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The Carroll Sentinel from Carroll, Iowa • Page 4

Location:
Carroll, Iowa
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Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Snnimer Cushions. Satin and silk coverings ore laic fiWay with furs and cloth dresses, nuc all sorts of inexpensive materials tha Jharrnouize with mattings and bnmboi furniture abound. Japanese orupo ii dark blue, with largo white convention 01 flowers wnuderiiig over it, is a mos effective covering for the hammocl cushion. It is cheap and enduring Chintz and cretonne and even plain gingham, which may be made los plain, by tho way, when appliqued wit) Some lace design, are among the favorites of the season. A New Fancy.

A new but not at all pretty fancy i the hanging of tho coin purse from thi Jong lorgnette chain. This fashion has Bnpreseded the Trilby locket, which was worn in similar conspicuous fashion. A least the purse has in it an element usefulness and has some small excuse for its existence. The looket had none whatever, for what sentimental woman would wish to have her sweetheart's picture dangling about loosely on the end of a Ledger. My biiby had 3roup and was saved by 5b.

loh Cure," wiltes Mrs, J. Martin, of Hunteviile Ala. For sale 05 fHEOAUWIN DRGGOO. Another nine Book. LONDON, July blue book on Venezuela has fieen issued by thi foreign office.

Potions who l-ave a coiienlng sro" flight, oa of a UokJIng seamiion In In Ibroat. may ove'coma it ar. dcsec OneM'uuiy Co jgb. DiugCu Dutiea on Wheat Increased. CHRISTIANA, July Storthing has increased the duties on wheat 6( ore, and on wheat flour 2 kroner per 100 kilograms.

When we cunslder that I he Intestine BT about Dvrf U.nes 119 long body, we can realize tlia Teripq; when they become Inflame 1. DeWi t's era Cnra siuyiues ii.llarr>n nt MX completely tha il Oiiiroll Co. The Eternal Fitness. Nancy Pr.incy—Your Woorncr suit is very becoming, dear; why such large clocks in your stockings? Kitty is to harmonize With the machine. You we, I bought ii on very large Chronicle; i We are sLiiloiib do a in til! world no or beite wajto do i' i Ijy One Mlnul I Cough Cure i 1 u'.

pneumonia, con pu'jiplion "'I n'iii?" sei mm t-onblPH tha fol'nw Druu'Co. Oh rutabagas in Wales ana in Jxorm- nmbeiir.iul, England, superphosphates afforded a yield than basic slag, except when tho soil was notably deficient in lime. The time at which nitrate of soda, was applied to rutabagas did not greatly affect the yield. Diseased b'ooil, and dud bowl troubles nre cured by Karl's Clover Root tea. For sale by THE GAtiWIN DRUG CO Harrison Going to the Mountains.

CLEVELAND, July Harrison and Mrs. Harrison, accompanied by. Secretary E. F. Tibbett, passed through thi.s city in their private car en route for the Adirondacks.

It wou'il Ije liitnl lo convlncj a man sufTer'ng from bll'iuus uollc r.mt agony IB due ton microbe with an nome. 1 one dose ot Cholera Ccite will conv' nee him o( its power to a.Toid InelSHt teller. It Onvroll Drug Co. Opposed to Free Silver. DBS MOINESJ July MissisBip- pi and Missouri Valley Hardware Deal ers' associatiou have adopted a resolution declaring themselves unalterably opposed to free silver.

Ell H'll, Lumber "I have bean aullc 1 ts rm- tweaty-flro years flnd in; -s-. Witch ve v. a. to me as piloeuru. so 1 bo.

-ii liov ni'd ic peirorineil a i. cue oE the KHI- and Skin -a- wlion It is used. Carro'i Urns (Ju. XoTpai Epworth l.oaguo Asseinoiy. MASON CITY, July 'S3.

seven days' session of the Epworth league assembly at Clear Lake closed with an illustrated sterroptiooii lecture by Dr. Wilkinson on the Weslovs. he best i-win cure IB Shlloh's cute. A neg'ecteii daiiiv. roin.

Stop It at onue With Sullili'o c.iiu. Fin-ault) by TUB CAUVVIN DBTO CJ. "Out of eymp'illiy for other poor mortals who may be suffering," says Miss Mary Fnuma of Biiranac, Clinton Ronniy, N. October 31, 1895, ''I wish to give you my ex; wfth the KipansTabules. Having suffered severely for a long time from liver complaint, indigestion, constipation, sick headache aud distress in the stomach, aiid finding no relief ia my efforts to regain mv health, I was induced by a frieuil try llipans Tabulea.

