Bloomington Courier, Volume 13, Number 14, Bloomington, Monroe County, 5 February 1887 — Page 3
is-
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0
CMILPFp WHO APvfL ComvtMtW taking
and subecr to
CROUP
Ydu Will rHd iK
A L LENS Lajng Balsam
AivD SURE
I" : - ,
A SAFEl
ftEMEDY.
Brings it MHun mcT. tf all
ihoutit
ALL DRUGGISTS SILL
ALIENS LUNG BALSAM
Lrstmna eigiwittird. A- CJlcyer Co, SoJeB
9
BB. BOLL'S COUGH SYBOP
Sfartbd core of Coughs, Colds, Hoarseaess, . Ctaajfe Asthma, Bronchitis, iVnooplag Congh, Incipient Conftmpticn, and for the relief of conKarptive persons in advanced stages of the Disease. For Sale by all JDran arists. Price. 25 cents, - . -.
c The best and meet Remedy for Caw of afl diseases eaased by any derangement of tan liver. Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels. Dyspepsia, Sick: Headache, Constipation,
Bflioos Complaints and Kalariaof all hinds
yield readily to the benefleeat infloenco of
Ml
liTf&lji
It i3 pleasant to the taste, tones Bp too g
system, restores and preserves health. .
4 T la nnivlv Vrntflhl' . anil fannot fhfl to
proro beneficial, both to old and yotws.
ass Blood FarifleFlt is superior to all I
others. Sold everywhere at $1.00 a bottle.
' -3:' 1
l E&1RON 11 BTON1C
Will purify Urn BLOOD regolato
the LJVE" arid KIDMVkapa J:s'3TOKE th & HEALTHandVXO-
OK 01 YOUTli- L)yspop8ia,aaj of Appotic. IndigestionXaM of
Mronjjto ana xirea reeungim-
80lut)V.3rsd: iioaea. mm-
Clod ana nmfan recawo new
lores. jniivffp"" and wppliea Brain fOC
-nfferin from comi4aXntatio. . .in tfmrsex will find in XB
J?jL raft's cn tonic
pa.
K3i
IlSf T1IE1 s
DOMESTIC. Hon. George 11. rendletoo, minister to Germany, arrived at New York, Sat
urday.
in iimiiimi urn mi iiwiiii iiiii iii I irn mii i ii ii i i I ill
Mr. Gosehcn has been defeated for
i anient for a Liverpool district and
considered bv the. t'Inbs to be a
great party disaster. A. Gladstone man 1 defeated him. j Lord.' Randolph Churchill Thursday 1 made his promised explanation of his
New England fishermen an- delight- i resignation. It contained nothing now.
vAonliiH.w JCIO leilllie VUUiny. uuiutunt; wuum t
1 uoiuutiuu
ed over the retaliatory
passed by the Senate. Cromwell pier,Ko. 0, New York City, was destroyed by fire Saturday afteruoon. riss, $80,000. Folly insured. Simon Cameron, no A' in his eighthninth year, left New York, Friday for Bermuda, with a party of congenial spirits. The Michigan legislature has resolved to submit a prohibitory constitutional amendment to the people at the April election. J
approve the army and navy estimates. The Pest her Lloyd says that war beween Germany and France is regarded as more probable at Berlin than is to be inferred from the information which is permitted to be accessible to the public. Serious rioting" occurred in "Belfast Saturday and Sunday nights between soldiers, police and Catholics, No one was killed although a large number of soldiere, police and rioters were disabled by gun shot wounds. Fifty rioters
The trouble
THK PISIlRfUKS QUESTION.
K.iglaiKl Di'sivcs nil AmJtsriWf' Adjust nuiut War Talk Anions: tho Canadian Milttia-Aii Appoal tn 5vi iaor Poraker For I!iiuiS!5ion i Organi Cobipimlra of ninilia-An KiirIIkIi War Ship Aewt to Trotevt Canada's A!lgol KiKlitsi-panatllnn FiHheraten InsolotiJIy Iitvnrtr American Vaters-SmtUini; Unbtotn prop Hard. The subject of thedispute between the Tlnited States and Groat Britain in re-
Laige emigration of negroes from the WCT0 amsu.
on &aiuruay nignT, m a run wiwcui
The arrival
m
rang
SfoiTpeeay cure. Give !r, healtto
SSa7a;cslt o f two cents! ft VoMBO.W TURK. BARTER MSCICiaE CO.. ST. LOUIS, MB-
SES81CR STEEL HE FENCE
1
the hill country,Mississippi,to the Yazoo swamps isseriously interfering with the work of the planters.
..... A jury at Portage, Wis., acquitted j
Brakeman Wells of responsibility for the
death of nineteen persons in the recent collision at East Riot on the St. Paul road. In jfehokyilage of Union town, 0., between Monday morning and Wednesday afternoon, five married iadies of middle
age dropped dead from supposed heart disease. ...... By the aid of bloodhounds, detectives were enabled to track and capture a gang of robbers operating in the vicinity of Albuquerque, N. ftf; Hardy Foster, a desperate character, was killed. Edward Unger, who killed August Bohle, in New York, and shipped his mutilated remains in a trunk to Baltimore, has made a full confession of the crime. The details are sickening.
