The Canadian Crescent. (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 23, 1888 Page: 3 of 8
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A Tornado Strikes Mount Vernon,
HL, Destroying Half the
Buildings.
The Killed and Injnred Number Hun-
dreds—Fire Adda to the
Horror.
Help Urgently Needed—The Btonn Said
to be Widespread—Incalculable
Damage Done.
Chicago, Feb. 20.—a dispatch was re-
ceived here last night that a cyclone had
struck Mount Vernon, I1L, virtually de-
stroyed it, killing at least thirty-eight per-
sons and injuring many more. Mount Ver-
non is situated in the southern part of the
State, about sixty miles east Of St* Louis,
in almost,a direct line.
A dispatch from Evansvillé, Ind., says
that over one hundred persons were killed
^n the cyclone at Mount Vernon, 111. Tele-
grams were received last evening at Evans-
villé from Mount Vercon asking for help,
and a train with two engines was at once
sent having on board surgeons and such
other assistance as could be hastily
gathered.
A Centralia, III., special to the Daily News
says two-thirds of Mount Vernon was
wiped out. Besides the people killed out-
right many were injured. In the response
for aid twenty members of t{ie Centralia
lire department, four physicians and a
number of leading citizens left at once for
the scene of the disaster.
The following is a list, as far as now
known, of the killed by the cyclone at Mt.
Vernon. I1L, yesterday afternoon:
Mrs. Russell Dewey; Mrs. Jjohn L. Wa-
ters and babe; Henry Waters; David F.
Yearwoofi and wife; John C. Murray; Mr.
Cummings, au engineer; Mary' Westbrook;
James Bearson; Mrs. Holcoitib; Dr. John
Year wood and wife; Samuel Yjearwood and
wife; George Puree 11; Mrs. William Jones
and child; John Dodson; Miss^osie Sutton;
John aw; a blacksmith, naiñeunknown;
Mrs. Colonel Cooper; Eddie lilaxie; S. J.
Walters; George Pierce; Mrs. L. E. Legge;
two telegraph operators.
The fatally injured are: Laura E. Legg,
Mrs. Henry Waters, Miss Laura Liserby,
Charles Ellis, Mr. and Mrs. (p. Galbraith,
Charles Weir, Mr. and Mrs. Westbrook,
Amanda Bearden, W. H. Hinman, Lizzie
Bennett, J. C. Hanbrick, Charles Pool,
Miss Corinne Hanbrick, Brownlow Haw-
kins, Mrs. Albright, Henry Ellis, Mr. Mille-
craft, Joel Howard.
a connected account.
Mount Veknon, 111., Feb. 20.j—About five
a cyclone
n ruins, kill-
o'clock yesterday afternoon
struck this town and left it i
ing fifteen or twenty people, and it is
feared many more than are now known to
have been killed will bo found among the
ruins of the buildings. Fire
immediately
broke out all over the city amid the ruins,
spreading rapidly, owing to
done by the wind. The storm
ry, striking
then carried
the southwest and had a rotary motion. It
swept down with fearful fu
first just south of the city hall,
away the third and fourth stones of the
Mount Vernon mill. From th]ere it swept
on in a path 500 yards wide.
The Methodist Church fell! just a few
minutes after 250 peoplo had loft the Sun-
the damage
passed from
day school room. Tho Come
lost its third story. Next the
the county court house aud
íercial Hotel
wind struck
bndered it a
under it was
ihe owner of
heap of ruins. By rare luck, however, the
county records were saved. The Crew
block on the south side of t he square is
leveled with the earth and
found the body of John Crew,
tho block, formerly of Chicago. The roof
and second story of R. L. St r it ton & Co. Js
hardware store was blown away. The
large two story brick school liouso did not
withstand the terrible shock
than the smaller house in the
cyclone.
The large two story fran
any better
track of the
e house of
and carried
George Ward was picked up
about twenty feet, and left ubhurt, while
two brick buildings 100 feet away were left
in ruins. The loss can not bj estimated,
but not less than 1500,000 worth of property
has been destroyed by the eye one and fire
in that neighborhood.
Reports are coming in from the country,
and the storm seems to have swept every
thing lor miles. Incalculably loss of life
and great suffering will follo\jr unless out-
side assistance is given tho mayor, G. H.
Harnell, who will give it to the proper
committee. A meeting of business men
was held and committees appointed to care
for the dead and wounded andj protect tho
property as much as possible. Many people
who escaped With their lives have nothing
besides. Many are walking ¡ the streets
with no home to go to.
