Pike County Democrat, Volume 26, Number 27, Petersburg, Pike County, 15 November 1895 — Page 5

Heart disease,** many other ailments 1,'ien they hare taken hold erf the system, never gets better of its own accord, but Cmn*tantlp yrews scerse. There am thousands who know they have a detective heart, but will not admit the fact. They don't want their friends w worry, and i>M’f know what to toko for it, aa they have been" told time and again that heart disease was Incurable. Such was the case of Ur. 811aa Farley of DyesvillerOhio jrho writes June 19,1994, as follows: “I ha* homrt dioomoo for 98 years, my heart hurting me almost continually. The first 15 yean I doctored all the time, .trying several physicians and remedies, until my last doctor told me it was only a

question of time as I coo Id not be cured. I gradually grew worse, very weak, and completely discouraged, until I Used, propped half up In bed, because I couldn't lie nor sit up. Thinking my time had come I told my family what I wanted done when I was

gone. Bat on the first day of March bn the recommendation of Mrs. Fannie Jones, of Anderson, Ind., I commenced taking Hr. Miles* Few Cure for the Heart and wonderful to tell, In ten days I was working at light work and pn March 19 com* menced framing a barn, which la heavy work, and I hav*nt lost a day since. I am 88 years old, 6 ft. 4H inches and weigh SSOlbs. I believe I am full* cured, and I am nod only anxious that everyone shall know of your wonderful remedies." Dyeevllle, Ohio. Selas Farut. Dr. lines Heart Cure Is sold on a positive itee that the first bottle will benefit Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure Restores Health

l^pNN^fNMNMMN 1 Pictures 2 ......AT. Richardson’s Gallery. 5 We guarantee every tiling we pul out to be satisfactory. ® f*/ per doaen fcr Cabinets that can’t ■ v' for the mouey be beat These pic* turesare made on the best paper out, ! and are highly polished and finished. e>0 per dozen. Our 12 00 work made cabinet sl*e is simply fine. This work be I uk guaranteed to be perfect. © per doaen. Tills is our best work. _ ye The flujsp is simply line and perm feet in every respect. Wo are now of5 faring with every dozen of this work % one large 11x1? Crayon air-brush pleat ture liuislied free from same plate taken at the gallery. Absolutely free. ■ We are prepared to do Copying, Ink • and Crayon Work. dr’eters'fc-vs.rg. lad. FRED SMITH Dealer in ali kinds of « • * FURNITURE,

Funeral Supplies A Specialty We keep on hand at all times the finest liu* I of Parlor and Household Furniture to be ■ Younri In t he city. Bedroom and Parlor Suits a Specialty. ' „ , a In funeral supplies we keep Caskets,: Shrouds, etc., of the best make. Lon VanCampen, Manufacturer and Dealer lu Saddles, Collars, Whips and Robes. Nothing but first cl ass Oak Tanned leather used in all Harness. Work made to order on abort notice. Repairing of All Kjnd$& Neatly InwLjiromptly done. Give me * call when wanting anything In my Une of trade. Shop In the Osborne *brlck building on lower Main Street, X*«tera'to'va.r£, In A.

THE INDIANAPOLIS Pail; and Weekly Sentinel Circulation has reached immense proportions by its thorough service in receiving all the 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. Largest Circulation of Any News' paper in the State. * TERMS OP SUBSORIPITON. Daily, one year *. $6 00 Weekly, one year... .1.00 The Weekly Edition Has 12 Pages! SUBSCRIBE NOW and make all remittances to The Indianapolis Sentinel Co , INDIANAPOLIS, IND This paper will he furnished with the Weekly Edition of the INDIANA STATE

CENTli R YOF GRO wyH MARVELOUS DEVELOPMENT OF INDIANA IN A HUNDRED YEARS. ——- Dt*cuMlon of WI»m For CtUhnilag tko C«ntMDl«l In 1900—Sant Romurkoblo FmU About the State Cited by Colonel Kit Lilly, President of the Centennial I Ceminlulon-11U Suyceetlona na to the Beope of the Ore at Celebration—Com* ntlaeloner Dougherty'* Idena. The closing year of the century will round oat the first hundred years of the existenoe of Indiana, the civil government of the territory having been | inaugurated on July 4, 1800, at Vin- ; eennes. The importance of properly I celebrating this epoch in the history | and growth of the state was recognized ! at the last session of the legislature by the authorization of the appointment by the governor of a commission composed of two representatives of each congressional district and four from the state at large for the purpose of considering and recommending plans for a fitting oentennial celebration. This commission is composed of leading men of the state. It is known as the Indiana Centennial Commission. The president is Colonel Eli fully, of Indianapolis, the first to suggest the movement. The proposed celebration is being discussed throughout the state with much interest, and the commission will soon take up the task of outlining plans for the consideration of the next legislature, with which will rest the determination of what shall be done.

