The Greencastle Democrat, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 April 1893 — Page 2
THE DEMOCRAT.
GREENCASTLE.
INDIANA
The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. U. S. SENATE IN EXTRA SESSION. Til it somite on ihe :tOth conflrmoil tho nominations provlously sent In by tho president. Tho nomination ot Herman Stump, ol Maryland, to be superintendent of immigration, vie. - William D. Owen, res Tued, wus received. The report of the committee on privileges and elections in favor of seating the three senators appointed by the governors of the states of Montana. Wyoming uml Washington was discussed. but no action was taken. Disci ssion over the seating of three western S' nati rs was re i mod in the senate on the 30th ult., hut no action was taken. The following nominations were received from Ihe president: Thomas P. Bayard, of Delaware, to be ambassador to England; J. D. Porter, of Ten* nessee, minister to Chili; James A. McKenzie, of Kentucky, to Peru; Lew is Baker, of Minnesota. to Nicaragua: Pierce M. B. Young, of Georgia, to Guatemala: Edwin Dun to Japan; John M. Reynolds, of Pennsylvania, to bo assistant secretary of the interior: Lawrence Maxwell, Jr., of Ohio, to be solicitor general: John I HaU, of Georgia, to be assistant attorney general Adjourned to April 3. In the United States senate on the 3d the Russian treaty was discussed, and Senator Hoar offered a resolution against the election of United States senators by the people. The nomination of James II. Eckles. of Illinois, to be comptroller of the currency w as received from the president.
\V. C. Rli’J'EY, the old man tv ho shot John W. Mack ay in Sun Francisco and shot himself, lias been indicted by the grand jury for assault with intent to commit murder. Thk Rock Island railway discharged twenty-seven employes at Peoria, 111., for visiting saloons during working hours. A snowslide near Durango, Col., buried two men under thousands of tons of snow. Hugh Evans and David Morgan, two young miiiers, fought at Wilkesbarre, Pa., over a young woman and both were horribly cut. The woman in tho ease quietly married another fellow within two hours after the fight. The business portion of liurdolph, 111., was destroyed by lire. Joe Jefferson’s beautiful villa. Crow's Nest, was destroyed by fire at Buzzard's Bay, Mass., the loss being $130.00J. Helen McGrath, the cook, perished in the flames. Jes.se Wooten shot and killed his wife and himself on the streets of Chadron, Neb. His wife had deserted him on account of his abuse. A BOILKR explosion at Lacona, la., killed Henry MeKiuness and his three sons. The British harkentine Maggie
A scoke of business buildings at Florence, S. C., were destroyed by fire, the loss being $150,000.
THE
FIGHT NOT ENDED.
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. E. D. Faiinswokth, ex-grand sire of the grand lodge of odd fellows in the United States, died in San Francisco,
aged 75.
Nathan Straw!», of Crawford county, Ind., celebrated his loist birthday. Joseph Tavenor 00 years obi, died at Rahway, N. J. He was more than 0 feet high and weighed 5!2G pounds. Dr. Henry Carr IIornexdv died at Montezuma, Ga. He was one of the oldest and best known Baptist clergymen in the south. William Patrick, aged 80, died in Denver, Col. Mr. Patrick was one of the committee of safety appointed by President Lincoln during th c war to keep Missouri in the union. “Mother” Toqrix, one of the oldest Pottawatamie squaws in southern Michigan, died in Van Buren county, aged over 100 years. George Washington Lusk, a preacher and one of the best-known colored men in Kentucky, died in Lexington ut the age of 98 years. Gen. Hiram Berdan, of New York, inventor of the famous Berdan iong-
Lake Shore KmkI ■ eei'H Will Appeal to Ihe t’lilted States Supreme Court. Toledo, O., April 5.—James Lennon, the Lake Shore engineer who was found guilty of contempt of court according to Judge Ricks' decision, has, in obedience to the instructions of his attorneys, refused to pay his tine, and has been formally arrested w
JVDGE RK'KS.
