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Fort Wayne Weekly Gazette from Fort Wayne, Indiana • Page 5

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Fort Wayne, Indiana
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Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THB FORT WAYNE WEEKLY GAZETTE THUESDAY MAY 141896. No wonder poor DINNIES so tired Carrying all day piece of tobacco ever Tom cents and piece ne yotf jbff trades for 16 cents LI RHEUMATISM Results from a Bad Liver and can be Cured by Using Dr. J. H. McLEAN'S LIVER AND KIDNEY BALM A Certain'Remedy for Diseases of the Liver, Kidneys and Urinary Organs AT DRUGGISTS.

PRICE, $1.00 PER BOTTLE THE DR. J. H. MoLEAN MEDICINE ST. Louis, Mo.

ABSOLUTELY PURE II Quiets Pain, Checks Bleeding, Reduces Inflammation, Is the Bicycler's Necessity, Piles, Sores, T) Rheumatism, Burns. Colds, vJ XvlLO Sore Throat, Hoarseness, Catarrh, Chilblains, Inflamed Eyes, TVounds, Bruises, Sprains, Headache, Toothache. Use PONDS EXTRACT after Shaving-No Irritation Use PONDS EXTRACT after Exercising--No Lameness POND'S EXTRACT OINTMENT is simply a marvel. How instantly it cures Piles. What relief from excruciating pain.

50 cts. jSuy GENUINE Pond's Extract for genuine cures. Suv imitations forimitation cures, POND'S EXTRACT 76 FIFTH AVENUE. NEW MASSACPES. on the Islands of Manning's Straits Indulge In Butchery.

SAN FRANCISCO, May Monawaia brings news of a "wholesale massacre of traders and missionaries by the natives of the islands of Manning straits and Solomons. The Malayta savages butchered a whole boat's crew of men from the brig, Rio Loge, at Hubiana, two French and American traders being slaughtered. The mission on the island has been attacked and the missionaries escaped with difficulty, back to Sydney by the first ship. The murders on the islands Manning Straits were followed by acts of cannibalism. A small trading schooner owned by a French trader was attacked the owner, an American, assistant and eight peaceful natives were lured ashore, bealen to death and the trading station sacked.

Two English missionaries are missing and it is supposed they also are murdered. The mission on Tounan Island has been abandoned as a result of this atrocities of the natives. A Disastrous Failure. Financial which disturb the of the business world arc productive far less mischief than the failure of the kidneys to perform the office assigned to them by nature. When these organs become inactive the acquires Impurities which bring on diabetes, Urighfs dlscaso.gravel, catarrh the bladder and other maladies.

To impart to the kidneys and bladder a healthful impetus, yety different from the excitement produced by an unmcdicatcd alcoholic stimulant, use Hostel- tor's Stomach Bitters, the finest diuretic in existence. This excellent remedy for Inactivity of the kidnes is also of the greatest service in malaria, dyspeptic, bilious and rheumatic troubles, and has received the unqualified sanction cm incnt phj sicians. The nervoui. the elderly and infirm convalescents derive unspeakable benefit from its use. Use It with persistence and at fixed Intervals, and anticipate with confidence the happiest results.

FIRE AT WALTON. A. HOLMES'NECKBEOKEN PROTESTS HIS I THE SCAFFOLD. ON Insists Ho Never Intentionally Killed Anybody--Acknowledges Cnnslnc Two Deaths by Malpractice Hanging Quickly Concluded, No Hitch Occurrlnjf. Philadelphia, May H.

Holmes, convicted on circumstantial evidence of the murder of Benjamin F. Pitzel, was hanged here Thursday morning. The execution took place in the Moyamenslng county jail. The drop fell at o'clock. It was not until a half hour later that he was pronounced dead.

His neck was broken by the fall. The marvelous nerve oi the man never deserted him to the end. Even on the scaffold he was probably the coolest person in the solemn assemblage. In a few well-chosen words he proclaimed his innocence of any murder, including that for which he was convicted and hanged. He declared that tho only wrong doing in the taking of human life for which he could be held responsible consisted in the death of two women who had died as a result of criminal operations at his hands.

He did not name these victims. Holmes spent the greater part of his last night on earth writing letters. At midnight he went to bed and slept soundly until o'clock. It took two calls to awaken him. Promptly arising he received a visit from hi? The Masonic, Maccabees, G.

and Other Lodges Lose Records. LOGANSPOKT, May Bumgarner's brick block, in the village of Walton, burned last night, entailing a loss of $15,000, with no insurance. Ihe records and furniture of the Maccabees, Masons, G. A. W.

