Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 49, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 August 1895 — Page 3

Impure Blood Manifests itself in hives, pimples, boils, and other eruptions which disfigure the face and cause pain and annoyance, By purifying the blood Hood’s Sarsaparilla completely cures these troubles and clears the skin. Hood’s Sarsaparilla overcomes that tired, drowsy feeling so general at this season, and gives strength and vigor. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the only true blood purifier prominently in the public eyd to-day. $1; six for $5. eonstlpatlOOQ S tion. Price2scents. ’ A Good Mead. Commenting on the amount which a •pider actually consumed during twen-ty-four hours, Sir S. J. Lubbock says: “At a similar rate of consumption a man weighing 160 pounds will require a whole fat steer for breakfast, a steer and five sheep for dinner and for supper two bullocks, eight sheep and four hogs, and just before retiring nearly four„harrels„£>f Jresh fish.” The frog deposits 1t& eggs in shallow water, where the warmth of the sun promotes speedy hatching. The common Snake often selects a bed of decomposing vegetable matter. The crocodile and the clumsy sea tortoise go ashore to lay their eggs. MANY WOMEN SUFFER FROM LACK OF IS FORMATION. Doctors Are Toq Deserved. A Woman Should Be Dealt With Openly, [SyBCIAL TO OUl} LAU\ BEADBEG.J Women are often allowed by their physicians to suffer much frojn lack of information and anxiety. Many medical men are vain, and it is a struggle for them to acknowledge that they dq not understand W?® acase.Wpmcn f do not inveatigotn; /aSwmlMgfeSAX they 'JfesrSlwk have fai’h * n . their M doctor, and B often wreck !'a their lives trough this unfortunate confidence. In the treatment of female diseases men work from theory; and it is not to be expected that they can treat as intelligently those complaints from which they have never suffered, as a woman can who has made the organism, and diseases of her sex a life study. ~ Women afflicted with female diseases are wise in communicating promptly with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Their distressed condition is due. to womb trouble, and their symptoms tell the •tory. Lydia E Plfikhatrts Vegetable Compound. is the one remedy that removes the cause, and restores health, courage, am) happiness. P"?■ ... The ' druggists sell \ 1 more of it. than all other female medicines. Why ? The following short letter speaks for itself. Mrs. Parker is ijggjgr | I a very young wife; ip’UwM I only twenty-one years ml VW'/ old. She was suffer- gfi! i'ra. Ing untold misery fl Im when she wrote toffl flt Mrs. Pinkham for ad-I|| n> vice. See the result. ’ ’J Can evidence be stronger than this F “ I deem it my duty to announce the fact to all my fellow-sufferers of all female complaints that your Vegetable Compound has entirely cured me of all the pains and suffering I was enduring when I wrote you last May. I followed J’our advice to the letter, and the result s wonderful." Mbs. Chas. Parker, Little Falls, Minn. Any druggist has it. DAD WAY’S n PILLS, Purely Vegetable, Mild and Reliable. Cube all DISORDERS or THE STOMACH. LIVER, BOWELS, SICK HEADACHE, BILIOUSNESS, INDIGESTION, TORPID LIVER, DIZZY FEELINGS, DYSPEPSIA. One or two ot Radway’a Pills, taken dally by those subject t>bilious paina and torpidity ot the Liver, will keep the system regular and secure healthy digestion. OBSERVE the following symptoms resulting from Diseases of the digestive organs: Constipation. Inward piles, fullness of the blood in the lieM, acidity of the stomach, nausea, heartburn, disgust of food, fullness or weight in the stomach, sour eructations, staking or fluttering of the heart, choking or sultocutfhg sensations when in a lying posture, dimness ot vision, dizziness on ruing suddenly, dots or webs .before the sight, fever and dull pain in the head, dellclency of perspiration, yellowness ot the skin and eyes, pain in the side, chest, limbs, and sudden flushes of heat, burning in the flesh. A few doses of HWWAY’S PILLS will free the system of all the above named disorders. Price 2S cents per box. Sold by all druggists. * ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR ★ the best* ROOD FOR INVALIDS ★ JOHN CARLE & SONS. New York. A Ofc 11! CH vN Washington, p.C. ■ »yiwtalest wnr. 16 a* (Indicating claims, atty since, niTEIiTC* F- Blmpson. Washington. PATENTS TJKIG HT A*ont>, male It female'. i» weekly. Pro Jjmotlon A chan. Premiums, bend 10c tor samples A particulars. A. B. P. CO- 2407 Showakerßt,.PhUa.. Pa. ln tlma - Pol<> *7 drugytrta. gj

