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Show 4 . OF' INTEREST TO A SUBJECT SOLDIERS. i Knowlton, Fifth Michigan Cavalry, Tell of the Effects of Army Life. From the News, Muskegon, Mich. There are few pleasanter drives In this part of the country than the one ong the South Grand river road, runCL XL i Grand1 Haven and Bass ning between little1 River, a miles from hamlet about fourteen the capital of Ottawa county. And especially Is that so in these October (days, When the rich au- tumnal colors are beginning to give radiance to the woodlands along the route. On the eleventh of this month a representative of the Morning News took this tripl to interview a certain Mr. II. B. Kniowltori, a farmer living about a mile away, about his cure from rheumatism. 'Mr. Knowlton is a man fifty-on- e years of age, and served three years in the war, being a tnember of Company F, Fifth Michigan Cavalry. He has lived in Allendale, Ottawa county, Mich., since the rebellion, and- is one of the substantial farmers of the county, his which contains; one hundred and farm, eighty-fiv- e acres, being a valuable property. He was working in the field when approached by1 che reporter, but kindly Invited him into his handsome brick house, and when asked about the benefits he had received1! from taking Dr. Williams Pink Pills, said: I was in the army for three years, and it was , while there I contracted the rheumatism. After doming out I was lame and sore a good 4ea-- of the time, but was not sick enough to go to bed. At first I, was not very bad, hut as time went on I became Worse. About a year ago I, was so bad that I had to give up my work on the farm. I had doctored with doctors and taken a great deal of medicine, and had become kind of discouraged. Nothing seemed to help me, and finally I went to the drug store of A. J. White and asked him if he had anything to kill or cure me. He said he had Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Pale People, and he thought if I would take them they would help, me. I purchased a box and before taking all of them I felt better, and I knew-thehad helped me. I continued taking the pills, and for the past three months I have not felt the rheumatism. I would advise any one who has the rheumatism to try the Pink Pills, and I am confident they , - f - -- l i y will help them. H. B. Knowlton, of Allendale, Ottawa county, Michigan, being by me duly sworn, deposes that the facts set forth In the foregoing statement, made by him this 11th day of October, A. D., 1895, are true. HENRY G. WANTT, Notary Public, Muskegon Co., Mich. Dr. Williams1 Pink pills contain all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore chattered nerves. They are for sale by all druggists, or may be had by mail from Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N, Y., for 50c. per box, or ix boxes for $2.50. i There are two specimens among New Yorks 400 husbands pro tem. Ii of husbands and 110 BU. PER SILVER KINO BARLEY, ACREl j The barley wondej. Yields right along on poor, good or Indifferent soils 80 to( 100 bus. per acre. That pays at 20c. a bushel! Salzers mammoth catalogue is full of go,od things. Silver Mine Oats yielded 209 bushels In 1895. 1 will do better In 1896. Hurrah for Teosinte, Sand Vetch, Spury andGint CloVer and lots of grasses and c overs they offer. 35 packages earliest vegetables $1.00. If you will rut this out and lend ttwith 10c.1 postage to1 the John A. Sal-zSeed Co., Lai Crosse, Wis., you will get free ten grain and grass samples, Including barley, etc.J and their mammoth catalogue. Catalogue alone 5c. for w.n. mailing. W The trouble with our Congressmen is that are to i er H eager they study geography at a time when the people want them to go into arithmetic. History of Cripple Creek. The most wonderful gold mining camp In the world. Folly illustrated the only authentic Dook of the kind. To Introduce our big illustrated weekly family paper we will send a copy of the above book free to all who send us 25c (postage) for our paper 3 months trial. All the latest mining news. Illustrated Weekly, Denver, Colo. The first good man furnished the devil a pattern for his first hypocrite. Ad-ires- s. "Hansons Magic Corn Salve. Warranted to cure or money refunded. Ask your druggist for it. Price 15 cents. The New Zealand Parliament is consider- ing a bill which provides that every domestic y servant. in the colony is to have