Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 October 1886 — Page 6
ml
TDM PEOPLE
DR. SWAYNE'S MEDICINES,
56th Year of continuous popular appreciation. The Zenith of Pharmaceutical Power. None others can excel it is impossible.
HWFEVER
oV0U^
0rlginal,
tested, Result
oi*ome.
fTCHINC PILES
A N
SKIN HUMORS
bi:iii.-hed by "Swayiie's Ointment" (Dr. Swjyne's best effort). It destroys the animalculee that cause the intense itching and unsightly eruptions. Heals ulceration and bleeding. Annihilates pain. As an external remedy Tor any purpose it is unequaled. 50c. a box.
THROAT
AND
LUNG TROUBLES
by
Conquero OVila*Cnerry first used by Dr,
•Swayne's Wild Cherry" st used by Dr. Swavne). It
stops the coughing, and soothes and heals the inflamed membrane. 25c. or SI a bottle.
HOW TO KEEP HEALTHY. Uood advice from Dr. Swayne. 1. Exercise daily. Eat plenty of good food. 3. Look on the bright side of life.—Strayne'a Pills and nature will do the rest. 25c. a box.
LONDON HAIR RESTORER.
Great English Toilet Luxury. Beautifies and adorns the hfcir. Endorsed fey Dr. Swayne. Stt l^d. a bottle. DB. SWAYNE'S MEDICINES PREPARED OHLY BY
V,.
I A E I A
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NERVOUS
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VQLTA10 BELT CO., Marshall, Hich.
CATARRH
ELY'S
ICREAM BALM
[Gives Relief at once and cures
COLD IN HEAD CATARRH
HAY FEVEH
Not a Liquid, Snuff or Powder, Free from Injurious Drugs and Offensive odor*.
"FEVER
A particle is applied into each nostril an agreeable. P-ice 60 cents at Druggists: by registered, fOcts. Circulars free. ELY BRO Druggists, Owego, N. T.
fozette.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7,1886.
As a Cure for Sors Throat and Coughs, "Brown's Bronchial Troches" have been thoroughly tested, and maintain their good reputation.
A Bad Break.
"Yes." said the chairman sadly, "our temperance meeting last night would have been more successful if the lecturer hadn't been so absent-minded." "What did he do?" "He tried to blow the foam from a glass of water."
A"
Ladeis
Who use SOSODONT have only to open their lips to prove its excellence. Their white, gleaming, spotless teeth aDd fragrant breath will tell the story. There iB more demand for this whole some and unexceptionable preparation than for any other dentifirce in the mar ket.
Faith.
New York Sun: Old Mrs. Bently (starting for church)—Have ye got the umbreller, John?
Old Mr. Bently—What do ye want of the umbreller? Thar ain't a cloud in the sky.
Old Mrs. Bently—I know thar ain't, but it's bea dry an* dusty fer so long thet jess as like as not the preacher'll »«ay for rain.
ife .v...
AVEL1NG AND LEiBKNECHT.
Ordered Out of the Manhattan Club. NEW YORK,Sept 30. -Lawyer Willarcl Brown, some days ago, invited the Socialists Aveling and Leibknecht to dine with him at the Manhattan club, yesterday. In accordance with the invitation, the three were gathered around a small table, enjoying a good dinner yesterday afternoon. They were the centre of attraction for the few members in the building, and their presence was soon known to the Governors. A hasty consultation was held, and it was decided to ask Mr. Brown to iuvite his Socialistic guests to leave the building. This fwas done and the unwelcome guests departed. Mr. Brown afterwards explained that he had been introduced to the strangers in London by Henry Irving, and was not aware that he was violating any rules of the club in bringing the disorder preaching visitors
its doors.
within
AWARDS OF ENTRIES.
The Awards of Ei tries Made
at
the
Marion Grange Fair.
''DIVISION A.—LIVE STOCK,
$$ Shi
Be6t mare, 4 years and ov6r, $6 Murray Leonard 1st, Mare. 3 and under 4,$5 Drake 1st.
Mare, 2 and under 3, $5 Drake 1st. Gelding, 4 and over, $5, Fred Robinson 1st.
Gelding, 3 and under four, $5 A S Robinson 1st. Colt, 2 years and under 3, either sex, 85 Frank Jeffers 1st.
Colt, 1 year old and under 2, either sex, $4 WH Rector 1st. Colt, under 1 year, either eex, $5 12 entries, A Rector 1st,
Team horses or mares, to be driven to a lighj rig, 810 Willard Thompson 1st. SPECIAL PREMIUMS.
