Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 4 October 1894 — Page 4
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REPUBLICAN COUNTY TICKET
JUDGE.
WILLIAM H. MARTIN*. PROSECUTOR. ELMER J. BI^ ORD.
RKPRKSEJ»IATIVE» MORRIS- HIGG1NS. CLERK.
B. BINFORD. AUDITOR.
ALTER G. BRIDGES. TREASURER. JOHN G. McCORD.
T-R- SHERIFF. JAMES W. McNAMEE. RECORDER.
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HOWARD T. ROBERTS. CORONER. DR. JOHN P. BLACK.
S
SURVEYOR.
WM. E. SCOTTON
COMMISSIONER FIRST DISTRICT. LEMUEL HACKLEMAN. COMMISSIONER SEC0SD DISTRICT
JAMES L. MITCHELL.
THE GREENFIELD REPUBLICAN
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY.
VOL. 15. ISO. 39-Entered at the Fostofficean I toond-class mall matter. W. S. MONTGOMERY,
Publisher and Proprietor.
Circulation This Week, I,
THE Ci Tic Fe deration, of Chicago has opened up on the gamblers of Chicago, and are making it warm for them. Several establishments have come to Hammond and Roby' Ind., but the people there are giving them a hot reception. In Chicago many indictments have been returned against the owners of buildings improperly used for gambling purposes, and some of the men are quite prominent and wealthy. Judge Lambert Tree, Cleveland's Minister to Russia, is the owner of one building where a big gambling den is located. Hush money has been traced to the hands of Mayor John P. Hopkins himself, so'.Mat Pinkerton swears. Chicago like New York is a hot bed of corruption not equalled by Rome in her palmiest days. They are run by politicians and law breakers, who all work together. Such corruption will continue too, as long as honest men and gosd citizens vote the tickets named for them by the bosses and ring men of a party. People should repudiate men at the polls whose characters do not come up to the standard that people require in officials.
THE war on the New York police department continues with unabated vigor. Dr. Parkhurst is coming out a winner, he has proved much more than he thought of proving when he commenced, for Tammany Hall and its police commisioners, police and even the judges are proving more corrupt than was at first dreamed..' It has been charged and proved that the police and police commissioners received commissions from and stood in with the men who blockaded sidewalks from gamblers, from counterfeiters, from saloonists who violated the law, from the owners, Keepers and inmates of bawdy houses, infact from all the violation of the law in the city. The police stood in and assisted these violaters of the law in catching suckers and protected the law-break-ers afterward. The corruption is fearful to contemplate but the Lexow committee appointed by the Republican legislature is probing the matter to the bottom and will punish many guilty ones, infact all of them, if the honest people of New York only stand behind them and speak behind them and speak out in tones that cannot be misunderstood next November The law-breakers and their allies the police are in desperate straights. Last Friday Geo. Appo, who gave the Green Goods business away before the Lexow committee had his throat cut from ear to ear, but may possibly recover.
AN English syndicate has secured an option on the twenty-nine paper and twenty-one pulp mills situated at Neenah Menasha, Appleton, Kimberly, Little Chute, Kaukauna, Combined Locks and Deeper uloiig Fox river, Wisconsin ior a distance of twenty-five miles. The value of these plants is estimated at $10,000,000. The daily product when run to the full capacity amounts to 1,300 miles of paper in a sheet seventy-six inches wide and 300 tons of pulp. The value of the product Is about $50,000 daily. This is the biggest syndicate deal £ince the English bought our breweries. This is indeed a bad thing for America. With English capital owning^ all the big industries in this country and drawing out enormous profits which are taken to England to be spent, this country will be sapped dry. The thing could continue until we would simply be hewers of wood and drawers of water for John Bull. Our Dernoc at friends are not only content for the English t« own industries here, but what is even worse they favor a policy that transfers our manufacturing to England or compels our workmen to take English wages and live correspondingly cheaper. Why not be Americans first, last and all the time and favor America and her industries. We whipped England in 1776 and again in 1812 aud can do it again whenever necessarjf, so why be dependent on her in anyway. By the Revolution we became politically free and by a system ot protection we may be industrially tree and we should also be financially free. Lat the policy of the Hon. Thos. B. Reed, of Maine and Senator Lodge of Massachusetts be followed aud just so long as England discriminates against silver and insists ou a Pjjngle gold standard let us discriminate against her goods in the way of reprisal. That is the doctrine.
YOURS FOR CASH ONLY.
WE SELLl^ ONLY FOR CASH. Several years' experience has taught.us,that-the credit system, as it is carried on all over the country, is a very unsatisfactory way to do business. It is TIE fa? treatment to those who pay as they go. Peor«* who pay the cash have to pay a certain per cent, more for their goods in order to balance the losses sustained by the credit system.
BILLY WILSON IN LONDON. Of course you've heard the tidings that have Hashed across the sea, They're dining Billy Wilsou where everything is 'free." The Prince he pats him on the back and toasts him up and down, They've granted him the freedom of their blasted London Town. And even Jack the Ripper, reeking with the gutter's slime, Has vowed to see that Billy has a high old time.
They thank him for the spindles that are silent everywhere.' They bleis him for the hungry cries that rend the autumn air. They bless him for the pitching of a thousand
Coxey camps.
They praise him for the making of our multitude «f tramps Aye, everywhere they seek him out in Queen
Victoria?s clime,
Determined that our Billy shall have a high old time.
The Briiish lion lifts his tail when he our Billy sees, And whispers: "Dear old comrade, you may twist it all you please You've tried to ruin our rival neath the banner of the stars. You've crippled Uncle Samuel more than twenty bloody wars We'll banquet you with pleasure, and we'll write you up in rhyme. Till you return I'll see you have a high old time.
The freemen of his district will be voting by and by, A shattered Wilson bill will soon be sailing toward the sky 'Mid the winds of next November, as they whistle cold and wild, The diner out in England will not know" his free-trade child, For the men of West Virginia, heroes true to
Freedom's clime,
Will see that Billy Wilson has a devil
of a
time.
—T. C. Harbangh, in Cincinnati TMbune.
Pithy. Pointed and Pertinent.
Republican principles—good things pass them along. Dave Hill still has his yellow jacket and his peacock feather, too, notwithstanding Emperor Grover's edict.
Comptroller Eckels mistakes the opening of the banquet season for the beginning of an era of national prosperity.
The Democratic editors of Louisiana must consider the situation desperate they have began to shout "no nigger domination."
Bishop Potter says a trip to Europe is a sure cure for the "big head." Who'll start a popular subscription to send Mr. Cleveland to Europe?
The administration did not make a very striking success of its attempt to oust Dave Hill from the control of the Democratic machine in New York.
It seems that Kentucky Democrats do sometimes venture out without a revolver or bowie knife, notwithstanding the popular impression to the contrary.
The White House has been given a fresh coat of paint, but the administration, which needs it much worse, still has its spots and blemishes uncovered.
Senator Brice is said to be determined that Tom Johnson shall not be returned to Congress. Money ought to be plentiful in the twenty-first Ohio Congressional district this fall.
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As they sat by the sea, in a cove,, ,? Whispered Carlisle, to Grove, "The People have kicked: we're licked" And the wild waves echoed "licked, kicked." Congressman Bryan isn't the first man who has lost a reputation, made by two or three carefully prepared speeches, by attempting to furnish a similar brand of eloquence for the editorial columns of a daily paper.
The London Chamber of Commerce shows its' gratitude for tariff favors received and yet to come by banquetting Ccugressman Wilson, of West Virginia. The voters in Mr. Wilson's district will show what they think by retiring him next November.
The Democratic managers are so badly frightened at the revolt of the La. sugar planters that they have promised them that Congress will at the coming session provide for the payment of the sugar bounty on this year's crop, if they will remain in the Democratic party.
Instead pf challenging history to support his absurd misstatement, Senator Voorhees should call upon his Demo-
GREENFIELD REPUBLICAN.
Therefore, on
/'MONDAY, OCTOBER 1,1894,1
We began selling only .for CASH TO EVERY BODY. All will be treated exactly alike. We will
SAVE YOU MORE MONEY
by this system, for we can sell a great many things cheaper.
We want everybody's trade and good will, and will treat y®u right. All our goods are new and clean. We have no old stock to work off. fc -sS.
WILKINS & BECKNER.
cratic colleagues in the Senate to tell the Indiana voters how he wobbled on the tariff question also, about that antiCleveland speech he prepared and promised to deliver, but never did.
