Semi-weekly Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 July 1896 — Page 8
8
W9l
k*.
I
•ft
SSI
E=
e=
Buy a Suit
INow!
$7.48
$5.00
$3.98
89c
AmHND
VIGO
COUNTY FAIR
$10,000
W. T. BEAUCHAMP, Pres. i-3*^ ifvs
%fi
And take advantage of our Semi-aiistual Clearance Sale prices.
TrX
w!S buy your choice of 115
men's suits that sold for $9
$10, $12 and$l5.
PIXLEY & CO. I
RELUBLE ADVERTISERS OFF^ O.tS
^UUUiUUiUUUiUaiUUUiUiUUUiUiUiUiUiUiUlUiUiUiUlU^
For 35 Years
R. Cummins & Co., distillers, Loretto, Ky.', have' borne the reputation of snaking honest whiskey—hand-made, sour-mash whiskey by the old-fashioned method.
"Old Process
Is the best medicinal whiskey—no artificial flavor, well ripened by age, good body, fine bouquet. Sold only by druggists. Each bottle bears the certificate of Prof. J. N. Hurty, chemist, Indianapolis, as to medicinal value and purity.
•v,^A. Kiefer
The Removal Sale at Levin Bros.' Dry Goods Store, 1119 East Main.
S. L. FENNER,
SPECIALTY.
THE ACME OF PERFECTION ACRES
3 3 3 3
3
3
3
tS!Jfj(3
will buy men's suits reduc- 3 ed from $6, $7 and $8.1 y*3
will buy men's suits reduc- 3 ed irora $5, $6 and $7. V*I3 h\ £3
will buy boy's knee pant suits re- "3 duced from $1.25."* 3
Company
Drug
Sole Controllers and Distributers. INDIANAPOLIS.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.-*- Latest U. S. Gov't Report.
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
BARGAINS IN EVERY LINE
1200
Main Street ,i«
HARDWARE
All New Woolens for Spring Wear.! Finest Work.
Aug. 10, II, 12,13,14, '96.
Wilt. BE THE
GREATEST OF THE YEAR.
Purses and Premiums
$10,000
OF BREEZESWEPT
SHADY GROVE
MAGNIFICENT DISPLAY IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
LIVE STOCK DEPARTMENT! THE POULTRY SHOW
WILL BE UNEXCELLED Will be a Complete Show in itself
WOMAN'S DEPARTMENT Art, Needle Work, Culinary and Competitive Exhibitions, Etc., Etc.
AMUSEMENTS AND INSTRUCTION FOR ALL
EVERY DAY
100—Entries in the Various Classes—100
Finest grounds in the state, an abundance of good water, pure and clear, and plenty of shade. Half Care rates on all railroads, and an electric line which lands passengers at the gates. A Studebaker Wagon, value
$65,
day, and during the week a handsome bedroom set, value at $So, will be voted to the most popular yonng lady in the county. &
Admission 25c
Cliilcirezi and Veliioles Free
For further information call on or address
will be given away on Tours-
1.6ft
TERKE HAUTE EXPRESS, TUESDAY MORNING, JULT 28.1896.
AT HIS STRING'S END.
"BED" O'BBBIIT, IBB SAI* BLOWCK -AT LA8T BUN TO KAHTB.
The Wily Thief the Terre HmU Police 'J Tried to Convict laIn Jail at ]•. SiTanoah, Mo....
"Red'* O'Brien, the notorious thief and 'saife btowleT, With .wtoom the Terre Haiufte. aetaat-feves had so much troufble three yeans a®o, 'has a/t-
last turned a
trkflc thatr xesiflltied in tois captaine. O'Brien is noiw in jail at Savannah, Mo. a ltd tlhe indications are thalt it wi(ll be many a long day before tlhe big cncx^k wiill a^gadn breaJthe the free oaone. Mkyst Terre Hlauiteans are feumJliaT with the hfettory of the netted cnook.
