Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 November 1908 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
GREEN CAST LE’HERALD
1 KII>AY, XOVIMllEH _*7. i
HERALD
Founded 1906
PrBLTSHKI> EVENING
>'*»• pt Sunday the Star and Democrat i’uhlishinx (*ornpany at 17 and 19 Smith Jackson Street, Greencastle, Ind.
I
F. C. TILDEN - - - C. J. ARNOLD Editors
TerniM of nieteriiilion fine Year, in advan«e $3.00 By Carrier in City, per week..6 cents Single* Copies 2 cents
\d\erti<«inu ItuteM
|iou \ pplien f icoi
WEEKLY ST A K - DEMOCRAT Established 1858 The official county paper, sent to any | address in the Coiled State's, for $1.00 a year- Payable strictly in advance.
Entered is second-class mall matter it the* Greencastle, Ind., Postofflce.
Telephone.
No. 0."
PE.YK BROKEN PROMISES. Tin' .\InmiaHiirors Association and otln*r stnnd-pat 111<• n who have been votiim for and snpporlint; the Rcpnhlicnn |iart\ on the strength of its tarIfl declaration* In It* Chicago platform, are now trembling with a great fear. This fear is that the platform, in the words of the Springfield Repiihli< an. "was made to get in on. not to act on.” In other words the signs of the times seem to show tli.it the Republican party, from Taft down, is about to forget the Chicago platform, the men who aided with the sinew:, of war and the standpat- j ters, and will go in for tariff revision downward. The president of th ■ Manufactured's Association believes ' this. He declares that it would he exceedingly tricky and deceitful for tlmj Republican party to now repudiate its Chicago plank which all manufacturers understood to he a hid for the upport of Hie high tariff men. The Itenim rats honestly stood, he dei lares, far tariff reduction on a revenue liasip. Tito Republicans pre- | tended to stand for just the oppo-I ite. To now make their pledges of no effe f and to adopt, even In modified form, as a result of the canvass a ml anal, is of the election returns, the pe-ition of the Democratic party I is to act dishonestly. It is to make | both sides diet rust fill of the part.' and the party leaders. Taft lias at | tempted, throughout Ids campaign toj lie till things to all men. Now he! must choose, and it appears that lie is to boose that which is contrary i to the platform declaration of his I party.
Wiliams' Indian Pile Ointment will cure Hllnd, Bleeding and Itching Piles. It absorbs the tumors allys Itching at onc.e acts as a poultice gives instant relief. Williams’ Indian Pile Ointm ent Is prepared tor Riles and itching of the private parts. Sold by all druggists, ,.iail DOc and $1.00, Williams' MTg. prop. Cie\eland, O. 49
Making Good. There Is no way of making lasting friends like "Making Good;” mid Doctor Pierce’s medicines well exemplify this, and their friends, after more than two decades of popularity, are numbered by the hundreds of thousands. They ha\i) "made good" and they have not made drunkards. A good, honest, square-deal medicine of known composition is Dr. Pierce's Qoldcn Medical Discovery. It still enjoys an immense sale, while most of the preparations that have come into prominence in the earlier period of its popularity have "gone by the board ” and are never more heard of. There mu^t be some reason for lids long-time popularity and that is to be found In its superior merits. When once given a fair trial for weak stomach, or for liver and blood affections, its superior ctmtive qualities are won manifest; hence It has survived and grown in popular favor, while scores of lcs» meritorious articles have sudden! v Hashed Into favor for a brief period and tken been as soon lorgotten. For a torpid liver with Its attendant Indigestion, dyspepsia, headache, per hap; dizziness, foul breath, nasty coated tongue, with bitter taste, loss of appetite, with distress titter eating, nervousness . nd d'ini ity. nothing is to good aa Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It’s an honest, snuare-deal medicine with all Its ingredients printed on bottle-wrapper — no secret, no hocus-pocus humbug, therefore don’t anct/it a siihstltutf that the dealer may possibly make a little bigger prolit. Insist on yc.ur right to have what you call for. Don’t buy Dr. Pierce's favorite Prescription expecting it to prove a "cure-all.” It Is only advised for woman’s s/aV-fot ailments. It makes weak women strong and sick women well, le ss advertised than some preparations sold for like purposes. Its sterling curative virtues still maintain ns position in the front ranks, where it stood over two decades ago. As an invigorating tonic and strengthening nervine it is iinequaled. It won’t satisfy those who want" booze," for there is not a drop of alcohol in it. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets, thoorfr/fintl Dittle Diver Pills, although the tifst pill nl their kind In the market, still lead, and w hen once tried are ever afterwards in favor. Kasy to take as candy—one to three a doso. Much iinUuUxl but ticntr Ot/tuiicU.
