Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 March 1896 — Page 4

rut imam;;: tuiks. ouK^AOAS'i'LR iXDiaaa Friday march i^isob

THE PICKPOCKET.

THE BIGGE5T YOU EVER5AW

Tne largest piece of .good tobacco ever sold for 10 cents _ .and Ine 5 cent piece is nearly as jarge as you get of othe^ hf'Sh grades for ic cents

“Doar,” .sh* iM) l, tit'iiilly (sho was a bride), **My pock«*t ha l iu picked!” Without a word (She was a ! : : U 1. \ r once demurred, But from his p<>« ket t u;, nor even Kigbed, A crisp new bill, an i asked: “W’hat was It, dear? A ten or a twenty? :'« *•, I have it here!” (E-ho was a hriue.)

Pay in India Is a n.utter of a _v. not merit, you see, and if their j ,.*i ;ulnr b >y wished to work like two boy- , business forbidtlud they should stop bint. Hut busincsu forbid that they should {;ivo him an Increase of pay at his prcM-nt ridiculou. ly innna-

-. • •«. •.•vj'v

turo age. So Dicky won certain ri es of salary—ample fur a hi y, va.I enough for a , >>

“It was hut ten!” with a soft blush she cried, But looked i o sweet that joyfully he laid The twenty in her hand, and thought he paid Bxnall price for her quick—kiss; she was a bride— Then turned, but ; low whisper met his ear, “p' ••h:u>s, perhaps, I ought to tell you, dear”— (She was a bride.)

-certai r y too lilt lo for tlie t! :it he, and Mrs. Hntt | C'

wife and child-

700 rupeo i'-

had discussed so li hth otve uoon a time. And with this 1 v.es . i toeonli tit. P Somehow all his mo:.' • se lined to fade ; Cj away in li uo dralfs and the <, hing ex- V> change, and tlie iono cf the l.omo letters | (r changed and jrrew qiieruh is. “Why j ^

Sr'A

%

Ssaatlfwl Fsci

Locul i'uT-:e Gard. |{''< K'U'I*.

lytr.

Her voice s:>.nk lower till; she faintly sighed. And sought for words she could not seem to find. At last, “ ’Twas I who picked it. do you mind?” Of course he didn't mind Gbe r.wa a bride). But thought it such a pretty little trick. He laid down twenty more for her to pick. (She was a bride.) —Alice Wellington Hollins in Elite.

AN 01.1) YOUNG MAX.

wouldn't I)irI v lut\o Ins \vi; ami. tho ; baby out? Httruly Ir.i had a s .lar/—a (Inn j | salary—ami h was tool adof him to enjoy I himself In India. Uut v.'or.iU hi—uoulil j i ho—malm tho next draft a liltlo more ’ : elastic?” Hnv fullowoil a list of hnby’s i I kit ns long as a Parson's bill. Tlion • Dick)', whini hoar; yenrmul tohis wife nml 1 tho little son Ijo had m ver sri-ii—which, again, Is n foollnw no boy Isentitloil to— onlurgod tho draft anil wrote queer half boy, half man letters, saying that life was not bo enjoyable in'ter all, and would the little wife wait yet a liltlo 1 i!ig.'r v But | tho liltlo wife, however much sho approved I of money, objected to waiting, and there

is made doubly attractive — a plain iacc J'? s e e m s 1 e s s ^ plaiii—if ac- sj com pan led by j! a graceful fib'- t<

ure. The

OOINO l Al

Jlfi'Oinelnr.iiti AightExi ret

•1 * IfldiHUM . ' , , H* Mail . ‘ . .

y 1 IK* Knick i buek: .

r

« | No ;;-rr .st. i, JJ! No V VkII

^outh *,'i •• - i l/iniie!.,

Mr a* o’m

v > i:

a. m :t V.\ a. m 4:15 p. tn r.”l p. in

ii r:

11

Daily t 'Cxcm t S. n .

