Jasper County Democrat, Volume 1, Number 29, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 October 1898 — Page 7
famous? • Do vou get up with a. • W Is there s bad taste la w A your mouth? X Bi V Thin you have s poor wA appetite end a weak digea- Ap Y tion. You are frequently W"}A diizy, always feel dull and A f drowsy. You have cold ▼ A hands and feet. You get A X but little benefit from your ? • food. You have no ambition • . to- work and the sharp pains X Y of neuralgia dart through w A your body. X Y • What is the cause of all w. Y Constipated bowels. ▼ Ayer’s PILLS ▼ will give you prompt relief ▼ A and certain cure. A Y If you have neglected your W A case a long time, you had A better take j X sapsiMHHi J Y also. It will remove all Y w impurities that have been • X' accumulating in your blood X A and will greatly strengthen A X your nerves. X Y Wrlto thm Doctor. Y Thera may be something *bont your case you do uot quite um!er> X stand. Write the doctor freely: tell X A him how you are suffering. You will promptly receive the beat JL madlcal advice. Address, X Dr. J. C. Ayer, Lowell, Maaa. jk~ Whiskers Dyed A Natural Black by Buckingham’s Dye. • l Price M cent* of all drtgfiiti or R- P. Hall * Cair Nashua. N. X - < > "4 Perfect Type of the Highest Order of Escot fence in Manufacture. ” WalterßaleraGols I ® reak * ast jT(i)coa lU i Absolutely Pure, . iffll Kill Delicious, Nutritious. (..costs unTMnaiEißm cm..' Be sure that you jet the Genuine Article, made at DORCHESTER, MASS, by WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. Established 1780. J LIVER ILLS. Dm. Badwat A Co., New York: Dear Sire—J have been aiok for nearly two yean, and have been doctoring with aoma of the most export doe ton of the United State*. 1 have been bathing in and drinking hot water at the Hot Springs, Arkansas, but II Seemed everything failed to do mo good. After I saw your advertisement I thought I would try your pills, and have nearly need two boxes; been taking two at bedtime and one after breakfast, and they have dons me more good than anything aim I hers need. My trou ble has been with the liver. My skin end eyes wars all yellow: 1 hod sleepy, drowsy feelings; fait like a drunken man; pain right above the navel, like as if it was bile on top of the stomach. My bowels were very costive My mouth and tongue sore moat of the time. Appetite fair, but food would not digest, but settle heavy on my stomach, and some few mouthfuls of food come up again. I could only eat light food that digests easily Plaase send “Book of Advice.” Respectfully, BEN ZAUOO, Hot Springs. Ark. Radways PILLS Price 28 cents a box. Sold by Druggists or sent by mail. Send to DB. BADWAY S 00., 66 Elm Street, New York, for Book of Advice. ) '' SHOOT IyiNCnCSTEB lOAPHP gflOT 6UN StlEUfi EM Used by Allthe Champion Shots. f|re. Semi Namz on a Postal quid. rod 152 mot /uvstmtu Qtalooui. Winchester Repeating Arms <£? ISO WiMHCsrcr Ate. tow limn. Com SFlsThma] [HPr FOPHAH’S ASTHMA CP‘ CIFIC l£isEjK2swß» o * Tesrc, ' ( ' r It nYS mln-.ics. Ccrul HMHmB t or a PKBBtrial pad: Cold by! IflUli Miltii'1 Drugghts. Ono Box. . ... por.tpt-.ld ■ SgUSWBSJon receipt of tl.to. . r „«6ioa. Nt., PiUIA., PA.
WASHINGTON GOSSIP
Ex-Queen Lil did not present a claim before the Hawaiian commission for indemnity or compensation for the hundreds of thousands of acres of choice land in the Hawaiian Islands formerly vested in the royal family and which were seized by the Dale Government. She refrained from presenting her claim to the commission because she was advised that the ruling would be against her and that a formal decision by the commission might have great weight with the Congress of the United States, to whom she must finally appeal for recognition in any event. The two Hawaiian members of the commission were openly, opposed to her pretensions, and Senator Morgan, one of the three American commissioners, is believed to lean the same way. That would constitute a majority of the commission, regardless of the attitude of Senfitor Cullom and Mr. Hitt, the other two Americans. Believing the cards to be thus stacked against her, she concluded to ignore the commission entirely and lay her claim before Congress direct. The Dole people hold that she has no standing whatever and no rights in the premises which this Government is hound to respect.
