Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 July 1895 — Page 4

THE BANNER TIMES. GREENCASTLE, INl'I A F*» SATURDAY JULY « 18ri5

tno other trom rue linine. it was tn»* policy of Napoleon to prevent the union of hm enemiea. Tho 15th of June found him on the Bel* pi;in frontier with 1:M,0U0 men. On the next day he defeated Blueher at Ligny. The attack of Ney on the English at Quatre Bras was un Bueoesaful. The impi-tuous marshal, who was now the Emperor’** right arm, fell back on the village of Waterloo. The place was about nine miles from Brussels. It was skirted by tho forest of Soignes. There the allied commanders had agreed to form a junction. Napoleon ordered Marshal Grouchy with his division of 34,000 to follow up Blueher on his retreat from Ligny to Waterloo. Tho plain purpose was

CUKES THE TOKACCO IIAlilT IN 4 TO 10 DAYS OK MONEY REFUNDED.

Uso All the Tohacco Till Your “Graving”

You Want is Gone.

N.wicoi i-!'ri:K i* tlie only reiiK-ly in the worM that acts dirortly on the nerve# anti drive* the nicotine from tin- sy.-tem in from four to ten days. Ii leave* the path id in better health than hefort! taking, and i* warranted free from any injurious ingredients. N.MiC<ni-Ct RK is po|iular heeau-e it allows the patient to use all the tobacco he wants while under treatment, or until the •‘craving ’ and “hankering'’ are <rone. It is then no * urillee to throw away tohaeeo forever \ AK ot t-( t kk is sold at th** uniform price ot f a.ttt) a hoi tie and one bottle

cures.

Money refunded if rcctions.

cure is not allei-ted when taken according t > dt-

Prof. W. N. WAITE, Of Amherst, Mass., Chewed Tobacco for to Years and was cured by N.ircoti-Cure. Amher.'t, Mass., February . s . l'' , . , .>. Tlte Xareoti ( hemieal t'o., tiprinjjlield, Mass. Gentlenuit:—Krplying to yours of the 1st, would say that I have used tohaeeo for H> years, and of late have consumed a Iti-ceiit ping a dav, hesides smoking considerably. I commenced to use tobacco when I was only P years old and have never been able to give up the habit until 1 took NurcotM tiro, although I have tried other so-called remedies without ell'ect. After using your remedy four tlays, all ‘’hankering for chewing disapputred, and in four days more smoking became unplea aut.I ha ve no fun her desire for the weed, and experienced no had etleets, whatever. I am gaining in llcsh and feel better than I have for a long time. To all who wish to he free from the tobacco habit I would say. use \ mcoii-t wue. \ours truly, IV. X. W Ai 1 K.

If your druggist is unable to give y u full particulars about NARCOTI-CURE, seud to us for Book of Particulars free, or send $5.00 for a bottle by mail. TUB Haicoii Ciiemicai so..

NAPOLEON BONAPARTE. A Spectacle That Has No Parallel In History. TRIUMPHAL RETURN FROM ELBA. AH France) Ilespond® to I!in Call to Armu. Hattie* of Waterloo and Extinctlou of the Old Guard— Death at St. Ilch-im of tlte Empcfor <»f the French. [Copyright, 1895, by John Clark Eidpath. ] XXI.—The Hindhed Days axi> Finis. On the 12th of April, 1814, tho Fast rode into Paris. It had on the white cockado of Bourbon, and came out of England. Thu Past, after an absence of twenty-three years, was old and fat. Young men born in tho year of the Terror, sitting in the cafes on that day, had never seen tho Past before. At tho gate of tho Tuileries, it reeled on its flue horse, and was about to fall. Thu attendants helped it to alight, and saluted it as Louis XVIII. Paris, tho city of effervescent jubilee, was ominously silent. Some ci-devant royalists tried to shout, and only gasped. That was the

