St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 15, Number 18, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 26 October 1889 — Page 4
159 T ; LR Y WOoR | THE WORLD OVER. A MIRROR OF THE IMPORTANT OCCURRENCES OF A WEEK. Things That Do Happen—A Complete Record of Interesting Events the World Over — Shocking Accidents, Startling Crimes. Other Topics. NIHILISTS ACTIVE IN RUSSIA. ! The Capital Flooded with Revolutionary Doc- }’ uments in Spite of the Polic-. ! THE nihilists are again active in St, : Petersburg, and the city during the past ! month has been flooded with their revo- ! lutionary proclamations. The police are [ entirely at a loss_ to explain how these | _documents are printed or distributed. It is asserted that the printing is done in Paris under the protection of certain high government officials tainted with | revolutionary doctrines, and that the | French capital is also the headquarters of | the_ m.hills.t newspaper, the Struggle, | which is printed expressly for circulation | in Russia, large editions being periodi- ! eally spirited across the Russian border in spite of every police precaution. !i DEATH ON A BURNING VESSEL. | e v Four Lives Lost and Six Persous Injured on i a Canadian Sieainer. l THE steamer Quinta caught fire in the : Bay of Quinta, near Deseronto, Can., and i before she could be grounded many of her ’ passengers and crew were seriously hurt ‘ and four persons burned to death. They are: Mrs. Christie, mother of the cap- | tain, and her 12-year-old son; Mrs. Stacy, assistant cook, and her young son. The injured are: Aubina Kellar, Captain in! the Salvation Army, seriously; Mrs. | Anderson, the cook, badly burned; En- 1 gineer Short, badly burned about the ead, neck and arms, bones broken; Fireman Hart, badly burned; Mr. St. Charles, suffering from asphyxiation; Colonel Strong, United States Consul at Belleville, Ont., badly burned. Several others were slightly injured. PENNSYLVANIA R. R. CO. An Inerease of Nearly Half a Million in the Road’s Net Revenues. The statement of the business of all lines of the Pennsylvania Pailroad Com- ; pany east of Pittsburg for the uine months | of 1889, as compared with tho same pe- ‘ riod of 1888, shows an increase in gross | earnings of $1,311,626, an increase in ex- | penses of $829,235, and an increase in net ; earnings of $482,391. All lines west of | Pittsburg and Erie for the nine months of | 1889 show a surplus over all liabilitizs of I $421.047, being a gain as compared with | the same period of 1888 of $500,793. | KENTUCKY FACTIONS FIGHT. ! Bloody Battle at Harlan Court House—Wil- | son Howard Wounded. , NEws has been received at Louisville, | Ky., of an engagement between the How- | ard and Turner factions, near Harlan! Court House. James Dean, of Howard's ! party, waskilled and five others wounded. ! Wilson Howard and one of his principal | henchmen, named Jennings, are among | the wounded, and it is said that Howard’s | injuries are probably fatal. Three of the | aurner crowd were wounded. ' WASHINGTON’S VOTE. ! The Correct Figures as Shown by the Official | Returnrs. ! THE official count of Washington Ter- | - I ritory shows the total vote to be 38,443; | Republican majority, 9,535. Olympia 5 for State captal fell 2,000 votes short of | a majority. The majority against women | suffrage was 18 000; against prohibition, | 11,900; for the -constitution, 28,273, | Olympia, North Yakima, and Ellensburg | compete next year for the capital. i . THIEVES IN WANAMAKER’'S | STORE. : Systematic Scheme by Clerks to Rob His Philadelphia Establishment. A PHiLADELPHIA dispatch says Andrew | Graham's arrest for robbing Postmaster ; General Wanamaker's store of SI,OOO i worth of goods while he was employed there has been followed by the arrest of ’ George Ingram, another employe. De- | tectives are looking for others who are supposed to be implicated in a systematic scheme to rob the store of a large amount. | Foreign Christian Missionaries. l THE annual report of the Foreign | Christian Missionary Society was read | at the Christian Church Convention at | Louisville, Ky. It embraced reports from missionaries in Japan, India, China, Turkey, Scandinavia anq England. They showed tl'mt. the mission work in those countries is 1n a prosper- | ous condition, though it is attended in many places with great difficulties and opposition, e | Flouring Mill Burned. § TuE flouring mill of the L. C. Porter Milling Company, at Winona, Minn., | has been destroyed by fire. The capacity of the mills was 1,400 bushels daily. ' Loss, ®150,000; fairly iqsurqd. The ele- | vator of the Winona Mill Company ad- | joining caught fire from sparks, and was | damaged to the extent of SSOO. ; Henpy Villard Said to Be IIL. : HENRY VILLARD is reported to be lying seriously ill at his home in Dobbs Ferryv, N. Y. He has not been in town since the meeting of the Northern Pacific | directors took place. Mr. Villard is suffering from a scvere cold. | Our Exports of Merchandise, A sTATEMENT issued by the Treasury Department shows that dnring September last the value of merchandise exported was $65,074.371, as agaiust 353,$12,740 imported. A Flood at Pasadena, Cal. : AT Pasadena, Cal., business was suspended the other day owing to the unprecedented rainfall. Street-Far tracks were washed out, and traffic ceased. | Railroad traffic was also interfered with. The streets and property have been badly damaged. Many basements and the first floors of houses were flooded. | Japan’s brime Minister Lioses a Leg. | OXUMA, the Prime Minister of Japan, has had a leg amputated as a result of the attempt upon hi'q,l,if(?,' - EASTERN OCCURRENCES. | BexsaMiN T. BABBITT, the soap manufacturer, died at his home, in New York, after a lingering illness. He was eighty vears old. The profits of his business tempted more than one attack by birds of prey. About ten years ago his head clerk, Charles Beckwith, robbed him of $%200,000 while Mr. Babbitt was in Europe, Mr. Babbitt left a check book full of drafts signed in blank, which Beckwith filled out, cashed and converted to his own use. He covered up tmces_ of his dishonesty for months by doctoring the books. Mr. Babbitt’s next unfortunate
