Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 October 1892 — Page 3
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THE STAR-PRESS
SiHiit^av, Oct. ±2, 18!»2.
Demft Ic Ticket.
For rresdent,
GROVER CLEVELAND, of New York. For Vice President, ADLAI E. STEVENSON, of Illinois. Governor, -Claude Matthews, Lieutenant Governor, Mortiwbb Nve, Secretary of State,~W. R. Mters, Auditor of State,—Jons Oscar Henderson, Treasurer of State.—Albert Gall. Attorney General,—Alonzo O. Smith, Reporter Supreme Court. Sidney R. Moon, Superintendent of Public Instruction,— Hervey D. Vories. State Statistician.—W. A. Pkelle, Jr., Supreme Judge 2d Dist., LJ. Hackney, Supreme .Indue 3d Dist., James McCabe, Supreme Judge Sth Dist..—T. E. Howard, Appellate .Indue 1st Dist., G. L. Reinhard, Appellate Judge 2d Dist, Frank Gavin, Appellate Judge 3d Dist. Tiieo. P. Davis, Appellate Judge 4th Dist.,—Orlando Lotz, Appellate Judge 5th Dist..—George E. Ross, For Congress George W. Cooper. For Senator—J. M. Sellers. For Joint Representative—F. D. Ader. For Prosecuting Attorney—Frank Horner. For Representative—J. Q. Vermillion. For Treasurer—George Hughes. For Sheriff F. M. Glidewell. For Assessor Wm. Broadstreet. For Coroner T. W. MeNeff. For Surveyor—J. F. O'Brien. For Commissioner. 1st Dist.— J. D. Hart. For Commissidner, 3d Dist.—S. E. Farmer.
Mr. J. W. Cole has been quite sick. Dr. E. B. Evans has been confined to the house by sickness. Jesse W. Weik and wife are housekeeping on North Indiana street. Hon. Frank Landers was a caller at the Star-Press office on Saturday. Mr. Schirmer, of San Francisco, Cal., is visiting his sister, Mrs. R. L. Higert.
What the Record Shows. There was never a more conspicuous display of arrant demagogy in Indiana politics than is evidenced by the assault of Republican members of the general assembly upon the new tax law, for which they themselves voted. Senator Shockney, republican nominee for lieutenant governor, even had the gall to deny that he voted for the measure in the face of tne senate journal to the contrary. Senators Mount, Boyd and others are daily declaiming against the measure that they helped to make a law. The journals of the senate and house, the official records of the legislature, show that the following republicans voted for the new tax law: SENATORS. Theodore Shockney, Delaware and Randolph. Thomas E. Boyd, Hamilton and Tipton. James A. Mount, Montgomery, Clinton and Boone. 0. Carver, Lagrange and Steuben. 1. N. Castor, Clinton, Boone and Montgomery. B. F. Clemens, Kosciusko and wabash. W. W. Gilman, Newton, Jasper and Benton. William Grose, Fayette and Henry. A. E. Harlen, Greene and Madison. S. A. Hays, Putnam and Hendricks. G. W. Hobson, Parke and Vermillion.
*
The fog of last Saturday night was the heaviest within the memory of the oldest inhabitant could cut it with a knife. We are under obligations to the teachers and pupils of the Fincastle school for an invitation to attend their Columbus Day exercises. Things are coming our way with a rush as the campaign draws to a close. The cause of Democracy never had brighter prospects than now, and the omens are for a Democratic landslide even greater than that of 1890. The Democratic meeting at the Court House, on Friday night, was a good one and the speech of Hon. C. C. Watts, of West Virginia, was logical, brilliant, entertaining, and enthusiastically received by the audience.
R. J. Loveland, Miami and Howard. REPRESENTATIVES. W. S. Haggard, Tippecanoe and Clinton. A. C. Lindemuth, Wayne. J. S. Hougham, Hamilton. M. G. Parker, Hendricks. A. F. Wells, Tippecanoe. A. J. Whittenberger, Kosciusko. S. C. Wilson, Grant. L. McDowell, Howard The corporations are fighting the tax in the courts; yet these republicans have the audacity to proclaim that it is excessive on the farmers and lot-owners and easy on corporate wealth. Do they take the people for fools? Repfblicans are awfully tickled because some democrats have been
Hon. John Q. Vermillion had a fine audience out to hear him at Roachdale, on Friday night, and his speech was a strong presentation of the Democratic cause. All who heard him were pleased and compliment his effort highly. The butchers of Greencastle have agreed among themselves not to open ■ their shops nor deliver meat on Sunday hereafter. If anyone shall at any time decide to open he agrees to give notice to the rest. The moral and religious sentiment of the community will give hearty approval to this
action.
