Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 13 July 1895 — Page 2

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•THE EVENING REPUBLICAN.

5W.

S. MONTGOMERY, Editor and ^Publisher.

Subscription Bates.

One week 10 cents One year

Entered at Postoffice as second-class matter.

SOME of the people are inclined to think that the men who handle flour have not heard of the decline in the price of wheat. Wheat is now selling at 55 cents per bushel and flour at 82 40 per hundred. The ri?e in the price of wheat made flour sell higher. Now let the drop bring prices down.

THOMAS TAGGART is a fall-fledged candidate for Mayor of Indianapolis and in an interview says: "If I am elected Mayor there will be no persecution of any particular class." That means that Taggart wants the support of these who desire to do business unlawfully among the loon men and gamblers. Enforcing the law is called persecution by the lawless and those who cater to them. The better element at Indianapolis should bury the iaw breakers and the demagogues who cater to them beyond the hope of political resurrection.

DURING the year beginning July 1st, 1894, there was a net shrinkage of $60.000,000 in the circulating medium, $5,000, 000 a month is a goed aea! of money to take out of circulation. The total circulation is now $ i.G04,131,908. The percapita now $22,96 or £1,37 less to each person than they had one year aso, foi while the curreucy decreased the population increased. Stating ths amount percapita however does not cut much of a figure as the vast majority of people do not have their proper proportion, it is cornered in the hands of a few, thu3 enabling them to largely control the business of the country.

Deaths.

'*As reported by

C.

VV. Morrison & Sou

undertakers. Lucinda Young, aged 75 years, at her late home in Morristown, at S a. m., Friday, July 12. Funeral at Blue River U. B. church by Rev. G. MeXew, Saturday at 10:30 a. m.

JJumber of Voters in Jac knon Tovrnsliip/lSO —Names of Voters Ovar 70 years of age. JULY 1, 1895.

The names of all the men and ages in Jackson township 70 years and upward: Years John Addisou 75 Ira Bevel JohnS. Barrett 73 James Bickman 71 Thomas Bice 73 William Ballard 85 Frank Chandler 71 B. B. Clift 73 John A. Craft 70 Elisha Earles 81 Jeremiah Goddard ^2 Thomas J. Hatfield 75 Robert Hill 74 George Kinder 70 Joseph A. Loudenback 72 Isaac Leamon 71 David McClarnon 88 James McClarnon, Sr 90 Tli&mas McClarnon 72 Morgan Miller 83 Nathan Parker 91 Pleasant RiJey 87 Elias Roberts 83 Anthony Smith 71 El wood J. Star buck 79 William Thornburg 75 William White 71 Richard Ward 75

J. H. McKowx, Trustee.

CHARLOTTESVILLE. (Left from last week.)

Jesse Evans is attending Normal school at Terre Haute. Myrtle Allison, attendant at Insane Hospital at Indianapolis has been for a few days guest of, and administering to the needs of her grandmother, Eunice Allison who is improving nicely.

Pet Roland spends a week with her mama at Richmond, then goes to visit her grandma near Connersville.

Ettie Finney, of Indianapolis, is a guest of Harrison Staley and family. Le&nder Busey and Arden Smith, of Woodbury, were guests of the latter's brother, Mica jah Smith and family Sunday.

Fanny Hill and Callie Staley1 visited Lemuel Hill and family Friday. Maude Ormstoa, of Indianapolis, is a

guest of her grandparents Andrew Ormston and lady. Cassius M. Niles and family removed is last week amid the regrets of their many friends, to Indiauapolis to engage in a

#100 Reward, 9100.

p® The readers of this paper will be pleased §1. to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure fkfin all its stages and that is Catarrh. ipsHall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to tbe medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constituational disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surface of the system, thereby destroying th6 foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they Offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it-fails to cure. Send for list of Testimonial*.' Address.

F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. 0 S is 7 5

SECOND

Furniture, Stoves, Dishes, Glassware, Carpets, Baby Cabs, Sewing Machines, Etc., Etc.,

For sale at the lowest living prices. Call and see niy stock. I will pay highest prices for all kinds of second hand goods.

T.J. ORE,

Proprietor Second Hand Store.

58 West Main St. 76-tf

boarding house enterprise and cold storage business. Edward S. Ceffin spent Sunday with his friend, Miss Dia Reed at Seymour, visiting on Saturday at Martinsville and looking for a business location.

Luella Johnson and children, of Wilkinson, were guests of her mother, Lavina Laikin Monday.

