Bloomington Courier, Volume 15, Number 47, Bloomington, Monroe County, 7 September 1889 — Page 3

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NEWS OF THE WEEK.

DOMESTIC; " 1

tPhetriat of the Crouin suspects, is pro-

The G. At U. Encampment adjourned j The report of Texas f over in the Chorokee -xsotiDLtry is denied. ; ' " G;; B. Grahanr claims to have gone, over Niagara Fall in a barrel Sunday morning. ' Mrs. Sullivan, mother of John Ii., died at Boston, Friday. - John . Teas oh a drunk. ; September 2d was Labor Day,, and w generally. observed, throughout the countayv . 'A, " r,. . '- - J;' f KearlyS(jOOO strangers' were attracted 0 Milwaukee by the & &d Encampinent. ' '."'' '' . v'.!l j: i The Gronin suspects are to be tried to)Kethex that is,, they haye., been refused separate trials. v ".,--,A . In a match game of billiards at Chicago, 3Priday evenincr. Schaeffer made the ro-

3 r Varkablo run of 8S1 points." .'x- WilHanj JShaw the dead millionaire railfk"; sjfeadk of Pi

SSpfe '- oept the mines of W. L. Scott, has been

BCbueu. xolii siue luaut? cuuucoaivua. "V?m. Terhuhe hanged himself at Newark N. J;, because another man had been adjudged a better sheep-killer than he.

tMil&-M' "wiUbe about OOOOOOf galibiiv';.ai: the

. brandy output-will reach 1,000,000 gallons. The late Charlemagne Tower, of Phfla delphia, theT millionaire mine operator, and counselor, leftan estate Talued?at 121,000;- ".". ait-1! " -

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01iverWcndeli

Holmes celebrated his

eightieth birthday, Thursday. He received Itandreds of congratulatory letters and telegrams. ? . , "v- '"."''' ; -; The announcement1 has been made at Washington that G. H. Bargar will be

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tive Committed

Russell; Harrison, son the President T arrived.at New York, Thursday, from hia

C i.te?R' from royalty-wbile in England.

. Ex-President Cleveland has formerly ao cepted his appointment as -a- member of the

'.. - ' " organizatioh for -fte International Exposition in 1893. ' 'iW : Henry Shaw the St IiOuis phUanthopist "!T i r who died last vreek, willed bis gardens and i-4 0 I j the bulk of his wealth to1 the City of St. ' iis: He was iwOrth nearly 15,000,000.

" Hv H. -Warner; tneneaa oi sne proprietary - medicine establishment, has agreed to sell t the business to a British syndicate for tUK&OQO; Theguaranteemoney has beea Over sixty prisonersT are in-; jail at IHchita, Kansas, awaiting tmalthirteen of . Whom are charged ivith -mtirdei and many

iot&ers f or horse and cattle stealing Altogether there -are over 300 cases on . - the iJocibaK'.-'-' " v...-, '-- ' At Sopris, a small mining camp ih Colotadoy an eight-year-old daughter of James DaHochy started to kindle afire, with coal t' The can exploded; burning the girl to ideath and fatally-burning tbe moopr- who attfemptedto saTeejehiittr".':.

The business portion of Sackett Harbor,

Thursday

000. The

tax payers recently Voted down a proposi-

tion'to pnrehasea fire engine; In 1387 fire ; 3 caused a loss of $35,t)O0 in. the same village. ' Tb&town of Gardiner, en the edge ef Kational Park was entirely destroyed by

fire-Saturday: Only bne-Aonse was saved

outof about thirty in alL ; All the troops mad other Government employes iii Yellow Stone National Park had been en gaged all last week in fighting the fires in the park. Reimnnd- Holzheyv the "Black Bart?1 irf Wisconsin, the stage? robber, wasJ captared Saturday in Mouquette coantyir He Is a young man, a German. He confesses to aU'bis crunesf whiclr are : many.; His latest undertaking, it will be remembered, was the robbinof the Gpgcbic stage about two weeaoV El Bio Rey, the greatest, two-year-old

race horse m the world, carried 136 pounds at Westchester; Saturday, anddefeated

thebest colfe in the East," running the three-quarters of a mile in th,e undreamed-

tfff'fy - of time of 1 clipping a full second from

and no hopes are entertained of their -recovery The others Stephen Clihst, Michael Dzerko, John Dudas, and S. S. Schtdtz were' frightfully burned, but will recover. All are married except Lane." ' . '.' .

The cause of the accident is not known.

It is supposed foreign gases generating in

the ladle caused tho metal to boil over, but this is'only a surmise. The mill was not

damaged. . ' . . . .

ANOTHER RACE WAR. A Srlong Klot at New , Orleans 500 Shot P-:: JWrer-severalt: Wounded. A race war occurred at Gouldsboro Sta tion, a suburb of New Orleans, early Sun (day morning, in which five hundred shots were fired, a colored woman' killed aud six or eight colored people wounded. A -sum

umary of the affair is given below :

An excursion . train had just returned from Baton! Rouge freighted with about five hundred colored people, more than half of whom were women and children, and either just before or very shortly after the train had come to a stand-still, two or three shots were fired, which caused a

tremendous panic among the excursionists,

who threw themselves from the train pellmell and scampered away in two... or three different directions under a decidedly brisk fusillade from Winchester rifles, shot-guns and revolvers. Those who witnessed the

.scene describe it as one of tho wildest ex

citement. Shortly before the arrival of the train a small house had burned down just beside the levee, but the remains of the fire threw considerable light on the scene and- ' enabled the panic stricken negroes to make their way to the street car track and down the . railroad nearly or quite as rapidly as though it had been daylight, while those who were firing among them were enabled to determine at "least as to the general direction in which the negroes were hurrying. . The story of . the row and its origin differ very widely; . The negroes say that before the arrival of the train there was a large force of armed white men awaiting its arrival, and that some ten minutes after the train had stopped, and after a portion of the excursionists had; reached the street ears; and while others were still on board the train, these white men, without any sort of provocation, opened fire on theretreatingcrowd; . The white men's version of the affair, as giveniby eye-witnessed, differs very materially from that of the negroes'. They state that there were only some half dozen white men concerned in the, affair, and that the shooting' was commenced by the negroes before the train had stopped.- Two shots were fired from the train at a white boy named Burmeister just as the train was coming into the station. Then William Miller was shot in the face by a negro, as the latter was getting off the train, , and then it was that B; Miller, a police ofacer of Gouldsboro and brother of the i wounded man, attempted to arrest the would-be murderer. At this the negroes opened fire and the latter returned the fire. The shooting then became general and the excursionists fled panic-stricken from the scene. The whites in and about Gouldsboro seem ed disinclined to talk, and with the exception of Officer B. Miller and a young man named IJstesseemed to know next to nothing of the affair. - K .,"

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the.record. Brittanicalso cut down' the record for five-eighths by a sn.;rmning it in fifty-nine seconds. - ' " ' ;vSamuel tS; Showalter,'aged 69j ofDaytoiR

4 '0.? died"Tuesday,the result of ;a dose of the Elixir; v Immediately after the insctioa

Was made his limbs began to swell, and his

a at-q zittv Tvrdat .TIoMi iAofm Tint.H "MiTUul

j $ V ; poisoxt Gangrene set in and his bodybes? tiTN". mg putrid, the flesh chipped off in flakes as 64" vV'- a " lare as a man's haadj7 and he became a 9& wM -;t M horrible-nbi ectr-hef ore death. relieved him.

