Pike County Democrat, Volume 24, Number 6, Petersburg, Pike County, 30 June 1893 — Page 4

DB. L. Ik CASHES. stricken Down with Heart Disease. * Hr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. GENTuaren: I feel It my duty, u well as • eeasure, to pubilsh, unsolicited, to the world the meat received from pn. Miles- Re.toh.tive Remedies I was stricken down with Heart IHsease and Its complications, a rapid pulse varyIns from 90 to 140 beats per minute, a choking or burning sensation In the wind pipe, oppression THOUSANDS* « alon of the heart and below lower rib, pain in the arms, shortness of breath, sleeplessness, weakness and general debility. The arteries in my neck •would throb violently, the throbbing of my heart could be heard across a large room and would shake my whole body. I was so nervous that I could not hold my hand steady. I have boon under the treatment of eminent physicians, and have taken gallons of Patent Medicine without the least benefit. A friend recommended your remedies. She was cured by Dr. Allies’ remedies. Ihavetaken _ . . — _ _ three bottles of your Kew (.1 IHr I I Heart Cure and two bottles v —— a a Nervine. My pulse is normal, I have no more violent throbbing of the heart. i am a^well maw J sincerely recommend every one with symptoms of Heart Disease to take Jir. Miles' JRestorer five Hemedies and bo cured. . Gypsum City, Kans. L L. Cum Sold on a Positive Guarantee. OR MONEY RETURNED fib tent*} JJnuomt By ML. ilIcC. STOOPS. jflgf* Th© Pike County Democrat has the lar* {test circulation ot any uewspaper published in JPike County l Advertisers will make a note of this fact! Entered at the posto$iee In Petersburg for transmission through the mails as secondclass matter. FlilDAY, JUNE 30, 1893. The Chicago Times says: The Indiana folks have probably done the right thing more completely than anybody. A great, cool room, that takes up half the third, story of iloosier building, has been fitted up exclusivly for luncheon parties. The room has a clean linoleum floor, its many windows are white curtained and it is filled with brdad white tables where whoever comes in njav eat. The;‘a are polite servants in' attendance and big pitchers of ice-water are scattered everywhere. Hundreds of people come to this room every pleasant day. From 11 o’clock to 2 it is a merry place. The lunchers here are finite different from the dejected people who perch on steys, lumber heaps, and piles of stuff and much dry food in the lower end of the grouuds.

A"funny story is going the rounds of a young lady who found a hbrsehhoe and wishing for good luck placed it under her pillow in company with her false teeth. In the morning in the hurry of dressing she substituted the shoe for the teeth and wore it for sometime belore the mistake was discovered, This story was told a young lady, and with great astonishment in her voice she exclaimed “and never washed the shoe!” She was evidently surprised more over the lack of cleanliness than the size of the girl’s mouth. An Albion girl recently found a package of . love letters written by her father to her mother before they were married. The daughter read them to her mother, pretending they were of *a recent date and substituting her own name for that of her mother and the name of a young man known t» both of them for that of her father. The mother was very much disgusted and has forbidden her daughter have anything to do with a young man who will write such nonsense and sickening stuff.

The Chicago Sunday Sun was again sold here last week. The marshal should suppress the sale. The correspondent from this city is liable to run agaiust a brick-bat at any time. Ho should immediately cut off the point of his pencil and once more try to become a mau. Any person who will write such disgraceful items as appeared in the Sun of last Sunday should be taken out and White-capped, and that just as soon as he is known. He is not a fit subject for this community. Hox. Johk C. New, laie'consul to London, expresses the opinion that “if Harrison would accept ihe nomination four years frotn now. he can get it practically without opposition’*' 6nd then he adds, "I think that' if he is nominated he will be elected by the largest majority that was ever given to a candidate for the presidency” Everybody expects Mr. New to talk 'bat way. i.

THE BOLD MON OM ETA LISTS. Is the East getting ready to contend openly fo* ai restriction of full legal tender quality to golid ? Jlr. Horace White, on? of the editors of the New York Evening Post, read a paper be1 fore the Chicago Bankers’ congress in which he argued without qualification that a single gold standard is both right and inevitable. The paper has been more coWpicIously printed in the East than another address to the congress. While a few editorial references have positively indorsed its conclusions, there is room for an inference that the eastern movement toward avowed monometalism considers itself about ready to throw off the mask. Western and southern congressmen must look beyond the present disturbances ot the Sherman act to the future monetary policy of these United States, not only for the guidance of our internal affairs, but for the effect of our action upou the rest of the world. The United States, occupy today the position of being tho nation to which all others are looking. All of them have worse disturbances than we, because none have our resources and rate of production to compensate for unfavorable circumstances. Whatever we decide to do will produce a profound impression.

