Newspaper Page Text
I I
4 hJLM
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large Store Room is now Filled with a
in an if M WM M
i
I
— OF----
vwJS) Clothing,
■ -• H&'F• V . *• -s ••’^ • • ■•' V- S-'V. *? - ■ *•■ *■■■■; •
Shoes and Hats.
Wool Cashmeres : 10c.
Henriottas, 27 Inches Wide 121 -2c.
20c.
: 25c,
These are the Most Desirable Cheap
XDress Goods
IN THIS MARKET.
Justreeei eda lot of 40 inch All Wool Plaids at
4oc.« worth 60c. - 90c.;
Also, assortment of Fine French Plaids at
worth $1.25 New Side Band Suits. *
-
New Giilas, Prints aii Satis
Arriving Every Week.
-Jot-
Splend.dStock Children’s School Hose
at 8c„ 10c. and 12e. per pair. Onr Ladies’
Fast Black Hose at 20c., 25c. and 35c. can’t
be matched at the prices. Secure a doz. pair
of Macon knit Half Hoes at 75c. per doz. be¬
fore they are all sold.
-toi-
ELEGANT LINE
labs,’ Mbs’ ini Cim’i Umr
in both Wool and Cotton. Our 50c. Ladies’
Ribbed Undervests is a bargain.
Will save you 20 to 25 per cenl. on your
Ribbon purchases.
Handsome stock of Newmarkets, Mojes-
kas and Ladies’ Jackets just opened up. See
my $3.50 Ladies Light Weight Coats.
SHOEb ! + SHOES!
Don’t fall to see my Shoe stock before mak¬
ing your selections in this line.
Big Stock Solid Shoes
AT LOWEST PIUCES.
--toj-
Bargains in Children’s Suits, from 5, to 13
years, bought at Cut Prices. Can haye you a
Sul, Pants or Overcoat made to order at Jacob
Raed Sons, Philadelphia, Penn., at reasonable
prices with fit and workmanship guaranteed.
E. J. Flemister’s.
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i
A A drowsy, hammock dieamy ’neath arteraooon, the maple,
The pale ghosts the swinging,
o( crescent moon,
Above the trees Where bird* are singing;
A hood of verses, grave and gay,
and easun lual sipe of eld Tokay,
Bine ekle* o’erbead.
it I F '
Anil iiugern sum in Mtroug jimoiH
he Bright eyes, red lips, of slippered at love dissembling; feet,
And buoyant tread whispers
soft replies to sweet.
To turn one’s bead
n solitude 1 strive to guess,
And always choose the one that’snearest ?
Thus, loving Bess when Belle’s might away,
On Belle’s returninglove stray,
I dare not wed.
Christmas is approaching rapidly,
and will be here before you are ready
for it, if you don’t hustle around
pretty lively.
The men who advertise are the
men to patronize. The advertisers
are the men who keep the town alive.
Deal with them if you would save
money and keep business moving.
A meeting of the congregation of
8t. George’s Episcopal church will be
held in church this afternoon,
at 4:30 o’clock. All members
of .the congregation are earnestly
requested to attend as business of
urgent importance comes before the
meeting. The parish missionary
society meets also today at 3 p.
m. and the members are requested
to remain to the congregatfonal
meeting at 4:30 p. m.
fiucklen’s Arnica Salve.
Tho Best Salve in the world for Cuts-
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever
Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains,
Corns, and Pilesor all S kin Eruptions, {required. and Itis positive,
y cures no pay guar
d to gives pe rfect sotisaction, or money re-
unded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by
K R. Anthony.
Around the World In Short Order.
On Thursday last the New York
World started a young lady reporter
Nellie Bly, on the North German
Lloyd steamer, to go around the
world in 75 days. -After the steamer
had left New York, it was learned
that the Herald had smuggled a
young man as a reporter on board
the same steamer, with instructions
to beat Nellie Bly at all hazards. If
they succeed in making the trip
around the world in 75 days, they
will beat the record the fastest travel,
er has’ ever made about five days.
