Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 April 1893 — Page 3

-'AbsolutelyT* MB-Host- . C — C11130 for^PcVin s ^- .air—ST~ m

ftGES AT WHICH MEN MAR’IY.

I

TIDES IN THE MEDITERRANEAN.

W?. I_ tTauj^i~

isA FiOfflpt' Cure? _ sA Permanent Cure.

_ j5—•A Perfect Cure.

liY nauVXXj, M '

^Rock-Ciiy” (PiUMBA8Q> Sol'fd Axle Oilifrour Grocer or coaler haRn’f it. w.-;to u»for h s:u;.p1o i >r.O«u* A will run your Hukkt or feMonSOOtolMlOmneMM*' ♦ • • . f , < r. if. '••CAH SHAFT HOLtEft CO ,WABASH, IH0.,U.fc f>.

A uew ami complete lino at Rock Bottom Prices, at ■U AWJW Undertaking and Embalming GIVEN SPECIAL ATTENTION. East Side Square.

THE STAR-PRESS.

Salimliiy, April. 29, 189.'}.

Sheep Men. The Putnam County Wool Growers held n large end enthusiastic mcetlnn at the Court House last Saturday, April 21. Several interesting and lively discussions were hail. The editor of the National Sheepman, of Indianapolis, was present and addressed the association. The old officers were unanimously elected to serve for another year. The association will meet again Saturday, May IS, at 1 p. m., in the Court House. Several papers will be read and a good time is expected. All members are earnestly requested to be present. J. A. Guilliams, Secy.

Real Estate Transfers. Nelson Fordyce to J. B. Lloyd, land in Russell tp.,»2»,000. M. Johnson to L. Sellers, laud in Jeflerson tp., tf.uoo J. H. Priest to J. R. Mahan, land in Greencastle tp., I'.I.OOO. C. Wisehart to J. 8. Jesse Jackson, lot in Roachdale tp., |no. ( H. Manierto J. Bettis, land in Madison tp.,

fflfi.

M. J. Conk to C. J. Stutler, lots in Roach-

dale,?200.

J. P. Alice to P. Coleman, lot in Greencastle

|2,415.

J. Howard to W. E. & E. Thomas, land in

Madison tp., t'JOO

M. A. Lucas to M. A. Prichard, land in Jef-

ferson tp., $900.

O. F. Swain to J. G. Britton, land in Jack-

son tp., $700.

A'. B. Gilpin to A. L. Palmer, land in Floyd

tp.. $2,000.

A. L. Palmer to J. J. & S. F. Carriger, land

in Floyd tp , $1,000.

L. C. Case to J. F. Case, land In Jackson tp. |1,800. , Jesse Eggers to J. L. Dickerson, land in

Jackson tp.. $700.

Jesse Eggers to L. L. Higgins, land in Jack-

son tp., $700.

Ruth Boyland to E. Dicks et al., lot in

Greencastle, love.

E. Grantham to J. Hessler, lot in Uoachdale $100. , , Auditor P. C. to Trussell * Kattman, land

in Washington tp., $162 90.

E. Dicks. Exr., to H. W. Dicks.lot in Green-

castle, $850.

A. Mcl'gh to W. L. Williams, lot in Green-

castle, $6.50.

M. A Waynick to G. W. Kimble, lot in

Greencastle, $750.

J. B. Shaw to O. J. and M. Shaw, land in

Frank Leslie’s Popular Monthly. The idyllic and historic Bronx Valley, sympathetically described by one of its residentsDr. Peter MncC^ueen, and iliustrated with a score of charming views, occupies with vernal seasonability the front place in Frank Leslie’s Popular Monthly for May. Another timely paper, hearing as it does upon a National Quarantine for the Fnited States, is the graphic sketch of “Carribhean Quarantine” experience, by Henry Arthur Herbert of Muckross. An exciting nargative of the ascent of Mt. Etna is accompanied by numerous views of the great Sicilian volcano and its recent eruption. Among other illustrated articles are “The World's Fair Fisheries Exhibit” by Charles Bradford Hudson; an entertaining account of Chinese cuisine and resaurant life in Mott street. New York City, by that vivacious journalist, Don Seiti; “Persian Pottery," by James Bassett, the eminent Orientalist; and “Carnivorous Plants,” by Colonel Nicholas Pike. The department of fiction contains an exquisite story by Pan! Bourget, the author of "Cosmopolis," enti-

tled "Dom Griff.”

