Bloomington Courier, Volume 15, Number 25, Bloomington, Monroe County, 13 April 1889 — Page 3
11? - Xm: 'v''ttS"1'
T . FOR f III
la
4k '
At Druggists and Dealers. ... nm CHARLES A.VOGELER CO.. Baltlwwt.lM,
3 '-- '
ELY'S CREAM BALM
Is sure to 'Cure
COLD IN BEAD
Q0ICKLY ,
"Anply Balm Into ohch nostril. ELY BBOS. 54 Wrran Si. HI?.
GRA?TEFt-COMFORTING.
irTO
BREAKFAST. By a thorough laiowlefj of tho natarallaws
3
I
HI
Hies of well-scleewjd Ovcsk Mr, tnps
. T cur breakfast tiblerf Willi delicately flavoured bev-
: : crag- which may saw ui many heavy doctors' Mils.' .1 It is by th juaicicvus use of such articles of diet that
. ; a roasts tution may bo gradually iml.t up uutil strong : tivuujh to resist -every lemltvucy to disease. Hun ... dieds of subtle ruafccUei; are toatiajeraronidxis ready
w ui..n wwrevei mere :s a we is doiul tiomav
escape many a fata: shaft by keeping ofcr elves well fortified vith-mitchlcoil and a uroxjexhr nourished
.frame. Civ-US rvice i?az?tfe. Msde simply with; boiling water or m3fc Sold
rnly vahalt round UnsLby Grocers, labelled thns: J A ;UES EPFS & :4., HomreopathLivChoJniatj,
Scrofula.
3
Of a!i tha ills that that human flesh is heir to. Scrofula is the most prevalent. Very few indeed Ve entirely free from some taint of Scrofula. Young people of delicate constitution are often afflicted, by this disease, which manifests, itself in various forms. TbV glands of the neck, groin, abdomen, ela. becoTC.e enlarged, either peraistently, or with slight impairment of health
s
of the Neck
V t.
S '
Frequently become so engorged with scrofulous matter that abscesses are formed! Painful run-
, rung sores may also appear on the arms, legs and
leer; sometimes contmnous sometimes of an intermittent character. OccasiQually the sores ; appear in the earsaud nose, and -on oc -about the eyes, causing deaf nest' and blindnes Pimples, cancerous growths, swollen joints, etc, are other
Vb5!Bbl"- yj"P"jms oi tne unease, xi must no .ireaiea --Uirougk' tfielbioQdiTfr permanent cure fs-to be
iff
obtained.
- Vhat fa more beautiful than a rich, soft complexion in man or woman? This can be obtained only by the eradiciuion of all scrofulous taints , from. the bloodrby-the persistent use-of
-.JO
4-
And health will follow. Be sure .your Drnggitt ells you. only that t?pared b'--"-J ' r
2'
-.-it "
,r4
is
. TBS WCSU) 0U3ST
The world ought tc done for me in the curt which was so bad as t( ble by toe physician; went to be treated. On me a copy of an adver Swift's Specific, and reSef from "the first f e CTadually forced cut o
won cured sound am months since I quit tak
TO SHOW Iff know what S. S. S. has of a malignant Cancer, bo considered incurain : Chicago, whero I of my neighbora sent tisemcnt in regard to began taking it. I gqfc deses; the poison was my system, and I was wclL I is now ten
tag S. S. S. and I have
ar. . . . -
3e
had no siga of return of the dreadful disease
JI.Axs-ItoxirwEix. AnSeh1e,'l,l)ee; kGS. : v Seed for booJes. ott Blood "Dlseasea and Cancers; ? mailed free. mtm. TH Swtpt SPEcirrc Co. ' Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga. 20 PRIZE STALLIONS Perchcrtms and French Coachere, 4
RESERVED FOR SPRING TRADE, s .i: '." ; " TO BE TXACXXI "r On Sale March 25, 1889i These S ta! Hons were Prize Winners at the three trsst Horse Shows of France, 1388. . I have toand each year that a number of my customers cuuld not conveniently buy until late tn tne season, and It was to accommodate these that I last Fall made a reserve of Twsy of my Sees StallKMse. Old enough for Service, whtefc will be placed on sale Karch 25, It being my determination So so control my Importations that 1 can offer porehasexs a flrstrctaas liocse any day tn the year. . M, Sattsfbetery Breeding GnrnU Urea wltk sca Aahsa) 80M. M. W. DUNHAM, Wayne, Illinois. Vhtrty-ffve M3ee West of Chicago on tb J Cwvago A Swrt Western KsTlroetf.
DR. W. H SARBER, Gives his special attention to aJJ PRIVATE DISEASES of Male and Female. Regulating me dies furnished. Cancees positive ly oared without the knife. Rcnr
.TTJR8, no cure, no pay. fijjeb a
guarantee L Fistula, fissure,
atorrhea, impotency, oterGonorrhea, Syphilis f and
oily treated and positrreiy
eared. Call on or address, BR. SARBER, 50K & Hx. St., bmiANATOi js. Ism. All letters containing eoampa answered, and mediciQea sent to ordei. CHICHESTEfTS ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS
22D CEC23
Original. btt, otttyccaalncaQd
. rciUbte pill far sale. Never Fail. Ask for Ckldutter'm EngtukS
tDiamond Brand, la red me-
boa, At JEbrncclffts. Accept no other, ah dH1 in cate-
bow d boxes, pink wrapper, are a dancereat coanterfvlt. J5enA4e. tstssipw for. I,axt Izulxrs and Keileffur Ladle," Utu-r.br return malL 10.000 testS
iCnKnlADIE$'l,holl'ceuseilllieni- Same P per.
tkicJweter theiuical CoMailiso Sq.,PhiIa,,Pa
KWBility
other ills successf
rMM.
r , .. a? v .1 "
KIM
TS SID A DAY. AQEHTS WANTED!
-OTBCUXABS nil. - ;
1JX Brewster's Safety Rein Holders ziveo away to introdnce them. Every horsb owner buy from 1 to C Lines
never under heroes feet. Send 25 cents
m etiusps tc pay pottaKe and pacJunff for X ickel-Plattd Sample that sells for
tfcmAY. , All; Contracts on the Panama Canal have been can celed: and- the work praci tically abandoned, Mrs. Herman Flechsic committed suicide at Allegheny City, Pa., because she thought she was afflicted with cancer. After a turbulent session the. Tennessee .Legislature passed the Australian System Voting Bill. It practically disfranchises voters who can not read or write. Amm- ,. Mr: All is, the wealthy Milwaukee man who died a few days ago, was among the heavy, patrons of life insurance. He had policies amounting to about 5oo,ooo:; . Jasper N. Watson, of Jonesboro, has been arrested on nine indictments, charging violations of. the liquor law. He failed to give surety in $',400, and was committed. .The steamer "Westernland, from Ant werp,: landed at Castle Garden 1,488 steerage passengers, mostly Italians and Germans. .The Circassian , from Glas
gow, brought 432 steerage passengers.