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? k?; ts .'at,

; -'fy? v awakening Sunday morning; discovered a

rPE-""" burly negro on the stairsof her dwelling,

in the act of making off with an armful of plunder.- - She immediately grabbed the

V!5rw ' v ? the thief and held him until theappearance

C.' r of her husband, who; erappled with "and

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t ' in t.-w? jnauy' succecu ui tuiuwius nun w ui

floor. Then both Mr. and Mrs: Tevisr sat

ifir ":4 theyitoplcumto

upon him until a neighbor" -arrivedi and

the lockup , ;;.c; - -.. ;

FOREIGN.

The great Xiondon stxikecon toues with

the situation unchanged .

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i3f jNortn unma ana japan nave Deen visitea

by a series j of typhoons of unprecedented

severity. At the lowest - estimate five thousand persons nave been' drowned . Maliteo, King of ; Samoa, who was' deported by the German naval forces nearly ? two years ago, returned from 'his exile

Aug.. 11; He was warmly received by the

; Pekin advices are that a number of high Chinese officials have petitioned- Prince Chun to have all Americans employed im

China expelled from the,, empire. It-is;: renorted that Prmco-Chua consented

v- ment for Cork, who last Week was

'Anniwl

.THE GRAND ARMY. 1.:,

Encampment at Mll-'paukee-

Fointu of the Proceedings,

... The Twenty-third National Encampment of the Grand" Army of the Republic was called to order at 10:15 o'clock Wednesday at Milwaukee by the commander in Chief. Soon after the Commander read his ad; dress he said : I am here to give an ac

count of my stewardship. The growth of

par organization has been' steady and healthy. Strong as it isT it has never been, and j trust never will be, used for partisan purposes, or to gratify the personal ambitions of any man or set of men. The greatest gain during the year has . been in the 'Department of Missouri. Eight Departments show a gain of membership in good standing of 15,834, distributed as follows: Illinois, 285 j Iowa, 1,513; Nebraska, 1,709;

Pennsylvania, 1,746; New York, 1,995; ; City, was in the habit of. jumping on Bee

Ohio 2,003; Wisconsin 2,033; Missouri, ; Line freight trains and riding to and fro 8,652. The net gain in . membership during ' between his homo and place of work. On the year (in good standing), was 21,481. ! Saturday ho was struck by a switch target

INDIANA STATE NEWS. ' Vincennes bas a five-foot vein of fire day. . Madison county schools require 165 teachers.. . . Randolph county claims 390 miles of

free pikes.

Shelbyville will probably erect a soldiers' monument. Fifty cases of typhoid fever are reported at Corydon. Typuoid fever is ravaging Dundee,Blaokford county. The Farmers' Alliance is being organized in Madison county. CrawfordsvUie dedicated a now 18,000 Christian Church, Sunday. A snow-white English sparrow is among the strange things of Muncie, Logansport saloon keepers are paying the increased license under protest. The corner-stone of the new German Luthern Church has been lad at Seymour. Elkhart county claims more, real estate transfers than any other county in the State. . .. ...... , Drought and-grub worms have materially damaged the corn crop in the Wabash valley. The Indianapolis base ball club, sticks closely to its position near tho bottom of the list. . .. " It is proposed to change the street railway in Eyansville to the electric motor system. Mrs. D. Ii. Bouslog, of Middletown, was killed by the kick of a cow she was mak

ing, Friday.

The Stanton family held a reunion at liberty, Thmsday, vith aviarge number of Stan tons in attendance. ......... , J Crawford county, has a full grown county-, seat war? 1 It-is propbsed'to remove ; the court-house from Leavenworth to English. Edmund Pettiford (colored) , aged one hundred and four, and doubtless the oldest man in Northern Indiana, died on Saturday. Two men entered a Chinese laundry at Peru Saturday night, knocking down the proprietors and robbing-the drawer of $07. V Henry Wildbaoker and his team, fell into a hidden cave while plowing, in Harrison county, and were rescued with difficulty. .., A lamb killing snake, alleged to be sev en teen' feet long and eleven inches in diameter is reported to have been killed near Muncie. ;i Goshen is rivaling Jefferson ville. in its Gretna Green facilities. The eloping parties seeking marriage largely come from Michigan. It is reported that the city jail at Jeffersonyille is haunted by the spirit of Tim Sullivan who hanged himself while in prison in- 18S5. . ... . Winthrop E. Stone, of Knoxvillo, Tenn., has accepted a : professorship in Purdue University made vacant by the resignation of Professor Neff. ... State Statistician Peele is about to send out circulars for the purpose of getting statistics on the industrial and general condition of labor. ,r, John McClellan, of Jefferson ville, va6 bitten on the hand by a .mosquito. The hand swelled to twice its natural size, ang John jamo near dying. Miss Anna Jones .died at Jay Bridge, Maine, Thursday, aged 87 years. She had been an invalid for seventy years, and confined to her bed for sixty years. , Ten thousand bales of straw,, lying near the track at New Carlisle, awaiting ship ment, were destroyed by fire the past week. The trouble originated from a flying spark. As the result of a trivial quarrel between Milton Elliott and Henry Turner,of Landisvillo, Elliott was stabbed sixteen times with a pocket knife in the hands of burner. He may recover. ': 1 . The first train oyer the new Evansville & Richmond Railway was run into Bedford Sunday, amid general rejoicing. The same train also crossed over the line into Jackson county.. ..." - -.1At LakeviUe Peter Hathaway returned home drunk, and compelled his wife to get up from her sick bed and cook supper for himself and a boon companion. She did so and shortly afterward fell dead. ' Isaac Skillman, aged eighteen, of Union

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gpaenteaced to ttw months imprisonment, '2. ' TOdcoaviotion of having held a National-

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- Jst 'meeting which had - been proclaimed,

Monday, taken to Galway to serve out

his sentenced The streets in the icinit? of the prison were. crowded with hia; sup. porters, ;who cheered ami during the journey to- the raiiwayr station' and . were most enthusiastic in their demonstrationf

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A ri 'Twoeir were killed and seven others

injured at the Homestead steel-works of

& Co., at Homestead, Pa.,

by the boiling over1 of a

ladle contammlrtem: tons of molten steel..

