People's Pilot, Volume 2, Number 52, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 June 1893 — Page 6
The People’s Pilot RENSSELAER. : : INDIANA.
The News Condensed.
Important Intelligence From All Parts. DOMESTIC. In a fit of jealousy Dora A. Velzyshot and killed W. G. Gray at Grand Rapids, Mick,and then took her own life in the same manner. L. C. Dumas, young 1 colored man, was lynched by a mob at Gleason, Tenn., for assaulting the daughter of a farmer. Marsden Bellamy, of Wilmington, IN. C., was elected supreme dictator of rthe Knights of Honor at the annual in Milwaukee. > The tabernacle choir of the Mormon •church at Salt Lake City has decided ■to send 250 members to the world’s fair in September to compete for prizes of <5,000 offered. Nebraska dedicated her state building on the world's fair grounds with great enthusiasm. The congress of vegetarians was -opened in Chicago and papers setting forth the benefits to be obtained from abstention from the eating of flesh were read. Five prisoners escaped from the jail at Marietta, 0., by locking the deputy in charge in a cell. Joseph G. Donnelly, of Wisconsin, and Van Leer Polk, of Tennessee, have “been appointed consuls general at Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, and Calcutta, India, respectively. G. C. Pray, aged 26, shot and killed his wife and then shot himself at Shirley, Me. Domestic trouble was the cause. The Mobile & Ohio New Orleans express train was held up by six masked men at Forest Lawn, 111., and the express car robbed of ?10,000. Judges Woods and Jenkins of the United States circuit court decided that the gates of the World's Columbian exposition should be closed on Sunday. Judge Grosscup rendered a dissenting opinion. Josiah B. Kendall, a real-estate dealer and broker in Boston, failed for $279,446.
Worthington Ford? of Brooklyn, has been made chief of the bureau 6f statistics by Secretary Carlisle. A terrific windstorm swept Rice county, Minn., doing fully $50,000 damage. The village of Dundas suffered the most severely. John A. Lee, of St. Louis, was elected president of the Traveler’s Protective association at the annual meeting in Peoria, 111. Oarsmen Peterson won a quarter of a mile dash in the Texas regatta in 1:16%, defeating Stansbury, llanlan, Teenier, Ten Eyck and others. Eulalia, infanta of Spain, and her husband, Prince Antonio, together w’ith members of their party, visited the world’s fair. Auditor Ackerman’s report shows the world’s fair receipts to May 31 were $20,309,545 and the expenditures $19,142.981. The remains of Edwin Booth were interred at Mount Auburn cemetery at Boston. There were 322 business! failures reported in the United States during the seven days ended on the 9th, In the week preceding there were 238, and during the corresponding time in 1892 the number was 168. During the week ended on the 9th the leading clearing houses in the United States reported exchanges amounting toll, 156,384,853, against $899,142,352, the previous week. As compared with the corresponding week of 1892 the decrease was 2.6. The floors of Ford’s theater building in Washington, used by,the pension and record division of the war department, collapsed, and twenty-two clerks from all parts of thqcountry were killed and over fifty others were injured, some fatally. War records on which the claims of thousands of veterans in all parts of the land depend were destroyed. The building had been in an unsafe condition for some time, and repairs were being made when the accident occurred. Bank failures were reported at Mascoutah, 111., Hudson, Wis., Eilenburg, Wash., Missoula, Mont, Gillespie, 111., and two private banks in Chicago. Susan B. Anthony and others spoke at the congress of the Women’s Christian Temperance union in Chicago and the world’s fair directory was denounced -for permitting the sale of liquor on the grounds. The Fairmount woolen mills at Cincinnati were burned the second time, the loss being $200,000.
