St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 19, Number 15, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 28 October 1893 — Page 3

The Strong-est Defen io Aggtuat 111-health, debility and nearvousnesa Is to promote digestion, activity of the liver and regularity of the bowels with the incomparable alterative and tonic, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, a n edieine without a drawback, safe and thorough, and having the highest professional sanction. It promotes an adequate secretion of the gastric juices that act as solvents of the food, and insures i s conversion into rich, nourishing blood,which never fails to honor the drafts for strength made upon it by the rest of the system. As a laxative of the bowels it is natural and gentle in operation, but at the same time effective. By directing the bile into its proper channel it removes the many , ml harassing symptoms of liver complaint. Heartburn, nausea, sick headaches, nervousness, rheumati m, malaria and kidney troubles are remedied by it. The Modern Plow Due to Jefferson. Thcmas Jefferson invent ’d the modern pit w. Thore were plows, of course, thousands of years before the time of the Sage of Monticello, but he first laid down the mathomatie principles that underlie the construction of the plow and so enabled any blacksmith to make one. A plow ecn ist’ of two wedges, a cutting and a lift ing wedge, and Jefferson discovered and enunciate I the proportions of each and the relation each bore to the other. Before his day no two smiths made plows alike; now they ar a all made in accordance with a mathematical formula. F. J. CHANEY - * co ,'~ToiedJ~a. Props, of ITrU b Catarrh Cure, offer S 10) reward for any case of catarrh tin' cm not bo cured hr taking JI ilia Catarrh Cure. Kt.nd for to.dlLiimfal J, tree. Sold by i>ru^lsta, 7uo. Borrowed garments n wt keep on - warm. Nor can cn a get smuggled goods safely into kingdom e m j. R, Lowell. '1 HE evils of malarial disorcer-, fever, weakness, lassitude, debility ami pr»strutiun aro avoided by taking Re •chant’s Pills. If you have to bite at every bait you see, you had better have a guardian appointed.

A WOTAN'S BURDENS are lightened when she turns to the right medicine. The chronic weakr asses, delicate derangements, and painful disorders that afflict her sex, are cared by Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. In bearing-down sensations, periodical pains, ulceration, inflammation, and every kindred ailment it’s • positive remedy. aTl'Asn. Madisonville, Hopkins I * 'aunty, Ky. f Dn. R. V. Pierce, j Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Sir q. —Please accept my o’ *£. w thanks for the good your l(_, -'Y® medicines have don© for V—- .v-W me. I trulv believe tho ^^7’ , ^-“Favorite Prescription” saved my life; It is a sura ■IHcTCF iVr'' id 7 “’d certain cure. lam * U having perfect health; I Ww J 1 BKI s ‘°ut and csh do nil rWYiS' X®' niv housework. tlvcry invalid lady MicacY should take Dr. Pierce’s MIBB FUGATE. Favorite Prescription and Oolden Medical Discovery. Yours, fIOZZIE FUGATE. PIERCED. CURE OR HONI*Y RETURNED. ’tv 0 HIGHLY ENDORSED. V The Profes»or of Physiological Cbcm-• J istry at Yale College say s: “ I find A vi- L apoo Indian Sagwa to be an <■ b u t o/a T Roots, Harks anil Hei In of ialuable He»i r 9 edial Adum, without u»'i mneml or other 9 0 tmyji/Ht admixtures /~j • q ’Cltemedy Known. V Cleanses, Purifies, JR 4 | — and Renovates every yl- ek-'jWy*fYivS~ fL I ? part of t!>e human I , ■ • system. All Drug- 9 \ gMs, $1 a boule- /^.“t - \ 7 C Bottles for $5. & * J • • -ex -w. © e A $ DR. KIEFER'S SWAMP-ROOT CURED ME. SUFFERED EIGHT YEARSI Couldn't Eat or Sleep. Dyspepsia and Heart Trouble. Dr. Kilmer & Co:- "I had been troubled for eight years with stomach und heart difficulties. : I lived mostly oil milk, as cvery-thing I ate hurt /■Mjp me so. My kidneys and Alw sRjIl liver were in a terrible fIW ^9 fS | - state. Could neither sleep UI or cat. 1 had been treated rth A‘ -by the best Chicago doctors p-without any benefit whatr 1 oi.ae’v' 'X ever. As a last resort I 1r ' e d J' our S " P " "T* ROOT, and now! can cat anything, no matter what. Nothing hurts me, and cun go to bed and get a good nlghi’s sleep. Swamp-Rest He. Any one doubting this statement can write, I will gladly answer." Mrs. German Miller, Dec. 20th, 1892. Springport, Mich. At Druggists 50 cents and SI.OO size. ‘‘lnvalids' Guide to Health” free-l'.•nsuluui. n free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., - Binghamton, N. Y'. I OrTKHmerTPARiLLA LIVER PILLS Ate the Best 42 Pills, 25 cents. AU Druggists. ELY’S CATARRH CREAM BALM Cleanses the C0V?8 Allays Pafn and ^JJAV'-fcVtn^y , ( Inflammation, KgHeals tire tlores,^* / -V Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. TEY THE CUBE. A particle Im applied into each noszrtt and ie utreoablp. Price M cents at Druuirists. or by inuli F.LY BKoTII El;-'. So Wnrrju ->t.. Nev? rorfc. <o^ Id F <sli m* 51 This Trade Mark is on the best WATERPROOF COAT c 2!X a u: d in the World I — A - J - TOWER, BOSTON. MASS. 1 in time. Sola by druggists.