financial experience,was‘ in connection with Mrs. Peck, the notorious confidence woman. After this second experience his l wife assumed the financial management of his business. ‘ TaE second victim of typhoid fever has died at Yale University in the per- I I son of Thomas J. Roberts, of the class of ’92, of Scranton, Pa. He had been ill | about two weeks and was a diligent student and kept at his books, when his physicians ordered him to receive medical attendance. Several other students are ill. Dr. Seaver says there is no danger of the fever becoming epidemic. AT Larrabee, Pa., fire destroyed J. J. Newman’s saw-mill and 3,000,000 feet of lumber, loss $24,000; J. C. French's store, loss $6,500; two barns and ten tons of hay belonging to D. C. Young, loss $2,000; Mrs. D. C. Smith’s board-ing-house, loss SBOO. The fire caught in a heap of sawdust near the mill furnace. The loss on the mill and lumber is covE ered by insurance. l A. Dawsox of Boston, who is highly connected, has been arrested at Montreal for forgery on the Mgreantile National bank of Hartford, Conn. Sixother forged i checks were found on him. IN Boston the statement that John 1.. Sullivan is bankrupt is said on goca | authority to be false. It is said that $20,- . 000 of his money was placed in his fath- . er’s keeping after the Mississippi fight, | and the old man has it yet. WESTERN HAPPENINGS. A Fort SwmirH, Ark., dispatch reports that a disastrous explosion occurred in a ’ coal mine at Bryant Switch, in the Choc- ' taw nation. A miner’s lamp came in contact with a keg of powder, and the explosion of the powder caused one of coal - dust, which set the mine on fire. Sixteen ! men were in the mine, the shaft of which 18 500 feet deep, all of whom were taken ’ out more or less injured, four fatally. ~ ST. Louss exposition has closed. The total attendance in forty days was 550,000 | people and the total receipts $130,000, ~ Goods worth $250,000 were sold by exhibi itors and contracts were made by them -for the sale of 500,000 worth of goods. ' A REPORT from Columbus, Ohio, isto ! the effect that Governor Foraker is very' ill, and that it will be some time before he is able to resume campaign work. GEORGE H. STEVENS, Treasurer of the Penitentiary Board at Tucson, Ari., has disappeared, and his accounts have been found to be $6,000 short. The copious rainfall in California has damaged late grapes and wheat that had not been harvested. The precipitation | has been heavier than in any previous Oc- | tober in the history of the signal service. . . » . | ! A1 Wichita, Kan., an electric strect- | car was struck by alocomotive and hurled i sixty feet and nearly twenty passengers t injured. Those most seriously hurt are: ' Ollie and Sadie Munn, who were badly | cut and bruised, and Nellie Henderson, ' of Oswego, Kan., who was injured in‘ternully. A grove near the track l)re-l vented the engineer from seeing the approeching car. ' RoBBERS entered the postoflice at Far- , go, D. T., at night, bound and gagged the - clerk, Harry Milton, and by applying a t red-hot pokerto the soles of his feet com- ' pelled him to tell them the combination . of the safe. =~ While they were working it | Milton managed to free himself and se- . curing a revolver fired at them. The thieves effected their escape after secur- | ing $125 in currency. | AT Huron, S. D., the State Enforcement League organized with a fund of $£50,000 to aid in enforcing the prohibi- | tion laws of South Dakota. The officers | are: President, Rev. William Fielder, of l Aberdeen; Secretary, Rev., E. English, of { Huron; Treasurer, F. H. Kent, of Huron. | The Central Committee consists of one E from each judicial district. ! AT Lexington, Mo., the residence of { ex-Mayor Ballard - was burned, Mus. | Ballard, who was of unsound mind, per- | | ishing in the flames. She was alone in ! the house. Tuae village of Woodville, Ohio, is gscourged with an epidemic of diphtheria and typhoid fever. Ten deaths have occurred from the latter disecase and nearly as many from the former, The local physician has at present some fifty cases on his hands. Business has been almost entirely suspended. SOUTHERN INCIDENTS. ! ‘ A conwnisioN near Lynnland station, ' Ky., on the Louisville and Nashville . Railroad, between two passenger trains, | resulted in the death of one man and the | serious injury of several others, Van D. | Heisen, of Millstown, Ky., was the most | seriously injured, death resulting in a i few hours. The others badly hurt were: { Rev. J. M. Bruce, of Gleason, right arm | broken near the shoulder; J. M. Wheeler, | Worthington, Ky., fractured arm and inI jured internally; Jirs. B. A. Green, Nichi olasville, dislocated shoulder; Elder W, i F. Rogers, Horse Cave, dislocated shouli der and badly bruised. Ed Jeftries and wife, of Green County, and four little i children, the youngest not over two years | old, were all badly bruised and internally | injured, two of the children seriously. ‘| A LovuisviLLeE (Ky.) dispatch says: | A report, at first discredited, that Wilson | . Howard with a hundred men is besieging County Judge Wilson Lewis in the cour! : house, at Harlantown, has received con- ! firmation from the men who have just ' come in from that section. ILewis issaid ! to have fifty men and to be fortified in i the court house. Howard is the man for whose arrest large rewards have been ' offered both in Kentucky and in Missouri. The report of the present trouble is probably exaggerated. { DR.J. L. PosgY, of the Marine, Hos- | pital Service, on duty at Jacksonville, | Fla., telegraphs to the bureau that Dr. | Porter reports another sporadic case of yellow fever at Key West, Fla., and inl consequence quarantine restrictions have been resumed. The patientis Mr. E. Ellinger, who left Havana on the 2llst of | Sept®mber for New York by sea. He | came from New York by rail to Key West, i Oct. 2, and was taken sick in a locality of i the city distant from that of the former , cases, e ’ POLITICAL PORRIDGE. | THE Greenback party of New York, have nominated the following State ticket. i For Secretary of State, the Rev. Thomas K. i Beecher of Elmira; Controller, John B. Sulli- . van of Westchester ; Treasurer, Joseph Madison Hall of Hamilton; Aitorney General, Joseph Wright of Weedsport. | A7 New York, the 7th district County Demceracy, in congressional convention, | indorsed the romination of Amos J. Cum- | mings for Congress in that district. | e 4 ; ACROSS THE OCEAN. | ANOTHER great naphtha well has been struck at Buku, in Southern Russia, Tne Xussian police at Odessa, Russia, have arrested two men, said to be Amerians, charged with circulating large amounts of the new and dangerous forged 25-ruble bills of the Bank of Russia. Iwo packages, purporting to be bales of cotton cieth, Which mrrived from New York a few days before, were counsigned to one * of these mex, and on examination by the
