People's Pilot, Volume 3, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 August 1893 — Page 2

The People’s Pilot. RENSSELAER, t : INDIANA.

The News Condensed.

Important Intelligence From All Parts. DOMESTIC. THE forty-seventh anniversary of Liberian independence was celebrated by the dedication of that country’s pavillion on the world's fair grounds. BANK failures were reported as follows: Oregon national at Portland, Ore., Farmers’ at Mount Sterling, Ky., First national at Middlesboro, Ky., Traders' at Mount Sterling, Ky., Bank of Sparta and M. A. Thayer & Co.'s bank at Sparta, Wis., First national and Montana national at Helena, Mont., and the National granite state bank at Exeter, N. H. SEVEN lives were lost and great damage to property was done at Pueblo, Col., by floods. Houses were swept away by the torrent. AS a result of the war against liquor dealers in Brooklyn, Ind., George Moss’ saloon was demolished by dynamite. Moss defied the people. NINE of the largest lead mines at Aurora, Mo., closed down to await developments. MORE than 1,000 men were thrown out of employment by the closing of the Strange silk mills at Paterson, N. J. FLAMES destroyed thirty-four buildings in the business portion of Fifield, Wis., the loss being $200,000. JEWELRY manufacturers in Plainville, North Attleboro and Attleboro, Mass., have closed their shops, throwing 3,000 persons out of work. NANNIE HOYT, of Topeka, Kan., 10 years old, was arrested in Sioux City, Ia., for stealing a horse and buggy. She traveled 200 miles before being captured. THE mercantile houses of Neal Currie at Tracy and Currie, Minn., were closed, the liabilities being $100,000. WILLIAM MARLOTT, an Indianapolis letter carrier, has commenced suit against the government to test the legality of the eight-hour law. THE American Tube & Iron company of Pittsburgh, Pa., was placed in a receiver’s hands with liabilities of $1,250,000; assets, $2,700,000. A HEAVY fall of snow occurred in Brewster county, Tex. THE Wilmington (Del.) Dental Manufacturing company went into the hands of a receiver with liabilities of $200,000. W. H. IRVING, of Boston, committed suicide in Chicago by filling his mouth with powder and applying a match. He left a note saying he was tired of life. WILLIAM G. TAYLOR was electrocuted at Auburn, N. Y., for killing Solomon Johnson, a fellow convict in Auburn prison, on September 20 last. THE Goodwin pants factory at Evansville, Ind., was burned, the loss being $100,000. O. D. TAYLOR, manager of the InterState Investment company at the Dalles, Ore., was arrested on the charge of embezzling $500,00. S. H. MORRISON, an extensive lumber merchant in Philadelphia, failed for $100,000. SCHOOL elections were held in all of the country districts in Kansas and the woman vote showed an increase of 100 per cent. THERE were 386 business failures reported in the United States during the seven days ended on the 28th. In the week preceding there were 467, and during the corresponding time in 1892 the number was 171.

HARDY CALDWELL, of Middle Fork, Ky., killed himself and wife. Domestic trouble was the cause. AT the leading clearing houses in the United States the exchanges during the week ended on the 28th aggregated $887,988,509, against $979,445,234 the previous week. The decrease as compared with the corresponding week of 1892, was 10.7. RAY EARL, 80 years old, started to walk to Chicago from New London, Conn., a distance of 950 miles, on a wager of $100 that he can cover the distance in forty-two days. HENRY MILLER (colored) was hanged at Dallas, Tex., for the murder of Policeman Drewer; Alexander Brown (colored) was executed at Bastrop, Tex., for wife-murder, and Ida Hiers (colored) was hanged at Waterloo, S. C. for the murder of her half-brother. A NEGRO named Isaac Harper was lynched by a mob at Calera, Va., for assault on a white woman. FIRE in the Union Indurated Fiber company’s works at Lockport, N. Y., destroyed the entire plant. Loss, $100,000. HALF of Wakeman, O., a town with a population of 600, was destroyed by fire. LOUIS IRIG of Chadron, Neb., died after a continuous sleep of three months, caused by exposure to a violent snowstorm. TRADE at all points was reported to be restricted, but the outlook was more hopeful. THE statistician of the interstate commerce commission says railways of the United States are gradually being amalgamated into a comprehensive system. IN Mobile, Ala., Bolivar Hudson, a man 69 years old, was convicted of a murder committed twenty-four years ago and given a sentence of five years. BY the explosion of a pot of varnish which was boiling in a Pittsburgh saloon Joseph Hussell and Maggie Mitchell were killed and three others were injured. IN a criminal courtroom at Russelville, Ala., Clark Richardson cut the throat of John Ligon. Testimony in a divorce case started the fatal quarrel. TWO THOUSAND men were thrown out of employment by the suspension of all work at the Vermillion mines in Minnesota. J. F. BRENNAN, an ex-convict, and “Broncho Jim” have been arrested at Denver as leaders of the mob that lynched Arata, the murderer.

