Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 February 1885 — Page 4
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12,1885.
WE had a cleaner ptatesmauship, a higher standard of fidelity to public trusts, and a much less costly government when official lite at Washington did not have eucli extravagant social ideas as it now has, but was kept within the bounds ot Democratic plainness, simplicity and economy. On the return of the Domocvaiic par.j to power in the aalional government the wisest thing Mr. Cleveland could do, and something that would be entirely in accord with Democratic potions, would to try the experiment of selecting cabiuet officers who are willing to live within ibtir salaries, find to devote themselves to pubiic service Tather than to the en'.erjainment of millionaires and magnates. A uiau who takes charge ot a depariincut serve the people faithfully, and to discharge his duties vviu'i'jiit fear rr favor, dues not need be 'iijject ions that can only be bsd 'it, in' cort ol several times his salary. Wlit a man pays io' an office time or tuna, e'.
tn the papers appears this floatinj pad agraph: When Mr. Cleveland was leaving Buffalo the other evening tie ticket inspector at the Central depot gate failed to recognize him- "Tickets," he said. Show your tickets." The president-elect held his ticket in his hand and was passing through hurriedly, when the inspector called a halt: Then punching the presi--dent elect's ticket he allowed him to pass through.
1
„.
Doling the caovaes Grover Cleveland accepted no favors from the great corporations. It is gratiifyng to observe that he is accepting rothing from them now. He will go into office entirely untrammeled. In this he is infinitely better off than James G. Blhine who was bound to the corporations hand and foot before the election.
SENATOR EKMEST, of Sullivan county has introduced in the State Senate a joint resolution proposing a constitutional amendment. It amends Section 14, Article 5 of the Constitution by adding the following proviso:
Provided, however, that the Governor .shall have power to disapprove of any item or items of an) bill making an appropriation of money embracing distinot items, and the part or parts of tile bill approved shall be the law, and the item or items ot appropriation disapproved shall be void unless lepassed by both Houses, as provided herein for the repassage of other bills.
Resolved, That in submitting this amendment to the electors of the state to be voted on, it. shall be designated as Amendment No 1.
Thit is an admirable amendment and Senator Ernest deserves not only the thanks of his immediate constituents •but also the thank* of the people of the whole sta1efor introducing it. For years the feeling has b.t-n growing that our eon stituton was defective in just this point and that it is now proposed to remedy it bringing it abreast of the best opinion on the tobjec', is a matter of congratulation.
It is to be hoped the 'tgislatnre will be prompt in taking sctiou on the measure.
THE New Tork Herald gives the following account of the title of Mahdi which has come into prominence by the rebellion in the Soudan. It aays:
Mahdi, or mahadi, as D'Herhelot spells it, is an ancient title in themoslem wcrld which at first signified simply director of the faithful But in the course of moslem history,* and especially moslem history in Africa, it came to have another signification related to an accepted prophecy of Mohammed. It necessarily refers to the African part of Arabic history. By this secondary significance of the word the mahadi is a certs in'ancient leader come again. His
appearance is the "second advent of a prophet who lived in the old days, and who in all the meantime has been with the immortals. Mohammed, the twelfth im am and the twelfth in descent from Ali, is the real origi nal. He is the mahadi who comes again everj now and then. He was hidden from the world at an early age and com muned only with his disciples through hiB lifetime, and finally did not die bat "went up" with the fixed intention of returning to revive the glories of moalem. As the Christian theory, and even in the history of several monarchies, this legend of a prinee who is to return has afforded a favorite pretext for ho end of impostors, so it did in Islam. The most tamous of these in past ages was Abulcassem Mohammed Ben Abdallah, the founder of the Fatimite dynasty in Africa. Mohammed had prophesied that three hundred years the sun would rise in the west, and as Abulcaseem'a glory was in 208 of the hegira, it was held that the propheoy relerred to him, and since then the idea of the mahadi haB commonly had relation to' a revival of the glories of Islam in that western wot Id of moslemism, the provinces of Africa held by the Arabs.
bur times as much as it is 1* gi- It has been proven tbet a dynataoelec.vurth, ho either rates the Value [trie machine oi forty elements will churn ot his services to the public much higher forty-five quarts of eream in live minutes than the law does, or he confesses that the position is worth much more to him than the law allows. Within the last twenty ears there has been a number of cabinet officers who have spent their prilate fortunes lavishly in sustaining the social credit of the several administrations, and yet none of them have been impoverished. Tha money invested in style and entertainments seemed to come back to them in some way. When a cabinet officer is enforced to lire bejond his salary we can find a partial explanation of the many big jobs which have disgraced several administrations.
