Richmond Palladium (Daily), 8 January 1902 — Page 2
RICHMOND DAILY PALXtADIUM. WEDNESDAY, JAXUABY 8, 1902
TETD1TO 119 WILL MCEf
Aacated DatlieM Wilt Get
- Tn-mhrr nn frUi't. Indianapolis. Jan. S. The annual .m' ting of the Indiana Associated XXaJIit will be held in the Century tT2ifi rooms at the Denison hotel FriXy, -Jan. 10, the session being called mt 1.30 p. m. An interesting program faas been arranged tor the meeting. In addition to the formal proceedings of the association and ejection of officer fur the year, papers will be read follows: Co-Operation in the Purchase of NtM Stock VV. Bent Wilson, Lafayette Journal. Coiti rating the Local Advertiser OtaxLas H. Neff, Anderson Herald. Valne of Clause 7 of the Bylaws TMarli O. Waters. Newcastle Courier. Charges for foreign Advertising JiobeTt Henkle, Brazil Times. The meeting will conclude with the evening session.
Went to Grave TojcethT. Tloonville, Ind., Jan. 8. Mr. and j3Ar. Henry Bessing. age respectively , and 92. died within two minutes asrf each other. They Uvea in a little ieabia near Elberfleld. which was their Jhooue for 50 years and more and their XdSm was one of seclusion, wiever paySax visits to their neighbors and reaeiving no callers. It was their' wish .sto 4e together, and both were strick-
- n about the same time and soon were .intii. Their bodies were buried In the
-ataiae grave yesterday at Elberfleld. TTbere are no children and the estate, "which will aggregate $10,000. will go
-" distant relatives.
Menial na Mystery.
JUobJeavllle, Ind., Jan. 8. After two
mki of diligent work, the authorities are bo nearer a solution of the
-John E. Seay assassination than they
i when they first began to give the
attention, the following day af
ter the murder was committed. Wm. FbArea. who Is in jail under suspicion , of having fired the shot through a -window In the Model mill that result.t An Seal's death, still declares that "2e ia innocent of the charge. Every
effort on the part of the authorities to et him to say something that will
implicate himself has failed.
He Dnjr, a Cave. 'Marion, Ind., Jan. 8. The police ryesterday located and arrested Daniel ZXr-JioIs. He has been a fugitive for two months, and was wanted for assaulting William Blanche, an oil man, who ic was feared would not recover. Nichols dug a cave under his house and used it as a hiding place. He was la the cave when arrested. He entered a plea of not guilty yesterday. JBJlanche residegyat Van Buren. 7 Vharsre of Infanticide.
'Vincennes, Ind., Jan. . Following 'j'the discovery of the bodies of twin babies buried in a garden near this . city last week, Mary and Ruth Put- .. luua, unmarried daughters of Ebel . "Putnam, a prominent farmer living -west of this city, were arrested yester- . day charged with killing Mary Put- . nam's twin girls, born Dec. 21, last.
Inter-State f 7 -in irc Cmuint-tsion Chicago, J .a. 8. Prcs?cutios3 against all the big packing houSi? concerns la tha We.it tor viaia.iona of the provision of ihe ia.erstata commerce law against receiving preferential raivS contemplated by the iattrsta.e comaierce toxm ssion. This fact develoiiel dming an inves
tigation begun by the commission ia;o the handling of pack ng house products and dressed meats. It also became apparent that the commission and the railway managements of the entire country practically had entered into ai alliance for the purpose of inducing congress to pass legislation permitting the railroads to pool under certain regulations by the interstate commerce commission, an J that It !3 believed such a law can and will be passed. Another development was the announcement that the commission had
requested the attendance here of all
the leading men In the advancement
of the community of interests idea,
including J. P. Morgan, James J. Hill
and E. H. Harriman, and if these men
failed to respond to the request
harsher measures would be taken to
compel their coming. Evidences upon which to base prosecutions against
the packers was obtained in abund
ance. Traffic managers and vice presidents of roads east and west threw up their hands and admitted freely
that there will be no pretense toward maintaining tariff rates on packing house products and dressed meats for
export or domestic use except for a very short period of time at the be
ginning of each year.