a every Wednesday, and that the employer is to be fined 5 f the domestic is deprived half-boll-da- ry jf"v ; rf-- a. jrrsi, 1 w v v W ? PAIN often concentrates all ( ) its MISERY in ) C r j1 J ( ) ) C ) i'liiliillbU Use at once f St. Jacobs Gil o ) ) If you want to "feel it concen- - ( trato its healing in a cure. (' ') f ''-"- V r-v -- fv ---5. south. Nearly four thousand feet of this tunnel had to be driven by comiressed air. Tbe accuracy of the survey and the dangers of the work may be imLATEST; REPORTS OF INVENfrom the statement of the enagined TIONS AND DISCOVERIES. gineers that while driving the shield under the river bed there were, at one gome Note About the Bicycle A Popa- - time, but five feet and two Inches of lar Fallacy Danger from Natural Gas earth between tbe top of the tunnsl and ' An Stamp Device for the water. So great was the danger of the water bursting through that largo Indoor Amusement. quantities of clay were . dumped Into the river over the thinnest spots. 7 T Is by no tneans i an accurate tpst of Bulletin Boards. Electric tbe running powers Mr. Petry of flew York has devised of a wheel to turn bulletin-board- s, and patented electric-lighte- d the machine upside are used with great sucwhich down and sehow are made of ground cess. The bulletins long tbe wheels will in front of mounted in frames, glass, spin without stopset are which parallel glass plates ping, An expert an of inch apart. The letters a wheel says that enameled black, and are that will not run are of metal,means of a spring on the fastened by any great length of th is which thrust Into the time under these circumstances may back, Inch slot between the parallel prove exceedingly satisfactory on tbe Electric lights behind the glass plates. road. Of course, it is important that white glass project the letters with tbe adjustment be accurate, but the wonderful clearness at night, and no mere fact of so many revolutions is not can blur them. , specially significant. A wheel fitted weather with a very light racing tire will not Stamp. revolve as long as one fitted with a herewith The illustrations represent Some of the forces heavy roadster. which- oppose the revolutions of the an lately introduced improvement wheel are increased by the weight of whereby the rubber stamp is made more the rider In the saddle, others are not. valuable by being better adapted to Of two machines, the back wheel may print plainly on uneven surfaces. It revolve more freely in one than In the consists of tbe interposition of an air other, oie may be retarded by some cushion, as shown in the illustration, friction i4 the the other the cushion being just elastio enough may havej some of the gearing coming to insure, with ordinary usage, a good slightly In contact with the spokes. In impression on any surface, either unthe latter case the weight of the rider even or yielding. The cushions will not lose shape or wilbmakeVery little difference, so little indeed that it will not be noticed in ordinary riding, but any friction in the bearings is obviously greatly increased by the riders weight. This is a matter of great importance, and Is, in fact, one of the principal causes of hard work, and is even more taxing than a machine of much greater weight. SCIENCE UP TO DATE. contracted in me War. ) AjLr-Cushl- on t , one-eigh- th one-eigh- Alr-Ccshl- on - hub-hearin- gs, A Popular Fallacy. There is a widespread Impression among medical men and the public at large that jthere is little or no danger attending the removal of the tonsils, and instruments for this purpose are found in the possession of almost every practitioner inj the land. An eminent surgeon declares that removing the tonsils is an operation attended with a great deal of risk. One reason for this seems to be tha in cutting there is danger of approaching near the large arteries, or, at all jevents, tapping small veihs that may cause alarming hemorrhage. This physician gives an account of the removal of the tonsils from the throat of a boy, when he was obliged to hold the parts with his fingers for several hours to jarrest the hemorrhage1 that threatened the boys life. Having no at hand for checking the hemorrhage, which was entirely un he came very near losing t. The general practitioner against, too free use of ;these Instruments; indeed. It Is as well to be very wary; in cutting the tonsils at all, and not to operate upon them unless It