Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, October 24, 1896, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

BY E. C. KILEY. GRAND RAPIDS. - MINNESOTA Lord Rosebery resigns as the Liberal Jeader for the very good reason that he can’t lead the Liberals. England could better have spared a worse poet than William Morris. She has them by the score. ‘Another uprising is on tap in Hondu- ras. No wonder the people are tired of the administration of a Policarpo Bonilla. It would be a joke if some of those fellows who are reaching viciously for the lion’s tail should get a bull by the horns. ‘The sultan regards Gladstone as one of those dangerous agitators who nev- er neglect an opportunity to array the masses against the classes. It is thought that one reason Herr Most doesn’t like the Democratic ticket is because one of the candidates lives in Bath. The czar seems to be having a pret- ty good time in Paris, even if he is mo- mentarily in danger of being blown to atoms, as some newspaper correspond- ents would have the world believe. Reports indicate that there has been some sharp fightiag in Cuba, and those who read between the lines of the offi- cial dispatches will rot fail to discern that the Spaniards got the worst of it. Wonder what the sultan thinks of the ezar, his friend, hobnobbing with the rulers of the balance of Europe, his enemies? The town of Elba, in Genessee coun- ty, has a remarkable distinction. It is the first township in the state to have the benefit of the rural free-mail de- livery. The French general, Trochu, who died recently, once had a tremendous- ly-difficult task on his hands.’ He was in command of the defenses of Paris during the siege of the Germans, in 1870. It is rumored that the Arbuckle | brothers, of coffee fane, are going into the sugar refiring business, and that there is to be a war with the sugar trust. If a war is inaugurated there will be a sweet old time. Corbett says he will not have any- thing to do with Sharkey until after his match with Fitzsimmons, and that he will not have anything to do with Fitzsimmons until after his match with Sharkey. Wise young man. ‘The cable doesn’t state how the czar and czarina behaved themselves while crossing the choppy English channel in a gale, and when their ship was being. tossed about tu:nultuously, but every- body who has made the passage can guess. It may console Emperor William to know that at the performance in Paris, attended by the czar and czarina, was produced an opera which deals with a German theme. The naughty Esrrison sisters appear to have occasioned some disappoint- ment on the occasion of their first ap- pearance in New York. They are not quite so real devilish as their press agent. Now that James M. Barrie has fol- lowed “Ian Maclaren” to this country, a Scotch craze is in order. So long as the country does not uranimously take to drinking Scotch whisky anything else can be forgiven—even to the wear- ing of kilts. That Cleveland father, who ground his ax in order to wreak vengeance on the supposed gay deceiver, set a shin- ing example for careless parents. A little more ax and hickory club invest- igation would secure a more creditable crop of sons-in-law. Considering that France is a Repub- lic, it was very polite in the Parisians to shout “Long live the Czar-” but they rather spoiled it all when they joined in singing the Marseilles hymn of death to despots. La belle France is hugging the Rus- sian bear with such abandon as to in- dicate that Moscow is entirely forgot- ten. But the excessive display of affection is chiefly due to the fact that the black eagle of Germany is watch- ing the performance. It is announced that Karathedori Pasha has been appointed first trans- lator to the sultan of Turkey. We sin- cerely hope that Karathedori is fully i qualified for his office, so that he will be able to translate the sultan at once, and so translate him that he will never } get back. The translation will prob- ably be a descent. That will make i easier for Karathedori and’ more diffi- | cult for the sultan. In that case there should be no necessity for a second | transla ter. | Salvation army, ‘was sent up for four ‘rom Foreign Shores. it is announced, will abandon ggle in Cuba if the revolution A General : portant News of the Week, From all Parts of