Under this euro I improved vei-y much autl in tlnue weeks was cured. 1 feel like uew person anil my lerii'ulo HiiU'eriugs have goue. LiCi; a comfort compared to tbu misery il used to be. i can now gn tu bud mid have a good night's real, urn! can eat heartily without uuy 1 am willing this should In: published for others' good, ttnil a thousand Ihnnks for your treatment. 1 inclose my photo." relief.

BlpsiiB fabuluB uuld druKglsla, or by mull If tho prluo (K) ouiita a box) sent to The Blpans Chemical Uompuuy, No. 10 Spruce Bt JNewYork. Sutuijlu viul, 10 cents. nas, AUTHOR "I think they're what we want. Wo should be rather out of it with plucky lot who insisted on standing by us at a pinoh." "Oh, don't you mako any orror about that," replied Kottlo.

"They'd have boon shaky anywny, but this bogus clockwork dovil of yours fixes them to nicety. It'll be ovory Jack for himself when tho scare comes, and Davy Jones take tho steamer and the others. Oh, they'll run like a warren of rabbits. Tho brutes Kottlo broke off abruptly and stared moodily over the gulf stream. A flying fish got out of tho blue wator and ran across tho ripples like a silver rat.

A school of porpoises snorted leisurely up from astern and passed tho steamer as though she hnd boon at anchor. And the tangles of gulf weed floated past liko reefs of tawny coral. "Do you ever read poetry?" the skipper suddenly asked. Gambol slowed round his head and stared. Tho idea of this vinegar mouthed little savago talking of poetry very nearly made him break into wild laughter.

With an effort he steadied his face and said quietly, "Sometimes." "I'm glad of that. Somehow I hadn't dared ask you before, but now I know, Mr. Gambol, I like you all the better. It gives us something in common we can talk about without being ashamed. We can't very well discuss the other matter which binds us together and respect ourselves at the same time." "Quito right.

You and captain, are shouldered to common piracy by tho force of circumstances, but I always kick myself when I think about it. There's no glamour of romance about our intonded villainy or the way it's being led up to." "Not a bit. Byron wrote about piracy, but Byron wns no seaman, and he didn't know what hazing a crew meant. A thief's a dirty scoundrel all tho world over and always has been, and a sea thief, having tho scum of tho earth to handle, has to mako himself tho crudest bruto on earth if ho wants to succeed. I think it's that which put mo out of liking with Byron and all those poets who've written about movement at sea.

They give wrong idea of men's motives and actions, and when they got talking on shop they're that inaccurate and absurd they mako one tired. No, Mr. Gambol, give mo a land poet, who talks about farms and primroses and tinkling brooks and things ho understands, and with that man I can sit bhrough- two watches on end. Reading him may mako me feel low, but it doesn't do a man harm to bo that way sometimes. You see, Mr.

Cambel, a scuffle or a row with a mutinous crow is just meat and Jrink to mo. Yes, sir, that's the kind of brute I am." They chatted and basked during tho rest of tho afternoon, while tho two mates off watch painted ironwork, and tho crow off fluty grumbled and smoked and slept in stuffy forecastle. Tho cabin tea came. Settle at tho head of the table preserved a aour silence, and Gambol and tho mates among them a strained civility. And then skipper and supernumerary officer re- iurnod to thoir canvas chairs beside the iddlo on the bridge dock.

The gulf stream ripplod over tho stcam- ir's wako astern, and tho small wavelets of a calm licked tho yellow rust stains which patched her sweeping flank. Be- ore them tho narrow sea was tho color of dull blue roofing slate. Tho bright hot lay had faded, tho brilliant cobalt had iltored away from overhead, and a silver, nail paring of moo'n peered from a sky of morphons violet, still lighted in its high- flats by the sun's afterglow. On tho lorizon line was what at first appeared to )o a steamer's smoke, but what tho glass bowed to be tho reek of a fire on tho invisible low lying Florida coast. No blaze could bo seen.