He 'oame to this city witlh Prank Bruae, "who now in presto® soufilh, aJbouiL Jiusni6 1'5, 1893, and on June 23rd was "arrestee! for the robbery of the Buckeye Ctasih dtore. With Bruce and O'tBrfen was John Hienryfce^another noted .thief, whlo is also i«n prli&m. On the morning of June _22, 1893, tihe Bu^ eye saife was onawked and!.«/bip,tf $600 taken. It was on Sunday morning ami a heavy raJrn was falling^ The robbery was not dLacoY^r^d: ^saitty noon, but at once the lpij^'^efesdcives wenit to work on tlhe case.. .Brnase and 0'Brien, together witih itlheir wwete, were-boarding at Mrs. Pot his' on Somtfhi Fiith »trpat am'd in was, there Uhait the police arretted t'heim. John Henry wlas stOipfpintg ait a North Nintih street hotel and rt was bout a, few hours ailter O'Prten and Bruce were taken into custody thiat he wias behind ,tihe bans. !Ovl*rieu
Wltu i'lorouce W'uJKeus.
Tlhe!Terre Haute detejofcaveis worked on t'iie case as they had never wlorkeid before aaid while they succeeded oonviiatAag
Bru'oe and Henry tlh-cy were
uKtalbte to secure eVLden.ce sufl&ciewt tk» aenfi O'-Brien to t'he penitentiary. In Sepiiteimlber O'Brien was released and leifJt- here wiltih Fliorenice Wilkens, his alleb^d wiife. While an Terre Haute ol&pieui went under the nam!' of Joihn Ckin." The charge on which i'Brien
now iit j/a'iil is bank oiblbery. The. bjg fchieif remiaimed pretty quiet, after leaivinig .this cjty aind probaiblly lus flrsit woi^k wia© t'he rtoibtoery of tlhe Sitaite Ba'nic ait Seuvannah, Mo. on tjie ni®h.t otf Felbruiary 7'th iiagiL Bes:desr O'Brien were i.*'.jjpunaat-ed in- the raWbjairy
Mag-ner, Wiwiajn L»^u©hrydge
a'nid Jake Welber. llhe haml "netted Stii«m'. $14,000 an government 'bondls, al^'ut $1,000 in money and some stiatnjps. Mlagner wiais arresited shortly atlter the roibtbery an K'amsas Oity and 1/omgihmdjge was caipibureid by the San Fran-, ti/jjaeo deiitiatwtfcj last Miarch. For a long time ••O'Brien amd Weiber eluded tlhe detecituvee, bu/t tihe locial authorities have juiS't learned thlat O'Bnen wiais I'omlted a«'d arrtiined by Pinker ton men alt Vancou'Vier, B. C., a few days ago* 't lio aavaiiuiilt «.»olmry.
A djcipatiah from Savannah sent oult on. the night oif M'arc.h 24th in wlhiJ^h t'he oaipnure of L»oushridge ,'its .,anrjo'uncdd, tiays in piaiit:
W-hon the four burgilars le'lit here t'he nig'hit af tlhe rebfbery they drove to St. JiOJi-eiph in a &ui-rey tiha.t had been hired in' that cJty. llhey tiien wenit to- KanEias Cuiy, where ihey had been making tne .r headquarters, and Welaer w^s serjt tfo Sit. LouijS to disipioise of t'he bonds. H'is prooeedingls there .have been'toM in tihe RetpuMx. .Weiber reiturned- to Kansias Gity, art-d he and men au'piposed to M'agner, Lougihrl'dige ancl O'Bnen met in a room to a house in that city. .Weber reported 't'hait he haid loiilt aill o'f the fciondB, but ihiis pall's didn't believe him, and they aLl got i'rtio a wrangle, When one of tlhe pairty puilled .his gun on Wielber amd .• deima.nld\ed that he produce tihe bto Mis. This broughit Weber to t-'me, and he turned over eight of the bondls saying, tthat these were all he had. Tihe- eiiglhit boin'dls were thien diviided.. anrionig- t'he thieves ,eaoh receiving bwo.