At Marrietta, Ga;, the house of Ahner Bascomb burned. Bascomb's young son and two girls were cremated. It is thought the girls were assaulted, then killed, and.the house burned Jp divert suspicion. The celebrated steamer Hay tian Rennblic was sold to Wm. Lewis, of New
Bedford, Maes., for $41,000. After being fitted out as a whaling supply craft, she will be sent to Behringfs . Sea and the Arctic Ocean.
h, A horrible story of starvation comes from: Lac Temisconta, north of Quebec, where it is alleged snow bound French Canadian families have been living on soup made from hay. . Several children and two women haye died. TIdob being elected Speaker of the Florida House, Br. J. L. Gaskinga com mented on the fact of Harrison's election, notwithstanding Cleveland received 93,000 more votes, and intiraateV that; there was a defect in the national organism that required correction. rJPhe speech is regarded as a "gun" fired in behalf of the popular election of President. Edward Diet z of Pittsburg Pa., cut the throat of his three-year-old daughtter from ear to ear and then cut his throat They were discovered shortly afterward both dead. Dietz was a German. He assaulted his wife Wednesday, night and a warrant was issued for his arrest. He became desperate on heaiv inc of it. and said he would put an end
to his troubles.
The returns of the election in Rhode
Island show no choice for Governor f by the people. Davis (Democrat) : has plurality of 4,000. Hlocum Democrat) is elected Attoney General, f ourseen
members of the General Assembly 'iare
yet to be elected. The complexion or
those known to oe elected snows, a de
cided majority in favor of the prohibitorv amendment.' Total vote 41,382,
against 40753 in the last Preeidocttaal
election;
v - SATURDAY. The German naval authorities have ordered the cruiser Habicht and .the
gunboat Wolf to be put in reai iiness at once to proceed to Samoa.
The railroad coal miners of Western
Pennsylvania met at Pittsb urg, and de
cided to demand the same wages as last
yeart viz. , 7o 1- scents per ion. .
William Dallas, a workman at Birming
ham, Ala., met with a horrible death.
He supped and fen into a ;.. rea not iron furnace and was cremated in a second. A bailiff who had chargo of a farm
from which the tenants had been evicted
at Colerain, County Londonderry, Iref land, wasshot dead hy unknown parties: s . , Police Lieutenant John Haines of Chicago, is charged with be? ng one of -the men who not long ago mred a lawyer by a bogus telephone message and sandbagged him in the dark. xv". J Hon. C. R. Breckinridge has provided the Governor of Arkansas witli Junda to prosecute the search for Colonri Claytoa!a.a8sassin, and he says .hB will., get thousands more it needed. . .. Philip Remington, son of th founder of, the great iron works at Hi am, N. S, since 1861, one of the proprietors, is dead. The works employ 1,200 men, and manufacture gunsXise wing machines and; typewriters;. ' J. W. White, Sheriff of McLean county; Kentucky, attended a religious revival and confessed that thirteen years ago he embezzled $1,000 of the county funds. He paid4 over the money and promised to pay the interest which will amount to $800. f There was not sufficient evidence forthcoming to warrant the return to Antwerp of the four hundred anir odd musicians who wer landed at 'TJastle Garden, and. they were permitted to shoulder their inetrnmeaits and leave thegarden. . ' -George W. Ward, ' Assistant Postmaster, at Elmira, N. ?Y., has disap
peared, and $1,500 in Gorvernment funds
are reported missing. Ward was ap-
noited under a previous administration.
and was retained by Postmaster Babcock
on civil service reform principles., Ward is married and has a family inElmira.
The British man-of-war Calliope,
which escaped possible destruction in
Ania bay during the ravages of the
cyclone there, on March .15 and 16, by
Deing aote to put iu ui:a, una arnvcu ai
San Francisco. She reports leaving Samoa on the 21st of March, and that
the United States man-of-war In i dsic
bad been floated off of the beach, the
.natives -lending mate rial? assistance.
PENSIONS
iff
We axe actively easajzecl Ir. & e prosecntion of penston and other war claims," tr.d respectfnlly aoUoit sorrespondence. Khrba sae Experience. Collect OUlcers Account?, Kwse Claims. Fenalaae laereased. BeJeted ese re-opened. 12-pace JNwiphlet of Penal on Leys sent freev Addrees "I '.Pi HL FTTZtJEKAU, . U. S. Claim Aencr. XodlsnapoLLs. Indiana.
m - f;J
CHEAP I
HOMES
in CIDUlUG DCOiniiC
thei miminu iiLuiunu
5 V-
0 .- -
of NEBRASKA, KAXSAS, COLOBABO and WYOMING.
Free government A5tr otsea
I. A NBA. DESCRIPTTTE ClRC0LA
WITH WAP. SENT. S'JEJKK ON APPLICATION TO r. XViTlS; O. P. A, a B. Q. B. Chicago.
I
HBItflP
FITS
8
ft-
eShm 1 m mm T rfn not. Rutan mer&i7 to BtOD them
for a time and then baro them xettar j again. I moan radical core. InaveiiadBthftdiseasoof FITS, BPDV EPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a life-long etndy. f warrant my remedy to tare the worst cases. Bocanrf othsrs have failed is no reason for not now receiving, t core. Send at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle f my infallible remedy. Give Express and Post Office. H. G. ltOOTiU, C, 183 Pearl St. New York.
A.
jLLP iPniztn
ifilriollFROYBDCinisteis
IWARSAMTKO CHOLERA PROO.
(89 PREPAID. Wiee 1ST i in II. 8. a Foes km Coua
lies. ; 2 WEIGHED 2808 LBS.
Into sow ocaoanno eme o mtt r AHOue noes, mm fowls-
b tn unA.fttiymao.a
fffbis co rarany sold loot head for breeding purposes fa Tusa. Send foe facts and mention this paper.)
