Ocilla dispatch. (Ocilla, Irwin County, Ga.) 1899-19??, April 21, 1899, Image 3

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THE WAR ends AND PEACE REIGNS Treaties Between America anil Spain Are Exchanged. A PROCLAMATION ISSUED Friendly Intercourse Between the Two Nations Resumed. The condition of war which has ex¬ isted between the United States and Spain since April 21, 1898, terminated Tuesday, when the last formalities in the restoration of peace were per- formed by the exchange -of ratifies tions oi the peace treaty, Coincident with this,-President Kinley issued his proclamation dee-lar- “ ilirr g that the f war was was ct at an o„ on end, ,l anti anc the appointment . of Bellamy btorer was determined upon as T inted States minister to Spain. The'principal ceremony of the day occurred in the reception room at the white house when the exchange of ratifications took place at- 2 o’clock, In anticipation of the historic cliarac- ter of the. event, many members in the cabinet and o.Ticials prominent in the administration gathered *t the white bouse - Shortly before 3 o’clock -the French ambassador, M. Cambon, arrived in with ' ” ” M. Thiebaut. ’ ' first " * company secretary ,of the emltassy, the lattei bearing the Spanish copy of the peace treaty. Mr. McKinley cordially greeted the .ambassador,-and after a brief exchange of well wishes, the formal ceremony began. The powers-of M. Cambon and See- ■rotary Hay were examined, a protocol concerning the dav’s ceremony signed -an(bother formalities concluded. These preliminaries took some time, so that it was nearly 3::30 o’clock before the actual exchange began. 'The effect of the action taken is to completely renew peace relations, trade, official, diplomatic, consular and in all other ways, Between this coun- try and Spain. Following the appointment of « United States minister to Madrid and a : *zi°zrt su'SsiSfis Pointed For throughout this country. j a time the trade and navigation between the two countries will pro- ceed without treaty protection, as the war put an end to the commercial treaty, but a treaty of trade, naviga- tion and commerce, suitable to the new conditions and the needs of both countries and also au extradition treaty will be negotiated soon. After the ceremony President McKinley issued the following proclamation: The President’s Proclamation. Whereas, A treaty of peace between the United States of America and her majesty, the queen regent of Spain, in the name of her august son, Alfonso XIII, was concluded and signed by their respective plenipotentiaries at Paris on the 10th day of December, 1898, the original of which conception 1 being in the English and Spanish languages, and Whereas, The said convention has been duly ratified on both parts, and the ratifications of the two govern- ments were exchanged in the city of Washington on the 11th day of April, 1899. Now, therefore, be it known that I, William McKinley, president of the United States of America, have caused the said convention to be made pub- lie,to the end that the same and every articles and clause thereof may be ob- served and fulfilled with good faith by the United States and the citizens thereof. In witness thereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Done at the citv of Washington,this Uth day of April, in the year of our Lord, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-nine, and the independence of 1 the United States the one hundred ^nd twenty-third. McKinley. ; William By the President: John Hay, Secretary of State. ; PROCLAMATION EFFECTIVE. Vlany Filipinos Express Desire to Become Citizens of United States. President McKinley received a dis- ,atoh Thursday from Dr. Schurman, ! resident of the Philippine commis- : * i -ion, now at Manila. The message says that the proclatn- ition recently issued has done great- rood and that the Filipinos are visit- ng the commissioners every day to express their satisfaction and desire :o become citizens of this country. The message also stated that the Hlipinos coming into Manila declare hat Aguinaldo’s government is tyran- lical and that many natives are de- lerting from his standards each day. COAL OPERATORS COMBINE. They Secure Options On Properties Albng Monongahela River. A Pittsburg dispatch says: The ,ig combination of all the coal inter■ is ts on the Monongahela river have is been nmv , ud assured fact, Options river leeured on practically all mines, sine property, coal boats, toiv boats, fcc. The brokers engineering the cheme say the combination will be apitalized at $30,000,000. MUST SMOW CULPABILITY. Government Will Sustain Admiral Kautx In the Meantime. A Washington dispatch says: As a result of conferences held Tuesday at the state