As a result of the Post-Dispatch's exposure of election frauds and forgeries in St. Louis, over fifty indictments have been returned by the United States Grand Jury against election officers. Thomas B. Whitehead, ex-clerk of the Cleveland Board of Education, was arrested Friday morning, and is a prisoner at the county jail. The grand jury indicted him for embezzling $2,285 of the funds of the board. Mrs. Asa J. Mill in an and her two children under two years of age, residing one mile south of Burr Oak, Mich., were found drowned in three feet of water Friday by her husband on returning home. Upon the mother's body was tied a stone
of twenty-five pounds' weight
James Duffy, of Chicago, and Michael
Gainey, of Terre Haute, fought six rounds Friday night for the middle
weight championship of Indiana. There was lively thumping for a short time, but the police stopped the mill and the fight was declared a draw. Ffty thousand laborers on the river front in and around New York are on a strike for alleged cause. It is one of the quietest on record. Ocean vessels can not load or unload for want of laborers, and great damage is being done against those interested. A Salt Lake dispatch says a report is current there that Brigham Young is not dead, but living in England. The dispatch also says that tho prophet is to apparently be resurrected from f,he .dead and preach to the people of JSion as one haying returned from the grave to tell what lies beyond. The Brooklyn grand jury reports that the chief of the fire department and-all the men sold franchises to telephone and electric light companies for their personal benefit. No indictments are returned because of the Ioosp manner in whieh the laws are drawn, and because of the failure to get the necessary witnesses Raymond Belmont, son of August Belmont, the well-known banker, shot himself through the heal at 1 o'clock Monday morning in the shooting gallery in the basement of his father's residence, 105 Fifth avenue, New York. The
j wound proved fatal in a short time. ( Young Belmont had been out to dinner,
and had evidently been drinking. Assembly 1,384, K, of L., has brought suit in the Baltimore Superior court against S. Ruth & Co,, tin-can-makers for $20,000 damages by violation of con? trect. The assembly claims that the defendants contracted to pay the union scale of prices from April 1, 1886, for one year, which they have failed to observe, thus throwing many men out of employment and causing their support to be a charge upon the assembly. An exciting scene occurred at St. Stephen's Church, New York, Friday nignt, which might have culminated in
in a big row had it not been for the
the arriyaj jjf the police. The basement of the church was locked all day , fyut the body of the church was left open. A large crowd assembled that evening,
and at 9:30 about 200 women succeeded
in forcing their way into the basement wnere they surrounded Dr. McGlynn's
confessional. Dr. Donnelly went down
stairs and, asked them to leave. He was driven out, and called in the police, who finally succeeded in clearing the place. The women hissed Father Donnelly and made fun of the pfliceis.
Tbe best Farm, Owfeo. Paultry Yard, Lawn, School Lot, Park and Cemetery renins and ya&ef. Perfect Automatic Gate. Cheapest and Neatest Iron Fences. Iron and wire summer Houses, Lawa Vttrnkure, and other wire wr.rk. Best Wire Strep- & und Pller. Ask dcalcra hardware, or address, SEDGWICK BRO&, RICHMOND, iNg.
Leadin?Nof, ; 14, 04B. 130, 135, 333, 16! " Por galo by a'V Stationers. THE E3TEKW00 sSTEEL PEW CO., fcka: Camdiin. H. J. 26 John St., New York,
W4K1ED
AlEMEN
GOOD WAGE?. toKi terms, stock and specinities in th basinesa. Wfito at once
if
p AN-Z AM A BALM2i VSi vl Ssaaedlec. The grand eat and simpleat known rtmedy for all female Trouble to which womankind It he! r l pf r box of one month's treatment. Bella bia Irfidy AgKnU can nuke money for them, elves at" become benefactors to. their race. by. en mAaina In the sale of this remedy. For mHdichieand SrenUrs. addrens Paa-Z Ui. Co., TrkfortIaJ
CUBES ytiZK All ELM FAILS.
Eesi Coatrh 6yruD- Tastes sood.
Use In time. Sold by druggists.
Protestants and Catholics.
of the police incensed the mob, and led
to a free use of revolvers and stones.
Hie nelice were comnelled to fire for
j : . . their own protection.
WASHINGTON. It is again reported that Secretary Manning will soon retire from the Cabinet. Pension Commissioner Black has issued a circular, announcing that only soldiers of the Mexican war, who served sixty days therein, and who are sixty-two years of age, can secure a pension, unless they can prove disability or that they are dependents. The widow of such a soldier is also barred from the benefits of the act, unless she has reached the age of the sixty-two years, or is dependent upon others for her support. The Knights of Labor "National Legislative Committee" have petitioned the President to veto the inter-state
commerce bill because (1) of the commission clause; (2) the arbitrary power conferred upon the commission; (3) the exclusive jurisdiction given to the Federal court to bear and determine causes arising under this act, and (4) the acknowledged uncertainty as to tho meaning of nearly all of the provisions of the bill. There has been a great deal of talk here within the past few days as to the probable political eflect of the rejection by the Senate of the nomination of J. C. Matthews, of Albany, whom the President has twice tried to make recorder of deeds for tho Bistriot of Columbia. Democrats generally are of the opinion that the action of the Senate will lead to a stampede of the negro vote to the Dem ocratio party.
The fact that the Senate acted in accord
with the plank in the Democratic platform which declared for home rule jn the Territories and the Diptrict of Columbia will not, they think, enter into
the consideration of the matter at all.
The colored voters will be told that a Democratic President tride to appoint a colored man to a good oflice, and a l iepublican Senate stood in his way. This they think will be sufficient to stampede the greater portion of that vote. Republicans, on the other hand, say that the President has appointed only one African who has been rejected, and that there are a hundred places in which he might be put with the apr proval of the Senate, If Cleveland really desires to provide for colored men they will aid him, provide" fie selects places at or near their homes. They do not think this case will hurt the party. Marine Disasters in 1880. The past year has been an unprofitable and disastrous one to the fishermen from Gloucester, and has been attended with some loss of life. The loss lias ex
ceeded the average. The figures show a total loss of 26 vessels, with a tonnage j of 175,126, valued at $ 152,300, and in- j
sored for $11.9,231. The number of lives lost is 137. The Christmas and New Year gales of 1885 proved vers' calamitous. The losses from December 2 to March comprised 15 vessels, three with crews of 42 men, while 24 other men lost ther lives while visiting Terwals, or were washed overboard. The total loss wasfiQ lives and nearly $100,000 worth of property in tijese gales. Fourteen women are left widows an4 35 ohiidren fatherless. The prewa nptcd above have all been lost since March. It is rarely that December passes without the loss of a fishing vessel, but as yet no loss has been reported for this month.
POtiTTIOAIi. Philetus Sawyer was re-elected Senator from Wisconsin, Tuesday. New Mexico has a legislative row on
Paliuerstou's Way of Getting Even. The story goes that when Lord Palmerston was traveling north on one occasion by rail he purchased a thirdclass ticket, lit his cigar, and entered the coach. One pf the employes called the attention of the manager t.Q the fact remarking; "What shall we do if Tord Palmerston rides tnird-riass? Every one
will follow suit, and no first or second
class tickets will be sold " The manager thought a moment, then took two thirdclass tickets, handed them to two chimney-sweeps standing on the platform, and ushered them into the coach where Palmerston sat. Palmerston looked un and immediately comprehended the position and the motive. ,: Arriving at the next station he purchased two firstclass tickets, took the sweeps out, and ushered them into the fintt-olasa coach.
