Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 July 1895 — Page 4
THE BANNER TIMES, GREENCASTLE, INA>r/r‘fA
Fill DAY
JULY
18! 5
The only remedy in tlie world tlmt Refunds Purehase Prieeii it Fails to Cure the Tobaceo Habit in 4 to 10 Days is
It Cures while you Continue the use ol* Tobacco.
'I In- greatest discovery of tlie age! A certain, pleasmt, per.iialient, eure A lifetime’s sttllering ended for U liy smoke and spit your life away? \\ 11v sillier from dyspepsia, lieartImm, and drains on ytmr vital forces? stop using tobacco, but stop the right way! Drive the nicotine irom your system by the use of tins wonderful remedy. N vitcoil-CritK is waDanted to remove all desire for tobacco in every form including t'igar, ( igatvlle, and I’ipe Smoking, Chewing, and Sunil Taking. Use all the tedi.iecn you want while under treatment, and in from four to ten days your •‘hunkering” and “craving” will disappear the weed wont taste good. Then throw away tobacco forever. X ai(coti-<'i in; is entirely vegetable and free from injurious ingredients. It never fails togive tone and new vigor to the weakest constitution. Kememher Nakcoti-Ci hi doesn’t deprive you of tohai'eo while alh eting a eure: doesn't ask you to buy several hollies to he entitled to a gvaran'ec; doesn't require a month's treatment: and. tinalh , doesn’t enable you to stop tobacco only to lind yourself a slave to the habit of tablet chewing. With N'AitcoTi-U' nt:, when you are through w ith tobaceo, you are through
with the remedy. One bollle cures. Send for hook of nrnmiueul testimonies like the fol.owing: Hiiiitbiirton, Mass.. M IS, IS'.ir, The Xureia i i la lineal I o., 'Iii'liililleld, Mass Oenlletien: I have used tolmeen for o\'er 1 u enty live years, chcwlntt; and siiiokina' every day frnin 7 a. in. to w p. in. stopidnvt only for meals. nil Monday. Pehruary I, I ealled al your olHce In Sprioyrileld. and Iminrht a bottle of the Cchk wInch I used as directed, and ini the tenth day t he desire for lolmeeo had left lyie and it has not returned. I did not lose a meal while tiikiutt; thccniK. My appetite has ImI roved and I eoiislder Naucoti t’CKK a trntnil tiling. Very resin etfully, t'H VS f. I.INCOLN Mr. Frank II- Morton, of Cluenpec Falls. Muss , late inspeetor of I’liblic lillildings for Mas- icbllselts. says ; I useil toliaceo for twenty-fivo years, ind vvi.s# continued smoker. In just eight days’ treatment with NAlieoTl-i cur: I wnslhrough wiih tohaceo. In fuel the desire for lolmeeo vanished like a dream. V ers respectfully. Kit VNK H. MDHTON. If vour druggist is unable to give full particulars about A’AitcoTi-Ci hk, send to ns for I of Partieulats free, or send $ o. I HI for bottle by mail. 1U Harcoti Ciismical Go,, Sprinofielii. mass.
