Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1896 — Page 6
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THE INDIANAPOLIS JOTJRNAL, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1896.
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J vwA nyc i it I i c stations. BliANCU Ori-iCLjj OF THE JOURNAL Rave been conveniently located at the following drug tores In the various sections of . U e city, from which ADVKr.TI.SKMKN ib WILL UH TELEPHONED Direct to this ofce at regular rates. CENTS PUP. LINlToF SEVEN WORDS, STATIONS latarra ar.J Tth Fta.-.-'. ITuhl. lielltr.-ntaine St.. No. 4'o CUuJe Fields. Chrita.i Ave.. No. 137 F.' LannUelle. Hi.Tord Ave., No. Kl-Pijillp Miller. College Ave. and Tth St. Geo. C. Fisher. Columbl Ave. an.l Tth St. Jeo. C. Iluch. t'olumbu and Hill Aves. K. C. lUmplon. Delaware and M Carty II. A. Pfaialri. Dillon and Fletcher Ave. IIu?o II. Iehmtter. Kast an t ilcCarty i.Vl. Keiek. rt. Wajne Ave, No. J Thou. It. Thornburs;. Hillside Ave.. No. 13 II. W. Carter. Illinois and 1st Sts. S. il'ihl. lllinota ant 13th Sta. 3. Muhl. Illinois an.l Tth Ms. J. M. Scott.
Illinois and North Sts. It. M. Navln. Indiana, Ave. and Verrror.t t't. It. I'. Elclau. -naiana AVe.. No. 2'Jl Jrnn 1. OlUl'l. Madison Ave.. No. 4T Jc. M. liwyer. 31a.s. and Cornell Avs. C. K. Ilarram. M.s. Ave.. No. 201 L. K. Ha3g. Jler. and Morris Sts. O. II. i:roich. Mtr. and Hay ists. John K. Myers, iler. and Russell Ave. Geo. P. Porst. illch.. No. lu-Z'j Kast Van Arsdale Bros. New York ami N'nMe Rts. K. II. Knners. Nw york. No. 27 S West 1 K. tVolcutt. I'lne. No. 201 Fouth A. L. Walker. Senate Ave. and 2d St. A. M. Eyster. tvnate Ave.. No. b'lfj North E. E. Steward. Khelby St., No. 1W C. A. Lttel. Talbott Ave.. No. 10 M. Schwartx. Virsdma Ave. and Coburn C. L. Mueller. Virginia Ave. and MtCarty II. C. Staler. Wash. St. and State Avf.-N. S. Drlsgs. Wash. Ft., No. 7C3 East Iiaron Uros. West. St.. No. :ru North C. W. Lichrodt. Yandes and 9th Sts. LixonCECIL John II., cl!5t son of Mrs. Marshall E. Palrner. at the family re Idene, lTii East St. Clair itreet. N'nv 1. Further notice of the funeral will be given. CASS Andrew- Gas. rr., cn Saturday, Oct. 31. at S:J. I'uac-ral iluaday. at 2 p. m., from the. residence cf hi.- dJu-chter. Mrs. S. E. lloflt, 124 East St. Joe strett. Friends Invited. ADAM Clara E. Adam. wlf. of L. G. Adam. diel Saturday. Oct. 31. at 8 p. m. Tuneral Monday at 2 . m. from residence of her mother, Mn. Ilu.hr. Ash ftrett. Friends invited. UltEl'NIG lit v. Ceorxe A.. Sunday. Nov. 1, aired eiKhty-F!x jf-ari and teven months. Fur.eral n-rvlce vl!l te hld on ilnes.lay. Nov. 4. at 1 p. rn.. at the residence. 241 I'ark, avenue, and at 2 t-.- m.. at the First German M. E. Church. Friends Invited. Fi.i;n.tii DiitF.cToiii. FL-NNEn & BUCHANAN 172 North Illinois street. LaJy embalmer. for ladies and children. OU.ce always OiA-n. Telephone 611. FINANCIAL. LOANS Money cn mortgages. C. di Eaal Alarnet street. F. SAYL.ES, To LOAN A lare turn; amounts to suit; commisficn and eiin.s lowtt. No gold clause. yuii.'N 'iOLu. u Inualls Hlock. MONEY To loan on Indiana farm. Lowest rates, with partial 'pavments. Address C. N. Wl LEI A Ma t CO.. Craw tordsville, Inl. LOANS Sums of VjO and over. City proi-erty and farms. C. E. COFFIN CO.. W) East Market street. FINANCIAL Money toioarPin sums of 1(W. $210. $200. or M0. without delay. Fay tack at any tir.;e after six montho. C. W. GOltSL'CH. 3ui Indiana Trust Building MONEY To loan on Indiana farms. Lowest market rate; privileges for payment before due. We also buy municipal bonds. THOS. C 1M Y CO.. Ilooms w2r'k., third floor Ler.icke Euil ling. Indianapolis. WANTED An Idea. Who can think of some simple thir;, tt. patent? Protect your Ideas; they may bring you wealth. Write JOHN WEDDENHCIiN A: CO.. patent attorneys. Washington. I. C. for their H.iOO prize otter and list of Inventions wanted. "v'ANTEI Men and boys to learn Itarber trade. Only eight weeks required. Can earn board by Futurday wages whll learning. No trad? offtrs better inducements. Good wages the entire year, or small capital furnishes shop. Complete outfit of tools" given each student upon entering. Write for fre illustrat-d catalogue. MOLEK S It A It BEE SCHOOL, 23 South Clark street, Chicago. CLAIIIVOYANT. CLA1HVOYANT Mrs. T. GrUwolJ. the great clairvoyant and valnilst, tells you every hope, fear and ambition of life; everything revealed; gives advice on business, luve and marriage. Office and residence, East South street. jTjmAj3nSTORAGE Indlanaj-olls Warehouse Co.. 26i-27i S. l'enn. St.. Pennsylvania tracks. Phone 13 U. hi:mov.l. REMOVAL A. V,'. Denny, to 30 North Delaware street. Eeal eetate. re.its and insurance. LOST Fowler's Hair Stare. New Goods. Offlce Indianaiolis Clearing Houi-e Association. Oct. 21. ISM. The associated banks nf n Ha nape lis will le clopetl on Tuesday, Nov. 3. cU-tion Jay. 1'ajer maturing tn that day should be n '. to on aioncay, Nov. 2. FiiEDEltlCxC M.oOS, llo.nao'er. f.KO A L A II V K ItTI S K TJI 1 MS. Noiicf; of Li;niti iumkaci l-'uit sti'iiKSTiiicTrui: or jniDtii:. Notice is h-.-reby given that th undersigned. Board of Commii"ners of Marh n county, lnCiana. have rVrel the ontiruci'on of a new brtdg acns hite river oa a iine extendet outn frim Jjiktf Hardin? street, in the city of Wet lndunaH!i.. in said county and State, and that i lans und sre;dttc:ttlcns tor the superstructure of f-ald brieve will be on rile in the cilice of the Auditor or said county on und after Nov. tf. lMU. and that up to lw o'clock a. m. of the 17th d:iy nf November. lsDS, St-aled bids are invlnd r.l will be rrctikel by said board at the oti'c of 5ii!d AU'litcr in th Majii'n county tourth. ii.e fr ihe censt ruction cf id superstructure, a:.d that on j-ald day the contract therefor w ill he l-t to the lev. jt bidder. :ald board reserving the right to rtjtci any and all bids. Kuril i'id filed with the Auditor mu?t be acconii ar.ied by a ir d and urp.ile;it bond payable to the Stab- if Indiina. slg..ct by the bidder, and by at lu.-t two freehold svreties. and the ctnd'.ticns of said lon 1 shall guarantee the faithful perJnrancv and ::tcitlTi of th? Work so bll for. according t the jhrns and .sr"ci.dcat.on3 on hl't a aforesaid, in eas. Fuid contract is awarded tt said ti lacr. anl that the contractor. to rvreivinsr Ra.10. contract, shall promptly pay all Ibts inurreil by him in the moecution of said work, including liitor. rriMTialn furnished and fcr tnr'iir. the latx-irs th-ren. Wltntfs our hanls thi i'.uh d.iv rf October. 1S30. JI'EH'S F. ItEINEOICE. HEN it Y U HA It DIN (J. JAMES E. GICKKE. Commltl sntrs of Marlon County. AttC3t: IIarryl. Smith. Audi tor. Proposal for Supplies. National Military II-me, Indiana, Treasurer's Olhce. Ot-r-i.r 27. . Scal-d i ti -p.sii!s will 1) recelre l at this office until noiii. Tues !.-, December 1. lj, for furnishing and Miv-ry of m!.i.