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The Daily Democrat from Topeka, Kansas • 3

The Daily Democrat from Topeka, Kansas • 3

Location:
Topeka, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SUPPED ON STAGE RAIN. AMIABLE LAWYERS 41 A BELATED LAUGH. Che Meal Cooked on Thunder. Lightntag and Snow Furnishing the Fire. 'Perhaps one of the ost peculiarly prepared luncheons ever laid before hungry people was one which we had Vary GMi Tbe Chicago girl's Joke about West-irn corn came Tory near suffering fee fate of Sir John Franklin, and feting lost from the sight of human-ity fibre Ye r.

It mar be of interest to briefly review the history of this tbe trial csmmenced, and during am Informal preliminary conversation he asked, bluntly: "Judge, who in the wurrld is et That's fwat O'im wantin' t' be towid." "Well, well, Moichael," exclaimed his honor, in evident amazement. 'OI must say 01lm a bit surprised that an Amirican citizen, an' a man av orthinary intlliiglnce, should not know the manln' of et al. But for the biniflt av the witness an any Take no Substitute for Royal Baking Powder. It is Absolutely Pure. All others contain alum or ammonia.

when we were snowed up in the theater of a small Western town. said a theatrical man to a writer for the Puts-burgh Dispatch. pon this night, A Client Wko Faund It impossible te Re-m a aerate His Legal AdTtser Lawyers, as a matter of fact, are as a rule extremely amiable with their debtors. Some law vers of extensive practice and ample incomes have a happy-go-lucky way of sending in bills "some time" A Ke Yerk lawyer who is extremely sufc cessful in conducting cases, and so not worried about flndiag bread at4 butter for himself and his family, recently made a flying trip on business to tbe Pacific coast He was detained in the brief interval after the people left the theater, while we were dressing to ko to our hotel, a terrific snowstorm, such as you can only find in the West, came up. The snow drifted against our doors and all other gintlemin pnsint that moight be ignorant as well as Moichael Fen-nessey, Oi will explain.

It is diriv-ated from two Latin wurrds contracted, an manes in Its litheral an' Amirican sinse, at al, at all!" about the streets, so that we had to remain all night in the theater. Of course we got hungry, as actors will there longer than he had expected One of his New York clients was spending the season there, and to him tbe lawyer mentioned the fact that he was running short of funds. "Well," said his client, "1 have a thfular international episode. It appears then, that last autumn Lady rOyle Ayle of Somersetshire, lilted certain of the Western States of America Just before harvest time. The enormous fields of Indian corn, eorerlbg areas like kingdoms, with their beautiful products, W4th its taiaing robes about it, Ami lta lout, soft ysllow trasses," tiled the patrician traveler with amaiement From the Wabash to the Kaw extended these illimitable areas of precious grain, of which Illinois alone has yielded more than bushels in a single year.

Out ef the 14,000,000,000 produced yearly by American farms, it was shown that the value of the corn alone reaches 600,000,000. When you come right down to the facts in, i ne Rfinrdy. Dentists are raising a note of the case, it's the loose-fitting straw hat that shows which way the wind blows. alarm about the grow ng teudenc- sometimes do, and we began a search for something eatable. We prowled around the property-room and were about to give up in disgust when one of the company struck a box of beans, comfortable deposit out here.

Won't to decay of the teeth of the present Ilrsftnan mnhi Ire with Thr Mbuino. I generation. These wie gentlemen and Face. CoklSor-rCav. C.G.

Clark CoNJlAvn.OU tell us that "dental caries inarche. you take $500 of it?" The lawyer accepted It with thanks, and as soon as he returned to New York sent a draft to bis friend for tbe amount which were used to imitate the sound of rain. By shaking the box a stage No inventive genius has utilized the rain- hand in hand with c.vilizat on." If that be so we can only devoutly wish that civilization would find a more making capabilities of church picnic. Yet in these capabilities the percentage of fail rainstorm could be produced. We 'ow, for five years the lawyer had been conducting extensive legal busi ures is ridiculously small.

took this as the profession is encouraging and eomfortabie com pleased to call it. but saw no way of ness for his friend, and in that time Karl's lover Root Tes. panion. But why does civilizaton insist upon destroying our teeth? The rromt Blood nurUVrtvck twthiiw, a cooking it, Some one suggested that his client had never been able to get to i.e complexion and cures cobw aw An Enjoyable Fire! While the author of "In the Shadow of the Pagoda" was making a journey to the interior of Burmah he came to a village that was on fire. The inhabitants did not seem to be doing anything, and tbe Englishman set his men at work and called for help.

