The Greencastle Democrat, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 June 1894 — Page 2
THE DEMOCRAT.
GREENCASTLE,
INDIANA.
The News Condensed.
Important Intelligence From All Parts.
CONGRESSIONAL. Kcgulur St-H.lon, Ik the senato on the 23d Senator f’.orman defended the tarid bill in u •pecch. A motion to lay the measure on tho table wus defeated by a strict party vote of 28 to S'* The house continued Its onslaught on tho rlvll servleo comtnlsslon by striking out of the legislative appropriation bill the paragraph transferring department clerks to tho classified service. A bill was favorably reported providing a fine of $600 and Imprisonment us a penalty directed at any ex-soldlcr who postdates his voucher for pension before tho 4th of tho month. Sesatob Ktlb urged tho passage of his resolution In the senate on the 24th declaring that it was not tho purpose of tho United States to Use force to restore I.iliuokuluni us queen of tho Hawaiian islands, but It went over for the day. ITto taritf bill was further eonsidered. . In the house the amendment to the legislative appropriation bill to strike . out the provision for contingent expenses of the clvllaorviee commission was voted down and tho measure was passed. Tho bill to incorporate the supremo lodge of tho Knights of Pythias wus also passed, end a resolution was adopted Betting aside Saturday. June 22. for eulogies on the late Representative llouk. of Ohio. Thb Hawaiian resolution was considered •gain for half an hour In tho senate on tho ttth but no action was taken. The tariff bill was further discussed In tho house the time was occupied In the discussion of an omnibus resolution from the committee on war claims, grouping together thirty-seven claims for cotton. etc., aggregating Jl.b40.U00. In tho senate on the 2flth Senator 11111 (N. Y.l again attacked the InrlfT bill and was bitter In denouncing the Income tux. A bill was Intro- j duced providing that all persons who receive pensions less than *12 per month shall have their pensions Increased to that amount, and Bpeoial provision Is made that no widow s pen- j slon shall be less than J12 In the house tho bill to remit the 10 per cent, tux on clearinghouse certificates and other notes Issued by private and state bunking associations was
discussed.
DOMESTIC. Reboi.vtioks denouncing' President Cleveland and calling forliis impeachment were adopted by the populist •luto convention ut Sacramento, Cal. At Dorseyville, La., Adolph lllock and Jules Luke engaged in u gun fight with a negro and ail three were killed. A kkoko who assaulted tho 14-yenr-old daughter of Washington Smith, living near Arlington, Ga., and killed Air. Smith, was taken from jail by a mob and hanged and his body riddled with bullets. Thb Hoods in Pennsylvania were receding. The loss at Williamsport and In Lycoming county was placed at $1,000,000. Losses in other portions of tho atate were also heavy. Thk Pan-American HimetaHic association, composed of representatives from the United States, South and Central America and Old Mexico, met in Washington, in his opening address Air. Fiske said a revolution would come if relief were not granted in tho line of free coinage. Snow to tho depth of 5 inches fell at Bristol, Tenn. John Chow, for whose murder John Van Nimmnngs is serving a life sentence in tho prison at Jackson, Mich., Is alive and well at Muncie, Ind., and has just learned of his supposed death in Iss.'i. Heahino of the ease of Prendergast, the murderer of Mayor Harrison iu Chicago, lias been set for June 11. John Schindler, of San Francisco, Bupposed to be dead thirty-live years, returned to St. Joseph, Mo., and claimed a fortune left by his father. Peter Crcbkr fatally shot Annie Bran/, in Philadelphia and then killed himself. No cause was known for the deed. John Roeschi.ein and Frank Grany found a package containing Sl.ftUO wortli of diamonds in Chicago and hunted up tho owner, though both were out of work and bud eaten nothing for two days. Warrants were issued at Colorado Springs, Col., for tho arrest of W. 1). Richmond, who is charged with having six wives in various places. A succession of light earthquake shocks, accompanied by a rumbling noise, were felt at Anna and Cairo, 111., and at Cape Girardeau and St. Louis, Mo. Gov. Nortiien, of Georgia, waselected president of tho American Baptist Educational society in session at Saratoga, N. V. Appropriation of public moneys to sectaria . schools wus opposed by speakers. Five members of the bar of Beatrice, Neb., were committed to jail for contempt for being absent when Judge Bush's docket was called. Fiftv-ni.ne indictments were returned by the special grand jury against persons charged with violations of the election law in Chicago. Four bandits robbed a Longview (Tex.) bank of S'2,000 and in a fight with citizens killed one and wounded four. George Bennett, one of the robbers, was also killed. A thousand striking miners marched to the Mission Field coal mines near Danville, 111., and compelled tho 200 men at work to come out and take an oath not to return. Business men of the northwest met at Minneapolis and formed an association whoseobjeet is to build up a home market for home-manufactured goods. The business portion of the town of Luten. la., was destroyed by fire. The entire tobacco crop of northern Pennsylvania and southwestern New York was destroyed by the recent Hood. At the session of the state constitutional convention in Albany, N. Y., petitions with 32.000 signatures in favor of woman suffrage were presented. A cyclone at McKinney, Tex., destroyed houses, trees and fences and killed one man. The bank of Tempo at Phoenix, A. T., closed its doors. B. F. Hughes, R. F. Weed and Charles O’Brien, leaders of commonwealers who stole a Union Pacific train at Alontpelier, Idaho, were sentenced at Cheyenne, Wyo., to five months’ imprisonment, and twelve others were sentenced to four months' in jail.