K. and the Eastern Star lodges were destroyed, in addition to the contents of a saloon and bakery. It was only through the efforts of the citizens that the fire was kept from spreading. Snmmer Homes. In the lake regions of Wisconsin, Northern Michigan, Minnesota, Iowa and Dakota, there are hundreds of charming localities pre-eminently fitted for summer homes.

Nearly all are located on or near lakes which have not been fished out. These resorts are easily reached by railway and range in variety from the "full dress for dinner" to the llannel-shirt, costume for every meal. Among the list are names familiar to many of our readers as the perfection of Northern summer resorts. Nearly all of the Wisconsin points of interest are within a short distance from Chicago or Milwaukee, and none of them are so far away from the "busy marts of civilization" that they cannot be reached in a few hours of travel, by frequent trains, over the finest road in the northwest--the Chicago, Milwaujsee St. Paul railway.

A dcscriptkn of tho principal resorts, with lits- cf sum- mcr nctc.8 and boarding houses, and latcs for beard, wii. sent free on application to ROBT. C. JONES, Iraveiing Passenger Agent, 40 Carew Building, Cincinnati, Ohio. Subscribe for the GAZKTTI.

H. H. HOLMES. (Picture taken in 1893.) spiritual advisers, Fathers Daly and Macpeak, of the Church of the Annunciation. They administered the last sacrament and did not leave him until nearly 9 o'clock.

During their absence he ate a breakfast of eggs, dry toast and coffee. At 10:02 o'clock the sheriff called together the official jury, and after each man had answered his name and subscribed to the certificate the solemn march to the gallows was begun. As the gathering stood in intense silenca before the scaffold a murmuring sound came from behind the partition erected Immediately back of It. It was the dolorous chant of the two priests accompanying the doomed man to the scaffold. They were uttering the psalm Misere.

At 10:06 they mounted the fatal scaffold. A moment of prayer edapsed and then Holmes stepped to the front of the scaffold, and, reeling his hands on the rail before him. made hia statement of innocence. It was received to absolute silence. Two minutes later he had finished his valedictory.

Then at a silent signal from the priests he bent to his knees, his eyrc fixed on the crucifix clasped in ihis thin hands. Until 10:12 the prayer continued. Immediately afterward he arose, shook hands with the priests and his lawyers and in a firm voice bade them good-by. Without an Instant delay his hands were bound behind him and the black cap adjusted. Sheriff Clement placed the noose about his neck and after an instant of terrible stillness the crack of the bolt rang out like a pistol shot and the man had fallen to his doom.

Consciousness left him instantly, said the doctors, although hia heart continue a feeble beat for fifteen or twenty minutes. After an examination had been made by several physicians Holmes was pronounced dead and the swinging corpse was cut down. Holmes became acquainted with Benjamin P. Pletzel in Chicago about 1890. Pletzel wae a married man, with six children, poor, and afflicted with the drink habit, and not at all averse to engaging In dishonest work if he were paid for the risk.

He was just such an instrument as Holmes needed, pliant, fairly capable, and sufficiently unscrupulous to carry out shady transactions plotted by the master mind. They worked together industriously in many criminal schemes. In" 1892" Holmes was doing quite a business in the forgery line. Pietzel was at once mixed up in it, and was arrested in Terre Haute, in January, 1893, for passing some of the forged paper. Holmes was not quite done with Pietzel, so instead of letting him languish in jail he went to Indiana and furnished straw bail for his colleague, who thereupon ran away.

On a trip east it was arranged Pieteel should take tho name of B. F. Perry, and a house and store was rented at 1316 Callowhill street, Philadelphia, In which the latter was to conduct a patent rights business. This of course was to be another insurance scheme, tho amount involved being $10,000. There is now no doubt that Pietzel was really killed by Holmes in the scheme, and an ex-convict named Hedgepeth was the means of exposing the murder.

The prisoner said that Holmes, or Howard, as he knew him, declared that Pietzel's wife was privy to the whole conspiracy, and Howe told him after the discovery of the body of B. F. Perry that Howard would not let Mrs. Pietzel go to Philadelphia to identify the supposed body of her husband, having the little girl go instead, and that Howe was of the opinion that Holmes deceived Pietzel; that Pietzel in following out his instructions in regard to the alleged explosion was actually killed and that the body found was really that of Pietzel. Hedgepeth, in his communication to the chief of police, said that he had not received the $500 Holmes or Howard promised him for his share in the preliminary arrangements.