Franklin Butt, for best sucking colt 6f any breed, 85 11 entries, A Rector 1st.
rv
0 W Baily, for colt tmder 1 ydAf, sired at his stables, 85 Wm Turner 1st
Second best, 83 A Rector 2nd. George Champer, for 2 years old and under 3, stallion, 82 Drake 1st.
William Carter, for suckling colt, sired by any that may be exhibited at the fair two or more entries, 82 W Bailey 1st.
Enos Strous, 228 Main street, Terre Haute, for 1 year old colt, 2 pounds best gun powder tea, value 82 Drake 1st.
Marian Garrigus, on colt sired by his horse, 85 A Roberts 1st. Second best colt, 83 Gibson 2nd. "t
Horses for General Purposes Pittenger, Brazil, Ind, for best 3 years old for general purposes, a riding bridle delivered at my place of business, 3rd door east of postoffice, on presentation of premium card, value 82 W Downing 1st.
SECTION II.
Horses For Heavy Draft.
Best stallion 4 years and over, 815 Geo Huffman 1st. Second best, 88 W Bailey 2nd.
Stallion 3 and under 2, 86 same 1st. Mare 4 years aud over, 86 I N Lee 1st.
Mare 3 and under 4, 85 Holmes 1st. Mare 2 and under 3, 85 W Lumer 1st.
Colt 1 year and under 2, either sex, 85 Wm Baker 1st. Colt under 1 year, either sex, 84 N Lee 1st.
Team of horses or mares, 810 Rector 1st.
SECTION III.
Horses For General Purposes. Best double team light harness horses driven to light rig, 810 S W O'Brien 1st.
Single driving horse drove to light rig, 86 9 entries, same.
SECTION IV.
Mules, Jacks And Jennets.
Best span of mules, $S Ira E 1st. SPECIAL PREMIUMS.
Biggs
1
CH Rule, for best span of mules, 82 50. S W O'Brein, for pair of general purpose, mules, 84 Ira E Biggs lit, prietor Glick House, Corey, Ind.
pro-
CLASS 2.—CATTLE., SECT ION 1. Cattle of Any Breed. R. S. HOBBS, SUPERINTENDENT. Best herd of cattle two years and over, one male and four females, two or more entries, 830 James Daily 1st.
Bull, 3 years and over, 810 Green Bull, 2 years and under 3, 87 Rector 1st.
Bull, 1 year and under 2,86 Jas Dailey 1st. Calf, under 1 /ear, 85 same.
Cow. 3 years and over, $5 same. Cow, 2 years and under 3, $5 same. Heifer, 1 year and under 2, 84 same. Heifer, calf, under 1 year, 84 S Lee 1st.
SPECIAL PREMIUMS. ,•
Bruce, thb butcher, east Main street, Terre Haute, for best Cotswold sheep for mutton, 82 Jas Dailey 1st.
WEEKLY GAZETTE, one year for best calf under 6 months old, same.
CLASS 4.-SHEEP.
Best pair lambs, 84 Jas Dailey 1st Ewe, two or more entries, 83 same. SPECFAL PREMIUMS.
Jeffers, Yigo Woolen Mills, best
pen of sheep, one buck and four ewe3, goods 82 same. ,,
CLASS 5-POULTRTAND PET STOCK.
•. $ ^SECTION I. '"'-Chickens. GRANGE PREMIUMS.
Best pair Plymouth Rock, $1 S Mauer 1st. Pair Partridge Cochins, $1 Ed Lawrence 1st
Pair Black Spanish, $1 Albert Pugh 1st. SPECIAL PREMIUMS. I
W Baily, for pair Plymouth Rock 81 Lloyd Reotor, 1st W Baily, for pair light Bramahs, 81 Albert Pugh, 1st
John Schurb, for pair Plymouth Rock, he to have them, 81.50 S Maurer, 1st.
Green Triplett, for pair Plymouth Rock, he to have them, 81 Geo N Rec-1 tor.
N Gregory, for best half dozen Plymouth Rock hens, full blood, he to have them, 84 same.
rooster, she have it, $1: Wm Wyeth, 1st
SECTION II. Turkeys.
GRANGE PREMIUMS.
Best pair turkey's, any breed, $1.50 Mahala Harper. 1st. Ennes Hamilton, for pair bronze turkeys raised in 1886, he to have them, Wm Coffman, 1st. ,,
George Dumm, for pair white Pekin ducks, he to have them, 81.50 John Rector, 1st
Mary Bradford, for beet Pekin drake she to have drake, 75c Et Lawrence 1st.