DULL RUN' RKCALLK1). A CHAT WITH OLD RESIDENTS ON THE BATTLEFIELD. Story of a Veteran of the Fourth Virginia Cavalry How Colonel Hire of MaNKacliUKettM Stood I.ong at IN^atli’M Door. Tlie Spot Where Doth Hattleri Knded. [Special Correspondence. | Wkij.in'.iton, Va., Jnue^l.—This little hamlet on the ManassSs gap branch of the Southern railway is just three miles straight south of the point where the first battle of Hull Run ended, and a few rods from hero Johnston stopped the cars on their way to Manassas Junction, and, like a true soldier, started his men on the dead run toward the point where the firing was heaviest. As all readers know, he took command on arrival, and the face of things changed very suddenly. For many a weary week after that great humiliation the northern papers were filled with "guff and rot” about the P’liie having begun among the teamsters, about masked batteries and any other silly excuse that could be thought of. It is to he hoped that all such bosh has long since ceased. The battle was well planned by McDowell. The Federals fought surprisingly well for raw troops, and tlie result was one of those accidents in war which Julius Caesar and Bonaparte could not probably have prevented if they had been there. Present Day Politic*. The scene on this dozy summer afternoon is rich in local suggestion. Theold men sit under the trees or on the shady side of the country store and brag about the big things they did when they were young. The listless clerks are excited occasionally by the arrival of a darky with an order for “three sacks of fertilizer. ” Next to the structure which is depot and warehouse, agricultural implement, dry goods and gmeery store all in one tlie most conspicuous building is one which I at first took for a church, but found it to be the hall of the local Farmers’ Alliance. It is worth noting as an evidence of tlie great strength that organization has in this part of Restate. Politics is of course a perennial subject with the old fellows aforesaid and the
•(mi ‘siiodciiBip'i; ‘it IBdUIOg SlIHjOBd liUlEQ U2A •p joquioiti3v{ •jpciu open aip s.ieqx U' U a not )l> joe ]uiv: Si ‘oi isazts stuid uj ’sjui -. Hi jc poi[si[3i XprajS puu p.'UJBD Xjtscg 'U3JT!3 oq oj Xpr.vi pun tjsojj ‘jsiom sXc.w ’uuaAcq spuujq jaqjo '-’uj lo.vtqj snopipp r 3Acq
' 7 ^od U3)IV0 N01S09 dm NVA
j^ICYGLES. Are the HIGHEST of ALL High Grades. Warrant(<i HupcM'inr to any Bicycle built In the world, reuardlcss of price I>'» not he induced to pay more !non« y for an inferior wl.or' Insist on having the \Navetly. Built ami ^0:1 rati teed bv the Indiana Bicycle Co., a million dollar concern, whose bond is as jfood as jjold. 24 LB SCORCHER. S85. 22 LB LADIES’, $75 ANDUKSON Mt BARKIS. Exclusive Agents 1S1 it
A FRIEND’S ADVICE.
If you v\ i-h to save 10 to 20 per cent on the dollar then buy your Dry Goods, Notions, Hats and Caps, Boots and Shoes, Groceries, Tinware, Glassware, Queensware, Woodenware at
Cushman's MENTHOL INHALER
Tlie GiotiG sipig
COR MAIN AND OHIO STS
tf
Cures all troubles ol tlie Bead and Throat. CATARRH, HEADACHE, NEURALGIA. LaGRIPPE.
iou stops
HiHifThur. coughing,
WILL CURE a ,n -
g, snuffing,
BEABAIUK. Conti n u i*ti use e fi e c l s
St RE c I ItK.
ENDORSED !i:, liigiipst nietiical autliorities of Kurofie *«»"l A in ei if a l»» r V COI.DH,Sore Throat Hay Fever, Bronchitis, La GRIPPE. 'Hip most Refresliing and Healthful aid to HEADACHE Suffe-
rs. Hrings Sleep to ^.ll( , Sleeuless. (Hres Insoumia nd Nervous Prostration. Don’t befooled wilh worthless
N it couftosv* ibc j to read this type at it tn«: lie* from the face, jou had better g • to Dr. U. W. and havyoueeres lifted wi»h • fair of *ne«*tacies.
The largest Stock of
MU SEMIS Ever brought to the County. Do not trust your eyes to Peddlers or Jewelers. O. W. UKaNGKv. 'Jfti-lyr-e. o. w.—»l-lyr-c. o. w.
HIS
imitations. Take only CUSHMAN'S. Price. 6O1 Druggists, <»r mailed free. Agents wanted. I LSI MENTHOL BALM E3* uc S,. w »TS d,r 5iJ. sore, Cuts, Wounds, Burns, Frostbites. Kxeels a other remedies for PILES Price 26c. at Druggist Book on Menthol free. Address Cushman Manu facturins Co., No. 324 Dearitorn Street, tlonaa Huddinin, CHICAGO, «r VIMKNMs I Ml.
kgents wanted, t i otiMAiN s rod lives wonderful cures of
CH,
I "\i . I' :i 11
Price 26c. at Druggists.
