Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 33, Number 48, Jasper, Dubois County, 14 August 1891 — Page 2

OH3irtOLY WORK.

A Grand Rapids & Indiana Train Wrecked Near Kalamazoo, Mich.--- Evidently the Work of ViIlans Who Misplaced a Rail A Large Number .Severely Injured. Kalamazoo, Mich.. Aug 6 -----.A dastardly and successful plot to wreck a train was carried into executton yesterday afternoon on the Grand Rapids & Indiana road nar Cooper, the first station north of Kalamazoo. The fated train was the through express, carrying the Mackinaw ami Chicago sleeping car and due here at noon. After leaving Cooper, and while the train was running 35 miles an hour, Engineer Clark Snyder noticed what seemed to be an open switch a short distance ahead. He quickly applied the air brakes, but before the train could be stopped it ran onto the fatal spot. The engine wheels caught in the rails and ties and stayed on the track, but the rest of the train went over an embankment 30 feet high. There were about sixty passengers in the train, and twelve in the Wagner sleepinjr car. In the descent of the latter to the bottom of the embankment it rolled orer twice and finally rested right side up almost completely demolished, The trucks and wheels tore with terrific force through the bottom of the coach and the escape of the pansenders from instant death is nothing short of a miracle, Brakeman Conway, of Fort Wayne, though badly injured about the head, ran to this city for aid. A special train bearing a corps of surgeons went out and in an hour brought the injured to Borgess hospital. While the injured were being cared for railroad men inrestigated the cause of the accident, and discovered that it was caused by a deliberate plot to wreck the train. What seemed to Engineer Snyder to be an open switch was a rail sprung from its place by bolts being taken out. The condition of the nuts and bolts plainly showed this. The ties and the spikes used in holding down the rails bore evidence of having been tampered with. The following is a list of the injured: A. Conway, Fort Wayne, head cut; N. B. Williamson, Trenton. N .1,, arm injured, head cut; Dr. H. B. Carriel, Chicago, back hurt; F. A. Burnham, Medina, N. Y head cut: A. O. Davids Chicago, badly shocked and bruised; Charles A. Shellman, Baltimore,, face cut and head bruised: Miss Carire Hawley, Niles, Mich., bddly bruised; W. S. Pratt, Grand Hapics, shoulder dislocated; Mr. and Mrs. J. Karl. Grand Rapids. his shoulder dislocated and . her body badly bruised; M. R. Powers, Chicago, bad gash in leg, arm broken, head and face cut; L. Waterman, Lowell, Mich., badly injured internally; Henry G. Dykehouse, Grand Rapids, two bad scalp wounds. A number of other passengers were less seriously injured. While the railroad men insist that the accident was due to a deliberate plot to wreck the train, others believe that the spreading of the track caused the accident. A FRIGHTFUL ACCIDENT. An Engine Thrown from the Track on the West Virginia Central and a Number of People Seriously Injured. Cumberland, Md., Aug. 6. News has reached here of a frightful accident which occurred at a point called Switch Back, on the West Virginia Central road, about 60 miles from here. Tuesday morning, as usual, the men, seventeen in number, boarded the tram-road engine to go to their work in the lumber regions. Two women asked permission to ride out a short distance to a berry patch. Their request was granted, and the engine containing the nineteen passengers started. It had hardly gotten under good headway when the engine struck a piece of timber that was lying on the track, turning it completely over. The occurrence was so sudden that none of the people on the engine had a chance to escape and all were more or less injured, either by escaping steam or from the fall of the engine. John McKenzie, who lives at Frostburg, was caughtunder the engine and scalded so badly that he died that evening. The others seriously but not fatally injured are: Robert Robinson, engineer, badly scalded and bruised: Frank Craver, fireman, scalded and bruised; Lewis Layman, scalded about hands and face; John Rickey, hurt internally and scalded; Jennie Durst, badly bruised and scalded. As soon as word could be sent the physicians of Elk Garden, the nearest town, were telegraphed for. and they promptly responded, relieving as far as possible the sufferings of the injured. Cont relnt Ity the I"ii.:.fr. lAiOtrtvliXK, by., Aug. 'J. Late Kentucky flection n turns a m fpvorable in every instance to the farmers, and there is no longer any donbl that thvy will control the next leg! daturc. Tlu y arc not all alliance or people's party men, however, although the peoples nartv has surnmeu the democrats bv electing no less than thirteen of their candidates. The political complexion of the house is: Democrats, 05; repute licans, 17; people s party, 13; indpend cnt democrat, I; ami one district doubtful. The farmers of all. par ties number fifty-six besides several couutry merchants and teach ers, whose sympathies arc m the same directions. The farmers, most of whom arc alliance men, will have a majority in the democratic caucus, Tlnsre will be sixty-eight members of the demo cratic caucus, not counting the inde pendent democrat, whose admission to the caucus is doubtful, and thirtVMtstie of them are farmers. t'.rstW-HH Indian. Kansas Citv, Mo., Aug.rt. A special dispatch from Kl Ilcno, I. T says: Thirteen Chcrcmie Indians. Chief f)ll Crow leading them, started for Walker uaKe, acv., totiay to see Messiah, They hope to induce the h tin to come and annihilate the whit es with a wave of mud. Thev cxnect ths buffaloes to come from the north and again cover the nralr.es. The Messl dancers are everywhere to be seen, and the Messiah craae lias not by any means ceaseu. inmoatlous point to ether oalbraak of these rstless red aklaa.