Edith and Het.ie Hunt with, their father, Joseph Hunt, visited friends at Greenfield and Indianapolis and probably Fairmount for a few weeks.

Rush county wheat is averaging abc ut seven bushels per acrf,

Notice to Contractors.

Sealed proposals will be received at the ollice of the Secretary of the Schools, City of C-ireentield, Ind.,on

WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1885, AT 10 A. M.,

Opened

immediately after and contract awarded as soon as conditions suit the Board, for the lurnishing of all material and performing all labor for the erection and completion of a High School Building, according to plans and specifications prepared by WING & MAHURIN, Architects of Fort Wayne, Ind. Plans may be seen on file either at the Secretary's office at Greenfield or at the office of the Architects after July 17th. Or if desirable, contractors may secure a complete set of plans and speciflcatioes for their individual use by sending twenty dollars to the Architects and on their returning same to said office will receive a rebate of ten dollars. All bids must be made out according to plans and specifications and on blanks furnished by the Architects. Each bid must be accompanied by a certified elieck of five hund.ed dollars as a guarantee that if awarded the contract, the contractor will enter into a contract and furnish a satisfac ory IJond of the full amount of the contract. A sep arate bid for cut stone must be niade by the general contractor, also a separate bid for cut stone will be received governed by the same conditions as the general contract.

The Hoard reserves the right to reject any or all bid also to alter the plans, to increase or decrease the amount of the contract before awarding the same. (E P. THAYER, Jr., Pres.

Board of Trustees-^ D. B. COOPER, Treas. (E. E. STONER, Sec'v.

Notice of Annexation.

To whom it may concern: Notice is hereby given that at the regular mr-et-ing of the Hoard oiCoininissioii' rs of the County of Hancock, State of Indiana, to be held at the City ol' Greentield, County and State aforesaid, be ginning oti the 2nd ay of September, ls'jo. the City oi Greenfield, of said State, will present a petition by its duly authorized attorney, pursuant to a resolution adopted on the 5th« ayof June, 180.1, by its Common Council, authorizing tbe presentation of the fame, for the annexation to and the incorporation within the limits of said city, the following territory situate wit bin the County of Hancock, and State of Indiana, viz:

Commencing at a point on tbe north line of the southeast quarter of section 5, in township 15 north, of range 7 east, a distance of five hundre aud fifty-three and 12-100 553.12) feet west of the north-east corner thereof, running thence south one thousand one hundred and twenty two (1,122) feet thence west on a line parallel with the north line of said quarter a distance of one thousand forty-one and 5-10 (1041 5) feet thence north on a line parallel with the west line of said quarter a distance of six hundred ninety-fonr and 32 100 (6514.32) feet thence east on a line parallel with the north line of said quarter a distance of six hundred nineteen and S-100 («1CJ S) feet to the center of the Greenfield and Brandywine gravel road thence northwestwardly with the center of said road two hundred fifty and 14-100 (250 14) feet thence west two hundred seventy-one ami 75-100 (271.75) feet on a line parallel with the north line of said quarter thence north one hundred ninety-one and 4-10 (101.4) feet to said north line thence east on said north line to the place of beginnine.

Also beginning at a point on the north line of the southeast quarter of section 5. township 15 north, of range 7 easta distance of one thousand five hundred forty-seven and 64-100 (1547.G4) feet west of the northeast corner thereof, running thence west on said north line seven hundred fortv-five and 3 100 (745 3) feet to the west line ot Mechanic street, in sain City of Greenfield thence south with the extended west line of f»ai I Mechanic street one hundred and seventy (170) feet thence east on a line parallel with the north line said section a distance of seven hundred thirty-seven'and 53-100 (737.53) feet thence north on aline parallel with the west line of said section one hundred aud seventy (170) feet to the place of beginning^

By ordtr of the Common Council of the City of Greenfield. GEORGE W.DUNCAN,

Mayor of lie City of Greenfield.

WILLIAM M'KOWX. ''lerk of the City of Greenfield. 100 t30.

Notice to Non-Residents.

To Martha Rilev, James W. Kiley, John Riley, Elva Eitel and May Cox:

You are hereby notified, that upon the 30th day of March, 1HU5, the City Cemiuissioners of the City of Greenfield, State of Indiana filed with the Clerk of said City a report in the matter of opening Pennsylvania and Depot streets within said city, which report was accepted by the Common Council of said City, and the land therein described as necessary to' be appropriated was so appropriated on the22nd day of April, 1895, and a certified copy of so much thereof as contained an assessment, of benefits and damages was placed in my hands by the City Clerk, wherein it appears that there was assessed to the lot of land within said City known as ihe Riley property Seminary Square damages In the amount of six hundred dollars (?C00 00), one third of which, or two hundred dollars ($200,00), I understand be* long8toyou l^ottoe is therefore given you that the said city fttands ready and willing to pay said sum of two hundred dollars ($200 00) to whomsoever is entitled to it. WILLIAM G. SMITH, d95t2vrks. Treasurer of the City of Greenfield.

