People's Pilot, Volume 3, Number 35, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 February 1894 — Page 2
The People’s Pilot RENSSELAER. « : INDIANA-
The News Condensed.
Important Intelligence From All Parts. CONGRESSIONALRegular Session. The bill that passed the house to repeal the federal election tews was passed in the senate on the 7th by a vote of 39 to 28....1n the house the McCreary resolution condemning Minister Stevens and sustaining the Hawaiian policy of Mr. Cleveland was adopted by a vote of 175 to 57. Senator Perkins presented memorials in the senate on the Bth of the San Francisco chamber of commerce praying for the annexation of Hawaii. Senator Wolcott (Col.) presented a resolution providing for the submission of a constitutional amendment prohibiting the states from denying suffrage to any person on account of sex. A memorial of the wool growers against the Wilson bill was presented by Senator Sherman.... In the house tho deadlock on Mr. Bland's silver seigniorage bill was broken after hours of continuous filibustering, when, by a vote of 176 to 4, Mr. Bland's motion to go into committee of the whole for consideration of his bill was carried. In the senate no business was transacted on the 10ih....The entire day in the house was consumed in the debate on the Bland silver seigniorage bilL The senate was not in session on the 10th ... In the house resolutions of respect to the memory of the late Representative Houk, of Ohio, were adopted and an adjournment was taken. On the 12lh the Hawaiian controversy occupied the greater part of the time of the senate. Senator Gallinger (N. H.) introduced a substi tute for the Wilson tariff bill which declares that in view of the widespread industrial depression it is tho sense of the senate that it is unwise to attempt any change in the tarllT 1aw5....1n the house a bill authorizing the oxtime for the construction of the high wagon bridge across the Missouri river at Sioux City, la., was passed. The urgency deficiency bill was also passed and a message was received from the president transmitting additional correspondence in the Hawaiian matter. DOMESTIC. In a fight near Warm Spring's, Va., between officers and moonshiners two of the former and two of the latter were killed. Judge J. W. Proctor, of Glenwood, Fla., was married to Miss Elizabeth Maddox, of Athens, Ga. They had courted by correspondence and had never seen each other. As William Purvis was swung off the scaffold at Columbia. Miss., the rope broke, and the sheriff refused to hang Tim again. Peter Degraff was hanged at Winston, N. C., for murdering his sweetheart, Ellen Smith. The Kansas supreme court decided that Gov. Lewelling had no authority to remove Mrs. Mary E. Lease from the state board of charity. Frederick Marvin, cashier of the Third national bank at Detroit, Mich., has flea He was said *o be SIOO,OOO short in his accounts. At San Francisco the schooner Bangor arrived fifteen days from Honolulu. The captain of the Bangor reports everything quiet at Honolulu. New York anarchists placarded the houses of Depew, Vanderbilt, Astor and other rich men with warnings written in Latin. Frequent post office robberies in Ohio and Indiana lead the government inspectors to think an organized gang is at work. A cyclone swept over the northwestern portion of Mississippi and plantations were devastated, farmhouses were wrecked and the debris scattered over the country for miles around. Several persons were injured and one woman killed. Many persons were hurt, much property destroyed and a negro child killed by a cyclone at Port Hudson. La.
