People's Pilot, Volume 3, Number 5, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 July 1893 — Page 2

The People’s Pilot. RENSSELAER. « : INDIANA

The News Condensed.

Important Intelligence From All Parts. DOMESTIC. HARRIS BROS., dealers in gloves in New York, failed for $100,000. THE postmaster general has decided to abandon the three sizes of postal cards now in use and to substitute one size for both single and reply cards. KELLY and Peterson, two laborers were instantly killed by lightning at Cedar Rapids, Ia. THE National Retail Clerks’ union in session at Nashville, Tenn., decided to make Chicago their permanent headquarters and elected F. P. Fitzwilliams, of Nashville, as president. H. C. W. MEYER was arrested in Detroit charged with poisoning no less than five young women —each of whom, he represented as his wife —and one man, for the purpose of securing life insurance which he had taken out on their lives. J. K. ARMSTRONG, of Tipton, O., county treasurer, was said to be short $25,000 in his accounts. His term expires August 17, 1893. THE dead bodies of two unknown men were found in a dense thicket on the Ray farm near West Newton, Pa. THE business section of Luckey, O., was almost completely wiped out by fire, the loss being $100,000. FOR the first time in the history of the trade every plate-glass factory in the United States is closed, and that indefinitely, and fully 10,000 men are idle. Overproduction is the cause. THE Nebraska savings bank at Lincoln closed its doors with liabilities of $100,000. THE total number of original pension certificates of all kinds issued during the fiscal year ended Juno 30, 1893, was 121,628, against 222,297 during the preceding year. The net increase to the rolls during the past fiscal year was 91,628, against 199,808 for the year before. THOMAS CRAIG and William Shannon, two well-known explorers, were drowned by the capsizing of their boat in Rainy lake, Minnesota. ANNA WAGNER, the Indianapolis servant of the Koesters, has been indicted for poisoning five of the family. FIVE persons were killed and a score more injured by an accident to a West Shore express train at Newburg, N. Y. THREE highwaymen rode into Mound Valley, Kan., bound the cashier of a bank and secured $600 in money. ROLFE N., with a record of 2:26, valued at $10,000, dropped dead on the track at Saginaw, Mich. APPLICANTS for pensions must hereafter file their military and medical history, according to Commissioner Lochren's order. WHILE drunk William Cook, of Pemberville, O., made a murderous assault with a club upon his four children, injuring three of them fatally. ANNIE MORRIS has been masquerading as Frank Blunt for fourteen years. Her arrest at Milwaukee revealed her identity. THE third annual meeting of the Baptist Young People’s Union of America commenced at Indianapolis with nearly 5,000 delegates and visitors present HENRY HOWARD, a farmer near Pueblo, Col., 50 years of age, was murdered for his money and his body thrown in a well. He was unmarried and a hermit

IN a freight wreck at Henryville, Ind., George Shirley, engineer, and Brakeman Brookbank were mortally wounded. OTTO REINECK, Tillie Williams and Annie Watson, a noted Chicago gang of thieves, were sentenced at Denver to ten years each in the penitentiary. ALLEN BUTLER, a wealthy colored man of Lawrence county, Ind., was found hanging by the neck dead near Vincennes, and it was believed he was hanged by a mob for performing a criminal operation upon a young white girl. AN army of crickets was devastating Wyoming of every sort of vegetation. THE National bank of Kansas City, Mo., failed with liabilities of $1,000,000 and assets of $3,000,000. The failure caused the Franklin savings bank of the same city to close its doors. ANTICIPATING a raid by robbers officials of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas road placed armed guards on trains. BY a vote of 24 to 4 the local directory of the World’s Columbian exposition passed resolutions rescinding the action of the meeting of May 16 and ordered the gates closed on all Sundays after the 16th. THE head chief of the Sioux nation of Indians, Young-Man-Afraid-of-His-Horses,dropped dead at Newcastle, Wyo. IT was reported at Ishpeming, Mich., that the Schleisinger syndicate, the largest operators in ore in the world, had failed with millions of liabilities. BUSINESS failures to the number of 374 occurred in the United States in the seven days ended on the 14th. During the week previous the failures numbered 324, against 168 in the corresponding time in 1892. W. H. BUSH and N. M. Tabor, lessees of .the Brown Palace hotel in Denver, made an assignment with liabilities placed at $650,000. EXCHANGES amounting to $1,000,390,677 were reported by clearing-houses in the United States during the seven days ended on the 14th, against $1,051,402,282 the preceding seven days. The increase, compared with the corresponding in 1892, was 12.5 per cent. TWO PERSONS were killed, over a dozen injured and much property destroyed by a cyclone which passed over Stillwater, Minn., and vicinity. THE bank of Hay & Webb made a general assignment at Carmi, Ill., with liabilities of $176,000 and assets of $216,000. THE report of the world’s fair auditor shows that the total receipts of the exposition up to June 30 were $21,251,316 and the total expenses were $20,610,160. |

