Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 17 August 1895 — Page 7

muiiicid Cures Rising

Messrs. Horr and Harvey Summarize Their Awimonts.

I have been a midwife for many years, anti in each case where “MOTH* ERS' FRIEND" was used it acoomplbhed wondsrs ar J shortens] labor ?n] Isssened pain, it is the best remedy for THE BREAST known, and worth the price for that alone. Mrs. M. M. Brewster, Montgomery, Ala.

Etu'h Point* Out the I>«*fertn In th© Ollier’* I (loti*, and Claim to Pou- [ session of the l»(*st of th© Controversy.

Sent by Express or mall, on receipt of price, $1.00 per bottlo. Bovk ‘ To MotUerK M mailed free. ERASFIZLD RCGULATCR CO.. Atlanta. Qa. ECLD BT ALL PRUQGI3TS.

CTI1CAGO. Auj: 7 —Iq accordance with the agreement entered Into by th-* silver and gold | debaters, Messrs. Harvey and Horr. governing their recent contest in inis city, each w.u* to prepare a recapitulation ot the points made In their respective arguments, not exceeding •J.50J words each, und to complete the same v. ithin a week from th- close of the contest This has been done, aud in substance the summary of Boswell G. Horr is us follows:

Mr. Horr’a Claiius.

Mr Harvey admits that the book is pure iietloa He repudiates its motto by declaring that it does not mean what it says. Ills statement that primary money only is the measure b: value he has not even attempted to sustain, though his proof has been called . for repeatedly. His stuteinuat th^t the ! people of the JlUecnth and sixteenth ! cmtur;es were .a the most degraded condition of serfdom and slavery on account of tho lack | of metallic money, has been completely de- , molished. Mr. Harvey next based h>s case 1 upon the assumption that th- law of 1978,

To tlie Soiitli

The Louisville £. h'sshvlllc Railroad will r '1 tickets on dates and under conditions as L d'JW mentioned, at One Single Fare for tite Round Trip, and one-way tickets at about < e hall' the usual rate.

Kan Fr»ncl.co's Very Interesting Officer

of the I.aw.

| San Francisco, being a progressive town, boasts of a woman deputy sheriff. She is Miss May Simpson, and it is said that she manages the duties of her unique position with great skill. She is a young woman, and she says she has never seen anything of which she was afraid. The dark, ghosts, burglars, drunken people and the insane have no terrors for her. Horses, dogs, mice and even the fiercer animals that men themselves have no longing to

fondle, are nothing to her.

Miss Simpson’s work consists mainly In escorting women who have been ! adjudged insane to their asylums. She has a theory of her own as to how insane people should he treated, and her ideas have sUxxl successfully the time test. She believes in kindness, combined with firmness and absolute fear-

lessness.

The salary connected with the somewhat dilficult position is in no sense large. It is like the pondmaster’s wages—no dogs, no pay. The woman deputy is paid bj' the piece—two dollars and fifty cents f<>r every trip. If no

r o?lKln ri '“n fraud n'u’us birth through ! women are committed there is no pay, bribery and corruption. Ho Introduced and the deputy goe:; home and awaits no evidence In support of either proposition. ! the next session of court. The most she

und ho stand* convicted of making every ono of those charges without uny proof that would be received In uny ordinary court of justice. If congress wns bribed to pas, u bu ! bill, then the bill must have Ur-t passed In bad shape Now.lt that be true.thou there would be no need of n clerk to do the dirty Worn. If it wus done by the enrolling clerk, then it follows that congress pussed the bill ns it ought to have been, und consequently they could not have done what he says they wore bribed to do If congress passed the bill all right and the enroll.ng clerk enrolled It correctly, then tho oribery could apply only to the members of the conference committee. All these villainies are then abandoned when he

claims that the whole thing wus seeompllshod i , ,

by means of a “substitute bill" He stands an< ^ a I ,rl I‘iant complexion toat tells convicted by his own statements of uu effort ' of long hour, of dreamless sleep, unto deceive the people Mr Harvey's state- ! troubled by the faintest suspicion of ment that free coinage creates uu- j scenes of the Jane Eyre type.

