Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 18 March 1893 — Page 2
ZZZSi
AVER’S
Sarsaparilla
claiming to be* blood-purifiers. First
of nil, because the principal ingredient used in it is the extract of genuine Honduras sarsaparilla root, the variety richest in medicinal proper-
Cures Catarrh
low dock, being raised expressly for the Company, is always fresh and of the very best kind. With equal discrimination and care, each of the other ingredients are selected and compounded. It is *
THE
Superior Medicine
because it is always the same in ai>pearance, flavor, and effect, and, being highly concentrated, only small doses are needed. It is, therefore, the most economical blood-purifier Piippc in 11 OUl ca makes food nour-
CfOnnil A ishing, work pleasOOnuruLn ant, sleep refresh-
ing, and life enjoyable. It searches out all impurities in the system and expels them harmlessly by the natural channels. AVER’S Sarsaparilla gives elasticity to the step, and imparts to the aged and infirm, renewed health, strength, and vitality.
AVER’S
Sarsaparilla
P oared by Pr. J. O. Aver & Co., Lowell, Mas§. Hold by all Dru valets; Frtcefcl; t*ix bottle*, $5.
Cures others, will cure you
Mil 10 L
-A T*
6 PER CENT,
CALL ON
GEO. HATH All
No. 22 Sonll Jattsoii Slmt, GREENCASTLE, IND.
JsraD-w
Livery and Feed Stable,
tr. Ji. VESTA L <e SON, Props.
JiHit north'of the northeast corner of Public Square, on North Indiana street.
G-ivo \_Ji3 cv 0«11
For fine rigs, good saddler*, andfine drivers
8AS FITTING AND FILTJ MBZX7 C
I w:ii attend to all orders fo< 5 aBtitling and plumbing pioun ’
ly. All work thoroughly tested
and
Wwuitt lo h Sittt'jji.
And prices very low. \ •’all.
Give
nn
FRED VVEIK.
G. W. Benos, Physician,
0(Leu tind Kosiaonco, •Vashingtoxi Street, one
Squaru . h.bI oi .National lianK.
flUKKNC
M STL INP.
SSit
BUTLER AND THE CLERGY
Sensation Created by the Governor’s Fast Day Proclamation.
How the Whole State of Massachusetta * —- --n i r ,f> * 1
ROYAL ECONOMY.
All (iumt* Killed at Shooting: Parties Sold at the Highest Market Kates. Emperor William has, much to the disgust of a considerable portion of his subjects, inaugurated the practice oi having all the game killed at the Im-
Trlck of tha Chief Executive.
No tree* of first qmiHt.v can ever be Rent by mail. Mayhap you know it. By freight, pre-
6 feet
excellence—ev ery-
iou iutiu.lly pay less than for the punystuff. l.OOOncrcK Nurseries. '20,000 acres Orchards. Kxad intorniation about tree aud fruits. STAUK 1IHOH., Louisiana. Missouri. 8t42
man. Maynap you know it ilyircign paid if preterred, \>c ship safclj 4, 5»r trees; 2-year Hosts of rare exccllence-
thing! You at i ua I ly
“I see old Hen liutler’s gone at last,” said Maj. Edward Downing, of Boston, to a Ht. Louis Globe-Democrat man. "Let mo tell you a story on the old man that has never been printed; at least, if it has 1 never have heard of it. You know one of our greatest holidays in Massachusetts is Fast day, and it comes along in April. It is the duty of the governor to issue a proclamation setting the day and exhorting the citizens of the state to lay aside all their earthly pursuits and devote the day to fasting and prayer. Well, when Ben was governor he had a mighty hard row to hoe. There were all sorts of editors in the state who laid for him with a scalping-knife up their sleeves night and day, and no opportunity to make life a nightmare to him was ever overlooked. The same feeling was indulged in by men of high standing in other professions, too, clergymen among the rest. Well, when old Ben’s proclamation came out it was a beauty. It wound up with a special exhortation to the clergy to the effect that they devote their time to the welfare of the spiritual man and refrain from indulging their curiosities in the family affairs of the men and women of their congregations, and look to it that in their teachings their own souls were free from taint. That proclamation created a sensation. It shook the staid old state of Massachusetts from end to end. The papers everywhere denounced the governor us impertinent, sacrilegious, indelicate, coarse, brutal and profane. They accused him of being everything that was disagreeable; no official in the history of the world had ever dared to assail the clergy in the wanton manner that Gov. Butler had. On the following Sunday the ministers had their fling at the old war horse, and right merrily did they roast him. The old man kept perfectly quiet and good natured through it all, never losing his temper or vouchsafing anything in the shape of an explanation. After everybody had had their say, and a whole lot was said, too, the old man came out with a statement— and the copy to show it, too— that inasmuch as he was not experienced in such matters he had copied word for word, the proclamation of one of the first governors of the common-
. — asU
■ if
BARBARIC WARFARE.
