St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 19, Number 52, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 14 July 1894 — Page 3

' The Real Demoa of the Maran Jb not a spook, but a reality. It is neither ■. bogie nor a “kelpie," nor any other of those; spirits which the credulous have supposed to haunt the banks of rivers and streams after dusk. Its name is malaria, and though Invisible, it is very terrible and tenacious when it seizes you. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters drives it away, nor will it attack those whose systems are fortified with the great medicinal defensive agent. The miasmatic mists of early /norning, the vapors exhaled at eventide may be safely breathed by those protected by the Bitters. In the tropics where every form of inalarial disease threatens the sojourner, and is particularly virulent when developed, the i 8 tn ? b , e , Bt * reliance of the inhabitant.' liver complaint, lack of vigor, e * or rheumatism and nerv- ^ Bne33 the Bitters are a sure and safe remIncreasing Gold Output. . The largest increase in gold produc-> tion in any State last year was in Colorado, whoso increase approximates $2,060,000. The only State in which a decrease is shown is Nevada, a falling off of about $575,000. GENTLY I took that which ungently came, and without scorn forgave; do thou the same.—Coleridge. Impure Blood Manifests itself in hot weather in hives, pimples,boils and other eruptions which disfigure the face and cause great annoyance. The cure is found in Hood's B araa ~ JL jpaWZla Sarsaparilla, which makes the blood pure A W a and removes all such aaaaa disfigurations. It also rwwwww gives strength, creates an appetite, invigorates the whole system. Get Hocd’s Hood’s Pills are prompt and efficient.

27 QO Wae \ bt e J R ~ \? ‘,um\\\>’

Ailments of Women. It will entirely cure the worst forms of . Female Complaints, all Ovarian troubles, ' Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and I Displacements of the Womb, and consequent ; Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change of Life. It has cured more cases of Deucorrhoea than any remedy the world has ever known. | It is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels Tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of development, and checks any tendency to cancerous humors. That Bearing-down Feeling causing pain, weight, and backache, is in-‘-ntly relieved and permanently cured by T Tnder all circumstances it acts in ’ f ie laws that govern the ALjw* B harmless as water. **^**®«fc^_ • _ < n confidence, Lydia E. 20 conta. - Ihe Greatest Medical Discovery > ■ ■*> vhe Atre. 1 JL 1 I *

tlr f i OOHtLD KEHHEDY, OF BOXBOBY, MiSS.. kind of Humor from K that cures e ^ry downt. " u ™ or ’ fr ° m the worst ScrofnG

uvunw a common Pimple ^' ulula (both thunder hum. hS ' n tW ° cases possession over ♦ i H e has now n his of its value al Boston cl U , twent y miles of a k 2 Hd postal card f <>r book A hana^4 i “-'x-v/rv.

the firsTbottle and from ra ^ e " h .^ tee after taking it. Reid the label. feelings at first° US R WiU th^be^vF ° f dlet ever necessary. Eat Dose, oneTabTespSfuNn water^t^ time. Sold by all Druggie % tuP? UCLAS Sa SHoF j sthe bes t. W 0 IV £■ NO SQUEAKING. ^5. CORDOVAN FRENCH&ENAMELLED CALF7 * W „ * 3.50 POLICE,3 Soles. > S 2.d.7SBoYSSCHOOISHOES. " • LAD IES • BesTD° ng °l.4 i FOR CATALOGUE * r DOUGLAS, J 7 £ value by stamnHz t i>A^ l! > and guarantee tbe£ I bottom, which the - the middleman s profit, Ou?“Ih St hlsh prlces and work In Stria, ca 4 °“r »hoea equal custom tf Y eh “ TOt b°n» «oM ^ arin « ^tles. ■p-f who WEARS the

i Owen Electric Belt * ? ays: ‘'They arc the Best.” Get-,™, alogue by writing et a cat ~ & j The Owen Electric Belt Co. - ^State Street. Chicago, h. l . [ELYS CREAM BALM c.iiPFQ'MPck'A^C MW W -Ilf «... TH ___ Br? Ln [price SOCENTsTaLL DRUGGISTS^rfg:^ Oil UIWW _ H S’ ° “ ,u ™PHve. and peopj^fla™ M Who have weak lungs or AsthH ma. should us. p lBO 's Cure for S Eg Consumption. I t hag enred I™ th na . ac « a , It h.s not Inlur- » u >. lt 18 no ‘ b ‘ d to take K u I’the bwt cough syrup. " ^^^^^Sold everywhere. »S C .

