Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 20 August 1885 — Page 2

to

MARK-

TRADE

OUG

Xreefrom Op iaies, JSm iiVfrf and Poisons

PKOMBJ.SAFE,SURE

Cure for

CAIISII^CoWf

other Throat

fl»d liUflft AfliMHrtilflfc

FIFTY CRJCTA A UOTTM:. AT VIJW'-J-RIBTB A^D PSALETMU THE t'HATTFAKH.*..YOFIKLKV NNLIIREORR,S.K

CEMSHEW FerPaiii

Cures Khsumatism, Neuralgia, ]Barkiihr, Hcfttiarbc, TonOinrko Sprains rtrui»o» and

Fifty

Cents.

other

l'aliu and Athch

At Drnjtjlsts and

Dealer*.

iHE CHAIILES A. VOGELttt CO., ltaltUcoro, Jlrl., C.S.A.

Mpstii Mi!

Atlanta, Ga., May 13, 1885.

'tyj

I sufferod for more than fivo years'with, iadigestion, scarcely able to retain the simplest food on my stomach. The burning sensation was almost intolerable, and my whole system was deranged. I was wakeful and could not sleep, and consequently more or less nervous all the time. I declined in flesh, and suffered all the usual depression attendant upon this terrible disease. In a word, I was miserable. At last, failing to find relief in anything else, I commenced the use of Swift's Specific. I began to improve at once. The medicine toned up the stomach, strengthened the digestive organs, and soos all that burning ceased, and I,could retain food without difficulty. Now my health is good, and can eat anything in the shape ot food, and digest it without the slight est difficulty. I most cheerfully bear this testi mony, because there are hundreds suffering as I •was, and I am sure they can be as readily healed. Take the prescribed dose after eating, instead of before. JAMES MANN, No. 14 Ivy street.

Free From Malaria.

In the fall o? 18811 was taken with a case oi malarial fever which prostrated me both Taody and mind. I was drugged after the old ashion wth mercury and other mineral mixtures, bat with no good results. My health was shatterand my energy gone. My legs and feet would •swell, and I had what everybody thought was *lropsy. These symptoms alarmod me, and I was *eady to grasp at any remedy suggested. A friend lid vised me to try Swift's Specific. I procured three bottles and commenced its use. The swelling soon subsided. I have taken the three bottles, which have made a perfect cure, and I feel like a •ew man today. There never was a more meritorious medicine offored to suffering humanity.

It has wrought wonders for me. WILLIS JOXES. Leesburg, Lee county, Ga., March 11,1886. For sale by druggists. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free.

THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.,

N. Y., 157 W. 23d St. Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.

fifi "writ-tf*

MKSrl PHS!

"I ache all over!" What a commori expression and how much it nqeans to nqany a poor sufferer! These aches liave a cause, and nqore frequently thari is generally suspected, the cause is tfye Liver or Kidneys. No disease is more painful serious thaq tfyese, arjd no renqedy is so prompt aqd effective as

ISHLEITS

Bitters-

No remedy has yet beerj discovered tl^at is so effective iq all KIDNEY AND LIVER COMPLAINTS, MALARIA, DYSPEPSIA, etc., ar\d yet it is simple and ^arrrtless. Science aqd nqedical skill have combined with woqderful success tfyose herbs whicf\ nature t^as provided for t^e cure of disease. It strengthens ar^d invigorates tl\e whole system. f'i

Hon. Thaddeus Stevens, the distinguished Congressman, once wrote to a fellow member who was Buffering from indigestion and kidney disease:

Try Mishler's Herb Bitter?, I believe it will cure you. I have used it for both indigestion and affection of the kWaeys, and it is the most wonderful combination of medicinal herbs I ever saw." MISHLER HERB BITTERS CO., 525 Commerce St., Philadelphia. Parker's Pleasant Worm F? V-J™ I^VER Fails

Iptc iffcekty (gazette.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 20,1885.

