Bloomington Courier, Volume 15, Number 26, Bloomington, Monroe County, 20 April 1889 — Page 3
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W: ' SIAcobS Oil
1
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a-
For ItfeTimatism,
The latest, Current Curea. On Crotches. fonwy. Tta.,4ne ttlaal. Was cm cratches tcom rhenantlitt tet time ? ewntiu; oxxa bonis St. Jkcocii QU fcr4 me. Ha -.. Estonia two yar-, fr. g. WOOD, J. P. "ttnce the War. Ifm&rfib, o., June as, m Had haul rhsuratla since the war in knee; ft year a go two PS4iitions St. Jacob Oil cortd me. Ho return ttact. K, KXLBOK. Ko Sir ep - creenriUe, 0. , June 39. 1S8& . "WrittJ the floor at night, suffering with rhi Tnatfcto; no reUfc tiled St. J-cofce Oil; half hot lCBrcamo. Morewm in yearn. J, c. WEAVHU AT DntT3GTTS AVD JEAT."RR3t IHE CHARLES A. VOGElER CO.. Baltimore AM.
QATAR R
lfXT8 CREAM BAX3I.
Cold in Head.
&j3&t B&os. 56 Warren St, N. Y
i
Mape's
iolsion,
1J
a
1 Cod Liver Oil, JExtract of Mait, Compound Syrup of S52S A Reliable. Remedy for Consumption , Congas, Colds, Bronchitis, Dyspepsia, Scrofula and General Debility. Trj easy to take. Ioes not produce Nau nea. nnd is easily assimilated. Thousands of Physicians are prescribing it in their jugular practice and many assert that It to The Best Emulsion in the Market
Ask your Druggist for it and tafce no . other.
a. A. MAOEE & CO., Manufacturers,
0 Lawrence, Mas. Toronto, Can.
- it-
4 V
In 1SS3I contracted Blood Poison of bad type,- and was treated with mercury, potash and sarsaparilla mliturcgrowing worse all tbethne. 1 took 7 small bottles S. S S. which enred iric entirely, nnd &o slga of the dreadful disease has returned. - C Najtcb,
Jan. 10, m HobbyviUe, Xnd. Ky little niece had white swdHng to such an extent that she was confined to the bed for a long time. TtfnrAthiin 9ft nf hone cmns
oat of her lcjr, and the doctors said
amputation was tao only remedy to
s.encr tne. 1 rei useu 1 ats operauvu anu pnt her on S.S.S.andshe is nor npacd activcand inaa health as any child. Bliss Aknie GEEsraxo Feb. 11, m . Colnmbus,Ga, Book on Clcod Diseases sent free. Swift Specific Co. Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga,
BRONCHITIS CURED.
sir
. -of "i. f ; r -
Afier spending Ten Winters South, was Cored by Scott's Emulsion. lis Centre St, New York,! ' a?16.23 1S88 5 . .... The Win ter after the great fire In Chicago I contracted Bronchial affections, and since then have been obliged to spend nearly every Winter South. Last November was advised to try Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Hypopnosphltea and to my surprise was relieved at once, and by continuing Its use three months was entirely cured, Sained flesh and strength and was able to stand even the Blizzard and attend to business every day. C. T. CHURCHILL. 8cSd by aU Druggists.
1F YOTX WISH Apx-l -
jpnrefaass ona of thu : ede-
bratod JMTXH & WESSOK arms. The finest e-mall arms ever maamactnred and the first choice of tH exnerta.
Mannfactnrsd in caUhrea 32, 38 and -10O. Sinfrleordonhie action. Safety Hammer lesa and
Tarspt models Constructed entirely or best qua!, ity wraaakt steel, carefully inspected' for woxk maifefc'pand atodk, they are unrivalMT for fiai b. dnrabillry and accuracy. Bo not be deceived bi cheap saalleable cast-iron imitations whici are often sold for the genuine article ami are not oslv nnraliab.e, but dangerous.- The SMITH & 'WESSON' Banrorrazs are aU stamped upon the bar rels wlih firm's name, address , and dates of patents and are smraa teed perfect in every detail. Insist opon having the genuine, article, and if youx dealer cannot supply you an order s-nt to address bejew -vrffl receive prompt and careful attention. SwerJptf catalogue and prices forniahed uponap asnt SMITH & WESSON, j"3(fanon Shis papre. prlngfield Masib
m
Help Wanted
cial work np to Jtm next. Besides gcod pay for worst QCVa will be given as an performed. KXTEA present to the agent doing the test work; S400 to the second, and so on. Men, toys and girls can make hnndredc of dollars between now and July i&fcfc This is a special, chance, end holds good only uniil July. Address CURTIS PUBLISHING CO. PHILADELPHIA. PA.
DR. W. H. SARBER, Glrep his snecisl attention to all
PBTVATK DISEASES of Malt
I and Female.' Regulating rem
dies furnished. Cancf.bs positive
ly eared without the knife. Rut .Teas, no euro, no pay. Piuca a
ignaranteeu. rigm rissnie.
latorrnea, impotency, Kter-
tty. Gonorrhea, Syphilis r and
other ii ia MUocessinuy treated ana pogayery eared. Call on or address, DR. SARBKR, 60H S
III. Sr., Indian atous. Inp. All letters containing
ips) saniena, sna meaicmes mta so arucv
a
am. jcarsBem
BRADFIELD'S
REGULATOR Cores all Diseases Peenllor to Women. Book to "Woman" Miled Fbee. ftradfield Regulator Co., Atlanta, Georgia - " Sold by alt. Druggists. : Name This Paper every time yon write. WAK, NERVOUS PEOPLE.
PB. MOUSE'S ELECTBO-3UB-
SETlC BKLT pftsHiv-ly cares KMIUaATISa, S KVRAlU, uv. IKS, SIDSET aud exbaoUag f chronic 01eafs of both sex ea. Contains 23 toioo dpgreesof Eiectritltv. OCABABTKEB the
latest imp - roved. chwst. cientiflc pwTf"Jt durahto aud 'VectiTC 9ED1CAL ELECTB1C BELT In the WORLD. Electric Saspennorics freo with Male Belts. Avoid bogns companies with niwnvjthawa am worthJes imitations. BLKCTBIC TBC88IB WR RCPTUBK. O.OOO cored SndiuTnpforlHntrated pamphlrt. CR. W. J. HflRHE, iKVENTOB. Ifll Waeseuf.
