Newspapers / The North Carolinian (Elizabeth … / Sept. 18, 1889, edition 1 / Page 8
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"SUNSET" COX DEAD. i)cath of the Well-Known New York Congressman; - A Sketch of His Long and Event mi Public Career, Congressman S. S. Cox died about hal past 8 o'clock in the evening at his borne, No. 13 East Twelfth street, New York city, from peritonitis. His wife, Dr. Lockwood and k few friends were at his bedside. He was con scious almost to the end. During the day he recognized his wife, some of his friends and an old colored servant who came on from Washington to see him. Only a few days before, Mr, Cox was pre paring a speech on the new States, embody. ing his recent observations in the West, for delivery before the Judge Stickler Associa tion, a Democratic club in Second avenue, New York city. The title of his lecture was "The Wonderland." The members of the society met at their rooms, and sat about in gloomy groups reading with anxiety the fre quent bulletins from 1 welfth street, and at length the news came that their friend had gone to the Wonderland of which he could telj them nothing. a There were many callers at the house dur ing the day, and telegrams were received from the Turkish Minister and other "well-known men. Among the friends who called were: General Fits-John Porter, George Francis Train, Congressman John J. O'Neil, of 8t. Louis; ex-Judge Charles F. Daly, James M. Seymour, United States Marshal McMahon, General Roger A. Pryor and John T. Agnew. Mrs. Cox's brother, E. B. Buckingham, of Zanes ville, Ohio, arrived in the afternoon, as also did her sister, Mrs. Hardenburg.' About two years ago Mr. Cox had a serious illness from which it was not thought he could recover, and the recollection of his wonderful rally at that time, after tho physicians had pronounced his case hopeless, caused his friends to cherish the hoje that the same thing might happen again. Almost his last words were in regard to the new States of the great West, and plans which he had formed for advocating the admissibn of Now Mexico and Wyoming at the next session of Con gress. A change which told of the approaching end took place early in the day, and in spite of his cheerfulness and a brave effort to hold on to life, he gunk gradually, and even at five o'clock the doctors thought death so immi nent that members of the household were summoned to the bedside. Sketch of His Career. Samuel Sullivan Cox, better known as "Sunset" Cox, was born in Zanesville, Ohio, September :), WA. His father, Ezekiel Tay lor Cox, was a leading politician of Ohio and a member of the State Senate in 1833-33. The mother of S. S. Cox was a daughter of Samuel Sullivan, who was Treasurer of Ohio in 1818, and had a high reputation for probity. Mr. Cox attended the Ohio University at Atliens, but subsequently became a student of Brown University, Hhodo Island, where he grndnnted with honor in the class of 1840. He a'dopted the professioiof law, and after being admitted practised many years success fully. He then made a trip to Europe, and on his return published a very readable and popular book on travels, entitled "The Buckeye Abroad." In 185:5 Mr. Cox became owner and editor of the Colifuibus (Ohio) Statesman, the Democratic organ of the State. In 1855 President Tierce tendered Mr. Cox tho posi tion of Secretary of Legation to England, but ho was not able to accept the honor. Subsequently, however, he accepted the sec retaryship of the Legation to Peru. On his resignation and return to Ohio, Mr. Cox was elected from the Columbus district to Con gress, his Congressional term commencing on the same day as Buchanan's Presidential term. He was thrice re-elected, serving con tinuously from 1857 to 1805, or throughout the memorable years of the administrations of James Buchanan and Abraham Lincoln. In 1803, on the assembling of the Thirty eight Congress, Mr. Cox was the caucus nominee of the Democrats for Speaker against Mr. Colfax. Upon tho expiration of the Thirty-eighth Congress in 1805, Mr. Cox removed to the city of New York, where ho afterward re sided, lie published that year, under the ti tle of "Eight Years in Congress," a book of his experiences nnd observations while a member of the House. Iu 1808 Mr. Cox was again put into the field for . Congress, tlus time by the Democracy of his adopted home, and was elected. Before the assembling of Congress he again visited tho Old World, touring through Spnin and other parts of Southern Europe and Northern Africa. On his homeward trip he tarried long enough in England to write an interesting book of his travels, which he published in London. It was entitled "A Search for Winter Suu beams " and has hart an extensive circulation in this'country. In 18?it Mr. Cox was re-elected, over Hor ace Mroeley, who was the Republican candi date. In 18iJ ho received tho nomination from the Democratic State Convention for Ctingrcssirtan-at-large, and led tho balauce of the Democratic State ticket. The major ity against Mr. Cox was 15,0(10 less than the majorities against Greeley for President and ICcinan for Governor. The death of Con gressman James Brooks occurring the follow ing spring, Mr. Cox was nominated and elected to 1511 the vacancy. Ho has been again and again elected ; once with only forty cue votes ntrninst him. ilr Cox was a candidate for Speaker to fill the term left vacant by the death of Mr. Kerr. He was subsequently beaten in caucus by Mr. Randall, though coming within a dozen votes of success. On the 25th of March, 1S85, President Cleveland nominated Mr. Cox to succeed General Low Wallace as Mnister to Turkey. This post ho" resigned and was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Joseph Pulitzer, and was re-elected to the Fiftieth Congress. His best known book, "Why We Laugh," is an analytical de scription of American humor. In tho cummer of 18S2 Mr. Cox visited Sweden,Nor Way, Russia, Turkey and Greece. Tho vol ume describing this trip ho called "Arctic Sunbeams, or From Broadway to the Bos lihorus by Way of the North Cape." In May, 1885, he published a semi-historical and semi-biographical work entitled "Three De cades of Federal Legislation." He received the name of "Sunset" soon af ter ho had become editor of the Ohio (Colum bus) Statesman, thirty-two years ago. He wrote for his paper a highly sophomosical ac count oi a line sunset lie had witnessed, winch was so rudely commented unou and ridiculed that he was dubbed Sunset Cor, and he never gos mi oi me soubriquet, though very tow per sons who use'it have any idea of its origin. ATLANTIC CITY. Great Destruction of Property by the Furious Gale. The loss caused by the storm at Atlantic City has been enormous, the velocity of the 'wind being at the rate' of sixty miles an hour, and the waves dashed on the beach twenty feet high. The summer bath houses, only remodelled last spring, were totally wrecked, and the " indsor Hotel suffered greatly. While standing on the pavilion outside of the board walk and a short distance below Howard Pier, a woman holding a child in her arms was lifted up by wind and thrown into the water. For a few minutes great excitement prevailed. Mr. Walter Field, a photographer, realizing