Jasper County Democrat, Volume 6, Number 31, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 November 1903 — Page 2
m am «kmi p. E. BABCOCK, Publisher. RENMELAER, - - INDIANA.
AROUND THE WORLD
Turks prerent an adequate investigation of Macedonian affairs, but apparently, says a correspondent, botli aides in the recent insurrection were guilty of pillaging villages and slaying their inhabitants, either for joining or refusing to join the revolt. The Philippine commission lias confirmed the anti-slavery law passed by the Legislature Council of the More provinces Oct. 5. The law prohibits slave hunting in all the More territory and provides for the coniisention of ull vessels eugaged in the slave traffic. Portions of Xlissouri, Illinois, Kentucky and Louisiana experienced two decided earthquake shocks Wednesday afternoon. the first at a few minutes after 12 o’clock, the second about an hour later. The area of disturbance extended aa far north as Peoria, 111., and as far south as Memphis, Tenn. The Standard Oil Company added $10,000,000 to its yearly income the other day by arbitrarily increasing the price of refined kerosene 1 cent per gallon throughout the United States. At the same time it added another $1,000,000 to Its income by increasing the price of paraffin candles 1 cent a pound. Marshal Woodruff, of Oxford, Ohio, who v-as shot and seriously wounded a few weeks ago while attempting to arrest the Spivey brothers for creating a disturbance and for whose shooting a mob lynched Joe Spivey, declares that the crowd punished the wrong man. He positively asserts that it was lx>u who shot him. Co&mander Hubbnrd, of the American gunboat Nashville has ordered the superintendent of the Punama Railroad at Colon not to transport troops either of the government or the opposing force. Washington officials believe the revolutionists will be successful in Panama and think the supremacy of the United States is complete. Advices to the State Department in Washington force Secretary Hay to believe that the partition of Chinn, which his diplomacy alone has prevented for two years, is at last under way. That Russia and Japan have reached an agreement which will make Russia supreme in Manchuria and give Japan a free hand in Corea is regarded as certain. Miss Emma Oyer was killed and nineteen others injured, four perhaps fatally, in a collision of two cable cars in a fog on the Twelfth street incline, near the Union depot in Kansas City. Most of the injured were working girls, clerks in the big retail stores uptown, who were on their way to work from homes in Argentine, Annourdnle and Kansas City, Kan., across the river from Kansas City, Mo. The aocident was due to slippery tracks. One train heavily laden with passengers had reached Summit street, nnd had stopped to let off a passenger, when the gripman lost his grip on the cable. Immediately the train started back, gaining great speed. A heavy fog made it impossible to see a block ahead, and indescribable confusion ensued among the passengers, dozens of whom were too closely packed inside the closed car to make a move to save themselves. Several on the grip car and many among those on the platform of the rear car jumped and escaped with but slight injuries.
NEWS NUGGETS.
It is reported that the German garrison at Warmbad, in German southwest Africa, has been annihilated by the Hottentots. It is rumored at Colon, Colombia, that startling developments, pointing to the independence of the isthmus, arc near. Everything is quiet. Lieut. Albert M. Beecher, ordnance officer on the battleship Maine, fell from the forward turret, a distance of forty feet, and was killed. Report of Commissioner of Education for the last fiscal year places the total number of pupils enrolled in the public schools at 15,025,557. Railroad men declare the big companies will put the Erie Canal out of business in one year, provided it is rebuilt, which some persons profess to doubt. Blanche D. Chesltrough, formerly Mrs. Roland B. Molinenr, has become the wife of VVullnee D. Scott, who was her attorney in divorce proceedings at Sioux Falls. The main body of the host of John Alexander Dowie has left unregenerate Gotham for Zion City. About 3,000 of them departed. Dowie remained in New York. Six meiCwere killed, one is missing and four were injured by a series of explosions which destroyed two shellhonses at the naval depot at lona Island, N. Y., causing a loss of $500,000. While running forty miles an hour, passenger train No. 0 on the Santa Fe was wrecked on n curve a few miles east of Trinidad, Colo. William Walker, the fireman, was killed and Engineer J. Pose was badly scalded. A dispatch from Posen says that ft bloody conflict between 500 Jews and a force of Russian gendarmerie took place at Warsaw during the enlisting of recruits. The wounded on both sides numbered over forty persons. A dispatch from Simla says terrible earthquakes have destroyed Turshis, neat Turbat-I-Haidari, in Persia, killing 350 persons and injuring many more. One hundred and eighty-four carpet factories were leveled. By advice of the gcand officers of the International Association of Machinists the strike of machinists in the New York shipyards which began last May has been given up. The men return to work under former conditions where positions are vacant. Gold in vast quantities is reported to have been found in the Arbnckle mountains west of Mill Creek, Ok. Mining experts have assayed the ore and pronounced it very rich. The existence of this rein has been known for some time, but not until the land was allotted has the discovery been made public.
