The Greencastle Democrat, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 February 1894 — Page 2
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THE DEMOCRAT.
GREENCASTLE,
INDIANA.
The News Condensed.
ItTiportant Intelligence From All Parts.
George H. Painter w as liamted i Chicago for the murtler of Alice Marti on May 10, 1K»1- i ,e protested hts
nocence to the last.
CONGHE88MAX M. It IUldwiiI wa handed in effigy at Duluth. Minn., b< cause of his stand for free iron ore., Near Shannon Gity, la., P. t>. f»oo ale. an aged farmer, was murdered b 1 two youths who were after his mone (iov. Wolfe, of Inc’ian territory, i his message to the <-x ra session of til Chic Rasa w legislator* advices agami allotment and stutebxid. and recon mends two delegates ‘o attend to ai the business of the Chekasaw peopl a at Washington. / I A. M. 1.ka< 11. lumber dealer and trf Fn owner at Marysville. Cal., failed/ or
/ /
Michigan's supreme court 1 •/ /onfirnied the constitutionality of tb gen-
eral banking law of the state.
At Encinal. Tex., a Mcxica* .mined Valdena shot and killed M 1 . Josefa Trevino because slie would <t marry him and then fatally wouiuh 1 himself. A 1111.1. was introduced if tile Oliio
provides th - at a parent
I el's*
was
which
arn ri y .1 ai ce » Laehi 1 een \, Th.
CONGRESSIONALRegular Session.
IW the t-enate the Hawaiian question was acain brouglit up on the t'4ih and after an hour's discussion went over for ti e day. The bill npea’.tng the feoeral election laws "as further discussed....In the house uu amendment to the Iron schedule in ihe tanlf bill placing iron ore on the free list was adopted. The income tax bill was reported from the
committee on ways and means.
Ill the senate on the 26:h the federal election law was discussed and protests were presented against the placing 01 coal and lumber on the free list in the tariff bill— In the house an nmendment to the tariff measure calling for the free admission of all cotton machinery was dofeated. An amendment to repeal ihe reel- 1
procity section In the McKinley bill was adopt- senate . . , •. , ed. At a democratic caucus it wa-- decided to , may not disinherit a cniin. attach the income tax bill 10 the tariff bill. j JppoE Rli’KS refused aa On the ydih the session of the senate w as de- ^ ^ restrain the receiver .'ro
▼i.ted to a U seusslon of Senat";' Call . I 1 '■ ' laud resolu 1 ion and a general colloquy over the f- deral election bill. Adjourned to the 29lh ... In the house the onlv nmendment to Hie tar.lT bill adopted was one Increasing the duty on diamonds, unset, to 111 per cent, ad valorem. The meinb. rs ,.f the judiciary committee adopted a resolution declaring that the secretary of the treas. ry lias no authority to sell I onds to meet the current exnensos of the government. Thk senate wa. not in session on the 27th — In the bous ■ the tanlT debate was eiucluded, B«> far as it relat. s to the customs schedules. At least a hundred amendments were shut out It was expected a vote would he taken 111 ihe bill on February 2, the Interim to be spent in discussing Internal revenue. A bill was introdue. d to in crease the revenue by a direct .ax
on land iu the United States.
Thu senate was addressed on the gUth by Senator Toiler (Col.) on the presidents Hawaiian polity. I n taking advanced ground in favor of ttai e >■ x at ion of the Hawaiian Islands and ultiuiat dy ot Cuba and t anada. The homo bill to r- d the federal election laws was also discuss ■ t a-nl a resolutton was offered declaring thit 1 1 secretary of the
Toledo. ()., u reducing
wages of employes of the ^ oletlo, St.
Louis & Kansas City railroad L Upward of fifty familhR i n Sedalia,
Mo., were found on tae verg .‘of starva-
tion.
liRCAl’SE the lTilted Stnt os Express company is not '..corporate! tin Illinois, L. T. Carson, an alleged ctnbezzler,
-vns set free.