the Globe, Boiled Down and 2 ‘ta Con- venient Form for Rapid Per. | ; usal by Busy People. u Washington Talk. The United States supreme court formally opened the October term at Washington, but immediately adjourn- ed to call on the president in accord- ance with immemorial usage. People in Print. Henry William Parnell ,third Baron Congleton, is dead. He was born in 1809 and was formerly in the royal mavy. John R. Williams, aged 60 years, bur- gess of Norristown, Pa., dropped dead recently. Mr. Williams gained a na- tional reputation as the “funny man” of the Norristown Herald. John Philip Sousa, the distinguished American composer and conductor, who is now in Berlin, was irivited to conduct the great Philharmonic orches- tra of Berlin at a special concert given in the Exposition building. William Rodman, for nearly twen- ty years city editor of the New Haven (Conn.) Register, and one of the best known newspaper men in the state, is dead. He was 44 years old and un- married. President Jordan of Leland Stanton! university, California, is mose Dp! - nently ee rea to succeed the late Prof. Goode as assistant secretary of the Smithsonian institution and direc- tor of the National museum. The report cabled to the United States that Bishop Spalding of Peoria had been nominated to succeed Bishop Keane of the Catholic university of America at Washington, is pronounced by the authorities at Rome to be pre- mature. Rey. Crosby H. Wheeler, D. D. ,the well known missionary of the Ameri- board, died at Auburndale, Mass. In early life Dr. Wheeler was a pastor in Maine. He was founder and president of Euphrates college and through this institution and in other ways he had wrought most successfully for the good of the Armenians. Accidental Happenings. Fire burned the major part of the business section of Great Barrington, Mass. Mrs. Myers, aged seventy-two, of Williamsburg, Iowa, fell into a cellar, completely scalping herself and fract- uring the base of her brain. She died twenty-four hours later. The plant of the Gladstone (Mich.) Electric Light eempany took fire, and before the flames were checked the building was a total less and the in- side wiring destroyed. Miss Lizzie Herrold, who lived at Hantield, Ind., was burned to death. In lifting a vessel from the stove she used her dress skirt to protect her hands, and the govds touched the tire and ignited. Three men were instantly killed at Wilkesbarre, Pa., by a fall of rock in the Laflin mine. hey ar Thomas Mitchell, Mill Creek, aged forty; John Patruz, Mill Creek, aged twenty-tive; George Puchuski, Laflin, aged tweuty- four. Crimes and Criminals. The headquarters of a “directory scheme” fraud have been found in In- dianapolis. Apparatus of all kinds for erasing and changing contracts, print- ing bogus circulars, etc., were found. George Appo, a noted product of+ street life in New York, and one of the star witnesses at the Lexow investiga- tion, was ordered to be removed from the Tombs prison to the insane pavil- ion at Bellevue hospital. Mrs. John Meyers and her twelve- year-old son are in jail at’ Atchison, the latter charged with murdering Les- ter Dyke, the twelve-year-old son of a neighbor, and the former with being accessory to the crime. After being out several hours the jury in the January murder case at Mexico, Mo., returned a verdict of guilty and assessed the boy’s punish- ment at ten years in the penitentiary. The prisoner, Will January, killed his father. Judge Taft of the United States court at Cincinnati sentenced William M. Boynton of the Franklin, Ohio Na- tional bank to five years in the peni- tentiary for violations of the United States banking law,, to which Boyn- ton had pleaded guilty. A dispatch from Montery, Cal., says that Count Hallesten, an artist, was shot and killed by a man named Ahiger. who lived with him. Ahiger has been arrested. The shooting was accidental. It is said both men are well known in Berlin. Charles Pscherhofer, a real estate agent and broker, arrested in San Francisco a month ago charged with swindling numberless victims, has dis- {| appeared. His case was continued sev- eral times in the police court and he was admitted to bail in bonds of $1,000. The wife of C. D. Smith, a farmer living thirteen miles east of Nevada, Mo., was found dead in the house with her head crushed. Her