Democratic Press, Volume 2, Number 57, Decatur, Adams County, 14 November 1895 — Page 3

■■ST IN TH I! WORLD. Vwr &avh\j\\\\q NvOJiFiL H '^' s > x&Vofr \s *> i a\\x wtw a\\tV THI' RISING SUM V\ STOVE POI KM tn /f WK*-> 11 caket for general 1 ft, AJ bUcklug of a BIDVf. r THI- still PASTH Vj, 'les J UAOCH *%af aftCl •Hlllltt «l>.uc, ia tnr *-° fr »t>l>lir'l Ind pol. • l.hrd with a cloth. Moron Bro- ■ I'rofm., Canton. Mat.,., U.S. A. Fame Amon*: New Zealand Reboot, boy a. A curious test was tried in Lyttleton, New Zealand, the other day by n lehoolmastt •. who set out before 2ut boys the nano sos six famous men Livingston, Stonewall Jackson, GladI tone, Howard, the philanthropist, Bearle, the champion s.-ullor, and John L. Sullivan, the pugilist. The boys were asked to vote ns to which was the r.jatest man < t the lot, and out of th« 200 votes Sullivan got nearly 140, most »f the INdance being east for Searle. Byway of accounting for Sullivan’s large majority the schoolmaster explains that seme of the boys were under the impression that Sullivan, the New Zealand boat-puller, was meant. —Westminster Gazette The poorest man is not the one who has the least, but the one who wants the most. PROOF ISJPOSITIVE THAT LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND b Dally Curing Backache, Dizziness, Falntae. Irregularity, and all Fe* male Complaints. I pw>iii to ors uhr siAsm.} Intelllg- ■ ' women no I oncer doubt ths value of Lydia E. Pltkham'i Vegetable Compound It speedily relieves irregularity, suppressed or painful menstrua- ” ■' '' - • ***** w\n riLo/ r.'O I Sons, weakm-ss at the stomach, indfeew Hon, Hosting, Isucorrhoea, womb trouble, flooding, nervous prostration, headache, general debility, etc. Symptoms of Womb Troubles are dizziness, faintness, extreme lassitude, “don't rare,’’ and “want to be left alone ” feelings, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, flatu iency, melancholy, or the “blues,” and backache. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will correct all this trouble as sure as the sun shines. That Bearing-Down Feeling, causing pain, weight, and backache, is iMtMtly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it sets in perfect harmony with the laws that govern the female system, is as harmless as water. It is wonderful for Kidney Complaint* in either sex. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Liver Pills work in unison with the Compound, and are a sure cure for constipation and siekheadache. Mrs. Pinkham's Sanative Wash is frequently found of great value for local application. Correspondence is freely solicited by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn. Mass., ami the strictest confidence assured. All druggists sell the Pinkham remedies. The Vegetable Compound in three forms, — Liquid, Pills, and Lozenges. v - J’Aaa JI 1 KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and lends to personal enjoyment when rightly use'- 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, B?yrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satiMfaction 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 substance. Byrup of Firs is for sale by all gistain Abe and $1 bottka, 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. Pg— Ml I HI JOHN W. MOItRIS IM O B EM Washington. D. C Successfully Prosecutes Claim! late Principal Examiner U. 6. Pension Bureau 9 >re in last war. IS aiUmllcaUng claim*. aUj «un»