WERE BURNED ALIVE. HORRIFYING WRECK ON THE GRAND TRUNK. । Passenger Trains Going at Full Speed Collide—Cars Take Fire and Are Reduced to Ashes—Many Bodies Burned Beyond Recognition. An Engineer's Bluniler. A railroad wreck more terrible in its results than any other of the many horrors which have boon recorded since the heavy World’s Fair passenger traffic began occurred on the Grand TrunK Road at Nichols, Mich., about one mile east of Battle Creek, at 1 o'clock Friday mo. nitig. Two pass?nger trains collided, t-overal coaches wore demolished and shortly after caught tire, roasting twenty-, ix imprisoned passengers until the remains v/ere unrecognizable, while over thirty others are injured, two of whom may die. The trains which collided wore a , Rayniond and Whiter mb special, being I run as thp first section of No. (>. known ' a? the Atlantic express, and No. 9, the j Pucilic express. The Grand Trunk yards lie between Battle Creek and Nichols, which is one mile east of Battle Creek, and the train crew on the out-going train, No. 9, had an order to meet the Raymond special on the double track at Nichols. The wreck was duo ts> the <lisrogurding of this order. Beyond Nichols the y<ir<l- ; tracks verge into u single track ami ; N 0.9, instead of side-tracking, ran right : out out > the single track. 'Pho trains! struck each other within a quarter of a mile fr< nt Nichols. Both wore go ng at high s| ee l and were well loaded with sleeping passengers. The engin s wore badly smashed and the baggage-car on the Haymond train was wrecked, but m no of the* passengers on th" train woto hurt. I The outiping train fared w< re. and | the whole force of the c dlision :e ni" I to mine on the day coaeb.es of this train. These coaches, all filled with World's l’air excursionist... were

