Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 April 1893 — Page 2
THE FACT That AYER’S Sarsaparilla cures others of Scrofulous Diseases, Eruptions, Roils, Eczema, Liver and Kidney Diseases^ DjgPBBrtRi Rhcu^
anu Ca&rrn sfioulu*oe con-
SIOUX MORTUARY CUSTOMS.
TerrlMe Self-Torture In flirted by Both Ceased by Earthquake., at See end Some-
LARGEST OF KNOWN WAVES.
Ilritvcit and SqumwH.
The Dakota Sioux paint a corpse red acrost, the mouth, the hand black, with the thumb on one side of the mouth. A Sioux, says the St. Louis Republic,
times llUtng SUty Feet In llrl|;ht. While we usually think of earthquakes as taking place on land, they do occur with equal devastation in the ocean. That point in the earth at
vincing that the same course of treatment WILL CURE yoi:. All that has lieen said of the worderful
cures effected by the use of AVER’S
Sarsaparilla during the past 60 years, truthfully applies to-day. It is, in every sense. The Superior Medicine. Its curative properties, strength, effect, and flavor are always the same; and for whatever blood diseases AYER’S Sarsaparilla is taken, they yield Ut this treatment. When you ask for
AVER’S
Sarsaparilla don’t be induced to purchase any of the worthless substitutes, which are mostly mixtures of the cheapest ingredients, contain no sarsaparilla, have no uniform standard of appearance, flavor, or effect, are bloodpuritiers in name only, and are offered to you because there is more profit in selling them. Take * AVER’S Sarsaparilla Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer&Co., Lowell, Maps. 8oki by all Drug^ista; Trice $1; six bottled, £5. Cures others, will cure you
never cries with pain and never exhib- J which She expiosion or breaking takes its alarm ut death or shows fr.ir of any P' a '' e ''ailed the earthquake focus,
■ tmmem mv
the heart. There is little or no prepar- quake waves pass to the surface,says St. ation for death. The corpse is blanket- Nicholas. 1 ake a basin full of water ed, boxed and buried with the head to »nd dip a glass tube into it. Blow through the south, whence they believe they | tube a nd you will see bubbles originally came. A person who has ! risin S 10 the surface and circular waves been murdered by one of their own 1 out. The disturbance at the tribe is always buried face down, with I bottom of the basin corresponds with a fat piece of pork or bacon in the explosion or snapping of the crust mouth to prevent the spirit of the mur-, a * t ‘ ar tkq ua ke focus, with the dlfdered person from searing the jjame ' ^ eri ’ nce thid Instead of water waves the
from that section. A kettle of food is sometimes placed at children’s graves. Girls eat the food out of it at girls’
graves and boys ut boys’.
The sealfflock is cut off, hung up in the lodge and considered “keeping the ghost." Formerly these Indians buried In a tree or on a platform, anil burial in the ground was a disgrace. They even sometimes carried the dead body of a person with them on their journeys. The most cruel mourning is practiced. The squaws hack themselves to pieces with stone flints until they are covered with blood. The braves run sharpened sticks through their flesh until the scene is fairly sickening. A single scalp avenges the death and stops the mourning. While they mourn they never laugh, wash or comb their hair. They also have what is known as the “ghosts'gambol.” The Minnataree Indians, of Dakota, cut off their fingers for the dead till the whole ground is strewn with them. They are invariably buried in a green blanket, though they never wear green when living.
VT-
6 PER GENT.
-CALL ON
H.IATHM No. 22 Sontli JacKson Street, GREENCASTLE, IND.