The distance is estimated at 25,000
miles, and they will haveMo travel
1,000 miles every three days, or 333
1-3 miles per day for the entire trip,
including slow steamers, railroad ac¬
cidents, and misconnections general¬
ly. They will travel east, and will
first land at Southhampton, when
they will go by rail to London,
across the Channel to Calais, thence
by rail to Paris; thence by fast mail
eastward to Brindisi, and through
the Suez canal to Singapore, thence
to Hong Kong, and back to San
Francisco and New York. It seems
almost impossible for the young
lady to make such a trip in so short
a time; yet “all things are possible”
-with newspaper reporters. But
the New YorkCqsmopolitau Magizine,
determined not to be outdone by
either of the above journals, in their
attempt to send reporters around
the world, asked one of their young
lady reporters, after the Lloyd steam¬
er had left, if she could get ready in
15 minutes to make the trip by San
Francisco. She replied that she
could, and was immediately hurried
off to the depot, with instructions to
make the round trip, by way of the
west, in 72 days! She is only 22
years old, is very pretty, and never
“gets left.” She is now flying west,
while the others are sailing east.
Who will beat? This will interest
the world until the latter part of
January. Who will win? Hurrah
for the Cosmopolitan girl, who got
ready for the trip in 15 minutes!
A Scrap of Paper Saved Her Life.
It was but but just it it an saved ordinary her life. scrap She of wrapping in the
paper, , of of was
last stages stages consul eoi
that she was incu
short tii she
poi she
tsas it a
. . it a
and better helped fast, her more, continued >ntinned re, bought bougbt its its t an-
■r grew healthy, use i
is now now strong, i rosy, plump,
c 140 pounds. For further particn
Discovery Thee at E. B. Anthony’s Drugstore
It’s an IU Wind, Etc.
Pittsburg Post.
That wind out in Ohio which blew
a little rocky the other day for Re¬
publicans was not altogether ill—at
least to Congressman Ben Butter-
worth’s thinking. The Republican
Waterloo knocked McKinley’s Speak¬
ership boom completely out, and now
the friends of the Cincinnati member
are pushing his claims. Such a con-
sumation would be wormwood to
Foraker.
.-
Hood's Sarsaparilla is a purely vegetable
Two Cleveland Favorites of Forune.
D. W. Gibbons, 497 Lorain st., beld
twenfcieth of ticket No. 88,525, which
the second capital prise df $10 >,0Oi in the
cent drawinaof the Louisiana State Lottery
Sept. ». He is a maker ol waebers at the
Upeon nnt and bolt work*. C. A. File
young mechanic of 25 or 26, who fives on
rarear.ss No. 69,159,
held one-twentieth of ticket
winch drew the third SubTilet. capital prise sf
- Cleveland <0.1 2.
jjWIIP gj,
I w fonpi, Unu»d
u______ H„m,.
St. Perm, ] 17—The
bones of 8w and his wife
were found in the
smouldering ©moors or ms bom®, near
have had oonsiderabl® ari
glace money. for He had
a fear of banks as a monev de¬
posits and was never their patron in
oonsequenoe, always preferring to
WIMMAjT L HHH.
been aroused in time to have saved
themselves 'The theory is that some
man's person odd who was fancy acquainted about the with banks tho had old
entered oonple and the then dwelling set fire and to miudered the dwelling. the
An investigation is be ing mad e.
Died .1 a Broken Heart.
FiiKMiNGBBUKe, Ky., Nov. 17. —Miss
Adeline Herd, aged 20, daughter of the
richest man in this county, took a dose
of morphine with suicidal intent Thurs¬
day afternoon and died at 1 o’clock
Friday morning. 'The cause given ont
is opposition of her parents she had to a matri¬
monial engagement formed.
Deceased beautiful. was finely educated and
strikingly
Wreckage on the Atlantic Coast.
Nohfolx, Va., Nov. of 17. — Several
wreoks and a quantity Virginia wreckage are
reported between the and Del¬
aware capes of the coast The Old Do¬
minion steamer Northampton was towed
into port Thursday disabled* havin'-
her rudder broken off in Ware river.
