Pike County Democrat, Volume 26, Number 25, Petersburg, Pike County, 1 November 1895 — Page 5
Mr*. J. JP. Be/1, Oauawatomie, Kan. wife of the editor of The OrapLlc, the leading local paper of Miami county, writes “I tram troubled with heart disease for six years, severe palpitations, shortness of breath, together with such extreme nervousness, that, at times I would walk the floor nearly all night. We consulted the best medical talent. The* maid there «mn» help forma, that 1 had organic disease of the heart for which there was no remedy. I had read your advertisement la The Graphic and a year ago, as a last resort, tried one bottle of Mr. Mile* Sew Cure for the Heart, which convinced me that there was true merit In it. I took three bottles each of the Heart Cure and Restorative Nervine and It completely cured me. 1 Bleep well st night, my heart beats regularly and I have no more smothering spells. I wish to say to all who are suffering as I did; there’s relief untold for them if they will only give your remedies Just one trial." Dr. Miles Heart Cure Is sold on a positive guarantee that the first oottle will benefit. All druggists se ll it at tl, • bott-1* s for IS, or Dr. Miles* Heart Cure Restores Health S* I Pictures Richardson’s Gallery. We guarantee everything ww put out to be satisfactory. *1 per dozen for Cabinets that can’t v » for the money bo beat These pictures are made on the best paper out, and are highly polished and finished. an per dozen. Our fl.tky work .made w* cabinet size- is simply fine. This work beiug guaranteed to be perfect. *0 per dozen. This Is our beat work. The finish is simply fine and perfect lu every respect. We are now offering with every dozen of this work one large 14x17 Crayon air-brush picture finished feee from same plate taken at the gallery. Absolutely free. We are prepared to do Copying, Ink and Crayon Work. SPetoxs'b-cLXgr. X:ii. FRED SMITH Dealer in alt kinds of , , , FURNITURE,
Funeral Supplies A Specialty Wf keep on hand at all times the finest Hut of Parlor rikI Household Furniture to lx found in the city. Bedroom and Parlor Suit* a Specialty* . . . In funeral supplies we keep Caskets Shrouds, etc., of the best make. Lon VanCampen, Manufacturer and dealer in Saddles, Collars, Whips and Rohes. Nothtng but firstclass Oak Tanned Leather used in all Harness. Work made to order on short notice. Repairing of Aft Kinds^t Neatly and promptly done. Give me a call when wanting anything hr my line of trade. SJhoD in the Osborne brick building on lower Main Street, i_i 3P«texs'pvxrgr, Iaa.dL. THE INDIANAPOLIS Daily and Weekly Sentinel Circulation has reached immense proportiona by its thorough service in receiving . all tbe latest news all over the State and from its dispatches from foreign countries. Every reader in Indiana should take a State paper, and that THE'SENTINEL. ' V Largest Circulation of Any Few?* paper in the State. a TERJ15 OF SUBSCRIPT ION. Dailv, one year ..... Week ly, one year. . |6 0© .. 1.0© The Weekly Edition Has 12 Pages! SUBSCRIBE NOW and make all s,. : remittances to The IndianapGik Sentinel Co, P|P4ANA^>U3,|N» tvi’l he fhrnjahed wita the .if tbe INDIANA STATE ft** . . .