OYS IN ItUC.

Yj U, . K. Hufcire tUm Ma wassaws vswBPSri rrf niffvimwTi etVf v tawe it DrrKoiT, Mittk., Aug-. . The fol low ing k Htm MUtrea of Commandor-ia Chief Veaaey before the eneampment. "CoMKAUu-Thu It turn dlTwr analrerrr of a birth, itut nt a wcxtdlsg. The wtMltiini; oAcarrist wha the bridegroom, the yeata of the land, enUt4 la 1U dfn. Abraham Uueola eeiebrtleU themarrlai huji1 1 hi. ComtMbla wti the Md. IIr ts. tur wu the antloa' Aug. The pltnlK to e. tabttab that tig orr the Uomaia et eae kn wu the pledge of her H'hea the ledKe wail gruHUly redremed, throHKh bloody trifr, through ffriK ad deeth, and after tbe Ylrtor bftd placed, oa the brow of the Unite s new diadem. whose xm were hotter, raler, fsiuM, untainted with fUvery, a eouatry re-united nail free, the fruit of that marrltKe vra the Grand Army of the KepitbUr, aa oifiprlng worthy of its royal parentage. The man utut be blind ladeed who nitt failed to ee la repeat year. as time baa liuaeled our eoltuutt to nnl the river which all mankind wnt ero, that the G, A. K.. ut It ha beeois bettr known, ba bea constantly warchlnjf to ahiKber plase In the etKmatlon of the ntMJnle Keaer. ally as well at the veturaasof the war; that the spirit of true eowradehlp ie eontaat!y taking a de)t4r hold la the hearts of cms ritdee, and thm tlmo lias not deutlnished.but quickened, their pride of service; not quenched, but Intenalttetl, tba ardors of their love of the tUjCaMdallit repreents; not dulled, bat enlivened, tli soldierly spirit which they exhibited la the old herote days. Auy clurxe to the ceatrary Is aa Insult to the viUraus as a class and as Indi viduals." fter referrlns; pathetlcaltr to the deaths during the year of Sherman, l'orter, IlHiiiliti, Devlns, lotim and other honored membera of the order, the commander-in-chief con tinued: The present administration etwouRtered the same divturlmnetrsln the departments of Louisiana and Mississippi that had troubled ay predecessors, t rom various sources ot Inforniatlon that have been accei-siblt. to me, 1 believe that a lance majority of both hlte and colored. comrades its tbe depart ments of Louisiana and Mississippi are strong In the conviction that It would be for tbe best Interests of all individually, and of the posts, and of tbe order, to Hht h separate department In Lou.siaua and some of the other gulf states made up of sueb KHta as may apply to come into It, and having; concurrent Jurisdiction with the department already established in sueh states-concur rent In respect to the charterlnK and mustering of poets, but each department bttving exclusive Jurisdiction over the posts which it may receive. My best Judgment, after a year of painstaking Investigation, Is that It would be wise to confer upon ray sueeeesor tbe authority to create sueh a department. He tnay either nnd It necessary, or think It uet to exercise the power conferred. The commander-la chief advises that the executive otUcers refrain (rom Indorsing appeals for contribution for any paapose. however worthy, except those expressly named in the objects of the order. Veterans are apt to lie strongly influenced bv sueb indorsements. It Is reeommen led that eoMKressbe appealed to to provide for ths maintenance of Ht. MeOregor eotte. The G. A. K. has been paying the expenses be cause no one else assumed tuem. -The argument In favor of servlee pension legislation has been Hrp;edupon congress without avail, but under the disability pension bill about l.OOw pensions arcs now beln allowed per day, and will be until the docket of applications Is substantially cleared. The number who thought the b;ll too liberal Is rapidly diminishing as the act becomes bet ter understood. Tbe commander in-chief reeo mwends that the legislation giving pref ereuee la the eivll servlee to discharged soldiers be amended so as to recognise the Me et servlee apart from discharge or disability. "Comrades, our order has not resetted Its high'water mark, neither In numbers nor la glory or power. In cultivating fraternity and charity it works on the tame tines with some other organization. Hut there la another basic principle of our order which Is, In a sense at least, peculiar to It-It is tbe broad principle of loyalty. Here we provoke erltlcism. and on the ground that there Is no disloyalty now. True, no clais or section Is eKaed fit disloyal acts; but, as is well known, there are men here and there throughout the land who adhere to tbe pernleloua doctrine that secession by a stnte Is a ritcht, and therefore resistance to attempted coercion Is not disloyalty or rebellion. The Iron b-l of Andrew Jackson crushed the first threats of overt action bd upon tills doctrine. n hen. In the next Instance, a threat was parried Into effect. It required tbe scourge of war and rivers of blood to suppress it. A third tHt-ct Is not likely to appear again la tbe south, iiecause