Terrible Result of a Powder Blast.
Birrris, Mont, Nov. 17.— By an ex¬
plosion miles of of blasting here, powder, Tuesday fifteen
east last even¬
ing, Con Sullivan, Leary John Dell, A A.
Larson, T. O. and Ham Ross
were their killed, blown and two other men had
eyes out
“Painting the Town Red.”
u may call this a vulgar expres¬
sion and as modern as itis vulgar,
but in the “Inferno of Dante” we read
the lines:
“Who, Us visiting, greet through the purple air.
Incarnadine who have stained the red incarnadine.” be the
or may
wrong color for a town,’ but it is the
natural color of the blood. If your
liver is out of order, your blood will
soon lose its ruddy glow and become
impure. This means kidney disorders
lung death. disease, Toputtheliverrightandso and, in course ot time,
stop such a train of evils, take Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery—
benenefit a sure remedy. It is diseases aguafanteed arising to
or cure all
from a disordered liver or impure
dyspepsia, blood, as indigestion, all skin, scalp,and sour stomach, scrofu¬
lous affections, salt-rheum, tetter,
erysipelas, and kindred ailments, or
be money promptly paid for it will, in every case,
refunded.
An Abandoned Call's!.
Williamsport, Pa., Noy. 17.—That
portion Bald of the Eagle Pennsylvania dam, Clinton canal ccunty, be¬
tween
and distance Lovalsock of fifty-five crock, Lycoming miles has county been j
a
abandoned for public use. Notices in-
iblic of the abandonment
>ng the canal.
delegates to the Silver Congress.
Harrisburg, Nov, 17. — Governor
Beaver appointed Waldron J. Cheyney,
John A. Urier and George E. Burnham,
of Philadelphia, and Hon. H. D. Low¬
delegates ing, of Linesville, Crawford county,
to the national silver congress
which will meet in St. Louis on Nov. 26.
Struggling with the Returns.
Harrisburg, Nov. 17.—After every
election the state department has a
struggle with the official returns.
County clerks are, as a rule, careless in
filling in the blank return sheet.
■ m -
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Kupepsy.
'housands are searching for it daily,
looming nds because thousands they find dollars it not. Thons-
upon of are spent an¬
nually by onr people in the hope that they
may attain this boon. And yet it may be
had by all. We guarantee that Electric Bit¬
ters, if used according to directions and the
use tion persisted the in, demon will bring Dyspepsia you Ooon, and” install Diges¬
oust
instead Eupepsy. We recommend Eleetrie
Bftters for Dpspepsia and all diseases of Liv¬
er, $1.00 Stomach and Kidneys. Sold at 50c. and
per bottle by E. E. Anthony Druggist
ALL’S WELL A* I' JOHNSTOWN.
The Belief Commission Emphatically
Deny Reports of Dincrimillation*
Johnstown, Pa.. Nov. 17. —The flood
relief commission in investigating the
distribution of funds to the people of
the Conemaugh valley found that the
charges of discrimination between the
rich and the poorer classes, in favor of
the former, are without foundation.
The reports were circulated Associated by John
E. ’ Strayer, agent of the
Press here. The members of the com¬
mittee have given him five days to
make good his charges and if he can
sustain them the members of tbe com¬
mission say they will pay out of their
own pockets the amount unjustly with¬
held from anybody, if the charges are
not sustained they will then begin pro¬
ceedings against strayer.
The Lady Godiva must have had excep
tiqnally long hair sineeit completely conceal¬
ed her lovely person. Since Ayer's Hair Yig-
or came into use such examples are not s
rare as formerly. It not only promotes the
growth of the hair, but gives it a rich, silken
textnre.
A Valuable Remedy.
A letter from S. P. Clarke’s Wardwelf, Bos¬
ton, says: “I used Extract
of Flax (Papillon) Catarrh Cure in
June last for Hay Fever with great
satisfaction, and find it is the only
thing I have seen which would allay,
without irritating,. the inflamation
of the nostrils and throat. Its sooth¬
ing and healing immediate.” properties were
marked and
bottle $1.00. Clarke’s Flax Soap is
Hie latest tand best. N. Try B. it.
