Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 February 1893 — Page 3
i| f e5pot-'^er]eniy'of r Pai 1^ irfightj tol(ili. „ Ifwim it> w/d (p 11 ^ °' COfiqueit)!?
HE STAR-PRESS.
FIFTY BELOW ZERO.
Satuiday, Feb. 11, 1898.
Tbt maple syrup crop promises to
Urge.
l^easles and whooping cough are
alent about here.
ye Century Club meets with Mrs. j
¥. Lammers to-day.
^ William Dills has been confined !
i house by sickness.
C. Grooms returned from Wann,
IU*.jSaturday morning.
E. lb. Yetto, of Saratoga, N. Y., has
Bn \ isiting Lon Jacobs.
Lute Vanfossen, of the Third House,
Coldest Weather Known for Years In Montana—Hecord at Other Flares. Helena, Mont, Feb. 1.—Helena is experiencing the coldest weather known for five years. Fifty degrees below zero was registered early Tuesday morning, and 40 below was the record at noon. All trahis are late. Much suffering is reported among the poor and other persons who are ex-
posed.
Sioux City, la., Feb. 1.—Tuesday was the coldest day experienced here in six years. At 6 o'clock in the evening It was 18 degrees below zero and growing colder. A gale is blowing and the railroads report a terrible blizzard in South Dakota aud central Iowa whicli has caused a general blockade.
BATTLERS AND SWINE.
California Snakes That Wage War
Upon the Porkers.
An Alpine County lla^k wondNiuan Describes the Manner in Which the Hogs
Are Pursued and Killed by
Their Venomous Foes.
“Among the odd things that have been told so much that everj-body is familiar with them,” said a ranchman who came into Pomona to lay in his
ENGLISH HOUSES.
rhuM In tile Country Kipre.a the Own-
er's Teste and Experience.
Country houses have an initial advantage over all town dwellings of the ordinary type, says the London Spectator. The last are designed in nine cases out of ten by a builder or contractor, who intends them for other people. Country houses are, almost without exception, built by their owners to suit themselves. They are the expression not only of the general feeling as to comfort and convenience but
,. ., .. , .. . also of the owner’s taste or experience. supplies the other day, says the Pomona 1 », . , .. ' , . * T> it,. o,., l Ever y country house can therefore be
Foley’s
For Asthma
(Cal.) Progress, “is the one that the deadly venom of rattlesnakes has no effect on hogs. Now, I don’t know whether the poison bags of rattlesnakes j that have their habitat up v Alpine county are filled with venom of greater power than the poison rattlesnakes of other regions, or whether the hogs of other localities have stronger constitutions than the hogs of Alpine county have, but I know what I am talking
taken as a document illustrating the exact modification which individual good sense has made in the general type. In them, if anywhere, we should expect to find the nearest approach to perfect comfort so far as structure can secure it. Next to warmth, which, with its concomitant of shelter from the weather, was presumably the original want which led men to build houses at
about when I say that hogs are just a ^^Xfactkm. "rhe living mi
picnic for Alpine county rattlesnakes. “I have read many and many a time that the favorite amusement and recreation that hogs have in other communities where the rattlesnake abounds is hunting down and destroying these deadly reptiles, the hogs going in among them with as much nonchalance as if
Honey
This j"eparation gives qmcK nnd positive relief and frequently eaects a cure.
For Consu
- !•
and
. a.v- ’s: tgiw,' ihis fc";:xdv'
wiii v comfort and relief trom l ’ . ' i its car!'- ges it \ ill almost invariahiy effect a cure. Ho not neelect a cold. “ De'.ay ;::e dangerous.”
M
ar
For Bronchial Affections
• ••
Hoarseness, difficulty in breathing, etc. This remedy acts like magic.
on the ground floor, deriving their support of fresh air from the hall, which, as in the London house, gets its stock in turn from under the main door. Hut the greater space leaves ample room for a thorough warming of the central air chamber. Yet in how few country
St. Paul, Minn., Feb. 1.—A blizzard
W from Indianapolis on Sat^ raged all over the northwest Monday
1 night and Tuesday and still continues. A driving storm broke over St Paul during the morning. The wind blew at the rate of 20 miles an hour, driving
clouds of snow before It.
