A BUNGLING EXECUTION.
! :
The Irn1v3n1an-L0s.es His Nerve,
Causiijg a Fearful Scene.
Groans and Contortions of the
Dangling Victim.
Jfiwph M.. Hillman, convicted of the mur-
1T
f Herman Soideman. a Hebrew nedler,
ha
jl.Kifjn executed .in a corridor of the Glou
cester- County Jail at Woodbury, N. J.
.'fames Vanhise, the professional hangman of
e-ai-K, furuiMie1 the gallows and conduct-'
! t
iiiti
lifiliaiiftinjf. Sheriff Itidgway merely pull-
Jttie rope which operated the fatal drop,
lte.'ffallo-.vs was of the sort which requires
'1
no scaffold, but by weights and a rope run
ning Over puHis jerks the criminal upwaru
and lets him drop the length of the slack.
This (f as the thirty-sixth execution of the
kin 1 )i"if(ii-uiHKl by Vanhise, but notwith
standing his experience -the execution was
. b.fdlvi iiiHiingod and caused a sickening scene
iu the
Tij.j extraordinary nerve displayed by
yoi.njj lli!ii!iau during the trial in court did
nhi fii-sak(' Imii in the closing ordeal. lie
slept well during the night and in the morn
ing ate his breakfast with relish. During
thc 1. horning hours he was visited by Kev.
V.". N'ohles awl". Kev. tieorjje Carter, the two
ministers who acted as l"'s spiritual advisers
'since .lie was sentenced; his counsel, Messrs.
; Harris and ..Srove, and by his father and
lin t her Kphraini, tii; latter remaining to
wiijnss the exeeution.
In jiidding his father farewell Joe broke
Ion-it and wept freely, but soon recovered
his composure. To the ministers and his
cot. n.-H he adhered to the statement he has
repeated often, that he did not do the killing
alonii but was assisted by another man. To
that alleged accomplice he has at different
1 in icij given different names. He expressed
himself as not only fearless of dath, imt 'en
tirely willing to die, as he was sure he had
bet 11 forgiven.
T! persons designated under the law to
witness the; execution, nliout twenty-five in
rmrnbrr, assemliled in the jail corridor at
lo
-'.- a. 11. Hilliiiau was led from his cell at
th.
fart her end from the gallows, his arms
!''
aii'
his
til. l.lii,-L- .m. i.lafM Oil his Vlpml
1 the noose with a short niece of rope about
lu ck. Escorted by the Sheriff and the
f'wJ
! mniisfers, he walked with firm .step to
lh
alio, and the end of the rope on his
was attached to the rope hanging from
the iiotw r beam. The ministers bade him
- iroodhy. "whh a few words of consolation, and
Hi- Sheriff asked him if he had anything. to
- v . ; ' ' '
peaking in a voice loudind distinct; Ilill
eirui said: "Dear friends, lam aliout going
to leaven.- All I have got to sav is, that rny
aid-had nothing to do with it. I am the only
I li 1 1 1 1.-1 1 1 that, touched him. I have forgiven
o!i all. anil I hope you have forgiven me,'
md tome' day I hoje to meet you all in
iieaven."
J "he cap was drawn -down over the face,
nhise .adjusted the noose, Joe saying as he
pel it up. ' Don't draw it so tight," and
Sheriff IJidg-way pulled the rope." The body
sh'jit (inward to the top of the gallows, aliout
fi.ikrt.i-cn feet high, dropped until the feet
neirly touched the floor, fetching up with a,
sharp rebound, and then hung for a few second-:
cut inly motionless. '
'Then tin? arms and legs W-gnn'to. twitch,
thi' hi' nds were raiseil ns-hjgh as the strap
fastening tin' arms would allow, and heart-'
rending moans, some of them almost similar
to ari iculate utterances, escaped from the
wretched man. : .
The noose had loosi-neil instead of tighten-in;;-,
nnd the knot, having slipped from the
sii e to the front, of the head, there was no
pressure on the front of the throat. The
executioner seized the rope to readjust the
noose, two oiiicris lifting the body to aid him
inidoing so. The knot was slipped down and
held in place, and as the weight of the body
n-jjain rested in the noose the throttled man's
liiind that had clutched the hangmanVcoat
relaxed, and all the struggles ceased.
h'he sci hi' war. too painful for many of the
si -tat iry. -who turned their faces away from
tbje sickening sight, and some of them . left
I hie. jail as hurriedly as possible. "Horrible!"
"Outrageous!'' ' lirtital!" were words heard
otj every hand. In eight minutes from the
drop the pulse ceased to beat. Six minutes
later pulsation at the heart stopped, and the
man was pronounced 'to be (lead at five
minutes to eleven.
I'Vanhiso's explanation of the unsuccessful
execution was that, he became unnerved when
Hillman asked him not to make the noose
titlit, and yielded too much to the request.
(The crime for which Hillmah paid the
.death penalty was committed over a year
ago, and remained for four months undis
covered. ne day last March a man fishing
iij Nash's mill pond at Turnerville found the
nearly nude body of a man bearing marks
011 the head that indicated murder.
The. I body .was. not identified at
first, but about three days afterward it was
fiMmd to be that of Herman Siedeman, a.
Prdler wlio had been known to make tripsin
that : neighborhood and had been no'i'nn-
from his boarding jilace in Philadelphia since
the early part of November, 1888.
1 no jaci mar, joe iiinman adopted the
cat ion of .ed!er about the time the mnr
r was supposed to have been committed,
n'pled with a 'rather bad reputation, di
eted suspicion to him. He w as placed tm
r arrest and Prosecutor IVrrv o ml T-
th e ( iarrison worked away at the case until
nass 01 damaging evidence had been .col-
cted. The trial, which took Y I fl (t in Qo-
inlw. lasitHl piHit 1n
II ill man's arrest he was twenty years old
aiid kept housa with a wife and baby.
THE NATIONAL FINANCES.
If-" i ;
Fiffii its From the Annual Report of
the United States Treasurer.
United States Treasurer, Huston, in his
annual report says that the past fiscal year
isj characterized as a remarkable one in the
history of the public finances, both the rev
enues and the expenditures having been ex
eeeded but a few times since the foundation
otThe Government. The former amounted
th 387,050,058, and the latter to $2!t!,2S8 078
iiichisive of 17.2U3,3G2 paid in premium oh
bonds purchased. The surplus revenues on
June ;10 were $87,70.1,000 n decrease of $2.3,
r)80,l'j:j, as compared with the year before,
counting premium on bonds as an ordinary
expenditure.
On Jimo;), 1888, there was in the Treas
urer s.custfxly, in cush and effective credits
the sum of $704,72!,:aei, and a vear later the
-sum of S7i'.0,t',4.'i,S71. The current liabilities
decreased m the interval from $148,21)1,347
to $127.'.i:il,880 and the reserve from $22! -805,1100
to ltf3,W7,(M7. The gold in. the
Treasury in excess of certificates outstanding
was $11)3, 010, 172 in lsss, and $180,257,490 in
I The changes that took place in the currency
were an increase of alwut 134,000,000 iu the
stock of silver, a contraction of $41,000,000 in
the national bank circulation, and a loss of
$2j,750,000 of gold, less than four per cent, of
the stock. The total stock of gold, silver
u,nd circulating notes, excluding the certifi
cates of deposit, which are merelv represen
tative of moneys in the Treasurywas si 008 -04!)
for 1888, and $l,00G,Oi)5,420 for 1S8'J
"ift"1!? apparent contraction of about
p3,000,000 in the total currency of the
cbuntry. As the holdings of the Treasury
decreased 111 the interval in the sum of $41 -000,000,.
the 'circulation increased about
,000.000. The public lost $18,000,000 of gold
find 30, 000, 000 of notes, and gained $56, 000, 000
in sliver. - '
j The. increase of the circulation of silver
certificates was about $50,000,000, having
kept pace with the rate for the two previous
years. The new issues of small denomina
tions appear to have fully supplied the needs
Of the country, and no further difficulty is
apprehended in furnishing such denomina
tions as they are wanted, within the limits
of the coinage of silver dollars. These cer
tificates now exceed in volume every other
kind of paper currency except United States
J The coinage of the standard silver dollars
has proceeded M. itlirvnf o 4. .1
or remark. ltliont. ir.v ,.i,.. k
amount m eireulntinn .fj ...