The men about the sheriff's office

has ever made was forty dollars in one month, and sometimes there are as few as six cases in a month—that, is, fifteen dollars. It isn't exactly a prineely income for taking one’s life in one's hands

every day or so.

There is nothing about the woman deputy to attract attention, except the novelty of her position. She is young — considerably under twenty-five — dresses in dark, stylish clothes, is unobtrusive in her manners, and has a pretty face, with dark curly hair, gray eyes

" c'i TP Q I° r ^c sale of tickets will be June ii, July 5, August 7, September 4 ansi October 2, 1895. Tickets will be sold for the Regular Trains starting from Cincinnati, Louisville, Evansville and St. Louis, and from f lotions of our Connecting Lines in the North t' connect with those trains. Tickets good to r.turn within 20 days. POINTS to wl 'ieh tickets will be sold are the principal Cities, Towns and Villages in the States of Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, North and South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. * Full infonnation cheerfully furnished upon application to J. K. R1DCELY, N. W. Pass. Agt., Chicago, 111. C. P. AIMORE, Geu’l Pass. Agt., Louisville, Kj.

THE MILD POWER CURES Dr. Humphreys’ Specifics are scientifically and carefully prepared Remedies, used for nearly half a century by the people with entire success. *0. grrcinc for pavers, Congestions, Inflammations.. U-Worms, Worm Fever, Worm Colic.... 3- Teething j Colic, Crying, Wakefulness 4- Diarrhea, of Children or Adults 7-Cough., Colds, Bronchitis 5- Jicarnlgla, Toothache, Fnceacho. £)—Headaches, Sick Headache, Vertigo.. TO—Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Constipation. 1 l-Kuppregsed cr Painful Periods .. Ill—Whites, Too Frofuso Period! 13-Croup, Laryngitis, Hoarseness H-Knlt Rkenm, I'ryslpelns. F.niiUons.. 13—Hheunialisin, Rheumatics Fains 10—Malaria, Chills, Fever and Ague 19—Catarrh, Influenza, Cold in the Head. tiO—Whooping Cough 27— Kidney Diseases 28- Nervoua Debility 30-Crluary Weakness 34—Sore Throat Cmlnsv.Dlphthcrla.... “77”forHAY FEVER Sold by DrnyglBtti, or Bent pt-j-nM cm rocelpt of price, 2 r >c., or 5 for fL.'Uhty bo a9*"rt«d', except 2S, $1- Hlzo only. I»ti. nrMPHHlTS’MAST’AL Flllar<eil *Kevl9e<U.MAII.«l>rBKE Ht irifRXY-V 3IU>. CO., 111 A II* William St., > wYork.

Ii ti La!

\() SMklgAY.

GEO.PJ.lilI No. 22 Soiitli Jackson Street, GREENCASTLE, IND. Building Association .-dock bought and sold or taknn ;i» security

for loans.

D. E. WILLIAMSON, •KWovwdv^ l\A Mlwvs ORKKNCA8TLB, IND, Business in all courts attended to promptly Three Crops a Year Can be grown on the same land in Eastern Mississippi and Southern Alabama along the line Mobile A Ohio Railroad. The summers are cooler, the Winters are milder, the death rate is lower, than in the North. Improved farms. (10 to |15 per acre, unimproved land ♦3 . r near railway stations. It is the best portion for raising fruits and early vegetables, stock raising and general farm crops. Lands are advancing, now is the time to buy. Very low rate excursions monthly. The Mobile & Ohio has put on two through fast trains each way daily between St. Louis and Mobile. It la the shortest and quickest route to Hie rtoutk. Aa illustrated pamphlet telling all about our country will be sent free to all who wish* it. Apply to F. W. Orel ni . Gen rol Agi nt. No. 108 North Broadway, St. Louis, Mo,, or to E. E. Posey, General Passenger Agent. Mobile A Ohio Railroad. Mobile, Ala. if

