People's Pilot, Volume 2, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 March 1893 — Page 2

The People’s Pilot BENSSELAER. : : INDIANA

The News Condensed.

Important Intelligence From All Parts. U. S. SENATE IN EXTRA SESSION. In the senate on the 22d Mr. Manderson resigned his position as president pro tern. and Mr. Harris, of Tennessee, was elected in his place. The following nominations were received from the president: John S. Seymour, cf Connecticut, to be commissioner of patents; Silas W. Lamoreux, of Wisconsin, to be commissioner of the general land office; Horace H. Lurton, of Tennessee, to be United States circuit judge for the Sixth judicial circuit, and Max Judd, of Missouri, to be consul general of the United States to Vienna. The senate on the 23d confirmed the nominations for public positions previously sent in by the president No other business was transacted and an adjournment was taken until the 87th. In the senate on the 27th the elections committee reported in favor of seating the three men appointed as senators from the states of Montana. Wyoming and Washington Among the nominations received from the president were the following: Samuel E. Mores, of Indiana, to be consul general at Paris; C. W. Chancellor, of Maryland, to be consul at Havre; Allen B. Morse, of Michigan, to be consul at Glasgow; George F. Parker, of New York, to be consul at Birmingham. DOMESTIC. A T. Freeaian murdered his wife and child at Tyertown, Tex. Domestic trouble was given as the cause. J. J. Ervers fatally injured Mrs. Christian Onstall at Gridley, Cal., and then killed himself. She was engaged to marry Ervers but had jilted him. Mrs. Onstall was a divorced Woman with five children. At Laramie, Wyo., VV. ‘J. Hunter, incensed at his wife for having him arrested for beating her, shot her fatally and then shot himself dead. “Mother” Mandelbaum, the famous New York “fence” and accomplished criminal, is dead. For nearly nine years she has lived like a princess in Canada, where she found refuge when she fled from New York, leaving her bondsmen in the lurch. A fire swept away a large portion of the town of Pauhuska, Oklahoma, and five lives were lost. The sale of a negro at Mexico, Mo., was stopped by proceedings instituted by George Robertson, a leading attorney, who will test the constitutionality of the vagrant Jaw of the state. A CLAM mine, full of little necks, and of great breadth and depth, was discovered at the mouth of the Delaware bay, near Cape May, N. J. A cyclone wiped the town of Kelly, Miss., off the face of the earth, not a soul being left to tell the tale. Great damage was also done at Tunica and Cleveland, in the same state, and twen-ty-five persons were killed. The supreme council of the Patrons of Industry in session at Detroit, Mich., elected R. P. Kerrick, of Durell, Pa., as supreme president. The Morgan, a fashionable apartment house in Cleveland, 0., was burned, and Mrs. Mary E. Abbey, Mrs. Jesse Hunt and her daughter, Mrs. Emma Somers and Mrs. P. G. Somers perished in the flames. The cotton firm of Dobbins & Dazly, of Nashville, Tenn., with branch houses in Memphis, New Orleans, Little Rock, Montgomery, Mobile and other cities, failed for $300,000. J. C. Davis, a grocer at Sedalia, Mo., who was in love with Miss Mary, the 17-year-old daughter of M. A. Miller, a prominent real estate dealer, shot her dead because she refused his attentions and then killed himself. The east wing of the state prison at Jeffersonville, Ind., was destroyed by fire.