Mix stove polish with vinegar and a teaspoonful of sugar. *,

"Rough on Catarrh.-*'

Corrects offensive odors at once. Com plete cure of even worst chronic cases,, also unequalled as gargle for Dipthena, Sore Throat, Foul Breath. 50c.

"Dear Sir: I am too busy making history to write it," was Senator Mahone's reply to a Virginia editor who requested some historic information.

CATARRH OF THE BLADDER. Stiaging, irritation, inflammation, all Kidne^ and Urinary Complaints, cured aj "Buchu-Paiba." $1.

BEST AT RIVERSIDE.

GEN. GRANT'S MARCH TO "ETER? NAL HEADQUARTERS."

Pictures oflfc Funeral—Lyfiig In St* at ^Sow York—North, and South Clasp Hands Above

His Coffin.

[Special Correspondence.!

NEW

Yon^, Aug. 8.—The mortal remains

of Ulysses S. Grant rest at last in the spot nelectod by his wife. Riverside park, on the Hudson. Our readers have had thft loveiy and picturesque place fully described. The funeral services, which have been proceeding step by step in solemn pageant for nearly a •week, ended to-day at Riverside.

Fully 75,000 people viewed the general's remains at Albany. A committee of 100 citizens of New York met the body at the capital city and escorted it to the metropolis. Minute guns wore fired all the morning at Albany, and continued while the train moved out through the suburbs. Bells tolled from a dozen church steeples. This feature of tolling bells attended the progress of the funeral throughout. At New York the weird and mournful sound was heard at intervals from Wednesday till Saturday.

THE OLD BKUh

One of tho Now York bells has a history that is worth mentioning. The corporation of the Collegiate Reformed Dutch church has three places of worship in the city, in all these tho bells were tolled at sunrise, noon and sunset, daily while Grant's body lay in state at city hall, and while the funeral pageant was passing to Riverside., One of the churches is at the corner of Fifth avenue and Forty-eighth street. The bell in its tower ,wns cast in Amsterdam in 1731, and presented to the church corporation by CoL Abraham De Peyster, for the use of the Old Middle Dutch church, which stood at Nassau and Cedar streets, on the ground now occupied by the Mutual Life Insurance company's building. The bell rang on July 9, 1776, when the Declaration of Independence was read at tho head ef each brigade of Washington's army, tlien stationed in this city, and en July 4,1776, the day of reopening of the church for divine service after its desecration during the revolutionary war. It was tolled at Lincoln-1 funeral

ififcl /(y

FUNERAL TRAIN PASSING WEST POINT. West Point was perhaps tho spot of tha world the general loved most in his lifetime. A curious incident happened here. As the train bearing his dead tody came in sight of the well known hill a straight bolt of lightning shot down to the earth out of the dark cloud in tho background, and seemed to plunge into the topmost point of a 'H™ hill in the distance. The train had now slacked up to apace of not more than three or four miles an hour. All eyes Were turned upon the spot Gen. Grant loved so well, and on which he had so recently looked for the last time. The white dresses of groups of ladies could be seen through the dark foliage of the academy grounds, and a moving to and fro'which indicated an unusual stir, but no sound or hint of a gun was heard. Suddenly, when the train had got within its own length of Garrison's station, a puff of white smoke came from tho landing at the foot of the road leading up to tho grounds, and in two or three seconds there came the heavy boom of a gun, followed quickly by another and another, until in all tHe Federal saluta of thirteen had been fired. Long before this was over, however, the train had reached the station, and there, drawn up in a line that was s*.rai*ht to a hair's breadth, stood the corps of cadets in their gray coats and whito trousers, holding their guns at present, their eyes looking straight before them, and their erect, athletic forms as motionless es the ground on which they stood. In the csntcr of their line the color-bearer stood with the colors drooped and wrapped in crape- At their left, drawn up in another line, stood all the officers of the post in full

uniform. The last of the thirteen guns sent a parting echo after the train as it rounded curve out of sight, and then almost instantly the storm that had been apparently following the train on all its journey down broke with such fury a!s to shut out at once from sight the opposite shore of the river.