It might be a fisher's iampfli'0 on an outlying key; it might bo i game driving of Seminole Indians bo- 'oml the explored coast fringe, in that unknown tangle of trees and grasses and agoons, tho Everglades themselves. "It's worth living, Mr. Cambel, times ike these, "said Kettle when they had at there in silence till tho warm night itul spread all over and tho white stars woro beginning to show in multitudes hrough its gaps. The other nodded, sucking at his cold ilpo. "None of those poets have over put all his down on paper.

They've got parts, its, but not all. I fancy it is because hey haven't seen tho tiling for themselves, 'vo tried myself, but I haven't made much account of it. a poet?" rapped ut Cambel. "I knock off a bit of verse occasionally," aid the skipper complacently, "when 'm in tho mood, that is. It generally omes times liko this, when I've been tail wisting tho hands and have a spell of a est and a think afterward." "I see.

Tho outcome of vivid contrast," aid Gambol. Ho imagined to himself that hcso boasted poems would be of tho "ho- oic" order to tho vorgo of melodrama. As happened, ho could not conveniently avo made a worse guess. Kottlo tugged rom his pooket a doubled up exorcise book eddoued slightly under tho tnn and anded it across. His companion flnt- oned out tho crease, and in the light rhiuh came from a chartrooin port dipped the manuscript versos for himself, 'o his astonishment they were one and all onnots and ballads which might well avo boon written by a.

sentimental school- irl. They breathed of love and devotion nd premature failing away, and at least irco gushing adjectives quaiMled each ouder noun. There was no word about tho sea on phich their author had spent his life or tho tilings of tho son with which ho had id all his dealings. Hu know about these as few men did, but they seemed common him and unclean. Consequently ho had lelivorod himself to tin ode of that spring vhich ho had never witnessed ashore and ovo songs to hulled ho had never met out- iilo the covers of cheap fiction.

It was ill imagination, and untutored, uniu- piroil imagination at that. As a rooiilt, Ciunhul found tho poems too lljngly funny lor words and was cou- unied with a wild dosirofor laughter, but hat red bearded little savage, thoir maker, glaring anxiously at him from the oppo- ito shadow, ho daro not lot so much us tho ail of a smile dunce from the corner of his month. He had to enjoy and outluri in silence, and with the exercise book thrust out to tho yellow light, then hi road on through tho stanzas diligently. In one, evidently autobiographical, thi writer.spoke of himself as a "timid, frai gazelle," In another he addressed his re marks from the mouthpiece of a "coy anc cooing turtledove" to a "sylphlike niaid on of haughty mien" who at the time narration was the "bewitching, ontranc ing, unparalleled queen" of another gen tleman's hearth. An "Odo to Excellence' which commenced "Hairy Alfred, brother bard," was evidently directed at a oontoja porary, but tho past was oared for in "Cleopatra, a Lament," which a footnote stated could be sung to tho tune "Greenland'sIcy Mountains." Probably as a collection Captain Kettle's was unique in its clumsy, maudlin sentiment and its general unexpectedness.

Meanwhile tHe author was fidgeting nervously. He had not got over that in itial nervousness which publication gives Ho hungered for a il possible. At last he made bold to ask for it "You're a wonderful man, Kettle," returned his companion, quite meaning what he said, "and unless I had seen those verses for myself I'd never have believec you capable of producing them, no matter what had been told mo about your powers." The poet gave a sigh of relief, and was going to pursue tho subject further when something fell upon his ear which turned his thoughts into a very different key. "By James, there's the engine stopped. What's up now, I wonder?" Ho jumped to his feet ami stood with nook craned out, listening.

The ring of heavy boots made itself hoard on tho engine room ladders. Then there was i murmur of voices and a pattering of foot steps from tho forecastle, and presently stream of men began to oscend fin bridge' dock ladders. Among tho growins: babel of voices came references to the gold, "Half a million yellow sovereigns, boys!" and throats there was no mistaking, "Teach tho old man manners or put him over the side." By an evident previous arrangement the men wore massing themselves on tho port side of tho bridge deck. "Mutiny, by James, that's what this means!" commented Captain ICottlo in an undertone. He was cool as ice and on tho moment had decided how to act.

"Now, Mr. Gambol, slip into tho chartroom for your pistol. I have mine in my pocket. It's us two against tho lot of 'em, and we'll finish out top side. Oh, don't you make any error.