WEEKLY GAZETTE one year for pair toulouse geese Charles Moore, 1st.
SECTION V.
S Dubree, for a canary singer, he to have bird, $1 S Dubry, 1st. Mrs Wallace Collins, for best canary singer, she to have it, $1 Mrs Miller, 1st.
DIVISION B—-AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT.'
4
SPECIAL PREMIUMS.
O W Ayer, for best half bushel Yellow Dent corn, 50c A W Carter, 1st. Henry Felling, for best peck white corn, he have corn, 50, O N Hamilton, 1st.
A Reed, for best half bushel white corn, he to have corn, 50, ON Hamilton 1st
James Dickerson, for best bushel white corn, he to have the corn, 1 00, O N Hamilton, 1st.
James Lawson, for best half bushel white hominy corn, 1 00, ON Hamilton 1st
THE TERKE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
SECTION III. gf^ Geese and Ducks, -y,:
TEW™* &%BAXGB PBEMIUMS^TFE' Best pair geese any breed, $1.50 Nelson Palmer.
Pair toulouse geese, 1.50 same. SPECIAL PREMIUMS. Saml Dumm, for pair of dry land geese, he to have them, 82.50 Hamilton, 1st.
1
Pet Stock.
GRANGE PREMIUMS.
For cage of prettiest canaff birds, $1.50 Mrs Miller, 1st. For Becond cage of prettiest canary birds, 81 Lenna Nattkemper, 2nd.
CLASS 6^-GRAIN^ Vf
/-SECTION I.J,.
--w Wheat.
,J W. W. MILLER, SUIT. GRANGE PREMIUMS. Best half bushel red wheat, Hamilton, 1st.
{.R
Half bushel Fultz wheat, Lawrence, 1st.
V« ®A*S*
81 Et
SECTION II.
GRANGE PREMIUMS.'
Best half bushel White Russian, 81 Rector, 1st. SPECIAL PREMIUMS.
Dickerson, for best half bushel
Welcome oats, 50c ON Hamilton, 1st.
SECTION Jll. Corn.
GRANGE PREMIUMS.
Best half bushel white corn, $1 ON Hamilton, 1st. HPIf bushel Yellow corn, $1 Norris Swearinger, 1st. jHalf bushel Bloody Butcher corn, $1 John Collins, 1st. ... ....v
Yanness, for best half bushel
hominy corn, he to have the corn, 50, O N Hamilton. George S Zimmerman, 648 Main street, Terre Haute, Ind., for best bushel of corn exhibited at Fair, goods valued at 2 00, Miller, 1st
The Hudnuts, for best bushel hominy corn, 3 00, Miller, 1st. The Hudnuts, for second best bushel hominy com, 2 00, Isaac Layer, 1st.
The Hudnuts, for third best bushel hominy corn, 1 00, ON Hamilton, 2nd. W Eversoie, for best half bushel yellow corn, he to have the corn, 50, Norris Swearinger, 1st
Weekly GAZETTE one year for best half bushel white corn, four entries, O N Hamilton, 1st.
Newhart & Soif, for best half bushel hominy corn, 3 00, O N Hamilton, 1st. Second best half bushel, 2 00, Isaac Layer, 2nd.
John Holt will give for best bushel yellow corn, he to have the corn, $1J Miller, 1st.
A. J. Taylor, for best half-bushel potato onions, be to have them, $1 Blizabeth Dumm, 1st
Sarah Gregory, for best peck potato onions, she to have them, 75c Roena Vflnnaafi lof,
V. G. Dickhout, trunk bmilder, 642 Main street, half bushel largest red onions, one traveling valise, onions to be delivered, 83 John McBride, 1st
Hiram Breddy, for best peck potato onion sets, he to have' them, 50c Elizabeth Dumm, 1st.
J. E. Sherfey, for best half bushel onions delivered at my store in Brazil, one oane seat rocking chair, John McBride, 1st.
L. H. Dickerson. for best gallon{potato onion sets, he to have them, 50c W. W. Miller, 1st
Section V.
GRANGE PREMIUMS.
Best half bushel tomatoes, $1 'A. W. Carter, 1st.
SECTION VI. Beans.
Best pSck'soup beans, $1 00, Phebe Hamilton, 1st. SPECIAL PREMIUMS.
mouth, he to have them, $1, same, 1st Roedel, for best peck white navy 1 XCBAriKeAr
pri°f.chick6ne'1
Alder & Co., pair Lang Shang chick- SPECIAL PREMIUMS. en3, one pair dado window shade A. Jones, for largest watermelon, he same, 1st. to have it 50, Frank Hamilton, 1st.