Profane language is to be penalized by the National Baseball league. Gold is reported to have been found in rich deposit on a farm 2 miles from Portland, Ind. Statistics issued from the census office show that the farmers are the most prosperous class iD the whole country. In the New York legislature the bill submitting the proposition to annex Brooklyn and other Long Island towns to the city of New York was passed by the assembly. Phe publishers of Godey’s Magazine made an assignment in New York. Godey’s Magazine, which was formerly called Godey’s Ladies’ Book, is one of the oldest publications in tne United States, being sixty-four years old. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 9th aggregated *868,216,856, against *768,522,347 the previous week. The decrease, compared with the corresponding week in 1898, was 29.0. The entire plant of the Ute Pass works at Colorado City, Col., was burned, the loss being SIOO,OOO. Edwabd Benson, aged 16, while playing at “hanging” was strangled to death at Jackson. Tenn. The Indian school building at Pine Bidge agency was destroyed by fire. Only $69 of the assets of the Exchange bank of Seville, 0., could be found by the sheriff. It had $50,000 deposits. Thebe were 385 business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 9th, against 336 the week previous and 222 in the corresponding time in 1893. John W. Love, the president of Watkins, N. Y., and cashier of the First national bank, absconded with $50,000 of the funds of the bank. J. Clayton, living in Cumberland county, Ky., was tortured by robbers until he revealed where SI,BOO was hid den. Rev. John Dingledey was convicted of cruelty to inmates of an orphan’s home at Richmond, Ind., and fined *6OO. , Jack Phince, bicyclist, beat a horse In a 10-mile race at Jacksonville, Fla. John Habt. convicted of killing his two sisters at Bockford, 111, was sentenced by Judge Shaw to be hanged on Friday, March 16. James Boss, aged 38 years, attempted 4* Irill his wife and mother-in-law at Pittsburgh, Pa., and then committed suicide. Domestic trouble was the
A masked man held np a passenger train near Carson. Nev., and in the express car secured a box of ,coin containing $2,000. The Sigua Iron company of Philadelphia failed for $1,000,000. Henry Renken was said to have embezzled $15,000 from the 1' ariners’ and Merchants’ bank of Talmage, Neb., recently suspended. Henry Bruce, Charley Plunkett and Bob Plunkett were lynched in the Gulch country in Arkansas for the murder of an aged couple The house of Bert Croman, together with his two small children, was burned at Light Street, near Bloomburg, Pa. Henry Snodkrly, aged 91, one of the wealthiest farmers of Union county, Tenn., and his wife, aged 70, were murdered ia their bed by two burglars. At the annual meeting in Topeka, Kan., of the National Farmers’ Alliance Marion Butler, of North Carolina, was elected president. Resolutions were adopted denouncing Secretary Morton as an enemy to the welfare of the American farmers, and therefore to the general welfare of the countryThieves secured the combination of the safe in the poolroom of John Payne at Covington, Ky., and robbed it of $1,400 in cash. A blaze in the Colt Firearm factory at Hartford, Conn., destroyed about 5150,000 worth of property. Mike Gorman, wanted for stealing $12,000 from the United States Express company at Sutersville, Pa., was caught in Ohio. Henry McCray (negro) was taken from a train and hanged by a mob near Knoxville, Tenn., for assault upon Mrs. Sallie Taylor. Two brothers are said to have lived at Acme, W. Va., for forty years on charity. The schooner Samuel 11. Walker that sailed out of Baltimore December 15, bound for Weymouth, Mass., was reported lost with its crew of nine men. A negro named Collins was flayed alive by white caps at Athens, Ga. lie was accused of enticing away servants. The livery stables of W. O. Jones were burned at Atlanta, Ga., the loss being 5100,000. The 1,500 employes of the Washington mills at Lawrence, Mass., struck against a reduction in wages. Flames among tobacco warehouses at Henderson, Ky., caused a loss of $200,000. M. 11. McDonald bnd T. P. Searls resorted to firearms to settle a quarrel at Rush Springs, Kan., and both were fatally injured. Miscreants made four attempts to fire the world's fair buildings. Government reports indicate 92 per cent, of the cotton crop has been sold. The yield was hardly up to average. The board of trade building at Duluth, Minn., was entirely destroyed by fire, the loss being SIOO,OOO. Mrs. Heiirat, of Bonne Terre, Mo., locked her two children in and left the house, and the home and children were burned. Planters of the lower Mississippi valley will import German labor to supplant the negroes, who are unreliable. Malvern Cresswortu, a mining man, claims to have found a deserted city in an unvisited section of Mexico. Lou Ff.hrman was shot and killed by her husband, Charles, at Milwaukee, who then cut his throat.
Jacob and Bobcrt Wilgus and Reuben Conna were drowned in the Ohio river between Uniontown and Shawneetowu in trying to cross in a skiff during a high wind. Twenty indictments for swindling were found against James Thompson and Jesse Arnold, bankers at Columbia City, Ind. Joseph Reindkau was found in the woods near Concord, N. 11., and two persons arrested for killing him were released. The six elevators of the Farmers’ Mutual Elevator company at Crookston, Minn., went into the bands of a receiver with liabilities of $240,000 and assets of $200,000. The government forces in Brazil killed many insurgents in a battle and captured hosts of prisoners. It is estimated 52,795,503 cattle, 45,206,498 hogs and 45,048,017 sheep were in farmers’ hands on January 1. A schooneb ran ashore in a blizzard near Race Point, Mass., and five of the crew were lost Expkbts claim that the ore found on the farm of M. W. Carpenter near Brazil, Ind., is rich with silver and gold. The steamer Roanoke, from Milwaukee to Grand Haven, was probably lost. She had twelve passengers and a crew of eighteen. ' V The 85th anniversary of the birth of Abraham Lincoln was observed in many portions of the country. A Stobm. which was almost unprecedented in the area covered and the amount of snowfall, swept through the western states, causing great damage to property and loss of many lives. At Cross, O. T., Sherman Stone killed his wife and five childreu to prevent them from freezing and then took his own life. The law in Arkansas for the taxing of Pullman cars and telegraph and express companies was declared unconstitutional. Business was stopped by the combination of northern blizzard and southern hurricane which swept over Chicago. Louis ,T. Silva, who embezzled $176,000 from the Rainwater-Bradford company of St. Louis, has returned and will stand trial. Sisto Wesley, a Mexican woman, while visiting the grave of her child near Silver City, N. M., was devoured by bears. The Farmers’ Mutual Elevator company at Crookston, Minn., failed for $240,000. Over half the business portion of Genoa. 0., a village of 2,000 inhabitants, was destroyed by fire. Freight trains collided on the Wheeling & Lake Eric road near Beiievue, 0., and Engineers Connell and Stowell. Fireman McMullen and Brakeman i Johnson were killed.
William H. Abtman, a farmer living near Tell City, Ind., killed bis wife and oldest son, aged 12. No cauae waa known. A cyclone passed over the states of Louisiana and Mississippi and left in its wake many casualties and a vast amount of destruction. The Gibson Heights Land Improvement company filed deeds of assignment in St Louis with liabilities of $150,000. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. A. J. McLaurin was formally elected United States senator from Mississippi by the legislature. Mrs. Lucy Evans died at the home of her daughter, lifrs. Smitson, near Independence, Mo., aged 110 years. In state convention at Birmingham, Ala., the Jeffersonian democrats, or the Kolbites, and the people’s party nominated a full state ticket, with R. F. Kolb for governor, to oppose the regular democratic ticket. Mrs. Mary Galloway (colored) celebrated her UOth birthday at Alton. 111. Mrs. Mary E. Williams celebrated her 100th birthday at Zanesville. O. James IL Lofland died at Milford, Del., from an attack of la grippe, aged 71 years. He was a member of congress in 1873. George W. llouk, of Dayton, representing the Third Ohio district in congress, dropped dead while making a call in Washington. He was 09 3'eursold. , John Barrett has been nominated by the president for minister to Siam and T. R. Juruigan as consul general to Shanghai.
FOREIGN. Tiie tugboat Estelle was wrecked near Vancouver, B. C„ by an explosion and eight of the crew were killed. Near Campiegne, France, a passenger train was wrecked by a freight and seven persons were killed and many injured. Mr. Gladstone told a correspondent that he would not resign and that he would fight the English lords to the bitter end. R. M. Ballantyne, who gained a wide reputation as a writer of stories of adventure, died at Rome. The most famous ship of the naval service) the old corvette Kearsarge, was wrecked on Roucador reef, off the coast of Nicaragua. Advices from SL Louis, Senegal, state that Col. Bonnies, eleven other officers and 259 French privates were massacred by the Tuaregoras. Signs are increasing that the English house of lords may be abolished as a legislative body. By the explosion of a carboy of sulphurel of carbon in Paris eight firemen were instantly smoothered todeath and seventeen workmen were seriously injured. Twenty persons were injured in a case in Paris by a bomb thrown by Edeon Breton, who shot an officer before he was arrested. Revenge for the execution of the anarchist, Vaillant, was the motive. The crew of the wrecked cruiser Kearsarge were taken from Roncador reef by the City of Para. One man was drowned. Advices from Brazil say that the insurgent cruiser Republica sank the government transport Itapa and 600 soldiers were drowned. John Wallace and his Mexican bride were murdered on a ranch near Monclava, Mexico, by Juan. Martinez, a disharged foreman. Col. Gregorieff was hanged as a spy at Odessa. For two years he had betrayed Russian military secrets to Austria.
LATER. Ihe Hawaiian resolution was again the subject of discussion in the United States senate on the 13th. Senator Gi ay in the course of his remarks said that the administration had ceased its efforts in behalf of the dethroned monarch. In the house the time was spent in debate on the. Bland seignorage bilL Mrs. Nancy Callahan died suddenly at Urbana, 0., at the age of iOS years. A barn near Penselin, Germany, in which a number of school children sought shelter during a hurricane, was blown down and five of the children were killed. The unemployed at Indianapoiis, Ind., refused to work at shoveling snow when given the opportunity. Nearly 3,000 miners near Pittsburgh, Pa., went on a strike against a reduction of one-half cent per bushel in the mining rate. Calvin Armstrong, convicted of embezzling $45,000 of Tipton county (Ind) funds, escaped from the jail at Kokomo. Hans von Bulow, the distinguished German pianist, died at Cairo, Egypt. He was born at Dresden January 8 IS3O. Thirteen lives were lost in a mine nt I lyinoutb. Pa. The men were caught by a cave-in. George and William Lutz, 10 and 14 years of age, were pinioned to earth by a falling tree at Charleston, Ind., and fatally injured. One THOUSAND acres of rich coal were found on the farms of George Loyd, II rs. \ irtue and Mrs, Hurst near Fairview, O. Fire in the iron works at Bath, Me., caused a loss of $155,000. Dr Arthur Duebtrow fatally shot his wife and then killed his little bov in a drunken frenzy at St. Louis. \\ illiam H. H. Stbouse, aged 70, chaplain of the Indiana prison at Jeffersonville, dropped dead. He was a government scout during the war. The Northern Mill company at Minneapolis made an assignment with liabilities of over $200,000. Two MASKED men held up and robbed the mail stage at Briceville, Mo , and secured a large sum of money. Ar ban Antonio. Tex., fire destroyed the St. Leonard and Central hotels, the loss being SIOO,OOO. Three firemen were fatally injured. A rig tannery at Sand Bank, N. Y'., was burned, causing a loss of SIOO,OOO During the recent blizzard in Oklahoma thirty persons were frozen to death, including a Creek Indian woman aged 120 years. Several persons in : Kansas also perished in the storm.
SETTLERS PERISH.
Death and Suffering; Result from the Blizzard in Oklahoma. At Least Thirty Live# Lost Id the New Territory People Found Frozen to Death on Kansas Prairies—Work of the Storm Elsewhere. BROUGHT DEATH TO MANY. Kansas City', Mo., Feb. 15. —Reports received here from Oklahoma and the Indian territory make it almost certain that at least thirty lives ( were lost during the great storm of Sunday. Many isolated homesteads where the families were poorly prepared for the winter cannot be heard from fqr days and possibly weeks, and there is reason to believe that thirty will not represent the total number of the dead. In western and southwestern Kansas there was great suffering and it is probable that more than in one sod house dead bodies will some day be found. Wichita, Kan., Feb. 15. —Snow comj menced falling Tuesday afternoon j throughout Kansas and the efforts to restore railroad communication with : the western part of the state i will be further impeded. Telegraphic facilities are greatly im- ; paired and distances to railroad points | are so great in many of the western counties that it will probably be some j days before the complete stor}’ of the suffering endured by settlers can be told. Succoring parties were formed in some of the western towns to scour the ; surrounding country, but little except ; rumors of their discoveries have so far ' been received. j In the northeastern part of Clark county a rescuing party came across a wagon | on the prairie with the dead body of a ' man named Lane in it. The horses | had dropped in their .tracks and were i dead. Lane had been in Ashland early , the previous morning after coal and food and had succumbed oil his way : home. Hurrying on to Lane’s farm the searchers discovered the family j consisting of the wife and six children, l in a deplorable condition. Two of the babies were dead and the others were j all senseless with cold. In Mead, the adjoining county, the sick wife of a ; man named Wells, who was taking her ; to Mead Center for medical aid, died j from exposure.
Denver, Col., Feb. 15. Railway traffic, which has been greatly de- ! layed, has resumed its normal condi- ; tion. Railway men report that in Kan- ; sas there are snowdrifts fifteen to : twenty feet high. One Rio Grande j conductor reports that his entire train i was blown from the track near Palmer | lake by a gale blowing 80 miles an j hour. Another train was blown from • the Rio Grande & Western track near j Farmington, Utah, and a number of I people injured. Nashville, Tenn., Feb. 15 —A short | time ago forty-nine convicts escaped j from the prison stockade at Coal Creek. i All had been overtaken but two Tuesj day morning both of these were found in the mountains. One of them had been frozen to death in Monday night’s blizzard and the other had his feet so badly frozen that amputation is necessary.
CincAGO,Feb. 15. —Chicago's bigretail ! stores never beiore experienced such ; a lack of customers as befell them on ! Monday. Many of the merchants have | been in business for a quarter of a cen- ! tury, but they could not recall the j time when their stores were so j deserted. Conservative estimates of i the loss to the retail dry goods | business alone, including the goods soid by the department stores, fixed it at $250,000. The thrifty seekersafter bargains, who were wont to throng the stores every Monday morning to the number of 300,000, were absent, i The snow actually piled up in front of j the doorways and the shoppers were so j few that there was not even a wellj trodden entrance to the doors. By | noon the managers of the larger stores began sending home their girls and women help. Boston, Feb. 15. —Boston has not seen such a severe storm for years. Seven inches of snow have fallen on the level. The streets are in a terrible ! condition. On every line the cars are blocked, and many telephone and telegraph wires are down. Many of the schools are closed. General trailic is simply impossible. The railroads from the south and east are terribly blocked. | All business along the water-front is |at a standstill. Many' schooners are I out and reports of them are anxiously j looked for. The observations of the weather | bureau show that the storm is severest | along the coast and in southern New | England. In northern Vermont only | 8 inches of snow have fallen, while at Eastport, Me., only a high wind has | touched. Reports are beginning to i come in of the severity of the storm in 1 other places.
NEATH AN AVALANCHE.
| A Number of Deutlis Reported in Switzerland. London, Feb. 15.—The exceptional mildness of the weather in Switzerland j has caused several avalanches. By one l of these three chamois hunters who were trying to scale the Spitzfiuh, near Berne, were overwhelmed and two of them were killed. Some Turlo hotel servants who were sent to inspect a small hotel a„ the summit of the mountain at Saentio have not returned. A search party was organized to rescue them, but they found their progress barred by an enormous avalanche. It is supposed that the raising men are buriect beneath it.
Jenkins Impeachment Resolution.
Washington, Feb. 15. —The house judiciary committee has adopted a substitute for the McGann resolution looking to the impeachment of Judge Jenkins, of the Seventh judicial district, for his conduct in enjoining the employes of the Northern Pacific railroad in their recent strike. The substitute provides merely for a full investigation of the charges as a preliminary move.
A Spy Hanged.
St. Petersburg, Feb. 15.—C01. Greg orieff was hanged as a spy at Odessa. For two years he bad betrayed Russian militarv secrets to Austria.
A SIGNIFICANT SPEECH.
Senator Gray Announces the Administration’s Policy Toward Hawaii. Washington, Feb. 15. —The Hawaiian ; resolution was again tbe subject of disI sion in the senate on Tuesday. Senator Gray (dem., Del.) resumed his arguI ment in support of the president’s policy and reiterated his charges that the ; revolutionists were dependent on j the United States minister and the | United States forces for support of their movement, and that thereafter I the provisional government depended absolutely upon the United States forces and the flag for protection and for the maintenance of the government they had established. Continuing, Senator Gray said: “If ; the conditions at Hawaii now are such as to make that government a de facto , government, which I do not think it | was in the months preceding, I think the best interests of those people and Of the United States will be subserved by allowing them to pursue their own policy.” The full significance of the present Hawaiian situation came out at the close of the senator’s speech, when in a colloquy with Senator Teller he admitted that as a member of the foreign relations committee he understood the efforts of the president, moral or diplomatic, to restore the queen, were at an end, and that the present minister to Hawaii had no directions to pursue further diplomatic negotiations to that end. He said: “I sav, as an An’erican citizen, that 1 very much regret that th; president of the United States was not able to undo the outrage and ma.;e reparation for the wrong which was committed there on January 17, 1893. I think that the good name and fame of this country of ours was so involved that it would have been a gratification to every patriotic citizen had the president been able to restore tbe status quo of January 16, 1893. Why he failed is wellknown now. That opportunitv is now gone and I suppose it will never return. •’lt seems to me more than wicked and cruel that we do not declare in an emphatic manner that we do not propose to Interfere with the government. Ana if our minister in any way leads the people of that country to believe that we are still disposed to carry out the suggestions of the president to restore the status quo he ought to he withdrawn summarily. He ought to know enough of public opinion in this country to know that the moment the president submitted this question to congress there was no possibdity that tho provisional government would he destroyed and the queen restored to power.”
MANY KILLED BY THE STORM.
The Gale I’lays Havoc Throughout Germany—Ships tV recked. Berlin, Feb. 15.—At Ludjenwalde, in Brandenburg, a factory chimney ! was blown down by the gale and | crushed through a portion of the ! buildings, killing ten persons and inj juring many others. A factory chimney was also blown down in lienteln, i in Casset, and caused the death of two j persons and the injurj’’ of several. Much damage was done by the storm jin Hesse and Waldeck. The storm at j Cuxhavett was the most violent experienced in years. The Danish schooner ; Ellide was driven ashore at that place and a boy was drowned. The remainder of the crew were rescued. The : English bark Lake Sinicoe is also ashore. Her crew was saved.
FOUGHT A FIERCE BATTLE.
j Many Killed and Wounded In an Engage* meat in Honduras. j City of Salvador, Feb. 15. A battle took place at Tegucigalpa Tuesday between the forces commanded by Gen. Ortiz and those of Vasquez. Gen.. , Ortiz succeeded in opening a breach in the defenses of the city, j The number of wounded on both sides is large, although the number ;is not yet definitely known. There j were over ten killed. During the bat- ! tie there was a liand-to-liand fight be- | tween the regiments of infantry. Gen. ; Ortiz claims the victory and says the road to Tegucigalpa is now open. The • telegrams to Ainalpa, however, say the city is still in possession of Vasquez.
FATAL CYCLONE.
1 Two Women and a Child Perish in Har- ] fc* lorn County, Ky. | Babboursville, Ivy., Feb. 15. —A ; severe cyclone is reported near Red j Bird creek, in Harlem county, with ■ great loss of life. Mrs. Skidmore and : her 9-year-old son and another woman are reported to have perished, while I live stock and property suffered severej ly. Red ilird creek is a tributary to ! Cumberland river and empties near i Pineville, Ky. Slight damage was done . property' in this county.
GREAT HERD OF ELK.
Ten Thousand of Them Driven from the Mountain* by Snow. j Landers, W.yo., Feb. 15.—1 tis estimated that not less than 10,000 elk have come out from the mountains and foot-hills to the plains between Fort Washakie and the head of the Wind river to escape the deep snows. The Arapahoe and Shoshone Indians are very anxious to get a permit from the Indian agent, Capt. Ray. to slaughter these afiimals, but so far they have been unsuccessful.
To Extend the Fair.
+san Francisco, Feb. 10 —The managers of the midwinter exposition will not reduce the price of admission to twenty-five cents as has been proposed. The fair will be allowed to run along until July 1 at the fifty-cent rate and then a reduction will be made to twen-ty-live cents. The fair probably will be continued until October 1. Its latter days will be taken up with special fresh trait exhibit*.
GLADSTONE WON’T RESIGN.
He Says He Intends to Fi»rht the House of Lords to the Bitter Knd. Paris, Feb. 10. —The Patrie publishes an interview had by one of its correspondents with Mr. Gladstone, who is spending 1 part of the British house of commons recess at Biarritz, the French watering-place on the bay of Biscay. According to the correspondent, Mr. Gladstone stated that he had no intention of resigning oflice. He had decided to light the house of lords to the bitter end, and was ready to show that the future belongs to the democracy.
Da Hoxsla’s Certain Croup Cora Sent postpaid with beautiful souvenir spoon. Bend 50c lip A_ P. HbxsiE, Buffalo, N. Y. The huntsman who brings home the antlers proves that he has been able to get a head of the game.—Elmira Gazette. Do you want to earn a little money by selling a small article required in every family ? Send your address to Bob’tTorrey, Montclair, N. J. He (sentimentally)—“Money Isn’t everything.” She (practically)—“No: but it gets , everything. N. Y. Press. j The irritation which induces coughing | immediately relieved by use of "Brown’* Bronchial Troche*. ” Sola only in boxes. Claisette—“What are you going to give me, papa, when 1 get married?” Harpagon —“My consent, Clairette.”—La Laquette. Pleasant, Wholesome, Speedy, for coughs is Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar. Pike’s Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. Kev. O. H. f*otrei’ Symptoms cf Cancer Appeared on my lip. Disagreeable eruptions came on my neck. After taking four bottles ot Hood's Sarsaparilla, all the traces of disease have disappeared and tho medicine has given me renewed vigor and strength. I am now almost 73 years of age and I work like a tiger. And I know that Hood’s Sarsaparilla has had much to do with my vigor and strength. I recommended it to my wife, who had suffered so much with rheumatic troubles, as also with Hood’s^Cures female weakness. In two years she has used about three bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and to-day, and for tho last six months, she seema like a new being.” Rev. O. H. Power, 2911 Hanover street, Chicago, 111. Hood's Pills are the best after-dinner Pills, assist digestion, cure headache. 25c. SWAMP-ROOT CURED USE." INTENSE PAIN IN THE KIDNEYS AND BACK. Urinary Disorder Instantly Relieved. Moravia, N. Y. Sept. 7,1893. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. Gentlemen;- Last winter I was taken with ,rs\ -severe pains through (C jTMSfrgß*. & mo in the region of f my kidneys; tho H pains were bo severe I ifz could hardly endure it: \ Ag. r/ my face and eyes were \ ftH-v J ns red as blood; the | i sweat stood in great j drops all over me; I f WBS a 9 as and was in terrible I>f-fiANKB.RcYNOLD3\ pain wlllle Voiding urine. I purchased one bottlo of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, also one bottlo of his U& O Anointment. They Gave me Immediate relief. I heated the Anointment in with a flat-iron. In four days time the pain 3 had all disappeared. I think Swamp-Root one of the greatest medicines ever offered to suffering humanity. Any one wishing to write mo may do so and I 37111 gladly answer. Yours truly, Frank B. Reynolds. At Druggists, CO cent and SI.OO Size. ’’lnvalids’ Guide to Health" free—Consultation free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., - Binghamton, N. Y. The Greatest Hectical 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. Send postal card for book. 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 alwavs disappears in a week after taking it. 'Read the label. 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. Sold by all Druggists. “COLCHESTEIT gPMSBQOJ fflaas«i6«. < iss'D'ssi J sr tt jss£
