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The farmers' union. (Memphis, Mo.) 1891-1895, October 08, 1891, Image 4

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn89067453/1891-10-08/ed-1/seq-4/

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51
EnUUTTfiS,
Always open
the offer made by the proprietors
of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. It's
a reward of $500 cash for an in
curable caae of catarrh, no matter
bow bad, or of how long standing.
They'll carry it out, too. It's one
thing to make the offer. It's a very
different thing to make it good. It
couldn't be done, except with an
extraordinary medicine. But that's
what they have. By it's mild,
soothing, cleansing and healing
properties, Dr. Sago's Remedy cures
the worst cases. It doesn't "simply
palliate for a time, or drive the dis
ease to the lungs. It produces a
perfect and permanent cure. Try
it and see.
If you can't bo cured, you'll be
paid.
The only question is are vou
willing to make the test, if "the
makers aro willing to take the
risk?
If so, the rest is ea?y. You pay
your druggist fifty cents and tho
trial begins.
If you're wanting tho $500 you'll
get something better a cure!
The Soap
for
Hard
W ater
is Le
nox.
NATUHAX. BEHEST iOii
Epileptic Tits, Falling Sickness, Hyster
ics, St. Titos Dancef Nervousness,
Hypochondria, Melancholia, In
eforlty, Sleeplessness, DIz
ziness, Brain and Spi
nal Weakness.
Thi3 medicine has direct action upon
.he nerve centers, allaying all irritabili
ties, and Increasing the fiow and power
Df nerve fluid. It is perfectly harmless
and leaves no unpleasant effects.
FREE
A Valuable nook Nermna
Diseases sent Tree to any ftadret-B,
and poor patients can alto obtain
Uiis medicine free of charge.
Ttaia remedv has been prepared by the Rev.Tend
Pastor Koenlg, ol Fort Wayne. Ind- times la. ana
is now prepared under his direction by tho
KOENIC MED. CO.. Chicago, III.
Sold by Druggists at 8 1 per Bottle. C for 5S
: Iorse Siie, 81.75, 6 Bottles Ibr 89.
Have You Tried It? 1
IF XOT,
Try It Now !
Go to your Druggist, hand
him one dollar, tell him you
want a bottle or ... .
PRICKLY
BITTERS
The Best Medicine known Ed
fortheCUREof
All Diseases of the Liver,
All Diseases of the Stomach,
All Diseases of the Kidneys,
All Diseases of the Bowels.
PURIFIES THE BLOOD,
CLEANSES THE SYSTEM,
Restores Perfect Health.
Tutt's Hair Dye
Gray hair or whiskers chanced to a glossy
black by a single application of this Dye.
It Impart a natural color, acta instantane
ously and contain nothing injurious to the
hair. Sold by all druggists, or sent by ex.
Srem on receipt of price, Sl.OO. Office, 39
411 Park Place, New York.
TY KiCyES MEN I1 1 TO 5 DAY8.
. A- RECOMMENDED l f HVS1CIAMS.
' A poaitlTfl car far tb dobilitating' wnes of worann.
Seat prepaid. (Murrlj iealed, for 60 Ct . Btut mom
by postal Bete. Addms
O. B. KINSEY, Box 740, Chicago, III.
PILES
A N A K ESIS b-Iws instant
reliff, and Is an 1NKALLI-
m. e t uiua Mr i.is.
Price. 1 ; at dnigsiHts or
lv mail. SaTDiilPS free.
Ad.lrw "ANAKES1S,
Hox'UO. New York C'itt.
MM SOLICITORS
A SAVIOR OF HER SEX.
TrfEW pain becomes a constant companlos;
Then there is no repose for the sufferer, by day or
night ; when life itself seems to be a calamity ;
nd when all this is reversed by a woman, has
he not won the above title?
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S
cures all those peculiar weaknesses and ail
ment of women, all organic diseases of the
Uterus or Womb, and Ovarian Troubles, Bearing
down .Sensations, Debilitr, Nervous Prostration,
etc. Every Druggist sells it, or sent by mail, in
form of Pills or Lozenges, on receipt of 1.00.
srSsBn. rhiAkai'akMk,eMWHemUku4 IUcMc,
fcMaf UMII7 UIMtratr. Mat M rrlpl onwe xe.
Lydia B Plnkham Med. CoM Lynn, Mass.
0
.
GIRDLES THE GLOBE
IS WHAT OUR NEWS SUMMA
RY DOES.
KNOCKS OUT GAMBLERS
BOARD OF TRADE DEALS ARE
NOT VALID.
rhl In the Duelslon Kendereil by the Min
nesota Supreme Court I'lungcd Iron, u
Flying Train rhifUKo's Mall flub Sink
ing Deeper In the Soup.
Lynched by Masked White Men.
White men visited the hou?e of John
Brown, a well-to-do negro farmer, near
Chlldersburg. Ala., and carried htm off on
a pretext that they wero officers. The
next day Bruwu's body was fouud In
a creek with a rope round his neck. No
cuu.e for the deed Is known, excepting that
Hrown was a wltne.. against two white
men charged with burning a barn.
KNOCKS OCT THE OKA IN UAMHI.KKS.
The Minnesota Supreme Court Say Con
tract. In Future Are Not Valid.
The Supreme Court of Minnesota lias
handed down a deciblmi of first Importance
to grulu camblem, which knocks out deal
ers in futures and the lower courts In one
sweeping blow. The decision is far-reach-lug,
as it will enable men who get caught
on the Hoards of Trade to repudiate their
Contracts unless they buy and sell real
grain.
FKOM A lXVlti TKAIN'.
Awful Plunge Taken by a Young Woman
Near lilue I.land, 111.
The bojy of a young woman, dismem
bered and mutilated, was taken from tho
Rock Island tracks about four miles west of
Biue Island. 111. bho had been a passenger
on train No. 1G, from Denver, and bound
for Chlcaga Although there wore no eye
witnesses to her awful death, the circum
stances point to suicide while suffering
physically. Sickness or something else
may have affected her mind as well and
Caused her to leap from tho flying train in
the dark.
( IT OFF HISUANO AND SONS.
The Will of Jane Griffiths Gives All Hor
Property to Her Daughters.
Jane Griffiths, of New York, died, and by
hor will sho disinherited her husband,
Thomas Griffiths, and her three sons
Richard A., Thomas W. and Frederick aud
left all her estate, consisting mainly of a
fine stock farm of 300 acres at Bowesvlllo,
In Virginia, and a handsome brown-stone
house, to her daughters. Mary Jano and
Margaret. Mr. Griffiths and his son
Frederick hare contested tho will. The
Bowesvllle farm adjoins the estate of
Amelio Rives Chunler, the novelist.
I.ITKH.1M.V SET THKIilVKK ON FIRE.
Ptsastroug Klazeon the Shipping; Wharves
at Halifax, Nova Scotia.
At Halifax, Nova Scotia, fire started In
tho lower end of town and spread
north and south with great rapidity.