, j " "cic iruucui'j to
ward a decrease. As the efforts to increase
the circulation have proved futile, no ex
traordinary inducements have been held out
to the public to take them.
During the year the national banks with
drew $00,340,.KK) of their bonds held by tho
treasury as security for circulating notes or
yy-.,',Com2ney The deposits amounted to
, 00. There remained at the close of
the year , $148,121,4.50, belonging to 3262
JSrfwl;."? r" fr circulation, and $45,
,000, belonging to 270 banks, as security
for deposits. The amount of public moneys
c -r.,fPritorj banks ran down from
$08, 12,oll.ll to $47,259,714.39, the result
mainly of the voluntary acts of the banks in
surrendering the deposits and withdrawing
their bonds. The semi-annual tax on circu
lation amounted to $1,410,331 for the Tear. -
I The new crown which has been manufac
tured for the German Emperor by the court
jeweler weighs three pounds, and is adorned
with a hundred fine diamonds. That pro
vided for the Empress is ornamented with
eleven pearls and nearly fifteen hundred
diamonds.
PuTVPCr railarav liiiit.liiwr... 1. . . . .
v ..... 1.... . t". " . yuuuuiKd UC0 .VIXIt3 LO fill
-1 1 1 1-1 1 . . .
euu, uucause vno r renca vxovernment insists
upon the fulfilment of the Tientsin treaty, by
which France was to supply the personnel
and material of all Chinese railroads.
THE NEWS EPITOMIZED.
Eastern and Middle States.
A collision, of gravel trains occurred
near Dover, Me., killing John Shay, of Ban-.
gor, and an unknown Italian.
Miss Catherine Drexei of Philadel
phia, heiress of over $5,000,000. received the
white veil in the chapel of the Sisters of
Mercy Convent in Pittsburg, Penn.
A fire on the riveV road in Bedford. N.
II., destroyed the house of Samuel W. Dun
bar. Two children, a six-year-old child of
Joseph Ricker and a five-year-old boy of
John Hart, were burned to death.
In a railroad collision near Altoona, Penn., '
"William Stevens, a brakeman, was killed and
two other persons injured.
Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, has voted
to instaU the Rev. Dr. Lyman Abbott as its
Iastor.
The World's Fair Site Committee of New
York decided to use no part of Central Park
for the site, and the resolutions were ac
cepted with cheers by the General Com
mittee. Thk State Treasurer of Pennsylvania,
William B. Hart, has died at Horrisburg,
Penn.
The Oil Producers' Association of Pennsyl
vania has raised $12,000,000 for the jmrpose
of laying a pipeline and building refineries in
opposition to the Standard Oil Company.
Five boilers at Pardee. & Co.'s coal mines,
near Hazleton, Penn., exploded, killing John
Burke, Frank Munck and Joseph Rand.
Cold water in a hot boiler was the cause.
Three men have been killed by a terrific
explosion in Wylie & Wallace's chemical
works at Philadelphia.
The trustees of the Brooklyn Tabernacle
have decided upon the plans for a new and
splendid church, to cost f 150,000.
Three prisoners, named respectively
Brooks, Bertrand and B-icord, all charged
with theft, escaped from jail at St. Albans,
Mr. Robert Bonner, of New York, has
bought the great three-year-old filly Sunol
for 40,000. Sunol recently trotted the fast
est mile since 1885, achieving a record of
3.10J. .
A large and enthusiastic meeting of
Anarchists was held in the Cooper Institute,
New York city, to commemorate the second
anniversary of the execution of the Anarch
ists at Chicago. Speeches were made by
John Most find Sio?-Oriiiu "P Mli-.ricr.V oiwl r.
. ....... ,,. . ttuu. a I
bloody social revolution was predicted
South and AVcst.
A fire has oi'curred in Petersburg, Va.,
which destroyed property to the value of
$750,000, and caused the loss of ono life.
At Bayou Boeuf, IjA., a madman attacked
a number of men with a knife, killing one,
and badly wounding three others. He was
afterward killed himself.
Frequent burnings of barns and hayricks
in McDonougn and Hancock Counties, 111.,
cause much excitement among the farmers,
who are keeping a sharp lookout for the
torch bearers. -
Georoe Hancock,. Mormon high priest.
lias been arrested at Payson, Utah, charged
with murdering Mrs. Hatch and her son,
George Jones.
Oscar Beki ; hstrom, of Willmar, Minn.,
while hunting, was drowned in Long Lake.
He accompanied Nordenskjold, the explorer,
011 hisexpedition north of Asia.
A ktre in a new thirteen-story flouring
mill in.. St. Paul, Minn., has caused the de
struction of that mill, with a loss of $180,000.
Fifteen convicts confined in the peniten
tiary at Htiutsville, Ala., attempted toes
cape. One of them was shot and killed and
two others were wounded.
Hundreds of cattle and sheep perished in
a severe snowstorm in New Mexico, and at
least five cowboys were frozen to death.
Fire has destroyed property to the value
of $100,000 at Columbus, Ohio.
-s The clothes taken from the body -of Dr.
1 1011111 iiynis muruerers, witn ins case of in
struments, have been found in a sewer at
Chicago.
J. D. aun has been hanged at Summit
villc, Tenn., for the murder of North White.
He had tried suicide twice, and the rope
sank into th-j wound, breaking his neck.
AT Leesburc. Va.' one hundred un.wl
men took Owen Andrews, colored, eighteen
years of age, from jail and hanged him for
attempting to assault Miss Leith, a white
school gii'k
The convention of the National Women's
Christian Temperance Union began in Chi
cago. A womax, said to be an important witness
in the Cronin murder case, was sand
bagged in Chicago.
The Catholic Centennial was opened at
Baltimore by an imposing procession of
ecclesiastics and pontifical high mass, at
which Archbishop Ryan preached the ser
mon. "German Day" was celebrated in Louis
ville, Ky., by Turners singing societies and
other organizations to the number of 15,000.
Colonel William Goodloe died from the
effects- of the wounds he received in his en
counter at Lexington, Ky., with Colonel
Swope, in which the latter was killed.
Patrick Airy, a pugilist of New Orleans,
was shot and killed by Andy Berrill.
Miss Francis E. Willaud was re-elected
Piesident of the Woman's Christian Temper
ance Union, which met in Chicago. 1
A freight train was derailed near Kenton,
Tenn., and badly wrecked. Brake-.nan
Thomas Carter and Engineer Thornton
Emmons were killed, and Fireman i Avery
Hudson and Conductor De Witt Newman
were seriously injured. j
Nearly complete returns show that Boies
(Democrat) has a plurality of about 0000 for
Governor of Iowa. The remainder of the
Republican State ticket was successful bv
pnu aiuies ranging ironi 1000 to 3000.
C. A. Ross, a preacher living near
Locke-
ford, Cal., shot and killed his wife, his eisrht-
yenr-old son and himself. He was a Metho
dist preacher for several years, but lately
had been an itinerant Congregationalist, en
gaged in selling books. .
Charles A. Smith, a prominent Alabama
politician,. and brother of ex-Governor Will
iam A. Smith, was shot and killed by Calvin
Brown in Clobume. The killing is supposed
to be the result of a, political quarrel.