Hello! Hello! Hello!

When you have a good news item call t)ie Central office and ask for No. 81, the EVENING REPUBLICAN office. We want a'l tbe news. Also call us up on business.

NAPOLEON BONAPARTE.

A Spectacle That Has No Parallel In History.

TEIUMPHAL RETURN FROM ELBA.

All France Responds to His Call to Arms. Battle of Waterloo and Extinction of the Old Gnard—Death at St. Helena of the

Emperor of the French.

[Copyright, 1895, by John Clark Ridpath.] XXI. —THE HUNDRED DAYS AND FINIS. On the 12th of April, 1814, the Past rode into Paris. It had on the white cockade of Bourbon, and came out of England. The Past, after an absence of twenty-three years, was old and fat. Young men born in the year of the Terror, sitting in the cafes on that day, had never seen the Past before. At the gate of the Tuileries, it reeled on its fine horse, and was about to fall. The attendants helped it to alight, and saluted it as Louis XVIII. Paris, the city of effervescent jubilee, was ominously silent. Some ci-devant royalists tried to shout, and only gasped. That was the Restoration!

On the 30th of May the allies concluded their trial treaty of peace at Paris. Napoleon had gone to Elba. There he began at once the organization of his "country," just as though it were an empire. His capital was Porto Ferrajo his residence, the Hermitage of La Marciana. The new sovereign saw at a glance what were the resources of his kingdom and the little insular realm felt the touch of the master hand. Improvements appeared in the municipal governments. A fine road was built from the capital to Porto Longone. The traveler in Elba finds to-day the Napoleonic museum of San Martino, and notes with keenest interest the relics relating to the brief ascendency of the Empetor. His reign in the island extended from the 4th of May, 1814, to the 26th of February in the following year then the Man of Destiny went suddenly away.

The temporary settlement made by the allies in Paris was carried to Vienna, in October, 1814, to be there completed and confirmed by a congress of the Powers. Prince Metternicli presided. The discussions were in the ancient manner, orthodox and dull—mere platitudes and precedents. The winter months were con-

NAPOLEON BT MEISSONIER.

sumed in debates about technicalities. The real issue was how the Past might be set up again in Europe and the Future prevented. This profound business, so mediaeval and inane, was still on at the end of February, 1815, when the startling news was borne to the Congress that Napoleon Bonaparte, quitting Elba, had landed at Cannes.

The intelligence flashed north, south, east and west. The cowardly and pallid Past enthroned in Paris smiled a ghastly smile. The Court newspaper chronicled tlio landing at Cannes thus: "The information comes to lis that that miserable adventurer and brigand Bonaparte has left the island of Elba and again polluted the soil of France with his bloody feet." The next notice of news from the south was given in the same organ thus: "Our intelligence is that the man Bonaparte has set out from Cannes to Lyons, and that certain turbulent adventurers have joined him on the way." On the following day the same paper said: "It is now certain that General Bonaparte at the head of a great and enthusiastic force is approaching the city, on the Lyons road." On the next morning the paragraph read thus: "His Majesty the Emperor Napoleon entered the city last night, and slept at the Tuileries!"

This journalistic transcript of events, absurd as it seems, was in striking conformity to the facts. On the 1st of March the "man Bonaparte" did land at Cannes. On the way out from Elba the. ship Zephyr, on which he sailed, had been accosted by the barquo Inconstant, who^e officer called out through his speaking trumpet, saying, "How is General Bonaparte?" Napoleon, being on deck and hearing the call, himself took the trumpet of the Zephyr a*id answered, "The Emperor is quite well, thank you!" At the landing, when an enthusiastic peasant came up in salutation, Napoleon said to Bertrand: "Here is one recruit already!"

The spectacle that ensued has no parallel in history. The eld soldiers of the Republic and the Empire rose as if from the earth to groet their commander. His progress en route to Paris became a triumph. At Grenoble the officers and soldiers of the King joined him. At Lyons the forces of the Duke of Orleans went over to the Emperor. Ney, who had accepted the Restoration and become a peer of France, had promised the King to put Napoleon in an. iron cage and bring him to Paris. With a division of the army lie met his old. commander at Auxerre, forgot all his hateful oaths of allegiance to the Bourbons, and rushed into the Emperor's arms:

For eighteen days the gathering .tumult swelled and broke into a tempest of enthusiasm. On the 19th of March, Napoleon entered Paris, and the Restoration was blown like a thistle-down out of the city. Louis fled to Belgium, and his Royalist followers returned to England. The Congress of Vienna rose suddenly from the consideration of court etiquette and regalia to find that their card-board house hi Paris was gone, and that the Imperial: Reality was there again with the gray coat, and three-cornered hat, and marble face, just as of old.

From the 1st of March to Waterloo was a period of a hundred and ten days. History calls it the Hundred Days. The iron purpose of Napoleon, his tireless energy, and omniscient perception, were never seen in such prodigious eruption and glare as in this period of his fate. The allies had become desperate. The whole world perceived that the Imperial republicanism of France, impersonated in Bonaparte and springing in the w.ind of his sword, ipust now triumph to the borders of Europe or, perish miserably under the heels of banded kings. The two ideas which the parties of the jiast and the future represented were irreconcilable they could no longer coexist. Either must Napoleon and his dynasty be staniped into the earth, or the old system of political Society in Europe disappear forever.

The French people sprang to the call. In a few weeks 867,000 men, volunteers: and conscripts, were thrown into the field. It was the last call to arms, and- Frande wak draihed from her mountains to tha sea-r-drained -not only of men and horses, tut of that moral force and enthusiasm which constitute: the sbtil of war. Napoleon declared that with a feW additional weeks in April ^uid May of. 1815 he|would have drawn around his Empire' a rim of brass and. firs that: no human povfer coold penetrate. lJut he was obliged to take th6 ffdld "With intofnplete preparation. The allied armies of England and Prussia, v.ndor Wellington and Blucher, cahie on, the o^ie from Fliinders, and ,•!

the other from the Rhine. It was the policy of Napoleon to prevent the union of his enemies. The 15th of June found him on the Bel-

§ay

ian frontier with 124,000 men. On the next he defeated Blucher at Ligny. The attack of Ney on the English at Quatre Bras was unsuccessful. The impetuous marshal, who was now the Emperpr's right arm, fell back on the village of Waterloo. The place was about nine miles from Brussels. It was skirted by the forest of Soignes. There the allied commanders had agreed to form a junction. Napoleon ordered Marshal Grouchy with his division of 84,000 to follow up Blucher on his retreat from Ligny to Waterloo. The plain purpose was that if Blucher should join Wellington, then Grouchy should unite his division with that of Ney. The failure of Grouchy to do this—to hang upon Blucher's rear—was a fatal circumstance of the final catastrophe.

On the night of June 17th the British and French armies encamped only a short distance apart. A modern field-piece could easily throw a shell from La Belle Alliance over La Haie Sainte to Mont St. Jean and far beyond into the forest. During the afternoon of the 17th and the greater part of the night, there was a heavy rainfall—another fact in the catastrophe. On the following morning the Emperor, viewing the situation from his headquarters at the farm of La Belle- Alliance, was unwilling to precipitate the battle {ftral his artillery might deploy over a dry field.

Hugo has made the place and the scene immortal in the greatest battle-piece since Homer. The field of Waterloo is an undulating plain. Strategically, it has the shape of an immense harrow. The clevis is on the height called Mont St. Jean. Behind that is the village of Waterloo. The right leg of the harrow terminates at the hamlet of La Belle Alliance. The left leg is the road from Brussels to Nivelles. The cross-bar intersects the right leg at La Haie Sainte. The right leg is the highway from Brussels to Charleroi. The intersection of the bar with the left leg is near the old stone chateau of Hougomont. The battle was fought on the lino of the cross-bar and in the triangle between it and the clevis.

The conflict began just before noon. The armies engaged were of equal strength, numbering about 80,000 men on each side. Napoleon was superior in artillery but Wellington's soldiers had seen longer servico in the field. They were his veterans from the Peninsular War, perhaps the stubbornest fighters in Europe. Napoleon's first plan was to double back the allied left on the center. This involved the capture of La Haie Sainte, and as a strategic corollary the taking of Hougomont. The latter placo was first attacked. The field and wood were carried but the chateau was held in the midst of horrid carnage by the British.