Spider Cures. In China spiders are highly esteemed In the treatment of croup. You get from an old wall the webs of seven black spiders—two of which must have the owners sitting In the middle—and pound them up In a mortar with a little powdered alum. The resulting mixture must then be set on tire, and the ashes, when squirted into the throat of the patient by means of a bamboo tube, are said to etTi-et a certain and Immediate cure. Black spiders are evidently full of medicinal virtue, for they are largely employed In the treatment of ague as well. Tn Somersetshire. If one Is afflicted with the unpleasant ailment, the way to get well is to shut up a large black spider In a box and leave It there till it dies. At the moment of Its disease the ague should disappear. In Sussex the treatment is more heroic; the patient must swallow the spider. Perhaps, after all. this remedy may not tic so disagreeable as It appears, for a German lady who was in the habit of pi king out spillors from their webs as s|n- walked through the woods and eating them after lirst depriving them of their legs declared that they were very nice Indeed and lasted like nuts Rendon <'hronlcle. Asked Too Much. In It. F. .loliusou's 1 k, ''From Pekin to Mandalay,” the author tells the story of ji poor Chinese scholar noted for his piety, who heard the voice of an Invisible being who spoke to him thus; “Your piety lias found favor In the sight of heaven. Ask now for what you most long to possess, for 1 tun the messenger of the gods, and they have sworn to grant your heart's desire." "I ask," said the poor scholar, "for the coarsest clothes and food, just enough for my daily wants, and I beg that I may have freedom to wander at my will over mountain and fell and woodland stream, free from all worldly cares, till my life’s end. That Is all 1 ask." Hardly had he spoken than the sky seemed to be tilled with the laughter of myriads of unearthly voices. "All you ask,” cried the mes senger of the gods. “Know you not that what you demanded is the high est happiness of the beings that dwell In heaven? Ask for wealth or rank or what earthly happiness you will, hut not for yon are the holiest joys of the gods.” The Ungrateful Cuckoo. To hear the cuckoo's cheery note you might think he hail the clearest eon science In the world. He can have nei ther memory nor moral sense or he would not carry it off so gayly. We say nothing of the "raptures." who are a race apart, hut Hie most disreputable of birds, as a rule, are guilty of noth lug worse than peccadillos. The jack daw will steal for the mere fun of the thing, for he can make no possible usi* of plate or jewelry, and sometimes un dcr temptation may make a snatch at a pheasant chi k. Sparrows are, of course, notorious thieves, hut they rank no higher In crime than I lie sneaking pickpockets. Rut the cuckoo, so to speak, Is a murderer from his cradle. He violates the sanctity of a hospitable hearth. His (list victims are his own foster brothers, and before he tries his wings on the lirst (light he is Imbrued In fraternal blood, like any Atuurath or Bazajet.—London Saturday Review. Which Foot Walks Faster? You may think this a very silly ques tlon to ask. but It Isn’t. It Is a simple, demonstrable fact, which you can prove to your own satisfaction in n very few minutes. If you will take n pavement that Is elear, so that there will be no luterferenee, and walk brisk ly in the center, you will find that bo fore you have gone fifty yards you have veered very much to one side. You must not make any effort, of course, to keep in the center, but if you will think of something and endeavor to walk naturally you cannot keep a direct line. The explanation of this lies In the propensity of one foot to walk faster than the other, or one leg takes a longer stride than the other, causing one to walk to one side. You can try an experiment In this way by placing two sticks about eight feet apart, then stand off about sixty feet, blindfold yourself and endeavor to walk between them. You util find It almost impos slide.