Tlie Woman’s Club of Greencastle will hold an open meeting at Ladies’ Hall to-night, at which invited gentlemen will be welcome. The literary program will consist of a paper by Mrs. Ogg, on “Localism in Amerii can Poetry;” discussion led by Mrs. I Ridpath, and illustrative quotations
I by the club.
Died, on Oct. 10, at his late residence I in Hendricks county, of stomach : disease, Reuben Masten, aged 86years. I Deceased was the fajt’ier-in-law of Mr. W. I. Buis, and.»<« a pioneer resident, having come to this State from North Carolina in 1833, and shortly afterwards entered the farm upon
which he died.
South Washington.
Corn gathering h on—there is an immense crop William Tolley and wife, of Jamestown, are visiting her mother and other relatives in these parts .John Evans is still sick with rheumatism Rev. Isaac Lawson preached at the Mill Creek church on Saturday night and Sunday Mrs. Mary Cole visited Polly Neese last
week.
convicted, in New Jersey, of election frauds. They do not stop to consider the fact that it. was a Democratic Count that convicted them, while the Republicans in Indiana have not only protected those guilty of election fratids, but have sought to honor those engaged in this crookedness by giving them public office. An Indiana correspondent writes The Republic that agents of the Republican committees are going through that State offering to employ Democrats to work in Pennsylvania at good wages, with railroad fare paid. A campaign lie may be nailed but caucascs are bolted.
Of course a yonug lady expects to be killing when she puts on a kilt. "This thing is worth looking into,” murmured the pretty girl as she stood in front of her mirror. When a doctor considers it nesessary to prescribe sarsaparilla, he simply orders a bottle of Ayer's knowing full well that lie will obtinn thereby a surer and purer preparation than any other which the drug-store can furnish. Ayer's Sarsaparilla is the Superior Medicine. “I have lots to tell you about," said the real-estate man, meeting an old friend on the street. It's not very pleasant to cough and hack. To suffer pain in chest and back. Many people could stop it. for sure By simply using One Minute Cough Cure. Albert Allen, agt. ly The summer girl will soon become a far less important consideration than the maiden vote. Don’t fool with indigestion. Take Bcecham's Pills.
“What did Miss Marvin do when you kissed her?" "Rung it up on a little bell punch she
carries."
Portland Mills. Wallace Leonard is suffering from a sprained ankle Neal Dowling is working for Mr. Leonard Mrs. Spencer, Mrs. Ingle and Bessie Ingl*, of Kansas, are visiting at ('lias. Spen®ffr s Geo. Potter has two sick children Mrs. Matilda Clodfelter has been visiting her. son Miss Pearj Inge lias gone to Marshall, Miss. Kate Ratcliff goes to Tern* Haute to study music Miss Bettie Shannon lias been visiting here. \x Tlie New York Evening Post remarks: “What a commentary it is upon tlie Republican professions in •favor of ‘a free ballot’ that the party is everywhere complaining of the Australian system and is ready to adopt any possible expedient to overthrow it.” The Post should understand that Republican professions don’t count. It is only confessions from that source to which any heed should be paid. One of the firms principally benefited by the sugar bounty is an English concern, the Medicine Lodge Sugar Company, owning a big factory in Kansas. This firm expects to claim bounty on 1,500,000 pounds of sugar next time the bounty is divided, which will give it $30,000. The absurdity and injustice of the bounty system is nowhere more strikingly shown than is this instance of paternalism, which takes $30,000 out of the pockets of consumers of sugar in America and pays it over to a foreign corporation.
What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world aini then has the dyspepsia so bad that he can't enjoy any ot the good things it contains? He won't have dyspepsia if he takes De Witt's Little Early Risers. Albert Allen, agt iy
"Here is another idle shattered," said the young man who found he had to go to work.