custom officials they were found to contain nearly 1,000,000 rubles of these counterfeit bills. To avert suspicion from them- ' selves, they circulated none of the stuft ! in Odessa, but St. Petersburg and Mos- | cow and other large cities have been ! flooded with it for three months. The counterfeit, which 1s undoubtedly of American manufacture, is so perfect that it po-ses from hand to hand without question, and everywhere, except at the counter of the Bank of Russia, appears to answer every purpose of the genuine bills. A ZANZIBRAR cable says: Lieutenant Gravenreuth, of Captain Wissmann’s expedition, surprised Bushiri’s camp and put his forces to flight. Lieutenant Gravenreuth’'s men are continuing the pursuit of the rebels. A LisBON cablegram says: Luis 1., King of Portugal, is dead. The King passed away quietly. He became uncon- i scious some time before he expired, and ! hiz life went out almost without a (remor. ‘ 'Ptu'al,\'sm was the cause of his death. - The Duke of Braganza, who succeeds to | the throne, will assume the title of Car- ‘ los I. King Luis I. was born Oct. ‘3l, 1838, He was ‘ the son of the late Queen Maria 11. and the late Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-Cqburg. His royal - mother was the first sovereign of the line of Braganza to break through the custom, which ~ had prevailed for two centuries, of keeping ‘ up alliances with the reigning houses ot Spain, Her union with Prince Ferdi- l ‘ nand resulted in the beginning of the house of Braganza- Coburg, the - first sovereign of which was her son Pedro V., &t whose death, in 1861, Luis succeeded to the ! ' throne. The young King took to wife Pia, the | iloungest daughter of King Victor IXmanuel of i ) tulg.. They were marrvied Oct. 6, 1862, when | - the bridegroom was 24 years old and the bride ' - only 15, From this unicn were born two sons, | ~ the elder of whom, Princo Carlos, Duke of Bra- ‘ - ganza, born _iu 186 , is a cultivated man, Prinecs | - Carlos married adaughter of the Count de Paris, | ~ the most formidable of pretenders to monarch. ! ical rule over ¥rance. King Luis has been a } ~ wise and liberal King, toiling to establish free- | dom and education and encouraging railroads | aud telegraphs, but the people appear to have | lost that enterprising character which made | ~ them 80 active during the fitteenth and sixteeuth l centuries. . oy : ' FRESH AND NEWSY. l - 1 SEVERAL car loads of New England | capitalists, with a few from New York | and Ohio, are investigating the State of | : : . s | Texas with a view of making investments. | THE provincial government of Quebec | has contributed a large quantity of pro- i visions and goods for the relief of the | 4§. & v f starving Labraderians at Point Esqui- | mau, on the Gulf of St, Lawrence. Five | hundred barrels of flour have been sent | by steamers. ON the 224 inst. the Adventists of Virginia were in session all day at Scream- ] ersville, Spottsylvania County, awaiting | the coming of the Lord, the wildest ex- | citement prevailing, bLut retired to their komes about midnight when satisfied that | the world was to exist a little while | longer. It was the forty-fifth anniversary of the going out to meet the Saviour | in October, 1344. , Tae annual convention of the Mutual Benefit Association of the United States Railway Postal Clerks held its annnal session at New Orleans. Letters of re- | gret were received from Postmaster Gen- | eral Wanamaker and General Superin- | tendent 8011, of the railway mail servica, | } R. G. DuN & Co.’'s weekly review of | trade says: | E As before, the moneyv mavket is the one noin’ | of anxiety., Rates are higher, but perhaps ap | prehension is somewhat lessened. Country still calls fox money largely, but reports fron | - nearly all interior centers of supply show that | the supply is considered ample for commercin! 1 needs. There is {iramess and increased de mand at Kensas City. and some stringency as | Cleveland, but with an casier tendency. At Milwaukee the market is brisk &t 7 per cent. ; at | Philadelphia customers are supplied &t | 6 to 7 per cent, The wvolume of trade | coutinues large; bank clearings ex: | ceed last vear's, railroad earnings aré | - encouraging, and eastbound shipments from | Chicago are hieavy. At Chicago the dry goods trade tor the week falls below that of tho correspounding week last year, and receipts of wool and lard fall off one-balf, but coal receipts aro larger, and receipts of grain and provisions show a good increase. St. Panl rejoices in the maovewent of “Minnesota’s largest crop,’ and railroad reports indicate that Northwestern lines are - choked with the enormous receipts from farms. | Cléveland notes activity in all lines, with suall | ~ sales of ore because unsold supplies are scarce, | The iron trade js still healthy., The wool trade is still dull, and while there is | fajr movement of_ dress goods and en- | larged discounts ha®e ecaused more business in knit goods, the demand for men's woolens is | strietly moderate. The cotton manufacture is ! - thriving and the trade in goods satistactory. { f Speculation for higher prices in wheat has not been active since the last Government report. - and heavy Northwestern receipts, with scanty | ~ exports, combine to depress prices, which have fallen 213 cents for the week. Corn bas declined | & quarter, and oats 11§ ceuts, while pork prod- - ucts are a little lower, Coffee has yielded a | \ quarter, and is weak. The coal business is bet- 1 ter. The price of raw sugar has again declined | | an eighth, and of refined a quarter. The busi- | i ness failures number forth: TUnited States 182, | - and for Canada 41. For the corresponding week | last year the figures were 202 failures in the | | United States and 22 in Canada. i | i J " WILL SERVE THEIR COUNTRY. | } Recent Appointmenss to Positions in the Gov- | 1 ernment “;f".":""' { | THE following appointments have been | | | ~ apneunced: i | Hichard E. Sloan, of Arizona, Associate Jus- , 1 tice of the Supreme Court of Arizona. Oliver C. | Bosbyshell, Superintendent of the Philadelphia | - Mint. Gaugers—lirst Illinois District, Robert | - Blair; Eighth Illinois, Jesse C. Moore; First | 1 Wisconsin, Robert H. Markham, { Nicholas Smith, of New Ym’k,.