Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 April 1893 — Page 3

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1 '’ c One A will ran your Rupffv or /HCHCAHSHAfTKOlDfaCO .WAIAiH.IND., U.S.A.

nvc A. IT - o-w ^, TJIE INDIAN DOCTOR, will be at the Uommercial House, Groencastle, Ind, Thursday. April 13.1893, pared to heal the sick with Nature’s own romedios, viz: Roots, Darks, erbs, Plants and heaves, which were placed in the ground by the (in at >irit for the benefit of mankind. SUFFERING HUMITT Why fill your’system full of drug poison^ and nostrums, when you can get Pure, Fresh and Unadulterated Remedies, God’s Greatest Gift

to Mankind?

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Dr- Man-O-T^Ta Is a Regularly Ijicensed Physician. Spent three years among the Indians, learning their methods of healing the sick with Indian Herb Medicines. These medicines do not poison the system. They cure after all other medicines fail. They are Nature's remedies for

the relief and cure of disease.

All who may be troubled with Acute or Chronic < atarrh, Dyspepsia. Indigestion. Bright’s fiiAease, Dropsy, Consumption, Epilepsy or Fits, Nervous debility, Headache. Bronchitis, CbVotipat.ion, Scrofula or any form of Blood poison. Painful or Sippr. - > i Menstruation.

I

YOUNG and MIDDLE-AGED MEN suffering from weakness and Impotency 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. r>r. Man-O-Wa Locates all your aches and pains andtiells each patient how they feel £ without asking one single question. ♦ Medicine sent to all parts of the world. Write for question blanks and terms; consultation:personal or by letter free.—Treatment including all medicines used from $2.00 to $H.OO per month. Address, DR. MAN-O-WA, Or, MiVN-O-WA. INDIAN AIKU1C1MC CO , Frankfort, Ind.

lor Suppressed Menstruation.

Inflammation of the womb or bladder, Diabetes, Kidney or Urinary troubles. Nervousness and General Debility, Lucorrhiea, Female weakness. Pi mules, Hloclies or Skin disease in any form. Impotency,Gleet,Gonorrhoea, Rheumatism, Heart Disease, Neuralgia, Asthma, Hysteria, Piles, Loss of Strength and loss of Manhood are especially invited to call on the

Doctor.

WHAT LOVfc ONCE DID. It Drove This Alan from the Footlights to a AVoodchupper's Sliauty. Love made a recluse of a man who is now three-quarters of a century old, and who has avoided his fellows for nearly thirty years. He calls himself John Smith, and his hermitage is in the mountains not far from Erving, Mass., says the llrandon Rumor. ■ .I!.- , i'.'.v _Miter mM she was an actress, they were engaged, quarreteo, and separated. The lover’s mind became unbalanced, and while yet in dhu prime of life ho abandoned his profession and soupht the semi-solitude which has now grown to be a habit with him. It may be remarked that no one knows his real name. That of John Smith is an alias, and he frankly acknowledges that he has taken every precaution to conceal his identity. lie visits nobody, hut during the past few years many people have been to see him. He is a sort of local fad and the folks thereabouts almost love him. The old man's hair and beard are white as snow. He delights to chat with visitors, and on pleasant Sundays of summer ami autumn the grounds around his little cottage are covered with scores of teams and hundreds of visitors. For the time being the grounds are converted into a picnic grove, and the old man shares the hospitality of his visitors, tolls them quaint stories, and in return they give him the remnants of their feasts and little gratuities, and purchase the photographs of himself and his cats. In the winterthe old man isagennine hermit, so far as human beings are concerned, but in and around his cabin he has no less than a dozen cats, to say nothing of the wild cats that every little while are killed on the surrounding hills, and he Isas proud of “Jim Fisk” and “Lady Ann" as ever a fond mother was of her tirst-l>oru twins. The house which he occupies was formerly a woodchopper’s shanty, and it is little better now. The boards Inside the living room are covered with playbills and pictorial printing.

CAMELS OF MONGOLIA.