.AaaaaAaaaaAaaAAAaaaaAai
1TviiE PASSING
g 1 CF MR. and MRS.
3
2
JOSEPH BRUBE3
Bv E:nry Irvai
a'n't l !
Copyright. ISMi; Dr Henry IrTiag Dodze.
frelshtroom and jrot his inspiration,
s Then he accosttnl Brutlor.
kj -Wait in for Harris' team, ain't yerT" i Bruder looked at his wa. and she I
i- j naitl. "Yt-s. !! Goia" Ut work oa the job.
MyerV" .j Asnin r.rc!cr !hed f t Lis wife, aaJ b 1 again she said. Vcs.
I "Well. I'm r'?l:t Rla 1 ter rco yrr." f said the unconscionable I!n!o:nat ef
fusively. "1 toil yer. we've been Uavia
I great goal's on sroun here.
Cimianatu Ricbmonl AMuncie llailroad.
ii
-Bip Four" pulled into lUawr Mead-i Sa,n soU y and reows on the Kome-Watertown UivUion, f f 'ttle ck!st'r ucdi?r tUe ti5't'Ilw of n.l irKin.u lirntlpr an.l hl wlf j his mighty Shib.
COM PA It ATI VK STATEMENT
w School Vamifced. "Mnncle, Ind., Jan. 8. The Garfield public school building, completed last fall at a cost of (40,000, was damaged . $5,000 yesterday by fire.
TOO MANY JUDOKS
of
Britisb and Boer Losses Put Side By Side.
London. Jan. 8. A published review of operations In South Africa during the past year based upon offi
cial reports, gives an interesting comparison of Boer and British losses. The review says that the total reduction of the Boer forces in killed, wounded, taken prisoners and surrendered amounts to 18,320 men. Out of this total only 7.993 rifles were secured. The captures of Boer ammunition amount to 2.300,000 cartridges. British columns are supposed to have taken all the Boer artillery, amounting to 27 guns exclusive of the two captured by General DeWet at Zefontein. The capture of Boer stock has been enormous, considering the great hauls made during the earlier years
of the war. During the last year a total of 29,882 horses were captured, while of other stock, such as cattle,
oxen and sheep, 366,821 head were caotured.
The" British casualties from actual
fighting amount to only half of those sustained by the Boers, namely 9,113
men, of which 1,513 were taken prisoners and have since been released. During the last year 4,090 men died of disease, 15 oflScers and 342 men were accidentally killed, and 23,800 men were invalided home.
Om i ha Police Court the Scene Singular Action.
Omaha, Jan. 8. Two police judges Commission
each with a number of supporters.
A Hisb Prieed Hall. Chicago, Jan. 8. The Hereford bull "Perfection 92,891," was sold for $9,000 yesterday at the Union stockyards, Chicago. This Is the highest price ever paid in America for a Hereford and the highest price in recent years for a bull or cow of any breed. He headed the list of 56 animals sold by Thomas Clark of Berea, Ills., and was
purchased by Gilbert H. Hoxle, vice president of the Mallory Livestock
company oi umeago.
held court at the same time in the .police courtroom yesterday, and the :reatUt was forcible ejection of one of ;?iem by the police. Judge Berks, the j newly elected judge, held the bench, while Judge Gordon, who claims to , hold over on the supposition that the election of Berka was illegal, pulled . a table in front of him and rapped for - order.
Judge Berka had the support of the:
The First Snit. Lansing, Mich., Jan. 8. Samuel Beach has commenced suit against Ingham county for $1,500 damages for injuries received at the hands of a mob in Leroy township some months ago. when he was accused of taking improper liberties with a young girl. This is the first case under the Dickinson act of 1899, which makes a county liable in damages to victims of mob
caty police and Gordon was recognized1 violence or to thtir hei:s in case of
1j? the coan.y authorities. Berka aplEea.rtd in the courtroom first, mounted the bench and began hearing cases. Gordon came in a little later and attempted to take a chair on the bench.
death.
down from the passenger coach that j was traXns behind six "flats" of raild. j Brcder was six ftft four and broad, j end his wife was five feet and narrow.!
