o rd i Drr a ub m O Uriroptd ,

t n d e d

1

1

: Q

No. 78 An Album of Illustrated Natural History. Fifty colored p4cfurr oi Anlml selacUKl tot ttxilr bMui; anl nffli. !at i.aM aa r - af 'J ml aaalaav ataaia aai I. at-, uns cut froiu wrappvra of ArouckMa' Hnat xl CoOka.

No. 79. Pepper and Salt Holders.

Mad cf wna Silvw mhhout mju or oint vxreftt h I screw oa and off. Aral pataal4 aa rarrlat af 4 rrat vaalaao aiaaia aal I -J oiaaaiarra out Irum ritrt of Arbuckles Huastad CoOrw.

Mo. SO

A Spring

uaianoo

scale.

will waicb

ana Dale a St puuDda m br araail by aa. aa rrcrial at' S raat pa ! acaaaa aaa VM aiaaa. Iirrt cut from w ra ppr of ArbucKtva' Konlt4 iVHoa. b orlrtn aama jrur nnrm Kapraaa Ulbca aul w 1 1 aa your fmt OSct.

UKHC1SO IXTOTHE MCZZLS OF A SIX SHOOTKR Texas correspondent of the St. Iouin lost-lispatch. He came to Texas ia ISTtJ, leaving: in the states to the east a score of which any iroft-sMional man killer onjrht to be proud. His total kills were

fire negroes and two white men. and

lie was ui't then 30 years old. It is thought

that he came oiit west because his own

country had grown too hot.

In November, 1ST!), Ilaworth attended a country dance in I'anola county, near

the river. At this dance was a younjf stranger who had come out of the west, a slender, blue eyed fellow, with a thin, aquiline nose, prominent cheek bones and a drooping, yellow mustache that hid a thin lipped mouth running straight across his face like a gash. This was Hill Longley, already six ttnies a killer iu his own section and destined in the next two years to become rfne of the most

celebrated slayers 6f the Boirthwest. T"

He did not know Ilaworth, and Ila

worth did not know him. There is a pe

culiar antagonism, howevjr, between

men of this class. Prawn by some force

of which they are unconscious, they get

together invariably, no matter what the size of the crowd. About 10 o'clock Ila

worth, pretty drunk, anil Ixmgley, cold sober, were conversing in a corner of the room, while the dancers occupied the center of the floor. The talk began about horses. It went from horses to

women and from women to weapons. I'rom weapons it went to the use of weapons and some argument as to the re

spective merits of the talkers. An instant thereafter Ilaworth fell at full length. He had been struck in the mouth. He leaped up, the blood welling through his red beard, and when he gained his feet he was looking into the muzzle of a cocked six shooter within a foot of his tace. lie did not speak, and his hands went np as if they had been jerked by strings. His eyes were half closed, and he trembled slightly. Longley leaned forward and repeatedly jammed the muzzle of the pistol against the man's lips and cheeks. Slowly he was backed to the door, the savage six shooter denting his flesh with every step. He was taken in this fashion to his horse and made to mount. Longley told him that if he was found In the cinty the next day he wonld be killed. He rode away in the dark, still silent and thoroughly cowed, respite his undeniable bravery he left Panola county that night filled with a blind, dumb terror of his conqueror. Ilaworth was stabbed to death in New Mexico in 1SS3. In the next year Ixmgley killed seven men in eastern Texas. Three months after his arrival in that region his business became pretty well known to the people. He was a hold up man. and his specialty was stagecoaches, buckboard that carried one or two passengers and country stores. Early in 1SS0 he went west for awhile and in a barroom in Victoria met King Fisher, whose reputation was then at its height. Fisher was born id Goliad county, and his right name was John King. He was slender, like Longlev, bnt of an olive complexion. His eyes were dark blue and his mustache black. His face was exceedingly handsome, and he was one of the most expert as well as one of the most graceful riders the west has ever known. He assumed the name of Fisher when he left his native county. There was a good deal of j

the romantic and debonair about him. and a history of his exploits would fill a book. His trail and Longley's had not crossed until their Victoria meeting. Bnt.thev knew each other by hearsay, and there could be but one result of the meeting. They drank together and took cigars together, and had another drink and squared. oSf for a talk, each leaning an elbow on the counter and noticing every movement of a finger. From the first it seem

ed that Fisher's personality had

No. 81 -' Men's Suspenders.

J-lastic Web buipi mi era, durable, neat, well imu::U-i. Sent peatpaid oa rreeipt cf two rent pnsfa

nee aiamp

nod 1 H -untnrvi cut from wnpjrors cf A red CoQe.

