Greencastle Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 18 October 1883 — Page 2

Ki l l’ NOiUINO UiOM MOTHER.

Ti.* >« • tlio apinninic iOir»ther, Am • th -v ^pui the fin© whit© thread:

i' fa a* va.« old und the other young— ao'den and u silver head.

•Men the you 14 voice f»r<»k«* in song was wonderfully Hweot; 1 i• :oother'B h'Mirt heat deep and oalm, r joy whs most complete.

I

• Vrta many a holy lesson. • vovhu with Hileot prayer,

Tnn4 ! to her gentlo. iMtetjing child

\s I• y two hat spinning there.

“ ’* 5 »f all that l < my d irling. Krom my older !;oad and heart, (io.l «i*'• t;i me one last thing to say. A::d -Vith it thou fiiall not part.

‘Tie ’ .vilt listen to my voice. And «.»,* woe that this must be! The v nc» of praise and the voice of love And the voice of flatterv.

Jiff \v •

.«**en to mo my tittle one, 1 a one thing that thou shall fear - v.*r a word to my love tx^ said •;i her moth t may not hear.

“No

ritter how t rue, my darling one, t’i *’ words may seem to thee, h* v ;«r * not fit for my child to hear If t. * cm not h** to d to me.

•ff fliouTt ever keep thy yomg heart pure

And thy mofchor’s heart fr »in fear, 1 1 » ;' • !I that is said to thee h* day \t ht to thy mother’s ear.”

W ^AT ONE GIRL DID.

Mollie I’erry woke, thf> moraine ot Memorial day, al>oat; s cross as it is possible for a healthy, sunny-tempered ffirl

to be, and with some reason.

For, to besriu with, her waking senses weri'fl ret greeted by a strong whiff of tobacco smoke wafted into her open window from the pipe of a lodger below; and ar -he had gone to s eep with the same incense iu her nostrils, jon must own that it was trying, particularly to a oountry hnrn nose t^at knew the fragrance of wild *• ape vines and locust trees. Whateve ei think, Molly was wrathful, and fliii u cd out of bed, shut the window wit'11 mphasis, and sitting down in her on. '.telling ohair, eyed with strong disfavor !• pile of clothes on another chair. And here was another reason for her crasHne a. The night before she had taken account of stock in the way of cloth •. and found herself on the verge of bank 11 .toy. “Not a decent thing among them except that gray suit,” she thought disconsolately; and the truth is they were a shabby lot. Barring the gray suit, a navi blue serge (ragged as to edges, aud ehinv as to elbows and back), a faded Caroline, an old black cashmere, hot and

dusti looking, make up the sorry display, ^"refa^them'

“■Why didn’t she buy some new clothes?’’ Well, there was no particular reason oTcept that she had no money to buy and no time to make, being one of the forty or more clerks in the “Mart of Fashion ” on Washington street, at a salary of SR a week. Anyone mathematically inclined can do thesum which Molly

did each week;

Board 8i.RR Washing and ironing 50 ■T'. i. i<Tt 1.

settlement. But Molly’s ancestors did not fight at Concord without leaving some of their spirit to their descendants, so she turned to go with an air that betokened no acquaintance with “rules,” when Mr. Bush, whose heart bad been a fritted e 'boned by memories of a certain grave iu Mount Auburn which would be decorated that day. handed out three trade dollars, and in ten minutes Molly was in the Common, “with all the world before her where to choose.” The usual leisure was so pleasant that the girl loiler:d aid lingered, enjoying the sunshine and air, aud only when t s noon whistles blew .’id she come down i >

reality.

After dinner, with locked door, she held a council of war. Here, on one side, was Molly Perry,24 years old,with health and hope, five dollars in her trunk, three silver dollars in her pocket, and one good suit, and on the other side the great,pushing, scrambling, selfish world, eager to grasp, ar>d slow to give. Mollv did some hard thinking. “There is ore thing t-ure,” she thought, “I won’t tend store again, and I won’t sew for a living, and I won’t be cooped up in a shop.” The chances are narrowing f-ist. Suddenly came an idea. “I’ll do it,” said Molly; and what it was, the Adveitiser

told next morning:

447 ANTED, by an American airl who in a aoort V T plain conk, a aituation to do hrutawork in a Hiuall family; nouatrv prafnrrod, Address M.

