Pike County Democrat, Volume 29, Number 48, Petersburg, Pike County, 7 April 1899 — Page 2
8k aeihc County gcmwrat -r-1-' , j M. MnC. >1 (lot's, Kdltor nnd l*roprli«<t«>». PETERSBURG, : : INDIANA. S. B. Armour, head of the Kansas Citj (Mo.) packing house of \rmour & Co., and brother of P. D. Armour, of ** . Chicago, died at his homedn Kansas City of pneumonia on the 29tU. The dreadful report from Cairo, 111., that the steamer Rowena Lee had foundered off Tyler, Mo., and about 00 persons lost, was, happily a mistake. Later reports fixed the number lost at three. / Malolos, the Filipino capital, was captured, after a gallant fight, on the 31st, by Gen. MacArthur’s army the j-ebels falling back to San Fernandc, Before retreating they applied the torch and burned the town.
The Missouri house passed a mil, on the 30th, providing1 for the levying of nn inspection tax of one cent per gallon on all beer manufactured or sold in the state. The money goes into the revenue fund to meet expenses of the state government. The Ninth Illinois and -several other •t volunteer regiments have expressed a willingness to remain in the service 1 and go to the Philippines if they he permitted to retain the present organization intact with the present Officers in command. On the 29tl,i the president appointed Coh Edwin V. Sumner, of the Seventh cavalry, to be brigadier in the regular army. Gen. Sumner will immediately retire, and Gol. Thomas M. Anderson, * of the Fourteenth infantry, will prob- * ably be appointed to the vacancy. The Poston Commercial Bulletin announced, on the 31st, that efforts were making to form a trust of all the leading carpet mills in the country. The capital stock of the mills already interested was over $5,000,000. The combination will be financed from Boston * ur.d New York. Gov. Stephens of Missouri called on the president, on the 30th, and voluntarily offered the entire Sixth Missouri regiment, now at Havana, for service in the Philippines, to be re-enlisted under the army organization law. The president promised to give consideration to the offer. All ship yards on the Delaware river are so busy with work at present, that the owners report that, they are not prepared to take new orders unless actual work is not to begin for some months. There are now under construction at the various yards, vessels of many types. Officials at Washington regard the war in the Philippines as practically at. an end. The losses of Aguinaldo during the six weeks fighting .have been enormous, and his remaining forces are scattered and dispirited, and it is unlikely that anything more than skirmishes are to follow. Capt. William A. Andrews, who crossed the Atlantic to Paris in 1878 In it small boat, the Nautilus, will, on June 17, of this year, start on another voyage across the Atlantic in a tiny craft constructed of aluminum and canvas, and small and light' enough when collapsed to carry under the arm. / It was stated at the waiv department, on the 31st, that the provision of the f army' law allowing the retention in- \ ■ service for six months of the volunteers in the Philippines had been construed to mean the officers as well as the men and that the volunteer organizations would be retained just as they now exist. E. Bates Soper, who was Imaged at Harrisonville, Mo., on the 30th. was allowed to go upon the scaffold and test it. He tried the trap, and offered suggestion to the sheriff. He said: “I can hardly wait for the time of the execution to come. The suspense cf waiting is w'orse than the execution can possibly be.” The passenger steamer Stella, plying between Southampton and the Channel islands, crashed upon the (headed Casquet rocks, near the island of Alderney, on the 30th, in a dense fog. and foundered in ten minutes, her boilers exploding with a tremendous report as she went down. Seventyseven persons are supposed to have perished. 5
Drury Jf. Tallant, of Great Falls, Mont., has been appointed an immigration inspector for service at Coutta, Canada. This appointment is made in accordance with the recommendation of the collector of customs at Great Fulls, who states that an additional Inspector is urgently needed to prevent the importation into this country of alien contract laborers. T*he troubles growing out of the election of a king of Samoa have taken a more serious turn and resulted in the bombardment of native villages along the shore by the United States cruiser Philadelphia, Admiral Kartz, commanding, and the British cruisers Porpoise and Royalist. At latest accounts the bombardment bad uontineud intermittently for eight days, and several villages had been burned. The following was posted at the war department in Washington on the 2Pth: “Recruiting for the regular army is progressing most satisfactorily— both in numbers and the high class of young men offering. Returns received by the adjutant general up to the close of yesterday show the enlisted strength* ss being over 62,000, within less than 3,000 of tile maximum, which, at the present rate of enlistment; willj be reached withir ten days." i ■/
NEWS IN BRIEF. Compiled from Van mi Sotuoes. PERSONAL AND GENERAL.
