People's Pilot, Volume 3, Number 22, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 November 1893 — Page 2

The People’s Pilot BENSSELAER. : : INDIANA.

The News Condensed.

Important Intelligence From All Parts. DOMESTIC. There were 1,894 arrests for different offenses at Jackson park during the world’s fair, as follows; Smoking, 24; disorderly conduct 709; drunkenness, 156; pocket-picking, 162; jumping the fence, 382; theft, 240; and miscellaneous, 371 . - Six men were killed by the cars at Sedalia, Mo. Francis H. Weeks, the New York lawyer who plead guilty to the embezzlement of over a million dollars from various estates intrusted to his care, was sent to prison for ten years. Street traffic was seriously interfered with in Chicago by a dense fog and heavy smoke and artificial light had to be used at noon. Nearly 1,500,000 persons paid to ride in the Ferris wheel during the world’s fair. It earned 3150,000 for stockholders above" all debts. A negrq named Bob Kennedy was captured at Gaffney, 8. C., by a mob and hanged. His crime was attempted assault John 8. Johnson again broke the world’s bicycle record at Independence, la., going his mile, dying start, in 1:55 3-5. In a rear-end collision on the Rock Island road at Eggleston, a Chicago auburb, four persons were killed and thirty-three were injured, some fatally. Louis Floyd, who, with his brother Frank, robbed the Bank of Minneapolis at Minneapolis, Minn., of 390,000, was arrested in New York. At Moberly, Ma, the Wabash “can-non-ball” train was wrecked and Fireman Malone was killed and Engineer Robinson fatally hurt Mrs. Martin O’Neill, of Buffalo, N., Y., died of heart disease while sitting "between her two children in the ladies’ room of the Union depot in Chicago. In a railway wreck at Hutto, Tex, fire broke out in the mail car and 2,000 letters were burned. Peter Barker, once a wealthy man, was arrested at Kansas City for snatching women’s pocketbooks on crowded streets. Two standing starts world bicycle records, the two-thirds and full mile, were broken by Johnson at Independence, la., he going the mile in 1:58 1-5 and the two-thirds in 1:21. It was announced that Secretary Carlisle had perfected plans to stop the making of any more silver dollars. Henry Bogue, a negro who took part in the murder of N. J. Duncan at Lake City Junction, Fla., was shot to death by a mob. Stephen, Michael and Mary L. Toole, Bged respectively 31, 21 and 30, were under arrest in Boston charged with killing their mother and sister with poison. J. J. Arnold, ex-county treasurer of Niagara county, and ex-cashier of the Merchants’ bank, was in jail at Lockport, N. Y., charged with embezzling 3100,000. Joseph Funk and Mrs. Ada Brown were run down by a freight train and killed near St Joseph, Mo. Carter H. Harrison’s will was filed In the probate court in Chicago by a son. The estate is estimated at 3960,000. The drop of the treasury balance in Washington below 3100,000,000 was interesting the officials of that department The barns of the North Side Street Car company in Chicago were destroyed by fire, the loss being 3100,000. Flying Jib paced a mile in 2:06% and Directum trotted a mile in 2:08 at the Hartford (Conn.) track. Four lives were lost by a collision on the Hocking Valley road near Fostoria, O.

Congressman Oates, of Alabama, calls Editor Hawkins, of St Louis, hard names in a letter and wants to fight John Dossett, of Guthrie, O. T., Is the first man ever sentenced to be hanged in Oklahoma. At the seventy-fifth annual session in Minneapolis, Minn., of the general missionary committee of the Methodist Episcopal church it was decided to spend $150,000 for mission work the ensuing year. Annoyed by a persistent collector at Duluth, Minn., Sam Johnson seized him and painted him a fiery red. Two moee victims of the Rock Island wreck at Eggleston, a Chicago suburb, have died, making a total of six. There were 361 business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 10th, against 858 the week previous and 210 in the corresponding time in 1892. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 10th aggregated <982,853,717, against $1,050,712,065 the previous week. The decrease, compared with the corresponding week in 1892, was 20.8. Louis T. Menage, the absconding president of the Northwestern Guaranty Loan company at Minneapolis, is said to have stolen $1,650,800. John D. Rockefeller made his fourth gift to the university of Chicago. Its amount is $500,000. With his previous donations this makes Mr. Rockefeller’s gifts to the university $3,250,<OO. It was reported that settlers west of the Montezuma valley in Colorado had • collision with the Navajo Indians, killing four of them. Secretary of State Gresham made public a state paper addressed to President Cleveland informing aim that the overthrowal of Queen Liliuokalani of Hawaii was brought about by such an abuse of the authority of the United States, and by such “force and fraud,” that nothing short of a restoration of the qneen to her throne would satisfy j the demand* of justice. !

