Bloomington Courier, Volume 13, Number 26, Bloomington, Monroe County, 30 April 1887 — Page 3

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1 Fains have ended the drotith in Lou

isiana, Mississippi and Texas. ' . , v A two-foot vein of silver ore has been found in Bandera county, Texas. . James Russell Lowell sailed Ilmrsdfty for Europe on the steamer Favonia.

. Western tjnion has increased its capital $1,200,000, making a. total capital? of

$81,200,000. . Barnuro, Bailey & Hutchinson have settled with the Grand Trunk; railroad for killing Jumho for $10,000. 3 T Hon. James O. Blaine arrived in Chicago, Wednesday. He has completely recovered from his late illness. A cyclone passed nearMt. Carmel,IH., on Friday night of last week, killing and wounding eleven persons, and doing great damage to property. The labor ludf-hoHday bill passed the New York Legislature . . Tuesday. It makes every Saturday of the year, from 12 noon to midnight, a holiday." J. J. Pendergast and J. J. Slatey, deputy recorders of St. Louis, have been sentenced to the penitentiary for fraudulent registration of" votes last fall. Joshua Baker, a Mormon elder, en route from Idaho to Alabama with three wives and eight children, was arrest-ad in Chicago Saturday, charged with bagamy. The firm of Procter & Gamble, soap manufacturers at Cincinnati, have adopted the profit sharing plan, dividing the profits with the" employes every six months.

Schnanbelt, the man who threw the bomb at Hay mark ett Chicago, last Jfay, is said to ha ve reached Norway, and to bf- engaged in the herring fishery on the North sea. , : . .." " A draft for $75,000 in favor of Dunn Bros;, of Philadelphia, drawn by the IBank of North America, Philadelphia, on tho Bank of New York has been either lost or stolen in the mails.

Among the passengers who arrived at New York Saturday were Canon Wilbarforce, his wife and daughter. He says lie jbrhere chiefiy for a holiday, and '-will probably remain about six weeks. - General Sheridan having been named in connection with the Vice Presidency, ; a friend says that the Republican nomination for President is ' the only thing that could tempt him into politics. ' '' Stephen Salisbury, one of the richest men of Worcester, Wednesday, in formed the trustees of the Worcester Free InBiitute that $100,000 was at then disposal with which to build a laboratory building for the schools. . 4 ' . ; Alexander Mitchell, President of the Chicago, M'lwaukee & St. Paul railroad, died at the Hoffman House in New York, Tuesday, in vbich city he was on biisiness. His estate is valued at from- $20,oqooo to $25,000,000. ; . " John Roy and Wra. Carson, peaceable neighbors of James county, Tennessee, quarreled over a piece of land. - They drew weapons and fired, both fell dead .-Cr8on with a bullet in his head, Roy with one in his heart. The late Joseph Allen, one of the wealthiest farmers in Bureau -county, Illinois, left $35,000 for the erection and maintenance of a public school in Lamoille, and $15,000 to the Baptist vand Congregational denominations." ' r T A well- bore&at Herscher, III., to secure water for stock, throws out a barrel of dark brown oil each day. Experts irom Pennsylvania pronounce it a -fine lubricating oil worth $9 per barrel, and they have, leased land to sink several wells." , 'i.;v,- , ., r J.- . Archbishop Corrigau has threatened the editor of the Catholic Herald, a staunch supporter of Jr. McGlynn,with the thunders of the church if he does not desist from his criticism of the church authorities. The; editor defies the archbishop. . ',. Representative Bakin, labor member from Bay county, in the Michigan Legislatf e, has got himself into trouble by f armsbing & lis of seventeen members, who, he saidy could be bought by him-, self to vote for a certain measure. An effort will be made to expel him. It is stated that President Cleveland had written a letter formally declining a nomination for the office, but withheld it; at the request of Mr. Dprsheiiaer, editor of the New York Star. Mr. I)orsheimer denies that he ever saw such a 'letter. , . Representatives of the leading newspapers of the Missouri valley and the ' southwest met in Kansas City, and resolved to deal with railroads hearafter as with other business interests, paying for all they get, and charging regular prices for time tables and other business - notices. ' . . L , A boiler explosion in' the Ivanhoe - paper mill at Paterson, J., Saturday afternoon, caused a loss to property of . $30,000, and . injured eighteen persons, one of whom, Mike Burk, is dead under the debris. James Simpson was fatally hurt and several others were dangerously

4

. Edward A. -Mosely, of Boston has been elected secretary of the interstate commerce . commission. He' is a Demoera tic member of the Massachusetts Legislature and one of the committee on railroads. He was strongly indorsed ' for one of the commissionerships. " Mr. Mosely has been a merchant oh high standing in Boston for many, years. He is a resident of Newburyport.

r Major John .EL Blame, paymaster,.

(brother of Hon. James G. Blaine) died at Hot Springs, Ark., TJiursday morning.-; JobnJE. Blaine was born in Washington, Pa., abut fifty- years ago. In il868 he was appointed to the quartermaster's department of the regular imy. " He held this position for two years, when he resigned to go into private business. In 1875 he was appointed a paymaster with the rank of major and was assigned to duty in the north west. His last station was in Montana Terri tory. T. - - , .Father Donnelly, whohas had charge ; - of the parishes of Mercer and Greenville, Pa., has defied the authority of Bishop Mullen, of that diocese, and has sorted oir a lecturing tour. He is delivering a discourse entitled "Fifteen Yearn Be

hind the Curtain, which refers t his

term of service, as a priest, and in it he assails the authorities. of the church and

the priesthood in violent ;terms. i ; r;. Queen Kapiolani, of the Hawaiian , - kingdom, arrived at San Francisco,

Wednesday, from Honolulu. : She was

accompanied by a number of high offi-

cials of the Hawaiian government.

,! She will remain a short time in San

i Francisco, going thence tcf Washilngton and Jfew York, and then to London for

Queen Victoria's jubilee celebration She will visit all the principal cities of the world bef ore returning to her native country. Arrangements are now being made at the Treasury Department for the construction of a new silver vault in that building to accommodate the rapidlyaccumulating standard silver dollars. There is available for this purpose the sum of 127,804. Supervising Architect Bell has completed plans and specifications for the vault, and will invite proposals for its construction in a shorttime. The new vault will be built in

the court-yard of the Treasury Building,

adioininflr the rireHent silver vault. It

will consist of a wrought-iron case en

cased in thick brick walls, with a roof of arched brick covered with concrete and

asphaltum. All modern appliances will

be employed to render it perfect se

cure from fire, flood or pillage. It will

have a storage capacity of one hundred million silver dollars. FOREIGN.