The Catholic College at Baltimore ad
journed sine die after adopting a declaration
of principles ' j
A woman testified in the Cronin murder
trial at Chicago that she saw Dr. Cronin en
ter the Carlson cottage shortly before his
murder; heard blows, then something fall
followed by cries of "O God!" "O Jesus!"
Her testimony had visible effect on the ac
cused men.
Three white men were fishing near Selma,
Ala., when the river bank caved in upon
them. All three were killed. j
"Washington.
The. President has appointed William T.
Hopper to be Collector of Customs for' the
District of Perth Amboy, N. J., and William
W. Bates, of New York, to be Commissioner
of Navigation. i -
Ex-Prekipent and Mrs. Cleveland visited
the U hite House to par their respects to
I resident and Mrs. Harrison. v
Hkcretary Tracy has ordered Rear Ad
miral D. L. Braine to the command of the
.New ork Navy Yard. -
President Harrison has signed -and is
sued the proclamation admitting Montana
to the Union. The proclamation is similar
to those admitting North and South Dakota.
Six special committees were appointed by
the President of the Maritime Conference,
and a number of amendments to the Rules
of the Road were adopted by the Conference.
The annual report of Colonel C. McCaw
ley. Commander of the Marine Corps, shows
tnat there are 1823 enlisted men in the ser
vice ooi on ooara snip, ana -sou on snore
duty.
The President has appointed Charles P.
Lincoln, of Michigan, to be Second Deputy
Commissioner of Pensions.
. The annual report of Commissioner of In
dian Affairs Morgan recommends the ab
sorption of the Indians as American citizens
and the full recognition of their individu
ality. The President has issued a proclamation
admitting Washinston to the Union.
Great Britain has removed the limita
tion placed upon her delegation at the In
ternational Maritime Conference, in regard
to the scope of the programme to be con
sidered. ' ;
The International Maritime Conference
voted down a motion to strike out the rule
providing that vessels approaching each
other in a fog shall slow down.
Arthur Laferastrie, delegate from Haytl
to the International Congress, was presented
to Secretary Blaine and the President.
Foreign.
! The closing of the Paris Exposition was
marked by a brilliant fete. . Four hundred
thousand persons were present, the largest
attendance since the opening of the Ex-'
hibition. :',.. .
It is reported at Zanzibar. tUatthJd:43
nr Snmnlic finvo ti a sc rril ' Tit T'nf . -.-(..! w
- - . ........ . u '. w J i . . oroi o,, IUD
German African explorer, -and", his whole,
a. XT'- i in i - .
party except one European- and one SordalL- .
who were
Ngao
w uuuudu auu aio uuw ax i "j .fey3 gcurrai oactie occurred
"KreSultlngr in the death and wmimiin. '
The sum of $400,000 was paid, over by the
Provincial Government of Quebec to' the
Jesuit uiraer in uanaaa, in consideration 01
the order's total and perpetual abandon
ment of claims to the estates 'which became
the property of the Crown when the order
was suppressed nearly a century ago.
The American ship Cheseborough, Cap
tain Ericsson, from Hiogo for New York,
has been lost off the Northern coast of Japan.
1 Nineteen of her crew were drowned.
Ox the eve of his departure from Constan
tinople for Berlin Count Herbert Bismarck
had an audience with the Sultan, who prom
ised to Germany and the Triple Alliance the
friendship of Turkey.
An explosion has occurred in a dynamite
factory near Bilboa, Spain. Four persons
were killed and -many were injured.
The volcano of Colima. Mexico, is in ac
tive eruption. Many buildings in its vicin
ity have been thrown down, and for miles
around the forests are on fire.
Princess Marie, wife of Prince Alexan
der of Battenberg, recently ruling Prince of
Bulgaria, has died at Gratz, Germany.
Sixty prominent adherents of General
Boulanger have been holding a conference at
his residence on the island of Jersey.
Dervishes on the warpath in Abyssinia
were defeated, three of their Chiefs being
ariymg th siain.
The British cruiser Amphion, with the
Governor General of Canada on lxard, while
en route from Victoria, British Colombia, to
Esrmimault, struck a rock and was seriouslv
: 1 "
The Budget Committer of the German
Reichstag has approved the scheme of a new
Colonial Department.
Many notable men were present at a
banquet given in London in honor of P. T.
Barnum, the great showman.
The first sod of the Nicaragua Canal was
formally turned amid the booming of can
non and the cheers of thousands of spec
tators. The French Government has prohibited a
projiosed Boulangist demonstration,
r. At a public meeting in Sydney, Australia,
resolutions were adopted in favor of colonial
federation.
The new Lord Mayor of London, Sir
Henry Aaron Isaacs, has leen installed in
office with the usual show.
Prince Albert Victor, son of the Prince
of Wales, arrived in Bombay, India, and
was given an enthusiastic welcome.
Bishoi O Dwyf.r, of Limerick, Ireland,
has issued a pastoral letter forbidding the
eiergy 01 me niocese to grant absolution to
any fterson guilty of Iwycotting or pursuing
the Plan of Camjiaign.
Great loss of life has been caused in China
by a flood in the Vang-tze Kisng River.
The solar eclipse exyiedition has arrived
safely at St. Vincent, Capa de Verde islands.
Barni; m's show opened in London in the
presence of 20,000 spectators.
General Corona, ex-Minister to Spain
and Governor of the State of J.'alasico, in
Mexico, while on his way to a theatre in
Guadalajara, was stabbed to death, by a mad
man. General Boulanger has issu?d a ' manifesto-'
to the French people from the Isle of
Jersey.
Great distress exists in the Transvaal,
South Africa, resulting from brought and
famine. The situation was reported to be
critical at Johannesburg, where breadstuffs
were selling at famine prices.
A dispatch from Shanghai, China, savs
me emperor, who married against his
will in obedience to his mother, now refuses
to see either his mother or his wife. 1
The hands employed on the steam craft
on the Thames at London, and on the Clyde
at Glasgow,, went on strike.
Mr. Connery, the representative "in the
City of Mexico of Thomas A. Edison, has
made a contract with the Mexican Govern
ment for the establishment of a phono
graphic iostal service.
Prince Albert Victor of Wales reviewed
.000 troops at Poonah, India, and afterward
visited the Rajah of Kolayiore, and in the
evening attended a State ball.
M. Deroulede and other Boulangists
were arrested for attempting a demonstra
tion iu the Place de la Concorde in. Paris.
Dispatches from Zanzibar state that the
fortified camps of the Arabs in Usanbara.and
Usebara coast districts have beem stormed
by flying columns of German soldiery . and
hostiles dispersed. ;
LATER NEWS.
The Brewers' Board of Trade of New York
city has promised half a million dollars to the
World's Fair fund.
The investigation of the New York City
Dock Department revealed gross carelessness,
ignorance and dishonesty.
A mass-meeting has been. held at Guthrie,
Indian Territory, to take action regarding
Secretary Noble's intention to remove the
cattlemen forcibly from tho Indian lands, if
they do not move off of their own accord.
The Secretary's determination was unani
mously approved.
Captain Stephen A. Moore was instant
ly killed and IY E. Jackson badly wounded
at Cambridge, Md., by the explosion of a
gun while firing salutes.
The Iowa delegates to the convention of
?he W. C. T. U., at Chicago, under the lead
of Mrs. J. Ellen Foster, withdrew in a bod v.
Mrs. Foster's action was on account of, the
non-partisan issue which tho convention de
cided against her.
Mrs. William Cassius Goodloe has ap
plied for the position of Collector of Internal
Revenue for the Seventh District of Ken
tucky, made vacant by the ldlling of her
husband ;it Lexington by Colonel A. M.