The thirteenth annual report of Carroll D. Wright, commissioner of labor, will make a book of 1.200 pages, and some months will probably elapse before copies are ready for distribution. It has been the policy of the bureau ever since its establishment to discuss each year some one topic and to lay before the public such statistical and other information gathered by the bureau during a number of years as relates to the one subject chosen for investigation. This year the effect of the use of machinery upon labor and cost of production is the topic discussed. Previous reports have covered such subjects as industrial depressions, convict labor and strikes and lockouts. It has been fouud necessary thus to specialize in the, annual reports in order to bring out fads and figures sufficiently minute to have any statistical value. The capitol guides meet queer people sometimes. Oue of them was showing a party of well-dressed gentlemen and ladies around the building, and as they looked prosperous and took great interest in his explanations of objects of interest he laid himself out to do a good job and make an impression—for revenue only. After they had comideted the tour of the great building the spokesman of the party, evidently a prosperous business man, said to the guide: “You have been very kind to us. You hayo shown us the Supreme Court, the rotunda, statuary hall, the Senate chamber and the hall of the House of ltepreoentativcs, as well as many other things I never knew about. Now if you will show us where Congress meets we will let you off.” The Chief Justice of Canada is apparently determined to take no chances on securing the fee which he earned for acting as arbitrator in the case of Victor McCord, tl> American citizen, against the Government of Peru. He telegraphed the State Department that he had formulated his decision and placed It in the keeping of a Canadian bank. The telegram also contained the information that Justice Strong’s fee was $2,000. The State Department took the hint at once, and half of that amount, the share of the United States, was sent to the Chief Justice. The treasury tables show that during the nine months ending Sept. 30 exports from the United States exceeded imports by $393,965,000. The total exports for the nine months are $569,128,000 and the total imports $475,173,000. The exports for the period named are larger by nearly $125,000,000 than for the corresponding period of 1807, which up to that time was high-water mark. The imports, on the contrary, are smaller for the Inst nine months than they have been for any corresponding nine mouths for fifteen years.
The consular bureau issues a bulletin devoted entirely to the use of nuts as an article of human food. The bulletin contains reports from consuls and consular agents in France, Italy, Syria, Corea and other fruit-raising and fruit-eating countries. The bulletin leads up to the moral that we in the United States have all the variety of the soil* and climatic conditions necessary to produce every kind of nut, and that if proper attention were given to their cultivation the people would be greatly benefited thereby. Senator Thurston of Nebraska will retire from the Senate at the end of his present term in 1901. He announced formally some time ago that he would not accept a re-election, thereby serving notice to all that there would be a free field for his seat. The chances are that he will become a resident of Chicago and establish a great law firm there. When Judge Day and William McKinley first met they were employed on opposite sides of a case that involved leas than s2o.‘ This was thirty years ago, both gentlemen having just come to Canton, Ohio, to practice law. The case was tried in a blacksmith shop in the southeast corner of Stark County, a country justice of the peace presiding. A statement recently prepared by experts of the Treasury Department fixes the cost of the war up to .Sept, i at $120,000,000, and estimates that the expenses daring the remainder of the calendar year will aggregate about $115,000,000 add!- . tional, or $235,000,000 in all.
Americans Whip Germans.
Officers of the Empress of .tapan report that shortly before they left Hong Kong, there was a serious fight between American and German sailors, in which the former were victorious.
The Corean minuter of justice has been dismissed for permitting the savage mutilation of the bodies of executed men and women. Recent census report on agricultural products of Massachusetts shows $52,880,431 worth nnd $215,{157.214 land value.
TEN NEGROES KILLED.
Town of Harporavillo, Mia*., Has a '•■'"f. Race War*. The town of Harpersville, situated in the interior of Scott County, Miss., Is in the throes of a race war, which has already resulted in the death of ten negroes, the killing of one white man, and the wounding of three others. The trouble started the other night, when Constable Thompson, at the head of a posse of fifteen men. went to the house of William Burke, a desperate negro, who residea a mile from Harpersville, with a warrant charging Burke' with an attempt to murder Charles Freeman, a white man. Burke had fortified himself In his log house, and l»ad summoned about fifty negroes to his assistance. The moment the officers arrived they wore met with a storm of bullets from the house, and a regular pitched battle ensued. Henry Sibley, one of the* officers, was shot dead at the first fire, and a second later three other members of the posse fell, with perhaps fatal wounds. The officers, finding themselves outnumbered, retired for re-enforcements. The attack was renewed in the morning. The negroes in the neighborhood ambushed themselves near Burke’s house, and from their place of vantage they poured a deadly fire into the besieging party. The whole country for miles around was soon ’ in an uproar, and scores of white men armed themselves and rushed to the scene of hostilities.