Restoration (

On the 30th of May the allies conclud- wwaj ed their trial treaty of peace at Paris. | turn of tho bar with the l. tt leg is nour the Napoleon had gone to Elba. There he 1,111 stone chateau of Houcmont. Th.-I -d , . .1 • s.- /. . • wua foui?]it on tlu* lino of tho cross-bar and iu began at once the organization of his th ,. triu ,^ l0 , t ami th.,ei. v,s. “oouiitry, M just as though it wore an The conflict bc-an just beforo noon. Th« empire. His capital was Porto Ferrajo; armioH i iiLrakrixi wero of equal strongGi, num his residence, the Hermitage of La Marciana. | Ijering abinit t«,0U0 im n on om li side. Nap«>h*oii The new sovereign saw at a glance what were i wassuprrior in artillery ; but Wellington s sol- | tho resources of his kingdom; and the little diers had soon longer service in the field. They ! insular realm felt the touch of the master were his veterans from the Peninsular War, hand. Improvements appeared in the munici* ; ]»erhaps the stubbomest fighters in Europe, pal governments. A fine road was built from ' Napoleon’s first plan was to double ba.-k the the capital to Porto Lon gone. The traveler in allied hit on the center. This lnv< ^ v,,< .., j v . , . # ciipture of La Hale ,s ainte. and asastratt^ie H U \\ ln ^ U> ' tU K tht : Na V:: ,IH : nU :. l etiollary the taking of liougomont. The lat-

ter place was first att-acked The field and

oomo ham-1.

No it" Nlirht ExprcMM

No tmltaiiapolis Accoinni.MjiVi ; .

I in 1 iu it ii i ii > I i u V'lvo*.

[t 14

AVii-lti-r Banket Filled

No 4* linliimu|iollB Elj|.f So *• Mail Nu 18* Ktiickorbockcr

QOIKt W KMT.

\o.TR* Niulit ExpreHM.. Mo It* Mall No li* >. W. I.tmil.-il

No .v Mat toon VecoiiiiniMlatiini

3-il - i J

AVitli Flower, and Vine,.

u i Poeticailv speaking, the basket in tho

that if Bluc-h.-r should Join WellinKton. then • i i-irdeiiiug is supposed Grouchy should unite hi« division with that fllustratiou from O.miemng i of Key The failure of Grouchy to do this—to t 0 have been temporAriiy h hang upon Utwcher’, rear—was a tatal cir , having l ei'll used ill tninsplitllt cuiust.im-e of the final catastrophe. inir ni-irathering CUt flowers. PracticalOnthe night of .tune Kth the British and ng °r gatnermg j. m . ule French armies em-nmpiHl only a short distance ly it is a nt sed liuwir u

apart. A mixleru ticld-pioee could easily throw !u j follows:

u shell from La Bell- Alliance over La H ue rr.] 1( , j s removed f <,r 11 space 4 by 2 Batsto to Mont 8t. Jean and fsr beyond into . -u.-uri,, i,i the eeuter tho forest, miring tho afternoon of the ml. feet, drawing m slight!y in tno wait and the greater part of the night, then* was »i 80 as to approach the torm oi me

heavy rainfall—another fact in the catastrophe. On the following morning the Emperor, j viewing the situation from his headquarters | at the farm of La Bello Alliance, was unwill- , ing to precipitate the battle until his artillery j

might deploy over a dry field.

Hugo has made tho place and tho scene mi- j mortal in the greatest battlo-pioce since Homer. Tho field of Waterloo is an undulating | plain. Strategically, it has the slmix: of an ;m* ! mouse harrow. Tho clevis is on the height I called Mont St. Jean. Behind that is th** vil- | lage of Waterloo. The right leg of the harrow j terminates at tlu? hamlet of La Belle Alliance. | The left leg is tho nuid from Brussels to Ni- | veiles. The cross-liar intersects tho right leg • at La Han* Saintc. Tho right leg is the high- { way from Brussels to Charleroi. The intersec-

*»SJr»sasr5»s£ ■

\„. 36, ntglii exj.rcM, liu.ils thif.lwk Cincinnati, New iorkiin.1 Miwi,,, nrcl, wtih tmlmm for MU-hignn ,iivV'.' ! '” Anderson and for ( ini-lniiuti Uiv: | 10,1 ., connects for l lucinimti, V WatiHsh, 1ml No, l’ < v , *Kiii< l t , il„„. k ^" “ through sleeper for N. I . and . -k.. iNiishlngtoi:, l>. i ., via( Incinnaii c".'"" '! dining car. New coaches lliuodn...

gas on all trains. r £_Hcksti s . aG

Si

n-'d; '• jM

' 1 ■ ’ TfSCirf K '* m '

In effect >i;nda}\ Ms-p. p..soKTa bou:'d. ' ’ ] Vo 4" C hicago Mall No 6* “ Express ,. j No44t laical

sorrii bound.