Th(ra>iiml« AVeml Tlirlr AVay Over the Rough Trails of the Tartar Stept.ee. The popular idea regarding “the ship of the desert” is completely at fault if applied to the camels of Mongolia and 1‘echili, according to the Century. Juvenile natural histories talk of the -oft padded foot for which the animal is so distinguished, as if a "sandy bottom” were the only surface upon

As to prevailing fashions, the cloae of winter seems rather long in the back. The continual succession of boils, pimples, and eruptions from which many suffer, indicates an impure state of the blood. The most effective remedy is Ayer's Sar-aparilla. It expels the poison harmless! through the natural channels, and leaves tnu skin clean and clear.

It is an odd fact that the duties of most

missionaries are to go to the l i

f '* ttftflS TTfttk I—»|-»

the greater part of all mercantile

In Paint

transport in North China is performed by camels, and, except in the immediate neighborhood of Pokin, sand is an unknown luxury to this much-enduring

beast

How vast is the number of camels thus employed may be guessed from the fact that during one day's journey wo passed more than eight hundred wending their dilatory way from the Tartar steppes to the plains of Chi-li. They chiefly carried soda-soap, a kind of animal alkali or lye found on the borders Mongolia, and cut into blocks, each -’algid ng about two hundred and sixty pounds. At no time is the camel a prepossessing object. Hut here nature provides him with so shaggy a covering that his ungainly form becomes even more hideous. Camel’s wool, by the way, used for padding clothes, is an article of considerable traffic hereabouts, and when spring zephyrs take the place of winter blasts, the herdsmen of the plateau shear their camels by- a process which preserves the merit of extreme simplicity, pulling out by hand whatever has not been shed naturally. Many an imals are kept for the sole purpose of yielding wool, but the amount obtainable from each Is singularly di.“pr<'portioned to the huge bulk of its producer. A heavy fleece taken from a full-grown camel will seldom average over seven pounds, while eight dollars is a high price for the picul of one hundred and thirty-three pound*.

FDIITll! FIIIT1E!

A new mid complete line at Keck Bottom Prices, at ^ e .. .a .whtj*.’*

Undertaking and Embalming

GIVEN SPECIAL ATTENTION.

■ wwm a-r. .—

THE STAR-PHESS. Saturday, A pill. 8, 1 George Calvert has returned from Washington. T’hc Spencer Democrat says: Mrs. Wiles and daughters are talking of moving to Greencnstle the coming summer.

, Died, in (Jreeneastle township, on L April 1, of scarlet fever, Nellie, ■daug’-Ver of Mr. and Mrs. W. A.

( workman, aged 4 year's.

| IGeorge W. Black shipped three car 14ads of horses to Connecticut and w Hampshire last week, and jpped three loads to the New Eng- j $

d States this week.

East Side Square. Real Estate Transfers. C. W. Daggy tc M. A. Jones, land in Madison tp'., $600. W. Albright el al. to C. W. Wc..ver, land in Washington tp., $2,000. J. Vaughn to G. Dobbs, luml in Mill Creek

tp., $soo.

M. E. Burgess to U. V. O’Daniel, lot in t'lo-

verdalc, $1G0.

E. Grantham to M. J. Edwards, land in FrnnW'in tp., $1,200. J. W. William to U. V. O’Daniel, lot in Clo-

verd.ile, $150.

P. Miile ■ .o E. Orantham, land in Franklin

tp.. $1,300.

D. W. Leonard to J. & J. Nash, lot in Green-

castle, $150.

E. Grantham to R. Glover, lot in Roach-

dale, $120.

Q. Kroadstreet admr. to S. P. Vaughn, land

in Jefferson tp., $500.

P. R. Reed to I. J, Evans, lot in Cloverdale,

City of Greencastle to Cora Sears, lot in

l <>■. ., , i, ■ 1 .