Fire destroyed the most important portion of East End, New Orleans’ most popular summer, resort, the loss being 3100,000. Representative Davis (Kan.) has made a careful estimate of the different bands of Coxeyites on the way to Washington and claims that there arc 5,000 men tramping or riding on boats and borrowed trains toward the cap-
ital.
John Dewright, a well-to-do farmer, died at Kalamazoo, Mich., aged 72 years. Nothing but water passed his lips for forty-six days before death, lie was determined to starve himself to death and succeeded. Troops were ordered to I,a Salle and Centralia. 111., to suppress striking miners, who defied the local authori-
ties.
Five strikers were shot to death and a dozen wounded in a fight with deputy sheriffs at Stickle Hollow, Pa., and three deputies were injured. The J. K. Gill company, wholesale dealers in books and stationery at Portland, Ore., failed for 3130,000. Michael Bash and wife, an aged couple, started from Clinton, la., in a roadcart drawn by a mule for an overland trip to New York city. The Edgar Thomson steel works at Braddock, Pa., closed down in all departments, throwing over 2,500 men out of work. Mistaking his 17-year-old niece for a burglar, Ephraim Bills, of Fairbury, 111., shot her, probably fatally. Gov. Flower vetoed the bill to prevent display of foreign flags on New York public buildings. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in tho United States during tho week ended on the 25th aggregated »854,560,909, against #837.677.573 the previous week. The decrease, compared with tho corresponding week in 1898, \\a-, 18.2. There were 237 business failures in the United States iu tho seven days ended on tho 25th, against 220 the week previous and 250 iu tho corresponding time in 1893. Strikers at Kangley, 111., drove out the miners near that place and wrecked the mine by filling it up with debris. Suit for 3100,000 damages, caused by fire in the Manufactures building January 8, lias been commenced in Chicago by the republic of Franco against the Columbian Exposition company. An organization to be known as the American Congress of Liberal Religious societies was effected in Chicago with Rev. II. W. Thomas as president. The grand court of the United Commercial Travelers of America began its annual session at Cleveland, O. It was said the discovery had been made that congressmen had been drawing salaries for employes who do not exist and pocketing tho proceeds. Adolph Brenner, a Chicago anarchist, attempted to kill a family in New York and then shot himself. Investigation shows that farmers of the northwest have abandoned wheat as their only crop. The decrease this year will be 25 per cent. Charles \V. Buttz was found guilty by the investigating' committee in Washington of attempting to bribe senators. Bradstrkkt's trade review says that tho unfavorable conditions prevailing in commercial and industrial circles throughout the country, together with the prospect for no material improvement during tho summer, mark the present season as probably the dullest relatively for twenty years. Strikers visited a coal mine near Ottawa, 111., burned the tools and de-stroj-ed the mine by removing the props. Striking miners blew up a gold mine at (.ripple Creek, Col., killing eleven men who were at work in the mine. The giant Cunard steamer Lucania made the trip from Liverpool to New York in five days twelve hours and fifty-seven minutes, beating all rec-
ords.