the situation, jumped into the water and rescued the couple. Thirty thousand dollars w ill not repair the loss from Griffith's carou sel to the Chelsea pavilion. Two large board ing houses, the Gladstone and Cincinnati, each containing twenty rooms, were raised from their foundation and crushed like kind ling wood. These houses are worth at least S5000 each. St. Monica's Roman -Catholic Church at Chelsea, although greatly ex posed, remained standing. The first morning train to Longport started iu the morning, but was compelled to re turn, the tracks having been washed away. No trains for Philadelphia were able to start out upon either road. All day residents of the city were rowing out to the unfortunate tenants of houses beyond Baltic avenue and the Thoroughfare. They had to be taken from the second story windows. These people were principally colored and quite poor. Several houses were thrown from foundations and are now unsafe to live in. The tin roof jf the United States Fire Company blew off. A - portion of it struck the feed wire of the electric road and threw it on the fire alaVm wires, causing an electric fire for several blocks. The current had to be cut off. The most careful inquiry established the certainty that there was no lives lost, al though there were many instances of brav ery and daring in cases of rescue. The schooners R. R. Leeds and Rebecca M. were lost. The masts of two large yachts which were caught on the drawbridge of the Pennsylvania Railroad had to be cut away in order to allow a construction train to pass. One of the Knickerbocker Ice Com pany's schooners broke her fastenings and dashed against the same bridge, making a .partial wreck of it. . The Farmers' Alliance has purchased the plant built for a gin fr.ctory at Florence, Ala., and say they will be making 5000 yards of lagging per day in thirty days. Machinery has been ordered from New Orleans. THE NEWS EPITOMIZED. Easter a Middle States. General. P. D. Lieorrnm! Hayti, has arrived at New "fork on the Ward Line steamer Manhattan. He was accom panied by bis family and several officers of his army. PRESIDENT HarrisD anH PnEtrruurtar. General Wanamaker were among the speak ers at the anniverswry of the founding of the Old Log College, the cradle of American rresDytenamsm, at HartsvlUe, Penn. Upward of 200 stevedores and longshore men are idle in Boston on account of the Lon don strike. Deitxisow D. Das a. for thirty years treas urer and general manaeer of the Douglas Axe Company, of Boston, has embezzled a large sum and disappeared. The New York Prohibitionists have nomi nated a complete State ticket beaded by Jesse H. Griffin for Secretary of State. The Old Loe College celebration has been held on the Tennent farm near Hartsville, Fenn., a number of distinguished persons, including the President and Postmaster-Gen eral, being present. r A TRAi.v on the McKeesnort and Bille Vernon Railroad struck a cow near Webster, Penn. The cars left the track, killing one man and fatally injuring another. A supposed chicken thief shot and killed Washington Dilliard on his farm near Bethle hem, Fenn. The murderer escaped. A RACE, riot has occurred at New Castle. Del., between gangs of Irishmen and Poles and Hungarians, which resulted in the death of one Hungarian and the wounding ' of an irishman. The new United States cruiser Philadel phia has been successfully launched. A vestibule train ran into a freight train near Shenango, Penn., killing the bag gagemaster and seriously injuring the en gineer and fireman. ' 'Steve" Brodie, the bridge jumper of New York, alleges that he went over Niagara Falls in his rubber suit, thus eclipsing the feat of Graham, who was carried over the great cataract in a barrel. Brodie has three witnesses of his performance. Dick & Meter's great sugar refinery In Williamsburg, N. Y., controled by the sugar trust, was destroyed by fire together with 3,500,000 pounds of sugar which it contained. The loss amounts to fully 'fl,000,000. High tides have occurred on the Eastern coast, and some damage has been done to property. - The authors of the incendiary fires which have recently occurred at Roslyndale, Mass., have been arrested in the act of setting fire to. a house. A JURY in Worcester. Mass., has decided that the Rev. Father G. Ely Brochu, a priest of Notre Dame Church, must pay $1730 for denouncing a parishioner from the pulpit. Leon Abbett has been nominated for Gov ernor by the New Jersey Democratic Con vention. Mrs. Aaron W. Dilliard, widow of the farmer who was murdered near Easton, Penn., has confessed that she and William H. Bartholomew planned the murder and that she assisted in carrying out the plot. "Rttrt &r Wvniir tViii rtlrlnsrfr. hnncA ft wrvln jobbers in New fengland, have failed. The amount of liabilities is estimated at between fSO.OOO and 1100,000. Sontli ami West. Jacob Scoll was working in Purcell's ele vator, Chicago, when one of the doors gave way and an immeuse quantity or wheat poured in upon him, burying him so that he was smothered to death. Two men have been blown to atoms and two others injured by an explosion of dyna mite on a Government lighter on the St. John's River, Florida. The South Dakota -Democratic Conven tion has declared for tariff reform and nomi nated a State ticket headed by P. F. Mo- Clure, of Pierre, for Governor. The Union Iabor party of Iowa, in con vention at Des Moines, has nominated S. B. Downing for Governor, and Ezra BrOwnell for Lieutenant-Governor. A fire in Laird, Norton & Co.'s lumber yard at Winona, Minn., has destroyed property to the value of f314,000. The Republican Territorial Convention of Washington, which has been in session at Walla Walla, has nominated ex-Governor E. P. Ferry, of Seattle, for Governor, and John L. Wilson for Congress, i The business portion of the town of Link- ville, Oregon, has been burned. The loss amounts to about $160,000. Mrs. Myers, the wife of a blacksmith of Bourbon, Ind., threw vitriol in the face of Dr. F. J. Linn, a prominent physician, de priving him of sight. He had assaulted her while on a professional visit. Fourteen colored men have been whipped at East Point, near Atlanta, Ga., the whip ping party consisting of white men whose identity is not known. Dr. David Tilton Brown, formerly phy-, sician in charge of Bloomingdaje Asylum, who had become insane and had been re ported dead, hanged himself in a barn on his son s iarm near tsatavia, in. A mob of armed white men surrounded the jail at Columbia, Mo., and took from his cell George Bush, a negro 17 years old, and hanged him from one of the windows of the Court House. The city of Upper Sandusky, Ohio, has drilled in u gas well which shows a capacity of over 50,000,000 cubic feet daily. Forty five thousand people visited the place in one day, and the excitement is inttfhse. Three farmers while standing under a tree near Albany, Ga., during a storm, were struck by lightning and instantly killed. Louis Nelson and John Coleman were killed at Minter City, and Wilson Porter whs hanged at Sunnyside. This swells the total number of colored pien killed in the Mississippi ribt to twenty-five. President Harrison was present at the first day's exercises of the celebration in Baltimore of the battle of North Point. Two freight trains came into collision on the Lake Shore road near Millersburg, Ind Thirty-six cars and two engines were wrecked at a loss of $200,000. Two Italians working on the Midland Railroad, near Clarksburg, W. Va., were blown to pieces by the explosion of a cart ridge, and others were seriously injured. The canvass of the contested votes for Governor in West Virginia, has given Judge Fleming, the Deniocratic candidate, a majority over General Goff. The thirty-ninth .anniversary of the ad mission of California into the Union was celebrated in San Francisco by : public holi day. By a freight wreck on the Norfolk and Western Railroad near Lynchburg, Charles McDowley, a fireman, has killed, and a brakeman fatally injured. The Aurora Watch Company, of rora, 111., has made an assignment. beer Au Th liabilities are about 200,000. Five farmers have been killed near Can bondale. 