Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 March 1895 — Page 5
HIM)J{K1)S I>1{()\\XEI). I INDIANA STATE NEWS.
%■ ^ ^
sool of 420 on IteBrd 'U Toll ,ho Kt.iry of tho It la She Wua Uoaoiaworthy.
Caviz. March 20.-Tho Spanish cmisor. Alfonso XII., has returned hero after searching for the missing cruiser Kema I<e(rente, and reports having found the latter vessel sunk near Bajo Aceltanos, nr,t far from the stralu of Gibraltar. Only 20 inches of the Ueina
s masts showed above water To Recover llodles of ths t rew
* he Alfonso XII. has returned to the iCene of the wreck with a number of vers and diving appliances in order > r'cover the bodies of the crew of the
iiken warship.
fh" Ueina lieg-ente was reported issinir March 13. She had just coneyed from Cadiz to Tangier the ror.riling Moorish mission to Spain. The ■miser left Tangier March 10 for adiz and her location has not been (•finitely ascertained until Tuesday, ■ieoes of one of her boats and flags ere reported to have been picked up long the shore near Ceuta and Tarifa. he carried a crew of 430 officers and men and all are believed to have per-
ished.
As soon ns the reports of the disaster became current a number of Spanish and British warships put to sea in search of her. The Spanish cruisers, sla de Luzon and Alfonso XII. rourned to Cadiz, after having searched he Spanish and African coasts and the traits, without any news of the miss,ujf warship. Her Armament Too Heavy. Deputy Diaz Moreau, who was forrly an officer in the Spanish navy, in the chamber of deputies during the evening of March 14 road the statement of a former commander of the Iteina Hegente, in which the writer described tiie cruiser us a vessel unable to weather a heavy storm, owing to tho increased weight of her armament. Kzrltement in fpatn. The uncertainty as to the fate of the Ueina Hegente caused great public excitement in Madrid, and the government was accused of keeping back news of the ship and of having ordered the detention by the censors iff all telegrams giving Information about her. But when a numlier of Hags, a compass box and other wreckage known to have belonged to the Reina Regente were washed ashore at Tarifa she was given up for lost. In Cadiz and Cartagena, where most of the 430 officers and men of the lost cruiser belonged, there has been great anxiety and excitement from the momeut she was reported missing. She Visited New York. The Reina Regente. about two years ago, visited New York as one of the (Spanish squadron which escorted across the Atlantic the Columbus caravels.
■r.
WINDOW GLASS TRUST.
1 omlilimllon to Trim and Wages
of the Workmen.
Pittsburgh, Pa., March 20.- The combination of tiie window glass interests of this country is now an assured fact. At a meeting of manufacturers in this city Tuesday the National Association of Window Glass Manufacturers was ■ formed, which is designed to regulate the production, the price of the product and the wages of the workmen. The capital represented in the association is estimated at 82.">,000,000 and the aggregate yearly output at from 6,000,000 to
7,000,000 boxes
OFFERS A BIG~ REWARD. Gov. McIntyre Determined to C lear Up tho WaUmhurg (Col) I.ynchlngH. Denver, Col., March IS.—Gov. McIntyre Saturday night gave out a proclamation announcing a reward of 91,000 for the arrest and conviction of those who were implicated in the killing of the Italians at Walsenburg. He declares his intention to give the mutter his close personal attention and see that the Taw is vindicated.
