Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 18 July 1896 — Page 3
EHOiSfiC *5}til
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GREENGASTLK, IND., JLLY IS, 1896.
{ 8 “% w .. Vol. 21 Noll
ABSOLUTELY PURE
Ity and county .Mrs. James Stone has returned
om Toledo, Ohio.
. T. H. Farmer went to Missouri, on
basiness, last Saturday.
Albert Murphy is now telegraph
operator at Frankfort, Ind.
Mi'S Rose Williams is attending
normal school at Chicago,
ied, on July 5, 1S96, Cecil, son of
C. MoCurry, aged 10 monts.
orn, to Peter Quinton Broadstreet
;1 wife, a daughter, on July 4.
itev. R. K. Beery’s baby, aged 14
nths, died on July 10, of flux.
BMrs. Sarah Nutt and daughter are ^siting relatives at Terre Haute.
McAuley and' wife, have
bc<'ii visiting relatives at Rushville.
Dr. Boucher preached at Lafayette last Sunday. B. F. Corwin visited at Springfield, Ills., this week. Miss Belle Graham has returned from Greenfield. D. E. Williamson went to Louisville, on Monday. Fred Meltzcr is here from Chicago visiting home folks. Born, on July 11, to Louis Buckner and wife, a son. W. H. Harrison made a business trip to Spencer, on Monday. Mrs. Calla Insley, who was visiting here, has returned to Duluth. J. P. Allen and wife and son, Joe,
The New Gold. I Financial Facts. Cleveland Plain Dealer. ' It was the Republican party that Goldite papers and gold standard demonetized silver in 1873 and it was whorshipers are constantly parading a Republican secretary of the treas
•»« there l« „ inrre,» ,n
the production of Home of deeming our currency in ^old, when th«*m even go so iar as to say that the law specifically said that it this increase will ultimately lead to> hc > ul <* he redeemed in coin gold
the free coinage of silver. Tht. 1- £ ^ ^
opinion conies from the ratio cranks, way by which the money speculators those who claim that there should of the east have made many millions never be any free coinage until In the of dollars on account of the sale of markets of the world sixteen ouce. >0 ^ en Danie , ManninK wa8 8ecre of silver are the equal of one ounce | tary of the treasury during Cleve of gold. Of course, they never take i land’s first term of otilce, he refused into consideration the fact that it is to gratify the gold hugs by redeemthe demonetisation of silver that I l,,K pa P er CUrretle - V in K old - and t!le the aernonetiz.ition ot smer tn.a. consequences were that when the changed the commercial ratio from | office was tnrne!! over to Charley the coinage ratio. Foster in 1S89 there was a gold surA very interesting article in the P' 118 °f i?-’<5,000,00(1 in the national London Bimotalist gives some im- Harrison’ a^lmimstruron.^the plates portant facts on the gold product.; were made for the sale of bonds to It says that the increase of European | replsuish the gold reserve and a gold from 1891 to lS9(i has been £102,- l' anlc . was , narrowly averted just as
nnn . .. _ Harrison left the white house.
6 U ’t «i, A .‘; cordl nb *° . rt> ^ In exblaining how the gold bugs port of the director of the mint of have glutted the treasury of its gold 1 'mV Utei isn-> a * 08 i«<. t - le ■ pi j oduct > ! f a wr.icr has furnished the following gold from Is.12 to is.lo, inclusive, IS .,,,,1 be onnlna Crnin n ,1...
HOT WEATHER.
| fa:
|Mrs. II. C. Rudisill and children e home from French Lick Springs. Ed. Ridpath accompanind his fattier home from Chicago, on Sun-
day night.
Jesse Messick and wife, of Indiana-
■ , are visiting relatives at Liberty, Ind. Marry McAuley and wife, have „ ■ ... ... . I Only 25 cts. will pay for the Stau-
Piskss until after the November elec-
tion.
A\ alter Saltmarsb and wife, of Indianapolis, visited relatives and friends
here, on Sunday.
