The Greencastle Democrat, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 May 1894 — Page 2

THE DEMOCRAT.

GREENCASTLE,

INDIANA.

The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. QPNGRESSIONAU Kcgular HeNsloo. Ob the 16th tarts discussion occupied the time of the senate. A resolution fur an Investigation of the chartre that bribery had been attempted to defeat the tarlS bill was oSered.... In the house the joint resolution authorizing an Investigation of the Industrial depression was reported from the committee on labor. A bill was Introduced for the erection of a national memorial homo for aged colored people In Washington. The agricultural appropriation hill was considered. IK the senate a resolution for an Investigation of the charge that bribery had been attempted to defeat the tarlS bill was adopted on the 17lh and a bill providing for the admission of Utah as a state was reported The tariff bill was further discussed.... In the house the agricultural bill was passed Ok the 18th a resolution calling upon the attorney general for Information as to the eilstence of a sugar trust in violation of the law was adopted In the senate. The tariff bill was considered ...In the house the legislative, executive and Judicial appropriation bill was dls cussed. At tho evening session private bills Were considered. Adjourned to the 21st. ON the 18th a bill was Introduced In the senate to authorize several American citizens to accept decorations and testimonials from tho Hawaiian government. Several bills of minor Importance were passed The house was uot

in session.

The debate on the tariff bill occupied the time of the senate on the 21st. An amendment to put iron ore on the free list was defeated ....In the house In committee of the whole an amendment to tho legislative appropriation bill declaring the statute authorizing the ser-geant-at-arms to “dock" members fur absence to have been repealed was curried.

DOMESTIC. Tennessee bankers in convention at Memphis passed resolutions opposing the repeal of the state bank tax law. A stokm of wind and ruin swept over portions of Minnesota and Wisconsin and several million dollars' worth of property was destroyed, all the railroads running through that section were blocked and four persons lost their lives. Chahi.es Samrmuli.kr, aged 50. killed his mother, aged 00, in Now York and then took his own life. 1‘overty was the causa. Iowa prohibitionists have organized for a three years’ fight for a temperance amendment to the state constitu-

tion.

Gaudaub broke his own 8-mile world's fair record of 19:0(3 at the pro-f'-sJJPbl regatta at Austin, Tex., beating Peterson in 19:02 V In Chicago Election Commissioners Keenan, Hutchings and Schomer were fined f 1,000 each for contempt by Judge Clietlain for refusing to turn over ballots to the grand jury. Da Samuel A. Mutchmore, of Philadelphia, was chosen moderator of the Presbyterian general assembly in ses•lon at Saratoga, N. \\ 11. H. McDowell, of Pontiac, was elected department commander of the Illinois G. A. 1C, and Mrs. M. R. M. Wallace, of Chicago, was elected president of tho Woman's Relief Corps. Barkers, brokers and investors report no improvement in the general business situation and are correspondingly depressed. Wheat touched 531* cents, the lowest price ever known in Chicago. A kike which started in the United States appraiser’s office in Boston caused a loss to the government of $150,000 and other losses amounted to $311,000. The conference of coal miners and operators came to an end at Cleveland, nothing having been accomplished toward settling the strike. Owing to the coal famine the Grand Trunk railroad refuses to accept lake and rail shipments of grain from Chi-

cago.