CARLOTTA IS DYING.
The Uaforteaste Widow of Maximilian Can No* Lira Loss. Carlotta, the wife of Maximilian, the Austrian archduke who conquered Mexico, has been insane since Napoleon 111. refused her pleas that be aid her husband, who was finally captured and shot. She is now dying in her prison, the Chateau de Bonchat, near Bruesele. She still holds a mock court daily, fancying herself yet Empress of Mexico, for she has been bereft of reason for thirty-sev-en yean. Toohumor her the attendants pretend that she presides over their entertainments. Carlotta was 17 when she became Maximilian’s bride in 1857. It was a love match and the ten years of their
CARLOTTA.
wedded life were a continuous honeymoon. But Maximilian was overthrown, captured, led put behind a hill at daybreak and shot by the “execution guard,” Before the capture of the Emperor the Empress pleaded with Napoleon 111. and with the Pope to aid her husband. Her prayers were unanswered. The first symptoms -of mental derangement were manifested on the day on which she had her last Interview with Napoleon. Her mania Is harmless. King Leopold seldom sees! her. It is a public scandal that he dissipated her fortune. The most pnthetic feature of Empress Carlotta’s fate is her hallucination that her hufhnnd is alive. She talks of him frequently, and often begs courtiers to send her husband to her at once.
NAMES DAY OF THANKSGIVING
President Roosevelt lasnes the Annual Proclamation. Hie President has issued his annual Thanksgiving proclamation in the following terms: “By the President of the United States of America: “A Proclamation. “The season ia at hand when, according to the custom of our people, it falls upon the President to appoint a day of praise and thanksgiving to God. “During the last yeur the Lord has dealt bountifully with tis, giving us peace at home and abroad and the chance for our citizens to work for their welfare unhindered by war, famine or plague. It behooves us not only to rejoice greatly because of what has been given us, but to accept it with a solemn sense of responsibility. realizing that under heaven it rests with us ourselves to show that we are worthy to use aright what has thus been intrusted to our care. “In no other place and at no other time has the experiment of government of the people, by the people, for the people, been tried on so vast n scale as here in our own country in the opening years of the twentieth century. Failure would not only be a dreadful thing for us, but a dreadful thing for all mankind, becanse it would mean loss of hope for all who believe in the power and the righteousness of liberty. Therefore, in thanking God for the mercies extended to us in the past, we beseech Him that He may not withhold them in the future, and that our hearts may be roused to war steudfustiy for good and against all the forces of evil, public and private. We pray for strength, and light, so that In the coming years we may with cleanliness, fearlessness and wisdom do our allotted work on the earth in such manner as to show that we are not altogether unworthy of the blessings we have received. “Now, therefore, I, Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States, do hereby designate as a day of general thanksgiving Thursday, the 26th of the coming November, and do recommend that throughout the land people cease from their wonted occupations, and in their several homes and places of worship render thnnks unto Almighty God for His manifold mercigs. “In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. “Done at the City of Washington this 31st day of October in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and three of the independence of the United States, the one hundred and twentyeighth. “THEODORE ROOSEVELT. “By the President: “JOHN HAY, Secretary of State.”
Exhaustless Supply of Iron.
mineral resources are a vast and continual surprise. Our iron masters hsre their hands upon new sources of supply beyond the Pacific ocean. Moreover, new processes are continually rendering iron and steel production profitable where it has not been profitable before. Iron is everywhere, snd many metallurgists are of the opinion that to talk of exhausting the supply of it is much like talking of using up the world's supply of oxygen and hydrogen.
Girls Replace Messenger Boys.
The telegraph messenger keys of Boston are-on strike and thein places are being token by women^and ffiris. The new messengers range In age from 25 to 60 and are giving perfect satisfaction. Already 275 of the women and girls are carrying the messages.
The Weakness of Our Laws.
A man In jail in California waited eighteen years far trial and then died. Ia Misaoori there have been eighteen boodle convictions, snd not one of the boodlers la in the penitentiary.
MANY STUDENTS DIE.