CHI LDREfl mo IRRITABLE
Feverisn. comctimes cravin
g toou ana eaung
v; 4 : i fcrously. again refusing wholesome diet, tossing s V esrr2S3lvTosie. moaning m!.dgT5nding:the teeth, 11 g 'FT- :-Jntx &s may 1ra'Vr3x2 arc capping at their ' 2 - r i &eil: . ' Uz C- unless -rcsnpt fcsrs? ore. taken, snasmr
,m
r' t taC'S :YBftW STfV'&E KEVTEK V.AXX&
, w x? rii see iyr ycuxseu,i ari stood ins tcs;
We will mafee you a present of a building lot
. adjoining one of the most promising ci ties m the West ana pay the taxes on ft for two years, if yon will dft a sifeht service for us in yonr town. Send
us your name and we will write you full particulars." Address Tofi-Koam-WEsr Co., '120. Xlfabasb
Avenue, Chicsgo, iu. - -.- .-. -
Pfacs Kemedy f&r Catarrh is the
Best. Easiest to Use, and Cheapest.
I Sohfc.by druggists or sient by mail.
from
honday. ... Norfolk, Va., snffered $500,000
Are and storm.
A large colon v of Chicago clerks.
storekeepers, idlers and workmen are
bonnd for Oklahoma.
A fire at Savannah , Ga; , destroyed
property worth $1,500,000. ..Somerset, Ky.. also suffered a loss, probably
reaching $100,OOOA '
At a charivari given a newly-married
couple at Chester Center, la., one of
the. participants, J? red Bacon, was shot
and fatal 'y wounded.
A banquet was held in Earis, at which
Boulancer was to preside. The . speech
hewa to haye delivered was read, set
ting fortn his , programme upon being
elevated to the head of the state.
A recent decision of the Maryland
Court of Appealain regard to the holding of property of married women, . is
ound to cloud the titles to nearly one-
third of the property in the State. .
In a nrize-fight between Paddy Welsh.
of St. Cloud, Minn., and Thomas Stock-
ley, of Colton, W. T., WelBh'a arm was
fractured m the eleventh round, but he
continued to fight until the eighteenth,
when he withdrew.
Mary Collins, the daughter of a
wealthy Phiiadelphian, visiting in Cali
fornia, suffered' from neuralgia. She
applied to druggist for an opiate. The
clerk ottered to cure her for So. She
consented. He applied a' liquid to her
face, and it was immediately discovered that the liauid contained ctbton oil. A
part of itbt into her eyes, and her face
is not only permanently disSsured but
she will.become4otabhnd. The clerk
after robbing the bank of 100,000. In addition he went away with t'8,000 be
longing to an aged widow. Fasli living j
anc( stocks caused Ins downfall. The bank has closed. Mrs. Elizabeth Smith, aged 89, an i ved afe Bridgeport, Conn., from Wheeling, W. Va,, having walked nearly the entire distance. She said she was afraid of the poor lionse in Wheeling aud started for her children in New York. "My beys are too poor to help me with any more money. Theysent me $100, but I used it to pay debts." Miss Sorosia S. Alexander, an old maid of Vermont,, has been awarded S:!6,867 in a suit against. her ..brother's estate. The brother promised her that if 6 he would not marry, but stay at borne and take care of the old folks, ho would give her SI ,000 a year. She discarded her lover and did as requested, hut the brother failed. to reward her as promised; hence the suit and verdict. Lary McDonald and John Schneider, Government employes working on the Mississippi River Improvement Commission, quarreled in a small skiff in the middle of the : river at St. Louis. The men clinched aud a terrible struggle followed. McDonald proved the more powerful, and seizing Schneider about the waist, threw him headlong into the river. Schneider was drowned. McDonald rowed ashore and escaped. The explosion, presumably that of a
dynamite bomb, which occurred on the evening of February 8 in the rear of
David Stevenson's brewery, New York, has been found to be the work of Labor men, four of whom are now in . custody at police headquarters. The informer is Henry A. Fitzgerald, former)) walking delegate. The men whom he im
plicates in his confession, and who are
in custody, are John O'Conuell, President of the Local-Assembly;. Patrick F. Close and Thorn Reardon, members of the executive, comrsittee of the Local
.Assembly. , .
WEDKESDAT, Boulanger denies that he has been ordered to leave the Belgian territory. During a prize fight at Seattle, Ore., a row occurred and two men were fatally injured. ' "Prof." Wm. Glass, of Verndale, Mich., ate five dozen eggs in two minuteB on a waper. '... The Louuvillft, Ky., Bridge and Iron Company machine shops were completely destroyed by fire. Loss $90,000. Advices received from Zanzibar are to the effect that news from Stanley may be expected there about the end of May. . ,. : ' The "after elect jpns" in Rhode Island gave the Republicans. a majority of eleven
in the Legislature and they will elect
the btate olncers. Dispatches frcm. India say that 15,000 persons were rendered homeless by the great fire .at Surat. To add to the prevaiiinc dislress, cholf ra has broken out in the town. " A storm, which raged in Baltimore with severity swept, over the lower Chesapeake moet disastrously to shipping. Over a dozen seamen lost their lives, and thirty or forty vessels, some small and others large, were wrecked. The new postmaster, Mr. Van Cott, has said: 51 am going ;o run the New York postofBce on strictly businei?8
principles. There shall be no removals
m that office exrept for cause. I believe thoroughly in honest civil-service reform, and I shall carry it out with all my might. This is no new position with me." . 5 . Tho town of Fairbury, 111., has been quarantined on account of the prevalence of scarlet, fever.. There arfe more than twenty cases of the disease in the little town, and six des ths have occurred in tne past few days. No reUgtyus services were held Sunday. The Sunday schools and the public schools have been closed. A liquor shop . at Sail, Hungary, was entered by thieves, who plundered the premises of everything valuable. The proprietor of the etore surorised the robbers at their work and was seised and crushed to death in a wine .press, Tnehieves'afterWartl . got drunk and were in an almost helpless state of inebriety when, a few hours later, they were arrested. The hard fought legal contest instituted by the heirs of the late Dr. Scott Stewart, of Philadelphia, to break his legacy of about $269,000 for establishing a .hospital, of the Methodist Episcopal Church,, has been brought to a close by a decision of the Supreme Court in favor of the trustees of the hospital. A man who called on Henry Achtemaite, near Pomona, 111., and asked permission to occupy a cabin on the farm for a few days, was found dead in, the cabin by Mr. Achtemaite, a day or two later. A bullet wound was found in the calf of his leg, an. , his pockets contained a bottle of bowder, s'ome fuse, a
bunch of skeleton keys and some files.