LEAN TOWARD ANNEXATION.
Position of Delegates to Filipino Assembly Causes ■ urprise. The Filipino National Assembly met at Maloios on Sept. 15. The ceremony of inaugurating the assembly, which tpok place in the old dining hall of the convent formerly used by the Spaniards as the srat of local government, was simple. President Aguinaldo entered the room unannounced, and, upon reaching the platform, bowed to the assembled delegates, who received him with “vivas.” He was in full evening dress, according to the old Spanish custom. Cheers were given for the free Philippines and for the Americans, after which Aguinaldo read his inaugural address in both the Tagalog and Spanish languages. The appointment of standing committees proved a surprise, for it was thereby developed that of seventy delegates in the assembly eighteen were for annexation outright, twelve only for absolute independence, and forty favored an American protectorate, with a decided leaning toward annexation.
MURDERERS ESCAPE NOOSE.
Judicial Decision Save* Three Indian Territory Criminals, Judge Springer of the Federal Court at Muscogee, I. T., and one of the well recognized jurists of the West, has rendered a decision to the effect that there is no court in Christendom that can punish a member of the Creek nation for a crime committed in the Creek country prior to 1898. This state of affairs was brought about by the enactment of a law last June abolishing all tribal courts that then had jurisdiction of such offenses. No proper provision for immediate succession of judicial authority was made. As a result of the decision William Tigis, convicted of murder. and Chiffon Flennelly and Belcher Smith, both of whom were under sentence of death,, have been ordered released from custody.
CELESTIALS SLIP OUT.
Two Hundred Chinamen Suddenly Disappear from Omaha. Two hundred Chinamen brought into the United States for the ostensible purpose of managing the two Chinese villages at the trausmississippi exposition have disappeared. Where they have gone no one knows. The Wong Citing Foo Company, composed of wealthy Chicago Chinamen, had charge of the concession. They gave a bond in the sum of $25,000 to the Government for the return of the Chinamen after the exposition. The Government discovered the situation and orders from the Treasury Departmeht were issued to the Federal marshals throughout the country to apprehend the runaways and hold them for deportation. Many of them were women, and it is charged these were sold to the highest bidders.
SPANIARDS ARE DEFIANT.
It May Be Necessary to Send Warships to Havana Bay, Havana advices say there is a possibility that warships will be sent to Havana again in the near future by the United States. The demauds and protests of the American commission have been treated by Spanish officials with contempt and defiance. The commission cabled to President McKinley asking for power to enforce respect for its protests. The trouble was caused by the sale of 150 cannon by Spanish officials in defiance of the protest of the American commission. The Spaniards are fleecing the people of the island by official brigandage.
LOSS OF LIFE IN CHINA
Two Thousand Persons Drown by overflowing Hiver. A steamer from China brings news that the overflowing of the Yellow river in Shantung province has caused an appalling disaster in central China. Villages were swept away by hundreds. One hundred thousand people are ruined and homeless; 2,000 drowned; cfops were ruined. Famine will prevail next winter in the district, which is populated by more than 100,000 people. Two hundred Chinese were drowned near Canton by the overturning of their vessel.
CLAMOR FOR THEIR WAGES.
Em ployea of the City of Havana Usable to Get Their I nee. Havana city employes arc clamoring for their wages, which are long overdue. A delegation of the employes visited the Mayor and after noisily invading his private office, demanded their pay at oncoThe Mayor declined to treat with the delegation. The police were called upon to eject them.
PORTO RICAN WANTS TO VOTE.
He Claims Annexation Gives Him the filsht of SafTranc. Antonio Voles Alvarado, who was born in Porto Rico, but has resided in New York for ton rears, claims that the annexation of his native land makes him an American voter. He attempted to register, but the clerks refused*to register him, as he bad not taken out citisenship papers. The members of the election board told him he must get an order of court befior* thejr would register his name.
STORIES OF RELIRF.