VlOL^
w'
j y A lovely com-
j plexion only Nature
I can give. She gives a new, clear and soft one to those who use Dr. Hcbra’s Viola Cream. It is paint or powder to cover defects.
gtts rid of th< by Nature’s own process of renewing the vitality of the skin ; banishing all roughness, redness, Deck! moles, pimples, blackheads, sunburn amt tan. It does this surely ami harmlessly, because naturally. Its use means both skinbeauty and stein-health. Viola Skin-Soap hastens the process, because it is a pure and delicate soap. It should be used in connection with the Cream. It should be used in the nursery, too. Ordinary soaps arc not fit for a baby’s skin. Viola Cream, 50 cents. Viola Skin-Soap, 25 cents. Sold by drug-
gists or sent by mail. Send to G. C. BITTNER CO., TOLEDO, O.
Keeping everlastingly advertis ing brings success. tf
Subscriptions for any magazine *»r paper taken at this office,
will sare you money
w
\N’TKl)—An honest, active trontlnmnn or Indy to travel for esdabllshod. relia- 1 ble house. Salary >7Ml, payable $15 weekly
Yy (> I and expenses. Situation permanenr. Uefer-
envea. KncloMetd-lf-achlrctuu'd stamped envelope. The Dominion company, U1H Omaha Ruildlnit, l hicuifo. 2aU3u. I
"DON’T YOU KNOW ME?" SAVS HE. farmers, who ooiue and K" at intervals, always pausing for a few minutes’chat. I find that all the way up Hull Run from Manassas about one-third <>f the people are of northern birth and rearing, and that every kind of political opinion flourishes luxuriantly, from gold monometallism and regular old John Adams Federalism to Jerry Simpsonism and a mild form of socialism. Old residenters on the two battlefields tell many interesting stories, a few amusing and many rather pathetic. Visitors are surprisingly few—so few that as 1 wander from farmhouse to farmhouse the people soon come to know me well and are very communicative on all matters ouco so fiercely disputed. As to the war and its results, that is no more a live question than tlie wars of the roses Long ago, 20 years at least, public opinion became unanimous that it turned out for the best, and tin nearly all other old issues discussion has ended and opinion crystallized into dogma. But there is one on which tho ebb and flow of views and guesses is just as continuous as it was 20 years ago—namely, What progress have the colored people made, and what are they really capable of? "As to tho war,” say one and all, “we honor our soldiers and want jus tice douo ’em, but for the rest we care nothing. ” Htill they love to toll of the stirring times and laugh about tho adveutums of their neighbors who were "caught both ways, us they thought you all was coming on some other road. ’ ’ Going to Kichinoml. There lived near Sudley church an amusing character named Burkett Newman, who was too old for the militia and too obstinate to believe that there was going to be much of a war. He had been living so secluded that ho knew nothing of what was going on and started on tho famous Sunday morning for church along the heavily shaded road. His attention was attracted by steps behind him, and turning he confronted the long line of blue and was struck speechless. Recovering himself, he gnsi>cd: “Wha—what—what I Be you old Abe’s men?” “That’s what we are. ” “Why—why, whuh you all going?” "We’re going to Richmond.” “Oh, you air, air you? Well, go ou.’’ And they did, but not quite to Richmond. A few hours later the church and his house were filled with wounded. Into this litrlo cove, which oven today can scarcely bo seen a few rods away for the dense timber, a few shells wore fired from a Confederate battery by mistake. No damage was done, and the church was not struck, but much was made of it in the northern papers. “Were there really any of the wounded bayoneted?” I asked of Mr. Benson, veteran of tho Fourth Virginia cavalry, who has lived here all his life. “I never heard of any, and I’ll give you my own experience. 1 hadn’t’ listed then ; lived over east of the nm on the Sndlev farm. Ou the second dav
after the battle messengers came all through the country calling for everything, as the wounded were suffering awfully. A few didn’t like to help, but they were very few, and we all worked hard cooking and making soup. Oh, it was an awful eight all around the place! Some had their jaws broke aud some their teeth shot out, and others Mere shot in the stomach, and tfiese all had to have soup, you know. I couldn’t but notice, and it’s real curious how different sick men are. Some thanked me even with tears in their eyes, and some cursed me because I gave them so little or the soup gave out before I got to them. A few were very much astonished and had expected to be killed. The for eign Ihuti took it as the regular thing and said nothing. They expected to be treated equally well no matter whnt hands they fell into. But I must tell you of one very interesting case. Wliiit Colonel Klee Did. “There was a Colonel Rice of Massachusetts, who was shot through hot! lungs and dying. I thought. A day <•: so after I sun that he was just the same, and so I brought one of the doctors. He took one !