TVRirec will' die. "About 3

engaged casting

two inoldsi

boiled" over,

Horrible Fate of a Gang of Workmen iu f. Carneeio?9 Mi mestediMill; -

A Qm" Jst""--' v CamegievPbipps;

mW-Mr - .ESaay afternoon,

The Committee on-pensions have been un

able to make any progress in seeming consideration by Congress of the pension bills recommended by the Columbus En campment. The reason for. this failure will be given by the committee, and I know that its members are in no way to blame. The . question of pension legislation will come before you again- for discussion and recommendation. . ' .r. ; He strongly advocated a service pension bill,' and said "the service pension bill will comer The day is not far distant when" an honorable discharge from the Union Army or Navy shall be all the evidence required to secure a pension to its holder. .. The measures recommended by the National Encampment should not be antagonized by conflicting measures urged by departments or posts.' Unityof action will secure satisfactory results ; a divided council will contribute to defeat. Our demands should be reasonable and consistent. Let the bondholders of the country remember that the men who rendered their securities valubale, the men who have ever insisted that they be paid to the uttermost farthing, principal and interest, of the money advanced by them to the Statelet them remember that these men have claims upon the. State at least equal to those of the bondholders. ; Very unexpectedly the delegates proceeded to the election of officers,'- Wednesday evening. The sentiment seemed so : overwhelminy in favor of Gen. Alger

that tiie names of all of thecandidates were,.

withdrawn and Gen. Russell A. Alger of Michigan was elected Commander-in-Chief by acclamation, Col. A. G. Weissert, of Milwaukee, was elected Senior Vice Comr mander, and John F. Iiovett. of New Jer- : sey, Junior Vice Commander. ' . . .: ", A resolution endorsing the administration, of Commissioner of Pensions Tanner was adopted unanimously; At night a

sham fight between land and sea forces

was witnessed by 250,000 people, and was a sublime spectacle. Boston was decided upon as the' next place of meeting. The; encampment refused at its session of Thursday, to recognize the Sons of Veterans as an auxiliary to the G; A. R., because of a disturbing faction in the former organization. The Women's Relief Corps and similar organic zatlons were not given format endorsement, but were bidden God-saeed in their wprk.

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';v-$gsS? o'elock-a;gang:of nine men were p. &i&-$B- in ;thU;beartb departmenti

tmM Mftfi bad lust filled

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scattering themolten steelin all directions.

- -i The unioixunavsTnen were unaDie w get

'.out of the pit iii time -to . escape the awful

Tthi nd all engaged

i--. ? nom my ; ournea.

&jg?? Andrew Kebbler was thrown into the

which): there- were . about three

T;-' roasteu: a?ve. Kebbler was,- fortyrtwo.

o- L'?" .TAnwon? iwootii? mormoil . .

at., TjL :' J f5V N 5?' " T"Tiftliolaa-.rBbwerai'' the vnitman . acred

iiV 'twehtf iS&'ir: :ratfd'was''Sociba64y burned that the flesh

idly

Vdroppedfron -hisibones; -ours: . ' ' ".

The-clothingJ of .William . Fagah, Joseph

He died ih a few

. ., " . A Captured Schooner.. The schooner Pathfinder arrived at Victoria, B. C., Thursday night, from the Bearing Sea. Captain O'Leary reports that bis vessel was boarded by the revenue cutter Rush, in Bearing Sea, July 29. Lieutenant Tuttle took 854rseal skins that were on board and all the guns and ammunition and then placed the quartermaster of the Rush on board with instructions to take the schooner to Sitka, After the Rush left the Pathfinder headed for Victoria despite; .the protest of the prize crew. r K r Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder and delicious Flavoring Extracts . are -exactly as represented, free from all

adulterations, and the most perfect

UiltUtJ.

The man with a boil on his neck

m1im&. waVburned fromj never lprrcrouble. Hehasenpugrli of it.' , 8 v " - -,

1 their bodies. There sufferings are terrible,

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and killed. . V7arden Patten, of the Prison South, has JUSu added 500 new books to the convicts' library. It now vu tains 3,500 volumes, consisting of prose, fiction and historical works, and is one of the finest libraries in southern Indiana. " The Board of Health of Connersvillo corrects the report which has been given out, that an epidemic of typhoid fever is prevailing. There have been less than twenty cases in the city and vicinity, with but one death, iand every' patient has been cared for. The late Mrs. Allen Hamilton, of Fort Wayne, b.ecraeathed 81,000 in aid of woman suffrage, the money to be held in trust by Mrs. Stowe and Susan B. Anthony.. Mrs. Hamilton was never active in the propaganda of woman suffrage, and her ,bequest excites surprise. A. H. C. Beam, aged seventy-three, of Lambert's Station, while alighting from a train, fell and dislocated his shoulder. The shock rendered him unconscious, after Which he revived and walked to his home, two miles distant, unassisted; The dislocation was not reduced until the following day, the first attempt failing. 'Squire Huckeby, the noted justice, who has been theobest friend of Kentucky eloping couples to be found in New Albany, has three distinct rituals he uses in marriages. When he has an intuition that he is to receive but $1 fee the ceremony is the very

essence of brevity. A $3 fee is slightly more ornate, while $5 brings out the 'Squire'3 powers to that degree' that the newly married pair leave with the feeling

that they are high up in the social scale.

Robert Hessler," of Connersville, for several years has been studying the weeds of Fayette county by which is meant use

less plants, injurious to the farmer and

growing wild in cultivated grounds and

meadow. He has a record of thirty-two

new weeds which have appeared in that

county in the past seven years, one-half of

Which are American and the remainder

tof foreign nativity, principally European.

