People's Pilot, Volume 2, Number 31, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 January 1893 — Page 2

The People's PilcL INDIANA.

The News Condensed.

Important Intelligence From All Parts. CONGRESSIONAL. Second Session. In the senate no business was transacted on the 12th owing to the funeral services over the remains of the late Senator Kenna . In the house a bill was increasing from one to two dollars per barrel the internal revenue tax on fermented liquors. A recees was taken to attend the funeral of the late Senator Kenna. In the senate a bill was introduced on the 13th to extend to the North Pacific ocean the ©revisions of the statutes for the protection of fur seals and other fur-bearing animals. A resolution was adopted calling on the secretary of the treasury for a copy of the opinion of the law officer of the department under which he is disbursing the 5,000,000 souvenir coins in aid of the Columbian exposition, conditioned on Sunday closing.... In the house filibustering against the consideration of the private war claims bill resulted in nothing being 'accomplished. In tjie senate on the 14|h the Nicaragua ship canal question was discussed....ln the house a bill to ratify an agreement with the Cherokee cation of Indians was considered and a bill to admit Utah as a state was introduced. On the 16th speeches were made in the senate against the McOarrahan bill; in favor of a constitutional amendment limiting.the presidential office to one term, and in defense of the constitutionality of the anti-option bi11....1n the house a resolution calling upon the executive departments fqr information as to the number and amount of w* claims allowed or disallowed by departments was adopted. A motion to suspend the rules and pass a bill to settle the claims of Arkansas and other states under the swamp land grants failed to s.ecure the necessary two-thirds vote and was defeated.

DOMESTIC.

Flames at Chateaugay, N. Y., destroyed almost the entire business portion of the town. Loss, >175,000. The wife and daughter of Jacob Ringger, a farmer near Alma, Wis., died from eating diseased pork. Wealthy Farmer Judd, of Tyrone, iAu mourns the loss of a hired tramp, 8900 and a shotgun. Fire swept clean one street in the business district of Alliance, Neb., involving a loss of over SIOO,OOO. Cushing academy at Ashburnham, Mass., a noted educational institution and preparatory school, was burned, the loss being $160,000. It was repprted that a gigantic lumber combine had been formed by Maine and Massachusetts parties which would practically control the lumber business of the United States. Advocates of a canal to unite the great lakes and the ocean met in Washington. Between seventy-five and 100 gentlemen were present, representing the commercial bodies and the lake in-’ terests of the country. The westbound Maysville accommodation train collided with a freight train at Dover, Ky., killing the engineer, flreinan and six passengers. The National Bicycle Association of America was formed in Philadelphia. It is allied with baseball and its purpose is to give regular bicycle meetings With cash prizes. A hire in the heart of the retail district of Kansas City, Mo., caused a loss of 8245,000. Will Brown, aged 18 years, and Alice Smith, a 15-year-old girl, surprised their friends at Springfield, 0., by eloping and getting married. Two negroes, Ed and Dick Moorman (brothers), were hanged by a mob at Gaston, Ky., for murdering and robbing a farmer.

An avalanche swept down the mountain side in Salzso, Wash., and buried two miners, James Switzer and Martin Flaherty, under 150 feet of snow. An ice bridge of frozen foam was formed at Niagara Falls and frozen so solid that a number of persons crossed it This was the first time in 100 years that these boiling waters had frozen over. All but one of the 150 rare manuscripts presented to Knox library in New York by Banker John S. Kennedy have been pronounced forgeries by the British museum experts. The trial of Hugh Dempsey, district master workman of the Knights of Labor, J. M. Davidson and Robert Beatty, charged with poisoning non-union workmen in the Homestead steel mill, began at Pittsburgh. Thebe was considerable excitement in Jackson over reports of outrages committed by white caps against wealthy Jews in southern Mississippi. At the leading clearing houses in the United States the exchanges during the week ended on the 13th aggregated ¥1,370,808,981, against $1,000,549,436 the previous week. The decrease as compared with the corresponding week of 1892 was 3.1. The Hotel St Louis, the first large hotel ever built in Duluth, Minn., was destroyed by fire, the loss being SIOO,000. William Baudre and Charles Preston, railroad men, perished in the flames. Eighteen persons were badly injured by the telescoping of a Chicago & Eastern Illinois accommodation train by the Chicago & Erie express at Fiftyfifth street in Chicago. > Three more negroes were lynched in Monroe county, Ark., on accpuntof the Atkinson murder'ai Cotton Plant The four negroes named Charles Brooks, Frisby Comegys, Fletcher Williams and Moses Brown were hanged at Chestertown, Md., for the murder of Dr. James H. Hill April 23, 1892. Three of them were 16 and one 13 years of Ae. / Henby Codman, landscape artist of the World’s Columbian exposition, died suddenly at St. Luke’s hospital in Chicago. „ 1 • In a railway wreck near Minshall, Ind., George Stith, engineer, and William Warren, fireman, were killed. An engine with a snow-plow in front dashed into the rear of a Chicago & Northwestern train at Story City, la., injuring twenty-one people, but killIn the United States during the seven days ended on the 18th the business failures numbered 806, against 340 the previous week and 830 for he corre- > ... . ® •*

Tme steamer Jolm Warner v oat a flue at Chattanooga, klllinglwo deck hand% and twelve others were scalded more or less serioaaly. Twenty-five persons narrowly es- . caped death from asphyxiation by illuminating gas at Pittsburgh, Pa. Ben Lafargue, son of the state superintendent of education, was lynched in Avoyelles parish, La. He killed a negro some weeks ago. A passenger train on the lowa Central was derailed near Burlington. la., -killing two unknown passengers and injuring fatally Rev. Mr. Miller, es Wayland, la; Elmer Reece, of Morning Sun, la, and E. S. Drummer, of Wyoming, IIL Flames at Brewster, N. Y., destroyed •everal business buildings, causing a loss of SIOO,OOO. The Winnebago Indians at the reservation near Black River Falls, Wis., were suffering terribly from the cold, the mercury being 40 degrees below zero. In a quarrel at Dallas, Tex., Albert Grant shot Fannie Howard and then killed himself. James Kelly and Tobe Hines, two farmers living near Truxton, Mo., engaged in a quarrel that resulted fatally to both.

E. C. Allen fatally shot his wife and shot and killed Bert Van Tassel in a restaurant at Rice Lake, Wis. He alleged that the two were criminally intimate. Diphtheria and scarlet fever were epidemic at DanvilU, Pa., and all public gathering? hail been prohibited. The pope Has debided to establish a permanent apostolic delegation the United States, and has nominated 'Mgr. Satolli to be the first delegate. Miss Ethel Cary, an estimable young lady .aged 22, shot and killed an unknown man at Crawford, Tenn., who attempted to assault her. Mrs. M. M. Anderson, of Pulaski, has been elected assistant sergeant-at-arms. of the Arkansas legislature. This is the first time a woman has been elected to that position. Intensely cold weather was reported from all portions of the country, the thermometer ranging from 26 degrees below zero in the north to 10 belew in the south. At Knoxville, Tenn., and vicinity over a dozen persons froze to death. Exports from the United States to South American countries in 1892 amounted to $62,808,003, an increase of $7,106,359 over the previous year. The continued cold weather has increased the suffering at Homestead, Pa., and it was stated that nearly 300 people were on the verge of starvation. Gov. Stone, of Mississippi, issued a proclamation commanding the white cap organizations in the southern part of the state to desist and offering SIOO reward for the capture of each of the outlaws. Because told that he must go to work Thomas Kilday fatally shot his father, mother and sister in Philadelphia. Fire destroyed the Neufeld manufacturing company’s building in Chicago, the loss being SIOO,OOO. * The country residence of W. C. Harrison near Philadelphia was burned with its contents, the loss being $125,000.

J. N. MiTTijEBEfeGBR, treasurer of St. Charles county, Mo., was said to be $16,000 short in his accounts. Gbandville Stevenson, second engineer, and Henry Thompson, third engineer of the British steamship Glenbervie, were suffocated on that vessel in New York by coal gas. A four story warehouse in Philadelphia collapsed, and seven men were caught in the ruins, three of whom were killed and one injured The first regular session of the twenty-fifth annual convention of the National American Woman Suffrage association was opened in Washington. In the United States the visible supply of grain on the 16th was: Wheat, 82,081,000 bushels; corn, 12,260,000 bushels; oats, 5,903,000 bushels; rye, 1,044,000 bushels; barley, 2,135,000 bushels. Koknel Loth, the murderer of Mrs. Demacsek, met death by electricity at Clinton prison in Dannemora, N. Y. In the trial at Pittsburgh of the Homestead poisoning case Patrick Gallagher, the cook upon whose confession the charges of poisoning were made, said that Hugh Dempsey, master workman of the Kpight of Labor, gave him powders to place in the coffee and tea that was to be given to the nonunionists C. R. Ryan & Co., wholesale grocers at Memphis, Tenn., failed for $150,000, The new SIOO,OOO courthouse at Dubuque, la., was dedicated with imposing ceremonies and a banquet. Gisbert Waescher, of Chicago, arrived in San Francisco after riding horseback overland from" Chicago. It took him ninety-eight days to travel the 3,000 miles. A mail car on the East Tennessee, Virginia & Georgia railroad was totally destroyed by fire near Selma, Ala., and all United States mail and southern express matter was burned. Michael J. Kelly, famous catcher and right fielder of the old Boston baseball team, made his debut as a theatrical star in New York.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Lewis Baker died suddenly at his home in Poughkeepsie, N. Y., in the 101st year of his age. lie leaves three sons—Alexander, aged «0; -Nicholas, aged 77, and Cyrus, aged 72. Upon canvassing the returns of the election on November 8 in Arkansas it was shown that the amendment to the constitution requiring an elector to exhibit a poll tax receipt before he Can vote at an elect on was-adopted., Dr. Samuel Logan, aged 63, one of the oldest and most prominent physicians in the south, died suddenly in his office in New Orleans. The official canvass of the vote cast in Nebraska at the recent election showed that the republican governor and other state officers were elected and Gov. Crounse was du|y inaugurated. W William H. Wickham, mayor of New York city during 1875 and 1876, died in that city, aged 65 yeair

Jeremiah Harvey* known throughout Indiana as the oldest odd fellow in the state and the founder of the first newspaper in Grant county, died at Marion at the age of 8$ years. State Senator Fred Born, the oldest member of the Wisconsin legislature, died at bis home in Cedarburg at the age of 77 years. He had served in the legislature almost constantly for forty-five years, having been elected to the first state senate in 1848. Horace Smith, founder, with D. B. Wesson, of the celebrated firm of Smith <fc Wesson, revolver manufacturers, died suddenly of heart failure at his home in Springfield, Mass. James Comstock, a veteran of the Mexican war, died at Carthage, Mo., aged 64 years. Miss Sarah Herring, daughter of Attorney General Herring, is the first woman admitted to the bar in Arizona. Gen. Rufus Ingalls, United States army, retired, died in New York city, aged 70 years. The funeral services over the remains of the late Gen. B. F. Butler were held at Lowell, Mass. Dr. John B. Rice, ex-congressman, died at his home in Fremont, O. The democratic members of the Delaware legislature nominated George Gray for United States senator. Ex-President Hayes was suffering from an attack of neuralgia of the heart at his home in Fremont, 0., on the 16th, and a fatal result was feared.

FOREIGN. A body of federal cavalry attacked the rebels at Sanotome, in the Argentine republic, and dislodged them from their position and fifty of the rebels were killed or wounded. The health officer reports that there ♦ere 10,919 deaths from cholera in Hamburg in 1892, and 26,323 deaths from all causes. A spinning mill at Osaka, Japan, was burned with a loss of 125 lives. Most of the victims were young girls. Two hundred and seventy houses in the vicinity of the inill were also burned. | Robbers fired a temple at Kam Li, Chiqa, which, was filled with natives who were thatching a theatrical performance, and 1.400 lives were lost. A law passed by th© Colombian congress decrees ample funds for the gradual exchange of paper money for silver. A band of brigands made a descent upon a church at Pego, Spain, killed'a priest named Suarez and one of his assistants, and then stole the altar service. The emigrants who left German ports for the United States in 18ffe numbered 108.820. The weather throughout Europe was intensely cold. In Russia the mercfiiry fell to 69 degrees centigrade below zero, and in Siberia to 79 degrees below zero. In Hungary it was 40 below. A train on the Congo railway collided with a wagon loaded with dynamite near Matadi, an explosiqn followed and fifty persons were killed. The body of a woman cut in 178 pieces was found in a coffee sack in the street at Moscow. Nothing had been learned as to the identity of her murderer. The French steamship St Marie ran down an Italian bark off Villa Franca during a heavy fleet storm and the bark went down with all her crew of thirteen men. Frances Anne Kembi.e (Mrs. Pierce Butler), once a well-known actress, died in London, aged 84 years. Domincio Taragnello, an Italian, and Sing Kee, a Chinaman, were hanged at Nanaimo, B. C. Each man murdered a fellow countryman.

LATER. A bill to repeal the silver-bullion purchase provision of the She: man bill was reported in the United States senate on the 17th and the McGarraghan bill was defeated by a vote of 29 to 18. The joint resolution to amend the constitution so as to limit the presidential office to one term was discussed. It* the house a bill was introduced to refund the 4 per cent, bonds, to increase the circulation of the national «banks and to discontinue the purchase of silver bullion. A resolution was agreed to making provision for the joint meeting of the two houses of congress on Wednesday, February 8, to count the electoral vote. The National League for Good Road§ m et in annual convention at Washington. Fire completely destroyed the homa of the Calumet club in Chicago, entailing a loss of $250,000 on the building and contents. Martin A. Redfield died from the effects of the flames and a domestic named Kittie McCabe was missing. - , Martin Milleb, aged 30, was kitted and his wife Kate, aged 43, fatally injured by their sleigh being struck by an engine near Belfast, Pa. Sixteen of a wandering band of gypsies were frozen to death near Koniggratz, Bohemia., United States senators were elected as follows: Michigan, Francis B. Stockbridge (rep.); .Indiana, David Turpie (dem.); Tennessee, W. B. Bate (dern.).; New York, Edward Murphy (dem.'j; Massachusetts, Henry Cabot Lodge (rep.); Connecticut, Joseph R. Hawjey. (rep-); Maine, Eugene Hale (rep.); Deiaware, George Gray (dem.). ' A freight train crashed into a largei, sleigh-load of people at Lonsdale, R. 1., killing eight of the occupants and in-* juring a dozen others. A train took fire near Samara, Russia, while running at full speed, frdm an overturned stove, and forty-nine persons were burned to death and many others’were injured. George T. Writs' took the oath of office in : Trenton and was duly installed governor of New Jersey. Rutherford Birchard Hayes, LL. D., nineteenth president of the United States, died from paralysis of the heart op the 17th‘ at his home in Fremobt, aged 71 years. He served' in th? army throughout the way,, was a member of congress in 1865, served as governor of Ohio frpm 1866 to 1870, was governor in 1875-76, and was inaugurated president oi the United States on March 5, 1877. : ’ r

THE COLD WAVE.

Jaek Frta'i Fewer Felt la AU Part* j»f the Warld. Sunday morning the thermometer reg-' istered 2o below zero, the coldest in over twenty years. The increased cold was felt before midnight and steam i was kept np in all the factories. Stock is suffering severely, and there is no 1 donbt that all fruit is killed. A high j wind is blowing from the southwest I and another cold night is imminent I The natural gas supply is abundant and of good quality. Lebanon, Ind., Jan. 16.—Through misunderstanding of orders between employes of the natural gas company the supply of this city, which comes through a pipe line 20 miles in length, was shut off about 11 o’clock Sunday j morning with the thermometer 15 deI Frees below zero. There was great suffering among the people. Church services were discontinued and most of the population went to bed to keep warm. The supply came on again at 3 o’clock. Evansville, Ind., Jan. 16.—The Ohio river is frozen completely over at this point and river traffic is entirely closed. This is the first time in fourteen years that the river has been frozen over, and the coldest weather for eight , years has been suffered Sunday, the thermometer registering 5 degrees below zero at 7a. m. From Newburgh, ! 12 miles above here, to Henderson. 13 below, there is a solid gorge of ice, in some places piled several feet high. Jolet, 111., Jan. 16.—The city is threatened with a coal famine.’Freight trains on all the roads have been abandoned because of the snow blockade, and the supply is hearly exhansted. 1 For nearly a week dealers have been doling out coal to their customers in small quantities, hoping to be able to replenish their stocks goon, but the outlook is jnst now very dubious. Champaign, HL. Jan. 16.—The jpercury broke its record fdr this Season Saturday night by getting down to 22 degrees below zero mark. In fact Saturday night was the coldest in this city in eight years. Saturday the coal supply of both Champaign and Urbana was exhausted, and a great many families are tsuffering on account of lack of fuel. • ■ ’ * < ’ ‘

Greensburg, Pa., Jan. 16.—A little child of David McCracken, of Log tn’s Ferry, was frozen to death Saturday. The baby was 2 months old. Mrs. McCracken, wrapping the child up, started to walk to Parnassus, a distance of 2 miles. When she arrived there the babe was frozen stiff. Mascoutah, 111., flan. 16.—The reports from St. Clair, Washington, Clinton and adjoining counties in the great wheat-growing section of southern Illinois indicate that the growing crop has been badly injured by the December drought and the exceeding cold weather pf the last two weeks. An accurate - estimate of the damage cannot be made at this time. The theri mometer registered 9 degrees belqffc zero here Sunday, the coldest in years’ Cape Charles, Va., Jan. 16.—Snow fell early Sunday morning, covering the peninsula from 11 to 14 inches deep. The mercury is at 10 degrees. It was the coldest day since 1857. Steamers between Cape Chttrles and Norfolk are making their trips with much difficulty on account of the ice. At Smith’s island ice extends a mile and a half into the ocean. Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 16.—Sunday was bitterly cold. The Cumberland is frozen from bank to bank and during the day was visited by thousands looking at the unusual sight. Ponds near the city have been crowded with skaters, a scene rarely seen here. Baltimore, Md., Jan. 16.—Dispatches to the Sun from all parts of Maryland show that the mercury marks below zero in the eastern shore counties, as well as in the western and mountainous section of the state. Salisbury reports 10 degrees below zero, and in the country round about birds, fowl, and rabbits are found in large quantities frozen to death. There is much suffering among cattle on the marshes and many will die. The Wicomico and Nanticoke rivers are frozen solid for miles, and in many places the ice is banked up' 5 feet high in the lower Wicimoco. London, Jan. 16. The weather throughout Europe is intensely cold. • In Russia the mercury is reported to have fallen to 69 degrees centigrade* below zero and in Siberia to 79 degrees below zero. Wood fires are kept burning in the streets of St. Petersburg for the benefit of way■farers. Even the double windows of houses are coated. In the south of Russia the mercury indicates 45 degrees of frost. All river and canal traffic in Germany is interrupted. Navigation on the Baltic has almost ceased. The pontoon bridges on the Rhine have been haused in. In some parts • of Hungary the thermometer is 52 degrees below zero cen- . tigrade, and in Constantinople tram cars and cabs have stopped' running and snow has blocked all traffic in the suburbs. Even telegraphic communication in Turkey is generally interrupted. Many deaths from cold have been reported.

Chicago Pork Comes High.

.Halifax N. S., Jan. 16.—Chicago pork has advanced' 1 within the last three weeks in Halifax frpm $7 to $9 per barrel to $13.50 and $18.50. Prime mess is worth tflb. sd-stfld is scarce at tha£ Mess is qupted as high as sl9. , Fresh pork has advanced in the same lipp from 6 to BJ£ centspe'r sound.

