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Delaware gazette and state journal. (Wilmington, Del.) 1883-1902, January 28, 1892, Image 8

Image and text provided by University of Delaware Library, Newark, DE

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn88053046/1892-01-28/ed-1/seq-8/

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I AT CHICAGO, JUNE 21,1892
There and Then the Conven
tion Will be Held.
I.
MILWAUKEE MAKES A FINE FIGHT
But the Feeling Was In Favor
of Chicago.
Si
The Result Is Not Signifie
log Any Cho
President—Chicago Considered the Rest
Place—Harrity Succeeds Sco
Committee.
[Ball : 11
for tho Nominal i
i the
Washington, Jan. 21.—The Democratic
national committee at 11.30 o'clock to
jngbt, after taking 15 ballots, decided to
hold the next Democratic national
▼ention in Chicago.
It had previously been decided to hold
the convention
after the Republican
_ . a stron B rip out this morning that
Chicago would be ultimately chosen,
though that city had no delegation here
to represent her claims and the Demo
cratic members of Congress from Illinois
had stated that she was
Chicago's diffidence in this respect w
g ot due to any newly-acquired modesty,
ut because it was deemed undesirable to
{ »ress for the convention at a time when a
arge appropriation was desired from Con
gress for the World's Fair.
Notwithstanding this fact the leaders in
the National committee, especially Messrs.
Gorman and Brico. desired to locate the
a nvention in Chicago
Umately prevailed.
June 21st,
weeks
mention. There
the race.
nut
and their influence
MILWAUKEE A
Milwaukee
SECOND.
the strongest competitor
Chicago for the honor. Every city
race was honored at one time or
other with a large complimentary vote,
t this was a courtesy which
hing, and, as the sequel showed, it w
l^gely for the purpose of getting the cora
iV .*»3 it tee steered in the direction of ( 'hicago.
ii Nearly every city mentioned for the
■ Älace except Chicago and New York w
B® fweueved by the committeemen ..
H JNUfflcient hotel accommodations. If it had
I Dot been for this,belief Milwaukee might
' have secured the honor.
I
: ill
As it is the Republicans have already
discovered that Minneaoplis has
cient accommodations to entert
u rean v
i not siitlf
, . , , entertain those
who will attend the convention there and
the Democratic committeemen we
mined
I
di ter
repeat the error.
It cannot be said that there i
ucutor advantage to any
«election of/f.'hicago. The
«g , is that it wus the metropolis of the north
H / {S5J5few ' faciiitiea for entertaining ull
0 m The select;
lidate
the
argument
. _ of Chicago was largely due
io tn§ efforts of Democratic* committeemen
ïrKt,? re ooc regarded
i hii ly 4 91 Cleveland, but
rd ■ evelknd issue was
If ' in . riie proceedings, and the choice is
./ 'factory to all except the representa
tha s of disappointed cities.
particularly
o Cleveland dr
ChHii l tta ™ E ballots
: w . ä p'' m ie detailed result of the different ballots
UlJSum" follows:
DETAIL.
SI!
71
jy
o
2
te
PI
Ïtîjvo? Ballots.
Wliï I
3
T
5 a
13 l
t
7j 3 12; 2
Oj 2 5 3
13 7 (i 3
8i 210 3
Ü 3 r, 2
■V
3
lo 1/
I
<•
0
10
11
3
.
1!
v
-•
4 1
i 9
J 19
! ■
l
:
18
:
i:
:
H 1
t;
I
o; i ;
3.Î
I
thaj
21
î& V r- "' . 18L: " 1 •
♦h- J» the motion of Mr. Mitchell ol' Wis
^.'jsiri the selection of Chicago
?îianimous.
up}
•as made
HARRITY sc
When the committee met i
-State Ohuirmau ......
JJ*Del^gate-elect Harrity appeared together,
a be the rep
ennsylvania ii:
M r. Kerr had been previously
by Chairman Brice as t lie rep
of the state on the strength of t
ment of the
committee. Mr. Harrity came
this
*°morning
K
:ü claiming t<
'■täte of Pci
nmittee.
mtative of
B the
cognized
tiie strength of the
state Demoerati
executiv
dentials from tho state committee. It wa
necessary for the national committee to u
into executive session
question.
I j,Mr. Kerr and Mr. Harrity were botli
! ma resent.
; se chai rman Brice gave Mr. Kerr the ilo
Irf? enable tom hi explain thosituati
r ^«the committee, most of whom had n
» fused idea in regard to the eomplim
thresulting from tiie double renre
defrom Pennsylvania. Mr. fee
stated the eirc
of his explanation lie unnounceu that
would cheerfully retire if it would p
serve the committee from deciding an o
f barrassing question.
, Mr. Harrity's credentials were then ac
cepted by the committee.
K
déterminé t
fui
!y
St!
lie «:!
he
A SOUTH !
Whe Strange Story
PIRATE.
T*
From Ho
San Francis«
a stowaway from H«
Australia, teils a remarkable story of his
adventures in the .South Se
he deserted from an Ame
Sydney,
schooner for
islands of tiie Pa«
the Australian co
up from the hold
Were to be sold to the
The vessel carried
commanded by Captf
erner. At the first pi
five young girls wen
The natives pursued i
near the ship were fired upo
being killed. The canoe w
and the rest we
Which aw
o, Jan. 21.—James White,
Last Muv
ship i
1 shipped o
ling •
«In
nge among the
n afUsr leaving
st. guns were brought
ij be j was told they
f 15
«sel
•lied
blv abducted
d
devoured 1
irk:
in the wake of tii
Two we«'ks later the vessel touched ;
another island, and in a tight with nativ«
of the crew was killed und the
arm broken. At another island
Sandalwood was stolen and then«.,
was chased by a French gunboat, bin
getaway. At theGuahun islands White
serted and was
brig Madrono.
1.
•f
'
I"
to Honolulu by ihe
ANOTHER DENSE FOG.
It Wraps Lond<
iu u Maul
>aik
London, Jun. 21.—This city
wrapped in a dense, almost inn
fog. eijual to that which
Christmas time and which
loss of life and incalculable
damage. Traffic is greatly i
dark is it ttiat th
f ;as light has b
he city in hou
Step»
di
iblo
tiled
•Ii
peded ^ t
d t«> throughout
1 factories.
BO
simps i
e to Wv
Min K i
V
, Jan. 21.—The
fflade of the betrothal of Arch Duel
S ephanie,
iidolph. whose death o
r.v .'Will,
188!
seel
eh
-idespread
Mi
tel of Bru .
thedamri
za. Arch Duel
Btephaiii
of Helgi
InVicn*
r of King 1
old
■ I
Muv :
narried I«
i on May luth, 18*1.
»Rudolph
Ii<
I 111
. ~.e compelled to perfoi
sllOUl.1 Hof- iWfiva n li v
I
tl
•ith :
■ f
ht. They sli
oats at in
tected fro
il«l als
• !
»nie
fell, and be i
onditio
fo
rice the
«law nml
tittle M
bruk««r'8 Hors
food will imp
• I
le Powder i
their.appetite, «li
bole Proprietors, Baltimore, Md.
FUNERAL OF CARDINAL MANNING.
ids Turn
to Honor the
lory of the Dead Prelate—Inipres
Uerei-*—
London, Jan. 21.—-The funeral services
over the remains of Cardinal Manning
were held in the Brompton oratory to-day.
Admission to the oratory was bv ticket
only, for it would have been utterly im
possible for the structure to contain a hun
dredth part of the vast crowd who were
desirous of paying a last token of respect
to the dead prelate.
Not withstand i
conditions p
begun
line the miserable weather
failing the city, the crowd
gather at an curly hour, and
every minute it gained in size. It w
composed largely of workingmen and
their families, and on every side could be
heard expressions of love for the man who
had devoted so much of his time and tal
bringing about a betterment in
their condition. "He was good to the
KMir." the crowd were heard to exclaim
dreds of times. Ho dense was the
. d and so thick the fog that traffic in
the vicinity of the oratory wus brought to
a standstill. Hundreds of mounted police
i constables on foot were present
to maintain order, but they were seldom
called upon to do more than speak gener
ally to tho crowd to have their orders
tiffed
When the solemn
commenced the oratory _
notable personages representing the church
d the state, and all political parties. The
queen and the Prince und Princess of
Wales were represented by high members
of their household. All the ambassadors
of foreign powers were also present.
The coffin reposed in front of the altar. It
was enveloped in a black pall, ornamented
with gold ami crimson cords and a fringe
of bullion. Surmounting the coffin
the hat of the cardinal. The altar _
draped with black, the only ornament
visible being a solitary gold cross.
Tho Rt. Rev. John Cuthbert Ileadly,
bishop of Newport, preached the funeral
on. He opened his remarks with a
touching tribute to the lute DukeofOlar
Avoudale. He said that an area
had closed in the history of Cutholicisra in
England with the death of Cardinal Man
ng and a new one hud opened. He
made special reference to the cardinal's
the Catholicism of chil
dren and declared that the struggle was
not yet over.
of
« tfa
efforts
At the conclusion of the servi
clergy preceded the body to the hearse.
The first coach was occupied bv the cross
bearer and acolytes, fhen followed the
clergy, who proceeded tho hearse, and
following came carriages with the rela
tive of the cardinal, the members of his
household, diplomats, members of the
nobility, Knights of Malta, a deputa
tion of members of the house
of commons and a deputatic
the Irish Parliamentary p
ing these came 3U0
private citizens and after the
large number of workingmen's societies.
1 he dock laborers and the stevedores were
represented by large delegations of the
those occupations. The
nterred in Kensal Gree
the
fr<
y. Follow*
ai n ing
ages
body w
i ■ iy.
FANT EGA V II,
AILED.
ie Cliiliat
: I
radically
■ ■ . ■
lie Culled Away.
New York
«raid special.
on, Jan. 21.—Will Minis
tailed? The Chilian
ment, through Minister Mo
tically asked his withdraw«
liminary f ...__
factory adjustment of tïië'pending
troversy. Such a suggestion—for as yet it
Iy a suggestion-is indignantly re
pudmted by the Harrison administration,
x 7 lult , < ''dps purpose is can only be co..
ed. It is possible that knowing Mr.
:.gan s unpopularity in the Fnitod States
it has put forth the suggestion through
Montt, hopi ng that public sentiment
u-rison to adopt
Eg
ml fro
ttl
:
would force I*
it. This being do
ily elapse
•uoh Santiago, and thus
months in '
ide
. flOorflOdi
before his
uld

if
il
.. . . the settlement of'the
Valparaiso incident might be effected,
l In* is the only reasonable theory ad
vanced for the suggestion which reached
Minister Montt to day.
It may be stated as
highest official auth
that under
fa<
d i have tho
making it,
dll Mr. Egan
bet we
strained as :
*or be
for
.ailed while the
I lilted .States
present, if indeed lie
while General Harrison remains at the
hea.l of the government. President Harri
is entirely satisfied with Mr. I
representative at
tfiis repeat ed I v i
I this fli -
lut
the
d Chili
.•called
He li
stated
rersation,
ring Ost
of Mr. J
is generally
flit
ed by those
dent and co
•ho
cl
j the i
with Mr. Egan's
sequently familiar
duct of affairs in Chili.
alizés that Minister
in
•nt to Santiago
•speak; that his p
j mied by the
• I«
jttruey of Santiago,
iiated wholly by English
" ' •—• suraullyus
i with
public
«/•.^Valparaiso
s, and tin
he 1ms 1
«liai Jv tin
he A
«tl
How
lislike lii
popular
knows tlm
ffi.
lie II.
dispatches
Yet. in
:
«It
it all, Mr. 1
I :
. , self with a dienitv
itutie that entitle hi • - •
.•rtai
fo
;d. h
t»..
1 f.
pect, if he e
y feeling
oward the Chilian people
«•fully refraine«! from giving < x
loiuienee with
of
he has ci
i,.
lire!
MillAn foreign offic
read his «:«
•nth, tl
ay
«1 i
s str
s in the extra
id
tlint in it
h his
himself
ediph
While tbo
is still talk of wi
betweer
this co
louable

peaceful
stth
f t he all
. 1
.
II
•<l
till«
he hi
Ished whirl
tilted fr«
th
Vail
Mo

Upol
ling
'
iglit
beo'Mir^" Ullry
sed
Fill LA Di
'///.I
A FF A.
old, was found
Charles Wa
froze»
sd
buries 1*. Donnell
cumbent, \
a Thursday by the Democratic
id Job
Slevin,
ial meeting of the executive c
f Hit* Citizens' Republic
A spr
A
b<
illtsJ
:
the
of M
istratus Hackott
Joseph Mill
ho pleaded
guilty
uilting
ialims,
dderly
years and three
:1k; Eust
onths ii
1'

Ii
he • *:
dc
«day Josh
Davis \v
r K. I
ile
f tho
• ; -
: i
Ik
a child after tl
].l,
ha«l
n
found T|
û
tin
lb
.died
Bright's
F
:
la
,vin. 1 1
1 cl.
i dia
charged.
ho
held I
ch:
ilt
Mrs. Hold,
Th
Maste
Brick!;
•P
1 ;
i •
f the .1
Bricklayers' I
eight-hour «
ivc A
d r
t lie «1
10 cen
fi.
Josepl. I
elected
of the
YOU Id yot
ot like to tlv
• with •
To I
ib
It « ml I es
ll
rile b
B
th:
taketho
y«»
lies
of
•If
Tak
< 'ough Syrup, it cures
25 cents per bottle.
toughs aud colds.
THE DUKE'S FUNERAL.
Memorial Services In All European Capl
—At St. George's Chapel.
London, Jan. 20.—Memorial services for
the Duke of Clarence and Avondale were
held in all European capitals to-day.
At 3.30 the train bearing tho remains
came into the station in this city. On it
the Prince and Princess of Wales.
The coffin was taken
the shoulders of
men from the Tenth Hussars. It was
wrapped in a silken Union jack, and
was a single splendid wreath, which had
been sent by the queen. A silken ribbon
{attached to the wreath, on which
; the words: "A mark of the tenderest
affection and love from your devoted, lov
ing, and sorrowing grandmother."

