Plattsmouth weekly journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1881-1901, April 19, 1901, Image 6

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    PLATTSMOUTH JOURNAL
O. K. TOffL, rabllahf-r.
PLATTSMOUTH, - NEBRASKA
BRIEF TELEGRAMS.
. .."...".."..".. -
The sale is reported of a seat on
the New York Stock exchange for
$59,000.
The department cf the interior is
receiving a large number of requests
for vaccine for use in treating black
leg among tattle.
The Denver, Colo., manager cf the
smelter trust has announced that the
selling price for lead has been re
duced from $4 to $3.90.
James 1. Witherow nas sued the
Carnegie Steel company for more than
140,000,000 damages for alleged in
fringement of patents.
The state department has received a
cablegram from Consul Kong, at Cairo.
Egypt, announc ing that the plague has
broken out at Alexandria.
The government bulletin gives the
number of goats in the United States
as 400.000. and the annual production
of mohair over a million pounds.
Stricken with remorse after a
night's carousing with convivial com
panions. Mrs. Eugenia Godfrey, aged
22. committed suicide at Warsaw, Ind..
by taking morphine.
The lhirlington & Missouri and the
Santa Fe roads have anncunced their
intention of establishing an ' inter
changeable mileage burea.t for their
own roads June 1.
Samuel M. Nave, one of the best
known wholesale grocers, bankers and
stockmen of the west, died at his home
in St. Joseph. Mo., of stomach tron
He. aged 52 years.
Rear Admiral Schley embarked on
the British steamship Clyde at Buenos
Ay res for the United States. Mrs.
Lloyd, wife of the United States min
ister, is also on the ship.
Frank D. Gardner of Illinois, an ex
pert in the soils division of the de
partment of agriculture, has been ap
pointed to take charge of the experi
ment station work in Porto Rico.
Mrs. S. R. Lyons, wife cf the presi
dent of Monmouth. 111., college, com
mitted suicide by hanging. She had
been ailing for some time, but there
was no suspicious of suicidal tendency.
The London Daily Express this
morning says that it understands that
the government has decided to cease
tending reinforcements to South Af
rica. William H. Hussman, an office em
ploye of the Barrett Manufacturing
company at St. Louis foi thirteen
years, confessed that he was an em
lezzler and forger to the extent of
S4.000.
Mrs. Lenora Wheeler, -wife of a
prominent whisky dealer, committed
juicide at Chattanooga. Tenn.. by tak
ing laudanum. Mrs. Wheeler was bit
fen some time ago by a dog supposed
ro be mad.
Miss Hattie Rose Laube of Sontta
Dakota, whose engagement to Senator
Clark of Montana is announced, is but
24 years of age. She is well educated
and has been admitted to the bar of
South Dakota.
The Frankfurter Zeitung prints a
;reelal dispatch from Constantinople
which says the Turkish government
Las raised a loan of 200,000 from the
Ottoman bank to settle the claims of
the Cramps and the Kmpps.
The London Morning Post says it is
rumored that an Alexandria firm of
rotton brokers has failed with liabil
ities reported to amount to 250.000.
while it is sa'd that the assets show
on paper a margin of 30.000.
F. E. Emery, formerly of the North
Carolina agricultural experiment sta
tion, has been detailed by the secre
tary of agriculture to visit China,
Japan, the Philippines and other east
ern countries with a view to extend
ing the markets for American dairy
products.
Apparently crazed from fancied
wrongs, a farmer named Revenger,
living near Steele. N. D.. shot Nels
Olsen In the neck inflicting a serious
wound; then shot Peter Levine in the
wrist, and committed suicide. He left
a letter saying the neighbors had neg
lected and slighted him for years.
Contracts have been signed by Cap
tain John Crowley of Boston for the
immediate construction of two seven
mast schooners, to be the first vessels
of this type and the largest sailing
ships in the world.
Yellow fever has made its appear
ance at Port Royal, the entrance to
Kingston, Jamaica, harbor.
Brigadier General John B. Turchin,
who organized the Chicago Board of
Trade battery, was taken to the insane
asylum at Anna. III.
