Jasper County Democrat, Volume 3, Number 17, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 August 1900 — Page 7
y w <1 A A SI O W \ growth ► o f h a i r ; comes ; from lack < of hair \ food. The *< HAIR I It is starved. It keeps ► coming out, gets / F< thinner and thinner, < bald spots appear, \ L then actual baldness. \ ► The only good, hair h / food « you AMpr k < can bu y IM Is - Hall 1 * visor* / feeds "M the roots, stops b < starvation, and the / \ hair grows thick and / long. It cures dan- < ► draff also. Keep a k < / bottle of it on your k < < dressing table. ►< < It always restores ► \ color to faded or gray / ► hair. Mind, we say J “always.” ► Sl .OOs bottle. All druggists. < / “ I have found your Hair Vigor 1 . to be the best remedy I have ever k / tried for the hair. My hair was \ ► falllug out very bad, so I thought L 1 1 would try a bottle of It. I had ►. k used only one bottle, and my hair ’ 4 stopped falling out. and it is now ► . real thick and loug.'‘ ■ < . Nancy J. Mountoabtle, . July 28, 1898. Yonkers, N.Y. \ ? IMrffe the Doctor. \ He will send you his book on The . < Hair and Scalp. A»k him any quet- \ ► tlon you wish about your hair. You 1 . will receive a prompt answer free. > / Address, Ds. J. C ATER, r < ► Lowell, Mass.
Alum Mountain in China. In China, twelve and one-half miles from the village of Llon-Chek, there is a mountain of alum, which, in addition to being a natural curiosity, la a source of wealth for the inhabitants of the country, who dig from it yearly tons of alum. One Who I*. Aunt Jane—Do you think men are really capable of loving with a deep and sincere affection? Aunt Hannah—Are they? You ought to see my husband gloating over the rare old bindings in his library!—Chicago Tribune.
ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter’s Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of See Pac-Stalto Wrapper Bsiow.
* ItABAMI, ) FOB DiniNEU. FOR BILTOUOREtt. FOR TORPID LIVE!. FOR CONRTIPATIQN. FOR CALLOW MIR. _ FOR TMECOfIPLEXIOR CURE BICK HEADACHE. The University of Notre Dame, NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. F%ILL COURSES In Claralcs, Latter*, Econ* omlca and Hlatory, Journalism, Art, Science, Pharmacy, Law, Civil, Mechanical aud Bloc* triad Eng'iwerlng, Architecture. Rooms Free to all student, who have completed the stud lea required for admission Into the Junior or Senior Year, of any of the Collegiate Course* Rooms to Rent; moderate charge to students over seventeen prvp.irtng for LSI leg late Courses. A limited number of Candidates for the Ecclesiastical state will be received at special rate* St. Edward's Hall, for boys under 18 years, is unique tn the completeness of Its equipments. The 87th Year will open September 4th, 1900. Catalogues Free Addr.-ss REV. A. MORRISSEY. C. S. C.. Preaident.
WORK OF ANGRY MOB.
RACE WAR AT NEW ORLEANS CAUSES MANY DEATHS. Negro Murderer Smoked Out of His Refuge and Slain After Making a Fiendish Resistance—Five White Men Killed—Negro School Burned. Robert Charles, the negro desperado, who had killed Captain Day and Patrolman Lamb and badly wounded Officer Mora, was smoked out of his hiding place in the heart of the residence section of New Orleans Friday afternoon and shot to pieces. In a desperate battle lasting several hours he shot nine persons, killing five of them and seriously wounding the others. Charles was discovered iu a little frame building at Clio and Saratoga streets. His body was cut to a thousand pieces, but he sold his life at a terrible cost. Before his body was riddled with bullets before 20,000 persons, Charles shot and killed Sergeant Gabriel Porteus, Alfred J. Bloomfield, a boy, and Andy Van Kuren. a deputy. keeper of the workhouse. Corporal John R. I,ally was shot in the abdomen and died. Frank H. Evans, an ex-policeman, received a fatal wound in the right side of the abdomen. A. S. Leclerc, proprietor of Mannessieur’s confectionery at St. Peter and Royal streets, was shot fatally in the right hand and the right groin. George Lyons, son of I. L. Lyons, was shot mortally. It was found necessary to burn the building in which the murderer had sought refuge and from which he poured a deadly fire at policemen and citizens who were seeking to take his life. Never before was such desperate courage witnessed in the city. Charles knew that he would be killed the minute he tried to get away, so he stayed in a room on the second floor of a house and fired on anyone who came within range. But the fire finally drove him out and the moment he was exposed a dozen rifles and pistols cracked at him and soon his body was filled with lead. Great excitement prevailed. Hundreds of persons armed with rifles and revolvers were on the scene. Policemen ran about as if insane. Many held revolvers in their hands, which they never used. To add to the excitement the fire department was summoned to the scene and many firemen exhibited great courage. After midnight a mob which had evaded the militia and the citizens’ police attacked the Thomy Lafon schoolhouse, 6th and Rampart streets, upon the supposition that negroes had stored arms and ammunition in the building. Unopposed they had no difficulty in gaining possession and, firing the structure, destroyed it completely. The school building was erected a few years ago by the city and being devoted exclusively to the education of negro children it was named for the well-known colored philanthropist. No negroes were found in the school, but a number who emerged from houses in the vicinity were pursued for quite a distance. A strong force was dispatched to the scene as soon as the alarm was given, but too late to save the school. The mob was quickly dispersed. The Mayor, Paul Capdevielle, has issued a proclamation imploring all good citisens to aid in suppressing the lawlessness.
