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f ED. U BLUE, Editor and Proprietor. PERRYSBURG. : OHIO. It 18 estimated that with what George -Gould hns made for hitnsolf, anil what his father bequeathed him directly, ho will have about $10,000,000 of his own "to continue business with at the old stand. Tin? fact that next March 1 will fall on Saturday has given riso to a suppos tion to omit the inauguration ball, which could not properly bo continued after midnight. flfnE people of Maine at the last elec tion adopted an amendment to their constitution requiring hereafter an edu cational qualification as a percquisito to tho right to vote. The North Carolina, people have a gTeat Bchemn to endow a state univers ity. It is to insure the lives of fifty pcoplo at $10,000 a head and trust to death working them off by the timo tho plans for tho university nre agreed upon. It is said that mail matter dropped in the post olflco nt 1'aris is delivered in Berlin in an hour and a half, and some times within thirty-five minutes. Tho distance between the cities is TS0 miles, and tho mail is sent by means of pneumatic tubes. At Iho timo Shakspcaro wrote his plays there were not in all the world as many English-speaking people as there are now in New York and New Jersey. To-day nioro than 100,000,000 people speak English, and it will proba bly become a universal language, A courouNi) locomotive of tho "Vau clain type, running on the Bound lirook route between New York and Philadel phia, recently covered a mile in 37 sec onds, and two successive miles in 75 seconds, or at the rata of 07 miles an hour. This engine weighs 12o,8U0 pounds. The famous Oaks plantation in South Carolina has been sold for the phos phate deposits on It for $40,000. It plays a conspicuous part in several of Simms' novels, and Marion and his men were often encamped there. One of tho great attractions is a long avenue of ancient oak trees. A Railway passengers' protective as--cociation, with an carl at its head, has recently been formed in England to look after the protection of thoso who travel by rail. It will also guard tho rights of ticket-holders, and in general will seek to represent the traveling pub lic in all disputes with railways. Owing to the heavy gales which havo prevailed this fall the cdtch of white fish has been very light in Lake Huron, and only 150 jars of the eggs of this-fisli were secured by Superintendent Wires of the U. S. fish hatchery in Alpena, Mich. The amount is about half what the hatcheries -could take care of, and will produce about 20,000,000 fish. The coldest known spot on the earth's mirface is on the eastern slope, a shelv ing mountain that runs down to near the water's edge, on the eastern bank of the Lena river, in northeast Siberia. Dr. Wolkoff, director of the Russian meteorological service, gives the mini mum temperature of the place as being eighty-eight degrees below zero. A bcijeme for the insurance of work men against accidents has just bscn drawn up by the Russian ministry of finance. The pensions will amount to half the annual salary of the workmen nt the time of their death. Tho chil dren of the latter will also receive, un til they attain their majority, an allow ance of 15 to 20 per cent, of tho salary paid to their fathers. In the jeycl house of tho Tower of London the place where the British i id other royal insignia are kept, a book bound throughout in . to the wires of tho hinges. i N two rubies set nt opposite ends of four golden links. On one side there is a cross of diamonds; on tho oth er the English coat of arms set in dia monds, pearls and rubies. Dr. J. P. Munjt, whom Mr. Gould ia understood to have paid a salary of $40,000 a year for his exclusive medical attendance, looked so much like tho financial wizard that he is said to havo once talked for over half an hour to Postmaster-General Wanamaker while personating Mr. Gould without Mr. Wanamaker suspecting for a moment that it was other than Mr. Gould ho was talking to. A Philadelphia milk dealer bos con trived an ingenious plan to hurry things in tho morning in order to get out early to servo his customers. To feed his horses while ho lies in bed, ho has placed an alarm clock in tho stable, which he sets to go off at 4 o'cloclc Tho clock is fixed bo that it releases a pin, and opens tho door of a little box which