Marshall County Independent, Volume 1, Number 48, Plymouth, Marshall County, 27 September 1895 — Page 3

Peculiar In combination, prop r;io:i. ami process. Hood's Nursa pari 11a p;issfv's pciuiüar curative powers iiuknown to any other pie, aration. This is why it has a record of cures u::t quak' I in tin history of medicine. It .ii' s directly upon the Mood, and by making it pure. rie!j and h althy it cures li -a.' a:id jives 1:0 d heuith. Hood's Sarsaparille Is the 1 :;!y tru blood ur.hYr prominently In the public e.,e to-itay. $1: six for $". l-l - - -J ' c Dil!c Mir habitual t-onstipa-nooa s rihs lioil. pri.e & ntl

He wlio attempts to palm oft as Iiis t)vn the work of mutt her is almost certain, sooner or later, to he found out not always .-is .r.inpiy. however, as in this ( :iso. cited by the Syracuse Post: "Ami did you write this essay all by yourself;" inquired the ixe:u editor, gazing hard at the literary aspirant who had called t ascertain the fate of a manuscript submitted by him. "Yes it is my own writing." was the reply: for it is my handwriting." he thought to himself. "Wfii. then, rharles Lamb." remarked the editor, ironically. "I am much pleaded to meet you." Jumbled. When : novice tries to write a letter, tvith nothing in particular to say, the result Is likely to be amusing. An Knglish working girl on an emigrant ship is reported to have written thus to her former mistress: "Dear Madam: I hope this finds you well as it leaves me. The ship is in the middle of the lied Sea. and it Is fearfully hut. I am in a terrible state of melting all day huig. Hut. honored madam. I know you will be pleased to hear that I am still a member of the Church of England." The wonl Atheist comes from two Greek words signifying "no god." An Atheis: is a disbeliever in the existence of any deity. "HOW AN - 'ADVERTISEMENT SAVED A WUJIAX'S LIFE. SPECIAL TO Ol LAKY CHADEBS Tor four years I suf fered with fennla trou bles. I was so bad that I vas compelled tohavo assistance from the bed to the chair. 1 tried au me uoetrri JlTvl thrt JJ medicines that I thought would help me. One day, while looking over the paper, fer vour Comibt I would try it. I dil so, and found relief. I was in bed when I first began to take the Compound. After taking four bottles, I was able to be up and walk around, and nor,- I am doing my housework. Many thanks to Mrs. Pinkham for her wonderful CompounJ. It saved my life." Mrs. IIattieMadaus, 184 North Clark Street, Chicago, 111. More evidence in favor of that neverfailing female remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY, DONALD KENNEDY, CF 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 :ase, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in Iiis possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a'prtect 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 the ducts being stepped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will canse squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Doe, one tablespoonfu! in water at bedtime. Sold by all Drugnists. THE BEST TEST IS USE. BH.w are a few cnliissl esiracU from Irtttrt revj f..r my own la!x atil can trill? ar that It Is el- i jra-; ialat.-ll ln.iirWhliur. aii'l fa-iily ilifsUM " -J W. J I..HIM-.R. M. I.. Narx.lt'.Hi. M'. ' J "I n: 1 fwlhiir hit lmlv tv th -SiK'lal ririi-ti..iw it ! ha rkiJ iik- a rliarin." Uxi. It. S. Tlbman, lbist:i llig'..' tinis. Ma . An IhtT I Jijsi-iarj writes. After Trial of Ridge's Food: It rm-eu my ivl nanculne -xirtatliiH. I expect to ii it when' vi r orc'aslon t.iU-r." Ev. TThfMly thinks he Is a month oMer than h Is a r.-at. tat. runsr. healthy !'. . . A if real many of mjr irlemis a-e I r 1 1 1 if to in.lm-i me torhaiiKf. I.nt if my al.y ihrlvef 0 Kitx.K's l-oni. tinrt I fimutfli." Mm. L.n i. L.::n. Mans. "I have uetl Itiime's Ki Iii pat stx immths. anl niitl it jMt ax recommend!. In fact, would not Im without it.'--.Miss 1,RA S. Davis. ltockf..r1. 111. Sentl t WOOLRICII X ( O , l alnnr. Mass., for "Healthful Mint." MKNT FKKK.

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DR. J. C. AYER'S The Only

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SARSAPARILLA naif a

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PROSPEROUS INDIANS.