A Civilized Community Tliat Gave Scalp Bounties.
Malnu's llutortc Old Forts and Thelt Former Prominence—Historic Fort
wealth, 1 ve forgotten which one, but in such high esteem was he held that he was almost sainted. Butler showed to the satisfaction of everybody that the only change he had made in the original document was to fix the date and substitute his own name for that of the
original. That tickled the old man probably as much as anything in his life,but there was an awfully crestfallen lot of editors and clergymen in the old Bay state for a long time after that. The old man had caught them fairly, and there was no way for them to get out of It.”
FROM PRIVATE TO PRESIDENT.
luterestlugf Career of the Vice President of Switzerland. A lilt of history connected with the life of Emil Frey, who was recently elected vice president of the Swiss republic, will interest both officers and ex-officers of the army. When the civil war began in the United States young Frey was at a university in Switzerland, and being moved with patriotic# impulse to aid a struggling sister republic he came to this country, went direct to the Swiss colony in Illinois and enlisted as a private in the Twenty-eighth Illinois volunteers. The Army and Navy Journal says that he served with his regiment until he resigned as second lieutenant on June 17, 1803, to raise a company for the Eighty-second Illinois, in which ho served as captain until mustered out with it, June, 1805, having served about four years and constantly in the field. Ho was taken prisoner with part of the Eleventh corps at Gettysburg July 1,1808, and for a long time was held as hostage under sentence of death, and after his release was brevetted a major for gallant and meritorious services. At the close of the war he returned to Switzerland, where he obtained the rank next to the commander in chief,and was dented to the Swiss federal council and served in the cabinet. _ He revisited this country as the first envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary from Switzerland to the United States, serving through the administrations of Presidents Garfield, Arthur and Cleveland. The next step of this ex-private of the federal array of the United States Is, according to the custom of Switzerland, from that of vice president to president of a European republic.
est possible price to the game dialers of the Prussian capital Hitherto it has always been customary that such of the game as was not required for the royal household or for presentation to the participants in the hunt should be given to the hospitals and charitable institutions of Berlin. The same thing is done by the royal family in England, according to the New York Recorder, and immense hampers of game shot at Windsor, Osborne, Sandringham and Balmoral are received by the various London hospitals during the autumn and early winter months. In France, however, at the presidential battues in the state forests of Rambouillet all the game shot is sold to the Paris game dealers, this method of disposal having been inaugurated under the economical, and in every way mean, regime of President Grevy. The idea of selling game shot on the estate to game dealers would have been regarded as the height of bad form and vulgarity thirty or forty years ago in England, and the adoption of the practice is altogether attributable to the indiscriminate and wholesale slaughter of birds and ground game, most of the former artificially bred. Where formerly hundreds of heads of game were shot to-day they are numbered by thousands, the majority of the birds haring in most cases been purchased and imported into the preserves hut a few days previous to the shoot. The selling of the game is, I suppose, destined in a measure to reduce the expense involved by the purchase of the birds. At one of the great country houses not a hundred miles distant from Paris, the preserves of which are famous throughout Europe for the abundance of the game, every piece is sent to Paris for sale and the strictest rule prevails against any of the guests who have taken part in the battue from appropriating any bird that they may have shot. No one is permitted to retain his day’s bag. Some of them used to endeavor to avoid this regulation, whereupon the noble proprietor made a point of going round the various bed and sitting rooms while his guests were at their postprandial coffee for the purpose of hunting up any game that they might have hidden away. On such occasions as these he was accompanied by a dog specially trained for that purpose, who would at once commence to point on entering any room where there were hares or birds concealed.
