Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 2 July 1891 — Page 2

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W. S. MONTGOMERY.

OREEN FIELD. INDIANA

While

French doctors arnied witb

hardly possible. The Sun didn do that with its cholera mixture. That grand discovery was freely scattered far and wide for the benefit of humanity, and we presume the Passion ist fathers will,as a matter of course, follow the good example.—N. Y. Sun. ______

Several

$Z4

serioush and two tatally poisoned at Pittsburg as the result of eatiny smoked fish, an examination of which showed that it was unfit for human food before it was cured. There is very little difference in principle between putting arsenic in an enemy S coifee and sending poisonous stuff ii the 6hape of food broadcast througt the markets of the country. The dif ference is in degree, for the man wht commits a definite crime on accoun4 of a definite enemy is rather more respectable than the one who hazards the lives of innocent persons whoir he has never seen for the sake of few mean dollars. Before the coun*

try is many years older there will b«

more

used

more than midJle-aged walked out of college halls with their sheepskins in their hands. In those earlier day6, however, the life of the students was far simpler and more wholesome,and it would have been an impossibility for the police to find a Mquor selling students' club in any college town

Another

,1 k\ .,

A

large Indian reserve will

soon be opened for settlement and cultivation. The Government has COUI pleted negotiations with several tribes in the State of Washington by which it will obtain possession of a tract of territory comprising 1,500,000 acres of land as soon as the treaty meets with the approval oi Congress. The people of the new State have been very desirous of the opening of this broad tract, which is fully a half of the great Calville reserve held by two or three thousand Indians. It is the finest part of the State and comprises farming, grazing, timber and mineral lands. It has all the resources needed for the support of a large population, and as a matter of course, it has plent Df fine sites for flourishing towns. There will doubtless be a heavy rush of settlers to the reserve as soon as It is thrown open to settlement.— New York Sun.

man

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who is as good a republican

as he is a musician has been arreste*. in Munich, and will probably be im prisoned, for playing in the street tunes thought likely to excite sedition. The arrest seems arbitrary enough, but it can hardly be called Irrational when one considers how Inspiring and suggestive are the tunes of popular political songs in days of political excitement, like tht Marsellaise in the French Revolution and Yankee Doodle in our own, or the quaint shrill tune they pipe in Ireland that means the boycotting of a farm. If speech be forbidden, other modes of expression take its place, and music becomes as significant as words, and a creed may be condensed in a color, as in the green of Ireland or the red of the Anarchists. Anything may be a symbol, from a cross on a watch chain to the shape of the beard. One might imagine perfume bemg condemned, and not without reason, as seditious. Fronj any suppression of

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THE REPUBLICAN. 'TIIE NEWS OF THE WEEK.

goats" milk are attacking Dr. Iiocli Bad his lymph, Father Grieta, a mis- ahlfng women to vote for all school officers sionary priest iL India, comes to the

front with an infallible cure for chol-1 era. Satisfactory tests of the drug are said fco have been made in Calcutfca, and it is also reported that Father Grieta, who belongs to the Passionist order, has sent the precious recipe to his superior in Rome, so

stringent legislation governing The gang was a desperate one, and the production and sale of food, and were accused of several murders. Thearthese will be enforced, for the abuse »'"*is were made at the muzzle of Winchesstrikes home to every man.

to go to college purely for the fea,tol

sake of obtaining an education, work

his way through by sawing wood or attending to the professor's horse,

ona afterwards face the world in aU

Beriousness In some respects it

is

better, in others worse. The world

knows a great deal more now than it

Aid thirty years ago, and many important branches of study have

opened since those who are scarcely.

During the secord quarter of 1891 there were 892 new industries established in the South. 7'"

During the strawberry season Furnessvllle shipped one thousand cases daily to Chicago.

Governor Fifer has signed the bill en-

In

that it can be kept secret and the ooo. medicine sold at a high price

persons were recently

Illinois.

for

the

benefit of the order. This «so«ms

A statue of Henry Ward Beecher was unveiled at Brooklyn on the 34th with imposing ceremonies.

A syndicate lias been organized with a capital of S1,OOC 0 Oto cultivate a farm of 112,000 acres in Florida.

