Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 March 1902 — Page 14
iises iiiiD BMiTEiiiii;
ARGUMENTS AGAINST BEARDS AND CIGAR CLIPPERS,
GERMS LURKING IN THEM
According to the Theorlot of Some Student* of Hygiene — Few Whiekered Doctors.
NB by one the home* of wicked bacteria and geroi* are being found <jut and deetfoyed. or the public warned against them. Some of these warnings, however, are-without avail; jdeadlnm against emulation and paper money are Igfiored. and the great public goes on osculating and seeking for dedth enwrapped in musvy money. Occasionally on* sees some dainty wofis.m holding a regular hobo of a coin between her lli», but the general fveling la rather of envy than of horror. Bocks have tong been advertised as favorite date to let for bacteria, and the story is oft repeated jOf the seven bookkeepers who. one after wiother. traveled to another clime by way of pulmonary tuberculosis, contracted through tongue-moist-ened thumbs and one old ledger, fltrdetcar straps are alto under ban by some, but Indianapolis would be a deserted vll^laSe,were fhe mortality at all high as the * result of dangling from there leather loops, and it Jb probable there Is little danger, unless one carries his Angers about in his mouth, like n shy child. Water Is the most prolific distributer of fatal - germs, but many people like water, and others are so poor as to be compelled to drink it, and, therefore, ft is a danger from which It has so far been rather difficult io guard the public. Germs In Cigar Clippers. Among the bacteria dwellings that have recently been condemned are cigar cllplH>rs and whiskers, and it is eaid by some physicians that If the clippers and whiskers should get oft In some corner and
THE IHDIAiK’APOLIS WEW8, SATHEDAT, ilAECH 1, 1902.
romp with each other until both were extermlnattfi, the general public would be much better oft as well as the whiskers. There ate.no objections.to the small private clippers that are carrlsd about the person of the owner and are no more used by strangers than his teeth, but there are some serious objections to the public clipper that repoBes on the counter of the cigar' dealer for the use of all customers. Some of these customers prefer to chew off the ends of their cigars in tho good cld-fashloned way and kwallow the tip, or else blow it, in a nne dust, over the , garb of the other custorners; some prefer j, the use bf k knife or scissors; others carry aboui with them more or less elaborate cutters of their own, but thejrtsat majority use the-public clipper. This in itself : ivould not be so bad, but there seems to ^ be a prevBlienco of the custom of first i moistening ths cigar betvreen the Ups and j then clipping off the end—possmiy for luck, or to prevent the cigar froig breaki Ing. The moisture that Is thus carried from i the Ups to the jaw* of the clipper is apt
story op f\ P°UTlGflL ■ °R4finiz(rn“n MN 5°jn'H£:Rn " i inoiAMA xy.K.BLobGETT
[From a SUff CorrespondenkJ NEW ALBAKT, Ind., March l.-Ther« Is said to be In certain parts of southern Indiana an oath-bound political organisation, whose members have for their motto, "We Stand Together." Thte oiganlaatfon has Its signs, grips and passwords; In fact, it is a secret organisation in the full meaning of the word, ^nd it is claimed that it Is the outgrowtlt of the whitecaps, as that aggregation of Woman-beaters was the outgrowth of the rejgulators of a half century ago. Of this political organisation but little is known, except by its members, and they tell | nothing, not even in a court of Justice, >lt is asserted by people who say they kn*w, that the whitecaps in certain countlw elect their own members to office; that when a trial In which any member is interested is to take place other members are around to go on the jury; that it Is a inutual protection society in more ways ^than one, and if an alleged whitecapperi is punished it Is because he has a little crowd of bis own. and does not belong to the big organization. ■ Moves In Sacrscy. Where this political organization meets, no one who knows will tell. The members know each other, and they axe found In city, township, county, district and State conventions of all political parties, and It is said that this la one secret organisation that can not bd used to further the interest of any politician; the Interests of them all being held above the Interest of one. It Is not an organization that sells its votes, or| makes a display at the polls, but its pdwer is feH. This organization, to which ■ no one has ever given a name, is said iio be particularly strong in th# counties of Brown, Monroe. Greene, Lawrence, Martin, Crawford, Harrison and Perry; in Tact, it is said to be pardcuiarly lusty ail over parts of the Second and Third congressional districts. As it is explained, it Is not an organization of law violators, but when one of the members Is in trouble, the others stand by him to the last. This has been demonstrated in the icouHs time and again. That there was some secret Infiuence at work was realized when the Verdict came, gither in the court-room or at the poils. Some time the history of JAbs organization will be told. There is no one now who would dare to reveal its
secrets.