Illinois roads paid div dends last year of $‘i8,713,«U, against | fo5,.‘!37,6lf) the pi Emplftyps in the
state number 71,884. A wave of anarchy, in
which followed bloodshed
/M, and
States.^ than .'I in John the Fifth districts . .^ for three terms ending nv^ his home in (iritlin, aged .79 ycitis. John Yaryan, probably the old Am, legislator in the world, died at Richmond. Ind. lie served as state senator during the last legislature at the age of 94. Mas. Fontaine, aged 100 years and J months, died at Hancock, Midi. Jitmie William H. Calkins, a member of congress from Indiana from Jhdd o 1882. died at Tacoma, Wash., from Height's disease, aged ft'J years. Thomas Moonlight, of Kansas, was nominated by the president for in in byte r to itolivia.
A NEW ENGLAND MIRACLE' JVXJZF-’ft
A Railroad Enginoor Relates Hia Experience.
the destruction of props
over the Mansfield (Ha.) •oat region.
It began at dawn and at estimated that $200,000 wc erty had been destroyed, was so great at Mansfield
tile
train of Arson and
rtjy, passed
luslt it was ( rtli of propThe feeling that the dis-
treusury lies no I ■ - il rl A to issue nnl sell me , bonUs ami other interest-i earing obligations of j
; j charge of all foreign
millers was de-
Ibc government. ..Tho tlcliute on the internal revenue bill, Including the provision for the In-
come tax, began in ihe i ouse.
t
DOP/1ESTIC. Koetting, the convicted Milwaukee banker, was sentenced to five years imprisonment by Judge Clementson. As a result of the coal miners’ refusal to accept a reduction in wages Ohio operators have ordered the mines
closed.
A steam heater in a passenger coach
on a Texas road burst and two men
were killed and three injured. The. boiler in a sawmill at Newman.
Ga., exploded, instantly killing William Kidd and Oscar Herring. Kidd’s
head w as blown off.
Andrew Franklin, a veteran of the war of 1812, who lives in Coffee county, Kan., and is 102 years old, will probably be given a pension of t.">0 a month. The First national bank of Fort
Payne. Ala., has suspended.
T he interior of the hide, fur and wool Ttnrrse Ot Airtc-,, t^j. in St. Louis and the German Evangelical Lutheran church were burned, the to-
tal loss being $180,000.
By the extravasation of blood into the muscular tissues following a tit of — ,miting Harvey Kenyon, a lad of 13, living at Waleh, O., has been practically mummified below the knees. Fire destroyed St. Paul’s Episcopal church in Louisville, Ky., the loss being
$100,000; insurance, $5A,000.
The house of a man named Thomson was wrecked by a snowslide in White Bird Gulch, Idaho, and his four daugh-
ters were killed.
By the capsizing of a boat in the harbor at Charleston, S. C., six men were
drowned.
Jeremiah M. Mui.vihii.i., alderman of the Seventeenth ward in Chicago, was shot and probably fatally wounded iu a saloon by Mike Fewer, who was
drunk.
Cold weather reduced the pressure d:i \N ln tlle natural gas fields around Celina, 1, O., and great suffering was the result Two Freeport (111.) young women sawed several cords of wood donated to their church by a farmer. Twelve of tile hat factories at Danbury, Conn., have resumed operations with non-union men. B. B. Cami-sen and Fred Miller and four others were drowned by a boat capsizing near Sullivan island, S. C. Three grandchildren of Frank Miggins were burned to death in his house at Crawford’s, Ala. Mrs. Emil Kkli.ar while insane shot and killed her husband, her U-months-old child and herself in Auburn, N. Y. A big gold strike was made 18 miles from Sorocco, N. M. Three victims of superstition were expelled as the result of the witchcraft trials in the Salem (O.) Methodist
church.
(Vi A trial of the monster Niagara falls s . tunnel water power proved to be a suc-
cess.