husband was digging potatoes in a field some dis- tance away and had left his wife alone in the house. It is supposed she was murdered by a tramp. An unknown man jumped into the water at Prospect Pvuint, Niagara, N. Y., and was immediately swept over the American falsl. The act was de- liberate suicide, for before stepping over the parapet he coolly took off his hat and put into it his money amount- ing to 40 cents and laid it on the stone wall. ‘The only witnesses were two hackmen. Helen Forsland, a member of the committed suicide at Boston by taking poison. A few years ago she masqueradcd as a man and was implicated in a daring highway robbery in Helena. She and a male | accomplice were arrested and her sex discovered. She .was acquitted, but pppressed by March 1. ‘ English authority, a former minister, says that the Venezu- mdary commission will decide England, and properly, too. u ing stained with blood. It is supposed that he was assassinated. Emperor William received in audi- ence Grumbkow Pasha, a German offi- cer in the service of the Turkish gov- ernment, who is the bearer of a letter, of thanks from the sultan to his maj- esty for the latter’s portrait, recently ; presented to Abdul Hamed. ; | The dispatch of British naval rein; forcements to Zanzibar has renew interest in the situation there, and is universally interpreted in’ Europe as a demonstration against Germany, as the condition of affairs in Zanzibar does not justify such measures. The office of minister of foreign re lations has been abolished, and the for- eign affairs of Honduras will be con- ducted in the future through the diet of the Greater Republic of Central America, formed by the alliance of Honduras, Nicaragua and Salvador. A Brussels dispatch says that Maj: Lothaire, who was recently acquitted of the charge of illegally executing the English trader Stokes, on the Congu, has quitted the service of the Congo State and has engaged in the French service in Madagascar. Baron Nicholas A. Grebnitsky, gov- ernor of the Russian fur seal islands, is on his way to Washington, D. C., where he intends to present to the Rus; sian ambassador the form of a new treaty governing the seal trade be- tween his country and the United States. : German scientists throughout the empire celebrated the seventy-fifth an- niversary of the birth of Prof. Ru- dolph Virchow, one of the greatest medical discoverers of the age. A quarter of a century ago his fiftieth birthday was celebrated by an inter- national gathering of physicians. : George Smith Fraser, an American, staying at No. 34 Albemarle street, Piccadilly, London, committed suicide by jumping from a window. At the inquest evidence was given that he had been suffering from illness and had threatened to commit suicide. A. verdict of temporary insanity was ren: ; dered. Otherwise. The New York Recorder has ceased publication. Republicans of the Seventh Kentucky district nominated W. C. P. Breckin- ridge for congress. The National Educational associa- tion will hold its next convention in Milwaukee. The Democrats of the Tenth congres- sional district (Mo.) nominated Dr. Le Grande Atwood of Farguson, St. Lou- | is, for congress, by acclamation. The eleventh annual convention of the Brotherhood of St. Andrew, of the United States opened at Pittsburg, , with a quiet service, led by Rev. J. Os} Roper of Toronto, Carada. The Arkansas Populist State Central committee has issued an address an- nouncing that the Populists and Demc- crats had agreed upon a state fusion elextoral ticket, by which the Populists ° were to hve three : nd the Democrats five votes. F. P. Schuman, a German engineer, has arrived in San Francisco from Gua- temala, where he has been employed for several months in surveying pro- posed routes for several new railroads. Mr. Schuman reports that matters are booming in railroads in that country. | . Dougal. D. Crawford, the big dry goods merchant of ‘St. Louis, who dis- « charged a baker’s dozen of his men be- cause they announced their intention to vote for Bryan and Sewall, has re- - pented his action, and recently, over his own signature, in a public letter, says he will take the men back. After a year’s anchorage on one side of Mombeshe lake, in New York, a floating island containing about two acres became released, and is now floating