IICKCLOHE CP FLIP Fires In Bamboo Forests Are the Fiercest Known.
Seven Years of Proof. "I have had seven years of proof that Dr. King's New Discovery is the best medicine to take for coughs and colds and for every diseased condition of throat, chest or lungs,” says W. Af Henry, of Panama, Mo. The world has had thirty-eight years of proof that Dr. King’s New Discovery Is the host remedy for coughs and folds, lagrippe, asthma, hay fever, bronchitis, hemorrhage of the lungs, and the early stages of consumption. Its timely use always prevents the* development of pneumonia. Sold under guarantee at the Owl Drug Store 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free.
Ballot for United States Senator
J am a and I am in favor of (Htftti- your ikiliticH) of tor th. . t nate of the United States.
SWEEP ON A MILE A MINUTE.
Like the Roar, the Roll and the Rattle of a Great Battle Is the Noise of the Exploding Stalks That Sometimes Shoot High Into the Air. When the forests are alire, when the smoke makes dusk at noon and reddens the harvest moon a thousand miles away, there Is the measure of a cunfingration. When the prairies burn, ns they used to before farms had crept in upon the endless miles of grass, there was a lire which ran like mad and left behind it n blackened trail of death. If one could combine the speed of the prairie lire with the tumult of the Mazing forest, that would he a tire Indeed Such a combination is effected when the bamboo groves catch tire. The bamlion is hut a grass, a grass with the height of a tree, swaying stems reaching ion. even ino, feet in air. In Cambodia, where the bamboo groves along the rivers cover the space of forests, it is no unusual thing for fires to break out and sweep all before them for many miles. If the summer has been dry the bamboo turns sear and intlammaMe as any grass. All that is needed is a spark; then ruin runs red. It Is not necessary to rely upon the carelessness of the woodsman to start the blaze. The bamboo cun kindle itself. Let two swaying stalks of .fry bain boo be set In motion by the breeze, let one rub across tin* other long enough, and the friction will sot the spark, and the long dry leaves \ ill feed the tlame. It is known that . .any fires of the bamboo forests thus originate. Per haps It was from observing such a sight that primitive man learned tin* Promethean secret. That theory lias been advanced. As sot it. as a tlame in the bamboos has crept to the level of the tossing tips it spreads like wildfire. The wind carries a sheet of flame along the grove at tremendous speed. Some observer , say that such tires have boon seen to move forward at the rate of more than a mile a minute. Seen front below, it looks as if she sky had hurst into an instant flash of flame. Prom such a burst of lire there could he no escape. Fortunately It passes high overhead at the tops of tin* bam boos. It serves as a warning to the traveler who may be making his way along some one of the water courses by which the forest is intersected. The bamboo itself is almost an obstacle to travel of any sort. It is well nigh ini possible to force a way through It ex cept by the slow and toilsome labor of hewing out a path. The fire In the great trunks moves more slowly, and if warning be taken It may be possible to sink one's boat and throw up wet herbage and day against the bank of the stream to provide shelter until tin* furnace Mast has blown by. Such n fire in the bamboo has not only the speed of the prai rle lire on its sweep overhead, but it lias tin* same volume of fuel ns is found in any forest tire. It combines the two types. Kumhoo forest tires have another quality which is all their own. They hang and rattle with thunderous crashes, ns of artillery tire, without cessation. The stalks of these tree bamboos are frequently more than a foot in diameter. Near the ground the joints are close together; in the younger growth the nodes may be several feet apart. Rut, longer short as they may be. each joint of the sun dried bamboo is a tightly sealed chamber tilled with air. The partitions between the cavities are singularly tough; the outside rind of the stalks is almost pure flint. When the Mast of the flame sweeps onward the air In the stalks upon which it is driven is suddenly heated to a very high temperature. The residuum of moisture which may be in the stems Is immediately transformed into steam and at once subjected to superheating, thus becoming a violent explosive. As the hot breath of the flame becomes hotter these joints burst with loud cannon discharges. Sometimes the force of the explosion near the roots is so great as to shoot the stalk like a javelin high Into the air. where it flashes into torchlike flame and is carried by the wind to spread wider disaster. The bursting of the smaller joints Is like the roll and rattle of rifles and machine guns. The effect is that of a battle hotly contest cd. Washington Rost. An Aquatic Outfielder. One day a ship was lying at anchor at Boca Grande when the crew ob served a dolphin chasing a Hying fish, both coining directly toward the ship. On nearing the vessel the flier arose In the air and passed over the bow just abaft the foremast. As It did sn the dolphin went under the ship and, coming up on the other side, sprang from the water and caught the Hying tish on “the fly” just as It was curving gracefully down In Its descent to the water Puntn Gordu Herald.