lUKNIXG Ol THE TEI F.S( Ol ED (AM

crushed like egg-shells. To add to the ; horror, th ■ wrecked ear* i nor nd hit eh ' cnmxht fiv<> .....i, > Uivir mangle I < I Inn g rent the cold morning air. through I which a drizzling ia'n fell, and den ■ | darkness prevailed. Tim frantic cries l of those who escaped were nlnm-t ;as terrible t > h< ar a the greau-! jof the suffering. Where th" wr.el; I occurred the country is onh tinn y !pi pulate 1 by farmers, anti th >-< i who w< r • around ha-ter.ed to the ‘ po’ 1 and did w l.atever they mml i *<> u~s .• ;n । recovering the dead ai d w. nmied f: :n { the burning mass of wreck.ige ; n i to I alleviate the suffering of the in tired. I As nK>n ns the news ma< be I Batl’o l Creek the tiro departnient und a c-rps I of surgeoim was dis| atchmi to Nicho I where they did heroic service. When they arrived there this is what tlo.t saw: i rnt I Ihe two front ea s were Ie c co; e t and lay in big. shattered pic<o- within the length of one ear. The other two had jamnod tightly t g ther, M-n and women were < raw.mg mat thro .g i broken windows. s> 're of tbom we , bieaking away the glass with ti .dr bare hands, while otb.m frantic men and wi men behind tl .m wete ti h’i j to get i ast them and crawl out. . m en were screaming and men w -re shouting. Some who had leap, d । thr ugh the window- my helpless on ; the ground, while other,, were falling ; on them. Men with bliHxly bands am! ' facts and women with t in dr s-e-I shouted the names of mis-ing friends. ; These are the old incidents of a rai.1 way horror. rasMMijje: t; Kouhuml to I>ctith. Then smoke l>egan t » curl up from the mass of w eekage whe'e- the two cars were telesco; <d. Within five minutes the smoke was f; 11-nved byleaping Hames. Men who stood there ami watched tl;e wreck burn say that theyht.ard shriek-, m.d erics cmuit.,, from the interior oi the oven. It nr-noM Ka rffA-’SS’ifro- tn think that the ’ aeaa amt did n >t suffer the torture of suffocation and slow Im -rdr>:.r. (In,, at 1 lea-t Ji.- I a horrll. " ihmth m fen vh-w of 10" helple.-s iimii. She w ;( s aW‘ man who had erawled hulf-wa ? o-.u of the window. Her dres- was tmu fr in her । shoulders ami Lei ir had fallen about her face. She was a hands mu? . woman, n t more than 10 vears old. (When the iesei.es f.”-’ ' her ‘ they climbed up and tried to draw her through th" window. They found ! that a heavy timber lay across her. । “Hurry up; please hurry up,” sho said, as the fear cros-ed her mind that perhaps she was pes-iblv in danger of burning. A minute later, whiletrong men were straining to ext ieate b.c^ this possibility beeam ■ a. probability I and the llames crept rnpidlv toward tha ' imprisoned woman. ’’S ou'shan’t burn i w«> 11 get you out,” cried the men. he-i roically, as they w.eJb d frant'cally I with the splintered timbers. There; Was a lull of spo eh for live minutes. I Iho rescuers lad become giants in strength and madmen in desperation and they struggl. d wildly with the I tangled wood and iron. The woman was silent, and gazed imploringly and inquiringly into the faces of the fire- । men “My God! Oh, my God!” sud- . t denly burst from the lips of one of j the heroic workers, and in that de- : i spairing heart-cry the helpless woman i i read her death warrant. She gave an <

agonized wall, and then her woman s ’ weakness gave way to her martyrs strength. “I can die. Oh, yes, I can die, if I must,” she said soothingly to the strong men who were weeping in their impotent strength. Again they struggled breathlessly to the rescue, but the llames wore encircling the party and claimed the victim the crash had spared. “1 am a Christian,” she said resignedly and a moment later her voice was raised in prayer. She gave her name, Mrs. Charles Xan Dusen, of Sprout Brook, N. Y. The flames now completely encircled her, the firemen were driven away, the praying lips were stilled, and the soul of Mrs. Van Dmen had passed beyond the fury of the elements of the earth. An hour later the husband for whom CT V.( 11 0 IS WIIKHK iHK WKKCK OCCUHIIKIX she had left a loving message joined I her in the world to c >me. d Taken to Hi. in Baskets. * Not until th^ fr emon had quench^ i flic fl lines was Ju> full extent of the disnsti.r tenlized, nnd the heart-end-i ing spectacle tho.i p -esented caused I : .-t ■< ng men to weep. Twcnty-tive hor- ! rib'o and sb.apeles- chunks no other wotd will express it <f human fle-h, burned t > a crisp, we e n tule visible, ar.d tbeio all that ummined of the victims if one of the most sickening railroad accidents of recent years—we.e gt thcred up in baskets, in bags, and in one । use. a pail, and carried ’ temierly to the in rgue in Battle j Creek. । The accident occurrel because the engineer of No, f>, going east, dis dxiyed o:d rs by not stoppingat Nichols to let the otl 0.-train pu.-s. ami Imth Engin er

Wo ley and « i nductor Scot t were «r-J roster!. I Ihe passengers kill d«• • 'til en en t b -ti'■! I•. <> iowß'Y * 1u “ r«s yg-r - 1 f ~ LHieil crniHl n<J be arc a • f. n >w - Nr- < Vmt Dnnis. KproatlaoQk. X Y-41 unrnrnl. . q Mrs. I B. McKrnrls Middletown. Conn * i i' Asn l>u« n. sj>r« nt? ook, N Y.; died in ! thr hosplts! W W llrtiry Wootoo kn t K I . bnm«l to » < ri p. J w Benrdrji'v w»tkm« S’ Y . burned nnd । ninnglrd I \ McGarvrv Hutnllt n Hnt.; burned nn i nurulci! | Mr« Allier: Brtwlle , Toronto On* , burned atul tunneled I J M»k- >en Proefdenci K 1 ; burned and ruanyb d VAN ALEN IS CONFIRMED. I tidorat^ H « '•ui i'uilhin a» Minuter to Italy. Wmshing’on spa-cial: Mr. Van Alen will b" In tel State- Minister to Italy. ' The Sena’c in exeeuthe - -shm cunf. " "it! e msni’mth n bv a v. of T to 2”. T eti -h? ngaift t lim very j bi.tei-. but was mrvceeMul. The i ehut \।< we e that l.e va. mJ ar p -o- i sentative Ame: ican liti-en iming a! resident of Lon lon a greater pirtof; t . t in- , an I i! mt h- b mght the oL C' ■ by a-■•’o.'io । donation to the Clove- ; lutiJ campaign fuu 1. EIGHT HURT AT KANKAKEE. Srrlou i Ac, lilrnt to an Illinois Central Limited Train The N< w Orlean limited over the ! L it । i- ( c trr.l tlea , w ith e\ cry coach : full of World’s Fair । a-songers. was wi ecke 1 I y c.>,. :;g with a e al train ■ three mile- och i f Kankakee, 111 | l-ig'.t persom- w. re seri usly injured, I ami i any m< r. ■ offered fn in brui-e. that did 1Y t re pure the attention of a sm-ueon. It w: s a mira ■ e that nobody was killed. Notes of Current I; .. .11 - Smatj.-pox has appeared at MWHok, * d w ai.ii > win th'cmno vice presfdeJbi of the V' - m " Pac 1 ' r.vtJ. s. !’. R : xs< j.ey, a ’.rav ling salesmOT • f ' hie tgo, was found dead in his room nt St. Lo us. • f ami-s I). Burns, a< lie igo burglar, was sen’en.-od for seven vears from I Grand Rapids. Mich rwiiNTY-s.EVEN emp y freight cars i wore demolished by a‘ wreck on the 1 lowa Central n mr Sear. b ro. 1 HE namo of the Gorman Epworth l.eagne wa.» change 1 a* the St. Louts convention to .lungerband. Hevenue ofdoers have discover'd an opium factory anil a large quantity of crude opium at Oakdale. Cal. Proceedings will b" instituted in Missouri to annul the charter of the Guarantee Investment Company. Ex-Senator, Fair, < f California, has uiSiuherited his son, whoso reported I arrest proves to have been false. i The First National Bank of Ouray i Col., which suspended about two ! months ago, has resumed business. | Mrs. H. o Houston, Pine Bi uff ! Ark., was awakened at an early hour in the morning by the noise attendant i ° n « a , - lro o PP° s it° her residence, th" G reflection of which appeared in her room. She became so frightened that WM strlck »" "•!«> apoploj «“d

Lacking in Will Power. Conscience, as the principle is goneraiiy understood, d< es not exist in i munals. They seldom realize the boo nt their “Given a cl }aneo in life 1 should have mw/ H ^G^r man. Circumstances pl, 1 !™ 0 1 tlln ‘” Tais is their ouVnf } ra P'VJ 1 K P°ke n - Thonqison, J J? Ur 1 hund, : e(l a,KI tenassa sins, am J 1 I’m ‘ n V lneere case of ^Pcnt- ■ • Although s; me, mem to repent, e mrally toprofft by p a'anthiopic pm^KHiH about themselves. Laeenio, alter his first condemnation, wrote L O .’ 1 to >’protection an! money. iv\ ♦ n< thing for me to do out to repent; yon can do a good deed, a id have the satisfre ion < f saying, ‘I brought one back from the evil way >or which he was not I orn.’ ” A few moments after writing the o lines Laiomuo -lommttei a theft and p.unned an issassinuti n. On the scuf <>ld he said he never know what remorse was. The Marquise of BrinvilU.rs, wlio had ben a । a-ricide and I'atricide, passed for a model penitent; yet, at the la t moment, she wrote to he • bus'sand: ”1 die an innocent woman, an ! my punishment is owing to my enemies.” W| on hoi- con--1 j-s-or urged her to change the terms this letter, she felt he self so in<apabie < J t .inking । therwi o that she reque-Jo I him to do it for her. Unfoituirte'y this principle of self-ox-MhmßaHiHi, which leads one to look Kind y Tip >n his <wn sins, i i not con*'i<» Llm • j iiulnoi •»,. XVO 4kl I K now jxioplc who find it imp issib’e t > Relievo tl at they ever do wilfully iyr ng, a.al wao in i-t, howo/er nu- ■'. e -i;us their m c al emb: odni mts, that [•hey me mer • : i ned against than sinni: g Ears ant! Character. You never saw a po -t or a painter with large, co:u-bc ears that -tand out fr. in the head like < xtended wings. That kind of an auriiul ir :•]>, endage b-tokens ccarm n-ss of mind. A I ng, narrow ear that lie* Hat t > the bead i« a sign of pugnacity. Neve - tin t a man with a taim wafer-like ear. He wa. born a hypocrite, if not a th;ef. A very small ear betokens a 1 rilF i:g mind ' lacking decision. Ears set very high on the head indicate narrowness of mind. A larg -. wMI-simped -n- that do< s not spread itself to the breeze is indicative of gener oily. M st of the world-compellers hid large ears and well-devehqx-d n s >. A though there are s > many millions o' i>eople in the world, no two pairs of < ars a'c alike; ■ wach has u marke 1 individuality. That J.l fill 1 C. m r, With thr rxh lara'ing nn e of n n-wej health nn ! ►tri ngih . rd interm! cd nnHneas, whi< hAl< ws th ti e of- yup ■of i iga, s» unknown o the ew wl.o I have not pogre-'sed l« yond t o odthne medicines tod th elo up a I st- . tutv ■ Fo i rthma < ff< ied but rev. r aci cepted by the w< .n or. el. They Arc Si I Sian'-1 A cl. The eye-of Isca the Jana;.•■-.<• and i the Chinese ar - in reality the same I shape as our own. bit the eyelid- f j these race are d awn down so cl • ch ' at the inner corn' r • as to a’most f" m ; a fold when tl:- eye- are op n. It is i this iw^uliarity which gives that curt- ' ih. »iO cl l* Mongoluui ia e. This and BUrßWri' - -of the ;aw Und th© t * MbTUdarly bhA and guileless M< ALLnrrh ikriinps »n tmi•f tat io© of Iho Heir 1 » f Tr Ie of Havan •nah *o *•■ *। • •. • । • r„... > rlutcr was lurn In h vn mh. but *a p a'os lhi> fa. t that it w iM boa A ow t<. him so .ally to mingle w .th mere r^lesj <-op!e anywhere Erysipelas in Face • r«! ul had long truubkj ms. 1 became ; । nesfiy blind an 4 niy Lair all came out 1 Joc*ith'iul relief. ir l hl fr ■ !t" 1 11 . trou Is I/ V£ | *n ;| i'-re sue. : :a t -i I n-t •I T "*':■ r i k.' , "-’TI - .-x-dy ,-s V. /ti' I * l h- I U" n; petite! resorted to iHkkl r Hie tired fe line ■ 4<u>e and I have a jgw 1 appetite A aereie o> :ith widen troubled ‘me much has left me. Two of mv oldest Hood secures dauxhtets are taking H- 1* Sar« .parilla with ; benetit and I un irlving it to na Itt'J.- girl for ' I extorh * WksWitLlaM E Bakin.-EU, Olive R iee. New Y rk. i. • <ml HOOD’S Hood's Pills cure liver 11U.

9^9 70 20 70 70 70 70 70 2070 70707070y0Z0T0Q fl 15 xZ A r. •■ Beetly I'ap'r gun such a Variety of Entertaining and Instructive Heading at so low a price.” Iz> TteYOUKS (JIMfMM I Z An unsurpassed variety of Articles will be published in the 68th volume of Tke Companion Something fl ’ of s[< ;a. inte:e»t aad value for every member of the family every week'. Full Illustrated Announcements Free. w Important Articles. C A I lie vnimuou oi -vi _ ?\ Boys who ought not to go to College. An important subject. By Prof. Stanley Hall. j Some Remarkable Boys of the Boys’ Brigade. By Prof. Henry Drummond. Jj CX The B °y ,looJ of the Russian Emperor. How the Czar was Trained. Isabel F. Hapgood. £ a Serial Stories. Adventure Stories 2

£ Nine Serial Stories will be given during 1894. A 1 The Deserter. By Harold Frederic. I The Sonny Sahib. Sara Jeannette Duncan. A The Wood Sprites. By C. A. Stephens. I Herm and I. By Alyron B. Gibson. Down the Grand Canon. By A. Ellbrace.

I £ j Double Holiday numbers at Thanksgiving, Christmas. New Year's and Easter, Free to each subscriber. £ sl-75 to Jan. 1,189 S. j — । J a'Cvtrzvzv/ . This beautiful Colored Picture, “Sweet C harity." mat j .- . I Xj CX dW eet be seen to be appreciated. Its richness of coloring co.:-- thp Clift I f mands instant attention. Its subject is a young lady of L. TJ colonial times. There is not a home that the picture wiil \n £ _ not ornament. Size 14 Vs2l inches. It will be sent safely Os / 9Z I? <rs f. / f-« r ° " c 'y subscr ibers to The Youth’s Companion who will v/ftli Ilf . out out this Slip and send it with 81.75 for a year’s sub- 'T'l 5 r \n scription, and in addition the paper will bo rent Free to / [lO S' 03 T S sA Jan. 1,1894, and for a full year from that date to Jan. 1895. ° 4® * 43 THE Youth ’ s Companion, Boston, Mass. <7x6 & C\S.exo'o

f Millions of Housekeepers ARE daily testing Royal Baking Powder by that most infallibleof all tests, the test of practical use. They find it goes further, makes lighter, sweeter, finer-flavored, purer and more wholesome food than any other, and is always uniform in its work. Its great qualities, thus prov®u, aro tho cause of its wonderful popularity, its sale being greater than that of all other cream of tartar baking powders combined. Neglect i.i Small MattiTH. It is really surprising in view of the much-vaunted attention bestowo l upon personal comfort by th< so who eater to the public in any shape how much i:eg“ k et is shown in small details. Has anybody yet discovered, for instance. why it is that the windows of railroad carriages, even the most lux- ! n ions viies, are almost invariably so eenstrueted that when raised the lower sash comes athwart the line of vision, and to sc • anything of the scenery you have either to duck yi ur head beneath it or rt ain your neck to get your eyes 1 rated above it? Then again, what perverse ingenuity and disr. gard of common sense is it that prompts railroad compani s to i keep on making the catches for raising ! the w indow- so prep sterouslv small ; that one cannot get anything like a dec -nt purchase upon them, and thus it N' -om < well nigh impos-ib e to raise a win -ow that offers a slight ro i tance without a vast •■x|H'nditur.-of muscular effort, out of all proportion to the ne-<-e—-iti'-s of the < uses and generally involving a ’amenta'>l" los.-.of temperand wint > < f profan ty? \ " il> there are s m e things in this w rid that ought to be as c ear as dayh). t hr no fellow can understand. — New Y ork Herald. The longest bridge in the world, over the Sj. luiwrem-e River, is 9,144 f< < t.

ST. J ACOBS OIL cures RHEUMATISM, r^wAgf „! neuralgia, „PAIN. JGA,, ennAixc; BRUISFC. SWELLINGS. BURNS.

Vibration vn IMg Strnniers. The changes lately made in the iv-w < unard sb aniot- Lucania, to try to j overcome ’he vibrati >n, ha- set many | : in-, an wyiig-Ts ta king about the । , ••uliarity of th<> bii; < :t n| ania. on which j th« y say the vibration is so extraordi- I J ni'ty that many people find it imposMbh- t । -li-' p. no matte • what the po i- 1 tion of their stateroom^. < >ne wellknown lady who went aoioad in the | ('mupaniu had to change her tickets i ami c >m - back in an >ther steamer, as I she f ’.mJ it impossible t 1 sleep without tl e aid of drugs all the waj across. They < ertainly build fa-t and wonderfm ■‘eamships abroad, but experts say ’ i.a’ one excellence po--.-s-e i by Amer-i(-;in-l>;it!t steatnsliips is that vibrathm ' is overeome. \ Signal Clock. Auiugenii ui I’eun vivunian has invent'd a signal fhu-k f railways, by means of which every passing train i ro_: i-‘.-rs the h. ur for the benehtof the ! engine r 0:1 t e next one. London con.aius । ne-< ighth of Great B: 1 ’uin's pop :’at ion. It ha- a larger daily delivery of letters than all ScotI land.

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