Daily News, Franklin, Johnson County, 16 November 1889 — Page 6
6
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Fruit* and Vegeia IMMI to Throufh Tb*lr Stre«tl»( Period- AUate Ground lUir»){i I* Il« »t Some Tliisj* mmy be
Fr«i«o Sufriy. A large proportion of fruits aud vegetables that are usually harvested in tl»e fall con?vi*t» of water, and for this reason will nearly aJway* go through a sweat after being harvested. If stored away immediately after harveHiiug good ventilation must be provided in order tliat the moisture created ly this sweating can escape or there will l* more or law decay. With many fruitu and vegetable* tm» better plan
Apples and OIHOIH will liear freezing without injury if they IK- thawed out very gradually.
Ura|M"s can easily he kepi until the holiday* if the bunches are carefully cut off and all the l»niiscd or decaying fruit is leuioved the eudsof the bunehetrshould be dipj»ed in Healing wax a luyei of sawdust 01 cork-died should l»o put in a jar, lien a layer of grajx's then another of the dust, and so on until the jar is full. They must
IH
For cabbage, dig ti trench about three ieet wi4*»*ud enough *tu tiwld all I hat il »,* dt»n* Tto store. Uuc the bottom aud sidkN with clean »traw, pull up ttie plunUf by the roots and place in verO in the trench, pt«*king as chse as |SJ«I hie together put a layer of straw over this and then cover well with earth. The object in pulling in the ^I raw to keop the brads cJUwior.
With all products pitted out it i« very important to we ttiat thorough drainage is provided.
Hibullc Acid.
arliolic acid is very u'-cfnl where uuim«lsarelHfd and kept. It is a greiU purifier hetlier it is a sore or a stable or a ptm that ucvd* purifying. It will destroy uic«t
kf
VIK9SMM
A.VD
of
to
keep
management,
when practicable, i« to let them have tliia sweating berfore fitixfiy storing away. With manj a few days is all that is uecesa&ry, and they will keep in| much better condition tha*i if they are »tored away a.i iwion harvested.
The cellar i« generally tio wwm mid is ptibject to ux many changes of temperature
littme.
condition
product* in the best
no
that except with what is
needed for use reasonably MXJH, the bet-U-r plan will be pit out. Potatoes. tateUi, carroUt, turnip*. and rutabagas can be buried, digging a trench, putting in a lavw of straw, than the product*, covering them with a good layer of straw and then with *trtb nuflttcientfy 1?-*?j» to protect from frost. With apples a trench should be made long enough to hold (he fl«*»»ired quantify at each end. if not too w«t iJ11 a stout forked j**t or stakes put good layer of «traw in the bottom IIH I pile up U»e apple* carefully, cover it another good layer of t-tiaw, Jay a ktout pole in the forks and then take board** that will reach from thin to the ground. 'I he pofeU should high enough sti thai after the Iwards are laid on there will be an air space between the straw and the liourdh. 'llien cover carefully with earth. Th»* will, to a great extent, pi event tin* ground tiudo so oflen taken by the Iruit when pitted away. Onion* ran put in pit-* the sumeaA potatoesor liiey an be xpread out in a loft with a good la\er of litter. hay or straw, both ttljovc and beneath.