111., by the-explosion of a threshing mnchin boiler. .ciGHT colored men have been arrested near Norfolk, Va., on suspicion of being con cerned in the murder of a storekeeper named T. L. Waller. Dr. H. H. Tucker, one of the leading Baptist clergymen of the South, and pro prietor of the Christian Index, has died through falling from " the window of his house at Atlanta, Ga. The Washington Democrats have placed a State ticket in the field headed by Eugene Semple, of Tacoma, for Governor. The striking miners of Spring Valley, 111., have refused the employers' terms. They ask the Governor to use the State Emergency Fund in their behalf. Eleven influential citizens, of Marian, Ind., have been arrested charged with being implicated in the White Cap outrage, in which Mrs. Aseneth Street and her daugh ter were taken from bed at midnight and flogged. George Allen, one of the colored leaders in the recent labor uprising -in La Flore County, Miss., was taknn to Charleston, in that State, and hanged. It is now estimated that 100 colored people were killed in the Le Flore County riots. Washington. Secretary Tracy has designated Lieu tenant Aaron Ward, naval attache of the United States Legation at Paris, to repre sent the Navy Department at the Inter national Meteorological Congress to be held in Paris. ; The President has appointed Thomas IL Anderson, of Ohio, to be Minister Resident and Consul-General of the United States to Bolivia. The reason given by St. Domingo for re fusing to participate in the Congress of American Nations is that a treaty negotiated by the, representatives of the two countries several years ago failed of ratification by the oenate oi the U mted States. . The President has been advised by his Cab inet not to call an extra session of Congress inis year. -The President has appointed Georsre "W. Lyon to be Surveyor of Customs for the Port of New York, Theodore B. Willis to be Naval Officer of Customs in the District of New York and Ernst Nathan to be Collector of Internal Revenue for the First District of New York. Fabius H, Busbxs, United States Dis , . I ' " . . . I trict Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina, has resigned. During the last three months 33.436 pat ents were issued by the General Land Office. The issue for June, 16,523, exceeds that of any month in the history of the office. The President has appointed Henry C. Warmoth to be Collector of Customs at New Orleans. Thb President has designated Colonel Will iam P. CraighilL of the Engineer Corps, to be a member of the Lighthouse Board to fill the vacancy caused by the transfer of Colo nel Wilson to West Point. Foreign. The town of Tlacalula, In the State of Hi dalgo, Mexico, nas been entirely destroyed by floods. ' nENERAL BotXANGER has written to M. Tirard, the French Prime Minister, demand ing a trial by court-martial. Three sealers from Behring Sea have arrived at Victoria, British Columbia, with 5500 sealskins aboard. A Canadian Cabinet Council has been held in Ottawa to discuss the refusal of the Imperial Government to interfere with the Rush's work in Behring Sea. An explosion in a colliery at Penicnick, near Eainburg, Scotland, resulted in the death of fifty miners, only fourteen out of the sixty-four men at work in the pit at the time having been rescued. The French Minister of Justice has noti fied the bishops throughout France that any ecclesiastic violating the law by attempting to influence the elections will be vigorously prosecuted. j An American flag which was suspended across Water street, in St, Stephen, New Brunswick, was torn down, dipped in a drink ing fountain, dragged through the street and left hanging to a barber-shop door. A German bank has contracted to pro vide the Mexican Government with capital to construct a railroad across the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. The Krupps are to furnish the iron and steel material for the road. Later reports put the number killed by the explosion in an Antwerp (Belgium) fac tory at 200 and the wounded at about 500. The fire which followed the explosion lasted two days. The village of AustruwelL inhab ited by artisans, wag completely destroyed for hundreds of yards, and in its vicinity not a building escaped damage. All parts of Antwerp show more or less damage, and por tions appear as if bombarded. While a christening party was enjoying a sail on Lake Killarney in Ireland, their boat capsized, and before assistance could reach them five persons were drowned. The municipal authorities of Paris have given a grand banquet to Edison, the in ventor. O'Connor, the Canadian, has been defeated in a sculling race for the world's champion ship on the Thames by Searle, the Aus tralian. The entire Bench of Judges, District and Circuit, of Riga, Russia, have been arrested for using the German language, after they had been ordered to use the Russian. The Industrial Exhibition of Toronto, Canada, has been formally opened by Sir John Macdonald in the presence of an im mense concourse of people. , The losses by the Antwerp fire will be nearly $7,000,000. LATEENEWS. A dispatch from Wilmington, Delaware, states that thirty vessels went down in the terrible gale which has prevailed off the At lantic coast for three days. The gale has done immense damage at Lewes and will be as memorable as the famous blizzard of March, 1888. The contour of the Atlantic-Coast line has been changed in many places to a remarka ble degree by the great gale. The New J er sey Coast was a heavy suff erer'in this respect. While the members of the G. A. R. Post at Marabile, Mo., were cleaning their cannon it was prematurely discharged, frightfully injuring six men, one with fatal results. Mrs. Starr, a wealthy widow, of Decatur, 111., was shot dead by her son Harry, who mistook her for a burglar. A boiler in the California sash, door and blind factory at Oakland, Cal, exploded, killing four men outright and injuring several others, j ' A colored man and a white man, both murderers, have been lynched at Morganton, N. C. The President has appointed to be Col lectors of Internal Revenue: John S. Loth rop, of Iowa, for the Third District of Iowa; James W. Hearne, of Texas, for the Fourth District of Texas. Charles III. Honore, Prince of Monoca, is dead. He was born in 1818. A number