Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, July 3, 1897, Page 3

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we? * tional sense which provides for EASY FOR CORNELL WINNERS OF THE GREAT INTERCOL- LEGIATE BOAT RACE, ‘Triumph of American Grit, Ameri- ean Methods and American Training Over English Methods English Training — Yale in Second, Followed by 20 Min- and Comes Harvard—Cornell’s Time utes, 34 Seconds. Poughkeepsie, 2 Re « June 26.—Cor- nell won; time, Yale was sec ond by three ler wal and a half; time, 20:44. Harvard came in third, five lengths astern of Yale; time, 21: 00. Fi in grit, American methods and American training won the game as against / i English methods A crew of Ameri trained under an raining. sHege youths American coach won fre the two other American college crews in an eight-oared contest, the two other crews having studied, the one under an American coach with a mixture of English and methods, and the other disregarding all American teachings and methods and importing an English coach in an er or to prove a superiority for Henley methods. No such contest ever occurred in this country before. Cornell university has not been able to meet Yale university on the er since 18’ and then, as now, she de- feated the boys of the blue. After long bickerings Yale university consented under pressure from Har- va 1in meet cornell. The match ged and finally the leading ws of these three leading colleges s college strewn country started stretch together. 2 the four-mile finished secon f boat lengths ell, Harvard, with her new! s over eight and a half Her she w lengths behind the Cornelians. eight were thoroughly exhausted, while the exponents of the American theory as applied by the propulsion of eight-oared she! finished at a hot pace without any distress being ap- rent. The tide was slack, ‘te wind ored no particular crew and abso- lutely no favor of any kind was shown by nature toward the result. The race Was rowed entirely on its merits. ages JUBILEE AT ITHACA, Cernell’s Victory Is Enthusiastically telebrated. June 26. — This was y in Ithaca. The Cornell crews have had many victories but so popular as this triumps over le and Harvard. When the news ame that Cornell had signally defeat- ed both Yale and Harvard the scene in the streets was almost beyond de- scription. Students embraced each other nd professors forgot their dig- nity they cheered and flung their hats in the a Tn an incredibly short time the business hou on the prin- eipal streets of the city were decorated with the red and white of Cornell, and as the ringing of bell all over wer pread the news te the city hastily dec n nnd the Cornell colors. ‘Lhe students and Ithaca citizens secured a band and paraded the streets of the sity. Soon after the result of the race was known cannon began to boom in various parts of the city and the sto°k of cannon crackers laid in by the d ers for Fourth of July use was pract cally exhausted. Yale’s N Poughkeepsie, N. Y., June Yale crew b elected Payne ney captain of next yea is a son of William C. New York, and is twenty-one old. ‘The Whit- crew. He Whitney of years The “Astor Tramp” Newburg, N. Y vey, the famous in the hospital mp,” died t Matteawan to-day. y Ww: Iked into the res- went to ‘hed in ‘one of the chambers where a servant found him. He y arrested and on trial was shown to be mentally unbalanced. Comstock Found Guilty. Luddingvon, Mich., June 26.—A ver- dict of guilty has been reached in the Chester W. Comstock embezzlement case which was transferred from Big vids her This case is the first of three against the manager and president of the defunct Mecosta County Savings bank. Wages Will Be Reduced. Steubenville, Ohio, June 26.—Notices were posted in the furnace depart- ment at the Mingo Junction Iron and Steel company that after July 1 the wages paid would be what they were in 1894, which is the price paid in this ¢ ct. The reduction is about 15 per cent. Russian Ironclad on a Reef. St. Petersburg, June 26.