Hon. Bourke Cockran said while the tariff monstrosity was pending in Congress that as soon as it became a law there would be three good places open to every man out of employment. Although the thing has now been a law for more than a month Mr. Cockran has failed to locate any of those good plaoes. There is reason to believe that these places and the dollar wheat promised two years ago by the Democrats belong to the same category.
THE Sentinel's attack on Charles L. Henry will not hurt him. Every laborer employed by Mr. Henry stands by him, and the attacks of a few men who were discharged for cause will not effect him. He always has been, is now and always will be a friend to labor. He has done a hundred fold more for the laboring man than ever W. D. Bynum did. Hear Henry Saturday night at Masonic Hall.
THE chances are that there will be an Independent Democratic ticket in New York to fight the one headed by David B. Hill, which was named at Saratoga last week. It will be headed probably by Charles S. Fairchild. The movement is backed by all of the independent leaders and will be supported by a host of Democrats who are opposed to Tammany Hall and the Hill-Murphy machine methods. While the movement will not elect Fairchild it will show that New York Democrats are not all to be corrupted and bossed by that great organized conspiracy for robbing the people, Tammany Hall. It is a healthy sign.
DEMOCRAT speakers make a great point of telling audiences that the Democrat legislature increased the assessed valuation of railroads and other big corporation $100,000,000 for taxation purposes and right there they stop. They fail to tell the people that the same ^legislature increased the valuation of farms and improvements $150,000,000, of tewn lots and improvements $100,000,000, and of personal property $50,000,000 or in other words, put three times as much additional valuation on the property of the common people as they did on the big corporations. When a man is on the witness stand, he should tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. In the way of putting on high taxes, a Democratic legislature is a dandy.
All American Tin-Plate Mills Closed.— Building of New Plants Stopped.—
1
The .Effect of Lo^s Iuty on the Product/
PITTSBURGH, Sept. 29,—To-night nearly all the tin-plate plants in the country closed down, and there is no indication as to when they will again be put in operation. There is a wide defference between the manufacturers and workers on the subject of wages, and the latter insist that notwithstanding the reduction of the duty that the wages agreed on in June can be paid the balance of the scale year.
Two important reasons are given for tie action taken by the manufacturers' a*8o iation. One is that the closing of the ftct jries is being done to discourage prospective builders oI tin-plate plants.
There are at least ten in course of erection in the United States, while manufacturers of tin plate machinery are enlarging their works. It was decided to put up some of these factories after it was known that the cut in the duty would be 1 cent per pound. Another reason given by the manufacturers is that under Secretary Carlisle's ruling 46,000,000 pounds of tin plate, now in bond ,can be put on the market on Monday by payiug the new tariff of 1.2 cents per pound. This will fill all the demauds ior some time to come. As this tin-plate comes at a reduction of 1 cant a pouud duty it means a loss of revenue of $460,000 to the government. The importation of this tin means that much work lost to American workmen.
Sfflffi
HI Rumor Comes front Wales. SM SWANSEA, Sept. 29.—It is rumored
here that there is a movement on foot to strike a blow at the tin-plate trade of the United States. It being contended that the Americans cannot produce certain plates without Welsh labor, the representatives of labor in Wales are inviting the return to that conntry of all makers of tin plate in A merica, who have been discharged from their position or whose wajges' have been reduced as a consequence oft he adopt ion of the new tariff.
OCTOBER 4.
NICE BOOMERANG.
JTAL8K AMD SLAMiEKOCS CHARGES AGAINST CHARLES L. HENRY.
Even Anderson Democrats Quickly Take Up the Defense of Bynam's Popu-
1
l»r Appouont.—The Sentlual
Special to the Indianapolis Journal. ANDERSON, luu., sept. 29. Business
men. irr«4cr»^tive o' party affiliations, are much angered at the vile attack in today's Sentinel upon Hon. Charles L. Henry. The statements imputed to Mr. Henry relatirs^ organization? are lies pure and simple. Since the appearance of the paper here to-day several Democrats have announced their determination to vote for him. Mr. Henry is not in the city to-day. Mr. Len Cox, superintendent of the street- railway system said to the Journal representative to-day: "I don't know a thing about that Sentinal statement and I never heard or said as much to any oae, I don't know how it could have been invented. It won't do any good for them to make that sort of warfare on Mr. Henry. I will have more to say on this subject."