of cases of cholera have oc curred in Greece. The Prefect of the Seine has refused to ac cept the declarations of candidacy for mem bership in the Chamber of Deputies made by General Boulanger and Henri Rochefort. The Senate of Mexico has been formally inaugurated and Senor J. M. Couttoleno was elected President.' The Directors of the -, Paris Exposition have decided that it must close October 31st. ' ; ' Servia and Bulgaria are making warlike. preparations while protesting that nothing unusual is transpiring. CUT OFF BY FLAMES. Men and. Women Leap From Fourth Story Windows. Mc Ardle's large bag and general paper stock warehouse at Albany, N. Y., has been destroyed by fire. The origin of the fire was the spontaneous combustion of a pile of rags on the third story . Bo quickly did the flames spread through the grease saturated build ing that the employes, consisting of fourteen women and girls at work in the sorting room and ten men in the office or about the build ing, were forced to jump for their lives. The majority escaped by leaping to the roof of a neighboring house. Carrie Swartz, wno weighs over yoo pounds, jumped into the yard and crashed through the roof of an outhouse, receiving serious injuries. Mrs. iuien Mack jumped from the fourth story, a distance of seventy feet, and fell upon a "pile of scrap iron. : Her condition was critical. Richard Gamble, a bookkeeper, in his en deavor to avoid the flames fell through the snaic ana was b&aly cut and bruised. The inhalation of flame, however, was the direct cause of his death, which occurred soon af terward. Mrs. Ellen Frank, who jumped from th fourth floor, and Mrs. Ellen McShane, whu fell down the elevator shaft, sustained frac tures of the limbs and severe bruises, but not necessarily fatal injuries. Several others re ceived severe injuries. Loss about $80,000: insured. ' TEN MINEES KILLED, Water Floods tHe White Ash and Smothers the Men Working in It. One of the most serious niining accidents ever known in Colorado has occurred in the White Ash coal mine, near Golden. An old abandoned mine runs alongside the White Ash, and has for months been full of water, which, without a moment's warning, burst through into the White Ash mine, filling it full of mud and water. Ten miners are known to have been at work in the White Ash mine at the time of the' accident, and not one of them could have lived five minutes after the surging mass broke in upon them. It will take between two and three weeks before their bodies can be reached. Work will be commenced at once by hun dreds of willing hands in order to pump the mine out, but old miners who have been through the mine say it will be impossible to clear the mine and reach the bodies under two and perhaps three weeks. Part of the men leave families who were dependent upon them, while the rest were single, and all highly spoken of. TANNER EESIGE3. The Head, of the Pension Bureau Goes Out of Office. President Harrison has received the resig nation of James W. Tanner as Commis sioner of Pensions. " In his letter conveying the resignation, tt is said the Commissioner writes that he recog nises that differences exist between himself and Secretary Noble, of "the Interior Depart ment, respecting the administration of the Pension Bureau; and that, those differences being radical in the interest of a thoroughly satisfactory administration of the office he should resign. Rain in the valleys and snow in the mount ains have extinguished the fires that have beenraging for the past month in Montana. MM OF VICTIMS. ; Terrible Explosion in an Ant werp Cartridge Factory. A Great Fire Adds to the Horrors of the Calamity, , Dynamite exploded a few days ago In a cartridge factory, in Antwerp, Belgium, and by the explosion and resulting fire probably 800 persons lost their lives, many of them factory girls, about 1000 others 'were in jured, and property valued at many millions of dollars was swept away. The factory was situated behind the docks, where millions of cartridges were being loaded upon the shipping. Close by were the petroleum stores. The Bourse was so near that it was struck by burning frag ments when the explosion occurred, and set on fire. The building was crowded at the time, and a panic ensued, in which many persons were slightly injured. In a workshop in the factory a large num ber of men and women were actively at work breaking up old cartridges, and about twenty-five million had been partly taken to pieces when the accident took place. So rapid was the spread of the flames that it was difficult to rescue those who had been hurt, let alone removing the bodies of those who were instantly killed. The police, gendarmes and the troops were called in to help fight the fire, whils priests and Sisters of Charity looked after the wants of the sufferers. The force of the explosion was such that windows three miles away were shattered. By 7 o'clock the fire had spread over an area of two acres. Flames were shooting up high in the air, and the whole city was enveloped in dense smoke. In the ruins of the factory and on the neighboring docks, above the roar of the fire there was a constant succession of sharp reports, supposed to be caused by the ignition and explosion of., the packages of cartridges. As the fire spread, two large Russian petroleum Warehouses caught. Eighty thousand barrels of oil (were burning at one time. Nobel's sheds, and warehouses beyond them, soon became food for the flames. ; The shipping was in a position of great danger, particularly, at the Africa and American docks. Before they could be re moved, several vessels were burned. So in tense was the heat that the firemen could nowhere approach the flames nearer than 100 yards. Many soldiers and workmen received severe injuries in this fight with the fire. The Corvileian cartridge factory, where the trouble began, had been condemned by the Communal Council, but the Deputation Permanente had allowed work to continue. At the American docks all the ships were saved, owbag to the favorite direction of tho wind. Ihe dock sheds and hydraulic cranes were greatly damaged. The soldiers of the garrison and a large number of citizens assisted the firemen. Many dropped from suffocation. The scenes at the hospital were heartrend ing. King Leopold sent a telegram express ing sympathy. The people are incensed at the Deputation Permanente for allowing work to continue in the cartridge factory. THE WHITEOHAPEITfIEND. Another Feminine Victim of "Jack the Ripper" in London. ; At 5:30 the other morning a policeman found the body of a woman lying in a corner of a railway arch spanning Cable street in Whitechapel, London. Examination of the body showed that the head and limbs had been cut off and carried away and the stom ach ripped open, leaving the bowels lying upon the ground. The police authorities immedi ately placed a cordon of officers around the spot, but no arrests were made. A police man passed the place where the body was found every fifteen minutes throughout the night, and saw nothing to arouse his suspi cions. Physcicians who examined the body believe that the murder occupied nearly an hour, and it is surmised that the murderer carried the head and limbs away in a