Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, July 18, 1896, Page 3

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A TERRIBLE RIDE. From the Times, Buffalo, N. ¥. Along one of the dismal roads in Western New York, a man and wife Were driving as rapidly as the darkness and inclement weather would permit. The rain beat down upon the rubber covering and found its way into every crack and opening. The occupants of the buggy were Dean Jones and his we. of Springville, N. ¥. Everybody i lamiliar with the name. He is the well-known starting judge, who has be- come famous for his impartial and fair treatment of jockeys at the post. It wag about ten years ago when Mr. and Mrs. Jones took that fateful ride that_came near costing her her life. Mrs. Jones’ clothes were thorough- ly soaked before town was reached. ‘There was no fire in their hotel room and she became chilled to the bone be- fore the little blaze the attendant start- ed warmed the atmosphere. From that time on Mrs, Jones was an ill woman. Her trouble—well, it was about every- thing with which human flesh can be afflicted. She had a strange, queer feeling in her head, that felt as if sev- eral shot were rolling around loose on her brain. Pen cannot describe the torture she suffered. Local doctors told her she had water on the brain. A ‘Times reporter called upon Mrs. Jones, who said: “Ever since that terrible wetting I received, up to a year ago, I was an invalid. I had terrible neuralgia pains in the head which often went to my feet and limbs. I was often in such a terrible state that I had to use a crutch to get around or else slide a chair be- fore me to move about the house. I was very ill for five years, in spells, and never expected to get well. It was f blood disease, I guess. One of the doctors I consulted said I had clotted »lood in my head, and perhaps I did. He could not cure me, neither could Several other doctors I tried. I also used many patent medicines, but they did me no good. My complexion was a perfect white, and my ears so transpar- ent you could look through them, My blood was turning to water, “Look at me now; do I look sick?” The reporter was forced to admit that he had seldom seen a more per- fect embodiment of health. With pardonable pride Mrs. Jones faid: “Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People did it. I can go anywhere now, while before I commenced using Dr. Williams’ remedy I could not move cut of the house. For three years, would you believe It, I did not even go to church. I was not always confined to my bed, but could not leave the house. Wherever I go, people say: ‘Why, Mrs. Jones, how well you are looking. How did it happen? and I always tell them ‘Pink Pills did it.’ I have not had the slightest touch of my old illness for the last six months, and feel as if I never had been ul in my life.” Mr. Jones said: “You can readily imagine how highly we regard the remedy in this house, where we have had a wife and mother restored to per- fect health.” Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price (50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50—they are never sold in bulk, or by the 100) by addressing Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. ¥. Corn Culture, Within the last twenty years meth- ods of corn culture have changed very materially. Close study and observa- tion of the habits of the plant has finally taught us that the best results are obtained by disturbing the roots as little as possible, and to-day, instead of using instruments that prune the roots, we are using those that disturb them as little as possible. Shallow-working {mplements have given by far the best results in late years. Experimental stations by comprehensive tests ex- tending over several years, have dem- onstrated that by shallow cultivation the yield has been increased consider- ably. Surface cultivation, when land las previously been well plowed and thoroughtly harrowed, enables the plant to obtain the necessary food from the soil without further stirring except that necessary to exterminate weeds and conserve moisture. Valuable Franchise Secured. The franchise of easy digestion—one ot the most valuable in the gift of medical science—can be secured by any person wise enough to use Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, either to suppress growing dyspepsia, or to uproot it at maturity, Bilious, rheumatic and fever and ague sufferers, persons troubled with nervousness, and the consti- pated, should also secure the health fran chise by the same means. No; Abolish the Fools, Jeems—A man’s a fool to marry when he can’t afford it. Deems—Then your theory is to abol- ish marriage altogether?