People's Pilot, Volume 2, Number 53, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 June 1893 — Page 2

The People’s Pilot RENSSELAER. t : INDIANA.

The News Condensed.

Important Intelligence From All Parts. DOMESTIC. THE trial of Chief P. M. Arthur, of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, for $200,000 damages for alleged encouragement of the recent strike on the Ann Arbor road at Toledo will commence at Cleveland September 18. The International Supreme Lodge of Good Templars in session at Des Moines, Ia., elected D. H. Mann, of New York, right worthy grand chief. THE Kentucky legislature defeated a bill to move the capital to Louisville, thus ending finally a fight for removal that has been going on for forty years. THE suspensions were reported of the Farmers’ and Merchants’ bank at Fairmount, Ind., the City bank at Parsons, Kan., the Exchange bank at Weston, O., and the First national bank at Kansas City, Kan. THE International Typographical union in session in Chicago for the third time made W. B. Prescott, of Toronto, president. THE Lone Star Iron company of Jefferson, Tex., failed for $100,000. AT a meeting of the board of directors of the Union Theological seminary in New York it was decided by a unanimous vote that Rev. Dr. Charles A. Briggs should continue his work in the department of Biblical history as hitherto. THE Indiana and Arkansas state buildings and the German building on the world’s fair grounds were dedicated. THE seventeenth international and second world's convention of Sundayschool workers will be held in St. Louis from August 31 to September 6, inclusive.

TEXAS women have by their energy completed the state building at the world’s fair which the legislature failed to provide for. MANY wheat fields in Kansas have been ruined by the chinch bug, and since the wheat cutting commenced the bugs have gone to the corn. FIGURES show that the savings banks in the United States contain $1,700,000,000. FRUIT sheds of the Louisville & Nashville road at New Orleans were destroyed by fire, the loss being $100,000. J. W. FLOOD, ex-cashier of the Dono-hoe-Kelly banking company at San Francisco, was convicted of embezzling $164,000. DURING the week ended on the 16th the leading clearing houses in the United States reported exchanges amounting to $1,031,364,527, against $1,156,384,853 the previous week. As compared with the corresponding week of 1892 the decrease was 9.6. MANY houses were blown down at Valdosta and Thomasville, Ga., during a tornado. THERE were 313 business failures reported in the United States during the seven days ended on the 16th. In the week preceding there were 322, and during the corresponding time in 1892 the number was 153. AT Fairfield, Ill., E. Bonham, a banker, made an assignment with liabilities of $125,000. THE total value of the exports of merchandise from the United States during the year ended May 31, 1893, was $848,373,845, and during the corresponding period of the preceding year $1,022,984,545, a decrease of $174,610,700. The value of the imports during the same period was $936,901,287 and $828,848,119, respectively, an increase of $108,053,168. THE dry goods store of Bauer, Foster & Co. at Dayton, O., was burned, the loss being $100,000. THE International Typographical union in session in Chicago decided to demand a nine-hour work day for all printers employed in the United States and Canada on book and job work. THE Genesee Oil company of Buffalo, N. Y.. made an assignment with liabilities of $300,000.

M. FOX & CO., New York importers of diamonds, have been driven to the wall with liabilities of $141,000. MAY COLVIN, who, though but 19 years old, has been arrested nine times for horsestealing, escaped from the jail at Carthage, Mo., by sawing an iron bar with a fork. MRS. JOHN HERMES was chloroformed and robbed of $325 while riding to Cincinnati on an Ohio & Mississippi train. THE supreme lodge of the Independent Order of Good Templars in session at Des Moines passed a resolution demanding enforcement of the prohibitory law in the world’s fair district THE Methodist church and several dwellings at Dundoff, Pa., were destroyed by fire, the total loss being $150,000. WINKLEY, DRESSER & CO., Boston stationers, failed for $150,000. THE Sons of the American Revolution in session in Chicago elected Gen. Horace Porter, of New York, as president. GEORGE DRIER, a Polish Jew who murdered Mrs. Fannie M. Fadden at Cape Charles, Va., October 16, 1891, was hanged at Eastville, Va. DURING the twelve months ended May 31 the exports of gold from the United States amounted to $123,095,453 and the imports $20,658,725; excess of exports, $102,436,728. During the corresponding twelve months last year the exports of gold amounted to $48,888,224 and the imports $49,488,334; excess of imports, $600,110. THE Highspire distillery at Harrisburgh, Pa., was burned with 5,000 barrels of whisky, entailing a loss of $200,000. FRANK ALDRICH, until recently sealer of weights and measures for the District of Columbia, left Washington owing creditors $20,000. THE First national bank of Grundy Center, Ia., closed its doors. The Illinois legislature adjourned sine die after a session lasting 163 days.