Austin Brown (colored) was banned at San Antonio, Tex., for the murder of Anderson Harris, an ex-poUce officer. Joseph Guiles, alias John D. May, was hanged at Kansas City, Tex., for the killing of Fireman Frank Martin while attempting to rob a train. The percentages of the baseball clubs in tho national league for the week ended on tho 26th were: Cleveland, .720; Philadelphia, .080.; Baltimore, .007; Pittsburgh, .007; Boston, .007; New York, .500; Brooklyn, .402; Cincinnati, .458; St. Louis, .429; Louisville, .891; Chicago, .308; Washington, 111. Twi negroes were lynched near Clinton, Miss., for burglary. The New Jersey legislature adjourned sine die. The Presbyterian general assembly in session at Saratoga refused to entertain tho appeal of Dr. Henry P. Smith from suspension for heretical teachings. The lire losses in the United States during the week ended on the 20th were estimated at 32,402,000. Mrs. Riley Yates gave birth to her twenty-fifth child at Springfield, O. She is 40 and her husband 01. The city council at El Paso, Tex., passed an ordinance that no woman shall be allowed on the streets wearing what is Unown as the divided skirt. The coinage of gold at the Philadelphia mint during the present fiscal year will reach 380,000,000, the largest in its history. Nine million dollars was offered by an English syndicate for the Elgiu (111.) national watch company. Three companies of militia were ordered to Minonk, 111., where traffic on the Illinois Central had been stopped by armed miners. A Baltimore & Ohio passenger train was wrecked by a landslide near Pine Grove. Aid, and the engineer and fireman were killed. A hi.ah believed to have been Inscribed in 1054 and to be a relic of tho anti-nomain sect was unearthed ut Fredonia, N. Y. Judge Gresham's decision denying the power of the interstate commerce commission to compel the attendance and testimony of witnesses and the production of books and papers was overruled by the supreme court.
James Howard, while drunk shot and killed his wife at Pineville, Ky. She was holding in her arms a baby and her dead body fell violently on tho
child, crushing its life out
THE TARIFF DEBATE.
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL.
In convention at Indianapolis the Indiana populists nominated a full state ticket headed by C. A. Robinson, of Fountaintown, for secretary of state. The platform recommends the free coinage of silver; adv.ses an increase of the currency to 3.50 per«eapita; de-
nounces national banks and interest | Wils is only May
bearing government bonds; recommends the election of United States senators and postmasters by a direct vote of the people, and favors an in-
come tax and local option.
Charles B. Landis, of Delphi, was nominated for congress by the republicans of the Tenth Indiana district. The Michigan democrats will hold their state convention at Grand Rapids
on June 28.
Dr. Smith, charged with heresy, argued his ease for five hours before the Presbyterian general assembly at Saratoga, N. Y. Arthur H. Taylor was renominated for congress by the democrats in tlio First district of Indiana. Dr. Thomas 'Wilkinson, of Ann Arbor, Mich., died at the age of 95 years. He was a veteran of the war of 1812. W. W. Herrick, aged 02, a wellknown capitalist of Minneapolis, died on a train en route home from California, where he spent the winter. The republicans of the Sixth Kansas district nominated Abram 11. Ellis
for congress.
Rev. Edgar H. Gray, a well-known Baptist minister, who was chaplain of the United States senate at the time of President Lincoln's assassination, died at San Francisco, aged 80 years. Valentine Ulatz, president of the Blatz Brewing company of Milwaukee, died suddenly in St. Paul, where he had gone on business. He was worth
315,000,000.
Senator (iormnn Defend* the Measure Now
liefore the Senate.
On the 23d Senator Oormnn (dem.. Md.) mad# a reply to the attacks that had been made upon him. explaining tho necessity tor tho com-
•“ r -r r x; 1 leSoKSI isfrftssw fronted the democratic party In dealing with 1Joef 8uet m „i rtnp n ])a i 0 yefiow material of the question of tariff reform. The difficulty tho consi8tem . v BU bstunco of lard, alwas not all In opposition hut In Internal dis- t without o -j 0r an j intended to take the
Froleetlng Lot to lens.
The N. K. Fairbank Company of Chicago have lately brought suit in the United States Court against W. L. Henxy, of this city, for $5,0U0.0u for infringement of their trade mark “Cottoleue.” The N. K. Fairbank Company sets forth that they originated, prepared, and put upon tho market
Benslon as to how the fruits of victory should be secured. Withal he claimed that action by the present congress had not been unusually delayed. It was the last of September liefore the president signed the McKinley bill, and
most without odor and intended
place of lard in cooking.