- 'if . .. '
19
55
TO SIB A DAY. ments -mm
CIBCTTLAB3 FRrS. -
ISKXt Brewster's Safety Rein Holders given away to introduce them. Every orse owner buyu from 1 to C Lines never under hones' feet. Send 25 cents in stamps to pay postage and packing for Nickel-Plated Sample that selta for KrwtrMf .Co- ffothr.MWsll
60 YEARS IN USE. A Physician savs, asovercign remedy ior worms. Having used the original B. A. Irahnestock'' ernufuge w my practice for many years, I have r.o hesitancy in recommendiiig it as a remedj which is safe. . tdfail and efficient v all cases where a Vermifuge is needed. r Thos, Hi Handy, JNI. I. Cambridge, Md Observe particularly that the initials axe It. A chus avoi dins' imitaiiops.-
m &
J QUE S
PAyStheFREIGHt
J ion ttaguu ntau'n Iron Levers, Sul JieariBg. Brut TwsBeamaod Beam Box for
SBOBverj L: SeI. ?or frw price 11 t&onoa thi. paper and addrea JOKES Of BJHGHAHTBH,8I.N H AiUTON. N. y-
.A
is' -f
$75.00 tO S250i00m'e?mkl?&?onse
Agents preferred wr o can furnish a hors and give their whole time to the business. Spare moments may be profitaMy employed also. A few vacancies in tow is and ci ies. TB. F. JOHKgON & CO., 10(59 JIain reet, RU hmond, Va. jV. BLadita Employed also. Never mind about minding ttfamp ?r T9pg. Come quick, Yvrr
WEEKLY NEWS EPITOME. Walt Whitetnan, the Doet. is living afc
CamdenK. 3. and is growing feebler daliy. -The epribg rains have set in in South Dakota, and are extinguishing the prairie fires. The Rhode Island Legislature, elected Nathan T. Dixon IT. 8. Senator to fill out the term of Chaee, resigned. Near Centerville, Pa., masked robbers tortured a farmer by roasting his feet and face to compel him to give up money he was supposed to have. Mrs. Krishner, of Chattanooga, got a divorce, went in on the real estate boom, made $150,000, and Mr. Kirshner now wants the divorce annulled.. The condition of Mr. Robert Garrett is 3aid to be so much improved that he will soon join his friend, Mr. Winans, in a hunting expedition upon the latter gentleman's estate iu Scotland. . A young girl who had been rescued from a life of shame by the Woman's Christian Union, at Chattanooga, .Tenn., committed suicide after having been induced to return t o her old haunts. ... Mr. T. W. Sanderson, of Youngstown, 0., is being urged for the vacancy on the 8upreme Court bench caused by the death of Justice Stanley Matthews. President Harrison has announced that he will not make a selection for this office until next fall. Miss Bertha Tracy, who was in charge of the Woman's Christian .Aid Society at Chattanooga, shot herself throhgh the heart on receipt of an indecent proposal from a drummer named Hodges, her betrothed. A policeman swears to shoot Hodges on sight. . It is estimated that fully 150,000,000 feet of logs are in the streams on the northern peninsula of Michigan waiting for water. Light snows and low water are-liable to keep back a large portion of the cut. Heavy rains are all that will move the logs. Rev. Mr. Dennis, of Day ton, O., a converted Hebrew, backed by Major Bickham and others for Consul to Jerusalem as a desirable man to convert the Jews, has been discouraged by Mr. Blaine, who wrote on his papers that the State De-
parr men t is not) an evangelical jiibutu-
Uon.
George Kennan, the famous Siberian
traveler, whose articles are now appearing in the Century Magazine, said to an
Indianapolis reporter Wednesday that,
i4if I bad lived in Russia I should have
been in the Eastern Siberian mines as a
Nihilist before I was twenty-five years
old." ...... .. .......
The Belgian Government has ordered
General Boulancer t abstain from
political agitation, which the govern
ment will not tolerate. The General
has been informed that if he complies
with the wishes of the government in
this respect, he will not be expelled
from Belgium. .
Two strangers visited Daniel Keller's
place, at Shamokm, Fa., and alter a proposal to purchase his farm engaged
the old farmer in a game of cards. Keller
became interested and procured $4 700, which he put up as stafees. The money was seized by the strangers and Keller was covered with a revolver while they moved off. Both escaped. A few months ago burglars broke into the residence ot John Reillv, of Wilkes-
rjarre, Pa., chloroformed the family and
stole nearly $1 ,0T 0. father U Mearn, pas
tor of fc. Mary's fcoman uathohc
Church, banned Mr. Reilly $7(i0,
which he said had been given him by a prominent man; who had made a confession to him. and . had told the story- of
the robbery.
A private car containing J. F. Hart,
mayor of Brooklyn. Ma sM his wife, son
Henry and niece. Mies .Winnow, a por
ter and a cook was demolished by an
other train running into it near Lorenzo
Btation, Iil.. on the Chicago, Santa Fe
and California railroad. Miss Winslow, Henry Hart, the son, and the porter and cook were killed and Mayor Hart and
his wife were scalded.
The trial of the noted Indian Chief
Jack Spaniard, for the murder of Deputy
united States Marshal William Irwin,
was begun at Ft. Smith, Ark. One of
the first Government witnessess called
was a mongrel dog, Ratler by name. The Government attempted to prove
that Rattler was the prisoner s dog. hav
ing been seen in the neighborhood of
the spot where the murder was committed. The defendant denied ever
having seen the animal, but the. dog's
affectionate greeting to his old master made him a dangerous witness. The animal picked him out of a crowd and
wagged his tail with great vigor.
