Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 March 1893 — Page 6

«. I

!

Dorit

Ton Know

that you can secure almost immedinte relief from Indigestion, and that uncomfortable fullness after meals, by .-imply taking a d(>st> of Simmons Liver Regulator? Some people think that because it is called Liver Regal .tor it Inis nothing to do with Indigestion and the like. It is the

inaction , ; tiie Liver that can -s Indi-v-tion, and that fuiluess j also Constijution, and those Bil-

ious He 1: cl.

1,1 ill i.

ms

have been ma le to understand this and have lieon cured from these troubles

bv Simmons Liver 1

lator—

ing and purely vegetable. JY.e a v. .n.Wh:!rt<::i,F>!*.l!lmorp,Md “It utlerils me (ili iiHure toadd my te»tlpt°ny to the i;reut virtiicv. of Simmons

egu-

i medicine unfail-

Liver Rpgulnt T. I huvo had experience

(li ’.nanfled, for many

year.', fil l . ,1 it as thegreatest medl-

With it. ;is i

Cl •'

di

the

s.) pootl a medicine l commendation.

THE GUELPH FUND.

A Subject That la Profoundly Agttatinu the German Empire.

How the Fund \V»g Created and the fTse* to Whlcho It Cut by Bismarck When He Wag in Power.

STRICKEN DEAD.

TRUSTWORTHY STATEMENTS.

A recent New York dispatoh rends: “James C. H , a line looking and

tpparently healthy man, was observed to ■tagger while walking on Filth Avenue this afternoon, and after tnkio ; one or two uncertain steits fell to the sidewalk. When picked np he was dead. A physician examined tin body .and pronounced In urtilimixt the cause of den .1. A pi cuiiarly sail feature of the envois that Mr. II was on his

way to Maine, to settle in the home of his boyhood. He had passed the previous ten years in the western mining e luntry, and had amassi .1 a f' tune. ifYiu' have any of the symptoms given in flie f. ! lowing testimonials you si. ' ild lose n 1 lini' in 1. king relief. From Joint L. Robeits, Siatington, Pa.:

“I li.. suflered with ])iilpialin i, irretjular

\thcrinq

ptifse. ’ a(. 7 < d mntfr i ; fjHll*. pain in thou idem, aide, and arms for over forty years. For twelve years have been treated without avail by prominent physicians in my neighborhood and in New York. Growing constantly worse, smothering spells followed one another, so my life was often in danger and I needed constant care. As my son had been cured by />r. 1 flies’ Snr Ifrurt ('are, he sent me three bottles. The first dose gave me instant relief, llefore using the last bottle I was completely cured. Although seventyfive years old I feel twenty years younger. I claim ray cure to be almost a miracle.” Here is a letter from Mrs. John Kolges, of Cleveland, O.: “ 1 had been troubled with my heart and stomach for years, hut for sixteen months bad been confined to my bed. lhad four of the best doctors in the city, but none of them could benefit the weakness of my heart. 1 also had dropsy and rheumatism. I never took medicine that relieved me at once as Dr. Milcd AYro Heart (hire does. 1 am much stronger. My appetite is splendid. I gain strength with every dose. 1 have gained more in six weeks from your treatment than in sixteen months from all the

doctors.”

“ Dr. Miles’ New Cure for the Heart is sold on a positive guarantee by all druggists. It is safe, effect ire, toireenhlr, and does cure." Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, lad.

The uses to which the Guelph fund was put have been cynically admitted by Prince Bismarck, who while he was chancellor had the fund at his disposal free from all parliamentary restraint. The Guelph fund hail its origin in the sequestration of the property of the late King George V. of Hanover. The events that led to the sequestration of the property may bear repetition, says the New York Herald, in view of the fact that a reconciliation has been effected between the king of Prussia and the duke of Cumberland, the rightful heir of the property. Hanover was a sovereign kingdom from 1814 to 1800. The monarchy was hereditary in the male line. In ISfid Hanover became involved in a war with Prussia and was defeated Hanover became a Prussian province, and the property of the king was sequestrated by the victor. It was entirely owing to the obstinacy with which the late king refused to renounce his rights to the throne of Hanover that Prussia felt herself constrained to keep n firm grasp of the rich inheritance which became hers after the battle of Eangensulza in dune, 1800. Not only did he assert his claim to he the legitimate king of Hanover after its annexation to the Prussian dominions, but ho did everything in his power to make good his claim by arms. On his death, in 1878, the present duke of Cumberland, his son and heir, issued a proclamation from his residence in Austria declaring that he, too, maintained his ancestral claims to the throne, and again, upon the death of Duke William of Brunswick, in October, 1884, he endeavored to assert his rights to succeed the duke. As he persisted in his pretension to Hanover, the government of Brunswick refused to acknowledge him as heir to the dukedom, and in the following year the rundesrath confirmed their decision, and declared his accession to the dukedom incompatible with the fundamental laws of the empire. It was plainly impossible for the Prussian government to make over the immense wealth of the late king to heirs who openly avowed their claim to an integral portion of the Prussian kingdom. Negotiations to settle the question wore begun, and an understanding was arrived at by which the duke of Cum•berland entirely renounced the impracticable position which he had maintained in the face of modern Germany. In April last the Prussian diet removed the sequestration and the duke of Cumberland came into his property. The property has been estimated to represent a capital of 40,000,000 marks and a revenue of 500,000 marks. Prince Bismarck applied the money to the requirements of the secret service and to the subsidization of the “reptile press,” and ho has never hesitated to justify his expenditures in these directions.

r

-nil

w

W: ■ TA

W. L. DOUGLAS

S3 SHOE

NOT mp.

Besi Call Shoe in the world (or tbs price. W. L. Douplasaboea ore sold everywhere. Everybody should wear them It Is a duty

yoa owe yourself to get the best value for

~ omfr'' f

your money Economise In your footwear by parohaoiug W. L. Douglas Shoes,which (•present the boat value at the prices advartlsel above, as thousands can testify.

T»ke No Substitute. .(*>

Beware of fraud. None ktouIuo »Ithout W. U Dougins nnm* and ] stninpeil on bottom. Look

for it when you buy.

VV, l.. DoughtH, Brochtun, Mass. Sold by P. K. OHKISTIE, Greencastle.

FOR HIGH AIR SOUNDINGS.

A Frenchman Has Invented a Hall0011 for Making Meteorological Observations. The employment of free balloons for meteorological observations at very great heights has long been discussed, but hitherto with little practical result, because as yet no balloon suitable for this purpose has been tlevised. M. Ch. Renard, a French scientist, however, has just presented to the Paris academy a design for such a balloon which promises to be a success. Ilia proposed miniature vessel for sounding the atmosphere, according to the New York Herald, is supplied with a very light self-recording barometer and self-recording thermometer, partly made of aluminum, each weighing less than five pounds. To prevent derangement of the registering apparatus upon the fall of the balloon he provides each instrument with an clastic guard so effective that the clockwork of the instrument is not interrupted by the shock of the fall. The total weight, instruments included, docs not exceed twenty-one pounds avoirdupois. If found to work satisfactorily this simple and apparently cheap device will mark a new era in meteorology. At present meteorologists know but little more by direct instrumental gauging of the upper atmosphere than the fauna inhabiting the floor of the Atlantic know of the gulf stream and its associate surface currents.

Consumption in um «tages, an<i» aurc relief in advanced •tagpf. n*« fit once. You will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Sold by deal. r» everywhem Lvtfe Rouion. bOuuiU auid ai.ou. it Cuixui iullucnza.

W. U. 0VERSTRKET 0. F. OVERSTREET OVERSTREET li OVERSTREET, IDElM'miSTJS.

Special atwntion given to presorvirg the Ba'iirsl t Tth. lb e in Williameon block, opposite First National Bank.

Smiley A "Sett, A.TTO lil\ 10VH AX LAW Office up stair, in Central National Bank Xall'ling South Side, Public Square. (IreeacasJe. Ind. Practice in alltheCcurte aftheStat* *4 itiieU business.

Civil Marriage in Hungary. The ecclesiastical struggle in Hungary precipitated by Premier Wekerle is beginning to attract attention all over Europe. The premier is endeavoring to force the passage of a bill making a civil marriage sufficient in law, and the bishops are united in opposing him. The latter have issued manifestoes protesting against the proposed law on the ground that it is contrary to the law of God, and they have called upon the representatives, whose official acts they are su pposed to greatly influence if not control, to vote against the measure. The fate of the bill is uncertain. It will doubtless bo passed by the lower branch of the legislature, but may be defeated by the upper branch. This struggle has called attention to the fact that in all other continental countries the civil marriage Is recognized as legal, and that in France, where the church fought so bitterly to preserve all of its rights and privileges, the i.ivil marriage is now the only legal one, the religious ceremony being regarded o«ly as a profession of faith.

JEWS IN NEW JERSEY.

A Colony Established by Hlrsch, the Philanthropic Banker.

INDIANA STATE NEWS.

An Fiperlment Whlrh Frninl.r. to !!•- come an KHtablUhcd Success—The

People Prefer Trade to

Farming-

The reports which have been from time to time received from the ITirsch 1 agricultural colony in New Jersey have been nearly as conflicting and quite as unsatisfactory and unsubstantial as certain war bulletins which engaged ( the attention of humorous writers dur- , ing the progress of military maneuvers j in Madagascar some years ago. On , one hand, according to the New York Nun, the Russian colonists in Cape May county were represented as being in a flourishing condition and in possession! of lands teeming with fertility. On the other they were pathetically de- i scribed ns lacking needful raiment and decent shelter, without means or hope, 1 restricted to uncongenial and unprofit- ! able toil in a strange land, and utterly wretched, despondent and dependent. Under these circumstances, any conclusion ns to the success of the Ilirsoh experiment was difficult to arrive at, but it need be so no longer if the report made recently to the New Jersey board of agriculture be accepted as trustworthy. It is certainly explicit. Mr. Lee, { who submitted the report, showed that the town of Woodbine, under Superin- ; tendent Jabsovitchof the fund, consists of 1,536 lots, around which are thirty- | acre farms, and the outlaying lowlands ' ar« reserved for pasturage, upon the plan of medieval English communities. I In a year 650 acres of farm land, twelve miles of driveway, and 170 acres of | town lots have been wrested from a natural wilderness. The town houses built by the company (composed of the trustees of the American Ilirsch fund) cost from $850 to $1,300 each, and are models of neatness and adaptability for colonists' need. Active work is expected to give Woodbine 150 houses by spring. A hotel, a railway station, a synagogue, and a public school are completed, or are in course of erection. A park has been laid out, with side streets and avenues lined with poplars j and maples. On the farms each agri-1 culturist has 250 fruit trees, planted in < 1891, with an acre of grapes and small! fruits. Early vegetables, growing as readily in Cape May as in Norfolk, were

A leaolk of young ladies has been formed in Shelbyville with thirty-one signers up to date, who say they will not wear hoopskirts. Edwin Ntuaiit, manager of the opera house, a prominent Elk and a wellknown actor, died at his home in Logansport, of paresis. He was buried in Chicago. Henry Nelson, a workman at the Stiner chilled plow works, in South Bend, was fatally injured by the fragments of a broken emery wheel. One cheek was crushed, and the right eye will have to be removed. Little river is up, and ten squares of Huntington are flooded. AlbertGlick’s two-story house and a barn on Samuel Johnson’s property were demolished. Heavy ice did the business. The Cleveland elub, of Indianapolis, has been assigned to the first division, next to Tammany, in th^ inaugural parade. At Martinsville Mrs. Jos. Felix, aged 85 years, fell on the icy pavement a few days ago. She thought she was little, if any, hurt at first Later, one of her limbs turned real black and she went to bed, dying in great agony. She left a husband and two children. A mail pouch thrown off at Orleans was cut open and robbed The Fielding sisters, evangelists, are doing good work in the vicinity of West Fork. The people of Dublin are up in arms about the starting of a saloon there. The Indiana house of representatives passed a bill taxing the receipts of foreign building and loan associations, also subjecting them to inspection and requiring them to deposit $50,000 with the auditor to protect local sharehold-

also successfully raised. This is certainly an

encouraging

showing, and if, as Mr. Lee declares in his report, the soil of South Jersey generally is susceptible of such improved | cultivation, the hopes of the trustees of j the Hirsch fund may be realized, more especially if. as is stated, the agricultural conditions of South Jersey much I resemble those found in that part of j Russia from which most of these colo- | nists come. At the same time it appears j that, great as has been the progress made in farming in the South Jersey colony, it has not kept pace with other! pursuits less carefully fostered—cloak- ’ making, knitting, and cigarmaking. It I

mercantile and manual pursuits and the consequent neglect of farming which led many to doubt at the outset the success of the Hirsch experiment. Their apprehensions, even according to Mr. Lee’s encouraging report, do not i seem to have been entirely groundless; I hut it is probably too soon to determine j definitely whether this natural preference of the colonists will militate seri- | ously against the success of the South Jersey colony. Meanwhile no one appears to be starving: quite the reverse.

THE DREAM OF AN ENTHUSIAST.

Ilo 1'urpoHoa to Trave 1 from Cape Horn to Cape Town By Hail. It adds something to zest of life—if one has a healthy, active fancy—to reflect that there are people now living who may travel by continuous rail from Cape Horn to the Cape of Good Hope, says the Review of Reviews. The plan of a “pan-American” railway to connect the South American system, through Central America, with the systems of Mexico and the United States is already . well advanced. There are tosbe roads from the Canadian Pacific away up to the Peace River j and Mackenzie valleys, and it is not hard to believe that these may ultimately he extended across the Rockies to the Ukon valley in Alaska and continued finally to the narrow and shallow Behr ing straits, across which a connection would be made with the Siberian road. Continuous rail travel from Siberia to Constantinople will soon have become an accomplished fact, and the link from Constantinople to Egypt may bo expected quite confidently. At the present rate of development In Africa the construction of a road from Egypt to the cape ought to he realized within twenty-five years. The channel tunnel will, of course, have been built and electricity or some still more powerful motive force will have superseded steam, so that the Californians and Puget sound denizens v. mid naturally go to London by fast Alaskan and Siberian express. If they chose they might return by steamship, making tfho passage in two or three days from the west coast of Ireland to Labrador or Halifax. In view of all that has been 1 done in the last twenty-fb-e years such . further development of traveling facil- , ities is easily within the realm of sober prediction.

Flowers of the Nations. Some of the flower badges of nations are as follows: Athens, violet; Canada, sugar maple; Egypt, lotus; England, rose; France, fleur-de-lis (lily); Florence, giglio (lily); Germany, corn flower; Ireland, shamrock leaf; Italy, lily; Prussia, linden; Saxony, mignonette; Scotland, thistle; Spain, pomegranate; Wales, leak leaf.

Agricultural Exhibit*.

Chief Buchanan has made the lost os- 1 signment of space within his building j to exhibitors whose applications have ' been regularly filed. A few applications are now being received every day, and the most important of these will receive attention. In all there will he more than six thousand exhibitors in the department of agriculture. Within the agricultural building, however, there will be not more than seven hundred and fifty domestic exhibits of manufactured food products; of these seven hundred and nineteen have already been assigned to space. The i crop exhibits and the domestic wool

and honey exhibits will be made with-1 i in the state buildings. >

The new city directory will give Muncie a population of 19,763. The census report of ’80 gave Muncie 5,219. In ’90 the population was 11,845; eighteen months ago the Emerson directory people issued a hook that gave the city about 14,000. The growth is wonderful. Milan is about to begin a hank. At a meeting held recently to inaugurate the enterprise ninety-one shares of stock were suhseri bed. Milan is a village of 300 to 400 inhabitants. There are hanks at Versailles, Osgood and Batesville, in the same county. The body of Saloonist Robinson was found in a gravel pit pond at Anderson. Suicide. John P. Johnson and A. S. Hughes, were arrested at Columbus by a deputy United States marshal for violation of the United States revenue laws. Charles E. Graves has been appointed receiver of the New Aveline house at Fort Wayne, by consent of all parties concerned; and has taken charge of the hotel. At a contest the other evening E. G. Davis of Crawfordsville, was chosen to represent Wabash college in the state oratorical contest. His subject was “The Conflict of the Closing Century— Capital and Labor.” Otto Faui.kf.nburo, upon a charge of assaulting John Underhill in the form of white-capping near Branchville on February 15, 1892, pleaded guilty the other morning in court. He implicates fourothers, including Marsh Land, a local lawyer, as well as two cousins and a brother-in-law. The evidence of Linton Carr, the defendant’s brother-in-law, agreed with Underhill and the state’s witnesses that Faulkenburg was the leader. Underhill displayed his arm in which a shot is still lodged. The defendant was sentenced to five years in the state’s prison. Charles Kohlmeyer, a young farmer of Knox county, was killed by being kicked in the breast by a Texas pony. As a result of the recent gas explosion at Lebanon the Lebanon Light, Heat and Power Co. is made defendant in a suit by Martin Hohl for $25,000 damages; $15,000 for personal injuries and $10,000 for damage to his property. The controller's certificate authorizing the Merchants’ national bank, of Muncie, to begin business, was issue.i a few days ago. Hardin Roads is the president of the new hank, and a capital of $100,000 will he employed. It is semi-officially announced that the quartermaster-general of the United States army, through congress, will establish a military post at Jeffersonville, where recruits for the army can enlist. Seventy-five acres of ground necessary for barracks and other buildings and parade grounds will be donated to the United States by local capitalists at the proper time. Th« ground in question is located three miles west of Jeffersonville, fronting on the line of the P., G, C. and St. L. railroad and the Ohio river. John Strahi.e, aged seventy-nine, a pioneer of Elkhart, committed suicide by cutting his throat with a razor, nearly severing his head. A few days before he placeif himself in front of an approaching passenger train for the purpose of being run over, hut was pulled from the track in time to save him. During the night he tried to strangle himself to death with a handkerchief. Ill health and the recent death of his wife are supposed to have unsettled his mind. Thofsands of fine carp were set free in the White river, near Columbus, several days ago by the breaking of a leveo which destroyed a large fishery. Zora Peyton has been appointed postmistress at Riddle. Some miscreant placed a dynamite cartridge under the C. & I. C. depot, at Brazil, but it was discovered before an explosion took place. The heaviest verdict ever returned in Madison county for personal damages was given by a jury at Anderson, in the case of Joseph Beck, of Lebanon, against the Big Four Railway Co. It amounted to $5,500. At Columbus Ed Saladine, a tinner, 18 years old, fell from a scaffold that was fifty feet high and broke his hack. His right arm and leg were also broken, the bones protruding through the flesh. He will die. A careful estimate of the wheat crop of southern Indiana places 70 per cent of the crop as good and 12 per cent as fair. This shows no change in the autumn condition.

Qui’eS ^ick. rn l,vTn<,t ' 1 ’ 111 10 iiAiuoixii v—

than forty or fifty mile* pur hour.

Louses,

Ybur next week's washing

> •* ,

WilF look whiter, will be cleaner and will be done with less labor if

SANTA CLAUS SOAP

is used. The clothes will smell sweet e-rand will last longer. SANTA CLAUS SOAP is pure, it cleans but does not injure t-he-fabric, It does i)ot roughen or chap thehands. Millions use* it. Do You.?

N. K . FAIR BANK &CCO.. M/rs. CH ICAG.O. ' A

www mommr

The Original Ev porting v aper Stove.

A Stove that lights like gas!

A Stove that makes no smoke or smell! A Safe Stove! An Economical Stove!

A Stove calling for no skill to operate it!

if order!

A Stove that never gets out o Made without packing, swivel joints, levers, stuffing boxes, lighting cups, or

—jjarri ;mv t ^ ie 0, d style “traps,” whicli give i;- ; - ijfi' 'lit and cause trouble. The only stove

® ^J^jjA^ 'orrcct in principle, that “evaporates” f [■•djf if**!)instead of “generates,” and absolutely without any of the complicated and dan-

gerous devices used on all vapor stoves

before its introduction.

ft c Yl \v vv^'vWv Wxc VvmtftW

Don’t make any mistake with theoreti-

_ cal, untried experiments, but buy the article which time and thousands of tests have proven to be an unqualified

success. Don’t buy an old style, complicated and troublesome “generat-

_ 'ge

ing” stove under a “new” name. If you have one, you can’t afford to keep it. The “New Process” is what you want. Call and examine.

H. S. REiYICK & CO

EAST SIDE OF SQUARE.

Agents for Putnam County.

■fty • tXfrccmamTP'ar'a

THE BEST IS CHEAPEST.

Parties desiriug a lirM ci.tss Rooi at a retsonable price should sou

&EOB&E BICKNEIA*

Agent tor'1 ire i!ante itooiing Co.’s FELT ; VUtCANIZlii) ROOFING

B.in-FIRE PROOF, LIGHT AND DURABLE, it makes a desirable Roof lor Business Room, Residence, Barn, etc. $ iirriu^ Wag-mis, life., At Lowest Prices. Clover, Tim'd by and Blue Grass Seed, Barbed Wire Nails, etc., ''Lot (Tons nd Loud, d Sh. Us.

XiamiUVA STm NORTH of quark 'i'-zaiacH’' • .. -l. ■ r—n m-wnrmiTnfi miiiii ni» fi'iwiiM—mi

ItTastes Good ^

One reason why Sco/l’s Emulsion of Pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda has had such a large sale is because it is ‘‘Almost as palatable as milk;” but the best reason is that its curative properties are unequalled. It cures the cough, supplies the waste of tissues, produces

flesh and builds up the entire system.

Bcott’s Emulsion cures Coughs, Colds, Consumption, Scrofula, and all Anaemic and Wasting Diseases. Prevents wasting In children. Almost a* palatable as milk. Get only the Kentilne. Prepared by Scott & Bowno, Chemists, Now York. Sold by all Druggists.

_ Scott’s Emulsion

Steal or Water Heat.

.1 !

45

Most Healthful, Most Cleanly, Most Economical.

Let us give you an estimate on heat-

residen

too late in the season.

nee. Don’t wait until

Ctvev\\v.’t\.*A\e VowwAvvy

A.ii<I Co.

r : ~--4r •7 s f ■ —W.

rr,J. ‘ ' ' f J '"- * ! •

“Rock-City (PL8SB»aO) Solid Axle Oil.

IfyourGroceroruoftlerhasn’t :> write i

tawonSOOto iHOOmih'u.

V'!d*\ A

* ^ M E K ?C AN S il A FV H oVd E r'c 0 ' W AIA£h 'Y (

'WHERE DIRT CATHERST WASTE RULES?’—

GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OF

SAPOLIO

ZDEJUNTTISTIEnr.

Artificial teeth The be*( fillimrs neat and theap; extracting by local anesthetion, at

L) It. !£ El GUI T LEY’S

OE3VTA15, OFFICE,

duvotila STAK-P1UESS Office, Ur :oncwUe,Ind

MONEY! MONEY! MONEY!

S5G,000.00 to Loan ong or short time, in sums of fx.j and

(»n long or short time, in sums ot fjuu and upward, at lowest rates. Privilege of prepayment. A. P. JACOBS. 8m8 8>iB. Wa»hingtonSt.,areenca«tle,lnd