There is little doubt that he has was a burglar, who, on being shot, did not dare to call on a doctor, but died from the neglected wound. At; the closing session of the Mormon Conference at Salt Lake City, George Q. Cannon read the statistics ..... of the Church which are:. Twelve apostles, 70 patriarchs, 8,718 high priest?, 11,805 eiders, 2,0.69 priests, 2,292 teachers, 11,610 deacons, 8 l,8P9 families, 115,915 officers and members, and 43,31)2 children under, eight years of age a total . Mormon population of 153,911. The number of marriages for six months, ending April &, 1869, was 530; births, 8,754; new members, 488, excommunications, 1 83. Cannon said that many young men were leaving the Territory to take up land elsewhere. The Saints, he said, had been called together to build up Zion, and this scattering must be stopped. A dispatch from New York states that Philadelphia parties have secured an option on the controlling interest in the Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Company of Hartford, Conn. The company has assets of over $10,500,000, and is controlled by a capital stock of $100,000. A. C. Goodman, President of the com-
DESTRTTOriON IN DAKOTA.
the terrible losses by of fire . that swept over
TUESDAY.
Great distress iB reported at Panama.
Four men were killed by an explosion
near Junction City, Ky.
JSinson natneia nas maoea mil confeseion of the McCoy murder, the out
come of the McCoy-Hatfield feud.
It has become known that Prince Victor Bonaparte visited General Bou
langer on Saturday, and they had along
conference. It is surmised that they are plotting together. Boulanger will leave
for London this week.
P. L. PrattjCashier of the first National
hank of Anoka, Minn., flad to Canada
The stories of the hurricanes
South Dakota, savs a dispatch of the
6th,continue to come in. At Mt. Vernon forty-five buildings wore burned and .100 families., left homeless. Tho loss is put at $80 000. Voilin village has only i hree buildings left standing: Olivet, Hutchinson county, was burned and Puukwanna wan wiped out. Iu the vicinity of Janesville, twelve miles north of . Yankton, eighty farmers sustained losses running from $1,000 to $3,000 each. Around Janesville the loss w ill foot up $-10,000. One man lost $1,000 in money which he had in his coat on a piece of plowed ground 300. feet, from the grass. Two new wagons were burned 100 feet from the fire. Sixty miles of Western Union wires were blown down between Centervillo and Huron. The losses in the vicinity of Blunt are estimated at $200,000. v At Keeheights, fifteen miles east of II ighinore, thirteen residences were destroyed. The losses, estimated, in .Hyde county, are 530,000. At Sundown ite fire swept away six .homes, burning to death Miss Annie Sweenie and a five-year-old baby. Eugene Tibbs, Mr. and Mrs. Tibbs, Mr. and Miss Ruby, were dangerously burned, the two former fatally. In Hutchinson county the losses wilt foot up $200,000. At Scotland the Herald office was burned. Twenty-five farmers east of Scotland are known to have lost everything. At Leola, the county seat of McPherson eounty.outof thirtyplaces of business, including two banks, two newspapers, two churches, three or four hotels, and til lines of business, but four arc left standing, and out of from thirty to forty" residences less than a dozen remain. C. W. Old and Thomati Ward ell were terribly burned and can not live. The surrounding country is nearly, devastated. Hundreds of farm he-uses are in ashes, and carcasses of burned stock are lying alongtho road. The sews. from ail over South Dakota continues to come in slowly and shows the details of a great disaster. It is probable that not one-tenth the damage is yet reported.
WILL BE! PKOSEOUTJ3D. The French Ministry have asked the Chamber of Deputies to sanction the prosecution of General Boulanger. In making the request, the government submitted a statement to the Chamber in which it reviiws the career of General Boulanger since tho Commune, and charges" him with attempting the destruction of the Republic. It declares that his offense comes under the sections of the penal code dealing .. with conspiracy and attempts. to overthrow the established government. The Chamber agreed to the immediate assembling of the bureau for, the purpose of electing a committee on the prosecution of General Boulanger, A committer was anpoirted and subsequently presented its report to the Chamber, The committee advised the House to authorize the prosecution of Boulanger. The Chamber voted urgency for the discussion of ths accusations againt General Boulanger, nd the debate proceeded. After speeches .by ..several., members, a vote, was taken on the question of sanctioning the prosecution of General Boulanger. The result was adverse to Boulanger, the Chamber deciding, by a vote of 355 to 203, in favor of prosecution. Boulanger is in Belgium. PREACHERS SHOOT TO KILL.
Two ministers ol! the Gospel in Va vasota, Tex., wareictively concerned in tragedies on Sunday. Rev. R. K. Lawson, a minister shot and killed a. negro named Daniel McLeod. who had stolen several articles from him. Tho second tragedy i ecu rrei near Yarborough Station. Rev. Hall Miller was conducting Sunday-school, and while praying, an intoxicated ma:a named Purchard entered the school and disturbed the meeting. There was an altercation between the preacher and the disturber, and Rev. Mr. Miller went home. He returned with a shot gun and fired its contents into Purchard!s side,, killing him instantly. The dead man was poFgessed of great bodily strength and was brutal.
pany, has $100 more , than half of the capital, and the report says that his $50,t(J0of stock is offered at $501,000, or $10 ..for? $1. The would-be purchasers are said to be endeavoring now to borrow purchase, money on pledge of the
stock. The highest scale of tae stock
known in Hartford was beloW $300 and
ast year's taxes it was valued at $220.
The company is in strong financial condition, with over $600,000 in bank, and
it is reported that policv holders may
resort to the courts or Legislature to prevent the deal, which, it is understood, has been entered into without the knowledge of the other directors of
the company.
THINKS WE DON'T NEED IT. Gov. Hovey thinks he can now see
his way clear for carrying on the State government without an extra session of
the Legislature, if money can not be obtained on the . temporary loan board.