hurgeon-General St;rnberg received mai! reports from Manila, on the 29th, concerning the hosp ;al and medical affairs there. In the main they dealt with routine matters, and showed satisfactory conditions [revailing. Claus Spreckles hn* decided to establish in San Francisco an electric plant that will be without a rival in the world, and which will furnish to the people of San Francisco tight, heat and power almost at cost. The supreme court of Indiana, on the 29th, held that'll! a man marries a woman.who is indebted to him the marriage annuls the debt. Plans are afoot to leorganizc the National Red Cross society, with a view to greatly increasin' its scope. Brig.-Gen. Flagler, chief of ordnance, U. S. A., died at the Hygeia hotel, Old Point, Va., on the 2!»th. Ex-Secretary Sheiraan reached his home in Washington on the 29rh. Rev. John MeQueid, pastor of the First Methodist Episcopal church of Omaha, Neb., died, on the 29th, ns a result of an operation for apendicitis. He was looked up:jn as one of the ablest men in his cl irch in the west. The statement of 1he condition of the treasury issued on the 30th • showed: Available cash balance, $282,527,000; gold reserve, $243,Siji6,049. The formal order retiring Rear-Ad-miral Robeson, under the provisions of the personnel act, [was issued on the 29tli. This retirei ent will promote Capt. Benjamin F. day to the rank of rear-admiral, althc lgh the president has not yet made he appointment. Ex-Secretary of he Treasury John G. Carlisle and his wife arrived in Covington, Ky„ on the 30th, with the body of their son, W. K.j Carlisle, who died recently in New Y: rk city*. A report, issued <!>n the 30th, showed that the year’s revenue for the United Kingdom was £117,857,353, a net increase of £ 1,841,039.“ Last quarter's revenue was. £39,516,885. The secretary of the navy received a dispatch from Ad liral Kautz, on the 30th, saying: “Sicjuation is improving since telegram of the 18th, via Sidney, N. S. W The American : Jamaica, on the 3 La Guayra, Venez eet left Kingston, st, at daylight, for ela, with the exception of the training ship Essex The French senate adjourned, on the 30th, until May' 9, and the chamber of deputies adjourned until May 2. A package of arsenic, enough to kill 40 people, was found in the well of William Floreth, a prominent citizen, of Baldwin, 111., on the 30th, from which drinking’wi ter is drawn for the family’s use. Mr the package, whi dropped in the we before t he d i scow The motion fo: Floreth discovered eh he believes was 1, but a few minuted >\V. a new trial in the case of Frank Ainsworth, convicted of murder, at Carronton, 111., was denied by Judge Thompson, and the defendant was sentence tl to 49 years at hard labor in Chester prison. The marquis do Corral bo, the chief agent ‘of Don Carlos, has gone to Venice, according to a dispatch to the London Daily Gi iphic from Baris, to report to the prt ender and to receive his final instruct ons. Dope Leo continues very' feeble, and. although he has Ijieen able to celebrate mass a couple ot times, he was forced to remain seated hroughout the entire ceremonyx He lent a large amount ot blood at the time of the operation, and it is this, coupled with the obstinate refusal of the wound to heal, that is responsible for Ids present condition. Rear-Admiral 1 lenry L. Howison formally assumed jommand of the new South Atlantic squadron on the 30tli. He raised nisi flag on the cruiser Chicago, the flagship, and was received
Postmaster-General Charles Emor> Smith has accepted an invitation to respond to the toast of “The Union," at the Hamilton elub dinner in Chicago on the 10th. . Brig.-Gen. Henry C. Merriam has been assigned to temporary command of the department of Missouri in addition to hia duties as commander of the department of the Colorado. Putnam Bradiee Strong, reported by Gen. Otis as wounded, is the son of cx-Mayor Strong, of New York city. Failures for the week ended on the 31st, as reported by R. G. Dun & Co., were: For the United States, 194, against 290 for the corresponding week last year, and 26 in Canada, against 27 last year. News reached Seattle, Wash., on the * 31 Bt, that Chief Moses, the well-known Indian^died at his home on the Colville reservation on the 25th. Lord Charles Frohmanhas purchased George Edward’s interest in the Duke of York theater, thus becoming sole lessee of the building.