Artisans Take the Plunge Early In Life, Professional Men at About Thirty. i Statistics show that a law of chances governs in the vast majority of cases the ages at which mea marry who are engaged in certain occupations. Workmen and artisans take unto themselves o ir. s at o.i c... i;/•a r r~r ..o loo .. ho-e vocations are of a more intellectual mind. Thus, miners, textile factory hands, laborers and artisans marry at an average of twenty-two years. Of these tlie miners are tirst in the field, more than one hundred of every one thousand of them securing wives before they have become of age. Workers in textile fabrics run them close. Then come shoemakers and tailors, and they are followed by artisans and laborers. Farmers and farmers’ sons consider twenty-five early enough. Commercial clerks seek the pleasures of matrimony at twcr.ty-six . Shopkeepers and shopmen postpone the rapture a little while longer. Professional men and men of independent means randy care to incumber themselves oven with so delightful a burden as a wife until they have toed the line of over thirty years. Though ! the rich marry at a more ripe age than i the working fraternity the New York Ledger finds that they continue marrying until long after the last named have ceased to wed. Whereas fourteen miners and twenty-five artisans in every thousand marry between the ages of thirty-five and forty nearly a hundred of the independent and professional class do. It is explained in this way: The rich like to see something of the world and pleasures before settling down to sober matrimony. A laborer has neither desire nor opportunity for it. When lie has a house of his own and a wife to look after it for him he has attained perhaps to the height of his ambition. It is said a man is neither physically nor mentally mature until he is thirty, and if this is true it stands to reason a man at that age should be better fitted for the duties of a husband and a father than a stripling of twenty-

one.

The oldest flute in the world is made of the thigh bone of a sheep and was found In a tomb on the Nile. The oldest monument in the world Is the mound covering the tower of Babel, erected B. C. 2247.

Jefferson tp., $60. W A Tyler to H.

Dector, land in Warren

lp*» fWK).

lii A Smith toThos. Smith, land in Marion

tp.. 1720.

A. E. Browning to J. W. Crawley, lot in

Greencastle, $76.

The highest inhabited place in the world is the Custom House of Ancomarca, in Peru,

16,000 feet above the sea.

First-class for cure of bruises, sprains, and rheumatism -Captain D. H. Macaulay of No. 9 Engine Company, Baltimore Md., says; The members of our company have thoroughly tried Salvation Oil for sprains, bruises and rheumatism and it has given satisfaction in every case. We regard it as a first-class lini-

ment.” The Side Shows at Chicago.

The season for opening the great Columbian Hxposition has brought to the World's Fair City the greatest aggregation of amusement enterprises tha* has ever been gathered together. It lias been estimated that nearly six million dollars has been invested in these enterprises. The most noteworthy of these is perhaps the Cyclorama of the great Chicag Fire. It shows the city as it was during tn

The largest single fortification in the world is Fortress Monroe. It has already cost over $3,000,000. The condor, when rising from the earth, always describes circles in the air, and can rise in no other way.

:ity a

progress of the fire, and will doubtless prove one of the marvel’s of the World's Fair. Another very interesting exhibition, and one that will appeal strongly to the religious masses will be the new and original panoramic reproduction of Jerusalem and the Crucifixion of the Savior, to open May 1, on Wabasc avenue opposite the Battle of Gettysburg. Hardy's Underground Theatre, built seemingly anywhere from 120 to 1,200 feet below the surface, promises to be one of the most unique end wierd of all entertainments. Over $300,000 is said to lie the outlay on this enterprise me. Ills on Wabash Avenue, just belt.w</1o Libby Prison War Museum. On the Midway Plaisauce in the Fair Grounds will be foumd attractions almost without numlier,—nearly two miles of front age. It is estimated that it would cost i couple over two hundred dollars to see all the aide shows at the World's Fair and the down town attractions; hence it would be well for ’ parties going to the World's Fair to make up a list of the places of interest they wish to see, for, manifestly, few can afford the time

and money to see them all.