Some of the benevolent institutions may be crippled, but responsibility for - I. i : 1 1 i. iit a i -i i
tnnt, ne says, win resb.wun toe legisla
tors, who neglected to make the proper provision for meeting the demands upon
ine.o&aie .treasury, nis pian is to ap
ply the revenues where they, are most
needed. The in come, from taxation ag
gregates about $1,400,600 annual 1 v. The
temporary bonds for $370,000, issued for
tne purpose oi raising money to pay tne interest on the outstanding debt, were accepted by the German Savings Bank, and the total levenue for the next , year therefore, will be about $1,800,000. This is about the amount of the annual expenditures. No effort would be made to pay :the specific appropriations and the undrawn balances amounting to $1,400,OfiO. The new appropriation act does not go into effect until next fall, and in the meantime he believes that it wiil be set aside by the courts, if the matter is brought before them, as revolutionary'
Facts in Human liifo. There are 3,062 languages in the world, and its inhabitants profess more than one thousand religions. The. number of men is about equal to the number of woinen. The avera ge of lif is about thirty-three years. One quarter die previous to seventeen. To 1,000 persons only one reaches 100 years of hie; to every 100 six reach the age of sixty-five, and, not more than one in 600 lives to eighty years. There are on the earth. I,n0:,000, 0i) intiabitants, of these 33,033,033 die every year; 91,824 every day; 3,739 every hour, sixty every minute, or one every second. The married men are longer lived than the single, and above all those who observe a sober and industrious conduct. Tall men live longer than short , ones. Women have more chances of life in their favor previous to fifty years of age than men have, but fewer afterward. The number of marriages is in the proportion of seventy-five to 1,000 individuals. Marriages are more frequent after the equinox, that is, during the months of June and December. Those born in the spring are generally of a more robust constitution than others. Births are more frequent by night than by day, also deaths. The number of men capable of bearing arms is calculated at one-fourth of the population. John "Wesley as a Physician . London Hospital. It is not generally . known that J ohn Wesley wag something of a physician, though hi3 medical creed is founded
more on theology than physiology. In
a volume which he published in 1747,
and which went through twenty-two
editions in forty years, he states his
views on the subject. He holds that
the great antidote for many diseases is
contained in the curse: "In the sweat of
thy brow sh alt thou eat bread; for. the
power of exercise, both to- preserve ana to restore health is greater than can ...be conceived." He holds, however, that all medical treatment is, or ought to be empirical; and decries scientific study. The prescriptions he gives are haphazard enough, here are a j'ew examples: For dropsy, eat a crust of bread every morning or be electrified. For deafness, put a little salt in the ear. For cancer of. the mouth or throat, , blow in the ashes of stjarlet cloth. For consumption, eat cow-heel soup, and every morning cut up a turf of fresh earth, and breathe into the hole three-quarters of an hour. And so forth.
An Old Thief at the Hive. The entrances to the hive are very carefully guarded by sentinels, and every bee on arriving at the door is challenged by them with their antenna). If he can give the countersign he is admitted to tho sanctuary., but if he can not, he is in danger, for bees aro very nervous insects, and draw stings on the slightest provocation. The applicant must bo a thief, .and old ..thieves are detected by experienced sentinels, but
the form of challenging must be gone through firs':. The old thief bee is fat
and sieex and sninmg and very suave. If caught by sentinels he will at once try to make a deal and offer the policemen some sugar, and while they are eating it he either slips in and fills up a the cells or he retreats and tries another h?vo. If the sentinels are incorruptible the thief humps himself, and draws his horny shields tight around him so - that the stings cf the policeman may not penetrate, and runs. A your-g thief S ands up to fight and gets clubbed. Ho learns by experience,
SEKATOUS MAllW L0 CABIN. Senator Evarts has erected an old fashioned Log Cabin on an elevated point of laud which he lately purchased on the Potomac, just below Washington. It is much more elegant in its finish aud appointments than wore tho homes of our ancestors in the Log Cabin days of long ago, but probably not more conducive to comfort. Outside, it presents the appearance of the typical old fashioned house of the pioneers, being builfc of logs hewn in the adjacent forest and raised-and chinked in the oldcm style. The interior will be finished in native woods, from the place, but, unlike the primitive original, it will be finished in oil.. This is luxury to which the dwellers in the rude Cabins of early days dared not aspire, it being pure luxury, and not adding to the comfort of the domicile. Senator Evarts began tho Log Cabin last summer with tho determination that, if Gen. Harrison were elected, he would reverse the popular campaign axiom of half a century ago, "From the Log Cabin to the White House" to a social axiom of the new administration, "From the White House to the Log Cabin." Harrison was successful; Senator Evarts' new, old-fashioned, Log Cabin will doubtless also prove a great success. Many a happy day's surcease from the toils and cares of his great station, our Log Cabin president will no .doubt enjoy beneath its hospitable roof as the guest of the genial, senior Senator from New York. ' Great as . the success may be that atr tends the introduction of fchis old-time log cabin to fashionable lile, it caianot be greater than the success which has attended the introduction of Warner's Log Cabin Saraaparilla, one of the oldtime, effective remedies, the us of which, in primitive times, gave; our grand-parents health and: rugged old age. ,y Senator Evarts- log cabin is but another evidence of the tendency in fashionable life, at present so marked, toward things primitive and antiquated.. The new fashion is for things old-fashioned, and a return to the old-fashioned roots and her b3 remedies of log cabin days is noted with pleasure, as their common use does hot permanently injure the system, as the use of the mineral drugs of modern medical practice does, THE PROMISED LAND. The members of lihe Kansas Board of Railroad Assessors, just returned from a trip through Oklahoma, report army officers as saying that thousands of boomers areBtill concealed in the brush and that if the whole United States army was there it could not drive them out Names are taken, but ninety out of every hundred are fic titious. Captain Woodson and Lieutenant Carson are in receipt of telegrams daily to hire horses, have them saddled and bridled, and in waiting on -the arrival of trainaat Oklahoma City, April 22, at noon. The object is to mount at once and by ileet steeds distance rival boomers on foot and caoture choice claims. A party of four Hoosiers, with a balloon, T- are camped near Anteliope Hills. They will make an ascent in the morning, drift until noon, and then descend, hours in advance of teams and speedy horses. . State officials anticipate trouble and sgy the country will be an. Eldorado for