Norwegians in Chicago celebrated the eightieth anniversary of Norway’s Independence. Hailstones 8 inches in diameter fell at Decatur, 111., and much damage was done to windows and vegetation. A cyclone passed one-fourth of a mile west of Kunkle, O., doing great damage to property and killing Daniel Barrett Rml his wife and their two grand-daughters, Myrta and Martha Caso, ami George Oxlnger. Charles Cole and his wife were fatally injured. OVER 18,000 sheep perished in a snow and windstorm on the Sierra Nevada gauges. During a terrific gale on Lake Michigan tho beach from Glencoe to South Chicago was strewn with wreckage. Eight vessels came to grief and at least ten lives were sacrificed. The financial loss was estimated at $100,000. The scene off the lake front was unparulled in Chicago’s history. During the storm the old cottonwood tree in Chicago, marking the Fort Dearborn massacre of 1812 was blown down. There were 220 business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 18th, against 200 the week previous and 247 in the corresponding time in 1893. Plans have been formulated whereby the Pacific railroads may liquidate their debt to the government in fifty years. John Applin, a farmer in Wood county, O., was swindled out of $4,000 by two confidence men who engaged him in cards. Five men and a woman were drowned by the wrecking of the schooner M. J. Cummings at Milwaukee. The anniversary of the establishment of the first post office in America was celebrated at Breeze cottage, Garden City, L. I.

During a storm in New Jersey fourteen houses were struck by lightning In Bridgeton, three in Cedarville, four at Newport, two at Dutch Neck, seven at Vineland and several in Millville. William McKeii.l was hanged at Mobile, Ala., for the murder of his wife, whom he found to be unfaithful

to him.

Bookkeeper J. J. Kean, of the Harlem river bank in New Y'ork, was charged with stealing $19,000 of the bank's funds. Frank Goon ale, a well-known jockey, was thrown from Judge Payne at Louisville and trampled to death by the horses following him. All the employes of the Chicago. Burlington A Quincy railroad have been requested by tho company to submit to vaccination. Violent storms of wind and snow swept over Illinois, Wisconsin, Ohio, Iowa and Indiana, doing vast damage to crops and buildings and causing some deaths. The National Editorial association will meet in tenth annual convention at Asbury Park, N. J., July 2 to 2(5. Application was made in Philadelphia for a receiver for the order of Tonti. The liabilities were said to reach into the millions. Experiments in Washington with a new brand of smokeless powder discovered by a Virginian proved it superior to any yet tested. Judge Bookwai.ter, of Danville, dismissed the suit attacking the senatorial apportionment of Illinois, and tlie case will be taken to the supreme

court.

The percentages of the baseball clubs in the national league for the week ended on tho 19th were: Cleveland, .810; Baltimore, .090.; Philadelphia, .680; Pittsburgh, .007; Boston, .5(55; New York, .478; Brooklyn, .478; Cincinnati, .474; St. Louis, .409; Louisville, .310; Chicago, .800; Washington, 120. Striking miners called Walter Glover, a nonstriker, to his door near Birmingham, Ala., and riddled him with bullets. The Conemaugh river at Johnstown, Pa., overflowed its banks and the streets were covered with water to the depth of 2 feet. At Cambridge, Mass., James Wilson, 40 years old, murdered his wife by cutting her throat and then fatally wounded himself. The latest estimate of the loss of life off tho harbor of Chicago during the recent storm was twenty-eight. Heavy rains caused disastrous floods throughout Pennsylvania. At Williamsport the boom which contained 81,000,000 worth of lumber gave way. Great damage was done by frosts to growing crops over an extensive range of territory. The effect of the cold wave was felt from the northern lino of Dakota to the gulf, and it also went well toward the Atlantic, especially in the southern states. Seven men were killed and a number injured in a collision between Chesapeake .t Ohio trains in Standing Rock tunnel near Princeton, Ky. W Hii.e attempting to rescue the crew of the waterlogged schooner William Shoupe four sailors were drowned near Port Huron, Mich. Ex-Gknkhal Master Workman T. V. Powdeuly, A. W. Wright and P. 11. Quinn were expelled from the Knights of Labor on a charge of plotting the order’s destruction. The Julius Schiel company’s drygoodsstoreand L. Dannenbaum’s wholesale millinery establishment in Philadelphia were destroyed by fire, the loss being $625,000. Two masked men attempted to bold up a stage near Milton, Cal., and one was killed by the express messenger. The Kellys and Kuffertys at Southville, Mass., settled a long-standing feud with revolvers and two would die and two others were badly wounded. Property valued at $145,000 was destroyed in Akron, O., by a blaze Which started in a planing mill. A CLOUDBURST southwest of Dwakirk, N. Y., caused one of the most disastrous floods known there in mauy

years.