Present Condition of a People Kauietl in History und Fiction. The payment of certain moneys, awarded by the Court of Claims to the I Maware Indians, who live anions the Cherokee in tiie 1 Lilian Territory, will make the !n mbers f this tribe anions the wealthiest of any pt :! ;n the lace of the earth. 1'veiy man. woman and hild of them will be worth .s;.imm an amount live times as much as the per capita rate of 2 rent liritnin, six times as much as that of the United States, nine times greater than that of tJerinany. and over tweaty-six limes as much as that of Uussia. The Delaware Indians are famous in history and tiction. The once peopled the wilds of Pennsylvania. Delaware, New Jersey. Western Connecticut and Southern New York, and went under the generic name of l.enni I.enape, or true men. They were the Indians with whom William I'enn negotiated the celebrated treaty under the Shuckamuxon elm tree in Philadelphia. A branch of their general tribe, the Mohicans, furnished the subject of James I'eninior. Cooper's popular romance. Another branch, the Manhattans, drank calabashes of rum with Hendrick Hudson, on the site of Xew York City. P.efore the revolution arid lon afterward the Delawares ohivee IlF.I.AWAIIK HAPTIST ( HlfU II, CIIKKOKF.K XATIOX. IS'.Ml. a prominent part in the Indian wars asrainst the whites. I 'or over a eentury they wen niove-1 aiut and ilriven from pillar to post with 110 prnnanriit aloe. 1'rom the time of their oripina! departure from the Middle Atlantie States down to their loeation in their present home they have inhabited sne-essively the States of West Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois. Missouri and Kansas, leaving their footprints on the soil of eaeh, and hequeathinff to the loenlities they fre-pn-nted the lejraey of their native names. No other Indian trihe has. perhaps, experiene'd so many vicissitudes. Itut now their trouhles are happily over. They are in a decidedly enviable position, and heim; assured of permanent occupation o their well-earned land of Canaan, they can look hack contentedly upon the hardships of their lone exodus. They are at present a very prosperous people and are highly civilized. They are the hest business men of all the North American Indians and are noted in the West for their shrewdness and commercial ucuteness. They conduct a number of riilJs and faci tories and all their property is well cared '. for. their houses bciufr substantial, and , their farms, orchards and fenees kept in j prime condition. Over I'OO of them are j members of the Delaware ltaptist Churdi. ! and the children attend the public schools. Current Condensations. According to the latest directory of Hartford. Conn., the city has a population of t7.7t, an increase of Lljii7 over that of last year. At Ys trad Meurii; school in Wales the hoys are taught Latin through Welsh. The "pastorals" of the old founder of the school arc used for that purjose. In spite of ffs commercial importance. Odessa has no direct telegraphic communication with St. Petersburg. All messages have to go lirst to Warsaw. The leaves of a plant are always of a tone of green perfectly adapted to the color of the blossoms; and there are. indeed, some plants that seem as if nothing else but their own foliage will assert with them daffodils, for instance, says .Mrs. r'eiiwick Miller. Within the memory of many persons London was once, like many American cities, absolutely treeless nothing but brick, stone and mortar being seen anywhere. Of late years intelligent horticulture lias been drawn into service, and tr-es and shrubs are being planted everywhere. If there is any truth in the old saying that :i season of abundant wild fruits and nuts presage a cold and snowy winter, severe weather may be expected from December to March next. All the wild fruits have been unusually abundant, and there is promise of an equally abundant nut crop. Dr. Litel. the inspector of schools at Hong Kong, says that the best educational theories of Lurope, based as they are on observations of western children, are inapplicable to Chinese children, whose minds and environments are essentially different. In I long Kong Chinese scholars spend from four to seven years in studying I'nglish without learning the language. The betting mania seems to be increasing at an alarming rate in France. During the year ending last month no less than x7.ri y,0 N was distrib-itM to the "Paris Mutuer by the people of Paris, compared with .", Kß ),( M N ) in the previous year. This amount is exclusive of the money paid through bookmaking and agriic'n'S generally, which is estimated to be even a still larger sum. The best remedy for nil diseases of the blood. The best record. a century of genuine cures

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CUBA'S BIG TICTOBY.