CentekCity, Minn., Feb. L—A storm
of such proportions has been on here since early Monday morning that the whole population has been driven indoors. Business is at a standstill in the logging camps, as the workmen dare not venture away from
their camps for fear of
lost and frozen to death, is more snow in the than for the last fifteen years.
Mr. John F. Scobee has purchased la fine evaporator, and will make an [extra fine article of maple syrup this
Iseason.
Services at St. John’s Episcopal Church to-morrow, Sunday morning, it 1(J:80 o’clock, conducted by Rev. lEdw. Saunders. Public cordially in-
Mre. Thomas Hanna and children •re here from Washington, thegnests if Miss Rebecca Hanna. Kx-Gov. lanna will make his home at Indijiapolis, and his family will go there
Yom this city.
■When a young man goes to see a oung lady six nights in a week, nowrdays, it is a sure sign that papa’s el and light bill are being greatly
being There woods
Throw Person* Burned. Wheeling, W. Va., Jan. 80.—The residence of James Malone in Mineral county was destroyed by fire, and Mrs. Malone, her son Louis and Edward McCarthy were burned to death.
Window Ulass Trust.
_ _ | Milwaukee, Feb. 1.—Tliis city is to |jBced; it is also possible that a y )e t j,p headquarters of a big window ftge may materialize, and if so, J glass combine, which will include near-
is dry goods bill will also climb up'
her.
‘ . j houses is the hall properly warmed bv entering a com-cnb, tearing !. a ...... * 'A,,,
they were c.termg a ...ru-e...,, .. aj.uK stov(>s w j th that provision om i tte d the reptiles to pieces and devouring them I ^ size of hall an(1 ‘ 8taircase merely a .i n icat s. j prevents the air from ever becoming “I had an old San Bernardino back- ' pr()perly warmed ftt :l n. and for weeks woods friend once, who often told me, t ] u , py^agog and bedrooms remain at a with tears in his eyes, how he had to ! temperature in which it would be uukill a valuable brood sow of his because j safe to allow even cattle to sleep. A of her persistence in hunting and de- j f ur thcr capital defect in most country
Warranted The
Why risk your child’s life?
s troy in g rattlesnakes to that extent houst , s is the absence of bathrooms.
that the locality was in danger of being I either ()f hot water 0 r hotair, and the entirely depopulated, of the reptiles, impossibility of obtaining any sudden which would have seriously affected the j j ncrease 0 f temperature in ease of chill
income of my friend, as the rattlesnakes J or i]] neSK
in his bailiwick yielded him a snug sum j Contrast this with the conditions for annually from their oil and skins. He j j n< j oor Hfe as understood by the Rotried to educate the sow to fetch the , 1U!ins during the three centuries in
snakes home that she killed and deliver them over to him, but she wouldn't have it that way, and so he had to kill
her to prevent a snake famine. “Rut it is different in Alpine county.
The hogs up there don’t hunt rattlesnakes. Rattlesnakes hunt the hogs. If
Best Cough Medicine
Thousands of Infants and children yearly die of membranous croup. We do not exaggerate when we state that every one of these innocents could have been saved had Foley’s Honey and Tar been given them in time. Pleasant to take. Can you afford to be without it in your home?
Prevent Pneumonia and Colds
By taking a dose of Foley’s Honey and Tar after exposure or when you feel the cold coming on. It may save your life.
FREE Sample Bottles of FOLEY’S HONEY AND TAR can be had at agencies named beto»
FOLEY’S FAMILY PILLS
which they occupied this country. Every Roman villa, however small, as a visitor to any of the numerous excavations may see for himself, was thoroughly heated with hot air, running in pipes under the floors nnd up the walls. Rotter than this, the same furnace
you should ever be in that garden spot of I which distributed this even warmth
Fincastle.
Mrs. Cole, of Parke county, and [rs. plat man, of Roachdale, visited at IMF. Thompson'# during the past week.. ...Cjuite a number of our young folkskttended the box supper at the Goslin school house, last Friday night John L. Bridges has been appointed administrator of the MoGaughey estate John and Nettie kj^satou and Gertie Hendricks attended Church at Oarpentersville last Sunday | night Mis-o Kiln King and Mary I Walsh went to Greeneastle last Friday evening and returned Sunday The young folks enjoyed a very pleasant evening at the home of Miss Mary Morris, last Thursday Preaching at Christian Church last Sunday, by Rev. Dodd Fincastle was well represented at the show at Roaohdale last week T. L. Grider put in a new foree pump for Tims. Walsh last Saturday Russ Edwards was in our vicinity last week, engaging hog* for the summer market .Miss Mary Lovett returned last 1 W'-dnesday from Indianapolis, where,she lias been dress-making Albert Edwards and wife spent Saturday night and Sunday at Roachdale, visiting relatives James Si ott is workiugat Motion Chas. Bridges and wile visited Janies Nelson and family last Thursday .... Mr. and Mrs. James Hendricks and Len Ratcliff and Laura Harvey visited the latter’s
ly all the leading window glass manu-
facturers of the country.
Collegiate Institute Hurned. Ottawa, Ont., Feb. 1.—The Collegiate institute, one of the leading city schools, was burned to the ground Monday night. Lose- f40,000. —
occidental climes, and should see a hog tearing over the plain like a cyclone, its eyes hanging out, its tail curled up like a cork-screw, and its whole bearing indicative of an overpowering wish to get in out of the wet somewhere, you need
throughout the house also heated a small hot air chamber or Turkish bath, next to which was a cold plunge bath. The writer recently saw the remains of a Roman house, built some oae thousand years ago. perfectly fitted with a
have no apprehension. Not for yourself, j warming apparatus; while a modern
I mean. You may have some for the |
GLASSES FOR ANIMALS.
parents at Fern last Sunday Mary Morris is visiting her sister near La-
doga.
Spectachia Are Used on Colts to Make
Them High Steppers.
Although it may seem almost ludicrous to think of horses wearing spectacles, it is nevertheless a fact that horses do sometimes wear them. The business of one well-known firm of opticians in London consists largely in the manufacture of horse spectacles. The object of the spectacles is to promote high stepping. They are made of stiff leather, entirely inclosing the eyes of the horse, and the glasses used are deep concave and large in size. The ground seems to the horse to be raised anti he steps high, thinking he is going uphill or has to step over some obstacle. The system of spectacle wearing is
generally adopted while the horse is
s “itrat ^
hog if you want to, for not far behind it, and surely gaining on it, you will see a rattlesnake sliding along like a streak of greased lightning, his head raised al«)ut six inches from the ground and his glittering eyes on the flying hog. “It will be something out of the common if that hog gets home with its life, for even if it is in a fair way to escape from the pursuing rattler, the chances are that it will find itself ambuscaded by others. If you see the hog stop suddenly in its wild flight and tack off on another course either one way or the other, you may know that an accomplice of the pursuing snake has risen up in front of the hog and barred escape in that direction. Then if the hog stops suddenly again in the new course it was forced to take, and makes a break in another direction, you may safely bet that a third rattlesnake has as much as said to the beleaguered porker that he can come on if he likes, but he may not like it. And so, if you see the hog try every point of the compass, and stop short at every one, at the
house of six times its size, in the garden
of which the old villa lay, was unprovided with any other means of heat than open grates. Naturally, the warming of country houses may be over-elaborated. But that is rare, | though wo have known instances in : which a difference of two degrees be- j tween the thermometers in any two'
Clinton Falls. ffA little daughter of Win. Thomas’ 'is sick Work began at the saw mill Monday, with two mouths sawing abead— Born, to Ely Boswell and wife, a daughter, on Jan. 81 John Q, Vermillion was at home Saturday and Sanday Last Thursday Miss Natinici Alspaugh brought her school ovoraigd spent the day with Mr. Oscar Thomas and Itis pupils, and all were happy. This is much more creditable than sitting in a school room without a single pupil, as one teacher is doing this year Schuyler Hamrick talks of going into the hardware business tin- -pring Dr. ■fOore wa- a cripple la-t week, caused Imy rhefamutisui iu his tent Eggs 80 ado/.eu, ami yet hens are all OQ Vitrike .. ..Ma-tei- I Him Vermilli.ui accompailied his uncle, J. <^. Vermil[to Indianapolis on Monday jerkins is buying timber through —walnut and cherry Arthur jle’s wife is very sick -momentary insanity is what the doctors wihn it. xx
been discovered that the cause of a horse’s shying is, as a rule, short sight, and it is now suggested that the sight of all horses should be tested, like that of children. It is maintained by those who have made a study of the subject that, by a a little artificial assistance, many valuable horses which have become optically unfit for work may be restored to usefulness.
^ Mill Creek Township
No farm work, owing to continued cold weather.... A series of meetings is in progress at the Methodist Church at Eminence Whooping
Money is a good thing to hnv when you want to persuade a man how to vote rite. Wifelto her husband): I say, my dear, how how badly the tailor has put this button on your waistcoat! This is the fifth time I have had to sew it on again.” Cupid seldom shoots his arrow plumb through the centers of two hearts. “So Bingdad is married at last! I'll bet he is a no. 1 husband.” “No, he is not. He is a No. 2 husband. He married a widow.” A inexican street car can be hired for personal use for $3.50 a day, with a right to stop at any one place for two hours. The United States Blue Book contains in formation about 180,000 Government offices, with salaries amounting to $00,000,000 a year.
tremble, you may make up your mind that escape has been cut off on every side by rattlesnakes and he will be a dead hog in a jiffy, for he will have the fangs of one of the snakes in his jugular before you can count ten. and he lies down, swells up like a toadfish and
passes away.
“I have heard of a band of these hoghating rattlesnakes of Alpine county rounding up whole dfoves of hogs and driving them up to the hills and imprisoning them in the rocks, where the reptiles would amuse themselves by picking them off at their leisure, make them run the gauntlet of long rows of snakes and have other fiendish fun with them. The snakes don't eat the hogs, for even an Alpine county rattlesnake has not capacity enough to gulp down anything larger than a rabbit. They simply seem to have an uncontrollable and deadly hatred for swine, and kill them just because they hate them.”
Have gained an enviable reputation for all diseases arising from a disordered Liver, such as Biliousness, Headache, Chronic Constipation. Lassitude, Dizziness, Jaundice, and Sallow Complexion. A splendid dinner pill to relieve the uncomfortable feeling after eating that affects so many; also Sou; Stomach and Flatulence. The action of this Pill is mild but effective, without griping or distressing.
A beautiful aouTcnir allium rontainlnir fine llthoeraphtr tlewaol the Worhl’a (YituniMan Exposition will lie sent gratis to those mailing tno wrappers of Eolej’a Kamtly Pills to I OLi.l A CO., I hicagu.
FOLEY’S CREAM
is a delightful toilet article. It removes pimples, blotches, tan and sunburn; it cures
is a delighttul toilet article. It removes pimples, uiotcnes, ran anu sunourn; it uires chapped hands and lips and makes the skin soft and clear; it is soothing and refreshing to use after shaving, as it does not smart like Bay Rum; it is not sticky like Glycerine, nor is it greasy like Vaseline or Cold Cream; it dries almost instantly; is elegantly perfumed. . . We have hundreds of testimonials from people who have used it and are delighted with it. NO LADY SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT. Free Samples.
The above remedies are for sale by the following first-class firms:
rooms was visited with ill missal to the
domestics in charge, while the first impulse of a visitor was to rush to open a window.
EXTRACTION OF PERFUMES.
W. H. Walden, Putnamville. W. J. Steeg, Limedele. Oakalla Store Co., Oakalla Isaac Brattain, Vivalia. O. R. Carver, Morton. J. V. Rishop, Portland Mills. W. E. Counts, Reelsville. W. F. Gardner, Russellville. A. F. Fields, Wheaton.
B. F. Wilson, Barnard. J. W. Rector, Fillmore. L. C. Burgess, Cloverdale. ■Hurst Bros., Mr. Meridian. Ader & Graham, Groveland. B. B. Cline, Carbenterville. C. Bowers, Fincastle. B. D. Skillman, Raccoon. R. Sanders, Roachdale.
Accept no subatitution from other dealers who may attempt to palm oft' inferior or northess concoctions in place of these splendid medicines.
USE LIVING SPECIMENS.
Nothing so good for allections of the throat and chest. Miss J. O. Newman, Buffalo, N.Y. writes: “We think teere is nothing so valuable for coughs and hoarseness as Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup. Have used it iu our family for the last five years, and would not like to be without it.”
There is only about 30 members left of the (Dee mighty tribe of Choctaws, near New Orleans.
With pure, vigorous blood coursing through the veins and ouimating every fibre of the
ooogh is prevalent The fox drive 1 b °dy, cold weather is not only endurable but
proved a failure, owing to tin* depth oftbesii"' ..S. 'ii..- ..I tin- limners hafve engaged their hogh for <’> cts. a nd Alpheus Shackleford lives ibis mother .. Sam. Wilson, of tpolis, is visiting in these parts
■s. Layno is preparing to build
Sc - - -
ome of the farmers are up ice Why not have a
R’e, as the foxes are proving a
• H. C. Cox & Co. are doing a usiness with their meal and 11 Harmon Hurst is agent Ptah-Piikss Torn is selling
XX
for Mfci-. a Ini-! ■ . The Testimonials
pleasant and agreeable. No other blood medicine is so certain in its results as Ayer's Sarsaparilla. What it does for others it will
do fop you.
A recent invention is a cradel which rocks by clockwork mechanism and at the same time plaps baby tunes.
Hall's Vegetable Sicilian Hair Henewer is unquestionably the best preseavative of the hair. It is also curative of dandruff, tetter and all impurities.
Patent Medicine Agents Are Making a New Departure to Sell Their Wares. There are indications that the patent medicine trade, like the book trade, is falling into the hands of canvassers. The medicine vender is now frequently met with in Maine villages and on Upcountry roads, says the Lewiston Journal. Another feature fast developing in the business is the use of “the living specimen.” to furnish convincing proof of the efficacy "f the concoction. From the old-time plain certificate cure, the next step was to print the picture of the person on whom the
miracle was performed.
Now, the foremost in this race for trade are introducing personally to sufferers the cured person, whose per-
Six Different Way* of Scents for My I.arfy't* Handkerchief. Six methods of extracting perfumes are known, according to Popular Science Monthly. The first is e xpression by moans of a special press, which is applicable without too great loss to fruit skins rich in essential oils, su h as orange and citron peel, previously grated. Another method is that of distillation, which consists of heating flowers with water in a boiler. The essential j oil is volatilized, and is condensed with the vapor of water in a worm and a Florentine receiver. The water usually goes t > the bottom and the oil floats. The oils of neroli, rose, patchouli, geranium, lavender, caraway, etc., are obtained in this way. The process is not applicable to the delicate perfumes of themignonettound the violet, and for them recourse is had to tua oration of the flo wers in animal fat or mineral oils, which have the property of absorbing odorous sul»stanccs, and arc then washed in alcohol. The flowers are usually heated in the fat for a variable number of hours. For perfumes which cannot endure a high temperature the petals are placed between frames of glass coated with fat. This is the process of enfleurage. The pneumatic process, which consists in causing a current of perfumed air or carbonic acid to be absorbed by coatings of lard on glass plates, appears not to have given satisfactory re-
sults.
Another process consists in dissolving perfumes in very volatile liquids, like sulphurct of carbon, chloroform, naphtha, ether or chloride of methyl, and volatilizing the solvents, which can be done at a low temperature in a vacuum. The last method lias given very satisfactory results in the extreme delicacy and great accuracy of its returns.
ZMI-A-HST-O-W A
THE INDIAN DOCTOR, will be at the
Commerci'l House, Greencastle. IncL, Thursday, February 16, 1893.
Prepared to heal the sick with Nature’s own remedies, viz: Roots, Barks, Herns, Plants and Leaves, which were placed in the ground by the Great Spirit for the benefit of mankind.
SOFFEMG HOMITY!
All who may be troubled with Acute or Chronic ( atarrh, Dyspepsia. Indigestion, Bright'* disease, Dropsy, Consumption, Epilepsy or Kit», Nervous debility. Hind v Br nuhitis Constipation, Scrofula or any form of Blood poison. Painful or Suppressed Menstruation.
Inflammation of the womb or bladder, Diabeies, Kidney or Urinary troubles. Nervousness and General Debility, l.ucorrhcea, Female weakness. Pimples, Illocln 'nr ski:' di-ease ic any form. I m potency, Gleet, Gonorrhoea, Rheum at ism, Heart Disease, Neuralgia. Asthma. Hysteria, Piles, Loss of Strength aud loss of Manhood are especially invited to call on the Doctor.
To tolse the j)rcbtem requires thought. Hut the siirpi- fact is known to many— that Dr. Fenner’s GoMe:-. Relief cures Consumption. 11 does It every time and in every case, when used before the lungs have be-
come too far disorganized. Here's a typlvnlcuse:
sonal statement, like that of the witness Miss Jones, aged 20. 1 ...s lest 25 pounds, cheeks in court, is more effective than any cer-1 have the “hectic flush" coughs and raises ail
Eight olive trees now exist in the Garden of Olives at Jerusalem which are known to be at least 800 years old.
!
pi A > it's Hair Vigor keeps the sea! p li i e I'm in ^^^Hdon behalg of Hood.s Sarsaparilla d nidruir. prevents the hair from becoming ^^^Hfoble and as worthy yoyr confidence, dry and harsh, and makes it flexible and came from your best and most glossy. All the elements that nature Bfus^mneighbor. They state only the simple quires, to make the hair abundant and beau^Otstn regard to what Hoods Sarsaparilla tiful, are supplied by this admirable pre
■to done, always within truth and reason. p.,ration.
^^^^^n>ation, and all troubles with the di-
^■HVOirgans and the liver, are cured by good neighborhood.
Unequalled as a dinner Pill. office
For sale cheap, a building
hood. Apply
lot in a at this
tiiicate could be. In one Maine village the officers of both agent and witness arc united in the same person, and he does a thriving business buttonholing
Uh time; h;%3 ^jst returned from the South, where she eix-nt the winter. Did not improve. She takes 5 drops of Dr Feunor’a Golden Relief, on a small lump of sug&r, once in 2 hours. Improvement begins at once. In 2 weeks rhe
the fanners and other visitors to the ho* -ained 10 nuundE. in G weeks she weighs
place, exhibiting himself as one rescued from the grave. Under the new system. to be sick may be no misfortune, provided one gets well and can attribute his case to a patent medicine.
It may result in a good salary.
(iratia ('loth.
The Chinese make what is called “chi-wa-hi," grass cloth, from the libel of the common nettle. It is said to make a splendid cloth for tents, awnings. etc. When mode into belting foi | machinery it is said to have twice the I strength of leather.
130 aud in cuuei) The remedy is a Specific in Inflammation. No In'.la'.umat'.on, to sore n"*s, no consumption. Thus It euns u long list of ailments from a i .nmon sore throat, to a grave bronchitis, asthma and consumption, from a toothache to a grave neuralgia, from a headache to a grave rheumatism andn from summer complaint to a grave dysentery, ehcl era or flux. This wide range of r.pplicatlon has sometimes unjustly caused It to be dubbed a "cure all." Hut it ir.nt. It cut os one disease and that is inflammation Inlluir.mation cannot exist in its presence—and that “ solves the prob lew." One tablespoonful doso cures La Grippe. It never disappoints. Contains no opiates, narcotics or mineral poisons. Perfectly safe. Money refunded if satisfaction not given. Take
home a bottle to-day.
Why fill your system full of drug poison ami nostrums, when you can get Pure. Fresh and Unadulterated Remedies,C I's Greatest Gift to Mankind? COME AND BE HEALED.
Dr. Man-O-W"a
a Regularly Licensed Phvsicinn. Spent ’ tn<
three .’. ears among the Indians, learning their methods of healing the sick with Indian Herb Medicines. These medicines lo not poison the system. They cure after i.ll other medicines fail. They are Nature’s remedies for
the relief and cure of disease.
YOUNG and MIDDLE-AGED MEN suffering from weakness and Impotence brought on bv youthful indiscretion or over indulgence in old age, should call at once.* The Indian Herb Treatment will restore you to perfect Manhood. Dt. Mmi-O-WH Locates all your aches and pains andttells each patient how they fee ithout asking one single question. Medicine sent to all parts of the world. Write for question blanks and terms; consultation personal or by letter fre Treatment icluding all medicines used from ^i.OO to $8.00 per month. Address,
DR. MAN-O-WA.
Or, .IIAN-O-WA INDIAN MEDICINE CO.,
Frankfort. Ind.
zl)/)!/ i ii i strut or’s Sale.
Nollce ot Ailniliiiwiriiilon. Notice is hereby given that the undersigneU have been appointed by the Clerk of theCircuit fin u rf fit’ I* ii t ii a ni it n * v t ■ f 1 •> <1; r. .
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned
administrator of the estate of James Me- | Administrator of the estate of
W • , Court of Putnam county, state of Indiana He auct^on! e at e the < *rate*re8idence 8 of e sadd P de^
cedent, in Russell township, Putnam county. Sai(! es J ate is sup p osed t0 hp , 0 i vent-
<fa>
Indiana, on
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1st, 1893,
I Dated this 27th i
All the personal property of said decedent
not takeii by the widow, consisting of household and ki‘ ' “ 1 1 1
tchcn furniture, bees and bee-
hives, timothy and clover hay, corn in the bin, clover seed, four cows and two calves six brood sows, one mare three years old, four two-year old mules, twenty-one head of sheep, one two-year old heifer, three yearling heifers, twenty-two head of yearling steers, fanning implements and tools, and various
other articles.
ay of Januarv, 1893.
john l. Bridges,
Administrator.
Henry H. Mathias, Atty. 3t42
FREE GRAY El. I!<> * l> tu;e.
NO-
TERMS.
Sums of five dollars and under, cash; over five dollars, a credit of nine months, the purchaser giving his note with approved surety, waiving relief from valuation and appraisement laws, and drawing interest at six per cent, per annum after maturity. Hale to begin at IU o'clock a. m. JOHN L. BRIDGES, Feb. 1, 1893. Administrator. H. H. Mathias, Atty. St42.
Notice of Klection.
Notice is hereby given that on Tuesday, February 28, 1893, Putnam Lodge, No. 45, I. O. O. I'’., will, at a regular meeting of said Lodge, in their Lodge Hall, in Greencastle, Indiana, proceed to elect 3 Trustees, to serve sale Lodge for the remainder of the current term Given under my hand and seal of said Lodge, this 26th day of January, 1893. E. T. CHAFFEE, Secretary, 3141 Putnam Lodge, No. 45, I. O. O. F.
tiK of I In* HoiirB «8< I r«f Tieritpiki* Dlrct-tarM. The Board I b'reo Turnpike I'ir e'ora of Putnam County State of In iiapH. will meet at the oOce of the C unty Auii" r in the Court House, in the ei*y < (irecncnstlc, Putnam County, Stats of Indiana, or.
SATURDAY HIE iJih DAY FEBRUARY, '
OF
To transact all bnsine... ti i' . . nnie betore them requiring the at’ent: i "t aid Board of Free Turnpike Direct' r; J I . V’.nOLN, C:-r.» oi Board,
J. S. ROBERTS.
M. . . CHASTAIN
Roberts & Chastain, Undertake r ^ and ISmbaimers COATSVILLE, IND.am*