Albschools agree upon the advisability of repealing the Sherman act. A repeal without an assertion of intention to reserve,the bimctallkyfbundation of our currency will be heralded as proof that the United States agree with Mr. Horace White and are to join the baiid of gold grabbing uations. - Gold has been going abroad for a term of years not limited to the operation of the Sherman or any other law. Iu lO years our exports of gold have exceeded imports by $200,000,000. When we discard silver and"begin to grab for gold we must pay for it with agricultural exports. Our export crops have been rapidly falling in price, and as gold appreciates will tall with possibly greater repidity if silver is further discredited. The moment the United States abandon silver it will fall in value and the gold necessary to maintain the legal tender quality for. what silver coins we have on hand—assuming that the gold men will consent to leaving our present coins as full legal tender money—will be increased. It is plain that from the very install the Uiiited States seem to have in view a monometallic gold Standard we must not only grab after new gold but must grab an enormous quantity. With every European nation holding its gold in a grasp as yiseiike as its financiers dare to place around the monopoly metal, the sacrifice of other Commodities in the purchase of new gold will be something unprecedented and frightfully destructive of debt-paying power.

It is sound nioney we want and not a money which is so precious that everything else is to be a drug in the markets while we struggle and elbow and lose our heads in the scramble to exchange the products of our labor for a share of the scauty legal tender supply* In the Fifty-third congress the west and south will' be called upon by the interests of their constituents to make a stand for a bimetallic currency, the currency of the constitution, the currency of history, the currency of the American people’s undeviating preference. Our money must be gold and silver coins and paper redeemable in such coins without loss to the holder. Only |by that bimetallic system can we have a sound, equitable, well adjusted freely moving currency supply, which will encourage commerce aud industry, establish just relations between debtor and creditor and remove the question from the uncertain agitations of each year’s politics. The question, “what does a mau buy when he purchases the title to a farm,” has ofteu been asked, but not so satisfactorily determined. From the latest decisions on the subject it is plain that he bays the ground, of course, and all the buildings erected ou it, whether these are mentioned or not. He also buys all the fences, but not material once used, then taken down and laid aside, not material purchased for a new fence, unless they are specially mentioned. He also buys all adjuncts necessary to the farm, except implements and machinery, For instance, if there be a pile of bean poles cut and used for the purpose, these go with the farm, but if cut and never used, they are the seller’s property unlesg specified as sold. Standing trees and trees that have fallen cm1 blown down go with the land, but if cut down and made into cord wood they become personal property, and to go with tho land must be specified in the sale.

a A QUEER ADMISSION. One of the latest arguments issued in behalf of a protective tariff—the address of the manufacturer’s club— insists that protection was devised chiefly for the man who toils. As proof of this it is slated that in the last quarter of a century ten million immigrants have coide into the country, most of them men of toil. The tarifT, it is maintained, has been the agency that has brought these, laborers here iu such great numbers. In the Chicago Tribune, a paper that insists that protection is necessary to the maintenance of the so-called American scale of wages, we find a lament over the exclusion of American boys from trades and trades’ unions. The article is based upon one in the Century, iu which it is.stated that the American boy is denied instruction as an apprentice, and if taught in a trade school is refused ad-. mission into the trades’ unions and is boycotted if he attempts to work as a non-union man. It is asserted, furthermore, that all foreign applicants obtain admission with little or no regard to their training and skill. This is explained by saying that the trades’ unions are controlled by foreigners. Commenting on these statements of

the Century, the Tribune says : “The American mechanics who in the early days of the republic were not only good workmen, but among the most loyal, sturdy and patriotic of all American citizens, almost entirely have disappeared. Their places are filled with foreigners, m'aiiy of them unskilled workers and a considerable number of them without any sympathy with American institutions and full of anarchistic proclivities. How disastrous all tills is tb American labor is demonstrated by the fact that American labor virtually has ceased to produce American goods. The places of skilled American mechanics are filled by tufbulent and unskilled foreign mechanics dominated by leaders who have introduced the strike and boycott, with which th$;y paralyze the labor market at their owu pleasure Meanwhile American boys are growing up iu idleness and without trades because these foreign know-nothings will not aliew them to learn one.” If we are to accept these statements as true, it puts the service which protection has rendered to the American laborer in a very peculiar light. In thje past twenty-five years the American people have paid hundreds of millions of dollars morp for goods Of various kinds Ilian they would have had to pay^under a reasonable tariff levied for revenue purposes. They have paid these great sums by reason of laws enacted under the pretense that they were necessary to protect American labor against pauper labor of Europe. Yet the Philadelphia Manufacturers’ club tells us that ten millions of immigrants, consisting of these pauper laborers and their families have come to this country to compete with American laborers; and the Tribune tells us that these foreigners have driven our native laborers, and that “American labor has virtually ceased to produce American goods.” Such are the two points of view from which protectionists contemplate the effect of their favorite policy upon the American workiugman. The one authority, discussing the tariff', cites the influx of foreign laborers as evidence of the wonderful prosperity which protection has created, ignoring, however, the fact that the greater part of the laborers come from countries in which protection prevails. The Tribune, on the other hand, is discussing the effect of immigration, and, losing sight of the tariff question for the moment, undertakes to show that American laborers have virtually been driven out of the field by the competition of the “panperjlaborers of Europe.” The deplorable picture furnished by tbe Tribune is a sufficient answer to tyhat the Manufacturers’ crlub says of the blessings which protection has bestowed on American labor.