the dinwiMt germs that iurk
about o**r prcmis***. if prop»rly applied, A free i»se of carixltr acui would often destny tlw gernts of dM»evse aud prevent sickness among our annnnls. All lisejiseitare to an exten| catching, That is trut* of a common cold because there is prtwonl SHsimalcuUc, which will try to tind a Ixi|{eit4eut in other systems than the one that is suffering, if other animals come in contact with the disciiarges. An animal catches eold in the head, it may run into gleet in theliorse, and while other horse* may able to resist the aainvalcuise. if they come in contact with them, they may not. lltmce it desirable, when animal* have discharges from the n«v«trth to scatter something like carbolic acid whenever such discharge are Ualle to One of our riters on twins' mentions that it-* value has t*H«n rccogmv,«»d by the ct»numvsi«u which investigated hog cho!»»ra and reported to the c»n»mis«ioner of agriculture. It is commonly lined now by the uu*st careful breeders of swiue. 8«»me use it constantly alnmi I he pens and feedmi thH»»*s and trough*. One writer savs iliat cwti the «»f carUdie a« id will destno the sp»iye«of m- of disease which fii^t in an nffevtcd Hfunwphen*. It pr-\cnts the development of }acieria if used liefore it has an»v*st s»l the glia tr niMritng. Dr. Stetsson. of
4\V
5».vnset. 111 has had remarkable immunity fit»m th? diseas«\ tiionah he raises from thrv-e to live hnndnsi h«*g* e«ch
ymr, and the disease Hivs raged all around the wnallest *i«e that we Can ju*t discern, him. The bed*, pen*, feeding floor* and water ttoughs are never free ..lor of udc caii*»tic acid,
mors, in his r»qHnt to the dejvartment of center of vue of the larger of time ring*, ngricuUuit. IS^K sav Iw thtok* the
nig about thm' wks with regular d»ne* objects than could be obtained hy actualv«f carl*i-'lk acid.'--I Western Rural :Jy gdiitg there. Sometimes* titers b» lofty mountain fieak rising in the center
Piwat* «f «^*si I of the ring, and oftentimes tit# contour A. M. Altoa the IVjwiar Schntw .of tbe riti« by Ute invasion of Mo-nthly. spenkiOji of the proWf# of tent sugiMr farUHu*,^ «w*y*i One sugar t^p^ration iu Frame repH«te4 a net profit deu\ed from tite mantifactJiire tMT Iseet sugar a few years ago the wwon did nt)4 extettd beyond days, I nder these new condition* the prvMiuc
"v*"
mit it-* to
stored where thcv will keep
cool and yet be sure not to freeze. A good wnv of keeping peafs is to wrap each one in paper and pack in biixes or drawers lined with paper and store them in the cellar or iiuit house where they will be cool.
see
TERRE HAUTE DAILY NEWS/SATU
jt STROLL IS THE MOOS'.
Th« Barren and MoiintainoiK Detolattoa of Ihr Lunar S«irfa»-e. Tlie relative distances of France and Japan from England may be likened to the distances of the moon and the nearest of the other heavenly bodies from this earth. We see the moon much more favorably than any of the other heavenly bodies. But under the niont favorable circumstance*, our neighbor is nearly a quarter of a million miles away, and when viewed from so great a distance objects liave to be of considerable magnitude if they are to be visible at all. A lunar mountain, even if it were as great as Mount Blanc itself, would only be shown like a tiny hillock by our mightiest telescopes. No object on the moon could be seen unless it were at least as large as a town hall a cathedral. Were the great pyramid of Egypt on the moon it would only seem to us
as
a sjfeck,
which an artist who was making a sketch at the telescope would indicate by a dot with his 'pencil, ii. our .study of the geography of the moon we need, therefore. not expect to see anything clearly except the broad features of its scenery. Here, fortunately, we enjoy an advantage which an astronomer who dwelt on the moon would not have, if he endeavored to look at the earth. The surface of our globe is so extensively oliscured by clouds thai it would be very hard for a lunar inhabitant to obtain such a view of this globe as to gain any adequate idea of what its surface
was
really like. Here
and there, no doubt, he might get an occasional glimpse, but
it
is uncertain to
what extent a knowledge of the geography of the earth could be obtained by an examination conducted from a point of view lying beyond our atmosphere. The moon, strange to say, has no encompassing sheets of cloud: there
is.
through
in
deed, little or no air there, and consequently whenever our own
sky
will ]er-
it
there
is
no other
obstacle to our obtaining a clear view of the moon, There are certain spots or marks on the moon as seen ith the unaided eye, with which every one is famihav. They can be lie*! ol"served when the moon is full, and it is a remarkable fact that the features exhibited by the full moon are always! the same. The moon always turns the same face to us. we are never granted a glimpse at the other side, and as to what the other side may l« like no one can give the slightest ii.n-i matioii. The diameter of the moon about a thouAand miles, from which we infer that the hemisphere that we do *ee has an area about double as big as the entire o.f Kurope. Some of lho-e larger spots which form the features til" the full moon are therefore about a* large as France or Spain. These regions have a different color to the rest of the moon's surface, and the telescope shows that their floors' are smoother than oth?r tracts of Itiuar country.
