Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 44, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 July 1895 — Page 7

All Out of Sorts Tired, weak and weary. If this is your condition, stop and think. You are a sufferer from dyspepsia, and pvat misery awaits you if you do not check it now. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the best medicine you can take. It has peculiar power to tone and strengthen the stomach. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the only true blood purifier prominently In the public eye to-day. $1; six for $5. Hood's Pills|||||||l|| Prepared Breakfast While Asleep. Somnambulism has in all ages furnished many curious illustrations, and among them may be noted one that occurred in a Utica, N. Y., residence a few days ago. The husband and wife were aroused by the breakfast bell ringing jp the middle of the night They arose and discovered that it was 2 o’clock, but on going down to the din-ing-room they found breakfast waiting for them. They were greatly alarmed at the condition of things, for they at first imagined that the hired girl had suddenly gone Insane. After a few minutes, however, Vhey discovered that she was asleep. She had got up, started the fire, prepared the morning meal, and had it ready for serving, but was sound asleep all the time. The geutlenum was about to summon a physician, when the wife dashed a glass of cold water In the girl’s face and she awoke.

S’iX ([CLOCK. WEARY WOMEN WATCH FOR THAT BLESSED HOUR. Help for 6trr Workinsr-Girls and Women Near &t Hand. (EriCLU, TO oca LAl>t BCADEJIS ) the stroke of six ends the today’s work at stores, offices, Wi A® * act,or^cs > u dlls, where women 1 women worki; 3 for ambition, the great m drifts them Into the horrors of all kinds of female complaints, ovarian troubles, inflammation, ulceration, falling and displacement of the womb, leucorrhoea, and perhaps irregular or suppressed “ monthly ■periods, 11 -causing swere -backache, lose of appetite,'nervousness, lrri- a lability and weakness. /W Lydia E. Pinkliam'a Yegetable Compound is the nhfail- fagtgsS ing cure for all these troubles. JgjTjJ It strengthens the proper mus- JfPjr clcs, and cures displacement. rgppsfej, Backache, dizziness, fainting, bearing-down, disordered stomach, moodiness, dislike of friends and society all /&sss& symptoms of the one caus_e, will be quickly dispelled. wnPal Write Mrs. Pinkham about your trouble. 'You can tell the story of EMSSS your pain to a woman, and h get the beip that only woman can give. Mrs. Pinkham’s address is Lynn, Mass.

The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age.— KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF DOXBURY, HASS., 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 •topped, and always disappears in a week after taking it Read the label. ~lf the stomach Is foul or bilious It win 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 bad* time. Sold by all Druggists. ★ HIGHEST AWARD* WORLD’S PAIR. .MWj: ★ The BEST ★ PREPARED POOD SOLD EVERYWHERE. * JOHN CAULS A 50NS. New York, ft

FIRE KILLS SIX MEN.

WALL COLLAPSES IN A MINNEAPOLIS BLAZE. Worst in Many Years— Four Blocks in 'Frisco Destroyed Valued at s2,ooo,ooo—Flames Rage for Fonr Hours, Fanned by a High Wind. Loss Placed at $260,000. Six men were killed and ten hurt Thursday night in the most disastrous fire which has visited Minneapolis since the old Tribune building conflagration, when the five-story brick building at 240 and 242 First avenue south, in which was the MacDonald crockery store, was destroyed. The fire_broke out at 11 o’clock and burst forth with a sudden violence which defied restraint. The building was full of straw used in packing the china and the flames fed upon this and swelled to gigantic proportions. They leaped above the walls and rolled in waves of fire over the roof. The entire fire department of the city was called out and heroic measures were used by the firemen to stay the terrible tide. First avenue and Third street were filled with spectators, who watched the awful sight. Suddenly while they looked the south wall tottered out and fell with a sudden erash. A murmur of agony went np from the throng who had but a moment ’before seen a squad of firemen run into the alley with a quantity of hose and turn six streams of water on the walls and into the windows. Sixteen men were under that wall. When they fvere dragged out six were dead and others seriously injured.