Tbe Libby Prison War Museum. Of the many attractions outside of tho

World's Fair at Chicago, them are hut few in which there is so much luterest centered ns the Libby Prison War Museum. In 1889 this celebrated prison was removed from Richmond to Chicago and converted into a War Museum. Tho project was undertaken by a | gvndicats of the best known business men of l the city whose enterprise was conceived in a 1 commercial spirit, but has attained a national ' reputation. A project such as this was never 6 befere heard of. To move a brick and stone c building the sire of Libby more than a thousand miles; across rivers and mountains, was an enterprise that many of the best known I contractors in the West refused to undertake at auy price. But the move was made with success. Then the famous old structure was filled with war material that represents the i work of a lifetime and the expenditure of half j a million of dollars. The great collection is | second to uoue in the country and contains [ niu. h of the most valuable material that the Greatest civil war the world has ever known jhus left to posterity. The collection includes ^Kouaands and thousands of relics of every

■cscriniion. many of which form

Tlnks in the " of our l building itself is fraught

mmemories and the story of the i * li I ated ■ tunnel escape of Feb. 0, 1864, never f ils toin- — One hundred and nine

CAME TO AN END. The Extraordinary Session of tlie Senate Brought to a Close. Washington, April 17.—The senate adjourned sine die Saturday. In return for the customary resolution of thanks the vice president made a pleasant speech, but otherwise there was nothing to distinguish the day from its predecessors since March 6. The extraordinary session lasted just six weeks. The proposed investigation of the charges against Senator Roach formed the chief topic of the day's discussion. No disposition was made either of that matter or of the question as to the admission of the three appointed senators from Montana, Washington and

Wyi iming.

Ixong Overdue. Philadelphia, April 111.—Much anxiety is felt in seafaring circles over the non-arrival at this port of the Hritish steamship Castlegato, ('apt. Evans, which is now overdue, and it is feared that the steamship, with a crew numbering twenty-three men and a cargo valued at $.100,000, has suffered a fate similar to that of the Naronic. The Castlegate left Dantzie March 5 with a full cargo of sugar. Death of a Well-Known Chicagoan. Chicago, April 18.—Horace A. Hurlbut, widely known in financial circles, died suddenly at his residence in this citp Mondey morning. As receiverfor the Wilbur F. Storey estate Mr. Hurlbut conducted the affairs of the Chicago Times for a number of years. Farm Anluiula. Washington, April 17.—The report of the statistician of the departmentof agriculture shows that the approximate number of the several classes of farm animals in the wholecountry U: Horses, 10,207,000; cattle, 52,478,000; sheep, 47-, 274,000; swine, 40,095,000.

Found Dcnd.

Cleveland, O., April 19.—Charles H. Williams, managing editor of the Cleveland Plaindealer, was found dead I in a closet of the Plaindealer building Tuesday. It is supposed that his death was due to an internal rupture.

Thu (irziht Supply.

Washington, April 18.—The visible supply of grain in tlie United States yesterday was: Wheat 70,098,000 bush els; corn, 13,800,000 bushels; oats, 4,189,000 bushels; rye, 837,000 bushels; barley,

807,000 bushels.

Jewelry Store Looted. Mansfield, ()., April 19.—The jewelry store of G. M. Wilkinson was robbed of $5,000, principally in gold watches and diamond rings, Monday

night.

MONKEY JOKERS.

Senne

Actions Which Clearly Manifest

of Humor.

No one will doubt that monkeys have a keen sense of humor which enables them to relish a joke. It is not to be supposed that they care whether the fun is at the expense of one of their own species or of ours. Their jokes are necessarily practical. In the Now Review Mr. It. S. Garner describes one of

these.