Mr. Cleveland, it he wants to put himself in line wiih Democratic ideas, should select his cabinet with a'view to eliminating all those condition which have led to the establishment of a court circle at Washington, wielding power and patronage by virtue of a property qualification, alien to the purpose and tpirit of our institutions. Wo do not expect a Democratic administration to eathrohe a plu toccacy at the national capital, with the chief officers of the government setting an example of lavish expenditure heyond their salaries. «.
Farmers will be interested in the statement of ^scientific authority that electricity bids fair to supercede nearly every other motive power, and in its sweep of old methods threatens to include the churn. Life will lose half it* charm in the country without, the agents for patAnt churns, who abow how quickly butter can be made and then have a machine ior enormous prices wbich can never be used ugain, but they must go. Electricity has been pn ven to be the best butter •oaker. A French chemist has found that by placing two electrodes in an isolated vessel of cream '.hat the electric current segrega'es the particles of butter.
TUB CRIMINAL COURT BILL. Senator Schloss' bill to establish a criminal court for Vigo county ie known on the legislative records as (Senate Bill, Mo. 246. It was brought before the Senate coramUfcie on organization of courts last night. No friend of the measure came to cast a garland on its grave. Even its senatorial parent deserted it in its hour of death and wept in secret if he wept at all over its untimely taking off. A shout of indignant dissent rising to the proportions of an angry roar from the direction of home iB calculated to remind even a Senator that there are limits to endurance which it is wise not to overstep. 4
An additional roll of signatures to the protest, bringing the grand total to somewhere in the neighborhood of two thousand, was presented to the committee and the suggestion madfc that there was no occasion for further prolongation of tho fuueral rite*. Evn its friends had abandoned it and an cni might as well be made of it at once. A vote was then taken and the bill was indefinitely post--*ss
poned. This ends the bill. It wou'd have caved the pecple ol Vigo county much uneasiness and not a little trouble if the bill had nev.T been presented. The matter wae not an issue in the canvass and any measure making a radical change is the existing order of things should always have the warrant popular approval before an attempt is made to pass it Once upon a time this doctrine, founded in the plainest of common sense, was universally practiced. When a people selected a legislature then they knew just what to expect for they had expressed their wishes in the canvass and what they willed was done—only that and nothing more. But now it seems that a legislature is a newfangied,double-barreled grab bag. What is in the bag the people partly know lor they put in one hundred individuals in one bag and fifty in another. But what is to come out of it—who shall iell? Platforms of principles, issues of the canvass, public discussion, the wishes and will of the people—nens of these throw any light on the problem. A bill is the personal bantling of its legislative patent and, whatever it is, elbows its way to the front and then by some hocus pocus or other the burden of proof is cast upon the people and thuy u*usu show that they do not want the propossd legis-! seeking permanent homes.
lation. As a natural result, if this sort of thing continues, a session of the legislature will come to be more dreaded than an epidemic of small pox. The only cure seems to be a very general vaccination with the virus ot common sense. Let that only^be uone. which the people desire done! UTT t, —MM—,MMM r"i
ALIEN LANDOWNERS. JW The bill introduced in congress to prohibit the ownership of real estate by persons who are not citizen* of the United States, is aimed chiefly at the English noblemen who have acquired large tracts of land in the Western territories, although the prohibition applies to every portion of the country. The principle ot the bill is not anew one, although applied in anew field. No foreigner can own any vessel property in the United States, and no one who is not a citizen oan receive a license as an officer of a vessel.