Brader carried a huge valise that cost j
a dollar and fcad done service, also an ax. Mrs. Bruder wore mitts and a plaintive, piquant smile. Iu her eyes there was a standing apology for the disparity in their sizes. This sieissd to tie a sore point with the little man, for she was ever on the alert for the quizzing glances of straugers, and if one should stand apart and glance at the odd couple he was sure to have his gaze arrested by a plaintive glance from the woman which said as plaiy as speech, "Please don't make fun of us." But the man never bothered his head about what other folks thought. He was a woocchopper, and that's all he knew or cared. Next to his wife lie loved his tx, and it used to be bis
pride that be could put a keen enough j
edge on it to shave with. He used to lay his cheek fondly against the purple blade and pat it and call it his darling. And the ax seemed to understand him, for It would bark with quick delight when his giant arms swung it aloft and bite the matle and bury its nose to the point where the tempered steel joined the softer stuff. When Eruder got off the train, he looked around In a sort of inquisitive, defiant way and put his hand clumsily around his wife and drew her should; over against his thigh. There was uo one at the depot but the agent, a veteran in the business, the tenure of whose position was due to five tv"J
that he had years before contributed to the annual list of accidents on th road. Smith had heard that Bruder was coaiing to take the place of one of the striking woodchoppers, and it tilled him w:h grave concern. Almost all of his relative! bel'uuged to the strikers, and uU sympathies were deeply with them. On the other baud, it fell to his lot to sUow ostentatious loyalty to the company. Beaver Meadows was the chief "w'oodiu up" poiut of the road. For miles the contiguous cou;;ry yielded nothing from its stubborn soil save stunted beech and knotted maple. The president of the. comiuiljpUat
supplied the railroad with wood vena
Smith's backer. A nod from him would have dislodged that worthy from the
comfortable nielie that afforded him a comfortable living. So Smith was between the devil aud the deep sea. His
heart was with the strikers, his inter
est with the company. That's why his
usually plr.cid mind was filled with
perturbation when he beheld the lumbering form of Joseph Bruder and the diminutive wife alight from the caboose of Big Four. Bruder Lad an arm as long as his wife's tongue and could fell at a blow J either kind of jackass, human or
brute. Mrs. Bruder was the brains of the outfit. She took charge of the money, when there was any. allowing Joseph only enough for tobacco. Otherwise he was a teetotaler. On the whole, thia strange couple was deemed a combination to be avoided. Xo one ever knew where they came from. On that score Bruder himself was silent, with a persistency that detied all the subtle influences of bucolic diplomacy. Surmise said he was an ex-convict, and as chapter and verse of his past were not forthcoming this comfortable theory crystallized into a very goo counterfeit of fact.
When the woodchoppers learned that
"Between yon and mc." continued
the wily t-iiiilh. "these woodchoppers I rneau the Beaver Meadow fellers." he hastened to explain as a slight contraction cf Brtider's forehead warned him that c.v.y slur upon the craft would not be welcoiue "don't know when they're well off. He paused, and Brader looked at his wife, but she remained silent. "Of course I ain't got nothin asainst those men here, and it may not sound well comin from me. me loiu' in the employ of this corporation, as ain't supposed ter show no partiality, but seems ter me these men is a little unreasonable. Yer see. he went o: as neither Bruder nor his wife spoke, "times have been pretty hard around here, with crops failin and a good deal of sickness in the neighborhood, and I thin!; these men ought to been glad to get steady employment. Of course they're really in the power of the company, cos they ain't got no money, and the officers knows it, and so they cuts
down their wages. Now. some of 'em finds out that the big fellers Is makiu' dead loads of money, and so they makes a big kick and goes on strike. So the company jest shuts down, and I beard the superintendent say as that they was goin to start a process of starvation. Of course I don't want that to go no further. "Did the company treat the men fair?" nski-d Mrs. Bruder. "Of course it did. said Smith quickly. "Ain't they got a right to pay their money out any way they like? Couldn't these men pick up and leave if they didn't like it?" "Most of these men has their own homes. ha?n't they?" asked Mrs. Bruder. "Yes. th?y has." said Smith, "but if they keeps cn this way they won't have no one left in their homes." Then he added as be walked toward the office: "Ye'd better come In and sit down. Harris team may not be here for an hour j-et. They generally comes ter meet the down train. 'Big Four is waitin' here for it ter pass."