P., AnTortin. i offlae, Boston

Well, the answers fairly poured in. It seemed as though all womankind had been waiting for “an American girl who is a good plain cook;'* but Molly resolved to be critical aud waited. In the meantime. seeing that a way was open, she dressed heraelf iu her best and went shopping Saturday afternoon. She chose to patronize Rush k Crush, where her high and mighty airs gave unbounded satisfaction to the clerks, with whom she was a favorite She sailed up to the print counter with great dignity, turned the goods over, pulled the corners crosswiseafter the fashion of women shoppers, de, preoiated the patturns, etc., but finally bought print for three dresses, gingham for aprons, etc., to the amount of 83, aud o< muted out with great majesty the three

trade dollars.

"Oh, Molly, you know wo can't tako

them,” said the clerk. Molly turned to Mr. Rush, who was sauntering along with his eyes on the other side of the store,and

taking in the whole proceeding. “Mr. Rush,” she said, “I took these

here day before yesterday, and uow the

a far-away look, as country which held

One sitting at “Trinity” (a very hum-

ble one),

Mr. Rush was grimly am ised at her endaoity, but instead of answering her turned to the grinning oash-boy iu waiting, mid snappad: “Cash, what are you waiting for? Take the goods aud money

this instant!"

The ycuthful Mercury disappeared like a spirit, and Molly felt somewhat as her great ginndfather did at Concord. Monday morning brought a letter, which seemed promising, aud which read

to

Total

And out of the difference liotween this total and six dollars must come boots and gloves and hair-p'ns an 1 pocket handkerehiefs and everything else, so that you ean see that the Queen of Shelba waa--qnite safe from a rival so far as Molly

was concerned.

But this rabntion of the “Mart of Fashion" brings me to the cap-sheaf of Molly's discomfort. She had expected to have the lav to herself, but Rush A Cr'isli, scanting possible profits from country visitors, decid'd to keep open. So it was s very cross faoo that looked at Molly from the little wavy looking-glass, and the soft, brown hair was hatoheled and twisted with very few of the pats and touches usually bestowed on it, and the blue dre*s was donnedjwith some twitches. The sight of the breakfast table did not lighten her mood. She looked down its long length, and noted the spots and rings an! splashes on the coarse cloth, the knives and forks at all angles, and the dishes piled up, fragments and all, by the untidy table-girl, and felt an unutterable disgust for it all. It is not necessary *o go into the story of sickness and debt and death which had brought her from a quiet, refined home to be a clerk m the Mart of Fashion and an inmate of Widow Jackson’s second-rate boarding house; but wo will start with her this Memorial morning, wher, after trying her little teeth on some tough steak and turning over ou her plate some flabby fried potatoes, she fished a fly out of her ooffea, and took her w-.y to the

store.

Half the forenoon had worn away when Mollv, with a l>ox of tumbled laces before ber, stood looking after a lady wbo had just ta c sed with a cluster of violets at her throat, and thinking wistfully of a certain place she know of where they grew,cool and moist in their green leaves, when the voice of the ubiquitous floorwalker brought ber to the present“Miss Perry, if you are not more attentive, I shi.ll have to report you.” “I will nave yon that trouble,” said Miss Perry, and clap went the cover of the box, and swish went the box into its place, and Miss Perry, with very red cheeks and bright eyes, went down the long store to the office and tendered her resignation, “to take effect at onoe, if you please.” Mr. Rush was pleased, for trade was slackening and there were twenty girls for every vacancy. “But yon know our nil*.” Yes, she knew the rule, which was that a clerk leaving without ngtioeebpiiW forfeit pay from the last Saturday night

15 ] as follows:

84.65

Wheatfikld, N. H., June 2.—Miss M.