: niuht c.\p;*< ss. hanJslhmugh i 1 1. •. 1111 : . I V i v ’ . . i Lr , • ■ . * II. , .», *• l

i j.:r *i. - 5e a. VI : v p > fi? a.

cars foi

(?i:ic»»m;Ul, Ni Vorknrtd Boslcai. No. ICui’iK'd.'s.wiin nains for Mlelrjran division v:.t Anderson u id lor ( incinniiTi divi i(*n.

No. “ virck !» t v r.” liaul

tli • utufh slcrpt r ft,r N. V . uiul Ho t..n nml !«., VV};shington. D. iieiiumfi, « . <S; m:Is ijininj'c.irs. New ctJaolu'-'. HlmniusKed with gas on all trains. 1 . V. Hukstib, Ayt i»:.

si. V/>

■'ty

; k if.a

brings out the curves of a hand- ( j sonic figure and gives grace to an 0 awkward one. Every indi of it fits.

I !a ve vou

Has it got You?

' ,:-Y'

C; >■ 'si*.

When I was tolling you of the joke that the worm played off on the senior subaltern, I promised a somewhat similar tale, but with all the jest left out. This Is that

tale:

Dicky Hatt was kidnaped in his early, early youth, neither by landlady’s daughter, housemaid, barmaid nor cook, but by a girl so nearly of his own caste that only a woman could have said she was just the least little hit In tho world below It. This happened a month before ho came out to India and live days after his one and twentieth birthday. The girl was It! —six years older than Dicky, In the things of this world, that is to say, and, for the time, twice as foolish ns ho. Excepting always falling off a horse, there Is nothing more fatally easy than marriage before the registrar. The ceremony costs .ess than 50 shillings and is remarkably like walking Into a pawnshop. After the declarations of residence have boon put In, four minutes will cover the rest of the proceedings—fe , attestation ami all. Then tho registrar slides the blotting pad over the names and says grimly, with his pen between ids teeth, ‘‘Now you’re man and wife,” and tho couple walk out into the street, fooling as if something were horribly illegal somewhere. But that ceremony holds and can drag a man to his undoing just ns thoroughly as the‘-long ns ye both shall live” curse from the altar rails, witli the bridesmaids giggling behind nml ‘‘The Voice That Breathed O'er Eden” lifting the roof off. In this manner was Dicky Hatt kidnaped, ami lie considered it vastly tine, for ho had received an appointment In India which

carried a magnificent salary from the

Tho marriage was

Read The

i

Daily

nYf

O *j

Banner

home point of view.

to he kept secret for a year. Then Mrs. Dicky Halt was to come out, and the rest of life wn . to be a glorious golden mist. Thai was bow they sketched it under the Addison Il iad station lamps, and after one short month came (Iravi - ind, and Dicky steaming out to his now life, and tho girl crying In a UO shillings a week bed and living room in a bn.k si reefflit Montpelier square, near the Kulghtsbrldgu barrack. Hut tho country that Dicky came to was a hard land, whore “nion” of ^1 were 1 reckoned very small boys, indeed, and lif. !

was a strange, hard sort of ring in her let- j ,'t AURORA CORSET C0-, Aurora, El. <

tors that Diokv didn’t understand. How it

AT YOUR DEALERS.

wa, exp.*;- i\o. The salary that loomed i

Try ‘ 4-0”

large it.(ion miles away did not go far, i particularly when Dicky divided it by two 1 and remitted more than the fair half at ■ one Ixtii to Montpelier square. On. j Iiuf.dr d and thirty live rupees out of tjoi, i is t much to live on. hut it was absurd i to suppose t*!«) 'tr- Hen could exist for 1 over on the *. m held back by Dicky from ^ Ids outfit aWc.v.’nneo. Dicky saw this and remitted at or-.o, always remembering that Tod rupees were to bo ; id id months | later for a first class passage out for a lady.

When you add to th"-;? trilling details the

rimes?