Mr. Cox is a Democrat, but has been in the employ of the company ever since Mr. Henry has been in control of the lines. The Evening Bulletin, whose ediioi is a bitter Democrat, says, under the caption, "Candidates and Organized labor." "A more uncalled for, uujust and untruthful political attack could not have been mado against a man than that of the Sentinel against Char!e3 L. Henry, Republican candidate for Congress, this morning. What adds to the meanness of the article is the fact that it was prepared in Anderson, the home of Mr. Henry, and by people whom he has repeatedly befriended aud who knew every line of the article to be false. Fortunately, they have so overdrawn their charges that the falsity of them is patent to every one and especially to the people of Anderson and Madison county. It is known by all here that to Charles Henry belongs the credit ot furnishing more men employment than to any other man in the city. Ending with to-day he has paid laboring men, teamsters, shovelers and laborers $60,000 since last use. This was done in the building of streets and sidewalks in Evalyn addition and had it not been for Charles L. Henry that $60,000 would not have gone into the hands of Anderson working men. The reference to the discharge of street railway employes because of the talk of forming a union is a lie, simple and pure, as the Bulletin will be able to show by statements from the men themselves. When he is quoted as saying ^that 'he would never again have a cent of his money invested in any business or enterprise that was controlled by a "l tyranny of organized labor," the lie has half on its teeth. Everybody who knows Mr. Henry knows he never swears or uses profane language. "Now here is another thing about the article. The Bulletin has verbatim expressions from more than one candidate and more than one leader of the county Democracy on the organized labor question and if the Democratic managers here want to make that an issue the Bulletin will be at home with them and in the front parlor. If it can't give them cards and spades on that question and take the trick hands down, there it will acknowledge that it don't know what it is talking about and that is something it has never done yet. Come on with your fun, Mr. Bynum, and while you are explaining the Bulletin will have a lot of fellows not a thousands miles from the Madison county Court House doing the same thing. Such as that is meat for this paper. Cut her loose and see the fur fly."
The Anderson Bulletin is Anderson's most influential paper and has been independent in politics. Its editor, Mr. Biddle is a red hot Democrat, but he knows just what Hon, Charles L. Henry has done for Anderson and Madison county. The Bulletin knows that Mr. Henry has brought more industries to Anderson and done more for the laboring people than any man there and we might almost add no man in the State has equalled Mr. Henry's record in that respect. All this has been done in a quiet, business like unostentatious way. The Bulletin and the people of Anderson who know Mr. Henry feel that be is just the man to represent this Congressional district. He can do the district good as he has done Anderson and Madison county good. He has force and ability. Help yourself, your family and your friends by voting for Charles L. Henry for Congress.
THB DEMOCRATS LOWER PRICES,
Prices Are Lowered and Labor Is Lowered Moat of All,
Last week the Democrat contained interviews with a number of our business men which showed that the tendency in almost all lines of goods was from 5 to 25 per cent cheaper than heretofore. TLe Democrat makes great claims that such reductions have been caused by the new tariff bill. We grant that in some places. Eleven cents a pouud off of wool which was the amount of duty taken off will not make a difference of 25 or 50 cents a yard or an article that contains but a few ounces or at best, less than a pound of wool. By the tariff being off wool you save from 2 to 11 cents and in the reduced labor you save from 20 to 40 cents, so you see it is the laborer that is made to suffer. He has much less money to buy their cheaper articles.
In Greenfield workmen have had their wages reduced from those paid in 1892 under Republican administration of the McKinl- law as follows: At the Stove Works 2o to 40 per cent Glass Works, 22%per cent Paper Mill, 10 per cent.
Carpenters are working for less money throughout the country. Eggs are from 15 to 25 per cent lower than in 91 and 92.
Wool and sheep are now worth 50 per cent less. Wheat 30 per cent less. So even if goods are cheaper, there is so much less work and the wages so much lower that people generally have a much less surplus after making purchases than they did in 91 and 92 and a surplus is what makes people prosperous.
Fine Nursery Stock For Sale.
All who wish to plant nursery stock are invited to call at the Pan Handle Nurseries. My stock is very flue and prices reasonable. Just South of the glass works, Greenfield, Ind.
40t5
J. K. HENBY,
1
Proprietor.
For Sale or Trade.
A nice Dude Haasoa horse, 2}4 years old, gcod driver. See Eugene W. Wood
an his office.