ANNIE GEARY, aged 17, and Mary Schireber, aged 5, were burned to death at their home in Port Clinton, O., by an explosion of gasoline. TWO ROBBERS escaping from officers at Westfield, Pa., jumped down an embankment on a bed of rocks and were killed. THE statement of the condition of national banks throughout the country shows a startling decline in deposits. FIVE knights of pythias were injured in a wreck at Vincennes, Ind., one of them fatally. AT the annual meeting in Indianapolis of the Baptist Young People's Union of America John H. Chapman, of Chicago, was reelected president. GEORGE GRANDIN left New York to walk to the world’s fair. He carried no money with him. SNEAK thieves stole a tray containing nearly $10,000 worth of diamonds from the jewelry store of T. V. Dickinson in Niagara Falls, N. Y. SIX deaths from sunstroke and a large number of serious cases of prostration were reported in Chicago on the 14th. THE United States grand jury at Tacoma, Wash., indicted President Van Horne, of the Canadian Pacific railroad, and all the other leading officials for violating the interstate commerce law. FIRE in the Fresno flouring mills at Fresno, Cal., caused a loss of $100,000. MRS. ADAM ALLIS and her son and daughter and Willie Boyce were drowned in a stream near Mill Creek, Ind. Mrs. Allis and her daughter lost their lives in trying to save the two boys. THE percentages ot the baseball clubs in the National league for the week ended on the 15th were as follows: Philadelphia, .662; Boston, .646; Pittsburgh, 576; Cleveland, .559; Brooklyn, .547; Cincinnati, .483; St. Louis, .462; New York, .446; Chicago, .446; Baltimore, .429; Washington, .399; Louisville, .327. NEAR Clinton, Tenn., Freeman and Mose Cox, brothers, were shot and mortally wounded while at work in a field by George Beels. LUCA SCESCICH, a capitalist and miner, shot and killed his wife at Los Angeles, Cal., and then killed himself. Jealousy was the cause. BY the explosion of a seven-inch mortar at an Italian picnic in Chicago two men were instantly killed and two others were fatally injured. S. N. DUSSENBERRE, cashier of the suspended bank at Puyallup, Wash., was arrested on a charge of embezzling $41,000 of the bank's funds. THE Columbian 100-yard sprinting event at Goshen, Ind., for a purse of $2,000 and the championship of America was won by Morris, of California, in 9 3-5 seconds, which is one-fifth of a second below the world’s record. THE Bouton Foundry company in Chicago failed for $200,000. THE private banking house of William Oberhauser in Peoria, Ill., closed its doors with liabilities of $60,422. IN the recent cyclone in Iowa fiftyseven persoms were killed at Pomeroy, thirteen in Cherokee county, six in Buena Vista county, four in Pocahontas county and two in Wright county. THE Northern bank, the oldest financial institution in Kansas City. Kan., closed its doors with assets placed at $475,000 and liabilities amounting to $315,000. AS a result of the closing of silver mines a reign of terror has been inaugurated in Montana by idle men. CLEMENT MILLER and his wife and baby were fatally burned by the explosion of coal oil at Columbus, O. RICHARD P ROUGHTON and Frederick T. Rawlins, prominent citizens of