RIOTERS SHOT DOW Blood Is Shed in the Great Railroad Strike. MOBS IN A WILD FURY State Troops Called to Stop Acts of Violence. Thousands of Soldiers and Police Will Oppose the Law-Breakers —Deadly Contests Have Already Taken Place — Strikers Madly Desperate — Authorities Determined—President Cleveland Resolved to Crush Out the Rebellion—Militia from Other States Will Be Ordered to Chicago if Such a Move Be Necessary. The long-expected armed conflict began in Chicago Friday morning. Human lives have been sacrificed. Blood stains the ground at the suburb Kensington, and the mob, in a frenzy of rage, rioted throughout the Illinois Central j-ards, committing unheardof depredations on the property of

r-v 5 -wwV' ■ ■■ i. $ STONING OF THE I 1 NWSLVAMA TRAIN AT THIRTY-NINTH STREET.

I Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable * Compound CURES ALL

tho company. A reat force of police was dispatched to tho as- : sista nee of the deputy marshals and deputy sheriffs, who, though using their revolvers with deadly effect, were unable to break the spirit of the mob. Four of the strikers are reported killed and many others wounded. Engineer Geogan, of an incoming FL Fayne train, was held up at 31st street and stoned almost to deeth. The rioting broke out early in tho morning-

r i 4 ZS'JpH ! HUOf'KING A CATTIt’ tp.iv LiuZTT. ™ A ^-TROOPS DtSPERSp TOP

; ™*»o and a half in extent Tim ™ u seized the milk train of the lilinor Central and upset the cars afte d? ■ 110,™ S‘» '^wmi 1 trains were blocked?’ Aft tbls al]

- ' Thursday night * ~5~ ' But the scene of the principal tumult ' g ft 4 , from ~k „ „ ™X which lies over against . own of Pullman and is inhabited 0 (Principally bvlaWi...^.^^ XV/ k

- x--v xn.H,ring-men and their 1 T °V^ ' ”"■ H_.fi.ro tho morning wa halt over it hai grown to such size Hs a! . most t.> overshadow the large force

: - 2^ wtoo derailed and - j ■ ! v’-"t - I Mln / R -L> i N

ARREST of a STRIKER. and engaged in the work'of dp 1 t man tion. At “11 o’o’ock ♦». . f destr . uc ‘ Ing and fichtir r r le, ° "as riot- < buildings ^to Ihe^f’?- 0 Pullman *

At this point the position of the officers became unbearable. They were struck with heavy missiles. They drew their revolvers and fired into the mob. The firing became general, many of the rioters retaliating with shots from pistols. In a melee on the Cincinnati express four strikers were fatally shot by special officers of the Michigan Central. Mayor Hopkins was appealed to early, and he sent Inspector Hunt to the battle-ground. He also united with Sheriff Gilbert in wiring Gov. Alt gold, apprisin j him of the alarming situation. The Governor promptly responded by callin i out the entire Pirst Brigade, I. N. G. Two other regiments were also ordered to Chicago in case re-enforcements Were necessary. Local authorities also made a vigorous appeal to Gen. Milos, in command of the Federal troops, to send an aieouate force to Kensington. Wild Mob In Control. The mob was in comple e control along the lines of the railways and in the Stock Yards district. In Packingtown 10,000 men congregated and swore that not a train ot any kind should pa- s them. And they kept their caths. At Fortieth street an engineer who attempted t> drive his locomotive through the crazy multitude was drag ged from the cab of the machine and beaten nearly to death. Along the Rock Island and Lake Shore track thousands of men congregated, overturning cars, wrecking switches and doing everything in their power to prevent the passage of trains. The few soldiers on duty at those points were jeered and hooted at and I the mob dared them tO "Slibcrtt " I

most admirab e patience the soldiers endured all this in silence and the crowd became merry at their expense. So much had the troop< endured that some of the more turbulent of tho rioters thought tho soldiers would* ^T-

’ F \W ’ 11.1 Kssmr.