The beginning of this organization counts back many years. In the earljriettiement of the State, Indiana was. overrun with desperate criminals from Ohio and Kentucky, and the southern part was more afflicted because the horse thieves, robbers, counterfeiters and other desperadoes could reach It from the Ohio river. There was a reign of terror in the river counties of Indiana for years, and when the people of those counties banded together for self-protection, the criminals fled to the hills of Crawford and Harrison counties, and made their way up through Lawrence and Monroe, and zought shelter in Brown and other counties. It was then that the famous regulators were formed. There was but little law in those days Might mads right, and even If the crude courts did attempt to Inflict punishment, the thieves and murderers bad it in their power to produce the preponderance of evidence and go acquitted. But the regulators, Jiie nighi riders, made no mistakes, and there was no appeal from the judgment they rendered. Some of the older citizens of Corydon, in Harrison county. say that often they have seen horsemen ride through the town at night, with white sacks over their heads and eye holes
They did.not know where
from; they knew
A few days
r»g them were brutally «wlteh(‘d*and ordered to leave. They went I to Martinsville, but returned afterward to [ Bloomington. | Assasalnatldn of Mershon in Jail. | I have recited the outrages in Monroe j county more particularly because it was ! m that county that the political organlza- \ tlnn I mentioned at the beginning of this i letter was found, and Its Inception waa! the killing of Mershon In the Blooming- ; ton Jail. It is claimed that the sheriff j knew the members- of the mob, but he j never revealed their names. He waa] elected to any office he uspired to, and when, as county treasurer, he was a defaulter for $lS.e(lO. no attempt was made to punish him, and he left Monroe county unmolested. "But while Monroe county was suffering ■from whitecap outrages, oUter localities had its whippings and beatings as well. ITie at ate authqritieit were aroused, detectives- were employed, and arrests were made. One or two alleged whltecappers were sent to the penitentiary, but they were fellows who went Into the whitecapping business on their own account. They did not belong to the gang. The whitecap* went too far—they* overstepped the bounds of prudence, even In law violations. The death blow to whltecapism m-as dealt In Harrison county. In the hills, near Corydon. lived a family, consisting of the father, two sons, daughter and mother. .They were poor whit# trash, from across the river hi Kentucky.' The father was found dead In the woods, and the boys were brought to Corydon, charged with th# crime. A preliminary examination showed them guiltless, and they returned home. In a few days ths customary bundle of switches was left on their doorstep, and a note informed them that utiiess they left the country in ten days the whitecaps would get them. They did not go, and they were Informed that on a certain night the whitecaps would come. Th« bouse stood close to a com field, the corn rows reaching almost up to the little porch, Tho two boys, armed with shotguns loaded with slugs and buckshot, hid in the com field. Nine of the whitecaps stood on the porch. Two of them went Inside the house after the mother. A rope was thrown around the sister’s neck, and she wa* dragged Into the house, and then the boys, hidden In the corn field, fired a volley. Five of the six men on the porch were killed and one was badly wounded. The rest fled. Th( boys escaped to Kentucky, and at labt accounts were there. Damage Suits Always Beaten. Since that time there have been a few whippings, but the practice has about died out There have been several diamage suits for whlteeapplng tried In dlfterent counties, but In no instance have the plaintiffs secured judgment. The jury either disagreed or decided for the plaln-
THE DEATH BLDW TO WHITE CAPS.
In the sacks. , the horsemen came
"they were on tho march.' later the story of their march was told. SomeUmes it waa a ghastly object swinging from the limb of a tree; maybe It was a badly whipped man, or perhaps someone had suddenly left the neighborhood. No one asked any questions. It would hardly do, for one’s right-hand neighbor
might have been riding In the crowd that night. This was the original w'hite cap organization, and when the thieves and thugs were driven away, the regu-
lators disbanded.