(fo‘nsul at Thres | Rivers, Canada; Oliver F., Williams, of New | York, to be United States Consul at Havre, | ¥rance. Land Office Registers—Samuel P. Mc- | Crea, at Las Cruces, N. M. ; Williamm McCrack- | en, at Booneville, Mo.; Webb McHall, at Kirwin, Kan. ; James Eaton, at Grand rorks, N. D, | ~ Receivers of Public Moneys—Willinin M. Berger, at Sante Fe, N. M.; Willinmm A. Smiley, abt Booneville, Mo. Charles H. Cooley of M jciigan Special Agent of the Burecau for the Collection of Railway blatistics, : ‘ b e | i ) MARKET REPORTS, i | CHICAGO. ‘ CATTLE-Prime.......5ee........54.50 @ 5.00 | Good: .i o viis o B W S 5 | Common. ..., ..., 200 @ 325 | - HoGs—Shipping Grade 5......... 400 @ 450 | pßuapEe.. sl D B 0 s . WHEAT—NO, 2 Red...csevecesens I 8 @ 69 | ECORN-No. 9 . oo doios @3O @ idllis | } OATE=No 2.0, v il gel 8 @ e Bl NGO, 2000 aai i e pAA@ Al BurTEß—Choice Creamery...... .20 @ .22 | CHrESE—FuII Cream, f1at5...... .09%@ .10 | BOGE—Hresh. .....o.cniavi e, <lB (@ (19 PorAToEs—Choice new, per bu.. .25 @ .30 | Pogr-Meds (.o .o 5a 30T @l MILWAUKEE. o WHEAT-—Oshe ..o o cciiats - WlO (@ 7308 OOBEN—NO. 8... ... v s 306@ 316 OATS—No. 2 White..........0e... 21 @ .2:.’. i BeR-No Lol i 0. lllg@ 48 Bantmy No. 2.0 iiion OBA (@ 88 ] Pope-Mens. .ol =L% @YD i DETROIT. | GAUIRLE. .i iy 500 (@ 800 i) BOGE. .it a, DOO (6 KOO - Braeey: ol Bab @ al) WHEAT—No. 2Red...c....00ime 8l @B2 CORN—NO. 2 YellOW.. ci.-cvsnens <S3O@ 3836 ¢ OATs—No. 2 White............... 24 @ 2 | TOLEDO, - i WHEAT—~No. 2Red.. ... c.coaios .f’»fl @ '.89‘25 CoRN-—Cash . ... i 88 @ B OATS—No. 2 White. .. ii.i.....0. 21 @ 2106 ’ NEW YORK. i GlTrer S e sBO A DL Bma i i AP @i BHEEE i enea 480 HAOED - | WaEAT-No. 2 Red .l i (82 @ B 4 CoRN-NO. 2., .. vl B 8 @ AU OATs—Mixed We5tern........... 23 “",‘,'?‘.3 | PoßEK—Prime Mess. . .ivoiv..ivea 350 (@l2O = | ST. LOUIS. e : Carrew. - oAt o o 486 A ol Hoas @0 0 s e Gle @i WHBEAT—NO. 2 Retk.iiicis. iivs o .713".305? gt CORNNO: 8. vt aevis o EBREO U 0 BIeC e R g Ryr—Towa. ...k i i 800@. 98 | INDIANAPOLIS, -~ - CATTLE—Shipping 5teer5........ 3.00 @ 4.50 HoGs—Choice Light............. 4.00 @ 450 SHEEP—Common to Priwe...... 250 @ 4.‘5» WHEAT—NO, 2 Red...ooveeaniases .‘7.7 @ .17 GorN—NoO. 1 Whille: /i isiiisieie 180 DOB OATS—No, 2 White. ... ... . w 2 @ 23 CINCINNATI, I WaHEAT—NoO. 2 Red.. ... cc.co.oca 19 (@ BY COBRN-—NO, 2. .. bi o iad i (BUE QATE-No, 2 Mixed . i tiodi.a s 81 @ 22 Hem-NO:. 2i e 4D @I . KANSAS CITY, > ‘CATTLE—GoOOd........ .lueeese. 825 @ 450 Madinm. iv.or i sn 285 ) in Butehers'..o. cociaoai i 2,00 (@ 800 JTOOH. . Soxiariidvniio s Sbb s Bl (L SBEERP .. cootosi s veasmmarsines 800 @ GIOO
e YN ! ! [NEAR TO DEATH'S DOOR. L i ; AWFUL SUFFERINGS OF THE SURVIVORS OF A WRECK. i i W | Yhey Face Famine in an Open Boat for Many Days, One of Their Number Going Insane and Suiciding from the Terrible Strain—A Pititul Tale of Woe. i The seven survivors of the steamer Earnmoor, which foundered at sea when 300 miles off Turk’s Island, - have arrived in Philadelphia, and tel] a story of terrible suffering. The FEarn- . moor struck a terrible gale Sept. 4, which increased in force. and at 11:30 a. m. the following day the vessel gave a lurch and foundered. As the steamer sank the port ! lifeboat floated off from the ship. The ' second officer, second and third engineers, ! four sailors, three firemen, and the cook ! . clung to the boat and serambled in. i | An effort was made to save the rast of the crew, and a drag was made of the ’ painter, but the boat was Llown away and the oars wrested from the hands of the | l men so that no more could be saved. The | cries of the drowning men, as they were ! dashed about by the mountainous waves, | could be heard by the men in the boat. | l The boat drifted into (he gulf stream and ! the air was warm; but this increased the I i intensity of their thirst. | | “The horrors es hunger on the second | | day became awful,’’ said Carl Crane, one l |of the survivors, ‘‘and it increased | las time woire on. We managed to nick up | | sea-weed, which gave us a little nutriment | | and on the third day a flying-fish was | ! caught. This was immediately cutup into ’ i a portion for each man and devoured. f Wa also captured a sea-bat and suciced | | its blood, and then ate tihe esh after it | ! bad dried in the sun. The first man to die | ' was a seaman named William Robinson | } and the second was the tlird engineer, l | Thomas Hunt. One night while we were | | all asleep, except a German fire- l | man named Flagge, who was | |on watch, he suddenly became | | insane and jumped overboard. ’ 'We were too weak to save him. We were : } without a compass, and steered by the sun | { by day and by the stars by nigcht. Eleven | [ vessels passed us. Une, a British bark, | | we were certain saw us, and deliberately ! I left us to our fate When 500 miles off | | Hatteras we were picked up by a schooner. | i I can not describe in words our joy at the ! | sight of this deliverance. We were so; | weak that we had to be lifted upon the 1 | vessel's deck, and one of our wmen, ¥d | | Johnson, a Norwegian, fell overboard and 5 was drowned.”’ i DELIBERATELY SHOT DOWN. ' A Notorious St. Louis Lawyer Killed in i Cold Rlood. i A 'St louis dispatch says: B |M. Chambers shot and instantly killed Frank J. Bowman at Ferguson, Mo. Both are well known in St, Louis, Bowman was an attorney here for several | | years, and made anything but a favorable ‘ reputation. The killing grew out of the trouble between the parties over the old E Times newspaper, Chambers was a large | stockholder and princinal owner of the | paper up to the time of its demise. Bow- t man was also interested in it. He bought | among other things the press franchise of | i the paper, and has been in litigation over | the matter with Chambers ever since. i | At the time of the tiagedy, Frank .J. 3 i Bowman, accompanied by Deputy Sherifl | Garrett, called at Mr. Cha:nbers' house in } | Ferguson. His yurpose was to levy an at- | I tachment on Clambers’ life interest in his | wife’s estate, or whatever other property ! he might be able to find. B wman said: | ‘I have come to levy on your property.’’ | | ““All right,”’ said Mr. Chambers and he | ' entered the house. lln a few moments he | ! stepped out into the yard again, and he | then had a double-harreled shot-gun in his | | hands ' { “Garrett, you get out of this place and | | get out quick,’’ he said to the deputy | sheriff. Garrett walked away., Then Mr. ; Chambers turned to Bowman and said: { “*Now, Bowman, I’]l give you three min- | utes to get out of these grounds.”’ ! Bowman did not move. In an instant ! Chambers raised the gun and poured the | lead into Bowman’s heart. The men were | standing close together. and the full load | took effect in Bowman’s chest. He fell | dead in the yard. Bowman never spoke, | | and died instantly. | Mr. Chambers walked into the house and f quietly remained there awaiting arrest. ; | He seamed very cool and coliected after | the killing, and did not appear to think he | had done anything but what he had a' right to do. ! Bowman was one of the best known ' men in St. Louis, although his reputation | | was very unsavory. He practiced law for | many years here, but removed about three ! | years ago to New York. Previous to his | | going he figured in a couple of very | | shameful scandals. He sued his wife for ‘ | divorce and afterward compromised the | | suit on her cross bill, paying her a | i large sum of money. Shortly after | | it was given out that he had married a } | woman in the East. As soon as this | ! became known, a Chicazo woman, who i claimed a common law marriage with | Bowman, sued him for divorce in Chicago. | He fought the case hard, but the courts | decided the Chicago woman was his wife | | and gave her the divorce. This left Bow- i man very much mixed up matrimonially. | Bowman was at one time prominent at | the local bar, but he was disharred sev- | eral years ago for crooked practices and I | since then he has largely forfeited the | ! esteem of respectable persons. ‘ ! Chambers and Bowman have heen at| | daggers’ ends for years. Chambers was formerly president of the Butchers’ and | Drovers’ bank, of this city, but became a | bankrupt twelve years ago. He has since } enjoyed a big income {rom his wife’s es- | tate. The levy was ona judgmenttwelve | | years old. I ‘ e i ABNER TAYLOR MARRIED. I { The IXilinoi: Congressman Elopes u'ith; i Col. A. C. Babeocek’'s Daughter. l { Chicago dispatch: The friends of Con- | | gressman Taylor of tne First-district may § | be surprised somewhat at the intelligence, ? | now made public for the first time, that | the statesman has taken unto himself a | wife, and furthermore that there is an | | interesting story thereunto belenging. In ! | fact, Mr. Taylor’s wedding has all the | | elements of romance—love, unrelenting | | opposition by the stern male parent, clan- | | destine cooings, flight, secret vows plight- { ed before an unknown and cloaked priest, | . and at last reconciliation with the afore- ! | said parvent. ‘ { The lady in the case is the daughter of | | Col. A. €. Babeock, I-known as a poli- | | tician in this city and at present a promi- f | ment candidate for the United States mar- | | shalship for the district of northern Illi- ' nois. Mr. Taylor has for a long time been | assiduous in his suit for the hand of Miss | Babcock, but his attentions were unhap- | pily frowned down by the Colonel. | But Cupid’s arrows were never known | ; to shiver on paternal anger and Col. Bab- | ' cock one morning awoke to receive the | tidings that the congressman and his I daughter were wedded in a little town in | | Michigan on the 7th of September last and | that now it was all too late, Bride and . bridegroom enjoyed the honeymoon in obscure feiicity until quite recently, when | they returned to Chicago. Here they spent a few days, and then left Chicago to . reside at Washington. “ e n | Inspectors Tinocked OGut of Their Jobs, | The announcement is made at the Treasury department that in view of the fact that examination has shown that the evi- | dent controlling reason in many cases for the anxiety to secure the post of inspector of foreign vesseis is tke limited work snch inspectors have to perform, Mr. Windom has decided, for the sake of economy, and good administration, to dis= pense with the services of such inspectors ‘at Philadelphia, New Orleans and San Francisco, .and have 'their duties performed ‘by loeal inspectors, g
fi What “Limited” Mears. ! - Os late years a marked change has taken place in business enterprises by the introduction into this country of an English custom. The old principle of partnerships and corporations was that the entire property of every partner or | stockholder was liable for the debts of the firm or company. | This system made it possible for Mr. D——, who perhaps had only | one-tenth interest in a firm, to be called upon to pay all the debts, and it deterred wealthy men from becoming in- ! ~terested in the shares of a corporation | unless they could secure a controlling interest. . To remove this objection “limited” | . companies were organized. This | . means that only the separate prop- . erty of the corporation is liable for‘ ' the debts of the corporation—that is, that the liabilities are “limited” by the t assets, E | The English law requires that such | | companies display the word “limited” . in connection with theirname; but few, | if any, of the States make such a re- | quirement. : i Most American companies and a ' great many business firms do business | on a limited liability plan, which, bei ing founded on common sense, bids fair | to be universal. | The most noteworthy exception to | the general rule is the case of the | national bank, but even in this in- { stance liability is limited to an amount | | equal to the par value of the shares | { held. That is, if the national bimk! | fails, each stockholder may not only ! . lose what he has invested, but SIOO | | more tor each share of the stock he | | holds, if so much is necessary to pay | | the debts of the bank. l . S | To Those Interested. ' ‘ HastiNgs, Mich., April 22, 1889, ' | Rheumatic Syrup Co., Jackson, Mich: - | GENTs—This is to certify that I had been | | troubled with rheumatism in all its forms | | for the past twelve years, and was confined | | to my bed at various periods from three to I six months at a timo, and I could get about { only by the aid of crutenes. I employed ’ | several first-class phvsicians of this city, i none of whom eftected a cure or gave tem- | porary relief even. ] 1 About two years ago I was induced to g ! try Hibbard's Rheumatic Syru'p, and, zlf_ter { taking a few bottles I experienced relief, | and now consider mysclf cured. I unhesi- | tatingly recommend this medicine for | rheumatism. I know what it