The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, March 17, 1892, Image 2

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    Crime aud Penalties.
“Thomas. Gaffy shot and killed Edward
Buggy at Duncomb, Towa. Gaffy was are
ected suitor of the girl with whom Buggy
' ‘was walking when killed.
. Wm. A. Losey, confidential bookkeeper
for Mallison Bros. & Co., paper warehouse,
. New York, has been arrested, charged with
? appropriating $31,703.37 of the firm’s
money. The peculations have been going
on for over two years and the money was
spent in playing policy!
Agent Robert McClure of the Pittsburg,
Pa, Law and Order Society was held under
$1,000 bail for court trial to answer the
_ charge of perjury preferred against -him by
J. M. Sharps, a newsdealer.
N. F. Evans, a director of the defunct
Spring Garden National bank, of Philadel-
phia, was held in $15,000 on charges of mis-
‘application and embezzlement of the bank’s
“funds.
. Bobert Musgrave, the life insurance
- swindler of Terre Haute, Ind., was refused
ew trial and sentenced to prison for ten
years. ; ;
_ Officer Berean. of Philadelphia, shot ‘and
killed a man named W. H. Brooks while
frying to arrest him on a charge of attempt-
ed burglary,
Two young men at Sandosville, Ga., W. H
H. and Fred Horton, are on trial for burn-
Ang eight railroad trestles and bridges.
_8ix men ambushed C. M. Brittain, a mine
| owner, and three others near Durango City,
J “Tex. a few days ago, knowing he had $10,-
000 th silver in his wagon. The robbers
were repulsed, with the loss of one man on
each side. No arrests.
SHE Messieglia and his 17-year-old kon were
murdered at Yazoo, Miss., by some unknown
parties in their store. They had been killed
iy blows on the head with some hard wea-
pon, probably a hatchet, ;
At Indianapolis, Oscar Abbott, Colored,
26 years old, shot and slightly wourlled
Celia Bass, also colored, and then blew
his brains out. She had refused to marry
him.
John T Bright, of Taney county, Mo.
shot and instantly killed his wife while she
was returning from a spring with a bucket
of water. He then proceeded tothe house
‘and informed his children that their mother
‘was dead. The little ones subsequently
found her corpse on the wayside. Brigh
was captured aud lynched.
Capital, Labor and Industrial,
A. Leggate & Sons, the Allegheny, Pa.,
axle makers, have reduced the wages of
Aheiz employes 10 per cent:
. Thesixth annnalxeport of the New York
: factors inspectors sent to ths Legislature,
- shows that ehild labor has been reduced in
this State over 60 per cent. since 1886. The
sweat shop evil is increasing, and it is no
uncommon thing to meet in them with men
‘and women who work from 16 to 19 hours
_ a day, seven daysa week for weeks in suc
pession. The swarm of inferior immi-
grants who have come to the country within’
the last few years supply these sweat shops.
The strike of the employes in the Penn-
sylvania Railroad Company’s shops at
JAndianapolis, which began three weeks ago,
aow seems likely to affect the entire sys-
dem.
Hoorens iron mill, in Norristown, Pa., was
shut down, throwing 230 men idle. The
wages of McHose & Sons blast furnace em-
_ (ployes, of Norristown, have been cut 10 per
bent.
The report of William Stein, mine in-
spector of the sixth anthracite district, (Pa.)
for 1891, shows the total production of coal
was 6,419,302 tons, and increase of 182,748
. tons over 1890. The fatal accidents for the
gear was the same as in 1890—66; non-fatal,
92, a decrease of 5. Employes inside the
mines, including foremen, 11,269: outside the
anines, including superintendents and clerks,
8,203. Total outside and indide, 19,472. Tons »
of coal produced per life lost,
against 94,491 in 1890.
Twelve furnaces at Birmingham, Ala.,
have reduced wages 10 per cent. » In only
one has there been a strike, and in that case
a sufficient force was immediately secured
to continue work. The reduction affected
8,000 men.
The Langhiin’ nail factory at Mingo
‘Junction, O., closed indefinitely, laying idle
450 men. .
* The machinists’ strike at Indianapolis has
heen officially indorsed.
The building trades school at Pittsburg
will graduate its first class of journeymen
bricklayers next month. Their work is
pronounced by experts to be fully equal to
hat of competent journeymen,
3 Legislative.
95,757 as
3
The Towa prohibition law was practically
A wiped out of existence Wednesday. The
State senate then, by a voteof 27 to 22,
adopted the.Gatch bill, which allows county
_ option, each community being given the
right to settle the liquor question for itself
by elections to take place not oftener than
every five years.
After a good deal of debate the New York
Senate’ declined to investigate the Keeley
Tn the lower house of the Bw | State leg-
ature the question of the resubmission of
prohibition to. a vote of the people came up
| Th New York assembly committee on
des has agreed to report favorably the bill,
nding the capital punishment act of the
8, The bill does away with the electric-
rand substitutes hanging. The bill
without amendment.
Senate passed on third reading
fog the World's fair
fair on Sunday,
at Ey a distance of 105 feet.
~4-most remarkable feature of the fall is that
he was not killed. He alighted on his feet
elevator shaft
The
and walked home, a distance of ‘several
squares.
At Danville, TIL, Jeremiah Moran, aswell
known mining expert, was squeezed todeath
between the mine roof and a car which ran
off the track.
Edward A. Rush, a New York horseman
wisiting Lancaster, Pa., ‘was kicked in tae
.abdomen by a horse and fatally injured.
Two Big'Four freight traios, from Cincin-
nati to Indianapolis, collided near Brook-
field, Shelby county, Ind. It was a rear-end
collision, the first train stopping unaccount-
ably. Conductor Wm. McGill and Brake-
man Myers, in the caboose of the first train,
‘were instantly killed. Considersble loss of
property resulted. %
Chas. Lesh and H. A. Swatsor were en-
gaged in a friendly boxing contest at Bluff-
ton, Ind., when Swatsor struck Lesh a blow
on the neck. He fell and expired in five
minutes.
} Convention News
The Texas State Republican convention
elected four delegates to the national con-
vention and adopted resolutions instructing
"the delegates to cast the vote of Texas for
Herrison.
The Executive Committee of the People’s
Party State Central Committee has issued a
proclamation calling upon the people of
Kansas who indorse the declaration of union
and independence of all industrial forces and
the platform promulgated by the St. Louis
conference to meet in mass convention in
their respective county seat towns on March
26 for the purpose of ratifying the action of
the conference.
The Republican State Convention at In-
dianapolis elected de'egates-at-large to the
Minneapolis convention. . All except the
17 delegates from FL. Wayne or Allen coun-
ty are in favor of Harrison's renomination.
The latter are for Gresham or others. :
A Texas convention of white Republicans
has been called, and will senda contesting
‘delegation to Minneapolis.
The Plymouth County Republican Con-
vention at LeMars, Ia. instructed for Har
rison, and tabled a resolution indorsing the
Gatch liquor license bill.
Fires.
plant of the United States Glass Company,
was destroyed by fire at Pittsburg, entailing
‘a loss estimated at $150,000. The factory,
commorily known as Duncan’s. covered half
an acre.
At Milwaukee, the art store of Roebel &
Reinhard. Toss, $46,000; many valuable
paintings were destroyed.
At Chicago, a 6-story building, 195 and 197
Michigan street. Loss, $125,000.
At Philadelphia. fire destroyed John
Greaez Bros.” cotton and woolen mill. Loss,
$75,000, insurance $50,000. Also the Irving
public school at Dubuque, Iowa. Loss
$15,000, insured.
At Bloomfield, Ia., the entire south side
of the public square, including the Opera
House and many stores. : Less about $200,-
000.
At Bedford, Ind.; 11 business blocks and
three residences. Loss, $35,400; insurance,
$8,390.
Washington News.
Representative Holman, of Indiang, is
again confined to his rooms in’ Washington
by an attack of illness,
The President sent the following nomina-
tions to the Senate: George W. Miller, of
Pittsburg, to be Collector of Internal Rev-
enue for the Twenty-third District 6f Penn-
sy'vania. Judson C. Clements, of Georgia,
to be an Inter-State Commerce Commission-
er, vice, Walter I. Bragg, deceased, and
‘William Lindsay, declined.
The House Committee on Territories will
repor favorable on the Arizonia Statehood
bill,
Secretary Blaine is improving slowly. It
is the general impression that he will take a
Southern trip as soon as he is able to travel.
President Harrison issued his proclama-
tion announcing the establishment of the
reciprocal treaty with Nicaragua under the
reciprocity section of the McKinley bill.
Sanitary Items.
The Japanese leper, John Wing, of Phila-
delphia, had been cook at the Peabody hotel
there, where 150 guests boarded, until with
in a few days. He was en‘ to the pest
house. Dr. Paide, the proprietor of the ho-
tel, entered bail in the sum of $1,500 to ap-
pear in court for employing a cook afflicted
with leprosy.
“Only one case of typhus fever has been
reported by the board of health at New
York City within four days, and it is
thought that the health officers now have
the plague under control and that it will
soon be wiped out. During the week just
ended 12 cases of typhus were reported.
The deaths number eight. © The total num-
ber of cases since the disease was first discoy-
ered is 149, and the deaths 76.
Personal.
The Hon. Charles Foster, secretary of the
United States treasury, has embarked for
New York on the North German Lloyd
Steamer Spree, the same vessel on which he
went to England.
Jay Gould has given $25,000 ‘to the Uni-
versity of the City of New York. The gift
was made a few days after he gave his check
for $10,000 to the Presbyterian church ex-!
tension committee.
HM igsaid that Mrs, James G. Blaine, Jr.,
yielding to the arguments and importuni-
ties of her counsel and friends, has decided
to forgo for the present her promise to give
the public the full text of her love letters,
which she ¢laimed Secretary Blaine had
garbled i in: his statement.
The Crops.
The prospect of large yield of fruit in
Southern Indiana were never better than
at present with the exception of the peach
crop. :
Reporte trom various. cities and owns
t throughout Kansse and mar os foe |
Factory D, the largest and most valuable
i
— —
effect that winter wheat h
b .
Michigan peach buds are in peril.
The blizzard has damaged winter wheat
in Kansas,
Polizical. fg
Inthe municipal election at Seattle, Wash.,
J. T? Ronald, Democrat, was elected Mayor
by 800 majority. The Democrats also elect
ed nearly all the other officers! At the last
Seattle
feated Wm. Carroll (Deri. ) the present in-
cumbent; for Mayor, by 2,968 majority at
Rochester, N.Y. The whole Republican
city ticket is elected.
Dr. T. L. Froop, of Meadville, is the only
Republican candidate in the field for Con.
gress in Crawford county.
Democrats carried Seattle, Wash.
Financial and Commercial.
The Standard Oil Trust, the greatest and
most powerful monopoly in the world, is go-
ing out of existence. The real p in
terminating the trust, itis sup , is to
reorganize all its companies into one great
company, as the Sugar Trust did. Thus the
legal difficulties would all be overcome at
one stroke. The new company would bea
far greater trust than the Standard Oil
Trust itself,
Mortuary. :
Infectious cerebral meningitis has caused
five deaths within a few days in the vicinity
of Laurel Hull, town of Newton, L. I. N.Y.
Three of the deaths were in one family.
Religious.
phia, the question of admitting women as
ed upon and defeated by a vote of 76 to 66.
| Sporting
Collin. the Detroit pug. easily whipped
Gilmore of Chicago in eight rounds at
Detroit. :
The Weather.
Cold weather has formed ice in Louisiana
and Mississippi.
Miscellaneous. J
A bold attempt was made Tuesday evens
ing to abduct Carrie, the 3-year-old daughter
of H. W. Petsinger, Pittsburg Pa. The little
girl was out walking when a man seized her
and started off. He was overtaken some
distance away, when he dropped. the child
and fled.
0. C. Perry, the Eastern train robber, is
said to have secured $27,000 from the Adams
express car which he robbed three weeks
ago, but no trace of the money has been
found. Detectives are working on the
theory that he hid the money which was
afterwards rémoved by a confederate.
The Philadelphia conference of the Metho-
dist Episcopal church, now in session at
Philadelphia, passed unanimously a resolu
tion protesting against the opening of the
World’s Fair on Sundays.
Last night the Rev. R. Cyrus, a colored
at Las Vegas, N. M., on a visit, fell dead in
the pulpit while preaching,
Victims of the blizzard in the Northwest
In the Methodist conference at Philadel: | &
delegates to the general conference was pass.
Methodist. minister at Trinidad,N. M., while-
to be advancing g
Dispatches Bane xe
foundering oft Sciely iflahd, February 19,
of the German steamer, Messina. The cook
of the Messina has been landed at Port Said,
and it is believed all others on board per-
ished.
There has been an Indian outbreak in
Bolivia. = The rebels were completely
routed in one battle, with a loss of 1,000
men. Thirty soldiers were wounded.
~The market at Glasgow closed against
sattle, sheep and pigs in eonseqHence
if the foot and mouth disease, _
report’ ie
{seems to be spreading in
number of cattle and
slaughtered at Paisle;
authorities.
c
it Bamara, a bay i is being construct-
ed under government directiof to afford a
shelter for steamers during the winter.
Devonshire, 7 2 years’
has been fined: forty shillings for
swearing in the streets of Cambridge, Eng-
stershire (England), was
t hard. labor for
the estate of John
represents Waterford.
The grand duke of Hesse died at Berlin.
‘Accounts arestill being received of the
terrible ravages of yellow fever in Brazil.
It has been ascertained that a foot and
mouth disease exactly resembling ‘the
English outbreak, has appeared among
Belgium cattle. There iS great consterna-
tion in ‘the agricultural districts. The
Brussels cattle market will probably be
glosed.
. The Madrid Gazette phblishedn | ‘govern-
ment decree prohibiting the a ot
artificial winesin Spain.
There is much destithtion among the
working classes‘in Lisbon.
Heavy snow storms prevail in Germany
and Spain, and a blizzard raged i in Northern
Austria and Hungary.
General Booth, the Salvationist, addressed
an audience of London roughs and ex:
criminals Friday night. The crowd was
very abusive and disorderly and nearly
broke up the meeting.
ALL ENGLAND IS STRIKING.
Half a Million Airers and Bagtory,
| Hands I dle.
are now being reported. Nelson Blackmer
was lost near Albert Tea, and has not been
found. At'the town of Badger, Ia.; Thomas
Onesone was blown from his wagon and his |
neck : broken.
frozen to death one mile from'his home at |
Oberon, N. D. . His wifé and two children
were with him, but . were protected in .the
sleigh and arrived home safely.
Ex-Auditor James C.Lavel of Washington,
Ind., whose $18,000 shortage was reported
by theexperts and who is under indictment
for attempting to burn the court house and
for mutilating the public records, was sur-
rendered by his bondsmen.
Casper Greb, a native of Germany, living
at Hiawatha, Kan., who failed to serve full
time in the army of his country, has been
cabled for from the German authorities and
warned that unless he immediately returns
and serves his time, his father will be fore
ed to pay $5,000.
On Thursday the Mayor of Waverly, Ill.,
received the anoymous message. ‘Stop. the
Sturgis whisky peddling case or the town
will burn.” The case went on and that
same night four buildings were reduced to
ashes. The author of the letter, who is said
to be known, will be prosecuted. .
Alexander Hockaway, of near Corydon,
Ind. celebrated the 112th anniversary of
his birth. He is a blacksmith. He ha
never taken medicine but once, and that was
after he was 100 years old. He is ‘in ‘ excel-
lent health.
A. 8S. Wilson has been found frozen to
death near the residence of his employer,
near Deyil’s Lake, N. D. Wilson was from
Eden, Minn.
Miss Marlett, 12 years old, of Paoli, Ind.,
died in terrible agony from ftrichina, having
eaten half-cooked, fresiy pork.
A Strawberry Trust has been formed at
Racine, Wis.
' Fully 18,000 bushels of wheat have been
stolen from the elevator of Iris Bailey, of
Adrien, Ill.
H. W. Fitch, a Christian Science banker
at Spokane, Wash., tried for a week to re-
store to life his dead wife .and @ child by
prayer, but his loved ones are still lifeless.
Lawyer T. McCants Stewart has brought
a suit in the United States Circuit Court at
New York, in behalf of Mack and Mamie
Caldwell, colored, against the East Tennes-
see, Virginia & Georgia Railway. Theywsay
they bought first-class tickets from Johnson
City, Tenn., to Chicago, and were made to
travel on the smoking car. {They ‘want $5
000 damages.
were leaders of the; oh. who, lynched the
Italians on March 14
Orleans, . Mrs. 'Comitiz is the widow of
Loreto Comitiz, one of . the . victims of the
mob, and asks $100, 000 for the ase of ‘her
husbands qin dun ;
rr tpn
fa Horse-Thief Prince;
Mouxr Kisco, nN ye March 12.—Prince
Jolin Zobieski, ‘grandson of the king of Po- |
land, was arrested today with’ horse and
wagon which he tind stolen.
+ oi
Frank Braithwaite was |
Mrs. Anng, Comitis ‘ red suit agninsh i? )
W. 8, Parketson and 12 other persons who {ea
‘of last year at New |
Loxpox, March 14.—By ‘the Frtont strike
of English miners forthe purpose of keeps
i ing their wages from being reduced, ‘about
500,000 men are idle to-day. Saturday the
Durham miners, 70,000 strong, dropped their:
picks. The diggers of Lancashire, York-
| shire, Warwickshire, Staffordshire, Cheshire,
Cumberland and North Wales, te the num-
ber of 35,000 men, also quit work. The
strike is spreading rapidly. A convention
"will be held in London on Wednesday,
when it will be decided how long the sus-
pension shall be continue. In the Tyne,
Wear and Lancashire factories about 500,000
persons have been notified that the stop-
ping of the coal supply will throw then: out
of work. Altogether there are now 500,000
men idle, and this number is likely to be
‘their fires.
MANY MORE QUIT.
Today the miners of Lincolnshire quit
work, acting in sympathy with the Miners®
Federation. This action will make neces-
gary the shutting down the plants of the Ap-
Jlsby Iron Company, the North Lincoln
ron Company, the Rrodingham Steel and
Iron Company, the Trent Works, the Red-
born Hill fron and Coal Company and sev-
eral other large goncens in the North ‘Lin-
colnshire trade. the action of to-daw
alpne, it is le the most conserva-
ive, that at least 200, o Heh i be 12dded
e great army already at play eports
iy Sheffield, Birrgioghain and Sther.
places show a low stock of fuel, which must
result in the stoppage of work in the fac-
tories in case the strike continues more than
a week or two.
THE POOR SUFFER.
The poor in this city and elsewhere are
already suffering from a lack of fuel. The
only English colliers at work * are those of
South Wales. Prices have already
b0 per cent. The Miners Federation will
pay the men strike wages and claims’ it can
continue this for four months. In Scotland
the miners are still at work.
re et reer?
Prairie Fires Rf he
‘GurHRIE,. 0. T. March 15—A. Aerrible
prairie fire has been raging for |
several days in Payne county, doing many’
thousand dollars damage. John Shotwell,
William Querry, Johi Quer rry and others
had their farm swept clear of everything |
and are left’ peniless. John Querry’ was
fatally burned while attempting Ln Baye his
home.
Hurox, 8. D. —A prairie fire twelve miles
south of here has destroyed the farm-house
of William Mills and William Eye with
houshold goods and clothing. Several sheds |
containing a large amount of grain, hay and
faym machinery were burned.
Sacrificed Himself for His Family.
JAMESTOWN, N. D., March 14—Frank
raithewaite, wife and two children, living
n miles west of Oberon, were lost on
‘ednesday when a mile from home. The
was unable to go further, and Bratthe-
te froze to'death while trying to lead
horses. The women and children were
inthe sleigh with blankets and arrived
safely at Oberon.
re lb peers
Retaliation Against United States.
"OTTAWA, Oxr., Mareh 12.—A bill has been
3 ‘4ntroduced i in Parliament to prohibit the
importation and immigration of foreigners
‘under contract or agreement to perform in
Catinda. This 1s a . retaliatory measure
nst the United 5 States. £
OND OUR BORDERS, ;
Cholen peared ot | al and and guid
|e wailing, desperate crowd oO
‘Wexford in the place of J. EB. Redmond, :
Parnelite, who resigned Wexford, and now |
; » Explosions Om: a
; £ :
While 300 M:n and Women Are
In a Belgium Mine.
Brusseis, March 12—A terrible series of
explosions of fire-damp occurred yesterday
at the colliery at Anderlues, near Charieroi.
About 300 persons were in the mine when
it occurred, 25 of them being women. Fully
100, and probably 150, people have perished
h suffocation, fire or falling
. 30 have been recovered
1 Five of them
outs. Phe pit mouth
those who werein thes mine,
: n the first
caving of the shat hightensd them a
th he 10 men refus
he th of the
le The found a few men who had
fon ey shaft when the first expl
occurred. Theminers had run
fires, but had been. caught at
by x Tallin ling § timbers. ; :
broken bones and three
fray lodged in the wreck that thi
arty dared not wait to extrica ¢
for
ti is i$ thought
si
ose furth-
st from the Bee of the gallery have
probably been accion before this, and if
not will gfe before they can be reached.
The work has been set back twice this
Svening by the caving of great blocks of soil
and stone from the sides of ‘the wrecked
shaft, and since the third trip no volunteers
could be found togo again. The superin.{
tendent of the mine oe twice gone down
200 feet, but has returned saying that the
chances would be four to one Against him if
he went lower. The dead will. number" at |
least 100 and probably 150. About 400 mem-
bers of the families of the Jnlising 3 men will |.
shaft all
in the ler at
f otoat by the
camp in the fields a; rould the
night. ;
They cleared +
the debris at the nance of the gallery
found 25 dead bodies. Five of mn were
women... Most of the bodies were terribly
mutilated. Others showed but few fractures
of the limbs. Death had been caused ap-
parently by suffocation. . The rescue party
returned to the spot and are still at work in
the gallery clearing ava ARay {ebris and con-§
tinuing the search
Leopold has: ies dl 5,000 francs
from is private purse oo the temporary
support of the families of the, Zine a.
ready known to have been ed. Hun-
dreds of men and
villages have gathered
ithe pit and are camp ping ap around ! bonfires
Aeatehing the progress of he ‘work of rescue.
Families and relatives of the 200 or more
men have. made their home ‘in the fields
for the night ‘and are cooking their mea
over o Fon air fires s0 as to get the earliest
Ser jou those! imprisoned by the shatter-
near the -mout.
o ghar ace at J hich the explosion occurred
is iu the second gal lery, 500 feet below the
surface, and work at this depth is difficult |
and dangerous.
The foul fumes coming from the mine are
greatly hindering in the work of rescue.
Brusseis,| March 14 —Another explosion
at the Anderlues pit, near Charleroi, added
the horrors of fire to the scene. The crowd
about the pit mouth has increased. Hour
by hour more mutilated remains are
brought to the surface by the searchers. It
de,
has been learned that the number of men
in the pit was 238. Of these 30 have been
doubled. Many of the establishments in | brought up dead, 9 injured, 25 escaped by
1 eds and Manchester have already damped i the shaft, and 174 are entombed. There
were 90 in the ‘lower gallery when the ex:
plosion occurred. It is impossible even to
hazard a guess when more bodies’ will be
brought to the surface. Eight days at least
will be required to flood the lower middle
gallaries, which are at present the seat of
fire, and before the submerged bodies can|
be recovered ths water will have to be pump-
‘ed out. The second explosion occtirred when
the flooding of the mine had been com:
menced. Help is being given the families
of the destressed. A great édlumn of flame
has shot out of the mouth’ of the pit, de
stroying the buildings connected therewith.
FEAR SIR Cl SR
THE CONDITION OF BUSINESS.