His the
Thompson, from Sagua for the Dela-j nmge torpedo and rifle, died suddenly
DOMESTIC. A su mp of 7’ j cents in May wheat on the Chicago board of trade caused a panic among broilers. John Hill, a boy sentenced to be hanged April 14 at Camden, N. J., has confessed to the murder of Joseph Dodson. A great prairie fire was raging at Culbertson, Neb., and vicinity. The whole valley between Trenton and Culbertson had been burned over and much stoca had perished. The last of the 5,000,000 world’s fair souvenir half dollars’ have been struck off at the mini in Philadelphia. Engineer William Gray was killed and Fireman Lewis Mitchell fatally injured in a wreck on the Georgia Pacific at Waco, Ala. The Doxie music hall and theater at Anderson, Ind., was burned, the loss being Sioo.ooo. Frank Long, a Cincinnati gas fitter 28 years of age, who had not been living with his wife for the last six months, went to her home and cut her throat and then took his own life in the same manner. Three dories containing six fishermen were wrecked near Province town, Mass., and the men were drowned. It is said that the maple sugar output in Michigan this season will be triple that of last year. IMPEACHMENT proceedings were begun in the Nebraska legislature against J. G. Allen, secretary of state; A. B. Humphrey, commissioner of public lands and buildings; G. 11. Hastings, attorney general, and J. T. Hill, extreasurer of the state. They are charged with failing to prevent systematic plundering of the state by contractors. Nearly every western railway president has issued stringent orders against the issuance of free passenger transportation after April ft The orders are all alike, and forbid the issuance of free transportation amt the cancellation of any already issued. A nriLTHNG in Kansas Citj*. Mo., occupied by the Campbell Paint & Glass company was partially destroyed by fire with its contents, the loss being SIOO.OOO. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 3lst ult. aggregated SI ,050,808,539, against *1,227,224.418 the previous week. The decrease as compared with the corresponding week of 1M; u 11s 1. Thirteen buildings were destroyed by fire at Walnut Ridge, Ark., the loss being 8103.000. A man and a child perished in the flames. Navigation on Lake Erie between Cleveland and the head of the lake is open. In the United States during the seven days ended on the 31st the business failures numbered 194, against 243 the preceding week and 218 for the corresponding time last year. The failures during the first three months of the present year number 3.009. against 3,207 during the same time last year. Admiral Gherardi. with the Philadelphia, Baltimore, Yorktown, Vesuvius and Cushing, arrived at Fortress Monroe. The Electric company’s plant at McKeesport, Pa., was totally destroyed by fire, the loss being 8100.000. The American Stove and Cooperage company was incorporated with a capital stock of ?4,001),000 ut Trenton, N. J. The company proposes to control the manufacture of whisky and drug casks and barrels. An incendiary burned about half of the town of Mci omb, O. Loss, $109,000. William Blunck. aged 14, and John T. Luviene. aged 13, were each sentenced in Chicago to forty yeatV imprisonment for the murder of Albert Eckroth. The new Columbus stamped envelopes were placed on sale in Washington for the first time. The stamped impression is of the same color as the Columbian adhesive stump, but the design represents an eagle with outstretched wings and open mouth. Thomas G. Allen, of Ferguson, Mo., and Will L. Saehtleben, of Alton, 111., rolled into St. Louis on tiieer bicycles, having completed a tour of the world in three years. The American Press, an organization for the gathering and dissemination of news, filed articles of incorporation at Trenton, N. J. The capital Stock is $2,500,003. A train on the Denver & Rio Grande road was efitched near Leadville, Col., by the rails spreading and seventeen persons were injured. Secretary Carlisle has announced that no one who has been discharged from the treasury department will be re a tp red.
ware breakwater, sixty-two days out, and the Portuguese hark Faro, from Philadelphia for Faro, Portugal, 122 days out, were, with their crew of thirteen men each, given up as lost. The cigarette factory of William Duke & Son in New York was burned,
the loss being $135,000.
