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*}7l -s nri> #7^ t\ [ A n«tner Man'? Wife fco J un drel v elled youn g Jaco b Green, fe^^^o d B r o W „ r e. I^ffmiid and meek; , tf&U've not denied. fe» 8 e ste looked ao hand- B9 very picture o f beauty and r Whafc i s the secret o f it?\ Replied Green, \since you ask if Ql you: sbo vises Dr. Pierce a I? Prescription . I except your I (Joo d night.\ \Favorite Pre- tV» is the only remedy for the del- ILjeemeflts and weaknesses o f ''so d by (Irugists , under a posi- > of giving satisfaction iu E 8 e or money paid for it returned. billwusnesB: sick headache, indi- coistipation , take Dr. Pierce's lyouig reporter on a certain con- \n veut to a residence a fe w eve- go, to report a party, where the recently been blessed with a £by. Accompanied by hi s best Imet the hostess at the door and fe umnl groetings asked the baby's The lady , who i s quite deaf,and Ig vdth th e grip, thought h e was llhffit her cold , and told him that gulie usually bad one every season, Ktle W'»i'pt one she^kael ever had ; Hie' awake nights a good dea l at fed sometimes she was real sick. |g he scribe was getting pale and die paid she could tell by his jiti! he wr going to have one just |s and aske d him to come i n and |n, The paper came out o n time, , local edito r will never enquire She health of babies again. How It 'Was. L battle of Gettysburg I was shot |hthe left le g and was sent to the The •.. ay surgeons relieved iprououueed ray case incurable, Ikarge d is-uees of bone, and fo r (jbavesuff \'3d with a running sore. \ ev-. rylhing which my limited (would allow, and experienced no Intil I tried Sulphur Bitters, I ralmo-twoll and shall continue -Old Soldier. 17 111 a t Russell's Mammoth One •Store, Stockholm Depot, and no- jie fine embroideries, torchion, 1 lacea, &o. t f IS HIRES' IMPROVED 251 | [ROOT <BEER![ lllUUD. II0BO1USC0RSTRWNINS EASILVMADE|| 1 THIS PACKAGE MAKES MVE GALLONS. i'most APPSIIZTNa and -WHOLESOME •TEMP-RR* NOR DRINK to th e world, •clous and SparkUng. TK * iJ -- list your Druggist o r Grocer for it. IE. HIRES. PHILADELPHIA DICKINSON OENTEE. i-wi Ul ^^T Weconfe8a we have' been n ^L*&M£ B '« the past o D u . weens, out wil l try this WBPV tr. w tu readers of thaeve? weLrnf N ws know that we ar e still alive, £MW The stone work of our new bridee i « completed and we are waiting fo r the bridge, which is expected every day. WHS »£f rah0U at the *»K we think, was about an even thing-11 dancini halls; one more would have made an even thing in that respect A few familiar friends o f Mr. and Mrs W. Manchester called at their door last ed them that they had been married 5 years 0 f course they let us in; congrat- ulations were exchanged; a bountiful re- ftkpn »^ rmahed bv toe ladies and par- rl L°' h l 6Very one - The evening passed rapidly and ere we were aware we were bidding the happy ooup i e goo ^ night and a happy future. Sabin Oota has the sympathy of the entire community; its a pair of bouncing boy twins. r OFF. His Ignoance Cost Me $150.00. I was sick abed for three months The doctor said I had Prolapsus Uteri, which was untrue. He didn't try to cure rae but wanted to mak» a $1.50 every day My unele is a drug-mt, and he told me to turn the doctor off and try Sulphur « Ji ers '• I dld so ana flve dollars worth ot Sulphur Bitters cured me of general weakness and debility Mis. 8 New Haven. ' ' 17 ' County Board ot Trade. CANTON, July 5 , 1890 . Our telegram quotes fancy cheese, col- ored, 83cents; white Sl@8\ cents, with market easy. Cable 43s. 6d. Keeeipts 75,000 boxes ; exports 53,000 Creamery butter 17c. We'sh tubs 14c, market stoady. Receipts 6,000 tubs; exports 5 ; 000. Ofaeese has declined during the week Jo. in New York and one shilling by cable, and there was a very strong \don't care\ feeling here among the buyers. Butter holds it s own. One year ago cheese sold o n this board a t 8*0. , aud butter at 19c. The butter today was sold at auction and accepted o n the board fo r the first time' this year. The cheese sell- ing had a strange freak. All regular or- ders to the buyers were 8 cents. One buyer had an order fo r five factories to pay the highest price paid on the board, aud one had an unlimited order for three factories. The buyer that had the first choiee at 8c, called these 3 factories and was refused. Then the buyer with the special order raised i t a sixteenth. A little feeling sprung up and the price was pushed to 8^c . fo r 7 factories. This will explain why some good factories were lef t at 8c . 