limited demand is not true, berauso there cuu be au unlimited demupd for no human productions !v!r. Harvey falls entirely to prove that the use of one metal us tho measure of value Is an experiment He utterly fulled to show a fad lu the price ef a single article which Is not fully accounted for by cheuper cost of production, improved transportation or increased supply. He Inadvertently admitted the great value of banking facilities, which was an entire “give away" of his whole rant und fustian against banks. He misled people by pnrttu. statements which led to false conclusions. when the whole statement would have been perfectly clear to any one. The civilized world Is clearly on my side of this Issue

Air. Harvey’s Summary.

Mr. Harvey, lu summarizing the debate, says: "It settled the proposition that gold and silver are the money of the constitution. Mr. Horr did not controvert this Tho silver dollar was the unit of value In our coinage system lixed by the act of in*.’. Mr Horr admits this. Silver and gold wero the measure of value of all other property until 1873 and the debtor had a right to pay In cither metuL The act ot 1 m3 was surreptitiously passed. For all time of which we have any knowledge gold and stiver were treated equally as money until 1818, when England closed her mints to sliver, and 1873-4, when the United States, Germany. France and the Latin nations followed suit The prices of all property are now measured In gold alone, and are substantially ono-half what they would be under the bimetallic system. Mr Horr frequently In debate substantially makes this admission, 1 have made good all the propositions set forth In my opaulng statement Mr Horr found no errors in my book except the statement that tho silver coined prior to 1873 was $106,000,U00 instead of $143.000,0003. If Mr Horr had followed me In the logical arrangement of the debate us Indicated by tho book wo wore dheussiug. 1 would have been able to furnish data more fully Justifying points lu tho ’’School’' attacked by him. Tho llrst object in tho way of this tlnauclal subject Is soltlshness. Mr Horr snows lliut he doos not yet know what bimet-

allism la ”

Kays Harvey Is a Deceiver. Mr Horr, in his rejoinder, said his opponent took two days to dlsouss a crime which never existed, and hud no time to defend many errors In his book repeatedly pointed out. and which he promised to explain later. He now tells what wonders he would have done had be not been driven from his essays, which he calls his “regular order In his summary he goes out of his way to vllilfy the supreme court, the only honorable body in the United Slates which he had not slandered in his part of the debate. Nowhere has he shown the advisability of this nation freely coining silver at 18 to 1, nor can he do lb Uls summary, like his debate, attempts to disparage honest Industry, thrift and solvency. HU whole system clearly alms at the destruction of law. Individual deveiopmeat and social order. If need be through revolution. 1 have shown that Mr. Harvey Is devoting his life to deceiving the people. Mr. Harvey In reply, declared he made nc statement as to the condition of tho people ol the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, reading only a statement from the report of the monetary commission of 1876 to show what the preface In the “School" was quoted from Mr. Horr Is exceedingly mixed as to the order In which 1 presented tho crime of 1873 I did not claim that any one was bribed.

treat her courteously, as they would

another man whom they respected. They don’t try to do her work for her

She wouldn’t like that, but they treat her as she treats them, with a business-

like courtesy that is refreshing. THE BALTIC SHIP CANAL.

How It Hill Make and Unmake Various European Ports. Germany does well to make the formal open luff of the preat Baltic ship canal a ceremonial affair of the first magnitude, says the London Ueview. When ships of the largest burden can pass by a protected short cut of sixty miles' length from the North sea to the Baltic the ugliest as well as the oldest problem of north European navipution will have been solved. Incilentally it will destroy what little remains of Denmark's commercial im-

portance.