In a large cage in the Philadelphia Garden were kept at one time about twenty monkeys. Among them were two big, wise-looking apes with gray beards and hair, and with the mien of stoics. They had very long, straight tails, and a habit of sitting high up from the ground, and allowing their tails to hang at full length. In the same cage were three or four brown Cebus monkeys, who were much de-

voted to exercise and fun.

While the big monkeys would i^ng to the side of the cage, or sit on a perch some ten or twelve feet from the ground, one of the little brown

monkeys would stealthily creep up to j — one of them, aud suddenly grasp the ^ an( ^ was s'gm-'d.

end of the lontf tail and swing with all his might. Of course the “big’un” could not lift his tail because of the weight of the little monkey clinging to it. lie could only climb down the side of the cage with his burden until he

could reach the floor.

During this operation the brown monkey kept swinging until his own tail touched the floor, at which instant he would release his hold and spring to the top of the cage, followed by the outraged monkey amid the screams of

the others.

liy the t;: ie he had reached a point where h<' could attack his little tormentor, v ho would show some signs of resistance, and < :u sc him to pause for a moment ’ ■ c brown money would i and take a swing.

! Out of each thousand deaths in Europe, sixteen are by violence; In the United States

forty-one.

1 The best medical authorities have pronounced Ayer’s Sarsaparilla to be the most skillfully-adjusted combination of alteratives and tonics known to pharmacy. It is this which has earned for it the well-merited

tp J ^ - n -

..........

i In one summer the descendents oi a single

The I.nnar Influence uu the l.andloeked

Rea Is of Small Dimensions.

It is not correct to say, although sue'; a remark is frequently mode, that the Mediterranean has no tide, as there is a daily rise and fall of the water due to the action of the moon, but it is of very si;..,. n-i.'.ff V'c "is 7i.it er,:. oi> owing to the landlocked position of this

sea tliat its tide is so small (although, 1 n y wiu number 2,08°,32°,

according to the Urooklyn Eagle, this j circumstance has much to do with it),

for Hudson and Huflin’s bays and the fci"", off k the * ve ,f‘T a, ‘ ll i ^ ou * ht “ Red sea have well marked tides, due to ' freRl, attacl ‘ 01 In ' hk ’ e8l "' n aml Dy,pep, “' U

the fact that their mouths are open in the direction of the tidal current, while the entrance to the Mediterranean at Gibraltar is at right angles to it; thus but a Miiall portion of the tide passes through from the Atlantic, not sufficient to produce any marked difference in its level. Besides this, its dimensions arc too limited to allow of the moon's action being equally exerted upon it, when in the direct line of her attraction, so that the equilibrium of the surface is not greatly disturbed. The highest tidal rise in the Mediterranean occurs to the east of Si ily, where a wave flows up the Adriatic, elevating tlie water nearly four feet at new and full moon and half that amount at neap tides. At Antium regular tides have been found, in the summer, rising to fourteen inches, and a tide was observed at Toulon rising a foot about three and a half hours after the moon had passed the meridian. In the east of the sea tides are felt, and also slightly in the Grecian archipelago, but the general level only fluctuates a few inches. The soldiers of Alexander were alarmed on beholding the high tide at the mouth of the Indus and the troops of Uiesar were similarly affected by a like spectacle on tin* English coasts, their previous knowledge of oceanic phenomena having been confined to the comparatively tideless seas uf Italy and Greece.

Bogus!

Too Much Holiday

fresh attack of Indigestion and Dyspepsia, was Simmons Liver Regulator that cured this time. It never fails. You want to keep it on hand also for any bilious attack, or for constipation. It is the emergency remedy, unlike pills in the effect. No gripings, and does

not debilitate. Try it once.

The bones and muscles of the human body are capable of over 1,200 different movements.' For a disorded liver try Beeoham’s Pills. Tho most perfect echo is at Killarney, Ire- < land. It repeats a cornet note nearly twenty

times.

If you want a reliable dye that will color an even brown or black, and will please and satisfy you every time, use Buckingham’s Dye

for the Whiskers,

The pouch of a large pelican will contain 7

or 8 quarts of water. The Best of All.