We IL.VC good reason to Itelieve that
these dark patches indicate the basins dr™'can produce an great seas that
once
covered co'isider-
able part of the moon's surface. In fact, the very
name
by which astronomers
distinguish these objects involve this doctrine. Thus we speak of the Mare Serenitatis as the name of the region where a pacific ocean is supposed to have re|Hsel. We are, however, certain that the surface of the moon no longer contains any visible water. It seems to have penetrated into the interior of the lunar glole at some period ages before telescopes were ever directed to the heavens. Though the ancient sea basins are the only conspicuous objects in the nakedeye view of the moon, yet when the telescope if» used these feature# are not nearly so interesting as the craters. These arii multitudes of small objects quite invisible to the
unaided eve,
a few hundred yards aero#*, up to vast
from tlie extents of a huudte«l miles or even more Dr. in diameter tnde«d, if standing in the
rmp^ of
-ifUe by cjirtsdtc acid treatment "to d«- it would be invisible because they wouM »troy the conditions itttMMit l« forwi* lie below the twHnm. Our birdsey# lion of glsa and the development vj*w of the moo* gives u« slmo»i a betswine plague or .^hwophytii^
hr
mountains which encircled
treat- ter gbutce at tlw general feature* of the*
other rings of varying ««K, While tliese are the genera! t*atur«s of Itlw geography some others may
TT .*hM'
has in Ik* applied with appraf»ri*te*t«* to opt- jemperor himsSf), various v^etables aod
sar in the market* of the world more of itanwrf ace alou^quite independently of !**r than fiftt per cent
•nar"
ion. The entire of moorfand oo,
able descri appears to be an utter£esert, a desertt not of sand, but of rough and rui ged rocks, carved into the wildest formspind presenting every difficulty to one should try to move across such a cjuntry.
The lunar rambler would find his
occasionally barred by a fearful ch|sm half a mile or more in width, deceu to a depth which his eye could notlfathom. Never in the course of his tralels would he meet with any featuresjre8embling thot^e with which he is haplily familiar on earth, lie would never npet with a brook or river, he would infer see a grassy field or a tree: in fact, wier being now entirely absent from the mora, it is almost needless to add that vegeation of any sort is not to bo found. It fllows aLo that tlure can be no anirial life there. SRE ROBERT BALL
Astronomer Royal for Irelanl.
IN Marble Ponl.