Livery andFeed Stable, ir. if. I ESTA L <e SON, Props. Just north’of the northeast corner of Public 8r|%are, on North Indiana street. GriTT-o TJe* «. Oo.ll For fine rigs, good saddlers, andfine drivers
PUSSY DIED OF GRIEF. Her Only Friend Wa» » M urderer Whom She Followed to the Scaffold. Ellis R. Smith, the only republican sheriff Pettis county has had since the war, and the only sheriff that has ever executed a criminal during the criminal history of that county, was relating his experiences as an officer to a reporter for tbs St. Louis Post-Dispatch. “I witsed quite a peculiar thing in the jail at Sedalia last year,” he remarked. "I had the very unpleasant duty of officially removing an old man by the name of Tom Williamson, who had been convicted of a triple murder. About two months before the day of the execution the old man asked mo to get him a young kitten to raise. I did so. An attachment grew up between the two that was certainly remarkable. If at any time I happened to look the old man up in a cell without the cat, she would raise such a disturbance that I would have to lock her up with him. They were together day and night. When the day of execution rolled around, the cat appeared to be the chief mourner and brought up the rear of the death march to the scaffold. When the trap was sprung, the cat walked back into the jail and, after walking up and down the corridor for an hour, pounced upon old man Williamson's cot, where it remained for a week, refusing to eat or drink. About eight days after the execution I determined to remove her. When I attempted to frighten the cat off, I discovered that she was dead. I actually believe she grieved herself to death.”
latter produces earth waves, passing through the ground. When the city of Lisbon, Portugal, was destroyed, the earthquake took place in the bottom of the sea, fifty miles west of the city. Yet it so agitated the water that a wave sixty feet high dashed over Lisbon, destroying it and its inhabitants in the space of six minutes. Another earthquake, occurring just off the coast of Peru, made such a gigantic wave that a large vessel was thrown several miles Inland. These are called earthquake! waves. They are the largest known waves and arc caused by the heaving | and rocking of the bed of the sea. In deep water such waves are not very high, but their motion extends far down into the ocean. When they reach shallower water, however, they heap up like a gigantic wall and, with a force more terrible than fire or sword, they sweep on, bearing destruction with them. Huge ships are tossed like straws far inland or mingle their ruin
with that of a harbor town.
PROGRESS IN BURGLARY.
Bus FITTING AND PEcXTMBIlTG I will att*‘ii<I to all orders for ^«*sfittiug auil plumbing promptly. All work thoroughly tostei 1
and
Wwutti»Es Satkkb, And prices very low. Give m*
\ call.
FRED WEIK. G- W. Bence, Physician, Office and Keaidence , WaBhinuton Street, on#
Square cast of National Rank,
iJREKNCABTLK. INP.
:«ti
No trees of first quality can ever be sent by mail. Mayhnp you know it. Hy freight, prepaid if preferred, we ship safely i, 6or fi feet trees: 2-vcnr Ros< - of rare eicellence—everything! You actually pay less than for the puny .-lull. l.OMiac: sNurseries. 20,000 acres Orchards. 1- \...t information about Ireland fruits. STARK BROS?., Louisiana, Missouri. -t i
§ssssssss»§ S Swift's Specific S O A Tested Remedy Cl g For All g 5 Blood and Skin | s Diseases s 4C A reliable cure for Contagious fi Blood Poison, Inherited Scrofula and Skin Cancer. g As a tonic for delicate Women gy SS and Children it has no equal. Being purely vegetable, la harmless in ite effects. nJ O Atr -ftlss on Blood and flkln DlstJ eases mailed l kkk on application. Itruyf/iata Sell It. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., J? Sw Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ci. v'5 3ssqsssss£;
Safe-Crack lug; Han Heroine a Science and the •Jimmy Is Ohselete. Burglary is a trade. It has its tricks, its tools, and its ups and downs. It is n trade which, according to the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, is continually changing and improving. Methods of high-class burglars that were in vogue twenty years ago are hardly known now. The thief's “jimmy” is out of date. Safe-blowing has given way to safe-cracking. Four or five men, with a few sticks of dynamite, rob a train nowadays as easily as twenty men, armed to the teeth, did it a dozen years ago. But in spite of the changes the motto of all low-grade crooks is: “The way to steal is to steal.” They embrace every opportunity, and steal whenever they can, often making a bnngling job and getting nipped. After a few terms in the penitentiary, however, they are no longer low-grade crooks, but have become educated professionals. The penitentiary is their school. There they are taught all the improvements of the “trade," and there many burglars’ devices are invented by brainy but vicious men.