At last one old native and two younger ones took very reluctantly their places at the pump. They pumped half-heartedly for five minutes; then, as ill luck would have it; a flock of paddybirds appeared overhead. They hovered above the rolling smoke, and the flames gleamed rosy-pink on their snow-white plumage. "Ahmay! Red Look! Red The sight was too much for the lazy wretches at the handles. They squatted on their heels, re-lighted their cheroots, and stared upward.

a bill rendered. So the client wrote Bt cause, say the de.itlsts. 'The in the 'thunder' might be a good thing to cook it upon, in lieu of nothing better. The thundei' was a sheet Wickers: Timmins is a pretty good elo back: 4Great Scott! Isn't there any way in the world that I can creasing perfection of the culiuary art by reducing the work of tbe cutionist, is he not? ickars: let. indeed.

Why. he can even make his own petry of tin or iron which was shaken to make a payment on my account? I masticating organs to a minimum," sound as though there was in it. make the roar of heaven's artillery. was congratulating myself that I had cause? both teeth and jaws to atrophy been able to force you to take $500 Hairs Catarrh are We bent the 'thunder' so that it would hold the beans, but were at a loss for means of producing heat. on account Now, you return it to and decay.

So then it is the cook, the scientific cook of the school of cookery, who is at fault Can noth Is taken internally. Price. 75c. Our property man suggested that we me." to this the lawyer dictated a little consolation in the following form: "You won't congratulate ing be done to offset the evil? A use a powder of lycopo-dium used for making flashes upon A Misunderstandinc Rev. Mr.

to fat yourself when vcu get the account" little, say the dentists, We must all go in for brown bread. Wholemeal bread alone contains in quantity the christening, forgetful of the date. Let me see. this is the thirteenth? tTouu Good heavens, no! It is only the eleventh. Now the client goes around wondering if there will be anything left of his estate after the lawyer's lightning the stage, for the fire.

We found juite a lot of this, and with the addition of some snow bite of paper used to represent the beautiful we started quite a Are and succeeded in cooking the beans, which we ate with a relish, hesolving it Hanson Megn era ftalre. Warraatrd to care or mone fun W. Ask strikes it Tribune. the riourlne which is necessary for the hardness and permanence or the teeth. Wholemeal bread it must be.

then, at morning, at noon and at night if we would avoid the pangs far il. rw-o is Lesson from a "Chestnut." of toothache, and the pains of dent Every one knows the storv of the into stage parlance, we had used indolent man who could not mend istry, and save our precious teeth. and snow' to unless a man has poor health, he his leaky roof while the weather was stormy, and who did not see the use cook a lunch that consisted of helps the devil when he wears a long of mending it in pleasant weather, face. because then it did not leak. How to Produce Potatoes.

The Grape Belt, of Brockton N. lioD and woman gave trie world a Saviour. Man and tbe devil rrucifled Not to be disrespectful toward While standing before the cereal exfcibito at tbe World's Fair with a young lady friend of Chicago origin, Lady Poyle Ayle remarked. "May awsk you, my dear, what becomes of this quite too awfully immense quantity of maize? (You Americans very wrongly call it corn, don't you, but wheat is the only proper corn in the United Kingdom.) I really cawn't comprehend, my dear, how you Yankees manage to dispose of such amounts of maize." To which the fair lllinoisan made reply: "Oh, that's easv enough. We eat what we can, and can what we can't." The British matron, of course, missed tbe point, but the incident was noted down and borne back to England as an illustration of the flippant inconsequence of the young American female.