-terce supplies at Marlon l-rarch. National Home D. V. S., quantities t be tturta.ed ten ir rrnt.,' if rciuired Uurlnsi th' exeri!tlin of the contract. Standards enn be eximiritd. and printed instructions and specifications, ant blank proposals will lo supplied ujon application to this Oilce. Samples presented by b! Mors will not b.considered, unless ame are called for in ieclllcatlons. The rip hi is resvrvnl to rej.vt any or all proi)sals; or to waive ; any Informalities tl)ereln. , Envelopes containing prTV:a? shoull be in-dcr-ed: Frop-sals for sm? pi?. V." II. D. V. S., ani adlrK?d to the unJer-'.r.ed. Divls aecreKating over av must be accompanied by a certiried check, payable to the undersigned Tnasurer. for at b-a?t five ir cent, of the amount thereof, which check will be forfeited to the National Jlomc for D. V. S.. in case the successful bidder refuses or fails to enter into contract as required; otl erwUe, to be returned to the 1-iddt.r. H. O- HEIC!IEllT. Treasurer. Approved: JUSTIN II. CHAPMAN, Governor. RIlCniVHIl'S SALI1. By order of the Marion Circuit Court the undersigned. i:-ceiver of the Indianapolis i'aMnt Company, will, at its ofllce. la the Indiapa Tru.-t Company Euil.'dr.g. offer at public sale, for ca.vh.
on Saturday, the 7th day of November, lv;. t 10 oVlx k a. m.. certain un.-olb'cted n o ur.ts and tills receivable belonKlncr to f;i,1 Indliyap--lis Cabinet Company, of the fare value oi J713.I1. Sai l 4!- w ill te made without reserve to the highest d bier. THE INDIANA TP. EST COMPANY. Receiver. I.enrnlng n Costly Lfsson. Eoston Journal. Ono of President Cleveland's consuls Is quoted as raying: Once I thouht ilr. Illalno's rcciprocity Ide:i was th- rankest folly. Slnc I've trav--fl about it Lit Yvf chanpTctl my minI. I et mad t-vi.-ry tim I think of how we opposed it. It was the 11 :i of a jrrei't Mausman v ho tind. rf tood tlie b-st interests of Lis country." This coi. -til i not tlio only Democrat who has changed his mir.d as to the merits of reciprocity. Lots of his party friends have hail th same experience, and as to th business men congressional inquiry has shown that they are practically unanimous In favor of It. Ilecir.roc';y is one of tho prood things which are bo'vnti to come buck with tltO njw iUpuLUcart ad-aainistratlon. '
A DECREASE IN TONNAGE
Ficinns SHOW A decline of soo in LOADED CAIl MOVEMENT. Q. A C. Shortens ltd Rannlnr; Time Esrnlns of tlie Penn) Ivania. a nil Erie Linos for September. The train record shews that In the week ending Oct. 31 there were received and forwarded at In iianapoli? 22.1S4 cars, 17.SC3 being loaued, Lelnj? a decrease in loaded-car movement as compared with the week ending Oct. 24 of 824 cars. The loaded car movement enst bound continues to be well up with the maximum. ' Shipments of grain, flour, cereal ine products, provisions, dressed meats and live stock are heavier than in October last year, and. in fact, limited only by the cars that can be commanded. The VandalU brought in 1,218 cars, sgalrt 6&9 forwarded west. The Panhandle brought In 921 cars, against C26 forwarded, and with the Big Four lines the east-bound movement was proportionately large. The decreased business is" in westbound freights and with north-and-south lines. The west-bound through tonnage has not been as light In any October of the last twenty years, say the freight officials. The last ten days, in coal and coke, there haa been a heavy westbound business, but by no means the tonnage usually moving at this season of the year; in the higher class freights but little is doing. The volume of freights moving north and south is at Its minimum, as well uj west-bound business. Little lumber, which is one of the principal items handled by north-and-south roads, is moving. Shipments of fruits, produce, etc., are In excess of those of last ytar. The last week more ir.uiana and Ohio coals have been handled by the roads In a local way, and more live stock. Indications are tnat the hog crop will be marketed earlier this year ana that the new corn civp will begin to move two weeks earlier thbs fall, and this will soon be telt by the roads in tueir local business. At the city freight depots and bulk freight yards it was an unusually quiet week, the wholesale merchants, the commission houses and the manufacturers making lighter nulpmenis in any week of many months. At the trucking houses and tok yards business continues to be in excess ot last year, and, as the teuton advances, will further Increase. Freight men predict that the month of November will snow a laige increase in through freights westbound and in local business, as the political excitement will be over und manufacturers will be so encouraged by the results of the election as to be eager for business. With all lines there Is a scarcity of cars to meet the requirements to handle the gr-ln and live stock awaiting thlpment. Below Is given the ear movement for the week ending Oct. 31 and for the corresponding weeks of li and 1S1M: Name of road. L., N. A. & C 1.. D. & W
1S9S. ISO'. 1S91. . 4tJ7 4S 4J7 , 46 27S 'i'Ji , 700 7Xi !i , 27 C73 612 . 4J0 Hi? 7.14 iV.3 1,052 fcCH . 478 7iy t0:i , 1,4.10 1.&75 1.-34 6 910 74J S52 H3 , 1.5? l.M'l l.fc72 , 2.M4 2.132 1.W7 1.4 1.852 1.759 , 2.12S 2.lf7 1.9S3 , 1.M7 1..V.& 2,023 17.3K3 1S.021 17,149 4.821 4,Csl 4.443 22,134 22,702 21,502
L. E. At W Penn. I. & V l'enn. J., M. & I... l'enn. Chicago dlv . l'enn. Columbus div F. A E. East div I. At E. West dlv Big Four Chicago div .. Biif Four Cincinnati div Big Four St. Louis dlv Big Four Cleveland div Vandaila Totals ' Total movement 22,134 22,70 Earnings of the Trunk Linen. A statement of comparison of earnings and expenses of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company for the month of September and nine months c-f 1S36 with the tame period of 1823 Is as follow. Pennsylvania railroad lines directly operated: September. Nine months. Gross earnings, decrease... tt10.2'H) dec. $7..,.00 Expenses, decrease 2.40O inc. 21.1.900 Net earnings, decrease 3j7.Km) dec. 1,001,500 Lines west of Pittsburg and Erie, directly operated: Gross earnings, decrease... $675,0O dec. $976,200 Expenses, decrease 23a. K00 dec. m,M)0 Net earnings, decrease 440000 dec. W7.30') All lines east of I'ittsburg and Erie: Gross earnings, decrease. ...Jt5'.3.$oO dec. fI.0S2.000 Expenses, decrease 3'.30 dec. 4DX.0OO Net earnings, decrecse 25C,oOO dec. L&sO.GiO All lines west of Pittsburg and Erie: Gross earnings, decrease.. .f742.fc,-0 dec. fl.lM,500 Expenses, decrease 30MjO dec. 275. no Net earnings, uecrease 4U3.tM.-0 dec 907.900 The Erie statement for September follows: Gross earnings, t2.7na.4S0; decrease, J3.538; operating expenses, fl,V3ei,92; decrease, 7i,541; net, : .2.5T.S; increase. 