A windstorm at Indianapolis wrecked several buildings, causing a loss of *IOO,OOO. Ella Fugate, 13 years old, daughter of J. E. Fugate, of Brazil, Ind,, has not eaten a mouthful of victuals for the last twenty-five days and persistently refuses subsistence in any form. Grief over the death of a brother is the cause. A sole-leather trust wa j formed in New York with a capital of $80,000,090. Secretary Carlisle signed vouchers to the amount of $250,120 in favor of the world’s fair commission, which is payable in souvenir half dollars. The commission up to this time has received *1,920, W 0 of the *2,500,000 appropriation by congress payable in souvenir half dollars. At the third annual convention in Louisville. Ky., of the National Association of Skilled Glass Workers Albert Paulson, of New Albany, Ind., was elected president. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United States during the wesk ended on the 24th aggregated *1,227,224,418, against *1,231,454,629 the previous week. The increase as compared with the corresponding week of 1892 was 6.5. The livery barn of George Faurot at Lima, 0., was burned by an incendiary fire and eight head of fast horses belonging to prominent sportsmen were burned, together with several other horses. In the United States during the seven days ended on the 24th the business failures numbered 243, against 220 the preceding week and 231 for the corresponding time last year. A tornado that passed over Indianapolis wrecked fifty houses, caus-ing-a loss of ovpr *IOO,OOO, and several persons were seriously injured. The Thirty-seventh general assembly of the state of Missouri has adjourned sine die. , Maj. C. C. Wilcox, formerly of the Thirteenth. Tennessee regiment and noted as being in command of the troops that killed Gen. John Morgan, the confederate raider, at Greenville, Tenn., died at his residence in Emporia, Kan. The vault in the register of deeds office at Newton, Kan., was broken open and the county records destroyed. The loss cannot be made good for less than *100,090. George W. Selby, of Macon county, and his brother Oscar, of Peoria, IIL, were drowned in the lake by the up•Ottogof »skiff. |

Louis Michael was hanged at St Martinsville, La. for participating in the murder of Robertsoh and his daughter in August 1891. It was the first legal execution which had taken place there in forty years. Two firemen were killed and a number badly injured at a fire in the Summit Fuel & Feed company’s house at Denver. Flames destroyed the Weber building in Chicago, causing® loss of 8150,000 to the various firms that occupied it The Chicago Inter Ocean celebrated the twenty-first annivertay of its birth by the issue of 200,000 copies. Each eopy of the paper consists of sixty pages. Anton Wood, the 11-year-old murderer of Joseph Smith, was found guilty at Denver, Col., and sentenced to life imprisonment An explosion of gas at the Oak Hill colliery near Minersville, Pa., killed John Morgan and William Purcell and injured three others. # An earthquake shock lasting thirty seconds was felt at Helena,’ Mont, but ne damage was reported. Advices from Memphis say that the damage done by the recent cyclone in the Mississippi valley would reach 82,000,009. One-half of the state penitentiary at Nashville, which covers eighty acres of ground, was torn to pieces, entailing an enormous loss. Bi- the upsetting of a skiff in Bigbee river near Mount Sterling, Ala., Hubert and John Dix and Edward Westcott were drowned. The trial trip of the new battleship showed it to be the fastest armored vessel in the world. The government of Spain, through the state department at Washington, has officially tendered to the United States as a gift the reproduced flagship of Columbus, the Manta Maria. Elizabeth and Raymond Yost, aged 5 and 7 years respectively, were fatally poisoned at Sedalia, Mo., by eating canned plums. The barge Equator was lost off Fenwick islands (Va.) light, and Capt. John Feehan, of Philadelphia, and his crew of three men perished. The thriving town of Lynnville, Tenn., was swept by a fire which wiped out the business portion of the place. The strike of over 7,000 miners in the Monongahela (Pa.) valley that commenced July 1 last has ended in a victory for the employers. The Sandusky Insurance company of Toledo, 0., has failed with assets of 850,000 and liabilities of SIOO,OOO. Two custom inspectors at Portland, Ore., were suspended for allowing six-ty-seven Chinamen to land in violation of the exclusion act. The French legation at Washington has been raised to the rank of an embassy. A blonde at Youngstown, 0., began eating roasted coffee inorder to change her complexion to a brunette. She now eats a pound a day and cannot break herself of the habit, which is rapidly killing her. The big clothing lockout was inaugurated in New York by the manufacturers when 500 employes were paid off. Frank Ackerson, aged SO; George Dow, aged 24, and Henry Dow, ageu 15, were drowned at Marietta, 0., by the upsetting of a boat. The Commercial national bank of Nashville, Tenn., suspended, owing depositors $500,000,