TWO MOBS IN A RIOT.

DESPER ATE RACE RIOT AT SPRING VALLEY, ILL. Italians Commit a Brutal Crime Under the Plea of Avenging a Comrade’s Murder—Men, Women and Children Are Shot and Clubbed. Fend of Long Standing. A settlement of 200 negroes, who live in what is called the “Location,” near No. 3 shaft, two miles west of Spring Valley, 111., was attacked by 500 white miners. Many shots were fired and bricks and missiles of every description were used by the combatants. Forty of the negroes were wounded and several of them may die. The uprising was caused by a white man, an inoffensive and popular young Italian, being held up, robbed, and almost murdered by a gang of five negroes, between the city and the "Location.” Barney Role, the man w’ho was assailed, was coming from Spring Valley on his way home when he was.suddenly ordered to halt by four or five negroes, who made him throw up his hands W’fiile they robbed him of SSO and his watch. After robbing Role the negroes fired five shots into his body, three taking effect. The wounded man could give no description of the men except that they were negroes whom he had frequently seen around the “Location.” This robbery and attempt at murder happened at 1 o’clock Sunday morning. The police were- at once notified, and a force of twelve extra men was put on to hunt the murderers down. At 7 o’clock in the morning five colored men were arrested and brought to the jail. By this time the affair was pretty well known throughout the city and a big crowd gathered around the city bastile. There were cries of lynching. Some one rang the fire bell, augmenting the crowd still more, until the police were compelled to remove the prisoners and bring them to a better place of safety. As the mob became greater it became bolder. A brass band was got out and about 500 men marched to General Manager Dalzell’s house. A committee went in to see the manager and told him the whites wanted him to discharge every colored man of they would runthem out of Town themselves. Manager Dalzell refused to submit to their demands. He was jeered, and the mob struck out on its march to the “Location.” When’they were about half way there Manager Dalzell, by taking a circuitous route, headed off the enragedwhites. - Mayor Delmorga, who is an Italian, was in the buggy with him. The Mayor stepped out of the buggy and addressed the crowd. He counseled peace, but they brushed him aside, saying if Dalzell would not run such a murderous set of negroes out of town they could. They continued the march. A little way further they met Chief of Police Hicks and ,a few’ deputies. The officers were unable to check the progress of the march. Mob Makes the Attack. The mob, headed by. the Italian band, with music playing, then went direct to the negro village. The column proceeded slowly and the band rendered several national anthems. About fifty members of (he mob were armed with shotguns, rifles, and revolvers, and the others carried clubs and sharpened sticks. The men Wanted blood, and the constant warcry, given in Italian, was: .“Kill the niggers! Drive them out! Blood for blood!”

The negroes had been warned of intended onslaught of the Italians, but were deceived by the appearance of thS brass band. As houses jwere reached the rioters struck out the windows and where doors were locked broke them down. The interior was ransacked, the women insulted, and-the. JiieiL-dragged.. forth., and clubbed and shot. That there was not a large number of immediate fatalities was not the fault of the rioters, as they used every endeavor in their power to kill the men outright. One reason many negroes escaped was that the weapons of the rioters were mostly old, rusty guns that had not been used for many years, and in addition the men were not skilled in the use of them. Had modern rifles been discharged in the same manner as the old shotguns and muzzleloading rifles the list of dead would have been enormous. The raid of the Italian miners upon the negroes had been contemplated for several weeks. In fact, ever since the negroes were imported into Spring Valley at the close of the three months’ strike last summer the miners speaking a foreign tongue have been laying plans *to drive them out.' —Si

News of Minor Note.

