St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 14, Number 40, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 30 March 1889 — Page 4
Extraordinary License. "It seems to me,” remarked ony of om citizens the other day, “that physicians aro allowed extraordinary license in the manner in which they juggle w th the welfare of. their patients.” Now, here is Dr. , who was attending U P to the time of his death, and if he treated him for one thing he treated him for a dozen different disorders. First ttie doctor said pneumonia was the trouble; then it was consumption. Then the patient was dosed for heart trouble, and so on, until just before he died it was ascertained that disease of the kidneys was the real trouble, and that which had been at first treated as pneumonia, ‘J ns urn ption, heart disease, etc., were but. the symptoms of kidney disease. ^ut t !’ en was too late. "This is only one ease in a hundred, and l am 1 yginuing to lose faith in the doctors altogether. In fact, I haven't had any need for their services since 1 began to keep Warner’s Safe Cure in my house, a little over three years ago. Whenever I feel a little out of sorts 1 take, a few doses of it. confident that the source of all disease is in the kidneys, which I know Warner’s Safe Cure will keep in good order, and will eradicate any disease that may be lurking there. Had Mr. followed a similar course, 1 have no doubt he would be alive to-day; but, of course, all people don’t think alike. “One thing is certain, however, and that is the doctors are allowed a little too much freedom in the way they have of pretending to know that which they really know nothing about. If they don’t know what is the real trouble with the patient, they should admit it and not go on and experiment at the cost of the patient’s life." Novel Defense and Verdict, An Alabama man, charged with stealing a calf, made, the following statement: “I was always teached to be honest, an’ most always have been, but when I seed that calf I caved. 1 never wanted a calf so bad in all my life, an’ yon all know that when a man wants a calf he wants him.” The jury returned the following verdict: “ We, this jury, air satisfied that Steve stole that calf, but, as the feller that owned the animal is considerable of a slouch, we agree to clear Steve an’ make the owner pay the costs.”— San Francisco Argonaut. A Terrible Misfortune. It is a calamity of the direst kind to feel that cue’s physical energies are failing in the prime of life—to feel more nerveless, more dispirited, weaker everyday, let this is the unhappy lot ♦f hundreds who surround us, A source of renewed strength which science approves, In behalf of which multitudes of the debilitated have and are every day testifying, and which, in countless instances, has built up constitutions s ippod by weakness and infirmity and long un benefited by other means, surely comprehends itself to all who need a tonic. Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is such a medicine pure, botanic, soothing to the nerves, promotive of digestion and a ertilizer of the bbod. Dy-pepsia and nervousness —the first a cause, the second a conuquence of lack of stamina—depart when a con so of the Bitters is tried. All forms of ma arial disease, rheumatism, kidney and bladder trouble, constipation and biliousness are annihilated by this standard fumiy^modicine. Life would be one delightful slide if we did not have to drag our sleds back up the hill. — A c< Id is oft n the forerunner of consumption and death Magee’s Emulsion is the latest a .d best itmedy known to the medical profssioir FOR CHICKEN CHOLERA.
I recommend it as a sure cure. It has saved me many dollars. 11. A. KCENNE, Breeder of Fine Fowl*. DIAMOND VERA CURA FOR DYSPEPSIA And All Stomach Troubles, such as: IndigestiO’. Sour S omach, Heartburn Nausea. G dd ness, C nstiprtion. Fullness after eating. Food R sing in the Mouth ant Disagreeable Taste after eahng. Nervousness and Low Spirits. At Druut/M#anil Dealers, or sent by mail on receipt of 25 cents (s bases $1.00) in stamps. Sample sent on receipt of scent stamp. THE CHtRLES A. VOGELER CO.. Baltimore. Md. VHIIMP MCN Learn Telegraphy here id we will lUUnU hlLll help you to good situations. Address Amer.can School of Telegraphy. Madison, Wis. HAVE CTIinV Bookkeeping,Business Forms, Uink O I UM I • Penmanship,Arithmetic,Shorthand, etc., thoroughly taught by mail. Circulars free. Bbyant’s Business College, Buffalo, N.Y. ^CHOLERA PROOF, OR OHIO Improveo\& ^ScHESTtH HOOS. SEND FOR D ESCRI PTION&PRICe'^^ V\oF THIS FAMOUS BREEO&FOWLS. AD’ TS WAN TE D.