bag. The murder is the most horrible of the whole Whitechapel series. The dissection of the body showed that the peipetrator possessed considerable surgical skill. The murdered woman was about thirty years of age, and was evidently addicted to successive use of spirituous liauors. Her clothing was shabby. As yet she has not been identified. The murder created tre mendous excitement, and a large crowd of agitated humanity surrounded the morgue, whither the body was taken. Further examination revealed the fact that there was no blood on the ground where the body was found, nor was there any indica tion of a struggle. This confirms the general belief that the woman was . murdered in a house and her body taken to the spot where it was discovered. Experts are of the opinion that the woman was killed two days previous to the discovery of the body. Three sailors, subsequent to the finding of the corpse, were found sleeping in the ad joining arch. They were arrested, but con vinced the police that they had neither seen nor heard anything of the murder or the body lying near them, and were discharged. The generally accepted list of the White chapel fiend's victims up to date is as follows: I. . Unknown woman, past middle age, Whitechapel outcast, found dead in October, 1887, with body horribly mutilated. Little attention paid to the case. 2. Martha Turner, found August 7, 1888, stabbed in thirty places, probably with a. bayonet. ' ' 3. Polly Nicholas, found August 31, head nearly severed from body. 4. Annie Chapman, found September. 8, horribly carved. 5. Young woman, near Newcastle-upon-Tyne, found September 23, slashed as were the others. 6. Elizabeth Stride, found September 30, body warm when found, but mutilated like the others. - 7. Catherine Eddowes, found the same morning, body and face horribly disfigured. . ' 8. Unidentified woman, found October 2, with head and arms severed and the usual mutilations of body. 9. Mrs. Mary Jane Lawrence, found No vember 9, head nearly severed, face lacerated almost beyond recognition; body ; literally hacked to pieces. " 10. Elizabeth Jackson, body found iu sec tions between May 31 and June 25. 1889. II. Alice Mackenzie, alias Kelly, found in Castle Alley dead, but with body still warm, July 17, 1889. Mutilations not completed ; knife evidently dull. 12. The present case. NEWSY GLEANINGS. A diamond trust is proposed. Florida reports a big sweet potato c op. The cotton crop of the South promises to be the best on record. . All the Adirondack resorts have this year been crowded with visitors. The potato bug is making its appearance in various parts of the country. Typhoid fever continues to spread in Lon don, and people are getting nervous. The Deleware peach crop is smaller this year than it has been in many seasons. It costs the city of New York $250 a year t"Vl Vjvn io "wolle Trine" in r,Y1ir itEPORTS oi tne jJTencn wneat crop were noc so satisiactory as was anticipated. Ice houses containing 150,000 tons of ice were destroyed by nre near La Forte, Ind. A number of stage coaches have been robbed recently in California by masked highwaymen. Kalamazoo, Miss,, expects to realize $1,000,000 for celery this year. The business is chiefly in the hands of Hollanders. The average flow of petroleum in the Baku region of Russia is 88,000 barrels per day, as against o,duu narreis in tne united states. Out of twenty-eight murders committed In London last year, in only six instances were me perpetrators brought to justice. Upward of twenty-eight large bales of human hair were brought to France in the last steamer that arrived from the Orient. Capitalists are preparing to start a huge meat-canning estabhshment at Galveston, Texas, to compete with the giant Chicago concerns. The he&t has been so infonsA in Trwlinw China, that the authorities, in the hooe oi bringing rain, ordered the killing of pigs to oe stopped. The new cruiser Charleston, built by the Union Iron Works, of San Francisco, for the Government, has failed to come up to the contract requirements. A recent cargo of Java sugar, landed at Philadelphia, was infested- with swarms of sugar-fleas resembling potato-bugs, and in- The Lutherans of Maryland, Pennsylva nia, V irginia ana West Virginia are holding their annual reunion at Penmar, Ind. Ten thousand people are attending it. Workmen digging a ditch near Renns- selaer, Ind., discovered $439 in gold, several watches and other valuables, believed to be tne plunder oi an old gang of robbers. An irrigating scheme is under way in Utah in which $2,000,000 are to be invested. The reservoir for the canal will cover 130 square miles. The canal will irrigate 200,000 acres in nAip ijk;p vpimYn - THE NATIONAL GAME. iy . . -) i " Becxxst leads the Rttburg Club in hom runs. .1 . . The Bostons won the series from New York.. .. j' : , Haot has a base ball fib called the Pen nessewassee. , .. Caset, of the Phuadelhias, has been laid off without pay. : j : . A. G. Spalding favor doing away alto gether with the foul catc'. The total attendance athe Boston grounds this season is almost sunto reach 275,000. According to Anson teveland has given Chicago harder fights thn the other League clubs. -j ; ? Utah, Glasscock and ternari are the only League players who haviscored 100 runs this season. i . The "buildings and fetes of the old Polo Grounds in New York hre been sold at pub lic auction. j EwTNG, the New Yorte Captain, has given up playing mascots. Tl last (a little colored boy) was a failure. , i Farbar, Fogarty, Wod and Nash are the latest additions to the 100 base-biS record among League clubs. ; In Omaha they have rtarted the old and demoralizing practice f rewarding home runs with coin showers.', ; j Pittsburg, Philadelnia and New York are the teams that PJcher Clarkson, the mainstay of Boston, is a special terror to-. In'dianapohs fears him lot. ; . - A Bostonian promits a forty dollar easy chair to each member f the Bostons if they succeed in winning the iennant. The struggle for theihampionship, is very close and exciting tt year, both in-the. i League and American kssociation. Over one hundred jeague games have so far been won and lostiy one run. Chicago has won the most gauss and Cleveland lost the most by that small nargin. ' The stars of the hseball world afford valuable lessons to the aspiring youngsters of the profession. Thr are shining exam ples of the value of tenperance. Cleveland is the ony League club to lose three straight games Uone club by one run each. It, is also the otly club in the League which scored in every lining of a game. The Washington nmagement have made arrangements with th Bostons to play a se ries of six games, in Washington, during the Triennial Conclave of the Knights Templar in October. ; i The Louisville bastall managers have signed Flanagan, formirly of the Athletics, to play first base; Ryai and McDermott as a battery; and young Carkson,' formerly of the Tri-State League, oi a pitcher. On Labor Day the tvelve games played by the League and Association clubs at tracted an attendance ol 75, 302. The League had 46,384 patrons and ihe Association 28, 98. i The League playd seven games and the Association only im. j The Boston-New Tork, ! Philadelphia