TUAN REPORTED SLAIN.
Rebel Leader Said to Have Been Killed in a Battle. The Shanghai correspondent of the London Daily Express says that reported there that a large section of the “Boxers” has revolted against Prince Tuan, alleging that he is making tools of
PRINCE TUAN.
them for his own ends. A desperate conflict took place outside Pekin. Prince Tuan personally led his followers, two of his generals having deserted him. The battle lasted several hours and Prince Tuan was defeated and killed.
CONGER MESSAGE A FORGERY.
State Deparment Convinced that Fain oua Dispatch Is Not Oennine. A Washington special says: “The cipher dispatch signed ‘Conger,* which was supposed to have been dated July 18 and was received through Wu Ting Fang, the Chinese minister here, .is a forgery. The State Department, which has regarded the dispatch as genuine, has received absolute proof that it is a fraud.”
Kill Boxers on Sight.
Fugitives from the interior report at Shanghai that the Imperial Chinese troops are killing nil Boxers on sight, saying that the Boxers deceived them into embarking in a hopeless struggle.
News of Minor Note.
There is promise in Oregon of the largest fruit crop ever harvested. A Frenchman named Dufour claims to have found n way of melting and molding quarts like glass. Ashley B. Jordan of Davton died of over-exertion while participating in a iTVfc-mile bicycle road race. After calling on bis sweetheart, at Millerton, N. Y., Michael Collins fell dowj an embankment and was killed. A Concord, N. H., judge has decMed that soda water is one of the necessaries of lite, and may be sold on Sunday. licmons and oranges from Loa Angejes, Cal ? wese kept perfectly*fresh in a cold storage voyage of 8,000 miles to Paris. A pet robin gave ths alarm when burglara entered the house of Walter Sigler. at Millerton, Jf, Y., frightening them off.
SOME CURIOUS DINERS.
B>Sgar on Hot Beans and Thick Balt Paste for Soup. "Talk about queer fish of the human School, this la the place to see them,” remarked the head waiter of a big downtown eating house. The nearest waitress smiled in approving affirmation, as Is the duty of all well-conduct-ed waitresses when their immediate boss makes an assertion. “Well,” said the bright, young bunch of vivacity who serves the first table, “I thought I had seen the limit when a man put sugar on hot beans, but to-day a man ‘wolfed’ because there was no olive oil handy to put on an order of meat pie.” The young lady who plays the cash register volunteered the Information that a man with the salt habit was the limit. He just couldn’t get enough ■alt, try as he might. When his order of soup was before him he would calmly unscrew the tops from all the salt cellars on the table and deposit their contents in his soup, making it into a thick salt paste. This he would spread upon bread and consume with a keen relish. This man always sat at the same table with the customer who ate the green tops of young onions and left the white bulbs untouched. The demure girl with a fathom of stiver rope about her wrists observed that when she saw a man pour mayonnaise dressing over apple pie she almost dropped a tray full (not a poker term) of orders for star boarders. “These freaks are, of course, all peculiar,” Said the head waitress, “but the climax is capped by a woman with an Insatiable appetite. She was quite a steady customer and always ate everything on the bill of fare, and, like the guests of Donovan’s party, ’looked on the back to see If any more was there.’ This woman, a few days ago, cleaned up in great style. She excelled herself and ate more than three average men. When she was given her check she deliberately walked over to another table, sat down and began going through the bill of fare again. She had just finished her soup when I noticed her game. I went over to her and said: ‘Lady, we can stand for almost anything but this. You have eaten one large dinner already.’ She was as cool as a cucumber, and replied: “ ‘Ah, yes, it had quite escaped me.’ “ ‘Your memory must be awful short,’ says I. " 1 don’t care to be Insulted by a waitress,’ says she, ‘and 1 will never come Into your place again.’ “ ‘Keep out,’ says I, ‘and give the boss a chance to make a little money; he has been losing long enough on you.’ “So out she went with her nose in the air, pretending to be dreadfully Insulted. I told the boss about It and he said he hoped she would never come back, for he wants to buy the missus some new clothes. But the next day we forgot to tell the cook that the woman was not coming back, and so there wae a siirplus of veal that day.” All of which accounts for the fact, possibly, that the boarders had chicken croquettes to infinity the following day.