Engllali Farm llandi. When, as rarely happens, English farm laborers come to this country, they find it extremely difficult to accommodate themselves to the current American custom of eating but three meals a day. An English maid servant and nurse who lived to be more than a hundred years old averred that she had always been accustomed to “a dew bit and breakfast, a stay bit and dinner, a nommet, a crummet, and a bit after supper.” Extra meals are common enough during the harvest season in this country'. The hasty breakfast at half-past three in the morning is followed by a “stay hit” at eight o’clock and by a luncheon between the noon-dny dinner and the after-sunset supper. In parts of southern Pennsylvania the dinner hour is eleven o'clock in the morning, and it would not be difficult to show that Americans living on the same meridian are dining all the way from that hour until seven in the evening. The great mass of country folk stil 1 dine at noon. Curious Death Customs of l^lji. The Fijians believe that in case a marriageable youth or maiden dies without having gone through with the elaborate nuptial knot-tying ceremony of the islands his or her soul Ls doomed to wander about forever in an intermediate region between heaven and liell. When anyone dies, man. woman or child, a whale’s tooth is placed in the iand of the corpse, the missile to be thrown at the tree which stands as a guide post to point out the road that leads to Heaven and the one that leads to helL
THE WITCH TREE. A Natural Curiosity That In Found In Nevada. A most remarkable tree which grows near Tuscarora, Nev., is described in the Popular Science News. The witch tree, as the superstitious Indians call it, grows to a height of six or seven feet, with a trunk whose base is three times the size of an ordinary man’s wrist. It has numberless branches and twigs, and resembles somewhat the barberry indigenous to certain regions in the eastern states. The trul y wonderful characteristio of the tree is its luminosity, which is so great that on the darkest night it can be plainly seen a mile away. A person standing near could read the finest print by its light. Its foliage is extremely rank, and its leaves resembVe somewhat those of the aromatic baytree of California in shape, size anil color. The luminous property is due to a gummy substance, which can be transferred to the hand by rubbing, together with its phosphor escent light, while the light on the leaf disappears. The luminosity is thought to be due to a parasitic growth. The Indians will never approach it, even in daylight, with such superstitious awe do they regard its mysterious light. WANDERING WAITERS.
They Earn Two or Three Salarle, a I>ay at DllTerent Kestaurantu, Many of the waiters in the first-class restaurants of New York have short hours, and are therefore able to work in several places. For Instance, says the New York Sun, an ambitious waiter, who is employed only for breakfasts and luncheons in one restaurant, can easily enough serve the dinner in another. The waiters in some restaurants, where the dinners are served early, are even able to work in others where the dinner is kept going until a
late hour.
An experience of a well-known play wright recently suggests some ludicrous possibilities. He has been in the habit of dining at Delmonico's, and was always served by the same waiter. A few weeks ago Jio decided to try some of the odd restaurants in the French quarter. One night he went to a cheap table d’hote at an unusually late hour. To his great surprise he found the Delmonico waiter serving meals at this place also. The waiter was equally
astonished.
Saved by Their Good Grip. A thrilling incident occurred near St. Clair, Pa., the other morning involving the lives of two men. When the morning train from Shenandoah was approaching the ninety-feet high trestle of the Pennsylvania railroad, a mile above that place, at a high rateof speed the engineer was horrified at discovering two men ahead in the center of thestructure. It was too late to stop the train, and as there is but a single track and no sidewalk the engineer, after reversing his engine, closed his eyes tc shut out the sight of two human beings hurled into space. The train reached the w est side of the trestle before il stopped, when the two men, supposed to have been thrown into the ravine below, were seen walking along the tri-st-ling. They escaped death by hanging from the spans which the trains passed
Rubber Tree* In the United State*.
The plants which produce the principal portion, if not all, of the rubbei supply, are natives of tropical America. As therv is no BitailRT climate in .the United States, it Is altogether unlikely that any of these trees could be cultivated to be of any commercial importance in this country. Although an almost tropical climate prevails in the extreme southern portion of Florida, yel occasional low temperature, even in these portions, would be fatal to the
permanency of these plants.