General MacArthur at Manila has
informed the war department of the
oeath of Major William Monaghan,
volunteer paymaster.
Carrie Scott, aged 8 years, is dead
r.nd her sister. Edna, aged 4 years, is
in a critical condition at Denver. Colo,
as the result of eating candy Easter
eggs, which had been colored with
dyes containing arsenic.
The report that Aguinaldo has sign
ed his manifesto is denied officially,
the delay being caused by minor differences.
G01IEZ WILL VISIT US
Cuban General Coming to Thank the Peo
ple of the United States.
TO BE THE GIEST0F SENOR PALMA
Will Itemaln Here I'utll Itrtarn of
Special Committee on Itelatlon Sent
to Counult President 1U Sojourn Will
lie Void of I'olitlral Significance,
HAVANA. April 18. General Max
imo Gomez is making arrangements to
go to the United States to visit Senor
Sstrada Palma. He will be accom
panied by his son, Urbano, and will
probably remain in the United States
until the return to Cuba of the spe
cial committee on relations. He de
sires to await definite action in refer
ence to the Piatt amendment in order
to avoid the accusation that the trip
is made for political purposes. He
has always expressed a desire to meet
the people of the United States and to
thank them for the assistance they
rendered Cuba during the war. Senor
Palma is the choice of General Go
mez for the presidency of Cuba.
Fcnor Meriel has resigned from the
special committee on relations, owing
to ill health.
Surgeon Glennan says it is neces
sary to continue the disinfection of
vessels from Uruguay and other parts
of South America where it is suspect
ed that the bubonic plague exists, as
there is a danger of the disease get
ting a foothold here unless the great
est care is taken.
Most of the vessels that arrive here
from South American ports are small
craft loaded with dried beef. Their
cargoes are discharged immediately
on lighters, after which the vessels
are sealed and fumigated in order to
kill the rats which infest them.
Numerous complaints have been
made by ship owners because of the
refusal of the officers to allow vessels
to come alongside the docks and re
main there until the cargoes are sold.
INDIANS FINALLY CONSENT.
Council of Oklahoma . Trlbrn Result iu
Removing Their Objection.
GUTHRIE. Okl.. April 18. A thn.-e
days' council of the chiefs and lead
ing members of the Kiowa, Comanche
and Apache Indian tribes closed at the
Indian agency at Anadarko today. Oh
Pe Ah Tone, who has been the leader
of the Kiowa seceders, who for a year
have refused to come Into council or
comply in any way with the law re
quiring them to take allotments, was
present and it was decided that the
Kiowas would c ome in and take their
allotments at onc e. U was dec ided to
empower Agent Randlett to select the
48,000 acres of grazing lands provid
ed for in the bill opening the reserva
tion to settlement. This has been the
stumbling block to the way of com
pleting the preliminary work neces
sary to get In readiness for the open
ing and this action of the tribes re
moves what promised to be a serious
obstacle.
FIRE LOSS TO LNI0N PACIf IC
A Conflagration at the Transfer Does
Much llamite.
OMAHA. April IS. Fire raged three
hours last night in the passenger
cleaning yard at the Union Transfer
depot. Council Bluffs, destroying the
row of frame buildings 1 sed by the
Union Pacific- and Pullman companies
as store and machine rooms, with
their contents, entailing a loss to both
companies that will run well up into
the thousands.
The origin of the conflagration is
unknown, but the fire is supposed to
have been started either from a spark
from an engine or from spontaneous
combustion of some of the supplies in
the oil and waste room.
The buildings destroyed comprised
the linen and commissary storerooms
of the Pullman company, the machin
ery room, car repair room, oilroom of
the Union Pacific and the office of
James F. Spare, foreman of the yard.
Indiana Reaches Manila.
WASHINGTON. April 18 General
MacArthur reports the arrival of the
transport Indiana at Manila. It had
on board ,14.1 men of the Tenth in
fantry and 5X5 of the Twenty-eighth
infantry.
.Still Ilrfoses to Answer.