ongressmau Cooper has had the j.t. Towneyt > T. M. Dykes, lot in Russcl - lowing postmasters appointed in ' vilie, $‘,oo. Is District. Taylorsville, Bartholo- T " ,)v, ““ »<> J T. Towuoy, lot in Russellkw county, G. W. Cook, vice (J. ''') e ’^ >00 ' , . . i * ’ ( B. Grantham to S. W. Boaer, lot la UoachJIp; Stinosville, Monroe county, G. dale, $80. IMoEaven, vice M. Dunn; Clayton, E. Grantham to 8. W. & L. B. Honor, land Indricks countv, H. Johnson, vice 1 *u Firnk'm tp., $150. .. J. H. Nichola to G. W. Wise, hunt in Marion l H °P k " W - . , tp.. $75. The concert given by Arthur Fried- M d. Payne to Roachdale Hall Association, leim, at Meharry Hall, last Friday ! lot in Roachdale, $ioo. night, was a fine entertainment—ar-i Lucy Bowen to J. H. Watkins, lots In New Ltic, inspiring and attractive. The lo R . & N . T . Biddle, ttist is to be congratulated, as are i ot ln New M aysv me, $200. Iso those who were fortunate enough j. t. Cully to e. c. & L. w. Lewis, lots in

1 hear him. The work ol the orcheska was also very tine and worthy of Igh commendation. Book A Whitby's English :i-King < Snageric and Hippodrome, which exhlbtt|lierv yi’-t ■ i'i 1' ; w thr utmost -ulisfai 1 - |n and delight to its swarm of visitors. . this show mo e 111 > 1} realizes the higiiJMiaeal of ail thn* a circus can than any Lve have ever attended. The riding was surb, the races created great excitement, eliBa great applause, while every act out of le hundred gi\en appenred the In st while lu were looking at it, or, 111 other words, ere was not a pool feature in ihc whole rformanca, which is more than we can say any circus that has ever visited Pittsburgh. Hie parade made in the morning was a revlotion of wealth and snleudor that fairly lied the beholders. The cost of such a inlay must be app pi 111,;, t he dent and wans ticing covered with ivory and glittering Md, every horse a thoroughbred and all anl Js richly caparisoned 111 silk and satin a d uiile of them altoget licr. lie balloon ascenions took place in the afrinoon, and combined v.it’i the splendid harpshooting end nth r : i ( : !: 'n, ■a,1! v p io were Just Booking around." min flact everything about this immense orkknlzatiou seems perfect, the uniformly Tmrteous and iniiet deportment of all emiloyes was widely commehted upon, and crekp the most favor ible Impression. IWc lieg to aeknowledge courtesies extendHilessrs. Cook ,v Whit oy and their repre* ‘llativcs, an l hope to again have thi I of attending so great an exhibition.— sburgh Press.

RAISES RATS FOR A LIVING. A Kansas City Man Who Furnishes Rodents for *• Sporting" Purposes. Rat culture is something of which one-tenth of the world knows little and the other nine-tenths knows nothing. Yet right in the center of Kansas City there flourishes a “rat farm.” Down in a dingy basement of a house on Twelfth street there is a wooden box about twelve feet square and four feet deep lined with zinc. The floor of this box is covered with straw. Loaves of bread with the edge# nibbled off and with holes in the crust litter the straw, together with u pan of water and pieces of cheese certainly old enough to be ranked prime. There are rats in this box. plenty of them. The rodents had nestled all close together when the outer portal to their domain was noisily unbolted the other night and the proprietor of the “rat farm" cautiously descended the steep stairway to the cellar, conducting a Times reporter and several friends. These visitors, too, were cautious, very, for a misstep would have sent a man headlong into tho zinclined box to meet in close quarters two hundred rats of various dispositions, sizes and color. A light was struck and in an instant the floor of str$,w was undulating in a manner to make the poetical “angry sea” ashamed of itself. The horde of rodents. In their hurry to get the farthest they could from the light, crowded over each other and squealed and squirmed themselves out from under their covering to a bare corner, Here was a pyramid of nearly two hundred wriggling rats that gave one the cold chills to h Kilt upon. There were rodents of all classes, distinctions and descriptions. Gray rats, black rats, dun rats, yellow rats, young rats and old rats, fat rats and rats with transparent hides. The. pied piper never saw a better collection. It is not hard to maintain a rat farm, so the keeper said. First a few of tho despised animals are procured and put in the pit. They attract others, who crawl up the rough sides of the outside walls of the pit and slide dowu to call on their friends. They ean’t get ouL Then they multiply quickly. WEALTH OF A PRINCE.