The Cunard docks and immense
wharves and great business struct
ures surrounding them were in flame. In
one of the warehouses hundreds of casks
of kerosene oil were . tored. These burst,
and many were thrown into tho water,
which burst into a sheet of flame for half
a mile, menacing the entiro shipping of the
port.
ON THE DIAMOND.
flow the Clubs Engaged In the National
Ganie Stand.
Following Is a showing of the standing of
each of the teams of tho different associa
tions: NATIONili LEAGUE.
W. L. Vc! W. L. o.
Bostons 87 65 .638 Cleveland-. .H4 74 .4v
Chiragoa i 82 .614 Brooklyn . .1 75 .44
Newiorks..70 61 .6S4 Pittsburg. .iS 7. .410
PLil'd'!phias67 6a .4aa.Cincinnalis.55 .1 .4 4
AVKRICAX ASSOCIATION'.
W. li. ?c.l W. L. fe.
Bostons PI 41 .W9 Milwaukees.63 " .tV7
Ft. Loni..... 81 .fJ!2 Colnmhn . .61 75 .449
Baltimore,. . 69 64 .6i7 Ijonisvilles. .54 ffi .M7
Philndelp'n.."! Oi .522 "A'asfctlng'nii. 43 63 .328
TWO VILLAGES DESTROYED.
Civil War In the New Hebrides Interrupted
by a Hurricane.
Advices by the steamship Mmiowatl say
that the Island of Tanna, New Hebrides,
has been visltsd by a hurricane and de
vastated by a civil war. Fierce fighting
was going on when by a hurricane two vil
lages were wiped out of existence. The
German ship J. W. Glldeiuernsteri was
wrecked in Dliuifrtiii Bay. The cutter
Hilda was driven ashore and a canoe con
taining nineteen native; lost.
LOST WITH ALL ON" HOAKD.
Tho Schooner Percw Has Certainly Gone
to the Hot Win at Whitefiidi Point.
The schooner Frank I'crew was lit off
Whiteflsh Point, Luke Superior, with all on
board. The I'crew carried nine men and
was commanded by Captain J. Murquey, of
Bay City. She was insured, partially In
Chicago companies. Sho was considered a
standi, seaworthy craft.
Set Eighteen Fires.
The Boston police arrested Ia)u!s Schnelt-
zer. a Jew about 60 years old. charged with
setting fire to the dwelling of Jacob Levlne.
r-ebneitzer, who was deleted almost In tho
act of firing the house, has been under sus
picion for sonic time as an incendiary, and
was closely watched. The police believe
that, no less than eighteen iircs have been
started by hint in the lar-t three or four
years.
Peace In Guatemala.
At New York, Jacob liaiz. Consul Gen
eral from Guatemala, has received the fol
lowing cable from Guatemala under -lute
Oct, 1; "Absolute pea-e reigns in Guate
mala. Deny all rumors of revolution,
which art; false and malicious.
"Uahii.laS."
Domestic Tragedy in Ohio.
Joseph llobe, a German from Toledo
made an attempt at Fremont, Ohio, to mur
der his wife, who had left him. lie t her
shot himself through the head with u re
volver and died almost instantly. Mrs
Hobo was not seriously Injured.
Stanford Cnlvcrslty Opened.
The I.elaiid Stanford (Jr.) I'niverslty
at l'alo Alto was opcued with imposing
ceremonies. The first clas, that matricu
lates will be much larger than is usual
with new institutions, students having
come from all parts of the State and tho
Vnirn. All the students and the facultv
participated in 1he opening.
Flcuro-Pneumonln in New York.
Plcuro-pnctitiionia is racing nmone tho
rattle in the vicinity of New York. The
Inspectors ere keeping sharp watch to guard
against the further spread of the disease.
Connecticut Water Fi.mlne.
There Is danger of a water famine in tho
larger towns of Western Connecticut. Tho
lakes and ponds are either very low or dry.
Tho Bridgeport reservoirs are very low, and
the water pressure Is so reduced that fac
tories which have no Injectors or pumps
cannot feed their boilers and are obliged to
shut down.
Tried to Itlow Cp a House.
A dastardly attempt was made at Ron
dout, N. Y., to blow up 1 lie two-story frame
building occupied by Ann Welsh, a widow
and her daughter, by placing a carefully
prepared block of wood loaded with powder
here it would be used in starting the fire
in tho morning. The attempt was unsuc
cessful.
Must Ke-Lay the Track.
The Kansas State Railroad Commission,
after making a tmr of inspection of the
Lawrence and Rurlington branches of tho
Santa Fe Road, have ordered tho company
to re-lay the tracks from Lawrence to Ot
tawa and from Ottawa to Burlington, sub
stituting steel for the iron rails, which have
been in use twenty years.
forests linined by Gales.
A farmer from Itasca County, Minnesota,
while in SI. Paul said that the havoc re
cently wrought by windstorms among the
forests of that section could not be appre
ciated. He estimated that about 80,000,000
feet of timber had been blown down. In
Borne districts tho forests presented a scene
of terrible devastation.
MAY IS KING Til EI It OWN HELP.
Foreign Nations Will Experience No Dif
ficulty with the Contract Labor Law.
Assistant Secretary Nottleton, of tho
Treasury Department, has sent the follow
ing letter to Alexander I). Anderson, Spe
cial Commissioner of the World's Colum
bian Exposition, stationed In New York
City:
In your recent communication addressed
to the chief clerk of tills department, you
ask on behalf of the Consul General of
Great Britain for .a copy of the regulations
of ttiis department in regard to contract)
labor to be employed In connection witli
foreign exhibits at the approaching expo
sition. While no formal regulations have
been promulgated by the department in
this connection, you are authorized to as
sure the Consul General of Great Britain
and all others with whom you have occa
sion to communicate In tills conned Ion
that alien laliorers, mechanics or experts
in the employ of foreign exhibitors and
coming to the I'nitcd States In connection
with foreign exhibits at the World's Colum
bian Exposition will be freely admitted
and will be subjected Ui no delay or hin
drance of any nature. Whatever regula
tions shall prove to bo necessary In order to
carry out tills decision of tho department
will be formulated in duo season and fur
nished to all interested parties through the
proper channels.
NINE NEGKOES LYNCHED.
Colored Cotton-Tickers Taken from the Of
ficers aud Hanged from a Tree.
Nine negroes were hango l by an armed
mob as they were being conveyed by
Sheriffs from Cat Islan 1 to Marianua,
Ark. Two of the same gang were shot
earlier In tho day, one in being cap
tured and the other by an armed posse.
A week ago tho negroes of I.ee County,
Arkansas, began a strike for higher wages
for cotton picking, aud wero excited to
deeds of lawlessness by worthless negroes
of Memphis who have no trade or occupa
tion. The gin-house on the J. F. Frank
plantation was burned, and the overseer.
Thomas Miller, waylaid uud killed. Tho
rioters wero closely followed, and when
called on t surrender they refused to
do so, and were fired on by the officers,
but not until they had shot at the deputies.
