Bloomington Telephone, Volume 15, Bloomington, Monroe County, 13 October 1893 — Page 2

THE TELEPOHNE.

Waiter Bjuut.

BLOOMINGTON

INDIANA

It seems certain that the World's Fair will officially cease to exist on the last day of October, and the melancholy disintegration of the greatest and most attractive aggregation of useful, ornamental and elevating influences ever assembled on the footstool will set ;n. People who have been procrastinating and deferring their visit from any cause, hoping that the time of the exposition would by some means be extended, will do well to 'stand not on the order of their going, but go at once," before it is everlastingly too late. "Rheumatic rings" are the latest phase of faith iure evolution. Vendors claim that thev are made of seven metals and that the magic number "hoodoos" the pangs that wrench the nerves and muscles of sufferers to such a degree that they lose their power. People with superfluous cash might be able to quandor it in a more harmful way, but probably would have to search along time to find an opportunity to spend their money for a more ingenious and worthless humbug. However, if the expenditure of one or two dollars f& a finger ring of unknown origin and composition will ease one twinge of "rooinatiz'1 we are the last person to object to its application.

Tn autumn flies are falling and the 'skeeters' getting skeercer, the horses' coats are thickening and the colts arc getting fiercer the pigs are getting fatter and the spring thickens are a frying, the turkeys are a gobbling and sweet 'taters are a lying in ridges on the uplands where all the vines are dying, the corn in shocks is gathered and the yaller punkins nestled in heaps behind the cow sheds wherein the -stock is hustled, the apples are a drying all strung beneath the rafters, or fill the bins in glory the pride of all the grafters the cider from AL - i a. -l a 1.1

the fanner in the wheat fields ths golden grain now soweth, the birds are going southward in droves or frightened coveys, the wild eeese

high are sailing like a review of navies, the maple leaves in splendor their colors are; a turning, the frightful heat of summer has ceased

its wonted burning, the twilight shades come settling down on the land so early, that supper must be eaten by lamps or candles pearly,

inc summer tourists weaned have ceased their wistful roaming, and all the land is ready for the annual hari 4tm i Kara rm V a t.s (-. A ,3

w sivuiAu, tut; uuat u auu breezes makes life scran worth the liv- .. ing, so let us all get ready for turkey

sad TQnksgivmg. Probably not one person in ten thousand of the millions of delighted people who have passed the gates of of Jackson Park into the wonderland that burst in glory on their enraptured vision know to whose genius they are indebted for a privilege so rare and in every way beneficial. Kow that the end is drawing near, and the certainty that the dream of beauty there embodied will soon have vanished iike the baseless fabric of ,a vision, leaves not a wrack behind' all will be glad to know and honor the man to whose wonderful mind their pleasure has been due. Frederick Law Olmsted's bold imagination and skillful business ability to bring to a practical end his ideas of landscape gardening and noble architecture has placed his name far up in the temple of fame as a genius who has undoubtedly given more pleasure to a larger number of his fellow men than has been the fortune of other men of great ability to confer. All honor to such a man is due, and bis detractors will be surely few, Mr. Olmsted was born in Hartford, Conn,, in and in early life was for years a sailor before the mast and a world wide adventurer. Finally, settling down, he turned his attention to architecture and landscape-gardening and became an authority ou these matters. At the inception of the improvement of Central Park, New York, he was

his undivided attention to that great work for years, with the most gratifying results, as is well known to a!l who have been so fortunate as to view that great pleasure ground. The wonderful creations atJickson Park are the crown ng trinmph oi Lis genius, but unlikehis work t Central Park will rt remain as enduring monuments to bk fray as artist. : ho faraatioo of n ormoge trust ,ta Bost Is- siaomke Tfw ttomber of apin-