| y L.. U. Silver Co., Cleveland, Ohio.t^' Uiif 4k RITETR Men to travel on salary for the WAnl I CM FONTHILL M RSERIES OF CANADA. SSO to Si 100 a month and expenses paid t > sell orr Canadian-Grown Stock. Addre s STONE & WELLINGTON, Madison, Wisconsin. find that Piso’s Cure g 3W, a$ nF I B for Consumption not B i’J R B S IH X onl y PBEVENTS, but u ° urfe - A REPOSITORY OF A NATION’S WANTS. If you want to sell or buy a farm, or stock of merchandise, anywhere in the United States, send fora c rctilarshowing our non-commissionplan. National Pbovkrty Exchange 51S Temple Court. Chicago, 111. BWI ELY’S CREAM BALM F/^GATarrh Apply Balm into each nostril. oxa ] ELY BBOS., 56 Warren St., N. Y. Iile&il contract' d flood Poison HKMteWyi of had type, and won :r atcd with - mercury, potash and tarraparilla IRMLjg mixture .' rowing worse all the time. took small bottles S. S, which y Sy cured me entirely, and no sign of •J ^y Si IF the dreadful disease has returned. A Aj J. u. Nance, MbMMHwßgjly Jan. 10, 'B9. Ilobbyville, Ind. KhHm My little niece had white swelling ij &Jr to such an extent that she was cou--2 zk I fined to the bid for a long time. 1 * Morothan 20 pieces of bone came out of her leg, and the doctors suid SmMSmWk amputation was the only remedy to i sax e her life. 1 refused the operation | and put her on S.S.S. and she is now j / upardactivcandinasgoodliealthas 5 W ■ any child. Miss Annie Geesling, I SV Ju Feb. 11,’£9. Columbus, Ga. ' Book on Blood Diseases sent free. ! .swift Specific Co. Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga, DADWAYT 11 PILLS 0 The Great Liver and Stomach Remedy For the cure of all disorders of the STOMACH, LIVER, BOWE S, KIDNEYS, BLADDER, NERVOUS DISEASES, LOSS of APPETITE, HEADACHE, CONSTIPATION, COSTIVENESS, INDIGESTION. BILIOUSNESS, FEVER. INFLAMMATION of the BOWELS, PILES, and all derangements of the Internal Viscera. Purely Vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals, or DELETERIOUS DRUGS. PERFECT DIGESTION will be accomplished by taking RADWAY’S PILLS. By so doing Dyspepsia, SICK HEADACHE, FOUL STOMACH, BILIOUSNESS, will be avoided, and the food that is eaten contribute its nourishing properties to the support of the natural waste of the body. Price 25c. per box. SOLD BY ALL DRUCCISTS. AS*lf your storekeeper is out of them, mail the price to RADWAY & CO., 3'4 Warren Street, New Yolk City.
LATEST Bl TELEGRAPH. —a " ’ ■ > —— A TURBULENT WORLD. IMPORTANT happenings of the DAY TOLD BY TELEGRAPH. Foreign and Domestic Intelligence Transmitted by Wire —A Kaleidoscope of Interesting' Occurrences—Political, Criminal, Accidental, and Industrial. JOHN BRIGHT DEAD. The Great English Philanthropist Passes Away in London. John Bright., the great English philanthropist and statesman, is dead, his demise occurring in London after a long illness. The remains were interred in the Quakers’ burying g ound at Rochedale. John Bright, the son of a Quaker, Jacob Bright, was born Nov. 10, 1811, near Rochdale, and
received a thorough Eni \ IM /I
JOHN biught. he gided with the Union’s cause. In 1807, after a decade of great work in that direction, the friends of reform triumphed and Bright entered Gladstone’s Cabinet in 1808 as President of the Board of Trade, but resigned the office in 1871 on account of ill-health. When Gladstone ret urned to power in 1880 Bright became Chancellor of the Duchy of laneaster, but resigned in 1882 when the Government began war in Egypt. He had always been an uncompromising champion of Irish rights, and justified Irish turbulence and disorder in view of the treatment of the nation by the Government until the franchise bill brought eighty-six Irish members into the House, when he became completely alienated from the cause, and proved one ] of the most powerful opponents to Gladstone’s scheme of home rule. Mr, Bright was married I in 183 J to Elizabeth Priestman, of Newcastle. His wife died in 1841, and he was afterward married, in 1849, to Margaret Leatham, daughter of a ; i banker of Wakefield. He leaves four sons and i three daughters. The President's Proclamation. President Harrison has issued a proclamation opening to settlement under the recent acts of Congress the lands in j the Indian Territory ceded to the United > States by the Creek and Seminole Indians. I By the terms of the proclamation the ; | lands are only open to homestead entry, and sections 16 and 36 in each township are reserved for public- : school purposes. The proclamation ! goes into effect on April 22 at noon, j and all persons are warned not to enter upon or occupy any of said lands before that time under penalty of being forever debarred from acquiring any lands or : lights therein. The lands comprise all I the western half of the Creek Nation and । that portion of the Seminole Nation ceded । to the United States bv the treaty of June ; ! 14, 1866. Presidential No».iinatlons. j Among the nominations sent to the Senate by President Harrison on the 27th ult., were the following: Robert T. Lincoln, of Illinois, to bo Minister to Great Britain; Murat Halstead, of Ohio, Minister to Germany; Allen Thorndyke Rice, of New York, Minister to Russia; Patrick Egan, of Nebraska, Minister to Chili; Thomas Ryan, of Kansas, Minister j to Mexico; John Hicks, of Wisconsin, to ! be United States Minister to Peru; George ! B. Loring, of Massachusetts, Minister ■ Resident and Consul General to Portugal; I Chester A. Wilcox, to bo Postmaster at i Quincy, 111. Losses by Fire. The Tennessee Range and Manufact ur- ’ ing Company’s works at Nashville, Teun., > were burned. Loss, $45,000; insurance, $23,000. Incendiarism is suspected. Destructive prairie fires did much j damage in Stearns County, Minnesota. The Globe Warehouse at Scranton, Pa., ; owned by Clelland, Simpson & Taylor, I