Sandersville, Ga., killed each other in a street duel. THE Glen house at Glen Station, N. H., was burned, the loss being $100,000. THE John Kauffman Brewing compa ny in Cincinnati went into the hands of a receiver with liabilities of $150,000. W. F. WERNER, sheriff and tax collector of Crittenden county, Ark. while en route to Little Rock was shot and robbed of nearly $12,000 by persons unknown. GEORGE POND, aged 24; Albert Butteroux, aged 16, and Willie Clawson, aged 12, were drowned while bathing in the bay at Galveston, Tex. MEREDITH LEWIS, acquitted of the charge of murdering his wife, was lynched near Roseland, La., by unknown persons. TOM KING, a noted Oklahoma horsethief, was captured and turned out to be a woman. A CYCLONE swept over the town of Leipsic, O., unroofing many buildings and doing other damage. THE People’s savings, the Colorado savings and the Rocky Mountain dime and dollar savings bank closed their doors at Denver. The assets of the first named bank were $1,500,000; liabilities, $1,350,000. WARREN DEAN, a negro accused of assaulting a woman, was captured by a mob at Stone Creek, near Macon, Ga., and lynched. A HAILSTORM destroyed all the crops within an area of 20 miles in length and 7 miles in width in Cedar county. Neb. A MAN named Segerman and his son, aged about 13 years, were found murdered 4 miles from Wharton, O. T. Their pockets were rifled. THE First national bank of Cedartown, Ga., closed its doors. JOHN McCONNELL, morocco and cotton manufacturer in Philadelphia, failed for $200,000; assets, $100,000. D. C. JOHNSTON started from Steubenville, O., to drive overland to the Snake river in Idaho. His wife and son accompany him. He expects to be a year in making the trip. ANNA WITKOWER, a chambermaid at the Palmer house in Chicago, has become the wife of Baron Sohlberg, a millionaire Austrian nobleman. THE council of administration has decided not to cooperate with the plan of the railroads to bring all western newspaper men and their wives to the world’s fair free. IN a prize fight in the outskirts of New York between George McDonald and Frank J. Egan the former was struck a blow in the second round that killed him.

THE Missouri national bank of Kansas City closed its doors with liabilities of $700,000 and assets of $1,254,785. A CONGRESS for teachers opened in Chicago with distinguished educators present from all parts of the globe. A TRAIN on the Grand Trunk road struck a street car in Chicago and Thomas Perkins, John Finn,and Grace Hunt were killed and ten other persons were injured, some fatally. ONE of the pigeons let loose on the worlds fair grounds reached its home at Ozone Park, L. I., about 1,000 miles away, in 46 hours and 8 minutes. THE 9th of September has been designated as Grand Army day at the world's fair. SHERIFF SPRADLEY, of Nacogdoches, Tex., killed his fifth man in Joel Goodwin, who had a murderous record. The Duplex Street Railway Track company, a West Virginia corporation doing business in New York, failed for $150,000. BANDS of Mormons are at work in Virginia proselyting. They avow their belief in polygamy. TWO OIL tanks at Whiting, Ind., exploded and the Standard Oil company lost 200,000 gallons of refined petroleum. WORKMEN at Elwood, Ind., where factories have closed, were suffering for the necessaries of life. THE will of the late Martin Richelberger, of York, Pa., bequeaths almost $85,000 to Yale university. THE world’s fair national commission acquiesced in the action of the local directory in closing the gates Sunday and adopted resolutions appealing to the people, now that all discussion is ended, to visit the fair. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. THE Massachusetts republicans will hold their state convention in Boston on October 7. THE Iowa state league of republican clubs will meet in Des Monies on August 15. GEN. W. H. ENOCHS, congressman from the Tenth district of Ohio, was found dead in bed at his home in Ironton. JAMES McCORMICK died at Darwin, Ill., aged 110 years. REAR ADMIRAL EARLE ENGLISH (retired) died at his residence in Washington, aged 69 years. GEN. EDWARD JARDINE, a veteran of the late war, died at his home in New York, aged 65 years. THOMAS EDWARD WALSH, president of the university of Notre Dame at South Bend, Ind., died of Bright’s disease at St. Mary’s hospital in Milwaukee, aged 40 years.

