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ti — iyela, one oly 7 ee : —— VE WILL RECEIVE THIS WEEK TPR Fine Black Goods, Mohair, Serges and Silks, Craventies. Sicilians, Mohair Brocades, Summer Silks, Wash Silks,Dimitys, India Linen,Challies, Batistes, Percales and Cheviots, also a fine line of Se, VAD AM METH _G. ELLINGER returned from eastern markets and the goods are arriving daily. There are a good many plums in the various lines. GES WITHIN REACH OF ALL, Lace Curtains, Bed Spreads anD Window Shades OUR LINE OF SPRING WRAPS AND SHIRT WAISTS IS COMPLETE——-y HOO DOZEN OF LADIES HOSE 000 * ufvhich were bought at a speciallow figure and will be sold accordingly. Don’t forget;we sell youa 00D STYLISH SHOE AT A VERY LOW PRICE. _o — G, ELLINGER. qrEGULATOR OF PRICES. for § ——— - - = —— = REMARKABLE COURTSHIP. ‘triumphantly. ‘What time did it mey occur?’ — FPebyic Phenomenon Vouched tor bya! “ ‘Really, I don’t know, but it , Confirmed Olid Bachelor. |must have been about 9:30. I re- From the Washington Star: “Four, Member that I thought it odd that | tfive years ago,” said a bachelor in | the clock should strike just as it, | Beaversation with a reporter, “I had | happened.’ toweetheart that I was deeply in! “ ‘Wasn't it remarkable?’ | 1 Flore with, and wanted to marry, but, ‘I was coming to it by degrees Iwas afraid to ask her. At that 904 wanted to see just where I was. time Iwas making a study of psy- ~“‘No I don’t think it was,’ she | ttic phenomena and that sort of answered indignantly. ‘George has | ne F thing and it occurred to me to make always loved me and his propogal | tpaychical proposal by projecting jlast night was quite what I expect-| 1g FB subjective mind around the cor ed. We are to be married in June’ ” | ter to where the girl lived and fixing To Make a Happy Home \ itopall ready for me whenIshould | 1, ‘ : | take my objective mind around to), ) mans Rninerae® paccettens eek @Hbeve the affair ratified. I went to: mf*e her Thursday evening and felt} ;, @ § wre that if I asked ber I would get, bl | ~ her, notwithstanding she was about | Weeit le, and soften them by prayer | Te tutercated in 2 triend of penitence and a sense of your own | I Bing whom I shail call George. shortcomings and errors. : | Having doubts as to my courage I 3. Never speak or act until you} determined to make a test the next | 28¥° EMER QU AGU LS GE meting, instead of going to see her, acts, and concluded that Christ; would have done so in your place. ol retired early, that is, about 9) | 4. Remember that, valuable as is | the gift of speech, the gift of silence | to be gentle and patient. : clock and according to formula, I erted my mental faculties to their). uimost and directed all my mevtal|‘® much more valuable. | ®ergies upon the girl and willed; Do not expect too much from ! with all my power that she accept others, but that all have an evil na- | Me. For half an hour, fully, I shut ture whose development we must | out every thought but this impert-| expect, and which we should forbear | tt one, and went to sleep, or into a, and forgive, as we often desire for- Mecunder the mental train. I bearance and forgiveness ourselves. @woke an hour or two later and felt | 6. Never retort a sharp or angry that my efforts had been a success, | word. fod that it would be all right next the quarrel. ; day when I called. I felt soencour-| ‘ Beware of tged that I went to sleep and dream-| ment. ed beautiful dreams of her till morn- Of waite ig. At3 o'clock next afternoon I 9 Jearn to say kind and pleasant alled to make my real proposal. I things whenever an opportunity of- talked to Ler on some trivial subject) fers. e Or other for balf au hour and then; 10. Study the character of each tame to the all-important matter and sy mpathize with all in their “Didy bob ere natal troubles, however su ee Ce eae 11. Do not neglect little things, if oO vtional sensat , stev pet . . emotional sensations last evenivg? | they can affect the comfort of others asked. lin the smallest degree. “She blused violently aud I was rs Sure thatauy subjective proposal had Chiidren Cry for hit center. Pitcher’s Castoria. > “‘How did you know anything Children Cry for 4 about it?’ she replied, laughiog somes| Pitcher’s Castoria. What nervously. Chiidren Cry for “Ob, that's all right, I smiled Pitcher’s Castoria. the fi t disagree- S. Learn to speak in a gentle tove il. It is the second that makes | j fuckers drugst re. TOWED TO SEA BY A DEVIL-FISH Thriiling Experience ota Kentuckian | Who Severed Sixty Tentacles of a | Mammoth Octopus. | Fort Myers, Fla., March 11.—Col. | R. T. Holloway, of Lexington, Ky.,| who is spending the winter at Naples} ternoon while fishing in Rookery! Bay. The bow of his boat was seiz- | ed by a shuge devil-fish and towed) | swiftly seaward. Col. Holloway car- ried a heavy hunting knife, and with | this he severed the tentacle that held | the boat, but the tish immediately | Holloway cut tentacle after tentacle, | only to see another thrust forward. At last he dropped his hunting-! knife, and seizing a repeating | rifle, he began shooting into the! water where he supposed the fish to be, hoping to strike it by a lucky shot. After firing a number of times the speed of the boat diminished: Col. Holloway continued to shoot, and soon the boat came nearly toa stop and the fish arose to the sur- face, having been pierced by many bullets. The contest had continued three hours and Col. Holloway was over thirty miles from Naples. He started to row back, but was fortuo ately seen by a fishing sloop, which: towed him to Naples, reaching there about 11 o'clock last night. The dead devil-fish was still st- tached to the Kentuckian’s boat, be- ing towed by the last tentacle it had put forward. Over sixty tentacles bad been cut, and the fish had near ly as mavy more. Its weight was over 2.090 pounds. In several plae-s where a tentacle touhecd the boat the wood was dented. 