INTERVIEW WITH COLONEL ULLY. In an interview regarding the great project Colonel Lilly, the president of the commission, said to a press representative: “Every consideration of state pride and individual duty should move the people of Indiana to grandly celebrate the centennial aunte£Tlnry if the establishment of civil government of the territory at Vincennes July 4, 1800. On that'day, the 24th anniversary of our national independence and in the very year the oougress of the United States first met in the capitol at Washington, the name Indiana was first given to that region which has now become the heart of the uuion, tho very center of population, wealth and intelligence. “Indiana is therefore the only state historically representing the exact boundaries of the 10th oeutury. “The general assembly, recognizing their patriotio duty, wisely and in time provided for a commission to consider and report a plan for the proper observance of the great event. GROWTH OF A HUNDRED YEARS. “The general assembly had in mind the wilderness of the year 1800, with a population of soarce five thousand frontiersmen, now grown to be a great state of two and & half millions of souls, with a real value in farms of nine hundred millions of dollars, producing an annual value of one hundred and twenty-five millions of dollars; a state with a manufacturing population of One hundred and fifty thousand, earning annually sixty-five millions of dollars, with an output to the value of three hundred millions of dollars, and a mineral output of over fifteen millions qf dollars; a state with the greatest organization for the ednoation of the masses in the world; a state that gave the services of over two hundred thousand men and twenty-five thousand lives that the Union might iive, and that has ereoted the nobles}/monument on earth to the citizen soldier. “Those things were in the minds of the members of tile legislature and it now' remains {or the people of Indiana to reoognize their opportunity, the greatest ever presented to a state, to demonstrate the achievements of a hundred years, the most momentous hundred years of all time.

A GREAT MIO-CONTINENT EXPOSITION. “It may be early to suggest plans, but I have in mind that all appropriations made by the state should be expended solely upon a state centennial building and the permanent exhibits and expenses of administration. That authority should be given by the legislature to authorise oities, towns and counties to appropriate aid to a general exposition of the resources of the state to be called possibly the Indiana Mid-Continept exposition, these appropriations to be supplemented by individual subscription and the usual paethods of raising funds for such purposes. To this the general government should be asked to add an exhibit at its own expense. “But we must not stop here. In every county in the state k competent person should be selected by the Historical Society of Indiana to write the oounty history from its organization, and by all means the history of every regiment and battery in the United States service should be written and preserved. These histories should in 1900 be placed in the permanent exhibit.

▲ GENERAL BRIGHTENING UP. i "But if the tangible results of this great event are not manifest in every community the greatest benefit will be lost. Every oity, town and village should clean up and beautify the publio places and all oitizens should adorn their premises by planting trees, flowers and grass, painting or whitewashing fences and buildings; railroads should lead off and become an inspiration to the people in this work until as morning breaks on the 20th century the Indiana of a hundred years would show the brightest, oleanest, happiest land on earth. The travel of a continent crosses Indiana. £iet the eye of the traveler rest upon things beautiful and he will oarry our fame wherever he goes. “So the centennial must not be alone for the great capital which in 1900 will have a population of 200,000, with its hundreds of miles of beautifully paved and shaded streets, with its boulevards and parks and magnificent buildings and monumepts which all may enjoy, but for every city and town, village, hamlet and home within our borders.” INDIANA THE PULSE OP THE UNION. Hon. Hugh Dougherty of Bluffton, i Ind., a member of the executive com1 mittee of the commission, in an interview with reference to the importance and desirability of suoh a oelebration, ; says: “Indiana is the ppise state of the Union. Through her the great throbbing veins of commeroe, which nourish every part of our national body, flow. Her geographical looation'and physical features are suoh that the east and the west traverse her territory in passing to sud fro.' Her capital is the largest in