Doga im Kmugg'Drs. In the Netherlands dogs used to be trained by smugglers to cross thefrontier laden with parcels of lace, at night. A quick-scented dog was despatched ahead of them, who, when he smelled customhouse officers about, turned back and warned the others, who lay concealed behind bushes or in ditches till all was safe. At the end of the journey the leading dog showed himself alone, nor did the others come up till a whistle was given by the consignee to show all
was safe. I
INDIANA STATE NEWS. Last September Uncle James Am* bmse, a noted character of Evansville, died suddenly and unattended. He owned real estate valued at $3,500, and being without relatives, had made a will bequeathing all his property to a business partner and friend named buried in Potter's field. It is now claimed that poison had been placed in the old man's food, and that he was murdered. Sarah Laoro brought a $5,000 breach of promise suit against Daniel Hill, a retired business man of Goshen. Hill is very wealthy, has passed 80 years, and was married but a few months
ago.
A fkkioht on the Wabash extension was wrecked near Millersburg, badly damaging the track and demolishing the engine and four cars. Michael Coon was crushed to death under the locomotive. Mrs. Wm. Middleton, of Hatfield, Spencer county, committed suicide the other morning by jumping in a cistern. Only six months ago her son killed himself. Tue other morning Mrs. M. J. Rankin was found dead in her bed in an old and lonely house near the Baltimore and Ohio tracks at Milford Junction. Her little dog, sole companion of her solitude, was whining disconsolately, lying in the bed with her. The unfortunate woman was addicted to drugs, and she either got an overdose, or heart failure, brought on by an excessive use of stimulants, caused her death. Mrs. Geo. Briscoe was driving into Greenoastle, the other day, in a spring wagon, when one of the wheels came off and the team ran away'. She was thrown against the curbstone, fracturing her skull and otherwise injuring her. Her recovery is doubtful. Paddy Croak and father, while drunk, undertook to drive down a street pavement at Anderson. Deputy Sheriff Coburn attempted to arrest them, but were fired on by Croak, Jr. The shots were returned. Coburn will
die
Charles Khinkr, hunting ducks near Martinsville, lost an eye by reason of his gun exploding. James IIaooard, of Morgantown, lost all the fingers on his left hand by sawing them off while at work on a fence. The other day John S. Welch’s barn, including two horses, southeast of Muncie, in Henry county, w as destroyed by
fire.
Mr and Mrs. G. W. Hester’s ten-months-old baby, at Farmland, upset a pot of boiling tea, scalding itself so that the flesh fell from its limbs. Peter J. Clark, one of the men indicted for participating in the riot at the opera house, Lafayette, at the time George P. Rudolph, the ex-priest, was shot, has filed a most voluminous affidavit asking a change of venue. It is under advisement. Gf.ohue Cafkky, a young farmer living near Switz City, went to the barn, and, failing to return, his wife searched for him and found him dead. He had committed suicide by hanging. Financial troubles. L H. Langdon, editor of the Atlanta Herald, filed action in the circuit court at Kokomo against the Tipton County Fair association, asking damages in the sum of $5,000 for false imprisonment. Last fall Langdon contracted with the association to supply printed programmes for the fair, and while he was distributing the paper a special policeman, mistaking him for a faker, arrested him. At Lawrenceburg George Sedler caught 1,000 pounds of fish at one haul The story is vouched for by creditable fishermen. An unknown man, supposed to be a minister, was killed by the cars at Union City a few days since. The dead body of E. J. Hurley, of Valparaiso, was found in a pond near his home. He disappeared last Decem-
ber.
Arthur Shaw, an employe of the Monon railway at Lafayette, was run over and ground to pieces the other morning. It is supposed he fell between the cars. A Kkkley institute bos been organized at Liberty. Dr. Levi Ritter, of Indianapolis, is dead. On Monday, March 27, Winchester will vote on the question of incorporation as a city. Suit was brought the other afternoon at Columbia City by John Young, of Fort Wayne, for $25,000 damages for injuries sustained in a wreck February 3'2. at that place, when several coaches left the track and rolled down the embankment, killing one man Und injuring thirty people. Dr. Young received three fractured ribs : d was otherwise injured. This is the a^st suit growing out of tho wreck. Ed Godfrey, a dm;.' st of Columbus, while hunting near tl. -lackson county line the other mornir. killed a large gray eagle, which measured seven feet and three inches from tip to tip of its wings. These birds are exceedingly scarce in that locality. He will have it mounted. At Anderson Thomas Hollenbnch was cowhided by Mrs. Zohns for havii reiSark about
her.