[ DENVER Vl* IN ARMS. ! FIFTY GUARDS GARRISON THE COURT HOUSE. Excitement Over Alleged Tunipcrluu with llullote - Women Talk of Lynchinn March in «» body of 150 and Threaten the County Clerk. Fearful of Moh Law. Taxpayers of Arapahoe County (Colorado), of which Denver is the seat, have arisen in revolt against the perpetuation ' of chronic officeholders. Thursday night the court house wns in a state of siege and fifty armed guards patrolled the Inner corridors, while outside sentries baited everyone who attempted to enter the i grounds. Inside the court houso were I the ballot boxes nnd outside the indignant voters, angry nt th* manner in which the returns had been “manipulated," and the alleged counting out of one ' or more of the candidates on the taxpay--1 era’ ticket. ' Wednesday night County Clerk Lebert, who was a candidate for re-cfection. conI ceded the election of George J. Kindel, : one of the taxpayers’ candidates. He, however, refused to allow any representnl five of the taxpayers to remain within the walla of the court house where the ballot 6--i ' &rl A THE DENVER COURT HOUSE. boxes wore stored, and Thursday morning it was announced that Kindel was defeated and that Lebert had been elected by a majority of 100. The conclusion was instantly r< ached the ballots had been tampered with. The publie had anticipated some such crooked work, and the report spread rapidly throughout the city every one of the candidates on the taxpayers' ticket hns been counted out. Crowds soon gathered in the vicinity of the court bouse and George J. Kindel, the candidate whose election was the chief object of attack, came running to the court house with a shotgun. He ran all the way from his store in the lower part of the city and stopped only long enough to hear the approving remarks of several merchants. His appearance created excitement at the county building. He inquired for Lebert, then left. No sooner had he gone than a force of deputies cleared the halls. Kindel during the afternoon spoke before the Ladies' Civic Federation, and when he concluded they marched to the court house in a body to the number of 130, and left the impression that trouble would occur unless a change of base was made. The crowd in the court house got nervous. Rumors of vigilantes and visions of ropes appeared, and word was sent out that watchers would be permitted to sit beside the ballot boxes Thursday. The answer was to the effect that it was for the alleged doctoring of the returns Wednesday that the people were angry. A host of deputies was turned into the corridors and the remaining citizens driven out of doors without regard to nge or sex. Then the doors were barricaded and the regular clerks were allowed to go home from a side door, with a warning not to return during the evening save at their own risk. LONG DROUGHT BROKEN. A Genera! Rain Comes to the Relief of the Farmers. The drought was broken in the Northwest and a generous fall of rain has come at the* Inst minute to save the crops. The farmers have been in despair for weeks at the continued absence of moisture, with fields drying op, wells and cisterns empty, and the prospect staring them in I the face of a destruction of crops. In many places there was a more immediate ganger from prairie fires. All these fears have been set al rest by the opportune rain. Prairie fires have been quenched, fartn binds drenched, and wells and cisterns filled, giving rise in some sections to meetings of thnnksgiyipg. aw.’T ' In some sections of Illinois it is the first rain that has fallen for nearly three months. In Michigan, while the rain was general, it was not copious enough to be of any lasting benefit. It is doubtful if the ground was wet to the depth of oue inch, so that the most benefit to be derived will be the keeping of the tops of wheat and grass green for n few days longer. Copious rains have fallen throughout Central and Southwest Missouri, and the prospect for winter wheat is greatly improved. Wheat out of the ground is i looking fine and growing vigorously. A . considerable amount planted during the drought has not come up. but this rain is expected to bring most of it out. In Nebraska it is believed to be in time to save all fall seeding, although the grains are not probably as heavy as they would have been but for the extended dry weather. The recent rains throughout Ohio have had a wonderful effect upon the fall pasturage that had been burned out by the heat and drought of the summer, fields everywhere being as bare of vegetation as if swept by fire. The rains have caused the grass to sprout and farmers are no longer compelled to give their stock dry feed as was the case the previous two months. The present moisture hns also helped the wheat, nnd it gives promise of taking root sufficiently to stand the rigors of a hard winter. The snow and rain storm which has prevailed throughout Wisconsin hns done n great amount of good. In some sections it has been three months since there has been any min. All of the forest and marsh fires which have been burning for weeks in the central anil northern portions of the btato have been extinguished. lowa farmers and stockmen have been complaining much of the lack of water in wells and springs. Thousands of cuttle have been, the last few weeks been driven to rivers and flowing creeks for water, the ordinary supply being exhausted The rainfall must be heavy to relieve this want and the needs of the long winter mouths. Every colliery in the Lehigh (Pa.) region which wns forced to shut down on account of drouth haa resumed work.

