Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 35, Number 46, Jasper, Dubois County, 28 July 1893 — Page 6
TOLD ANOTHER STORY.
OnfeMtoa of Tat Sallager amlnB that it Conviction or Much IHHry ifCoa auction with Ihn Ilomeatriui ruUoalnaj Catx w th Koault at a CoBflncy lu rhlrh I'takertaa Detective mul Othet I'romlarat Mm wer Concerned. I'ittmu'Roh, Pa.. July 'JO. At the Western .penitentiary yesterday District Attorney Clarence liurlcigh, Attorneys L. K. Porter and V. 1. llrerv Ban, Notary Public C C. Lee and Stenographer J. Heal met to take the depositions of Gallaphcrand Davidson, serving time in the Homestead poison cases. Gallagher was before the committee over two hours. Davidson's ex aninatiou occupii-d about twenty nunuiea. The district attorney conducted the examination, but declined to give out anything for publication. It is learned, however, that Pat Gallagher's confession in regard to Hugh Dciupsey and the Homestead poisoning case is much more sweeping in its details than had been imagined by the general pultlic. A gentleman who has heard the whole story says Gallagher's statement not only implicates Pinker toa detectives, hut several men much more prominent in business and professional life. He stated positively, the gentleman said, that every word he said against Dempseyon the stand was false. He implicates Detective Ford, of the Pinkerton agency, and gives tha natnes of many others who were instrumental in Dompsey's conviction. He further states that he never administered poison or eroton oil to the men at Homestead, and that Dempsey never proposed that he should. He sticks to the story that the $25 Dempsey gava him was a loan to protect his furniture. To subtantiato this the defense will show by members of the linn who sold hira the furniture that they were pushing him for th money. Davidson made a statement similar to the Gallagher story except that he was not in the plot as long as the man who convicted Dempsey. i hey both seemed willing to make their confessions umler oath and stand by it even if it mcaus a lengthening of their terms of imprisonment Demp sey'H attorneys have matters in such shape .that they will corroborate the confessions by other witnesses, PENSION FRAUDS. An Important InTetlgation (Joint; Ob IB rw Mexico Asrnt Marcellno' Kx tcaalre Operation String I'nenrtlitHl Washi.noton", July 20. The pension bureau is now engaged in investigating what appears to be an extensive system of pension frauds in New Mexico. An examining board, consisting of three medical examiners and seven spe- , . . ciai examiners, was sent to .ew Mexico, and about the first result of a preliminary investigation was the arrest of a pension attorney at Socorro, named Marcelino, charged with forgery of evidence. He pleaded guilty, was tried at once, and has been sentenced to seven years' imprisonment in the penitentiary. It is not known yet how extensive Marcel ino's fraudulent operations were, but 200 cases of afc are under examination. Some of these will doubtless prove to be all right, but they are all being closely looked into. It is said that about 2,000 pension cases in the territory arc being investigated by the board now on the ground. No report has yet been received from the lward, and the bureau Ss unable to estimate the extent of the frauds which have been perpetrated. GROVER IS HIMSELF AGAIN. Me Return to Huzsstril' liny from Hit CralM In Ihn Onelrfa In flood Spirits and Ka ( Hraltli Th Time of III lieturn ta Wahln;to Nat Yet Drtormlned. Uuzzaku'b Bat. Mass.. July '-'O. E. C. Benedict's steam yacht Oneida having on board President Cleveland, Dr. Bryant and the owner, dropped anchor late yesterday afternoon. In a few moments the little launch was lowered and the party was landed on the wharf at Gray Gables. The party has been cruising since Monday along Long island and Narragansctt "bay, and in the meantime doing more or less fishing. A call at Gray Gables last evening found the president on the veranda. He expressed himself as having had a most esjoyablo cruise, and that ho did not contemplate another during his atay here. In speaking of his physical condition, he said that he was in splcn did health ad the rheumatic trouble had ffBtttrely disappeared, for which he was ru!y thankful. He could not give any definite time when he would be likely to return to Washington. hands" laidoff. Oae-Half of t lie Wrotlaghotifte Cn.'a Hanrfi t Newark. N. J., la Kn'orcctl MIchcm. Nkwakk, N. J., July 19. At the Wcstinghousc Electric Light and Manufacturing Go.'s works here 400 hands, one-half thcTorce. were laid off Monday. Head Clerk Everett said that this