LATE NEWS ITEMS. > The American liner Paris, which sr.iled from New York the early part of March with a large party of excursionists for a cruise to the West Indies, and especially to the scenes of the date war, arrived at Old Point, Va.. on the 2d. directly from Santiago de Cuba. All aboard expressed themselves as being pleased with the trip. A Bee special from Pierre, S.D.,says: A deed transferring the interests of the Minneapolis & Pacific Eailroad Co. tu the Minneapolis & St. Louis company was filed in the otliee of the secretary of state at Pierre, S. D., on the -1st, which bore $1,000 .in revenue stamps. The demand in the Philadelphia market for steel appears to be insatiable. Price cuts but very little figure in the majority of cases, the point being to get the material to ?keep the men at work on orders, many if which are being declined by the mills. , Bear-Admiral C. C. Carpenter, retired, committed suicide, on the 1st, in a Boston sanitarium. Admiral Carpenter was ealled from the retired list to active duty in charge of the navy yard nf Portsmouth, N. H., during the^var. He had a brilliant record. A serious collision has taken place between Bulgarian and Turkish gourds at: Kazyl-Agob, between Jamboli, Eastern Boumelia, and Adrianopie, On the links of the Toonja, 56 miles south of Jamboli. Both sides suffered losses of killed and wounded. The funeral of the iate Lieut.-Col. John M. Hamilton, of the Ninth regular cavalry, who was killed while leading his regiment up San Juan hill on July 1 last, was held from the state armory at Geneva, N. Y., on the 2d. Contracts have been let foAtfcksliipment over the line of the Cheyenne Ss Northern of 1,500 ears of southern cattle, to the ranges of northern Wyoming and southern Montana, shipments to begin on the first of May. Oscar Strauss, the United States minister to Constantinople, had an audience of the sultan on the 1st. The interview, which was protracted, was of the most cordial character. •- The opion is expressed in official circles- in Washington that the outlook for a satisfactory and peaceful final adjustment of Samoan affairs is decidedly hopeful. Bichard Chamberlain. brother of Joseph Chamberlain, British secretary of state for the colonies, died in Loadon on the 2d. CURRENT NEWS NOTES. Ardmore (I. T.) merchants sustain K!"heavy losses by fire;* Near Petroleum. Tenn..- Bobert Hinton was killed by lightning. Joseph Howard was killed by a falling tree in Hickory county. Mo. World's fair enthusiasm continue.* to grow at St. Louis, and subscriptions are piling in. Chicago women are pushing the cj mpaign for municipal ownership of si reef railways. Not a single democrat of national fame will speak at the $ltt dinner in New York on Jefferson's birthday. Dr. Henry F. Ewers, a prominent physician of Burlington, la., died suddenly of apoplexy, Friday, aged 69. A South McAlester (i. T.) judge rules that an affidavit as to age js not necessary to obtain a mai-riuge license. C. G. Grooms, a prominent stockman, in jail at Austin, Tex., charged with forgery, was stricken with paralysis. Will Dinkins was killed four mile^ north of Earl, Ark., Friday, by a tree, v'bich he was cutting down, falling on him.