Lord Lonsdale and party who started
upward of a year ago on an expedition North-poll wards, have been rescued in
a famished and exhausted condition. Lonsdale himself met with an accident that rendered himself almost. helpl8S. While in the lead of his party he. slipped into a crevice. His left shoulder was so bruised that the arm was rendered useless and his hip was all but dislocated, incapaciating him from travel on foot. He was placed on a sled and in that condition transported to Kodiack. The party was in the last stages of fa tigue when they reached Kodiack, and had not food and shelter been found there Lord Lonsdale would have died.
He stated that he might remain at
Kodiack a week or a month and perhaps
longer, 88 suited ms janey. ne stated
positively, however, that he had had
enough of Arctic exploration and would
return to England soon. FRIDAY.
Russell Harrison, the President's son,
was arrested in New7 York on the
charge of having published in his
paper, the Montana Live Stock Journal,
an article taken from a Buffalo paper
accusing ex-Governor Crosby, of Mon
tana, with having stolen jewels from a Washington lady. Young Harrison gave $5,ti00 bail. The demand is for $100,000 from Mr. Harrison for malicious and criminal libel. Harrison's defense will be that he had nothin g at all to do with the publication in question. Qn March 21 a train on the Atlantic and Pacific railway was iobbed at Canon Diablo, Ari. Last week the entire gang of four who perpetrated the crime, were captured, the officers pursuing them over 300 miles through as wild and desolate a country as can be found in the west. When the gang was overtaken a battle ensued in . which over fifty shots were fired, but no one was hurt. The robbers then abandoned their horses and took to the underbrush on foot. They were soon overhauled, however, and have confessed their con nection with the robbery. The officers suffered many privations in their long pursuit. . SATURDAY. The Supreme Court ot Nebraska has decided that notes given. to. secure margins on grain speculations are void. ' The family of W. P. Word, consisting of six persons, living in Robin county, Ga., perished in their burning home. The lower branch of the Michigan Legislature has passed a bill prohibiting manufacture, sale or giving away of cigarettes. Mrs. Andrew Dubna, of St. Paul, Minn., a native of Finland, Friday gave birth to six children; three of them being alive. At Richmond, Va., a ten-acre lot belonging to the Confederate Soldiers' Home property, purchased five years ago at a cost of $8,300 was sold Thursday for $4 i, 000. It is asserted that the case against Allard & Son. of New York, accused of
smuggling, is growing darker, and that important discoveries have been made by the Treasury agents. A rumor was circulated in European cities that an . attempt was made on the life of the Czar on Sunday pre
vious, and that he was injured by the
explosion of a shell.. It is alleged that strenuous efforts are being made to suppress the facts, but, the rumor is very generally credited and geat excitement prevails. The general eatures uoon which all reports agree, are that on Sunday last a ..dynamite bomb exploded within the imperial palace at Gatschina, whether . by fuse or concussion is not stated, and that the explosion must have been produced in the room in which the Czar was present, for it is circumstantially reported that the Czar was injured and that an officer of the guards was wounded at the same time. BrONDAY. Abtl Lodge, Town Treasurer of Lisbon, O., is found to be an embezzler to the amount of $S,C00. The Rhode Island Legislature stands fifty-nine Republicans and foity nine Democrats on joint ballot. Ex-President Cleveland has beeu elected an honorary life member of the Manhattan Club of New York. Four children of Sebastian Merdan, a German farmer, near St, Joseph, Minn., were poisoned by eating roots of wild parsnip. Three "of them died. William H. Bright, of Danville, 111., deserted his wife and has Bince been paying attention to a respectable young lady, who committed suicide when she found out what kind of a man he was. - Specials from Findlay . and Tiffin,, in the natural gas belt of Ohio, report phenomenal strikes of gas. At Findlay two wells were drilled. One has a capacity of 30,000,000 and the other of 20,000,000 feet per day. At Tiffin the pressure of an old well increased suddenly, blowing out the casing of the well and bursting the pipes in a factory which used the gas. This well has an estimated capacity of 23,000,000 feet per day. Eddie. Gallery, of Chicago, eleven years old, was killed bv the accidental discharge of a revolver. While overhauling the drawers of a bureau, the lad called out to his mother that he had found his father's pistol. The mother hurried into the room and grasped the weapon by ihe handle and, not knowing that it was double action, caught hold of the trigger. An explosion followed. The bullet lodged just under Eddie's right eye and he fell to the floor dying in half an hour. Mr. and Mrs. Gallery are distracted with grief.
TUESDAY. An iron mountain has been discovered in Greenbrier county, W. Va, . No news have been received from the ps8enger8 and crew of the wrecked Danmark. Mrs. Hannah Battersby, of Philadelphia, the largest woman "in the world, is dead. Sho weighed 300. H. M. Flagler, of New York, presented Dr. Geo. Shelton with securities valuea at $37,000 in consideration of his faithfulness and skill in attending his daughter, who died recently. This is the largest fee but one ever paid to a physician. , Edwin Booth made his re-appearance on the stace at Cleveland, O.. He baa
almost entirclv recovered from the
effects of his -sudden prostration, and.
although he chafes considerably over
his physician s edict prohibiting him
from smoking, he admits that it has
done him good. Miss Minnie Tavlor, of Schley county,
Ga., died, a result of swallowing a pin.
While dressing Sunday she put the pm
in her mouth, to hold, and accidentally swallowed it. It lodged in her throat and all ; attempts to dislodge it were futile. She died from convulsions aiter
suffering intense agony.
Dvid Lindsey, a farmer, aged sixty,
living near Ann Arbor, Mich., fatally
shot his son. The old man was arrested
but claims the shooting was accidental.
He savs his son and he were quarreling,
and that the former drew a revolver and attempted to Bhoot him, the re
volver being accidentally diseiiarged.
Both were of intemperate habits.
P. F. Lockwood, a well known real
estate dealer and capitalist of Minneapolis, committed suicide by taking
poison upon his own . cemetery lot.
Lockwood was sixty-five years of age a:d quite-weal thy. He formerly re
sided in New York City. His attorney
thinks the deed was caused by Look-
wood's peculiar ideas of a spiritual existence in the hereafter. The suicide
left no familv.