Dr. Poucher and Rev. L. D. Moore
_ ,, _ , attended District Conference, at polls, have been visiting Orville Earle Center Pointi thl9 week . nfed family. little daughter of Thomas ■Mrs. Goltra, who was the guest of Brant aged six nlonth8i died on Dr Overstreet and wife, has returned j u |y pt, of summer complaint. ■ Craw fords\ ilie. The Wheeler’s Post says that bicy- ■ Died, on July 10, of flux, ’' d| t < cles will be reduced in price greatly daughter of William Jameson, aged during the Dext twelve months. ■ie year and six months. Base ball at Stilesville, on Friday, ■ Mrs. Mitchell and Mrs. Davis, who was between the Hubs of this city pere visiting A. T. Kelly^and family, ftnd the Stilesville giants, score 28 to
13, in favor of Stilesville.
have returned to Terre Haute.
■
Dr.J. C. Ridpath returned from John Klein, of Indianapolis, is the Chicago, on Saturday night; during new ppeber for the Hubs; he is said
his visit to the Windy City he was
quite sick.
I Phil Kreigh, Indiana’s largest
to be very effective, and never makes a noisey kick, as he is deaf and dumb. Farmers living near Greencastle
bodied and biggest hearted citizen, who have , 0(?8 they desire 8awed into
was a caller at the Star-Pkkss
on Saturday.
Miss Cromwell, of
lumber would do well to confer with the Greencastle Manufacturing Com-
Washington p any . 3tl4
• township, has been conducting a The Old Settlers Picnic and Soldiers very interesting series of revival Reunion is to be held this year, at meetings at Brazil. Quincy, on Thursday, Aug. 13. Good The Greencastle Manufacturing speaking, plenty of music, and a most Company has a first-class saw mill, enjoyable time are promised.
and is prepared to do custon sawing. Mill located on old rolling mill site, opposite Vandalia freight depot. 3U4
Jesse W. Weik returned from New Jersey, on Saturday, whither he had been to assist in giving Hobart the
.
ft The Haymakers of this city; have information that he had been offered elected the following officers: John U p for sacrifice as the Republican Cannon, past chief haymaker; John nominee for Vice President. Mr. F. Maloney, chief haymaker; Fred j Weik was one of the spokesmen on Peyton, overseer; J. Champer, K. of this auspicious occasion. B; J. Kiefer, C. of S; John Cannon, ^ horse and buggy was stolen representative to Grand lodge. from Mr. Hays, at Roachbale, on July H A horse ran away on the gravel 4, and the horse came back the next ■read west ot this city, last Monday day, minus the buggy and harness. ■ morning, and gave Mrs. Etta White Marion Leach was arrested for the *a close call for her life. She and her theft, and had a preliminary examilittle daughter were in the buggy nation on Friday. He was held for when the horse began to run, and trial at the next term of Putnam ! tho^little girl jumped out in safety, Circuit Court, and Sherifl Glidewell ' but as Mrs. White attempted to get was sent for to escort the prisoner to out her feet became fastened in the jail. Before the ShorifTs arrival |: back of the buggy, and she was car- j Leach made bis escape and has not j, ried in this position for quite a long ( yet been found. Ho is good for a
£137,000,000. It is estimated that
£12,000,000 per year is usen in the
arts, so deducting £48,000,000 it would leave £89,009,000 to go into money. It is estimated that £6,040,000 have been destroyed by wear and loss, so that, according to these figures there would be available, for the four years ending with 1895, £82,i!00,000 for coinage purposes. Now, il wo div ide that sum by four, it will leave £20,625,000 or ?103,125,000 of gold to be fought for and divided between all the gold standard countries ot the world. Does it look reasonable to suppose that there should be no increase in the volume of money greater than would come from the division of 8103,125,000 per year’.’ Look at It? There are certainly ten countries on a substantial gold standard. It each one of these should get a tenth only of this increase, there would be a
little over $10,000,000 for each. But of this increase in the last four
years what did the united States get? Not a dollar except what it issued its bonds for. It has all gone into the four great nations, France, Great Britian, Austria and Russia, for Germany has lost over $20,000,000 of gold, while Russia has virtually absorbed all of the increase, having
added to her gold stock £10,000,000. 'Hie Economiste European says:
“During the years 1851-55 the world’s annual production of gold averaged
£23,8000,000. Sauerbeck’s index
number for the year 1850 was 77, while that of 1855 was 101, showing that, during these periods, the new
gold had at once given a great im
pulse to the general movement of human industry and enterprise, with a continuous rise in prices amounting to 31 percent. During the last
lour years on the contrary, with an
unheard of production of gold, averaging £34,240,000 per year, the
general level of gold prices for com modities fell by at least 14 per cent,
Sauerbeck’s index number for 1892
facts and he quotes from a speech delivered on the Hoor of the United States senate in March last. The
speaker said:
From January, 1879, to Julv 1, 1801, the greenbacks presented for redemption were only a little over $34,000,000 $34,000,000 in 13 years and not a treasury note was ever presented for redemption prior to October 14, 1891, and yet we exported from January, 1879, to July 1, 1891, over $339,0o0,000 in gold. There was no raid on the treasury. From July 1, 1891, to October 1, 1895, $275,000,000 of greenbacks ha:l been redeemed in gold. From July 14, 1891, to October 1, 1895, $7ti,000,000 of treasury notes had been redeemed in gold. Over $351,000,000 ot gold was taken from the treasury from July 1, 1891, to October 1, 1895, a little over four years, and yet in the 13 preceeding’ years, with $346,000,000 of greenbacks outstanding, only $34,000,000 had ever been presented for redemption. Both notes were used to raid the treasury
and take gold.”
On further reading of this speech, 1 find that on October 8, 1891, the
Coined, But Not Remonetized. The assertion of the gold standard I
advocates that because a certain a- An Ea3y w t0 Kef . p comfort-
mount of silver lias been coined since i
1873, the people have no cause for | able
complaint, Is one of those half truths! ltUonI >' tlirou Kii food that the human that are more dangerous and mislead- ,,<K b' is "usiaiDtii. Food makes good blood ing than a downright falsehood. int i» j.roparly digested. Theproj er operaAstho Post-Dispatch pointed out of the organa of the body will he carrecently, it is quite trus that silver bed on perfectly as a rule if one will abandon has been coined everv year since 1878.: tt ”'" tobacco, whisky, cofTi-e. etc. According to Muhleman, there were I 8to,,1,Kh nuickly recovers itself and doe* its
422,333,208 silver dollars coined be-1 work correctly.
tween 1878 and 1895. Potsmasterl Those who find it hard to give up coffee General Wilson points to this and to cao<1 ° “"easily if they win use Postum the fact that few silver dollars were teed in its place. This is made of pure coined for circulation prior to 187;; K r »in« hut looks and ■•mells like fine coffee, and asks why there is a cry that ' vllile 1111 '* olll - v i:,c neuts of wheat, etc., slver has been struck down and which are nourishing and fattening, must be restored to its rights as be- Postum Cereal i-; eminently the drink for tore 1873. j hot Weather as it contains all the elements This is not a question of coinaire. °f fcod nececsury for the body and helps one If the government should coin ail “i 1 *' 1 ' 1 the nervous strain on the system
the silver in the country and then j during the heated term,
bury it in the ground, how would it!
benefit the people? It is a question There is but one genuine original Postum of legal tender of restoring to silver bereal coffee, with a multitude of imiiaits constitutional standing as one of lions, offered as "just as good."
the money ni>‘tals.