FOREIGN. DURING the seven days ended on the 12th there were 139 deaths from cholera in various portions of Russia and 403 new cases. AT a disreputable resort in the City of Mexico three women became involved in a quarrel which resulted in a battle with knives and all three were killed. IN a battle with French gunboats on the Meinam river twenty Siamese were killed and fourteen wounded. LIEUT. PEARY and party, on board the steamer Falcon, sailed from St. John’s, N. F., for Greenland by way of Labrador. THE army bill passed the German reichstag by a vote of 201 to 185. A TRAIN ran off the track and went over a high precipice near Bilboa, Spain, and six persons were killed and thirty seriously injured. ANTI-SEMITE mobs in Yalta, Russia, beat and killed many Jews and plundered their homes of everything of value. LATER. THREE national banks, the Union, the Commercial and the National bank of commerce, and the Mercantile, the Capital and the North Denver banks closed their doors in Denver, pulling down with them several large commercial firms. JACKSON WRIGHT (colored) died at Racine, Wis., aged 101 years. AN excursion train carrying a Sunday school picnic party from Buffalo was wrecked at East Aurora, N. Y., and twenty children were hurt EX-GOV. WILLIAM M. STONE, of Iowa, late commissioner general of the land office, died at his residence near Oklahoma City, O. T., aged 66 years. Mr. Stone came out of the war as colonel of the Twenty-second Iowa infantry and was elected governor in 1863 and again in 1865. THE drought which extended over an area of 40,000 square miles in western Texas was broken by good rains. LOPEZ MUMAUGH, a cigarmaker at Indianapolis, fatally shot Miss Mary Winsh, sister of his divorced wife, and then killed himself. THIRTY warehouse buildings in London were burned, causing a loss of $7,500,000. MISS EMMA GARRETT, a Philadelphia school teacher, committed suicide in Chicago by leaping from a fifth-story window at the Briggs house. No cause was known. TWELVE men were drowned in the River Danube near Vienna by the upsetting of a boat. IN Kansas the Citizens’ bank of Kansas City, the Bank of Richmond, the Farmers’ and Merchants' bank of Osawatomie and the First national bank and the People’s savings bank of Fort Scott were forced to stop business. EX-CONGRESSMAN FREDERICK A. JOHNSON died of heart failure at Glens Falls, N. Y., aged 65. BONEY BETS and Jacob Takington were killed by the cars near Whitehall, Ill. Both men were drunk. CATTLE in the Cherokee strip and in Oklahoma were dying by the thousand from Texas fever. DURING the twelve months ended June 30, 1893, the gold exports amounted to $108,680,844 and the imports to $21,174,381; excess of exports, $87,506,463. During the corresponding period of the preceding year the exports were $50,195,327 and the imports $49,699,454; excess of exports, $495,673. The silver exports were $40,737,319 and the imports $23,193,252; excess of exports, $15,544,067. Increase of exports over the preceding year, $12,855,473.

A SUDDEN IMPULSE.