Washington, Indianapols-Cleveland and the Chicago-Pittsburg seriei are complete. At least the few games whfch these clubs have not played will not Iikdy be contested, as the schedule will not pffmit it. The Columbus Club directors at a meeting request that Holland the umpire, be no longer scheduled for any game in Columbus President Wickoff replied that he has no power to change inspires, as the schedule of umpires was arranged by a committee ap pointed f or that purpose. Arthur iRWix.late Captain of the Phila delphias, has reasn to feel proud of there cord he has made -with the Washington Club. It stamps him as abaseball general second to none. He took a team badly handicapped, and, with ' practicily the same men and de pending on the effcrts of two pitchers to win, has vastly bette-ed its standing among League clubs and made it a dreaded antag onist.' j A bad accident occurred recently in Chi cago at a game of laseball between two nines that styled themsefves the "Doctors" and tho "Undertakers." In the seventh inning, when the Undertaters were well in the lead, James NcNerney, fhe pitcher, was delivering a swift in-shoot when his arm snapped a few inches from the shoulder, and he fell to the ground unconscious. An examination re vealed the fact that his arm was broken, the bone almost protruding the flesh. He was removed to his home. LEAGUE RECORD. Won. . Lost. Percentao Boston New York. ......... 68 38 .642 68 40 .630 58 61 . .532 58 56 .509 53 58 .447 50 ; 65 .435 49 66 ;j .426 38 : 68 .853 Philadelphia Chicago ..... Cleveland. . . . . Indianapolis. Pittsburg.;..;..... Wasflington. ,. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION RECORD. Won. . 77 ' . 73 . 65 . 62 .61 . 48 . 48 . 24 Lost. Percentage. Brooklyn...... St. Louis.....; Baltimore. . . Athletic. Cincinnati. Kansas City... 37 .675 .637 41 47 48 55 67 70 01 .580 .564 .627" .417 .407 .209 Columbus.;... Louisville. . . . . IN THE FAR NOETH, Stories of Starvation Among Indians Because of a lack of Snow. A terrible tale of suffering in the far North is told by the Rev. E. H. Black, a Church of England missionary near Fort Simpson, who has just arrived in Winnipeg, Manitoba. - Last winter was a very hard one for the In dians, owing to the absence of reindeer and the impossibility ot hunting moose success fully in the absence of much snow. Ten per sons succumbed at fort wrigley. Mr. Jjlack fears that the mortality during the coming winter will also be great, unless there comes a heavy fall of snow.- Provisions gave out at the fort last winter in the beginning of January. Flour is dear enough at any time, the regular' price being $30 a . bag at Fort Wrigley, while it is 127 a bag at Fort Simp son. But Mr. Black says he would have given f 200 a bag last winter if he could have purchased some and have given the Indians a share. The distress in that district was ter rible. He had to leave to avoid starvation.! At Fort Liard seven died from starvation last winter. NEWS OF STANLEY. Fighting His "Way Through Hostile 'I Tribes in Africa. Advices from Brussels, Belgium, state that Henry M. Stanley is marching toward Mombassa, after fighting his way through, the hostile country of the Umjaro and Uganda tribes, and conquering the natives. He has established the authority of the British East Africa Company over the country from the upper Nile to the East Coast. The advices declare that it is doubtful if F.min Pasha, to whose relief the Stanley ex pedition was originally sent, is accompany ing Stanley to the Coast. THE MARKETS. 37. raw tork. Beeves. . .... .i ............. . 3 Milch Cows, com. to good. . .30 Calves, common to prime. . . 3 57J 4 60f 00 45 00 10 3 65 25 5 00 50 7 25 : 30 4 75 5 (, 20 4 35 65 5 85 83K 83? :55 75 85 42X 43 35 25 28 75 : 80 75 ; 80 6.00c Sheep. ............. ... Lambs Hogs Live. Dressed Flour City Mill Extra - Patents....... ...... Wheat No. 2 Red Rye State Barley Two-rowed State . . . Corn, Ungraded Mixed. . ... .: Oats No. 1 White. ......... Mixed Western. ..... . Hay No. 1 . Straw Long Rye Lard City Steam . Butter Elgin Creamery..... ! Dairy, fair to good. ' West. Im. Creamery Factory .-. . Cheese State Factory. ..... Skims Light Western'. Eggs State and Penn..... . . . 18 20 13 10 8 7 6, 5 19 18 14 12 : .7 8 BUFFALO. Steers Western 3 Sheep Medium to Good. ... 4 Lambs Fair to Good, 4 Hogs Good to Choice Yorks 4 Flour Family..:........... 5 Wheat No. 2 Northern.. ... Corn No. 3, Yellow Oats No. 2, White . Barley No. 1 Canada. . ..... 25 90 25 4 60 50- 5 50 25 4 70 00 5 25 84 38J 25 25K 74 BOSTON. " Flour Spring Wheat Pat's. Corn Steamer Yellow..... Oats No, 2 White Rye State. 5 50 47 6 15 : 47 31 70 65 WATEBTOWN (MASS.) CATTLE MARKET. Beef Dressed weight. ...... 5 6J Sheep Live weight. 4) 4 Lambs.... "5 ; 6 Hogs Nerthern 4 5 j PHILADELPHIA. Flour Penn. family 8 90 Tim 86 35 oo: 42 40 ; 20 . Wheat No. 2, Red, Sep.... Corn-j-No. 2, Mixed, Sep.... Oats Ungraded White.. . . . . Potatoes Early Rose Butter Creamery Extra. . . . Cheese Part skims. 5 A DEYASTAT1G GAL The North Atlantic Coast Swept by a Furious Cyclone. Great Damage Done at Noted Sea side Eesorts. t A. tidal wave Which swept the Atlantic Coast Sunday evening, causing damage and injury to life at various points, appears to have been merely a preliminary skirmish. It was followed by a series of disturbances in the elements calculated to make memorable the month of September and the fag end of the seaside resort season of 1889. i The weather all along the coast, following a period of delightful atmospheric conditions, , was rainy, cold and windy. Finally a furious storm of wind and rain brought about the worst mixture of the disagreeable season, and put a summary end to the season at all the popular places by the ocean in the vicinity of New York. 'i. : . Stories of the severity of this storm came from many points and stamped it as one' that will probably prove historical. It was peculiar in its large ,f weep of territory, in the prolonged character of the disturbance, in the great velocity the wind attained, in the rainf aS and in the destruction to coast line property by tides of extraordinary height, activity, andi volume. The water along the New York cjty front reached the highest point this yeaf. ' Not for a long time had the Atlantic Ocean been more turbulent, j Like a huge monster with an .' insatiably appetite, it bit huge ' pieces out of . the coast line along New Jersey, Coney Island, Long Island, Staten Island and other exposed points. Old landmarks Were washed away and new channels cut fn the sandy soil.