173.603. For ten months: Gross. $25,007,232: increase. $54l.: operating expenses. Sli.630,87: increase, U31.S16; net, I6.4fati.025; increase, $UC0,770. Delt Road Traffic. There were transferred over the Belt road last week 13,923 cars. Belt road engines handled at the yards 1.004 carloads of live stock, and for private switches on its line CC3 cars. Trafll c Note. The Monon handled 27 cars at Indiana polls last week, 4G7 being loaded, an Increase of 37 The Big Four lines handled at Indianapolis last week 10.636 cars. f,82t being loaded, 1.08 fewer than in the week ending Oct. 24. There were handled at Indianapolis last week by all lines 4.5.21 empty cars, against 4,725 the week ending Oct. 24. The Peoria & Eastern handled at Indianapolis, on both divisions. 1.551 loaded cars, 107 fewer than in the week ending Oct. 24. The Lake Erie & Western handled at this city 4."a cars, Ml being loaded, an increase of one car over the number handled In the preceding week. The Vandaila handled at this point last week 1.097 londed cais. 63 fewer than in the week ending Oct. 24. ThlJ road brought in 15 carloads of live stock. The Cincinnati. Hamilton A Dayton handled at Indianapolis laH week H0 cars. 7W0 being loaded, a decrease of 41 loaded Cars as compared with the week preceding. The four Pennsylvania lines handled at this point last week 4.354 cars, 2.950 being loaded, 11 decrease of 431 loaded cara as compared with the week ending Oct. 24. I'craounl, Local and General N'oten. M. E. Ingalls, president of the B!g Four, who has been in West Virginia for a few days, is expected home to-day. Guy S. McCabe to-day succeeds A. S. Matchetta as traveling freight agent of the Panhandle's Richmond and Chicago division. Dnvld Owens, for years agent of the Erie lines at Youngstown. O.. was buried at his old home on Saturday. He died la Chicago. General Agent Blaker, of the White line, states th&t the business of the line in October was the heaviest of any month in the present year. Dating from to-day. mileage of the Columbus & HiKktng Valley will be honored on the Baltimore and Ohio Southwestern, and that of the latter on the C. &. H. Business of the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton at Toledo and several other points of late has increased to t-uch an extent that ad lltlonal tvk itching engines have been put in service. S. B. Gnult. who has been acent of the Union Star line at St. Paul for twenty years, will retire to-day on f-U ray. H. C. Shepard. agent of the company at Winona, will succeed him as agent at St. Paul. II. C. Shellds has hen appointed traveling rasser.ger agent o. the Wabash Pnes, to succeed James Gatvey, who dlM at MoU-rly, Mo., last week. Mr. Shellds has teen in the general otficcs for fcome years. The Wabash Company is Just completing a fine iron bridge near Logansport over the Eel ,rtver, taking the place of a wocden structure. Fifty or more men are now at work getting the new bridge into roiltlon. The Illinois Central has disturbed Chicago paser.ger circles by announcing an rate troin Chicago to Memphis, and a Slo rate to Yickshurg or New OiKai.s. for lu bore is. when more than live travel on the one tU-kct. E. V. Clapp. private secretary to Joseph Ramsey, general manager of the Wabash, has Just returned frcm & visit to his New England home, e n Wedne.-day General Manager Ramsey and his utoruirate orj.cials tiart tn their annual inspection trip of the entire system. The Santa Fe Is making a good financial exhibit. The earnings for the six months show an incrva" over the corresponding p.rtovi of Psl of Jl.usi.t-w. E. I. Ripley, im its preiJvt. has been Ir.btru mental in rnrku.g tdriking ecanges la the opeiatkn of the lines. George Bradbury, vie-? president and general managtr of the I-ake Erie a.- Western and other BiUe lines, is quoted s saying that although his home will be in Ch.cc go he will f.end two or tl.ree days of each wuk at Indianapolis, which will continue to be his othcial headquarters. Berr.atd Fltrpatrick, m.nrter mechanic of the Pennsylvania tympany's .-1 at eV.umbus, today gi.es to the shops in i eit Wajne as master me-char.le. and Thomas F. Butltr succeeds Mr. Fitziatriek at Columbus. . Iioth of the oilicUls rect iol their mechanical education in the shops at Fort Wayne. The Journal has Infcrmtiticn to the effect that the entire trathc department of the Gould system. Including the M!s.-ourl PaciJ.c and the St. lul .f: Iri-n Mountain, the Ttxas Pacific and the lnternatlonnl and CJreat Western, Is to be reorganized before Jr.n. 1. ihe third vice president to have general supervision of all the lines named. Nearly all the fast freight lines have their headquarters In Buttalo. N. Y., ux.d were depositors tn the Bank of Commerce in thft city, which closed its doors on Saturday. The rcpr sen tat Ives of two of these lr.es at t'.rls point were notified that they would net be ptid until Nov. 21. I'sually th-y receive checks for their pay ibe first day of eacii month. An official of the Chicago & Eastern Illinois states that the report that the trainmen and agents of th rood were dl.satlsr,til beaue the con pany vvUhel them to wear uniforms when on duty Is nyt true. As to requiring thn to buy of a certain firm, the reason was tr.at the firm would furnish uniforms much lower than they could otherwise secure them. Harry . Bronson. son of H. M. Bronson. assistant general passenger agent of the Big Four, pent fianday In the city with his parent. Ilanry U riftti-baad maa ot F. II. Lord, gtaerai p4s-
senger agent of the Chicago Great Western. II" Hates that this read is now earning 20 ier cent, of tha business between Chicago and St. 1'aul. against five e-ompeting lines. The M'agner Sleeping-car Company has Issued some new regulations and says they wiil be strictly enforced. One of the rules forbids a passenger taking more than one satchel into a. sleeping car. and that a small one. To be technical, the nil? provides that no passenger shall carry any riore baggage than will go under bis berth without sticking out into the aisle, when the berth Is rr.ade up for the night. The new rule becomes effective to-day. Train 17. the White special over the Big Four, which makes the1 run from Cincinnati to Indianapolis in two hours and forty-five minutes, and from IndianH-nolis to ehlcsso tn five hours, was put cn by PresiJnt Ingalls. it is slated, without consultation with other oflicials, with orders that it be run until he ordered it taken off, and in three months' time it has become the bestpaying and most popular passenger train on the system, the Knickerbocker excepted. J. J. Murphy, track foreman of the Big Four at Acton, has been irraned a vacation of hve months at I1I3 request. For forty-six years he has been with the various comran'es that have controlled this line of the TdK Four and always on this division. He has held his present position tcr thirty-six years, and during that time has never had an accident that was caused by a defect In the track. In the entire torty-slx years cf service he has not lost a day by sickness and has had no vacation. He has a farm near Acton and will spend the winter on It. He will lesurr.e his work next sumrrer if his health will jcrmlt. The New Orleans and Florida limited service announced by the Queen & Crescent route, to take effect Nov. 8. marks an era In Southern railroading. The schedules provide for magnificent trains, which will leave Cincinnati dally at 8:30 in the morning and run throunh solid to New Orleans and to Jacksonville in twenty-four hours, arriving at these destinations at the same hour next morning. This is something which has never been surpassed in the history of the Southern roads. It includes an arrangement with the Southern Pacific Sunset (limited) train, which will cover the journey from Cincinnati to the Pacific coast in 24 days. Heretofore it has taken that long to go from Chicago to the coast, so that the East Is one step nearer to the West through the enterprise of this vigorous line of Southern roads. HOW TO CAST YOUR VOTE