!X!" u ‘ , ' h ' gUM on lh « ir j 'b-hR to kih.” '■*’ With ° r,ie ^ ‘0 ",«shington dispatches sav that th. >ho Xft Th» > m the extreme cation wit"'!' "VnJnd 0 "^ ^n’’“jß larV l ' e (d, ycd, and President Cleve army to com^l obedience. ' ” » I XMt S MAKE HAXOC.

— I CnparalleUd Scene, of R lot . Terror I I’Blage in Chicago. j .Ad the ju-evious efforts at lawless OUS and a i’l'X i Aid with tracks two miles | on „ ) 7! i a mile wide, occupied bv th. 2 2 ^ dl V^„ at a^" ft[; and de-trmed Th ei i Ue " O!O ( sr ed e ' tim^e ‘ d ‘ Ihe iOSS - at Ih G lowest demons. ' shouting rioters snum) ■ ~r ? i ‘ i t»o deja r ds With hied, ;a„d a y, ,h.s. hand ° i i (

- -—LC—S«»h L jriJE MOR about like wilho'-the-wisps 08 bobbin & sho ? up s and b/lKs o°f f fir^S??™ 03 the ears, coding them wi h S ° VG I

attractedhy the great bonfire Before the cars were fired those filled with any cargoes were looted. The strikers, [helped by their women eVery loc ^ ed car and took everything portable. she men and women stripped the cabooses of cushi ns, desks, and other furniture, and were seen hastening S hrough night with th eir ^-gotten I f' UH \ will 1 I \ I Wfz Fall Iff! BKATI a AN ALLEOEII “SCAB.” plunder. S !me °f the ea s were loaded i with house °'d furniture, aud women | we.e B3en/^ a ^t n o away with bedding cn their If 03 1 8, Children carried chairs aww? nn 'l men helped to steal benches jB 3 car s ats. 1 here were 150 carsl°t c , a l , ' n yards, i Women »« n ffored th m, carrying the black diaWC^V" ^ lu eir »P rt n3 ’ tnkinw sk ’ r ‘ B of their dresses taking olH and thcin with coal ana shawy em miurn let 100 o, the tire It wua f>r miles and the men dancing with frenzy. It and w 'hero riot became was an( i women became wow— a, Wheir own excesses. The hvutik on»o wn way pi. lve( i its „ uno mob had iw w ith ou t interruption, unmooted f any Bemblanoo of authority. I JS WEEPING E AST W A RD. STRIKE . »»T II W’*O Tie Vj Every Line En^eruifj < L-ve'and. o. ~ surely the great railn a 1 strike is C ^ 3t " atL Astor an »1 Xht 3d J' ° the meters of the a T'^etand. Ohio ' in a. k. t . as^nnug i r . to the . t every roaj it (> . ided t> y ie u repre?ent^ nter i n g. in Cleveland. At lT ^' v Lvvoai eating into the Woe ock t h e B i ns r| e except .on of the ha l felt th ° efTcot of lhe 9 tnk» Ll'Y""" m 3 '' »"<” 1 less t o "gebted and the was moi ^f passenger trafTcin many I SU9 P en ’ped imminent. The Nickel in? hl » p nei a lly abandoned pasPlate M ns for the Wo4 in co ^ 3e senger tr< the tie-up on the western quenco of roild . end of th PENT DEBS’ STATEMENT. PREsI I Manifesto on the Strike an:l He *** C’au«e». d °f American t resicKnion, has issued an address Lailwa^b ic on the strike situation tO ' Ji 0 tkat led to the pre ent and thellt recites the course of Mr. troubWwith his employes, the repeat Pullmaj” ——l L , /j t—_^^TK^rTTTTnr

a-seru F^t to arbitrate bworn^^^ UDiOn asks for nothing to' X n n o ent of Alr - Allman to reMr the disputee question ™ committee It a £ •e ts that the railway companies or L tO l Ui ’ ho ’ d ^^l’nan, and that' line li'mL ex . f . endod f ™n line to ported Mr: Vu’Snmn SB&ll' &tF“