The property loss consisted of the entire demolition of the building occupied by McDonald 'Brothers, dealers in crockery, chinaware, glassware, silverware and gas fixtures. The building was of five stories, brick walls .and wooden interior framework, and was well stocked. The tire Originated in the boxes and packing stored in the rear of the building and was beyond the power of the fire department to control. At a few minutes before midnight the walls fell, one side wall falling in and the other falling out into the alley, where the firemen were at work. The loss will aggregate over $200,000; insurance unknown. The first evitlenee of— the-Coming disaster was the discovery of smoke from the rear portion of the building at 10:40 o’clock. Several alarms were turned iri, one from the engine house only a few hundred feet from the firq. For nearly half an hour fire burned within the walls and roof of the building. It broke out first on the alley nearest Third street, at the door near the rear. The firemen could clearly see that the flames were under full headway in the back part of the building, near the elevator. All this while the front was still dark, only a slight escape of smoke from the doors and windows betraying the fierce conflict of the elements withiu. So the great store stood for fully twenty minutes, a vortex* of flame withinVnd a cold and dark exterior. The firemen tWmsclves In their efforts to get their streams to play upon the flames opened the building to currents of air that changed the suppressed fierceness and scut its tongues through the roof and the windows, casting a lurid light on the surrounding scene.

MILLIONS GO UP IN SMOKE.

Fire in Son Francisco Destroys Prop- ■ erty Worth at Least $3,000,000 The manufacturing district of San Francisco was swept by a fire Thursday night that caused a total loss of at least $2,000,000. Shortly before Q. o’clock a fire broke out in the roar of the San Francisco box factory, located on the corner of Fifth and Bryant streets. The factory was a two-story frame building filled with inflammable material. The flames spread rapidly and it soon became evideiiWhat a serious conflagration was threatened. Within a jew minutes the entire east end of the block, bounded by Brannan and Bryant streets, was a mass of flames. A jrtrong southerly wind was blowing and it wns deemed necessary to turn in another alarm. The flames soon spread all over the block, destroying in a few minutes the yards of the Spring Valley water works and the furniture factory of H. Eueler, the box factory of Korbell Bros, at 723 Bryant street, also the stable of H. Washburn at .657 Bryant street. The carriage factory of G. W. Hclan and the soda factory of J. Horstmann were all destroyed in short order. The high wind which fanned the flames and swept them on drove the firemen back by degrees,* and the situation became critical. By 6:45 the whole of the block bounded by Fourth, Fifth, Brannan and Bryant streets was destroyed with the exception of the machine shops on the corner of Fourth and Bryant. At that hour the fire waj spreading toward Bluxom street, sweeping on its way the lumber yard of Van Wart on the corner of Fourth and Brannan, the Meehan Lumber Company’s yard on Brannan street and various small machine shops and tenements. The intense heat made it difficult to utilize to its full capacity the water supply, which was anything but sufficient, owing to the unusual number of hydrants called into play all over the district. Tb# water tower rendered most efficient service, furnishing a jet of water which could be rendered serviceable tyjiere the other streams thrown upon the flames were turned into steam when they had barely left the nozzle. At 8:30 p. m. the entire block bounded by Fourth, Fifth, Bluxom and Brannan streets was a mass of ruins. The firo had reached the Ovwlnnd Transfer Company’s brick freight warehouse and the hardware store of Baker & Hamilton. These brick'buildings temporarily checked the flames. The wind was blowing a gale and the sparks were carried for blocks, greatly increasing the spread of the fire. One death is reportod. A Miss Gilroy, while attempting to save some of her belongings, was covered with burning oil and burned,to death. A number of people received injuries from the falling walls and the flying timbers. The people in the fire district were terror stricken. Most of them are of the poorer classes and were making.great efforts to save their small belongings. « Express wagons and drays were at a premium and people were moving a few blocks auray from the fire. Probably 100,000 people were gathered at the fire, and the poilco were powerless to keep them away. The fire was so hot, however, that the unmanageable crowd did not get near enough to be iu serious danger. At a late hbur the lire department got the fire under control. The wind shifted to the southwest, driving’the flames back over the burned area. Over 100 families have lost their heeeea and all they possess.

A large number of horses were burned la their stables. The change in the wind and the big brick wineries and the railroad offices are what saved the day for the firemen. Probably $2,000,000 will cover the loss. It is nearly total, however, as owing to the dangerous character of the district, insurance rates have been so high as to be almost prohibitory.

ORDER OF GOOD TEMPLARS.