It Causes a Philadelphia Sehool-Teacher to End Her Life—For No Known Reason Miss Emma Garrett Throws Herself from a Fifth-Story Window in Chicago and is Killed. CHICAGO, July 19.— Miss Emma Garrett, principal of the home for deaf children at Philadelphia, entered the Briggs house about 6 o’clock Tuesday evening. With Miss Garrett were her sister, Mary S. Garrett, also a teacher, and Miss Viola Wilcox. After having registered the ladies were shown to room 500 on the fifth floor and on the east side of the hotel fronting the court. This court is of heavy glass set in iron framework and extends from above the second floor. Its dimensions are about 20 by 20 feet. All seemed in the best of spirits. While Night Clerk Henritze was working at his desk he was startled by hearing a heavy crash on the glass court over his head. The shock excited guests who happened to be in the corridor and the clerk darted upstairs to investigate. Screams came from room 500. Henritze burst open the door and found Mary Garrett and Miss Wilcox hysterically shrieking: “Oh, she has killed herself.” The big window on the court side was open. The clerk looked out. Away below him lying on the shattered glass roof was the bleeding body of Emma Garrett. She had entered her room with her sister and friend seemingly in a quiet and happy condition of mind. The ladies set away their valises and removed their bonnets. Miss Mary was seated in a chair and said something about the educational congresses in session at the art palace. Miss Emma walked over to where her sister was and sat down beside her. She glanced up and saw the open window. Without a word she arose and walked to it. Her two companions noticed nothing peculiar, they say. As she reached the window she laid her hands upon the sill. In an instant her face was changed. The dark eyes seemed to stand out from their sockets. With a convulsive clutch upon the wooden casing and full in the gaze of the two horrified observers with almost light-ning-like swiftness the crazed woman sprang through the window. Those she had left behind were too frightened for a moment to stir from their seats, The woman had gone to her death headforemost. Her body had partially turned as she fell, for the side of the head, as well as the top, was crushed to an almost shapeless mass. From the way she had struck death must have come on the instant. The face was almost unrecognizable. Besides the broken skull the neck had been dislocated. Blood had flowed in streams from her ears and mouth, staining the black silk dress she wore and making the sight a ghastly one. There was nothing that could be done other than to remove the body to the morgue at 73 Fifth avenue. In the short space of half an hour the woman who had reached the hotel in apparently perfect composure and happiness lay mangled in the dead house. When the sister and Miss Wilcox recovered sufficiently to speak they said that no reason could be given for Emma Garrett’s terrible act. She had never been afflicted with anything like insanity nor did it exist in the family. The ladies had come to Chicago for the purpose of attending the educational congresses and visiting the world’s fair. The hotel people seem to think that the sight of the open window might have given the woman, tired and excited by the long journey, the inexplicable impulse to throw herself out of it

GREAT FIRE IN LONDON.

Conflagration in the Very Heart of the City—Thirty Buildings and Warehouse* Destroyed with a Loss of £1,500,0U0. London, July 19.—Monday night’s warehouse fire in the .district bounded by Leadenhall streets and Bevis Marks and Cammolie streets burned over an area of over 1,500 yards before the flames were extinguished. Thirty buildings were entirely destroyed. These buildings were occupied by more than twenty-five firms, who dealt in stationery,' .clothing, tea, wines, furniture, imported goods, etc. The porters and their families living on the premises had narrow escapes. Many of them rushed to the street in their night dresses. It is expected that the loss will reach £1,500,000. The burned district is but a short distance to the eastward of the Bank of England, the Royal exchange and the Mansion house, the residence of the lord mayor.

DEATH OF EX-GOV. STONE.

The Well-Known lowan Passes Away Near Oklahoma City. Oklahoma City, O. T., July 19.—ExGpv. William Stone, of lowa, late commissioner general of the land office, died at his residence near this city Tuesday. [William M. Stone was born in Jefferson county, N. Y, in 1827. At, the age of 6he removed with his parents to Coshocton county,O., where he worked on a farm, as canal driver and learned the cbairmaking trade. At 24 he was admitted to the bar. In 1854 he went to lowa, settling at Knoxville. As editor of the Knoxville Journal he was the first to suggest a convention to organize the republican party in lowa. When Fort Sumter was fired on he resigned a district judgeship and mustered a company. He came out of the war as colonel of the Twenty-second lowa infantry, was elected governor in 1863 and again In 1865. He aftprwards served in - the lowa legislature, and was one of Greeley’s followers in 1872. When Harris on was elected he was made assistant commissioner of the land office, and when Carter resigned was made commissioner, which place he held until April 1 last.] Gov. Russell has appointed the author, Robert Grant* probate judge for Suffolk county. Grant is both b distinguished and remarkably clever Bostonian, In the magazines he continues such good work as characterized “The Little Tin Gods pn Wheels,” “Confessions of a Frivolous Girl,” “The Average Man,’” etc. The oldest German railroad was opened in 1835 and ran betweep, NOrenburg and Fnrth. Califobnia has forty Chinese temples, jNejvXork Oregon one. 1 fU'’"--

MANY BANKS COLLAPSE.