The marble ponds of Persia consist if pools or "tliaez."1 as the Persians csll them where the indolent waters, by a slow ami regular process, stagnate, concrete and petrify, producing {hat beautiful transparent stone, commonly callfd tabriz marble, much iued in the buriil places of Persia, and in their best edifices. These ponds are contained within the circumference of half a mile, and theirposition is distinguished by heaj»s of atones which have accumulated as the excavations have increased. The process of petrification may be traced from its commencement to its termination. In one part the wafer is clear: in a second it appears thicker and somewhat stagnant: in a third stage quite black, contrasting strongly with the fourth and last stage, in which it is as white as hoarfrost. in the third stage when the surface is quite black it, can be indented by tossing a stoue on the surface, but in walking across it it will no more stick to the shoes than greased tatTy to the hands. Such is the constant tendency of this water to become stone that when it exudes from 11 ground in bubbles the jietrifai sumes a globular shape, as if the I of a spring, by a stroke of been arrested in their play a morphosed into stone. Tin thus produced is brittle, transj ire sometimes richlv stre kejjf* red atul copper-colored vj™ heatin.the negroes from
takes a good polish. r\
people in the land of^
How to Cluoig. 'A curious it made into the arv birds wit plumage. given to color to theiS ant. finds th
they have not seem to experience when treated with\ ture,it is added, aicl but under the influel
thougti many
of them must be a hundred mile* or more in diameter. To observe these objects with advantage, we should select an opportunity when the moon i.- at or near the quarter. In any case we should avoid making our visit to the observatory at the time when the moon is full. You must rememler that the moon derive# its light from the sun just as the earth does. The sun illuminates that half of the moon which happens to be turned towards it. •'while the other half is in darkness, and accordingly as we see more Or less of the bright half we see the moon more or less full. It is along the diameter of the imon at the quarter, or at any time along the boundary U'tween the bright pari and the dark, that the illumination is beat suited for rendering faint objects visible. There the features are shown with that relief which ran alone le obtained by sfrougly contracted light and shade.
There is one jwtriieolnr kind of object which specially characterizes the geography of the moon. The type of thisol ject is a ring aud of these rings there are hundred*. They have been most carefully drawn on the charts of the meon, ami. indeed, thegreat majority have had sp«vi»l name* assigned to them. Each ring is a rampart of lofty mountains, unwinding a rough aud ?tg£ed interior. The diameter of thin circle rauges from
be noted. There are, for example, lofty the naming, breakfast of tea, ham, egg* ranges of mountains which in their alt* and a large slice of "mubtf eleven ia tttrfe and in their may he the morning, luncheon, bouilkm beaten
Important
of being cut intover^0^ icgar(f'es'
Bte Finkbiner
v.f
a
at a
iwloni^U 'OUue
/ocked and must ,,f
imiav
this stone as an ar none but the shah, privileged by a spe milled to use it.
,.t.iebrated
variety. His prices
make select tous
WEATHE]
We have a
nn, to I weather strips, on is a fire service on be-
4-DW"1,lx)rne
iighl' Viie ml "tinr^yanos'and organ^r^nd the men. wornTi xv.,,,1.1 that u%Bsem points ot CJJinil, Singing a 'spintn^rs, which purcR®ior key. The grov r. Instruments h:coffin lowered to iti •eading the beaut if
It would seem that a as triolein, which is con1 per, is the active agent color-change, in the feat* i.„ ««PRt ,, ad.led that glvcerine the onlv
tsi in il ia result to triolein\tv We lmv",
birds tliuswi.se nfleet# the %il gcxsl eolc'll»'
bt''!"
Ked next with my
he chlirch
1
bulk of
volk stores up the red coloHiV'and I' 'liers streaming acro^nb four feet loygand arid after a judicious nutrition* .md me tow anla tain iuch thick. Forudee seen to be changed to a eompJel^
of vvluc a
.11*. nail bespeaks
Ahroit Pinf»r
A white mark on the misfortune. Pale or lead-colored nails melancholy people.
co^li^
indicate
1
Broad nails indicate a gentle, timid, and iiashftd nature. levers of knowledge ami Iilieral sentiment have round nails.
People with narrow nails are arnbitious and quarrelsome. Small natb indicate ittlieue&» of mind, and obstinacy, and conceit*
Choleric, martial men. delighting in
Tt»* r»ar*» Appetite.
fVaf Alexander ill. is of gigantic strength and stature, and his appetite aeent» to beta accordance witli his phy nique, Here i* his daily menu: Seven in
compared with our Alps or our A pen- up with egg*, cutlets, cold fowl, game I***'1
iaM-
'be lH««e populam«n sup, -led tW sur rwspooding Ulnar objects Bat a walk #weeta, atxl two or thr*e cuj* of black pins a experted to Great a^d the on the HKWI would tie atteuded with coffee two in the afternoon, a ba«tti of jOtorowgli Intted S«at»*. rodw^ the of *u- nn*t frightful dt^ulueafixwc the natvre rice hoil«d
in
ii ii
oilier impediments of a Mill more inauper- erentag t«a, coffee and c-ake# ad libituui. ^^pectivft.