- Mag nificent seashore hotels and improved proper ties that were supposed to be beyond the reach of the. devastating elements, are no longer picturesque placesi Nowhere was there better evidence of the havoc caused than at New York's most popu lar summer resort Joney Island, particu larly Manhattan- Beach and Brighton. A large part of the island was inundated, and the two principal 1 hotels were in dan ger of destruction. The , sea had made such a sweep; at and around Man hattan Beach that it was not only an island, and a dangerous one for those who had the courage fo remain on it, by it self, but one so isolated that the inhabitants were cut off from escape and entire com munication. The Coney Island season was summarily ended. s On the southern sh$re of Long Island the wind assumed the character of a cyclonic hurricane, its speed varying from thirty to sixty-five miles an pour. At Long Beach, Fire Island, Arverne, Rockaway, Point Lookout, Far : Rockaway and other summer resorts the tide rose so high that many hotels and cottages were in danger of being floated from their foundations, while outhouses and pavilions have already been car ried away at all these" points. Wide channels' appear in nearly all the beaches, and swift currents sweep inward to the low grounds. The damage on Staten Island was Very serious, while all along tho JNew Jersey coast. from Sandy Hook o Cape May, the same condition of affairs existed. The cliffs at Long Branch were (crumbling, and the sea surged through ; the, streets, and avenues of Asbury . Park, Ocean Grove and other places in that , neighborhood. Atlantic City was cut Off from the main land. On Long Island Sound the tide caused havoc to the wharves at Greenwich, Stamford, Bridgeport, and towns on tho Connecticut coast were overflowed and the streets flooded. New Rochelle, Will eft's Point and all the islands lying in the neck Of the Sound ex perienced the fulli vigor of the storm, for the tide roso , to on unpreceden ted height and. poured immense vol umes of water over what has always been considered high land. Nowhere could the storm and tide be combated, only temporary makeshifts being possible toward saving threatened property.. Measured by dollars and cents, the storm caused more damaged along the coast at sea side resorts than couid be approximately esti mated. . j ;- ;- a tereibleIforest fiee. 3 Several Lives ant $1,000,000 Worth . of Property Lost in Montana, ; - Information has been received at Helens of one of the most destructive forest fires yel : reported in Montana It occurred in the St. Regis district, Missoula C6unty, and the Cokeley ranch was rade a barren waste in less than thirty . -mill utes. Cokeley and the hostess of the ranch mounted horses and barely escaped with their lives to the river, less than a quarter of a mile away, reaching the water after having their clothes nearly all burned from theif bodies. . They remained in the water over twp hours, and even there the heat was almost feuffocating. A Swedish prospector pained Anderson tied his horse in the gulch. a,bout hal a milo from the Coke- ley ranch and went hp the hills to his claim. Both horse and man perished in the flames. J. C. Veedeiy who his returned from the St. Regis country, savsr that several men per ished in the mountains. The destruction of property will aszreate fully SbOOO.OOO. - j i m Grand Rapids, lioi., offered a bounty for the killing Of English sparrows, and up to date boys have slaughtered over 10,000 of the pests. In addition th boys have filled a horse with bird snot, punctured the leg of one of their number with the same, and put out. the eve of another. ' ' s The German powder factories are all at work night and day turning out" the new smokeless powder for the army. They are also crowded with orders for . the Austrian and Italian Governments, both of which have adxroted. the Dowder-. , Cord of Thanks. : If the proprietor of Kemp's Balsam should publish a card of thanks, containing expres sions oi gratitude which come to him dally. from those who have been cured or severe throat and lung troubles by the use of Kemp's Balsam, It would fill a fair-sized book. How much better to invite all to call on any d rue- gist and get a free sample bottle that you may test tor y ourseil its power, large Datties ouc. and $1. . . j - The Government gave the Northern Paclflo Railroad Company 47,000,000 acres of land with, $iuo,uuu,uyw to build that road. We recommend "TansilTs Punch" Cigar. Salt Rheum Often causes great agony with IU Intense ltchtaz and burning. Hood's Sarsaparilla, the great blood purifier, cures salt rheum and all skin diseases. It thoroughly cleanses, renovates and enriches the blood. Give It atrial. ! "After the failure of three skillful physicians to cure my boy of salt rheum.'I tried Hood's Sarsapa rilla and Olive Ointment. I have now used four "boxes of Ointment and one and a half bottles of Sarsaparilla, and the boy Is to all appearances com pletely cured. He Is now four years old, and baa been afflicted since he was six months of age." Mas. B. Sahdersos, 56 Newhall Street, Lowell, Mass. Hood's Sarsaparilla Bold by all druggists. SI; six for S5. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD a CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Malta. IQO Doses One Dollar N Yaru 37 I iiiaawici& b manual. rl n -1 mr i 7 in. x o in. 70 page. Illuminated Cover. iSTiWT T?"PT!T!''01iaPPllcatlon enclosing one lOXJll X X XVXiiJ .(j,.,) gtamp by addressing Theodore hollakp, p. o. box 120, Phna.,p. PEERLESS DYES Are tke BEST. Bold by DBuaeans. : Cleanliness and neatness i , 1 B at Ifte Tm Bsrt Testfaatal .Jlxlna Is Che rut published f or any wooo KrWooldOT Medical Discovery, which EIrLS. Xwftndrful medicine to benefit in 11 cases of tnos aiseaws w H 77t oommended. or money paia nww wlu returned.. It .?JW yg-S tnmi( liver anu lm" -it, Union. All Bam, ocaap mux ktoSS oSTEruptlons. Sores and Svrell msStSeum, Te&er, Erysipelas and kin frS aseVire among tfose in twhich the tniaeoverr" effected marveloue cores. When everything else falls, PT-SaPm ffe7cTTreI 60 cents, by druggists. Do you wish to know how to have andnot half the usual or on wash-day? As tn,?rocr for a bar of DcbtmW Btectrie Scap SoraoUonVwUl teU you how Be sure fcget no imitation. There aye lots of them. - . . . ,1 TaxBX are 1430 barons in Germany. TO HEAL ALL " Thus it was tlit Swift's Specific Brought unto the world its llessing; Over land and over water Went the priest and Uanita; Bringing to the people tidings Of relief from llood contagion Of a salutary agent That would purge them of all poison." , --zxtbacx raoK poem or 'tastta." Treat! on filOod and Skin Diseases mailed free. Address UK. Dr. Kothler's Mixture" right along Kith tuccess. It is the best colic medicine J have ever teen, ISAAC MOOO, Hone Dealer, . Brooklyn, Hew York. ID READY RELIEF. THE GREAT CONQUERER OF PAIH, Applied externally. Instantly relieve Hprains, Hrnisea. Backache, Pain in the Chest or Sides, Headache, Toothache, or any other external pain, CONGESTIONS, INFLAMMATIONS, Rheumatism, Neural. tin, Lumbago, Sciatica, Pains in the Small of the Back, etc. CURES ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS, Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Nansea, Vomiting, Heartburn. DIAR.RH.tEA, Colic, Cholera Morbus, Fainting Spe:la. Inter nally, half to a teaspoonful 1b isalf a tum bler of water. 