HULKS AXD RKGULATIONS UNDER WHICH BALLOTING IS DONE. Provlnlons of the Law -with Which Every Voter Should lie Familiar in Order to ATOld Mistakes. Experience In the elections held In this State under tho Australian ballot law has demonstrated that at each election manythousand ballots are thrown out and not counted, by reason of the Ignorance or carelessness of the voters in not observing the provisions of the law and because their ballots are stamped In such a manner as to render them void. In this way thousands of voters are practically disfranchised at every election. To avoid this every voter should, before voting,, familiarize himself with the few and simple provisions of the election law. Every voter, on entering the election room, will be furnished with two ballots, one printed on red paper and one on white paper. The red ballot contains the names of all the candidates for State officers, which includes the presidential electors, whose names appear first upon each ticket on the ballot, immediately under the large square inclosing the device of each party. The white ballot contains the names of the congressional, legislative and county candidates. The several names of the candidates of each party are printed upon this ballot. Immediately beneath the large square inclosing the device of the party. The poll clerks furnish these ballots to the voter, and also a stamp. It is then the duty of the voter to go Into one of the booths and there stamp each of the ballots in such manner as to indicate for whom he desires to vote. If he desires to vote a straight ticket that is, if he desires to vote for all the candidates of any partyhe should stamp upon tho large square Inclosing the device at tho head of the list of candidates of such party, and stamp no other place. If he does not desire to vote a straight ticket, then he must not stamp the large square inclosing the device, but must stamp upon the small square to the left of the name of each candidate for whom ho desires to vote. After stamping his ballots he must, before leaving the booth, fold each ballot so that the face ot it cannot be seen and in such a way as to show the initials of the poll clerks, which aro written on the upIer right-hand corner on the back of each ballot. Ho should then return the stamp to the poll cierk and present his ballots to the inspector, who deposits the red ballot in tho red ballot box and the white one iu tho white ballot box. Care shoud be taken by the voter before leaving the booth to carefully fold his ballots in the manner required by the law, for if he fuiis to do this and brings his ballot out of the booth in such a way that tho stamp upon it can be seen, he forfeits his right to vote, and he must destroy the ballot in the presence of tho board and leave the room without voting. Tho stamp must be upon the square; that is, it must bo within or touch the square. If it is not within or does not touch the square, the ballot is void, and will not be counted. If the ballot is mutilated or torn or marked by either scratching a name out or writing one in, or marked in any other way, except by stamping the square or squares, the ballot is void, and will not be counted. If the voter is phyislcally unable to stamp his ballots, or cannot read the English language, ho should Inform tho election board, and it Is then the duty of the polling clerks to take his baliots and, in his presence and in the presence of each other, stamp them for him so as to indicate the way in which he dosiies to vote. If the voter should accidentally or by mistake deface, mutilate or spoil his ballot, or stamp it wrong, he should return it to the poll clerk and receive a new ballot. The large square Inclosing the picture of the eagle is the device of the Republican party. Tnrefore. if you want to vote for -VicKlniey and the Republican candklate stamp upon the large square Inclosing the eagle. Stamp but once, and stamp no othtr place on the ticket. A New View of the Matter. Nl'W York 1'usL A rtader of the Evening Tost was in a car the other day when a conversation of two feliow-passtngers attracted his notice. One. it soon appeared, was the keeper or a livery stub.e. who was evidently in prosperous circumstances; the occupation of the other was not made so clear. They were "talking politL-s." and , when their voices grew loud enough to carry the words to the next seat, the livery stable keeper was saying: "Ueii. I'm Koing to vote tcr Bryan. I'm tick of these b.oatcd bondholders. The rich men nave too much to uy about the government or this country. Its high time to tail a halt ar.d have a change." I1I5 lnter.ocutor waited a moment before he re-p.icd. then said: "Do you know I think you nad better go a tittle slow In talking about bleated bo;alho!d;ra? Mow many years Is it since you were a poor man yourseifv Are you aware that tnere are lots of peop.e in your town who consider you a rich man. because you have been sujetsFt'uI lu yourbuiiness? Do you think it would be a good thing fcr you to get the idea abroad that every man who has accumulated anything is to be pulled down?" The livery stab.e keeper lest his Interest in the conversation at this point, and grew silent. His ardor for Bryanism had evidently been cooled when he saw what It really meant. Hcttr Now. rhiladedphla Tress. "In the early dnys of the Republic." says the New York Evening Post, "everybody wanted law and order." This is, we suppose, the reason that the first fifteen vcars or so of these "early days" saw Shay's rebellion, the whisky rebellion. Burr's eonMdtacy. Wilkinson's treason, the attempt cf the State of Franklin to set up for itself and other Ilk signs of devotion to "law and order." The "early days of the Republic" had less desire lor "law and order" than these days. 1'or Indigent lem Use IIorsford'A Acid 1'h on ph ate. Dr. fJ. II. Leach. Cairo. 111., says: Of great power in dyspepsia and nervous prostration.''