George Allen, for best half peck
em, j» same. lima beans, Weekly Express one year, Mendeth Anderson, for pair Ply-
John
McBride, 1st
beans, $2, Bell Lawrence, 1st
any kind, $1 Albert Pugh, 1st CF Zimmerman, corner 13th and & SECTION VII. Main, for pair buff cochin fowls, he to1 .. *, have them, 83 same, 1st. Pumpkins, Squashes and Melons.
Mrs James, for Plymouth Rock Ab S Gray, for largest watermelon
exhibited at Grange Fair, he to have it, $1, Frank Hamilton, 1st Isaac Taylor, for largest pumpkin exhibited at Grange Fair, he'to have it, 50 O N Hamilton, st
Dora Eversoie, for the largest watermelon, she to have it 25, Frank Hamilton, 1st
Clifton Scofield, for the largest watermelon, he to have it, 30 Frank Hamilton, 1st
Lewis Haltman, Brazil, Clay County Democrat one year to the one showing largest pumpkin raised in Clay County, ON Hamilton, 1st
John Oren Rector, for largest watermelon, he to have it, 25, Frank Hamilton, 1st III
SECTION VIII. .^Garden Produce. SPECIAL PREMIUMS.
IW Modesitt, for the largest cabbage head, he to have it, 25, B. Perkins, 1st vr
D, Debbs, grocer, No. 1100 Main street, corner of Eleventh, for the largest cabbage head exhibited at Grange Fair, he to have the cabbage head 1 00, Mrs
Miller, st.
/.V: SECTION IX.
P*4^
banned Vegetables.
Best can corn, 50 Mrs George N Rector, 1st. Besfcan pumpkin, 50, Mrs Miller, 1st.
Best can tomatoes, 50, Mrs Rector, 1st.
CLASS 7—ROOT CROPS.
1
SECTION I.u'-*"
Irish Potatoes.
GRANGE PREMIUMS.
Best half bushel white Peach Blow, 81 O Rector, 1st. Best half bushel red Peach Blow, $1,
Rector, 1st
W
Best half bushel Early Rose, $1, O Lawrence, 1st. Best half bushel Early Ohio, $1, W W Miller, 1st-
Best half bushel Burbank, $1, John McBride, 1st. SPECIAL PREMIUMS.
Thomas 0 Gillaspie, for best half bushel White Star Potatoes, he to have them. 50c, W McBride, 1st.
Henry Nussel, for best half bushel Early Ohio, he to have them, 50c, S McBride, 1st
O W Ayer, for best half bushel Mammoth Pearl, $1, Frank Wickiser, 1st. Henry Hyde, for best bushel Early Ohio, he to have them, $1, W W Miller, 1st.
WeeHy GAZETTE one year for best half bushel O Mammoth Prolific, Frank Wickiser, 1st.
Kramer, harness maker, No .842 Main street, Terre Haute, Ind., for best bushel Early Rose exhibited at the Fair and delivered, a Buggy Whip valued at $1.50, S McBride, 1st.
Finkbiner & Duenweg, dealers in hardware, Terre Haute, for best bushel Peach Blow delivered at store, one corn sheller valued at $5, W Bennett, 1st.
A Foote, for best 12 potatoes of the Early Gem bought of me, $1, Frank Wickiser. ^1
SECTION II.
.. Sweet Potatoes Best half bushel sweet potatoes, 81. BPurkins, 1st.
SPECIAL PREMIUMS,5*''
Goldsmith, seed merchant, Terre
Haute, Ind., for beet bushel true Jersey Sweet Potatoes, $1, Purkins, 1st. A Collins, for largest dozen Yellow Nansemond Sweet Potatoes, he to have them, 81, Purkins, 1st
SECTION ni. Turnips.
Best half bushel turnips, 81, Johu id 1 SPECIAL PREMIUMS.
Dickerson. for best peck turnips,
25c, John McBride 1st SECTION IV. GRANGE PREMIUMS.
Best peck potato onions, 81, John McBride, 1st House Plants.
Best collection house plants, $2, Flora, Light, 1st. W Mewhinney, for prettiest collection house plants grown from Cuttings by the exhibitor in the year 18864 $2, Ossie Carter, 1st.
CLASS 9—FLO',VERS.
SECTION I.
PAPER AND CUT FLOWERS. SARAH HAMILTON, SUPT.