DYNAMITE IN THE MAKING. Workmen Who Are Encircled by Death In Gallons and Tons. So thoroughly deceptive is dynamite in the making th '• you are apt to be disappointed on i wing the surface of things. You could more readily fancy thunderbolts leaping and crushing from tender blue skies than that the most fearful forces in creation are bidden under such a peaceful exterior. Nitroglycerin, a cupful of which would distribute you over square miles of landscape, Is dlllgctstly mixing around you in hundreds and thousands of gal Ions. It is making itself in big iron retorts, cascading down leaden gutters and merrily tumbling In minute Niagaras into Immense vats, where the deliquescent yellow peril pursues its Jour ney powder ward. Out of one receptacle It fares furiously through special lead coils, driven only by cooling blasts of air. and is drawn off like draft ale and piped on to the next perfecting stage. Gaze with the nitroglycerin expert Into one of those big caldrons. The interior is brilliantly illuminated by electricity, the only illuminating agency permitted in or about the dan ger houses. Around you are other houses at uniform distances apart and connected by a series of narrow gauge tracks wherein workmen arc railroading nitroglycerin from here and pulp cotton from there to In* compounded into dynamite and Masting gelatin. Greatest care is taken in rolling Die product from house to house. As soon as a loaded cart is ready to pass out of the nitroglycerin house, for instance, a semaphore signals from an adjoining station, to which the consignment is carefu^y hurried Around you are long storehouses packed with pulp In tons of innocent whiteness. Rrcscntly this pulp will assume a tan color under the nitrating process, and (hen. suddenly becoming carbonlte. red cross, hereules, judson and giant powder, fordte or what you order, it develops the quasi virtues of dynamite dynamite or blasting gelatin In which more natural forces are | condensed to tin* cubic inch than exist anywhere else in creation. Death, curbed and sleeping, encircles you in gallons and 'ons. Annihilation threatens at every turn hi the form of potential pulverizing forces. But the man and tin* mercury are there also, alert, responsive, reliable Leslie's Weekly. LIBRARY SLOW POKES. Time Killing Methods of Officials In Continental Europe. “Americans who grumble about having to w ait a long time for books when applying to a public library," said a Boston literary woman, “should try to work or study In a foreign library, particularly in Germany. "The typical continental librarian takes no account of time. The reader, worker or student must turn In Ids or her application for books at least a day In advance. The men who search for the books applied for arc aged, tottering creatures who have been shutfling around the dusty piles of books for years, and the word hurry Is not In their vocabulary. “The most priceless books and manuscripts are kept In places which are perfect tiro traps, and disorder predominates in every department. When you speak about the Impossible methods employed the librarians tell you that they arc too poor to Introduce any modern indexes or catalogues. This is to some extent so, but as a matter of fact they would not change If they had all the money In the world at their disposal. "They do not wish to encourage the common people to use books. The learned are iiiuong the aristocracy, and the spread of the knowledge which Is hidden in the o wonderful literary museums Is far from (he purpose of the men at the head of Europe's libraries. "There may be some delay In our libraries, lint our people in the lower walks of life are certainly ahead of the common people of tin* old world In the matter * f getting books when they want them, and generally free of charge.” New York Telegram.