dry-goods dealers, was gutted by fire. ; Loss nearly $200,000. Five buildings, including one church, j were burned at West Haven, Conn. Abducted Their Niece. Lizzie Myers, a 16-year-old girl of Justus, Ohio, was abducted a few days i ago by her two uncles, Andrew and Will- . iatn Maurer, and taken to Urichsville. ; Her stepfather claims the object of the abduction is to get hold of a large sum of j money which is to be left to Miss Myers ; on the death of her grandfather. Death of Mr. Mahoney. Ex-Refresentative Peter Paul Mahoney, of New York, died at the Arlington Hotel, Washington, D. C. He was taken sick two days after President < Harrison’s inauguration and never recov- ! | ered. FAVORITES OF THE SENATE. A Number of Nominations Confirmed—Others Delayed. The Senate confirmed the following nominations on the 27th ult.: Francis E. Warren, Governer of Wyoming Territory; Benjamin F. 'White, Governor of Montana; Robert V. Belt, Assistant Commissioner of Indian Affairs; Charles C. Walters, United States Attorney for the eastern district of Arkansas ; Oscar M. Spellman, United States Marshal for the eastern district of Arkansas; Walter P. Corbett, United States Marshal for the Southern District of Georgia. J Postmasters: William B. Hodge, Jr., Marshall, I 111.; John P. Yost, North Bend. Neb.; Harper ; Brosius, Alliance, Ohio; Charles W. Jones, Mar- [ tinsville, Va.; Robert E. Milner, Newman, Ga.; I Walter F. Brashear, Russellville, Ark.; James I J'. George, Dardanelle, Ark.; William L. Pearce, 1 Gainesville. Tex. The nominations of Lewis I Wolfly to be Governor of Arizona and of John < C. New to be Consul General to London wore reported favorably from committee, b.it, under in dividual objection, they went over until the next I executive session. EASTERN OCCURRENCES. Mrs. Margaret E. Sangster has accepted the position of editor of Harper’s Bazar. George A. Singerly, of Philadelphia, is reported to have sold the famous trotter Prince Wilkes for $30,000. A strange case has been reported in Brooklyn, N. Y. A' Hungarian servant girl named Sitkier had been employed by the family of Mr. Brunner. The girl has suffered somewhat from hysteria, and disappeared a few days ago. When found j she was locked up in a closet iu the house a raving maniac. She had been without food or water for three or four days and nights, and is not expected to recover. All of tha collieries in the Pittston (Pa.) region have notified the men of a suspension of six weeks’ duration. About, 10,000 men and boys are affected by the suspension. At New York Aiderman Charles Goetz, Charles M. Jackson, Morris Isaacs, Edward Butler and Charles, alias “Silver I Dollar’' Smith, have been arrested on indictments charging them with violating j the election lax. s. Henry Hardie, the New York forger, under arrest at Halifax, N. S., has ( made a
419 Huron St., Sheboygan, Wls., Nov. 12, 1 1888. 1 have used St. Jacobs Oil for chicken cholera with great suc.cess. Every fowl affected with the disease was cured by it and
f confession and oxpressc; a willingness to return to New York without a requisition. P. IL Kissam, brother-in-law of the I late William H. Vaud.rbilt, died at New । York. He had be?n a member of the Stock Exchange for twenty-five years. A SHATTERED MIND. A special from Hartford, Conn., reports that Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe has recovered physically from the attack of sickness which last summer threatened to cut short her life, but her mind is shattered and intellectually she is but a child. Her friends will not say that she is insane nor that she is an imbecile, but her mind is ahnost completely go:.e. Her memory is that o’ a baby. When former dear fiiends visit her—people whom she has known for years—s. e g eets them with a vacant stare, so indicative - ri x \ HARRIET BEECHER STOWE. a symptom of cases of that kind. Her whims are treated with the utmost tenderness. For some time it was given out that Mrs. Stowe did not recognize her friends because of her failing eyesight, but this excuse is no longer alluded to, and the fact that she is now no longer mentally capable is recognized by every one. It was aiso for a long time thought to be an attribute of genius when Mrs. Stowe showed i these idiosyncrasies, but the genius which made “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” the most popular book of the century has departed. i The father of Mrs, Stowe, the Rev. Lyman i Beecher, passed the closing years of his ■ life with a cloud resting over his mind, j His symptoms were greatly similar to j those of Mrs. Stowe. === - - WESTERN HAPPENINGS. The laud about Red Lodge, ou the ; recently-opened Indian reservation, has ; been thrown open for settlement. Parties ■ representing New York, St. Louis, Chij cago, San Francisco, and Helena capit ili ists were present on the first day of openI ing as well as Union Pacific and Northern Pacific attorneys. The most extensive i and easiest mined coal lauds in Montana ; : are located at that point, and the result I is some land has been filed on as agricult- I I ural and coal. The day was the busiest i | ever known in the history of the Bozeman j Land Office, the receipts