54 factories have registered 5,516 boxes of cheese, and 11 creameries 772 tubs of butter. There are 1,20 0 more boxes of heese registered than at this date las t year. There were 977 boxes of cheeso sold at 8{e, 30 0 coutract cheese at 8}c, and 30 0 a t 8 1-1 fie- The rent were sol d at eight cents. 145 tubs of butter were sold atl7c. M. R. WAIT, Sec —The largest liae of carpets, rugs, curtains, wall paper, trunks and valises ever shown in town, at the Mammoth One-Price Store, Stockholm Depot, tf ZZIN Gr I — AT THE — IP IE O PliB'S And shall close some Line of Goods this week at (laug;-liter Prices! (few pieces of those -5 and 7c. Challies; a few pieces of those fee Cashmere, a few pieces of those Diagonal VVorsted IxooUs p will be closed at the cat prices of 12 and 18c A tew ot h Large Damask, 50c. Towels left to be closed at 29c A ITONF. BARGAIN-. 5 doz. Ladies' Colored Taffeta Gloves tfc 50c, will be closed at 25c. A lot of Ladies Colored Jersey |es worth 30c. for 15c. • .||1— Vaa/ XnJ ft of Men's Brogaiis will be closed at 50c., former P noes! 1 to p. About 100pair Gents', Ladies', Boys' Youth s, Mis Pes', and Children's Wigwam Slippers, will be sold at one [ half prices They are easy, comfortable and good wearers and — Rich — Bargain v io XDOZ. oEJisr'U*i^ :r:E3 la QM torn Ear I\ 25c. A Pair, AND- 85c. A pair. for bargains too numerous to mention. *+ <*' k * KOiR The American riflemen in Germany have won several prizes. Strangler Eyraud has arrived in Paris, where his trial will soon begin. The Western Union telegraphio opera- tors at New Orleans have gone out on a strike. Mrs. Prances Hodgson Burnett has ar- rived safel y in London with her son Lionel. Ten thousand miners and furnace workers are likely to strike this week in Alabama. Hon. W. W. Dickinson, successor to ex-Speaker Carlisle, has token his seat in the House. English and French war ships are watching each other off the coast of Newfoundland. The body o f a man found below Ni- agara Pall s on Sunday has been iden- tified a s Charles E. Obud, of Buffalo. Superintendent Porter has ordered a retaking of the census of Minneapolis, Id inn., o n account o f charges o f unfair- ness. The decisio n o f the court o f appeals of New York dlssolvh 5 tho sugar trust has failed t o affec t the values of sugar stocks on Wall street John C. Wheeler, of Brunswick, Me.- died from hydiv.ph ,bia las t week. Two other men were bitam b y the dame dog, and will b e sent t o New York. The census returns show that the pop- ulation of Newark, N. J., is 181,230. This place s Newark as the first oit y in the State and seventeenth in the coun- try. The cit y o f Ulm, Wurtemberg, i s this week celebrating the completion of its great cathedral. The tower i s 537 fee* high, making it the • tallest spire in the world. J. B . Johnson, the champion long dis- tance, swimmer of England, has arrived i n New York, and Quinn, champion o f Now Jersey, has challenged Mm to a ma ich. The Dutch steamer Prins Frederick ha., been sunk by collision with the, Kng- li.-Ji steamer ilaipussa i n the English Uiumiel with 1,000,000 guilders on buurd. Tl>o second sculling between O'Conor ;,n,; Siausbury, at Sjdney, N. S . Vv'., re- s.iiUid in a victory for Stausbury, who became the single scull champion o f the \\ orld. The hot weather throughout the West during the early part of the week was almost unprecedented. Many deaths from sunstroke, occured in all the large cities. The census shows a large increase o f white population i n Danville, \Va. and a slight deuiv-ase of I he colored contingent. The roceuL exodus fever took a good many colored people away. Dr. Gibior , o f the New York Pasteur Hospital, has now nearly 6 0 patient: ; suf- ferin g from d >,;• bites. He refused to re- ceiv e two patieats las t week i n whom symptoms o f hydrophobia had already developed because hi s treatment i s wholly pivvcntive. Th e conliilcnce of the Carlists i n Spain has bee n stimulated by tho knowledge that Prince Alphonse i s suffering from hydrocephalus, and that it i s the opinion of the doctors that he will not otdy die befor e reaching manhood, but that he wil l livo only a short time. Politic s are lively in Pennsylvania this yenr. The nomination o f George Wal- lace Delainater for Governor i u opposi- tion to a faction of the Republican party has created wide in'-erest , and the meet- ing of the Democratic convention this Week promises further interesting devel- opments o f \of f year\ politics. Arrangements have just been con- cluded for a mammoth reunion at Khox*- ville, Tenn., during four days of tho first in October o f the soldiers and officers, Federal and Confederate, who fought ei.her i n tho battle of Fort Saunders An- other engagements near there. Responses already received indicate that not lef s than 50,000 soldiers wil l attend. No fua'ther news has fJell^recerved confirmatory of the reported revolution i,i Mexico. The reports grew out of tho operations o f bandits in Northern Mexico. The bandits attacked a train near Monterey, loaded with gold and silve r bullion for the United States. In the fight that ensued four taudits ve-re lulled and their loader captured a:.-I shot . Semi-officia l oonsus returns give the following population o f our principal cities: Brooklyn,' 930,870 ; Baltimore, GOO 000; Boston, 417,720 ; Buffalo, S$5O,00O) Cincinnati, 800,000 ; Chicago, 1,085,000; Cleveland, 248,000; Columbus, 114,000; Detroit, 187,000 ; Grand Rapids, 95,000; Indianapolis, 125,000 ; Louisville, 180,000; Milwaukoe/200;000; Minneapolis, 185,000; New York, 1,620,737-, New Orleans, 840,000; Philadelphia, 1,040,450; Pitts- burg, 350,000; St. Louis, 440,000 ; St Panl, 138,000; \Washington 230,000, GKENEBAt MARKETS. NEW YORK, July WHEAT.—Market dull and values doubtful. No. 2jred„92£e . i n store; July, 02+ c.; August, 9Hc.; September, 914c . CORN— Trade light, but prices rather firmer. No. 3, at 417-8 a 424c.; July 41$c.; August, 42c.; September, 42J«. , i-tts—Prioet) well sustained and trade fair' No- 2 white, S&io; No, 2 mixed, 84c.; July, 3 3 7-8o.; August, 33c( September, it YE—Western, 50o.j State and Penn- sylvania, 57 a-BSc. HAY AND STRAW—Fanoy toaotby, per 10 0 lbs, , 79 a 80c; No. 1 prime, 65 n 70a; shipping, 80 a 35c; No. 1 rye, 85 a 90c; Ho. 2 rye, 6 0 a 10c,; oat straw, 80 a 33c. ^ ... PORK—Extra prime at $1 0 a 810 . new mess at $J8.25a?13.7fi; famity, * : ; , J ARb-aeflued,'$O.OOB$&40; Wei*. eru, S5.95. _ TALLOW—Steady, at 4 7-16o. BUTTER—SlotfJ a* 01 * 6 <S \ Tania, l4al5*o.i Wester-•, &,,. , CHEESE—Punier; ° tate \^ Peml ~ eylvante, choice, &i&; fair to good, %& Tic; sfcims, B&aBjQ, ' u^-lt^ EGK30—Steady) ohoicftfwflh UaW* RQSIN—Common to good st \»9« <L TUBPENTINE—Demafad tea itttia tnayl. 41)c ' 1 Vh» Cream o f Events That Amused tU c People tlie Past Week. Popular interest in lawn tennis is bo- ginning to decline. Yale won the championship in the col- lege baseball struggle. Sullivan got clear with a fine o f 5300 and costs at Richmir-g, Miss. The New York League pitchers have struck oUt the most men this season. The two leaders in the National Lea-rue race are importaions from the American Association. Joe McAuliffe and Frank Slavin have signed articles in London to fight for $4,000 on October 1. Buck Ewing predicts that the Brother- hood and American Association wil l unite forces next year aud compete with the League. The new Monmouth Park racing