The Sherman Oil & Cotton company’s mill at Sherman, Tex., was burned,
the loss being $100,000-
Sevkral heretofore reputable farm-
ers and merchants in Jackson county,
• > la., were found to he robbers and ar/ tin ^rested. /
^N^dwakd Thompson and his lO-y/ar-
? v . du^lr 1 ' " ere uphyxiated by natural
,k * gas atrWii» ni ‘P olis -
i In the p?t45 fight a t Ja^ksyfriville,
Fla., between Corbet/^ 0 f California, and Chari**- Mitchell/ ,,f England, the latter was 'V'oej/cd out” in the third round, givitiN^orlicit the title of champion pugiltsf ,,f ilit- world.
England was said to be preparing
troops for Egypt. The relations between the two counlries were strained.
The exchanges at the leading clear-
Ir ing houses in tl e United States during
the week endon on tho 20th aggregated
pri $840,227,507, Cgainst $924,025,525 the preM|: '8 vious week.. The decrease, compared indT. the corresponding week in 1893:
■turors time to u s 88-“-
inter (Ueiu., III.) iPWiy persons were frozen to death -'i..a a demon mi .rioma during the recent blizzard.
were 430 business failures in ‘ed States in the seven days he 26th, against 407 the week d 255 in the corresponding
California’s midwinte|r fair was formally opened by Mrs. De \ oung pressing the electric button which started the machinery. Hen \V. Hi guey, AlonzoCarndall and Perry Wilkinson.hunters, were drowned near Shawneetown, 111, h^ their skiff
capsizing.
Had debt collectors have swindled residents in twenty-one towns in southern Minnesota, securing $’.0,000. Only 8,500 out of 10,0*0 Iowa coal miners tire at work, and tiey at greatly
reduced wages.
In a jealous rage a mi kins fatally shot his wi Mich., and was himse while resisting arrest.
The interstate eommi doners' report on railway earnings for^893 show a net decrease of three dollar |a mile. The mills of the ijnerican Cereal
i named Uawnt Robinson, fatally shot
FOREIGN.
The decrees expelling ex-King Milan and ex-Queen Natalie from Servia have
been canceled.
A new Servian cabinet has been formed with M. Simitch as prime minister and minister of foreign affairs. Constance F. Woolson, the authoress, a grandniece of James Fenitnore Cooper, died at Nice, Italy. Timbuctoo was occupied by French troops. The African city is the most important in western Soudan. Fifteen persons lost their lives in a railroad accident near Samara in tho southeastern part of Russia. Prince Bismarck was given an enthusiastic welcome to Berlin and was publicly embraced by the emperor. Fire destroyed 124 houses, thirty godowns and a temple in the Japanese
village of Kagiu
Additional advices say that 12,000 persons and 50,000 cattle were lost in the earthquake which destroyed tho
city- of Kuchan. Persia.
American Minister Smythe was said , , ,- , , , r , to have made himself objectionable at heart that comes from hope deferred
and from the final stoppage of the
Hayti by giving advice to the officials.
England’s fear of war is dying out,
and the public is no longer absorbed
with vague rumors of conflict.
The 35th birthday of Emperor AVil- .