Brutal Murder of Bingham. Along In 1887 the “whitecaps” again became prominent, but they were of^a different class from the old regulators. These were rulfians, who used their might for personal spite or vengeance. They were particularly obnoxious about that time In Monroe county. Edward Bingham, constable, in Richland township, was whipped to death by them, but not until he had killed one of the gang with an ajc. The murder of Bingham was an atrocious one. He was carried on horseback to a big hickory tree, where the gang took turns beating him with switches cut from a tree near by. When he fell unconscious^ the leader of the gang threw the body of Bingham across the pummel of his saddle and carried him back to his home, where his wife was waiting for him, and threw the body over tho fence, exclaiming to the terror-stricken woman: "Here is your old Bingham.” The poor woman tried to save her husband’s life, but«-he died In her arms the next day. The community was so outraged that detectives were employed and Indictments for murder were .returned against John Taylor, John Rogers, George and Enoch Morgan and John Koontz. Solompn Claypool, afterward of Indianapolis, was the Judge before whom^ these men were tried. Enoch Morgan was* sentenced to nineteen years, George Morgan three years and John Rogers six years. Koontz and Taylor proved an alibi. • . » ^ The punishment meted out to the whitecaps did not stay their nefarious work. They had such powerful influence that the convicted men served but a small part of their sentences, and whipping of men and women became a common thing. Prom 1858 to 1874 Monroe county was quiet, except an occasional "insignificant whipping.” In the latter year Daniel Jacobs was killed by the whitecaps. No attempt was made to capture the assassins. In 1878 a man named Mershon was arrested on charge of murder, and the "whitecaps” broke Into the Jail and shot Mershon to death as he cowered In one corner of hla cell. Many believe that Mershon was Innocent of the crime for which he W.18 lynched. In 1883 WUllam Norman was badly beaten by the whitecaps. He brought suit against a number of farmers for damages, but the Jury disagreed.
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((([I/ 10 <q (•’K
THE ■WHIPPINO OF E0WAIID BINGAM.
A Milwaukee Railroad Mao Knocked
Down
During
at a Telephone a Storm.
SiekMtl^
1;
■•rvtIouB EHxIr IM r. ei»v«r«d by PaimitM . . . SetentNt :Tli«t Gm^ Cv#ry — Wonderful Gutm Ar«,Ki That Saam i^a.MIraiitt Parfonaaii — The i« emt of tong Ufi of Oifion Tlmo* Revived. ^
A Dreadful Nervous Disease the Result—Victim Lost the Use of His Limbs—His Marvelous Cure aud How It Came About.
Strange happenings are constantly being recorded, but It Is safe to say. tew people can tell of a personal experience as wonderful as that which fell to the lot of Mr. D. C. Peak, of No. 814 Well* street, Milwaukee, WIs.^ HI* m|raculou* recovery from locomotor ataxia Iz attracting widespread attention throughout the country, and has excited much comment from the press and among physicians. Mr, Peak is well known In railroad circles throughout the entire State, and held an Important position with the Chicago. Milwaukee & St. Paul R. R. Co. for a number of years up to the tims he was taken with his terrible affliction. He is now well, and expects within a short time to resume his position with .the company. In view of the Importance of Mr. Peak’s case and the talk his
IR
D. C. PEAK. cure has caused, a reporter was assigned to look up the matter. In answer to the newspaper man’s Inquiries Mr. Peak said: “To go back to what I suppose was the first cause of my disease. Onp day In 18^ during a heavy thunderstorm, I was talking over the telephone when lightning struck the A'ires and the shock knocked me down. How badly my system was affected at xhat time I am unable to say, but for about a year afterward whenever it rained or the weather was damp, I would feel a prickly sensation all over me, just as If I were taking an electric shock from a battery. But this finally stopped and I thought no more about it. “However, In 1896, when I was 41 years old, my fingers in both hands, as well as my limbs, began to get numb, and there were severe pains in all my Joints. I went tp the doctor and he treated me for some time for rheumatism. But, in spite of the medicine he gave me, my affliction grew worse. My limbs got so numb that 1 could stick pins into them and scarcely notice It. If I shut my eyes I would fall down. ‘Well, not getting much benefit from the doctor, 1 went and consulted a specialist on nervous djseases and he pronounced my case locomotor ataxia. He began treating me for that disease, but while under his care I contracted blood poisoning, and was confined to my bed for some tlms. 'When I