is absolutely necessary, and then only remove a sufficient surface to relieve the mechanical obstruction caused by their enlargement. iljljl!' i for them 1 7 1 get them, plant them. They are the standard seeds every-fv - vz where; sown by the the world. planters in largest S' J Whether you acres, 50you square feet j of gtound or 60 plant should have Ferry Seed Annual for US, j - J x j j The most valuable book for farmers and gardeners ever given away. Mailed free. CO., V D. M. FERRY ' Detroit, SIlclu THE COMPANY PAYS THE FREIGHT Will new steel horse On their eontraon-wnbostt Ti ton of rock U X) feet each shift. I jut & safe can be ad lehiible an engine It packed anywhere No cog wheel or a jack cua go. clutches to break. 90 per cent 1 , wrought iron and steel andb'--will bend la use before breaking. Over some running 6 yesra without one Vve make dollars eiperibe. at priced, $25, CO, 75 JQO 1125 w J horRe-hoii- p rn f . iin cf. f m i 1- -2 i" fin Caii If 1 cl t to THE Maxima Elliot Has Charmed London and Boston and New York Foor Rse Norreys and Her Sad Affliction. (Boston Letter.) , HOSE WHO HAVE seen Olga Nether-sol- e since she arrived in America this fall, notice one especially, thing and that is, that while more beautiful than she was a year ago she is more the beauty of the theater. This evolution takes place In every pretty woman who adopts the theater a3 a profession. It is as unavoidable as that her face should grow in mobility, her Is it always an figure in flexibility. the rub! In theres improvement? Aye. case the Miss Nethersoles change is very marked. It is almost like growing .a domestic flower in a She is far more striking. She even has acquired an air of youth that she lacked before in a marked .degree. Miss Nethersoles roles this year will be even more exacting than they were last Camille, Denise, Carmen! Could .any actress he more unstrung by any iine of parts? Denise1 is to America a novelty, for - hot-hous-e. resiliency, as they are formed by minute cells which do not connect with one another, and the cushion is mounted on handsomely nickeled metal plates. There are no pores to fill up with ink and dirt, or compartments to puncture. A Speedy Locomotive. Electric locomotive No. 2, the ty-eig- to the possession of an actresses most personal characteristic, delightful very the is that the quality charm, foundation of the success of actresses like Ellen Terry, Julia Marlowe, and even Sarah Bernhardt. Miss Creighton is not very generally known, and the resemblance she is said to bear to Mary Anderson is not ' so striking as at ne time appeared to be in pictures of her. Aside from her pictures, It can hardly he said to exist at all. Miss Creighton became conspicuous lately In the dramatization of A Social Highwayman that the Holland brothers produced, in which she played telinor1 Burnham, the girl whose purity proved fatal to Courtney Jaffreys enjoyment of his daring and rather vulgar career. But the third of Novembers beauties was the most dazzling of all. It does not seem as if It was as long ago as May , 4, 1891, that, as Miss Fleetwood, the Kentucky heiress of John Need- ht et er-sio- hams Double, Miss Elliot first' rr I Blood mfirn sound lipalti. v healthy blood, tho stomath organ? will te vigorous, aini dyspepsia. Rheumatism ami re, unknown. Scrofula and salt rl mr pear. Your nerves will be stroi-- 1' sound, sweet and refreshing jj rilla makes pure blood. That s many diseases. That is why It to cure disease, retain good Leal j j tha story without a verbal explanation. Put a lighted cande on a table and on the wall opposite tack a sheet of white V paper, Between the candle and the paper place 'a big book or a piece of cardboard, so that the paper may be dark. The effect will be better if the spectators sit between the table and the wall, or at least so that the table is in the rear, either directly so or on one side. Now, place a mirror at the edge of the table so that it will reflect the light from the candle upon the paper on the wall, and if you hold before the mirror fancy or grotesque figures of any kind, an image of them will be thrown upon the paper. If the figures be of the jumping jack order, their evolutions will prove to be quite amusing. slow-movin- g, low-pressu- J Tr A in Paris before members of the town council and the fire department. It consists of a hollow tube placed along the cornice of a building or the lower