Comedian Edward Leslie stopped a runaway team at New York and saved four lives. ———“— A. C. Cade was siiot and killed at Sparta, O. T., by Bud Ray, marshal of the town. As a rebtalt of a. feud a dynamite bomb thrown in the hamlet of Mart, Texas, and five members of the Phillips family were killed outright. Hector Louis Francois Tessard, a well-known publicist, died at Paris. He was at different times connected with a number of Paris impers. At Atlanta, Ga„ Dr. Hawthnrne preached a red-hot sermon against bicycling, declaring that a personal devil was responsible for the evil. The Omaha Board of Education elected Prof. Frank B. Cooper, of.’Des Moinea, superintendent of the Omaha public schools for the coming year. Messrs. Dudley, Tatro, Troche and Trudas, of North Adams, Mass., were killed at a railroad crossing near Williamstown. Their carriage was struck by a train. Porter Jones, a nephew of Sam Jones, the evangelist, committed suicide at Atlanta, Gn„ in the penitentiary camp, where he was serving a five-year sentence for killing a ma a. H. M. Saunders, a passenger, and Conductor Emmett Burdick were slightly injured in a railway collision on the Western New York and Pennsylvania Road near Southport, Pa. Mrs. Helen Fenger, aged 35, and Charles Church, aged 32, she a mother of four children, and he the father of three, eloped from Boston. Ind. They are supposed to have gone to St. Louis. THttnas, II- Fetei'Bon, .agent for the Hocking ValYejrHtaftitortd and merchant*! Longley, Ohio, was found on the track with his head severed from his body. He fell from an excursion train.

Russia’s Bitterness Toward Japan. An incident wliich sufficiently illustrates the bad feeling with which Russia has regarded the success of Japan, and which may be taken in connection with the talk concerning further action in the far East, is tliat mentioned in th® Issue of the Japan Weekly Mail, just to hand." When the Jananese Plenipotentiary arrived to ratify tire treaty with the Chinese Envoys at Chefoo there were eleven Russian vessels in the harbor, in addition to two German ships and one French. Then ensued an extraordinary demonstration. The Russians uncovered their guns, removed the tampions, ran down their topmasts, and cleared their decks for action. In this they were followed by the German commanders. This display was an unmistakable demonstration against the exchange of ratifications. Strangely enough the French vessel took no part In it. The result of this Insolent hostility was tliat the American and English Captains in the harbor boarded the Japanese vessel to pay visits of friendly courtesy. No. doubt there Is not so much, eagerness outlie part of Germany to play lap-dog to the Russians as there was at the time we mention, but the bitter feeling of Russia will, we are afraid, be in no way minimized by recent events.

A Slave from Boyhood.