Fifteen Football Players and Friends Perish in Wreck. Fifty of 1,200 from Purdue University Are Badly Injured. Special Lafayette Train Strikes Coal Cars Entering Indianapolis. Coaches Holding College Boys Are Smashed and Hurled Down a Steep Bank. Fifteen students of Pnrdue University, among them several members of the football team, were killed and fifty or more others in a total of 1,200 players or “rooters” on a special train were injured In a terrific collision on the Big Four Railway while entering Indianapolis Saturday morning. The students' special from Lafayette ran into a coal train at Riverside Park, crushing to splinters a coach containing seventy students and friends, telescoping a second coach and hurling it down a 15-foot embankment with its 100 occupants, nnd upsetting and smashing the third coach. In the tangled masses of twisted iron and broken wood the victims were mangled, beheaded or held prisoner till rescuers could chop them out. Aa fast aa the willing boys and men extricated the corpses the unconscious and less seriously injured, and carried them to adjacent grass plots, the girls and women among the excursionists lent their aid In ministering to the sufferers. Holiday dresses were stained with blood, but no pne thought of them. Agonizing groans fitted the air and these came no less from the Injured than from the more fortunate, for all were close friends. The collision tools place at 10:20 o’clock, while the students tvere entering the city for the football game between Purdue and Indiana universities for the State championship. A switch ingine was backing a cut of coal cars an the main track at a gravel pit, where a deep cut obscured the track ahead of each engineer. Blame for the disastrous collision has not yet been placed. “We had no orders to vacate the track,” said Lon Akers, conductor of the freight train. “The fault, if there ia any, cannot fall on our shoulders. We have orders to get out of the way of regular trains. No orders wero given ns that a special was coming in.” Names of the Dead. Following is the list of the dead. Coats, J. 0., Berwin, Pa. Drollinger, Gabriel S., Lafayette, ImL, substitute; beheaded. Furr, Charles, Veedersburg, Ind., guard. Grube, Charles, Butler, Ind., substitute) player. Hamilton, W. D., Lafayette, center rush. Hamilton, Jay, Huntington, Ind., substitute. Howard. N. R., Lafayette, president of the Indiana Laundrymen’S Association. McClair, Patrick, Chicago, trainer. Powell, R. J., Corpus Christ!, Texas, end player. Price, Bert, Spencer, Ind., substitute. Rohertson, E. C., Indianapolis, assistant coach and captain of team two years ago. Roush, Walter L., Pittsburg, Pa., subitltute. Shaw, G. L., Lafayette, Ind. Squibb, Samuel, Lawrenceburg, Ind., substitute. Tsuitt, Samuel, NoblesTille, Ind., substitute.
Details of the Collision. The special train bore the Purdne football team —professors, students and “rootera" —numbering altogether nearly 1,200. It consisted of twelve coaches and was running as the first section at high speed. In the first eoach back of the engine were the Purdne football team, substitute players and managers. Three players, the assistant coach, trainer and seven substitute players of the university team were killed and every one of the fifty-three other persons In the car were either fatally or seriously iujured. From the twelve coaches were coming the joyous cries of 1,200 rooters for Purdue clad In gala dress, with colors streaming, while in the front coach snt twenty great muscular fellows, on whom the hopes of a brilliant victory on the gridiron was confidently placed. Aronnd a curve at the Eighteenth street cut Engineer W. H. Schnmaker found directly in front of him the freight engine snd coal cars moving slowly from a switch leading ont of the gravel pit. He reversed his engine and jumped. The crash hurled the passenger engine and three front coaches against the steel freight care loaded with coal that plowed their way through and buried under a pile of wreckage weighing many tons fully sixty college boys. The first car, In which were the players, was completely demolished, the roof being torn sway and landing across a car of coal, while the body of the car was reduced to kindling wood against the aide of the steel freight car. The second ooach, containing the bend musicians, waa partly telescoped, while the third coach was overturned and hurled down the 16-foot embankment The other coaches did not leave the track. President Stone of the university, with hie family, waa in the fifth coach and was net injured.