50c. a bottle. All Druggists. IpDTOY'J Iu PULLS, An excellent and mild Cathartic. Purely Vegetable. The Safest and Bent Medicine in the world for the Care of all Disorders of the LIVER, STOMACH OR BOWELS. Taken ccording to directions they will restore health an d renew vitality. Price 25 cti. a Box. Sold by all Druggist. Ely's Cream Balm V lliii UUUI. CATARRH. I Price 5QCents. I Apply Balm Into each nostril. ELY BROS., 56 TVarren St., N. Y. ?2;.uiNr-" . THE EDWARD HARRISOH Mllilj CO., Maaaf ftctarera ! Harrlsoa's Standard liar ptoao Ctrladlaa and Flnurin Jaills of all sues and varistiM, possessing great eapao- x uariDintT, UUls mat on trial to responsible parties. Frtees. Write for Jew aiiascrated Cat .wgur, ana mention tius paper. Tie .Edward Harrison Hill Co.. 7C TO $250 A MONTH can be made working l" for us. Agents preferred who can furnish 6 horse and give their whole time to the business, pare momenta may be profitably employed also. 1 few vacancies in towns and cities. B. E. JOHN BON CO. 1009 Main St, Richmond, Va, If. B. Please ttate age and butinet experience. Sever mind about tending ttamp for reply. II. K J. dt Cq f -: : : r-: AXLE GREASE BEST IN THE WORLD IT Oet the Uenuino. Bold Everywhere. DUE ALL SOLDIER if M atisaled ; par, st. y. Mccormick sons. arstiaa this pt,fr. S25" uniis made by onr Agent, nvun TIIR UK. PERKINS MJEDlOAJj COu Richmond. FRMif! PENSIONS lcarar niuTUt Uwi frss. A. m v.n.i...n, m n ssalagssa, n. C. P ISO'S REMEDY TOR CATARRH. Best, to use. Cheapest. Relief is immediate. A certain. For Cold in the Head it has no equal. It Is an Ointment, of to the nostrils. Price, by mail. Address, sy ifcyLrfcy..y..y ..T..y ..y j ..y.-v -v. The man who has invested from three to five dollars in a Rubber Coat, aad at his first half hour's experience la a storm finds to his sorrow that it ia hardly a better protection than a mos quito netting, not only feels chagrined at being so badly taken in, but also WET leeis if tie aoes not look exactly like ASk for the ' FISH BRAND Slicke eoei pot have the nsn s&Ain. send far desert,. iw w w mm im. a 1 ira 1 1 rence in h ho about a hrm U - fosa I V 4rV-avass, 1 asa La sr 11 oaves iauw PTJ ACQBS OUT J TRADE AIM XT CONQnERO PAIN. Heuerea ana cures &HETOATISH, NEURALGIA. Sciatica, Lumbago. HEADACHE, Tocthiche, Spnins, BB17I5XS, Barns aid Scald. At Druggists and Dealers. Till CMAILES A. V08ELEB CO.. BatUmsrt. Ml BLOOD CONTAGION. 1 Took Off Ills Under Up. Eight years ago a cancer came on my lower lip. I had If cut out while it was yet small, and It healed up apparently, but soon broke oat again, and com menced eating very rapidly. It took off my under jip from one side to the other, and down to myrhin. 1 had it treated by burning, aud got bo weak that I did not think that I could stand it much longer. Af ter much e offering I discarded all other treatment, and be?an takinp Swift's ypecnic. and the cancer coon b-sran to heal, and in a short time it was com pletely healed and I was entirely well. It is now over three years f lnce I pot well, and there has been no sign of any return of the disense. I know It was cancer, and I know it was enred alone by S. S. 8. E. V. r'E brand, KuEtou, La. 8. S. 8. cured me of malignant pore throat nd mouth, caused by Impure blood. The trouble ex tended down to my left lung, which was very sore.. The doctors practiced on me for t hree years without relief, when I left them and took 8. 8. S. Fonr bot tles cured mo. JJits Kilist, Meridian, Misi. Bwrrr Sricino ConrAirr. Drawer a. Atlanta, Ga. : I i DR. KOEHLHR'S FAVORITE COLIC MIXTURE for all domestic animals, wUl oure 99 out of every 100 cases of colic, whether flat-i ulent or spasmodic Rarely more than 1 or 2 doses necessary. It does not con stipate, rather acts as a laxative and Is entirely harmless. After 20 years of trial In more than SOCK) cases, our guarantee is worth something. Cellc must be treated promptly. Expend a few cents and you have a care ou hand, ready whea needed, and perhaps save a valuable horse. If not at your druggist's, en close 50 cents for sample bottle, sent prepaid. nuciiiicu ar jirtnieuem, rt. "Favorite Colio We cheerfully recommend Dr. Koehltr't "Favorite Colio Mixture." Would net 6 without it at long at vie have hornet. ISAAC MOSES t BRO., Sale and Exchange Stable, Easton, F you WISH A liOOO REVOLVER purchase one of the cele brated 8MITH WESSON arms. The finest small arms ever manufactured and the first choice of ail exoerts. Manufactured in calibres 32, 38 and 44-100. Sta le or double action, saretv uammeness ana 'arret models. Constructed entirely of best ossl ity wrought Mrel, carefully Inspected for work manship and stock, they are unrivaled for finish, durability and accuracy. Do not be deceived by cheap malleable cant-iron Imitations which are often sold for the genuine article ana are no only unreliable, but dangerous. The SMITH A WESSON Revolvers are all stamped upon the bar rel with firm's name, address ana date of patent and are guaranteed perfect in every detail. In sist upon havlug the genuine article, and If your dealer cannot supply-you an order sent to addres below will receive prompt and careful attention. Descriptive catalogue and prices furnished upon sp plicatlon. fiMTnPU AV WRHCOV K3P"Mention this paper. - Springfield, IMaiiJ C3F" LATEST IMPROVED Machine for THRESHING CLEANING Grain, also Machines for HAWING WOOD ' "i with Circular and Cross Acknowledged I V Cat Vroc Saw. Dy au to bs THE f refsvrdiiic EASY DRAFT, DURABILITY I QUANTITY OF WORK rr!!!2 A.W. GRAY'S SONS, MIDDI.ETOWN SPRINGS, VTJ R n and TMskey Hab i j Its cured at home with gjv-jS out pain. Book of par. B b 9 tlculars sent FREE. tlaaut, w office Gtta Whitehall EL Elf) MP STUIlV. Bookkeeping, Business Forms, jlVInC Penmanship, Arithmetic, Short-hand, etc., thoroughly taught by HAIL. Circulars free. Bryant' College, 457 Main St, Buffalo, N. Y. Mitre YOUR Dime Price lists of machines. II1MCL, OWN llWUOs patterns and yarns free. E. ROSg fc CO., Toledo, Ohio. Agents wanted. NEW TREATMENT. ABA LTIO, As applied at the HORSE POWER CANCER Holland Medical aud Cancer Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., removes Cancer without pain or use of knife. Scores of patients speak in unqualified terms of praise of the success or this treatment. Write for circular. OLLANU MEU1CINECO., Kuflalo, N. Y ir. Lobb, After ALL otners fall, consult 329 N.I 5th St. PHILA., PA. Twenty years' continuous practice in the treat ment and cure of the awful effect of early ice, destroying both mimfi and body. Jledlclus and treatment for one monlfk Five Dollars, 8?ut securely sealed from observation to any address. Book on Special Disease free. I prescribe and fully en dorse nig ii as the only specific for the certain car of this disease. O.H.1NOKAHAM.M. D., Amsterdam, N. Y. We have sold Big G for many years, and it ha fit Oh DATSGJ yOtjaraaMe Mt H i;2rv eassrtsur. uriealybytke ? riven toe dmi oi bus action. D. B. DYCHE t CO.." 3v2lklaSsasIars1 Chicago, nr. SI. 00- Sold by Drueilstr Easiest cure is which a . small particle is applied 50c. Sold by druggists or sent E. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. We offer the man who waats service (net style) a garment that will keep bins dry In the hardest storm. It is called TOWEK'8 K1SH BBAKD SLICXEB," a nsme familiar to every Cow-boy all over the laDd. With thei the only perfect Wind and Waterprod Coat is "Tower's Pish Brand blicker." .njt n.nthw If vnn, llM'.V...,, , . i ....... 1 t taw,. .w cmn.. it.tnn u... HCOIXf10MTs m e if you use in nouseworre , " . . n
The North Carolinian (Elizabeth City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 18, 1889, edition 1
8
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