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BROWN'S IRON BITTERS WILL CURE HEADACHE INDIGESTION BILIOUSNESS DYSPEPSIA NERVOUS PROSTRATION MALARIA CHILLS axp FEVERS TIR FEELING GENERAL DEBILITY IMPURE BLOOD CONSTIPATION FEMALE INFIRMITIES RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA KIDNEY AND LIVER TROUBL FOR SALFE BY ALL DRUGGISTS Th: Genuine has Trade Mark and crossed Red Lines on wrappe TAKE NO OTHER. ' &)\@g%\‘\\* 5 BR7s K N B Il AT l-'/u il 7[5 Lk 0 N il m!é' ERYG(HROY: E&L NO FEE! UNTIL CURED ! ' A@*A written guarantee of cure given in ever care undertaken. #{Allmmnllllullonsi‘m and ored. Dr. Ciatke's Colebratcd Book an (In platn envelopes) two stamps. M, D.,186 So, CLARK ST, CHICAGO, ILbe Indigestion Cured. I suffered for more than five vears with indiges- tlon, ecarcely ablo 10 retain the elwplest foaa on myj etomach. Thelur niog_seneation woe aimest Antoloreble, and my wnole tystem wan deravged 1 was waketul and cotld nct tleep, and consequently more or less nervous all the time. I declinein £,.8h and euffered all the wual depression attendant upon terrible diease Tn a word, | was misereble. At licg to find relict In onythng dse. 1 com. mouced the use of Swilt's Specttie. I began to im- prove atcnce. Tho mdicine tcned vp the 8 om- ach, strengthened the divestive orgars, and socn oll that burning ceased, acd I could retain'food without difficulty, Now my health is z0od, sud can eat any- thing n the thaie of food, ‘ona’ digest it witbout the lighest difficulty. 1most chesrfully bear this toetlmeny becauss thore aro bundreds suffering as 1 was, aud Tam eure cin be as read Iy hoa'ed. fake tho prescribod dcse atter esting wstcad of beforo, JAMFSMANN, No. 14 Ivy sirect. Atlinta, Ga., My 13, 1885, Troatise on bivod and tkiu disevses mailed froo, Tho Switt ¥peci 0 Co,, Drawer 3, Atlsuta, Ga., or N, Y. 167, W. 22d 8. DR. RICE, Tt Tt Red Clover Blossom cuRES Cancers. ITnaca, Mich., Feb 8, 18855 omon B TS i toa loves fof fiflfim‘.‘, imaniiy, Hospectfully, MRS, L. A JOHNSON, Scrofula. "ToLeno, 0., Ianuary 17, 1888 2, M. Loose & Co., Moxmor, Husary Gt S wile havtor o (bl 1Ko fcrofulous diocst, Rod £ound UL ahie av6 Our Fxtu of Ked Olover & triah am Hpey t'4a 160 s oxierenced s vl Pt 1 Faris avit srpimpiabof Jay appetolation el ¥ ‘orforts ‘. Lelial{ of hUmaaiy, wict you s L0800 use o tooir honeiir e TGk you ax o HARME I lam, very respecttuliy, Erysipelas. £ Tooau & Co., Moxon, djh. > O Do 15 185 ANTR-] commsLoed taking your Exe. Red Clover. Awo yewr 4go, for Krysipelas, and Fave not boen Iy with me, Think you VO S8 o dieuse Kaows oars truly: “#. M. sEIBERY, Flever SSores. R. B, flyman, of Grand Rapids, Mich.. saya—Aftee 8w Disciara advised hith (0 usd Lodse's it Ned Clover » B chd of Fezeina 07 FYr Bors on O ‘unod Ewo pouns of yur Salid dixtract Jod Gioy Tuow wal Soring Medietne Tonto and general Blood Pu ko by st o leg. ven THE DAILY BEE--THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, h A MAD-HOUSE VICTIM. Frightfal Fafe of & Beantiinl Phil- adelpbia Girl, rather valn and light. travagant; I admit that. ly attached to my brother, Brinckle, n very bright young lswyer, apy, with reason, for I admit that I was I always was ex- I was devoted- William nd after h's death 1 became stlll more reckless in my expenditares, and sought to drown my sorrow in the gay whirl of Incarcerated for Twenty-Seven Years ; in an Insane Aeylum for an Act of Youthfal Folly, I got rather high after his solety. In 1856 my mother dled. Short- eath. Iy afterwar | my father mot with reverses. The bulk of his fortane was invested in manufactu ingeatablishment,whichdidnot Philadelphia Record, 16th, Twenty-seven years in a mad house is | a the frightfal penalty which has been|e pald by a Philadelphia belle for a bit of indlscretion and folly. When the moth. |4 ers of the prosent generation of West | a; tarn out well. then gave uphishouse in Girard Row Heo lost_everything and nd moved to other quarters, I board- d at vations placss. My father always pa'd my hills and indeed rather encour- ged me in my reckloss expendltnres, nd it wos hard to atop right off, I Walnat street debutantes was the rose- | bought some furniture and sold 1t before PAIN v THE BACK & SIDES |buds of the season none of them were (pyying for 1t. I moved to another EALN TN TE more envied by thelr less attractive sls- go{rding house and did this without ters than the gay and of Dr. Willlam Henry per Brinckle, the wealthy and aristooratio physiclan, who lived above Eleventh atreet, on Chestout, and whose carte de visite found a welcome In every fashionable house in | ¢ town., Adrlana P. Brinkle, who but the other day ercaped from the horrcrs of a lunatle asylum, after more than quarter of a century of unlawlul inocar ceration, Was passionately fond of dis- pla d the extravagance of her cos: tumes was the talk of society in the clty, even smoug those whose welth far sur— passed that ot her father. One day a sed