BANK failures were reported as follows: First national at Great Falls, Mont, First national at Middlesboro, Ky., Farmers and Merchants at Covington, Ind., German-American at Port Washington, Wis., Seymour’s bank at Chippewa Falls, Wis., C. W. Chopin & Co.’s bank at Stanton, Mich., and the Union Banking company at Portland, Ore. THE villages of Prentice and Medford, in Wisconsin, were almost entirely swept away by forest fires. THE exports of wheat from all United States ports for the week ended on the 28th show a total of 4,363,000 bushels, against 5,077,000 bushels the previous week. PATRICK McVILLA, sexton of a Catholic cemetery at Paterson, N. J., lighted his pipe and threw the match into the grass. The fire which ensued swept the cemetery and marred the headstones. BY a wreck on the Pennsylvania road at Indianapolis six persons were seriously injured. CARTER'S mill at Ludington, Mich,, including a large amount of lumber and shingles, was destroyed by fire. Loss, $125,000. WILLIAM WASHINGTON, of York, Pa., dropped dead while beating his wife. THE percentages ot the baseball clubs in the National league for the week ended on the 29th were as follows: Boston, .663; Philadelphia, .628; Pittsburgh, .590; Cleveland. .569; Brooklyn, .513; New York, .474; Cincinnati, .468; St. Louis, .468; Chicago, .429; Baltimore. .423; Washington, .397; Louisville, .362. WHILE laboring under great excitement Emma Lindsay, of Jeffersonville, Ind., was suddenly stricken dumb and later became totally blind. BANK failures were reported as follows: First national at Kankakee, Ill.; Dollar savings bank at Youngstown, O.; Citizens’ Savings and Loan association at Akron, O.; Commercial national, Ainsworth national and Portland savings banks at Portland, Ore.; Commercial at Eau Claire, Wis.; Savings at Baraboo, Wis.; First national at Ashland, Wis.; Exchange at Nunda, Ill., and the Commercial at Eau Claire, Wis. CLARK H. BUFORD and Miss Fannie Sudlow, prominent young people of Rock Island, Ill., were drowned while bathing in the river near Rock Island. FOURTEEN persons were arrested charged with the murder on July 17 of S. P. Bradshaw at Kingston. Ill. MRS. LUCILLE RODNEY arrived in Chicago from Galveston, Tex., having walked the entire distance, 1,346 miles, for a $5,000 wager. She left Galveston May 16. ABRAM FARDON, teller of the First national bank of Paterson, N. J., confessed that he stole $10,650. THE fire which had been burning for three days through the cranberry bogs near Egg Harbor, N. J., was checked by rain. The damage was $250,000. THE wholesale drug house of L. H. Harris in Pittsburgh was destroyed by fire, entailing a loss of $100,000. WILL THOMPSON and Tom Preston, negro boys, were tortured to death by a mob at Gaston, S. C. They were guilty of criminal assault THE Waltham (Mass.) watch factory, second largest of its kind in the world, closed down for an indefinite time.