The train came over the New York Central read. It was consequently on the opposite side of the Hudson river from West Point, which is on the west bank. At a rural point above Poughkeepsie a simple, touching picture presented itself. A grizzle-bearded man was working alone in a field. He looked like an old soldier. Not a creature was in sight except a great blaek Newfoundland dog that lay on the grass beside him. As the train passed the old soldier knelt on one knee, holding His hat reverently above his head, and in this position he remained motionless as a statue until the train rounded a curve.

A TRIBUTE Of RESTTCZ.

T^trine the iournev from Albanv to He* York not a bell or whistle sounded on cue train.

The reception of the body at the Central station at Forty-second street, and the sub* sequent march down to city hall, constituted as imposing a spectacle as is often seen. It was attended with all the splendid insignia and ceremonial of a military funeral The final procession itself on Saturday was not more magnificent. A tremendous rainstorm burst just as the parade began, but none regarded it. The steady regular troopa and the dainty National Guard alike stood under the terrific flood of water as if it had not been.

A line Qf..m0u*bt£ nnuo* cievea the ww

ISIS

rirth

a hollow balf-square, came the commander of the military, department of New York, Gen. Winfield *J3cott Hancock,- the hand' aomest man in America. Ho was in magnificent uniform, fend mounted upon a beauVtul ho—a. Involuntarily one bought of hlsfamous rile down the lines at tlMf battia •^Gettysburg.

THE CATAFALQUE.

Then came his staff, mounted, noble looking men. After them followed some-com-panies of United States artillery, with six field pieces. Then came United States marines. After thfse were a brigade of regiments of the New York National Guard. Then waB what all were looking for, the funeral car itself. It was so tall that the top,of the waving plumes interfered with the telegraph wires. To prevent this, men carrying a long black pole walked beside the car, and raised the wires while it passed uftder. Upon its top, in open sight, was the coffin. It was covered with blue silk velvet, and had silver handles.

The car was drawn by twelve b'ack horses. They were covered with a wab-liko black stuff that draped them in mourning. Walking at the head of each wen a colored groom in black. Tho faithful veterans of the G. A. R. guarded their beloved dead commander as they had guarded the last hours of his life. Just in front of the catafalque was a carriage. Thoao who have read our illustrated letters would have had BO difficulty in recognizing its occupants to bo Dr. Douglas and tho doughty Parson Newman. Behind the car were carriages in which the same readers would have discovered Col. Fred Grant, the colored attendant, Harrisen, and others. CoL Fred Grant is a very fine looking man. After them came yet other New York National Guard regiments. They wore fancy uniforms of red coats and whito trousers, white coats and colored trousers, etc., with spiked helmets. Among them was the New York Seventh. Its uniform is gray coat, white trousers and white hslmofc. These regiments are among the flower of American militiamon. Their drill, uniforms and fine physique attracted general attention. Regimental bands played solemn music all along the line picORATIONS AT CITY HALL.

The coffin rested upon the same sappcrt that had upheld it at Mb. McGregor. At the head was a magnificent floral piece. It was seven feet wide, and nearly ten feet high. In the center was an immense broken column, composed of asters, hollyhocks, pond lilies, glodiolas anl white and Marechal Niel roses. Upon it were perched three white dove?, just fluttering as if to begin a winged flight. Hanging from the column

A FLORAL PXEC3L

was a large shield of red, white aid blue immortelles, flanked on either side by an American flag of the same flower?.. Beneath the shield was a scroll of purple immortelles, bearing the letters

UU.

mt I

ft?