-! is M ll

No. C2 Barber Swing Strop. A doubi etrop, Ont uf leather nail one if can vat. bound t:::i-er-Lerii ti, lacneA. widtb. twoim-tMs, trimmings nickel plated. Kent poll-paid oa receipt of two c c t po.lugr afnnip aad W nis natures cut from wrapper of

No. 83 A Table Cover.

Handsome cloth, varir-i

fT&tel tienffd (uittt-m ir'i!

rrm-e. 3 Inch-. hrnt

Anj cna Back cf the fallowing List will be sent post-paid oa receipt

cf a 2 cent psstaga stamp and 10 signatures cut from the wrappers of Arbuckles' Roasted Coffee.

No. CS A ONE NIGHT MYSTERY, and two other great DewctlT

C5 ADVENTURES OF A BASHFUL BACHELOR, kfCuii fu TEMPEST AND SUNSHINE. A NnrtUr JI.M.T J. lint.Mfc.-s. Tie Eisl popular ivmala writer of fictloo of loe ag. C7 THE SUNNY3IDE COOK BOOK, be M Pt. Jkknik

lUr.i.ix. 1 4 ia tiue of the ttiuat cotuprebeoaiva, coimui k-ii?k. toii IkuCS eff iUblbUiHL No. CO OLD GEiTRCT'5 AND NEW DISCOVERIES. Tbi hook l.ik. tiie re-i;l-r .mt f tort tteatea trmoaa of kaowtodge, and will l.e fviuml tuth tuUTtMluiDA uud useful.

Cf- 2.2? V. . -t ' 1- X-kk. r a:m.r of M.re' I'mvaroal Atant." Th Ikh.k oi two cent Pslmi)i .,...... i,....,. tli..i. i.. ....u.i r,nn

ed Cotlea. jlnrpf ditlrnm wrajieMi'f No. OO

rbucklul i;oasle4 ti'U. L

No. 91 Tho FIrat Prayar.

A oeauUral ImpoiKi rtctura ISiM Inekti la ia. pMt.tall reeetpi f 4 aaa ?! a'aaap aad 1 ataaa. tarea eat from wrap.

THE CITY CF DREADFUL N1QHT. Kl'ljVAHD K tf LINJ.

and otber stoiiea per of A rbuckiea' BoaMad CoCaa.

No. 2 The First Kiss

buckles' Boasted Com-.

A beautiful im po rt ed picture 15z 20 incbea t a size. Sent paat - paid an receipt af 3 cent tag e tamp and lO aicnatarea cat from wrappers of Ar-

No. 93 Two Is Company.

Trie oriftinnl waa painted ty J' e r Monin. 'i hut rep rod urtion in 14 printings lit a ire nutne work cf art. Size 1.t lnclien. Sent postpaid on receipt of Iwa cent p aa t a e Mlamp und lO Higna. Ivrrtt out

from wrappers of Arbucklea' Kotuted Coffee.

No. 94. A Basket of Beauties. A miutrt 'flrfrtt pU-ture of Hea ty Paul 1e I'nepre. tne Kreat paioter sf tlnwers. We tielieve thm to be oue of toe uatHlsotueat

' ' ' J'.ik" - ,aZ

r

flower pii-ture ever offered to the pehllr. It lali4tx'. int-hes In size. Sent puHf-pairi an receipt nf'2 cen tmMtHftc tttnmp aud lO nianaluree -uf frutu wrappers of Arbucklen' Koasted Cortee.

No. 90 Three Beautiful Flower Pictures. Karh measurioff vzlT Inches. Tba tttlea arc Summer Fragrance. " A Vase of ratios, " and Fresb and Sweet," These three pictures all go together, and will ba Beat peat-paid aa re. cript at 3 ceat pasts( stamp aad 3 ain it tare a cut tromwrap. pers of Arbuckles' Koanted t'orTi-e.

No. OO. Noah's Ark. A menagerie, conaiatlnc of IS pain off Animals- Elephants. Camel. Peer, Horaea, Cattle. TVonkej-s. Qoats, Lions, Bears, Tlcera, Does and Cats. Karh pair la coupled and stands alone. They are lithocrepBsd la many colors on heavy cardboard, cut oat and emboased. Every feature of tba Animals la distinctly shown. Tba elephants are T Incbea high and 10 Inches loon, and tb other Animals are proportto&.ue!y lance. fteBC poet-paid aa receipt sf'2st peelaae stamp aad 13 aisnaterre cut from wrappers of Arbuckles' Koanted Codee.