Cushman’s MENTHOL INHALER

natural instincts of a boy beginning n new ''/? In a new country ami longing to go about and enjoy himself and the necos-

could he, poor hoy? Later on still—just as Dicky bad been told—apropos of another youngster who had “made a fool of himself,” as tho saying Is—that matrimony would not only ruin his further chances of advancement, but would lose him his present appointment—came tho news that the baby, ids own little, little son, had died, and behind this 40 lines of an angry woman’s scrawl, saying the death might have been averted if certain things, all costing money, had been done, or if tho mother and tho baby hurt been with Dicky. The letter struck at Dicky’s naked heart, but not being officially entitled to a baby he could show no sign of trouble. How Dicky won through the next four months, and what hope he kept alight to force him into his work, no ono dare say. Ho pounded on, tho 700 rupeo passage ns far away as over, and his style of living unchanged, except when he launched into a now filter. There was tho strain of his office work, and the strain of his remittances, and tho knowledge of his boy’s death, which touched the hoy more, per haps, than it would have touched a man, aud, beyond all, tho enduring strain of his daily life. Gray headed seniors who approved of his thrift and his fashion of denying himself everything pleasant reminded him of the old saw that says: If u youth be distinguish.'.! in his art, art, art, lie in .1st keep tlio girls away from his heart,

heart, heart.

And Dicky, who fancied he had been through every trouble that a man Is permitted to know, had to laugh and agree, with the last lln tof hisbal ... I bankbook jingling in his head day and night. But ho had one more sorrow to digest before the end. There arrived a letter from tho littio wife—the natural sequence of the others if Dicky had only known it— and tho burden of that letter was “gone with a handsomer man than you.” It was a rather curious production without stops, something like this: ‘-Sho was not going to wait forever and the baby was dead aud Dicky wr. only tv buy and he would never ict eyes on her again and why hadn't he waved his handkerchief to her i\ In n he left Gravesund and Gotl was her ju ' ;u sho was a wicked woman but Dicky was wor.-i enjoying himself in India and this other man loved tho ground she trod on and would Dicky over forgive her for she would never forgive Dicky; and there was no adit: - -s to vvrito to.” Instead of th "iking his stars that he was free, Dicky (ii uvi rud exactly how an Injured husband fe. i —again, not at all the knowledge to which a boy is entitled —for Ids mind went back to Ids wife as ho roimmiljered her in tho ffO shilling ‘‘suit” It; Montpelier square, when the dawn of hii 'ast morning in England was breaking, and sue wa' crying in tho lied, vhe. at ho rolled about on ids bed and bit Ids fingers. HonovorMopped to think

l-’:o5 a m U:' r. p m .11:in u In

DBRAI W UNIVERSITY

In oiToct Sunday, Jan. 12,

XOHTa UOUlid.

No 4* t hicnjro Mail.. . No fi* Mail and Accommodation.. ; No 4 It Local

SOUTH ROUND.

No 3* Louisville Mai! No 5* Mail and Accoinnnjdtition...

N > i)

Daily, t Kxc-cnt Sun*iii». i'ullman si. mhtr in niurlu trains, parlor ana diuinir c:ir8 tin \ns. 5 and For complete 1 line r ir N and t oll Infurinalici .n regard to ratve.. through c;»rs, etc., nd Mt J A. Mit iiai !., Agxnt F. .1. llhEU, <■. I . A < hkiurc

. 58:52 a nc . 2:2< j. m .ll:4u a m

THE BEST NFvVS OF OUR GREAT AND GROWING INSTITUTION.

VAsMDAUff line..

Trains lea'.

rconoascio. ina. in t:icot Ech-

lit, 18915

The Student*’ fl>oinj£*—Tlieftr him! Social title-Tin ir <>lic»t» Incident* and Note* ol the fZdulii Live* ol Many \ ouii” .TScii ant? \\ omen Told by Special Kcportcr.

Miss Freda Tucker is enjoying a

FOR TH I". W KST.

No 7 luUy 12:2» a *r., for M. Route. No 15 D uly . fi: ■f»n m,ior.M. t.cuin j No 5 Daily.... — !*:(•'-a m, tor St. Route. No 21 Daiij 1:45 n rn, lor 't. I.ouio. No ” Kx. >mi arte p m, for 'Terri* hautL* Noll Dally , H;'i3 p iu. for St. Louis.

FOR th:. KABT.

No 12 Dally 2:-’i a in, ” No it Dally. ..4:Si>am **

I No 4 Ex. Min .. 8:45 a m, for JndH^niir.cdla

No ‘JO Dally 1:35 p ni. *•

No 8 Daily .. ...5:31 pin, ” “

No *2 Daily 0:0*1 j

UEOKIA l)/v(>1()N

visit from her little sister of Ten e n<. ;h i:\ '.m ... .... .7 : a-.« m. tor I’-o,;:. I, . No 77 *• “ 3:55 p ir. lor Decatur liailie. I or complete time curd, jriv.i.jr all trains

and stations, and for f’.II Information uh to

The Alpha Phis hud a Dust last , ran m. thr.iign cam. etc. addres1 J,S. Dowling. Ajrcnt,

night.

E. A. Ford. Grccncastf©

“asp. Agt. >t. Louis >io.

A good number of students will remain in Indianapolis over Sun day. Claude I). Hull, Roy Wade aud W. W. Want are the three orulori cal delegates from DePauw who will vote in the State oratorical as eocmtion meeting in Indianapolis this afternoon. Rev. Asher Preston returned to Knightstowu yesterduy. Prof. Davis, professor of biology in Rutler university, was the guc.-t of Prof. Cook yesterday. There will be no recitations u-

i: ol row.

Yesterday evening’s Indianapolis Xeirs hud a writeup of Indiana orators who speak tonight in Indi auupolis. I Quite a number of the Phi Del s will attend the Piii Delta Theta banquet at Indianapolis thiseveting. Jake White will vixit his parents

sity for grappling with strange work-

in Rockville tomorrow after heat- 1

whether, if l.o had mot Mrs. Hatt after tends the contest in Indianapolis

tonight.

It is a paper tor the young, the old, the middle aged, for ric'" and poor, for high and! low, for Teachei and Preacher, for Student and for professor. It is a paper for the home. It i£ preeminently a paper for the people. You can't gel along without it. You must have it. You will not live

urea all troubles Head anil Thro;

of the

at.

CATARRH. HEADACHE, NEURALGIA, UGRIPPE.

WILL CURE a,

sneezing, snofflhg,

hACfli:

ng. Htifi

HEA

t 1 n ii e M RU. i I KK.

Plops

YOUgilil.g,

Con-

7-V fcllUVIWUM ,1„

highest medical authoritli'H of Ku

J nod A me ri rn " COT.DH,Sore Th

S,8

Hay Fever. Bron-

it.pe I o r

root

liny

ihitis, I.tt CJKTl’i’fcj. 'I he most Kefre^hlng

i iltbful aid lo

and Ih ilthnil aid HEADACHE >ufler.

er«. Kriiigs sleep to the shH’ples-*. Cures InHonnilH uid Nervous Prostration. lAiin’t ue fooled with woithii

imiiations. Tuke only CU

wor

SHMAN S. Price.#Oc.at a

wanted. ( USHMAN'S

dess tall N’S

nderful cures of

n. Old Sr

sleep

s ProHti

..iiiUitloiiA. Take only

„,1I-Y,.u cannot be happy t , 1ENrH0L BeLt1

Without it. 1 >CC3.USC 1L IS rl Cuts, Woundn. Burns. Frostbites. ExceD id.

. \ r \\ f l I remedies for PILES Price 26c. nt Druggists.

home paper choc k full of good | J';e k tu ^^' a ^.^ 0 A3 , 'a7D; , a , rhor n Manu

live, interesting news every 1

No. 324 Dearhoin 8 CHICAGO, i\D.

day. It is in the van guard ' of progress and you must take ' it to keep up with the times. 1 | .

Identify yourself with it now ; j - VIJjLr^[ Sffl)

and stay with it. In so doing! you will get good, and do good You will show your apprecia-! tion of hustle and enterprise; and will demonstrate your right to live in a progressive j ,

and up-to-date fowii.

