Democratic Sentinel, Volume 11, Number 26, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 July 1887 — Page 5

DIAMOND BETRAYED HIM.

How Ba:ton, tH*> jilige-Robber, Was Finally Captured. ! From the Kansas City Journal, j The publ cation of the adventures of Burton, the noted stage-robber, in the Eastern papers, recalls the history of his capture. Capt. W. L. Richardson, of this city, was the man who captured him. In speaking of the matter he said: “One day I was in Pueblo, when news came that the mysterious bandit had robbed a stage just outside of Alamosa about dusk the n ght before, and, after taking between $6,000 ands7,ooo, boldly rode into the town ahead of the despoiled coach. Knowing the nature of the man, I suspected he would come to Pueblo, and I determined to catch him and catch him alone. “A singular freak of Burton’s was to wear an immense diamond shirt-stud whenever he held up a coach, and many a victim’s eyes had been dazzled by this cruel display while his pockets were being emptied. I determined to watch for that diamond. About 1 o’clock p. m. the train from Alamosa pulled in, and among the passengers was a well-built man, fairly dressed, with a cap pulled over his eyes. He walked toward the depot door in a manner that attracted my attention and I intercepted him. “ 4 Your name is so and so,’ said I. ‘No it isn’t,’ was the reply. ‘Ye3 it is,’ I returned. He denied it again and I said, carelessly, ‘Well, I guess you’re right.’ As I was talking to him I saw the famous diamond. I was sure that a man who would rob a. stage full of minors single-handed would fight. I covered him and told him to throw up his hands. H e hesitated a moment. I thought I would have to kill him, but he finally weakened and confessed. I then secured all the money and sent him up to Denver. When near Tombstone he received permission to go to the closet, and took advantage of the chance to leap through the window. The train was stopped, backed down, and Burton was recaptured. After his heavy sentence and while on his way to the Detroit House of Correction he again leaped from the train and nearly succeeded in escaping, but that part of the story is too well known to bear repetition. “The worst adventure I ever had with this class of robbers, who are now hardly ever heard fr®m, was in 1883 in Texas near Colorado City, and a true account of it has never appeared in print' before, I believe. I had been appointed to a position in the secret service and given the task of breaking up the Donovan gang of stage and mail robbers, There were thirteen members, some of whom had been with Sam Bass. They were a desperate lot and committed many murders, among which* was that of an inoffensive traveler and his wife. They hid in the Talpena Mountains in holes and caves that were almost impossible to discover, but one day we found seven of them in a blind canon and besieged them. I had seven Texas rangers with me and determined to make them come out and fight. After lying before the entrance of the canon three or four days they made their appearance and opened fire. We were about 400 feet apart and that is point-blank range with a Winchester when a dead shot is working the pump-handle. One of the rangers was wounded and another one skulked, but we made the riflle after an hour’s fighting. They surrendered and we found we had killed two of their party, Elias Courtright and a man named Dean, two of the worst of the gang. J. Walker, the two Donovans, Johnson, and Carter were sent up for life. I was shot through the right shoulder, but kept right on until another ball caught me iu the arm. I was laid up fourteen months from the effect of the wounds. ” Kansas City Journal.

Business Proverbs.

A merchant is known by the advertisement he keeps—standing. He who advertiseth not his own wares, the same shall not be advertised. As ye sow your seeds of advertisements, so shall ye reap a crop of quickbuying customers. The wise man advertiseth his wares in ye newspaper, the fool on the carmine emblem of ye sheriff. If the front of ye store appeareth not in ye newspaper, the eye of ye customer discerneth it not. What doth it profit a man if he buveth an abundance of wares, yet hideth their existence under the seal of secrecy . Whitehall Times. We are all dependent upon one another in this world; we all have our sunny and shadowy days, and we all, in our turn, need sympathy and help.

Zine Collar Pads for Horses.