Ill an adjoining room were a numiber of women whio overheard the seoratis, oif: the tbuT/g'lars. This jniforma. iilJii reaidhe'd tlhe ears of a,n
interested par
ty amd when C. F. Booher, wlho is one Off- the attorneys Dor the proeecuitioih, and Sheriff B. F. Kalley, bo'th of tM's aty, got wind oif it, they deterLTJilnelQ, '!iif ipbasMe, to caipiture' the entire g'anss'. Booher and. Ke)Uey Went to Kansas City and suiciceeded in ca'ptiuriinig MJajg.ner,' and put delteatwes oil tIM traok &£ .the: ptlher t'hiiev^. Uou^hricl'gt was falloiwed to S'an Frair.ictisco and Was. stfaldowed there umt'i'l he attepiipited ?o dieposei of-.'the bfon/ds, when he wais arrested. O'Brien ar-d Weber are s-'Pli at liiJ'ge, but will liiikely be caiptiurjBd in shoitt time. Five of the bonds h^ve so Par been re'eovered. Niine are .syjiltt miBs-i'iig. When the thieves arrived in Kansas City there were only thirteen bomU's in the stolen paciklage. It ie noit known what became c*f the missing ,bon'd, but it is thought- tha-t one of the t!hieves sitole it from tlhe package.
Maigner, the prisoner now In jail h-^re, Iw been identified' a3 Paddy MoGraw, anf esca-ped convSct from tae PemnivfU van 'a pen'iten'tjiary, who wu^^scrvt^j a tettoa there for iruturder.
,v'.. Spain'H New Wur Ships. iiifLo'ndoin, July 27.—The following Bufluiwutyo. diepait'eh received by the Chronicler "Nicholson' paitTol, 300 etrong, was oheaked yesterday in a narrow gorge ajt tlhe nemth end of, M'atoppo HiKls. Tlhe enemy in great strength ocauipied an impregnateie position and they were fully equipped |,»-5'th rifles and aimimiuiniition,.., T'he. strafgtetnees of the.r shoofinig x^m-^rka'ble. The Ctaipe's "boys (w^th Ntohcteon's patrol) cleared the neigfritorj:n^f |h'eiigihk's of the enemy, kitting twenty, .oif,', the rebels,fcut a giallanit ait'temjp,t. to"'foir?e a paissage 'VMas oh^fckad by a,y heavy fire fro'm ,'the caves studiijn-g the mountain, delivered at close ramg'e. Nicholson loat five trooipers anld two ca.pe boys in a •few. miiniuites. He therefore wlthfremr w&th hie torces ami returned to the catnip."
TVyENTY FIVE PERISHED, g'.
CApiain^s Family aed Crpw Went Doiro 'W51th the "City of I'hJIadelphla." Fh5ftj*Mlphla, July .26.—I ntfortmatio-n lusfc. r^eived from fSanley, F. I., uftdert date of June 9th, proves conclu»i-Veiy-tihait'the s-hSp wfhich foundered off that» Kvcalltn Mky 14*/h last was the PhiladeH phia cglpjper, City of Philaydeiphia, and? ilbat Oaptaiin Johnsom, his wife an-di ilaimiily, one passenger and a orew num-* be ring jfn all owentyjfive men' periohx-d. The articles picked up "have beeni»de^ minutely and lta.ve been tfecogthe shippers as the identical fe'oo^'ghiipped to 9atri Franotsco by the C2ty otf Bhifadelphlia, Which made saii from Sandy Hook early pn. the mioirning"
-jiized-vby
W. H. DUNCAN, Sec'y
of
FefltmUary ^nd.
vt
Big l'urse Has Been Klined. That William NbrrPs and others who suffered from Friday mornins's cyclone a iA avi
tturb tjudte «. aeait sum tas
been
Niagara L. L.. .& Phoenix of LO»dbn-ii.i...
is
raised
to be donated Jb them. The subscrj^ dftoa paiper was started !be day after the storm and up lo 9a-t*irday ni@M $130 trasd (been raised. Sir. NorrlS was aw employe of
the
Tool
Works
trad
the
employes at the pliant sribseiUbed $5$ to the fumcL Willia.a# MSles has a ipurse of $35, Mr. Fronrm-e'e pamper has •broug'h't In $22, Mr. Ooordes' $23 and -Hlft Steokler's $23. Moet or this money 'wiH go to Mr. Norrls, who was tihe sgrfaitest swfferer, everytliing tie' toad being ruined.
OPERA HOUSE FIRE.