Immediately after the shock ths ptfsengtrs, men and women, began fjbs frantic work of touring sway tho wreckage and polling out dead and dying classmates and fraternity brothers. Ths yonng women, dressed in bright colors for the holiday, performed heroic work. Though the bodies were in several Instances horribly mangled, ons completely and one partly beheaded, the girls took upon their laps the head* of the dying and injured and soothed their sufferings as best they could until the surgeons arrived. Their bloodstained and grimy garments were gloomy witnesses of their heroism. i A general alarm waa Bounded and every assistance the city could afford was rushed to the wreck, which was three miles from the business center. Surgeons dashed np in automobiles, fire wagons, unbalances, express wagons, undertakers’ vehicles, private conveyances and even delivery wagons were sent to carry away the dead and injured. While these wore being carried to the morgues and hospitals the work of tearing away the wreck and rescuing those pinned beneath went on. ’ Big, muscular students cried aloud as they stood over the bodies of their, dead friends and fellow workers or gazed helpless upon the sufferings of their college mates writhing in pain. To add to the horror the wreckage caught fire, but the flames were extinguished by the students after a hard fight. The condition of some of the dead was frightful. One body was entirely beheaded. Others were ter ribly mutilated in other ways. The Purdue football team played against the Chicago University eleven on Marshall field a few weeks ago and made a good showing against the Maroons. They were to hnve played in Indianapolis Saturday with the University of Indiana' team, and the game was to settle the State championship. Purdue is a member of the “big nine” college conference and the team,!while not counted In the race for the championship of the West, is a contender for secondary honors. Purdue Unisersity’s officials have announoed that the institution will engage in no more football games this year.
SAM PARKS GUILTY.
Jury Finds the New York Labor Boee Extorted. Samuel J. Parks, walking delegate of Housesiniths and Bridgemeu’s Union, local No. 2, of New York, was again convicted of extortion in the Court of General Sessions Friday afternoon. It took the jurymen just twelve minutes, In which time they took two ballots, to agree that Parks had extorted SSOO from the Tiffany Studios Co., a firm of contractors, under threat of keeping them from continuing work on buildings last January. It was Shown at the trial that Parks had obtained the SSOO as an “initiation fee” when the housesmitha and bridgemen were on strike on three of the Tiffany contracts in New York City. Parks claimed that this money was a fine levied by hla labor union. Later the fact developed that Parks had been disloyal to his union, inasmuch as he permitted the Tiffany firm to employ non-union men on jobs after having received the SSOO. When Parks heard his doom pronounced all his former bravado left him; he was hanging over the railing, his head bowed with shame and grief. He waa the very picture of despair. The convicted walking delego te looked about the court room for his follower*, but not one was ou hand. While the Jury waa out the court room had been cleared and the doors were locked. It waa feared that there might be a demonstration. When the jurors filed out of court and Parka was led back toward the rear of the court room there was a wild rush in the outer hall. Parks’ friends wanted to get into the court room. He saw them at the door. He halted as he reached the gate that leads to tho prisoners’ pen. “I want to see the gang. ,1 want to shake hands with the gang,” insisted Parks. But Captain Wheelock of the court squad and the other officers pushed Parks along, nnd a moment later the door had closed behind him.
THE RAILROADS
Lake Shore officials announce that their large freight ynrds at Elkhart, Ind., and Collinwood, Ohio, are now open. Import rates will be higher next year. All {he Atlantic port rail lines have aaeeuted to the advnnce of 10 per cent in the inland rates. Shipments of oranges from California this season are estimated at 28,000 to 30,000 car loads. Lust year they were 23,000 car loads. < From 1804 to 1902 the freight traffic of the United States—the number of tons carried one mile—increased from 80,335,000 to 157.250.000. It is announced in Chicago that the officers of the roads operating west of Chicago are determined to inaugurate a reform in the system of reserving Pullman berths in advancer Articles of consolidation of the Youngstown and Southern and the Yonngstown and Salem, under the name of the former, have been filed with the Secretary of State of Ohio. The Texas railroad commission he# ruled that certificates of weight on cotton from point of shipment to destination shall take precedence and then affidavits of railroads and consignee in the order named. ▲ joint conference waa held in New York last week between the Import committee of the trunk* fine association and a number of traffic officials of western roads. The object of the meeting wan to fix all import rates on a stable basis, each as will prevent the shipment off foreign goods to potats in 'the West at a lower rate than is made* for the same -u— of articles from poHita in this country. It was agreed to establish a fixed tariff of rates from all port* with the retee from Baltimore as the basts, the gulf railroads to have a 10 per cent differential ia their favor.