BREACH IN THE WALL FREE WOOL OPENS T -IE WAY TO COMMERCIAL FRE EDOM. Protection let* Flarhtin* Hod to Repair Their Barrier*-Wool T Jiff Their Ob- | Jcctlre Point—Farmer*** ec Are Opened. Manofactareri* Tarn One «• Rest. There is good method i * the madness with which the Republics i press attacks the wool schedule of tt a senate tariff act. It is excellent taoti s. It is massing the troops on the broken oenter. It is the “stitch in time" tl at may “save nine.M It is a Vain attei apt to retrieve an irretrievable blander by the protectionists that dominated the senate. ' So we have the assault all along the line. We are gravely told that he mere apprehension of untaxed impats of wool sent millions of domestic she* p to the shambles, one reckless paper stating their number at over 60,00(,000. Others, more cautious, estimate that the slaughter has diminshed the Lome clip over 60.000. 000 pounds. Doleful, pathetic pictures are drawn by those word artists of the miserable oonditic a to which the merely impending freedom of the fleeces reduced the poor American farmer. Then the farmers have been given comparative figures shov ing the importations of foreign wool ‘ before and after” the blow fell on the flocks. Only 65.000. 000 pounds of wool came from pauper sheep in 1894, as compared with some 300,000,000 pounds in 1895. That imports fell off in anticipation of the removal of the tax *, that the imports of 1898were 173,000,000pounds; of 1892, 148.000. 000—these are immaterial matters, not pertinent to the discussion, and therefore omitted by them. That also is excellent tactics.. Leave to your opponent the discovery of year weak points. Then we have had stout denials of any advance in the price of domestic wool. Prices today are put alongside those of two or three years ago to establish this. The, omission to luue the prices of last year, while wool was still under the wing of its guardian angel, the basis of comparison, is another bit of adroit fencing. Interviews with woolen manufacturers are given in which they assert that free wool is not helpful to them. And so, one way or another, the assault is fiercely made and persistently kept up.
xms, we repear, is gooa xacucs. r ra j wool breaks the center of the whole protective policy. It strikes out the keystone of the arch. If the long struggle since 1887 had resulted in nothing more than tins, the end justified the effort. It opens a breach in the wall through which the hosts of commercial freedom will press. It is to the repairing of the breach that the enemy are bending their efforts. The protectionists have heretofore zealously maintained the line intact A corner of a bastion Was knocked off when qu:nine was placed on the free list and another when hides went there, but they were not serious breaches. The strength of the protectionists has been in their ability to bamboozle the farmers into believing that somehow they also were the beneficiaries. The wool tariff has been given as illustrating* this. If wool remains f**ee, if the price docs not fall to the ex* if the tax reduction, if, on the contrary, it advances from the lowest prioe obtained while it was protected, there is imminent danger that the farmer will have the wool pulled from his eyes and realize how he has been catspawed. Then will come the turn of the manufacturer of woolens. The farmer whose wool meets, like all his other commodities, a price made by unsheltered competition, will insist that the cloth made from his wool stand a similar competition. He will join the free traders in demanding free woolens as well as free wools.
nere is wnere rue manuiaciurer scenis danger to himself. He is satisfied with present arrangements that give him from 40 to 50 per cent of protection from competition, bnt he sees that if the farmers turn against him, now that the partnership is dissolved, it is all over with him. When woolens axe as free as wool, the manufacturers, too, will join the growing hosts of commercial freedom to get their necessaries of life and manufacture untaxed. And thus the movement will spread from class to class. It is this that our opponents see, and it is to prevent this that they are now centering their efforts in an attack on free wool If they fail, they know that their whole fabric will come tumbling down about their ears.-j-St. Paul Globe. Crumbs From Our Table. Ex-Secretary Weeks of the Iron Manufacturers’ association, recently back from Europe, reports that the European mills are beginning to catch the overflow of our iron trade, our manufacturers having all the orders they can filL In this halcyon time even McKinleyism wonld scarcely grudge the crumbs that drop from our table to the “pauper labor” pf Europe.—Philadelphia Record. _*__ No Noed to Bo Despondent. A sapient Republican contemporary ventures the observation that Senator Gorman must be. afraid because he talks so bravely about the Democrats carry- j tug Maryland. How should the senator j talk? We have no doubt Republican journals would be glad to see him in a despondent attitude and predicting Republican victory.—Cincinnati Enquirer. Comfort For Tom Rood. T. B. Reed will be pleased to learn th** there is an intimation that the Ohio delegation in the national convention will not stick to McKinley through thick and thin.—St Louis Post-Dis-patch. __ Mr. Ingalls Will Fool It. If Mr. Foraker comes to the senate, iha absence of John J. Ingalls will not it so seriously felfc—Washington Post.