He adroitly halted the couple in
front of the open door of the freightroom, and instantly the maternal eye
of Mrs. Bruder caught the little coffin. "Whose is that?" she asked. .
baby. said
5
S..i.
Korth Third St. C. ft. A M. PiMW Sta'ian.
WESf AND NOKTtt.
EAST AKI SOUTH.
STATIONS ' STATIONS No... Suixy Un'' ' Sund-y Unty
4 I I ft i
Lean C I. E. Sut-:s. Sick ;ai BiraU- " i KscisriB".... " I 1 iltca .... n 1 ixlurd Col 1 orner. . CuOage Orove .. kitchcU " ut .... ...... UoMon..-. .... I ru iry Wolfe S. Richmond.. i:2L-uti . ....... W illuini&burg ... Ecouomy ...... LofeamviUe Kiountsville .... Mcdiord. ....... Icrei 4aton ......... Jaoney ...... I owivrlou ...... fmrsboro ..... 5rja seetscr. ...... Micr Converge ...... mboy ... ....... Santa Fc...... .. r
dim $ 10 aw 33am 9 41' am U .V ara lUtWam f 10 12 am
J03Oro
lUS.im 10 59 am lilt am 11 -tJ.ni 1 1 So am 11 4 am 1 2 Vi pm 1225 pm
t
pm 4 15 pin i 4 pin o44 pm 5 1 1 pm f 5 pm "545 1 m
730 pm It tl pm
t) JXpm
5 ft) pm
616 pm G2pm 6 4. pm
B '4)pm 902 poi f 912 pm
H30pm
1UI2 pm
l It. pm
lOS.ipm
55 pm It 4.4 pm
7 Id pm , 10 5 pm
T pm 1 1 1 la pm 7 4H pm I II 4"pm f f
1243 pm I tsOS pm ' 11 5 pm
1 i pm 1 22 pm
1 43 pm 2 09 pm 217, m 2 pm 10 im
62 ' um ; 1220 am
ts 4o pm ' 12 40 am
LEAVE
Peru . . . . , htita Fe .... Atrboy. ........ Converse ... . . Mier ... Srreelcr 3rioa ......... Jmc?tKrt Volcroa ...... Janncy .... iaton SUwB It Vcdiard ....... tountkville .... 1 OMntsviile .... rconomy ...... W tiUAinsburg
Eicix-ci-.-
S K rchuiomi . . . Wot e I 'rulcy ..... HuMtMa ... .... Whw Kiichcll
4 ottage Grove .
Col. Corner. Oxford .... Eimilrr ....
I M4 z
635 am t5 am ' 15 am I 7 34 am 1 y. am (ill am 8 .8 ara 8 7 am 53 am 9te am
B 41 am 035 am
954 am f I'iOl am lit 15 am
10 2 i am
11 "0 am It m am 11 46 aia liU pm 12 Opm 12 4opm 1 U2 pm 1 2 j pm 1 50 pm 2 -It pm 2 ti pm 2 49 pm 2 54 pm 8 In pm 8J9pm
100 pm 1 2i pm 1 4xi pm 101 pm 2 pm 2 40 pm aoi pm 3 22 pm S 5 pm 4 09 pm 4 24 pm 4Jw pm 4 47 pm 54 pm 51 pm
loS4 am i 5 0 pm
mm M p.. 1 1 vt am 0it pm
355 p 54 pm 4 0 pm j 6 ;5 pm ::::::::!....:::: 4 li pm 601 pm 4 f pn i 611 pm 4 !' pm ' 6 23 pm
4 1 p
700 put 745 pm
f Stop for I'assetisrers. Connections No. 3 at Muncie Big 4 Knickerbocker Special to Buffalo and New Yoik, and all points on Big Four. No. 1 at Muncie to all points on I,. K. & W. At Bern Wabafh for Buffalo, St. Louis, Detroit ard Toledo. Nos. -2 and 4 at Cincinnati C. & O.; B. & O.; Q & C. and L. & N. for all points east and south. No. 4 Special lates to Jacksonville and southern winter resort.