No. 97. Eighty-one Cold Eyed Needles.

4 I

ooio rvto NeioiiB.' f 5 ssaajaaw"

Put up in a pretty m o rocoo case, assorted sizes, and made by the best English manufacturers. Sent pest-paid a receipt r 3 cent f sitaie areas aad SO slnatarea cut from wrapperi of Arbuckles' Roasted Coffee.

"Mm

No. OS Hair Pin Cabinet A mtal ho littocraphd in fuiom, ttntiMMti.i; One HundrtHl Hair Finn, aAvrtil 8lxt a n1 stylrs; etraiirtit. crtni,lel and invisible. Tin tlirtvrvnt styles ire In wparu.ie cimpttr ajfiita. n I puii paid on receipt of U rent pontMce tnmp und 1) nignmiirts cut from wrKptri f ArLuckica' ILiMuticU Cutlce.

No. 99 A Pocket Mirror and Comb.

Set ia neat leather

combination case, with white metal frame.

Seat past, paid a a reeelpt af a ceat

peatase eta sap ai

7 alaaatarea cut from

wrapper of Arbuckles Roasted Coffee.

No. IOO Safety Pin Book Contain tw en t y -lour nickel . plated r-a fety-1 Ins three star vkkh enter tbe sole Ida from either ids. requirine no guidinc hen bnt secured er released. Heat peat-pa Id receipt af it cent puaiaaa

tnmp aad eisnniurea cut from wrapper uf Arbuckles' Koaatad CoOaa,

kl ANUhL Plth.SSb.l118 UAGGElt AGAINST F1SU KK'b THUOAT.

Mexican named Manuel Estrala, who

cauie from lMedras Negras. Without

word Manuel rose, drew a dagger, press

ed the point of it against Fisher's throat, first tilting back his chin with his hand, forced hiiu.to arise, backed him through

the door to the sidewalk, disarmed him.

ordered him to mount his horse, and

leave town, and he saw that he did it.

All the time he was pouring forth upon

Fisher every objurgation and form of

abuse of which the Spanish language is

capable. Nor dkl the desperado utter a

word of protest. He cringed like a beat

en hound. His nerve seemed to melt.

turn to water and run away from him,

He became a reformed character, was

made a deputy sheriff, proved singularly efficient in hunting down criminals, many

of whom had been his companions, and

was killed along with Hen Thompson in Jack Harris' theater in San Antonio in

1SS4 not because he was drunk or dangerous, but t-ecause he was in bad com pany. .

The Hue Pleased Him. "Soe that man?" said the clerk of an

up town hotel to uie this evening as

a handsome, middle aged man strolled through the lobby. "That is the president of the IJfe Insurance company. He married his stenographer

last spring. It was quite a romance. He aud the girl aud his office hay were

coming down iu the elevator in the insurance building oue afternoon when the stenographer saw a mouse on the boy's shoulder. She threw her arms

around the president's neck ami

screamed to him to pruti-ct her. The mouse cowered in a corner until the

elevator rt-ached the bottom flor and

then cscafHtl. the girl holding the

president all the time. Well, he liked the sensation of !eiug hugged by a pretty pirl so much that he married

her a few weeks afterward."

"And what became of the oldce

boy?" I asked.

"Oh. he has a desk in the office at a

good salary now and is iu line to lie

president in due time." answered the clerk carelessly. New York Cor. I'itts 'ours lisj.at' h.

How's This?

We offer Ooe Hundred Dollars Reward for any ce cf Catarrh that cannpt be cured by Hall' Catarrh fure F.J Thexet & Co. ProDrisorg.

de- loiedo, U.

pressing cSect noon lender. Some- II " uouen-iEnea. nave Known

tluug that the fearless scoundrel could F. J. Cheney for the last 15 Tears. ai.rl

net explain or understand was tugging at I believe him perfectly Lenorable in all

his heartstrings, and as tne apparently j buiret transactions and fir ancially purposeless conversation went on he j able to earrr out mv oblitratioria

r? "ff

5". es..-

While tlk-y ro-j.-e tfce liver, res -ore full, r -cular a- tioi d t,e tvcl. they do in t --!; or i .-.ln, do ik Irritatt or ir.iin-e iiw Ir; r:.;-! ora-is, bat have a positive ttmic eSt. iOc at all dniin-sts or by tnr.ii of C I. llooi & t oe, liOwll, Mass.