International Snpreine Dodge Holds Its Biennial Session in Boston. The biennial sessions of the international supreme lodge of the Order of Good Templars was held in Boston last

DR. D. H. MANN.

nating in Oneida County, New York, in 1851, with a band of young men, among whom'was ex-Postmaster General James, the movement had a marvelous growth. It has since extended to Africa, Asia and even Australia, where some of the best lodges of the order now exist. At the last international grand lodge, held in Des Moines, there was a spirited contest for the honorofthe grand lodge this year between Sydney and Boston. There are now established no less than eighty-five grand lodges, with over 13,000 subordinote lodges and temples, and the international, supreme lodge is composed-of representatives! from these bodies.' The rjtuals have been translated into sixteen different languages, and its strength is shown by a membership of 246,346 adults and 52,747 juveniles in the United States alone, while England, by the last reports, has 297,196 adults and 108,744 members of the juvenile branch, and British North America, a membership of 36,039. Even in frigid Iceland it has secured a foothold, with over twenty lodges. The pledge of the order is that a mem-

ber will not take, buy, sell,- furnish or cause to be furnished to others as a beverage, any spirituous or malt liquors, wine or eider, and in all honorable ways will discountenance the use thereof in society. The doors of the lodges are open to persons of all races and nationalities, and the members are in

effect banded together for mutual protection ancUco-operation in total abstinence work. The ritual is largely made up from Scriptural texts and has been translated into eleven different languages. The Good Templars’ organization was the first of all temperance bodies to recognize woman as fully nie equal of man in the work of the order, and there is not the slightest doubt that it is largely due to this that its growth was so immediate and, has been so constant. One of the most interesting of all Good Templars is Dir. Oronhyatekha, the Canadian Indian, who for some years was the world’s Good Templar, and was succeeded at the last grand lodge by Dr. Delos H. Mann, of Brooklyn, present incumbent of that high office.

The Political Por.

Gen. Wade Hampton, in an interview at •Portland, Ore., declared himself for sound money. Congressman C. A. Towne says he is considering the calling of a silver convention 4 in Minnesota. The silverite conference at Topeka, Ivan., appointed a committee to take steps towards calling a State convention. Replies to a circular letter sent out to 130 Democratic editors of Ohio show that 90 favor free silver and the other 40 are divided in their view’s. Senator Quay is unable to leave his room at a Harrisburg hotel, but is directing his campaign for chairman of the State committee from there. At the Oklahoma silver convention \V. J. Bryan, of Nebraska, scored the Republican National League for refusing to discuss silver at the Cleveland meeting. J. W. Farris, chairman of the Laclede (Mo.) Democratic committee, says if the State committee refuses to summon a monetary convention he will issue the call. Ex-Gov. Campbell, of Ohio, who may be the standard bearer for the Democrats this year, has come out for free silver and a literal interpretation of the Monroe doctrine.

Gen. Warner, who has arrived at his home In Marietta, 0., says: “There is no trouble about the West. Nobody but an out-and-out silver man can carry a State west of next year. A canvass of the Republican papers of Kansas shows that out of 102, 17 are for free and unlimited coinage of silver at 16 to 1, while 85 stand on the money plank of the last Republican national platform. Senators Harris,,Jones and Turple, empowered by the recent free silver convention at Memphis to form a national bimetallic Democratic league, have issued a call for a national gathering to be held in Washington Aug. 14. Thunderstorms and lightning continue with fatal results in different parts of Austria-Hungary. Two persons were killed near Funkfcrichen, and two girls were killed and ten persons and 135 head of cattle destroyed between Bekes and Ceaka. : On Donaldson creek,' about twelve miles from Inery, young brothers named Chapman killed James Rowe in a quarrel about Rowe's wife. Edmund Griffith and Thomas Davis were killed by a premature explosion near Massillon, O. ■■————

week with a large attendance, at least 5,000 delegates being present The Good Templars organization hr by far the largest temperance organisation now in existence, having a total membership of 700,000, of whom 450,000 belong to the adult branch of the order. Origi-

DR. ORONHYATEKHA

Highes t of all in Leavening Power.—Latest TJ. S. Gov’t Report ABMUTEEV PURE

BULLA-DOG KILLA DA MONK.

Tearful Doss Experienced by an Organ Grinder from Italy. A monkey belonging to Raphael Jo, an Italian organ grinder, was killed by a bull-dog on Fort street yesterday, says the Springfield Republican. The Italian came here from Philadelphia with his instrument and says he paid his way north by working on the roads. When he reached New York his heart was captivated by a well-trained monkey, which he bought for SSO, and which had been a companion of his travels ever since. The couple reached this city two days ago, and began at once to gather in the pennies on the streets.

