ing tho llvah lu-hwi-n mllml out. nml llnv In small Rtw-lx, About t' run into tln- im-islnn The same up mtinn * back. To the lnttrr n A rnw llldt' lflrlnt. qlm: top of lhe ('mltrc In?†em]- was {astonv (l ouch l‘rvnal 'l'nki: N thvcnndl-lm \ for hon all his 'migllr. T *ï¬ds. he threw his ropes. and suspending breast. danced had“ around th‘b pnlv. l‘x way. and he Ml nu "pm a {nllllmluud operation began. an old countml Hm young mm was not 3 \rr} lung mu Ind hn utolu sunn horn arrows mnl probably rr not stolen more while I‘ old puty did not rolntc "mm or hvn-rnosts In young mun tlwn Mm thrnw his arms m-onml‘ Iml «yo tn llwsun. hlm n hot or spiriw an show pm'wllx 11. Th!" one rmhod for tho “ma ye tn‘vhv nun «lmm- n! "I warmly that it w: would norm (n. "at time In“ your." ï¬nch certainly pitinlvlo mm: 1 lndhm mm mm . IWII in View of “I mustn‘t“... prune 38h!» pnym nrnu.‘ this 1 1110 mumr of the For! Mncleod’ Gun’m has. been unending a sun «15:13? at the Blood .Rcsorvo m-ar that town. and has come bank to his sanctum considvmhly disgusted. He says " it was the same old thing. the same old song and thv snmvnld tune." The worst fc-Murv wnm'wmi with this hepthcninh con-mnny is the “ making of braves." On mm 0 ‘cnsimx â€new (146-. no appear to have been mw mndidmm. L... .LA 7- ~ The editor of tl has been nttemlin Rowdylmu by (‘nnmlimn Tough»: on a Dr- trult Ste-mm-r l’uwl-ngvrs lh-uton uml Ruhlnml A Dina! of the “an: Arrested. A Detroit duspntch says: ' A gang of thirteén pii'lipookots and general thirn-s Want to l‘ut-iirli'ny yesterday morning; on tho stcunn-r City of (lowland. 'l'hcir con- duct on the way was suvh that tho otlicvrs oftho boatput them ashore and rofusud to let them return on board. As a result they took the Htvmner Alaska on her return trip. During the voyage pandemonimn reigned. in some casirs pistols being drawn. Peam-nblu nion wore robbed, insulted unrl threatened with violence. , The women passengers ‘wwo greatly alarmed. and although the otlit-ors of the bdat did all in their pom-r to restore order the riotous conduct lasted during tho wholv trip. When the stunner i'vachcd Detroit she stopped in midstrolm and sent two yawl boats ashoro. ln tiftwn minutes two‘ patrol wnugmm tilled with dotolztives mme clown to the dock. The ofï¬cers got into the bouts and rowed out to the Alnsluu A thorough som'rh of the boat was l‘lltult', and when sho came alongside the dm‘k an hour huqr clown pursuits WOI'L' brought off and taken to police lu-mlqunrters. Among: those arrested were: Martin l-‘orbvs, of Toronto; John Byers. of London, Ont. ; Robert S. ltodgvrs. of Hamilton, Out, and Thos. Mullen. Windsor. ()ut. Two of‘ the gang, on, tho approach of the poliuv. jumped overboard. One. said to l»: the rinul’ or, rvm-hc-d shore and r'scltpml. The 0 nor was tnkon off one of tho hlndm of the paddle whc-ol. Ex-ltoputy Shorit‘t' Downs an l (Ir-ergo Campbell. of this city. were badly lwaten by the gang. A large amount of cash was found in the pocket of mm nf Hm n...†amount of'cash was fob: one of the gang. Lord Salisbury objected, sag/in}; publication of such information we tiply discontent and encourage ngit The, anwndnn-nt was withdrawn. The 11an of .Dunmven next prop: rejection of the House of Commons ment relating to town parks. On Lord Saliah‘ury’s advice tho I of Earl Dunraven was accepted. Earl (‘adogam Lord Privy Seal. that revision of rents In- bascd u! difference in prices in L“? as (20‘ with prices from 1-“! to INNS. Earl Spvnccr and Earl Kimborh posed the motion. but it was carried 17. The ronmim'm,y House of Con amendments were adopted. uuw Lucy should reduce the value of lund in Ireland as much as possible before prcn (lacing the lnndapurchaso scheme. The Earl of Dunmvcn proposed to amend the fifth clause by providing that the court revising judicial rents shall state the scale of prices of produce affecting tlrg holding. . _. “.uuuv| men: of the Irish polit-y as was in}; the pcm‘r‘ and prosperity of Baron Hmvth, Liberal. su (imwrnmcm. appeared to enter! that they should reduce the v in Ireland as much as possible dllCillg “IO landwhurchamt ur'hm- V. wv~~lli tlllil responsibility. lercforu he urged the ousc to recognize the difï¬culties of the position and accede to the amendments. Lord Sclborne (Libvml) said he thought the Government would have been unwise to throw up the Bill. 110 would rather wave cut off his right hand than ham kmn fl ..., -. uuuporury nwusure. pin-Ceding larger proposals, by inlvuns of which the Government, would tryto mitigate the evils of previous legislation. Thu Government had not accepted thu unmuhnents without anxious consideration as to what the result of their rejection would be. The uhundon- ment Of Illa Bill Wall-3 tlmnltnrm-Oi-m “n" TH] EVEN .\ N D I'M a nu (r‘rlduy) night’u London cable toy: : In the House 0! Lads this evening. on motion toconlider tho Home 0! 0 non. unmuhnont- to the Load Bill. mm Duke of Aruyll warned the "0qu that the Bill in its present term was» Ill immense development of the Gladstone Land Act of 1881. and one that in tho future would lend to the development of some defection. l‘ho Bill. he declared. would foam among the lriuh not induntry, but lnzineas. making , tenants more unthrifty. it wuuld give tennntu the privilege o! regulating route to such an extent as to enable them. howevur lazy or ignorant, to remain on their hold- ings. The Bill was a violation of recognized truths. 4 ll political reasons forced thv “onset accept some of the amendments he hoped that the llll lulu-rs would ha 0 that cournw- to n-jvct uthu's which Hillpl} 'm- J pascal lilo ruhhvry of htmlownvru. 1 l'lill‘l (haun'illu mimirh «i that llu- Hill 1 was imperfc-ut. but it was it (-lnnnprumim . lllCllSlil’t‘ and tho lu'st ubtuinuhlv mu‘lvr tin.- s ciruuuutunws. and it Wm H» rvfuro udvlw u ublc that tlu- Hun“ .1†WV it, Nuthin; 1‘ could lit-unim-ul 'I} Iiln'l-lbslllg the llill on [i :thstmvt (-zmmmli- nrim i..l.m It: Olmus AIBHDIBNN IADB T0 .NI‘N DANCE. In}! ‘gk‘rjgun nit: . ...‘ .u- 'h of the boat was nuulv. mu alongside the dm'k m: pursunn wou- brought off '0 hx-mlqunrtera. Among rrc: Martin l"nrl)vs. nf iyt-rs, of London, Ont. ; ars. of Hmnilton. (ML. h1()r‘hl!(iilll sputclx says ,1 .__-.--.n uvuuu 6U .lxleut as (Jumble them. however moraut, to remain on their hold- . Bill was a \‘iolauon of recognized If political run-Tons forced tlw )y ago pandemonium pistols being drn“ n. obhul, insultui and once. , r'l‘he women any manual. and fthe bdat did a“ in e order the riotous 4 the whole trip ruched Detroit she and sent mtuzml tun minutes two ...... nuv information would mul mvmnu. 