mil

THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

avenue. Ttren, nuing aioue in

S. G." immediately

above a sheaf of wheat and a sickle. At the left of the base stood an urn, about four feet high, made of asters, with handle* of purple immortelles. ,It was filled with lilies. Just at the foot of. the urn was a broken swdrd of Mareohal Niel roses, and a pen of white roses. At the right of the base wai a large anchor of hollyhocks, and in the center of the base, nesr the bottom, wa3 -the coat-of-arms of the city worked in various flowers. This tribute was ,'A' I-

I

ABIS WOMEN'S TRIBUTE

In the center of the balcony, above th9 grand staircase, was a floral piece, modeled in imitation of an old- fashioned cloek. Beneath the dial, worked in immortelles, was the date "1823," the year Gen. Grant was born, and the dial hands were stopped at 7:08. On the pendulum box was worked in purple and white flowers "Woman's Relief Corps, G. A. R." The hands were stopped at the hour and moment of Gen. Grant's death, July 2a Beneath the clock was the beautiful bronze bust of Grant that was modeled by Rupert Schmid, of Munich, last April. At the foot of the coffin was another fine floral piece presented by the Loyal Legion. veterans oT the Grand 'Army Grant post carried the coffin of their dead captain down the stone step3 of the city hall and up the black-covered wooden steps to the lofty funeral car. At 10 minutes before 10 o'clock this dispatch was sent to overy corner of the union: "Gen. Grant's casket now in catafalque. The procession starts."

Ambulances accompanied each regiment to gather up those who fell by the wav. Among the spectators, however, men, women and children now and teen were overcome. These were lifted into the ambulancQMnd SVried off. *1- W MlH -f

I rn

VO** 'it £&t

Tt is auatf&urit so many noted men will be togeth-r again in the present genercti on. President Cleveland and his cabinet were there, and the vice president aricT Secretary Bayard rode alone in at carriage drawn by six bay horses.

Many in -the crowd were inquiring for Gen. Shermlto. "Where is he? Is be not onhoraeback?" people asked one another in Whispers. Exactly this question was asked of a ganeral of the army by a friend a day or t#o before. "On horseback?" retorted the general, laughing, "you don't know Sherman. He is much niore likely to put on a linen duster and stsaw hat and sit bunched up in' a hack." So it propped^ or almost so, for the grim and Democratic old fighter did ride in a carriage along with the other pall bearers, though not in a linen duster. Ha Was ablaze with gold, and no man's uniform was worn with more grace or better effect than he wore his.

At intervals, after the procession started, the man-of-war anchored along the Hudson fired salutes Minute guns boomed over toe waters.

Governors of twelve states were in the urocessioo-

r/v

THE PALL BKAJUOUL

They were: Gen. Win. '1. enermqn, Lieut.. &?n. Phil Sheridan, Admiral D. D. Porter, Rear Admiral J. T. Werden. Gen. Joseph £. Johnston, Virginia A. J. Drexel, Philadelphia George S. Boutwell, Massachusetts George V. Childs, Philadelphia John A. Logan George Jones, Oliver Hoyt, Gen. Simon B. Buckner.

Joseph fi. Joha6ton and 8. B. Buckner clasped hands acress the blue-covered coffin with Tecumseh Sherman and Phil Sberidan, RIIJ together they looked down upon the dead face of tho soldier of the Union, him who was the first of all to say: •'LRT US HAVU PEACH."

Here were Sherman and Johnston, the two great enemies who closed the war. What a scene this must have been to them I

Fifty ex-Confederato soldiers took part in the Grant funeral procession and oareincmies at Chicago.

FT7IVO THE LAST SALUTE.

