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Im git li 1 ■!! FM r c Lffl Vacas, FenitaiDs ic.
What V -u'Want and’G«» W hsl You Order
s HEM3THEE r Mgr, Chattanooga Tenn.
1116 Market Street,
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Nothing in This World
Is so cheap as a newspaper, whether it be
measured by the cost of its production or by its
value to the consumer. We are talking about
an American, metropolitan, daily paper of the
first class like THE CHICAGO RECORD. It’s so
cheap and so good you can’t afford in this day
of progress to be without it. There are other
papers possibly as good, but none better, and
none just like it. It prints all the real news of
the world—the news you care so day,
and prints it in the shortest possible space. You
can read THE CHICAGO RECORD and do a day’s
work too. It is an independent paper and gives
all political news free from the taint of party
bias. In a word —it's a complete, condensed,
clean, honest family newspaper, and it has the
largest morning circulation in Chicago or the
west—l2s,ooo to 140,000 a day.
Prof. J. T. Hatfield of the Northwestern
University says: “THE CHICAGO RECORD
comes as near being the ideal daily jour
nal as we are for some time likely to find
on these mortal shores. ”
Sold by newsdealers everywhere, and sub
scriptions received by all postmasters. Address
THE CHICAGO RECORD, 181 Madison-st. (t)
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COIKAGB OF
*4“
*theelifratio of !6 of silver to iof ft ~T> JhE
Hthe only solution of and
fr the disturbed and unsati» j
of trade, maniac. 1 $
*' acetal business of the ecus
?JL 6nrreptnkm act of
t 3 Ver e ° W iD mO *’*
wy W, was a crime of untold i 'I j A\* »••»«•
i ! W <\ Ft Mneinrnt, cut tor’. tu.d trouo!
Jt was the rankest kind ! F >1 K.n.ic. and fiction
sZ of tte' LI
.he producers of 181 «UJ
ei th, a.d hostile to the prosperity . (* o
States. It was an act
J ‘ because done at the instance painter*, which
a woiean syndicate and for bribe | \) 1 Demotes Matmzfne'-t i •;« Tba
‘giving aid and comfort to ' ‘ k t i £
Wry’ s enemies.” To shield M<2 $
' J, ll J Pities, the well authentic [-c isl h’A, iiTraci.
litorm? t<n publisbed » have becn H i &"»<1 “trix^'bly 1 i".>"’rmted 'that
win cont inue to ex-'
npMdonable crime until
are done the people
restorario, of silver to its £
Xxt onship with goid ' wc r;rt Sx? »
ü BCe Os 1110 PCOple b
the truth, to which end
>««hi f 10 your selection ofpa - ‘r • I
th^ 88e4SOntO iDdUdC Ilf
costs only sl-o ° 4 MJ
wathr^ 0 " 9
to club raisers. Sampk I <
ENQUIR “ COMPANY > ! Jes
Cincinnati (X
I aSr.
THE HUSTLER OF ROME.WEDNESDAY NOVFMRFR 14 1894
HORRIBLE CRIME.
< ‘ ' '/- ■, - - 1 , j\ t :• ;
Os a Man Who Was Made Mad by
Jealousy.
Pittsburg, November 14.—Henry
Powsll shot arid fatally wounded '
Mrt. Saphira MoLaughhn near
Rochester, Pa"., Saturday night,
»ud then sent a bullet through hie
own brain. Powell separated from
his a if* recently and went to board
with Mr, McLaughlin, a wido.w.
ley became lovers, and Powel
through jealousy, often threatened
the woman.
Saturday Pewell went to Roch
ester and bought a revolver,saying .
he uas going to ehoot rabbits. That
evening be spent with Mrs. Mc-
Laughlin, her three children and’, ,
her sister. After the sister and
children had retired they heard |
three shots firad down stairs.
Neighbors were called in and found
Powell dead and Mrs. McLaughlin
unconscious, with two ballet holes
in her head. Mrs. Melaughlin s
wounds are fatal. Powell left a
note saying that he wa» married to
the woman, but she revived suffi
ciently to deny it.
SHE ENTERS THE PEF,
I
C< lumbus, Ohio Novemler P» -
—To the great variety cf ethe r
criininnls in the penitentiary wat
...day iduid & Aunale horst thief.
El.. 1 Flora McGrosien, a rath
er pretty girl, whose (home is at
| Cedarville, Greene County. She is
..ot yet 10 years an effort
.vas made to save her from,’the pen
in account of her youth, but the
! Court sentenced her to a serve one
year, and she arrived in charge oi
the Sheriff tonight.
Her family are well to-do and
highly respected peo a r
ville, but there is no doubt as to
her guilt. She stole a horse from
the stable of A. L. Erwin, at Ce
darville. rode it to the barn of 1?.
J. McMi'lan, some distance away,
and hitchedit to a buggy.
I Then she drove to Springfield,
Payton and Xenia. At the latter
plaee she traded the horse to a man
named Bud Bailey, and it finally
passed into the hands of some gy] .
sies. The crime was soon fixed up
on Miss McGrossen and tha horse
recovered.
khurst for President.
I)*nver, Colo., November 14
In a sermon on “The Leesons
From the Late Elections,” at
M. E. Church, Rev. Dr
Robert Mclntyre last evening call
•d Rev. Mr. Parkhurst, of New
fork, the “Hero of our [country,’*
and expressed the hope that he
vyuld live to cast a ballot fox
’Shat great and good man for Pnsi
■ on t • ”
Owen’s Majority.
Frankfort. Ky.. Nov. 14— Tb*
official vote la the Seventh district
•uiupared by Secretary of State
H-adly today, f.ves Owens, demo
•r.t, a plurality as 101 ▼otee. Th
.'Rowing is the total vete east:
Owens, demoerat, 18,677; Demy
xpublieau, 18 876; JehusoD, i op
u.'jte,‘J6a; Finnai, prohibitionist,
554
a.jju—
There is no medicine so often
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mirably adapted to the purposes
or which it is intended, m Cham
berlain’s Pain Balm. Bald
ly ft week passes but some member
of the family has need of it. A
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lesd time than when medicine ua
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ion set* i». . wkieh
4urft , a sure in about
ue-tuird of the time otherwise r«-
itiired.Cute and bruises should r«-
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n» parts become swollen, which
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« k»«pt at baud. A sore tbroat ma
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\ troublesome corn may be remu.
,L hv applying it Mr ice a day for a
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im a saved or a pain in the side or
llH .t lelieved without paying
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"olid Oak buit, <17.50.
BtfIHBHHBHBSNT
iw will *
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I 1 WHiSW’
Oak C »i’ , $1 25. ft W b Mat\ ZjZjj* M
t p e is i r* 1
I f I I r4b||HßK: |
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ft \ 1 I / I 30 inch Eo ind lab e 90c.
ft \ Ci M e ‘ t'" e Table, $ ‘ 75.
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.'<> -e . .|l.'o Soild O; k Suit, $11.50
.MESHOViS 0 LY A FEW OF ORTHWbAO BA.u
Comoanu
Carpets, Furniture and Underta king, Rome, Ga.