The special grand jury in Chicago decided upon the Indictment of fiftyeight persons for violation of LTe election law at the December and April elections. Among those on the. list are two election commissioners, one exelection commissioner, three aldermen, a number of judges and clorkft of election and several policemen. The Ohio legislature adjourned sine die. Among the bills passed was one to hold but one session in two years. The Traders’ bank of Tacoma, Wash . suspended' payment for a second time. Investigation of the attempted bribery of senators to vote against the tariff bill was begun in Washington Senators Kyle and Hunton and Buttz, the alleged briber, were before the committee. In trying to arrest three outlaws at Yukon, (>., T., two deputy sheriffs were fatally shot and one of the bandits was wounded. CoXEY, Browne and Jones, the commonweal leaders, were sentenced to twenty days in jail for displaying partisan banners in the capitol grounds. William Perdue went to the home of Squire A. W. Bundle in Nevada, Mo., and shot him dead and then took his own life. A family feud was the

cause.

The flood in western Pennsylvania still continued, and boats, bridges, houses and other property had been destroyed and ten lives were reported lost. The property loss at Williamsport alone was placed at $1,500,000. At Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Dansville

Mrs. Matilda A. Peterson, of Chi- and Rochester, N, Y., great damage cago has petitioned congress to ap- 1 was done by high water, propriate $5,000,000 to purchase lands | The J. C. Lane Paper Manufacturing on which to settle unemployed thou- ' company at Elkhart, Ind., went into Bands. 1 the hands of a receiver with heavy li-

Thk exchanges at the leading clear- abilities.

ing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 18th aggregated $887,677,573, against $908,225,546 the previous week. The decrease, compared with the corresponding week in

1893 was 27.0.

An agent for the Missouri Pacific Bought the Kansas City & Beatrice Railroad at auction for $100,000.

Mary Anderson is now engaged in writing her personal memoirs. She will give for the first time the reasons which induced her to retire from the stage. All the carpenters and mill hands in Cinch.nati were ordered to strike because the bosses refused to pay $2.50 for eight hours or $3 for uiue hours.

The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers in session in St. Paul adopted resolutions condeinning the bill of Senator Walsh to prevent interference

with mail trains.

The Illinois Congregationalists celebrated in Chicago the fiftieth anniversary of their state organization. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. T. W. Phillips was nominated for congress by the republicans of the Twenty-fifth Pennsylvania district Nathaniel P. Crane, aged 84, and Mrs. Chloe Gibson, aged 78, were married at Belvidere, 111. The officiating minister is 82 years of age. In the Congregational church at East Northfield, Mass., Emma IL Moody, daughter of the evangelist, was married to Arthur P. Fitt, of Chi-

cago.

WIND AND KAIN.

Fearful Havoe Wrought in Many Parte of the Country.

fetoriiiM in the Northwest-Terrible KfTeets Felt on Fake Mirtiigan—Floods iu Feunsylvanla Kqual Those of Five Years Ago.

a THE WOKST FOU YEARS.

St. Paul, Minn., May 18.—The great storm which swept over Minnesota and western Wisconsin Tuesday night was the most revere since the cyclone of April 14, 1886, crushed eighty-six lives at St. Cloud and Sauk Kiipids. So far us reported only four people have been killed, but the loss to buildings, crops,

bridges and railways by wind, bail,

Rev. Dr. Edward Bright, the editor ! liKhtnin * ftml ^ , wlU foot f? an . 4l ,, • a a enormous sum. 1 he downpour of rain or the Examiner, a prominent Kaptist , • , 4 ^

, 4 X . . . . V. for a given period was the greatest

newspaper, died at his home in >mw u b

■«- i i ever know n.

Y ork, aged SO years.