Crown Prince of Roamauia t-» Receive

$130,000 a Year us l!i» Allowance. The crown prince of Roumania is to

have an allowance from his country of £12,000 a year, and his uncle, King Charles, is to give him £12,000 a year, according to London Truth. In the event of the crown prince’s death, Princess Marie would have a jointure of £12,000 a year, half coming from Roumania and tho remainder from King Charles. The prince of Hohenzollern is to make a settlement on his son, and the duke and duchess of Edinburgh are to give their daughter an allowance, but slie will not receive any dot until

after the death of her parents. It is no secret that there has been a

prolonged, ami not altogether amicable, negotiation respecting the settlements which are to be signed at Sigmaringen on the day before the wedding. It Is understood that the prince of Hohenzollern proposes to allow £-1,000 a year to Prince Ferdinand with an ultimate «•’’>’ oi 1 1 Px^ngeaa Marie is to

Mr. 8. H. Jackson, of Doberta, ImL, writes 1 follows: "Please send me one dozen more of Dr. Well’s New Cough flirt. I find it the best seller and most satisfactory Cough Medicine I can get. Mv customers s.iv it ithe best of all. Price 25 cents. Sold by Al-

bert Allen.

It is a cold day for a man when his friends roast him.

The many cases of rheumatism cured by Chamberlain's Pain Balm during the past few months have given the people great conli dence in its curative properties, and have shown that there is one preparation that cun he depended uyon for that painful aggravating disease. Honaker Bros., Lorain, Ohio, a ays: "Mr. Moses Price, of this place, was troubled with rheumatism for a long time. Chamberlain's Pain Balm has cured him. He says that (he Balm has no equal." For sale by Alhi rt Allen. apr Female fish of all species are considerably more numerous than males, witli two single exceptions, the angler and the cattish. The most intelligent peopleofour community recognize in P \Vitfs Little Early Risers pills of unequaled merit for dyspepsia, headache and coiistipa. ion. Very small, perfect In action. Albert Allen, ugt. ly It is estimated that during the last five years the turpentine gatherers of Georgia have destroyed $200,000,000 worth of pine timber.

A Kentucky Yarn. A resident of Scott county, Kentucky, felt a severe puiii in his left shoulder and arm several years ago, and for some months he suffered intense pain. Then the affected parts began to change color, and became dark brown as the pain decreased. At last, it is said, the shoulder and arm were covered with a thick growth of soft, brown hair an inch in length. The pain ceased entirely, it is further stated, and now the man, it is claimed, is twice as strong in his loft arm as he is in his right. Mrs. Darley: George, dear, why is love said to lie blind? Mr. Darley: Because he has had the wool pulled over his eyes so often. Trusts and Combinations. Are unpopular. But there is one form of trust against which no one has anything to say. That is the trust which the public re poses in Hood's Sarsaparilla, and the best of it is the trust is fully justified by the merit of the medicine. For, remember, Hood's Sarsaparilla cures. Hood's Pills are purely vegetable, and do not purge, pain or gripe. Sold by all druggists. By using Hall’s Hair Renewer, gray, faded or discolored hair assumes the natural color of youth, and grows luxuriant and strong, pleasing eve ybody. Reason? Beechnut's Pill act like magic. aThe man with a long head is rarely head-

long.

Tho Proof of Merit

Is fully demonstrated in the use of Graft's Distemper Cure among h<>r«e« It cure Chronic l oughs, Colds, Pink Eye and all catarrhal troubles of the horse. It is acknowledged by Veterinary Surgeons to be i wonderful remedy and the only known spe eifle treatment for Distemper. Price 50 cts. Sold by Albert Allen. apr The oldest artesian well in Europe is found at Lillers, France. From Us mouth water has flowed uninterruptedly for 746 years.

True Blues!

Away with them ! Take Simmons Liver Re guintor for that torpid live : which has put your digestive powers out of gear. That’s at the bottom of the blues, and when you take Simuions Liver Regulator you strike at the rootof the evil, and everything else that wrong goes with it. No more Indigestion, Dyspepsia or Biliousness. That sounds bright enough, and is true. “The pleasantest way to take cod liver oil says an old gourmand, "is to fatten pigeons with it ami then eat the pigeons.” There's a good deal of guarantee business In the store keeping of to-day. It’s too ex eessive. Or too reluctant. Half the time means nothing. Words—only words. This offer to refund the money, or to pay reward, is made under the hope that you won’t want your money back, and that you won’t claim the reward. Of course. So, whoever is honest in making it, and works nut on his own reputation atone, but through the local dealer, whom you know, must have something he has faith in back the guarantee. The business wouldn't stand

a year without it.