A PACIFIC Express wagon was held up on the streets of Wichita, Kan., by three negroes and robbed of $7,500. WALTER SANGER clipped five seconds from the world’s mile record in a bicycle race at Milwaukee, covering the ground in 2:08 4-5. IT was claimed that employes of the Northwestern Pacific Elevator company of Minnesota had issued forged duplicate grain certificates and victimized seventy-three New England banks to the extent of $1,500,000. THE Sayles Woolen Mill company at Killingly, Conn., with a capital stock of $1,000,000, made an assignment. GEORGE G. THORNBURG and Charles Asche have brought suit in the Pittsburgh courts for divorce from the same woman. IN accordance with the order of the council of administration the gates of the world’s fair were opened on Sunday. The attendance proved to be the smallest of any day since the fair begun, but 18,637 persons paying for admission. JAMES and Bud Roche, brothers, were shot down without warning by unknown assassins at Groveton, Tex. NINETEEN white cappers were sentenced at Birmingham, Ala., for deeds committed in Cherokee and Clebourne counties. Some got four and others six years. THE visible supply of grain in the United States on the 31st ult. was: Wheat, 59,350,000 bushels; corn, 8,022,000 bushels; oats, 1,702,000 bushels; rye, 294,000 bushels; barley, 359,000 bushels.

BANK failures were reported as follows: First national at Portland, Ore., First national at The Dalles, Ore., Pendleton savings at Pendleton, Ore., Bellingham Bay national at Whatcom, Wash., Springfield savings at Springfield, Mo., Akron savings at Akron, O., private bank of A. Daniels & Co. at Cedar Rapids, Ia., private bank of J. W. Case at Astoria, Ore., and Park national at Livingston, Mont. THE two children of Farmer Langrain, living near Olga, N. D., were burned to death and Langrain and wife badly injured. Kerosene was used to start a fire. GEORGE W. SMITH, a well-known contractor at Rhinelander, Wis., shot and killed his wife and then took his own life. Jealousy was the cause. HANDY KAIGLER, the third and last of the negroes who assaulted the young wife of Archie Sightler at Gaston, S. C., was lynched by a mob. THE Philadelphia Packing & Provision company went into the hands of a receiver with liabilities of over $200,000. A BARN on the farm of James Bunton near La Porte, Ind., was burned, and nine horses and a tramp perished in the flames. THE loss by fire in the United States during the week ended July 29 was $2,835,000, against $1,888,375 during the same time last year. THE Amoskeag mills at Manchester, N. H.. closed down, throwing 8,000 persons out of employment.

IT was estimated that 150,000 men in Chicago were out of employment. THE Cleveland (O.) Rolling Mill company closed its plate, wire and rod mills and steel works, throwing 3,000 men out of employment WILLIAM NONEMACHER, a farmer living near Antigo, Wis., killed his wife and three children and then made an unsuccessful attempt to take his own life. Poverty was the cause. BUYER, REICH & CO., wholesale dealers in fancy goods at San Francisco, suffered a loss of $100,000 by fire. THE Eagle machine works at Indianapolis were placed in the hands of a receiver with liabilities of $100,000. PRAIRIE fires swept over a vast portion of country in Oklahoma territory, doing immense damage. ROBERT P. PORTER, ex-superintendent of the census, has resumed control of the New York Daily Press. STRIKING lumber-shovers at Ashland, Wis., attacked the men who had taken their places and injured them terribly with clubs. THE president appointed Charles B. Morton, of Maine, fourth auditor of the treasury, vice John K. Lynch, of Mississippi, resigned. THE Missouri national bank at Kansas City that failed recently has resumed business. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. GEN. GEORGE W. MORGAN, of Mount Vernon, O., the only surviving general of the Mexican war, died at Fortress Monroe, Va., where he had gone for his health. NANCY QUINBY LAWWILL died at Columbus, O., aged 100 years. W. S. MELLEN, general manager of the Northern Pacific and Wisconsin Central roads, died at Victoria, B C., of heart paralysis. AT the Logan county poor farm near Lincoln, Ill., Grandma Hernon died at the age of 103 years and 5 months. DONALD McNAUGHTON, executive officer of the New York state board, died at the New York state building on the world’s fair grounds, aged 63 years. JOHN STEPHENSON, the famous car builder and builder of the first street car, died at his home near New Rochelle, N. Y., aged 84 years.