So 3* Ixniisvillc Mull

I No v Southern ISxprees. So tit Local ! * Hally, t Except Sunda, Pullman sleeport .n nigln tmins dining cars on day trains. I ni

i cards and full information in regard T**

| tlirougli curs, etc., address

f. A. j rt,i,.ug/,;" UI -

t-. j. Keeu, <;

VANDALIA Liwi rainsU‘ave ««ret ncasth . i . ‘ 11 1

Hbn Martino, and notes with keenest interest the r«*lics relating to the brief ascendency of the Emperor. His reign in the island extended from the 4th of May, 1814, to the 2(ith of February in the following year; then the Man

of Destiny went suddenly away.

The temporary settlement made by the allies in Paris was carried to Vienna, in October, 1814, to be there completed and confirmed by a

congress of the Powers. Prince Metternieh | fortune back and forth,

presided. Tho discussions were in the ancient manner, orthodox and dull—mere platitudes and precedents. Tho winter months were con-

wood were carried; but tho chateau was held in the midst of horrid carnage by the* British.

Early in tho afternoon a Prussian division, ,— - .

under Bulow, about 10,000 strong, eailie on tin: willow twi^saro lllturwovuil 111 ll IhlSKOIr

F LOWE It BASKET ON LAWN.

8. Then gi ■ -u willow twi^s a quarter of au inch thick me lirnily set in tlte ground cIum- together in u Lite witli tiic e<li;o of the bihI. In'inK one fiKit hi^li 111 the center, gradually rising to 15 inches at the center of tlieencLs. Smaller preen

Trains leave uroencastn-, u,

III. I8!i:,

rou Tin: wkst. Ev -un ... '.:0t u in. Dir , ,, I Gaily 12:2i. a m. f,,, *, o M Dully 12:3.-. p m, foi -i |I Duj J h r p in. to, , ; I Dully .... !':4lin, f..[■ **i i . EX. Sun - r >:2H p in! r,„ ,, J rOB Tin BA81 *

! No 15 j No V

No 1 No 21

! No 5 I No 3

I Vo 4 No 20 I No 8 No 1(1 No ]2 n o r,

| No 2

Ex. '■*1111. I hilly . . Hally ... Ex.Sun. Daily . Daili’ ... Dully ...

■« rgWSfe

In a Can Likc j/fliat? ° Pork anil beans enough and good enough to go ptculflug with or to make u meal of. PORK AND BEANS urc prepart'ri irlth tomato nan re, which adds a rdlshable tart to thdr lastc. Madcfroni hiinil picked beans, the -.weelest of pork and the plunipesi and ripest of tomatoes. Always moist, fresh and delicious when opened.

.If tiroeem lOr, lav and V0<v

VAX CAMP PACK ISO CO.,

;! va

1

Iinlinniipolis, Ind.

ICYCLES.

1111*141 , ill HI* '*** ***' fit Id, and Napoh*<*!i had to withdraw a cbvision from his c<‘nt< r to repel the oncoming G rmans. For two or three hours, in the area between La H ue Sainte and Hougomont, tli • battle raged, the lines swaying with uneerlain

Haio Sainte was

taken and held by Ney. On the whole, t!n I British lines receded. Wellington's attempt t<> ' retake La Haie Sainte ended in a repulse. Ney i on the counter-charge called on Napoleon for | reinforcements, and the latter at that moment, changing his plan of buttle, determined to I make the principal charge on the British ceni ter. The support which he sent to Ney was j not as heavy as it should have been, but the Marshal concluded that the crisis was at | hand, and NniMdeon sought to support him with Milhaud's cuirassi. rs and a division of the Middle Guard. Under this counter-charge j the British lines reeled and staggered, but still clung desperately to their position. They gave a little, and then hung fast and could lie moved no farther. In another part of the ! field Durutte carried the allied position of PaI pelotte, and Lolmi routed Bulow from Plan chenois. At half past four everything seem.-d to portend disaster to the allies and victory

to the French.

Just at this juncture, however, an uproar was witnessed far to the right. The woods seemed to open, and the banners of Blueher shot up in the hori/.oif. Grouchy was n< t on his rear or Bank! Napoleon saw at a glance that it was then or never. His sun of Austerlitz hung low in the west. The British center must be broken, or the Empire which he had builded with his genius must imss away like a phantom. He called out four battalions of the Middle and six of th** Old Guard. In the last fifteen years that Guard had been thrown a hundred times on the enemies of France, and never yet repulsed. It deemed itself invinci-

ble.

At seven o’clock, just as the June sun was sinking to the horizon, the bugles sounded, and the finest body of horsemen in Europe* started to its doom on the squares of Welling-

. . , . . ton. The grim horsemen rode to their fate

wh.n thu Htiirtling now, wan borne to the l on- ljk „ s . Thl . ,. h . in , ( . ron.,,1 on ii k( , an a vagr**ss that Napolefm Bonaparte, quittiug Elba, lanche. It piling* .! Into the sunken r.Mwl of hail landed at Cannes. O’Hain. It seemed to roll over. It rose from

flashed north, south, east the low grounds and broke on th** British

squares. They reeled uinloc the shock; then reformed and sto*)d fast. Around and around

. i • i i i ii . those immovable lines the soldiers of the EmC*,urt newspaper chronicled the landing a. piro beat and bent in vain. It was the war of (Cannes thus: “ I he inf*>rmation coiiu*s to us : u t its climax. It was the final death grip

IU

NAPOLEON BY MEI88ONIER.

sumed in debates about technicalities. The real issue was how the Past might be set up again in Europe and the Future prevented. This profound business, so mediaeval and inane, was still on at tho end of February, 1815,

The intelligence flashed north, south, east and west. The cowardly and pallid Past enthroned in Paris smiled a ghastly smile. Th*.

liko manner, tho ends beinK drawn inside. The handle has three slender twigs, with a long shoot of Akebia quinata carried iu a zigzag manner till over it to form a trellis. A stout piece of string will answer. The handle must be carried 1 20 inches higher than the sides, or the plants will hide it. The inside is then lined with coffee bagging and good soil

(ilh'd in.

Now for planting: After yon have used a Manettia bicolor at each base of | the handle and a Solanum jasminoides ' at one end, a choice climbing tropaeolum at the other, drawn and fastened along the edge with a geranium or so to give constant col r, you can till in with any free flowering plant. Verbenas, Callirhoe involucrata, or any plant with a spreading habit, is good for the edp*. The manettia vine should be trained

from side to side

Mo a 111. fur Ii„] ;ani ....1:35 p m. •• . —3:35 j> m, ** ,

.."6:17 pni, ••

..•.2:3da m, • > ...,4:30a in •• .

... .6:03 ii m •*

•EOUIA I>1\ IshiN

“ Terre llantc.

i N(i7b E_.\ Sun 7:(It a m, |,, r p, NoTT •• 3:55 p ir tort:* I nr oomph i<- time card, . j »»-! ri:iii..|is. anil fi.i- in:! • ■ rnies, throuirh cars, etc., addr,* it. r, ,, •*-S' hoiVUNi;, W. F BHUNNEU. , . ” Asst. Uen’l 1'ass. Ajrt. St. Louis Mo

Are the HIGHEST cf ALL High Grades.

Warranto*! superior to any BIe> t*!** built in I lie worbl, ri*gar*lli»ss of price. 1)*) n*)t be in*luc**«l to pay mo , H* money f*»r an inferior wlicc 1 . Insist on having th** Wavcrly. Built mul guarant* , * , d l»v tin* lii<liana Bicycle (Jq., u million dollar concern, whose bond is as good as gold. 24 LB SCORCHER, $85. 22 LB LADIES', $75 ANDKRSON & HARRIS. Prelusive Agents iSi it

A FRIEND'S ADVICE.

If you wish to save It) to 20 per cent on the dollar then buy yonr

Cushman’s

MENTHOL INHALER

that that miserable adventurer and brigand Bonaparte has left the island of Elba and again polluted the soil of France with his bloody feet.” The next notice of news from the south was given in the same organ thus: “Our intelligence is that tho man Bonaparte has set out from Cannes to Lyons, and that certain turbulent adventurers have joined him on the way.” On the following day the same paper said: “It is now certain that General Bonaparte at the head of a grv*j;t and enthusiastic force iu approaching the city, on the Lyons road.” On tin* next morning the paragraph read thus:

“His Majesty the Emperor Napoleon entered i ly^his shattvivd columns,

th** city last night, and slept at the Tuileries 1” t This journalistic transcript of events, ab- ! surd as it seems, was in striking conformity 1 to the facts. On the 1st of March the “man Bonaparte” dkl land at Cannes. On the way out from Elba the ship Zephyr, on which ho |

of the Gaul and tho Tentfm. The Old Guard recoiled. The wild cry of La Garde recall** was heard above tip* mar of battle. The crisis of the Modern Era brok«* in blood and snick**, and the past was suddenly victorious. Tie* Guard was broken into flying squadrons. Kuin came with the conn tor-charge of the* British. Ney, glorious4n his despair, sought to stay th** tide. For an hour longer hi* was a sp**ctacle to gods and men. Five horses had been killed under him. H«* was on foot. He was hatless. He clutched th*’ hilt of a broken sword. He was covered with dust and blood. But lii> grim face was set against the victorious enemy in tlu* hopeless and heroic struggle to ral

pinched buck when tho tops moot.

Pruning Peach Trees,

Peach trees at tho time of planting should bo pruned to a straight whip, every branch cut off. At tho first starting of growth, buds low down along the body start into growth and all such should be rubbed off, the sooner the better, and up to the height where one desires the branches to form. In the subsequent one or two years trim off any side shoots that form too low down on the body and thin out branches that crowd. Also shorten back any strong branches that grow too much on one side soils to secure asymmetrical form. Little more trimming will be necessary until the trees have borne a good crop of fruit. After a crop of peaches the trees should be trimmed by cutting out three to four feet or more of those branches that extend farthest from the body or center of the tree. This will check the flow of sap in those most vigorous branches and increase the vigor and

Don’t insist that the old rattldj your gi andfntlicr bought : ni ,| J i onic down to you an | ll n-|,„„i,J . good a» the modern piano. In thej

, , „ of your grandfather tlien*

of the handle and | , lbout ., (1)lZ(>|1

was form**d by

Dry Goods,

Notions,

Hats and Caps, Boots and Shoes,

Groceries,

Tinware, '<p\

Glassware, 'oV*

Oueensware,

Woodenware at

1116 Gl3i)6 SIPI6 288 if

COP MAIN AN D OHIO STS

\\r K II i-uDluitf. ,l>i jlo lui> IJI"- I : .11. - four W tll , , v ,, I,. ll .r -.t Dr.O. W.lau, . i. m ,■ youreroB lttt»"1 with w nftirof *Dt*r* >*cf <-

Ever brought to the County. Do not trust your eyes to Ped-

dlers or Jewelers.

W. BEINGEk. SSu-lyr-e. c. «r.—4l-lyr-e. o. w.

Or.

Keeping everlastingly advertis ing brings success. tf

Siihscriptions for any magazine #r paper taken at tins ollice. Wt will save you money ft

Cures all troubles of the

Head and Throat.

CATARRH, HEADACHE, NEURALGIA. LaGRIPPE, WILL CURE A 1 , 1

ig, Miullmv,

IIKADACIIK. Conti it ii <*d ii **** efli’cts

SURE CURK.

plo r« ^iiuent of tin* 01*1 Guard

Napol**on into a last square around which to rally th** fuKitivcH. Th** Emt cror HtocHi in tinmidst and doolaml his purpose t*> <lic with

sailed, had been accostt d by the bar*iuo In- i ^Lirshrd Boult forc**(l him out of th** constant, whose officer called out through his nn<l th ' Biimms s*,uar«*. **«,iiiiiiaii*l.*d by

^ truiiqii't. Haying, “H„w U *I.nenU ,

Bonapart**> Nai)ol**oii, b**inK on deck ami the wild cry < f Vive rEmperour! hi*arinK the call, himself took the trumpet of ! On that spot French par riot ism has planted the Zephyr ami answered, “The Emperor is a bronze lion to commemorate forever the ex quite vv« ll, thank you!” At the landing, wh**n i Hnction, not of tin* Old Guard only, but of the an enthusiastic peasant came up in salutation, FT J ll iL ^l ,I)o oon fIn* Great. '1 h**re the

“"’^l Napoli,,» .aid to Bertrand: “Hitu i, -me r„- : bailee of'^liehiy Tnr^fn.nl'ATrh.mril!!:

emit already. cataclysm, and r**fl****ts with wonder how The spectacle that ensued has no parallel in | within th•• iiu im»ry of living men human na history. Tho old soldiers «>f tho Republic and ture could hav«* been raised by the passion of tho Empire rose as if from the earth to greet ! nattle to such sulilime heroism as that *lis-

iiia n-i t*u diiuiuiiH. i , ,/• -i a? i i ■» M< anwhilf the Prussians rushed in from the , ktTOligtli OI the more feOiilc 0U6S, and as riudit. Wellington's guards rose and char^sl. a whole ffreatly rostun* and equalize the

Havoc came down with the darkness. A sin- 1 - -

th*’ wild cry < f Vive I’Empercur.