THREE HUNDUGl) BROWNBP,
HflMF
1
gTUDY. Book-keeping. Boainew
forms
eamaiwhlp, Arithmetic. Bhort-
ta nht by mail, tarcniur
Z1
I
OPIUM KaUt PntnlessU
;c;3d at Home. Treatment
sent is - rial and NO PAY aaked
untU 7on .re benufi tod. Terms Low.
jjgjffgsg.f jay-cay vo. toranttfi taa.
ABRtlllll
f
FOREIGN, Henry Labo":here predicts that there will be no war. Parliaiment opened Thursday. Queen Victoria's ''speech1' was very indefinite
I as to the proposed Jrish policy.
Six hundred police are preparing to assist in seventy evictions pn the Boy dke estate, county Clare, Ireland. The consul-general of the United States at Shanghai reports that $1,260 has been contributed by Chinese in that city for the Charleston sufferers. Serious floods have occurred in southern Queensland. Fjfty?eight persons have been drowned and much damage has been done to property.
An ISJiglUli Ship llound for Auitmllu Collision Oirtho Const of Hrazil,
in
Dement ii favor of Republican. ; The Tetaliftljon wga appreciated on the Governor Rosa vetoed the measure and part of the railroad manattera.
threatens to assume military control. It is expected that that the result of the McGlynn affair will be that the Pope will address zn. encylical letter to the Catholics in America, defining the attitude of the ehureh toward the rising tide of democracy . An noon Thursday, seven adherents of ex-Governor Abbett (Democrat), in the Now Jersey Legislature met, organized as a Joint convention of the two Houses, east their seven ballots for Abbett for United States Senator and then Mjoumed.
The British ship, Karunda, which left London, December 11, for Fremantt, Western Australia, with emigrants,
came ipto collision near the coast of Brazil, Jan. 31, wth an unknown vessel and was sunk. Three hundred oftliose on board were drowned. The remainder were saved and have arrived at Dahia. The Kapunda was an iron ship of 1,084 tons. She was commanded by paptail Mason. Mr. Buchter, a well-khbwh, citizen of Lancaster, Pa., has used St. Jacobs Oil, and considers it an excellent remedy in cases of swellings, bruises and burns. Nothing Mean About Hi in. Texas Siftiagf?. Servant Tfye man who brought this bill says he iatired poming put Jere so far to collect this bill. Col. Yerger (who never pays anybody) Tell him I say he cm hire a house in this neighborhood if wants to.
The publisher of Baltimore, Md., Every Saturday, .Mr. T. J. "NVentwortli, says his child aged six months, was suffering from a severe cold, and he gave it Bed Star JJough Cure, which acted like a charm. No morphia .
sard to tho Camidian islieries was brought up in the House oft Commons Friday afternoon. Sir Jamefj Ferguson, Parliamentary Secretary of the Foreign Cilice, in answer to iuquiriesi llmt the government has been conferring with the governmert of (the United States on the question. TUe Canadian iisheries, he said, were vary valuable,
1 and government had followed the policy
concerning them which hajd been adopted by the preceding government, and would maintain the rights of the colonies, with every desire to conciliate the United States. The government was undable. at present. !io narrate the
------- M whole course of the negotiations with
j the United States, but ciulJ state that
a dispatch had been received which was of a pacific nature, an 1 ajfforded material grounds for hope or final settlement of the dispute. United States Minister Phelps had an hour's conference with tho Marquis of Salisbury, Friday, at the Premier's request, to discuss tho Canadian fisheries question. The conference was most cordial on both sides. Lfinl Salisbury expressed himself gratified at the genernl tone of the American press and people in the dispute, and he assured Mr. Phelps that England and Canada were equally desirous of an amicaible adjustment of the whole case. I An Ottawa, Out, dispatch of Saturday savs: The war talk from over tho border has raised a similiar bellicose felling among the militia of all the British colonies, and there is a growing feeling thai a recourse to arms is not unlikely. The War Department hei;e haa maps of every
fortification in the United States, all of them equal to those possessed by the War Department at Washington, particularly those upon the coast and the great lakes, and duplicate copies; have been sent to the imperial Ministe-r of War, in London, so as to prepare the mother country for any emergency, A careful review of militia here has been ordered, and everything has been pronounced to be in flrsfcclasp order. , The Canadian government has decided to release the American fishing schooners Jeanette and Maggie Mitchell, seized by the cruiser Middle ton at St. Andrews, N. B., a few weeks ago, on the payment of fines pf $50 and $100 respectively. An Ottawa dispatch of Sunday, says: It is positively stared in official circles here to-night that the British government has, in accordance with an appeal from the Dominion Cabinet, given Sir John MacDonald assurance that if the fishery trouble is not settled before the fishing season opens, they will dispatch several of their men-of-war to co-operate with the Dominion cruisers in enforcing the fishery regulations. This is an important communication to which reference was made a few days ago, that Sir Charles Tupper was bearing from the British government, and which he laid before the Cabinet on Wednesday last, on his return frpm England. A similar course was pursued by the British government in 1870, before the treaty of Washington was signed. Sir John Mac Donald declines to confirm or deny the report. A Cabinet Minister, speaking on the
subject, expressed himself as follows: "I
have come to the conclusion that American legislators, having gone so far, will never yield their consent to the appointment of a commission. Gloucester fishermen will not venture into our waters again in force, and next "April will witness tho first falling' ofTin their trade. Two years hence the splendid Yankee fishing fleet will be a thing of the past. Let them resort to retaliation if they will, and the result will be that the game will work both ways. Portland, now a winter port of Canada, will decline, while Halifax, under the new order of things, will flourish. Civil war between the pastern and Western States would follow the adoption qf a retaliatory bill." A special fuoro Columbus, Ohio, says: "Governor Foraker is constantly receiving letters from citizens of Ohio asking that, in view of the threatening attitude between this country an . Canada, permission be given toraise militia compan ies. The latest letter is from J. Lake, of
Tiffin, who asks authority to enroll the able-bodied men of Seneca into defensive home guards, as northern Ohio would be the grand theater of the struggle A telegram from Eastport, Me., reports that when the sun wasrisingSunday morn?