THE percentages of the baseball clubs in the National league for the week ended on the 17th were as follows: Brooklyn’ .634; Philadelphia, 634; Boston, .628; Pittsburgh, .571; New York, .512; Baltimore.. 512; Cleveland, .500; Washington, .463; Cincinnati, .442; Chicago, .439; St. Louis, .400; Louisville, .188. FREIGHT trains collided on the Baltimore & Ohio road near Cameron, W. Va., and Engineers Dean and Kinney, Fireman Clem Fisher and two other trainmen were killed. AN attempt to hold up an express train near Council Bluffs, Ia., was frustrated by the fireman turning the hotwater hose on the would-be robbers. IN a general fight in the lumber town of Edgerton, Ind., Lewis Boyer and Hugh Coye, proprietors of the only saloons in the place, were killed. THROUGH an error of government survey a strip of Texas land embracing 75,000 acres was included within the boundaries of Oklahoma. MR. AND MRS. E. GL. EAMES drove in front of an express train at Rock Island, Ill., and both were killed. They leave several small children.

A FIRE destroyed the Adams building in Chicago, causing a loss of $172,000 to O. W. Richardson, carpet dealer, and a loss of over $200,000 to other business firms.

IN Wisconsin the towns of Virginia and Mountain Iron were destroyed by forest fires and the towns of Mesaba, Biwabik and Merritt were partially destroyed. WARREN, James and John Keaton (brothers) were drowned while bathing in the river at Merrill, Wis. COMPLETE official returns of the Chinese registration under the Geary act show that out of 110,000 Chinese in the United States 13,139 have registered. A. S. ARNOLD, of Leavenworth, Kan., shot his wife fatally and then put two bullets into his own head, killing himself instantly. Jealousy was the cause. WILLIAM HIPES, a wealthy farmer, and his wife and daughter were killed by the cars at a railway crossing near their home at Crawfordsville, Ind. AS THE result of a quarrel of long standing over a line fence William Kuykendall, a farmer near Otterville, Mo., killed W. H. Smith and then shot himself.

MARTIAL law was proclaimed in Tonawanda, N. Y., because of strike of lumber shovers. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER of the United States supreme court and his associates in the circuit court of appeals, Judges Bunn and Allen, gave a decision in favor of the Sunday opening of the world’s fair, and in the event of no further legal complications Sunday opening was permanently assured. WHILE attempting to board a train at Liberty, Ind., Jack Kain and John Gear were thrown under the wheels and killed. Each leaves a widow and two little girls; each was 35 years of age; each was a Catholic, and each had just $18 when killed. LYLE KELLOGG, Will Ford and John Gay, well known young men, were drowned in the bay near Washburn, Wis., by the capsizing of a yacht. THE Racine (Wis.) Hardware Manufacturing company failed for $300,000. DAVID BLACKBURN was sentenced to prison for life at Columbus, O., for stealing three chickens. It was his third offense, and the law makes a third sentence a life one. IN a quarrel over a girl at a dance near Louisville, Ky., John Nagles shot and killed John and Jake Sheeley (brothers). PRESIDENT CLEVELAND has issued an order assigning army officers to act as Indian agents. EXPONENTS of banking, finance, railway, commerce, board of trade, insurance, building and loan associations and mercantile credits met in Chicago and inaugurated the world’s congresses of commerce and finance. THE Kanawaha Lumber company at Boston failed for $785,900, pulling down with it W. H. Leatherbee & Son with liabilities of $217,000 and A. F. Leatherbee & Co. with liabilities of $231,000. BECAUSE of Sunday opening of the world’s fair Bishop Merrill says the general commission of the Methodist denomination will issue a manifesto withdrawing the Methodist exhibits from the fair within two weeks and asking the 5,000,000 members of the church to keep away from the exposition on week days as well as on Sundays.

THE mob which was supposed to have lynched Lee Bennett at Gleason, Tenn., hung Jim Harris, an innocent man, instead. Bennett was in jail at Dresden, heavily guarded. THE Capital national bank at Indianapolis, Ind., which suspended one month ago has resumed business. THE George L. Squire Manufacturing company at Buffalo, N. Y. failed for $200,000. MILLER F. LENG, a well-to-do farmer near Napoleon, O., was stabbed and killed by his 16-year-old son Emanuel because he ordered the boy to go to work. THE forest fires in the Mesaba iron range in Wisconsin caused a damage of over $1,000,000 and left nearly 4,000 persons homeless and destitute. Reports from Ashland state that forest fires were sweeping over miles of country and hundreds of homesteaders were in danger. John Meagher perished near Moquah and two children were burned to death at Sanborn and the town wiped out. Similar forest fires were also burning over the whole upper Michigan peninsula. FRANK DAVIS, said to have committed twenty-five burglaries in New York city, was sent to prison for twenty-four years. THE Oil Well Supply company of Pittsburgh, Pa., unable to meet maturing obligations, was placed in charge of a receiver with liabilities of $l,100,000. THE Missouri law permitting the sale of vagrants has been declared unconstitutional by the state supreme court. CONTRACTOR DANT, Superintendent Covert, Engineer Sasse and Col. Ainsworth were held responsible by the coroner’s jury for the death of the Ford theater victims in Washington and the government was censured for carelessness.

THE village of Jeffersontown, Ky., was swept away by fire. BANK failures were reported at Lebanon and Albany in Oregon, at New Hanover, N. C., at Chattanooga, Tenn., and at Plainville, Kan. AN incendiary fire destroyed the business portion of Tillamook. Ore., leaving many parties destitute. Loss over $100,000. A PLAN of celebration has been conceived by the committee in Chicago in charge of the Columbian liberty bell whereby on July 4 all the bells in schoolhouses and churches of the land will ring simultaneously at noon. PHILIP GRAVER, a retired market man 54 years of age, whose estate is valued at $150,000, committed suicide at Pittsburgh, Pa. No cause known. JOHN J. HAGGERTY while drunk jumped from the Brooklyn bridge to the river on a wager of a pint of beer and was not injured in the slightest way.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. PRESIDENT CLEVELAND has grown so very stout recently that he has resorted to the diet system for reducing his weight OHIO democrats will meet in state convention in Cincinnati August 9. WILLIAM WALTER PHELPS, ex-minis-ter to Germany, and his family arrived in New York on the Spree from Bremen. MISS M. MERTA MITCHELL, of Salem, Ia., is the first woman admitted to practice law in Indiana. WILLIAM M. MEREDITH, chief of the bureau of engraving and printing at Washington, has resigned. THE executive committee of the National Republican league has made Chicago its headquarters. SAMUEL BLATCHFORD, associate justice of the United States supreme court, was stricken with paralysis at his cottage in Newport, R. I.

FOREIGN. THE court of cassation in Paris holds that the cases of the Panama canal convicts are outlawed and has ordered the release from prison of M. De Lesseps and his son and the others convicted of squandering canal funds. IT was thought that the opponents of the army bill had been successful in the elections for members of the German reichstag. SIBERIA for life is the probable fate of the Russian monks arrested for robbing the Chudor monastery. PRESBYTERIANS of Canada are stirred greatly over a heresy case. Prof. Campbell is the alleged heretic. THREE private soldiers were tried by a court martial at Chihuahua, Mexico, for disobedience of orders and desertion and sentenced to be shot.

A GOVERNMENT powder magazine a few miles from Athens, Greece, exploded, and twenty persons, including officers and soldiers, were killed, and property valued at 3,000,000 francs was destroyed. THE steamer Khiva, with 1,000 pilgrims on board, bound for Mecca, caught fire on her voyage from Bombay to Jeddah and in the rush for the boats one capsized, drowning twenty persons. PRACTICALLY complete returns from the German elections show the return of 101 supporters of the army bill and 114 opponents. Second ballots will be necessary in about 200 districts. A WATERSPOUT flooded the town of Utzermatlan, Mexico, drowning many of the inhabitants. INDIAN tribes in the village of Loja, Ecuador, raided the village of Zamora, killed all the male inhabitants and carried off the women.

LATER. A TRAIN on the Long Island railroad upon which were about 1,000 persons returning from Sheepshead Bay races was derailed in a tunnel near Parksville, N. Y., and nine persons were killed and twenty-six others were injured, some fatally. THE University bank and City savings bank closed their doors at Los Angeles, Cal. ROBERT E. PHILLIPS and Arthur Mead, prominent members of the Boston chamber of commerce, were drowned by the upsetting of a boat FISHER BROTHERS, cloak manufacturers in New York, failed for $150,000. ENLISTED Indians had a fight with other Indians at the Cheyenne agency in Montana and five of the latter were killed. CORNELL'S freshman crew defeated Columbia at New London, Conn. The 2-mile course was covered in 10:08. LIZZIE BORDEN was acquitted at New Bedford of the charge of murdering her father and stepmother at Fall River, Mass., on August 4, 1892. A TOY pistol in the hands of a boy caused a fire at Frederickton, N. B., which made 125 persons homeless. TEN government inspectors in the state of Washington were detected in aiding in smuggling in Chinese by means of fraudulent certificates and in permitting opium smuggling either by connivance or otherwise.

FIRE in the barrel works at South St. Paul, Minn., caused a loss of $100,000. IN a row at an emancipation day celebration at Flat Prairie, Tex., four negroes were killed and many others wounded. THE American Railway union, a new society to embrace every branch of the service, was organized in Chicago with Eugene V. Debbs of Terre Haute, Ind., as president. AN earthquake shock was felt throughout North and South Carolina and Georgia. BY the terms of Edwin Booth’s will his daughter will receive the bulk of his estate, which is estimated at $605,000. THE Iowa republican convention will meet at Des Moines August 15. FOREST fires were still raging in Minnesota and Wisconsin. The line of fire in Minnesota extended 50 miles and included eight new mining towns, four of which were totally destroyed. The fire in Wisconsin was scattered in patches from Michigan to Minnesota, a distance of 96 miles, over nearly 8,000 square miles of territory.

MANY TOWNS WIPED OUT.

The Forest Fires Are Still Raging in the Northern Pineries. ASHLAND, Wis., June 21.—Forest fires are still raging and the air would be suffocating but for the cool breezes off the lake Another fatality is reported in Sanborn. The line of fire in Minnesota extends 50 miles and includes eight new mining towns, four of which are totally destroyed. The fire in Wisconsin scattered in patches from Michigan to Minnesota, a distance of 96 miles, over nearly 8,000 sguare miles of territory. Sanburn is totally and Iron River partially destroyed, many small villages entirely wiped out and Ashland and other large cities are threatened. The situation is worse than it has been at any time since the forest fires of 1873, which destroyed Peshtigo and other towns in the upper peninsula. The fires in the Michigan peninsula are not so bad yet, but are increasing. Clouds of smoke cover Ashland and ashes fall day and night. All the dozen sawmills on the bay have gangs of men throwing water on the lumber. The body of an unknown man, with papers on him indicating he was from Fargo, N. D., was found Tuesday morning in the river at Brule. The clothes and body were badly burned. The indications are that he was trying to escape from the flames and jumped into the stream. The river is very rapid there and he had loaded his pocket with stones to prevent being carried by the current into an avenue of flames reaching across the river below. The water is not deep, but very swift. His face was burned beyond recognition. He was evidently about 52 years old, with smooth face and of stout build. He was a stranger and was seen fishing on Sunday and was probably a tourist taking a vacation, as he was well dressed. Another bridge on the Omaha was reported burned Tuesday morning. A homesteader named Duncan, near Nimekagon, reports two sons missing, who were out hunting for stock and were caught by the fire.

FATAL SOMNAMBULISM.

Three Cases in Chicago—One of the Victims Was Daniel Lord, Member of a Prominent New York Family. CHICAGO, June 21. —Daniel Lord, of New York, died on Tuesday morning from injuries received by falling from a fourth-story window in the home of R. Hall McCormick, of 124 Rush street, whose guest he had been for the past week. It is believed that Mr. Lord was walking in his sleep and had gone to the window to obtain fresh air. He was a son of Daniel Lord, Jr., a member of the law firm of Lord, Day & Lord, New York, and came to Chicago with his father, mother and sister to see the world's fair a little over a week ago. The deceased was 22 years old and unmarried. Anton Tripp was found lying dead on West Indiana street, near Oakley avenue, at 1 o’clock a. m. by Officer Flynn. He was a barkeeper in the employ of Herman Hesterman, at 828 West Indiana street. Tripp occupied a room on the third floor and it is supposed he fell to the sidewalk after going to sleep in the window. Mrs. Minnie Berg fell from a secondstory window at 435 Washington boulevard about 2 o’clock a. m., and was seriously injured. Mrs. Berg is subject to somnambulism and while in her sleep walked to a large bay window which fronts the boulevard and walked out. She may die.

TRUSTS BETRAYED.

Customs Inspectors in the State of Washington Detected in Aiding Smugglers. Washington, June 21.—The official heads of Patrick H. Winston, United States attorney; Thomas R. Brown, United States marshal; Andrew Watson, United States collector at Port Townsend; C. J. Mulkey, United States special agent, and six special inspectors of customs in the Puget Sound district, all in the state of Washington, have fallen into the official hopper as the result of reports made to Secretary Carlisle by special treasury agents. These officials, it is charged by the reports received, have been doing a wholesale business for several years in connection with private parties in Victoria, B. C., in smuggling in Chinese by means of fraudulent certificates, and in permitting opium smuggling either by connivance or otherwise. More than two months ago Agents Wood and Lewis, new men from the east, were detailed to secretly investigate these alleged frauds. Uninfluenced by local surroundings or affiliations they went to work and unearthed what is regarded here as one of the greatest conspiracies in which government officials were ever implicated. Other removals are yet to come, and the matter in due course of time will find its way into the courts.

American Railway Union Organized.

Chicago, June 21.—The American Railway union, the new organization of railway employes, held a meeting at Uhlich’s hall, 27 North Clark street, Tuesday evening. A constitution was adopted at the afternoon meeting. The officers are: President, Eugene V. Debbs, of Terre Haute, Ind.; vice president, George W. Howard, of Chicago; secretary and treasurer. Sylvester Keliher. The object of the organization is to obtain the cooperation of all railway employes in the country, no matter of what station in the service, and by so doing protect themselves from railway corporations.

The street railway company which owns the lines in the City of Mexico has a monopoly of the funeral business there. It runs special funeral ears, white for children and black for adults. No hearses are used. Mourners ride to the cemetery in a richly-up-holstered special car. Wedgewood’s investigations of the action of light on chloride of silver were begun in 1802. Daguerre’s experiments began in 1824; his invention of daguerreotype plates was made public in 1839, when a pension was granted him by the French chamber of deputies.

COST NINE LIVES.

Frightful Railway disaster on Long Island —An Excursion Train Wrecked in a Tunnel and Nine Passengers Are Killed—The Injured Number About 100. New York, June ?L —A train on the Long Island railroad, upon which were about 1,000 persons returning from the Sheepshead Bay races, was derailed Tuesday evening in a tunnel a short distance from Parksville. Two persons were killed outright, seven died soon after being removed to the hospital and about 100 were injured, many so seriously that they will not recover. Those killed ontright at the time of the accident were: Patrick Daly, a court officer of the Third district, New York city; H. S. Pringle, whose residence, according to card in his pocket, is New York. The following were removed to the Seney hospital, Brooklyn, and died soon afterward:

Henry Spink, marshal at Jefferson market police court, New York city; Robert Cudley, a policeman, New York; R S. McGonigle; Fritz D. Johnson; John Simlay; Quinby, Utica, N. Y.; unknown man, about 30 years old, dark mustache and dressed in dark clothes. The accident happened upon what is known as the Bay Ridge division of the Manhattan railroad and about half a mile from the little town of Parkville, which is at the junction of the roads rdnning to Coney Island and Manhattan Beach and Sheepshead Bay. The Bay Ridge division after leaving Parkville passes under a viaduct of .the Coney Island boulevard. The fatal train reached this point of the road at 6 o’clock. It had left Sheepshead Bay race track at 5:45. The crowd aboard were men, women and children, who had been to witness New York’s great race, the Suburban. The train consisted of six cars, the front and rear cars being closed, the others open. Every seat was taken and the men stood in the aisles of the closed cars and shoulder to shoulder upon the platforms running along the sides of the open cars. Everybody seemed merry, and the uppermost thought perhaps of the whole train was to get back to New York as quickly as possible. The train, which was going at full speed, suddenly gave a jerk and jolt, and the expressions of pleasure were instantly turned to feelings of terror and dismay. The engine and the first two cars ran along upon the track, dragging behind them the other cars of the train, bumping and reeling along the ties up to the very mouth of the tunnel. Then the engine and the two ears that remained on the track broke loose from the others and were carried by their own speed clear through the tunnel and 25 feet beyond. The other part of the train pulled apart, the first dragging itself half way through the tunnel. No one knew what had happened, so quickly had the fatal accident occurred. People jumped from the train and fell upon the embankment, to be bruised and cut by the cars. Others were carried along upon the train, their bodies rubbed and bruised upon the rocks of the tunnel and the stones of the embankment There were shrieks of pain. Women fainted and men became panic-stricken and trampled them and the children under their feet in their mad flight for safety. When the train finally stoppad the cooler heads immediately began to render assistance to the wounded who lay along the track. Court Officer Daly was found beside the track, the lower part of his body frightfully crushed. A few feet from him was found Mr. Pringle. He was still alive, and he was carried up to the top of the embankment and laid upon the grass. Then others carried up Robert Cutting and Henry Spink. A physician who was upon the train hurried to these two men, and after a very superficial examination pronounced both of their injuries fatal. He did what he could for them and they were transferred to a hospital. Policemen who had arrived immediately sent orders to Brooklyn hospitals for ambulances, which soon began to arrive. In the meantime the wounded had been gathered up and stretched out upon the grass on the embankment The physicians attended to their wounds as best they could. One hundred persons, it is said, found upon this green plat a temporary hospital.

The cause of the accident and who is to blame for it are matters which are yet to be investigated. The train was without doubt derailed by a misplaced switch—it stood there open after the accident in mute evidence. Whether it had been opened by the switchman or whether through long use had become unsafe and was jolted open by the passing train, is not definitely known. As the first two cars remained on the track, it is declared by some that the switch was shut when these passed over but was jolted loose and allowed the other part of the train to be derailed. The engineer of the train was John Bachner. The conductor was George Ormsby. Neither would give any statement as to how the accident happened. Ormsby said that he was collecting tickets at the time and had just warned the people to get on the inside of the cars.

Coroner Kane said that there would be a formal inquest over one of the dead in a few days and then there would be a general investigation to see who could be held responsible for the accident.

Married School-Teachers Dismissed.

St, Louis, June 21. —By an edict issued by the school commissioners all married teachers in the public schools have been dismissed. Nearly 100 teachers were let out.

Fell 100 Feet.

Chicago, June 20.—John Thornly fell 100 feet from a scaffolding in the Manufactures building on Monday and was instantly killed. Thornly was one of a gang of painters engaged on the interior of the building arid while busy with his work lost his balance and fell from the scaffold with fatal result.

Killed His Father.

Napoleon, 0., June 20.—Miller P. Long, a farmer, died from the effects of a stab wound inflicted by his 16-year-old son Napoleon, who was arrested. The father had reprimanded the son for not going to work. . s . \.

Oar Rapid, Transitory Existence.

Brief as it is at the longest, is liable to be materially curtailed by our own in discretions. The dyspeptic eat what they should not, the bilious annk coffee in excess, snd the rheumatic, neuralgic and consumptive sit in draughts, get wet feet and remain in damp clothes, and then wonder when ill how they became so. To persons with a tendency to neuralgia, we recommend a daily use of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, and especially after unavoidable exposure in damp or otherwise inclement weather. Exposition of 1993. Visitor “What kind of a toy eaanon is that?” Attendant —“That is the Krupp Gun from the world s fair of 1893. It weighs 122 tons. Chicago thought it was great”—Puck.

Saved Her Sight “My little girl Hazel two years ago had the grip, leaving her with inflamed eyes, so bad. that for seven months we had to bandage them and keep her in a dark room. The family physician and an oculist said the sight of one eye was destroyed and she jJJB might lose the other. hM She suffered intense j pain, and when light TJk was admitted to the . room would cry as if burned with a hot iron. Hazel Butterfield. We began giving her Hood’s Sarsaparilla, ana toour surprise her eyes began to improve rapidly. The sight gradually returned and Hood’s ~ Cures she is now as well as ever. Her eyes are permanently and perfectly cured.” W. A. Buttekfibld, 1495 Hastings St., Detroit, Mich. Hood’s Pills are the best after-dinner Pills assist digestion, ctfre headache. Try a box. 25c. “August Flower” “One of my neighbors, Mr. John Gilbert, has been sick for a long time. All thought him past recovery. He was horribly emaciated from the inaction of his liver and kidneys. It is difficult to describe his appearance and the miserable state of his health at that time. Help from any source seemed impossible. He tried your August Flower and the effect upon him was magical. It restored him to perfect health to the great astonishment of his family and friends.” JohnQuibell, Holt, Out.® The (freatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week, after taking it. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bedtime, and read the Label.

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