People's Pilot, Volume 3, Number 51, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 June 1894 — Page 2

The People’s Pilot RENSSELAER. « INDIANA.

The News Condensed.

Important Intelligence From All Parts. CONGRESSIONAL. Regular Session. In the senate on the 29th ult. a bill was Introduced making it unlawful for any person to send obscene literature or any other matter of indecent character, or any article intended for immoral use by express. The tariff bill was further discussed... In the house debate on the state bank tax repeal bill was begun. Mr. Cox (Tenn.) speaking in its favor and Mr. Johnson (Ind.) presenting the opposing arguments. Adjourned to the 31st ult. On the 31st ult. the senate adopted a resolution declaring the senate to be in favor of a policy of non-intervention with Hawaiian affairs. Senator Sherman spoke on the tariff bill, and during his remarks said the McKinley bill had been persistently misrepresented as a bill to increase revenue, when as a matter of fact it decreased revenue $30,000,000 a year. An amendment making all lumber duty free was adopted.... In the house a bill was passed for the appointment of an additional judge of the district court of the United States for the northern district of Illinois, and the bill to repeal the state bank tax was further discussed. In the senate on the Ist a petition was presented from the “New England Industrial Army" asking legislation that would guarantee work to the unemployed. The tariff bill was taken up and the great battle over the sugar schedule began .. . .In the house the senate bill providing for the carrying out of the award of the Paris tribunal of arbitration for the protection of seals in Behring sea was passed. The state bank bill was further considered. At the evening session private pension bills were discussed. The debate in the senate on the 2d on the sugar schedule was preceded by' three hours of discussion of a resolution to throw open the doors of the committee investigating the method of forming the sugar schedule, but no vote was taken.... In the house a resolution was introduced for non-interference with Hawaiian affairs. A reduction in tife wages of laborers to one dollar a day by the district commissioners caused a resolution of inquiry to be offered. On the 4th the tenth week of the tariff debate began in the senate and an amendment was presented to the bill declaring all combinations, conspiracies, trusts, agreements or contracts to be contrary to public policy and illegal and v0id....1n the house the time was occupied in discussing the state-bank tax bill. A senate joint resolution appropriating SIO,OOO to defray the expense of the sugar investigating committee was agreed to.

DOMESTIC. Secretary Morton has appointed James D. Cooke, of Michigan, chief clerk of the weather bureau. Arthur Davis and Guy Gilbert, two jockeys, were killed in a hurdle race at Phoenixville, Pa. Three men were killed and one seriously injured in a freight wreck at Sharon, Mass. At Village Springs, Ala., Thomas Early, a miner, shot and killed Wash Bailey and his wife and then fled, pursued by an officer, who shot and killed Early. Doyles bronze statue of Horace Greeley was unveiled in Greeley square in New York. The large briik livery stable of J. T. Roberts at Galesburg, 111., was burned and twenty horses perished in the fire. I. T. BUROIS, a negro preacher charged with a vile conspiracy avainst white women, was lynched by a mob near Palatka. Fla. Ex-Justice Sutherland must suffer imprisonment for two years and eight months for connection with the Gravesend (N. Y.) election frauds. The railway telegraphers at their annual meeting in Wichita, Kan., elected W. V. Powell, of that city, as grand chief. Nearly 300 war department clerks in Washington were dismissed by Secretary Lamont in compliance with the provisions of the appropriation bill. A cyclone 200 feet wide passed over the northern portion of Sedgwick county, Kan., destroying a church and several other buildings and damaging crops. In a fit of jealousy Michael Jansen fatally shot his wife at Butte, Mont., to whom he had been married thirty years, and then shot himself. Great excitement prevailed over the discovery of rich gold fields near Boise, Idaho.