How long this inspired gem of repartee might naturally have lingered unrecognized and unvalued about the shores of the Bristol Channel we cannot estimate. But one evening Colonel Sabretoche. a widely traveled military officer, came over from the adjacent garrison town to dine at Poyle Ayle Castle, and was regaled with the Sphinx-like remark of the He ie-mained in a pensive frame through-ut the rest of the evening, smiling in an increasing broadness as the purport of the words dawned upon him, bit by bit, until suddenly be broke into a roar which clattered the morions and hauberks on the walls of tbe incient hall, ejaculating: "Yaas, by Jove, I see! Just fawncy! To can what they can't! Why, my ady, it is positively a bong moe worthy of Sidney Smith or the Carlton Club." By the aid of a careful and patient zplanation and a suitable diagram her ladyship in time came to comprehend the bright quip, and the gallant Colonel also communicated it to certain friendly officers of the Ciack-manshire Battalion. Thus the long- Him. congress, tnis iaoie seems, witn a slight variation, to describe the at busies itself.ouiside the grape season is hunting up ways and means for farmers to add to their crop returns "Whose houss is that?" the englishman demanded, pointing to one now threatened.

'Your honor, that is the house oi Pho Too." "Where is Pho Too?" uHe is there." The Englishman turned. The man indicated was one of the two that he had driven to the pump. He was squatting on the root of a tree smoking. "Are you Poo Too?" The man nodded. "Is that your house?" He nodded again, and smiled pleasantly.

"It will be on Are at once," the stranger said, catching the other man's infectious coolness. "Yes, your honor, I think so," and he contracted his brows and looked at the house with a disinterested air. The Englishman burst out laughing; he could hot help it, and he a mm a. a It is not a good means of grace for titude on the subject of immlgra the head of the family to do all the in any other legitimate ways, and ilon. For it does not even take note of the damage the flood causes when giving.

this is what it says about potatoes: 'In the United states, the average Tub devil alw iys comes back to the man who don't say no as though he it is pouring into the national domi cile. yield of potatoes per acre is less than It never does anybody any good td give away rotten apples. Tor can't check the devil', baggage on the Lord railroad. Wren sin bides, it forgets that it cannot cover op its tracks. If you have no trials how do vou know you have any faithr The Christian's God is the only god who waota the children.

The smallest sin is big enough to keep Christ out of the heart. A lie is one degree worse than tho sin which it tries to t'onceaL Christ will not remain in any heart where sin is a welcome guest. The wickedest man on earth demands that (rod shall be good. Perhaps there is more kindness in every heart than we look foe The g.ca test enemy that any man can have is sin in his own soul. There is no promise in the Hi bio for people who borrow ouMe The only right way start out to be religious is to do it publicly.

When a bad man reads the Mi bio the devil looks neer his shoulder. 80 bushels. Over agaiust this we meant it have many reports of premium yields What the devil did in the garden Just at present the roof does not leak. In other words, the hard times in this country deter the people of ranging from GOO to 800 bushels. of Eden every sinner would try to do We claim that a yield of 300 bushels other countries from coming here.

in Heaven. Far From the Madding Crowd. is perfectly feasible and can be secured and they are even driving back to their former homes some hundreds year in and year out. As to seed, use This is what many a nervous sufferer wishc whole potatoes of fair eating size. of thousands of discouraged immi himself every day.

Hot thorp will soon ho no The largest may be cut a into two grants. necessity to forsake the busy albeit somewhat pieces, hut the one eye or two eye There is little consolation to be noisy scenes of life, if the nels system has proven a failure. ons invalid will begin, and persist in the use of taken even from tbe return current, Hostottcr Momarh Hitters, which will We plant in rows exactly inches because those who are departing ily bring relief to a weak and overstrung nerv apart, and drop one potato in a hill. must be persons who have earned and ous system. Lay ny day tho txxiy acquire vigor 30 inches apart Put on a dressing through the influence of this tvliablc tonic, am saved something while here.

Conse in the vitality which it diffuses through tin- of stable manure, cultivate it in, then maae no runner enort to put out a fire which seemed to be giving so much pleasure to the persons interested. Settled the Pass Fiend. I called upon the general passenger agent of one of the big railroad lines running into the city yesterday and was ushered into his private office. He was ecgaged in conversation with a gentleman when i entered, and after a few minutes of abrupt ques- system tho nerves conspicuously share. Sleep, appetite, digestion all these are promoted by this popular iuvieoraut.

and if tbev are. who plow in narrow furrows, then furrow quentiy they are men ana women who might have become good and valuable citizens. The idle and shallow drills for the seed. Before can doubt that the acquisition of. health and planting, scatter liberally either nerve quietude will be sMedy and complete? thriftless remain here.