There are several grounds upon which the application of the principle to the ownership of real estate may be defended. In a popular government it la in the highest degree important that the. influence which goes with the ownership
of real estate should be in the hands of citizens who have an interest in the welfare of our institutions. It is important that men who derive the benefit of the protection of the government in the accumulatiou and holding of property, should be subject to the call of the government tor military service whm its existence is threatened. There is no justice in a condition which compels one man to shoulder a musket and risk his life to preserve the nation, while hta next-do neighbor, owning property and enjoying all the privileges and protection of the government, is able to escape service under the plea that he is an alien. We cannot compel ali who enjoy the advantages of this government to -become citizens, but we may prevent the ownership of property by foreigners whether they live here or abroad, 'V'
We would not feel safe if Great Britain should acquire title to millions of acres ol land in this country. We have bad political troubles with England, and u*tvf he.ve them again. The aims of the. republic and of the English government are different, anu the policies ol the two countries are, in soma respects, opposed to each other. We would feel uneasy with extensive tracts of lard in this country in the hands of such a foreign government. The ownership of millions of acres by English noblemen (they own now eouiei 21,000,000 acres) is for all political purposes its ownership by a foreign government. These great tracts of land will be colonized by British subjects— by great masses of people who have no sympathy with our institutions, and who will owe no allegiance except to a foreign nation. It is little enough to ask of these people, aua of all who come here to ac quire property, to become Americas citizens. If a man has the privileges of citizenship, he should be m&de to carry its burdens also.
Aside from the question of citizen responsibility, the ownership of lands by foreigners is objectionable, because it increases the evil of non residenco. The ownership ol lands by persons who reside in this country, but away from the land, is a serious matter to actual settlers in the West. When the ownership rests in persona who are not even in this country, ar.d who never will be ol persons particularly who use the lands for speculative holding, as many Englishmen do, the injury to the actual settler is considerable. It would be well it all the tracts of public lands which have passed into the hands ot great corporations, whether American or foreign, could be declared lorteited to the government, because there is no doubt »be titles were obtained by fraud. Men have been hired to enter the land as individuals, and upon settlement have transferred it to the companies by which they were employed. Bit since this cannot be done in every case, at least something can be gained by prohibiting foreign syndicates from playing the game aiy further.
The public lands were intended for actual settlers and it was supposed that every section, at least,., would have its settler. But there are not only sections, but Wuolc townships without a single settler, every foot being in possession of non-resident English companies. The actual settlers who have gone beyond thew» immense foreign-owned tracts, are deprived of the advantages of railroads and towns, and of neighbore.
Of course, it is not practical to exclude foreigners entirely from land ownership—the law may be evaded, the syndicates holding property in the name of an American citizen—but th« evil maybe greatly lessened. The suggestion that such a law will retard the development of the West by keeping out capital is not worth much—American capital is seeking every opportunity for just such investment as English capital finds iu the West. Besides, it is not the best kind of investment for the West—it does not put the land to the best use. We want settlers. And there are actual settlers for all the public lands we have to dispose of. The ownership of tracts of land by English and American companies keeps out actual settlers who are
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
Certainly,
the bill ought to become a law.
Soonover Sifiings.
T. H. Welch says indigo is cheap. Rev. D. M. Nevena bitched Johnny Peter* tnd Miss Buth Pearson up in the matrimonial harness the fith inat. Success to you Johoby G. W. Linton refuses to sell bis pork just now We learn that Clarence Dean's school is a success EHOS Akers and bis partner are down in the country buying pork Our Legislators would lo well to get through with the legal business and go home anrl let our courts alone Our neizbbor, John Copland, is bnildinsr an addition to bis bouse— Would in not be better for (our Legislature) to give us a giiod road law and let our courts alone. With Mack for our Judge and tbe present courts we think the people will get along finely. *7?*' UNCUS SNORT. *Wl ..
Runaway Team.
uite nd,
Yesterday afternoon there was an exciting runaway in tbe South made more so by the fact that one of the horses was blind. A couple of colored men got out at Pike's Peak grooery, and shortly afterward an engine passing on the Southeastern railroad frightened the team and they started nortb to Grover street and thence east to Second, where they ran into a tree near Luken's and upset the wagon. One of them, a blind animal, went tearing on in his darkness right through a fence and into Mr. Senningera kitehen. The other ran up Third street.
Action of the Board of Co&nty CcsM musioners To-day.
To Forests! the Bill to Relieve Couoty Treasurer Rogers' Bondsmen.