Home I'bone 1 1.
CIIAS. li LAIR, City Ticket Agent.
"That's Cy Selden's
Smith, l.vinjr heroically. Mrs. Bruder looked at her husband, then back lo Smith. "What ailed It? she asked. "Cholera morbus?"
Smith drew closer and lowered his voice a bit. "That's what they jrive out." he said, "but between you and me it didn't have enough ter eat." Just then Smith found sudden business in the ticket office, where he remained untH he heard the booming of the down tru'n. when he went out on to the platform to pass up the mails. He lingered for a moment and watched "Big Four" pull out from the siding: then he looked all around. There was no one iu sight. "Ilow'd yor do It. Bill?" asked Jack I.nndy that night, while a half dozen strikers smoked and listened. "I didn't do nothlnV aud I don't know nothin'." snapped Smith. "They come, and they've pone, ain't they?" And then t; modify the rebuke the good 6oul continued in a tone that smacked suspiciously of tenderness as he puffed his pii? reflectively in the darkness: "Sirniw: I used to know those fwlkfyears ago didn't know it till terday tbey was a good deal younger then just married. I gutss they were pret
ty poor had a little baby that died I
Avnz"l Their Companion. Guthrie, O. T.. Jan. 8. A lynching took place Monday night on the gAde of the Oklahoma City and Southwest-
. i i " r j . s t.L f
iue pouce, nrr. lu.ceu mm. nu ern ranroad in an isolated district aa much dignity as possible, to a chair j ROtlthwest of chickasha. One of the outside the railing. Judge Gordon I laborers, while the men were in camp. tm pulJ-d up a table and began hear-j shot a company and the remainder : ing a case brought by the county at- of the party hanged the murderer to
.lornei. cersa oraerea me ponce to:
eject the judge and two bluecoats took
a tree.
Him try the coat collar and hustled him out. not, however, until he had declared court adjourned.
TKIISK TKLlXaKAMS
f lttterv Swindle Vnearthed. Buffalo, is. Y Jan. 8. What ia regarded by the federal authorities as m well developed lottery swindle was brought to light yesterday. Andrew Clifford, a barber, was arrested charg- . ed with having used the mails for . fraudulent purposes. It is stated by the federal officers that no drawings
- were held by the '"lottery." purchasers -of tickets never having Sad a chance t win. Pcstoffice Inspector Cochran, castasted by two United States marishals, raided Gifford's place. They found piles of unused lottery tickets, . circulars and a large number of envelopes bearing postmarks of places in New York. Canada, Pennsylvania, 53bio and Indiana. Gi fiord was taken iTseioce a United States commissioner uand ield in $3,000 baiL
Belmont Beaten. New Torts, Jan. 8. Montague Lessler. Republican, was elected to congress in the Seventh district yesterday - to Mcceed Nichols Muller. Dem, rejsiipaed. He beat Perry Belmont, the 7esular DetDOcraUc candidate, by 394 -KOteju -j . t. -- -
Orvr thir bnndred bills and joint resolutions wero introdueed jesterda.T in tbc n. The barkentine lVn. raptatn E. B Muroa bna bwa wrpeked at Lantana off the Florida coa-ot. TiH hoove enmtnitt on cenn has or1red a faTorable report on ia bill creating a prraaa-
nt tfa-u bureau. Fire al Tumcansport, La., bnrned the bi- :ness portion of the town, romi-itinir of 33 builUins. Total kK Ilii.Of: insarance $;5.000. The aw-retary of the naT has prepared for nbmuvioa to congress a bill providing for the establishment of th naral training station on the great lakes. Sixteen million dollars has been snbgcribed ia Paris for building and equipping a new system of electric street rail-oars in Mexico citj aavl introducing low fares. Senator Fairbanks has introdnred a bill appropriating :U.0.flt for the erection of a building in Washingtoa to be used jointly b the state department and the department of justice. head-end collision on the Kramt division of the Norfork A W estern railroad, occurred yesterday in -which H.iirh Smith, an express mecsenger. engineer Bailey and flagman John Turner were killed. The bearing of the prize ra-srs on appeal from the district supreme court involving the question of the amount of prize money due Admiral IVwey for victory at Manila has been set for tsaaring next month by the district court ol appeals. The senate committee on Inter-oceanic canals has decided to defer al! effort to seenre action by the senate on the question of canal across the isthmus nf Panama until after the bouse shai. havs dupiMaKl or the bill bust under coaaidar rwioa ia tUe latter body.
little thing died cos it didn't ret enougn ter eat.