It'll bo a red night's work for those dogs. But we'll rub tho four of death into them boforo we've done this those that are loft, that is. Got your pistol, quick, sir, and skin your oyo for handy shooting." CHAPTER IX. MUTINY. Patrick Gambol came out of tho chartroom with all tho armament ho could lay hands wit, throe revolvers.

He gave one to tho captain and put tho others in his own jacket pocket, so that they had a brace apiece. From tho other side of the bridge dock tho clamor of tho mon roso high into and tho steamer's fore truck began to swing past the stars. Her engines had stopped, tho quartermaster had deserted the wheel, and tho gulf stream was taking her as simple flotsam whithor it listed. There was no starboard ladder to tho upper bridge, but Kettle swung himself lightly up by a funnel stay and a stanchion and climbed over tho canvas dodger. Gambol followed as nimbly.

Tho mato of the watch received thorn with a frightened sidelong glance, but no words, and then he vanished into tho darkness. Captain Owen'Kottlo stumped cheerfully across to the port side of tho bridge and looked down. Beneath him, massed and moving, was apparently every man of his crow. Tho electric lamp from insido tho head of tho companion way blazed full upon them, dazzling some of tho group and blinding tho others with dense black shadow. With folded arms ho looked down on them for a full minute with a silent sneering laugh till tho upturned faces which had been quiet in expectation began to grow clamorous again.

Then he waved thorn to upisolessuess and spoke. The man's words were not conciliatory. He addressed his hearers as dogs and wished to know in tho name of tho pit why they had dared to leave thoir duties and thoir konnel and come to sully his bridge deck. Tho harangue was brief and beautifully to tho point. An ordinary seaman stood out into tho middle of tho circle of light and made reply.

''You gall us togs, und you droat us as togs, und ve'ro nod going to schtandt it no longer. Dls grew temants its rechts." "Hollo," said Kettle, "got a blooming Dutchman to speak for you I Well, you must be a hard up crowd. See hero, now, if you do want to talk, have your say and be done with it. English is tho official language on this ship. Understand that and don't waste my time." The Gorman seemed inclined to bluster and hold his ground, but ho had no backers.

"I told you how it would bo if wo put tho Dutchman up," said one. "Why, I oan't hardly understand tho beggar myself," said another. "If you're undecided," suggested Captain Kettle, "you've got a nigger among you. Why not sot him on to talk? If you were mon, I wouldn't say it, but as it is he's as much a man as any of you, and perhaps he'll throw in a sand dance to enliven proceedings." The nogro from somewhere on the outskirts of tho crowd broke into a loud guffaw till some one kicked him on tho shins and sent him away yelping diminuendo into tho farther darkness. An angry growl went up from tho white mon at tho taunt, and one of them, a whiskered quartermaster in a cardigan jacket, stepped out and spat into tho circle of light.

Ho looked round to catch tho encouraging glances of his mates mid then lifted up his face toward tho upper bridge. "Sec hero, Captain Kettle, you'd better not try us too far. This isn't a slavo ship you're commanding. It's an ordinary, common, low down British tramp, and tho law looks after the deckhands and all tho rest of us." EVENTFUL LIFE ENDED General George W. Jones of Dubuque Passes Away.

HE NAMED WISCONSIN AND IOWA. First United States Senator From tho Hnwkeye State, it Veteran of 1813 nnil Floneer of WlaconMu and Michigan. Prominent in Rational Affairs In Early Wealthy at One Time. DTJBDQUB, July George W. Jones, the oldest surviving ex-United States senator, died last night, aged 92.

He represented, as a delegate to congress, that territory now included in Wisconsin, Michigan, Iowa and the west except the Pacific coast. He was the state's first senator and in early days was prominent in national affairs, especially of the northwest. General Jones died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Ii. Duess, at 8 o'clock.

George Wallace Jones has had a remarkable career. Bora at Ylnconnes, April 13, 1804. he was a drummer boy in tho war of 1818, and won distinction in the Black Hawk war. He was tho last delegate in eongreas from the territory of Michigan, the first delegate from Wisconsin and the first United States senator from the state of Iowa, and he selected the names of Wisconsin and Iowa. He has known every president nince Monroe, was in the escort of Lafayette, was a business GENERAL GEORGE W.

JONES, partner of Daniel Webster, was tho colleague in congress of Thomas I-I. Bunton, Charles Sumnor, Stephen A. Donglag, William H. Sewurd and James Buchanan, vras the intimate friend of John C. Cal- hovtn, Martin Van Buren, Henry Clay, John C.