PROCESSION.
A detachment of the Tenth Hussars and
of the Horse Artillery immediately pre
ceded the gun carriage upon which the re
mains had been placed. On either side of
tne gun carriage walked guards of officers
of the Tenth Hussars.
The Pri
, , of Wales, Prince George of
Wales and the Duke of Fife led the
mourners. Next came the Duke of Con
naught. Duke of Edinburgh. Prince Chris
tian, Prince Henry of Battcnburg, and the
Marquis of Lome.
Thon followed the Grand Duke Alexia,
representing the Czar of Russia; Prince
Albert of Schleswig-Holstein, the Crown
Prince of Denmark; the Duke of O
brother of the King of Portugal; J
Frederick Leopold of Prussia, the Duke of
Teck, between Prince of Lenlngcn and
Prince Edward of 8axe-Wemiur.
Then followed the three Princes of Teck,
sons of the Duke of Teak: the Duke of
Wurtémburg, and Prince Philip of Saxe
Coburg-Gotho.
. GEORGE'S CHAPEL.
The cortege passed into the castle, and
at 4 o'clock the funeral ceremonies were
roceeded with i
BNVII E
St. Gcor
» Frank
rge's Chapel.
Elliott. D. D.,
of the garter, do
mestic chaplain to the Queen, and the
Dean of Windsor, assisted by the Rt. Rev.
Randall Thomus Davidson, bishop of
Röchest or, officiated at the ceremony.
The choir sang the burial
' n moved up the navoof thechapel.
( in the arrival of tho body at the choir, the
Prince of Wales, as chief mourner, stood
ut the head of the coffin.
The ceremony was concluded by singing
of Sullivan's anthem, "A Brother Gone
Before L's."
V;;
e Very Rev. Philip
registrar of the ord

processio
London, Jan. 21. —During the evening
tiie coffin containing Prince Albert Victor's
remains was removed from St. George's
Chapel to the Albert Memorial Chapel.
Here it was placed between the cenotaph
to the late Prince Consort nnd the recum
bent figure of the Duke of Albany. The
coffin will remain in its present position
till Saturday in order that the queen may
he enabled to place a wreath upon it. All
the floral tributes are ranged around the
chapel, which presents a vivid and bril
liant picture. The Prince of Wales _
the other members of the royal family
who are now ut the castle again visited
the chapel before retiring. All the prin
cipal mourners dined and slept
castle us the queen's guests.
The Prince and Princess of Wales, their
daughters, the Duchess of Fife, Princess
Victoria and Princess Maud: Princess May
1 the Duke of Fife will return
London from Windsor Castle
to .Sandringham Hall on Saturday. Tho
Prince of Wales and the members of his
family to-day took their last look at the
coffin contuini
of Clarence
Memorial Chapel.
:
the
of Teck
the remains of the Duke
Avondale in the Albert
Captain Ev
London, Jan. 21.—The Timt* publishes a
dispatch to-day from its correspondent
Santiago de Chili, which states that
tain Evans of the V. S. S. Yorktow
dent iy ascertained that the Chilian
ment declined
Egan's pretcnsii
would p
• Co
I govern
Minister
to accept
that u mercantile flag
oct the Chilian refugees, and he
therefore carried them under tho U. 8.
warship flag to Callao. The conduct of
Captain Evans, the dispatch adds, is
slightly appreciated in.Santiago. It further
says that Minister Egan's hostile atti
tude is in complete contrast to Captain
Evi
' policy.
ll
Burn »
Bridgei'c
r, Cr
NN., Jan. 20.— Last
passing the Ht. Thomas
atholic church, Fairfield, he dis
covered flames within and promptly noti
fied the Rev. Father Coleman, who occn
îsidenco close by the
si.mul with lightning
the church wa*
ing.
a bov
pied tho pai
church. The
h
rapidity and so
which quickly
ml both were
d,
the
. with
* 00 ,
insurance o
■ Hie origin of the lire i
' incendiary.
about $10,i
without doubt
Yt
B Mrs. Blaine's
J S. D-. Jan. 21.—In the
nony.
Deadw
of Marv Nevi
Blaine vs. James (j
Blaine, .'fr.,
order h is| be
•le by
i. lixiug temporary alimony
ittorneys' fees ut fciou. The
arranged by the c<
temporary alimony
•as *800 for ulimonv
Judge Tlioini
. *000
onth ago
fei
I
f«»r fee
This lias be
, , cut down on
account of the defendant's plea of poverty.
Portrait»
Gro
id Randall.
W;
Jan. 21.—The
its of
peakers Grow and Randall
«;re displayed i
the House lobby thi
«1 attracted
great deal
f well-merited
ich ihe likeness is striking
sterly. The portraits
u;h gilded frames, and they will
the collection
In the cas
and the e:
prove a pic
Iditir
of pictures of
-Speakers.

I si
Nk
•.
Ian. 21.— Herbe
the professional
guilty of shoot i î
wife of a patio
this morning sei
>f generul
g M
the
ap
«1 by Judge M
thee
« in Brookly
hard labor,
i
the full penalty
«I by law.
O LIT
Governor Flower last week signed tho
Enumeration bill passed by the New
York legislature, and it was placed
tho statute books.
!//.
Ihe two houses of the Mississippi
legislature have, by their separate votes,
re-elected Messrs. (Jeorge and Walthall
to the Lmted states Senate.
Governor Boies of Iowa was in
augurated at Des Moines Jau. 20th.
In his a«kl ross he urged tiie repeal of
the prohibitory laws, which, he said,
had failed of their purpose, being dis
regarded by entire c
wise law-abiding.
The executive committee of the Na
tional Association of Democratic Clubs
met in Washington Jan. 20th and de
cided that the meeting of the general
committee of the
munitics, other
ssociation shall be
held at the same place and date ;
rratic national convention.
The Maryland general assembly, in
joint convention, at Annapolis, yester
atified the action by the two
the
Dc
lay
:ck
ho
ke
rrmaratoly on Tuesday,
d L nited Mates Sc
. i
elc
. Balloting for
Wilson
successor to the
as resumed, but
i
rit
•suit.
Sie f«
Tl
str
the control of the
initie su
. 20th, resulted j
the sue
land-l'attist
and
ill';ul , a:li"i, nf J. Marslwll Wright" ni'
I.. high, ns dmirinnii of tho nmiiniltm
by a vote Of 44 1» (ig f„ r Mr. K. rr, tho
m:c rotary of the C<
kith Harrity
bor of the De
ocratic national
mi ii it
i •<; in place of William L.weott dc
Wednesday, April 13th, and lb
' cro selected as the date
sed.
Tisburg
d place for
the statu «;
■ention.
The Whisky Trust" directors, nt
( hicago, yesterday decided upon a re
duction in tl, 0 price of whisky.
Children Cr^ fcr Pitchc^s^Castoria
I
}
i
CHARGE OF BRIBERY.
A Foraknr Follower Raines a Rumpus In
Republican Camp.
Columbus, O., Jan. 19.—On the floor
of the house of representatives this
afternoon ox-Representative E. E. Dres
bach of Stark county demanded of Wil
liam Halm, chairman of the Republican
state committee, an explanation of an
insinuation in a newspaper interview
with Hahn that Dresbach had acted as
a middleman in demanding money for
the suppression of evidenco of
ruption.
While these two were quibbling,
Henry W. Tiernan demanded of Hahn
an explanation of statements made,
charging him with being a boodler.
The two men were apparently about to
come to blows, when the Speaker called
upon the sergeant-at-arms to separate
them and clear the lobby.
Mr. Tiernan publishes a card this
evening, the most important statement
in which is that he was present at a con
versation In which a third party was
commissioned by Captain J. C. Donald
son, Sherman's manager, to pay a mem
ber of the legislature $8,500 for his
vote. He further stated that ex-Gov
ernor Foraker was consulted and the
arrangement was made that the man
should* take the money and then
cause an arrest which, Tiernau
states, "would have repeated the Inoalls
episode of '78. made ex-Governor For
aker United States
the
senator and brought
to justice the ringleaders of one of tho
most disgraceful campaigns evor -wit
nessed in a civilized country."
Tiernan states that at the last moment
Forakey, out of regard for some persons
said to bo connected with the transac
tion, determined not to do It.
Late this afternoon Representative
Taylor of Jefferson county, offered a
resolution to exclude Mr. Tiernan from
the floor of the house on account of
spreading stories of bribery in the Ohio
legislature. After a heated debate, in
which the Foraker men took the part of
Tiernan, the resolution was referred for
investigation of Tiernan's conduct.
A humorous fact about Hood's Sarsaparilla
-it. expels bad humor and creates good humor.
Bei
A Fl ER Y F
it Kef
t «f Mr. Laur.
.Jan. 20.—M. Henri Rochefort, the
Boulangist leader, iu reply to the inquiry
telegraphed to him by M. Laur si
w hether he should challenge M. Cons_,
the minister of the interior, for striking
him during the trouble iu the chamber of
deputies,
prosecution, 1ms telegraphed as follows :
"Men of honor do not fight with thiev
in cam an.
to the Assall
lochefort's lie
!•
•bother he should resort to
pimps.
no justice and the magis
trates are only valets." To-day's papers,
while regretting the incidents of yesterday,
declare that the conduct of M. Constans in
tic
there is
striking M. L;
under tl
as perfectly excusable
circumstances.
He
!'H Till»!
We offer
for any
cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney ä Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for tho last 15 years, and believe
perfectly honorable in all business trans
actions, and financially able to carry out
any obligations made by the firm.
. * Tritax, Wholesale Druggists,
lolcdo, O.
hundred dollars reward
of catarrh that cannot be
Kinnan ft Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly upon tho blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. Testi
monials sent free. Price 75c. per bottle.
Sold by all druggists.
Will Not Cull i
Boise City, Id
Wille
Oxtra Session.
o. Jan. 20.—Governor
*d, has decided not to call
m of the legislature,
be arranged satis
matters of dispute ct
factorily without it.
IN G EN ERA L.
The trial of the suit for criminal libel
brought by Senator Quay against the
Pittsburg Post was begun in Pittsburg
yesterday week.
A German paper of Frankfort, N. Y.,
has been confiscated for publishing an
immoral article on Guy do Maupassant,
the famous French writer.
A dispatch fr
says that five of the Li
were convicted yesterday week and sen
tenced to terms of imprisonment rang
ing from one to live years.
Christopher P. Crunch died i
Pine Bluff, Ark.,
in wood rioters
, Cam
bridge, .Mass., Jan. 20th, aged 50 years.
artist and a member of tho
National Academy i
author and poet of considerable
ability.
According to a dispatch from'I raverse
City, Mich., the water of Lake Michigt
receded from the shore lino, fulling (5$
few minutes. In about an
hour tho waters returned "in a mighty
He
1804, as well
feet i
Thirty-si
ized i
imported paintings were
New York city Jan. 20th by
stoms officers, being a portion of a lot
imported by Art Dealer Spiridon, who
der bonds to answer Charges
of smuggling.
The railroad telegraphers'trouble
the East Tennessee road has been
settled, the railroad officials having
signed a written agreement that
member of the order shall be discrimi
nated against on account of his member
ship.
Chief Engineer Wagland of the
British steamship Calvin, was found
dead in the ship yesterday we.»k, at
Newport News, where the Calvin had
just arrived from Tyne, England. W;
land hud taken a dose ol' curbolic
whether by accident or design is not
35 ;
Jacob Studebakcr of Westminister,
Maryland, was found near York, Pa.,
on r i uesday week, having been brutally
beaten and robbed, and then placed
railroad track. Elisha Johnson,
•rested charged with
the crime, and was last week identified
by Htudcbaker,
prove fatal.
Charles Sehrocdcr, Martin Lyng, Ed
ward B. Gallup and W. II. Cartright,
whose arrest was ordered by the coro
ner's jury which has been investigating
the cause of tho explosion in the Warren
Springer factory, in Chicago, several
days ago, have been found and locked
up. Warren Springer, whose arrest was
also ordered, has not yet been appre
hended.
upo
colored, lias bee
•'hose injuries may
Mrs. Martha Davis nn«l lier brother,
W. H. Danlorth, two old people, who
lived in the suburbs of Athens, Ala.,
rday week found in their
i t<* death. The old woman's
clothing caught fire and she succeeded
filing the flames, but not until
so badly injured as to bee«
Her brother was bedridden
d could not assist her.
•fr«
she v
help!
•lut
Green, at Trent«
, N. J.,
petition for the ap
pointment of commissi
ter of the condemnation of Petty's
Island, in the Delaware river, i
ith the harbor improvement.
The court held that the state law does
.t permit of condemnation proceedings
< h government uses. The only
circumstances under which the Beere*
tary of war is authorized to make the
improvement and extend the appropria
tion is by a free gift of land to the
United States.
Jan. 1
denied
•rs in the mat
setio:
A MER ICA N CL I FF- D VF EL LERS.
They Are Relieved by One Arclueologlitt
to be tho Most Ancient Kaoes of Men.
The moving spirit in the new effort to
bring to light the buried history of this
western hemisphere, even as Schliemann
dolvod after the autiquarian treasures of
old Greece, is Rev. C. II. Green, who is
an enthusiast on tho subject of American
archæology and who has spent several
years' time and many thousand dollars
of his private fortune in exploring the
wildernesses and mountain fastnesses of
the south-west. Mr. Green has come to
the conclusion, after much investiga
tion and consideration of the subject,
that tho ruined bouses, mummies,
human bones, utensils and implements
found in the Grand Gulch in Utah ante
date any human relics or productions
yet discovered, being anterior, in his
opinion, to the wonderfully ancient
ruins at Karnak in Egypt. Mr. Green
figures tho probable date of the prosencc
ln lifo on the earth of These tribes of
cliff-dwellers at more than 10,000 years
ago, and this theory is sustained by the
opinion of the ethnological department
of the Smithsonian Institution.
Mr. Green, who is stopping at the
Leland Hotel, in St. Louis, has been ex
hibiting some of the relics found by him
by Charles McLoyd and C. C.
Graham and other explorers in tho
wild, almost impassable, canons in New'
Mexico, Utah, Arizona, Colorado and
Nevada. What the first adventurers
found Mr. Green purchased, and to
these he added such archeological
specimens as he and his special
ploring party found after most adven
turous research. The whole collection
will be
Fair in
under char
Harvard College. Before the date set
for the opening of the fair Mr. Green
hopes to have obtained many more
valuable specimens and to have
cleared the subject of many of the ob
scuring circumstances that how environ
tô make plain the correctness of
his theory that the American cliff
dwellers were the oldest human race of
which we have any knowledge.
"The Federal government should send
to those regions a well-equipped expe
dition comprising a competent ethnolo
gist and arclueologist," said Mr. Green
to-day. "The surveys heretofore made
have been entirely topographical or geo
logical—both necessary and useful, of
course, but throwing
most interesting phase of all, the archaeo
logical. It is true that several explorers
have visited the plac
the cliff-dwellers may be found, but
these investigations were almost value
less because not scientifically conducted.
The archæologist can often derive much
knowledge by seeing a specimen
iu situ than by examining it after being
removed from its environment. Pur
ported cliff-dwellers have been brought
east and exhibited; that was plainly to
gratify curiosity, because these individ
and the cliff-dwellers
of 10,000 years ago wqrj not Indians,
but white men—they belonged to the
Caucasian race, as their features and
skulls plainly indicate. It. is to obtain
accurate scientific information about the
relies left by these pro-historic American
races that the
organized. Some of the best know
in Chicago will be interested. The
organization will be incorporated under
the title 'Tho American Bureau of Cliff
dwellers Exploration.' It
for profit. Ni
self
exhibition at the World's
the ethnological department
of Professor Putnam of
it
light
where relics of
uals w
association has been
ill not be
work of the kind, even
under the most favorable conditions, for
exhibition or sale of recovered speci
mens will yield as much as it costs to
obtain them. The association will be in
the interests of science and American
archaeology.
"I hud many strange experiences in
my exploring tours. There were seven
in my party, and
from a railroad
supplies
cated the canon in which we knew the
remains to be we found its sides to have
a sheer descent of more than 1,500 feet,
and we traveled 70 miles along its edge
before finding a place where we could
descend. Wo finally got down by a
zigzag route, practically leaping from
lodge to ledge and making our ponies do
the same. We found tho houses of the ex
tinct races built under cover of project
ing water-worn cliffs, and bo protected
from , the elements that they are in a
fairly good state of preservation, being
everywhere covered to a dopth of 18
Inches or more by a fine, dry dust. In
the floors of these ruins we found at
ring depths beneath tflo surface
king utensils, bone and stone imple
ments, feather cloth, ornaments of bone
and shell and weapons of various kinds.
No iron was found. These people must
have antedated the 'stone ago,' aud yet
superior to it, as their handicraft
•e 200 miles
rc had to pack o
horseback. When
L >
vat
shows. I
"The buildings themselves are won
derful. They are built of dvod brick
of stoncB hewn with great skill and m...
yelous taste, considering the develop
ment of the architects. The pillars and
arches arc well proportioned, and the
structures were evidently intended to
be lasting. One built under an abutting
cliff in tho Maucos canon is 425 feet
long, 80 feet
height. Each house is also a fortress.
Some of the supporting pillars are hol
low cylinders pierced with loopholes,
invading enemy could be
other projected
. On the ground tloor of this
125 rooms. In places the
»aches up to the overhanging
mountain side, which is covered with
hieroglyphics.
"Groat reverence was paid the dead,
especially women and children. Em
most effective style was
known to these people. One nuinimv
of a child we found was excellently pre
served. It was wrapped in three cover
ings of buckskin and buried where
neither sun or rain could reach it. A
woman's body, well preserved
considerable portion of the kai.
head, was also found. Many skulls and
large bones of the body were dug up.
These remains indicate that the race of
prehistoric cliff-dwellers were not In
dians. Not a characteristic of tho ex
isting Indian is to be fourni i
bony physiogomies. They
more the white
Europe. The cliff-dwellers were ïàrgê
men. Some of the jawbones we found
larger than that possessed by any
living to-day. One of the w<
mummies fourni buried in a sitting pos
ture in the detritus at the foot of the
cliff was six feet two inches high. 1
satisfied that most interesting dis
;ries would result from systematic
is what the ne
or
•ide and ten stories
repulsed by
weap
palace
structure
balming i
to a
the
these
semble
of norllu!
research, and that
dation proposes to do.
find the
Mexico,
strato that A meric
continent when Europe und Asia were
but isolated mountains aud islands ris
ing out of the receding oceans after the
glacial period of 35,000 y
think we'll
into
remains extending dow
d we may be able to demon
inhabited
ago."

The be
alve
the world for cuts,
, ulcers, salt, rheum, fever
s, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
( and ail skin eruptions, and posi
ior pay required
to give perfect satisfaction,
.«funded. For sale by Beau
" .Seventh and Fine streets.
bruises, s«
lively c
is guarantee«
money
.Smith, co
tio«xls delivered free.
It
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castor^
A Doom for Woman Snffrago.
Washington, Jan. 20.—A largo
delegation representing the Woman's
Suffrage Association, which has been
in annual convention here this week,
before the Senate select committee
on woman suffrage, this morning, and
delivered addresses in favor of the pro
posed amendment of the constitution
introduced in the Senate in December,
givi«g the right of suffrage to women.
The committee decided, by a vote of 3 to
2, to mako a favorable report to the
Senate on the measure, and the Massa
chusetts Senator will probably be its
champion on the floor. Many of tho
prominent members of the association
were present at the hearing, which was
held in the reception room of the Senate.
EVENING ECHOES.
Lady (to her maid)—Haven't you at
last found the flowers which you have
to put in my hair? Maid—Oh, yes,
ma'am, but now I can't find the hair.
Mrs. Slimdlet—Is there anything I
can put In your room to add to your
comfort? New Boarder—I notice there
thermometer on the stove; how do
you know when it is going?
A young man who was fond of champagne
One day lumled way down in Magne,
When he learned with contrition
That the stufe
He fled, and wus ne'er seen sgagne.—- Ex.
Sunday-school Teacher (sadly)—"I'm
afraid Johnny, that I will never meet
you in heaven." Johnny—"Why? what
have you been doing now Y'—Harper's
Bazar.
is
Prohibition,
"Jack Blower told me the other day
that he rides a great deal." "Well, for
once ho told the truth. You sec he lives
in a Harlem flat and works in a Produce
Exchange office."— Puck.
"What do we get from iodine?"
Inquired the tutor placid.
"I think," replied a brilliant youth,
"'lis idiotic acid."
The tutor frowned and said, "A-hum !
\ dung friend, have you been taking some?"
—Pharmaceutical Era.
"My cook left to-day in spite of all I
could do." "What was the trouble?"
"The children annoyed hcr. 1 offered
to kill the children, but she was afraid
the authorities would detain her as a
witness.'
N. Y. Daily News.
recent poem Ella Wheeler Wil
cox speaks of "the wistful mouths of
unkissed nuns." Will Ella kindly send
lost office address of these lactic,
the Discourager of Wistfulness, care of
this office ?—Rochester Post-Express.
"Wait on the Lord and keep His way,
and He shall exalt then to inherit the
land." "Watch your hat and overcoat;
the proprietor is not responsible for
them." These are the inscriptions on
two placards that hang near each other
wallsofa Chestnut street lunch
house .—Philadelphia Record.
House Hunter—"Do you live here,
sonny ?" Little Boy—"Yessir. In that
house next above that empty one." "I
see. Do you— er— have nice neighbors?"
"Yessir. No matter how mean we is to
'em, they don't say a word. Come
around and see me break a winder."—
Good News.
In
the
on tho
"I wonder why I can't make my kite
fly," wailed the little brother of the
high school girl. "It looks io me," re
plied Mildred, "as though its caudal ap
pendage were disproportionate to its
superficial area." "1 don't think that's
it," «aid Jim; "I think its tail is too
light."
First Citizen—Strange, isn't it, that
the inhabitants of China should maltreat
the missionaries sent to them from
Christian countries? Second Citizen—
Simply incomprehensible.
What's the r<
Hello!
down the street?
First Citizen—Oh, nothing but a lot of
fun-loving boys pounding
Good News.
Chinee.
He was in the pantry trying to open
of tomatoes and making a good
deal of unnecessary noise about it.
"What in the world is the matter?"
demanded his wife from the kitchen.
c you trying to open that can
of tomatoes with?" "Can-ope
he growled back. "Do you
suppose I was trying to open it with
my teeth ?" "No; I thought, perhaps,
judging from your language, you were
trying to open it with prayer."—Ac to
'What
, Of
A physician, who spent some time iu
the countries bordering on tho Gulf of
Mexico, found a curious body of men
among the natives called Curodos de
Calebra, or the safe from vipers. Having
been inoculated with the poison of the
serpents they w
î proof against their
venomous bites. The inoculation wus
made with the venom tooth of a viper
ami the bulb of a native plant called
man«) del sapo (toad's hand). Tim pro
mtive inoculation has been an old cus
tom among the natives of that region.
The desirability of care in expression
can hardly be too forcibly impressed
upon those who write advertisements,
circulars and public announcements of
•ts. A very peculiar effect was
produced by the following
ment, contained in the advertisements
of a
all
ninee
Dunty fair: "Among other at
- dures of this great fair there
will be highly amusing donkey rae
and pig races. "Competition in the
two contests open to citizens of the
county only."— Youth's Companion.
A horse jockey in Aroostook county
(Me.), repented of his sharp practices,
joined the church, and announced that
if lie had taken unfair advantages of
any one in a horse trade he would be
glati to square things by paying the
difference in cash. It was scarcely day
light the next morning when a neighbor,
who considered that he had been
ap with the newly
converted jockey, made his appearance
at the latter's door, remarking that he
had "come early to avoid the rush."
The jockey promptly settled the case.
Phrases and slang terms are fre
quently born of interesting episodes, as
witness the following : Peter the Great,
while off driving in the neighborhood
of Moscow on one occasion, wus seized
with the pangs of hunger. "What have
we in the hamper ?" he asked of his aide.
"There is but
tractive let
"roasted" i
candle left, your
majesty," replied the aide, "but 1 think
I can exchange it for a fowl at the next
farmhouse, if you wish." "Do so," re
plied the czar, "for I am famished, and
do not «;are for a light luncheon." The
aide laughed, and, as lie had surmised,
imaged the exchange; but tho bird
was found to be unusually tough,
do not think, Vosky," said the
peror, later—"I do not think the game
was worth the candle."— Harper's Bazar.
The
"I
•count of the girl who laughed
herself to death in Ohio is not without a
precedent in Massachusetts. Several
years ago "Farmer Allen" and "Brother
they were called (David
Allen and It. K. Potter), used to travel
together as Republican stump speakers.
They had a great fund of stories, anil
were accustomed to tell them in a
comical way. They spoke
Dedham, and F
of the audience laughing so that the
man could not stop. He was carried
home, and literally laughed himself to
death. He was a Democrat, too,
lievo, and so the killing was done upon
one of the opposite party. These inci
dents illustrate the danger of people
being as funny as they can, which Dr.
Holmes long ug:> warned against.—
Philadelphia Evening Telegraph.
Potter,"
îeting
îr Allen set one
be
AN HISTORIC RELIC.
Tho Gateway of Old F
Post of the Hud«
At the upper end of the main street
of Winnipeg is an interesting relic of
the earlv «lays of tho Canadian north
west. It is iho gateway of old Fort
Garry, known far and wide before St.
Paul and Minneapolis were overheard
of. Through that gate for many y
hundreds of Indians passed to sell their
loads of furs or skins to the agents of
the Hudson Bay Company. It is said
that onco a year thero was a grand
carousal around the old gate. Christmas
was the brightest day in the calendar
for tho poor red
only occasion
brethren in tho fort
with whisky. It
drinks, and
Garry, the Chief
Hay Company.
, because it was tho
• which his white
rould fill him up
a long time be
the red-letter day
the untutored native indulged in
grand, glorious, royal drunk.
Through that old gute, In 18(19, ltiel
marched his Scotch and English
prisoners, when he incited the French
half-breeds to rebel nnd ordered the
governor, w
over her new territory, to betake him
self back to Ontario. 'J'hoBO wei
most exciting days that Fort Garry
saw, and it was a lucky tiling fo._
few thousand English-speaking pioneers
of the north-west that the reign of terror
ushered in by this irresponsible, half
crazy leader did not endure long. Near
the old gate Riel placed Scott, the
martyr of the first rebellion, against the
wall of the fort and shot him. The
wall has vanished. The place where
Scott fell is marked by no memorial,
but to every stranger who visits the old
gate is shown the spot
stood.
The city extends beyond the fort, and
the value of tho land has led to the de
struction of the interesting relic of early
days in the Red River country. Twenty
years ago the walls of Fort Garry
closed several acres. Now the old gate
is tumbling into complete ruin.
Through the old gate have rumbled
thousands of specimens of that peculiar
invention, the Red River cart, some of
which may still he seen in Winnipeg.
Hundreds of them carried from St. Paul
stores and supplies to Fort Garry,
carts w
tw
■ I
'bom Canada had appointed
th<
•■wi
; II
•hero Scott
_, Tho
ere of home manufacture nnd
were constructed entirely without iron,
because the transporting of such heavy
material to Fort Garry was too expen
sive for the use of it. The harness of
the oxen that drew the earls was made
of the raw hide of the buffalo dressed
for the purpose.
Where the bustling city of 40,000 in
habitants now stands the prairie, almost
as level as a floor, was the grazing
ground of great herds of buffaloes,
which formed the staple article of tood
for the Indians. Their shins were
brought by thousands into Fort Garry,
lhirty-five years ago tho territory
known on our side of the border a:
lied River country. Fort Garry w
' „ s the chief post of the Hudso,.
Day Company. It derived its import
ance from the fact that it was at the
junction of the Assiniboino and the Red
River, and was right on the border be
tween the hundreds of miles of scrub
between Ottawa and tho fort and the
great prairies and plains which extend
to the Rocky Mountains,
the close of the Riel
s the
Soon after
. . - ibellion Canada
took more effective control of the region
ami lort (lurry brain t.ulevelop into an
Important city, with the crumbling gate
way ns its must interesting historical
monument.
"How old i
ut-boy?" "Twelve."
...... ,ritc? "-No" "HencU"
Why, aren't you ashamed to
ciennve him of ordinary education?"
llush! I m educating him to bo an
acceptable juror, and it's the terror of
my life that be may
school."— Washington Star .
y
"C
"No."
he
:ay and go to
Faded, jaded,
tired, ov
. worked wome
^Vous. d*
V?
delicate
d suffering
JR These
3 ®
T
tho
' i
we helped to
health and
strength by Dr.
Piorce's Favor
m.
tion. It's a legitimate medicine, that cor
•ts and cure*; a tonic that, invigorates
and builds up; u nervino that soothes und
strengthens. And if it doesn't do what
«f ! nakers claim for it, they don't wont
painful disorders and wenk
.ffliet, women, tho " Prescrip
safa and certain remedy_a
. . . .. • !» periodical pains, iu
mrnal inflammation and ulceration, und
kindred ailments—if it fails to benefit or
cure, you have your
No other inedicin
your money.
For nil the
that n
guaranteed «
;y back.
for w«
. . . - is sold
y mg terms, If any could bo,
you may bo sure that it would lie. Is
something else which pays tho dealer
better, likely to be "just
good f "
*f/)v£ a mi
L AVs
/
lilt
TIKE23 GrÜ'SÜT
EXTERNAL REMEDY
For Man and Beast,
Stonebraker's Liniment
1
:
CURES
Lumbago»'Nsaralcto, Pains In the SI,I,
mod 1/luil.s, ScnldB, Ul
Br.il.r*,« liUblulnit, Fr
worms. Truer, ftpr
Joints, Merc Thron
s. Old «ore
Bites, Rin(
i, »wi lled
Poison, Spina
Pleurisy, Pni
it and Nhoulder.
« bsok mors rood in on
la
Ch*
ioUniod
:
¥
Wf. w Ä
nc
Ror®«, Kic
Zfti
■ »■ d •! OO
»'•H.ltry Dealer In the
bnttl«.
F I
fter Uavlntr trte.1 t
. Poult»y Koad. et
rid
t Chicks« Pow
RT.
iMf
»ud
S.ÆTS
tÄuSl,
x

Sum
r».
Obt
Hh|< (tap
» apMnfio
<. b
iChi
!kS
ur tuarrUant for n™m B „Rak 1
Y.
1er. ul mir, „m*
d •»>« psskiur*
original prsp«.
oats; $3so i> u r
«v«ry vmoro. Tr
IMKMTONBBRAKKH Ull EM IGA I, GO.
b-1» Proprietor» of iuo Gaum»« Hionabrikcr
'f fraudu aud 1 tu i UaûoiJt^ ' ° r * ' Md *
I :
11
FITS,
[LEI I
.INO SICKNESS i
study. I w
i:
liblu
udy.
EL gTrÖotTm. C. *H3 1'eurl St.. N, Y.
ECZEMA ON A LADY.
Stubborn C.me ot Skin Dise
Her Face ami llody. Many
Rattled.
covered
Marvellous and Complote Cure by Cutt
curà. Six Yours Have Elapsed
i;
A lady customer of
Carol i no D
(Miss Fanny Atwood
<1 of a
pot. N. Y.)
of skin J
lx
; ...
I» U1« Of
KRHBD
case had baffled the skill cf
pby.oicluiiH. They unanimously pronounced it
Kczeiua, with Kbouinatls
. Home predicted
»Rh
. She
KM Ut
lurking in the
f
iy more
o tho lhoii iiath
A it KM Kb
■nit her ltheumatiam
s greatly rolinvod during the treatmoot.
have elapsed at nee the o
I has since nover
She m*ed
ell
tier
only completely
ed
Six y
i
by
ut ratuer «!
symptom* of tho ro
completely took
At ins A t wood
tho Eczema which onot
MftSMlon of her
»lights iu tolling
face and
of the good e
«iy
«I«
soil, lied l
pi all kin>
ns for
prep
sale; Indeed, CUTICURA
buy almost continuously,
JIA8KIN & TODD, Druggist, Ithaca, N. Y.
aratlt
Hoad is on tbo list
Urn
I y
Cuticura IKonolveut
Blood and Skin I'uriOer and greatest
The ]
. and Cuticura, tho
1 CUTICURA 80AI\
Skin
Skin Heau
©xquim
«rnally (to clour me »klu
o liuir), c
evory specimi ot
jniztng, Itching, burning, scaly and pimply
diseases of tho skin, scalp and
Hold everywhere. Price, cuticura, 50c.; Soap.
ItRSOI.VENT, SI. Prepared by tbo PoTTim
Chemical Corporation, Boston.
8 »"Send for "How to Cure Skin Disease«," 64
illustrations, 100 testimonials.
Dau
pag
Qiyi'LKM, black-heads, rod. rough, chapped
rim and oily skill cured by CUTICURA SoAf.
I CANT BREATHE
Pains, Soreness,Weakness,
Hacking Cough, Asthma, Pleurisy,
ami Intliimuiation
Cho*
. _ Guttr.urn
»'«I Piauler. Nothing like It for
Weak I.uiigH.
RHEUMATISM
KIMBALL'S GERMAN
Anti-Rheumatic Ring
IS A SITKDY
'AIN CORK FOR
RHEUMATISM IN
ALL ITS FORMS
AM» ANY DISEANE
WHERE A QUICK
ENING OF THE CIR
CULATION IS RE
QUIRED. IT IS THE
ONLY GENUINE
RING SOLD IN THIS
COUNTRY, AND HAS
RECEIVED MORE
THAN SEVEN THOU
SAND UNSOLICITED
T E S T I »I O MALS
M PERSONS
WHO HAVE BEEN
CURED BV IT.
MK. RUDOLPH liLANKKNBUHG, DU» MAR
KET STKFKI. PHILADELPHIA, PA., says:
••While in
hiciiRo several
Hli KHKUNI ATISM. heilig unable to
onttiH ago. I
BIltTlM
ti»r
h ml vl
I !
m
matin Kit
d what wai
u pain hat] ontirely loft
very
!
>y
y HttrprlMo
tv
•I
it
nod. 'I his
id I« as «la
ISON of John 11. Ellison
I'll!LAI)IILIMIIA. |*A.,
tho f
It.LIAM It. K
Hiilliiii
it k!
h pioiiHiiro to tratify
rltH nf j
ItUftllO
of ati
■ 1
oi.i'i
.
urn of LI!
!.. with II
net, i'll]I
M Vi lNM
ML
h
'1st, No.
\. PA..
h
•!
My wlf
It
flftoor
fltll HIM
vrisM
ils tl
ralgla Iu
head
«ting
. I
.f
. I lull MR
Mm
by good physician*
U
adios.
!
Cl in
I it
Wild

• ffl
LilLl
MA I 13M (»I
Mil II. K
Son, Hatton
NEIL
I1IA
, of I
KiRlith
kford &
pii 11.
SL
Anti
tor MUSCULAR Ullh
i its ro'
all sulTm-ers to b
tic Lings for tbs
ornmend
Prospect
ed w
8. \\
ML. c. E. W
. Preside
Co„ PHILADELPHIA, 1
♦•I
ii
itlt good
»nult!«. 1 ilk
•IIAHI.E
..OLTKLS, .
Co., PttILAD
Antl-Lbeumut
■retary Pr« 3 -
.PillA. PA.,
LiiiR has
i of tho ninny
idocl it would
•Yi
sfucti
:;v
:
t It."
h. PULLMAN, of Pullman' I'ulaco
HICAGO., ILL,
Lt
«■
••Th
ii
fttlt*
tg Ii
at i
uo
I witli (>
u
fr
|»U;
Ii
it
umht certainly t>
y way from ItHEU
all whu buller in
MAI'IS
MR
N. ROBERTSON, Audit
Pullman
"LIIKÜ
. '"JV™".
lt worked nicely
since thon advisod
ill*
ii). ILL.,h
MAI ISM all.'
1 mo ii
I
ot
utilised
in
a 1 «:
ll. II. s ^
Works, PI i.LM
kindly solid
Anti-Lhotiii
SION'S, Manager Pull»
Car
N. ILL., w
> by first mail
c Kt
i i
utbs
a* of losing
si
1
ivo had the luisfort
it.'
ML. DAVID R. SICKLE»,' Vioo-I'rosl.Ient
.RKOADWAY, NEW
no or
voral months and
from It. 1 do
iionil It to RHEUMATIC
liberty
think propor."
MILK, Fri
ll Surety
Yt
ITT. writ
-Lhoiiumtic Lii
fo
shat
Mill.