—The Rus- sian turret ironclad Gangoot, one of the best vessels in the imperial navy, ran- upon ef near Transend this morning during a storm and sank al- most immediately. The crew is re- ported saved. The Resolution Was Defective. Columbus, Ohio, June 26. preme court of Ohio has decided the joint resolution defective in a constitu- ve to hold a constitutional convention, and it will not be voted at the next election. Guilty of Murder. Viroqua, Wis., June 26. — The jury found George Sullivan guilty of mur- der in the second degree. He shot Asa Gorham Jan. 25. The men had trouble over Gorham’s wife. Sentence is sus- pended until July 12. Michael Challenged. Toronto, June 26. — Angus McLeod, the Canadian wheelman, has chal- enged Jimmy Michael to a mile race to be run at the island track, Toronto. It is probable the race will come off ~on July 10. ~ GAYETY IN LONDON. Banquet by Marquis of Landsdowne and Ball by Duke of Westminster. London, June — The marquis of Lansdowne, secretary of state for war, gave a banquet at the Sculpture gallery of Lansdowne house, at which were present thy prince and princess of Wales, Amb:Msador and Mrs. Hay, almost all the special envoys and for- eign princes now in London, the duke and duchess of Devonshire, the duke and duchess of Marlborough, the marquis and marchioness of London- derry, the marquis and marchioness of Salisbury, the earl of Rosebery, Lord and Lady Wolseley and other persons of high rank. Later in the evening most of the guests, including the prince and princess of Wales attended a brilliant ball given in an immense marquee by the duke of Westminster. Among the guests in addition to the prince and princess of wales were the duke and duchess of York, the duke and duchess of Teck, the marquis of Lorne, all the foreign princes, Am- bassador Hay and Mrs. Hay, Lord and y Lansdowne, Sir William White- way, premier of New Foundland, and Sir Wilfred and Lady Laurier. JUBILEE CEREMONIES. School Children and Firemen Theiry Day. Windsor, June 26.—The queen drove to Windsor Park and_ visited 6,000 School children who were celebrating her maj jubilee. Later the queen received delegations from fire brig- ades belonging to all parts of the kingdow. The queen seemed in excel- lent health and spirits and smilingly conversed with those around her. The firemen’s parade was one of the larg- est ever held in England. There were 1,200 men in line and 100 engines. The duke of Marlborough, as presi- dent of the firemen’s brigade, present- ed the officers to the queen. While the queen and the Empress’ Frederick were were dining a thousand Eaton boys, with bands of music, entered the quadrangle of the castle and gave an exhibition of torchlight evolutions and fireworks. The charming spectacle was watched by the queen and the members of the royal household from the castle windows. Have MURDERER LYNCHED. Mob at Crystal Springs Was Too Strong for the Guards. Jackson, Miss., June 26. — A negro named Mosely, who killed Farmer John Strong, near Crystal Springs, a few days ago, and who was ed at that place and confined in jail, has been hanged by a mob. The negro had been guarded by 100 armed men and two calls for troops from this place had been sent, but, owing to the absence of Goy. Me- Laurin, and the fact that it was im- possible to establish communication with Lieut. Goy. Jones, who is at his home in Woodville, the troops did not start for the scene until this morning, when the moving order was received. The troops received order to stop as they were boarding the train. TO BUY OUT SPAIN. Talk of an Offer of $100,000,000— Hanna Dodges. Cleveland, June 26.—Senator Hanna was asked whether there was any truth in a telegraphic statement that President McKinley is considering a plan whereby the freedom of Cuba is to be purchased from Spain for $100,- 000,000, the amount to be secured by Cuba. “The statement is not authori- tative,” said he. Mr. Hanna denied that there was a veiled slight to Pres- ident McKinley in the omission of his name from the state platform. To Prevent Mob Violence. Frankfort, Ky., June 26.—The gov- ernor of Kentucky is determined to prevent mob violence in this state. While every one knows that the sol- dier boys are going to Simpson county to protect George Dinning, the negro who is to be tried there next week, vected that cannon would be to prevent mob violence, ng Governor Worthington thought otherv , and two cannon were loaded on fiat cars here to be shipped to Franklin. Dauntless Crew Discharged. Key West, Fla., June 26.—The crew and the Cubans who were on board the Dauntless, and who were arrest- ed, were discharged by United States Commissioner Julius Otto on the ground that there was no evidence to show that they were a military or- ganization or intending to commit acts hostile to Spain. Brooklyn Will Have a Day. New York, June 26.—Arrangements are nearly completed for the celebra- tion of Brooklyn day at the Nashville Brooklyn exposition. There will be exhibits arranged by Brook Brooklyn music by a Brookly and a representative audience of prominent Brooklyn people. Barber Gets Wealth, Sioux City, Iowa, June 26.—Linnie ),000, The money came to him his uncle, James Kasson of There are two heirs to from Austin, Tex. the estate, Linnie and a brother in the East. A Record Broken. Cleveland, June 26.—The side-wheel steamer City of Buffalo broke the speed record for the great lakes. She went from Cleveland to Put-in-Bay island in two hours and __ fifty-five minutes, a speed of 223-7 miles an hour. Two Rivermen Drowned. Rhinelander, Wis., June 26. — Two river drivers, Bourke and Ed Johnson, were drowned on the Pelican river rapids, opposite this city. They were working for Daily & O’Day on the rear of the Wisconsin river drive. Isane Hoffman Was Murdered. San Francisco, June 26.— The coro- ner’s inquest into the mysterious death of Isaac Hoffman has been concluded, the jury returning a verdict to the ef- fect that he was murdered by some persons unknown to the jury. Steamers Overdue. Suez, June 26.—Steamers have left Bombay and Aden in search of the Paudo, an intermediate steamer. The j steamer Aden, from Yokohama, via Colombo, Ceylon, on June 1, is a week overdue here. on, a barber of this city, is heir | THE TRUSTS HAVE THEIR INNINGS. SUGAR TRUST PROFIT John De Witt Warner Makes Some Estimates and Scores the Trust. x-Congressman John De Witt War- ner is ce of the best-posted men in this country on sugar tariffs. When in} cengress he carried the house for free sus In a recently-published state- ment he estimates the net protection to the trust given by the Aldrich sched- ule at from 35 cents to $1.14 on every 100 pounds of refined sug: Without attempting to gi ment as to each of the ways in which the trust would be protected, we give his summary of trust profits, as follows: Specific difffferential....$0 13 to $0 40 e his argu- Thirty-five per cent ad valorem differential... 014 to 0 21 Countervailing duty, say . 008 to 035 Additional by substitu- tion of 75 per cent ad valorem for specific du- ties in low grades.... 0 Mele to 01S PIS oil's asewcias to $1: lu In the y st majo howey- er, the actual result is between 45 and 60 cents per 100 pounds ret protection | to the trust, and it is impracticable so | to combine circumstances as to bring this below 40 cents or above 60 cents for any considerable amount. an item of tariff taxation the su- schedule is ideal from the protee- Sugar is the one a A gar si tionist standpoint. ticle used by poor and rich to an equi alent extent, and a tax on which, there- j fore, falls most heavily proportion to thei Its production and distribution are con- trolled by a concern which is at once the greatest cf eur mean trusts and the meanest of our great ones. It is tent, therefore, this one article there should be levied | more than one-third of cur total tariff taxation, and that our people showlé be | burdened by a tax of more than S89¢ 000,000 that realizes less than $70,000, - that, on $20,000,000 for the sugar refining com- bine, while the same combine is en- abled to net an additional $10,000,000 n it to import at by the opportunity giv present duty raw su; from which it} can make refined te be sold by it under the enhanced price assured it by the} Aldrich schedule. The net “protection” of from 45 to 60 cents per); 100 pounds given the trust on its retin- ing pr one should be considered as sufficient, when we remember that the labor cost of this process is slight] less than 6 1-2 cents per 100 pounds: , Senator Aldrich, in be- half of American labor, proposes undu- ly to tax wage-earners ir order to give the trust from five to seven times as as it pays for all the proposed that is to much “protection” labor involved. Next to the wage-earrer, the farmer is dear to the protectionist heart, and he is, therefore, equally favored by the sugar schedule. Of late years, through- out the Eustern and Middle and many of the Central states, the competition of the