WANT GENUINE CALAMITY. Xkl CMatqr Is Too Prosperous to Salk the Bspsblhsst. Republicans can be candid an occasion. They are preparing to make the tariff question the “overshadowing issue” of the next presidential campaign, but they are not altogether satisfied with the outlook and would doubtless select another “issue” if there were another in sight, or if their political exigencies did not oonapel their submission to the dictation of their tariff barons, says the St. Louis Republic. What the Republicans want and what they need badly in their politics is a genuine calamity. The country is too prosperous. The growing crops are too promising. There are too many advances in wages. Too many mills and factories, idle undo: McKinley law, are resuming operations under the Democratic tariff. They do not regard the prospeot with serenity or comfort, and occasionally their feelings overcome their prudence, and they talk as they feel * The recent meeting of the New York Republican state central committee was one of these occasions. The New York Tribune, a journal consecrated to the work of promoting a new tariff campaign and making the tariff an ‘‘overshadowing issue” in politics, interviewed all, or nearly all, of the members of the committee as to the outlook and the ways and means of advancing Republican prospects. There was an undertone of sadness in nearly all the contributions made by the committeemen to our pum of current political comment and information. One of these will serve as a specimen of alL Mr. John Sabine Smith had been to the northwest and found there a boom which led him to doubt whether the Republican party could carry the next elections as easily as it carried those of 1894. Mr. Smith put it enigmatically at first “Our success is sure in next year’s campaign,” he said, “if we can only hold our present advantages. ” The Tribune reporter was indiscreet enough to ask him what he meant by such diplomatic phrasing, and then Mr. Smith threw diplomacy to the winds and said: “I was in Indiana, Illinois and Minnesota, and the crop outlook there is almost marvelous. Not in ten years has there been such a crop showing for the farmer, and a large proportion of the crop has been already harvested. If nothing interferes to injure that which is yet outstanding, it will be a great year indeed, and the danger, if any should arise, to be guarded against will be that of an overflowing prosperity, wherein the issue born of the last two years may be forgotten. ”
EXPORTS OF IRON. With Free Ore tad Coal We Could Control Markets and Prices. Daring the first half of the present year $31,000,000 worth of iron has been shipped from this cpnntry to Enlgand. Yet there has been assiduously culti-' vated an idea that this country needed protection of one form or another from English competition. The truth is, that this country, with fair opportunities, can be made the manufacturing center of the world. With a tariff tax of 40 cents a ton on ore and the same amount on coal we can now enter the field against England in her own territory. Released from these unnatural burdens we could control all the markets and prices. Yet in the face of these conditions there are those who pretend to want the McKinley law restored. That measure was responsible for the distress that has prevailed during the last two years. It put off the revenues and increased the taxes at the same time, and closed every industrial establishment in the country that wasn’t protected by some sort of a patent.—Kansas City Times. Still Baying at the Moon. A calamity organ in Cincinnati, The Commercial, says: “Mr. Cleveland thought nothing of giving a bounty of $16,000,000 to English money lenders or of practically destroying American industries for the benefit of English manufacturers. ” It would not be easy for a partisan expert in misrepresentation to condense more falsehood in a few words, but the above specimen is considerably belated. It is an anachronism —an echo of the dying calamity howls of last year. But some of the organs are keeping up the howls from mere force of habit, as some dogs bay the moon when it is not visible in the sky.— Philadelphia Record.
Tariff “Tinkered" to Good Purpose. According to the Cotton and Wool Reporter there were in operation on June 1 last in the woolen mills of the United States 8,456 sets of cards for woolens and worsteds, 77,100 looms working in woolens and worsteds and 64,350 knitting machines. In, Mar* 1892, there were 7,784 sets of cards, 71,000 woolen and worsted looms and 48,601 knitting machines. These figures are referred to Mr. McKinley as evidence of the demoralizing effect of tin baring his tariff. —New York World. Advice For John Sherman. As John Sherman, with the official patronage of Ohio at his command for 25 years, has rpt been able to obtain a presidential nomination, he might very well come out as a champion of civil service reform.—Si. Louis Post-Dis-patch. '■_« It-: . What McKinley Need*. The electric train, with a speed of 150 miles an hour, would enable Governor McKinley to cover considerable ground before the Republican convention meets. —Washington Post. A Prediction Front Missouri. More eastern Democrats than David B. Hill may favor a western man far president before jthe new year comes.— 3k Louis Post-Dispatch."