OVATIONS . TO HARRISON
ENTHUSIASTIC CROWDS MARK THE CLOSE OP THE GENERAL'S TOUR. Northern Indiana Voters AH Aniloni to Hear the Ex-Preslden fa Patriotic Utterance. At 9 o'clock Saturday night Gen. Harrison finished his second tour of Indiana, after making thirteen speeches during the day and talking to as many people as his voice could reach among something like over 110.0W who turned out to see him. In the two days he made twenty-three speeches and said something every time. There Is no measuring the good done for the Republican cause by this remarkable bit of campaigning, but it is possible to measure In some degree the strength of that cause by tho demonstrations along the line. And If there Is anything in surface Indications; if tremendous crowds of people at Republican rallies; If unbounded enthusiasm for everything Republican; If a general and extreme anxiety Tor the success of the sound-money cause mean anything Indiana is going for McKInley by such figures as have never been known in Indiana in a presidential" or'any other election. Wasaw, county'1 seat of Kosciusko, famous for Its big Republican majorities, was reached half an hour late, and here another big demonstration was encountered, with a crowd of IS.O-jO people. In the morning they had a big parade three miles long, which required forty-five minutes to pass the Times office. There were 2.500 In line, with nine bands, five marching clubs, two companies of cavalry and fifty-live floats filled with pretty girls. The beautiful little city was never so handsomely decorated, and the Eryan pictures, .If there ever were any in this Republican stronghold, had been retired for the day. General Harrison was driven to the courthouse, where he was given a tremendous ovation upon his arrival, lie was introduced by II. S. liiggs, and spoke for twenty minutes. He said in part: "Aly Fellow-citizens The campaign of debate is aoout over. It lias been u thorou&n campaign. Perhaps never before In our campaigns have tne people been so aDunaaniiy buppiied witn tne opportunity ot liiiornnng tnc-mselves upon puodc questions, uur Democratic iricnas are in a good deal of trouble. As 1 have said bulore. taey have a habit of taking things Btruight, and they ure in great ciiillcuiiy this year to know how to do it. They have two tickets In the lieid, each of which claims to be puru and to be true Simonpure Democracy. The Chicago convention assembled under the call of the national committee of the party; and in this State the Democratic State convention assembled under the call of your State committee. At Chicago you nominated Bryan and Sewail. Again at St. Louis a Populi.it convention nominated Bryan and Watson. At Indianapolis the sound-money Democrats nominated Palmer and liuckner. So that there was a good deal of confusion; but that did not end it. After your Democratic State convention had put In nomination fifteen Democrats as electors for the State of Indiana to vote in the Electoral College for liryan and Sewail.. your Stajte central committee, without any authority, pulled off H-e of those Democratic electors and put ah five Populists; so that the ticket that Is presented to you . for your choice next Tuesday Is not a Democratic ticket. "The othe-f day g listened to a good old Democrat, who always voted straight, and Jr.9 said: I want to vote straight this time, and I wish somebody would tell me how I can do It. I am not a Populist; I am a Democrat, and 1 don't want to vote for Populists. ; They have mixed this ticket so that if I stamp the square up by the rooster I shall be voting for five Populists, and I am not going to do IL They have a right to ask rr.e to vote the straight Demccratie ticket, but they have 110 light to uk mo to take a mixture like that.' On the other hand, we Republicans have no trouble: things are straight with us. We have fifteen Republican electors and we have only 0110 candidate for. Vice President. 1 take it thaa ,there; is;.not a Democrat In Indiana who wants."to vote for Tom Watson for Vioo President. Think of it! Think of putting Watson In a position where he might become President of the United States! "But not only Is your ticket mixed as to candidates. You have adopted mixed Democratic and Populist doctrines in your platform. I want -to know if these good old, patriotic Democrats who stood by the country in 1S61, who hi id their politics aside to keep till the war was over, are going to vcte this time for a candidate who Indorses a platform that declares that the President of the United States must ask the consent of Govcrncr Altgeld, of Illinois, before he opens the'way for the mail trains cf the United States? Many Democrats have spoken out upon that question in .Indiana. They have said, 'It is not Democratic doctrine; it was not the doctrine or Andrew Jackson, who thre-atened with the halter the men in South Carolina who resisted the laws of the United States: it is not good.' patriotic doctrine, and we will have nothing to do with this young man Irom Nebraska who is pledged, if he is elected President, to humble the national authority before the State powers before lie executes his duty as President to enforce the laws ot the United States. "This is flag day. and this beautiful banker that we have enshrined in our hearts floats to-day over every patriotic home. It means something; It mans the supremacy of the national government in all national affairs. Ry the glorious memories that hang about it. by the glorious victories for truth and popular rights which have been achieved under it on bloody fields, we swear to-day that no man who does not believe in the powers of the national government fdiall ever succeed Lincoln." IN DEMOCRATIC WHITLEY. Jam of li!.0KI People at Columbia City und a BlK Parade. A swift run of a mile a minute' brought the party to Columbia City, and If a tremendous crowd, unbounded enthusiasm and such other surface indications as an absence of Bryan badges count for anything the Republicans are likely to make good their claim that they will carry this Democratic stronghold, even though it be a purely agricultural 'cbimty. There were about 12.000 people there, three times the population of the town, and they had a procession in the morning that went ahead of anything they had ever een before in Vhltley county. It was much like the other agricultural parades, with plenty of cavalry troops and floats and martial music enough to last a year. General Harrison was driven from the station to the courthouse square, where his carriage was caught in tho dense jam of people and extricated with much clihlculty. He was given a rousing welcome upon his appearance, and his speech was warmly cheered. He said: "My Fellow-citizens I will address some of you. a tew of you, for it is uuite impossible with my voire . broken by som twenty speeches sinc-e I left home yesterday morning, to ra.cli th outskirts of this vast meeting one of the very greatest that I have s.en on this trip. "We hear a grout deal of talk about money. The most important thing is that you should have confidence in your money and that your money shodid have confidence In you. A Kieat deal has been said about gold being cowardiy money. Everything that Is worth anything I. a little scary. It is the wife and baby that you look after when tho nous-; !s on lire; not tho cookstove. Gold is scary w.Vii it is proposed to put in use with it another money that is not f-o good. You will never get a money that is not s-jury till you get a money that is not good lor anything. 1 said that it was necessary that money pliould have confidence In you. If it has not nobody will lend It to you. The man who has it must have confidence that he wiil get it back ar.d that h-j will get back just as good money as he loaned. If he has not he will no: Knd you any; he will lock it up till better times come. "What Is It that has caused financial panic? Mr. Bryan lias !w-en calling attention to the fact that within the tast few drtys money on cull In New York I as been loo per cent. Who was it that was paying HO por cent, for money? It was not the merchant; he wis getting accommodations in bank at 0 or 7 per cent. Mr. Bryan's sympathy has been excited in be haif of the very men ho h.is bcon generally denouncing. It w;u thf stock broker In Wall street who had bought stocks on margins and whose stocks had gone down, and who - j va itvt tucj v. 4Lr:r j campaign; because of the Chic&g plat-
nan iu put up margins lor a tew uays nil the market turned: and he had to pay what anybody demanded for, money. Why was it trio V rvn V oa t4 w-..e9 TJrrf- in