far West has driven out farm- n raising into fruit cult-! s now so developed that, of nned goods— s, ete. h. we cught to pai the world, the business of fruit as, in its turn, become almost profitless. And poverty is now assured to those who are dependent | upon fruit culture by the pr et tax ' s per pound on sug: This | by from 5C to per cent the le which would make up from 40 7 per cent of the total weight of the the export of which might! ure living pI for the surplus! , but which is now practically pro-! ¢ hibited. And this is “a government of the peo-; ple, by the people and for the people. Who are “the people?” oa jams, ete., in: The Infamous Wool Schedule. The senate computations of the equivalents for Dingley bill rates on woolen goods only need to be stated. They’ make opposing argument unne- cessary in the mer ample, the rate is 55 per cent on second- ¢ wool, 289 per cent on garnetted waste, 326 per cent on shoddy, 171 per cent on woolen cloths valued at not more than 50 cents per pound, 167 per cent on blankets more than three yards in length and valued at not more than 50 cents per pound, 212 per cent on shawls valued not exceeding 40 cents per pound, 151 per cent on knit fabrics valued at not exceeding 40 cents per pound, 257 per cent on hats of wool valued at not more than 30 cents per pound, 419 per cent on felts of the same value, 147 per cent on plushes yal- ued at not over 40 cents per pound, and G4 per cent on the aggregate of woolen carpets- The people of the United States could better afford to buy every sheep in the country and put every shepherd on the pension list than te submit themselves to such shameless plundering.--Phila- delphia Record. Cannot Convict Sugar Kings. In these days it is harder to convict a sugar trust king than it is for a camel to go through the eye of a Cleopatrian needle—Baltimore Herald. reading. For ex- Blessed Are the Poor! Representatives of the crockery in- terest who have gcne to Washington to protest against the new tariff complain that the proposed schedules discrimin- ate against goods used by the poor and jin favor of those purchased by the rich. Blessed are the poor, but they need ex- ! pect little help from a protective tariff. § —philadelphia Record. 600 for the treasury and more ‘than! ats High Daties on Buttons. The button manufacturers, present and prospective, are unusually greedy in their demands for tariff duties. Me- Kinley duties are entirely too slow for the button infants. The following is part of . statement made by button importers. The proposed duties on buttons, as per schedule of the finance committee ef the senate are, as a rule, prohibitory, and would prove a severe hardship on geods used by the poorer and middle classes, and also to manufacturers of various garments used by the mass of our people, such as low-priced shirts, underwear, clothing, ete. The follow- ing data will give some idea of the in- equalities of the prcposed dutie: Agate Butto Present duty, also McKinley bill, per cent; proposed duty of 1-12 of 1 per cent per line per gross, plus 15 per cent ad valorem, would average from 67 to 161 per cent, bearing heaviest on the cl: of good that make up the great bulk of the im- ions. The following schedule, ng the styles that sell, shows the nge proposed: White Lentilles on Card Sold to Job- bing Trade. Present Pro- Equals duty. posed ad val. No. Lines. Price, 25p.ct. duty — p. ct. 1% 18 $0.024 0.031 0.190 161 10 0.059 0.235 104 0.078 0.526 82 0.095 S776 40 0.110 0316 9 71 50 0.128 0.347 67 Buttons For Manufacturing Trade in Bulk. --14 0.138 0.034 0.160 116 16 0.145 0.036 0.182 Bb +18 0.153 0.038 0.203 1e These buttons are not made here, nor are they likely to be made. First, be- cause little or none of the raw material required has been eae here; sec one sales, being limited to, try, would not ee ne the in- v stme nt of the necessary capital in a plant needed to make the various styles It is evident that the inten- tion 1s to exclude these goods in the in- terest of some higher-cost goo The proposed duty would be a real hard- ship and bear heavily on the class of people who buy “china buttons,” as well as on the manufacturers of cheap shirts, underwear, ete. Bone Buttons (to sew on)—Present duty, 35 per cent; McKinley bill, 50 per cent; proposed duty, from 106 to 194 per cent. These goods are mostly sold to manufacturers of cheap underwear, , Clothing, ete. Manufacturers Against the Tarifl, 1 BU. One of the most striking indications ef the growth of sentiment against high | protection and of a liberal sentiment upon tariff matters is the movement against the pending tariff bill by the Manufacturers’ Association of the United States. Mr. ‘A. B- Farquhar, an extensive manufacturer of agricultural machinery at York, Pa., is at the head of the movement. soit 1 It is well known that in the manu- facture of agricultural implements and machinery Americ: in ad- vance of their competitors in any other Jand and that the products of tieir factories may be seen in the fields all over the civilized world. These people need no protection and are well able to take care of themselv: All the oe to have untaxed raw material, that they will not be placed at a aia vantage. A great list of other industries are practically in the same position and de- sire free raw material more than they desire protection. It is also significant that the manufacturers, in their peti- tion to the senate, declare that their ability to employ American labor will be greatly impaired by the passage of the tariff bill. They ask that the Chi- nese wall that is obstructing the for- eign trade and crippling American en- terprises should be broken down. The plea that has been uscd for y by the protectionists—namely, that pro- tection is in the interests of Amer labor—is shown by census figures to be a sham. Of the 5,000,000 persons em- ployed in manufacturing in the United States, it is shown in the petition that less than 200,000 are employed in occu- pations subject to active foreign com- petition, and 616,000 in occupations sub- ject to moderate foreign competition. The remainder, over 4,000,000, do not come at all in competition with foreign labor. It is very plain that the Dingley bill is not designed, any more than any oth- er high protective measure was de- signed, to protect American labor or to produce revenues for the government. It is designed primarliy to protect the Sine and foster monopoly.—Balitimore un. Mineral... Tyory Lentille. wanted. children’s w: A Matter of Expense. Jack—Was yours a long courtship, oi fellow? Will—Gracious, no! My wife had nine little brothers and sisters. Jack—Really. But what difference did that make? Will—What difference? Well, if you had to bribe a crowd like that to keep out of the parlor every time you went to see your girl, you’d soon want te cut expenses.—Hoston Traveler. MINNESOTA NEW: Interesting Happenings in the North Star State. 2 Henderson will have races, ete., July Ada is agitated on the electric light question. Frazee is going to be modern and have a band. The Rochester insane asylum will have electric lights. Osakis has a building boom, with six large brick buildings under way. _ Milaca and Mora both need better jails. Prisoners who stay do so of their own free will. Luverne has a school enrollment of 645, of whom 32 were not absent «@ce during the year. Anoka has had six inches of water in June, and twenty-six inches since Oct. 1. This beats the record . Nels Christianson, nine years old, had his right leg cut off above the knee by an electric car at Winona. St. James has entertained the Stan- dinavian Samhold. Nearly 1,000 took part in a picnic at Long Lake. Judge Cadwell, of the Eighth judicial ct Montgomery, has ceived hi i and will begin upon his duties at once. A valuable trotting horse was stol+ from John Kirk's pasture. The coun- try has been thoroughly searched, but without avail. Sam Longfellow, who was. caught in the act of stealing Rey. F. H. Van Fossen’s horse at Clearw: ater, ‘recently, has been bound over. Stillwater will make the St. Croix howl on the 5th with a celebration. All sorts of races, parades, fireworks, etc. About $1,000 will be spent. At Duluth, Judge Cant issued an crder allowing Receiver A. R. Macfar- land of the defunct Security bank to pay a second dividend of 5 per ceut. ‘The village of Milaca held an elec- tion to decide on the separation of the village from the town. A total of 63 votes were cast, 45 being for and 18 against. The 11 r-old son of John Majerus, while diving in Lake George at St Cloud, became entangled in the weeds and was drowned. Ella, youngest daughter of Mail Car- rier Witzel of Stillwater, while playing with other children at the boat landing on the St. Croix river at Marine, fell in and was drowned. At the coroner’s inquest held over the remains of Dennis O’Brien at Will- mar, tie jury returned a verdict of ac- cidental death. caused by the dis- cbarge of a gun in the abdomen. Bert Von Nordstiand fired two shots into the neck and head of Miss Jennie Gessie at Kasson, which may prove fatal, and then shot himself dead. Jealousy is the supposed cause. Wadena creamery butter during May | brought the highest price paid for creamery butter in New York on the days that it was sold. It netted the creamery 11 cents per pound. ‘The Kasson board of edvcation have selected teachers for the ensuing year, including McD. Williams, superintend- ent, Kasson, and Miss Gertrude Tib- betts, assistant, West Concord. The 12-year-old son of Andrew Rins- welki, a farmer of Pine Creek, w very probably fatally injured while driving to church. He fell from the wagon and the wheels crossed over head entting it horribl | Wilbam Senrynek, a deck hand on the steamer Santa Maria, was drowned at Duluth. He fell off g scantling while painting the side of the boat. | Hie was 18 years old, and his home was in Marton City, Mich, : Tracy can now boast of as fine a tele- phone exchange as can be found a where. The plant was put in by T. F. Robinson of Pipestone. The material used in the construction seems to be first-class in every particular. Anton Berger of Cross, Wis.. who was reported to the authorities as mi was found drowned in the river at Winona. He had been work- ing for the government on the river and the heat had affected his brain. The report that the Farmers’ eleva- tor of Winnebago City, which has closed its door temporarily, is $5,000 short, is incorrect. The liabilities above quick assets are but $2,000, and ultimately all debts will be easily paid. Daniel Sheehan, aged five years, at Duluth, playing with matches and his clothing caught fire. By the time the flames were extinguished, by roll- ing him in blankets, he was bad burned about the neck and back, may die. ‘he Indian branch of the Young Men’s Christian Association of the northwest has gone into camp on the shores of Big Stone Lake, eight miles south of Brown’s Valley. About 200 delegates from various reservations in nd the Dakotas and Montana will be there. Mrs. Seneth Brennan, mother of thirteen grown up children and wife of John Brennan, a pioneer citizen of Kenton county, died at her home in St. Cloud. She was 70 years of age and had lived with her husband for fifty-three years. Her husband yester- day observed his 90th birthday. The St. Peter insane asylum is to have three improvements: A $23,000 dining room extension, an $8,000 kitch- en and bakery, $5,000 worth of plumb- ing, $2,000 in corridors and several thousand dollars’ worth of new ceiling and floors. Peter Bolstad has been ap- pointed superintendent of construction. Anna Newman, one of the female prisoners at the Duluth reformatory, in charge of Matron Slater, made a second escape within three weeks by cutting through the plastering of her room into one adjacent that was not locked, reach- ing the ground from the second story. A force of guards found her in a fild, a mile from the institution, after three hours’ liberty- A said accident occurred at a gravel pit near Randolph on the Great West- crn Railroad, whereby Nick Lindenfel- ser, a young man 21 years of age, iiving in Hampton, who was assisting in loading gravel. lost his life. The car he was loading was nearly or quite ready, when it tipped over and buried him underneath and it was twenty minutes before he could be reached and reneena He was dead when taken ou = FROM LOWELL, MASS. The Home of Hood’s Sarsaparilla— A Wonderful Cure. “A swelling as big as a large marble came under my tongue. Physicianssaid it was a semi-transparent tumor and must be operated upon. I felt I could not stand it, and as spring came began to take my favorite spring tonic, Hood’s Sarsaparilla. The bunch gradually decreased and finally disappeared. I have had no sign of its re- turn. Iam glad to praise Hood’s Sarsapa- rilla.” Mrs. H. M. Copurn, 8 Union St., Lowell, Mass. Get HOOD’S. Hood’s mentls cure Sick Headache. 