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A CLEAR HEAD; good digestion; sound sleep; is fine appetite and a ripe old age, aresome ofthe results of the v of Tutt’s Liver Piils. A sis dose will convince you of tl wonderful effects and virtue v1 eS Ee EE a oe A WRMROW ER no ciee. Anabsolut i ache, dyspe stomach bilious r, piles, torpid |: and all kindred diseases. Tutt’s Liver Pit's William Mahone. Like the odd man in the Senator- SHE HAD HEAPS OF GOLD. The Bedroom ot the Late Mrs. Coolidge i Was a Treasury. Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 10.—Mrs. Sarah Coolidge, who died of apo- plexy at her home on Massachusetts | avenue last evening, had for thirty years lived a seciuded life, with only four women servants for companions. Her frugal mode of living and her stances. She secured a divorce from her husband, James Coolidge, th | years ago, and sin participated in sc jany sort She made frequent e then has rn al functioua of ~ }@ woman of very moderate circum-| istances. When the uadertake: ' | | avoidance of society led to the belief | - | jthat she was in straitened circum | | to Boston, but always passed as a} robed the body, preparatory to em-| balming it, he found various ass »t-! ments of gold coins tucked awry in! concealed pockets in her clot! | ial vote in the Johnson impeachment | trial and in the divisions in the Electorial Commission, William Ma- hone at his entrance into public life turned the ecale in a political crisis. If any one of the seven Republican Senators who supported the Demo- crats in defending Johnson on the crucial vote in 1868 had stuck to his party the impeachers would taye had two-thirds of the Sevate,a Pres- ident would have been removed from office,a grave partisan blunder would have been committed by the Repub- licans, and a mischievous precedent would have been formed. If any one of the eight membors of the Elec. toral Commission who voted for Hayes on all the points involved in the disputed count in 1877 had de- clared in favor of Tilden in any of them, Tilden and not Hayes would have been elected and the popular ban against the Democracy would have been removed eight years earl- ier than the date at which Cleveland forced its extinction. When William Mahone entered the Senate in 1881 that body was swinging back toward the Republi- cans, but was not quite near enough to them to let them contre] it. The Democratic tidal wave of 1874 which put the House of Representatives in that party’s hands in 1875 fer the firet time since the early half of Buchanan’s term struck the Senate a little later, and in 187981, in the last half of Hayes’ term, that body was Democratic for the first time since the last half of Buchanan's. The tide turned in 1880, in the year of Garfield's election, and the Dem- ocrats, who had ten majority in the preceding Senate, would, have had only one in the Senate of 1881-83, and that slender margin was de. pendent on the vote of Mahone, the Democratic Readjuster. Leaving Mahone out of the count, and also David Davis, another estray, the Senate was tied—thirty-seven Dem- ocrats and thirty-seven Republicans. But Mahone cast his fortunes with the Republicans instead of remain. ing with the Democrats, and as Davis, who was made President pro tempore usually voted with the Re- publicans on partisan questions, the Republican party controlled the Sen- ate. But it is a serious thing for a prominent man to break with his party in a crisis. President Buch- anan, in December, 1875, learning from Douglas that Douglas would oppose the Administration’s policy of forcing slavery into Kansas, de- clared excitedly: “Mr. Douglas, I desire you to remember that no Democrat ever yet differed from Ad- mistration of his own choice without being crushed. Beware of the Tall- madge and Rivers.” “Mr. Presi- dent” replied Douglas emphatically “I wish you to remember that Gen. Jackson is dead.” A war almost as savage and relentless as was waged against Douglas by the Southern Democrats and their Northern allies was carried on against Mahone in hie state and section. Possessing much of the audasity, the energy pad the resourcefulness of Douglas, he was yet crushed in the end, as, indeed, Douglas eventually was, and the Republican party, which he led in his state, which his prestige as a gallant Confederate officer aided in the beginning, but which his meth- ods and his feuds ultimately imped- ed went down with him. General Mahone was one of the most inter esting and picturesque characters of a critical period in the country his- tory, and his political, social and financial misfortunes of recent years the striking tragedies of are among the time.—Globe This discovery led to 2 searct room, and it proved to be able gold Io mine. vases and in bureau mostly in gold coin. aggregating $3,800. On the shelf in senting scores of thousands more with securities and deeds showing a valuation of over a million dollars. One document showed her to be the owner of property at the corner of Washington and Avon streets, Bos- ton, which pays a rental of $1,000 a month. In addition to the money and bank books there were dresses of the most stylish and expensive goods, covered with jewels and old laces. Many of these gowns would easily receive a valuation of $1,000 each from any tailor who catered to in| other pieces of bric a brac, in shoes, ! drawers, aud in every! conceivable nook and cranny the! searchers found $20,060 in cash, | In ove dilapi-} dated hand-bag was a roll of bills! her closet were bank-books repre-} THERE ARE MANY IMITATIONS | but only one genuine. MOORE'S AIR TIGHT, | the best heating stove made. | 5M i Superior cook stoves, both wood and coal, have no equal. Also a full line of HARDWARE, GROCERIES AND QUEENSWARE at prices that defy competition. first-class goods. A. L. MeBRIDE & Co. North side square, Butler Missouri. Square dealing, low prices and swell patronage. All the chamber closets and wardrobes were filled with these expensive gowns and none of them have eyer been worn. The servants were as much sur. prised as anybody. They were never permitted to enter the room in which the treasure was found, though there was no especial effort to secure protection from thieves. There was over $300,000 of nego- tiable securities in that room, guards ed only by an old woman and four women servants. Nobody dreamed that it was there, so the vast sum was secure Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear, There is only one way to cure deaf- ness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is causen by an inflammable condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you havea rumbling sound or imperfect hearing and when it is entirely closed deat- ness is the result, and unless the in- flammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by eatarrh, which is nothing but an in- flamed condition of the mucous sur- faces. We will give One Hundred Dollars forany case of deafness (caus ed by catarrh) that cannet be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F. J. Cheny, Toledo, O. BES" Sold by druggists, Wiped Out. San Francisco, Cal., Oct. 10.—A dispatch from Guaymas tells of the complete destruction by a cyclone of La Paza, the capital of Lower California. A severe storm prevailed all along the coast early this week. La Paza has about 4,00¢ inhabi tants and is situated near the south- ern end and on the east side of the peninsula. Its harbor is excellent and is visited by large ships. Its most conspicuous buildings were the Government and town houses, and two or three churches and the inhabitants have lived by pearl fish- ing, silver mining and general com- merce. Brookside, Ala., Oct. 9.—George Herris went home late last night to find his wife chatting over the sup- per table with John Rankin, a form- er sweetheart. He joined the pair and quietly ate with them. When Rankin had gone he went into the yard and got a pick axe and return- ing, split bis wife's skull with it. Sie died, and he is in jail. he was jealous. IsjYourjTongue Coated, your;jthroat dry, your eyes dull and inflamed and do you teel mean generally when you get up in the morn- ing. Your liver and Kidney are not doing their work. Why don’t you taxe Parks Sure cure. If it does not make feel better it costs jyou ;nething— Sia by H.L Tucker? A Democrat. The New York World recently of- fered prizes to three persons who could state most clearly and logically WILD WITH ENTHUSIASM Did Hot Springs Become When Notified | It Would Get the Contest. Hot Springs Ark. Oct. 10.-The news was announced officially here last | A Kansas Democrats. Democrat, | = wounding LAWYERS FIGHT IN A SaLoon. | CATARRH DESCRIBED. Temple Houston and an Ex-Shermf 4 Short History of a Bad Malady by an Kill One Man and Wounded Another. Woodward, Okla., Oct. 9.—During atrial in Justice Miles’ court last! vening a quarrel was begun by the attorneys in the case which later re. sulted in the k of Lawyer Ed Jennings, of this city, and mortally John Jennings, his Kminent Medical Authority. Thi catarrh A persons catches jcold, which hangs on longer than ; usual. Then follows a sensativeness \of the air passages, which inclines to ,catch cold yery easily. At last the person has a cold all the while ‘seemingly. More or less discharged \from the nose, hawking from the ,throat, nostrils stopped up, full ing were ex- Senator Temple Hous- | feeling in the head, and cracking in ton, of Texas, the oldest son of Gen. | the ears. The Peruna should be Sam Houston, and ex-sheriff Jack) taken without interruption until Love of Woodward. every symptom disappears. The Court case was one in which 8} Send to the Peru na Drug Manu- boy was charged with steal a keg |facturing Company of Columbus, & beer from the Santa Fe opens | Ohio, for a copy of their latest book | Houston as attorney (for the Santa) on chronic catarrh. ‘This book is a Fe was prosecuting and the Jen-| complete guide to the cure of all nings brothers were the defendant's! forms and stages of this dreadful lattorneys. In course of the tnal! s the way chronic begins: brother. The two men who did the shoot- disease. For two days the city has been ex- Democrats: | the lie was passed from the Jenni | boys to Senator Houston and he in- jStantly resented it. All parties jumped to their feet, drew revolvers and commenced firing but the Court and its officers restored order before anybody was hurt. After the adjournment of court, Senator Houston and ex-sheriff Jack Love, went to the Cabinet Saloon, a political resort, and as they were taking a drink, the Jennings boys in court was renewed. All drew revolver again, including ex sheriff Jack Love, who is a frontiersman and a dead shot. At the first fire Ed Jennings fell dead on the floor with his brains oozing out on the carpet. When Jobn Jennings was raising his reyolver his arm was pierced by a bullet, and the weapon fell on the floor. He was shot again through the body but had vitality enough to run out of the saloon and up the street for 200 feet, where he fell in the dust. His death is hourly ex- pected. Senator Houston and ex- in 600 words or less why they were|sheriff Love weat to the house of the county Sheriffs and gave evening that Hot Springs is the place | Judge Frost of Chapman, was award-| themselves up. The coroner held where the world’s championship fist ;¢7 @ prize, and thie is why the/an inquest today and rendered a contest is to take place Oct. 31. | Judge, as wellas many others are| verdict in accordance with the above facts, but failed to lay the blame on gs! came in, and the quarrel that began! | Murder and Suicide. | Aurora, Mo, Oct. 8—George upper a wealthy resident of Vernon a vilage five miles west of Aurora, shot and killed his wife yesterday jafternoon and then placing the re- volver into hisown head. Napper’s body was shipped to Billings, his former home for burial, while the wife's remains were sent to St. Louis. They had been separated for some time, Napper vowing he would kill his wife if she return- ed. The woman came back yester- day morning and after an all day’s quarrel the husband committed the terrible tragedy. Before the shooting he locked his son, a young man in the house. ‘When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, ‘When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, ‘When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, ‘When she had Children, she gave them Castoria, The customs receipts at this port during Julf, August and September of last year were $24,739,266,81. During the same months this year they amounted to $30,896,817.63. This certainly does not suggest that the new tariff is going to create a First—I am a Democrat because pecting word to come and when the | f messages came establishing the fact } the principles of Democracy are in the people went wild with enthusi-, perfect harmony with the fundamen- asm. tal principles of this government of Arrangements will immediately ; ours, a government of the people, be made for the erection of a mam- by the people and for the people. moth arene for the accomodation of | Second—I am a Democrat because the thousands of visitors who will| the principles of the Democratic come to witness the event. The Party are eppored to monopolies Hot Springs Railroad Co., will pro-| 82d trusts and all combinations provide all the accommodation for | against the government of the peo- special trains and Superintendent | Ple. Richardson says he will build ample; Tird—I ama Democrat because side tracks for this purpose. The the p oles of Democracy are not hotels and boarding houses, about sectional, but national. They are 700 in number will be augmented by | broad enough to extend to every hundreds of priyate residences to P3¥t of this great nation of ours; take care of an almost unlimited | they know no North, no South, no number of people. Hot Springs East or West. But they are in favor stands fourth in the list of American | f equal rights to all, whether high cities, having hotel accommodations \ or low, rich or poor. for visitors. Invitations will besent | Fourth—-I am a Democrat be- to Corbett and Fitzsimmons to | C2use the Democratic party is in complete their training here. favor of state rights of the people While nineteen-twentieths of the | thereof and opposed to the centrali people here evince satisfaction that | Z3tiov of power by the general gov- Hot Springs has been selected a few | ermment. have already risen in protest. The | Fifth—I am a Democrat because Methodist pastors of the city, at a | the political principles of the Demo- meeting yesterday atternoon passed | cratic party are about right, much resolutions placing themselves on | better than the political principles record as against the contest- of any other party I ever knew, Re- eee | publican party included. Closed Doors. | oes Springfield, Mo., Oct. 10.—The Sixth—I am a Democrat because anybody. Temple Heuston is one of the most brilliaut crators in the south- west. His speech nominating ex- senator Reagan for the senate some years ago was said to be the finest ever made in Texas. He is about 45 years of age and is the oldest son of the famous Texas, general. deficiency of revenue, while it indi- cates a tremendous increase in the country’s commerce and in the peoples’ ability to buy and enjoy goods.—N. Y. World. What ara said to be the oldest vessels in the merchavts service in the United States arrived at Callais, Me., together a few daysago. They are the Polly, a schooner of eighty- four tons built in 1805, and the schooner Hiram built in 1819. The Polly is the vessel that captured a British Brig at Machais in the war What’s the Use ot Talking About colds and coughs in the sum- mertime. You may haye a tickliug cough or a little cold or baby may have the croup and wh en it comes you ough toknow that Parks cough Syruy is the best cure forit. Sold by H. L.Tucker- “No man need want for railroad as UES = work” remarked employment Agent Gervaisto to the St. Paul Pioneer Children Cry for Press. Pitcher’s Castorla. “The railroads are offering all Children Cry for kinds of it, and can't get cuvugh | Pjtcher’s Castoria. men. The abundance of employ- ildren Cry for ment of all kinds and the scarcity of passe men is serious. Never in the past ten years have I seen such a demand for laborers. It is impossible to fill one sixth of the orders from the farms. There isa big demand also from the iumber woods which can not be filled. Besides an order from Memphis, Tenn., for 1000 men for government work, I received an or- der to-day for 60 men for work right around St. Paul, and could not get Poisoned by Their Father. Griffin, O., Oct. 9.—News has just reached the city this afternoon of a tragedy that occurred in Pike coun- ty, near Milner, on Monday, in which eight or nine children lost their lives by poison administered by their father. It seems from the best in- formation that Tom Speer, taking Greene County Bank failed to open ; its doors this morning, having been ordered into the hands of a receiver by the State Bank Examiner, Gor- don Jones. protect the stockholders. The deposits in the bank are |small, something over $60,000, and the cash on hand exceeds $20,000. Other assets will amount to over | $130,000. E. H. Grabill, jand Frank P. Clements, assistant cashier, have been appointed on the |recommendation of the secre’ to /act as receivers. Depositors will be | paid in full. | The bank is closed to | cashier, | Are you Billious, conszipated or trou- | He says | bled with Jaundice, Sick Headache, bad | yille, 11t., says: -‘To Dr- King’s New always prospered much better under than any other. | past and present, and being very | desirous for the welfare and pros. | perity of this nation and its people, | I could not be anything but a Dem- | ocrat and be honest, and I must and | will be honest and truthful and al- | ways advocate the pure principles of Democracy. The Discovery Saved His Life. Mr. G, Gaillouette. Druggest, Beavers- the government and the people have Democratic administrations or rule Seventh—I am a Democrat be- cause, knowing what I do of the | taste in the mouth, foul breath, coated | Discovery I owe my lite. Was taken | tongue, dyspepsia, Indigestion, hot dry | with La Grippe and tried all the physic- skin, pain in the back and between the | ians tor miles about, but of no avail and shoulders, chills and tever, &c. If you | was given up and told that I could. not have any of these symptoms, your liver; live. Having Dr. King,s New Discov- 1s out of order and your blood is slowly | ery in mysroreI sent tora bottie and being poisoned because your liver does | began its use and from the first dose be- not act properly. Herbine will cure ali} gan toget better, and atter using three disorder of the liver, Stomach er bowels | bottles was up and about again, Its Ithas no equalas alivermedicine. Price | worth its weight in gold. We won’t 5 ees Free trial bottles at CH. L.. | store rr house without it.” Geta £ fuckers drugst re. 48 ty } trial at Your Drug Store. aman. Wages are generally good No wonder the Coxeyites are dead and the populists dying.” Tried To Eurn Himself. St. Louis, Mo, Oct. 4—Charles Dreher, confined in jail awaiting trial for the murder of Bertha Hun- icke attempted to end his life at noon yesterday by setting fire to the mattress in his cell and deliberately lying upon it stark naked. The guard rushed in, grasped | Dreher about the body, and though |he struggled fiercely, pulled bim lout. A physician was summoned ;aud found his body badly burned jand his hair singed to the roots. By this time the smoke had spread into all the cells and created a panic amoprg the other prisoners who set up a great cry to be released. Wine For Weakly Persons advantage of his wife’s absence, and being prompted by jealousy, admin- istered the fatal drug to his chil- dren. It was “Rough on Rats” and the fiend is now behind the bars. Chillicothe, Mo., Oct. 9.—C. D. Hurxthal, cashier, and Hiram Cop- ple, directo:, of the defunct bank of Dawn, recently arrested for receiving deposits when they knew the bank to be ina failing condition, to-day gave bond for their appearance at the January term of the Circuit Court. President Henry Bushnell is also expected ‘te furnish bond this afternoon. Another indictment has been served on him. “A Friend in Need is a Friend Indeed.” A friend advised me to try Ely’s Cream Balm and after using it six weeks I be- liexe myself cured ot catarrh. [t is a most valuable remedy.—Joseph Stewart, and strength to the system. It is “| superior to all other wines. 624 Grand Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. My son was afflicted with catarrh, I induced him to try Ely’s Cream Balm ee “s le paris smell all ‘im. He appears as well as any one, —J. C. Olmstead, Arcola, Jil. Price of Cream Balm is fifty cents, $ Weakly persons use Speer’s Port Grape Wine and the Uafermented Grape Juice because it gives tone