war, have rt-d and sp«iite*l na»K |jhr*i- foet Hve inches long, tlie others at Nail* growing into the flesh at the paoh end three feet l«»ng The five inches points or aides indicate luxurious taste*. |vj,tcni«tm IK ^UMI the end OF the cswip i*
People with very pale nails are #ub- !to hold a trough Tl«» Inr^ject to much infirmity of ?'i ilesh. and Mtd Mtow ^wtttls fl*eftft i-i.v inchcs persecution by neighl*rs fuends,— fkwig—all ftirw-eigimts of »n int-li *htck I Medial Classics. -mieslatwai^fKKii^ro-awl-u-iialf f«ih^ im hen wide, fre*#rrn» knot-, aodstmightgraitml. A V-9ha|n«d notcti ts efit hi the projectendat of
DAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1889—SUPPLEMENT.
TXE 9TOGK TjmltM.
There is BO reason fer retaining an unprofitable eaw. yet in all dairy stabies may be found cows that do not pay for their food. The profit derived from the best cows is made to cover the loss from others. It is easier and cheaper to keep only
few good cows than to retain a large number composed of animals of different degrees of quality.
The horse is blanketed to prevent colds, while the cow is turned out to face the storms. The cow cannot endure cold any better than any other animals, and though it may not be necessary tt blanket her, yet she should have a shed or some other protection in the barn-yard.
UI
have seen. says a sheep farmer, "a field which has been used as a pasture for colts and calves till about one-third of it was covered with golden rod and blackberry vines, changed to a fine grassy sward in three years by putting in a few more *heep than it would keep in good condition, and giving them extra food to make up the deficiency.
It is the duty of every farmer, the Auburn (N. Y. 'l Gazette claims, to keep one hoi*se that is safe for the women folks to handle, Jf farmers would teach their wives and daughters how to manage a horse there would not be many accidents.
Professor Thomas Shaw maintains that production of special crops for soiling stock effects a saving in land to the extent of enabling the farmer with about fifty acres to raise more beef, mutton, milk, butter, and cheese than the one with 100 acres who pays no attention to growth of green fodders.
If the food is diminished and animals become jioor the amount of food required to get them in good condition will be greater than the amount of food saved in an attempt to economize. Keep the stock always in the best coudition, and the cost of mai tenance will be lessened.
It is said that burning the button-like horn protuberance on the calf's head with caustic potash when the calf is about ten days old will prevent further developlent of the horn. It appears that the must KO." and the most humane vould seeni to be to prevent their
than ,g
jf
friend tells|5 ith which the
possible.—[New Hampshire
Vnd
Slopping Uve Poultry.
Mahone m^d alive to market should
in mind ot a healthy, and free from
t|u.recoustruc
anJ
stiy used by the citytake or use any fowl way deformed. 1 well-fattened pay the highest hem in the coops, drink. Feed
ls ufji(-er
,us
my place in th^Citv.