The democrats renominated H. C. Snodgrass for congress in the Third district of Tennessee. The prohibitionists in state convention at Oakland, Cal., nominated a full state ticket, headed by Henry French, of Santa Clara, for governor. The populists in the Second district of Indiana nominated E. A. Riggins, of Davies county, for congress. The Nebraska populists will hold their state convention at Grand Island on August 15. The republican state convention of North Dakota will meet in Grand Forks July 11. Andrew J. Graham, author of tho system of shorthand which bears his name, died at his home in Orange, N. J., aged 04 years. Gen. Philip Cook, secretary of state, died at his home in Atlanta, Ga., aged 77 years. FOREIGN. One hundred German Baptists from Kherson and Volhynia, in Russia, embarked from Liban for America. Religious persecution forced them to emi-

grate.

Testimony given in a Canadian divorce suit connects prominent people of tlie dominion with several mysterious crimes. Edmund H. Yates, editor and proprietor of tlie London World and the author of many novels, died suddenly, aged 02 years. Emile Henry, the author of the explosion in tlie cafe of tlie Hotel Terminus in Paris, was guillotined. The new constitution of Hawaii provides that the new government is to be called the Republic of Hawaii. Tlie cabinet will consist of five members and the senate and house of fifteen members each, congress to meet every two years, the sessions to lie limited to ninety days, and all members must bo able to read and write the English language. The new constitution will be presented to the convention on May 80 for its approval. King Alexander of Servia lias abolished the liberal constitution of 1888 and restored that of 18(59. Many of tlie radical leaders have become fugitives. Six of the accomplices of Pallas ia the attempt to assassinate Marshal Campos were shot on the plaza at Barcelonia, Spain. A fire in Annul province in China destroyed 2,500 houses. The worst wind and rainstorm known in fifty years prevailed at Toronto, Ont., and considerable damage was

done.

The Manchester ship canal was formally declared open to the commerce of the world by Queen Victoria. LATER. Seven paragraphs of the metal schedule of tin* tariff bill were disposed of in the United States senate on tlie 22daftereight hours of debate. In tlie house in committee of the whole the section oft he legislative appropriation bill providing for the civil service commission was stricken out by a strictly party vote of 109 to 71. Tlie committee on the eloction of tlie president and vice president voted to make a favorable report on the bill providing for tlie election of tlie president by a direct

vote.

Snow to the depth of 5 inches fell at

Bristol, Tenn.

Resolutions denouncing President Cleveland and calling for his impeachment were adopted by the populist state convention at Sacramento, Cal. The floods in Pennsylvania were receding. The loss at Williamsport ami in Lycoming county was placed at 810,000,000. Losses in other portions of tlie

state were also heavy.

Col. W. C. Oates was nominated for governor by the democratic convention

at Montgomery, Ala.

CoREANS,

I.oh. Will Reach 181,000,000. St. Paul, Minn., May 19.—Reports from tho districts visited by storm and I flood indicate that the loss was heavier than first reported and will reach at least $1,000,090. All the railway lines entering St Paul except the Chicago i Great Western and Minneapolis & St. i Louis employed all the idle men they , could find in repairing bridges and I tracks washed away by the torrents which swept down every river and j brook in this section on Tuesday and - Wednesday. Kvery Bridge Oone. Maiden Rock, Wis., May 19. Rush river overtlowed its banks during Wednesday night and the raging torrent carried everything before it. Every bridge from the headwater of 1 Rush river to tlie outlet in the Mississippi has been swept away. Both llouring and sawmills were ruined and the j total loss will reach $109,000 in this | county. At least a dozen farmhouses along Rush river were washed away. Klilcil by a Cvclone. Kunkle, ()., May 19. — A cyclone passed one-fourth mile west of here at I 4:30 o'clock Thursday afternoon, killing five persons, fatally injuring two others and slightly wounding several

more.