HIr; 1 lr«» In Burlington. Vt. | Burlington. Vt., March 20.—A disasI trous fire broke out Tuesday in the J woodworking shops of J. R. Booth. •'The Pioneer lumber mills were de- ■ atroyed and the flames spread to other I adjoining buildings. During the lire I IV. L. Millington, aged C. , > years, a watchman in the employ of the mill, fell through the roof of a building into the flames and was burned to death. The total loss is estimated at 9300,000. Striker* to (In South, Chicago, March 19.—A large number of the Pullman strikers of last summer with their families and others intend to settle this spring as a colony In tho south. The colonists have named their company the Mutual Colli' onlzatton association, and the kind of colony they contemplate Is cooperative. i> They wIU settle on a large tract of land and establish manufacturing j plants tnereon. , ' Burned to Death. St. Paul, Minn., March 18.—While trying to light a fire by the use of (gasoline Sunday an explosion of the inflammable stuff occurred by which Mrs. Frances Sumner, residing at 833 I Payne avenue, and her niece. Miss Nellie Cluason, aged 21 years, whose home is in Boscobel, Wls., were so hadly burned that both died in a few hours. Victim of Heart Diftcane. Tacoma, Wash., March 18.—Charles E. l^aughton, ex-lieutenant governor of Washington and Nevada, died of heart diseas*' Saturday evening. His father lives in Hangor, Me. Three Negroes Lynched. Ttukr, Tex., March 20. — Daniel Dawaon, Robert Holman and James Holman. negroes suspected of barn-burn-ing, were lynched by a mob at this place. , ittHceie IteeWyk AlYMCtli. ■r ' Dayton, ()., March 20. - Christian seieree healers in this city were ar rested charged with having rnused the death of a child by ncglccL
EL*
Th* Cenrral Anncmhly.
Isdianapolh. March 12.—S«nato -Soou
GONE TO AFRICA. Itrmarkable Scene at the Hailing of 300
Negro Emigrant*.
Savannah, Ga.. March 20.
The
SCt ‘ ul< ‘ m, t Mor(!l >y morning Presi- steamship Horsa with 200 Liberiaemi-pa's-ci ' i l > hat n °i ( hUI " ® oul 2 b ® grants sailed from Savannah Tuesday r?®* 0 ,' . Ij PaSied he would not sign them HtterDOOU . Five thouund negroes
(fathered on the wharf and cheered tho
a. . -... II , 'I -. I/, , (W paNSiru Moncuy. A resolution was adopted authorizing the appointment of a committee of three hold-over senator* to consider the advisability of erecting reformatory prisons to relieve the overcrowded condition of the prisons and to separate the younger prisoners from the hardened criminals. Adopted. The senate ad-
journed sine die at 11 "0.
House—The house was engaged most of the day In the passage of house bills, notwithstanding the well-understood position of the
vessel as it passed down the river. Over 400 trunks and boxes were taken ns baggage. In the boxes are agricultural implements, firearms, ammunition. household utensils and supplies,
clothing, etc.
When the vessel’s lines were cast off there was a cheer from the crowd on
senate that it wou'd not have nothing mor< to I the wharves and the emigrants sang
do with bills. The remainder of the time was put ‘ In in the adoption of resolutions of one character or another. At midnight the house ad-
journed slue die.
their parting song: “Tin Going Home to Africa's Shores.” The refrain was taken up by those on shore and the singing kept up until the ves-
aiikon \\ King, the private secre- sel passed the city, and tho crowd tary of the governor, is reported by his following along the wharves shouting physician to be out of danger, barring ! good-bys. while from the negroes gathcompueations, that are not likely to cred on the crowded deck of the steumoccur.. Dr. Carey, who has been at- sliip came back answering shouts, and
tending him. states that it will be a week yet before Mr. King is able to be out. It is stated that when he is able to appear, Mr. King will go before the grand jury, and tell who it was that incited the riot, and who prevented the governor's messenger from performing his duties. Judge McCray, of the criminal court, denies the statement attributed to him that he will call the attention of the grand jury to the matter. Judge McCray states that he will call the attention of the gr^nd jury to general Infractions of the criminal law. but does not deem it neces-
sary to refer to any offenses specific-
ally.
Slits. JamTs StaVENS, residing in Tippecanoe county, several miles from Lafayette, was choked to death the other morning. Mrs. Stavens was seized with a violent spell of coughing, and in her paroxysms choked to death. She was thirty-one years old, and leaves a
husband and four children.