FOREIGN. THE steamer Pearl ran into and sunk the steamer Archibald Finney off North Bock, Ireland, and seven persons on the Finney were drowned. A NEW annexation treaty has been drafted by the new provisional government of Hawaii for submission to the United States. IN the British house of commons a hand to hand fight took place over the home rule question and many disgraceful scenes were enacted. IN a spirit of retaliation Germany has decided to put an additional 50 per cent. tax on Russian products imported into Germany. A FIRE which started in Bercy, a suburb of Paris, destroyed thirty houses and did damage to the extent of 4,000,000 francs. KARL SMETANA, a convict at Prague, has confessed to a murder for which John Olkowski is serving a twelve-year sentence in Pennsylvania. ENGLISH coal miners to the number of 350,000 went on a strike, by order of the Miners’ federation in London. THE Siamese government has accepted all the terms of the French ultimatum in order to prevent war. RADICALS have commenced a revolutionary movement in Buenos Ayres and fighting had taken place in twenty towns. THE ravages of cholera in ports of Russia where the disease is now epidemic show a marked increase. LATER. THE public debt statement issued on the 1st showed that the debt increased $4,263,973 during the month of July. The cash in the treasury was $681,756,908. The total debt, less the cash balance in the treasury, amounts to $843,233,449. EMANCIPATION day was observed at various points by the negroes of the United States. THE government receipts for the month of July were $30,905,776.19 and the expenditures $39,675,886.60. In June the receipts were $30,983,921.85 and the expenditures $29,266,451.30. TWO CABINS occupied by Chinese miner in the Taryall gulch in Colorado were burned by white miners and eight Chinese perished in the flames. THE advocates of free coinage of silver met in convention in Chicago with 810 delegates representing forty-two states and territories. A. W. Thurman, of Ohio, presided.

FIVE men were killed and four injured. two fatally, by the explosion of a thrashing engine at the farm of Louis Pierson near Homer, O. The coinage executed at the United States mints during July was very light, being only 2,165,500 pieces, of the value of $391,900. THREE burglars entered the offices of the Newspaper Union in Chicago, bound the watchmen and robbed the safe of $15,000 in notes and $100 in cash. HENRY REYNOLDS, a negro, was lynched near Montgomery, Tex., for murdering a man named Marsh, assaulting his wife and mutilating their two children. THE doors were closed of the Nickel savings bank at Charleston. S. C., the Seven Corners bank at St. Paul, Minn., and the Safety Deposit & Trust company at Denver, Col. THE total amount of national bank notes outstanding on the 1st was $183,655,920, an increase of $5,041,385 during July. WILLIAM BEDECK, a farmer living near Rushville, Mo., paid $4,000 for green paper. He thought he had $15,000 in counterfeit greenbacks. THE 10-year-old son of Charles Johnson, of Arlington, Neb., deliberately murdered his 8-year-old sister by shooting her. THE fall of pork from $19.25 to $10.50 per barrel caused the failure in Chicago of six big board of trade firms. They are: John Cudahy, E. W. Bailey & Co., Wright & Haughey, A. Helmholz & Co., J. G. Steever & Co. and the North American Provision company. The total liabilities were about $4,000,000

OUT OF WORK.