—Kansas City World. Gladness Comes itha better understanding of the transient nature of the many phys- ical ills, which vanish before proper ef- forts—gentle efforts—pleasant efforts— rightly directed. There is comfort, in the knowledge, that so many forms of sickness are not due to any actual dis- ease, but simply to a constipated eondi- tion of the system, which the pleasant family laxative, Syrup of Figs, prompt- ly removes. That is why it is the only remedy with millions of families, andis ~7orywhere esteemed so highly by all 6 value health. Its beneficial effects are due to the fact, that itis the one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness without debilitating the organs on which it acts. It is therefore all important, in order to get its bene- ficial effects, to note when you pur- chase, that you have the genuine arti- cle, which is manufactured by the Cali- fornia Fig Syrup Co. only and sold by all reputable druggists. If in the enjoyment of good health, and the system is regular, laxatives or other remedies are then not needed. If afflicted with any actual disease, one may be commended to the most skillful ns, but if in need of a laxative, uid have the best, and with the wei-iaformed oe ners Syrup a "ies stands highest and is most largely nsed and gives most general satisfaction WHERE THEY STAND. Majority Report on Platform as Pre- sented to the Convention. Chicago, July 9.-Following is the plat- form prepared by the committee on reso- lutions and presented to the convention: We, the Democrats of the United States in_national convention assembled, do re- affirm our allegiance to those great essen- tial pcinciples of justice and liberty upon which our institutions are founded, and which the Democratic party has advocated from Jefferson's thme to our own—freedom of rpeech, freedom of the press, freedom of conscience, the preservation of personal rights, the equality of all citizens before the laws, and the faithful observance of constitutional limitations. During all these years the Democratic party has resisted the tendeacy of selfish Interest to the centralization of xevernmen- tal power and steadfastly maintained the integrity of tbe dual scheme of govern- ment established by the founders of this republic of republics. Under its guidance and teachings the great principle of local self government has found its best expres- sion in the maintenance of the rights of state and in its assertion of necessity of confining the general government to the exercise of powers granted by the consti- tution of the United States. Recognizing that the money system is par- amount to all others at this time, we in- vite attention to the fact that the federal constitution names silver and gold together as the money metals of the United States, and that the first coinage law passed by congress under the constitution made the silver dollar the monetary unit and admitted gold to free colnage at a ratio based upon the silver dollar unit. We declare that the act of 1873 demone- tizing silver without the knowledge or ap- proval of the American neople has resulted in the appreciation of goid and a corre- sponding fall in the prices of commodities produced by the people; a heavy increase in the burden of taxation and of all debts, public and private; the enrichment of the money-lending class at home and abroad; prostration of industry and impoverishment of the people. We are unalterably opposed to monomet- allism, which has locked fast the prosperity of an industrial people in the paralysis of hard times. Gold monometallism is a Brit- ish policy and its adoption has brought other nations into financial servitude to London. It is not only unamerican, but anti-American, and it can be fastened on the United States only by the stifling of that spirit and love of liberty which pro- claimed our political independence in 1776, and won it in the War of the Revolution. We demand the free and unlimited coin- age of both gold and silver at the present legal ratio of 16 to 1, without waiting for the aid or consent of any other nation. ‘We demand that the standard silver dollar shall be a full legal tender, equally with gold for all debts. public and private, and we favor such legislation as will prevent for the future the demonetization of any kind of legal tender money by private contract. We are opposed to the policy and practice of surrendering to the holders of the obli- gations of the United States the option secured