P.: We need a domestio, and prefer one [ of'V'r own nation. The family consists ! of myself and wife and a hired man. My wife is feeble, and the domestic w.mi l have to take charge of everything. Wo would pay $3 a week to the right person If you feel capable for the place, andean bring a recommendation, we should like i to have you oome as soon as possible. Then followed some directions about trains, and the whole was signed in plain, | homely fashion, “Yours Bethuel Har- j

low.”

“Wife feeble,” mused Molly; “well, she won’t b 'poking around the kitchen all the time" (another flash of the Concord spirit). “Domestic," not “servant” or “hired girl.’’ That suited. The result was that a few days Inter Molly, with a letter from her minister , was set down, the only passenger, at Whestfielde station.

Squire's eyes had though toward the

his Mary.

Presently they drove up to a comfortable house, with an air of plenty about the large barn anti wide norch, over which | grew a white lilac. Molly found hermiftress a little woman with fad 'd, gentle , eyes, and soft, slow voice. She looked at I the girl kindly, and held out her hand After giving her a directions, aud telling her where to find things, she added to her husband, “Tell John to car r v her trunk to the cast chamber. ’ This, apparently, was someth'ng unusual, for the Squire opened his month as though to say something, but being a man of few word-, shut it again, amt went out. Molly, following her trunk, found herself in a small room, with a bright carpet on the floor white on-tains looped away at the window, home-made linen towels with knotted fringe ou the little table, an old-fashioned chest of draweis, ai d a | low four-posted bed with valance and patchwoi k counterpane The room was neat, but had an unused look, and Molly tv< udered if the tiibe of girls of which the Hqnire had made mention, had marched through it; hut, too tired to think long,she unpacked her small wardrobe, said her prayers, and knew nothing more till morning,when a trilling of bi ds and a ray of sunshine on her face, woke her to her first day of service as a “domestic.” While making her simple toilette she gave many quick glances at the billows of apple blossoms under her window, and t omething born of the light and fragrance and music was reflected in her face as she took her way to the kitchen. The wood and kindlings ware near at hand, the fire started off briskly with a cheerful air of encouragement, anti then Molly considered her bill of fare. There was salt mackerel, eggs, stale bread, the inevitable salt pork, doughnuts and pie, and a pan of oraam whose yellow wrinkled surface hire testiumy t> th

Squire’s Jersey.

“That mackerel won’t be fried,” said Molly, for the course of frying at Widow Jackman’s had been severe. The fingers that had measurel lace aud ribbons so deftly made short work of getting breakfast, and the Squire, coming in from his i trs wherry bed with a pan full of “Wil-

sans,” found it about ready.

But somehow his table hud an unfamiliar lo >k. The cloth was on straight, the knivt-s and forks were laid With mathematical precision, an unwonted air of trimuess pervaded his familiar or okery, and—there was no pie on the table. But there was mackerel baked in cream, and mashed potatoes, and nicely browned

toast, aud the doughnuts.

“Miss Harlow don’t feel able to oomo

out to the table this morning,and I guess

I’ll take ner a bite before I oat.” And so saying the Squire took a plate, and commenced piling things on

promiscuous way,

“Oh,” said Molly, “let mode it. I have had a long experience with sick people. They must be tempted, you know.” 8he looked up at him with her bright smile, an 1 th» Squire gave in at onoe,and watched with won ler while a tray was brought, a clean n ipkin spread over it, a piece of the mackerel laid on a plate, with the cream ladled i ainhly over it, (Molly had seen too much of plates where the meat seemed to have been launched on th> m by an avalanche of gravy);

making was complete without Molly Perry. Those of you who have followed this story m expectation of some absent ron or nephew or younger brother of the family Hppea-mg aud taking Molly for a wife may ns well stop here, for nothing whatever of the kind happened,for the’Squire and his wife hail no sons,aud their nephews mid brothers were married long before Molly’s day. It is true that some smart young fur me/s of the region round about tied their horses occasionally at t’ e “Squire’s gate, end it is equally true that Molly said No to some of them, though they one and all swear by her. This story is not written to induce all clerks and shop girls to rnsb into housework, for not one in twenty would be capable of doing as Molly did, and not one in a hundred would find sue.; a home; it is written simply to show what one girl did.

came a little plate of the potato, a slice of brown toast, a little plate of butter, a cup of o ffee, knife, fork, spoon,etc. Then she whisked into the pantry, and out again with a sauoer of strawberries, and edded them to the contents of the tray. “Wait a minute,” she said, aa the ’Squire lifted his burden, and in a twinkling she was out of the door and back

The Tiger and His Victims.

tJt-lj/r tvtti.

