Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 February 1896 — Page 4
lUE BANNER TIMES, GREENCASTLE. INDIANA TUESDAi FEBRUARY 25
’• EACH BOTT1.E SOm IXAKES MANY FWIBWD8.‘ , mps' cis, cois m imp cm THE GREAT FOUR “C” REMEDY. THE ONLY KNO'VN SPECIFIC FOR Is-A. Ca-JFt-IFFE. If you hare LA GRIPPE, try 4-C. If your Children have the CROffP, try 4-C. If you CAN’T SLEEP from Cou^hiiiK and Cold, try 4-C. if you have the* ASTHMA, try 4-C. If you Nave a HARSH, HACKING COUGH, try 4-C. If you have CONSUMPTION, try 4-C.
DEPAUW UNIVERSITY
THE BEST NEWS OF OUR GREAT AND GROWING INSTITUTION.
There is actually more FORCE and “GET THERE” properties in a bottle of Four-C than in a gallon of ordinary cough medicine. In compounding it 1 have follov ed in no “ruts" or used the prescription of no Dr. So-and 80 of Amsterdam or London, or any other place. 1 owe its composition to no one in no single > particular. Neither is it made of herbs and roots dug in the dark of the moon in the jungles of ' Africa or South America. This preparation 1 first put up in Chicago in 1870. Since that time I had prepared it only as called for. My first advertisement appeared only i> few weeks since (put it on the market the 1st of December last). The demand foi the Cough, Colo and Croup Cure, and its wonderful success, has been electrical. Nothing in the whole history of Cough and Cold medicines can compare with it. No disease of the Lungs seems afile to resist its curative properties, as is well proven by the numerous ease s ot La Grippe Cored, Croup Cured, Tonsilitis Cured, I’nernionia Cured, Bronchitis Cured, Consumptives’ greatest help if not cure, Dry, Hacking, Harsh Coughs of weeks’and moil ill*’ standing cured with from one to three doses. My aim is to convince the public of my sincerity and of the true merits of this remedy.
‘Tin* Student*’ Tlielr College and *oeial Life Their <>ne*t* IncldenfM and IN ole* ol Hie Krlglil Live* of .Ytuiiy Voting; Hen and Women Told by Speetal Reporter.
Theodore Neese returned yesterday trom Cory, where he Inis been
visiting home folks.
Chas. A. Heard will represent DePauw in the state prohibition contest to be held in Masonic hall, Indianapolis, tomorrow at ten o'clock a. m. ()uite a number will i accompany our prohibition orator anil see him win another victory for DePauw school of oratory. Miss Dora Elliott is enjoying a
When You’re Hungry Late at Night and there’s i a of
VAN CAMPS
BOSTON BAKED) ptm
JIM-
V-
'SAUCE
in the house you're sure of a relishable meal. Delicious hot or cold. Always moist, fresh and ready to be eaten. At ali grocers, tOe, 15c and 2Cc. Send 6c in stamps and we will send )oa sample can. Van Camp Packing: Co., Indianapolis, Ind.
number of pieces o! art turniture for wood carving. Mrs. Walker is
Kocal Time. Gard.
RIG FOUR. GOINO FAST.
a graduate ot DePauw art school I •d’f'lnc'lnnnti NiphiExpri^a
4t tmliunaiioliB Flyer
and her work in this line reflects great credit upon herself and the school. The pieces are one beautiful china closet, two hutfets in quartered oak, one Moorish table, (walnut) and one large walnut
18* Knickurbockt r
going v*ust
No. 8.V £t. L Cin. Night Ex . No. '.»* Vail No. I!" South we stern Limited. No. 5t Mat toon Arc’m
Dally t Except Senday. <> I' ni.rlit to
9 ;i, m ... h L> a. lit 4:15 p. m . 5:21 j . m 12:32 a. IB . ... ► :50 a. Hi ... 12..1^ p. m 5 57 p. m
i ft.t
No. nigbt express, hauis throujrii ears i Cincinnati, New York and lloston. No. 4eon- • leetswitn trains for Michigan division , t Anderson a id tor < incinnati division.