calamily happened to her. Inconstant fortune forsook the hitherto prosperous physiclan, and his rlche in many snother case—took to thempelves wii g+, The father gave up his big house on Chestnut streot and re- tired modestly to leas protentions quar: ters, The giddy eud thoughtless daughter however, could not glve up her fine dresses and the prodigallty of her ways. She continued to buy fine drers- esand koep up the old style of living. The blils she ran up threataned to wreck the little remnaut of her father’s fortune, but nothing could check her, and when in desperation Dr, Brinckle refused to give her farther credlt a crisls was reached. Sho lefe her home to live in a bosrding-houee, where for & time en- coursged by her uncle, John Woodward, a rich manufacturer, she launched intoa more lavish «xpenditure than before. Her ster must have been,however, sn un- lucky one, for in a short time Woodward lost his fortune. Even this mirfortune _ falled to pat stop to Miss Briockle's reckloss ¢ extravagance The climax of her unfor- |4, tunate career was reached when, ina thoughilcs: and Innocent financial trans- action, she became liable to & criminal prosecution. She was at the timellving at a fashionable board/ng Louse on Tenth stroot, paying ber cxpenses from a emall annuity which the received from the es- tato of an aunt, She has recently re- moved from the boarding house of a Mrs. Clayton, on Eleventh sircet, whero she had farnished a parlor and other spart. ments on credit. Before the furritura had been pald for she eold it and moved to the Tenth street house. That unfor- tunate circamstance sealed her fate for twenty-seven yesrs, and doomed her to live for that length of time In the midst of the insane, from which khe Was to emerge & broken old woman to ind the friends of her youth and all of her kin in the grave. A FATHER'S HEARTLESSNESS. Dr. Brinckle was a proud man, The family honor, he sald, was ai stake. He visited his davghter, told her that a pris- on cell was gaping wide open for her; that ehe would be compelled to stand in the dock, and thus taruish the family name forever. There was but one a t tl § ol ul b ol [ & u b 8 h =l 1€ has no sgual. . Ko [T T er n&—Avlu(lmB§1§lg[§g fausine Promatare Dec ‘Norvous Dobiliy. anhood, do., having i Fainody. iaa dsoover, Which "ho will sen A JHREE! FOR Jowh, Man and Beast, Mustang Liniment is older than most men, and used *more and more every year, cholee to ba made. A mad woman could not be proeecuted, and to escape the dis- grace of the penitentiary, she must be prepared to face the horrors of a mad- house, Dr. McClelian, a well known physictan, who died a fow years ago, was preeent at this Intervlew. The danghter pleaded piteously for her liberty, declar- ing that some of her doad mother’s rela- tives would pay her debts, and that she would try,to ps more economical in the fature. But the doctor was tnexorable, declaring that the s'ep was neceesary for the preservation of the family honor, and promising that she would soon be re- leated from the asylum. At last, worn cut with the terrible straggle, she submitted, and on July 13, 1858, was taken to the Penneyivania lunatlc hospital at Harrlsburg. Flve yeors after her commitment her father dled, Then her uncle died. Many frultless efforts wero made by the unfortunate womsn to get a relesse, Twenty-sIx years passed bzfore a glim- mer of hops came to her. Tho lunacy commiseion heard of her dreadfal story last yosr and bogan an invostigation, In June last Philip C. Garrett, chairman of the commlssion, st the national confer- eney of chmities and correclions at Wathington, thas referred mysteriously to the case: A bosutiful and charming young lady, just out of her teens, used to wealth, 13 extravagont, and her father, reducad in circumstances, finds hiwmeelf unable to restraln her hablt of spendlng, concludos she requires cuatedlal care, places her in o hospital, hecdless of her earn ro- teets; ho dies and leaves her there; there she has been nearly thirty yesrs, and is now neatly G0 years of age, aud still beg- | ( glvg to be r:leased, but the custcdlan stils thinks sho needs ‘‘custodial care,” and sho remalns to this dsy under re- straint of her personal liberty. Socn after this the following report was made of the result of the investiga- tion: PriLapereais, June 11, 1885.