Decatur Democrat, Volume 40, Number 33, Decatur, Adams County, 29 October 1896 — Page 2

SHIVELY’S SILVER SPEECH. — Th« Democratic Nominee For Governor Ever An Advocate of the People and An Enemy of Plutocracy, A MAGNIFICENT RECORD, South Bend, Ind., Oct. 24, 1896. To 1 hi> Editor: Here at his home where we have known Hon. B. F. Shively, the Democratic nominee for governor, for so ruanv rears, and where we long since familiarly and affectionately dubbed him “Our Frank,” his record in the editorial sanctum, in the halls of congress, and in the walks of private life, as a consistent advocate of the People and persistent foe of Plutocracy has won him the confidence and admiration of the entire community regardless of political affiliations. As an eld friend and neighbor I feel that I am but doing honor to whom honor is due in citing briefly the following extracts from his editorials and speeches, which show that he is no new convert to the cause of the people and their emancipation from financial bondage. Mr. Shively’s Editorial Record. Over 16 years ago, on March 27, 1880, the first number of the South Bend Era, “B. F. Shively- editor and publisher,” appeared with, the following editorial, leader: “Who can view the policy of the goverAient for the last 15 years, with retuthe bonded debt, without feeling sfiight suspicions that it has never been the design of those whe manipulated Uncle Sam’s exchequer, to pay off that little obligation? It is evident that all financial legislation since 1865 has been shaped with a view to perpetuating our interest-bearing indebtedness. After the close of the war, the public debt was being rapidly liquidated, but (f was seen by government security holders that solid 6 per cent investments were soon to be paid and so they framed ?’ innocent piece of legislation, called the “Credit Strengthening Act.” which changed the whole tenor of the law, and made bonds, costing 60 cents on the dpllar—and previously payable in lawful money, greenbacks—payable 100 cents on the dollar in coin, which then consisted of gold find silver. Bondholders still not satisfied, demonetized silver. This made the debt payable in gold alone. Next in order was the resumption act, which of course would require the accumulation of gold for the purpose of greenback redemption, and deprive the government of its use for paying the bonds. But the people finally Con-;ht‘led to have a slight pause in these proceedings. , They compelled the partial remcneliz ;*ion of silver, the bondholder suecevuiug. however, in lini.fi’ its annual coinage, -to an amount sufficient to pay less than onehalf the annual interest of the bonded debt. Th.e-a.cT' providing for the contraction of the currency, the '“Opedit Strengthening act,” the “demonetization s't.” the "Resumption act” and the si.ver coinage limitation clause are but su'r•' -ivc steps in the d sign to perpetuate tire bonded debt as a-basis for a national'feank nc-t‘> circulation; The-frantic a 1 tom pi -of Hay-.is. Bayard, jhe-rinan and com ciny to, ; ’sweep oaf -Of - Cirenl:.*:on. ’he -' ri- -y.b.tchs, fully “’- confirms t'lie view '-if the case. And

U.. rr■■.'l.'!, as Cv.pt of''Sei! among the p*op!-- ■■■' /■' mn u sr:.i:t' zephyr, ly-mparei with the tornado that will sweep theso. traitor.; from positions-of public trw v|jhen'.fm> iniquity of their uroee/dings ,- •ifS'rff Voider ' owl. Jobn Sherman i? taking some pains to reduce ’tTio bonded debt by a few millions, but it is evideat that ha in taking more pains to have’t -refnmWl- into bonds te run from 8C to 50 .-oars, upon which bonds the pen : ,b? in the meaatim,e will have to pay interest, amounting to nearly one and one-lr If times their face value. The people have abealy }ad over $l,8o<),000';0 0 as interest on the debt, and the principal -today is SIOO,090,000 larger than it was in ’77”. And Mr. Shively kept up this lick throughout his editorial career, only stepping aside occasionally to take a whack at the trusts in mucli the. same manner that he does now.on the stump. The following extract, taken at random from the South Bend Era of Sept..l,

1883, being as truthful and pnrt-ineut ■ now as on the day it was written: “There is a bond of sympathy connecting the various forms of monopoly in this epuHfry. It is idlp to .expect to lead a general movement against one without meeting more or less resistance from all. Those., who wish to restrain transportation corporations, ; without interferring with the coal oil and telegraph monoplies; make-the serious error of arousing the entire.camp - L of monopoly to thade lense of a single < tent. This connemTon between any two forms of monopolv jg, of course, tirely 8 Ifish .in its iiaiure., Itis formed 1 to secure mutual advantages at the expense of outside' parties. For instance, , in 1877 the Standard Oil company en-' ( tered into with four rail- ! way companies by which the latterj! were to grant the former a rebate of ! $1 on each barrel of oil shipped over , their lines. Within 17 months after j this ryrangement was completed these i railway companies paid back, to the Standard Oil c'ompifhy, as rebates, the enormous sum of $10,500,000. This discrimination against other oil companies has made the Standard the oil depsot ,es the civilized world. These connections are formed, conspiracies concocted aud the most villainous combinations entered into—all in defiance of the rules « honorable competition and the wellare « the oounfty. ” r [ Sut U was as a member of congress,

daring the consideration of the bill authorizing the issue of treasury notes on deposits of diver bullion that Mr. Shively's best contribution to financial reform was made in a speech opposing that measure. Mr. Hhlvnly In Congress. On June, 6, 1890, in the house of representatives Mr. Shively discussed silver restoration as follows: "However prejudicial to the supply of a sufficient and sound currency our present law with its limitation on silver coinage may be, it is infinitely superior from the standpoint of sound finance, the public credit, and the commercial interests of the country to the law that would supplant it should the committee bill or the caucus bill be placed on the statute book. True, the venerable and familiar .prophecy comes to us again from the treasury department. The alarm is again sounded, and the red lights are again flashed athwart our purblind sight. But the vast majority of the American people persist in accepting the hard, plain, demonstrated facts in preference to the oft-repeated, and to this hour utterly unfulfilled and doubly discredited prophecy. Gentlemen easily recall the smrm of lurid predictions and the flood of awful forebodings which were turned loose on congress and the country in 1878 during the pendency of the remonetization bill. We were told to conceive if we could of the panics of 1887, 1857 and 1873 all combined, and yet such combination would be but a gentle zephyr compared with the tornado which would sweep over the country if the silver dollar were reinstated in our monetary system. We were told that gold would instantly leave tin country, that our national credit would be everywhere discounted and that industrial enterprise would be utterly paralyzed. "Despite all the learned and disinter-

ested advice, the earnest aiid patriotic counsel, and the generous warnings and friendly menaces of the frantic idolaters of monometallism, the friends of the silver dollar in congress persisted and finally established its limited coinage ovqr the veto of the president. It is needless to remind those gloomy prophets how utterly mistaken they were. Suffice it to say that the storm of bankruptcy did not burst upon the country. Ou the contrary, with even a partial restoration of silver coinage and the consequent addition of over |2,000.000 per month to our depleted volume of circulating medium, prices and wages took an upward movement, gold a cumulated in the country in amount never witnessed before, productive enterprises revived, hoarded money sought investment in active business, substantial reductions were made for the first time in 12 years in the public debt, and the country entered on an era of comparative prosperity. So overwhelmingly, from every point of view Consistent •with the honor and welfare of the country, has the logic of events vindicated the juo gmont of the friends of the silver doliat in 1878 that even the present secretary of the treasury in his last report prefaces his reiteration of the j stmilard annual prophecy, and his asi sault on th present coinage of silver, ' with the" frank admission that thus far all adverse predictions have failed of fulfillment-. In short, the .fact becomes more emphatic the more the question i$ investigated, t.' at nothing in thp history of recent silver coinage, nor in the-pres-i ent fi iancr.,l situation, nor in thecalI endur of probabilities for the future j suggests a i-gle-soiind reason why we I should even li.-mporai ily stop the coiui age of rhe eiiver dollar. [Applause.] “But the si -": era . y-es the treasury, the maj rity of the committee on coinage, weights and measures, and the caucus i- have fipsned up iiif whole question by,.