It is not conceivable how the Interest of that section can be no advaataKeottaty situated at they are witlila tbe Union. Hut the doetrine permeates the politleat literature of the country. The seed took deep rout In the disciples of Calhoun and other who labored to plant It Aa our country extends its burden, and sections become antagonistic In Interest, we can say that another effort may not be made ont" where, !m long as tills danger exists, how ever rentotely, the work of the C. A. K. Is not finished. No organization nlaeethe war htti done fo much for the country, especially la laying deep the foundations of future security, as the J. A. a. It appeals to every loyal band that drew a Made or carried a musket. Therefor, no Union soldier has done bis full duty as a citizen unleM he bas given the order the benefit of his comradeship in It. "la eloslng I desire to renew- the expres sion of gratitude which I wade a year ago, far the great honor you conferred upon md. Having intended to wrong no one, and hav ing received no affront from anyone. I say to one and nil, from tbe deepest reeeses of my heart, I thank rou. and (Jotl bless yon." As a prelude to the address et the com mander-in-chief, a quartette rendered severnl war n. In one of them was Inter polated the line: "There will be bo fusion of the blue and the grey, as we go marching on. At this suggestion thedtegatc arose en mase and cheered vociferously. "So fusion In ours!" ahonted a man In the galIt ry, and tho ground floor cheered again. Kx rresldwnt Haves. Gov. Ilovev of Indiana. ex-tJov. Algr or Michigan and ex-tlov. Oglesby of Illinois came upon tbe platform at this Juncture and were warmly received. in behalf of the comrade from Nebraska Col. CUrkson presented to the commander-in-chief a silver gavel and n magnificent tand of Ho were, while CoL Duflield, of Detroit presented a "business gavel," made out of remains of the old fort which was brought to the surface while excavailHg a site for the new post nftte. Tho address of the commander- ta-elilet was listened to with close attention. An ptause greeted his declaration that the colored organizations nhould e recognized until tne question nan been Hastily adjudicated, but there was much More of It wbea he recHiHiimu.-d that power be given his successor to create another department Report s. QfAKTRMMliTKh QKVKMAI.. In bis annual report Quartermaster-den-aral Taylor gave the receipts for the ascal year as StUrt; expenditures, MT.Wt". bat ance, I1JS01. The assets of the organ izatloa he gave as 121,711. The posts, be said, as a general rule, were prompt la meeting their obligations, and the financial future of tba order was apparently a bright one. THE INHl'BCTOH-eitXBaJM. ' Inspector-General J. W. Hurst, In his re port, complained et the Inadequate faclll ties afforded his department to perform Its duties, because of the changes In the dates fer Inspection constantly made bv the na tlenal encampment. He ha-st been ablets) secure repojts of Inspection from only a part of the pesta.kat seen aa had betsi hv ee.td were la mt esMdltlnn,

THE OJTh UNDER HARKIHON, KspabHwinlsMa KIHed Uf the freeesst Ad aslahrtratsea, Takittf the ftfansa of tM, a ato )UtiticiaH ia Kan mm haa Hured out surpriktaif inreae of remtblk'aH strenicth Im the southern state, atttl hia statist l-i are tind in wide circalation in our rMpubUean oontemporarisws who tind eowfort ia jfraveyard whlstliHg. The ttffHrati are all rlffht, Imt it la a aharacterUtii! remiblicaa halat X go wmiiK oa right fibres. The trouble in this cae ia that th statistic are compilfd from Uie rnturns of thts election of 188. Th cotntry then knew little or nothing about Mr, Harrison and tlbl not dream of such a revival of the radicalism of the reconstruction epoch aa it has man under his administration in the plutocracy of the MeKtnley bill: or the shameless fraud of the bullion purchaM? swlndl" for the domonetizatioa of bilver, and in the bitter malipnancy of the force bill, iinr sectional hate against the southern states as a pretext for putting' the control of einffressloual elections in the. hands of a clique of politicians in oino ia the District of Columbia. The carnival of sjormption dnrinir the reconstruction epoch made it impossible for any disinteristed and intelligent person residing- in the south to be a republican. With the lapse of years this wa beginning' to change. The people of the southern states are attached to the theory of rotatiou in ofice. They grew restless under the loop-continued control of one party in their state affairs. They wished a change. Under the Cleveland admlnstration tliej' began to believe they could risk a ehanfje without danger. With a democrat like Cleveland or sush a republican as Arthur in the white house, they were in danger of concluding that, merely for the sake of change, they could venture on putting republicans in office without the danger of having thera kept there indefinitely by republican forcj and fraud. The Harrison administration has shown them how gravely they were mistaken. It has convinced the in that the republican party can never be safely trusted with sueh power as will allow it to follow its bent anil demonstrate its real meaning. Under the Harrison administration, the prosperity of the south has been attacked; the attempt has been made to violently subject it politically, and its agricultural interests, in common with those of the west, have been ruthlessly sacrificed to the plutocracy. As a result