Four men in Evans' Bank were impris-
oned in the ruins of the bfuilding and
burned to death. Their cries of fire and
distress were agonizing in the Extreme, but
nothing could reach them, 'fheir names
could not be obtained. Phvsicians to the
number of twenty-one joined the relief
train from Evansville en route. Tney ar-
rived shortly before midnigiht. At one
this morning the fires were u^ider control
and guards were on duty over the goods.
Nothing that the limited resources at hand
could provido has been neglected. An un-
earthly quiet is over the place, and only
the occasional groans of the dying an?i the
broad track made desolately the cyclone
tell of the terrible catastrophe^
I
HANGING OF PICTURES.
How to Dispose of Paintings to tiie Best
Possible Advantage.
It is generally admitted that a sym-
metrical disposition of pictures, when
practicable, is more agreeable to the
eye than when they are hung in hap-
hazard fashion, and if mathematical
uniformity of grouping were the only
object in view, that object, in dealing
with a miscellaneous collection, might
easily be secured. But whenever pict-
ures are classified under "schools" the
possibility of ranging them according
to size is at once greatly restricted.
Nor is this alL When two or more of
similar dimension have been selected
for a group it not infrequently happens
that the nature of the subjects treated,
the chromatic quality of the works, or
the style of their execution, is such as
to render their juxtaposition incongru-
ous. A brilliant and gayly colored
picture hung near one which is painted
in a somber key will sometimes take
all life out of the latter and reduce it
to the level of a work in monochrome.
On the other hand, to group together
a series of somber-toned pictures is
apt to produce a gloomy effect,
and the hanger has therefore to
steer between two extremes. Again,
for the purpose of study, it is
no doubt convenient that the works
of a particular master should hang
side by side. But the varying scale of
such works, their dissimilarity of shape
—horizontal, upright, square, circular,
oblong, or arch-headed, for instance—
will often present obstacles to such a
plan. And even where conditions of
size, color and subject are favorable to
the close association of certain pict-
ures, it may happen that while some of
them deserve the best place that can
be found on the walls, one at least of
the group is of inferior quality, and
can not be allowed to occupy space
which may justly be claimed for a
work of higher merit though less con-
sonant in style. Last, though not
least, the requirements of students
have to be borne in mind. The pict-
ures which they select to copy may not
be always in the first rank of art, but
they are generally popular works, and
when the object in view is to produce
a salable copy, or perhaps to execute a
commission, some pardonable dissatis-
faction would ensue if the original
were hung up in an inconvenient
place.—Charles E. Eastlake, in Nine-
teenth Century.
4 I 1
ThegLatest Electric Curio.
Mr. Yolk, whose electric railway is
known to all visitors to Brighton, Eng
land, has constructed an electrically
driven dog-cart, which attracts a good
deal of attention among the leisure
crowds which throng the gay Sussex
watering place. It is driven by a half
horsepower Immisch motor and six-
teen small accumulators, which have a
capacity equal to six hours' work. In
Uie desire to keep the machinery light,
scarcely sufficient power has been pro-
vided, so that, although the vehicle
will make a speed of nine miles an
hour on asphalt, it only makes a speed
of four miles on a soft macadam road,
while, with two passengers, an incline
of one in thirty is the limit of its
climbing power.—Electrical World.
—Cold drinks, as a rule, increase the
feverish condition of the mouth and
stomach, and so create thirst Expe-
rience shows it to be a fact that hot
drinks relieve the thirst and "cool off'
the body when it is in an abnormally
heated condition better than ice-cold
drinks.
^ •
An awkward waiter frequently plays the
deuce with the tray.—Hotel Mail.
THE GENERAL MARKETS.
A Modest, Sensitive Woman
often shrinks from consulting a physician
about functional derangement, ana prefers
to suffer In silence. This may be a mistaken
feeling, but it is one which is largely preva-
lent. To all such women we would say that
one of the most skillful physicians of the
day, who has had a vast experience in cur-
ing diseases peculiar to women, has pre-
pared a remedy which is of inestimable aid
to them. We refer to Dr. Pierce's Favorite
Prescription. This is the only remedy for
woman's peculiar weaknesses and ailments,
sold by druggists, under a positive guaran-
tee from the manufacturers, that it will
give satisfaction in every case or money re-
funded. See guarantee printed on bottle
wrapper.
♦ -
—An old man who died the other
day in Fluvanna County, Virginia, had
cut his third set of teeth when nearly
eighty years old, and his hair, which
had become white, was returning to its
original color.