O-I-C
When a preparation has an advertised reputation that is world-wide, it means that preparation is meritorious. If you go into a store to buy an article that has achieved universal popularity like CASCARETS CANDY CATHARXIC for example, you feel it has the indorsement of the w’orld. The judgment of the people, is infallible because it is Impersonal. The retailer who wants to •ell you “something else” In place of the article you ask for, has an ax to grind. Don’t It stand to reason? He's trying to sell something that Is not what he represents It to be. Why? Because be expects to derive an extra profit out of your credulity. Are you easy? Don't you see through his little game? The man who Will try and sell you a substitute for CASCARETS is a fraud. Beware of him! He is trying to steal the honestly earned benefits of a reputation which another business man has paid for, and if his conscience will allow him to go so far, he will go farthef. If he cheats his customer In one way, he will in another and it is not safe to do business with him. Beware of the CASCARET substltutor! Remember CASCARETS are neve? ■old in bulk, but in metal boxes with the tong-tailed “C” on every box and each tablet stamped C. C. G.
Impolitic.
Now that collection boxes are made that allow every one to see what bls neighbor gives at church, two things are pretty sure to happen wherever they are used: the collections will increase In value for a time, and then a number of persons will conclude that they are too poor to go to church.
Try Grain-O! Try Grain-O!
Ask your Grocer to-day to show yon a package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury aa well as the adult. All who try it like IL GRAIN-O has that rich aeal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made froA pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. % the price of coffee. 15c and 25c per package. Sold by all grocers. The value of Transvaal mining machinery Is about $47,000,000.
CASTOR IA For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought
SEND SPECIAL OFFER! mdtoiuand wewtll ———»not eiactly *. repreoented ,„<1 th* moat wonderful beiaaln you *vnr-* O, <rf. pay Uu> aiproa. *<...! our BPE-
A HORNY-HANDED SON OF TOIL.
Thia Time the Phrase Turned Out to v ße a Boomerang. "I never hear anybody speaking of a •horny-handed son of toll,’ ” said a Kentucky colonel, “that I don’t think of a race for the Legislature which took place in my State a number of years ago between Tom Stuart, then editor of the Winchester Democrat, and I. N. Boone, a descendant of the great Daniel, and at that time holding the office for which Stuart was making the race. Stuart was a young man, very progressive and quick of mind, while Boone was well along in years, slow of thought and action, and especially proud of the fact that he was a representative of the farmers. was he In this regard that he carried it to the excess of almost total abstinence from water for washing purposes, and he would let his hands and face go unwashed for several days at a time. “Stuart was quite the reverse in his Ideas of cleanliness, and at one of their joint discussions he gave his opponent a blow that fairly knocked him out. Boone was making his regular speech, and at the proper place in it he referred to the matter of his relation tc the toiling masses. “ ‘My friends,’ he said, holding up a pair of hands that looked as if they hadn’t been washed in a week, ‘to let you see for yourselves that I am a horny-handed son of toll I ask you to look at these hands, and,’ turning to Stuart, ‘I would ask my pale-faced young friend from the city what he thinks of them?’ “Stuart was on his feet in a minute. “ ‘I do not desire to embarrass my distinguished opponent, ladles and gentleman,’ he said with a bow, “but I would say that I tfiink they need soap and water.’ “It was such an apparent case that the crowd took hold at once with 1 a shout and Boone was completely floored, and later Stuart was elected.”— Washington Star.
World to End Thia Year.
This is the recent decision of one of the societies of the world, and while there are few people who believe this prediction, there are thousands of others who not only believe, but know that Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters will cure dyspepsia, indigestion, constipation or liver and kidney troubles. A trial will certainly convince.