in Wind lake, situated eight miles distant, near Monroe. Hunters are having fine sport with the foxes and raccoons thus imprisoned. Origin of New Styles, New styles are chosen in quite an odd way. The fashionable dressmak- ers bring over, twice a year a selection of costumes, from which their custom- ers choose what suits their fancy. They cannot buy the gown they see— that is not always, but from the mod- el shown there :an be ordered a gown made to fit the particular figure. Sometimes the blending ef colors does not suit the taste of the purchaser, who then chooses what she prefers, guided, of course, somewhat, by the taste of the dressinsker, who is an ac knowledged autocrat, and refuses to allow too much latitude cf choice. When a costume has sufficient origin- ality of design to mark it as distinct- ive, it is certain to be copied, and in this way ail new fashions make their debut.—Harper’s Bazar. Bread, Butter and Health. Many physicians, according to a lec- turer on dietetics, are ordering thin bread and butter for delicate patients, especially those suffering from dyspep- sia, consumption and anaemia, or any who need to take on flesh. This thin bread and butter insensibly induces persons to eat much more butter than they have any idea of. It is extraor- dinary, says the lecturer, how short a way a pat of fresh butter will go if spread on a number of thin slices of bread. This is one advantage, and a great one, in the feeding of invalids, excellent form of the fat which is so essential for their nutrition in a way that lures them to take it without re- bellion. But the thin bread and butter has another advantage equally as great —it is very digestible and easily as- similated. Fresh butter made from cream is very much more digestible when spread upon thin slices of bread than the same amount of cream eaten | as cream, per se, would )e. ; in demeanor, entered the court. j Sle. On HELD FOR TRIAL THE CASTLES ARE AGAIN IN LONDON. COURT Various Shopkeepers Identify Goods Found in the Trunks of the Cas- tles, After Which the Prisoners Are Held for Trial Next Month, the Bail of $150,000 Being Con- tinued, (Copyright, 1896, Associated Press.) London, Oct. 22.—Directly after the routine police cases had been disposed of to-day the court room was cleared of the throng which had been inter- ested in them and was almost imme- diately afterward refilled, this time by an overflowing gathering of store- keepers, city men and others. It was the trial of the Castles, the American prisoners charged with theft. Mrs. Castle is said to be a kleptomaniac. All the bondsmen of the Castles were among those present and H. Hodson, representing the United States embas- sy, Was accommodated with a seat at the solicitor’s table. There was a humming of excited comment which was quickly hushed by the magistrate, Robert Milnes New- ton, as Mr. Castle, calm and dignified He was followed by his wife, who was stylishly and becomingly dressed in a tailor-made dress of gray material. Mrs. Castle carried a handkerchief in her right hand and held it almost con- tinuously up to her face as if to thwart the efforts of the police court artists if there were any in the vi- cinity, to sketch her features. She Was more composed than last week, when her distress touched everybody present. But in spite of this gain in strength, due, no doubt, to her re- lease from prison and rest at the res- idence of a friend, Mrs. Castle no soon- ' er found herself in the prisoner’s dock than she showed symptoms of faint- ness verging on to collapse, which caused the policemen on duty at her side to fetch a seat and place it in the dock for the use of Mr. and Mrs. Castle. The latter then sank wearily upon it, closed her eyes and leaned her head upon her husband’s shoulder as if seeking there the strength neces- sary to enable her to bear up against such a trying ordeal. Mr. Castle, as on Tuesday last, placed his arm af- fectionately around his wife and sup- ported her as best he could. During the further hearing of the case against her and incidentally against her hus- band, Mrs. Castle frequently moaned so piteously that finally, the kind- hearted policeman already referred to handed her a bottle of salts and Mr. Castle was kept busy whispering words of comfort in the stfferer’s ear, and holding her hand, while striving in every way to encourage the half- fainting woman. Several shopkeepers identified num- erous articles found in the trunks of the Castles, then Charles Matthews, leading counsel for the Castles, asked that the prisoners be committed for trial at the Central criminal court, but Mr. Newton refused to do so, saying that his instructions were to send, all shoplifting cases to trial at the ses- sions, and, therefore, he committed both prisoners for trial, allowing bail in $150,000, at the Clerkenwell ses- sions, which open Noy. 2. MARKET REPORTS. Latest Quotations From Grain ana Live Stock Centers, Chicago. Oct. 22.