Albert Ramsay, the negro who killed his wife at Artesia, Miss., some two weeks since, was arrested at Ackerman. Miss. Two fatal accidents occurred in mines near Joplin, Mo., Friday, the victims being Tyler Martin and Edward Wbitewell. Three thousand regulars, sailors and volunteers will present to Miss Helen Gould a handsome album containing their autographs. 5. James Weldon, an old settler of Hardin county, 111., was found dead in a skiff Friday morning. Exposure is supposed to be the cause. Foreign lire insurance 'companies have left Arkansas. The attorney general has sued them on charges of vio leting the anti-trust law. Thirty thousand Spanish reserves have been called out, says a Madrid dispatch, and it is probable that there will be a Carlist rising'after Easter. The army transportation department at San Francisco is unusually active. Mer. ’ and material are being shipped to Manila on every ship that can be chartered. Albert Thole, of St. Louis, upon returning home, Friday, was shocked tc find his wife’s mother a corpse on thi ilcor and his 18-moiths-old baby sit ting near it., ,
WITHIN OUR LIMITS. News by Telegraph from Various Towns in Indiana. Mill a. Nytlrirf. Terre Haute, Ind., April 1.—There i» no clew to the whereabouts of Howard Khinehart, of this city, a young married man, v;ho disappeared from Marshall, 111., Monday, March 20, and whose disappearnce caused so much gossip that a new-made grave in the Marshall cemetery was opened to disprove the suspicion that he had l>een murdered and buried. The prevailing opinion is that Rhinehart has wandered away, while temporarily insane, but his brothers here, who have been believers in the foul play theory, do not think so. Young Rhinehart was married in December to a girl of 16 in Marshall, and soon afterward went tg^vark here. The young wife says that there was no trouble between them and that so far as she could know he was happy. ('warts,to Decide. Indianapolis, Ind., April 1.—The announcement that Sunday games have been provided for in the schedule of Western League baseball clubs. and> that such games are to be attempted here, has caused the attorney general to determine to prosecute the appeal in the lMisehall eases to a filial hearing at once. .The case now pending in the supreme court originated from the attempt at Sunday ball here May last. The lower court he]d the law unconstitutional, mu! an appeal was taken. The attorney general has filed a brief in the case, and on his petition the court granted an oral argument to >e heard April 21. r
Hrotherit ti\ Jail. Washington, hid., April 1.--. Sheriff McLaughlin has returred from Hu nl*oldt, 111., with John and Willi fin Brown as his prisoners and both ire now confined in the county jail at BJagunfield. Their arrest was based upwm an indictment returned by the recent grand jury, which charges vhe Browns \#lth murdering Elisha I tainbolt at Jonesboro, ten years ago. The murder was the outgrowth of an nrrbst of a cousin of the Browns, liainbolt having served the warrant. Tries to l’olaon a Family. Muncie.lnd., April 1.—George Brooks, his wife and two daughters, living on West Charles street, drank of the wa ter of a well on the premises and all became ill. The family had refused assistance to a tramp, who went away threatening revenge. A white powder was found, on the boards covering the well, blit none of it was saved. Prompt medical attendance prevented serious results to the members of the family. It is believed the water was poisoned. «, In a Sew Hole. Anderson, Ind., April 1.—“To heal by laying on of hands and to raise from the dead”’ is the purpose of a company incorporated in this county under Indiana laws. The incorporators are Christian Scientists, who propose to operate in this county on a new and legal basis. The attention of the state, however, has been called to them by the papers and it is thought that steps will be taken to head the scheme off. S»>» She Was a Victim. Anderson, Ind., April 1.—Mrs. Rebecca Price has filed suit for' $10,000 damages against Dr. A. Cox, a hypnotist. The suit grows out of a remarkable case and is preceded by a $25,000 suit by her divorced husband against the same man. Two years ago she placed herself under the treatment of the hypnotist. She says he placed her under a spell which she has just succeeded in shaking off. l.OMt Hist Het. Kokomo, Ind., April 1.—Albert Hunter, convicted of larceny, made three efforts to kill himself in jail here. He hung himself with a rope made from four handkerchiefs, next he severed a wrist artery with a pietje of w ire, and then tried to beat out his brains against the stone wall. Before eommencinghe bet a cellmate a quarter against a pants button he would go out of jail dead. He lost.
Skeleton Mystery. ■ J Muncie, lnd., April 1.—Detectives are working in Whitely on a clew that may lead to the discovery of the identity of the person who deposited a portion of a woman's skeleton in the center -jf the city. A test made upon the bones leads to the belief that acids must have been used upon them at some time. Fined for Punishment. Morristown, lnd., April 1.—Prof. H. B. Patten, the principal of the public schools here, has been fined $13, with costs, for whipping an eight-year-old child of Andy Sleeth. The penalty was inflicted by a justice of the j>eaee and the case will be appealed to the circuit court. Epidemic of Mentnirltis. Princeton, lnd., April 1.—There hare been seven deaths from meningitis in that many days 14 miles southwest of this city. Physicians cannot cope with the disease. Many families have left ♦he neighborhood and others will leave. Guilty of Harder. Sullivan, lnd.. April 1.—-The jury in the Adams murder case, after a deliberation of one and one-half hours, found William Adams guilty of the murder of William Eaves and fixed his punishment at imprisonment for life. Bankruptcy Petition. Auburn, lnd., April l.—Jokn C. Vought, leading merchant of Kendallville, and for two terms recorder of Noble county, has filed a petition in voluntary bankruptcy in the United States court. Indiana Soldier* Arrive. Savannah, Ga., April 1.—The transport Logan has arrived here frono Havana with the One Hundred and Sixtyfirst Indiana resriment on board.