Chicago Reports Fully 150,000 Unemployed Men Within Her Borders, and the Number Growing Larger Daily. CHICAGO; Aug. 1. —Twelve hundred unemployed workingmen reached Chicago Monday from the west. Most of them came in on freight trains. There was not one of the dozen western roads but that carried its quota. These men who are coming to Chicago on these freight trains are silver miners from Colorado, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico and Idaho. All their mines are closed. Utah does not have such an exodus, because it is an agricultural country. Arizona is affected but little, because its mining is largely of copper. All along the line freight trains are black with men coming east. They beat their way, take possession of trains, or in some way get along. Commissioner Allen of the county board offered a resolution in view of the incoming of these miners to the effect that a penalty be provided against railroads for bringing paupers into the county. It was referred to the county attorney to see whether any authority for such could be found in the statutes of Illinois. The close of work at the world’s fair grounds left 40,000 idle men on the market, which was already carrying from 50,000 to 75,000. It is now estimated that no less than 150,000 artisans are walking the streets looking for employment That many of these will suffer for the actual necessities of life this winter seems a certainty, and that their presence in the city is a constant menace to the stability of the labor market appears an equal certainty. TOPEKA, Kan., Aug. 1. —The stream of idle workmen from Colorado continues to pour through Kansas. Reports received by the police department are that a great many depredations have been committed in the towns along the lines of the Santa Fe and Union Pacific railroads. Houses have been broken into and valuables stolen both in the towns and country. ST. LOUIS, Aug. 1. —Sunday night every cell in the police stations was occupied by voluntary prisoners, miners en route from Kansas and Colorado to the cities of the east in the hope of securing work. Over 300 spent the night in the stationhouses, and after breakfast furnished by the officials they left in droves for the east. Trainmen coming from the Missouri river say that there is not a freight train running eastward but carries from twenty-five to fifty tramps. MANCHESTER, N. H., Aug. 1.—The big Amoskeag mills were closed Monday. This is the first suspension of these factories for many years; 8,000 operatives are idle. The Jefferson mills started up again Monday morning, thus giving employment to 1,000 hands who had been idle for two weeks. All the remaining Amoskeag mills are certain to resume work August 28, if not before, but it will be on the basis, it is stated, of a reduction of wages to operatives. It is said that there will be a general reduction of 10 per cent and those receiving better wages than the average will be cut down 15 per cent NEWARK, N. J., Aug. 1. —The proprietors of the Arlington Sand Paper company have announced that until further notice the mills will work but forty hours a week. Until lately they have been very busy. The superintendent said that the condition of the building trade and the stringent money market affected the usual heavy orders for the fall trade. The Arlington Celluloid & Cellonite company will be closed, on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. This company has in its employ between 200 and 300 hands. CLEVELAND, O., Aug. 1.—The Cleveland Rolling Mill comyany has closed its plate, wire and rod mills and steel works, throwing 3,000 men out of ememployment. Lack of orders is the cause, there being no disagreement regarding wages Five hundred men are still at work around the small mills and in putting up a new steel mill. Two hundred more men will be laid off as soon as the present supply of coke at one of their furnaces is exhausted.

CHICAGO’S SALOONS.

Strong Probability That About 3,000 of Them Will Be Closed Up Before January 1. Chicago, Aug. 1. —One thousand of Chicago’s 7,279 saloons will probably close between now and September 1. Unless conditions now existing shall change it is said that 2,000 more will go out of business before January 1. The wholesale reduction in the number of drink resorts will be brought about by the action of the brewers. The majority of them have determined not only to cease paying licenses for saloons, but also to refuse further credit. Thousands of notices to this effect have been sent to saloonkeepers during the last week. To-day the issue of licenses for the three-months period begins. For this license $125 is paid. Aside from the three Anglo-American companies there are thirty-eight or thirty-nine independent breweries in this city. The keen competition for business long ago instituted among the brewers a custom of granting credit of a kind scarcely known in other lines of business. Breweries fitted up saloons for men starting in the business, taking mortgages for the fixtures. They paid the keeper’s license fee and gave him credit for the beer he purcha&d. Last year they generally ceased supplying saloon equipments. To-day they will inaugurate a further tightning of their policy.

Desperate State of Affairs in Pern.

San Francisco, Aug. I.—John Hicks, of Wisconsin, who returns to this country after four years’ service as minister to Peru, says that affairs in Peru are in anything but' an encouraging state, and that the country is all but bankrupt. The silver question has already become a serious problem, and the whole country is in a state of political unrest pending an election of president to succeed the present incumbent Before the elec tions, howevqr, a revolution which is now threatening may throw Peru into internecine war.

