Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 August 1896 — Page 1
Vot. 33, No 14
GREENCASTLE, INI)., AUG. 1, I89G.
l
f 8 *:. w ,. Vol. ‘.’4 No 1G
Highest of all in Leavening Powe. —Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
aking
ABSSMJOTES.V PURE
CITY AND COUNTY Roy Abrams went to Chicago on
Saturday.
Mrs. Janies B. Nelson is home from
Greenwood.
Watermelons plenty in market and .elling allow figures. Jersey heifer calves for sale; call on or address J. A. Keller. itlfi J. S. Dowling and J. C. Baker have returned from Colorado. Mrs. Dr. Bence and children visited relatives at Indianapolis, the first of
the week.
Mrs. Marion Hurst has shown us
a very beautiful bunch of gold band
lilHes as fine as ever grown. Mrs. Frank Spurrier, of Indiana-
polis, who has been visiting her fath
A. J. Smedley continues seriously sick. Miss Laura Lane is home from Tene Haute. J. H. Donan was here from St. Louis on Sunday. Mrs. Margaret Beck attended camp meeting at Battle Ground. J. P. Allen, Jr., returned from Liberty, Ind., on Saturday. Mrs. Florence Dunbar^has returned from a visit to relatives at Earl Park. Dr. Williams, who was visiting his sister, Mrs. H. S. Renick, has returned home. Mrs. Hardy, of Indianapolis, has been here visiting her parents, Capt. • W. P. Wimmer and wife. John H. Moreland has been
er, James Brandon, and other rela- appointed administrator of the estate
of Martha E. Bales, deceased. William Paisley and wife, who
were guests of Mrs. John Irvin, re-
turned to Boston on Saturday. Ben Bass, charged with carrying
gambling devices, was fined $25, and
ioing
lives here, left for Detroit, where she will spend the summer, on Monday
last.
Dr. H. H. Morrison, one of Putnam county’s leading thinkers, made a short speech at Brick Chapel, on
Friday night, in which he defined not being able to pay, he is
his ideas of the political situation, time in jail.
and announced that he was for Bryan j Services at St. John’s Episcopal for President, and he urged his hear-! Church, on Sunday afternoon, at 3 ers to vote for Bryan and free coin- o’clock, to he conducted by Rev. A. age, and thereby break the shackles e. Pressey. All are cordially invited, which a gold standard and the Farmers living near Greencastle Republican party has fastened upon who have logs they t , esire 9awe d into ^ em ' . j lumber would do well to confer with Company 1 went to camp at Fair- the Greencastle Manufacturing Cornview, last Saturday, with the follow- pany. 3tll ingoffleers and men: Capt. E.G. Fry; Maynard L. Daggy made an elo1st Lt., John M. Morris; 2nd Lt„ W-| qU e„t and a strong address before a
H. Graham; 1st Sergt., W. J. Sandy;
Voices of The Fathers. A correspondent signing hinisc’f ••American," writing from this city to the Iinliauapoli' Sentinel, -ay-.: A certain class of * individuals are now engaged in denouncing the Chicago platform for being what they term ••revolutionary" in it- character. Their evident ignorance is nian-ife-t, a- they denounce these principles of true democracy in oik* breath and then eulogize the great statesmen of the past in the ncNt, Would be ntmtsiiig it it were not so pitiable. For the special edification of tlic-e followers of the plutocratic hand wagon as well as for the patriots we append a few extract- trout the utterances of the men who have helped to make the pages of American history. Thomas Jctler-on said: ••Hank (taper mu-t be suppressed and the issue ot circulating medium restored to the nation to which it belongs. Banking e-tablishmcnts arc more dangerous than standing armies." Daniel Webster said: "No nation can long remain free where the tendency of the laws is to concentrate the wealth into the hands ofthefew." Governor Morton, the memory of whom ever Itidinniaii reveres, once said in -peaking of the financial manipulators: ••There is gathered around the capitol of this nation a gang of pirates who thundered -tte-eo-gfiilly at the doors until they have drawn this government into the mo-t preposterous acts ot had faith and legalized robbery that ever oppressed a tree nation since the dawn of
history.’’