Mr. B. H. Jackson, of Doberts, lud., whites as follows: “Please send me one dozen more of Dr. Well’s New Cough Cure. I find it the best seller and most satisfactory Cough Medicine I can get. My customers say it is the best of all. Price 25 cents. Sold by Albert Allen. apr Sixteen ounces of gold are sufficient to gild a wire that would encircle the globe.

ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO. Historic Kvcnts of the Time Transpiring

In tlie Old World.

Division of time into centuries seems a natural thing, and in 1S93 we are far more deeply interested in what was occurring in 1793 than we are in the years 1792 and 1704. In 1798 Washington was inaugurated president for the second time and the United States was just entering upon a career of prosperity that has continued in a remarkable degree ever since. France, which had helped the American colonies to gain their independence, was in 1793 passing through the horrors of a revolution that, terrible as it was, has done more for democratic government in Europe than any other event. Louts XVI., the king of France, was imprisoned by his subjects, tried, condemned to death and beheaded on the 21st of January; Marat, one of the leaders of the revolution, was stabbed by Charlotte Corday; Queen Marie Antoinette was beheaded; Mme. Boland, the duke of Orleans and many other well-known persons lost their

heads by the guillotine.

In 1793 Poland was nearing its end as an independent state. .Russia, under various pretexts, had gradually made its way into the kingdom, and that year a second treaty of the partition of Po-

seize his * n;.

UNDER EXCITEMENT, Strang# Action* of V«npl<» When Influ-

enced by Fear.

In a fire you get very close down to human nature, observes the New York Sun. tine night recently an apartment house took fire. There was no time to be lost by the inmates. A motherscantily c lad and crying, took out her two little children. A wife buttoned herself in her long newmarket and ran, leading her brown-eared setter. A devoted son and daughter on the top floor dressed warmly their helpless old mother of eight ;.nd waited to carry her, if need be, mss the fire escape. One woman put . a fur-lined cape over her night lire! id came forth with a traveling bag ...led with silver. A young widow ran for her new Sunday frock and took down the departed one's portrait. Another came forth fully equipped as for church, in jacket, tipped hat and crimps. Another young woman left all of her belongings and fled in her night dress, blistering her bare feet on the cinders, and ran down the street calling for a carriage. An-

In 1793 the world first learned something definite regarding the Chinese empire. ’ An English embassy arrived in Pekin in September, was received by the emperor, and then requested to depart, which it did in October. But the embassy found out a number of things; among others that the population of China was said to be 333,000,000, and that there were 4,402 walled cities in

the empire.

DIFFICULTIES OF SMOKERS.

A Habit That Watt Frowned on In the

Olden Time*.

The Turks are now a nation of smokers, but early in the seventeenth century the priests and rulers denounced smoking as criminal, and Amurath IV. ordered its punishment by death in the cruelest furies. One playful punishment consisted in thrust ing tlie pipes of smokers through their

noses.

In Russia, according to All the Year Round, the noses of smokers were out off. The powers ecclesiastical strongly opposed to the new habit, and Popes Urban VIII. and Innocent X. thundered in turn against the terrible vice of smoking. The pupal thunders, however, proved powerless against the charms of St. Nicotine; although there was much reason in thosedecrees which were directed against the custom of smoking and snuliiiig in church. Pope Urban excommunicated all who should be guilty of so unbecoming a practice; and, later, Innocent X. solemnly excommunicated all who should take snuff or tobacco in St Peter’s church at Rome. Valuable I'apers Destroyed for Gain. Not long ago says tho Philadelphia Record, a local collector, whose letters of rare interest only his most intimate friends are allowed to see, secured possession of about twenty letters of a revolutionary hero which were most valuable historically on account of the

The many eases of rheumatism cured by Chamberlain’s Pain Balm during the past few months have given the people great confidence in its curative properties, ami have shown that there is one preparation that can be depended uyon for that painful aggrovatiug disease. Honaker Bros., Lor sin, Ohio, says: “Mr. Moses Price, of this place, was troubled with rheumatism for a long time. Chamberlain’s Pain Halm has cured him. He says that the Balm has no equal.’’ For sale by Albert Allen. apr The highest falls in the world are the Ribbon Falls of the Yosemite—3,800 feet.