Flames destroyed the shoe factory of Snedicor <fc Hathaway in Detroit, the loss being *150,000. A fire among business buildings at Tyler, Tex., caused a loss of *IOO,OOO. During the progress of the work on the world’s fair grounds in Chicago eighteen men have been killed and 610 have been injured. Jode Holloway, John Bell and Seth Calhoun were fatally shot by a negro at Fort White, Fla. The district a£U>rney’s office and the pc lice superintendent have decided to close up all the pool rooms in Buffalo, N. Y. Pancoast, the cebrated trotting stallion belonging to Ben Johnson and valued at *38,000, died at Bardstown, Ky., On the 27th Fourth Assistant Postmaster General Maxwell appointed 100 fourth-class postmasters, and of this number sixty-seven were to fill vacancies caused by the removal of the incumbents. Judge Billings, of the United States circuit court at New Orleans, says that a combination among laborers to allow no work to be done in moving goods and merchandise is forbidden by the interstate commerce law. Francis M. Bowie, a millionaire living near Upper Marlboro, Md.. was murdered and his body thrown in a well J. W. Johnson (colored) was arrested on suspicion. R. Irveng Latimer, who was serving a life sentence in the prison at Jackson, Mich., for murdering his mother, made his escape after fatally poisoning G. W. Haight, one of the guards. Frank Marshall’s elevator in Chicago, containing 100,000 bushels of wheat, was burned, entailing a loss of *IOO,OOO. The visible supply of grain in the United States on the 27th was: Wheat, 73,211,000 bushels; corn, 15,101,000 bushels; oats, 4,599,000 bushels; rye, 9-54,000 bushels; barley, 1,173,000 bushels. Bandits robbed the bank at Caney, Kan., of *4,000. The Mechanics' savings bank, with a capital of $500,000, and the Bank of Commerce, with a-capital of *250,000, closed their doors at Nashville, Tenh. The stable containing Kirk Bros. ’ racing string was burned at Mason City, la., and several valuable horses perished in the flames. Loss, *IOO,OOO. R- W. Bear, a Dunkard preacher, dropped dead while offering prayer in the pulpit at Abilene, Kan. The elastic web concerns of the country which manufacture rubber goring for the shoe trade are about to pool their issuerThe Elm Park Methodist Episcopal church at Scranton, Pa., was destroyed by fire, causing g, loss of *125,000; insurance, $30,000. |

A syndicate headed by Charles R. Flint has pm chased the New York Times for 8950.000. In a fight between moonshiners near Danville, Ky., Dick Crowder shot and killed James Meader and John Harp. The stables belonging to John Teneyck near Leadville, CoL, were burned, and twenty-five imported draft horses were cremated. Hobace O’Donoghue, aged 48, a wealthy Chicago publisher, killed himself with a razor while temporarily insane. The house of Oliver Sanders near Neillsville, Wis., was burned, and Mr. Sanders and two of his children perished in the flames. Two families, consisting of Acy Harlowe and wife and Peter Wolfrey and wife, were foully murdered at their home in Cooper county, Mo. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Col. Elliot Fitch Shepard, editor of the Mail and Express, died suddenly at his home in New York from the effects of ether taken that he might undergo a surgical operation. He was 59 years of age. CoL Shepard married Miss Marguerite Louise Vanderbilt, the oldest daughter of William H. Vanderbilt, and she and five children survive him. Mr. Shepard was president of the American Sabbath union and founded the State Bar association and was its first president Rev. John Souder, a Methodist minister, died at his home iu Tiffin, 0., aged 95 years. He had lived there seventy years and had been in the ministry for fifty-one years. • Rev. Dr. Ashley died at bls’ home in Milwaukee at the age of 81. For fiftyfour years he was a minister of the Episcopal church. Stephen Strange (colored) died at Lovelady, Tex., aged 105 years. The Massachusetts socialists in state convention in Boston nominated Patrick F. O’Neil, of Boston, for governor. Rev. George R. Bliss, D. D., professor of Biblical theology at Croser theological seminary, died at Chester, Pa., aged 77 years.

FOREIGN. A band of revolutionists entered the town of Allegretta, Chili, which they sacked. The residents resisted the ravages, and in the fight which followed forty persons were killed. The court of arbitration appointed to adjust the difficulties between the United States and Great Britain in regard to the seal fisheries in Behring sea met in Paris. Two men from New Orleans committed suicide on the casino grounds at Monte Carlo. Their names were given as Weill and Robb. They had lost heavily. The Russian government has suspended the coinage of silver rubles for the reason that the silver ruble is now cheaper than paper. The yarn spinning mill of the Rivett company in Stockport, England, was burned, the loss being $250,000. Rome was in a state of great excitement cause by a workingman having struck King Humbert with a stone as he was returning from the Villa Borghes. The French Canadians of Montreal are organizing committees among French speaking people in the United States to iivvarfcn a sentiment in favor of annexation. Tee voled.no at San Martin in Mexico is now in a stat-e of eruption, after having been extinot for more than a century. M. Challemel Lacour was elected president of the French senate in place of Jules Ferry, deceased. The office of the Daily Herald at Montreal was burned, the loss being $125,000.