SALESMEN wanted to travel in surrounding districts, by team or otherwise, soliciting orders on commission from retail dealers for rubber hoots and shoes, to be shipped direct from factory. These already traveling with another line of goods could make this a valuable addition to their business. Address, stating particulars and references, Colchester Rubber Co., Colchester. Conn. 1127 FREE TO CHICAGO, THE flAGNIFICENT. For how long, after tho first reading of the Declaration of Independence, was tho old “Liberty Bell" rung? UTii’ Rome Jiieel wt. rivo an elegant Chick or tag pure-toned, upright piano to the first person answering tho above question correctly; two first-class round-trip railroad tickets to Chicago ami return and admission tg kots for two to World's Fair grounds to witness dedication of buildings October 21, isir.’. for oueli of next two correct answers; a gold decorated China dinner set for tho fourth correct answer. An a Iditinnnl special prize, n beautiful poir of gold and pearl opera glasses, will bo given fortho first correct answer from ouch slate. Each person nnsu-erlnj must send fiftoaii two cent itumps for d mos. suh'erlption to Thr. Home Jnr I. tho lllu-.r .tod laatily paper containing particulars of our prize competition for n free trip to California or Florida. The object of offering these prizes Is to increase tho circulation of this excellent family pap r. P-T’d to day and you may secure a I cosily pr n. tut ■« of p-'-*-wl uners In, (H tober iniuibor. Write |>h \!y name, ] “- o'lico, express office, county mil state. Address Tlie Home Jewel, Suite CJ1, Manhattan ] Bldg., Chicago, 111. 1
STRIKERS SCORED. Justice Paxton's Charge to the Jury in the Treason Cases.
He Sayti tlie Homestead Workmen Had No Exeuse for Violence —Corporations Have the (tight to Import Armed <iuardH.
UAI> FOll STRIKERS. PlTTBBrRGH, Fa., Oct. 11.—Chief Justice Paxton, of tlie state supreme court, at 10 a. m. charged the grand jury in the treason cases against the Homestead strikers. The charge contained over 5,000 words and embraced a graphic resume of the circumstances leading up to the riot at the Carnegie Homestead mill and the subsequent charges of treason lodged against thirty-three union men Justice Paxton said: “We can have some sympathy with a mob driven to desperation by hunger, as in the days of the French revolution, but we can find none for men receiving exceptionally high wages in resisting the law and resorting to violence and bloodshed in the assertion of imaginary rights and entailing such a vast expense upon the taxpayers of the commonwealth. It was not a cry for bread to feed their famishing lips, resulting in a sudden outrage, with good provocation: it was a deliberate attempt by men without authority to control others In the enjoyment of their rights. “ In detinintf the law, Justice Paxton said: • When the company shutdown its works and discharged its men it was acting strictly in the lines of the law; it could not compel the men to work nor could the men compel the company to employ them: no arrangement could be made in such regard except in the nature of a contract agreed upon by the parties. Upon this subject their rights were mutual. The company had the undoubted right to protect its property: for this purpose it could lawfully employ as many men as it saw proper and arm them if necessary. The right of the men was to refuse to work unless their terms were acceded to and persuade others to join them in such refusal, but the law will sustain them no further. The moment they attempt to control the works, and to prevent by violence or threats of violence other laborers from going to work, then tney placed themselves outside the pale of the law. It cannot be tolerated for a moment that one laborer shall say to another laborer: ‘You shall not work for this man for that wage without my consent,' and then enforce such command by brutal violence upon his person. “You will observe that the offense charged is treason against the state, and not against the United States it is a matter with w hich the latter has nothing to do and over which it can have no jurisdiction. A mere mob, collected upon the impulse of the moment, without any definite object beyond the gratification of its sudden passions,does not commit treason, although it destroys property and attacks human life. Hut when a large number of men arm and organize themselves and engage in a common purpose to defy the law. to resist its officers and deprive their fellow-citi-zens of the rights to which they are entitled under the constitution and laws, it is a leying of war against the state, and the offense is treason. Where a body of men have organized for a treasonable purpose every step which any one of them takes in part execution of their common purpose is an overt act of treason. Every member of such asserted government who has participated in such usurpation has committed treason against the state. “ He closed by saying 1 : "We have reached the point in the history of the state where there are but two roads for us to pursue. The one leads to order and good government: the other leads to anarchy. The one great question which concerns the people of this country is the enforcement of the law’ and the preservation of order.