land railroad oenter in the world. The center of our country’s population it within her borders. Her position among her sister states is unique, and her mar- ! veloos progress since organisation as a i territory calls for r centennial jubilee of I such a character as will best enable her ' sons and daughters to appreciate the heritage of a hundred years. “There is no way in which we cool more effectively kindle that wjiolesoio* state pride which most underlie #be noble action of her present and future citisenship than by a parade of her i achievement and a fresh revelation of her early struggles. The latter are now matters of recorded history to most of ns, and a retrospective view of the heroic struggles of our fathers would be an eloquent lesson in patriotism. In their toils, their sufferings, their hardships, their conflicts, momentous Questions were at stake and issues vital to the future world. In appearanoe they were insignificant at times, but in reality, copious and full of benevolent conse?[uenoes. Acting at the springs of our uture greatness, instruments otherwise weak became mighty for good, and our pioneer fathers, obscure to the world, proved to be agents of destiny. They who entered an untamed wilderness with vast wastes erf forest verdure to make a garden for their children, and. the hills then silent in their primeval j sleep now echo the music of happy j homes of industry. These hardy sons of toil, whose school was the forest, whose trade was barter with savages, whose social life was that of the campfire, whose daily lesson was self-sacrifice, conquered the territory of Indiana for civilization. Such memories as these ought to kindle a burning enthusiasm in every loyal Hoosier breast to joiu in the proposed observance of our anniversary.

“THE HERITAGE Of A HUNDRED YEARS.'' “Suoh an observance would be of mon, than local conseqnenoe. It would be a formal way in which our state could give evidence to the world of her worthiness of a place in the family of states comprising our great republio. Our ex* hibit would say: 'This is our achievement;' and of this we need not be ashamed. With an agricultural productivity unsurpassed, monumental manufacturing industries, natural resources inexhaustible, among which are lumber, stone, coal, natural gas and petroleum, a school system whioh is an object lesson to the world, an intelligent, industrious, patriotic, Christian citizen ship, populous cities with every modern improvement—in fine all that constitutes the highest degree of prosperity and civilization to be found on the globe— the people of this great stale may be exceeding glad to make a representative exhibit of the fruit of their labors and say to the world: ‘Behold the heritage of a hundred years.' “Then let us celebrate the event which has led to 6uoh marvelous consequences —an event cpntemporaneous with the beginning of a century which has seen greater commercial development, mw© extensive ... manufacturing enterprise, more valuable invention and discovery, more fruitful agricultural activity, more widespread intelligence, more altruistic feeling, and more application of the agencies that make possible oomplete living than all the centuries that precoded; and in the observance of this historic event let us show that Indiana has contributed her full share toward achieving this unparalleled progress.” All Free* 1 Those who have used Dr. King’s New Discovery know its value, and those tvho have not, have now the opportunity to try it free. Call on the advertised druggist and get a trial bottle free. Send your name and address to H. E. Bucklon & Co , Chicago, and get a sample !«>x of Dr. King’s New ' Life Pills ftee, as well as a copy of Guide to Health and Household Instructor, free. All of which is guaranteed to do you good and cost you nothing. J. It. Adams & Son's drug store. Cause of Red Noses. “Redness of the nose” is caused by indigestion, not intemperance. The remedy, it isstated, is to “abstain from over-indulgence in fats and sweets.” This dictum will be appreciated by many worthy persons whose noses are unduly rosy. For years ijhey have been misjudged by irreverent scoflcrs who did not scrumple to ascribe the uasal tint to excessive imbibitions. Now science comes to their relief, says an exchange. It is “tats and sweets” that make the trouble, causing indigestion, which produced a rush of blood to the noso. Some persons given to alcoholic stimulants do iudeed have red noses, but the redness is stomachic, not alcoholic. The “fire-water” may “burn out one’s coppers,” aud thus indirectly produce the luminous proboscis, but its owner is now in a position to assert that it is ati error to say “drinking did it.”

The issue of Harper’s Weekly dated November 16th will contain three pages on New York’s great social function, the Horse Show; three paxes of pictures selected from the New York Portrait Loan Exhibition ; articles on the coming Opera Season, with portraits of the new singers, the Marlborough-VanUerbitt wedding, and the Atlanta Exposition with illustrations by W. A. Rogers; a fourth paper in the interesting public school series, entitled “Pupils”; contributions by W. D. Howells and E. S. Martin to the departments “Life and Letters” and “This Busy World,” and an instalment of the serial story* “Ceneion,” by Maud Mason Austin. It is understood that a company of gentlemen from a cltv near here are organizing for the purpose of leasing or buying a large body of land for the purpose of engaging extensively in coal mining. The thickness of the vpins of coal here is what is drawing them to this section, Ijt is to be hoped that the arrangements will not !t$l! thr.'Ugl\.