Like a Circuit of Electric Wires.
The human sensorium resembles a circuit
of electric wires, the various sets of nerves
forming links in the circle of continuity.
When digestion grows weak the epigastric
nerve suffers, and the whole system is af-
fected. Reinforce it with Hostetter's Stom-
ach Bitters, and the nervous organism grows
tranquil and reposeful. Fever and ague,
constipation, kidney troubles and liver com-
plaints retreat before this remedy.
«-
kichabd m. demanded another horse be-
cause he was tired of the nightmarei^that
had been riding him. — Texas Sifting*
With groans and sighs, and dizzied eyes.
He seeks the eouch and down he lies;
Xtfausea and faintness in him rise.
Brow-racking pains assail him.
Sick headache! But ere long comes ease.
His stomach settles into peace.
Within his head the throbbings cease—
Pierce's Pellets never fall him!
Nor will they fail anyone in such a dire
predicament. To the dyspeptic, the bilious,
and the constipated, they are alike 44 a
friend in need and a friend indeed."
The barber's apprentice is generally a
strapping fellow.—Boston Commercial Ad-
vertiser.
Life is burdensome, alike to the sufferer
MUU MAJi «« 4. «-« A-M. VV V &
attending evils hold sway. Complaints of
this nature can be speedily cured by taking
JricklyAsh Bitters regularly. Thousands
once tiius afflicted now bear cheerful testi-
mony as to its merits.
What is the difference between a tube
and a foolish Dutchman? One is a hollow
cylinder and the other is a silly Hollander.
" I have been afflicted with an affection of
the Throat from childhood, caused by diph
tberia, and have used various remedies, but
have never found anything equal to Brown's
Bronchial Troches."—Éev. G. M. F. Jiamp-
ton, Fiketon% Ky. Sold only in boxes.
•
If there is any one who should be
"wrapped in slumber," it is a man who
Bnorea
—-m
pi go's Cure for Consumption is the best
Cough Medicine. If you don't believe it,
take a dose. By druggists, 25c. a bottle.
.
A charity bawl—Please, mister, gimme a
cent?—Washington Critic.
*
Don't hawk, hawk, blow, spit, and disgust
everybody with your offensive breath, but
use Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy and end it.
it is generally "all up " with aman when
he begins te go down hilL—Boston Courier,
•
a Dose in Time Saves Nine of Hale's Hon-
ey of Horehound and Tar for coughs.
Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute.
•— —
A winding stare—watching your best girl
as you hold her skein of Üosa
-«
Pipe Lines—those written in favor of
smoking.—Texas IS if tings.
Destitute Miners.
Shenandoah, Pa., Feb. 19.—The destitu-
tion among the families of the miners that
is being developed here is terrible and such
that it can not longer be hidden. One fam-
ily named Fogel was found to-day to have
actually been without food for two days,
and the children were so weak from fasting
tbat when relief came it had to be sparingly
given to avoid killing them. There were
nine in the family. Another family of six
named Burns was in the same state, and
one named Johnson was almost as bad.
They are but instances that have many
parallels. It has been established that
most of the contributions intended for tho
miners bus been absorbed by the railroad-
ers who have been living in clover while
thfir allies slarvccL
We want on® person in «rery village, town and tewnship, to
keep in their hemes a line of our ART SAMPLES; to those
who will keep and simply show these samples to those who call,
we will send, free, the very best Sewing Machino manufactured
in the world, with all the attachments. This machine is made
after the SiNOKR patents, which have expired. Before the patents
run out, this style mnchine, with the attachments, was sold for
$113; it now sells for $50. Header, it may seem to you the most
\VONI>ERFUL THING ON EARTH, but you can secure one of
these machines ABSOLUTELY free, provided your application
comes in first, from your locality, and if you will keep tn your
home and biiow to those who call, a set of our elegant and ua-
equaled art samples. We do net ask you to show these sam-
ples for more than two months, and then they become yeur
own preperty. The art samples are sent to you ABSOLUTELY
TREE of cost. How can we do all this?—easily enough! We often
get as much as $2,000 or $3,000 in trade from evcu a small place,
after our art samples have remained where they ceuld be seen for
a month or two. Wo need one person in each locality, all over
the country, and tako this means of securing them at once.
Those who write to us at once, will secure, free, the very best
Sewing Machino manufactured, and the finest general ^assort-
ment of works of high art ever shown together in America. All
particulars FREE by return mail. Write at once; a postal card
on which to write to us will cost you but one cent, and after yo
know all, should you conclude to go no further, why no harm is
done. Wonderful as it seems, you need no capital—all is free.