(From the Red Wing, Minn., Republican.) “I am now 24 years old,” said Edwin "Swansbn,of White Rock, Goodhue Cotinty, Minn., to a Republican representative, “and as you can see I am not very large of stature. When I was 11 years old 1 became afflicted with a sickness which baffled the skill and knowledge of the physician. I was not taken suddenly ill but on the contrary I can hardly state the exact tinje when it began. The first symptoms were pains in my back and restless nights. The disease did not trouble me much at first, but it seemed to have settled in my body to stay and my bitter experience during the last thirteen years proved that to be the case. I was, of course, a child and never dreamed of the suffering in store for me. I complained to my parents and they concluded that in time I would outgrow my trouble, but when they heard me groaning during my sleep they became thoroughly alarmed. Medical advice was sought, but to no avail. I grew rapidly worse and was soon unable to move about, and finally became confined continually to my bed. The best doctors that could be had were consulted, but did nothing for me. I tried various kinds of extensively advertised patentmedicines with but the same result. “For'twelve long years I was thus a sufferer in constant agony without respite. Abscesses formed on my body in rapid succession, and the world indeed leoked very dark to me. About this time when all hope was gone and nothing seemed left but to resign myself to my most bitter fate, my attentioii was called to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. Like a drowning man grasping at a straps in sheer desperation I concluded to make one more attempt—not to regain my health (I dared not hope so much), but, if possible, to ease my pain. “I bought a box of the pills and they seemed to do me £ood. I felt encouraged and continued their use. After taking six boxes I was up and able to walk around the house. I have not felt so well for thirteen years as during the past year. Only one year have I taken Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills and l am able now to do chores and attend to light duties. “Do I hesitate to let you publish what I Ijave said ? No. Why should I. It is the truth and I am only too glad to let other sufferers know my experience. It may help those whose cup of misery is as full to-day as mine was in the past.” Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain, in a condensed form, all the elements necessary to give new life and richness: to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, irregularities and all forms of weakness. They,btiihl. wp- the Hood,' and restore the glow of health to pale and sallow cheeks. I n mon they effect a radical cure in all cases arising from mental worry, overwork or excesses of whatever nature. Pink Pills are sold in boxes (never in loose bulk) at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, and may be had of all druggisls, or direct by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y.

A Rarity.

A gentle pleasantry at the expense of one’s critics can be forgiven its bit of sarcasm—especially when it shows more patience than malice. In the early days when Mrs. Julia Ward Howe was becoming known as a public speaker, she met with some opposition both among her friends and the people generally. Walking down Charles street one day with a friend, Mrs. Howe noticed the sign over the Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary, and read It over slowly: “Charitable Eye and Ear—Can It be that there Is a charitable ear in Boston?”

The Farmer Is Happy! (C. N. U.)

The farmer reporting sixty bushels winter rye per acre, six ton of hay fifty-two bushels of winter wheat has reason to be happy and praise Salzer’s seeds. Now, you try It for 1890, and sow now of grasses, wheat and rye. Catalogue and samples free, if you write to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wls., and send this slip along.

Coeducation at Cornell.

Twenty years’ record of coeducation at Cornell University shows that the women lead in scholarship. They have a higher record throughout the four years’ course than the men; more women than men received the highest record for scholarship, and with the exception of oratory women took more than their proportional share of honors and prizes.

Keeps Men Poor.

The clerk may be “boss” if he had the head for it. The, brains are, there, but they don’t seem to, work. The trouble usually begins tn the stomach. Indigestion keeps men poor because they don’t know they have it, but imagine something else. Ripans Tabules insure sound digestion and a clear bend. They regulate the entire system. Ask the druggist for a box. Precept Is instruction written in the ?aml, the tide flows over it and the record Is gone. Example Is graven on the rock.—Channing. "■ The most difficult thing In life Is to keep the heights which the soul has reached.

RoWl Baiting 1 Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE

Beyond Doubt.

Among the many good things told some years ago of Colonel Utley, well known as a Wisconsin editor, and also as the hero of more than one military story, is a little incident which illustrates his ability to make a good-na-tured joke. During the war, while Colonel Utley was in command of a 'Wisconsin regiment stationed in Kentueky. he attained some notoriety by allowing his men to harbor and protect a poor negro boy. w’ho had escaped from his niaster. The the master brought suit for his value against Colonel Utley, day "the went rfqm‘’"Els home to Milwaukee, and while there he met a friend w’ho asked him how his case was progressing. “Very well,” replied the colonel. “I think I shall win it, although I have the smartest lawyer at the Milwaukee bar against me.” —— “Why, he isn’t our smartest lawyer, by any means," said the friend, with evident surprise. “Oh, certainly he is;” responded the colonel, with conviction. “How do you know?” persisted his friend. “Know! Why, man alive, he acknowledges it himself!”

Unknown and Known.