&

a

IV

j A lovely cora-

j plexicu only Nature 1 can give. She givei

J clear and r.oft

j iso Dr. Hebre. s v;aia Lrea.n. It as not 'jk < t a paint or powder to cover defects. Y/ HA l| I rsd of th*m, by Nature’:- own pre Vo r ces of renewing the vitality of the sk

new, who

e to thOev.

Viola Crea.n. It is not

)

Bring in }our name or telephone it in or hire a cheap bov and send it in.

in ; <

f-cckic*, '

I

Yours for subscribers.

banishing all roughness, redn

mole:, pimpk.., blackhead* 1 , sni’ jurti and inn. it dues this surely and harmlessly, be- JJ j ’ r-ase naturally. Its use means both skin- tf - beauty and skin-health. Viola Skin-Soap H i \ hastens the process, fcecar c c it . a pure r.nu (j j j dciicate soap. T t should be used in

Viola c it .

d be used

It should be used

con- Jj

THE BANNER TIMES

1 J ion wit’n the Crean

j in the i.urvery, too. Ordinary soaps arc not fit for a baby’s shin. Viola Cream, 50 cents, jj Viola Skin-Soap, r?5 cents. Sold by drug- (:

gists or sent hy mail. k:nd Xsj G. C. BnTNMF O’ TOLEDO, O. ^7

"V*—

Cripple Creek, i oiomtlo.

i- now attracting attention in all |>ar!s of the wotlil. on account of tin* i i ii vel-ou-t discoveries of (fold waicii l•uv( , tieon made in that vieinit'. I'lie \ortli We-erii Line, with it- iinriv.ilied eqoipinenl of solid vistihol.d trains of ^talace sleiqdnjf ears, dininff cur* and free reclining chair cars, dailj hi-nveen Chicago and t olorudo. oilers the tc-1 of facilities for reaching ( 'rio|ile ertek. t'or tickets and full infonuation anidv ♦o ticket agents, or address . li Isnise,eni. General I‘as-eN(fc;■ and ’i’icket Agent Chicago it Not th wester!) Railway,Chicago, 111.

‘‘If wisdom’s ways you’d wisely keep. Two things o!)si*rve with care.” I’ln-ler jour house with Acme Cement, And not with lime and hair.

R. B. HURL.BY !m> S. I.ociist street, Oreenca-t!-, Ini’.

I'or Sale.—Ulit papers, Aniiahle tor j potting under carpets or on closet Ishchcs, for sale cheap at ihe Banm:r Tijiks olllcc.

whirl), properly speaking, should take up a boy’s undivided attention—you will see Hint Dicky . tarted handicapped. He saw it himself for a brent h or two, but lie did not guess the full beauty of his future. As the hot weather began the shneklc;settled on him and ate into his tlesii. 1 First would come letters—big, crossed, seven sheet letters—from ills wife, telling him how she longed to see him, and what a heaven upon earth would ho their prop erty when they met. Then some boy of the chummery wherein Dicky lodged would pound on the door of his hare little room and tell him to come out to look at a pony—the very thing to suit him. Dicky could not afford ponies. He had to explain this. Dicky could not afford living In the chummery, modest as it w as. He had to explain this before he moved to a single room next tho office where ho worked all day. He kept house on a green oilcloth table cover, one chair, one oharpoy, one photograph, ono toothglass. very strong and thick; a T rupee eight utma filter, and messing by contract at :,7 rupees a month, which last item was extort ion. He had no punkah, fo-. - a punkah ousts if) rupees a month, but lie slept on tho roof of the office, will) all his wife’s letters under ids pillow. Now and again lie was asked out to dinner, where lie got both a punkah and an iced drink. Hut this was seldom, for people objected t recognizing a hoy who had evidently the instincts of a Scotch tallow olmndler, ami who lived in such a nasty fashion. Dicky Could not subscribe to any itniusi inent. so he found no amusement except the plea , lire of turning over Ids bankbook and reading w hat it said about '‘loan- on approved security. ” Thai cost nothing. Ho remitted through a liombuy bank, hy the way, and tho station knew nothing of his

private affairs.