Two Letters to Mrm. Waltham. 4 ... M Mra. John Williams, English town, B. J., writes: “DeabMbs. PxxkhaM:—l cannot befin to tell you how I suffered before taking yonr remedies. I was so weak that I could hardly walk across the floor Without falling. I bed womb trouble end such a bearing-down feeling ; also suffered with my back and limbs, pain in womb, inflammation of the bladder, piles and indigestion. Before I had taken one bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I felt a great deal better, and after taking two and onehalf bottles and half a box of your Liver Pills I was cured. If more would take your medicine they would not bare to suffer so much." Mrs. Josepm Peterson. 513 East St. Warren,-Pa., writes: “Deab Mbs. Piseham:—l hare suffered with womb trouble over fifteen years. I had inflammation, enlargement and displacement of the womb. I had the backache eonstantAy, also headache, and was so dizzy. I had heart trouble, it seemed as though my * heart was in my throat at times choking me. I could not walk around and I could not lie down, for then my heart would beat so fast I would feel as though I was smothering. T had to sit up in bed nights in order to breathe. I was so weak I conld not do any thing. , “1 have now taken several bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and used three packages of Sanative Wash, and can say lam perfectly cured. Ido not think I could have lived long if Mrs. Pinkham’s medicine had not helped me.*
Making Something Out of It.
“Hello, there,” said the banker, as he entered his office and fonnd a burglar resting in his easy chair. “What do you want?” “The name of the maker of your safe,” replied the crook. “I’ve tried all night to break It, but It beats me. I thought I might be able to sell a recommendation to the makers and realize something on my seven hours’ work.”—Philadelphia North American.
What Do the Children Drink?
Don’t give them tea or coffee. Have you tried the new food drink called GRAIN-O? It is delicious and nourishing. and takes (he place of coffee. The more Grain-O you give the children the more health you distribute through their systems. Grain-O is'made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tasteo like the choice grades of coffee, but coats about %as much. Ail grocers sell it 15c. and 25c.
Just Like a Men.
Miss Antiquate—Do you believe in dreams? Mr. Guyer—-Sure. But why do you ask? Miss Antiquate—Oh, just because. 1 —er—dreamed of you last night. Mr. Gnyer—Did you, really? As I remarked before, I believe in them, but I don’t believe they have any signifi ranee whatever.
It Can Be Made to Go.
“The melancholy days have come;" has rheumatism come with them? It can be made to go right off by the use of St. Jacobs Oil, which cures and leaves no trace behind.
And Prove Himself a Fool?
His Attorney—You’d better plead guilty. Your punl&ment would be merely a nominal fine. Prisoner— I That* all right. I’d rather run the risk of going to jail than te staud up before everybody and acknowledge I stole a bicycle of the make of 1894.—Chicago Tribune.
Coughing Leads to Consumption.
Kemp’s Balsam will stop the congh at once. Go to your druggist to-day and get • sample bottle free, sold in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; delays are dangerous.
Too Blow for Any Use.
Ella—lsn’t Charley Smudgktns a simpleton? Etta—How, pray? Ella—The other evening when he was kissing me I told him to stop and he did.—Roxbury Gazette.
Are You Going to Florida?
Do you want maps, rates, routes, time card or other information? If so, address H. W. Sparks, T. P. A., 234 Clark street, Chicago.
Was All Right.
” Captain—That new recruit seems to enjoy army rations. Lieutenant— he said It is such a change from his, wife’s cooking.—New York Evening Journal.
Lane’s Family Medicine
Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acta gently on the liver and kidneys. Cure* sick headsche. Price 25 and 50c.
Better than Throwing It Awsy.
Friend—Why do you drink whisky? Colonel Blood—l don’t know of any better use I can put It to.— Town Topics.
Just the Time.
This la Just the time of the year wo feel the muscles all sore and atlff, and then It la just the time to use Bt. Jacob* Oil to relax them and to cure at once. So remarkably perverse la the nature of man that be deepisea those that court him, and admires whoever will not bend before him.—Tbucydldek. i Piso’s Cure for Consumption has been a'family medicine with us since ISGS.—J. R. Madison, 2409 42d ave., Chicago, TIL Punctuality is the stern virtue of racu of business, and tbe graceful courtesy of princes.—Bui wer. There are always 5,000 British vessels at sea. T :' , - Mrs. Winslows Uournma Hnor lor Childrsa r trcthlns: cottons the chibs, reauces InflsminsMMb Sllsys j. »tn. cure* wind colic. K cents s bottle. MtoU
A Houscholder’s Opinion.