I I Suits, $16'aad up. Pants, $4 and tip. §§j • • f ’ ■ -wB Call and See our Piece Goods and Trimmings. C. A. Burger & Bro., Merchant Tailors. lomUe, EyansYille & St. Im G. Railroad Time table In effect Nov. 28, 1W: (M. Lome Vut Exp. 8:<M a.m. 1«:46 a.m. Il:«8 s.m. 11:22 R.m 11:88 a.m. 6:20 p.m. St. Loots Limited. 3:00 p.m. 11:10 p.m. 12:01 a.m. 12:11 a.m. 12:80 a.m. 7:12 a.m. Stations. Leave ........... Louisville .1...... arrive Leave . Hon ting burg.4...arrive £***«••.Velpen - ......I...... arrive I*ave .......... Winslow ..1.arrive Leave..— Oakland City .....'.arrive Arrive.St. Louts*. . Leave Louisville LpdfevlU* Limited, 7:00 a.m. 4:25 a.m 4:t«. a.m. 3:52 a.m 3:37 a, m. 3:15 p. Fast Exp, 5:45 p.m. 2:55 pun, 2j90 p.ia. 2.m p.m~ l:oT p.m 1:52 a.m. Night trains stop at Winslow and Velpen on signal only. R. A. Campbell, G.P.A., St. Louis. J. F. Hurt, agent* Oakland €8|f* . vV?
RICHARDSON A TAYLOR, Attorneys at Law. Prompt attention given to *11 business. A Notary Public constantly In the office. Office In Carpenter building, Eighth and Math-sis., Petersburg, Ind. ^SH BY A COFFEY. Q. B. Asliby* C. A. Colley, Attorneys at Law. • Will practice In *11 courts. Special attention given to all civil business. Notary Public constantly in the office. Collections made and promptly reiniited. Office over W. L. Barrett’s store, Petersburg, Ind, O. DAVENPORT, Attorney at Law. Prompt attention given to all business. Office over J. K. Adams A Son’s drug store. Petersburg, Indiana. M. * C. L. HOLCOMB, Attorneys at Law. Will practice In all court*. Prompt attention given to all business. Office in Carpenter block, fit si floor on Eighth-si., Petersburg. L. E. WOOLSEY. Attorney at Law. All business promptly attended to. Collections promptly made and remitted. Abstracts of Title a specialty. Office lu Frank's building, opposite Press office, Petersburg, Ind. T. R. RICE, Physician and Surgeon. Chronic Diseases a specialty. Office over Citizens’ State Bank, Peteisburg. Indiaua W. BASINGER, Physiqian and Surgeon, Omce.over Bergen A Oliphant’s drug store, room No. 9, Petersburg, Ind. All calls promptly answered. Telephone No. 42, office and residence. H.STONECIPHER, Dental Surgeon. Office In rooms 6 and 7. In Carpenter building, Petersburg. Indiana. Operations flrstelass. All work warranted. An test he tics used for painless extraction of teeth. Q C. MURPHY. Dental Surgeon. Parlors In the Carpenter building, Petersburg. Indiana. Crowu and Bridge Work a specialty. All work guaranteed to give satisfaction.
C.A.SNOW&CO lako notice. ■g^OTICE Is hereby given to all persons Ini' terested that 1 will attend in my office it my residence * EVERY MONDAY. To transrct business connected with the office r»f trustee rtf Marion township. All persons having business with said office will nlease take notice. T. O. NEl.tsoN. Trustee. Postoffiee address: Winslow. NOTICE Is hereby given to all parties concerned that I will attend at my residence EVERY WEDNESDAY, To transact business connected with the office •f trustee of Madison township. Positively no business transacted escort on office days. J. D. HARK ER, Trustee. Postoffice address: Petersburg, Ird. NOTICE Is hereby given to all parties interested that I will atteud at my office in 8lendal. EVERY SATURDAY, To transact bosiness connect ed with the office of trustee of Lockhart township. All persons with said office will please •J. L. BASS, Trustee. by given to ail parties conIN cerned that 1 will be at my office at Pleasaatville, MONDAY AND SATURDAY cf each week, to attend to business connected with the office of trustee of Monroe township. Positively no business transacted only on office lays. J. M. DAVIS, Trustee Postoffiee address Spurrson. NOTICE Is hereby given to all persona concerned that l will attend at my office EVERY MONDAY To transact business connected with the effice of trustee of Jefferson township. Tl, E TRAYLOR. Trustee Postoffiee add ress: Algiers, I nd.