actios was simply a discretionary Measure, as the men had Tuen working night and day for the past few weeks and the output had been large and the collections poor. The men, he said, would bo taken back in a few days. It is said that the company intcndscorwiolidating all their works at Ilrinton, in the outskirts of Pittsburgh, and that soon the Newark plant is to be removed to that place. Death or Illatorlan .Tent. Augusta, Ga., July 20. Col. a Jones, JrT, .historian of Georgia, died yesterday morning of ltright's disease, aged 52. lb ropU? er Kali City Drop the Kola f Hank Wrecker. Kanhah Citt, Mo., July 10. Kansas Cttv depositors hare dronned thn mit of oank wreckers and assumed that of benefactors. Not a single bank expe rienced a run to-day. On the contrary, petitions are ia elrcalation asking officers of suspended banks to reopen their doors and pledging support. Expressions of confidence and a wish that they were open have been tendered the National Hank of Missouri, the National Hank of Kansas City, tho Safe Deposit baak sad the Hank of Grand imw,
A HATCHED-UP SCHEME
ratrlek dallasnrr Now Hay a HU Caafw lea KirulpatiM Uatpary und Otaar from ratlclpatlaN la tha If rarste folaoalnfa wi All a Lip, and that Urn Wi lragKI Into Making It. PlTTSHi'KOK, Pa., July 20. At 10:30 o'clock this afternoon, Patrick Gallagher, the confessor, requested the presence of Warden Wright at his cell in the penitentiary. Warden Wright responded at once. Gallaghersaid: "Warden, I have been in hell all night, and wish to say to you now, that the confession made by me yesterday was all a hutched-up scheme, and that I was dragged into it. 1 wish now to retract everything that was said in that confession, and wish you would send for the attorneys interested, as I will decline to sign the confession." Warden Wright immediately notified District-Attorney Hurlcigh nnd Attortorney Porter by telephone, and they went to the penitentiary with all haste. After a three hours' talk with Gallaghcr. District-Attorney Hurleigh came out and said Gallagher had declared under oath that every statement ho made yesterday was absolutely false, and that he, Dempsey, Beatty and Davidson are guilty as indicted. Ho broke down and wept like a child. Warden Wright saj-s Gallagher had a big bundle of manuscript which he took as the foundation of his little story which was prepared for him on the outside of the penitentiary and which he told yesterday. There is considerable speculation as to why Gallagher made the statement he did yesterday, but the most plausible reason given was that he thought tho knights of labor would have enough influence to secure hira a pardon. However, the story that Davidson went back on Gallagher seems to have settled him, and he decided to reiterate the statement he made on the witness' stand at the time Dempsey was convicted. Since the attorneys for Dempsey have put in their application for a pardon they will have to go through with it. If they withdraw it they would have as much trouble in the future to get a rehearing as they would if they go through with it now and are refused. When it became noised about the courthouse that Gallagher had retracted all he had said yesterday, it created much excitement and comment. ANTHONY d. DREXEL'S WILL. Tlif lMt Will and TMiumrnt of thr IMillarlrlplila riilhintlirnplot Admitted tu Probatr An Kitatr of Twf ily-Kivo or Thirty Million of Dollar WUely Utrlbatcü. Philadkmmha, July 21. The last will nnd testament of Anthony J. Drexel was admitted to probate yesterday. The executors, who are also tho trustees, are George W. Childs, John Lobar Welsh, Richard C. Dale, his sons, John IL Drexel, Anthony J. Drexel and George W. Childs Drexel, and son-in-law, .lames W. Paul, Jr., and John II. Fell. The petition filed by the executors places the value of the real estate at over 11,000,000 and personal estate at over $1,000,000. The estimated value of the estate is between $25,000,000 and $30,000,000. The will is dated December 31, 1891, and there are five codicils. The executors are empowered to make such arrangements for the continuation of tho banking business conducted in the name of Drexel it Co., and its associate firms, as in their judgment seem wise and expedient. One hundred thousand dollars is be queathed to the German hospital, Philadelphia. The executors aro directed to transfer $1,000,000 to trustees, who will apply the income toward the erection and maintenance of an art gallery, museum or other public institution in tho neighlwrhood of the Drexel institute of arL science and industry, in thi.4 city. The trustees, however, can npply so much