part of a balcony railing, inside which runs a small wheel, which can move from one end of the house front to the other. A light wire ladder or an iron cage attached to a rope passing over the block furnishes the means for descent. The apparatus can also be used for workmen, like painters, employed on the outside of houses. Life Boat. A new hydraulic propelled lifeboat has recently been constructed in England that meets all the requirements of the National Lifeboat institution. Water is admitted by means of a large scoop, and is forced out by a strong A Large Tunnel. pump of very simple design. A speed ever built tunnel the of 9 The, largest knots was made on the trial of Blackwall the section underwater course, and the boat was stopped and Tunnel, under the Thames has just reversed in fifteen seconds. feet been finished. It is twenty-seve- n one in mile It is stated that butter contains forty in diameter and length, and connects Popar on the north s'.de times as many microbes as of the river with Greenwich on the I p of, peit lie that TI Government pres me a arm As principal bicycle factories in & that tear country, to determine the aZ value of various makes for port into Canada. After ano! haustive investigation, his md i .Vtc re fth efor iben r: port to his Government gb 1 re cently sent an appraiser b t .ouse Columbia ac n -- Da: aine t Md Nat nger IV2 per cent, high- - pay duty ortra hows cveic he sr Q er than any other make and they st. aote ? ' 1 accord- - ingly. This but confirms the pop- ular verdict. are Col-umbi- as STANDARD OF THE T0RLD, Unequalled, UnapproacLcd. Beautiful Art Catalogue of Columbia and Hut ford Bicycles is free if you call upon any Coium bia agent ; by mail from us for two stamps. POPE MANUFACTURING CO Factories and General Offices, Hartford, Ckl Branch Stores and Agencies in almost evr city and town. If Columbian are not propr represented in your vicinity let ui know. ASK YOUR DEALER Nl 1 FOR L. Douclas J VI AND WIDTHS, CONGRESS, Et'TTO' am) LACE, made in k I ml of the bent neledw leather by skilled work 1 ii j s fi J make and l sell more A. $3 Shoes than any other i manufacturer In the world. ; None genuine unless name and price is stamped on the bottom. Ask your dealer for our 85. 84, 83.50, 82.50, 82.25 Shoes; 82.50, 82 and 81.75 for boys. ROSE NORRFYS. ror of a night in the streets, shelterless; and even now Is in some retreat pros, vided by thd charity of in hope that the doctor's vefdtct of probably incurable may be reversed. fellow-worker- NO SUBSTITUTE. If your dealer cannot supply you, send to factory, enclosing yrice and 36 cents to pay carnage, btate kind, style of toe (cap or plain) , size and width. Our Custom Dept, will fill your order. Send for new Illustrated Catalogue to Box B TAKE The Frenchfseem to be ahead of every nation in thehonor which they pay to great men, especially great men of science,, and this honor is not confined to their 'own countrymen. A number of streets-i- n Paris are called after eminent foreign, savants, English and other, and monuments are even erected to illustrious foreigners. For instance', the municipal cpuncil of Paris has decided to erect a statue to Sir Isaac Newton, and" in doing so it honors itself. With so many of pur own famous men of sci- ence, dead or alive, waiting In vain for public recognition in this noble manner, it is hopeless to expect the lord mayor or the county council to reciprocate the compliment and honor the great investigators of France in this way, London j Denver - V-v- 7 v, 4 W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton. A French Statue to Newton. Directory iHarnes: The best ble Concord S' ness in for flS. breeching. $25 .7 AS double . harness breeching H steel horn saddle forU1 $8 50. Do single buggy harness for deceived by .worthless imitations but gett tbe lovst direct from us and tree. All prices. " Catalogue r FRED MUELLER, 1413 Larimer Denver, Colorado. examination. Goods sent for On C AMERICAIIHOySE.' E. E. BURLINGAMES A lady ini London sent Frederick W. Christmas a gTeen enameled snuff box with a medallion on the lid. It was appraised in the j , New York custom house to be worth $33.75 and the duty was $8.75. Mr. Van derbilt did not pay the duty and the box was said last week as unclaimed customs packages for $27.50. Portrait of Pocahontas. MAXIME ELLIOT, Henry S. Wellcome, the well known and the ranks of really promising ones