GOOD FOR EVERYBODY Almost everybody takes some laxative medicine to cleanse the system and keep the blood pure. Those who take SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR (liquid or powder) get all the benefits of a mild and pleasant laxative and tonic that purifies the blood and strengthens the whole system. And more than this: SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR regulates the Liver, keeps it active and healthy, and when the Liver is In good condition you find yourself free from Malaria, Biliousness, Indigestion, SickHeadache and Constipation, and rid of that worn out and debilitated feeling. These are all caused by a sluggish Liver. Good digestion and freedom from stomach troubles will only be had when the fiver is properly at work. If troubled with any of these complaints, try SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR. The King of Liver Medicines, and Better than Pills. REVERT PACKAGE-*^ Has the Z, Stamp In re<l on wrapper. J. H. Zeillu & Co., Phila., Pa. Say, why dop’t you try De Witt’s Little Early Risers? These little pills cure headache, Indigestion and constipation. They’re small, but do the work. Adams & Son. Waited. Persons to accept, gratis in view of future orders, rubber-stamp of their own name for marking clothing, books, etc., write plainly and enclose four postage stamps to defray mailing, packing, etc, H. P. Maynard, 16Arcade, Cincinnati. Ohio. Agents wanted for rubber stamps, rubber type, pads, datere, white letter signs, “Bottled Electricity,” for catarrh and pain, electric belts, etc. Write for agents* pripes. 24-4 The healing properities of De Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve are well known. It cures eczema, Skin affections and is simply a perfect remedy for piles. Adams & Son. The wife of Mr. Leonard Wells, of East Brimtield, Mass., has been suffering from neuralgia for two days, pot being able to sleep or hardly keep still, when Mr. Holden the merchant there sent her a bottle of Chamberlain’s Pain Balm, and asked that she give It a thorough trial. On meeting Mr. Wells the next day he was told that she was all right, the pain had left her within two hours, and that the bottle of pain balm was worth $3.00 if it could not be had for less. For sale at 50 cents per bottle by J. B. Adams & Sou.
There are many good reasons why you should use One Minute Cough Cure. There are no reasons why you should not, if in need of help. The only harmless remedy that produces immediate results. Adams & Son. ~_ Reiter in Six Hours. Distressing Kidney and bladder diseases releaved in sis hours by the “New Great South American Kidney Cure.” This new remedy is a great surprise on account of its exceeding promptness in releaving pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary passage in male or iemale. It relieves retention of water and pain in passing it almost immediately. If you want quick relief and cure this is your remedy. Sold by J. R. Adams «& Son, druggists Petersburg. It’s just as easy to try One Minute Cough Cure as any thing else. It’s easier to cure a severe cough or cold with it. Let your j next purchase for a cough be One Minute ' Cough Cure. Better medicine; better results; better try it. Adams & Son. Home Seekers* Excursion. ' Round trip tickets to all points in Westera. Southwestern and Northwestern states also to all points in Southern and South? eastern states from all points on the B. A O. S-W. Ry. at greatly reduced rates, Oeiol»er 21st, and 22nd See ticket agents B. & O. S-W. Ry. for full particulars as to privileges of these tickets.