Copies of the following will be sent to bpth branches ot the Legislature te-day STATE OF INDIANA, VIGO CO.. S3:
Commissioners Court February Dial Term 1885.) SI At a term oi the Board of Commissioners of said county, begun, held and continued at the Court Honse in the city oi Terre Haute commencing on Monday, the 9th day of February. 1885, present Jno. W. Wilson and J. F. Roedel, commissioners, the following proceedings were bad on the 9th day ot February, 1885, in tfce cause of Bondsmen of Newton Rogers
Ex-Treas. of Vigo Co: Whereas, It appears that the public i, ,' rests of Vigo county demand an imradiate session of the Board ol Commis siobers of Vigo county for the following icason, to-wit:
Whereas, It baa come to the knowledge of this board that an effort is being made to pr cure the passage of a law to relieve from liability the bondsmwn of Newton Rogers, ex-Treasurer of Vi^o county and upon said information John W. Wilson and John F. Roeael, county commissioners, and who constitute a majority of said boareh, are now present in the court room in tbe Court House ot said couoty, this Monday morning, February dtb, A. D., 1885, on their own volition and in special session to take aotion on the foregoing information, and after due consideration tbe following action was had by the board: "Now, therefore, be it resolved by this board, that in behalf of tbe people and the tax payeia of said county, this*board moat rarnestly and solemnly protest against the passage ot ruph measure.
Be it also further resolved, that a copy, properly certified, of these resolutions and order be transmitted to the members ot the Senate and House of Representatives of the General Assembly of the Sute of Indiana, and that the attorney of the board, C. F. McNutt, Esq., be and is authorized to present these resolutions to the Legislature and any committees of that body, and he is authorized and instructed to represent the interests of said county in *aid matter. ad and approved this, February 9, 1885. Ordered that this special session adjourn sine die.
JOHN W. WILSON JOHW F. BOEDEL Commissioners Attest: Andrew Grimes, auditor and ex officio clerk of board, Stat,e of Indiana, Vigo county, SS.
THE MARKETS.
,TOUJ»U
ASSOCTATSD PRK6S TBX.BSBAV TOLKDO, Feb. 11
WHEAT—Dull: No 3 cash, or Feb., 79HC IVfjicb 8UKc asked April: h2.^c: 'ttity, 83%c: Itfo 2 soft, 83(4850.
UOKN—Dull No2cash,42c Feh. 42c bid May, 42^o bid. OAT!*—steady No 2 81%.
CLOVER—Firm prime, cash 4 93 Feb. 4 93 bid March 4 U5 bid.
NEW YORK.
ASBOCIATKD PKKSS Tm.K0HAINRW YORK, Feb. 11
'f LOUR—Receipts, 21.000, sales, 9,000 dull, heavy WHEAT—Receipts, 22,000: opened higher, afterwards weakened, tost mosi advance, very little doing No white nominal saio, 4.1'e. No. 2 r«l *eb. Mar. 90^c 40,500. April 92K@92^c 240,000, May 84@94J 120,000. Jane 9o(®95%o.
Keceipts, 190,000, better, qulet:mix-
ed Western spot 49J4@51tc futurts, 49@50%c Sites 128,000. O ATs—Keceipl*, 71,000. irefitarn 36@40 dull
BEEF—Quiet and unchanged new extra ii oooau PORK—Firm*, new inew« 14 [email protected].
LARD—Quiet and steady: steam, |7 87X. HUGAR—Quiet and steady BUfTRtt—Firm western, OH ICES F—Dull 1§1S. MOLASSES—Firm. PETROLEUM—Firm. Ri- E—Strong COFFEE—Dull. /, FREIGHTS—Dull. Spr. TURPENTINE -Steady SO}* ROSIN—Quiet »l 6$»1 27%. TALLOU-Firm,3). F3GS—Western. Firm 26%c.
iNeMWNAii
ASSOOIATXD PBBSS TEIIKGRATF CINCINNATI Feb. 11
FLOUR—Dull and unchanged. WHEAT—Stronger tM)@86%c. CORN—Strong and higher No 2 mixed, 42Ji@48c.
OATS—Firmer 83c. RYE—Steady 72c. BARLEY—Firm and niiehanged. i1 ROVISJON- Quiet and unchanged. W jBISKEY—Steady 1 18.
OFCLLC'AGKJII ABHOOL ATKD PBKSS TBXKOBI* CHICAGO Feb 11
WHEAT—Ruled dull and closed shade easier than yesterday 77X, cash or Feb. 78J^c, Mar: 8354c May.
CORN—Easy 36Kc, caah or Vc&. 36^c, Mar.: 40^@40&c, May. OATS—OUII and easy S7e, cash or Feb. 27*c. Mar.- 30%@80Xe, May.