It

prew whiter and whiter under bis tan. 1 le knew that ia a quarter of an hoar the test would come, and be did not feel himself fitted for it. He had often desired the meeting and had pictured to himself the addition to his reputation to

come from Fisher's death. The oppor

tunity waa at hand, and he could not rise

to it.

Weil. he said at last, ia a weak ef

fort to stave 2 the final moment, "let's have another. The liquor was served, and as he

reached for his glass his hand shook. At that moment Fisher grabbed him by

by tbevr firm

West & Truax, wholesale dnnreistn, Toledo, O. Wavdikg, Kixnan & Martin, wholesale druggists, Toledo O. Hall's Catarrh Cure U taken internally, acting: directly upon the blocd and mneom surfaces of the system. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold b all dru$reists- Testimonials free Hall's Family Pills are the best.

This Is a picture of th Signature ea Arbuckles' Roasted Coffee wrapper, watcn yoa aaa a eul out and seiM to us "

other part el the Coflee

, ia. -awnpper will De accepted as a IW Sawcher. nor will this Picture be

M accepted as such,

This represents one paee of a Lint which 1 foand in pound pack axe of Arbuckles KoHsu-d t'olfee. and with

packMKe in which the L,lt la found the purehaeer baa loiisbt deflnite part of some article to be aei-iwl by htm or hoc from tbe l.lat, subject only to the condition that the aienatuM) on the pnckaire Is to be cutout and returned Ut Arbuckie i roaa

aaa tocdbttis aaeoraauoe wittt uie directions printed a connection with each itaaa innsnams awa a.amn uai.sma a

WHI OF OfJat SlfiMATCKKS ARE PRINTED OK I

I HACKtiBOCMP.

Tiiia I.lat will be kept cowl only ttll Mar 31

pare of thia l.lat will appear In this paper shortly.

itMsO. AuuUal

lA&nss all communications to ARBl'CKLE BROS.irjQTION DEPT., NEW YORK CITYt M.V

WOMAN AND HOME.

THE DEAR OLD MOTHER OF POET OF THE SIERRAS.

THE

Little Girls mad Their Hair The Story of Aprona The Artiatlc TemperamentSarah iiernhardt Married 1b a Sheet. Joaquin Miller's mother is quite as notable a figure in some ways as the Poet of the Sierras himself. She is 84 years old and as bale as a woman 25 years her junior, is active and deeply interested in practical gardening. She is intensely fond of ber sou and proud of his attainments, but she likes him best in the guise of the farmer. "This is what I call my man with the hoe," she will say as she shows the visitor to her home iu the California valley a picture of her son standing with the farming implement in his band. "That picture was taken a long time before Maikbam wrote his poem, and it is only since that work appeared that I have giveu the picture a name. I have been told that this was caught by a snap shot artist just as Joaquin was about to break Into my franlen and cut down some weeds with his hoe. n l;eu every good gardener

knows that weeds ought to be pulled np

tinuoir .Mrs. Miner, "ami tliiifs one thins that makes tne prejudiced. I mimjkc. "Now, there's that corn out there, with its broad, rluik leaves that look like cut airy sabers Itent the wrong way. Just look what a brave show tbe corn makes, yet it isn't a comparison to tbe potatoes in tbe matter of production. "My garden is not so good this season as it was formerly, yet. such as it is. it is all the result of my own work. But I had to pay the penalty, too. for I have

been seized with a touch of rheumatism in consequence. However, it's worth the

price to inc. since nothing else seems to

afford, me so much contentment as watch

ing my cucumbers, melons, squashes, tad

ishes.string beans and olhcr garden truck

grow from the sid to be ready for the

table, ome might think it bard work but it has never seemed so to me."

In her quiet way she will talk of her

daily cares. Her house on the heights

overlooking the Joaquin valley is a pic

turesque place. It is just such a place the recollection of which would call f.rth

a song of the "wan moon" and "the land of the midnight sun" from a wanderer who lias deserted it for the frozen north

as Miller did.

A more gracefuL sight than the little

home affords could not be imagined, nor

could a woman be found who is more in accord with such surroundings than Joajquin Miller's mother.

X.YIt a cn!;c of pun oli J "il aoiip'in a quail of li-.iiing water. When the soap , is dissolved, the rcult will lie almost a : jelly. Tnkr of this jelly, say. two large! tahlespooiifuis Mini a siiiull lump of cominon washing soda alMut the size of a

hllicit. i-st net the hair thoroughly wilh hot water, then rub the shampoo mixttue well into the roots. Rinse thoroughly in several waters, aud then carefully dry. Woman's Iife.