A Trunkless Body.
An explorer, lately returned from his travels, was relating bls adventures. “I peered,” said he, “into the thicket, and there before me lay a trunkless body.” “Nonsense!” remarked an interfering critic; “who ever heard of a trunkless body?” “My friend,” replied the traveler, quietly, “the body was that of an elephant.” He then resumed his story.—. London Globe.
Homeseekers’ Excursions Via Chicago and Eastern Illinois Bailroad.
On the first and third Tuesdays of June, July and August the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad will place on sale Homeseekers’ Excursion tickets to various points in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Indian'Territory, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas.
One fare (plus $2.00) for the round trip. Tickets are limited on going trip .fifteen days from date of gale. with stopover privileges in Hqmeseekers’ Territory. Returning, tickets are limited twenty-one days from date of sale. Remember that we now have in service a new wide-vestibuled train between Chicago and 'Waco and Fort W’orth, Texas, leaving Chicago daily at 1:50 p. m. Through Pullman sleeping cars ana free reclining chair cars. For further particulars call on or address any agent Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad, or C. L. Stone, G. P. & T. A., Chicago.
Progresive Orientals.
The orientals of the diplomatic corps are much more progressive than the Europeans In adopting American customs. The Chinese minister was the first among his colleagues to acquire the bicycle habit, the first to own an automobile, and his enterprise Is shared by Turkey’s representative, who is quick to take up the fads of the day and ably conducts an a'utomoblle over the fashionable drives of an afternoon.
Crops in Nebraska.
There is a broad smile on the fice of nearly every farmer in Nebraska, because of the satisfactory crop conditions in that remarkable State. In the Northwest, drouth has seriously injured the wheat yield. In the South again there has been more or less damage, but in Nebraska they have had seasonable, heavy rains, and not too much of them. A full crop of oats and wheat will, from present indications, be fbllowed by a bumper crop of corn. During the past week heavy rjiins all over the State have put thia crop in fine condition, and it msy break the record. The expectation is that great numbers of people will go to Nebraska this fall, when the cheap harvest excursion rates are in effect, to investigate the country and confirm by actual experience the stories of prosperity so often beard. The tendency is on the part of renters, everywhere in the Rast, to seek homes beyond the Missouri River, where land is cheap and so very productive.
More Meanness.
She—Then you don’t believe a woman can make her busband be what she wishes him to be. He—Well, if she thinks she Is doing it, It muounts to*the same thing.—lndianapolls Journal. * Dropsy treated Jee by Dr. H. H. Green's Sons of Atlsnta, Ga. The greatest dropsy specialists In the world. Read their ad. in another column of this paper. Of the total track mileage In England one-third is owned by the public.
Too Late with His Heart.
“Unless you promise to be mine,” he passionately declared, “I shall enlist In the army." Pointing toward the door, she replied: “Go! If you had said those words while the war was in progress they might have moved me. Now It would be just as heroic of you to say that unless I promised to be yours you would go out and drink a pint of buttermilk.”—Cleveland Leader.
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 the place of coffee. The more Grain-O you give the children the more health you distribute through their systems. Graln-0 is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee, but costa about (4 as much. All grocers sell it 150 and 26c.
In Rural Districts.
The telephone has proved very successful in the West in places where different farm houses are connected by wire, as it enables them to give each other timely warning of the approach of tramps. It is also useful in cases of fire and sickness. The possibilities of the telephone in rural districts are very great.
BEST FOR THE BOWELS.
No matter what ails you, headache to a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right. CASO A RETS help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. CASCARETS Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations.
Anxious to Know.
First Boarder (a doctor)—Yes; thia bed of mine Is rather hard, but it’s unhealthy tb sleep on feathers. Second Boarder—Then bow do you account for the long life of that chicken the landlady served for dinner?—Puck.
Do Your Feet Ache and Burn?
Shake Into your shoes Allen’s FootEase, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or new shoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot and Sweating Feet. At all druggists and shoe stores, 26c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y.
Chinese News Bearers.
According to the ancient practice of oriental monarchs the Chinese Emperor rewards those who bring him good news, and punishes those who bring bad news.
Lane's Family Medicine
Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acta gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c.
Cheap Postage, More Letters.