from filings be- j iug $76,000. It seems probable there will 1 i be a contest over every entry made. Milwaukee grain buyers cl iim that I the process of scoiuiu ; amt clipping ; I second-grade oats, and selling the grain ' as high grade, is being taken advantage of j by Chicago elevators, where, us alleged, ; patented machines do the scouring and clipping. The rectifying house of the Dodsworth ! Distillery Company at Cincinnati, Ohio, was destroyed by the The loss is estimated at from $20,000 to $25,000, with insurance of $ 12,500. J. H. Heinenkamp, a well-to-do farmer of Mount Vernon, Ind . was accidentally pushed out of a wagou by a drunken man and killed. Fire at Brazil. Ind., caused a loss of ■ $20,000, which was ] irtialh covered by I j insurance. Natural gas has been struck at a min- ■ ing town near Terre Htuto, Ind. No r satisfied with their graveyard disi turbance, the gaug of miscreants at Sani born, lowa, operating under the name of i White Caps, continue their depredations. The other night several bains weie entered, and the tails and ems of several anis mals were cut off. T. H. Linden was i hung in effigy over one of the p.incipal j ’ streets of Mason City, The two who were ] ; arrested are still held in custody, and it i ! is thought they will soon peach ou the entire gang. Robert McCaffney and Miss Dollie । Love, both I'.l years old, of Elkhart, Ind., i were struck by a Lake Shore and Michi--1 gan Southern train while out driving and j were instantly killed. They were found ! on the pilot of the engine locked iu each ' other’s arms. The Governor of Lower California re- ; ports that the discoveries of the Santa Clara placers have been greatly exaggeri ated, and that only practiced miners are i finding gold. The loss caused by the b. ag of Aiderman William S. Manierre’s Central warehouse, on the corner of Rush street, . Chicago^ will amount to $1,(>OJ,000, and i the insurance $550,000. Deputy County Recorder Robert j Fleming of Kansas City, Mo., a brother of Deputy Marshal John Fleming, who recently blew out his brains in a Kansas City court-room, was fatally stabbed the other night, in a row, by William Samuels. The Logansport, Ind., authorities are waging a war against the gambling fraternity of that city. Several arrests have been made. At Columbus Grove, Ohio, Miss Laura Mich el shot and fatally wounded Miss Lou Getterman. The cause of the shooting is a mystery. Mrs. Sinai J. Falvey, of Racine, Wis., is dead. She was a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Mather, the first white couple manied in Walworth County, Wisconsin. The remains of Justice Stanley Ma - thews were interred at Spring Grove Cemetery, near Cincinnati, Ohio, the services being simple but impressive. SOUTHERN INCIDENTS. Barnum’s Hotel at Baltimore, Md., which was founded in ls2.’>, and which C harles Dickens said was the best hos'elry in America, is to be closed and sold April 4. B. F. Wood, living in the Cerulean Springs neighborhood, near Princeton, Ky., sent to Hopkinsville a prescription which he got from an old medical book and had it tilled. His obje t, it seem-;, wr o use it as a worm me licine for his children, and ou getting it he gave each of his three children a tcaspoonful. As a result, two of them died, and the remaining one, the eldest, will not live. H. C. Still, one of the most notorious forgers in the United States, has been sentenced at Memphis, Teun., to five years in the penitentiary. The Governor of Tennessee has signed the bill making women eligible to the of- । fice of county superintendent of education. THE NATIONAL CAPITAL. Rear-Admiral Stephen B. Luce kas been notified by the Navy Depart-
iglish education. In 1834 he became a personal friend of Richard Cobden, and gained distinction as an orator of the Anti-Corn Law League. He was elected a member of Parliament in 1843 gand was returned in 1847, Kduring which time he vudvocated a pacific for-Z-eign policy and electoral 'reform. For opposing the Crimean war he was defeated in 1857, but was elected the same year by the Liberals of Birmingham. Buring the civil war in the United States
ment that he will be placed on the retired list at once. Commodore A. E. K. Benham has been ordered to take command of the Mare Island (Cal.) navy yard. The Western Montana National Bank of Missoula, M. T., has been authorized to begin business with a capital of $75,000. Funeral services over the remains of the late Associate Justice Stanley Matthews were held at the family residence in Washington, D. C., on the 25th u't. A large number of prominent persons were present, including President Harrison and all the members of his Cabinet, Vice President Morton, the Justices of the Supreme Court, many Senators and other distinguished persons. The rem ins were taken to Glendale, Ohio, for interment. POLITICAL PORRIDGE. The list of nominations sent to the Senate by Pri sident Harri on ou the 21st inst. was as follows: Miles C. Moore of Walla Walla, AV. T., to ba Governor of AVashingtou Territory; Oliver C. White of Dayton, AV. T., to be'Secretary of Washington Territory ; Henry N. Blaine of Montana, to be Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Montana; John D. Fleming of Colorado, to be United States Attorney for the Dis trict _ of Colorado. Postmasters — Carlos G. AV ilson, Milledgeville, Ill.; Alanson H. Reed, Flora, Ill.; William S. Parks, Petersburg, HI.; James S. Reeves, Union City, Ind. ; Graham L. Rice, AVest Superior, AVis. ; DeAVitt C. Carr, Fowlerville. Mich.; John P. Yost, North Bend, Neb. ; John AV. Banburg, Britton, D. T. ; Daniel Kerns, New Philadelphia, Ohio; John F. Welch, Nelsonville, Ohio; George W. Baker, Athens, Ohio; Stephen A. Philley, Troy, Ala. 