The horse shoe mills of the Diamond State Iron Co., at Wilmington, Del., were

burned on the 28tb, causing a loss of $400,-

The Dalton gang of outlaws is reported to have robbed the Sac and Fox agcncy, Indian Territory, of a large amount of money.

Preparations arc being made for a series of naval maneuvers off the New England toast to test the value of our ships in actual war.

The United States legation in Mexico will be raised to the fust-class rank on July 1, and after that date Minister Ryan will receive an annual salary of 17,5"X).

Jn a fit of absent-mindedness Jay Gould came near being run over by a railroad train at Irvington, near New York, the other day. He was dragged from the track by a baggageman.

Senator George, of Mississippi, is out in a 7-coItimn letter approving all the principles of the Alliance, including the subtreasnry scheme, and taking advanced ground of the Alliance itself.

Frank Mellourn, the Australian inventor of an alleged rain machine,will attempt to cause a fall of rain over seventy thousand square miles of territory, next Tues* day, with Canton, O., as a central point.

The insurance on the stock and fixtures in the coffee-roasting house of E. Loverng & Co., which was burned Sunday night, amounts to ?9 5 X). Of this $82,500 was on the stock alone, and §9,8C0 on machinery.

Harvey Mullins and Pike Cooper, two of a notorious gang of moonshiners, were

|n McDowe|1 cot,nty Va on thc

ters. The Mjchigan nouse of Representatives

The education of our youth is not ',as Passc(l the Senate bill making the lega a in 6 what it was when the young

BanLile-eHmlloIlcontn^e8per,aen,nt,bntte.

the making ten hours a legal day's

work. The Senate has killed the bill repealing the local option law. There is a prospect of a big furniture

s«rlkc a' ra"1 T''" em"

ploycs of the Grand Rapids School Furni-

nre

Company claim that they are locked

out. and that their employers intend using

non-union labor. The Furniture-Workers' Union may support them by going out. All the details of the transfer of the signal service from the War Department

|0't|w A(,ricV„ltllr|

completed. The transfer goes into effect

on Wednesday, July 1. It is generally conceded that General Greely, the present chief signal officer, will be foon succeeded by a civilian, and it is said that the new man will be Assistant Secretary of Agriculture Willets or Prof. Nipher, of St. Louis.

FOREIGN.

Parnell was married to Mrs. O'Shea on the 25th. Chinese have murdered several missionaries in the district of Canton. Others have been abducted and are held for heavy ransoms, under threat of death.

Much indignation exists in government circles at Berlin over the renewed bitterness of the Vismarck organs toward the Kaiser and his policy, and especally the covert assaults upon the triple alliance. Most of the articles are inspired by Bismarck and serve to widen the breach between the ex-Chancellor and the Emperor, and there is yet. a possibility that Bismarck may find himself called to account, not in the way of a judicial proscution, hut as an officer of the imperial army endeavoring to undermine the faith of the •"•ople in the sovereign. Those who are nnar the Kaiser say that his animosity toward Bismarck has grown rapidly of late tid may take a form unpleasant to the riiice.

DESTROYED BY A FLOOD.

'i Hundred Iowa Families Homeless.

terrfble

Department have

been

Rendered

A dispatch from Cherokee, Iowa, on tho rtli says: The terrors of the Johnstown rod were in part repeated in this place o-day. Seventy-five houses havo been arried out of sight in tho Niagara-like orrent. The number of lives lost is yet a natter of uncertainty. A terrific cloud'nirst. thrice repeated, and wind, almost a hurricane, are what consummated the iread work. The storm, which began last light, appears to have swept a vast circle »f northwestern Iowa, fully 100 miles in iianieter. with Cherokee as the center.

Most of the. destruction in Cherokee wa wrought by the extraordinary rise in the Sioux river, resulting from the tremendous lown-pour )t water. Some idea of the

:mmensity

the utmost free

done of speech to the minutest, mo.s! 1ptoi«rable regulation of private life there is logicully and practically onh difference of degree.N. Y. Sim.

and suddenness of the flood

may be inferred from the fact that it earned off, apparently without an effort, the ig truss-bridge upon which the Illinois 'entral Railroad crossed the river, and vith the bridge went 400 feet of trestio on which tho company's tracks approached he river.

To-night the Little Sioux isat the highst stage ever known. Tho havoc both to •oadway and bridges is something seldom paralled in railroad history.

Eight lives aro reported lost near Waterloo. At Lemars. Floyd river is a mile wide. Bridges aro out on the railroads. AH trains are abandoned. The Omaha paycar has t|ie only«n^ine available for work. At Sutherland it is reported that fifteen 'nnf»esare swept away. It fatal)!.raining and the slmamt are Retting hfgher.

A dispatch from Sioux CitjTsays: The

0'

rains of Wednesday night

most

have

al­

devastated this portion of Iowa. Nc roads are running trains from this cifcj east. Floyd river valley is inundated foi thirty-five miles north of this city. Tho towns of Merrill, Hinton, Lemars and James are completely submerged. Thirtyfive miles of track on each of the Illinois Central, Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis Omaha and Sioux City & Pacific are flooded north of this city, with bad washouts ai Lemars. On the Central Iowa branch ol the Illinois Central- nine hundred feet oi tract was carried out. On tho Central Sioux Falls branch, seven bridges were washed out. The Chicago & Northwestern tracks in the Sioux valley are out foi over a half mile at Sutherland. The same road is also washed out at Carroll. At Merrill, eight miles from the city, the Floyd river rose fifteen feet in three hours and the flood was sweeping through the Floyd river valley toward this city and devasting hundreds of acres of crops.

LATER—A courier from Cherokee announces that the first dispatches sent out from that point do not begin to give a proper idea of the awful damage done by the storm and flood that set in Tuesday night and had only partially subsided by sunset Thursday evening. It bad been storming all day Tuesday, tho rain being driven through the streets in blinding sheets. But this alone would not have resulted in such a disastrous flood. Storms havo been common there, and the Sioux has frequently overrun its banks. Tho river rose steadily during tho day and toward night caused some apprehension. Shortly after dark, however, the storin seemed to bo increasing in fury and thq inhabitants gathered to watch the ter rible down-pour. Cellars were already covered with water in the flat district Suddenly it seemed as if a veritable reservoir in the sky had broken its walls and was pouring its resist.'oss waters on thq city. It was more than a rain it was a river from tho clouds, and it fell wit!} crushing violence on the roofs of stores and dwellings. Lights across tho street could not bo distinguished through the almost solid bank or sheet of rain. In a few minutes—noone thought to time It— the very streets had been converted into swollen channels that shortly rose above the curbs and rushed into stores and houses. None could venture out in such a storm, and no one dared save those in the bottoms, who, rather than be floated away in their frame houses, risked their lives climbing through the torrent to higher ground

It was estimated that the Sioux river rose ten feet in about fifteen minutes, shortly after 10 o'clock. Then the great truss railroad bridge, with its 100 feet of spans and over 400 feet of trestle work, gavo way and sank in the roaring Sioux with a noise that was heard in the city above the storm. Every one knew what had occurred, and all realized that outside help was then cut oil". It now appears that over one hundred dwelling houses soon followed the bridge down the stream. The cloud-burst was soon over, but tho rain fell until late in tho afternoon. Today probably 1,530 people havo reported themselves as being without home, shelter or household goods. Damages in this town alone are placed a£S^P,000, outside of that to railroad property. Tho Sioux is still raging, and its middle current is full of floating farmers' outhouses, wheat stacks, wagons, pig pens, with now and then a barn or a hut of more pretentions. For miles up and down the valley the story will be the same.

Four deaths were at first reported, but many persons are missing, and it is impossible to give the exact loss of life. Everything is in confusion, and the people are panic-stricken. The railroad bridge is lodged a half mile down the river,

A later dispatch says: An Illinois Central work train has succeeded in reaching a point about one mile east of Cherokee and further progress is barred by a vasi expanse of water stretching as far as the eye can reach. It is feared there will be added to the present sufferings of citizens the pangs of hunger. All tho surplus stock of provisions was destroyed by tho flood, and the town is now as effectually isolated from the rest of the world as though no railroads were in existence. The wagon roads are all impassabie in tiie valley, and no prospect is seen of reaching the people from any direction until tho water subsides.

ALGER SAYS IT'S BLAINE.

Tho last, agricultural appropriation aci contained an appropriatian of $7,000 to bf used in experimenting in the production of rainfall. The department is now about to embark in these experiments, having prepared to test practically the theory that heavy explosions cause rainfall. Tuesday evening a preliminary trial was made anri a balloon sent up in tho northern suburbs of Washington was explodod with grea violence amid the clouds. Whether th« subsequent downpour of rain later on ir the evening was caused by the exn)oMo remains tobq di-termined, and,the depa

NEW WEATHER.

A Change in the Bureau Makes Us Hopeful

Will tho Change to the

8§SS

er

4

The General Talks About the Approach* lag Presidential Campaign,

General Alger, who arrived at Omaha from his Western tour on the 29th, said in an interview that "without doubt if Secretary Blaine wants tho presidential nomination he can have it. I find this feelliif? generally gaining throughout the West, and his acceptance is all that is necessary. In the east I am confident he is stronger than a year ago. I have personal knowledge to the effect «hat many of his most influential opponent of 1SS8 are now anxious to have him nominated. Harrison if second choice—not that his administration has net been successful, but for the simple reason that Blaino is the most popular man in America. "From my observation throughout the Western States, Cleveland has the lead in Democratic popular favor. -His silver ideas, I find, injure his chances very little. I scarcely think the Alliance will be in the field with a national .ticket, but the old soldiers will certainly cut more figure in the approaching contest than ever before. This element virtually nominated Harrison in '88, and its strength will sett'e the contest In any event."

rt-

mentwill try the experiment on a lnrfeoi seale to test the efficacy of this means ol breaklag summer droughts.

fV^ricnHitral Do'

tment Make It

a

Rural

Affair.

IgpfcTark W. Harrington, editor of the American Meteorological Journal, and a professor at Ann Arbor, Mich., has been appointed Chief of the Weather Bureau.

Acting Secretary Grant Tuesday signed an order discharging the 163 employes of the Signal Service now engaged in the Weather Burea* The list is headed by Professor Abbe and ends with the firsi class sergeants. Under the law the Secretary of Agriculture is bound to give preference to these men in making appointments of the force of the new Weathei Bureau and with the exception of a few men who elected to remain in what wil. hereafter be the purely military branch the Signal Service, all of the employes who were engaged in the Weather Bureau an likely to be reappointed.

The Secretary was asked for a statement of his views and intentions regard in the future conduct of the Weather Bu reau. He said that he could see a many ways in which meteorological science could be made helpful in co-opera-tion with many of the present divisions of the department, and ho believed that in course of time his expectation can be fally realized. In the meantime he proposes to perfect, .as much as possible, the prompt dissemination of the weather forecasts throughout the agricultural districts.

The meteorological service of the United States Government must go far beyond the mere forecasting of the weather, and be so extended as to include a thoroughly systematic investigation into the climatic conditions of the various sections of the country, in order that a full knowledge o: them and of theirefi'ects upon plantgrowtb should be available for the farmers.

Professor Harrington, who was made chief, has for the last twelve years been professor of astronomy in the University of Michigan, and is about forty-threo years of age. He is regarded as an accomplished student of meteorology and climatic problems. Prof. Harrington's appointment received many strong indorsements, including a majority of the highest scientific authority in the country, the Senators from his own State and many other prominent gentlemen. Lieutenant Finley remains for the present at his post In California.

The enlisted force of the signal corps, togetfie1* with the civilian employes heretofore in the signal corps, electing to remain with the weather Bureau, will by this order, with the exception of those whose appointments expire by limitation, be transferred to tho Weather Bureau of the Department of Agriculture.

GAUiNT WANT.

Deporable Condition of the Poor­

Classes in Berlin. I:, Ml

The Military Necessary to Prevent Riots lor Bread—The facts Being Suppressed.

According to a Berlin dispatch several cases of death from absolute want among the poorer classes have been covered up by the authorities as being entirely attributable to disease. The is a systematic effort on the part of the authorities, from he Department of State down to the low3st municipal official, to minimize the misery that prevails owing to the high price }f bread. The police have been known to rebuke persons on the street who were heard talking about the corn duties in a tone of dissatisfaction, and they give a flat ienial on every possible occasion to the reports of destitution.