contains sufficient feed for tho -horse. Tho feed runs into the trough and by the time the milkman is ready to start the animal has had his bi-cik-fast and is in good shape for his fore noon's work. PnonABLVthe largcstship timber ever cut in Ashtabula county, O., was cut on Mr. A. Parshall's farm in Colebrook tho other day. The stick is seventy-ono ieet long and when squared measured at one end four by four feet, at tho small end thrco feet four inches square and forty-yno inches square in the middle, and contains 0,075 feet board measure. It is a perfect piece of timber in every way and of great value. The stump on which it stood measured across two ways exactly eight feet and another way seven feet It toclc twenty five teams to diaw the timber to Orwoll station. CURRENT TOPICS. M. Pabtkwh will bo seventy yenrst old on December 27. Op Missouri's 114 counties 11 nro with out railroad connections. Tiikkk are seven llcbrow members In tho llrltish house of commons. Tun wealth of W. 11. Vanderbilt's sons is estimated at $200,000,000. "Scumoui.i.ion" is tho ouphonioua name of a new town in Georgia. Tin: Egyptian is taxed 50 cents on tho palm tree that grows in his garden. Ik tho coldest part of Siberia tho ground is frozen to a depth of 020 feet. It will cost only eight cents to regis ter a letter at the post office after Jan uary 1. AccoitniNO to tho census 230 of tho 004 cotton mills in tho country nro in the south. A ruTiUKiui) turtle was recently blnstr cd out of tho rock in a quarry near Atchison, Kas. A noh'STEU mountain lion is said to be scaring people in tho neighborhood of Cortez, Colo. Justice Ryan, of New York, has sent a woman to jail for throwing eggs at one of her neighbors. The trust funds held by the govern ment for tho various Indian tribes ag gregate over $24,000,000. A single row of pearls as largo as peas, and perfectly round, were sold re cently in Paris for $120,000. Gen. DvitENroRTH is said not to be discouraged by the failure of his rain making experiments in Texas. New Yoiik is so rich that a down town building lot could not be bought by covering its area with $10 bills. It is said that the New York state treasury will receivo from Gould's heirs about $750,000 as legacy taxes. Mils. Lavina Fillmoiii:, of Clarence, N. Y., a cousin of Millard Fillmore, .re cently celebrated her 105th birthday. Mas. llAituiET Maxwell Convkkse, of New York, has been elected a chief of the Six Nations of Indians in New York. All green vegetables growing nbovo ground should be cooked in salt water. Those growing below ground in fresh water. It is no longer "housekeeping" in Boston. They call it "the science of oekology," from the Greek word for house. At a recent chrysanthemum show at Dalles, Ore., four hundred varieties of that plant are said to have been ex hibited. Oakley Rhin-elander, of New York, has a collection of antique armor that is said to be the most complete in the country. Houses are so plentiful in llueuos Ayres that everybody has at least one. It is said that even tho beggars beg on horseback Thomas Lincoln, a cousin of the lamented President, is still living in Fountain Green Township, I1L, and is SO years of age. TmiEE Englishmen now have statues in France Lord Urougham at Cannes, Jenner at Boulogne -sur-Mer and Shak spcarc in Paris.' The title "her royal highness" means something in the case of tho crown princess of Denmark She is six feet three inches tall. "Samuel Ktsdouuttousmystem, tin peddler," is the legend inscribed upon the card of a Russian commercial trav eler in Connecticut. The first aluminum microscope, weigh ing one-third as much as a brass micro scope, has been exhibited to the Royal Microscopical society. A woman in Ohio has a churn which has been in her possessiou for fifty-five years and which has made more than $10,000 worth of butter. Chieh Justice Turney, Governor-elect of Tennessee, will not resign his pres ent ollice, and will appoint his own successor after his inauguration. Ghay wolves are reported to be play ing havoc among tho stock in Elk mountain country and along the Cheyenne river in South Dakota, Mineiialogists now exploring north ern Thibet claim to have discovered valuable mines of gold and many varie ties of tho richest precious stones. The anniversary of Washington's crossing of the Delaware is to bo ob served this year on Christinas