\D FREEDOM. PROCLAMATION by OLUTIONISTS. |p That the Deliverance of from Spanish Domination ll, AMured — Two More I Are In Revolt# .1:l jUne 15.—The following translated, from the revo ,, uimUtee of Havana, has n il from Cuba: vjt, ,n People: Maximo Oo ■mmand with 2,000 men. The Santa Lucia, with the cry it,re," has joined him with Twenty of the most noted , f Puerto Principe aocom worthy son of Camaguey. o hope for Spain. Remldos , ,1 the landing of Roloft and len. He brings munitions of ,KiO pounds of dynamite. The Yero and Seraphln Sanchez 1. They bring American py Santa Sptrlte has already ..,1 bands. General Maceo, l.iiuO Machetenos, Is destroying lug everything he finds In his al Spaniards have nothing ,ives and property will be re link- assistance is not rendered iv. l ament. t, nomist party says that In in arms is necessary to force ■nim-nt to favor autonomy, these false patriots who live file bread that the despot them! Soldiers from Mahon, province, have gone over to tgt-nts' ranks. The dally ex Spaniards run up to $175,000. Campos has lost already 10, Soldiers die of fever In the the city of Manzlllo. Famine [hrough the province of Cuba. > and Guantanamo there are intents in arms. Spaniards, the sons of Ringo are here for liberty. To arms with the metropolitan gov tind tyranny! Hurrah for iomez!” auutrs lCUCi»cu uci c M,* w vw that 11,000 Spanish troops will C.uvitas, In the northern coast today, being the second ln : : troops dispatched to Cam h home government, by steamer is that the prov Sigua and Gibara joined the n ,n the 11th and 12th inst., t-Iy. The volunteers have been in. under the leadership of vet 'iie volunteers refuse to re ll.-ss under their own leaders, i-rity of Marco Garcia's guer Santo Spirite have deserted to li.-nts. Reports are that Maceo possession of the seaport near II ; tiiat he cleared two ships I lading for the United States ALKS FOR SILVER. st Addresses the Conservative Association of Belgium. Is, June 15.—M. Alphonse Al ii was a delegate from Belgium nternational monetary confer 1V'J in an addresso to the con < association asserted that the ■ policy of Belgium Is the re i'.'' currency difficulty, which he has divided the world into hos i s and developed changes ab 'PP sed to the interests of the n'.iT s and in favor of the silver nations. M. Allard also said fall in the prices of commodl due to overproduction, but arcity of money caused by the ization of silver in 1873. TAYLOR’S RETURN. Arrive in Pierre Tuesday Morn inr The Conditions. s D., June 15.—Attorney Gen '■'ford talks freely in regard to 'asp and the finad result, stat Taylor will leave Chicago Sun ht and arrive in Pierre Tuesday ■ The terms on which he comes ■cl by the attorney general and ft" cash, all the property of la South Dakota. Illinois. New and other states, property to e,‘ i,y Land Commissioner Lock General Crawford, and Sheldon and bondsmen to r'd to the state any deficit yet n? .,1n the total sum. Taylor is guilty ‘■-'•n Bonionpp -HAZIL. mp. he ,0 Be Manufactured Extensively ' °ar Su“thern Neighbor. S;!:r 15-There has been BrfrM .vf past twelve months r;v nrt. ■' tllan for the same per f'rlaas year and much more >a.( ihe ensuinS year, writes irtamCrSU McDaniel. The sa^\Impr0Vement t0 c°m f stnrlnv n a coa,ln& station ca s t0 i"8B , 0° tnns of coal. The '« for SPPed wlth latest 1 will be einS ?nd discharging timber mp eted In August nutactiire At C°.PSu1 further says mPortant in/0t,ton Is becomlng a t‘0' s dUSt7 ln Brazil. A paid-in ^ ? !ormed ln Bahia will «n„n hP‘tal ot M.600,000, in HrazM h, ? a factory, the mis. or thee63 8ened to contaln aving calicoe«f 1,200 wl!1 be uselJ M too for PA>; 1,ght domes • stripes hpav^0 cI°ths, cotton $<.at tL ; ”ea'y cottonades etc r,:U\lTl0t the ^ctory are ■1. the nrnrtb0Ut 450 hands are "ards of cloth* p" belns about ■7 has also buHPter309eeki; The - rf-nts to 309 houses, ; r week ployes at about SO ' ^ ^output of three i8,r>-l» flourish,„“"a Sh°WS *** R°BBED A mail car. ity upon which her peace of mind, her y~ happiness, and her life depend. In stead of the treatment that makes thousands of cures a certainty and fail ure almost unheard-of accident, she re ceives that which makes failure a cer- , , tainty and the cure a mere accident. No woman, who is tired of suffering, tired of doctoring, or tired of life, ; should fail to write Dr. l'ierce, or to the World's Dispensary Medical Asso ciation, of llulfalo, N. Y., of which he is President She will receive, free of , charge, good, sound, professional ad vice that will enable her to cure her self at home (if her case is curable), pleasantly, painlessly, permanetly, and this, too, without having to undergo the trying ordeal of1 ‘examinations” and the stereotyped and dreaded treatment by “local applications.” If her case is really incurable, she will be told so ’ plainly. Hut Dr. Pierce’s records, cov ering hundreds of thousands of cases, prove that there are not three incura ble cases in a hundred. A GREAT BOOK FREE. When Pr. l’ierce published the first edition of his work. The People's Com* mon Sense Medics] Adviser, he an nounced that after 680,65o copies had been sold at the regular price, $1.50 per copy, the profit on which would repay him for the great amount of labor and money expended in producing it, ho would distribute the next half million free. As this number of copies has al ready been sold, he is now distributing, absolutely tree, 500,000 copies of this most com- „-» plete. in ter ror pon NO. 101. esting and common ical work * lished—the recipient only being re va 1 ua ble sense med * ever pub quired to mail to him, or the World's Dispensary Medical Association, of Buffalo, N. Y , of which he is presi dent, this little coupon number with twenty-one (a 1) cents in one cent stamps to pay for postage and packing only, and the book will be sent by maiL It is a veritable medical library, complete in one volume. It contains over 1,000 pages and more than 300 illustrations. Several finely illustrntsd chapters are devoted to the careful consideration in plain language, of diseases peculiar to women and their successful home-treatment without the aid of a physician and without having to submit to dreaded ' examinations” and the stereotyped "local applica tions.” so repulsive to the modest and justly sensitive woman. The Free Kdi tion is precisely the same as that sold at $1.50 except only that the books are bound in strong manilla paper covers instead of cloth. Send now before all are given away. They are going off rapidly, therefore, do not delay send ing immediately if in want of one. The June Atlantic contains install ments of the two leading serials by Mrs. Ward and Hilbert Darker, also a short story of frontier garrison life, by Ellen Mackubin. entitled Uosita. An other bit of fiction of unusual charac ter and interest is, Through the Win dows; Two Glimpses of a Man's Life. The two chapters bearing the signifi cant titles Detachment and Disen chantment. Lafcudio Hearn contrib utes a delightful paper entitled In the Twilight of the Gods, which, with Mary Stockton Hunter’s poem, A Jap anese SworcTCong, gives this issue it distinct flavor of the Orient