3f teen of them were discovered along the railroads, showing that the trains furnish facilities for distribution of strange plants. He has made a record of all of them, giving time of first appearance in the county and other interesting data, and his work is proving of inestimable value to the farmer and small fruit grower. L. L. Wilson, member of the Legisla ture from Shelby county and Jane Fox of the same county were arrested Monday,charged with violating the pension laws. Tho affiV davit on which the arrest was made makes some serious charffes against Wilson and the Fox woman, who, i t is alleged, wa s s party to the t ran aaction . Accordi ng to the affidavit Jennie Fox was at one time . the wife of a Union soldier, named Oliver Snyder. Soon after the war Snyder died, and the woman obtained a pension, which she drew until .1875, when sho married Daniel Fox. After living with Fox a few years and haying three children by him, ho died, and then the woman, it is aliened sot about to-have her pension renewed. It is charged that in order to recover her pension, WU Boh. went before tho Circuit Court and mao affidavit thvit the woman was never the "wife of Fox, and that the three children were' illegitimate. Upon the facts set forth in the allegod false affidavit the

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pension was renewed by the department, and Mrs. Fox received $1,200 back pay. Tlie Federal authorities claim that they have sixteen cases of a similar character against Wilson, all in Shelby county. Michael Posse, Treasurer of Shelby county, is short $13,000 in his accounts. Mr. Posse stated Friday that he first discovered the shortage in April last; that he had used tho money to pay off debts standing against him 'before he went into office, aud that tho receipts of the offieelSPlH the four years amounted to $10,000. He also said ho had real and personal property to the value of from 10,000 to $12,000, which he was ready to turn over to his boudsuien and give his note for the balance The debts, he says, he paid of i with the money, had accumulated upon him for ten years prior to his taking tho of ace, and were duo to William Henry, deceased, John W. Robinson and others.. Mr. Posse is a Democrat and a prominent Odd-fellow. He has boon m poor health for several years. This summer he has been confined to his house ajgreat deal of tho time. The Commissioners will ...at once order an investigation of the boons of the office. Mr. Posso was considered one of the most re sponsible man in Shelby county, and his shortage has greatly surprised the people His races for the office he held have cost him a great deal of money, while his living expenses have not been heavy. TnAT SCHOOL IJOOK LAW. , Tvison, Blakeman & Co., of Chicago,brought suit in the Federal court at Indi anapolis, Wednesday, to enjoin tho Indiana School Board from, introducing in tho city schools the geographies to bo, furnished under the contract with the Indiana School Book Compau y. The complaint says that prior to April, 1SSS, Guyotts Geographies were in use in the Indianapolis schools, and that. in March of that year the School Board Vdisplaced Guyptt's series m6 substituted Swinton's, published by the plaintiffs in this suit. It is then alleged that after the now geographies had been adopted, Ivison, Blakeman & Co. entered into ii written contract, with the School Board to furnish $10 books for six years at a stipulated price. This contract, the complaint says, is still in force, and will be for nearly .five years yet, and ean not be vitiated by any . act of the Legislature, because the Constitution of the United States provides that "no State shall pass any law impairing the obligation of... contracts." Therefore, the complaint holds, any statute adopted after this contract was entered into is null and void. It is also " maintained that the new law does not apply to the schools of Indianapolis, because they are not mentioned in the act. ... '. $ The complaint seeks to give numerous other reasons why the new law is null and void. One is that it i3 in contravention of good government and safe public policy, because it seeks ana proposes to establish a monopoly by placing the manufacture and sale of school books in the hands of one man. A second reason is that it seeks to make the Township Trustees the State's agents, bailies and salesmen of the alleged monopoly, when the constitution of the

State says that ."no man's particular service shall be demanded without just compensa

tion:'

The complaint says further that the

statutes have for many years provided h at school text-books should be selected

by local School Boards. This new law, it

is maintained, does not repeal the old act,

and it is therefore claimed that local

School Boards still have the legal right to

say what textr books shall be used m the

schools they control.

In conclusion, the complaint alleges that

the new law has no claini whatever for

validity. The people of Indiana, it is as

serted, have never delegated to the Legist lature the authority to say What books

shall be purchased, what price shall be

paid, and who shall have charge of the

education, training and conduct of their

children. Many minor reasons are given why the law will not stand a test when measured by the provisions of the National and State constitutions, and the plaintiff

alleges that if they are not permitted to carry out their contract with the Indianapolis School Board thev, will.be damaged to the amount of several thousand dollars. They say that, believing they were to sup

ply the city with geographies for six years,

they have manufactured a largo number of

books specially for that city, and that the

stock of such on hand is valued at $2,000.

An immediate hearing of tins case was

asked for, and by agreement of all parties

concerned, the petition for a temporary

restraining order will be heard Monday;

Superintendent of Public Instruction La

Follette has issued a circular to County

Superintendents advising pupils not to ex

change their old books for the . new at the prices offered, but to keep and utilize them

as works of reference. Mr. LaFollette's action has caused some surprise, though he

has all along been opposed to the new law.

STATE CONVENTIONS. Ohio Democrats Nominate ; James B y-"'- ' ' ! Cnoophell. The Ohio Democratic State Convention met at Dayton Wednesday with an immense attendance of members of the party. After prayer ...by Rev... Dr.. McFarlin, Dr. Norton, who called the convention to order, made a brief address, outlining the pur poses of the convention. He made his speech the vehicle for a caustic critioisni of the Republicanparty, and especially of Governor Foraker, the candidate of that party for re-eleetion. This was followed by a eulogy of the Democratic party , and its principles. His . allusion to Grover Cleveland as the noblest and greatest, of living Democrats, was marked by long continued applause. The Hon. M. D. Hartcr, of Richland county, 'Was elected permanent President and Lewis' G. Bernard, of Hamilton county, Secretary. Hon. John A. McMahon made the report of the Committee on Resolutions; prefacing it with the statement that it "was not a compromise, but was unniamously adopted, and that the committee was fully agreed that there should be no backward step iu the matter of tariff reform. Great Applause. . ' "" The platform was as follows: I. The Democracy of Ohio, in convention assembled, approve the declaration of prin-

; ciples made by the National Democracy in

St. Louis in 1888, and especially that part of it demanding a reduction of tariff taxes. We will continue the battle for tariff reform until the cause of the people is triumphant. - 2. We regard trusts, in whatever form

organized, as the legitimate result of ur

present tariff system, and we demand the repeal of all-tariff taxes that enable them to extort from the people exorbitant prices for the products they control.