At 4:30 o'clock the funeral car reached the tomb. Bishop Harris, the oldest bishop of the Methodist church, read the burial serce of his denomination. But the solemn ritual of the Grand Army of the Republic was first read. As the bishop's voice died away two little girls, Gen. Grant's grandchildren, laid flowers upon the coffin. Then the undertaker's men lifted the double coffin into the great

ghoul-prcof steal casket within the vault. Ryan,

They staggered beneath its weight. When

this was done Col. Grant and wife led the family orocessicndown into the vrult, where they remained tor' several moments alone. When they emerged, the iron gates were closed and locked by one of the undertaker's assistants, who delivered the key over to Gen. Hancock. Turning to Mayor Grace Gen. Hancock formally tendered it to him, who in turn handed it to Commissioner Crimmins. It will remain in his keeping till the removal of the body to the pei-man* ent tomb.

The moment after the vault was locked. The New York Seventh regiment fired thrw volleys over the grave. As the echoes roiled and rumbled another regiment, the New York Twenty-second, caught up the sound and fired salutes, and aether and another, till there was a roar of earthquake in tha

throng bf gan to disperse. Such was Gen. Grant's march at the head of his army to eternal he^dquartefsl

A. J.

'Mm

"Powerful heaby rain, dis. An' it 'pears to perfolato right frco dis umberil, an' ng2is down my spineual column."

Public-Spirited Man. I [The Patrol.")

A

7

THE CHOLERA^

The Death Rate Increasing.

PARIS, August 18.—The autumn manouvres in the south of prance have lften abandoned on account of the preval&c© ofdiol£rk. 'MADBfD, August 18.—There weite 4,4-33 new cases of cholera reported throughout Spain yesterday and 1,648 deaths from the disease. ».r

There is great excitement in Seville over tfrfe goveramen^ proposal to abolish the powef of the local authorities during the prevalence of cholera because of the inefficiency sanitation and to itself assume the direction of the city's local affairs. The populace are hostile to the doctors and averse to any interference in family affairs, and they strongly support the local authorities. Great crowds assembled in aM the public places last evening to discuss the situation and the civil guard was caUed upon to. disperse them. ft

PARIS, Aug. 13.—Eeports received today from Marseilles state that the cholera there has received a fresh inpetus owing to the extreme heat, the number of new cases has steadily increased, and that the disease is unusually fatal in consequence of the heat.

ROME, Aug. 13.—The government is arranging to convey poor Italians employed at Marseilles and along the French coast by rail to Italy in order to be able to supervise their habits and prevent their infection with cholera. The Informa (newspaper) protests against this action as calculated to introduce cholera into Italy.

RANDY CHURCHILL.

5

He Makes a Rip Rorarmg Speech. LONDON, Aug. 13.—In a speech at Wimborne-Minster, last evening, Lord Randolph Churchill, secretary for India, denied that he was actuated against Earl Spencer and Lord Bipon by personal feeling. He assailed only their methods of governing. Lord Bandolph denounced the radicals for wishing to tax the poor man's beer, which, he said, was, food equally with bread. Lord Randolph said he cared not a rap what the Daily News and the Standard said about him. S\ich criticism was as effective as water on a duck's back. He emphatically denied that the conservatives wanted to tax the food of the people. He claimed for the conservatives the passage of the Seatz bill. Lord Randolph taunted the radicals with having no policy while the Tories were carrying out a great ong, having for its Object the strengthning of the Empire at home and abroad. They hope to create an overpowering navy which would be adequate defense to the coasts of Great Britain and the colonies and to commerce they believed they could bring about a revival of the trade and industries of the country. Lord-Bandolph repudiated the charge that he desired a war with Bussia for the sake of securing votes at the election.

As a consequence of Lord Bandolph's reference to newspaper criticisms the Standard this morning ignores his speech.

"She Hath Done What She Could." 0 [COMMUNICATED.] Departed this life, August 6th, Mrs. Nancy JaDe McPheeters, nee Bigney. She was born in Orange county, Ind., December 5th, 1819, and was married to Alexander McPheeters October 27th, 1836. She died August 6th, 1885, at her homer near Honey creek, Vigo county, IncL The deceased was the mother of eleven children, five of whom survive her—Samuel A., William M., Matilda Byan, Etta Cantrell and Clara Durham.

