Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 15, Number 51, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 7 March 1894 — Page 2
THE NAPPAXEE NEWS. BY O. N. MURRAY. g NArPANEE. * INDIANA News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. CONGRESSIONAL* Regular Session. ▲ large number of petitions were presented In the senate on the 27th protesting against a Ireductlon of the existing duties on wool and Various other features of the tariff bilL A bill introduced for the establishment of a national university In tho house resolutions •Were presented to investigate tho action of Beveral United States judges who have issued injunctions in railroad cases. A bill was introduced to amend 1 the revised statutes so as to jjermit, In civil cases, the verdict of threeiourths of the jurors constituting the jury to •tand as tho verdict of the Jury. The silver seigniorage bill was further discussed. On the 28th ult. the senate held a two hours’ •ession, whole of which was given to a ■peech p rye i n opposition to the president's Hawaiian policy.... In the house the deadlock on tne seigniorage bill was broken after two weeks of filibustering, but upon a question for a special order to discharge the committee of the whole from further con: elderation ot the bill the quorum disappeared nd no action could be taken. On the Ist a resolution was introduced in tho senate providing for the establishment of a tariff commission of nine to regulate the tariff on the basis of the difference of wages here and ♦broad. A bill was introduced for the erection of a statue at the treasury dopartment to Gen tl*. E. Spinner. The house bill providing for urgent deficiencies was passed ... In the house the long struggle over the Bland bill for the coinage of the silver §eigniorage and the silver bullion in the treasury was ended by the passage of the bill by a vote of 107 to 130. The senate was not in session on the 2d.... In the house the fortifications bill (53.000,000) was passed. The pension bill was taken up aud general debate consumed the?remainder of the day. The aggregate of the bill is nearly 1162.000,000. Ex-Speaker Grow, the newly elected congressman at large from Pennsylvania, was sworn in. At the evening session private pension bills were considered. The senate was not in session on the 3d.... In the bouse the time was occupied in discuss- ; lng the pension bill and a bill was passed granting an Increase of pension to Andrew I'ranklin, aged 101 years, who resides in Kansas mud is a veteran of the war of 1812 and of the wrar of the rebellion. DOMESTIC. - The Peace Association of Friends in America was organized at Richmond, Ind., the object being to promote peace and to settle difficulties between indiBduals,8 duals, labor and capital and nations 7 arbitration. The bill providing for the consolidation of New York with Brooklyn and its suburbs has been signed by Gov. Flower. At Linden, Mich., a platform collapsed and twenty-five or thirty persons Were more or less injured. William E. BTjrr, cashier of the St liOuis national bank at St Louis, was arrested on t a charge of embezzling §57,000. Willi an Ryan, a potter, 25 years old, shot his wife Christiana at Trenton, N. J., and then fired a bullet into his brain and died instantly; No cause Was known. Joseph Donjan, of Baltimore, who threatened Vice President Stevenson by mail, was sentenced to eighteen months’ imprisonment Nearly all the remaining world’s fair employes were discharged, a total of about 000. Work was nearly finished. The resolution for a woman suffrage amendment to the lowa constitution was defeated in the state senate by 20 to 20. The Columbian Fire Insurance company of America filed a deed of assignment at Louisville, Ivy., with liabilities of $125,000. Burglars killed Township Treasurer Henry Geierman’s wife, seriously wounded him and Exeter, Mich. Eighteen fishermen who lived at Gloucester, Mass., were lost in an eastern coast storm. They were members of the crews of the Henrietta and Resolute. Pitcher McNabb, of last year’s Baltimore baseball team, shot and fatally wounded Mrs. R. E. Rockwell and then killed himself in a hotel at Pittsburgh, Pa. The National Baseball league season will open April 19. A bloody riot occurred in the Kanawha coal region at Eagle, W. Va., in which at least one man was killed, three fatally injured and many others hurt Troops were ordered to the scene. Jesse Hickman, a farmer near Glasgow, Ala., cut