I I I i ' mm

"Like diamonds raindrops glisten." Drops of Hood's S&rs&Darilla are

hia yellow mustache and gave it a ear-1 preeious j-wels for the blood vh ch age tug. yanking his head around. Long- gligten in their use. 1 ley faced him for a moment, stammering, 1

but made uo motion to draw hia weapon.

MRS stlLLKR.

by the roots. I certainly never taught

him to do anything like that, and I reckon the lesson be got when I found it out will teach him never to indulge iu such

pranks again."

Mrs. Miller s admiration for fcer son s

work rests primarily on portrayal of

scenes with which she is personally ac

quainted and ia which she, to a certain

extent, took part. His verlml pr.-tnres of the long journey across the continent by the familiar prairie schooner route by

which she reached the Pacific coast she most enjoys.

They serve to recall the days gone by. and the scenes that were then part of her daily life, but which have passed into the grave, she cannot forget. That 'is why she loves them. She is a plain old soul and cares for nothing beyond ber son and her garden. Nothing delights her more than to chat on one or the other. "Strange, isn't it. that my potatoes

thrive the best of anything ia my garden, when, as a matter of fact, 1 like potatoes

Little Glrla and Their Hair. The arrangement and care of the little girl's hair has long been a source of anxious thought to tbe loving mother. A wise woman no -longer clips her little daughter's hair, nor keeps it short all through ber school days. She lets it grow in the natural soft ringlets that seldom come in after years, and relies on her skill and care to maintain a luxurious growth She brushes the tender hair carefully every day, making it soft and glossy by this process. The beauty points are trained by painstaking labor. If the hair is scant about the brojv. then a little cocoa butter is rubbed iu. She uses no washes or bleaches, but lets nature take care of the color herself. It is a mistake not to change the dressing of a child's hair frequently. A part must not be allowed to become too wide, yet the hair must be parted at times to prevent its becoming untractable. For very little girls the "granny curls" are about the daintiest way of arranging the tresses. The hair is parted, and a curl on either side is tied with .nie delicate shade of baby ribbon. The curls fall forward over tbe ears, forming a most delicate and fitting frame for the wee baby fate. The girl who is a little older wears her hair in a pompadour not unlike ber mother's. It is tied with a black bow, and the ends are neatly braided into the long braid, which hangs down her back. Often a very plain little girl may be made quite pretty by a studied arrangement of her hair. If ber hair is dressed quaintly, it wid improve her immensely. The artists are responsible for many

or tne styles of fixing children's hair. They paint their little daughters with some artistically or fantastically arranged mop. an.! quickly the mothers adopt the style for their own darlings. Mothers at the summer resorts often do np fhe soft curls in a wee knob at the

The Story of Aprona. The word "apron" should really be called "napporoii," the old French word for napkin, from the French "nappe." a tablecloth. It is said that in many villages in Knglnnd the word "apperou" is still used. Aprons are of extreme antiquity mid npriear to have been worn from the days of Kve. In the thirteenth century aprons were worn by the upper classes as an ornamental addition to the

dress. Leathern aprons had been worn previously by blacksmiths, the type being similar to that of the present day. Chan, -or speaks in his "Canterbury Tales" of an apron worn by the carpenter's wife iu "The Miller's Tale" as being f u! : cf many a "g.re." these "gores" lieing er plaits or honeycomb smocking. 1- i.i;i this time to the sixteenth century the use of th apron was chiefiy rinfimil t, the middle class housewife, but after then tho dames of high degree again took them into use. Of tine texture, fringed or edged with lace, ornamented with more or lts stitchery of quaint device, it may be inferred that aprons of this nature were usually very costly articles of apparel. In the time of William III and Mary, aprons were richly decorated with needlework. gUd lace and spangle. When

small, they were usually edged with fine, costly lace. They were worn under the pointed bodice, and sometimes the stomacher matched them in color. Later on they were worn very long and quite plain, sometimes fringed at the end. but withoct lace or ornament. White maslin or lawn was the material used, and even ladies of quality appeared at assemblies of fashion iu such aprons, which were worn, somewhat shortened, on full dress occasions until the end of the eighteenth century. . During the early part of the reign of Queen Victoria most ladies wore aprons

tuade of Ua k silk or black satin, variously decorated, often embroidered and trimmed round the edge with lace. Many old ladies still adhere to this custom, but ornamental aprons are not now greatly

worn, though they were in vogue from lg7 to 1.NS5, when art needlework designs were applied to them. Cooking aprons are usually of hoi land, bound with scarlet

or white braid. They should be of am

ple size as regards both bib and apron

proper. A pocket ta also very desirable. Lady.