Swops.
The Capitol Hotel. at Dallas, Texas, has
been destroyed by fire. The seventy-five in
mates lost nil their clothing, most of them
escaping in tiieir night clothes. Two drunken
men perished in the flames, i
William Griffith, aged 73, sexton of the
Straw-bridge M. E. Church, Baltimore, com
mitted suicide in the church by inhaling gas.
The Ordnance Department of the Navy
has awarded a contract for furnishing 2000
revolvers to the Colt Arms Company, Hart
ford, Conn., at $12.50 each.
Admiral Gherardi, whose management
of affairs at Hayti during the troubles there
last summer won for him the thanks of Sec
retary Tracy, has been ordered to proceed to
the West Indies again. He will go in either
the Kearsarge or Galena.
The American delegates to the Marine
Conference banqueted the foreign delegates
at Washington. A large number of Govern
ment officials were present.
Dr. Norvin Green, President of the West,
ern Union Telegraph Company, has informed
Postmaster-General Wanamaker that the
company cannot accept the reduction of rates
Mr, Wanamaker proposed.
Plans for two 1000-ton gunboats, a prac
tice ship and the Thomas cruising monitor
have been completed at the Navy Depart
ment. The Catholic University in Washington
was opened with impressive ceremonies. The
President and Secretary Blaine were among
the speakers at the banquet.
The delegates to the International Ameri
can Congress returned to Washington on
their special train, having traveled nearly
6000 miles.
The persons arrested for taking part in
the attempted Boulangist demonstration in
the Place de la Concorde, Paris, numbered
158. All bufsixty of the prisoners were af
terward discharged. . .
Two lives have been lost and much prop
erty in the vicinity was damaged by the
breaking of the dam at McClellin's flouring
mills, about a mile west of Alton, Ontario.
0FFI0IALS LYNCHED.
Mexican Troops Kill and Wound Fif
teen People.
News has reached the Commander of the
Mexican troops in Neuvw Laredoi of serious
trouble which is now going on in Mier
Mexico. The other Sunday a merchant
named Guteries was shot and kUlSi ' by two
customs guards, who claim .he refill to
stop and be searched on the road between
Mier and Camargo. On their arrival in Mier
they reported the affair and the citizens were
so incensed they raised a mob" ana lynched
1 or fifty Mexican: troops
aiia a-hodri if .fif te.1 mti' v. r
. Prdfji afrtyed there tdo late to savts the'lives
sfcu afxtyed there tdo late to save the'lives
resulting in the death and woundin of soma
r,1'"' "t""!"!80?,5. KsnuorcemeDtswer
telegraphed for to Matamoras. " '
rami
Terrible Fight Between Widely
j Known Politicians. -
One Falls . Before the Knife and
1 the Other to the Pistol.
fAt 1:45 o'clock in the afternoon Colonel
William Cassius Goodloe, Collector of Inter
nal Kevenue of the Seventh Kentucky Dis
trict, and Colonel Armstead M. Swope, met
on the Postoffice corridor at Lexington, Ky.
Both were after the mail that was in their
letter boxes, which are rather close together.
They approached these boxes at almost the
same instant, and when each saw who the
other was they glared at each other fiercely,
and one of the two, it cannot be discovered
which, exclaimed: ''You spoke to me; yon
insulted me."
This was followed by some-angry words
from the other man. At this instant they
straightened up, and each drew a weapon at
the same moment. Swops a revolver and
Goodloe a clasp knife. As so an as the
weapons were drawn Swope tired, and Good
loe knocked the revolver down as it went off,
the ball entering his abdomen on the right
side. Goodloe then began stabbing his oppo
nent in the breast with his knife, which forced
Swope backward toward the money-order
door. After several blows had been struck
by Goodloe, Swope fired again, missing Good
loe. In a moment after firing the second
shot Colonel Swope fell on his tace ad died
almost instantly. On his person were found
thirteen wounds on his back, arms, and in
his breast.
Immediately after the killing Colonel
Goodloe walked to a physician's office, where
his wounds were examined. He was per
fectly cool and made a disposition of his
property in case of death.
The cause of the difficulty was a statement
made in the Republican Convention of May
i, 1888, by Colonel Goodloe, that fully two-
. . . . VM, - . . T v v j 1.11 l UMCauiii tu
the Convention did not speak to Swope.
me corresponaence netween tne men oc
curred about th miiMln nf ATno- 1SSS Tt-
was very brief, and simply withdrew the
remarks each had mado"about the other.
Since that trouble they have never spoken
toeach other, and sine. their rtiffprcnpps worA
settled by the correspondenca thev have
never spoken of each other, acting as if the
other had never existed.
The only persons who saw the fight were
Postmaster McChesney, who was just issuing
a money order, William K. Shelby, who was
in the money order lobby, and Harry Swift,
a postal clerk. Shelby aided Goodloe in reach-
; . i t - a
T H t A i n t.h ini crh'. (Atvllna ctt Vi f, I r-
ing version of the difficulty: He said that as
l. A. 1 1 .1 , . . .
no wens rowara nis rostomce dox lie saw .
Colonel Swope getting his mail, and, and as
he did not Wish n (lifflellltv ha wail-orl fnr
Swope to get away with his mail and go out.
T d. i i . , . ... .
uu mwr uo uau procured nis mail, swopo
still stood in front of - his box.
Goodloe politely said: "Will you
pleaso allow me to get my mail?" The
trouble then began, and with few words.
Colonel Swnrw drew Lie PAvnivop , -I
attempted to shoot Goodloe in the head. He
iiiucKBu me piswi, ana it went orr, the bullet
going through a package of papers Goodloe
had in his hanrl and intv hie liilnmni tL
attempted toward oft' the revolver until he
could get his knife out, and when he did, he
began cutting his assailant as rapidly as
possible until he fell.
r First Assistant Postmaster-General Clark
son being interviewed at Washington, said: .
"In the Republican partyof the nation there
are few men better or more widely: admired
than Colonel Goodloe. The announcement
of the tras-edv will ha n
"sonal erief to thousands of Reonblinaiis
Colonel Goodloe could have had re-cognition
.under the present Administration, but he
preferred to stay in Kentuckv because of his
business interests. He was "a man ,of abso
lute fearlessness, manly, and generous."
I The intelligence of the tragedy was a pro
found shock to a large number of persons in
Washington. Colonel Goodloe had many
friends in the capital, and was high
ly esteemed by prominent leaders of both
political parties. As a member of the
Republican National Committee he natural ly
enjoyed the confidence of tho chief public
men of the Republican party, and his cour
tesy, genial nature, and general lovable
character gave him a warm place in the
affections not only of thoso with whom
he was in political accord, but of those
with whom he differed on national
affairs. By marriage he is related to Sena
tor Beck, of Kentucky, his brother, Major
Goodloe. of the Marinn
ried the Senator's daughter. When in the
city he was a frequent visitor at Senator
Beck's residence, and here he met many of
the Democratic members of Congress.
:. The President knew Colonel Goodloe well,
and esteemeed him highly. The news of his
probably fatal shooting was commuuicated
to him, and affected him to a, most
marked extent. The intelligence seamed'
to stun the President almost as
though it had been a near relative.