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 ail 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 liver is properly at work. If troubled with any of these complaints, try SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR. The King of Liver Medicines, and Better than Pills. jjSP-EVERY PACKAGE-^ Has the Z Stamp In red on wrapper, J. H. Zeilin & Co., Phlla., Pa.

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 wiib it. Let y»ur nest purchase for a cough be One Minute Cough Cure. Better medicine; better results; lietter try it. Adains & Son;Wanted. Persons to accept, gratis in view of future orders, rubber-stamp of their owu name for marking clothing, books, etc., write plainly and enclose four postage stamps to defray mailing, packing, etc, H. P. Maynard, Hi Arcade, Cincinnati. Ohio. Agents wanted for rubber stamps, rubber type, pads, daters, white letter signs, “Bottled Electricity,” for catarrh and pain, electric belts, etc. Write for agents’ prices. 24-4 The wife of Mr. Leonard Wells, of East Brim field. Mass., has been suffering from neuralgia tor two;days, not being able to sleep or hardly keep still, when Mr. Holden the merchant there sent her a bottle of Chain berlaia’s Pain Balm, and asked that she give it a thorough trial. On meeting Mr. W ells the next day he was tokl that she was all right, the pain had left her within two hours, and that the bottle of pain balm was worth $5.00 if it could not be had for less. For sale at 50 cents per bottle by J.R. Adams & Son. There art} 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, Relief in Six Hoars. Distressing kidney and bladder diseases releaved in six hours by the “Hew Great South American Kidney Cure.” This new remedy is a great surprise on account of its exceeding promptness in releaviug pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary passage in male or teiuale. It relieves retention of water*and pain in passing it almnsy immediately. If you want quick relief and cure this is your remedy. Sold by J. R. Adams & Son, druggists Petersburg, • It is a truth in medicine that the smallest dose that perforins a cure is the best. De Witt’s Little Early Risers are the smallesi pills, will perform a cure, and are the best Adams & Son.

How to Prevent Croup. Some reading that will prove inteiesting to young mothers. How to guard against the disease. Croup is a terror to young mothers and to post them concerning the cause, first symptoms and treatment is the object of this item. The origin of croup is a common coid. Children who are subject to it take cold very easily and croup is almost sure to follow. The first symptom is hoarseness; this;is soon followed by a peculiar rough cough, which is easily recognized and will never be forgotten by one who bas heard it. The time to act is when the child first becomes hoarse. If Chamberlain’s cough remedy is freely given ail tendency to croup will soon disappear. Even after the croupy cough has developed it will prevent the attack. There is no danger in giving this remedyfor it contains nothing injurious. For sale by J. R. Adams & Son. n English Salviu Liniment removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavins, curbs splints, Sweeney, ring-bone, stifles, sprains, all swollen throats, coughs, etc. Save $d0 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful blemish cure ever known. Sold by J. H. Adams & Son. SO* Nothing so distressing as a hacking cough. Nothing so foolish as to suffer from it. Nothing so dangerous it allowed to continue. One Minute Cough Cure gives immediate relief. Adams & Son. £. & I. Excursions. The E. & I. railroad will sell excursion tickets to the following points on the dates named; see agent for father particulars: Atlanta. Gn., exposition; round trip rates 116.35 and *22.30. Indianapolis, Nov. 18 to 22. Woreester, Mass., Nov. IS to 20. Acts at once, never fails. One Minute Cough C\ire. A remedy for asthma, and that feverish condition whicn accompanies a severe QPid. The only harmless remedy that produces immediate results. Adams Ron._ Or. Price’s Cream Baking Powder Perfect Made i “ *

L11 B S’ . «4BAKERX AND RESTAURANTS Oysters by the Dish or Quart -viiuonDiluunorOranges, Lemons, Banannas, Apples Cudla, Clean, Maeot, Qwoata aad duad Goods. Call and we os wbsa la fee dty. Loach at alt w as. LIIBS* the otTbakery

“ALL THE MAGAZINES IN ONE.** t"-REVIEW°'REV1EWS edited by ALBERT SHAW.