onstlpation, biliousness, malaria, nausea, sea phosphate, potato fertilizer or hard Congress has many great questions sickness and cramps in the stomach yield to wood ashes, in the drill and mix with this remedy. to aecide. but there are not many the soiL more important than this. A restric An American Father. Neighbor: Now If you want a large yield of smooth, tioning took a small book from his that vou hev succeeded in irivin v'r eons and buried pleasantry was lifted from its tion upon the horde of foreign tramps who ngle the useful daughters a college edicution.

what are yeh catacomb, stripped of its dusty cere- desk and began writing. An expres-ments, and new back to gladden sion of intense delight crept over the goin to do next? Mr. wnyback: "all. sound potatoes, there must be care given to the seed and to the thorough mixing of the special fertilizers well immigrants would mean an enor CROSS-GRAISED, sour, irritable, so that the whole world seems wrong. That's the way yoa feel when your liver is inactive.

You need Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets to. stimulate it and correct ft, and clear up your -vtein for you. ou won't mind the taking of them they're so small and so natural in their effecta. Ail that you notice with them is the good that they do. dunno.

but I've been thtukin I'd better of American newspaper move out of town so I won't disgrace 'em millions readers. mous saving in taxation. For it would lessen the expenditure for the through the soil. As soon as the tops New York Weekly. Winter Wheat, lOO Bashela Per Acre can be seen, cultivate, and once supportof paupers, and would dimin TO RAISE THE PEWABIC.

week thereafter for six weeks. Hill ish vastly the cost of detecting and punishing crime and maintaining Wonderful reports come in on NalzerV moderately after the last cultiva tion. new winter wheat and monster winter rye prisons. To recapitulate, use whole seed of A vigorous treatment of this mat Over 2.000 farmers planted these grains last fall and now report yields of 30 to 70 bushels wheat, and over 60 bushels rye per fair sized potatoes. Add to stable ter cannot be postponed indefinitely.

manure potato fertilizer at the rate In the permanent cure of Biliousness. Jaundice, Constipation, Indigestion, Sour Htom-ache, Dizxinett, Sick or Biliou Hadachas, and every liver, stomach, or bowel disorder, they're guaranteed to give satufactiou, or the money is returned. louth's Companion. acre. The wav it looks 100 bushels will 1h of 1,000 pounds per acre, then cultiv reached.

Send to John A. Salzer Seed Co ate six times. La Crosse, 4c postage stamps, for Successful "Fakirs. In varieties. Beauty of Hebron, samples of this wheat and rye and fall An interesting book might be writ catalogue.

ten on "street men' or "faKirs," as Don't tinker at your Catarrh with unknown medicines. Its risky and dangerous. You may drive it to the lungs, (let tbe Remedy that has cured Catarrh for jiars a tul Tlr Kama tm li IT ii I they are called. Dr. Flagg of Balti Little Tommy Whykins Thad been wrest ling with a niece of hardtack.

'Mamma. said he. after a silence. "What in it?" "If more was probably the pioneer in the business. For twenty years he sold patent medicines from the side of a The makers guarantee it to cure, or betssdl.

poll parrots get all the crackers they ask for in me worst aon wonder they learn to swear. buggy, with a negro banjo player as the attraction to draw a crowd. He MYfjSgj WIFF CANNOT SEE HOW YOU 00 Ist IT AND PAY FREIGHT. retired twice, with fortunes of $100, Slsa tmr 1 4rst vsssst oO tm Htt 4 rm SSSfSf 1 1 SM SMTSSW BafeSW. txktl I i mm 1 000 each time.

John Stinson was one aS kmmry mmk; fttumt tm HlMni mUk MMlbhMli ldr. CM. of the old-timers. His specialty was the sale of glass-cutters, and when he died he left $7o. 000.

Tom Wood eSBarTrtel. StMMTimMaMiUM. smiSSsi ir I "i was another. He sold razor strops, part? CMTsstl HttsS t4ftY MMSBBBBBBT WT IftffV FVB aJ sTIMsm ritCC estslan. tootkwatal dentifrice.

arnd soap for taking out aw fa. OXFORD MFB. CO. a As. CHICAGO, lit.

stains, This he used to describe as WORM NIGHT AND DAY. being useful in taking "stains from your coat, stains from your vests and stains from your character. If you nr a i WB IVrf- 44 urnt. rifM and should get shipwrecked, gentlemen, Crown Jewel, ick's Perfection are good and yield well. Rural No.