Fire at Arlington, Mass., destroyed four large icehouses and other property valued at $125,000. The bank at Enterprise, Kan.,closed its doors with liabilities of $20,000. Coxeyites in Wisconsin took possession of passenger cars on the St. Paul road and rode to Avoca. Pueblo, Col., was visited by the worst flood in its history. Several thousand people were rendered homeless, property was damaged to the amount of SIOO,OOO and some lives were lost. An official treasury statement shows that the expenditures of the government for the eleven months of the current fiscal year have exceeded the receipts by $72,000,000, the aggregate standing in round numbers: Receipts, $268,000,000; expenditures, $340,000,000. The boiler at a sawmill near Adelphi, 0., exploded, instantly killing Engineer Joseph Shewler, Theodore Sawyer and Sherman Waite. Officers dispersed strikers who were terrorizing miners at work at Pana, 111., and many arrests were made. Fire destroyed the greater portion of the business part of Maysville, Mo. Count Herbert Bismarck, son of Prince Bismarck, and family were passengers on the Normania which arrived in New York. Corbett has declined to fight Jackson in Europe and has accepted the offer of the Jacksonville (Fla.) club. The Central Trust Company of St. Louis failed for SIOO,OOO. # The four-story building at Omaha occupied by the Manger Printing company and the Columbia Clothing company was burned, the loss being $200,000. Conconully, a village in Washington, was swept away by a flood and Mrs. Almira Keith was drowned. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United States during the week ended on the Ist aggregated $711,060,979, against $854,506,902 the previous week. The decrease, compared with the corresponding week in 1993. was 21 ].

John Bussell, a bank cashier at Palmyra, Mo., and his wife were shot by burglars whom they surpised in their home. Coal operators ?n six states notified the leaders of the strikers that they proposed to open the mines by force. Advices from Portland, Ore., say that the flood in the Columbia river continued to increase, and the fertile bottom lands along the river from the Rocky mountains to the sea. a distance of 600 miles, were all inundated, crops were all ruined, houses washed away and stock drowned. Thousands of persons were homeless. Mrs. Elizabeth Williams, aged 80, of Greenville, Pa., was chloroformed and robbed of SI,IOO, every cent she possessed. In the bribery investigating at Washington Representative Warner, of New York, testified that he had been approached by agents of the sugar trust.

Morgan White was executed at Columbia, S. C., for murder. Frank Bullard,a negro, was lynched at Jackson, Tenn., for attempting to murder Miss Thomas, a white girl. Bv the capsizing of a sailing boat at Buffalo, la., Mrs. 11. Hoppens and her two children were drowned. Bradstreet's financial review says uncertain tariff legislation and strikes have caused general stagnation on Wall street, New York. By the explosion of a keg of powder at a mine near Jermyn, Pa., seven men were burned, some of them fatally. The public debt statement issued on the Ist showed that the debt decreased 8640,879 during the month of May. The cash balance in the treasury was 8117,854,335. The total debt, less the cash balance in the treasury, amounts to 8895,062,225. AV heat dropped on the Chicago board of trade under any price heretofore made. July getting to 54$£c and June to 53 Xc. The government receipts from all sources during May aggregated 823,066,994, about 8500,000 more than during the preceeding month of April, and nearly 88,000,000 less than in May a year ago. The percentages of the baseball clubs in the national league for the week ended on the 2d were: Baltimore, .679; Cleveland, .667; Philadelphia, .667; Pittsburgh, .667; Boston, .636; Brooklyn, .531; New York, .485; St. Louis, .471; Cincinnati, .867; Louisville, .323; Chicago, .313; Washington, .235.

