St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 23, Number 9, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 18 September 1897 — Page 3
Mere Bundles of Nerves. Boms peevish, querulous people seem mere bundles of nerves. The least sound agitates their sensoriums and rutiles their tempers. No doubt they are born so. But may not their nervousness be ameliorated, if not entirely relieved? Unquestionably, and with Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. By cultivating their digestion, and insuring more complete assimilation of she food with this admirable corrective, they will experience a speedy and very perceptible gain In nerve quitude. Dyspepsia, biliousness, constipation and rheumatism yield to the Bitters. In order to arrive at a certain point at a certain time, it is not necessary to run fast, it is only necessary to start in good time. Word comes from all quarters that the neatest and most satisfactory dye for coloring the beard a brown or black is Buckingham's Dye for the Whiskers. The coinage of American 20-cent pieces began in 1875, and was discontinued in 1878, Piso’s Cure for Consumption has been a godsend to me.—Wm. B. McClellan, Chester, Fla., Sept. 17, 1895. The world cures alike the optimist [ and the misanthrope. AN OPEN LETTER From Miss Sachner, of Columbus, 0., to Ailing Women. To all women who are ill:—It affords me great pleasure to tell you of the benefit I have derived from taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. J can hardly find words to express my gratitude for the boon given to suffering women in that excellent remedy. Before taking the
Compound I was thin, sallow, and A nervous. I was troubled with pfl; leucorrhcea, and my menstrual periods were very irreg- f ular. I tried three phy-
sicians and gradually grew worse. | About a year ago I was advised by a ; friend to try Mrs. Pinkham’s Sanative Wash and Vegetable Compound, which I did. After using three bottles of the Vegetable Compound and one package of Sanative Wash, I am now enjoying better health than I ever did, and attribute the same to your wonderful remedies. I cannot find words to express what a Godsend they have been to me. W’henever I begin to feel nervous and ill, I know I have a never-failing physician at hand. It would afford me pleasure to know that my words had directed some suffering sister to health and strength through those most excellent remedies.—Miss May Sachses, 848 K E. Rich St., Columbus, 0. (
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I I ZUI I r I §j ^X^ “ I can J sincerely say that I \ \ % X / owo my lifo to Ayer s ! \ \ /Sarsaparilla. For seven 1 X \ /years I suffered, with! MpWwHgg\ \ \ /that terrible scourge! g|||||||g^A \ \ / Scrofula, in my shoulder! ) \ / and my arm. Every means! t?) f /of cure was tried without sue-! <■ I /cess. I had a good physician! I / W ho tried in everyway to help! f I /me. I was told to take Ayer’s! / /Z V I / I /sarsaparilla. I immediately be ! I H \| j ' /gan Its use and after taking seven ! f ■ 1 f I /bottlesof this remedy the scrofula^ ! kY I I / was entirely cured.”-Mrs. J. A^ \ ! ! \ I /tie, Fort Fairfield, Me, Jan. 26,1896. \ ) WEIGHTY WOROS Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
ABLE OMAHA LAWYER. ' 1 James M. Woolworth Who Addressed the American Bar AHaociation. James M. Woolworth, of Omaha, whose snsatlonal address to the American Bar Association at Its Cleveland meeting created much comment, Is perhaps the foremost lawyer in Nebraska and one of the most remarkable men in America. His father was a noted New iWWHM Sr -C'ußuw - ' \ JAMES M. WOOLWORTH. York lawyer, and as soon as young Woolworth left Hamilton College he : began the study of law under the preceptorship of his father. As early as 185 G left Syracuse, N. Y„ and went to Omaha. He was the first City Attoruey of Omaha, ami lias steadfastl.v devoted himself to the pursuit of his profession, declining all temptations to wander into political fields foreign to the law. He was admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of the United States in 18(12, and since that time he has argued more cases before that court than any lawyer west of Chicago. Apart from law books, Mr. Woolworth’s studies have been wide and varied. His essays, addresses and lectures on general subjects