gooa iana omce lawyers. , xne excitement is increasing daily and all Southern Kansas is ablaze. The assessors think that Oklahoma is not what it has been painted. The soil is red and the land if? good chiefly for hay and cotton. Oklahoma was surveyed some years ago, but the corners are nearly all obliterated now.; Settlers taking claims will find it difficult, to describe the same when they goto the land office to make a filing, and this will givarise to innumerable contests. . The officials of the Santa Fe Railr oad were busy Sunday investigating the story that the boomers, concealed in the woods of Oklahomia, had oanded together for the purpose of destroying the railroad bridges on the night of the 21st inst, in order to obstruct the influx of homesteaders until the men concealed in the country could make perfect their claims. It appoars that the boomers in hiding are despeirate. They have selected and watched their claims for years, and they now fear that the new-comers, with the assistance ... of rapid transit, may get the best of them. .There was a meeting of the boomers held in the timbers near Oklahoma City last Thursday, and they canvassed the situation. After the meeting adjourned the Santa Fe agent received notice that the railroad bridges would be burned and the trains stopped on April 22, as the old boomers did not propose to jeopardize their chances by allowing a flood of "tenderfeet" to drop in on the land they had picked out. Detectives have been sent along the line through the country, and every precaution will be taken to prevent railway obstruction,- There are twice as many people now on 'she borders as can be accommodated under the homestead act in Oklahoma. Sunday fully 3000 passengers arrived in Arkansas City all bound for Oklahoma. Many of them represent colonies, and are there as the advance agents. There, are men there representing colonies from Washington, California, Utah, Colorado, Nebraska. Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Wipconsin and Alabama. The colonies number from twenty to five hundred persons. Sunday evening, twenty empty passenger coaches pulled into the city on the Santa Fe, attached to the regular freight train,' and were run into the yards to await the 22d.. A railroader said that the Santa Fe Company had 400 cars already engaged by parties who desired
household goods, removed by the 21st. The crowd has increased to such , proportions that persons who get their mail at the free delivery window at the postoffice are compelled to form into a procession and then it is frequently five or six hours before they can get a call for their mail. THE GOVERNMENT SWINDLED. One of the most extraordinary cases
of smuggling and fraud in the Custom House known in this country became public through the Customs authorities
in New York, Friday. Allard & iSons, a large Parisian firm dealing in antiques, art furniture, rare tapestries, paintings and bric-a-brac, have a branch establishment at 304 Fifth avenue. For a period extending over at least seven years this house has engaged in. the most bare-faced acts of smuggling, . For many years the agent of Allard & Son was a man named Bloosairo. About three years ago he was superseded by
their present agent, Paul Konles, under Roule's management Bloosaire wras steadily degraded until last February he was discharged from the employ of the firm. In revenge for, what he claims the injustice practiced against him, some weeks ago Bloosaire called on Special Treasury A gent Simmons and imparted Borne startling information that led to an immediate and searching investigation of the affairs of the firm. A raid
was made on the store, and captured a
seats, that were found stuffed with rich laces, tapestriefi, silks, bronzes, portieres, curtains and almost every thing a person could imagine. Roules the agent then made a full confession. So far as it is known the Government has been swindled out of more than a quarter of a million dollars by the firm, as the unpaid duties range from 30 to 50 per cent, ad valorem. Wnat the total sum will be when the investigation is complete remains to b3 set?n. The faut that Allard fc Sons number among their patrons some of the most select and wealthy families in the United States will probably increase the sum up to $1,000,000. No arrests have been made in the . case because all of the AHards are out erf reach, being in France. Whether they can bo extradited and punished is a question which the Government officers will express no opinion. Their representative, Paul Rouies, can be punished, however, and it is only by the clemency of the Treasury Department that he is. not behind the bars. The fact that he has practically turned State's evidence, it is supposed, will save him from State's prison. More interesting disclosures in the matter are expected. BULLIONS STARVING. Detailed reports : of the great famine in Shantung and Manchuria, brought by the ChineiB steamer Monday night, snows that ivm horrors have not been exaggerated. It is the worst famine known in China for twelve years, and the saddest icture of it is that in many parts of these two provinces the overflow of the Yellow River has ruined the land so that no good crops can be expected for several years. Letters from American and English missionaries, who have be3n distributing food, say that no moie than one hundred thousand can be reached by them, although fully five millions are starving. Ma ay of the,men abandoned their familiejs after the flood and the women and children have . nothing to live on. The missionaries report; that the spectacle of patient suffering .of these people i i heart rending: One case is recorded of a blind woman who 8traigled her little girl . rather than sell her or see her starve, while an old. man of seventy-seven, maddened by hunger, sold his daughter-in-lawtor $9. It costs only one cent per day to maintain one person,, yet the wealthy have been so re duced they can not aid their poor neighbors. Near CheeJoo, Dr. Laughlhi writes that the whole plain is dug up by the people in search of roots which serve to fill their stone achs. but draw up 1heii bands as though they had inflammatory rheumatism.
Uses fcr the Department. PiUborg Chron icle. The genus crank seems determined to put the new -Department of Agriculture to some use, or perish in the attempt. An application for a yoke of oxen, a horse, cow and agricultural tools was received at the department not long ago, and on . another occasion a man who had heard that Uncle Sam was Vrich enough to gie ub each a farm" asked the Secretary for an order for 160 acres of land. Sorae people bad an idea that the creation of the Agricultural Depart
ment was unnecessary, but others, if
appears, regard it as "filling a long-felt want." V ! , : ....... Ingrown andTInmlot The seeds of intermittent and bilious remittent fever germixate and bear evil fru I;. No rommnn ty haf nltoiether escaped it. I n populous wards of large cities bed sewage causes it, and in their suburbM stagnant pools In sunken lots hreed it. There is at on:e a remedy and a means of prevention. Its name is Hostet'er's Htoma'h Bitt-is. which is, w thout ptradventure, the most potent antidote in existence to the malarial virus. Fortified with this infomparalle, saving specific, miasmatic influences may beencountered with absolute impunity. Disorders of th- ston a h, 1 ver and bowels, begotten by mtasma-tdr.tel water, or any other caue, succumb to the beueficent corrective named, and rheumatic, kid nev and bladder troubles are surely removabl e by its use when in is given a persistent trial. 1 Always on hand- The finger. State of Ohio. City op Toledo. Lucas Cot'XTY, . S. f, , Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner cf the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HITNPRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Ci.TAitRH that cannot 1e oured by the use of Hau-'s Catabrit Cube. FRANK J. CHENEY, Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6 ;h day of Decern oer, A. D. S6: V--, A. W GLEASON, seal y Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucus surlacas of the system. Send far testimonials, free.! F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. iold by Druggists, 75c. . Burglars ontered the First National bank at PI y mouth, early Wednesday morning, and secured $1,500 from the safe. An inner compartment containing $20,000 resis ted their efforts to open it , aSavellsg man,
Causes
Groat Eccitement in the ICmpire House,
large quantity Of chairs With UphOlilterecl j Read Dr, Sarber'R card in another column.
is i neccBsitr with uearlv even bod v; The run
down, tired condition a t this season is due to impurl it sin the bloo A which have accumulated during the winter, and which mUct be expelled
it you wish to feel well. Hood's SarsapariUa thoroughly ritaliz j6 and purifier the blood, creates a good fippefct?, cures oiliousness and headache, gives healthy action to the kidneys and liver, and imparts to, the whole body health and strength, 1 : ' Hood's SarsapariUa Sold by all 1rogi?s& H; six for 35. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD k CO .Apothecaries Lowell, Mass. IOO Doses OneDoilar.