A. G. Bartley of Magic, Pa., writes: It is a duty of mine to iniortn you and tbe public that lie Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve cured me of a very bad ease of eczema. It also cured my boy of a running sore on his leg. Adams & Son. English Salvin Liniment removes all . hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes | from horses, blood spavins, curbs splints, , swceney, ring-bone, stifles, sprains, all swollen throats, coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of oue bottle. Warranted the most wondertul blemish cure ever known. Sold by J. R. Adams & Son. 90* Nothing so distressing as a hacking cough. Nothing so foolish as to suffer from it. Nothing so dangerous it allowed to continue. One Minute Cojugh Cure gives \ immediate relief. Adams & Soz>. E. & 1. Excursions. * The E. & I. railroad will sell excursion tickets to the following points on the dates named; see agent for futher particulars: Atlanta. Ga., exposition, round trip rates *16.35 and $22.30. Indianapolis, Nov. 5 to T. I ndianapolisfN ov. 18 to 22. Terre Haute, Nov. 7 to 11. Oberlin, Mo.,*Nov. 4 to 8. Worcester,Mass., Nov. 13to20. --- Ac.ts at once, never fails, (toe Minute I Cough Cure. A remedy for asthma, and j that feverish condition which accompanies 1 a severe cold. The only harmless remedy that produces immediate results. Adams : & Son. ; Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder M«6t Perfect Mad#
iHiyumminmi IB «<BAKERY AND RESTAURANTS •vmruciioi Oysters by the Dish or Quart -W* ALSO XBSP A W LZXX OFOranges, Lemons, Banannas, Apples Candles, Cigars, Tobacco, Groowies and Canned Good*. Call and ass tts when la the city. Loach at all > ;rs. MVJU. LIIBS* THE TtVba'kery h_;_:--v•• • gmrrTmTnBHnimiiiiHinmnimihnintnr.fHminirTi ■gggtmnrgniiitminavi't^rfTr,
■55* REVIVO RESTORES VITALITY.
Made a Well Man of Me. THE GRfAT Noth Par- , pnss^ca KSMmDT t h* abort- results In SO days. It acta and quickly. Cure# when all others fail ceagn-. n will regain their lost manhood, and old n“n .viil recover their youthful vigor by using ‘ l VJ -O. It quickly and sorely restores Nervous-i-ot-t Vitality, Im potency, Nightly Emissions, .ost Power, Failing Memory. Wasting Diseases, and .1! effects of self-abuse ay excess and indiscretion. ■**uch unfits one for s udy, business or marriage. It :0t only cures by starting at the seat of disease, but i? a great nerve tonic and blood builder, bring;ig bach the pink glow to pale cheeks and retori ng the Are of youth. It wards off Insanity jnl CosGumption. Irfist on having BEVIVO.no -iclier. It can be carried in vest pocket. By mail. 11.00 per package, or six for 83.00, with a post "ire written guarantee to cure or refund >e money. Circular free. Address 10YAL MEDICINE CO.. S3 Rim St. CHICAGO. ILL FOB SALE BY Bergen ft OMphant, Drnsrsrlfifs.
RIPANS The modem standard Family Medicine: Cures the common every-day ills of humanity.
«4T 0 CONSUMPTIVES^ The undersigned hftrlng bwn restored to health by simple means, after suffertug for nevtral yean with a severe lung afiectlon, J snd that dread disease Coaaaaiptlee, Is anxious to make known to hts ffcUow saflVrers the means of cure. To those who ite«*re It.ae will cheerfully send, free of charge, a copy of the prescription used, which they will flud a lure cure for Orsamptle*. ntkei, Cst».-ra, HronrhtlU and ail throat end »»u;g mated lee. lie hopes all sufferer* wit! try h!» remedy, as It N tnvatuahte. Th«»ee;de«lrliig Ike \ rveertp* llon. which wilt cost them nothing. and ui»y prove a hlevitng will pu-n.e KUUAi.D A Brooklyn, Y. Hey!