Four blocks of storehouses and residences, comprising the principal part of Clarksville, Va.. were destroyed byfire and two colored men were burned
to death.
C. L. Krissfno. of Pittsburgh. Pa., has received a legacy of $12,000 from a
tramp to wuoin he gave
time ago.
K. Ross Smith, of Portland, Ore., shot and killed Miss Effie Clark, daughter of Rev. N. Clark, of Spokane Falls, Wash., in Evanston, 111., because she refused to marry him and then took
his own life.
Joseph Hattkrmack, a tailor, aged 40, and his son Charles aged 10, were drowned at Lincoln park in St. Paul by' the capsizing of a boat. Blanche Keister and Maggie Blari were drowned at Butler, Pa., by the upsetting of a boat. Mrs. Philip Kline and two children died at Lima, O, from the effects of poison obtained in eating pics made from prepared pie fruits. Up to date the receipts for the world’s fair were $17,406,433 and the expenses were $10,708,826, leaving a balance on hand of *787,006.. The plant of the Granite Paper Mills company at Salt Lake City was destroyed by tire, causing a loss of SIOO.-
OOO.
Fire destroyed the Higgins house at Bradford, Pa., and five lives were lost and twenty-two persons were injured. By the overturning of a sailboat on Lake Ponchartrain. near New Orleans, four persons—Mrs. Mary A. Kelly. Miss Agues and Mamie Flynn, her nieces, and Miss Eflie Kelly—were drowned. The public debt statement shows a decrease during the mouth of March of *1,956,178. A secret anti-prohibition organization, called the “Army of Liberty.” whose object is the overthrow of the prohibitory amendment in Kansas, was spreading throughout the western part of the state. The carelessness of a miner in filling his lamp in the slope of the Neilson shaft at Shamokin. Pa., caused a tire by which ten men lost their lives. In the United States circuit court nt Toledo, O., Judges Tefts and Ricks declared the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers to he a conspiracy against the laws of the country. Over $100,000 worth of property has been destroyed by forest fires in Spotsylvania and Caroline counties. Va. In the latter county an old church built long before the revolution with bricks brought from England was burned. Fire destroyed many buildings at Wilton, Me., including the post office and Record newspaper office. A barn on the John H. Voorhis place near Maywood, N. J., was burned, and five tramps perished in the flumes. The treasury department’s monthly circulation statement shows a net increase in the circulation during the month of March of $3,865,264. The total circulation of the country April 1 is placed at $'..602,530,806, against SHOOS, 641,520 April 1, 1892. Over 1.500 union carpenters on the world’s fair grounds in Chicago struck because of the employment of several non-union men. A NEC ho murderer named Charles Morgan was lynched by a mob of his color at Graham, Va. A passenger and a freight train collided near Edwurdaville. 111., and four men were killed and several other persons were badly injured. John W. West, city treasurer of tirand Island, Neb., confessed to his bondsmen that he was $13,000 short William P. Shaw, cashier of the Lincoln national bank at Rath, Me., was said to be a defaulter to the extent of $40,000. A trust that includes most of the prominent typewriter companies in the country was formed at New York. James W. Hamilton, a colored expreacher who imfrdered his wife at Winfield, L. L. May 2. 1892, was electrocuted at Sing Sing. N. Y. By the explosion of an engine on the tracks of the Choctaw Coal & Railroad company at Wilberton, I. T., 1 red Fredericks, Henry Landis, L. P. Lowindell and George Marbam were blown to atoms. Thk Pullman Cur company 1ms announced that lease rates on tourist sleeping cars will be raised from $13 to $25 per day. Most of the business portion of Point Arena, Cal., was burned, and two men perished in the flames. The existence of an organized gang of blackmailers was discovered at Minneapolis. The car-house of the Newark & Orange Electric railway at Roseville, N. J., w as burned, the loss being $150,-
009.
at the Metropolitan club in Washing-
ton.
Gip.son Peacock, aged 71, editor in chief and principal owner of the Evening Bulletin at Philadelphia, died suddenly at his home while sitting in a chair.
FOREIGN.
Cholera has broken out at Zalosce, Austria, and several deaths from the
disease were reported.
The entire French cabinet resigned because the chamber voted to retain the liquor law amendment bill us a a meal sonic part of the budget The greater part of the arsenal in Lille, France, was burned, the loss be-
ing 1,006.000 francs.
Macmanits & Sons, bankers of Chihuahua, have suspended, with liabilities of $1,000,000. The cause of tho suspension was land and mining specu-
lations.
Thomas M. Nkwsox. of St. Paul, United States consul at Malaga, Spain, died at Malaga of smallpox, aged 62
5 ears.
Tint attempt of revolutionists to. overthrow the government of Costa Rica has been suppressed. Advices from Panama say that 500,000 persons in the Cauca valley were on the brink of starvation. It was reported that a church was blown down at Taudria, Austria, during a storm, while services were being held, and over 100 persons were killed. The receipts of the Monte Carlo Casino during the year just ended were larger than in any other year of its existence. They amounted to 24,000,000
francs.
A r Seabruce, Austria, a house occupied by two families of six persons each was entered by burglars and all the inmates were killed and all property of value carried off. A fire at Manila, Philippine Islands, destroyed 4,000 houses and some lives were lost. A yacht carrying eighteen persons capsized in the river near Burnham, England, and five persons were drowned. Ninety houses in Klein-Poechlarn, Austria, on the Danube, were burned, and over thirty persons perished in the
flames.
McLean Keifpland, cashier of the Imperial Loan company at Toronto, Ont., was said to be a defaulter to the extent of $30,000.
nnd is in the custody of the court, attorneys will appeal the case to supreme court of the United States for a writ of habeas corpus, and it will come up nt Washington as soon us possible. The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers will fight the matter to the bitter end and will not spare any expense. They realize that the final decision is of vital importance to their organization. Attorneys and railroad officials think that there will be no more trouble or outbreaks by the men until after the whole matter has a final hearing.
Arthur Will Appeal.
In the case of Chief Arthur, Frank Hurd, one of his attorneys, says that it will be appealed to tlie circuit court of appeals, which meets at Cincinnati. The appeal will be made within thirty days and the case will be heard within
the next sixty days. Wlmt Ashley Says.
General Manager H. \V. Ashley, of the Toledo, Ann Arbor & North Michigan road, says it i, not a matter between the Ann Arbor and its men or the Lake Shove and its employes now, but a question between the men and the United States and, it will be fought out on that line as long as the issue iris been made. It will do tliom no good to fight the railroads now. Mr. Ashley incidentally stated that the Ann Arbor road, under the non-union men. for the last week had been handling 30 per cent, more ours than were ever before handled in the history of the road, lie Is well satisfied with the change.
PeafneM Cannot b« Cored by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafnesi is caused by an inttaiued condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling jound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed. Deafness is the result, and unless tho inflamm itmn can bo taken out and this tube restored to ita normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ion are caused by catarrh, Which is nothing lint an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot bo cured by Hall's Catarrh Gure. Bend for circulars; free. F. J. CiiENtr & To., Toledo, O. t?T'i8old by Druggists, 75c. ‘‘Novzt.tics in sandwiches.” read a pedestrian. v , ■ m< 'i: “Gracious 1 I've heard O’ most cvcrylning in-’em, butldidn't know that they put that ’ere kind of stuff in nay.” — ♦ ... Serious Danger Throntensevery man, woman or child living in a region of country where fever and ague is prevalent, since the germs of malarial disease are inhaled from the air ami are swallowed from the water of such a region. Medicinal safeguard is absolutely nucepsary to nullify this danger. As a means of fortifying uud aeciiiuuting the system so as to he able to resist i ho malarial poison, Hostetler's Stomach Bitters Is incomparably the best aud the most popular. The emery wheel trust must not complain if evervbod’y looks upon it as a grinding monopoly.—Chicago Tribune. You can always find out how much a man Is worth when hedn-s by looking at his will. It is a dead give-away. Chec k Colds and Bronchitis with Hale’s Honey of Horehound and Tar. Bike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. It appears tons that these meetings between debtors and creditors are largely over Uuu.—Binghamton Leader. The progress of science in medicine has produced nothing better for human ills than the ceicurutcd Beechnut's Pills. The greatest circulating medium is the drummer.—Galveston News.
Brooklyn Bridge Day After Day on the Cars L II ell linoirn Conductor 1 * £» pericnee.
LATER.
Debate was continued in the United
States senate on the 4th on the question , pied by the H .1. Heinz Pickle company. The
HUNGRY FLAMES.
They Devour Property in Allegheny, Du., null in Uinuberlanil. 5Id., Worth in the
Angregute #550,000.
1’iTTsnuROH, I’a., April 5. — Fire started at 2:30 Tuesday in the paper manufactory of Godfrey & Clark at South Canal and Chestnut streets, Allegheny. This was an old building used as the Hope cotton mill during the war. A high wind aided in the spread of the flames. So serious was the outlook that three engine companies were dispatched from the Pittsburgh department to aid the full Allegheny department. The buildings destroyed by 0 o’clock, when the fire was under control, were as follows: Godfrey & Clark, two brick buildings joined ns one, three and four stories high, with 80 feet frontage; loss, (61,000; insurance. (2'i,o00 on
buildimrs and SflO.OOJ on stock.
Kherhnrdt & Obcr Brewing company, grain elevator. 158 f.-et hieb, ironclad, in which were stored 110,000 bushels of barley nnd mnlt. and warehouses three stories high: loss. KUo.tXXI: Insurantc. fki.iMh, almost the w hole amount of
which was placed on tin elevator.
A warehouse owned by K. M. Ferguson, oceu-
m KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement nnd tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bettor than others nnd enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers awl permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys. Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c amf^l bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered.
Conductor IFm. F. iturph'j “I regard Hood's Sarsaparilla the best medicine I ever took. For seven years I have been employed on tho trains at Brooklyn Bridge. First us locomotive fireman, and now as conduetor. Tho e instant jolting of tho cars ar.d tho haul work caused debility and Paine Ail Over SVty Body which I could not get rid of until I began taking H.m. 1's Sars iimrilla, which was sugg Med toms by a friend w ho had been benefited, nnd it has clone great things for me. I have taken three bottles aud am now in perfect health. Don't Hood’s Cores have that tirotl feeling nor feci broken up as I used to. I can honestly recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla to anyone.” Wm. F. MlkpRY, 128 Broome St., New York City. Hootl’s Pills act easily, yet promptly and efficiently, on the liver and bov.els. lJ5c.
XL 11—ILLLUJJLLLU-LUj l J— J.J—' llll 1 >iii un i tj \ V M ‘1 J iTTT
jimmrmw AP/n Money —^TiTTfRIf]
IU
• Lg-m-m 11
Pin Money Father isn’t rich ; husband is short of money; a little ready cash is womanly necessity. You do not like to canvass; we do not blame you ; few people like it; suggesting isn’t canvassing; The Ladies’ Home Journal is wanted everywhere. In the suggesting of that want there is money for you; we believe in originality, and will tell you how we may help each other in a pleasant way for you if you will write us. The Curtis Publishing Co. Philadelphia
of the rigiit of governors of states to appoint senators when the state legislatures have been in session ami have failed to elect. The following nominations were received from the president: James O. ISroiuThead, of Missouri, to be ministerto Switzerland: Bartlett Tripp, of South Dakota, to tie minister to Aus-tria-Hungary; Aben Alexandria, of North r.irolia. to be minister to Greece, Roumania and Servia. A confi.Atiration broke out during a high wind and wiped the heart out of the little town of Lockport, Pa. The revolutionists in Chili under Gen. Tavarez fought and routed the national forces at Artigas and in tho battle 600 on botli sides wure killed. Thomas II. Brown died at Iris home near .Volinstown N. Y., of pneumonia, aged 102 years. Seventy deaths hare been reported from L'Oircnt, France, in the last fort- ] night from a mild form of cholera The disease was spreading. The Commercial bank of Australia I at Melbourne suspended payment with deposits of over $60,000,000. Five carpenters fell 6J feet by the I falling of a scaffold at West Superior, 1 Wis., and all were probably fatally in-
jured.