The Lafayette city council has awarded the *225,000 refunding water bonds of Lafayette to Blair dt Co., of New ^ ork, who offered a premium of *12,127.50. The bonds run for twentylive years, with an option on tiie part of the city of paying them off in twenty years, and bear 4'4 percent, inter-
est.
A tkn-tiiousand-dollar damage suit against the Alexandria Gas Co. was brought by Jean Baptiste Griner. Griner charges that his infant son was recovering from lung trouble when the company allowed the gas pipes to freeze. The cold, he says, caused the child's death. The suit of parents of Anna Speakman for *10,000, was referred to the supreme court. Miss Npeakman was cremated by an explosion of gas at Marion, caused, it is said, by a defective pipe. The Marion Gas Co. 1h the defendant. Little Freda Marl, of Indianapolis, who was so terribly burned in November last, and who was saved by skingrafting, is beginning to gain strength rapidly. Another 250 square inches of skin were contributed by volunteers. Much excitement exists near Nashville, Brown county, over the disappearance of Lewis Patent, who was to have married Mrs. Carrie A. Horner, the other evening. I in ken hundred people were converted during the Chapman revivals at Evansville. Mrs. Agnes Harrison, 100 years of age. died at Jeffersonville. \\ . I). Sebriro, of Portlandahas been appointed supervisor <>f oil inspection for Huntington. Marion. Bluffton, Peru, Hartford City and Portland. Fulton & Finch drilled in a twohundred barrel oil well on the farm of Aaron Worth, near Portland. The other night Miss Lillie Downs was accosted on the street at Shelbyville by Elmer Israel, a jilted admirer. He became very abusive in his language, ending up with knocking the young lady down several times. Her screams aroused the neighborhood and she was carried home, where she remained unconscious and in a precarious condition. Israel has eluded ar-
rest.
Wm. Mitchell, a prominent farmer of Howard county, after carrying a confederate bullet in his left leg for thirty years, was compelled to have the leg amputated recently. He was not expected to survive the operation. Mr. Mitchell is president of the Howard county farmers' institute. At Terre Haute, the jury gave Frank Montrose, the diamond thief who robbed Strange's jewelry store, six years in the state prison. He offered to plead guilty before the court, but the judge would not give him less than seven years. Montrose was captured at St. Louis. Incendiaries burned the house of Mrs. Ollie Klingler, near Zionville. The two young daughters of Mrs. F. M. Latridge, of Fairmount, who had been kidnapped, were found at the home of Charles Louthain. in Muncie. Their father, who had been separated from his wife, is said to have kidnapped the children. A WILDCAT was shot near Cambridge City by B. S. Herr. Howard Cai.e, of Indianapolis, receiver for the Queen City Electric railway, sold the road at auction in Marion to satisfy judgments in the sum of *80,000 in favor of the Metropolitan Trust Co. of New York. Directors of tiie Marion City Railway Co. were the purchasers. *30,000 being bid. Russell Harrison was president of the Queen City at the time it passed into the receiver’s hands. James Latta, Mooresville, was kicked by a horse three months ago, crushing his skull and leaving an opening one and a half inches wide and three and a half inches long. He has recovered sufficiently to be able to walk around town. Latta is 76 years of age. A six-YEAR-OLD child of William Spigle, near Frankfort, knocked out one of its teeth. The flow of blood could not be stopped and the child bled \o dentil. Inmates in prison north number 820, an increase of 105 over last year, and the largest number ever confined in the institution.
the color-bearer of the party, a sturdy negro, violently waved a large American flag that will be displayed as the Horsa enters the harbor of Monrovia. The Horsa expects to reach Monrovia about April 1, and, after landing tho emigrants, will endeavor to secure a
return cargo.