Fathers and mothers, Jook.out for your boys when the shadows of evening have gathered rouud you. Where are they ? Are they at home, at the pleasant social fireside, or are they running the streets? Are they gaining a street education? If so, take care; the chances of their ruin are many. There Is scarcely anything so destructive to their morals as running abroad at night. Under cover of darkness they acquire the education of crime, they learn to be rowdish, if not absolutely vicious, they catch up loose talk, hear sinful thoughts and see obscene things aud they become reckless and riotous. It you would save them from vulgarity, save them from ruin, save them from prison, see to it that night finds them at home. More than one young man has told the chaplain of the state prison that there was the beginning of his downward career that finally brought him to the felonjs cell. Let parents'solemnly ponder this matter, and^do all they can to make home at- | tractive to all the children j so attractive that the boys will prefer it to roaming in the streets. There is no place like home for boys in the evenI ing

Edits Is tot®: asi Haifa Kew Jail and Sheriff's Residence Pealed proposals will be deceived at the Auditor's office In the town of Petersburg, Pike county, Indiana, until 12 o’clock m. sharp on Thursday, July 13th, 1893, for furnishing all materials and labor required in the excavation, foundation, erection, construction hnd completion of a new Jail and Sheriff’s Residence in the town of Petersburg for the county of Pike and state of Indiana, according to the plans and specifications for the same as furnished by J. W. Gaddis, Architect of Vincennes, Indiana Plans and specifications can be seen at the Auditor’s office at Pete»*sburg, Pike county. Indiana, and at the Architect’s office at Vincennes, Indiana, on and after this date. The said building to be fully finished and completed on or before the first day of March, A. D.. 1894. Estimates will be made, as may be agreed upon from time to time, and eighty per cent of said estimates wi# be paid according to contract Ail proposals must be accompanied by a good and sufficient bond, signed by at least two freehold sureties payable to the state of Indiana, ia the penal sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,0CO,) conditioned for the faithful performance of such work according to the plaiix and specifications on file, and the time, terms an^i conditions mentioned in the advertisement of letting. Alii proposals must also be accompanied wath a gqpd and sufficient bond payable to the state of Indiana signed by at least two resident freehold sureties thereof in the penal sum of Twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000,) whitph bond shall guarantee the faithful performance a.id execution of the work so bid for ip case the same is awarded to said bidder; and that the contractor so receiving said contract shall promptly pay all debts incurred by him in the prosecution of said work, including labor, materials furnished and tor board and lodging of laborers thereon. Said bonds must be certified to by the clerk of the county in which the sureties reside. that the same is good and sufficient beyond a doubt. Blank forms for olds and bonds will be furnished by the Auditor on application and all bjdfe must be made on said blanks The county commissioners reserve the right to reject any any and all bids. By order of the Board of Commissioners of Pike county, Indiana. Zachariah T. Bearing.) VVm. H. Gladish. > Com. Washington Carlisle.) ’ Attest Franklin It. Bilderuack, Auditor Pike county. Petersburg, Indiana, May 25th, 1893. 2The king of all Cough Cures is f‘C. C. C. Certain Cough Cure.” It cures Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Croup, Influenza, Bronchitis, &.C., where other remedies fail. For sale hv Bergen, Oliphant & Co.