Copenhagen has endeavored to forestall disaster by making itself into a free port and spending largo* sums of money upon dock and harbor improvements; but, we fear, all in vain. It is incredible that any shipping will hereafter be sent into Danish waters, to round the tiresome Jutland peninsula and brave the dangers of the treacherous passage of the sound, which can take advantage of the shorter and entirely safe route across Holstein. Where the commercial supremacy of the Haltic will resettle itself when once it quits Copenhagen is not clear. Hamburg is very confident about its own succession to these rich honors. Ancient Lubeck is projecting an ElbeTrave canal, by means of which she hopes to divert the increased traffic and wealth to herself. The Courland port of Libau has spent two hundred and fifty thousand pounds in enlarging its facilities for the competition, and even St. Petersburg, which, with its new deep-water dock in the Neva, becomes a seaport this year for the first time, has visions of maritime greatness based on this novel rearrangement of trade currents. While these rival claims are as yet in the air the advantages to British shipping are tangible and immediate. Not least among these advantages may he counted the in creased incentives to peace which the financial importance of keeping this great canal open will give to the German empire. A GIRL'S NOBLE ACT.

Used tor Climbing Out anti Hack Whan He Vtalted Hi* Sweetheart. Warden Patten, of the Indiana prison south at Jeffersonville, has on exhibi* 1 tiou one of the most remarkable con- i trivanees of a prisoner that ever cama ! into his collection. It is a ladder made ] of thousands of small pieces of twine, ; threads, cords and rope, such as a Convict would secretly collect through years of effort. With the rope Thomas bhepherd used to climb a thirty-foot wall and get out of the penitentiary yard night after night to visit an old sweetheart. He never attempted to escape, and when hLs ladder was found one night he returned before his al>sence had been discovered, rang the bell at the front gala;, and surrendered himself. On his arm he carried a rubber coat, whi.h he 1 been used to conceal his striped shirt, lie wore moccasins over his shoes. Shepherd told a straightforward story, so far as it went. He had made the ladder, he said, in order that l\o might visit a woman outside the prison. He hud gone to her house only four times, he said. The other nicht, when he returned, he found his ladder gone ; from the wall, and at once he decided , to give himself up. He would not tell the woman's nanle, but the prison of- ! fieials think they have discovered her , identity. Stic went from her homo in Sullivan county, Ind., some years ago to live in Jeffersonville, near her con-

vict lover.

Shepherd said that he wove his ladder at night, and that it took him I months to finish it. It contained j threads, strings and bits of cords of every size, length and color. They were woven, knotted and twisted

skillfully.

Shepherd was sent to prison to serve a life sentence in 1S75. A new trial was secured two years later, and he was recommitted on tho same sentence 1 on April 19, 1ST8. He has continually s petitioned for executive clemency, and two years ago his sentence was commuted to twenty years. He will lie released, consequently, on April IS, 1898. lie was a country school-teacher. One night at an apple paring he had a quarrel with a man named Macey Engle over a girl. Engle had Shepherd arrested, and ono night, before the ease was tried, Engle was assassinated. Saenhirri was convicted purely on circumstantial evidence, und has always maintained his innocence.

O-K.EEISrCaA-S'X’XaE,

IltTID.

£vvv\\\a\%,

i>i nECToitMi R. L. 0 Hair, Pres.; M. F. Me Raffle, Vice Pres-, M. D. Bridges, Cash.; J. L. Handel, Assf. Cash.; E. B. Evans, IF. R.'Allee, F. A. Arnold. S. A. Hays, Quinton Broadstreet. WHEAT FERTILIZERS

/>>

THE HOUSE SHOE DRANDS BONE FERTILIZERS

WHEAT GROWERS

FOR THE

LEAST MONEY.

One bag per acre insures good Wheat and Grass Crops. Write for circular and prices. N. W. FERTILIZING CO., Manufacturers, UNION STOCK YARDS, CHICAGO, ILL.

Appointed to Wisconsin Supreme Dench. M unsox, Wis., Aug. 0.—Gov. Lpham

Monday appointed Judge 11. D. Marshall to a seat on the supreme bench to fill the vacancy caused by the death | of the late Judge Orton. It is believe 1 1

that Judge Marshall will accept Registration Law Constitutional.