'2 yields welt but is only of second quality. Great Men in small Places. "I have been reading biographies lately," said D. E. Dean to the corridor man at the Southern, "and it is very noticeable that the men who attain prominence are usually from small places or from the country.

The cities naturally absorb the greatest talents in the professions, in commerce, in art, in music, and in the drama, and yet a roster of the men prominent in public life will show that four-fifths of them are from country places. Consequently it is evident that out greatest men are never beard'of and take no part in public life. My explanation of this condition of affairs is that in the country the man of brains is marked by reason of the contrasts he presents when compared with his fellow-men, while in tbe city he is on an equality with hundreds, and even thousands, of others and there is no contrast to bring him out. It is rare to even find a Congressman living in the larg est town in bis district, and there are only four or five Governors whose homes are in the metropolis of the States which they govern. It is a fact that I have never seen men-tioned and that I never thought of until accident led me to investigate it St.

Louis Exchange. urr Tai las- Wv 1 TJ piwiwii" llinirtetf ratalomi- 1 rul. for this soap will wash you ashore." Charles W. Thompson, of New York Superior Men to Search for the Treasure-Laden Hull. It has been over two years since an attempt was made to raise the hull or secure the car of the ill-fated steamer Pewabic, which reposes on the bottom of Lake Huron in 128 feet of water.

Preparations are now being made to raise the abandoned wreck. Superior, capital will be put into the new undertaking, as it was in the last ill-starred expedition in which Diver Pelkey lost his life. The diver, who will join the new expedition on shares, lives in Pennsylvania. So confident is he that he can raise the the Pewabic that he is willing to perform the work on much better terms than any other man of his profession. He has perfected a new style of diving suit and has experimented with it for some time.

He is not in the least concerned in regard to the depth of water in which the Pewabic lies, and says the stated depth will not embarrass his working to good advantage. Two good submarine divers. Pelkey and McCarty, have lost their lives in trying to get the treasure imprisoned in the sunken hull. The Pewabic was a propeller of about 1.000 tons. She was sunk in Lake Huron off Alpena outside Thunder Bay in June, She and the Steamer Meteor came in collision at night and the former was sunk.

There were 250 persons aboard and the number lost is variously estimated at from 80 to 130. So far as the loss of life is concerned the sinking of the Pewabic was one of the greatest lake marine disasters on record. The cargo of the Pewabic contained seventy-five barrels of silverware, 3bo tons of copper ore, llo tons of pig iron, 250 rolls of leather supposed to be buffalo hide and a great number of trunks, for which there are big rewards He red, ranging from $100 to $5,000 for a slngie one. Among these trunks is one belonging to the army paymaster, which is supposed to ontain a laree sum ol money. visitor's face as his eye followed the agent's pen, and I immediately surmised that he was about to receive a pass.

By this time two other persons came in, presumably on the same mission. They sat down in the opposite side of the office, and realizing the situation cast wistful glances at the fortunate man. The agent continued his writing and asked the man where he wanted to go. 'Make it New York City this time," responded the man, who had evidently dead-headed before. A few finishing touches were applied and the pass was handed over to him.

He thanked the agent very politely and assured him that he would not bother him again. He examined the ticket and started for the door, when he noticed that It-was good for only one way. 1 'Why. I guess you have made a mistake," he said, in a tone of surprise, "this ticket will only take me one way." "Do you expect to return?" asked the agent unconcernedly. "Well, 1 should say I da" "All right, hand me your ticket." The man gave the agent his ticket and was astounded to see him tear it up.

"Well if you're coming back you can't get any ticket from me. I thought I waa going a get rid of you lor sure this time." Without further ceremony the chronic pass seeker took leave and the other two persons having seen enough, followed in his train. Buffalo Enquirer. Millepeds. The little creature which possesses the distinction of having more legs than any other animal is that which belongs to the family of insects known as millepeds, or thousand footed.