-3

In this way they have rrianaged to deceive some of the newspapers, while others ire willing to thus misrepresent matters without being deceived. The truth, says he United Press correspondent, is that nearly every wage-earnii family keenly feels the situation, and the Kaiser is losing, on account of it, much af the popuarity which lit* earned by the advocacy of labor reforms. The Socialists are taking tdvantage of the general discontent to «w their doctrines broadcast, and expect to reap the harvest at the next election for the Reichstag. Military, as well as the police, are kept vigilant for signs of a riot

FIVE MILES OF PETITION.

A Historical Document to the Cz

There will be aboard one of the outgoing European steamships irom New York, next week, a document that is destined to ive in history. It is the petition of the United States to Alexander III, Czar of Russia, asking him to mitigate the severity of the punishment meted out to the political prisoners of his country. It conains several millions of signatures, and if put together would be five and one-third miles in length. It will be shipped in ten enormous chests, and will fill a space 2 ceet long and broad and six feet in height The name of the American who goes with to present it to the Czar is suppressed for the time being, but It is stated that is a journalist and diplomateof interna tional reputation. All portions of th country are represented among the sign •i\s. The Western States have an cnor nous contingent, but it is an interestin act that the autographs of Russians an» Poles are conspicuous only by their al sence. Prominent men in every ljusine!and profession are here represented, an here and there are such names as Jam Russell Lowell, John G. Whittier, Olive Wendell Holmes, Julia Ward Howe an ex-Vice-President Hannibal Hamlin.

Secretary Proctor Is not hating things all his own way In his Vermont Senatorial race. Unexpected opposition has arisen which has made It necessary the Secetary to bestir himself. *.

ftW,

^!RBANK&k0.

The greatest improvement in

Corsets during the past twenty

years is the use of Ccraline in

the place of hom or whalebone.

It is used in all of Dr. Warner's

Corsets and in no ethers.

®The advantages of Coraline

over horn or whalebone are that

it. does not become set like

whalebone, and it is more flexi­

ble and more durable.

Dr. Warner's Coraline Corsets

are made in twenty-four differ­

ent styles, fitting every variety cf

figures—thin, medium, stout,

long waists and £hort waists.

Sold everywhere.

WARNER BROS., Mrs., New York and Chicago.

I

jHimrtfTOmlj

HEBRA'S

pWlQlkQmM

THIS

preparation, without injury, removes*

•tcu Freckles, JLiver-jVIoles. Pimples, Blaek-Hends, Sunburn md Tan. A few applications will renter the most stubbornly red skin soft,, ••niooth and white. Viola Cream ig lot a paint or powder to cover defects,, jut a remedy to cure. It is superior ty ill other preparations, and is guaranteed give satisfaction. At drng^igts or mailad for CO cents. Prepared by rolOdo. Ohio. G. C. BITTNER A CO 1 sule tiy IV'. C. Qmil'iv. (Jreenfte

J. SMITH, Doctor Dental Surgery

Odice Corner State and Main 8treaU.

Residence Corner State and Flippe Stri

Price* Reasonable.

ABY L. BKUNER, M. D.,

GREENFIELD

to Be Presented

jmi

SHEEN FIELD, IHOTAKA

Diaeanes of "W omen.

Residence, North Pennsylvania St.,

81 tf

DR.

V* «. J-

WARREN R. KING, PHYSICIAN

OFFICE—In Gant'« Block, corner Peps and Main streets. Residence, West Mali street. I 't\'r

GREENFIELD, IND.

J. H. BINFORD,

ATTORNET.AT-LAW,

GREENFIELD. IND.

Tubular Wells.

I have my Well Drilling Machine now ready to make you a first-class Tubular Well at reasonable prices.

Call and see me if in need of a well and I will treat you right.

E. WEST,

A

Local Tuns TABU.

aor—* Jan. •olid Tr»l»

.•«&»

B&a.

u*m

H/U* IMKXY aad FWOZi*

triefcifu Otto

ItlUOT evMM* tteim

ad fro« *tl l.'oiUd MiM »i»4 Cmdtt

7'ratiiw arrive and tlopart from ia dlaiiftpitliN Union Htatimi follows* HKVaHT -SO 10 pasaeuzer. T-1A a m. 9*. 10 p«s.venger, *\:'M p. m., No. 14 pmraeaKUE, Wl» m. No Ifi express. til-U) p. bl Trains not markeri ran dally uxoept SsoAij. AKKIVK—No. a pawuuger, *l»a» a. an. Be. jft ptuweugtti, **£.•(• m. No 13 j^ateagw, SCtkyu m.. No. 17 exprem. tS:I0 a. m. •Dally. tDallj exoept

No. U, vis Tipton, arrive Blooa»tBfftaa •. in., making •tirer.t connection «iu A A. cut trail arriviug at (Causae City &£t> MV morning, oonueciing direct at Kumi Clft In* Denver, San Prauoiacn and all point* wnA Free raining chair can betwaea Tipton umm IfiBMtarl river for all pnwenjen.