The Ohicaco Daily News savs that
24,000 men threaten to quit the employ .i.L. -n-lii P. A1.J. T ! I J
oi me jsaiiimore a. umo xiuiiroau vompany, because an order has been made that all employes must subscribeto the
insurance scheme which has been re
cently adopted. Information has been received that at the shops at Garrett.
Ind., fifty seven machinists have been laid off because of their refusal to sign, in the East a number of lay-offs have
occured on the same account.
Caldwell Township, New York, the
place where Grover Cleveland was born,
has a sensation. ..... John and Henry Stanton, twin brothers, live there, and
both loved Emily Jansen. The twin
brothers can scarcely be told apart Thursday night Emily and John were to be married. John was taken suddenly ill the night of the wedding, when his brother, without telling any. one . of the fact, went to the bride's house and was married to the girl. The girl discovered the mistake the next day, and does not seem to feel very badly. Charles F. Hatch, President of the Wisconsin, Minnesota & Pacific railroad, committed suicide in his office at Minneapolis, Minn., by shooting, himself in the mouth with a revolver? The suicide is well nigh inexplicable, as Mr. Hatch's business and domestic relations were of the happiest. . He was an even-tempered and contented man and his frienos are at a loss to explain the deed. .... It is hiL ted that he has been speculating in
wheat and nad lost heavily and that this, caused a sudden despondency. His fxiends ridicule this4 story. .
. WEDNESDAY. Rock salt-has been struck at Kingman,
Kansas
Cleveland, coal handlers on the docks are on a strike. The new Democratic Mavor of Chi
cago, Wm. Creiger, has been inaugurated.
Daniel Keller, a well known farmer.
was "bunkoed" out of f4,700 by the card game at Belvidere, ft. J.
Rev. F. S. Cramer, a Jewish rabbi, of Montgomery, Ala., has renounced the faith of his fathers and joined the Bap
tist church.
The Minnesota Lecrislature has nassed
a meat inspection bill which will .prohibit sale in that State of Chicago and
Kansas City dressed meat.
Thousands of seals brought down on the ice have been killed near tha mrmth
of the St. Lawrence river. The total number killed in three days will reach
iou,uuo. A new mineral oro has hppn H
ered in the Southern Wisconsin mining
iciuuDttuu iiuum vriena, in,, wnicn resembles petrified wood
and jn Borne places yields 30 per cent
oi zinc . A syndicate composed of New York, New Orleans, Atlanta and Memphis capitalifjts. has purchased 630,000 acres of iron, coal and timber land in the Rquachee Valley, near South Pittsburg, Tenn., and calculate to develop it as soon aa possible. The price paid was $540,000. ' . The largest natural gas well ever struck was brought in Monday near Bellevuernon, twenty-six miles from Pittsburg. It is running at the rato of forty million leet a day, the pressure being eight hundred pounds to the
inch. It is one of the moet significant wells ever struck, as it shows there are
many new fields and that the sup
ply is good lor many years to come.
The bank of Grover, Col., was robbed in the regulation Western way. A cow-
J to! at the head of the cashier, and de
manded that it be honored. The cashier hauded out over $1,000 and the "cowboy" rode away eattefii d. An almost similar attempt was made to rob the Stae National bank c.t Minneapolis. The timely entrance of a depositor saved the bank from the loss of over 18,000 which the robber had thrust in his pocket. He had an accomplice and both of them are in jail.
I1EPOI1TED LOSS OF A VESSEL. The following dispatch from London was received at the Maritime Exchange, New York, Friday morning. '-The steamer Danmark, from CbriBtiansand, was seen April 8 abandoned in midocean." The Danmark belongs to the Thingv&Ua Line of steamers plying between New York and Gopenhageu. She was formerly the Jane Rvdel, of the White Cross Line. She is said to have had fioO passengers on board; mostly Scandinavians. Funcb, Edyo & Co., the agents of the company, say that they place no reliance in the dispatch, but have cabled to agents in London and Copenhagen for further in formation. The greatest excitement prevails in shipping circles over the loss of the Danmark. The Tbingvalla Liue is probabty the largest carrying emmigrant line that plies between New York and Europe, The Danmark had on board, when she left Ohaistiansand for New York, on the 26th of March, 650 passengers, presumably all immigrants. Including the vessel's Captain, R. M. Kundsen, the crew numbered forty men. The New York agent of the Thingvalla line Friday said: "We have here a cable dispatch to the effect that the Danmark left Christiansand on March 26, on her first voyage under her new flag and name. She had been completely overhauled, aud it was thought by all that she was the best of our fleet. There were on board of her at the time of her departure at least 710 people. Of these 750 were passengers. To manage and to look aiter the comfort of t his large number of passengers there must have beeu at least 60 in tin crew and probably the number may hfrve reached 100 or perhaps 125. Dherc:i are, therefore, to be accounted for the lives of from 710 to 775 people. The Danmark is commanded by Captain Kundsen, an old seaman, well knov?n for his courage and presence of mind, and he is not the man to abandon a ship to the mercies ot thesa when there is ene chance in even a thousand of getting her into port. And we do not believe that ho nas abandoned her. She may have been disabled, but we are very nearly certain that she has not been abandoned. "The position in which the Danmark is said to have been sighted abandoned is one in which she might very easily have been at the time, April 8. She had at that time been out from Christiansand thirteen days. I do not think it at all improbable that some fearful calamity might have befallen her, but please allow us to state to the number of friends of Uanmark's passengers that we don't believe she has been abandoned. No incoming steamship to this port irepoits any life