Wick wire—l don’t exactly like the idea of calling one of the new ships of war "The American GirL” f Yabsley—What is the matter with it? Wtekwire—lt sounds too tame. “The Hired Girl” would give a much better idea of destruction and desolation.— Indianapolis Journal.
Shall We Keep the Philippines?
While public opinion is divided as to the wisdom of keeping the Philippines, it is, however, all one why in regard to the wisdom of everybody keeping their health. For this purpose Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is widely used. This medicine is both preventive and cure for malarial fevers and stomach disorders.
Extracting Gold.
Gold is now extracted by mixing the ore with common salt and sulphuric acid, then adding a solution of permanganate of potash. Hydrochloric acid Is formed, and chlorine is liberated to combine with the gold, forming chloride of gold. This new method as employed at Mount Morgan, Queensland, Is said to have advantages over the amalgamation and cyanide processes. It Is more searching than mercury, and can be applied to ores containing copper.
Try Grain-O! Try Grain-O!
Ask your Grocer to-day to show yon a packageof GItAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The ehil.dren may drink it without injnry as well as the adult. All who try it. like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it'ia made from pare grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. % the price of coffee. 15c. and 25 eta. per package. Sold by all grocers.
Tulip is derived from the Persian word “dulband,” meaning turban. Busbeck, a German traveler, brought the first bulb to Europe in the sixteenth century.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
Is a constitutional cure. Price 75 cents. By the streets of “by and by,” one arrives at the house of never.—Cervantes. FITS Permanently Cured. No Ota or nerrouanwa ■lter first djoVuseof Ur. kudo’s (treat Norre Restorer. Send lor FJIKK 52.00 trial boUlo and treatise. lU.K. u. Huu Ltd., 931 Deway Publishing Company, Westfield, Mass., wants agents everywhere for Lite of Admiral George Dewey and Dewey Family History; nicely illustrated.
/\MSsMhS \ PLUG^V^ # Pemember the name X l ' when you buy again, f “A Good Tale Will Bear Telling Twice.” Use Sapoliol ... Use... SAPOLIO
n n SLICKER I WELL KEEP YOU DRY. Dor7bTfortedwlthamacklntoalT3 ■gflor rjbber ccat. If you tha'. will Itet p you dry in the hardlast storm buy tha Fish Brandi Jt Slicker. for tale to ywrl^j^ ", /L J. TOWER, Boston. Min.
White Tow Sleep.
Do not have too much air blowing through your room at night, or Neuralgia may creep upon you white you sleep. But if It comes, use Bt. Jacob* Oil; it warms, soothes and core# promptly.
A Doubt[?]ul Tradition.
First Sulmrt»anite—Thompson tells some queer tales about this place, but you can’t believe anything he saya Second Suburbanite—l should say not; He says he had a cook once stay long enough to get malaria.—Puck.
There Are 1,000 submarine cables in us# all over the world, which have cost about $100,000,000.
Scrofula Cured A Sore on His Limb Had Troubled Him for Years. “I had s bad esse of scrofula, sad there was a sore on one of my limbs which troubled me for three or four years. 1 saw Hood’s Sarsaparilla so highly recommended for scrofula that I began taking it, and it has completely cured me. I am new sound and well.” Clarence L. Delaney, Waller, 111. Remember Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is America’s Greatest Medicine. Hood’s Pills are the favorite cathartic. 28a TAPE WORMS •*A tape worm eighteen ft long at toast came on the scene after my taking two CASCARETS. This lam sure has caused an bad health for the past three yeara. lam a tin taking Oaacarets, the only cathartic worthy of notice by aenslbto people.” Ono. W. Bowles, Baird,Mass M A CATHARTIC gnnyniioih uyVVwWVVVV thaos maun Mwsismo .Pleasant. Taste Good. Da Good. Never Sicken. WegtMn. or Gripe. Me, Sc, 60s ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... SMtte a»ri 7 tw W , CMsaf. N«etTMl,S—TMfc, Stt ■O-TO-BIC SUM I# I*o. Feral Ter eale. S 3 per acre paid.. ,J. Malksll. Sleav^lt^ygf
»CURE YOURSELF! rritstione or ulcsrsUosc Sold by Drsatota, PENSIONS. PATENTS, CLAIMS. Sjns. isUMwsr, 13 oleins. ettjr. dees C. N. U. s# 44-Os* " ■ ■ , ■—