Holmes was closely shadowed until Nov. 17, 1894, when operatives of a detective agency arrested him, not for the crime for which he was condemned to death, but for horse stealing in Texas. Holmes realized that at last he was in a dangerous situation, but he did not lose his nerve of cunning. One of the Fidelity officials went to Boston to interrogate him on the Pietzel swindle, and he saw a chance to avoid going to Texas. He knew that they have a summary of dealing with horse thieves in the Lone Star state, and he quickly resolved that his carcass would be safer in Philadelphia, even though he confessed to a charge of conspiracy to defraud the insurance company.

He, therefore, told his captors he was wanted in Philadelphia, and not in Texas. The suspicion Holmes had billed Piet- zel's children grew into a belief, and a systematic search was begun to obtain proof of their murder. This mission was entrusted to Detective Frank Geyer, of Philadelphia, who displayed great tact and ability in its prosecution. He went over the entire route taken by the prisoner from the date of the murder of Pietzel in Philadelphia to the disappearance in Toronto. The search was a difficult and puzzling one.

It took the patient officer to St Louis, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Detroit, Toronto, Chicago, Prescott, Ogdensburg, and occupied several weeks. Traces of Holmes and the children were found at several of these places. He was traveling with his Miss Yoke, who thought his movements were connected with the sate of his patent copier. At Indianapolis, Detroit and Toronto he and his the children and Mrs. Pietzel and Dessa and the baby were within a block or two of each other, and neither party, outside of the arch-fiend himself, knew of the proximity of the other.

The bodies of Alice and Nellie Pletzel were finally found in Toronto, burled In the cellar of a house Holmes had rented there. Holmes' trial for the murder of Benjamin F. Pietzel, which began Oct 28, last year, was one of the biggest sensations which Philadelphia erer experienced. Ample time had been allowed the prisoner to prepare for trial, but when he entered court that day his counsel made a hard fight for postponement They declared that delay was necessary to collect evidence for the defense and for shaping the prisoner's financial affairs so that the expense of procuring necessary evidence might be met. They asked for two months' time.

It was not granted. And so the trial went on, the strange criminal examining jurorswiththeskill and coolness of a lawyer. When lie was deserted and his every plea for time was refused there was a slight change of feeling in his favor. It showed itself in trifles, as whea he got his derby hat under his chair and smashed it, more than one spectator felt sorry that he should lose a hat as well as his lawyers. Among the other murders said to get her property in Fort Worth, worth some $30,000.

Minnie Williams --Holmes' third wife and sister of Nannie Williams. Ske disappeared while living in Chicago, and has never been seen since, according to the detectives. They say ehe was murdered by Holmes. Since his condemnation Holmes made repeated confessions, and though found to be full of lies, yet the original opinion that he was a cold-blooded villain who practiced muider for gain was deepened by every statement he uttered. Just how many murders Holmes has committed one has been able to telL Holmes' Confession.

New York, May George R. Chamberlain of Chicago, who claims to have first exposed the late H. H. Holmes and driven him from that city, is at the Astor house. He says Holmes' dying confession will be received by Chief Badenoch, of the Chicago police, next week.

In this he is supposed to dispose of $55,000 he made in his swindling operations. Mr. Chamberlain talked with Holmes, and the latter asserted that the "confessions" he 'sold for large sums to several newspapers were "faked" and were simply to make money to conduct his defense. NBAK1NG THE END. Lutheran Synod Will Close its NEAJRING AN END.

Scott Jackson case time at intervals The Case of Scott Jackson Soon Go to the Jury. NEWPORT, May 7 Dullness characterized the trial proceedings in the to-day. Much was spent in whispered conversation between the court and counsel for both sides. The attendance was also smaller. Five witnesses in the forenoon and two in the afternoon were used to strengthen the proof that George t.