25c. un ous points of ind ne cena th evai nterest. At last we © to the yueen’s cabin. “Here,” “is where the queen found a middy trying mm her bonnet at the lookin gglass, and she gave him a box on the ears, which resounded right away to the qua jeck.” “Well,” I said, “that was better ruining his career for a boyish drank.” “Oh!” he replied, “he didn’t zet off with a smac He was sent aome next day, and his people were tiven a hint too take his name off the dooks at once. It was a pity. for he was a jolly little fellow, and didn’t nean any harm.”—London aro. False Prophet. “They told me,” said he to himself “that when I married her I would be spoken of as Mrs. Bingle’s husband. But they lied.” “So they did,” said she, who had overheard. “You are not spoken of at all.”"—Indianapolis Journal. Ere the Farewell Is Spoken On the dock of the steamer, or on board the train that is to bear you away from those dear to you, you will, if you are wise, have safely stowed away in your luggage a sufficient supply of that safe- guard against illness—Hostetter’s Stom- ach Bitters. Commercial travelers, tour- sts and pioneer emigrants concur in testi- fying to the fortifying and saving proper- ties of the great tonic. Use for constipa- tion, biliousness, malarial and kidney complaints and nervousness. Obedient Boy. “You know I told Johnny I wanted him to make his next essay a hum- at does the little rascal do but write half a page about the buzz saw?” —Detroit Free Pres: Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Awa; To quit tobacco easily and forever, be ma: netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bae, the wonder-worker that makes weak men ists, 50c or $1. Cure guaran- ud sample free. Address Ster- Chicago or New York. Reasoning. Mrs. Watts—My husband won about poker night before last. Potts—How do you knov use he said be won gave me $15-—Indianapolis Journal, Bocklet ling Remedy Co. The duke of Sutherland owns 1,176,454 of the 846 acres in Sutherland coun- ty, Scotland. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup For children teething,softens the gums.reduces inflam- mation,allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. London has now an “electric cab com- pany,” and various motor syndicates, some of which use oil or steam in place of electricity. There is a fami in Strasburg, whom rides a bicycle. ty-two, 3 one of The oldest is six~ the youngest six months old. 2 every Shake Into Your Shoes. gt-es~ + ae Foot-Ease, a powder for the teet. Tt cures painful, Swollen, smart- ing feet and instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions, It is the greatest comfort discovery of the >>- Allen’s Foot- He=s oF NOW shoes Teal leash. cure for sweating, callous tired, aching feet. Try it to- -day. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores. By mail for 25¢ in stanips. ty 1 package FREE. Address Allen S, Olmsted, Le Roy, N. ¥. me The West Sullivan, Me., base ball nine sawed a pile of wood for a resident of the place and put the money received for the work in the treasury. ie t is a certain and hot, We will forfeit $1,000 if any of our pub- lished. testimonials are proven to be not genuine. The Piso Co., Warren, Pa. The distance from St. Petersburg to the Pacific terminus of the Siberian rail- way is about twice as great as that from New York to San Francisco. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tubacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c, $1, All druggists. Already grasshoppers are hatching in such numbers in the region of Oakesdale, Wash., that the inhabitants are alarmed over the threatened injury to crops. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is a constitutional cure. Price, Tic. “Frost hasn't any sense. “Why? “It never nips the canned fruit.”— Detroit Free Press. Lightning struck two hoes that a negro was carrying over his shoulder near Millington, Md., and passed through him from his shoulder to his feet, killing him, fiegeman’s ‘Cam hor Ice with Glycerine, ‘Cures Chapped Hands and Face, Tender or Sore Feet, Chilblains, Piles, &c. C. G. Clark Co.. Now Haven, Ch Tennessee is looking forward to a very large blackberry crop. Awarded Highest Honors—World’s Fair, Gold Medal, a Fair. yRices BAKING A Pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. 40 YEARS THE STANDARD 98 uUght- aie

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