SIAM ALARMED.

France Make* a Move Which Create* Vueselnesa In Bangkok—Her Fleet Ha* Been Increased—Notice of a Second Blockade Issued and British Warship* Ordered to Oet Outside of It* Limits. Bangkok, Aug. I.—The uneasiness among the people far from lessening, is increasing. Seven more French gunboats have arrived at Koh-Si-Chang, making a total of thirteen now here. Negotiations are still going on. but the progress made is not reported. The intentions of the French are awaited with fear and apprehension. Rear Admiral Humann, commanding the French squadron, has issued a second blockade notice, to take effect ■ three days from Saturday. He will order the British war ships Pallas and Swift, now lying off Bangkok, to go outside the blockade limits. M. Pavie, the French minister resident, has gone to Saigon and RearAdmiral Humann is under direct orders from Paris. Unless the French government interposes quickly an attack on Bangkok seems certain. The trading community is surprised that Humann Is still allowed a free hand. Paris, Aug. I.—The ambiguous tone of the cabinet in accepting Siam’s surrender has excited much comment It is generally understood that this tone was adopted for the purpose of soothing international susceptibilities. It is stated on high authority that France intends to take decisive steps to insure the Siamese carrying out’ the terms of the ultimatum. The blockade of the Siamese port will be continued, it is said, until France’s demands are satisfied. The French force now in Siamese waters is believed to be sufficient to make the blockade effective. The general opinion here is that the issue of the controversy is a triumph for France over English diplomacy. It is believed in diplomatic circles there will be no disagreement between France and England in the delimination of the frontier. It is also believed that China will not meddle with the matter. London, Aug. I.—lt was learned at the admiralty office that the English government is much puzzled over the latest turn of affairs in Siam, by which France, after having apparently arranged everything with Great Britain on terms most satisfactory to Britain, has declared a new blockade to begin Wednesday. The foreign office’s advices from Bangkok agree with the newspaper telegrams announcing that Admiral Humann has said the new blockade is in obedience to instructions direct from Paris to him. Yet the latest information the foreign office has had through Lord Dufferin is that France has accepted Siam’s terms, and proposed to arrange the details "upon a peace basis. While the foreign office would say nothing officially it was plainly much perplexed over the conduct of France, and fears that this new move is a repetition of that singular conduct of last week, when a blockade was begun without notifying England. Paris, Aug. I.—Lord Dufferin has obtained from the French government assurance that the question of the Shan states will be settled in the manner desired by England. This means that they will be restored to Siam, which had no right to cede them. The embassy is now engaged in active telegraphic communication with the foreign office at London. The Siamese question has for the present no gravity. Siam’s submission is accepted, though ungraciously, and the blockade will not take place. The negotiations with England will probably last some time. A Paris correspondent says it has been learned from good authority that France demands as security from Siam that the terms of the ultimatum shall be carried out at Chantaboon, a town near the Gulf of Siam; also that Siam shall establish no military station at certain named places near the frontier of Cambodia or within a certain distance of the Mekong river.

FUN FOR OLD SOLDIERS.

How the Veterans Will Observe Their Annual Reunion at Indianapolis in September. Indianapols, Ind., Aug. I.—The official programme of the national encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic to be held in this city in September has been issued. It is as follows: Sept I—Reception ot the National Veterans’ association on the Kearsarije. Sept 2—Parade of the naval veterans. Sept 3—Naval veterans at religious services. Sept. 4—Arrival of the G. A. R. and escort to its quarters. Naval Veterans’ association meets at Masonic hall at 10 a. m. In the evening the reception of officers, delegates and distinguished guests of the G. A. R. will be held at Tomlinson halt First night of the electrical and artificial gas displays, which will be continued every night during the encampment. Sept. s—Grand army parade. It will be seven hours in passing a given point The naval veterans and sons of veterans will act as guards of honor. Reunions will be held after the parade. At night the Woman’s Relief Corps will hold a reception at Tomlinson hall. Natural gas display and exhibition of fireworks on the grounds south of the deaf and dumb institute, Sept 6 National encampment meeting at Tomlinson halt The Woman’s Relief Corps meets at Roberts Park church. Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic at Young Men’r Christian Association halt Daughters of Vet eran’s at the Second Presbyterian church. Army corps, division, and brigade reunions will be held. At night camp fires and receptions of the encampment will be held. Sept. 7.—Meetings of the encampment and reunions will be continued. At night, the war pagentry. Sept. B.—Sessions of the national bodies will continue. Tne farewell reception will be held at nigh \

A SHORT CROP.