'J he Rhode Island Republican Stste Convention made these nominations at Providence: For Governor- Herbert AV. Ladd, of Providence. For I/ieuteniuii Governor—Daniel G. Littlefield. The incumbents of the other State offices were renominated. In regard to lesubmission the platform adopted says: AVe believe it is the duty of the General Assembly to permit the people of the State to pass judgment upon any proposed amendment to the (constitution whenever an opportunity is demanded by any la co number of citizens, realizing that our constitution furnishes full protection against hasty changes. The Rhode Island anti-resubmis-sionists have nominated this State ticket: Governor. James H. Chace, of Lincoln; Lieutenant Governor, Franklin Metcalf, of Charlestown; Secretary of State, J. Barclay Foster, of Westerly: Attorney General, H. Rogers, of Providence; I reasurer, E. A. Green, of Lincoln. The platform declares that the laws for the enforcement of the prohibitory amendment of 18sii have not been given u fair trial, and that the Republican members of the Legislature have violated their pledges in voting to resubmit the amendment, and demands more stringent prohibitory legislation. Ji dge James N. Tyner, Assistant Attorney General of the Postotiiee De- ; partment, and Mr. Washburne, Minister i to Switzerland, have taken the oath of i office. The Republicans of Rockwell, lowa, ' will settle a contest for the Pootmaster- । ship at the ballot-box. The candidates 1 are Editor McEwen, George Howland. ) and Miss Belle Bowe. I lir Hon. F.dwiu Willetts Piesideut of ■the Michigan Ayrieultural College, has । telegraphed to President Harrison his aef ceptauce of the appointment of Assistant ■ Secretary of Agriculture. FRESH AND NEWSY. — The Hon. Mr. Foster. Canadian Minister of Finance, said lately that the Government had under consideration the advisability of excluding American lard, by increasing duty or otherwise, on account of the extensive adulteration practiced. The trolling horse Pancoast, lecord 2:21,. is reported as being permanently j crippled G<>m the rdSeot of a >e;r» ke of lightning which he received a year ago. He was owned by -John 11. Shultz, of the Parkville form, and cost his owner $28,000. The report of the trial board of the I cruiser Yorktown has been accepted by the Secretary of the Navy, and after the electric-lighting p’aut and other articles are completed the vessel will be delivered to the commandant of the League Island Navy Yard. The regular quarterly dividend of 1 per ■ cent, has been declared by the Kock . Island Road. Mrs. Robert Horace Walpole is I critically ill at Loudon. R. G. Dun A Co.’s review of trade for last week is as follows: The signs of recovery in legitimate trade increase, and though iu important branches the season has been exceptionally unfavoiuble, there is less dullnesb or depression than, under the circumstances, might have been expected. From three-quarters of the interior cities reporting there come signs of some improvement in trade, though it is nowhere grea:, but moderate and gradual. The outlook is generally quite favorable, and at New Orleans it is reported that planting is under good headway, win* in Dakota and .Minnesota preparation for seeding is a full month ahead of last year. At Cleveland and some other points business is considered better than last year, but there is a marked reaction at Pittsburg from the favorable tone of the last few weeks. At Philadelphia some improvement is seen iu the boot and shoe and the wool trade, but dry goods are in ordinary condition and collections are slow, as also at Milwaukee. The Government report as to wheat in farmers’ hands lias helped a decline of 2% cents, from which there was recovery ol about 1?4 cents on the covering of shorts. Exports cor 4! uue insignificant, and good prospects for the coming crop tend to wtakei^ holders. Corn has declined IJj cents in spite of large exports, while pork products and oats are substantially unchanged. No disturbance occurred in the money market. The business failures tor the week numbered 249. MARKET REPORTS. CHICAGO. Cattle—Prime SI.OO (u 4.75 Good 3.2 i <« 4. >0 Common 2.5 J t" 3.! > Hogs Shipping Gra les IAJ t" 5.0 Sheep..... 3.00 a' 4..’5 Wheat—No. 2 lied 'JB <" Corn—No. 2 34 c« .15 Oats—No. 2 24 (<» .25 Rye-No. 2 12 .43 Bi rrcu Choice Cream i\\ 23 i" .25 Cheese Full Cream, tint I! i‘< .12 Eggs Fresh 10 .11 Potatoes Cui -loads, per bu '!> <" .27 Fork Mesh 12. Ml <<f12.50 M IIAVAI KEE. Wheat Cush 87 t" .8 u, Corn No. 3 31 <" .32 Oats No. 2 White 21 <!< .2 t Rye No. 1 II i" .!'