Jutlook Seems to Be Favorabls Beepite
Complaints.
; R. @&. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Revi 1 or Trade
says: ‘Distribution of products’ i ‘nnques-
_tionably improving. Transactions are, on
the whole, larger than a year ago, in spite of
| depression at the South, being, very much.
larger ifi the We Nor is improvement.
eonfined to that séction. * “Phsugh general | ©
there, it i3 also more distinctly felt in East.
ern cities, and there are not wanting signs
that trade gf the South, though still much |
embarrassed by the low price” of cotton is
steadily gaining. With all.the; indus
tries active, § money abundant | spite
of goldex ris and wih 8
holesome cheek, the oul
to be unusually favorable, twithstanding
general complaints that prices are low and
‘margins of profit unnsually, small.
Pittsburg finds the volume of trade in iron
smaller, and sonte thors ilk of closing
furnances, hut the glass trade is-fair. The
grocery trade at Cincinnati is good,
trade is noted at Cleveland in dry goods,
hardware, boots and crockery, and jo bing
trade. Mone ey is plenty for timate trade
in Chicago. Throughout the Northwest t
has unsettled tri trade, though Pdi
where prospects are considered brigh
The business failures S daring a seven
days for the United States: were. 230, for
Canada 26, total, 256 as compared with 240 last
week, 270 the week previous to the last, and
278 for the’ corresponding week of last year.
FROM THE FOURTH FLOOR.
A Nurse Throws Two Children and THers
3 self Out of a Window. -
New York, March 12-—Kate Noolock, a
=
women lls near-by
| powers and it is the
BOSE Spring Medicine
oon I powers:
“CL Hood & Co. Lowell, Mass, = ;
“Gentlemen: Ihave had salt rhenm for a num«
ber of years, and for thie past year one. of my legs,
from the knee #own, has been broken out oe
“badly. Itook blood medicine fora Jonig ae
no good results, and wal at one thue ooo
Walk With Crutohas..
- 1 finally concluded to try Hood's Sarsaperilla, and
before I'had taken one bottle the improvement wast
80 marked that Icontinued until I Had taken threer
bottles, and SLUOW better tiasl | have boon 15 yeark.:
The am EIn has all left my leg and it
entirely healed. Ihave had such benefit ron
Hood's Sarsaparilla’
that I coucluded to write this voluntary, statement.”
¥, J. TEMPLE, Ridgeway, Mich. .
Hood's Pills cure all Tho Tits.
PN Ll
193 |
Before the cause of con"
sumption was known (that
was only a few years ago)
we did not know how Scott's
Emulsion of cod:liver oil did
so much good in consumption:
~and in the ‘conditions that
lead to consumption, ;
The explanation is inter:
esting. We send it free in.
{4 book on CAREFUL Lavine.
gs 2] Bows, Chiembis. 139 South sth Avenues
Your druggist keeps Scott's Emulsi f soddiven. |
oll—all druggists everywhere do, on i
Kidney, Liverand Bladder Cure,
Rheumatism,
pain in Jomtsorhack, brick Ritin iis
reguent calls, on, inflamation,
, ulceration or catarrh of b
‘Disordered Liv
Fen iar
ble, brights diseases.
Rn Blood,
Btololn malaria, gen'l weakness or pe
Guarantee—Use Sontents of Ons Bottle; 1 not
ruggiste will refund £0 You the price pain
efited, D;
Az Procaiste 50e¢. Size, $1.00 Size,
ealth”free—~ Consultation trea,
“Invalids’ Guide to Healt
Dr, K1LwER & Co.. BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
Kennedy's
Medical Discovery
Lambago.
| Takes hold in this order:
rl
wels,
Yi
5
Inside Skin.
Good Julies Skin,
Driving everything before it that ought
) be aut,
You Enow whether you fio
need it or not. or
Bold by every druggist, and manufactured bys
DONALD XEMNEDY
¢ ROXBURY, » Pass
nurse, during a fire in a dwelling threw two | |
children named Burns out of a fourth-story
‘window and jumped after herself. All Weta) }
badly hurt. = ©