,,T, _ ,r 11,11 It in not giving away any secret to say When the gold Htiindfird nien a ly th.tt many a Wtiman wear - another image we have ill circulation silver dollars in hi r hea'rt from the one she carru-s ill her
amounting to $428,000,000, they do not tell the truth. Maurice L. Midde-
distance, but fortunately she was not seriously injured. Real Estate Transfers. J. M. Schultz, assignee, to S. M. Durham, land in Russell tp., $559.20. J. M. Schultz, assignee, to W. H. Durham, land in Russell tp., . U. N. Loan Asso. to N. B. Dickey, land in Marion tp., $4,800. U. N. Loan Asso. to N. B. Dickey, land in Marion tp., $50. W. W. Seller to E. F. Walker, land in Greencastle tp., $1000. Lawrence Lewis to Home B. & L. Asso., lot in Greencastle, $500. J. E. Garner to A. T. Hillis, land in Greencastle tp., $3,250. S. L. James to C. W. & B. M. Allen, lot in Lockridge, $800.
Awarded
fTighess Honors—World's Ftii,’
term at Jeffersonville if be is captured. A^er his escape bloodhounds were secured and put on his track, and he was traced beyond North Salem, but at this writing we have not heard of his capture, and this fact is strange, especially as he was handcuffed when.mu» he made his dash for liberty out of and the Roachdale depot. The report is that other crimes, besides horse stealing, are alleged against him, and there is proof to hack the allegations.
was 72, and that for 1895 was 72, while for the month of march last it had further fallen to 60.7. When the immense volume of gold sent out from California went into the commercial world, between 1849 and 1855 there was free coinage of gold and silver; or, in other words, in all countries of the world except England, silver was coined free and used along side by side with gold For that reason one may note the strides the world’s progress and prosperity during those years, while today, with all the Increase in the gold production there is stagnation in business and steadily declining prices. Today there is no free coin age of silver. He that runs can read the reason lor the different results.
man, Deptuy Assistant Treasurer of tile United States at Now York, in his “ M onetary Systems of the World,” which is recognized as a standard work, distinctly states that, these silver dollars so coined are held on deposit for silver certificates, and that
locket.
Don’t think because you are sick and nothing seems to give you relief that you
can't he cured.
There must be a cure for you some where. If your doctor can’t cure you, perhaps he has mistaken the cause. Anybody is liable
to make a mistake sometimes.
One in three of us suffer from indigestion, and one out of three dyspeptics doesn’t know it. That is, he may know he is sich,
only a limited amount actuatlv cir- bbimen it to «omi ihiQB eiiu-
^ orrv nr\t\ * Indigestion is the cause of half of our
culato not nior© tlmn $*)0,000 ? 000 to dangerous diseases.
$60,000,000 at any onetime -less than Shaker .Digestive Cordlil.msde from tonic
$1 for each inhabitant of the United
States.
These silver certificates, like the silver dollars they represent, are merely “warehouse receipts” for the coin on deposit. They are not legal tender. And it is for legal tender for silver that the people are now
fighting.
A Business Man s View.
It has long been a false assumption and boast of the gold standard supporters that they include practically all the active and intelligent men
shaker Digestive Cordial, made
medicinal roots and herbs, is the most natural cure for indigestion. It relieves the symptoms and cures the disease gently, naturally. efficiently, giving fresh life, strength
and healtli to sick dyspeptics.
At druggists. Atrial bottle for 10 cents. A woman may not care to marry a man who professes to love her, but she will never forgive him if he marries some one else.
The Habita of Children
•Should be closely watched and regulated by mothers. Carele.sness in childhood often leads to serious troubles in after life. The digestive organs and bowels should be kept in tile best passible condition to insure good healtli. not only for the present, but for
Di Caldwell’s Syrup Pi p sin ,
a harmless but potent remedy, corrects all
of '
the business world. Never true, the ] such eviis'in children. Twcn'ty 'doses for claim is farther from the truth to-day chlldr vn ioc.,at w, w. Jones. " 3m5i than e%er before. I Thereis one advantage about the folding In a signed letter George A. Bayle, bed. Even the timi lest Old maid dose n’t active 111 St. Louis business circles, j hl * ve to lo,,k lo see therv >8 a mail under it.
president of the Repulilican club of points out the inherent hypocrisy of! ... ... ,,
" the claim that international agree !