by law to the government of re- deeming such obligations in either silver coin or gold coin. We are opposed to the issuing of interest-bearing bonds of the United States In time of peace, and con- demn the trafficking with banking syndl- cates, which, in exchange for bonds, and at an enormous profit to themselves, sup- ply the federal treasury with gold to main- tain their gold monometallism. Congress alone has the power to coin the issue money, and President Jackson declared that this power could not be delegated to cor- porations or individuals. We therefore, de- mand that the power to issue notes to cir- culate as money be taken from the national banks, and that all paper money shall be issued directly by the treasury department, redeemable in coin and receivable for all debts, pubiie and private. We hold that tariff duties should be leyied for purposes of revenue, such duties to be so adjusted as to operate equally throughout the country, and not discrim- inate between class or section, and that taxation should be limited by the needs of the government, honestly and economtc- ally administered. We denounce as dis- turbing to business the Repu ‘an threat to restore the McKinley law, ich has been twice condemned by the people in na- tional elections, and which, enacted under the false plea of protection to home indus- try, proved a prolific breeder of trusts and monopolies, enriched the few at the ex- pense of the many, restricted trade and de- prived the producers of the great American staples of access to their natural markets. Until the money question is settled, we are opposed to any agitation for further changes in our tariff laws, except such as are necessary to meet the deficit in revenue caused by the adverse decision of the su- preme court on the Income tax. But for this decision of the supreme court there would be no deficit in the revenue under the law passed by a Democratic congress, in strict pursuance of the uniform decisions of that court for nearly 100 years, that court having, under that decision, sustained constitutional objections to ifs enactment, which have been overruled by the ablest judges who have ever sat on that bench. We declare that it is the duty of congress to use all the constitutional power which remains after that decision, or which may come from the reversal by the court as it may hereafter be constituted, so that the burdens of taxation may be equally and impartially laid to the end that wealth may bear its due proportional expenses of the government. We hold that the most efficient way of protecting American labor is to prevent the importation of foreign pauper labor to compete with it in the home market, and that the value of the market to Amer- jean farmers and artisans is greatly re- duced by a vicious monetary system which depresses the prices of their products be low the cost of production and thus de- prives them of the means of purchasing the products of our home manufacturers. “The absorption of wealth by the few, the consolidation of our leading railroad systems and the formation of trusts and pools require a stricter control by the fed- eral government of these arteries of com- merce. We demand the enlargement of the powers of the interstate commerce com- mission and such restrictions and guaran- tees in the control of railroads as will protect the people from robbery and op- pression. We denounce the protligate waste of the money wrung from the peo- ple by oppressive taxation and the lavish appropriations of recent Republican con- gresses which have kept taxes high while the labor that pays them is unemployed and the products of the people's toil are depressed in price till they no longer pay the cost of production. We demand a re- turn to that simplicity and economy which benefits a Democratic government and a reduction in the number of useless offices, the salaries of which drain the substance of the people. 