Ask for them at Dr.
Drugstore
Tiro Universal Verdict Of the
Who have used Clarke’s Extract
Max (Papillon) Skin Cure award
bottle at Dr. N. B. Max Drewry’s Soap Drug¬
store. Clarke’s hi
or the Skin. Try it. Price 25c
mmmm
The result is a fearful increase of Brain
and Heart
blltty, Insomnia, .,
sanity. Chloral and
the evil. Tho medicine best
sA5”raie to vitalise* vitalises do permanent the tho blood, blood, good and and . tl thus t» enriehea, Ayer's strengthens Sar- and
every function and faculty of the body.
“ I have used Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, in
my family, for years. I luive found it
invaluable & . 0
A Cure
tor Nervous .Debility caused by an in¬
active liver and a low state of the blood."
— Henry Bacon, Xenia, Ohio.
“For some time I have been troubled
with heart disease. I never found any¬
thing to help me until I began using
Ayer’* Sassaparill#. I have only used
this medicine six months, but it has re¬
lieved me from my trouble, and enabled
me to resume work.’’—J. I*. Careanett,
Perry, III.
“I have been, a practicing physician
for over h*lf a century, and during that
time I have never found so powerful
and reliable an alterative and blood-
purifier as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.’’—f)r.
M. Maxstart, Louisville, Ky.
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla,
PREPARED BT
Dr. J. 0, Aysr & Co., Lowell, Mata.
Price *1; air bottle., 16. Worth $&» bottle.
BAST ALL PRECEDENT !
f Over Two Millions Distributed.
OOl
Louisiana State Lottery C*mpar<y
Incorporated by tbe Legislature in 1868
for Educational and Charitable purposes, and
its franchise mode a part of the present Stats
Constitution, in 1878, by an overwhelming
popular Its GRAND vote. EXTRAORDINARY DRAW-
■HR months RHR the . and all drawn „
ten in year are
in public, at the Academy of Mnsie, New Or¬
leans, La,
__
“We do hereby certify that we suitervineths
tery Company, and in person manage and
control the Drawings themselves, and that
the same areeondneted with honesty, fairness
and ih good faith toward all parties and we
authorise the Company to nee this certificate
with facsimiles of onr signatures attached in
t advertisements.”
Cownlwisam.
We tLe undersigned Banks und Bunkers
trill pay all Prizes drawn in The Louisiana
State Lotteries which may be presented at
onr counters:
Mammoth Drawing
At the Academy of Mnsie, New Orleans,
. _ Tuesday, Uecember 17,1889,
Capital Prize, #000,000
100,000 Tickets at $40; Halves $2C; Qunr
ters $0; Eighths $5; Twentieths $2; Forfi
LIST Of PRIZES.
1 Pbus op $600,000 is............ $600,000
1 Prize or 200,000 is...,........ 200,000
1 Prize op 100,000 is............ 100,000
1 Pbize op 50,000 is........... 50,000
2 Prize op 20,000 is............ 40,000
5 Prizes op 10,000 are.......... 50.000
10 Prizes op 5,000 are.......... 50,000
25 Prizes of 2,000 are......... 50,000
100 Prizes or 800 are.......... 80,000
200 Prizes op 600 are.......... 120,000
500 Prizes op 400 are.......... 200,000
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
100 Prizes do.' of $1,000 are............... $100,000
100 800 are............... 80,000
100 do. 400 are............... 40,000
TWO NUMBER TERMINALS.
1,998 Prizes of $200 ase................. $399,600
3,144 Prizes amouutingto...........$2,159,600
AGENTS W ANTED.
ir resilience, v
Sunfber. More ra{rid re’
tnm rnaii deliver}'will be assured by enclosing
an Envelope bearing your full address.
IMPORTANT.
Address M- New A. DAUPHIN, Orleans, La.
D.C.
Address Registered Letters Contain*
ing Currency tc
»W|OKZIAm«T10SAl. MASK
- New Orleans, La.