Sheriff Klddlck and posse 1 ft Cat Island
with nine of the thirteen rioters, conveying
them to Marianua to Jail. They wero over
taken by an armed band of white regu
lators, and after a desperate struggle tho
nine black prisoners were taken from tho
Sheriff and his men and hanged t a syca
more tree.
HISTORY IN THE RAW.
Rich Treasures In the Archives of the Gov
ernment at Washington.
Tt is s.lid th.'it. Secretnrv lllnlnn. before
relinquishing the portfolio of the Depart
ment or Mate, win try to secure tuo puna
cation of at least a portion of the historical
archives of tho Government which arc at
present stored away under his charge, as
icy have been hitherto in the care of his
predecessors. Many attempts have been
lade to obtain an appropriation for this
iiirnnso. lint Congress has never resnonded.
The National Legislature is toa keenly in
terested in tho present, keeping an eyo al
wavs on tho future, to feel the slightest.
enthusiasm concerning the pat, and thus
those enormously valuable records aro per
mitted to moldcr away, food only for the
ookworra and tho patient historical
searcher. Here, In fact, Is the groat re
pository of American history from which
Bancroft, Henry Adams, Hildreth and
others drew most of their information.
MANY MILES HCKNED OVER.
Houses, Cattle, and Crops Destroyed by
Fire In North Dakota.
A dispatch from Fort Yates. X. D.. on the
Missouri River, brings the news of an im
mense prairio fire west of tho Missouri.
It says that a scope of country 300 miles
long and 200 miles wido has been burned
over, destroying farmhouses stock
ranches, many herds of horses and
cattle, and numerous quantities
of hay. The fire is said ti have been
started by a bone-plckor who found his
calling unremunerative owing to the heavy
growth of grass fiis season. Seeing what
an awful calamity ho had been the author
of he fled at once, realizing how little his
life would lie worth If captured by the en-
ranged ranchmen. The whole region is do-
ecrlbed as a place of death and dewlatlon.
Many nersons aro believed to have perished
in the Haines.
IDAHO INDIANS MAKING TKOVHLE.
Settlers Ask Protection, and Troops Will
Likely He Ordered to the Scene.
Fcttlers in the Calispel Valley in North
ern Idaho are alarmed over the menacing
attitude of the Indians in that section.
Marela, chief of the Calispels, it is re
ported, lias ordered all the white settlers
out of the country, and the Indians arc run
ning off the settlers' stock and otherwise
annoying the whites. Gen. Carlln, In com
mand of the Fourth Infantry, now in camp
in Spokane, lias been uraed to take meas
ures of precaution. A troop of cavalry,
under the command of Gen. Carlin, is ready
for marching orders and may soon start for
the scene of the disturbance. The Calispel
Valley is Isolated, and all supplies have to
bo sent in by pack train.
LOST AT SEA.
Only
One of tho Crew of Five
of the
Schooner ISlossom Saved.
The schooner lUo-isom struck Gull Isl
and, off Newfoundland, in a heavy gale.
There were live men on board. One of them
jumped into tho water and clung to a cliff
against which he was dashed. He passed a
terrible night In a fierce struggle for life.
The agonizing cries of those who held to
the wreck, lie says, are still ringing in his
ears, but he could (h nothing, and they
were dashed into the sea and drowned.
The schooner Neva reports at Halifax that
she passed the hull of a water-logged
schooner, supposed to lie tho schooner
Maurice Wilson, that was abandoned. How
the crew fared is a mystery.
OKDERED TO CHILI.
The Yorktow-n Will Sail and Will He Joined
by the Iloston and Atlanta.
Unusual activity is being displayed at
ffie lirooklyn navy yard. Conference:
were held between the commandant of the
yard and oflicers of the various depart
ments and of the vessels at the yard.
Assistant Secretary of the Navy Soioy also
conferred with the commandant. No one
could be made to admit that the activity
was due to the. critical situation in Chilian
affairs, but it was learned that the York-
Uiwn has been ordered to immediately pro
ceed to thos' waters. She will sail at once.
It was also stated that the Tioton and
the Atlanta would follow tho Yorktown us
soon as they could be got ready.
Rl'SSIA FEARS CHINA.
Why the Cstar Refuses to Assist In Coercing
the Celestials.
The refusal of Russia to take a hand in
coercing China is attributed to tho dread
with which the Russians resard China's
capacity for Injuring Russia's interests in
the interior of Asia. Russia has always
feared a sudden and overwhelming move
ment of the Chinese that would sweep back
the Russlatn Empire perhaps ti the Ural
Mountains. Tills fear seems to be tradi
tional, and is as strong to-day as when Rus
sia was a Tartar province. The Chinese
have a very largo force stationed near the
M; tchoorian boundary, and could throw an
army Into Siberia superior to any force
that Russia could readily place in that
neighborhood.
PLCNGED INTO THE DRAW,
A Hansom Cab Driven Into the Chicago
River Two Persons Drowned.
Ono man, one woman, and a horse wero
drowned In tho river at the Washington
street bridge. Chicago, one night recently.
A reckless cab-driver drove his cab Into
the open draw, and the driver and one of
his passengers, a woman, wero drowned.
The woman's escort had a narrow escape.
HAS SLEPT SIX DAYS.
Curious Case of a Seven-Month -Old Child
at Hempstead, L. I.
A seven-month-old child of Prof. Cyril
L'Africain, of Hempstead, L. 1., lias been
asleep for 150 hours continuously. The
child was taken sick with whooping cough
and bronchitis twelve days ago. The at
tendants Imagined that the child whs im
proving from the fact that It went to sleep.
but when tjhe sleep continued over twelve
hours the parents becamo alarmed and at
tempted by evory possible means to arouse
the child. At stated intervals nourish
ment has been administered, which it re
tains, and appears to be growing stronger.
Occasionally a sigh Is heard and a slight
moveiment of 'a foot or arm are the only
signs of life.
(RASH ON THE ERIE.
Four' Killed anil. Thirty Injured In a Col
lision Near Akron, Ohio.
A freight tralu on tho Erie ICailroad col
lided with a 'passenger train near Kent,
Ohio. Four persons wero killed, including
fjie engineer aud fireman of the passenger
train, and thirty persons injured. The
train was occupied almost wholly by mem
bers of tie' OK11 family, going to their re
uuliQi at Bennington, Vt. The identified
aro: Clayton Olass, fireman; Matwell,
engineer; and an unknown elderly lady.
Tho train was running as tlie sixth section
of east-bound train No. 4. The freight
crew claim that they saw no flag on the en
gine of tho fifth section to indicate that
another traits was soon to follow.
'TWAS; A CHIMNEY SWALLOW.
Mrs. HoWton and Two Daughters In Con
vulsions from a Noise In a Stove.
Mrs. Ho&sUm uixl her two daughters, Mary
and I.lzzie. aged fifteen and eighteen years
respect Kely. living on a farm two miles
north of Ifambnrgh, Conn., are lying at the
point of death as the result of a terrible
fright. Mrs. liolston and her daughters
wero tho only occupants of the house, and
their fright was caused by a chimney swal
low fluttering in usi unused stove.