4 ‘We denounce arbitrary interference by federal authorities in local affairs as a violation of the constitution of the United States and a crime against institutions, and we especially object to gov- ernment by injunctions, as a new and highly dangerous form of oppression, by which federal judges,. in contempt of the laws of the states and rights of citizens, become at once legis- lators, judges and executioners; and we ap- prove the bill passed at the last session of the United States senate and now pend- ing in the house relative to contempts in federal courts, and providing for trials by jury in certain cases of contempt. No discrimination should be indulged in by the government of the United States in favor of any of its debtors. We approve of the refusal of the Fifty-third congress to pass the Pacific railroad funding bill, and denounce the effort of the present Kepub- lican congress to enact a similar measure. Recognizing the just claims of deserving Union soldiers, we heartily endorse the rule of the present commissioner of pensions that no names _ shall be arbitrarily dropped from the pen- i | } ston roll, and the fact of enlistment and service should be deemed conclusive evi- dence against disease and disability before enlistment. We favor the admission of the territories of New Mexico and Arizona into the Union as states, and we favor the early admis- sion of all the territories having the neces- sary population and resources to entitle them to statehood, and where they remain territories we hold that the officials ap- pointed to administer the government of any territory, together with the District of Columbia and Alaska, shou.d be bona fide residents of the territory of the district im which their duties are to be performed. The Democratic party believes In home rule and that all public lands of the United States should be appropriated to the estab- lishment of free homes for American citi- - We recommend that the Territory of Alaska Be granted a Uciegate im Tongtess and that the general land and timber laws of the United States be extended to said territory. ‘We extend our sympathy to the people of Cuba in their heroic struggle for liberty afd Independence. We are opposed to life tenure in the pub- le service. We favor appointments based upon merit, fixed terms of office, and such an administration of the civil service laws as will afford equal opportunity to all citl- zens of ascertained fitness. We declare it to be the unwritten law of this republic, established by the custom and usage of one hundred years and sanc- tioned by the examples of the greatest and wisest of those who founded and have main- tained our government, that no man should be eligible for a third term of the presi- degtial office. The federal government should care for and improve the Mississippi river and other great waterways of the republic, so as to secure for the interior states easy and cheap transportation to tidewater. When any waterway of the republic is of suff- cient importance to demand aid of the gov- ernment, such aid should be extended upon a definite plan of continuous work, until permanent inpzevement is secured. Confiding in the justice of our cause and the necessity of its success at the polls, we submit the foregoing de@aration of prii- ciples and purposes to the considerate judg- ment of the American people. We invite the support of all citizens who approve them and who desire to have them made effective through legislation for the relief of the people and the restoration of the country’s prosperity. A TENT BLEW DOWN. Storm Afflicts the Christian Endeav- or People in Washington. Washington, July 11.—A serious mishap that will interfere somewhat with the plans of the programme of the Christian Engleav- orers took place this morning. During @ rain storm, accompanied by a high wind, ‘Tent Williston, one of the largest stretches of canvas on the white lot, was blown down and appears to be a wreck. It is feared that it will b impossible to raise it again, as it Is water soaked and toru, though an effort may yet be made to do so. This tent was calculated to hold about 10,000 people. A mass of telegraph and electric wires were torn down when the tent fell. Tents Washirgton and Endeav also suffered from the storm, but the con- tractors were aroused in time to save them from destruction. Notwithstanding the discouraging weather con-Htions the Christian Endcavorers gatb- ered by thousands in Washbirgton, were eaily astir making their way to the many churches set apart for the morning services, which began the exercises of the day. The topic at these suniise services was “Prayer for the Conveation,” and in each case the meetings were led by members of the visiting organizations. ‘Chese special services lasted from 6:30 to 7 o'clock. A short adjournment for breakfast and a walk ubout town, and many of the dele- gates were gathered again at the big Pres- byterian chureh to participate in a Bible book study conducted by President G. 8. Burroughs, D. D., of Crawfordsville, Ind. The big meetings in the tent were fixed at 10:30 a, m. IRREGULARITY SUSPECTED. Report of the Savings Building So- ciety Are Examined. St. Paul, July 11. — Considerable excite- ment has been caused among