*’ TRUK RILLS FOUND. PiTTpnrmm, Pa.. Oct. 13.—True bills were found yesterday by the ^rand jury in the cases of all the members of the Homestead advisory committee and other strilcers charged with treason, thirty-one in all. Bills were also found against Frick and other Carneffie officials and the Pinkerton*, who are charged with murder and conspiracy. In the nature ofthings two lovers must full in love before they can fall out. Gauranteed Cure. We authorize our advertised dru^ist to sell Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption. Couchs and folds, upon this condition. If you are attlicu-d with a Cough, Cold or any Luur, Throat or Chest trouble, and will use this remedy as dUected. giving it a fair trial, and experience no benefit, you mry return tlie bottle and have your money refunded. We could not make this offer did we not know that Dr. King's New Discovery could he relied on. It never disappoints. Trial bottles free at the drug stores of Albert Allen and W. D. Tompkins, of Bainhridge. Large bottles 50c. and #1.00. "Don't walk around the owl and stare at her,” said the keeper in the menagerie. "It turns her head." There is no use talking, neither Harrison or Cleveland will he elected unless thev take De Witt’s Little Barly Risers. They have a "iret there" quality possessed by ho other pill. Albert Allen, agt. ly In a spring the woman shoos the hens out of ihe garden, and in the fall a man shoes the boys out. Our dear little daughter was terribly sick. Her bowels were bloated as hard as a brick, We feared she would die Till we happened to try Pierce’s Pellets—they cured her, remarkably quick. Never be without Pierce's Pellets in th,. house. They arc gentle ami effective in actio and give immediate relief in casse of Indi. gestion, billiousness and constipation. They do their work thoroughly and leave no had effects. Smallest, cheapest, easiest to take. One a dose. Best Liver Pill made. Rivers—Tlie cholera bacillus, it seems, is shaped like a comma. Banks—Then why don't the authorities knock its tail off and bring it to a full stop? Jagson says the man who can't take a joke always seems to be tho editor of the paper he sends his to. Have tried almost every known remedy for Itching Piles without success, finally bought a box of De Witt's Witch Ha/el Salve, ami it has cured me. C. D. Haskins, Peoria,Ills. Alhei t Allen, agt. ly Pre-emlnet for cough and cold. Mr. Wm. J. Beecher, 142 Whltcsboro St., I'tica, N. Y., writes: “Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup has cured my two children of a very bad cough and cold, which they have had for some time. It cannot be equaled for coughs or colds. I have always used it.”
"Young man," said an evangelist, “do you realize that when you retire at night you may be called before morning dawns?” "I hope so; I am a younif doctor, and I need encour agement of some kind."
Why Cattle Are Cheap. Why is it that the fanners have to sell their steers for $3.25 jht hundred? Why is it that lieef retail to the consumers in the cities for the same price that existed when farmers received #5 to $7 pet 1 hundred ? Does the local butcher pocket the 1 difference? No; for the local butcher is j at the mercy of the beef combine of Chicago and Kansas City. If a butcher iu a city like Indianapolis, Fort Wayne or Evansville, does not buy his dressed beef from Armour. Swift, Morris, or some other packer of the beef combine, a rival butcher shop is quietly established to crush out the local butcher, who dares to buy his steers direct from the farmers. Through this combine, the beef monopolists control the price of cattle and the price of meat. It will be remembered that shortly after ti.e election of Harrison, that a w edthy cattleman of Kansas City, in a. interview, said that although he had lieeu a Democrat all his life, ho had contributed with the rest of all the large cattle buyers, a large sum of money to defeat Grover Cleveland for reelection, because he had canceled the cattle leases in Indian Territory. Soon after Harrison assumed control of the government the cattle syndicates of the west were reinstated' on their old leases, as per agreement when the cattle combine furnished the money to defeat Cleveland. Why did the cattle combine desire the continuance of the cattle leases in the Cherokee strip and other Indian reservations? It was because without the 1,000,000 steers raised on the cheap lands.of Indian Territory and other parts of the west, it would be impossible for them to hold down the price of cattle raised by the farmers of Indiana, Illinois and other agricultural states. There are at present over 1,400,000 acres of land leased in Indian Territory, for which the cattle syndicate pay only six cents a year per acre for the grazing privilege. In Indiana, the farmer’s taxes on the land upon which he raises his steers for the market, averages seventy-five cents per acre. In Illinois, eighty-seven ceni.s and other states from sixty-five to ninety cents per acre. Nor is this all. The farmer of the states must pay a personal property tax on his cattle. Now, how is it possible for an Indiana farmer to raise cattle on land worth $:!