’^EVKVNREYIEWS I Octefctr, l»»«

The review of REVIEWS, as its name implies, gives in readable form the best that appears in the other great magazines all over

the world, generally on the same date that they are published. With the recent extraordinary increase of worthy periodicals, these careful reviews, summaries, and quotations, giving the gist of periodical literature, are alone worth ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION _

me subscription price. i < Aside from these departments, the editorial i U I and contributed features of the “Review Of Reviews are themselves equal in extent to a magazine. The Editor’s “Progress of the World’* is an invaluable chronicle of the happenings of the thirty days just past,

with pictures on every page of the men and women who have made the history of the month. Tbi Literary World says: “We are deeply impressed from month to month with the value of the ‘Review of Reviews,’ which is a sort of Eiffel Tower for the survey of the; whole

THREE RECENT SAMPLES 25 cents.

field of periodical literature. And yet it has a own, and speaks out with decision and sense the hour. It is a singular combination of the mind and voice of its on ail public topics of monthly magazine and

the daily newspaper; It is daily in its freshness; it is monthly in its method. It is the world under a field glass.” Sold on all News Stands. Single Copy, 35 cento. “Review-Reviews 13 Astor Place, New York.

Agents find it the Host Profitable flagaxine.

For Sale byallDruwists.

The Laboring Man Speaks, vMonon, Ind., May 10,1894. i Lyon RUt^cine Co.t Indianapolis, Ind.: Gents—I think it my duty to send this statement to yon of the benefit X have received from LYON’S SEVEN WONDERS. I have been afflicted for twenty years with stomach trouble of the severest nature. Would have seasons of the severest suffering from one to two months at 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. Hackktt, Blacksmith.

WHEN WHISKEY IS USED AS A MEDICINE . . . . It la of apoelal importance to the patient (and to the physician) that the article used should be A-B-S-O-L-U-T-E-L-Y fMJ-R-B, otherwise the full right that the patient has to *nm is trifled with. Whiskey ••Old Process** R. ClimmlnS & CO. Hand-M.de ? Sour-flash .a

Meets every requirement of on absolutely pare medicinal whiskey. It has a line body, rich and elegant flavor. Ask yoar druggist 10$ It. Sold In bottles and by druggists only. A. KIEFER DRUG CO., Indian SOU CONTROLLERS AND DISTRIBUTERS r

I ndianapolisDusiness Bryant A Stratton^ Established 1880, (Incorporated) When Building, N. Pennsylvania St aae ■ i Raea* a naan nan v AAtl AAI At Bltf i ttC ^ B C UADTU'I it Y% Atilt DCIIDR All OLDEST? LARBIST AND BIST SCHOOL OF BUSHKSS, SHORTItANO >ND PENMANSHIP Finest quarters of any Business School in America* Ablest faculty; best systems; business _*3_r_Ctntnc* fliHYitmtant Ann rPT) ftimi uuaa%v«<a vi • uv wwmuvw *--**«»*^«*» — ,- < ’ _ • . * . . practice from start; finest penman in Central States; expertacconntant and reporter; most sue1 graduates; students assisted to positions—over 10,000 in good situations; open „v„ indents entering daily; time short; expenses low. Has no connection or similarity of purpose with the so-called business “universities." J'collej^s,*’ ete^seattcrcd^throughoot the State, cessfnl new sti WRITE FOR BEAUTIFUL CATA106UE ANO SPECIMENS. g. J. HEEB, President.

FOrt This Fiuonna Remedy cure* quickly, permanently all nervous diseases, Weut Memory, Loss of Brain Power, Ueadacho, Wakeful ness, Most Vitality, Nightly Boils

evu urenmit n«puKr.’iv;jr »nu waoun^ mocaocn mkUBtu vy yeuUifvterror*or«ckj.-». Contains noopiates. lt»a«rvetsn!« ami blood lit'l'ilci . Hakes the pole and puny strong and platen. Raslly carried 1 n waft pocket. SI per box;« for 8S. By malt. pro., pa lit, itX*h a 'jvitten p^nmUt arTnonrimfuneieel. Write ns».f«-erv medlool sealed plain wrapper, with testimonials aria »nane*nleinnrt«Mr. A'o r ftnres/nr mmimttatinax. Be*vor»of imit»

w» ***• ' (1WKH. OVKS MUIWMIM. ----- For sale ia retersburgtlii<l., w* M, A1»A31& & bON, Druggists,