For prettiest paper flowers, $1, Mrs Miller, 1st. Lillie Bowles, fdr t\tfo prettiest bouquets of paper flowers, she to have them, 81 Mrs Jos Pugh, 1st
Mrs Rule, for nicest bouquet cut roses, 50c, Mrs Catherine Bell, 1st O. N. Hamilton, Secretary of the Grange Fair is one of the most accommodating men the GA2ETTK knows of. He ought to be ^elected^ secretary of 6tate. 'l
JUD.GE H.j). SCOTT.'
Extracts l-rom a Letter to His Friend, John J. Brake. John J. Brake lately received a letter from our former townsman, Judge Har vey D. Scott It was written at San Diego and bears the date of Sept 14th Of his health he says: "Since the weather became so warm I have not felt so well. I should have gone back into the hills but I did not know it so well as I do flow. I am learning a good many things. On the whole, however, I am as well as could be expected. The climate here has undoubtedly helped me." Of the country he says: "There is a big ground swell here that gets wider every day and men are making monev out of it If in the end they do not hold too much stock they will be all right Everything for miles around is cut up into town lots and put in the market and, what is curious, the lots sell. They can't be occupied in twenty years but they
Sell,
and
P'
well,
and the
thing goes on. You would like the climate in the winter but not in the summer it is so dry. I like it, however, for I am alive and it is due probably to the climate."
I
Terrific Explosion in
183611 SWIFTS SPECLFIC.L 111886
A REMEDY HOT FOR A DAY, BUT P0R' S&- HALF A CENTURY RELIEVING BUFFERING HUMANITY!
AN INTERESTING TREATISE ON BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES SENT FREE TO ALL APPLICANTS. IT SHOULD BE READ BY EVERYBODY. ADDRESS THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, QA.
GIMT POWDER.
Four,, Men Blown Into Fragments and Scattered Far and Wide.
Explosion Caused by Sportsmen ^Shooting Into the Building.
f$YACK,
NEW YORK, Sept. 30.—It is said that the shocks felt in Westchester and portions of eastern Connecticntt, this morning were due to an explosition of dynamite at Bay Chester, Westchester county, N.Y.
BARTOW ON THE SOUND, New York Sept. 30.—A terrific explosion occurred at the Ditmar powder works, Bay Chester, on the Harlem River branch of New York and New Haven
The names of the men killed are as follows: Ernest Dralen, John Susch, Max Shafbolt and Mr. Beinhart, ing was left of them except the fragments of their bodies. Their hands, legs, feet, arms and pieces of their skulls, backbones, and charred bits of ilesh were scattered in every direction, from five hundred to six hundred feet from tho packing house. Max Kruger, foreman of the works, says the explosion was caused by two men shooting into the building. He was in the packing house at the time, and, going out, found two men who said they were shooting squirrels. He says he threatened them with arrest and they became impudent As the explosion occurred the men were seen hurrying away.
iftfiSs
A
Powder
Packing House..
N. Y., Sept 30.—Just before
10 o'cl6ck this morning a heavy shock resembling the noise of' an earthquake startled the people here. Colored folks were frantic. One colored family named West ran out of the house, soreaming in terror. They were told that it was an earthquake from Charleston, and the head of the family cried: "Wiggins." The shock is supposed to be caused by a heavy explosition of dynamite somewhere near here.
NEW HAVEN, Conn., Sept. 30.—At 10:10 this morning the telegraph opera-tors-at Branford and Bridgeport reported that slight shooks had just been felt at those places. At "Wheeler & Wilson's sewing machine works in Bridgeport the shock was distinctly felt, the windows of the shops being severely rattled.
POET JEFFEBSON, L. I., N. Y., Sept. 30.—A continuous rumbling was felt here at 9:58 this morning.
BRIDGEPORT, Conu., Sept. o0.—A severe shock, supposed. to have been an earthquake, was felt here at 9:57 this morning. Buildings were severely shaken up in the western part of the city and the tenants were terribly frightened. In one house a lamp was thrown feom the mantelpiece and broken. Many people thought that Wiggins' prediction for yesterday had come to pass. As far as can be learned no particular damage was done.