form; b?cause people who have good moneyfear that if these theories are carried out, if they put their money out now, it will be paid back to them in cheaper money. That Is what makes the trouble. I put it to any man who hears me, if he has accumulated by Industry and care a little ir.ono-, whether he is going to lend it ar.d take the risk of being paid back In fifty-cent dollars? We muiU let everybody know that we do not Intend to depreciate and degrade the currencv ot cur country, and then everybody will be glad to put his monev to work and to put it out at fair rates of Interest THE 16 TO 1 FRAUD. "They want to coin silver freely at the ratio of 16 to 1; and why 15 to 1? If the government can make the 1G ounces that arc now worth about half an ounce of gold worth a full ounce of gold, why can it not make ten ounces of silver worth an ounce of gold? Why waste six ounces? But the government cannot fix this value; it must take its value as it finds it in the market; and if it expects two dollars to circulate freely with each other, one must bo worth as much as the other. If It is not one will get scared; it always has. When we had greenbacks that were worth 40 cents on the dollar, gold and silver both got scared and nobody saw anything of them. We had the cheap money and nothing else; and so it will be if we coin suver and gold freely at a wrong ratio. We will have silver, but no gold. We will not, until people are ready to pay a dollar for a thing that they can get for 0 cents. The truth is that money has its code of morals. A good money will not associate with bad money; it never has. "What will be the firt effect of free coinage? I want my thoughtful friends here to-day to think of this and see if I am not right in saying that It will require all the business of this country to be put upon a new basis. The storekeeper would have to change the mark on his gcods to correspond with the dollars that he Is going to be paid in. Every manufacturer would take it into account. Nobody would knowJust what was going to happen. Making silver a legal tender would add some value to it, but no man could tell hew much it would add; so that no man would know w hat to do. If you were trading you would say: 'I will stop; 1 will wait till this thing shows Itself, until I see what is going to happen.' The manufacturer would say: 'I will shut down my factory.' The storekeeper would say: I wiil not buy much of anything.' Every man would stop and wait to see how this experiment that Mr. Rryan suggests was going to turn out. Every man who had money coming to hlra would press his debtor for payment. "If you had money out and you were afraid cu a change that would slve vou
back depreciated money, wouldn't you try to get 11 in as quick as you could? Sunpose tne man wno is pressed for money says 'I will go to the banker and see if 1 can get it The banker would say, 'No, sir. these are hundred-cent dollars 1 have and it looks as if there was going to be a change and I won't lend you any monev till I find out what is going to happen You say, 'I will promise to pay you back the same kind of money.' He will say, "Your Democratic platform says you i.re going to pass a law that will make such a ptmise illegal and It cannot be enforced; they say they won't allow anybody to make a contract to pay back as good money as ho got.' The result of this would be that this country would be rocked from center to circumference by a great commercial panic that would bring to distress every man in It, except the banker, who had his money locked up. "Mr. Frewen, of England, one of the leading free-silver men, while urging us to adopt that policy, in an interview in New YorK recently, admitted that tho first effect of free coinage would be an all-pcrvad-lng panic. Take that home with you; that if youre to have free silver, you are to have it at the cost of a great panic, at the cost of utter stagnation in business, whil everybody awaits to see what this fatal experiment in finance may bring about. No, my countrymen, the good old honest dollar of Jackson and of Jefferson, the good old hundred-cent dollar, is the only dollar for the poor man and the farmer, the only dollar for honest men who want to pay their debts honestly and want to be paid honestly. "1 do not like the declaration of the Chicago platform that when Anarchists and thugs seize upon our great railroads, tear up tracks and stone railway trains, that the President of the United States, sworn to enforce the Constitution and laws, shall not enforce those laws until he has asked Governor Altgeld's consent. That was not Lincoln's thought. Lincoln said when Governors not only refuseel consent, but when they protested and raised armies to resist. I have sworn to execute all the laws of thr United States.' And he mustered tho great army In blue and triumphantly established the principle that United States law covers every square foot of the United States. (Applause.) "Democratic comrades, loyal men who stood by the country and by Lincoln, who helped to defeat Iee and Jackson, who brought home the starry banner of honor, are you willing to have a President who says he will first bow a cringing knee to the Governor of Illlinois before he onfcrces the laws of the United States? No. my countrymen, Indiana, a State that had so glorious a part in the war to maintain the Union and the Just powers of the government, will not surrender what they wrested from the armies of Iee to a mob of Chicago AAarchists." (Applause.) TO CITIZENS OF WABASH. Great Demonstration Made In One of the Republican Stroitglmlel. Hot Republican territory was again entered after leaving Columbia City and at North Manchester, the next stop, four thousand people were found packed about the station. They cheered lustily as the train pulled In, cheered again upon Harrison's appearance, cheered at every point he made in his speech of ten minutes and gave three rousing "cheers for Harrison" when he closed. Wabash county seemed to be gathered at Wabash, where the arrival was greeted by cheers from an immense concourse of people. The Republicans were out for their closing rally of tho campaign, and about fifteen thousand were on streets to see General Harrison. In the morning they had had x parade three miles long, with six bands, any number of floats, marching clubs and troops of male and female cavalry. It was by far the greatest demonstration of strength the Republicans of this county, which has never elected a Democratic officer, have ever made. The great quadrangle of the new Big: Four shops had been transformed into an enormous amphitheater and here speaking had been going on all afternoon with .Hiram Browniee, Warren G.Sayre and others as the orators. General Harrison's car was stopped in the rear of the shops and he was led through them to the stand, thus avoiding the exhausting experience of being Jostled through a jam of people he had undergone so many times during the day. He was given a tremendous ovation when he appeared in view of the multitude and was Introduced by L. E. Carpenter. In the course of his speech he said: "Fellow-citizens of Wabash-Thls is a magnificent demonstration. It is another eviuence of th great interest which our people feel in this campaign, now so soon to close. I am sure that we have never had a campaign since the war in which there was sucii a general jnte rest as in thi.. Every man and every woman in the" land has come to feel tn Intense personal Interest in the result of it; and J think it is because we feci that the Issues involved are not only as great as those involved when the maintenance of our constitutional union was at stake, but that we are called upon again to fight issues that we supposed l ad been forever put at rest, and which the people of the United States have determined they will this time put forever at rest. (App.ause.) We thought, when Lee gave up his sword to Grant, that it had been settled settled by four years of bloody and costly war that the laws of the United States might bo executed bv the President of the United States and bv the courts of the United States without asking the consent of the Governor of any State Rut that issue has boen revived again" Governor AltgelJ. of lliinoi. who has been more than suspected of sympathy with the the laws of the United States without th Governors consent; and he had sullielent influence to put Into the Chicago platform a oeclaration against this power of the President. J "My countrymen, we are a law-abidin" I p. op e; we believe in every man having all ! his rights; but we do not believe that it is I any man's right to tear up railroad tracks ami warn rai ruau cars ana stone railroad trains carry.'m? Innocent nun and womr-n The Constitution puts the control of the' post routes o." the county into the hands of the United States; interstate commorco I3 a matter that can only b regulated by the national power; offenses against Interstate commerce 'and postal laws are offenses against United States laws, and not against the statutea of the States; therefore we holA ihxt It U not only the
a:;uicxiims an: uesiructlonists, raised thiiriiutj with Mr. Cleveland whether the President had a right by the power the Constitution puts into his hands