iias done for | me, what physicians could not do, i. e., | cured me of rheumatism, l Mzs. H. J. KENFIELD. Ask your druggist for it. i I certify to the above statement. ’ Frep L. HeaTH, Drugglst. | A Glenpie of His Investment, at Last. | I heard the other day a enrious illus- i i tration of the way in which people of a ! | speculative turn are led to invest | | money in enterprises of which they | i know hardly more than the name. A | | Boston man was camping out in the | : wilds of New Hampshire. at a place | ' which he and his party had reached | | by a tramp of several days through the ; i pathless forest. While enjoying his | | rest around a fire which had been made ! ' by logs from a great tree, cut down by : | one of the gudes, a party of men came | | along and stopped to have a chat with l i himself and friends. After a little talk l t about the weather and the fishing, one | | of the neweomers said, jocosely : l | “Do you know you are liable to n' | fine for trespassing on this woodland, . cutting down trees and burning np the l { logs?” | i He added that the property belonged | | to a certain land company, the shares | | of which were at the time quoted on | ; the Doston Stock Exchange, As soon , | as the other man heard the name of | { the company he said: i ! “Well, I never expected to get a ‘ | cent out of that company, and this is | | the first time that I have heard where ] | its land is.” | | The speaker by chance had camped | { out on land of a company in which he | { had invested years before, and had | f never even known its location till i't-% | was suggested to him at this meecting | { in the primitive forest.—Boston Post. ; l Hereulean Strength l ! Continually on the strain, or overtaxed at inter- ! { vals, is far less desirable than ordinary vigor | | perpetuated by rational diet aud exercise, and ’ i abstention from excess. Professional pugilists [ and.athletes rarely attain extreme old age. As ' | ordinary vigor may be retained by a wise regard | for saniiary livirg, and for the protection | ‘ against disease which timmely and judicious ! ! medication affords, so also it may be lost : through prolonged sedentary labor, uvinter- l i ru_ptrgl uu\nml‘stmin, and‘ l’oolisb eating and I ' drml}mg,the (_-mufuudn:n.st nn‘mcdm’te sequence [ { of all four being dyspepsia. ¥or this condition | thus, or in any way induced, and for its offspring, & failure of muscular and nerve power, t Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is the primest and l most genial of remedies, Not only indigestion, but loss of tlesh, appetite and sleep are remedied { byit. Incipient malaria and rbeumatism are { banisheq, and kidney, bowe! aud liver com- ‘ plaint removed by it. ] . Sl e It Was the Hat. ! | A man wearing a white plug hat was | going up Macomb street anight or two ‘ since, when a pedestrian coming down | ; was struck by the lateness of the sum- ! mer wear, and called out: t “Aren’t you rather late in the sea- | son, old man ?” i | | “Shay! shay!” called the other aJ |he came to a halt, “am I too late?” ‘ | © “Yes prefty late.” ‘ | “How late is it —after 102” | I “No, only 9:30.” | | “Zhen I'm all right—all right. Old } { woman doan’lock ‘er door till plump { 10, an’ Il be home wiz ten minutes to | spare. You almos’ scared me t’ death. | Thought I was an hour late an’ would ! have to sleep in er coal shed.”—Delroit ! Free Press. | e e ey i Your Life in Danger, $ Take time by the forelock ere that raspi ing, haecky cough of yours carries you { where so many Consumptives have prei ceded you; lose no time, but procure a bot- | tle of the rational remedy for Lung and | Bronehial diseases, Scoti’s Emulsion of Cod i Liver Oil with Hypophosphites. It will cure i you. Sold by all Druggists. l Chestnuts 1.300 Years Old. '; [From Hierocles, who flourished about the midi dle of the fifth century.] A man, hearing that a raven would “live 200 years, bought one to try it. A robust countryman, meeting a physician, ran to hide behind a wall. | Being asked the cause, he replied: “It | is so long since I have been sick that I am afraid to look a physieian in the i face.” A man wrote to a friend in Greece - asking him te purchase books. Irom negligence or avarice, he neglected to execute the commission; but, fearing that his correspondent might be offended, he exclaimed when next they met: | “My dear friend, I never got the letter l you wrote me about the books.” l A wittol, a barber, and a bald-head-i ed man traveled together. Losing their way, they were foreed to sleep in the open air, and to avert danger it was agreed to keep watch by turns. The lot fell first on the barber, who for amusement shaved the fool’s head while he slept. He then woke him, and the fool,raising his hand to scrateh his head, exclaimed: “Here’s a pretty mistake! Rascal, you have waked the bald-headed man izstead of me!”
| A High-Toned Fluid. " There must be something about an intimate acquaintance with electricity “which produces a different effect from ‘that which comes of other intimacies. It is an old saying, so old that It“ha.s llong Passed unchallengg’d, that_ ; fa_.miliarty breeds contem pt. Familiari- ’ ty with electricity, however, does flQt breed contempt. On the contrary, it engenders a peculiar, not tc say morbid, affection for the subtle fluid and a singular sensitiveness on its behalf. | This is ~hown by the attitude of the electrician. on the question of execution by electric shock. According to the New York Sun, instead of regarding with interest this new field of possible nsefulness for their pet, the electricians “ are outraged that the agency they use shouid be employed for a purpose so horrible.” The lightning may without any indignity be harnessed in the service of man and ?om.pelled to light the darkest and dingiest of his abodes and haunts. It may without dishonor illuminate the chambers where aldermen and legislators assemble; the gambling rooms and the thieves’ resorts. It may shed its rays upon the victim of the murderer so that the lat{er may see clearly where to strike. It may carry the most infamous messages between the foes of society, enabling them to rob the public and escape the punishment of their crimes. But it must on no account be dishonored by ; rendering any aid to society in exterm- ‘ | inating the criminal. 