track i s said lo be the finest in the world. Tin - grand stand i s the largest structure o f the-kind in America. In the fight i n Loudon for the ban- tam championship between Geoige Dixon, o f Boston, and Nunc Wallace, ot England, Dixon won easil y in 1 9 rounds. Harry Wright i s able t o be out, and goes to the games in Philadelphia, al- though he can not see. President Reach and Colonel Rogers explains the plays to him. Spooner, o f Chicago, has challenged Van, the ^roat long distance cycler, to a 100-mile track race, to b e run any v. here between New York and Chicago, after July 30 . The Virginia official s laugh at the idee, of Sullivan proposing to fight Jacksor in that State. They say that if the Bos- tonian undertakes to fight in that Stats: he i s certain to be arrested. ' Several of the clubs throughout the country have run up the flag o f finan- cia l distress, and it is sai d the existence of some of them will depend upon tho value of the receipts July 4. Senator Stanford's 3 year old Calif or nia horse Racine broke the record at Washington Park, Chicago, on Saturday, running a mile in 1.39^, beating the rec- ord of Tunbroeck a quarter o f a second. The New York public is at loss to un- derstand why the Giants, who have won the pennant of the National League two years i n succession, are occupying such an insignificant position among the Brotherhood clubs this season. Tho Puritan Club, of New York, has offered to put up a purse of $20,00 0 for v. figh t betrt-eon Sullivan and Jackson. The effor t to suppress glove fighting in California is likely to lead to a failure in the arrangements fo r a fight there. George Dixon, the bantam weight champion of America, who has just de- l-sued Nunc Wallace in England, v. as born at Halifax, N. S., on July 29 , 1861. Lo i s •\> i'e -t 3 hio'ue s high, and weighs -,:'o-,i it 115 pounds when in training, lie i.- a, mulatto. Mice Cleary was fin\d $10 0 and Mul- d-- !i ?25 0 fo r ai-'ing and abetting the lo.ht , between Sullivan aud Kilrain at Uiciil , a'g . Muldoon made a speech, in which he profe.sed great regret for hav- ing broken the laws of the State. Both pleaded guilty to the indictments. Charles 11. Shorrill. the crack sprinter of Yale, is now on his way to England. On his arrival on the other side his strained le g -v. il l be thoroughly examined by a physician, audit' pionouueedstrong enough to stand the slraiu, Sherrill will carry the Yale Athletic A-sociation and New York Athletic Cub emblems in the 100 yards dash in th e English champion- ship meeting. Additional interest i s given the Hen- ley regatta this year by the fact that O. G . Psotta, the Ani'-ric-m champion ama- teur, will row for the diamond sculls. Psotta has now been in England for several weeks, and has been practicing on Windermere, accompanied by G. W. Lee. the professional. At present he is at Putney, where h e will remain until i t i s time to proceed t o Henley. Advices say that the American i s in the best of health, and will b e able to do himself justice. The college boating contests at New- London, Conn., were hold last -week, and excited the usual amount o f hrteivs . The great boating event o f the year, tne senior contest between Harvard and Yale, was won fo r the fifth successive 1 time by Yale. Time. 21:29, Harvard crossing the lino 11 seconds later. The . freshman race between Yale, Gonrell, and Columbia, was won by Cornell, Yale coming in second. The Cornell crew also beat the University of Pennsyl- vania. Salvator, by beating Tenny last week; shows himself the greatest racer o f th e day. ' His phenomenal speed i s shown in the following table. The\ time here given fo r the several distances i s the fast- est made, an'd i s takef l from the' officials record: 15111 Passu? Distance. Time. .211-2 .«! 