The Greencastle Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 February 1885 — Page 6
TUN (iRKENCASTLE TIM KS. NKRRU A RY o, 18^5
The Countv N>>vs.
Our uorrospondentH should romomtHT to iiuul favors ho u« to nmoh us by Tuetday. Mattor n*ac*liii«nj th«*oflh , <» late on \V«*ilnosday cannot , hoc arc insertion tlie Ham** week.
FLUVI > TONYSSHIl*.
Sim Wright spoilt last week viait ing in Illinuis. ‘•C.imo gentle Siring, ethereal j Hill tliess. Oi'ine Jnhu Hi, ill. of lielltoli Cii. is here visiting I' el--. Mi, l> i I ■ \ Williamsoii nftirtive land, i- • 'ick. lh v |*i''-y will again <venpv the pulpit it ('■ ru\eiain] on next Sahliath. Dora Mason has <|iiit the telegraph business anil hired to Dob Smith foi th? summer.
I nch' I* iry Smith and wife took advening ■ of the line sleighing to visit their children.
Mr- Kn z. a daughter of James Sle i n' i\ i \v:is burned nt W esley ( ii,i| i 1 In- Week. She died of coll HUIli|'ti' i Joe Underwood has moved lo his farm. I esse Estep has moved on Dr. Moudy’s place near Putt amville, and Alf .McCoy has gone to John Mill man’s place. Several of the youngsters attended the Winchester meetings last Sunday. Some of the gay and festive took in the dance at Fillmore, last Thursday night. A numb >r of our citizens sold hoi-*.-i it stranger at tlroveland i w "ek, to be deliyered at Keno on Siini'l.iv The horses were there but the-ti anger didn’t materialize. The ninis hurdened with perfume the 111e111\ c ncentrated esstmse of P' I*' it Large num'.iers of these sweet little things are beingcaught bv ti ipper- \\ hat .sill tiniii not do for m ‘in"
i in.- i". the open winter predicted by the weiiilier prophets. It froze an I I,uisted open. But it has been propitious for storing up tempera tu' ■ to use with next summer's ex css' if culoric.
I{"V I’ B liley will he in (trove land next Sunday and that night at Canaan, if he does not protract the meeting at (irovelaod. He will preach at Canaan the second Sunday in each month until further notice.
Sue: i at Mr (’lay Darnall's Sat ' urd iv n y.lit A splendetl lime is re | por. lb all w no attended. There has been no school at Sum mit school house for some time, as wood is out and Mr. Hubbard has been sick. The report come- to u-that our old time froMcl I r tnk l ullow'.i, has takiui iiiito I, in-elf a hotter half Miss I,.i ■ o i !i \ 1 M iv in speiits and happ:iie-- itt■ nd tliem. S' Ilie ('ll i II g 'S 1| I ve been made ill moving Mr .1 lines Cross return* to his old f irm, Mr. Archy Collins taki's the house vacated, and Tom Sieel moves to Mr Collin-'s house.
A SHOWERY MOHNING.
fMary Howies iu Sunduy ilairazine.) AU my Heaven was dark with rain, .\s I mused of loss and pain, Going down a Devon lane (Ju u showery morning; Joy had vanished, frail itml Heat, How could roso and woodbine sweet lj.lt their I o ids, and tempests meet With such merry scorning?
"Such great droj s were never known," Sni-.l the '|».'islwolli, shrinking down; They have spoiled my only gown,” Sighed a eruuipled eistu,; yuoth the roses in surprise Answering m oleni'i w is ■. Though u smile " i- in tlieir eyes "Nay, they only kissed usl'’
itugg'd n.l .n- sh i.ik wit .i glee, Knxghiv , laugh" I in com any,
Doug Ueynols taki's possession of the saloon, bought of Ford *V Me Norton, Feb. 15. Doug is a Imsi ness man, but we think he could please the eye of the people better in some other line of business.
'fill tin sun peeped out to see Through a cloud embrasure;
Do I the rain was past an 1 gone. And stellarios clustering saone
Like a Milky Way upon Speedwell depths of azure
Mr Levi C. FytV" from Kansas, lias returned on a visit He likes tbeconntlv W" 1 . an l III!,' nl- tore turn in a a sb >rt t new th nm* of our fair ones the beautiful heli's of our little tow u g i to all puls of the U. s.
Every blossom on itsstsm Wore a shining diadem, Ajid my heart rejoiced with them In their fre-h udornmg; Flowers are sweetest after rain, Joys completest after pain, Life is but a Devon lane On a showery morning!
WASHINGTON’S RELIGION.
Mrs. King, after a long seige of sickness, died at the home of her father. Mr. Shoemaker, Sunday, Feb ruary 1. She leaves a large family to mourn her loss. They have the deepest sympathies of the commun ity. Doc.
Th« Father of HU Country as a Church lioer —A I'rohuhlo Myth.
MMI l» \I.K.
Mr <'ox, of L inisville, was in town
Sunday.
Dan Enright a son. John Bayne
•a son.
11 ('. Steeg will move to Terre
Haute soon.
A child of Mi and Mrs. Dalton
died last week.
•lack Summers has gone to Mat toon. Ills., to work. Mr. David Haines and wife have moved to Rutuumville. Mr (been Lee and family have moved to (Jreeneustle. 1 he boys on the L.. N A \ C were paid oil' last we.'k. K 11 Walls an I wife have been vis'ting friends in Illinois. I).i a ()u M a. lay. Eeli 2. infant daughter of Ed ami M attie W alls.
There is a difVerence of opinion h • i- to \vhi«vh is ground hog'iny, I I 1 riiose who r** I I the pi p' ■ - kimw that our Deni • uatic Leg j« ,1 i,i*•-••tiled tbat matter re •ently It i- ilie 2nd No mistake. Its ale gal holiday. This week's amusements opened viut witli a party at. Bailti Herod’s on Monday night. The “Walnut Valley Literary Society" organized at No D. last Friday night, with John Jacobs in the chair. They meet every Friday night, and the society ut X i. 8, every Saturday night. I’ublic night will be Saturday night •of next week.
Mrs Sul iv in, aged about US years, is lying very low at the residence oi her son
Id SSKI.I.V ll.l I .
Rev. W. C I bividson. of W a vela nd. '•■as in town last week.
The traveling public will do well to note the change in our railroad time table.
i VIU'I x I 1 KSV1I.I.K.
John (irider and wife visited at xiis fathers last Sunday. All seem to appreciate the line roads for the past week or so.
The young people attended a dance at Charlie Edward’s last week.
Brotracted meeting was held here week before last at tin* Bresbyterian church.
Our farmers have been quite busy for the last few days harvesting ice. Look out for ice cream next summer
Oakie and Ollie Batman have re turned from Danville where they have been attending Normal this winter.
The schools in Jackson closed week before last. Several of them had social gatherings and line din Hers on the last day.
Asa Hall received slight injures from coal oil one day last week while attempting to start a tire by throwing coal oil on a slight blaze.
I .li Miller. (i W C. T. for Indiana, has been here recently stirring up the (rood Templars. Flishu Evans, well and favorably known here, died last week in Ckica go. His remains were taken to Owen county, this State for inter ment. The protracted meeting at the Methodist chinch closed last Friday night, and now the Breshyterians have commenced a series of religions services.
In week Indore last’s Times it is stated that there was a “hoy cut in the north end.” We do not know which is the north end of a boy, but what will be the “end’, of some of our hoys may not he hard to conjecture, if they continue their present down
ward course.
ek itN
Some of the I ern hoys are engag ed in the tie business.
i From another correspondent. | A car load of tile has been shipped to our town.
J L Seyhold has been sick the past week. A washing machine peddler is in amr midst. (J. L Hutchins will take yonrsuh scriptions for the Times. S. <). Berry is preparing to build a new house in the spring.
Air Alfred VNoodrnin’s feed mill will soon he in operation. Our school closed last wiVk on ac count of the cold Weather' W (> would like to know when Dav id Skelton is going down in Clay county again. Mr. Walter Woodrmu has return ed from Indianapolis where he has been pagein the Senate. The deputy sheriff was in the vicinity of lorn last week calling on some of the citizens to attend court. James H. Blummor returned Sat urday from a short visit to Illinois, his grandma, Mrs. Swinford coming with him.
mam.e GROVE.
Miss Ballon is making an effort to secure our school another term.
There will not be quite six months of school in our township this year. Mr. Blades will move to his farm northeast of Roachdale in a few
days.
'Chas. Williamson and Lawson Hey bold are trying to graduate from
the common schools this winter.
Sleigh riding has been the order. AVe know of one instance, however, in winch only the sled rode. It was locomoted by a pair of mules. Clark Brown gave the signal to start, which was promptly obeyed. Clark, not liking the velocity at which they .traveled, got off.
Sore throat is prevalent here now. 1 he report is that we are to have a wedding soon. R R Dicks is putting up ice with Dan Kelly of (Ireeucastle. Miss Annie Abrams has been visiting at <ireeucastle the past week. Foxes are getting numerous again, our hunters should give them a chase. Solomon and Ed. darner are our champion debaters at the literary society.
J. A. Hillis, telegraph operator at Ladoga, was visiting relatives here the past week. Elmer Murphy is expected home from Terre Haute, also Sandy Sco bee, from Kentucky.
hai:. umiHiE.
Arch \l! :i is >till in Kansas.
Laura McKee is improving, after | hort spell of sickness.
Extreme Tired Keeling, A lady tells us *((110 first bottle has done my daughter a great deal of good, her food does not distress her now nor does she suiter from that rrlremi’ lind feelinr/ which j she did before taking Hood s Sarsaparilla.” A second bottle elTected a cure. No other preparation contains such a concentration ot.vitalizing, enriching, purifying and invig- i orating properties as Hood's Sarsaparilla, j
(Cor. Episcopal Recorder.] As 1 read, a few days ago, of the death of I lev. Richard M. Abercrombie, rector of St. Matthews Brotostant Episcopal church in .Jersey City, memories of my boyhood arose. He was born not far from my father's house, in I’hila dclphia, and was the sou of the Rev. Dr. James Abercrombie, a lino scholar and preacher, who had, in early life, lorrosponded with the great lexicog rapher. Samuel Johnson, and in later years was the assistant minislir of c hrist's and St. I'eter's churches in Philadelphia, where my maternal ancestors had worshiped for more than one generation. Ono day alter tie father had reached four-score years, the Intel) deceased son took me into the study of the aged man and showed me a letter which President George Wash ington had written to his father, thank ing him for the loan of one of his manuscript sermons. Washington and his wife were regular attendants upon his ministry while residing in Philadelphia. The president was not a cominuuieant, notwithstanding all the pretty stories to the contrary, and after the close of the sermon on sacramental Sundays hadful ten into the habit of retiring from the church while his wife remained and communed. Upon ono occasion Dr. Abercrombie alluded to the unhappy tendency of the example of those digiii lied by age and position turning tlieir backs upon the cclcbrat ;on of iho Lord s supper. The discourse arrested the at tenlion of Was.iiugion, and after that he never came to ehutvh with his wife on communion Siindav. Dr. Aber erombie, in a letter which appears m the hi th volume of Sprague's •\\nnals oi the American I ulpit. mentions that he di I not lind fault wit i tie' sermon, hut respected Die piva her fox his moral courage. There is a story a- out Washington being found iu the woo !• in the winter time in prayer by t lie owner of the house which he used as his i u.irters nl \ alley forge vvInch I would like in Lclicvc it it were not so improbable, and if it had not been lirst | ut in print by the eeceix trie and not very accurate Episcopal minister, Morgan I . Weems. John Pott s, of Pottsgrove. had several sums ami daughters. One, James, >nid ed law at the Temple, Loudon, and was a judge of the court of common pleas in I’hiladel pli.a at the beguiniug of the war of the revolution, and, being a tory, eventually went to Halifax; Jon atliau, aimt.a r son, studied medicine at i ndinbiirgh and esjsmse.l the cause of the colonies, and was the medical director general of the middle department; another son was a i.uaker and a neutral, and owned the house at valley forge which is still known as Washington's head ,uarters, and the three were bi’others of the grandmother of the writer of this article. W ith a capacious and coniiortable house at Ins disposal, it is hardly possible that tlie shy, silent, cautious Washington should leaves eh retirement and enter into tho leaHess woods iu the vicinity of the winter encampment of an army and engage in audible prayer. Tho alleged scene has I ecu often produced by the painter and engraver, but 1 fear ii is only a myth.
T«•lel:r«|llle^s• Parnly»l». IPhilailelphia Times.) “During the past three weeks 1 been unable to use my pen, said Super intendent Walker, of the city's electrical department, "and have been compelled to dictate my correspondence. I a n suffering from telegraphers’ paralyds. M\ right arm i - useless, reudere ■ 1 my working in and around l atteries, testing their strength and from tlie repeated shocks 1 have received "Anyone handling Die keys o( an operators board is sub eet to this ailmt ut. It is first observed in the mas eles of thearm, which becom • benumbed after a hard day s work. A few months alter Die lirst shock tho stout st op oa tor will succumb. My physician has had me un ler treatm nt tor a month, but as yet does not appear to have benefited me much. Any muscular work, such as lilting heavy packages, I can readily accomplish, but it is only with diincu’lty that l can button my coat. Superintendent Dill, of the Western l niou operating rooms, said that many men after ser. ing the company for years were < (impelled to throw up tlieir positions on a count of this form of paralysis. Many mistakes have been traced to the same source, as tlie slightest pressure on the key will produce other than the letter an operator wi.-h's to indicate. He will often charge the mistakes to a defect in tie* machinery, but in the nd must admit of his inability to work. When an operator is first attacked he will simply attribute it to overwork, but he soon finds that his keen sense of touch has disappeared. In nearly every case it Is a first-class operator that is afflicted. Ag I transmitter is paid a large salary, but must keep continually working at his board, while a second or third-rate man lias many resting spells whi li allow him to stretch his arms.
MICROS'!.JPES AND MICROBES.
naming with Strum!* of Hair. (New Orleans Tiling-Democrat.| A Baltimore merchant tailor says ho frequently does fine darning with strands of hair from his wife's head. It often happens that there is a small, cleanly cut place iu a bolt of goods. It may not be known until alter a g.'.r ment has been cut out. Rut when it is discovered tlie tnilor cannot atlord to throw the piece away, lie simply calls on his wife for several strands of hair, hands them to the best-skilled workman in Die shop and bids liiin mend the rent. He uses a very tine needle, and does Ills work so perfectly that it is never known that tlie doth was cut. He said to i reporter; “1 once knew a tailor who got iu a peck of trouble from having cut the button-holes on tho wrong side of a costly coat. He finally oveivaire the difficulty by mending them with his Wife’s huir. < nc • upon a time, as the story I ooks say, I cut out and had made a tine cloth coat, which was discovered, before being sent iiom •. to have a defe< t iu it which ii uld 11 remedied without stitch.ng in a piece oi doth tho size of a 10-eent silver piece. Alter puzzling over it for half a ilay, I secured a sharp tubular steel ii strunient, such as one would think might Lo used iu cutting gun wads. With this 1 cut out the defect in the cloth, fitted a piece iu tlie hole taken from a scrap of the same material, and sewed it wit. hair. Of course l was careful to have the nap run right. It was so perfectly done that no one ever diseovei'e I it."
In Thm* Matu* at O.m c.
A Itig “Hi (Ecston Globe.] A soldier went bobbing for eels near Marseilles, and received a "bite" he will never forget. He drew up an cel of the Murcena species, whose ponderous jaws and rows of teeth nearly snapped oli Ins arm. He is in the hospital. The Munena was a delicacy in ancient Rome; it is as vorai ious as a shark, and Vadius I’odio, when a slave was dis obedient, threw him into the i-escrvoir to fatten Die eels.
[Bait imcHv Sun.] The Maryland line is about two miles south of Newark, and the tracks of the Baltimore iV < Hiio extension run ncross the sharp angle of I'erinsylvania, vvhie.i extends down between Delaware and •Maryland at a point where it is live fret wide. After the first train stopped ovet the Maryland line most of the persi ns on board .dighled and picked th ir wav 250 feet through the mud and water to the point in the woods where the three elates meet, the spot is indicat d lirsi by a long stone just above tin* surface, which marks Mason and Dixon's line. Beside it is planted a triangular stone, with the initials of Delaware, Maryland and Bennsylvania cut on Die various sides. On the west side is the following inscription: “Erected by II. (i. S. ivey, Md.; J. I’. Eyre, 1 a.; G, R. Kidd e, Del., Commissioners, ispi." Some of the visitors mounted the stone iu order to say that they sat in three states at onetime; others placed their thumbs on the apex of tho stone in order to say that they had their thumbs in the three states at ono time, while others still stood in the narrow strip of Pennsylvania and extended one hand into Maryland and the other into Delaware. The stone is about three foot high and the three sides each about fourteen inches wide. It is called a prismatic stone.
A Singular I-’at't. The building of the Georgia state capitol, at Atlanta, develops tlie fact that granite can bo quarried in Maine, brought to Savannah, and thence by rail to Atlanta at a less cost than it can be had at a quarry only sixteen miles away.
(’Hilled to I’tllM-ll. |Albany Express.] At a dinner party tho oilier evening the hostess let fall and broke a plate. ''Alas:'’ she said, “war on China has I icon carried to Amen a. ’ The next day the joke was cabled to The I ondon Punch.
DangrroiiH. I Boston Glob *.] The manner of Schuyler t ’olfax’s death shows the danger of going suddenly from a tem; > raturo below zero into an overheated room It i- a wonder that more men do not get Dn ir death in this way.
\mrri< i’s FartiHiiiakf* (top. (Exchange. | In the current number of Science Iresh interest is given to the subject of earthquakes, which have lately caused alarm m both hemispheres, by a statement of the number of noticeable shocks in tin - country during tho twelve years from L v 72 to 188;J, inclusive. No less than :J(t4 earthquakes are recorded as occurring in Canada and the I nited States, not including Alaska, within the above period. (*f these tho Pacific slope had 151, the Atlantic coast 147, and the Missis sippi valley 6(1. Thus it appears that an earthquake occurrs about on-o in every twelve days somewhere in Die l nited Mates and Canada, and about once a month on the Atlantic coast. These are exclusive of the lighter tremors which do not make an impression on observers, but which would be recorde 1 by a properly constructed seismometer, an instrument designed to detect the slightest shocks.
Japan'* .Material lor I'apor.
Arizona. The name of Arizona, The Sentinel of that territory says, was not bestowed through any poetic arrangements of Indian or Spanish names, but is derived from aridus, dry, and zona, a girdlo’or belt.
Instincts are implacable. If we disobey them we arc punished.
The I nhappinew for Which M. 1'u.teur Is Keaponslhln— Everywhere. INew Orleans Times-Democrat ] There is an "Id. old story much older than M. Pasteur-about a European who, armed with a powerful mieroscoik', approached a holv eastern x ranman and recjut*.sted liiin to inspect thuiowitli the rosy cheek of some delicious iruit that he was about to eat. Having acced'd to the demand, tins saintl) Brahmin, who had never wantonly deBUoved life of any kind, requested Ins European visitor to give him the nncroscop.'. I or some Line this petition was denied, because of tlie great worth ot Hie instrument: but by dint of persistmt legging the Bratimm finally obtained “he eostlv gift, and immediately shattered it into a thousand pieces, shrieking. “You have destroyed tho happiness of mv life. The educated reading public have some reason to feel toward Mr. Pasteur and his school of mieroscopists as that Indian devotee felt toward the i.uropean and his instrument. If M. Pasteur has not actually destroyed the happiness of our lives, he lias at least made many million. 1 -of people more than moinentarilv uneonifortal'le. The microscope gi a . ■ Merged iii magnifying power sill e the Brahmin's day, reveals to us a universe of horrors all about us, well calculated to ilismay the strongest mind. Indeed we are told that Pasteur himself never attempts to eat a piece of bread without larefully scraping oil the out-ide, so a-' to eliminate the microbes; undone has some grim consolation in knowing Dial the great author of our worry has not wholly escaped the results of his own discoveries. The water we dr.nk, whether of springs, well , cisterns or running streams the air we breathe, unless indeed we have the privilege of residing in the (ire it Sahara or upon the mountain tops beside the sea; the food wo eat, fiesh, fruit, fish or fowl—swarm with hideous monsters which vve must ab>orb whether we want to or not. No strainer or filter can save us, and this is not the worst! Every particle of dust, upon our mantels, our furniture, our stairways, siguiiles millions of fi rocueis microbes ready to spring at our nostrils under the least disturbance. The common Hy. always and at all eras of human existence one of the plagues of hie, lia^ become more than a plague; he is now a veritable monster of evil. No matter how smipulou-ly particular we mas be in o n - own homes, the nasty lly com. s in there to carry with him microscopic poison of all kinds which lie carries about with him Ju-d as bees carry pollen. < ther discoveries, such as the contagious naimvof consumption, and tlie special ins isiiile life attached to sarious forms of common maladies, are not laleulated to increase our confidence in medicine, nor our k.iidtiess to the sick. The svoiiderful knosvledge that we have gained in regard to the forms, the morals, the manners and uistonis of our invisible enemies, affords small gratification in viesv ot the well-estab-lished fact that some of the worst of them can flourish in boiling water, enjoy a picnic in carbolic acid, hibernate in any degree of cold, and resist almost any known poison. Acids wiiieh consume metals like tinder seem scarcely to affect their marvelous constitutions.
IChicaffo Heralil.]
While the Japanese have long been famous for their superior manilla papers , they have not yet been able to make a 4 ooiI note paper. Their material is most unique and lias been recently purchased in considerable quantities by j i wo Yankees, who hope with it to make | paper that will take I.ondon, Baris and New York, which are always running I wild after oddities in this line, b) storm.
Tho Russian government has decided to construct immediately a system of railways throughout Siberia.
An Anriint l.illl<l Aiiinetl. ISoicntittc Juurnal.j The oldest known land ani mil is a scorpion recently found by Brofessor D. Liudstrom iu tho uppermost -layer of the Silurian rocks of Gothland, Sweden, ibis fossil scorpion has, like existing •ities. seven segments in the tail, the last "hatied into a sting, and seven abdominal segments. There are eight legs, and both the great claws, or palpi still remain. The legs differ from those of existing scorpions in ending in a point instead of claws. Tho air-breathing nature of the animal is made evident by the preservation of its stigma, or breath-ing-hole, on the right side. It will be remembered that all silurian animals hitherto discovered have hern fishes, criistaica. molluscs, crabs, sponges, etc. —all of them a uatic animals, yet geologists have alwuy- -uppos -d that land, and probably land animals, must have existed iu silurian ages.
N(>\H 'Ik.uis of l>(*t I iii£ ( I'im i | Fxchanze. ] There have Ixcen many ordeals through which thus" suspected of crime have heen leiligi d to pas-,; among them may be m It he i >i deal i >f t be cross, the ordeal ot the cueharist, tho ordeal of cold water, tho ordeal by fire, the ordeal of touch and the ordeal of chewing rice. This last is still in fashion in many parts of India. The person is obliged to chew rice in the presence ol o ncer-, of the law. Curious as it may appear, such is the inllucneo of fear on the salivary glands, that, if they are actually guilty, there is no secretion of saliva in the mouth, and cbewing is impo-siblc. Such culprits generally confess without any further e.inrts. On the contrary, aeons ionsness of innocence allows of a proner flow of fluid for softening tho rice.
Cui .line fin- tlie Morplitnc IlnbK. IMetlical Journal. | Dr. Fleischi, of Y'inna, declares that morphinism, alcoholism and similar habits can now be cured rapidly and painlessly by the use of cocaine chloride, lbs method is very simple—a withdrawal, either gradual or abrupt and complete, of the habitual intoxicant, and treatment of the nervous and other symptoms which arise therefrom by means of hypodermic injections of the cocaine, lie claims that in ten days a euro may be effected in any ease. The Hose of cocaine chloride, hypodermically, is from one-twelfth to one-fourth of a grain, dissolved in water, repeated as necessary.
Iiu*ftla'* linmciiftity. The czar’s empire reaches nearly half round tlie world. Humboldt, to present it fairly to the imagination of ins leaders, had to go to tho heavens for Ids parallel, for he compared its extent lo that ot the visible face of the moon.
(Irern Mountain Itoyi. \ social scientist has discovered that Joe tsmit h, the founder of Vfortnonism was a \ ormoati r. Brigham Young too. was a \ enuontor. John H. Noyles, buherof tho Oneida community, wasa Vermonter.
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Rheumatism, Veuraluia v " .“ qo ' B ? ck ^ho. HeS’ T l C ! a llCt
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pressioq; anyhow m V L*
a poor sufferer! These ache, havt cau-e, and more frequently tha, ■ ai!u suspected. thA .. ... -
a"u s ispected, : e cause is the K-dneyS. No disease Is more r.— ” L
ser ous thaq tqese, and n 0 remad 1 31
prompt aqd effective as
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No remedy has yet beeq atco f • tlqat is sd effective iq a KIDNEY i>q |
LIVER COMPLAINTS, MALAR'A C SIA, etc., aqd yet it 's S'mplg and
less. Sc eqce aqd rqed cal sk II q., I conqb.ned voth vvoqderful success ttos( herbs whiclq nature tqas pto. ded «?*'•** cure of disease It strengthens end n
v,'derates the w hole system.
lieu. 1 Xtaildcua Sti'veiiK, the diHtiuniiibea Crt Krc.SHii.uu.oiiC" wi.'t" to a f"llow iiiciiiher who «a suHitIuk from iud(in«Uon and kidiwy du**.
Iry Miahh'r'a Herb Uittim, 11, ",,t,
you. 1 have usod it for both iuduri ftioniiKliI. | tum of the Idilui'ya, ami it lathi' im*t wondrr; combi nation of mcciiciniil Ik t bs I Bvcr rs a 11 MISHLEH HEIiB BITTEB8 CO.,
525 Commerce St., Philadelphia.
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Parker's Pleaaaut Worm Syrup Never Faij
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PASSKNdEUH \ I \ Till
P ee Line Routj I. .51. L. unci C. ('. (!. \ I. HyINDIANAPOLIS,
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with Palace bleBpiiuc coaclios wliirh ruii THROUGH WITHOUT CHANCES, BETW EEN-
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Will Leave (ire('iic!i>tle Daily. t'i| C(>pt Sum-lay, arriving at St Louis xit 7:30 a. m.
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MISSO UU1, KA NS. 1 .S’, ARKANSAS, MEXICO. TEXAS. COLORADO CALIFORNIA .f- SEHE.CU AVOIDING TRANSFER nDKLaH
W
’ I
SATThm Train will run ITomptlf
On
NO delay: no detention |
i 7 ■c
Aiel I'liHHonKorH will Have ini'" “" l ' I wii 11 i 11 *r A I* 11 i r rt-;i ii i \.rl . "D D * I
oonsalting A. P. Harri ' . ■ ol** MupH. and ndiahl© information * 1 I rnt(*.s for freight ami poascnKer. I
, P B.
(ieu'I I* m*.
SUOUIS-^worl
“*AN EXTKAOHDINAKY . FAMILY COMBINATI0«|
THE TIMES
■•f: ■i.li pio
Oemoid's lllustiaieil
m I ill TWXLTB Cl l PAPKK I \i VOUB OWJf SELECTION IND01 \ ^ ' V
BOTH PUBLICATIONS, C::E FOR $3.00 (THREE DOLLARS)
rVEMORESTS T LJ TH E B ESI I
OT Jill <1,^ |
Illuatrated with Ortiriniil Steel Euirni Photogravurea anil Uil Pietuiv- • • • * . i_ * v_ . K'. . * i • M i
I'
ConimenelriK with the November iHKt, each MoKazine will eonluin u ORDEK, ■ a titling the hold, t '
of ANY PATTERN Ulustru; J ,
DBMORrai - MON PH LA - the w. >i Id’* Mo lei Mag utl ■ t''"'!n. the Largeat in Circulation
TWO Hollar family M.xjfaxl'i -• ',, , la* thi I'weiit;, -hi t y* nrd it-1" 1, !l ' now improved no exten ivel'' us e ,,
now improvea SO evien i"" ■ , ;i tti front mnk. i l aouiy t ■ '
it i on; nn" W
to any maitazln
inairastno. It < on; ef < 1 ''JJ-idad' s . x ll 1 " inches.('lea'im'fV I ' .rce
quart • •• . x n inem e.' i'- ■ ■ fully fliuslnitcd. each uuiulier tui
tuny niusiraieu. eaeii no"*'" 1 ••• enirRivtnirs oil picture, of aft 2.y.irk llshed t.y W. Jcnniiura Dcmorcst-1"
u i>y w. jennmtra i’"""" -iicNff A NE? BV SPECIAL AUHEE a * j
COMBINED WITH
THE TIMES AT $3,00 PER ?EA|
J Ir
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