Tho Proof of Merit

Is fully demonstrated in the use of Craft’s Distemper Cure among horses. It cures Chronic Coughs, Colds, Pink Eye* ami all catarrhal troubles of the horse. It is acknowledged by Veterinary Burgeons to be a wonderful remedy and the only known specific treatment for Distemper. Price 50 cts. Sold by Albert Allen. apr Rivers hold in suspension over one-hun-dredth of their volume of solid water.

UST** " I Jl- -i f

Bogus white lead would have no sale did it not

afford makers a larger profit than

Strictly Pure White Lead.

The wise man is never persuaded to buy paint that is said to be “just as

good ’’ or “ better ” than

- Strictly Pure

White Lead

The market is flooded with spurioMS white leads. The following analyses, made by eminent chemists, of two of these misleading brands show the exact proportion of genuine white lead

they contain. Misleading Brand

"Standard Lead Co. Strictly Pure White

Lead. St. Louis."

Mali rials Pruportions Analyzed by Barvtcs 60.86 |ier cent. Regis Chauvenet Oxide of Zinc 84.18 per cent. .fc Bro., White Lead 6.ill per cent. St. Louis. Less than 7 per cent, white lead.

Misleading Brand

"Pacific Warranted Pure [A] White Lead." Materials Proportions Analyzed by Sulphate of Lead 4.18 per cent. Ledonx .fc Co., Oxide of Zinc 45.04 per cent. New York. Barytes 50.68 per cent.

No white lead in it.

You can avoid'bogus lead by purchasing any of the following brands. They are manufactured by the “ Old Dutch’’process, and are the standards: “Armstrong & McKelvy” “Beymer-Bauman” “Eckstein’ 1 “Fahnestock” “Anchor” “Kentucky” “Morley” “Southern” “Shipman” “Red Seal” “Collier”

“Davis-Chambers”

For sate by the most reliable dealers la

paints Tverywhere.

If you are going to paint, it will pay you

to send to us for a book containing information that may save you many a dofiar; it will

only cost you a postal card to do so, NATIONAL LEAD CO.,

1 Broadway, New York.

Cincinnati Branch,

Cincinnati, - - - Ohio. W09L! WOOL! I will he at the old Greencastle Woolen Mill until July 1, and pay the highest market price for all the Wool in this and adjoining counties. DANIEL KELLEY.

8100 Reward For any Cut, Bruise, Lameness, Swollen Limbs, Saddle or Collar Galls that Morris’ English Stable Liniment will not cure. It cures when all others fail. Use it ami you will not be disappointed. Price 25 cts., 50 cts. and $1 Actually worth f25 to the consumer. Sold by Albert Bllen. apr

The cuckoo never builds a nest but lays solitary egg in the nest of some other bird.

The most intelligent people of our community recognize in DeWitt’s Little Early Risers pills of unequaled merit for dyspepsia, headache and constipation. Very small, perfect in action. Albert Allen, ugt. ly

A speck of gold weighing the millionth part of a grain can be easily seen by the naked eye Eggs for hatching Barred Plymouth Rocks Silver Spangled Hamburgs and White Leghorns r )0 cts per 13. Call on or addres Forest Ellis, Bainbridge, Ind. 10116 The caravan of camelo.

Huston Miitincry Ami Xotion Store, Sr.rt Door Host of f'ostoffi.ee. The fullest amt first in S/irintf Hoods in stock ami to Arrive durimj tIncutire season. Trimming guarani ed. Prices gattranleed.

3m 16

IS. Ah! I. Milii.