THREE HUNDRED SPANIARDS MEET DEATH. General Macco's Patriots Achieve a Great Triumph D.vnamite I Vacd with Terrible K fleet Uartoloiue Masso Klectcd President. Killed by Hundreds. News of a battb- i:i which the Spanish Were defntcd by th Cubans was received in New York by President Palm 1. It came in a letter, writtt n Sept. I I. by Pedro IJodra. a '!ilan privat-, who desertd the Spanish ranks at Pera Legi, when Campos wa defeatc!. In a later engagement Kovira was captured by tie? Spanish, court-martialed and sntcnccl to receive Pxi last.-s ami to be shot. The sentence was -arriei! 011; while Kovira was shouting for Cuban liberty. hi Aug. 31 the Spaniards aptnrcl Fr:;n-is. and (ion. Jose M:! eo fot tilled his few men in a plantation house near 1 1 1 - Casamhra Hospital. The Spanish were slowly closing in on him some days later when Gen. Cbre'o and a Cuban -dumn came to his relief and made the enemy evacuate their position. A hot engagement folloel. iu which the Spanish r'gainel their position, but were unable to hold it long, as Gen. Annio Ma ceo suddenly appeared on the scene, and. with Cebreco and Col Mienninit. succeeded i:i wresting it from Canalh and Oariko. who commanded the Spanish. This battb lastcl from o o'clock a. tn. until i o'clock at night, when it was liscoiitinu'd until the dawn or.i si'amsii foi:t, santi.m.o tr:n r.A. of the next lay. Sept. 1. The Spanish then cmineu'l to retreat until they reached the Igubanabano field, where they were able to use their cavalry, which was impossjl! 011 the mountains of Santa Maria. They did not gain any advantage, howcvi'j. ami after burning their provisions they continued to retreat to Mountanin. which plac' they entered iu scattered groups. The Cubans had no cavalry, but made effective us of dynamite bombs, which, the letter stats, struck terror to the enemy. In the engagement the Cubans' loss was forty men, wounded and kilb'd. The Spaniards last over .'. men, forty horses ami a large store of provisions and munitions of war. The Spaniards after the battb snt a cable to Spain headed. "The defeat and capture of .lose Maceo." and also asked for the reward and the alvain-e of the officers in the engagement. Cubans. Klect a President. Letters received ::l Tampa. Fla., by prominent Cuban leaders stat that on Sept. 10 a Constitutional convention was hehl at Najasa at which Partohuno Masso was elected President of the Cuban republic, Matpiis of Santa Lu-ia Minister of the Interior. Thomas Lstrada Palma Keprescntalivo of the Government iu the exterior and Maximo Gome. Gcncral-in-chb'f. Some time ago when delegates were called Santa Lucia was mentioned as President of the con vein ion. and lhimpression prevailed that he was the destined Constitutional President. Masso was born sixty years ago at Manzanillo. II is highly connected and thoroughly lucated. He left Manzanillo l'eb. '2 last, and was considered as the head of the revolution in the eastern department. When this occurred Calleja, sent a committee of prominent autonomists and some chiefs of the former revolution to dissuade him, but he was not pliable. Tin committee went again, reenforced by ex-resident Sportono. who, during his (rin. published a decree to put to death any person who should propose anything but Cuban independence. Masso reeeiv d him. but learning his purpose, told him to h'ave the camp iminediat.-ly or his own deree would be enforced. News has been received at military headiuarters in Havana of a desperat tight at Meti. near Pahna Sola, province of Santa Clara, between .'m insurgents, Id by Pcrmudcs and Fleites, and a dtachment of Government cavalry under Capt. Kiestra. The vanguard of the cavalry, consisting of a sergeant and seven privates, were lirst surrounded bv the " - 1 1 1 K i; A 1 : A K T K C. V 1 . insurgents, and in the engagement every one of the vanguard was killed. Py this time Capt. Iiiestra, with the main lody of cavalry, thirty in number, came up ami engaged the insurgents, whom he forced to retreat, leaving three of their number dead on the field. Their wounded the. carried off with them when they retreated. As the cruiser Harcastegui. which was sunk by the merchantman Mortera Wednesday night, constitutes a danger to vessels leaving or entering the jKrt of Havana, it has been leci.led to break up the hull of the vessel with dynamite. Tindivers have refuseil to work uon the wreck on account of the danger from sharks and because of the insufficiency of their outfits. Sparks from the "Wires. The ball at Par Harbor in honor of Secretary f the Navy Herbert was a brilliant social success. The sloop Jumbo sunk at Newhuryport, Mass., and Capt. Stephen Orr ami George Welch were drowned. Five members of .1 Staten Island (N. Y.) family were dangerously ill from being poisoned by canned tongue. Steven Talle, occupant of a shanty boat at Sand Hill, Ky., was rocked from hi Iosition by the swell of an iucoming tauer and drowned.

Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U.S. Gov't Report

VANQUISHED THE ENEMY. Desperate liattle Itetwecna Flock of Sparrows and a Tom Cut. A hundred Ainlersonians witnessed .1 lively encounter the other morning between a large Maltese oat and ;i score or more of Fngiish sparrows that took plac in the heart of the city. "Tom" invaded the nest of a sparrow In the loft of Merrick's livery barn. The mother of the young birds showed tight, and her piercing cries soon brought a score or more of other sparrows to her rescue. Tom beat a hasty retreat, but the birds followed liini out into the street, where the battle waxed hotter and hotter. The sparrows swarmed about the dospoiler of the nest in dozens, peckii at his head, ears and back, ami tlcn darting1 away before lie had a chance to claw them. Occasionally Tom would stop and, rising on his hind bgs. make a wicked lunge at the birdV, and several were sent to the earth as the result of his sharp claws. The air was filled with the littJe excited birds and thir chatter could be heard a block away. By this time Tom was squalling at the top of his voice and his eyes glowed like coals of tire. The light continued up the street until the house was reached, when Tom made a live for the thee. but was headed off and at last found refuge under a cab that stood In front of the door. A large crowd gntlnml and saw the light waged by the birds on their common enemy. Under the cab the bints ould not reach Tom without subjecting themselves to great danger from his sharp claws, and soon flew back to the barn chattering and making every possible manifestation of delight. When the noise was stilled the thoroughly whipped Tom crawled from under his retreat and scurried down an alhy. Indianapolis Joi1n1.1l. Gootl Court Story. humorous scene was enacted in Superior court room at Jackson, recently (according to the Atlanta A th Ga.. Constitution). A negro had been charged with burglarizing a store. Colonel Watkins defended him. and was about to open the ase with a well-prepared oration of his innocence, when the negro quietly informed the colonel that he h'sired to plead guilty. Judge P.eck accordingly read the law in the cr.se, and sentenced the negro for ten years. Dumfoumled at this long sentence, the negro rolled his eyes round ami beckoned Colonel Watkins to come forward, and when the lawyer reached his side, the negro gently whispered: "Say, Mr. Wadkins. kain't yer 'peal fer a new trial?" Smull Fry Swimllcrss. Some of the meanest of tlese are they who s ' k to tnnle upon and make capital out of the repui atlon of th gre:'t-st of Ameri-an ionics, I lostetter's Stomach Hitters, by iinit.iting ils outward guise. Reputable drugjrlsts. however, will never foist upon ym as Kenuine spurious imitations of or substitute for this sovereign remedy for malaria, rheumatism, dyspepsia, constipation, liver complaint ami nervousness. I niainl. ami if tin lealr lie honest, you will get the geiiuiue article. Port iignese Illiteracy. The report of the Portuguese census of lN'.X) has only lately been published. It shows that the population f the little kingdom then numbered ,. P. i.7lh.. and liscbkses the almost incredibh fact that over 4,!H0,tMjo of these ,Vm,ijm in civili.d L'urope are unable to either read or write; only l.'S,l5 can real and write; and H0.ti)7 more can read a little. An effort may be made to establish 1.r:M new primary schools within the next year and a half. New York World. Hall's Catarrh Cure. Is taken internally. Trice 7 j cents. A Persian philosopher, being asked by what method he had actiuired so much knowledg answered: "Iy not I being prevented by shame from asking ltiestions when I was ignorant." It is positively hurtful to use ointments i for skin discuses, l.'srf instead Glenn's Sulehur Soap. "I I ill's Hair and Whisker Dye." lilac'r Brown. ."iO The smile that helps others has to be. gin in the hart. Piso's Cit.e for Consumption is an A No. 1 Asthma medicine. W 11. Williams Antioch, Ills., April 11, 1814. ASSIST NATURE a little now and then in removinp offending: matter from the stomach and towels and you thereby avoid a multitude of distressing: derangements and diseases, and will have less frequent need of your doctor's sea-vice. Of all known agents for this purpose, Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the best. O n c e used, they are always in favor. The lVHet rnrp k m m -- - 1 YA'I biliousness, sick Vl rwi ant k.lio.us hcadacne, aizzmess, costiveness, or constiYmtirtn amir cfnm ach, loss of appetite, coated tongue, indigestion, or tlyspepsia, windy belchings, 'heart-burn," pain and distress after eating, and kindred derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels ükK'U HHJM2 7aT kl CUIUS WHtHt All (ISf (IIIS. J Best Oouch Syrup. To lea Good. Um I "I in lima Bold by druggists.