American merchant in London, has thin,, anything as supremely presented t0 the senate of the United vry as pretty Amy Busby cannot pass with- States the portrait of Pocahontas, out hopeful notice. Indeed, one bewas In the womans building of comes indulgent as well as hopeful, for which the worlds fair. It was painted in It can hardly be said that Miss Bu3by after her conversion to Chrishas yet shown any special aptitude for Englandand her marriage to John Rolfe. tianity real acting; but she certainly has shown the ability to become, so far as the sale of her pictures are concerned, a very popular little lady. Yet there has been good reason to be hopeful about Miss Busby, for the actress who can make Constance Neville, in She Stoops to Conquer, interesting, and she did that two years ago, certainly has just claims is 1 The Canadian r i A Hydraulic , OVER IOO STYLES Vanderbilt last J All dr shoes, ex-amine the W. L. Douglas Shoe, andO see what a good shoe you can buy for Vanderbilt Is Stingy. f 1 5 SHOE BEW;! S3. If you pay 84 to 80 for Globe. I " i Opinion j 7. re A Novel Fire Escape. A novel form of fire escape, the invention of M. Berutti, was tried lately J j ns. as the play is in Dumas best style, intensely interesting and brilliant in conThe Hot Winds of the Rockies. Scientists are of the opinion that hot, versation it ought to be a great success. As a matter of history, it may be dry winds that blow oyer the eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains depend noted that Miss Nethersole gave her first performance of the part Aug. 28, upon the presence of at Birmingham, England, and also that areas In that region, and thence eastward, accompanied by rela- Signor Ventura once read the play in at Chickering hall, in Boston. tively high pressure over the Pacific French Boston has had at one time this seaocean off the coast of Oregon. It is beson the opportunity to admire several lieved that air Is belted in its sudden In Novempretty actresses. passage from the summit of the Rockies young, were town In there ber, Amy Busby, the to the prairies below. pretty girl who once played with Crane, and has lately been the heroine of The In Latest Photography. Fatal Card, enjoying the long run For Indoor Fun. ' closed November 16, at the hiswhich in A curious photogexperiment Here ii a simple and easily contrived old toric was in made Museum; Bertha Creighton, recently England. raphy viieans of having some indoor fun. The A man was made to look steadily at a who first came into. notice as resemaccompanying illustration almost tells postage stamp on a black card for a bling Mary Anderson, and Maxime' minute; the room was then darkened, Elliot, who was the most picturesque a sensitive photographic plate put in American actress in London last sumplace of the card, and the man looked mer; for that matter no player of the at it steadily for twenty minutes. The year was more pictured than she was, plate was developed and showed two several illustrations of her appearing in distinct Images of the stamp. Inr-- s one issue of one of the weeklies. In these days, when actresses are few. Rogers, one of the three witnesses of to decide whether this fact, is unable the photograph is one of the imge projected on the mans retina or whether it is a case of thought transference. lf 5 ry has been seen outside New York, and motive. ! Hoods Pills . throw a lighted match or cigar into any depression in the earth. Recently an excavation was. begun for a building, and having been undisturbed for a day or two, some workmen, as they returned to their Jabor, threw a lighted match into the ditch. An explosion immediately followed, and through a small fissure in the earth came a little jet of natural gas. It is thought by many experts that the supply of natural gas will last put a few years longer; indeed, considering the prodigal waste of it on its own ground, the wonder is that it has lasted so long. ' V Sarsaparilla Is the One True Bipod purifier. d, f 1 n u ap- peared in Boston, in support of E.S.Wil-larat the Tremont theater, and that same season we saw her also as Felicia Umfraville, in The Middleman. Miss Elliot is a Rockland (Maine) girl. She traces her descent hack to a mixture of Irish and Spanish settlers, a fact that accounts for her beauty and temperament. Miss Elliot remained with Willard two seasons; during the second she played the trying role of Sophia Jopp in