The World’s Columbian exposition received at the gates up to November 1 310,576,208. There is now in the treasury 32,153,128, not including souvenir coins. The situation of the miners in Iron county, Wis., was said to be deplorable, and they had petitioned to Gov. Peck. Illinois ranks second in postal receipts and third in presidential post offices, according to the annual report. Mureo Murdoc, proprietor of the Egyptian village at the world’s fair, was robbed of $5,000 at Brooklyn, N. Y. Miller Davis, convicted of murdering Sheriff Dollerhide near Chapel Hill, October 23, was hanged at Center Point, Ark. The Middletown (O.) Paper company assigned with liabilities of about 3200,000. The home of Louis Long at Stanchfield, Minn., was burned, and his wife and one child perished in the flames. County Treasurer Cashman, of Greeley Center, Neb., was said to be short in county funds between 320,000 and 325,000. Senator S. Parker, of Toledo, 0., was found dead at his home with his heart broken, literally as well as figuratively broken, for the organ was rent in twain. Grief over a son’s misdeeds was the cause. The price of admission to the world’s fair grounds has been reduced to twen-ty-five cents. Five masked men held up an Illinois Central train near Bardwell, Ky., and robbed the express car of some 37,000. At Riverton, Ala, Mrs. Davis and her daughter were killed by a masked robber, who was then shot by a son. B. Perry Collins, of Washington, and J. Salmon, of New York, were asphyxiated in a St Louis hotel. The Honduras government has apologized for firing on the American flag and Uncle Sam is satisfied therewith. E. P. Bernard, aged 80, of Yates Center, Kan., tired of life, killed his wife, daughter and himself. Foreign commissioners to the world’s fair united in giving a banquet in Chicago to Director General Davis, for whom all had words of praise. Warren F. Putnam, president of the National erranite bank of Exeter, N. H., was arrested on the charge of embezzling 330,000. Representatives of Corbett and Mitchell have agreed to their fighting at Jacksonville, Fla., January 4, 1894. At Middletown. 0., the Gunekel Banking company assigned with liabili-. ties of 3200,000. The entire rolling mill plant of the Whittaker Iron and Steel company at Wheeling, W. Va., was destroyed by fire, the loss being 3100,000. Pansy McGregor, in the 2:25 trot at Holton, Kan., broke the yearling record, making the distance in 2:25%. The wife of Adam Bright, a farmer near Troy, 0., who was beaten out of $4,500 by gold brick swindlers, died from the shock produced by the lass. The chief of the Osage nation in Oklahoma issued an edict ordering all negroes to leave the reservation in thirty days. At Utica, 111., the Fire Brick company plant was destroyed by fire, the loss being 3200,000. Frank Knox, aged over 100 years, an ex-slave who had been a barber in Liberty, Ind., for a great many years, was found dead in bed.

The Academy of Music and other property was burned at Fort Wayne, Ind., the total loss being 3100,000. The fury of a Bardstown (Ky.) mob ended in blowing up the home of Phil Evans, a colored criminal, killing his mother, wife and daughter. James E. White, general superintendent of the railway mail service, in his annual report says there were handled during the year 10,236,314,915 pieces of mail matter. This is an increase over 1888 of 49.68 per cent. Amused at the remark of a young man, Miss Bertha Pruett, of Philadelphia, laughed until seized with a fatal hemorrhage. The visible supply of grain in the United States on the 13th was: Wheat, 74,067,000 bushels; corn, 8,042,000 bushels; oats, 4,747,000 bushels: rye, 567,000 bushels; barley, 3,208,000 bushels. Van Roberts, living near Rush Hill, Ma, has fallen heir to a 3600,000 fortune left to him by John Bennett, who died at Las Vegas, N. M. Twenty years ago Roberts saved Bennett from drowning near Decatur, 111. An epidemic of influenza prevails in Cleveland, O. A displaced manhole cover wrecked a crowded Milwaukee avenue grip-car in Chicago and fourteen persons were injured. For the ten months ended October 31 last the reduction in the value of exports of breadstuffs and provisions, compared with the same period in 1892, was respectively $42,487,957 and 321,457,493.