A T>ay of Extitement in Denver* Ww, More Banka, a Big Dry Goods House and Several Small Firms FaU—Five More Kan was Banka Closed. « , >a HUHXK, Col, July 18.—such" scene was 4 ever witnessed tn the west as could- bp seen here Tuesday morning shortly after 10 o’clock, whem the banks were supposed to open their doors for business. The failure ’of”’ three Savings banks Tuesday had excited the masses and the streets were crowded with anxious depositors. , The eleven clear-ing-house banks, located within four blocks of each other, were surrounded, and far into the streets the crowd gathered until officers and special police were called out to clear the way for traffic. The Union national, with a capital of 81,000,000, posted a notice that they would not open their doors. _ This started the panic, and, following quickly, the Commercial national posted a similar notice and then the National bank of commerce. A run was immediately startedon all of the other basics. The excitement continued unabated until about 3 o’clock, when it almost entirely subsided at all the banks, except the Utah state national and tlie German Rational, where the line of depositors seemed ers and business men is.that the panic is over and that no more banks will be obliged to close, although the run in a mild way may continue against two or three banks for a day or two. D. H. Moffatt, president of the First national, stated that the deposits at his house during the flay greatly exceeded the withdrawals. ; It is believed by financiers that Tuesday’s run will result in the people having more confidence in the strong banks, that the money withdrawn will at once be redeposited and a better footing be established in financial circles, which will make money easier. The suspended banks expect to resume business in a short time. The constant drain on the bahks by scared depositors brought about the crisis. It is stated by bankers that no less than 13,000,000 has been drawn from the banks during the last three .months. Of this 83,000,000 has gone to the east in regular lines of business, but there is 85,000,000 hoarded id the city. The safety-deposit vaults are full and there is reason to suppose that the homes of workingmen contain secret places in which their savings are hidden. If one-fifth of that amount was let into circulation the stringency in Denver would cease. The banks paid all demands except on time certificates, they demanding that these remain until the expiration of time. The clearing house will render no assistance, each institution being compelled to stand upon its own foundation. The Mercantile bank, a private institution, with a capital stock of 8100,000, closed its doors at noon. The failure was caused by the failure of the Union national bank, through which it cleared. The McNamara, Dry Goods company, one of the largest institutions of the kind, failed Tuesday morning. The liabilities are placed at 8260,000. The failure was brought on by an attach ment served at 1 o’clock Tuesday morning by the Union national bank, which failed to open its doors, for 871,780, and the Colorado national for 820,847. The failure was not unexpected, but it had been hoped that money would be easier, and that tl}e firm would be able to pull through. The stringency in the money market and inability to place securities or sflcure an extension from the banks, aided by the closing of three savings banks Monday, was the direct cause. Nearly the entire amount falls on Denver banks and commercial houses. Following the failure of the big McNamara dry goods house several other mercantile failures were quickly announced. One was the John Mouat Lumber company on an attachment from the German national bank for 8155,200. ,■ Albert Nelson’s restaurant and saloon went down with the National bank of commerce. His assets are placed at 8111,510, with liabilities of 896,725; M. S. Noah, installment furniture house. Assets, 840,000; liabilities, 816,000. Three other firms with liabilities of 820,000 each were announced as having failed Tuesday afternoon. They were all caused by the bank panic. Topeka, Kan., July 19.—State Bank Commissioner Breidenthal was notified Tuesday afternoon of the failure of the Citizens’ bank of Kansas City, Kan.; the Citizens’ bank of Armourdale, the Bank of Richmond, Franklin county, and the Farmers’ and Merchants’ bank of Osawatomie. All of the banks were doing a small business. Fort Scott, Kan., July 19.—The First national bank of this city failed to open for business Tuesday morning, owing to steady withdrawal of deposits and inability to collect assets. The officers claim that the bank’s assets are more than three times ite liabilities and depositors will Ipse nothing.

Eight Thousand to Be Idle.

Boston, July 19. —The Amoskeag mill, which will close for the month of August, employs 8,000 hands. It has a pay roll of 8225,000 month and uses 6,000,000 pounds of cotton per week. Other mills are likely to follow suit. The Amoskeag mill is the largest producer of manufactured cotton in the world. ,

Two Bodies Found in a Thicket.