NEW
Now on sale at the
WHITE HOUSE GROCERY.!*
Have you tried any of our California White Cherries,
Green Gage Plums or Bartlett Pears? We are headquarters
for Fruits, Fresh, Canned and Dried.
Quality the highest. Prices the lowest.
Harry Strickland,
North Side Square.
The New York Store.
Established 1853.
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA.
MAIL ORDERS.
Are an imporfaat feature of our business. That's why we give especial attention to them. It's an excellent way for out-of-town folks to shop. Ever try it?
CLOAKS.
We assert with pride that if you want the best 38-in. Jacket in Indiana for 85, you want to come to the New York Store.
For $10 the best black or blue Chinchilla Jacket. It has 4 pleat back and is 40-in. long.
A 27-in., full sweep Astrican Cape, not pieced, for $10. Cloaks for the ''little tots." Good ones at $5 and better ones up to $20.
PETTIS DRY GOODS GO. THE GREENFIELD
LADNDRY
EAST MAIN STREET GREENFIELD, IND. First-class work at reasonable prices is our motto. Your patronage is respectfully solicited.
Office at the Lee Chong Laundry West Main street. Leave your orders.
All work not satisfactory will, if returned, be re-laundried free of charge.
Carpets cleaned at the lowest prices. 38tf
Tj."Sing,
Hi.
Prop
'l'lie Council Meeting.—Another Long Session.
The city council met with all members present last evening. Minutes of previous meeting read and then they voted on the Hawking and Peddling ordinance, test week's vote was reconsidered and the ordinance passed. The license per day is now $1 or $15 per month and all wagons or carts to be kept moving. Minutes approved.
The committee who investigated injury of P. G. Cooney's horse in a culbert, neld that^injury was small and city not liable.
Knight & Jill son's claim of $135.68 reported favorable and orde:el paid. Dr. J. P. Black, Secretary ot Board of Health made his monthly report, with recommendations etc. This is a splendid idea.
The Health Ordinance was read on its second reading and referred to the city attorney.
J. N. Goble was granted a deed for a cemetery lot. There were three bidders for the cement sidewalk on East street. Peters & Dunn lB^cents a square foot and 50 cents afoot for curbing, Wm. Ficklen & Co. cement 11% cents, curbing 60 cents C. M. Kirkpat rick cement 14% cents, curb 52% cents. Ficklen & Co. had the lowest bid by 8 cents a lineal foot, but the bid of Peters & Dunn was considered best and they were awarded the contract.
Ficklen & Co. were allowed a final estimate on North street sidewalks and those on Pennsylvania street accepted, except from Di'. Selman's gate to Main street.
The stable Of John Milburn just west of E. P. Thayer's brick building on North street was declared a nuisance and ordered removed.
A cement sidewalk was ordered on the east side of East street from the south line of the Odd Fellows block to the north line of South street.
The council has an enormous amount of business at present, but proposes to look after it in a thoroughly systematic manner which will benefit the taxpayers and add largely to our city as a delightful -LUU flMM
HERE is but one
way in the world to be sure of having the best paint, and that is to use only a well-established brand of strictly pure white lead, pure linseed oil, and pure colors.*
The following brands are standard, "Old Dutch" process, and are always absolutely
Strictly Pure White Lead
"Anchor," "Southern/' "Eckstein," "Bed Seal," "Kentucky," "Collier."
Send us a postal card and get our book on paints and color-card, free. NATIONAL LEAD CO., New York.
Cincinnati Branch,
Seventh and Freeman Avenue, Cincinnati,
Guardian's Sale of Real Estate. NOTICE
is hereby given that the undersigned, as guardian of Lillian Ditniars will, in pursuance of an order of the Hancock Circuit Court of Hancock county, Indiana, made on the 4th day of September, 189-1, sell at private sale on the premises on West Main ttreet,
ON SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6th, 1891,
betwen 10 o'clock a. m., and 1 o'clok "p. m., of said day, the following described real estate:
A middle division of lof. number two (2), in iMeek's Reserve in the town (now city) of Greenfield,
iDd.,
bounded as follows to-wit: Commenc
ing at a point on the south line of said lot number two (2), forty (40) feet west of the southeast corner of said lot number two (2), running thence' north parallel with the enst line thereof to the north line of same, thence west with said north line thirty-eight (38, feet and ten )10) inches, thence south parallel with the east line of said lot number two (2), to the south line of the same, thence east thirty-eight (38) feet and ten (10) inches, to the place ct beginning, situate in Hancock county, State of indiana.