A CLOSE CALL. Timely Arrival of u Courier with a Hepriov* for a Murderer. Caddo, I. T., March 18.—Johnson Jacob, a Choctaw, was sentenced to be sjjot all Pushmataha court grounds, 30 miles cast of here, Friday for the murder of his wife last fall. Religious services had been held and Jacob was ready to go. He had shaken hands with all his friends and bade them farewell, had pulled off his coat and boots, painted a spot over his heart on his left breast and taken his scat to await the firing of Sheriff Canady Lawrence's deadly Winchester, when tho courier arrived with the glad tidings of a reprieve to give him a hearing before the supreme court. Had the courier been ten minutes later Jacob's soul would have been sent into eternity.
SPAIN IN TROUBLE.
llesi^ncd—
I’cr Cabinet MlnUters Have
The C nuwe.
Madrid, March 18.—The Spanish ministry has resigned in consequence of the trouble in the chamber of deputies Saturday, when all the report-Ts
withdrew from
the
house as a
protest against
the
official de-
fense made by
the
minister of
war of the officers who attacked and wrecked the office of E) Globo, the organ of Senor Castelar. It is probable that Field Marshal Martinez Campos will form a new cabinet. The editors of al the newspapers have agreed that unless the freedom of tho press is guaranteed they will suspend
publication.
LEEDOM IS DEAD. i;x-C mi U reus III »n and Kx - Kercrcnnt - atArms of tho Houso russcs Away. Toledo, O., March 18.—Ex-Congress-man John P. Leedom died in Toledo Saturday morning, aged 47 years. Mr. Leedom had been living here in seclusion for the last two years. I Mr Lo-clom was a representative to the Forty-seventh congress from thU state, and ut the close of his term was elected serKeant-ut-arms of the house, serving two terms in that oflloe. During his last term, and toward the end of Cleveland'! Hr»t term of ofTlco. the Sllcott defalcation took place Edward E SUcott was Leedom s deputy and he absconded with IIOI.UOO and has never been apprehended Leedom was relieved by congress ol paying the money that was stolon. | KILLED BY THE CARS. Fate of a Young Couple at a 1'ennHylvania Hallway Crossing. Mercer, Pa., March 16.-—Charles Heasley, a scliool-teacher, aged 27, and Mary Boyd, aged 24, both of London, this county, were killed by the night express train on the Western New Y'ork & Pennsylvania railroad at Milburn, a flag station 5 miles south of here Friday evening. They were driving across tho track in a buggy when the train
struck them.
Weitorn Men Moy«« to Maryland. Baltimore, Mil, March 18.—A large number of farmers from Wisconsin, Mlunesota and other northwestern states are settling in Maryland. Over 10,000 acres of land in the southern part of the state along the Patuxent river, where they grow watermelons and cantaloupes, have been taken up by a colony of Wisconsin farmers.
THE MARKETS.
New York. March 20
LIVE STOCK—Cattle
Sheep Hogs
FLOUR- Minnesota llukers
City Mill Patents
WHEAT—No 2 Red
No 1 Northern
CORN-No 2
May
OATS -No. 2
Truck White Western....
RYE PORK Mess. New
LARD-Western 7 00 0
UL'TTKR - West rn Creamery
Western Dairy
f>0 (<£
1 60 (ft 4 00 a 2 00 to
4 (V)
b ISVt
5 00 3 60
3 U0 to
4 15
ft* Vi*
flu*
70%
70*4
W‘ito
58
61^ 83 ^
U3S &
37 to
41
W ('ii
M
13 00 to
13 50
7 00 to
7 05
ii to
H
13
FLOUR—Spring Patents. Spring Straights Winter Patents Winter Straights GRAIN—Wheat, No. 2. ...
a oo a 2 10 a 2 R0 0 2 a
Corn, No. 2..
Oats. No. 2 Rye liarley. No. 2 MILWAUKEE. GRAIN-Wheat, No. 2 Spring 1 Corn. No. 3 Oats, No. 2 White Rye. No. 1 Harley. No. 2 PORK Mess LARD—Steam
ST. LOUIS.
CATTLE—Texas Steers 13 00 Native Steers. 4 26 HOGS 8 75 j SHEEP 3 35 'CATTLE M20
Stockers and Feeder*. HOGS—Light and Mixed..
4f> qa 28V8i 52V,U M <4 57(4(13
44
32 M® MVii 6 2 ‘
II SO fl 75
2 25 « 16 * S6
* - fW)
CHICAGO.
CATTLE—Shipping Steers Stockers and Feeders ..
14 00
a
6 25
2 flb
J
4 40
Butchers Steers
3 NO
4 20
Cows
1 50
k
3 35
Texas Steers
3 00
4 (W
HOGS
4
•j
4 »0
SHEEP BUTTER—Creamery
L 00 10
d
4 HO 1«
Dairy
6
to
17
Pucklntr Stock
5
■A
a
EGGS—Fresh
lOtt®
ii
BROOM CORN iper tom
eo uu
tol30 oo
POTATOES (pjrbu)
5*
to
PORK Mess
11 50
1
11 H7“A
LARD—Steam
f flft
0 70
SHEEP 2 in <d
3 50 2 75 2 6i 2 50 55M 45*4 2k 62 ^ 55 RTtg 44 >4 82* 64 53 12 70 6 30 3 75 5 25 4 25 4 50
4
6 25 8 75 4 40 4 ao iti
arch April May
Are the Best Months in Which to
Blood
And the Best Blood Purifier is
arsa
Which Purifies, Vitalizes and Enriches the Blood.
At this season ever/one should take a good spring medicine. Your blood must be purified or you will be neglecting your health. There is a cry from Nature tor help, and unless there is prompt and satisfactory response you will be liable to serious illness. This demand can only be met by the purifying, enriching and
Blood-Vitalizing
elements to be found in Hood’s Sarsaparilla. That this is the best medicine lor you to take is proven by the fact that it lias the largest sales and accomplishes the greatest cures of any medicine in the world. It purifies the blood, creates an appetite, builds up the nervous system and renovates the entire body. not be induced to buy anything else. Didst upon HOOD'S.
A Doy’s Life Saved.
“I cannot praise Hood’s Sarsaparilla enough for what tt has done for my boy. 3ome four years ago, when six years old, Gaorge was attacked by hip disease in his
in a short time he has a mere skeleton. He had no appetite, and it was hard work to make him eat enough to keep him alive. A few weeks later wo had his hip lanced,
“ My mother-in-law. Mrs. Elizabeth Wolfe, at the age of 72 years, was attacked wiUi a violent form of salt
and following this live other eruptions rheum; it spread all over her body, broke out, making eight running sores in and her hands and limbs wore dreadful all. We did all we coaid for him, but he to look at> At ^ ti grew weaker every day, although we had . .. , «me, my three of the best physicians. As a last re- W daughter Clara, who was just one sort we were prevailed upon by relatives J ea ’' °^> was attacked by a similar who had taken Hood’s Sarsaparilla with , disease, like scrofula. It appeared in beneficial reiults to give the medicine a Lar^o Sores trial. We got one bottle about the first „„. , . . . , , , , of March, and ho had taken the medi-| Cach 8Uk ‘ ° f h,M ' ,,eck ^ hatl lhe cine only a few days when hU appetite be- , ‘‘ttendunce of t|ie family physician and gsn to improve. When he had taken one other doctors for a long time, but fccttic ho could move about a little with seemed to grow worse. I read of
his crutches, which he had not been able to use for the preceding three months. We
right leg. We had to get him a pair of cl^TonTy"the “scars^and
continued faithfully with Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and in six months he was
Able to bo Crossed
and go about the bouse without the crutches. He has now taken Hood’s Sarsaparilla regularly for eighteen months, and for the post six months has been without the crutches, which he has outgiown by several inches. The sores have all healed with the exception of one which is rapidly
ilonal
worse.
