Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 6 August 1892 — Page 2

The BmaUesl^^ilJJba^lioJWorld!. 1

THE SECRET

I of recruiting health 1» discovered d|

•Tiny Liver Pills*

In liver affections,

DAILY—

sick hcadache, dy»- A

peptla, flatulence, heartburn, bllioua colic, eruptions of the skin, and all troubles of the bowels, their curative effects aro marvelouB. They area corrective as well as a gentle cathartic, A Very small and easy to take. Price, 85c. Office, 39 & 41 Fark Place, N. Y.

Weekly Journai.

PRINTED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING

By T. H. B. McCAIN.

Entered at the Postoflice at Lnvwlordsvllle Indiana, as second-class matter,

WEEKLY—

One year In advance S1.2o 8lx months Jjj Three months 40 One month 15

One year In advance LO.OO Six months 2.50 Three months 1.25 Per week delivered or bv mail 10

SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1892.

OUR NEXT CONGRESSMAN.

The Republican convention held at Rockville on July 28 made no mistake. The delegates from the various counties conferred with each other and canvassed the names of several gentlemen. After discussing the strength of each they unanimously reached the conclusion that "W. S. Carpenter, of Clay county,

4was

the man to it against the Democratic candidate, and who could win in November. While the district is regarded as Democratic, having been built that way by a Democratic Legislature, it is by no means certain that Mr. Brookshire will have a walk away. In 1886 James T. Johnston had a majority of 1,097 over John E. Lamb, with the district as it now constituted. In 1888 Cleveland carried the district by 39 majority, while Brookshire's plurality was but 69. That year there were 16,237 votes cast. In 1890 the total vote cast was 40,556, a falling off of nearly 6,000 votes. While Brookshire had a plurality of over 3,000, yet he received 2.000 less number of votes than he received in 1888. From these figures will be seen that the election of Mr. Carpenter is not hopeless by any means. Of Mr. Carpenter personally the Terre Haute Express has the following:

Winfield Scott Carpenter, who was nominated for congress at Rockville yesterday and who will represent the Eighth congressional district in the next congress, was born in Cloverland, Clay county, January 30, 1850. He lived and worked on the farm until four years ago. After taking the usual Course of school common to boys on the farm, young Carpenter went to Ascension seminary at Farmersburg, where he prepared for college. Hp spent a year at Asbury university unci afterword, during the winter months, taught school in Clay county, Avorking on thr farm during the summer months. Four years ago Mr. Carpenter was elected clerk of the Clay circuit court by a majority of 105 Votes, he being the only Republican elected on the ticket. No better evidence of the faithfulness with which he discharged the duties of county clerk could be found than the unanimity with which the bar and people of Clay county supported Mr. Carpenter in his recent race for the office of secretary of State. And no

Burer

test

of his fealty to the Republican party than the manly spirit displayed by him after defeat in his gallant race for that office.

Mr. Oarpenter has scores of acquaintances in every county in the Eighth district, but his circle of friends is especially wide in Clay and Vigo counties where without regard to political preferences, he has won hosts of fiiends and admirers by his earnest, BtraiglitforiWard manner and fine personal charac ter. Mr. Carpenter was in no sense a candidate before the congressional con vention and when hie many friends urged him to accept the nomination on the score of his thorough fitness for the place he insisted that his name should not be presented. At the same time he assured his friends that if it was the de mand of his party that he should make the race he would enter the race to win.

fEARL BUTTONS.

The Indiunapolis News is an ultra free trade organ. It has an editorial in Thursday's edition on pearl buttons and the tariff thereon, in which it says:

All this shows the wonderful value of a [high tariff—only let it be high enough. It makes manufacturers prosperous who were languishing, though they have to sell their goods at lower rates in prosperity than they did in languishment. It puts down "the prices of goods to consumers. It enables manufacturers to pay twice as hi^h wages BB they paid when they got more for their product. Incidentally it showB that when the manufacturers assured Congress they could not compete with the Vienna pauper-made buttons they were prevaricating, for they are now Belling their buttons below the prices formerly ruling for the imported buttons, are boasting of their prosperity and are declaring that their workmen earn twice as much a week as they did in the old unpaosperous days of higher prices.