Ambrose and Joseph Smith were killed near Mount Pincon, Ala., while resisting arrest on the charge of trespassing. As the result of a quarrel Herman Schank, of Milwaukee, shot and killed his wife Lizzie and then killed himself. Mrs. Lydia Youngs died at her home at Stillman Valley, IIL, aged 93. She had resided on the same farm fiftyfive years and never saw a train of cars. John Connors, for seven years custodian of stolen property for the police department of Chicago and with an office in the city hall, is a self-confessed embezzler of the funds intrusted to his charge. Several lives were believed to have been lost in a conflagration in Memphis, Tenn., which caused $500,000 damages. Three 1 men attempted to hold up a train near Lincoln, 111 They were driven off after shooting Brakeman Trott. Henry Boggs, a negro charged with murder at Lake City, Fla, was captured by a mob, his eyes gouged out and pieces of flesh cut from his body, after which he was shot to death. The new United States cruiser Columbia arrived in Boston harbor from Delaware breakwater, her run at sea f>eing the quickest ever made by a war vessel in this country, beating the New York’s time over two hours.

Justice Blatchfobd’s memory was honored by the supreme eonrt in Washington. Justice Fuller and Attorney General Olney pronounced eulogies PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. New Jersey's redistricting law of 1891 was declared unconstitutional. Legislators shall be chosen by counties, it is held. Francis Parkman, the eminent historian, died from peritonitis at Jamaica Plain. Mass. He was 70 years old. Further returns from the election in Nebraska show that the entire republican ticket was elected. In Kansas the republicans were also successful. Prof. Herman August Hagen, o Harvard college, one of the greatest scientists in the world, died in Boston, aged 76 years. Maj. William Lawbence Poole, of New Orleans, the oldest editor in the United States, died at the age of 90. His journalistic career began in 1823. Judge Richard Parker, of Winchester, Va., died in the 83d year of bis age. He was noted for having presided at the trial of John Brown and his men at Charleston. Charles H. Bell, ex-governor and ex-United States senator of New Hampshire, and a historian and author of reputation, died at Exeter, aged 70. Prof. William L. Shoup, who had a national reputation as an author of text books, died at Dubuque, la. Dr. David Judkins, chief of Lincoln’s medical staff during the war, died at Cincinnati. He was 77 years old. Mrs. Orville H. Platt, wife of the Connecticut senator, died in Washington from paralysis, aged 63 years. FOREIGN. During a performance at the Lyceum theater in Barcelona, Spain, two bombs were thrown from the gallery by anarchists and one of them exploded, killing twenty-three persona An immense number were also injured, both by the explosion and by the panic which followed and, several more would die. Admiral Mello, leader of the Brazilian rebels, resumed the bombardment of Rio. Further advices say that of the twenty-eight persons on the steamer John Frazer, burned an Lake Nipissing, Canada, only seven were saved. Annie Pixley, the famous actress, died in London of brain fever. She was a native of Brooklyn, N. Y., and wife of Robert Fulford. A workman named Metzgar and an innkeeper named Übeluem were executed at Berlin for the murder and robbery of Herr Grunbaum, a cattle dealer.

Fifteen cities near central Cuba have declared against Spanish rule and are in open rebellion against the government. An explosion of ether at Breslitovsk. a town of Russian Poland, killed twenty persons. Mrs. J. Roosevelt, wife of the secretary of the United States embassy and daughter of the late William Astor, died in London. Eugene Turpin, the discoverer of melinite, has invented a machine to combat the effects of tornadoes and cyclones. Ben Hyams, a well-known English bookmaker, was dragged at a Liverpool hotel and robbed of SIO,OOO. Paris has decided to hold a world’s fair in 1900. Floods in the southwestern portion of Japan caused the death of 1,557 persons, the destruction of 3,908 houses and the wrecking of 577 vessels. Rev. "Dr. Morrison, founder of the Scotch Evangelical church; died in Glasgow. LATER. The schoolhouse at Coopersville. N. Y., was destroyed by fire, and Miss May Porter, the teacher, and Willard Johnson, a little boy were burned to death. The Coal and Iron bank, the last bank in Middleboro, Ky., closed its doors. Champion James J. Corrett and “Charley” Mitchell have agreed to fight before the Duval Athletic club in Jacksonville, Fla., January 25. The business portion of the town of Portland, Ark., was wiped out by fire. W. A. Beane, proprietor and editor of the Goshen (Ind.) Democrat, dropped dead on the street from heart disease while on his way to his office. With all but two counties official the majority for Gov. McKinley, of Ohio, stands at 81,187. A hurricane blew over the Frischeflaff, an extensive bay in East Prussia, and many fishing boats were lost and eighteen persons were drowned. Weiss & Goldstein, of Greenville, Miss., shoe dealers, failed for 3300,000,