.ML. W
.1.
Cable
150 Franklin street,
: "After HuiTorlng *x
'M VHSM for eight
Antl-lthnu
Uubber Co
HOSTON, M
i-it
o_ pil

rslbouffh
if
atic ItiiiKH.
R lt a short tlmo i
lid a
end
, , , , »ins'e RHRU
l*aln. I sincoi'dy roeommoud your
■' afflicted with RHEUMATISM

my busluos.
MaTIC
all
abovo tostimonials,
but a fowaf the
ollcitod from evory
itry uud Europe.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
ed with
ctlou of
many
ch have bmn arlvor
. ortunt dis.
ntly cured thousands
when
sotrlc
valiiahl
ry.
n
and
tailed.
PRICE, TWQ DOLLARS.
GOI.D COVERED
N OUTSIDE, »5.
of paper of
hould bo
. " ft «■
ige
CO,, Sole Agts
Mos. 604 and 60S C-irard Building.
(BltOAD AND CHESTNUT STB.)
•I
OFFICES,
PHILADELPHIA. PA.
Iy appe.
air-«
ally.
Act SHrcctly on
CuriES Chills and Fzvsn, Dv8 fEMlA(
Si« kIIi.adaciic, Ciuons Colic, Const va«
^ 31 * ** ,LE8 ' 1'AtWTATIOM
IIbaut, Dizzinsbs, Tonn» i.
Coated Tono ur,
7<>u«l
bed-ti
ii UtrLBPBNF.SS,
8to
CH. If
not "feel
o Btliuiila
well, a ringle pill nt
Iuo Gtomnch, restores
thoappctlto, imparts vigor to the system.
They euro all dlsooMS llko mngtc Get
the right kind. SELLERS' LIVER 1'ILLS
Sold by drugglfit^. Send for circula
SELIjER 8 MEDICINE CO.,Pittsbur>» l v p.

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