Alexander McCurdy, who terribly mutilated his stepbrother, Charles Berry, was taken from the Golden (Col.) jail and lynched after being sub- : jected to horrible brutalities. Two brothers named Donath while , digging a well at St. Cloud, Minn., struck gas at a depth of 45 feet, and before held could reach them both were I dead. Five blocks of dwellings and business houses in Ottumwa, la., were destroyed by fire, causing a loss of $225,- i 000. A boy was burned to death. A further postponement of the in-I sanity trial at Chicago of Prendergast, the murderer of Carter Harrison, until the fall term of the criminal court was agreed upon. In an address before the International Temperance congress in New York Neal Dow denied that prohibition had been a failure in Maine. Floods continued to do great dam- ; age throughout Colorado and Oregon. The farm and well machinery plant of R. R. Howell & Co. at Minneapolis was destroyed by fire, the loss being 8180,000. Jeff Crawford, the negro murderer of W. P. Blackburn, of Bethesda township, S. C., was lynched by a mob. Andy Johnson, who killed five people at Pineville. Ky., in one day, was killed by Jim Horn, whom he tried to arrest at a dance. Horn was also killed. J. L. Bell, second assistant postmaster general, resigned to become traffic manager of the Jersey Central railroad. The Winters Lithographing company at Springfield, 0., failed for $151,000. Harry Gill (colored) was taken from the jail at West Lancaster, S. C., by a mob and lynched, and Hill and Parker, in jail for murder at Colfax, Wash., met a like fate. In the United States district court at Owensboro, Ky., Judge Barr handed down an opinion declaring the separate coach law for whites and blacks unconstitutional.

The visible supply of grain in the United States on the 4th was: Wheat, 59,395,000 bushels; corn, 7,49(5,000 bushels; oats, 2,606,000 bushels; rye, 252,000 bushels: barley, 100,000 bushels. Cyclones swept over Tacoma. Wash., and Fort Scott, Kan., and a number of persons were killed and great damage to property was done. United States deputy marshals were guarding the Santa Fe road from strikers under orders from Judge Grosscup. Strikers fired upon Powellton (W. Va.) miners and killed four of their number. Steele & Walker, wholesale grocers at St. Joseph, Mo., assigned, with liabilities estimated at £700,000, Leonard W. Marsh, of Kansas City, shot his wife and daughter, but their lives were saved by their corsets. Colorado mine owners agreed to a settlement of the strike proposed by Gov. Waite, who had ordered out troops to secure its enforcement. Judge Baker sentenced F. A. and Percival B. Coffin, the Indianapolis bank wreckers, to imprisonment for ten and five years, respectively. Jealousy caused Joseph Lozeinski, a Toledo, 0., contractor, to kill his bride of two weeks, and then to end his own life. In a battle between the striking miners and the Indiana militia near Farmersburg four of the former were shot dead. The strikers were burning railroad bridges to prevent moving coal trains. Robbers ditched a Mobile & Ohio passenger train at Fisher’s Lake, 111., and the engineer and fireman were fatally hurt and many others injured.

The total fire losses In the United States and Canada during May were 810,777,800, making the losses for the first five months of 1894 aggregate $53,330.900, against $69,637,650 during the same time in 1893. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. James A. Craword. state president of the United Mineworkers, was nominated for congress by the populists of the Seventeenth Illinois district. Dr. Henry Van Aernam died at Franklinville, N. Y., aged 75 years. He was a member of the Thirty-ninth, I Fortieth, Forty sixth and Forty-sev- ’ enth congresses. Rev. W. A. Passavant, Sr., founder ' of hospitals and orphanages in several | cities, died in Pittsburgh, aged 76 I years. Ex-Judge John M. Broomall died at J Media, Pa., aged 78. In 1864 he was elected to congress and served three consecutive terms.

Joseph N. Carter (rep.) defeated O. P. Bonney (dem.) for supreme judge in the Fourth judicial district of Illinois. His majority was estimated at 3,500. Charles E. Van Zandt, ex-governor of Rhode Island, died at the residence of his brother-in-law in Brookline, Mass., aged 64 years. Oregon republicans claimed the election of Lord, their candidate for governor, by from 5,000 to 10,000 plurality. The legislature will also be republican. Herman (rep.) was also elected to congress from the First district and Ellis (rep.) from the {Second. J. W. Wilson, of Chicago, inventor of the sewing machine that bears his name, died at San Jose, Cal., while on a visit to a daughter. Gen. Charles M. Grosvener was renominated for congress by the republicans of the Eleventh Ohio district.