Joe Kirksey, Will "Weiss and Bob McKinney were killed by an explosion in a lumber mill near Beaumont, Tex., and three other men were fatally injured. By guessing within sixty-nine of the total attendance at the world’s fair F. M. Cowan, of Flushing, 0., won a gold-plated gun. Masked men took D. T. Nelson, a negro murderer, from the Varner (Ark.) jail, riddled him with bullets and burned his body. The women white caps at Osceola, Neb., who flogged several girls three weeks ago, were fined for unlawful assembly. In an unofficial trial off Boston the new cruiser Columbia made the unprecedented speed of 22.87 knots an hour. Herman and Otto Habeck, of Wein, Wis.. admit that they killed their drunken father at the instance of their mother. The Thurber- Whyland company, wholesale grocers in New York city, failed for SBOO,OOO. John Johnson (colored) was electrocuted at Auburn, N. Y., for the unprovoked murder of two fellow convicts. John Palmer, the inventor of the baggage check, died at Union City, Mich., aged 85 years. The “Little Red House” at Lenox, Mass., in which Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote “Tanglewood Tales, “The House of Seven Gatles,” and other stories, is to be restored. It was destroyed by fire some time ago. /

HUNDREDS LOST.

Awful Ravages of Recent Floods in Japanese Provinces. Beaidea Destroying Nearly 4,000 House, and Wrecking Over SOO Veaaela, More Than 1,500 Persons Lost Their Lives. WOE IN JAPAN. San Francisco, Nov. 16.—Further details have been received of frightful loss of life and tremendous destitution by the floods in the southern and middle provinces of Japan. Following are the returns of the outcome of the inundation up to October 21: Deaths, 1,557; persons missing, 627; vessels wrecked, 577; houses entirely destroyed, 3,908. The greatest loss of life reported up to date is 950 in the province of In aba. At Okayama nearly 1,400 houses were destroyed. At Oita 144 vessels were wrecked, but Ehime exceeds this number by twenty more. In the flood at Oita 300 persons were drowned. Fortyfour fishing boats foundered off the western coast during a typhoon, and all their occupants were lost, numbering 142 men. At Minomua the water attained a height of 30 feet, sweeping away many houses. It was still worse in the neighboring prefect of Ekayema, where at Kawabe the river rose 18 feet and broke down a great embankment, carrying away >2OO houses. About 100 persons are unaccounted for. The police station was demolished and the chief killed. Going northward, the storm beat with violence on the island of Sado, where it broke to pieces ' six vessels in the port of Yebisu and nine others at Suisu, whereby four | seamen lost their lives. Before going so far northward it touched at Toya-ma-Ken and carried away forty-eight houses. At the Cify of Toyama eighty houses were carried away and over 1,000 are under water. The Yoshino yose 27 feet in Tokusshima-Ken, and many houses were demolished. In Kawabe and the neighborhood 400 houses were carried away and the fate of over 200 persons is as yet uncertain, while a similar number. of houses have been swept away at Kuboya. Up to the present the report of the greatest loss of life so far as actually known comes from Futakata-Gun, in Hyogo-Ken. where a mountain side gave way, burying two villages and killing fifty persons. At Misumi, in Kumamotoken, 120 vessels were shattered to splinters, but the number of men drowned has not been ascertained. The wharf at Oita harbor is half destroyed and a majority of the houses are demolished. Thirty large junks have been cast ashore and damaged, and Mount Takaski gave way inflicting further serious damage. The Tsurusakigaiva river burst its batiks and carried many houses to sea. In all sections innumerable bodies of men and cattle are to be seen in heaps. At Moji twenty-four vessels foundered. Off Tanowia seven others were wrecked, and the crews were seen clinging to the topmasts and crying for help, but no help could be given and they sank into the sea. The total number of vessels wrecked in that neighborhood cannot be much under seventy. At Kawabe water rose 18 feet and embankments were burst in ten places. The total number of houses carried away at Kawabe and other villages is about 400, and the fate of over 200 persons is uncertain. From reports the neighborhood of Tamajima appears to have suffered terribly. Embankments have been burst in Kayo and Kuboya districts, in the latter of which 400 houses were carried away. At Osaka sixty or seventy junks and fishing boats foundered. At the port of Tanoura sixteen junks were smashed to pieces. At Nagasaki eighteen or twenty junks went ashore and most of i them are broken beyond repair. The Mitsu Bishi collieries alone have lost eleven junks sunk and nineteen darn- : aged, and at the mines seven sunk and five damaged. About twenty cargo ' boats have also been lost. Reported i loss of life is thirty, but this is not yet ' confirmed. The Abot volcano of Mount Mazon, in extreme southeast of Luzon, Philippine islands, was in a violent state of eruption from October sto 11. On the evening of the sth lava and ashes commenced to pour forth without intermission from the left outlet of mountains. On the following day streams of lata and ashes increased in volume and alarming subterrannean noises were heard. The hamlet of Bunqueroham was in danger of being overwhelmed by a lava stream flowing down the mountain. Inhabitants both there and all over the neighborhood hurried away with whatever property they could. The volcano continued to belch forth its fiery stream until October 11 when eruption ceased. No casualties j are reported.

TRIBESMEN PUNISHED.

Spanish Cruisers and Forts Fire on the Moors at Night. Melilla, Nov. 16. —At 11 o’clock Sunday night the electric search lights of the Spanish cruisers Alfonso XII., Conde de Venadito and Melilla suddenly illuminated the whole country around, taking the Moors by surprise. A terrible cannonade was opened by the warships and the forts at the same moment. The terrified Moors could be seen running about like madmen seeking shelter in the caves. Many were killed.

Augusta Exposition Open.

Augusta, Ga., Nov. 16.—The Augusta exposition and the Georgia state fair w’ere opened formally here Tuesday. Fifty thousand people witnessed the procession of military, civic bodies and the firemen. In the building is a fine agricultural display of south ern products, the state of Georgia and South Carolina participating. In the industrial, mechanical and electrical departments nearly all the states and eight nations are represented, while among the attractions are some of the features from the Midway Plaisance al the world’s fair. President Patrich Walsh delivered the opening address.

A TRUE HEROINE.

la Trying to gave » Pupil a SchoolmUtresa Is Burned to Death. Nunda, N. Y.. Nov. 16 —The little school-house at Coopersville, a village 2 miles north of here, caught fire Tuesday afternoon and was totally destroyed. The teacher, May Porter, and a little boy, Willard Johnson, were caught by the flames and burned to death. Before she died Miss Porter braved death in a most horrible form to save her pupils, and it was in making a hopeless effort to rescue the boy Johnson, the last one in the building, that she lost her life. There were twenty scholars in the school Tuesday morning, and they were all at their studies shortly after the noon recess when the building was discovered in flames. The house was a frame structure, lightly built, and the fire spread with awful rapidity. | The children were panic-stricken and rushed up to the teacher’s desk, screaming and begging her to save them. So sudden was the outbreak of the flames that the teacher was for a moment paralyzed with fear. Burdened : with the struggling children, many of whom clung to her dress, she could not [ for a moment move. She recovered her presence of mind quickly, however, and began to tight her way to the door, around which the flames were already creeping. As she j reached it she saw that escape by that direction was impossible. The only j way to save the children was to I drop them out of the windows. Two of the biggest boys, Mulvin and Charley Chambers, dropped out of the window, and to them Miss Porter passed the children. One by one they were dropped out All the time the flames raged about her and the room was black with smoke, which almost stifled her.