() to an acre, and compete with the rich syndicates who raise cattle on land upon which they pay no taxes, and but a few cents for the grazing priveleges ? They are at no expense for feed. And three men will herd 5,000 head of cattle. The>e cattle kings pay no personal property taxes on their herds. And it has been demonstrated again and again that they have put steers on the market at $3 per hundred and made a big profit. Can the Indiana farmer do this? No: especially, if he has interest to pay on a mortgaged farm. The only thing that keeps up the cattle combine, is the cheap grazing of the west, which Grover Cleveland tried t. abolish, but for which act, alone, ht probably lost his re-election. Farmers of Indiana, will you vote to again sustain the interests of the cattle kings and the beef combine, or will yon vote for the Indiana steer? Judge (aresliiim. Judge Jordan, of Indianapolis, in an interview in regard to Judge Gresham says that he knows personally that for a number of years Judge Gresham has been in favor of tariff reform. He says 'that they were boys and young men together. and have maintained intimate personal relations ever since and that it is not necessary to violate any personal confidence in stating Judge Gresham's position on the tariff. It is well known that the Chicago Tribune, with great zeal and persistency, advocated the nom ination of Judge Gresham for the presidency in 1888. No abler articles in favor of tariff reform have been published in this country than those found in the columns of The Tribune and it evidently reflected the sentiments o( Judge Gresham on the tariff then. Judge Jordan further says that Judge Gresham was a member of Arthur's cabinet and that President Arthur urged tariff reform, and that during his whok administration his cabinet were a unit in supporting him in the position which he took in his message delivered iu 1882. which was as follows: I recommend an enlargement of the free list so as to include the numerous articles which yield inconsiderable revenue: a simplifleation of the complex and inconsistent schedule of duties upon cer tain manufacturers, cotton, iron and steel, amt a substantial reduction of the duties upon these articles, and upon sugar, molasses, silk, wool and woolen goods. Entertaining such views as Judge Gresham has always entertained on the tariff, he could not, as au honest man, support the nomination of a party which has now planted itself on a platform ot high protection, thus violating all the pledges that it made in its platforms, state and national, from 1872 to 1892. Judge Gresham is consistent, while President Harrison and tlie leaders of the Republican party have repudiated the whole record they have made iu party platforms for the last twenty
years.
DO NOT STAMP THE SQUARE
What is the dismay of the early pedestrian, | who leaves his cozy home on a winter’s morning in quest of lucre or pleasure, when he finds himself suddenly the victim of the treachery 1 of r* slippery pavement. It will be a comfort ] to know that .Salvation Oil will cure his bruised limbs.
CONTAINING THE ROOSTER MORE THAN ONCE. Tlie poll clerks will show you how t< told your ticket when they hand i i> you for stamping.
DM. PHILLIP SATTLSR, PRiaiofiNT.
EXPLANATORY. Many of tho special proscriptions of tha Chicago Medical (.'iiuie i . " become valuable by standing the tests i f ti:.. end extensive employment. V,'o have often been urged by our patrons to give them to the world that their full value might he felt in a wider field of usefulness. To this end we have placed th* in in the hands of the well known firm of Foley & Co., who have the sole rights for their manufacture and sale. The reputation of this firm will afford the best guarantee of their staudard purity and strength. CHICAGO MEDICAL CLINIC. Dr.. Phillip Battler, President.
We can therefore confidently offer to the public Two G oat Remedies of
the Chicago Medical Clinic.
CLINIC SARSAPARILLA. Tlie Clinic Sarsaparilla is a valuable remedy f >r all diseases arising from impure blood sueh as Pimples, Boos, Carbuncles, Pustules, Sj iIJ Head, Running Sores and Ulcers, Scrofula and Syphilitic Affection. Cancerous Tumors, Ring Worm, Eczema, Tumors and all heriditary bleed taint whatsoever. By i: ole: z-inirai:,! o no prop: rtie< it imparts new life and vigor. It removes the tired, ILu' -• feedi.. ivi ; . a loss of interest iu usual work. Its restorative qua.ities impart increased p- the aud energy.