Address at once* TRUE St CO., auuwsia, illlss.
KANSAS CITY, Feb. 19.
3ATTLE—Shipping steers....$ 4 00 4 65
Native cows 2 10 3 00
Butchers'steers.... 3 00 © 3 75
SOGS—Good to choice heary. 4 25 (ft 5 05
WHEAT—No. 2 red Not quoted
No/i soft 79 <& 8'
30RN—No. 2 43 © 43%
DATS—No. 2 2854® 28%
RYE—No. 2 00 ®
FLOUR—Fancy, per sack 1 65 (& 1 70
HAY—Baled 0 50 @ 7 50
BUTTER—Choice creamery... 21 26
3HEESE—Full cream 11 @ 1*4
EGGS—Choice 10 @ 10
BACON—Ham 11 @ 11%
Shoulders 7 @ 7J4
Sides 9
SjAHO.... ..................... 4(jy i
POTATOES 60 © 75
ST. LOUIS.
3ATTLE—Shipping steers 4 40 ® 5 20
Butchers'steers.... 3 10 ® 4 20
HOGS—Packing 5 00 © 5 35
3HEEP—Fair to choice 3 05 ® 4 50
FLOUR—Choice 3 60 @ 3 80
WHEAT—No. * red Si Q 80 4
CORN—No. 2 45 ® 45?*
OATS—No. 2 29%
RYE—No. 1 5 ^ - 60
BUTTER—Creamery 24 @ 80
PORK 14 00 © 14 25
CHICAGO.
OATTLE—Shippingfsteers..... 4 00 5 10
HOGS—Packing and shipping.. 5 05 @ 5 65
SHEEP—Fairto choice 4 oj 5 30
FLOUR—Winter wheat 3 60 ^ 4 00
WHEAT—No. 2 red 7H9& 80
CORN—No. 2 47%® 43
OATS—No.2 — 27 ® 28
RYE—N 3.2 60^ 61
BUTTER—Creamery 20 & 29
PORK IS 75 <& 13 71%
NEW YORK.
CATTLE—Common to prime.. 5 00 ^ 5 CO
HOGS—Good to choice 5 40 ^ 5 6)
FLOUR—Good to choice 3 70 4 80
WHEAT—No. 2 red 68?88®£
CORN—No. 2 60 & 60?*
OATS—Western mixed S9 <§> 41 i
BUTTER—Creamery 29 @ SO
PORlk,• ••!•••••• t•••• •• •••••• U «S j|fr ¿5 ¡A¿
DO HAÍÍÍ the ASTHMA?
POPHAM'S ASTHMA SPECIFIC I
gives prompt and positive relief im#rerycaa« I
and CURES all CURABLE Cases. Pleasant
and agreeable to ass. Established TWKNTTI
TEARS, and sold by all,DraggisW. TRIAL
PACKAGE and Pamphlet FREE by
Mail. Send for Freo Package and TRT IT. I
t. popham k CO.,
philadelphia, pa.
■ NAME THIS PAPER evety tiass yea «rita.
Prepara for Spring
It is none too early to be getting ready for spring,
and the first thing which should receive attention
la your own system. If yoa have not been well dar*
ing the winter, have been troubled with scrofula,
salt rheum, or other huLiors of the blood, you
should purify the blood by taking Hood's Sarsapa-
rilla. You will then escape that indescribable tired
feeling which is so prostrating and often so unac-
countable in the spring months. Take Hood's Sar*
saparilla before it is too late.
441 take Hood's Sarsaparilla for a spring medi-
cine, and I find it Just the thing. It tones up my
system and makes me fee. .ike a different man. My
wife takes it for dyspepsia, and she derives great
benefit from it." Frank C. Turner, Hook &
Ladder No. 1, Friend Street, Boston.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
3oldby all druggists. 11; six for 15. Prepared by
C. I. HOOD it CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
Dr. S. Owens, ef the firm of 8. Owens*
Co., druggists. Ashland. Fk. writing Sept
18,1887, says: MPiso's Cure ror Oousump- .
tion gives mere satisfaction than any //
other Ooagk medicine. I prescribe li
in mv practice in all esses of .Lang
and Bronchial trouble."
Piso's C
eooe—eoeoe—eeeeeos—oo a— ■ a s si
The treatment of many thousands of esses
of those chronic weaknesses and distressing
ailments peculiar to females, at the Invalids*
Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y.,
has afforded a vast experience in nicely adapt-
ing and thoroughly testing remedies for the
cure of woman's peculiar maladies.