—Wheat—October, 761-2c; December, 783-Se; January, 79 3-Sc; May, 82c. Corn — October, 245-8c; December, 25 3- May, 29 1-4c. Oats—October, 18 3-4c; Decem- ber, 19 1-2c; May, 221-8c. Pork—Oc- tober and December, $7.10; January, $7.97 1-2; May, $8.321-2. Lard — Oc- tober, $4.30; December, $4.32 1-2; Jan- uary, $4.52- May, $4.75. Ribs—Oc- tober and December, $3.72 1-2; Janu- ary, $3.95. Chicago, Oct. 22.—Hogs—Market ac- light, $3.10a3.55; mixed, $3.10a rough, $3a3.15. Cattle—Texans ti 3. ' and Westerns quiet but firm; beeves, $3.50a5; cows and heifers, $1.50a$3.90; Texans, $2.65a3.25; Westerns, $3.10a4; stockers and feeders, $2.70a$3.85. Minneapolis, Oct. 22—Wheat — Oc- tober closed at 751-2c; December opened at 75 7-8e and closed at 76 1-2c; May opened at 805-Se and closed at track—No. 1 hard, 74 1-2c; No. 1 Northern, 73 1-4c; No. 2 North- ern, 71 1-4¢. Milwaukee, Oct. 22.-Flour in mod- erate demand. Wheat stronger; No. 2 spring, 73¢; No. 1 Northern, 76 1-2c; December, 763-4c. Corn easier; No. 8, 253-4c. Oats weak and lower; No. 2 white, 191-2c; No. 3 white, 16a20c. Barley steady; No. 2, 36c; sample, 26a 36c. Rye weak and lower; No. 1, 40: 41c. Provisions lower; pork, $7.05; lard, $4.25. South St. Paul, Oct. 22—Hogs are steady, heavy selling the best; sales at $2.85a3.20. Cattle steady; fair de- mand, good feeders selling the best; sales at $243.15. True Bill Found. London, Oct. 2. —The grand jury to- day found a true Dill against Lady Scott, mother-in-law of Earl Russell, who is charged by the latter with criminal libel in conjunction with two young men who were arrested with her on the same charge. The Juryman Skipped. Bottineau, N. D., Oct. 22.—George S. Fairles, the juryman under arrest charged with perjury in the Scott murder case, and who has failed to give bonds, has fied. A horse was awaiting his break for liberty. Of- ficers are in pursuit. Old Newspaper Man Dead. Evansville, Ind., Oct. 22.—John H. McNealy died suddenly late to-day. He was proprietor of the Evansville Journal and was an old newspaper man. An only son survives him, E. 'T. McNealy, of the Journal. Resumes Operations, Grand Rapids, Mich., Oct. 22.—The Berkey & Gay furniture factory, the largest in the world, resumed opera- tions to-day after a period of enforced sciences during the business depres- sion. WHEAT IS GOING UP. Another Big Jump in the Price of the Grain. Chicago, Oct. 21. — Wheat made a record-breaking jump. The December option opened at 78 1-2a7% 1-8c, steady- ing at the latter figure, an advance of 81-4¢e. The wildest excitement char- acterized the trading. There was talk of possible failures as a result of the unparalleled advance. After a mo- mentary reaction to 79¢ December wheat soon went beyond the top figure at the opening, touching as high as 79 1-1c several times within the first fifteen minutes of business. Just before 10 a. m. the market took a sudden plunge downward and fell to 78 1-2c, reacting to 783-4c. Shortly after 10 a. m. the price receded to 78 1-4c, but at that point, the market whirled sharply upward again and within a few minutes advanced to 79¢. During the freuzy at the opening some few trades were made as_ high as 791-2c, while sales at the same mo- ment in other parts of the pit were at different figures ranging all the way to 78 1-2c. At 10:30 a. m. the price was 78 3-4ce for December. At this point another 1-cent-a-bushel advance was recorded, with amazing rapidity. Almost be- fore the tickers could place the figures on the tape in the brokers’ office the quotation had leaped to 79 3-4e. This was within 1-8c of 4 cents a bushel added to the value of the cereal within a single hour. Before 11 o’clock the pit witnessed a notable example