day, at Trenton, by tho Sons of the Revolu tion, Mns. Inuiiease Sumneu, Starke, Fla., raises her own tea. She gathers three crops a year, and the bushes furnish her tea which in China would cost a largo sum. "Gilsonite," a variety of mineral wax, contains eighty per cent, of car bon or asphalt in its pure form. Tho Utah vein is three feet wide and a mile in length. At a cost of five years', labor and more than $1,500,000, the four-mile tun nel under Lake Michigan at Chicago has been completed and is now ready to re ceive water. Miss Viola Fullek, of Mitchell. S. D., will present to the Chicago World's fair a unique opera cloak It is made entirely of the feathers of prairie chickens. Mme. Diaz, wife of the Mexican pres ident, is organizing an orchestra of forty-five Mexican women, which she will Bend to tho Chicago exposition at her own expense. The most costly piece of railroad line in the world is that between the Man sion house and Aldgate station in Lon don, which required the expenditure of close upon 110,000,000 a mile. A BTitKET railway car, fully equipped r collecting, postmarking and distrib atiiig mail matter en route, the first of its kind in the world, was put into op eration in St Louis a few days ago. Gkohok Vandeiuhlt'8 palace near Abbeville, N, C, will stand on an estate of 8,000 acres. Its cost is estimated all tho way from $3,000,000 to $10,000,000. About 5,000 people are now employed on the place. The Jupaneso government has pro vided for a visit of 2,000 of its iniddlo class citizens to the fair at Chicago next year, and then look about in other large cities in this country before thelr return home. The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. CONGRESSIONAL. Second SckhIoi). Tnn McOdrrnhan claim was discussed In the ennto on tho llth, tho anti-option bill was con sidered and tho resolution calllnR for Informa tion on tho subject ot tho civil scrvlco was taltrn up nnd tiRrrcd to ...In tho houso tho rmy appropriation bill (S'.M.SOJ.T'lO) was passed und tho publication ot 10.000 copies of tho presi dent's unnual message wnr, ordered, Tho claim of tho Leo family of Virginia for !217,sa0 for supplies of wood und timber taken for tho use of tho quartermaster's department during tho la to war was favorably reported. In tho senate on tho 15th the nutl-optlon bill was further dlscuscd and n favorablo report was made on tho bill to prohibit foreign vessels from transporting merchandise from ono United States port to another United States port via tiny foreign port. Ad journed to tho 10th... . In tho houso bills were Introduced to repeal the not of Juno IT, 18P0, granting pensions to soldiers and sailors and to widows, minor children und dependent parents of soldiers nnd sailor, nnd to prolde for tho election ot tho president and vice president by the direct votes of tho people. A resolution for a holiday rocess from Thursday before Christ mas until Wednesday after New Year's wub ncrced to. Titr. senate was not In session on the 17th.... In tho house bills were Introduced to make tho pansy "ic national flower and to make cer tain changes in the United States Hag. Tho death of Senator litbbon, of Louisiana, was an nounced, nnd nsu mark of respect to tho mem ory of tho acccascd tho house adjourned. DOMESTIC. Buiins WiNoriELi), a wealthy farmer near Springfield, O., dropped dead al ter acting as pall bearer at a friend's funeral and returning' home and tell ing his family he would die before night. TiinEi: of the Brown family tit White Oak, O., who partook of a, cake with which rat'poUon had been mixed, have since died and threo others were in a critical condition. It was said that skilled counter feiters were preparing: to flood the country with spurious world's fair souvenir coins. SECEETAKY ClIAItLES FOSTER, of the treasury department, says there will be an available balance "of 50,000,000 in the treasury at the close of the iiscal year. Thomas Collins and TJ. Forjrey were arrested at Huntington, W. Va., for tho attempted robbery of the Ohio & Ches apeake train near that place, ami Col lins made a confession. A. B. Clakk, a wholesale grocer in Cincinnati, failed for S100.000. Autiiuk Wuillmeau, the Frechman who started to fast fifty days in Cleve land for the benefit of science, has stopped because thero is no money in the job. 51ns. David G. IIediiicm, wife