down a tree near his borne and in falling it struck his two daughters and killed them. Gifts amounting to more than $300,000 were received by trustees of the Western Reserve university near Cleveland, O. A Residents of' Benlon Harbor, Mich., were startled by grumbling noise and a shaking of the ground which lasted a minute. At Emporia, Kan., Mary C. Davis Was divorced from her husband, John Davis. This was the fifth time one or the other of these two had sued for divorce, and each time the divorce had been annulled by a remarriage. The public debt statement issued on the Ist showed that the debt increased §40,064,215 during the month of February. The cash balance in the treasury was $787,075,834. The total debt, less the cash balance in the treasury, Amounts to $1,007,356,015. Henry Baker and son, negio' Luiglara, killed Mrs. Moore Baker and her child at Franklin Park, V. J-, and were themselves killed by llfoore Baker after a desperate fight Colby Bros.’ livery barn at Fort Dodge, .la, with contents, was destroyed by fire and twenty-eight head •f horses were roasted alive. ;ONotices were posted by white caps •Commanding all negroes to leave Pike county, Ala, by March 10 under penalof lynching. White caps took Wesley Thomas and Siis wife, aged negroes, from their beds St Brantley, Ala, and whipped them so severely that their lives were despaired of. Members of the Protestant societies Would ask the courts for an order enjoining Catholic nuns from teaching in the public school# oj Pittsburgh, Pa
John Carberry died at Newark, N. J., of hiccoughs. It was thirteen weeks ago that the disease attacked him. Henry’s opera house and other buildings were burned at North Baltimore, 0., the loss being SIOO,OOO. Frank Ripry and Charles Dawson were killed by an explosion in a planing mill at Warsaw, lnd., and two other me* were fatally injured. Z. T. White was fined SSOO for aiding in the hanging in effigy of Secretary Morton at Nebraska City. A verdict of $5,000 against the defendant was given at Indianapolis in the first case tried under the coemployes’ liability law. Nine eloping Kentucky couples crossed the river to Jeffersonville, Ind.,* and were married. The Commercial bank of Milwaukee resumed business after having been in the hands of an assignee for seven months. James J. Corbett, the prize fighter, was found not guilty of violating the law by a jury at Jacksonville, Fla. The Dexter (Mich.) savings bank was robbed of $3,000 by two masked men, whoo forced the assistant cashier to open the safe. John Y. McKane, convicted at Gravesend, N. Y., of political frauds, was taken to Sing Sing to serve his sentence of six years, all attempts at securing a stay having failed. Six thousand miners quit work in Jackson countj% 0., because the operators wished to reduce wages to fifty cents a ton. Tiie exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 2d aggregated $838,528,160, against $001,4W 1,780 the previous week. The decrease, compared with the corresponding week in 1893, was 30.0. There were 2G4 business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 2d, against 288 the week previous and 200 in the corresponding time in 1803. In the opal mines near Caldwell, Idaho, an opal has been found as large as a hen’s egg and without a flaw. Two men Were instantly killed, two fatally burned and five others dangerously hurt in an explosion in a coal mine near Leeds, Mo. Waterman & Katz, bankers ab Port Townsend, Wash., failed for $120,000. More troops were ordered to the mines near Charleston, W. Va. The miners threatened to burn the coal company property and martial law had been declared. Tiie World’s W. C. T. U. is preparing a temperance petition to be presented to all the rulers on. earth. George Hensley and W. R. Shelton, Jr., while in a quarrel at a dance in Madison county, N. C., shot each other fatally. Rev. Mr. Roberts, Methodist, of Richland, quit his pulpit for other fields because of the hard times. Kansas farmers secured $47,000 damages at Emporia against Hezier Brothers for bringing Texas fever' among their cattle. The State bank at Brookville, Ivan., closed its doors with liabilities of $50,000. Theodore F. Baker, former paying teller of tha Consolidation national bank in Philadelphia, who stole $47,000 of the bank's money, was sentenced to seven years and six months in tffe penitentiary'. Grape growers of Ohio have formed a ‘‘combine,” alleging as the business is now conducted there