CStEAM
BAKING POWDER MOST PERFECT MADE. rt p-ite Crape Cream of Tartar Powder. Frei from Ammonia, Alum or any other adulter,ttu 40 YEARS THE STANDARD.
Trouble at Barnard. A special dated July 12 says: Conductor McKern, who was in charge of the Indianapolis, Decatur and Western passenger going east on Saturday night, had a dangerous ex- | perience with three desperadoes at j Barnard, some thirty miles west of i Indianapolis. The train was just leaving the station when three men grabbed the conductor and pulled him off the ! steps and began to beat him. Brakei man.Shaller jumped off and ran to McKern’s assistance, but the men ! proved too much for the two and one | of them held McKern down and was j beating him savagely, while the other two assaulted Shaller. Fortunately ] Engineer Scooley looked back from i his cab, and, seeing the trouble, backed down the track, and Fireman j Alrich left the train to help the con-
I ductor.
A general’ fight ensued, in which many blows were struck, but the three men were not intimidated till Baggageman Jameson jumped from his car with a revolver in his hand and threatened to shoot them.
Awful Results of the Gold Stand-
ard Robbery.
TuleJo Evening Times.
From every quarter, and with alarmingly frequent recurrence come the reports ot failures. Not the failure of wild-catting or baseless business bubbles. On the contrary nearly all the failures are concerns that have been doing a legitimate
liberty out of and prosperous business. The his-
tory of these failures is plenty assets, but no money to meet current
demands.
If there is one financial fact, better settled than any other, it is the fact that the volume of business and the measure of values. If one-half the basis money is destroyed, one-half the values of property is destroyed and the volume of business as measured in dollars is also shrunk. Notwithstanding all the subterfuges and false pretenses of the money power, this fact asserts itself in the business world and is a full and complete answer to all single gold standard argu-
ments and buncoism.
Shrinkage ol value, by artificial, un-
Boston, in a letter to Secretary Foster, asked: “Are not the present notes redeemable in either gold or silver coin at the United States treasury? Does the government so redeem them when presented?” To which Secretary Foster replied: Treasury notes are redeemed in gold when so presented for redemption at the treasury or any assistant treasury of the United States.” On the following day Phineos Pierce, of Boston, presented a $1,000 greenback at the subtreasury of that cit v, but as the official in charge, Mr. Kennard, had received no instructions to redeem these notes in gold, the gold was refused. A wire to Secretary Foster, however, brought the reply: Assistant Treasurer Kennard has been instructed to redeem treasury notes in gold.” This opened “Pandora’s box,” and since then the gold hoarders have fallen over each other in their haste to secure the yellow metal, withdrawing it from the treasury as fast as it could he replaced by the sale of bonds. The redemption of greenbacks and treasury notes in gold is a voluntary assumpfion on the part of the secretary of the treasury, and in direct opposition to the clause ot the law of July 14, 1890, so states
my authority.
By those who upheld the secretaries, of tho treasury, Foster and Carlisle, in redeeming these notes in gold, the people were told that the sale of bonds was necessitated because of a lack of revenue to meet the expenses of the government. More revenue, has been the cry, and Senator Sherman said he would be willing to tax tea and coft'ee, so great was the demand for revenue, while at the same time praises were sung to the Rothschild-Belmont-Morgan syndicate for their patriotism in coming to the rescue of the government and saving our national honor. Nothing has done so much to aid the tree silver sentiment in tins country as the recent sale of government bonds. Rightly or wrongly, the people are opposed to an accumulation of the national debt in the shape of bonds in time of peace; and should the country be so unfortunate as to elect a president and a majority of both houses of congress favorable to the free and unlimited coinage of silver, a large share of the blame can belaid at the door of the treasury
raiders.