Andrew Jack-on, who, if living tolay, would he -hindered as an
Who Has That Money? Philadelphia Farm Journal. r l lie total value of all cereals tobucco and cotton grown in the I'nited
State- in Isitl. wa-
The total value of these same products grown in Isfiu was fl.slttjli,-
•') 17.
This shows a shrinkage in value of
NLW STATE SEALS.
farm
•rops in I s!).") under those of Ih'Jl j ot 2s. 72J.!) I’.l. (Crop values and |
farm valtu
i
ign trade was f..A<Nt flRtr -n-...,,. last year than in previous year, that she i- ling floit.tKMt.otiO of this uni in battle ships and naval armaments. and that steamships have been busy all summer hauling gold on* of the l nitod States. ($13,(JIHI,(XJO in eleven months.) Much complaint come- to us from all parts of this country of a great scarcity of money: crops are abundant hut (trices very low : many of the exchanges on the people are being carried on by barter, by trading eggs and butter for sugar and eotlee : fruits and vegetables for hoots and
.... , , calicoes : snd it is a well known fact •anarchist’ by those who are hurling j that there was withdrawn front cireti-epiihet-at the defenders of human iatiml during the first six mouths of rights, -aid in vetoing the rutted j tin* pr-ent year *S.').(Kkmkki. and -inee States hank hill, on duly Id. Is32: |Jiiue 1.no less a stuii thninMol,* "Most of the difiiculty our govern- Therefore, in behalf of the
tVyimitug and I tah Hava* Heef-ntty Had
Ttielrft
The states of Wyoming and Utah have recently had their seals made, and are now affixing them to all public documents emanating from the governor or secretary of state, says the Washington National Tribune. That of Wyoming represents a pedestal Mhowing
have been steadily shrink- on the front an eagle resting u(x»n a ng since l>d!.) shield. Upon the shield are engraved The eoM of labor, taxes insurance, o star, and the figure “44,’’ Ik*ing the interest, repairs, etc, were nearly a- number of Wyoming in the order of adgreat in lS!X) as in IV.H. so there mu-tj mission to statehood. Standing upon be a li>" ot at least $.4(10,000,000 to tl.e; the pedestal is the draped figure of a American farmer in the year IMK). woman modeled after the statue of ■Now, we want to know who has that) “The Victory” at the Louvre, from
1 whose, wrists hang the links of a broken chain. In the right hand she holds a staff, from which lioats a banner bear1 lug the words “Equal Right*.” This I suggests the political (xisition of a woman in this state. On either side of the pedestal, standing ut its base, tire figures typifying the live stock and mining industries of Wyoming. Behind the pedestal, and in the background, are two pillars, each Fup(xirt-
r
rn.T
farmer- of the I’nited States, who are groat sufferers by the above condi-
tion-, we demand to know Who Has Th i r Mon i
We want tlm-e $.’i(K 1,0hi.tkki accounted for and we want < )ur Folks to help us tind out what has become of them
2nd Sergt., E. E. Evans; 3rd Sergt., Oscar O’Hair; 4th Sergt., George H. Steele; 5th Seigt., James Rhea; 1st Corp., W. J.Allen; 2nd Corp., Chas. Donohue; 3rd Corp., Paul Allen; 4th Cor., Omer Newhouse. Privates C. J. Allen, Ed Brockway, Wm. Brown, Ralph Cooper, Geo. Calloway, Will Conklin, Chas. Denny, Homer Denny, C. Davis, I. Evans, Edgar Ellis, Chas. Ellis, Heber Ellis, Earl Fisk, Frank Curtis, Will Grooms, Forest Hughes,
large audience, at Brick Chapel, on Friday night; about twenty Greencstle people went out to hear him.