republicani-m in the south is dead. There may be some few white repub1 icans left, the majority of them in the fastnesses of the mountains and in remote backwoods, where little or noth ing is known of the outside world. Hut there are not enough of them anywhere to make even the nucleus of an effective republican organization ia support of such republicanism as that of Heed and Harrison, Dudley and Quay, anamaker and Banlsley, Chandler and Lodge. The entire eotsntry ha reacted strongly against the radicalism and plutocracy of the republican party under Harrison, and as the southern states hare been most fiercely attacked, most seriously threatened by it, the reaction has naturally been, strongest there. If tha democratic party were to disband to-morrow the republican party would still be unable to carry a single southern state in 1692. St, Louis Republic SAVING AT THE SPIGOT. Enforced Retrenchment the Kesnlt ef tterfcless Expenditure. Secretary Foster proposes a material reduction of the clerical force at the New York custom hous2, aa the in auguration of . new regime of economy at the commencement of the fiscal vear. Similar reductions in other branches of the government service may be looked for this summer. The treasury is empty, and every dollar of expected revenues will be needed to meet the terrible bills imposed upon the government by the billion congress and the consequences of department extravagance for two years past. It is stated that one thousand census office clerks must go, and a reduction of 5130,000 a year will be made in the salary list at the New York custom house. Here comes a snarl between the secretary of the treasury and the collector of the port Mr. Krhardt makes a vigorous protest against the depiction of his force. However necessary it may be from Mr. Foster's standpoint, it will have a fatal effect upon republican politics in Xew York city. The turning out of office of a large number of the faithful will have a decided effect upon the coming election. The republican party In this state has never possessed a particle of strength except through office holders, and a wholesale dismissal this summer is sure to produce an effect which will prove especially disastrous to tho fortunes of the party in the fall. The ranks of the disaffected, and they arc numerous enough already, wijl be considerably augmented by those dismissals. The enforced economy on the part of the government places Mr. Krhardt in such an unfortunate position that he may be compelled o resign to preserve his influence with his constituents. He is the first of Republican leaders in Xew York, and he has taken such a position against Mr. Foster's new regime that he cannot consistently remain in oflice after his friends have been turned out wholesale. There is no question as to the necessity of the government U reduce expenses. Every department has been run at high pressure since Mr. Harrison took possession of the white house. The ordinary expenses r f the government have been increafc.vi beyond all precedents, and charge of corruption and fraud have been the rule, not the exception. The billion congress completed the work of the depletion ef the treasury. Nothing is left of the large surplus saved by the Cleveland administration. The leswoa haa been taught to the American pie that republican rale at Washington la the Meat exix naive Umjm possible

xprisM, They hr hsssMt ah 14

in the tMHsast, ta tU pemoM , m the land oAiew a4 other Imreasta cf the laWrkM- dewrtiaestt. Tby hava mnsm the worst legislation, by a re pa bl lea a tMHigre that ever was known the country. Thy have nrotsNtfciti in vaia agaluatthe deterioration of their industries by an iufatuow tariff act Titer a -e humiliated by the continued presence of Wanamaker. Kauaa. Huey, Noble ami Qnay in re public a councils. It is too late for th secretary of the treasury to ntentl matters by saving at the spigot. The frightful extravagance and robbery of the lat two years cannot le condoned by partial and enforced economy in the reduction of the clerical force of the government Albany Argus. CLARKSON TO THE FRONT. A Uetttea Opportunity for the Crest HestkmHU, The mountains are laboring again, but it is more than a mouse this time I f report knows