the stock- holders of the Savings Bank society, all the deposit books being called in for ex- amination. The society was incorporated in 1882, and for fourteen years there has never been the slightest suspicion of any ir- regularity in the management of the con- cern. The calling in of the books natural], caused some alarm among the stockhola- ers, who were at a loss to know the reason for the unusual procedure. Much comment was indulged in by some of the stockhold- ers, who were unable to give any definite information on the matter, except to hint that something was wrong. E. F. Berrisford, president of the society, said last night that shortly after the death of Andrew N. Nelson, who committed sui- cide May 24 last, it was discovered that there were some irregularities in the ac- counts of Mr. Nelson, who bad been secre- tary of the society since it was organized. The books were found not to have been posted regularly, and other things that have been neglected caused the officers of the society to institute an investigation. ‘At the regular mecting of the society last month an expert accountant was employed, and he is now engaged in making an e: amination of the books of the late secre- tary. Mr. Berrisford said that he was unable to state what the shortage was, or if there was a deficit at all in Mr. Nelson's accounts, as the auditor had not completed his in- vestigation. A Well Known Character Dead. Bayfield, Wis., July 11.—By the death of Capt. John Stewart, who was buried here to-day by the G. A. R. post, Bayfield loses one of its best citizens and North Wiscon- sia one of its landmarks and most eccentric characters. ‘Jack’ was born in Ireland in 1831 and served in the English navy in his younger days. He came to this section in the early fifties and was one of the first lake captains in this vicinity. He owned and commanded the schooner Algonquin on Lake Superior for years. At the breaking out of the rebellion he enlisted in the twenty-sixth Michigan, and later was trans- ferzed to the navy, where he remained un- til the close of the war. He was well known by every mariner and prominent man who ever visited this section of the country. Horse Dropped Dead. Minneapolis, July 11.—A horse belonging to GC. H. Osgood, an expressman, dropped dead from fright this morning when he saw the heard of elephants belonging to the circus. He was hauling a load of fur- niture along Grant street, between Nicollet avenue and Vine Place, just as the ele- phants came along. The horse did not see them until they were alongside of him, and then turning his head he saw the giant ani- mals towering above him. He took one look, began to quiver and then dropped. His legs stiffened out and he never moved. It was undoubtedly a case of heart failure. Storm at Pensacola. Mobile, Ala., July 11. — The Italian brig Dadem, Swedish bark Syea and Norwegian bark Johan Ludvig were blown ashore in Pensacola bay yesterday during a severe storm, The wind blew from the northeast at seventy-two miles an hour and then changed to the northwest and blew 100 miles an hour, Pensacola being the center of the storm, 11 wires are down, the nearest telegraph statlon working being at Flomaton. The Pensacola & Atlantic divis- fon of the Louisville & Nashville is washed out In places. The damage amounts to $250,000, iH a Sn h Awarded ‘Highest Honors—World’s Fair, paces BAKING POWDER - MOST PERFECT MADE. A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Free fom Ammonia, Alum or any other adulterant, 40 YEARS THE STANDARD. CLEVER LOUISIANA MICE. Easily Outwitted Both a Man and His Big Tom Cat. B. C. Willis, living in the country be- low here, says that for some time past he has been greatly annoyed by rats In his smoke house. About a month ago he purchased a big wire and tin rat trap, and has since succeeded in catching some twenty-five of the big: rodents. This seemed to settle mat- ters so far as rats were concerned, but no sooner were they disposed of than the mice became equally as ob- noxious, the rats having ieft them a fair field. As he had no mouse trap on the place, Willis borrowed a big cat from one of his neighbors, and last night put Tom in the smoke house to make a raid on the mice. This morning he visited the scene of battte, hoping to find the cat master of the situation, with the mice nowhere in evidence. Instead he found the cat sitting on his haunches the picture of misery, hav- ing been outwitted by the designs of the overastute mice. It seems that Willis had left the big rat trap sitting behind a barrel in the smoke house, and into this the