The Greencastle
incut eneouiiters, and most of th dangers impending over mtr union have sprung from an abandonment of the legitimate object of government by our national legislation. Many of our rich men not been eontent with equal benefits, hut have
besought us to make them richer by | and how they may he recovered, act of emigre-' By attempting to Pos-ihly the corner in gold has-ome-gratify their de-ire-wo have, in th ■ | thing to do with it! It the farmer’-re-tilts of our legi-hition, arrayed j crop-, when they came to he -old. n • tion. interest were to be measured by the gold the agaiii-t intere-t and man again-t man London Shyloek own-, might Ihi- not in a t’earlul commotion which threat-1 be the reason the price i- -o low? ons to-hake tin* foundation of tin* The dollar now -eem- to 1>e able to
union. If we cannot at once, in
Company has a first-class saw mill, and is prepared to do custou sawing. Mill located on old rolling mill site, opposite Vandalia freight depot 3tl4 At College Ave. Church la-t Sunday evening, a joint meeting of Epworth Leagues and Christian Endeavor Societies was held. There was
Manufacturing ju-tiec to intcrc-ts vested in improvi-
Henry Higert, Wm. Irwin, H. M. j splendid music by Paul Burlingame, Jordan, Fred Jacobs, H. G. Kennet, | Susie Talbott, Lillie Graham, Maud Earl Lane, A. M. Lockridge, A. G. I Burk, and others, and addresses by Myers, Jas. Moss, Ed O’Hair, Ray Miss Lenora Alspaugh, Miss Sallie O’Hair, Guy O’Hair, Fred Payton, H. Sellers, Mr. Farley, Mr. Hawkins,Mr.
E. Reeves, Geo. Reising, Adam Reis- Allen and others, ing, D. M. Springer, W. M. Slice- Obituary
maker, Will Glideweli, F. A. Warren. John Samuel Fltnn ’ is the third
t- T™ a. a. m r S child of John Hiul IfaTV Flinn. atid Real Estate Transfers. was ,, ortl April ,*,, 1852. in Marion
J. L. Jewett to Franklin Vermillion, | town-hi(), Putnam Co.. Ind., on the land in Clinton tp., $SOO. same farm and near the same t-o-i-Tr^onUitr, t r e. u dene? where he died on July 23, 1896, Franklin \ermtllton to J. L. & t** | ttt the age of 4! vear-, 3 month- and Jewett, land in Clinton tp., f800. j; day-. Of a family of fourgirls and
G. W. & H. Grubb, guard., to S. & W. F. Massey, land in Madison tp.,
$382.22.
G. W. Grubb et al. to S. & W. F. Massey, land in Madison tp., $3,057,77. Annie Anderson to Trustee of Franklin tp., lots in Carpentersville, . Sidney Cook to F. B. Garrett, land in Clinton tp., love. V. J. Cox to I. I. Macy, land in Greencastle tp., $60. 8. T. Denny to A. S. Young and F. M. Demoret, lot in Roachdale, $500. E. Grantham to S. T. Denny, lot in Roachdale, $225. E. V. Brookshire to A. & J. E. Allison, lot in Roachdale, $900. H. C. & I. B. Elliott to E. V. Brookshire, lot in Roachdale, $1,200. T. M. & M. F. Layne to E. A. Wood et al., trustees, lot in Cloverdale, $345. E. & P. C. Wood to Avarilla Stringer, land in Mill Creek tp., $650. W. R. McElroy to P. & C. F. Mc/Cullough, land in Washington tp.,
$2,000.
Saul Marshall, admr., to Lunney Marshall, land in Clinton tp., $137.