what it is talking about, it means the rise of Clarkson over the fallen forms of Qnay and Dudley. The bos is dead, long live the bKaThough the glories of Quay ami Dudley shall glimmer anil fade away, the golden aureola that surrounds the brow of Clarkson will shed' sufficient light fot the republican hosts. Ve shall still have a shrine to worship at and a saint from whose lips the pearl awl rubies shall drop as they scattered the ground when the favorite of the fairy godmother soke. Long live Clarkson; Clarkson. the cunning and ruthless; Clarkson, the headsman. Though ho be no statesman, he is the most useful man In the republican part3, and the laborer is worthy his hire. According to republican standards Mr. Clarkson is entitled to his promotion. If Quay and Dudley are to stand aside, who is so fit as he to uphold the traditions and practices of the republican party? Is he not in thorough accord with them? Can he not handle the funds and diride the spoils to the queen's taste, and does not that put him at the head of the machine? The country should be proud of Clarkson, together with Quay, Dudley and the others of that sehooL He is peculiarly a home product. He has risen to power by original methods, Kurope has none to compare with him. Mr. Clarkson does not bother his brain with such vain and empty things at theories ami principles. His domain is that of the material and substantial. He is the vote getter, the worker on election day anil before it High tariff and low tariff, protection and free trade are nothing to him. lie does not disturb himself about free coinage of ilver or limited coinage of silver. In his business these things are useless, but when it conies to getting the boys in line, by means of a judicious use of the wherewithal, he is a wheel horse. The young men of the country should take notice. The 4ld avenues to distinction are no longer worthy of consideration. Xew standards of statesmanship have beea erected The Clays, the Webeters, the Calhoun, the Sewartk and the Lincoln have had their day. They have bee pretty good fellows in their way, bat they ware not half as useful as a Qttay or a Clarkson. Tom Plat! says that he loves Clarkson for the heads that he has chopped off, and it behooves the youth of the land to study in order that they may become choppers themselves in their matnra age. Their ambition should not fall short of that high mark. The democratic party is unfortunate in having no Quays ami Clarksons, but perhaps Stean get along without them. Such greatness brings with it its burdens, and there are some people who love the old order of things, when fair play was the rule and the boss was unknown. On the whole we are not sorry that Quay, Clarkou and Dudley belong to the other fellows. Louisville Courier Journal. POINTED PARAGRAPHS. The Ohio democrats accept McKinley and MeKSnleylsm as the issue with something more than alacrity, and put the monopoly tariff, the billiondollar congress and the foree bill conspiracy ia the front of the fight X. Y. World. "We may reasonably expect that the expenditures for pensions will decrease," said Gen. Garfield, twenty years ago. Gen. Garfield may have been a very good soldier, but what are we to think of; him as a prophet? Louisville Courier Journal. Raum is about to unload 60foec pension cases on the various agencies of the country in order to get them disposed of with more celerity. This will please the old soldiers undoubtedly, but the country in general would greatly prefer to see lien Harrison unload Raum. Chicago Herald. The democratic movement in the west is steady ami permanent It is the result of earnest conviction and it is crumbling down republican strong, holds long "considered impregnable. The full result of the MeKinley tarifl have not yet come home to the recklest party responsible for that outrage oc American industries. Albany Argus. Financier Foster bo doubt f ulli satisfies the. wishes of hk friends in Wall street, by his offer to extend the percent bonds after maturity at S per cent w hat the tax payer demand is that he pay the Iwnds at maturity and stop the interest altogether. This could easily have been done but for the criminal extravagance and rapacity of the billion-dollar congress. St. Louis Republic. The very downy esjwhion being prepared by kindly republicans to break the fall of the tumbling Quay has its notable advantages for him whom it is to catch, but deprives the party of the satisfaction of affirming that the malodorous leader was ignominiottsl ejected because of his misdeeds. Pea. pie are to be given to understand that Mr. Quay retires against the wishes of his colleagues, and perhaps it is a well so, for no one could ever be persuaded that lie would have been expelled as i(ng aa there was a chance of his carrying elections, however had hk reputatle might haaema. Chige -S 11

SOHOOL AM OHUMOH.