'JHfrcjfr JdNar lead to the usticios

m trust has long exist

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THE SEWS OFTDE WEEK Snowed sit Denver, Sunday. This year's cotton crop is estimated al 6,soo,co bales. Thft paid admissions to the World Pair Sunday were 47.928. The Goodrich steamer Chicago went ashore at Racine in a fog, Tuesday. Henry Irving and Ellen Terry have arrived at Chicago to fill a long engagement. Children nnder twelve years of age will be admitted to the World's Fair (or ter cents after Oct. 10. Fred Pierce, a lawyer of Little Hay. Ark., was accidently shot and killed by his room mate, John Riley. In Douglass and Edgar counties, Illinois, wild animals escaped from a menagerie are creating havoc The B. & O. road insists on a 7Jtf ptn cent, reduction for an indefinite period and the employes will strike. George McFadden, a negro, was lynched at Moore's Crossroads, S. C, for assaulting a sixteen-year-old white girl. Mrs. Robinson swam the Embarras river, near Oakland, III,, to get help for her wounded husband, and died from ex posure. Omaha had a big fire Monday night. The Farnham street opera house was destroyed, involving a loss of half a milWon dollars. NeiirMarshall.il!., John O' Harrow; a farmer, was shot and killed by Daniel Thompson, a neighbor, in a quarrel oxrer money matters. A difficulty occurred at. the village of Steseton, S. D., between Thomas Morse, a white man. nnd three Indians of the SJssetons, which terminated in the killing of one of the Indians, Henry Campbell. Eugene Starr, of Holyoke, Mass., died Saturday in the wilderness near Atlanta, Ga where he had just found the grave of his boy who perished from want and exposure during the war. At Waco. Texas a negro burglar in a boarding house fired on Win. Downs, who fired on and killed the negro. Ou his person wa5 found a kit of burglar tools. Several thousand dollars' worth of stolen jewchy was founa in his house. Three men giving the names of iTohn Wilson. John Graham and James King, were arrested in Chicago, Wednesday, and charged with the Kendallville robbery as accessories. They claim to have just reached Chicago frem Kansas. The storm of Monday at Mobile and other place? on the Gulf was very destructive. At Mobile the shipping was driven on the wharves and the city was deluged. Many boats were wrecked. The hurricane that accompanied the rain was the worst for years. As reports come in it becomes evident that there has been great loss aof life at many points on the Gulf coast during the frreat 6torm of Sunday and Monday. Hundreds of persons were killed in territory tributary to New Orleans. Plantations haqe been storm swept and crops destroyed. The damage i in the harbor of New Orleans will exceed $100,000. President Cleveland has adopted the policy of accepting the recommendations of Cabinet officers for appointments coming under their departments instead of undertaking to pass personally on the merits of the applicants of each individual case. He pursued the latter course during his last administration, and undertook to continue it in this, but the pressure upon him for office has been so great he has been compelled, in the interests of his health, to abandon the task and to divide the work of filling the offices among the eight members of his Cabinet. Garza, the Mexican revolutionist and his lieutenant General Sandoval, who have been hunted high and low by Mexican and American troops, are said to have spent the early part of August in Chicago viewing the World's Fair at their leisure They stopped at the Palmer House under, fictitious names, but were finally recognized by F. G. Canton, one of the Mexican commissioners and a friend. They disappeared from the hotel suddenly. PORBtQN. The nrike has sent coal up to $11 a ton In London. Serious storms have swept over the south of France and Italy. Emperor William's big war ships have been condemned by experts. The quarantine declared against the Russian war ships at Cadiz has been removed. Eighteen new cases of cholera and one death from that disease are reported from Leghorn. The anarchists arrested at Manchester were brought up in court and sentenced to small fines. An additional 4,000 men struck at Charlerol, making a total of 10,000 men who are now out. Sarah Bernhardt has returned to Paris from South America. She saw the bombardment of Rio. John Dillon, member of parliament for east Mayo, addressed a largo meeting at Baiymote, near Sligo. The Hungarian budget for 1894 shows & total surplus of n,688 florins, a decrease of 403.44 florins compared with 1893. A tin pail filled with American silver coins dated previous to 1654, was found hidden in the woods near Perth, Canada. There is little doubt that the whole Austrian cabinet wil! resign if the royal sanction to the civil marriage bill is withheld. The health of Prince Bismarck is again failing. Alarm is felt throughout Germany at the prospects of his early demise. Bis great age is against his recovery. Through the Intercession of foreign powers peace will probably be restored in Brazil and the perpetuity of the republic assured until the next rebellion breaks out, at least.

HER TWENTY-NINTH BOY.

Mrs. Helmet t laing What She Can to Reduce thm Democratic Bfajorty. Mrs, Samuel Bennett of Tanner, Gilner county, W. Va., gavo birth to her twenty-ninth boy a few days ago. Mrs. Bennett is only forty-six years old. Her husband is fifty-three. The twenty-nine boys are all alive and hearty. This is the largest crop of children in any one county in this State. "Unfortunately," said a well-knoown Gilmer Democrat, "the Bennetts are all Republicans, and if this sort of thing continues our majority will b in danger."

THE GULF HUlUtlCASK. Greatest Calamity in American History. Bach Hoar Bring Nttvfl of More Disaster Two Thousand Known to IIsts Ferlshod. Kew Orleans dispatches of the 4th, bringing further details of the great storm of Sunday and Monday, say: Over two thousand killed and nearly live million dollars' worth of property destroyed is the record of the great Gulf storm in Louisiana. There has never been anything approximating it since the country was settled. More than half the population in the region over which the hurricane swept is dead. Everything is wrecked and not a house is left standing, wMIethe survivor are left )n the most destitute condition, without food or even clothing, for most of them were sleeping in their heda when their iiomes were cm.-had hy the wind or waves. At Lost Island, where 2$'" people lost their lives, and at Johnston's bayou the lost numbered 2.0 six years ajro. but. Monday's disaster far surpassed this horror. The weak and injured were nil killed, and in the settlements where the: storm was worst not a child survived and very few women. The survivors are the young men in the vigor of manhood. Notone of them bat has a terrible story to tell; not one but is badly bruised nnd injured. They escaped mainly on rafts or logs, floating for twenty to ninety hours in the water, with the wind at 115 miles an hour. The deaths so far 'as reported and which are confirmed, aggregate over two thousand. At the time the storm visited Chomp, Canunnda, 130 fishing vessels were in tho gulf iishing. 2sot a word lias bwn heard from them or their occupants. Along the Mississippi the loss of life was to some extent due to falling buildings. In tho bay it was caused wholly by drowning. The pecuniary damage, while heavy, is not as large as might have been expected, as the sugar plantations and the richer portions of Plaquemine parish were not worsted by the storm, and it w? th smaller farms and Iishing settlements which suffered most.

CURRENCY 1'RQBLEMJL Ex-Senator Farwell'ft Startling i'iaa to K lUvcthe Situation. The Committee on HankMnrr and Currency has received communications from various parts of the country containing snffffe.stions with regard to proposed changes in the financial system of tho Government which are pending before the committee. One of them is from ex-Senator Harwell, of Illinois. In the first place, he thinks the Government should take up all its greenbacks and circulating notes of every kind, lie says that the Government has issued circulating notes twico only in its history during the Revolutionary w;ir and during the late rebellion r.ot to furnish a circulating medium, hut because the Government was unable to borrow money. The National Bank act was passed, not to provide a financial system, but to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to get faCKXO.acOO out of the banks. The Government, at the time of the passage of tho act. discredited its own bonds by saying "they are worth only 10 cents on the dollar:" and it lias maintained that opinion up to this hour. Now,' javs Mr. Karwell, "if you waist -, make money cheap to the people, footer, extend and cherish the National Hanking system. Jirst, by allowing the banks to take the par of bonds in circulating notes; second, repealing the tax on national bank circulation, except just enough to pay to print their bills. Then refund the present bonded debt into 100-year two per cent, bonds. It would probably the:; appear that the volume of Govern nunt bonds would not 03 adequate to furnish till the circulation which would be required for the business of the country. If tthis should provo to be so some future Congress could provide that municipal and tate bonds, under proper regulations, could be takeu to supply the deficiency." Mr. FarweH also suggests the repeal of the Sub-Treasury act. "The Government." he says, discredits the national banks which it has created and supervises. The Sub-Treasurers give bonds in tfiOfUOOor f(X 0,(00 when they hold from fifteen to twenty millions of Government money. If the Government revenues could bs deposited in the national banks, xh same as all business people deposit their money, it would be kept in substantial circulation. Now it is ocked up and for any business purposes m ght as well bo at the bottom of the sea." On the subject of silver the ex-Senator write?: "withdraw the legal tender quality of silver dollars, except for a limited amount, and thet let free cuinae follow. Silver w ill be used for money and all of it at it - market value, and cannot be used for any more." A TERRIBLE TRAGEDY.

Oscar Baruall Shoots Ills litroth4 and Kill Himself. A terrible tragedy occurred at Jamestown, Wednesday morning at an early hour. It involves two of the most prominent and influential families in Boone county. For some time past Oscar l)arnall, the son of attorney V. J. Oarnail, had baen paying marked attentions to Miss Lillie Majors, the fourteen-year-old daughter of James Majors. The girl's parents objected on account of her ago and the youth's wildness. Tuesday night he took her out for a buggy ride, and after leaving home he told her that they would go to Lebanon and bo married. What passed a between them until 3 o'clock Wednesday morning is not known. At that hour they were near the residence of i)arnall'8 uncle, John Ashley, a mile from Jamestown. Here Darnall, after a quarrel with the girl, drew his revolver and shot her in the moutk. He then stubbed her three times in the neck, one blow scratching the jugular vein. The girl was then lifted from the buggy and ;ho horse turned loose. Darnall dragged the fainting girl tc a straw stack in an adjacent field and was thero with her for some tinv. Finally he carried her to the Ashley residence and aroused the household. He stated that a mob had followed them from Jamestown and shot the girl. MrAshley started at once for Jamestown in a buggy, accompanied by Darnell. When they passed thestraw stack Darnall as iced to get out to recover something left thnrv. He walked to the stack, and. drawing his revolver, shot himself in the forehead, dying inetamJy. The cirl was alive at V o'clock, Wednesday morning, but she wls sinking rapidly.

PIMA STATE NEWS.

Osgood is to have a "KkP fca nd. The Floyd county fair came out nearly $2,000 in debt. Grasshoppers are doing: much damage in Knox county. Diphtheria in epidemio form is raging at Martinsville. "Wheat sowing Is nearly completed in southern Indiana There are COO convicts in tho Jcffersouvi lie State prison. Fowler wants a society to prevent minors from gambling. The Indiana Baptist Association met at Columbus, Tuesday. The Seymour street railway has discontinued business. J. G. Willkom, of Nowry, has LWXXcabbages ready for market. Vincennes women have formed a society for the killing of cats. Chesterton is without a constable and the people want one appointed. Oria Brown, of Randolph county, owns a hog which weighs 800 pounds. The authorities at Kokomo are imprisoning boys for jumping on cars. The new Missionary Baptist church at Crawfordsville, was dedicated, Sunday. Tho Roby cases at Crown Point have been postponed until the November term. In Goshen, Monday, 8,0'JO bushels tf wheat were bought for CI cents per bushel. For several weeks not a night has passed that there has not been a burglary in Marion. Dr. W. V. Cook, Evansville, died, Friday, of lockjaw, the result of a cut on tho linger Pike county is contemplating building a new jail at Petersburg one of the linest in the State. Farmland old settlers say that the hickory nut crop this year will be larger than ever before. Tho corn crop in the western part of Jackson county i3 a failure except on tho river bottoms. A party of four Elkhart young men are going down the Mississippi river to A'ew Orleans in a small boat. The Anderson Bulletin says that there is a plan being matured to overthrow tho lndia.ua school-book law. No church services w ere held at -M uncle, Sunday. One case of smallpox developed and there was one death. Indianapolis has had two murders and two suicides within forty-eight hours ending Monday morning. The Indianapolis Bank of Commerce, which suspended in July, re-opened for business, Monday, Oct. 1!. Miss Oliie Urandstrolf, postmistress at Monmouth, is dead of typhoid fever. She was only seventeen years old. Diphtheria in epidemic form is the result of people drinking polluted water at Peru. The schools have been closed. An unknown woman, making her way from Chicago to Boston, was given sholt r in the jail at (ioshen and died in her cell. Fifty men have been put to work in the. Northern rolling mill at Terro Haute, after an enforced idleness of three inonthr. Jonathan lladley, a well-known farmer in the vicinity of Kingman, committed suicide by hanging, using a log chain for a rope. The other day a tramp stole a quantity of oil in Elkhart and canvassed the town selling it for furniture polish at 73 cents a uottfc. John Uroderlck and Newton Burke have nruck a largo quantity of silver ore in Madison county. The people are wild with excitement. One prominent farmer estimates that the acreago of wheat in Bartholomew county this year will bo 40 per cent, less than last year. Goshen is "buying itself poor" on peaches. Estimated that $4,000 have been spent on the imported fruit in that place already this season. Mrs. Charles McCafTerty, sister of Denson Wratten, who, with his family, was murdered near Washington, recently, has offered a reward of $i,500 for the arrest of tho murderers. A contagions disease is prevalent among horses in the west portion of Orange county that is proving very severe, and in some cases fatal. It is thought to be a severo kind of distemper. County Treasurer Paul is loaded for the follow that turned a calf into the treasurer's office the other day and then shut the door, leaving him to do batilo with the brutp. Mouticello Herald. V. P. Sid well has been elected cashier of the First National Bank of Frankfort, vice D. P. Barner removed by the directory, because of lack of harmony. N. G. Gaskell was elected assistant cashier. William Sinclair, assistant manager of the Flint bottle-works of Marion, suddenly disappeared from hornet, leaving a note addressed to his wife saying that he was tired of life and was going to parts unknown. 1). S, Maurer, of Clay county, claims to be the champion pumpin grower. One of his vines measured 3Cd feet in length, and it bore nine pumpkins, weighing altogether pounds. One of the pumpkins weighed sixty-one pounds. Kx-Priest Rudolph, whose lecture precipitated the famous riot at Lafayette last winter, returned to that city, Tuesday, and in the evening addressed a largeaudience on "Why I left tho Kornish Priesthood.' He was not dis;urbed. Frank Ostheiraer, of Montgomery, in sane with the delusion that he must offer sacrifices to the Lord, seized an ax and slaughtered his hogs, Thero w as fear that, he would kill his children, and the authorities placed him under arrest. The Palace pharmacy, of Anderson, sutfered from the loss of money pilfered from the drawer, tho stealings ranging from $5 to $25. Suspicion fell upon two cierks, both of whom resigned iu disgust, but the depredations continued. A colored man was caught in tho act and was imprisoned. A war on gas rates is ragimr in UlutFton. The company has pushed up the rate a notch or two, and tho consumers are holding indignation meetings and t hreatening to burn wood. For a few days it almost smothered the currency question. The MeT.hodistminlstf-rsof Montgomery county have formed a "Methodist Ministers' Evangelistic League." The county lias been divided into districts, and protracted meetings will be held at stated periods during the year. The initial mooting will be held Sunday next at i'rawfurdsville. The .iiorsG-thiuJ Detective Association,

which inciuds within its bouadaries Indiana, Ohio and Illinois, held an annual meeting at Frankfort. J. A. Mount was elected Grand President: H. M. Miller, Vice President; II. I). Hostetter, Secretary, and Marion Porter. Treasurer. A membership of ,li()0 was reported. The anti-vaccination war in Randolph county, more particularly at Fnton City, will be tested in the courts. Maim is madethat the health board exceeds its powers in prescribing a penalty exclusion from schoolsother than that given by the Legislature, and that the Legislature can' not delegate legislative power. The Chesterton saloonkeeper? have adopted a i-raiseworthy course regarding minors. They have printed blanks containing the law regarding misrepresentation of age, and any person whoso ago is not known and thought to be under age must sign an affidavit stating that he is twenty-one years old before liquor will bo sold to him. A new swindle is tworked by a fellow who visits a farmer and pays him two dollars for the privilege f posting up show bills on his farm. lie takes a receipt from the farmer, and that receipt later turns up in the form of a note for a good sum. The scheme has been worked in tho southern part of the State. Oiv no receipts on prepared blanks. Or better yet, give no receipts to strangers. 3 The herd of cattle stolen from Will lam ileaton, in Delaware county, was traced to Randolph county and found in possession of Stephen Perry, who was trying to dispose of them. Perry confessed his guilt, implicating Albert Daugherty, of M uncle, as an accomplice, and admitting that he was convicted at Indianapolis some years ago of stealing cattle and only recently had he been released from prison. Daugherty was also arrested. Track-laying on tho Brazil extension of the C. & S. K. road was commenced, Monday, with a fores of about twenty men. The track is now laid to within a mile of the Ft. V. T. iL it S. W. and will be to this place by the iSrst of next week. Tho paymaster was over the line, Tuesday, paying the graders. It is probable we wiU have some news for our readers by next week either the cars will be here or work will have been again suspended by that time. liridgeton News. The lust Legislature changed the Indiana quail law and it will bo some weeks beforo sportsmen can begin banging at bob white. Heretofore it was lawful to shoot quail from tho 15th of October until the Wth of December, but last wi::iUT tho date was changed. The open season now begins November 10 and continues until the 31st of December. Notwithstanding thi- law is now in effect, the little birds are killed and served in restaurants in Chicago and other large cities under the name of short billed snipe. Patents were issued, Tuesday, to the following Indiana inventors: J. 1. Alfree, Indianapolis, Metallic conveyor; J. M. Adkins, Indiant. polls, lock stop cock; S. J. Austin, Terro Haute, platform scale; G W. Daily, Charlottsville, mail bag catcher or dispatcher: K. H. Hopkins. Ooshe.n, bicycle: W. B. Horsford, Misaawaka-, clutch shifter; O, R. Root, Indianapolis, rail joint; G. V. Smith, Union City, vehicle pole; J. 8. Thurman, fuel oil burner: J. Brian, Evansville, hoop and handle fastener. The South Bend Tribune has learned that the accident int Kingsbury a week ago. in which Uaveu persons were killed outright, was the seventh that has taken pl&ceon iinesetst f Chicago since August lV, In those disasters seventy-two persons lost their lives, and probably more of tho victims will yet die of their injuries, nearly one hundred and forty having been reported severely hurt, in this summary no account is taken of accidents to freight trains alono, although several deaths to trains hands have resulted irom such accidents during the same brief period. Jasper Davis, Abram Sieg, Henry Bye and Lphraim Kngerman, four of the oldest, best known and most reputable citizens of Harrison county, have received White, Cap notices to leave. The letters were postaa at the White Cloud postofiice. Each envelope bore the same devices: One corner burned slightly, indicating that the torch would be applied to property of tho receiver: in another corner was the device of a bundle of switches; in the corner below a rope was drawn, and iu the remaining corner a pistol. The sending of these letters has aroused the greatest indignation in Harrison county. The recipients are all prominent nnd leading members of itho M. K. church, and are known as sincere Christian men.

A LITTLE WAR.

A Spanish Fort in Morocco Besieged.

The Hostile 3txrt Outnumber the Spaninli Forre and Kill Eighteen. A cable from Madrid, Tuesday. :iys: The Spanish authorites recently decided to arid to the strength of tho fortifications at Melilla, on tho north coast of .Morocco. The worU was begun and pushed forward rapidly. Thin incensed tlv Moors nnd .Monday morning a forco of moro than 00 natives attacked the Spanish garrison of 400 sou is. Tho Spanish troops bad ro food, but this was a matter of smali consequence to them, as they knew that death or slavery awaited them shot ! 1 they be captured. They fought desperately. The white residents of tho t wn organized a lOrce and too!; part in the defense. They were greatly outnumbered by tho Moors, however, and wi re finally compelled to retire into tins fortress located on the outskirts of the K,vn, where they are now still beM 'prod. During tho battle eighteen of the Spaniards were killed anil thirty-five wooded, in eluding three officers. The Spanish gunners at one timo directed their lire up;in a mosque and almost completely destroyed it. Other buildings in the range of their (ire. wre also destroyed. Northern Morrocco has been greatly excited hy the news of the attack and tin fanaticism of the inhabitants if being aroused by Mohammedan demands for revenge upon t he "infidels" for destroying tho mosque. The situation is critical. The govuri1 ut hns announced that it will hncieenw--''- uspatch a war ship to Tangier.!-. e v.nd iim lb' Sultan full and instaiu 10 nation be tin outrage upon the. S;i:u.iarc!s. Thecabmet will meet Tuesday, and it is expected that orders will hr issued h r the sending forthwith to Melilla of n strung military forca to ; u i U Vho Moors.

..i'.'X'V

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A Matter at HeaAUA. Housekeepers faintly realize tfce danger of an indiscriminate ufle of the numerous baking powders nowadays found upon every hand, fux& which are urged upon consumer with such persistency by peddltw and grocers on account of the bUf profits made in their sale. Most of the powders are made from sharp and caustic acids and alkaiies wbteo burn and inflame the alimentary organs and cause indigestion, heart

burn, diarrhoea! diseases, eta bw- .. ';,;

i : J a: a U W.- ' w

puuru; aciu, causnc puwiaa, alum, all are used as gas producing agents in such baking powders Most housekeepers are aware of tbt painful effects produced when these chemicals are applied to the external flesh. How much more acute must be their action upon the deli

cate internal membranes! Yet iin

scrupulous manufacturers do tfot. hesitate to use them, because they make a very iow-cost powder, nor to urge the use of their powder to made, by all kinds of alluring advertisements and false representation. All the low-priced or so-called cheap baking powders, and all powders sold with a gift or a prize, belong to this class. Baking powders made from chemically pure cream of tartar and bicarbonate of soda are among thtt most useful of modern culinary devices. They not only make the preparation of finer and more delicious cookery possible, but they

IMLVU IL(Wlt-(I 1.11 I lit II . ' r.n 111 IllLlb V IUIU f

j t. a . tja - i-vn:

baking powder must be composed of such pure and wholesome ingredients or thoy must be tabooed entirely Dr. Edson. Commissioner of

iieaitu or iew i orK, in an ariacie m . ?v

1111 lVlllj .III 11 J 1 f f II 11 1. . L U " . VS

lKn flirt nlrnntotrflc rtf a. nmswl n&lr.

ing powder and the exemption from the dangers of the bad ones in which the harsh and caustic chemicals W

and he recommends this to ail con-J Burners. ''The Royal' he says "eon1tains nothing but cream of tartar and soda refined to a chemical purity which when combined under the influence of heat and moisture po duce pure carbonic, or leavening, gas. The two materials used, cream cf tartar and soda, are perfectly J harmlesss even when eaten. Ibut ia '

this preparation they are combing v-?

in exact compensating 'weights, i f i r :i

tween them inothe dough they pr;

tically disappear, the substance Or both having been taken to form cv

bonic acid gas " Hence it is, he

says, that the Royal Baking Jrowcior

is the most perfect of all conceivable

agents for leavening purposes. It seems almost incredible that

of those of a well-known, purearwltf wholesale character simply for tfirf M, i sake of a few cents a pound greater;.

nrnfit' Knt. cinof tViv fin a fAW wfWSMt'-'A'

oi warning seem to do necessary.

v. j

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One of the latest fads is cologne

drinking, it is common in Eoglail4;

anu Franco and is gaining ground $4.

America. Cologne can bo bougiM without exciting suspicion utthe.dlff ;

stores and its intoxicating qualities wwvv--f

of the most reliable character, eolorne drinker usually begins bj takiugiton lumps of sugar and pro-

in liberal quantities. As most 'of .-tNi"

r.inr p!in n urrnp i mrififi rmm wnnii. v.

alcohol, a particularly venomous wdy

JiM'y deeoction, its effect aromoi1" marked than those of the ordlnanfr Al

his appetite with a responsible oer tainty that he will wind up with delirium : tremens. But this, instead qif being an objection to cologne drinking is regarded as one of its meriteu tiier

seeming to he in the direction of something more deadly. v':

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Tlir Prettiest trtrl lu St liMb. Miss Nellie Pratt, who was chosen hy the votes of the exposition visitor us tho prettiest of all the pretty irl9 in the building, is a very handsom

and petite young lady, who carries

her honors easily. She is neither

blonde nor brunette, having golde

hair, with just enough curl in it; d

give a pretty offect to tho well poised head. Deep bluo eyes, which hV' owner knows how to use to the boi ad vantage sparkle saucily beneati drooping eyelashes, and a well-round' ed outline, with shapely arms nod bust, small but well-formed foot aud hands, coupled with a nout drest, V makes :in ensemble that is fair to locAt upon. Miss Pratt claims H summQiv to her credit, but to tho usual observer v this looks Like an exaggeration. Wvteti S.uuothin Nw. 4iI love you, Kmeline, with all jtb$4

thoy strolled out East avenue. Vj

Georjre," she replied, MI know iL ate&

yet l woula that you told me of JOttT

lovo in some other tei'ms, Ihavebe$C loved with fervor, oh! so many timoi and 1 do want VhU uiutch u amount ti

somoLhinj.

JJ.

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Constipation i la eu oy omam, lii.e Utaua As to horse shows, the best ol thl fon'tgetany unless the jockry isstralffht Sample l aekup M&U(1 Fm. . Sv)resa Ssvam. Bile Beans New York.

The voir'Harians have a convention- fc?'

i 'hicao next month, which Is quit mcttt; '''i:iufm

3k

No matter how inodiwta hilI-tosterl8 t4

tttrt it t t-Hixn't. tiiL-rt him !miflr h '"'.Va

111' O ! 1- "-O w carno very much stuck up.

li;s reroJed that a tloatin Mm4Q

Idaho.