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Italian Politeness. A friend of mine who has just returned from Italy, where he has been wandering for several months, told me an amusing story with regard to one of those railways that disfigure the high places of that delightful country, though doubtless to the lazy and the invalid they are a blessing and a boon. My friend was seated in one of the cars near a stout matron as th made the ascent of a certain mountain. "And where would we go, conductor, if the brake would not work?" asked the stout lady in vile Italian. The ronluctor courteously explained that in such circumstances then was a second brake, a duplicate safeguard, which might be relied on in such au unlikely emergency. "And where should we go. conductor, if this second brake would not work';" ivpeated the persistent stout one. "Ah, madame," replied the official, with an inimitable shrug and smile, "that would depend on what our lives had beoii." Providence Journal.

The Modern Reality Thrives on good food and sunshine, with plenty of exercise iu the open air. Her form glows with health and her face blooms with its beauty. If her system needs the cleansing action of a laxative remedy, she uses the gentle and pleasant liquid laxative Syrup of Figs. Wanted to Keep Her Ow n Statistics. The little girls of Iloston are reported to be overeducated. The story goes that a child was asked in a street car her age, with a view to half fare for children, whereupon the premature little damsel murmured, "If you don't object, conductor, I'll prefer to pay full fare and keep my own statistics." Dandruff is due to an enfeebled state of the :kin. Hall's Hair Kenewer quickens the nutritive functions of the skin, healing and preventing the formation of dandruff. The Unitarians were thus named because they denied the doctrine of the Trinity. In theory they are opposed to the Trinitarians. Mr. ATintovs Soothing Syrup for CMHrot trthlnjf: sotten the emus, reduce inflaminaUim, aJlays pain, cures wind colic, ceuts a bottle. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR THE BEST Nursing Mothers,Infants CHILDREN JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. it

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Follow the directions, and you'll get thc best work from Pearline. Not that there's any harm to be feared from it, no

matter how vou

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Mot toasu at V w . TH" RISING SU STOVE POLISH la cakes for general blacking of a Move. THR SUN PASTB POLISH for a quick after-dinner shine, fipplied and polished with a cloth. Kort Broa., Prop., Canton, Mat., U.S. A Mr. Bert M. Moses, the advertisement and business writer of o02 Third street, linx.klyn, relates that he recently had occasion to consult Dr. J. S. Carreau, a well-known physician of IS West Twenty-first street. New York city, for a stomach trouble which was pronounced a type of dyspepia. "A f tr consultation," writ.-s Mr. Moses, "the doctor gave me a prescription, and I was somewhat surprised to note that the formula was nearly identical with that of IMpans Tabule., for which I bad, on more than one occasion, prepared advertising matter. I had Dr. 'arreau's prescription tilled, and it proved satisfactory, giving quick relief. A week later, when I had taken all the medicine. I again called on the doctor and mentioned the similarity of his prescription and the proprietary remedy spoken of, showing him both the remedy itself and the formula. The doctor was at first somewhat inclined to criticise what he called patent medicines, but appeared to be surprised when he noted to what extent his own prescription conformed to tlfe formula I showed him. It was practically the same. After a short time devoted to noting the careful manner in which the proprietary medicine was prepared, he wound up by prescribing it for my case. Of course I h.;d to pay him for telling me to do this, but it was worth the cost to have such high professional assurance that the advertised article was, in fact, the scientific formula that it purported to be. I might have taken the proprietary medicine In the beginning and saved the doctor's fee, but I think the confidence I have acquired in the ellicaey of the. remedy, through the doctor's indorsement of it, is well worth the fee." lüpft': Tahnios an Mid hj dniffff'.sts. r by mail If th itIc? iM cents a box) Is s-m to ihe Klpajis hemlcai Company. No. 10 Spruce Street, New urk. Saaipla vial, 10 teats. "HARVEY'S FREE SILVER MARCH." Very latest Two-step, llano 00 cent. Band 5o ceuii For short time, 15 cents. L. I'.Kl l'KR, M. Lout.-.. Mix nftTniTC Töoni P- Btmpgon. Wiahlnitofa, I 14 I til I w D.O. No att's fe until Patent oi talced. Write for Ioreatort Quid. 'o. 29-93 C. . U. VlrlIKr RITISO TO ADVERTISERS Dlease Rar you saw the ii.il vert iMninft In this paper. use it or how much you use.

But to make your washing and cleaning easiest, to save the most rubbing, the most wear and tear, the most time and money keep to the directions given on every package of Pearline. If you'll do that with your flannels, for instance (it's perfectly simple and easy,) they'll keep beautifully soft, and without shrinking. sos

Your Neighbor's Wife Likes makes overwork unnecesYour grocer sells it. only by

SOAP

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