This is not an advertising paper, but for the good of horses we take pleasure in saying that, after many conversations with horsemen, and seeing many certificates of veterinary surgeons and others, we believe that for curing and preventing sores on horses there has been no better invention than the Boss zinc and leather collar pads, patented, manufactured, and sold by Dexter Curtis, of Madison, Wis., who was superintendent of the department of horses at the World’s New Orleans Exposition. —From the Humane Society Journal, “Our Dumb Animals.” Mb. J. W. Mevis, 28 Rock street, Lowell, Mass., writes: “I was taken with a click in the neck and suffered agony. St Jacobs Oil cured me.” For sale by druggists and dealers. We are all dependent upon one an- ' other in this world; we all have our gunny and shadowy days, and we all, in our turn, need sympathy and help. % Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh is agreeable to aae. It i#not a liquid or a snuff. 50 %

The agent of the German Baptist Publication Society, Cleveland, Ohio, Air. H. Schulte, write*: “We keep St. Jacobs Oil on hand, and consider it most valuable in case of burns, scalds, etc.” Use according to directions.

The Millennium.

A Cleveland man is trying to prove that the inhabitants of England and America, of the Saxon race, are descended from the ancient Israelites. He says the old prophecies are being fulfilled every day all about us, and we have only to get our eyes open to see it. He adds-that “we are living in a wonderful time.*’ That is so. Who would have thought, a short time ago, that the day would ever come in New York when a man couldn’t get a drink in a saloon on Sunday? It really looks like a forerunner of the millennium—or would if so many men didn’t get full on private bottles provided Saturday night. —Texas Siftings.

Summer Excursions.

At all principal railroad ticket offices will b< found on sale, at low rates, during the tourist season, round-trip tickets, via the Burlington Route, C., B. &Q. B. It, to Portland, St Paul, Minneapolis, and all principal resorts in tho Northwest; and also to Denver, Colorado Springs, and Pueblo, CoL In addition, the Burlington Route runs at frequent dates in each month excursions to Kan Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego. When ready to start, call on your nearest ticket agent, of address Paul Morton, General Passongcr and Ticket Agent C., B. & Q. It R, Chicago, liL B. W. TANSILL k CO., CHICAGO. Our frequent orders during the past five years attest the merits of your “Tansill’s Punch” 5-cent cigar. Winter & Cushing, Druggists, Princeton, lU. Mensman’s Peptonized Beef Tonic, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nutrition* properties. It contains blood-making, force-generating, and life-sustaining properties; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general debility; also in all enfeebled conditions, whether the work of exhaustion, nervous prostration, overwork, or acute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. Hazard, Hazard A Co., proprietors, New York, bold by druggists.

Warm Weather Often canges extreme tired feeling and debility, and in the -weakened condition of tho system diseases arising from impure blood are liable to appear. To gain strength, to overcome disease, and to purify, vitalize, and enrich the blood, take Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which is peculiarly adapted to the needs of the body at this season. “When I took Hood’s Sarsaparilla that heaviness in my stomach left; the dullness in my head and the gloomy, despondent feeling disappeared. I began to get stronger, my blood gained better circulation, the coldness in my hands and feet left me, and my kidneys do not bother me as before.”— G. W. Hull, Attorney-at-Law, Millersburg, O. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. *1; six for $5. Prepared only by C. L HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar. RADWAY’S PILLS, For the cure of all disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys. Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Loss of Appetite, Headache, Constipation, CostiVeness, Indigestion, Biliousness, Fever, Inflammation of the Bowels, Piles, and all derangements of the internal viscera. Purely vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals, or deleterious drugs. A FINE, SUKE MEDICINE. Radway & Co.—Gentlemen: Your Pills have often warded off sickness in my family. I never think it safe to be without them; they are a fine, sure medicine. Most respectfully yours, HKNRY KENWORTH, Chebanse, Iroquoia County, HI. What a Physician hays of Ratlway's Pills. I am using your R. R. Relief and your Regulating Pills, and have recommended them above alt pills, and sell a great many of them. 1 have them on hand always, and use them in my practice and in my own family, and expect to, in preference of all Pills. Youra respectfully, DR. A. C. MIDDLEBROOK. 'DYSPEPSIA. raVme - G *' DR. RADWAY’S I’/I.LK are a cure for this complaint. They to the stomach and enable it'to perform its functions. The symptoms of Dyspepsia disappear, and with them tho liability of the system to contract diseases. Dyspepsia of Long Standing Cured. Dit. Radway—l have for years been troubled with Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint, and found but little relief until I got your Phis, and they made a perfect cure. They are the best medicine I ever had in my life. Your friend forever, WILLIAM NOONAN. Blanchard, Mich. Fr ee. 25 cents per box. Sold by all druggist-*. MENTION THIS PAPER win warrisa to .dtuvuim.