Jackson identified Walling in the Hamilton county jail and the two were used to corroborate the story of his midnight drive with the murderers and their victim. All other evidence tended to break down the character of Scott Jackson. Three negro prostitutes were brought to court from Cincinnati, one of whom identified Jackson and before the court could forbid she blurted out that Jackson had been acquainted with her the 1st of December. Will Wood was brought out by the commonwealth to rebut some of Scott Jackson's testimony and this gave the defense the opportunity to get in the affidavits of Ed Hunt "and Ohmer Newhonse, of Gnjencastle, as to Wood's boast of his illicit intimacy with Pearl Bryan. By a corresponding false step, the 'defense opened the door for the commonwealth to restore the evidence by Chief Dietsch and Mayor Caldwell of the damaging admissions of Scott Jackson which were ruled out early in the trial.

It looks now as if the testimony in the case would close to-morrow. It can hardly go to the jury before Monday night. NEWPORT May The end of the Scott Jackson trial is now near at hand. The commonwealth announced this morning that it had no more witnesses to offer. Col.

Crawford called Capt. Bassler, of the United States weather bureau to show the state of the weather on the night of January 81. This closed the testimony in the case. During the trial the prosecution called in chief seventy-two witnesses; the defense, eighty-two, including depositions. The prosecution in rebuttal called forty and the defense followed with one, "making a total of 196 witnesses.

The court adjourned until 2 o'clock this after- Session To-day. The Lutheran synod met Friday morning at the usual hour. The most important business transacted was the creation of a sixth professorship for the theological seminary at St. Louis. The allowance of $2,500 for a needy congregation at Denver, was granted.

The request of the Red Wing seminary for the loan of $7,000 was refused. The committee on publication matters reported and its recommendations were approved and agreed to by the synod. On account of "the obsequies of Rev. Sauer, the synod held no session in the afternoon, and as his death has delayed business somewhat, the pastoral services which had been arranged for last evening, and hold a business session of the synod in its place. The synod will hold the last day of its business proceedings to-dav, and the members will then leave for their homes.

PLANTED DEEP Are the Remains oi Holmes, the Brutal Murderer. PHILADELPHIA, May 8--The body of H. H. Holmes was this afternoon taken from the vault in Holy Cross cemetery where it had been" under guard since the execution on ves- terday and lowered into a grave'ten feet deep. The only persons resent were Attorney Samuel rotan.

Father McPake, of the church of the annunciation; the undertaker, and the grave diggers. The dead murderer was accorded a Christian burial but the services were brief. At the conclusion a layer of cement two feet thick was piled upon the coffin and the tomb will be a solid wall of rock. These precautions are the result ot Holmes's last wishes. noon.

The arguments begin to-mor- ITftoosanfls oi Women! SUFFER UNTOLD MISERIES. BRADFIELD'S REGULATOR, ACTS AS A SPECIFIC Bj Arousing to HealthjAofionallhefOrgans.j It causes health to bloom, and joy to reign throughout the frame. It Never Fails to "itywlfehasbeen nnder treatment of lead-' Ing physicians three years, without benefit. After using three bottles of BRADFIELD'S FEMALE REGULATOR Bhe can do herown cooking, milking ana washing." N.S. BRYAN, Henderson, Ala.

BBADFIELD EE6ULATOE AtlnnU, (is. Sold by druggists at R.OO perbottle. "THE TRIUMPH OF LOVE IS HAPPY, FRUITFUL MARRIAGE." Every Man Who Wonld Know the Grand Truths, tho Plain Facts, tho New DiicovericH of Medical Science 08 Applied to Married Lite, Who Would Atono for Putt Errors and Avoid Fnturo 1'ilfulln, Should Secure the Wonderful Little Book Called "Complete lUanhood, and How to Attain It." "Hero at lost is information from a high, medical source that must work wonders with, this generation of men." The book fully describes a method by which, to attain full vigor and manly power. A method by which to end all unnatural grains on tuo system. To cure nervonsness, lack of self-control, de- rpondency.iic.

Toexchsnca a aatl -worn nature for one of briRlrtnf" buoyancy and power. To cure forever effects of and tono to every portion and orcan of the body, Age no barrier. Faitaro impossible. Two thousand references. The book is purely medical and scientific.

useless to cariosity Beckers, invaluable to men only who need It. A despairing man, who had applied to us "Well, I teE TOD. that first day is one I'll never forget. 1 just wUhJpy. wanted Yd" hnfr everybody-and tell them my oldself bad died yesterday, andm was born to-day.