boats or rafts that might have belonged to the Danmark, Even if the Danmark had been abandoned she had sufficient means to accommodate all the passengers ou board if not all the crew. There were a great number of life boatsenough for the great passenger list and several new life rafts of the latest pattern and imrrovenients, which could have accommodated the crew and officers and. some of the passengers if there, was not enough room in the life boat for them." The Jnman line steainer, City o!: Chester, Capt. Bond, from New York, April 2 for Liverpool, arrived . - .aft Queenstowiv Friday. She reports than on April 8 in latitude 46 north, longitude 37 west, she passed the Danish, steamer Danmark from Christiansand, Copenhagen, etc., for New York. The Danmark had been abandoned by .her crew. Her stern was level with the sea and her bow stood high out of the water. She was apparently sinking. The Danmark was a vessel of 2,260 tons; bark rigged, and was 340 feet long, forty feet in . breadth and twenty-six feet deep. She was built at New Castle, Eng., in 1880.. It is believed the passengers were rescued. INDIANA "WHITE CAPS. The White Caps, unterrifi eel by recent prosecutions and rather emboldened by the release and acquittal of a number of the band, have commenced fresh depredations in Warrick and Dubois counties. John Langsford is a Road Supervisor in Miadison township, Dubois county, and one of his duties is to take up stray hogs.. .Recently he im pounded a large number of porkers, which he refus?d to release without the
customary fine. Last Monday he received a notice from the White Caps, in regu
lation Btyle, that these hogs were the property of poor people, unable to pay the fine, and if not promptly released he would be visited on Wednesday night and compelled to surrender them Thursday mondng,at 1 o'clock, Mr. Laosford was awaksned by a body of twenty masked men, who demanded the hogs. He refused, arid they dismounted and proceeded to go through . his premises. He warned them to desist, and when they disregarded him he. opened :tire wita a double-barrelled shotgun, wounding two with the first volley. The White Caps returned the fire through the windows of the hous?. wounding a y oung son of Lansford, who was descending the interior stairway. The old gentleman took down a brace of "seven-shooters" after discharging his gun, and continued to pour bullet after ballet into the ranks of the assailants, who, after discharging their weapons, "beat a haBty retreat, bearing three of their wounded comrades out. of the yard. One of them has since been identi fied by the wounds he received, and through him it is learned lihat five of the White Caps were wounded. Lansford's son only received a flesh wound, which is not serious. Mr. Lansford is satisfied that he knows several of the White Caps, nd they will be summoned before the Grand Jury. The White Caps also appetnred Thursday night near Newburgh, W arriek county, about twelve miles from Evansville". A band of ten visited the bouse of W. T. Masterson, who, as alleged, fails to provide for his family. He was given ten lasheaand promised forty more if he did not improve his ways. The same night the mob visited a negro named James Crews, who has a white wife, and who had been previously warned.. They took him to a woods near by, tied him naked to a tree, and administered forty lashes to his oare back. He was left tied to the tree, where some oi his friends subsequently found him. The terrors of last year in
stituted by this gang of White Caps are breaking out afresh. The indignation of law-abiding citizens is great, and it is said will result in the organization of vigilance committees to suppress the White Caps. . Concerning1 Sleepers.
Portland Oregon an.
ftome railroad man has given to the world what he knows on this subject in
the following: "A sleeper is one who
sleeps, A sleeper is that in which the sleeper sleeps. A sleeper is that on which the sleeper runs while thesloeper sleeps. Therefore, while the sleeper sleeps in the aleeper the sleeper ewries the sleeper over the sleeper under the sleeper until the sleeper which carries the sleeper jumps t he sleeper and wakes the sleeper in the sleeper by str.kir. gthe sleeper under the sleeper, on the sleeper, and there is no longer any sleeper sleeping in the sleeper oh the sleeper." Torre Hauiians ener a vigorous; protest against the habit of calling that town "Terry Hut." Polite society in the Prairie City call it as if spelled "Terra Hote," and stigmatize "Tarry Hute" as exceeding bad form, and more inexcusable than "Terry Hut,"
ENORMOUS 1FOUTUNES. Notwithstanding the enormous for tunes accumulated through the use of printer's ink. large sums of money are annually wasted in ineffectual and unremuneraUve advertising. The merits of a really valuable commodity properly uortrayed in the
I columns of an influential and widely
read newspaper, will speedily become generally known and appreciated, while the returns reaped by the advertieer will bo like those of the wise husbandman who "planted his seed in good ground, wherein lit bore fruit and brought forth, some an hundred fold, some Bixty, some thirty." The wording of an advertisement is an all important matter. Clearness, attractiveness, brevity and sincerity must character iae any announcement intended to catch the public and appeal to public confidence. An advertisement inserted in a London journal a few days ago brought instant said multitudinous replies accompanied by an almost unlimited supply of bank notes, simply because it touched the chord of nature which makes all mankind akin. Its simple pathos and selfevident truthfulness appealed, to every heart. The advertiser sougnt for a loBt relative, and, giving his nan e, said: "I am Ml and friendless. My last half crown iiS expended in paying for this advertisement. Write me at" (giving the address). A.8 already stated, nearly every one who read tthe announcement hastened to relive the necessities of the sufferer a real sufferer in this case, though many swindles are perpetrated in the diyine name of charity. Thus it is with a really meritorious commodity or preparation; if its virtues be properly and truthfully sefc forth in the public press, its success is prompt and certain. On the other hand, the public is quick and unerring to detect deception and charlatanry; and, accordingly, no amount of ''puffery" will force a vile nostrum into public esteem and patronage. TJntold sums have been sunk in vain efforts to advertise into popularity
so called medical preparations which
did not possess the virtues or properties
claimed for them. Valuable mediciines, however, like
Warner's Safe Cure and Warner's Log
Cabin Sarsaparilla, carry their own best commendation m their power to cure
the particular diseases for which they are a specific.
They require no labored panegyric
to convince the people of their power
and efficacy, for they have been trie1 and found perfect.