Russia will not make war upon Ger

many. . Italy will avenge the massacre of Italians at Dongali, Egypt. England's revenues last year were 90,000,000; expenditures the same. Six of the men arrested for conspiracy in the plot to assassinate the Czar, which was to have been carried out on the 13th of March, have been sentenced to death. The other conspirators have been sentenced to imprisonment for life. . .. .. ' . Qaeen Natalie, of Servia, has separated from her husband, King Milan, and returned to the home of her father in Russia. The cause of the separation, is understood to be the flagrant infidelity of -King Milan and the attitude of the Servian monarch toward Russia. Queen Natalie is the daughter of Colonel Kechko, of the Russian army.

DESOIATIONIN KANSAS

IiEPROST IN IiOUISVIIiliE.

A ToTingHan Afflicted With the Xoatbflpmo

Di; discovery of the Fact. ' Physicians are much interested oyer the discovery of a genuine case of leprosy in Louisville. The patient is John Hastings, who lives with his parents on Wilson street. He contracted the terrible disease in Honolulu about three years ago, and his entire body is covered with siekening eruptions peculiar to lepers. He is .thirty years of age and was born in Louisville. Being of a roving disposition, he left home about five years ago and went west. Finding himself in San Francisco without money, he accepted a berth on the steamer City of Pekin, a trading vessel bound for the Sandwich Islands. When the ship landed there Hastings was taken ill, and grew so much worse that the officers had him moved to a house in Honolulu and arranged with an old man to care for him until the ship could return. It was then that the young man was afftiGted with the awful disease. On the City of Pekin' return, the officers took aboard the sick sailor, and when they were again fn port, Hastings was sent home to his relatives. He succeeded in keeping from his parents the knowledge of the terrible disease, and it was not unti last Sunday that they knew of their son's ailment. During the last two years he has been treating himself. Two of

the best physicians in that city no

have his case in hand.

tost With All On Board. News was received at Victoria, B. C.

Thursday of the foundering of the schooner Active, with all on board,

about the first of this month. She had aboard " five Sweeds and

twenty-eight Indians, all of whom are

supposed to have been lost. No one

witnessed the wreck, and the Indians

who brought the news first Jearned of it

by seeing the wreckage which came ashore. The schooner was owned by Guttman .& Co., of Victoria, and was registered at 420 tons. Among those

who perished are Jake Guttman, one of

the owners; Captain Eatschm, Etta Jacobsen, Charles Frederick, Billy Les

soning, besides the twenty-eight Indians

before mentioned. The latter belong to the Chief Bilsoormatz tribe. Chief Wilunet himself was on board, the

other Indians being hunters.

The English and. Irish. The Government Monday night refused to rescind the the vote of suspension against Mr. Healey. In discussing the coercion bill Mr. Parnell in

dignantly aenounced as a forgery the

letter in the Times Monday, purporting to have been written by him to Patrick Egan, tacitly defending the Phenix park murders and admitting complicity in them. After a concluding speech by Mr. Gladstone against the bill, Sir Bernhard Samuetsbn's amendment, to the effect that the bill, if passed, would increase disorder in Ireland, endanger the union and the empire, therefore, should be rejected, was defeated 70 to 2611 and the second reading of the: bill' waa

agreed to without division.

New Appointments. The President has appointed Sigourney Butler, rof Boston,to be second comptroller of the treasury. Mr. Butler it but twenty-nine years of age, a native of

Xuincy, Mass., a graduate of Harvard

and a Boston lawyer. The President. Tuesday appointed William J. Allen to be United States district judge for the southern district of Illinois; Colonel Wesley Merrit has been nominated to be a brigadier general, vice Brigadier General Orlando B. Wilcox, retired. . The President has appointed Edward F. Bingham, of Ohio,Chief Justice of the Supreme court of the District of Columbia. . Canada's Appalling Debt. According to Sir Charles Tupper's statement in the Commons, Monday, the gross public debt of Canada on March

31, was $270,340,146; net debt, $225,865,-

831 ; revenue from the sale of Dominion lands last . year, - homesteads , and ; pre emption sales, $504,341, leases, $186618. XroaMe on the Border. A company of soldiers have been sent to the Winnebago, and Crow Creek reservations to drive settlers from the land. President Arthur threw them open to settlement, but President Cleveland revoked the order, and has directed that the settlers be ejected. Vrom Men to BInleM. Colonel Bradford Dunham, formerly general manager of the Baltimore & Ohio road, has been appointed manager of the Street Railway company, Montgomery, Ala.

Great" Loss of Tjife and Damage to

Property by a Cyclone.

Seventeen Persons Killed in One County

and Present t Practically Swept Ou. of

Existence Eight Persons Killed in Mis

souri and Throe in Arkansas letails of

the Destruction.

Foiit Scott, Kan., April 22. A Monitor special from Prescott, in this county, reports a terrible cyclone on Thursday evening at about 6:30 o'clock. There were seventeen killed at different points throughout the county and an incalculable amount of damage was done to all kinds property. Prescott was literally

wiped put of existence, not a single

building being left standing to mark the site of a once prosperous and thriving place. Reports are coming in from all over the county of damage by the terrible storm. It was a genuine cyclone, but came from the northwest instead of the south west, as is usual. Hail fell all over the county, some stones measuring thirteen inches in circumference. Following is a list of casualties The killed as reported are fifteen, namely: Constable Jake Stephens, - Will McHale, Mrs. Sarah Crone, t Flynn . and three children, J acob Broach and1 wife, Mrs. Richard Harkness, Douglass Walter and infant. An infant of S. P. Denning, one of Joe Duncan and a six-year-old child of Will McHale were also killed. J The seriously injured are: James Waldridge, arm broken; Ed Horn, back Kurt and arm broken; George AVhite, arm broken; J. C. Kinsey, severe contusions; William Campbell, stmck by timbers and feared will die. On the farm of Richard Harkness, he, with his wife, four children and Miss Minnick, of Oakwood, 111., visiting the family, were in the house. The building was taken up bodily, carried two hundred yards and dropped in an orchard, crashing upon a large apple tree. All the occupants were hurt very seriously, and Mrs. Harkness was killed. The force of the storm was appalling and wonderful freaks were, performed by the wind. It is reported that several persons were killed at Blue Mound and Mapleton. A messenger just returned from Prescott.-reports that tne cyclone there left but a dozen houses standing in the place. The havoc wrought in that vicinity was fearful, and a desolate waste marks the path of the storm. St. Louis, April 22. A dispatch from Nevada, Mo., says: A terrific cyclone swept over the northern part of this (Vernon) county, Thursday night, about 8

o'clock. The clouds were plainly visible here, passing only about eight miles from this city. The cyclone seemed to come down the Marmaton river from the Kansas line, dealing death and destruction wherever it struck. So far as can be learned, the first place it touohed

was in Metz township, passing through

Metz, Osage and Blue Mound townships. Fences, houses, learns and everything in the line of the storm, which, was about a half mile wide, were picked up, rent into

splinters, and cast down hundreds of yards away. Trees were torn up by the roots, oyer thirty houses were destroyed and about fif teen persons killed.

There were five members of the Mil

ler family, four of whom were killed. The baby, aged two years, was dropped in the yard and was found unhurt this morning. Parts of the Miller house and

furniture were found strewn over the

fielcs for a mile from where the house formerly stood. Reliable, news has onlv

been received from Osage township, and it is thought that the death rcli will be swelled to oyer twenty-five. ;' A heavy gale passed ovor this city, damaging the Methodist church and other buildings, but none were seriously injured. Nevada, Me., April 32. A heavy storm, which originated in Kansas, swept over the northeast part of this eounty, last night, between 8 and 9 o'clock. There were four persons killed outright, and several so dangerously wounded that they will probably die. The wind was precede.d by a hail-storm which did considerable damage. Many of the hali-stones weighed from three to five ounces, and some of them measured nine inches in circumference. They crashed through -the roofs of dwellings and barns, leaving holes through which a man's arm would pass with ease, considerable injury to stock is reported from the hail, but, so far as learned, no persons were injured by it. The storm entered this eounty. a short distance from Fort Scott, Kan., .and traversed a distance of nearly thirty-five miles, entering the county at a point -two miles south of Schell City, The path of the wind waafrom 300 to 400 yards wide, and the track was left desolate. The damage to stock, fences and farmhouses is almost beyond ; computation Hundreds of houses and barns were swept away and utterly demolished.

AT OTITER POINTS. Four persons were killed and several

injured at Clarksville, Ark. Houses Were blown down and scattered far and

wide. Considerable stock was killed. Three lives were lost, and great dam

age wrought to property at Ozark, Ark.

The roof of Broxton lodge, A. F. and A. M., at' Hannibal, Mo., was blown off while the lodge' was in session, but no lives were lost. Falling chimneys made it a night of terror in Hannibal. Six people were killed in the neihgborhood of the towns of Hume and Sprague, and a number seriously and some fatally injured. Humel Station, on the Pacific road, was destroyed,, only one house being left standing. Dr. Smith's house, three miles from Rich Hill, was blown to atoms, and Mrs. Smith fatally injured. Her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Eyan, and her two children were also badly hurt. Two hired men on the place also received injuries, All the stables and graneries on the Bruce place were demolished. ' At the Miller farm, three miles west of Sprague, a splendid residence, barns and out-houses were destroyed, nine cattle, a number of hogs and other stock killed, and Mr. Miller and his wife and baby blown into tho ytell and drowned. In the lower part of Linn county, Kansas a regular" funnel-shaped twister made a descent about 6 o'clock, seven miles northwest of Prescott. Every farm house in the path of the storm was demolished, and every house in Prescott was ruined. Four miles from Pres-

cott Mr, Dimn's line , residence was mashed flat, and Mrs. FJinn and three

small children were injured and two visitors dangerously hurt, Jacob Brock and wife and one son, Win. McPold and wife and'Child, also in this vicinity, were fatally injured. A few miles from this scene W. S. Bogart, Mrs. M. 0' Dell, Mr. Hogan, wife and two children had taken ret'ugo in a storm-cellar, when eight oows fell on them through the roof and all were severely hurt. ATm, Browing burg's family found refuejo in a storm-cave, while a five-thousand-dollar house was scattered over the fields. Ten miles northwest of Prescott, Mi s. Crane was killed and family injured by the crushing of tho house. In a distance of twenty-threo miles, only one houBO is known to havo stood the storm. Nearly every house at Miami Junction, five miles north of Prescott, was blown down and several person injured. Seventeen persons are known to have been killed in Linn county and about fifty were seriously injured. N From Bourbon county, Kansas, re

ports aTO coming in slowly of terrible devastation. D. J. Fields's farm was swept clear of buildings and live slock. Near by the Mills family was nearly exterminated, two children and father and mother being killed, and a niece and child .were found barely alive, but will recover. The stone residence of Samuel Coles was razed to the ground. . In Anderson couiaty the cyclone badly

damaged the town of Colony.

At Blue Mound, a town of 900 inhab

itants, twenty houses were wrecked and two persons killed.

A special froffi Greenville, Miss., says

that section of the country was visited

by a terrible thunder storm, followed

by heavy hail that killed -live stock and

injured many colored persons in Bohvar

county. The town of Huntington was

nearly demolished: a new hotel, Kobertson's store and dwelling, Worlich's

hotel, EemuB's dwelling, etc. -

consthuing the IjAW.

The Interstate Commission Expresses Sonne Vievrs on the Law of General Inter, est--Suggestions to Railroad managers.

The interstate commission has delivered its opinion upon a number of matters submitted to it. In answer to tho request of the Conductors and Traders' and Travelers' union for a construction oi the law upon the rights and

powers of the railroad companies to

DEATH OF DANENHOWJjJR. He Commits Suicide by Shooting The Naval H?ro, a Victim of Insanity, Talces Ills Own Ufo His Notable Career in the Arctic Ki gions.

Adam had a . spare-rib with apple sauce. i

AN EXCITING INCIDENT.

A French

Commissary Arrestod by the Germans. ' - s

A Paris dispatch of the 21st. says:

M. Schanbele, a special French commissary at the Pagny-Sur-Moselle depot, has been arrested by. Germans. He had

received several letters from tho Ger

man police commission at Ars. asking him to come to that place and confer with him regarding jthe frontier service.

He finally agreed to do so. While on

his way to Ars, he was roughly seized

by the German police and was taken to

Noveant, from which place he was sent

to Metz. The Metzer Zeitung says M.

Schanbele's arrest is due to his connec

tion with the anti-German agitation conducted by the patriotic leagues but the people of Fagnyur-Moselle declare this to bo entirely untrue, and say he had nothing to do with the agitation. The incident has thrown tho inhabitants of Metz and Nancy into tho wildest state of excitement. .. The arrest of M. Schnabels at Ars has produced a profound sensation, and, it is feared,may lead io unfortunate results. Le Paris calls it "another provocation," and asks if Bismarck is seeking a casus belli. The Germans requested Schnabele to set up one of tho posts which mark the frontier line. The commissary, crossed the boundry and advanced a few yards on German soil, . when he was seized by German police agents, who were disguised in gray blouses. E knocked tho agents down and escaped back to French territory, but he was again seized j handcuffed and sent to Metz, where he wasplaccil in the prison, in which accused persons are confined before trial. Later dispatches confirm the statement that M. Schnabels was arrested on French territory;.- MMv Flourins- will await the result of a minu te in quiry on the spot before demanding reparation of Germany for the. arrest. M. Sarrien, minister of justice, has sent tho procurator general to assist tho procurator at Nancy in making ah in

vestigation into" the arrest of M. Schna

bels and to report the facts in the case. It is announced from Berlin that the arrest of M. Schnabels was ordered by the judge who had been conducting inquiries into treasonable practices in Alsace-Lorraine. Doesn't Want a Sechod Term. A Washington special to the St. Louis Republican says: President Cleveland neither wishes nor will he accept a renomination. The correspondent of the Republican has the highest possible authority for the statement, and it cap

be depended upon as strictly and en

tirely true. It comes from the President-

himself, who made a declaration to this

effect cm Wednesday to a prominent Democratic Senator irom one of the

western states, who is on terms . Oi especial intimacy at the White House.

"The President said he had not given any intimation of his feelings to the representatives of the press, for the simple reason that he felt nothing he might say about not wishing or being willing to' take a second term would be believed. 'I hardly1 expected anybody io believe it he said 'except my wife, but it is so,none the less.' Continui ng, he added: 'Everything I do. every appointment 1

make,they think it is to secure re-election.

On the contrary, J. am counting the days that remain until my release from office,

j ust as if I were a: prisoner in confinement.' "

Kellogg Kicliols Avenged. The celebrated Watts-Schwartz murder case, at Morris, 111., was given to the

jury, Tuesday. The court's instructions

to the jury were itrongly favorable to the defense. The jury returned a verdict of guilty, and both prisoners were sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for life. Watts was baggage master and Schwartz brakeman on the Rock Island train, on which Kellogg Nichols,express messenger, was murdered, near Morris, a year ago, and robbed oi a large sum of money. For a iong time there was no clew to the., murderous thieves, but finally Nichols train associates were suspected and arrested. A leading Real Estate Agent and Pri vate Banker, Mr. Ira Brawn, Chicago, III,, writes: "I feel it my duty to say of St. Jacobs Oil that I lay on my back three months with rheumatism. I Med it, was cured, and have never been troubled since Women will never raako good base ball players. They are too much addicted to the rauft. , 9 Mr. T. J. Murphy, 61 Debavoico Place, Brooklyn, N. T., says: "I was o filleted with sciatic rheumatism and found St. Jacobs Oil very efficacious,"

Issue passes and check extra baggage for

commercial, travelers, tho commission

says: "A careful reading of the act to

regulate commerce, under which this

commission is organized, mil show to the peth ioncrs and others who have

made similiir applications, that no juris

diction has been given us to answer

queslions'like thoso in consideration, t is obvious that applications like these

have no relation whatever to the duties

iim posed on ua by section 4. And this is the only section of the law which the commission has power to suspend or relax. "Congress has not taken the management of the railroads out of the hands of the railroad companies. It has simply established certain general principles under which interstate commerce must be conducted. It has enacted, in section 1, that all charges for interstate transportation 'shall be reasonable and just;' has prohibited, in section 2, all manner of unjust discriminations; has forbidden, in section 3, all undue and unreasonable preferences and aid vantages; ha re quired, in the same section, reasonable and equal facilities for tho interchange of traftlc, and has prohibited, in section 5, the pooling of freights. That, in sub-

j stance, is the interstate commerce law

There is nothing novel in these provisions. They simply bring back the business of the common carriers to the well settled principles of uhe common law. Yet, no one can deny that there was urgent need of their statutory formulation. Alleged' difficulties in putting them in operation only disclose

examples of the extent to which they have been violated in the past. Good faith exhibited in an honest effort to carry out the requirements of the law,- will involve reasonable and fairminded officials in no danger of damages or fines. The elasticity of the statute in their favor is noticeable. The unjust discrimination of section 2 must ho in a like and contemporaneous service, in the transportation of a like kind of traffic, under substantially similar circumstances and eondi tions.' The preference or advantage of section 3 must bo 'undue or unreasonable.' Throughout the act, as it now stands, in confessedly experimental form, there is exhibited an obvious and a generous purpose to allow to the corporations ample scope in the conduct of their business as common carriers for the people, and fair consideration of every reasonable claim, while insisting upon just, impartial, open and consistent rates of charge, to which every citizen shall bo subject alike, whose situation is the same. Surely the people coutld not ask for less. The language and the tenor of the act wholly fail to justly railroad managers, if any such there be, who . refuse to accept responsibilities, decline to offer rates, - - neglect to. announce conditions of traffic, embarrass the customary interchange of business and impose stagnation upon trade, while they 4stick in Ihe bark of the phrases, and expressions oJf the law. inventing doubts and imagining dangers. It is still more unjustifiable for railroad companies to make use of the general clauses of the law; ignoring its modify

ing and enlarging word3 and formulas, in order to impose additional burdens upon localities, trades., professions manufacturers, consumers classes of travelers, or employes, straining and repressing e very construction in favor of the corporate treasury, anil quoting the new law as their authority for all manner, of petty exactions. The powers of the commission are entirely aleqmte to cope with such conduct, the existence of which is not affirmed, although it has been somewhat publicly suggested. The same statue which enacts that charges for like service shall Ve uniform to all also provides that charges in every case, and for every kind and class of service, shall be responsible and just. As the law is practically applied, it is said to contain many elements of advantages to the economical and profitable management of the business of the carriers, which they have not been slow

to apprehend and take the benefit of." In repiy to Bishop Knickerbacker, of Indianapolis, who inquired as to the right of a railroad to transport missionaries'at special reduced rates, the commission writes that it has no power in the premises. 'There is no doubt," Judge Cooley adds, "of tlie right of the railroads to grant special privileges to religious teachers, and deciding in good faith what they will dp, they can seaircely be said to incur risk of penalties. Penalties are for willful violation of law, and not for errors of judgment." Replies of similar purport have been make to inquiries with respect to transporting persons as acts of harity. The Boston railroad and commercial commission, Wednesday, to ask that the old plan of doing .business for business, involving the right to make rebates, so as to equalize rates from the west with those to New Tprk, be permitted the companies. Otherwise the foreign export trade of Boston will be interests appeared before the interstate ruined, and all the property accumulated to handle it be rendered worthless. The purpose of the commissioners is to leave the interpretation of the law primarily to the railroad companies themselves, and to confine its own operations to hearing of complaints of violations of the law and passage upon them Outrages by Indians. A special from Vernon, Texas, Thursday, says: "News has just reached here that a band of Kiowa and Comanche Indians killed W. A, Stfincon and two of lais men near his ranch, in Greer county Tuesday. It is feared that a

general outbreak is imminent.

Wliat Next? At Listowell, County Kerry, Ireland, Monday, a band of armed and disguised men tired in the direction of some children returning from a school, and then extorted from them a promise that they would no longer attend tho school. Will Annex Some Other Time. In the Nova Scotia assembly Saturday, tho "annexation to the United States resolution was lost-yeas 1, nays 26.

UV tiaurrh Curo ia oll on a guarantee ami it .W ;.50: roughr PjeWn&r MM

nivat f.iils. Auv neraoti wtio uses it

to ti9 irl)j43 which is ovkltnco of its

Lieutenant John W. Danenhower, of Arctic fame, was discovered at 10 o'clock Wednesday morning, dead in his quarters at the naval academy, at Annapolui, Md., with a bullet hole in his right temple. He was found lying

on his rug in front of his fireplace with a tag tied to his button hole saying: "Send to :ny brother in Washington." Although he has had mental troubles since he returned from the Arctic re

gions, what immediately led to the suicide is thouaht to have been tho re

cent grounding of tho Constellation on its way to Norfolk, which heliad charge of, and for which it is supposed he had fear of being courtmartialed. Furthermore, ho was very intimate with young Kobert Gatewood, who recently committed suicide on the Carolina, and whom he saw in death. It is supposed that this deatli suggested the mode to him His wife formerly Miss Sloan, of New York, is away with her parents Lieutenaicit Danenhower leaves two chil dren. Lieutenant Danenhower's career wai eventful, and his sufferings on tho ill-

fated Jeanette Arctic expedition lire now.

fresh in t lie public mind. He waa born.

about thirty-6even years ago in Illinois, and entered the naval service in 1861

He was attached to the United States

steamer Vandalia during her cruise ih

the Mediterranean In 1876-7, whenGeneral G rant and family was on board

and visited the Holy Land. It was be

fore this cruise that the Lieutenant, through his conduct, began to show

signs of an unbalanced mind, and his

malady soon assumed a form so violent that in the year 1875, after he had been

found wandering ina North Carolina

wilderness, his friends deemed it expedient to provide proper treatment for

him by confining him for aboiat two." months m St Elizabeth's insane asylum

in Washington. He was among the

first of tho officers who volunteered ta.

go upon the Jeannette Arctic expedition, sent out by James Gordon Bennett. On July 8, 1879, tho Jeannette sailed from San Francisco on a north Polar expedition by way of Behring's strait. The expedition wa under tho command of. , Lieutenant Commander George W. DeLong, assiah ed by - Lieutenante Chipp and Danenhower, tftnd Chief Engineer Melville. The last communication from tho vessel was dated "Cape Serteekamen, Siberia, September 2, 1879," although she was afterward, seen off Wrangleland in about 70 degress north latitude. The crushing of the Jeannette in the back ice; the separation in a gale of the three boat "containing the officers and crew; th starvation of Commander DeLong and his boat's crew; the loss of Lieutenant Ghipp's boat and the terrible sufferings and final rescue of Melville's party are matters of history. In the final separation of the boats; DeLong placed Danenhower under Melville's command, for the reason, as the lieutenant said in his report, that ho was partially disabled by the condition of his eyes. Naval officers, however,, maintain that it was to Ban enhower's nne seamanship and skillful handling of the whaieboat, note withstanding his partial blindness, that .the safe landing of the crew was due, Melville and Danenhower were the only surviving officers of the expedition. When Lieutenant Danenhower returned to the

United S tates, in 1882, he was placed on waiting orders during the progress of the official inquiry into tho loss of the Jeannette, and afterward was granted a year's leave of absence. During this time he delivered a number of lectures in different parts of the country. He was married in New York while on leav of absence, and has left a wife find two"

children. In September, 1884, he was-

assigned to duty at Annapolis as assistant coimnandant of cadets, which station he held at the time of his death. A few

da3rs ago he was at Norfork, Va., looking

after the equipment of the practice ship Constellation, and it is now recalled by officers who met him at the navy yard that he was very morose and distraught, and the opinion was freely expressed that ho was suffering from an attack of his oid malady. A famifip once called bin cow "Zephyr," She seemed uch an amiable hephyr. Wlaen the farmer drew mar, Hhe kicked off his ear, And now the old farmer's much dephyr. Don't Get Caught This spring with your blood fall .of impurities, your digestion impaired,your appetite poor, kidneys and liver torpid, and whole system liable to be prostrated by disease but get yourself into good condition, and ready for, the changing and warmer weather, by taking Hood's Sarsapaxilla. It stands unequalled for purifying the blood, giving an appetite, and &r a general spring medicine. The jfcrc it r At H -past.

Whn Baby iraa alok Tte gro her Ctorta, When iha waa a Child, he cried for Castor '' When fthv'oecame liiae, she elang to Caatoria, Whan aha ha4 Children, the yaToiham CaetoHa,

Always seedy The fig.

Dr. - J U. MoLenu'i

Blood furiner glrw mid stiftnatheat tho

n e iroufi piearo i to Know or a mi" or womau

wiic Has nover n-d hmdHCho or beon eubioct to cuu-

H'Uo ftdvieo muy te In order. Why should p-rBtms mm their st-iinticha ni h nueoftilog mirgotiTe Tiill. eta . Wl i :h KlckMt an 1 i hi:ilAin u I,-n . 41, b

pli-A-"tnt aud eterli k remi'ii rs Tr'i kljr .jh lHUer wi. Jict niUdtv nn i off ctiy. fjr on ho liTr, Hdj4e7, 8 oinach nnd bowels, nnd nt the 9frut time tono tip

em air- uKuien lU'i wnoio eyu'win, cb. tg iiRrtei-e onsti potion and nil ench uistrceei t or ve nl. kly dUappeaiad. . . ' - t The 'Lifo ot the flcah is the b'ood (ilierrof; pure blood meant haulthy fnnetionAl ftctirtty mnA I'hia

uesrs tviiii it tne certainty oi nU K r i. ratlen

irom atcKneas or acetdenr. Strengtbenlna Cordial and pare rich .blood. ?i talir.es whole body, ti 00 per bottle.

The onaliiy or the blood Jepomls mrteh npon aoad or bad'dUostion aQdaBBimilation; to make the blood rich In leand strrngtliglvin? cQnntitnents, nee S,r" H.j!MeLofln,n Strengthening Uwrdial and Blood Pnrlfler; it win nourish the properties of the blood from winch the oilmen of vitality ara drawn. 1.00 per bottle. ' r- . 3?f yo want a good sonse git o'sa ob a laxy mat. BToxle Korve Food hits proved fr bo Ihe most remarkable remedy, for nervotw, exhausllon, tired out, overworked persons over produced, it gives relief at onee with no reaction . Tt will, beyond donbt, stop tho liquor appetite, and has created more excitement all nrtr ih mnnttv

than all other discoveries combined: ciioan for

a wonder. Everybody drinks it.

The dank and: decay ins Tegotatioa of

newij cleared or timber, exposed to the nv

SffAi 8Uto.t !,reed nmloria. Dr, J. Jl. McLean's Ohill's and Foyer Cure, by mild and gentle action will radically cure. 50 cents a bottle. Bronchitis is cured by frequent small doe of vlaq' Cure for Consumption. Sick Ilead ache, and a sensation of oppresilon and dullness in the heid, are very commonly produced by Inuigeetion: morbid deapoudenoy , frrltabliUty and over BonsitivnoBS of the nerves may. ia a majority of cases, be traced to the same cause. Dr. J. H. McLean's Lfrorand Kidney Balm and Pfltatb will positively core. j The dude is oleraargarina to the man. ''. There a'e many acoldents and diseases which affeot .Stoek and cause serious inconvenience and loss to the farmer in his work, which may be alekly remedied by the nse of I)r.J. H. McLean's Toleante Oil Liniment. ' Da nearer sundown de enelo r de lair v.

regiona

ys oi tne

olds eorae uninvited.

oi tnese. wun a ror do

Vougha and qniokly get ri

H. MoLeanTe Tar Win Long Balm.

bnt yoa caa

of Dr. J.

Take one of Dr. J. H. McLean's LHtle Livtr and Kidney PI tie ts at night before you go to bed and yoa will be surprised how; buoyant' and vigorous yon will feci the next day. Only 24 cents a vial. Prayer Is the heavtnly telephone.

The most delicate oonntitntfon ean safely nse Dr, J. H. McLean's Tar Wine Lung Balm: it is a sure remedy for coughs, loss af voles, and all threat and lung disease. . . A seal-skin A notary pablie. . . . Is Death Painless?' A Philadel phia doctor, after years of careful observation, says that onr demise is as painless as onr ad vent to tho world. This is certainly reassuring; yet notwithstanding these great inducements, we still do not court death, and shall sontinue to use Dr. Pieree's infallible remedy, the "Golden Medical Iieeovey,,, for cunsumption, spitting of blood, shortness of breath, weak kings, soughs, bronchitis, and kindred affections si the throat and shest. It is uneaualled. Br

druggists, : . ' : Toilet cream is not a dairy product J A Poor, Weak; Sister, ; .., who is suffering from ailments peculiar to her sex, dreading to go to a physician, but knowing she needs medical help, will find, Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription," a preparation which will give her strength and new life : through the re storation of all her organs to their natural and healthy action. It is the. result of many years of study and practice by a thoroughly scientific physicianrwho has made these troubles a specialty, To be had of all druggists'. ; Out of order A. non-union man.

To break up colds and fever, use early Dr. Pierce's Extract of Smart-Weed 3 ; One who is never withont a Tloe The earpenter.

A Husband's Greatest Blessing is a strong, healthy, vigorous wife, with a clear, handsome complexion. Theee can all bo acquired by using Dr. Harter's Iron Tonic. Life will acqui rone w aest, cheerfulneis rotnrn. If you will impol jour liver and kidneys to the performace of their lunetione. Dr. J. XI. McLeans Liver slid Kiduey Balm will stimnlat:e them to health) lit action. $1.00 Pr bottle. If you a re suflcring with weak or inflamed eyes, or granukitin" eyelids, you can be anickiy cured by using lr. J. U. McLean's Strengthenini; Bye Salve. 25cent9abox. '

THE MARKETS

Indian a pous. April 26. 1867. WHBA.T, No. 2 Medlwrranean 81c. ;Mu. a, do 80c.; No. 2, rod, 80Kc; No. 8, refli 78ij,; rejected 70c. ; h orn wagon. 7880c : Cork. Ko.l, white, 40c ; No. do. , 89 j.; He 3 white, 88Kc.;- Kj yS JH Oa. Kffi 2. white, siKc; No. 8, da, SOaj Ko 2, mixed, 27Xc ; rejected, 26c Hay, choice, f9.75. Hoos Heavy packing and shipping, 6.665.85: light raiaed packing, $6.30($5.60; pigs and hcavj roughii, $(.25$3.00. CATiLB-Extra choice shipping, W.85(8$5,2o : good bo choice, do., W.50W.75; medltun fair aa good, do.; 83.50(484.60: common', do., 83.2583.60. extra i shcice heifers 83.7584.25 ; good to (jhoiceuto.. 83.50(384. W ; medium fair and commont, do., pM S83.25; extra choice cows 83,5084.00; good tc choice, do., 83.0083.25; medium, fair and common, do., 8l.7588.00; veal calves, $4.006.00;oowi and calvis 8200840.00. SHEitPExtrs cAoice wethers, 84.40(gi84.6&: good to choice mixed, 84.0084.40; medium, fair and common mixed, $S.75f4 00; extra choice lambf f 6.1)0887.00. : -;' ; ftAUB, patent, 8i.5084.75: extra fancy, 84.00 84.25; fancy 83.7583.90: choice 83.40(8133.60. Coal, iiuthracito, 87.0); Plttsburgj 84.00; Braai block, 83.25 . EOQJJ. BUTTKR AND FOULTJIY EcgS 90.: bUttai fancy wmtry, 15(318c sells at 17202. ; countn choice J012a,: selling irom store at 10 915 POuI try hens,ftlive,7Mc perpouud;roostcTS,3Xc.; turki y hens, J3. : toms 7c j-geese, mii-feathered4 SO per dozen; picked, 84,00; ducks 7c. a pound. Irotisions jobbing prices sugar cured bams "reliabk',brand,llH13c; cottage &4c; English breakfast bacon, lie; shoulders, 8c; bacon clesi aides. )c, , , MisiiJhiANF.)Tj8 Green cow hides, 8MC ; steers Vic : gr-jen calf, 8-?. ; salted, do., 9c ; tallow prime 8Mc :vfool, tub-washed, clean, 8i38i.; mediumwashed 202lcv; clover seed, 83.75C3 85 pei aushel : nimotity. 8L 8 )$f 1.93! bluo erai,90c Chicago. Wheal, 77: corn, oats, 28-; pork 820.75 lard. l57.' : rib3, 88.02 Cattle beeves, 83.ooa85.25-

stock -rs S3.0()84.15 cows, 82.7aaH.00. H0R8-

s merits. ' 84,00igl.75.

.65

eep

m

Spring is Iho best tlmejto pnrify the blood, for at no other season i the body so susceptible to benefit from medicine. The best thirg to take is forii1 inn Hood's Sarsaparillar whiah by cWtUliar its peculiar eombinntion, proportion and preparation possesses surrtive power unequalled by any other medicine. '?

repared far .Mass.

1 OO Doses One Dollar.

ld by all drwwrfsta, Six for J. Prej

. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries. Lowell,

HILL'S

BLIND

as

The Neatest, Most Attractive bIaWSDv

Ornamental Blinds Mnde. Go and see them or send for circulars ro the SIDNEY PLANING Ml LIL Co. SIDNEY, OHIO. .J - - - , . - Local A . en ts Wanted. . ,

J5w sis per acie; rood. lands and clinUtr; cttfaQ U

bo;wcrkout elivu moetn to tlie yrarjneftr reienbi gi tt of 22.000 inhabitants: convenient-' to market or Jamas K tor; boat thy allmate; mill pro.pcrty and wt-r pwor mineral laad Wnltu UABBlSON tt EApJDON. Pyterburg, Ta.

017THEB29 FAB MS FOR SALK.-Priwt 'WW M

, MACHINERY, BOLTS, ETC. INDIANA POUS Bolt and Machine Work Ueary and lightmachinary.inade to order. Bittg roof and trans bolts a specialty. O. B. OL8BW. am priotor. Indianaonlis. lad. -

XTt O rTT1 Bv return mail. Full Iesorip

jl lAtAUM Jtton moon

ot Dress C ntiinff.

5 dvs New Tailor 8j tens

MOODY & CO , Ciucinns tt, O

OPIUMv

ud MaraMaa Baait 0wrt U;5N SO days. tUtmr to IOOO Mttonto ur

BROW 1ST Si

3M

HEADACRE" :-M:'Mi ;vv: INDIGESTIONS ' t-f'- ': ;i DYSPEPSIA ' r NERVOUS PROSTRAT10B malaria;:'.: iKfmi CHILLS and FEVERSft f TIRED FEELING' J'- 'ht -i GENERAL'DEBILITV VAIN in the BACK & SIDES islPURE WboMHM i -M CONSTIPATION ' " ' ' FEMALE INFIRMXTIBSf :

..:S3

RHEUMATISM

NEURALGIA f :V. : : KIDNEY AND LIVER, 1 if. TROUBLE -Jl ; FOR SALE B Y ALL DRUGGISTS The Genuine has Trade Mark and crossed Uf Unesfon wrapper. -." ' - -i- C T : TAKE NO OTHER. : '-,

V SHSBBBBBi BB1 BBS! BBB1 BBB aBl & SB . . Viajt

ICTVH iSJ BM SBjBJ BM F Mi :

BITTERS

CURES

NXDKiEUESDI

uvm

KIDNEYS

STOMACH 3-.:f AMD,-'-:

BOWELS

HY99

AllDHUGGISTS

00UAR

rr lea punny vcerrABU pmmmnow

PRiaoJPRicxDri

SENNA -MANDRAK&BUCHU

AND OTHER CJAliy tTTIDIDIT KBmMS,

hat stood the Ttt of Tasra,

l Cnrinr all BUaasas of ths)

BLaOD. LIVEKt STOM

ACH, KIDltEY S,B0 WEXS.atc ItPnriflaotha

Blood, InTiferf tat iAd

ciotaaai ms njmm.

DYSPEPSIA, COHflTI .

PATIOK- JAUKDME,

SICKHEADACOT,Ba

10 US COMPLAUfTB , Jte dliiappaar ft onooimter

its beneficial inflnaxoa.

ItispuralyaKtdielao no its cathartic properties forbids ito tuo as a berorafto. It it pic ao nut tn n t aat a. an A a

eaiilT Uien by caild-i

ran as adoita. - "

PRICKLY ASH BlTTUC CO Sola Proorit4oi.t

8x.Iiuxaan4 SUsraaaCXn

JUT.'