Every month lie sent home all lie could possibly i pare for tils wife, and lor another reason which was expected to explain Itself shortly amt would mqitiro more money. About tlds timii Dicky was overtaken with the nervous, haunting fear that besets married men when they are out of sorts, lie laid no pension to look to. What if lie should die suddenly and leave ids wife unprovided for? The thought used to lay hold of him in the still, hot nights on the roof, till tiie shaking of Ills heart made him think that he %aa going to die then and there of heart disease. Now this is u frame of mind which no boy 1ms n right to know. It is a strong man's trouble, but, coming when it did. It ueariy drove poor punkahless, perspiring Dicky Hatt mad. He could tell no one about il. A certain amount of ‘‘screw” is as necessary for a man as for a billiard hall It makes them both do wonderful things. Dicky needed money badly, and ho worked for H like a horse. But naturally the men who owned him knew that a hoy can live svrv comfortably on a certain income.

the. two years, ho would have discovered that he and she had grown quite different and now persons. This he ought to have done. He spent tho night after the Eng-1 llsk mail camn in rather /tuvnro pain. Next nierning Dicky Halt felt disinclined to work. He argued that he had missed the pleasure of youth. He was tired, and be had tasted all tho sorrow in life before thrao and twenty, ills honor was gone—that was the man—and now he, too, would go to the devil—that was tin

Miss Tutwiler will entertain tin ! DePauw students who live in Indi | annpolis tomorrow evening at het

home in that city.

(jlias. A. Beard after the contest will go to Knightown to spend Sun j

SII SIC AM) Al’T NOT!;s.

The next orchestra rehearsal nil:

■'i

boy in him. So lie put his head down od ] day. tho green oilcloth tablo cover nml wept before resigning his post and all it offered. | But the reward of his services oaine. | He was given three days to reconsider I,

himself, ami the head of theestublishiuent, ' ,e h p xt Monda.t evening at 8c\cn

after some teiegraphlngs, said that it was o clo> k.

a most unusual step, but in view of the

ability that Mr. Hatt had displayed at j Mrs. Mansfield aud Miss George, j such and suoli a time, at such and such r ,. • . , ... junctures, ho was in a position to offer | of tlle ,1U ' 8,, ' »«" arl 'acuities, arc'

SOUTH ONB WAY TICK 8T8 ARB SOLO At I i Cents a Mile

prom thb north ovbr yhb

LOO'SVILLB A NaSHVILLB r. r. To individuals on the First Tuesday And to parties of seven oi mote ou the Third Tuesday of each month, to nearly all points in the South ; and on special dates Excursion Tickets are sold at a little

One Fan

more than One Fare for the round trip.

For full information write to

J. K. R1DGELY, N. W. Pass. Agent, Chicago. 111. C. P. ATMOKE, Usn'IPass. Agl.. Louisville, Ky.

SENT FREE.

Write for County Map of the South to either of the above named gentlemen, or to P. Sip Jones, Pass Agent, in charge ol Immigration, nirmiugliam, Ala

B. I <tn s if t•

t' . ^ L; ’’ ; I t* l'W*2..»)t .uuvte Bra .il BEkU

c:;

7r<

:Am«vr>

pte?

.. -1

ctcnn.'.s.

And tin tti-at 1‘lttKtiurgt) en Anlliraelti

Hilda

The holiday for the music unii,-

yard opposite Vo' rlli t'n Ight ollli'c

him an infinitely superior post, first ou in Indianapolis for the contest ihG; probation, and later, in the natural course , . , of things, on confirmation. ‘‘And how , mnch does the post carry?” said Dicky, i T>V( , re( , it ^ al . e | )O0 kcd lor hex “mx luuulrod mid fifty rupees, saltl the i head slowly, expecting to seo tho young week—on Wednesday and ITidny i