Tkdkpendencb, Iowa, Oct. 14, 1888. Rheumatic Syrup Co., Jackson, Mich.: . Gents Your Mr. Brooks came here to night and registered, as agent for Hibbard's Rheumatic Syrup, and as he did 60, it awakened in me an interest never beforo realized in a guest at my house. Yoti will not wonder at it when I tell you th e story. For years I have been greatly sfflicted with inflammatory rheumatism , the.-pain and .. soreness of the joints at time being almoBt unbearable; could move about only with the use of crutches. In addition to this my stomach oecame badly diseased, aha neuralgia set in, which threatened to end my d ayi. A traveling man stopping with me gave quite a history of your Syrup, and the peculiarities of its combination, which induced me to try it. I have taken Bix bottle, and no act in my life affords me greater satisfaction than in writing you that I am a well man. It will be a pleasure for me to answer any communications, for I believe it to be the best remedy ever formulated. A. J. Bowley, Proprietor. Empire House, Independence, Iowa. A swell- The poisoned pup. . ..... Interested People. , ., .
Advertising a patent medieine in the
peculiar way in which the proprietor of the Kemp's Balsam for Coughs and Colds doeB, it is indeed wonderfuh He
authorizes all drutraists to give those
who call for it a sample bottle Free, that thev inav try it before purchasing.
Tho l.arire Bottles are 50c. and SI. We
certainly would advise a trial. It may
save you from consumption. A Good Excuse for Iieavingr. Mrs. Gramercy Park Why did you leave your other place?
Celeste Madame was twenty years
older than Monsieur. Food for Consumptives. Scott's Elmulsion of Cod Liver Oil,
with Hypophosphites, is a most marvelous food and medicine. It heals the irritation of the throat and lungs, and gives flesh and strength quicker than
any other remeay kuowii. m is a very palatable, having none of the disagreeable taste of the crude oil;
Night sweats indicate i run-d own nervous
SVfitem. MA GEE S KMUlisION IS tt (,U1CK rcittuiiu a sure cure. Get it atyourDnigjjist,
For Throat Diseases, Ooiiirhs, Colds, etc.,
effectual rel ef is found in the use of "BrovmU
Branchial troches." tricots ct. itoiaotuu tn
boxes. ' ,
SOUTH DAKOTA'S BOOM. South I'akota is now engaging public attention through her early achieve
ment of statehood, as yre as by her phenomenal growth and th apid development of her wonderful 'Ticultural resources, and the advantage i he offers to home-seekers and persons u String safe and profitable investments. A new pa mphlet containini? recent letters citing the actual experiences of reliable residents, and other valuable information relating to Dakota, will be mailed free upon request by E. P. Wilson, No. 22 Filth Ave., Chicago, J1U
"When in the sorinc I felt all run down and
de bilitated, I found Hood's Saraaparilla. jast tha medicine to build mo. up, My wife also. After much pbyscial prostration; found in itife
uso now life and lifting benefit. Upon mizi f?? litflrtcHrl xv1n VtaA Kanri bIoV wHh Vn1lt. : fWr. ' '
it etiect vas marvelous, entirely1 removing tie noison from her blood and restoring her to'
good health," . E. i)t Steatton. Swarapscott. .JIllSS. ."if"...".-..: ",. "
Hood's SarsapariUa
QUIU oy nil uruiririsift. ijiihiiiur rreuaiw uuii ,
tn i i ,ii if ill .m 'n -m nArnnnartoc , mvui i hhmm
IOO Doses One Dollar . v
- ' - - - . . 11 v--" VJI'C. .-v M ". i rW.-:S
DESPaIIR. .
: "T arn weary of life,, moaned poor Mrs, Black, ;' i $ V: For I'm fairly Worn out with the ache' in my $f i : ' My nerves are a chain p - V-f .-, -'f t : ' ,. Of weakness and pain, .. And my poor head is aching: as. if it would cracks f TNow, don't be discenraged,' cried good Jfcs. Whif& ' ?'It is never so dark but theni's promise of -Jiglifc;;'
I can tell you. in brief, i
2 :
y
"SI
ir.
; S&fclf JL' '"jfcfi '.- '
rr-.ry
What will give you relief
Pierce's Ettvorite, Priscriptipa wiU Boon set ycii rlglxt.
It i3 the onlr remedv for woman's neculiar weaknessea and ailments, sold by L
druggists, under a positive guarantee from the mauuf acurers, that ft w01 satisfaction in everv case or monev will be refunded! See enarantee on bottler
wrappers. Ajj an invigorating restorative tonic and as a soothing nervine It - S'i unequaled. :Por overworked", wornrout," run-down," debiUtatedlhnl ml Minora. insaQmnkora. Rp.nmRirroBCAa ,; short - cirls.1 hOuSekeeners. nursing
milliners, drtsssmakers. seamstresses, ''shon-firirls.' housekeepers, nursini
mothers, and feeble women generally, lf. Pierce's Favorite Preserippoa Is mgi ,
irrHMI.HM. HII.ri.MIU IKIIllI II. IV IIIVHIIIHIII ' II I III I !IV I tltr Ml III . KIIIKIIlIliy UUIUUO'
UIO B)'lUJJtUUtJ CUIUUlUmy ULUmtUUlb ;U"UU. lUUUUUUU. 'WU-. Vigamw . , induce. ref rcshinsr sleer and. relieves mental anxiety and despondency; ' - fe
Ctopyrhrht, 1888, by WoBUtfs DniPEKSAKv MEOiCAn Assocxatjon, Proprietors, r
Dr. K.erce's .Pellets cleaaiise and re tle
stomack and bowels. Gh a dose. : Sold by drag?sta
A IPrixe Winner. : No poU turn in the ground either to right of left perfectly. -.' ; -Call on our agent in your city, or write us for speulal printed matter! .