3. Wo again acknowledge tho great debt

of gratitude the. nation owes to tho heroes of the late war, and we declare in favor of just, liberal and equitable pension laws. 4, Wo denounce the Republican administration for its repeated violation . of- its pledges in behalf of the civil service reform. - ... 0. .W.e. denounce the present State administration as the most partisan, demoralizing and extravagant in. our history. We invito the careful investigation of all citizens in our financial affairs as shown by the official records. . .. . 0. Wo protest against the repeated en

actment of laws, vesting the appointing

power in the governor, enabling him . to control the local boards of pur loading cities While depriving them of self government, it constructs a YJt PpJoaJ ma

chine that is at all timW'daVgerous, and in the ha.nds of a partisan oh Lef executive has become a positive menace to the people of the State. .,, 7. The nomination of the governor of Ohio for a the third termm violation of all preced ent, by the notorious and disgrace ful use of patronage at his. command is an outrage against the people and should be rebuked at the polls. 8. We heartily favor home rule In Ire

land ; we demand it also for Ohio. While

favoring all laws that sactedly protect the ballot-box and the honest voter, we demand

the enactment of laws that will enable our

cities to choose their ow$n servants and control their own affairs; James E. Campbell .of Sutler county, Virgil P. KJirie of Cuyahoga county aiid Lawrence T. Neal of Richland, county were placed in nomination foif Governor. The first ballot result ed: Campbell, 373 Neal 252 Kline 149. Several counties quickly changed te Campbell and others to feal and the vote then stood Campbell 388, Neal 692, Kline 109. On the second ballot Campbell received 397, Neal 299, Kline 33. The nomi. nation was received with, wild enthusiasm. Hon. James Edwin Campbell was born in Middletown, Butler county, Ohto,'.July 7, 1843, and is the son of Dr. Andrew Campbell. He coqies of Scotch extinction, hence his pugnaci ty and staying qualities. He served during the rebellion in the Union navy, became a master1 s-raate on the gunboats Elk and Naiad, serving on Mississippi ana Red River flotillas, and taking .part in many battle! and engagements. He went into the servioe before he was twonty-one. He was elected Prosecuting Attorney In 1875, and re-elected in 1877,' and served three terms in Congress-, is a Knights Templar, Mason, -member of the Knights of Py thjas, G A. R. and Elks. Montana Democrats, held ' a large and harmonious convention, Tuesday. H. JC. Toole was nominated fcr Governor, . . Pennsylvania Prohittitionlsts, Wednesday, nominated J. R. Johnson for State Treasurer. The platform endorses the platform of 1S88, favors the Australian ballot system and universal suflrage and declares that prohibition will settle the labor question by insuring better wages, iteady work and larger profits.

WASHINGTON NOTES. . T"he public debt was increased $6,Q76,09 during August. Congressman MoEXaley thinks there should be no extra sesnion of Congress. Hon. John 6. Carlisle has returned from his trip to Mexico. , He expresses the opinion that the Cherokee strip will be opened to settlement soon. There are 1,2H cases, on the United States Supreme Court , docket.- It will be f .vo years before the' hist case on the dockiet can be reached . There is said to be a mortgage of $120,000 h?ld on the White House by the State of Virginia for money advanced to President Washington with which to build it. It is announced that Mr. Ashburner has been appointed an expert to collect statistics about the consumption and production of coal for the next census. It would seem from the name of tho gentleman that

it is the most appropriate selection that

Superintendent Porter has made.

Ex-Speaker Carlisle, in an interview,

Friday, on the speakership of the next

House of Representatives, expressed his belief that MoKinloy, of Ohio, would be chosen for the 'position. Koed, of Maine;

and McKinloy, he said, would bo the lead

ing candidates, but tie fact that the Secretary of State was from Maine would convince most of the members that to confer additional honors on that State would'' be

unfair.

Since Aug. 3, 1887, to and including 'Sat-

urdny, . the.Treasury Department has pur

chased $77,304,350 four per cent, bonds and $118,185,350 four-and-a-half percent, bonds

era total of 195,490 700. Their cost was

$320,852,875, and they would have cost at maturity S269,724.32 so the government

has saved $42,871,446:. In the last ten dajrs the purchases amoun ted to $17,978,800, at a

cost of $22,515,859. The largest purchase

was Aug. 27, when $0,339,000 was paid out for $4,945,000 in lionds.

Reprosentative-elCiCt Evans, of Tennes

see, ana uenerai LJoff, ex-uongressman

and recently candidate for Governor of

West Virginia, held a consultation, Satur

day, with the representative of the Tobacco Growers Association with reference to a raid on the next House of Representa

tives for the repeal of the tax on that pro

duct.. They concluded to secure pledges from all the candidates. for Speaker of the House that if they were elected they would appoint a committee on ways and means who -will report a repeal bill favorably. Such candidates as refuse to make this

pledge will beboycotted by the tobacco

men. -. . . - -

Public Printer Palmer has had to intro-.

tluce a forest of pillars into the Govern

ment Printing Offltje to prevent the- floors pf that ancient and rotten building from falling through. Notwithstanding the fact that the structure has been condemned 4by the building inspector and the fire department, the government continues to use it, and not only imperils several hundred thousand dollars' worth of property. bat twenty-two hundred lives. Congress has been repeatedly appealed to for a new building, but Mr. rRandalPs ideas of economy have stood in the way. Mr. Palmer will make another appeal at the approaching session, and Will support it with -a report from a commission of architects that the building is in a dangerous condition, not alone from fire- but collapse. The baking powder investigation, which hasbsen: conducted under direotion 'of the CbAists of the Department of Agriculture, has been completed and results compiled in a bulletin. The analysis of a large number of sampres of various baking powders, and the conclusions derived there? from, the report says, are not such as to create any general alarm lest the American people should suffer injury to health from the use of baking powders. . The in

vestigations show that even with the best of tartrate powders the residue remaining

in one loaf of bread procured .with it was of the same character of seidlitz powder.

and in quantity exceeding that of an ordi

nary seidlitz powder by oyer 50 per cent. The report gives some interesting facts, as to the baking powder industries; and says that the American people pay at least $25,000,000 a year for baking powder, while the cost of it to the manufacturers is less than a third of that amount.