many people cured of scrofula by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. As soon as we gave Hood's Sarsaparilla to Clara, she began to get better, and before the first bottle was gone, the sores entirely healed up and there has never been any sign of the disease since. She is a Healthy Robust Child. H r grandmother took Hood’s .Sarsaparilla at the same time, and the salt rheum decreased in its violence and a
h.a to h... 1,1. rl«Ltlanced Ju.t above f n Kw'Sl'cSoJ'li'.'lt'S.tt -be tferibc, licr" J| |,k|,h' .ml the knee. In a few weeks a second sore and plays as lively as any child. We feel strength at her advanced age to Hood’s broke out, both discharging freely. Agon- inexpressible joy at having our boy re- SnrsaDtirilla It has rertainlv Leon it'tnj rain, afflicted bin,, bo could not bear tjJTlL’b.jtTerm.’ot’Hood'i’samapaidUa!" < sSil to be moved, his growth was stopped and Mrs. Henry W. Mcrphy, Exeter, N. H. WOLFE, Zaleski, Ohio.
THIRSTON .MAY GO.
Hawaiian Minister Said to Have Given Grave Offense.
A Defined Humor That the New Republic Han Keen Notified That IDs Recall Would I’loane This Uovm ii menu Washington, March 20.—Intimations have been made in general by well-in-formed circles for sonic days past to the effect that Mr. Thurston, the Hawaiian minister, has not been altogether persona grata to the ruling authorities in Washington, but so guarded have these suggestions Wen and so reticent are all prominent officials who have l>een spoken to on the subject that no basis for a public assertion of them could be obtained from any proper authority. That the relations between the representative of Hawaii and the secretary of state have seemed somewhat strained of late appeared very evident to those who have given close attention to that phase of the situation: but even this had not
place. It occurred Fast Thursday in 1 Keya I’aha county, near Brocksburg. Mrs. W. E. Holton, who was living alone on her farm, was taken from her bed, cruelly outraged and then lynched. A neighbor discovered the deed the next morning when he passed by the house. She I
Floyd Township.
• >n Thursday last as Mrs. May Wilson was passing by the open fireplace her (liess caught fire, and in an instant she was enveloped in the Haines. H('r sister-in-law ; Mrs. Baker, being present, tried to smother the tire with bed clothing, but failed to
was found lying on the floor of her so - fibe then ran out of the house dwelling, surrounded by the scattered being exhausted, fell to the and tom clothing and the cloth-! > • ,poum, • i ,rother , at * 1,at Aji 1 ^ leg of her bed. Tracks of -aine with water and ext.ngmshed , . . , , . i the flames. Direetlv she arose and many mens feet were found in the wlls hei,,..., ihlo the’house; she was \artl unci m the house. No warrants ! , nos t t e ,. r jblv burned. 8he Jingereti have yet been issued, but a meeting of until Saturday, when death relieved the citizens of the neighborhood was Iter sufferings! She was the wife of held Sunday and it was decided that j Harvey Wilson, of Floyd township, prompt measures should Ihj taken. She was about 24 or 25 years of age. Several persons are under suspicion i Rnd had been married but a few
and these parties will be arrested. Negroen A^aIm at Work. New Orleans, March 16.—The scene along the levee Is one of bustling activity. Nearly every ship in port which came for the purpose of receiving cargoes of cotton is now being loaded. The negroes have no fear. They are surrounded on all sides by soldiers and they feel contented. Gov. Foster stated that he would keep the military on the river until all signs of danger
had passed.
I.lvetl 90 Yenr* to Salcltle.
Chicago, March 19.—Mrs. Levi, 90 years old, of 1023 Noble avenue. Lake
mouths; was highly respected, and her untimely death will i>e deeply mourned by her many friends. The bereaved husband lia> the sympathy of the comm unity. xx Wanted, girl to do house-work — apply to or address the Star-Press*
Greeneastle, Ind. South Washington.