i win sing," lie said. "I will sing my best." Just then some one banded him a bottle of wine. "Here." he said, and filled his glass, filled it so carelessly that the red wine spilled on the cloth. The singer dipped his ftugers in the tiny iiool and touched his throat with the wine. After that be moistened bis lingers agaiu and put them into his pocket. We do so in my country," he explained. "We spill wine we touch our throats and our HH-kt ts. Then we sing divinely divinely, and money cornea to our pockets. It is for good luck. 1 spill always wine when I want to sing well." It was the hostess' very liest tablecloth, however, and. the artistic sens being in every rightly made woman, aubordinate to the housewifely instinct, she well, for this and other reasons she beams no longer on the artistic temperament in the concrete, nor does she speak of her admiration for it in the abstract.' -Washington Tost.

Tbe Artlatie TeaiBeranest. There is a woman here in town who

simply loathes the artistic temperament. There was a time when all her frk-nds

wotted well that it was not thus with

her. She admired the artistic temperament ia the abstract and she beamed on it in the concrete. In the concrete it took the form of a gentleman of Latin birth and possessed of a beautiful voice. Like many song birds, however, he required a deal of coaxing before he wamld consent

to warble. The lady who admired tbe

Sarah Iiernhardt. Sarah Bernhardt' earlier years are especially rich in persotial reminiscences. A writer in a Manchester paper tells as that at 5 she jump.-d out of a window in her desire to run to meet her mother in a maniK r more t xin';ti..us than that offered I y the rtniniiw. ind at 7 she ea-cap.-d from sclx.iil .-.--I induced all ber school fellows to f-.lli.-.v her lead. Ht range lo say it. it n s me . ir In-fore Sarah Bernhardt hid eeti a n -inkling of that passioti for lo t profession by which aha was aerard l, I- p-mecd. The lata M. Sareey dirii-.i-d ber immense gifts aud was never tin-d of proclaiming them. In 1871 he wrote: "If would be iinroit.u

be more naively nietic than is this young woman, who wiil fieeome a great actress and who is already an admirable artist. She is a creature of sweeiueas and beauty. Is she pretty? It Is impossible to say. She is slight of form, and her face is sad. but she iKtasesses a sovereign grace, a penetrating charm, that something that cannot be defined. She is a born artist and an incomparable artist." During her earlier triumphs Bernhardt waa perpetually haunted by the idea of death. It was this besetting notion that caused her to have her colli n made and placed at the foot of her bed. The shell, which bore ber initials and her mottoC "Quand Meme." was lined with whita satin and held the lei tens on which ahaset most store and bc-r dearest aoovetUra. Fed by this incident, which became known, the popular imagination waa soon busy with the doings of tbe favorite actress, who was credited, without a shadow of reason, with the strangest fancies and the most extravagant cs prices. ,

Then Fisher slapped him twice with the oTiep hand, the blows sounding through

Dr. Xilae' Pain Pffla cure NeoralglaHeadav che bad? Get Pr. Hllea Paia Pnia

too of the head. This is coo! and ex

tremely quaint looking. Sometimes the artistic temperament Invited him to her hair is drawn ud hiirh and tied with house one evening last spring while be

when, as a matter of fact, I like potatoes i baby ribbon, while the loose ends Boat; "as in Washington. She had prepared the least of ail vegetables 7" she wUl ask j unrestrained- the daintiest of suppers, and there was you. looking earnestly into your face. . j a child's hair should be washed every win of several colors. The man with "Potatoes dou't show their keeping and two weeks at least. A good shampoo voice was in great good humor aa he bringmgjip like most other ttloc" .coa- aDd , simple one is a foUow.. aatat the table.

Tfc Old U4f. Kavarlte Color. Entering a music shop the other day a Welsh miner who had lately come into a considerable sum of money asked the price of a grand piano. lie waa told Lc was $-JTK - He bought it. A fortnight after be returned for a music book.' and the shopman asked him if the instrument gave satisfaction. "Man." he said. "Int yon wouldn't know it now. It just looks splendid! My old Vman has painted it yeller to match the chest of drawers.' Spar Moment.

A t ne seasoning for chicken salad is to slice an onion on the top of the prepared! chicken and let it marinate two hours or more, adding at tbe same time a few drops of prepared chevril. Be sore that every particle of the onion is taken from tbe chicken before adding tbe drssadng.