No, 18. ”Kniekerb(K k( r.” hsiul
thunnrh sleeper for N. Y. and Holton and tor
NOTICE TO DRUGGISTS AND THE PUBLIC.
CONTRACT.—IlrugRUt, sre authorized in ALL CASES TO REFI ND THE PURCHASE PRICK Four-C Remedy (Phelps 1 C'oufcK, Cold and Croup Core) f^ils to give satisfaction In Croup. Bronchitis, Arthnia, La Grippe, l oughs and Colds, no matter how long etanding, or deep seated, in fact I guarantee it in nii manner of Bronrhlal or Lung trouble, not as a. Cure-All, but to give unbounded
satisfaction. Give it a trial on the above conditions. 1 take all chances.
I. H. Hukstis. Agent.
If the
Testimony of the Traveling Agent III. Cent. R. R. Mr. R. R. Phelps: Your Four-C Remedy is certainly a RRMAHKABLK MEDICINE. TOO MI CH CANNOT BE SAID IN its rAVOR My daughter suffered from an attack of La Ghippb that finally resulted in Toneilltis, with ulceration of the throat. Liss than one botti.c effected a COMPLETE CURE. G*0. K. HINES, *92 57th Street. ChicaRo. 111. Cough and Cold one year* Standing Cured. Union Stock Yards. Chicago. .Ian. 6.1892. Mr. R. R Phelps: We consider your Cough and Co,d Cure a remarkable remedy. My wife and 1 after suffering with a cough and cold for one year, and trying various remedies until discouraged, were induced almost against our will to try your Four-C Remedy. Its work was magical. Less than a bottle cured us both. Dennis Ccnerty.
Seven Years* Cough Cured. Mrs. Fuller, of €322 Sheridan Arc.. Chicago, aged 8T years, has this to say: “I have been troubled with a cough for the last seven years, destroying my rest by night and day. One bottle Phelps’ Cough, Cold and Croup Cure cured me. I most gratefully recommend it to my friends.” Henry Grady, elevator man of the Anglo Am. Packing House, Chicago, says: “Phelps’ Four-C Remedy is an ELEGANT medicine, a pew doses ccbbd me OF A 81* VERE attack of i a grippe and cold.”
picture frame. Hesiilt* she has
visit from her brother from Koko-jtwo elegant secretaries 1 completed Washington, l» via Cincinnati, r \ i 11• .. ii , ‘ , dlninir ears. New coaelios illuminated with
mo. Mr. Klliott will enter Deruuw ready to be put together, next fall. sent Miss O’Keefe, of Miss Crowder returned to her Mo , one buffet in quartered oak. home ia'. Sullivan today after a j Mis* Jean Nelson is doing some pleasant visit with 1’heta sinters i work in this line She is curviiiii
'(■per 1, IK
lie 2i 1 SO ifns on all trains.
Carthage,
a magnificent lady’s writing desk ''C^^viut uwa^c^
bsMber. euh mm soli g;re psrfsct satiifictioa o; dossj reMi. Frki, SO Cts, per Betti*. R. R. PHELPS, PropY, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. DENVER, COLORADO. ROR S7YL-e BV ORUGGISTS ONL.Y. Insist upon having; tho FOUB “C’*ItEMEDY.
ave you
Read The
Has it got You?
Daily
Banner
Times?
^ A lovely coru-
plexioti only Natiin
give. She giv<
\
r.cct: in tii
soap. .% B ,.v. W i
tion with the Cream.
f liUrS*;»jr, iuv/.
fit for a baby’s t.Wn,
It is a paper ior the young,
the old, the middle aged, for rich and poor, for hit’ll and low, forTeachei and Preacher, for Student and for professor. It is a paper for the home. It is preeminently a paper for the people. You cant get along without it. You must have it. You will not live well—You cannot be happy without it. Because it is a home paper chock full ot good live, interesting news every day. It is in the van guard of progress and you must take | it to keep up with the times, i Identify yourself with it now and stay with it. In so doing you will get good, and dogood You will show your appreciation of hustle and enterprise and will demonstrate your right to live in a progressive)
and up-to-date town.