:RerUed List pt Insurance Reported by the Agents. Fodlowimg fs a correct list of the losses mnd insurance carried by the firms damaged by the recent opera house Are:
OPERA HOUSE BUILDING, SCENERY A1NTD FIXTURES. Htotne $ 5,000 Hartfbrd 2,500 British America 2,500 Phenix of Brooklyn* Royal Manohester
North America Pennsylvanfe, Fire ^Fifcemenis' Fund
Norwioh UnloQ
2,500 7,500 1,500 5,000 2,500 1,500 1,000 1,000 2,500 2,300
v,
Total $40,000 Total loss, •estfrttared $50,000
N1ATIXXR ~EATkTE, RENTS. Phendx of $1,500 Phoernx of' Xtondon 3,500 Philaideiipihiia Underwrites 3,000
Total loss, estimated -$6,000 ESPENHiAIN & ALiBRiDCHT. STOCK. Traders Insurance Company 5,000 Aetna 1,000 Michigan 2,000 Delaware 1000 ... 1,000 1,000 ,..1,500 .V: "1,500* i..-- 1,500 ... 2,o30 750 ... 2,250 ... 2,000 ,u- 5,000 ... 2.500 ... 2.SOO ... 2,300: 5 OilO
Rochester Germ^an Queen ScoiftlSh Union Natfonal Associated Underwriters ... German Freeport ... Farmers of York Sum Glens Falls Milwaukee Mechanics Indiana Undenwrdters Hanover New York Underwriters ... I^ancaBbire London & LamoasMire Ooimtmereflal UniOin Sprtngifleld MsrchantB of New Jersey .... ^Total -$19,000.
FURNITURE AND FIXTURES.. German of Freeport :.....$ 800 Total loss, estimated 60,000 KLBEMAiN iRY GOODS COMPANY. -Phoenix of Hartford $ 1,000
Girard Citizens of St. Louis Western Assurance Neiw York Underwriters Palatine Home L.
TJ. & G.
GOODMAN & BRO.
Royal- $ 2.500 Home
vpsm
£S-
"•Sll
J..
,&m
1.000 1,000 1,000 ll,00S!1,500 1,600. 2,000. 2'000 £500 2-600 2,500
Gairman-Amenidan Najttonal of Hartford I^orrhenn Assurance Company Month Ameritoa .. Quern 2500 Phenix of Broo«ilyn ^500
Toteul $24,500 Loss nomlinal. GOODMAN & HIRSCHUEZR. German-Amerioan $ 1,000 Detroit 1'29? Northwestern National l.nOO IT n'i ted Fi.remens Niagara .... 1.5W Home 2,000 Pheintlx of Brooklyn 2,a00 North Am« ri'ca 2,aQ0National of Hartford Royiki 2,o00
fotiai .-V. Total loss. esitPmated lO.lXK) BUILDINIG BELONGING TO LET3
2 000
Total."?. $ ^.500 Total loss, estimated $ AWO BUILDING OCCUPIED BY KLEEMAN
D.RY GOODS COMPANY. (Belonging to C. C. Smith.)
TTlartford $ .P.-®®® Total loss, eBtiimated OUNCIiNNATI HOUSE. German of New York ...$ 2,500 Rockforti 2,trtK)
Total Total loss, estimated 7,o00 i, ANTON MAYER'S BUILDING. a (Occupded by E. W. Leeds.) __ ifrankli of Phi ladel.ph ia $ 4,000 Total loss, estimated o.OOO
BHIL. 'MAY'S SALOON.
oentix of London .....$ 750 ockford o'999 Total Hoss. estimated 3,o00
E. W. iLEEDS. «f"
^ff'iilwiaukee Mechanics 1,800, Phenix of BhookljTi j.-.1^200f Total loss, estimated 3,000
SOCIAL LODGE NO. S6.
PMladelip'hia Underwriters l.tKK) Total loss, estimated ERVIN, DENTIST. ,' •Liondon Assura.nce ••'••••$ "C(j jTotal loss, estimated ..-.k'-L l.OOO ?DICKSOiN'S OPERA HOUSE SCENERY] '•German-American .' $'1,011(3 Total loss. estimated 2,000
GODECKE, STOCK OF GOODS. ETC. No insurance. Total toss, estimated ^.,..5 2.000 C. N. MURPHY (OPERA EXCHANGE.) Genman of Rochester $, 1,000 Pacific .l.'COO Rock-ford Loss oh .stock and fixtures ........ •:lOp Loss on btriidiin-g 2Q0
BLiWiRD CARNEY. BARKER I suranoe .$ 300 Total loss, estimated .... 600 SJ^J'1'.f ARY OF INSURAJIOE AND
LOSSES.
josses. S 50,000.... ..... 6,0
CO,000 500 10.000 2.JCJ 250 .... 7 500 .. 5 003....:.,. ... 3,500... 3.000. .... .... 1.5C0 1,000 2,000 300.... •'200^..,,.