Awarded
tflghesi Honors—World’a Foie
•DR;
five boys, he is the first one to b called away. He was united in marriage to Mary C. Reeves, March 14,1*;-. To this union two children were born—Maud, sixteen years of age, and Silas, aged five. These with their mother are left to mourn the loss of a kind, loving and indulgent father. He would do all possible for the comfort and pleasure of his family and was a good neighbor and citizen, of a cheerful disposition, kind to the poor, often helping them in many ways. Mr. Flinn was one that took great pride in his occupation, having one among the best cultivated farms in the county. He believed in an allwise and merciful God, and his la-t days and hours were spent in calling upon Him for mercy. His parting words to his dear wife and daughter were to prepare and make ready for the eventful hour of death. J. H. N.
dent legislation, make our government what it ought to be, wo can at least take a stand against all new grant-ot motirtp ilio- ami exclusive privileges again-t any prostitution of our government to the advancement of the few at the expon-eof the many, and in favor of compromise and gradtul reform in our code of lawami system ofpolitieal economy.” From the pen of Abraham Lincoln came these prophetic word-: Alter writing of the fearful cost of the civil war Mr. Lincoln continued: “It has been indeed a trying hour
buy two bu-hels ot’ wheat instead of one; soon it will buy three Lu-hcl-A- Shyloek tighten- hi- grip on gold which measure- property, down goes
the price of crop-, and Down goes the Farm, Down goes the Farmer.
Down goes the Merchant. I town goo- the Manufacturer,
1 town goe- the Laborer, I tow n goes I Ik* 1 )octnr,
1 town gne- the (’arpenter, Down goe- the Blacksmith, Down goes the Poor Debtor.
Down goe- I ndcpetuleee, I town goe- Liberty, Down goe- the Flag.
for the feint hi ie, but I see in the near Down goe- evervbodv and even
future a eri-i- approaching that unnerves mo and causes mo to tremble for the safety ot my country. As a result ot the war corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of (he country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the republic is destroyed. 1 feel at this moment more anxiety lor the safety of my country than ever before, even in the
midst of the war.”
The Hon. William Wimloni. late Unite l State- -enator, and secretary of the treasury, said: "The channels of commerce, being owned and coin ruled by one man or a few men, what is to re-train corporate power or to fix a limit to it- exactions upon the people ? What is to hinder those men from depressing or inflating the values of all kinds of prosperity to suit there caprice or avarice and thereby gathering Into their own cotters the wealth •’
the nation? Where is such a (lower as this?
tiling else bat the dollar and—London
Shyloek.
Ditec more we demand to know Who II v- That Monky ?
log a lighted lamp, signifying the light of knowledge. Around the pillars supporting these lamps are scrolls bearing the words “Live Stock,” “Grain,” “Mines” and “Oil.” At the ba.se of the (iedest.il in front, nre the figures “1369,” “1890,” the former signifying the organization of the territory of Wyoming and the latter Hie date of its admission
to statehood.
The seal of the state of Utah is well composed. An eagle holds in its clawsix arrows and a Norman shield. This shield bears a hive on a pedestal, about which the bees are humming. The word “Industry” is emblazoned across the top of the shield and the figures “1847” are shown at the lower point. Behind the shield are cro--i*il two tings of the United States. Around the outer edge of the shield are the words: “The Great Seal of the State of Utah,
1S9G.”
A man may dress as r-ell as Ins own good taste, judgment and the assistance of an artistic tail r may elect. He may taki in- tubs’’ : as regularly as the most eientioua water cure doctor may dictate; but if his digest tv organs are out of order, hewill br.ve an un- i wh< lc» mie appearance. Hi- complex- 1 icn and the white of b.- eye- will have a yellowish east. His tongue win be ■ •: ■ t i t e p r. • teeth rusty, ids breaM* Voomin s’ 1- it i- one bin un-v ■ . de sig* of con- tipation. Worst if all, his temper is as ugly and in. rh lesotne to lire with a i- his p*tsi L man who haa » family and Utends, t say : ithing „f himself. will make an effort t'.t health The qnickest, St . iv i- to take Dr Pierce's Ph-aiant I’dht- They are made of r tin, d, eonri iilratt d vegetable extracts. Nothing in tie h-i-t harmful enters into th. n compositi n They hunt down all impurities, .ind make them move on They are the product of many years' study and practice Dr Pierre cannot afford to put forth a worth! -- or a spurious article Send for a free sample. If you would know yoursi lf and the Doctor better, send »r cents in one-eent stamps, to pay f It wrapping and | -,-tng • K ,. t hi- Common S< ;:-e Medical Advi-er i.»)8 ' pages profusi !v illustrated Addr.-.s, \\ iurn's Dispensary Med-i ical Association, Buffalo. N v " Hot sometime I h..d risen Or Pierce - Plea-ant Pellets for eonstipati n with in t aatisfact • • suits The winters Imvealwavs heeu very hard on my husband. tic too tried the Pellets.' They have made a new man f him We li.ivr used in all. sin botltes •• V :r. truly
North Parma Monroe i
N Y.