And Yet Sihe Wasn't Tired. "Pm awful t;ired," Dusenberry said as he Sung hiniseif into a chair aftei Supper. , :f ;.w : What did yon dp to-day?" meekly asked his wife. 'Filled a large order, wrote three letters, wen t twice to the bank, and higgled with Branson until he threw $9 off his bilh'! And that made you tired, h? Well, I prepared three meals, baked fiix loaves of bread, got the children ready for school, mended all your clothes, cleaned the stair-rods stoned three pounds of raisions, picked live quarts of berries, weeded the flower bed, white-washed the cellar, and shased an impudent tramp off the premises. . And I don't say that I'm tired either!" Detroit Free Press,

What Is Written, Stays. ... It is said that all the newspapers in Russia are really edited by the Czar. H'm; this probably accounts for the fact that in Russia nobody ever comes charging up-stairs out of breath, bouncing into the office with a big club and demanding the name of the man who wrote a certain article reflecting on the Musical Union or the chairman of the Relief Committee. He's afraid he might have logo all the way to Siberia to And him. Burdette

, "Mamma's Gittfn' Bel tor;' There is gladness In tho househoid; : The shadow fatlrs away That drtikened all the sunshine Of many a -summer day. - "O, mamma's getting better," Tne happy children cry, And the light of hope shines bright again In the lovit'g husband's eye. In thousands of honies women are "sick unto death" with the ..terrible diseases so common to their sex, and it would seem as if all the happiness had gone out of life and the household in consequence. For when the wife and mother suffers all the family suffers with her. This ought not to be, and it need not be, for a never-failing remedy for woman's ailments is at hand. Many a home has been made happy because tho shadow of disease has been ban

ished from it by the potent power of DrPierco's Favorite Prescription the un

failing remedy for all weaknesses and dis.

eases peculiar to women.

$500 Reward offered for an incurable case

of Catarrh by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's

JEtemedy. 50 cts., by druggists.

"There is an. art in pulling on

gloves, M says a fashion paper. Come

to think of it, you have to get your

hand'in, as it were, in putting on, a

gloye properly, .. . V .'

E. A. ROOD, Toledo, Ohio, says-. "HolFs Ca

tarrh Cure cured my vife i f catarrh flfte n

years ago and she has had no return of it.. It's a sure cure " Sold by all Druggists. 75ci

Mr. Oyster is making a great stew

about his being bounced from the public printing office in Washington.

When Dobbins' Electric Soap was first

made in 1864 it cost 20 . cents a bar- It is

precisely the same ingredients and quality

now, ana doesn't cost halt. 5uy it 01 your grocer and preserve your clothes. If he hasn't it, he will get it. h

It is believed by leading jewelers

that the proposed Diamond Trust

would be a glittering success. .

If tho Sufferers from. Consumption,

Scrofula and General Debility will try

Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver, Oil, with Hypophosphites, they will find immediate

relief and a permanent Denent. uv. fi. v. Mott, Brentwood, Cal., writes: "I. have used Scott's Emulsion with great advan

tage in cases of Phthisis, Scrofula and Wasting Diseases. It is very palatable. Sold by Druggists. ..." . ... EttPOBTANT. '- . . ,. . X? Whon visiting New York City, save Baggage Express and Carriage Hire, and stop at the Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central Depot. 600 Handsomely Furnished Rooms at $1 and upwards per day.: European plan. Elevators, and all Modern Conveniences. Restaurants supplied with the best Horse cars and elevated lailroads to- all depots, You. ian live better for less money at the Grand Union Hotel than at any other first-class, hotel in the City. ; siavin's Infallible Female Toni6V as a female regulator, for all female complaints, such as weaknesses, change of life, painful or suppressed menstruation, has-, ho equaL, It relieves instantly. If your druggist does not keep it send at once to S. I. F.. T. Co., Indianapolis, Ind;, for full particulars. fi THE MJKjETS.f r ' Indianapolis, Sppt,:4, 1&S9. . gbain. '

The Lost at Johnetowm The latest attempt; to register the survivors of the flood at Johnsto wn has resul ted in failure. The difference be tween the total number of those who report themselves to he survivors, and the number of- people Johnstown is supposeii, to have had before?' she was engulfed by the destroying wave is only 1000; and the list of dead from the various morgues aggregate 3,900. There -Is now no hope that the number who les their lives through the bursting of tlie Souths Fork dam will ever-be determiiaed with any degree of v neon

racy. . j . "

It is not probable that another attempt will be made to register the survivors.': No one1 knows exactly how many people Johnstown had before the fiood, aiad what is a more discouraging fact, there -are people who in the presence of relief supplies and with the prospec.bf a di vision of relief funds are only too willing, to figure among the survivors of once happy Johnstown. This is one of the weaknesses of human nature, and people in the. Conomaugh region a re no better than the average. A count of the dead handled at' the morgues, and the findings of searchers for-bodies in the: river helow John town, will form the only reliable death record, And there are undoubtedly many bodies now slowly wasting away in the water, held down by sancLbr by rockstor snags. Wisconsin, .'

To judge from the way in which mis-

plaoed affection s now find expression, the pangs of unreqvdtted love are eyi dently shooting- pains M ? " , Tli e Grand .Frarf qulsit of Vigor. The daal operation of digestion "and assimilation (s the grand prerequisite of vigor. To insure the conversion . f food into rich nutritious blood, it !is only noeesary to use with persist? encj aud; systematically Hontetter's Stomach Bitters. The fountain head of supply, in the an' imai economy is t!-e stomach. To regulate, to invigorate tbat organ, and tbus facilitate Ite dig stio and assimilative processes, should be the chief aim of tb use troubled with a deficit of stamiiiEu Nervousness insomnia, feeble-; appetite thene arc usually : tmeeabte to im paired digesikm. Overcome tois an i you of necessity dismiss i'2 multifarious,- pe plcxiug nd harass-, ing synuitoms. The emaciated can never hope to gam flesh so long as assimilation is imperfect. The Blthrssurmoiums the only ob-taele to an Increase not only of vigor, but or bodily substance. Conquer also vith the Bitters, malaria, kidney and - liver complaint, constipation and rheumatle. trou wje. Thoroughness cnaiacterlzes

useueiiw. . . . . ,. - ::, It cloesnH take muchto- cause aw tall man to get uppish i r r ; . , A Pocket Cigar Case andr nvoiof fSCanisUPsunch," all for 23c. ;r, ".

You take Hood's BarsaptirMU, if you have vfBK pure blobd, have lo t yon. appetite, )avei tM tired fdf.bnk or kr troubled bv sick headachei.

nsr or rt trou Die a rv

dyspepsia or biUune s. It baa; accomplish

wonders ior tnousands 01 amicted people, an if riven a fair trial, is reafonabiv; certein(,toVi(

vnu ironri. ' ,'" . ...