• ik aud said. ‘I’ve got m time to waste on such cases,’ and went on to help them bethought had a chance of life. 1 put some hoards over tho colonel’s head to keep off the rain, and he took his chances on the hare ground, for | all tlie inside was kept for men that had a chanco to live and men to ho operated on. A few days later I found Colonel Rice just as well, it seemed to me, as when I first saw him, and then the doctor had time to work on him. Well, sir, in three weeks he was able tube took to Richmond and got wed fast. Only a few years ago he came to •ipe mo and staid around some days. “I hapi»eued to mention that there was a debt on our church, and not long after he went home I got a letter from him with a draft for the whole amount and the letter said it was made up mostly by Grand Army men and some that .had been wounded there. The letter was lead out in church, and I tell you when the reading was finished there were not many dry eys. It seemed too good that the old feeling between Americans had come liaek s< completely.” Mrs. Benson has a rather more pointed story to tell and tells it in a more snappy southern way. As the flunking division of < ar army passed by the house on its way to the Sudley ford she stood on the porch, and noting her black looks a jocular New York hoy sang out, “Say, ohf* lady, where’s your rebels?” Her eyes gleamed as she replied: “You juat keep right on, ami you’ll find ’em. They’ll be glad to see you too. ” lit tho rout of the afternoon these troops, as men nearly always do in a panic, tried to find the road hy which they came in and ran through the yard aud garden, throwing off their outer clothes as they ran. Mrs. Beijam clapped her hands and shouted with delight till exhausted, but not one paid any attention to her. Many years had passed away when, says Mrs. B., “a very genteel man drove up to tho house, walked in us if he had an interest in the place and appeared right glad to see us all. ‘Don’t you know me?’ says ho. ‘Indeed I don’t,’ says I. ‘Ah, 1 had on blue clothes when I made your acquaintance. ’ And, would you believe it, it was tho same New Yorker who dpoke so saucy to me in the morning! I was delighted to see him. He staid round quite a spell and showed himself a very pleasant gentleman. ” Air. Dugan’s house, where Mr. Benson now lives, also has its little story. On the morning of the second Bull Run battle the Confederate generals breakfasted there, and soon after shells were flying about it so thick that the j family ran into the hollow. Thinking ! the battle over, they returned to the house and in ten minutes were caught between two fires. A shell exploded in j the midlde of the room and wounded a woman and child, hut not seriously. “Fact is, ” said one of those present, “wogotcotched both ways. \Venaterully calculated they’d oumo in same as they did at the first battle, but it was faced right round the other way, each shooting contrary to what they shot before, aud completely fooled us. ” A ruthctlc Chk»>. But the saddest story is that of Airs. Judith Henry, which has often been told. Her husband, Dr. Isaac Henry, was surgeon ou tho United States warship Constellation when it was commanded by Comftiodore Truxtou, mid her son now lives at the old place. She was 85 years old and unable to walk. When the shells began to fall near the house, they carried her into the hollow, but, finding it no safer, returned to the house, where she was killed a few minutes later. Her grave is in tho front yard, aud around it are a fow of the old trees, all twisted and deformed us a result of the battle. There was a heavy locust grove, aud seven trees survived ■ the first battle. Four of these were shot all to pieces in the second, and the other three arc worth going many miles to sen as specimens of what a locust can endure and live. A red sandstone monument north of | the house marks the spot where both battles ended. The Confederates held the ridge at the first battle and repulsed the Federals. The Federals held it in the second battle and kept the Confederates at bay till they were able to retire in something like order. Mr. Hugh F. Henry, who now owns the house, is 82 years old and a gentleman of unusual intelligence. He has refused offers to purchase the farm at a very high price aud has had it entailed to remain in tho Henry family as long as property can bo so fixed by the laws of Virginia. It was a strange experience indeed to walk with this old gentleman around his mother’s grave, where brave men struggled so fiercely 24 years ago, and hear him talk with all the vivacity of youth of the happy future of our common country. J. H. Beadle. In the Biukiu islands, "though there sre neither vehicles nor public lighting, :he inhabitants have letter boxes and telephones.
rJP
bocal Time darn' BIG FOLK. *
OOIKO EAST.
No 38* Nlfrht Express No lieltHimpoli!* Arcommudati i, No 4* IniilaiiaiHills Flyer
No h* Mail
: ..**;
v,
12*
i'ii
No IS* Knickerbocker
noise w ear.
So 35* Night Express Mo »* Mail
Noli* S. W. Lindteil
No fit Mattoon iceotniodaiion . rs No 3t Terre Haute Accou iniMlailon -"!''l > i»
• Hally ♦ Daily except Minrtny ’ No. 38. night express, hauls thrnugl
Cincinnati, Ni w York and Itosti u. v, '’.I* f ', r nccts with trains for Michigan dlvim, ’ t ‘"'- I Anderson and for t.'lnclnnuil dlvlsh, 11 " n v 'l4 connects for t liiclnnati. sprlngth M » Wabash, Ind. No, IS.‘‘Kiilckci bi., k, i ■ i' 1 " 11 ! I thrinmli sleeper for S. 1 . and r.o-t,,,, , , l,: ' AHshingtor., I>. i .. vlat Incininitl, i , ,, ! 'r lining car. New coaches llliunjnated "' lv ‘
gas on all trains
*iiti
r P- Hcssrts.
Battle Ax PLUG The largest* piece, of Goo_d tobacco ever sold for 10 cents 600 Simples to pick your spring and summer suits from. The finest lot of woolens ever hrmight to the eity. Spring Suits from $19 to $25. P:»nts from $4.50 to $6.50. Ei. W. WHITE, Merchant Tailor. Over Jones’ Drug Store, opp. postolliee Cleaning and Repairing A SI’M IALTY.
In effect Sunday, May 1:, isiVi
NOKTII BOUt>D.
So 4* l hlcago Mail No «’ *’ Express.. No 44? Local
SOUTH Mill's li.
No 8* Louisville Mull No 3* Southern Express
No 43+ Local. . .» Hally. + Ksccot Sunda,
bU,,
a ®
'fe.
I’ulfinan sleepers in night trains, pari,, P . ln , 1 inning cars on day trains. Kof coiui,l, t,. cards and lull Information in regard i,,
t 11 i'a 111 • - li (•lire: (•It*
(] ini tiff cars on cards and full
tlirniiL'h cars, etc., address
J A
K. ,J. ill kd, G. I*. V., rhicawo.
J A. M.n.A„,
VANDAUA Line Trains leave i.rccncastn , ii, |. m ,
voh the west.
No 13
K.x. Son
. .. »:0! am,for 8t. u U |, — 12:2ii e. m, for st. |,, )u e' . ..12:2.i p in, for -I. |,ouu'
No 7
Hally...
No 1
Hiiily . .
Vo 21
Hally...
1:35 p in. for -i |.,, 1|t , .. .. »:44 h m, for Si | n||
So 5
Daily..
No 3
Kx. sun
... 5:2s p m. foi 'i|
FOR THE EAST.
No 4
Kx. -un
“In: “ r
No 20
Hally .
No 8
l >aily ..
.... 3:35 p in, “
No 111
Kx. sun
8:17 p m, “ ->
No 12
Hally .. Hally
2:35u in, •* ..
Vo «
4:30 a m “
No 2
Daily
0:03 p in “ ■»
KKOIll A l)l\ I SION Lea’ " Terre Haute.
N(> 73 Lx Sun 7:05 a m, lor I' •< h. No 77 “ 3:55 p II'. for Hn«in, lor complete timecard, glv.i.g idl to,in. imd stations, and for full information as tn rates, through curs, etc., address
3.S. Howi,ing, Agmt, ■
' .ri'ciicain'e, '
W.K Rrunnek.