liam was celebrated throughout tier- Sydney-unless he should happen to many in a most enthusiastic manner. ^ k,lled b ? fore Rtt «'" ,n ff ' ! :,t c, ' n ' Thieves broke into the American .nation of respectability. tricks
(
I j ft in ng
ml |,1 br-
ill
)
4
company at Akron, O.Jvere destroyed by fire, the loss being fiO.OOO. Mrs Ella I’oWEits.of Peoria, 111., shot and killed her lit)e daughter and then committed suicid J. H. Bkmis and ondif his sons, botli of the lumber firm f J. 11. Bends <fc Co., of Jefferson, Te , were charged with swindling bankwut of $500,000. A large fKirtion of .he business section of Bath, Me., wa laid in ruins by fire. Loss, $700,000. In the report of tl agricultural department at Washing J>n the total value of the corn crop for p93 is placed at $591,025,628, and nltguigh the crop is only about 9,000,OOoWshels less than that of 1892 its money alueon the farm is $50,500,000 less. The Western Bootjfr Shoe Manufacturing company andlternanl Gannon's shoe factory in St. liuis suffered a loss of $100,000 by fire. - The world’s recoi 'for a half mile at skating was hroldfl on the canal at Cleveland, O., by Jpn S. Johnston, of Minneapolis. His line was 1:16 4-5. The safe of thMPlanters’ bunk at Eliaville, Ga., wa ' blown open and $7,500 secured by tl thieves. Charles Owens living near Diehstadt, Mo . murder* his wife and child, then set fire to tbyhonse and escaped. Minnesota’s law directed against ticket scalpers wi» declared unconstitutional by JudgeVVillis at St. Paul. James 1>. Wii.i.i^is, president of the City national buy> at Marshalltown, la., dropped deai bn his way home to dinner. Fred J. Sha p shot and fatally wounded Miss Ki ie Klees at Tiffin, O., and then blew ou his brains A lovers’ quarrel was thee Dso. The LouisianaVsupreme court re versed the decision of the lower court in the Olympic clpb case, thus ending prize fighting in tH" state. William BottS, b burglar, was sentenced at Tol-do, 0., to imprisonment in the penitentiary for two years longer than hi* natural life by Judge Lemmon. Residents of Topeka, Kan., celebrated the thirty-third anniversary of the state's birth. His suit being rejected, Charles Dcether shot and killed Mrs. Bertha Hunicke at St. Louis and then fatally 'wounded himself. John Costello, an ex-convict, shot his wife and 16-year-old daughter at Pittsburgh, Pa., because they refused to stay in the house with him. John B. Johnson and his son George fought with shotguns and revolvers white drunk at Los Angeles, Cal., and both were fatally wounded. 'l ite petition of the Knights of Labor for an injunction against an issue of bonds by Secretary Carl isle was presented in the district supreme court at Washington. Goldsmith & Co., clothiers and furnishers at Salt Lake City, failed for $200,000. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL Mmk. Laiha ScHir.MEH Mapi.eson, the opera singer, died in New York. She made her debut when hut 7 years
old.
A. F. Brown, one of the oldest and best-known lawyers of Iowa, died at his home in Wavcrly at the age of 66 years. He was a delegate from Iowa to the republican national convention when Lincoln was nominated.
legation at Rome and set fire to tho archives, most of which were reduced to ashes. Rosin a Yokes (Mrs. Cecil Clay), the well-known Knglish actress, died at, h*‘r home in Torquay, Devonshire, aged 36 years. Her deatli removes the last of that once famous organization, the Yokes family, from the stage. The British bark Port Yarrock was driven ashore in Brandon bay, Ireland, and her crew of twenty-six were drowned. The Turkish steamer Mi was burned in tlie Black sea and the captain and twenty others perished. Solomon & Mass, bankers of Frankfort and Mannheim, Germany, failed for 20,000,000 marks. Brazilian insurgents captured the government fortifications on Bom-Jeus island and twenty-five soldiers were
killed. LATER.
At the conclusion of the financial discussion in the United States senate on the 30th the bill to repeal the federal election laws was considered and it was decided that a vote on the measure should be taken on theOth. In the house the income tax bill w as discussed at length. Mrs. Williams, a faith cure enthusiast, finished a 110 days’ fast at Portland, Ore. Judge Cox decided in Washington against the Knights of Labor petition to restrain the new issue of government bonds. Many houses were unroofed, fences demolished and buildings in course of erection damaged by a windstorm at Baltimore, Md. Ohio republican legislators in caucus decided upon a bill for biennial sessions of the general assembly. By firing on an insurgent tug Admiral Kcnhtim emphasized to Brazilian insurgents that American vessels must be let alone. The business portion of Rosamond, 111., was destroyed by fire. A i.arge cotton mill of 8,000 spindles, the property of the Railway Mill company at Oldham, England, was burned, the loss being $500,000. The Rhode Island legislature convened at Providence* The little son of Thomas Duncan, a milkman, was drowned at Selina, Ala., , in a large can of buttermilk. Labor representatives met in Chiea- j go ami organized a new political party to be known us the Union Labor league. I At the election in New York city to ' fill congressional vacancies Eli Quigg (rep.) was elected in the Fourteenth district and Isador Strauss (dcm.) was chosen in the Fifteenth district Ah the result of a debate in the Colo- i rado legislature Col. Fisk challenged Senator Boyd to a duel. Five men were killed and one fatally injured by the explosion of a boiler in a mill at Crow, Ky. Judge Lee, at Little Rock, Ark., declared null the marriage of a negro and a white woman and fined both. A break occurred in the levee above Sacramento,Cal., causing an inundation 1 of 60(1 acres of the finest hop land in j that section. In a drunken row at a dance in Alpine, Ark., Lew Jones, Charles Ross and Sam Powell were killed. ON their way to Texas a family of immigrants, consisting of two children and father and mother, were frozen to death in a blizzard near Clarendon,
Ark
The Wonderful Story Told by Fred C. Voee and Ills Mother-In-Law to a Keporter of the Huston Herald— Roth Are Restored After
Years of Aguuy.