^ COPYRIGHTS.^ CAN I OBTAIN A PATENTf Brt prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to MUJiN Ac VO., who bare bad nearly BUT yean? experience tn the patent boeinaea. Coniaannicatlons strictly confidential. A Handbook of laformat ion concerning Patent. and bow to ob> tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of martian, teal and acientiOe books sent free. Patents taken through Nunn A On. feeeien special notice in the Scie.tittc A merlcan, and thus are brought widely before the public without coat to the inventor. This * til end'd paper, tamed weekly, elegantly 11 lust rated, has by far the lam cat circulation of any aeieutiSe track in the A DAY TO AQ£38TSj AriyoneVlio wants to. set rich and who has a little enterprise can secure $13 m dap fn the Dish Washer business. It is booming how. Everybody wants a Climax nowadays. One agent cleared ISO ev«ry day for a year; a good chance; b#*t Dish Washer made; no soliciting; Dish Washers sold at home; a permanent position In town, eity or country. One million to bo sold. A wide-awake hustler can clear |1;> tq |2t> a day easy; washes and dries In two in inures. Climax krg. Co., S»\ Starr Avenue, CelamKas. Ohio. WANTED-AN IDEASSiEfiSS thing to patent! Protect your idei.s; they may bring you wealth. Write JOHN WJKDDKRBLTHN & CO., Patent Attorneys, Washington, D. C.( for their $1,800 prise offer. .
ilflAUt Hit A MAN AJAX ^TABLETS
Positively CURE ALL Nervous Diseases, railing Memory, I in potency. Sleeplessness. Nightly Emissions, etc., caused by Self-Abuse and other Excesses and Indiscretions. Quickly and surely restore lost vitality in old or young, and fit a man for study, business or reariia^e. Prevent Insanity and Consumption if taken in time. Their use shows immediate improvement, and effects a CERE WHERE ALL OTHERS FAIL. Insist upon having the genuine Ajax Tablets. They have cured thousands and will cure you. We give positive written guarantee to effect a cure in each case or refund the money. Price $1.00 per package, or six for $5.00. By mail, in plain wrapper, upon receipt of price. -FOR FREE PAMPHLET ADDRESSAJAX REMEDY CO., chicaguTiulI 1 Sold Jin Petersburg by Bergen A titiphxnL
Mairf by THE LYON Medicine —Co. c- Ihdiamapous Stomach* ind. rbR Salebyall Druwists.
The Laboring Man Speaks, « Mongn, Ind., May 10,1894. Lyon Medicine Co., Indianapolis^ ItuL: Gents—I think it my duty to send this statement to yon of the benefit I have received from LYON’S SEVEN WONDERS- I have been afSicted for twenty years with stomach trouble of the severest nature. Would have seasons of the severest suffering from one to two monthsat a time. Between these times of sufferingwas never longer than three months. There was never any time that I was entirely free from misery more or less. These spells of great suffering would sometimes come on with sickness and vomiting, and other times would come on in form of rheumatism, but would finally center itself in my stomach. I have doctored with a great many physicians, but none of them could tell me what the trouble was. I was unable to get relief until I got LYON’S SEVEN WONDERS. It is now sixty days since I began taking this medicine, and am now for the first time in twenty years free from pain and misery. I am compelled to say it is a blessing to a poor man. J. J. Hacrare, Blacksmith.
A Nerve Tonic . . An Invigorant . . . A True Anti-Malaria
SUCH IS THK FTTKJS MEDICINAL MBTOCKT WHISKET MADE BT THE OLD-FASHIONED METHOD AT LORETTO, KT., AND SNOWS AS THK ....... *R. Cummins 3t Co,
“©16 process'’
f f t Hand-Made Sour-Mash Whiskey SOLD ONLY BY DRUGGISTS. SEE THE CHEMIST’S CERTIFICATE OS EACH BOTTLE. A. KIEFER DRUG CO., Indianapolis Sole Controllers end Distributors. ^
f ndianapolisHusinessU niversitv 3i?ant A Straten. Establish*! 1SC9. (Incorporated) When Building, IE Pamtsyivaaia St. QLBEST, LARGEST AV9 BEST SSH3CL 3r SBSiiESS, SHOBmSBi AMO MMMAjtSMIg incst quarters of any Business School in Ainsnca. Ablest faculty; bear systems; business, start; finest penmen in Central States; expert accountant and reporter; most sue* ■ students asstsied t» posK»ORS-e«f IG.OCO in goad sHwrttoM£ooen all year; time short; expenses low. Has no ccauecuon or similarity e»t puress “trawerskies.” “coHeyes.'’ etc., scattered thnxt^hotA the State, eon sstuTiruL CATUOtiUE AtiD squats*?. 5. «J. ^££3e fresident^