She could easily have abandoned her pupils and saved her own life by jumping out of the window, but she remained inside heroically until all had been passed except the boy Johnson. The Chambers boys say that the iittle fellow was panic-stricken and struggled as Miss Porter stepped backward to pick him up. She was surrounded by fire, and flames were leaping from the window through which she had already passed seventeen children. Mulvin Chambers clambered up on the window sill to help her, but was driven back by the flames. He saw her with the Johnson boy in her arms. He climbed up again and saw her tatce a step forward. A great whirl of fire swept arcAmd her, and she stumbled. She made one more effort, and, as the flames drove the boy back from the window, he saw her fall, with the Johnson boy in her arms, into the very heart of the fire, and the nineteen children stood there and saw the schoolhouse reduced to ashes. The district is sparsely settled and it was some time before aid arrived. When it did come there was nothing left but the smoldering ruins. When the news of the Are once got started it traveled rapidly, and in a short time the parents of nearly all the children were gathered at the spot nearly mad with anxiety. Willing hands tore away the ruins, and in a few hours the bodies of Miss Porter and the Johnson boy were found within a yard of where the window was. They were burned beyond recognition, but the larger frame held close in its twisted and blackened arms a little body.

ELECTROCUTED.

John Johnson, the Convict Murderer, Dies in the Electric Chair. Aururn, N. Y., Nov. 16.—John Johnson, the colored convict murderer, was executed in the electric chair in the prison at 12:40 p. m. Tuesday. He walked to his death calmly and his nerve did not desert him. The execution was a success. Johnson was known as the “Blue Nigger from Clyde.” He had been a criminal for years and had been sent up for various crimes many times. April 17 last, without excuse or warning and simply while in a fit of ill temper, Johnson ran through the broomshop of the prison and began slashing right and left among the convicts with a broomknife. He stabbed Charles Peck to the heart and slashed Daniel Britton in , the abdomen, death resulting in two hours. Several others were badly cut before the convict was disarmed.

LOST MONEY ON HIS WHEEL.

Inventor Ferris’ Dividends Do Not Pa, Cost in Excess of Contract Price. Pittsburgh, Pa., Nov. 16.—The Ferris Wheel company has paid the stockholders 22 per cent on their investment The surprising information is also made public that George W. Ferris, the originator of the big Plaisance attraction, has lost money on the wheel, together with the construction company that built it The construction company only received $300,000 for building the wheel, while the actual cost was $362,000. Therefore Mr. Ferris and the construction company are out $62,000, while the Ferris Wheel company, which operated the wheel during the fair, made a good profit on their Investment.

Place for Ben Harrison’s Brother.

Washington, Nov. 16. —President Cleveland has appointed J. Scott Harrison to be surveyor of customs for Kansas City. Mr. Harrison is a brother of ex-President Benjamin Harrison. He is a democrat in polities.

Says She Isn't a Murderess.

Marshalltown, la., Nov. 16.—After two extensions of time in which to plead, Mrs. Emily Bennett,who was arraigned for tiie murder of Miss Anna Wiesse, entered a plea of not guilty through her counsel Tuesday. She was remanded to jail to await trial at the January term of court, which convenes January 8.

Dropped Dead While Praying.

Monticello, N. Y., Nov. 16.—Joseph Osterhout, a retired farmei, dropped dead in a Methodist revival meeting here. Monday night while engaged in prayer.

Mr. Im R. Fretz In Misery With Dyspepsia Distress in the Stomach-* Tired and Nervous “New York City, June 22, 1893. “ I was in misery with dyspepsia. Sometime* I had no appetite, and when I did eat a hearty meal I felt much distsess for hours after. I did not seem to have any ambition: was restless at night, and in the morning tired and nervous. My digestion was irregular and unsatisfactory. My wife urged me to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla,, and the result is that I ha re Never Feit Better In all my life than now. I have gained nine pounds, and am free from all dyspeptic symptoms, I can eat a hearty meal with a good relish.” Louis R. Fretz, 1734 Amsterdam Ave. Hood’s Pills are prompt and efficient, yet: easy in action. Sold by all druggists. 25c. “German Syrup” I am a fanner at Edom, Texas. I have used German Syrup for six years successfully for Sore Throat,. Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Pains in. Chest and Lungs and Spittipg-up of Blood. I have tried many kinds of: Cough Syrups in my time, but let me say to anyone wanting such a. medicine —German Syrup is the best. We are subject to so many sudden changes from cold to hot, damp, weather here, but in families where German Syrup is used there is little trouble from colds. John F. Jones. ®

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