of p coal merchant at Reading, l'a., was taken with such a violent coufjhinr, spell that she ruptured the main artery in her lungs and bled to death in ten minutes. A kike that started in Hornet Broth ers' bakery at Fulton, Mo., caued a loss of 8100,000. Theodore D. Fibk nue arrested at Buffalo, N. Y.. on the charge of having a dozen wives in and about Chicago and the eastern states. The government building on the world's fair grounds in Chicago is now ready for the installation of exhibits. Secretaev of Wais Elkins an nounces that the new fort which is being built at Helena, Mont, will be known as Fort Harrison in compliment to the president of the United States. Evfcltv dry goods store, the banks, railway offices, many saloons aud other places of business in Omaha closed for three hours on the 14th that l employed might attend revival scr fices being held by Itev. B. Fay Mills. The National Fire Insurance Com pany, established in 1838, one of the oldest insurance corporations in New York, has decided to close up its busi ness. . Emanuei. Biiuxswick, a wealthy bil liard table manufacturer of San Fran cisco, was killed in Chicago while try ing to board a State street cable train. The negro who outraged Emma O'Bryan, iin S-year-old white girl, near Nashville, Tenn., was hanged by a mob and his body cremated. Michael Adamski, aged 104 years, was badly injured by the cars near his home in Chicago. RoDKHtcn Cmsp, an aged man living near Mounds, 111., died in his chair while at home and the same day his aged wife fell down and expired. The factory of the Huggins Cracker Company at Kansas City, Mo., was do stro -cd by fire, the loss being Sl"o,000. Is a fire in a boarding house at Union Park, a suburb of St. Paul, Mrs. Jennie Fames and her bon and daughter, aged respectively 7 and 5 years, were burned to death. The 12-year-old horse Reese fell in his stall at Columbus, (ia., und re ceived such injuries that he had to bo shot. He was owned by J. J. McCaf ferty, who had refused SaC.OOO for him. Chakles A. Benton, a United States prisoner under sentence of death at Leavenworth, Kan., for the murder of Mrs. Tcisa Mettman in 1880, com mitted suicide in his cell. The office of the Times at Wabash, Ind , was gutted by fire. A Flitii in St. Paul, Minn., caused 100,000 loss to occupants of the John Mann block. Tiik National bank of Newton, Kan., closed its doors. In a frenzy of insanity Mrs. Henry Buxter, of Rogers City, Mich,, destroyed the sight of her year-old babe by thrusting a knife into each eye. The business portion of the town of Beacon, 111., was wiped out by fire. The leading clearing houses In the United Htates reported exchanges of 81,855,ia3,'il0 during the seven days ended on the 10th, ugainst $1,41)0,502,872 the previous seven days. As compared with the corresponding week of 1891 the increase was 8.7. John Buit.ss, the murderer of Mau rice lligglns, was executed at Mihboula, Mont, Duihno the seven days ended on tho 10th the business failures in the United Stutes numbered 304, against 207 the preceding week and 035 for tho cor icsponding timejastyeif. Joski'H Jknkinh (colored) was hanged at Mount Pleasant, & C, for the mur der of John Morgan. Curtis Miller, a, wife-beater living near Canton, O., was tossed for an hour in blankets by whlto caps and then probably fatally clubbed. Mrs. William Jackson, aged 00, liv ing near Springfield, O., pulled a needle out of her left shoulder, which hns been tore for years. Mrs. Jackson swal lowed tho needle when 17 years old. Nelhon F. Evans, aged 70, who was largely instrumental in wrecking the Spring Garden national bank at Phila delphia, has been sentenced to seven yenrs' imprisonment. A hail pouch made up at Fairbury, 111., for Chicago, and containing over $10,000 in drafts, besides many regis tered letters, in missing. Charles IIaltimies, a stookman at Shcrbrook, N. I)., has failed for S100, 000. An Yuno, a Chinaman condemned for tho murder of Ferdinand Inljudo, com mitted suicide in his coll nt Los An geles, Cnl., by hanging himself with his queue. Dice Edwards, alias "Texas Jack," was arrested at West Superior. Wis., and will be sent to Texas, where ho is wanted for murdering four women tit Denison. J. W. Hoy, aged GO years, n leading physician at Blooinvllle, O., dropped dead while walking from his office to his residence. At Alpena. Mich., August