TUB Short Line TO f. . ' INDIANAPOLIS* CINCINNATI, PI - ISBL'RGH, WASHINGTON BALTIMORE, NEW YORK, BOSTON. and ALt Points* EAST,
.. .. . 5 6:+i am. No. Si, Boutli ..TTT*.-.*. x . ': l:‘£> pn». No. SI. north .?. .' 5:15 pa*. rcr sleeping car reservation*, rate** and further Information, caii on your uoar«t ticket agent, or address. ' ' v ^ IK. P. JKKKKIKHLO. P. Art. V. H. R. GRISWOLD, A.G,I’.* T.A. -•> E'Vajtsvti e. led. a E B. GUNCKiil* Agent/ WKWBVJSD. No. S , . ; , Idla.ws No. 13,Pves 6:ut>a. m* No. 5.8:>*l a. m 12:49 pm* .. .. 1:42 p. in No. p. mf-j Bj&OS-WRY - j ' lgCLC3B XArex/ig-; Trains leave Washington as follows forr * HAST BCUNil. '■ No. 617 ... 2:« n. m* No. 12 . ... 6:17a. m+ No. 4 ...r. 7:17 a. m* No. 21.law p. m* No. 7 No. 8i.1:13 a. tn-r No. 1. No. li^arr. 11:40 p. ra+ Nc ♦ Dally except Sunday. .. >* For [detail information regarding rau*,, lime on connecting lines, sleeping, pttrl>er cars, etc., address THOS. DONAHUK§p' ■;i Ticket Agent, B.& o. S-w. Ry.. J. M. CHESBRl)C^I^,n’ IO<l General Passenger Agent, »t. Louis, Mo —4--- ■; • r ; ILLINOIS CENTRAL Ry. AHHOUHCEHEI A nfw 1833,edition,entiretyrewritten, ant* giving facts* _ 3 »«« cotiditfd^s. brought. HftlfDOttlWBDQ* down to-date, of Ih«. OUKlDOIlIlfLuilO Souther©* SOUTHERN letters from northern farm erenow prosperously jocuted oo &r tine of tbsII IlHois Central railroad In the States of Kentucky. Tennessee. Mississippi and Louisiana,, and also a detailed wriie-updf the cities, towns and country on and adjacent to mat line, To homeseetcers or those (si search of a farr . this pamphlet will furnish reliable Ins>ible nnd formation concerning the mosta£ee prosperous portion of the SootW'-Free copies can ,T*e had by applying to the nearest of tha undersigned. Tickets and full information aa to rates in connection with the above can be had oft °f tbe Central and connecting lines. «, sf. Morray, Div. Pass. Agt, New Orleeis,. J°HN A. 8-ovt. Div. Pass. Agent. Memphis. 8. q. Hatch, Mv^Pass^im^pincinnhli. G. P. * T. A., i. C. R.R.^Evansville, Ind. H. Hanson. G. P. A.. Chicago. W• A. Ksli,on0. a.G. P. A.. Louisville, 4 Trad* Marks Designs * CqpvfttQHTS Ac. iic*.iy aat-Ti imn uur uptuiuu xtw wupioer ao .-▼entton ts probably patentable. Commun e*, ttons strictly confidential. Handbook on Patent* lent free. Oldest agency for securing oatentn. Patents taken through Serial notice, without cha bey forieh Mann _ . bsrge. In the PVVMM w IUIUUW VAISES'* w tdio Scientific jmerkai. A handsomely illastrated treekly. lanreet clr*. ealatton of any eeientihe Journal. Terms. 63 a yew,; four months, »1. Sold by ah newsdealers. WINN SCp.^^-New Tori i Branch Office, 6K * Sh, Washington. 2k 0. ^ in Diseases. Forth© speedy and permanent corset' witter, salt rheum and eesema, Chamberlain’s Eye «nd Skin Ointment is. without an equal. It relieves the itching and smarting almost instantly and. its continued use effected permanent mre. It also cures itch, barber’s itch, scald head, sore nipples, itching piles mapped hands, chronic sore eyes and granulated lids. ^ 7*