Asa matter of fact, the tiger is not a specially ferocious animal. As the greatest authority on Indian natural history says, it is “a harmless, timid animal. ’ It feeds ou animals that are prodigiously injurious to crops, and there are ou record in India the complaint? of villagers on the increase of deer and wild animals in oonsequeiiee of the d struction of tigers in their neighborhood. When it gets too feeble to catch wild animals it begins to eat tame ones, or, easier victims still, the men and women who are in charge of the cattle. It then becomes, ns a “man-eater,” a criminal against humanity—and death cannot overtake it too soon. But it is only those who know the Hindoo thoroughly wiio can credit the amazing apathy of these mem even when in imminent danger. So long as it is not actually visible they refu e to take precations against peril, and I remember during the Afghan war assisting to thrash some lazy follow ers in order to arense them to a proper aens of the necessity of saving th. ir lives. They had squatted down to smoke along the roadside iu the Khyber Pas? though they knew the enemy was ’urking in the rocks above them and in the jungle behind them; though they had with their own eyes seen the corpses of camp followers lying where they had been murdered when they set down to smoke. In the very same way the herdsman comes loafing home iu the twilight, singing a song of the country as he goes (to let the tiger know that no one is coming, probably) and suddenly out of the sugar-canes Dashes the tiger, and there is au end of that herdsman. But the next man will probably do the very same thing. He will take another road, of course, on his way home, but he will lag behind his cattle and sing to himself in the same ridiculous way, and out from under the . bair tree springs the same old tiger. In-

it iu a k deed, it is one of the problems of Indian

Administration how to keep the natives from snioide. They prefer to have half the village down with the emall-pox and then to carry a dead chicken round the stricken hamlet on the end of a pole than to be vaccinated. They prefer to lose a prodigious number of their acquaintances by drowning than to protect their well ?. They prefer to have tens of thousands of men aud women bitten by snakes in the toes and thumbs and die therefrom than t > let enough light into a hut to see the then | differenoe between firewood and cobras.

I M. HANNA, M. I>. I Onoe in Bayne’s BlockIteeicipnoe, corner of Vi.it* nml Walnut eireets. the former residence of Dr. Kills.

II V. DEVOKE, XX • ... Phjsi rian and Surgeon — Office, Kust Washington street, over Darn ell’s grocery store, with Dr, Evans. 7-*

(i. W, Hence, M. D J. F. Morrison, M. D. I \RS. HENt E A MOHKIHON, ■ X Other and residence, Washington street, one square east of National t»ank. ly'J

K. n r< II LYNN, M l>. • Office, cor. Vine and Poplar street*.

t. SMYTH E, VJX* . ..Physician and Surgeon Office, on Vine street, between Washington and Walnut, one door north of family residence

II, EVANS Xlrf* Physician and Surgeon Office, East Washington street, over DsrnhllV grocery store, Oreencastle, Ind.

\\r OYEKSTKEET, >> . dkn tsr {^“Special attention given to preserving the natural teeth. Iy3

ill. W. P. HILL

Homoeopathic Physician-

i'he Doctor bus hftd many years experience, anti is more thmi ordinarily successlii: in the treatment of all l*re% Hill«ig He has mane a very extensive and >• ireful study ot Chronic IHneses and the IMwertWe* <>t VV«»inen him I < lail«lr«‘M, and •• ci pr-Mi'^e a cure in many cases where others have failed All Medieiiioa m re turnislioil. All cal In receive prompt attention. Tali and -< t a nook

free that explains the comparative merits of the two schools of practice. Office over Levi

Kahn’s store, Green castle, jnd.

1W-21

ATTORNEYS AT LAW.