An 'inti-Annrrhift Itiil. Washington. Jan. 7. Representative Grosvenor of Ohio yest.-day introduced an anti-anarchist bill. It is similar to other measures on this subject except that the death penalty Is provided for criminal assaults on an officer of the government, without spe
cifically designating the president as
the one assaulted.
Joe Bruder was coiuiug to take Cy Sel- j don't know, but folks aroun there said
den's job. they knew there would be trouble, for they were a determined
lot. There was an understanding, bowever, a sort of feeling, although no words had been spoken, that somehow Smith would settle matters, and so it was determined that no one from among the strikers should meet Bruder at the depot and attempt by moral or umscnlar force to turn him back. Smith knew what was expected of him by his friends and relatives: be
also knew that the suspicious eyes of the president were upon him, and hence the delicacy of his position. lie hated being "double faced. but he had a very romfortable niche indeed, and times were exceedingly bard in those parts. He reflected with considerable disgust that it was qoite unjust that he. who had no personal interest in the matter, should be the one upon whose shoulders the task of adjusting the affair should l thrust. That explains why Smith was perturbed upon the arrival of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bruder. It also explains why he alone was at the depot to meet the distinguished pair. It is an axiom that lurk Ui-fi r mpuw Ia iKa
lazy. Smith was a lazy man. which stomach
Pennsylvania Line TinETABLB. In Ef ect Sunday, Nov. 24, 1901 Trains ran by oantral standard tlma.
IfMlsiutl Um. Depart AnfHamJltoa & Clnrinnari isia ilteai d&ctDnati Accomodation 8 50 am 1 wo p , 'Hamilton A r'-'""-4 6oopm itospt G. K. a L C Ctn. Aoc, 3 5 p m is op 1 iBSllaaieMlla rUtae. Hew York ft St Louis si all 4 s a a s 1 a St Louis ,J 1 4111s 'SPS
indianatioks Acc
No arfc ft S Bonis Mail, Nr. York ft St Louis Exp.
M Jouls l.tml a Mail
6 n n issopt
...so 15 am Ijlpt itspa loocai
4HPSa 7 3SP
-. Vrk- SL, Fait Mall-. Ii
Bradford & indpl Acc . . ...... if 5 a m
hl4t4J UfM.
3 3P
Lonaaort Acc Cfaicaco Fast 1
nil
5SP 05 a lsti Sur'
tcaco Fast saaB St alar 11 ma
CiacsDiiati ft Logansport Acc y 35 p as Clm. ft Chlcaco Might Kap 11 13 p am Oaytea a Xeoia Llae.
Xeela Spcfld. ft Cola. Acc J ao 1 7 55 p Day torn Xaada A Columbtu w..xo 0 a a 10 so at 'DavtDB Flos, ft Now York so Mia ana
Cols. Pitts, ft New Yor 4 SS P aa si oa t, t
Daytoa ft Xanla acc loota 7 55 pa Nw York limifD , , . 9 00 p am 440a riMM, UrkftM Im.m Um.
St Loots ft Kw York Mall s s a as 4 47
' fVJ. Aar- - - 1 S3 a S
Pttta ft last Mall ft Eap ? 45 p as (cspi St tUmla Llawssd Mall .err
ladpls ft Bradford Acc 3 55pra 113011
raaa liaMt lasllaaia R.
fG. W fa. TD a, I TC -
" -- - r cwMcy raJaw 5 140 sTaB 3V P Graad R4motiU Mw MrUi laiossm loooii
'MorttlhuKl Kruw n to s
Dally. AS othr trmlns dally J. JL, GofaMa, Station Maafear.