1 Hull“ (‘UII- 1111 that thoofliuvrs ashore and rcfusmi )oard. As a result jeeted, spying; that the Mltl r'scnpml. mm of the Marina x-l’opurty Shvrifl' ht hand than have been mg of the Act of PHI if at a ï¬lament than its d upon 0. course that“ h a disastrous dcwlup. :flivy us was nowtmubl- '4‘ advice the proposal Fog-opted. ppoar to have tho whiten Dllcaued by the in Swim it “.u H! ruforc ndvis 1‘ 1mm ‘1: Nuluing Mn ll-1.~ssin:,,' the Hi" on uityof tlmcountr); ml. said that tlu run; an. be. The abandon- the alternatiw. and i not accept tlmt p ronn was an immense Ghduoue Land Act of u the {uturo would 403d 9! some defection. i‘ho )uld fostvr among; the but laziness. making m'fty. It Would give 0 of zloguhuingrrcnts to pxt proposed the ommons amend- 'nrlxm. n )"v ()Ht. 311, ()nt. 'l‘wonl N? [‘Olinfl" t be thc Seal, moved 11 upon the is compared (H) WI! :‘tuin the idea value of land agitation 01!“! An rxpm! clergyman M mike about {our knot. an, “I. wind. ll .. u“ u'uccl my dayfl rvnmrked a. vomit; the city fonds last evening. excuses-x are gin-n and all wurkcd to got u ride. ()m- 1 mm? it has bl‘l'll my lurk wummo 0M skinnint Hm‘ flu-quontly whm I first calm The ï¬rst time I nxtmnptml fun- In" smilul knowingly m hand manner said: ‘ ()h. t1 I was 301111;: in rthv ‘ biz‘ an by. He wurkml the ' way ‘ only did he ri‘lu Ilium-If but ï¬nd sumo {rivnds to ammm last .1 tumbled and made 501 lwmlquartcrs touching: his ri; The very nrxt morning, whic the hottest of a hot July (in) tlu- our. ‘ 1"an 3' vaHod in that's all right} he placidlv Ill-L Ion cable calveginu- Bill. To that the immense d Act of )uldigcud on. Fho .0ng the making 21d give route to howovor ‘1' hold- :oguizvd :cd flu- dmcuta :\ c thu ])\Al'(h 11‘ “I“ {or 31 tho it the \‘1 tuner! I. ow an In. due- mu m ï¬rst i butclu: Thu ti says, w ltnbka Cattle ' On Tue at prom 111 mm: Wulncn bar of x tivcly ll 1) ï¬ne: (It: Min! by “Lulu ('[L rumim. (h uh 1‘ III vr UM: slum tin udï¬w u“ to R l â€thing rupm'tcd mt on “Md, am: [mrtalncu {saw pf makc u. t u, Bill to thu c0 uf the 'l’cxuslux on, in terrible r: 1 the lieu-d to I “It it bun-k4 hr [mummy over 750,000, and, taking iutc m-count other oonnnnnitim‘ immediately dopvndcnt on, and gvogmphigally unité‘d to, the port of New York. the present popula- tion of tho Metropolitan district is more ‘ than 2.500.000. At the present moment tln- population of the area known as the ltvgistration District of London is a tit 1,250,000. so that there is a long intervu to be L‘OVCI‘t'ti lit-{ore we can begin to rival the populonsnvsu of thcgrcat English “ province ill-l)l‘i(fk and mortar.“ But if New York hoops up its accelerated rate of growth the differvnév beforu anothor generation is over may be wiped out. London is growing at the rate of about “0,000 a your, while New York‘s growth is about 60.000. Ilnt in tin- tt-n )vurs hetwwn 1570mmIHNUthcavc-rngo annual addition to our city population was lws than 137,000. so that. We have already more than doubled the annual increment of the (lvcadv prm-cding last consuv, and have for tin“ hm six years established an ayerngo of H.000. This kind of geometrical pro- gression has only to be maintained. to make the aim: of New York as um-xampled as its t-‘(rmvtli.~-t\'m~ YUP]! 11.....1. Un the basis of tho numbc thy new pity diructm‘y. Hm Now York. from thu South“ Yonkers In 11w Battcryhis 1.000.000. The‘ population I probably over 750,000, am account other vommunitie: dcpvndent nn’, and uongruphi; the port of New York, the pr tion of the Metropolitan dis than 2.500.000 M n." “â€"â€" (“THIN-Mm: up to I _I have met J W-..“ rv-uuruulH/ly rlnflln dour bell of Mien: Violet Cannon that mrt of London khown as Womf. He was hauled up before: at the Marylebone Police Court of the (â€My linen which was s aired last full at the Tombs in was rulaundriod. Thd only whivh appeared during the CO! procvminus was the remarkable Imulv hv Mim \‘u’nlu- 1' _, ‘ A London cable say : was on \Vednesdny u: e: wilfully and persistently \I:. ‘u . llnnr In.“ .‘I [)0 "1.",~ A [ ._. .uu uum several days ago but this is de- niul by “w owm-r. It is “nu-rim! by Meat Imp. (‘tul' Kant/.ia-r, lmm-wr. that We milk dud: r had a herd of nineteen head only a short time ago and had disposed of the-m all to a butvhcr near by. On Tuesday he reported ()1. math-r to Health Ofï¬cer Du!- hohl. and 11m: oflivinl, recognizing the im. parlance of the mutter, at once hastened to make u thumnul. s“... '- N l-IH’ Hm K l'.‘\ l'l‘Il we met with . "‘ rmmrkod a. u roads last own are mun and :n :40: u ride. 1 (‘un Int-Hm] ,,,,,, .., “nu aux.“ n H. mmâ€, “.0 can begin to rival the that it :e uned as if human 118.1: ansa 0f thcgrcut English“province ï¬ltturly incapable. It 1‘“;de and lunrtur,“ gut if New York minutes of midnight. Down in I , its accelerated rate (,f growth the lay the second engine. EngineerMc 90 beforu another mmumtion 1:; over dead and Fimmun Applegate 13 wiped out. London is growing M. jurcd. Oxgmwcro piled “‘9 three 0f abut 1: 613,000 a your, While New cars, one on ton of nnnthnr mm :.. r: . » rnud‘. V , ...... q-uxu unnmczcra m rmmrkcd a conductor on .0218 of )nds last evening. " All sorts of '0 giwn and n.†old fakes ur got u ride. Una-of the m-rvicat slnwn my lm-k to. meet ‘Wll'd a 0M skinrlint that used to ride \vlun I first mum on the lino. imol uttmnptml to collect his ilml knowingly and in an off- wrsaid: ‘01). that‘s all right.‘ , ' ‘L . I ' ‘ ‘ .1... ('H '1‘" l1 ACTOR AN D 71mm“! nrrvstml fur “'H'e’u Door lit-H I'LElquâ€"I’NEL'ION IA IN ho Nut Inspector Report- , Cam In the cm. A Detroit despatch up : 'l'l‘ Detrpi: o! plquro~pncumouizt .un-nâ€"...,, “I? aid: ‘Uh. t 'thv ‘ biz‘ u] l tho. ' way ‘ rhimsvlf but ls mna nl’ geometric-d1 prb- fly to be nmintnilmtto make v York as um-mm‘pled as its YUI‘II I‘flnu'll. ‘11.! she haul uIrWy [mid )1 band n. sum of $5,000 i ing u. little pom-u and quit.- a mason of De ansnudc’e ng of the front door bell pvt of oxtortiug further this) Du Bensaunie rctortm Iquostion had been nnirl umuugu mvcstigatim). He came nulusimz that it was the genuine lg plague, which has wrought such wagons in other localities and is be- mvc been communicated to local Texas cattle on their way East. {c bccn unloaded for food and \Vith llu‘ "mud r anlun i ‘npulut inn. h- . - vvvlflI'wp qu his of Nanny-ï¬ve cattle in the us of tln- contagion have been and sold to the flubucfor 100d. 'ul.‘l -_ J mm “0.000. But in thv ‘71) and IHNU the average mr city pupulmion was that we have already ho annual increment of I‘uly and in an uff- Uh. that‘s all right,’ riz‘ and passed him way ‘ to (iv-nth. Not ~lf hut froquéntly in- ar'compnny him. At ule some inquiries at {his right to ride from M marrying could hour with {nor- queer charm-tars romluctor on One "v ..v yvluvualy the Tombs in New York Thd only new thing luring the course of the ,l.†,, ' ‘ - 0 says : Mr. De Be‘ FY “lifestpd for vic lStCHHy ringing the frofit' Viola]! Cunmrou’s villa. in IA‘_ I. at door bell again if he a pass k0). This was , --. uunuurt UI “RINGS m â€y. the pnpulutiun of South; :11 boundary of '(In'yhis not less than Intiuu of Brooklyn is H), and. taking: into lullitit’h immediately gruphigally unitM to, numbcr of names y. â€no population iuuthn'n boundary .uuxuug xurzncr pay- Bunsnude rctortod that u had been paid him is signing; a statement saw nothing (Innmging u. wife in the purely hich she had main- of Logxsdnle. De Bun- pow regretted having ibovomentionoth By 0 offered to undertake ‘ I ‘ “ ssumiuu rm :1in «1 fraud sand: d.‘ 'In what Misé Cmnorou’s then adjourned in Hm Hm-v for TATIUNS m: as St. John‘s before a magistrate ‘ Court, and much was so copiouslv by _in New York l'Kuble statement crun‘s lawyer to My paid her un- >f €55,000 in the we and quietness, ansnudc’s con- Ills “WEE Repeat- Rlauy Fatal Ringing 1H,. be“ w "rm: “an sum .\ rot.“ h HM To ' lu'nfl" BIC ï¬nally the victory cm #0:; the Be nude \_'io _1tly, _ ._ .. , -.u vaun- "VIII! Ilu'll' linnds. yew-kn .«s n! flu..- .hlm‘i strumming «mt from under ï¬ngvr nails. and hcnping it up in little monndn. while 3!] the while came hum-ending crie- lurm'a m uqurus, Emtlt‘tlnu's HIE" “ bout back the flames when they fluhcd n nlnngsidb some unfortunate wretch. who. pimmi down by a heavy beam. Inï¬kl‘d mt hupi-lussly while it termed as if his dth by ï¬re was mrtain. And while the ï¬ght was thnn going on with tho workers thomrs WPN‘ tilled with moans a! dyin nit-n. thi- multinhmi mtrutios of those %- Ml!" death «mind rortnin unit‘s“ tho [errihlv ‘D'fll' «HIM 1w I xtinmlinlu-d. and â€to 'cfir 0! Mum-4 too bully hurt it; mm- in what ma mar the“ end tn he M‘mmht about 80 only 3 HIM ht‘ lilï¬l'li; no 1hr) din; “flute earth nit their ._ >A» , I O - ‘ ‘ ‘ ....» ....» wnn uumg on. owner or v0 men crept underneath wrecked cats. meat]: the lire and the wooduq in: which held as prisoners '0 many prec ‘ 1i and with piocva of bands, emm‘timcs H r‘h bput back the flames when thev fluhrd n To]: DETROIT. , W V, -...‘ v -uu unuuuu the ï¬ercely burning embers. ï¬iverywhore in the wreck wore wounded and unhurt men, ' women and children. whose. lives would be saved if they could be gotten out. but whose death. and mm: xx A Mus-r uonmnm mm: was certain. if the twisted wand n! Hm _.. - ..v uniï¬sguï¬u , curs, one on Yap of another like “child‘s i card house after he has swept it with his . lmnd. Then came the six deyoouehes. i, They were telescoped as cars never were before. and three of them were pressed into just space enough for one. The second car had mounted off the trucks. crashed through the cur ahead of it, crushing thei woodwork aside like tinder, and hiy there resting on the tops of the. car seats, while every passenger in the front car was L\lNH ltl'3.\l1.\Nlil)\il.\‘H FNI’HRNICA‘I‘H. Out of that car but {our people ¢CMIIO alive. On top of the second car lay the third and its bottom was smeared with the blood of the victims. The other three cars were not so badly crushed, but they were broken and twisted in eVery conceivable shape. and every crushed timber and beam represented a crushed human frame and a broken bone. Instantly the air was tilled With the (cries of the wounded and the uhrieks of those about to die. The. groans of men andth screams of women aided to make an appalling sound, and above all could be heard the agonizing cries of little children. as in some instances they lay pinned alongside their dead‘mrenta. And there was another terrible ( nger yet to be met. The bridge Was still burning. and the wrecked cars were lying mkoml around the liercelv )nrninn mung-“ ~_ .7 qeoh A-z-n 118 .. NW. All“: m.- passed over in safety, the ï¬rst engine keeping the 'ruils. As it \k'irnt m'cr the bridge fell beneath it. and it could only h \‘0 been the terriï¬c speed of the train \vlliCh saved the Jim 3 of the engi- ncvr and his lirmna'n. But the next engine \Vunt down, and instantly ’l‘llli â€LEI! (ti: PLAT†WAN l'UNlI. ‘ (fur crushed into‘ car, coaches piled one on top ol’unothcr. and in the twinkling of am eyc‘ nearly 100 pgople found an instant death and ï¬fty more were 80 hurt that they could not live. ‘ As for the wounded they Were everywhere. Only the sleeping coach :4 escape-«l, and us the startled and half-dressed passengers came tumbling out of them they found such a. scene of death (19 is rarely witnessed, and such work to do that it leaned as if human hands wore 9|!fnvln .'.A<,.A,, I I - _ , ’ Right up before his eyes leaped the bright flames, and the next instant ho was among them. There was no chance to stop. Had there been warning,r it would have taken half a mile to stop that on-rushing mass of wood, iron and human lives, and the traih was within one hundred yards of the red- ; tnngued messengers 01: death before they rhuhmi their fatal signals into the engi- neer‘s face. But he passed over in safety, the ï¬rst engine keeping the mails. As it Went ovor the bridge fell beneath it. and it r'nniii nnlu L... peupiewere killed and {our tinie: tit; ‘11! number were more or less badly injured. “0 The train Wtw composed 01 six sleeping lf- cars. six day couches and chair can and n.. three baggage. it was carrying 960 pus. 10 sengors, all excursionists, and was bound ie for Niagara Falls. The train had been made up all along the line of the Toledo. l’eoriii. A- Warsiiw Road. and the excursion- ists hailed from various points in Central Illinois, the bulk of them, however. coming from 1"»oriu. Some of the passengers came from Canton. l‘llpuso. Washington. and in {not all the stations along the line, some as fur west as Burlington and lieokuk. lowa. A special and cheap rate had been made {or the excursion, and all sorts of people took advantage cfit sum or ’l‘lll: ll.l.-tA’l'l~2l.I 'l'iuxx. ‘ ’ When the train drew out of Peoria at .8 1 o'clock Wednesday evening it was loaded to t its utmost capacity. livery berth in the six ( sleepers was taken, and the day cars car- 3 ried sixty people each. The train was so 8 heavy that two engines were hitched to it. “ an“ when it passed this place it was an n hour and a half behind time. ()liatsworth, n the next station east of here. is six miles it off, and the run there was made in seven .3 minutes, so the terrible momentum ofthosm i) ï¬fteen coaches and two engines shooting bi through ï¬lial-t,- at the rule of n. mile a min- f†ute can be understood. The tmin (lid not _ . L0 stop nt L‘lnitsworth. nml Sllt‘tl by the small m station with lightning speed. Three miles th east of Chat worth is it little slough. and in: here the railroad crosses a dry run about (:0 ten feet deep and lifteen feet wide. ()ver vil this was stretched an ordinary wooden (In trestle bridge. and as the ‘xcursion train mi eume thundering «town on 1 t what was the horror of the engineer on the front engine I when he saw that FOUR HUNDRED BADLY INJURED Over 100 Excursi’oniats Hurled Into Eternity. Tumnw Ann nu; mumâ€: “AS ox mm: 3 w mum and {our times tlmt are more or less badly injured. was composed of six sleeping my couches auul chair can and ugv. It was carrying 960 pas. lexcursionists, and was bound m Falls. The train had been ll along the line of the Toledo. u'nruaw Road, and the excursion- {rom various points in Central : bulk of them. howwer, coming 3. Some of the passengers came m. l'llpnso. Washington, and in stations along the line, some as c Burlington and licokuk. lowa. nl (:lmup rate had been made for m. and all sorts of people took fit. I Ul-' 'l'llll ILL-I'A'l‘l'll: 'l'nuv, dead ‘aronts. And iblc «ï¬nger yet to be L still burning. and lying oxknnd around Burning Bridge. lucked but tivé Down in the ditch ngineerMcClimock , _‘---_ wavuï¬l‘, uuu )SSCS a dry run about an feet wide. Over n ordinary wooden the ‘xcursion train :1 on 1t what was the on the front engine w out of Peoria at 8 wing it was loaded to 'Jvery berth in the six 1d the day cars car- 1. The ‘traiu was so srcxnmuo mars bad] y in 9 “Wm mnmn‘nu hvon wry dry In nahnun '0? I hm: (hm. almost nn rum hm" hilt-n. an?! no the woodwork of the Mt .. I"! like ï¬nds-r. .\ live conl dropped on it new ï¬re it at once: um! th. malt. moi»- ... .1..- I- _._, 1h lwn hr) 11"" ix «mum has t hm: timv. 1 MRI can the “0d. 1h! thn origin bridgn 1m. and taking n pi~to§ nu the trigger. Tho bl llct his Bum. and the t? that little fmnily are sido- m ('lmtsmvflh l Through s “ FUR uon‘s >\KII 'm IH‘IJ‘ Inun or‘r." stripped them of their wutchcaand jewellery and smrched their poc-kets for money.‘ When the dead bodies were laid out in the ‘cornï¬eld those hycnns turned them over in their search for valuables. and that the plundering was done by unorganized gum: was provcxrby the fact that next morning out in the cornï¬eld several purses all empty wore found in one heap. It was It ghastly plundering. and had the plunderers been caught {his afternoon umu-mnnm kn-m ~H- ...... uluu wuu wul r01) [dead men. who will steal from the dying and will plunder the wounded, hvld down by the broken beams of u. wrecked car. whose death by ï¬re soc-mud imminent. can «lo almost anything which in base, and that is what those lionds in human form rlid. They Went inm'thc curs when the ï¬re was burning ï¬ervely underneath, and when the poor wreyclws who Wore pinned there begged them ' , 7,7 ._,..‘. | I I‘ll feeling which nnimntes the human race. But still men ‘ I ' I 1-1..\x.\'::n ( ASH ur 1'1le \nzuvxtXu, that the- bridge “(as set on ï¬re by mi ants, who hoped to proï¬t by the opp4 uity offered ; and the fact that the b1 was so far consumed at the time the 1 canwnioug, and the added fact that train was an hour and a half lute, pointed out as evidence of a careful Hpimcy. It seems hardly possible man could be so lost to all tho m-Ji- I‘l' lb ,, -.....-- u uuuuiy, so 1113!: night did these human hyonas plunder the dead from the terrible accident, and take ‘evun the shoes which covered their feet. Who those wretches are is not known. Whether they were a band of pickpockets who accompanied the train, who were lurk- ingin the vicinity, cannot be said. The horrible suspicion. however, exists, and there are many who give it credénco. that he accident was a dollberately DIJHWLIFJL DEPRH'H'Y. I No sooner had the wreck occurred than n. scene of robbery commenced. Som'e hands of unspeakable miscreants, heartless, and with only nuimul instincts. were on lnunl. and like “nailing who throng o. lnlttlelielal at night at‘ter the conflict and lileh from the (lead the money which they received for their meagre pay. stealing oven the bronze medals, and robbing from the children of heroes the otherwise worthless emblems of their'father’a bravery. So last niuh’ JL] ¢I.,.... I." . nm- mmuy are now I’m“ side by u ('hamwrth waiting to bcidenlh Therv have b.0911 gnuny gucuel a! to _ _l .I ‘- killed m ir assis- came Urs. were [W0 other surgeons and the rants. From. Peoria also Mai-tie. Baker, l-‘leugler and Johnson, and from every city whence the unfortunate exmirsimlists had come their physicians and friends hurried out to help them. From l'eoria had also come delegations of the liedmen and the Ancient Order of United Workman, members of both societies being on the ill-fated train. and so after 8 o'clock in the morning there were plenty of people to do the work that needed such prompt attention. In the town hall was the main hospital, and in it anxious relatives and sorrowing friends sat fanning gently the sufferers’ faces. Down in the deudhouses fathers, husbands, brdtlxers. sisters. wives and children tear- fully inspected eiteh face as it'was un- L'OYUI'L‘il, Illld sighed us the features were unknown, or cried out in anguish when the well~known fnee-sinnetimes fem-fully mangled but yet recognizableâ€"«was un- eowrcd.‘ The entire capacity of the little village was tried, and kind-hearted women (ll‘OVOlll from miles to give their gentle minirirations to the sufferers. H’l.\TE.\lE.\"I‘ us A mssttx‘umt. Dr. Huxen, of Fort Madison, Iowa, says the train was running about thirty miles an hour when the accident occurred. He feltasudden jar. and found himself and wife fastened under the seats. Ila nullml Wynn-u 3mm. . HH l‘ul'. Mm " of the Iir'e whit mum-«I the mrci milling ht“ uM‘ ...t nu, null uusy carpenters were making rough coflins to carry to their homes the dead bodies I theexcnrsionists who twelve hours before mt! left their homes iulio! pleasure, with expectations hf thoenjoy- unent they were going to have during the vacation which had just begun. Au- ion in": SL’FFEIï¬iMH. When the news of the disaster ï¬rst flushed over the wires prompt aid was at once sent. Dr. Steele, chief surgeon of the Toledo. Peoria .\' Warsaw road. had come on it special tmin, and with him were two other surgeons and their assis- tants. From l'eoi'iu. also came Urs. Martin, Baker. 1"ieugier and Johnson. and from every city whence the unfortunate exr-ursionists had come their physicians and friends hllrrind nus 4» J, ‘ , .._w 7" IV. Ill-"o Chums-art}: was turned into 3 morgue to-day. The town hill. the engine-house, the depot, were all full 0! dead bodies.wl‘lilo awry lmuse in the little village lmslta quota oltho wounded. There were over one hundred corpses lying in the extem- pori/ml «loud houses. and every man and woman was turned into anamuteur but walnus nurse. 12‘ch in ,n lumber ym-(l thu noise of hammers and saws rung out on‘ the air, and busy carpenters: were making ‘rough calling to carry to their homes the dbml bodies nf theexcurulouiuts who twelve hours before and left their homes {ullof pleasure, with expectations bf thuenjoy- ment tlu-y WUI‘O going to have during the vacation which had in“ bounn, 1mm; nut of his packet pulled 'ho bullet Went surely through “lathe three dmd bodies of t} ulspt'L‘LL‘U each face as it'was un- l, amd sighed its the features were .vn. or cried out in anguish when ll-known fncu-mnnctimes fem-fully Id but yd recognizable-«was un- l.‘ The entire capacity of thelittle was tried, and kind-hearted women n from miles to give their gentle ‘Rf innu in GI. ..... AT â€A, rn wlm-h' wenkoned the : thv mw'idr-nt. hm hr . hm gun-«soy. Tl: mm! 1‘ I! flunk (run: I '9!“ ’ M a train whirl! puma-(l mum] thu ' Maze. Thel ry dry In "about: for a 21d down by broken wood hon relief came. the man .d and fccblysu‘id. “ Take ‘11! afraid the child is carried out the mother. nme brandy to her lips she felt. A feeble groom r. and the next instnm I felt the forms of his and cried out urnblo scones. In the an. his wife and ï¬ttle on t! not be learned to- l he got on at Peoria. ocwrred - -u... IWII‘J' ulU lmmc of a careful com 5 hardly possible that lost to all the ordinary mtes the breast of the still men who will rob I steal {rpm the «lying H... ._U set on ï¬re by miscre- prolit by t'heppportu- r. 110 says hi: saw J'Zd. l boy out to a lady while get his wife, who was and “am“: at that the; Bridge the gime the train ME TO “Hutu iwm i'eoria this morning and ymg related many incidents of the disaster. 10W“ i “ We didn't hear about it until yesterday 04113 morning," said he, "and the ï¬rst report CM! ’ was that several hundred had beenkilled. that There were 750 (-xcursionists from Peoria (lld- alone, and a special train was at once made was up to go over to the scene of the accident, the about sixty miles distant. When We hero 1 reached the place where the accident oc- curred thc first thing we saw was a pile of maslied‘up coaches us high as a telegraph levy . pole. The top of the second chair car shot my; ' up on top of this. standing like a monu- the l ment. at~ least ï¬fteen feet higher. We - in arrived jubt in time to see Mr. Murphy. 9. the theep from Galesburg. climb out of mg a hole in t 0 top of the ï¬rst chair car, ing which was just in view upon a pile of all broken timbers at the to of the heap. He 3 it pulled out his wife an baby uninjured, era but almost exhausted from having been we penned up for nearly twelve hours. It of was with great difï¬culty the Were assisted to the ground. Mr. Murpiy then went back into the hole and brought out alive a little baby. He had torn it from the arms of a dead mother. After that he helped out an aged woman, whose back had been injured. These ï¬ve, together with two others, were all that Were rescued from the car. When Murphy came down I asked him how it happened k that he was not killed. He replied that .e when the crash came his wife was sitting f†in one seat and himself. and the baby were ’92: in the one just behind and near the front of the car. The baby was knocked off the seat and he stooped to pick her up as they shot into the mass of ruins ahead. Juï¬ at that moment he said a timber penetrated the car. shooting across the lace where he had been sitting and struc ayounulacly who sat bpposite in the neck. He was thus pinned down by the timber. which also protected him from being smashed and savod‘liis life. He looked across the aisle and saw the young lady'- head had fallen over on tho back of her seat and hung only by the skin. The sight of the dead and wounded lying in the ï¬elds was horrible, A fricnd who was with "accounted ninety- seven dead bodies at noon yenerdayaan'd the «tech was not nearly cleared sway. Thcyxvcre lying in nlittle heaps of about a l' dozen. all having been killed in a dilfercnt r. n‘is‘iiner. The entire side of any man‘- it taco would he smashed in, while 5 hole as 9‘ large as your ï¬st in the forehead r5 of another would show when the d: mm had mutated. Throws-[earths of . I t d.“ never knew what killed them 7! was ,8 mm tamer want to Mt upon ‘ again, There Wei-«imam: Imam h. .i....i.. I! “an- .1. 'Vlhlllk‘ .h‘rn. “ilh tlnir whiln skirts saturated With [4|de an! the front of their faces Innshnl beyond rncngnition. One young- Imkinu mmhvrhnd held her hby in her arms. wheï¬ a timber ntflking the child in thi backimmled bmh victims in inn-M «nth. Th Mother's “(‘I did not but I watch. bu§thc expulsion on it will but: no .to “a gun. I much when! the are “'3 S AV l:\'I-:-\\‘I'l.\'lis,~" â€our 1'. C. Church. commercial arrxvcd from Peoria. this mo related mm»! incidents of :11 .u.- .-. , -___.....--. aux UK 'sec. Eighty-four of their blackened and l mangled corpses are scattered in the depot, ‘schools and engine houses, hero and at Piper City, on are being carried on trains in all directions to their homes. 0m- hundred and thirteen cripples are stretched on all available mattmsses, beds, chairs and lloors‘ in this vicinity struggling for a little leasu of life. The streets are ï¬lled with' crowds of anxious spekers for friends and rclgtiona, and with other crowds of bustling people hurrying medicines. slowly bearing rude piuo cofï¬ns to the trains 0r talking earnestly of the horror. ' mummsx 1mm or 1:\'«n.\'i:a‘;n n'cmxrorn .Y . . l. was underneath. 1' tom all Sides came a cries for aid. so we went to work. and we n worked hard, too. If the wreck overcuught o. lire 300 people would have been burned to death. The only thing we could do was to smother theliro with dirt. Fl. was hard ! and glow work, and took us four hours, but i we did it, and when the ï¬re was out and t , other help came. we got the dead and l wounded out during the morning and carried them to (Ylmtsworthfl‘ There was an incident in the affair which was not only remarkable in its way. but shows how terribly those six coaches were jammed and mashed together. When the uccidmt occurred. Andy Mooney, of Peoria, and Conductor Stillwoll. who wan incharge of thotmin. wore three cars {min each otln-r. Mooney was in the second mr and Stillwull in the tilth. The next instant 1 thvy found lllclllSt’lVL‘S literally in each ofln-r's arms, the our in which the (:nu- doctor was riding having been ran-id! < over the two in front and drmmml rm mm ‘F"" ‘ w an" at twl he thei:f E mono of :1 men 0 many to there a: in the m roused, no Fore-t br: 1) co: The most honihlo death of all “ of .I‘lugenc McUlintock, engineer second engine. I , - _.. “V.†will] uluppuu (m L of the one in which Mooney sat. TIN. strange part of it was that neither: mm was hurt. as your ï¬st in the {arehmd [other would Ihow where the had [men-ml. Three-fourths of .II newr kmw whfl killed mom h sight l‘mewr want to lbok upon Thu-o erv young India in picnic with thrir _wm_ln skins sum-Mod . ,uufln- ".uu nut; UlflV'el' lers were well-to-do people. 0 “ lT WAS SIMPLY HURRUHJ-i,†said Mr. 15. A. VanZundt, of Peoria, to a reporter. " No words of mine can de- scribe the awfulness of the scene. I was in the rear sleeper and was in no danger. as no one in the six sleepers muss more than shaken up, but even there we got shad shake. I felt three distinct bumps and then rushed out of the car and run forward to the wreck. The scene was horrible. The only light was the flames of the burn- ing bridge, and above the day >coaches Were piled on top of one another in a hete- rogeneous mass. The engines were. buried in the ditch, and the __ vuâ€"wâ€" w-ICflOWO '9! This in on tutu! one to oonteuploto..but lt 9" bu it: when“; They point to thetoet thnt there were a lot of thieves ohout end to the addition“ {not thot they seemed to be miution working to- “) “ether. and the: inbolichl Multan... ti: width which they wont 11.12%“ their work in iceted deviliuhueu w would stop at d: nothing. The new; of the dieï¬eter wu " brought to muteworth by One of the pn- ‘ W eengeu shout midnight. AI int n the n corpses were taken from the wreck they '0 were laid out on the side of the truck. fl Belore daylight the work of recovering the dead and moving them to (ï¬hotswortli had beuun. The residents at the town threw open their lumen {or the rcce Man of the dead and wounded. but the ormer Were taken to improvised xnorguci. The scum IN THE mrrnt: where bodies ht majority of the ENT “Aw-i yware heartrending. The bodice Were mangled in a most {rightful manner, many of them hav- ing their faces entirely torn away, leaving their brains exposed, while tluir jaws, lingers and liuibehiul been turnoff. About5 o'clock one of the Chicago Thur» stutl‘vibitml the Smell“. The ï¬lm ping enr'l'uuiii “heat the end of the tmin. it was jacked in the air, supported by trestle-s. The front end of the car was directly over the place where the u bridge stood. To the right hty tt couch vs broken into kindlingI wood, and (lirtetlv \ on the mm! was piled up what was left of 1) six or HL‘Vt'H (-nnt-lmu .........n - .. 1 l l l u '1 h n tl ,,_ _.-- v. uuv war was directly over the place where the bridge stood. To the right lay a coach broken into kindling wood. and directly ‘on the road was piled up what was left 0! hi): or seven coaches turned bottom up and broken beyond recognition). Beyond wvro two tendei‘s and one engine. They ware turned bottom side up. and were scarcely recognizable. Along the hedges there were valises, shoes. boots, llama“ manner 0! articles of wearing apparel. broken lanterns and seats from cars. It wus an awful sight. flats of men nml ......... .u unpronled morgucl. The V scukizs IN nu: DIFFERENT mum whgro bodies II were Marti-ending. Tho mljority of the {ladies Were mangled in a. moat (rightful manner. many of them hav- ing their faces entirely torn away, leaving their brains exposed, while tluir jaws. fingers and iimbuhui been turn off. ‘About5 o‘clock one of the Chicago Timmc stat!†visited the sumo. The aim ping car'l‘unis wusat the end of the train. It was inn-Inna ;.. u... 1y remarkable in its way. but terribly those six coaches were :1 mashed together. When the :ux‘red, Andy Mooney, of Peoria, m... uullm. ll I‘ll Oil or TIA]! WIECIM. commercial traveller m): of {All was that 5km from the wreck they m the side of the truck. the work of recovering the g them to ()lutnwoflh 11nd Iidentl ot the town threw as for the recem'on of the [eds but the £ormer Were ’hicago Timm stuff visited ping car Tunis was“ the It wpu jukcd in the air. es. The l‘rom end of the “ammo. flamed [tom the on no ntemplno. but it “[0“?! "“39 my I“ “0‘ point to the (.0. l cor}. wu surronn d b3 1“?“ .Mu‘and ‘0 “Inn!“ '0' “WI ! “I [my seemed to be A mum's .uuucuo iuIu “Working ‘0' Mr. Arch. (ï¬rm-wall .m' I “-0 -h....-__ of the me â€noon and '. Ind rem y in her flnjost dispond .u... ur. 1 ms. an m m-ionn lady, is physician to tan Queen of Zora. Shah" aparmwnh in the royfl pulses at Seoul. and recoives I you]; nl y whkh is equal to 0133.000. She in oblged to visit Athc QM“ daily. ï¬nd remiinu'in an" than I‘MHOVQS the m at pain! duya. This a u re" spots, dm-sn‘t go {oblin ’0’“, but guts to bualnm a cure. [Jon' the impo: tun-1 and "Imitationâ€? and no other. The Moon»: Influence - l'pnn thn wonthnr is acneptvd b some real. h} other!" is disputed. ' ‘ho m. mm r nth-nuts « arm hum the lmulvr. ach' spot: , l‘ptnnm's l‘ninl_es_s Corn Extm“ -- any poker going on asked Reed. .. Good uncioun. no 2;: cxclm’mefl the pious landlad . hqrriflod. ‘ H We I," returned Reed. " if that‘s the one I army; it wouldn't pay me to bond herc."â€"~ Tilv’ [2’14†II. Not "Ir Place for Him. " You' 1 ï¬nd this a Very quiet I said Miss. l'oundulonk. “ Most of the era are gingle ludhs und members of ing circle.†" Any poker going on asked Rec “ Good uncioun. no 3;: cxclm’mefl flu landjqu.‘hqrriflod. ‘ hwy. hnd romoiedqtvl'wwd' obscured her bonny. Sold An ugly complexion made Nellie a fright. ier face my: all pimply 3nd rod. “ouch her future: Wem “nod, and her blue «yrs wore bright, ‘ “ What a plain girl is Nellie .'" they acid. lint now. an by magic, plnin Nellie has grown An hir as an Iu‘USt'I hright dream ; lier face in as steel as n ilowur nowhlown, Her checks are liko pouches uml cream. As Nl'llk‘ walks out in the fair morning light, lier bounty nt'mctu every syn. And M for the People who called her a (right, " Why. Ne! is is landmine." they cry. And the reason of the chnngo is that Nellie took Dr. I’ierce's Golden Modicnl‘ Discover-K, which regulated her liver. cleared er complexion. m‘adchher blood pure. hcr_breath prct. her face fair nmi Mrsfl Dr. 1min. an . v' n;- “ Dun,“ snide contractor to one of his trusted employees. “ when you are. down seeing about. that line this morning, I wish you would mention to Dempsey that 1 would like to have that little bill paid. You needn'ï¬'prcas it. you know, but just men- tion it to him in nu off-hand manner." " Yea, aorr." °' I got the money from Dcmpwy, son,†said Dan on his return. “ I'm very glad ; you merely alluded to it in an off-hand way I suppose." " Yes. sort. I handed him the bill and towld h'm if he didn't pay it. 1 Would let off and and give him u. wipe in the jaw that he _wouldn't forgot for a while. . V... .y vul bulb unu pepper mulbuttor and then eat. My word fox'it, ifthc corn is not too old. you will relish the corn as you mover did before. The lmaku remain on the ’col). And you can then svo wlmt so†of indigestiblo stuff has ('Hunped your stomach." _-.... vul u. The haul of one of the biggest restaur- ants in Chicagocame very near lowing a customer the other day by asking him if he knew how to out corn in the ear. The cus- tomer, Yankee-Like, spunkcd up with this query : “ Do you take mo {or a hog 1’" After a reconciliation the restaurant mun talked as follows : H No one man in ï¬fty knows how to eat corn in the our so as to get at the good of it. In the ï¬rst place, I admit that no man or woman looks very pretty with mi ear of corn in hi5 or her mouth. The faict is there is no artistic way to out it. Take your car of corn and lay it across your plate. or leave it on the side dish. Hold it with your fork in your left hand. Take your knife and run it over the row br‘ kernels, cutting them or lancim,r them. Take tho. next row, and so on until you cut all the rowa. Put on \'nnr uh um: ma itho In st painful (90ml 1 This 51 st re" clymkes man‘t go Iohlinfnronnd 4 tux-ts tn buuhws M 07160.1“! â€013' bu impoud hprm I): Ind "invitationsâ€, {Set “ P0 nun-r. In In“, -..\-n‘_,, ._ ,,., “.‘uuyu m mu morning in whibh they had met their death. In the empty storeroom were Counted twenty-seven corpses at one time. Their clothing was torn and dishevellcd and their stiffened hands and arms, in the ma- jority of instances, were cwssud over their breasts. The heads of the do , woman who was lying on the floor of the depot had been so beaten . in by the cruel car timbers that recogni- tion was out of the question, and her pulpy mass. in which dabbled he hair. She was not identiï¬ed. A man with a heavy dark moustache, and who was ap- pnrpntly35' years of 11in MA LN.- - __..â€". ‘ unrupes of men, women a: in the clothing in whiéh death. In the cmpt) counted twenty-seven co Their clothing was torn: their Stin‘cnl‘d llnhl'n nn': Restivc of n. slnu‘ 0n the floor in _ -_-â€".. an ings. Lamï¬s Wore placed their lights carefully shad was strqngly suggestive of Dulfcrere were cured stages of blllft‘l‘lll the inllui-ncv of other their faces. unbtly whi clenched. showed the the fact. Blood was floors. walls, clothing wounded, as well as th for them. As tln- day afternoon Shadows lo evening the Scenes changed wounded hurl bu.- nnd most of them re overcome by mental and ph 'l‘ol‘nund blot-«ling human blankets on which they lnul boo from the wreck. Many patio were undergoing while par ndressul and baudw'cd, D‘lfl‘lfl'l'rl’L SCENE. 0F M't‘t‘h‘lllh’ï¬. A Ifmlel from Forest to the Times aye : “ AI. net on the wounded were brought into Chutiworth from the wreck directly to the town hall. which had been turned into a. temporary hospital. Reds and cote Wet-o brought in tr houacu with necessary bedding. they Were taken om neighboring and the {or by ‘loving hands. 1 beings in all g lay around the rooms, moaning and crying With doctors and nurses were bl! wounds. Bloody clothing agony. while nling up their . torn and covered ‘ Home in heaps, or mattresses and n brought nts \vvru under or chloroform, while to. and tooth ti htly suï¬'oring whicl they tiully obvious of everywhereâ€"on the and hands of the use who were caring were away and tho ngthened into the somewhat. The PI eted quietly enough, ysicul suffer- ings. Lumps were placed aroundthe halls. their “1|th naval-AL. -L I ‘ (lroawell M1101. the centre 0! the It wu taken to cared for: .mmmn : lutn ht. It would nukesnyn Ii . The e t n Peoria wu sun-mm by 5.000 poop 9, all wnitinu for no“! the may " A aunt's )mucl‘wrs use-5.11:. Mr. Arch. meefl nnd wife. of Dead; were on their w. to visit their parents in ‘ Ksnluku with t ei: nix weeku' old baby. Mrs. Croawcll occupied a mat in the from end of the our. next to the door. Mr. Crou- well, being uch to get a seat with his wife. took another position a. few yards back. \Vhen the coucuwisu came the from and 0‘ the car “'55 ('runhml in ....n M.“ In an (HY-hand “‘ny. u'mcu BVOYY DVD. neople who called her a (right, is is landmine." they cry. mum" of the chnngo is that Dr. I’ierce's Golden Medic-l hich_ mutilated her liver. nrns tom thctemh-r. aching 1's Painless Corn Extractor ks: painful corn! in thrm at m «15' makes no sure > {oblinruronnd a man's busIm-a M onceynud effects bu imputed upon by “absti- Lntinm. I, {m " Pntmm'a" She in 0in god to um and remhinnn all when (l of one of the biggest restaur- dcugocmne very near losing a. he other day by asking him if he to out corn in the ear. The cus- 1kel:-Uke, spunked up with this Do )011 take mu for a hog?" anciliation the restaurant mun allows: " 1‘50 one man in ï¬fty on ..-4. --w Iqu' m lint Cur-n. Vv‘..-â€".-- 11"“- Were brought in' from neighboring ‘ilh ncccsaury beddmg. and the were cared for ‘by 'loviug hands. bleeding human beings in a“ LII“AAII;I }\ m _" M'oszfnt thé 1563-71 ting them or lancing xt row, and so on until . Put on your salt and unluted her liver. m. m'udchher blood her face {air and m defects that hld Sold by druggiltl. wr ' l .. “y 711m: hp.- c ' "J ' nurses Were binding up m] y clothing. torn and c1 Ly around on the floors in} ushions or lnuttrvsmnn ,_, -vyAIUUI/ll| 11 different directions women and children. (it "nu-concussion came the from car wan crushed in. and Mrs. «I. The baby was found in he cu with but uligm injuries. to a lam; house near by and n the bill and t. I. Would let u wipe in the ’t {or a while. no so we 1 1mm says : ldcd were brought into wreck they Were taken all. which had been torn and covered 10 floors in heaps, umttrusses and (i been brought --' nth". an†nIl:r'I v.2». .AH'II "D,“ M ‘qu ï¬rancn once 37 1031381.. fo'ronto. ,_ . .. â€a..." "I'M and llwv Lam-l rm 1»!- lln I h!“- nu'fr P v Ivhuu- 4 I!" *N‘KNK‘S. l‘ 0 11-7.‘ In. Io run In. 'nnl run â€on minim «0‘ no. rush g Mn «M 3 PM Muh- 3?} n 7 up A n and ran "Mm I: n. ms were , dressed THE MW? mgr l‘nvvn.“ ... Why] in v I Branch 0:553. 37 3813;; St. won-to "'40. that In; "W I Hi "Ann Univ". um an.N [haw "Hill"? lg" hr Liver, B'i'é‘dd', ‘and Lungs. For \ank Lungs. Snitrimr nr mm“: m..__. We want Fur us. (‘nsh {nrnikl Addn as C. 8‘ PMâ€) .,.. . I ‘1' "II†II III "I nor)“. of Hrvulh, (‘ hrmm: NIIHIII HI! (-h “Inna. N- \IrI- (‘mmlm III III! I'I'?;1)'IIR. ‘it. In on driving; romwl} ~01 mu: vist (It or {UT $150M. L Q. 00‘ {if blond Ivn m nIs III stmnmfnr. bouk kon Consumption. Addrcm Mere/mg; Bu tellers] 1: arm in: (mm: in stumps fur Dr. Picrcu'a on]: on L‘nnsunu‘tmn. Address. World's Dispensary Mics! Association. nnn _A- -~ whit-h is , v 7 _' w-lâ€" hl ' 'hnrnnnhl; t-lvunsv 1 M “rim; Dr. PL .‘uldg-n ulvdic-ul Discovery, and «lmvnrmn. n fairï¬kin, huuynnt :pir' x strength and buddy lu-ulth will In; 1 .inn “ FOR THE ‘ ,__.,_ -uâ€"unwnccy from u (mmmnn Mari-h. 01‘ En: mun. in tho Wurst Erratum. :‘nlt-rhoum. “i’cw bum-s," Fouly nr Rnuuh Skin. In shun. u“ (“bl’HSl‘F cnusml by bud Nuod nrc mnquvn-d by this powerful. purifying. and imigummm mod!- Cmv. «...-u: Eating Ulcerq rapidly L ~l undc-r ms benign innumm. m ... . Drrl'ii'é‘uzl'é“! cover)- ..., ~ u. nuau u'nummmn. Dr. Ph‘rcv‘v (Auldcu Medical Diu- oovq-ry m1; p.ï¬â€˜.‘t~l'l'tu upon thv Liver. and thruuuh that pr. :21 Hunt-purifying nmun, ('lvnnsvs lhu- mm m ut‘ :u“ hlnuddnints and Im- puritim. {mm \vlunmvr wuuuc arising. It is equally Hva-imm in noting upon the Kid- nvys. and mlm' vm-rvtnry urmum. (-lvnnsiu . strvxmthvnhm, and lu-uling :hvir disoasvs. 15! an uppt‘tizm". rt'mturulirv tnnm. it m‘mno'a’ dim-Mum auh Imlritiun. lht-n-hy hmhung up nth Ilvsh mnl sm-nmh. In mnhlrinl districts. ns wunvlvu'l’ul mmlirinn hn mlinml great (-vlv-hrim' m vuring I’vvm‘ and . ysuv. Chills and Frat-r. lmmh.-\ul.:t":tlr_lt1kindnwl dismr. .g_ p. Diannao, , -._,..,.‘ mm mrpm mvor. associated with Dyspvpsm. or Intligostion.‘ The more mnwliuutul your (“501150 has become. the greater the numlwr mnl diwrsity of symp- lums. No Innttvl' whut Mum“ it. has reached. Dr. Plcrco’u Golden Medic-u] Discovery will subdue if. if talknn m'mrdinn‘ to direc- tium {or :1 reasonable lvnuth 0f time. If not warm]. ('nmplivntions multiply and Cunsumn~ hun ohm- Lungs, Skin Ulm'usvs, â€curt Dim-use. Hu-ummimn. ls’itlnr-y Uim-usv. or otht-r gram mnlndio-s nrn quite hnhln tum-t, in mm ammuâ€" 1\u I... ' ‘ ‘Gmg$_ï¬i§i:|e Hume‘s AND TRADERS m: no you fool (11131.,I,:7:;"I:id Ivan. and indvm-rihfldy Inir't (‘HILV uml nu-nlnlly: (-xpm fullur‘ss or hlnmimx utter «a UPI-N.†or vmplinvss of stun hm. :nmmv ('ulm'd. hitter mouth im-uulur uppt-Utc. ( pvz‘lduvllgs. m’urwd t-yt-suzht- 063 Main St. BUFFALO; "\lulull s an, mun. some one has bu.†foolin’ yo." “Na. 1m! its true. The). tolled me sh 0,. one Jessie (Inllimm †"I I «and 'l W!) AMI. 'I flirty "rig-O mil r v 'V""D UH.“ yuuucul situation. Quoth one» “ Woe]. Angusmml what do you think of this Maï¬a Chambcï¬ain that’s to be here the mo 2’†To w ch the other replied- “ Wee], Donald. ho mauu be a. very bad man. travelling about wi‘ a woman wi‘ a dlï¬'vrent name 2" “ W1“ a wmnnn! Eh, mun. soune mm. lqu 1. ...... our! - -- , l‘iercc'a l‘lonsant Purgativu ï¬es: Powerful Potency. Puss Promnte Physical Prosperity. ,W Dix-lug the. new: visit of MI lain nml MiaJosso (lollinga tn two Skyc- (traitors were dis‘ political situation. Quoth o Anuusmml what do you tln' Maistcr Clmmbcflain that’s to mo '2ԠTo w cli the othe “ W'ccl, Donald, ho umuu bu CALFSKINS unnuluull mun when the Fr uhmulumll the purblo duriu o.’ 1680 tin-y buried tho be trrasurv, and up to this 1 concealed from the c huutur and the fll‘chll'o anciscgn friars g the revolution Ila sud the church ime they continue ye of the treasure- logical ï¬end. ’ -..v "qu u: u rumed Mexican church at (irnnd Quiewm, N .M., are three feet thicker at the top than at the base. It in mutter of truditiun that when the Franciscgn friars almhdmu‘d tho lmrblu (1mm... .1... “ML-A“ '1110 walls o! a mined Ml (irand AQuiu cm. N. M†are t] cure her. ~ _~ w - wu'. Good healthmood nor-1o. 000d Inna- In good temper are the {our essential. for: good witc. The-e no the indloponuhloa After thoulqome the minor advantagea a good looka. accom iliahmouta, tamil poai “ammo. With t ohm four married lill will be comfortable and hoppy. Lacking either it will be in men or let: deuroea failure. l'pon good health depends largely ‘ good temper and good looks, and to some extent good some also. as the best mind must bu aï¬cCtL-(i more or less b the‘vook- noises and whims attqidam on rail health. Young man, if your wile is falling into a state 0! im'iilidiam. ï¬rst of all things try to reatorc lier build). 1! she in troubled with debilitating female woaknesaeu, buy Dr. l’irruo’a Favorite Prescription. l! will Climber. I that numu us I‘ whivh, from r («)nh', «u'S‘trc-m iv:m:-in;r. anti-h Luann-111w. fa u “N 0" my "Palm? '~ " M" 1m: nv D MAN in yux rmklmd on Am \G"). Hyde l'n D c N [4.31 87 ii BLOQD IS THE LIFE.†u fatal 1‘ 9 “(flat -|‘wvl~l‘nlly _. . .u ‘41-†v strg-ngthvnmkfl ultr‘mth'c, m‘m-lulinus, [u-«xtnml. mu] $.13; nm-qunh-«l. nut unlv 'om:_unmt.iun. but Im- a" s u! the u. - M'rm‘ uumght m‘riunsl ' (,‘oxsrmmnx (‘I‘IUC." but me as hm n-striI-tivc for from m: m‘mdurful com- ‘ bdrm“... .. » . a u mu U Spitting thrmq. Rhnrt‘ O .x lll"1:rl'nrl ten wutn In '- rh'qhst. \uilll (-uhzrml man m- I)": sumo amount ummJnus AIL-(tiuns. ,, â€"â€"vâ€"-.-" 5" untenable Ind huppy. lacking will be in men or let: degree a 1' pon good health depends lsrgely per and good looks, sad to some Jd sense 1130. as m. beflhmind â€HRH-ll nun-n .. I u .. H'nï¬ ounlllrnu . In In a†1;" V n! in“. flllfllnï¬ m: In my mum. In 1â€?" "Ml. â€mun nun. the-why hmhung up 2th. In mnluriul districts. «limm‘ 1m mlinml great “Wt-1‘ mu] . rm». (fhills and um] kindrml diwm- '8. olden Medlcu; m.- mmgooa aortic. good Ion. had her no the {our sawmill: lo: I These are the indiupouublu. home the minor Adv-angel of accow rliuhmeml. {unity poni- ‘th t no ï¬rst four 111““ng lilo furtn MIA - -- J SNERALLY, ;' 16mm m pick up nuns “(“312th on i{_your w: 9 is {a «uractury guaranty ark. Vermont. U. H . V. a In uvu. Illu- My mi-‘vruhlv. 5mm physi- ; (-xpcricnco n 5011.90 of :IHL‘I‘ ruling. or nf “mone- ol‘ stomach in the mom- . liillL‘l‘nnl"_ bud. gnstu in mum I... I' FUN"! '9'. "' "Huh-II 1% m... "4 M mm -" hmâ€. Haunt-‘1'". hmâ€, 'ng'nur‘ m visit of Mr. (‘hamber- 3 (Tollings to Scotland, rs were ‘ discussing? the . n.._Ar )r mmpor. hot flushes. sonsmlu . sharf) new and t are cod mmls, wukcfulnésa. or “J u n... -l A- upon thv Liu'r. and uA-pnrifying nrmm, hlm)d-tmms and Im- --uuw.~ arising. 1; in 1-. ..... â€" uuuy and Cunsumn- Rt-usvs. "curt Dismso. «1:30. or otht-r gmvo in wt. in and, sooner 'rminmion. u 1'19}!!an Dis- to I01.“ I I!“ ‘amrrh‘. Iii-6h- ‘mul kindred ur 3011' V0 Pellets Six Home: h ny-spn 1306‘ "to |‘- Pic-room S.-“ nrrvstvd ., n in the u its mmâ€" xl dist-unt- um I! rom- . \‘ilnl ‘liu‘hcd. 13' this Hindi- undo!- manh zr-mn. Strut? elletl Poa. Eainlessly,