Notice to Non-R^idents. The,state of Indiana, Pike county. 14 the Pike circuit court, July term, 1893. William F. Brock 1 William Survant I Elizabeth Hichardson i . vs. y- Complaint No. 2078. Anthony Gwartney | Children and heirs of | Frances Gwartney. J Now comes the plaintiffs, by Richardson & Thy lor, attorneys, and file their complaint herein, together with an affidavit, that the defendant. Anthony Gwartney is a non-resi-dent of the state of Indiana and the names and residences of the children of Frances Gwartney are unknown, and that diligent inquiry7 has been made to ascertain the names and residence of said defendants, but that said;inquiry;has not disclosed the names or residence of said defendants. Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants that unless they be and appear on the 2uth day of the next term of the Pike circuit (court to be holden on the 2nd Monday of July A.l). 1893,at the court house iu Petersburg; iu said county and state, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in their absence. In witness whereof, I hereunto set my hand and affix the seal of said court at Petersburg this 8th day of June, A.l). 1893. GOODLET MORGAN. 341 Clerk. “C. C. C. Certain Chill Cure” is pleavuit to take and harmless. Children like It. Guaranteed to cure Chills and Fever. No Cure—\o Pay. For sale by Bergen, Oliphant A Co. Executor’s Sale of Personal Property. Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned executor of the will of John J. Robiing. late of Pike county deceased, will sell at Dublllc auction at the late residence of the deceased in Clay township, on FRIDAY, JUNE 30th, 1893, All of the personal property of said estate, (not taken by the widow) consisting of horses and cattle, hogs, farm wagon, buggies, mow - er, bay rake, wheat drill, farming implements, hay in stack lumber, threshed oats and other articles too numerous to mention. Terms of Sale:—All sums of five dollars and under cash; and upon allsufns over five dollars a credit of nine months will be given, the purchaser giving note With freehold surety bearing six percent interest from date until paid and waiving relief fiom valuation laws. Sale to begin at 9 o’clock, a. m, Edward P. Richardson, June 6th, 1893. 3-3 Executor. Notice to Non-Residents,

Complaint Nd. 70. The state of Indiana, Pike county. In the Pike circuit court, July term, 1S93. Levi S. Noftzger. I Administrator of the * estate of Kowana Les* lie, deceased, vs. Alexander Leslie, George Leslie, Anna L, Bott, Ella DeWeese. Now comes the plaintiff, by Ely and Davenport, his attorneys, and flies his complaint herein, together with an affidavit, that the defendants, Anna L. Bott and Ella DeWeese are not residents of the state of Indiana. Notice is therefore hereby given said, defendant*, that unless they be and appear on the second day of the next term of the circuit court to be holden on the second Monday of July. A. D., 1893, at the court house;in Peters* burg, in said county and state, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in their absence. Ip witness whereof, I hereunto set my hand and aflix the seal of said court at Petersburg this 8th day of June, A. D., 1893. 3-3 Goodle* Morgan, Clerk Notice of Final Settlement of Estate. In the matter of thq, estater of Elizabeth Price, deceased. In the Pike circuit court, July term, 1893" Notice is hereby given that the undersigned as executor of the estate of Elizabeth Price, deceased, has presented and filed his final accounts and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said circuit court on the 11th day of July, 1893, at which time all persons interested in said estate are required to appear in said court, and show cause, if any there be, why said accounts and vouchers should not be approved. And the heirs of said estate, and all others interested therein, are'also hereby required, at the time and piace aforesaid, to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate. JAMES D.HOLLON, , * 4-3 Executor. Ely & Davenport, Atty’a, N otice. Notice is hereby given that the Hoard of Revlov of Pike county, Indiana, will meet at the commissioners’room at the auditor’s office in the eourt house at Petersburg, on Monday the 10th day of July, ISPS, for assessment, review and equalization of taxes for the year 1S*3. Frank R. Biij>ekback, 1-4 Auditor Pike County.

TTTTRTY years’ observation of Castorls ndth the patronage ft ».iTH«.n. of penom, permit n» to apeak of it without gnesshif. It is unquestionably the best remedy flu Infanta fend Childiai tie world hai evr known. It fa harmleu. Children lit* It It gives them, health. It ■will save their lives. In it Mothers hsva i something which Is absolntely safe end practically perfect ai it child’* medicine, Castoria destroys Worms. Castoria allay Feverishness. t . Castoria prevents vomiting Soar Curd. \ - > , Castoria cares Piarrhcsa and Wind Celle* ? Castoria relieves Teething Troubles. 'N' Castoria cures Constipation and Flatntency. Castoria nyntralises the effects of oarhonio acid gat, or polsomms s lr. Castoria does not contain morphine, opium, or other narcotic proper ty. Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowsls, giving healthy and natural sleep. Castoria is put np in one~sise hottles only. It in not sold in ibnllt. Don't allow any one to sell yon anything else ou the plea or prom's** that it isajnst as good ” and “ will answer every pnrpose.” See that yon get C~A-S~T"Q"R~I~A. The fao-simile i signature of ‘is on ever/ wrapper ■ Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.