A gang of tramps, near Winchester, after having broken open a freight car, retreated to a school house, where the whole outfit was captured by plucky farmers Sam and Bill Conrad have been jailed on the charge of murdering their father, Edward Conrad, in Boone township, near Corydon. The governor has appointed H. F. Work, of New Washington, and G. II. 1). Cole and M. 1!. C de, of Charlestown, to supervise the erection of a monument over the grave of the late Gov. Jennings, the first governor of Indiana. The remains lie in an unmarked grave 1 at Charlestown. Fire destroyed the dry goods store of , Wder A Wise, at LogansporL Stock 1 valued at $75,000. Building damaged to the amount of $3,000. Insurance on ' stock $43,000.
She said farewell to that young man, It seemed to do no good. Her father came and said it once, And then he understood.
The plain truth is good enough for Hood's Sarsaparilla. No need of embellishment or sensationalism. Hood's cures.
The faith cure has reached Chicago, they tried it on their hams yet?
Hane
e.awae -ijm, . nsed the better It Is liked. **,. s.w.t?"!*' other remedy thst always gives satisfaction. It is good when you first catch cold. It is good when your cold in seated and your lungs are sore. It is good in any hind of a cough. We have sold twenty-live dozen of it and every bottle has given satisfation. Stedman & Friedman, druggists, Minnesota Lake, Minn. 50 cent boitles for sale by Albert Allen, druggist. . apr Until this winter it is said that no wolves have been seen in Massachusetts for half
century.
A little ill, theu a little pill. The ill is gone the pill has won. DeWitt’sLittle Early Kisers
the little pil s that cu
StopTMe
Any one whose Watch has 2^.
Alien, ag.
great ills.
Albert
iy
Eighty six, or nearly one quarter, of the 355 towns of Massachusetts contain no resident physician. It is a truth in medicine that the smallest dose that per for ms a cure is the best. De Witt's Little Early Kisers are the smallest pills, will perform the cure, ami are the best. Albert Alien, agt. ly The breaking up of the winter is the signa* for the breaking up of the system. Nature is opening up the pores and throwing oil'refuse. DeWitt’s riai-suparilla is of unquestionable assistance in this operation. Albert Allen agt. iy ‘My wife,” said Squills proudly, “is queen of the t ea table, and she never reigns but she pours.” I Feel Like a New Man. Bedford, Ind., Auo. 18, 1892. To the Public: For three years I have been a constant sutferer with kidney disease and its resulting rheumatism. For four months was unable to be out only occasionally for a short time and was coulfned to my bed most of the time. 1 was treated by live of the best physicians within my reach in that time, and my case had been pronounced as incurable. Four weeks ago I consulted Dr. Man-O-Wa at the Avenue House in our city and began his treatment, and now I can say I feel like a new man. Respectfully, Frank Fkrouson. Dr. Man-O-Wa will be at Commercial House, Greencastle, on Thursday, April 13. Oh! there is bliss supreme in home, When its joys are are pure and sweet, And life's most sacred memories Around the hearthstone meet; And the tenderest thoughts and saddest ones Come borne upon the strain Of the singing of a kettle As it hangs upon the crane.
Mrs. Languish. “Tired! Oh, so tired all the time!” Mrs. Smart. “Well, so I used to be until I began to take Ayer's Sarsaparilla as a spring medicine, and now I don't know what it is to have that tired feeling. Try it my dear; only ba sure you get Ayer’s.” Daggs: “What are you reading there? Scaggs: The story of “She Who Must Be Obeyed.” Daggs: Oh, yes; the romance of a hired girl.