Death of Gen. Rufus Ingalls.

New York, Jan. 16.—Gen. Rufus Ingalls,- United States arpiy, retired, died Sunday in the Grand hotel. Gen. Ingalls was retired’ from the own request on -.J,uly l w; .1883, he being/ tbe,n quartermaster general of the army. He was born in Denmark, M#., bn August 28, ‘1820,. arfcl Uas'graduated from, the United States military academy in 1843.

Post Office Robbed.

iBviNGgON, N. Y., Jan. 16.—The post office at this place was entered by burglars at an early hour Saturday and robbed of MN in bills and Btampa? ■ V

AT BUTLER'S BIER.

Tkouand. JTeUowjhe Remains of MmmF*mo* Sou to Their Laat BestS* Pf.ee ■- LottMx, Matt., 4aji 17.—Monday tie■ foremen citizen-soldier of Massachv* •ett* was laid to rest with all the honors, both military and civic, to which his high rank entitled him. Thousands gathered around his bier to attest their sorrow st his departure. The chief executive of the commonwealth and the humblest workman stood elbow to elbow at his grave. Maj. Gen. Benjamin F. Butler, jurist, ex-con-gressman and ex-governor, received in death the full measure of recognition which was denied him in life. He was buried as the friend of the people. There were among the mourners all shades of political opinion, all sects, all classes. Long before the hour of the services in the church the sidewalks in the neighborhood began to be crowded, and when the body was carried from the hall across the street fully 80,000 people were within sight. As soon as the casket was seen hundreds ©f heads were bared and heads bowed.

It was nearly 2 o’clock when the tolling bells announced the approach of the cortege. The four coal-black steeds were stopped in front of the gate and the Grand Army of the Republic veterans lifted the casket and placed it upon a stretcher, guarded by the body-bear-ers. They carried the casket into the vestibule, where Rector St. John Chsjrnbre and the honorary pallbearers awaited it The latter were Hop,, John A. Low’ell, J. E. Shprman,Hod. Edward Avery, E. T. Burley, Hoh. Charles H. Allen, Col. George J. .Carney, Hon. George Fi Rich'aralod and Hon. J. M. Marshall. Ws 4 Jn the first carriage were Mr. Paul Butler and his sister, Mrs, Blanche Butter Ames, Gen. Ames and Cadet Antes, of West Point. Tile other members of the family and intimate friends who had assembled at the house followed them into the church. Itev. Dr. Chambre and his assistant, Rev. George S. Sinclair, opened the doors and slowly led the way towards the altar, the rector reciting the regular Episcopal burial service. The eulogy had been spoken at the private services at the house, so there-were no departures from the regular service-at the church. At ite-clofee, the caskjet was borne out of the church and placed in the hearse and then the line of march was taken to the cemetery. There were more than 150 carriages in line and when the escort arrived at the grave with the I casket the last of the cortege had just left the church. Gen. Peach and st|ff occupied a knoll inside the cemetery knd the trdops and the volley firers wer| grouped near the grave. Rev. Dr. cjiambre concluded the religious service,’the masons gave a short ritual and tlty volley was fired. Thousands followed the procession to the burying ground.

LEFT MILLIONS.