Why didn't yo r.v- when I first wrote that 1 would findittlus yon tell me way?" -a And anotherthus: "If you dumped a cart load of gold at my- feet it would not bring such, gladness into my COMPANY! this paper, and. the company promises to send. tho book, in- seared envelope, without any marksTand entirely free, until itis well intto- iuced. Tho Pennsylvania Station. Trains Eon by Central Time AS 1'CLLOWS FROM FT.

WAVBOTO OAST BOTJHD. 6 4 0 a 52 tram Chioipo 45 25 limited 85 from Chiasro LEAVE WKBt BOUTOJ 35 lu a limited t710 a 40 a 3U 40 Wabash R. R. Sffective ISaich 22,1896. Six Per Cent.

Money. I have any amount of money which I can loan, at six per cent, interest on first on farm or city property, for years, with tha privilege of paying it sooner if desired; also, can loan any amount from up, on good personal security; also buy and eel! notes; also, bay sell or trade property of all descriptions. For further information write or cali 1 on PETER P. PO2BSON, Room No. 12 Banic Block.

WO. GOING EAST. DEPABT 42. N. Y.

fe Boston Limited, daily 4:48 14. Fast Mas! and Express, ex. Sunday 7:17 p. 46 Kan. City and Toledo a.

m. 70. Local freight. Except Sunday-- 6:00 a. m.

GOIMS WEST. 46. St. Express, ex. 6.60 a.

41. Kan. City Cannon. Ball, daily 11:05 a. m.

47. Past limited Mail, daily 6:30 p. m. 43. St.

Lenis 8:20 p. m. SABT ABBTTIg DB7ABS II. Y.Boston Ex No.2 am am 'Jlevelad Mall No. 4 Eatteta EiptoseNo.

6 LooilFreight i WIST ABBITBS DBP1X Chicago Express No. 1 a am Chicago Mail No. 3 pm a Western Exptisa Ho. 03 Local Freight tDailY eioept Saaday. THE BEST SPRING MEDICIN Is SIAVMONS LIVER REGULATOR-don't forget to take it.

The Liver gets sluggish during the Winter, just like all nature, and the system becomes choked up by the accumulated waste, which brings on Malaria, Fever and Ague and Rheumatism. You want to wake up your Liver now, but be sure you take SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR to do it. It also regulates the Liver--keeps it properly at work, when your system will be free from poison and the whole body invigorated. You get THE BEST BLOOD when your system Is in Al condition, and that will only be when the Liver is kept active. Try a Liver Remedy once and note the difference.

But take only SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR-it is SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR which makes the difference. Take it in powder or in liquid already prepared, or make a tea of the powder; buttakeSlMMONS LIVER REGULATOR. You'll find the RED on every package. Look for it. 9.

B. Zeilin Fbitodelpbia, Pfc have been committed by H. H. Holmes are tte following: Benjamin F. Pitzel, Holmes' confederate, and for whose murder Holmes was hanged today.

Alice and Nellie Pitzel, children of Benjamin F. Pitzel. They were killed, tne detectives say, in a house in Toronto and buried in a cellar. Fear that the children would betray him caused Holmes to murder them. Howard Pitzel, brother of the children named above.

The detectives aay he was killed either in Detroit or Indianapolis and the body made away with. George W. Thomas; he was killed for the insurance money on his life at a point on the Tombigbee river below Columbus, Miss. Proof was said to be In possession of the police, but Holmes escaped. Emily C.

Cigraml--She was Holmes' typewriter, and was emplojcd in the place of his sister-in-law. Nannie Williams, at the "castle." Tt is alleged Holmes killed her and cremated the body. Robert E. Phelps--He gained Holmes' enmity because he married Miss Cigrand, so the detectives said, and was butchered like the others. Evidence of the crime was not discovered until after Holmes had been convicted of the Pitzel murder.

Mrs. Julia L. Connor--She worked In the castle as Holmes' bookkeeper. Holmes insured her life, and then It is said killed her. Pearl Connor--The 8-year old daughter of Mrs.

Julia Connor. She was killed, the detectives say, because Holmes feared she would inform on him to the police. Emily Van Tassel --Another "castle" employe. Holmes, It la alleged, betrayed her, then killed her, cremating the body. Nannie Williams--Sister of Holmes' third bigamous wife, and lived in his family while in Chicago.

She was jealous of her sister, Mrs. Holmes, so Holmes said, and made trouMe. He wag charged with having killed her so as to row and will alternate, the commonwealth closing the case. John Seward, the detective who figured unpleasantly in the case.was assaulted in the streets late last night with eggs, thrown by a lot of young men and boys. Tuesday, May 19, has been set for the beginning of the trial of Alonzo M.