LATER. Resolutions for the election of officers of the United States senate —W. R. Cox, of North Carolina, as secretary; Richard J. Bright, of Indiana, as ser-geant-at-arms, and Rev. Mr. Milburn as chaplain—were presented on the 28th, but action was postponed. A resolution was offered directing the commit tee on privileges and elections to investigate the allegations of criminal embezzlement against Senator Roach, of North Dakota, and to report the facts, and what the duty of the senate is in relation thereto. A gang of counterfeiters was discovered plying their trade in the state penitentiary at Little Rock, Ark. The Choctaw feud resulted in a desperate encounter at Antlers, 1. T., in which ten persons were killed and fifteen others were wounded. The breaking of the great ice gorge in the Delaware river at Washington’s Crossing, N. J., and the consequent subsiding of the water on the farm lands along the Delaware caused a loss of $1,000,000. Frank Nicolin, a miller at Jordan, Minn., failed for $120,000. Barney McFadden, a miner living near Scranton. Pa., murdered his wife and child and then escaped. No cause was known. The boiler at the Conrad stone quarry in Franklin county, Ala., exploded, and John Bur field, James Ferguson and Crockett Gray were killed. Gen. E. Kirby Smith, the last of the full ex-confederate generals, died at his home in Sewanee, Tenn., in his 69th year. The funeral of the late Elliott F. Shepard took place from the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian church in New York. , A. R. Sutton, a liquor dealer at Louisville, Ky., was charged with forging whisky warehouse receipts to the extent of *200,000. R. Irving Latimer, who escaped from the Jackson (Mich.) prison after fatally pftisoning Keeper Haight, was captured at Jerome and returned to the prison. Edward Sterrett, a physician at Auburn, Neb., shot his wife because she had left him and them killed himself. A battle near Tatumbia, Honduras, resulted in the defeat of the government troops with a loss of more than 100. Nearly one-fifth of the revolut ion ary soldiers were slaughtered and after the battle the bodies of all the men found on the field were collected in a heap and burned.

TOOK DESPERATE CHANCES

J. Irving Latimer, Sentenced for Lite Ln the Jackson (Mich.) Penitentiary for the Murder of His Mother, Drugs Two Guards and Escapes—One of Bis Victims Dies from the Effect of the Dose. Jackson, Mich., March 28.—R. Irving Latimer, the notorious matricide, escaped from the prison Sunday night by getting the keys and walking out of the front door. The keys are missing. Capt Gill, in charge of the prison at night, is in jail now. It is supposed that Latimer got possession of some powerful drug and administered it to the guard and night turnkey. Guard Haight wasfounddying about 1 o’clock a. m., Latimer having gone an hour before that time. Haight died at 8 o’clock. Maurice T. Gill, night keeper at the prison, was the indirect means of Latimer’s escape. About 11:80 o’clock he and Latimer took lunch together in the hall master’s office. It was against the rules for Gill to take a convict out of his celt Capt. Gill has been completely bamboozled by Latimer, who had been telling Gill that there was 82,800 buried on an island in Rhode Island, where Latimer’s father lived when Irving was 13 years old. Gill was taken with this story and had Latimer out at lunch every night to give him details. Gill expected to leave the prison in three weeks. It transpires that Latimer had been in the habit of taking up a cup of chocolate nearly every night to Gatekeeper Haight, passing it through a slide in the grating. There is no doubt Latimer had planned to poison both Haight and Gill, and the chocolate at night was only to gain confidence until he could get some poison. At lunch Sunday night Latimer carried up a glass of lemonade to Haight instead of the chocolate, and Haight died in twenty minutes after driuking it Gill also drank of the lemonade and was attacked with spasms almost instantly. In a few minutes a cry came from the guard-room above, which Haight occupied. It was evident that Haight was sick and needed help. Gill was so sick he could not go. Latimer said:

“I will go and whistle for Dr. Mason.” “All right, go ahead,” replied Gill. Latimer then took the keys, but instead of going for help he unlocked the door of the guard room, passed through the gates and was free. He took the prison keys with him. He had neither coat nor hat and it is believed impossible that he can escape. The prison authorities have offered a reward for Latimer, dead or alive, and officers are scouring the country. Night Guard E. C. Rice was arrested for complicity in the escape. Rice was directly connected with Gill on night duty, and it transpires that he was present when Latimer left the hallmaster’s office to go above and see what ailed Haight. The supposition is that Rice had knowledge of what Latimer was to do or that he was criminally careless in allowing Latimer to go through the upper gate. Rice was much confused when questioned and does not say why he allowed Latimer to go out Latimer was serving a life term for the murder of his mother January 24, 1889, with whom he lived alone in tjieir home in Jackson. Eighteen months before his father, Robert F. Latimer, died suddenly, leaving consider able property, including SII,OOO life insurance, to Mrs Latimer. His death was undoubtedly due to poisoning, but, friends, supposing the old man had committed suicide, hushed the matter up and no inquest was held. The subsequent death of Mrs. Latimer under circumstances that left no doubt of the son’s guilt lead to the conviction that he was also responsible lor his father’s violent death.

On the morning of January 24 young Latimer went to Detroit to be gone all night and Mrs. Latimer was left alone in the house. The following morning workmen employed in the place could not gain an entrance to the house. The door was forced by neighbors, who became alarmed at the failure of Mrs. Latimer to appear in response to repeated summonses. They entered her bedroom on the second floor and found her lying upon the bed, clothed in her night robe. She had been dead several hours. Her head, face and neck were covered with blood. The bed was saturated with blood. Marks of blood were .also found in young Latimer’s room. The autopsy showed that two pistol shots had inflicted the wounds that caused Mrs. Latimer’s dfeath. Both shots entered the face, passing through the neck. Physicians said the woman had died about 3 o’clock In the morning. That afternoon Latimer who, by the way, was sole heir to the property his father had left his mother, returned to the house He appeared so unconcerned at the violent death of his mother that suspicion was immediately directed against him and he was promptly subjected to a rigid examination, but declared he had been in Detroit and had no connection with the murder. A careful investigation proved Latimer’s Story to be false. He did go to Detroit and visited many friends in order that he might be able to prove that he had been away from Jackson, But that night he returned to his home and the evidence showed he murdered his mother in cold blood. All this, however, was not discovered until after the inquest on the body of Mrs. Latimer. The verdict was that the woman had 2een murdered by some person or persons unknown to the jury. In the meantime detective* were the case. Everything pointed to the guilt of the son. r’ive days after the death of his mother he was arrested. As a bluff he asked to be permitted to attend the funeral, but when given an opportunity to look upon the face of his dead mother he refused to leave the jail. Throughout all this time and the trial that followed h’e conducted himself in a most unconcerned manner, treating his mother’s death and his trial as a joke. -4F* The case was called before Judge Peck, of the Jackson criminal court, April 24. The trial lasted ten days. It was clearly shown that Latimer was guilty, and upon retiring the jury brought in a verdict of murder in the first degree, after deliberating less than a quarter of an hour. Seventeen minutes after leaving the box the fate of the prisoner was declared in open court May 11 Latimer wa's sentenced tb life imprisonment and was a few “days later taken to the penitentiary. Latimer was a dangerous prisoner. Several times he caused revolts in the penitentiary, and on one occasion, October 19, 1890, he concocted a plet to blow up the buildings with dynamite.

TO MEET NEXT FALL.

An Extra Session ot Congress to 'Be Called—President Cleveland Will Convene the Body in September—Probable Scope ot the Session. New York, March 28.—A Herald speoial from Washington says: President Cleveland has finally made up his mind to call an extra session of congress next September. He made this statement several times last week to prominent members of both houses of congress. This course has been believed to be the one most likely to be pursued by the president, but the formal announcement has not heretofore been had.

