Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 April 1895 — Page 4

HIE BANNER TIMES, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. TUESDAY APRIL L\ 1805

FRUi'; "L S WER!

STRAWBERRY CULTURE. How to Set Plant* In Kiel*! iunl Garden. The Best Varieties. Strawberries will succeed in any soil that is adapted to ordinary farm or garden crops, though prefen uco is given in favor of the loamy or light soils. The ground ought to bo well prepared, drained and enriched. A usual plan in field culture is to set in rows 3 or 3 feet apart, 13 to 18 inches in rows, for garden culture 15 inches apart each way, leaving a pathway every third row' To produce fine fruit, keep in hills, pinching runners off as soon as they appear Ground should always be kept, clean and well cultivated. lu a bulletin on the strawberry, issued recently from the Cornell (N. Y.) university station. Professor L. II. Bailey attempts to answer the question

*00^*.

SKTT1N0 STRAW HURRY PLANTS.

so often asked, “What are the best va- i rieties?" by tabulating the replies of 110 growers in different sections of the state. A striking feature of these replics is the various character of them. Scarcely two persons recommend the same varieties for the various uses. The replies show very distinctly how great are the differences in the acknowledged merits of varieties in different places. Take, for instance, the six most popular varieties of the lot—Wilson, Crescent, Parker Earle, Warfield, Bubach, Michel. In Oswego county, where a late berry is desired, Parker Earle far outranks all other varieties. In Monroe county Wilson is mentioned seven times where the other leading sorts are mentioned once, and Parker Earle is not mentioned at all! In Erie county Crescent outranks all others. Each important strawberry center lias its own list

of favorites.

The most popular berry for earliness is Michel. Its closest secoud isCrescent, although this receives less than half the votes which the Michel does. Parker Earle and Gandy contend for popularity as late berries. All things considered, Parker Earle is probably the best late berry which has been well tested. The most productive variety is the Crescent, although the Parker Earle occupies this place in Oswego county, and it is closely followed here by Haverland and Buhach. In general, Wilson and Warfield /ccupy second and third places for productivity The best shippers are Wilson, Parker Earle and Warfield. The four kinds receiving the most votes as the best berry for home use are Bubach, Crescent, Jessie, Wilson. At Fig. 1 in the cut is illustrated a plant set too deeply into the soil, whereby the crown is soon rotted and the plant dies. Fig. 2 shows the other extreme, the crown being too high out of the soil. In Fig 3 we have a plant hastily thrust into the soil with its roots crowded together in a bunch. For a correctly sot plant see Fig. 4, where the roots are spread out evenly, and the crown is on a level with the surrounding soil, tiie latter being packed firmly around the plant. This plant will live and grow The others will die. The young plants should be carried in a pail with their roots in water. Do not fail to firm the soil around the plant with the feet. Shade for a few days with old berry boxes, a handful of straw or any similar light material

Spraying Pays.

Each year adds evidence of the value of spraying, but you must not expect too much from spiayiog, said Professor Beach at the annual meeting of the Western New York Horticultural socio- \ ty It.will not take the place of thin- j mug the fruit or pruning or fertilizing or cultivating it does pay, however, if you do it well and care for other conditions. Indeed no grower could afford to do without it. Tho speaker laid dowu these rules: First, spray after tho buds break ami just before the blossoms open. Spray with the bordeaux mixture, com- \ posed as follows: Sulphate of c >pper, 4 pounds; wat-r, 45 gallons; lime, 3 pounds. Second, spray just after b!os- j aouiiug ceases with tho same as the above, but add 4 ounces of paris green for tho codling moth. Third, two weeks later again spray with tho bordeaux mixture and tho paris green. Some of tho experts at tho stations are urging tho spraying of the dormant wood for apple scab. They claim that tiiero is everything to bo gained ami nothing to be lost by early and prompt j action and the use of strong remedies at a time when the infection is least scattered ami least protected. Others tell that their experience with grape diseases has shown the value of spraying tho | dormant wood with strong fungicides.