Grossman was found guilty of murder in the first tofrn,n In litivltifr inn;ml t.b li!lfrll (if Albert Molier, a Rogers City lumber man, seventeen years ago. There are twelve others charged with the same crime and their trials will follow thortly. John Beal, while excavating at Richmond, Intl., penetrated a grave of human skulls and bones. The skulls are of gigantic size, and by measure ment arc thought to have belonged to persons S feet tall. The Reading company entertain fears for the safety of their Becchwootl colliery at Mount Laffee, Pa. A mine fire which has been burning in the old Wadesville shaft near there for thirty four years is working its way toward tills colliery. Cyrus Mitchell and another pris oner were smothered to death in the jail at Batavia, 111., by escaping steam from a coil of stcampipes which had burst. A concerted movement has been started by the Chinese of the United States to resist the Chinese exclusion act They demand the repeal of the law and say if the movement fails the Chinese government will abrogate all treaty rights and will withdraw protec tion to the 1,500 merchants and the several hundred missionaries now in China. Ernest E. Eckert, confidential clerk for II. B. Rea & Co., pork packers at Pittsburgh, Pa., was charged with em bezzling S20.000. Frkiiieko, Klein fc Co., wholesale liquor dealers at Galveston, Tex., failed for $250,000. A kike in Brooklyn, N. Y., caused a loss of $400,000 to W. B. Jurgens, whole sale grocer. The Inman steamer City of Paris, now holding the eastern record, and the Cunarder Etruria sturted from New York for a race across the ocean. The Indiana supreme court has de cided unconstitutional the apportion ment act passed by the legislature two years ago. At the annual meeting in Philadel phia of the American Federation of Labor Samuel Gompers was reelected president. N. R. Jones was shot and instantly killed and his son Jesse shot and fatal ly wounded near Leicester, N. C, while resisting arrest for refusing to work on the public roads. Irwin Roberts (colored), charged with the murder of Landon Cross white, was lynched by a mob near Bristol, Tenn. A large number of illicit distilleries in Wilkes nnd Catawba counties, N. C, were seized by government officials. In a wreck on the Cincinnati, Now Orleans & Texas Pacific road near Danville, Ky., Charles Fagin, baggage master, and Expres-s Messenger Kinney were killed and beveral passengers were injured. A im'.eicht traiii telescoped the ca boose of a wrecking train on the Great Northern railway at Nelson, Minn., and eight men were killed and five more were badly injured. The first published official informa tion concerning the. foreign trade of Germany for 1BU0 shown that 00 per cent, of Germany's imports come from the United States, while 12.2 per cent, of her exports come to the United States. President Harrison has signed the bill giving Mary North, uged 100 years, an increased pension. She is the widow of a soldier in the war of 1812. A fire in the building of the Falk Manufacturing Company at Buffalo, N. Y., caused a loss of $100,000. Suit has been entered in the United States circuit court at Pittsburgh against the South Fork Fishing club by Mrs. James Jenkins, of Youngs town, O., for $25,000 damages for in juries received in the Johnstown flood. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Rev. Charles Atkinson, for thirty years a Methodist minister in Illinois, and chaplain of the Seventh Illinois cavalry during tho war, died in Chi cago, aged 70 years. It. L. OinsoN, United States senator from Louisiana, died nt Hot Springs, Ark., after a long illness, agedOO years. His remains were taken to Lexington, Ky,, for burial. The New York htate canvassers an nounce the total vote cast at the re cent election for the severul presiden tial electoral tickets was as follows: Cleveland, 059,008; Harrison, 009,459; Bid well, pro., !!8,IU3; Woaver, people's, 111,430; Wing, capitalist labor, 17,958; blank, scattering, etc., 29,052. The official count in Idaho compiled by tho secretary of state gives Weaver 10,4!JO; Harrison, 8,709; plurality of MuConncll (rep.) for governor, 1,400. LbopoLD Mouse, a congressman from Massachusetts from 1870 to 1880, died suddenly in Boston of paralysis while attending a banquet. lie was 53 years of age. CrtATtLKS Bai.mkk, one. of t'.io bes known musical composers in Amorlca and musical director of tho funeral ol Abraham Lincoln, died at his residence in St. Lulls, aged 75. Tun official vote of South Carolina In tho recent election for president is as follows: Cleveland, 51,098; Harrison, 13,84; Weaver, 2,110; Bldwoll. none. Miss Sarah Wheeler, of Philadel phia, celebrated the 102d nniiivcrsary of her birth. Henry W. IIiLL.vrtD, ex-ministcV to Belgium nnd fifty years ago a member of congress, died in Angtistn, Go, The offieiul canvass of Michigan's vote for president gives llnrrlson 222, 70S; Cleveland, 202,20(1; Bldwell, 20,250, and Weaver, 19,792. Harrison's pin- rallty, 20,412. The 85th birthday of John G. Whit tier was fittingly celebrated at Ames bury, Mass., by 1.500 citizens, nmong whom were tunny distinguished in lit erature. FOREIGN. The Arcliduko Franz Ferdinand, heir apparent to the thrones of Austria uud Hungary, left Vienna for a tour around the world. An explosion occurred at Baumfur long colliery in Wigau, England, and not less than fifty lives were lost The woman Bedwarska, in Lodz, Russia, tried for having murdered more than 100 babies, was sentenced to ono year's imprisonment At Vllna, Russin, a Jewish innkeeper in the outskirts of the city, his wife nud four young children were mur dered by tramps. An aerolite weighing 40,000 pounds fell near Jctninez, Mexico. It plowed a deep furrow in the em th and rock-, revealing a rich vein of silver at one point of its descent. The L'Esperanee, a French vessel, was wrecked on the Maud of Guernsey and all of its crew were drowned. Tin: Michigan' Lumber Company's mill on False creek, Vancouver, was destroyed by fire, the loss being $100, 000. Mauna Loa, the, great volcano of Hawaii, was in eruption and threatened the destruction of several villages and extensive plantations of cocoannts. In the towns of Orel and Tanzer, in Russia, a cyclone did grcatdaraagcand many persons were caught under tho falling buildings aud killed. A law requiring that Russian Jews shall live only in towns where official boards of trade exist has been promul gated by the Russian senate, with a view of driving more Jews from the country. FiNAl.oflicial statistics of the cholera epidemic in Russia show that since the outbreak of the disease in the empire, there has been a total of 205,700 deaths. A lil.ocic of warehouses in Bootle, near Liverpool, was burned, the loss being $500,000. Two merchants named Junakow and Paitschcwitseh were found murdered in a compartment of a first-class car near Rostov. Russia, and SO.0O0 rubles which they had in their possession were missing. The cabinets of Europe are arrang ing for a united protest against .ho threatened restrictions upon immigra tion in America. Sir Richard Owen, one of the world's foremost specialists in comparative anatomy, died in London, aged 88 years. The conspirators, Capt. Garcia aud Lieut Bahamandc, were found guilty at Valparaiso of suborning revolution and sentenced to be shot A syndicate of American capitalists has acquired virtual control of the island of San Domingo by the pun.haie of the right to collect the customs rev enues of the country. UA.T1STZ. Joseph Mellon was hanged at Man chester, lOnglund, on tho :20th for tho murder of his wife, Mary Ann Mellor, at Oldham, in September last Mellor met his fate quietly and is said to havo acknowledged the justice of the sen tence. A FliiE broke out in a school house at Cincinnati, O., on the night of the 20th. While t e firemen were at work on tho roof of the building, which is four stories high, William Beerman made a misstep and fell to the ground and was instantly killed. The celebrated trotting stallion, Stainboul (3:07,'-), tho property of tho lato Walter S. Hobart, of the Hobart farm, San Mateo, Cal., was sold at auc tion at New York City on the 20th for $41,000. The purchaser was D. II. llar riman, a broker of that city. At lluntingburg, Intl., on tho 20th an engine ran into a box car nnd toppled over, buying Kngineer William Kemper in the wreck. The fireman escaped by jumping. The senate in executive session on the 20th confirmed tho following nomina tions: Peter S. Orosscup, United States district judgo for the northern district of Illinois; B. S. Rairdon, of Maine, United States consul at Batavia; C. A. Orr, pension ngent at Buffalo, N. Y.; Silas Alexander, secretary of New