Jca

1

BOTHWELL.

Baraiuer Showers. [Harper's Bazar.]

She wad a member of the Presbyterian church, having early in life sotight and

found her Savior. She has lived a consistent, Christian life. The subject of these remarks was a close friend of the writer for more than thirty years, and, like all who knew her, we could but love her for her Christian worth and examples. Often have we gathered true inspiration and strength for the better life from ber pure influence. Her ever kind and cheerful face and cheery voice was always like an oasis in the desert in life's journey. I remember years ago in conversation with her ifshe chose her own epitaph), we were talking of Christian charity and other good works, when she said, "Cousin Clara, do you know that I desire no greater epitaph when I

While the echoes died away the great! gone than this, that it may be truthfully said "She has done what she could." To this desire all of her actions in everyday life were adjusted. Under trials and afflictions, incident to this life as wife and mother and neighbor, the same Christlike patience aid true Christian fortitude was a subject of remark with those who knew her best. Yet like all others, her pathway in life was orten strewn with thorns-as well as' roses, jtj But like pure gold, she passed through 'j the crucible of trials and affliction only that the human dross might be separated from the purer gold, tried and

I ready for the Master's use. To her devoted children and husband we would say: "Try to follow her examples as she tried to follow Christ, never forgetting her prayers for you and her kind ministrations to you. Be ready, watching I and waiting for the great family reunion above, where is no more sorrow nor separation." Let us all so live that it may be truthfully said of UB as of her, "They have done what they could."

"There

is a day of sunny rest

Kor every dark and troubled night, And grief may hide in every breast,

OF^,JII

helps a little child who, with quivering YOURS forever. lips, asks direction in stranee nlacea From ISnron"

I

I

The English, stimulated by Russian enterprise in the same direction, are beginning to talk seriously of a railway from Europe to India.

TV

1{

But joy shall come with early light. And thon.who o'er T^Y loved one's bier Dost shed the bitter drops like rain, Hope that a brighter, happier sphere

Will give her to- thy arms again.

A public-spirited man is one who stops1 to loosen the halter of a horse which has -. 77~ .. ... one foot caught over the tie Strap or

For God hath marked each sorrowing day And numbered every secret tear,

I^5.A PIEA^^TAKE care of mv

"Crossest Man in Alabama." "De Grossest man in Alaharaa lives dar," said the driver as we approached a way-eide home, near Selma, Ala*, to ask'accommodations for the night^ At supper* and after it, "mine host" scqwl-

growl if the heavenly halo

didn't fit him, when incidental jnention being made of the comet of 1883, he said: "I didn't like its form, its tail should have bee_ fan shaped!"

But, next morning, he appeared half Offended at our offering pay for his hoapitality! My companion, however, made him accept as a present a.sample from his case of goods.

Six weeks later, I drew/ up the same house. The planter stepped lithely from the porch, and greeted'me cordially. I could scarcely believe that this clear complexioned, bright-eyed, animated fellow, and the morose being of a few weeks Dack, were the same. He inquired after my companion of the former visit and regretted he was not with me. "Yes," said his wife, "we are both much indebted to him."

T)

"How?" I asked, in surprise. "For this wonderful chauge in my husband. Your friend when leaving, handed him a bottle of Warner's safe cure. He took it, and two other bottles, and now—" "And now," he broke in, "from an ill-feeling, growling old bear, I am healthy and so cheerful my wife declares she has fallen in love with me again!"

It has made over again a thousand love matches, and keeps sweet the tempers of the family circle everywhere.— Copyrighted. Used by permission of American Bural Home*

S5

ALLEN'S

GENUINE ORIGINAL

I

NERVE DT BONE LINIMENT.