DECKARDS

' Ml

Stomach Corrector frmposttttelj oare tho wont forma of Djoim "Ia IndisnstioB, Mat-asaluit nation, lksar 3 tomach, FIn in tha Stomach alter e1 la IHoatJna; of the 8 torn a ch, Falntlnn: or SinkItiKBenaatlons at the. pit of tha stomach, : all gone feelings on ri sins in the morcjnfe liMl taste In the mouth, coated tonsroe . ana sU dlseasas arising from a perverted eondlUoa ' of the secretions of the stmaeh, and an ina rtlra

torpid eondinon of the llTer and towela, su m aa cenrous and siok headache. neivOna prostraiionsj chronic oonstipation, eold hands and feat and nn anemic Impoverinhed condition of the blood. DECKABD'g STOMACH OKRECroOX Is purely regetable, and li aompoecd of new an rare remedial agents, she latest discoveries known te medical science fot the cure 01 the,; -above diseases. It is a remedy anequalhd isi buidling np the impoTerisbed bloxl supply elOV Inc diffestion and assimilation, aulckeninc sha-

blood onr rent, relleTen - th 0 eongestedi "JTer, ovorcomOs constipatioxi, heals and ' ' haa dens- the irritated mucous sarfsce of tba stomach, makes blood and flesh rapidly, imparting renewed vigor and vitality; tba remedy It

pleasant to toe taste, ana is put up m cor vent ent lorm f6r administering. Price r treatment- 4 obnssiufng two paakageB Sl.Sff, sent .by saalr postpaid on receipt of prise. Address -Of f " "; LOGANS tOHt HSDIOI K CO.. ..V.9 : P.O. Box, 060. ; : Logansport, laC ! We, the undersigned drnggista and pmuroacists, are personally aotuainted with the Merles t. Of DECKARD'8 8TOMACH CORRECTOR a-:' know H to be a remedy uneqasJled and imax- " -'-celled for the diseases for which it is recoxaiaaasV . -''V- : JOHSSTOH A J0RD4H, :- " M " : Crjiijcr co.k TjngarMpoyt 104

M

mi

'mi-

HI.

S3

DUU

pnrir tna BLOOD

tha I IVfttand 1CIDMI

RiWTOiir tho USAXiTH andTO..

OR of TOUTH. D7spepaia.V'sst otAppetits, IndigvatioaXackotr

btrenstn ana urea raensucae-

solute 17 cured: Bones, iaae

cisa ana nerfee receire aesr

suae.

-if

LADIES

tn Kn (MM tba B

aitdaappliaa Brain neea K

erliut from tmplmtaiJ -f '

liar to their sex UlTVL2-?i Si TT A -RTVR.il IRON TOKIOS -

f,pedy car. Give a clear, heeJ W&a,S2?V All attempts at counterfeit! ns only udds to il

lotiW lo not expert ment-et ukixwi.v' v" '

nr. HARTER'S LIVE . K' .

RMdvhit Hnmola Boh and Preasa BetikB ,

Inikllnilnn Tnnnintnftv aoflntfetll DOltUf

rHC 0fc HARTER MEDICINE G0m ST. iQUIfcPV WEAK, NERVOUS PEOF LI

And others snaertoir frosi norrons dobUlty lrsliaastano,: ?

ciironio aieace, pntnmu tklino ot jouds; or old ere -'oxsiUrely : carea . Jw Des'; Horne's fomoxu tcctr i Maine tic Belt. Thmso :

festato In e union nare neen rarea.-

K tr instantis feis. Ftitcntcaaoa eoio iw. ,

lole family can wear nunc belt, i.utrte ?

Saepeaeeriea fret with man beiu. A vow worn ttauons ana bos companies. Elnetrla Tra fe Uapiurc. 700 enred in'85. Rend stamp for m pales, gaj. J. HORHE, iHYEWTOa, 181 WnUttil kt CHI0atj0$(

j

PS i

1 1 1 1 i aa t

.jit -zm

In every K

rears. Tt

CHICHESTER'S ENGLI8M

Tho Original and Only Genuine). Pnfe imd ahvays Reliable. Dea-areot worthle lmsa 1 to ns. ladies. ak your lmnlt ' CiudieOcei Eaa-llfth" and take no othttr, or intOoee c setups) SB: usfor p&rticubvr In letter by retjira Mali. KSXB rim, CHICHESTER CHKHICAL CK. SS18 HaiUit-R eoorctTFsJI4w J Pa.' Oeld by HraawUt everywhere aa for MChlehea

tet? Eefiiah I'esiny rnjel Wits. Taite y otaea - Foe Sy8-M5i rf 1750 Icroi: j Situated la the BenabUean Taller, In Webstar Oav U: Nebraska, on he fine f 1 e Darliaataa Ilissoei River R.B-in ybrasia. ;3SniUaf'oii KanaaOtt ; 200 nnlw from Omaba .awl STt n.ilea from Tery largety improved an l in ablirb state d-Wt'lR ion; ftrmirl it'ei aiboiae raneh for swl ajef-; -

sheepositflt. 1 ii se'i ciiMkp as aooet ine ieiaa e-i

the raw land in tne vicumr ena on nri b. Tor forlherpartlralers aon dpeeripUTe ctrc star aadt ss P O box W.Bcd Uloud,Welister.Co;,Hebrasam

dnt by mail. Airess

8ns pen saw

lUaaTcreoiniort. 010

tt. w.

wear a

reotpTort. Btasn,

luvni- a caa

2tt M. Sth. St.. Philadelphia, Pa. Circnlara free.

I? A TajTO on James River, Va.,inSasB"eaaMe C AK.IV1 Colossy. zuasuauaoirealar Tree 1. F, MAJWC iSA, Clmressiswf .Tss.

I NH

0

QiinLD

m ! n mm mm. mm mm

9 sal ! II

When yinMLnx tnArtrrnxkmAp confer a favor by me ntlonir s; thla pa per.

10 sis A DAT. Samples yrtt0J !k"a PRICE. Lines not under the horse's feel . WrttO WU aaairaTKB firkw aats "orjMtaea,.i-.W:-.

Is TUB

Wateroroof

?v: M. a.4

The FISH BRAND 8X3

ni vaiip mrfflur nn n tmm or rubber coat:

tm .i,cnintniv tA. iv I in'-i-f psftnv nud v'ill keen tou f-rv i-i the hardest

Ask ior iho'FISH KAN'O" slicker ant take no other, tf yonr storeaeep

Kftns cnnins unless itampe d with the sbove VR1DV HARK.

..i,.,.,u"r,cn .pvn inrt frtrdfr.rintvvr tnlivniH tf A- J. TOWKB. 20 tammong gt.. MOSSOB

3

flat

1

deesf

esWoaBKsPaeBpssBSaSsssssBBs ;

i a.

for Infants and Childig 'Oastoria f s so wea adapted to chndron that Oactoria enrea OoHo, J' t recommend it aa superior to any prescrij 4ioa I J' aSroaOaa A aaosmtome." tt A. AacHaa, M.D., I KU Btee,H T? lUBo,arJordBttBroosjTn1N. Y. j Wttnoiit U&stouM raaflp3lem v W TU Qoutaub Oomtast, 191 lUoon ttrao. 3Y. T.

,---

5 '

6.