of the income as cannot be judiciously expended for the aforesaid purposes to the establishment of the "Drexel hospital" in this city. Small bequests are made to servant and employes. Three million dollars is directed to uc invested for the benefit of Anthonv D. Diddle. Livingston Diddle and Craig Diddle, grandchildren. Mr. Drexcl's one-third in the Drexel building, Hroad and Wall streets, New York, is devised in trust to Anthony Paul, Mae Fell and Anthony J. Drexel, third. The will then directs that the residua of the estate shall be held and invested by the executors. The trustees shall have possession of the estate during tbe lifetime of the last surviving child or last surviving grandchild, and for twenty-one years thereafter. At the termination of the trust the principal of the estate shall be divided among the issue then living. The Starr tJanjr at Drnilea. Dexiso.v, Tex., July 21. Considerable xcitement was created here yctcrday when Deputy United States Marshal McCall landed at the depot in charge of Dill McCoy and Joe Hnygood, the territory outlaws and members of the Starr gang, which the ofllcers surrounded and arrested at Stringtown. A detective states that two prominent men in this city arc known to be implicated in these recent train rob berios, also one in Sherman. Another outlaw was arrested yesterday morning at Caddo. His name is not known. Other developments will follow, as on of them have turned state's evidence. ltimlnrx Mm of V 1 i ratio Alarmed. Dknvkii, CoL, July 21. The Denver chamber of commerce held an important meeting yesterday afternoon. It was decided, in view of the recent troubles in financial and business circles in this city, that the interests of Colorado demanded that the state be represented at the Bimetallic League conventions in Chicago and Washington by business men who would place the state before the country in a proper light, and repudiate any incendiary utterances which might be made in that convention by delegates from tail Ute,
Harrison and the hole."
Mm KsrrideBt'a Katalattoa Coavcratag tha Mierataa Law. In the course of a very courteous in terview with a representative of the 'limes Air. Harrison was Kind enoutrl to give his recollections, flavored with few personal reflections upon th history of the Sherman law. Ho did not "care to go into a full discussion of the financial question remarking hu uiorously that that "would require a large book," He showed the saut jren tie aversion to thissubject when he was president, and it will bo remembered that when his secretary of tho treasury. Mr. Windom, proposed an elaborate plan to promote the use of silver in our currency without danger of debasing tho currency, Mr. Harrison reported to congress that he had not had time to examine it carefully, tnd that perhaps he would, in the slang of tho day, "see them later" on the subject. Hut he never did. Mr. Harrison, however, is willing to say unqualißedly that tho "Sherman act was an expedient only. Mr. Sherman, Mr. Aldrich and other conservative members of the senate regarded it simply as an expedient to pro vent something worse, and, as an expedient, only a temporary one. I think," he added, "this is generally understood." We agree that it is fjcnorallv under stood, though perhaps not exactly as Mr. Harrison fancies The notion has been industriously spread that the "expedient" was in the interest of sound finance, and that tho "something worse" which it was meant to prevent was tho unlimited coinago of silver. But there is clearly an error in this, because free coinage could not have been enacted without the president's consent There were not enough votes in favor of it to override his veto. What, then, was tho thing to be avoided? On this very interesting point Mr. Harrison's subsequent remarks throw some HghL He said: "Our democratic friends, who are now appeal ing to us to be patriotic an appeal to which wo have always listened were willing to vote for a free-coinage bill 'Just to put Harrison in a hole,' Tney wanted nothing else so badly as that, and thty were willing to do any tblnj oa the silver question to nuke that 'holo deep "I Jo not say this as any excuse for a similar course on the part of republicans now, but I do say that I never had any fears of that 'hole.' " Apparently, then, though Zlr. Harrison in his natural simplicity docs not seem conscious of how plain he makes it, the Sherman bill was au expedient, and a temporary one, to prevent Mr. Harrison being put into a "hole," to prevent him having to veto a free-coinage bill. It is plain that if the democrats had voted for such a bill Mr. Harrison could easily