{From the Boston Herald 1
The vast health-giving results already attributed by the newspapers throughout this The 1 country and Canada to Dr. Williams’ “Pink
excen- | Pills for Palo People'’ have been recently
only 1 supplemented by the cases of two confirmed
ncipal Invalids in one household in a New Eng-
land town. The names of these people are Fred C. Vose, his wife and his mother-in-law, Mrs. Oliver C. Holt, of Peterboro, mem-
fcsrs of tho same household.
To the Herald reporter who was sent to Investigate his remarkable cure Mr. Vose said: “1 am 37 years old, and have been railroading for the Fitchburg for 15 years, bim'e boyhood I have been troubled with ,a weak stomach. For the past 7 years I have suffered terribly and constantly. My stomach would not retain food; my head ached constantly and was so dizzy I could scarcely Stand; my eyes were blurred; 1 had a bad heartburn and my breath was offensive. I had physicians, bat they failed to help me. My appetite gave out, and four years ago 1 deve.opod palpitation of the heart, whr h seriously affected my breathing. Had terrible pains in :ny back and had to make water many times a day. 1 finally developed rheumatic signs and couldn't sleep nights. If 1 lay down my heart would go piPa-pat at a great rate, and many nights l did not close my eyes at all. I was broken down in body and discouraged in spirit, when some time in February lash 1 got a couple of boxes of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. Bofore I had finished the first box I noticed that the palpitation of my heart, which had bothered me so that I couldn't breathe at times, began to improve. I saw that in going to my homo on the hill from the depot, which was previously an awful task, my heart did not beat so violently and I had more breath when I reached tho houso. After the second and third boxc i 1 grow better in every other respect. My stomach became stronger, the gus belching was not so bad, my appetite and digestion improved, ami my sleep became nearly natural and undisturbed. I have continued taking tho pills three times a day ever since last March, and to-day I am feeling better than at any time during the last eight years. X can confidently and conscientiously say that they have done mo more good, and their good effects are more permanent, than any medicine I have ever taken. Mv rheumatic pains in legs and bunds uro all gone. Tho pains in tho small of my back, which were so bad at times that 1 couldn't stand up
straight, have nearly all vanished, and I
‘ ‘" r T''' . ,; ' ' find my kidneys are well regulated by them. Mis horizon is li.n- This is an effect not claimed for the pills in the savage and lie the circular, but in my ease they’brought it
about. lam feeling 100per cent, better in
every shape and manner.”
The reporter next saw Mrs. Holt, who said: “I am 57 years old, and for 14 years past I have had an intermittent heart trouble. Three years ago I had nervous prostration. by which my heart trouble was increased so badly that I had to liodown most of the time. My stomach also gave out, and I had continual and intense'pain from the back of my neck to the end briny backbone. In 14 weeks I spent Sini) for doctor bills and medicines, but my Health continued so miserable that I gave up doctoring in despair. 1 began to take Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills last winter, and the first box made me feel ever so much better. 1 have taken the pills since February, with the result of stopping entirely tho pain in tho spine and in the region of tho liver. My stomach is again normal, and the palpitation of the heart has troubled mo but three times since I com-
menced tho pills.”