of whipsaw. From 79 3-4e the market fell as rapidly as it had risen, dropping a cent almost in a straight line to 7834e. Scattering sales were made at 785-S¢ and then the market once more rebounded to the ruling price at 11 a. m., being 79¢ for December. The advance was due to the Liver- pool cables, which reported that mar- ket excited and from 31-2 to 5d high- er, equivalent to an advance of 4 to 6c. No such jump has been experienced in the market for years. Between 11 and 12:15 there was a gradval relapse. From 79¢ December slumped to 773-4c. In the next half- hour it was again ascending the lad- der and reached 78 5-8c, but during the succeeding fifteen minutes it returned to the down-grade and at 1 p. m., fif- teen minutes before the close, was quoted at 773-4c. The decline con- tinued during the final quarter of an hour. Just before the bell struck De- cember was 77 1-4c, and the last quo- tation for the day was 77"%-Se bid, Speculative Exciteme st. New York, Oct. 20.—Wheat made a perpendicular advance of 41-2c a bushel, following a stupendous jump of Ge at Liverpool, and general specu- lative excitement throughout the whole of Europe. The bull movement was accompanied by intense local excite- ment and heavy trading during the first few minutes. Buyers’ orders, of course, predominated. Even the bulls themselves were amazed at the enormity of the advance, which has not been equaled in years. The De- cember option opened at 85 7-Se, and before the demand could be appeased, had jumped to 861-2c. Following this came a cent r ion with a let-up in trading. The close was 2c below the opening. KENT MUST SWING. Allen Refuses to Commute the Death Sentence, Bismarck, N. D., Oct. Goy. Allin denied the appeal for a commutation from the death penalty to life imprisonment of the twice-con- victed wife murderer, Myron R. Kent, sentenced to be hanged at Fargo Nov. 12, and has notified sheriff Barnes of his decision, thus ending one ef the most remarkable cases in the criminal annals of the West. The :vernor will make public his reason: for de- nying the applicaticn to-mori..w. Cov. Race War in Alabama, Birmingham, Ala., Oct. 21.—A battle which occurred at Belle Ellen mines, Bibb county, yesterday, between whites and blacks, resulted in the death of two men and the wounding of two others. Deputy Sheriff Tatum had gone to the place from Blocton with a warrant for the arrest of Geo. Gore, a notorious negro character. Gore was found earl yyesterday morn- ing and resisted arrest, drawing a shotgun on the officer. The latter brought his pistol into play and both men fired, Tatum being slightly wound- ed in the head. At this juncture sey- eral negroes ran to Gore’s rescue witb drawn weapons. John Sullivan, a jewelry drummer from Bessemer, seeing Tatum’s plight, came to his aid and opened fire on Gore, ng him at first shot. When the In one of his wonderful sermons very truthfully said, “ My brother, your trouble is not with the heart ; it is a gastric disorder or a rebel- lious liver. It is not sin that blots | — To-day ; nde was | over Frank Martin (colored) was dy- : ing and Jim Daniels (colored), was dying, and Jim Dennis (colored) badly wounded. <A large number of negroes gathered and made ugly demozstra- tions towafd Tatum and Sullivan, but the whites rallied to their aid. Fora time it looked like wholesale bloood- shed, but the formidable showing of the whites overawed the negroes, who finally dispersed. Drove a Bone to His Brain, Larimore, N. D., Oct. 21.—John Ry- all, a farmer living twenty miles north of here, was probably fatally injured by the bursting of a boiler on a thresh- ing engine owned by himself and brothers. A piece of iron struck him in the back of the head, driving a bone one and a half inches long into the brain. The engine and separator were badly wrecked. Chicago, Oct. 21—Thomas B. Reed spoke to-day in the big Republican tent at Fifty-fifth and Peoria streets. The tent was filled to its utmost ca- pacity, but the audience was doomed to a great disappointment for Mr. Reed was able to speak but for a few minutes. His throat was troubling him seriously and he could speak only with great difficulty. Display ‘the Flag. Chicago, Oct. 21.