A Ptcturoaque Outfit DUappsarlng from rtalus of Narthrm Africa. A great caravan in march is a superb spectacle; alas, too infrequent now in northern Africa. At first, says Scribner, Arabs alcmo can detect it, a mere speck lost in a dusky halo, whence it emerges at length a tawny-colored mass possessed of a strange motion, the swarming of a thousand lives in one. Here and there silhouettes of straggling camels stand profiled, like hieroglyphics, on the fiery sky, as, insensibly trailing its snake-like curves, the convoy advances. Hours after being sighted, it passes in slow defile, led by a vauguuid of blooded canids, whose gait and bearing have an air of arrogance not customary to that race of ptoletarians, the chieftains seated aloft in their floating burnooses, alert of eye, with gun in hand, statuesque guardians of the convoy treasure. Behind them the camels of burden, exhausted less by loads than with the fatigues of the journey, their legs and croppers bald and scarred by blows, straggle -forward languidly, thrusting out the tongue as they press their huge, spongy feet in the yielding ground. What resignation in their soft staring cyeal Verily, no philosopher knows better than these poor brutes how inane are the revolts against inexorable fate. Near at hand walk the drivers, their emaciated features savagely Illumined by eyes of fire, and white, gleaming teeth piercing their parched lips. Of all who started with tlie caravan how many have fallen by tho way, abandoned to agonize alone in the desolation?

Duappointmenl

is felt at the premature decline of American women. Habits of life have much to do with prevailing conditions. Their

correction will improve coming gene-

disooverics of the Norsemen and tho ver y important historical letters have ' rations, and corrective medicines have stories of their trips to \ inland and recently been destroyed in this way. ! just ns much to do with the present. possibly North America, will be lent by | Dr. Fenner's Kidney and Hackache

Cure is a positive specific in all kidney

other got her valuables in her sealskin ! new light they threw upon some di.v coat, and finding the smoke not too ! pu ted points. Their number, however, threatening, fished out her k iur-luih d necessarily reduced their individual gowa -sr.Ucl tin. black silk silhouettes of 1 t xon;:s\.iatf VtHtwv’SO ten of tteeai were her grandfather and grandmother, ! consigned to the flames without ha/ing which she knew she couldn’t replace. even been copied. The value of the reOue man contented himself with a batn maining ten was, of course, enhanced robe, another dressed hi mself in his greatly by this course. To such col-four-in-hand tie and scarf pin. | lectors the money value of » letter is

! the only point to be considered, and

Iceland Siticns. ; t bey do not hesitate to make any sacriIceland sagas, hearing on the early b ou that will increase this value. Many

The Docile Fle]>hant.

i form Important nation. Tlie old

t-tcrpstinir

the Danish government to the United 1

Htatcs for exhibition ut the world's fair, j An elephant gives, perhaps, tho best complaints, gravel, stone in bladder,

~ j ~ ri ~ ! These sagas are entitled Codex Flute- instance of disciplined courage to be female weakness and irregularities, _ 011 ° “ ’ r ' r ' yensis. It has required a great deal of teen in tho animal world. They wil moth on face, etc., improves appetite a . ■’ 1 I’’ 1 ' red tape to secure these valuable man- submit, day after day, to have painful and digestion, corrects and restores to Alma, the murderer of C hristie Warden, uscr i p t s . Before permitting them to wounds dressed in obedience to their normal action all organs of the body

has confessed to his lawyer that he ie leave Copenhagen the Danish govern- keeper, and meet danger in obedience

ment lias stipulated that in ease of the to orders, though their intelligence is

Dropped Dead. total loss twenty thousand dollars sufficient to understand the peril and

George 11. Abbot, the desperado.

and purifies tho blood. Also cures headache, backache, dropsy, rheumatism, skin diseases, drowsiness, sleeplessness, dullness, and brings freshness and bloom to the cheek, elasticity to

... . , jcttijc the step and cheerfulness and contenttiiat tunnel, which formed one of the most (lend at Broad street station, I’hiladcl- to be returned by a United,States man- animal will face danger more readily at ment to the mind. If satisfaction not piriHing dveuU of the war. phia, Saturday. of-war 1 ' -* ' J

_ Camdkn, N. .7.. April 17.—Thomas H. must be paid for them and all expenses far too great for a man to trick them Jttfnton 1 offlcer"* 1 ^niadu*'their''cJ-apc "'t'hro'ugh Dudley,ex-consul to Liverpool. dropped i incident to their exhibition. They are into a belief that it is non-existent. No

man's bidding.

given money refunded. Costs nothing to try it. Take homo a bottle to-day.