T muni. '' • Office, in Albin’s Hlock.south side nublio square, Greoncastle, Ind. Practices in,all the courte of the State, ami solicits business.

H IIOMAS T. MOOKE,

. .Attorney at Law and Notary Public.

Office, over (t. Mautz store.

27-16

VY r cox, ▼ ▼ • Notary Public and Attorney at Law. Office, over frade Emporium, east side public fquare. 15-14

JOHN H. MILLER, Attorney at Law.

Pension anti (’laim Agent. Office, East Washington street, over (1. Mautz store. l-*2

THOMAS HANNA,

A no RNE y-A T- L A IV.

OFFICE—Room* 7 nn'l 8, 18V.) North Penn.yl • vania street, Indianapolis,with Pcelle & Tftvlor Will practice in all the court*.

s

OU1* FREE TO ALL!

E

DR. ASTLEY’S APPARATUS, together with a free prescription for the permanent cure of Seminal Wen k an I all other diseases arising from Solf Abn**©, Yotittifui Imli*crHIoii Send for FREE sealed from observation, to E. M A EH LIN A CO., South Front st., Columbus, O. Mention paper. 33- 2

jYRT 1ST LC

Dress ill a king! All’s. Keating Is in re eipt of the Latest New York Styles.

SILK DRESSES MADE from $5 to 86 S$oIicitocl,

Residence—One Square west of the Walnut Street House. 38 50

L

\ .an*. •

Irish Humor.

I Chamber’s Journal. “I engaged,’' said a burly lawyer, “a j chaise at Galway to conduct me some few j miles into the country, and had prooeedI cd some diatanoe when it came to a aud* I den standstill at the beginning of n rath- ; ex steep incline, aud the coachman leapI ing to the gtouu 1. came to the door and

THE RUSSELL.

INDEPENDENT

Lateral Moving Slacker.

again with a spray of white lilac, which, j opened it. ‘(Vhat are you at, man? This

Squire Harlow, waiting for the exported “good, plain oo k” waa smitten with great misgivings at the sight of the stylish young lady, for to his eyes, accustomed to the dross of Whentfieldsdnughtars, the simple gray suit with its graceful draperr seemed the haighth of ele gauce, aud he was not reassured by the question of the station agent; “Got company from the eitv, ain't ye?” But it was too late to retreat,aud soon old Dnn'l was pulling them steadily toward home. The Squire said little, but glanced at the girl oocftaioBal'y from under his shaggy eyebrows. It was a fair, honest face, whi-'h freshened with every in'le io the sweet evening air, and the gray eyea took in everything, from the ohipmonk oo the wall to the locust trees with their fragrant drooping clusters. “Want a piece? ’ raid Hie Squire, as they drove under one. Her face was anew/r enough, and stopping old Dau’l.the good man ant a olusler aud dropped it in her lap. She triftily took off her new lisle thread gloves to take it, /bowing hands so white that the Squire groaned internally. Those hands wash his dishes aud sei nb his Doors? Was this young lady, who was prettier and better dressed than any girl iu Wheatfields, his domestio? He shook his head alightly, ohewing a bit of the locust, Molly ventured a few questions about the famMy, and he rd the story of what was always uppermost in the Squire's mind—the story of the lost daughter,Mary, one of the victims of Now England’s scourge, who ha/1 faded away three years before, since when “Mias Harlow h»d sorter pined,” It was a pathetic little atory tol 1 in the laconic New England way, bat the brown, knotty hands worked uns'eidily on the reiua, and the

in a tall glass, was given the place h mor in the middle of the tray. “Sho!" said the ’Squire, with his slow

smile, “that’ll just suit iny wife. She'd

famous for having things fixy.”