On that spot Fr**nch parriotisin has planti*d

»*rs. Brings Sleoi

Uuuun lllli

Paris became a triumph. At Grenoble the officers and soldiers of the Kin# joined him. At Lyons the forces of the Duke of Orleans went

iln*

higlipot medical authorities of Kurope j tl A in e r ica lor LDS.Sore Throat Hay Fever, Bronchltis, La GRIPPE, The most RefieHliing mid llealllifiil aitl lo HEADACHE Huffer-

Sleep t*> tin* S!e*‘i*l**s.s. CureH Iiisomnia

iikI N*’rvoua Prostration. Don't befooled with worthless imitatioiiH. Tak*' only CUSHMAN’S. I’ric**. 60c.ul a!) Drnuyisis, or mailed free. Atfents want***!. < 1 SH.MAN'K

MENTHOL BALM

Cuts, Wounds, Burns, Frostbites. Excels all other remeilieK f*>r PILES Pri**** 26c. nt DniKubls. Rook on Menthol free. Address Cushman Mann-

facturing R?» £ ! r J??. rn .?.! reetl siasni. On the li)th of March, Napoleon enter jtlding), CHICAGO, **r \ IM k >.N I Ml. , ., , , , ,, . . , , , •,

ed Paris, and tin* Restoration was blown like

— a thistle-down out of the city. Louis fled to

ssl p /: , ?r^..r.f„?i. u,u T o i Tnlrtts:

but r->w to imtuort4il f:iine.

■.... .... .... ' — -- | The rest maybe brirlly Bummaiised. Na Q ,,.i , ■ ov,t to thi' Emperor. Ney, who hint accepted poleon once more In Pnria is obliged to at«h- exjieriinent stations liuve Shown durthe Kestoriition und iHS'oine a peer of France, cato without eondltlons. He becomes a fuKi- ing more rooont years that this odviK-uw

five. < >n th-'3rd of .Inly we see liini nt Roehe- . . ... ... ”

vigor aud symmotry of tho tree. Itoue and rotasli For Fruits.

The Rural Now Yorker lias been for 15 years an advocate for the use of bone and potash for hardy fruits, large aud small This authority says: ‘ ‘ Bone (raw bone) aud potash, whether in the form of ashes or muriate, will give to fruits all the food they need that the soil does not freely supply. We consider that nitrogen supplied in soluble forms is a waste of money. The nitrogen of bone is slowly soluble, and we may make it available by an earlier or later application. ” Experiments by fruit growers

hud promised the Kin# to put Napoleon bum i . .

<r,m cm and bring him to Karls. With a di- ! r™‘' h °the UniT«T sta't, ™but t Engbsh df-Ts vismnuf the army he met his old commander At , ;iIlti( .. H is mind is eonfused at Auxerrc, forgot all his hateful oaths of al j amid th.* wn i ks <.f his .b stiny. He chant’s legiiuice to the Bourbons, and rushed into the his purnos* 1 , and throws himself on the #**iierEmperor's arms. | osity of England. He claims to b** a prisoner

of war, and^ xiMH-tM the treatment accorded

of bone and potash for fmit plants has

been no mistake.

For eighteen days the gathering tumult

swelled and broke into a tempest of enthu-

to Torbay on the 2oth

The Polyantha Rotes.

The foliage and flowers of the polyantha roses ;iro both small. The flowt’^nre pmluced in panicles. Having

Commons. For been.crossed or liybridizeil with teas aud

(RUlM

A lovely coir-

plcxion only Nature

can give. She gives a new, ^

clear and soft one to those who x use Dr. HeiiraLs Viola Cream. It is'not a paint or powder to cover defect^ 1/ 11^ gi fs rid of them, by Nature’s own pro- ttJ ce.-.. of renewing the vitality of the skin ; ^ banishing all roughness, redness, freckles, moles, pimples^ blackheads, sunburn ami tan. It does this surely and harmlessly, because naturally. Its use means both skinbeauty and skin-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-

giita or m nt by cnaiL Send to U. O. BITTNER CO., TOLEDO, O.

Belgium, and his Royalist followers returned to England. The Con gross of Vienna rose suddenly from the consideration of court etiquette and regalia to find that their card-board house in Paris was gone, and that the Imperial Reality was there again with the gray coat, anil three-cornered hut, and marble face, just as

of old.

From the 1st of March to Waterloo was a period of a hundred and ten days. History calls it the Hundred Days. Th** iron purpose of Napoleon, his tireless energy, and omniscient

were 1

. , , piano inuniifarti with only about a Jo/.eii jc|,. as „f, fon-t motion. Now then' are huj uml as many moilern ideas. Tin In keen and inventive men vim nub S7VVITH St NIXON P!B|| compel the prejudiced public to» t'M' superiority of tin. M usifl Beauty. It L I letter, intinitelrl ter, than the old fossil your 2 f "ought. No time like tlm p: 1 ii;.l ern ideas predominate in the Wonderful Smith k Nivm 114 * otne in ami seo them whethil wi<li to buy or not—we ll tMij

courteously.

F• C.. NcwhouscJ Ware room, 17 8. It

h’i't.itIon! H is eonvi'.vcil

. »f July. _ Tin ('i* an* fu-

rious ili'liatis in the British

what dull we do with/f(mf I „ i- . . , ,, — That imli-cd, O Ori'ut Britain, <« u question! ' 111 r kinds, a list of valuable sorts has Tta worst, the most ungenerous thing is don.', resulted, and they are at least as IvinW He sbalt ig' banished to St. Heli'iia. Tile tiling »l. 1 .. i . T . 11 o'*' I is nreomplishisi. On the tilth of Ortob.-r, 1M.T Ils thi hardiest of the teas. Of slender the greatest military leader, and in many re- growth Olid everbloomiHITchur-iotnr tliev i speets the most reliiiirk-itile man who has an- ’ ‘OCj | iieared in Hie world sinee the i ra of i iin- i are b(>ulining great favorites. A few of was debarked on his <b solute island, thai th in are: Little Pet, Paquerette ('is-ile ■ ‘•Petite Isle with whieli he laid eomdudi d u,™ . 1 ii« , | his seliiMil exercise at Autun, thirty six yearn Umiincr ;md < lotluldo Sonport Tile List i

a Kg ! .... named is especially fine. Napoleon was not only exiled; he was tin I J

prisoned. St. Heh na was his prison. He wus I

guarded. His masters watched liim with era. I What tli» Florists

Htirvi *1 ui V TT.s.1.- .1. ...

Big Four FxrtirKions. Rig Ffiir exeursion to Iloqd count I hristiun Endeavor . iv.j 6 to », half fare. 8top nib lowed at ( hataiiqna and N .. | For pariienlars see On account of Christiin Knt convention at Boston, ue «il t Ickets to Boston via set' i.d • •« eluding \ ia Nlagara. «>ne I | lands. Hudson river, NCv Vi , - etc., at Itall fare, Julv " J ial train will leave Iiidhiiuqio'i' day, Dili at 12 m. and reach p. in. on the lOtih For hail I t ■ rcem ast!<• tickets w i I 4 #20.20. To Warsaw, Ind., account 'hi assembly, July 5 to Aug. 21. IS tut ning 15 days after date of 5 alei To Baltimore and Washington B* and 17, good returning iintiUl 5, $27.20. F. P. lit ism It. Y. P. It. CO.NVKN rtON. Baltimore, Md., July IH-H Four route, official route Ip* ] ana. One fare for the round trif «ts good going July p: and 17,J returning until A ugust 5th. II csal liain w ill leave lm!i ii.ap . m. July 11! via the B g Four aniij apeake A i Fiio Rail w a\ -. I ' formation add ress t ra n -1 1 L. A. < Hark, < rawford I

perception, wire never aein in such prodigkma survilbinei for nearly sixyiirs. F'ndertb.ir Hnddi,... erimtioii uml glare as iu tilts ncriod of Ids Sleejtlcss eyes he dictated lus “Memoirs" r..

eruption and glare ns in this period of his fate. The allies had become desperate,

Say.

very easy.

of Ids -“•’T*'-s ej. s Ilf uiei.iuu ms ■ ■ aieinoirs P, — r> *0 »exy easy. The T1 B. rtrand Conyers d with his friends, or Nought Manetti is still the Ix'st stiK'k Rnddin® an hour in solitude on tin* rocks n**nr Lom:- i i ^ Guaciing

whole world perceived that the Imperial r*»-

— Long-

.... „ * ,a „ , wood, looking out to the m*a. His health ut publicanisni of I* ranee, impersonated in Bona- length gave way. Though his constitution parte and springing in the wind of his sword, was superb, th«*re was an organic muLuiy must now triumph to tho borders *>f Europe which came, as if from his father’s grav*, to or perish miserably under the heels *>f band*M ^-V.V r ^t'»mach—symp-

U. u. IIITTM.K r<» . TOLEDO, V. Q

X

can bo done about the middle or end of

June.

All lilies that can lie grown iu the open garden can bo grown in pots.

, Frequent hoeing among the roses, in-

May, 1821, in the mi isolating the islam

Th* y gave him a grav<* under home willow . w trees, by u fountain In Hlane’* valli y. Then, especially persisted in durimf a Arv unoll for nineteen years and n half his body lay I Tl t _ >, (s n u.ry speiL

toms of which had appeared *t intervals lor a

decade—began its ravages, and

in

the

few

5th *>f

months he sank away. It was on nit? oin oi i , - --n m*

lidstof n terrible tempest | O^ler to keep the surface of the soil loose

desolutiug the island, that Naisileon diol \elll i„. 1 , „ . . "u* 1 louse,

will be found beneficial and should be

\\T \NTBD—An honest, act I vi

VV or lady to travel for eslablishtxl, relia-

ble house. Salary $.80, payable $1") weekly tml expenses. Situation permanent. Kcfer■necs. Kneloseself-aildressisl staniDisI envel-

rim of brass and fire that no human power

could penetrate.

But ho was obliged to take the field with In-

,, , I complete preparation. The allied armies of

i'omiJ ; m compansr ‘ 318 ' England and Prussia, ander Wellington and .Suildiug, I hicago. AlltJO. Blueher. came on. the one from Flanders, and

kings. Tho two ideas which the parties of tho past and the future represented were irreconcilable; they could no longer coexist. Either must Napoleon and his dynasty lie stamp* d into the earth, or the old system of political

society in Europe disappear forever.

The French people sprang to the call. In a un ,ji ;l n ,. w

few weeks 3117,uuu men. volunteers and con- , „ws of a re.... .. ...mi. M , m luxuj scripts, were thrown into tho field. It was the j hero who, at thcTjeg!milng'uf tlie ee'nVuryhad lost call to arms, and France was drained made France the first of nations; to him w in, ' riil k

had led her armies to victory and built

her an cm

rope. On ' ,

of the Emperor Napoleon, under the care of 1 r,,.

the not ungallant sons of Louis Philippe, was hlieagnus is reifitrcled hv so.,,,, brought back in state from the desolate island -o— - ^

of his exile and death. The coffin with ihe Great Dust in it was taken in pomp and pageant unsurpassed through the streets of Paris, and deposited in the saroophugus of dark red porphyry, to rest for tlmesand a time un-

ier the magnificent dome of the Invalldes. ; r peuuuious Hal) There he reixises; and the Third Republic Immense quantitieg of rnards him. Joan Llakk Riupath. ; durina- the flowerinff neriod 0f W

last call to arms, and France was draincc from her mountains to tho soa—drained not only of men and horses, but of that moral force and enthusiasm which constitute tho soul of war. Nai>ol«K>n declared that with a

gentleman 1 few additional weeks in April ami May of ibl5

he would have drawn around his Empire a

ycurn aim a nan nis ixxly lay, Tb.v T ^ *' x generation, rising from th.* shad* _ 1110 Ja Pdli Ru^wa hybrid, Georitt* vised BonrbouiHin. turned t** the Bruaiit rose is hur^v i ^ . theheginningof tlicc ntury, h‘,d . r ,„i ’ 18 llar,1 y lul, l Wortliy of

D the first of nations; to him who |

her armies to vletory and built for I Tile Mrs \V n ut.

miiire covering the Is tter part of Eu- , , . , mrs - "• L. Wlntney is a new

th " lKM| y h y brid tei * of great promise.

Eteagnus is regarded by some as in-

trinsically one of the most valuable

shrubs ever introduued.

ehJ t iCi Ja r aU Weepi,1K 1086 flowered

JllJES F. [ffl INSURANCE AGE«| PENSION : ATI j

AND

NOTARY PUBLIC

Pension Vouchers, Deeds gages. Correctly and expeditio* ?cuted. Office iu Central Bank Utiildii’Jj

Greencastle, Ind-

Cabinet ani Repair Neatly and Prompt^ By i D. W. RIG< Shop: t orner Vine Hiul ' 0 “1

When it c< me? to the g e, ul | of news the Baknkji Tim* 9 ll,f 1