V It KV! 11 ► , IIOH.HKMKV YOUNG 8ILVLRTAIL will stand the «e»80n ,‘?' th e tarm of A. J. Kimi-k, 2 miles south ol HUmore. on the Mt. Meridian road at fiU to insure cult to stand and suck. Younx Siivertnil is a beautiful dark chestnut sorrel, IB 1 ., hands nigli. and is live years old; sired by John Hammond s Bed Buck, out of a Canadl.m mare. His d im is Quarter Norman, out of a < nnanian marc, making both of his arrand dnmg C'anadiain. Geo. p. Shoptauirh, Proprietor. B ’ YOU\u C LYUK will stand at Un same time and place for u few choice mares. Younx ’ lyde is a beautiful dark brown, 15h. hands hiKh. aid has only to be seen to be admired A. J. Huark, Proprietor. 3452 AotSc#' ot tiliGiitlaimlloii. Not! ■ I* hereby xiven that the undersigned is been appoin ted by the Clerk of the fir uit Umirt o; Putnam county. State of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of Alexander Gorh.im, late of Putnam county, Indiana. deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. Dated this 8th day <.f April, 1893. JOHN W GORHAM, ii ir . Administrator. H. It. Mathias, Attys.

I’omai issio,lev’s Sah of' liral Estate '- dice is hen by given that the undersigned. .1 commissioner duly appointed by the Circuit Court of Putnam county, Indiana, in an action new pendinx in s»i ' court, wherein •bud Dobbs ct ul. ..r. pluimius, and Martha J. Hobbs et nl. nre defendants, will in pursuance of un order of siiid court, (lifer for sale public outcry, to tbe highest bidder, at the V''urt House door, in the city of Greencastle.

Indiana, on

SATURDAY, THE TWENTIETH

DAY OF MAY, 1893,

ii. iu u eiuck a. ni., the following described red estate in Putnam county, Indiana, to-

wit:

The east hitlf of the northeast quarter of se non thirty-five !35i. and the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of said section thirty-five 85|, in township fourteen '14:

mirth, of range three (3) west.

Also all that part of the southeast quarter if Section twenty-six (26 , in said township ami range, that lies south of the National

Road.

TERMS OF SALE.

One-third (U cash, one-third in nine (9i

and one-third ' i in eighteen <18 months,

deferred payments to be secured hy

on said real estate, and evidenced by notes

deferred payments to be secured hy mortgage on said real estate, and evidenced by notes bearing 6 per cent, interest from date and waiving valuation and appraisement laws and

providing for attorney's fees. QUINTON BROADSTKKKT,

4t52 Commissioner.

Police ftl ITltlll $t'|||4>K|l4-|||

Efciat*.

In the uintter of the estate of Jesse

Circuit

Court, April

ilymer, deceased. in the Putnam

Term, !8'.<3.

Notice is hereby given that the undersigned hxecuu r ot the estate of Jesse P-ilym-T deceased, bits presented and filed his account and vouchers in final settlement o< said esiatc, and that the same will come up for the examinnH" 11 and action ot said Circuit Court on the ■ i n.. , . - L.'wiua • b '..me all persons interested in said estate are required to appear in said Court, and show cause, if any therft bo, why account and vouchers should not be approved. And ti e heirs of said estate, and all ollicrs interested therein, are also hereby required nt tho time and place aforesaid, to appearand make proof of their bc;r«hip or claim to any part oi said estate. , „ , JAMhS tV. ID MER. J. M James. Atty. 2tl Executor.

x*oti<s«f of <4<liiilnlMintllon. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Putnam county, State of Indiana, A (ministrator of the estate of James M. Sharp, late of Putnam county, Indiana, deceased. Said estate is supposed to ty. solvent. Dated this 20th any of April, 1893 BENTON SHARP, John P. Allee, Atty. 3t2 Administrator.

For sale, a beautifhl home on East Seminary street; housoofeightrooms, large shade trees, largo lot. choice fruit of all kinds, tf H. A. Mills.

\

Call on Andrew Hanna for Cleaveland Fence—it is handsontA aud best. tf-W ’