have prevented it from becoming a. law. It was not for that purpose, therefore, that the Sherman "expedient" was inventetL Tho cx-presideut says that he "nevsr had any fears of that 'hole.'" We are bound to accept his statement. Jfo one knows better than ho what he was afraid or was not afraid of. Hut it is a great pity that Mr. Sherman and Mr. Aldrich and the others did not know how he, felt, or, if they knew, that they should have loadeff thVVounlry with so bad a piece of financial legislation to save him from what he had "no fears" of. Mr. Harrison makes no prediction as to the course of congress upon the repeal of this "temporary expedient," the Sherman law. He says: "The men who will have to vote on the silver question have very positive ideas on very different lines. They are hard to I manage. I do not know how well "President Cleveland has broken his wild team, or how skillfully he can handlo the reins." We rather like this modesty in the matter of prophecy. Mr. Harrison probably feels that he is not, himself, an expert in the art of guiding congicss. There were several important occasions when ho "handled the reins" when it was his uncomfortable fate to be dragged whither he did not want to go, or when his "wild team" balked with him and left him where he did not wish to stay. Tho Sherman law is a case in point The congress, or his party in party in congress, in this instance, ran a wild course, with the sole purpose of saving- him from a situation which, it now appears, he did not fear, and rather courted. Clearly, as a charioteer he is right in refraining from a prediction or criticism. N. Y. Times, A LOST OPPORTUNITY. Kcaiona of the Sorehead Repablleaas Over Thalr MhorUlfhtMlaeM. A good part of tbe soreness of the republicans over the present politicofinancial situation is no doubt due to the remorseful consciousness that they threw away ia 1800 a great opportunity for leadership and party success. When Speaker Kccd was moving heaven and earth to "hangup" the free coinage bill in committee, and keep it at all hazards from going to a presidential veto, he was really dooming his party to defeat It is easy enough to see new that If he and the party leaders had boldly thrown down the gauntlet to the frce-sllvcr men, had hailed the chance of a strong veto and a defiant campaign on the issue of honest money, they would have driven the haltlngdemocratsinto alliance with the silvcritScs and into inevitable defeat. Tho republican party seemed almost predestined for such a work as that; and if the old clear moral sense had not gone out of it, it is inconceivable that it would not have seized the opnortunitv of dointr it Itut th lnn years of jobbing and bargaining over I the tariff and of seeking power through shrewd intrigue had done their fatal work? and so, instead of a bold and resolate attitude in which would have been safety and triumph, tbe best wisdom of the party could agree upon nothing better than that miserable dangling between the devil and the deep sea known as the Sherman law. N. Y. Post I "The further the democratic pf .rty gets away from the Chicago platform," says an esteemed contemporary, "the better Its chsaccs will be of avoiding the breakers which He before rt" Last year it wu the Minneapolis platform wakh wet-.t poa the break rs, sad it U there yet, the repabllcaa rt with It aU. Umla iMmnlU
THE TARIFF AND THE PANIC
A DtatarMa Klemeat ta tka Nataral DUtrlbsrtl or Wealth. Exception has been taken to our statement that tho tariff is one of the' causes of the present condition of financial distrust Wo think this is' easily demonstrable and must bo taken into account in any analysis of tho situation. We look on the tariff and the Sherman act as subordinate forces, which have come in conjunction with a! larger and more potent cause to bringabout the existing condition. Neither of them alone probably both of them combined would not have effected it; not that cither or all of them Is not vicious and debilitating in effect, but because this is a wonderfully productive country, and can stand Immense drains, just as a vigorous young man can sustain excesses without immediato impairment of his vitality. The root of the evil is tho speculative or boom spirit which has ravaged the country, beginning ia town sites and real estato everywhere, and, when that field of adventure failed, turned Into industrial stocks, in which the fever ran its course until the climax came and fictitious prices shrunk to actual values, possibly below. The tariff contributes to speculative investments in being a disturber of the distribution of wealth. It turns it out of