Not tf, 10,12 and 13 connect al Ttptt* vMft main line trains for gaud oaky. fcooaaiaglMS and all potato Kastaud Weak

Tratna 18 aid 17 have elegant wlIMM ehato •an fr»* to all pameoGen, stake ddrntt connection at Pen witb the Wabaih fast for Pt Wayne, Tolado, Chicfla Detroit

York

For further Information la regard to routes, etc., call on A. H. Sellam, City ger Agent. 4« 8 Illinois St., or addreo, H» PARKKK) Tr fflo Mnangw, 42. 1

DALTi A-b

tinn'l Pa**, a'trt Tkl. Ag*. INIM AN tPtlLf* KNI.

lfSE*r-

& I

m.

TAR

FOR COUGHS -TAND COLDS

SOLO BY DRUGGISTS AND GENERAL STOREKEEPERS.

MIPMCD OMIV BY

*OO$A&BATUcrFtMlcALca

•CINCINNATI,OHIO.

For dale by fcarlj and I.' 0 Mimam, ureee

I CURE

When I Bay CrrsB I do not mean merely to stop tlii- ior a time, and then have ttoem Cora again. I mean A IiADlGAI* CUIUS* iiave tuaue the disease ol

FITS, EPILEPSY OP FAIXING SICKNESS.

/. Ti'c-lonff study. I XTAEftANT my remedy t®

CURB

AMI) SURGEON.

tue worst enson. BI cause others HAVO 1 ailed is no reason ior Send at once for a treatiwe oi my

INFALLIBLE KENEDY.aFreeExpressottusacme.BGivereceivingandnownot

and Post Offico. It costs yot cotlung fas trial, and it will cure you. Address M.C. ROOT, M.C., 183

ILESl

TM

Fortville, Ind. ""jSS

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tf

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3

PEARL ST.,ffcwYOR

«niPTOMS-Mk •ret Inteum IMtw and ntlmctnct mwtw

Ichtl worae.fr/ •erotcMac. lfaX JlewM to.

ttwillim

IITCHING PILES.tCrS

ulceration, and In moat re*tT* tfcr aora. Swarm's

OINTWIKT wtd

ty fnicgiato,f waMHNfc

my adrtresn on recipt «f price, 50cts. bo* S

ftdflnw letters. IK. SWAYMK AON PtiflftdvMt-Mu

£|f IM DISEASES 5IUI1SWAYNW ABSOLUTELY CURES,

till?

atotola

I IHCIf

•ppllentfim

"fwirwr* Oiamam" wliy^

of

•nr lafrnal mnHtlne. will cm* in tu, or T«W««. CM' tbeuu). RlBKWorm.Hlet.Ilch. Sortm PfnpTto. Mn®t«rhiw o*»»tii»«e

trr«r*i*.t*rnllii«.

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bar mail ftir

br4(.i«Ma

CM.

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Boa,

JUdK

a.

rfclhadetoUa. Pa. Mr

dr-aoOMP

Con?nmptinn Vnreil.

An old physician, retired from practice^ laving had placed in his hands by ao

KmM

India missionary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy Mod permanent cure of consumption, bronchitis cHtnrih, asthma and nil threat ami lung niTections, also a positive aud radicalcnr» for nervous deliility and all nervous complainto, after having tested its wonderfwl curative powers in thousands of cases has felt it his duty to make It known to bis suffering fellows. Actuated by thl» motive and a desire to relieve human \«f- .:v4§ fering, I will send free of charge, to Sd who .sire it, this recipe in German, French or English, with full direetifllM tor preparing and using. Sent by mail"by •i*-^ dressing with stiun-, naming tW#