An analysis of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills shows that they contain, iu a condensed form, all tho elements necessary to give now life and richness to tho blood and restore stiattored nerves. They are an unfailing speciiit forsuch diseases as ioeomotorataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effect of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, all forms of weakness cither in male or female, and all diseases resulting from vitiated humors in tho blood Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will bo sent pi-ipt paid on receipt of price,(50 cents a box.orsix boxesfor $.•.50—they are never sold in bulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y., orBrockvilie, Out.
1011 gh enerit tho liming
.on » pc rate ruffians that . » .oer. Mr. Stevenson has glorified the trad -r. Take that ind vi lual apart from the glamour east over him by a great novel st's art, and yon will find him an exceedingly unlovely creature, though not always unlovable, perhaps, when in contact with men of his own color. We exclude the man who represents a reputable European house becans.-, as n rule, he is fixed, and it is his policy to keep on friendly terras with the natives. The ordinary beach-comber may also be set apart. Ho is too lazy, as a rule, tube very bad, and his only selfimposed task is generally to advise the chiefs, for which services, and for acting as interpreter between them and the natives, his usual remuneration takes the form of ‘•chain-lightning.” The man we have more particularly in mind is the individual who, in his own or somebody olse’s schooner, curries “notions” up and down among Ihe islands, to be- bartered for copra, or anything else that is marketable and that will fetch in Sy Incy twenty times as much us was originally given for it. The average trader is a man of absolutely no bowels, lie has no eye for nature’s marvels. The poetry of the southern clime never yet slid into ins soul. His class is made up largely of riff-raff of all Australia, and of some honest men whom the itch for wandering has carried on board a trad -r, or who have drifted thitlu-r from Sydney after experiencing that sickness of
parental supplies, itc-d to “bilking’’
makes enough in a few years to retiro to a handsome villa in the suburbs of
would fill a book His vocabulary of cuss-words would make you cold. <*n the whole it is not to be wondered at that, now and again, the savage worm should turn round and, not knowing any better, slay him.—Pall Mall Ga-
zette.
A Yiiltiivlilc I'ackiiqp.
A gentleman who had been refreshing himself a short time previously at one of the boulevard cafes hurriedly re-entered the establishment, and adI dressing the waiter anxiously inquired of him; “Did I leave behind me n small parcel, tied with a string, on the table?” “No, sir,” replied the waiter. “By Jove, then, its unlucky. I shouldn't like the parcel to get into strange hands, for it contained some
valuable ” “Jewels, sir,” suggested the waiter, smiling blandly. “Jewels! No, man; scorpions. Some very rare and deadly scorpions.” The waiter smiled no more, lie, on the contrary, turned deadly pale, and sinking into the nearest chair gasped, as he pointed to ins coat pocket: “They arc there.” —-Spare Moments. NewspaiM»r» nn Kriucntor*. Teacher—In what state is Chicago? Pupil—New Jersey. “Wrong. Where is tho Hudson river?” “Rises in the Rocky Mountains and flows to the Gulf of Mexico.” “My goodness, child, you must have been reading a London newspaper.”—
Good News. sm Pstrtoisa.
Governess—Your litth- girl is a very i
skilled arithmetician, madam.
Mrs. Parvenew—Ready? I am sc ; sorry. Ft goo I ness' sale-, don't let her liecum- too intimate with tliosa vil -n ■ fra.' ins. — Detroit Free I’re.-a.
all moonshine'” rmm* iaco-V of them pay internal^, ijjwaxes.
Field's Washington,
What You Read 1 q €3 About flood’s ^ The testimonials published In tAbalf ' Hood's SarAaparills are not purchased, nor are thr/y written up in cur offlew, nor are they fApm our employes. Tliry ^ arc staple statiXmcnts of .{jUtS froth people whom HooWlp Sarsaparilla has cured, published without sensationalism or fictitious headlines They prove positively that Hood's Sarsaparilla possesses absolute merit and that Hood’s s f>Cures
Hood's Pills cure liver Ills, Jaundice, tolls lousness, sick headache and Indigestion. 25c.