THE KARAIM JEWS.
CREAM
BAKING POWDER MOST PERFECT MADE. a p-rre Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Frea horn Ammonia, Alum or any other adulteran| 4P YEARS THE STANDARD.
West Cloverdale.
Mrs. Frank Ki.-er has been quite sick ....John Redmou tuu! family, of Bloomington, returned home lust week, after visiting relatives here Miss Bessie Taber visited Mrs. Caldwell last week The excursion to Jeffersonville was represented from this part by E. V. McYay and Albert | Riley Murl Abrams, of Greencasj tie, fins been visiting hisgrandmamn, ! Mrs. Welch Sam Chudd ami wife j visited friends at Greencastle last ! week Jas. Reeves and family Sun- ! uayed at Isaac Herbert’s Mr. i Rader and wife of Clay county, have 1 been guests of relatives and friends in tltis vicinity W. A. Kellum, of , Lewis, whose father died recently, is ’ making his home with his Uncle, Jas. | Reeves. Country Girl.
Deafness Cannot he Cured
I by local application as they cannot reach the j diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is; by constitutional remedies. Deafness is eauscii | by an mltamed conditlonof the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or ! imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely 1 closed. Deafness is the result, and unless the ! inflammation can be taken out and this tube
-hall he -aid of the spirit of a free people who will submit to be thus
hound hand and foot?”
And-o we might continue. These nil- but ti few typical extracts from men who have stood al the head of the nation’s eounsels. These men were not “cranks" they were not “anarchists.” They were men of wide experience and keen judgment, who. not being completely commercialized and not being advocate- of the doctrine of Cain, were enabled to discriminate between justice and injustice, between the right and wrong and, hence, gave to the world wordof patriotic warning w hich mu-t Ik* heeded il this nation i- to realize, under providence, the splendid destiny
of it- early protectors.
Women who are weak and nervous, who have no appetite and cannot sleep, fluri strength and vigor in Hood's Sarsaparilla.
The Gold Men Are Mixed.
The favorite war cry of the gold men began about a year or two ago, was that the free coinage of silver would catt-e thi- country to bo “flooded” with -ttcli an immense volume of silver money, and that money would become so plenty that workingmen would have to pay twice what they now do lor food and clothing and
other necessaries ot life.
The argument proved to be a perfect boomerang to the gold men for witli one voice ot the masses of people in the West and South sent tip a shout “let the flood of silver dollars come on, we can take care of all you can give us for our labor and its
products.”
So the guldbugs finding that the more they lamented about the dangers of an “immense flood of silver
the limit of j ( ( 0 (| ars " dii* better pleased the people And what I -(.cnied over tin* prospect; have
One Way by Which Uurtsians Snub Ortho- ;
tlox Hebrews.