A Dollhouse*

A dollhouse is a great pleasure to little girls, and even boys do not disdain to play with one if “tho other boys” are not too near. Much satisfaction can bo extracted from a homemade one, a large box with vertical and horizontal partition forming four rooms. A curtain is hang in front, and the little housekeeper is as happy furnishing and arranging it as if it were one of the costly mansions with glass windows and real doors which are out of the reach of ordinary pocketbooks, says a writer in Ladies’ Homo Journal. Everything that is necessary to furnish a house can bo procured in miniature, from lamps for j the drawingroom to mops for the kitch- j eu. Tubs, wringer and washboard for the laundry, a revolving clotheshorse and clothespins leave no excuse for tho existence of soiled linen. Ranges in which a fire can be built, scales that will weigh tho ingredients for a tiny batch of cake, tin bathrooms, with bathtubs that will hold water to give the washable dolls a bath, and refrigerators, which are exact models of tho larger ones in everyday use, make doll

housekeeping easy.

A visit to a largo toyshop is a revelation to those of us who in tho days of our youth had to make our own properties for the dramas of doll life which we loved to enact. Here are not only dolls’ fans, parasols,shoes and stockings, watches and earrings, bracelets and pins, hut nursing bottles for baby dolls, two sizes, looking dainty enough to satisfy the hungriest dolly that ever clam-

1 ored for sterilized milk. Under the Kitchen Stove.

Under the kitchen stove is a “catchall’’ fi r every particle of dust and other litter that brings the broom so often into back aching requisition, and every housekeeper knows how difficult a place it is to sweep clean. Again, tho kitchen stove is almost invariably too low, cans-

NAPOLEON BONAPARTE. Reinstated In the Army and Promoted to a Captaincy. VICTOR I FOR THE MAN OF DESTINY Fires Ills First Gun at the Siege of Toulon. Emerges From Obscurity and Ills Extraordinary Character Keveuletl — The Keign of Terror In France. (Copyright, 181)5, by John Clark Ridpath. ] VII.—Jacobin and Cattain of Artil-

lery.

Bonaparte was cashiered; but ins case was not hopeless. He was able to leave Corsica with such a record as gave him a fighting chance for recovery. Throughout Ids life a fighting cliauco was all that he demanded. By his misconduct as an officer ho hail brought the disaster on himself. Ho had overstaid his leave of absence. Ho had refused to return when summoned to his command. His disobedience was rank. Busy among the Jacobins of the Corsican towns, Napoleon had heeded not the repeated order to return to Valence. Getting himself chosen, first major, and

III

A LABOR SAVING DEVICE, ing no end of bending over the dishes that are cooking upon it. Both those difficulties may ho remedied by adopting a plan recently illustrated by Country Gentleman. In this the stove is raised to the desired height by rows of brick laid up in cement beneath it, the outer surface of tho bricks being then covered smoothly with a layer of cement, if it is desired that the bricks shall not show. Tho cook need not then get down upon her hands and knees when looking at the pies baking in the oven, nor can any dust whatever got un-

der the stove. The Weather.

The indications for this vicinity

for the coining thirty-six hours are as follows as received by H. S Renick A Co. from the official

weather bureau at Indianaoolis: Indianapolis, April 2, 18!). f >. Fair weather, stationary tom

IIIPh

snail nave relations witn mscory in the

next two decades I

France had now become an ocean o f molten brass, seething, bubbling, breaking along the billows into flames of 1 lurid iglit. The Revolution was coming to its -ri-is. Hunger and despair in the heart of men hud done their perfect work. War was on with Prussia and | Austria and England. The emigrant nobility across tho borders was in li agno with tho enemies of the French nation. That nation had sprung up, an infuriated tigress, and woe bo henceforth to traitors) There was intrigue between the dying court and tho Emigres beyond the Rhine. It was now or never. Tho Terror came on; chateaus were flaming; the streets were slippery with red; tho axe went always up and down in the Place de la Revolution; tho day bf death, ami extermination was at hand. This condition of affairs in tho extinct kingdom of tho Bourbons brought tho revolutionists of France and those of Corsica into closest sympathy; for Jacobinism is universal. It is simply humanity in insurrection. Whether it be in Franco, in Germany, in Italy, in the Mediterranean islands, ia England, or the party-cursed cities of tho United States, it is all the same. The only question with Bonaparte now was whether ids destiny might bo better attained by tho leadership of tho Corsican revolutionists or by allying himself with the

Jacobins of Paris.