Tenement.
. Mr>f?r»rn
For selling his vote a resident of Wolfe County, Kentucky, was sentenced to disfranchisement for life.
ONE BIG DIAMOND.
“I said
2£ut:tl4,d to a rase.
called to get a pass, Mr. Webb,” an old lady who insisted upon
They all Testify To the Efficacy Of the ■'r.r'Syl VV:)rl< l‘ Renown * ( f ^MrSwift’s
Specific.
<ar Tho old-tlmo simple ly remedy from tho Georgia
a a.. 1 lie Ids has 1 —^ | K n no f t rLh to tho antipodes,
" astonishing tho skeptical and I confoundlr.g tho theories of " those who depend solely on tho Ian's skill. There b no blood
' , .. it .|... : t In medial* ly eradicate. Poisons outwardly ah rhed or tho result of vile dl- oses from within all yield to thb potent but simple remedy. It Is an uncqualed tonic, bnllds up tho old mid feeble, cure* all diseases arising from inipuro blood or weakened vitality, dead for a treatise. Examine the proof.
walking into the office of the third vice president of tho New York Central . ^ ro«d thi other day. “I am Tory glad to see you mauum, hut tvny should the road give you a pass? You appear to be well able to spend the money for one.” “Yes, I've got the money, but my aunt used to know your grandmother.” "If that is the ease the road is certainly compelled to give you a pass, madam,” said Mr. Webb, and while the clerks in the outer office snickered with delight tho third vice president signed the necessary paper, and tho old lady smiled and waddled out, highly pleased with
herself.
A Man In lirazit Is .Made Klch by Finding It. "Diamonds, are rather plentiful, nowadays,” said a jeweler to a representative of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, “but like many great men, there are very few large ones. We all know of the Kohinoor, the whilom treasure of the kahn of Persia, and again the great orange diamond, now in possession of the German emperor; hut the largest diamonds are not always finest. "Sometimes a large diamond fails to sparkle properly, lacks radiance and color. Such a stone upon being divided will often make several very brilliant and valuable small diamonds, whose aggregate value would be more than the great colorless original. In the early dawn of civilization diamonds were the cause of more crime than even gold or silver. They have been swallowed for safe-keeping, frequently causing death. “Murder after murder can be traced to one or the other of these great diamonds as the principal cause. Some dire state intrigues and plots have had a diamond for the center or nucleus. One of the finest diamonds in the world was found not long since in the Brazilian sands. It came in a novel form. A small quartz rock was found, about the size and shape of an egg, lying in the sands along the bank of tho Amazon, in Brazil. This was carried home by a Brazilian peasant, who was attracted by its good shape and light weight. "For some time it lay in his home, with a number of other geological specimens, a mere curiosity. Happening one day in handling it to drop it on a stone block, it hurst open and lay in halves on the block. The hollow interior that gave the light weight to the stone was filled with blood red sand. In this sand lay the diamond, a sparkling gem of tho rarest quality. The stone was later sold to a diamond merchant. and left the finder exceedingly wealthy. “It is safe to say that the next eggshaped stone found in that section will not long remain unbroken, and now that the quality and value of a diamond so formed is well known the next finder will realize a fortune out of it most certainly.”
In Augusta, Me., on the east side of the Kennebec river stands a building called Fort Western, which is one hundred and thirty-nine years old, and built on the same point of land Where once stood the famous New Plymouth trading house in 1038. At Windsor, Me., near Waterville, according to the Boston Herald, can lie seen another—Fort Halifax—erected the same year, both silent and eloquent remindersof ye olden days of bitter strife and struggle. The first Maine fort—Fort St. George —was erected in 1007, and followed by Forts Richmond, Shirlej’, George and others, around which cluster historical events of thrilling interest. In 1754 Gov. Shirley was informed that the French were building a fort at a noted carrying place of the Indians on the head waters of the Kennebec, and he commissioned Capt. North, of the fort at Pemuquid, and Lieut. Fletcher, of St. George's fort, to start with a sufficient armed guard and request any chief officer thus engaged to remove from the ground with his soldiers, as being within the jurisdiction of his majesty the king of Great Britain. Tlie same month a party of sixty Indians, supposed to be spies, appeared at Fort Richmond, and were insulting and threatening. The French were active in persuading the Indians to prevent further settlement on the river, promising favor to those who woultl unite with them, and threatening vengeance on all who should interpose between the Indians and the English. In tho emergency which thus arose, the general court decided that the French should at all events be prevented from making any settlements on the river or at the carrying places at its head, and as the Richmond fort was in a precarious state it was demolished and a new one built at Ticonnet and named Fort Hali-
fax.
Septembers it was garrisoned by one hundred men under command of Capt. W. Lithgow. During the building of this fort, a committee of the Plymouth company was engaged in erecting a fort on the east side of Augusta, to be called Fort Western. The main building, which is the one that still remains, is one hundred feet long, thirty-two feet wide and sixteen feet high, and is built of timber, making solid walls twelve inches thick. A road was then made between Forts Halifax and Western, aud was the first military road constructed in Maine. In the fall of 1754 a message was sent the governor from Fort Halifax, stating that the Indians had fallen upon a party of six of the garrison, sent out to draw logs, and killed one man and captured four others, one only escaping to the fort. This act of barbarity and treachery on the part of the Indians, together with the information that the French, with the Indians, were preparing to make an attack upon the forts, necessitated the reenforeement of the garrison, and four hundred and sixty men were detailed from the independent companies, to he held in readiness to immediately march to the relief of the forts on the first approach of the
Of Course You Read The tcstimoniale frequently published in this paper relating to Hood's Sarsaparilla. They are from reliable people, state simple facts, and show beyond a doubt that Hood's curee. Why don't you try this medicine? iYu*-’ —
The
County Fair
affords aa excellent opportunity for the pick-pocket to get your watch. If you would be proof against his skill, be sure
that the bow 'or ring) is a
Constipation, and all troubles with the digestive organs and the liver, are cured by Hood's Pills. Unequalled as a dinner pill.
Many New York Brokers are said to have earned in commission #1,000 per hour during
the Heading cyclone.
The people at the World’s Dispensary of BulTulo, N. Y., have a stock-taking time once a year and what do you think they do? Count the numeer of bottles that've been returned by the men and women who say that Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery or Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription didn’t do what they said it would do. And how many do you thiuk they have to count. One in ten? Notone in five hundred! Here are two remedies—one the “Golden Medical Discovery,” for regulating and invigorating the liver aud purifying the blood; the other the hope of weakly womanhood; they’ve been sold for years, sold by the million bottles; sold under a positive guarantee, and not one in five hundred can say: “It was not the medicine for me!” And—is there any reason why you should be one! And—supposing you are what do you lose? Absolutely
nothing!
There are men who starve their children to
help the brewer fatten his horses.
That Loathesome Disease
Distemper among horses can positively be cured and prevented by the use of I'rafl’s Distemper Cure. One dose will keep the horses from taking the disease and three to four will cure. Will also cure Conghs, Colds, Epizootic and other Catarrhal ailments of horse. Price 50 cents at Albert Allen's drugstore. mar.
Women talk a good deal, of course, but so would men if they had so many interesting
things to say.
Shut Your Ears
To the representations of unscrupulous dealers w ho tell you that their bogus nostrums and local cure? are identical with or akin to
This wondertul bow is now fitted to the
Jas. Boss
Filled Watch Cases, which are made of two plates of gold soldered to a plate of composition metal. Look equally as well as solid gold cases, and cost about half as much. Guaranteed to wear 20 years. Always look for this trade mark.
None genuine without it.
Sold only through watch dealers. Ask any jeweler for pamphlet or send ,
to the manufacturers.
cystoneWatch Case Co., 0
RHI LA DELPHI A. j
ItAlLlVAV H Mi:- i'AltEE. I
A.
Hit, FOUR. Going East—8:45 a. in., 1:48 p. m., 5:00 p. m., 2:37 a. m. Going Wkst—8:45 a. m., 1:01 p. m., 6:46 p. m., 12:30 a. m.
Dr. Well’s New Cough Cure. Such state-
fo
MONON ROUTE. Going North 2:17 n. in., 12:29 noon; local,]
11:30 a. in.
Going South 1:58 a. m., 2:22 p. m.; local |
1:20 p. in.
VANDALIA LINE. In effect February 1,1393. Trains leave Grecn-| castle, Ind., r
KOR THB WKST.
No. 21, Daily 11:47 u. m., for St. Louis. " 1, Dally 1:13 p. m., " “ “ 7, Daily 12:12 a. ra., “ “ “ 6, Ex. Hun 9:27 a. m., “ “ “ 3, Ex. Hun 5:28 p. in., “ Terre Haute. “ 1, Ex. Hun 7:05 a. m., “ Peoria. " 3, Ex. Sun 3:00 p.m., “ Decatur.
FOB THE EAST.
No. 20, Daily 1:19 p. m., for Indianapolis, " 8, Daily 3:52 p.m., “ “ " it, Daily 3:36 a. m., “ “ 12, Daily 2:24 a. m., “ “
2, Ex. Sun 6:20 p.m., 4, Ex. Sun 8:34 ». ra.
nients are false. Ask For, and insist on having the genuine article, whiclt is put up in salmon colored wrappers aud retails for 25
cents. Beware of imitati
bert Allen.
ations.
Sold by Al-
mar.
A bald headed man’s power of reflection are greatly increased under an electric light.
Do you lack faith and love health?
establish
Let us
ush your faith and restore your health with DeWitt’s Sarsaparilla. Albert Allen,
agt.
A Michigan man has a dove farm.
The strongest recommendation that any article can have is the endorsement of the mothers of the town. When the mothers recommend it you may know that that article has more than ordinary merit. Here is what the Centerville, South Dakota, Citizen says editorilly of an article sold in their town: “From personal experience we can say that C humberkiin's Cough Remedy has broken up had colds for our children. Wc are acquainted with many mothers in Centerville who would not be without in the house for a good many times its cost, and are recommending it every day.” 50 cents a bottle at Allen's mar.
Southern factories are making paper fro palmeto.
The breaking up of the winter is the signal for the breaking up of the system. Nature is opening up the pores and throwing off refuse. DeWitt’s Sarsaparilla is of unquestionable assistance in this operation. Albert Allen, agt. ly
The French people still fight an average of 4,000 duels every year.
Piles of people have piles, but De Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve will cure them. Albert Allen, agt. iy
enemy.
The French
and Indian war was
finally declared the following year, and largo inducements were offered to volunteer companies of recruits to take part. Two hundred dollars was promised for every Indian scalp, and two hundred and fifty dollars for each captive. To individuals, one hundred dollars for a scalp and one hundred and
ten dollars for a captive.
I’articular attention was paid to the defense to the eastern frontier. Companies of scouts were established along the seacoast from Saco to St. George’s, and Forts Western and Halifax were garrisoned with eighty men and well supplied with stores. The forts between the Kennebec and St. George’s were also put in a state of defense, and the friendship of the Tarratin Indians cultivated. But their bitter rancor was aroused when James Cargill, of Newcastle, received a commission to raise a company of scouts, who on tho first day of J uly made an excursion for the purpose of obtaining the government price for scalps. When near Owls Head a party of Tarratin Indian hunters were discovered. Without stopping to inquire whether they were friends or enemies, they were deliberately shot and their scalps secured. On their return they Hvt Margaret Moxa, a friendly squaw, i ith her child. A
volley was fired i mother and child, headed and tried on but discharged after
two years.
The war ended in 1759, when the Indians, deserted by their French allies,
proposed peace.
Fort Western i; now fumilarly teemed the “old fort," and years ago was converted into a tenement house. Despite these modern changes, the structure still bears many of its old characteristics, and even to the casual
in them, killing rgill was apprearge of murder, confinement of
lleggars In St. Petersburg.
St. Petersburg is troubled with large i numbers of mendicants who grow j bolder every day. Every person of re-
( spec table standing is importuned by characteristics, and even to the casual j begging letters and oftentimes by the observer t>ea> s the evidences of its early
personal intrusion of beggars, who itn- 1UI< * stirring history,
pertinently insist upon compliance with ; their demands. Even soldiers arc ap- ,
proaehed with tho demand that they A UuHsian arm .V <'flieer made
share their rations with the poor The Romc ver y successful experiments in the chief of the St. Petersburg police has (,f falcons to carry dispatches, therefore issued an order that house uud general attention has been culled janitors and policemen on dutv shall to the possibilities of the use of this
Books on “Blood and Skin Diseases ” mailed Croo.
I>ruggi*tB Hell It,
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.,
Drawer a. Atlanta, Qa,
s_a sa a w w ■» | |
Chinese on the Congo. The Belgian officials in the Congo country are about to import Chinese coolies to do the work of cothmon laborers. The English, who have tried tho experiment of mixing Chinamen and negroes, wish the Belgians success, but predict that they will not meet with any. They say the two races wiU I not work peaceably together, theChina1 men generally being the chief mischief
> makers. S# L
MAttAt ALFA Iqy VSA AAA VJf AAAiAV 9 AAtgOJ.
on duty shall . . , . . »
arrest every beggar pointed out to blrd f '"' messenger pnrpoeesIn time of them by private citizens. In order to ' vtlr - Tho falcons 80 traim,d carried prevent the crowcUng of mendicants at messages from one garrison to another 1 the entrances of theaters and other with v, r y gratifying success. If the places of amusement, lines are drawn 1180 * du ' se b * rds * s found to be really at a distance of two blocks around generally practicable they will have .them, within which no crowding of many points of superiority over pigeons people and no loungers are allowed to for messenger purposes. They are remain. Vehicles bringing passengers ruucb stronger, and some of those so to such public resorts must withdraw far trled carried a " el g h t "} four Rusbeyond the lino and not approach the P°" nd8 "*thout hindrance to gateway until they are called. The po- s P eod - A not unimportant consideralice force was considerably increased to ‘ lon ls the / ar u e 1 1 lkel y to suffer 1 give effect to these new regulations from attaocs of other birds.
York, Pa., is the leading town in the manufacture of rag carpets.
Three days is a very short time lit which to cure a bad case of rheumatism; but it can be
done, if the proper treatment is adopted, as will be seen by the following from James
Lambert, of New Brunswick, 111.: "I was badly atllicted with rheumatism in the hips and legs, when I bought a battle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm. It cured me in three days. I am all right to-day: and would insist on every one who is afllicted with that terrible disease to use Chamberlain's Pain Halm and get well at once.” 50 cent bottles for
sale oy Albert Allen
Owing to the inclination of its orbit the moon is never exactly full.
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
The best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Mores, Ulcers, Halt Rheum, Fever
nrutses, Hores, Ulcers, Halt Rheum, Fevei Sores, Teter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains Corns and all Hkin Eruptions and positively
rfect sa
cures Piles, or no auteed to give per
refunded. Price 25 cents per box.
by Albert Allen.
positively
quired. It is guartisfaction. or money
For sale
43-ly
The city of Washington consumes 8,000 gallons of pure milk daily.
It is a truth in medicine that the smallest dose that performs a cure is the best. DeWitt 's Little Early Kisers are the smallest pills, will Iierform the cure, and are the best. Albert Allen, agt. ly
In Finland and East Turkestan thunderstorms are wholy unknown.
“The people of this vicinity insist on having Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and do not want any other,” says John V. Bishop, of Portland Mills, Indiana. That is right. They know it to be superior to any other for colds, and as a preventative aiid curr for croup, and mhy should they not insist upon having it. 50 cent bottles for sale by Albert Allen. mar
Millions of buttertlies are eaten every year by the Australian aborigines.
“There is a salve for every wound.” We refer to DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Halve, cures burns, bruises, cuts, indolent sores, as a local application in the nostrils it cures catarrh, and always cures piles. Albert Allen, agt. ly
The year 1893 began on a Hunday, aud it will finish on a Hunday, so that it will contain 53
Sundays.
Bad complexion indicates an unhealthy
state of the system. DeWitt’s Little Early
pills that will correct this comli-
Risers are puis mat wm correct this co tion They act on the liver, they act on the
a to loach, they*;.. w /i the hone*}-.
For complete Time Card, giving all trai and stations, and for full information as
rates, through cars, etc., address J. H. DOWLING, Agent,
Greeucastle, Ind.
Or J. M. Chesbuough, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Louis, Mo.
THK B EST
GROCERIES and. Provisions, If si . Pics.
TuBsicOOi
ETC., ETC.
A T LOWEST I’ll I ('ES, A
Kiefer’M*
Fount Lunch Counter i* the City. Come and See.
NIOHii! MM\ MONEY!
On lo,
upw,
pay, tisni
000.00 to I-ioam
btu^^Bsln>rt tune, in sums of £200 am
owest rates. Privilege of pre
A. F. JACOBS,
Washington St., Orcencastle, Ind
III*, iu ?1. HANNA, |
vyrriv r., axw. jo ra/tni «v U J 04. I 1st door cast of Engine House. The DoctoJH may be lound at the office at all times, botllr day anti night, when net prolessionall’lj engaged. ^
DE. G. C. SMYTHE, Physician and burgeon i
Office and r« deuce, Vine street, between Washington and W alnut streets.
No. 705. >4»tl<*e wl l*'4irecl<»n(i re Nt'liool i null .florlKUUCN,
In comiiliani, with tin school law of iw St.itc cl' Indi ini. pertaining to the dutie and obligations of county Auditors, in U management of school fund, for non-pad ment of interest and principal due schoil funds managed in Putnam County, in th state of Indiana, on loans of said fundi hereafter mentioned, I shall oiler for sale z, the Court House door, in the city of Greei] castle, in said county, on
MONDAY, THE fWENTY-SEVENTH DA |
OF MARCH, 1893,
between the hours of 10 o'clock a. ra. and o'clock p. in., of ciid day, to the highest bill (It r i.ir cash, so much of the following di scribed mortgaged picmi.o s as will satistl the amount due for principal, interest, danf ages and costs, or it the premises be not sud * t pUble ot division, then the whole of th trio t or tracts will be oflered to the i : g)ii Liililor frxi* r>neVi \-iv ^ A.
bidder for cash, viz:
That part of the southwest quarter on four li. townshin fourteen iiziT
tiou four i.4), township fourteen (14. , range four 1- west, bounded as tt JFfl to-wit: Beginning at the southeast ecrnerL said quarter, and running thence north wil the east line thereof, eight isi chains
forty-four (Hi links, thence west to’ r d chains and twenty-seven (27) links to a tuJ stone ninteeii (It) inches A. I*, ttience ,a eight (8) chains and forty-four (44) linl i the south line of said quarter section thil east with said south line four i li chairsjjf
twenty-seven t27i links to the place of nine, containing three and sixtv nr
g, containing three and sixty one-1 dths_(3 60-100. acres morn or less.
dre
about three (3i
acres more or legs off t7
northwest corner of the northens' yuarter . section nine i0‘, township fourteen (14) norO or range ,J^t. ^said __traeUe^
of
bon art aI ner stone at
i ♦ nort , h *e8t corner of sail
Hitfhetit price paid for hide*, pelts llfty thV'^
northeast on a line to a point seventeen (I'jl
tiinl tallow by \ uiiclcavi* A Non. lltt
When Baby was sick, wo gave her Castorio. When ahe was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When rite became Miss, sho clung to Castoria WETS dbe had Children, sho gave them Castoria.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry Jor Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
" <h« ginning on ttll
section line running east and west betwee'l sections tour i 41 and' hi, thence west on sail section line to place of beginning Also 1 part ot the west halfofthe southeast ouarU* ot section four (4), township fourteen 111 north, of range four ( I) west, which is scribed as follows, to-wit: Beginning at
southwest corner of said w, M o ill of
:;.\ ul .v r north
the line dividin east quarter an
ig said west half of the soutl d the east halt of the soutl
west quarter of said section, fifty-two Td! rods ttience east to the line of the survey ,1
the Greenenstle and Bainbridge Free Grav Road, thence south on the said line to U south line oi said section four 14), | lienee we on said line to the place of beginning said 1 contain six 16) acres more or less for payment of one hundred and fifty doll (§150.00) principal, and interest, and costs
Congressional school fimd'of't
mge four (4) west,
county and Htate of Indiana.
teen (14) north, rani
ml of tow :i ship ij
PutT
GEORGE M. BLAC# Auditor of P,itn (>,„
Greencastlo, Ind., Feb. 28, 1893. 8