DCIIOIHMO 5?. n 4 to l *»nMon Laws to U. 8. rtNd IlNd Claim Agents FITZGE It ALU I LIIUIUIIU & POWELL, Indianapolis, lnd. DATCIITC ?l. 8 s a -F Lacey, Paten* t A I ELN I X Attorneys/Washington, D.C. ■ ■ •“.TF ■.V* Instructions and opinions ss to patentability TREE. 4^17 years’ experience £T% as to gg a day. Samples worth FREE, wkfk lines not under the horse’s feet. Write 10 V Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co., Holly, Mich MENTION THIS PAPER when wsitina vo aktiktmiu. ftMlllfl !' lo .rj? b . ,ne Habit Cured la lO 111*1 SI IN «? . c“ y V P»V till cured. WI IV isl Hr. J. Stephens, Lebanon, Ohio. MENTION THIS PAPER wun vutinc vo adtiktimu. *3O/LADY AGENTS permanent employment at *SO to *IOO per laOlWgiJr month sellingQueenCltySupporters. Sample outfit free. Address Cincinnati Suspender wCo.UE.Ninthht„Cincinnati,O. Utl&J PENSIONS. ■££££? BOSS COLLftR Zinc Is pressed Into heavy sole leather on underside. Presents a smooth zinc surface. Always cool. Never wrinkles Dirt does not stick to it. Kasv cleaned. If you bad a raw sore how would you like a scabby, wrinkled, dirty piece of leather, or a soft, heating pad on It? The BOSS PAD is for sale at all Harness shops and guaranteed to give satisfaction or money refunded. D. CURTIS, Madison. Wia. MENTION THIS PAPER win t*> Aum-rimi. ■ ■ ■■ 4% Dr. Williams’ Indien Pile Ointment II L is a sure cure lor 1 lind.bleeding or piles - Cmv guaranteed. ■ I ■■■■%#Price 50c an*l *l. At druggist’s or mailed by WILLIAMS MFQ. CO., Cleveland. O. KIDDER'S P«BTILUB!BSi™i: MENTION THIS PAPER wim wkitinc to ABUtrauu. " CORES WHERE ALL till MILS. M Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use H _ln time. Bold by druggists. |p C. nTu] NoT3I —B~7~~ YLTHEN WAITING TO ADVERTISERS, f please «a> you saw the adverUaemcat in this paper,

INVALIDS’ HOTELeSURGICAL INSTITUTE No. 663 Main Street, BUFFALO, N. Y. Not a Hospital, but a pleasant Remedial Home, organized with A FULL STAFF OF EIGHTEEN PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, And exclusively devoted to the treatment of all Chronic Diseases. This imposing Establishment was designed and erected to accommodate the large number of invalids who visit Buffalo from every State and Territory, as well as from many foreign lands, that they may avail themselves of the professional services of the Staff of skilled specialists in medicine and surgery that compose tho Faculty of this widely-celebrated institution.

NOT ALWAYS NECESSARY TO SEE PATIENTS.