A book which he was holding' in his hand at
the time fell to the floor, and for. a few
minutes he paced nervously and abstractedly'
up and down. He asked that any particu
lars of the tragedy which might be received
should be communicated to him.
s Colonel A. M. Swope was about fifty years
old and a native of Kentucky. He practised
law at Paris, Ky., until the begi uning
of the war. when he ioined the TTninn
army and rose to rank of Colonel,
serving on General Buell's staff. After
tho war he went to Lexington, and re-
sumed the practice of his profession. He has
held many positions of trust within tho gift
of National Administrations,' and was re-
f arded as one of the ablest men in his party
n the last Kentucky Republican Convention
he made a strong fight for Senator Sherman,
, but was unsuccessful in his attempt to have
; the delegation instructed for the Senator
: being opposed by Colonel Goodloe. In 1877
Mr. Swope was appointed Collector of In
ternal Revenue for the Seventh Kentucky
j .District, and resigned in lt83. Ho was an
applicant for Commissioner of Internal
Revenue under President Harrison, but was
defeated, it is asserted, through the enmity
of Colonel Goodloe.
! William Cassius Goodloe was born in Madi
son County in 1841. His great grandfather
Was General Green flair . . 1 ..I
brigade in the Northwestern campaign under
General Harrison. In 1S01 he accompanied
his uncle. Cassius M. Clay, to Russia, where
he was sent as Minister by President Lin
coln. Mr. Goodloe acted as Secretary of
the Legation until JS03, when he
returned and joined the Union army
as Assistant Adjutant-General -of Volun
teers, serving until 1884,. when ho rescued
and commenced the practice of law in Lex
mgt.?V InlS6S hevvas elected a delegate to
the National Republican Convention, and
was appointed a member of the committer
t GeneraI Grant of his nomination,
in 1873 he was elected to the State Senate
and the following winter was nominated bv
the Republican caucus for United States
Senator.
skelet'ms of three miner-; who. went
into the A olf Mountains to prospect for the
Lost Cabin gold mines iu 1880, have been
lound in Carbon County, Wvomino-
THE MARKETS.
40 NEW YORK.
Beeves.
3 00
4 75
50 00
'S 00
?? 4 75
6 50
4 40
Milch Cows. com. to axiod
.35 00
. 2 75
. 3 50
. 5 50
. 4 00
Calves, common to prime
Mieep
Lambs
Hogs Live
Dressed '
. 45
Flour City Mill Extra
7i
. 4 25
. 4 75
4 40
Patents
Wheat No. -I Red. . "
5 75
live State
Bariev Two-rowed State...
So ffi
57 :
34
29
Corn Ungraded Mixed
.Oats No. J White
Mixed Western . .
Hay No. 1
80
C5
13
15
10
&5
75
Straw honsr Rve .
Lard City Steam '....
Butter State Creamery
( 6.35c
25
Dairy, fair to good.
West. Im. Creamery
Fact or v
23
20 :
10
10
24 :
Cheese State Factory
Skims Light ......
Western
Eggs State and Penn
8 (
5
23K
BrrFAT.n
Steers Western. '
2 25 2 75
4 50 (g 4 65
5 50, 6 25
SheepMedium to Good. . . .
parous .fair to liood
rxoirs itooii zo unoies vnrts 4. s
I I I I . . 1 . -. V . .
Cb 4 70
FJour Family ; 5 00
3 S 25
Wheat No. 2 Northern
81
85
Corn No. 3, Yellow
- &
65
36
25
66
Oats No. 2, White.
Barley No. 1 Canada. . . .
BOSTOX.
Flour Spring Wheat Pat's.. 5 25 5 80
Corn Steamer Yellow 47
Oats-No. 2 White.......... 31 - 32
Rye State. 60 65
Vv ATEKTOWN (MASS.) CATTLE MARKET.
Beef Dressed, weight
-5
7
Sheep Live weight.........
Iambs ,
Hogs Northern
; -. '. . PHILADELPHIA
Floyr cPenn. family ;.
Wlfeat Nfo. 2, Red, Nov....
Corn No: 2, Mixed, Nov
Oats Ungraded White
Rptatoesr-Rose ... ...
Futter-t-Qreamery Extra. . . .
Cheese-Part skims.
I 00
80
.
So
-
6
4 25
80
41 .
,28
53 i.
25 jj
-jL3
Fort rajnc, Alabama.
i.
The wonderful growth of this New Eng
land, city in the South has been such as to
occasion exclamations of surprise from all
visitors. Surely, say many, the magicians
art alone could have produced this great
transformation in a few short months. To
those who have studied the situation the
growth seems the most natural thing imag
inable and aot at all to be wondered at,
though phenomenal.
Of all the flourishing towns and cities-of
the South this one has attracted most atten
tion, perhaps, for here alone is to be worked
out the result of the first organized move
ment of the capital and brains from the
North and East in the development of the
vast resources of this region of country.
Here the iron ore of the best quality is
within a quarter of a mile of 'the furnace.
Limestone for fluxing is yet nearer, on the
opposite side, and the coke oyens are building
on the lot adjoining the furnace. A like
condition of fortuitous circumstances. do. not
exist elsewhere in this or any other country
to insure a cheap production of pig iron.
Besides, this country abounds in clays that
makes the finest quality of fira bricks, sewer
pipe, terracotta, etc.; in kaolin aud haioy
site, from which is -made the finest vroekory
and pottery; in sand for. moulding and for
glass making; in building- stone of lieautiful
colors and shades; in forests of tiiuler, both
hard and soft woods; in a productive soil; in
beautiful scenery; an abundance of "pure
spring water, and in healthful surroundings'.
Its location is in the Wills Valley, Ktwoou
Lookout and Sand Mountains,. on the Queen
& Crescent Route, fifty-one miles below
Chattanooga and ninety-two miles above
Birmingham, in north-eastern Aalaba.ua.
The Fort Payne Coal & Iron Company,
having 1800 stockholders, nearly all from
New England, with Col. J. W. SpauM
ing, as President, and C. O. Godfrey
(Mayor of the city), as General Manager.'
locate here in February last and piirchas 'ii
many thousand acres of land. Atthat tini '
the population 'numbered 531; now it is a
city of over 3000 population, with 'electric
lights, water works, and rapidly growing.
In that time there j has ; be.'ii eroote 1
and in process of erection over five htmdre 1
dwellings; two large hotels, furnace, roilia;
mill, lime kiln, asphaltuni block pavcai 'lit
factory, ice factory, stove works, very 6 s
tensive.fire clay; works, five brick yar l,
carriage factory, two saw mills, pla:ii;i
mill, two banks, many stores, school houses,
churches, opera house,! etc.; The officers of
the company are busy day and night ar
ranging for new industries, answering score
of letters daily received, entertaining visit
ors ana pushing tno building operations o
the new industries under way. The Fort
Payno Herald, of August 23th, issue-! a six
teen page illustrated paper which gives a
complete resume of tho wonderful growth of
the city up to that date. '
THE LABOR WORLD.
The strike of the coal miners in Belgium
has. collapsed. j '
TriE New England iiasters' Protective Un1
ion has 10.000 members.
Ax assembly-of the Knights of Labor has
been formed in Oklahoma.
The Brotherhood of Railway Brakemen is
now the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen.
The Journeymen Tailors' Union of Amer
ica has now local organizations in 104 of our
cities. ' j
Several German unions in New York
city have clases where English is taueht to
.uuci .T v, jiu vanuoD speas tne language.
' All the machinists iof the United States
are to form a national union for the mutual
protection of its members against the em
ployers. ;
The formation of great federations like
that projected for the railroads will soon be
undertaken, by; several trades that are not
yet organized. t , -'.
The Supreme Court of Montana decides '
that mechanics' wages must be paid before
any other debts are liquidated out of an in-
i am ucuwjr s assets.
r Eighteen planters in Hayes and Caldwell
Counties, Texas, are accused of importing
Mexicans into the United States to pick co
ton on their plantations.
pTi?AIgreatlabor organization, the Patrons
of Husbandry, is growing rapidly in Michi
gan, and nearly 100,000 of the farmers of the
fetate have joined it this year.
The sailors and firemen of tho nnrt nf isUn,
ork have organized a trade union. It will
work in harmony with similar organizations
in England, Ireland and Scotland. '.-.'
EiGHT-Hot R meetiugs are being held in the
principal cities in England, where it is be
lieved there will lw a general eight-hour
system soon. At present nine hours is the
rule.
Ox1 July 5, 185!, the Iron Moulders' Union
of America was organized, having but a few
local unions. There' are now 250 locals and
28,000 members, of whom fully 20,000 are in
benefit. j
The window-glass manufacturers of Find
ley, Ohio, have advanced the prices of win
dow glass fifteen per cent., to conform with
the recent advance made by the Pittsburgh
houses. - j
' There are altogether 42,740,000 spindles in
operation iu the various manufacturing towns
f England. The total number of mechanical
looms in Europe is estimated at 1,000,000, of
which 600,000 are in England.
There have now been threo conferences
between representatives of the Knights of
Labor and the Federation nf 'T.oHm- Th
questions that were under debate at them
wilj l7 brought before the National Conven
tions of both bodies, i
A RESOLUTION has been nasserl h-p tlia Pv.
vention of the National Association of Silk
Workers at Yonkers; N. Y., that all the
iiiembers should unite in the endeavor to
Vn'ing about an equalization of wages in the
trade all over the country.
Ix some of the villages in the North of Ire
land are still to be found "t hatchers." They
thatch country houses with, straw, but their
services are not often heeded. Most of them
are old men. Their average earnings all the
year round are $2.50 to $3. a week.
The New Jersey State Factory Inspector
says he will see to it that, after next session '
of the Legislature, any factory owner send
ing ignorant or unskilled persons to work
about machinery known to be dangerous
shall be held accountable for all injury or
damage done. j ,
Sexator StaxkorO. of Califni
finished with Chinamen iu his Vina vine
yard. The Superintendent says that white
labor is much more profitable than Chinese,
even at far higher wages. He declines to
pay low wages, as, he says, the other system
is much the most productive. i "
Ix Nevada electricity runs the, very deep
mines and has increased production twenty
five per cent. ; The ! men who work at 3100
feet deep live only a few years, notwithstand
ing the fact they work only about two hours
,ier day. They get j more pay than eight
hour men. They work fifteen minutes and
rest forty-five. j -
Ax address was recently delivered in a
Brooklyn church by i the Earl of Meath on
the condition of the "English toilers. He said
that, through the operations of benevolent
societies, there had been erected for the
working people of London a new class of
houses, which give good accommodations at
a rent not exceeding $1.50 per week, while in
Dublin an excelleut dwelling can be procured
for ?1 per week. i . i
" ' r"
A Treasury warrant for $203 was issued
recently in favor of Honore Levernier, Com-'
pany B, First Wisconsin Cavalry, now res
ident in Chicago, the amount due him as his
portion of the reward offered by the Govern
ment for the capture of Jefferson Davis.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo,!
Lucas Cocxty, : f'-,
Frank J. Chexev makes path that he is th e
senior partner of the firm of F. J. Chexev &
Co., doing business in te City of Toledo,
County and State; aforesaid, and that said firm
will pay the sum of one hundred iioi.im.im
for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot
be cured by the use of Hall's Cat arrh Cuke.
' ' . ! Frank J. Cheney. :
Sworn to before me and subscribed in mv
rresence, this tith day of uecember. A. D., lSSti.
- ' A. W. Gleasox.
1 jALV j ; , -Rotary Public-.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken interna'lv and
acts directly upon the blood and mucous sur
faces oi the system. Send for testimonials.
free. i - -
rs- ci T-'?; cenev & Co.. Toledo, O. ,
tW Sold by Druggists. 7'c.
The world's output of tobacco is said to be
increasing more rapidly than either wheat cr
corn.
. -
S5000 lor a Wife. '
: One of the greatest stories (founded on fact)
ever published, commences in the December -l.-m,is)
nnmber nf (innrv-'a 1 i iw . u,....- .
published at Philadelphia. Every woman
should read it. Ready Nov. 15. AH Newsdealers
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thorn n
son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle
A pocket cigar-case free to smokers of "Tan
till'a Punch" 6o. Cigar.
A Great ftliafortnoe.
Heavy rains , of ten produce disease among
farm animals, rt. Almost every .day cases of
roup, swelled bead and a distemper very dis
astrous among poultry are reported. A part
of this is also due to improper feeding. You
cannot make a hen lay when everything you
give her is being transformed into fat, an!
laying the foundation of disease, same as with
an overfed child or persou. Alfred T. John
son, Hampton, N. H.r says: "Last fall I had
80 fine looking hens, which legan to droop
and die; I changed their food and began us
ing Sheridan's Powder; in three weeks they
were nearly well, and had increased the eggs
sixteen a day. I have just bought six cans of
it, as a preventive of disease the coming win
ter. It can' be leat, for that can saved mo
$40 last yeaf." I. S. Johnson & Co.. 22 Cus
tom House Street, Boston, Mass. . (the only
makers of Sheridan's Condition Powder), will'
send two 2o!cent packs of Powder, ami new
Poultry Guide, for S0 cents;, for $1.00 five
packs and book forf i.20 a targe 2V can. and
book; six cdins $j.00, express prepaid. Send
stamps or cash, Testinionials free. For 5
cents a copy of the bes Poultry paper scut.
GeOroe Tall and Lyilia Short werj
ried in Baltimore recently.
raar-
. . The Exriteineot Not Over.
The rush on the druggists still continues and
daily scqres of people: call -for a bo. tie of
Kemp's Balsam for tho Throat and Lungs for
the cure of Coughs, Colds;; Bronchitis Asthma
and Consumption. . Kemp's JBjilsam, the stan
dard family remedy, is soldm a guarantee
and never Jails to give entire satisfaction.
Price 50c. and $L Trial size free.
Dr. Nausex, the Norwegian explorer, is or
ganizing an expedition to iue onu role.
0 to be dead -and done with "trouble
That fills each day with a dreary pain."
This is the moan of many a Woman
Who thinks-she can-riever be well again
It were better for me and better for others
If I were dead," and their tears fall fast.
Not so, not so, O wives aud mothers, f
There's a bow of hope in the sky at last,,
and it tells you that the storm of .d iodise which
has spread Its shadow over vou will give way
to the sunshine of renewed heal; h, if ypu are
wise, and try Dr. Pierce's Favorito Prescrip
tion. If can and will effectually cure all fe
male weakness s and leranccinents. and no
woman who has n- t trivil it ne?il despair, for
a trial will convince her that it is the very
thing she needs to restoie her ro thu hciilth
she fears forever lost.
To clea-se the stomach, liver and system
generally, use Dr. Pierce's Pellets. 25 ceiits.
Oamblixq at Seattle.: Washington, is fast
and furious. I Fifty-two games are runuing
openly. i ., . . .
If you have ever used Dobbins's Electric dur-:
ing the 24 years it has been sold, you know t hat
it is the best and pure sttamily soap. made'. If
you haven't tried .it; ask your grocer for it imio.
Don't take imitation. There are lots of theiu.
Many Chinamen are 'being smuggle'l 'into
the Northwest by way of British Columbia;
' A Weekly .tlnsrnzine
Is really what The Voutu's Companion is. It
publishes each, yea ip as much, matter as the
tour-dolUtr monthlies, and is illustrated by tlie
same artists it is an educator in every home;
and always' ah entertaining and wholesome.
comnanion. It has a.
tan famijy life, if you do not know it,, you
imijy life, if you do not know it,, vou
? surprised to see how much can be given
s small sum of $1.75 a year; The i rice
t.v will entitle you to the paper to Janu-
win oe
for the
pent no
arv. lSOl Addrnsa
The Youth's 'companion'. Boston. lass.