In addition, the people have been told that the government has been compelled to pay out gold in order to maintain the parity between the two metals. It is in honor to our government that a dollar, having only the intrinsic value of50 cents is made to pass current with gold, having the greater value, but the
,. . — | Distresaiiin Kiilney anrl bladder disease*
month are a necessary preliminary to relieved m six h.uirs i, y the n, w Great
silver coinage. Mr. Bayle writes; Does not protection mean Ameri-
South American Kidney Cure." This new remedy is a great surprise on account of it*
aaucB lion pawwv wvm. *•** <*•* exceeding promptness tr relieving pain in can commerce independent of inter- the bladder, kiduev-. hack and • very pan of national trade? The goldbugs prate Ithe urinary passage in male or female. It about international agreements in ! ^'mos^imme’dmuiy 0 ' 1 'if 1 “you ^ni financial matters; why not interna-1 quick relief and cure this ; 8 yourr remedy, tiiinnl Airreemenls in matters Ol’ Sold by Albert Allen, Druggist, Greencastle
Ind.
tional agreements in matters of tariff? Where the business is done, the money will come. Finance fol-
lows and seeks business.
The political trade which put high protection and the gold standard into one platform is certainly a sorry shift. The one is a defiance of foreign nations; the other a surrender to them. Mr. Bayle brings out clearly the fact that international tariff arrangements are as practicable and as necessary as international monetary arrangements. But he is particularly strong in the two compact sentences: “Where the business is done the money will come. Finance
follows and seeks business.”
How long will it take the entire business not banking world to real-
ize this vital truth? Some Plain Facts.
The New York World sums up some facts for the people to digest in
the present campaign:
The McKinley tariff law threw away about $50,000,000 a year in sugar taxes. It red need the revenues of the country in two years from $229,000,000 to $117,-
Druggist, Greencastle
lyl4
Yours for Health.
The Salt River Valley of Arizona and the various health resorts in New Mexico are unrivalled for the cure of chronic lung and throat diseases. Pure, dry air; an equable temperature; the right altitude; coustant sunshine. Descriptive pamphlets, issued by Passi nger Department of Santa Fe Route. contain such complete information relative to these regions as invalids need. The items of altitude, temperature, humidity. hot springs, sanatoriums. cost of living, medical at tendance, social advantages, etc., are concisely treated. Physicians are respectfully asked to place this liter iture in the hands of patients o ho seek a change of climate. Address. Geo. T. Gcnsip, G:neral Agent, Cincinnati, O. tf Are you Going to Cripple Creek? The Santa Fe Route is the most direct and only through broad-guage line from Chicago and Kansas City to the celebrated Cripple Creek gold mining district. Luxurious Pall in Ana, free reclining chair cars, fastest time and low rates. A beautifully illustrated book, descriptive of Cripple Creek, will be mailed free of charge on application to Geo. T. Ounnip General Agent, Cincinnati, O., or a copy, maybe obtained from any agent of Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway. tf
P prfc" |
of life’s necessities by adding to I
natural and uncalled-for means, is the I people can not believe that the financial crime of today. It lias prac-j sacrifice is made unnecessarily burtically bankrupted farmers and labor-! densome at their expense. era, and now it is reactiing and pound-: ing come sense into the heads of the! In Germany unbreakable mirrors
“upper strata.” Business men arc! have been manufactured from tran . , being forced to recognize this fact, sparent celluloid. The silvering is anarchists know, a better goltl stum • m < -x, I? . . _ * I . ... i_* . .. i . .. •.J*. til OH I ”
protective duties and consequently
tojprkes.
The present tariff law was coupled with an income-tax provision which was expected to yield a large revenue from rich corporations and wealthy men. This tax was overthrown. But even without it, and in spite of present business dspression the existing law produced $16,000,000 more revenue in its first vear than the McKinley law did the* year before, and has produced $12,000,000 more in the eleven months of this fiscal year than the McKinley law did in the first eleven months of its last year. This year’s showing would have been even better but for the extension of the bonded period for liquor. Several millions of taxes from this source, which would otherwise have been paid this year, have been post-
poned to future years.