West Newton,' Pa., July 14.—The dead bodies of two men were fppnd about 2 miles west of here Wednesday evening in a dense thicket in Goal Hollow, on the flay farm. While the Ray children were picking berries they found the bodies, which were covered with an old blanket. As yet there is fib clew to the identity of the dead tfieir.

Difference of a Few Thousands.

St. Paul, Minn,, July 14.—The schedules of the Northern Pacific Ele-

■A General EeAorattvs. s The above term more adequately dawnbeaMa nature of Hostetter* Stomach Bitters than any other. The medicine haa specific qualities, of course, as in cases of malarial disease, dyspepsia and liver complaint, but ite invigorating and regulating qualities Invest it with a health-endowing potency made manifest throughout the system. Purity and activity of the circulation are Insured by it, and it effectually tendearij* to kidney disease, rbeunmti.m, aeuraltaandfout. . careless at church and put one dollar in the box when I Intended to give only a dime.” “A case of contributory negligence, so to speak.”—Detroit Tribune success of Kiralfy’s spectacle ‘ Amenca” at the Auditorium, Chicago, is extraordinary. The resources of that theater—the largest in the world—are inadequate for the accommodation of the crowds that clamor for admission at each performance. . Food Made Me Sick “First I had pains in my back and chest, then faint feeling at the stemach, and when I would f eat the first taste would a make me deathly siok. Of course I ran down I t rapidly, and lost 25 . lahMA pounds. A friend ad- A vised me tp take Hood’s X Sarsaparilla snd soon my appetite came back, I ate heartily withoutdistress, gained two pounds a C. C. Aber. .J 100118 bottles of HOOD’S SARSAw Z* R,l y UA * cd MTN felt bptter in my Iff*.C. O. Artfcn, Grocer,-Canisteo, N. Y. Rood’s PINs sure Constipation. XJW TH MIDST OF ALARMS A Complete Novel by ROBERT BARR, .(“LUKE SHARP”), Author of *' In a Steamer Chair,” “ From Whossßoum." etc., is contained in LlDDincott’s Magazine for AUGUST (published July 30), also, ZACHARY TAYLOR, HIS HO/1E ANO FAMILY. (Illustrated). By A. R. Watson. THE NATIONAL GAME. (Athletic Series.) (Illustrated.) By Nortojt B. Young. THE LADY OF THE LAKE (at tho Fair). By Julian Hawthorne. JANE’S HQLIDAY. (Illustrated. \ (Notable Story No. VI.) Valeri® Hays Berry. Also poems, essays, stories, etc., by favorite authorsoriginated the complete story Lirrinuv ■ 1 o feature, and, with Its varied and interesting miscellany, is one of the most attractive Magazines now published. For sale by all new* and book dealers. Single number, as cents; per annum. $3.00. LIPPINCOTT’S MAGAZINE, PhiladelphiaThe Greatest 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. 1 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. {Unequalled j train ggHgr 5 J SERVICE I C from . . . £ 1 CHICAGO 5 L ■■■ to p buffalo I 3 L— NEW YORK ■ J A boston - - Z L and > gVT AariA Intermediate ■ ■ TOURIST O points 2 2 TICKETS O «• * C 3' — to tbe J E EASTERN EE- M ff V SORTS now on g E ) sale. Send for M f S 2 list of routes and rates. A iSOS A.J.SMITH, 0. K. WILBER,! F (G.P. A TkL Agt., Westl’aw. H K ? CLEVELAND. CHICAGO* fflkffleans Positively cure Bilious Attacks, Constipation, Sick-Headache, etc. 25 cents per bottle, at Drug Stores, Write for sample dose, free. J.F. SMITH & CO.^-'Neno York, CURES RISING BREAST “MOTHER’S FRIEND” offered child-bearing woman. I have been a mid-wife for many years, and in each can* where “Mother’s Friend” hadbeenuseditha* accomplished wonders and- relieved much. Buffering. It is the best remedy for rising of the breast known, and worth the price for that alone. Mbs. M. M. Bbubter, Montgomery, Ala. 1 BRADFIELD REOULATOR CO., Boid by all druggist! Atlaxta,