show his great versatility and comprehensiveness of mind. In 1875 Racine College conferred upon him the degree of LL. D. I n 1892 the I Diversity of Nebraska made him L. 11. D., ami in 1890 lie was given the degree of D. C. L. by Trinity University of Toronto. He has laid by a snug fortune from his earnings, and Is a large part of the backbone of the citizenship of Omaha. Current Condensations. It is said that a great many American flags are made by sweatshop labor in New York. Waste gases from blast furnaces at Horde, Germany, are to be used in gas engines, which will drive dynamos for light and power. Experiments in Florida and Southern Georgia make it clear that tobacco
equal to that grown in Cuba can be produced on American soil. Thomas Burns, a diver, leaped from of 150 feet, into me auv - picked up uninjured. A highland claymore that was once the property of Rob Roy was sold at auction in London the other day for SIBO. It was the handiwork of Andrea Ferrari. A farmer near Bartlett. Neb., harvested forty-one bushels of good peanuts from three-eighths of an acre of ground last season. The peanut will grow to maturity almost every season in Nebraska, and the sandy soil is just right. President George Falloon of the Ohio fish and game commission says that the supply of fish in Lake Erie will be exhausted in two or three years unless the existing laws regulating the catch are quickly revised and thoroughly enforced. The women of St. Louis want representation on the School Board, and as the simplest way of securing it have had a bill drawn up which, if passed, will put an end to the existing masculine monopoly of school management in the State of Missouri. Vessels passing through the new Bal-tic-North Sea canal will pay 12 cents a ton. for the first GOO net register tons if i laden, and 9 cents for each additional I ton; vessels in ballast will pay 8 cents a j ton, and the minimum charge will be : $2.50 by the tariff just issued by the German Government. From October to March the charges will be 25 per cent, higher. Sailing vessels will be towed at the rate of 10 or GU cents a ton up to 2GO tons, and 7^ or 4 cents a ton for all ! above that, according as they are laden I or in ballast.
FEAR MORE RIOTING. TROOPS SENT TO QUIET THE STRIKERS AT ECKLEY, PA. More Trouble Near' Hazleton— Opera* tors Appeal to Gen. Gobin, "I>O Orders the Ph i I ndel ph in Militia to tiie Scene—Funerals of the X ictitua. Miners Forced to Quit. Tiie situation in the Hazleton (Pa.) mining district is one of unrest. All tiie collieries in tiie district are apprehensive
of da uger. Requests have been pouring in to Gen. Gobin from the various mines asking that lie send troops to tiie places in order to prevent any possible outbreak. The gen- i oral states that he I will not send troops j .to any point unless i i an outbreak does occur. He declines to give the names of the collieries, as all the men in them are still at work. The
o SHERIFF MARTIS’.
operators, however, are apprehensive of a strike and want to be prepared for an emergency. Two mine superintendents in tin- immediate vicinity have asked t; -n. I Gobin to place guards around thrir house i. Trouble has broken out at Coxe Brothers' colliery at Eckley. Two hundred miners nt Bm k mountain, which is liamt three mines from Eckley, vent on strike ami started toward tiie Eckley mines. The superintendent of tiie Eckley colliery telegraphed (Jen. Gobin for troops. The J miners mar' bed on tiie Eckley mines mil ' forced tiie miners to quit work. It w.is stated that th, mim r-- had I" mi roughly handled by the strikers. G, m Gobin <r-
COOL C’MFORT. I ■a' '^l k ’ I fW a 1 " / . - U J ’ik
deied the city troop of Philadelphia to g<, I । to the scene of the disturbance. first funeral procession • wood at 11:15 o’clock. First .line a baud, followed by St. Kushner so< iety of Ila zleton, then came a hearse bearing the body of Anthony Grckas. Behind this were carriages bearing the widvw and children. A s iiml hearse, beaittig the body of Andrew M :zkot< h:. fi»H“nv<l. After it came the body of Itaphial !*:><• vish. The prm< -- on urov, <1 t > SS. Pi ‘er and Paul's Lithuanian Chnr h. 110 re the bodies were taken from the hearses to the church and services were conducted by I other Martusih. the pa*' r. In the line following the b nlm* tln ic were ,>. men, ami at 'he ehnr< h their Were as many more p •pie. The si wires lasted an hour, after wlmh the bodies were taken to St. St:im'i.i > erne leiy. wheie the three bodies were p’.aied in one grave. The second funeral started from Umhitaker Bromm's -t ibiishment. Six men carried •uh ( Ilin. At St. Stanislaus