CORSETS
Are warranted to. wear longer than any corset sold at same price. Ask for the celebrated Gt grade. For COMFORT and FIT it has no equal. We keep a full line of these very desirable goods and guarantee a perfect fit to all of our customers. We are authorized to refund money if these goods are not in every way satisfactory. h&s
HERZ Ladies' Bazar,
BROUGHT TO LIFE.
about ten o'clock this morning, result- On July 30 last Mrs. Frazer gave birth ing in the instantaneous death of four men to a child, and in August, after several employed in the factory. The explo-1 days' illness, was pronounced dead by sion occurred in the packing house, a her attending physicians. Dr. Mark H. one etory frame building 20 by 30 feet Laekereteen, who was also attending in the center of the grounds, and about ^rs'^
200 vards from the main factory, a large
building near the water where the bulk ^hout effect leu minutes of the giant powder and nitro-glycerine ^aDSe"' tbongh at that time used in the new acqueduct workls man-
ufactared. The men were hard at worK putting up and packing cartridges,when suddenly and without warning the explosion occurred, shattering the building to'splinters and blowing the four men to fragments. The exploding powder, of which there was a large quantity, shot up into the air as high as fifty feet and splinters of the building were blown over a mile distant
1
D. H. Stansfield, Superintendent of the Thorote Powder Company, near by, picked up a box full of fragments of the dead men and others assisted in the work and the remains were all put in a heap to await the coroner's arrival. One of the dead men leaves a family in Germany. The others were single men. Their clothing was burned to shreds. The manufactory of the Ditmar works was nearly wrecked, one end being blown to pieces, exposing the interior. After the explosion the lower timbers of the building'took fire and burned fierce-
ly. A large tree near by was torn up by
1#
TERRE HAUTE, iNO.
Elliot's Bay view Hotel at PeJhami Bridge, over a mile away, were shattered. Thomas Dinwoodie's blacksmith shop at Westchester was shaken violently and windows in many houses iu the same village were broken. This is the second explosion that has occurred in these works this year. The one last winter blew a man to fragments. The remains of the men killed today could not possibly be identified.
Many persons living miles away drove hurriealy to the scene and some of then! helped to gather together the fragments of the dead men. The windows, sashes and doors in the railroad station at Bay Chester, not far from the powder works, were blown to fragments, and the windows on the other houses were damaged, but no one outside the factory was hurt.
'j
Remarkable Return to Life Dead Chicago Woman.
AHypo'deMic Injection of the Alcohol of Nitro-GIvcerine-CHICAGO/ Sept. 29.—The Evening Journal today will publish a case of remarkable resuscitation from supposed death of a young married woman named Mrs. Frazer, the daughter of Mr. T. H. the Stevens, who with his family came here railroad from New York to live some years ago.
ea}d
cc?y£
of a
'I did everything I
J,0
r66.t°r®
a
respiration,
Ten minutes must have I was not
P°sltlon to watch the
position to watch the passage of time. Then it suddenly struck me that I would like to try a hypodermic injection of this solution of alcohol of nitroglycerine. I took up t&i drops of it and let the corpse have the full benefit of it The first minute there was not a pulsation, but just a gasp that was all. I looked at my watch and there were four such gasps distributed over the first sixty seconds, but that is not life. In the second minute there were six respirations and a slight heart pulse Noth-' c011^ be heard, but no pulse coild be
felt. In the third minute it was 18 and upward, so that it could not be counted. Her face flushed her eyes began to. roll in their sockets all the muscles relaxed from the extreme stiffnea sds alo fhlt the contraction of the limbs gradually relaxed speculation came back to ke'r eyes and she became conscious. In my opinion in all cases of sho or collapse this thing ought to be tried before they/ are given over for lost. There is nothing' peculiar or sensational about it at all. The only thing is, I have been the first person to try it hypodermically. If ever I have saved a life it is this one. "Just before the woman collapsed her last words were, 'Good God, the cold wave of Death is over me.' She said she wanted to drink something and had a pain in her inside. Then there seemed to be rush through her bowels, and when that was over she knew nothing more. She called for the consulting physician, Dr. Adams Allen, who came about 1 o'clock in the morning. In two or three days' time twenty-eight gall stones came from her. These were from 1)4, to
2%
the roots, and branches of others were} c. a.
blown away. The ground around for OTTAWA, 111., oept 30.—The Supreme half mile was strewn with fragments of Courthas denied the application of- At. the dead, splinters, packing paper, eto..
he vi of he os on ok he
houses in Bartow, across the creek from
inches long and 2% inches in
circumference. She has since been to my place two or three times, and I was very glad to see her."
N
on
torney
1
Richberg for the release of Jo-
1
C"
»-Bay Chester. Many windows iti John I tiary on a writ ot habeas corpus.
Mackin from fcbe Joliet
P3QltenT