Auditor’s Report of County Funds Fiscal Year 1892 To the Honorable Board of Commissioners of Pike County, Indiana, June Term of Court, lSOtr. The umlersisned Auditor of said County now submits hi ; annual report of Rece pts and Disdursemefits of the County Funds for the fiscal year 1892. commencing on .the first day of J une, 1892, and ending May 31,1893, both days inclusive, viz RECEIPTS. To balance To amount To amount To amount To amount To amount To amount To amount on hand last report, June 1,1892 .. since received on account of County Tax. since received on account of Change of Venue since received on account of Miscellaneous ... since received on account ©f Printers Fees. since received on account of Special Judges .. since received on account of Sheriff's (tost since received on account of County Bond Tax Total Receipts. —. .. Amount Orders redeemed by Treasurer during the year. .•...$24,55* f2 25,121 64 21 il > 7 30 8) 09 141 65 6.77 \ 87 ....:-.9.$o6,98T 2S . 37,354 94 Balance in Treasury June 1, 1893 .. • .. DISBURSEMENTS. .819,633 3 » amount orders issued on account of Jurors .. amount orders issued on account of Poor . amount orders issued on account of County Asylum . amount orders issued on account of Roads and Highways — amount orders issued on account of Printing.. amount orders issued on account of Miscellaneous. amount orders issued on account of Public Buildings, amount orders issued on account of Records and Stationary . amount orders issued on account of Bridges.. amount orders issued on account of Benevolent Institutions. amount orders issued on account oCBoard of Health ... amount orders issued on account of Prisoners .. . amount orders issued on account of Interest on County Orders amount orders issued on account of Coroners’ Inquest — — amount orders Issued on account Insane.. Afliount orders issued on account School Funds . amount orders issued on account of Change of Venue . amount orders issued, on account of County Attorney . amount orders issued on account of Election and Fuel ... amount orders issued on account of Circuit Court -- amount orders issued on account of Teachers’ Institute and Co. Supepnteo amount orders issued on account of Fox Scalps . .,■>— amount orders issue<&on account of Assessing and Board of Re view......... amount orders issued on account of Bailiffs. ^. amount orders issued! on account of County Officers . amount orders issued on amount of Interest on County Bonds ... amount orders issued on <®k)unt of Sheriff^ Salary.... amount orders issued on account of County Bonds.. ■amount orders Issued on acfcouut of Special Judges ... amount orders issued on account of Orphans’ Home.. . .. dent 2,31? 3) 3,018 61 1,27$ 9f> 1,487 2i* l,02t 4 . 291 HI 232 05 528 70 4,997 31> 275 6-, 119 50 579 10 1C 95 392 85 762 40 451 10 136 OC 25C OC 1,708 8o 892 2f» 1,27C UO 51 Of 1,411 IX 5>1 OC 4,246 & 3,035. ue 142 65 5,000 00 80 00 , 815 23

Total amount Orders issued. .$37*35® Total amount to balance... ..v — I9,b31 ' * |o«,987 Amount orders redeemed by Treasurer during fiscal year, 1S92 ..... . $37,353 Amount issued by Auditor during year. . • • •.. . S7*3*” Excess of issue over redemption..* - —. • $ 2 10 State of Indiana, Pike County,, SS: ... .. . . . I, F. H. Bilderback, Auditor in and for said county and state, swear the foregoing to be a true and correct report of the receipts and disbursements o' the county kind fof tie fiscal year, 1892, to the best of my knowledge and belief so help me God. F. R. Bilderback, A. P* C. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 13th day of Juue, 1893. . Z. T. Bearing, P. B Accepted and approved by the Board at their June term,li»3, ana ordered spread of Z. T. Bearing, record. Z. T. BEARING, ) W. H. <Juadish,> Commisiocert. W. CARLISLE. > Indianapolis BusinessUniversitY _ . — * -r, _ . __ . nmt rrmnir n. am AwiAnma 0n*osm post-owic*. ty; time short; expenses low; no fee for Diploma; a strictly jsusme&st tehoot man unnvaiea commercial center; endorsed and patronised by railroad, industrial, professional and business men who employ skilled help; no charge for positions; unequaled m tt e r lccees of its graduates. SEND FOB ELE6AHT CATAL06UE. HEEB & OSEiOBN, Proprietora, MItS. WALLACE ss I s m i

THE GREAT FAITH HEALER, ISTo. 8, Upper Eighth Street, Evans ville, Ind, Mrs. Wallace will he at the Pike Hotel, 'Wednesday aii^ Thursday, June 14 and 15, until 2 p. m.