EVER CHANGE

20 Ib.4. Standard Granulated

Richmond, Ya., Aug. 7.—Judge Goff Sugai, !8l,0ll.

in the South Carolina registration case dismissed the complainants bill for an injunction. This decision upholds the

present registration laws.

Baking Powder, l°o a lb. and up.

4 cans Pt as or Corn, 25c.

Icimis of. (.'mined und Dried Fruits nt Jlot-

tom Prices*

Improved in Many Wnye.

Manhattan, Ind., July 20, 1805.—My father has had ttouble with his eyes for two or

three year.. We tried numerous phyMcians B( , st Bucket S 60c . and medicines, but he found but little relief., ^ v 1 **i in Finally a friend advised him to try Hood's LflKO Ofllt. <**1.10. Sarsaparilla and lu* has taken four bottles of Ividde*! k Soli’s bi/St FlOUf, A

tins medicine and it has done him more pood Xo. 1.

than anything else. He now ha. a good a„- Screen Uool'S, Sa.sll, Glass and

Tlarihvare of all kinds at bottom

| prices.

Chin, now ha. 11 daily new.papers, nine TgJ "fri » TO \ V VE : which are printed in ■ nines' on iu JCD » JlT • .L3.tJL.LV Vv 3 4 7 sV French and the other in English. | « — No. 11 North Side Square,

Hall's Hair Rencwer will keep the hair v: 0 - I orous and healthy, and a natural color.

petite and is improved

A’.len.

Hood'. Pills cure ah liter U'.s.

in many ways. —Eva i

GREENX'ASTLE, IND. emu

new poKansas,

_f>soor Wf>h«ito" the old reliable, who has been hanging paper for our people for over thirty years, is still in the field and does the very best work In this line, using muscle and skill, and no wind; he guarantees satisfaction, and does the work as cheap as anyone. Don’t contract

A New Burly.

Topeka, Kan., Aug. 5.—A litical party has been born in

and a call fora state convention iu this city September ."> has been issued. The name of the organization is the Independent Americanism, and it declares for true Americans, free coinage of silver and the removal of the national

capital to a move eeutra* location.

A Nebraska Hank 1 all,.

Omaha, Neb., Aug. rt.—A special to the World-Herald from Dakota City, Neb., says that the Citizens' state bank at Soutli Sioux City, Neb., has failed. The liabilities are about 820,000. The bank is said to have had 810,000 Dakota

county funds on deposit plot to Aid yin« n i.u.

San Francisco, Aug. 5.—An alleged plot to restore Queen Liliuokalani and loot Honolulu was exposed here. Rudolph Sprockets, the youngest son of Claus Spreckels, was said to be back-

ing the scheme.

Twenty Residence. linmed.

Berlin, Md., Aug. 5.—Six acres were the burned over Sunday night. The total! by garments, would have every right number of houses burned was seventy-! to feel most proud, and, executed as it five. The loss is $#00,000 and the in-, was by a young lady, was almost if snrnnce about 825,000. | not quite without precedent in the anlaok out (or Thra. | nals of deeds requiring presence of Washington, Aug. 7.-The secret mind, sldll and courage. It is indeed service gives warning of a new phot<Y extraordinary that a swimmer, bowgraphic counterfeit ttve-dollar national *' . ovi ““I't*' 1 * bank note. First national bank ol at once two drowning persons and to Flint. Mich., series of 1862. | bei ^ caught in tho grip of one j or other of liiein. jxever \>as the Koval rive Per.on. Drowned. | Humane society’s medal better d<

Gallantly P.rHCue. Three People ami Gain,

a Medal.

Few more gallant feats have

ieci* perfoxraed by women thin that o*.