is no profit Orders were issued by the Erie Railway company to hold common freight trains at terminals over Sunday. About 8,000 men will thus be given a day of rest During a quarrel near. Eugene, Ore., Albert Moss fatally shot David Cole man and his two daughters and then blew out his own brains. Lon Tye, a Harlan county (Ky.) negro, tyaa reported to have been skinned alive by a mob and then roasted for kidnaping a white girL Dave Johnson and Mansfield Washington (colored) were hangefi at Baton Rouge, La., for murdering Prof. Emile Van Ilofe and Michael Kane. Gen. Miles said at Boston that there was not a harbor in this country in proper condition to resist a hostile modern fleet. Cincinnati haR annexed the adjacent villages of Westwood, Clifton, Avondale, Linwood and Riverside, thus adding 15,000 to the population of the city. Two babies, a boy and a girl, twins, months old, were smothered to death in bed in Chicago at the home of the parents, a family named Jacquer. John Sachs, a tombstone decorator, dropped dead while placing n inscription on a tombstone at Waldheim cemetery in Chicago. Farmers in Kansas are turning their old enemy, the wind, to account by utilizing it through windmills for irrigating. Ed Williamson, of Chicago, one of the most popular of ball players in his time, died at Mountain Valley Springs Ark. At Kosciusko, Miss., Rev. W. P. Ratr liffc killed S. A. Jackson and fatally wounded two bystanders. A political sued was the cause. Danny Russell and George Siddons fought twenty-seven rounds at Newark, N. J., the latter being awarded the victory on a foul. Gould A. Stjll, a night operator, was assassinated while *at work at his key at Hay Springs, Neb. Thus far in 1894 eighty lives and eighteen vessels have lost from the fishing fleet of Gloucester, Mass. Records for the year 1893 show that America is by all odds the greatest racing country under the sun. Nebraska homesteaders dispossessed by a recent decision will lose all but their improvements and government fees. The Lehigh Coal <fc Iron company, which went into a receiver’s hands in April, 1893, with liabilities of $1,250,000, has been declared restored to solvency by Judge Jenkins, of Milwaukee. The Jackson Brewing company at Cincinnati failed for $150,000. Daniel McCormack and Mrs. Annie Kelly were suffocated by gas in a hotel at South Framingham, Mass.
The business portion of Morgantown, Ind., was destroyed by fire. Mrs. Charles Richfield and Mrs. J. F. McCuen 1 were killed by the cars while attempting to drive across the Michigan Central tracks at Battle Creek, Mich.o For accepting a bribe J. T. Bennier was expelled from city council. Four other aldermen are to bo tried. A tablet was placed in Providence, R.IIf. f to commemorate the burning of British taxed tea in 1775. The resignation of Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage as pastor of the Brooklyn tabernacle has been withdrawn. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. The populists propose making Kansas the fighting groundthisyear, where their batteries will be concentrated. Prof. Carl Wilhelm Knudson, the astronomer, died at South Norwalk, Conn. He was born in 1818. Carl Jonas, lieutenant governor of Wisconsin, was appointed consul general at St Petersburg by the prcsidenL Rev. Dr. R. W. Patterson, a Presbyterian minister, well known throughout tho northwest, died at his home in Evanston, 111., aged 80 years. Jacob C. Horn, who was present at the Fort Dearborn massacre, and in j the Black Hawk, Mexican and civil ■ wars, died at Winniecanne, Wis. Ex-Judge J. W. McDill, of the inter- j state commerce commission, diqjl at his home in Creston, la-, of typhoid fever, aged 60 years. Mrs. Sarah Galloway (colored) died near Alton, 111., aged 110 years. I U John C. Downey, ex-governor of California, died at Los Angeles of pneu- j monia after an illness of only three days. lie was 67 years ol<£ Gen. Jural A. Early died at Lynchburg, Va., the result of a fall. He was born in Virginia November, 13 1816. The Colorado legislature adjourned sine die. James Montgomery Bailey, the “Danbury News man,” died at his home in Danbury, Conn., aged 55years. ; FOREIGN. Mrs. Ali.en Francis, formerly of Illinois, died at Victoria, B. C. She .introduced Abraham Lincoln to the girl he married. Russians and Germans were reported to have fought a battle on the frontier in which several were killed. Rumors of the retirement of Mr. ! Gladstone from oflice were being re- 1 newed and were agitating the English. 1 Mmk. Janet Monaco. Pat by, a distinguished contralto singer, died at Sheffield, England, at tire close of a song. 4 r j In a fight between a band of brigands and the police of the town of fztlahuaca, Mexico, eight of the former and* 9 two of the latter were killed. The - Brazilian elections resulted in the choice of Senor Prudente de Moraes as President Peixoto’s successor. In an engagement between the government troops and insurgents near Saranda, Brazil, the rebels were defeat- ! ed with a loss of 400 men. Senor Ellauri was elected president of the republic of Uruguay. At Victoria, B. C.. Green 'Wbrloek’s bank closed with liabilities of $400,000. ; Two members of an American hunting party were killed by wild beasts in the Sierra Madre mountains in Mexico. | Advices from Rio de Janeiro say i that the rebel transport Venus was wrecked during a bombardment and the three officers and twenty-nine men on board were drowned. Mr. Gladstone’s resignation .was ac- j cepted by Queen Victoria and Lord Rosebery was offered and accepted the vacant premiership. LATER. TnE United States senate held a short session on the sth and but little business of importance was transacted. A brief debate on silver took place and Senator Stewart (Nev.) offered a free silver amendment to the Bland bill. Senator Morgan (Ala.) offered a resolution looking to the appointment of a tariff commission, offered as an amendment to the tariff bill. The debate on the pension appropriation bill continued all day in the house and at times considerable spirit was displayed. The principal speakers were Messrs. Dolliver, Hepburn, Cannon. A total of $1,513,738 is carried by the diplomatic and consular appropriation bill which was introduced. Elections for local officers were held in many towns in’ lowa, and the republicans were in most places successful. A crank, who said he had been directed by God' to turn the white house at Washington over to the Jews, was put under arrest Sylvester Rhodes (colored) was lynched at Collins, Ga., for the murder of Ernest Dozier (white). The striking West Virginia miners planned to blow up the Acme mine with dynamite and kill Operator Wyant, but were unsuccessful. The best part of the business portion of Dead wood, S. D., was destroyed by fire, the loss being $209,000. Queen Victoria prorogued parliament after giving her royal sanction to the local government bill. Municipal elections were held throughout Maine, the republicans being uniformly successful by increased majorities. Miss Ida Van Etten, an American authoress living in Paris, is said to have died from starvation. Two BOUSES Uca-aT dcu*o.'Li.wv. ... storm at Butler, Mo., and Jasper Smith and his wife and two daughters were badly injured. The Illinois democratic state convention will be held at .Springfield June 27. Fou/: thousand miners near Bridgeport, v. resumed work, leaving tho settlement of wages of outside laborers to arbitration. The republicans at Richmond, Ind , renominated Henry V. Johnson for congress. Mrs. Eliza Davis died in San Francisco at the age of 103 years 4 months and 18 days. She was a mulatto and was born a slave October 12, 1790. The plate mill of the Eureka Iron & Steel corfipany at Wyandotte, Mich., was burned, the loss being §IOO,OOO.
r FOUR KILLED. Terrible Tragedy Enacted in a New Jersey Home. - J Two Burglars Murder a Mother and liar llabe—Both Brutes Killed by the Husband After a Most Desperate Struggle. MET A RLOODY FATE. New Brunswick, N. J., March B. Wednesday night two negroes named Henry Baker and William Thompson entered the residence of Moore Baker at Franklin Park, 6 miles west of this place, for the purpose of robbery. Upon being discovered by Mrs. Baker, who was up with a sick child, the robbers killed both her and the child. Mr. Baker then shot one of the negroes dead and killed the other with an ax. Mr. Baker was | reported to have had a large sum of money in the house. The burglars : effected an entrance to the house ! about midnight through the cellar j door in the rear and went through the kitchen up the rear stairs to the i second floor. Mr. Baker, his wife and child slept in front room. Mrs. Baker wasup ; attending to the child, and hearing j footsteps on the stairs she opened the door and saw Thompson, who carried an ax in his hand. He rushed at her with an oath and buried the blade in her skull, scattering the woman’s brains over the walls of the room. Thompson then ran to the bed and struck the baby with the ax, killing it instantly. Mr. Baker was horror-stricken at the Bight of Thompson’s crime, and with a cry of frenzy leaped at the slayer of j his wife and babe. The black butcher turned with uplifted ax from his bloody work, and aimed a blow at Baker, but his aim was bad and tho point of the ax buried itself in the floor. Then followed an unequal battle between the t\Vo, the second negro | appearing confident of liis confederate’s ; success or dazed at the spectacle before him and not interfering. Baker, crazed with the horror of tho crimes he had been unable to prevent, attacked the negro Thompson with the ferocity j of a tiger, lie tried to secure the ax, j but Thompson was too quick, and they'’both laid/hold of it at the same instant. Both strained for the pos- j' session of the w'eapon and in their fury ! they rolled and tumbled about in the j rivers of blood that ran from the body of the murdered wife and that of the baby, which had fallen to the floor. The contest was about equal for a j time. The hands of both men were i lacerated.into shreds by the sharp point of the ax. Finally Baker tripped his opponent, and as the negro fell ’ the ax struck Baker in the face. The blood from the wound almost blinded Baker, but he brushed it aside and, raising tne ax, brought it down upon the head of the negro, who was j attempting to rise. The blow was a 1 true one, for the keen blade of tho weapon crashed into the head of the negro almost at the center of tho : crown and tore the skull asunder i down to the bridge of the nose. \ Thompson dropped like a shot, his • blood mingling with that of his vie- : tims. ' □ Wrenching the ax from the head of the negro brute Baker made a dash for the other negro, who had started to run away. Baker followed him in close pursuit, leaving a trail of blood behind. As the negro reached 1 the rear door of the kitchen, in j seeking to escape, Baker caught up a shotgun from a rack, and, pausing an instant in the doorway, took deliber- j ate aim at the fugitive and fired both ! barrels. As he recoiled from the shock j of the gun he saw the negro spring into the air and then fall face down- | ward. llow Baker managed to return to the J room where the murders and retribu- j tion occurred lie does not remember, ! but his neighbors, who were aroused ! by the report of the gun, found him , clinging to the chair when they rushed over to learn the cause of the disturbance. Baker could not add anything to the story told by the horrible scene they gazed upon. Some of his neighbors took him to his own ■ room and dressed his wounds, which j may yet prove fatal, while others made ! an examination of the bodies in the front room. AH three, moth- ! er, child and murderer, were dead, their bodies frightfully mangled j and indistinguishable in color by j reason of the deep dj'e that covered every part of them. The body ; of the negro, Henry Baker, was found I in the spot w here the bullets from ! Moore Baker's gun had overtaken him. j The burglar was not dead, and the j neighbors were unanimously in favor \ of lynching him, but before they could j carry out thejjr plans he died. The coroner took charge of the bodies | and held an inquest. The jury found ; that the negroes had killed Mrs. Baker I and her child Gertrude, and returned a verdict of justifiable homicide in the case of the killing of the negroes by Baker. " luitane Man Kills Ills Wife. Lima, 0., March 3. — Edward Froidereux became insane over religion at Point Pleasant and secured a club, and after telling his family that he had been commanded by God to kill them, attacked his wife. He had. beaten her to-death when neighbor®, who had been notified of -his insanity by the little children, appeared on the scene and after a struggle succeeded in overpowering him. Landed in SingMnj-. Sing Sing, N. Y., March B. —Officers arrived at the prison at 3:12 o’clock p. m. Thursday, having in charge John Y. McKane, the Gravesend politician, who ! had been sentenced to serve a six-years ■ term for election frauds After-* the ! usual formalities McKane was given a \ convicU* suit, which he put on himself. No cell was assigned him. He will for the present bo in what are known as Hie idle ranks. McKane went through all ihis ordeal with firm- t ness and showed no signs of depnes- j eion. He will bg released in four year# j and three months if him arm duct im i good.