sU(.[l
t.olll|tifi8- was
JL |K?ople to take the justice of *it, the doctor |arg capacity I
:oal
anrl \uPl"'a,'*'l,,ce
Do not overexcessive feverish and tlie coop is compatibear rough
services at the .one of the plan-
il1
1 really felt
want to close otttbetOntheiittiepro\V quarters tomove tO Olir Itevy ^^liaf^tatiou dead
OH weight Itry. Old
'""T1,
'the price of a rated the and nearreits, and the of charge, and lighter by freight. A Ute for express and ducks, is as and middle, each
on tne
the child, wiiile
U1 '"te™ Sr" ewer in the Mvisjc. f2H MainJ^ja8 the wbrld-rentTttfti
^jpk. free rot splits
°^ht dry wood. For
straight-grained
Irking. As 1 sioppooUth is tine best and cheapest. ,11 might mean, bottom of board- the same
A Uitfht and a Wrong Way. Vneijto me and W\\m laths and of full width of A St. l/ouis physician asks if nie\'s troed anud#and middle pieces. Nail tlie naturally wit«»r than woinemif they le\dog on deaths lose against the bottom move readily from experience and ob*A mes^fH^s. on both sidec, to prevent the vat ion. He watched one Sunday eveVT^u
ls frmM
Petti,,^r
ing at a certain street corner the passen-*fix»ave interstices ot about two inches begers who alighted there for three hours, and gives the following as the result of his observation: Twenty-two ladies got off the cars, sixteen with their faces to the rear: three got straight oft the car, and three with their fa e- fronting the way the ear was going. During the same hours, at the same place, forty-five men g»)t off. Thirty of these had their faces the way the car was going: eleven got off straight, and none with their faces turned hack ward. There is only one projier way to get off a vehicle—that is with the face turned to ward the direction in which it is going, or would if it were in motion-—right foot first if getting off on the right side, K»ft foot first if getting off on the left side,
l"*'r
fwt or
loSs
out
tween the laths on the sides, but only One-and-a-half on top. This prevents the fowls from sticking their heads through and being injured or killed, as one coop is placed on another. Do not nail the two middle laths on top of the coop, but use screws, so they can be easily removed. Nail a piece of thin, light hoopiron all around theendsand middle. For small spring chickens ami pigeons make coojs of the same dimensions, but only eight inches high, as only strong, healthy pigeons are used for trap shooting. Do not put squealers or young ones in. or any with cHpj«ed ings, as thev will be
««ATR row sniretsn I-OI I.THV.
thrown out when gold. For geese he Coops* should be fourteen, and for turkeys sixteen inches high. For shipping by freight or long distance, make as follows: Five feet six inches lent, three feet wide aud one foot high chickens* fowls and ducks for geese, fourteen inches high: and forturkeynsixteen. Th«* coop divided by a jKtrtition aco*# the middle. Use post* two incites square for the coined anil middle. The slats on each vide next to the bottom should lie
Um»1«»WC(
1110
milk at tux o'clock a din- I are and wilt not
s4afs i. h»vhj
the fred tr iiglv-Otit*id« tf tlie coojv. PtU the srtat* on thf sides aiwi cutis, al*ut tw% inches |»rr. 1*61? on t% to preC.^it tite fcrwk from, g^tthift their heads 'iirougk Make a /ee«1 ti«»ugt5 of two «f board, femr or ftfe in^te wide.
len^th^3£f witl=r thejr went e««
•"•"•I*"* ^'.H* "S!" °f"™ «^.'r «T 15Xy...r,-l,feV-r.rrrli
T«e
«J"many aml'diiring The i**™* heavy atyle of coop in per- }can be »*tt at Ork-ana, wteuty mil* jdbtaat
A Mlrac* on th* Plates.
tSgfWe witnessed the most perfect mirage we ever saw on the Laramie plains one evening recently, says the Rock Springs (Wyoming) Independent It was about an hour before sunset, and looking out of a car window we saw a mile away a beautiful lake. It was in a slight depression among the hills and seemed to be about two miles long by a mile wide. Never having noticed a lake at that place on the road, we were considerably astonished, and asked the conductor for an explanation. He was equally astonished, as were passengers familiar with the road. As the train advanced the lake appeared to enlarge and rise, but in spite of that it was difficult to believe the appearance was simply that optical delusion known as mirage, and that what appeared to be a lake was level, grassy plain. The apparent lake was as smooth and bright as a mirror, except at one edge, where it appeared to be ruffled by the wind. The strange sight was viewed with wonder by hundreds of passengers until it was out of sight.
