People's Pilot, Volume 3, Number 38, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 March 1894 — Page 6
The People’s Pilei, RENSSELAER. : ; INDIANA.
The News Condensed.
Important Intelligence From All Parts. CONGRESSIONAL Regular Session. The bill passed by the house appropriating 145,000 for the rescue of the armament and ■wreck of the Kearsarge was passed In the senate on the 7th, and the silver seigniorage bill •Iso passed its third reading. After five days of debate the pension appropriation bill, carry* tag 1151,000,000, was passed by the house without division. On the Bth the resignation of Senator White, •t Louisiana, was announced in the senate The Bland seigniorage bill came up as unfinished business, but a vote was postponed for one day. The bill for the sale of unsold portions of the Umatilla reservation in Oregon was passed.... The president transmitted some additional Hawaiian correspondence to the house. The conference report on the urgent deficiency bill was presented and agreed to The bill abolishing the office of commissioner and assistant commissioner of customs in the treasury department was passed. IN the senate on tbe Vth Senator Peffer intro* duced a resolution for an investigation into the senatorial sugar speculation. The house bill authorizing a bridge over the East river between New York and Long Island was passed. The seigniorage bill was discussed, and it was decided to postpone voting on the measure until the 15th. Adjourned to the 12th.... In the house the District of Columbia bill was considered. The night session was devoted to the passage of Individual pension bills The senate was not in session on the 10th.... In the house the District of Columbia appropriation bill was passed and it was announced that the sundry civil appropriation bill would be considered next. The resolution by Senator Peffer for an investigation as to whether senators had been ■peculating in Wall street was defeated in the senate on the 12th by a vote of 33 to 27. Newton C. Blanchard was sworn in as senator from Louisiana to succeed E. D. White Senator Peffer introduced an independent tariff bill •mending the McKinley law in various particulars. The seigniorage bill was further discussed.... In the house the time was devoted entirely to the consideration of a bill for allowing a street railroad company in Washing ton to change its system of motive power. DOMESTIC. The president sent to congress the latest correspondence in relation to Hawaii, the important feature being a statement that steps had been taken to provide for a new constitution and a new form of government for Hawaii. The Nicholson hotel at Nashville, Tenn., one of the largest and best known in the south, went into the bands of a receiver with liabilities of <IOO,OOO. The Bank of Harrison, Neb., closed its doors. Depositors would be paid in full. Jebse Hauselman. of Ravenna. 0., aged 15, started west to fight Indians. He was arrested at Massillion and sent home.
Judge Smith, of the Cincinnati superior court, granted an order forbidding members of the district carpenters’ council preventing non-union men from working at a mill where there was a strike. Owing* to heavy rains towns to the south of Chicago were under from 4 to 6 feet of water. William Weib, a prisoner sent to the Ohio penitentiary from Cleveland on a three-year sentence for passing counterfeit money, died while entering the prison.
John Geschwilm killed his wife at Columbus, 0. Five years ago he killed his brother and served a two-year term for it John Hallock, confidential clerk in New York of Theodore Pabst & Co., importers of glass and chinaware, was arrested on the charge of embezzlinu •65,000. The Virginia legislature defeated a bill to require the United States flag to be raised on public schoolhouses. Thbee men were killed by the explo•ioD of a Lehigh Valley locomotive near WVilkesbarre, Pa. The democratic members of the senate finance committee laid before the full committee the Wilson tariff bill as they have amended it. Many duties *re raised, and sugar, iron and coal are taken from the free list. The income tax remains. The date when the free list «hall go into effect is changed from June 1. 1894. to June 80. 1894. Caleb S. Bragg, a Cincinnati millionaire, died on a Pennsylvania train near Pittsburgh, Pa., while homeward bound. Bohemian strikers assaulted Italian laborers with a shower of stones at Cleveland, 0., and one man was badly hurt.
Mrs. Martha C. Atchison was incinerated, as she had requested, at the crematory in Graceland cemetery, Chicago. Two Denver police commissioners cecured an injunction preventing the governor and mayor from ejecting them from ofiice. Two thousand striking silk weavers Paterson, N. J., roughly treated, one wan who refused to quit work. James B. Billings, dealer in boots and shoes in Boston, failed for SIOO,OOO. The Aeeond trial of Daniel Coughlin oa the charge of complicity in the murder of Dr. Patrick Henry Cronin in Chicago came to a close after a session of nearly four months by the return of • verdict of acquittal by the jury, who were oat only six hours. John Geter was swindled out of •550 in Chicago by W. F. Ohlran, who represented he had counterfeit money for sale. Bev. R. Mac Neill, of Emporium, Pa., received a fortune by the will of an old woman, whose spectacles he picked ua Boundless, the famous race horse, broke a tendon at Little Rock, Ark.’ and may never run again. Five minutes after taking a tablespoonful of wine as a toast at a reception in honor of the wedding engagement of his son, Joseph Racker, of Bosenbayn, N. J., died in terrible convulsions. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United .States during the week ended on the 9th aggregated •736,852,864, against *838.528, l«0 the pre viou# week. The decrease, compared with the corresponding week in 1893,
Dutch Niei.l, of St. Louis, defeated James Barron, of Australia, in a fight of thirteen rounds at Hot Springs, Ark. A syndicate has purchased 1,500,000,000 feet of northern Minnesota pine timber for (6,000,000 in round figures. The suit of Miss Madaline V. Pollard against Congressman W. C. P. Breckinridge, of Kentucky, for breach of promise, began in Washington. Gen. Howard reported to the war department that Atlantic port cities were without modern means of defense. The land office at Washington decided that nearly 69,000 Michigan acres were wrongfully given the Portage Canal company. A statement from the pension bureau shows that there are 966,000 pensioners on the rolls. William Snyder and his wife, both over 70 years of age, were burned in their home at Develan. N. Y. Snyder got out once, but went back to rescue his wife. C. M. Gates, aged 75 years, and Mrs. Caroline Sawyer, aged 72, eloped from Bellevue, 0., and were married in Cleveland. Opposition from the married daughters of Mrs. Sawyer caused the elopement. It was said that customers of the Michigan Mortgage company, with headquarters at St. Johns, had been swindled out of 870,000. During a fire at Warsaw, Ky., which destroyed the Crown flouring mills and a granary, Mrs. E. A. Allen died from paralysis of the heart. During a boxing match in Chicago A. W. Crane struck Mike Sullivan a probably fatal blow. During the year 1893 431,712 immigrants arrived in New York, Philadelphia, Boston and Baltimore, representing four-fifths of tbe whole number which arrived at all American ports. At Alton, 111., Marion T. Skaats shot his wife and killed himself. Jealousy was ascribed as the cause.
Unfinished buildings were greatly damaged by a windstorm of unusual severity which swept Chicago, and John Ginochio, an Italian lawyer, was killed by a falling piece of timber. Capt. Evans’ life saving crew at Louisville, Ky., rescued three medical students from death just as their boat was about to go over the falls. John T. Hiler, who had married and deserted seven wives, was arrested in Chicago. A Fike at Cygnet, an oil town in Ohio, caused a loss of (100,009. The entire plant and stock of the Lansing Lumber company at Dodge, Mich., was burned, the loss being (175,000. Rescued from a wreck thirty-seven years ago, Frank Willis, of Manitowoc, Wis., has just discovered his identity by means of a locket At Atchison, Kan., the Missouri river was cutting a new channel, endangering property valued at 81,500,000. The entire business portion of the village of Omro, Wis., was destroyed by fire. Mrs. Lease told a Boston audience that the women would solve the business depression if the men would mind the babies. Unknown persons failed in an attempt to destroy the office of the Ironclad Age, an agnostic paper at Indianapolis. Mathias Ludatschka, who shot his wife and her daughter near Prairie du Chien, Wis., escaped lynching by killing himself. According to the government report fanners have reserves of 114,000,000 bushels of wheat and 589,000,000 bushels of corn. Near Marche, Ark., the body of a young mulatto woman was found suspended to a tree. She had been lynched. Rev. Alanson T. Wood, of Omaha, Neb., aged 77, was stricken by illness in church and died in a few moments. Recent assays prove that the great sand hills in the vicinity of Duvan, Col., contain from one to twenty dollars’ worth of gold per ton. Steel works covering 800 acres of land and employing 3,000 men will be removed from Johnstown, Pa., to Cleveland, O.
Mayor Denny, of Indianapolis, ordered the arrest of labor leaders who indulge in incendiary speeches to the unemployed. The J. R. Morin company of Cedar Rapids, la., dealing in eggs and fruit, failed with liabilities of $210,000 and assets of $65,000. Citizens of Greenwood, Ind., have boycotted a saloonkeeper so thoroughly that he cannot buy food, raiment or water. Explorer Wellman was given a silk flag by the National Capital Press club and requested to hoist it at the north pole. Postmaster William Gould disappeared from Stony Brook. L. 1., leaving a shortage of $15,000. J. K. Stratton, a criminal for whom the police of many cities have been searching, was located in prison at Huntsville. Tex. “Billy” Edwards, a well-known sporting man, died at Hot Springs, Ark., from injuries received in being thrown from a buggy. To secure perfect safety for its passengers the St. Paul railway has adopted the block signal system. Senator Voorhees said in Washington that he had no idea that the tariff bill would become a law before the middle of July and it might not be until August The bodies of the thirteen men entombed in the Gaylord mine near Wilkesbarre, Pa., on February IS, were reached by rescuers, but were beyond identification. The installation of Edward Douglas White, of Louisiana, as associate justice of the United States supreme court took place in Washington. Navigation on the Mississippi river has been resumed. May wheat made a new low record in New York, declining to 62 5-16 cents, or l-16th below the previous lowest record. Because he was discharged, Jacob Studt, a St Louis carpenter, killed Emil Wuensch. then took his own life. Michael Altifilish and John Kegler, 15-yeur-okl boys, were drowned while crossing the river at Bellevue, la.
1W a saloon row at Cleveland, 0., Michael Kennedy fatally shot John Cummings and James McNamara. Navigation on Lake Michigan was resumed, being the earliest opening ever recorded. The health officials of Ohio were alarmed by the spread of smallpox in the state.
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL, Gov. Foster, of Louisiana, appointed Congressman Newton C. Blanchard as United States senator to succeed Judge White, whose resignation takes place on the 12th inst The prohibitionists of Wisconsin intend to make a vigorous campaign this year. Gen. Neal Dow, the champion of temperance, will be 90 years old March 2u, and the event will be celebrated in New York city by a great national meeting. James S. Walker, a noted scout on the plains for many years, died at Stockton, Cal. Col. Sylvester Morgan and wife celebrated their sixtieth wedding anniversary at Jeffersonville, Ind. Rev. Charles Machin died at his daughter’s Chicago residence. He was a Congregational clergyman for sixty years. The republicans of the First district of Tennessee nominated W. C. Anderson. of Newport, to succeed A. A. Taylor in Congress. The seventh annual convention of the National Republican league will commence at Denver June 26. Rev. Gideon Potter, a pioneer Baptist preacher, died in Owen county, Ind., at the age of 106 years. At the charter election in Michigan the republicans were successful in the majority of instances where party tickets formed the issue. Harriet W. Potter, of St Joseph, Mich., will soon wed Hawaiian Minister Thurston, whom she first met at the world’s fair.
FOREIGN. Ex-Premier Gladstone was seriously ill at his home in London from the effects of a chill. Eight persons were wounded by the explosion of a bomb near the Italian chamber of deputies in Rome. Fire in the hold of the steamer Paris, lying at her dock in London, caused a loss of 8100,000. Dispatches received from Calcutta say the British met serious disaster at the hands of Abor tribesmen. Mexican bandits attacked a ranch near Durango but were driven oft with a loss of four dead and five wounded. It was said that about 10,000 Canadian Knights of Labor, dissatisfied with Grand Master Sovereign, would secede from the organization. Premier Rosebery was said to contemplate a scheme of home rule for the whole united kingdom. Fearing a plot to restore the queen, tbe Hawaiian government has placed restrictions on immigration of aliens. A thousand arrests were made as the result of the discovery of a plot to kill the heir to the Corean throne. The crew of the yacht Natalie, fitted out in an American port by Haytian revolutionists, were captured and shot by Hippolyte. In an address to his party Premier Rosebery said the battle for Irish home rule would go forward with unabated vigor. Ludwig August Frankl, the Bohemian poet, died in Vienna, where he had lived for many years. He was 84 years old. Admiral da Gama, the Brazilian rebel leader, offered to surrender if guaranteed protection.
LATER. The time in the United States senate on the 13th was occupied in discussing the seigniorage bill. Senators Stewart and Lindsay spoke for and Senator Dolph against it,holding that its passage would destroy the existing equality between gold and silver. The house be gan consideration of the sundry civil appropriation bill and fair progress was made. The schooner Mary Brown was lost off Banks Island, B. C., and eleven persons were drowned. Passenger trains collided at Cap]eton, Canada, and Conductor Cowan, Engineer Dutiie and Fireman McPherson were instantly killed. Minnesota republicans carried a majority of the municipal elections. The New York legislature passed a bill making minor grades of hazing misdemeanors and the infliction of physical injuries felonious. The Ohio legislature has decided in favor of biennial sessions. The war is practically over in Brazil and the cause of the insurgents is a lost one. The rebel forces have surrendered unconditionally, almost without firing a shot.
_ A boiler in a mill at Sombra, Ontario, exploded, and Mr. Cornell, the engineer, and three of his children, who had brought his dinner, were killed. M. O. Shoop, town tax collector, was held up by two highwaymen near Elburn, 111., and relieved ot S4OO in cash. Incendiary- fires have destroyed five barns and a livery stable at Fort Dodge la., in two weeks and over thirty horses were burned to death. The Santa Fe depot at Woodward, 0. T., was robbed of over SIO,OOO by two masked men, who overpowered the agent By the overturning of a lamp at l.er home in Washington Mrs. Pattie Miller Stocking, widow of CoL Stocking, of Andersonville fame, was fatally burned. Navigation of the great lakes for the season of 1894 will be open six weeks earlier than for many years. John Brecht, a farmer, murdered his wife at Ravenna, Neb., and then killed himself. Brecht had previously worked for the woman he married, who was a wealthy widow. Miss Alma Winters was frightened to death by a fire which destroyed her fathers residence at Barrington, 111. In the British house of commons Henry Labouchere's amendment to the queen’s address to abolish the house of lords was passed by a vote of 147 to 145, in spite of the opposition of the government
INDIANA STATE NEWS.
Barney Six, a member of the Marion Soldiers’ home, was attacked by two men near the home the other night and robbed of 150 and his watch. The Clay County bank at Clay City has become a thing of the past The stockholders were the only losers, the depositors having received all their money. It has been discovered that a gang of boys from 13 to 15 years of age has been committing various depredations in the vicinity of Bourbon and concealing its plunder in an old house in the woods, where nightly meetings are held, each member wearing a mask. An effort is being made to identify the young rascals and bring them to justice. There were three attempts at suicide in Indianapolis the other evening, all by young girls. A small boy at Goshen lost a finger and thumb in endeavoring to analyze the contents of a loaded cartridge by dissection. At an early hour the other morning Alphonso Brooks was discovered trying to effect an entrance into Wm. Kreider & Sons’ grocery, Logansport Four policemen surrounded him, but he drew a revolver and gave them a desperate battle in the dark. Seven shots were exchanged without any one being struck. The fugitive was finally fished out of an empty salt barrel in which he had attempted to hide. Noodle soup socials are the latest fad at Warsaw. The prison north has nine hundred inmates. Two fine, large swans were killed on a lake near Vincennes. While he was in a boiler at the paper mills, Anderson, steam was accidentally turned on and Samuel Roach was nearly cooked. He will die. At Shelbyville, George Kiport, aged 72, has taken his sixth bride, Mary Hensley, aged 10. At Jeffersonville, Houston Starks, aged 10, fell 70 feet off the approach to the Louisville & Jeffersonville bridge and was fatally injured. Dr. W. H. Brown, of Sheridan, was arrested and fined ?20 for practicing dentistry without a license. The unemployed of Indianapolis, at an indignation meeting passed a resolution appealing to Queen Victoria for aid. Residents of Hartford City will shortly vote on the question of a city charter.
I The parents of Chauncey Moore, the 15-year-old boy who disappeared two ' months ago from Terre Haute, have : offered a reward of 1100 for informa- , tion concerning his whereabouts. Hammond has petitioned for free mall ! delivery. | Anthony Beck, of Lebanon, a : wealthy farmer, became enraged at a steer for tearing down a fence, and, ! driving it into a pen poured coal oil all ' over it and set it on fire, burning the : animal to death. The grand jury is in- ! vestigating the affair. During a terrific thunder and rainstorm at Clay City, the other night, lightning struck the residence of Jos. I Funkhouser. Mrs. Funkhouser was ; knocked senseless for a few moments. When she recovered she found the stove-pipe demolished, the paper on the wall burned and the children screaming with fright A small child of John | Long was knocked flat, but not seriously hurt. Several persons on the street felt the effect of the shock.
Gas well No. 9 was drilled in at Pen* dleton, a few days ago, and it is much the strongest of any of the Pendleton wells, which are all above the average. A fifteen-year-old lad, supposed to be Chauncey Moore, who disappeared from his home at Terre Haute some time ago, was arrested at Geneva, the other afternoon. Policeman Van Tilbury took him to Portland to jail. The boy is a son of M. S. Moore, of Terre ‘ Haute, and a reward of SIOO is out for ! him. His father has been notified to i come to Portland. Two of the North Anderson window glass companies’ factories resumed operations, the other evening, putting 250 men to work. The outlook in the window glass trade is encouraging. Calvin Darling, living near Mulberry, ended his life, the other night, !by the rope. Darling was a wealthy i farmer. 11l health is supposed to have i been the cause of his rash act | Robert Bruce, night watchman of : the offices of Receiver Falley, of the i Iron Hall, Indianapolis, was shot while resisting an attempt to burglarize the I offices, He will recover. The street railroad project is being boomed at Bloomington. i While duck hunting on the Ohio near Evansville, Louis Eckerle fell over- : board and was drowned, being weighted down by the loaded shells in his : pocket Thirteen people near Anderson -were I poisoned by eating tainted cheese. AU are out of danger. De Kalb county has an indebtedness of $109,000. Miss Angelina Lamb, of Goshen, i who lost her voice 12 years ago as a result of severe sickness, has just regained it in a peculiar manner. An unusually severe paroxysm of coughing resulted in a rearrangement of the vocal chords. She now speaks in a distinct, but moderate tone, and she says that she seems to be speaking unusually loud. The case is regarded by medical experts as one of the most remarkable ever encountered.
Julius H. Beaver and Margaret Beaver, of Bedford, were married while seated in their buggy at Paoli, the other day, by Justice D. M. Hudleson. They were divorced about two months since, and are making an effort to keep their remarriage a secret At Newcastle, John 11. Gauz was given a verdict of $2,000 damages against the Panhandle railroad for the killing of his two children at a crossing last summer. Db. Joseph M. Bulla, coroner of Wayne county, filed a damage suit for (5,000 against Dr. W. W. Zimmerman lor alleged slander. Both are candidates for ffuroncr.
REVENUE ESTIMATES.
Comparlsoa Between th* McKinley, Wfl•on and Senate Tariff Bill*. *"• Washington, March 14.—The senate finance committee has been supplied with a- tabulated statement prepared by the treasury department showing in detail the amount of revenue which it is estimated will be received under the senate bill, if it should become a law, also giving the estimates under the Wilson bill and comparing both with the returns from the treasury department under the present law for 1893. The statement also gives an estimate of the increase in the internal revenue under the senate bill, which is as follows: Income, 130,000,000; spirits. 120,000,000; cigars, O.OOOjOOO; cigarettes, 11,500,000; playing cards, 13,000,000. Total increase, 163,500,000. The estimated duties of the senate bill, as compared with those of the Wilson bill and the returns under the present law, by schedules, are as follows, the figures first given showing in each schedule the returns under the existing law; the second, the estimates under the house bill, and the third the estimates on the senate bill: Chemicals, oils and paints—Present law, <6,132,650; house, <5,096,316; senate, <5,100,421. Earths, earthenware and glassware—Present law, <12,101,661; house, 18,078,228; senate, 18,. 689,344. Metals and manufactures of—Present law, 127,003,637; house, <15,769,653; senate, <15,775,815. Wood and manufactures of—Present law, •935,381; house, 1648,451; senate, <653,710. Sugar—Present law, 1193,294; house, <16,832; senate, 141,778,511. Tobacco and manufactures of—Present law. 114,831,989; house, 111,528,783; senate, <11,528,783 Agricultural products and provisions—Present law, <12,122,403; house, 17,969,748; senate, <10,271,189 Spirits, wines and other beverages—Present law, <9,698,336; house, <8,421,847; senate, 18,183,GOS. Cotton manufactures—Present i*w, <11,323,. 605: house, <7,885,585; senate, <7,885,685. Flax, hemp and jute and manufactures of— Present law. <18,767,353; house, <12,724,279; senate. 112,773,735. Wool and manufactures of—Present law, <36,. 448,667; house, <14,714,879; senate, <2.979,346 Silk and silk goods—Present law. <20,310,258; house, <17,113,647; senate, <16,747,345. Pulp, paper and books—Present law, <2,070,125; house, <1,658,398; senate, <1,750,893. Sundries—Present law, <13,982,275; house, <12,. 794,208; senate, <11,312,838. Unenumerated—Present law, <272,644; house, <372,614; senate. <272,644. Articles transferred to the free list—Present law, <12,170,167. Total—Present law, <198,373,452; house, <124,693.004; senate, <165,093,771. The average ad valorem under the present law is 49.98; under the house bill, 85.62; under the senate bill, 34.19. The comparison of the sugar schedule shows that during the last year 15,490,757 gallons of molasses were imported, upon Which no duty was paid, but which under the senate bill would produce $809,815. During the year 3,531,219,367 pounds of sugar, valued at •114,959,870, were imported free. Upon this the senate bill would yield a revenue of $41,043,413.
SWORN IN.
Justice White Installed, and Mr. Blanchard Succeeds Him In the Senate. Washington, March 14.—Newton C. Blanchard was sworn in Monday as United States senator from Louisiana, to succeed Edward D. White, who resigned to become associate justice of the supreme court of the United States. The appointment of Senator Blanchard
NEWTON C. BLANCHARD.
is for less than two months, as the Louisiana legislature meets in May, when it will elect two senators, Caffery and Blanchard both being appointees of the governor. They are both candidates for election to the senate. Washington. March 13.—The installation of Edward Douglas White as associate justice of the United States supreme court took place at noon Monday.
AN AWFUL FATE.
The Tragic Suicide of Mr*. M. A. Well* at Savannah, Mo. St. Joseph, Mo., March 14.—Mrs. M. A. Wells, living at Savannah, 10 miles east of here, entered a closet Monday morning, carrying with her a can of kerosene. Locking thedooronthe inside she-poured the oil over her clothes and on the woodwork, then she set fire to her dress. Her screams alarmed the neighbors. They were compelled to break down the door, but did not succeed until the woman’s screams had eeased. W hen they finally reached her she,was dead. Mrs. Wells was assistant cashier of the Stat® bank at Savannah, and owing to the illness of her husband, who was cashier, had been doing all the work. The strain of overwork and the anxiety caused by her husband’s sickness unsettled her mind.
Minister Thurston to Wed.
St. Joseph, Mich., March 14.—Harriet W. Potter, of this city, will soon wed Hawaiian Minister Thurston, whom she first met at the world’s fair.
Pensioners Get Their Money.
Washington, March 14.—A1l suspensions of pensions in cases where payment has not been already resumed, or where the pensioner's name has not been stricken from the rolls, will be removed by an order signed by Commissioner Lochren. This action affects the cases of between 8,000 and 4,000 pensioners.
Senator Coke to Retire.
Austin, Tex., March 14.—Senator Richard Coke, of Texas, has notified the democratic state committee that he will retire from public life at the close of his present term.
./Wsb Jfr. J. W. Goss Savannah, New York. Scrofulous Bunches Neck Lanced Without Relief Hood’s Sarsaparilla Purifies the Blood and Conquers. “C. L Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: • “Gentlemen: I had large acmfulnnw hnnnticw on my neck for, seven years. I treated with different physicians and tried many remedies but Did Not Get Any Help for them. I went to Rome, N. Y., and had them opened, but this gave me only temporary relief. My physician then urged me to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and before I had used one bottle the bunches began to grow better. To-Day I Am O. K., and the trouble has not returned since I took Hood’s Sarsaparilla, only the scars being left. rloodVP’Cures Upon my recommendation and the effects of Hood’s Sarsaparilla in my case the druggist has sold a great deal of Hood’s Sarsaparilla in this place." J. W. Goss, Savannah, New York. Hood’s Pills are prompt and efficient, yet easy in action. Sold by all druggists. 25c. SDR. KI LM ER’S — ~ vwp hoof KIDNEI LIVER*ss Pain in the Back, joints or hips, sediment In urine like brick-dust frequent calls or retention, rheumatism. Kidney Complaint, Diabetes, dropsy, scanty or high colored urine. Urinary Troubles, Stinging sensations when voiding, distress pressure in the parts, urethral Imitation, stricture. Disordered Liver, Bloat or dark circles under the eyes, tongue coated, constipation, yellowish eyeballs. Guarantee-Use contents of One Bottle, if not benefited. Druggists will refund to you the price paid. At Druggists, sOc. Size, SI.OO Size. "Invalids’ Guide to Health” free- Consultation free. Db. Kilmer & Co.. Binghamton, N. Y.
In the first veer in which the Aermotor Co. did galvanizing it expended <50,000 in this work, and did not furnish galvanized goods for the entire year either No extra charge was made for lhe goods into which this enormous sum was put. Are yoiveurious to know why this lavish expenditure was made? Are you curious to know how the Aermotor Co. came to make bedrock, hard times prices long beforo hard times set in? The explanation is this The Aermotor Co. foresaw that something better than painting was required and foresaw that hard . times were coming. TUB AERMOTOR CO. FORESECS, IT LOOKS AHEAD, IT ANTICIPATES, IT KNOWS IT HAT IS COMINO, IT KNOWS WHAT SHOULD BE COMING, IT KNOWS IN ADVANCE WHAT IT SHOULD DO. Because of this it has an enormous factory, and turns ouk an enormous quantity of goods, and good goods. The other fellow is a used-to-be, has been, or might have been, had ho known, but he didn't know It is all in the past. His bus iness is in the gone by. Ours is in the present, the future. His consolation is found in the darkeys statement. “It's better to be a has-been than a nebbor was.'' After we have done and are doing a thing and it is known to be the only thing to do, certain little piping voices are heard saying “We can do it if you will pay us enough money to do it.” We made the Steel Windmill business, made the model to which the best of our imitators can only hope to remotely approach and in thoir endeavor to approach it are still weakly exj perimenting at the expense of tlio user. But to return to our enormous outlay for galvanizing. Why did we do it? The reason is this. WE BUILD THE EUT WE KNOW, REGARD* LESS OF COST, and we believe we know better than anybody. We know that thin metal, exposed to the air, will not last nulem galvanised, but if properly galvanized, will last scores of years. Barbed wire galvanized will last 20 years, and be practically as good as new. How long does it last painted? But the barbed wire is an eighth of an inch thick, while some of the steel used in the vanes of windmills is from a thirtysecond to a sixty-fourth of an inch thick, and therefore would last only from a fourth to an eighth as long as the barbed wire, other things being equal, but they are not equal; the sheet metal has holes punched through it and is riveted to thicker and more rigid pieces. The vibration of the thin parts at once cracks the paint around the rivets, and water at once gets in and rust quickly eats awa 7 V“ n P art <- Some have used galvanized metal and put in black rivets. This of conrse is not so good as painting, sinoe i thg cut edge of the galvanized metal is exposed and is in no way protected WE BUILD FOR THK < AGES. We wouldn't sell i you a poor painted wheel, nor onn made of metal gal vani ixed before being put together if von would pay ! us double price for It. We build tbc best we know, and know- 7**. Ing I hat such prMt * y&E&SsSr worthies*, we < .Xr&ffiWfffiTyr ,'**Wr*S hav« nothing to do with ASnZfHvf SXS&I the*. /gg fin o/ an Aer-~ motor Wheel is rfrgSs all riveted up,compitted and cleansed of rust and it it then immersed in melted sine and and left there until it becomes as hot as the metal is and until every crack, cranny, crevice, pore and opening of every sort is filled, closed up and saturated isith the awl mldtd loytthrr at one vitet, then WH. Bom imm. thing that enduring and reliable. small doers cannot afford to do it. IF* keen IO ton* * a f* *«*”»*" enough so that isgcun afford to doit, Om word about tho nature of galvanizing. The silvery whita coating which fills every pore and covers every portion of the Aennotor Wheel, Vane and Tower is zinc and aluminum when ?“ <* n ’?“*• whieh, after standing for a time form,, with the steel, a chemical combination or alloy which cannot bn, melted and is practically indestructible. The sth advertisement in this series will show a 4-Wheel Rtaol Truck, wjtghing HS 1b,., which will e.rry iltem‘tX?S w. um 500 m th. Aermotor Factory. It will be found almoit indupeniable on any farm or in anv warehomo. For 2 copie, at thu advertuomant, which >• No. 4 fn th. .erim, and U.SO euh seat in immediately after the appearance of ,dv. No. 5, w, n il! deliver f.0.b., Chicago, one of these Trucks or forward branch houm, freight from Chicago added **“ frOm Where we can, w« ahall make liberal offer, to accent of thoM adrertlMment, in part payment for WindmiuZ* If have any thought of unng a windmill thi, year wr.tr «, •WM. Jtatmg what you will need, whether Pumping orOmkdl »• win make yon a liberal offer P ro P°«* »<• diatrilmt. ,400. CASH, IN PBIZCS for tho beak euay, written by the wife, mm or daughter • ’rtndm'U. an.wering the question competition and amounts and numbers of prizes send fornar. ‘ ticulars to the Aennotor Co., Chicago, or to its branches at San Francisco, Kansas City, Lincoln, Neb., Sioux City lowa Minneapolis, Buffalo, or 65 Park Place, New York City ’ Aermotors. Punping and G.a«dwn. prieo. All Steel, .U a.lr. o £Xfte? Completion, delivered free on cars at Chicago and shfoMdta »M r B."- 1 a<«“ Ely’s Cream Balm«S» QUICKLY CURES COLD IN HEIpMSi