FOREIGN. Two thousand families homeless and a property loss of $3,000,000 was the estimated result of the flood in the Frazer river valley in British Columbia. The rebels derailed a train near San ' Salvador loaded with government ’ troops, and 200 of the soldiers were killed and 122 wounded. The thirteenth international conference of the Young Men s Christian asI sociations of all lands began in Lon- | don. The meeting commemorates the ■ fiftieth anniversary of the organiza- | tion of the first Young Men’s Christian association by George Williams June 6, 1844. Owing to a rebellion in Corea the lives of Americans were in peril and a warship was asked for. Marsan & Brosseau, hay shippers . at Montreal, failed for 8100.000. Despondent from financial reverses ■ Karl Seigr and wife, of Berlin, I poisoned their four children and then killed themselves. i Nearly $300,000 damage was caused | by a fire in St. John’s. N. B. Ex-Premier Casimir-Perier was elected president of the French chami her of deputies to succeed Dupuy. I A CLOUDBURST occurred in the Sierra Madre mountains south o' Durango, Mex., washed away a camp of chaccoal burners and ten men were drowned. During a storm at Yahualica, Mex., several residences were blown down and ten persons were killed. It was announced that the revolutionists in Salvador had triumphed completely and that President Ezeta i had fled the country. Sf.nor Megneo, manager of the Provincial bank of Buenos Ayres, committed suicide. Irregularities had previously been discovered in his accounts to the extent of $1,800,000.

LATER. In the United States senate on the sth the amendment to the tariff bill placing sugar on the free list was lost and an amendment fixing sugar duties, to go into effect January 1, 1895, was carried by a vote of 35 to 28. In the house bills were introduced to provide for arbitration and to prevent hostilities between labor and capital, and to reimburse the soldiers of the rebellion or their heirs for the average annual difference between gold and the value of the paper currency in which they were paid. Indiana miners in Suilivan county outwitted the militia and burned five cars loaded with coal. ■ At the republican state convention in Lewiston, Me., Henry B. Cleaves was renominated for governor. The resolutions favor international bimetallism, the restriction of immigration, and advocate a high protective tariff. Striking miners at Streator, 111., refused to allow the city waterworks to have coal. Drought, cold weather and frosts have greatlj- retarded crops generally in Minnesota, Illinois, lowa and Missouri. Edward Daniels, a young farmer at Perry Landing, Tex., killed three men with whom he hau a dispute. Fifteen frame buildings, comprising three blocks of the largest business bouses in Pleasantville, la., were destroyed by fire. Charles W. Pike, a commission merchant of San Francisco, failed for SIOO.000.

By the explosion of a gasoline generator in a laundry at Portland Ore., six Chinamen were killed and property valued at £IOO,OOO was burned. The Farmers’ and Merchants' bank * at South End, O. T., closed its doors. Five boys, inmates of a Catholic , home in Tarrytown, N. Y., died from ■ eating a poisonous root, and seven othj ers were seriously ill. I Oscar J. Hodgens, of Springfield, 111., killed Mrs. Mollie Jones and then ended his own existence by shooting. A quarrel was the cause. Desperate strikers took possession of McKeesport, Pa., and non-uuion men were terribly beaten and many acts of violence committed. Later advices from the Oregon election give Lord (rep.) for governor a plurality of 15,000. The legislature will stand: Senate —republicans, 17; democrats, 7; populists, 6. House—republicans, 42; democrats, 10; popu lists, 8.

THE SUGAR SCHEDULE.

The Senate Adopts the “Oompromise” Amendment A Majority of Eleven Against Free Sugar and the Duty Is Fixed at 40 Per Cent. Ad Valorem—Takes Effect January 1, 1895. SENATORS VOTE ON SUGAR. Washington, June 6.—The senate resumed consideration of the sugar schedule of the tariff bill Tuesday. Senator Higgins (rep., Del.) opened the debate with a general assault on the sugar schedule and an argument in favor of continuing the bounty provision of the McKinley law. Senator Aldrich (rep. R. I.), alluding to statements made in the senate regarding the influence of the sugar trust in the framing of the McKiniey bill, said that while there was a sugar trust in 1890, it was not the gigantic concern it is now, and speculation in its shares was comparatively trivial. The hour of 1 o’clock arriving, on agreement the vote was taken on Senator Jones’ (dem., Ark.) amendment fixing January 1, 1805, as the date on which the repeal of the sugar bounty should go into effect. This was adopted, 30 to 33.

Senator Allison offered an amendment to reduce the sugar bounty for the remainder of the calendar year to 8-10 of a cent per pound and to make the sugar schedule take effect immediately on the passage of the bill. The three populists this time voted with the democrats. There was no break in party lines and it was defeated—32 to 40. The senate then passed to the next paragraph, 182 X, fixing the duty on sugar. Senator Jones offered the “compromise" amendment fixing the duty on raw and refined sugar at 40 per cent, ad valorem, with a differential of oneeighth of one cent on sugars above 16 degrees Dutch standard and an additional one-tenth on sugars imported from countries giving an export bounty, continuing the Hawaiian treaty in force and imposing a duty of two cents a gallon on molasses. Senator Lodge (rep.. Mass.) offered as a substitute the amendment originally reported by the senate committee on finance fixing a specific duty on sugar, beginning with one cent per pound on sugar testing 80 degrees by the polariscopic test, and graduating the duty according to fineness. Lost —2B to 37 —Messrs. Pfeffer, Allen and Kyle voting with the democrats. Senator Peffer (pop., Kan.) offered an amendment to place all sugar on the free list. Senator Hill (dem., N. Y.) asked if this would precipitate the direct question as to whether sugar should go on the free list or not. and, being informed that it would, said lie hop<-d a recordmaking vote would be had upon it. Senator Hit voted in favor of free sugar and announced that he was authorized to say that Senator Irby, who was absent, would have voted for free sugar had he been present. The amendment was lost by 26 to 37. Two republicans, Senators Manderson and Perkins, voted against free sugar, and Senator Quay wa v s paired the same way, while Senator Sherman did not vote. Of the democrats, Senator Hill voted for free sugar, while Senator Irby was paired the same way. Of the populist , Senator Peffer voted for free sugar. Senators Allen and Kyle against, and Senator Stewart did not vote. Had all the republicans, with three populists and the two disaffected democrats, joined hands, sugar, raw and refined, would have gone on the free list.

Senator Allison offered an amendment to make the schedule go into effect immediately on the passage of the bill. The amendment was lost —30 to 33. Senator Pettigrew (rep., S. D.) offered an amendment to strike out of the schedule the one-eighth of one cent differential given to the refiners. It was lost—3o to 33—Senator Hill and the populisms voting in favor of striking out the differential given to the sugar trust. Senator Manderson proposed an amendment to cut the duty down half and the bounty half. Lost on a rising vote —23 to 31. The question then was on the Jones amenment to paragraph 182 X, the amendment being the schedule agreed on by the democratic side. The Jones compromise amendment fixed the sugar duties, and it was carried—Bs to 28. An analysis of the vote follows: For the Jones schedule: Democrats, 32; populists, 2; republicans, 1; total, 35. Against the schedule: Republicans, 25; Democrats, 2; populists, 1; total, 28. The Jones amendments increasing the duty on sugar candy fuom 80 to 35 per cent, and making the duty on saccharine 25 per cent, were agreed to. This completed the sugar schedule and at 5:45 p. m., on motion of Mr. Harris, the senate went into executive session and shortly afterward adjourned. [As adopted the schedule Imposes a duty of 40 per cent, ad valorem on all sugars, raw and refined:, with a differential of one-eighth of a cent per pound on sugars above sixteen Dutch standard and an additional one-tenth of a cent against sugars imported from countries paying an export bounty. It continues the Hawaiian treaty admitting sugars from the Sandwich Islands free of duty, and plaoes a duty of two cents per gallon on molasses testing above 40 degrees by the polariscope. The schedule goes into effect January 1, 1895, and the bounty is continued until that date.]

KILLED BY BURGLARS.

Murder of the Leading; Merchant of an Illinois Town. Ottawa, 111., June 6F. O. Whittemore. leading general merchant of Ransom, was shot dead in his store at 10 o’clock Monday night. Two unknown men entered the store and ordered \V hittemore to throw up his hands. Instead of complying with the request he showed fight, when the robbers fired, killing him instantly. They then made their escape and were f< 1lowed into Streator by a posse of ame(l farmers, where all trace of them was lost.

CAPTURED BY STRIKERS.

National Tube Works -at McKeesport in the Hands of a Mob. McKeesport, Pa., June6.—Never has this city witnessed such scenes of defiance of law and the inability of the authorities to cope with the law breakers as are in progress here. At this hour the strikers are practically in command of the situation. The trouble grew out of the strike at the National tube works, and the strikers have outwitted the police, broken into the mill yards and are making systematic tours of the works and their surroundings. ! The plant resumed in two departments Tuesday and about twenty-five men went to work. The news quickly, spread and by noon a mob of nearly I 10,000 had assembled out-ide the gates, awaiting the appearance of the workmen. Most of the men remained inside, but a few attempted to go to their homes and were caught by the mob and terribly beaten. They were finally rescued, however, by the police and I taken back into the inclosure.

The mob then dispersed in part, but toward evening reassembled, and by 6 o’clock probably 5,000 men were massed on Fourth avenue, and it was said that fully three-fourths of the number were foreigners. They were disappointed. At 6 o’clock the day turn did not come out and the night turn did not go in. There was a great load of provisions taken into the mill by the company. At the mills the mob surged around the entrances until 7 o’clock in the evening, when a rush was made and they broke into the yards. The men inside were panic-stricken, and it was the rule of “every man for himself.” The mob swarmed into the inclosure, looking for the hated non-unionists. Hundreds of the strikers were equipped with clubs or weapons of some description. Then beyan a wild chase and pursuit of the hunted workmen inside. The strikers were in complete possession of the place. They ranged over the grounds, and finally routed out ten hidden workmen. The poor fellows made a dash for freedom, but were cut off and surrounded. The mob set upon these men in swarms and beat them shockingly. In the crush to get at the prostrate men one fellow was badly stabbed. One man was found during the evening, still in hiding in the mill yard, which the strikers were patrolling, in complete mastery of the works. The fellow made a dash for the street and got outside the yards. He was pushed closely by the pursuit and in desperation sprung into an electric car passing on the s reet. The strikers surrounded the car, and the motorman tried to force it through the crowd. The trolley pole was pulled down and the car stalled. Then the fugitive was dragged off the car and beaten and kicked into insensibility. Another stowaway was found, his clothing stripped off, and he was kicked and beaten until he was uncon8' ious. 3 hen the assailants left him for a time, and he managed to crawl into a store on Fifth avenue. He vias unable to help hims If and is still there, where he sought refuge. Terre Haute, Ind., June 6.—Early Tuesday morning the militia in the Sullivan county mining district learned they had been outwitted and that five cars of coal had been stolen from them by strategy. The miners had placed a decoy of twenty-five men on the track and, lured to that apparent scene of trouble, the militiamen massed their forces. Then the striking miners captured the five cars of coal. Early in the morning the captured coal was burned on a branch road to the Alum Cave coal mine. The militia had an accession of 500 to their ranks by daylight and at 10 o’clock they started on a special train down the Alum Cave branch. The militia spent the day in the ravines and arrested perhaps a dozen men, some of whom were strikers and some of whom were not. The miners laughed at the militia. The five cars of coal were burned by the time the troops arrived. There were no strikers in sight for the militia to arrest. Then the soldiers formed a circle to scour the country. They brought in a few men, but none were the ones they hoped for.

MAY END THE STRIKE.

Leaders Take Steps Toward Settlement— Situation at Many Points. Columbus, 0., June 6.—The executive board of the United Mine Workers, after a session lasting all day and far into the night, passed a series of resolutions setting forth that, as a general conference of operatorsand miners for the settlement of the strike was not possible, next Saturday meetings should be held in every district with operators and miners for the purpose of making a settlement. This means that the miners will do all in their power to declare the strike off. The action is directly due to the efforts of John Mcßride, against the united voice of the.board, which was for a continuance of the strike on the old lines. The move for conciliation was made at the night session after a heated discussion, every member of the board being against any form of compromise. Mcßride labored with the men at great length, and the result was the passage of the resolution. It is understood the district officers have power to settie the strike in their various districts and that they are supreme in their findings. Many members of the board declare nothing substantial will come of it.

Two Thousand Cattle Drowned.

St. Johns, N. F., June 6.—The Dominion liner Texas, bound from Montreal to Bristol with a general cargo and 2,000 cattle and sheep, went ashore in a dense fog at St. Shotts, St. Mary’s bay. The members of the crew are all safe, but the cattle were washed overboard and drowned. The vessel is going to pieces. There is no hope of saving it.

Honors for a Woman.

Philadelphia, June 6.—Dr. Sarah Hackett Stevenson, of Chicago, was given the degree of doctor of science by the University of Pennsylvania.

tub MaoiG touch OF Hood’s Sarsaparilla You smile at the idea. But if yoi| are a sufferer from Dyspepsia And indigestion, try a bottle, and before you have taken half a dozen, doses, you will think, and no doubt exclaim “ That just hits it!” “That Hood’s Sa w > >%%%%%% parllla soothing effect s a magic f touch!” Hood’s K J Sarsaparilla %%%%% gently tones and strengthens the stomach and digestive organs, invigorates the liver, creates a natural, healthy desire for food, gives refreshing sleep. Hood’s Pills are prompt and efficient. §wjp kool* ’" E^ T KIDNEY LIVER :O* The Spring; Tonic Makes thin, pale, sickly people well and strong* La Grippe Cures the bad after effects of this trying epl. demic and restores lost vigor and vitality. Impure Blood Eczema, scrofula, malaria, pimples, blotches. General Weakness Constitution all run down, loss of ambition and appetite, nervousness, tired and sleepless. At Druggists 50 cents and SI.OO Size. “Invalids’ Guide to Health” free—Consultation free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, of ROXBURY, MASS,, Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and rever failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession ever two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Se'id postal card for book. A benefit if; always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted wnen the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week alter taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No caange 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. takeaheST —CO EAST GO™ Like Shore Route AMERICA’S BEST RAILWAY. VISIT SOME of the DELIGHTFUL MOUNTAIN, LAKE or SEA SHORE RESORTS of the EAST, A FULL LIST of WHICH WITH ROUTES AND RATES WILL BE FURNISHED ON APPLICATION. SEND 10c. IN STAMPS or silver for Beautiful Litho-Water Color View of the “ FAMOUS EXPOSITION FLYER,’’ the fastest longdistance train ever run. C. K. WILBER, West. P. A., CHICAGO.

fIfI&BIGFOUR Ma ROUTE BEST LINE TO CINCINNATI, INDIANAPOLIS AND ALL Southern Points. . . ARRANGE YOUR TRIP . . VIA BIG FOUR ROUTE. E. o. McCormick, d. b. martin, Passenger Traffic General Passenger and Manager, Ticket Agent, CINCINNATI, O. ICon.nm ptlve* and people who have weak lungs or Ar th- B| ma. should use Plso’s Cure lor ■ Consumption. It has cured E thousand*. It has not Injured one. It Is not bad to take. M Ills the best cough syrup. V?? Sold everywhere, n.tc. ■