A REMARKABLE CURE.
1 am pleased to let the public know.-f ttiorcTaark:ii'lecnr<' T.-c I a-- Ca«<\ I had rcrofnlona taint of the blood from childhood. Filially,r eon.ne a i. s-\ having all the appearances of a most malignant cancer. Hi* a; s-arahe >«,f t!:- v- r .. most formidable and 1 w “ merest , l th e progress of t i . - 1 was induced to try the ( note Sarsaparilla and at once not in d a i-hangefor the l,.-ti.-r. It aoiioared to neutralize the poison m the blood and the growth of tlie ui-rc- a-ti From the bottom of the cavity new flesh began to form, the diseased tissues sirm-d to io - .a: i* . itmut fit-h totako its place. No part of tho disease cow rem Vy 1, !• v- - i ha ! > -oir.- much affected, improved, my blood appeared to become renewed an 1 I a n G it- r tua., for many y ir«
MRS. H. II. ADAMS,
160U Wab.tfh Avenue, Chicago.
THE CLINIC KIDNEY DURE has mndc many curor that are nvonl-iin 4V<« cnncotti i>s*r ngly advise those who are s-ufTert':.- Inn. ii'.ci; i it Blights Diseas: ne-1 Ciabetis, Laninayi, Female Weakness, constant Book Ache, iuc intenem e< , t riu . j meat of the kidneys, as indicated by a brick-dust-like del • t urln . IGra It taka
the Cliuic Kidney Cure.
SUFFERED TWENTY-SEVEN YEARS. Mr. G. A. StUlson, a merchant of Tamjaeo, I!!., writes, August 1 1-3!:
Messkb. I OLEY 4 Co.
Gknti kmkn Your Kidney Cure i, meeting with wonderful fuccess. It has cured some rases here that physicians pronounced incurable. I. myself, can testify to its merits. My face to-day is a living piet lire of health, an i your Kidney euro lias made it auch. I had suffered twenty-seven years witti the disease, and to-day I feel ten years younger than I did oue year ago. I can i litain some wonderful certificates of its medical qualities.
F'OJUKViS FWAIII-rY Have trained an enviable reputation for all diseases arisintr from a disordered Liver, sut h us Bilimisnt rs. Headache. Chronic Constipation, Lassitude, Dizziness, -Tauudiee and Sallow Complexion. A splemiid dinner pill to relieve tlie uncomfortable feeling after eating that affects so many; also Sour Stomach and Flatulence. Tho ret ion of this Pill is mild but effective, without griping or distressing. A lioa'dlfal nnvcnlr a mm containing line lltliiurmphtr view, of flip Worlds Colnnibian Exposition will he Bi-i.t gratis to those matting t«o wrappers of I nicy's Family Pills to
HOLEY & CO.. CHICAGO-
The above Remedies are for sale by the following first class Firms:
W. H. Walden, Putnamvtlle.
W. J. Bteeg, Limedate. Onkalla BtoreCo., Onkalla. Isaac Brattain, Vivalia.
B. F. Wilson. Barnard. J. W. Rector Fillmore. L. C. Burgess, Cloverdale. Hurst Bros.. Mt. Meridian.
O. R. Carver, Morton.
Juo. V. Bishop, Portland Mills.
W. E. Counts, Reelsville.
Ader Graham. Groveland. B. B. Cline, Car] entei sville. C. Bowera, Fincastle. B. D. Skillinan, Raccoon.
W. F. Gardner, Russellville. R. Sanders, Boachdale.
A. F. Fields, Wheaton.
Accept no mi list i tut ion from other dealers who may attempt to palm off inferior or worthless concoctions in place ofthese splendid me Ihines.
.-IC'Ct: , ' CUT?.' i;; £ fit ■' r —
31
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YOUNG PEOPLE
mUt
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goto TERRE HAUTE,
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lonaJ -fed
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“DIRT DEFIES THE KING.” THEN SAPOLIO IS GREATER THAN ROYALTY ITSELF.
im: .a. nsr-o - w The Great Indian Doctor, will be at the Commercial House. Greencastle. Thursday, Oct. 27. 1892.