My Bojr. His mind conceives vast schemes to span, The nursery floor with railroad plan; He sails brave ships in childish play To Ceylon’s isle and fair Cathay; No land remote or unconfessed Lies hidden from his viking quest; No castle tower can e’er withstand His tin-clad soldiers’ fierce command; His knights in tourney never fail, His prince must win the Holy Grail Beforehand; it is understood He'll wake the beauty of the wood, And all the giants’ heads will fall Before his sounding bugle call! —Providence Journal. Onlv a Rrakeman. Awful tho shock when the engines met; All was terror, confusion, din: None who saw it will e.’er forget The picture that daylight ushered In. Shattered fragments of iron and steel. Splintered wood and battered brass Mingled with broken rod and wheel— And some one’s blood stained the wayside grass. Someone's body, all crushed and. torn, Covered with wounds, bereft of breath. Was found ’neath the wreck; the jacket worn Told how a brakeman had met his death. Someone wept when the news was borne; Someone mourned o'er the mangled dead, In line of duty from someone torn— Yet “only a brakeman,*’ the papers said. Sadly they buried him ’neath the sod, Thee took the crape from the cottage door; Over a Rrave the roses nod— The grave of a brakeman whose run is o'er. —Chicago Dispatch. When Morning Breaks. When morning breaks—the shadows fade Before tho mighty king of day, Who comes in majesty arrayed; And Earth, exulting, seems to say: “ Lo, darkness flies—her prey forsakes— When morning breaks!’’ When morning breaks—then error flees Before the sun of righteousness Who heals the blinded eyes, and frees The captive in his helplessness; From sin and doubt the soul awakes When morning breaks! When morning breaks—the shades of death Before the King shall disappear, For “night shall be no more,” He saith. Himself—the light—shall banish fear, And joy the place of sorrow takes, When morning breaks! —Nannie 11. Woodruff, in Good Housekeeping. “Hit am er profit fin# ter be consistent, but not too much so. ” remarked Unde Eben. “De clock in de jeweler's sign dat alius p'ints ter twenty minutes past eight is erne ob de inos’ consistent t'rngs what is.”— Washington Star. Always Gets There. Jack Potter—- “ Well, there's one thing in this world that nearly always pets its duel” Ned Fresheut —hat's that :” Jack Potter—“ The club.” —Brooklyn Life. Siie—“They say my sister has a prettier figure than 1. But (sure of her answer) whose figure do you like best; Jack, dear?” He (fervently)—“Your father's, darling.”— Brooklyn Life. * “Now, listen, Freddie; the doctor said that it was that little bit of candy you ate last night that made you sick.” “Well, you know how I asked you over and over to give me a whole lot.” ‘T fear.” said the postage stamp, when It found itself fastened to a love letter, “that I’m not sticking to facts.”—lndianapolis Journal. •‘I wish,” said a railway passenger as a bunch of comics were dropped into his lap by the train boy, ‘-that these people would quit poking fun at me.”-Washington Star.
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“My wife, after using ‘Mother’s Friend,’ passed through the ordeal with little pain, was stronger in one hour than in a week after the birth of her former child. —J. J. McGoldrick, Bean Station, Tenn. “ Mothers’ Friend ” robbed pain of its terror and shortened labor. 1 have the healthiest child I ever saw.—Mrs. L. M. Ahern, Cochran, Ga. Sent by express, charges prepaid, on receipt of price, $1.50 per bottle. . Book “To Mothers” mailed free. sold by aii Druggists. BRADFIELO REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga.
“Almost as Palatable as Milk” This is a fact with regard to Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil. The difference between the oil, in its plain state, is very apparent. In Scott’s Emulsion you detect no fish-oil taste. As it is a help to digestion there is no after effect except good effect. Keep in mind that Scott’s Emulsion is the best promoter of flesh and strength known to science. Prepared by Beott A Bowne. N. Y. All dragffirt* ELY’S CatarrH
worn
BALM Allays Pain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores. Restores the Senses of Taste and SmeU.
TEY THE CUBE. HAYFEVER A pnrtiele 1a applied Into each nostril and is agreeable. Price cents at Druggists, or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, Warren tit.. New York. i nnn nnn acres of lamd [J for sale by the Saint Paul i|MWtf|vvw & Duluth Railroad Company in Minnesota. Send for Maps and Circulars. They will be sent to you TywrerFT. HOPEWELL CLARKE. LCotcmieisioner, St.