With skillful duplicity ho did both. Corsica, on his return, was in a fer-

ment. The popular party was at. one with the French democrats. The National Convention passed a decree that tho ex-

iled Corsican patriots might return.

Paoli went homo by way of Paris, where | he was recognized as a hero and made |

lieutonaut-goni ral and military govern-

or of his native island. Franco was divided into departments, and Corsica |

was declared to ho one i f thesn. Meanwhile, the world was turned

upside down Tlie Convention had taken the autumnal equinox of 17i!2 as tho date of a new era for mankind, it was an epocli of universal abolition. Tho marvelous thing was that while tho old ! expired under tho stroke of tho destroy5 er's wand, the now did not spring up iu its place. Thu King was brought to , trial and death. Tho proud daughter of

Theresa wont swiftly after her lord. Moderate patriots throughout France and the world were alarmed and angered. Washington would follow Lib-

erty no further. Paoli, establishing

himself at Curte, stood for moderation.

! Ho was too old and conservative to ho

(I ID k' For March.

People are surprised that F. C. \E\Vllt<UsE -ells -o many piano— especially iliuiog these hard limes. Here’s the re i« ai: Ilf- pianos are the best ami hi-prices are low. It'saeluir-| acton-tie "I mi- huu.-c to make ex-|

Local Time Chi. c .

BIG FOUR. CO I NO E \ST.

No 10* Vest ihiiU'd I xpress 5: .' !» n No 2) Indianapolis Vccommodation. .8:4.’a ji No 18* >outhwestern Limited 1:5^ p a. No 8* Mail p in Noll' 2:50 u m

(201 NO WEST.

No 7* V • *st i hull’d Lx press 12:22 am No li* Mail 8:42 a m No 17' NoiithweaternLimited 12:41)p m No Terre Hauie Accommodation. ii:28 p m No 11' 12:58 a in

' Dally + Except Sunday.

Tml!i No. H hauls sleepers to Doston and Coiumhus, sleepers and coaches to Cincinlatl. No.c mnect - for Chlo igro, Cinotimatl

f

el.M'when* for cash.

traonlinnry nllcrings. A Iioiish where!

youc:t I • 11 v on iTeilit ; 1 cheaply as ! < Irveland and .MieiifuHii division points. No

| 18 hauls > I copers :• r Washington via < .A <>. 1 -loop r lor New York and connects foi Col- ! iimhua No. 8 connects for < inctnnatl and 1 MlchiH’an division points at Wabash. No. 10. ! “Knickerbocker Special” sleepers t'»r New j Voi k. Nos. 7, 11. ii and 17 connect in st. Louis j Union depot with western roads. No. i) connects at i’iiris with ( airo division for points south, and at Mattoon with 1. C. for points

north.

K I*. lltTESTis. .Went

ill? SMssani Piano

And the

How piaiMPiin-Giiiiai

are ateadily winning favor with scores of our music lovers. Hadn’t jou better hear them? Cash or easy pay-

ments.

WARE ROOMS 17 S. INDIANA ST.

Albany s Chicago Er K

In effect Sunday, May 27,1893.

NOKTfl BOUND.

4* i hicugo Mail

d* M Express .

... 1:80 a rn ... 12:06 p m .. .12:05 p in

Local. ..

SOUTH BOUND. No 3* Louisville MhII 2:17 a m No 5* southern Express 2:22 pm No 43t Local 1:45 pin • Daily, t Except Sunda*.

VAN DALI A Trains leave Dret ncastle, Ind.