Attention Farmers! If you have a horse that has poor appetite, is languid, hair rough and run down generally use Morris’ English Stable Powders and he will speedily recover. F'or the removal of worms it has no equal. Will make your horse Slick, Fat and Glossy. Contains no antimony or other injurious' drugs. Pound packages 25 cents. For sale at Allen's, apr No sooner will the weather mild Let us close the glowing grate Than the guy and giddy housefly Will be prancing on our pate. Piles of people have piles, but De Witt's Witch Hazel Salve will cure them. Albert Allen, agt. )y “Patrick, you haven’t given fresh water to the gold fish.” “No, miss the ain’t drunk wot they had already.” Do you lack faith and love health? Let us establish your faith and restore your health with DeWitt’s Sarsaparilla. Albert Allen, agt. iy Teacher: Who was it turned every thing he touched to gold? Scholar: I guess it was the man that makes cheap jewelry.
My wife was confined to her bed for over two months with a very severe attack of rheumatism. We could get nothing that would afford her any relief, and as a last resort gave
i's Pain ”" 1 — -
Chamberlain’s Pain Balm a trial. To”our ;reat sunrise she began to improue after the first application, and by using it regularly she was soon able to get up and attend to her housework. FI. H. Johnson, of C. J. Knutson & Co., Kensington’ Minn. 50 cent bottles for sale by Albert Allen. apr
O, for a breath of summer; For the sight of an ice cream sign; For the sizz of the soda fountain. And the yell of the baseball nine.
“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 When Music, heavenly maid, was young,
Hhe never had her nerves unstrung, By cranky nuignbors across the way, Binging Ta-ra-ra-boom-de j>y.
Bad complexion indicates an unhealthy state of the system. DeWitt’s Little Early Risers are pills that will correct this condition. They act on the liver, they act on the stach,moy th caet on the bowels.* iy KM'-r 8. 8. Beaver, of McAllisterville, Ju matta Co., Pa., says his wife if subject to cramp in the stomach. Last summer she tried Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhma Remedy for it and was much pleased with the speedy relief it afforded. She has since used it whenever necessary and found that it never fails. F’or sale by Albert Allen. apr For sale, a beautiful home on East Seminary street; houseofeigiit rooms,
large shade trees, large lot, choice A " ' ’ tf H. A. Mills.
fruit of all kinds.
Wanted, a girl to do general housework. Wages, f3.50 per week, and and no washing to do. German or Irish preferred. Must come well recommended. Address Postoflieo Box 311, Greencastle, Indiana. 4Stf —-TlacAvsLAttd’vrmi„ on record to visit tiic t irent South, are now ottered by the Mobile & Ohio Railroad. See adverti sment.
When Baby was sick, wo gave her Castoria. When shewa^a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria W> had Children, alio gave them Castoria
u
bow (ring),will never have occasion to use this t ime-honored cry. It is the only bow that cannot be twisted off the case, and is found only on Jjs. Boss Filled and other watch cases stamped with this trade mark. Ask your jeweler for a pamphlet, or^ send to the manufacturers. Keystone Watch Case Co., PHILADELPHIA.
KA IL If A 1 TIME TA IlJ.E.,
BIG FOUR. ,
Going East -8:15 a. :::., 1:48 p. m., 5:00 p. m ^
2:37 a. m.
Going West—8:45 a. m., 1:01 p. m., 6:16 p.
12:30 a. in.
MONON ROUTE. Going North—2:17 a. m., 12:29 noon; lo
11:30 a. m.
Going South—1:58 a. in., 2:22 p. in.; local
1:20 p. m.
VANDAL1A LINE. In effect February 1,1893. Trains leave Greencastle, Ind., FOB TUB WEST. No. 21, Daily 11:47 a. :u., for 8t. Louis. 1, Daily 1:13 p. m., “ “ 7, Daily 12:12 a. m., “ “ 6, Ex. Sun 9:27 a.m., “ “ 8, Ex. Hun... . 5:2» p.m., “ Terre Haute i 1, Ex. Sun 7:05 a. m., “ Peoria. 3, Ex. Sun 3:00 p.m., “ Decatur, j 4
No. 20, Daily.... “ 8, Daily....
6, Daily..,. 12, Daily. .. 2, Ex. Hun..
FOB TUB EAST.