Mrs. Harlow had missed the acoustom-

Complete. Convenient. Ituruble. It savcn from two to four im n on the stack. Saves the chaff by depositing it in the centre of the suck. PRICE, COMPLETE, $125.00. Furnished In Four Sizes. Can be adapted to any Thresher. Address for full particulars, RUSSELL & CO., Massillon, Ohia

of I is not where I ordered you to stop. Has the animal jihbnl?’ ‘Whisht, yer honor, whisht!’ said Paddy, in an undertone, “I’m only desaviug the siy baet/j. 111 jist bang the door, and the o. ifty ould creator will thins he's iutiraly got rid of

ed smell of frying, and wondered in a j yer honor’s spliudid lorm. and he’ll be at feeble way if Molly couldn’t find Hu, | the top of tlie lull in n > time.’"

pork. “Why, Bethuel,'’ she said, as her husband sat the tray do / n beside her “how pretty! I really believe I am hungry.” And the 'Squire went hack to his own breakfast so happy that he entirely forgot the absence ot the pie. Well, this was the lieginning, and though life afterwards was not all cream aud atrawberries and white lilacs, and though bread would sometim s bura,Hnd pastry Uatly refuse to be flaky,and though unused muscles sum. limes ached with the new work, yet the giri kept up a bravo heart. The ’Squire and bis wife were uniformly kind, and the lath r, who had snffeied ns much from lack of cheerful society as from any physical cause, gradually grew stronger, and would sit tltroU 'h the long sumraer forenoons in the threat airy kitchen, pla' idly knitting or paring apples, and (hough she sometimes looked wietfiilly after Molly as she tripped from puntry to cellar, and longed for the girlish figure which used to flit about in the same way, her h«atfc took great comfort in the bright, cheerful stranger. And thu’Squire, hearing the

On the edge of a small river in the County of Cavan, in Ireland, there is—or used to he—a stone with the following inscription cut upon it, no doubt intended for the information of strangers traveling that way: “N. B.—When this stone is out of si it ht it is u >t safe to ford the river.” Even the above is almost if not quite surpassed by the famous post erected a few years since by the surveyors of the Kent roads m England: “This is the bridlepath to Faversham. If you can’t read this you had better keep to the main road.” We are also reminded of a debate which took place in the Irish House of Commons in 17J3, on the leather tax, in which the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Sir John Plunkett, observed with great emphasis: “That in the prosecution of the present war, every man ought to give his last guinea to protect the remainder.” Mr. Vuudalcur added: “However that might be, the tax ou leather wo'rid be severely felt by tbe barefooted peasantry of Ireland.” To which Sir B. Roche replied that this could be easily remedied by making the under leathers of wooiL" Baubaua Miller, who was hanged at Richmond for murdering her husband, had expressed a desire to go to the gal

RECEIVED!

Gr. ]VX[«E^'CL‘t!Zf 17 E. Washington St, Nil EKlUIDIHIIl!

Hamburgh and Irish Points.

A Handsome Line of GLOVES mid HOSIERY.

New Millinery. ItTMlOVEliym

CALL AND SEE THEM, M

KL i e f e x*’s Is the place to ttet a good

LUNCH!!

And don’t yon forget it. ^ Iso a large stock of GKOt 'KBIKB, at the Tery lowest chmIi prices. Farmers, call and see him. The boye all know where Charley Kiefer is, and they go to see him without invitation. ly^J)

Wanted.

Wagon Spoke Timber.

We want 000,000 White Oak Spokes, cut 28 inches long, 1?4 inches thick on heart edge and 3 inches wide. Must lie go/ d ‘ough timber, straight, free from knots or woimholes, the sap to be taken off, for which we will pav the higuest market price, to be delivered at our factory iu Gieenoastle. 2tf ..- f-Ati .Bkockway A Rookafellow

TO The LADIES

Of Greencaetle and vicinity.

I have taken the Agency for Mrs. M.A.Ferguson s Eureka Rule

for fitting and drafting ladies, misses and children’s clothing. I find it to be splendid, giving easy aud beautiful fits. I am r&iriy aud williug to teach any one wishing to learn. I will al?o cut patterns,and cut and lit garments Please give me a trial. Mbs. W. E. STARR. 44 East Seminary street. 44tf

The CHEAP

MSI GROCERY

K OF

jiiu&Minns,

Staple & Fancy Groceries,

Provisionn, Queeimware. (Jhint-wure,etc. We Bell the celebrated

WABASH Pl.OUR.

Has opened n

Deal Estate Office

1 No. 4x5V OHIO STREET, TERRE HAUTE, INDI^.4.

(Establish >d 2875.) For all Disease of the Fye, Ear, Head, Nost. Throat, Lungs and all Chronic Dlstases,

gff 13retaily CHEOKIC DISEASES ofW nd

ly CHRONIC DI8EARER of W n«o un* ChildiHii; Fifltula, Pilea, Lupufl,('niiC4- , Ophm*

Habit, niHMimatiHm, Neuralgia. Skin Diner »s, Mfv EASES of thw STOMACH, LIVER, SPLKK' . II KA 1(1 : Hiqppien of the Kidneyn and Bladder, and all diHeaaea ol tn< -mu : '-T-r'nnry SvBtetn. ALL NFL 'OPS ]>!«-

EASES: Liiial). , • . a or St. Vitu Janco. El lepay, Catalepsy, SCKOFU.A m all its forma, and aL those distr&Aes not mtccesslully treated by the “buaf Physician" aud Deformities oi all kinds, and inutrumeulr

furnished.

whole Una of Pens will bo sold by th*- trader r:*”Price Lint* furnished to dealers ou applicalion.

ELECTRICITY and ELECTRIC RA TIIS

fresh, new voice singing about the house,

would give a great sigh for the lost voir •, i f^VinUhiteBto^Ringe and without shoes

but somehow the old house seemed less 1

mu somenow me oiu xtoiise soemeu .ess R8 Bhe expecte(l .. to wear ffolden ePppe^

lonely to him, after awhile his first qnes- in heaven.”

tiou would be, “Where’s Molly?" The j — plain country soc # y readily took her in j All nations use the grindstone,and it is and considered her high authority iu the 1 perhaps the one piece of machinery that matter of “looping'’ of overskirt.i and hta the same form and is the name in

“doing up” of h tir, ai.d at last n» merry- principle everywhere.

of the

All cases of Agu. , Dumb Ague or Chills

and Fever, Fistula, Piles, Ulcers and F Rectum, Lupus, most Cancers, r

le Diseases genernlly. On le Cornea, Weak and Boro Eye. Ear, Nose, Throat or

torrnc

eases, Pemai

Ulcers of the Cornea, of the Eye. Ear, Nos

Flssuret

Lancert*, most Hktn In**

rally, Granutai

Throat or Skin fK-xema), of

permatorrhaia or diseases peculiar to Mon and Youths. Operations for Pterygium, Strabismus or Cross Eyea. irtiflcial Pupil, Opium Habit, Tape W'orme, Hydrocele , Hernia or Rupture, Epilepsy or Fits. OW Dore i^egn, Old Bores fanvwhere upon the body) Rheu in at ism, Acute or Chronic, Gonorrbcea, Byplnhs an«

Chancroids.

Art; Var

Bright’s Disease ssd Billons Colic, Etc.

Address with stamp.

Consultation froo and Invited.

2d 1*4

ED. AC KK KM AN Can make you ROOTS & SHOES

That will wear yoi ns long as 1w,> nidi nary pans of tliosc vou buy out of the stores.

REPAIRING

Is also neatly and promptly done bv h m Call on Inin, near the Engine House. 38-37

h

• •

K A. Hays’ oldatand, entri aide public Hquare, is

the beet and cheapest place to buy

And also the rtdiahl© bent wood churn. Highest price in cash or goods for country produce. 40- 30

w.s.cox

Gn tho east ouleof tho Public Square, over the I l ru/lB Emporium, imti nil |„,rHoiiM winhing to i 'lixpose of property, or to purchase homcH in the | city or country, will do w 11 to seo him. He 1 will give

] CIonp Attrnlion to li/tsinc.ss, nml Guarantee Satisfaction.

THE MILLER BROS.CUTLERYCO. MERIDEX, CO.XX.

STANDARD POCKET CUTLERY, Ladies’Scissors and Ink Krasers. Make all stylciof STEEL PENS. We show ontof Patent Adjustable Quill ArtionResprv.Hr IV-i, 4 The Acme/* and will mail nuniplcgrusson receipt •! v i

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