1.10 1-4 1.39 4-5 2.05 -2.34 Name of horse, ^pev ,Iim Millor. OJurakline.. Fides Maori Salvator... Firenzi. . .. (it 5-12 57 (i-12 ass 5210-12 515-12 The Bpeed o f a steam engine going at the rate o f 35 miles an hour i s 5 1 3-1 2 feet per second, thus showing' that Salvator tra ,'eled at a greater speed than 35 miles an hour. The following are the percentages o f the various league and association clubs up to the first of the week: PLAYERS' LEAGUE. W. L. P'CT Boston . ... 3521 .625 Phil'delpM a 31 25 .554 Chicago ... 29 24 .647 Brooklyn . . 30 28 .517 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION. W. L. P'CT The IItuition River Rrltlgo tile Semite. The House bill to incorporate the N'n-'..;i IMve r Bridge Company, which h.-..; parsed the United States Senate, i-< .-. ilep toward the connection o f Nm- York city and Jersey City with the '.-i-r- f-esr -pa n ever eve-ted. The Hor..-e bin t'uthori'zed the construction of a bii'.-c- across the Hudson River and pi-ove-eu for the regulation of cortimerce uv c i such bridge between the States of New York aud New Jersey, aud fo r the es - tablishment over it of a military aucl post road. According to the plan of Mr. Linden- thai, the engineer, the span will be 3,U00 fee t in length, and svinga-t least 155 fee ! above tide water. The towers at either sid e w il l be 500 feet i n height, or almost as high as the Washington monument. The masonry required for each of these towers alone vail far exceed that in the largest o f the flgyptian pyramids.* The Brooklyn bridge cables are 1 5 inches in diameter. In the proposed bridge over the Hudson the cables will be four feet in diameter. The bridge' wil l have a capacity for ten railway tracks across it, with proportionate accommodation fo r foot passengers and wagons. The estimated, cost of the bridge proper, including towers, cables, and anchorage, i s §15,000,000; approaches o f stone and iron and appurtenances, $11,- 000,000; incidentals, S14,O00,000. A VAIN BTliliCiGLl!:. Tlie ISntombed Miners at Dunbar Beyond Hope of Heucue. The gallant effort for the release of the entombed miners at Dunbar, Pa., has been a brave but hopeless effor t of hero- ism . The fir e has gradually extended through the mine, s o tliat it i s now a seething furnace of flame, and, even if the mine i s pierced, the prospects o f rescue i s now considered hopeless. The history o f the effor t to penetrate the Farm Hil! mine by running a drift from an adjoining mine i s one of gallant ef- fort and bitter disappointment. While every effort and the most heroic exer- tions have been made, the.maps of the mines have been found hopelessly at - fault. It was thought the Farm Hill mine had been struck on Saturday last, but it turned out that the miners had merely entered a pocket. Work was courageously renewed, but al l hope o f rescuing the imprisoned, miners has been abandoned. The rescuing party is now working under conditions of the greatest danger, and it will be fortunate if other victims are not added to the list of fatalities o f this memorable tragedy of the Pennsyl- vania coal fields. A Strange and F;it.!tl Disease. Late news fromCeatral America states that a new and fatal disease is creating alarm in that section. The disease i s more fatal than yellow fever. It i s called the black fever i n some countries, and it will do more injury to a person in one day than would yellow fever in two weeks. It has played liavoc in Hondu- ras and in the southern part of Central America. A hospital which has jwst been erected near the proposed line of the Nicaragua Canal has some 20 0 vio- tims. One half of them will probably die. The black fever comes almost as suddenly as a, stroke o f lightning, and there i s no relief. Tlie first symptoms are burning seusations, and before you have boon afflicted two hours you fee l m if you were being roasted alive at the stake. Unless th e black fever disappears from tliat country or a cure i s found for it the loss o f life will bo appalling. Probable End or a Kentucky Feud. Harve Turner, leader of one faction in the Tumer-Sowers feud, which has raged for years in eastern Kentucky, was killed Tuesday