The April Wide Awake

has a gossipy, descriptive sketch of quaint old Williamsburg, a reminder of the Colonial days of Virginia, writtea by Edwin A. Start, and illustrated by Louis A. Holmon. It opens with “The Tansy Cake,” a story-sketch of an oldtime English Easter happening, by IL Carrie Hyde, also an American Eastertide story of Creole life, “How the Lilies Work,” by Kate Chopin. Louise Chandler Moulton has an April “Readel,” and Theron Brown an Easter poem, “The April Child.” Frederick A. Ober contributes his fourth “Columbus” sketch, telling of Isabella, “the first city in the New World;” Agnes Blackwell tells a delightful wonder story about “Willie and the Treedeedle;’’ Abd el Ardavan has a Moorish story of a brave boy, “Ebno’l Amed;” Sarah Winter Kellogg gives a glimpse of life in New Mexico “In the Delegate’s Placets;” Mary Catherine Crowley contributes a capital Indian story, “Jeff’s Strange Adventure.” Theserials by Stddary, Molly Elliott Seawell and Mrs. Jenness are full of interest. Price 20 cents a number, 82.40 a year. On sale at news stands or sent postpaid, on receipt of price, by D. Lothrop Company, Publishers, Boston. He—“ Are you fond of dancing!” She—- “ Yes, a minuet or—” He —“Oh, I can dance for hours without feeling weary.”—lnter Ocean. The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Company has recently purchased ten thousand acres of coal lands at and around its station of Toluca, in Marshall County, Illinois, and is now sinking its coal shafts and putting in machinery to develop this great coal field, which is to furnish the fuel supply for its system in Illinois, lowa and Missouri, as well as a vast amount of mercantile coal for manufacturing and domestic purposes. The new town site of Toluca is being surveyed and platted by the Santa Fe Land Department to meet the demand for building lots, which the employment of a large force of miners and other employes has necessarily created. The utter recklessness of bacilli in regard to what becomes of them has been demonstrated by the discovery of them in boarding house butter.—N. Y. World.

The Barricade Gives Way,

No doubt, when the bowels are stormed with drenching cathartics, to overcome their constipation, but at serious cost to the assaulting party. The intestinal organs are thereby much enfeebled and excessively relaxed. Far more thoroughly, and less violently effective, is Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, most benign of aperients. Incomparable for malaria, 'nervousness, dyspepsia, kidney troubles. “Are you engaged to Miss Bondclipper!” “No, not exactly. But when I asked for her hand she gave me the refusal of it.”— Texas Siftings.

The Skill and Knowledge

Essential to the production of the most perfect and popular laxative remedy known, have enabled the California Fig Syrup Co. to achieve a great success in the reputation of its remedy, Syrup of Figs, as it is conceded to be the universal laxative. For sale by all druggists. “I don’t believe all this stuff about flowers’ having a language. They may use signs, I—” “Yes; it’s generally the B.” Inter Ocean.

To Florida.

Dixie Flyer via the Suwanee River Route. Double daily sleeping car service from Chicago, St. Louis, Cincinnati. Louisville and Evansville, via Nashville, Chattanooga, Atlanta, Lake City, Jacksonville to Tampa. For rates and sleeping car write B. F. Neville, 194 Clark street, Chicago. “Well,” said the man who handed his last cent to the lawyer, “I suppose turnabout is fair play. I broke the law and the law broke me.”

Agents Wanted.

To sell Richard 111. Headache and Neuralgia Tablets, guaranteed to cure all kinds of Headache and Neuralgia. Energetic ladies and gentlemen can make good wages. For particulars address Boesenr'oth-Ober-mann Medicine Co., Chicago. Nine belles of Beaver Dam, Wis., have had a woodsawhig match. Ttie sawing was easy, but the effort to say nothing must have been a strain.—Philadelphia Record. Letters 3,000 years old have been found in the mounds of Egypt. It is time they were answered.—Boston Globe.

McVicker's Theater, Chicago.