COMMERCIAL AND FINANCIAL
~ ; R. G. Dun ft Oo.’s HeV York. Weekly Review of Trade I gays: Industrial activity has increased somewhat, many plants resuming and others preparing to reopen Monday. Several pending labor controversies have reached amicable adjustment, adding to the aggregate of wage earners employed. On the other hand, strikes ar« ordered and some mills will be dosed by lack of new business, while the struggle for control of the copper properties has thrown thousands out of work. While there le evidence of a setback in the steel industry and some hesitation in textiles at the East, the general tenor of these reports is encouraging for a continuance of prosperity, particularly in the sections where agriculture ia the chief occupation. Collections are causing some uneasiness, and financial conditions are unsettled. Merchandise ia freely distributed; earnings for October thus far surpass last year’s by 5.0 per cent and those of 1901 by 13.4 per cent. Purchases of iron and steel products are still restricted to Immediate requirements as a rule, although the decline in quotations appears checked. Some trade authorities anticipate an avalanche of business when buyers are convinced that more attractive terms cannot be secured, but other experts believe contracts wiU not be freely placed until financial conditions improve to such an extent that the railways and other big consumers can serve funds readily. Some increased interest is noted in structural material for office buildings, warehouses and bridges, but orders are insignificant when compared with last year's business in this line. Fsr the first time this season it is possible to record a distinctly better tone in the market for cotton goods. Print cloths are firmer, occasional small advances being quoted, nnd the market for staple and fancy prints is strengthened by the paucity of supplies. A slight increase in sales of woolens is not sufficient to recover lost ground, nor is supplementary business up to the volume that should be coming forward at this time. Although the eurtailCnicaoo. nlent of production in flna ished iron and a partial strike of packing house workers for more wages has created a disturbing feeling, but little appreciable reaction appears in the aggregate volume of current business’ Freight traffic shows no fnlling away. The distribution of merchandise through wholesale and leadiug retail channels compares favorably with a year ago, and there are larger dealings at the banks and in foodstuffs. Weather conditions have favored the progress of seeding and farm work, and the marketing of crops adds to a wider circulation of money throughout the interior. Tha prices of agricultural products maintain unusual firmness. Machinery and hardware factories are kept quite busy, some of the latter working hard to overtake old business. Mercantile collections make a satisfactory showing, and the number of reported failures for the Chicago district does not exceed same week of 1902. Grain shipments for six days, lnclud ing 2,757,330 bushels of corn, aggregate 5,550,740 bushels, and are almost 29 per cent over the previous week nnd fully double those of a year ago. The general demand has been fair and prices well sustained compared with closing a week ago. Live stock receipts, 324,528 head, are slightly over the corresponding week of 1902. Sheep advanced 15 cents per hundred weight. Choice beeves declined 15 cents and hogs closed weak with 50 cents loss. Dealings in provisions showed best on domestic buying, and closing quotations were unchanged in ribs, 5 cents higher in lard and 32Vi cents better in pork.
THE MARKETS
“Chicago—Cattle, common to prime, $3.00 to $6.40; hogs, shipping grades, $4.50 to $5.35; sheep, fair to choice, $3.00 to $3.80; wheat, No. 2 red, 81c to 82c; corn, No. 2,43 cto 44c; oats, standard, 34c to 36c; rye, No. 2,55 cto 56c; hay, . timothy, $8.50 to $12.00; prairie, $6.00 to $11.50; butter, choice creamery, 18c to 21c; eggs, fresh, 18c to 20c; potatoes, 52c to 62c. Indianapolis—Cattle, shipping, $3.00 to $475; hogs, choice light, $4-00 to $5.45; sheep, common to prime, $2.50 to $3.25; wheat, No. 2,83 cto 84c; corn, No. 2 white, 43c to 44c; oats. No. 2 white, 36c to 87c. St. Lonis —Cattle, $450 to $6-60; hogs, $4.50 to $5.35; sheep, $3.00 to $3.65; wheat, No. 2, 85 cto 86c; corn, No. 2, 39c to 40c; oats, No. 2, 34 cto 35c; rye, No. 2,53 cto 54c. Cincinnati—Cattle, $4.25 to $465; hogs, $4.00 to $5.25; sheep, $2.00 to $3.25; wheat, No. 2,86 cto 87c; corn, No. 2 mixed, 44c to 45c; oats, No. 2 mixed, 35c to 37c; rye. No. 2,61 cto 62c. Detroit —Cattle, $3.50 to $5.00; hogs, S4OO to $5.40; sheep, $2.50 to $3.25; wheat, No. 2,86 cto 87c; oorn, No. 8 yellow, 46c to 48c; oats, No. 3 white, . 37c to 39c; rye. No. 2,66 cto 57c. 1 Milwaukee—Wheat, No. 2 northern, 81c to 82c; com, No. 3,44 cto 45c; oats, No. 2 white, 36c to 37c; rye, No. 1,55 c to 66c; barley, No. 2,64 cto 65c; pork, mess, $11.25. Toledo—Wheat, No. 2 mixed, 84c to 86c; com. No. 2 mixed, 47c to 48c; oats, No. 2 mixed, 37c to SBc; rye. No. 2,54 c to 66c; clover seed, prime, $6.40. Buffalo—Cattle, choice shipping steers, $460 to $5.50; hogs, fair to prime, S4OO to $5.86; sheep, fair to choice, $3.25 to $400; iambs, common to choice, S4OO to $5.40. New York—Cattle, S4OO to $5.20; hogs, $4.00 to $5.60; sheep, $3.00 to $3.75; wfest. No. 2 red, 86c to 87c; com, No. 2,50 cto 51e; oats, No. 2 whits, 42c to 43c; batter, creamer % 18c to 2*e| eggs, western, 21c to 26c. ' „
This Mouse Built a Stairway.