1 ! Truly the electrical fluid should be | grateful to its self-appoinied gnardians ' and sponsors for their solicitude in lits | - | behalf. It might make some small re- | turn therefor by restraining its exuber- ' ant destructiveness in respeet to line- | men and other employes of the electricians. For the killing of these, be it remembered, thongh not at all beneath | the dignity of an honorable and high- | toned electrical fluid, subjects the elec- | tricians to inconvenience and occasion- | al loss.— Detroit Free Press. eaA e | ’ They Were with the Judge. ' When Judge Haskell was new to the | bench he was accosted during a term of ‘ . - court by a venerable old farmer jury- ' man who desired to show his friendli- | ness. “Jedge,” said he, “I'm an old | man, and have had more experience 1n court matters than you have. I'm 72 vears old and have served on the jury | nine times and probably shall never i serve agin., We've kinder taken notice ' of how ycr manage things, yon bein’ | new to this business, and we like yer. . . r s \ | All the jury like yer. We've talkedi | the thing over and we've voted to stand |by yer. Now, if any of them lawyers g attempt to erowd you any, Jedge, ver | just give us the word and we'll be with | yer every time. We've taken an inter- | est in yer and yer ecan depend on us. That's all, Jedge.” This was delivered | as seriously and honestly as if a father | had been talking to his son.—Lewiston i (Me.) Journal. ; s s g Don’t Waste Your Time i And money experimenting with doubtful l remedies, when Dr, Pierce’s Golden Medi- ] cal Dicovery is so positively certain in its % ('lll‘:ltl_\'{,‘ action as to warrant ics manufacti urers in supplying it to the publie, us they are doing through druggists, under a duly | v;c‘vutmi certificate of guarantee that it will accomplish all it is recommended to do, ! or money paid lor it will be promptly re‘l turned. It eures torpid liver, or bilious- | ness, indigestion, or dyspepsia, all humors, | or Mm-_\l tains, from whatever cause aris- { ing, skin and scalp diseases, serofulous af- | sections (not excepting consumption. or | lu;x;_: syrotulu) , if taken in time and given a ! fair trial § . 'l‘}unfs_}&ns of cures follow the use of i Dr. Sage’s Catarrn Remedy. 59 cents. % Why It Didn’t Work. ; Little Walter—Mamma, I do wish | 1 could find my hat. ' Mamma—Walter, Tam ashamed to ! hear you complaining every day that i s 2 o ; | you can’t find your hat. There shonld | be a place for everything, and every- ; thing should be in its place. | “Well, mamma, that’s all right. My | hat is in its place, but T've forgotten | where the placeis.”—New York I'ruth. ] Os Course! “Nowadavs & 33 Nowadays most dinner-eaters start | from a given point—a blue point.” | And most good diners wind up with '! embonpoint.—St. Paul Pioneer Fress. l A Family Gathering. > | _Have you a.ather? Have you a mother? l Have you a son or daugnter, sister or a brother who has not yet taken Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and lLungs, the guaranteed x‘eme\i‘_\' for the curs of Coughs, Colds, Asthnm.. Croup and ali Throat and Lung troubles? llf so, why, when a sample bottle is g:l:uhy given to you free by any druggist, I and the large size costs only 50¢ and $1.00°? HARRISON, the “boy preacher,” is | worth about $60,000. What a fortune he | will have when he gets to be a man!— . Texas Siftings. Hibbard’s RQheumatiec and Liver Piils, These Pills are scientifically compounded, uniform in action. No griping pain so commonly following the use of pills. They are ! adapted to both adults and children with perfeet S.:lf(‘t}‘. We guarantee they have no e:u:ml in the cure of Sick Headacne, Constipation. Dysp=psia. Biliousness; and. as an appetizer, they excel any other preparation. & THERE is a paper called T%me and another called Z%Wde, and tkhey wait for no man. PURE soap is white. Brown soaps are | adulterated with rosin. Perfume is only putin to hide the presence of putrid rat. Dobbins’ Electriec Soap is pure, white and unscented, Has been sold since 1865. WHEN a man has a _cataract, itis cruel | to dam his eyes any further. QWE are now making small-size Bile Beans, especially adapted for ehildren and women—very small and easy to take. Price of cither size 25c per bottle. For sale byi all drugzlgts. or mailed on receipt of price. J.F.SmitH & Co., St. Louis, Mo. Ir afflicted \w_.:b;g—fi - < i Lyes, use Dr. Isaac Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it. 25c, .“My little daughter’s life was saved, as we believe, by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Before she was six mouth; old scrofula sores began to appear. and in a short time she had 7 running sores. One physician ad\'_l.sed the amputation of one of her fingers, to which we refused assent. We began giving her HoquSu_rsaparilla. A marked improvement was i notlc«rgl after she had_takeu only oue bottle, and by i a contllxlxgal use of it her recovery was complete. % And she" is D?W- being seven years old, strong and i healthy.” B.C.JoxEs, Alna, Lincoln Co., Me. @ y e | Hood’s Sarsavarilla | Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Pre oni : 28 $1; six $5. pared o | Ly C.I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. - ‘ {OO Doses One Doillar
ISt - - —~ = S S sT LR ; e T ’ AE‘:, = ATTORNEY, \VASH,IN%%‘? | HU N I E R D. Co Wi 1 GET Sra¥ | " ¥ PENSION without P7O o 8 | B ISOS REMEDY FOR OATARRIL_Best. Fasiest | { Bas TS ¢ 1 . & o X< e 8 5 3 s l oy to use. Cheapest. Relief is immediate. A cure 13° RSN = 8 a #4# certain. For Cold in the Head it has no equal. .. : RN I , ' o e B eg, R T 2 1 ‘%‘u““:‘:‘l‘, ;}‘R\‘)“‘* .‘*fi: m E {”{y‘ ASL!. u‘. ; :"\ 4 N % { olt i u;.\&, Roa e R S £ A o { SRR SEDT N A BN e " TSN m Ay B 8 I fi‘f‘v*"{*,‘;.f‘f;',;‘ .A W ’f g N N 2 ‘“fif Mo BBt ! o It is an Ointment, of which a small particle is applied K = ! v to the nostrils. Price, 50c. Sold by druggists or sent ,;i L | S by mail. Address, E. T. HAZELTINE, Warren, Pa. = e Vo n i