Mex ico. Chahles L. Cadman, a clerk at the wholesale stump window of tho post ofiico at New York City, disappeared on tho 20th, leaving u shortage of botween $5,000 and S10.000. The $75,000 paid by tho Chilean gov ernment in settlement in full for all claims arising out of the Baltimore af fair at Valparaiso, were covered into the sub-treasury ut New York City on the 20 th. The Canadian E xpress Company's safe at Sarnia, Ont, was robbed on tho 20th of $7,000 whllo the omployes wero at dinner. Entrauco to tho building and Btifo was obtained by means of duplicate keys. In ihe senate) on the 20th soveral important hll's woro Introduced and two wero pasHCrt, au thorizing tho BUlu or the lands for tho IJrocklyn. N. Y., navy yard, and land in tho vicinity of PL Mimin, Del. Thu nntl-optloa bill wua then taltcp up and Mr. Palmer of Illinois, mado an nnjume-nt ugulnHt It chlotl;' on tho con Btltullonal (.'round that congros hud no power to dullno and punluh by lcgltilatlon crlmtn.il of fonscH In bUiuH bucIi power resting oxcltmlvuly in tho states themselves Without talcing any action on tho bill tho acnato adjourned In thu houso no Important meuiuro v. us brought up und tho proportions which wero proscnud met with Uttlo or no attention from tho Birull num ber of membars prrnenL Tho aonuto bill was panned with a slight amcndment-uuthoridun tho nalo of land in tho vicinity of Ft Mifflin, ai tho Dclawaro rlVer, Pa. Adjourned. -3.vSSraHFPffllESM!E5gS3 zjsjvjKcwjfiiii TreyMB?Kgav?,z 5& Mrs. lima Sutherland ttxlamazoo, Mich., nnd swellings In tho neck, or Goitre : From nor 10th your, causing ' 40 Years grcatsufforlng. When sho caught cold could not walk two blocks without fainting. Sho took Hood's Sarsaparilla And Is now treo from it all. Sho has urged many others to talto Hood's Sarsaparilla and' tlioy havo also been cured. It will do you good. HoOD'8 PILLS Curo nil Llrer tils, Jaumttoe, lclc headache, biliousness, sour ntomnch, nnniM. Kidney, Liver and Bladder Cure; Xumbjuro. pain In Joints or buck, brick dust In urine, lrequent cnlls, irritation, lntlnmiiUon. gravel, ulceration or catarrh of bladder., EMsoMeaed Liver9 Impaired dlircstion. pout, bllllous-hcadRchev SWAMP-KOOX cures kidney dimcultioi. Im Grippe, urinary trouble, brlght's disease. ImiMwe Blood, Scrofula, malaria, gcn'l weakness ordoblllty. O tiornntrc IV content of Ono Itottlo, If not be' ented, UrugsisU will refuuii to you tho price paid. At DrURsistH, 50c. Size, $1.00 Size "Invalids' Oulilo to HoaaVrreF-Conaultatlon ttea, XJR. Kiuivu & Co.. BlNOUAUTON, N. Y. Cnrrs Consumption, CoiiRh-i, Cronp, Soro Xliroat. Sold by nil Druggist! on a Guarantee. elys catarrh GREAMBALM It fs tpondrul loir quichty Ely's Cream Bahii has helped anil cured me. For a ueek at a time-1 could not ice. Ittttfcred from acute inflammation in my noseand head. ilrs. Georoie S. Jud ton, Hartford, Ci nn, BAY-IFEVEE& A partlc'.o l implied Into each nostril and u ftffrpriiliu-. ppniiit-. I'ric 'rtcn in cents ut Drui;i:lt6 or by ninll. I.V miOTIlEUS. W Worron Street. Now York. Guaranteed to euro Bilious Attacks, Sick neculaeho nnd Coiihltpallon. 40 In each bottle, l'rico 23c. For sale by druggists. l'lcturo "7, 1. 70' f. sunn a co and samplo dose free. Proprietors, HEW tOftK, ust ? wer "One of my neighbors, Mr. John Gilbert, has been sick for a long time. All thought him pastrecovery. He was horribly emaciated from the inaction of his liver and kidneys. It is'difficult to describe his appear ance and the miserable state of hb health at that time. Help from, any source seemed impossible. He tried your August Fower and the effect upon him was magical. It restored him to perfect health to the great astonishment of his family and frieads." JohnQuibell, Holt, OntS Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup SJuWr A romodv which. ff used by Wlve nboutto experience) tbo painful ordeal attendant upon Child-birth, proves an infallibla rpect llofur.smdobvlatea i tho tortures of con finement, loeccnlne thodanpcr.i thereof to both mother and child, torn Dy bu druggist. Bentby (Tcproas on receipt! of prlco, et.M per bottle, chorees pre '5T paid. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO,, ATLANTA. OA, 3 iBKafAyRafrAg'ipflwP-H5Sw5:s3 lllffsHELOrfsS iffgggra ' fey ", .,E1 BS'yISI Small j. rA mm Flo KmgWXmtfmtfBfiTi't ieh2v KKJrf i'J ?Jto. J Ow Xis a i f A Ji