its natural channels, and diverts it into special and narrower ones. It lays its exacting hand on the industries of the whole people, and takes a portion without recompense and gives it to tho few who aro its real beneficiaries as distinguished from its ostensible ones. Among the latter arc the farmers, the wage earners, the artisans engaged in? carpentry, painting, blacksmithing, masonry and kindred pursuits. In the former are, in tho main, th producers of those materials which lie at tho baso of the great industries, the owners of tlte raw material and such of the manufacturers as are able to corner production, nnd thus control prices. The inevitable result is the accumula tion in such places of unearned wealth restricted by the very nature of its cre ation from expanding the production out of which it grows. Idle money is useless money. The universal law of creation compels it to seek investment Men having it are as eager for places to plant it as is a farmer for ground in which to plant his corn or sow his wheat It hunts planting cround. Legitimate business promises inade quate return. Projects promising extraordinary returns spring up in answer to the demand lor investments. City real estate takes on a boom with rapidly advancing prices and increasing rents. Stocks and bonds feel tiie impact of demand and advance. Interest rates fall, stimulating, in turn, speculative movement Prices inflate, credit expands, like a bubble blown from the pipe, fcuucicnly something occurs, the bubble bursts, credit is flat, securities shrink, contraction brings business back to nearly a cash basis. Inasmuch as the tariff serves to disturb the naural distribution of wealth and concentrate it in fofVcr bands, it feeds the flame of speculation which is tho greatest of tho forces which have brought abcut the present condition, and is tho base of all financial panics. St Paul Globe. PARAGRAPHIC POINTERS. Those republican organs and or ganettes that are already holding an extra session have but the one desire to help thelra own party though the country has to be injured in the carrying out of their despicable purpose. They have come to tho desperation of the rule-or-ruin policy. Detroit Free Press. Even those who are so partisan as to attribute the financial distress of the country to democratic success last November, instead of the true cause the republican legacy handed down to the present administration arc forced to admit that the people everywhere have confidence in the honesty and wisdom of tho president St. Paul Globe. Ilccauso by good management and careful economy the Cleveland administration has caved the country from the deficit at the close of the fiscal year, which seemed inevitable when the republicans were turned out of office, a republican contemporary is cackling that there never was any fear of a deficit If the republicans had remained in power, and especially if Kaum had remained in the pension office, there would have been a deficit of several millions. Detroit Free Press. The true veterans of the war are learning that they have nothing to fear from the present administration of the pension office. The ruling which gives pensions to nurses employed by proper authorities of the war department is in accordance with the lines of justice. These nurses, most of them women, endured quito as much in serving their country as soldiers on tho front Most of them arc in greater need than the men, and the pitttneo which is thus granted to them will do much toward making their last days comfortable. As time passes and the lists arc purged of deserters, dead-beats and those disabled by baldness, the genuine, deserving pensioners will find themselves only drawn nearer to tho great heart of tho nation. They will always bo remembered. Kansas City Times, Since 1S07 there has been a tariff on wool almost prohibitive in its nature. Notwithstanding this high protection the number of sheep in Ohio, which was at the time of the passage of the tariff law tho largest wool growing state in tho union, hat been reduced to about one-half. Three years ago tho McKinley bill was passed increasing' protection to wool and th price of wool began going down tui'il its market selling price is more than thirty per cent less than it was immediately preceding the passage of the bill. And still in face of the facts McKinley and his followers continue to preach high protection to the farmers who are being crushed beneath its burdens, McKinley tnd McKinleyisss must go md go for food this time. No farmer can vote tot klm without votlaf Sfaiatt hla owa ha UresU. Clevelaaa Plata Dtaler-
THC SUNDAY SCHOOL.
latArnatieaal Iua for Jaly as, j 1'aul at FphMHa Art lSil-ls. Specially Arraugrd from I'oloubei's Notts. Ooi.niCN Tkxx When Ilo tho spirit of truth I come, He will guido you into all truth. John 10:11 Timk. Paul entered upon this slrd great missionary journey probably early In A. Ii H and was absent about four years, till the spring of A. D. Ml Tho thno ot the present lesson oxtends from about May, A. 1). M. to May. 57. covering the throo years of Paul's stay In Enhcsus. Pi.ACK. Asia Mlnor,.Galatta, Phryglaaad the city of Kphesus. I'AUi Aceu lltty-two to nfty-nvc, Oa his third visit to the churches of Asia Minor, anil second to Kurop. Companions or Rt, Paüi- Silas came to Paul at Corinth (18:5), an-1 that is tbe last mention of his name in the Acts. He probably went with Paul to Jerusalem, where ho had been a leader, and from whlcti place be wont with Paul (15:!). Horo he remained, and did not go ou tho third missionary tour, of wnlch our lesson is a part. Timothy was with Paul moat ot tho years at Kphesus (18:'") Thk SECTlow or Hlstort included la this lesson extends from Chap. 18:18 to Chan. 10:14, covering about three year of time. I.nssox JJOTE". Tho Return of the Missionaries. Chap. 18:lS-22. Paul remained a 3'car and a half at Corinth, founding and strengthening tho church in that city (18:11). Then he set sail for Jerusalem to be present at the great feast, probably that of Tabernacles (Lewin), which occurred this year (A. D. 511) on September 10. After a brief stay at Jerusalem he went to Aotioch, the starting point of his missionary tours. The object of this visit was no doubt to report his work to the churches, to refresh his own soul by communion J with long-established Christians, to , Iccep tho unity of all the churches of our Lord and to recover his health. For the same reasons, it is of great advantage to tho church to have their missionaries return home every few years. Tho results of a lifetime are much greater in this way. Summary of the Second Missionary Journey. (1) The old churches revisited and strengthened. (2) New churches founded. (S) The Gospel introduced ilitr Kiirnno nnd into thn nntcrs of influence. (4) New workers i brought into the missionary work. I (.") Two epistles written, the first I books of our present New Testament I that were written. Tho Third Misslona- Journey. Chapters 18:23 to 21:15. Fourj-ears, A. I). 54-r)9. The first portion of this tour we are unable to trace with accuracy. Paul left Antioch early in A. I). 54, revisiting the churches which he had previously founded in the provinces of Galatia and Phrygia; thence ho came to Ephcsus, which was to tho province of Asia a center, as Athens and Corinth were to Greece. There he remained nearly three years (Acts 20:31). Thcnco (May, 57) he went into Macedonia and Greece (20:2), whence he returned to Jerusalem. This was the end of his third missionary journey. Ills arrest there prevented his returning to the point of his departure Antioch in Syria. The whole duration of this tour is believed to be about four years; viz.: from early in A. D. 54 to the suas-a&roTAV-J). 5S. During this tour he Is thought also to have written the following epistles, viz.: From Ephcsus, spring, 57, 1 Corinthians; from Macedonia, autumn, 57, 2 Corinthians; from Corinth, winter of 57, Galatians; from Corinth, spring1 of 53, Romans. Ephcsus and the Church There. (1) The City. Ephcsus was not only tho capital of the province, but was the city of the greatest importance in all Asia Minor, and the principal emporium of trade in the cast. It was called one of the eyes of Asia, Smyrna, forty miles to the north, being the other. The city stood on the south of a plain about five miles long from cast to west, and three miles broad, washed on the west by the Icarian sea, an arm of the iEgcan. (a) The Inhabitants. The inhabitants of Ephcsus were of course Greeks; and they seemed to have carried with them the natural genius and fine taste of the Attic stock, for Ephcsus held no contemptible position in letters, and in sculpture it rivaled, and in painting excelled, the parent city (Athens). A pell es and Parrhasius, tho two matchless masters of the pencil, were both of them natires of Ephcsus. (3) Civil Government. The deputy of the whole province resided here. They were under the Roman government; but Ephcsus was a "free city," governed by its own magistrates and popular assembly. (4) Christianity in Ephcsus. In Christian story it was famous not only for the long residence of Paul and Timothy, but subsequently it was known as the abode of the Virgin Mary, and the home of the old