department and at the Brit- ish embassy, efforts will be made te have the Samoan high commission make a quick trip across the country reaching ban rranei&co in tune to catch the next,boat leaving for Samoa. This is regarded us a distinctly fa- vOrable turn in the negotiations, and ns indicating that the three govern- meats arc very near to a complete ac- cord on all the poiuts-of the corn mis- sion. It does away also with the reports that Germany was withholding appointment of her commissioner, and makes practically certain that Baron Speck Von Sternberg, first secretary of the German embassy at Washing- t'> n , will be the German high comnus- sioner. j n an aiufchoritative .quarter it was stated that reports of a German protest against Admiral ICautz's course in ref- erenoe to the treatment-of the cruiser paIk# wefe tinwarrnnt ed. All the ne- go tj a tions, it >is said in the highest Geirnan quarters, are of stick a charac¬ ter as to bring the governments more closely together instead of separating them. As it has been strongly-intimated in the Berlin dispatches that the German government was about to -make a de- lnand f or a -disavowal of Admiral Kautz’s action, dt may be -stated that 0U1 . government-will certainly not ac- c ,,, de to ariv 9 , K -h-request in-,advance of a full knowledge of all t-be facts in the ca3e and a conviction that the admiral acted wrongly, the presumption al- being that onr officers have acted with due propriety .until the contrary is & > lown to be the -case. H Admiral Kants found Mataafa, the self-constituted king, with his thirteen chiefs, dominating the .affairs 0 f ^e island, involving the sttspen- sion cf the functions of the supreme cour t, a nd of the municipal comncil, formality and duly established by treaty, then it was his duty, accord- ing to ithe state department, to condition at once into conformity w ith the treaty. ADDRESS ---------- ED LEGI —-——-_ SLATURE. B „ Spe aks Before Large Crowd In Missouri Mtssouri Canita! Capital. Colonel William J Bryan addressed . City the Missc-uri Tuesday afternoon legislature from at_Jeffetison the cap- rsu.***** .w Cuba and Porto Brno, and the conquest of the Philippine islands. He declared that the republicans sent a commt tee to England to get rid of bimetallism and had the old standard twenty-three years before they- knew n. Colonel Biyan was given . a reeep- tion by Governor and Mis. Stephens at tbe exe °Y tlve “ a “ Blon Tuesday Members oi the legislature attended. UNFAVORABLE TO MRS. GEORGE. ——— Pohce Officers of Canton Testify in j Saxton Tlurder Trial. The trial of Mrs. George at Canton, O., Tuesday was largely devoted to ev- idence of policemen who worked on j the murder case. They detailed the; arrest- and described her appearance and conduct. . Police officers McCloud and Rhon said Mrs. George, on being taken to prison, was searched by a woman doc- tor. The thumb and forefinger of her right hand were discolored and on smelling of it they pronounced the discoloration due to burnt gun power. , They also testified to finding burdock burrs and Spanish needles on her ! skirt and finding similar burrs ami needles in the vacant lots near the Althouse home. - ---- BRIDGES IS SENTENCED. Ex-School Commissioner Gets Font Years In the Pen. The motion for a new trial in th« case of W. M. Bridges, convicted of embezzlement for a second time last January, was completed atRome, Ga.. Tuesday afternoon, Judge Henry overruled-the motion a*^ sentenced Bridges to four years in the penitentiary. The bond was fixed at $3,000 and pending its execu¬ tion Bridges occupies a cell in the county jail. PROVISION WAS OMITTED. Defect Has Been Discovered In Geor¬ gia’s Convict Law. lt ntfw «eems certain that in spite of „ the care given the formation of Geor- gia’s new convict law by the ast leg- lslature, a serious oversight, that may produce much inconvenience,has been detected in it. The evident mistake in the system has been pointed out by Comptroller General Wright, who has submitted the facts to the attorney general for his opinion. There is apparently in the new lease law no provision for the payment of boards of inspection and chaplains for the various penitentiary camps, which have always been required by Jaw. CAUCUSES AT TALLAHASSEE. Politicians Arc Working Hard In Flor¬ ida Senatorial Fight. A special from Tallahassee says: The senatorial fight now overtops everything ami some fine election- eering is going on. Politicians .con¬ tinue to arrive and each at once en¬ ters into the great struggle for his favorite. Secret caucuses are fre- q; uent, and the latest leaks from them give Pasco 45, Taliaferro 47, and Call 6, present or vouched for in caucus. JEFFERSON DINNER 1 AT NEW YORK Long-He.raldea T „ .ism ien-l)ollar r\n r> JJatr t Takeg p iace as Scheduled. j. &N ELABORATE AFFAIR- Augustus van wyck and r urry Belmont the Speakers. A Bew iot), special ssys. J e long-heralded Jefferson day banquet of the Democratic club —the ten-dollar dinner began ut half past 6 o’clock , 7 „ ■ « iu th Metropolitan opeia nouse. | Each table was piled with a raises of , ro g e8 and ferns intertwined. So abun- ' e tUo iflowerK thatr some , 0 f the guests were hardly able to see each , -other over the floral banks, Conspicuously placed at the west •end of the dining hall was the inscrip¬ tion: “Jefferson. 