The Karaim Jews number 3,000 or t.- I 000, and live principally in the Crimea. They speak a Tartar dialectumongt hem | selves, and ethnologically are much | more like Tartars than Semites, says [ the Saturday Review. Their own legends. in fact, permit the assumption ! that they were Khuz.ars, and were con- ) verted to Judaism in the eighth century. Their form of Judaism differs from that of the 5.000.100 or more orthodox HusFi.'in Jew* in rejecting the Talmud and traditional theology altogether, and confining itself strictly to the Mosaic revelation. It has been u favorite amusement with the Russians for generations to preter ! the greatest admiration and affection for this obscure little tribe. Mme. NovikotT had her joke on the subject in London when she gravely esored an interviewer some years ago that there never had been a law of any kind issued in Russia against the Jews. When this amazing assertion was questioned, she coolly* explained that she referred to the Karaim Jews, as in Russia they did not consider the disciples of the Talmud were Jews at all. Inasmuch as the Karaimites constitute only a twothousandth part of the Jewish race, if, indeed, it be conceded that they belong to it ail, the insolence of the Russian attitude toward them is iieouliarly exasperating to Hebrews in general, and the spectacle of their being brought forward at Moscow as the sole representatives of Israel will smart and rankle just as the genial Slavonic character desires that it should.
PLAS ENGINES
and BOILERS.
Get the Best
acd
Save Money
Do not buy until you have |read the ATI.AS Catalogue. Write for it to-day. * ATLAS ENGINE WORKS, | !* 0«lSox711. lndianapoIlM, Ind.
Best Bicycles •®***i‘- to buy arc the Suncl, Hercules, Stella.
A NOVEL ADVERTISEMENT.
finally taken up a new cry just the reverse of their former one, viz: that "if the country votes for free coinage at this fall’s election, the increase ot the volume of silver dollars will drive all the $fiOG,0(Kl.tKK) of gold out of circulation and thus produce an enormous contraction of the currency." Thus they are telling us two diametrically opposite stories; threatening us with two radically oppo-ite dangers and telling us that free coinage will produce both it contraction and an expansion of currency.at one
and the same time.
And the funny tiling about it
The people have long since learned that the most disagreeable medicines are not nec- 1 | essarily the best. In fact, as a rule, they are ,
If you eat what you like, ami digest it, you ^ not. What is wanted is something mild and ' W But'lf*you > dou''t ,n ftJe»t mi*,,, .1- ^ *“<=" "" Cl,amber.a.a'. Colic Cholera most as well not eat, for what good can your J and Diarrhoea Keraedy. That >» really food do you if it dosn't nourish you? pleasant to take when reduced with water
(lullt a Ilonnm-nt in the Cemetery for the Purpose. A splendid monument of Pierre Cahochard, grocer, stands in a conspicuous position in the cemetery of IVre la Chaise. It bears'a pathetic inscription,
ending:
“His inconsolable widow dedicates this monument to his memory, and continues the same business at tbc old place, 167 Rue Mouffetard.” A gentleman had the cariosity to call at the address given, soys Tit-Bits. “1 came to see the widow Cabochnrd.” ■aid the caller. “Well. sir. here she is." said the man. “1 beg pardon,” said the gentleman, “but I wish to see the lady herself." “Sir." was the answer, “I am the widow Cabochard." “I don’t exactly understand," quoth the visitor. “I allude to the relict of the lute Pierre Cabochard, whose monument 1 saw yesterday at Pere lu
Chaise.”
”1 see. I ?ee," was the smiling re-
that the -umc political editors and j Joinder. “Allow me to inform you that the .-ante political speakers are using ! Pierre Cabochard is a myth, and thereboth these absolutely contradictory ' fore never had a wife. The tomb you arguments at one and the sanie admired cost me a good deal of money; time. J and, though no one was buried there, it
proves a first-rate advertisement, and I
Of New York City, Has Opened a Drrss Cutting mid Sewing Which will be under the management of c utters of the highest reputation, not only aw skilled workmen, bat a* u ichers i ipable of properly imparting their knowledge to others. SPECIAL ATTENTION Oivep apprentice girls and beginners. Any one who is apt can be fitted t.i do their own work or for others in from four to Fix weeks Those wishing to fit themselves us first-class* cutters or foreladies in large establishments will receive private instruction**. Open evenings for those who cannot come during the day. Good teachers wanted to take charge of schools. Ladies living in the country Are Invited to QAll Afid 8( >r work and enter the school. Bayne Block. First Stairway E;>st of Postoffice. Free exhibition of work for the next tew flays. 4114
F\ II. I-ammei-H. V , \\.v\s\.e\Avw ia\\A ^vvrvfttotv Office—In Central National Bank Building Toil'H/tJiip Trust* c'* I will be at my office, located in . iv house at Oakalla, on Saturday of each week, to attend to such of my official duties as cun be transacted on that day—the 1 isiness of issuing orders and receiving vouchers will be especially attended to on these days. I7tf O. F. Lewis, Trustee.