Could Send Her Voice a Mile. James Pavn. in the London News, writes: Only one lady, so far as I know, had distinguished herself as an athlete, and that in a very modest aud wholesome way. Miss Phoebe Bonn, of Matlock. never made an exhibition of herself in any ay. but William Iiutton, in one of his tours, speaks of her with wonder as well as praise. "Her step (at, thirty) was very manly, and could cover forty miles a day. She could lift a hundred weight with each hand. and. with the wind in her face, send her voice a mile. She ould knit, cook, and spin, but hated them all with every accompaniment to the ieinale character except modesty." If any gentleman made a mistake as to this latter attribute she knocked him down. She could hold the plough, drive the team, and thatch the rick, but her chief avocation was breaking in horses, without a saddle, at a guinea a week. She was an excellent shot and a great reader: fond of ShaktMpea re. and. doubtless, also of the musical glasses, since she played the bass viol in Matlock church."
Personal and Pertinent.
The Prince of Wales has been oblige' to cut oil' his cigarettes. "K smokes a pipe hat present, don'tcher know.
The late King 'of Bavaria left debt.which will be paid otf at the rate ot §275,000 a year. The last payment, will lie made in
Prince Lucien Bonaparte has come into a fortune of $150,000 by the death of his nephew, Paul Amadens Francis Coutts Stuart. "Walt Whitman, ilie good gray poet, has a boy about 1~ years of age to drive him around. The !M\ is clever. He recently said: "1 think a reat deal of W. W. I keep a note-book, and I put down all he says into the note-book, and after he's ,dead lrn going to
go
.Irouivd lectur
ing about him." The wife of the new Chinese minister at Washingto has not emerged from the seclusion of the legation so that prying eyes could catch a glimpse of her. Shegets fresh air and a knowledge of the capital by driving or walking in the evening with her husband.
Mary Anderson has won a high position as a maker of bread. She writes to the London Tinies giving her recipe for the stall' of lite. She is comopolitan in her tastes.
IM*
ngan American who makes
English bread out of Hungarian flour and French yeast. She says "Bread, if made as I lune described, will not turn sour, ami will be sweet and moist for at least eight or ten days if kept in a pan.
Avery Orr. who accompanies the United States eclipse expedition to Africa. is anxious to make certain anthropological studies. I'pon reaching the coast of Africa Mr. Orr will leave the ex* pod il ion and. accompanied by five black ami five white men. all fully armed, will strike out for the interior, visiting many of the native tribes, whose manner of living
IK*
him*
will closely olserve, photo
graphing and measuring them, noting their habits ami manners and studying all the characteristics peculiar to each trilM\ y-.:
Km|»eriir W flliam of Germany is much displeased with the models submitted to him for a monument of his grandfather, William I. He has said that not one ol them de-serves a prize. Many of the famous sculptors in Germany refused to compete, claiming that the prizes were too small a reward for the
labor
required
in the preparation of models. If it is any consolation to Km per or William to know that the name disadvantage has operated in this country against the production of Ti fitting design for the Grant monument, the fact is now suggested to
1
Hon- she fminlK Her Children, A Philadelphia woman who attended a reception given to George Macdonald. the English novelist, when in this country. tells a queer fad Indulged in by the author's wife. The latter wore, where*ever she went, a belt, front which dangled wlta! appeared to be a htirnber of golden twills. During a conversation with the novelist the Philadelphia^ iiappened to ask bow many children he had. "One the wrong side of twelve,"1 was his answer, ."I suppose you mean thirteen?*'
No, madame: I have only eleven." Then Mr. Macdonald called his wife, who opened the golden balb (which proved to be locket*) and showed the photographs of all her child asm. illig|j8|i|
A Conflict l»
Congressmen ought to change the naotetjf Washington territory before
aa^Moiidm addim
illustration The electric %bt oo the Eiffel Uw«r
PROFESSION
i£
AJLJ
DR. T. W. MOORHEAD,
Physician and Surgeon,
OFFICE, 12 SOl'TH EIGHTH STRKET, Residence, 115 North Eighth St.