1743-1899. Democratic Club.” This was composed of incandecent surrounded a picture of !u - ' Ti.ffi.rmit l " ’l’nll ‘ silver can- ■ ■ deiabra with shader, harmonizing . . with the floral effect were -an all the tables. The guests b 'gam to arrive at :6 the dinner did ..... not begin o’clock, but for an hour and a half «i ter that. Thr-e-. thousand quarts of champagne and 3,®00 quarts of various light wines were consumed. To kerve the thousand and more diners who occupied the floor of the opera no-use, 130 waiters were kept busy from the dozen serving stations. Sixty-one men had nothing to do from the beginning to the -end of the feast except serve wine. There wer-e fully three hundred more guests than the 1,500 planned for, but, all found seats. This is said to be the largest number ever accommodated at a banquet i n the history of New York city. band “Hail to the The struck up at 7:30 o’clock, and Richard „ m in arm with John Stanch- ^ marched dow n the ais le . W Rh them was Frederick C.Schraub, i e“S2“£ i&rz'zstzzx " in the boxe , M Oroker held a levee J just before the regular speech- makjug began . The confllsion was v0ry great _ As the time dre w near foj , making t)le speeches the orators W ere almost discouraged at the pros- pect of making themselves heard. perry Belmont began to speak at 10 0 , elock The uproar was so great that be couId not be heard a hundred feet away. By degrees more quiet was ob- tamed. In opening his speech Mr. Belmont said: “It is fitting that this _ democratic c ] u b celebrate the birthday of him whose monument is the declaration of independence—the first democratic president, the first secretary of state, the constructor of the first democratic j platform, the founder of the demo- cratic party. , “Thomas Jefferson was a party man of the democratic type. To him as a democrat, the world is a debtor for that which was a novelty in political government until his own immortal words proclaimed the doctrine that the right to‘life, liberty and the pursuit - of happiness’ is inalienable, and to se- cure it governments are instituted,; ‘deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.’ As a law- giver, the northwestern ordinance, framed_ by him, is his imperishable ' record. At the introduced close of Augustus his address Van Mr. Wyck, Bel- j mont the principal speaker, by referring to the latter’s canvas for governor, jj e said Justice Van Wyck has conducted a campaign with honor to himself and credit to the democracy. Justice Van Wvck was received with great ap- plause. He paid much attention to state affairs, dwelling at length ou the canal scandals, and then going into national affairs, he outlined the policy that the democrats of New York be¬ lieve should be embodied in the next national platform. STREET RAILWAYS GOBBLED. Big Syndicate Said To Have Bought the Atlanta Lines. An Atlanta dispatch says: For some days past there have been persistent and plausible rumors exploited from various sources that the consolidation of Atlanta’s street railway system un¬ der a management which would also have control of the Georgia Electric Light plant. these there To strengthen Wednesday rumors came from Baltimore a statement giving a portion of the de¬ tail connected with the new order of things in electric railways in the Gate City. HOBART IS BETTER. Representatlve Baird, However, Is & Very Sick Man. A Washington dispatch says: Viee- President Hobart continued to im- ; prove Monday and in his strength. physician He states is | that he is gaining j still confined to his bed, and visitors are not allowed to see him. The condition of Representative Baird, of Louisiana, is still critical, with a slight change for the better. ENGLAND TO BLAME. So Declare Germans In Regard to the Samoan Row. The German Democrat, published in San Francisco has received a leWer from one of the chief German offkiials at Samoa, which is interesting as «iv- ing the, German views of the coiujwliea- *«"• «* A *> ia I ho coraeRpondent , t writes .. that with all the shooting that has been done not a single MaVaafan had been tilled or wounded and that the Mataafansand Germans have apparently no respect for the fighting atbility of the American and British sailors. The Mataafans are anxious for the allied forces to come out and fight in : the opera, where they, with their na- tive implements of war, will have a chance against the modern weapons used by the Americans. j The writer says that Admiral Kautz gave ne warning of the bombardment, . aIK ] that when it commenced he thought a salute had been fired. According to the correspondent, Britieh Consul Masse is greatly blamed for the-trouble and there seems | to , . be an inclination .... among the . Ow- _ mans to hold the British responsible for the war instead of the Americans. The German commander of the Falke ij’.i in aaaimon addition to to receiving receiving o on , board the womea and children his ; own nationality, extended to Aateri- can and English women and children the hospitality of his ship, which was greatly crowded. The German cor respondent says that Admiral Kautz thanked the Germans for their court- by shelling the German consulate. The admiral later attributed the firing on the consulate to poor ammunition. The writer says that stores are being openly plundered by the Mataafans : and the English cannot stop it. On March 24th Mataafa sent word to Admiral Kautz that he would stop fighting if the whites would let him alone. The admiral replied that he would capture Mataafa and hang him. against The Enjbsh German are very Consul much Bose, incensed . and , . j Captain St-urdee wants to proceed ; against- —l him as ... a spy. According ‘ “ to the German writer the only cure for the trouble will be the sending of new consuls and new commanders, who - will act in harmony. According to a dispatch from Wash- ington the German ambassador, Dr. Von Holleben, called on Secretary Hay Monday and went over the Samoan question quite fully. The ambassador expressed the wishes of the German government to quesHons the couit of AdmirMKauVz. There is no disposition on the part 0 f the German authorities to repudi- ate Herr Rose’s course. The Kautz- Rose incident, it is said, in the high- o at quarters, official and diplomatic, will be quite immaterial in affecting the settlement under the high com- mission, The British ambassador, Sir Julian Pauncefote, also conferred with Secre- tary Hay on Samoan affairs. The president has selected Bartlett Tripp, of South Dakota, formerly minister to Austria, as the United States representative on the Samoan joint commission. npiTHflP ___- incTirppiPi ' n End o{ a Long and Notable Career as Chief lustice ' ' I dastice Stephen J. Held, ot ^ Uni ei ,, titles supreme coart > retired, ! le a ashington ear y Sunday , hati beea m ratner P 0 ” health lor several weeks, hut was not coalmen to his bed but a little more uin \ ^V, 01 6 en * Justice JJ lelds retirement . from - , the u supreme court bench oecurredDecem- ”® r 4Ha/, an<i Attorney General wards McKenna, was ot nominated Galitorma, to succeed shortly alter- him. I During his incumbency he said he. had written 620 opinions which, yith .57 California in the circuit court, court, and made 365 ln supreme up a total of 1,042 cases decided by him in his life. He took issue with *^ ie styling of the court as an aristo- cratic feature of a republican govern- me nt, and said it is the most demo- cratic of all. “It carries,” lie wrote, “neither the purse nor the sword, but it possesses the power of declaring the law, and in that is found the safeguard which keeps the whole mighty fabric of gov¬ ernment from rushing to destruction. ” BRAINED WITH AX. Farmer Near Palmetto, Ga., Assassi¬ nated By a Negro. About 7 o’clock Wednesday night as Mr. Alfred Cranford, whose planta¬ tion is about four miles from Palmetto, Ga., in Coweta county, was sitting at the supper table with his wife, a negro, armed with an ax, stepped into the house and behind Mr. Cranford and dealt him a blow on the back of his head which crushed his skull and caused death. The negro, after dealing Mr. Cran¬ ford the fatal blow, seized Mrs. Cran¬ ford, apd, dragging her into an adjoin¬ ing room, assaulted her. ' He then fled. WOMAN DOCTOR SENTENCED. Mrs. Nancy Gttilfor.i Pleads Guilty to Manslaughter. Dr, Nancy Guilford, the woman who has been on trial on the charge of ,,1 legeG murder in the second degree j at Bridgeport-, Conn., pleaded guilty I j 0 manslaughter. Judge W heeler de- clared a recess before imposing sen- j tence. Judge Wheeler sentenced Mrs. Grnl- : j f ord to pay a fine of one dollar and to ; years imprisonment. 1 BRYAN AT BANQUET. Nebraskan Addresses Jefferson Club at Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The Jefferson club of Milwaukee, ^j g< observed the natal day of the touul3<ir . ol . , ■ ,.. ‘ . the Plankington house Thursday night ntteisded by over 400 guests. Colonel William J. Bryan, of Ne hrawka, was the guest of honor mid delivered the principal address, Del- egations of democrats were in attend an „ t , from many towns throughout the state and nearly all the democrats , from the state legislature were pres- i The banquet hall was beautifully ' decorated with the national colors and j back of the guests of honor, in above oil of a : mantel, hung a large portrait | ; of the third president, “Democ- i Colonel Bryan spoke on | [ racy.” “We He said, in part: enough to the are now near I ’'ext campaign to be able to form some | idea of the lines along which the con- test will be fought, and 1 am taking no risk when I say that those who, in , 189( - their allegiance to the Chi- latform are as nuite d today in thf) determilla tion tllat uo step taken I" ’ H !‘. 1 ', 1)6 retraced. I he plat- i f orm applied to the conditions tnen . ‘ \ ’ f l ; , l, n ,1 ' , ti f ■ j °f! ' b „ ™ ‘ m „ , Su^estinns that ' . a tt... ,i,.,tiov tlnweVlin f - n f deserted ‘ 1 ’ but those ,' su ■* trees- ‘ , , | 1,, 1in n ‘ ” ' . . , „ ' ' A ' ‘ j V rneoly l,nal tae iq ls,BUb u l' 011 : , , I'i Tmt stranT c ' "«-w °«»eon« those” this arcument is made bv who have followed a different ■ mV. . I «. tn 188ft Cleveland was defeat- I ed ou the tariff issue, and yet the tar- j iff was made the main issue in 1892, | aad Mr. Cleveland was elected. In I ! 1892 Mr. Harrison was defeated on ae- j count of the McKinley bill, and four - ! y ear ? lllter th e author of the bill was nominated upon a platform reaffirming the belief in protection and was sue- - oessful. | “The test ought to be not whether the issue has been presented before, but whether the position taken is - rlgM “ Tf ,, ,, , , "f j 1 “ e " ; tefl ,n 8 6 lt r ls Unmf f, ted 7? to< , a f’ ’ thelnterestB of the people of this FFfFvrfrr CZ’LJZ tin f g “M m abandoning lf> Z t T , bappen ° d S mCe th ™ to ' na ^ e t |*e Ameiman people , accept it as g ' COMMISSION IS READY. Will Sail From San Francisco on the 26th of This Honth. A Washington dispatch says: The Samoan commission will sail' on the United States naval transport Badger, leaving San Franscisco on the 26th j ustan t. The arrangement was made a ffc er Baron Speck Von Sterd- bergj fi r . d secretary of the German embassy, had oalled on Secretary Hay and advised him of his appointment ns ^ be German member of the high commission. This completed the body. As the plan to have the members get away on the Mariposa, sailing on the 19th was no longer feasible, the trans- t Bad g er wa8 placed at the disposal of tbe commission. She is now at Calloa, Peru, on her wav around to San Francisco from New York. She is a large serviceab l e ship, with first- class accommodations for the commis- sioners. REWARD FOR MURDERER. Candler Offers $250 . F For the . Ap- uov. prehension of Sam Hose. Governor Caudler, of Georgia, on receiving official information of the assassination of Alfred Cranford and the assault of Mrs Cranford by Sam Hose, a negro, near Palmetto, offered a reward of $250 for the arrest of the criminal and his delivery to the sheriff of Fulton county at the county jail. It is unusual to require that a pris- oner be delivered to the sheriff' of a county other than that in which the crime was committed, but Governor Candler desires Hose brought to At¬ lanta for safe keeping and in order that a lynching may be avoided. THE QYAYS ON TRIAL. Father and Son Arraigned In Court On the Charge of Conspiracy. The trial of ex-United States Sena¬ tor Quay and his son, Richard R. Quay, on charges of conspiracy in the misuse of state funds of the People’s bank, of Philadelphia, was begun Monday morning before Judge Biddle The arrangements that tvere in effect ou the date the trial was 1-..A called February 27, when it was postponed at the request of District Attorney Rothermel, were again carried out. As a consequence, but few except those directly interested in the case, jurors and newspaper men, were enabled to guin admission to the court room. FIRE IN MEXICAN TOWN. Espanaldo Almost Destroyed, Entail¬ ing Loss of $125,000. A dispatch from Saul a, Fe, N. M., says: The town of Espanoia was al- most destroyed by fire Tuesday morn- j n _ Three 5* rge s warehouses and a store b l | in CJQ to Bcmd Brothers were burne ( causing a i 0B8 of $125,000. ‘ AN I a 'ERT ON FARM CONDITIONS. p e gays Farm Investment Paid Belter Years Ago Than To-bay. The 1 bn (rial Commission gave t hearing recently in Washington ob farm conditions, the principal wittiest , )t . i;! g Assistant Secretary Bingham of tllB Agriculturnl Department.' Mr. Brigham said that he had been con- nee ted with the Grange movement nearly twenty years, and as master of the National Grange for nine year* bad traveled over the country consid¬ erably. The number of men employed on farms was about the same, he said, as fifty years ago. The tendency, how- ever, was toward shorter hours and lighter work, and in general the condi¬ tion and wages of the farm hands bad improved. This was largely due to the use of machinery and Improved meth¬ ods, and not. organization of labor. The system of crop sharing, he said, was increasing, and would, he thought, largely supplant that of hiring men for ^ Brigham favored the teaching of the elementary principles of agricult- ure in the public schools, as arousing the interest of the boys in that branch would tend to keep them on the farm and away from the cities. The money invested in farms, farm implements and stock j n t be United States repre- seutec1, t d h tie „ sal<1> qaid aD0Ut r -rCoW,UW,UU0. «i -,(>0 000000 Barm Investments paid higher rates of interest forty years ago tban t<Kla y Some reasons for the decrease were tbe appreciation of !ant J values !lad 'wages for labor. J be net profit* 01 farming, taking an aveiagt for th* whole co,intry ’ lie thou e bt "’ ouI(i Il0t exceed more than two or three per cent. Farmers, he said, paid too great a pro- portion of the taxes, one reason being tbat |JI ° IKJ,tj c0,!!li not b° m *' Cealed £r0m the assws 5J? r8 08 oan 8,,ul * other classes of property. Sphinx and Man. Now, for the first time, a photograph of the Sphinx with one man standing on top of it and another half way tig the front, has been taken, showing at a glance the tremendousness of this monument which is more than six thousand years old. Figures give so p 001 - a n idea of size that they hardly convey anything to the mind. Close your eyes and try to imagine a figure sixty-five feet high, and its body a hundred and eighty-nine feet long; each ear is two yards wide, the nose is five feet long, the mouth is seven feet wide, large enough to swallow a six-footer if it were opened, and the distance across the face from one cheek to another is fourteen feet. If a five-story flat house were built ** *’ ^ C ' T,Wre hUV * been some great artists in that day to think of so big a work, which bag never been since equaled. The meaning of the Sphinx is on< of the hardest problems of scholars. Sum* say it is the statue of some old Egyp¬ tian god, others that It is a symbol ol the rising sun, but the most probabl* explanation is that the Sphinx is 11i« statue of some one of the Pharaohs of old Egypt. Its head is that of a man, and the body of the lion was only a symbol of the power of the mighty king who had it hewn. There are any number of Sphinxes in Egypt, but ( till one is the largest and finest of them all. Her Papa’s Idol. The Due T’Amale— Your parents pul no constraint upon your choice of « husband? Miss Kathryn Higgins of Omaha— Oh, dear no! Papa gives me cart blanch in the matter of expense. Beacon Street Belles. Emma—Do you know,I think Char¬ lie is really fond of me? Blanche—Funny, isn’t it?—Boston America and Germany. So soon as America showed iter character¬ istic lirmness the,German cruiser lest Manila Bay, and wo now protect the German iuter- ests. In a like manner all stomach ills By before the wonderful power of Hostetter’i Stomach Bitters. It strikes at the root of all diseaafis—the stomach, and not only cures in¬ digestion, constipation, biliousness, liver aui kidney troubles, but cures them quickly and permanently It makes a hearty appetlt* and fills the blood with rich red corpuscles. Navigation between Detroit and Cleveland was formally opened recently- 44 Trust Not to Appearances ." That which seems hard to bear may be a great blessing. Let us take a lesson from the rough, weather of Spring , It is doing good despite appear¬ ances. Geanse the system thoroughly; rout out all impurities from the blocd with that greatest specific, Hood's Sarsaparilla. Instead ot sleepless nights, with conse¬ quent iirltableness and an undone, tired feeling, you will have a tone and a bracing air that will enable you to enter into every day’s work with pleasure. Remember, Hood’s never disappoints. G litre—“Hoitre was so expensive in mefl- leal attendance that I let mine go. It made e a perfect wreck, until I took Hood’s Sar¬ saparilla, which entirely cured me.” Mr8. Thomas Joes, 12) South St., Utica. N. Y. unning Sore*— “Five years ago my affliction came, a running sore on my leg, causing eiq great anguish. Hood’s Sarsapar¬ illa. healed t e sore, which has never re¬ urn ed.” Mrs. A. W. Barrett, 39 Powell Street, Lowell, Mass. MwdA SaUahwuCta Hood’s PUs cure liver ilia, the n on-ir rit atin g and the only Cli‘ihartic to take with Hood's J 4 arsat>arUl».