So® Antonio, Tei., July 27.—Mrs. Jane Sk^rSan Antonio Normal OoMeig'e, dropped dead of heart-dis-ease this mofnfng while delivering a ledtiure on psychology before the class. She was df hWh standing in educational work in tihjs state.
•Mr. H. A. Conditt Omaha yesterday.
Jelement
Insurance, ..$ 40,000 ... 6,000 ... 49.000 j"i .. 18 500 .. 4,500 .. C,000 .. 5.000 ..' 4.000 .. ,2.750 t. 3.«iO .. 1,000 ..- 700 .. 1.000
..$181,250
-T
tiled tiatlw C)aM Room.
from
returned
J'
Red
Blood
Is absolutely essential to health. To. have pure blood and good health, take llood's Sarsaparllla,—the best medicine for the blood ever produced. Its unequalled succesi
In caring scrofula, salt rheum, blood poison, rheumatism, catarrh, dyspepsia, nervous prostration and that tired feeling have made
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
The One True Blood Purifier. Small itee, 2*. 94. large, 4s. 6d. Sold tor all chemists, or By port of & I. Hood A Co., 34, Snow Hill, London, E. C.
uiu m«a v.-... n4 (m:i harmoniously irith jwtlJHAad'a DiUfi w.r-"-°—'• atsomt. sad vlr-.i
CASTOR IA
for Infants and Children.
IUIOTHERS, Do You
in re'h.gion i® a revelation from
Giod, not the perv%ted notions tihat are seen ataong the heathen, but the sajenfiicas wihiich are sinow-n ,to. .be acceptalble to,Pq,d. ^bn&i'der tJie. cpnditlo.s of aclceipitable sacrifice. CiaJi'n and. A!b*l •broug'ht their aa'jirifllcieB, one wks aioceipted wihliile t'he other'.was rejected. Saul in hiaste presumed to offer tihe etacriifiice and wtais rejedted-o-f th'? Lord. We look to the Jaiw to leatii the conditions, of aodapltalUle offertagtsfc
The formal part was to .be sltribtly adhered to'. Tihe example of N'ada'b and A^hiul wiho pireBt|me^no offer strange fire uipon the and were imime-diiJi-aly sllain ls-suliicien't-ly throng in Its teaidhinig on tfhite p-^i'n't. In our own time we hiarve those -who s- ek to change thekifiormal pdai 6f
MAPLE AVENUE CHURCH.
Kev. J. S. Hoaelitnd Preached to a JLar?e Anrllenoe. Rev. J. 8. Hoaigland, pas'tor of M^ple Avenoie M. E. Church, delivered ai) interesting sermon yesterday morning. He chose as his text St. Jo5n xv. 5: "He th'at abideth me 'and I in W.m the -same bringeth orth n^uch fruit.'
The pastor held that the bearing fruit is the ulttoiate and crowning purpose otf the brarxjh. The vine of itself oanniot produce a single cluster exjeopt nhrough its branches, ^fhe relat.on of christians to Christ is illustrated by 'that of the branches to the vine. -The •fruit thait is to flourish and mature and 'bless, we as brar.ohes aibldingln Chr st in-ust bear. Ohrisl6can'n«t produce love, }oy,
peace, long suffering, gentleness. goodnesB, faith, meekness, temperance in this world except through us. Haw this trut'h magnifies the individual. God is rich therefore only as his people
..... .. ...
.. ...
fc
KNOW
fiateman's Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, many so-caltcd Soothln Syrups, aa4 most remedies for children are composed
X0 To« Know tbat ooium and morphine are sJupefyinsvSMCotic poisomf (1 ... pp yog Know that in most countries druggistsare not \crmittcd to»eU narcotic* ^Without labeling them poisom.
Bo Yon Know that von shonld not permit ":ny r'jjdicine to yourcMld unless you or your physician
k.n s.r
of what it Is co loosed
Dp Vow Snow that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a
Its ingredients is published with every bottle po Tqj*r«iow that Castoria Is the prescription if the famous Dr. Samuel IHtther. "Ihat it has been in ujs lor nearl- t.-trty ycar», and that more Castoria is now sold tha».||p^^ of all other remedies for children comic ned?