The barn of John Frische near Sey- j mour, Ind., was burned, and eleven head of tine cattle were cremated. Carter Harrison (dem.) was elected j mayor of Chicago by IS.OJJ plurality. ] Tlie board of alderman will stand: Republicans, 37; democrats, 31. Fire in the paper manufactory of Godfrey & Clark at Allegheny, Pa., i cuuseil a loss of $250 000. Almost complete returns show the election in Michigan of Judge Hooker; (rep.) for supreme judge and the two republican regents by pluralities of more than 10,000 each. Two cams ou.a “switchback” tobog-j gan slide collided at Raleigh, N. resulting in serious injuries to eleven students and one teacher. A cyclone struck Castleton, Ont., doing heavy damage to several business blocks and residences. Great loss was also reported in tlie surrounding country. Three blocks of buildings at Cumberland. Md., were burned, the loss be ing $150,000. The four-masted steel ship King James, coal laden from New Castle to Fan Francisco, was burned at sea 300 miles off San Francisco and seventeen of the crew were probably drowned.
latter loos (15.00) on stock, without insurance. ami Ferguson loses (J.501, but is pro-
tected.
Mrs. Stoublcs. two-story brick tenement, inhabited by Poles: loss, f-ysoj; no insurance. Cumberland, Md., April 5.—A few minutes after 6 o’clock Tuesday evening fire, supposed to be of incendiary origin, was discovered in a stable in an alleyway in tlie rear of the McKaig block on Baltimore street. There were a number of wooden structures in this alleyway, aud as tlie wind was blowing half a gale tlie rear of the block was soon a seething mass of flames. After a six hours’ struggle tho fire was finally got under control, having consumed six buildings on Mechanicstreet awl seven buildings on Baltimore street The loss is about $250,00). Bethlehem, Pa., April 5.—Fierce mountain tires were raging Tuesday night in close proximity to St. Luke's hospital and Lehigh university park. MORE NOMINATIONS. FrcHlilent Cleveland Wends Another Hatch to the Senate. Washington, April 5.—The president has sent the following nominations to tlie senate: James O. Hroadhcad. ot Missouri, to be en 1 voy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary of the United Slates t > Swilz aland Barth it Tripp, of South Dakota, to be envoy extraordinary and m nisti r plenipotentiary of the United S'.aics to Austriu-Hun:- irv. A ben Alexander, of North Carolina, to 1< envoy < x'.r.tonllnary and minister plenipotentiary if the United States U> Greece, Koumunin and Servia. To 1 o con dlls of the United States: Jamo • K. Neal, of Ohio, ni Liverpool; James M. Dobh-. of Georgia, at Valparaiso: (J. O. Eck fo»d, of Mississippi, at Kinesten. Jamaica: David N. Iliirki. of New York, at Pernambuco: Hdgar Whidden, of Maine, at St. stepuen, N II Henry F Merritt, of Illinois, nt Barmen: Asa D. Dickinson, of New York, at Nottingham: Ben.amlu Lculhicr, of Massachusetts. at Sherbrooke.
Easily Taken Up
Cod Liver Oil as : t appears in Scott’s Emulsion is easily taken up by the system. In no other form can so much fat-food be assimilated without injury to the
organs of digestion.
Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophos- | C phites has come to be an article of every day use, a prompt and ; infallible cure for Colds, Coughs, [S Throat troubles, and a positive
builder of flesh.