Missing Opportunities. “1 have no patience with a man who makes the same mistake twice,” said Armes. rather severely, in speaking of an unfortunate friend. “Neither have I,” agreed his wife, “when there are so many other mb takes to make.” Youth’s Companion
lie that studleth revenge keepeth his ov n wounds green.- Bacon.
The Town to Be Born In. In I la* German town of Kllngenberg, near Asclmffetiberg. Bavaria, in addition to having no rates to pay for the upkeep of the town, those actually born in the parish receive from the muni Ipallty a sum of £12 15s. a year. This sum, if invested regularly at, say, 8 per cent, would entitle the owner to rcelvo about £1,500 at the age of sixty —a very handsome old age pension Were It not necessary that the Inhabitants should prove birth in the parish before becoming entitled to this payment the popularity of Kllngenberg as a place of residence would doubtless be enormous Westminster Gazette.
For Bargain Day. "She’s no lady!” “Why, I always thought her most retim'd." "On the surface, yes. But what do you think of a woman who wears her little boy’s football shoes to the bargain sales and spikes every one who gets In her way?”—Cincinnati Enquirer. After Him. "It’s hard to lose your friends,” remarked the man who was down and out. “Hard?” snorted the man who was on the high tide of prosperity. "It’s Impossible." Rhilndclphla Record. The Prompter. “I suppose that Inspiration prompts many of your jokes.” "A few,” admitted the press humorist. “Desperation, however, prompts the most." Louisville Courier-Journal
AQuestioiiof Honor J
[Copyright. ISOS, by T. C. McClure. 1 Sergeant Brady and his -quad of men laid been cut from Rort i'httinas for four days, cutting and placing telegraph poles, w hen they were lirtsl on by the Sioux. There was a treaty of peace M-twcen the white man and the red, but it had been felt for three months past that the latter were getting ready to break it. The sergeant had gone out without instructions what to do In case he was attacked. When he found that he was menaced he did what a veteran captain would have done. He called in his men. scattered for two miles along the line, and threw up defenses and prepared to stand off the Indians until a eourict' could get through to the fort and return with instructions. Unfortunately for Sergeant Brady, the regimental adjutant “had It in” for t he grizzled old veteran, who had put In twenty years on the frontier and knew all the tricks of the red men. Three or four things had occurred to prove that the adjutant was after tie* sergeant's stripes, and for weeks the latter had walked the chalk line to defeat the former's plans. When the courier dodged the gathering warriors and reachiHl the fort and reported the commandant was for directing the squad to come in at once, but it was the adjutant who said: “Sergeant Brad.* simply reports seeing signs and being fired on. It Is some of the young bucks giving him a scare. Ha’s got rallied over nothing. We have no reports of outbreaks.” “He lias shown his bravery a score of times, but perhaps he has made too much of this occasion,” mused the commandant. “I will order him to hold his position for three days and then report again. 1 will also caution him not to provoke hostilities.” It was a tight squeak for the courier to return to the little command. The Indians were creeping up on till sides and boasting that there should bo a wipe-out. Already there had come a demand for surrender, and hostile bullets bad conje singing over the defenses. The sergeant read ids orders and then assembled Ids men, read them aloud and said: “It’s the hand of the adjutant, me boys, and it makes no difference to him that the rest of you have got to go down with me. It's rattled 1 am, is it. after being at the front in a score of shindies with the red devils! We are not to provoke hostilities with 200 copper faced heathen waiting for our scalps!” Seventy or eighty Indians who had crept us near as they could find cover rose up at a signal and rushed the breastwork of brush and limbs and bowlders. Tin* seven concentrated their