fegaSWia VI “’A / A." I —r - If fit WHERE MINERS WEKE SHOT. Church in Carson stieet the men took off their hats ami the nine bo-lies were carried through while the band played a dirge. Father Aust and the snrpliced acolytes met the n , ot the church stens. The service ■ - n I',x, ,an. i.it-O. I atlior Zyrluwiz. nreavbed the funeral sermon in the I’-.lisH hm.-W!-, T],, It-v. I. V. Moylan of St. GnO- - IT Church addressed the people in En-lish. TTu- nine b-Mii - were buried in a g :i ve '.i l>y 2 1 fe-t. (>f the twelve men bur ■ -I fmir w< >■ Polish, four Greeks ami four Lithuanians. Will Call for Indemnity. A dispatch from Vienna says that much excitement has been caused there by the news of the shooting by deputy sheriff’s at Latimer, l’a . of a number -if Austrian ami Hungarian subjects. Consular reports of the affair that have been received Hi.iractcrize the conduct of the deputies as unjust and unnecessary. The foreign office will demand strict compensation from the United States. Women Attack Mine Guards. Emma Haas, tin miners' Joan of Arc, ami three other women were arrested for marching at Plum Creek, by sherill s dep. uties. The attempt to make the arrest s precipitated an incipient riot, in which 'ho deputies fared badly. No one was serious, ly hurt, but scarcely a deputy escaped a clubbing and Superintendent Sam Ue Armit was cut on th’- hand. Charles I'. Wmkley. claim agent for q^ Illinois Steel Company, commute 1 suicide at Chicago by throwing himself from (be third-story window of his boarding-house.
SWEPT BY A GALE. u,n and Death Along the Coast of the Dem of Mexico. swent'k disaster by flood ami storm town -' lf> Texas coast Sunday night. The Sabin, ° f -Arthur, Sabine Pass, and of fie °> Wf ro uiiindated. The estimates to f< V 1 ’ 8 ^ lose places vary from eight froni^ • * ‘ H ‘ to " l,s mimed were ent off the fi l a firoad communication because of catiie *l^' !UK ' ^ ronl tologD'phic communithn " 1 - renßoll of tlit> blowing down of town" 1 " 8 ' west of Sabine the ... ranc hes ai >d farms along the Pit . 1 forty miles have been devasI)' '' 1" Town of Winnie only two off’"? lenia ’ n standing. To the south • ( 'Oston there is known to have been ('hr' c 1 r ' SV ' vatel ‘ as lar as Corpus of * a oompri hensi ve umlcrsta mling s | . Io " the disaster liappened it is necest- v‘' < x l’l a in the geography of the counnmi towns of Sabine. Port Arthur, • y • abine pass are in Jefferson County, ; ...? stWheasternmost county in Texas. | . ’* entire county is practically low prai- । i?’ Ihe towns of Sabine ami of Sabine i ass are on the banks of a short, deep ^tieinu that connects Sabine Lake with I ,h <‘ gulf. p„rt Arthur is on the m• st h a,l h Os Sabine Lake. Sabine Lake is fifteen miles long, about five miles wide, and is fedbv two large riv is. the Sabine :i"l the At lies. The lake is sb dlow. being gcrjKily from five to eight fi -t deep, and thvßd bordering upon it has little elevation,< /M'V" days. Friday and S itardny, the wiud^id been blowing heavily from the southvest, driving the waters of the gulf up in o the lake and its estnaries. ()u Sunday this s ( >nthw< st wind increased to a gale and the water p aired in from the sea at a great rate. Suddenly Sunday night the wind swung around ’o the north ami developed into .me of the tieu-est blows that has been experienced thereabouts in years. The winds whipped the waters back from the rivers an 1 drove them toward the lake, and she waters of the lake were driven against the waters that were rushing in from the gulf. The