Monday, March 27, the “Black Crook,” presented with the splendor of an Arabian Nights’ dream. The play of imagination is a great help in the work of imagination.—Puck. One of the most inviting articles in the house furnishing line—The dinner belt

VOLUMES COULD BE WRITTEN, filled with the testi- / Zs “\ mony of women who have been made well G and strong by Dr. Pierce’s Favorite i i Prescription. » i/ / J*’ B a medicine ■ ®x ’a\ that’s made especially ■ to build up women’s r\ iTT'yV’/iCT 1 strength and to cure women’s ailments an invigorating, restorative tonic, soothing cordial, and bracing nervine; purely vegetable, nonalcoholic, and perfectly harmless. For all the functional derangements, painful disorders; and chronic weaknesses that afflict womankiri'd, the “Favorite Prescription” is the only guaranteed remedy. It must have been the medicine for most women, or it couldn’t be sold on any such terms. Isn’t it likely to be the medicine for you ? Sold by druggists everywhere. Cures Consumption, Coughs, Croup, Sore Throat* Sold by* all Druggists on a Guarantee. Delicate Women Or Debilitated Women, should use BRADFIELD’S FEMALE REGULATOR. Every ingredient possesses superb Tonic properties and exerts a wonderful influence in toning up and strengthening her system, by driving through the proper channels all impurities. Health and strength guaranteed to result from its use. “ My wife, who wus bedrtddo* for eiffhBradfitH’a ptUag wen*”* o’’ 0 ’’ * W ° month, la \ ~ 3■ M. Jomtsox, Malvern, Ark. RxeuLATon Co.. Atlanta, Qa» gold by PruggUt* at jt.oo per bottle, ’i ■ - ’

Mr. Harvey Heed Laceyville, O. Catarrh, Heart Failure, Paralysis of the Throat M JT Thank God and Hood’s Sarsaparilla for Perfect Health.” ** Gentlemen: For the benefit of suffering humanity I wish to state a few facts: For several years I have suffered from catarrh and heart failure, getting so bad I could not work and Could Scarcely Walk I had a very bad spell of paralysis of the throat some time ago. My throat seemed closed and I could not swallow. The doctors said it was caused by heart failure, and gave medicine, which I took according to directions, but it did not seem to do me any good. My wife urged me to try Hood's Sarsaparilla, telling me es MrJoseph C. Smith, who had been At Death’s Door but was entirely cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla After talking with Mr. Smith, I concluded totry Hood’s Sarsaparilla. When I had taken two bottles I felt very much better. I havecontinued taking It, and am now feeling excellent I thank God, and Hood’s Sarsaparilla an* my wife for my restoration to perfect health.” Harvey Heed, Laceyville, O. HOOD’S PILLS do not purge, pain or gripes but act promptly, easily and efficiently. 25c. ‘August Flower" . I have been troubled with dyspepsia, but after a fair trial of August Flower, am freed from the vexatious trouble —J. B. Young, Daughters. College, Harrodsburg, Ky. I had headache one year steady. One bottle of August Flower cured me. It was positively worth one hundred dollars to me—J. W. Smith, P.M. and Gen. Merchant, Townsend, Ont. I have used it myself for* constipation and dyspepsia and it cured me, It is the best seller I ever handled —C. Rugh, Druggist, Mechanicsburg, Pa. <S>

Dr. Bull’s Couth Syrup — hooY KIDNEY UVER ess o Diabetes, Excessive quantity and high colored urine. La Grippe, Cures the bad after effects of this 'trying epidemic and restores lost vigor and vitality. Impure Blood, Eczema, scrofula, malaria, pimples, blotches. General Weakness, Constitution all run down, loss of ambition, and a disinclination to all sorts of work. Guarantee—Use contents of One Bottle, If net benefited , Druggists will refund you the price pafd. At Sruggista, 50c. Size, *I.OO Size. ‘lnvalid!’ Guide to Health” free—Consultation free. Dr. Kilmer & Co.. Binghamton, N. Y. ELY'S CaTARWH CREAM I was so much trou- m ym/A“J, I bled with catarrh seriously affected myW.®^,,. fej I voice. One bottle of Ely's Cream did the work. voice is fully restored. Hwwus —B. F. Liepsner, A. M., Pastor of the Oii ‘ vet Baptist Church, jg phtia. A particle is applied Into each nostril and 1» agreeable. Price 50 cents at Druggists or by maiL ELY BROTHERS. 56 Warren Street, New York.

f ISH BRk*’ This Trade Mark is on the best WATERPROOF COAT 22™?/ in the World I yree - A. J. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS. CHICKEN-HATCHINa BY STEAM. HSimpleTeuy of o»er*U<m,(.uEnnl Latina; funy auarantwA Bend 40. for Ulna. Oatalbn.. GNC. Xrt.l A Co.. Mfira, QuiMy,JQLV£X» •nuxi su* rarißn«r •asjwoma