A reduction of postage in Egypt from 1 plaster to a quarter of a piaster resulted in doubling the number of letters posted. I am sure Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago.—Mrs. Thos. Robbins, Maple street, Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17, 1900. Among the Chileans a belief prevails that the juice of onions is a sure cure for typhoid fever if given in its early stages.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
Is * constitutional cure. Price 75 cents. The French government has liberated in Madagascar during the last four years above 1,000,000 slaves. Mn. Winslow's Boonnrs Btxw tor Children teething: aoftens the jnuna. reouce* Infismmstlon. allay* pstn, cures wind coUo. B cent* * bottle. Advantage Is a better soldier than rashness.—Shakspeare.
Painful Periods aro overcome by Lydia E. Plnkham’e Vegetable Oompound. Fifty thousand happy woman testify to this In grateful letters to Mrs. Pinkham. Menstruation Is a severe strain on a woman's vitality. If H Is painful something Is wrong which | Lydia E. Pinkham’, Vegetable Compound | will promptly set right; If excessive or Irregular write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice. Evidence abounds that Mrs. Pinkham's advice and medicine have for many years been helping women to be strong. No other advice Is so unvaryingly accurate, no other medicine has such a record of cure.
pi IV * BBBBLE BARREL BBEECR LOADIHQ gig SNOT BUB hr gT.77. R !! BW winch as raw riflis, «3.07. new breech loading shot <Sunb. 04.47. new winchester SHOT 6ta,<gT B . 9 £ SHOT, MMRHMhI
Like the Deadly Under-Current which grasps one without warning, the mucous membrane which lines the entire body suddenly becomes weakened in some spot and disease is established. It may be of the lungs, the head, throat, stomach, bowels, or any other organ. Whereever it is, and whatever it seems, it all springs from the same cause— CATARRH or inflammation of this delicate pink membrane. The system is weakened in winter. The delicate lining is more susceptible to irritation or inflammation, and thus we have pneumonia, grip, colds, coughs, fevers, etc., all catarrhal conditions which may easily be checked by due catarrh cute—Pe-ru-na. That’s the only way out of it. You may dose forever—you will not be well until you try the true cure and that is Pe-ru-na. You may think your trouble is some other disease and not catarrh. Call it what you will, one thing is sure, your system is affected and must be treated, and Pe-ru-na is the only remedy which reaches the right place and dots cure.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ We take our choice corned ▼ beef, cook it and season it all ♦ done by experts, better than is X possible at home. When It is X just right we can it to keep it ▼ right until you want it. That is ♦ ■ LIBBY S ♦ COTTAGE “ ? CORNED BEEF: ♦♦ Keep it in the house for ▼ ▼ emergencies, for suppers, for + sandwiches—for any time when ♦ you want something good and X want it quick. Ask your grocer. ▼ Lit by, Me Ntil 4* Libby, Chicagt Write for free booklet, “Hew to Make Good Things to Eat.” ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Faster Time via the WABASH CONTINENTAL I IMITPR leaves Chicago at 13:41 LIUIIILI7 nooß and arrives New ’York 3:15 and Boston 5:30 the following afternoon. Through sleepers both points. WARAQH Spend the evening at TtrtDrtJll home or at the theater MIDNIGHT FLYER TO ST. LOUIS Louis before !:oo o'clock next morning. Try this popular train. City Ticket Office, 95 Adams St., Chicago.
A Skin of Beauty la a Joy Forever. MAOICAL BKA VTIfIUL* 13 MMr 9 J i*. im al "Is 1 Ml wly mass AoeaH 1* >4 ml as soentarfaM «i • L / Umllar asm*. tn t. 7% at jLrl A. •aymaSte a SlrV'X?' ) •"<> '• Cream • as Um ( 4 A*>- J !♦•»« harmful of all LZ-I W\ sHS?S Taney flood, D*al*r* la th* 0.8. Canada*. sad Faroe*, VKRI> T HOPE IKS, Propr. W Oraat Joaa, S*. S I TV * Secure our ternia au<l *y*fi>m Jg a! JEiJN X Q lor pla-jlng Invention, FREE OM'Alt A. M It'll F 1,. Kk<>ihtkxki> Attoiukv, No. 302 Broadway. New York City. I>cpai tineat 43. Branch. No. rat) F street. N W.. WuMilnuton. D. O. n D O D Q V Nf W DISCOVERY ; glva, LZ VZ “ O 1 quick rallaf a curs* <w«l ana I l> u**!*,**, AMERICAN WIDOWER an who will be mother to bt, little <lri. Addreee MB. GRANT, 117 Fant »nt Street. New York. C. N. U. No. 31 WHEN WETTING TO ADVERTISERS PLEASE MT ’’ yaa saw tb* aSvwllMaest la «Ha yaßr