TERMS OF SALE.
Said lot will be sold for cash in hand,
RICHARD V. DITMARS, Guardian.
Marsh & Cook, Attorneys. 36t3
Notice to Contractors.
NOTICE
IS hereby given that, the Common Council of the city of GreenSefd, Ind. will receive sealed proposals up to 5 o'clock, p.
WMi
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If you want colored paint, tint any of the above strictly pure leads with National Lead Co.'s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors.
These colors are sold in one-pound cans, each can being sufficient to tint 25 pounds of Strictly Pure White Lead the desired shade they are in no sense ready-mixed paints, but a combination of perfectly pure colors in the handiest form to tint Strictly Pure White Lead.
Ji
I
a
m., of
Wednesday, Oct. 17,1894
for the grading and construction of a walk stone crossing at all street and alley crossings on the sidewalks on both sides of North street from Pratt street to the west line of School street, and on Pennsylvania street from Main street to the north line of Fifth stieet, (formerly Flippo street), and on West Main street from Noble street, to Broadway street, and extending to west line of Broadway on the North side only, all in the city of Greenfield, Indiana.
Speciticati' ns for said work are now on file In the clerk's office in said city, and can be inspected by persons desiring to bid. Said work is to be done in accordance with the specifications heretofore adopted by said common council. Each bid must be accompanied by a good and sufficient bond with sufficient sureties, residents of the State of Indiana, one of whom mnst be a resident of said county of Hancock, or a certified check, conditioned that in the event said contract be awarded said bidder iie will contract with and execute to said city thf required bond.
The council reserves the right to reject any and all bids. By order of the common council of the city of Greenfield. Ind.
WILLIAM R. McKOWN,
39t3 city Clerk.
Receiver's Notice.
STATE OF INDIANA HANCOCK COUNTT| J.
In the Hancock Circuit Court, September Term, 1891. In the matter of the Receivership of Malone &
Spangler. Pursuant to an order of the Court in the matter of the receivership of the firm of Malone A Spangler, all creditors of said firm are hereby notified to file their claims against said firm with the undersigned Receiver on or before the 15th day of October, A. D.. 1894.
JOIIN T. DUNCAN, Receiver.
Felt & Jackson, attorneys.
"And the Leaves of the Tree Were for the Healing of the Nations."—Rev. YYII O
MAN
-.0.-
To whom It mav concern: We the undersigned business men of Frankfort, Ind.. certify that we have known Dr. W F. Petiiey (Man-O-Wa) the p.ist two years, and know him to be not only a good citizen, honorable and square in all his dealings an4 reasonable in his charges, but also as a skilltul physician, and that he has had a large and extensiye practice during residence here:
G. Y. FOWLKR, Editor Kranktori Times. STALEY & BURNS, Publishers News-Banner, A. D. BERRY, Pastor Baptist Church. T. C. DALBY. Postmaster. J. H. PARIS & SONS, Dry Goods, HANN A & MATTIX, Boots and Shoes. FISHER BROS., Novelty Store. DAVID T. HILL, Sheriff of Clinton County. W. P. STEVENS N, Furniture. CUSHWA BROS, Confectionery. A. A. LAIRD, Druggist. N. C. DAVIS, M..D Of Ant,i Haldaehe Fame. L, HILSINGI5K, A mfriean'Kxpress Agent. DR. MAN-O-WA:
For over one year my daughter, Vira, was a constant suft'erer from Cysretis She was confined to the house, she was greatly reduced in flesh and strongth. Sh^ was treated by several prominent physicians, but to no avail. We had dispaired of over havine her cured. But we are happy to say that after four months use of your Indian Herb Extracts, she Is enjoying perfect health. RICHARD M. DAVIS. Geentield. Ind., July 24, '94.
Dr. Man-O-Wa treats, and cures S per cent, of all chronic diseases givt^n up by other physicians as incurable. OfHoi in Wilson's New Block, Greenfield. Office days, Friday and Saturday of each week.
No money required of responsible parties to beftin treatment. Terms $3 00 to (8.00 per
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WA,