What is lacking is confidence. Back that, what is lacking is that clear honesty which is above the “average practice.” Dr. Pierce’s medicines are guaranteed accomplish what they are intended to do, and the makers give the money back if the result

isn’t appurnnt.

Doesn’t it strike you that a medicine that the makers have so much confidence in,

the medicine for you?

"He behaved dreadful at the swarry,” said Mrs. Partington. "Acted like a perfect idiom The confidence that people have in Ayer’s Sarsaparilla as a blood medicine is the legitimate and natural growth of many years, has been handed down from parent to child, and is the favorite family medicine in thou

sands ot households.

Tho blue law folks desire to see the day

rest made a day e r arrest.

Brinbridge, $700. 8. V. E. Martin to U. V. O’Daniel, lot in Cloverdale, $500. J. F. Fee to J. T. Lane, lot in OrcencasGe,

$1,000.

M. J. Long to G. liickneU, lot in Greencas-

tle, $.500.

E. Grantham to J. W. Morris, laud in Jack- _ son tp., $150. | 8. J. Eggers et al. to H. Thompson, land in

Jackson tp., $1,000.

H. Thompson to J. 8. Booker, land in Jackson tp., $1,800. I

J. G. Duuhar to W. A. Wills, land in Madi- rang'ement will permit of a settlement bles, the suffering of which language fails to

of £150,000 upon the younger ^children ^? d r ^ C ou^^efit ^Tpr^a 0 ^/^^ 0 ^ of the marriage. I doubted it and arose to leave tho office

Complete Loss of Voice. Cyclone, Ind., Oct., San, 1802.

To the Public:

One year ago yesterday I called upon Man-O-Wa at his office in Frankfort, Ind. had been a miserable sufferer for years. had as,..-.. . atarri. . f ihroat—il.t

The Best of All.

the best is the cheapest. Strictly Pure

White Lead is best; properly applied it wilt not scale, chip, chalk, or rub off; it firmly adheres to the wood and forms a permanent base for repainting. Paints which peel or scale have to be removed by scraping or burning before satisfactory repainting can be done. When buying it is important to obtain

S.*nVt]vJPnre White Lead

properly made. Time has proven that white lead made by the “Old Dutch” process of slow corrosion possesses qualities that cannot be obtained by any other method of manufacture. This process consumes four to six months time, and produces the brands that have given White Lead its character

as the standard paint.

“Armstrong & McKelvy” “Beymer-Bauman” “Eckstein”

“Fahnestock”

“Kentucky” “Southern” “Red Seal”

“Davis-Chambers” are standard brands of strictly pure Lead made by the “Old Dutch” process. You get the bes* in buying them. You can produce any desired color by tinting these brands of whit .: lead with National Lead Co.'s Pure White Lead

Tinting Colors.

For sale by the most reliable dealers In Paints

everywhere.

If you arc Roing to paint, it will pay you to send to us for a book containing information that may save you many a dollar; it will only cost you a postal card to do so. NATIONAL LEAD CO., 1 Broad , ly, New York. Cincinnati Branch, Cincinnati, - - . C: Mo.

Atty

For any Cut, Limbs, .Saddle

“Anchor” “Morley”

“Shipman”

“Collier”

ILirner A

' her iff f.

8100 Reward

Bruise, Lameness, Swollen or Collar Galls that Morris’

English Stable Liniment will not cure. It cures when all others fail. Use it and you will not be disappointed. Price 25 cts., 50 cts. and#l. Actually worth f25 to the consumer. Sold by Albert Bllen. apr The oldest tree on earth is said to be the Boo tree in the sacred city of Amarapoora, Burmah. It was planted in the year 2xh B. C.