Walling for the murder of Pearl Bryan. Capt. John Seward, who is under bond "for attempting to suborn testimony cannot be found in Newport. JNEWPOKT, May day the attorneys in the Scott Jackson trial were engaged in presenting instructions which they desired the judge to present to the jury. The usuaJ conferences and discussions crowded out the argument which was to have begun this afternoon.

Meantime Judge Helm made up his mind as So what instructions he will give the jury next Monday morning. Col. Cra'wford, for the defense, waives the right to make alternate arguments. The probable order of arguments will be Lockhart, first, and Hays, secood, for the prosecution, for'the defense. Col.

Crawford, and' Nelson closing for the prosecution. Crawford will be given as much time as that of the three speeches Elegant, Broad, Soft, Easy Couches For The Million of the prosecution. Dropped These Coueies are aseosible for they are far more comfortable than the old style lounge and are a much handsomer piece of furoituze. We are making a run apon thaai at greatly reduced figures, in all kinds of coverings. We can show you an assortment.

We are creating a on Bedroom Suits. Come and see- the Full.size, Bevel Plate Solid Oak Bedroom Suit which we will sell you at Dead From Heart Disease. POKTLA.SD, May Drake, a prominent resident of this city, dropped dead of heart disease to-day. He was sitting in a chair when the end came. Mr.

Drake had long been in failing health. Kheuniatism Kuus Riot When there is lactic acid in the blood. Liniments and lotions will be of no permanent benefit. A cure can be accomplished only by neutralizing this acid and for this purpose Hood's Sarsaparilla is the best medicine because Hood's Sarsaparilla is the only true blood purifier prominently in the public eye. Hood's Pills act easily, yet promptly and effective, on the liver and bowels.

25c. RAND RAPIDS INDIANA TimoTuble for Foil Wvxe. March 15, 182C. Grand KapSis aad North tl II .1 .1 II II II II From Richmond and IB efleot Leaves. 2 2 8 a 8 15 a 65 --12 30am 15 a From Grand 15 pn From Grand Kapids 12 20a All other trains daily except Sunday.

INDLAY, FORT WAYNE By. In cgec-t January 15,1896. WESTERN SIS 1105 1235 230 830 338. 407 443, 801 828 901 STATIONS. Ar.

55 Fort Wayne. 1 I 3 81 4. St. 1040 93S 906 830 P.M. 700 551 519 443 715 110 Ar Toledo LvJ 8451 257 I 6 S3.) 450 15S 1235 1100 p.x.

I P.a. I A.M.)Ar. I 40 I P.M. A.K. Trains arrive and depart from Wabash station Fort Wnyne.

All trains-daily eioopt Sunday. AKE SHORE MICHIGAN SODTHERM Wayno Branch. SOUTHWARD, ABBI71 6 5 No. 458, Cin Eipreas A. Mall 10 26 km So.

410, Detroit Ind'pls Si 3 5 5 NOHTHWABD DBPABI No. 483, Way Freight 8 4 0 No. 457, Lansing El 11 45 a No. 459, Ind'pli Detroit Ki .4 The Dresser is worth ail we ask for the entire suit. Big arrival of Polished Rockers, in all new finishes and coverings.

Also a lot of those Cano and Loath, er Seat Kockers, on which we have had such a big run. $50 will go as far in purchasing Furniture and Carpots of us as $75 will elsewhere. A. L. Wooster, a prominent citizen of Osseo, after suffering excruciatingly from piles for twenty years, was cured in a short time by using DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve, an absolute cure for all skin diseases.

More of this preparation is used than all others combined. Pollens. Gross FOSTER Furniture and Carpet (V To Cripple Creek VIA COLORADO SPRINGS. The Chicago, Rock Islands Pacific Railway ls HOURS QUICKER TO CRIPPLE CREEK THAN ANY OTHER LINE. Full particulars by addressing John Sebastian, CK P.

Chicago. 4 ChldiMttrt Emllili Diamond ENMYROYAL, PILLS Original JWuA Dan Kcd rt OM Mac ribbon. for iarlknil.fl, ta'lnnMl .,1. io.000T.".timt!»U.

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About Fort Wayne Weekly Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
824
Years Available:
1895-1903