man sink with gratitude and joy. And it cuine then! Tho 700 rupee pas-

sage, and enough to have saved the wife j

and the little son and to have allowed of . . ,

assured and open marriage, came then, jdlf schools this afternoon, is op- j T,,ni*v .. i-nrai p-,.rk,f*, Dicky hnr- - into a roar of laughter— fitinul with th(* sluilciifs tiietn selves 1 ^ urt ished th * Da*. I,ax ...r. * Mt.s laughter ho could not check—nasty, jnn-; ^ dailv bv R.W. Allen, t .tmgerof Ard.ui gllng merrlincut tb :t'-■emed as if it would Prof. Newton Iv Swift, of th - Jordan’s pouitry House.' go on forever. When lie hod rooeverert ,, p , i . _ . , u..n« in/ himself, he ,id quite.ortouslys “I’n. tinal! P, ® noforte apartment ot the Indi S^^&idie'.'.V. x‘

of work. i' - .i an old toon now. it's tmapolis school of music, vi«itcd . J’.l’rmirs. nato-. ’ The'". S",a,l!” ,,ld the need. O..I HChool ol on \* Cline.' ::n.

I think 1. was right, but Dh ky Hntt! The Schliewin Q.iartette, <d'! ,apd ^.“ , ’ aov, ' r ‘ r!,,

noviG’ roMpiicii-ffl to sottlo thu t|Ut stion.—

HutlyttrU Kip; mil*.

which Mr. Schi'llschini It is cellist, Kuvp. ttvHh suto haudiing. were here it part of today and rc n,lll ‘ 1 ' '

7k, S'-,

Venezuela^ Polsonoun Apples*,

One of our ejnsiils in V.uic/uela tells a heal Red in music hail tlllH forenoon.! gym- lo inaka Uionev von now inust ffiX^X3 i s:r:r‘K!:.KkT 1 ,o, | ss

feed. It is called the manzanlllo, and tin) I this evoilin'i.

crabs eat it \vtili impunity, aitliough it is 1 rank poison. The llesli of the ernb Imi- '

eilines thoroughly Impregnated with tho poison and i> tlms rendered a fatal diet.

>pi

The luanzanillo. or’‘little apple,” is found along thu coast. It is about an inch in diameter and grows upon a tree similar in appearance to an apple tree. It is very pleasant to the eye and lias a sweet, insipid taste. It is usually found whore there Is fresh water and may easily tempt a thirsty, inexperienced voyager. It is, however, a deadly poison, primarily caua-

Sny, do you know,

if trade is slow

'l li - dull times may huw- killed it You will he wise

To advertise?

For that will soon rebuild it.

to think Hint it i> only a new article that needs advertising tint 'bat is a great mistake. !.< t every man advertise his | wares; others liuve made fortunes doing it. Nothing is too cninuiou tn have its sale materially increased by newspaper nnldicily. Judicious advertising is not ! only Hie best way to make customers, but it is the cheapest as well. It gets I them ami ii keeps them for you. There is strong competition now in till line-' i of lui'ini s-. S on need advertising t" give you vonr share of the trade, and

# | ,1 Thousands of ladies are using Brazil- you m.d it done in the most skillful and inUMisn hurnin^ pains in thu throat * an ^ or aorcuess, pain, beoring wav. 'J’lti* jiilverHsinjr iaml stonmei). Unless romedies are prompt* down, and many kinds of trouble, it acts | lutMiiiitti in thi neck of lln* wootN i- tin* ly applied death is Inevitable. It is even a charm. A <)d cent or dollar bottle 11 • x xi i:- i imi:s. It

dangerous to remain in thu shade of one of does more good in one week than

jtbese trees, and a person taking shelter sny other remedy does in months. Jostah Bacon, conductor on the P. W. under it during rain will suffer from pain- V® . ® 8 an , ■ |eC !i i “u 14 KOC ® to fi** 1 £: B. R. R., says “^irtizilian Hahn cured fill blisters wherever a drop of water fail- r ® mov h 1 8 a n mn^tmahon. Taken me of inveterni f alarrhx liich I had for iug from the leaves touclies his persou.— ln ' r °P'*? ses ever y “our checks ex* ^ yuarr.” En riiinn Balm kills the Kxuhange. , j cestIvt nocding. | celprr ' a ul i ero > c „ radical cure.

' anMaaa H888HBiH8BMHB8Hi0NNMHMHrii8HIHH8HI

A Blessing for the Ladies.

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