Plantation colored people are often

7M ^ afflicted, a. Dr. • ^ \ when traveling

in the aouth

I I \ Their diseases ' i ' were painful. Many of them had what thev called “a rising under the jaw.” This was a swelling of the paratoid or submaxilary gland. He used with them, invariably, his Golden Relief. As it relieved the pain and reduced the swelling almost immediately In every case, they called it “ Golden Relief Quick,” a not inappropriate name. Dr. Fenner met a planter who informed him that he would sooner be without corn meal and bacon on which his colored help subsisted, than Golden Relief, which he used to cure their aches, pains, summer complaints and flux. This Remedy cures any ailment which has Inflammation and puin as its base, from a chronic bronchitis to a pulmonary consumption. Inflammation ecu no tnora exist in presence of this remedy than can the honey bee under the fumes of sulphur. No inflammation, no swelling, no pain, n bronchitis, no consumption. One tabK spoonful dos* is a certain cure for La Grippe No narcotics ormincral poisons in ft. Safe and certain—never disappoints. Money refunded if satisfaction not given. Take a bottle home to-day.

By virtu-i ol » eer’.ifinl ci.pv - * li. i-ree to mu -tirvi" t,i i Hi Clerk -d th • 1 -■ i .• in Cir-r-uit I'-ian. iu -. c-hi.-i wlitre.n l..-- .State ol Iniiar.H cn rpi .’mn of l-'riir.k Horner, Proe . -lohn lion /. . . : Wernekr. Bar 1 A .. . Of.mi 0 v - rneke, Grace G Wern e. H ly 8 Wf-ri,- , E-in a K. Wernui tuellie bcouiralo i-uane D. Scouzali- ami The Oiiy ui (ir.eui'ai;tle are

id InluDtt.

I nili rxi.oro to public sale to tbe highest

bid ler on

MONDAY. THE TWENTY F UI'.TIl DAY OF

APRIL, 1893.

between the hours of 10 o’clock a. in. and 1 o’clock p. in., of said diy, at the doer of the c ail house n Pulu .m county, li .lanii, the rents and profits kr a term not tjm ding seven years ol (he fotlowing I (M-r I bid r. . 1 estate situated in Dumutu county,'-'tutc ol Indiana,

to wit:

Filly-or.o '-M it. t i.ml four (4) inches off of the south side of lot No, i ne hundred and eighty nine (189) in the old plat of tho town (now city) of lireonc.istle, 1 ctnnui county Indiana-

If such rents and profits will not sell tor

-sufficient sunt to ssii-’

and costs. I will, at t: - .-umu time and place, expos'.-to public . the !e siiupi - - i said

1 id ile -its, interest mo time and place

eal e- late, or .u much thereof as May be sufS eicnt to discharge said decree, inter, si am costs. Said sale wilt bo made without relic irom valuation or appraisement low .

FRANCIS M. Gt.lDKW ELL, Sheriff ol I’utnnm E. unty.

March 29 1893 50

VXKM 3 J VA ay a’MUlx'X.’ ’

get £2,000 it year from her parents during their lives with a sum of £50,000 ,

aftur they have deceased. This ar- which ^'oughrabou^arn^*?^^

AdiiittiiNiriitor'* l.siax! Sale. Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an

order of the Putiuim Circuit Court the undersigned. administrator of the estate of Henry Albrignt, deceased, will sell at private sale for not less than the appraisment thereof the following real estate situated in the county