During the digging of holes for Newt York telegraph poles not long ago ths workmen noticed a moose which haft, fallen into one of tha cavities. Foe boom the tiny prisoner* raced frantically around the In do sure. Then ho seemed to gfet oxer his hysterics and set his wits to work. Soon he began systematically to dig a spiral groov* round and round the inner surface of the hole, which w£s several feet deep* Night and day the busy little captive worked away digging little pockety here and there as his improvised staircase got farther from the ground, so that he might rest from hie hard la-' bora. The workmen kept him supplied with food, and after the third day the Indefatigable little creature reached the top, and enthusiastic cheering welcomed his freedom. —New York Tril buna.
The Teacher Won.
Hinton, Ky., Nev. 2. —For over two years, two of the best physicians ln_ thls part of the State have been treating Mr. B. J. Thompson, a popular local school teacher, for Diabetes. They told him that hat little could bo done to help him. He made np his mind to try a new remedy called Dodd’a Kidney Pills, and says: “They paved me when the doctors held out no hope. I took. In all about ten boxes. I will always praise. Dodd’g Kidney Pills for the great good they, have done for me.” Many people, and some physicians, atlU persist In the pellef that Diabetes ia an Incurable disease. Our teacher, Mr. Thompson, says It is curable, for Dodd’a Kidney Pills cured him after two good physicians had treated him for two years without success. A remedy that will cure Diabetes will surely cure any case of Kidney Trouble.
Rare Brown Paint.
Ground-up mummy makes a brown of a certain rare color that nothing else can give. It is on account of tho asphaltum In the mummy that this is so. The Egyptians wrapped their dead in garments coated with asphalturn of an Incomparably fine and pure quality. This asphaltum, as the cefr turles passed, impregnated the tissues, of the dead themselves. It turned them Into the beet paint material hi the world. Being exceedingly expensive, It Is used only by portrait painters in depicting brown hair.
An Explanation.
u l’d like to know why it is,” said young Ardupp to his tailor, “that every time you make a pair of trousers for ms you get them a little short?” “I suppose,” replied the knight of the featherless goose, “it’s because I usually find you that way whan I present my bllL” Thera to more Catarrh In this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be lnoqrable. For s great many years doctors pronounced It s local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by .constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced It Incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore esquires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney to Co.. Toledo, Ohio, to the only constitutional cure cm tne market It to taken internally In doses from to drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the bloof and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Bend for circulars and testimonials. Address, - F. J. CHENEY to CO~Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, Tfic. Hall's Family gills are the best
The M. D. Got Left.
▲ rural exchange says: “An unknown man died near town yesterday without medical attendance.” Carefully remove the dost from your spectacles and you may be able to see a whole sermon in that paragraph.
A Pessimistic View.
In all vocations, It appears. Men plan to cheat and rob; Even an honest builder’s work Is, at best, a put-up job. All creameries'use batter color. Why not do as they do—use JUNB TINT BUTTER COLOR. Lorraine waa left an orphan at th* age of 12, and was cared for by his brother, who instructed him in wood engraving.
fno yovj J COUCH 1 ook t'r de l av m '£• jr fvlP'S fl ealsam I
It Cure* Colds, Conghs. Sore Throat, Croup, lnfln«m, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and A certain care for Consumption In first stares, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once. Too will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Add by dealers everywhere, Cam • bottles »» cents and *0 cents. * 'ififil'* ' • ...'.' ' ■wiwnß’ *^ScurmniC nffSW2Tl»Bi|isoa’s Eye Water