LINE. , in etlTet Jar

SclentMieSuspenders s„ 4 ; Made for health, comfort, durability and per- j ^<> 8 | IVet freedom for every moiion of the body! 'V ) 10 i No druiririn>r on the shoulders! Trousers a 1- Ne ]2 1 ways kept in shape and position. Easy in | x<) 0 I action! FreventbiiX nil straiii on the buttons No 2

! when sittInir or stoopinir.

If not on sale hv your dealer, we will si nd |

by mail on receipt of price, 50 ets to post-paid. State lie!irlit ami weight.

20, 1895

rOK THK WEST. Ex. Min 8:40 a m, for St. Louis. Daily 12:20 a hi, for St. Louis. Daily 12: .2 p rn. for st. Louis. Daily LM p m, for *>t. Louis. Daii$ 9:01 a ed, 1 ■ «• St. l«ru , s. Lx. >un 5:28 p m, for Terre Dante FOB THK EAST.

Ex. sun. Daily . . Daily ... Lx. >uti. I >aily ... I>al!y ... Dally ...

8:4oa m, for Indianapolis

...1:35 p m. •*

...3:35pm, " “ .. .»*:2> p m, “ ** ...2:35 a in, ** **

...3:32 am **

.. .6:10 p in “ **

UEOltlA DIN I MON

| Lea'•"'"“rre Haute. No T5 Lx >un

perature.

MooKE.

Hnw dear to my heart is the face of the dollar when some kind subscriber presents it to view ! It may come today or it may come tomoirow; it may come from others or it may come from you. The big silver dollar, the round silver dellar; dear delinquent subscriber, present it to view ! A round silver dollar I hail as a treasure, for often expenses o’erwhelm ’ue with woe. I count it the ;0 tree of an exquisite pleasure and yearn for it fondly wherever I go! How ardent I’d seize it—that lovely round dollar. The root of all evil ’tis commonly named. 1 oving money is sinful, some good people tell us, hut the penniless printer can hardly be blamed. The penniless printer, the hard working printer, keeps sending; out pnpeir- that interest you, so hand in the dollar, the big

NAPOLEON BY WHESSEL.

then lieutenant-colonel in tho alleged National Guards, ho had undertaken to got possession of the citadel of Ajaccio, and had failed. His leadership, like a rod of glass, broke to fragments in ins hands. Ho and tho whole Bonaparte family wore discountenanced, and lie

was glad to get away—being careful to ; rebaptized in tho muddy waters of Jaccarry with him a military record which obinism. But ( aptain Bonaparte at ho himself had prepared and the colonel Ajaccio was not of such mind and kind, of tho Second Battalion had signed, H 0 found himself at this juncture on showing his patriotic military services 1 Gvo military steeds, both going in the

and his rank as an officer. With this lie '

would regain his lost position iu the

1

I UN nriCsr-I’KNDKK CO. I l.lin), i No 77

1 or conipleti

IIUKFALO, N. V.

$500 000.00 OFFERED.

Kuiiuirl able Sticeu-g of a Foreigner The History of YT'ijoVs Wonderful Kemedie-—Make Iidu a M illionaire in Seven Year®.

.7:06 a m. lor U ’oria.

. 3:55 p ii’. for DecatuF. firm* card, (riv.i.*r all trains

, and statIons, and for fuli information as to

rates, tlirouirh cars, etc., address

Dowling, Atrent,

| W. F Hrunni h, (irccncastle.

Asst, ticn’l Pass. Asrt. >t. Louis, Mo.

Travel is best ac* commodated in tbe Through Pullman Buffet Sleeping Cars running over the lines of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad.

French army. At Valence, there was still much in Napoleon’s favor. Tho royal army was literally going to pieces. The organization of the National Guard in various parts of the kingdom had drawn off many of tho officers and infected many more with the disease of patriotism. Tho colonel of the Fourth Regiment was an old royalist who had gladly cut off the Jacobin Bonaparte from his command. It was useless for the latter to return to Valence, hoping to bo reinstated at such a court. Ho therefore made all speed for Paris, where he would have a hearing before tho minis-

ter of war.

By the summer of 1792 the roaring winds of revolution were shaking not only tho pinnacles, but the very foundations, of French civilization. The old order was already in ruins. Paris was in an uproar. The King and court had been obliged in tho preceding autumn to leave Versailles and come, in the most remarkable procession in history, to Paris. The starving populace had gone out to the royal palace, invaded it, hooted around it, drawn forth the King and Queen and their ill fated scion, and had hurried them off into thecity, dancing about them eu route and shouting in wild jocularity that now they had tho baker and tho bakoressand tho baker's little boyl All this wreck of royalty and nobility heaped itself up in the Tuileries, out of which the ancient monarchy of the Bourbons looked with wan face at tho weltering world. It was to this Paris that Napoleon came, with a billet of dismissal and petition for reinstatement. Guo war minister after another, to tho number of six, had now filled the iatportaot office

same direction, but at different rates of speed. Ho had never resigned his commission as colonel in the Corsican National Guards; but he now held a commission as captain in the French army, and was receiving pay from the national treasury. His captaincy and his colonelcy did not consist. Ho temporized and intrigued with the revolutionists during the winter of 1792-93; had an interview with Paoli at Corte; departed without satisfaction; broke with the governor, who ceased to be a hero in his eyes; made a conspiracy to invade Sardinia; tried to obtain an independent command; fell under condemnation of the Paolists, and in June of 1793, was obliged to leave Corsica with all the

family of Bonaparte.

Napoleon arrived at Nice on the 13th of June, and there rejoined his company. The Fourth Regiment, to which lie belonged, had been transferred to the extreme southeast, as a protection against tho menaces of the world along that threatened coast. The whole valley of tho Rhone was aflame with tho Revolution. Horror on horror had been heaped

throughout France.

Napoleon became a French Republican soldier. He was a soldier of fortune iu a sense more profound than that phrase had ever before conveyed. It must be confessed that the hardships and merciless conditions through which ho had passed, bearing with relentless pressure on his tremendous mind—inflamed as it was with unquenchable ambitions—are better calculated to excite tho compassion and sympathy of after times than to kindle against him that aisger and ceusoriousness which a merely logical consideration of his shortcomings, failures and unprincipled schemes would suggest. The judgment is mitigated in contemplating such a character

They are Prescribed by Uiindrels of 1’ln sicians in this ('inintrv and Recommended from the Pulpit. Since Vonocnnn* to thisecuntry some two and a half years atro, Mis remcDea have lomi ’ | a home at every fireside. The fac . alom .Hi: t thill t lies have iiei’ii .elnpted Lt hundreds o I physicians in t heir every day pr «c» ice, i*. p«> - Imps t he K»'eatest Kimraiitee as to their merit. Man> reverend K' nt|emeii have C Hiinieiiden Inwhl v from the pulpit, noinhiv amonir them heinjj the Kev Geo UriHleun. of the M Kchun h Xetini. Ohia, and tin- it v \ 1* McNutt, U.raancr. Ol io, also a Methodist olerKyman. llerme Venn left Europe, a svndieute of wealthy u< ntlenien. seehm the ureat imsslhlliiies' f tin 8 1 remedies, made him ad offer of 00.00 for Ids entire business. The Venn Remedies are sold by 50,000 drugirists Di the United States, with full instructinns f >r heme use. as follows: \ KMFM FK.\TI\ FSMil I* fjO cahotth] made from the famous Llandrindod Wat oils tlu quickest euro in the world for nor von - ness, dyspepsia liver, kidaey. blood and Htoinaeli disorders, had appetite, sleeplessness anil v^lien used with VFNO S ELECTP'C FLUID I c i bottle . will posi ively cure th • worst and mo t desperate forms of rlijumatism, sciatica, neuralgia, paraly i weak muscles, stiff joints, and all aches s ad pains. \ EN4! I,FNG TON IU (50c. a bottle), a positive cure for throat and lung trouble, bronchitis, asthma coughs and colds. Veno’s remedies have cured many Greencastle people who testify to their pjwer over disea es. All of Veno’s medicines are s id by Albert Allen. Druggist, Green castle I nd. Guaranteed to cure or money refunded.

Yanduliu Line Low Kate Excursions. April 2d ami 30th, 189.1. On Auril 2il ami 30th, 1893, the Yandalia line will sell excursion tickets to points in the south ami southeast, at one fare rouml trip. In a hlition to the above, round trip tickets u ill lie sold to points in Arkansas and Texas on April 2d, at rate of one fare plus $2.00. Liberal limits and stop-over privileges allowed. For full particulars call on or address any Yandalia line ticket agent, or W. F. Brunner. A-s't General L’assenger Agent, St. Louis, Mo, tf

0 R I D A A N D

This line runs double dally (morning and evening departure) trains from Cincinnati, Louisville, Evansville, and St. Louis to the principal Southern cities. This line affords two routes to points In the Southwest, via Memphis and via New Orleans. This line has double dally sleeping car service to Jacksonville, and the only through line of Sleepers to Thomasvillc and Tampa. This line has three daily trains to points In the Southeast. The passenger equipment of this line is not excelled In the South.

Winter Tourists’ Tickets at low round trip rates on sale from about November 1st, good till

May 31st.

Full information cheerfully furnished

upon application to

GEO. L. CROSS, N. W. Pass. Agt., Chicago, III. C. P. ATM0RE, Gen'l Pass. Agt., Louisville, Ky,

Write for description of

THE GULF COASl

T H E G U L F C 0 A S

J list received at the Bannkk T’i.mi - office some elegant new de-igns in fancy programmes, menus, etc. Call and -ee them. t f

(■ r<- which Bonaparte stood a peti- | emerging from obscurity, imm t tho play

tinner for rehearing. Tho now minister

was a Nationalist and favorably disposed towards the Corsicau adventurer; for the latter came with a uagga.d revolu-

dndtly dollar . dear reader, now will tiouary faco and long hair hanging to

\ou present ton llci'uhl.

it to view—Ilitntimi-

IHg Four Home Seekers’ Excursion. At hall' fare we will sell ink,,- to Alabama, Florida. Georgia, Kenlueky, New Orleans. Mississippi, North Carolina, Smith Carolina, Tenne-see and Virginia March 3. April 2 and April 39. Return limit 20 to 30 days. F. P. IlUF.sTIS, Agt.

• II for .V.

The Origin of the l>aisy. I he Races on the Neva. The Players at < Tiess. Ktchings: AfterwanN.

The Man Who Was Never Found.

An Original Assessor.

And other sketehes are to be found in the last issue of the Uhanddee book

his shoulders. There was delay in the office; and Bonaparte, with his former schoolfellow and future secretary, Bourrienue, was well nigh starving in tho

«fr** *ts.

To add to ids distress, the Royal Sch t! f T Gir's at Saint Cvr, under the immediate patronage of Marie Antoinette, went to pieces, like other xisting things; and Eliso Bonaparte was turned adrift with no friend in Franco except her sullen brother. To the credit of the latter, ho clung to his sister, and presently t'^ok advantage of her presence to gut another leave of absence, “iu order to conduct her homo. ” But lie did not do so until his cause in the war-of-fice had, cn tho 30th of August, been decided iu his favor. Ho was exonerated, restored to rank, promoted to a captaincy, and to crown all tho new con,

of-cuiupl-'-x fov. s. Into the foreground of \ (\ light and action. | ^Li

The regiment of Captain Bonaparte j cnnstitutod e part of th- Army of the! South, under command of General Car- ' teaux. It was tho business of this division of tho French national forces to operate for the recovery of Marseilles and Toulon; for these cities were held by the enemies of France. They had fallen into the power of the English | fleets, ns-’sled by the local loyalists. | The siUi.uimi wax .‘•trildiu; Patriotism was aflame in both tho cities; but the representatives of tho late monarchy, protected by a foreign power, were not yet down. It was out of Marseilles that, in July of tho preceding year, a band of patriots, most unique and strong, had marched to Paris, singing on tho way and to tho very porches of tho Tuileries, that famous war-song which Claudo Joseph Kongct de Lisle had given to the French nation and to all free men. So against Marseilles and Toulon, for wresting them from the English and

Cherrlea off tb« Mbrello ('Ihhh.

Cherries of the Morello class “ru i iiee department C. II. A 1>. R. R., more acid, and hardy as apples, very ..jun-oi, O. All for 3c. much less liable to rot than any of the i

sweet cherries, and are popular for canning; and for these reasons are generally more profitable for a crop, as they are less liable to rot, a longer time can be utilized in gathering them, and they do not decay as soon after being gathered. Of these Early Richmond. Montmorency

vnd Olivet are among tbe best

published by tho passenger department mission was dated back to the preceding i loyalists, the forces of General Carteaux of the (’. H. <S I>. R. K. Only a few February. j aro ' on the 9th of October, 1793, divideopies left, .-'end in your address and Tills was a great victory for the man I od and sent. Captain Bonaparte’s regime and a copy will be mailed you same of (U , Htiuy He was Captain Bonaparte, ment, with others, is directed against dav order I- received. AddivssJ hand- Tukil)K Klige l)y the hand, he spoil away 1 Toulon. Ho is given command of a sec-

to Lyons and Valence—whore lie paused tion of tho artillery, and is at last in

( in-

J. IVERKLE THE TAILOR

tins just teceived a splendid line of spring samples which he will lie pleased to show the public He i- prepared to turn out best work in pants and suits to Vie had in the city. Only \erv latest styles and very lowest prices. II w ill pay you to call and see him before ordering ••Isewhere. Kemember he is at the old stand. < Her the Western Union oUce, on Indiana St.

to be seen iu his new regimentals—and then to Marseilles and Corsica. His return brought together at Ajaccio ail the meinbera of the family of Bonaparte. He left behind in Baris the Countess Josephine do Beanharnnis. aged twentynine. And yonder at Vienna, in her Hapsburg cradle, nine months old, lies the girl-babe Maria Louise. These two

iiis element. Now for the first time ho is able to direct a battery against tho enemy, and to utter that tremendous word, “Firol’’ Here and now the cloud t f obscurity lifts from tho life of this extraordinary character, revealing him to tho world os one of the greatest in

the annals of mankind. John (It.auk Ruspath

finii & Did,

NO SMOKE. On and after April i, 1895. ail through tiams of the BIG FOUR ROUTE v*ni arrive nml depart from ST. LOUIS via the | NEW MERCHANTS’ DKIDGK and KLKVATLD

RAILWAY.

A “Daylight Ride ’ into st. Louis! No smoky and Dirty Tunnel! A beautiful ride of four miles along the river front! All trains enter NEW UNION STATION. O. McCormick. Pass. Traffic Mgr. I). H. Martin. Gen. d.»ss. iS; Ticket Agt. JAMES M. HURLEY

B. F. JOSKIN Haul os (he llignest (irad‘: lira/.il Rloo

Ilpi

i

$

And the llest I'ittsburKh and Anthracite. Cob. yard opposite Vandalhi freiirht ollice.

i

Has a Residence in Crawfordsville to exchange for a residence in Greencastle, and a few Real Estate bargains in property if taken at once. Real Estate, Insurance Loans. 1st Nat Bank Bldg, Greencastle. Ind

Subscribe for the Bannkk Times

EVERYBODY EATS EB R D Some people eat better bread than other people. They know better where to buy and consequently enjoy good health. They buy Lueteke’s Bread, j JIHES F. FEE. INSURANCE AGENT, PENSION : ATTORNEY AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Pension Vouchers, Deeds and Mortgages. Correctly and expeditiouslj executed. Office in Central Bank Building. Greencastle, Ind.

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