DALLAS. Tex.. April 18. H. C.
Henderson again today refused to an
swer any questions in the deposition
sent from Omaha in regard to the
Cudahy kidnaping case.
To Consider the Merger.
BOSTON. Mass.. April 18. Presi
dent Harris of the Chicago. Burlington
& Quincy railroad, arrived here today
to attend the meeting or the directors
here tomorrow, and at which it ir.
generally understood the question of
the consolidation of the Chicago. Bur
lington & Quincy with the Great
Northern & Northern Pacific, is to be
taken up. No one connected officially
with the Burlington road will say
anything officially about the deal.
DtSTRlCTION OF GRASSHOPPERS.
Prof. Ilrnnner Isaac a Bulletin. Regard'
Ing the Matter.
LINCOLN, Neb., April 15. Prof
Lawrence Bruner, entomologist at the
University of Nebraska, has issued i
bulletin in which he discusses vari
ous plans for destroying grasshoppers.
It begins with a general descriptii
of the insects, this outline includes
a statement of their life history, habits
and relations to other insect forms,
as well as the effects of climate, lati
tude, altitude and diseases in keeping
them within certain limits. Much
stress is laid on the past carelessness
in the efforts of farmers of the state
for permitting native locusts to be
come sufficiently numerous to cause
trouble.
Among the artificial remedies which
are suggested and described in this
bulletin the most important is that
of "discing" in early spring alfalfa
fields and other grounds containing
the eggs of these insects. This disc
ing can be done at any time after
tho frost is out of the ground, but
the best time seems to be early I
April. Instead of injuring the alfalfa
numerous experiments in Kansas and
Nebraska have shown that by running
the disc over the fields the yield I
greatly increased. This stirring of
the soil breaks up the egg masses and
exposes them to the drying influences
of the air and the keen eyes of the
birds.
NEW FISH AND G4ME LAW.
So Effort to Enforce It t'ntll After the
First of July.
LINCOLN, Neb., April 13. It is of
ficially announced at the state house
that no attempt will be made by state
officers to enforce the new fish and
game law before July 1, that being the
time when all laws passed without
an emergency clause by the last legis
lature will become effective. An
emergency clause was attached to the
enrolled copy of the blii through er
ror and without authority, but, al
though it was signed by the presiding
officers of the legislature and by the
governor, it canot be enforced, for the
reason that it was defeated in the
bouse of representatives. The official
Journal of the house shows that the
bill was ordered for third reading on
March 13 and that on roll call it fail
ed to receive the constitutional two
thirds vote necessary for an emer
gency clause thus leaving it subject
to a motion to strike out the clause.
Such a motion was made by Coppoc
of Holt county and adopted, as the
record shows. The roll was then call
ed on the bill without the emergency
clause and as it received the requisite
number of votes it was declared pass
ed. Senator Millard's Trirate Secretary.
OMAHA, Neb., April 15. Senator
Millard has selected James B. Haynes
as hi3 private secretary and has sent
the name to Washington. Mr. Haynes,
the new secretary, has been a resident
of Omaha for many years. In 1881
he did his first newspaper work iq
this city, reporting the session of the
legislature for the Bee. From 1882 to
1883 he was stenographer in the office
of the general passenger agent of the
Union Pacific railroad and in 1887 was
stenographer in Judge Hopewell's
court.
Will Move For Acquittal.
FRANKFORT. Ky.. April 13 The
prosecution in the Ripley conspiracy
case will conclude its testimony to
morrow. The defense will move far
instructions for a verdict of acquittal.
Lawyers for the prosecution do not
relieve this will be sustained in view
of the ruling of the court permitting
the introduction of evidence as to the
conspiracy. They assert that the evi
dence of rx-Governor Bradley and
Judge Yost connects Ripley with the
case.
Horns Hemelf to Death.
PLATTSMOUTH, Neb., April 15.
Mrs. Kinkead, 82 years of age, wha
had been living with her son, went
into the cow house of Mrs. Seiden
fctriker, a neighbor, and after partially
disrobing, set fire to her underclothing
and started for the house. A phy
sician was called, but she died. She
said she was tired of living and beg
ged the doctor to give her chloro
form. She had been in poor health.
Fixes Date of Reunion.
PLAINVIEW, Neb.. April 15. The
Grand Army of the Republic commit
tee of northeast Nebraska met to lo
cate the next reunion. Nellgh was
chosen as the place, the reunion to be
gin the second week in July. A
campfire was held at the opera house.
Lieutenant Mapen Friends Active.
NEBRASKA CITY, Neb., April 13.
Lieutenant William Mapes of the
Twenty-third United States infantry,
who has won such honors by captur
ing insurgent officers at Manila and
some $40,000 of their funds, was born
and raised in this county. He was
formerly major of the Second regiment
of the Nebraska National Guards. His
friends here will ask for his advance
ment as a reward for his services in
the Philippines.
ME LAW
A Measure in "Which Sportsmen Ar
Greatly Interested.
IN OPERATION THE FIRST OF JLLY
Some of the Sections la the Bill Num
ber of Votes It Received In the House
Lincoln Man tiets Promotion
Miscellaneous Nebraska Matters.
LINCOLN, April 17. An unusual in
terest has been manifested in the new
game law, that has been passed by the
legislature and signed by the govern
or. Inquiries come in on every mail
to the secretary of state for copies of
the bill and the supply has been ex
hausted. Additional conies have been
ordered printed. The law is a lengthy
one and re-enacts the entire game laws
as they existed on the statutes before.
The provisions against market hunt
ing are especially strict. The law
makes provisions for new officers to
protect the game interests. None of
these have as yet been named.
The bill as it is approved in the
hands of the secretary of state con
tains an emergency clause. It re
ceived fifty-eight votes in the house,
which was not sufficient to entitle it
to pass with the emergency clause
there. The senate was given this in
formation when the bill came up there
and it passed the senate without the
emergency clause, but in some man
ner that clause was left on the bill.
This, it is believed, will be equivalent
to giving it the same limit for going
Into effect as other bills which have
no emergency clause, which will be in
July 1. The measure is:
House roll No. 138, by Evans To
protect fish, and game, song, insectiv
erous and other birds within the state
of Nebraska, to provide penalties for
the violation thereof, to create a game
and fish commission for the state of
Nebraska, and defining its powers and
duties, and to repeal an act entitled,
"An act creating a board of fish com
missioners for the propagation and
distribution of fish in the public wat
ers of Nebraska."
Section 1. There is hereby created
a game and fish commission for the
state of Nebraska, which shall have
the general charge of the following
named public matters, viz:
First The protection, propagation
and breeding of such fish, game. Bong,
insectiverous and other birds as may
be deemed valuable to the people of the
state.
Second The collection and distribu
tion of such statistics and information
as may be deemed useful respecting
the protection and propagation of fish,
game, song, insectiverous and other
birds, and to take charge of and pre
serve all books, records and documents
pertaining to the subject which may
come into the possession of said com
mission, or under its control.
Third The control and managment
of all state fish hatcheries and grounds
used therefor, together with all build
ings, ponds, apparatus of every kind.
and all other property belonging to
or used by the state in the propagation
of fish.
Fourth The enforcement of all laws
of the state for the protection, pre
servation and propagation of fish,
game, song, insectiverous and other
useful birds.
Winter Wheat In flood Shape.
LINCOLN, April 17. Reports that
reach the freight department of the
Burlington indicate that the fall wheat
crop this season will be very heavy.
Up to this date the weather has been
all that could be desired for this crop.
For the past month the ground has
been soaked with moisture and there
has been no excessively cold weather.
Commercial Aent Cox of the Burling
ton said that information gTeaned by
him indicated the acreage would be at
leas-t fifty per cent larger than a year
ago. Favorable reports have been re
ceived from every portion of the state
where winter wheat is sown.