of Putnam, State of Indiana, towit: A part of section nineteen (19) township

thirteen . 13) north range live i5) west, bounded as follows: Beginning at a sandstone fourteen il4) by sixteen '16' inches marked “BA.” which is on the line dividing the east half from the wesX half of said section nineteen (19) and nineteen (19) chains forty-three and one-third (13 l ) links north of the southeast corner of said west half, also two (2) chains and lifty-six undone-third <5*)’ .i links south of the place where the “Indian boundary line” crosses the aforesaid division line, running thence south eighty and one-half (HO 1 2 ) degrees west twelve (12) chains ninety-live and one-half 95'o) links, thence north one and one-half (l 1 .) degrees west twenty-nine (29i chains to within fifty feet of the center of the 8t. Louis, Yaudalia, Terre Haute & Indianapolis railroad, thence north eightv-three (83) degrees east seven ami twelve one-nundredths (7.12) chains, thence north eighty-seven (87) degrees east seven ami fourteen one-hun-dredths <7.14) chains, thence east nine <9) chains, thence south eighty-five (85) degrees east eight and twenty hundredths (8.20) chains, thence four and one-half (4V'o) degrees west four and seventy-four hundredths (4.74) chains to a sandstone fifteen (1ft) inches, thence south seventy i70) degrees west two (2) chains ten and one-half (lOVa) links, thence north twenty and onefourth (20 1 .) degrees west sixty and threefourths (eo' |) links, thence south seventy (70) degrees west two and twenty-seven hundredths (2.27) chains to a sandstone twenty (20) inches, thence south twenty and onefourth (20%) degrees east five (5) chains and thirty-six (36) links, thence south fifty-one (61i degrees west one t,l) chain and fifty-four (51) linlcs, thence south eighty-one i81) degrees west six and fifty-two hundredths (6.52) chains to the place of beginning, containing eighty-

three (88) acres more or less.

And two (2) acres more or less in said section nineteen (19) aforesaid described us follow’s: Beginning at a point eight and thirteen hundredths (8.13) chains south eightyone (81) degre es west of the southeast corner of the above description, thence north twenty and one-fourth (20b$) decrees west four and seventy-four hundredths (4.74) chains to a sandstone fifteen (15) inches, thence south seventy (70) degrees west two (2) chains and .. .*»***,*.■.% \’.’f ^ ' iiMB ' Of f* li*'r»)i

LOSS "i \ 11 1' i could onls 8] * -ik in a wins- J twenty and one-fourth

per: raving with chills and fever, was also a | 8 i x t y alu j throe-fourths (60- { 4) links, thence

south seventy (70) degrees west two and

Forest Home Stock Farm, vw Ind., on National Road. Forest Wilkes, Race record, 2:15. Bay stallion, 15 hands and 3 inches high; weight, 1120 lbs. The prettiest horse in Indiana. I'ilol liussell i ISSol ). The full brot >er to Maud S., 2:08 : |. and Lord Bussell, sire o. the stallion king. Kremlin, SiOT^,. Gray stallion, 15 hands and 2 inches high; weight, 1050 lbs. Sired by Harold, siro of60 in 2:30 list. 1st dam, Miss Bussell, dam of Maud 8., 2:08Nutwood, 2:18,!/i, sire of 90 in 2:30 list. Chrstiinf Star, If. .1. I’, ft. The grout saddler and roadster, is chestnut, 16 hands high; weight, 1200 lbs. He can go all the gaits and can beat 2:30 pacing and 2:50 trotting, ami is the greatest living descendant of old Red Buck. David mat Goliah, Black imported jacks, 15 hands and 2 inches and 15 hands high, will stand at same place. Tcrms of Breeding: Forest Wilkes at |75 for the season, with return privilege; Pilot Russell at *7-5 for the season, with return privilege; ( hestnut Star at $10 to insure colt to stand and suck; David and Goliah at $10 to insure colt to stand and suck. All stock is registered under the Indiana State laws. Stock will be shown to visitor8 any week day. M. F. McHAFFIE .. SON, 3m49 1’ . Miles West of Stiles vi lie, Ind. SotlUtt ot l''initl Notilvmt-nt of LhIhI*’. Id th.i matter of the estate of Benjamin F. Wriitbt, deceased. In tho Putnam Circuit Court, April Term. 1893. Notice is h rely given that the undersigned as administrator of tho estate of Benjamin E. Wright, deceased, has presented and filed bis account and vouchers iu final settlement of said estate, and that tho saute will come up In: the examination s nd action of said Circuit C< urt on Ihe 24th day of April, 1893, at which lima all persons interested in said estate are required to appear in said Court, and show cause, if any ihere be, why ■aid account and vouohafl should not be approved. And the heirs of said estate, and all others interested therein, are also hereby required, ut the time and place aiorosaid, to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part ot said estate GEGl'.Uil UIHTON, Administrator. Mathias Jr Hays, Attys. 2t50

sor t

8.

In., fnoo.

F. Campbell to M. & A. Goodwin, land in

land in Marion tp., $soo.

C. A. Kirkpatrick to Sarah Sibbitt, lot in

Greencastle, $1,500.