The Czar's Prison Life. All turn must some day die, and all know that they must die. but the czar walks and talks, euta and drinks, nnd ■lews under the perpetual shadow of death. If half the account* be true which come from the aplcntlid and solitary receMH of the Russian palaces no month passes without some intimation that the enemies of hie throne and person cun menace hint through all the triple barriers of guards and safeguards which surround his imperial majesty. He may find words of treason in the golden cigarette case which he opens when he would smoke on the back of his dinner menu, u|«in the blotting pad when he signs dispatches, or beneath the pillow of Ids coach. ’Die trusted attendant ot Ills privacy may be sold to the conspirators; his kitchen may not be safe against them, nor Ids study, nor even the chapel where lie worships. When he walks abroad his |>ath must be heedfully cleared and protected, the walls amt floors of Ids palace must be searched Itefore he visits them, and his journeys by railway necessitates a minute inspection of the line, with often a conlon ot soldiers to keep it from point to jsiint. Amid all his grandeur and vast power “he doth live a man forbid;” peace and security cannot be so much as known to him, for the strongest nature is not proof against the cowardly turtuie thus |HT|M>tually inflicted. One does indeed become in u certain way indurat<*d even to such an existence as this, and the patient fortitude of the czar is said to be remarkable. London Telegraph. flow to Hend a Stamp. Comparatively few people know howto send a stamp in a letter. Nine out of ten stick it so carefully down that the recipient always losses his temper and generally his stamp, in the effort to release it. It is really more exasperating than when the sender forgets I altogether the stamp he should have inclosed, for then at least, it is not. wasted. Even the most extravagant of us seldom have souls above saving a stamp, for it is, strangely, far dearer to us than the two cents. The tenth sends it loose, when it is apt to slip out and vanish, as these totally depraved small things have a trick of doing. The pro[>er way is a very simple one. Cut with a sharp penknife two parallel slits at the top of your letter, and slip in your stamps, which will thus travel as safely as if in a special j ajier case. When Wrinkles Scum the Brow, And the locks grow scant and silvery. Infirmities of age come on apace. To retard and ameliorate these Is one of the benign effects of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, a medicine to which the aged and Infirm ran resort as a safe solace and Invigorant. It counteracts a tendency to rheumatism and neuralgia. Improves digestion, rectifies biliousness and overcomes malaria. A wineglass before retiring promotes slumber. A Bronze Catamount. A statue in bronze of a catamount is to be erected on a granite pedestal to mark the site of the old tavern at Kennington. Vt., in which were held the councils of military and State officers in revolutionary days. The tavern had a swinging signboard, on which was painted a catamount as an emblem of defiance to the British lion. Instead of trifling with a bad cold use Dr. D. .Inync's Expectorant, which will loopon the phlegm, subdue inflammation and certainly save your Lungs and Throat much dangerous wear and tear. Wealth is more freauently overestimated than worth. In a great many cases of Asthma. I’iso’s Cure for Consumption will give relief that I is almost equal to a cure. 25 cents. Silence Is the most effective liar. | .. \ I It Is a Pleasure To recommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla to all afflicted with blood or skin diseases. My blood was o«t of order, and I suffered for years from psoriasis. I fried several remedies without benefit. After taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla for two months I was restored to my former good health and feel like a different person. As a blood purifier I think Hood’s Sarsaparilla has no equal.” Chabi.es L. Cockelbeas, Irving, Illinois. Hnnd’c Pillc «et harmoniously with lIOOU b I 1113 Hood’s Sarsaparilla. 25e.

the food for all such. How many pale folk l^ere are ■ P e °pl e w h° / > CV\ have the will, but no power • < \ to bring out their vitality; i> people who swing like .wk a pendulum between V Strength and weakness—so that one day’s work causes six days’ sickness! *** People who have no life for resisting disease—thin people, nerveless, delicate ! The food for all such men, women, or children is Scott’s Emulsion. The hypophosphites combined with the oil will tone up the system, give the blood new life, improve the appetite and help digestion. The sign of new life will be a fattening and reddening, which brings with it strength, comfort and good-nature. iwr/ you gotScttfi Emuhitn V'htn you uouut it atui not a ckta/ oubttituto. Scott & Bowne, New York. AU Drrcgiats. 50c. and sl.

Highest of all in leavening Tower.—Latest U.S. Gov’t Report ABSOWrEEV PURE

Both Trolley and Cable. A rather unique device is in use by a San Francisco railway to overcome a ; 25 per cent, grade on an electric line. There aro two trucks on this grade for i ears going in different directions. On the grade there is a conduit like that for cable roads, and it contains an endless cubic passing over pulleys at the two ends. An up-going and down going car are attached to this cable by the men stationed at the grades, and the two cars then work together by the use of their own motors, the one going down hill assisting the one which is going up. The system was tested a tew, weeks ago for the first time and was found to ojicrate successfully. It has since been working to perfect satisfaction. It was found that the power of the down-going car is far more than is necessary for hauling the ascending car under any possible conditions of load. A Folding Lifeboat* A life I sial that can be folded into each stateroom of a steamship and readily extended for use haa just been patented. The inventor claims to have realized a lifeboat, the frame of which is composed of practically rigid material, a supplementary stem and stern jx»t being firmly secured to the keel, the whole making a frame-work for a boat, which is made of one or more layers of sailcloth and an outside coatling of rubber. The occupant of the 1 boat buttons a watertight cover al>out him. leaving only the head projeet’ng. i The boat is unsinkable, and if overturned instantly rights itself. NEW CHATrAMHMIA LABORATORY. * One of the Largest in the WorldWine of Cardui has an Immense Bale. Chattanooga. Tenn., Nov. 9th.—The immense new laboratory of the Chatta11002a Midicine Company uas e< uimi need to-day. Nearly an acre’ of floor space is now used in making MeEiree’s Hine of Cardui and Thedford's Black-Draught, but this new annex doubles the capacity of the plant. This 1 usiness has lecoum eae Ot the largest in the vouhtiy and now sends its leading product, Wiue of Cardui. to every part of the world. A branch office has been established at St. Louis for the Northwestern trade. Youth hastens to pleasure, manhood to care, old age to sleep.