Orreon, the Parallisr ol rrinei.
Mild, -equable climate certain and abundant
crops. Best fruit, rairi grass and stock coun
try in the world. Full information free. Ad
dress Oregon Iin'igrat'n Board. Portland. Ore.
- -; '- r
Catarrh in the Head
tes In scrofulous tatnt la tho blo vl. - Ilfn,i-i
Orlerlnates In scrofulous tauit la tho blovl.
the
i proper met trod by whiuh to ' cure-:-ctanr!i H t
rify the bloa t Its many.4bagro&!ly syjiiiJt.ui
purify
and the danger of developing lnt. bronchitis or th it
terribly fatal dKease,.cortsmnptiort, aro entiii'ly r
moved by Hood's Sarsaparilla, which cure.4 catarrh
by purifying tUe blood; it ill) tones up the system
aud greatly improves tho general health. Try ilio
' peculiar'medicine."
"I have used lo.Hrs Sarsnparilja for ontarrh with
Very satisfactory results, "i received mora perma-;
hent benefit from it than ..from any other remedy t
ever tried." If. E. Read, of . A. Ilea l . Jc Sou
Wauseon, Ohio. .
Hoodfs Sarsapanlla
bom Dy all druggists. $1; six for $3. Prepared onlv
by C. I. HOOD 4'CO.,' Apothecaries, iowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
GIVES RELIEF AT ONOF. FOR
COLD IN
(T'KES
CATARRH
Apply Balm Into each nostril. .
ELY BROS., SB Warren St;. N. V.iafcJ
JOHN F. STRATT0N & SON,
43 and 45 Walker St.. : , NEW YORK
. !
TmnnrtprQ ritid WlmUe.. i j- . 1
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE,
iolins, liiitHi s, Itanios, Ai-coi-ili onn, llur
inatiicne), Sci; All kinds ol triusrs. vie:, etcv
UK.1 iOH CA'lALOl.LF. '
ReliabiIe Goods"
Til a tjl u n t '
Lacie;
h -1
'jiir-UT. V5tuLUUUE:.OroOOl
. iwapx.rn..
CO.IZ$20U2ETyT)te?CHrV
OPIUi HABIT.
,A. Valniille TrehtlKo-'GI-vIrtir
full Information of an .Easy add Speedy eure tr( to
fne afflicted. pR. J. U. HoFFMAN.Jerierbon; Wisconsin.
OPIUM $
I KIT. 'Onlv ri.i.
and
sy t'l'KK in the World.
I)r.
M tl"HKS. Lebanon
AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT
3-iH North 'Fifteenth r,;i'hiladelphia, Pa , for
the treatment: of lilood Poison's, . Skiu Eruptions,
Aervous ComijJaints, Brisht's IHsease, Striltures,
lmpotency and kindred diseases, no matter of how
lHHL 8taikil'!f or from w hat eause orieinaUne
tWTen days' medicines furnished by mall mre
Send for. Bookbu 1'EC'l Al. liraea. rnCCs
1 preset-toe ana' fully en.
dorse Big, ti as the only
specific forthecertain cure
of thi disease.
u:h.I5gkaham,m.d.,
Amsterdam, N. Y.
PATS.
Mfasnly fevtha We haye sold Bie G for
Otooln.tl7B Taction: "
Oaio. jr63 i. a,i pycHE CO..
: Chicago, llf.
SI. 00.; Sold by Druggists
ruirurerrDie c-k.. .
PENNYROYAL PiLLS
ouif ana tiwTR rUahie. Ladle.
sa3k Drtlff ri f fnr B- I in
rtn, mruuiic doxn, flenlrd wuh tlue
fa pasteboarrl bexw, piak wrapperg. are
nnuon - sita nn i l .iu.
KeUef f- Lile," in Utter, hj re tarn
iRBll. hame Paper,
j Hir ktr dem'j MadUcn Sq., Pkila-, Pa,
Ely's Cream BalmK
S Jr-i-U IN rif I
i -
--niwT
mm
mm
-"R- 'S I AVOUITK COLIC MIXTURE
for all domestic animals, w IU cure ! out of every tot cases of colic whether flat
Ulent or spasm.Kiic. Karely more than 1 or it doies ueees7a?v j 'dTs not con
M.pate, rather acts at a laafive and.is entirely harmlcst 7f"ter Vywrs of t ill
. a more than 3tw cases, our guarantee Is worth something cf 1
treated promptly tlx pen d a few ceutsand you have a cure on hind read?
'-irn"""Vl U'1 Pfrhaps save avaluable horse. If not atyour druciisV en
close 50 cents for sample bottle, sent prepaid. iijruururugi4i ten-
aiiiirew nil.
Mixture " right along with It i.i
'he test colic medicine 1 have ever seen
" JSAAC JIOOG, Horse Dealer,
Krooklyn,
1 ' - WL - "' '
pimple homes Tn5,de bright-
v. wet icr man T&wary palaces. d:kHQ
should0 nntn'rnr ln Erroa?e? As a tru Patriot and citizen you
- tte"dallr OMr8ef by U8ln best Inventions of
LnZJTl SUh a charge- To Iive ln urease is
JACOBS OJJ
or sciatica
"Todiy cured Yesterday Cr ippl&i f'
At PnronrsTo avd Pea t er. V
THE CHARLES A. V0GELER CO.. Baltiinore. Md.
X Y N U 46
SEHB
roa a copy or
The Best and Cheapest
of the, Lady's-Books.
It Is without a rival in the excellence of im stories
and novelets,, the beauty of iw Illustrations, ilio
completeness of its fashion ami 'work table depart
ments, and the helpfulness of its ninny miscella
neous article! It num'liers among its contributors
some of our lest-known authors.
Einht novelets, nearly-one hundred short stories,
sketches of 1 ravel history, biography, etc., articles
on home dressmaking. '. the care of the sick, ami
lumscholj management, : numerous designs for nee
dlework, embroidery, knitting, painting, etc.'wili
be given during liK- making a volume of nearly
1'AW pages. '
Tkrjks: Two Dollars per year, witfr great re'du'e
tions to clubs ami line premiums for getting upclubs.
Sample copy free, to get up a club with.
Address ' : '
Peterson's Magazine,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
BEFORE CHRISTMAS;
erv H,i
and (iirl
llltlTIl III.. '.-. r-l.llla
lu stamps) lor sample, can muke $is, or inonev re
funded. C. A. Ill LTUKKN, Darien, I'uiin.
li trpctoi re liasouc. k.Wi , m
of the Magazine, ami in any ok tiu:
year Twelve Patterns, valued at from 2D
T5
1 Ins is a most liberal -offer: ami ladies are learning that, ho-idi
best Literary and Household' .Magazine that is published, thev can
$3.00 and '1.00 per year by subscribing
i.s.ucKuowu-ugcu to ue tne uest JVamily .Magazine in the world. .Many 8Uposc
.Demorest's to le a fashion magazine. This is a great mistake. It "undoubtedly
contains the linest Fashion Dki-aktmunt of any magazine pul.lilicd, but this is
the case from the fact that great enterprise and experience are .shown, so that each
department is equal to a magazine in itself.. Tiy subscribing for Ifc'TiioiT.st' Family
Magazine you really get a dozen magazines in one, anl secure amusement ami
instruction for the whole family. It contains Stories, rooms, ami other Literary
attractions, including Artistic, Scientific and Household matters, and is illustrated
with original Steel Engravings, Photogravures, Oil Pictures and line Woodcuts,
making it the Model Magazine of Aimica.
Yearlysubscriptions ir'2.00; or if you prefer, you can send 50 cents for a three
months' trial; for a trial is only. needed to convince vou that vou can get, ten times
the value of the money paid. Single copies containing Pattern Coupon) 20 cents.