REMEMBER, that the payment, ot Prizes
is GUARANTEED BY FOUR NATIONAL
BANKS of New Orleans, and the tickets are
signed by the President of an Institution
whose chartered rights are recognized in the
highest Courts; therefore beware of all imita-
taons or anonymous schemes.
ONE DOLLAar is the price of the smallest
part- or fraction of a Ticket ISSUED BY US
» any any Drawing. Anything in onr name of-
fered or less than a Dollar is a swindle.
Ms fils
T*ene eastIveness the medicine most
be more tlisn a purgative. Tab* per.
■sanest. It nasi contain
Tonic* Alterative and
Cathartic Properties. qnslttles In
Tnil's Pills possess these
nn eminent degree, and
Speedily Restore
Sold Everywhere.
FOB 8 A LB BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
iBMf.
tarns
STAPLE JWtttt
......... ......■-
Our Sweet Water Pat, i
Hams, Shoulders ootl Bn
Wa*,
Fruits, Fancy and Stick Candy,
FRESH FIS1I EV
FARMERS’ CO-.. mu? m
......
HAVING MADE MONEYED Af
We Want Col
AT HIGHEST MARK!
VY 'AM EMPTY Kl
V l \V.i.N I CHOKER AND .
We Want to Sell the Best Cow F^od r
1ST Call at OIL MILL.
W.E.HJ
- -.............U2...aui^UBPRL
Hftjp
STI
' ......
DRY GOODS,
ever offered in this market.
Good*, of tvith Trimmings ItiSJlkund Ye
iOe. to 30e. per yard. Jean* all grhd
Mixed and Black Blbed Hose at 10c.
SHOES! SHOES!! 8H<
W« keep a large .tort of Men's, W<
Hand Sewed, Wnranted, in Lace and <
Button Button Shoes Shoes fron from $1.25 to $2.50.
to fl.00 per pair. Examine our goods and we i
0'
TO THE F!
'ti 4‘
«—* the ★------
ipci lifactiii
HAVE MOVED THEIR STOCK 0
SASH, DOORS AND
To No. 16 Hill 8t. (C. H. Johnson’s <
Where All Sizes Sash, Doors. Blinds, I
■
will be on sale at lowest market prices.”,W« will also add to e”~
complete line of
Builders’ ffardi
and will have
finest prices w suit the times. Gall write
at to or „
Respectfully,
AYC0CK MANUFAd
........**
PURE DRUGS AND DRUG .
At prices below anything ever sold in <
111 Bills, ni all Ms Baaraatesi as
ftTSpecial attention given to customers who desire to pey
Respectfully.
ftf.B.DREWr
A. LOWE
Jeweler ai Dealer- la
JEWELRY, CLOCKS,
Special attention given to Repairing. 20 Hit!
For Sale or Beat.
THE CHARLTON PROPERTY.
on South Hill street. 4 acres bind, elevated 6 roojn
hous«—large airy rooms. High,
and beautiful view of surrounding country
A No. 1 water and fruits of different variet -
on place. . ? i-
THE TAYLOR MORRIS PLACE,
on 14th street. 4 acres land, 5 room house.
Branch running through the lot.
THE OLD NALL HOUSE,
7 rooms, double kitchen, 1 acre land. 1
bloek from centre Hill street.
J0SSEY HOUSE AND LOT.
7 rooms, double kitchen. Vt acre, stable, Ac
Hall block tram Hi.l street. Centrally locat
ed or boarding house. housed# Shelton lot
V4 acre and 2 room on
Poplar street. A bargain given to all of
aboVe property. lands for sale
Other houses and lots and
and to rent.
G. A. CUNNINGHAM,
Real Estate'Agent.
Mini Advertisementy /
==«
TO ADVERTISE!
A list of 1000 SECTIONS newspapers
ST ATES AND wil
lolte who better want their advertinr- for
we can offer no medium t
and effective work than the vanou a
ao.kf.ya.--
W. L. •wd
ra „L H .9f. . s
entlemen and iadies. '
FOBS
^ 4 kl