v e vrsgon, the Paradise of Farme, d ] Mild, equable climate, certain and lbn:; crops. Fest fruit, grain, grass, and stoek &l)m try in the V.\‘lz)yld_i Full inf(B)r!l, ation free, Add}g: = regon Ilmmigration Board, - the Oregon Immig "Ud li?‘f‘i"_nd-()reton, BEsT, easiest to use and cheapest. Pliok o | Remedy for Catarrh. By druggistg, 50‘:‘0! i “Moancill® o HAVE you tried “Tansill's Punep® Cigary T R IJACOBS Oy ) }N b TRADE £ W NP mancy] THE GREAT _ < MEDY~- PAIN CURES PERNANENTLY gulid ls J, SOLD BY Druggists and Dealers, E | THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., Baltmors, Mg, E : A DAY. Agents wanted, Me\\u’z ’ tricitv cures catarrh, colds,&e, S?l{mcn”'gvm”i 3 | 25¢. Cat. Free. K.E.Brewster, Holfi. Mmie?,, |ee e % Kabit. The on] o PIU M and easy care, yfi’:‘}‘h il # Stephens, r,(;h”mn'oi“xh MENTION THIS PAFER Wilkv wiiTine o upvesnamsih - YW;]I cure Blood pm;h‘—, . MAGIB REM mwercury fails, aned‘mdm sale only by Cook Remedy Co., Omaha, Neb, wfll'%‘" MENTION THIS PAPER wHEN WRITING 1o ADVERIgrpy, Y made by ¢ s 25 AN HOUR at: DR. ufigfi%‘; MEDICAL CO. Richmong, ya ¥ Wanted to Learn Telepms | You N G ME N Situations furnished, %ifirli:nl;h"r;{ 1 free. Address VALENTINE BRos, Janesvie. Wfi MENTION THIS PAPLK WHEN WIiTING T 0 Aovamfiayg T mRAME CTI Bookkeening Basin oot i OME STUDY. s icenine v s 8 *Penmanship, Arithmetis hand, ete., thoroughly taught by mai, C;]%mn‘f‘? free. BRYANT'S BUSINESS COLLEGE, Buffalg NY. MENTION THIS PAPER wiis™ wrining 1o Advenmed '};f e T ST SRR R TR Sure relief L ' " i Priceflhct;_flsm!]l, il KIUDER s PAST!LLES-by mail. Stowell &g, o SER AR NRO SORNIN D Tlestown, Mags, MENTION THIS CAPEIL wuxNy wWRITING TO ADVRUTINRR, ;( ; A MONTH AND BOARD P 65 or highest commission and 3¢ I)A;%f1 { CREDIT to AGEHTS on our NiWape | i J. S. ZEIGLER & CO., Quincy Bidg., Chlcwmfg_: i e e s . “f;j’yi'_v ST H iV ASAT BECURm, | A 8 A trial bottie sent Freg ey anyone afflicted. Dz. TAFT BRO., Rochester, XY ‘.,3; Mm%t J;\) e " e CATON'S FRENGH VITALIZERS, Aesme™ Maniy Tie and 0 e aginse e i ¢ ty known. A} Taiar, i \B':“.:LR.::“;!”‘::HX:M; I\_ )::’:e‘r'ga. Circulars free. DR, CA‘:U:‘G.'I.: g "'MENTION THIS PAPER wues wmimive 1o ADYERTISERS, e “ ~ o To handle Article eve: i AGENTS WANIED requires, Retails 34.(}33:0‘: " §1.50 per monih. dust “'\“l]’x;c“fvhxi&iim};;:tyn"minctie:l t 8 sent, expressage prepaid, 3ee i TP MOREY MEFG. CO., Waukesha, Wish & .MENTK)N THIS PAPER wWuEN WRITING TO ADVERTISHZS, ? NST R S se ap BASE BALL Tinxshioma R 7in.x sin. i ) Tluwminated Cover® EE ™ application enclosingopy SEN TFR (2¢ ) stamp, by addressing - THEODORE HOLLAND, P. 0. Box 120, P'n_iiada.,h,‘ Gold Hunters’ Adventures N AUSTRALIA, by Wi, H. THOMES; 12mo, 564 | l[\.h(tl ;0 L‘uli—;m,{v Illust § tions. A stirving story & of Aaventure among l).‘llr:macrs and Outlaws, Largest and best Books ever sold for price, oniy & 25 cents, postpaid. Address ALEX. T. Loyp &Co, Lakeside bldg., Chicago, 1. E P, ASTHMA, P, ~\@ b Popham’s Asthma Specifie, = | IRS e AiliNA Relief in TEN asvrss, - e 6N ‘;'.!,‘,i“}&!“ R WM, GLEGHORN, Gardn E i %;;{ SRI 111 R Tll., writes: 'lhavenothfi 3 | B s J/ @lO situp an hour for three i S e 8 vears. 1 hope the man that | = 3'_:1:,:3. RIS Ull vented the SPECIFIOMAY I N v,.};if'“fiafi’% V=3 have everlasting lite and ¥ ";'?i'—“_\,?o @ God’s blessing while hs y o —aan lives.” Sold by all drugeists, | N $1 per boxby mail,postpaid, ¥ o Trial package jree, Addresg 1. POPHAM, PHILADELPHIA, P, - - 9 This Trade] OW ER[s7] QY 2 OS| e ] TR T et 7%W '[ e S e e Wt '—F \$ Y “ Cflat i | IS HBR A“ In the world. i Send for illnstrated Catalogue, Free. A.J. Tower, Bosto! ; b o egreTes Wlien you dare toTU—th; i ! -.u',#',.".:;;,;} [RoSNeas Jones of DBinghamton, Bingfevap iiy W puedl hamton, N. Y., doesn't selithe 3 'U A p 8l very best SATRCER L FIVE-TON R i - Yt : 1 T AR S 3 I B R B 2 W =€ Beam Box, Tareßeam,Aforsfio : g u,‘-_‘..).."h.). LR W T'rce pricelist, every size, 1 g f—mmart LUMRERE: Jones he pays the freight” !’ 3 4 one 5 CATARRH | ; R 4 { = how 4% 43 | bk i 3 Uitk AR BA\M 3 suffered from co-geg i A \ ] { Isuffered | g - CAT CUR QO\L 3 i tarrh 12 yeers. xhe 49@ ES : o 3 | droppings into thebss &C’WJ)H% 'J, E | : e 2 wl | 1 throat were nauseal-§ "mr EVE : g 3 | ing. MMy nosebled al-fgq F R :;g 9 ‘ | most daily. Sincethe ;, é’% 3 i Sirst daw’s use of Ely's ;“ '3‘\9‘\".,- 3 A& A ¥ 4 | Cream Balm havehad g NESmms P o N ] | C 1. nh “\‘;A S‘,)‘r ':- g‘o A 3 !70 bleeding, thesore- e \:{ o 3 | mess is entirely gone. ,3_,‘9,;7“ o> usAl | | I A 2 -, 7, RO g |D. G. Davidson,with 5 ; m 3 ) ; the Boston Dudget. HA F v . 8 | -_Aparticleisapplied into each nostril anaisagreesti, . { Price 50 cts. at druggists; by mail, re%gstQFed.fl* +& 5 | ELY BROTHERS, 56 "\.'f':""“ff \l‘L»El:t\__-‘___‘ { l's J_l : |& R , |B B ; | 3 | THE GREAT CONQUEROR OF Pllh- | For Sprains, Bruises, Backache, Pain m:m; | Chest or Sides, Headache, Toothache, 0‘;’1”‘ 3 - | other external pain, afew applicationsri el ion by hand act like magie, causing the P ] | to instantly stop. : oo l For Congestions, Colds, Bronc'_hlfisv P:::l- --| monia, Inflainmations, Rheumatism. N‘;)nd gia, Lwinbago, Sciatica, more thogllg repeated applications are necessary. - | ’ All Internal Pains, Diarrhea, Colic, Slfi:‘fl: { Nausea, Fainting Spells, Nervousness, * iokly et G :hetantly, and qui ! lessiiess are relieved instantly, drops it ' | cured by taking inwardly 20 to 60 ttle. Al | half a tumbler of water. 50c. a bottie: . ' ! Druggists, ‘ ———— fre : s 8 1 ’x,“"‘ :‘»"l‘ ’ s o “_'.::.'."" {i‘, ' i KR | ! i e v A o . , ‘4 | : tic. Puzelf An excellent and mild Cathar i\{edicin'(‘ l Vegetable. The Safest and post L oorders | 4 | .n the world for the Cure of all Dis E | of the v | ) LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS. J will Taken according to directions they ] restore health and renew vitality. % | Price 25 cis. a Box. sold by all Droge®™=. | ? : CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH s ;‘: PENNVROYAL PILLS, RAND. 1 e RED CROSS DIAMOND B 4 : | .-'-:l\g,'_a b Safe and Mway\-"lmh‘ek}f,.%l,ei.l’ i |0 ask Druggist for D'mmmdi with blue o | S W\ red, metallic boxes, s«-ule: i1 pilis | " ¥ ribbon. h'r..ll;s‘;;? gitrll:(?:;‘ppe“_;: : - >3 in pasteboard boxes, 4, i 7] Y dangerous counterfelts bge;‘ill‘:mnlv.ll and (stamps) for _particulars, l‘e‘m py retur® - ! e "lfie}lef for Ladios,” it gosy - ! atl. Name Paper. Philaes . i :"l'lithalerlz':em'lttflu Nadison s‘”ffl-“y ens : a ] oPR T prescribe 80¢ 50 only i, A (’.nrg(’ Big G sse:&ncw.fi - AR Couresin ".'2'?3 specific forthec 4 ‘ EUF ITO 5 DAYS. Wof this ‘i.”i""”ffi;AM‘u:%" 4 o Gasrantead not oW G, H. INGR/ qam, N Xt f é: cauze Jtricture. 9 Amsted i Glor | [ :L"Lr‘ M'd ouly by the “’th:;",‘;grss?l and ‘““l::« [ Rozy irans Chemical Co, m;;;i;en‘ the best © &“‘it\ Cincinneti)| m:a(‘ti?y-DYcHE&COflL i x’%; Ohioc. D. & Ch]‘)?h‘o‘ &) 4 .\i 5 “fi“ . Trade SURRIBEES Nark s(o°‘S9ldb}’4sj - C.N.T. —_‘.’E_?'/" T T T | WHEN WRITING TO @2&s:‘l‘“" - rlease suy you saw the. o toin thils paper, i et