The Large Fortunes Devised by Twelve Millionaires—Lines off Business In Which Fabulous Fortunes Were Made Surprises in a Cases. New Yoke. Jan. 17.—Many millions of dollars were left by twelve New Yorkers who died in.,1892 whose families have divided among them $1,0b0,000 or more each.* The report of the surrogate for 1892 is full of surprises. Those who have been reputed to be millionaires are found to have left only modest fortunes The other surprises are almost as many, namely, those caused by the discovery that men unheard of except in their own narrow circle of business and social friends, men whose names were never seen in the newspapers and whose manner of life was unpretentious, were really worth millions. Perhaps the most striking example of this was in the case of the late Daniel B. Fayerweather. He was known in “Tlie Swamp” as a rich man, and his | close friends knew that, he was not ; obliged to economize, but, outside of his immediate family and his banker, no one ever thought of him as a millionaire. When he died and his will revealed that he had left many millions New York was amazed. The best example of this in the year that has just closed is that of Benjamin Richardson, the late Harlemite. Everybody knew that he owned a lot of land up town, but his warmest friends were . surprised when his will revealed $2,000,000 worth. Tlie following are the taen who left $1,000,000 and more in 1892: Willjam Astor, real estate. 875,000,OK) Jay'Gould, railroads... 72,000.0jX) Wilson G. Hunt, railroads 5,v00,000 Benjamin Richardson, real estate 2,000,000 A. Bradish Johnson.- 1,750,000 Willjam G. Vermilyea, banker..,..... 1.500,000 Mrs. August Belmont . 1,500,000 ■ Gen. George W. Cullum, soldier 1,200,000 E. S. JafTray, merchant.. 1,000,000 Jacob Halsted, importer 1,000,000 Augustus Kountze, banker «... 1,000,000 uornelius Vanberbilt, Jr., inherited... 1,000,000 Only two of these fortunes were made in commerce, while three were made in banking, for that ,of Mrs. August Belmont ittest be inducted in this category, her moniy having been inherited from her husband, who made it all.himself bank. Realestate is responsible for three fQr.tynes —those of m Astor, Benjainin Richardson and A. Bradish Johnson. Real estate is realty /ppre or less, for almost till the fortunes left by New -Yorkers’, for wl&Oer ■ 'business they are in it is safe to say they doubled in real estate. Not s.o with that of. Jay Gould. The kd bWned formed a poraparatively ~insignificant part of his estate less than onesetfenth.

3,000 MILES ON HORSEBACK.

A Cfalcngoari Ri<loH.frr>tn die Garden City' to the'Golden Gate. San "Jan. . Waesclier, of Chicago; arrived hers 'Sunday night after riding horseback ovevhkbd frbm Chicago. *ll ■ took him .piuptfy-eigiit; to travel miles by „ the circuitous route he, traveled, arid lie hat!'many ‘thrilling• adventures. He rodo one horse all the wgv, and both man and beast finished the long trip in gooit condition. Waescher camo over the northern, route, .and says in a few ho will start back by way of New Mexico 1b time ioreach the world’s fain. h■ v»r - i

The Crip Left Be is 1 texrtbly weak condition; my health nearly wrecked. My appetite,was afl I gone, Iliad na strength, felt tired all the time, had disagreeable roaring , noises in my head, like a waterfall I also had , fiW > severe headaches and ~ severe .Inking pains JEMMF tn my stomach. . Having heard so much about Hood's Sarsaparilla, I Concluded to try it AU the disagreeable effects G ®°" Cook/Of the Grip are gone, I am free from pains and aches, and believe Hood’s Rarwapartii. is sure* ' |y curing m~ Hood’s Cures aatarrh. I recommend It to aIL” Geo. W. Cook, St Johnsbury, Vt HOOD'S PILLB cure Constipation by restoring the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal. ‘August Flower” “ I am Post Master here and keep a Store. I have kept August Flower for sale for some time. I think it i? 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. Put that right at once by using August Flower. It assures a good appetite and a good digestion. ®

J|rji4.k«4irr>yrJ|i Five qpaaSEßEiafpa g o I found ohq of your Piso’s Cure for Consumption wrappers when I was going to work. I had a boy at home with a bad cold. I turned back, purchased a bottle of the syrup, and returned to work at 9 o’clock, well satisfied with the change I had seen take place. Since that time, my home has never been without Piso’s Cure,• I have recommended it to numerous friends, and they are all greatly pleased with its results. - FRANK J. DARCT, 17 Religious St. NEW ORLEANS, LA., Feb. 15, 1892. I had Catarrh for three years, being unable to breathe through my nose. After using Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh for one month I found great relief, and now, after using six packages, .at an outlay of 83.00, I am cured. I had previously spent $50.00 urith one doctor, trying to get cured.—T. E. Fuller, Pompton Lakes, N. J., July 11, 1892. a

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