| “Th* Companion h*j boon (roving better, brighter every year for more than sixty yean." K TheYOUTHS GftFANIDN i / More than two hundred of the most famous writers in Great Britain and America have contributed Z I expressly for The Companion for 1896—the 70th year of its publication. W / „11 Every member of the family, from youngest Distinguished / If "wX <UI to the oldest, finds in each issue amusement ' Z V the Fa.milv and educat4on ln the ser**iand short stories, Contributors. V I J * in its Editorials, Anecdotes, Health and Mis- / cellaneous Articles. The Princess Loul3C ' / I The Marquis of Lome. \ The Lord Chief Justice of \ J The Companion is published every Thursday England. I Times a Year. and ! 3 received each week in more than thirty- g lr Benj. Ward Richardson. f I six thousand post-offices in the United States, \ and by more than Half a Million Homes. Secretaryof theU. S. Navy. B I Secretary of the Interior. Z f SIY TJnlidav Secretary of Agriculture. f I OLA XlUlltlciy Special Souvonir Numbers, double in sine Oliver w 1 1 Iffnmknrc and appropriate to each season, are published J I riumoers. at Thanksgiving, Christmas. New Year’s, Wash- Sir William H. Russell. Z f ington’s Birthday, Easter and Fourth of July. Frank R. Stockton. V — w Clark Russell. \ I hTin General Nelson A. Miles. g / /vv The size of The Companion page is four times th n | T nyrrck that of the leading Magazines. In each Volume on " omaß . ee . ■ \ Taj,Cb, nearly 700 pages are given, profusely illus- The Dean of Salisbury. 1 trated. Sir Edwin Arnold. Z / . Tustin McCarthy. » I dh >_ The subscription price is $1.75, paid in ad- J B \ qp1.7,5 vance. No other weekly or monthly publics- Camille Flammanon. ■ a "yy tlon gives so great an amount of Entertainment And t / " -car. . and Instruction at so small a price, More than 100 Others. 1 \ Send for Full Illustrated Prospectus and Sample Copies Free. g ( j ■ REMARKABLE OFFER! j SPND 1 | ■. Hew Subscribers who will cut out this slip and send it AT ONCE ■ OL/i’“ , J 1 J *" z J with name and address, and $1.75, will receive: . J / j CAT K'NTT AR J FREE ~The Youth’s Companion every week till January I, 1806. r TIIIS Slip With ; V I , free — Thankscivinc, Christmas. New Year’s Double Numbers, t r g \ i T'TTT'r' ’■ FREE —Our Handsome A-pare Calendar (7 xlO Inches , litho- ■. ’• f I 5 fr frC t graphed in nine colon. Retail price, SO cents. «« ; 7 C • / I j AND THE COMPANION 52 weeks, a full year, to January I, I8»7. rr J : V y THE YOUTH’S COMPANION, 201 Columbus Ave., Boston, Mass. f / Send Check, Post-Office or Express Order, or Registered Letter, at Our Risk. \

“If* there anything that will bring youth to a woman?” asked the writer. Well, a lauding smile from bur might bring him to her feet. Stats or onto. Citv ar Toutoo, 1.. I.VCAH I Ot NTV. i Fhank J. Ckrsky make* oath that hoh the senior partner ot the firm of E. J.Cmknkv&i'o.. <luliiit bi>*ln> M In the 1'lt) ot Toledo. ( minty ana State afote*«ld. atol that »ald firm will nay the Mim ot ONE. IHSl>ltl'l> I >Ol.l. A Its tor each and every vu»e <>t ( ATanaa that oannot bo cured by the u»c of Hall's Catakkh ('time. I KANK .) CHENEY. Sworn to lieforo me and siilwtribed In my presenco. this uth day <>t I>i ■ cml ci. All. iv<;. A. W. GLEASON. . *KAt. . Kotaiy l üblic. Halt's catarrh Cure l« tnkon Internally and n< ts dlrm tly on the blood and miicou* xurlaces of the system. Scud for testimonials, free. E. .1. CHENEY & CO.,Toledo. O. tWSold by DruuKl-u. ,Je. Women arc now wearing undrewed kid for their slippers, yet for ages they have Iteen wearing their slippsrsou the undressed kid. FIT*. All FltßsitpDpvd frrw br l»r. KI bi ©’«»(» rit l<«*<st<iis'i. So Hl* aft. r flrwt uw Mar- i vriou*. curt**! «n 4 00 trial tx tlh’ tivr to >Hra«e«. bead to Dr. Khue, ICI Arch bl . Pluia. i’a. ! THE best time for the sinner to re-1 nent is when he first discovers that he is wrong.

§QueerNamcT^™^X C | ‘ a”— “DeadAches"— ) (g are all well known of flesh, bone, j'IPAhC |ljj and mu«*cl©, and easily cured by Id VF.Io 4 fjf oooooocoooooooocooooooooo — Timely Warning. The great success of the chocolate preparations of jf the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established in 1780) has led to the placing on the market misleading and unscrupulous imitations their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter Baker 1 Cj. are the oldest and largest manun •i'td facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and ■ tsi&M Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are bM f:i t used in their manufactures. Hl '"fl Consumers should ask for, and be sure that they get, the genuine Walter Baker &. Co.’s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS.

YOU WILL REALIZE THAT “THEY LIVE WELL WHO LIVE CLEANLY,” IF YOU USE SAPOLIO

■■ _ I Agent»-L«dlei or Genti, S7B t? 7 • we*k at hour u»iug or mliiur . a f Gray Platart.arHkiDgordtra for tta V ••I”***- Plate gold, ailtrr.nicltd, ■ t L'tiA' «®V r '* r « white metal, manufacture JwF- ~l‘ ' mutrrml* and outfit a. teat b the *MrcS. '** > - ■-<» - art. or.lr eotm'le" 1 outfit, inoliiding ■ trade aeoreta and formula*. lathe, ■ whffla, tool*, all material* for prt- | parlag, jxtllahiue • latinf at»l fin lahlng. no tors, email in trar.-lltig oaar, largr for ahopa. <le«cript|nn, "''’•awtiHfUMr A pi Jcee. ramnlea frer. Gray 4c Co., i'luUa* Warka, Dt p't IG, C olumhua. O. tartCUH£s WhtHL ALL tLSt FAILS. „ El BSd Best Cough Syrup. Twu'h Good. use itclj Iq time. Sold by druggist a.

'W 1»T * Mr. Win. J. Curlton, of EUsabotlg N. J., says: "I consulted a physlciaß In the country thin summer w b*-r» I wan spending my vacation, about n chronic dyspepsia with which 1 have been a good den) troubled. It taken the form of Indigestion, the food I take not becoming assimilated. After prescribing f<* me for some time, the physician told me I would have to be treated for several months with a mild laxative nnd corrective—Hotnethlng that would gradually bring l>ack my normal condition without the violent notion of drastic remedieav I recently sent to the doctor (Dr. Thomas Coin*, of Nazareth, l*a.) n box of Rlpuna Tubules, aud wrote him what I understood the lugredletits to be—rhubarb, Ipecac, peppermint, nines, nux vomica and soda. He writes back: T think the formula a very good one, and will no doubt Just suit you.’ ’* Rlmm r.bulM »re m-M b, Clruryut. »r W wuU> V -hr prtc (50 c.ni» a U>i> l.wul v> Th. Lipan. CMooral Ci.nipiiny, No, to Spruce StovL New VwHl Srunsia viol. lOcruu. IF Y<»t>R MATTREHS FILLING'* <1OT»» I l,- ur lick worn --nt, ,our.vt<-unrert II lul«u»MF I rat onpr.vi.,l l olUltur Vlann-M In 0 mlnutra, womb m-wiok <>r ta.-klntr. I>r u*lnu our H>*ady M.-lc < ».i.pass mvnt Tick. . ou.eiil ■ni;-lur»(ii<-: raauiUul.-heap, Tra uaaatul,r-u*llban-onother U3tK>. f-raitkllulinwKUL

■■■ ■■■ iini :w ' - POPHAM S ASTHMA SPECIFIC I '■ oi»"» r-’:-r In rive minute.. 1 Ktstrlul ./■ TT* iil*” Urussi»i«. 'n"r .. , i,r.p»ie.Mß IV-Y!. „n r-"■• il't «r HI. e*.eo. ■ >S T. : ffijljjM Ail<lre»» inos. iwill, FMILA , ft. g Il IIJ—HiIJI J'l BT'* r ~ r ”‘--ire relief, tfWnWl kiooer’s pastilles;; mall. StowellAOa (SS Q i g2jCjgjijjßa22l3gKji.'l.x kakiVTU, AU* F. W. N. If. No. 1t.—06 When writinc to Advertisers nay y<m sow the edvertieetiieni in this tiiioer.