submitting a p? ; -b.-auon which everybody admits must close, our mints against Tro-- coin,tie for an indefinite time, tyul th » minority of 'the comm ittee very properly meet this "assaulfwith a I plain proposition to restore the free coin- ! age of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1 of gold as it existed prior te 1878. It is proposed to repeal the legi-lation which first struck .. Ivor from our circulation, and thereafter limited its coinage, and by these hostile acts reduced its price, and restore Tree coinage of stiver as w" now iiave free coinage of gold. Th; ; somewhat hackneyed objection and al--1 ways inserted argument that the silver in the dollar is worth’’ only fi2 cents fes already been met. With a given object i as the standard of weight ass other ob- ; jects must be either equal to, less, or greater in weight. “In other words the standard of weight, or of size, or of value is a Iways i n the very nature of thihgs equal to itself, while all other things vjtry as meats cured by such standard. — * '* “Silver bemgdemonetized in 1873, the bimetallic standard was destroyed, gold was made the exclusive standard of coinage, silver was reduced to a mere commodity, and as the war on silver i continued the disparity of pripe between ' a giyen. apapunt of the two metals as' measured exclusively by gold increased, | ; ‘When we reflect that philippic after > philippic has been pronounced by the i treasury department, annually for 12 i years against silver, that the discretion lodged in the secretary of the treasury by the act of 1878 has been invariably, harshly, and inflexibly exercised in discrimination against silver by holding its coinage down to the minimum of $2,000,000 instead of an occasional coinI age of the maximum of $-1,(100.000 worth i per month; that there has been°constant l and aggressive co-operation of all the < eastern national banks with the treasury | department to discredit silver, the only i wonder is that the commodity value in ■ the silver dollar, as measured by gold, ! the value of which every effort of the government has been employed to enhance. haa not fallen to 50 cents. I “The contention,Mr. Speaker,thfit we must await thaco-operation of England, Germany and the Latin Union for The successful restoration of bimetallism is the last resort, of the secret enemies of , silver. Since there is neither a stock of I silver bullion nor of silver, coin in Eu- | rope to submerge our mints, why must , wo wait? Political independence is in-

oonsistent with financial dependence. This nation is of age, and is entitled to a financial policy of its own. Bimetali lisin would broaden the basis of our national credit, and fortify us against the danger resulting from the exportation of the single standard metal. The evil of a failure of a wheat orop is neutralized by a good corn orop. But if mankind depended on a single cereal for breadstuff its failure would mean starvation. W e are producers of both gold and silver, and should declare and maintain our financial independence, and leave those to wait,on European diplomacy for our financial policy who would wait on European statesmanship for ur code of political ethics. [Applause.] “The charge is made that free coinage of silver means repudiation. As this charge always originates in the sumo quarter, is always inspired by the Same creed, and always intended for the same purpose, it might be well to refer briefly to the history of repudiation in this country. Debt involves a contract between debtor and creditor. Can only the creditor’s side of the contract be repudiated? Is there- no such thing as violating the equities of the debtor? In 1876, Aug. 15, congress authorized the appointment of "The United States monetary commission,” consisting of three senators, three representatives and three private citizens, experts in finance, to investigate the cause of the commercial depression then universal throughout the country. A majority of this commission were Republicans, and Senator John P. Jones of Nevada was chairman. After a long and thorough investigation that commission reported to congress. On page 59 of that report they use this language:

"If ailthedebts in this country had been doubled by an act of legislation, it would have been a tar less calamity to the debtor and the country than the increase in their real burdens already caused by a contraction of the volume of money. •‘This language is plain and explicit. It was the res- It of thorough investigation. It means that if we had passed a law arbitrarily doubling our national debt, our state debts, our corporation debts, our municipal debts and all our private debt'? it would have been far less ruinous to the debtor and the country than was the violent fall of prices and wages due to contraction of the currency. Under that policy the equities of the debtor were utterly destroyed, the obligations under his contract were doubled, his burdens frightfully increased, and yet it is not recorded that one of the virtuous, highminded citizens who talk so glibly of repudiation ever lisped a syllable against that wholesale repudiation of the rights and equities of the debtor clans of the country. This most vicious of all kinds of repudiation is going on today all over this country, and unless congress does its duty in the premises our court's will become simply courts of confiscation. Free coinage, so far from involving repudiation, will revive stagnated enterprise and arrest the repudiation .which is brought about by the enhancement of the value of securities and destruction of the value of other forms of property, "The optimist- may prophesy and the enthusiast may chant peans to the success of our institutions, but the industrial horizon is not without clouds, nor the pathway of our -old ship of state without bit ukers. The 'clouds- are not

there by foreign influence, nor the

breakers from a foreign force. The daft- ’ ger is from within, not from without. Sir Archibald Alison, the most philosophic historian of modery. times, records the fact that the metallic money of Rome at jhe beginning of the Christian era waS $1,800,000,000. while in the 15th century it had shrunk to $200.000,000. He trxees Vfith peculiar distinctness the filial influence- of' decreasing currency on the occupations and character of thel-lown people.and .showshow the bold lb ”uan yeomanry were sacrificed to usury and taxation until the millions of small land owners were disfranchised, from the soil, agi’ieuiture destroyed,.lamjs turned to pasturage, and the plundered and disheartened rural population left to starve or join the carnival of vice, corruption and decay in the , larger cities. The wealthy locked upon thh government as a mere instrument for self-aggra ndfeement, the poor saw in it only an engine of extortion and plunder, and patriotism died in both. Opulence, luxury, and vice enervated the one; poverty, misery and despair destroyed all spirit in the other. The disorganization of society was complete; there-was no hardy- peasantry left to resist the northern barbarians, and the civilization of the west disappeared amid the gathering gloom of the dark ages. “It requires no genius to trace the momentous changes going on in the chemistry of our national life. Agriculture is losing that character which makes it at once the pride and strength of nations. The prosperous rural home : has ayer been the nursery of patriotI ism, the fortress of society, the infalli- > ble hostage to civilization. But this I institution which stands for all that it ' is worth human effort to save has lost • its rightful place in the structure of our ' laws. The blasphemous nuptials of greed and legislation have wrought the transformation. A decreasing money Supply falls with blighting force on an agricultural population. In cities the employment of credit may for a I time " avert the crisis. But the wealth of the farmer is locked up in his land, and to depress by legislation or the. failure of legislation the price of the products of his farm is to despoil him of his profit and confiscate his capital. [Applause.] "The evils of a bad system of taxation and a shrinking money supply are corelative and multiply upon each other. Each aggravates the evils and adds to the burden imposed on productive industry by the other. All taxes, whether levied under a wise or vicious system, must be paid in money, and to deplete the volume of money and thus arbitrarily reduce prices is to multiply the ' hardship# of taxation. The price of farm produets is going lower and lower every year. The taxes, the

, mortgage, the interest and freight rates that must be paid by the sale of such products do not shrink. It is an incontestable fact that notwithstanding we have paid 13,000,000,000 in principal and interest on our national debt it would today require the sale of as much corn, wheat, cotton, beef or pork to pay off the remaining debt as it would have required to pay the entire debt at the close of the war. It will require three times as much of the products of the farm to pay a given amount of state, corporation or municipal debt as 20 years ugo. It requires twice as much of the products of the farm to pay off tiie mortgage on the farm as 10 years ago. It requires four times as much of the products of the farm to ]>ay general, state and local tuxes as 25 years ago. "The increasing burdens of taxation and debt, due to the arbitrary red action of values, have totally swept away the profits of agriculture and the farms themselves are going by the thousand under the hammer of the auctioneer. Except on our frontiers and in localities where speculative causes operate to keep up values, the value of farm lands has fallen from 25 to 50 per cent. The fatal policy of requiring the debts and taxes of the 19th century to be paid at 17th century prices is doing its awful work. The disorganizing and destructive process is bearing its bitter fruits. Instead of a prosperous and happy rural population we meet on all sides an appalling picture of agricultural depression. Our young men by the 10,000 every year turn disheartened from the home and occupation of their fathers and grandfathers to engage in the uncertain struggle of life in our cities. The farmers’ daughters contemplate with sad apprehensions the farm life of never ending struggle and unrequited toil. Thus the sturdy, hopeful, independent anti aggressive spirit proverbial of this old and most honorable occupation is bending and breaking under the increasing strain of harassing conditions. That ohivalric courage, that moral energy, that sturdy self-reliance . which gave character to a people and is the best defense of nations is gradually yielding to the corroding influences of adverse legislation. The hour in which hope deserts our farmers and they are forced to the conviction that their - gov eminent has defaulted in its duty and made law an instrument for their plunder will be the saddest in our country ’s history. [Applause.]

“Added to the malign effects of a shrinking volume of money on agriculture is the incalculable loss to the nation from enforced idleness. Legislative necromancy may be employed to take, bv insidious processes, the earnings of the many and transfer them to the few; but all the statutes since the announcement of the sacred code from Mount Sinai have nfit added one farthing to the wealth cf the world. Legislation may supply favorable conditions for the production of wealth, but it never itself produces it. The law of production comes down to us through 6,000 years unchanged and unchangeable, ‘ln the sweat of thv face shall tho i oat bread.” Wealth is the product of labor. Labor is the first,'last and only source of wealth. The riches of this world have been wrought out by the workers of the world. Legislation may enlarge the opportunities and improve the conditions under which labor operates, or it may. as it often has dpne, decrease opportunities and destroy all favorable conditions. 1 should qualify this observation with the fact that legislation improves cond; tions of production by facilitating exchange and distribution. Human law cannot affect directly the natural conditions of production. To'supply the channels of trade with a sufficient volume of money to maintain steady prices and wages places all productive industry on a solid foundation where calculations sos too future can be made with certainty: To supply this money is a function of legislation. But when through failure of legislation the volume of money doorcases, prices decline, capital is withdrawn from productive oil terprise, nionev will not invest against a failing market, the army of idle workmen grows larger each day, demand for all.p -oducts of labor deems*? through enforced economy, and the evils of such policy multiply until the fabric of credit falls to pieces and production is swallowed up in bankruptcy. “This is the situation threatening the American people today.

“The day’s labor unperformed i*- cap - tal lost forever. The loss last year in the United States from enforced idleness was sufficient to pay off one-half our national debt. Not only ia the labor lost, but the laborer must live on his past labor or on the labor of others while out of employment. Se enforced idleness Is a two-edged sword saorifioing past earnings and future prospects. Tne loss in this country from 1 this source in the lest quarter of a century cannot be estimated. But even more disastrous on the future of our counf-ry than the pecuniary loss is the effect of enforced idleness on . the character mid habits of a people. Enforced idleness, with all its • atSbnding incidents which dishearten and humiliate, will finally make a coward of the bravest man, and a sycophant of the loftiest spirit. It is tSese considerations which make tho subject uot one merely of the imniHflial e prosperity and happiness of the American people, but of the permanent dignity and integrity of our natiom 1 character. [Applause.] “What is wanted in this country, Mr. Speaker, 18 a definite, well-settled financial policy. Such finanoial should be shaped in the interest of product te enterprise and honest, gainful occu It should open no field for the gamblers in public securities or private credit.. Every dollar coined or issued shoutfl fie a dollar for all purposee. No individual or corporation should be permitted to retire and destroy the dollar. It is money, not bullion! that the people need in the channelspf trade. The proposition to retire the totes issued on bullion by the ultimate redemption in bullion is vicious in the extreme. Fennit exohangability,

if you please, but not retirabiUty. When the government sends a dollar into circulation that dollar at once becomes the basis of equities. To retire that dollar and leave ouly bullion Hi its stead is to destroy the equities placed upon it. A certain per cent of our contracts are enforced by our courts. If every judge in the United States were corrupt and deliberately doubled his jugdments against debtors, it would involve not onetenth of the destruction of equities among the people that a shrinking volume of money visits on them by striking down the values on which they rely to redeem their promises. No avenue should be left open to any interest to retire and contract the currency. Permanency of volume per capita and uniformity of issue and control of circulation are essential to the highest development of productive enterprise, and is best at last for both debtor and creditor classes.” [Applause. ] These ex') nets show that Mr. Shively is the worthy leader of the Indiana hosts battling for silver restoration, and that he, as all his associates on the Democratic state ticket, is entitled to the cordial support of every silver advocate in the State. A Neighbor and Friend. 4 Tic fficlbfrnflc fomnit behn bifdiof ftrelanb erst in jiueitcr Sinie. Tic £nuiptfadie fiir ibn iff frljaltiuig doh „okic|i nnb Drbmuig". (Sr fiel’t niiiulid) ben politifdien sori* jont mil blutrolljen gotten iibcrjoqcn unb inaljnt buil flange Cai* bereifg bon Uni [turner it nnb Vlnardjiften unter= roiiblt. (£r,ibifd)of mag ruljig fein; seine golbenen Sdidfce finb nod) nirf)t in (Mefaftr. - 3l((erbing§ toirb bier ini Sanbe red)t bait) einc grofee Um* rodljiing ftattfinben, meldje bcr .£>err= fdiaft ber Solbbarone, ?.Ronopoli]'fen, Sclbtnudjerer unb s D?enid)enfd)inber ein (Snbe madjen ttnrb. Vlber fie mirb nidjb mic Lfrjbifdjof fiirdjtet, buref Sranbforfel unb Gd)iuert, nidjt burd) ?lufrubr unb <®efe|lofigteit,Jon* bent in frieblid)er unb gefettfirfjer ®ei|l am ©timmtaften bofljogen mer= ben. UebrigenS (elite (Srsbifdi)of sre= al§ qembtmlidie Ttenfdjen* linber.mifjeh, bas; es nidjt gut ift, ben Teufel atl]ii oft an bieißanbvi maleti. (Sr bcrliert bamit seine Sdjrerfen.

No kitchen is kept cleaner than the premises devoted to the 11 4 manufacture of NONE SUCH Mince Meat. No house-■ 5 wife can be more fastidious in the matter of preparing food \ Bk than we are in the selection and preparation of the materials of fit which it is made. The cleaning of the currants (for one thing) H 6 is more thoroughly done by means of perfected appliances, % jk than it would be possible to do it by hand. i OT Its cleanliness, purity, wholesomeness and delicidusness W Sk are good reasons for using NONE SUCH Mince Meat, a jl The best reason is its saving - of time, of hard work, of A money. A ten cent package affords, you two large pies, withSt out trouble to you beyond the making of the crust. Makes JK » just as good fruit cake and fruit pudding as it does mince IJ pie. Sold everywhere. Be sure and get the genuine. 'J Bend your name and address, and mention .thia paper, and iye will mail you f we“J»oic- ff “Mrs. Popkins' Thanksgiving”-by one of the most famous humorous authoraof tbeday. W MERRELL-SOULE CO., SYRACUSE, N.Y. JK .-W LUU .. ir 11 nwi ■iwn t rn» i 1 I 2 A 8 I Silver Army. J . ■ 31 H Great Campaign Document. J i —_ J t The "SILVER . I J supplement: | To the FARM, FIEL.4) AND FIRESIDE, t h e n ,o S t complete, instructive and convincingfidiscussion of the silver question 'iif ever published. Am I —— • 1 tWe will send from I . One to 10,000 Free f ■ J Send us your ijame with stamps to pay postage. I —./ . t fv i We will send the Farm, Field and s-k w IB Fireside until Nov. i. Fresh silver matter every week. > For 25 Cts , Until January i, 1897. I Wanted in This Town. AwiCii’i ■ O Write for Terms. 1 FARM, FIELD AND FIRESIDE, S CHICAGO. ILL. V , — • jfA JIZ. JIU. AU. A!/!. AW. JIA; •Sit- -W* jMfe jjf. -yfe jlfe

gwj| Or. S. Pagiti —V\ I I ifj Bia 1?N — DEO AT VIC, IND. BURT HOUSE, Thursday, Nov. 12. THIRTY YEARS EXPERIENCE. An extensive pmetice mxl niipiirnlleleil success In treating and curing Chronic Disein-es justifies Dr. Pugin, lie believes, in claiming the confidence, and soliciting the patroniiue of Men »nd Women, young and old. who are sultering from lingo ing ailments. The alllicted. therefore, are respectfully Invited tocall and see him. CONSULTATION FREE. lie will Investigate- Diagnose—every case, nnd tell the disease without asking what ails you. Como and satisfy yourselves. No matter what your disease. Curable or Inciirnblc. he will honestly tell you what ho can do. and what will be best for you. His opinion and advfee costs nothing, but WILL BE VALUABLE TO YOU. Treatment, if desired, will be on reason able terms, and in every case, when encouragement is given, satisfaction will lie guaranteed. Good references given. CALL EARLY. DR. PAGIN Cures Diseases of the Head, Throat, Lungs, Heart. Liver, Stomach, Bowels, Kidneys, and other organs. All Diseases of Females. General and Nervous Debility, Headache. Neuralgia, Dropsy, Rheumatism, Dyspepsia Dlarrhcea, Piles, Scrofula, Catarrh, Etc. Dkeasesof the Skin, Blood, Nerves, Spine,Bones, Joints, Eye, Ear, Sores, Cancers, Tumors, Fits, Paralysis, Goiter. YOUNG MEN and others having Depression of Spirits. Melancholy. Languor, Weakness, Wasting and Derangements of Organs, Functions. Faculties and Powers. Physical, or Mental, arising from certain causes, he never fails to cure. Do not delay. Come and see him or Address, DR. S. PACIN, Valparaiso, ladiaaa.