fire on the rush and broke it. Twenty redskins lay dead when the living retreated. “Take a long breath and do a little smiling, me boys." said tin* sergeant as he turned over and sat up. “That’s a thing we might brag about at the post if any of us were to get there. We are going to get value received, hut don't forget what the end is to be. If there were twenty of us and we had two guns apiece it would still be the same. Rafferty, what place In the old country is responsible for that mug of yours?” “The city of Dublin, as far as I can remember,” was the reply. “I’ve been there myself and can't say too much in honor of the town, if you've an old mother back there you might do a bit of praying before our friends make another move. O'Grady, did you bring that red hair of yours ail the way across the big water?" “Indeed, surge, but I did. It was colored for me in the county of Tipperary.” “Tlu* Indian who gets your scalp lock will lie mighty proud of the same. O'Menrs, are ye thinking of that sweetheart of yours back there in New York city?’’ “That’s what I am. Sergeant Brady. I'm thinking how much more decent it would have been of me to catch the smallpox and die within sound of her walling." “Well, iaugh and smile over it just the same. McGraw, I’m thinking 1 see a wetness about your eyes. Have ye been rubbing at them with some fine cut tobacco?” “Not at all, surge, hut curse the man who held us here to be wiped out!” “It don’t need no vote to see that we nil Ihlnk alike on that, hut It's no time for tears. We’ve been put on our honor, and we are going to die with smiles on our faces. Whist, hut they have bullets to spare around us!" Tlie Indians had completely encircled the little band, and for half an hour they poured In such a rain of bullets that every spot within the defenses was searched. Rafferty and O’Grady were killed and Sullivan and O’Menrs desperately wounded before it ceased. “Four from seven leaves three,” said the sergeant ns he rose to his knees and looked around. “The next move Is to die smiling, me boys. They'll come with whoops and yells and lie over the breastwork In a jiffy. Down we'll go under the crush, imt some day the hoys back at the post will learn that we did our best. Got ready —they’re eomlng!” * ******* “Dead all of them!” said a captain as lie looked over the defense's two days Inter. “Who was It that enlled it a false alarm? Who said that Sergeant Brady was losing his nerve?” “See tlicre, sir!" said one of the men as he* pointed to tlu* sergeant. And all saw that the battle scarred Md veteran had died with a smile on Ll9f ' u '‘ ! ' M. QUAD.
<»'X*<^»<*+*M“*F*:“X M J“i*<*<“*x~x**:":*v , »vv*:-F*x*v*x**:*vv*x-x**x*.;..
' Are Window Panes Broken!
This is the time of year that the cool winds In-gin L tell you of the Broken window panes. You should £
have these Hxed tit once.
THE, GLASS AND THE PUTT? For this work an* ready for you at this store. \\ . have anticipated your needs and have all the variuii sizes of window ("lasses cut and ivaaly for y,, Don’t delay any lonicer in attending to t his, for v, in
tor will soon lie here.
^ THE OWL DRUG STORE I •X“X"X**X**X , *X**X**X* , X"X**X**X* , X*<‘*X**X**X*'X**>*X**>*>-X.
$ •• V ••
JMk .rfV A rft* i&m W JFm JOb Jftm A A A A A A i*Th A A u? *. CHANGE OF OFFICE
< * < i < 4 4
tr*
The office of the Transfer Company will be up from the Palace Restaurant to the Transfer Ram. No. 50. After fSunday all calls should come cr -
50.
■mamxaa; -hr
GET YOUR MONE Y on THUR.SD Y
Our agent cun ’,e found in our olhee in tin* AM I N 111.OCk. over American Express Company, all day Ti prepared to make loans on furniture, pianos, live (< |, Features: long time, cheap rates, small payment . liM t counts. No (letter time than now to prepare Ft wiiiF-i our agent Thursday, or mail your application to 1M. National Hank building brazil, Indiana. block Brazil Loan Co. £
a
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE’S NOTICE I will be at my office at my residence in Floyd Towaship, for the transaction of office business, on Wednesday of each week. LEWIS C. WILSON. Trustee Floyd Township.