In order to indicate tho source nnd ger uinoncss of their new food product, the;
Tho Wilson bill, he said, had been reported to the house before its effect upon existing industries could be properly studied: an Imperfect measure that not only failed to meet tho treasury demands but actually increased the deficit created by tho republican prohibitive
duties.
'1 here wus no expectation that it would become a law unchanged. Tho senate had always perfected such bills, yet no sooner did the tlnance committee begin its work than the cry for “action" was renewed with extraordinary vigor, and the democratic senators were informed that any change would be set down ns “betrayal of the party's promises," and that every senator who showed the least concern for the Interests of his owa state was a traitor to tho union and his party; that the senate wus no longer a coordinate body, but Its sole duty was to ratify blindly the action of the
house.
In answer to the charges by tho republicans, Senator Gorman asserted that tho bill had been Constructed on the democratic theory of a tariff for revenue, with such incidental protection us could be given consistently to the industries of tho country. It followed stupidly the course marked out by President Cleveland
----'v- 7 originated, coined, and used as a trade mark the word “Cottolene.” The healthfulness and many other advantages of Cottoleue over lard were so apparent that Cottolene became at once very popular and is now
largely sold all over the country.
Tho new food product and its name “Cottolene'’have become widely known as tho
product of The N. K. Fairbank Company. The trade mark Is described as a ‘•trade
mark for Oleaginous Food Substances, Ac,” “consisting of a head or neck of a Steer or other bovine partially enclosed by •prigs and branches of the Cotton plant." ‘The N. K. Fairbank Company charges that W. L. Henry, of Macon, Ga., a dealer In fresh meats and food products generally, has been and is endeavoring unlawfully to avail himself of tho benents of tho name “Cottolene" and its popularity; that lie has been and is selling a product similar in kind, but inferior in quality, under tho name or “Cottolene” to tho injury of tho original and genuine “Cottolene,” and to the loss and injury of its manufacturers The N. K.
Fairbank Company.
The infringements upon the trade mark of “Cottolene” have become so frequent, and so many dealers are selling an inferior article and claiming it to bo Cottolene that Tho N. K. Fairbank Company are determined to protect their customers and pro-
Clarenee Itatc Crockett Murfreesboro, Tenn.
Almost Blind His Head a Mass of Corruption
Blood Purified and Sight Restored
by Hood's SarsaparBla.
Three yeers ego Clarence^ three^^yea r* old, <
mm
taken with scrofula on tho head whicn gradually spread until itgotInto his eyes and he hecan most blind. We did everythin* that could be with the assistance of a s)tllled physician, nothing did him any good. His head and neck were one mass of corruption, and wo thought ho
Mr alme • ut
Would Lose His Eyesight.
It was then that wo commenced to use Hood’s Sarsaparilla. and In less than three weeks his eyes began to improve. In a short time tho sores took on a healthy appearance and gradually healed, and now all are gone, and Clarence Is a bright and
in his letter of acceptance, upon which he was p oso to 8U - e e y erv retail dealer who is thus reelected, amt the democratic party Intrusted imposing upon his customers and infringing with full power, if there had been the slight- upon The N. K. Fairbank Company's trade est apprehension In the public mind of a radl- mark.—Telegraph, Macon, Ga. cal overturning of our industrial affairs Mr. 9 Cleveland would not have been elected. I MrnOE—“Some villain got into my room
Sarsa-
last night and stole u pair of brand new trousers. I had them made in London.” Yabsley “London made, eh! Oh, you are all right, then. They will turn up the first day it rains.”—Indianapolis Journal.
This was not a free trade measure, but it was ; a longer step for freer trade than either the Mills bill or the tariff act of 1883. It was not for protection for protection s sake, but it did discriminate between raw materials and manufactured articles to the full extent of the difi ference between Kuropoan and American I wages. Nor was It a deflcit-creating bill, such as the present law was or tho house bill would I have been. It was democrsitic because it re-
duced taxation to the requirements of the gov- PPPPBI
ernment. It was Just, It was wise, it was bust- Juno 5th, July 5th, August 7th, Sent. 4th, nesslike. it was patriotic and it was prudent, o t t. 2nd, Nov. 6th, and Dec. 4th, good to re- | because it did not attempt to ignore fact in turn twenty days from date of sale, to ! carrying out a theory. It was not perfect, but points on the Nashville, Chattanooga, & St. It was the most logical, most fair, most broad, Louis Railway iu Tennessee, Alabama,
parilla
Round Trip to tho South for One Fare. Homoseokers, tourists and investors are advised that excursion Tickets are authorized to be sold from Ohio river points and may be sold from points North thereof on
, ,, >\n* mu Uiuni. ivKim.i uojcii mu, XjOIUS xviwiwwjf o.