Literature for the Penitentiary,
LINCOLN, April 17. The chaplain
of the penitentiary sends the follow
ing to the Omaha Bee: "Please make
a call for books and magazines for
our library at the penitentiary, for
all of the 4,000 volumes were lost in
the fire, and we need books to cheer
the poor men. This is a real mission
work. Have all sent to the chaplain
at the penitentiary. Only good booka
are needed. '
Fell Dead on Street.
COUNCIL BLUFFS, April 17.
Smith Saunders, real estate dealer.
dropped dead while waiting for a car
at Broadway and Sixth street. The
cause of his sudden death was attrib
uted to a stroke of apoplexy.
Lincoln Man Gets Promotion.
WASHINGTON. April 17. Frank
M. Woodward of Lincoln, son of Cap
tain Woodward has been promoted to
$1,800 and made chief clerk of the
agricultuial division of the census of
fice. Mr. Woodward has been one of
the most efficient men in the service
nd has won his promotion, according
to Director Merriam, through broad
comprehensiveness of what was de
sired in one of the most important
branches of the census bureau.
m
ASKA'S
GA
THE LIVE STOCK MARKET.
Latest cjuotations from South Omaha
anil Kannas CltT.
SOl-TH OMAHA.
CATTLK There was anothe r h-avy run
of cattle, making, the supnly for ihf two
lays so far this week considerably ahead
of last week or of the- corresponding
week of last year, as the table of receipts
at the head of the column will show.
The great hulk of the receipt was com
posed of beef steers and the (juality av
eraged up In good shape. The liberal
supply, of course, gave buyers a chance
to discriminate against the common stuff
and sellers who had the- less desirable
Rnu'vs found them hard to dispose of and
were ituoting the market f'i Kie: lower.
The choice cattle, however. wre In good
demand and did not sell so much lower.
The kinds that were good enough to
bring from $!.! up were only a trille
lower than yesterday and the yards were
soon cleared of that kind.
The supply of cows today was very
light In proportion to the total receipts
and buyers were out early looking for
supplies. Hulls were also In good demand
and prices were stronger, particularly on
the better grades. There were very few
feeders offered and no one seemed to lf
anxious for them.
HOGS There was the heaviest run of
hogs that has arlved In some time, and
as Chicago reported a drop in values
amounting to from of to 10c. this market
opened about on that basis. The bulk
of the hogs sold at .VM'j and f.".!0, and
the better grades of heavy hogs sold
from that up to $;.mi, so that the market
was generally 7e lower. l'ackers took
hold In fairly good shape at those prices,
and it was not long before the bulk of
the hogs had changed hands. At one
time the market became a little tirmer
and mure active, but along toward the
last end the feeling was not as good and
the close was easily T'-j-Wliie lower than
yesterday.
SHKKl'-The ouotations on sheep were:
Choice we thers, tt.l'i'n J.Vi; fair to good
wethers. $4.. VH. 70; clipped wethers. $4..
fj-l.Ti; choice light weight yearlings. tt.Ci
4.xTi; fair to good yearlings, $4. Vlfj 4. '..;
clipped yearlings. I4.C1i4.sd: choice light
weight ewes. J4.2.V'4.40; f;Ur to good ewes.
CTTiff 4.10; clipped ewes. 4.2." ; fair to
good clipped ewes. t:!.5"i3.!': choice
lambs. V:iriHAn: fair to good lambs.$4.73
fi.l.ixj; clipped lambs. 9l.0iY!tt.Qr.; spring
lambs. Pi.'Xrtil.rAi; feeder wethers. j::.7.Vr
4.4'; feeder lambs. 4.ii 4.7."i.
KANSAS CITY.
CATTI.K Beef steers and Texan,
strong: Mockers and feeders, shade high
er; native beef steers. J4.7J'."i.i: stack
ers ami feeders. $.'!.fcif'i-l.o; western-fed
steers. J4..VL ..r..2t: Texans and Indians. $1.-TA'aa.)-.
grass Texans. $::.",iyii t.in; cows.
ts.27lj 4.:fi; heifers. ll.T.V.j 4.V.; canners, t
i3o; bulls. $J.:o -1.7U; calves. Xi.m'ii H.Tn).
iloGS Market S'ijl'te lower; top. $;.li's;
bulk of sales. V,.95i6.!."i: heavy. $;.erv,ir,.-l-":
mixed packers. y,.'Mntf,.i:,; light. $.'...V
''JH.:,; pigs. $.-.Vf-tZ.:.