Yesterday he had misfortune on his track. He was down on Fort street grinding out the regular tunes for the amusement of the crowd. Suddenly a big bull-dog ran out from the Handy establishment and gripped the monkey by the neck. The man tried to pull the animal away from the dog, but it held on with the grimness of death. The wratliy Italian kicked the dog, and he was finally driven away, but not before all the life had been taken out of the poor “monk.” Its owner borrowed a piece of brown paper, and wrapping the remains of the faithful servant carried them to the police station, where, weeping, he told his story to the officers. The man was looking for a lawyer, and will probably try to get damages. There was another case of the same kind in the city two years ago or so, where the value of the.dead monkey was paid in full to its owner.

Trolley Fender a Nuisance.

“Hey, there, Ike, here she comes.” “Look out that she don’t swipe you to the gutter and spoil your new clothes,” said Billy Moran. A moment later, says the Philadelphia Inquirer, there was a woman’s scream. A boy had gone under the trolley and he was certainly ground to death. The car was on the Twelfth and Sixteenth streets line and she had just passed Christian street. A pug-nosed, freckled-faced lad of 10 had run out of Everett street to throw himself before the death-dealing trolley car. “See me do it, Frisby,” he said to a boy companion. He stood right in front of the engine of death. The motorola n could not stop. The fender picked the rascal up. It was a by-play that might have had serious results,but the 10-year-old dropped squarely Into the net and he was saved. People will doubt it, but there Is a gang of boys who throw themselves before the Twelfth street fenders every day. It is fun for them, because they are never hurt. They know what they are doing, and all the trouble they have is a scolding from the conductor or the motorman whom they have worried. There have been no fatal results.

Don’t Get Scared

If you should hear that Id some place to which you are going malaria is prevalent. To the air polsonwhich produces chills and fever, bilious remittent and dumb ague there is a safe and thorough antidote and preventive, viz., Hdstetter’s Stomach Bitters. The great autl-malarlal specific is also a remedy for biliousness, constipation, dyspepsia, rheumatic and kidney trouble, nervousness and debility.

It Is Not Modern.

People are apt to consider that golf in England Is quite a modern introduction, and it will be news to many that it was popular and that It flourished pretty close to London more than a hundred years ago. Evidence of this may be found In a fine engraving by Valentine Green of a picture after L. F. Abbot, entitled “Golfers on Blackheath” and dated 1790. >.

Nicotinized Nerves.

Men old at thirty. Chew and smoke, eat little, drink, or want to, all the time. Nerves tingle, never satisfied, nothing’s beautiful, happiness goue, a tobacco-saturated system tells the story. There’s au easy way out. No-To-Bac will kill the nerve-craving effects fpr tobacco and make you strong, vigorous and manly. Sold and guaranteed to cure by Druggists everywhere. Book. “Don’t Tobacco Spit or Smoke Your Life Away.” free. Ad. Sterling Itemedy Co., New York City or Chicago. There recently passed through Butte en route from British Columbia to Chicago five tons of cinnabar taken from a ledge about 100 miles north of Victoria. The ore will average 10 per cent quicksilver. It Is a recent discovery.

“Good Spirits.”

The words have different meanings to a spiritualist, a Kentuckian, and an average man. For the average man good spirits depend on good digestion. How to insure good digestion? A Ripans Tabuie after each meal, that’s all. Talk what you will of taste, my friend, you will find two of a face as soon as of a mind.—Pope.

Hall's Catarrh Cure.

Is taken Internally. Price 75 cents. Mary Stuart bad a lap dog that followed her to the scaffold, and soon after died of grief. Half-cured eruptions always recur. Eradicate them with Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. “Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye,” Black or Brown, 50c. Suspicion shall be all stuck full of eyes.—Shakespeare. Fob Whooping Cough, Piso’s Cure Is a successful remedy.—M. P. Dikteb, 87 Throop Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., Nov. 14, ’94. Poe found his sole amusement in ' . k.»-

Cold Spot In China.

It is not commonly known that the capital of China is ice-bound for five months out of the twelve, or that the stolid-looking Chinese could use a very Inferior style of Skate, of their own manufacture—a mere chunk of wood arranged to tie or the shoe and shod with a rather broad strip of iron.

When Traveling,

Whether on pleasure bent, or business, take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as it acts most pleasantly and effectually oa tbe kldneys, liver and bowels, preventing fevers, headaches and other forms of sickness. For sale in 50c. and $1 bottles by all leading druggists. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only.

In Olden Times.