1s, COnszipated or trou- aundice, Sick Headache ad nouth, foul breath, coate e, dyspepsia, Indigestion, hot dry pain in the back and between the ulders, ¢ sandtever, &c. If vou have any of these symptoms, your liver is out otorder and your blood is slowly being poisoned because your liver does | notact properly. Herbine will cure ali | disorder of the liver, Stomach or bowels Ithas no equal as alivermedicine. Price 75 cents. Free trial oottle> at ie ly The man who eats because he is hungry is. thus far, on a level with the brutes The man who stops eat | ing the moment his hunger is ap- peased is the wise man. Nature needs no more food than she calls for. Continued excess brings about indigestion or dyspepsia, with loss of flesh, strength, sleep and ambi tion and mental power; and an accu- | some miles south of Fort Myers,had! mulation of aches, pains acd many ja thrilling experience yesterday af | dangerous local maladies. The stomach now can do nothing alone. We must appeal to some ar- tificially digested food which can also digest other foods. That is to say, we must use the Shaker Diges- tive Cordial. The effect is prompt and cheering. The chronic pain and distress ceases. Appetite presently revives. Flesh and vigor gradually grasped the boat with another of its! ome back, and the sufferer recovers. 2. Guard your temper, especially | Sores or arms and plunged through | But he must be careful in future. A seasons of ill health,irritation and | the waves at a furious pace. Col. |trial bottle for 10 cents Laxol is the best medicine for children. Doctors recommend it in place of Castor Oil. Columbus, O., March 7.—After 27 years of imprisonment for a crime of which he was not guilty, Jefferson Moorehead walked out of the Ohio Penitentiary a free man, with a par- don from Govy.’Bushnellin his pock- et He was convicted on circum stantial evidence of the murder of a young manin Muskingum County. Moorehead always denied that he killed the man. It has lately been presented to the State Pardcn Board that as a matter of evidence the hole in the skull of the murdered man could not biaye been made by the gun that Moorehead carried on that ‘day, as the caliber did not corre spond. Storm Damage in Kentacky. Hopkinsville, Ky, Mareb +.— Daring the violent rain and wind storms that swept over thissection of the state last night many barns were blown down and much stock killed \A barn onthe farm of T. E. Lane of near this city, was blown down and ‘several thousond dollars worth of destroyed in this and adjoining counties is estimated at $100,000. | fine stock was killed. The property | ! Kilied Three Men. ! Superior, Wis , March 12 —Harry the first degree here to-night. La. | mont is known to have committed two murders for purposes of rob- Spain Needs Money. Madrid, March 12.—Marquis di Lamont was convicted of murder in| Comillas banker, Senor Girona and Directors of the Banks of Barcelona and Hispano Colonia met with the Minister of Finance, in order to dis- bery and is strongly suspected of , cuss the manner of supplying the another. In September, 1895, a man named McCarthy was found murdered near | Dedham. Lamont was suspected, ‘ chashed and captured near Wausau. Lamont before capture however,bad gone to Two Harbors and got in with a man named MeMillan. He} went to Duluth with McMillan and the body of the latter was subse- quently found near Superior, where | he had been killed. Circumstantial! evidence iu both cases seems to be conclusive. La- mont is also accused of killing a woodsman near Wausau. Lamont hails from Denver. Washington, D. C, Mareh ' House Elections Committee No. Government with funds for the Cu- ban war until July next. ister asked for 24,000,000 at 6 per cent: advocated a popular loan and pay- ment of interest quarterly. isno doubt that such a proposition will be extremely popu- lar. The Min- The evening papers strongly There financial Old People. Old people who require medicine to regulate the bowels and kidneys will tind the true remedy in Electric Bitters. stimulate and contains no whiskey nor other other intoxicant, but acts ‘as a tonic and alterative. — i j This medicine does not It acte mildly on the stomach and bowels, | adding strength and giving tone to the organe, thereby aiding Nature > | in the performance of the functions. “| Electric Bitters is an excellent appe to day reported that no election had | tizer and aids digestion. Old Peo- occurred in the Fifth Louisiana Dis- | ple find it just exactly what they trict now represented by Mr. Boat- | ; al effect of which is | bottle at H. L. Tucker's Drug Store. ner, the practic ; to declare the seat vacant. The con- ! clusion reached by the committee | need Price fifty cents and $1 per Death of ‘Dr, A- we Small, Sedalia, Mo, March 11.—Doctor was that there had been so much | Small, the well known surgeon, died fraud, violence and intimidation at | at his home here last night at the the polls as to invalidate the elec. | tion. Mr. Boatner’s seat was contested by Alexis Benoit. Think it Will be Atlisoo James S. Clarkson, ex-chairman of | the Republican national committee, still committee, who represents Iowa on the passed through the city zoia. Mr. to day en route to Clarkson 1s a star p Iowa's favored -All the nomination of president » St. Louis convention. He s believes on will be nom and elented rter of is guaranteed to give viect sat oO! | or money refunded. Price 25 cts per bo | For sale by H, L. Tucker, druggist ‘ Dr. born in Germany, aud was a surgeon in the Crimean war. During the Civil war Dr. Small was medical di- age of 75 years. Small was | rector of the southern Confedracy. He has been a resident of Missouri for about forty years. A Naorsery Rivme The king has left his countir and wisely s ueen and bh vetting brea blackbird now haif her ncse. —Toledo Blade cincinnati mietipatbtiienirala Natit abana Ae Aout eae