It will be observed that the News does not deny that the American pearl button manufacturers are more prosperous than they were before the McKinlev tariff was passed, that they pay their laborers more than beipre, and that pearl buttons are cheaper than ever. If the Neu-

will study the industrial history of the country it will see that this has been the uniform result from the beginning of the government. Cheaper products, higher wages, greater prosperity. These results have followed tariff laws with as much uniformity as water has continued to run down hill. The editor of the Neios may exercise his facetiousness as much as he pleases, on the subject, but he cannot deny the facts, and facts are generally more telling in a controversy than fun.

A HIGH TARIFF MEASURE.

The city ordinance exacting a high license from peripetetic tradesmen of various kinds is a drastio measure. Its object is protection to home merchants, the men who pay the taxes and bear the burdens of maintaining our city government, against a class of tradesmen who jump into the town to-day, secure the cream of the trade and are gone to-morrow, carrying away with them scores of bright, shining dollars, and leaving none to lighten the burdens of the permanent tax payer. There can be no question as to the correctness of the principle. It is the policy of protection as applied to national trade now employed for local trade. The amusing feature connected with the measure and its passage by the City Council was the petition which was signed by every Democratic business man in town including the editor of the Star, praying for the enact ment of the ordinance. These men are oppobed to the foreigner who lives across the sea paying for the privilege of selling his goods in the United States, and wants no barrier placed in the way of his coming, but when it comes to fellows selling jack knives, soap, pearl buttons, tin cups, and various other items in competition with themselves they ssk for a tariff so high that it is prohibitory. It is entirely consistent for Republicans to ask for such an ordinance, but for Democrats, especially such free traders as the editor of the -Star,it becomes inexpressibly funny.

WORKINGMEN in this country are protectionists because it is their interest. They know on which side their bread is buttered. Their sentiment is clearly and strongly set forth in the following editorial from the Right of Labor, the official newspaper of the organized laboring men of Chicago:

The sap-headed logicians who are attempting to bolster up the free trade arguments by appealing to the workingmen to look at Homestead utterly mistake the principles of the protective tariff. No one assumes, no one but an aes would assume that if the tariff on steel was made five times as large as it is, that it would "compel" Carnegie or any other manufacturer to pay living wages—but the protective tariff enables Carnegie to pny Jiving wages if he chooses to do so.

Being !tbl8 tO pay living wages, it is the work of the trades-unions to compel him to do BO. But all the trades-unions in the icorld could not "compel" him to pay wages on a scale of $24 or $25 a ton if he ivas obliged to compete with steel of English manufacture that could be laid down in New York under free trade at S10 a ton.

THE JOUHNAL wants it "borne in mind" that Mr. Brookshire voted against the tin plate tariff and therefore make it impossible to carry on the tin plate business here in competition with the tin plate business of Great Britain. Certainly we all want it borne in mind. The tin plate humbug has gone far enough and Mr. Brookshire has done just what nine-tenths of the people wanted him to do. There was no excuse in voting tariff tax on sixty million people just because a few dozen capitalists wanted a legislative lift. It were better to vote a per capita tax of a few cents and present it to the tariff robbers, than to tax the people indirectly for their benefit. The tin plate fellows are always about to do some great things, but ail that is a bluff.—Star.

The best answer to this kind of stuff is the following dispatch to the Indianapolis Journal of yesterday.

ELWOOD, July 27.—The tin plate factory is fast increasing its capacity. At present it is turning out one thousand boxes of the finest bright plate each week. They cannot fill their orders they come so rapidly, but by September hope to be able to make ten thousand boxes per month.

THE Democracy of the Tenth District have nominated Thomas Hammond as the candidate for Congress. Mr. Hammond is the president of a bank and is at the head of the Beef Trust, the second largest truBt in America and by which he haa made

hiB

millions. It is

amusing to see Democratic newspapers denounce millionaires and trusts and in the same breath endorse such men as Hammond for CongresB.

THE Supreme court of Michigan haB knocked the Democratic gerrymander of that State for CoDgreBBional and Legislative purposes higher than Gilderoy's kite. This will soon be followed by the New York geirymander. The Indiana outrage would go the same way if it was attacked.

THE wbeat of Madison and Sugar Creek township is yielding from 25 to 30 bushels per acre, and there's thousands of acres of it.

TIN, TIN.

More than a score of years ngo the same class of calamity howlers that are howling to-day that tin cannot be made in this country, claimed that thread could not be made here, from the fact, as the Englishman said, we had not the hatmosphere but Yankee ingenuity went to work and created an atmosphere and by the aid of a protective tariff was able to manufacture a better grade of thread than was made in England, and now America is the home of thread manufacturing. While we have abundance of tin ore in this country, —which the enemies of American progress deny—there is EO reason why American ingenuity shall not manufacture all the tin we can use and have some left for campaign purposes. The party that would sacrifice the prosperity of the country for party sake is not trustworthy.

LABORERS WANTED.

Telegrams in Saturday's papers say that from two hundred to four hundred farm laborers are needed in each county in South Dakota east of the Missouri river—about ten thousand laborers in all. Southern Minnesota and North Dakota also ask for laborers on their farms. It is estimated that 40,000 of them are needed to harvest the immense grain crop of the Northwest within the next month. This is the only country in the world where there is a cry for men to go to work.

NEITHEK one of the Democratic organs of this city will undertake to explain why the entire Democratic representation in Congress voted against putting sugar on the free list. Of all of what the Democrats are so fond of calling "tariff taxes," none was so burdensome on poor people as the tariff on sugar. The duty had failed to develope any considerable home competition, to reduce the price and the poor used quite as much sugar as the rich, and the poorest were therefore compelled to pay the same amount of sugar tax as the rich. Why is it so monstrous to tax tin cans and yet all right to compel the poor man to pay ten times as much tax on his sugar? Whatever is made in England must be free but what is produced elsewhere must be taxed. This seems to be the Democratic theory.

THE speech of W. E. Humphrey at the congressional convention on July 28 which is printed in full in to-day's Terre Haute Express, is the theme of universal praise among Republicans. It is compact, full of points, and shows that Mr. Humphrey knows how to talk true Republicanism in a way to make his speeches effective. He v, ill of course, take an active part in the great campaign of 1892, and the people in Various parts of the State will have a chance to hear this rising young advocate of Republican doctrines.

THE protection ordinance has thrown the Star into convulsions. Discussing a sample case," that of Dr. Huntsinger, that paper says:

Now comes along a Council

find

enacts

an ordinance that drives him out of every coming here again. Well, didn't you ask the Council to pass such an ordinance? That same section concerning doctors was in tne Columbus ordinance and attached to the petition which you signed.

JOHN M. PYIJE, a prominent tarmar of Wayne county,

waB

pulled up the other

day before a Justice of the Peace, charged with the offense of permitting the Canada thistle to grow on his farm, not only to his own damage bun that of the entire neighborhood. Pylo pleaded guilty and was fined $5 ami costs, which aggregated $30.75. Montgomery county farmers should take wiiruing.

GOVERNOR CHASE has decided to appoint Judge Henry G. Fox, of Wayne county, to the position on the Appellate court bench made vacant by the death of Judge Milton S. Robinson, of Anderson. Fox was a candidate against the deceased Judge before the Ft. Wayne convention and came within twenty votes of being nominated.

IF any tradesman or merchant tells you that any kind of goods are higher on account of the McKinley tariff you had better go somewhere else and buy your goods. He is simply trying to Bwindle you.

Indianapolis Journal: WHEN Elijah Voorhnes Brookshire ascertains the facts about Winfield Scott Carpenter the truth will dawn upon him that he is outclassed.

I have been troubled with chronic catarrh for years, Ely's Cream balm is the only remedy among the many that I have used that affords me relief.—E, W. Willard, Druggist., Joliet, 111.

My son has been afflicted with nasal catarrh since quite young. 1 was induced to try Ely's Cream Balm, and before he had used one bottle that disagreeable catarrhal smell had all left him. He appears as well as anyone. It is the beet catarrh remedy in the market.—J. C. Olmstead, Areola, 111.

THE House ought to make the appropriation for the World'6 Fair. The fair is not a local, but a national institution, and as such it should be made worthy of the country. We think those Indiana congressmen who are opposing the bill are hardly in touch with their constituents, for we believe a vast majority of the people of Indiana favor the appropriation.—Indianapolis Sentinel.

Yes but they are all—including our Elijah Voorhees Brookshire—under command of the Southern Brigadiers, and like good soldiers must obey orders. Everything in this government, so far as the House is concerned, is subject to the will of a score of Southern Congressmen elected by fraud and intimidation.

CONGRESSMAN BROOKSHIRE is one of the filibusters in the House to defeat the proposed appropriation of $5,000,000 to the World's Fair. It is proposed to utilize $5,000,000 worth of the worn and unused silver coin in the treasury to assist the greatest industiial exhibition that the world has ever seen, yet at an expense of $28,000 a day Mr. Brookshire throws himself into the breach to prevent the final passage of the sundry civil appropriation bill. The voters of the District should set the seal of condemnation of their mossback Congressman.

THE editor of the Star did sign "such a petition but the ordinance he petitioned for don't look any more like the ordinance the council finallv passed than the editor of THE JOURNAL looks like Grover Cleveland.—Star.

The ordinance as passed, with some minor amendments, was clipj^ed from a Columbus paper and attached to a petition. And this petition the editor of the Star signed asking the council to pass the ordinanc making it apply to Crawfordville. Yes tell the truth

INSTEAD of jumping onto the City Council with both feet for passing the protection ordinance, the editor of the Star should go out and kick himself for asking that it be done.

WHY did you sign that petition, anyhow?

A carpenter by the name of M.S.Powers fell from the roof of a house in East Des Moines, Iowa, sustained a painful and serious sprain of the wrist,which he cured with one bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm. He says it is worth $5 a bottle it cost him only 50 cents For sale by Nye & Booe, druggists.

HON. W. V. LUCAS, Ex-State Auditor of Iowa, says: "I have used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in my family and have no hesitation in saying it is an excellent remedy. I believe all that is claimed for it. Persons afflcted by a cough or a cold will find it a friends. There is no danger from whooping cough when this remedy is freely given. 50 Cent bottles for sale by Nye Booe.

When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria.

When she bad Children, she gave them Castoria.

Xeivsjiapers Jbnaorse.

"Educators are certainly the greatest benefactors of the race, and I, after reading Dr. Franklin Miles' popular works, cannot help declaring him to be among the most entertaining and educating authors." He is not a stranger to our readers, as his advertisements appear in our columns in every issue, calling attention to the fact tbat the elegant work on Nervous and Heart Diseases is distributed free by our enterprising druggists Nye fc Co. Trial Bottles of Dr. Miles' Nervine are given away, also Book of Testimonials showing that it is unequalled for Nervous Prostration, Headache. Poor Memory, Dizziness, Sleeplessness, Neuralgia,

Hysteria, Fits, Enileusy

Strong witnesses.

Among the thousands of testimonials of euros by Dr. Miles's New Heart Cure, is that of Nathan Allisons, a well known citizen at Glen Iiock, Pa., who for years had shortness of breath, sleeplessness, pain in left side, shoulders, smothering spalls, stc. one bottle of Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure and one bos of Nerve and Liver Pills, cured him. Peter Jaquet, Salem, N. J., is another witness. For twenty years suffered with Hea.' Disease, w.as turned away by physician., as ncurable, death stared him in the face, could not lay down for fear of smothering to death. Immediately after using New Cure he felt better and could lay down and sleep all night, and is now a well man. The New Cure i« sold, alBO free book, by Nye & Booe.

|g|| lluntslngcv's Treatment. Dr. Huntsinger, of Frankfort, was in the city to-day to make arrangements with Dr. J. R. Duncan to take charge of his institute for the cure of inebrity. The doctor is confident that his discovery and treatment for the cure of drunk enness is superior to all others, as it leaves none of the bad effects of the bichloride of gold. Those afflicted with the disease of drunkenness should call on Dr. Duncan.

Motion Route.

The L., N.A.& C.R.R. will sell round trip tickets from Crawfordsville to Denver on account of the Trennial Conclavee of Knights Templar for 816.40. Tickets on sale August 2d to 7th inclusive. Good to return until Oct. 11th and good for continuous passage only in both directions.? '"V H. S. WATSON, Agt.

AND SO DO

More than Half a Million

OTHER PEOPLE,

BECAUSE

IT IS THE BEST.

Buy No Other.

Sold bv Zack Mahornev & Sors.

C. H. Erganbright, V. S.,

GRADUATE OF

Ontario Veternry Collce/Toronto, Cai

TREATS ALL

DISEASES OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS.

—Surgery a Specialty.—

Your patronage solicited. Calls by mail or telegram promptly answerod. Office with Merrick & Darnell, Livery Stable, 112, 114 and 111) EastMarket Street, Crawfordsville. Indiana.

A

DM1XISTKATOU'S SALE.

Notice is hereby given that the undersigned as administrator of t.he estate of Albert Allen, late of Montgomery countv, I ndiana.Heceased. will, on Thursday, August 11, 1802. sell at public sale at his late residence, miles east of lirown's Valley, the following- personal property, to-^ a. Horses, cattle, hogs, corn in the crib, corn in the field, all kinds of farming implements, including a half interest In a binder and a corn plauter, i! wagons, one buggy, harness, household and kitchen furniture and other articles too numerous to mention.

TEKMS

OF SALE-All sums of

83 and under

cash. Over S!i a credit of twelve months will be given, the purchaser glvlnir his note with approved freehold security waiving valuation and appraisement laws, and bearing six per cent. Interest from date.

E. P.McCLASKEV,

July 1(1, 18!)2. Administrator.

OMMISSIONEICS SALE.

Notice is hereby given that, on Monday, August 15, 189:2, between the hours of one and four o'clock, p. m. at the law oiliee «tf Thomas & Whittington. Crawfordsville. lnd., pursuant to an order of the Montgomery Circuit Court I will oiler for stile at private sale the following real estate in Montgomery connty, Indiana, to-wit: A part of lot number 74 as designated on the recorded plat of the city of Crawfordsville, bounded as follows: Beginning at point on the east line of said lot. If» feet south of the northeast corner ol said lot No 74, running t'lcnee west feet, thence south IS feet, thence east 8:2 feet, thcuce north 18 feet to the place of beginning. Heing the brick building known us the Carson property. Purchaser to pay one-hall' cash and balance in six months, with six per cent, interest, and pay all taxes due in 189:1. If no sulliclent bid is received on or before said date said sale will be continued from day to day until a fnilicieut bid is received.

W. T. WIllTI'IVfiTON,

July 2:2. Commissioner.

Nor)* Sucb

CONDENSED

t\irjee

f\edA

Makes an every-day convenience of an old-time luxury. Pure and wholesome. Prepared with scrupulous care. Highest award at all Pure Food Expositions. Each package makes two large pies. Avoid imitations—and insist on having the

NONE SUCH brand.

AAERRELL & SOULE. Syracuse. N. V.

The Father of Mann ills. Conetipntion leads to a multitude of pbysicial troubles. It is generally the result of carelessness or indifference to the simplest rule of health. Eugene McKay, of Bradford, Out., writes: "I had for years been a sufferer from constipation, had taken a great maay different remedies, some of which did tne good for a time but only for a time, then my trouble came back worse than ever. I was induced by a friend whom Brand-ret-h's pills had benefited to try them. Took two each nigLt for a week, then one each night for six weeks. Since that time I have not c-xperienced the slightest difficulty, and ray bowels move regularly every day. I firmly believe that for sluggishness of the bowels, and biliousness Brandreth's Pills are far uperior to any other."

To loung Mothers

who are for the first time to undergo woman's severest trial, we offer you, not the stupor caused by chloroform, with risk of death for yourself or your dearly loved and longed-for offspring, but "Mother's Friend," a remedy which will, if used aa directed, invariably alleviate the pains, horrors and risks of labor,and often entirely do away with them. Sold by Nye & Booe, druggists.

Children Cry for

Pitcher's Castoria*

The Skill and Knowledge

Essential to the production of the most perfect and popular laxative remedy known have enabled the California Fig Syrup Co., to achieve a great success in the reputation of its remedy, Syrup of Figs, as it is conceded to be the un versal laxative. For sale by all drug

I Have Taken several

Bottles of Bradfield'a Female Regulator for falling of the womb and other die eases combined, of 16 years standing, and I really believe I am cured entirey, for which please accept my thanks

MRS. W. E. STEBBINS, Ridge, Qa.

$100000 TO LOAN'

7 per cent, Annual interest?

Without Commission.

NO HUMBUG.

Cumberland & Miller

118 West Main St.

ABSTRACTS^FTITLE Hster,

aying secured the services of Win. Wph late of the firm of Johnson & Wehsiert abstractors of title, I am prepared to he? *on«sl}°,rt

notlce.

i£,^

ct

?°i,

full and complete

titlet0 ftU ,andB

Snrt

na'at

MontgoSerl

reasonabIe

theRS?ffi'sSofflcreefully

Prices. Deeds

executcd- CaU

octoyl THOS. T. MPNHALL. Kecorripr.

MONEY to LOAN.

us in dribs^of Si 0(?yiCg

this

payment

*aU to

more at

an'

Write to oi call on

E

interest:

O. N. WILLIAMS & CO.,

Crawfordsville, Indiana.

PAUL & BRUNER,

Atto-neye-at-Law,

Office over Maliorney'sStore, .... Crawfordsville, lnd. All business entrusted to their enm win' receive prompt attention.

wi

THEO. McMECHAW DENTIST,

CHAWFOllDSVILLE, INDIANA lenders his service 10 t)»o m.hlu good work and moderate orices." -'otto

White, Hnniphrey & Reeves.

ATTORNEYS-A T-LA W, Crawfordsville, Inc.

Ofliee 103!4 Main street.

Money to Loan.

Bouses and Lots for Sale also Dwellings to Rent.

Mo tguges arefn 1Prepare 1 f"11^

AL.BERT C. JENNK0N

Loan and Insurance a^rent, and "abstractor a Conveyancer.

122 East Main St., Crawfordsville

Morgan & Lee

ABSTRACTORS, LOAN AND

INSURANCE AGENTS

•Money to Loan ut 6 percent interest.

Farms and City Property For Sale.

Life, Kire ami Accident Insurance. Office North Washington st., Ornbauc Block, Crawfordsville, lnd.

FIRST MORTGAGE LOAN, AT 4 PER CENT Interest payable» Annnally

APPLY TO

G. W.WRIGHT

Fisher Block, Boom 8, Crawfordsville,

IIK'^

FOR SALE

At the Gold Hidge Herd Poland Cliina BJSlfy liCjrs, of both sexes, limners' prices.

Also Buried ami

White Plymouth Hot cliicks. Efrgs in season Come and inspect. .T.y stock before purchasing Also, 1 have ,.ho celebrated Pacing Stallion. Bill Hull man, mark of 2:.'10'4, out. of Daniel Boone, 1st dam by Green Mountain Morgan.

GEOHOE \V. Kri.i.fcH.

7 miles north of Crawfordsville. Ind. Mention THE JOURNAL

To Consumptives.

The undersigned having been restored to health by simple means, after sutlering lor seseral years with a severe lung atlection, and that dread disease Cuusumpthin, is anxious to uiMke known to his fellow sutlererers the means of cure. To those who desire it, he will cheerfully send (free of charge) a copv of the prescription used, which they will find a sure cure for Aflhma, Catarrh, lirun chili,* and all throat and lung M1U1H

S

He

hopes all sutTccrs willtry his"remedy, as It 1b invaluable. Those desiring the prescription, which will cost them nothing, and may prove a blessing, will please address 1EV, RHWAHD A. WH.SON Brooklyn, New York

Co-opoiatiTj Industrial Union

1 24-, F.ast Jlsirket St.

FRANK CORNELL,

1 in E A

Also agent for the Wholesale Dealers' Association. We buy for cash only and therefore we have to sell for cash. !No toleration of willful misrepresentation in business. No antagonism to any reputable business or business firm.

We furnish Gents' Suits to order, Machine made carpets, Binding twine, Notions, Sewing Machines, etc Old machines taken in exchange for ne»v ones. More lines of goods to follow. Eating apples a specialty. Call and examine our samples and give us a share of your patronage, and we will strive to merit a continuance ol the same.

£0Mu.

Alice

1^1

fV lb*., now it 168 lbt.,

wu 320 a re-/.

doction of 153 Ita.. and I feel *o much better'that I would not take $1,000 and be pat back where I wai. 1 ani both lurprised and proud of the chanee. I recommend your treatment to all sufferer* from obeiity. Will answer all inquiries if stamp is inclosed for reply." PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. CONFIDENTIAL.

Hartnleaa, and with no starting inc ivenlence, or bad effecU. For particulars address, with 6 cents in st tmpi,

DR. o. w. r. mm. M'VICKER'S THEATER, CNICRIO, ILL:

N

OTICE OF APPOINTMENT.

Notice 1B hereby given th the undersigned has been appointed and duly qualified as Administrator of the estato ol Albert Allen, late of Montgomery county, Indiana, doceased. Said estate is supposed to bo Insolvent

E. P. McCLASKtY,

Dated July 10. 1802. Administrator.