I The scene of the cyclone is a hard one to describe. Houses, fences, trees and obstructions of all kinds in the : path of tlie storm have been carried | away and nothing left to mark the spot where they stood except holes in tlie ground. Much Damage In W’incoiiHiii. Ashland, Wis., May 21.—The old portions of Ashland’s breakwater are almost demolished, tlie sea breaking , entirely through at three different places and wrecking it the entire length, so that it will have to be rebuilt Tlie new portion stood well. Thedamage will probably reach $75,000. Kewaunee, Wis., May 19.—The last of the heavy rainstorms ended Friday morning in u blizzard of snow and hail. No mail has arrived from the south since Thursday owing to the tracks of the Green Bay road being washed ouL Farmers report the pea crop totally ruined. In Iowa. Dubuque, la., May 21.—The spectacle of snow falling after the middle of May was seen Friday morning. After several days of extreme hot weather, resulting Thursday in prostrations by sunstroke, the mercury sunk from 90 degrees to 42 degrees inside of twelve

hours.

ON LAKE MICHIGAN. Ships Founder and Go Down with Their Crews In a Gale. Chicago, May 21.—The northeast gale which began with the change of weather Thursday night blew with increasing force all day Friday. The gale approached tlie dignity of a hurricane, blowing at intervals at 00 miles an hour. The beach in tlie neighborhood of Chicago was a ”lee shore.” From Glencoe to South Chicago it was strewn with

wreckage.

Thirty-Eight IVrishod. Chicago, May 22.—The latest estimate of the loss of life off the harbor of Chicago during the recent storm is twenty-eight. Add to this number the six members of tlie crew of tlie schooner Cummings, wrecked off Milwaukee on Friday, and the four life-savers off Port Huron, Mich., and the total loss at these three points alone is thirtyeiglit. The schooners Myrtle and Evening Star, wrecked at Twentyseventh street Friday evening, Lave gone to pieces, and tne Jack Thompson is rapidly meeting the same fate. FIN* Haven* Go Down. Port Huron. Mich., May 22.'—In nn effort to save tlie crew of the schooner William Shupe, which was water-

enraged at government 14 out Friday night and rule, assailed the government quarters ! ( ri ^ c *° s lore ’ nn ^ es nor th* Naturat Sinsr Lntao. wrecked the h>.ildim,J da y- four volunteer life

savers were

drowned. The dead are: Angus King, (’apt. Henry Little, William Lewis and Barney Mills. Capt. Daniel Lynn

seam ashore and was saved.

at Sing Latao, wrecked the buildings and killed the governor and forty

clerks.

The democratic congressional convention of the Fifteenth Missouri dis-

trict nominated C. li. Morgan.

The Michigan supreme court ordered a recanvass of the returns on tlie constitutional amendment increasing tlie

attorney general's salary.

A gigantic anarchist plot to explode

bombs in various European cities was • from the northern

discovered in Paris.

Illinois mine owners will try to settle tlie coal strike by offering to advance the wage scale in tlie southern and central districts. Hearing of the case of Prendergast, tlie murderer of Mayor Harrison in Chicago, lias been set for June 11. Miss 1 mHoff, a teacher in the AngloJapanese school at Yonewaia, Japan, who preached against idol worship, was stoned by a mob that afterward

tore her eyes out.

At Dorseyville, La., Adolph Block and Jules Lake engaged in a gun fight with a negro and all three were killed. The Pan-American Bimetallic association, composed of representatives from tlie United States, South and Central America and Old Mexico, met in Washington. In his opening address Mr. Fiske said a revolution would come if relief were not granted in tlie line

of free coinage.

Great I.omh to Farincrit.

Chicago. May 22.—By the frosts of Friday and Saturday nights incalculable damage was done to growing crops over an extensive range of territory. Tlie effect of tlie coltl wave was felt

line of Dakota

to tlie gulf. it also went well toward the At antic, especially in the southern states. Fruits, vegetables, wheat, corn and other cereals suffered severely from the remarkable weather. The Dakotas. Minnesota. Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Texas, Kentucky and Tennessee sent reports of trouble from snow and ice.