Fremont, Jefforson Davis and Franklin Pierce, was a minister to South America before tb.0 war, was a party to ieven "affairs of honor," caught the dying victim of tho Cilloy-G raves duel in his anus, was imprisoned by Seward on suspicion of being in collusion with Jefferson Davis, was tho Chesterfield of Washington society nearly fifty years ago, was jnco the richest man in Iowa, but in his 1 latter years has hnd little income except a pension of a month, grunted eighty years after his service as a drummer boy. Story of His Early tlfo. General Jones is the son of John Eice Jones, mentioned in history as the friend of Benjamin Franklin. The father was for years chief justice of the supreme court of Missouri. The family lived at 3t.

Genevieve, in 1814, and when Captain Linn was oomnsisaioned to raise a company of soldiers young Jones was the drummer boy who marched about the streets in that service. Ho graduated from Transylvania university ut Lexington, in 1835. Henry Clay was his college guardian. In 1828 he was sergeant of the body guard of Andrew Jackson on his way to Washington to take his seat as United States senator. When Lafayette revisited America tho young student was selected by congress as a member of a re- jeptiou committee and escorted tho French patriot through Kentucky.

After graduation young Jones lived three years at St. Genevieve, studied law and was clerk of the United States district court for Missouri. His health gave oub and his physician ordered him into the woods to recuperate. Accompanied by a dozen slaves and a number of hired men le went to Sinsinawa Mound, then in Michigan Territory, but now in Wisconsin not far from Dubuque. Ho engaged mining, smelting, farming and mer- chandising, living a simple, rough life, which restored his health, and ho boasted i Teodom from sickness for nearly 70 years, When the Black Hawk war broke out 1832 he enlisted as aide-de-camp to General Henry Dodge, father of his jolleague as United States senator rom Iowa.

After the war tho pioneers of Michigan Territory chose him colonel of militia without his knowledge, although a son of Alexander Hamilton was a caudi- late. Later he became a major general. While organizing a company of soldiers at what is now Mineral Point, he! vas chosen a county judge, although ho md not sought the place. Itepresented a Vast Territory. In 1838 he was elected delegate to con- ress from the Territory of Michigan, vhich then embraced all the country 'rom Lake Huron to the Pacific, the argest district ever represented by one man in congress.

One of his first acts was to introduce a bill for the formation of Wisconsin Territory, which comprised most of the country west of Lake Miohi- He took tho name from tho Ouis- consln river, so named by Marquette, and ecured the passage of his bill before the admitting Michigan to statehood was lassed. He was elected delegate from Wisconsin hile still holding that posi- ion from Michigan. He introduced and iooured the passage of the bill creating the Territory of Iowa. President Van Buren appointed him gurvoyor general of the Northwest Terri- ory and he became a resident of Dubuque. President William Henry Harrison re- noved him, but he was reappoiuted by President Polk.

He was choson first United States senator from Iowa in 1848, i position to which he was re-eleoted. In 859 he was appointed minister to the now known us Colombia. While here he wrote a letter to Jefferson Davis, vho had been lieutenant with him in ho Black Hawk war. Jones did not Lnow of the beginning of the war, and the erms of his letter to his old friend put ilm unilor suspicion when it fell into the lands of Secretary Soward. General Jones vas recalled and imprisoned in Fort La- ayette for 64 days.

President Lincoln bo- ame convinced of his innocence and ordered his release. A year or two later General Jones retired from public life. Children Cry for pitcher's for Infants and Children. You Know 1 Bateman's Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, many Bo-caUed Soothing Syrups, anil most remedies for children ore composed of opium or morphine Po Yon Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons Po You Know that in most countries druggists are not permitted to sell narcotics Without labeling them poisons Po You Know that you should not permit any medicine to be given your child Unless you or your physician know of what it is composed Po Yon Know that Castorla is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list at Its ingredients is published with every bottle Po Yon Know that Castoria is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel Pitcher.

Hat it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now sold than of all other remedies tor children combined Po Yon Knag- that the Patent Office Department of the United States, anel of other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use the word Castoria and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense Po Yon Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protection because Castoria hod been proven to be absolutely harmless? Po Yon Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 35 cents, or one cent a dose Po You Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children maybe kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest Well, these things are worth knowing. They are fajtB. The fnc-sJmUe signature of Cry for Pitcher's Castorla, 1 THE GREAT 3Oth hay. itrmhif above In 3O It aiirt quickly.