Uo Yon Know that the Pa-ent Office Department of the United btates, and of kps
other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher °nd his assigns ts us- the word Castoria and ite formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense 7
Do You Know that one of the reasons for granting this g-ivernmeat protection *M3 because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless? •1
Po Yon Ritow that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 33 I eentSi or one cent adore
IBo Ton Know that when possessed this perfixt preparation, your children may be kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest
I Well, these tilings are worth knowing. They are fac&. 1 wmr&vM'K. .1
The fac-gl«Mlle gfgnatnre of
uj(.y
(Serf's' ordinance's,
and it Us preaivn yftJii.*^ of the most darih'g kind. \yiliikJ' I have", th'u© spoken oif the format'/-art I may say 'hat Dhis wub nerer given as tihe most important ,part of the service. T.ie spiritual part otf fhe servitoe vais a'lfways giver, the importiin't: ipfflace. COnsciousnese of £lln and due reipentance of it was necessary to malce the offerer ajccepttatble to God. ""he —7e-?ing of a "broken and loontrite heart he has never despised. Tfhen, s. now, iif ih. re:WTas flrst a wi'llinig spirit, .it was accepted acooi'ding to thait .. man mid. 3. Conisidler the inadequacy of thetee sacriifilcee to remove sin. The Jervlah salcrifilce for sin wias never aidf^.tiate for its removaS. They were .^.xJequa'te from the fact that an un•rea.son'i•nls• animal could never be a prosper substitute 'for reasbning man. TJor does the Word teaoh that tlhe blood of bulls and goats had .any efflciancy In removing sin. They were oniy syimlboiiteai oif the fqll and' perfect sacrifice oif the Son of God. We nrust rem timber flhait our Savior, Jesus Christ, is thie laimlb aialn fnam the foundation of the wwrld. .vw®-
Cut Parej^jric,
rr
opium or morphine?
Mst
of
1
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoriai
IP
KB
1*4
WITH THE CHUECHES
KEV. E. B. OLEVKNOEB AT THE XABr"" SBNAULB BAPTIST. V'-5"
The Bev. J. S. Hpttglaod of Maple Avenne Church Talks of "Fruit Bearing Vt and-lts Aim9.'''^M^
Yes'tendiay mtorriHig' the Rev. E. iR. Cl'fivengier oif the •••Tabernacle Baptist (blruiricih preached an acfmiraible address, taking as 'h.is text the foil/owing from Liev. iv., 7. "Draw near unto tihe aDltlar, and offer thy sin offering, and thy buifcnlt offering-, and make atonement f&f t'heyseW and for 'tihy peo-ple." "While man wals proving to hlmeelff, by hard experience, thiait he could not find his own way back to God, he was at the paime time engaged in the perCor.mtanice oif the Jetwiish ceremonies thajt set forith symlbolifcailly the plan of salvlajtibni'Whiclh .was ito be originiaited and penEected in Jesuis djfo.st. From t.his iCatat we firpd' greait intert&t In tihe study af tihe Olid Testament eacrificei. 1. Consider the origin of saor.ffces in religion. In every religious sylstem the ifeeailng- oif necessity for .sacrifice is manifest, t'houigfh oru.de enomgfh. in heat'hen tlhiouig'hlt. Same have held that saxrriiflciee had their origin in a sipiiht of thantoCu'lin-eiss m-^n. Byt pa'inifuil conisotousness of sfin and condemnation are not natural ariCKM&panimenits of a feast oif thank'Sfgiving, especially while they remain "unreconciled with itheir God. •iaie^SellQf t'hat sacrj^e v/as a^ feast wtftih Gfod is open t-o-mmuch th«'«fime o'bjedtion. Indeed all theories axe excluded by tihe PaJot that sacrifrce ais an
la on every wrapper.
auu at 1
... .. _. ..