By our original system of diagnosis, we can treat many chronic diseases Just as successfully without as with a personal consultation. While we are always glad to see our patients, and become acquainted with them, show them our institutions, and familiarize them with our system of treatment, yet we have not seen one person in five hundred whom we have cured. The perfect accuracy with which scientists are enabled to deduce the most minute particulars in their several departments, appears almost miraculous, if we view it in the light of the early ages. Take, for example, tho eleetro-inagnetic telegraph, the greatest invention of the age. Is it not a marvelous degred of accuracy which enables an operator to exactly locate a fracture in a submarine cable nearly threo thousand miles long? Our venerable clerk of the weather ” has become so thoroughly familiar with the most wayward elements of nature that he can accurately predict their movements. He can sit in Washington and foretell - what the weather will be in Florida or New York os well as if several hundred miles did not intervene between him and the places named. And so in all departments of modern science, what is required is the knowledge of certain te np signs. From these scientists deduce accurate conUr elusions regardless of distance. 80, also, in medi- _ cal science, diseases have certain unmistakable UISFASF 8i B™’ or symptoms, and by reason of this fact, we uiukHuu. have been enabled to originate nnd uerfect a svstem of determining, with the greatest accuracy, the nature of chronic diseases, without seeing and personally

OUR FIELD OF SUCCESS.

1*.,.. The treatment of DDeates of the NASAL IHROAT Alr P»**a«ee and Lunas, such as naanL, innun I Chronic Nasal Catarrh, EarynAND gitie, Bronchitis. Asthma, and , „ Consumption, both through correLUNG DISFASFS spondence and ut our institutions, constii>una UIOLAOLO. tutes an important specialty. We publish three separate books on Nasal, Throat and Lung Diseases, which give much valuuble information, viz: (1) A Treatise on Consumption, Laryngitis and Bronchitis; price, post-paid, ten cents. (2) A Treatise on Asthma, or Phthisic, giving new and successful treatment; price, post-paid, ten cents. (3) A Treatise on Chronic Nasal Catarrh; price, post-paid, two cents. nTHTTTri Dyspepsia, “ Liver Complaint,’* ObDISEASES OF eti»»te constipation, Chronic Diar- ’ rhea. Tape-worms, and kindred affections niCF*Tinil are amon & those chronic diseases in the sucUIULOIIUI*. cessful treatment of which our specialists have ■■■■■■■“"■■b" attained great success. Many of the diseases affecting the liver and other organs contributing in their functions to the process of digestion, are very obscure, and are not infrequently mistaken by both laymen and physicians for other maladies, and treatment is employed directed to the removal of a disease which does not exist. Our Complete Treatise on Diseases of the Digestive Organs will be sent to any address on receipt of ten cents in postage stamps. BRIGHT’S DISEASE, DIABETES, and KIIDIFY kindred maladies, have been very largely treated, niunti an d cures effected in thousands of cases which had llicricrc 1)6611 pronounced beyond hope. These diseases are UldLAdtO. readily diagnosticated, or determined, by chemical analysis of the urine, without a personal examination of patients, who can. therefore, generally be successfully treated at their homes. The study and practice of chemical analysis and microscopical examination of the urine in our consideration of cases, with reference to correct diagnosis, in which our institution long ago became famous, has naturally led to a very extensive practice in diseases of the urinary organs. Probably no other institution in the world has been so largely patronized by suffers from this class of maladies as the old and world-famed World’s Dispensary and Invalids’ Hotel. Our specialists have acquired, through a vast and varied experience, great expertness in determining the exact nature of each case, and, hence, have been successful in nicely adapting their remedies for the cure of each individual case. I A......... h w Th6B6 delicate diseases should be carefully treated uAUTIQM Iby a specialist thoroughly familiar with them, and wmv i iwk. | who w competent to ascertain the exact, condition ■" and stage of advancement which the disease has made (which can only be ascertained by a careful chemical and microscopical examination of the urine), for medicines which are curative in one stage or condition are known to do pas (live injury in others. We have never, therefore, attempted to put up anything for general sale through druggists, recommending to cure these diseases, although possessing very superior remedies, knowing full well from an extensive experience that the only safe and successful course is to carefully determine the disease and its progress in each case by a chemical and microscopical examination of the urine, and then adapt our medicines to the exact stage of the disease and condition of our patient. To this wise course of action we attribute the WONDERFUL marvelous success attained by our specialists in ’ that important and extensive Department of our SllfinrAA institutions devoted exclusively to the treatment OUMItSd. of diseases of the kidneys and bladder. The treat' meat of diseases of the urinary organs having constituted a leading branch of our practice at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, and. being In constant receipt of numerous inquiries for a complete work on the nature and curability of these maladies, written in a style to be easily understood, we have published a large Illustrated Treatise on these diseases, which will be sent to any address on rt'ooipt of ten cents in postage stamps. nr.l’7l INFLAMMATION OF THE RL4DdLADOLR DBK’STONE IN THE BI.ADDEB, uuiuul.ii a ora ycl, Enlarged Prostate Gland, Re’ IIiCCIQCO I tention of Urine, and kindred affections. UIOLAOLO. | may be included among those In the cure of which our specialists have achieved extraordinary success. These arc fully treated rs in our illustrated pamphlet on Urinary Diseases. Sent by mail for ten cents in stamps. 1. I STRICTUBES AND URINARY FISSTRIOTURE I TUL AS.-Hundreds of cases of* the OI mu I (ML. | pf strictures, muny of them greatly ainrmvfited by the careless use of instruments in the hands of inexperienced physicians and surgeons, causing false passages urinary ilstuhe, and other complications, annually consult us for relief and cure. That no case of this class is too difficult for the skill of our specialists is proved by cures reported in our illustrated treaties on these maladies, to which we refer with pride To intrust this class of eases to physicians of small experience is a dangerous proceeding. Many a man has been ruined for life by so doing, while thousands annually lose thefr lives through unskillful treatment. Send particulars of your case and ten cents in stamps for a large, illustrated treaties containing many testimonials. Epileptic Convulsion*, or Fit*, Pa. NERVOUS or Palsy, Locomotor Ataxia, * w SL Vitus’s Dance, Insomnia, or inability IHCFISP? & sl<**p, and threatened insanity, Nervous UlwLHdLd. Debility, anting from overstudy, excesses, and '■ other causes, and every variety of nervous affeotlon, are treated by our specialists for these diseases with unusual success. She numerous cases reported in our different illustrated