Priem. 2Se. per bottle. Introduced

CHAS. H... facturenOfflce,

in 1835 by

Gee. Maraton Allen. A painless, SURE and speedy cure tor Rheumatism .Neuralgia, Old Soies, Burns,Sprains Scalds, Cuts,Bruises,Bwelllngs ana all other bodily pains. Farmers and owners of stock recommendlt as the best known remedy for cure of Shoulder Strains.Cracked Heels, Scratches. Chafes or Galls, Sprains. Corks, Film in the Eye. etc. JB«IEAT*« Imltorioiu.

Sole

Prop,

AND Mann*

St.«Cincinnati*.Q*

NICHOLS'

BARK ARD IHOft used and recommended by the MEDICAL Profession for

asan IRON TOUIC

for LOSS of appetite, nervous prostration, tnU all troubles arising

the past twenty-liveyears,asai for loss of appetite nervon Dyspepsia anifall troubles arisim ,TT,flBBTT.ITT. FOKSALEBY ALLDRI GGISTS

from

GEU\ETT-

BARK & IRON

OVERALL FACTORIES.

About one Hundred and Sixty Dozen Over-

f"

alls Manufactured in' This City in one day. v, The manufacture of overalls is an industry in this city that affords employmenttoalarge number of people. The three factories employ about one hundred and seventy-five persons. The oldest establishment in the city is that of C. Zimmerman on north Sixth street. ,f They employ regularily about seventy persons who make on an average about fifty dozen overalls per day. ,v

Mr. Samuel Frank's factory was established about five years ago, the fac- 7 tory formerly was on north Sixth street but was recently moved to south Fifth street. Since their change of location they have added to the factory machines for making overalls. They have twen-ty-five machines and employ in the factory about forty persona They also, have a large number of persons who take the goods home and make overalls. In aiddition to the manufacture of overalls they make skirts, drawers and cheap pants. The machines are run by a gas engine.

The overall factory of Schloss, Thornman & Co. was established several years *f~ ago on south Fifth street in their present quarters. They are now doing a good business, employing about seven-ty-five persons who average about fifty dozen per day. The product of the es- '4 tablishnient is mostly shipped but of Ki» course the trade in this city is supplied.

THE CHOLERA.

ji).

ready

1

11

And Heaven's long ago of bliss EH all -V Pay for all her sufferings here."

baby,

Have your Bolood made clean and pur© with Wilder Sarsaparilia and Potash.

For Round Worms, Tape Worms. Spasms, Etc. ut Wilder sMother Worm Syr­

ens nothing but up

L-

4^

4

/"t

1

t*4i

4isii|Worse

and More of it.

MAJSSEIIJXJES, Aug. 15.—There were 37 deaths from cholera during the past 24 hours ending at noon today.

MADBID, Aug. 15.—There were 4819 new cases of cholera and 1840 deaths from the disease reported yesterday throughout Spain.

r. a

PABIS, Aug. 15.—Stringent measures are being taken to keep the cholera away from this city. Travellers from the south are quarantined. The streets are cleaned every night.

PABIS, Aug, 15.—The National, the first journal to announce the appearance of cholera at Marseilles insists that the number of deaths that have occurred there from the disease is stijl much underrated. fv

Railroad Material.

LONDON, Aug. 15.—The government

.'t­

will utilize the material intended for the Suakim-Berber railway in connecting the forts at Chatham, Portsmouth and' Plymouth, which will also be connected with great railway fines in order to provide

transportation for troops in

case of necessity.

Lord Iddesleigh.

LONDON, Aug. 15.—Lord Iddesleigh, First Lord of the Treasury, speaking at Exeter last evening said he could not say that the Conservative horizon was entirely unclouded, but their position had improved since they entered office, especicdly as regards Ireland.

A MILD delightful invigorant for delicate Females is Wilde tomach Bitters. Cures cos iveness and headache. J-.

Physicians' Licenses.

Elizabeth P. Taylor, under the three year clause, has taken out a physicians' license.