Township Trust* * *s Xittice. I will attend to the busices> f my office on Tuesday and Friday of each week, at my office, in the store of James Bridges, at Fillmore. and on these days will issue rorders and receive vouchers, ami at no other time. tfl7 David M. Chadd, Trustee.
Trustee's Xutire, I will attend to my official duties as Trustee of Washington township on the second, fourth and fifth Saturdays of each month al lleelsville, and on Wednesday of each week at my residence. Itttf R. O. Bond.
lielirf in Si.r llour*. Distressing Kidney and Bladder diseases relieved in six hours by the “New Great South American Kidney Cure.” This new remedy is a great surprise on account of its exceeding promptness i»* relieving pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary passage in male or female. It relieves retention of water and pain in passing it almost immediately. If you want quick relief and cure this is yourr remedy. Sold by Albert Allen, Druggist, Greencastle lud. 1 >' 14 Call and examine our stock of
cj, , «U
c *' rRS ^ I Late-st styles and lowest ( rices, at
haYe ha-1 no cause to repret the expense.
Earthquake Observations.
Earthquake experts propose to establish a number of stations for sc ism o-
n 1-r.n,hat vmi can't iliiiest it. there is , . , , , , lish a numlKT of stations for sesmo-
11 y°u nna insi y °u can i oiKe.i ani | , W eetened. Then it >a acknowledge.! ....
a sin,pie help fo,'your stomach. , . I , . i .1 offtca okservattons around the earth.
restored to its normal condition, hearing failed to cure the worst case of indigestion. ! mi[Ut)er of )1r jlltB for ,| ie , )cgt renle( ] y cnmplet system of Studyinp earth- " f V0 8 u l ; e . n t f^*r n it h^s heen^iigeuSd snd h« j they have for diarrh.ra and fully nine out of quakes in the world, the stations will
gone Into the blood. j ten will recommend Chamberlain's. In j be Shanghai, Hong Kong, Calcutta, ald*to dtgeeVton! Shaker *D < 'ges°Uve Cordlsi?** o’’tbia medicine. Mr. II. B. Usffnm Sydney. Rome. Tncnbayn in Mexico. When you have acid erocutlona, nsusea. j of t ricndaville. Susquehanna Co.. Pa., «aj I'ort Natal, Cape of Good Hope, Sunti-
stfaker' Ihe sUMnacln^itc ^sinf'fonnd ago in UhiH. and Rio de Janeiro, al. com-
will be destroyed fofever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous
surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness caused by catarrh, that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
Send for circulars; free.
F. .1 CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.iDigestive Cordial will cure you.
id; Sold by Druggists, 75c. I At druggists. Trial bottle 10 cents.
it to be a most effective remedy,
j by all druggists.
For sale niunicating with a central station
uug
Stra-snurg.
| Bicknell’s.
In order to prevent confusion Between my individual accounts and those of the firm of Drs. Smythe & Tucker, it is desirable that all old debts, contracted prior to July 1, 1895, be closed without iinncess.try delay. 3tl5. G. C. Smythe. Glass and tin fruit cans, sealing wax, preserving kettles, brass and copper kettles, at lowest prices, at Bickneli’s, east side squuare. tf
i