; : W. . H:MNGS DEMO K EST; V M i slier, 1.', Fast l llh Street. N. V.
JOSEPH H. BfUNTER, 'W-
AUTiON.
, ... .,, . . . . , , ... . "''Mamini, uiiriw neceive.i iiv nt tiers i-ialmisl to
wharvmiwan whi,rt7'r?ali0n'"''eP"fit--t send direct to tactor.v, and receive by return mall
Trieelith orfieV I""" k'?L' V""""' t '". 'lde or narrow .toe, size and width, and enclobS
irice w ith order. Prompt delivery aud batisfaction guaranteed. Address
- W.I.. Dill in.AS. Itmrllnn V...
All made iu oti(resif, liuiton uud Lace
W. L. DOUGLAS $3 AND $2 SHOES FOR LADIES.
Both Ladies' Shoes are made In sizes from t to 7, lucl.tKliiiic half hizes, aud li, V, ti, K and EE wMthn
STYLES OP I.ADIKS' SIIOF.S '
"The French Opera." "The Spanixh Arch
"The .Medium Common Sense." All made in
Opera in fr rant Luce, on S3 Shoe onlr.
SPECIAL.
X. I;. J)Oi:;LAS' 3 GRAIN SHOE flaeed) for tlentkmen, with bearr
tap sole aud strictly watcrpnx.f, in just out. ' "c-ry
' V. 1.. IMH Ul, AS, Itrockion, MitM.
" "
-JU.m Mimas
Best Cough Medicine.
Cures where all else fails..
. vuiiui i&nc; lb w mi
- .
hOKIILER d: TO.. Krthl.b.m
m nritr. v.. U' .-r..u. ; '.'.f.
We clteerfullu j-n-n .t i p..li ,
"Favorite Colic Mixture." Wnxld not be
without ti us long a we have horses
Aew York.
Sale and Exchange Stable, Faxtnn, Ta
WO H
' " Q
TEAMSTERS.
Yori work in a'l weathrr. You want an all
weather" coat. In fct, the best waterproof coat
in the world. No frail rubber affair that will
rip before the week is out. Rubber costs more,
and lasts but a short time. Four teamstera out ol
five wear the " Kith l'.rand" waterproof clothing.
They re the only teamsters' waterproof coats that
are light, stroni, durable, and chr.ip. They cpjt
rery little, and last a long time. They never jet
sticky or peel off. The l tit.i:s ase- ire-fatened,
and never enme nfF Tlirv acrtlntiw w .
proof and wind-proof, t'l.til you own one you will
never know the comfcrt i f a ta;ny day. Feware of
worthless imitations, every i;jrment stamped with
the "Kish Brand" Trade Maik. Don't accejt
any inferior coat whenvyou can have the " Kih
Hrnd Slicker " delivered . wiih -r.t exira cost. Par
ticulars and illustrated cai.iUue free.
A. J. TOWER, - Boston, Mass.
J UiVES
PAYS THE FREIGHT.
1 on agwa Krales,
Ip tiltve s st.-z-I nfarinM. Sr..
luiv :;,m h.t HeaiuBu for
" . ut ..nun. irnj adnrrv
J0tS OF BINGHAMT0N,
III VI 'II I lln ... . '
F. n. TKEAT'S Catlrne 1
itn btakn. hotaat Ssiart
Inl'srta.bT 1 &lmr
fl'jil I Murk .1m hlg
1 1 Al. llotber.
' llnniA A- 1 1 ... a n
I 4.KII'et author. Kr'ltr 1
tiv I 1.. Cuvle.
Curioaitieasf Itihle'l i vNUil E D 1 RF.A I.N v.
BASEBALL
Chadwick's Manual
7 in. " in. 70 pngew
iiiiiiniiulrcl I nter.
CTT ATT" T''DT,"C' onaipii
.itlnti rtii'loHlntf nm
lp, bv ntt(!rpiitn)(
"X I Hi. liilla., I'a
THK(KKKK Ho!.I.AM. 1
JftUrTI'll Y. liook kr.-pl
MUraC Penmanship, Arlibmel
thnroiiKhly liiiiiclit 1 SI VII.
Itryam'-. (llrnr, I ."i 7 Mam
.fTI" II Y. Hook -kei-plnu, Huslnr Formi
ii'i i . nort nano.rti
! 1 .. I'lrclilnr fr
l llrsr. -157 Main St.. ItuiTalo, N. Y
s4raavA,iif.r,.,t
ACENTSjr-Tl
JvASl P lnftVlW
PJflTIT
il
US
Iv SpoMal Arratiiromont with Dcimin'sfs Family
MaaraziilP, the Circattt of all Family '.M iaiiics, w
are pnahlcil to make every one of our l;nlv readers
handsome present.
Cut out this slip ami enclose it (with a twn-crnt
stamp for return postage ami your name ami aillrrss)
to W. JenniiiLrs Deinorest, 1T Kast 11th Street,
New York, ami you will n icive hy n turu mail a
full-size pittern, ijlitratetl ami fully ileserihed, ol
this HAsitt.'K (worth 2 eeiit).;i
Cnjss out with pencil the size ihsjrctL I'.u.sf.
31, .'Us ;JS, 40.
Each copy of "Demoi-psl's Family Mairazlno"
'contains a Cm rox it i
i.r w T i r i i ,,k ;m... i ..... ...i ;..
any jiuhiIki
duriti'' tin
sizes iiianufactun-d, making
cents to .'50 cents each.
h
ving tho
between
for Demon's.' Family .Ma-razine, whi. Ii
It
V.
AV. li. IXH (il.AS' name and the iricp an' siampeil
on ie iHit'oni of all Shoes .-ulverllseii Uy liliu heforrt
leaviufr Ills factory: Hits protects ltni wearers against
high prices and interior kooiIk. Take nono. tin.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE GENTLEMEN.
' Our claim lor Ihin kIiou over itll olber
hlioew advertincd me:
II couliiiiiM (teller iiialerial.
1 1 in more r.1 v linli. Iel I ei- lining mid durable.
Jl k'ivc better vcncritl i iKliict ion.
It hvm n.ore money lor I lie conxiinier.
Itn ureiit MOccens is due to merit.
lli-Hiiuvt be duplicated by uny other manu.
iHcturer.
Il in t lie liet in tho world, nnd lins a. Inrger
demand Ida n ii ii y other ; uboe advertised.
SB 00(1 wU1 ,M5 l"'d tu any person who will proe
WUWUU the abuve htatcmeuts to be untrue.
The following line of Mines will be found lj be of tho
same high standard of excellence:
!5.0U (iKM INK II A MI-sCWKII SIIIJK.
!. iiam.m;hkd v i:i,t -.iiok.
a..1t roi.ICK AMI I'AIC tIKIO' f-IIIIK.
-4.ZO KXTKA VAI.I K I AJ.I-' MIOrj.
i.' HOKKIMJII ANS SHOE.
!.00 (a)OII-WK A It SIIOK.
W.UOnndSI.JJ HOV.S' M IIOOI, SHOES.
Opera,'
llullou i
"The American Common Senne,".
i Ibe Lillet style. A lao French
Recommended by Physicians.
Pleasant and agreeable to tho
inn w r -1 aii i -1 . . :
uuuti Ajy ai UASlS
BEST IN THE WORLD U ll L A O C
Qet the Genuine Sold Everywhere.
nd WHISTT V.Y WT.
ITS cured al home with.
out pln. Jiookof par-
ncitlars sent FREE
H. M. WOOLLKY. M. 11.'
'--y AlliAji TA, Oa.
Office (&y. Whitehall St.
wifh Sapoiib
- .
.t