was able to get up, I had lost the use of my limbs. "Then I was discouraged and thought there was no help for me. But my wife saw an advertisement In the Evening ’Wisconsin. In It was a statement signed by Mr. Joel Shomaker, of North Takima, ■Wash-, telling how he had been cured of locomotor atpiia by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pals People. I waa at that time unable to as I could not hold a pen in my fi^mrs, so my wife clipped out the advertis^ent and mmt It to Mr. Shomaker to see if It was true* and all right. He wrofe back that this medicine had cured hiti^r, and advised me to try It. "I didn't think It would be much use but I got some of Dr. MriUiaraa' Pink Pills right away and began taking them. Tou can see yourself wbat they have done. X expect to take up my position again with th^ railroad In a short time. "Certainly, you can publish what I have told you,” he' added, “and you can say that If anyone wishes to refer to me 1 will take pleisure in assuring -them ol the facta.” What jLoeomotor Ataxia Xs. locomotor ataxia is a disease of the spinal cord, characterized by peculiar disturbances Of gait and difficulty In governing the mjjtions of the legs. One of the commonealt and early signs 1# a tired feeling, particularly noted In the knees and ankles. This sensation is provoked by slight exertion, and Is hot remedied by rest. Often a numb feeling is associated with It, and tfibse two symptoms are always present in the early stages. Later developments are tho Increase In duration and extent of the numb feelings, covering at times the foot alone, then extending up the leg. As the disease is of slow growth, some cases covering a period of ten years, the Increase aitd Intensity of the symptoms Is not noticed, but Its progress Is constant and gradually approaches a total lack of feeling In the legs, causing a wobbling in the gait and the entire inability to’ govern the steps. As it grows the patient loses all control over the bowels and water. A further symptom is the sensation of a pressure at the waist, as the upper part of the spinal cord becomes affected. The Treatment. Locomotor ataxia is stubborn In yielding to treatment, and was for many years considered incurable. It has been fully demonstrated, however, that this disease can be cured by the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. The length of treatment required depends upon the stage at which It Is commenced. It Is dangerous to delay taking the pills after the presence of the disease is recognized, although this remedy has proved efficacious in many cases oi long standing. The fact that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cured this stubborn case, as they have cured others equally severe, leaves no room for doubt but that they will cure lesser troubles arising frepn disordered nerve*. It Is a well established fact that they are an unfailing specific, not only for locomotor ataxia, but for partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, neuralgia; nervous headache, and also for all diseases arising from impure or Impoverished blood, such as rheumatism, ansemla. after-effects of the grip, palpitation or the heart, pale and sallow complexions and all forms of weakness either In male or female. At all druggists, or direct from Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. T., fifty cents per box; six boxes for two dollars and fifty cents.
In William Ray was terribly whipped I tiff. The last suit of that kind was In by the "wWtecaps.’' after which he wm , Brown county, a few weeks ago.
tarred and feathered. He was ordered to'
leave the community and take with him a tenant named Nettle Chrlsman. They did not go, and the woman was strung up to a trr« by her wrists and whipped. While part the gang was beating the woman anot....i portion burned her bouse. Governor Matiht’ws tried to punish the perpetrators of this outrage, but he was not able to discover their identity. 'The last whitecap outrage in Monroe county was the whipping of the Hacker family. M. C. Hacker, two daughters and a young
to bear germs and bacteria of a fighting breed, though Uielr virulence is to some extent neutralized by the chemical properties of the tobacco, and the next man who trims hts olimr In th* clipper and then stioka it In hla mouth is likely to convey to his Up* th*. bacteria left by the man'before him. Some blood.dlsecsee are epectally apt to be traaamittad tn this maaiur. So it Is always beat to trim a cigar with a private appliance or ad^fe, or if the weed is too stubborn, wfni a
hand ejc or a oam knife.
- Whisker* form * moro deltoate subjoat to tfucb upon, beoause they are oc a ntorvpersonal nature, and no matter bow w^rd and unusnal they may appear, there Is always a man naar to back them
ABSOLUTE SECURITY. G#nuliie Carter’s ttleUyerPiUs. Must SMr RlgfiEtiim of
nRttHABML jjBMwmfft, littitnitMn. MlTIPilfM. SAULIW tut.