ALL TIIKKK HI T THE GROOM.
The Weddlng'of a Minnesota Woman Post
poned at the I.ust Hour.
There was Badness la tho household of
William Funk, a well-known contractor of
Mankato, Minn, His daughter. Miss Katie,
was to have buen married to William I'iko
in the afternoon, but when the tUnearrlTed
the bridegroom Jailed to put in tin appear
ance. He went to St, Paul ten days ago,
but no word had been received from him,
and his whereabouts are unkuowm.
CANCELED TH EOKDEli FOlt.FCNEKAL.
A Girl About to He 1'repanvl for the Grave
Returns to Life.
Adella Fuller, of Mansfield, Mass., was
believed to have died, and preparations
wero mado for the funerad. Shortly before
the time of tiie interment! the order for tho
service was canceled, as the uppearance of
the body indicated a possibility of trance.
Miss Fuller's age Is 18 years, and she was
ill but a few days when she passed into
unconsciousness.
A NEW DANGESK.
Parasite-Destroying Compound May
Also Destroy llmiuui Fife.
Tl
10 family of A. G. Urown. of Rrooklvn.
is
Ill from eatinu poisoned cranes.
All
were taken 111 in the night with violent
pa
us In the st.ntiiu.eh Tlie f.ill,r ,.l,,rl
da
,n declared that they wero suffering from
po
ols
ioneu grapes, ine poason consists or a
copper
'1" t-vaiill). ..V'l.lll.p, Hum Up llllAtlirU
ayed upon tho grapes. in the vinevards
spr
to
destroy parasites.
Deed of a Jcalou-a Lover.
William Wvncoou went powlnz with his
sweetbeait. Macale CarroLl at liridcenoit.
Conn. Some flippant remark of the young
laay arousea his Jealousy and he threw
the girl Into the water. In doing so he was
Ditched out of the lxiat himself. A s.i vn'rn
fight followed, Wyncoop trying to push
Miss Carroll under. A yacht swooped
down upon the struggling pair and pulled
them both into their boat. Wyncoon is in
jail.
A Rebellious Convlct-
Supcrlntendent Mclntyre and Clerk'Uow-
ers, at the penitentiary at Albany, N. Y.
went into the chair shop to Investigate mis
conduct on the part of a big negro named
Frank Wallace. He sprang at thom with a
knife, and when tills was knocked from his
hand ho felled Rowers to tho floor with a
hammer, seriously injuring lilm.
A Fair Horse Thief. j
Jennie Sadler was nrrestcsl near Valley I
Mills, Texas, with two stolon horses In her j
possession. She is dressed In male attlro :
and looks like a cowbiy of IS years. Sho j
admits she was to turn her horses over to !
Mime men who were to meet her, but re- I
fuses to Rive their names. j
8011th Daltota JnricpcnrlcnM.
W. II. Smith, of Minnehaha County. wni
nominated at Huron. P. !., for Consrres
by the Independents. The plaitforin pledges
al'esiance to the principles of the National
People's party and urges the appointment
of a non-partisan commission to adjust
the details of the tariff.
Rig Fly-Wheel Hurst.
At Cincinnati a fly-wheel twenty feet in
diameter, weighing twenty tons, burst In
an electric power-house. Two men wero
slightly injured and the building damaged
to the extent of fM.OOO.
Headed by Russell.
Massachusetts Democrats, In convention
at Worcester, have again chosen Gov. Rus
sell as their nominee. They declared In
favor of the equality of gold and silver, and
honest civil service.
Roulnnger Commits Suicide.
General Boulanger, the French political
Intriguer, committed suicide at Brussels on
tho tomb of Madame de Ronnemaln, who
died recently In that city.
Murder In the First Decree.
The Jury In the case of Patrick Fitzpat
rick, charged with tiie murder of pamucl
Karly, at Pittsburg, returned a verdict of
murder in the first degree.
Sin Men Drowned In Lake Superior.
Tho hardest gale of the season recently
raged on Lake Superior. The tug Ressio
Endress went down near Inamaise, and tho
six men on board 1 crished.
Assignment at Nashville.
At Nashville, Tenn.. the Terry Show Caso
Company made an assignment. Tho total
liabilities are f 43,161. 'Tiie total assets ex
ceed the liabilities.
Must Fat Itannnas.
Owing to the lack of rye, bananas are
actually being fed in place of bread to the
inmates of many charitable institutions in
Germany.
LATEST MARKET QUOTATIONS.
CHICAGO.
Cattle Common to I'riuio...
Boos Shipping Grades
$3.50 S
4.00 c
3.00
.01 IS
.fda
.'-'7 ifll
6.50
S.ii
50)
.91
.r2
.i'J
.84
.25
.10
.19!i
.88
PHiip-rair to t.uoico.
Whkat No. 2 Red
Cork No. 2.
Oats No. 2
Rvic No. 2
Bcttkb Choice Creamery
Chkksi Full Cream, flat
EiKis Freeh
I'oiatoes New per bn
INDIANAPOLIS.
Cattle- Shipping
Boos Choice Light
Sheep Common to Prime
Wheat-No. 2 Hed
Cohm-No. 1 Wblto
OA16 No. 2 Vi hlte.
BT. LOUIS.
Cattle
Hoos
Wbkt No. 2 Red
Cobs No. 2
Oats No. 2
Bye No. 2
CINCINNATI.
Cattle
Hoos
Sheep
Whkat No. 2 Bed
Cobs No. 2
Oats No. 2 Mixed
DEl'ROIl.
Cattle.
Hoos
fcHEEP
Wheat-No. 2 Red.
Corn No. 2 yellow
Oats No. 2 White
TOLEDO.
Wheat New
Couk- No. 2 Yellow
Oats No. 2 White.
Rte.
BUFFALO.
Bekf Cattlb v
Live Hogs
Wheat No. 1 Hard
Cork No. 2
MILWAUKEE.
Wheat No. 2 Spring
Corn No. 8
Oat No. 2 White
Kyk No. 1
Barlet No. 2
Pork Mess
NEW YORK.
Cattle
Hoos
Sheep
Wheat No. 2 Bed
Corn No. 2
Oats Mixed Western
B otter Creamery
3.50
S.50
3.S0
.U4
.54
,3J
(3 5.75
t 5.'-'5
4.00
(65 .i0
ift .55
ii .31
8.50 COO
3.50 & 5.00
."14 & M
.53 & .53
.28 (J6 .29
.79 & .81
3.50
4.00
3.0)
.95
.55
5.25
(j 5.25
& fi.OO
lit .97
.57
.31H,gi .32!i
3.00
S.lO
3.W
.98
.63
.31
& 5.25
( 4.75
. 4.50
.986
( .54
Si
.98 & .99
.57 (S .59
.23 .80
.66 .88
6.00 70
4.25 (Uj 5.60
1.02 is 1.04
.59 0 .CI
.90
.63
.29 (9
.83
.92
.65
.81
.85
.62
.60
12.23 12.75
3.50 5.75
4.00 & 6.00
3.50 3 5.00
1.03
.C2 .63
.32 0 .35
.16 & .25
U.7S (S12.25
Pom New Me
GUATEMALANS REVOLT.