Ca rpentersville.

Mr. L. Br dpcs is sick The unsiithtly bell tower has been removed from tiie M. E.

An Ancient Footprint.

Near Lincolnton, Ga., on a stream

known as “Fishing creek,”

Itotf, projecting rock, just above the wiv- : iitb.

without takinq any treatment, hut as my husband tLouRnt best to try his treatment

for at least one month, I finally consented and have token in all i»ss than four months’

in a sliclv-I I have taken no treatment since

'last January, and am still enjoyitiK (rood

r the no

therefore

Church, amt strangers will cease to ask if we ! tc,. {hero U tho Dorfeetlv ileiinod im- ,r itmctit is not only effective, but also perare in the gas belt The mask social lust: mauent. Yours respectfully,

Saturday inglit was well attended. Among print of a mans bare foot. All the '■nse from abroad were Miss Mattie Single-[ toes are perfect, and in every respect

New aL , v“Vin«" t am| lh Mr. M am»* Mr^" John the mark is as plain as if mode in plastic Bridges and children and Miss Leaton, of clay or putty. The stone is as hard as Fincastle Miss Nannie Patton attended ftl l„ mnn t nnd has Keen over sinen the examination at Greencastle last week adamant, and lias Dcen evir since tno

Mrs. E. H. N. Spivy.

Dr. Man-O-Wa will be at Commercial House cncastle, on Thursday, April 13.

Misses Bettie and Katie~Akers spent Monday I first white inhabitant landed in Lin- Cloverdale pike, d miles south of i ments nearing six per cent, interest irom afternoon with Mrs. Cline Joe Edward's ! poln coun t v now over nnn hundred and Greencastle. Corn OH the cob and nR ! date until paid, waiving valuation and ap-

ByXm^dthci other kinds of grain ground torf^d! by mortB “ g '

of West Franklin, has gone into business at ^$10 txdclt WCXS i il ti d G is im lOufltom J^rilldiD^ OH i^riufty of* Poch LLIJAH GRANTHAM,

Feed Mill Grinding.

At Asbury Bowman’s mill, on

the

twenty-seven humlredihs 12.271 chains to a sandstone twenty >20 inches, thence soutli twenty and one-foarth 20', degrees east live and thirty-six hundredths <5.36) chains, thence north eighty-one (M) degrees east to the

place of beginning.

Bids received at the law office of Presley O. Colliver, in the city of Urceueastlc, said

county, on

MONDAY, APRIL 24th, 1893, At two o’clock p. ni„ and from day to day thereafter until said real eatate is sold.

TERMS OF SALE.

One-third cash, one-third in nine and onethird iu eighteen months from date of sole, purchaser executing notes for deferred payments bearing six per cent, interest from date until paid, waiving valuation and ap-

VI1 v* V70V a ' ll 4 V. 1 £V7iJV I Lebanon. We wiuh him nucceas.

query.

week.

12t39

March 29, 1893.

4UA,

Administrator.

A copy oi the* Indiana Almanac for 1893 hag just been received by us. It is without question tho most complete ami best work of its kind that has yet neen issued in the State. The World’s Fair is fully outlined, showing cuts of the buildings am! descriptions of all the interesting features and exhibits. Complete tables and I arill' Duties and increases are noticed. A reliable table of the Indiana postoffices, with their salaries. The United States Government, with the names and salaries of every official therein, from President down, are given. A full list of United States Senators and Representatives is also fur- ’ *w*# vir ^ etc. A collection of general information on the recent political revolution le an into ’••■sting feature of this work. The vote of Indian \ ">• o>iint irs on both State and National tickets are given on legislative districts: For the benefit of handy reference the platforms of the four leading political parties in 1892 are

appended,

Moitry (o ru;ir>. Private funds to loan oil lung time in oums to suit. Lowest :.ito of interest. Terms reasonable No delay W. 8. Cox, Southard's (dock, 50tf Greynoastle, Look out foi a cheap set of blacksmith tools. Call on R. H. Jones or John Riley, South Qreenca itle. For sale, a beautiful hoi ae on East Seminary street; house of e i u iit rooms, large shade trees, large lot, choice fruit of all kinds, tf II. A. Mills.