Chnvs whun ail others fail will thoir lost rminiioml. and oUI I'M) will roeovor their youthCul viuor by HKiru; tliOVl YO. It nuielily uud iiiiroly restore Ncrvous- Vitality. Impolicy, Falling M'-mory, AVawtinir Diseases. p.r.C.

L-ilVfts ot Kolf-nbusu or and intUpurutiou liicli imfitii ont! for IjiiKiiirjtis or It mt mrcK by FfarMnir at tlm wat of bnf toiiic and hnikJcr, ug back the pink glow to cheeks a'ld re- tor.ii tlui firo of youtli. It wards inrt Conaiiniptir.n. Insist ou Ki-JVIVO, nc olhcr. It can lie carried in vest vockot. By mail per or six for S5.OO, written jrunmntc-o to or rufufK! -he Circular Addrusa LIEDICIfiE 271 Watosli CflICAC-0, For Sale at Carroll, Iowa, by .) W.

HATTOX, Not one part but every part of HIRES Rootbeer tends toward making it the perfect temperance and healthgiving drink. Umloonly by The Charles E. Hires Philadelphia. A 25o. package mnkcs 6 gallons.

Sold everywhere. PARKER'S GINGER TONIC flmtoi tuns Troubles, Debility, distressing stomach in4 fenmleUla, iinii ia lor making when all atlier treatment ftila. nmtlur and invalid should have it. PARKER'S HAIR Cleanses aiid beautifies tha hair. Promotes luxuriant growth.

Never Pails to Bestore Gray Hair to its Youthful Color a Gurus scalp diseases hair ful fiOc.audgl.OO at Druggiata The only sure Cure for walking easy. ISc. ".4 thousand only one Shoe bicycle Por Comfort Fit and Wear. Pratt Fasteners hold laces. TRADB.JIAIII iUrojwd oa heel, havo Booklet Free liini evilly ClcuuInO) BAFE, always rollulilo.

LADIES aelr Drugclat for CJitchesttf's Snqttth Dia-A In nnd uietiilllox jhoxea, no.i1cil wlili bluo rllibon. Tuko 'no other. Ile.fitsoitangeToua aubstitits- Local UruEclstn, fo. It's the Lame Leg that sets the paue. A chain is no stronger than its weakest liuk.

For weak spots ami places that seem big because they hurt, try Johnson's Belladonna Plasters. In Pat's phrase, they "suck out" the soreness ami pain. Look for the Eed Cross. No others bear that sign. It means excellence plug.

JOHNSON JOHNSON, Manufacturing Chemists, New York. BLOOD POISOM Chicago, 111., for pro tnl, Wa lOO-pa Yours lor The Salt BiveL- Valley of Arizona and the various health resorts in New Mexico are unrivalled for the euro of chronic lung and throat diseases. Pure, dry air; an equable temperature; the right altitude; constant sunshine. Descriptive pamphlets, Issued by pas- 'f-' sender department ot Santa Fe route, contain euoh complete Information rel- htlve to these regions as invalids need. The items of altitude, temperature, humidity, hot springs, sanitariums, cost of living, medical attendance, social advantages, are concisely treated.

Physicians are respectfully asked to place their literature In the hands oC patients who seek a change of climate. Address, S. M. A. P.

Des Homes, la. 8-1 T. F. BY. -THEOLD-RELIABLE N.

BEITER, Prop'r. Fresh and Salt Meats, the Best to be Bought, Ham, eicte Meata. FISH. GAME ANB POULTRY Highest Market Price Paid for Hogs. NIO BWITBB, Piftn Street, Oarroll, Iowa- The ART AMATEUR.

Seat azxcl tFractlceuL (The only Art Periodical unaided A at the World's Fair.) Invaluable for all who wieh to make their living by art or to make thnlr homen beautiful. For 1Of to anyone mention i. Ui 4.UI, tlonluB this publication a apeol men copy, with super!) color plates, (for copying or framing) and 8 supplementary pages of designs (regular price thirty-five cents). Or we w111 Bond alfl Or Montague Marks, 23 Union Square, N. It.

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About The Carroll Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
12,538
Years Available:
1890-1899