Mr. C. E. Harris Barre, Vt. All Broken Up Former Vigor and Strength Restored by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. “C. I. Hood & Cos., Lowell, Mass.: “ Dear Sirs: About two years ago I was suddenly taken with heart trouble. This followed me up to last spring, when I was unable to work. I Was Completely Broken Up and used different medicines, but without avail. I suffered at times severely, being unable to sleep comfortably. Up to the time when I was first taken I had always been a healthy man. Yes! tougher than a bear. I was sad, for it Hood’s s sGures seemed as if I had apparently come to the end of my usefulness M-y trade was that of aboard sawyer, always earning good wages. A short time ago a friend advised me to use Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which I did. After using one bottle my Heart Trouble Was Overcome so that lam able to work every day. Th change I attribute to Hood’s Sarsaparilla.** -Ciiaunct Es Harris, Barro, Vermont. Hood’e Pill© euro Constipation by restoring the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal. Unlike thdNlutch Process Qh No Alkalies Other Chemicals aro use(l in the wjJJpreparation of ipppr W. BAKER & CO.’S I p Breakfast Cocoa Est -pIT which in absolutely Kil f fill! til pure and soluble. MB $r Vh Ithas more than three times ESji ifi'niji y H the utrenjth of Cocoa mined ffiaLl Ik'hT L with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, ami is far more e:o---nomical, costing let is than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and easilX DIGESTED. Sold by Grocers everywhoro. W. BAKER & CO.,Dorchester,Mass. TRACTION AND PORTABLE NQIMES. Threshers and Horse Powers. Write for Illustrated Catalogue, mailed Freat M. RUMELY CO.. LaPORTE. INOb
Lessens Pain Insures Safety Mother and Child.
Because of the high speed at which Circular Saws are rus more power ia wasted in friction than ia used in sawing, where the hearings of the shaky, wooden saw frame get out of line. In the Aermotor n Frame, the only Steel Saw Frame ever made, this difficulty is absolutely and wholly prevented because Til* BEAIMVCS FOR TIIE HIIAFT ARK Hi HE Ilk BaBRITTISG IT 1.1 TH* F.RUS OK A PIECE OF BTF.EI. Tl RING. The steel tubing and babbitt are then slitted so as to take up wear with a bolt, 'file frame Is all steel, very rigid, and riveted together to that nothing ean get loose or ont of |Aaee. Th o guard to encircles. the taw at to make it impoetibU for any one to art hurt, a point of the greatest importance in a saw to be used by unskilled hands. The swing frame which carries the wood to he sawed and which automatically returns to Its place haa also a guard to keep a pole off from the fly wheel and yet does not cause it to present very much of an angle to the saw. The use of a 100 lb. 20inch fly wheel and 26 inch saw makes this easily possible. It is therefore, a very desirable Pole Saw, making it easy to cuE op ony long material quickly and safely. Another feature od
Sine# we offer this very superior saw frame with a 96 Inefc superior saw at a much less price than any cheap imperfect wooden frame can he bought for, we are sure that the men da of the Aermotor will appreciate the fact that we have again been doing the public a great scrvice anl have in red**icrnin an old articl* and it into an IllllllllCi, For a saw of similar size and quality, and ordinary wooden frame, you would be charged S6O. We make this all-stsst frame and this superior saw at siO f AND CITE TOE A CH ASCI TO GET IT AT slk, for the benefit of our Geared Aermotor . We have sold an enormous number of Power Aermotor outfits with which saws are used, and a poor saw that runs hard detracts from their usefulness and thair reputation. If wo,furnish a very superior saw at a very low price, many geared outfits -rill be h-ugHt to drive them. Wherever' one Geared AarmoUir goes, others are sure to follow. When we take a well known article, redesign It, and put ft in a shape very superior to anything that has appeared before, || widens and enlarges our reputation for doing well everything to which we put our hands, and this is the thing that has In the past brought so much business to our factory, and whioh in the future, we have no doubt, will bring, practically, all thr business in our line. It is this reputation that we are dally working for. # We believe that this Aermotor Steel Saw Frame and Saw will confirm and enhance the fame which we have gained in the manufacture of Steel Windqiilla and Steel Towers, hence, for the purpose of pattering flitm so tftat everybody may knew that a good thing can be had for a small price, W 1 OIFF.R Tim STEEL SAW AM* FRAME FOR fit CASH AKD FITE C'OP>EB OF AHTI.KTISEIENT Ko. S os this series aa per conditions stated in No. 2. In our next advertisement, No. 4. ere ahall talk of galvanizing, and make an offer that will bgflK Universal interest. Thu is ado. li'o. $. A LH.MOT OH CO. il M iIAFU permanently fared. No knife. ll ArailE-ffl tt‘ > P‘*s ,on - No piaster- JOHN VHftVykll B. HAKHIB, Fort V$.JU9i 4 lff* V*NAKX IUU PATER erst# Usee jus writ*