There are seeral different species of these, but tbev all possess the common characteristic of having segmented bodies, each segment of which is provided with its own pair of feet. These are set so closely along the body as to resemble hairs, and when they move one after another with i erfect regularity the effect is precisely the same on a small scale as that of a field of oats undulating under the influence of the wind. Some species of millepeds have as many as 350 separate and distinct legs. They are all perfectly harmless, unlike the centipeds. which frequently have the power cf inflicting poisonous wounds.

wuiHjr newlrd. 0 V- nas sola goods on street corners in HrsK Mm On eassJarav every city of more than inhab itants in the I nited States, and has VITIUCirilkJ JH I WIW I. 'Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Lata Principal Ean-iTiri: lr ainn rtiirsast. tiaveled through England.

Germany and 1 ranee, disposing of a wonder a. 13aitnlWiallag ful razor strop which he warranted to put a fine cutting edge on a hoe. New York Mail and Express. Got What He Wanted. A small boy.

with long yellow curls and leggins to match, was tak ing a lunch with his nurse at a San Francisco restaurant, savs the Post. I'i intPil in l.prka. Kati-a-. Warn- to talk to you And all ur r-' tolk- A In Mil ilitirs and other thing. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used.

The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form mast acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and nil' beneficial properties of a perfect laxative effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing oonstipetion. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substahec. yrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name.

Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. It'- a I rm 'awi All lllr u. 1 -'In tuna. l.Wa Vrar. ANV I.rJtli TIIK.

YtUH IXON. while his mother sat at a neighboring table, gossiping with a friend and nibbling at a piece of cake. Tbe boy was quarreling with his nurse, and his lusty howls had disturbed hi-, mother three or fou-times. "Mary, why will you tease child?" demanded the exasperated mother. "What does he want?" The boy knew he was about to tri-uiip'n.

so he ceased his howling. Sure, mum, I'm not teasing him." said Mary. "He is crying for what he calls a firecracker pickle." The temporary silence enabled the mother to resume her gossip, so, of course, she forgot about the boy. In a moment she was disturbed by another howl from the boy. What is the matter with that child, Why don't you give him what he "Sure mum.

he's got it." I mi cations! latlsMasee 1 I nas beru felt in every county in and in every tate in the Union. It rerurnized as a i.i. i.i. in this rreat Political Revolution. Th tieople want trood literature, and w- want Sincere Praise.

A well-knowu French composer was in his youth a member of a rhetorical class. The professor gave as the subject of an essay The Praise of Idleness." On the day appointed the themes were handed in by all the pupils excep. Maillard. "Sir," said the professor, -'I have had nothing from you yet" Here it replied the young rhetorician, as he placed a roll of paper on the master's desk and returned to seat The professor turned over the sheets one by one. Nothing "but blank pages met his eye.

Turning to the pupil, he exclaimed, angrily: "Trying to make a fcolof me, eh?" "No, sir." quietly remarked Aime Maillard: "1 only thought that tbe highest tribute you could pay to idleness was simply to do nothing." Wix tickles with a sting. tliftn to have it. ij-o want a few i. with which to bu-iaeaa. You pay the UOL-iAK, we do the rest.

S-nd S5 eta. for a trial, or special rt for campaign elubs ADVOCATE PIB. CO. Topeka. Kv His Explanation.

Xn a certa town in Xevada there was atone time a of the peace who had been born in the Emerald sie. and whose blunders occasioned many a smile to the better educated members of the co umunity. At one time a subp ma had been issued from his court to another Irishman to attend as witness in a case where Smith was the plaintiff, and Isaac Williams et al. were the defendants. Michael Fennessey, the desired witness, appeared in court before Yf WILL MAIL POhTPflID There is one good thing about the man with a trouble on his mind: he doesn't break into your office with whistle or song.

a fine Panel Picture, entitled I iupriTnriAu Best Court iryrup. Tastes Xod. Use in ne. Sold by druggist jti is sometimes too near- Caution sighted. ivi lui i i iun In exchange for it Lavge Lion Heads, cut from Lion Coffee wrappers.

ani a Zcent stamp to pay postage. Write for list of our other flnp prominis. Including books, a knife, game. etc. Woolson Seicc never a N.

T. 574-29 A THOROT GHBTiED dog is imart as a cur. i -GED trousers may have sound pockets. its Wli- ii any of thene advert i mention thi paper. IM Huron Toledo.

Ohio.

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About The Daily Democrat Archive

Pages Available:
4,192
Years Available:
1892-1901