The faestltr a4 station ts af l ajrlvaala state mdhsge, at Jfcriksftmt, legislature and goverttstr for the apfwepriation of f IM,), just gmated Ota hv aUtatioa. As indicative of thsamnntf labor performed under the auspice of the Aateriea hoard at their root in Koston, there are sent out frosa there annually, exclusive of postal can Is, some thirty thousand letters. In the Railway mission the United Kingdom miaakmaries, colporteur and evangelists have a constituency of over 4W,Wil military men. Multitudes of devoted Christian women are giving their lives to this work. According to o metal reporta the aumber of Jews in the nine old provinces of Prussia who leeaine Christians, between the years 1S75 and 1S88, was 2,101. During the same period 136 Christians went over to the .lews. This is the way the Weileslev girls masqueraded oa one of the class days: The freshmen were sailor lads, tbe sopliomores were gnomes, the juniors were in the eostume of. King Arthur's knights ami the musicals went as choir girls. Prof. John Stuart Illackie, of Scotland, ami Prof. W. S.Tyler, of Amherst college, have been teaching (Jreek for more than fifty years. Ami what is more, they are still pretty lively, though close on eighty, for people whose specialty is handl ing dead languages. Iter. J. Hudson Taylor, of the China inland mission, says that in response to the appeal of the Shanghai conference for one thousand missionaries in five years, one hundred ami eighty have arrived during the ten months since the appeal, mi that in all protmbility the first year's quota will be secured. The cwtr has sent to the Stanford university in California a magnificent collection of rare minerals valued at $S5,0OO. There are more than 890 specimens in the collection. In return for this liberal gift Mrs. Stanford intends to present a collection of California precious stones ami minerals to the St Petersburg National museum. The Uaptists certainly liold a high place for practical philanthropy. John D. Rockefeller, who gave nearly two millions to found the Chicago university; Charles Pratt, who established the Pratt institute in Ilrooklyn, and James I. Colgate, who has just given a million dollars to Colgate university, have been devoted followers to the ISaptist faith. All three gave their money while living. Philadelphia Ledger. A young graduate from Vassar had read the following paragraph; "It must be disinterested benevolence which leads the sweet .young things who go to Vassar college to plant trees on commencement dav. Thev can't ever expect to climb them." She didn't like it awl in reply wrote: "It is surely better to plant trees at college, even if debarred tha questionable privilege of climbing Rem, than to sow .wild oats, from which no esse ever yet failed to reap a harvest" aa mi ssBSHsaBsmsaaasV sWassi ahams. sjssaLsssa.sam asksaw eJ IwVsbbVVrV JHWA bTVcH AWfttv&tWvl sf" tweea the sMMsmtors of tarn estate c William B. Ogtkm and William R. Har per, preatdent of the) new Chicago uniersity, which insures to that institu tion a gift of a large amount of money, to be deroted to establishing a scien tific school. The new department is to be called the Ogdea scientific school, and the endowment will not lie less than $309,000, and may reach S&OO.CO0, the result depending upon the outcome of the litigation still pending over Mr. Ogden's wilt X. Y. Tribune. The old boys of old Yale have Wen reading with awe the announcement that the entering freshman class of Yale university numbers five hundred ami eleven. This includes, of course, the Sheffield scientific school ami other departments. At Princeton university the entrances number something over three hundred. Not to go too far back to the region of antiquity, in the days when "Jimmy' Hasted and Chauncey M. Depew were at Yale, the graduating class in the school of arts (there was no science about it then) numbered about one hundred. At Columbia the class averaged between thirty and forty in the academical department which was then regarded as the college proper. RUBBER HIPS. They are the Streceaeer ef the Kestle With Xew York Women. Although the bustle has been doomed and has sank into olcnrity, yet womenkind is not