—The I undertigoed officers and members of the committee on lunacy of the board cf public charities, huving each examined i Miss Adriana P, Brinckle, a patlent In the state lunatio hospital, at Harrisburg, Pa., find no evidencs of existing luean 5, and declsre it as thelr optnion tha she should be ditcharged from sald hos. pltal. They farther ind upon an iove:- tigatlon of the case, that the alleged cauee of her commitment to the hospital was *‘that she ls deficient in judgment, and disposed to extravagant expenditure of very limiied means,” This, in the oplnion of the uadersigned, is no ju: caute for her detention in the state hos- pital, even if such & propemsity still exists, which they have no reason to be- lieve. Puiuir 0. Garngrr, Tuoxas G, MortoN, Axprew J, Ovxr, MISS BRINCKLE SPEAKS OF HER CASE, As a result of thla repost the luncy commisilon directed that the poor cap- tive should be at once released, and ehe walked out of the ssylam doors, bent b, d of b: d [t with age and suffariog, @ iree woman at | lngs, as, in this busine last. dashing daughter | knowlng that it wi brought against me, and when my father and uncle heard of 1t they visited me tont. taken to the asy! visited mo & yeor after ho placed me ward and left me $4,000. relatives frequently wrote: o the euperin- tendent of the ssylum, who always sent back an unfavorsble report. sunt of mine wanted to take care of me, to do 89, she, too, dled. me, escape, bui 1 didn’t run away. blg ratiler, and then and looped his neox Into thls and so on Innm T had a snake rops sbout sixty feet ong. hand as I would a larlat and throwed it acrozs, and the bead snake tied himself %0 a tree, and the last one cn my side College. Single or dcuble rooms, with Principal, for moe when she gots 0 blg th to bo dignlfied. hot of ccurse t talks fastee tha wrong. Sult was nd told rae that I would have to go to an Insene & ylum to save myeelf from a faleo precenss care.” I went under pro- My father pald my board for while a1 d then I was an object of charlty o0 some ¢usina, Five years after I was um my father dled. He here, and then his health began to fall ard ho was forcad to glve up his practlce. saw him only once. He gave me some ncouragement, but wonld make no defi- nite promises,and I bogan to gat worrled. My father left me in Judge Wood- ward’s £5 000, ited me ocoasionally. bequeathed me Wocdward via: About seven years The lsst time he vis- cire. He Judge go he, too, died. Iten me was about nlno years ago, when he said ho would try to get me out. An nele in Maryland died shortly after- One of my Another ut, before ehe could make arrangemen s I then visited 6o of my eisters at her requost. That was glx years sgo, and the then sald that way oy woll as over. After etaying at her house for some time I returned to the ssylam. asylum, {t was not very pleasant, but I 1000 got used to it, As to tho people of the I kelieved I would et out in time and I did not despalr. I s0d £0 go to town whenever I liked for tho first fow months,” said Mies Brinckle, ‘and epent my money for finery and rinkets. They hardly kept a watch on and I had many opportunities to It bas con & torrible oxperience, and I am lad, very glad, it {s over.” S The Rattlesnake's levenge, Austin( Tex ) Letter to St. Louis Globe-Dem- ocrat, “‘Speakin’ o’ snakes,” sald the Texis frontlersman, “‘remlnds me ov a little ad- ventare me and a chum had with rattle- snakes that made ma respect the rattle- snske ever aince.” “What kind of an adventure did you ave that makes you respect the rattle- snake?” asked a St. Louis msn. “Well, one evening just before dark out among the Rio Grande canons thero| como the all-firedest raln you cver seed, Before we could get out the water had aon 8o the only way of otcape was to cross a canon about thirty feot wide and 500 deep. ““When we got to this canon we found about 1,000,000 rattlesnakes there. They reccgnized me as their friend, it seemed, as I tried to keep my chum from sheot. ing Into a mound of ’em, for they crawled around me and looked into my face, as much a8 to eay, ‘You can help us over if you will.” paid no_attentlon to my chum, excep: s I noticed that the snakes g zattler.my chum wounded would look at him and then go around to his follow- ers and eeem to tell them something. “Well’ 1tied a knot in the tail of a got another one Taen I colled it around in my id theeame. I had my lot of snakesto goover first, and then I went over on the snake rope. of the tree and he crawled up and the The last snake let go thera followed unill all were acrozs, “‘My cham had done as I did, bat he let the blg wounded rattler have himself made the last enake and tle himeelf around the troo 80 when all his snakes wero over end my cham was going over an I had done, that big wounded rattler ssemed to grin--showed all his teeth— and let go. Of courss the wholo the- ang wert down with & ‘awing’ and my chum was throwed cff and smashed into jolly and left tho big Texan t» himaslf. " but the crowd had scattered He mattered: *‘I don’t keer a darn; theee fellows think & rattlesnake ls the oxdlicat caemy of mankind, Ho ls not s poleonous us the copperhosd and _al- ways rattles o waralng before ho etrikes, Ho is my frlend, anyhow.” e — Media (Pa.) Academy fits for Business or Special Drill for Backward Bo; All students b SwitHiN O, SHOLTLIDGE, Harvard A, B. and A, M) e — The Comfort & Oar Driver Gets From His Little Girl, Chicago Herald, I have a li‘tlo gir),” eald the street car driver, ‘‘and 1t makes me sick when, every once fn a while, I notica that she It will be a eorry dey sbe hag Why? you Well, t's & plein enough case to me, though I s growlng big. don't wonder at your falling to under~ stand it, mile from the car track and my llitle girl brings me my lunches twice a day, snd You see, I live about half a s the lunches are fresh and the coffee t ia & comfort, “Bat that isn't suything compared to 5 the pleazure I get ous of having her rlde alwsys with me on the platform, sgalaet the rules of the company for a ¢ | dviver to carry on conversatlon while on his cir, but L don't do 1t, bless you, She carrles on tho oonversation all by her 1t's elf. Ste stands close behind me and the horses trot and never stops for streets either. She tells me all about her mamms, and home, snd the neighbore, and herself, and the dog, and I stand there and hold my lines and twitt the brake and take it all fn with de- light, Tf it weren’s for that glel I b:lleve L should lose all recollesiion of the ap- pearance « f my own home and gurrouni- @ have to get up so esrly and stay up so late, She 1s now at the Convalescont's Re- [ that gisl gets so big and diguified that treat, near Glenn Mlils, Delaware coan y. Here she receivea a reporter, with some show of her cld-tlme gayety and 8pirite, and gavo bim the following ac- count of her history: “Thicty-fi ears sgo my father, Dr Brinckle, ich physician, living on Chestnut strest. I was fond of eociety, she can’t make a run with me every dsy Ul quit drivieg,” e — A preacher, who lived lu Sonth Bend Was afrald that bis cough ne'er would mend, Now he presches an hour With ten-horse luog power, 4nd they callcd me a coquette, ard, per-1Red Siar Osugh Care was hia friend, 1885. A RUSSIAN CUSTOM HOUSE RING, A Combination in Taganrog by Which the Czar Lost Milllons, 8t. Peteraburg letter to New York San: ‘‘Whatever belongs to the stats belongs to everybody,” 1a one of the maxims most obstinately held by all the Russlan tohinovinks, or officlals, {n spite of »li reforms. *‘Only the fools do not make profit of thestate property,” runs snother rule of the Russlan clvil service, The famous cass now pending hero be- fore the senate on au mppeal clearly shows that in Taganrog, an Important commeroclal town, there are no *‘foole,” though there are many knaves. In fact, all the custom house ofticers and most of the merchants of that olty for years tiied thelr beat to obeat the Raeslan treasury. The amount of the plander and the pe- ocullar ways by which the state was rob- bed made the Tagaurog case a cause illus- tre, and the Russlan papers apeak of it a8 the ‘‘Taganrog epopee.” The Taganrog csse, or, as the presid- fag judgs styled it, *'the case of nlnety- nine cases,” was triea in the Kharkoff district court. The trial lasted a month, Among ths defendants were elghtcon custom house officers and twenty of the richest merchants, Someof the scoused, however, before the trial escaped, either to foreign countries or ad patres. Thus the governors of Tangarog and Keatch have committed sulelde. ‘T'ho .jury were instructed to conslder 1,315 polnts,which they accomplished In forty-elght hours. In many points the charges were as interesting as any sensatlonal novel could be. Tho leading chsraoter of the Tag- anrog epopee was Marko Valiano, the “Meroury of South Rusefa.” He fs 76 yoars old and I worth about 100,000,000 rables, For half a century Marko was master of the Azoff and tho Black seas. The cfficlals, the merchants, snd the common people of Scuth Russia all bowed bofora the mighty Marko. About sixty years ago there came to Taganrog, in a small sail-boat, & Greek seaman of 18, with acquiline noso_and black eyes, and black, curly halr. He was a shrewd, daring and joly fellow. In the fortile and almost wild South Russla that youth- ful seaman saw a bonanza, and he strack it. A decado sinco he was known aaa pushiog and rich merchant, and In an- other decade he was already a miillon- aire and owner of a little merchant fl;- tlila. He opened gome naw markets for Russian wheat, flax, barley, and other products, and he brought home coloaisl goods, such as figs, dates, olives, olive oil, ete. He employed hundreds of sgents in Russis, and his sons looked after hls groin interests in London and Marseilles. How mighty Marko Vallano was can bo /maigined from the fact that during the late Tarco-Russian war, when the Rustian soldlers were dying from cold and hunger, he furnished the Turk- ish army with Rus:laa wheat and Ruestan fur caftans, thus making 83,000,000 in gold. Among the custom-house officers Sur- veyor Kuzovieff was undoubtedly tho most prominent figure. It was he who perfected smuggling and the cheetlng of the government into & system. All the bi/ls of lading and invoices and other ship papers were prepared in duplicate, one for the government and another for the benefit of the smuggling asscclation,com- pozed of the merchants end custom house officers. Kuzovleff was t1e gentleman of the emugglers. Ho honestly paid the poorest of the clerks and the poorest watchman their sbare of the plunder. He wore tho best of linen. His dress was of Paris pattsrn and mike. He wore ollk atockings worth $100 s palr. He or- dered In thls city a eilk ladder which he used when examlining the ships, If per- chanco he forgot this ladder he would not examine the shigs at x1l. The din- ners, balls and sprees ¢f Kuzovleffl were of pure Romsn atyle. Along with Valiano avd Kuzovleff, tho colleotor of the Tegsnrog pott, Siate Uouncilor Nikitenko was rather a pale figare. Ho wes a tchinovnik of the pur- est type. Even in cheating the govern- ment he adhered to the officizl routine. His cleiks were stric:ly bound to report to him daily the kind quality of goodsim- ported freo of duty, and what his share ot plunder was. The inspector of the custom house stores, Aykanfl, was qulte a different cheracter, While eober he was unwilllng to chest the government, and when drunk he had no wlill of his own, and #0 his comrades took care that he should remain perpotuslly under the nflacnce of Mquor. When ho would come to hls senees ho would hurry to forget himezelf, drinking the etrongest voGka In big glasees. Even that was not alway s softi clent, He used to hire the Tuckish dram orchestra, blddlog them to striko bard:r and harder till the drums would burat. He had Iudeed a hsrd time silencing the voice of his conscience. Toe court room was crowded. The neoks of the public were oraned when- ever Marko g.t up to speak. Vallano magosnimously cffered to pay sll the goverzment los ey, all finos and cos, of trial, and certalnly he coald pay a paltry eum of $2,000,000, But the court would ot listen to It, and so Marko, perhsps for the first time in his life, realizod that after all oven sclid gold was a frall stoff, Kuzovleff appesred In the court per- famed, and In sttire of mont fashlonable pattern. He testified “‘opon his honor,” and geve ‘‘the gentleman’s word,” and, In fine, plsyed his role well to the end, It was evident that he could do olever tiicks, bnt hs was uaable {o lte. He was a competent and trust- worthy witness even against hlmeelf. Aykancff was sober, of course, and as there were no Tarkish drums in the court he told the whole truth—that is, so far a8 he could remember it, A counsel for one of the defendants, however, objested to his testimony on the ground that a man suffering from delirlom tremons was not & trustworthy witness, and poor Aykauoff dropped to hia meat as quickly as if be had been ehot. Even the attor- ney for the spare the feellngs of the defendant, The jary found five of the o houee officers and five of the me guilty. Tho rest, being small ofticers and merchants, were acquiited, Kau- sovleff, Aykancfl, and tho other threo icers wero sentonced to be deprived of ir vights, and to be traneported to Siberis. Valiano, on belng deprived of all bis rights, was to be sent to Siberis for five years, The guilty officors were to psy luto the treasury 275 000 rubles and the merchants about 2,000,000, It ia more than probabls that the senato wil sot aside the verdict of the Jower eouct. In compsrison wl h the Tagaurog heroes what small fish are the Jewish smugglers, who run In thelr goods by means o! (rained doge! L — COWBOYS BURPRIZE, Ba klug Up the Wrong Man—Their lixperionce With & Diummer, Milwaukee Sentin 1 havo secu 4ood mavy daring deeds perlormed aud cosree jokes perj otra'eo by cowboys,” eaid the agent, but I will toll_yon of a liitle incidernt whers the| LEGENDJOF § wind was taken out of three cowboys by a determined, fear! ‘tenderfoot.” 1t bappened only last apring. I was then station agent and telegraph opsrator for the Nocthern Paolfic railroad compiny at a place near the Montana lloa, It was not much of a place, as {t con: d only of & depot, & house or two and a saloon, *‘One morning a travellog man arrived at the depot by stage fromupnorth some- where, He hiad a small sample csse and a satchel. He was below mediam helght and rather slight, but was very neatly dressed and wore a sllk hat. Ho was travellog for a New York jewelry houe, He was about an hour early for the train east ana he opened his grip on the plat- form, took out a brush and dusted his clothiog and thoes. He then drew out an old newspaper, leaned up against the side of the depot with one foot projestod in front of the other and began resding. ‘‘Meanwhile, however, three cow-boys had sauntered up to the depot. They eyed him closely and watched his opera: tions, When he began reading they huddled together and talked awhile in an undertone. Prosently ono of them—a blg slx-footer—!eft the group and began to saunter carelossly about the platform with his head in the ale fnspecting the posters on the bailding and the cornlce. When he got around whera the traveling man stood he lifted hls blg brogan and planted It firmly on the jewelry man's foot. No apology was made. The trav- ellng man merely looked up, drew his foot back a moment, then placed it back whero It was. The cow.boy passed back to the other two. They all chuckled and jolved In a low-toned ccnversation, “'S)0n the cow-boy started out again on a similar round, gaping at the roof. When he reached the traveling man he tried to bring down his coarse bcot on tho extended foot. Tae teavellng man jorked hts foot bask suddouly wsnd the brogan came down with a thump on the platform. Anotber conferance aud chack- ling followed, Fiaally the cow-boy eat out on the th!rd round. Just as he was about to raise hls foot to plant it on that of the traveling man, the latter locked up quickly and said: 44800 hore, there is my foot, and it'a going to stay thera. You step on it, if you want to, but I want to tell you that bafore you can got off of it 1 will kill you.’ “Such a volley staggored the cowboy. He looked at the foot and then at the emsll powsossor, and finslly moved off without stepping on it. Another consul- tatlon followed, “The traveling man calmly reed his paper & few minutes and then took from his satohel three apples. He looked at them a moment, and suddenly threw them a fow faet Into alr, and then quickly drew a revolver, fired three shots, split— ting eaci apple fnto a dozen pleces be- fore they reached the ground He re placed the oartridges in the empty cham- ber of the revolver and returned it to his pocket. ‘‘Lhe cowboys wltnessod the sc’ with- ont ssying & word, and soon, ccmpletely cowed, turned and left the depot. The traveling man told me after thoy left chat he would have killed the three of them had_the fellow etepped on his foot agaln, and I thiok he would, as he was quick as lightniog. He then showed me a medal he carried, which he won as bs- {ug the moat rapld and one of the best shots o New York. The story simply illustrates that thers Is sometimes a great deal of fictitlous valor and daring aboat the cowboy.” ———— Tired, Lavguid, Dall. Exactly expresaes the conditlon of thous- onds of people atthisseason. The de- prossive effscts of warm weather and the weak conditlen of the body, can only bs corracted by the use of & rellable tonic and blood purifier like Hood’s Sareapa. rilla. Why suffer longer when a remedy ia so close at hand? Take Hood's Sarea- parllia now. It will give you nntcld wealth in health, strength and energy. —— A LILIPUTIAN TRAGEDY, A Little Boy Drowned—Two Midget Prisoners and Three Tiny ‘Witnesses, New York Herald, There was s strange blending of the pathetio and the ludicrous yesterday in & case which came before Justice Patterson inthe Bsex Market police cours. It was. in foct, euch a tcene as inevltably recalled Gulliver's adventares In the land of ILnlipat, Justice Patterson is the Broodingdag cf the whole arrsy of police maglstrates. Befor him were two littie midgets of prlsoners, and near by three other Lilipatizns who wero thero as wit- nesses for the rtate. The prisoners were Willism Frel, 9 years cld, and his brother Jaoob, aged 7. They were charged with homiclde, the highest crime known to the law, in wilfally cansing the death of lit- tle Bddle Lompe, their 7-year-old play- mate, The witnesses werc Ganrge N ckle, 7 years old; Ira Normav, 6 years (li, and Jamea Martin, 7 years old., Tho s atement mado by the witnetsea ehowed that tbe children, all of whem live near together in Lewis rtreat, were playlng at ncon on Taesdsy sbout the dock at the foot of Delancry street. The pier {8 very much out of repilr, aud there i8a hole in 1t about which some tempo- OCHOONER A Pirate Ohased to His Doom on the Rocks of |Mt, Desort, Mt. Desert Herald, The story of the phantom sshooner ran thus: Captain Kidd had had the luck to oaptare an outward bound West India- man, nesr the Bahamas, oarrying a large amount cf specle, which he promptly took chargo of, and, haviog disposed of the crew accordlng. to the manner of those times and scuttled the thip, made ff to one of his maty haunts, and there ting tho treasure on board a amall, swiit echoonor In charge of one of his henchmen, ordered him to the sscrct sterlog place at Mt. Dasert, This pirat! o lleutenant took his wife with him, while bont on such a pescefal mission, thoagh, an every sailor knows, nothing s more aniucky than to have s woman or a olergyman aboa; ship. Bat so In- sured was this hardened reprobate to danger of all kinds that sach old woman's notlons had no terror for him, and he would no doubt have set sall Friday and dined with thirteon at hls ocabin table every day of the voyage without a ripple of hesitation, though whether he ever ran the risk of taking a clergyman or private chaplain with him msy be open to some doubt, Notwithstanding this evil augury, no evil adventare befell them until the little oraft camo cfl' the const of Malne, when, a8 has sometimes happened since, & dense fog set In, 80 ¢case that the man on the torecastle could soarcely soo the end of the long, tapering jlbtoon,as the echoon- er gliding before the Mght broeze, poked her nose swiftly into the mlst. A fog at s0a i3 bad enough when one can whistle or ring a bell, or even blow a horn, but in the pres:nt care all of these means of making known one’s whereabouts had to be owitted for obvious reasons, How- ever, all went well until just before nightfall, when a biisk wind sprung up from the castward, dispelling the fog and revesling the presence of a Biltish cir- vette a fow miles to windward. Tho corvette, evidently regarding {he appearance of the schooner ay suspiclous, tired a zun as & eignal for her to heave te, which belog disregarded she forthwith gave chasa. As long as the wind contin- ued Hght the schooner gradually crept away from her hoavier pursuer; but tho wind Increased and tossed up tuch a rea that the tables were eoon turned, and there was nothing for the plrate to do bat run ia toward the land, in hope of eluding the encmy in some of the hun- dreds of bays und inlats, where the wa- ter was too shoal for him. With this in- tent the echooner's bow was put off uatil the wind was over her starboard quarter, aud she headed, as the skipper reckoned, for what is now called Otter Cove. He {ntended, if he should not ba able toslip away under cover of the increasing dark- nees, to rua into the cove, but his treas- ure ashora in boats, blow up or scuttle tho schooner, and escape overland to what fs now Somes Sound, near which the treasuro was to bes concealed, and where he would be met by others of Kid's retainers, and could make good his escapo in some other craft from the south- west harbor while the corvette was beat— ing about Frenchmen’s Bay. Owing to some misesleulatlon, assfs'ed by the night which had now fallen, while the wind bad increated to a gale, the aary ralls have been placed. Little Lempe was playing near the hole, when Willie Frel, secing that he was in davger, pushed him viclently away from it Eddle was thrown up agalost Jacob Frei, and, with child-like thovghtlessnees and Impetucsity, he pushed Eddle away frcn bim, Eddle’s foot struck a leg and he foll backward into the hcle and was drowned under tho pier, Mrs, Lempe is a widow, and the seemed anxious to have the boys hanged or fmprisoned for life when she sppeared against them In court. When luttle Ja- cob was asked by the big justice what he had to say to the charge made sgainst him, he resolutely refused to say a word. At once his elder brother spoke up and defended him, sayiog 1t was all purely accidents], and that nove of them lid any thought of Ipjuring another, The jostice adjourned the heating till the afternoon, and sont Policeman Kelly and Agent Young to inqalre into the faote, Later io the day they came into tf again and reported that the drown- gof the child Lempe, although causeo by the push Jscob Frei gave hi uodoubtedly accidentsl. Agal proteit protestof Mrs, Lempe the jostlo discharged the liitle prironers, All of the chbildren were pooely dressed, and wore csps, shirts snd little knicker- bocker trousera. ———— When Baby waa sick, wo zave hor Castoris, ‘When she was & Child, she cried for Castoris, When sho becamo Misa, sho clung to Castoria, When abie bad Clildres, she gave thew Castorla schooner ran psst the mouth of the cove. OF rourse bresksis were heard near at band, bat that was to b expzcied when ranning for the cove on such & night,and caused no great anxfety, until, perhaps mistaking the whitish face of the rock for an op:ning in the coast llne, the ekipper headed for it, patting the schoon- er before the wind, and then to his hor- ror discovered that he was running at an S i nsotutely Freo from Opiates, Ewmctics and Powsons, A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE WHITTIE Charies S0 80 o Mo “ Y o A Pasitive Written Guars i "MARRIACE CUIDE ! Aiaal Tmabibes adical Institute ed- No marks on . Address 204Washington 5. ,Chicago, L. Of'en, +iknees loave the Iit:le chil { 1n such a con- dition that it cannot assimilate Loty foods Suc one ehould &t onco commenoe the ueo of R Food as a daily ceit. Tt will +00n restore the digy #ve crgans to thelr normal condirion, and will give all needed etength. Al ort geists soll it, and rome grocera. Potup in f ur sizes,—b50., and upwards. S lnfants@valids Imported Beer IN BOTTLES. .Bavarla Bonowian | Erlanger. Omaha | Ale, Porte elght knot rate dlrectly for the clffs by the Spouting Hora, Just thena chance shot from the covette, euch as she had been used to firlng at any tlme for an hour or more, without effect, knocked over the man at the helm and passing forward cut the main halyards and donn came gaff, mainsail and all, in a heap on deck. The skipper himeelf sprang to the waoel avd around flaw the spokes, but port or starboard it was sll one to the doomed crafr, for luff she would not with no sail aff, and to wear ship, even If it hed been possibie with the aeck cumber- ed with the flapplng waiosatl, wis me ely to choso bet ween oue rock aud Its fellow. On,on the flew, with her crlippled