mice had betaken themselves as soon as they found they were being closely chased by poor Tom, who had not been able to make an entrance into the barricade of tin and wire. When Willis found the trap there were elev- en scared little mice safely housed therein. Thinking, of course, that he had them captured he fastened Tom in the smoke house again, and carried the trap outside, setting it down by the door while he went for a kettle of boiling water to demolish the catch at one fell swoop. But those mice had not lived in vain. Finding themselves safely outside and beyond the reach of the cat's, paws, they lost no time in improving their opportunity for escape afforded by Willis’ absence, and made their exit from the big rat trap as easily as they had entered it, and scampered off fnto safe hiding places before another and swifter danger overtook them.—Alex- andria (La.) Times. No More Wedding Rings. Wedding rings are doomed and a fashion 2,000 years old is doomed with them. The coming woman will have nothing to do with symbols and in- tends to be married in as short order as possible, without any of the folderol that her very feminine predecessors de- lighted in. Moreover, there is a signifi- cance in the marriage ring that does not please the modern woman. When the Roman put a tiny iron band about his new wife’s finger it was under- stood to be the outward and visible sign of his absolute authority. She was pound to him by an indissoluble band, and was his to own and command. Therefore she wore her ring upon her left or inferior hand, while her hus- band arrogantly placed his upon the right or superior hand; so what justi- fication could the modern woman have for accepting the sign of an authority which she would refuse to recognize? She will have nothing to do with a gift fraught with so obsolete a significance as the wedding ring. For the sake of consistency, it is only proper that the engagement ring should go at the same time, since, if a woman is not bound after marriage, she surely is not before. Princess May has shown her approval of the aboli- tion of this custom by substituting an engagement bracelet for the conven- tional ring of betrothal. Among those who regard royal precedent as authori- tative Princess May’s action should dispose of the engagement ring conclu- sively.—New York World. I believe Piso’s Cure is the only medi- cine that will cure consumption.—Anna M. Ross, Williamsport, Pa., Nov. 12, '95. Veils for Summer Wear. A veil protects the face from dust, gives a stylish finish to the headgear, and improves the looks of the wearer if the right kind is worn. A dotted veil is usually more becoming than a plain one, but the dots should be far “apart so as not to come within the line of the eyes. Black veils are the first choice, then black with white figures and border. A bordered veil must be worn with the border below the chin. A double-width veil, having loose, easy folds under the chin, is the most be- coming to a slender face. Black veils are worn with any color of hat, but brown and blue ones only look well with hat or trimming of the same color. Gray is worn with any hat, and gray chiffon veiling is very stylish this season for traveling wear. Cream- white veils are becoming to young fresh faces even up to middle life, but clear white nets are trying to any woman over twenty-five. Veils are hot properly worn to evening entertain- ments.—Ladies” Home Journal. In modern days Moltke made his reputa- tion partly in 1864 and 1866, but chiefly in the Franco-German war of 1870 and 1871, when he was seventy yeurs old. Patents Issued. List of patents issued last week to Northwestern inventors Charles A. Donaldson, Minneapolis, Minn, lock hinge; Peter Norsherg, Min- neano}is, Minn., spiing and air cushion; Jacob Heilbron, St. Paul, Minn., hydro- carbon vaporizer and burner; Iver Iver- son, Minneapolis, Minv., combinatiion lock; Fletcher W. Penhall, Morton, Minn., speculum; Edward C. and G. R. Shaw, Rushmore, Minn., band cutter and feeder; Herbert I. Walton, Minne- apolis, Minn., automatic switch lock for railways; Allan C. Weston, Minne- | apolis, Minn., toy musicai wheel; Geo. ; A. and F. C. Gregerson, Rochester, Minn., harness eye; North Dakota Milling company, Grand Forks, N. D., (trade-mark) breakfast food, fiour, cracked wheat, grits, farina and puri- fied middlings; Washburn-Crosby com- { pany, Minneapolis, Minn., (trade-mark) wheat flour. T. D. Merwin, Patent Lawyer, 910, 911 and 912, Pioneer Press Building, St. Paul, Mion. Not a Sympathizer With Cuba. Watts—Been reading anything about these Cuban atrocities? Potts—No. I have got a box of them at home yet that my wife bought three months ago from an alleged smuggler. —Cincinnati Enquirer. ffegeman’s Camphor Ice with Giyverine. ‘Cures Chapped Hands and Face, Tender or Sore Feet, Chilblains, Piles, &e. C. G. Clark Co. New Haven, Ct. Keeping It to Himself Diggs—What makes you wear your coat buttoned up to the chin that way, old man? It isn’t cold to-day. Griggs—I know it, but my wife made me 4 present yesterday of a new neck- tie that she had bought for herself.