age of the Apostle John. The graves of Mary and of John were here. Results. In these three quiet, eventful years, not only were the foundations of the great Ephcsian church laid, but also the early stories of those famous Christian congregations known as the churches of Asia, as well as the churches of the river Lycus, Colossm, Laodicaia and IHcrapolls. It was, perhaps, the most successful period of his busy, stirring et ccr. Schaff. We can see hi the effect upon the heathen business of making silver shrines (19:20-41) how "mighty grow tho word of God and prevailed." There must have been a very large number of converts to rrakc so serious an inroad upon a bad business. A great revival of religion dffects the liquor traffic it. tho same v ay In our day. Ah a natural effect, Paul was mobbed nnd drives from the city Uut the Gosncl renaincd. Gov. Russklx. has appointed the author, Hoben Grunt, probate judge for Suffolk county Grant is both a distinguished and remarkably clcve Boston ian. Ia the magazines he continues such good work as characterized "The Little Tin Gods on Wheels," "Confessions of a Frivo'.ouj Girl." "The Average Man," etc. Tirr. oldest German railroad was opened in 1S8A and ran between Nureaburg and Furth. California has forty Chinese teasplea, N'jw York foar. Idaho twe aad urea-Qa ni
afaa TjiifQg ect and perfect safety With which ladhs may usa the CalifornU liquid laxative Kyrun of .FiR. under all con. aitlons, makes it their favorito remedy. To f;et tho true and iMtialne article, look for he name of the California Fig HyruaCo prmted near the bottom of the package. '' "THK only way to prcvpnt whafa past," said Mrs Muliiooti. "ih to put a stop to it aeforo it happeus." Texas Sittings. It It positively hurtful to uao ointment for skin disease Uso Glenn's Sulphur 8oa Uill's Uuir and WnUkerTJye, 50c. Whejc the dressmaker cannot collect her pill a dress suit is likely to be ordered. Boston Hulletin. '
Fee. Maat Sick "First I had pains ia aiy back and chest, thea faint fccllntf at the stomach, and when I would eat tho first taste would Bake mo deathly sick. Of course I ran down rapidly, and lost 25 pounds. A friend ad. vised mo to take Hood's Sareaparllla and soon my appctlto cane back, I ate heartily withoutdlstrcss, pained two pounds a CC.Aker. weck. I took 8 bottles of IIOOB'S SAKSAPA RILL A nnd never clt better in my Ufa." C. C. Auen, Grocer, Canlsteo, X. Y. Hood's PlHs cure Constipation. August Flower" I am Post Master here and a Store. I have kept August Flow for sale for some time. I think it is a splendid medicine." E. A. Bond, P. M., Pavilion Centre, N. Y. The stomach is the reservoir. If it fails, everything fails. The liver, the kidneys, the lungs, the heart, the head, the blood, the nerves all go wrong. If you feel wrong, look to the stomach first. Tut that right at once by using August Flower. It assures a good appetite and a good digestion. 8 The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS,, Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it In over eleven hundred cases, and n;ver failed except In two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in Iiis possession over two hundred certificates of its va've, all within twenty miles of Boston. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a'perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by Ihe ducts beinß stopped, and alwavs disappears in a week after taking it. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoon ful in water at bedtime, and read the Label. ITC" V MIDST OF ALARMS A Complete Novel by ROBERT BARR, ("LUKE SHARP"), Author of In a Steaaer Chair." " From Whose Bourn. etc. Is conulneJ la LiPDiDGOu's Magazine for AUGUST (published July 21), also, Z ACH ARY TAYLOR, HIS HOHE AND FAMILY. (Illustrated). By A- K. Watso V THE NATIONAL GAME. (Athletic Series,) (Illustrated.) lty Norton It. Youso. THE LADY OF THE LAKE (at tin Fair). By Julian Hawthorne. JANE'S HOLIDAY. (Illustrated.) (Notable Story No. VI.) Valbbu IlAvaBnRRV. Also poems, essays, stories. tf.. by favorite avt&on. I IfDIKf-nTT'C originated the complete story LlrrlHbUII 9 (Mture. and. with lis varied and Interestine miscellany. Is one of the nwt ataactIve Masailnrs now piftlisheU. For sale by aH new and book dealers. Sinei number, as Cent; per aaflum.Sj.oo, LUTIXCOTTS JUeAZlXE, rUWelpal. Wliwns Posititely euro BiUous Attacks, Constipation, Sick-Hedd ache, etc. 25 oenU par bottle, at Drug Stora. Write for sample doee, free. J, F. SMITH A C0.SN(m York. CURES RISING BREAST . BKADFR3LD RiUtWlW w.i " -- AtliäTa "
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