Bring in your name or v , v ,-><• />
telephone it in or hire a cheap
boy and send it in. | ■xr r \ *i era. Brings SDen to I OUTS lOr subscribers, j*und Nervous ProHtrfllid
A SCJNCi Oh IH- IHUUShf. When greenly blooms tin bonded wheat, And tiger lilies dot the vale, And faintly soi nts th • momUnv s’vi et, And kin.* do brim the flowing pail; What time the ] <*wrc loaves his porch And on the stonefly tests his wings, Where whitoly gleams the silvi r birch, Then in dark woods the wo »d thrush sings. When past the hay tlje meadows brown, | And stands the wheat in banded shocks, i And slow the streamlet trickles’down, And sunbeams bake the rifted rocks; j What time the dog days ’gin to wane, And skies are dun, and June is o’er, And sulks tho high poised weather vane, The wood thru.mi sings in woods no more. When asters fringe the woodland ways, And wild grapes hang on fence and tree, Ami hills are hid in ripening haze, And down the gulch the streamlets flee; What time the first soft maple turns, And a red shade the sumac flings, And on stone walls the ivy burns. Once more in woods wood thrush sings. —William Higg;-: in Youth’s Companion.
Yl§m
can give. „
clear and soft o^c to thofe v. ho • use Dr. Hehra s Vbla Cream. It is not a paint or powder to cover defects. It gets rid of tJu iKy by Nature’s own pro cess of renewing the vitality of the skin banishing all roughness, ndn—“ *— 1
moles, pimple.^ blackheads, tan. It docs this surely and b
roughness, redness, {••ecklcs,
sue )urn and armlessly, bc-
both skir
ctusc naturally. Its use means both skmbertuty and skin-health. Viola Skin-Soap hastens the process, because it i r . a pure and delicate soap. !t should be used in
con-
Tt should be used
Ordinary soaps arc not
1 rc
ream, 50 cent
TOLEDO, O.
Cushman’s MENTHOL INHALER
:•* s all trouble.* of the Head itiid Throat.
. CATARRH, HEADACHE,
('f if ' V NEURALGIC L3GRIPPE.
* WILL CURE
* Knec/.in 0 .^ MdTlflng,^ <#ugl»lHg, ;
li nued use eflecis j ' >Flli; 1 URK.
■ " v ENDORSED \t
iilnlie.t Difilicnl »»*
' llmritii'n of Kurop.
n il A111. r I c » lor
THE SHREWD GRAY SQUIRREL. Attemlinf, Strictly to HukIiichii. lie (let.
the Hclter of a Wily Hunter.
‘‘Of course.” said a hunter, ‘‘everybody knows that when a man with a gun comes along, the gray squirrel goes around on the other side of the tree; he doesn't get killed if he can help it, and he cau help himself pretty well. I remember once coming across a gray squirrel up a big oak; he was out on a branch about 40 feet from the ground. He saw me as quick as I did him— quicker, I guess—and when I was ready to fire, he was around on the other side of the branch. This brunch was very small, only a mighty little bigger than tho squirrel, but he hugged it so close and he was in such perfect line with me that you couldn't see anything of him at all except a little hit of the tip of his tail that was blown out by a strong wind. I blazed away at him and never touched him. Then I went around on the other side of the tret', thinking that possibly I could get a shot at him from there, hut us 1 went one way he went the other, and by the time I had got over on the other side he was on tho side I had come from, and in just as perfect line with me as he was at first, and just as safe. I tried him again
with just t! ■ same result.
‘‘Then I pulled a stake out of a rail fence near by and planted it in the ground on one side of the tree and hung my coat on it, and went myself over on tiie other side; 1 thought that possibly
1 might make tho squirrel think there j hatei* were
Miss Millie Heed school spent Sunday
in Avon.
Miss Florence
temporarily out of school
fT" the art
working at her recital program and expects to give her senior recital
the latter part of March.
Prof. Sic hell Schmidt i* arranging for an ensemble concert in the near luture. His pupils are doing some fice trio and quartette work as well
as in their solo*.
B. r. JOSKIN llanl es the lliuiiost tirade Itra/.H
Illoe
and friends.