ing, a large fleet of Canadian vessels were taking herring in the waters of Passamaquoddy bay. The news of the new arrivals soon spread from house to house, and when the sun was an hour high the wharves were crowded with an excited gang of Maine fisherman and their wives and children. As this is the time of year when immense schools of herring run in, the citizens saw at once what
their Canadian brothers were after. One of the boats was haied from tQ shpre by one of the angry citizens, and in reply to the question as to what they were doing gnq of the Canaana answered: "We are taking Yankee herring; that's what we are doing." When this information was made known to the citizens, their indignation knew no bounds. Threats of retaliation were rife, and it is behoved that had there been any available ordnance in
town the angry fishermen would have opened fre .on the insolent Canadians. As the day advanced news was received from St. Andrews that tho Canadian cruiser Middleton had touched at that port during the forenoon. Later in the day she was cruising oif Eastport, and the news spread that the Middleton was there to prevent any American fishermen entering Canadian waters to fish. Tho indignant citizens were told by the Canadian fishermen, who were within a stone's throw of the shore, that the Middleton was there Jo protect them against the Yankees. One of the captains of one of tho Canadian vessels laughed insolently at the boneless condition of the Eastport fis hormen . II e said the Yankees could not molest him, and he proposed to fish just wherever it suited his fancy. When asked if he did not know that he was within the line.he said: "Of course, I am aware of i t. W hen a man can almost step from his vessel to f.he slmrc h,e is pretty sure he is ingjde
i. - 1
the line. The herring just now happen to be on this side ri old Passatnaq noddy, and have been for several days. Wliy shouldn't wo coiue here ana take them? You Yankees follow the fish into our waters, and when the cruisers are not around they dodge inside the dead-line and take all the fish they can
CONGIUESH.
get. Whv shouldn't we do tho same,
especially when there are no cruisers
about to seie our craft? Wo would
more warv about entering vour
if your coast was guarded. As it is, we would be considered fools to tie our
. w KnsntUA v, Jan. 21, 1&S7. TlicltnaUrcccIcl ti the rurouslricration of a resolution repnrtol by Mr. Hoar. iustrmtUu; llie coininitU'C on privileges iiml eUrUons to investigate the sulfations nsa-le by three roidonti otWashington county, Texas, to their )xkinjf l riven . from their homes, compelled to abandon their property aul deprived of the right of mi fnigo in tbut eounly. A lengthy disenssion followed iifter whieh the resolution wta ronted by a nartv vote A yea HI, naves 2ti The Seimtn
be ! then psmned eonsiderntion of the bill to estub-
waters ! Hsb agneuttund exjferinient stations in ectituee-
; tion with the agrleultnnil eol leges established ! nuder the ael of July 2, 102.. After a long dls-
2 Qm:mmm BOTTLES OF -'ijS.
Ar t cure
eussloM and ihc ot!ori!igof, and votinir on. a la?
vessels up to the wharves siin ply because t numlnY of amendments, Mr. Hawley oiTered a
the fish hanuen to be on the American : substitute tor the mi. una oniiis taotlon the bill
side of the bay." When asked his opinion of .Senator Edmunds's bill, he said: "If its provisions were enforced the Canadian government wouid have to right-about-face and adopt a different policy, or something would drop hard in maritime provinces." Should the government continue its present policy, a collision the coming season can hardly be avoided, and after that no one can tell what the end will
be. The indignant townspeople tonight forwarded a dispatch stating their grievances to Senator Frye, at Washington. AGRR.VTSTaiKl!.. fonsfshormon at JfW York and VioJnitj ltofuse to Work and Are .Joined ly Freight Ha ud lers and. O tli era V iobal)ly 50.000 ACett Idle Ocean Vessels Delayed in Loading and UaJimding XonlJnion Men at M'rk, bat Awkward A Quiet bat Uetermiaed CoateMt "The longshoremen at New York struck a few days ago, becauie of a question of wages. They have since been joined by union men in freight yards and other department? of business until it is estimated that 50,000 men are idle. Their positions have been filled by nonunion men, but being awkward, they greatly delayed handling of freight, and the departure of ocean vessels, many of which left "'light" The steamboat lines claim to have all the help they want, while the union men are calling oiit each in turn any set of men that will aid the strikers qr bring
arner s
OLD TO DEC. 27, 1886.
in
World Can Pro?
uce
a
we can
and substitute were ordered printed, and the matter went over till to-morrow,. The Speaker laid before the House n letter from the Secretary of the Treasury submitting estimates of the Secretary of the Interior of.au appro priation .tom.eet the expenditures required by th Mexican pension bill. Referred. The Secretary of the Interior estimate4; that $1,663,101 will be required for the first jreariv payment of pensions, and asks for an appropriation of Si37,G00 for an increased clerical forced The Senate fisheries bill havin-f ien laid before tbe House, on motion it
was re lc rred to the committee on foreign affairs j BoSt-Oll, - 1 149. 122 and leave granted that committee to report at I ; ' ' any time. The gran ting of leave to report at any j Jony L, HlGOlNS (248 S.Hatstead St.Cnitime temilred unanimous con&mi, hut there was cago, 111.) was ill with Liver cmtwlaint.
"ri"" uh,i iw, uwhjshhhi ju mo part oi aivv ' niimV .... in ..... I. ,.l.!.v..l -1 ft. I
jHtmnvi. iu j.jcftu uiijeviiun. i ne TOuteroneo rcmt on the army appfQpi Ration bill was agree! to. The river and harbor appropriation bill was ordered eriarowed.
. .T.his wonderful success of "Warner's Safe Cure" is due wholl v to tlin r& m
ItSvJl? remedy- For a long time it has been REtiAKJE bv the HittHttSlV MBDICAL ALTH0R1TIFS AS .TH ONLY SPECIFIC FOR KIOft'EYs LIVER i
VMU ..U Jl- UULAJiXt VVJir ii AlflXS
TJiqusands of people owe their life ana health to "WarjaerWSAE eure-1 and ;ah produce 100,000 TESTlMOfH I ALS to that effect: - T y
Read the following and note the large number of bottles distribute an tee these figures to be correct, as our sales-books will prove rf" :" ' v r If
Tit cast) ay, Jan. 28. 1887. After the transaction of routine business the Senate took up tho House bill for , the relief ef dependent parents aud honorably discharged so j. diem rind tailors vyha are . now diaablod and dependent upon their own labor for support. The bill wus dlseu ised t some length and passed as ; t came from the Ujuso. 19 provisions weren. oentl.vglA-en m thuac! columns The agricultural experiment station bill was considered and passed without division . It directs the establishment, in connection with the agricultural colleges, of a department to be kuown and designa.ed as an "Agricultural Experiment Station'.1 Where there are two such colleges in one Stat the amount appropriated to each State and Territory tflt this purpose , S15.000 a year, Is to be equally divided between them,unless the State Legislature shall otherwise direct. The object and duty of such exjmrimeni stations is to conduct original researches, or to verify experiments on the physiology of plants and animals, the diseases to which they are severally subject and the remedies therefor- the chemical composition of useful plants; the comparative advantages of rotative cropping: the capacity of new plants or trees for acclimating; the analysis of soils, and water; the
chemical composition of manures: the adaptation
an inlluenoe to bear in their favor. The and value of araases and forage plants; the com
position and digestibility of the different kinds of 'food for domestic animals; the scientific and j economic questions: involved in the production I of butter and cheese, and such other researches
aud experiments beiuing directly on the agricultural industry of the United States us may.be deemed nd sable. Tim House passed the river and harbor appropriation bill. Yeas 1M, Nays 94.... The bill for the Incorporation cf the Washington Cabje Kail way Company was taken up but its opponents by filibustering methods prevented a vote.
latestjphase of this great contest was the strike of freight-haudlors of railroads, thus tightening the blockade on freight transportation and adding other thousands to those already idle. Apparently by preconcerted action, committees of the freight-handlers of a number of the roads Monday presented formulated demands on the managers, and it is understood that similar demands will be made on the managers of all the roads leading
in that city. The freight-handlers of!
the Pennsylvania road employed on the company's North River piers Monday notified the managers that unless the rate of wages was increased from 17 cents to 20 cents per hour a general strike would follow all along the company's docks. Tho company was given until Wednesday noon to consider the demand. Their demands are 20 cents per hour from 7 a. m. to 0 p. m., with an hour for dinner, all over-time to be paid at the rate of 25 cents an hour. At present the men have no regular hour for dinner. The freight handlers of the company are in sympathy with the strikers. There are aboiyt 2,000 men employed on the piers. The concessions asked for were refused absolutely by each road. The demanoH?H a&ibisfe' on all the companies having terminus in Jersey City. The Custom House officials on all the piers in Jersey City al-
., Friday, Jan 28..18S7. In the Senate Mr. Edmunds, , in presenting a petition for the repeal or reduction of internal taxes, said ho wish ad to urge the importance Qf the subject of reducing, , i nctt ftUoijelhcr repealing, this remnant qf the unpleasantness of twen ty-fivereafs ago... Tho Senate proceeded to cousidor the bill to prohibit members of Congress from acting as attorneys for railroad companies .holding charters or having received grants of land or pecuniary mUI from the United States, and occupied the remai nder of the day in its discussion. . . Th 5 House passed the Washington cable rail way bill.. ...... .The plcuro-phenomina bill was taken up aud considered until adjournment. .
which the doctors could not.bendU. Afr ter .the thorough use of Warners Safe Cure he says. "I honestly believe J em cured. h i
Providence.
Pennsylvania'
1,821,218
W. A. Bode (Alton, 111.,) wasaddictedtoj the use of morphine, taking 30 grains a day. Dropsy finally came on, and he says, ' Wa Tier's Safe Cure nasi made a new man of me,, after using 150 bottles." . " " - ' 'X
Portland, Me.,
MaohS. B. AunOTT (Springfield, Moi), in 18T1 was afflicted with lame back Jiheumatim and Kidney trouble. Consulted the verrbest physicians in San Francisco, and visited all the mineral springs there.. Took a health trip to the N ew England States, but for seven . years suffered constanUv from thi malady, which had resulted in Bright a disease. After using a couple dozen bottles of Warner's Safe Cure and two of Safe Pitta, he w rote: " My back and Kidneys are without pain, and, thank God, Iowe it aU to Warners Safe Remedies."
441,105
Isaac Ha acre (Maro, 111.), wrote in Feb, 1886, that his wife since their marriage had been in delicate health, suffering horn palpitation of the heart, dtejiinm, intense fiain in the lower part 6t the abdomen and many other disorders. She seemed a hopeless invalid. The doetors failing to benefit her she began the use of Warner s Safe Cure, and in a month felt likea new creature. She ascribes her cure entirely under the mercy of God to Warner's Safe Cure. Bai of New Eiig-.. -441,753 W. H. Prince, (506 Webster ave.. Chicago, III.), was badly afflicted with Rheumatism, but after using a few bottles of Yarner-s Safe Rheumatic Cure he was able to throw aside his crutches,
New York State, - 3,870,778 j
Chicago,
2,808,698
Mrs. R H. Adams (287 Elm St., Chica
go, in.,; was prostrated by the effects of the Chicago fire and was for a long time a miserable sufferer. : ; Under the . operation of Warner's Safe Cure -J and Kafr Nervine she says Lhe haa.be- ; come a weU woman again? " t "M
Detroit,
846.946
J. R. Robikson (Editor BaUway Atoawx; 1 - : Chicago, IU.,) reports that his wife . ':. -r had dmcultdee peculiar to her Had 4 used Warner's Sae Cure with the j. very greatest benefit, 'and that her health"
is oeaer nowpian for ten years. . "-
Milwaukee,
458,894
Mrs . A . Bjlorrbec jc (2813th St, Chicago,IU.,)had hrmrt rettA,pain in left side and back;dinlcult breath ing. torpid Hver and kidney disease. Was almost pardl fujerf. After taking twenty bottles of Warners' Safe Cure, she says, o
e
Minnesota,
648,017
Mm. .T ' W Ot.m riiiTininF
Chicago, 111.,) was troubled with eorni plicated Liver and Kidney disease, Watf extremely nervous. Everything seemed , r -to be swimming, and it would become " dark. The doctors failing, she took: 4' twenty bottles of Warner's Safe Cure; J and says, "I completely reetnvred." H r Bal. N. W. States. 1,767,149 ' v
A8K YOUIt FRIENDS AKD MlQHB01tS ABOUT-
Warner
Safe
Cu
The MOST POPULAR REMEDY Ever Discovered.
so went out on a strike Monday. Their ' tion bill was also pfsed
grievances are not known. Tho strike includes all tho 'longshoremen and many other freight handlers, in New York, Brooklyn, Jersey City and adjoining cities and seems to have a tendency to spread to other business.
....... Saturday, Jan.. 9, 1S87. Thi Senate cousi lered the bill changing tie boundaries of Yellowstone Park. Finally the bill was passed ayes 49, nays & The limits of the Park, by this bill are extended on the east and west, but are dem hushed 13 two miles on tifi north to allow a ra Iroad to pass through these two miles.. .: : Th o irouse passed the bill appropriating S1Q,C0Q to enUbie the commisislontr of agricuHaro to make a special distribution of seeds in the drought-stricken counties of Texas The postoffice appropriation bill was taken up, considered
and passed. The District of Columbia approprTa-
Cleveland,
682,632 , St; tonis,
1,530,527
G. W. Patterson, (Truro. Madison Co..
Ind.) had inflammation of the urethra,, following bilious fever. He had pains in the back, disordered stomach, headaches and was very, nervous. He then began 1 he use of Warner's Safe Cure, Safe Nervine -and Safe Pilh and improved right away.
..jU'W.","" "
Cincinnati,
873,667
Hair Catarrh Cur is tnkeu iutTually. It act dire ;'ly upon the b'uotl and t"e uiucoud surface of tutf erste m. Prko 75c. hottU,
A Pow Fallacies About Food. That arrowioot is nutritious. It is simply starch and water, useful as a restorative, quickly prepared. That gelatine is not nutritious. It will not keep a cat alive. Beef tea and gelatine, however, possess a certain reparative power. That because milk is an important article of food U must be forced upon a patient. Food that a person cannot endure will not cure. That cheese is injurious in all cases. It is, as a rule, contra-indicated, being usually indigestible; but it is concen
trated nutriment, and a waste repairer, and often craved. That the cravings of a patient are whims, and should be ...4wed . The stomach needs, erares for, a,nd digests articles not lai4 down in any dietary, Such, as, for example, fruit, pickles, jams, cake, ham or bacon wifch fat, cheese, butter, and milk. That an inflexible diet may be marked out, which shall apply to every case. Choice of a given list of articles allowable in a given case must be decided by the opinion of the stomach. The stomach is right and theory wrong, and the judgment admits no appeal.
Jas. S. Murphy, M. D.t Company's Shops, N. 0., wr ies: "I sell a great deal of Dr. Bull 'a Cough Syrup, for every one who tries it. likes it." ' "There are more things in heaven and earth. Horatio, than are dreamt qfifl your philosophy." Qf course! Why tftase old du tiers suffered horribly with aches and pains, and diidn't and couldn't know that Salvation Oi l would cure them.
When tho drinks are set up too the crowd lies.
often
"How divine a thing a woman may be
J made,' ' when her cold is cured by Pr.
Bull s Cough by mp. "Mother, can X go out to fish?" Nt no, my little sonny, you know youri got a swollen foot, MV precious little honey." But they got a bottle of Salvation, il, and he went and caught an ell, and ate it like a man. TH EMULA11KEX3.
Wheat,
Ikdianapolis. Feb, 1 '&7.
No. 'l Mediterranean S3..: No. 3, do
S2t '- No. 2, red, Si ;Jc. ; No. 3, red, S0)c. ; rejected 76 Vi. : from wagon SS0c. (XkK, No. t, whlt. 38c. ;- No. 2. do. , Ho. white, 37e.; No. 2 yellow 85ra Oath. No. A whlW; 3lKe. ; No. 3, iio.f 30)c.i No 2, mixed, 29c ; rejected, So il.w, choice, SlO.'ic'. HotiH Heavy packins and jbipping,8i.85fiH85
light mixed packing, 8l.(0t-tS5; pigs and heavy
f irri.K Extra ' choire shinninc
. . . J n . O- y l IT'.'. .J
After Diphteri. Diphtheria w a terrible disease, requiring the greatest medical skill tp efiTet?t a complete cure, Even when' its power is broken, it clings id the patient with great persistency, end of often leaves the system poisoned and prostrated, J nst here Hood's Sarsaparilla does a vast amount of good, expelling impurities from the blood, giving it richness and vitality, while it renovates and strengthens the system. Saved iron Ruin by a Rattlesnake A strange story come from Brevard County, Florida. Mr, John Lennard says that near him lives a family named Belden. They had a daughter, a girl of 18 years old, who had formed an attachment for a big rattlesnake, which would come and go at her bidding and nestle in her lap. $ he reptile was fond of the girl, and would allow her to strike it and roll it about as she pleased. Tho girl was playing in some bushes near the house, with a snake in her lap. A negro saw tho child, and, thinking she was uibj
8185a$5 05.
It-. JT- . '4
good, do.,fS3.J15(aS4.H '; Amnion, p., &&0p&$3 65:
extra cnoiCU iiuuuxij.i.u;ju;i;ijuu yuuitmw.au., 33.20?3.5O: nedlnfu fair and" :coramotL, do., 81.75 (SSASQ)-extm' choice cows $2 8533.lp; good tc ehc-ice. do., $2;&03.$T ; meilnua- Iftljf ftud common, do., l.35$3 GO; vea.lcalveakS4.005.00;coTw and calves 550,005.00, - Shkrp Extra choir e we thors, 8-1.2B$4.60; good to choice mixed, l9,7Attfl t.i!6; medium i air and common mixed, Sl.t5$3.f0; extra choice lambs 3-l.0ti5.00: bucks per head $2.0053.50. 'ia1'k, patent. S-1.25S-1.50; extra fancy, J3.75t 1.2". ; fancy .40g.v..50 ; eho ice 83. 10$3.25. Coal, anthracite, $7.00; HUsburg, UM; Biazil block, 83.25 - Iro ,s, Butter Fodltky Effw. 23e. ; bu .ter, tare? country, 15l7c sells at l?$lSc.; eauutxr ctolce l213o., selling from stare allfilfic Vouf tiy spring chtkets, 6Kc per pouud; hens rdive, 6Kfi- perA pound r roosters, 3c.; lurkej hdns. Ve.;- tonlfe Go ; geese, full-feathered, 1S.C0 ie'r dozen; picked. P.60; dmiks 8c. a pound. iJROVisxoK8 jobb .ng prievs sugar cured b am "reliable" braud, I rKc : cottage 7c. ; ' jSnrtlsh breakfast leon, 7c, ; bippn cleai 8 auscWiAKMOBB green ecw hide-, QKc,; suiers, 6Kc; gTeeu calf, 7c ; salted, do., Sc.; tallow prime, ZVfi.: wool, tnh-wunod. clean, a&gSSe.; medium Wiishod 232ftfl.; olovt-r seed, H.teg$l.aO- pe bushel : timothy ?1 9052.00 Mue erss,90c Chicago. Wheat. 77M; corn, S5V; oat?, 26; pork $12.50; isrd, 86.12; ribs, $6 115. Cuttle beeves. S4 2S3S.00; stockers, 92JVl99a90 cows, -fi.50g63.75. Hop lif;ht, 4404 85; rough packing, jM.40fl.g5; h(w oftckim- and shipoiua fi.7.?5f ." at-.ep 2.50 5.00
Mrs. Katharine Gray (JXramatic Header, Richmond, Ind.) was ovei come with .malaria, and spent all her
means on physicans without eflect but"
was finally reawrca w iicuttn ujr t uci. o Safe Cure. Her daughter had a similar exnerience.
F. Mayer (1020 N. 12th St., 8t. Louis, s Mo.) afflicted with '.tired fifeelings, dix . ziness and pain across the back, ami i .'; loss aooetite. ;. AVas sallow and care, . .
worn all the time. The doctors failing he began the use of Warner's Safe Oure, and reporU. Ifeti tike a jgh$n$ Cbck i" - v
KanaaaCity?
717,860
Bal. Ohio, (State,)
633,158
Kate Miller (Akron, Ind.) was in a. dying condition for almost two years caused by gall stones and terrible erara in stomach and sides, In five days after usng Warner's Safe Gnre the iah sweat grew less. In a week she could sit up and eat and finally aot "fat and well and as pink as a baby?;!.'
H. M. Biokksll (Druggist, Garrett, Ind:) five years ago was sick with Bright? disease. Every doctor said he wasY billed for the other shore He took over one hundred bottles ot WarnerV Safe Cure and was cured; ' 4 ' t w
Bal. S. W. States,
746,789
boutheni States, - 3,534,017 C. II. Allen (Leavenworth, Kan.,) son Edwin, two years of age, afflicted witfe mremecaseofBHght'eas and the doctors gave hfa w. By the advice of the peter 's irife, began the use of Warners Saee Cpe, and after tekiog
even oot lies ne s psrjeeu we$ ana nas
ha,d no
Caiiada
- 1.467.824
I. Harrikgton (Pickwick, Minn.,) learned from his doctors that ne had -Bright' distast, could and not be cwt4 After using ten bottels of Warner? . Safe Cure, he says M doctorpi(onoMtiC' himweU. Sn Francigeo, ' 124946 Mrs. M. ItowELL (220 North 15th St, St.. ' Louis Mo.,) was afflicted with female complaints MQthiatf(erf and a general breaking down. She had no appetief, limbs and feet swatted the best physi-" cians in "-St. Ixuis could not telp her a biut She had nead&che, nervousness, racks' ing pains all through her body arui shaking chill. She took eight bottles of Warner's Safe ure,and aays,. "I tfouud myself a well womanf :' " Bal. PacificCoaftt 7 S316
f
..... Every Tet3timonlal we publish is gennlna. iog stamp for reply, and learn fbr yourselves.
Writa to tke testator, anloa
Sleeveless A coat of arms.
Tie Thanks His Paper. . Mr, Editor: , aa Induced by reading your 50,04 paper to try Dr. Harter's Iron Tonic for debilitv, liver disorder and scrofula, and three battles have cured me. Accept my thanks. Ofos. G, Bogs, A loud wedding ring-That of - the church bell, Are Vou Aware that a simple coiiRh often terminates in consumption? Why not be wise in time and use Allen's Lung Ba.sam which will stop the disease and prevent the fafej consequences. For sale by aU nedlehje dealers
When yon r
headftebf
r cWUpL u Jew; vimU) aeceof llr. Jf. H. McLean's Lit
iaKo uun vui cms vm -.v-p..xwi
- If you spit up phlKiu, nd' trouhled hackinc cough, use D.i i.H. McLpan'i T
Luur Balm.
wilha
r WW
Ffly cick headache, female ttbWi. ttunJg1e jftinjj tSe jiotd tttkf Ur. J, li. McLonia'a Little Liver atl. hlney PUleti. 3& cuu t M IL
Oronnv 'autftiaattuut. iiiahc cousht
caiiiuioii nQocUoua oi iho throat and luhga reJiovoU.hy Dr. J. H. McLoan'i Tar Wli
Balm,
and all the
oulckly
iue Luua
In ca?c of Kovor auu Ague, the bloc i ua eftect-
nr. J. a
pyaiUcate tula ipim fwm
ualiv. lhoueh uot so
effluvium of the atmcKphere a
dt-adlloBt poison.
Fever Cure will system.
duiigeroualy
i.oUaned
.liiifiatt 8lo8
the
ano tho
OM people suffer much from disorders of tho t.rinary orgatis. itud aw always gratified at the "w-biider-fuf effects of Dr. J. II. McLean's Liver aud Klluey Dalm iu haulshing their troubles. $1.00 pur hutlle.