gear, rushiog throogh the texthing waters, aud the soiverlng, shuddering gang of evil men knotted together as far storn ay poseible, as if to avoid the dreaded impact with the rocks more re- morscless than they. Bub the skipper stcod at the wheel, and his wife s10>d by him without a traco of fear on her frce but of resignition; and on his was suspense and determination, resolva to save that woman if all else perished, and wdost! ly donbt whether he could by any ty send the echooner’s hend anybody coald clsmber onto the 2fore she went t) plecee. Then a blg wave takes the frail oraft and thumps her hard, cruelly, pltilessly ugon the ledge by the Spouung Horn. Over went the forsmast by the board, One or two of tho crew succesded in clamberlng on it to the rocks before it fell over the side into the s°a, and were ssved. The cth- e were paralyzed with fear. Baot the skipper stood st the wheel and his wife kuelt by h's slde—aye, knelt and prayed; such a thing as, I ween, had not been done on that blocd-stained deck in many a day, aud the white-capped wWavos dashed the elight hull like & cockle shell upand down on the ragged rocks, fast stavlog Ler to pleces, uctll at length s huge fosm-crested monster lifted her off the rocky ledge and with the fufluent carrent she surged backward aua dowa- ward into the deep, black ocean and dis- appeared forever, Thae lo.kout on the corvette, who saw the echooner one moment, and looked for her in vain the next, Insisted upon it then and to the end of his davs that they had chased the ‘Flyiog Datch- wan,” who had nearly led them to their docm; and oftentimes in many years smugglers, who are not as a class given to superstition, reported that thry had slghted » phantom echooner wita her wierd helmeman fllittiog fn {he moon light off the rocks of Schocner Head, e —— Angosiura Bitters are the best remedy for removing indigestion and all diseases orig inating from the digestive organs, Beware of its, Ask your grecer or druggist for ne article, mauufactured by Dr, J. Bous, | —— »' Awsembl lea, Creverssn, 0., August 19 —The coal min ers of the Massilon district of Tuscarawss have been called to meet at Massilon day. It is bslieved the object of the meeting is to reconsider the action of tw weeks sgo, when the miners voted to strike aguinst the production of 15 per cent, e — A Great Surp! Ls 1o store for all who use Kemps' Balsan for the throat and lungs, the great guarantoer remcedy Wonld you believe that it is suld on its merits and that vach dugeist I author'z to refurd your mouey by the Proprietor of this preat wonde: ful remedy it it fails to cor you! Schoeter & Becht, oruggists, No, 211 15%h st., have secured the agency for it Prioe €0c and 8L, Trial size fre Rhbine Winea. ED MAURER, 12183 Farnam St, PENNYRGYAL PILLS “CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH." & FINE LINE OF s & 1 —Al WODDBAITGE A0S, THE ONEBY EXOEUSIVE AETTOTE MO0 DREXEL & MAUL, Succrssors 10 JORN G, JACOBS. UNDERTAKERS | At the old stand1417 Farnam St. Orders by tele- graph solicited andjprompily attended fo. Telophono o 226, DR.HAIR'S ASTHMA CURE This Invaluable #peo'flo readily aud pormsnently oures al kinds of Asthma. The most obatinate and long standing casos +ield promptly to f4a wondertul curing proporties. Tt Is keown throughout the world for its unrivaled efficacy. J. L. CALDWELL, olty Uncolo, Neb.; writes, Jan , 1884 H.noe using Dr. Halr's Asthma oure, for ore than one year, my wifo has boen ontirely well, nd 0ot even & symptein of the disease has appeared. WILLIAM BXNNETT, Richisnd, ows, writesNov, . 1838, Thave been aflicted with Hay Fover aud Asthuma since 1869. 1 followed your directions and am happy to say that I never elept better in my life, Lam glad that I am amon the many who oan speak 50 tavorubly of your remedics. A valuablo 64 pago treatiso contat trow every State in the U, § , Ci Britain; will bo malled upon Aoy drugglst not having it In stock will prooured, toordor, Auk for Dr. Hair o Asthma Care. DR B W HAIR & SON, Proy's Clu'tl, 0. UNION PiCIFIC RAILWAY CO. CROSS TIES. The Unlon Pacific Kaflway Company will receive touders up 1o August 1885, for 200,000 herd wood cecs 11w snd 0.0,000 6013 wood cros 1es, more In 1ot 38 way Go sgrecd upo, at Lo lowing wilar proof aud Gread o 0000 oak and 100,000 cedar crors ties at Katsay City, Mo., oF Leavenworth, K s, 100,00) o' acd 100,000 (odar_orcsi tics s Counoll Blufs, a5 5t Joseph, Mo.; Owmaba, Papli.n, o Graud 1 11, Net W {030, Db a1 Cou\er, oF ab statiung cn it of Union Pag Iway, 1n vieimity «f D ny 11040 8ol wor at Hustiogton, "Oiogon, oF tatl ns on Oregoa Shoit L U.uh' and Notthe an. 100000 native wood crom tior, ab shatlors on wain Nino of Un 100 Kaiiv 0y, b tween Cheycu Wyo., sud ¢ b, b ot To bod-Jiv ot later Shian Ap 1) * Addrees propocals and app y e vy ofhior part ulass to J. J, Buins, Genera Mook Ogwaba, Nel Bl CALLAWAY, Goat ral M \ Omati, Nob., Aur, 12'h, t6gs, " 2 ™ pmobee Il ot Y