met ing /.f Hl -• •• —r 1 ’ ■ i.„. „ "4k ; l ‘ > ** u"'T >! ’ l,y t4«f*’ ’ .. J these great, angry "w<r I:i- wis w lied iiAWiit were of paper. Wiinin n few hour* the level of the wate-s in ‘he territtry within n rn-liu. >f six miles - f Sahiae Pas* had ri*en < ght fe< t. To add to the terrors of the situation, it raised in torrent*. The force of the wind na* in itself -.nth- nt to lisniantle any flail strmtnre. Th-- people of the fhree town*. Sabine, Sabine I’.a** and Port Arthur, wen- p: • ' - illy in i trap, tbreahned from witbin am! w about. Wreck and tb v ,>ia' on w-- wrought by the vimi and death by (Iron >n>g was iu tin fir d. l’alt Arthur i* a ’ -wn - f .b ut I?kMJ > 1.2" ! r*. many of which are substantial structures. The Gulf railway owns a magnificent Sld.tMo. Im ■; g, and ■ p::: pal littcl is a costly structure - f seventyhve room*. P -it Arthur is th-- * itheff tennina! of the K usi* City, P"-lmig
and Cnlf railroad, and is s.’n.it i xr. n miles inland fr-mi S ibil U In I xS o a ware swept over Sab’ >■ C y. < ' T that place with six feet of wat- r, d‘ >t'. »y---ing many houses :iml causing *evcra. deaths. Great di--:.-" wi* < au-- <l. and there were many narrow ami thrilling esea pel FAVOR TORCH AND BULLETS. Social Democracy in Chicago Express Indicnation at Killing of Miners. Mcinbet* ~f th S I> t.! yof Ameri i miners killed at H.-izhm .. P . s- ■ in ( were imide and resolutions : •!> I at their meetings in ("..i- az -. f who-h Aukeynote was ’'Rmcng* Sa- M I f '■ Burn! Kill Si i” Two meetings were L-M. nt whi. i tloi sentiment was exp- - J. ! lilt speeches :•! ' meeting of b । > L ' 1 ' ; - Me -ii JeeHie- ami Im't- ' ' , ting of bl'am -. to v - ■ 1 :i .belongs, li. .1 .. l. l > 'I. b eime. At the latter place the resolutions fa-'erf-J killing a millionaire for every miner "ho was slain in Pennsylvania. The torch was urged as the next best means of revenge. Speeches of a very ineendinry nature were made by Fitzgerald, Murphy. L< o Richardson, Leroy M. (.oodwin, ami others. A number of meetings of Pule* were olso lickl, at which resolutions were -Tdopted denouncing the killing of their countrymen. Capt. Joseph E. Kempton, who iiguret’ ’n the sensational court martial of the Athnta (Gut artillery ofli rs. has been arrested on the charge of embezzling between s4,oO<> ami S.i.omi. R. R. Ackert. the oldest condm tor of ’ the Wabash I’oad in M.-- >uri. fell or was Pushed from his train while running south near the lowa and Mis* -uri line and died from his injuries. Philip I >. Armour, the ( ‘hicago million--1 Sire, is a vi ry early riser, ami is said to he in his ofime every n. ruing by GslO o’clock. The Northwestern Miih-r _b-* tm m: ' Put of flour at Minneapolis, l»m oh ,>upe- ‘ rior ami Milwaukee last week .it jgI.UJ.. • 1 barrels.
No Wonder He Fled. Judge—You admit that you entered the house of the prosecuting witness by । the rear door at 2in the morning? Prisoner—Yes, your Honor. Judge—What business did you have there at that time of night? Prisoner—l thought it was my own house. Judge —Then xvhy did you, when this I lady approached, leap througi. the win-1 dow, Jump into the cistern and hide j yourself? Prisoner—Your Honor, I thought it | was my wife.—Truth. Shake Into Your Shoes Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen, smart- j ing feet, nnd instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. It’s the : greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen’s Foot-Ease maW's tight-fitting or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet. Try it to-day. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores. By mall for 25 cents, in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, lai Roy, N. Y. Her New Love. She I can prove that you said you liked the very ground I -walked on. He—And 1 can prove that your feet haven't touched the ground since you got that new wheel.—Detroit Free Press. There Is a t lass of People Who are injured by the use of coffee. Recently there has been placed in all I the grocery stores a now preparation j called (>RAIX O, made of pure grains, i that lakes the place of.coffee. The most delicate stomach receives it without distress, and but few can tell it from cos- . fee. It <P»os not cost over one-fourth as much. Children may drink it with great benefit. 15c. ami 25c. per package Try U. Ask for GRAIN-O. The great art of life Is to play for much and stake little. — Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Is taken Internally. Brice 75 cents. The oarsmnn is a rowman-tic fellow. Mm. Win«l«w’< snnTiuNo htrff fnr Children Vethn c to ‘ttrnn the Kuriito, rrac.re’* inflammation. , allay# i am. cure* wind rolic. IB cent# a bottle. D A MTTC? M " *ILLSOH < CO , Wn-M I OS a I J*,c. sochar^’' Ml parent ■ ” ■ frr W .