The Phi Delta entertained their ma< * u * roni Hn antiquated solid rna lady friends very elegantly last ! * 10 ? aD y * ,a ^ e U)a( l e f°>' nnd used by evening. j Mrs. F. P. Neison’d great grand-
Miss Tutewiler returned from a visit at her home yesterday after-
noon.
The most enthusiastic demonstration probably in the history of Do Pauw university occurred this morning. It was in commemora tion and celebration of DePauw's third victory over Indiana university in joint debate. Early in the morning groups of students were seen and heard manifesting their college patriotism about the college and campus. The number of these patriots gradually increased until the eight o’clock hour approached when nearly every student was on the war path. The boys did not satisfy themselves until ever}' recitation hud been broken up After this had been done the chapel bell was rung and the studen'ts collected and held a mass meeting in Me harry hall. Here Dr. Gobin, <'ol. Weaver. Profs, liigham and Pi iesi made speeches congratulating the students on their recent victory. The debaters also responded to calls for speeches and several others made speeches which started the genuine old DePauw enthusiasm which soon culminated in a most enthusiastic demonstration. After the meeting at Meharry hail several of the cadet band boys collected at the head of a procession of about fiye hundred students who marched to Black’s, the undertaker, and pro cured a coffin box and draped it in I, U. colors. A number of pall bearers took charge of this and marched over the main streets of the city followed by a long procession of students. After a short time the procession was joined by one of the university cannons drawn by a team of horses, accompanied by Lieut. Lewis. The procession then proceeded back to college where C. Hah introduced Watson L. Lewis, the Demosthenes of DePauw, who pronounced a glow ing tribute to our departed friend, I. U, Mr. Lewis said that it was no wonder that I. L’. had at last succumbed to the chilly fingers of deat’i as he believed that the last three blows which we had given her in debate were sufficient to put a quietus on anything. Alter the funeral oration the triumphant de-
pt need on the coffin
toMfo'
In effect Sunday, Jan. 12,1896.
NORTH HOUND.
No 4* < hicairo Mail 12:55 n m No fi* Mail and Accommodation. . 12:(‘5 p m No 44t Local 11:40am
SOUTH BOUND.
mother in Baltimore, Mil , lonir be- No 3 * Louisville Mail 2:52am
’ ’ 0 No .V Mail and Accommodation 3:2: p m
fore our fathers saw the li<»ht of No(3t local ii:(0um
Dally, t Kjcocut sundit,
dav. Thus wc would call it a I’ullinan slceoiws on night trains, parlor ana
dining cars on No*. Sand i>. For complete time
modernized souvenir of great an- card* and full Inforniatlor in regard to rate*.
tliroujrh cars, etc., address
tiquitv. J. A. MlCHAkL, Agent >„, ' .. r . , ... , K. .1. IlfcSB. u. P. A Chicago l lie MacDowcli concert, the fifth = and last of the artiste’ course for V/VMDALS/^ this season, will he on next Monday Tralnsleav< ureencostie, ina. in effect Feb. evening, Murcu 2. for the west.
Vo 7 Dully 12:2t a tn. Tor >t. Isiuis.
Miss Foster, formerly ofournrt ?■' 1 • '!“!!>' >:ir.« m, for >t. i.oui*
• 7 Nu 5 Daily a in, for St. Ldu'm.
faculty, is now a member of the No21 ! ,r1 d i:«.pw.for>t. isjuie. “ No :i i.x.-ur» 5:l*pm, foi lorrc Haute, Art League in New York city No ll Daily no. for St. Louis.
J FOR THEE.
No 12 Daily .
!v
Vo I, Dully
FOR Tin: EAST. 2:27 a m, " L:;o:i in “
n in, for .'ndn.napolia
Ids p in. "
.. .;i:SI p in, “ “
Ao20 Daily. No 8 Daily ..
No 2 Daily t'KMp in
PEOItlA DIVISION
r.iilutt, t llOUgh I.eat'*-'."‘ rre llautc. No 7li L.\ sun 7:05 a m, tor Pooriii.
Oil ac- No 77 " " 3255 pir. for Dicutur , lor cmnplcu- tiiuu card, yiv.i.if nil truing
count ot her t ather s healt h, is Still and Btatlon*. and for full Iiiforniutlon as to
raves, through cars, etc., address
J.S. Dowi.ino, Agent,
K A.'.Foun. Dreencustie in il l Puss. Agt. St. Louis Mo.
Andthcllcst Pittsburgh an Anthracite yard opposite Vandal!H freight ofllce
C. SMVTIIK.
'!• No. 3r> Vine st.
It W TUCK EK.
“ • 310 “
310 Washington.
Drs. Sraythe & Tucker, I’hysicians ami Surgeons. No. 17 VineStrect. ftreencasile. 1ml
Ue.diH’cd Kntcs to Hot Springs, Ark. The Vandalia Line has on sale excursion tickets, oooil ninety days, to lie famous Hot .Springs of Arkansas, at
very low rates.
Hot Springs is the only health resort owned, indorsed and conducted L\ ihe I nited States Government. Ciniiafcl like that of Itlay. This is the best sea-! son to go. Over .'ton hotels at d tHiarding tiouses at rate* to suit all vi*iior*. | The hot waters have for llfiy yeiirs| boon found unexcelled for the etiro of 1
1
Best Route Southeast
South
Southwest
is the
Louisville
and
Nashville Railroad SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS TO PROSPECTIVE SETTLERS.
Full information cheerfully furnished upon application to ]. I. BIDGELT, I. V. Pm. uut, Clicaio, 01. C. P. AT10RE, ou'l Da. Agt.. Lotinille, IT.
rheumatism, blood and *kiii cliseas-..,) feniole conMilamr*. troubles of the stomach, liver ami kidneys, insomnia,! nervous prostration, etc. For illu*trnte,l pamplcl* and full lu-l formation call on neare*i N aiioidia Line ) Tick-t Agent, or nddre*-
K. A. Ford,
Qen'l 1’iDsenger Agent.
St. Lmfis. Mo.
s^A. P.T. L.
bedecked with flowers
5K,
’riio
A 111 p I
LDS.Sor© Throat
looking out for.
liultHtlona. Taki'iinKCUSHMAN’S. Price.soo.ataii Well, We dodged around that tree iiriiggi.t.. ui iiiaiieu ini.. a*i ni, »»nM. ( rsnman s for ouito a spell longer. There wasn t
ss I** Si T* 1 lt r% n ■ aa 11u'riniivi-l111 >'iii-o« it( .
were two ui.ai there, or put him i n 1 w |,i,.( ) W as
doubt long enough to enable me to get 1 , . ,. , , , . , a shot at him, but he never paid the jL ^ • colors iuI o\et which slightest utteutiun to the coat- I don’t waved the DePauw ensign in trisappoae it would have made uny ditler- | um |. ) |j i \ picture of the procession
euce to him if I d opened a clothing i 1
store tliero, lie knew the man with the was taken, as
ered heads gathered around the
r. Bron-
is, La GRIPPK.
The moHt Refreshing I
an.i iieniihfui uhi t« l-uu, aud it wus tlie ruu that he was
HEADACHE Suffer- n
the Sleeples*. Cures IiisomniH
«mT ih-toolwi with worthh
«Oo
i*Tiui Nervous ProHtrutioii. Doii’iIh*fooled with "orthlfSH ifiiitations. Take nnh CUSHMAN’S. Price, •Op. at all
The American Protective Tariff League is a national organization advocating " Protection to American Labor and Industry" as explained by its constitu-
tion, as follows :
•deeping cars, h ave < hicago every •• Th.objMtof tr.:, L«*u.•hall bate protMA
numerous uncov- Tlllir*dav \ia Hie NortllW.'*teni line, Amanoan labor by a tariff on importa, which •hall
’’ i in. w . adequataly aacura Amancan induatoal produoto ered around the l”"'rates, picturesque route, quickest a f a, n tt the compatition of foreign labor.”
time and careful attention are advan-
Personally < reXcursioTia t«f
California.
Via the Chicago, t iiicn 1’acille .V Nortliweslem line, in iip)iol*ter'>i1 tonr-
il
THE BANNER TIMES MENTHOL BALM pother ^ "" ” ” - ' - ' could go to, siiirl he knew his only sufe-
Addreaa Cuahman Menu^- fy ] u y ntickiiig to the one he was in,
Cuts, Wounda, Burm
nrdifH for PIL
Prlppi* I'rftek, ('olitrann.
i* now attracting attention in all parts of the wo. Id, on account of I tie marvel-
~ | other remedies for Book on Menthol free. A'l factoring Co., No. 3 momurn H„u7l.. . CHIC AC
Excel
im,
ns. Frostbite*.
EB Price 26c. nt Druggists.
hman Manu-
Straet,
DAD.
324 Dearborn o. wr VIMIAKia
and the way he did stick to it and keep around always on the other side of that branch was something wonderful. I fired
ous discoveries of gold which have! ‘II wisdom * ways you d wisely kesp, j five or six shots at him altogether and been made In that vicinity. The North Two tilings observe wttli care.’’ i fl]led fbo brallt . h uuilpr b j m ba if fnij „f Western Line, witli it* unrivalled » Vj!'' *’i‘i‘i l r l,U < * ,nel1 ’ j shot, but never touched him, and when
equipment of solid vestikuled trainsofi I I thought I had wasted time and ammo-i . , 11 , • i, ^ palace sleeping ';*r',di"iiigcars_and R. £3. HURLEY nit ion enough, I left him. ’’—New York ] l ,l8ee ' where lt Wl11 < ’ er, ' ,,n, ' V nwt
reuiains of the defeated and departed to perform the lust sad rights. The musicians again struck up the strains of a funeral niarcli and with speechless lips and tearful eyes the remains of the oratorical spirit of our sister university were lowered into the cellar of the undertaker in their last resting
tuges (ifl'cieil to those who join the-o i
There are no personal or private
excursions. I os I of berth only fli.OO. profits in connection with the organizaA*k your iicurest ticket agent for full tionand itissustained by memberships, particular* or a.biros* A. II. Waggoner,! contributions and the distribution of its
T. I’- A.. 7 -IscU.on Place, Indianapolis . , ,• . Ind. HCi.iwks 1 publications.
FIRST : Correspondence is solicited rsgarding
'* Msmborship " and *• Official Correspondents. SECOND: We need and welcome contribution!,
whether small or large, to our cause.
free reclining chair cars, daily between
Chicago and Colorado, oilers the be*t| wws> Locust street,
of facilities for reaching < rinplc creek. | for (Musts and full infoimaiion apply ^ -
t® ticket agents, or address W. B. Knis-; For Sale.—Old papers, suitable for
kern. General Passenger aud Ticket | putting
-Agent Chicago
1 b"»V "
Greencastle, Ind.
under carpets or on closet
Snn.
soon be resurrected. Vale I. 1 \
Subacriptions f'>r any n.r.ga/.ine j or paper takenat t.iis office. \' e will save vou nionev tf
M! SIC AND AKT MUTES.
b. Graham
igoJ^North western Kail-I shelves, for sale cheap at the Banner
i Tlwes office. „ .
The li A N ti EK T I.HF6-
F. b. Graham lias this week shipped to Mrs. Minnie Rowe
IX. * week. < Walker, »f Terre Haute, quite a
For l.etier Heads see
The Banner Timf*. pril.ter*.
Dr. L. Kittinger, a leading physician of Wilmington, Del., asked the proprietor of Brazilian Balm to send him a dollar bottle. A few weeks afterwards the doctor said: “I had a couple of cases of old Cough on hand that completely baffled me. I had got to the end of my string. But the Balm made a prompt cure in both cases. It is a remarkable
remedy."
THIRD: We publish « large lin. of docum.rU covering all phase* of the Tariff question. Com* pletn set will be mailed to any address for 50 cents. FOURTH: Send postal card rsquest for free anibie copy of the •‘American Economist.
copy of the American
Address Wilbur F. Wakeman. General Secretary,
-York
sampie Add res
135 West 23d Street. New
Do not purge yoursoif tor uoniitipaUoi o.'.Jv m.ilum matters worse*. Use Braztlimn JuAlm iame as for pile*. Iu»tant relief •nr! permanent cure.