< H MILEY No. 2 C' .0) Pork Mess 12.00 <«12.5) DETROIT. Cattle 3.50 (« 5.00 Hogs 4.25 (" 1.75 Sheep 4.n0 0.03 Wheat No. 2 Red ’>3 <" .95 Corn —No. 2 Yellow 33 et .34 OATS No. 2 White 28 .2.1 TGI,EDO. Wheat No. 2 Red 93 .115 Coax Cash 33 i" .34 Oats No. 2 \\ lute 27'.,.28 NEW YORK. CA’rrr.E 3.5 u («; 1.75 Hoos 5.00 e 1 5.50 Sheep 4.53 t" 5.50 Whea t No. 2 Re. ’U'-.o ,ll2’. 4 Corn No. 2 43 t«; .46 Dvrs White 83 t" .40 I’oRK New Mess 13.25 013.75 8 I,GUIS. Cattle 3.00 ("I 4.50 Hogs 4.53 yt 5.00 Wheat No. 2 92 .92' 2 Cohn No. 2 2 1 e' .30 Oats No. 2 25 o .254 Barley- Canada 76 (a. .78 1 NDIAN? POLIS. (lattle 2.5) G 4.25 Hogs 4.53 ((' 4.75 Sheep 3.00 G 4.5,1 Lambs 4JKI G 5,50 I . ;-'C INN ATI. Hogs—Butchers’.. 4.50 G 5.00 Wheat—No. 2 Red 95 G .95J^ Corn—No. 2 31 G .35 Oats—No. 2 Mixed 28 y< .29 Rye—No. 2 46 G .48 Pork—Mess 12.25 ("12.75 KANSAS CI'I Y. Cattle—Good 3.75 G 4.25 Common 3.00 G 3.75 Stockers 2.00 <" 3.25 Hogs—Choice 4.50 G 4.75 Medium 4.25 G 4.50 Sheep 3.53 .G 4.50
Hani to Identify the White Skins. Curious Parasitism. Nothing is more common than for Tlie greenish color of certain sloths 1 Europeans to complain of the difficulty was found some years ago to be due to 1 they have in individualizing men of a parasitic growth of algae upon the dark races who, to the eye of the v hite hair. Two genera and three species of man, seem all more or less alike, says these minute plants—one genus green, [ the London Globe. The natives of and the other, with its two species, India have apparently the same diffi- violet—have since been described by , cully with xvhite men Some men of Madam Weber von Bosse. A single the Lancashire regiment stationed at hair may have upon^ it from 150,Benares recently broke loose and raid- 000 to 200,000 individuals.—Arkan--1 ed liquor shops in a neighboring vil- saio Traveler. lage. Some of the culprits were so — ‘ ’ drunk that the authorities easily dis- So,n * Foo,ish r «°“ ,e t v wvot.il tliom Iml in milw to snAt the Allow a cough to run until it gets beyond (OMied tlum, but 111 onlei tc spot the (he of medicine. They often say, remainder the regiment was paraded, -oh, it will wear axvay,” but in most cases and the villagers were asked to point it wears them away. Could they be induced out the guilt v men. Thev absolutelv to try the. sticeesslul medicine called Kemp s -.. i . i ' • • . ' .1 x ' Balsam, which is sold on a positive guarantailed to do so in a single case, ay heie- ^ ee curei they would immediately see die upon a native paper, commenting on excellent effect’after taking the first dose, the incident, says : “Not a doubt of it. Price 50e and SI.OO. Trial sue free. At all One of the most difficult feats under Druggists . —— 1 the sun is to identify Europeans—they Even fowls will ape humanity; two roosters are so much alike with their loud, glar- The ti “ e e’ o f a8 if each breath wore ing white color. We xvonder whether their last; their friends and relations are at a loss Each was too fat to crow; but said, As sure as 1 . i • i n„ lam Lorn, as IO WIIOS AVilO r All I can show for my year's work is a good crop of corn. ” How S I his ! One of the reasons why Scott’s Emulsion We offer One Hundred Dol'ars Reward for any has such a large sale is, because it is the case of Catarrh that cannot he cured by taking best. Dr. W. IL Cameron, Halifax, N. 8., Hall s Catarrh Cure. says: “I have prescribed Scott’s Emulsion F. J. CHENEY & CO., 1 ropi,, Toledo, O. of Cod J.icer Oil, icith Hypophosphites, for AVe, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney the past two years, and found it more agreefor the last 1> years, and beliexe him perfectly ,q,[ 0 t 0 t ) ie stomach and have better results honorable in all business transactions, an, fyoni its use than any other preparation ot made bv their firm. Cany ° bligftUOn the kind I have ever used.” bold by all ' ~, . Druggists* West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, loleWalbino, Kinnan A Marvin. AVholesale Drug Isaac YV ALTON did not spoil the child gists, Toledo. O, —at least he didn’t spire the rod.— Texa b. H. Van Hiesen. Cashier, Toledo National Siftimis. Bank, Toledo, O. ■ ' ' Hall s Catarrh Cura is taken internally, actini < an<l Colds. Tiioio who are directly upon the bFod and mm us s urfaee. ol from Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, . system. 1 nee o.e per bottle, bo dby al (ry j> l:oWN S Bronchial TROCHES. Igg . Sold only in bo.ics. Average Height. ; —7 — ; —: —■ , .. . . Dies hard—the man who is frozen tc Hie average height of an American j ea th. man is 68.1 inches; woman, 63.9 inches. ——~—~~ There is no standard height for “per- Catarrh Cured. section.” A clergyman, after years of suffering from that loathsome disease. Catarrh, and vainly Consumption Surely Cured. trying every known remedy, at last found a m .>1 1 r ~ recipe Avhich completely cured and saved To the Editor: Please inform your readers I f denth p Anv stiftenu . {rom this Jiat lhayea positivecureforlonsumpt on. dl . esulrul disease sending a self-addressed By its t.meb uso thm^sands of stamped envelope to Prof. J. A. Lawrenee. । casiKhavi b.i 1 pci Ila wntly । ni< d. 1 shall Warren street. New York City, will rebe glad to semi two Let les o my remedy h , j free of ch e . free to any of vour readers who have eonand ^U^tddress* 1 "^ Exp ‘ e3d Mme. Blavatsky, in her latest book, T, A. SIAM. CM. M. C., 181 Pearl St., N.Y. fells about a prehistoric race of transparent men and women. If ve could “Women teach its repose, civility, see through them any more easily than ax I dignity,” says Voltaire. It is evi- through some of the present specimens, dent tiiht Voltaire never stepped on a the race must have been very transladv's foot in a crowded ear. parent indeed. 