All England was en fete in honor of most timely, ami would prove to be the most Georgia and to points beyond in l lqyida the 75th birthday of Queen Victoria. \ advantageous tariff legislation enacted sines and Carohnas. This is the time to^ investi-
“Thc assertion that any trust or trusts have and descriptive matter apply to Briard F. dictated any part of any schedule of this bill I Hid, 194 S. Clark Kt., Chicago, 111., 1). J. pronounce as unqualifiedly false. They have Mullaney, 59 \v’ ; 4th St., Cincinnati, O..R.
the same ut tent ion. althnueh not as C ('oWAUDIV, Western Puss. Agt. 120 Lu-
A gigantic anarchist plot to explode bombs in various European cities wus
discovered in Paris.
At a meeting in Friedrichroda of the German Banking association a resolution in favor of a gold standard was
unanimously adopted.
Drunken Canadian soldiers tore down the American Hag in front of the United States consul's office in St. Thomas,
Ont.
The Rookery cotton mills at Hud- j derstield, England, were burned, the
loss being 8200,000.
F. Stomre & Co., steamship owne.-a and brokers of London and Liverpool,
failed for 9560.000.
Craven & Craven, worsted spinners
at Bradford, England, failed with lia' j
bilities amounting to 810,000,000. At St. Petersburg Count Sollogaub and four other persons, including two lawyers, were banished to Siberia for
received tho same attention, although not as much consideration, as Individuals engaged In tho business of manufacture no more nnd no less. We felt the necessity of dealing nil such combinations a death blow, but we found them so hedged about by the bounty and other devices of republican statesmen that it was p isslble only to curtail their privileges to the farthest limit consistent with the rights of others intimately concerned, but not responsi-
ble.
• I consider that It has no fitting place in our fiscal system In a time of peace. I could not vote conscientiously to make this method of taxation a part of our settled policy, but. much as I deplore tho fastening of an income tax in any form upon our tariff bill. I cannot, as a democrat, bound in honor to let no ordinary prejudice or difference of opinion prevent the passage of n tariff measure, refuse to vote for j this amendment, simply and solely, however,
' as an emergency tax."
C. Uowardin, Western Pass. Agt. Cledo Building, St. Louis, Mo.
Tin: troubles we most fear never happen. —Raw a Horn.
THE MARKETS.
IN GREAT PERIL.
forging a will.
Five of the crew of the Norwegian steamer Norden were killed by the ex- j plosion of one of her boilers in the Buy |
of Biscay.
The czar of Russia issued a ukase <le- | priving ministers anil governors of the power of appointing or dismissing sub-
ordinates.
In the chess match at Montreal for I the championship of the world Lasker beat Steinitz in the nineteenth and de-
cisive game.
Sir Francis Johnson, chief justice of the supreme court of Quebec, died ot Montreal, aged 88 years.
Miner* and Visitor* Climb Up Ladder* Out
of a Mine.
LATER. The United States senate spent eight hours on the 28th discussing free lumber, the debate being upon Mr. Hale's proposition to transfer lumber ta the dutiable list. In the house the time was occupied in discussing District of Columbia matters. A heavy frost did great damage to fruit and other crops in Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan and Indiana. Signor Don Claudio Vicuna,who was elected to succeed Balmacedu as president of Chili, was sentenced by the courts in Santiago to fifteen years’
exile.
An order from the secretary of war was received ut Fort Leavenworth, Kan., for three companies of military to move immediately to MeAlester, I. T., to suppress the mine trouble and restore to owners the property held by strikers. The 115th anniversary of the birth of Thomas Moore was celebrated at Central music hall in Chicago. Rev. Dr. O'Reilly, of Detroit, was the orator. Gen. Coney has commissioned Gen Frye as commander-in-chief of the commonweal army of the United
States.
The soft coal operators of Pennsylvania decided that they would parley with their striking miners no longer, but would immediately procure new hands and work their mines, even if each workman required the protection
of a deputy sheriff.
Princess Josephine of Belgium and Prince Charles of Hohenxollern-Sig-maringeu were quietly married at
Rrussels. received.