examining our patients. In recognizing diseases without a personal examination of the patient, wo claim to possess no miraculous powers. We obtain our knowledge of the patient's disease by the practical application, to the practioe of medicine, or well-established principles of modern science. And it is to the accuracy with which this system has endowed us that we owe our almost world-wide reputation of skillfully treating lingering or chronic affections. This system of practice, and Hfimmmi the marvelous success which has been attained MIDVn fillC through it, demonstrate the fact that diseases IVIAnVLLUUd display certain phenomena, which, being subNlinncco Jected to scientific analysis, furnish abundant UUUUCOO. and unmistakable data, to guido the Judgment 'of the skillful practitioner aright in determining the nature of diseased conditions. The most ample resources for treating lingering or chronio diseases, and the greatest skill, are thus placed within the easy reach of every invalid, however distant he or she may reside from tho physicians making the treatment of such affections a specialty. Full particulars of our original, scientific system of examining and treating patients at a distance are contained in “The People’s Common Sense Med Ji; al > Ad J vl *? r ’L % R - v * Pierce, M. D. 1000 pages and over 300 colored and other illustrations. Sent, post-paicL tbr #I.GO. Or write and describe your symptoms, Inclosing ten cents in stamps, and acpmplete treatise, on your particular disease, wiU be Bent you, with our terms for treatment and all particulars.