1 ■ _ _ iEsSfelsiSSß For a K-. (I NpnuK id Jiuiue we < nihih ntiv rue- . “For years at irregular intervals in all seasons. I omni' tid H <l's S;ir aparil’a. By its use the blood ! suflvred the intolerable burning and itching of is pnr.itt il ■ns iciit d. and Mtali/ed. that tired teel- blood poisoning by ivy. It would break out on my ing i.s ei.tirely <»ver» im . and the whole body given j legs, in my thi\»at and ey<‘s. Last spring 1 took strength amt Yigm The appetite is restored and Hood's Sarsaparilla as a blood puriiier, with no sharpened the d ge>ti\e organs are t mud. and the thought of it as a special rum ‘dv ior ivy poisoning, kidneys ui:d liver invigorated. a has effected a permanent and therough cure. ’ > B. lb biiru te get Hood'b Sarsaparilla. Calvin T. Shuie, Wentworth. N. H. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by ail drniigbts. si; ^ix for $5. Prepared only I Sold by all druggists. Jl; six for >5. Prepared only > by C. 1. HOI>D x CO.. Lowell. Mass. jbyC I. HOOD X CO. Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar 100 Doses One Dollar Bryant & Stratton Chicago Business College! SHORT-HAND INSTITUTE and ENGLISH TRAINING SCHOOL. Isthe STANBARO IN^riTITION and the IJV TJEIK WOIVIiD ! Full inform*, tion, Catalogue, terms, etc., sent FREE. Address H. B. BRYANT A SON, Proprietors, Chicago, 11L We recouiuieud this college to our readers. Alentiou this paper when you write. I ^sh wisaUl% &■ It Ever Made. ■ None genuine unless Don’t wade your money on a gum or rubber coat. The FISH BRAND SLICKER Kitauipeu with the uuove j, nbsolutely \iotrr and cind rKOos, nnd will keep you firv iii the hardest storm ■ TRAtiK mark. Ask tor the'TTSH BRAND” slicker and take no other. If your storekeeper does i Boot have the ' i ish wusn”, send for <b serintive catalogue to A J. TOXVER. 20 Simmons St., Boston. Mass. gnnimMMiiniiik Mi —m I SAw. Nov?' WB C—THE OLD AND THE NEW. The old-style pills! Who does not know What agony they caused — what woe ? You walked the floor, you groaned, you sighed And felt such awful pain inside. And the next day you felt so weak, Thej’ do their work in painless way You didn't want to move or speak. And leave no weakness for next day; Now Pierce’s “Pellets” are so mild Thus proving what is oft contest. They are not dreaded by a child. That gentle means are always best. Dr. Pierce’s Pellets arc unequaled as a Liver Pill. Smallest, cheapest easiest to take. One tiny, Sugar-coated Pellet a Dose. Cures Sick ’Headache’ Bilious Headache, Dizziness, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks and all derangements of the stomach and bowels. 25 cents, by druggists. ’ Copyrighted, 1888, by World's Dispensary Medical Association, Proprietors. OJF’I’mUEU for an incurable case of in th© Head bv th© proprietors of DR. SAGE’S CATARRH REMEDY. Spraus OF OABABBE. Headache, obstruction of nose, discharges fallinoW/wV* into throat ' ’T otl ‘B?’ watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tena" o"£ mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid ; eyes weak, ringing in ears deafness \ 7 4 difficulty of clearing throat, expectoration of offensive matter • breath offensive; smell and taste impaired and general debility. Only few of '-'/▼A these symptoms likely to be present at once. Thousands of eases resuß ' in consumption, and end in the grave. 0 itsuit By its mild, soothing, and healing properties Dr. Sage’s Remedy cures the worst eases Only 50 cents. Sold by druggists everywhere. '
MAQEE’S^ 1 EMULSION No other proprietary medicine has"h ! indorsement of Physicians to the 8 a ’ ■ extent. ; None is used in Hospital practice withs I large a percentage of satisfactory result? I No other remedy Las cured so ms *' ! cases of j CONSUMPTION and other Pulmonary Diseases. ‘ SCROFULA is entuely eradicated from the system b ’ its use. ' | It is as easy to take as Maple Syrup or Honey, and can be retained by the most delicate stomachs without nausea. IF YOU have a Cold, Cough, Bron, chitis, Dyspepsia, or a generally run-dow2 I system, you can regain health and strength 1 quickly bv the use of MAGEE’S EMULSION I Ask your Di-URgist for it, and take only that labeled J. A. MAGEE & CO., Lawrence, Mass. MOTHERS’FRIENfi i makes CHBLO BIRTH easy IF USED BEFORE CONFINEMENtT - ” I! Book to “Mothers” Mailed Free | BRABFIFLD REG IL ATO It CO., ATLANTA SA. i sold by all Druggists. * If | SINAMS THIS PAPER era? time ion WHO. | LOOK! New pricelist H 'Lohim-s, Patterns, Yarn &ea J II WUMMSylrbook ot beautiful colored pattern 11 Signs Cfe. Agents Wanted “ ll E. HOSS & CO., Toledo, O, | Sample Pages from the Latest ' £ I Sunday School Song Books Free THE ECHO Music CO., I.aFayette, l u q. H HHBHMHOHHMKaSEHEHK Sure relief. I KIDDER'S PASTILLES.t;2rf™i 1177 My last lecture with hintsandr^s U W63K for complete Imine cure.krU H fIS-S IIIBl? Dr. R.I-. Caton. 