CITIES INUNDATED. Dlnaxtrou* Flood a in Many Portions of Pennsylvania. Altoona, Pa., May 22.—The reservoir at Kittunning point, 0 miles above here, broke at 2 a. in. .Monday morning. sweeping down upon llolidaysburg. A locomotive was sent down to that place to warn tlie people who had already been put upon the lookout. Williamsport, Pa.. May 22.—The river continued to rise during the night and nearly the entire business

portion of the city is under water. The Western L'nion Telegraph office, which is situated on comparatively high ground, lias 0 inches of water on its floor. There has been no telegraphic communication with Lock Haven since 5 o'clock Sunday afternoon, at which hour the telegraph operator was driven from his office by tlie rising flood. Four miles of track of the Glen Allen Lumber company have been swept away. The boom at Lock Haven lias broken and 15,000,000 feet of logs have been lost. Tlie Upper Linden boom also broke at 5:30 Sunday afternoon. It contained 10,000,000 feet of logs and they have gone down. Driven from Their lloinen. Bradford, Pa., May 22.—The worst flood in Bradford’s history is rushing through Tuna valley. Twenty streets contiguous to the creek are inundated and hundreds of families are driven from their homes. Tlie east and west branches of the Tuna are both transformed into good-sized rivers. Below Foreman street, at the confluence of tlie two streams, the flood is a quarter of a mile wide and is high enough to ruin all the carpets in the houses on Hilton and other streets in tlie lower part of the Sixth ward. ImprinoiKMl in Thoir llonieti* Huntingdon, Pa., May 22.—Within the last forty-eight hours the Juniata and the Raystown branch have risen 22 feet, flooding the low farms and imprisoning whole families in their homes. Portstown, a suburb of this town, was flooded to the second floors of tlie houses, and Allegheny street in this city was under water. Tlie gas company’s works here have been abandoned to the rising waters, and many residences and business houses are flooded to the second floors. DufTuln Docs Not Fscape. Buffalo, N. \\, May 22.—All the lower portions of the city are flooded. At Portville the streets are submerged and people are being driven from their houses. Merchants have been forced to take their goods off the floor and pile them on the counters aud upon boxes and barrels. Ten Liven Lent. Pittsburgh, Pa., May 23.—All the rivers and streams of western Pennsylvania had been swollen by Monday to floodtides, and were still rising. Ten lives were reported lost. The greatest damage done is along tlie line of tlie Pennsylvania railroad between Altoona and Johnstown. Tlie loss to the company will amount to 81,000,000. Bridge No. fl, which was washed away during the Johnstown flood of 1889, was swept down again. Several miles of roadbed and track were washed away, part of it being tlie eastern approach of the stone bridge at Johnstown. Three buildings were carried away in tlie central part of the city and a large number of others Viadly damaged. Tlie store of Anthony George was submerged. and, although anchored with ropes, tiie water swept it away. The residences of Emanuel James and Charles Statleralso went downstream. At midnight, Monday, the Monongahela, Allegheny and Ohio rivers were still rising and flooding all the cellars in the lower part of Pittsburgh and Allegheny. Iii Johiifttown. Several bridges and wooden houses below Conemaugh were badly damaged, but tlie greatest damage was in Johnstown. In tlie Eleventh ward an Oklahoma house, owned by Peter Seymour, was caught by tlie raging waters and swept to destruction. A threestory building of Philip Brown was torn from its foundation and greatly damaged. The iron bridge at this place was badly wrecked. Fully 815,ooo damage was done to property within 100 yards of the Pennsylvania passenger station here. A Cloiidhurnt. Near Edensburg on Sunday night occurred a cloudburst which swelled the Conemaugh river to many times its normal size. The volume of water reached Johnstown about 8 o'clock in tlie morning and was accompanied by wholesale destruction. The flood was first felt at Southfork, where numerous small buildings were swept away. The Schuylkill River K1hc*. Philadelphia, May 23.—The Schuylkill river began to rise rapidly Sunday, and by Monday night tlie city fronts on both sides the river were over flowed. The B. & O. tracks were nearly 5 feet under water for some distance. The Delaware and Lehigh rivers were also considerably swollen. Farmers SufTer. The storm lias been a bad one on the farmers, many cornfields have been ruined, tlie corn being washed from tlie ground. Throughout the city trees were blown down, cellars flooded and. Many washouts occurred. A dozen or more families in South Pottstown liuve liven driven out of their houses. At Schuylkill Haven a number of families living in the lowlands were compelled to flee from their homes. All the factories along the Lehigh river are closing down. At Easton and Bethlehem the factories are flooded with 8 feet of water. Three bridges have been carried away on the Pine Creek division of the Reading railroad at Suedburg, Stony Creek and Dauphin and traffic is completely checked. In tin* Genesee Dansville, N. Y., May 28. —The worst flood in years in the Genesee valley has just been experienced. The valley is one vast expanse of water. Tlie destruction to growing and newly planted crops is complete. The Bradner creek at Cummingsville has swept everything along its banks, carrying down acres of rieli farming land and depositing the soil in the creeks in the valley below. Tlie Canaseraga valley has suffered terribly. Wor»e Tliun In '89. Williamsport, Pa., May 28.—At 1 p. m. Monday the river reached a point 1 foot higher than it did in '89. Tlie entire city was under from 4 to20 feetof water. All tlie logs at the boom were swept away. The loss to property will exceed $1,000,000.