And K\ery Mtmrl; The »c« fl« r, Prepared to Heal the Sick. MAN-O-WA treats with unequaled success all Chronic or Nervous diseases. He especially asks those who have been treated with strong, poisonous drugs to visit him and receive sueh treatment as nature intended should be used for the relief and cure of sickness. By the proper use of Roots, Barks. Herbs ami Plants more cases can be cured and more relief given than by any other method.
IMPORTANT TO LADIES—Dr. Man-O-Wa disease, the most dreadful of all diseases, can
has discovered the greatest cure known for be cured.
all diseases peculiar to the sex. That tired THROAT AN D LUNG DISEASES—Catarrh feeling, heaaache, dizziness, weakness, pain of the nose, throat and bronchial tubes; cain the back, dragging down, backache, hot tarrhal deafness, headache, dropping in the flashes, cold hanns and feet, pain in the top throat, indigestion, impure blood resulting of head, sleepless nights and other conditions from catarrh cured by a short course of treatdue to weakness, positively and permanently ment. Catarrh if neglected will produce concured. My method does away with “local sumption, which very soon become incurable, treatment, * so much dreaded by the majority All throat and lung affections should receive of ladies, and which are perfectly useless. prompt and efficient treatment. TO THE MEN A permanent cure is offered DROPSY \ND KIDNEY TROUBLE- Dropto young and middle aged men who an- suf- sy can be cured by vegetable remedies, but by fenng with weak back, loss of strength or no others. Bloating of the abdomen, puffs vitality, despondency, night losses, lost man- under the eyes, swelling of hands and feet, hood, specks before the eyes, dizziness, palpi- are dropsy. If taken in time this condition
tation of the heart, fullness in the head re- is curable.
suiting from secret and pernicious practices. RHEUMATISM — IwillpoaitivelycurerheaMore lives are wrecked by this vice than by mutism, no matter how long standing. This all other causes combined. No time to lose, painful disease under proper treatment can I guarantee a cure in every case taken. be cured and the blood thoroughly purified PILES—Positive and permanent cure of will prevent a return. You don’t need to piles. No cutting, no loss of time, no ligature, change climate, as this result can be accomno pain. Fistula and ulcers of rectum plished hoYt as well as elsewhere. Rheumaonred. titm 01 se, which can’t bd EPILEPSY—Dr. Man-O-Wa has discovered cureu. heneo it should not be allowed to pro-
the great specific remedy for epilepsy. Thisduce this resoli.
All who may be troubled wit h dyspepsia, indige stion. Brighth liseas<, dropsy, constipd tion, epilepsy, nervous debility, headache, caSarrh. bronchitis, consumption, scrofula or any form of blood poison, rheumatism, asthmnncancers or tumors, female weakness, piles, neuralgia, diseases of the eye and ear, loss of st\ ugth and loss of manhood are especially
invited to call and consult the Doctor. \
DR. MAN-O-WA is one of the greatest diagnOTtician of diseases in America. He can locate your disease and describe a patient’s ailments without even a hint to guide him in his conclusions. Consultation, personal and by letter, free. Treatment, including all medicines used, $*2 t $5 per month. Address DR. MAN-O-wA, Frankfort, Ind.
BATH TUBS, Lavatories, Closets, ' And all Bath Room and Plumbing Fixtures^' HOiLIS, Belting, Hydrants, Pipe and Pipe Fittings. BEST GOODS AT LOWEST PRICES.
y Xotlpe uf Iiiao!vency. ^ In the matter of the estate of Thomas E, f- lexantier. decen ed. In the Putnam Circuit Court. Notice is hereby given that upon petition tiled iu said Court by tho administrator of te*A6ttiDg up the insufllcienoy oi th# , i ■ > 1 liabilities ihereot, the Judge oi said Court did, on the 16th day of September, 1892, find said estate to be probably insolvent, and order the i same to be settled accordingly. Tho creditors of said estate are therefore hereby notified of .-udi tnsilyency end required to file their claim* mgainst said eetR’e lor allowance. Witness, the Clerk and of I at Greencastle. Indiana, this 1st dxy ot October. 1892. DANIEL T. DARN ALL, Clerk. ! By W. 11. 11. Cullen, Deputy. Ut25