Nature's remedies, by their intrinsic
merits have conferred a lasting boon upon mankind, and they have secured an enviable reputation and unlimited sale throughout the civilized w orld. ON TO OKLAHOMA. A dispatch from Kansas City on the 16th, Bays: In this region nothing is heard but Oklahoma. In the freight yards, crowded on the tracks and under moving orders, are about thirty huge trains, freighted with anticipative citizens of the community. There are houses in sections, ready to be bolted together andV entered for habitation within sixty minuteB after their delivery. There are complete utocks of every conceivable sort of merchandise, and with each car load of stock is packed away the building required to harbor it. In this manner drug stores, dry goods stores, boot and shoe stores, saloons and groceries are drawn up in readiness to be launched forward upon the favored center It is said in the railway offices here that 1,000 carloads of supplies for Oklahoma have already been sent forward and are awaiting the onset at Arkansas City, on the border. Meanwhile there is a steady gathering of pilgrims by the railroads; but the pss3enger business in the direction of
the new country in not yet commensurate with the freight movement. The rush. however,is perceptibly beginning, and will gather in volume and energy throughout the week. Reports of the continued rise of the Cimanron river continue to come in, and this is threatening to cut off those boomers who aie awaiting upon the northern borders the long-withheld permission to pass, over and take the land. Such circumstances but tend to darken the prospect,, and it ia believed here that the opening will be marked with much violence. The poor squatters, with their slow teams, who, months and years ago, marked out . their . intended homes within the promised land, declare they will fight for them. There is, however, no more present talk of burnng bridges and molesting the railroads. Meanwhile the troops are being quietly disposed of in strength to do duty in conjunction with the United States marshal at the points of crowded settlement and registration. According to the time cards prepared by the railroads, there will be very little business done at the two land offices in Oklahoma on April 22. The first regular south bound train on the Santa Fe leaves Arkansas City at 2 p, M.,... and will be followed by all the specials needed, which will run as sections of the first train. This will bring the first train to Guthrie at 4:30 p. m., too lata for land office business. From the South the Santa Fe will start a train from Purceli at 1.1:40 a. m. This will arrive at 4 p. M., allowing, half an hour for filing claims before the office closes. The Rock Island expects to do a little better for those intending to settle in the western half of the Territory. Its. stages will reach Kingfisher from the end of its railroad by 4 o'clock, unless the streams are Bwollen or the roads unusually bad. At all events, the prospects are that very few claims can be filed at. either office before Tuesday, April 23. White-covered wagons, bound for Oklahoma, are passing through all day long. Pawnee Bill was at Wichita, Monday morning, and states that the soldiers have all oeen withdrawn from the State line and are now on the Oklahoma line. Settl era are perxaitted to go right to the borders of the promised land. His colony is now camped around H unnewel 1, and will start from Miller's Ranch, Ind. T., Thursday morning. There are 4,(100 people with him. Among the latest items from the Indian Territory is one a bloody tragedy a few days ago in the western part of Oklahoma, between two men from Kiowa, Kas., and two men from Texas, for the passession of a claim. Guns were used freely, and one of the Kiowa men was killed and a Texan mortally
and placing their wounded comrades in n i' er All oinriprt fnr a npihhorincr ranch.
Ere they reached it, however, the tight was renewed, and the entire party was discovered later by some cowboys stretched out oh the prairie. The cowboys took the one dead and three wounded men to the nearest stage station. Mr. David T. Littler, ex-member of the Republican National :- convention and of the Pacific railroad Commission,
and ex-State Treaeurer John Tanner will lead a party of tm from Sprinfield to Oklahoma Tuesday evening next. They have shipped a complete portable hotel and outfit, t be pi'ched at Guthrie or the nearest available site, where they can lay-out a town and open a bank. The whole combination is composed of prominent Illinois Republican politicians, and it ifi asfiumcd they will have much to do in shaping the politics of the new country. General Merritt has issued an order. to the troops to allow the boomers to cross the Kansas line into the Cherokee strip, beginning Friday, April 10. This will give them three days in which to drive their teams acroas the strip into Oklahoma. In addition to the seventeen companies now in Oklahoma the troops at Ft. Eiiott, Tex., have been ordered to Oklahoma, and it is thought that by the22dat ieant twenty-five companies will be in the Territory. The latest news from the border, says a St. Louis dispatch of Wednesday, is to the effect that the troop3 are being withdrawn from the neighborhood of Caldwell and other points on the Kansas line and the boomers, are getting
ready to cross the Cherokee outlet to the northern boundary of Oklahoma proper. They will move along the old cattle trails aud will reach the border the latter part of t his week and be ready to rush across the line on the 22d. The advance guard of : the old soldiers' colony, principally those from Ohio, Mar)' land and West Virginia, has reached Wichita, and
will start for the territory to-day or Thursday. They will bridge the Cimarron river, which cannot now be forded. The high water in the Cherokee strip and Oklahoma will cause much delay and trouble to boomers.. Many of those who have been in hiding in the valleys of the Cimarron and North Canad an have been washed out and t&eir tents and stocks swept awav. The Snorted damage to the Topeka & Santa Fe bridge across the Canadian river at Purcell has been repaired and there will bi: no delay to Wins from the south. Parties with temporary buildings for land offices at Guthrie and Lisbon left Arkanas City ; to-day and will erect ihem as speedily as possib'e. A stage line has been put on between Guthrie and Lisbon. Several deputy U. S. marshals have started for Oklahoma, and other officers will follow at once. Three wagon-loads of coffins left Wichita Tuesday for the territory, and bs an evidence that trouble is expected down there, quite, a number of wills have been made and deposited with bankers. There has also been a good deal of money left with bankers to be sent to designated parties in case the depositors are not heard from in reasonable time. Boomers are leaving Gainesville and other points on the Texas border daily for the territory, . both by wagon and railroad, and will be ready to cross the Oklahoma line on the opening day. Two hundred and forty eight prairie schooners went into camp at AmansaB
City, Ark., Tuesday, and fully 500 per
son s arrived by t h e three rai Iroads centering at that place, making an estimated crowd of nearly, if not quite,
10.0M temporary soiournerB. State
colonies ara being organized in the
camps, the Illinois colony now having
i.aou mem oars, ana unio and imssoun following in the . order named with from 800 members down to 300.
As In The Names of the Famous, Toronto Globe.
A collector of curiosities remarked the
other day that no man who hadn't an "a" in his name had ever been elected President of the United States. John Tyler stood obstinately in the way, but this difficulty was got over by the simple device of sticking an a between' the John and the Tyler. In Canada we could furnish a number of illustrations of the preponderance of the "A" men. Here is the Premiership of the Dominion held by Macdonald and Mackensie; the Premiership of Ontario held by Macdonald, Blake and Mowat, the Premier
ship of Manitoba held by Girard, Davis,
Norquay and Green way. England has of late years been ruled by Disraeli,
Gladstone and Salisbury.
A life Made Miserable-.....
By dyspepsia Is scarcely worth ihe 11 viDff. A cuprivious appetite, h artburn, pureliug; nervous fyujptoms, incrraseJ action of the heart
alt r eau Musing i' ine aouomeo DFiween mealiandflattt eutoaf er. are among tne sue-
ce-8iv indicia of t is harrassing ontoialnt To things on y are n .edf u tor I s removal. A
resort t ii. steuera s'oirucn nstiers, aua peralstene i t lis use These reraed'ai measures be ng ad pted, a cure is ce ta n. Tkeu immedia tely bef re r after mea -, t i ,s?reit st"m-
aebic prom t?a secretion i f the e sir c juice,
tha naair-uso vent or tne xooq. iq ncrv ui anl b lious symptoms consequent upon chronic in UgcsM'm disappear, ms tie comjjlaiot gradually vields to th co receive aud mr goratiug
influence of the B tters. Appn te retums,ueep riecoui 8 more T-fres log, and a a njquence tae body is mora efne eut'y nourished, muscular power ic eie and the mini grows sanguine. Us 3 he Bittern for oniUa and fever, and rheumatism. Intense A circus.
The largest Word in the Dictionary is incompetent to communicate the inexpressible satisfaction and Incomprehensible consequences resulting from a judicious administration of Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescription, a preparation designed especially for the speedy relief and permanent cure of all Femalo Weaknessea, Nervousness, and diseases peculiar to the fermale sex. The only remedy for woman's peculiar ills, sold by druggists, under a positive guarantee, to ffive satisfaction. See guarantee on wrapper of battle. This guaraniee has been faithfully carried out for many yeara by the proprietors.
Patience is a good thing to have, even
for a doctor: h A iArge Estate. A broad land is this in Vhioh we live, dotted so thickly with thrifty cities, towns and , villages! Amid them slK with ever-inoreasing popularity and helpfulness, is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, giving hope and cheer where there is disease and dspair. Wherever there is humanity there is suffering, wherever there is suffering there is the best field for this greatest American Remedy. Consumption (wThich is luug-srofula), yle'da to it, if employed in the early stages of the disease; Chronic Nasal Catarrh, -cin'rist tii it. Kidnov and Liver diseases,
yield to it! If yon want the best known remedy for alt diseases of .the b!ood,ask for Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and take no other. A useless invitation The falsehood. Popular Preparation! Pure, Potent, Powerful! Pallid People Praise, Progressive People Purchasel Positively Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets. Properly Partaken. Preserve Physical Powers, Produce Permanent Physical Perfection. Purchase, . Prove! Bovine humanity The cow-poy. Catarrh Can't he Cured, with LOCAIi APPLICATION, as they cannot reach the scat of the disease. Catarrh ia a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you have to take internal remedies. Hairs Catarrh Curo is taken internally, and acts directly upon the blood and mucus surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure is no ciuat k medioine It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in tuts couutrv for years, and it is a regular prescription It is composed of the Uest tonics known, combined with the best blood purine)?, actiug direction the mucus surface. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing mtarrh-. Send for testimonials free. ' ; P. J. CHENEY a CO., Props., Toledo, O. Sold
by Druggists, price 75c Speak gently to corn always or it may on its' 'get ear." . The Handsomest fciuly in Town Komarked to a friend the other day that sho know Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and; Lungs was a superior remedy, as it stopped hor cough instantly when otherc'ough remedies had no effect whatever. So to prove this and convince you of itn merit, any druggist will give yon a Sample bottle Preo. large size, 50c and $1, A stem winderThe snake.
1 (t p&-'&W.) .:.Sppr
! '
Tired Feeling i
"Here is my favorite Spring Mtdltine, "I waut some, too, Mamma."
. "Yes dear, we will all take It. for Hood's Sarsa-
oarilla mak(s us healthy and strong.
That
Is ex enenced by nearly everyone at this season and it should be driven off, or in the weak condition of thi toc.y serious disease may gain a toot-hold. Jrlood's Samparilla is just what is needed. It purifies, vicaiis s and enriches the b o d, makes tha head clear, creates an appetite overcomes that tired feeling, tones the nerves and Imparts new vigor to the whole body. . If yeu nave decided t take Hood's aarsapa-
ruia do not be icduoed to buy any otbar
'I take Heed's Sarsaparilla as a spring; tonie
and I recommend it to all who have that miser- ' : able tired feeling.' C. Pabmkxjbk,. 89 Bridge St
Breoklyn, N. y.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Sold by all dnsggisti 1. six for. Prepered i only, by 6.X HOOD A CO.,Apotheesuie, IwelL ltaes,
IOO Doses one uonar
THE SICK FRIEND.
The robust, haloy hearty gentlemen in thii pictTii liai jwt xwfts&: a eall from his Mend, who is Buffering all the torments of tibt iimMtL He is a victim of that commonest ot: American maladiss bilious dyspepsia, or torpid liver, associated with indigestion. He fesls despondent and gloomy, languid and lifeless; nas a bad tte in his mouth ; his tongue is coated, appetite poor ; he is drowsy after meals ; his sleep is disturbed by bad dreams or by horrible nightmare, and ao i not zsesh ing, and he lias a constant, indescribable feeling of dread or of impending calamity. His friend, upon whom he has called is telling the sick man that only a few months ago he was ia just that same dbtressed state of body and mind himself, but that he had the good fortune to leara an nnfailmg remedy for all such disorders, which be found in tbat orldr famed medicine known as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Tisootrerf,ci ' It is the only medicine of its class, guaranteed to benefit or caw
in all difieases for which it c is recoromended, or money refunded
Copyright, 1888, by World's isPBNSAinr Hxdicjul Associasioh,' PiwprietonsV '4.