SIIKKI AMI I .AM US- Market strong;
western lambs. $4.;0"'i...li: w. -stern we-th-ers.
.-,.'.( 4. !': western yearlings. $4.tiVi
0.; ewes. $4.i4.:0: culls. $:j.0O'.i::.7S;
spring lambs. tri.Tiir5i7.cci.
MIST StC WHAT AGENT GETS
What Oovernment i:-fulre at Spanlnh
Anierlcnn War Claimant.
WASHINGTON. April IS. The
Srpanish-Amcrican claims commission
yesterday made public a number of
additional rules for the guidance of
persons presenting claims of United
States citizens in connection with the
insurrection in Cuba. These addi
tional rules relate to pleadings, evi
dence and the various books which
are to be kept, such as order books,
general docket, notice book and mo
tion calendar. The rule which will
attract the most attentior is that
which is iu these words; The con
tract of each claimant wih any agent
and any attorney for carrying on or
aiding in the prose citiou of the claim
must be shown."
These rules for the presentation of
claims and taking of evidence having
been adopted, the business of the
members of the commission between
now and September, it is expected,
will be that of dealing only with in
terlocutory motions, which are not of
great importance. Various questions
have been put in the form of tenta
tive propositions upejn which the ob
servations of counsel for claimants
will be gladly received. They are as
follows:
1. That no depositions of witnesses
tan be taken outside the I'nited
States.
2. That it must appear that the
claimant became naturalized in good
faith and maintained and exercised
his citizenship in the I'nited States.
3. That Spain was not liable for
damages, done by the Cuban insur
gents. President May Ituy m Homo.
WASHINGTON. April 18 President
McKInley is not contemplating pur
chasing a summer home in West
Washington in which to spend the
rummer, as reported. . After the New
England trip, which will follow the
trip to the Pacific coast, the president
and Mrs1. McKInley will go to Canton
and the major portion of the heated
season will be spent there.
Iron Or Field Found
DENVER. Color. April 18. A new
oianganese iron ore field has been dis
covered twelve miles south of Little
Grande. Utah, a station on the Kio
Grande Western railway.
II I eh Cores n Convicted.
ST. PETERSBURG, April IS. News
has been received here from Seoul,
Corea, to the effect that the Corean
minister of justice. Yi Kon Ho, was
arrested April lfor conspiracy against
the empress of Corea. He named
various high officials as accomplices in
the plot. Yi Kon Ho was condemned
to death April 5 and the assistant min
ister of the Corean court was sen
tenced to fifteen years' hard labor. The
others were acquitted.
Practical Civic In School.
Superintendent Howell, of the
Scran ton. Pa., schools, has proposed
a plan for instructing the pupils a
to the manner in which a president of
the United States is elected. The dem
onstration is to be a practical one.
Each school is to constitute a conven
tion and each pupil is to write an es
say giving the history of a presidential
campaign from the beginning to the
Inauguration. After these are com
pleted a platform committee will b
appointed in each school to prepare
resolutions or declarations of party
principles after which the election will
be held, each pupil voting for his
candidate for president.. The election
ia expected to take place in March.
Many advantages are to be had from
practice of this kind and there is no
reason why It should be confined to
presidential elections.
Itegan a a Iturkntop.
Congressman Wadsworth's hands
are battered out of shape nearly as
much as were those of the late "Sil
ver" Flint and from the same cause.
The New York man was in his day a
crack baseball player and at one tlm
held xlown first base in the Yale nine.
He has a Jon who filled the same posi
tion for Yale and was as good a player
as his father.
MOTHER AND DAUGHTER.
Too Wife and Mother-ln-Iw of Sin.