THE POPULACE SEEK BARIL
LAS' BLOOD.
Soldiers Defied on the National Holiday
and Many Shot Dow n Artillery I'sed to
Suppress the Rioters The Opening of an
Oklahoma Town Site Wild Rush fur
Lots.
Five Hundred Killed.
Reports have been received of a revo
lution in Guatemala in which 500 lives
have been sacrificed. It appears that j
the people were celebrating tho ami!- j
vorsary of their nationa' holiday, and j
President liarillas had personally ap- ;
pointed tho orators of the day. To this 1
the masses took exception. When tho
9rators took the rostrum it was a signal
for a storm of stones, which sot them to
; (light, tlioy being chased across the big
1 plaza by a howling mob. An exciting
; tccno followed, and every Itarlllas
j partisan was driven fro:n the plaza,
i Tho news of the riot spread rapidly,
i and soon liarillas threw a battalion
; of Infantry into tho large square
! for tho purpose of dispersing
tho mob. '1 hey, with fixed bay
onets, attempted to carry the
I plaza by assault. They wero mot
; with a shower of stones and by a fnsil
; lade from revolvers, and lied, leaving
j many dead and wounded behind. Mem
i bera of the mob shouted: "Let's storm
i tho national palace, kill liarillas and re
store a rcpubJican form of government "
"I liiudering the. national treasury must
cease." liarillas then ordered artillery
into the plaza and infantry and two
cannon to guard his residence. When
tho Runs were turned on the mob tho
rioters lied, keeping up a desultory firo
on the soldiers. They left the plaza,
but fought in the side streets; in fact
they practically during tho ulglit held
full control of the city.
It is thought this will cause a general
revoiohroughout the entire Republic of
Guatemala, and engender war in all of
the other Central American States. A
strict censorship is maintained over all
press dispatches, and the mails are also
trilled with to prevent any Information
becoming known. A special from New
ton, on the line between Guatemala and
Mexico, brings the Information that
liarillas is master of the situation, hav
ing put down the revolt in the city of
Guatemala after three days of hard light
ing. Tiie revolt was precipitated by Mnn
tufar, a son of one of the candidates for
tho 1 'residency, who is a strong partisan
of Harillas, in attempting to make a
political speech on Independence Hay.
A mob threw him and his friends from
the platform in the main plaza, lelting
them with s'ones until they found shel
ter in a neighboring house. The arrival
of troops from adjoining districts event
ually restored Harillas to power, and the
whole city is now iilled with soldiers and
martial law has been declared.
A private dispatch says that fully ."iOQ
lives were sacrificed in the throe days'
fighting, and that President Harillas is
still shooting down the articipants In
the revolt as if they were animals Tho
dispatch a!so conveys the Information
that liaril'as lias declared himself d c
tator. A reign of terror prevails, the
Inhabitants being afraid to leave their
houses.
MAGIC CITY OF A DAY.
Five Thousand l'eople Now Located on
the Chandler Tow n Site.
Another preat Oklahoma rush is over
and another city Is born. Where at
noon on the day of opening not a siirn of
human habitation existed, there is now
a city of .1, 000 people. Hundreds of white
tents gleam among the trees, the sounds
of tho saw and hammer are heard, and
people are luiyingi and selling. At an
early hour in the morning Governor
Steele exhibited a p'at of tie town site
of Chandler, and announced that the
purvey was completed, and at 11:.8 tiie
bugle would give warnine, and at 12
m. a volley from the soldiers' mus
kets in the center of the public
square would be tho signal to
"go." The 5,000 people who had
been watting a week to get in on
the town site were gleeful. Hy 10
o'clock horsemen and footmen stood
three and live deep at all available
points of tho ea?t and west borders of
tho town site. Few people had noticed
that the sky was overcast with black
clouds, arid all were surprised when,
with & crash of thunder, rain began to
fall. For two hours it poured a perfect
deluge and the water ran In streams.
Kvery one was drenched, yet not a per
son moved from the line. Men In broad
cloth, women in silk, cowboys, gam
blers, preachers, boomers, all stood and
took the rain. All were too eager for a
home or a fortuno to I e moved by a mere
drenching. The plot showed that
Manual avenue, fronting on the public
square and running a n ile through tho
town and all on tiie smooth backbone of
the town site, would be the main busi
ness street. For it everybody was
beaded.
The thick woods did not hinder the
horsemen, who, a the signal was given,
dashed at breakneck speed for Ihe best
lot they cou'd get. Jumping from their
horses they would jam a stake into the
ground and yell. "This is my lot." while
horses ran loose pell mell everywhere.
Tho footmen, however. In many in
stances got the best lots, as the horses
could not be stopped under fifty feet.
Many men wore knocked from their
horses by tree limbs, while many horses
and men fell flat in the rush, yet there
was but ono serio is accident. Miss
Nannette Paisy Fu'and, of Sueve berg,
was on a fast horse and ascending a
rocky cliif, the horse fell anl threw her
against a bowlder. Her forehead got an
awful blow and her left leg was fractur
ed. She was urn otiscious for three
hours. Immediaely upon regaining
consciousness she declared: "The lot
where I fell is all mine.'' Selling fast,
at once the scramble began, -Many lots
had from two to three claimants, each
contending that he was there first Oi c
contestant would buyout another, whilo
those who "got left" at once wanted to
buy. One corner lot sold for $'w and a
good many went at from to $40 .
By 3 o'clock tents wero up everywhere,
and tho "business houses," which had
been down on the school section,
j.lanted on the town site as rapid y
as possible. Jiy supper time the city of
tents was in good order and the founda
tion laid for a splendid town.
Mlsfififf l.lnkN.
It Is not considc;ed an ofTens" for a
switchman to Hag at his w. rk.
PiiOF. Rokhuii;. of I'a'o Alto Uni
versity, speaks thirty laneuages.
Tiik words in common us? by the or
dinary individual aic estimated at from
1,000 to 3,000.
Tiik leader of the Farmers' All anee,
Col. Polk, is only 35 years of ace, but he
has gray iia'r and a white bear 1.
HitowN Uxivkksitv has decided to ad
mit women to Its cla-'ses on ihe same
conditions as men.
Tiik smallest trie that grows in Great
Britain may be seen on the very top of
Ben Lomond It is the dwarf willow,
which, at maturity, reaches a height of
only two inches.
IKEsirKXT Hakuisox and Secretary
Noble wero not only fast fr'ends and
schoolmates when young, but they were
rivals for the hand of tho same girl.
Carrie Scctf, somehow or other preferi o i
Mr. Harr'son.
A Philadelphia surgeon says that by
three strokes of the lancet he could par
alyze the nerves acted on to make a man
get mad, and thereafter any one could
pull his 110 e, cuff his ars and spit on
his boots, and he would simply smile a
soft, bland smile.
The Sandwich Islands alphabet has 12
letters; the Burmese, I'.i; Italian, L'O:
Bengalese. 21: Hebrew, Syrian, t haldee
and Samaritan, 22 each: French, 23;
Greek, 24; Latin, 2 .v. t'erman. Dutch
and English, 2d each: Spanish and Scla
vonic, 27 each: Arabic, 2; Persian and
Coptic, 32; Georgian. .' '": Al'.neniau, .IS:
Russian 41; Muscovite, 4 !; ."Sanskrit and
Japanese, r.O: Etbi p:: End Tartarian
have 202 each.
LE BRAV " EST MORT !
BOULANCER PUTS A BULLET
IN HIS BRAIN.
With Roots and Orders On Theatrical
Ending of tho Great Impostor's Life
Story of His Successes aud Ills Disgrace
ful Ending. a
The Enil or Ills Tether.
The "bra v' General," Georges Ernest
.Teau Mario lioulauger, ex-MInistor of
War of France, shot hinself thr3iigh
the head at Urn sols while standing by
tha grave of Mine. Itonneinaln, the
woman who had been known as his mis
tress since the stirring days of 1N88. Ho
fell forward on the grivo, and wa
found by an attendant, who rushed in
stantly to the spot, fjtii ,e deal. Tin
ball had been fired into the suicide's left
ear, and the revolver was still clinched
in his right hand.
Mine, llomiemain was '.he in'str?s9 of
tho hoi:se in the Fine do lierrl, Paris,
whither I'.otilanger resorted so frequent
ly when lie was at the tot of his power.
Though tho place was coiiH'.aiitly
wat hed by spies it was from thU hoimo
that Uoulanger lied to England and with
lii 111 went Mme. lonnemaln. Shi was
his constant companion in Imdon, In
IlrusselR and in Jersey, followlr 1? hi
broken fortune with tin same fj.tuom
devotion which she paid to Mm in the
days of his apparent prosperity. J I-r
fortuno of l,fi(io,ooo f rut cs was freely
his
Mme. Bonnoinain died July 17 last of
consumption, and since -.hen ISoulaiiirer
has been In a stat . of unbroken :nelan
choly. He frequently viMted her ffravo,
over which he caused to be erected an
elaborate tomb. On tho morning of
GEEP1L BOUIANGEB.
; his death the (Jeneral went as usual to
the grave, accompanied at a respectful
i distance by one of the attendants still
attached to his person. The attendant
I from his retreat heard the General g'v
! int? way as usual to 'amentatlons, but
i suddenly these were Interrupted by the
I report of a revolver, and when he
: rushed forward he discovered his mas
j ter's body bathed in blcod
The suicide was evidently premodi-
tat"d upon a truly theatrical scale. The
dead man was In full military dress, and
j on his heart were pinred all tho medals
! he had received from trance for bravery
' in the field. There was a letter also,
but this was scled by the authorities.
, who declared it was of too serious polit
ical import to be nisde public except
with the permission of the French Bc
publlc. Brussels is in a state of Xi itement,
and dispatches received from that city
indicate that the sa ne feeling prevails
in l'aris as well. In the absence of any
: interference (which is n.ost i.n'ikely),
I Boulanger will be buried where he fell
by the side of the woman who devoted
I her life and her forturos to him.
Since the third Xap-deon took posses
'. sion of Paris upon thLt December night
In 1S51 no such attempt has been made,
even In the South Ainerican republics,
to cstab'i-h the rule of the adventurer
, as that which was put forth by Bou
langer in lsss.
His efforts to overthrow tho French
republic by means cf a coa'ition of the
Orieanist pretenders and the army
seemed at one tim upon the very
threshold of sure: ss By marvel
ous intrigues with all parties ex
cept the representatives of Xupolcon
ho managed to o'jtain money and
: Influence enough to establish himself
', not only with the I aris rabblo but with
: the clerlea's and peasants throughout
' the provinces At the elections of lsss
! he seemed to be fully justified In issuing
' the famous manifesto in which he do
: clared that France could now "congratu
: late herfclf upon having reached the
! hour of her deliverance." And indeed
! there: were ho-ts of intelligent people
I throughout tho world who hud come tc
believe that parliamentary government
! was Impossible for Fiance.
Boulanger was bcrn at Kennes in
: 1S.17. His descent or the maternal side
; Is Welsh. In is .15 he entered the mili
S tary college of St Cyr and was made
: stib-lfentenant in 185". He served under
Marshal Kanolon In the Kabyle cam
paign. He also tooic part in the Fram o
1 Dalian war, and wls wounded at ihe
battle of Turblgo. In lstio he obtained
; his full lieutenancy and two years laict
: was promoted to a captaincy, havinc in
the interim seen service in Cochin China.
Just before tho war of 170 ho became
; major. He was witti Bazaino at Met.,
; but by some means escai ed the
fate of Marshal 1'azaino's army,
' a';d made his way back to Paris.
He was then promoted to a
i lieutenant colonelcy by the govern
i ment of national defense and fought at
; Champigny (Xov. SO to Dec 2). After
' the suppression of the commune Bou
' langer's newly attained promotion was
quashed by the grade revision commit
tee, but, w as restored to him in 1S71. In
1 sho he became bri zadier general. Be
; ing appointed to Lie command of the
j army of occupation of Tunis, lien. I'ou-
langer had a disagreement with M.
Camleon, tiie resident genen.', and was
recalled. He then held the War Oflico
! appointment of director of the infantry
division and became Minister of War
I in lssn.
! When M. do Freycinet resigned and
j was succeeded by M. Goblet i December,
j ISSi),) Boulanger retained hi portfolio;
i but on tho fall of M. Goblet his name
did not appear in the cabinet of M.
Kouvier. Soon after this the General
was dispatched to Oermont-Fcrrend to
take command of an arruy corps, re
ceiving a great ova .ion at Paris on his
departure. When the Limousin scandal
broke upon Paris like a thunder c'ap
General Boulanger commented very
freely upon the war minister's conduct,
and was immediately ordered under
close arrest for thirty days lit his own
headquarters.
Tho goverment haying decided in
March, SS?, to cashier tho General by
placing him on th3 retired list, he in
augurated a vigoro is campaign against
tho ministry. Vacancies shortly after
occurred in tho representation of
Boulogne and the Xord. Here he was
returned by .V.i,50) votes to 35,750
polled by the Opportunist candi
date. In the Nord ais triumph was still
more remarkable, tho number of votes
polled for him being 172,58, against
75.H01 for M. Foucart and 9,647 for M.
Moreau. This was on the llt.h of April,
1SSC, which, in a manifesto he issued to
the electors, he declared would be
marked in the annals of tho country as
a date of true celiverance. Subse
quently his popular ty waned
Axew patent pianoforte desk has been
issued. The desk is so mado that while
the frame Is rested npon the lid of the
pianoforte a sliding arrangement permits
cf the music bei brought to a level
with the eye of the singer, or raised or
lowered according to tho wish of the
performer.
Ax Knulish Inventor has constructed
a novel d 'vice to do away with the
enormous pressure of water against the
bows of ocean steaiiors. It consists of
one or more screws o 1 each side of the
bow, which throws the water aside and
j creates a dry well in front of the vessel.
Delight Followed by Torment,
What man or woman will deny that a good
dinner is a present delight. Equally undeniable
is it that when a well-cooked meal Ib euccee led
by a fit of indigestion, rapture is converted into
torture. Don't charge your dyspepsia to your
dinner. No, my doar sir, your gastric depart
ment was oat of order, to begin with. Had you
regulated it with Hostettor'a Stomach Bitters,
the cargo that yon tjok on board would have
been comfortably stawed away without the
slightest Inconvenience. This incomparable
stomachic entirely reforms faulty digestion,
and regulates, besides, the liver aud the bowels,
which must act harmoniously with the digestive
orjan, or a'l thn fall out of Rear. Take the
KitltrAfor kidney and rheumatic complaints,
aud in all caiiis of malaria. As a t mic, ap
pttizer a:nl pr.jinot-jr of convalescence it has no
peer.
Tiik library of the British Museum in
creases at the 1 ate of about a hundred
volumes a day.
HALL'S CATAHKH Ct'UKisa liquid and is
ta' 11 internally, and acts directly on th 1 blood
mi 1 UiC;i MltTaeeH of till) HVHtelll. Writo for
t..iiiiuiiialrf, fr-. MiiiifH"tiiio.l by
F. J. I'ill.NKV CO., Toledo, O.
Tiik Arctic raspberry is the smallest
known fruit, phtnt
I u:ir Knmlred Miles as the row Flies
I- the di'.tanec eovcrcil In single nlsht by
th-- Limit! (I Kill re's trains vt the Chicago,
M ; i iv :i is Kt e mid M. Paul Hallway let ween
( liieiijru and the Twin cities of the North
v.e I M. I'iiul and MliiiM-i'lioll-.
'l i e e lralns ;uo v.stibulcd, electric
II :lit-d and steam heated, with the !iuct
I It I aiid S eeping Car Servt -e in the
. rl.l.
, I t I". ectric r a llnt lijrlit in eachlerth
I - t I.e. stio-e.'-fiil novelty of this progreshtve
;:re, and is highly a .predated ly all regu
lar patrons of Uiis line. We wish others to
1. 11 . its merit", as the hicasro, Milwaukee
an l M. Paul Hallway is the only line iu the
We. I enjoj inn the exclusive use of this
p itcnt.
. r further Information apply to nearest
coup in 1! 'i-.et airent. or address I". A. Mil
ler. As-i-tant ienera' I'lisscuner Agent,
i i!V Clark Street. Chicago. III.
' bo Only One Kver I'riitel Can You Find
the Word."
'I here Is a, ;!-In h display advertisement
u this piper this week which has no two
vord- BllUe except one word. The same Is
rue of eafh new one appearing each veek
roii! The Iir. liarter Mdle!ne. o. This
io:ise places a "Crescent ,ln everything
'hey make uud publish. Look for It, send
hern the naii.e of the word, and they nU
etiirri you nouu, hkai.'TIfl'i. i.itihm;hai'US,
r sisi'i.r.s i'hkk.
1 xe"r.ton South, Oct. 14.
Oct. it ihe Chicago and Eastern Illinois
Kallroad will sell excursion tickets to
points South at one fare for the round trip,
g. oi for thirty days. This will be the last
ne-fare 1 xci r-l n Pi Southern territory
this vi-ar. l ie- rates and time tables ad-tire-s
C. I. Mone, ;. I'. & T. A. C. it K. L
li. K , Chicago.
Is Prtii'Ki.r Ash Hittkhs good for any
thing' Head what Irank Urlgirsby, of
Hodge ( iiy, Kas.. says: "l"or three years I
Mifl'cred from a disease that lay physicians
pronounced Incurable. My "friends had
iriven me up to die. when I wits Induced to
try your remedy. 1 took It for three months
and have gained s2 pounds In weicht. Am
a well man and Prickly Ash Hitters savi.il
my life. I am under life-long obligations
to this medicine, and will never cease to
recommend it."
ISkst. easiest to use and cheapest. I'iso's
Kcuit-dy for Catarrh. Hy druggists. 50c
FITS.-AI1 Fitsstitir'-l frr b lr.I-llnn'.rent
Nerve Itestorer. No f Its tfi'T first d .Vn n. Mir
vbllnus cures. Tr-atie and $i.K) trial bottle fr? to
Kit i a-s. Scad U Dr. Kllae. Sil Arrh St., Phlla.. Pi.
How's
Your Liver
If sluggish and painful,
invigorate it to healthy
action by taking
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
CXiVJS ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c
and 81 bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
Bubstitute,
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO. CM.
tOUISVILLE. KY. HEW V0RK. N.t.
SHILOH'S
CONSUMPTION
CURE.
The success of this Great Cough Cure is
(eithout a parallel in the history of medicine.
All druggists are authorized to sell it on a pos
itive guarantee, a test that no other cure can suc
cessfully stand. That it may become known,
the Proprietors, at an enormous expense, are
placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home
in the United States and Canada. If you have
a Cough, Sore Throat, or Bronchitis, use it, for
it will cure you. If your child has the Croup,
orWhoopinp; Couch, use it promptly, and relief
is sure. If you oread that insidious disease
Consumption, use it. Ask your Druggist for
SHILOH'S CURE, Price loets., 50 cts. and
$1.00. If your Lungs are Fore or Back lame,
use Shiloh's Porous Plaster, Price 25 cts.
DETECTIVES
V-tilr4 ta vvptj foty n met la ta Htcrvt fVrTioe sndrr
toMractioaa fra CaM.'Grannan. x-ffeW of ltMtira t
C tnclnsati. F x pr1fiic ant BwarT. rartiralars free. JLddrr
lirtuti Detective Barcan C. 4 Arcade, Ciacloaati, .
PX1IV8IOIVS - Ie nil KOLDIKRW!
a lisahlL for increasp. j yire x-
Priinop. writ for Laws. A. W. MriNiumcK
A Boms, Washington, D. c & Cincinnati, U.
P ISO'S KEMEDY FOR CATAliliH. lV-'St. Easiest to use.
Cheapest. Belief is immediate. A cure is certain. For
Cold tn tbe Head It has no equal.
It is an Ointment, of which
- ., 1 i WA t.l.l V-.r
A L r VJI ( I Wlll.lll V vv 11111 I
nostrils. Frice, fioc. PoWbytJni
IT 1
FI V'R CREAM BALM Cleanaes the Nauwll
Aliavs fain
Sorea, Kentores Tafte
:ivac UiltHt. nnA
A nrJv t nta tht Nostril.
Wc. ifcruccifitt or by mail. ELY
"German
Syrup
4
The majority of well-read phys
icians now believe that Consump
tion is a germ disease. In other
words, instead of being in the con
stitution itself it is caused by innu
merable small creatures living in the
lungs having no business there and
eating them away as caterpillars do
the leaves of trees.
A Germ The phlegm that is
coughed up is those
Disease. parts of the lungs
which have been
gnawed off and destroyed. These
little bacilli, as the germs are called,
are too small to be seen wun ine
naked eye, but they are very much
alive just the same, aud enter the
body in our food, in the air we
breathe, and through the pores of
the skin. Thence they get into the
blood and finally arrive at the lungs
where thev fasten and increase with
frightful rapidity. Then German
Syrup comes in, loosens them, kills
them, expells them, heals the places
they leave, and so nourish and
soothe that, in a short time consump
tives become germ-proof and well,
For a BRIEF PERIOD Only.
lesirh; and Valuable Useful and XecoHfary.
Ladies' Foster Lacing Gloves
(5-Hock).
$1.30
On receipt of
we will send
I", r on rear, or for SU.50 the ruilv and Sundar
'JiiiiM.Xninntlia.hy mall, and MAKE A rRESKST
t Vi Mil'scnh rot aimrot LadieV Fot-V-r Laolng
ti:..w .
TH.( HK'i;OTiMK.S 1 ItEon and rtc'niMd aa
t.ir- I.'-aii'P NVwt.iiiif.rot t':eiinat West. Th1 paper
aViH- ie worth tin' prici ot ul-arripti OSK LnJt
I.Alt A Vr.AK lu-i ce s'ihorl!r tcure a valuable
I'F' luiiitn fur aliiin-t notlun.
In f rdftriiw ftnt.' plainly the SIZE and the tvCOR
d kmI l.'o not Kf-nd po- time Mamim In payrreut.
It vnn do no wtt-h lilovfB wl 1 st-l:d vou Instead
Jor the tame prf.-e one of SKKI.VS RKVKRSIBLE
MAI'S. Thin its a comp e'? po.ltlcaj history 1 our
country, elnne a 1 the ptini'lrl -ventK from the
tirei of Wasfclt Bton to thfpre' nt tim on on rtd o
nd on tb other the late: Hand k. McNally ti.uo
Maps. Addre.-a
THE CHICAGO TIMES CO ,
Chicago.
THE
ONLY TRUE
nrwii(3
VTm pnrtfY BIOOD, Toinilate
i.'ii.vi.t'c .- v rftrarSP-
. . rjlf a li"- v .va
tiorh'r. iniiH Mronjrth. renew
apiH-tile, restore lieallli and
ImlUfstlon. thaltlrert foel-
luir ait sol ti tcl y cra-ilcatea.
Min i brtshtriUMi. ttraln
powr increased,
lioiH-s. mrvc- mas-
cV, receive new force.
, GTuTortne from complaints ye-
collar lot.H-irscx, usinir It. Ami
a mhmMv cure. Ilcttirni
rcti-e Imvm'Mi on hct'ks, .H-auiiiies Complexion
hold rviTvwhrr", AH trcmifne rw1s bear
"rrf-pornu' bead us cent stamp for 3-paga
pamphlet.
OR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. St. Louis. Mo.
iilinds State
Medical Institute.
103 State St., Chicago.
Chartered bj the State. '
Authorized Capital SI50.000.
Conducted by Full Staff of Physicians, three
of whom are noted German Specialists.
FOK THE EXCLUSIVE TREATMENT
OF ALL CHRONIC DISEASES.
Ampk Facilities for Room end Board.
Kaoh TMpbmi trentod hj a rhyslrlan, who makes
It a speemlty: tlveof ourptaff rect'iTlnp their educa
tion and experience In Kurojie. where a Doctor Biurt
Mudy n-m year Instead of IhreUs here. If afflic
ted with Catarrh, f inimpffc. Atthma or any
J.-uny Trouble, consult r hin'lnhtit. Onr trejit'
tneni of Stomach. Liver, Heart a tut Kidney Trouble
ha no equal.
Rhrumntiirm, Goitre, Tape Worm and oil Skin Dtt
tar treated.
Otir German Kye and Ear Fpeeiallrt has cured
many caree when pronounced Incurable.
Our treatment for Fpilrpry. Paralysis and AVrrout
TrmiWM hap met with wonderful fuiivm.
Delicate rleaeti of Men or Women have bad
Ceclal provision made for their treatment.
Ftncteet privacy maintained and all cummniiioar
Uons confidential.
CONSULTATION FREE.
If afflicted with any disease address In any uugtafla
ILLINOIS STATE MEDICAL INSTITUTE,
103 State Street. Chicago.
CATARRH!
HAVE YOU GOT IT?
If no. try my medicine. For Ca
tarrh it la a hursrtire. Fit Bar
Fever. Cold In the Head, and
Headache it is a permanent re
lu t. I'rice I.". Send lor circu
lar. A-l . ivfrTh ill S 1 HOlUt, Koos
6S. b. Clark tU.Ulcaiio.-.
BORE
"0HI0"
WELL
DRILL
WELLS
with our fninou Well
jMarlilnerv. Tbe only
perfect self -cleaning and
L00MIS & Htm AH,
TIF. IN. OHIO.
The Oldest Medicine trt the World is freiaiff
K. ISAAC THOMPSON'S -r
CELEBRATED EYE-WATER.
Tht article is a curt fully pretett physician's pi
ecTiptlon, and has been la constant u for nearly a
century. There fare few diseases to which nuuiklnd
are subject more dl-tressing than sore eyes, and
none, perhaps, for which more remedies have been
tried without success. Foraliextemal Inflammation
of the eves It Is an Infallible remoly. If the direc
tion" are followed It will never fall. We particularly
Invite the attention of phvpiclana to Itp merits. For
sale by all druggists. J0.1N L. THOfSO& S0S8
COn Tboy, S. Y. Established 1T9J.
PEHfl
You can here get more life
insurance, of a better quality,
MUTUAL
on easier terms, at less
cost than elsewhere.
LIFE
Address
921-3-5 Chestnut St., Philad'a.
JIG CPILtllL
Send at once for our Catalogue, too testi
i monials. C. N. Newconib. Davenport, Iowa
ItlU I H Elftd BED WETTING.)
1 or eircalars and Uwtiranuiain aridnna, with atamps
lO. W. F. Bnydeb, Mcvicaer'a Theatre. Chicago. III.
2For sale by all Druggists. Price $1.00.
B. N. li.
.No. 41-91
In wrltinar to Advertisers, please do not fall
to mention tills puitcr. Advertisers like to
know what luediuuis pay them best.
a small particle Is Applied to the
. oanr K mnll
U I UKCIi'in vl m ill 'J HUill.
. X. Hazbi.tine, Warren, Fa,
Rua xanammanim, itraiai
and Mnull, ana l uresl
VOL r FJM
fori Vila in Hfuul.
It is Oiticklv Absorbed.
U W arren 6Ut li. T-
AnUnpreceQentBQOfier
The Chicago
Weekly Times
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