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE'S NO I Id
©SKMBK? MO!® CATAPLASMA KAOHNI »
l^orth* relief of Tuflumatfon
I will attend to the business of! * .'"“'.i 1 ";' 1 ,, h','-iiir'
tny office as Trustee of Jackson town- ’ " iV'f
ship on Friday of each week, at my -
residence. BADGER
G. A. Wilson,
Trustee Jackson Township j;
rntui l» ’ii'Tr Mu l.
roWNSJIIP TRUSTEE’S NOTH’!*,. I will be found at my residence ok Friday of each week, to attend to
areM m*"" 1 rntri”'-" -
j Ki«-. rtSD, .« I Luo CORE TO- Mi as
of Trustee of Jefferson Putnam County, Indiana.
township, ^
WITH
OTHO VERMILION,
I
i*a * s
Trustee Jefferson Township. ,
New Siseper
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE'S NOYIOEI will be at my office at my resi- . deuce in Marion township, for transaction of office business, on Friday of each week, and on Tues-
day at Fillmore. J. B BUNTSN,
Trustee Marion Township..
I R« « & 8 kf?n t.l i. THRO*' Afvfi LU*iL • 'j-ES^ thf . NT-V/i*’. Vv’/X i M' 0RY
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TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES NOTICE I will be In ray office to transact, business at ray home on Tuesday and Friday of each week. J. O. SIGLER. Trustee Clinton Township
60 YEARS’ £X°ER!ENCE
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE’S NOTICE
'ruling
quickly oacorlain
In
Anyono sont
itokly ni
Hit 1 Ol
Tradf: WHRKS
Dcsions
Copyrights 4c.
ft nketoti and doper ' m ruiy
in our opinuhi If cc •hNhly pHtcm •! ll_ '
I will attend to township business at home on Tuesday and Friday of
each week.
Chas. W. King,
Trustee Madison Township
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE’S NOTICE. I will attend to the business of* my oflico as trustee of Washington township on Wednesday of each ] wee! , at ray residence, and at Reels J rllle on 1st, 3d and 5th Saturdays of
each month.
J. D. RADER, Trustee Washington Township
sent free. Oldest agency f"i -.'i i Patents taken tnrotifrh Mm tyecial notice, without charge, n
3„
Scientific fliiicriMit.
i handsome., -
ciilalion of hny t denf Itlc I hh ’ year; four mouths, f i BoM by «
r»!y fMnstrntdi wocklr
l-is
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE’S NOTICE. I will be at my office, at my home, on Friday of each week, for the ransactlon of Township business. R. C. HODGE, Trustee Mill Creek Township..
Moimn Route Excursions. To Chicago, account International Live Stock Exposition, tickets on sale, November 29, 30. December 1, to 1 inclusive, return limit, December 12. Round trip. Home seekers excursion rates to* Northwestern and soul ,r n points first and third Tuesdays o, each ni<,nt ^* J. A. Michael. Agt.
MONON TIME CAR*
! In effect Sunday June i L
j No. ( No.
No.
NORTH BOUND 4 Chicago Express
6 Chicago Mail ' 10 F. Lick & Laf. Ac" 12 Bloom. & Laf Acco
SOUTH BOUND 3 Louisville Exp . .
.Co. 5 Louisville Expr ss No. 9 F. Lick Ac Acco. . • 11 Bloom
Ail trains run dally
J. A MIT
No.
! No.
No.
Map of Grcenciistle.
A new map of Greencastle showing* If you are a sufferer f" ■ Interurban line and station, new Car- ManZan Pile Remedy will ! '" 1 ' r negle Library and new Big Four line, -lief with the fir t applb at. n printed on good paper at Hie Herald ranteed. Price 50c. Sold
Office for ttn cents. jc Green.
piles.
U 8(18*1
wf.erAw.'iWiMMff.’rpBawrqxg.q *-• ,■ ewo-:-?--;-**e***:«*■• **•**»
& GREEN
J » *> • i i ii * '• lira, q i i*- ■
illlUNN &Co. 3fi,,,roa,1 ' va ' Ne. York
Branch omoe, (05 r St.. W**l •
PURE a h Muiuifactured • \ 'J^
We are prepared t" s« t v runs with ;i good qua IF. aetured ice e\ ory day. CAFF PHONE 257
GARDNER BROS
I9IA
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