I tised August Flower for Loss of vitality and general debility. After taking two bottles I gained 69 lbs. I have sold more of your August Flower since I have been iu business than any other medicine I ever kept. Mr. Peter Zinville says he was made a new man by the use of August Flower, recommended by me. I have hundreds tell me that August Flower has done them more good than any other medicine they ever took. George W. Dye, Sardis,
Mason Co., Ky.
&
DR. KIMWF.R’S
THE (V./.RKETS.
Ntw Y.■ UK, Jan. 31.
LIVE STOCK—Cuttle Sheep Hogs. FLOUK—Winter PutentH Minnesota i 'stents WHK \ : & Red l'iif/ratled Ked COHN -No. a Un(traded Mixed .* OATS Track Mixed Western..
i.8 7 * 'i& 4 fiO 2 5.) ^ 3 5J 0 1.) (d» i» 45 3 33 (i 0 3 60 3 50 3 05 06 „ 4 07 02 (& 07 4i! ("6 4344 43»j 31 (<£ H5
RYE—Western
f>» ((& 5734
PORK —Mess, New
14 50 ('Ll* 75
LAUD— W ester u
8 03 ^ 8 10
liU’l TER—WoHtern Creamery.
1H (<6 ~0‘i
Western Dairy
17
CURED ME. La Grippe! Grippe! Grippe I After Effects Cured. Mr. Bilger writes:—“I had a bad attack of tho Grippe; after ^ time caught cold ami had a second attack. It settled In my Kidneys and Liver and Oh! such pain ail liii-cry I n my back and leg! The physicians’ mediciri and Other things that 1 tise^ made no impression, and continually grew worse until I was a Physical wreck and given up to die. Father bought me a bottle of l>r. Kilmer’s SWAMP-HOOT, and before I had used all of the second bottle I felt better, and to-day I ara just os well ns ever. A year has passed and not a truce of tho Gifppe
is left.
Swamp-Hso? Saved FSy Life. D. H. litLOER, HulmevlUe, Pa., Jan. 10th, 1S98. A* Priigt-lsts 50 ccnt*i and $1.00 size. •• Invalid!.* Guide to Health ” free- < oMultatloh free. Ur. Kilmer A Co., - Binghamton. N. Y. Dr. Kllmer's _ PARILLA LIVER PILLS Are Ihe Best 42 IMlIs. 25 cents. — All UrussaUt.. The Greatest fledical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. ' DONALD KENNEDY, of ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it In over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. # When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week a\er taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No cliange of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough o#it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists.
f 7 f
CHICAGO.
BEEVKS—Shipping Slevrs . CoW H Stockers ... Feeders Butchers Hteera Hulls BOON SHEEP BUTTER 1 i ■oral 1 \ Dairy EGGS—Fresh BROOM(OKN-
$2 VO <31 & 7 ) III m, 2 Ho 2 40 ot 3 ou 3 00 (is 3 00 2 H I 3 30 1 511 ® 3 50 5 00 u5 5 40 1 50 m, 3 81 is a son IS ia> 21 13 a 14
Western (per ton)
<aeo oo
Western Dwarf
50 00
«£70 m
Illinois, ijrood to Choice
50 00
(£70 00
POTATOES 1 per bu.)
411
(ft 56
PORK—Mess
12 V714'1.13 03 q
LARD—Steam
7 (fcVtA 7 fi7‘i
FLOCK Spring Patents
3 60
fit A 90
•Spcintf Straights
2 60
(ft 2 80
\\ inter Patents
0 U5
(ft 3 40
Winter Siraiphts
2 IU
(ft A 00
GRAIN Whe at, No. 2 Corn, No. 2
69 1 85
$ L 00«i (ft 35'4
On Is. No. 2
27V4<£ 2744
Rye, No 2
44
'!• 44’i
Hurley, Choice to Fancy ...
50
(ft 54
LUAII4ER-
Siding .V ..
15 00
(It22 60
Flooring
; uo
r,t.M 00
Common Boards
14 0)
<ft M
Fen elm:
12 <w
lifriO 00
Lath. Dry ...
2 40
a 2 4 a
Slilnglia
2 2i
(ft 3 UJ
KANSAS CITY.
CATTLE—Shipping 8leers
G no
CJ 5 25
Stockers and Feeders
2 60
(ft 3 'i b 1»
SHEEP
«ft 3 50
OMAHA.
CATTLE -Steers
Cl ’.0
at, 4 so
Feeders
A .* .3
dt :i so
HOGS
5 10
<i» 5 22q
SHEEP
2 271
(4 3 45
A Mist.
She blushed in sweet confusion. “And what, papa,” she faltered, shy ly, “did you think of Lord Eustace?” The old man contemplated her bowed head for a moment in silence. “My child,” he answered, slowly, after a time, “it seems to me that his mind is decidedly foggy.” “Papa.” She was kneeling at his feet "Forgive me, nay pet—” The father had risen to his feet in
alarm.
“— if 1 have spoken hastily.”
“Papa, I am sure you are right 1 had the same impression, but I feared I might be mistaken. And isn’t it—” She raised her streaming eyes to his. j — too lovely for anything. Fogs
nr - so awfully English, you know."
i In her rapture she insisted that she did not envy a soul on earth.—Truth.
“SWcet Sixteen.”
The beautiful calendars sent out by j C. I. Hood <t Co., of Lowell, Mass., I have attracted much attention in all parts of the country. The calendar bears the head of a lovely giri, "sweet | sixteen,” lithographed iu delicate colors. Over eight millions of these calendars were made. C*. I. Hood Co., as is well known, are the proprietors of
Hood's Sarsaparilla, which is ev fry- -fop rjpe-r minDCn |SrtOT' , '’'‘r mtentea where a Household word <."1 account of . ' “ nUDDLH DUUI furF*r««er«, tho wonderful euros that Jia.VD been of- , orwhoIelennUiofthnaoiadown
fected by means of this great blood ^ purifier. Hood's Sarsaparilla is made iu a building which is the largest in the world devoted to the business of making a medicine, and tliisg-reat industry has -been built up within a few years by the absolute merit of Hood’s
Sarsaparilla.
to tho hoftl. pi'HitA'tlntr rhephiink Inditchtiiff.<llap1n| and other work. littH'X 1 quality < hrn$ii;liout. ASIL YOL'K IICALUK IM>U TIK KM.
!S .»T 1 .
I have sent\
— L
*
- >
Keven I'lecefl of Pie. A very successful business man was fond of relating the following incident of his boyhood experience. His mother placed him w ith n family of Friends on a farm in Delaware. At dinner, the day after his arrival, he declined turnips, whereupon the good lady of tho household, thinking that he was anticipating the dessert, said, with a nod toward the center of the table: “If tho-i doesn’t eat turnips, thee can’t hav- pie. ’ Rut the boy’s aversion w as genuine, and he lu-ld out from day to day, till, on the seventh day, tho just woman said: "Samuel, I see thee can’t oat turnips; here is thy pie,” and she took from the cupboard the seven pieces of pic he hail forfeited during the week—Golden Days. Jk
W4'dh col « 1
head!
Oif
iraJfawu m.’ j taswH - TRY TEE OME. H AY ‘FE^ A partlrlo H applied Into ench n' -tril anil la agree Able 1 . Trice W» cuntnat DnuurTt*- orbv infill. KLY BUOTilEKH,5J \Vurron*?5t., New Vo*.
Cleanses the
Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and Iiiflaniitialion, Heals the Sores.
Restores the
Senses of Taste
and Smell.
CiiiM
' :i£LF-ACTiN3~\
SHADEWlftRs)
Beware of Imitations. yi iSMIMlI
- i/