DR. VAN VALZAH,
DENTIST
Office In Opera Hou$e Blwlt.
I. H. C. ROYSE,
MARK R. SHERMAN.
ROYSE & SHERMAN,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
No. 517 Ohio Street.
L. H.
BARTHOLOMEW.
(Successors to Bartholomew & Hall.) 529 1-2 Ohio St., Terra Haute, Ind.
DR. E. A. GILLETTE,
DENTIST.
Filling of Teeth Specialty. Keen's New Block, Cor. 7th and Main.
Office. McKeen
LEO. J. WEINSTEIN, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon!
KesUicnce, ttiO hesuuit street.. '•iVire. Ill S. Sixth (Savings llatik Building.) All calls promptly answered.
DR. C. T. BALL,
t.imtted to trvHtnifnt of witurrli, throat nervovib (lisoiisosi. tumors and superfluous hnir,U5 Sovat ti St^ctti sstreet.
DR. GLOVEK.
a» sit F. vm A I'TI I»I. sriiti rii. Hour.-: 10 11 lit. tv 1 p.
Ill.
mill te S p. 111.
1J AI I,WAV.
3 EXPRESS TRAINS DAILY
FROM
EVAMSVU.LE, VINCENNC8, TERRE HAUTC and DANVtLLE
TO
CHICAGO
WHENCE DIRECT CONNECTION ismadn to all points
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Tiokeis via CUago ft Ewtorn UllMls E.«.
or
ratal, time tables and information in dotall« address your nearest Ticket Agent, WILLIAM HILL, Cen. Pnsa. and Tkt. Agt.
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CALL ON,
V. Q. DICKHOUT
For Trtu. VaM-"- »n-t TraveHnjf tvfi. 1/
the Mcrni*
~nm «i
Kit*
it
bpdonm *85* the Rockvttle. Oral.) Tribute. Future generations i£ never know when they see that "Homebody has gone to Washington," whether
THE
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en
ut tti
.jfttira ibu as
Mr Co W. «-ison
1
ive
ev
frvn
aftc
while him t\ssor le bu vai'aui arc at id a
\Y. R. MAIL.
BARTHOLOMEW & MAIL,
DENTISTS,
TELL.
ate
the
Olitit'K. nt plai gcttii
LU'S
of ai
Mw ii appli ig tC *6W 111 'elf am in iti tin consi in tvj cant ul \vi
So sa
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monk ivoi:
nnu: tl
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came
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Quickest
ROUTS
TO TUB
ar
be ap Irion Q8 \vl OtlH' I
you
are irotnir »way tlifilter he miike a trunk that prove a vtciortou* enemy Uio batr«aj(e tnw.-
HRUNKKIi'8 IIAL8AM.
IS THfSfFAIR
We warr&ct lUtt .NKKU'H C'AKMISATIVK Il/IMAM
to mire Hurrifiwr *•«»plain
tt.-.-rliaia. Fto •''•mfntmr. VruapO c&otarw Mi.-
J*.
Chm-. lHarrb«a. «nd Cn«aoa
ot
awl I- "r trwlasd th- n.
ty.
Wwcfealt' ti# nn tl»# world tort •(, to prodacm a r- or irnRTi|itlM of ctinal ?fT»cv» hrtmem m' ptnr** m4 im tiu dl»"*4ers ~--uew. f."»0Q
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rbfi attohtewt
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its
adaiia.
Ho44 fer flrnceixt*, 5®
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la
tad BO
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#eat far malt rftdsHut of
prU* *tA rt*. l/
Mir portasw. AAirmn, UIA)UK MKtHClXK
CO.. Traitf- HiOTE. I*». H'-m* HvfemicM: McZ-crm asd Iks Vl*o Co. KstSonal Btdtiuu
FRESH YORK .1X0 BilTIMORE
Gystcrsj^lllcunvr..
-AT-
E W. JOHNSON'S,
615 Main Stroet.
ib*iT e»id
iera
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odies t«*•