RYK—Steady i8i. ,, BARLEY—Nominal. FLAJCSF.El)—Firm 148. PORK—steady 13 OS, Feb. or March IS 27 J*. May.
LA.KD—Shade easier 7 OS. Feb: 7 06, Mar. 7 20@7 22K, May. WHloKEY— $1 li.
'fiM Indianapolis Live Stock Market INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. i: CACTLB- Receipts, 800 head shipment*. 250 head. But few lecal hbre. Quality fair snippers stronger, bui not buotably higher butchers about steady: a few left over. Good to choice shippers 5 25@5 It Fair to medium shippers 4 60a5 OS Feeders and «'ommon shippers 4 2GA4 60 Stockurs 8a0®4 0S Good to choice cows and heifers 8 75«4 SO Fair to medium cows and heifers.... 3 26@8 60 Common cows and heifers.. 2 25@3 00 Veal, common to good 66(£)7 00 Bulls common to good 3 50§3 60 Milkers, common to good 35 00@60 00
HOGS—Receipts. 600 head shipments, 900 head. Quality fair: market active and higher: packers and shippers bnj ing •losing ttrm all sold. Select heavy shipping 6 1005 ITU Select light shipping .4*0(94 95 Select light ana heavy packing 4 86as 06 Heavy roughs 440(94 05 Pigs, 440®4 65 SHEEP—Receipts, 860 head shipment* 250 head. Qqualityfair market stronger on the best grades, white oomikon are Good to choice grades. Fair to medium graakes .... Common grades jSmcks, per head
S7S®4 00 20A8 6S ..260(13 00 ..26008 60
Civil Serviee Exaninatloaa WASHINGTON, Feb. 11.—Civil servio examinations for departmental service at Washington, will be held at Chicago. February 24th, Springfield, 111., Feb. asth, and Indianapolis, Feb. 28th:
MODDY HERE.
The Officers Arrive With Him This Afternoon.
He Says He Didn't Write to Mrs. Trump From Frankfort—He Wat at Septer's More Than Once-
FPMB Wednesday's Bally,
Yesterday the body of Richard Trump was exhumed and a post mortem held by Dr. T. W. Moorhead, who found that the bullet entered the right temple and ranged through the brain, coming out on the opposite side of the head two inches lower than it entered. This corroborates the prisoner's statement as to tbe manner in which she held tbe pistol up against Trnmp's^head. Dr. Moorhead found the remains well preserved. Officers Dwyer and Early found trains so delayed by tbe rough weather that they did not leave Frankfort with their prisoner until this morning. There are many rumors about Moudy and his wife, and theic seems to be enough to warrant the suspicion that Moudy killed het. Ibis suspicion is strengthened by remarks dropped by Moudy, who is the unfortunate possessor ot a tongue that never knows wheu to stop. There are so many rumors out about Moudy that it would take a column to teii them all in. If half what is said of bim is true he is a baa and wicked, but foolieh man.
1
THH XKT&RCEPTKD LETTJMt. Yesfeiday a letter was delivered al the jail by Letter Carrier Koutzhan addretstd IO Mis. Nettie Trump. As it was from Frankfort it was supposed to contain and did contain exactly the evidence :o convict her accomplice, Moudy, and the temptation to open it and ascertain before delivering it to the woman can be said to have been almost irresistable to an officer who wished to bring to justice the snaty scouudrtl who iuduoed Mrs. Tramp to committ the crime ot' shooting her husband while be lay in helpless sleep. Under such circumstances it has long been tbe practice to open such letters, so that it was aot known such action was against the law, and very few will condemn tbe officer who did it and who thus secured, in the interest of justice, most important evidence. Mr. Thcs. Harper, attorney fcr Mrs. .Trump, is naturally, of coarse, quite indignant at the interception of the lettei and this morning visited the Postoffice to get the law on the subject Postmaster Jones stated to Superiutendent oi Carriers Miller that he bad done wrong in sending Mrs. Trump's letter to the jail instead of placing it in the gen eral delivery, and instructed him in such cases in future not to do EO again, but Mr. Miller, in defense says it has been customary and cites the following rule:
SEC. 342:—Rules for delivery of matter —Mail matter directed to street and number must be delivered by carrier, unless otherwise directed. Mail matter directed neither to a box holder nor to a street and number, must be delivered by carrier if its address is known or can be ascertained from the city directory otherwise at the general delivery."