right, but It Is the duty of the President when any mob stops mail trains, when any mot Interferes with interstate com and obstructs the prcRress of tha produce of one State in its journey to a marketthat It is his sworn duty to use the powe rs of the United States to open tho.e post routes and interstate-comrm rco routes o that those trains may go freely to their destination. (Applause.) "Mr. Rryan. by his adhesion to the Cl.icapro platform, is pledg-od that If ho should be President of the United St-tUs and such condition? should arise, lie will quMly possess hfmj-'clf at Washineton and addrss a humble reeiuost to the Governor cf Illinois to please kcop the road open. No. my countrymen. Lincoln will r.ewr have a successor who does not ho'd to Lincoln's view of the Constitution. (Applause.) We may differ about tariffs; we may differ about silver, but as a great people. Democrats and Republicans, wo must -stand by the proposition that the powers of the national g-overnment shall not be edeprroded nor diminished. Iet us stand by the old flag. This Is flap day; enshrine It in our hearts. Tell acraln the glorious history that it has hrd. Tell again of the heroism of the men who died for it. Tell again of Lincoln nnd Grant, who maintained the Just powers of t!i government, not only without the consent of Governors, but over their armd resistance. (Great applause.) Let us stand by Integrity In our public finance and honesty in our individual finance. Let us resume protection and reciprocity. Lt us elect McKInley, and we will be prosperous again." IX TIIE GAS KELT.
Great Demonatratlon liy the Worklnsrxnen of Marlon. At Marion, where General Harrison arrived shortly before 6 o'clock, a magnificent demonstration was made by tho workingmen of this, one of the most thriving cities of the gas belt. It has always been very heavily Republican, but this ye r the feeling for sound money and protection is running very high among the glass workers and other skilled laborers, who make up the great bulk of the population. General Harrison was escorted by a flambeau club from the station through packed streets to the courthouse square, where he spoke from the carriage. The streets converging upon the square and tho square itself were simply Jammed with people cheering like mad, and the sea of faces was lighted up by the lurid glare of thousands of flambeaux in the hands of marchera who were ready to participate in ths big closing parade of the campaign, which was to form immediately upon tho departure of Harrison. When he could get a fair degree of quiet General Harrison addressed the section of the multitude in the vicinity of the carriage. He said in part: "My Fellow-citizens In this night air it will not be possible for me to speak very long, but what Is the use of talking? These great demonstrations that I have seen everwhere in Indiana, in the south and in the north, are the most eloquent and conclusive evidences that the buttle is won. I do not doubt, I never have doubted, since the Chicago platform was published and the Chicago nominations made, that this country would reject the platform and reject the nominees. (Applause.) The ieople of this country believe in a national government. We believe in the flag and we love it. We believe In the just powers of the President: in tho junt Dowers of the federal courts, and we have made up our minds that what the Confederate armies under Lee and Jackson could not do a Chicago mob of Anarchists shall not do. (Great applause.) Under the influence of Governor Altgeld, of J Illinois, they got in the Democratic platform a declaration which means that it Is net proper for the President to enforce the laws of the United States without asking the consent of a Governor. We will never vote for that doctrine. (Applause.) These gallant boys from Indiana, some of whom, in their oal sige and decrepitude, are housed by the generosity of this government here near Marion, these patriotic oeople In Indiana, who followed Morton and Lincoln, will never allow the doctrine to be established that the President of the United States must ask anybody's consent before he enforces the laws of the United States. (Great applause.) "Comrades, we do not mean patriotic fellow-citizens, you do not mean that the soldier who fought for fll a month to maintain the integrity of this government and is now getting a. little pension shall bo paid in 30-cent dollars. The working people of the United States, the men who work In your factories, have made up their minds that they do not want to exchange the good dollar they are getting for their wages for a 50-cent dollar. (Applause.) We mean to maintain the national authority; we mean to maintain the Integrity of the governmental powers; we mean to maintain honest finance: w mean that the man that works shall have an honest dollar when ho Is paid. (Applause.) "This question is settled now. I spent many weeks in the East this summer. They have given up the Yankees. Mr. Bryan has concluded, after two visits to New York, that the people in the East are too smart to be caught. (Laughter.) But he thinks that he may sot his traps out West and catch the Hoosiers. (Cries of 'No, fir: no. no.') No, my countrymen, we are Just a smart and we are just as honest, and we have just as much Interest in honest money as the people in New York have, and we are going to have it. This silver heresy is dead now; It is not a question of killing it; it is a question of burying it. (A voice: 'We will bury it deep.') Yes. bury it deep; that Is what we will do. Wo will give such majorities that will bury It so deep that no resurrectionist will ever think of trying to dig down to where it is. When we have done that business confidence will be restored: the money that Is being hoarded will come out; the factories will start up; business will be improved ajvi we will all be happy again." IN MAIHSON COUNTY. Ovations at Summltville, Alexandria and Pendleton. At Summltville, where it wns supposed a few hundred people wculd be encountered, a dense crowd of three or four thousand was found packed about the station, cheering the train as It pulled in. "There ho is! That's our Ren!" were some of the cries that greeted General Harrison as he appeared, and then there was a cheer that almost lifted the car. The voice that had been so far-reaching a few hours before had been almost used up In the effort to talk to the vast crowds of the day, and but a brief speech was made, assuring the people that the time for debate was closed, and, tho speaker believed, the award would be a magnificent victory for McKInley, honest money and protection. It was but ten minutes after the train left Summltville when the booming of cannon announced the approach to Alexandria. Here, under the glare of the flambeaux, six or seven thousand people had gathered and it was about the mo3t enthusiastic and responsive crowd that had been found during the day, seizing upon every point made for cheering and applause. General Harrison was Introduced by ex-Senator Harlan, and talked for about ten minutes, admonishing laboring men that their prosperity was at stake. Ho declared that Mr. Rryan had failed, though often requested, to show in what way the condition of labor would be improved by free coinage. Though he had talked possibly more than any other candidate for the presidency, the election was to be held without his answer to this question. Pendleton had not been scheduled for a stop, yit about 2,o00 people took chances by waiting at the station and firing a cannon as the train app.ve.aehed. General Harrison talked very briefly, but asked the crowd a ffv eiuestions, and the responses came quick and sharp. Neither was Fortville on the schedule, but from l.f.'J to 2a 'GO people were on the tracks there, and stayed there un b th? Lain stopped and General Harrison said a few words to them. It required but a few minutes more to run to Indianapolis, and the great city was ended. General Harrbon left the train at Massachusetts avenue and drove directly home. Though his voice was almost u.-u d up, and he was considerably fatigued with his big day's work, he was in excellent spirits and happy in the belief that the victory is already won In Indiana. Itenl Americanism. Philadelphia Telegraph. Ore cf the very best speeches made anywhere in the campaign was that of x-Presidc-nt Harrison at Indianapolis nn Saturday evening. It principal point was its complete- demonstration of the fah-lty of the Pryanlte charges of the coercion of votes of Republican worklo.gme n thiouh threats of employers. It was a most 1 lo- . fiuent and patriotic utterance, otic worthy t of any statesman or orator this country has produced. General Harrison said he not only did not justify coercion, as he had been charged with doing, but he denounced It; In fiery and conclusive words he claimed J the right of every man to vote according to his reason and his conscience, and to
AN OPEN LETTER.