Charles Sumner once had an experience which taught him that he was both known,and unknown, even in Boston. He was on his way, riding in a street car, to attend a social meeting at the Church of the Disciples, to which he had been invited by the pastor, Dr. JainesT’reeman Clarke, when two suggestive. incidents happened. While in tbe car he asked a gentleman the exact locality of the church. The gentleman told him, and then said, “Are you a stranger, sir?” showing that there was a Bostonian who did not know Mr. Sumner by sight. But a boy in the car jumped out when Mr. Sumner reached his destination, and said; “Mr. Sumner, will you please write your name in my album?” They stopped under a street lamp, and Mr. Sumner wrote his name.

Laugh and Grow Fat!

You shall do both, even If you are a slabsided, pallid, woe-begone dyspeptic. If you reinforce digestion, Insure the conversion of food Into rich and nourishing blood, and recover appetite and sleep by the systematic use of the great renovator of health, strength and flesh, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, whlcji also remedies malarial, kidney and rheumatic trouble, nervousness, constipation and biliousness.

Making Over Clothes.

A novel and sensible dressmaking establishment has been started don by a company of young women. They .take last season’s dresses and make them over in the prevailing fashion. No entirely new materials are taken. This making a specialty of remodeling and renovating new dresses has brought a great deal of custom, and might have profitably been introduced everywhere.

Skinny Sufferers Saved.

Tobacco users as a rule are always below normal weight because tobacco destroys digestion and causes nerve Irritation that saps brain power and vitality. You can get a quick, guaranteed relief by the use of No-To-Bae, and then If you don’t like your freedom and Improved physical condition you can learn the use of tobacco over again, just like the first time. No-To-Bac sold under guarantee to cure by Druggists everywhere. Book free. Ad. Sterling Remedy Co., New York City or Chicago.

She Was the First Professor.

The first woman to occupy the chair of jurisprudence in an university was “Prof.” Calderinl, of the City of Bolona, whp occupied that position from 1360 to 1366. I am entirely cured of hemorrhage of lungs by Piso’s Cure for Consumption.— Louisa Lindaman, Bethany, Mo. A Jan. 8,1894. Mithridates is said to have known by name every soldier in his army of 10,000 to 20,000 men. He spoke twen-ty-two different languages, all that were used in his kingdom.

•GREAT BOOK FREE. When Dr. R. V. Piercy of Buffalo, N. Y., published the first edition of bis work, The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, he announced that after 680,000 copies had been sold at the regular price, >1.50 per copy, the profit on which would repay him for the great amount of labor and money expended in producing it, he would distribute the next half million free. As this number of copies has already been sold, he is now distributing, absolutely free, 500,000 copies of this most complete, interest- CQIJPON ing and valuable common No. 112 sense medical work ever published—the recipient only being required to mail to him, at the above address, this little coupon with twenty-one (21) cents in onecent stamps to pay for postage and packing only, and the book will be sent by mail. It is a veritable medical library, complete in one volume. It contains over 1000 psges and more than soo illustrations. The Free Edition is precisely tbe same as those sold at $1.50 except only that the books are bound in strong manilia paper covers instead of cloth. Send now before all are given away. They arc going off rapidly. < IEWIS’UmYE La Powdered and Perfumed. VgffiLsff < K D > Th«»lr»ng*»< and purest Lye made. Vi.llke oilier Lye It being * line and pa> Xed In a ran with ..’aSMgtfk Wnm ..able I <t th- coiit.i.u are aI“MM Ways 1 >-»<!» lor nee. Will make the ro fnme'l H nd f O»p in 20 ruinuutteUAvul Mllna. It la the best for cieatMitig pipe" dl-lntect- ■■ Ing eieke, rloa-ta, washing boltlee, PENNA. SALT MFC. CO. Gen'l Pbilm, Pa. MUUCnO rAol ILlXO.bvmalL BtowsUAOSk 111 ..i ir ir. "~n

Pig with a Trunk.

George R. Jones has in his possession, at his farm on Hermit’s lane, Roxborough, one of the two young pigs brought from Cuba on the training ship Saratoga during her last cruise. The porker Is a real curiosity, being as black as Ink, and adorned with a long snout, resembling the trank of an elephant. He doesn’t root up the ground instead of his nose. He is a regular epicure in regard to food, for nothing but fresh, warm milk and bananas appeal to his palate.- Midshipman Miltenberger presented Jones with the animal about four weeks ago. It la now abost two months old and growing fast—Philadelphia Record.