As Miller knew Mrs. Trump was in jail he gave the letter t» carrier No. 3 to deliver.
Few persons are aware that the following is contained in the laws governing the postal service, and it will therefore be of interest to publish it:
SKC. 1284:—Any persons who shall take any letter, postal card or packet, although it does not contain any article ot value or evidence thereot, out of a postoffice or branch postoffice, or from a letter or mail carrier, or which has been in any postoffice or branch postoffice, or in the custody of any letter or maU carrier, before it has been delivered to the person to whom it was direoted, with a design to obstruct the correspondence, or to pry into the business or secrets of another, or shall secrete, embezzle, or deslroy tbe Bame, shall, for every such offense, be punished by a fine of not more than five hundred dollars, or by imprisonment at hard labor for not more than one year or by both." "If this letter which the officers had every reason to believe contained important testimony in this important case, what where they to do with it, if they could not open it asked a GAZETTE reporter. "Deliver it to the woman let her read it and then demand it," was the reply.
This would not work, however, as |the woman could refuse to open it, or immediately after reading tear it into atoms.
A LITTLE 8TORT.
A story is being widely circulated concerning Mrs. Trump which will probably have sensational developementa it brought out in the course of the trial. Parties who claim to know say that a certain prominent citizen paid Mrs. Trump $500 recently in lieu of a certain little claim she had upon him, the nature of which may be. imagined from the story of her connection with Moudy. The report goes that Mrs. Trump threat ened to sue him tor seduction, and the prominent citizen came down with the cash.
MOUDY HERE.
The Fron Officers Arrive With Hla Frankfort This Afternoon.
Ihis afternoon Officers Dwyer and Early arrived from Franktort, Ind., with Monroe Moudy in custody. They took him at once to police headquarters. The officers were snow bound north or they would have got in sooner with their prisoner. Superintendent Tandever bean at once to interrogate the prisoner, 'here were present besides the superintendent, Officers Dwyer and Early and a GAZET» reporter. Moudy looked pale and nervous, and seemed thinner than when he left here. In reonse to inquiries, he said he msde Mrs. ump's acquaintance about lour years ago .when he was courting his wife, new deceased, but that he had been intimate with her for leas than a year. Mr. Vandever asked him about the visit Mrs. Trump and himselt paid to Mrs. Septer's. Moudy did not answer the question readily. He said he did not know any woman by that came. He said he did not know any woman by that name. He said he did not know the woman who lived over the shop by that name. He had visited the place with Mrs. Trump more than once. "Who paid Hn. Sopterf" asked Tenderer.
"I always paid her," replied Moudy. "You didn't go to Louisvillef" asked Yandever. -. ••v"I wasn't going," was the. answer.
Mr. Vsndever asked him if he had written to Mrs. Trump sine# reached Frankfort.1 He said he hsd not. He was asked if he had written to anyone since he left here. He said be didn't: that he had no occasion to. Vandever asked the question several times, and ea time Moudy said he had never written to any one. Yandever said he .understood Moudy was to be mairied shortly. Moudy said be was. He wae S9ked the same of the girl. He said her name was Alice Harding. Theywere to be married two weeks. She was now working in a hotel at Marion, Obio. The conversation turned to other things. Then, about ten minutes L-ter, Vandeyer brought up the girl again, and,. speaking of ber as Mary, asked Moudy if that wasn't her namo. Moudy said it vfrasn't. Vandever abked bim what it was. Moudy charged himself uneasily in his chair, stopped, and after several moments hesitation said her namo was Alice. Moudy seemed unwilling to answer some of the questions, and Yaudever told him he need not answer any questions unless be wanted to. He was asked his opinion of Mrs. Trump. He said he had cone, He rematked that be "hoped it was nothing much," referring to the charge against him. He denied the statements mnde to Taylor's barbers.
His cousin c&lkd and after 4 short interview with bim and J. G. McNutt, he way tak".n to jail.
~v it v7a iisrTTin
A tie tht Moat Eminent I'hyaidon Ol any school, hat lg (he best thing In the world for qnieting and allaying all irritation of the nervcaand curing all foimsot nervoa comnlalntit, giving *natnra), childlike refresiling sleep always? 4.»11 will tell wjil tell aahesitatlngly "Some form ot Ho{ 6!2!"