pamphlets on nervous diseases, any one of which will be Bent for ten contain postage stamps,when request for them is accompanied with a statement of a case for consultation, so that we may know which one of our Treatises to send. We have a special Department, thoroughly nierisra nr organized, and devoted exclusively to the treasUloLAuto Ur ment of Diseases of Women. Every case con- ... suiting our specialists, whether by letter or in WfUIFM person, is given the most careful and considcrii umLn. ate attention. Important cases (and we get few which have not already baffled tho skill of all the home physicians) has the benefit of u full Council, of skilled specialists. Booms for ladies in the Invalids' Hotel are very private. Bend ten cents in stamps for our large Complete Treatise on Diseases of Women, illustrated with numerous wood-cuts and colored plates (100 pages). Dsninii H.rnr HERNIA < Breach), or RUPTURE, no RADICAL LURE matter of how Jong standing, or of whut size, _ is promptly and permanently cured by fIF nIIPTIIRF our specialists, without the knife and. iiuriunL. without dependence upon trusses. Abundant references. Bend ten cents for Illustrated Treatise. PILES, FISTULAS, and other diseases affecting the lower bowels, are treated with wonderful success. Tho worst cases of Sile tumors are permanently cured in fifteen to twenty days, end ten cents for Illustrated Treatise. n-i Organic weakness, nervous debility, premature ULLIUATI decline of the manly powers, involuntary vital _ losses, impaired memory, mental anxiety, absence MISFACCO of will-power, melancholy, weuk buck, and kinuibuwm, dred affections, are speedily, thoroughly and permanently cured. To those acquainted with our institutions, it is hardly necessary to say that the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, with the branch establishment located at No. 3 New Oxford Street, London, England, have, for many years, enjoyed the distinction of being the most largely patronized and widely celebrated institutions In the world for the treatment and cure of those affections which arise from youthful indiscret ions and pernicious, solitary practices. We, many years ago, established a special Department for the treatment of these diseases, under the management of some of the most skillful physicians and surgeons on our Staff, in order that all who apply to us might receive all the advantages of a lull Council of the most experienced specialists. Ufr flrrrn We offer no apology for devoting so much ItL UrFEH attention to this neglected class of diseases, .. , believing no condition of humanity is too fin Apm (ICY wretched to merit the sympathy and best • " uluhi. services of the noble profession to which wo. belong. Many who suffer from these terrible diseases contract them innocently. Why any medical man, intent on doing good and alleviating suffering, should shun such eases, we cannot imagine. Why any one should consider it otherwise than most honorable t» cure the worst cases of these diseases, we cannot understand; and yet of all the other maladies which afflict mankind there is probably none about which physicians in general practice know so little. We shall, therefore, continue, as eretoforc, to treat with our best consideration, sympathy, and skill, all applicants who are suffering from any of these delicate diseases. Pimm it Ilnur Most ot these cases can bo treated when at a IfUIILU AI iIUML. distance just as well as if here in person. A Complete Treatise (138 pages) on these diseases sent sealed, in plain envelope, secure from observation, on receipt ot only ten cents, in stamps, for postage. Hundreds of the most difficult operations known uUHoICAL to rTK>d< ' rn surgery are annually performed in the _ most skillful manner, by our Surgeon-special-PDIRTIRF iets. Large Stones are safely removed from the ■ nun i iul. Bladder, by crushing, washing and pumping them out, thus avoiding the great danger of cutting. Our specialists, remove cataract from the eye, thereby curing blindness. They also straighten cross-eyes and insert artificial ones when needed. Many Ovarian and also Fibroid Tumors of the Uterus arc arrested in growth and cured by electrolysis, coupled with other means of our invention, whereby the great danger of cutting operations in these cases is avoided. Especially has the success of our improved operations for Varicocele, Hydrocele, Fistula*, Ruptured Cervix Uteri, and for Ruptured Perineum, been alike gratifying both to ourselves and our patients. Not less so have been the results of numerous operations for Stricture of the Cervical Canal, a condition in the female generally resulting in Barrenness, or Sterility, und the cure of which, by a safe and painless operation, removes this commonest of impediments to the bearing of offspring. A Complete Treatise on any one of tho above maladies will be sent on receipt of ten cents in stamps. Although we have in the preceding paraALL UHRONIG graphs* made mention of some of the special 11....... ailments to which particular attention is UISEASES sv6n,$ v6n , hy, specialists at the Invalids’ I knuuif Hotel and Surgical Institute, yet the instiA NPFRIiITV tution abounds in skill, facilities, and ap- ** UrCbIAI.II. paratus son the successful treatment of every form of chronic ailment, whether requiring for its cure medical or surgical means. All letters of inquiry, or of consultation, should be addressed to WORLD’S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, > 663 Main Street. BUFFALO. N. Y,