Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 March 1895 — Page 4

UIE BANNER TIMES, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. MONDAY MARCH II. 189:).

FETCHES OF LINCOLN. “Short and Simple Annals of the Poor.” DATE AND PLACE CF EIS DIETS.

Interview With, a Newspaper Man—Lincoln’* Reference to His Mother — The Family Record—A Traffic I>eath—The Roving Father of the President. (From ‘The Life of Lincoln" by William H Herndon and .lease W. Woik. Copyright, 1888, by Jesse W Wuik. Copyright, 1 tftfJ, by D. Ap pleton it Co. J L Beyond the fact that ho tvas born on the 12th day of February, 1809, in Hardin county, Ky., Mr. Lincoln usually had but little to say of himself, the lives of bis parents or the history of the family before their removal to Indiana. If he mentioned the subject at all, it was with great reluctance and significant reserva There was something about his origin he never cared to dwell upon. His nomination for the presidency in 1800, however, made the publicatiou of bis life a necessity and attracted to Springfield an army of campaign biographers and newspaper men. They met him in his office, stopped him in his walks and followed him to his house. Artists came to paint bis picture and sculptors to make his bust. His auto-

d is asters. Their journey began at •‘.Mr. Frige’s tavern on the Rapidan.” When | only a few days out, “Hanks’ do^’s leg got broke." Later in the codrso cf the journey Hanks and another companion became separated from the rest of the party and were lost in the mountains |

for two days.

In crossing a stream ‘‘Abrahain’ssaddlo turned over ami his load all fell in Indian creek.” Finally they meet their brethren from whom they have been separated and then pursue their way without further interruption. Return-

UiSK f&S!

A.VmoXINE SEKli.M. THE SPECIFIC CURE FOR A DREADED DISEASE.

Larffo Cities Installing; Plants For It* Scientiifc Manufacture - The Discovery of Bacilli—Effects of Antitoxine Treatment. The I>eoline In the Death Rate.

[Special Correspondence.]

Philadelphia, March 7.—During the . year 1894 the mortality from diphtheria

K 1 r’, -up iucreased alarmnews of the Indians" that certain mem- I a11 0Vt ' r tl,e world-estimated at hers of the company are “afrade to go ov °r 26,000 deaths in Franco and 60,-

graphs were in demand, and people came long distances to shake him by the hand This sudden elevation to national prominence found Mr Lincoln unprepared in a great measure for the unaccustomed demonstration that awaited him. While ho was easy of approach and equally courteous to all, yet, an he said to mo one evening after a long day of handshaking, he could not understand why people should make so much over him. Among the earliest newspapermen to arrive in Springfield after the Chicago convention was the late J. L. Scrippsof the Chicago Tribune, who proposed to prepare a history of his life. Mr Lincoln deprecated the idea of writing even a campaign biography. "Why, Scripps, ” said he, "it is a great piece of folly to attempt to make anything out of me or my early life. It can all bo condensed into a single sentence, and that sentence you will find in Gray's •Elegy' "The short and simple annals of the poor "That’s my life, and that’s all you or any one else can make out of it. ” He did, however, com in uni cate some facts and meager incidents of his early days, and with the matter thus obtained Mr Scripps prepared his book. Soon after the death of Lincoln I received a letter from Scripps, in which, among other things, ho recalled the meeting with Lincoln and the view ho took of the biography matter. ■‘Lincoln seemed to be painfully impressed, " he wrote, “with the extreme poverty of his early surroundings and the niter absence of all roniantin and heroic elements. Ho communicated some la":s to me coneormug bis ancestry, wbc-h he .did not wish to have pub lished then, and which I have never : :: f * .iMa 1; 1 t * t V.What the facts referre I to by Mr Scripps v-« re wo do not know, for lie died sev* ral years ago without, so lar as is kno-vu, revealing them to anyone l.iuenln ami (IIh Mot!u*r. On th ■ s hjeet of his ancestry and origin I only reinemb r one time when Air I,me iln ever rut. rred to it It V s about 186D, when ho and I wore d'ivmg in Ins one horse buggy to the conrt in Menard county, Ills The suit wo wore going to try was one in which wo were likely, either directly or collaterally, to touch upon thesubjectof hereditary traits. During the ride ho spoke for the first time in my hearing of his mother, dwelling on her characteristics and mentioning or enumerating what qnalit'r.s ty. iehortted t'e-n b- *• H-- ogid, among other things, that she was the daughter of Lucy Hanks and a well bred but obsenre Virginia farmer or planter, and he argued that from this last source came his power of analysis. Ins logic, his mental activity, bis ambition and all the qualities that distinguished him from the other members and descendants ut tiie iiiiuks family Abraham Lincoln, the grandfather of the president, emigrated to JetTor.-oii comity, Ky.. from Virginia, about 17 o, and from flint time forward Use ferns r state bet aiiie an important one in the bi-i v nf thn family, fur in it was d •- tined to be h rn its most illustrious member. About five years lieforo this a handful of Virginians had started across the mountains for Kentucky, and in the company, besides their historian, William Calk, whose diary recently came to light, was one Abraham Hanks. They were evidently a crowd of jolly young men bent on adventure and fun, but their sport was attended with frequent

auey further. ” The following day more or less demoralization takes place among the members of this pioneer party when the announcement is made, as their chronicler so faithfully records it, that “Philip Drake bakes bread without washing his hands. ” This was au unpardonable sin, and at it they revolted. A day later the record shows that “Abram turns back. ” Beyond this we shall never know what became of Abraham Hanks, for no further mention of him is made in this or any other history. He may have returned to Virginia and become, for aught we know, one of the president's ancestors on the maternal side Of the house; but, if so, his illustrious descendant was never able to establish the fact or trace his lineage satisfactorily beyond the first generation which preceded him. He never mentioned who his maternal grandfather was,

if indeed he knew An Indian Trafffdy.

His paternal grandfather, Abraham Lincoln, the pioneer from Virginia, met his death within two years after his settlement in Kentucky at the hands of the Indians, “not in battle,” as his distinguished grandson tells ns, “but by stealth, when he was laboring to open a farm iu the forest.” The story of his death in sight of his youngest son, Thomas, then only 6 years old, is by no means a new one to the world. Iu fact, I have often heard tho president describe the tragedy as he had inherited tho story from his father. The dead pioneer had three sons, Mordecai, Josiah and Thomas, in the order named. When the father fell, Mordecai, having hastily sent Josiah to tho neighboring fort after assistance, ran into the cabin, and pointing his rifle through a crack between tho logs prepared for defense. Presently an Indian came stealing up to tho dead father’s body. Beside the latter sat the

000 each in Austria-Hungary and tho United States. Following the lead of Europe onr largest cities are rapidly installing plants for tho scientific manufacture and distribution of antitoxine, tho specific cure, nt a cost that will bring it within reach of tho masses, and thus practically test its merits. This movement, although started by the various local boards of health, Is, in fact, a philanthropic and humanitarian crusade against a common scourge, which will arouse tho interest of every civilized community. A Iready the people are contributing liberally to appeals for financial aid. Paris alone snbscribes |100,000, enabling tho Pasteur labora-

tory to supply the whole of France.

In order to understand the practical working of this new treatment, tho reader’s attention is briefly directed to tho modern “germ theory’’ of disease. By means of researches with the microscope Schwann iu 1839 demonstrated that tho tissues of all plants and animals are composed of minute living cells. Subsequent and similar investigations developed the “germ theory” that many diseases are caused by tho introduction and propagation in the animal system of minute organisms called “microbes.” While tho doctrine of “animal contagion” was held in the middle ages and published iu the sixteenth century, the discovery of the infections organisms themselves was not made until tho nineteenth century by Pasteur, Tyndall and others. At a meeting of tho British association in 1870 Professor Huxley expressed his concurrence iu this theory, since which date Lister, Koch and scores of scientists

are its well known advocates.

Cultivation of llarterla.

A knowledge of the fact that most of tho diseases of plants are produced by

pTOffo^mciC * PLUG TOBACCO. vV fLAVOIi

Consumers of chewing tobacco who arewillingtopai) a little more than the price charged for the ordinag trade tokccos. will find this brand superior to all others BEWARE Of IMITATIONS.

Free! Free! Free! For one day only Tuesday, March 12, 'OS. All «ho visit the eminent Physicians on March 12 will receive all medical services and Surgical treatment FREE until cured.

little boy Thomas. Mordecai took delib- parasites led up to tho discovery of a like erate aim at a silver crescent which cause for many diseases among animals, hung suspended from the Indian’s breast The parasites of man are both animal and brought him to the ground. Josiah and vegetable, but a great majority of returned from the fort with the desired j these micro-organisms belong to the relief, and the savages were easily dis- j vegetable kingdom, and to tho order

persed, leaving behind one dead and one

wounded.

The tragic death of his father filled Mordecai with an intense hatred of the Indians, a feeling from which he never recovered. It was ever with him like an avenging spirit. From Jefferson county he removed to Grayson, where he spent the remainder of his days.

Lincoln'* Father.

In Thomas, roving and shiftless, to whom was "reserved the honor of an illustrious paternity,” are we alone interested. He was, we are told, 6 feet 10 inches high, weiglied 196 pounds, had a well rounded face, dark hazel eyes, coarse black hair and was slightly stoop shouldered. His build was so compact that Dennis Hanks usod to say he could not find the point of separation between his ribs. He was proverbially slow of movement, mentally and physically, was careless, inert and dull, was sinewy and gifted with great strength, was in'

"oryptogamia, ” propagating themselves by spores. Bacteria are of vegetable origin and comprise a largo class of minute organisms, the study of which constitutes the science of bacteriology. Being so small and colorless, they are made visible by staining with the aniline dyes. The earliest attempts to cultivate individual varieties of bacteria artificially were made in fluids—meat solutions. Dr. Koch of Berlin first used a solid medium, the potato, and obtained pure cultivations, insuring perfect isolation and accurate investigation. Pathogenic micro-organisms produce their poisonous effects, first, by “intoxication"—in which case they generate "ferments," as iu foods or drinks, outside of the body, and afterward enter the body through the alimentary canal, and, secondly, by "infection,” wherein tho germs attach themselves to surfaces within the body, multiply and cause disease by the evolution of poisonous prod-

REMEMBER THAT EQoore

Will supply the people with firstolnss GROCERIES at the lowest living prices. I also keep a full line of Glassware and (jnei nswari'. Decorated Dinner Sets, I owls and I’iteln rs, and Tin ware of all kinds. Salt by the barrel. I keep a fine line of To.let Soaps. All kinds of Fruits, Nuts and Candies for Holiday Trade. Last bur not least, will give with every box of Mascott’s l!:iking Powder—price 25 cents—a child s quadruple silver set, embossed knife, fork and spoon. Just the thing.

J. W. Moore,

X. Sine Square. Abram's Old Stand. 44-am

IbSJj lAicbs discovered the characteristic bacillus of true Bvetoniicau diphtheria. In 188-1 Loeffierconfirmed this and succeeded in isolating it from other kinds of bacteria always present and obtained the bacilli in pnro cultures. After competent bacteriological examination of the discharges the diagnosis of true diphtheria or croup rests upon the presence or absence of this bacillus. Soon afterward Professor Behring, an assistant to Koch of Berlin, invented tho process of gradually immunizing animals from the effects of diphtheritic poison until finally an antitoxine scrum could bo derived from blood taken from their jugular veins, which could bo injected into the tissues of man, and thus confer immunity to exposed pi r'-ons, or cure of the disease if injected (Turing tho first three days. A healthy horse is the animal chosen, and it requires from six weeks

TH h. CELbBHATED INTERNATIONAL DOCTORS. The object of thisKHEK SF.lt V 1< E is to become quickly acquainted with the sick,also to demonstrate the superior excellence of their methods of ti estlny all diseases of a chronic and Iona standing nature. The doctors feel assured that i he are etui endorsement of the many they relieve and cure will iflve them, durtiiK their future vteii, an extended practice that will amply repay for this itre.it outlay of time and money. Although they treat all diseases of a chrome, lonir standing, obscure or difficult nature and cure many so-called Incurable diseases they wish it thorouirhlv understood that, if after a tbnrnuirh examination, your ease Is found to be Incurable, we will frankly tell you so and reserve the rltfht to reject such ease ALL DISEASES AND D EFO R MITIES CU RE D. C ATAUKH C0K*D—Consumption In the Incipient stn*c; Bronchitis, Asthma. Rheumatism. all diseases of the to sc. throat, lungs, stomach, liver and kidneys, scrofula sores, ulcers and «ll chronic blood trouble; eczema, pforlasas, pimples, blotches and all sklu trouble treated and cui"d. Nl.KVolls DISEASES-Epilepsy positively and permanently cured. Nervous debility from any cause, hysteria, neurathcnlu Vholcra, St. Vitus dance, etc., cured by the London Specific t rent mom. DISEASES OF WOMAN—We examine all ladles without exposure and treat all diseases peculiar to their sex without the use of rings, pessariers, supporters, etc., by new and painless met le ids. Young and Middle Aged, Weak, Diseased, Despondent Men smfTurinff from prom at uro decay, exhausted or enfeebled powers, any and all diseases arising: from habits <•!' youth, early vices, indiscretions or ( xucss—all diseases causing drains, losses weak or failing memory, blotches, pimples. Impure blood, fallitiff of hair, etc., should visit them at once by their \tiffio-liormun methods and remedies, they guarantee each sufferer immediate relief and perfect cure. Cancers cured without the knife—no pain— no matter how many physicians have failed to cure you, call on us, it will cost you nothing and you may profit by it. Office at the Commercial Hotel, Greencastle, Ind. Houck, 9 n. m to 8 p. m Main offices las West 14th st. New York ami 806 State st. Chicago. P. S,—These physicians will return every 30 dnys for one year.

All for Ac. The Origin of the Daisy. The Races on the Neva. The Players at Chess. Etchings: Afterwards. The Man Who Was Never Found. An Original Assessor. And other sketches are to be found in the hist i-Mie of the Chanddce book

i*P :| >'

nly a few

Local Time Gurd.

BIO FOUR, GOING KAST.

No 10* Vest!billed Kxpress 5:33 p n No 21 Indianapolis Accommodation. .8:42 a j\ No is' Southwestern Limited 1:52 p ji No 8* Mail 4:35 p in No 14* 2:50 a in

GOING WEST.

No 7* Vest!billed Kxpross 12:22 am No 9* Mail 8:42 n m No 17’ Southwesternl.imited 12:49 p m

published liv tile passenger depiirnnent I : * f Terre Haute Accommodation. «:23 p m Of the ( . H A I). R. R. ' nly a few + K^kunda^ 12:58,1 ' I1 OOple- leit. Mend in yoill {bhlie^." uiol Train No. 14 hauls sleepers to Boston and 6c and aciqiy will be mulled you same | DoUimbus, sleepers nod coaches to Ctncln-

day order is received. Address ('hand-' " H,i

dec dc|):irl ineot ''. 11. A I). It. R., ('ill-I is hauls sleepers for dllllllti, O. All for 5c. sleep r for

! umbos No. s connects for < inclumitt and

Michipriin division points at Wabash. No. 10, "Knickerbocker Special" sleepers for New

; f urnif litMl tile UAILV dannkk umks York. Nos. 7, 11. 9 and 17 connect in Louis . .. . 4 ,, *• 4 .i | Union depot with western roads. No. 9 eon daily by !£.»' . Alien, manager of Arthm ncctsut laris with t niro «

i'I.im.i "hti. No.2 connects for rhioiffo, Cincinnati

/ I, :V ,U ’ I Cleveland and

CPC

New York and connects for Col-

Mieblffiin division points. No

Washinffton via < . & ().

Todaj * Local Muriict*.

rKtirtii-lieil tin* Daily Hannkk Timks

Jordan’s poultry house.1 Hens 54 Springs,choice, 5)4 ( «»eks, young 2 Cocks, old .. 2 Turkey bins. old. ... : 54 Turkey hens, young <>4 Turkey, young toms 5 Turkeys, old toms 44 Ducks 5 Geese, choice f. f. 81 bs anti over 40 Geese, plucked 'it' Bggs, fresh, subject to handling 15 Butter, fresh roll 5 Broilers under vi pounds . 0

Chinctie Kites.

Great ingenuity ia displayed by the

, , . . . , Chiueso in tho nianufactiiro of kites, to three months to ooinplete immuniza- Kiteg of the auBtllar fiha , )e coninioll tion They begin by injecting into the a ourselves arc never seen, the deneck or shoulder the toxiues from pure gi r< .,, ri . 8t . uUllK at ,heir own sweet cultures, gradually increasing their vir- wll , flowi . r8i bir( , 8) fl8h> nud> in fact> ulency and the dose. It takes about a thi that , uay 1)0 found on

mouth to cultivate those strong toxiues, 1 and before injection they aro diluted with one-fourth volumo of iodine. Tho

offensively quiet and peaceable, but ' nets called “toxiues. " Predisposition to when roused to rests tan oe a dangerous disease is either inheren or acquired antagonist. Ho had a liking for jokes ' am' may be increased by hunger, faand (.tones, which was one of the few tiguo, change of temperature, etc. The traits he transmitted to his illustrious unsolved problem in medical science son, was fond of the chase and had no t° r tho prevention and cure of infectious marked aversion for tho bottle, though diseasos is how to confer immunity inin tho latter case he indulged no more stead of liability. One method of coufreely than the average Kentuckian of ferring artificial immunity is the hypo-

his day

At tho tinio of his marriage to Nancy Hanks ho could neither read nor write, but his wife, who was gifted with more education and was otherwise his mental slipelior, taught hilu, it in raid, »A> vrr.tv, b’;- cu l .tr > r‘ ,o d n t ho was able in lat.r years to spell his way slowly through the Bible. In his reFive A ill Bap.isoC ' ALer'his' rcuiovui to Indiana ho changed his adherence to the Pivsbvterians—or Prodostinarinns, as they wore then called—and later united with the Christian—vulgarly called Campbellito—church, in which latter faith he is supposed to h ive died. He was a carpenter by trade and essayed far,mIii.- tno, bat in tliis, ns in almost every other undertaking, ho was singularly unsuccessful. Ho was placed In po .-v—inn of several tracts of land at different times in his life, but was never able to pay for a single one of them. The farm on which he died was one his son purchased, providing a life estate therein for him und his wifo. Ho never fell in with tho routine of labor; was what Monie people would call unfortunate cr unlucky in all his business ven tures—if in reality he ever made one— and died near tho village of Farmington in <'oles county, lils , on tho 17th day of January, 1861 His sou, on account of sickness iu his own family, was unable to be present at his father’s bedside or witness his death. To those who notified him of his proba bio (iomi e he wrote: ‘T sincerely liopo that father may yet recover his health, but at all events tell him to remember to call upon and confide iu our great and good and merciful Maker, who will not turn away from him iu any extreiuit-,- F{.* .k the fell of cnorrow nod numbers the hairs of our heads, and ho will not forget the dying man who puts his tru -t in him. Say to him that if wo could meet now it is doubtful whether it would not bo more painful than pleasant, but that if it bo his lot to go now he will soon have a joyous meeting with many loved ones gone before, and where ihe rest of us, through the help of God, 1 hone ere long to ioin them.”

dermatic injection of blood serum from ' tho veins of an animal previously immunized by gradual saturation with toxine derived from tho culture soils of | specific bacteria. Such serum contains the socslled “antitoxine.’’ Fntnrespeoifics. if attainable, will probably oon-

may

tho earth or in the waters under tho earth. Many of thorn are extremely

„ , , , , , .... beautiful and do infinite credit to tho first dose is four drops, but at the close artistic t;lstl . s of th „ lllllo . Human tig-

of tho period the horse receives 2o0 C,

division for points

south, and at Muttoou with I. ('. for points

non li.

E P. IIuestis. A Kent

C, or 4,250 drops without showing any local reaction or fiver. Advantages of the New Treatment. Tiie "antitoxine scrum” is separated from the blood of the horse and mixed with .2 per cent of trikcsol to prevent decomposition. It is a clear, colorless liquid, of thick consistency, quite sticky, has a carbolic odor, and in injected nuder the skin of the patient between tho shoulder blades, on thn thigh or arm. No reaction follows, and tho rash that sometimes appears is of no consequence. Tlieskin should be washed with S( .:p and cleansed wiih alcohol be-

fore injecting

Aae :'.u tho many advantages claimed for thi:; specific treatment at the present I stage ■ l ( xporieuce, covering thifuMinus

CL)i louicviut ktv, Albanyx Chicago Rr

In clfcct Sunday, May *7, isu;}. NOKTH HOUND. No 4* Chicago Mall l:2nam No S' “ Express 1^:06 paj No 44t Local. .. 18^05 p tn SOUTH BOUND. No 3* Ismlsvllle Mail 2:17 a in No 5* Southern Express 2:22 pm No 431 Lik'iiI 1:45p in * Daily, t Except Sunda,. VANDALIA LINE. Trains leave (■reencast le, Ind.. In clfrct Jar

8(1.1805

roR TUB WKST. Ex. Sun S:to a in, for st. lamia. Dally 13:25 a m, for st. Louis. Dully...... .12: 'I p m, for st. I .mils. Dally 1:15 p in, for -t. Louis. Daily !i:IH a in. for St. Louis. Ex. sun — 5:88 p rn, foi Terre Haute KOH THE KAST.

Ex. Sun. Dally . . 3:35 ji m,

.Mei-i p in. .2::I5 a in,

.3::>2 a ill 8:10 p in

No 15 No 7 No 1 No 21 No 5 No 3

No 4 No 20 No 8 No 15 No 13 Vo H No 2

Daily ... Ex. Sun. Dally ... Dully . Dally ...

S:40am. for Indianapolis ...1:35 p m, •* “

ures, representing historical or mythical events, are very commonly used, while emblems such as the double fish and characters of felicitous import, such, for example, as sbou (longevity) and chi (good fortune), are favorite subjects. On some of them musical strings are so arranged that they emit sounds of

melody as they fly aloft. The first ones so I i.en •• Terre Haute.

constructed aro said to have been iiistru- li Kx 7 ;, r> a m. inr l , "'>ria. mental m saving an army when ill dire : i ,,r complete time card. kIy.i.k all trains distress. The general commanding this { and stations, and for ndMnforinatlon us to

unfortunate force, being hemmed in by

I'KOHI \ DIVISION

sist or those antitoxines injected into tno

body to neutralize the poisonous effects j of c..- -, i-= n m t marked improvooftorint s. In regard to inherent or nat- ! mont in tho gem i : I erudition of the

. «—

nized as iho omnipresent and providen- j ul tbo injections a.o made v.itiiiu the tialprotection of the human race against first three dnys; a diminution of local epidemics of infectious disease, it has j pain und distress, (iiseoniiiiutiiico of irobeen demonstrated that tho blood of ad- \ quont local applications and an average ults in perfect health has a resisting ! decline of at lc:;st 50 per cent in tho

|

o\vb bulk 0l lOxilio.

I’oUunoua Bacilli. | FoKT Si OTT, Kail.. March 11.—The During ciuluhood aiici youtn this torce jury in tiio v ouioy muruor case iu tno

Ivi u i u «* i Hi tilt? i'irni A>«ff ree.

is feebler. In this early period of life the theory of the action of this an’itoxi’.ie is the transference of an acquired immunity from the blood of a horse to that of man, thortdiy neutralizing the toxic cause of the disease, and so augmenting tho natural power of resistance and so arousing th i vital energies as to turn tho scales iu favor of euro. Speaking in pathological terms, tbo bacilli themselves do not enter tho circulation. They net upon tho products of local inflammation and tho saliva, producing a morbific "enzyme,” which, through tho blood, reacts upon the protoids of the spleen to form a poisonous organic acid und toxalbumoscs, which in turn poison the nerve and blood supply of remote tissues, thus causing paralysis, fatty deg"iieratioo and gangrene of mu .- oles, so common in maligant diphtheria Antitoxine prevents and neutraliz< -

these processes.

Iu iv’l the Derm "diphtheria," meaning leather or membrane, was fir.-t applied by Bretonneau, who deniutciy oistiuguished it from other throat affections. Trousseau, his pupil, advocated antiseptic local treatment as tho lm,t moans of preventing infection of tlio constitution. In 1808 an Italian physician vaccinated his patients with tho crudo diphtheria virus itself, and Dagola of Siona did the same, which only added new terrors to the disease. Iu

the enemy, resorted to tho stratagem of flying in the dead of night a number of kites with musical strings so arranged as to emit sounds resembling tho words, El Ly ui3-i“ i 1 uk'' ihe >. y 1 iuiis, Ltit

(),,4 4.. 4..,,, ( 4l... ,.I...4.-,'l' ^4' l. . 1 ‘ tending host took flight at th

and wero i • irnyid—hor. ••, foot ami

D: tug'.-s 4 I 1 .ling siale I*; !».

It is ini j. danger* :. to cat su.hi ff.-h than Hi ::t, ! :!!;;• r.ionil ;;t d oomposii; i ; • t> in in tho flesh < fa h ex oclir.gly poisonous products, i. •:! !y compounds of phosphorus, 1 • ,i til ■ I formed. T'm poison is rn ir*ltu:.f, r.ad 1 its effects ::io usually first a severe at- —— k th ik, ^ severe CUN.S into the gnstro-eiiteiitm form Tin n come gn at coldm ss of thn ; body and in-rvous di.-turbaueo and depression. Another form slill more serious begins wilh nausea, si veto and protracted vomiting, compression of the pulse, great lowering of temperature, i cramp, diarrhea, then convulsions. The decomposition of meat does not produce the e poisons, and therefore "high" meal ami game may be eaten wira comparative impunity, but it must never he forgotte n that fish, tho moment decomposition sets in, becomes t:n ucTial poison, and that the further tbo decomposi- ' tion proceeds tho more poisonous the li: ii

Lmonnw >u —"... tVr»vL’ A ilvat'fieeT*

flow to i'x*t VVoodcouKtt on 'I’oust. For six persons there will Lo i quired liix WOOtiDGuLs MXbiioth of fcia.’U un-utl about two iuches thick, Imlf u pint of butter, lialf a tcaspoonful i f pi ppi r and one teaspoonful of onion jnieo Pluck,

rates, through curs, etc., addriiss

•I.S. Howl.ino, Affont,

w. F Urunnrk, '.rooncastle. Asst. Gen’l 1*883. A art. St. Louis, Mo.

T ^ I O O ! \ Travel )« be^t scj’—4 L, O l\ I Is commodsted in the -e I it rough bUiilii.il oiiiiei 4.4.1.. , T rtrining over ibe lines of the Louisville & Kashvillc Railroad. T ' - -

O

J

r 2>

: r> D

district court of Lynn comity, at Mound City, return 'd a verdict of murder in tho first (legroo. Conley murdered James Mapes, a oompanion, at a celebration at viood rich, .luiy 4, 1894. Ho is a well known young Lynn county

man.

5!an Idunt

Richmond, Va., March 11.—Tlio man who died hero 1 ist night from starvation and exposure has boon positively identified as Carey C. Arthur of Ohio. Ho was found in a boxcar partially loaded with coal. It is not known how he got there, and lie had boon iu tho car prob-

ably a week.

8uiofd«d by Drovvnhiff.

Cincinnati, March 11.—Au unknown Woman auioule J yeutoi'day by jumping from a pu r into tho Ohio river. Tlio body has not yet been discovered, but a letter addressed to her mother, Mrs.

Colia btraum of Kansas City, indicates gin go an ,i draw tlio birds. Save the liv that tno saicule was Lssttio Sirauiu and . , , , l . ,, , . that she followed George Marsh hero I ^ 8 ‘l - ‘ SS r t , r ... .1 , ‘ , ? rh« iiirfiH. skewerim» tii« Iig*® *yir.‘j fhn

V*kvkt» vviv-'j * kO.i'C a vOva, I I -11 • 1

bills, season with a teaspoouful and a half of salt and half the pepper Now

AI hull' lire we will sell tickets to rub soft butter over the l.nnst, legs mid fii-0.1. CROSS, IJ. W. Pksl, Agb, Chicago, III, Ahih iinn, Flurida. Georgia, Kentucky, j Bides. Place the birds on their baoks d. P. ATM0RE, Gon'l Pass. Agt,, Louisville, Ky

New Orleans. Missi-ip$i, North Caro- in a dripping pan and at tho proper

time cook them for 12 minutes in a hot oveu. Arrange them tastefully over the toast. Place iu a hot dish and garnish tho border with water cresses and ouarters of lemon. Servo immodfatnlv

A N ’fry

This fins runs doubit; dany i(inorning and evening departure) trains from Cincinnati, Louisville, Evansville, and St. Louis t ) the principal Southern

chics.

This line affords two routes to points in the Southwest, via Memphis and via New Orleans. This line has double daily steeping car service to lackson ville, and the only through line of Sleepers to Thoniasvillc and

Tampa.

This line has three daily trains to points la the South-

east.

The passenger equipment of ...iu iiuv i.s no. exce.icd i.i ir.e

South.

E

G

'■I

r.

Tiff l our llnini- SppkriV F>.<*111**1011.

I linn, .Smiili Caroli'ia, Tennessee mid

Virginia March 5. April 2 and April 30. Return limit 20 to 30 days.

F. P. lit - ESTIH, Agt.

V/inter Tourists’ Tickets nt >-.v rc-'ind trio rates on sate from .e.ut November 1st, good till

May .31st.

T'ul! informitinn cheerfully fundsheu

iifsun iipi.licatlon to

k i li

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