Early in the afternoon a Prussian division, under Bulow, about 10,000 strong, came on the field, and Napoleon had to withdraw a division from his center to repel the oncoming Germans. For two or three hours, in the area between La Haie Sainte and Hougomont, the battle raged, the lines swaying with uncertain fortune back and forth. La Haie Sainte was taken and held by Nov. On the whole, the British lines receded. Wellington's attempt to retake La Haie Sainte ended in a repulse. Ney on the counter-charge called on Napoleon for reinforcements, and the latter at that moment, changing his plan of battle, determined to make the principal charge on the British center. The support which he sent to Ney was not as heavy as it should have been, but the Marshal concluded that the crisis was at hand, and Napoleon sought to support him with Milhaud's cuirassiers and a division of the Middle Guard. Under this counter-oharge the British lines reeled and staggered, but still clung desperately to their position. They gave a little, and then hung fast and could be moved no farther. In another part of the field Durutto carried the r.Ilii'd position of Papelotte, and Lobau routed Bulow from Planchenois. At half past four everything seemed to portend disaster to the allies and victory to the French.

Just at this juncture, however, an uproar was witnessed far to the right. The woods seemed to open, and the banners of Blucher shot up in the horizon. Grouchy was not on his rear or flank! Napoleon saw at a glance that it was then or neyer. His sun of Auster-lit-z hung low in the wost. The British center must be broken, or the Empire which he had builded with his genius must pass away like a phantom. He called out four battalions of the Middle and six of the Old Guard. In the last fifteen years that Guard had been thrown a hundred times on the enemies of France, and never yet repulsed. It deemed itself invincible.

At seven o'clock, just as the June sun was sinking to the horizon, the bugles sounded, and the finest body of horsemen in Europe started to its doom on the squares of Wellington. The grim horsemen rode to their fate liko heroes. The charge rolled on like an avalanche. It plunged into the sunken road of O'Hain. It seemed to roll over. It rose from the low grounds and broke on the British squares. They reeled under the shock then reformed and stood fast. Around and around those immovable lines the soldiers of the Empire beat and beat in vain. It was the war of races at its climax. It was the final death-grip of the Gaul and the Teuton. The Old Guard recoiled. The wild cry of La Garde reculle was heard above the roar of battle. The crisis of the Modern Era broke in blood and smoke, and the past was suddenly victorious. The Guard was broken into flying squadrons. Ruin came with the counter-charge of the British. Ney, glorious in his despair, sought to stay the tide. For an hour longer he was a spectacle to gods and men. Five horses had been killed under him. He was on foot. He was hatloss. He clutched the hilt of a broken sword. He was covered with dust and blood. But his grim face was set against the victorious enemy in the hopeless and heroic struggle to rally his shattered columns.

Meanwhile the Prussians rushed in from the right. Wellington's guards rose and charged. Havoc came down with the darkness. A single regiment of the Old Guard was formed by Napoleon into a last square around which to rally the fugitives. The Emperor stood in the midst and uc'lnred his purpose to die with •yjem. Marshal Soult forced him out of the rflelee, and the famous square, commanded by Canibronne—flinging his profane objurgation into the teeth ot the English—perished with the wild cry of Vive l'Empereur!

On that spot French patriotism has planted a bronze lion to commemorate forever the extinction, not of the Old Guard only, but of the Empire and of Napoleon the Great. There the traveler from strange lands pauses, at the distance of eighty years from the horrible cataclysm, and reflects with wonder liow within the memory of living, men human nature could have been raised liy the passion of battle to such sublime heroism as that displayed in these wheatfields and orchards where the Old Guard of France 9ank into oblivion, but rose to immortal fame.

The rest may be briefly summarized. Napoleon once more in Paris is obliged to abdicate without conditions. He becomes a fugitive. On the 3rd of July we see him at Rochefort, on the western coast. He would fain1 reach the United States but the English fleets patrol the Atlantic. His mind is confused amid the wrecks of his destiny. He changes his purpose, and throws himself on the generosity of England. He claims to be a prisoner of war, and expects the treatment accorded by international law to great captains taken in battle. Vain expectation! He is conveyed to Torbay on the 25th of July. There are furious dobates in the British Commons. For what shall we do with Hunt

That indeed, O Great Britain, is a question! The worst, the, most ungenerous thing is done. He shall be banished to St. Helena. The thing is accomplished. On the 16th of October, 181a, the'greatest military leader, and in many respects the most remarkable .man who has appeared in. the world since the era of Christ, was debarked on his desolate island, that "Petite Isle," with which he had concluded his school exercise at Autun, thirty-six years ago!