Charlea Krji,
CLARISSA, Minn., April 13, (Spe
cial.) No family in this vicinity is
better known or more universally re
spected, than Mr. Charles Keys, the
local School Teacher, and his estima
ble wife, and mother-in-law. For a
long time, Mrs. Keys has been in ill
health. Recently, however, she has
found a cure for her ailments in Dodd'a
Kidney Pills.
"I cannot speak too h'jhly of
Dodd's Kidney Pills, or of what they
have done for me," said Mrs. Keys.
"My life was miserable, my back
always ached, also my head. I was
troubled with Neuralgia in the head
and face and suffered extreme pain,,
but thanks to Dodd's Kidney Pills, all
those aches and pains have vanished
like the morning dew, and it now
seems that life is worth living. I con
sider Dodd's Kidney Pills a God-send
to suffering humanity. They may
rightly be named the Elixir of Youth.
"While speaking of my own case
and the wonderful benefit I have re
ceived, I might also add, that my
mother, who is now an old lady of
74 years and who lives with me, has
been troubled more or Ices, with aches
and pains, as is natural with one of
her advanced age. When she saw
what Dodd's Kidney Pill3 had done for
me. she commenced to use them her
self, and she says that they have done
her more good than any other medi
cine she has ever tried.
"This testimony is given In the
hope that others who may be af
flicted as we were, may see and read
it, and be benefited by it."
What Mrs. Keys states In her letter
can be verified by reference to any of
her many friends in this neighbor
hood. Dodd's Kidney Pills have al
ready a wonderful reputation In Todd
County.
Nothing has ever cured Brlght's
Disease, Diabetes or Dropsy bat Dodd'a
Kidney Pills.
Bret Harte Coming Home.
Bret Harte will probable return to
America next year, but only for a
visit, as he merely intends to make a.
tour of the West to brush up his mem
ories of that section of the country
and see its development.
What Ic the Children Drlnkf
Don't give them tea or cotTe?e. Have yon
tried toe new food drink called GLAIN-O?
It is delicious and nourishing, and take the
place of coffee. The more Gr-ua-O you give
the children the more health you distribute
through tbeir systems. Orain-O is made of
pure grains, and when properly prepared
tastes like the cboie?e grades of coffee, but
costs alcout hi as inuch. Ail grocer tell it.
16c and 25c.
The world is like a piano full of
sharps and flats.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES do not
stain the hands or spot the kettle.
The prosperity of fools Ehall destroy
them. Solomon.
Ask your grocer for DEFIANCE
STARCH, the only 10 oz. package for
10 cents. All other 10-cent starch con
tains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaran
teed or money refunded.
Platonic love is a dinner at which
nothing but soup is served.
Mrs. Wlnnlow'i Soothing (Cyrup.
Tor children teetbloe. soft em t he pnmi, reduce 1v
flaiuuiailua, allays psin.cure wmdcullc 2jcb botllc-
A'perfect woman, nobly planned, to
warn, to comfort and command.
Ask your grocer for DEFIANCE
STARCH, the only 16 oz. package for
10 cents. All other 10-cent starch con
tains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaran
teed or money refunded.
All I am or can be I owe to my an
gel mother. Abraham Lincoln.
Piso's Cure Is the best medicine we ever used
for all affections of the throat and luntrs. Wsu
O. Endslkv, Vanbureu, Ind., Feb. 10, 1110.
Toasts are often drunk, yet they are
never intoxicated.
8 lOO Reward SIOO.
The readers of this paper will be pleased tn
learn th there Is at least one dreaded disease
thut wnee has been able to cure In all it-e.
Ktasres. and thut is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to th
medical fraternity. Catarrh beinif a constitu
tional disease, requires a constitutional treat
ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally,
acting dini-tly upon the blood and mucous stir
fares of the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of thedisease. and Wiving the patient
strength by building up the constitution and
assisting nature in doing its work. The pro
prietors have so much ftiitfc in its curative
powers that they offer One Hundred Hollars for
any case that it fails to cura Send for list of
Testimonials.
Address K. J. CHEVEY & CO., Toledo, a
Sold bydruvgists 7.".
Hall's Family I'ilU are the best.
Youth may stray afar, yet return at
last.