Hall’s Catarrh Cure.

Is a constitutional cure. Price 75 cents. To struggle again and again to renew the conflict, this is life’s Inheritance. Mr?- Wlnjtowls Soonmra trranr for Children

KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the’neeos of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most jwceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with, the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. ' Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c ancTSl bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whoflb name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any subetitnte If offered. UKIVERSITYOFfIOTREpAME (Main Bulldin*.J The Flfty-sneond Year Will Open TVKSUAY, SEPT. Bd, 1895. -—will oooasas n Classic*, Letters, Science, Law, civil and Mechanical Engineering. Thnrcagh Preparatory and Commercial Courses. Sr. Edwazdi hall, tor bozo wider 13, is unique in the oompleteuMo of Ito equipment A Molted number of czndldatw for the ecdertaotical state will be received at special rates. CatetocweooeM free on application to KEV. ANDKEW MOKRISSEY, C. 8. C„ Notre Dame, Indiana.

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MRTiXN nu WOBia l\ % yov totmrtq % - wf / TMeSUNPAm POLISH fora eulcfi after-dinner man Morse Bros., Props., Canton. C.B. Ao t ? Beecham’s pills are for biliousness, sick headache, dizziness, dyspepsia, bad taste in the mouth, heartburn, torpid liver, foul breath, sallow skin, coated tongue, loss of appetite, eta, when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. One of the most important things fog everybody to learn is that constipatios causes more than half the sickness in the world,especially ot women; anditcanall be prevented. Go by the book, free at jotta druggist’s,or write B.F. AilenCo. ,36sCuu4 BL, New York. Pills,io<t and 254 a boE. . Anus al »*!e« mor. than SJXO.OOO boxam Mr. H. F. Barnes, a reporter for the Sunday Herald, ptfblished at Canibn, Ohio, under date of May 27, 1895, writes to the Ripans Chemical Company that he knows a workingman who has been benefited by Ripans Tabules after a severe attack of the Grippe, and he append* the following statement with permission to publish: “Testimonial of Thos. J. Meals of the City of Canton, Stark County, Ohio: “I had an attack of the Grippe four years ago this spring that left me in a bad way. My nervous system was broken down and my dige> tlve apparatus in a condition that made md miserable for days. “While able to work at my trade, as shearman In a rolling mill, I suffered more or less all the time with my stomach. Bitters and tonics were literally taken by the gallon, and every variety of pills and potions that promised relief. I derived some benefit from the use of some of them if I continued taking them, but if I quit a few days my old trouble would return. Noticing the advertisement of the Ripens Tabules, for impaired and bad digestion, I concluded to Invest in a few of them, which I am pleased to Inform you have proven all or more than I expected of them. While I have taken but a few of them, they have done me more good than all the other remedies that I have tried. They relieve the belching and sour stomach almost at once, and I feel better In every way since I . commenced taking them. The distressing headaches, which I always had preceding a fit of indigestion, have entirely left me. I will be glad to recommend the Tabules to anybody suffering from stomach troubles. (Signed) Thos. J. Meals, Canton, O.” Ripans Tabules are sold by flruagirts. or by matt if tbe price (SO cents a box) Is sent to The Ripana '-imp cal Company, Na 10 Spruce Street,-New York. Saante «lal, 10 cents. DROFSW cases pronounced hopeless. Front first doo. ana>. toms rapidly disappear, and in V n days at leaottw*. thirds of all symptoms are removed. BOOKqfl testimonials of miraculous cures sent FREflb Ten Days Treatment Furnished Free by Mill, It. 1.1 CUEI tMM SPECIALISTS ITUIU MMM U. N. U. No. 3»-M VITHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISER* Vv please say y<m saw the advertfaanMMfi tn this paper.