Iiiave been troubled a great d!al with bw

acne, nao no aprtetite, no streugtu, anp. xwvii mean as s.nyooe could, and be about my : wprl tt(ni fdl'inn'lJnnrl'D BaniiiuiinllA T Kaira nntni

oiv wjiujj uvy. RUBiajitUDi uaiu mv.i

tne neadncnc, my rood n a relished, ana see to do me Kood, and f-haV'S felt rnvself asbi

stronger every day." M. A. Hxeismak, 19 Gran(

Avenue. Kimna.iapiQjj.JJich.

Hood's Sarsaparill

Sold by all druggists. 81; six for j. m

Ely's Cream Bain 01 ves relief -at once for

Oplc iaci

-. --CUBES-- i

Kot a Liquid or Snun ; y ; ply Bm into each nostril Y BROS, 56 ,Ws.rren StX, Y,

42

1

THE BeiiT.'i N VkSTMCHlSati

WEB

TP

For the Family, School, or Professional;

A

m ;

Standard

M M Jbr liinf years

Authority in He Gov't Pi

Office aM U. S. Supreme C

t It is iligUy RecomE.endefi W3S S

Sup ts of Schools M tlie

Colleoe Presidents.

. Nemj all the SclieelH

ffiDea m mis couiiry are oases u

Webster, as Boos PnlMers.4

3000 more Words ani

2000 more Engravings tfiai

Qiner. American mcnoniir.

1

Jmmmm m

mid l)v all Booksellers: IHuatastad

...... Ufwwi,,.!! VMM) PWW4

U. & C. fDEiuilAH ft CO., Put

Pamnhle

Indianapolis.. Chicago....;..... Cincinnati;:... 8t. Louis......... Kew York...... Baltimore...... Philadelphia. Toledo.. Detroit . Minneapolis ;

Liverpool w ...

Wheat I Corn, ) Oats, j Bye

2rd 75

3 rd 1214

2W n

2rd'70

2 r'd 76X

2 r'd 83K

0 79

lw34K2w21

2ye 332; . -

30

35 30. i 40 43

3&K

24 18

26

22

22 . m 60

Clover Seed 4b2

i-', ,. tIYB STOCK.-. Cattle Export grades. ...... Good to choice bhippers . . . Common to medium shippers. Stookors, 500 to 850 lb . Good to choice heifers. Common to medium heifers. . . Goods to choice cows . 3 . . . . . Fair to medium cows. ........ HoGs-Heavy . r. . . . . . . Light......,,

iluACU ............ ...............

TToavv ronffha

Shbkp Good to choice . ......

Fair to medium.

Common.. .......... ..;w. .... Lambs, good to choice ........ Common to medium.. ......... Bucks, per head...... ........ Z. MISCELLANEOUS

...$4.104.50 ... 3.403.00 ; 2.503.15 ... 2.002.75 2.402.85 . ,-1.503.15 ... 1;TD2.70 ... 1.752.20 ... 4.104.20 ... 4,404,60

4.344.35 8.253.75

4.20i 3.65

3.25) 3.50

8.50i

2.i

4 4

t3 5

mm

Pork..,. Lard......... Kihs.........

Indianapolis 1 Chicago I Cincinnati

.... 6 75 6 00

ft w C07

10 75

6 la: 5 IS

Wooic-Fms merino, washed;?.;., . 8335 ' unwashed medium.'. . , .'. . ;.. 2025

very coarse;

Hi..

EOQ8, BUTTEn, POUI.TRT,

EggS 13c Buttercreamery 20o

Fancy dairy, .18c

Choice country . .10c .Feathers . . 85o

Hens per fly ;..... 80 Koosters . ,? , . .80

Turkeys ..... i -. 1 0o

MmVANDTERMfEifriV

SPRAINS.

For 10 Years". Thayer, la., Aug. 22, 1883; I suffered 10 vears since 1878 with strainc

hack and -was in bed 4 months. St. Jacohs Oil

cured me. No return.

'J. C. -STOUT.

T

At Druggists and Dealers: CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., Baltimore. Mtf

Read - 8arbor?s card in' another

column.

Children Cry for Pitcher's Castbria-

When Bahy vrak sick, re gave her Castoiia. When she -was a Child, she cried for Castoris,When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria,, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria.

IF YOIT WISH A GOOD H."K Y O Ti VE It

purchase one of th celebrated SMITH & .WESSON arms. The finest Kmall arms over va anuf actuxvl and tne

M.J.f,,hii.fJl in Mllhr, MRT.fl i.l-l no. Sin

y 1. nntin-n Cifnfw f (.unmnvlilBM II Till

f'-., ..nutotu nmofninfv) hhHtaIV tt tkAMr alin.ll

Uy wrouuht Htec I, carefully inspected for work roaneivp and stock, they are uurlvalt d for flui hi durability and accuracy. Do not, be deceived m. cheap malleofalf) eust-lroa' lB9 nvhnrton tiAid fnr t uc ironuinf! ttrtit'ift ana are not

nniv imrnliablo. but danjforons, . The SMITH &,

WESSON Revolve tb are all stareped fton the 1 barrels with firm's nnme, address and dates or patenta

in

Bin 111 r7Wi

jsc v ajcatuLto eat green apples! For S j. mmr Complain Diarrhoea, CrampColi5, Flux, Cholera Morbus. Congestion, i'd NTouralcia oJ the Stomach and Bowls, Sour Stomach and various terms of Indi. gBtSton. EVEKY BOTTLE GTJAKANTEEB to Oil-r S ttisfaotion or Money REFUNDKD. Price 2.ic.& 50c, by Driiffgists. 25c size aent by mail on receipt of price and 6c' to paypoatage, address, . Grcjilik MEWCINKJ30.. Terre Uaue, Ind.

WABASH COLLEGE, E - CRAWFORDSVli-LE, IND. Collegiate and Preparatorv Departments. Classical, :5c ten tide and Select Courses of stiiav. ; Welleqiiippbd Laboratories for Phsics, Chemistry and Natural History. Museum and Ulustrative col

lections large, bxorary .wutojs. -p ah serm.DBgins Sept II. Winter term Jan. 2, l$K. SptJWS term April -2. For dialogues address ;

flnv ran- d Im f nmlahM .

cures nn-anteed vrtlhoutthel

TrnnhlMi aacCMsfnllV

r'lirt omrtn (Mil. - B OT the

ful troa 'tmm. pi ny pwyr-w-

mehtfoned csn ifcJWw!

PA EBB ft, ao)6 soauiiiunwsi

'IndUnapoIto. IK . XWSt

All letters coatsinmg : itstofron!1

ad sdioiaaB esprte order .

TAe Ottltsi Mtdtcimt in ike WorMU

DR. KSAAC XHOMLPHO

ThSijfe Ls a camruiur DFebareotui

rricrlptioa and has been hi ocastant use; 5or

oentmy. There are few diseases to wtixm are st.bject more distrtssmff an sore'

uwdh.,

pan ;

mm.

HN . I. THOSITSPN, BJ

lbJlshe44lP JONESi

JOSE l F. XCXT LE, President.

$75.00 to $250.00 made working for us Agen-s preferred who can furnish a horse and giv their waole time to .the business. Spare momen s may be profitably employtd also. " A few vacancies in towns and oities. B. F. JOHNSON & CO., 1009 Main Street, Richmond, Va. Please state age and ; business experience, Net:t mindahout sending stamp for reply, B. f. j. & co. t ..: "

HritBlybylfcs

iCiaxoicdC.

Ohioinaal!

Ohio.

3

" X prcBcnwe and toSfy

aorae if s m u i Specific for the certain '

or this disease. O. H, ING BAH AH, MD;, Amsterdam, H.T.

We have sold BIf 6 lot ..many years, and it hat

? riven tae ecst or aace action. -;.- .

Chicago. BL

si.o. Bold bv BrnnttV

none, pernaps. forwnicD more remedies aim .

tried itithontKuceeas. For ail external iwittiai Of the eyes it Is an tofallfble remedy. ;ifOie

tlons are ronowea a wul ueywriau; .wsij

toTite tlie attention or niiysicians to its

sal a hv alldrmocfeta.

1

PAYS THE mi

- Iron L rem. S

EveiT ate scale." far nass m tioo this pp and 1

ioms or BiNfiiM

BrNOHAatrovy;

BVPAi(lnfi fbtrad ad IK VaauUhla i

Have cared many tnousana caaea. ynze pas

first dose symptoms rapidly dlsappaar, adia.1

days at leas; rwo-uura at au nTBDwa

-nym,t TT1 A an fatilMnt TOTtl IKfiaa' IMS I

postage. JXOL H. H. 6iBKEg tMMC AjBsjij

A W WPSRFtCTWITHOUTTIITt

TPinrn man i

circuianofMOOl

o& avsTca or m

Aviv lArtv'ef ArdlnarvVI

Miii nan urilr liwl Al

euxu to cot -nd mate aay A

mom, laany aiyiawanyi urn for lady or ldd

MOODY a, CILrMCinia

m win

mm : mSA

Wanted in every conntt. JVomnBaiiK

under Instruction, In our secret i

encse not. necessary-, sena 2c

DetACtiv Barean Co. 4 Aecade.

W&NTFD7 sample 4 Hr at-fcoatsuSWfcflM

I !H tioalan and tampieeasaiwuni

SALARY. ;q.. ssCiiwrt i

Piso's Bemedy -br Catarrh is the Best, Easiest to Use, add Cheapest.

Sold ' by druggists or sent by raall. 50c R T. HuEeltlne. Warrea. Pai

t

J Eng. Tansy Pihs. tsafe, prompt,, efi (aiinl Tmi lli. nylnliml .ml nnlv Odnn.

ln .woman s aaivauon.-wr. nua bwviu renumony stns. Pkflby nmlt SI. Qi. Warranted. DR. OATQK, B(.x5257rBOSTON.MA8S.

ruuxiisv mzm

inaianapow, mm

MEXICAN CERtUS

F male Bemedy. 1 mohtbtataew

foreircuian,. jr.a.jsvtr3x

confer a favor pv mentioaljui thto l

' m9 mm in aa n Aav HmTtl.-'Wnrt1i''ttAft''J

!S Oiitios notun.ler the .horse's fest Write

U v Safeti Rein-Holier ICompaay;, WNgm . -

WHEH BLOCK, OPfOSTTC, 8TprTttEir ....... - " .. . '. 'tr '&.? . -

N - (Consolidatonbithe Bry

Pre-Eminently the leauihu insirej

And one of the best equipped and largest Businese, Shoij-hand ar d TywrHilcKqiniUjj t'l.ited 'States; Our gra uates, hold lucrauye positions lu this city, .and are PMSM

dofsers. instructors of experience ana bwoububu protewLwaai inwiuu. ' v'. " i

I'lture tne practical oumuvn- vniiuwjs ww.x4, JSrm:JiiTji-ir5 v ith reliable book-keepers, stenographer vpeiuns,. addressi ' ' ' CVrv- f-; - . . ., i ? ; rsKfiHHHI n - i . - rk-iu p. j. HlzEB. Manaear. IndlanBDOl.. m

mmkm

9m ' Mm I 'ift-amBatiiii

Btof nikin thavinor the, ironuino article, and if youl

dealer cannot supply you an order a-nt tg address below -will recciAo prompt and careful, attention;'

IJCscrxntt ve cut axosac ioca i i tumwi uu upuoauoxu SMITH & WESSON, .:. ggr-ientlon this papor. Sprlnirfleldj Slaeg.

-. .. 21-V

vtr write us

what work

you, wish xxx.

do with a well machine.

ii

IS ' , 6REAT

TUBULAR WELL AND PROSPECTING MACHINE famous for snoee e dUxtt where othen have ailsd.

SELF CLEANING. DrUl drops CO te 90 time -a minute. CATAIQOUE FREE.

LOOHIS & H5MAH,

TIFFIN OriiO, l -- 5; .

HstaWished 3867; Decidedlr one of the best, mosmwcAil tion invited. A Oollcge of llook-keepiog, SH O X"!15,3SSISS8i k hdred brunches. Patronized by prominent busim sa mon. Catalogue alruto nxatiea?t . ?- A h a n.,, , Preffldent.-'i

TUe man whunas luvestfjd iroxntUree . JAto flvo dolLars in a Hubber Coat, and - 111

at his llrat hair ttour s eicnenonce m a stonn finds to his . sorrow tat It is hardly a better protection than v mosquito netting: not feds chagrined at being so badly taken in, but also ; feels ".if no docs not look exactly Ufca

Ksk lor tUtt FiSU lMiANlXM SLtCKEii

WE

1

HEN

TTvi,TTTTT

we offr the maa.howiii (not style) a KWAiihat55 hisa pX.k&im

cauca ;ivwaa'!j Kit." a hamf tki

Cow-boy all oror the land, the ohlv oertect Wmd'aiM

Coat Is 5 rowerV Rsh

and take no other..-lf

does not have the risHnttANUv send for desciipllvccatane, A'PtJSiaS

m

. -'f

I S RRYANT &. STRATTflN RII53NESS wHlEBfl