— Sommerville Journal. Much Worse, She—Do you know anything worse than a man taking a kiss without ask- ing for it? He—I do. She—What, for instance? He ene for it without taking it. —Life. . If the Baby 1s Cutting Teeth. Bo sure and use that old and well-tried remedy, MES WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP for Children Teething. Another View. “Mrs. Dobbs, don’t you find that club study rather interferes with house- keeping?” “Oh, no, not at all; it helps. I belong to so many clubs that I scarcely ever eat a luncheon at home.”—Chicago Record. Not Built That Way. Justice—You are charged with steal- ing Col. Julep’s chickens. Have you any witnesses? Uncle Moses—I heb not. I don’t steal chickens befo, witnesses.—Amusing ; Journal. twenty bicycles are stolen daily, chic‘ly from persons who have left them for a few | seconds standing on the curb, in the me | tropolis alone. Naked Pills are fit only, for naked sav- ages. Clothes are the marks of civilization—in pills as well | as people. A good coat does not make a good pill, any more than good clothes make a good Centrally Located. “Did you go to see that room just one minute from the station?” “Yes.” “How was it?” “Back room over the freight office.” —Chicago Record. Try Her With This One. Briggs—Does your wife laugh when you tell her a funny story? Braggs—Oh, yes. I always tell her beforehand that it is funny.—Indian- apolis Journal. man. But as sure as you'd look on a clothesless man as a mad one, you may look on a coatless pill as a bad one. After fifty years of test no pills stand higher than AYER’S Cathartic Pills SUGAR COATED. , ‘ _ Purely vegetable ‘and absolutely harmless, 7 The Great Blood Purifier 5 bd LAVYVYTYVYYYYYYYYAYTYYVNY TV OVYVYTYVYVUYYVIYYY IVYYYVYVYYYTYYTVIYYVYVYYYVYYYYYYYYYTYVYYYV IYI IV IV YY IVT lands are subject to homestead entry of 160 formation address eee fa Inclese 10 cents in Silver, (@F Refers to Bank of Harrison and FREE HOMES «ames. Nearly 2,000,000 Acres of Government Lands Now Open to Settlement_____——_—-_ IN NORTHERN ARKANSAS. They are fertile, well-watered, heavily-timbered, and produce grasses, 3 , » grains, 2 abundance. North Arkansas apples are noted. The ‘climate is delightful, winters mid and short. These fruits and vegetables tp h. NOW IS THE TIME TO GET A HOME, For further iu. E. V. M. POWELL, Immigration Agent, Harrison, Ark. Boone County Bank, Harrison, Ark. Cd large as a 10 cent AO) 2O) AO AO AO) 20202020) 20) 20) 2020) 20) 20120) 5 10) 2O) AWWW) 2 1O1O) 20 2OO O28 0OO 2072072) “The North Pole made use of at last.” Always at the front and wherever “BATTLE AX” goes it is the biggest thing in sight. It is as re- markable for its fine flavor and quality as for its low price. A 5 cent piece of “BATTLE AX” is almost as BOBS 2O) AW AO 2D AD AD AWW 2S OOS 20 GO B BOUGe QVOLOVOLOLGLSLBVOLOOOLOVOrOrs@rOr@r@rGrevGrevarerarevereuey piece of any other 3 equally good tobacco. 2 QL@LOLALCLALALALOSLOLOLOLETAO?@? @ are out of Twine., which runs 600 to 650 feet have som ndard Mixed Manilla, ‘M. 4s getting low, when your order is recel ie ys M. ROBERT'S N. B.—We have, in addition to the above, bought Te pound, Price 7% cents per pound. ived. if out of the No. 87, unless SUFPLY. HOUSE, NOS. 508, 510, ‘Thousand to the This consider to be 550 feet to the pound, at 5% cents T1T, 119 f Y: ‘IN OUR WAREH | MIN AI OVER FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS WONTH OF : INDING TWINE NILLA (ootpthstanding some, unserupulous dealer a report fng fe at oi cents per pound. We hive today some of the No. 87 8. Fea Re pee tg er RI Br e No, 87 M. Sta per pound; but as the quantity of the No. 87 S. and the No. A state not to, we will send you the value of the No. 97 Twine. "en Dollars’ worth of the Ron 401 pare 3 eee ‘whieh tune. from, 700.to'760 feet to ‘This Twine we bave not a large stock of, and In ordering it. please mak. “vst and second choice. 7 MA- that we the pound, at 5% cents per pound; also MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. I

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