IMlil - Mr, Hubert Barber Canton, Ohio.

Rheumatism Could Walk Only by the Help of a Cane Until Hood’s Sarsaparilla Cured. “For 15 years I have been afflicted with rheumatism, more especially In tho feet. About oue year ago I was scarcely able to walk at alt By reailiug testimonials In the newspapers I was persuaded to try Hood's Hood’s Cures Sarsaparilla. After taking throe bottles I was able to go without my cane. I continued faithfully with the medicine and Improved Fast. I have taken one dozen bottles and can walk without any difflculty and attend daily to my work at tho watch factory.” Kouebt Babiier, 133 Prospect Av., Canton, Ohio.

Hood’s Pills cure liver Ills, jaundice, biliousness, sick headache and constipation. 25c.

DR. KILM ER’S,

KiDNEUIVER-^ Vu D Zl H

Pain in the Hack joints or hii**, sediment in urine like brick-dust frequent calls or retention, rheumatism. KMoicy Complaint Diabetes, dropsy, scanty or high colored urine. Urinary Troubles Stinging sensations when voiding, distress pressure in the parts, urethral irritation, stricturo. Disordered Liver Bloat or dark circles under tho eyes, tongue coated, constipation, yellowish eyeballs. At Drugglnts, 50 rvnln and $1.00 alxe. “Invalids’ Guido to Health'’ free—Consultation free. Dr. Kilmer Sc Co., Binghamton. N. Y. The Greatest fledical Discovery

of the Age.

KENNEDY’S

MEDICAL DISCOVERY, DONALD KENNEDY, of ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures jevery kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula

down to a common Pimple.

He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both tliNiider humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from tha first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted

when tlie right quantity is taken.

When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same w'.th the Liver of Bowels. This is caused bv the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Dead the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will

cause squeamish feelings at first.

No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed*

„ ... a [| -

time. Sold by all Druggists.

WhenyouwantA

. HORSEPOWER,. owiNging Stacker, oelf Feeder. —“OR AN**— E N a r N EL, As thev^re the-Best /uosrwM &mo6i/£mi£D fm.

Remember the name : The De Long Pat. Hook and Eye. Also notice on face and back of every card the words: See that hump? TRADE*MARK KEO. AJ*. Richardson & f)c Long Bros., Philadelphia.