Prpyarpd by Beott <fc Bovnio, N. Y. AH drugtf sta.
t/f I ■ 'VA S
W. L, DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE
Do you wear them? When next In need try a puir, they will givoyou moro comfort and service for th# money than any other make. Best in tho world.
$5.00^^3.00
HOOd&S \»2 50 $3.50 pT »s2.0fP *2.25^ jWJ$l.73
W. L. Douglas Shoes die made In all the
West Styles,
If you want a fino DRESS SHOE den't pay $6 to 19)
try my $3.50, $4 cr$5 Shoe. They will (it equal tocuitom made and look and wear as well. If you wish t« eronomlzo In your footwear, you tan do so by purchasing W, L. Douglas Shoes. Mv name and price Is stamped on the bottom, look for It when you buy. Take no sub-
stitute. I send shoes by mall upon receipt of price,
postage free, when Shoe Dealers cannot supp ly you,
W. L. DOUGLAS, Itroektou, Must.
r / r ^.'r=~.
MILLINERY NOVELTIES. TVide-bbimmed huts, with an abundfinoe of ostrich-plume trimming, ivfli be popular for spring and early-summer
wear.
Yf inE-BRIMMLD leghorn hats, such ns have been worn by children for the past few years, are brought out for ladies. They are to be trimmed with lace, | bows and tips. A FLAT-TOfUED hat with a I’rinee of Wales cluster set exactly in the top of the corner is a new design. It hits the merit of novelty, and but little moro can be said in its favor.
SPURGEON WROTE
•* I testify to Tvbat I hnv* »een with my own eye*, and I believe >ou have Roved numbers from consumption. What 1 huvt* Been of God's healing Power tbrough vou, demands of me thm I speak ior tbe good of others.** The shove I* an extract fr< m n letter written by the lute Kev. f*. 11. SpnrL'eon to G T. Congreve, of London, whose BALSAMIC LLIXin, nne been a Standnrd Remedy in Ei glnnd for nearly three-quarters of acuitury Mr. Contrive ban n-'W opened a Depot in America, at 2 Wooster St., New York. If your case Isa serious one, obtain Mr. ronure\« Book on Consumption utd Diseases of the Cheat, mailed free to any part of the United States, for .’J5 cents, or send $1.00 for a ropy of the book ; a BO cent bottic of Ha'isamic Elixir and a 50 cent botfe of Pilis, as recommended in Mr. Congreve’s neat-
me ut.
Mention this Paper.
J
Kidney,Livorand BladderCur®.
IjimtiA,..,. ram in Jointu or but k. 1 trick <Iuot in airino, ire quent i-nlls, irritation, inriamntlon. rrravel, ulceration or catarrh of bladder.
Disordered Liver,
Impaired dion’-tlon, gotu. bllliouF-headnohe. 84V A tl p.UOOT cure kiditt difflcultie#, 2xi Grippe, urinary troul!e, brijhtT. di case.
Impure Blood,
Scrofula, malaria, gen’! weakne;* trdebility.
(•fiurnntre TTmi contents of One Bottle, tf not benefited. brugirists will refund to you the price plIU. At Ilriig&D ts* AOc. Size, $1.00 Size* "Invalid** OnLle to ltealtb"free-Consultation liU. K ll Uktt A C'O.. BlMGIlAMTOM.N. Y*
Tr=Yf^zJr- =4
Unlike tlie Dutch Precess r% No Alkalies "yW —cm — ^3 Other Chemicals w/are used In .the
p'operation of
W. BAKER & CO.’S BreakfastCocoa which iit absolutely jture and solubie. If in ore. than three timeM the strength of Cocoa mixed j<Lj with Starch, Arrowroot or Siit:ar, amt is f ar moro ec»>« nominal, costing lens than one ccitt a cup Ir is <U Ih ions, liwuritiliiiig, and jeasiliT DIGESTED. Sold by Grocers everjwhtrt. W- BAK2R & CO.. Doroheiter, tt u*.
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