IK"
smi
torious only as his soldiers are iranr* and valient. He is kind and consider, ss ate to the untfortunate and- lowly oi«%?:¥ as his children are tender, and synrpatihetiic. He has mewsengers here oiiilj •when our feet are wilHnjg to run. Jias servan'te only as our hand? at* v. ready to work. He lias musicrwhen out hearts are tunned to sing. Wlrile Ohrisl t'he bearing of blessed fruit they al30 is thus dependenit upon his people foi nvust aibide in Christ to accomplish- th same great object. That what nrakei generous people strong an-d trimmphanl
5
soldiers, kind" and considerate children, willling messengers, ready wortanen. This is what will ultimately bring a/boui in glory and grandeur the m.llennluait
ami Y. M. C. A. ... I The Rev. W. W. Wiit mer, who w*as re centlly called to t'he Christian Cftuirch 'jAv*.k garve a very im»terestt.ing address aut th« Y. M. C. A. rooims yesterday after. noon at t'he young men's meetinig. ,Thi« is the firdt address he has given in the ciAv
ine
and i(t w"as "ftfoivoH w'iitih
c-_cu.
marked interest. The singing wi^s ta'^ll led by Proifeesor Shook.
An Inter rating Keport. .J"^
Mies Kalte Hhinley who was senlt XC S the naltionaa Y. P. s. C. E. conventibr by the you rug people of the Congress tional Ohiurioh, read a very iresftru'cJt'iv« acicounlt of the national convention af a the Christian Endeavor meeftim^ Dasf might. She wias hig'My complimented^ by ali those presemt for tihe effiteientl p-. manner- to which, she perfiormed bet duitnes.
Deafness Cannot Be Cared
By local applications, as they camtof reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deaifneas^ and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition otf the mucous lining otf the eustachian tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumfoling sound oe imperfect hearing, and when it is en* tirely closed deafness is -the res-uK, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its nor. mal condition, -hearing will be destroyed forever nine cases out of ten are dausfid by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition ..of the mucous surfaces.
We will give one hundred dollar for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. Cheney & Co.,. Toledo. O. Sold by druggists, 75c.
1C to 1— A SUverlto Song.
The .problem 'is nearing solution ft last That trouh.-il our people lor many years past— We'll 'have fifty cent do-Mars ere long by, .tihe torn With unlimited coinage at sixteen, to one.
We fought 'garnisit "rosuani'tion" a few yftaro ago, Wanted million's of gov»*.ii^ont greeaiibaoks also, Ou. lohbj was bills stamped by old Unci* ©am. For unJ limited coinage v.*e cared not a 61am. For state banks we cfenw.red whtB o'uhec schemes failed* Denied "wild cat" money, liko chili'ren we -railed. We proved everything wrong wur op-pen^-.ts had done, Now r/'ll -Ojsse them with si'ver at «!xt*en
Co one.
W4at care we it uU^tesnien *lo«i't like new plar, Wo 'bori-c "ed good mowy, ana now if vo we can. We'll pay che-*»,iollars, oh, wont thtut be fun— We'll ihave ba-.rels of mb-ncy at slicteeo ta one. ^... ..., A mian witih the hrai-..^ of a Kionkey caia teH Thiat fifty certt dollars will do
411st
as well
As those of full value—we'll have them or none— ITu-rraih for our hobby at
•sffxtejn to one^-K...4 Frit*^
Ctoeinnati. On. July 24. 1S.»3.
Hnntlnc for the jn Kuiher*. Superintendewt of Police lifeaghe' yestendlay evening gave 'the mglvt r-v trolmen instructions to make a.A 's 1. to arrest the gang of "grcw*ler rull** •vhich holds out in the r&ar of Stark'* saloon on Cl estnut street near Xin The gang h^s been making tne nis*hl« hi-ieoas with drunken revelry for st»rr»i time and t'he peop'le of the neighbor-
hood ha/e made complainit to the au
thoiities.
BRASS BAND Instromento. Drama, Uniform#, Eqnipmenta for B»ad» and Dram Corps, tow-
I.YON
«0»JEY TO LOAN.
TO LOAN-Wc have sv/erai sums ot •incney toan i'.OO tJ Ktf- te loatBt trr -r— n'mt/.
MMi
4
rn
3
Jk
7^
wit price* erorQuoted. FineCJatalor, 'en Ill^iJtrotioim.inaJ/fityVtr,- it|1v«aS*Bd .^.-r -T Ma»io4Xu» ructV«/or An»»tonrB*nds
I1EALT,
Adult Hi. wd Ifabufe
Ancam,
CU«^W,Ut
•-••.-•