A protest against the admission of Utali as a state was adopted by the Presbyterian general assembly at its closing session in Saratoga, N. Y. A EIRE in the incubator establishment at Franklin, Ind., des’royed 80,000 newly-hatched chickens. Lyman Palmer, aged 75, of New Orleans, was married to Mrs. Mary Palmer, aged 75, of Waukegan, 111. The couple have each been married three times and in spite of this the bride has never changed her name, all her hus-
bands being Palmers.
The American Baptist Missionary union began i s eightieth annual meet
iug at Saratoga, N. Y.
In the United States court at Indianapolis Percival B. Coffin, Francis A. Coffin and Albert N. Reed were convict-
ed of bank wrecking.
Julia Marlowe, the actress, was married at Philadelphia to Robert Taber, formerly her leading man.
Wilkesbarhe, Pa., May 25.—At 9 o’clock Thursday morning 125 members of the New York Coal exchange on a visit here started, under guidance of Superintendent Lawal and other officers of the Lehigh & Wilkesbarre Coal company, to inspect tin: workings of the South Wilkesbarre shaft and breakers. This shaft has an output of 70,000 tons of coal a month, and the great breaker, only three yearsold, has a capacity of 4.000 tons a day. Some of the party had descended tho shaft, which is 1.000 feet deep. Nino others were on the carriage 500 feet down. Others of the party, including the superintendent, were waiting to descend. Those at the shaft and those waiting to go down were terrified by a terrible explosion. One of the eighteen boilers had burst. There were 400 workmen inside the mine and the explosion had
Kew York.
May 20.
LIVE STOCK—Cattle
*•4 00
<& 4 00
Hogs
5 00
(g 5 40
FLOCK Minnesota Patents
3 40
(4. 3 Ho
City Mill I’Htents
•4 05
0i. 4 30
WHEAT No. 2 Red
5<>V" 57 *4
Ungraded Red
50
«(. 01
COHN No. i
UVtr 43
Ungraded Mixed
41
43 Vi
OATS 1 rack Mixed Western..
42
KYK Ungraded Western
55
(hi M
POIiK Mess. New
13 00
Or 13 50
LAUD- -Western
7 33
(h 7 40
liUTTKK VVer tern Creamery..
13
Ik. 17
0
(tl» 12
CHICAl rO.
BEEVES--Shipping Steers
*3 35
@ 4 45
Cows
1 00
0’ 3 2b
Stockers
2 V5
Or 3 40
Feeders
3 20
Or 3 H0
Butchers’ Steers
8 30
(fo 3 75
HOGS
•4 40
«< -i m>
SHKi’ll*
2 00
0> 4 HO
BUTTER Creamery
11
'■c 10)4
Dairy
8K© 11
ECUS Fresh
OUGt 10
BROOM CORN—
Western (per ton)
30 00
' / 55 00
Western Dwarf
43 (Ml
(*•66 00
Cures
hPnltbTchuff, with clP^r hssntlfnl err* •atOflpfi that Hood’s lias made a coraplet D. M. CHOCKETT. JH., Murfreesboro, Tenn.
We nre
etocuru.’*
Hood’s Pills cure Constipation by restoring the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal.
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.
Seif ’s Emulsion
of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphites has come to be an article of every-day use, a prompt and infallible cure for Colds, Coughs, Throat troubles, and a positive builder of flesh. Prepared by Scott A Bovme, N. Y. All drugglsti.
Illinois (rood to( hoice.. POTATOKS (per bu.) POUK Mess LAK1J—Steam FLOUR -.'spring Patents... Spring .'straights Winter Patents
45 00 ((4,70 00 58 Or 75
11 (in
r. «» :i go <h 8 60 2 ‘JO Or 2 CO
big’ ventilator. Tho mines are the most gaseous of the country and half an hour meant death with the fairs stopped. The carriage, descending with nine of the New Yorkers, had
stuck 500 feet down.
The workmen inside at once noticed the stoppage of the air current. They rushed to the foot of the shaft and
Winter Straights
2 CO
('/ 2 75
GRAiN Wheat, Cash Corn, No. 2
53V"> 54 87V4 33 VC* 83 >4
Oats, No. 2
Rye, No. 2
45
4a'i
Harley, Good to Choice LUMBER—
51
<& 50
Siding
16 00
(fC23 50 Or 37 00
Common Hoards
14 50
Oi, 14 00
* Fencing
13 (N)
Or 10 IN)
Lath. Dry
2 50
Or 2 00
Shinnies
2 00
(1C. 3 15
KANSAS CITY.
CATTLK Shipping Steers
$3 20
r-e 4 30
Stockers and Feeders
2 50
Q ‘C 3 85
SHEEP
3 00
<& 4 50
OMAHA.
CATTLK Steers
$3 50 2 65
(it 4 10
Feeders
00 3 40
HOGS
4 50
Cg 4 70
S11KK1*
3 00
(0, 4 40
On the face and back of every card of genuine De Long Tat. Hooks and Eyes will be found the words:
See that
hump?
TKADK-MARK R8G. APR. 19-9I.
Richardson & I Long Bros., Philadelphia.
Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies — OH — Oilier Chemicals
VTvVl-w-' of people who visit the Invalids’ •■Jrir •»’- Motel and Surgical Institute, at Buf-
falo, N. Y., arc many who are sent ~ r there, by those who have already, from
told the visitors that they must climb personal experience, learned oftho grait Straight up the curbing to the surface, i Triumph nConsorvatlvoSurgeTf . ,, * . ”, , aehiwed by tbo Suoreons of that famed instiAll grasped the cross bars nailed to tutlon. Little heroic, or cutting surgery la
the timbers and toiled slowly up to the surface, assisted and encouraged by
the miners.
A thousand persons had collected around the shaft. As the men began to swarm out the crowd cheered wildly, expecting, however, to hear that some one had lost his hold and fallen, to he crushed in a shapeless mass. Rut all had clung fast. Some fainted as soon as they reached the surface from the strain. At noon all the New Yorkers were safely out and all but a few miners, while workmen were busy repairing breaks in the steam pipes.
found necessary. For instance, Ovarian, Fibroid (TJtcriae) and
ILHfriHIv* many others, are removed by Electrolysis nnd other conservative means nnd thereby tho porils of cutting oi>crations
avoided.
are used in the preparation of
W. BAKER & CO.’S reakfastCocoa
which \9 absolutely ,. jmre and soluble, I It hnsmorethan threetime$ [ tho strength of Cocoa mined i with Starch, Arrowroot or 'Sugar, and M far more economical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and easily digested.
Sold by Grocers everyTrhare.
W.BAKER&C0.,Dorch6ster,Mass.
p||_[: TUgIORS however large. Fistula
St. I.ouls Four Courts Crumbling:. St. Louis, May 25.—It lias long been
known that the Four Courts building
Magnificent presents were ! was in a condition of decay. I’resi-
i dent McMath, of the board of public Improvements, has received a communication from tho board of public commissioners setting fortli that the building was dangerous to life and recommending that the building be torn down. The building is daily
thror^ed by thousands.
andotherdisoosesof the
lower bowel, are pormunontly cured without
pain or resort to the knife.
RIIPTIIRS- or Breach (Hernia) is radically nUl Iwllfc., pored without the knife anil without pain. Trusses ean bo thrown awayl CTftMF in the Bladder, no matter how w! uthu i a rge, is crushed, pulverized, washed out and safely removed without cutting. QTRlflTIIRF^ of Urinary Passage are alVI .IIV I wll.bw a,, removed without cut-
so removed without cut-
f eases.
>r Pamphlets, numerous references and all particulars, send ten cents (in stamps) to World's Dispensary Medical Association, OKI
Main Street, liutVuio, N. Y.
ting in hundreds of eases.
For
Our 1894 Perkins'Steel GALVANIZED POWER AND
PUMP-
PERKINS
ING
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With GRAPHITE BOXES and
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I [PRICE 50CENTS. ALL DRUGGISTS
O'TTT TIMS OUT -A.ICM GET
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Scenes and Portraits
kwilwar
THE
RAM’S HORN WRINKLES.
The more you love yourself the less you will be loved by others. The day becomes longer every time a lazy man looks at the clock. ’ The one who has suffered 1ms a key that can unlock many hearts. Nothing makes us richer that docs not make us more thankful. It is much easier to love ss—’e people than it is to agree with them. Time sets his chisel a little deeper whenever there is a frown upon tho face.
PICTURES OF STIRRING BrtflLE SCENES ! GRAND CAVALRY CHARGES I ’AKD PORTRAITS OF THE LEADING GENERALS ON BOTH SIDES.
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