CHAPTKKI.
Afk any *r all of the most eminent physiciins: "What ie the bctt and only rexedytbat can be relied on to cure all diseases of of tbe kidneys and urinary organs* such aa Bright* disease, diabetes, retention or inability t« eta in urine, and all th» diseases peculiar to Women"— "And they will teli you explicitly and emphatically "Buchu!!!"
Ask the same physicians "What is the most reliable and surest enre for all liver diseases or dyspepsia constipation, tnaigeKtion, biliouf-ness, malaria, ferer ague, Ac.," and they will tell you:
Mandrake! or Dandelios!!." Hence, when tiles' remedies are combined with others equally valuable,
And compounded into Hop Bitter/, inch wonderful and mysterious curative power Is developed, which is so varied in it* operations that no disease or
111
health can possi
bly exist or resist its its power, and yet it Is Harmless tbe most frail woman, weak est Invalid or smallest child to use.
CHAPTER II. "Pat'en
"Almost dead or nearly dying" For yeare, and given up by physicians ef Bright's and othir kidney disea'es, liver complaints, severe roughs, calltd consumption, have been cured.
Women gone nearly crazy 2!! From agony of neuralgia, nervousness, wakefulness, and various diseased peculiar to women.
People drawn out of shape from exertcfa* ting pangs of rheumaiixm,-imlammatery ana chronic, or suffering from to elnla. ^Erysipelas!
Halt rheum, blood poisoning, dyspepsia indigestion, and in fact almost all diseases frail
Nature tu heir to Have been cured by Hop Bittern, proof of which e*n be lound In every neighborhood in the known world.
SS^Nonegenuine without a bunch of gi een Hops on tbe white label, bhun all tine vile, poisonous stuff with "Hop" or "Hops" in their name.
ALLEN'S
GENUINE ORIGINAL NERVE&BONB LINIMENT. PrUm, iSSe. yer bottle. Introduced in 1886 by Geo. Marston Allen. A painlos, sure and speedy cure for Rheumatism, Neuralsia, Old Sores, Barns, Sprains, Scalds, Cuts, Bruises, Swellings and all other bodily pains. Farmers and owners of •lock recommend it the best known remedy for cure of Shoulder Strains, Cracked Heels, Scratches, Chafes or Galls, Sprains, Corks, Film In the Eye, "infFsrAttLi
DON'TSSS"""*"*30-
hot repeatlnt
tor 915, at30 Breech Load*
ing Shot Gun for 816, a 919 Concert Organette for |7, a t?5 Magic Lantern for 912, a Solid Gold Watch for SI#, a *15 Silver Watch lor 18. Yflll Yon ean get any of these articles
1 uw
FIBS if you will
devote a few hours of your leisure time evenings tJ introducin onr new goods. One lady secured a Gold Watch free, in a single afternoon. A gentleman got &sil-lj|iea|T ver watch for fifteen minutes work A boy 11 years old secured a watch In one day nonaredsof others have done nearly as well. If you have a Alifi* I.aatrra yon ean start a business ttat will ay you from $10 to 960 every night. Bend at onoe for oar Illustrated Catalogue of Gold and Si ver Watches, Self-coccing Bull Dog Revolvers, Spy Glares. Indian Scout and Astronomical Telescopes,Te'eeraph instruments, Type Writers, Organ Accoroians, Violins, Ac. Ac. It mav Kisrt yon nn the road
!o
wealth
WOBLD MANUFACTURING CO* a Street New Yark.
IHVALt Will be mailed) cmdtocustomers oflagtyeMWlUiout ordering it It contains iUustrationf pries* descriptions and directions far planting alk
Notice to Farmers.
The Otter Creek Flooring Mills, fomerly the Markle Mills are running everr day making custom work a specialty having re* cently added New Machinery, New Bating, CVUMj wwou oioviuuvrjr* non apauu||| Cloths, ano ower Corn SheJer, we claim id to
that our facilities for aeoommodattoc and riori ay other In the State,
meeting the farmers'wants are supfcri an other In the State,
As an assurance of hind treatment{and fair dealing it is only necessary to slat Geo. Kussell, the most reliable ai miller known to
Flow
mill men is In cl
Meal teed sad Graham lour
on hand.
