Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 28 September 1894 — Page 2

THE DAILY JOURNAL.

E

stablished is

IS!

Printed Every Afternoon Except Sunday.

THE JOURNAL COMPANY. T. H. U. McCAIN. I'resMonl. J. A. 0 UKKN K. Secretary.

DAILY—

Uno year Six months Three months. Per week by ci

A. A. McCAlN* Treasurer.

Payable in advance. Sample copies tree,

0 0

..... ..... 1-5 10

currier or mail

WKKKLYOneytmr ...- Six months .... Three mouths

Did not Chairman Wilson 111 the last speech he made on the tloor of the House say that S 10,000,000 into sugar trust?

kt

S','04 a year for his labor is better paid than the man who receives S3 IT.

I Senator Hill should by chance succeed in being elected Governor of New York no other name will be mentioned in the Democratic convention in 1 s^m'i for the Presidency. Should the Senator be the nominee it is safe to say that there will be an anti-income tax plank in the platform, and all the little cuckoo newspapers which have so vociferously yelled for an income tax will deny that such a tax ever was a cardinal principle of the Democratic party, and will chameleon-like change their colors and turn their backs on their own record.

Mil, Uitor.KshiKK in his speech last Saturday said: "As your representative in Congress you know thatl voted against the tax on sugar." And he might, with equal truth have added that he also voted for the tax on sugar: which he did all in the same day. And the people will be apt to remember that his voted taxing sugar was a shot in the air, while his vote .'or taxing sugar was effectual in fastening taxed sugar on the people. The good voters of this Congressional district will know how to estimate the conduct of one who tenderly kisses them on one cheek and at the same time strikes them a stinging blow on the other.

A soMKWHA.r curious fact isshown by the September report of the statistician's department of the Agricultural Hureau at Washington, that is. the rapid increase of the population of towns and cities in the United States as compared with the increase of country population. For illustration, the urban, 01* city and town population has increased, since 1*00. a fraction over HW per cent while the agricultural, or country population lias increased, in the same time, only a fraction over f»7 percent. In many of the Mates a greater disparity even than this is shown. The statistics are given for the Southern States only, but the writer of the report thinks the census reports, for the Northern States, when they are examined, will show even a greater disparity than is found at the South. No doubt this peculiar condition grows out of the rapidly increasing wealth of the country. As individuals become wealth)* they retire from agricultural pursuits and seek homes in the towns and cities. Another cause is the rapid development of manufacturing pursuits, and the gradual decrease of demand for farm labor on account of agricultural machinery.

avid

H.

ii.l,

who has been nom­

inated by the Democracy of New York as their candidate for Governor, made a speech in the Senate in opposition to the Gorman tariff bill. He not only spoke against it but he voted against it. He was bitterly opposed to the income tax feature of the bill and in tincourse of his speech said: if this is true Democracy. I want none of it. If this is the best leadership which we cau present in this great crisis, I for one must decline to follow it. I prefer to stay with Jefferson. Jackson and Tilden opposition to all income taxes and direct Federal taxation. but in favor of a revenue for Federal purposes and direct taxation for State purposes. I repudiate the spurious Democracy of these modern apostles and prophets, who are part Mugwump. part Populist and the least part

Democrat, who seek to lead us astray after false gods, false theories and false methods.

It was on account of this speech that the A ryu#'Seu'H read him out of the Democratic party. The little cuckoo could not brook the idea of being classed with the "spurious Democracy," those who are "part Mugwump, part Populist, and the least part Democrat" and who are accused of wandering "after false gods, false theories and false methods."

33SSSS?f"

DIACNOSIM DISI-ASI: BLINDFOLDED.

I'.KMAKKAIU.i AKKKH IN TIIK CI KK or TIII: SICK.

Holding an Angry Mob »t Hay 1'roiu tin* Hear I'hitlorui ol the Train.