The Wheat Fields of England Yield

. Poorly. London, Aug. I.—The Mark Lane Express, in its weekly review of the British grain trade, says: “W here the wheat crop is bad, it is very bad. Where it is good, it is barely good. The average yield is not expected to exceed 27 bushels to the acre, which will make a total of 7.087,500 quarters, against 8,000,000 quarters in 1892 The growth of root crops, including potatoes, has been highly favorable lately. The cool, showery weather has been advantageous only to oats and barley in backward districts. There will probably be a fair second hay crop and an improvement in the pastures. There is a reduced demand in the market for all sorts of feeding •tuffs.”

“My trouble began with Inflammatory rheuxna- / W dsm tn my left leg abov» 1— X the knee. As a result of W ■gk at poulticing a running sore formed, and I was In terrible condition. I wm obliged to walk with • jL crutch. I bought Hood's jjFOgL ./Ms. Sarsaparilla, and soon MP after I began taking It * charging and healed up, I threw away my cane and crutch and can walk as well as ever.” Charles W. Haueb, 28 W. Patrick Street, Frederick, Md. Hood’s Pills Cure Sick Headache. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, HASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula I 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. J Unequalled J TRAIN ISIfF 5 J SERVICE MO® f Lfrom . . . ft 3 CHICAGO J VLa BUFFALO 3|_ NEW YORK | 1 A boston -- Z L -X- < > and 7 g W Intermediate ■ TOURIST O points 2 2 TICKETS O 0 •• 2 3' —) to the J E fggghfc/ EASTERN RE- B K ■ ’ SOB,TS now an I ■ faSgWjQg ) sale. Send for B C 0 ? Hst of routes and rates. A SOSS A.J. SMITH, C.K. WILBER, T r (o. r. * ru. *.t., w«.t r»- Act., ■ L ) CLKVIUAND. CIUCAtiO. y USE WASHBURN-CROSBY’S GOLD MEDAL FLOUR. thWEftv 118 w Waterproof IWggpw Coat WORLD! | SUCKER The FISH BRAND SLICKER is warranted water proof, and will keep you dry in ths hardest storm. The new POMMEL SLICKER is a perfect riding coat, and corers the entire saddle. Bewareof imitations. Don't bu; a coat if tho “Fish Brand" Is noton it. Illustrated Catalogue free, A. J. TOWER, Boston, Mass. . fyilefleans Positively cure Bilious Attacks, Constipation, Sick-Jleadache, etc. 25 cents per bottle, at Drug Write for sample dose, free. J.F. SMITH & Cb./ nr, "New York. DO HOT BE DECEIVED iMI with Pastes, Enamels, and Paints which stains the hands, injure the iron, and burn red. The lUslng Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor-1 less, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tins or glass package with every purchase. - c QFrom 1S to SS lb, IijSSW/F.n* month. Harm jf/4,i/Cn* w Im treatment (by prac- Wjr R tlcing phrncian). No,tarring. z/S RADFIELD’S female REGULATOR Br V bas proven an infallible specific for all derangemeats peculiar to the K tew * csne l®Bex,suclia3chronie and ovarian di»r sF eases> If taltcn in time it wW re C“late3 and promotes I z'7\ J 'S) is® Wealthy action of all funoB // / I J) tlons of tJie Generative rmiHrtl 'fa JI organs. Young Indies at the age of puberty, and pause, will find in ft a healing, soothing tonic. The highest recommendations from prominent -physicians and those who have tried it write for book “To Women," mailed free. Sold