Parasites Bye-glasses Tid Bits.
lWIW(U di(jo8ipn ana aulmllatlon produce dUordori'd cuudittons of tlie system which prow aud are oo unr mod by ueglect. Dr. J. II. McLean's Strengthening Cordiul and Blood Purifier, by its touic properties, cures indigestion d jdvva tone to the stomach. $1.00 per bottle.
Oi cures accom plbtliod by Hood's Siirsaparillo can never ha eomplei ely writ ten. Thousands with hearts overilouiug with grati Utile have .writtttn to uk tell lug of the wonderful things Hood's Su.iarilla has accomplished for 1 1pm. The poe'tia curative powers ot Ifood'o Sarsaparilla are. sue eresfttl wbeu qvorythlng else has failed. If your
protected, slipped upon her, seised her i iS lin 3 'ThJnYi J ' r ' . 1 . ; kidneys and liver Inactive, your body tired, ad, in his arps and was bearing her oft into s Xl o liChVH tmd iftlllSf try ihi$ mrnoaAao.
tne woous, .wuii nw inina presspu p.ver win uo you gcoq..
er moutb to stifle per cries. p. crawled from the folds of her dress.crept around the brute's arm, and struck him on the neck, hissing in rage. The negro dropped the girl, and dashed tho snake
against a tree, 'i lie girl ran screaming
toward her home. The negro went on!
a few yards before he was overcome by
the poison, and died shortly after m great agony.
For Iwuuty years 1 have boon troubled with
dyspepsia aud llvr complaint. My bowels Iiave been eotistiphted.'SO that ): had to take pills eontinuallv. 1 tried many dliferent mediefues to no cileet. " Last spring I was recommended to try Hood's Sarsaparilla, and one bottle cured me. My 1kwcU are now regular, I have no live itU:. eultv, and the dyspepsia has ent(roly disanptyired. I nan eat anvthintr without' dfetreaslna; me.
L18 - Hood's atreapftt'lUa Was a'Ciod-send to nuV-J. B, y UoaXBECk. So. EtiUsburg, Sullivau county, N. Y, iv Hood's Sarsaparilla
old
d by all druggists. $1; sU for 85. riotared C. I. HOOD & CO. '., ApcdUecariea, Lo.well,.3asa.
Froqueutly accidents occur in iQ .hauaahold which cause burns, cuts. spratu ua ui'uUea; for use in such cases Dr. . Mc-Leau YoJoauie Oil Liniment has fflr may year been the constant fa vo r i $ (awUy remo 1 y , If atnicud with Soro KycB.uso Dr. Isaac Thompson's Kye Water. Drugiats.sollU 25c. A b-vl:ug swe!l an uh era ted tooih.
Kvory er.on is iutoi'osU Ui ts and .f th h meo s rho exa or any one who i from the en" eta ej tiVpi livHr, Wo will i he :e ioret'jtd''lb get lug wofl. Qot a
if afuiirs, is surterma
admit tbut v,'. .v.i
Urlclny Ash BVttets, use it Hdue.cte-1, aud You will always to s ad'you rea ibhi ubm. If your kidneys are lyactiye, yau will feel auti look wretched, even iu tUeviuaat cheerful society, and nielaucholy on the toillout occasions. Or. J. H.
McLean s Lpar aua JUaney llalm.wili again, f LOS per hottfe,
M Best pJyJj TaBtesgood. Use g :.-.-;:.V5'y- ' : M -v-v.;, ; W '."4
ffi.
Hainsstfllb, K. J., October 15, 188ft. T E. T. Hazeltinb, "I V k Warren, Pa. : j Dear Sir: I was taken with a very severe cold last Spring, and tried every cure we nad in the store, arid could get no help. r:' .- I had our village doctor prescribe for me, lut kept getting worse. I saw anotb -er physician from Port Jervis, S. Y.. and he told me he used Piso's Cure for Consumption in his practice. I bought a bottle, and be fore I nad taken alt of it there was a change for the better. Then I got my employer to order a Quantity of the medicine and keep it in stoek I took one more bottleand my Gough was cured. Kespeetfuily, jPranx MoKslvYa
. -f- -
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS,
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use
in tune, woia Dy arutfjnsta.
'SYt-"
1
Dr. J
sot you rlgbi
Yon -vill have uo use for spoctacles If yon use Dr. J. 11. McLean's Strengthening Bye Salve; it removss tho Aim and scum which accumulates on tho eye balls, subdues inflammation, cools aud soothe the irritated norvos, strengthens, weak aud falling sight. 25c. a hox.
WEAK, NERVOUS PEOPLE
And others sufferim? from nervous debility .exhautitnj. etu-onio ditentes, piematun
ueeunu oi jouug: or oio-ar.
oy ui Electro-
T
ANSY PILLS!
SorawtJy and ourtntn relief, fWlceTtam( isstt
WO 1 1 OCt eCl- Frueaufi vt Co. nottu-v t.
torneys- Box 7, Ann, .tbor. Micu. . . -
If A I 1 VI en jamoaismr.va.au CIrMsfci;
-4
J. r. mani iia. OarsMMit.Ys,
Olrealar Fr
fnosittveiy cyied
. iiornv' S uunous
MacnvUe ftvl.t. ThoUMiuU tato In the Union have been eu mi i Instantly fell. Fnt'enTed, and Fold It
any with
joo Do8Qno Dollar,
m " over;
years." V hplQ f ami! y can w e;;. am o heU, Kl vftrK
Buspeiuorie tree wun m,aw octw. xvow wtxrtniesa tne itatfons and bogrus eoiUDanlw RleetHc Truatws for Itupture. 7UO vuro4 oad stamp fot pamphlet Or, 4t Hwwij InywtqMui mum AvH Chiccl
S5
TO 18 A BAY. Samp3T7orthi.a F UK?. Lines not under v. he horse's test. WritT sa-aWKR tumx wtw uojjMtco.,aoUr,xit!
Yt Un vrHtSi.i to A1 vr Users re. wtt ( 6ufr fwvor py mentioning thih jggg?
ADIIIII JSTipS18i
I