k_ <;r -T J rni ' T.F.NITXF, ARTICLE! ! } Walter Baker & Co.’s J & Breakfast COCOA i Pure, Delicious, Nutritious. ' i R Costs Less than ONE CENT a cnp. • rl t/ql Walter Bak package bears our Trade-Mark. V ' ‘ (EaUbllihed 1780.) 4 A J 1 Trade Xt»r«. Co. Limbed, { SAPOLiO IS LIKE A GOOD TEMPER, “IT SHEDS A BRIGHTNESS EVERYWHERE.” nr n n h । J s si th® itaU4 J Ji Ti =====— ~ / I know a lady who was troubled with what her doctors termed Intestinal indigestion. Her last doctor had her pursue the Salisbury treatment, which consists of eating only beef and bread dried in the oven and drinking all the hot water she could. I h « in office where she is employed walk along with a glass filled with steaming hot. The Salisbury treatment did give her some relief and she persisted in it for three months. It was then that she was induce to try Ri: ans Tabules, and now she finds that there are many eatables (chicken for instance) which she was not allowed to eat at first. which she can now eat without distress. She says Ripans Tabules seem to counteract the acidity of her stomach. Their effect upon her has been wonderful and the relief she gets is as much as she ever experienced with the Salisbury treatment, and she can now choose from a more liberal bill of fare. A new »tyle packet containing }" *and Le^cnnomliiT^ne doaen a™,- .coree roa ™ rxsTS JMe by ^i bv Ending fnrty-i^t cent* to the Rn-axs . ■XMICAI. or a ra.l. «^a ba y
Sl2 to $35 PER WEEK partie, preferred wfio K>ve " h ‘ IV/Xr <-nn>. red- ; t ES i & GET RICH ; TiriaißtSWHeßL ALL tLSE FAILS. a Best < outrh Syrup. 1 a^tes Good. 1
Thousands Tell Os marvellous cures of scrofula, hip dl»*i ease, sores, humors, ulcers, dyspepaia,, rheumatism, catarrh and other diseases* by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. This great medicine bas done a world of good by making pure blood, restoring appetite and di-' gestion, giving rosy cheeks, and clear,, J healthy complexions to old and young. Hood’s Ba p r X । Is the best—ln fact, the One Time Blood Purifier. \ Sold by all druggists. sl, six for $5. Hood’<? Pill« ar« purely vegetable, r»- ’ iwwu & i II lb nable, benefielal. 25c.
Rad way’s ) Heady Relief. ^\TTis life- • long friend. 4 It is the only pain remsj - EDYtbatin—^<^stantly stop. the most excruciating Fains, allay* nfl amm aisl 3 tlon, »nd'‘ V/1)7;n cures conA l/J' I gestion. «/z Internally
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a teaspoonful in water wlllin a few minute«cure Cramps, Spasms. Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Sick Headache, Diarrbma, Summer Complaint, Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency and all internal pains. There is not a remedial agent in the world that will cure fever and ague and all other malarious, bilious and other fevers (aided by RAHWAY'S PILLS), so quickly as RADWAY’S HEADY BELIEF. Price 50 cents per bcttle. Sold bv Druggists. RA DWAY * CO., New York. POMMEL SLICKER .SM- rider and stddle perdry in the hardest storms Substitutes will disappoint. Ask for J 'So? Fish Brand Pommel Slicker— WAZ, it is entirely new. If not for sale in CTsStki your town, write for catalogue to A. J. TOWER. Boston. .Mass PENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. JOHN W MORRIS, WASHINGTON, 0.0, LMe Principal Examiner U. S. Pension JmreiML i jm. in last war, 15 adjudicating ciaimi, atty. Maats
«CURE YOURSELF! I we Big O for unnatural iisebargea, inOaminationa, irritations or ulceration* it in uco u a rue tn brace*. Painless, and not astria- . fient or poisonous. Sold by nrngrEisd. or sent in plain wrapper, by express, prepaid, so» 11 00, or 3 liottles. $2.75. Circular sent on raquest. C. N. IL No. : 8 f»7 VVHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS PLEASE SAY ’’ yon saw the ad'ertiaemco; in this paper.