Originally there were no seats in the great cathedrals and medieval churches. Worshipers stood or knelt. The first Innovation was the introduction of small pieces of cloth to keep the feet from contact with the cold stone floors.

Two Hundred Miles Under Ground.

The Louisville and Nashvillfe Railroad Cbmpany has just issued an interesting little brochure of Mammoth Cave, handsomely printed -and illustrated. The text is by Dr. R. Ellsworth Call, a gentleman of scientific attainments and the illustrations are reproductions of photographs taken by flash light. Ten cents in stamps or silver, sent to 0. P. Atmore, general passenger agent, Louisville, Ky., will scure a copy. John M. Eagan, the Chicago railroad manager, jumped Into fame when he succeeded in laying ten miles of track In one day. Mrs. Winslow’s Soonmro Stitts for Chlldrsa teething: gotteng the rums, reduces inflammation. Allay* pain, cures wlndooUo. * cents • bottle.

Dr.PIERCE’S Golden Hedicai DISCOVERY Cures Ninety-eight per cent, of all cases of Consumption, In all Its Earlier Stages. Although by many believed to be Incurable, there is the evidence of hundreds of living witnesses to the fact that, in all its earlier stages, consumption is a curable disease. Not every case, but a large percentage of cases, and we believe, fully p S per cent, are cured by Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, even after the disease ■lias progressed so far as to induce repeated bleedings from the lungs, severe lingering cough with copious expectoration (including tubercular matter), great loss of flesh and extreme emaciation and weakness.

iS^mTi jfsb* CLAUS SOAPj " or washing clothes or doing housework, it can’t be , ‘ equalled. Try it. Sold everywhere. Made only by J The N. K. Fairbank Company, - Chicago. 3

It Was Before the Day of SAPOLIO They Used to Say “Woman’s Work Is Never Done.’’ €«& of sorts IS vonder. Think of the conose poor women who have othes and clean house in •fashioned way. They’re 1, vexed, discouraged, out of sorts, with aching backs and aching hearts. They must be out of their wits. Why don’t they use Pearline ? That s what every woman who es her health and strength g to. - And they’re coming to it now, faster than ever. Every day, Pearline’s fame grows and its patrons increase in number. Hundreds of millions of packages have been used by bright women who want to make washing easy. 481

wear nr m wokm*. ifcftiiUHaiitiEflK l\ \\foVn \V,\s }/ % xaVm \s Vtvflu wmaWtA.W @THE RISING SUN STOVE POLISH la cakes for general blacking of a store. THE SUN PASTB POLISH for a quick after-dinner tnlae. applied and polished with a cloth. Morse Bros., Props., Canton, Mass., {J.B.A. Beecham’s pills are for biliousness, sick headache, dizziness, dyspepsia, bad tasto in the mouth, heartburn, torpid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, pimples* loss of appetite, |tc., when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important thing* fat everybody to learn is, that constipatioa causes more than half the sickness in the world,especially oi women; and it can all be prevented. Go bythe book, free strong druggist’s,or write B.PiAllenCo. ,365 Canal Bt., New York. Pills, 10$ and 25$ a box. Annual ‘»les mor© than 8,000,000 boXM.

i: THE BABY’B LIFE depends on the food It gets. Insufficient nourishment is the cause at much of tlie fatality among infants. Improper food brings on Indigestion. If the food is right the digestion will be good, and ••Ridge’s Food" ls| the best. There Ls nothing “Just as good” est "nearly as good.” It is the best In the wholsworld. Have yon a baby? Its life depends upon how it U fed. Sold by Druggists. 36c up to $1.76. WOOLRICH ft CO.. rALWKR. MASS. HEW YORK. CHICACO. GEO. B. HULL A CO., Commission Brokers, RIALTO BUILDING, CHICAGO, Buy and sell Grain. Provisions and Stocks on smallaal margins. Eg"Send your address for our book on BUBINEBS and SPECULATION. It will PLEASE and INTEREST you. Mailed mrs l~JT Correspondence solicited, homesjohlsouti Good farms; fine climate; low prices; easy terms. Address D. H. ROGAX, Colonization Agent Q. ft C. R. It, BIRMINGHAM, ALA. nivruve Thomas P. Simpson, Washington, p A I IH IS D. C. Noatfs tee until Patent ob- * “ “** * w talned. Write for Inventor's QukUh C. N. U. No. 37-06 when writing to advertisers 11 please say you saw the advertisement In this paper.