1:49 p. m., for Indianapol 3:52 p.m., “ “ 3:36 a.m., “ “ 2:24 a. m., “ ‘f 6:20 p.m., “ ‘ v.
4, Ex. Sun 8:34 a.m., “ “ Vj For complete Time Card, giving all tra and stations, and for full information as rates, through cars, etc., address
J. S. DOWLING, Agent,
Greencastle, Ind.
Or J. M. Chesbrodgb, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Louis, Mo.
•M. WAflZ VW X
THE BEST
'I
GROCERIES and Provisions, H.-oacMMcvs, / C’itt’urs, Tubm*c*oJ ETC.. ETC.. AT LOWEST PRICES, At KUTep’s-u* 1 Finest Lunch Counter the City. Come and Sce.i
lOHIl! Mil! M $50,000.00 to Ijoan On long or short time, in sums of $200 and upward, at luwesl rates. Privilege of prepayment. A. F. JACOBS, Urns 8‘^ E. Washington St.,Greencastle, Ind.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
I>i\ Ij. M. 11 \ W A, Office, No. 18 East Walnut St. 1st door east of Fingine House. The Doctor may be tound at the oflice at all times, both day and night, when net professionallyi engaged. m DR. G. C. SMYTHeT Physician aiui tui'guonl Office and residence, Vine street, between Washington ami Walnut streets. Nollop lo Noii-KuMiluiitM. The Stale of Indiana, Putnam County. In the Putnam Circuit Court, Anril Terra, 1893. * J The Louisville, New Albany ,V Chicago Tl*. 1 way Company The Fort Wayne, Terre Haute and Southwestern Railroad Company et al. Complaint No. 5060. H Now comes the Plaintiff.by Crawford, Fielfll .4 Matson, its Attorneys, and files an atlidaV^™ that said defendants, Benjamin Reynold Elisha P. Reynolds, Jr., John II. Keynoli and Elisha P. Reynolds, Jr., Exec utors of tl last will and testament of Elisha P. Reynold Sr., deceased, John M. Dawson and Port Skinner, are necessary parties to this actii and are not residents of the State of Indian Notice is therefore hereby given said D fendants, that unless they be and appear i the 18th day of the next Term of the Putm Circuit Court, being the 8th day May. 1893, at the Court H 0 u in (ireencastle, In said County and State a: answer or demur to said complaint, the sac will be heard and determinedln theirabsena Witness my name, and the seal of said Com affixed at Greencastle, this 15th day of Marc jV. D. IHJkJ, Daniel t. daknall, cierk By W. H. H. Cullen, Deputy. 2148 Notice of Letting of lit pairs an Drainage of Free Turnpikes i Putnam County. The Board of Turnpike Directors of Putna county. State of Indiana, pursuant to an a lh ^ , a 1 e "J ral . ' Vsfi e‘uWy of 1893, approv: March 4, 1803, will on * f < MONDAY, THE 17th DAY 0 APRIL, 1893, ' fit: uniinage till'tree gravel roads in said county for tl ensuing year, at the office of the Clerk of sa board, In the Auditor's office, city of (ire., castle. Contracts will be let for the reus and drainage of all such roads in sections they are or they may now be divided for wo by the road superintendents, plans and spei ncations of which are now on rile and mnv obtained by applying at the office, befor mentioned, of the Clerk of said hoard Sm contracts will be let in each instance to U lowest responsible bidder, who must iri bond for the execution of said contract to tl approval of said Board of Directors In cases where crushed stone is used for ret,« the Board of Directors shall furnish the sto crusher. All bids shall be submitted on t ; basis often hours for a day’s work wheth with team or by work of one or more indivi unis. The board reserves the right to reh> any and all bids. J JOHN S. NEWGENT JOHN D. HART, SAMUEL H. FA&MEB Hoard of Turnpike Directors of Put’ County, Indiana. J. E. Mclholn, Clerk of Board. Greencastle, Indiana, March 21, 1893. Eggs for hatching—Barred Plymouth R,' Siivey Spangled llanilmrgt, and White horns—50 cts. per 13. Call on or —* Founsr Ellis, Bainbridge, Ind.