TS. jmTa 25 T3T3XX INT THE HBAD,
no matter how bad or of how long
V permanently cured by DR. SAGE 8 CATARRH REMEDY. 50 cents, by druggist
A Prize dinner.. ,- rSfgM M So pote, turn in the ground either to M Ifl Tl flll U ' right or tft perfectly. , M;--' TlS- -- ;a 'W Call on our as -tut in your city. or. m: . "v - , :M write ui forsoeial printed, matter! M - "j" QflgUClCSS South Bend " M-- Ui- iiiS sm'-ii.Mit' - S
jiIy45? JL - rtic iiiiiu 'Aiio has Invested from three iamm
WET
HEN
to five dollira in a Bubbcr Coat, and at bis first half hour's experience ta a itona finis to his sorrow th&t It Is hiirdly a better protection than a mosquito nettirg. not only feels chagrined at belli? bc badly taken In, but also feels if ne does not look exactly like
A:ik for the " FISH BRAND n Slickkb V and taxo' no Jher. If 51
dtes not h si-e the fish aaxN-n, send for aescriptlvo citalogue. A. J. ToWBUjiie wmaaont t., nosion. Ma
SjAjeaBJl aSaaaaaWtStlJtaMl. ' '
We offer the man who waut 1 txvb
(not style). a garment that wjilrti;! him dry in the hardest storm. It f -caUed TOWKh'S FISH B; K t ' SLICKER," a name lamiMar to Wjf -Cow-boy all over the lanfi. With m the only perfect Wind and.WatenVf Coat Is "Tower's Fih Brand SHdkr
Thps. J. icrea, of Bartholomew county, has been granted a pension of $13,949.77. Tbis is for total blindness, and includes all the law allowed at the various periods from July, 1862, when the pension begun. The sum is the largest ever granted under the general pension laws, m OKO. WASHINGTON'S INATJGTJTtATION. Excursions to New York via the Pennsylvania Short 14 ne for the Centennial Celebration. Fxcursi on ticket to New York City at very Jow round trip rotes will he sold from all prlncfa' statioi r on ;be Pennsylvania Lines west of Pittsburg f r the Centennial celebration of the inauguration of (r?orge Washington, .to-be held April 29 !a and SOth, 1889, This celebration . i in the hands of ell known and enterprisioe citizenB of New York, who promise that it shsli be a most pi tu'esouo andmaguiflcent carnival. For complete information rrding ntes of faieand trin neciommodatfons for individuals or organised bodies, apply to the ties rest" passorgtr or titiket agent of the Pennsylvania LIues. THE MARKETS, Indianapolis, April 18, 1888. GRAIN Wheat Corn
No. 2 Bed ......".8 No.3 Bed ....... 82
No. 1 White......33 No. 2 Yellow.....82 Oats, White......29
L1VK STOCK. Cattle Good, to choice ;4.004.2S Choice heifers ,. 8.853.66 Couamon to medium cow8......2.50a2.76 Good to choice cows...... v..3.003.20 Hogs Heavy 4.764.80 Light. 4.6?4.85 Mixed., i,..4.604.75 Pigs ..4.40fJ4.45 Sheep Good to choice .4.254.60 Fair to medium ... . . .......... S.6(i4,16
EC OB, BUTTER j POULTRY.
Railway fareHam sandwiches. , Tested by Time. For Broneblal affections; Coughs, etc.. Brown's Beokchial Tbosbxs have proved their efficacy by- a tsst of many years -tMce 25 cents. . ; If afflicted with Bore Kyes.use Dr Jeaae Thomp
son's Kye water, uruggista eeu it. wso. ysf 1
leading physician a?.l over the country pre-" . scribe Mag kk's EnvLsios for oougha, colds an ' seneral dehilltv. .' K.':
V
Bead nr. Barber's card in another column.
I prescribe and tattropf dorse Big G as the eft specific fortheotflelessiffi
or this dtsrase.
KftnutMnV Ef -traByi UllriuQasaSeiaOl,
G. H.XNO .RAH AMNT. A-iitexdam, If.T. We have sold Big G foe many yeere. end ft has
given the bc&i ct saut faction. - JJ. B. DYCKEwCO., : chicaco.nL"
at.SO, fSoid v Proarssy
DBLTs FOR DlBfuMWa.
ALSO ELECTRIC
OS. HORNE, iWVEWTOt, 181 WAM8S Atl, CS1W
I
Efifcs....... 9e
Butter, creamery 22c Fancy country ...12c Choice cOtt.ntry..lGc
n r- MISCELLANEOUS. . VTooL-r-Fine merino, washed. ... . . S335 unwashed med.. . . v. . . .,20k22 very coarse . ... ..... . . . . 17wl8
Hens per R)........9t
Roosters... ........4c Turkeys ......... lie
Pise's Remeoy for Catarrh Is the
Best, Easiest to use, and Cheapest.
Sold by druggists or sent by mail.
ooc is. t. riascmnevwarren, pa.
PENSIONl ."C. successfully prosecu increasa. re-ratlns. widows, C
JOIlNW.MOBltl, Late Principal BTamlnef,
U. 8. Pension Bureau, awt at Law, Wtehlnjctsue
I. C. successfully .prosecutes, cii-yraaa-
are5K5': Tear? lniast ,B
years in Pension Imreau, sAdlSltoraar since
Sample Pags oT the JLaf est SUNDAY SCHOOL S0N6 BOOKS
TBTJE ECHO MUSIC CO., Iiayett, Ind
T snrns: LQOKl New price-list of Rug m; sw chines. Patterns, Yarn. Ae. ans
book of beautiml colored pattern; 'designs free Agent Wanted. ,:. ' K. ROSS CO.; ToIejiSo, O. '
- -iSSt
Ha r, timothy ,,12.76
B iin., ........ 9.50 Clover seed. .. 5.25
Wheat (May) . 87 Corn .;3o
Oos
...t 0
Sugar cured ham 12 Bacon clear side 11 Feathers, goose 35
Pork... 11.65 Lard........,... 6.85 Ribs, mm Mj
PATENTS
F. A. LEHMANK Washington, D. O, Sena for Clrci;l
1NU
10-80
INPFI-S
r When writing to Advortiaeca readem WtWs vouf er a favor liy mentioning this paper.
u
U01ES'
Km. Im Ptua. 8ftt, jawwL cStotoia. tor om
dy fcamt Woman: SaiMOett, Ql.
m
--,-r.-V?-;-
Pl