Miss Kvans, the daughter of Dr. Evans,

of Ilythe, on the Southampton water, says the London Standard. Walking on the pier with a friend, she heard the

cry cf three po-rscr.s whose boat had

been capsized near the pier. Running down the steps, she sprang into the

water and soon brought the one nearest, a woman, safely to the steps. Then she swam off again to the others, a man and a girl. Waiting her opportunity,

she managed to seize them both, and

supported them until a rope was thrown

to her, and she was then able to get the man to the pier. The girl was going down for the third time, when Miss

Evans dived, brought her to the surface,

und took her also to the pier, thus saving three lives. It is difficult to know which is the more remarkable—the courage displayed, or the skill with which, hampered by her clothes, she succeeded in avoiding the drowning grip that is so oftep fn*al to those who attempt rescues, and so brought the

three persons, one after another, in

safety to the pier. It is a feat of which

best male swimmer, unhampered

HE FOLLOWED FUNERALS. Lotii.ville Hor?<* That Cmi.rrf HI. MUDeep Mortification. ‘Some j ears ago,” said Alderman James C. Gilbert, of Louisville, to a reporter for the Courier-Journal, “I had a tenant downtown who died, leaving a wife and helpless family. Their only property consisted of an old mare, and more to oblige them than anything else I bought the horse. She was gentle and my wife adopted her for her own driving, und was much pleased for awhile, as the old mare was so gentle that my wife could drive her about

town herself.

It seemed, however, that the mare had once belonged to an old lady over in New Albany who had a mania on tho subject of funerals, and made a point never to miss one. The old mare’s principal occupation for years had been to follow funeral processions to the cemeteries. One day my wife was driving down the street, when she suddenly encountered a negro funeral, followed by a number of societies, with all the paraphernalia of an imposing cortege. ‘•The old mare recognized the procession at a glance and calmly turned Into the line of the parade. In vain my wife tugged at the reins and tried to turn out. The old mare knew her business, and, with head hung down, solemnly followed close behind the mourners. Occasionally they would meet an acquaintance of ours, and they looked with surprise at the tribute which my wife was apparently paying to the. deceased, until my wife was frantic with mortification and anger. "At every crossing she would appeal to bystanders to stop the old mare, but they didn’t seem to understand, until at last they passed a policeman, who, in response to my wife's tearful appeal-,, stopped the old mare and dragged her out of the procession, much to her surprise and disgust. Of course, I had a good laugh over it, but it was no laughing matter with my wife, and l had no peace tiU I sold that old mare and got her out of sight for good.”

Children Cry for Pilcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.

When Baby was sick, wo her Castoria. When she was a Child, sho erk* l for Castoria. When she becamo Miss, she clung to Castoria. When hbo had CliUdrA#, sho gave them Gastonia.

HER CLAIM TO DISTINCTION.

of If«r

In one summer it is possible for the the descendents of a single fly to grow to 2,OSD,- ,

3J0.

The Nile River has a fall of but six inches ' in the last 1,000 miles of its course.

Best 5 Cent Cigars Verbenas, Cubanolas, Josephines,

AT

KIEFER’S.

Condors have been killed had a wing spread of 25 feet.

iu Peru which

PROOF IS POSITIVE

Portland and Louisville Cements, Plaster Paris, Lime, Hair, etc., always on hand. XI.. 33. IITmXjIEY, J ’6 v-i-t a -minary St. P. O. Box 773. Iy50

S

THAT LYDIA E. IT\'KHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND

Is Daily Curing Buchachr, Dizziness, Faintness, Irregularity, and all Female Complaints. I [ftPKOIAL TO Or* LADY XXAtlEllS.J Intelligent women no longer doubt the value of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It speedily relieves irregularity, suppressed or painful menstrua-

Drlehtcst Girl In ColleB* Tell.

Subsequent Experiences.