—Chairman Jones, of the National Democratic committee, } issued an appeal to-day to those who | “desire to preserve the country's honor ; and independence” to display the American flag Saturday, Oct. 31. ‘Chis is the date recently set by Mr. Hanna for the display of the flag by those who favor Republican principles. The 2,000 miners employed at the twenty-five mines at Sprivgneld, IL, came out on strike this morning for an advance in wages. out your hope of heaven, but bile that not only yellows your eye- balls and furs your tongue and makes your head ache but swoops upon your soul in dejection and forebodings,”—and \ Talmage is right! All this trouble can be removed ! You can be cured ! How? By using +|(Sae Gre a We can give you incontrovertible proof from men and women, forme: sufferers, But to-day well, and stay so. There is no doubt of this. Twenty years experience proves our words true. Write to-day for free treatment blank. Warner's Safe Cure Co., Rochester, N.Y. a His Winning Way. “Why is it that you politicians are always so tenderly considerate of the workingman?” “Because he is so numerous.”—Cin- cinnati Enquirer. Reward $100. , The Dominion Express Co. will paz $100 for information leading to the capture of C. C. Condie, who absconded from Oak Lake, Manitoba, on the night of Oct. 13. He is about 5 feet 8 inches, dark sunken eyes, dark brown mustache, lowering eye- lids, pale complexion, about thirty-tive years old; wore ordinary jockey cap, dark coat and trousers; boil on one eye and oue on neck; is a good musician. Arrest for grand larceny and wire G. Ford, superin- poate Winnipeg, or Ronald Stewart, St. aul, Minn. When bilious or costive, eat a Cascaret gendy cathartic, cure guaranteed. 10c, Ce legeman’s Damphor ice with Glycerine. Cures Chapped Hands and Face, Tender or Sore Feet, Chilblains, Piles, &c. C. G. Clark Co., Now Haven, Ct. Agents Wanted. The Home Life Insurance company of New York issues the most attractive poli- cies of any old line company. ‘The cash value and loaning privileges each year are plainly guaranteed in the policy. An ener- getic, live man, well acquainted, Is desired as a local agent. Special territory and Mberal contract will be given. References required. Address or cal! on Fred F. Loomis, general manager, 306-9 Pioneer Press building, St. Pant Miss Leftover—There is a saying, “Love me, love my dog.” And I be- lieve it is true. Her Little Brother—Of course it is. Anybody who could love you could love anything. ¥ Reforms Need More Than a Day ‘ To bring them about, and are always more* complete and lasting when they proceed with steady regularity to a consummation. Few of the observant among us can have failed to notice that permanently healthful changes in the human system are not wrovght by abrupt and violent means, and that those are the most salutary medicines which are progressive. Hostetter’s Stomach » Bitters Is the chief of these. Dyspepsia, a disease of obstinate character, is obliterated by it. Flowers—Cut this out and keep it. Fresh tut roses, carnations, smilax, ferns, palms and violets, flowers for funerals and wed- dings sent on mail or telegraph orders to all parts of the country, summer or winter, by Mendenhall, the florist, Minneapolis, Minn. A Lincolnshire rector, writing In the Lon- fon Times, says he has an income of ex- actly $1,000 a year, and this year he has paid $220 out of it in rates and taxes. I shall recommend Piso’s Cure for Con- sumption far and wife—Mrs. Mulligan, Plumstead, Kent, England, Nov. 8, 1895. The Emperor William is just now taking a great Interest in the construction of a new gun at Krupp’s works, which will have a range of not less than ten miles effective. Cascarets stimulate liver, kidneys and bowles. Never sicken, weaken or gripe. Mr. Wilson Barrett’s book, “‘The Sign of the Cross," will be published early in De- cember. Mr. Barrett gets $5,000 down for the work, with the promise of more to come. The Baby, If he’s peevish, restless, Suffers from sleeplessness, Loss of appetite, loss of flesh And seems out of sorts Generally, is undoubtedly Suffering from worms, and Should be given at once, Kickapoo Indian , Worm Killer. Relieves instantly, cures Speedily, and, being purely Vegetable, is positively Harmless. Remember, many, Little ones die from Convulsions, and many Un-named troubles when — Worms are the cause. Don’t delay, its dangerous. All druggists, 25c. A

Other pages from this issue: