TheHerald nsr.viiMsiini) iK7o. "All the News That's Fit to Print." Ptibllshr-d every evening;, except Sunday, nt 8 floutli Jnnlin street, Hhennnloali, !'. I.ONO DHTANOI5 Tlil.UI'lIONIi. The Herald In delivered In Bliennmloiili nnd tlie surrounding towns for six cents n w ek, my ublo to the curriers, lly mull (SOD n ymr, or 25 cents a month nynbte In advance. AiU vcrtlsements elmrired nccordltiR to xtcennd liosltton. The pulillsltera reserve the rlKht to change the position of Advertisements whenever the publication of news demnml It. The right is reserved to reject nny ndvertisenient. whether paid for or not, tltat the publishers mny deem lmproter. Adver tiling rates made known UHin application. Entered at the poet ofllce at Hlietmndoali, I'n., ns second class tuall matter. Opening $evalix TUESDAY. MARCII 23. 1809 OUR COUNTRY : First. Last and Forever. It is now asserted that the$l-iliiuier to be tendered Bryan is hi fact to be a fifty-cent affair. It may even be less than the ap pointed twenty days before Aguinaldo will enter Manila. A. TlKruuijicAN party has been or ganized in Porto Uico. Which shows that the new oitizens are becoming enlightened. SlIKNANDOAH is not the only place that has its water troubles. The City of Brotherly Love knows how it is. Fortunately our troubles are not with the quality, but the quantity of water. CoNTitOLiiKii Lloyd, of Luzerne county, bus made a very plain and einphutic statement concerning the costs to that county in so-called dis charged cases. He declares that the county has been paying from $25,000 to $30,000 a year as fees to justices and constables in discharged cases over and above what the county was hon estly liable for. Last year the costs in discharged cases in that county amounted to some thousands of dollars more than In the Common wealth cases. The Deadlock. It is announced from Harrlsburg that several startling moves are to be made in the Senatorial contest this week. The Quay people are not giving out any statements for publi cation, outside of the prediction that there will be no election by the pres ent Legislature and that Matthew -Btttniny Qiiav will .ultimately succeed himself. They point to tne election of state delegates in various countieb as an indication that the people are with the "old man," and that if the choice isleftto the voice of the people tne "insurgents" will be repudiated. The arfti-Quayites, however, are ox pected to concentrate on one candi date at to-morrow's ballot in the joint Assembly. The beneficiary of their votes has not yet been selected, and will hardly be known until shortly before this evening's conference. The anti-Quay leaders claim the original flfty-two" who stayed away from the caucus will vote as a unit for a Sena tor. Whether Clinton Rogers Wood ruff, of Philadelphia, will vote with them or continue to cast his vote for Superior Court Judge Rice, he only The importance of takisg a good Spring Medicine is well known in fact, its necessity Vie universally admit- kted. To argue this poilnt is useless takes up your time and wastes our space. The real question is, what to take? Ofcourse, you want the best. Foryour blood you want a medic'ine which cures blood diseases. "w Foryourap- petite, stora-ach-weak-ness, and dyspfl epsia symp tom! you S want a medi cine containing appetite- jivinj, stomachtoning, dyspepsia curing qual .pities. For that tired feeling. dull headache, 0 mis erable, all run a down con - a I v ditlon.you want a true tonieX to bone sinew, nerve anq muscle not a timulant.'Now we can prove, weiare'proved, we. DO prove each And . every day in the year, that Hood's Earaaparilla .IS the beet; I that it Is un- I equalled aa a general Spring Medi cine ; that it meets every requirement ibove named and more. We pr ove this by thou- Bands of testi monlals not from people anxious to advertisethemselves, from ,people In the same walk I of life as you. And our f testimonials tell ol curei, real, bona flue vuuaa. believe when you have given it a fair trial you will agree that America's Greatest Medicine and best Spring Medicine is Hood's Sariaparilla. Pre pared by O. I. Hood 4 Co., Lowell, Mass. P WINDING AN OLD CLOCK. conclusion with almost tho rapidity of galloping while n sort of sab-crisis In it would occur when tho best procurablo medical skill was oxbaustcd on tho case. So urgent did the doctors deem tho situation that ono or more of them would remain In tho house days In succession. When the efforts of tho medical men failed take tho chances of living or dying without The only grain of reason in this remark llos oincr worKers, must do juugou not by what they say but by what thoy can do. At this critical hour it chanced that Mr, Fiske heard of Warner's Safe Cure and began using It. Ho was an old man thou and the odds were "long" against him. But this tlmo tho proscription was right. In two months he was able to rldo out and had gained twelve pounds. Laying aside all otker medicines and adhorlng to this ono alone ho was at length blossed with a perfect recovery. Ho is now about eighty-five years old, in excellent health, and among tho wealthiest and best known residents of Lexington, Mass. But the clock was wound up not a momont too soon. knows. While he has been in sym pathy with the anti-Quay movement all through the session, he has de clined to attend their meetings or confer with them, except in a general way. He has not had the confidence of their leaders because he did not want it, and they have made no ef fort to have his. He has, however, been consistent in his opposition to ex-Senator Quay. To the "fifty-two" must be added Representatives Hersh, Maokey and Yates, who joined them after Speaker Farr adjourned the House to shut out the Bribery Committee resolution. This makes fifty-five, and Senator Weiss, of Lebanon, who was elected to the unexpired term of Lieutenant Governor Gobin, makes fifty-six, or the number that prevented tho elec tion of Henry W. Oliver to the United States Senate in 1881. In that memorable contest the "insur gents" were composed of twelve Sen ators and forty-four members, while in the present fight the anti-Quay or- tnitaHnn nnnolars nf Tiinn Senators and forty-seven members. It is evident that the "antis" are determined to force the issue, but whether or not it will result In an election of a successor to Quay the future must determine. Rheumatism Cured In a Day. "Mystic Cure" for Rheumatism and Neu ralgia radically cures in I to 3 days. Its action upon the system is remarkable and mysterious. It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disappears. The first dose greatly benefits. 73 cents. Sold by Shenandoah drug store, Shenandoah. t CHICAGO'S FATAL FIRE Wild Hnsli For r.tfb of Working Men . nnd Women. Chicago, March 28. Fire destroyed the Armour curled hair and felt works, Thirty-first and Benson streets, last Sight, caused a property loss of nearly JMUO.OOO, injured 11 employes, one fa tally, and endangered the lives of 400 others who rushed to escape through the blinding smoke. The injured are: Jeremiah Steele, jumped from third story window, legs and urrus broken, will die; Joseph Kuda, badly Injured about the legs and body; John Rhodes, jumped from second story window, log broken; George Mosher, fell down elevator shnft, right Bhoulder broken; August Schomlierg, anklespram ed and scalp wound; Mamie Ryan, face and arinn burned; Georgie Schwartz, hands, face uml head bruised; Nellie SIcNab, hands and face burned; Paul Kosomier, both hands burned nnd left side of hend scorched; Harry Lee, fell from second story window, scalp wounds. Late Inst night it was found that six people who were In the building when the fire broke out are missing, and it is prob able that the majority of them perished. The missing are Jamea Flnnnigan, Will iam Gillson, 1311a Ilennil Wright, Thorn as .Mitchell, Dennis Shechan and Johu While. Employes on the floor on which the firv started said that u nail, which caught in a "picker," caused friction, Igniting the inflammable material with which the ma chines were fed. Klames spread to ba of curled hair, and in three minutes the entire floor wsb dense with blinding black smoke. Men and women left their posts in frantic rushes to the exits. Many ran to windows and descended by the fire escapes, but most of them groped through the smoke to the first floor and out the eorner entrance. Jeremiah Steele was bending over his warding machine when the blaze brok; out. Stifled by the smoke he staggered to a window, swung over the sill and hung by hiB finger tl. Meanwhile fir raon stretched a net and shouted to Steele to drop. He did so, but crashed to the stone sidewalk. A Klondlko For the I'ni-U Exposition. New York, March 28. An important coritoration has Jtidt been organised un der CauHillau and New York auspices to exploit to the world at the Paris expo sition a jierert representation of life and work In the Yukon teiritnry, Including all phases of milling, by men direct from the Klondike. An exact counterpart will be built, repreiwuting a portion of the main street of i)awon. There will be Indian village, dog teams, together with moving pictures, the latter to be the re sult of an entirely new machine which Thomas A. lidutou U how contriietlng. Arrangements have been made to have on exhibition fnjm.im worth of gold dust and nuggets. consumption. Mr. FIsko's was the slow and to bring about an Improvement In the patlont, anybody meddling furthor. "I had lost faith," ho says, "In doctors and their prescriptions." In the fact that nono of their proscriptions benefited him. Ho was right. For doctors, llko all THE PRODUCF. MARKETS Aslteflooted by I) en II 11 rs In Philadel phia, and llnltlinore. Philadelphia, March 27. Flour firm; winter superfine, J2.15O2.40; Pennsylvania roller, clear, J3.05S3.25; city mills, extra. J2.50?2.75. Itye flour quiet and steady at J3.20S3.25 for choice Pennsylvania. Wheat firm; No. 2 red. March, 7Gi77c. Corn steady; No. 2 mixed, March, 30H39?ic. ; No. 2 yellow, for local trade, 40c. Oats firm. No. 2 white, 35Vjc; No. 2 white, clip ped, 39,4'S39-'ic. Hay firm; choice tim othy, J 13 for large bales. Beef steady; beof hams, J18.50Q19. Pork dull; family, H2812.50. Lard steady; western steamed. J1.60. Butter steady; western creamery, 176220.; do. factory, nHUMc; Elglns, 22c; Imitation creamery, 13lSc; New York dairy, 14ifeS20c; do. creamery, 17022c. fancy Pennsylvania prints Jobbing at 249 27c; do. wholesale, 23c. Cheese steady; large, whlto and colored, 12c; small do., 124124c. ; light skims, S5J10c; part do., 7HS?9c; full do., 4fi6c. Eggs steady; New York and Pennsylvania, L1'ic ; western, fresh, 1313V4c; southern. 12"13V4c Po tatoes steady; New York, J1.5CS2.50; L0113 Island, J2A2.50; Jersey 'sweets, J203.23. Tallow dull; city, 45i474c; country, 4Q 5c. Cottonseed oil quiet; prime crude, 22c; yellow, 26c Turpentine steady at 4C3'SHc. Cabbage quiet; domestic, JlSp 10 per 100. Baltimore, March 27. Flour firm; west ern superfine. J2.2562.10; do. extra, S2.45fj) 3; do. family, 3.30ii3.CO; winter wheat, patent. 3.o&ga.0Oi prlng do.. J3.9O04.1O; spring wheat, straight, J3.C303.S3. Wheat easy; spot, month dnd April, 76!4Q7G?4c; May, 769i077c; steamer No. 2 red, 72V4 72?sc; southern, by sample, 077i4c. ; do, on grade, 731770. Corn firm; snot and month, S9VJ09',4c; April, 39Vi083c; May, 39Si40c; steamer mixed, 37037?ic; southern, white, 40c; do. yellow, 39Hc Oats firmer; No. 2 white, 33035Vtc; No. 2 mixed, 3214033c. Rye steady; No. 2 near by. 581068:0.; No, 2 western, 60c. Hay firm; No. 1 timothy, J11.DO012. Grain freights quiet and easy; steam to Liver pool, per bushel, 2d. March; Cork, for orders, per quarter, 2s. 10V4d. March. Su gar strong; granulated, B.20V4. Hutttor steady; fancy creamery, 22023c; do. Imi tation, 18019c; do. ladle, 15016c; good do., 13011c; store packed, 11012c; rojls, 12014c. Eggs firm at 1214013c Cheese firm and active; fancy New York, large, 121401214c; do. medium, 1214012?ic; do. small, 1213c Whisky at Jl.3001.32 per gallon for finished goods In carloads; Jl.3101.32 per gallon for jobbing lots. Let tuce at Jl.7502.23 per bushel box. On Every Bottle Of Shlloh's Consumption Curo is this guar anteo : "All we ask of you Is to use tw o thlrds of the contents of this bottle faith fully, then if you can say you are not benefited return the bottle to your druggist and he may refund tho price paid." Price 25 eta., 50 cte. and fl.00. Sold by P. D. Kirlln and a guarantee Llvo stock jMnrketH. New York, March 27. Beeves moder ately active; steers firm; bulls and cows, steady;, all sold: common to prime steers, J4.5O06.45; fat oxen and stags, J4.4504.73; bulls, J3.5O04.4O; cows, poor to fair, J2 3.45; fat heifers, J4.5O05.25. Calves In fair request; prime veaU steady; medium grades 25c. lower; common to prime veals, J4.5O07; choice to extra, J7.1O07.25: fed calves, $304. Sheep tlrm; lambs 15025c. higher; common to prime sheep, ii.KiTf D; culls, J303.25; common to choice lambs. J5.DO06.5O; mostly JG.S806.3&; culls, J5, clipped lambs, 5605.36. Hogs slow and lower at J404.15; choice state pigs, J4.25. East Liberty, Pa., March 27. Cattle steady; extra, J6.5O0fi.SG; prime, J5.3O05.5O; common, 53.5004. Hogs about steady; prime medium weights, J4.O504.1O; heavy hogs and Yorkers, 5104.06; light Yorkers, $3.9504; good pigs, J3.75QS.90; common pigs and skips, JK28.06; roughs, J!.50g8.50. Bheep steady; choice wethers, $566.10: common, $2.7668.76; choice lambs, J5.9O0 6; common to good, Jt.7G06.86; clipped do., $1.5006.10; veal calves, $007. Shake Off Rheumatism and Neuralgia, Hub well with lied Flag Oil, 26c, At O rubier Jlros., drug storo. McCoy-Shnfkoy Flirht f)ff. New York, Jlarch 28.-AVilllam A. Rrady, manager of Kid SIcCoy, yester day notified Tom O'ltourke, manager of Tom Sharkey, that the Hharkay-MeCoy match would havo to bo declared off temporarily, as McCoy hurt his shoulder in his recent fight with Choyiuki. McCoy does not feel physically prepared to meet Sharkey, lirady snys. He wishes to tako on more weight before meeting the sailor. 'Coin" Jlnrvey HohIuiih. Chicago, March 28. Mr. W. II. ("Coin") Harvey has resigned as general mannger of the ways and means com mittee of the Democratic natlounl com mittee and Mr. Sam 11. Cook, of .Mis souri, has been apjioiiitcd in his place. Mr. Cook has been In practical charge of the ottlce for some time, while Mr. Harvey has been in the field. Mr. Har vey gives as the cause of his resigna tion that he could not get the committee to agree on what he thought was a prac tical, business like and asgrtHwire policy. Croup instantly relieved. T)r. Thomas' Eclectric Oil. Perfectly safe. Neverfalls. At any drugstore. "The. humau body," said j)r, ollyor Wendell Holmes, "is a seventy year clock. Tho Creator winds it up once, wlion wo nro born, and then de livers tho key Into tho hands of tho Angol of the Resurrection." Yes, but thoy do not nil run soventy years. It depends largely on how thoy are treated, Take tho pendulum weight off tho end of tho wlro, and your clock will rnttlo away at the rate of lialf a dozen hours at onco. Neglect It and It will run Irregularly j how fast, now slow. Ureak tho mainspring or a wheel, nnd It stops Instantly. Tako Intelligent caro of It, nnd a good clock will servo your grand children as faithfully as It now serves you. Thoro Is an important dlfferonco, howover, bo twecn your clock and your body. Kvcn aftor tho clock is completely run down, and at a standstill, you can wind It up and get It going again. Not so with tho body. Onco stopped it goes no more. It follows that if Mr. Orrln W. Flske had been "completely run down" at tho tlmo ho rofers to I should not now bo writing of him as a living man. On a certain occasion a few years slnco ho sat for flvo weeks contlnously In a rocking chair, unable to He down. At that tlmo ho was nearly crushed with a combination of complaints, influenza, bronchitis and organlo ktdnoy disease. For a less cause than this many human clocks have run down altogether and stopped dead . An analysis showed Mr. Flake's renal affection to bo truo Bright's dlsoaso ; a condi tion which oven tho best physicians treat as of pro fessional necessity ; without expecting to ovcrcomo It. It Is commonly tho final stago of a series of vascular degenerations which begins in partial atrophy of the liver and ends In death. Its progress is somotlmcs slow as that of a winding Btrcam crossing a plain ; and again it dashes to a sullen variety of the dlseaso. Onco In a ho himself dismissed them, saying ho would Poitofflco Tlilof Cniidht In tho Act. Toledo, March 28. J. V. Bully, an em ploye of the Toledo postofllce, was caught In the act of stealing money from tho mails yesterday and placed under ar rest. Bully is prominent here, having been for years n well known musician, nnd hnd 'been a choir lender. Money has been disappearing for years from the Toledo olllcc, nnd the aggregate sum is large. He was trapped by means ot marked coins. Women Should Know It. Many women suffer untold agony and misery because the nature of their disease is not correctly understood. They have been led to believe that womb trouble or female weakness of some sort is responsible for the many ills that be.t womankind. Neuralgia, nervousness, headache, puffy or dark circles under the eyes, rheumatism, a dragging jaain or dull ache in the back, weak ness or bearing-down sensation, profuse or scanty supply of urine with strong odor, frequent desire to pass it with scalding or burning sensation, sediment in it after stand ing in bottle or common glass for twenty-four hours, are signs of kidney and bladder trouble. The above symptoms are often attributed by the patient herself ,or by her physician to female weakness or womb trouble. Hence, so many fail to obtain relief, because they are treating, not the disease itself, but a reflection of the primary cause, which is kidney trouble. In fact, women as well as men are made miserable with kidney and bladder trouble and both need the same remedy. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is the great dis covery of the eminent kidney and bladder specialist, and is easy to get at any drug store for fifty cents or one dollar. To prove its wonderful merits you msy have a sample bottle and book telling all about it, both sent absolutely free by mail. Kindly mention Shenandoah Herald and send your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. Ex-Lefcflfclntor I)I n. Convict. Lancaster, Pa., Slareh 28. E. K. Smith, aged VI!, died Sunday in the Eastern penitentiary. In 18(il) he was a member of the legislature. Ho was a leading citizen of Columbia and a mem ber of the banking firm of Smith & Graybill, of that place, whose failure seven years ago resulted in his con viction for embezzlement. The case at tracted much attention at the tlmo through the position nnd age of the de fendant. Por Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears tho Signature of Aliened Doodlluu ill Jloluware. Dover, Del., March 28. Before Magis trate lliitton yesterday State Detective Bernard J, McVey swore out a warrant for Mark L. Davjs, Union Ilepublicau representative in tho general assembly from Milford hundred. The wnrraut charged Davis with offering to Francis H, I.attomus, regular Itepublican repre sentative, financial inducements in re turn for voting for J. Edwurd Addicks for United States senator. Representa tive Davis went to the magistrate's ofllce and gave $1,000 bail for a hearing today. Mr. Davis asserts his innocerfce. To Cure a Cold In One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. 25o. The genuine has L. B. Q. on each tablet. tf Dentil or ir I'rlilceton Professor. Princeton, N. J., March 28. Dr. James O. Murray, dean of the university, died yesterday after an illnss of several weeks. Dr. Murray was born in Cam den, S, 0., Nov. 7, 1827. His father was a grandson of Philip Syng, of Philadel phia, tho well known associate and friend of Benjamin Franklin. Professor Mur ray was graduated from Brown univer sity in 1850 and from Andover Theo logiial feminary In J8C4 He was pbb tor of the Brick church, in New York city, in 1806, from which in 1875 he came to Princeton as professor of En glish literature. He has been dean of the university since 1883. now Is Your Wlfa 1 Ifas she lost her beauty? If so, Constipa tion, Indigestion, Sick Headache are the principal causes, Karl's Clover Boot Tea has cured these, ijls for half a century. Ptlce 23 cts. and SO eti, Money refunded if results are not satlsfacttry. Sold by P. D. Kirlln and a guarantee Now York's Govornor Says tho Te,x Laws Aro Inequitable. HE URGES AN INVESTIGATION Tty a I.nglslnttvo Commltteo and a Ho port on Somo I'lnn AVhloh Will Jto llovo tho Overlmrdoned Small Tax payers Tnxntlon or Corporations. Albany, March 28. Governor Itoosc vclt last night sent to the legislature a message recommending the appointment of a Joint legislative committee to Inves tigate the subject of taxing public fran chises held by corporations, and to re port to the next legislature. The gov ernor says; "The tax lawn of this state arc In an exceedingly unsatisfactory condition, nnd I do not see how they can bo put upon a just and wise basis save after careful Investigation by legislative action. At present the farmers, the market gardeu crs nnd the mechanics and tradesmen having smnll holdings are paying an Im proper and excessive proportion of the general taxes, while at the same time many of the efforts to remedy this state of affairs, notably In the direction of taxing securities, are not only unwise, but Inefficient, and often serve merely to put n premium upon dishonesty, H would not be well to make any class of our citizens feel Immunity from pnylng taxes, for this would almost ccrtaluly result In cxtravaguut expenditures, both In the state and in the municipalities, against which the surest safeguard Is the immediate pressure on the purses of the citizens. But though complete Im munity from taxation by the people at large Is not desirable, the fact remnins that at present taxation Is excessive and badly distributed. "There is evident injustice in the light taxation of corporations. I hnve not tin slightest sympathy with the outcry against corporations as such, or against prosperous men of business. Most of the great material works by which the entire country benefits have been due to the action of individual men or of ng grcgates of men who made money for themselves by doing that which was i-i the Interest of tho people as a whole. Krom an iirmnr plant to n street rallwiy no work which Is really