Bob Brown, a negro, was hanged at Mayfield, Ky., for the murder of Albert Colley, a well-to-do farmer, on the night of December 10, 1892. The total loss by the recent fire in Fargo, N. D.. is placed at 13,500,000, and an appeal for aid for the many persons left destitute has been made. ’’ The Lehigh Valley coal trestle and eoal storage house, containing 60,000 tons of anthracite coal, were burned at Buffalo, N. Y. Loss, $500,000. Near Lemont, 111., on the line of the new drainage canal, a sheriff’s posse met and put to rout 400 striking quarry men, killing seven of the numher and seriously injuring a score of others. Gov. Altgeld ordered troops to the acene of the strife. A 9ox of opals valued at 125,000, the JRvpiitj of Gov. Casio, of Queretaro, Mexico, was stolen from the private eEwiwg-room in ex-Postmaster General Wraamaker’s Philadelphia store. Lactoe and Willie Osborne (brothwere drowned while bathing in Ahe river at Fort Madison, Tint hsrean of statistics at Washing- ** reports the total values of beef, hojr aetf dairy products exported for the dw ituMßth* ended May 31 last at $45,more than $10,000,000 swmmpwr'Ml with the same months of
Snow St Burgess, shipping and commission merchants of New York, failed for 4250,000. ' Chief Justice Fuller, of the United States supreme court, granted the supersedeas sued out by the World's Columbian Exposition company and the gates of the fair were open on Sunday. All the eastern state buildings and many of the exhibits in the’ public buildings were closed. * While temporarily insane Mrs. G. J. Weaver drowned herself and two children in a creek in Fultonham, O. The Union stockyards bank of Sioux City, la., with assets of 4482,667 and liabilities of 4’63,140, made an assignment. Harry E. Gamble, of Brooklyn, chairman of the New York delegation to the international typographical convention in Chicago, was drowned at Diamond Lake, 111., by falling from a boat while in a fit The percentages of the baseball clubs in the National league for the week ended on the 10th were as follows: Pittsburgh, .611; Brooklyn, .611; Boston, .605; Philadelphia, 600; Baltimore. .541; Cleveland, .538; New York. .514; Washington, .4720C'ineinnati. .432; Chicago, .429; St Louis, .412; Louisville, .148.
Savage’B livery stable at Charlestown, W. Va., was burned and thirtyone valuable horses perished in the flames. At the conference of charities and corrections in Chicago L. C. Storrs, of Michigan, was elected president The California express on the Santa Fe road was held up by five men near Cimarron, Kan., and robbed of money and jewelry amounting to 42,000. Oarsman Gaudaur won the 3-mile professional race at Austin, Tex., in 19:06, which breaks the world’s record. The little town of Liberal, Mo., was almost destroyed by a blaze of incendiary origin. Annie E. Murphy, aged 25, was convicted of forgery at St. Cloud, Minn., and sentenced to ten years’ imprisonment Anton Sholl, ofa Odell, 111., died from drinking too much whisky from a jug he was carrying home. Flames in the warehouse of J. 11. Ilobbys & Sons in New York caused a loss of over 4100,000. Rev. Dwight L. Moody preached to a congregation of 10,000 persons in the big tent of the Forepaugh circus in Chicago. The Citizens' national bank of Hillsboro, 0., closed its doors. Mrs. Frank Leslie, of New York was granted a divorce from her husband, W. C. K. Wilde. Mrs. Leslie may marry again, but the marriage of Wilde is prohibited during her life. A terrific windstorm swept over Buffalo, N. Y., and five persons were drowned by the capsizing of boats in Lake Erie. Gen. James A. Hall, of Damariscotta, Me., died suddenly on a train between Syracuse and Utica, N. Y. He was a veteran of the late war.
Hobbs & Tucker, private bankers at Albany, Ga., suspended payment. The battle ship Massachusetts was launched at Cramp’s shipyard in*Philadelphia with notable ceremony. A. L. Backus & Sons, of Toledo, oen of the best known grain firms in Ohio, failed for $300,000. During the eleven months ended May 31, 1893, the values of the exports of breadstuff’s were $173,069,261, and during the corresponding period of the preceding year $272,476,023, a decrease of $99,406,762. The Sulphur Linhber company at Sulphur, Tex., failed for SIOO,OOO. C. A. Pillsbury, the Minneapolis miller, told a senate committee inquiring into the financial situation that Chicago short selling was the ruination of trade in the northwest. While Mrs. Patterson’s 16-y ear-old son was cleaning his rifle at Moravia, la., it was accidentally discharged, the bullet piercing his mother’s heart, causing instant death. Two trunks which had been checked from Tonawanda, N. ¥., to Chicago were seized at Buffalo and found to contain smuggled opium. Evans and Sontag, the California train robbers, who have been fugitives for ten months, were wounded in an encounter near Visalia, Cal., with officers, the latter fatally. By the bursting of a boiler at the Peru (Ind.) basket factory M. J. Pratt and his young son were instantly killed. Dr. F. H. Wines delivered a memorial address in honor of ex-President Hayes at the opening session of the congress of charities and corrections in Chicago. At the inquest in Washington on the victims of the Ford’s theater disaster Col. Ainsworth was denounced by C. G. Banes as the murderer of bis brother and threats were made to lynch Ainsworth.
The plant of the Meriam & Morgan Paraffine company at Cleveland, 0., was destroyed by fire, the loss being $250,000. It was said that the Louisiana Lottery company would establish headquarters at Port Tampa, Fla. A robber invaded the Hotel Colorado at Glenwood Springs and, aided by a pistol, robbed guests of money and jewelry to the amount of $2,000. Five men were killed by the bursting of a boiler in a mill at Barnet, Vt. A tree which was being felled in a Burlington (la.) cemetery fell on a vehicle in which were Rev. Dr. William Salter and his wife and the latter was killed and the former fatally injured. The International Typographical union met in forty-first annual session in Chicago. The Park City bank at Salt Lake City, the McCague savings bank at Omaha, Neb., the bank at Burr Oak, Kan., and the People’s guarantee savings bank at Kansas City, Mo., closed their doors.
The Harvey World’s Fair Hotel company and the Harvey Home Improvement company were placed in the hands of a receiver in Chicago, the liabilities of the former being $99,000 and the latter $90,000. A train on the Ohio Southern road jumped the track near Storm’s Station, 0., and twenty-one passengers were injured, some fatally.
John L. Osmond suffered death in the electrical chair at Sing Sing, N. Y., for the inurder of his wife Mary and his cousin John C. Burchell on Octobers, 1891. The American Wheel company’s factories at Crawfordsville, Ind., Memphis, Tenn., Paducah, Ky., and Humboldt, Tenn., were closed for an indefinite time. The yacht Pilgrim, built by a Boston syndicate to defend the America’s cup, was launched at Philadelphia.
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Ohio republicans in convention at Columbus nominated William McKinley for governor, A. L. Harris for lieutenant governor, W. T. Cope for state treasurer, J. K. Richards for attorney general and J. P. Bradberry for supreme judge. The platform favors protection to American labor and industries; protection against the influx of the vicious and criminal classes; favors pensions to disabled soldiers and sailors of the late war, and the widows and orphans of such as are deceased, and favors honest money composed of gold, silver and paper, maintained at equal value Ind under national and not state regulation. Warren Leland, the last survivor of five brothers who made the name of Leland famous in the hotel business from the Atlantic to the Pacific, died at Port Chester, N. Y., aged 59 years. Ex-President Harrison visited the world’s fair as a guest of T. W. Palmer.
FOREIGN. The village of Imst, in Austria, wa» wiped out by fire. Advices from Rome say that the sum of money given to the pope during his episcopal jubilee by bands of pilgrims, by Catholic orders and by individuals amounts to 9,060,000 francs. The Ville Marie convent at Monklands, near Montreal, was destroyed by fire, involving a loss of 41,000,000; insurance, 4100,000. A royalist conspiracy to blow up the barracks of the Hawaiian 'provisional government with dynamite was discovered but the conspirators escaped. A SHELL from the military drill grounds at Luxemburg, Germany, exploded in the midst of a procession of Catholics and seven persons were killed akd thirty others fatally wounded. Fifty villages in Galaeia and Kunow’ina, in Austria, were partly destroyed by floods. The Active, which arrived at Dundee, Scotland, with a full cargo of sealskins, reported the discovery of land in latitude 65 south, longitude 63 west Gen. Vab Quese, commander in chief of the army, has declared himself president of Honduras.
The large stables of the street railway company at Winnipeg, Man., were destroyed by fire and sixty-one horses perished in the flames. Sixty deaths from cholera occurred in Mecca. Egypt. Maj. Gen. Sir John Hudson, commander of the British forces in Bombay, was thrown from his horse at Poona and killed. The Mexican town of Puachmetta was completely wiped out by a storm and nearly 2,000 persons were homeless. Convicts while returning from the quarries to Tourah prison near Cairo, Egypt, attempted to escape, and thirtynine of them were shot dead by the troops. Minnie Marschali, a 16-year-old girl at Megelhoff, Bavaria, killed her mother, her sister affd an aged uncle who objected to her vicious mode of life and then cut her own throat. Cholera was said to be spreading in southern and central France and many deaths were oceuring daily.