South Bend CHILLED PLOW COMPANY, SOOTH BEND,
JM - am-.-" -: " K 33
timm. U arm aim u gam 'v w;
PKe IM . amak. m maa. m a a) affk Miriilll.L ;
; Wc oflfer Ui
WET
c man who wants fienrice -. y
n imrm.nt tftitt. vrlB rAMt ....
C7 miTVI- n nam. bmlll.r A nmnr-i'. Ii
Wo ofl
(not style)
him dry In the hardest storm
caHed TOWEfc'S FISH" BBAKO
Cow-boy all over the land.; With thai
A. J, TowEit.au Simmons sr., lsostoiuaiasa, .
B
rue man whoaas Invested tronitliree iB to tlvo dollina in n Kubber Coat, and : mm
at - his' first luuf hour s experience m a storm finds to his sorrow ttat It Is hardly abetter protection titan a mosqlto netting, not only feels cliaerined at.bcin so badly taken in, but, also fetla If he does not look exactly like It k lor tho " filSU BliAND ' Sucker
does not have the fish bravo, s nd for descriptive ex. talopne.
ryanit & Straifon Hkkago Business Callage I
SHORT-HAND INSTITUTE and ENttUSN TRAiNINC SCHOOL. Zsthe BTA$Z&$ r ' T l?T8T3rn3TIN and the XiVH.w-u K33.' XTSCBi Fnlimtomjas i
tnn flfttjilnimn. tennt t. .nntVARR jk4)mii IT 11 mUVI V J. bnil '-. .1 iin.ii Ma t rHI6, ,SKw?a
B ! HI' tho only perfect Wind aui Waterjabof fiafl I im ill Coat la "Tomer's Fish Brand Slicker" ; I H in 1 aad take no other. . Ifycur storekeeper-
- " ...
Si.?
A tjme-loc-g-The prison Btep. --'. : Cousvixnptlon Sui ely Cured, "i To the Editor. . .i-.-.l.:..- .-,. Please inform your readers that T have a positive remedy fc r the above nained disease. B: its timely use thousands of hopeless : cases hava heen permanently cured. I shall he glad t send two bottles of my remedy fkfk to any ci your readers who have consum ption if they will send me their Express anll. O, address, Sespectfulfy, T. Av SLOCUM. M, C, 1S1 Pearl St. NowYor?c 6ntime-The landlord. . r: Work for workers! Are. you -ready: to work, and do you want to make monev? Then write to B P. Johnson & Co., of Richmond Va., and eeif they can not help you. , : J " A high liyer the condor, , -
THE MARKETS. ; y , - INDIANAPOL18, April 10, 1888. ' GRAIN - V. " Wheas- CornT--
No.5!Red
.......96
No. 3 Rcd.v. 90
No. 1 White,.....ct3 No, 2 Yellow..... Oats, White,..v29
Oatilk Qc4tochoiceu.......3.604.00 Choice hedf era.... i........M...2.803.a5 Common to medium cowfl..,....2.00(a)2.50 Good to choice cows......... ...... 2.60(o$.G0 Hoos Heavy ..... .........t. ..4.754.8) Light. ..... V. ....... w . . . . . . .4.6:4.8T) Mixed. s 4.604.7i)
Pigs... .4140 Shsep Good to choice. . ... .,,..4.25 Fair 'to medium . . . . . . . .. 3.50 QQS BTJTTKB, POTjITRY.
' vwAlway8 on root The tceS."A Xa3y la South CAiolina Writw: V Jj My labor was shorter and less painful
than oh two former occasions; physiT
"Mother's Friend." It is worth ita weiirnt in irold. Address the Bradfield.
Regulator Co.. Atlanta, Ga., fort!Wirti? ulars? Sold Ky all dtuggists
ASTHMA CUE German Aath ma Cure neverS&togtTO
imtiiiatnTciictin mewarsi easeinBuresoc
able aleep; effectacurwhewaaotheraj
S 1 .OO.o rruafifiBtsor by toail. Bamido
forntsnio. Dit-ltSOHTFFMAN.StJ
r. fu
tkDlKS, LOOffi A KoTOtty 4 Rug Machine sent by mail for Ii. ? -Sntisfaetlon guaranteed or money V
reiuaaeu. wuoiesaieprMw realtors -
patterns, etc, and a book- of beantlfal colored .
pattern designs, pent tree. Agents waniea. as. Boas & Co., Toledo. O. ...... - --:-:.
a.
-. .
PENSION
JOHNW.MO
Late Principal
OA
4.45'
4.6ft 4.60
Pension
at Law. Wsjfclm
A' : " "rr;.iw hlidrBa and deu
dlaBTriceVyy
voaratn Pension Bureau, and attwniy aw ; ;,
HSSk
MAD
Ah tn I O n-td KV Mtln nan or wow ta M9S:
WANTED' "pi 4 Lh v II MR I t" nnmid and axDOAMS ! advM. Vail
. OK fiealaaamartaampVioaaaFBEa. Ws SALARY. Co., Loca Box osOS. Hoataa, i
Hens per ft ....... .7c Roosters.;...: .....3c
-irurkeya ... 10c
-
Eggs... .......10c
5utw r,crearjiery2c Fancy country ...12c Choii country..09c
MI8CKLLANEOU8. WoQiiirino merino, washed.... ..3335 ' un washed medi,. ..... ,2022
verjf coarse , . . . v. . . . , ... . u
Baby Garriages
i
H a timothyl 1 , 75 Bran.. ,,., ....10.50 Clover seed, . . 5.00
Sugar cured ham 12 Bacon clear side 11
Feathers, gops
Wheat (May ji,.,. 104 i Pork.. ...;-,
.12 45
Corn
Oata
-O.I
26
Lara.....M?.. 7.05
Ribs
6,2
and daliver fr Of rvffl
ehararo av ithln 700 milee of Chtcak. Send for atetofQf
11 AS. KAISEK. Mfr., Cfl-4 Vtyboue X. . ;
thorouchlv tavjrht by MAIL. ''GliSHHUfMa
BRYANTS BUINEaS COhhEGE, Buffialo, T..v
" Xnnn e Pasrea of the lAla 'M
TJUS JBCHO BlCCiSIO cOt Xafayatt", Ia4?
, w...0 ...... 'ir rwii i... :m?,
INU 15-8B IN1PI a :
tfonrer a favoj- ty menuonwK ympapwr.
WW
B)(o. .T)rT Piu. Sf,,
. M a. i
orcum & oaur pu rr wi. . i mmm -aa- ;
- - V-v".