What Mrs. I. E. Brossle Bays to American Women. Speaks of Her Melancholy Cea ditto After the Hlrtb of Her Child. "I feel af if I was doing an injustice to in suffering 6isters if I did not tell what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound has for me, and its vrorth to the vr orld. "Fromtl birth of my child until he was fouryears old, Iwcs in poor health, but feel- I inrj convinced that half of tho ailments of women were imagined or else culti vated, I fought against my bad feel ings, until obliged to give up. My disease baffled the best doctors. I was nervous, hysterical; my head ached with such a terrible burning sensation on the top, and felt at if a band was drawn tightly above my brow; inflammation of the stomach, no appetite, nausea at the sight of food, indigestion, constipation, bladder and kidney troubles, palpitation of the heart, attacks of melancholia would occur without any provocation whatever, numbness of the limbs, threatening paralysis, and 'loss of memory to such an extent that I feared aberration of the mind. 44 A friend advised Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and spoke in glowing terms of what it had done for her. ' I began its use and gained rapidly. Now I am a living advertisement of its merits. I had not used it a year when I vras the envy of the whole town, f my rosy, dimpled, girlish looks and perfect health. 44 1 recommend it to all women. I find a great advantage in being able to nay, it is by a woman's hands this great boon is given to women. All honor to the name of Lydia E. Pinkham ; wide success to the Vegetable Compound. 44 Yours in Health, Mrs. I. E. Bhesi, Ilerculaneum, JiTerson Co., Mo.w have that vote honestly counted. He treated with withering scorn the Imputation that railway managers, manufacturers, or other employers could by any possibility take any attitude but this, and assured his hearers hat the humblest man among them could humiliate and disgrace the greatest and Ftrongest employer in the land by giving proof of an effort to debauch American manhood and the sanctits' of the ballot. It was a flight of statesmanship and patriotism, and .lot a man who heard It, whether of our own house or an nllen. but was convinced in his soul, and will always be convinced, of what real Americanism is. So fine a thing is tho noble pa&sion of an honest man! THE HORSE THAT SELLS IT IS THR SHOWY ANIMAL WHICH MAKES A GOOD ItOADSTl'R. Several That Horace Wood Has i:xporteel Pnrchaars In Local Market for Foreign Shipment. Horace Wood, one of the best-known horsemen in this section, says that tbo horse market presents some singular phases, such hh he never knew to exist before. The only horse now which pells well Is the showy animal that is a, good roadster. For common horses or high-bred horses there Is but little demand, or, at least, there is not such a demand as to make an active market. High-bred calts which three years ago would seil at Z'hH to $1.00 wl l not now bring much more than a good-sized fair moving hone, and It is only the rood looker and lair sp nl horse which sells readily. About four weeks ago, to illustrate. Mr. Wood purchased at one of thi PJialr & Raker auction sales a fine-looking pair of bay horses and good roadsters, paying for them $1JU. A few days later he sold them for $9iot and they wer exported to Paris, Franc, and the returns came Saturday showing that tho horses were told In France at JhiXO. It cost J70 to ship the two horses from Indianapolis to Paris. Last week Mr. Wood purchased another pair fit tine horses at auction, paying $kJ for them, and he has already been oftere-el a rood advance for them to ship uway from here. There are now exjort buyers at all the weekly auction pal-s. and lat week two carloads were purchased by one of tne buyers to go to Scotland, and by another cxiort buyer on carload to b exported to France nd one carload to D;nmark. The r.umbt f buyers for Eastern and Southern markets Is increasing with each week. Tho business Is proving quite a benanza for the stock yards and for the railways, as i'j per cent, of tho heroes are uhlpped In here and V) per cent., when sold, shipped to other it- b. Clectrie Headllcht. Railr officials who do not use the electric headlights on locomotives do not give thtm the credit deserved. On the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton the value of the electric headlight has been more fully tested than on any other road iu the country, urdess it be the Vandaila, It having nearly all of Its passenger engines equipped with National electric headlights. In a letter from the olficial of another road C. G. Waldo, general manager of the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton road, was asked for his views of the light and Its value on a crooked road. He answered as follows: "Iar Sir I have you letter of Oct. 2. A number of months ao a helping engine was returning iUht on our Indianapolis division from the tcp of the hill to Hamilton. Ihe ent;ir.eeT of this engirv? overlooked the fact cf a change in the schedule of our Chicago nifiht ex pros i. and would heve met ibis train on tbe bridge over the great Miami river in Hamilton if he hau not aern th-5 relhcticn of the tlctnc neadllitht on thi enirint' of No. Zr before the train was in sight. He then stopped his engine and b.if k d up to a siding and got Into cler le for the express train arrived. An ena.1-n-t-r recently told me Tscna!ly that rather than run an enelne on this particular division of uur road without an electric h.adhht he would be willing to pay Tor it r.lmse.f. "There is no doubt in my mind but that these lights are a safeguard against ucciuents, and especially so on roads having manv (ur cs." IMwm R. Peirce. gcnerr.l manner of U.e company. stat d on Saturday that they now had their ele-trie headlights on fourteen roads, and if Mr. McKiny Is elected mo.t of them would put on more electric headlights, and a number of upi rlntendents of motive power had signified an Intention to equip their pusetigT engine with this liyiiL Hetnodclliitf the lllock. George W. Snld-r, who owns the threestory block on South Meridian street "ccupied by tbe Hide. Leather and ReUlng Compr.nv. Is ie modeling the block, putting en a'no th r b'.ory. making It four stories hlh. and putting in an iron front of tho modern ttyle of architecture. TO MAKi: YOIH FAMILY LOVH YOU Use "Garland" Stoves and Ranges.
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