Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 13 August 1892 — Page 2

The smallest, PU^J^ti^RTorld

THE SECRET

^fcof recruiting health is discovered 1H|

I TUTT'S •Tiny Liver Pills*

A In liver affections, sick headache, dys-1 pepsia, iiatulencc, lieartburn, bilious colic, eruptions of tho skin, and all troubles or the bowels, their curative cffects are marvelous. They area corrective as well as a gentle cathartic..

Very small and easy to take. Price, I 25c. Ofllco, 30 & 41 Park Place, X. Y.

WEEKLY JOURNAL.

PRINTED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING By T. H. B. McCAIN.

Entered nt tho Postoflico at trawlordsville Indiana, as second-class matter.

WEEKLY-

One year In advance 11.25 Blx mouths 75 Three months 40 One month 15

DAILY—

One year In advance 85.00 Six months 2.50 Three months. Per week delivered or bv mall

1.25 .10

SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 1892.

THE SUNDAY CLOSING CLAUSE. That our renders who heard the sermon at the Methodist church yesterday morning may not be misled we print below that section of the World's Fair bill relating to Sunday closing as it passed both Houses of Congress and signed by the President: "And it is hereby declared that all appropriations herein made for, or pertaining to, the "World's Columbian Exposition are made upen the condition that the said Exposition shall not be opened to the public on the first day of the week, commonly called Sunday and if the said appropriations be accepted by the corporation of the State of Illinois, known as the World's Columbian Exposition, upon that conditon, it shall be, and it is hereby made the duty of the World's Columbian Commission, created by the act of Congress of April 25, 1890, to make Buch rules of said corporation as shall require the closing of the Exposition on the first day of the week, commonly called Sunday."

Mr. Switzer labored under a misapprehension. He said this morning that from a hasty reading of the papers on Saturday he received the impression that all restrictions were stricken out. He regretted very much having said •what he did say in view of the facts.

W. P. C. BRECKINRIDGE, of Kentucky,

could not vote for the World's Fair appropriation because he had conscientious scruples about its constitutionality. How strange that a man who spent four years in the rebel army trying, to the full extent of his ability, to overthrow the constitution, should now be so full of solicitude about the constitution. The Chicago papers insist that Mr. Breckenridge shall be superceded as orator of the Columbian Fuir opening, tind that sotnd one shall be cho6en to fill that position who has breadth of mind enough to comprehend the affair about which he is to spaak.

THE Philadelphia Record savs that when McKinley raised the tariff on firecrackers the Chinese put less powder and less paper in t.heir firecrackers, to enable them to sell at the same old price. If the Record man will look at the McKinley bill he will see that the tariff on firecrackers was not raised at all. It was only changed from an advalorem to a specific rate. The old rate was 100 per cent, and the new is 8 cents per pound, which is 100 per cent, on the present price. If the Almighty's fountain of forgiveness is not unlimited in capacity, some of the free-trade liars will go to perdition sure.

THE tariff is a tax. It is a tax on the labor of every man who is not in a trust or combination of capital. It is a tax on the industry of every farmer, every mechanic, every man who has to depend upon his own labor. It should be wiped out.—Star.

Yes, the tariff on sugar, for instance. w«e an enormous tax on the poor, and the Republican party wiped it out against the vote and protest of every Democrat in Congress. The Democratic party wanted tfie burdensome tax oh sugar retained in order that there might be free trade in English manufactures.

EVERY electoral vote in the South will bt counted for Cleveland and Stevenson. —Star.

Who ever doubted itV The only el raent of a Southern election is counting votes, and they always count enough to elect the Democratic candidates. Of course the Southern votes will be "counted" for Cleveland and Stevenson, regardless of h-w they are ca6t by the voters.

CONOHFSSMAN BHOOKSHIKE voted against the bill appropriating $5,000,000 to the Columbian Exposition on the grounds that such Hn act would be unconstitutional. Ho afterwards voted for the bill appropriating $2,500,000. How he can reaoncile conscience with the constitution none but a .Democrat can explain. .•/.

GERRYMANDERING.

The Rockville Tribune attempts to justify the Democratic gerrymander of Indiana by the "you'r another" sort of argument. For an "analytical" mind this is childish. A gerrymander whether made by Republicans or Democrats cannot be defended upon principles of common honesty. Justice McGrath, of the Michigan Supreme Court, in his decision against the constitutionality of the Democratic gerrymander of that State, does not hesitate to say that any apportionment which defeats the purpose of the constitution for an equality of representation is contrary not only to the letter, but to the spirit of our institution, and subversive of popular government, and he adds: "The greatest danger to the republic is not from ignorance, bnt from machinations to defeat the expressions of the popular will." Chief Justice Morse,who was a prominent candidate for Vice President before the Chicago convention, in his opinion declared "the time has arrived for plain speaking in relation to the outrageous practice of gerrymandering which has become 60 common, and has been so long indulged in without rebuke that it threatens not only the peace of the people, but the permanency of our free institutions." Ho says that the courts alone "can save the rights of the people and gave them the equality in representation which the constitution guarantees." He adds that "there is not a schoolboy who does not know what i9 the motive of these legislative apportionments, and it is idle for the courts to excuse them upon other grounds, or to keep silent as to the real reason, which is nothing more nor less than partisan advantage taken in defiance of the constitution and in utter disregard of the rights of the citizens." We commend these manly words to the thoughtful consideration of the "analytical" editor.

THE GERRYMANDER DOOMED. Again the gerrymander business is badly crippled. Judge Rumsey, of the Supreme Court of New York, has rendered a decision against the constitutionality of the gerrymander of that State. Thus Wisconsin, Michigan and New York have put their judicial condemnation on this infamous fraud. It is now certain that gerrymandering is soon to be a thing of the past, and the

C°UrtS

wiU haVe

f'he

eDtire

glor-v

of

hav"

ing overthrown this corrupt practice and preser red tho liberties of the peo-

pie. Every honest man of all parties will be glad that hereafter we are to have honeBt and fair apportionment. Justice is some times slow in coming but it generally comes.

THE New Albany Public Press, a Democratic paper of the straitest sect, is not tearing up the earth in its enthusiasm for the National Democratic ticket. It says:

Cleveland is a bitter pill for respectable Democrats to swallow and the tail is little better than the head. Both head and tail are mugwumps to tuch an extent that thousands of Democrats will refuse it by not going to the polls at all. It wa6 a bad day'B work for the Democracy, and the Public Press verily believes" that Cleveland will be defeated out of sight by the people at 6 o'clock p. m., on November 8, next, on the first ballot. With the material at hand a worse nomination could not have been made. 0§§

MH

THE tin-plate mill in this city is now turning out large quantities* of the bright article, for which it finds a ready Bale. Yesterday the company received from Norton Bros., Chicago, an order for four thousand boxes of tin plate, and to-day the order wa6 filled and shipped. The four thousand boxes filled eighteen

carB

and cost Norton

Bros. $30,000. This iB the largest single consignment of tin-plnte ever made in America.—Elwood.Cull, Any. li.

And yet such Democratic newspapers as the Star and the Review still persist in saying that tin plate cannot be manufactured in this country. Verily, the tin plate liar is still abrof-d in the land.

THE Stur in common with all Democratic newspapers seems to rejoice because the Anderson tin plate works were sold the other day at sheriff's sale. True to the Democratic instinct it revels is calamity, but has no words of rejoicing for a succcsfcful manufacturing establishment. The failure of the Anderson tin plate works signifies nothing, any more than the failure of the Times, the Courier or the Tempest signifies that the newspaper business has been a failure in Crawfordsville.

IT IS especially noteworthy that Congressman Brookshire, while constantly barking at Republican reciprocity, did not move a peg for its repeal. Tf reci procity is a sh im and a delusion why did he not take some steps for its removal? He did not dare to make such a ra6h break.

SULLWAN Union: Our standard bearer in the Congressional race is Winfield Scott Carpenter, of Brazil. He is in the race to win and no better selection could.have been made. ,' -v -v

AN "ANALYTICAL EAR

The Rockville Tribune in its feeble way, attempts to reply to the uiost excellent spee3h of W. E. Humphrey made at the Republican convention hold there last week. Th» Tribune puts this in which it thinks is a clincher:

How Mr. Humphrey can reconcile his position on "taxing foreigners" with the fact that the same box of tin plate that costs the English tinner $2.93 in London cosis the American tinner S5.25 in New York may be plain enough to a McKinleyite, but to the average voter there is too great a discrepancy between assertions and facts to admit of belief.

Mr. Humphrey's keynote

was very pleasing to the ears of his Republican auditors, but the analytical ear could easily detect its discord."

It perhaps did not penetrate the "analytical ear" of the Tribune, or does not occur to hi6 "analytical" mind that Great Britain has been making tin plate for the last hundred and seventy odd years, and during all that time the United States has been compelled to pay the tin plate makers of that country just what they pleased to demand. The difference in price of tin plate in London and New York is less to-day than it ever has been before. In one year since the McKinley law went into force it has enabled more than a 6core of tin plate factories to be started in the United States. The opening up of the tin industry in this country will have the same effect on the price that the development of the cotton industry, or the iron industry. have had on prices. Wire nails, for instance, are I.1, cents per pound in the United States, whih thov are 1] cents in England. Steel billets are $22 in the United States and $22.(0 in England. Calico is 4.1 cents a yard in the United States, and 5 cents a yard in England. Add the McKinley tariff and it would be 10 cents a yard. And so it will be with tin plate, and is now if the "analytical" editor will but take the trouble to step into the store of any dealer in tinware in his town. He will learn that not a consumer pays more for his tin cups, more for his coffee pots, more for bis dinner pails, or more for tinware of any kind than he paid before the McKinley law was enacted. This being true who then pays the duty on imported tin plate but the foreigner? This is evidenced by the fact that the largest tin plate works in Wales are to be transplanted at Gas City, in the good State of Indiana, whose managers say that they come to this country for the purpose of saving the duty, which they must pay from their own pockets if they remain in Wales and sell their product to the United States.

SENATOR ALLISON says that the appropriation made by the first session of the Fifty-6ecoud Congress aggregate $510,000,000, against $463,000,000 made by the first 6e6Bion of the so called billion dollar Congress, an increase of $47,000,000. ThiB increase would have been very much larger if the actual necessities of the government had been provided for, to Bay nothing of appropi iations for needed new public buildings, none of which passed during the session just closed. It is admitted by Democrats bothjthe Senate and Home that the poBtoffice appropriation bill as it became a law is millions of dollais IOBB than the actual necessities of the service calls for, and that a big deficit is inevitable. The same is true to a smaller extent of other appropriation?, and the fact is well known to the Democrats who deliberately reduced the appropriation for the purpose of deceiving the people until after the National ele tion, knowing that tho deficits will then have to be made good, and notwithstanding this scheming this Congrt has appropriated $47,000,000 more than than the first sessir I of the last Coi gress did. Republican ext nivalin will not be a favorite text with Demi cratic stump speakers this yea-, and the misrepresentations of 1S90, canni possibly be repeated.

NOTWITIISTAN 3IN! the rejoicing of the Indianapolis Sentinel and the Craw fordsville Star over the supposed failure of the Anderson tin plate works, the facts show a different phase. The Antler Bon tin plate works are on a firm foun dation. They have a capital stock of $30,000, and liabilities not to exceed $8,000, more than half of which is for new machinery and not yet due. It is true that Welshman are employed tLe works but they are men who have been in this country for fifteen years. While the Anderson works are 6mall as cnmpaied with El wood and other factories in the country yet, it is no just reason why it should be so virulently assailed by Democintic free trade editors who Beem to despise everything that ismerican.

LET all remember that the next meeting of the Farmers' Council, on the last Thursday in August- will be entirely devoted to a discussion of the repair of gravel roads. The meeting should be well attended.

THAT distinguished and much abused Republican leader, Mr. Reed, says: "Not one measure above the dignity of a rye straw will mark the annals of the House of Representatives of the Fifty-second Congress. In history it will represent the dead level of a Dutch landscape, with all its windmills, .but without a trace of beauty or fertility. The only picturesque object which will break the sky line will be Mr. Holman druped as a statue of economy, standing upon the railroad crowned summit of the Law renceburg embankment for whish he secured an appropriation, trying in vain with a spy glass to Und any trace of a river the embankment was intended to confine. Indiana, however, and the appropriation will be in full view." --s

I WANT to call your readers attention to this simple fact, even at the expense of reiteration and of being tiresome. We expended S462,000,000 the first session of the Fifty-fir6t Congress. We were abused most roundly therefor. The lowest figures any Democrat can now make for his Congress are 8510,000,000. These figures are undisputed. —Ex-Speaker, Thomas B. Reed.

DEMOCRATS in Congress have had a great deal to say regarding trusts, and yet this House carefully protected the gigantic Sugar Trust, for the reason that it was a Southern concern. No attempt was made to interfere with the work of that corporation and no Democrat was found who was willing to denounce it as a fraud and the enemy of the whole people.

THE Re.iiew gives a list of manufactures which it terms trusts and which would cease under free trade. This is true and so would every other protected manufacture cease and fall back to the old free trade days when we paid fifty to one hundred per cent, more for such article than under protection. That is what the Democratic party yearns for.

THE difference between a revenue tariff and a protective tariff may be stated thus: A revenue tariff taxes Americans for the benefit of foreigners a protective tariff taxes foreigners for the benefit of Americans.

I Ho ve Taken several

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

MRS. W. E. STEBBINS. Ridge, Ga.

Low linte JIaruest Excursions. The announcement that the Northwestern Line, comprising over 8,000 miles of thoroughly equipped railway, has arranged to run low rate Harvest Excursions during the months of August and September, will be gladly received by those interested in the development of the great West and Northwest, as well as by those who desire to visit this wonderfully productive region at a season of the year when exact demonstration can be made of the merits and advantages it offers to home seekers and those in search of safe and profitable investment.

These excursions will leave Chicago on August 30 and Sept. 27, and tickets can be bought at the very low rate of one fare the round trip to points in Iowa, Minnesota, North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, Idaho and Montana. They will be strictly first-class in every particular and will be good for return passage at any time within twenty days from date of purchase. Full information concerning rates and arrangements for these excursions can be obtained upon application to anv coupon ticket agent, or to W. A. Thrall, G. P. T. A., Chicago & North-Western R'y, Chicago.

I have been troubled with ch»onic catarrli for years, Ely's Cream balm is the only remedy among the many that I have used that affords mo relief.—E. \V. Willard, Druggist.. Joliet, 111.

My son has been afflicted with nasal i-at rrh since quite young. I 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 bust catarrh remedy in the market.—J. C. Olmstead. Areola. 111.

When Baby was sick, we gave her Castorfa. When she wes a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria.

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 sayB it is worth $5 a bottle it cost him only 50 cents For sale by Nye & Booe, druggists.

Z,228,i7X.

These figures represent the number of bottles of Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, which were sold in the United States from March, '91 to March, '92. Two million, two hundred and twenty-eight thousand, six hundred and seventy-two bottles 6old iD one year, und each and every bottle was sold on a positive guarantee that money would, be refunded if satisfactory results did not follow its use. The secret of its success is plain. It never disappoints and can always be depended on as the very best remedy for Coughs, Colds, etc. Price 50c. and SI.00. At- Nye & Booe's drug store, fas?

AND

A

SO DO

More than Half

a

Million

OTHER PEOPLE,

BECAU8E

IT IS THE BEST.

Buy No Other.

Sold bv Zuck Mahornev & Sors.

No Sucb

CONDENSED

t\irycz t*leat

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.

.WERRELL & SOULE. Svncuse, N. V.

C. H. Erganbright, V. S.,

(ilUlHWTE OP

Ontario Vetcrnry Coll ce,Toronto, Cai

TREATS ALL

DISEASES OF DOMESTIC ANIMALS.

—Surgery a Specialty.—

Your patronage solicited. Calls by mail or telegram promptly answered. Office with Merrick & Darnell, Livery Stable. 112, 114 and 11(1 East Market Street, Crawfordsville, Indiana.

PMINTSTKATOK'S SALE.

Notice is hereby given that the undersigned as administrator ol the estate ot Albert All-n. late ol Montgomery county, lndiana.Ideceased. will, on Thursday, August. 11, lHSi'J. sell at public sale at hjs lute residence, 2 miles cast of Crown's Valley, the lollowing personal property, t.o-wit: Horses, cattle. hogs. corn in the cri'o, corn in trie field, all kinds ol farming implements, includiug a hall' interest in binder and acorn planter, wagons, one tiuirtry. harness, household and kitchen furniture and otherarticles loo numerous to mention.

TKKMS OF SAIJK All sums of and under cash. Over y.'l a credit, ot twelve months will he given. the purchaser givlnir his note with approved lreehold security waiving valuation and appraisement, laws, and bearing six per cent, inteiest lrotn date.

Agents

E. P. MCCI.ASICF.Y.

July Hi, 1892. Administrator

COMMISSIONERS SALE.

Notice is hereby givn that on Monday. August 15, 1H1V2, between the hours ol one and lour o'clock, p. in. at the law ollice «t Thomas & Wliltllngton. Crawlordsville, Ind, pursuant to an order of the Montgomery Circuit Court will otter tor sale at pi-.v ite sale the following real estate In Montgomery county, Indiana, to-wit: A part of lot number 74 as designated on the recorded plat of the city of Crawfordsville, bounded as follows: llcginning at point on the east l.ne of said lot 1!) teet south ot the northeast corner ol said lot No 74. running thence west leet, thence south IS leet, thence east Si!1* leet. thence north 18 feet to the place of beginning. Ileltig the brick building known as the Careon property. Purchaser to pay oue-hall cash and balance In six months, with six per cent. In tereet. and nay all taxes due InlSO.'S. If no sulliclent bid Is received on or before said date said sale will be continued 1 rom day to day until a snlticlent bid is received.

W. T. WlllTriNGTON,

July 22. Comtnls loner

Wanted on Salary

Or commission, to handle the New Patent Chemical Ink Erasing Pencil. The quickest and greatest selling novelty ever pr duccd Erases ink thoroughly In two Feoonds. No abrasion of paper. Works like magic '?00 to •00 percent profit. One agent's sales amounted to 8020 in six (lays. Another, i?.'!2 in two hours. Previous experience not, uecesary. For terms and lull particulars, address, 'I lie Monroe brascr Ml'g Co. LaCrosse. Wis. 44

Newspapers Unaorne.

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

Attention Knights.

Make your arrangements to go via the Big Four Route to the Biennial Encampment, Knights of Pythias, at Kansas City, August 23, '92. Tickets will be sold August 19-h to 22d, good re turning until Sept. 15, at very low rates. Remember the finest trains in America run daily via the Big Four Route, with palace sleeping carp, re ciining chair cars, elegant coaches and hotel dining care. Best line to Kansas City. For full information call on or address G. E. ROBINSON, Agent.

To Huuny .Uulhtrm

who are for the tirst time to undergo woman's severest trial, we offer yon, not the Btupor 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 ae directed, invariably alleviate the pains, horpors and risks of labor.and often entirely do nwav with them. Sold by Nye & Booe, druggists

«.-.J 0. v..

$100000 TO LOAN'

7 percent. Annual interest,

Wit ommission.

NO HUMBUG.

Cumberland & Miller,

118 West Main St.

ABSTRACTS OF TITLE Hster,

aving secured the services of Win. Web late of the firm ol' Johnson & Webster, abstractors of title, I am prepared to lurnish on short notice, full and coamlpta abstracts of title to all lands In Montgomerv fuunty, Indiana, at reasonable prices. Deeds and mortgages carefully executed. Call at the Rocorder's office. octoyl THOS. T. MUNHALL. Recorder.

MONEY to LOAN.

At 4J^" and 6 per cent for 5 vears on Improved Farms in Indiana. We grant you ci ',rH1V-'ieFe°J,Pai''cF tbis money back to vayment °r

more'

at

an-v

Write to oi call on

interest

C. N. WILLIAMS & CO.,

Crawfordsville, Indiana.

o.

PAUL & BRUNER,

A r.to neye-nt-Law,

OHice over Mahorney's Store, ,,, Crawlordsville, Ind. All business entrusted to their care will receive prompt.attention- c.iic will

THEO. McMECHAN DENTIST,

CKAWI'OJ{DSVILLR. INDIANA. inolwau.n^o^"0'

*M' "m:'

OHice I ().'!1 Main

M°,t0

W,E.llni, iKry'V"M'

Hms

White, Hun plirty Reeves.

ATTOKXHYS-AT-LAW, t-rawtordsville, IIK.

street.

Money to Loan.

Bouses and Lots for Sale also Dwellings to Bent.

Caroftilfy^Prejmi'ed

aU(1

AL.BERT C. JENNIS0N

Loan and Insurance agent, and .ubstrnctoi a Conveyancer.

122 East Main St., Crawfordsville

Morgan & Lee

AKSTRACTORb. LOAN AND

INSURANCE AGENTS

.Honey to Loan at (i per ceni interest.

Farms und City Property For Sale.

Life, Kire and Accident Insurance. Office J^ortb Washington st., Ornbann Block, Crawfordsville, Itid.

FIRST MORTGAGE

LOAN,

AT 4 PER CENT Interest»payable Annnallj

APPLY TO

G. W.WRIGHT

Fisher Block, Room

8,

Crawfordsville, In\

FOR SALE

At the Guld Hidge Herd Poland China hogs, of both sexee, at farmers' prices. Also Marred and

White Plymouth Hoc chicks. Eggs in season Come and Inspect .t.ystock before purchatlng Also, I have the celebrated Pacing Malllon. bill Hull man, mark of 2:.'J0H, out of Danid liooue, 1st dam by Green Mountain Morgan.

GEOIIOK W. I'fl t.t K.

7 miles north ol Criiwlordsvllle. Ind. Mention THE JOITKNAL

To Consumptives

The undersigned haying been rcstoudto hculthliy simple mentis, sitter MiHering lor sc\eral \ears with i-cvcre luug i.Mo tion. and that dread dlreiise is anxious to tii'ike known to his leliow sullererets the means ol cure. To those who deslie it, he will cheerlully send (1 ret-ol charge) a copy ot the prescription used which ihev will llmi a sure cute for CoiiHumptlou, Atthma, ottn h. lit an chilis and all throat aud lung Malotiie* He hopes all sulTe-ere will try his remedy, as it iB Invaluable. Those desiring the prescrl| tion, which will cost, them nothing, an.i may piwe a bless UG. will please address HKV. KIIWAIID A. WILSON Urooklyn. New York

Co-opMtiv Inros'rial Union

124, Kast. Market Sr.

FRANK CORNELL,

A Pnrcbsing Agent.

Also apent lor 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, Iiindinp twine, Notions, Sewing Machines, etc Old machines taken in exchange for new ones. More lines if 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 of the same.

-fflMu. Alice

auction of IS'/ Ihi.tand feel io much bftirr that I woalJ not take 1,000 and to put l-ack *»hir* I ww, I »m Imth mrprUfd and rroud of the vhancc. I rrcnmtnend y«»ir trvntnifnt to all suflVrtro from obnity. Will «n»w«r *11 inqulrl** if tump ii lnclo*d for reply."

PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. CONFIDENTIAL. )Urml»«a, and with n» incnvcn1nc«, or tad eCdcU. For particular* al«lrr», with cent* in nam]*, DR. 0. W. f. SNYDER, M'VICKER'S THEATER. CHIMCO, ILL:

^OTICK OF A PI'Ol N'TM ENT.

Notice is lieteb.v given th"t the undersigned has been appointed and duly mutinied as "AdInlsirator of the estate or Albert Allen, late of Montgomery county, Indiana, deceased. Suld estate Is sunposed to he Insolvent

E.P. McCLASKi-.Y.

Dated July 1 «. Administrator.

•s-Vi