The Greencastle Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 June 1890 — Page 6
I HK OKKENCASTLK TIME'', JUNE 12 189C.
EOW LUGS EASILY CURED. YlifttkiiiK lit,* l.imlt. I ,it,H^jtry if m ^ C .t :i < i<» ISii r«-1«><>t •'(!. Mrs. Bussctt had s|>oiit tin* first five years of her married life in Kurland and when sir* retiinied t*» In*!* native town she drought, together with the twins and a baby girl, a great many novel ideas. The twins were 3 years old—fine, sturdy lit'.h* fellow . with rosy cheeks and sparkling eyes, straight limbed and vigorous as young athletes. The Bassetts \V» re “well to do,"and it was, therefore a matter of great surprise to the village in general, and to the young inothersiu particular, toseethe infant Bass; u running about from morning till night sans shoes and stockings. It was soon ascertained that the baby girl who was just beginning to walk was also destitute of these two articles of attire, and the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children had serious thoughts of railing upon Mrs. Bassett and remonstrating in a body with that derelict matron. But it was the general opinion that if Mrs. Bassett chos to he unconventional she had reasons of her own for conduct which might be worthy of consideration, and it was finally decided that a committee of two—ladies of an inquiring turn of mind—should visit the Bassett household and furnish forthwith to the community at large a report of the various heresies which had been put into practice. Mrs. Bassett received her visitors cordially and smiled pleasantly when informed of the nature of their call. “1 am very willing to talk about my barefooted babies,” she said frankly, for, to tell the truth, lam rather proud »f them. When the twins were babies,” she continued, seating herself in a low chair, “they were treated, I suppose, very much like other children. They lived out of doors a great deal and were healthy and strong, butsoou after they began to walk I noticed in them a decided tendency to ‘toe in.’ I was horrified, for if there is one thing 1 detest it is a bow legged man, and here were my little men of a year and a half actually setting out on the crooked journey of the nursery jingle. “My friends all said that most children were bow legged at first and all that would come right itself in the course of time. “I waited with considerable impatience, but saw no signs of improvement. Finally I consulted a doctor *nd asked him if I must pul the two pairs of legs in irons. “ ‘Irons 1’ shouted tin* doctor. ‘Fiddlesticks! Take oil their shoes and stockings. Their muscles have probably been cramped and weakened already and irons will only increase the trouble. Off with their shoes.’ “ ‘But won't they take cold;’ I ventured to humbly inquire. “ ‘Cold !' he said. ‘Why should they ’ You don't keep their hands tied up, do you? If your house is fairly comfortable and they are active and vigorous their feet will be as warm as their hands. At first perhaps they had hotter wear shoes out of doors, hut in a short time they can dispense with them even there, except, of course, in severe weather.' “I was not altogether convinced, »ut I thought the experiment worth trying. Another suggestion which the doctor gave me 1 also found a most useful one. He advised me to let the boys walk up hill, and when they sou hi not lx! out of doors to have an inclined plane arranged in the house lor them to practice on. In the effort to walk up a steep incline one naturally throws the feet outward. “ ‘Let youi'boys try it for awhile at any rate,’ said my good doctor. ‘Don't tramp their feet and I will wager that nature will give them as straight legs ind ;is firm muscles as anybody need wish for.’ ‘‘1 have followed my wise doctor's advice; the results you can see for yourself,” added the young mother, proudly, as her two barefooted boys eame running into the room. “But your baby, does she actually go barefooted, too?” asked one of the visitors. “Yes, inde *d,” replied Mrs. Bassett. “She has never worn’a shoe in her life. When she goes out for an airing she wears warm woolen socks, for until she can walk she cannot of course take sulheient ex* '*eiso to keep her feet warm. But in the house she is as barefooted as the boys. She is just beginning t<> get ou her feet and her little bare toes are almost as useful to her as lingers. They have saved her many a falk"—Horne Maker. George Wanhingion’i* Hutton*. In connection with the couch shell buttons, the story is told of Gen. Washington that one day, while walking alone in the streets of Philadelphia, he was accosted by a poor Italian, who, ignorant of the personality addressed, continued to follow and importune him to buy some of the conch shells which he carried in a basket on his arm, and which he persisted were the only things that he had in the world to dispose of. “But, my good man,” remonstrated Gen. Washington, “what would I tlo with your conch shells? I have no use for them.” “Oh, yes you have,” came the ready rejoinder. “You might have them made into buttons for your coat.” Smiling at his prompt reply, Washington not only purchased the shells, but, the better to further the advice, took them at once to his tailor, and, directing them to be riveted, ordered a brown velvet coat, that their especial usefulness might be straightway demonstrated.—Century.
A Civ!! Service Kvanilnution. There are people who seem l>orn with a faculty for always getting things wrong, and it must have l*een one of th<*s,• who figured in an incident which occurred at the City hull, in Boston. Into the room where the cit^ physician Held examinations of candidates for the police force came an awkward looking fellow one day. “Capt. Blank,” he said, mentioning the nain * of the captain of a police station, “sent me hare to ba examined.
Is this the room?”
He was told that it was, and after his name, ag and other things of this sort had been written down, lie was directed to take o!f his coat and shirt. Tin* physician thru examined his heart and lungs, and made the usual iu-
quiries, the o uiuidal * all the while^get- | i^ j]),. literary circles of Great
THE EYES OF FAMOUS MEN.
Biimu, Hawthorne ttixl shrlley AVrre AH
Kpinarkahlo for Th<* 1 r !\v»•*.
Emerson used to say that each man larriisl in his eye the exact indication of his rank in the immense scale of men. Another close observer of human nature asserts that persons with prominent eyes are found to have great command of words and to ho ready speakers and winters. A third holds the theory that the prevailing color of
tin* men of genius is gray.
Col. Higgiu*<m speaks of Nathaniel Hawthorne's “gray eyes," while F. II. Underwood “who once studied them attentively, found them mottled gray and brown, and indescribably soft and winning.” Elsewhere we find it asserted that “no finer eyes had ap-
liug more and more impatient. When ho was directed to renurve the remainder of his clothing his patience gave
way entirely.
“Look here,” he said, angrily, “I never was treated so in 1113' life. Why should I take otF my clothes just because you say so?" “Why, it is customary to make the examination thorough," the physician explained, patiently. “I am treating you exactly as I treat everybody else.” “All right,” the man said, sulkily, beginning to disrobe, “but 1 11 be hanged if I see what all this has to do
with the case."
“Why, if you want to go on the police force you must of course submit to the tests.” “Police force!” exclaimed the man, in mingled fury and astonishment; “I came hero to be examined as a wit-
uess.”
“In that case," the doctor answered, smiling at the situation, “ you may put on your clothes and go into the room over this.”—Youth’s Companion.
:*ikvc tin* Te«>th.
An eminent English dentist protests against the present extravagant waste of human teeth by surgeons and incompetent dentists, and declares that while there are, maybe, sufiiciont reasons for extracting a tooth, it is never necessary to do so merely to relieve pain. In at least 90 per cent, of the cases coming to an active dentist, pains in the teeth aia* due to what may he called primary and secondary toothache. Primary toothache, the pain of which is oftener felt in the nerve terminals in the face than in the tooth itself, is congestion of the tooth pulp, and it may be relieved very easily by careful excavation, sutficicnt to allow an escape of blood from the pulp, which may then be devitalized by an arseni-
cal dressing.
To complete the operation, which may lie postponed for weeks without further inconvenience, the pulp must he removed from the root canals and these filled to the apex. Secondary toothache, or alveolar abscess, is caused by gangrene of the pulp, and is regarded by most surgeons as so serious as to call for a removal of the tooth, which, in nine cases out of ten, might bo retained and made useful and comfortable. The course of treatment is an opening to the pulp to relieve the pain, followed by a series of antisceptic dressings in the roots to cleanse them from all puresceut matter, and then, as in the other case, filling them to the apex.—Now York
Commereinl Advertiser. HiTe Preserver for Minor*.
An English invention consists of an
apparatus for ascertaining the contig- * uity of water or gas workings in I mines, and for passing food to imprisoned miners and for rescuing them. The apparatus for ascertaining the state of a mine as regards approaching danger consists of a chamber fitted with a slide valve, which can be opened and closed at pleasure. Through a stuffing box in the chamber on the workingside passes a boring tool, with which the miner drills a hole in the coal to the distance inwards to which ho intends to work. Assuming this to be, say, eight feet, when he lias reached that distance lie withdraws the boring tool, and if neither gas nor water lias made its appearance, he knows that he can safely go in so far. Should ho tap water or gas during the boring there would be an inrush of the one or the other into the chamber
apparatus and its presence be indicated by a pressure
The boring tool would then
of the would
gauge
Britian since Burns’ time than those of I Hawthorne.” Shelley’s eyes are al ways spoken of as magnificent, and fully indicative of his wayward genius. One writer describes them as “large and animated, ; with a dash of wildness in them;” an- | other speaks of them as “such a pair of eyes as are rarely seen iu a human ; or any other head, intently blue, with a gentle and lambent expression, yet wonderfully alert and engrossing.” Medwith, while writing of Shelley's appearance, refers to his blue eyes, “very large and prominent. They were at times, when he was abstracted, as he often was in contemplation, dull, and, as it were, insensible to external objects; at others, they flashed with the fire of intelligence.” Tom Moore's eyes were "as dark and fine as you would wish to s,*e under a sot of vine leaves.” Of Coleridge it is reported: "His forehead was prodigious a great piece uf placid marble;and his fine eyes, in which all the activity of his mind seemed to concentrate, moved under it with a sprightly ease, as if it were pastime to them to carry all that thought.” Another friend of his writes: “The upper part of Coleridge's face was excessive!} - fine. His eyes were large, light gray, and prominent, of liquid brilliancy, which some eyes of line character may be observed to possess, as if the orb itself retreated to the innermost recess of the brain.” In his “Life of Sterling,” Carlyle introduces his famous description of Coleridge’s appearance. “The deep eyes, of alight hazel, were,” ho says, “as full of sorrows as of inspiration; confused pain looked mildly from them, as in a kind of mild astonishment.” The eyes of Keats were described by one of his contempories as “mellow and glowing; large, dark and sensitive.” Cowden Clarke slates that they were of a brown color, or dark hazel, thus contradicting Mrs. Proctor’s assertion that they were “blue.” Leigh Hunt, iu his “Autobiography,” speaking of Wordsworth's appearance, says: “I never beheld eyes that looked so inspired or supernatural. They were like fires half burn ing, half smoldering, with a sort of acrid fixture of regard, and seated at the further end of two caverns. One might imagine Ezekiel or Isaiah to have had such eyes.” Walter Scott says of Burns: “There was a strong expression of sense and shrewdness in all his lineaments; the eye, alone, 1 think, indicated the poetical character and temperament. It was largo, and of a class that glowed (I say literally glowed) when bespoke with feeling or interest. I never saw such an eye in a human head, though 1 have seen the most distinguished men of my time."—Frank Leslie's. Of 111 [I t*n'.11 Kamil)*. A prominent lawyer in New Orleans, who died recently, was no less noted for his tolerance than for his legal knowledge. To a friend who once happened to express wonder that this trait was so highly developed in him he said: “If 1 have a charitable temper, 1 owe it to a chance remark of an old uncle of mine made when I was a
boy.
“He saw me one day torturing a frog, and said, meditatively, ‘Now, I wonder why you do that? You are .kind to dogs, birds and rabbits.’ “I replied that the frog was hideous, filthy and useless. “ ‘Yes, perhaps so,' ho said, in the same reflective tone, ‘it belongs to a different family from yon. It lias not
box, the safety valve would be closed in front of it, and steps would be taken to insure* safety in the workings.—New
York Commercial Advertiser.
Too Many I’orpoiso*. The French fishermen are troubled by the depredations of porpoises, for which they have not succeeded in finding a remedy. An attempt was made to catch them in seine nets, but they jumped out <if the snares. They were scared away by guns and torpedoes, but the fish were frightened and disappeared with them. They are too numerous to be shot one by one in an effective maimer. The only thing to lie done seems to be for the fishermen to unite and drive them away in crowds; hut this will have to be often repeated. Insurance and payment of damages by the government are the lust measures of relief suggested; but they, too, are expensive to somebody.—Philadeli phia Ledger. Muaniu^ Unchanged. She In Shakespeare “fond” means “foolish." He I don’t believe the meaning lias changed any since his day. I used to cull myself your fund lover.—Yankee Blade.
Kno.-lti'il Cut TTiHr John B. Jeffery had an experience with bis two bright little boys that is one more illustration of how juvenile "i anger. (hi* ivening when the bedtime for the little folks ha l arrived they seemed to be in a state of great hilarity. Mrs. ‘Jcffery intimated to them that it was time for them to go, but in their high glee the boys did not obey with their usual alacrity. Mr. Jeffery then spoke to them, and a glance at “pupa” told them he meant business, so they started off, with ill concealed reluctance. Once out of sight of their parents, a new idea sei/i-d the boys, and instead of going directly to bed they went up into » room at the top of the house fitted up as a gymnasium. Here the two urchins put on boxing gloves and began sparring like two little Sullivans. They ware none too quiet, and the noise they made was heard down iu the sitting room. Mr. Jeffery donned his severest frown and marched up stairs. Opening the door of his gymnasium he saw his boys going for each other like Trojans. They saw him at the same moment, and both at the same time dropped down on their knees, threw up their hands, still burdened with the boxing gloves, as though they were at prayer, and said in mock earnestness: “Now I lay mo down to sleep.” The act knocked Mr. Jeffery out completely, and he could not utter a cross word. He shook his finger at them in playful sternness and ordered them to bed. This time the little fellows went, but they knew they had taken the wind out of papa's sails. —Chicago Herald.
Why He Couldn't Pay More. Proprietor of Second-hand Clothing Emporium—Seventy-five cents is all I can allow you for that suit, my f iend. Disgusted Citizen—That sign of yours says you “pay the high' st price for cast off clothing.” You’d better take itdown. Proprietor (aghast)— Take down that sign! My friend, that sign cost me $50. —Chicago Tribune. CONSUMPTION SCHE1 Y CURED. To the Epitor: Please inform yonr readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use’ thousands of hopeless ceses have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send tivo bottles of my remedy Free to any of your readers whohave consumption if they will send me their express and post office address. Bespectfully, T. A. Slocum, M C„ 181 Pearl st N. Y
be withdrawn as far as the stuffing ^ IU hereditary traits 01 the dog, the ,
rabbit or the man. But it is not a trait of a frog to light or despise another creature because it is not like itself. That is the meau, senseless vice
of a man.’
“I thought over the remark a long time, trying to understand what he meant by it. After that day 1 never threw a stone at a frog; and 1 learned to apply his meaning to the men and women around me.”—Montreal Star.
licit!Ihih in the Theatre. Mechanical contrivances will always be powerful stage factors. The public requires animation—hut hardly such animation as was experienced by an intimate friend of mine. In onescene ho had to effect an escape by jumping on the left hand side of a railroad train as it left the depot, and, by immediately jumping off the right baud side, evade his pursuers. The forepart of the train was built in profile; the last car was a solid one, wheels and all. The car crossed at a very speedy pace,, but ouc of the wheels broke oft' as my friend started to jump, and ho was hurled by the momentum of the shock clear across the footlights, and into the arms of a “fat, fair and forty” ladv who sat immediately behind too orchestra. Duncan B. Harrison.
•Slio Sits Still and <>lur<‘*. “When I go to the library,” said a lady, “and try to get any of the daily papers I usually find a horrid man in possession, either reading every line in the pujier, including the advertisements, or else carelessly resting his elbow on one paper while carefully perusing another." "What do you do in such an event?” “Oh, I simply take a seat near him and glare. Yes, sir; glare with all the tigerish concentrated ferocity an amiable woman can throw into a pair of weak blue eyes.” “What happens?” “Oh, he shifts about uneasily, as if he were the focus of four dozen pairs of opera glasses, and presently either moves his arm or deserts the paper I want to 'rot. But men don’t bother me nearly as much as women. Why? Because women are impervious to and wholly oblivious of a glare or a stony stare or any other form of ocular intensity. For instance, when 1 go to look for the foreign magazines I usually find some lady reading my favorite periodical, while the rest a.o out of
sight.”
“Where are they?'’ “She is sitting 011 them and nothing this aide of a dynamite explosion will get her to move. So I pass on.” There is a good sized moral hidden about this story somewhere.—St. Louis Republic. What Hoy* Talk About. Have you ever overheard the conversation of a number of small boys who, tiring of “peel away” and “sting goal,” have seated themselves upon a curbstone to cool off? It is a study. They invariably talk of their respective fathers, and the evident desire of each is to place his own particular paternal parent upon the highest pinnacle. “My father knows more than yours,” says one boy to another, “cause he's a newspaper man—he writes for the paper.” The other boy sniffs contemptuously and says: “Huh! he don’t write any, he gets advertisements. That’s what my pa says.” Then the first boy gets back with: “Maybe he does, but he gets free tickets to the theatre, just the saint*.” This is usually a crusher, as boys do not usually see anything above free theatre tickets. A third boy boasts that his pa is on the board of trade and that lie has often accompanied him there, while a fourth boy's pa is in a railroad office and can ride without paying. 80 the youngsters go on, while their fathers hustle for them, and the “old gents" would all feel proud if they knew what enthusiastic curb- tone champions they had.— Chicago Herald. Interrupted Memory. From an article entitled “A Study of Consciousness,'’ by Professor H. S. Wood, in The Century* we quote as follows: “During the centennial exhibition a big, burly Scotchman was brought to the hospital unconscious from sunstroke. I plunged him into a mass of slush and water and piled great masses of ice about his head. As he gradually struggled back to consciousness, his first sensation was that he was packed away in an ice box and doomed. When he came more fully to himself his first inquiry was, ‘Who ami?’ I said, ‘Who are you?' This he could not answer. For four days that man lay iu the hospital, apparently perfectly rational, wondering who he was. During all this time his friends were searching, and had detectives looking for him all through Philadelphia. At last his recollection came back, and he was able to give his name.” A Novi woman doesn't claim to be connected with the English aristocracy, but just the same she was but 11 on \he same day that ushered (^iieen Victoria into the world, she was married on the same day that the queen and Prince Albert were wed, and her first child was born on the same day that Albert Edward assumed an entity.
An Old Trunk. Mrs. Winnie Mitchell, a widow living about a mile from Rochelle, Ga., has a small, leather covered trunk which in all probability is 230 years o’d. It has been handed down through seven generations. It was brought across from Europe long before the war of the Revolution, full of gold, and was used by Mrs. Mitchell's grandfather while in service under Gen. Washington. It was first owned by Mrs. Mitchell's great-grandfather, and Airs. Mitchell is now 07 years of age and has great-grandchildren.—Chi-
cago Mail.
Children Cry for ditcher’s Cactorln, The Oakland Ledger says the calaboose in that town has not had an oc•upant since the saloons were voted mt. WEAK fVOMKX. The more 8011 satire naturo of the female box render* women much more euaceptibie than inon to thone nuraorou ill* which poring from hick of harmony in the aystem. Tne uervoua -tyatem kivoh way, Hick hoadnche in frequent, rhe Appetite is lout, and other ailments peculiar to the sex cause sroat Buffering. Hood’* Hnnuitmrilla i* peculiarly adapted to *uch caue*. and ona received the most gratifying praiae for the relief it ha* afforded thnuttamis of women whone
HO H0DSEH0LD SHOULD BE WITHOUT
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<ind give* regular and healthy action to every
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A Spiirtansburg, Pa., man eats his meals in Erie county and sleeps in Crawford county, in the same house. Why suffer with sick headache and biliousness when Simmons Liver Regulator will cure you. A Gainesville boy ate forty-eight bananas in an hour, on a wager, and then wanted more. A DUTY TO YOURSELF. It is surpiising that people will use a common, ordinary pill when they can secure a valuable English one for the same money. Dr. Acker’s English .pills are a positive cure for sick-headache and all liver troubes. They are small, sweet, easily taken and do not gripe. AtWalter Allen’s. The square of St. Murk, at Venice, is being “improved” and ••modernized.” An enterprising syndicate should buy the Rialto and bring it to this country. ETLERT’S DAYLIGHT LIVER PILLS arc a boon to sufferers from sick headache, sour stomach, torpid liver and indigestion. Sugar-coated, pleasant to take, and warranted to go through by daylight tf The farmer*, in their awamps, we’re sure. Could find the root* and plants that cure. If. by their knowledge they only knew For just the disease each one grow. Take courage now, and ‘Swamp-Hoot” try (for kidney, liver and bladder complaints) A* on this remedy you can rely For sale by druggists, tf
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~ CtlHE ALE HEADACHES. k "^Tiiry are not a Cathartic
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Trying to hold a drove of cattle together in a drenching rain means an amount of exposure which few can withstand without serious results. If sickness does not follow', it will be found that suc/i hardship) usually brings on rheumatism and similar complaints. At such times a " Fish Drand Slicker ” is worth its weight in gold, and is invaluable to any one exposed to stormy weather. For all saddle uses, you want a Pommel Slicker, which keeps the entire saddle, pommel, and can’.le d»7, and completely envelopes the ruler from head to foot. //# cam*/ wc/, whatever the weather. And, besides keeping him dry, it keeps him warm. Every range rider has one. Why shouldn’t you? Beware of worthless imitations; every garment stamped with ** Fish Brand ” Trade Mark. Don’t accept any inferior coat when you can have the 11 Fish Brand Slicker” delivered v/ithout extra cost. Particulars and illustrated catalogue free. A. J. TOWER, • Boston, Mass.
ttMarrok&Sgf dyspe IPS ba., <■
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btron|rth»n WK.4 K, I MAE V El.ol’KD OUG.4N* A I* I UTS OK ftOUY* ihsoliittlr unfall'ng HOlItt TKKATKKNT—ItraeStB In a day. Plan l«>*tlfy from 6U Plains and Famlgn ( onntrln*. Writ* (ben. lAearrlpllte Rook, tinlanatlon and proof* mailed (sralad) fr*«. Addr. u ERIE MEDICAL CO., SUFr ALO. N. Y.
SCOTT’S EMULSION
CURES
CONSUMPTION SCROFULA BRONCHITIS COUCHS
COLDS
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Sold by all Druggists.
SCOTT A. OOWNE, Chemists,N.Y.
DR.KILMER’S
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SYMPTOMS A !t T> CONDITIONS Thla Spi'clUc Will Hcllt.'vc and C'urc. If Yntir heart thumps after sudden effort ll 1 UUl ski|>«beats or flutters, if you him heart disease, faint spells, tits or spasms. If Ynn f'" 1 as though water was gathering II I UU around the heart,nr have hcurtdropsj If Ynn have Vertigo, dizzy attacks, ringing ii II I Uu ears, disposed to nervous prostration a apoplexy, shock or sudden death. If Ynil have Neuralgia. Numbnessln armsoi II 1 JU limbs, darting pains like Khruumtisn Ocean-Weed prevents it going to the heart l*rcparr.l ut l(l.prn-ur> . "til I UK TO IIKALTII' Sent Kr**,*. Ail, lee I pee. Olnglnniitoli, >. Y. HHI a^i.sTS. Larr-'CSc. Extn LM£5ILOft
Ca'ca's, and Trade-Man;, obtained, and all I’atent business condpcted for Mooraari Fees. Out Office is Opposite U. S. Patent Office iciu we can si'dir * patent iu less time Hum Liaise remote fiom W-.diington. Send iiin*' i. drawing nr photo., with description. Ve advise, it patcniuhlo or not, tree of c’ . ge. Oar . • not due till patent Is secured. A P-’-vphlet, “now to Obtain Patents,” with uam ie ml oil'nt* In your btai,'. couuty, or tow n, sent true. Addre-s, G.A.SNOW&CO. Cpp. Patent Office, Washington, D. C.
Ed. ACKERMAN THE Soot ajHLd. Sli.oe Cor. Indiana and Walnut Streets.
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