She was the pride of tho faculty ana the pet of the class — a girl who grappled with logarithms only to lay them low, and whose Latin and Greek were us perfect as cuuui he ilcbiretA. says the Maw York Son. All sorts of brilliant things wero expected of her after she left college. The president said that she hud one of the finest ufinfis the college had ever hud tho privilege of cultivating. The literature professor prophesied that sho woxihl make a shining place for herself in literature. The professor of mathematics shed tears at tho thought of her absence from his class. As for the girls, her fellow students, they each and all regarded her as a sort of George Eliot and Maria Mitchell rolled into one. And. in spite | of these many fond hopes and bl ight predictions, the girl, immediately after she was graduated, married. Ten years later her class mot for a reunion. Tho members made it a sort of experience meeting. Each arose and told whal had happened during the interval since they hud last met. One had won renown in music, another in philanthropic fields. Another had written her heart out in verse, and a fourth had become a successful teacher. At last it was the turn of the girl with a mind. Everybody held her breath as she arose and began: “Girls, I. too, have not been idle. During all these years I have

The Mont Sensible

mm\ TO SIGHT Isa pair of Gold Spectacles, and the only place to have them correctly fitted is at 105 Hast Washington street. No one every sold glasses so cheaply in Greencastle. Don’t trust your eyes to spectacle peddlers and jewelers. G. W. BENCE, M l D^_ Toich*/(i/> Tritstn 's Xoticc. I will attend to the business of my ottice on | Tuesday and Friday of each week, at my ofj fire, in the store of Janies Bridge!*, at Fillmore, and on these days will issue orders and receive vouchers, and at no other time, tf 17 David M. Chadd, Trustee. Toirnship Tru.stn's Xotice* I will be found at my office in Barnard, Ind., cm Saluidwy of estd. ‘u*>. t<s -aKtni \<r - the duties pertaining to the office of Towu«Mn Tru Q tpe of Jackson township, Putnam County, Indiana. Ivtf 1 homas M- Sanders Trustee.

Xkw York, Aug. 5—During a tor-1 6er ved, and there can be little doubt a lik « the . rC8t t^ hT

w nado along the New Jersey coast houses that the act will receive the highest ' knm ' n n the c ty w u * re 1 llwt “ 11 BS tho

for your paper hanging before seeing} were wrecked ami five persons were, m ark of distinction at the society's dis-

fcim. 8tf drowned by the capsizing of boats. 1 p,>sal.

woman who

i month."

averages nine cooks a

tior.s, weaknet? ef the stomach indigestion, bloating, leucorrlima, womb trouble, llooding, nervous prostration, headache, general debility, etc. Symptoms of

Womb Troubles

are dizziness, faintness, extreme lassitude, “don’t care,” and “want to be left alone” feelings, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy, or the “blues,” and backache. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will correct all this trouble as sure as the sun shines. That

Bearing-Down Feeling,

causing pain, weight, and backache, is instantly relieved and permanently cured by Us use. Under all circumstances it acts in perfect harmony with the laws that govern the female system, is as harmless as water. It is wonderful for

Kidney Complaints in either sex.

Lydia II. Pinkham’s Liver Pills work in unison with the Compound, and ...... a nuro for rnpetimtinr) and *lokheadache. Mrs. Pinkham’s Sanative Wash is frequently found of great value for local application. Correspondence is freely solicited by the Lydia F Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., and the strictest confidence assured. All druggists sell the Pinkham remedies. The Vegetable Compouud ill three forms,—

Liquid, Pills, and Lozenges,

i ou'nsh tp i ru.+irr * /a I will he at my office, located in my home at Oakalla, on Saturday of eacli week, to attend to such of my official duties as can be transacted on that day—the business of issuing orders and receiving vouchers will be especially attended to on these days. ITtf G. F. Lewis, Trustee.

J>ry I.sfind Herd of POLAND CHINA SWINE. | cyGs Knll Pins for salt, and two Summer Gilts bretl to Claude’s ^Superior No. 12313. to farrow ill Juue, and KgKS from three prize-winning pens—S. C. B. Leghorns, silver Lace Wyandottes and Barred P. Rocks;$1.25per sitting, or $2 for 2sittings from cither pen. GEORGE W SHUEY, PROPRIETOR, 4123 Hainbridge. Ind.

Incorporated Ln ter prise Wants AOfcMTs

Immediate renumeration upon Good fommlsslon. Apply to

^ ^ C. 0. Lagerlelt, P. 0. Box 22,

appointment.

El Paso, Texas,