Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 April 1894 — Page 4
THE BANNER TIMES, GIlEENCASTLE. INDIANA. THURSDAY, APRIL. 5, 1894
B. F. elOSbIN andlet* the Hiffbeet lira/.il Hloi'k
COAL
And the B<»»t Pittsburgh and Anthracite. <'oa yard opposite N’andalia freiirlit otBee.
Ill THANTS (ARID TOR. If you have a house for sale or rent, and It is proving an "elephant on your Imnds, *’ let is took after it. WVII sell it «>i l« t it. ftf you wish, if there’s a possible customer in town. Rivet that tact in your mind, then call and we’ll clinch it. M. f HURLBY, Insurance, Real Estate, and Loan. . . .
Second Floor, First
National Wy
Hank Building
CITY DIRECTORY.
UTY OFFM
Mayor. Treasurer
Clerk
Marshall Engineer Attorney >«*e. Board of Health.
ERS.
Charles B. Case Frank L. Landes .lames M Hnrley William K. Sttirr Arthur Throop TTiomas T. Moore Eugene Hawkins M. I)
corsrn.MKN
1st Ward... Thomas Abrams. J L. Handel •ml ’’ G«s». E. Blake, James Bridges ird ” John Hlley. John H. Miller Street Commissioner J -1).Cutler Fire Chief Gw. 11 Cooper A. Brink way. ) Mrs. Mary Birch, -School Trustees. I>. L. Anderson, ) K. A. Ogg, Superintendent of city selmols.
FOREST VI11.1. CEMETERY
OKS.
J . 8. MeClary John i .Browning J. K. laingdon
ItOAItn OF niMEl’T-
Pr<‘s V Pres
See
Treas .Supt
DONE IN NICK 0* TIME. SEVEN BENUMBED AND DYING SAILORS CUT FROM THEIR ICY LASHINGS. AltIioukL Tlirir \\ Hi i.ii.K- h.i.I l-it.t r..Atlr. Wrrr Npurnrcl, I n. lf* Kam*. II.Itruv.-.l I>fath r.»r I»uty Triu* Tale. I'rum tti»Life Saver*’ l.njcl.fM.k*. ICopyri^lit. I !*4. by American rrcs* AmwcI* tion. Book rights reserved. 1 1.1) X ('pt u ne ’» tri'achemna nlllet., the winds and the waves,would have ' a r r i e d to his loeoan caverns nine vic tims lu stetui of two from the wreck of the Maine schooner Allcert Dailey on the loth of January, IhH.’t, but for the unsolicited and almost unde served efforts of the Smith's island life saving crew, Fifth district, Virginia. It is indeed hnrd lines when sworn lifesaversare compelled by duty to plunge into the jaws of death and attempt to succorheedlt—.wiles bent u[s»t risking destruction for tint sake of showing valor. It amounted to that at Smith’s islanff beach, but 1 Side Sam's faithful sentinels watched and waited and w aited and watched hours and lours in the chilling sleet of a stormy wint.T’s night to save men who had run their noses fhto danger in fool hardy detianeeof the w arnings of man and
nature alike.
The Dailey was from Baltimore for Bridgeport, Conn., and on the night of the 7th ran aground, owing to a dense fog and strong current on the lieach about ~f>0 yards from shore. The beach patrolman got a glimpse of her through a rift in the fog soon after midnight. He lin-d Coston lights, and the crew on the wreck answered. Tlie surf men wore aroused, and they promptly put off iu their lifelioat, but the fog settled heavily over the scene, so that it was daylight before the boat, groping blindly in the black mist, reached the vessel. The captain of the Dailey chose to wait for a rise in the tide to float the schooner, and Kfc[*‘r Hitchens, with his 1m>at crew, remained on Uiard as a reserve for emergencies. In the aftemiMm the sea grew heavy, and all imnds were taken on shore. Next day, the ilth, a w recking crew of four men and five of the Dailey’s crew were placed on ImimixI. to work the ship off the bar. A snowstorm from the northeast set in while the lifeboat was putting the wreckers on hoard, and Keeper Hitchens entnated the sailors and wreckers to go ikshore with him again in the life!Mint. But they laughed at his fears and dindurcd that the wrecking com) any's surfboat, which was hum,red alongside, would carry them safely ashore in ease of need. It was arranged that a signal should lx- set ill the schooner and her foghorn sounded at intervals provided assistance from on shoi-o should fx-needed. Still unsatisfied, Kix'|x-r Hitchens left his service bouton the ix-aeli opposite the wreck, ready for use, and set men to watch for the danger signals on
the schooner as agreed it|x>n.
Tint wreckers were unable to got the ship loose from the bar. She was stuck in tho
It. S.Ttenlck James llugMV
K. K. Black. A. t>. I.oekridge Meeting lirst Wednesday night each month at J.8. Mel'lary’s office. SECKKT SOriKTIES.
1. O. O. K
OttEKNCASTl.t! U)DOE NO J4S. Bruce Krazier N G I. . M Hanna ,, ..Sec Meeting nights, every Wednesday. Hall. Ill Jerome Allen’s Block, Jrd floor. I’t’TSAM I.ODOE NO. 45. John A. Michael .N G E. r. Chaffee „• ••"fO Meetlngr nights, ev«*ry Tuesday. Hull in Central National Bank block,drd floor. CASTI.K CANTON No :>!, I 1 . X. J. A.Michael fill'* Chaa Melkel *»«• First and third Monday nights ol each
month.
(IKRKNl'ASTI.R KNC A MI’MI'.NT No. Ml. John i ook . i t* Chaa. H Melkel. ... -.•libe First and thifd Thursdays. I>. or It. no. IDtl. Mrs. K. II. Morriaon X’. G ll. E. Badger Meeting nights, every 2nd and 4th Monday of each month. Hull in central X'at. Bank building, Jrd floor. OltKESt'ASTI.E I A} DOE 2123 O. f. o. of o. f. Wm. Hartwood N.G H. I.. Bryan .1*. 8 Meets ttrst and third Mondays,
MASONIC.
EASTBHN ST A It.
Mrs. Hickson W. M sand and immovable. The sea was lashed Mrs. Dr. Hawkins , . , 5 ' 0 '' into mountainous waves as the fury of the I-irst idnesday n g to eat i m<m n ^ storm increased, tlie disks weri> swept with it > <l | , {eiiU k A>1 ' ’ * M '' ' K ' " N " H. 1* a no man could withstand, and the It . s'. Beals See surflxiat was torn lixise and lost. There Second Wednesday night of each mouth. was not even time to sot signals to amuse bi.ue bODOK k. and a. m. the life savers, and theiiien cliinbtxl into o' 's' R^hardson g* the rigging of the masts and lashed them Third Wednesday night id each month selves as lx-st they could upon the ratlines. commandehy. A fr<x‘7.1ng sleet scxm overcame them, and w. ll. II Cullen. — E. C ' they were as grxxl as dead for all purposes
.1. Me II. Hays .See Fourth Wednesday night of each month.
HOGAN MIDGE, NO. 19. f. A A. M.
H.I.. Brvan W. M .1. W. Cain See
Mee.s second and fourth Tuesdays. WHITE MI.Y (*H A!*TEK, 140.3, O. K. S.
Mrs. M. Florence Miles .... W M Mrs. M. A. Teisfer Sec
Meets second and fourth Mondays,
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS. EAGI.EI.OUGE NO. 111.
Wir.. M. Brown C. C H.S. Beals Sec Every Friday night on 3rd Moor over Tims.
Abrams store.
OREKNCASTLE DIVISION f. It. W. F.. Starr Capt II. M. Smith Sec Kiritt Monday night of each nnditli.
A.O. IT. W.
COLLEGE CITY LODGE NO. «.
Jonn Denton A. B. Phillips Second and till Thursdays of each month.
DEGREE OF HONOR.
Mrs. K L. Hlgert ...C.ofH l.iHie Black S<-e Firal and third Fridnvs of each month. Hall on di d floor City Hull Block.
BED MEN.
OTOE TRIBE NO. HO.
Jacob Kiefer. Tims. Sage . Every Monday nigtit. Hull on
City Hall Block.
KOVALAKCANTM. LOTT'S COUNCIL NO. 329. W. G. Overstreet !
Chaa. Dundee.
saw the Dailey s mast i*ihI spars just out of water, and. lashixl to the swaying cordage, eight nx'uiiilx'tit or partly recumbent figures, motionless and incased in shrouds of frozen snow. The spectacle kindhxl anew tho valor of tho exhausted and half frozen surfmen. It was then the 10th of January, and for more than 4s hours their minds had been ImnluiRxl with the fate of the Dailey and the responsibility of preventing disaster through the wreck But they were not the kind to cry “We told you so’’ and retreat to their comfortable station house*, leaving unsolved the fates of those hopeless forms on the swaying masts. The leaping, foam ing surf forbade the use of the lifeboat, anti the only recourse was to get a line to the wreck. The lirst shot of the line throwing gun earriixi a rope across the jibboom, but tho forms In the rigging made no sign. Keeper Hitchens then hauled it In and sent it to the same place by a second shot. Still the forms on the wreck gave no sign, and the ro|s' lay buried in the leaping sea which foamed over the submerged hull. A third and a fourth time the line was sent almost Into the hands of the poor fellows, hut no arm was outstretched to grasp the life mpe; no answering shout encouraged the surfincn »<> go on. Again the Imfllitl life savers summoned courage and patience to wait for the fulling of the sea. signs of which they had in the bucking wind. For 12 hours they had not tasted food nor drink nor felt the warmth of lire. Three hours longer they waited in that terrible blizzard of wind and shx-t, and then, unable longer to Ix'ur the thought that all life on the wreck might not yet lx> extinct, though slowly, surely frcez.lngout it must be, they once more man tied the boat. Long exixisure to the snow and driving spray, and the moisture of their (xtsoiis hadsoak cd their waterin’!x>f garments, and these the ley air froze stiff Like metal armor they clashixt us the limbs moved or the men jostled one another or struck the boat's sides and oars. The current of backing water whirled the Is wit off to leeward, despite the energy of the willing (Mirsmen, and she was put ashore for the men to take breath and get the bearings for another dash. The second time they went near enough to lay hold of a line attached to the wreck, and there, their craft, tossing helplessly in tho mad sea, which crashed over the hull and leap ixl half way to the motionless forms in the emsstrees. they realized tho horror which confronted them. Not a cry, not a signal, not a groan, to assure them that for all they had done and dared it was not too late. Then a tidal wave arose and lifted their Ixwit on high, wrenching the rope from the strong grasp which madly clung to it, and bearing them unco more buck to
the shore.
While taking breath a ft it the exhaust ing struggle during which their own lives were often in |xt11 they could not forbear gaz ing upon that sjxx’tacle which beckoned them on and ever on to the rescue. l)mx« more the daring launch was made, uml the bout, impelled by mad oarsmen, crashed through the breakers. On and on they rowed, holding the bow steadily toward the wreck. They reach one of the masts, and stout arms cling to it until four of the stiffened forms arc out lixise from tho ratlines and lowered into the boat. A re-
M. W
Sec
. .Sachem Sec :ir<1 Muor
K
Six;
llltr. IdllMl'-n. -x Second and fourt li Thursdays ot each month
Meet in G. A. K. Hall. KNIGHTS ll) HO>}<111.
mystic: TIE LODGE, NO. 1449 W a. Howe Dictator J ll.Johnson.... Reporter
Envy Friday night.
G. A. It.
GKKENI ASTLE POST NO. U. A M. Maxnn. C I. P. > Lupin \jt. Win. M. Murk. ......... 1,1 -M. Every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock. Hall corner Vine and Washington streets. 2nd
floor,
woman’s relief corps. Alice It i lianin Prt - Louise .laeons .... ... Six’ Meetings every second and fourth Monday at 2 p. m. !•. A. It. Hull
if helping themselves or co-operating with the surfincn on shore. One of them was torn from his lashings during the night and drowned. At least he took to the rig gingxvith his mates, hut was missing at
the rescue.
A few hours after the lifemen went ashore the weather grew so thick with driving , snow that the beach patrol could scarcely make out the vessel. After dark she could not lie hixti at all, and the sen drove upon the beach in huge breakers. At midnight the hatches and pert of the surflxiat were washixl on shore, and then the life savers knew the schtxmcr must Ixs In trouble. Perhaps her hull was breaking to pieces under the wrenching of the waves, striki ing her broadside w hile the keel was set
fast in the sand.
Keeper Hitchens waited no longer, but aroused his crew and set out to haul tho mortar cart by hand to the scene of pndiable disaster. The wind and sleet blew dead in the faces of the men. the snow was over a fi xit dix p and the beach sand mushy from the soaking tides which rolled over It out ; of the breakers. The task of hauling the i art and Its load was almost heyoud hu- ' man strength, yet the men bent to it cheerfully, in tho bare Iioik- that life could be ; saved. For all that they then knew the ; schooner might he floating and nianagcable. At 8 o'clock in the morning the crew wen; on the lieach abreast of the xvrock, as they could see at intervals when the whirling winds tom a rift in the cloud of snow. Then t he masts showed in dim outlines, | hut where her hull should be the strained i eyes saw only a furious, lashing surf. Was j there life on board? Maybe! “Although it I is alife and death struggle, we'll And out," j said dauntless Keeper Hitchens. Coston lights wen- burned In order to | search out the exact position of the vessel. They failed, and ax it was useless to shixit mm i. j
FI UK ALA KM S.
2-1 3- 1 4— 1 V-l i>—1 l 2 4 2
i’ollege ave and Liberty si. Indiana and Hanna. JaekMiaiand baggy. Madison and Liberty. Madison and Walnut. Hanna and Grown. Bloomington and Anderson. Seminary and Arlington. Washington, east of Durham. Washington and Locust. Howard and Crown.
(Ihio and Main.
College ave. and DcMotte alley.
Locust and Sycamore.
1- 2—1 Fire out.
The police call is one tap then a pause and then r ullow the box tiumocr i OFN'TY OF Fit 'KKS.
.Sen. M. Black
4-3 %-3 It- 3
)’. M. Glidewetl.
Gixi. Hughes
Daniel T. Darnell Daniel S. Horst
J. F. O'Brien F. M. Lvon. T. W. McNeff
Wm. Broadstreet. G W. Bence, M. D. .1. I). Hart. )
Samuel Farmer > Couimissloui’rs.
John S. Ncwgcut)
Auditor
Sheriff
Treasurer
Clerk
Recorder Surveyor
Senool Superintendent
Coroner Assessor
Six-. Board of Health
A HARD PULL ACROSS THE BEACH,
lines at random it wax dcciihxl to man the surflxiat and hreast that awful tide for the IHissihle rescue of fellow men. It bxik an hour to force the lx ait beyond the line of breakers. Once outside, the crew were not powerful enough to keep their craft in course, and she drifttxl to the leeward. There wax no light on the vessel, no sound, no foghorn signal ax agreed U|xin to guido the rescue party, and they simply beat about in the dark at the mercy of the waves anti their burden of plunging wrix-kage, which at a blow might send the boat and its brave crew to the bottom. Reluctantly Kix-pcr Hitchens put hack to shore ami waited two hours for the coming of day. In the obscure light of dawn the life savers
ARE THEY TOO LATE? action then unnerves them. They let go, and in an instant the bout is swept away into the boiling sea. For dear life the oarsmen pull again anti make shore In safety. The unconscious sailors are handed over to tho care of volunteers on shore, and again the lifeboat shoots off Into the breakers. Cold, hunger, exhaustion, sleepiness, are forgotten and the long hours of past toil seem but a moment to those men, now thrilled with the excitement of rescue, for two of the forms just landixl give sure signs of life. They reach the wreck again and hold the txiat alongside the other mast where four remaining forms lie aslant the sagging ropes. Swiftly they are cut down and lowered into the boat, and a long, strong pull Ix-aches tho boat with its precious load in safety. Then, for the labor of reaching the station across that heavy beach and restoring activity to the rescued sailors. One of them had died on the shore sixm after landing. The remaining seven were brought to full strength ufterilaysof min istratiuns and treatment. The man missing at the rescue and sup posts! to have Ixxoi swept ovcrlxxird in the night was t he steward of the Dailey. The unfortunate who expired on reaching shore was one of the wrecking hand which hail lx*:n placed on txiaixt to help float the strandixl hull. On .Inn, 51, at night, the storm reached its highest fury, and it was a memorable one for disastrous wixx-ks all along the Virginia coast. Gkokge L. Kilmer.
AMERICAN ROSES.
Saved by Fire. The youthful adventurer had his doubts whether the bonk would pay for itself, and when good natured friends—whose good nature, we may lie sure, stopped on the wrong side of buying—said, “you’ll he half ruined," he was rather inclined to agree with them. At last, in fear anil trembling, he wrote to the publisher to know the worst—which lie himself hail calculated at alxiut A'so. “Let me know how many have gone off,” he wrote in all modesty, "snd what is the Imlance I owe you.” The publisher wrote back: DeahSih Your whole edition has gone off, leaving a balance of A'2U in your favor. Check inclosed. The poet was in the seventh heaven anil yet not eatislled. He rushed to the publisher’s to inquire who hail bought the book—friends, Mudie or who? “My dear sir,” said the publisher, “I think you had better not ask.” “X’ot. ask? Why not? You wrote to say t hat the edition was all sold. It must have been sold to somebody.” “Pardon me, I wrote that it had ‘gone off. 8o it bad, the whole of it. There was a Are in the warehouse, and theconttnts were insured.”—Boston Home Eagle.
An Fiiglisltman on American !>letliod». Why Not Grow Kunes From Seed? Sometimes we may profit by even a sharp criticism, and an English critic expresses surprise that with an apparent love of roses, which pervades the American people and which leads them to buy them by the hundreds of thousands and very often at a high price, very few attempts have been made by American florists to improve the rose. They have not the patience in carefully crossing which a number of the old world rosegrowers exhibit—no attempt of any account is made to raise seedlings—and the critic calls close attention to the fact that all the so called American roses that are popular were merely chance sports. He refers to the varieties known as Marshall P. Wilder, the Bride, Sunset, the Puritan, the Waban and the Queen. A little fun is made of Americans about the American Beauty, which is not an American rose, but then, as Thomas Meehan tells in his last Monthly, Americans have never claimed this. It was called American Beauty simply because the original name was lost, and no one knew what its real name was. It was ultimately found to be a European variety known as Mine. Ferdinand Jamain. This is conceded by American rosegrowers themselves, and they are perfectly willing that the credit should go to where the credit is due. Still the point is a good one, and American rosegrowers might possibly turn their attention to the growing of roses from seed, according to the authority quoted, who says: The standard of excellence in America is very different from that which prevails in the old world. The American rosegrower does not simply want a large showy flower with some peculiar tint or shade of color—he wants a flower with a long stem that can he cut to advantage without having to fasten an artificial stalk to it—and he wants a variety that will bloom freely and in continual succession as well. These points have never been a want in the old world, and American needs should bring American results. Growth of Trees. A correspondent of The American Cultivator wanted to know if a mark or wound made on the stem of a tree would remain at the same distance from the ground during succeeding years or would become elevated as the tree increases in height. Here is the reply made: The wound remains just in the position where first made, for the simple reason that tree steins do not stretch growing, hut elongate by addition to terminal branches and layers of new wood deposited around and over the preceding seasons’ layers all the way from the tips of the highest branches to the very ends of the roots in the ground. If you will hear in mind that the inner or heart wood of a tree is dead material, decay being prevented because it is hermetically sealed within layers of live sap wood, you can readily understand why a spike driven into the stem can neither rise nor fall, but may in time become covered with the annual layers of new wood. If you measure the height from the top of some large root, then your mark will appear to get lower, simply because the new layers of wood formed over the root increase its diameter.
of the
NEW PROCESS OE
grafting.
HANDSOME, YET MODEST. An lilriil Itrxiicn For » Rcaldrnre Containing I l«*vt*n Room it. [Copyright, 1x93, by American Press Association.! If all houses which are built should lie designed as carefully as a conscientious artist paints a picture, the result in the appearance of our towns and cities would lie eminently more satisfactory than it Is today. There is no reason why this should not lie so. There is every reason why it should be so. A house stands for a long time to ornament or to disfigure its immediate location. The designing of houses, considered from the standpoint of their ex-
“ Simplest and Best.” THE FRANKLIN
PERSPECTIVE VIEW. terior, is not consider, d with the seriousness which belongs to that part of the work. Convenience is a necessity; it is expected. All should bear in mind that it costs no more to make a house hxik attractive than it does to make it look ugly; it costs no more to make an attractive molding than it does an ugly one; it costs no more to make a beautiful door than one which is obtrusive; it costs no more to have the casings and the interior of a room of delicate, artistic pattern titan it does something which is coarse and crude. The amount of labor ami material which Is represented in one instance and the other is practically without difference. An attractive outline is no more expensivethanone which is ugly. It is true that a great many more houses are ruined as to their appearance from having work piled upon them than by having too little. Most of our houses are ugly because they are aggressive; because they have crude, heavy porches; lumbering, clumsy towers; wild ami ill proportioned dormers and balconies and other excrescences that are ugly. On the other hand, there are very few houses which are built witli any kind of an outline vhich may not be improved by a simplicity of detail and a regard for the particular forms, and which may be done without any added expense to the building itself. It is a question of thought and study in making the drawings. It is a question with the artist. It is a
TYPEWRITER. PRICE, $60.00. QIM DI C | Hus fewer parts by half, almrLLl and weighs less by half, than any other type-bar machine. Standard Keyboard—forty keys, printing eighty-oup characters. Alignment perfect and permanent. Work in sight as soon as written, and so re* mains. Interchangeable parts. Constructed n|in i Q| r | entirely of metal,of UUllnULLl tno best quality, and by the most skilled workmen. Lnequalcd for manifold and mimeograph work. Carriage locks at end of line, insuring neatness. Type cleaned in five seconds, without soiling the lingers. Handsome in appearance and character C D C C11V of work. Speed limited Ul LLlI II only by the skill of the operutoi WSend for Catalogue ami xp 'clmen of work, R. FRANKLIN EDUCATIONAL CO. 260 <ft 2S2 Wabash Ave. CHICAGO^ A NEW IDEA. You will remember that Goliah was very much surprised when Dnvid hit him with a rock. He said such a thine; had never entered his head before.
PORCH I; ^ J* i'll PORCH R4M g || ^
kiTchen 136-12
DINING RM 15 - 15
u
' P ^° R I MALL | II WIDE
JJI LIBRARY
PORCH
Grafting Grape*.
In the notice recently given
death of a leading Philadelphia amateur horticulturist, Robert Cornelius, it was stated that he was the inventor of a new process for grafting the grajie. Themethixl was to take half matured wixxl to operate on. The scion was wedged at both ends and inserted like a Ixiw in the stock. A piece of tape tin'll tied around drew the scion tightly into the stock. Success in almost every case was absolutely perfect. Attention was recently drawn to this method by a paper in Orchard and Garden. This
new method has also been illustrated in Meehan's Monthly in a manner that plainly indicates the nature of the process. Yellows off the Peach. The experiment* of Dr. J. F. Smith of the department at Washington, as published in some of the journals, do not furnish any encouragement for success. He had applied to hundreds of trees potash, phosphoric acid, lime, nitrogen in various forms, muriate of potash, bone black, bone ash, nitrateof soda, sulphate of ammonia, ashes, tobacco dust and barn manure. Some of the orchards were entirely healthy, and others had the yellows. On none of these hail they any effect in preventing or curing the yellows. Of 645 affected with it, none recovered. A few slightly improved. The symptoms of the disease, as premature ripening of the fruit, branched shoots and premature unfolding of winter buds, did not disappear from any of them. It apix ars from this report that we must look for relief to some other remedy than applying compounds to the trees. So far the only efficient cure is the removal of the affected trees by the
roots.
E
FIRST STORY, question as to whether the artist Is there or not. No man builds better than his architect knows. If his architect is not an artist, his house is not artistic. He cannot force something which is not there. The illustration which accompanies this article is certainly of a simple, straightforward building. It has a tower of moderate dimensions, hut the details are not rich, they are not expensive, and it is not obtrusive. The porch embraces much less material and labor than usually go into such a structure. The dormers are simple, and the general finishing of the house is of a modest character. It is relatively an inexpensive structure, and one which would reflect credit to those who would have the good taste to build it. A structure of this kind can be made ugly simply by the little things which should be put upon it. The moldings should be exactly right. The little touches should be carried out exactly as they are indicated. Departures therefrom mean disaster in so far as it affects the appearance of the house. As to the floor plan. It tells its own story. It is one of those center hall buildings with rooms on each side, than which nothing can be better. When one builds an ideal structure, there Is a hall in the center ami rooms on each side. The reception hall Idea has always been a compromise. It is a house which belongs to a narrow lot. There are many beautiful houses of this
ROOF
GiRLS RM 13 G -13
h/Ch w ‘* {n
chamber 13-13
, P
. H—TT
SECOND STORY.
kind; but, on the other hand, they are never as attractive anil never as satisfactory as in the case of a house which has a hall and the rosins distributed on either side of it. This building has been studied as ' carefully with respect to its interior—the I arrangement of its kitchen, its pantry, its bathroom, the cellar and the practical fit- I tings which go with all—as though the exterior had not lieeu regarded in the serious •pirit which has been mentioned above.
Loins ll. Gibson.
ANOTHER SURPRISE. Some of our people may be surprised when we tell them that the best Daily paper for their needs is the • Daily Banner Times, of Greencastle, Ind. HERE’S THE idea: Perhaps you are not taking it. If not, why not. It’s cheap enough, prompt~as is the coming of the day, and has all the local news at the right time.
IT’S
ADVERTISING. Merchants who have tried it say it's the best advertising medium in the city. That’s another surprise, but the advertisers will testify to the fact. DON’T DELAY. Don’t wait for some philanthropist to come along and give you warning that you are missing the best thing of your life. We will tell it to you. ADVICE FREE. We. in giving this advice, presume you desire to increase your business, succeed in life, and keep up with the procession of local and foreign events. If you do,address an order
[to the
imif ihkiebtiihes Greencastle, Ind.
ItatfK to IndianapoliH. Tlic Vimdalia Line will make ol ♦1.20 for the round trip from G etisile to Indianapolis, April 24 tu return limit to April 27; uccoiii publican state convention, d-tf J. S. Dowling, /