Col. Kobert (7. Olcott of London, was the gxiest of the Chester Club of Philadelphia the evening when the subject for discussion happened to be our great men. Ami as Col. Olcott's tnission to this country was to investigate the history of the different types of .,

oo

... 50

a

Ruteieri at the Postottieo at CrawfordnvMe,

threat Americans, he was called upon

Indiana as secoud-^lass mutter. to respond. "I will respond as to the said the Colonel in his FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1894.

the liorman bill the pockets of

every voter remember that the

Republican party put sugar on the free list aud that the Democratic party has taken it off the free list and put a tarltl of 40 per cent on it. Hut a tariff ou sugar is not distasteful to British maufact re rs.

Mil.

kooksuikk

will please take

notice that notwithstanding the lior-man-Rrice tariff' is iu full operation the market reports show a declinc in both wheat and corn. The wonderful ''markets of the world" do not seem to

"open" to our farm produce.

MK.

kookshikk,

iu

his printed

speech attered ovei

which is being

the district, says: "According to the most reliable statisties the average laborer iu our manufactories turns out a product annually valued at SI.r*S0, and for making this product -lie receives in wages 5?347. In Creat Britain he turns out an annual product valued at ST'.'O and receives in wages for manufacturing the same $-04." •i \Mr. Brookshire's argument amounts to this, that the man who receives

4

physicians I English brogue. "My idea, gentlemen, of a great physician is a physician who is capable, a ml who does great things, a mau put of great originality, quick in perccpthe tion. cool in demeanor, strong in his convictions, forcible in the prcsenta-

I tion of his belief and unbiased by sectarian prejudice, whether it be in tnedicitie, religion or politics. The phy111 I refer to is certainly a worulerphysioian as well as a remarkable personality. "lie seems to possess a great intuition which enables him to diagnose all diseases and describe those diseases without being told anything and without asking any questions better than the patient can tell him. 1 have seen him in more than cases blindfolded, ami in this condition tell every person their diseases in detail without asking a question. Consequently, when he

a

patient he doctors him for

the right, disease instead of experimenting with him. I have seen him more than a dozen times while thoroughly blindfolded read a book as readily as if he had the use of hiseyes. I don't pretend to say how he does these things for 1 don't know, but I dp know that he does them. "He examines thousands of sick peo1 pie every year, and tells each and everyone their trouble without askin a question. Now it seems to me that a man who can read the inside of a sick person as he would an open book without asking any questions is far more capable of treating the patient than the doctor who has to guess at the disease from what the patient may tell him. "The gentleman I refer to is Dr. It.

C. Flower of Hoston. Mass. You have all heard of him many times. He has thousands of patients under his care. These patients are distributed all over your United States and in ot'.jer countries. Wherever Dr. Flower goes crowds gather to see him of the incurable sick from every part of the world. Inquiry at the following hotels—Uiggs House. Washington. D. (V. Exchange Hotel. Richmond. Ya.: Kimball House, Atlanta. Ga.: St. James Hotel. Jacksonville.

Fla.: Tremont House. Galveston. Tex.: Menger House. San Antonio, Tex.: Richelieu Hotel. Little Rock, Ark.: Guyosa Hotel, Memphis, Tenn.: Gait House. Louisville. Ky.: Reers Hotel: St. Louis. Mo. Throop Hotel. Topeka. Kan.: l'lankiniton Hotel, Milwaukee Wis.: Palmer House, Chicago, III.' Cadillac Hotel, Detroit, Mich.: Denison Hotel. Indianapolis, Ind.: Grand Hoteb Cincinnati. O.—and the Continental Hotel in this city have all brought the answer that wherever Dr. R. C. Flower visits their hotel great crowds of the sick and suffering come to see him,and that the people who come to see him are generally the most prominent and wealthy people of the country, representing all the positions, business and professional, of life: and as far as any expressions have been heard, they have been that Dr. 11. C. Flower has cured or is curing them, aud that he told them their diseases without asking a question. "The physician who took Antonio Casenero, the Cuban Prince, and his wife to see Dr. R. C. Flower in ls?W. de" scribed to me the first interview be tween Dr. Flower and the Prince's wife: You need not tell me anything,' said the Doctor as he took the woman's hand in his and looked directly into her eyes for a minute. It is my opinion,' said the Doctor slowly, 'that you were bitten by a vicious cat some years ago and come very near losing your life from the injury. Shortly after this occurred you received a blow in your left breast. Soon a lump appeared. This in time was pronounced a cancer and you had it cut out. It soon returned with four or live other growths, and are under the arm. You have had at least two, and I believe three operations. Your case is now considered by physicians generally as incurable.' You are right in every particular.' said the woman, 'but for 1 rod's sake how did you know these things.' 'Never mind how I know them. 1 see you now have seven or eight growths coming in the breast around the edges where the operations were performed and two under the arm. Your disease has now reached a stage where you are in constant suffering.' Without delay the Doctor filled a hypodermic needle with a mixture of lachcsis. permanganate of potash, thymol and refined green tincture of still enger, and made an injection into each growth. These injections he repeated every third day for three weeks, when every trace of the cancerous growths were gone. lie treated the svs em constitutionally for eight months, from which time Mrs. Casenero has enjoyed perfect health. "The Minister to the United States from one of the leading South Attic ican Republics told my worthy friend on tny left that he believed Dr. R. C.

Flower, of Hoston. was inspired of God to cure the sick when all other efforts failed: that he and his family were patients of Dr. R. *C. Flower, and his treatment of their cases was miraculous. I hold in my hand a letter from the late ex-Governor Hishop of Ohio, in which he says: *If uiiraclcsliave ever

been performed in modern times then Dr. R. C. Flower, of Hoston, performs them daily. I have seen him examine scores of patients without asking a question and tell each otic in detail his, trouble. 1 have seen men and women sick unto death with cancers and tumors. after given up bv the leading medical skill of this country to die. cured by Dr. R. C. Flower iu a short time without the knife, without pain ami without blood. I have seen the same wonderful cures of paralysis, rheumatism, heart and nerve troubles.' The

Governor closes this letter by saying: •There are several brothers in the Flower family whose lives are full of promise. H. O. Flower, the youngest brother, is the popular editor of the .Imm. but there is but one Dr. R. C. Flower, and there will

Never! Never! Never!

He another. He has built up his present great practice, which is without doubt the largest and most extended practice in the world. Of this great practice he is its head, its life, its center and its source. One of his brothers. Dr. A. H. Flower, is in his employ, and is doing a good work. Other phy" sicians of skill are associated with him. He is the most cheerful man in the sick room I ever knew. The moment you come into his presence you feel that he will cure you. lie is the most pleasing gentlcmau Lever met. and in my judgment the greatest living physician.' "It was Dr. R. C. Flower who 1 I years ago cured in this city the President of the Pennsylvania railroad, of hopeless paralysis. From that day to this his miraculous cures have startled your country at frequent intervals.

Such cures as that of Miss Ella Hetts, South Norwalk. Conn., from helplessness to perfect use of her limbs: Mrs. A. T. Longly. of Washington, D. C.. of malignant ilbroid growth of the womb, and all these cures permanent. His recent cures of such men as .John Hopkins, Ellsworth, Me., aud Dr. F. M. Hrooks. Portland. Me.: of John Straw, of Stowe, Vt., of Mrs. Jerry Roth, of Yergetines. Yt.iof Mrs. Mcmbor. of

Ralston Spa. N. Y.: of A. E. Sprague, of Columbus, O. of Mrs. Jhcnta Deykean. of Sheridan. Ind. of C. II. Posey, 015 Chestnut street. Evansville. Ind the wife of the Hon. William Mix, of Louisville, Ky.: is evidence beyond dispute that Dr. R. C. Flower in the treatment and cure of chronic diseases is a master: that most of his cures are men and women given up by other physicians as iucurabble. Dr. Flower is the head, the examining and consulting physician of this great practice, while the treatment and details are attended to by his associates.

Your worthy secretary, who has known Dr. Flower for many years, has told me mativ au interesting bit of his history while he was in the practice of the law. For, as some of you know, the Doctor was educated for law, practiced several years, lost his voice, went into the practice of medicine, and has never been able to quit it. It was in 1

ST I r.'O years ago) that Dr. R. C. Flower, not a practicing physician then, was called to Mobile to defend a mau under arrest charged with arson. After a desperately fought case he succeeded in acquitting his client. On his return North at a little station south of Franklin, Tenn.. a mob of infuriated men surrounded the sheriff, who was endeavoring to get a negro on the trair. A thousand men. many of them with masks on their faces, cried out:

'Jiang llhn! Hang Illm!'

A rope was thrown around his neck, and in another moment he would have been swinging to a limb, when R. C. Flower, moving his hand, cried out from the rear platform: "Gentlemen, hear me before you hang this man. You are Southern men, and I am glad as such to address you. This great crowd is represented by soldiers who a few years ago wore both the gray and the blue. Your records were those of courage, of daring and valor. You were brave men then, and 1 believe you arc brave men to-day. You are Southerners: men of ceivalry. men easily excited, quick to resent an evil, but, gentlemen.

You Are Not Murderer*,

And I don't believe you want to murder this man in cold blood. You don't want to establish a'precedent of mob law, which may some day be visited upon some of you. Let the law. beg you. take its course. You will feel better as you think it over: better when you go to your beds to-night, and better it. the silence of your last ::ight on earth.* At this the leader of the mob cried out as he threw the rope down: "I reckon you are right, young man. We will let the law take its course," and the Sheriff hustled the frightened negro into the car."

Hut enough. Col. Olcott only expresses what thousands know, aud if Dr. R. C. Flower should ever return to the practice of law he would at an early day carve his name on the highest round of a great reputation.

The great interest the world now has in Dr. Flower is as a physician, as a healer, when all others fail and death approaches.

Those interested in the wonderful career of this marvelous man who send four cents return postage stamps to the Flower Medical Co., No. 5.VJ Columbus avenue. Hoston. Mass.. will receive a Photogravure Biography and Dr. Flower's new book, entitled. "Dr. R. C. Flower in the Sick Room." This justly famous physieu can be conveniently consulted as follows:

Steubenville, Ohio, Imperial Hotel, Monday, Oct. s, Columbus. Ohio. Neil House, Tuesday, Oct.

Springfield. Ohio, Arcade Hot Wednesday, Oct. 10. Dayton, Ohio. Meckel House, Thursday, Oct. 11.

Toledo, Ohio, Hotel Madison, Friday, Oct U\

WORKING WOMEN.

THEIR ll.UU) STllUtiULE

Made Easier by (he Timely liitei'ven* tiou of One Woman,

(Sl-Kri ll. TO ll" LA1Y KKA1£KS

All women work. Some in their homes, some in church, ami some in the whirl of society. Many in stores, mills, and shops, tens of thous011 the never treatlmilleaming their daily food.

A shops, ten II amis are fA I ceasingtre

All are subject to the same physical laws all suffer alike from the same physical disturbance and the nature of their duties in many cases

^snwvquickly drifts them Into the horrors of all kinds of female complaints

—ovarian troubles, inflammation, ulceration, falling and displaccmentof the womb, leucorrh ix-a, or perhaps Irregularity or suppression of monthly periods "—causing severe backache, nervousness, irritability and lassitude.

Jjijdin K. niikham's Vegetable Compound is the unfailing cure for all these troubles. It strengthens the proper muscles and displacement with all its horrors will no more crush you.

Backache, dizziness, fainting, bearing down, disordered stomach, moodiness, dislike of friends and society all symptoms of the one cause will be quickly dispelled, and you will again be free. Accept the truth.

You can tell the story of your pain to a woman, and get the help that only a woman can give. Her

iHou'st'

address is, LydiaE. Pinkliam, Lynn, Mass.

A STRANCE CASE.

How an Enemy was Foiled. The following prraphlc statement will be refill with intense interest: "I cannot, describe 1.lie numl), creepy sonsation that-ex 1sted in my arms hands and lojxs. 1 had to rub and bent tlh^e partn until they were sore, to overcome iu a measure the dead feeling that had taken pDSM^sion of them. In addition, I had a 1 ranire weakness In my back and around my iit..together witii an indescribable 'tforie' feeling. In'my stomach. Physicians said it wis i-tvf'i'Oi r'paralysis. from which, accordr.'z 1 ihfir unix «-rsal conclusion, there is no "••hef. ice it fastens upon a person, they :iy, it continues its insidious progress until reaches a vital point and the sufferer dies, •sich vviis rny prospect-. 1 had been doctoring a year and a half steadily, but with no par.irular benefit, when I saw an advertisement fIr Miles' Restorative Nervine, procured a 1 itsle and betian using it. Marvelous as it :iay -eem, but a few days had passed before every bit of that creepy feeling had left me. and there has not been even the slightest indication of its return. I now feel a well as I ever did, and have gained ten pounds in weight, though I had run down from 170 to ItfT. Four others have used Dr. Mile*' Kestorative Nervine on my recomendation.and it. has been as satisfactory intheir eases as in mine."—Jarues Kane, La Kue, O.

Ir. Miles' Kestorative Nervine is sold byall druwristg on a positive puuramec, or sent direct by the Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind.. on receipt, of price, $1 per bottle, six bottles forSfi. express prepaid. It is free from opiate* gr daiUK'ruus drmftfc

Sold by all druggists.

10.

New Albany, Ind., Windsor Hotel, Wednesday, Oct. IT. Evansville, Ind.,,.. St. Ueorge Hotel. Thursday. Oct. l-.

Torre Haute. Ind.. National Friday. Oct. Lafayette. Ind.. Kramble Saturday, Oct. ^0.

Linen

The Randall.

Kort Wayne. Ind., Saturday, Oct. 13. Indianapolis, Ind.. New tel. Monday and Tuesday

Denison HoOct. 1 fi and

Hotel.

House.

Myers Charni have a groat many bargains left at the Campbell corner in everything that is desirable for win ter wear.

Try It.

For a lame back or for a pain in the side or chest, try saturating a piece of tlannel with Chamberlain's 1'ain Halm and binding it onto the aiTectod parts. This treatment will cure any ordinary case in one or two days. Pain Halm also cures rheumatism. HO cent bottles for sale by Nye & Kooe. Ill North Washington street, opposite court house.

Khfctrlc IllUor*.

This remedy is becoming- so known and so popular as to need no special mention. All who have used Klectrie Hitters sing the same song of praise.—A purer medicine does not exist and it is guaranteed to do all that is claimed. Klectrie Hitters will cure all diseased of the liver and kidneys, will remove pimples, boils, salt 'rheum and other affections caused by impure blood.—Will drive malaria from the system and prevent as well as cure all malarial fevers. For cure of headache, constipation and ,indigestion try Electric Hitters.— Entire satisfaction guaranteced. or money refunded. Trice ."() cts. and 551 per bottle at Cotton Si. Rife's Progress Pharmacy.

imim.ks,

boils and other humors of

the. blood are liable to break out in the warm weather. Prevent it by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla.

•SHaxKinj 'oo 'ivNimop MUX oas sduiuituifoad noj

3A3HLLHM)

Bargains,

5C

your inspection.

P.

S.

X"juap ftdsjpa

Blip

In the rush for Bargains in Our

XodsX xnjA^

There remains but a

days to get the

Handkerchief Bargains, Wash Goods Bargains,. Domestic Bargains,

every department.

Dress Goods Bargains,

We must have the room our Wash Goods occupy, so all

that remains of the

Lot, 7ic Lot, ioc Lot, 15c Lot. 29c Lot

Will be packed away after the selling is over Saturday evening, but

from past and present indications there will be but few left, be­

cause they are melting away like snow betore a warm Spring

sunshine. Some of the best styles yet remain and are worthy

It Pays to Trade at the Big Store.

LOUIS BISCHOF.

"The Big S ore." 127-129 E. Main St

New Fall and Winter Goods are arriving daily

QOAVU

Great Discount Sale,

few more