Preserve Your fa tb,en? here
ai tor isunnenng. VlOlneS . . Our method are
the same as those in the home laundry, but with skilled help and greater facilities we reach results which are unattainable elsewhere. The proprietor of Richmond Steam Laundrj
solicits your work, confident in his abil ity to give perfect satisfaction.
Carpet cleaning also done here.
C W.
Tlcfcat A (aM.
Cincinnati Northern R. &
Trains pass West Maochestaa- dailv aacaavt Saaa
s follow :
North Baaatf.
No. a No. 4...
oath Basmst
..10:30 a 1 .. ;a p 1
No. 3 . No. 1
... 0:14 .
Noa. 3 and 4 na only between tUncinaaci aad v. Wert. Noa. I and a run thrngt betwawa Clue1 una and JacaaoB. T. C. M. Seklaalwe, 0. f. A Tousoo. O
E. D. CROGVENOft. M.D.
SPECIAL. EQTTIPMEMT FOIt THE TREATMENT OF Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and throat, Scleatifle Fitting ef Claaae. 24 IVorth Eleventh Ot
64
Good Friends,
Pain in Stomach It has been said that a healthy person doesn't know he has a stomach. How unhealthy the dyspeptic most be! He feels as if he were all stomach, and one thing that makes him feel so is that pain at the pit of the
sometimes an " all-gone
accounts for tbe piece of good luck j feeling"; sometimes a burning
wbicb catce to him on tbe morning of tbe arrival of Mr. and Mrs. Bruder." Bab Armstrongs two-rar-oII baby boy had died of cholera morbus a few days before, and the sorrowing parents, who were farmers, had pot tbe littl creature in a simple pine box and were sending tiim down the road to be bnried in tbe Armstrong family boryInc proond at West Camden. The tiny morsel of humanity was at that moment resting in tbe freibtrooni of tbe Beaver Meadows depot. Aa Smith limped down the platform toward Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Brnder he looked thronga the open door of the
sensation. " I suffered from pains In my stomach and could not eat. An old gentleman told me to take Hood's Sarsaparilla, which X did. and after the nse of tour bottles I gained my appetite, and I was soon completely cared, so that now I feel like a new mai. On 00 account would I be without Hood's Sarsaparilla in my bouse." Boir CuxiJ, 71 Commercial SL, Portland, Me. Hood's Sarsaparilla and Pills Core dyspepsia, invigorate and tone the whole digestive system.
Richmond and Dayton Uare Richmond ia P(IC 8t L Ky Co 0:10 am fclfi f Leave aton via Clayton A Western Traction Co 9 9e am 4:40 a. Amu Dayton UM am fced tn
BarrtTmjriae LeaTe Dayton via Dayton A W extern Traction Co . g:00 am Iffcfa) mi 6 00 pm BUJG sr Leave Eatoo via P O C B L ay Co 10: at aaa 11 noo8:A7 Pan XOJsl V Arrive Richmond raFOOISt L.U.JO0 10-.Mam lm av 7 TU pm 11:00 av aaras op raaa. Round trip, Richmond and Eaton, via T. O C St. By 0 Bormd trip, Eaton and Ijayton, ns D.kW -Tractioa Co .
Booad trip, Richmond and Dayton .
-1
a mm In Main St. Business Property In Choice Location Come Quick and Learn Particulars.
don't yon think it's about time you gave us a call? We have everything in harness and harness furnishings, and you will
ways find our eooda
the best and out
.11c oest gooam. We are selliae a first class horse blanket at 75c to JW.60 THEWICCmO CO. Mew Phoaa 76. BOW MMU T
H.H.Meerhoff SAXITAKY ; PlaTJIBING Steam and Hot Water Heating SEWERAGE, ETC See us for Estimates- . ' ' Phone 46. S S. Nlstb
W. H. Bradbury & Son.
Wcstcott mock.
ED. F. DALBEY
4 EIGHTH ST. Photographer OUT-OF-DOOR WORK A. 8PEOALTT IAXDSCAPES AXLMALSI GROUPS PASTIES: ' GATHERINGS...