whiskers cherish them with a tenderness supposed to be lavished on only children, and taunt the beardless faction with the claim that it takes a man to raise whlsksrs-which is proba I'yflenio standpoint. The bearded ones also
“an
bad his whiskers removed that they might
twigs as he
it^tbUy made his way through the formte, and that teter. Alexander the Great
*»*«?*■ the Macedonian
f*™?'.*^‘.****^ might not be pulled out Ih battle, to the discomflture of tbelr owner*, ttm whiskered ones argue further that there are no longer warriors with ^r-puUlng proollvltleit, and that the daonr of catching whisker* in primeval brau and twigs has been leducM to a nunlmum. Th* antl-whtakerttes urge that beards am a relle of barbarism, that they are not hyglenio and that a man’s face WM not given him to be covered by hair. Th* second aigumsnt seems to have the cover of truth, as it is said by some leading Physicians that whiskers are regular hot-houses for the culture and growth of bacteria and germs of i vicious tendencies and that a man has. simply to shake his bwurd to scatter tbese( germs bi^dcast. Surgeons and physicians have, with few excertioaA discarded th* one* cherished bsard, that waa probably formerly worn to protect their throats on long, cold drives ov«r the country iroada The beardleas youth who baa bdt recently started <m the tndl of lte:uiaplds feels more nearly on an equal footl^ with the old but non-whi^ered practitioner. Even the fondly fostered whiskers of the dairyman have been atteoked, not on account of chertalied Mesds of milkmaids, gleaned frees oomio operas, but because it is said that the beard catotw* the germlad«n dust of the steblee and shakea it into the milk. It is even asserted that th* beard of the unobtrusive citlsen is a manaoe, as it catches germs tn aU garmbaarlag spots and dlatributea them im-
partteuy to the general public.
X>r. J. K. Miuty, eeoretary of the State Board of Health, when asked as to the poealbilltiaa of the public cigar clipper and whlskera said that neltber are safe objects to dally with. Hie cigar clipper, he aald. might aarily transmit contagious dieaaaas. and be mentioned a«v«rml cases of bleoa potsoalng that bad aifitetently been eontmeted la that maaiier. The tobeeoo. he added, would to sons* exhmt imtraas* th* TlTulemre of th* bacteria, l^igardlng wblskera, be said that few {diyslctsfui or surgeons now chestsh them, and that bacteria ndght be carried from a bedside or from the operating table and released among other patienU by , means of beards. It would seem queers 'he said, for a mirgeon carefully to pro-. %eet bte bair 8r«m gwrau, and then wean a beard that might readily dip into ahdoasteal cavities ^harfag an operatton and thus apread disease. "And as for milkmen.** no eoBciuded, *%&*! on wurth does a mOkman went to carry a brush like ^t around to Miaka ever the mtlkt ipytettre ara abaar uoasMum. anyway."
SHELBYVILLE’S NEW CHRISTIAN CHURCH DEDICATION TO-MORROW
First Christian Church and Pastor, E, F. Mahan, especial to Th* XBdiaaapoUa Mews.} R will hava coat 131^000. The material SHEX4BTYILLB. Ind.. March L-Th* used in its conatrucUon is Bedford buff new First Cbiistlan ohureh building i* to and Flatrock blue Umestone. Tbe arehibe dedkSLted to-morrow by the Rev, F. M. teeture la a modification of tbe old SpanRains, of CinclnnaxL He will be aaslsted Ish mission style. It has a seating capaoia tha eeremonle* by th* Rev. S. ITnley Ity of eight hundred. The Interior Qaish Mahan, pastor of the chardk. Few Chris- is golden oak. Harris A Shopbell, of Evtlan oongresmtlons in Indiana, can boast of ansvllle, were the architects, and the con- « church as pretentious as th# one that 1# tractors were Feaster A Dav*^ of this to be opened here. When fully oomi^ted mty.
TALKS OF A TRILUONAiRE.
L trilUonalre. scarcely a man who heard [ him thought of the tremendoue sum mentioned tn the prediction. Later some of
The political organization, called a Great Political Brotherhood, for lack of a better name, does not whip or murder people. Some members of it perhaps may violate the law, but the organization as an entirety does not. But the knowledge that such an organization is In existence has a salutary effect on the morals of several communities. There is no telling when it might cal! a special jeaslonjof^Judse Lynch's court. 1 ' * TOOK HIS OWN MEDICINE. Cured the Patient, but It Killed the
Doctor.
BT. LOUIS, March L-'‘We, the jury, find that the deceased, James Ripley, came to his death from an overdoes ol medicine, manufactured by himself and taken by him to demonstrate to a patient, to whom he 'waa administering, that the medicine was harmless." The above verdict was rendered by the coroner’s Jury at East St. Louis, which Investigated the death of James Ripley, an Aged herb physician of Rush dty, who claimed to be Immune from all contagious diseases and treated many patients for smallpox and other diseases. Last Wednesday Ripley was attending Olman Cherry’, of East St. Louis, and wanted him to take some^of his herb remedy, bqt Cherry waa afraid It would poison him. “Pshaw," said Ripley, “it ■won’t hurt you, I only want you to take a tablespoonful and to show you it Is harmless 1 ■will drink a pint.” Suiting hts action to the word, the doctor drank a pint of the mixture and ths patient then took his dose. Ch«ETy recovered from bis ailment, but Ripley waa seized with convulsions and died.
B'V’BRY INCH OOOH SAIOKB [OZJBAB HAT AS A} t •«PXEjRISOZ«:*.«l OIPiSOXAJL. BRECVIT** UXOHBJS EOotm. STRAlOU'r
Startling Suggestion of Enormous {them figured It out. According to coma* j putstlon. if 4>S men Were put at work
weaitn^at Boston Banqust. . counting this imst sum at birth, and - . stroa* nerves, A>ui)d zimd BOSTON. March l^Prestdent Eteker-1 wntlnuously untU death at the worth firing. Tb* inort chrome
mm, or th« American Itn-PlatR ^ compl<jt«d to tlin« to itlve each paay, dealt la some startUng figure* to man a few second# in which to die. ’They
I**-- m.* -- • I - _ .
DYSPEPSIA. Th* Ororer Grsbzm Dyspepdz ReaMdr is sold under a posttlv* guarmnt** that It will cor* Dymspaia. HMithura. GastritU or any form of ■tomaeh diaordar, no matter bow ehronlo or a*vere. The very flret doae r«novee all dtatreas, tones the weak stomach, pr*v*nU formantaUon and restoret digestion. Kvery nerve and Sber of the body depend upon the stomach for tbetr support. When dlgeetioi) eeaaee, a riow form of starvation begins and tbe vital organf. derived of tbelr subristence, become d*. biUtatad. Good digmUoa is essMttiat to baaltb; proper asstmllatlon of atouriahment means pur*, I blood, strong nerves, •ound sleep and tas life worth flving. The moat ehr^e caaa stomach disorder is ixoniedlately correctod
Stiff Joints What a stiff joint needs more than anything else is Omega Oil. The next need is plenty of massage, or rubbing. The rubbing makes the blood flow faster, and the Oil loosens up and softens the hard, stiff places. The first thing to do with a stiff Joint in machinciy is to oil it, and then work it back
and forth until all the stiffness is gone. Now, as a matter of fact, your body is a machine, not of iron, but flesh, muscles and joints, and you want to keep it well oiled with Omega Oil if you expect to have it in good running order. This is common sense, and every one knows it to be the truth.
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Tks Rsmsfiy Is Ffss Ts All ^ '1laM*:AR4 Afitlrsa*.'^''^' After years off patient study, ing Into tbe dusty record or ti well as following modem the reairos ef uiMIcal scleib W. Kidd, 16C Fl^t Natt ing. Ft. WayuA ilnd., makwi
is Clj
t IS
OR. JARKS WILLIAM KtOQ..^ annpunceraeot that he has sorely ered the elixir of life. That he le abfeT the ald| of a mysterious compound only to blmseif, pioduoed aa a rw. the years he ha* spent la searcnilg. this preciou* life-giving boon, to and every diaeaae that is'known human, body. There is no doubt of doctor's earnestness in making his and the remarkable cures that be 1 effecting seem to Joear him out strongly. His theory which he advaiie one of reoeon and Is based on sbuni perienoe in a medical practice of year*. It costs nothing to try hi# re able “EUxIr of Life," as he call* if, sends it free to anyone who, is a sufff in sufficient quantity to ooBVinoe of ability, to cure, so there is absoluteijj risk to run. Some of tbe cures cite very remarkable, and but for witnesses would bkfdiy bo credited, lame have tbro*|a away crutches walked, about after two or three trteli the remedy. The sick, given up by 1m doctors, have beeu restored to thMr fs lies and friends in perfect health, matism. neuralgia stomach, heart kidney, blood and skin diaeaaea aiJc der troubles disappear as by magiu^^ aches, backaches, nervousness, f«v consumption, coughs, colds, ssthma. taiTh, bronchitis and all affections oi l throat, lungs or any Vital organs are t _
lly overcome in a space of tims tbar|
simply marvelous.
Partial paralyslSs locomoeor ataxia,di sy. gout, scrofula and piles are gate and ijermanently removed. It purifies entire system, blood and tissues, rsstor norma! nerve power, circulation, and’' state of perfect health Is produced at oi To the doctor all sysj^s are alike c equally effected by Mils great “Ettxlr Life." Send for the remedy to-day. It freo to every sufferer. State what want to be cured of and the sure r«s for It will be sent you free, by reti
mail.
IWFUL RESULTS OF EPILEPSY OR FI A Remarkable Discovery Has Been Whereby Those Afflicted With Epilepsy or Fits Can Be Fenpaneatly Cured. '
FREE, k FULL I6JIUNCE BOl Hksy eiaaaVroiiB and fatal accldenta have directly cattacd through Bpllepey or Ftta long ago a prominwii actrass marred an tire performance by having an tpilspUo (It, recently % Mew York paper publiaoed as count of a young lady being seised with a and failing from the third fioor of a bulldb euriataing fatal injuries; bat It waa left far]
JOHN CHODTKAG. ettlMD of Vinita, I. T., to hava tha most ^ ritlnf axp«ri«aoe ad record, la tte spring 'M John Chouteau, wbUa on hfai pony Vlnlto, L T., suddenly uttered a beanrei yell and fell from his pony, bis feet stUI the atirrupa. Tte imy became frightansd •tartod to run: Bill Jfodway, who was sea made a great laaao mrow, eaeght tha pony ■eved Chouteau's Ufa. Chouteau had f warned not to ride, aa ha wa# aubjeat to .w rfbie attack* of epilepsy ainoe 4&faitc|>-the ei tacks coming sometimes three or four times week. Choutoau about this ttiM began Dr. Fred IL Grant'a cure for fi^iiepay, as auote bte own worde, "I have never had attack elnoe." Ae thte occurred tn ’IL hs beyond a doubt pennsnontlv oarsd. Dr. S. Grant spoken of in the above it a reac . phyelclan. who Me made a Mfe study of cause and core of lEpUwwy or Fits. Be prepared a remedy, which le a purely veget cdnuxiaBd and he emphattcaliy stetaa that preparation wilt permanently sad porit' cure flu in all its forms, no matter from cause. Me wtohes to oonvlnee everytee hts stoument ta a fact, be therefore every person tn the United States suBeris IMlepsy or Plu to send tbetr ni^ and 1 to Dr. Fmd E- Grant. *#» Mew fUjige Buih Kanaaa City, Mo., and receive afcamotely fi large bottle of this wonderful remedy, member, it is not a sample boitle, but a ' full E-oune* bottle and it eosts you. From the mawclous enrae that have te it esn be pMitlvety atatod that every ease be permanently cured that tafcee this treatn Our advice le. write to-dsy and taka ' tags of this generoiis offer,
Larrabee’s Rh#uiiiatto Liniment has enjoyed a oonetaat patronnSR bw aiyi|9 sixty yeare. tt is wenderfolbr eStoaetea* tel aU pHiififtfy dkSNMMfl* vmIi mm ' ^ Rttosumattlmm. LAftniMMiOi CteeteerrH, Toozlim«hte BfmurvatRte* Ckaolceaaltte sad othtr aiiioents where |mIb is aa 1 emL Try it At drug stoN*, or by 1 reeslpt of aama, adAeae aad SI seste smm CARBoixTbv chkhscal Mnltemer*. Md. Far eels by Frsak H. Oarin’. IS'W. Sttek' «t, ra aad T» Maas. Ave., ladtgossote.
address at tbe New England Iron j farther figured that one man. equating and Hardwe^ Aasociatton's annual ban- at the rate of » a second every day. qute at ^e Hotel Vendoma would be occupied for tl.7» years, tte . Vy* have mllMonaim aow; «§ wts and two hour* In oounttag the tril-, telldnt of blpiMireei it Is not Impoeei- lion. When they had svolreatheeo fact* Weteat ws S^ eoga hav* tittliona£rm” th^ wair* aghast at PzssIdsDt Dldrar-
Whm Prestdsnt Dhdussett spoks of thf ***-*‘‘
to "the Grover Graham Dyspepsia Bemedy. which is prepared from the ortgiaal MeOerinott formula so renowned throughout Europe, Md for which we have secured the aoie American rtokta Sold by aU drunrleU. Writs for pane^iet and asnd a bistmy of your osm for valu. edrica We have eared thnnaande of the funfld severe oases and can cure yoitra ber. we gwmntoe esriafaetkau B. Grever Gm.
Ob.. Mewborgh. K. T.
Onega Oil is good for <
a linincut ought te be good lor.
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