I strike whon „ “* u, nners could only t HtiiKew hen a majority of their num 1 | ?ates°in Vh’u^ t ° no voto of the d eleWherev., ln £ tan ce was unanimous, done so of 0° haVe Struck tbe y hav « iuone so of their own will. He had h ."I 1 ’ y servo,i the notice after the men had determined to quit. 0 ^lKlkElts l\ co.X TK(»E jKOlway C’o„, pa „ ie , at sacrament. Cal. ( Abso uteiy Helpless. the Mole. Whorevcm th^^-^ d « WQ £,< 1 that the f ‘ ta.es Marshal expressed ft n

!SehVVr.> 6 “ arti “ l and ■ s< eEe T?? ed s ? at3S to the iplS ?? string railroad men , piacea Oakland un ier sieo-o are abso’ute masters of th?? They tern. Thev in,?7 tho f erry syson both ]?iL &t °P‘ ecl . th « trains "•ithal J eit J ^“^tmn by rail । “ wneei is moving. i are that ! next objoetixl »• V? D ^s as the -two Jh JS J? to / le U P- With r and Buffalo u ‘ enters as Chicago ' t'^n “he WesTa^h 3 ^ ? affic b °‘ , seriously impaired h ° L Would be ! । decided' to’ 1b ’ anJ i engineers refus?j tn he 6t , rike - The I I tn eir own firemen. W< rk Wlthout !

hi Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report Rcd&l »Powder Absolutely pure

JAY GOULD. Th® First and Last Drink of Whisky Ever Taken by Him. Gould always believed that the secret of his abilty to overcome others in any contest of wits was his temperate habits of life, says Kate Field’s Washington. He never tasted whisky but once. In the days when he was a surveyor in a small way, and was mapping a county on the practical line of getting lodging 1 and meals of the : farmers in exchange for marking cor--1 root sun dials on their door steps, he I became tired one hot, dusty afternoon. He came to a country tavern. In his pocket was a five-cent piece. It suddenly struck him that as a medicine to relieve faintness he ought to buy a gla® of whisky with his half dime. I “I was ignorant of bar usage,” he said ■ once, in describing the incident to a friend, “and so when a glass and a bottle we: o set before me I filled th< tumbler chock full. The bartendei made no protest, and I swallcwe i th< big horn. Then I went my way, trun I filing my wheelbarrow-like measure 01 distances and occa ionally taking the bearings with a sextant. Never in my lie had my work gone off half so blithesomely, and for a while I felt as though making a map of the starry heavens in tead of a very duty portion of this mundane snhere. After an hour or more of exultation, I grew sleepy and took a long nap under a tree in a field. I awoke with an awful headache, and found that the figures entered in my notebook during the time of extra s earn were quite incoherent. I was fully convinced that whisky wa> a bad surveyor, and I have never tried it for anv other purpose.” At the Jumping-Off' Place. An Eastern newspaper man one nasty, raw day in the early springtime found himself in a small town t ntho Missouri River, which was without exception the worst place he had ever struck, and he had boarded in Brooklyn. He was standing on 1 he muddy 1 ank < f the river waiting for a boat that was a week or ten days behind, when a native came slowly up from the miserable wharfboat. He talked to him awhile and did not stint himse f in uncomplimentary remarks about the p ace. all of which the ot her man ac juiesced in. “By George.” he exclaimed, “what’s the name of the town, anyhow? Ive been so mad ever since I've been nere I hadn't thought to ask.” The native told him. “Is that it?" retorted the journalist. “Well, why don t they call it ‘A-mile-from-God's-knowledge?’ ” The native grim ed as he started on. ( ase its furder'n that,” he said, and passed out of sight in the murky atmosphere. Hbnry A Salzer, manuzer of the John A. Salzer Seed Company. La Crosse, Wis., is in Eurojie looking up rare noveltle-i in vegetables and nee things in the farm seed

Une. He will visit the celebrate I farming districts of France, Osrmany, E igland, Belgium. Russia and Bohemia, and the , custonjers of this wide-awake firm can «ed. that fo^Tc^S

Di-eipii ni( lfle yon tho stroot a:, or 5p , । ” ; p , l r“ r ’» ~ ’ , Ball’s Catarrh Cure J ’ a constitutional curet Price 75 cents. : ole < atl o„2? 'o“ mileo. <,o ““ fe at “ I pi'ri"i «' 1 1 P....C Sulphur Soap. u e ot Glenn s I

1 cross-ghaixed, j sour irritable, so that the I ^, hoi ? world seems wrong ; Ik“ £8 tho Way y° u feel ’ , whon y our Mver is fnacP?’F . need D °etor ’Z? c< ? 8 1 leas ant Pellets to I stimulate it and correct it | and clear up your system for you kou won’t mind the taking of them — they re so small and so naf«ral in their effects. All that you notice with them is the good that they do.

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the permanent cure of Biliou<mov« T«„w and every liver, stomach, or bowel disorder’ s ‘" You may drive it to the LnS Remedy that has curort Co* u Get the and vears -it ZZ - £ atarr h for years I

If you are bilious ij It you have no energy If your side pains you I I-! |lf your skin is sallow \ jlt you are drowsy LIVER I If your liver is torpid and j If your kidneys don’t work KIDNEK BALM; A SURE CURE I $ »LOO a Bottle. i THE DR. J. H. McLEAN MEDICINE COMPANy BO " 0 ! ST - LOUIS, MO.

The Wrong Conscience Stirred. A few days ago, whi’e a gentleman was buying stamps at Cue postofflee, some one took his umbrella, as he believes, by mistake, and the loser t this card in the morning paper: “The kind friend who carried off my 1 umbrella at the postoffice yesterday will bear in mind that the ‘Gates of l , Heaven’ are only twenty-four inches - I wide. My umbrella measures twentyi । eight. At the other place he wonT s need it. Didn t Dives pray for just one - drop of water? He had better return j it to 208, Chamber of Commerce, and . ! no questions will be asked.” 3 A few days later a boy brought In -, an umbrella, but, alas! not the adver--3 i tiser’s. He had caught the wrong man’s con cience.—B ston Transcript i The Famous Flathead Valley. j a Investors and home Seekers, Investlg&t« Chances for making homes a.xtd money In _ e Western Montana. Fertile surrounded and interlaced ers, lakes, precious metahs. Iron and coal e Splendid climate and sedner.-. No bllzzarda 1- and cyclones Kalispell, county seat and if beadquarters of pie Great Northern By., a has 2,350 people. Water works.electric lights, p mills, etc. For printed matter, etc., addreis G E. Conrad. Kalispell, Mont ’ The United States Government issues banknotes of the following denom- ’ inations: sl, $2, $5, $lO, S2O, SSO, sllO, SSOO, $1,090, $5,000, and SIO,OOO. > There is one divorce to every 479 marriages in the United States. 1 ' I ' 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’needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in th® remedy. Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax--1 ative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers

VI lol'Vll 111 U, VVIMOj LI V 4AXII VQ MLJXA A.V> VV/Aw ana permanently curing constipation. , ' It has given satisfaction to millions and I met with the approval of the medical -i-jaa^eadipn, because it acts on the Kid-

! nJ IL 2 giste in SO^ald'f I bcntle^'i an ufactured by thT Do-only, whose name is printed on ever package, also the name, Syrup of Fim and being well informed, you will xw accept any substitute if offered. IWREST ^CO EAST 60 m Lake Shore Route

> f AMERICA’S BEST RAILWAY. 8 Vain l^p 0 ' the r DEL,G HTFUL mount--1 1 the E^st a p, A , , SHORE RESORTS of _ lne CA5 '• A FELL LIST of WHICH with ; o^u^ T “ "- “ C. K. WILBER, West. P. A. CXIXCA&O. KEMPER HALL DAVENPORT, I r^ BOYS' BOARDING SCHOOL hrn-ens Sentombpr ’9 tcni t j »mr«yK>y < ol ema n. Af^^3! rJENSSONi??.^™"^ _-Dmok THIS r AFrB WTO atty dig* C. N. u. No. 28-94 ln •hUai-er >o " « a wthe adverU.'fm^