In view of these facts is it not folly or worse to base a campaign on the plea that a restoration of NlcKinleyism will yield ample revenues and
cure our financial ills’?
The gold men who have been calling the free silver men anarchists have gained an encouraging ally in Herr Most. He is the most rabid of the real anarchists of the East and said to-day: “Here I am represented by the Sun as a follower and supporter of Altgeld, Tillman and all the other silver cranks, when I am, as all
i fci vs. Parris L. Miller. Complaint No. 5751. Now comes the Plaintiff, by I O. Colliver, her Attorney, and files her complaint herein, for divorce, together with an affidavit that said defendant Parris L. Miller, is a non-resident of the .St ite of Indiana. Notice is therefore hereby given said Defendant, that unless he be and appear on the 2d day of the next Term of the Putnam Circuit Court, said term beginning September 7, A. D. 1896, at the Court House in the Citv of Greencastle, in said Count v and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined iu his Absence. Witness my name, and the seal of said Court, affixed at the city of Greencastle, this bth day of July, A. D. 18%. DANIEL T. PARNALL, Clerk. P. O. Colliver, Plff.’s Atty. it IS
They will discover that an appre- backed by a second celluloid plate, elated currency is good only for the giving thus a mirror surface on both creditor—that it is ruin to the debtor sides, or forming a double mirror,
and destroys all business enterprise.'
For this reason, the poor producers, How’s This! who Were the first victims of this in- We offer One Hundred Dollar, reward for
famous crime, can take it as cool ns any cnite of ratarrh that cannot be cured by possible. The largest business con-| a 8 4 “k. j. cheney & co..Toledo, o. cents will soon find out where they We, the undersigned have known F. .1 ,
nrp at too Then a nrotest will tro Cheney for tlie last l r > year., and believe him llg we ll he put in circulation as curare at, too. inen a protest, win go a b)ein ((11 bu|ln(iiis trahH:u US W correct up against the British system of { ion8 and flnam iaiiy abie to carry out any rency. Uolil 18 tne only
Township Trustee’s Sot ire.
I will he at my office, located in my house At Oftkalla, on Saturday of each w< • i.. tend to such of my official duties as
to atcan be
the business of issu-
transacted on that day-
ing orders and receiving vouchers will be especially attended to ou these days. 17tf O. F. Lewis, Trustee.
ard advocate than even the most rr. bid Wall street banker. I am, moreover, in favor of a scarcer material than gold as the unit ot value. I would have the karat of diamonds, if diamonds could be utilized, as the medium of exchange. As for silver money, why silver is so cheap and plentiful that shoe nails might
robbery of the producer. obligations made by their linn. It T mui e t ft wo n rk 9 W Ac< i or<li,,K i8 to th The '^Vru^S
eternal order of things, it must work. 4a Hall’» Catarrh Cure'ia takrn internally.
The shrinkage of values must come. ^Vf^e^o'rtb^Viatem' b Te 0 a < timo‘l
mucous
Testimoir«].« se"*
Let those who know the cause wait ^ ^'botV:;' 8o'd by ai; °‘V7Vni ' Je |until others learn. Drnmrisua. wilted foliage.
■tandard of t nlue.’
In tropical forests so large a pro portion of the plants are of the sensitive variety that sometimes the path ot'a traveller maybe traced by the
Druggist#.
Toirn^hif} Truster'* Xoth r. I wull attend to the business of my office on Tuesday and Friday of each week, at my • ffice, iu the store of James Bridges, ut Fillmore, and on these days will issue 'orders and receive vouchers, ami at no other time. tfl7 David M. Chadd, Trustee.
Trust* r's Xiitice. I will attend to my official duties as Trustee of Washington township on the second, fourth and fifth Saturduysof each month .• Reelsville, and on Wednesday of each week at ray residence. ISt}* S. O. Bond.
Best Bicycles * to buy are the Sunol, Hercules, Stella,
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