LATER. A six-story building in New York filled with sweater shops caught fire, and in the wild rush to the street four persons were killed, two others were fatally injured and five others were badly hurt. Eight cowboys left Chadron. Neb., on horses for a race to Chicago. The distance is 911 miles. The steamer Winthrop, valued at $125,000, was burned at Eastport, Me. It was owned by the Mallory company of New York. The coinage of Columbian souvenir quarter dollars was begun at the United States mint in Philadelphia. The Nashville (Tenn.) Savings company, of which Thomas S. Marrs is owner and president, filed an assignment with liabilities of $282,876. Flames destroyed ten buildings at Waldoboro, Me., causing a loss of SIOO,000.
While three children of M. Lakin were playing with a gun at Frisco, O. T., it was discharged and a son 11 years old and daughter 12 years old were fatally injured. The Franklin Buggy company at Columbus, 0., has been put in the hands of a receiver with liabilities of SIOO,OOO. Mount Higashiazum, Japan, was in a state of eruption and 100 lives were said to have been lost. Mrs. James Kirkendall, of Paradise, Wash., fatally poisoned her little girl and herself while temporarily insane. The village of Alba, Mich., with a population of 800, was wiped out by fire. Kuffler’s cotton mill in Brodetz, Bohemia, was burned, the loss being 1,250,000 francs. In a railway wreck on the Misseuri, Kansas & Texas road near Butler, I. T., Ames Frame, engineer, and his fireman were killed and many passengers were injured. The American national bank at Omaha suspended with liabilities of $600,000.
William Shorter, a negro, was taken from a train by masked men near Winchester, Va., and lynched. He was on his way to his trial for assaulting a girl. Thb Pioneer Lithographing company of Denver made an assignment with liabilities of $134,386.28. A paper on “The Philosophy of Crime,” read by C. H. Reeve, of Plymouth, Ind., caused a warm discussion in the world’s congress of charities and correction in Chicago. Mr. Reeve advocated the wiping out of the penal code as it now exists.
INDIANA STATE NEWS.
William H. Jones, of Spencer county, the other day filed suit in the Spencer circuit court against Noble Boyd for 41,500 damages for knocking out three of the plaintiffs teeth while they were engaged in a fight. At Kokomo the court fixed the bonds of Gov. Chase, John W. Paris and L. S. Walden, the indicted Greentown bank officers, at 43,000, which they gave. Trial is not expected until October, though Chase made a demand for trial at once.
Muncie officers are searching for J. M. Kennedy. A few days ago he purchased a fine steer from Edward Stewart, near Yorktown, and in payment gave a check for 444 on the Citizens’ national J»ank of Muncie. When the check was presented it was, discovered that Kennedy had no account there. Before leaving Kennedy sold the steer to a local butcher, then borrowed 460 from a relative and departed. Adolphus Minton, a prominent contractor, fell from the top of a threestory building under course of construction at French Lick Springs, the other day, and was killed. He lived only twenty minutes. He leaves a wife and two children. Coroner Davidson has filed his verdict in the inquests caused by the wrecking of the Big Four passenger train at the union depot, Lafayette, on Sunday morning, May 7, in which ten lives were lost He declares the curve was too steep, and the outer rail was not elevated enough. He further declares that, although the brakes were in good order, some one had shut the air off at "the tender. Tony, the 9-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Hitchcock, was found dead in a cistern at his home in Indianapolis, where he had fallen.
Rev. W. H. Bamford, of Scranton, Pa., has accepted the pastorate of the Christ Episcopal church, of Madison. At Valparaiso, Paul Depolis, aged 60, on returning home found his home deserted. He had a young wife, who left home, taking the furniture with her. Contracts have been signed for the location of a large factory for the manufacture of glass tableware at the new manufacturing town of Ingalls, five miles west of Pendleton. This latest acquisition comes from Washington, Pa., and will give employment to 200 men at the start, and is to be completed by September 1. 11. A. Cowing, secretary of the Muncie board of health, says that there is no smallpox in that city. Mr. A. W. Dickenson, late general manager of the Missouri Pacific, is having plans prepared, and will erect a fine residence in Seymour, which place he will make his future home. George Pfister brought suit forSlO,000 damages in the United States court at Indianapolis, against the Bromwell Brush and Wire Goods Co. The plaintiff alleges that in 1891 he was a convict in the Jeffersonville prison, and the defendants worked him by contract inside the prison. He was compelled to work on this contract. He -was put to work at a buzz-saw, and the foreman in the employ of the defendants required him to “hurry up.” Through this order and some defect in the machinery he mangled his left hand, and received such injuries that his arm had to be amputated at the elbow. He charges gross carelessness on the part of the defendants.
At Indianapolis Mrs. Lena Kiel made a desperate attempt at; suicide, the other morning. Going to a neighbor s she secured a butcher-knife. She then put on a night gown and drew the knife five times across her throat, in front and at the sides. The knife was dull, and she could not touch a vital spot. Then she attempted to sever the arteries in her wrist, but failed. When discovered, Mrs. Kiel presented a ghastly spectacle, being soaked in blood from her neck to her feet. Mrs. Kiel’s husband had left her, her children had been placed in a benevolent institution, and she was tired of life.
A cyclone completely razed the residence of Mr. Lowe at Economy. Gen. James C. Veatch and wife celebrated the fifty-fourth anniversary c f their marriage at their home in Rockport a few days ago. The general is 73 years of age, and Mrs. Veatch is r 2 years of age. Gen. Veatch served h\s country faithfully as a brigadier-ge; w eral in the Jpte civil war. Charles Temier, aged fourteen, ,wi .s sticking lumber at Ed. Moran’s mill, at Martinsville, when a tall pile toppled and fell on him. His skull is thought to be fractured. At Columbus, just after returning from church, Mrs. Marshall Fultz and three daughters partook of a light lunch and retired. In a few minutes all were taken deathly sick. Their symptoms were tho.ie of arsenical poisoning, and for some hours it looked as though all would die. The mother and eldest daughter will recover, but no hopes are entertained for the two younger. All efforts to locate the cause of the strange affliction have failed.
Alonzo Myers, of Richland, while out hunting the other day, accidentally shot himself through the abdomen with a rifle, causing instant death. The little three-year-old girl of Edward Livengood, living seven miles east of Lebanon, was choked to death the other morning by a coffee grain lodging in her windpipe. The operation of tracheotomy was performed, but too late to save her life.
Fish Nets.
Fish nets are made from some very strange materials. The Esquimaux manufacture them from strips of seal hide, and from thin slices of whalebones. By the Fijians they are constructed of human hair. Savages in various parts of the world plait the inner fibers of tree bark for fishing lines, and the Indians on the Pacific coast of North America use for the same purpose seaweed—a sort of kelp which is strong enough to hold a finny captive of one hundred and fifty pounds weight
FULLER INTERFERES.
rhe Chief Justice Hrants a Supersedeas In the Sunday Closing Case Until an Appeal Can Be Heard. Chicago, June 12.—Chief Justice Melville W. Fuller, of .the United States supreme court, has granted the supersedeas sued out by the world’s Columbian Exposition company, and thegates of the fair were open Sunday. The chief justice on Saturday indefinitely suspended the operation of the injunction granted by Judges Woods and Jenkins, of the United States circuit court. Unless there is a speedy hearing in the circuit court of appeals, something that cannot now be decided, the gates may be open for several Sundays to come. While hearing of the appeal is set for next Thursday the two judges who have been summoned by the chief justice to sit with him are both engaged in their own courts. These judges are Judge Allen, of Springfield, 111., and Judge Bunn, of Wisconsin. They may be unable to attend at the time fixed, and as they are the only available members of the court the hearing may go over for some time yet. Pending the hearing, however, much delajr may intervene before the order of supersedeas will be effective, leaving the directors at liberty to continue running wide open Sunday if they so desire. Chief J ustice Fuller granted the suspension of the order enjoining the directors from opening the gates Sundays on the representation of Edward Walker, chief counsel for the appellants, that to allow its operation would work a hardship upon the exposition company, while the government could not be injured by leaving the gates open pending the hearing of the appeal. There was little in the way of argument and the supersedeas was issued as a matter of course on the petition. Little attention appeared to be given by him to the actual arguments, he taking the ground that this case was just like any other and that the defendants were entitled to the supersedeas asked until the case could be heard in the court of appeals next Thursday and a final decision reached. AH parties in interest agree that the hearing in the court of appeals shall settle the entire controversy, The paid admisssions at the world’s fair grounds on Sunday numbered 71,644. All of the buildings were crowded with sightseers, the Fine Arts hall, however, proving to be the center of attraction. The promenade around the roof of Manufactures building was a favorite place. The electric launches, the gondolas and the yachts were kept busy. The same state buildings that refused to open a few Sundays ago adhered to the rule, and they were joined in the movement by the Japanese tea village, which closed its gates.
DEATH AT A BULL FIGHT.
Two Person* Killed and Several Dangerously Hurt in the Province of Madrid. Madrid, June 12. —Particulars have been received here of a bull fight at Getafe, in the province of Madrid, in which the proceedings were of the most extraordinary kind and led to the death of two persons, while six were dangerously injured and several others more or less hurt. A large crowd was in attendance and twenty-eight bulls were brought out. The ring was invaded by numbers of the crowd, eager to take part in the sport. One bull thrust his horns through a man’s cloak, and being thus blindfolded, became furious. A youth from Madrid, attempting .to recover the cloak, was caught on the bull’s horns, tossed -and then gored to death amid the frenzied plaudits of the spectators. Shortly afterward another youth, who engaged the next bull, was pinned to the barrier by the animal’s horns and killed on the spot The fight continued, as bull after bull was sent into the ring, amid the enthusiasm of the onlookers, the authorities continuing to preside at the proceedings until the last animal had appeared. Several persons were dangerously hurt and had to be carried out of the ring.
FATAL STORM.
Several Deaths Are Reported on Lake Erie. Buffalo, N. Y., June 12.—Buffalo had a furious gale Sunday. The wind blew sixty miles an hour for two hours. Through the city the trees, outbuildings and shrubbery were badly damaged. The streets and parks were strewn with broken limbs of trees and the roofs of small buildings. William Beardsley, one of a fishing party, was drowned in Lake Erie during the storm by the capsizing of their boat. Half a dozen fishermen’s shanties are now floating in the lake near the breakwater. Late Sunday afternoon a capsized boat and the body of a woman and child were found in Scajuquada creek. The bodies were taken to the morgue, but have not been identified. They had been in the water only a few hours. The rumor about the sinking of the Nyack is not credited here.
A Printer Drowned.
Chicago, June 12. —Harry E. Gamble, of Brooklyn, chairman of the New Yonk delegation to the international typographical convention, which holds its first session in Chicago this morning, was drowned Sunday afternoon at Diamond Lake, 111. A picnic was in progress and Gamble was rowing on the lake with a companion when he fell in a fit. His struggles upset the boat and he was drowned in spite of his companion’s efforts at rescue. The latter leached shore in safety.
FINANCE NOTES.
The first railroad in Siam was opened April 11. Chehalis county, Wash, has 30,000,000 feet of standing timber. The estimated revenue of the French ministry of telegraphs is £1,386,332. The banking system of the world dates from the establishment of the Bank of England, about one hundred and seventy-five years ago. A bulletin of the geological survey shows the production of minerals and mineral substances in Canada last year to have been £19,500,000.
Hood’s Cures “Fourteen years ago I had «n attack of the <ravel, and since have . been very seriously troubled with my liver and kidneys. Three years ago I got down so low that I could scarcely walk. I looked more like a corpse than a living Ur. D. M. Jordan, being. I had no appetite and for five weeks I: ate no tiling bat gruel. Had no more colorthan a marble atatue. After I had taken, three bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla I could eat anything without distress. Why, I got so hungry that I had to eat fl ve times a day. I have now fully recovered. I feel well and. am well. All who know me marvel’’ D. M.. Jordan, retired farmer. Edmeston, N. Y. Hood’s Pills cure all Liver Ills, Biliousness, J uundlce, Indigestion, Sick Headache. DR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOT CURED ME. La Grippe! Gripp! Grippl . After Effects Cured. Mr. Bilger writes:—“l had a bad attack of the t Grippe; after a time caught, cold and had a second attacx, it settled in my kidneys and liver, and Oh! such pain and misery in my back and legs. The physicians’ medicine and other things that I used' made no impression, and I continually grew worse until I was a physical •wreck, and given up to die. Father bought me a. bottle of Dr. Kilmer’s SWAMP BOOT, and before I had used all of the second bottle I felt better, and to-day lam just as well as ever. A - year has passed and not a trace of the Grippe is left. SWAMP-ROOT saved my life.’* D. H. Bilger, Hulmeville, Pa. Jan. 10th, 1893..
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