night by John Raines, a-boy of seventeen. Turner was shot down as he entered a coun'ry grocery store o n Yellow Creek. The first shot missed hinn, but as he turned with his rifle cocked, two bullets from a Winchester pierced hi s body. The killing, it i s thought, will end the feud (hat has existed between the Turner and other families for trie las t eight years. Pierced by a Crowbar. Star, ling up,in a scaifoid in a barn at Lowell, Mas., George Gately attempted to pry off a board with an iron crowbar, when the scaffol d gave way and he l \ 11, striking upon the head of the iron bar. It entered hi s body just below the h'i' t hip and passed up diagonally, combe; out at the upper part of the chest, pierc- ing his right lung in it s course. Ga'<:-!y exhibited wonderful muscular pow •-, for he pulled the iron bar out o f his body and walked home. He may recover. New York. Pittsburg. Cleveland. Buffalo. . . W, L. P'CT- 28 20 .5M 2G 27 .491 2129 .420 14 34 J302 Ohioumati . 37 17 .085 Brooklyn . . 33 21 .011 Phil'delpM a 34 S3 .007 Boston . ... 31 25 .554 Chioago. . New york. Cleveland. Pittsburg. W. L. P'CT 27 25 .619 24 38 .429 17 34 .333 13 40 £4 5 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Athletic.. Rochester . Louisville . Columbus. w. n. P'C T . 37 18 .<\- . 33 38 .589 . 29 25 ,5ffi . 30 25 \*86 St. Louis . . Toledo'. . . Syracuiie . Brooklyn. ATLANTIC ABSOOIATiOH W. h. P'OT . 29 27 .818 . 23 % .451 . 22-82 .407 . 15 89 JW8 »t in Baltimoi e 30 11 730 NowiHaven 30 li tf,J0 Woroeste r -!819 590 WeWarto 31 84 1 Mtfmm^,mmkA W L. POT Washington 20 20 BOO Jersey City 21 33 ^8 9 Hartford 18 87 209 Wilmington 12 30 .235 } j. inim Keferoo Cleveland's Decision Keversert . The report of Orover Cleveland as ref- eree in the suit o f Phelps vs. Vonner lies been sot aside by Jmlge Coxe, o f the United States circuit court for the southern district of New York. The court holds that Vernier isentitled to com- missions upon ceri-. d 11 stock transactions, The referee decided against Vonner. Chinese Snilors Mutiny. Dispatches by way of San Franci-co give information of a serious mutiny on the Chinese cruiser Nan Sliong, at Woo- sung. Twenty- threo men were placed under arrest, and a court martial will be held. Betiueatlted $200,000 t o Yule ColloRe , It is reported t l lat the late Thomas C . Sloano, o f Now York, has by his wil l h-'< $75,00 0 for ihe Sloane laboratory an t .$200,000 to Yale College, available on tho death o f hi s wife. - P. Teouinselt Sherman a Lawyer. P. Tocuuweh Sherman, son o f General W. T. Sherman, was one of a class o f 27 young lawyers admitted to the bar by the general term of the supreme court o f New York. ' British Wkr Slilp I n Behrlng Sea. The British iron clad Espiegle has been ordered to proceed to the seal fisheries of Behring Sea.. She carries 10>guns and has a complement of 160 officer s and men. Not a Rusineas Home Spared Tlie entiro business portion Of Cenrlltoty U M , SO milejiaorth o f Albuquerque ha> been destroyed By flw. t*om, |1GO I OQ& Have always made it a practice to sell any shopworn or out of J style goods at almost any price their cus- tomers thought them worth, but seldom if ever before have they offered staple goods, fresh and seasonable, at such low prices. Have you bought any of that 10c. Gingham at 6c, if not, hurry. Only a few pieces left. FairlygoodGinghams at 5c, good Prints, 5c, good Brown Cotton, yd wide, 5c, Bleached Cotton, worth 10c at 8 l-2c, 42 inch all wool grey dress goods 35c, wool Challies at 12 l-2c, cotton Chal- lies at your own price. This week to close out stock of Satin es they will sell the 12 l-2c at 9c, 15c. at 12 l-2c, 20c at 17c The re- cent warm snap has necessitated the use of Parasols, which '••' they are selling cheap. 4 Xight Underware, | White Goods, a line ij line of Summer Man- *' nels at 25c, a few i r styles of the Cele- v j bratedReynolds Bros, f* >.. ». ii Shoes at about Mff,^ •\ \'' J 4$$!Wll price. J * W ) I, * si., ' ' ') , f Si