Dr. Pierce's Favorita Prescription
is the outgrowth, or result, of this great and
valuable experience. Thousands or testimo-
nials, received from patients and from physi-
cians who have tested it in the more aggra-
vated and obstinate cases which had baffled
their skill, prove it to be the most wonderful
remedy ever devised for the relief and cure of
suffering women. It is not recommended ss a
"cure-all," but as a most perfect Specific for
woman's peculiar ailments.
As a powerful* invigorating tonic
it imparts strength to the whole system,
and to the womb and its appendages^ in
particular. For overworked, 4 worn-out,
u run-down," debilitated teachers, milliners,
dressmakers, seamstresses, "shop-girls," house-
keepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women
generally. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription
is the greatest earthly boon, being unequaled
as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonie.
As a soothing and strengthening
nervine* "Favorite Prescription" is uno-
3ualed ana is invaluable in allaying and sub-
uing nervous excitability, irritability, ex-
haustion, prostration, hysteria, spasms and
other distressing, nervous symptoms com-
monly attendant upon functional and organic
disease of the womb. It induces refreshing
sleep and relieves mental anxiety and de-
spondency.
Dr. Pierco's Favorite Prescription
is a legitimate medicine, carefully
compounded by an experienced and skillful
physician, and adapted to woman's delicate
SCOTT'S
St FM GOD WIS ML
organization. It is purely vegetable in its
composition and perfectly harmless in its
effects in any condition of the system. For
morning sickness, or nausea, from whatever
cause arising, weaJc stomach, indigestion, dys-
pepsia and kindred symptoms, its use, in small
doses, will prove very beneficial.
"Favorito Prescription99 is a posi-
tive cure for the most complicated and ob-
stinate cases of leucorrhea, excessive flowing,
painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions,
prolapsus, or falling of the womb, weak back,
female weakness," anteversion, retroversion,
bearing-down sensations, chronic congestion,
inflammation and ulceration of the womb, in-
flammation, pain and tenderness in ovaries,
accompanied with "internal heat."
As a regulator and promoter of func-
tional action, at that critical period of change
from girlhood to womanhood, " Favorite Pre-
scription " is a perfectly safe remedial acent.
Almost AQ PAlfltflblfiaQ Milk. I and can produce only good results. It is
Almost as raiaiaoieas mil*. | equally efficacious and valuable in its effccta
The only preparation of COD LITER OIL that
can be taken readily and tolerated for a long time
by delicate stomachs.
AND AS A REMEDY FOR CONSUMPTION,
SCROFULOUS AFFECTIONS, ANAEMIA, GEN-
ERAL bEBILITY, COUGHS AND THROAT AF-
FECTIOSS, and all WASTING DISORDERS OF
CHILDREN it is marvellous in its rosnitoT
Prescribed and endorsed by the best Physicians
in the countries of the world.
For Sale ay sill Droffflats*
g^Send for Pamphlet on Wasting Diseases. Ad-
dress. SCOTT sfe BOWKfi, Hew York.
FARGO'S
Very Stylish
dealer for FÍRG0'S$2?508H0E. If he does not keep them
• a s 5ii A nmr VvnrAH-í nal a.
when taken for those disorders and derange-
ments incident to that later and most critical
period, known as " The Change of Life."
" Favorito Proscription,9' when taken
in connection with the use of Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery, and small laxative
doses of Dr. Pierce's Purgative Pellets (Little
Liver Pills), cures Liver, Kidney and Bladder
diseases. Their combined use also remove
blood taints, and abolishes cancerous and
scrofulous humors from the system.
" Favorite Proscription99 is the only
medicine for women, sold by druggists, under
a positive guarantee, from the manu-
facturers, that it will give satisfaction in every
case, or money will be refunded. This guaran-
tee has been printed on the bottle-wrapper,
and faithfully carried out for many years.
Large bottles (100 doses) $1.00. or six
bottles for $5.00.
For large, illustrated Treatise on Diseases of
Women (160 pages, naper-covered), send tea
cents in stamps. Address,
World's Dispensary Medical Association,
663 Main St* BUFFALO* N.T
CURES
RHEUMATISM
ueaicriui fiauv o^osvusav . —lt . .
send to us, and we will furnish
on receipt of $&50. C. II. FÁ1M*0 A CO., tblesgo.
•9- NAME THIS PAPER arery time you writs.
THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY
For Liver, Bile, Indigestion, etc. Free from Mercury;
contains only Pure vegetable Ingredients. Agent*—
MEYER BROS. * CO.. ST. LOllS, MO.
i.v&v, >N' M*£r>
THE ATTENTION OF
STOCK KEN, BREEDERS, &C.
18 call* to thi ttnsttbpasskd link of
LIVE STOCK CUTS
We have to offer. We furnish cuts of all descriptions
from any specimen book at or below quoted priccs for
same. Catalogue to interested parties upon receipt
of 25c. in stamps, which amount will be deducted
trom first order,
A. N. KELLOGG NEWSPAPER CO.
316 Weat Sixth Street. Kansas City, Mo.
SEEDS! 20 PACKETS
for SOctS postpaid. Eclipse and
Blood T. Beet; Wakefield and All
¡Seasons Can.: W. Plume Celery;
I Erfurt Caulifl.- Ox heart Carrot;
1 Bonanza Corn: Prolific Cucum*
j ber; Prise Head Lettuce; Bana-
na If. Melon; Kolb Oem W. Mel-
on; Silver King and Tel. D Globe
Onions; Parsnip; Hub. Squa*h;
I Rosy,Oem and Chartier Radish;
Beauty Tomato, and Best Tnr-
'nip. Illustrated CATALOtíUB FSIS
ALNEEB BROS.. Kockford, 111.
'HAMS THIS PAFEa rr«ry ti«#wriU.
Neuralgia, Headache, Sore Throat, Sprains,^
Bruises* Burns, Wounds, Lame Back,
And Ail Pains Of An Inflammatory Nature,
Sold by Druggists. SOc. sad 81.OO.
BONO BOOK MAILED FREE.
Address WIZARD OIL CO.,
CHICAGO.
P"D.R pa
NEEDLES,
SHUTTLES,
REPAIRS.
fForall Sewing Machine*.
Standard Goods Only.
The Trade §opplied.
Send for wholesale price
list. Blelock M'f'q Co.,
309 Locust at.StJLouis.Mo
MINTIO* THIS PAPES trtrj time jou writ*
ARM&HAIU
THE ARM AHD
derfkil purity,
SLIGHTLY DINGY
but s eonpaxis
will show the differenos.
HAMMER BRAND SODA Is
and whiteness. Impure Soda
hito color, it may appear white
CHURCH A CO.'S "ARM ft
for its won-
is usually of a
examined by itself,
9
FINEST IRUITTREES
IS'
| voPi
my, new and old. Ho
in U.S.; mo better; no
Apr* \ budded and
fpiGUv **~r"
•65
A. MONTH and BOARD for
Bright Y «rang Men or Lsdltsla
each county. P. W. Z1EGLER&co.
118 Adama St., Chicago, 111.
IV5AJU THIS papes trrtrj üm jom wriu.
and BROODERS. Greatly
improved for 1888. Send flvo 1
for handftotne illukteatei Cata-
rOGUK. CHAMPION MFU. CO., Quine j, lUiaoU.
name THIS PAPEa •« «y ttm jou writ*.
PURE BRED POULTRY!
Fifteen varieties. Kggs for hatching war-
ranted fresh and true to name. Catalogue
free. Address. j. B. Shxnk. Norborne, Mo.
q jl TCKITfi Instructions, References, sam-
r #% I Bis 8 O pie copy patent free. J. C. Hio-
DOM. solicitor of patents, opposite Post-ofSce, Kan-
sas City, Mo.; reliable associate at Washington.
$5
TO $8 A DAY. Samples worth SI
FREE. Lines not under the horse's feet. W
rito
yi|||P STUBY. Book-keeping, Penmanship,
Hlf ME> >uetic. Shorthand, etc., thoroughly taught
by mall. Circula free. SBT AXT*S OOLLS6S, SdUo.I V,
Mr SAMS THIS PAPEa mntj «Mjnna
HAMS THIS PAPEE
SOU.
iJvoot homo and aukc
at ujthiaftiM in tho world
~ttrm
Taos* Co.
sams
PATENTS
obtained. H. W. t. Jekve*, Patent
Attorney, WASHINGTON, D. C.
Charges moderate. Circulars fraa.
in Ohio,
Good. Send fcr description
PlSOS CURE FORCONSUMPTION
A. N. K—D.
No. 1178.
WHEN WRITING TO ADVKKTltfJSBS,
please say you saw
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Miller, Freeman E. The Canadian Crescent. (Canadian, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 23, 1888, newspaper, February 23, 1888; Canadian, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth183549/m1/3/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hemphill County Library.