satisfied, ami' a makeshift is ia sight or rather, it is in use and not in sight It has taken the form this time of artificially developed hips. It is the same obi bustle that has reappeared, but it is cut in two, and the two halves moved around one on each side. A lady who knows all about such things told me. She had one on herself, ami when I commented on her increased robustness she laughed, blushed, patted her hips and said: "It's not me, it's rubber. False hips are the latest craze, ami one that Is becoming popular with wonderful rapidity. The pads are made of inflated rubber bags. They are not so inconvenient as the okl time bustle and not much more of a nuisance to wear. Go down fifth avenue any day ami yon will be surprised at the number of remarkably broad-hipped women yon will meet They have grown wonderfully stout in the past month." "Why do they do it?" "Oh. the great advantage to be gained in appearance is tbe smaller look it gives to the waist I don't think there is any other reason. That's quite enough for any woman. The fashion has its serious drawbacks, too. Sometimes the pad slip around ami the effect is unpleasant Again, tee, I am always ia fear that a pin will pnaeture oa of the things, and that oae side ef me will go off with a lead report You ean imagine hew lop-shied one weald look after such aa aeshMit It'sherribie Ve takka.V. Y. Herald

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the lift) that is fighting agaiu Only net pTontptlv. Put it off, Md nothing can sav ou. Hut, if taken in time, J)r, Pierce' Golden Medical Discovery will certainly cure. ' It must be done through the blood and the "Discovery" i the most potent blood - cleanser strength -reatorer, and flesh -buildf,' that's known to medical science The scrofulous affection of the lungs that's called Consumption and every form of Scrofula and blood-taints, all yield to it l'lir Weak Lungs, Spitting of U!ooi Bronchitis, Asthma, and all severe' lingering Coughs, it's an wiiesjiialci remedy. It's the only one that'j fuara'nitttl If it doesn't Wnet'it or cure, in every case, you have your money back. 44 We promise to cure your Catarrh, perfectly and iermaiientlv, no matter how bad your cae or of how long standing or well pay you 500." That's what the gopnetors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh emedy say to every sufferer frota Catarrh". And they" mean it "August Flower" Mrs. Sarah M. Black of Seneca, Mo., during the past two years has been affected with Neuralgia of the Head, Stomach and Womb, and writes: "My food did not seem to strengthen me at all and my appetite was very variable. My face was yellow, my head dull, and I had such pains in my left side. In the morning when I got up I would have a flow of mucus in the mouth, and a bad, bitter taste. Sometimes my breath became short, and I had such queer, tumbling, palpitating sensations around the heart I ached all day under the shoulder blades, in the left side, and down the back of my limbs. It seemed to be worse ia the wet, cold weather of Winter mad Spring; and whenever the spells cane oa, my feet and hands would turn cold, assd I could get o ska? at all. I tried everywhere, and got no relief before using August Flower Then the change came. It has done me a wonderful deal of good during the time I have taken it and is working a complete cure." 1 G.G. GREEN', Sole Mas' fr,Wxl bury, X.J. Have Yn Trie. It? XV NOT, Try It Now! Go to your Druggist, hand him one dollar, teu him you wantabottkof , . . . PRICKLY ASH BITTERS A The Best Medicine known for the CURE of All ttyttt if tht Linr. AN bbbbbbsssWMbbb aW Istsstl VbbbbbbbbsI Mtftttttt t4 ftf PURIFIES THE BLOOD, CLEANSES THE SYSTEM, -- as -- Mas) Ufa DONALD KENNEDY Of Roxbary, Miss., says Kennedy's Medical Discovery cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep Seated Ulcers of 40 'cars standing, Inward Tumors, and every disease of the skin, except Thunder Humor, and Cancer that has taken root Price, $1.50. Sold by every Druggist in the U. S. and Canada. I imv mue Wm (PATaxMW . Tbe atmsH and lfw sMda Wilt walls the i fa sWinrwastept. . . w mt WIT I flA. a a PsV

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