Napoleon was not only exiled: he was imprisoned. St. Helena was his prison. He was guarded. His masters watched him with cruel surveillance for nearly six yea'rs. Under their sleepless eyes he dictated his, "Memoirs" to Bertrand, conversed with his friends, or sought an hour in solitude on the rocks near Longwood, looking out to the sea. His health at length gave way. Though his constitution was superb, there was an' organic' malady which came, as if from his father's grave, to destroy him. An ulcer of the stomach—symptoms of which had appeared at intervals for a decade—began its ravages, and in a few months he sank away. It was on the 5th of May, 1821, in the midst of a terrible tempest desolating the island, that Napoleon died.

They gave him a grave 'under some willow trees, by a fountain in Slane's valley. There for nineteen years and a half his Dody lay, until a new generation, rising from the shadows of a revised Bourbonism, turned to the hero who, at the beginning of the century, had made France the first of nations to him who had led her armies to victory and built for her an empire covering the belter, part .of EUeope. On the loth of Decern oer, 1810, the body of' the! Empetrfr Napoleon, under the care of thp not ungallant sons of Louis Philippe, was brought back in state from the desolate island of!liis exile and death.- The coffin with the Great Dust in it was taken in pomp and pageant unsurpassed through the streets of Puris, and deposited in the sarcophagus of darkred porphyry^ to rest for times and a time under the magnificent' dome of the Invalidea. There he reposes and the Third Republic fuards him. JOHN CLARK RIDPATH.

at 3 iut

A

Neglect to satisfy the demands made by the nervous system carries heavy penalties. When this nervous force is exhausted the disgestlve processes are obstructed, the body is weakened and pains of neuralgia, indigestion, rheumatism, invade its parts. During repose the nerves and great nerve centers feed upon the nutritive material that is stored in the blood and tissues. It is when this supply of nourishment is prompt and abundint that, the nerveus system is able to recuperate, but whea the system has become too tired to appropriate sufficient nourishment and the nerves too shaky to get the the rest they need, that best of all blood purifiers, nerve foods, and nerve regulators, Paine's celery compound, should be given at once.

Paine's celery compound has brought health, strength, and freedom from nervous weakness to thousands of tired women, "run down men, and sickly children. ID makes them able to sleep soundly, to digest their food perfectly, and to win back health and strength. The tired brain and nerves are rebuilt and their wasted parts repaired during sleep, and where neruousness, irritability, and inadequate nutrition of the nerve

WORSE THAN POVERTY.

9

Poor Blood and JSTerves out of Order —Take Paine's CeleiyCompound.

m.

Among all the structures that]make up the human body, the nerves have been until recently the least understood.

The role of the nerves in the digestion and assimilation of food is a highly important one. The question whether the food shall nourish or become a mere load upon the system is a question of nerve force. f"

We invite all the citizens of Hancock and adjoing counties to call in and inspect our new store.

New Fixtures, New, Drugs, .New Sundries, New Stock of all Kinds.

j* "'4

"N". E. jcorner Public Squar^Odd Fellows Block.P

5VM

ceuters do not permit i!Ti ieat sleep, nervous prostration, lassitude and desponency are sure t» fol'o v*. Paine's celery compound guards against all thi9 by promptly feeding the exhausted nerves and making the blood pure, abundant, and nourishing. It cures uauraglia, rheumatism, all forms of nervous weaknees, despondency, skin dise-iae, and affections of the heart, liver and kidneys. It sends pure, vitilized blood to every organ,and thus makes people well. Paine's ce'ery compound has found its way originally through prescreptions by physicians, into every city and smallest village in the country.

It would be very difficult to find a man or women of mature aga who has not either been helped by this remarkable remedy or has haard of its marvelous prop erties at firsthand from some enthsiastic friends or relative. Paine's celery compound is the only great popular remedy that physicans of every school prescribe for disorders of the blood and nerves.

Say Mrs. Kate Manuel, 216K 3rd ave., Minneapolis, whose picture is above: "I have been greatly benefited by Paine's celery compound. I have taken six bottles of the wonderful remedy, and recommen 1 it to all who are aitloted as I was. For years I have suffered from inligestiou, and know not how to give due thanks for the relief that I have receive 1 waile takiug Piiue's celery campound. My son-in-law has tak^n two bottles for similar trouble and it has made him will.

,v

Open and Ready Far Business.

jiiiiis^

A| The store will be in charge ofE. H. Jackson, a graduate of the Purdue University School of Pharmacy.*

1

EARLY CO.