John Tresner visited his grandma last week John A. Neese is the proud papa of a new baby boy Mrs. Maggie Handy and Mrs. Jane Harris visited Mrs. Esther Evans last week Our school closed on Wednesday: nil present enjoyed the day very much Wonder how our Tom
View, committed suicide by hanging feels now about the railroad passes, Monday morning. since the battle in the State House, x
MINISTER THURSTON.
taken a shape to warrant a positive as- | sertion as coming from unquestionable ! authority that the official presence of | Minister Thurston was no longer de- j
sirable in Washington.
Positive public official utterance on ; the matter of this government’s request for Mr. Thurston's recall is nut forthcoming at this moment; but enough is known to justify the i assertion that such request has been [ made and the impression is prevalent [ that a correspondence between the de- ! partment ami tiie minister actuated the demand and hastens a request for its early compliance. While consistent with the reticence maintained at the
Opera House, GREENCASTLE, TO-NIGHT, SATORDAY, MAR. 23, via ii
Exponent of the methods of the areat European Practitioners, Sir Morrel MucKeuaie and Count Maetti, will Lecture and Cure Cripples upon the Staxe. No Muxnetic Power
No Sugar Coated Pills.
Lecture at <S 7\ M. Admission Free. All Rheumatic Cripples who cannot walk without crutches or canes, no matter how had
state department in this matter, no i they may be, are requested to call at the Opera Houso this (8aturdiy > afternoon, between
1 the hours of 2 and 4, as a few of the worst cases will be cured free of charge, to show tho
public reference to the causes of the ! extraordinary
unpleasant character of the relations
power of the remedies,
founded with the so called magnetic healing
The method of Veuo's treatment is not to be conThe cures arc effected through the elHcacy
liofwoon Lc.vernmont nfficinls nn.l 1 ho i of his li,tri * ordi '‘"'■J' '"‘ported from Europe. Other remedies may relieve oetwoen government omciais ana me J rheumatism, but Veno Medicines cure completely the worst and most desperate case
minister can be evolved, there are some that express the opinion that several very frank and emphatic remarks that have from time to time been dropped by the Hawaiian minister have not been regarded as strictly within the line of a dignified propriety, and this opinion goes far in placing a reason for the action of the department.
WORK OF BRUTES.
They Lynch a Nebraska Woman After
Shamefully Mistreating Her.
■ ii* u tutu ■ ^ in, >z * * * ii vr .»* ( >.. v ,* v • ■ | i . v ij v t.x i* mi in (■.-( i «i un perru it? ch Venn ami assistant physicians will remain in Greeneastle for a few days only and can be
consulsed free of charge in their ortice. Room 12, Commercial Hotel.
To-night. March, 23, and every night until Wednesday, March, 27, Veno, the great healing power, will lecture and cure cripples utwn the stage at the Opera House. The cures effected by the Wonderful Veuo Remedies have become town talk in every place he has
visited.
Every man, woman or child, sick or well shonld be in attendance at the lecture to-night. A few well known rheumatic cripples will be cured on the stage. Do not confound this with the so called magnetlclhenhng as it has no connection with such nonsense. It is the result of powertul remedie which never fail to cure the most obstinate and stubborn cases. You can't cure chronic rheumatism with sugar coated pills, and no man of intelli-
gence will be deceived by such representations.
Velio's remedies are imported and differ from any thing else evertprescrihed here. They are absolute specifics, not only in rheumatism, but in all diseases fur which they are pre-
scribed.
\ eno has in hispossession hun.tieu* I, - . ' ..A.yVu.ea niected by the use of his medicines, which he imports from Europe ami which are different from any
_ ou a,— —Ine and brain
i and deafness
few day* only, room
| medicines ever prescribed hers before. Rheumatism, paralysis, nerve, spi i diseases, Impure blood, dyspepsia, liver and kidney troubles, fits, catarrh
OUAUA. Neb., March 19.—News of a ' arc quickly and permanently cured b> Vena's medicines "See for a few d ivi_ - i.. i j... 4 v i .n.. u t oiuiuerctal Uotel. Ureeiicasue. I.-a . i'.' -u and advt.e free
1 terribleJlragedy bos just peached this