Judah, Beatrice Selwyn in A Fools Paradise, and Lady Gilding in The Professors Love Story. She was then engaged for the big production of A Prodigal Daughter, and played Kate Malcolm In Sister Mary, with Julia Arthur and Leonard Boyne. In September, 1894, she joined palys forces, making her debut as Heart of Ruby, in the adaptation of Judith Gautiers tale of old Japan, one of the mon exquisite productions ever given m tnis country. Among the best work she has done1 with Daly is Sylvia in Two Gentlemen of Verona, and Hermia, In A MidsumIn the latter mer', Nights Dream. her and London, in Boston part beauty, a She is a created real excitement. s.tately brunette with great repose of manner and lends an acceptable dignity to many a part she can hardly be said to play well. There has not been for many a day so sad a case in the annals of things theatrical, as that of Rose Norreys, whose pretty face is the last of the list. Poor Genie Norreys for only on the stage did the name Rose stick to her, a name derived first from a part in which she was a success. When a young woman is afflicted by a disaster like hers, from which it seems almost impossible for any one to rescue her, the very fact that the victim is still young and pretty and has beeh as dainty as the daintiest of her kind, serves to emphasize the case pitifully. ' , The bright face has lost Its expression; the pretty girl has known the ter-- j j ,J Bertha Creighton Foremost Among Them , : ti! STAGE WOMEN CONSPICUOUS FOR BOTH CHARMS. I latest BERTHA CREIGHTON, electric giant put on the Baltimore Belt although it has twice been tried here. It railroad, added new laurels on MondaY was neither time a success, a result that night to the noteworthy performance of may easily be put down to the attempts locomotive No. 1. No. 2 hauled twen made to fix it over. loaded cars, two dead en It was Jan. 19, 1885, that "Denise of a and was a total gines caboose, weight produced at the Comedie Francaise, about 1,400 tons, through the tunnel at where it was given one hundred and the rate of twenty-thre- e miles an jiour. seven times that season, making a great A stop was made in the tunnel, and success, with a cast In which Mile. Bar-twith all drawbars stretched the start played the title role, with the was again made without a slip of the charming Reichemberg as Juvenile, wheel. In doing this and accelerating and Worms, Coquelin aine, Coquelin the ' train up to the speed of twenty cadet. Got, Blanche Pierson, and Paulmiles an hour a drawbar pull of 58,630 ine Grainger all in the cast. Two American actresses have tried pounds was exerted. With this tremendous strain the engineers say the Denise, both hampered by poor least jerk would have snapped a coupThere was the production at the train apart. Daly's theater. New York, ten years ling piq and broken From one of the locomotives on the ago, when Clara Morris played Denrear end of the train, where a jerky ise, supported by, Joseph Haworth, and motion would be felt the greatest, an a later production at Palmers, when a entire absence of such a jar was noted. version by Will Stuart (Walsingham) Ranger from Natural Gas. soil IndiThe in the coal regions of During the work an input of 4,100 was called Fair Fame, and Linda ana and some of the adjacent states is amperes at a pressure of 600 volts was Dietz played Denise. Still few in so permeated with gas that it Is dan- measured. The test Is regarded as the New York even remember either vergerous to start a fire out of doors, or to severest yet attempted by such a loco- sion, and, until Miss Nethersoles, none r N BEAUTY AND TALENT. ASSAY OFFIO. - And Chemical Laboratory(Established 1806.) JEWELERS AND DUOTOGUTU 1 re send your sweeps and , and sliver for treatment. fFromm or g paid cash and highest price 1730 and ter bullion. AddressColorado. rence street, Denver, nnsifsn Morphine Cor, SURE CURE PILE PILE PR.fctort OO-UAN-K- fog. fcw. Uuiarl. A po.lUr QruggUta or Moil. Honey Saved, t f 1 l s f wTf- - .urC. x ' by fending for00 and retail price HAYDEN EROS.0 ? ! Jeffersons Reply. To a hoarding school miss who met j Ecst Joseph Jefferson at a tea table and began to talk to him about Sabbath breaking, the actor said: If I were a ' fisherman I should never fish on SunVoL N. W. an U. I Denver. actor, can rest both day, but being When writing to advertisers soul and body by fishing. that you saw the advertisem jfo pleii ilj(3 pSl |