80X5J57, Boston llEy 11 Kin I ! U Uw tmus always open for |] ri. Correspondents, Clerks, Shorthand B Writers, etc. Both sexes attend, and admitted at any S I time, shorthand taught by mail. Send for circular la i Business an i> I’honogkaphlc College, Sterling,fij‘ in PENSIONSgO i 1». C., successfully prosecutes claims, original, I Increase, re rating, widows’, children's and depen 11 I dent relatives’. Experience: 3 yrs. in last war, 15 » I in Pension Bureau, and 4 yrs. practicing attorney. I ^ASTHMA CUREDI KGcrnian YsthinaCurenever./au>togivetm.» 11 ■ mediate reZG/iu the worst cases,insures comfort-B 3 ■ ablesleeioeflcetsciireswhereallotherHfail al 1 ■B .'rial cinces </ie»no«< skeptical. Price 50c. and® a ■SSSl.OO.otDruKristsorbvniail. SampleFREEB 1 I CURE FITS! I then have them re, irn. I mean a radical cure. I hare M made FITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS* E lite-long study. 1 warrant my remedy to cure ths ;■ worst cases. Because others have failed is no reason a for not now receiving a cure. Send at once for treatiw IK and Free Bottle of my infallible remedy. Give Exprsa 111 and p. o. H. G. HOOT. M. C. 183 Pearl SL,N.Y. W PENSIONS! I We arc actively engaged iu the prosecution of pen- H ) siou and other war claims, and respectfully solicit |h j cowspondcace. Eighteen Years’ Experience. Cob IE lect Officers’ Accounts, Horse Claims. Pensions B I increased. Rejected cases re-opened. lipaKo IE Pumphlet of I’eusiou Laws sent free. Address I P. 11. FITZGERALD, | U. S. Claim Agency. Indianapolis, Indiana. ■ 3 NORTHERN PACIFIC IKLOW PRICE RSHRMDUmi FREE Government LANDS. ; IMILLIONS OF ACRES of each in Minnesota. North Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Washington and Oregon. CEMn 1 -blications with Maps describing The rUll BEST Agricultural, Grazing and Timber Lands now oven to Settlers Sent Free. Addreat chas. b. umbolv v?. ^CARRIAGES! We make a specialty of manufac< turing Baby Carriages to »ell *Hreetto pi lrale partlei. You can, therefore, do better with ns Wltll a dealer. We send CarItSSnlvvv ■ Tits r ' aKea t 0 Point ß within <oomiles JlSSijKl/oS Jia of Clneago free of charge. Send ■ AJK®SC\5ss&Mr for catalogue. CHAS. RAISER, Mfr., 62-64 (lybourn Ave., Chicago, 111. HELP ™> 22 YEARS “Torthe : EILERT’S 01 HI/' EXTRACT OF MbK TAR WILD CHERRY Has cured all coughs, colds, bronchitis, and I relieved asthma and consumption for al! j who have used it. Is not this an evidence of its merits ami reliability? It is a sure ,1 and safe medicine for all bronchial troubles, I and never fails to give satisfaction. Try it H under a full warrantee. Price, 50 cents and B SI.OO per bottle. Prepared by Emmert Pbo« B prietary Co., Chicago, 111. S GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. | EPPS’S COCOA BREAKFAST. I “By a thorough knowledge of the natural law. 1 ■ which govern the otierations of digestion and mitri- ■ tion, and by a careful application of the iineproEgß ■ ties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has nrovidw ■ our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured I*V* ■ erage which may save us many heavy doctors’bills, ■ It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that ■ a constitution may be gradually built up until strong V enough to resist every tendency to disease. ’IW" B dreds of subtle maladies are floating ai ound us ready ■ to attack Wherever there is a weak point. We may ■ escai>e many a fatal shaft bv keeping our elves wen ■ fortified with pure blood and a properly uourisliea M tr-dwe.”—Ciril Service Gazette. „ B Made simply with boiling water or milk Sold ■ only in half pound tins, bv labelled thus: ■ JAMES EPPS A CO.! Honiuopathic CheiuisUt B London, England. B I jjQ H GROB STUMP I AC H I N E. Works on ■ either STANDING W I ‘ TIMBER on g ! stu m ps . b : ll! 11111 il " “ ! 'Bflw ■ KyisW'vO&fr d i l lar v 111 u 6 'SfIHW if i 11 ■ CLEAN B Os two 4cr«‘Aat h Hitting, a man. a boy ;uii u uui see»u operaw it. No heavy Chahm or rods to handle. The crop on »> e acres the first year will pay for the Machine. It wiH on!//' you a postal card to send tor an Ilhretfatrd Catalngue, givi’l P. r, c e . terms and testimonial?;. Address the Manufacturers. W JAMES MILNE & SON, SCOTCH GROVE. lOW*> B CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH. | PENNYROYAL PILLS] EEE CSOSS DIAMOND BBAKD. A 5 ' Original, best, only genuine and reliable pill for sale. Never Fail- V \i*k lor ChichtHerA S Diamond Brand, i'» r*Ml n .‘®'; i tullio boxt >• scaled with blue no* ; I At Urug^lMta. Accept f/Y no other. Ail pills in paste- M USr board boxes, pink appt are a-S i ouh counterfeit. Send 4c. particulars and *♦lief for I.nd e*. " » / ' letter, by return mail. 10,000 t*® LADIES " hohave used them. Name Paper | a Chiehcsler Chemical Co.,Madison «i presfribn and H urse Big G as l ^ nCßr e:^B vecifle forthecerw I n f thia disease. u p K II INGRAHAM,®- y Amsterdam, We have sold Blr G SI faction. co.. IH 1.00. soidbyDwW I ^^ C. N. U. No. ViJHEN WHITING TO AIYVEKTISEMM, ‘ iil-ase »uy yuu ,aw the udverU»»“’ MB iu thin tun-er. -*^B