Asst, tien’l 1‘uss. Agt. St. 1-ouis Mu.
tMPIRE EMSdOIDEKY. This Most Popular of Many Classic Styles Is lOspecially Adapted to Linen. The empire is the most popular of the many classio styles from which beautiful lines may he borrowed for embroidery work Although for some years past it has been laid aside to make room for charming plant and flower designs, it Is, with the revival of the classic in all ornamental designs, becoming again a popular stylo for embroidery. These empire designs may be embroidered on any suitable material, hut they are particularly adapted to linen. Alany useful pieces, such as pillow and bolster shams, lambrequins, scarfs, ta ble covers, centerpieces, doilies, carving cloths and others of a similar nature may bo made of antique linen or of other suitable material on which the embroidering may ha douo with equally good and satisfactory results. Tho majority of empire designs for small pieces appear to host advantage whuu worked in outline stitch, but
Don’t insist that the old rattle-bni | your grandfather bought and that hw j come down to you as an heirloom i-m good a> the modern piano. In tlie iliv: j of your grandfather there were only about a dozen piano manufacturm] j with only about a dozen ideas of iiiano | construction. Now there are hmiilnili j and as many modern ideas. Tin brainy, keen and inventive men who niaketliH S7VYITH 3< NIXON PIKNO compel the prejudiced public to admit rbe superiority of tins Musical Beauty. It is better, infinitely bn-] ter, than tlie old fo-sil your gramltnther j bought. N’o time like the present. Mod-1 ern ideas predominate in the Wonderful Smith & Nixon I'iaoo. < ome in and see them whether y u wisli to buy or not—we’ll treat you courteously. F• G. Nerwhouse, "a re room, 17 S. Indiana St.
\ andalia Linn To Baltimore. Mil., July H; and K, ret urn limit August 5. Account. I!i|ilist A omig IVople’s Union of Aineria. ] Fare $17.20 for round trip. I’o Boston, Mass., July 5 to !), extreme limit Aug. 2, one f .re fur the round trip. Account convention of < hristian Endeavor. J. 8. Dow LIN 11. Agt.
A NAPOLEONIC CENTERPIECE, where tho eolid embroidering can ne employed to good advantage the combined modes of treatment will bo very satisfactory. The colors used in the empire furniture, draperies and ornaments were red, green and gold, but where it j was necessary the other colors figured in a measure, so that when embroidering empire designs, if these colors or shades of them are employed, tlie effect; of design and color will be more pleasing and in keeping with tlie style. Numbered with other designs illustrated in 1 ho Ladies’ Home Journal, authority for tlie foregoing, is a Napoleonic design especially suited as a centerpiece to a pillow sham. It is one that was employed extensively at the lime of Napoleon, and without the torch, but with the letter N substituted, this ornament was profusely embroidered on draperies, tapestries, household linens, . uniforms ami furniture coverings m use at the European court. It also fig. ured prominently in frescoes and iu mural decoration. For table linen a wreath sur winding your initial letter and worked in one or each of the four corners will be a very beautiful way to mark tho pieces, and tho time spent in doing so will he amply repaid hy tho satisfactory results. Fatal Accident. < . ) ”.’ ,uly Charles Hull, aged 18. loaded a gun with heavy shot yesterday and hung it above the door iu the sittingroom of his mother’s home, i The guti fell to the floor, and was distwr ^ P ? rtion of the load struck Hull s mother in the abdomen, and his the ™lnder iu
Bik Four Fxeiirslons. Big F- nr excursion to Boston, count i hristian Endeavor society, I •’ to !l, half fare. Stop off's will be lowed at <'hataiiqua and Niagara Fa For particulars see F. P. llt’ESTts. Ag B. Y. P. r. CONVENTION. Baltimore, Mil., July 18-21. Four route, official route Irom It ana. line fare for the round trip. Ti etk good going July Mi and 17, and g returning until August 5th. The < cial train will leave Indianapolis aU m. July Mi via the B ; g Four and (’I I apeake & Ohio Railways. For full formation address transportaiou leiu L. A. Clark, Crawfordsville, Ind.
JlllllfS F. FEF. INSURANCE AGENT, PENSION : ATTORNEY
AND notary public. Pension Vouchers Deeds and Mortgages, Correctly aud expeditiously eI ’ edited. Mllice in Central Bank Building. Greencastle, Ind.
Catinet anj Repair Wort Neatly and Promptly done D. W. RIGGS "hop: Comer Vine and Poplar SH.
Cl ( > ‘^MYTIIE. m. 1). No. 25 Vine St. \\/ W. TUCKER. M' 1 ’’ ' v *310 E. WasliiniftoB j DR-4. SMYTHE & TUCKER, Physicians and Surgeons, No. 17 Vine St. Greencastle, In 1 ’I