beneficial to the public can be performed to the best ad vantage of the public save by men of such business capacity that they will not do the work unless 'hey themselves re ceive ample reward for doing It. The effort to deprive them of an ample re ward merely means tnnt they will turn their energies In some other direction, nnd the public will be by just so much the loser. Moreover, lo tax corporation or men of means In such n way as to drive them out of the stnte works grejt damage to the state. To drive out of a community the men of means nnd tho men who take the lend In business enter prises would probably entail as one of its first results the starvation of n con siderable portion of the remainder of the population. "But, while I fairly admit all this, it yet remains true thnt a corporation which derives its powers from the state should pay to the state 11 just percent age of Its earnings as a return for the privileges it enjoys. This should be es pecially true for the franchises bestowed upon, gas companies, street railroads and the like. The question of munici pal ownership of these franchises ennnet be raised with propriety until the gov ernments of all municipalities show greater wisdom and virtue than has been recently shown., for Instance, in New York city; the question of laying and assessing the tax for franchises of ever? kind thn .ighout the state should In my opinion be determined by tho state it self. "I need not point out to you that In foreign communities n very large per centage of the taxes comes from cor porations which use tho public domain for pipes, tracks and the like. Whether these franchises should be tnxed as realty, or whether It would be wiser to provide that, after the gross earnings equal, say, 10 per cent of the nctual original cost, then 5 per cent of nil the gross earnings over and nbove this shall je paid into the treasury, or whether some yet different plan should be tried, can only be settled after careful ex amlnation of the whole subject. One thing is certnin, that the franchises should in some form yield a money re turn to the government." Hosotied I'li'.soncer llrlntrs Suit. Baltimore, March 28. Miss Catherine Belle Noble, who narrowly escaped death at the time of the loss of the steamship Mohegan, when upwards of 100 persons were lost, on Oct. 14 last, filed a suit in the city court here yesterday for $30, 000 against the Atlantic Transportation company, owners of the vessel. Miss Noble alleges that the employes negli gently ran the vessel down the English chnnnel without her lifeboats being in position, and that they did not take proper precautions for the safety of the passengers. She also claims that the vessel was out of her course. She al leges that she received permanent in juries in the disaster. Death of Itlshop Dnirtrnn. St. Louis, March 28. Bishop James Duggan died yesterday at St. Vincent's Insane asylum, where he had been a pa tient for 29 years. lie was 74 years of age. The bishop's Intellect became clouded In 1870, and it was found neces sary to provide for him at the asylum. One of his delusions was that he was the pope. At Intervals he appeared to be entirely rational. At such times he would pore over ccclestical volumes and recount incidents of his life. Fifty years ago Bishop Duggan was the coadjutor and friend of Archbishop Kenrick. Up to the tune of his death he was always permitted to rctniu the garb of a bishop. Tho Mollnoux Cuso Trnnsrerrod. New York, March 28. Justice Will iams, of the supreme court, at the re quest of District Attorney Gardiner, yesterday transferred the ease of Itoland B. Molineux to the criminal branch ot the supreme court, thus taking it out of the jurisdiction of the court of general sessions. This makes It necessary for consul for Molineux to make a new mo tion of 24 hours' notice to Colonel Gard iner that they will move for the quash ing of the indictment. The motion was to have been made today before Judge Dlanchard, in general sessions. Yellow Taundlce Cured. Suffering humanity should be supplied with every means possible for its relief. It is with pleasure we publish the following. "This is to certify that I was a terrible sufferer from Yellow Jaundice for over six months, and was treated by some of the best physicians in our city and all to no avail. Dr. Bell, our drueeist. recommended Electric Tliiirra . after taking two bottles, I was entirely cured. nun mc greu pleasure in recommending them to any person suffering fron this terrible malady. I am gratefully yours, M, A. Hogarty, Lexington, Ky," Sold by A. Wasluy Druggist. HOOD'8 iIl7a cureTwver Ills, Biliousness, Indlgeatloa, Heartache, 4 Dleatrut laxative. Ail Druggist Backache I Wearying, ceaseless backache. Dull, exhausting and constant pain. No comfort by clay. No rest at night. Aches in the small of the back, pain low down in the side. No spirit for any task, no hope for relief. Great numbers of women are not free from backache from one year's end to another. Among Mrs. Pinkham's victories there is none more complete than that over backache, and the evi dence 01 thousands ot women prove that she is its conqueror. Mrs. C. Klcnk, ol Wells, Minn. (Box 131). writes: "Dear Mrs. Pinkham suffered for years- with a long- Hst of troubles, and I want to thank you for my complete recovery. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Is a wonderful medicine for women. "I had severe female complaints, causing terrible backaohe and nervous pros tration; was dizzy most of the time, had headache and such a tired feeling. I now have taken seven bottles of your Compound and have also used tho Sanative Wash and feel like a new woman. I must say I never had any thing help me so much. I have better health than I ever had in my life. I sleep well at night, and can work all day without feoling tired. I givo Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound all the oredit, for I know it has cured me of all my troubles. I would not do without your remedies for anything." When a woman has severe back ache she has some serious trouble that will sooner or later declare itself. Mrs. E. Furton, of Hende, filch., found that her back ache was caused by a tumor, which three bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound expelled. This is Mrs. Furton's letter: "Dear Mrs. Pinkham Two years ago I was troubled with constant backache and headache, and was very nervous. I resolved to try your medicine and took two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and on taking the third a tumor Was exrllarl. T nrnu n little frightened and sent for the doctor; and he said that it was fortunate for me that it came away. I got quite, well after that and have your Compound alone to thank for my recovery.' The safe way to guard against trouble is to get Mrs. Pinkham's advice when the back ache first appears. A letter to her at Lynn, Mass., describing your case fully will receive a prqmpt reply without charge. " Your Madlolno Is a Friend to Woman." Dear Mrs. Pinkhjji I wish to tell you the great good your medicine has done me. I do not feel like the same woman. I have suffered terribly. Had womb and klndey trouble, leucorrhcea, very severe pains in hips and sides of abdomen, headache, was nervous, menses were irregular. I havo now taken four bottles of your Vegetable Compound, and the backache has left me, menses are regular, can sleep well, and awake in the morning feeling much rested. Your medicine is indeed a friend to women. I wish that I could tell every woman what a wonderful medicine it is. I cannot praise it enough." firs. Anna J. Fenstermnker Pine Summit, Pa. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound A Woman's Remedy tor Woman s Ills. Will You Winter In Florida 7 This will bo the greatest season Florida has had for years. You ought to go anil go via the Southern Hallway, Its tho best route. If you will write John 11. Uoall, District Passenger Agent, 828 Chestnut streot, Philadelphia, Pa., he will arrango all tho details of your trip for you. A Card. aKrcorO refund the money 011 a 60-ceut bottlo of I Greene's Warranted 8yrup of Tar If It fallal to cure your cough or cold. We also guaran-tcea85-cent bottle to prove satisfactory or money refunded. A. Wasley, 0. II. Hagen-1 buch, Shenandoah Drug Store, and V, w. ! iJ.erstein & Co. ll-14.33t-dw Tk TO HtWitra' 135 $ Coming Krt-nts, April 1. Sohoppe Bros. Minstrels at Fcr gusou's theatre. Annual performance Aprils. Orand concert in tho P. M. church, corner Jarillu and Oak streets, uuderausplccs of the church choir, April 1 und 3. Violet Tea, under auspices of Calvary Baptist church. Tell Yoar Sister A beautiful oomploxion is an impossibility without good pure blood, the sort that only exists in connection with tho good digestion; a healthy liver and, bowols. Karl's Clover Hoot Tea a,cU directly on tho bowels, liver aud kidneys keeping them in perfect health. Price 25 cts. and BO cts. Sold by P. D. Kirlln aud a guarantee (HAL I Til 9 tb
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers