Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 May 1893 — Page 2

]

What

PARLIAMENTARY HUMORS.

Can’t Pull Out?

New

Bow on the Jas. Boss Filled Watch Cases, made by the Keystone Watch Case Company, Philadelphia. It protec'.s the Watch from the pickpocket . and prevents it from dropping. Can only be had with cases stamped

with this trademark.

> 1 1 wkh at extra charge for this bow ring), through Watch dealers only. Ask your jeweler for painpl^ekjarj^endUojmdiSI^

VT

6 PER mT

CALL OX

No. 22 Soalti Jactson Street, GREENCASTLE, IND.

UE3W-

Livery andFeed Stable,

H .Ii. Vi:s TA LAH OX, Props.

Just north of the northeast corner of Public Square, on North Indiana street.

O-ivo XJs ex Octll For fine rigs, good saddlers, andfine drivers

I will attend to all orders for gas fitting and plumbing

thor-

proniptly. All tvork

oughly tested and

Warranted to Give Satisfaction And prices very low. Give

me a call.

FRED. WEIK.

Forest H .me Stock Farm.

ir» • 11' Miles East ofOreencasUe lud., on National Road.

rarest Wilkes, 17042.

Race record, 2:15. Bay stallion, 15 hands and 3 inches high; WLight, 1120 lbs. The prettiest horse in Indiana.

Pilot 11 asset I I ASM).

The full brother to Maud S., 2:08%, and Lord Russell, sire of the stallion kiiiR, Kremlin, i,.r*•—B ..... i i m .. , r t. l i t\ • . I.

«», otic me n.

2:07%. Gray stallifiu, ifs hands and 2 inches high; weight. 1050 lbs. Sired by Harold, sire of 60 in 2:30 list. 1st dam, Mis-s Russell, darn of Maud 8., 2:08* ,; Nutwood, sire of 90

in 2:30 list.

Chestuut Stftr, t!#*., It, A. I*, It.

The great 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, and is the greatest living descendant of old Red Buck.

Ditriil anti Gofittlt,

Black imported jacks, 15 hands and 2 inches

and 15 hands high, wii

_ , will stand at same place.

Terms of Bk he ding: Forest Wilkes at $75 for the season, with return privilege; Pilot Russell at $75 for the season, with return

privilege: Chestnut Star at $10 to insure colt

to stand a

and suck: l$avid and Goliab at $10 to insure colt to stand and suck.

All stock is registered under the Indiana State laws. Stock will be shown to visitors

any week day.

M. F. McHAFFIB & SON, 3m4fl 1!, Miles West of Stilesville, Ind.

G. W. Bsnce, Physician,

OSoDiod Residence. Woshinirton Mreet. on«

: at Xathma. :;»nk.

Square saat t __ ___

'1REENCA8TLE

CNP.

38'1

S.S.S.

«2Sa«E*xs.v a I—' made entirely ol roots and herb* J. gathered from the forests of of people with the best results. It

CURES

All manner of Blood diseases, from the pestiferous Httle boil on your nose to the worst cases of inherited blood taint, such as Scrofula, Rheumatism, Catarrh and

SKIN'C/WCER

Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed tree Swift Sfecvfic Co., Atlanta, Via.

■ ■ QptrMBIAN ,n EXPENSES enn easily bo obtained If you will lake ua Aganfy for the HYC El A CORSETS. No othfr article for tho Sex will give Bueb satisfaction to both buyer and^jelleror bringtach i i yto the Agent, v, pi.lfrWritoryand addrtKH:

Lord North’s Interruption by Member. The house of commons now scruples 'to adjourn on account of derby day; but upon occasions which modern readers must consider still more strangely inadequate. Horace Walpole mentions in his memoirs that in March, 1751, the house adjourned to attend at Drury Lane theater, where Othello was to be acted by a Mr. Delaval and his family. Again, in February, 1781, a bill introduced by Mr. liurke, with reference to the civil list, was read a first time; but the second reading was deferred to that day fortnight, “because the tllst was to be a feast day, and the 22d was the benefit of Mine. Vestris, the favorite French dancer at the opera.” Even when in session, says Chambers’ Journal, the house was much given to amuse itself with petty or frivolous incidents, as is shown by some singular entries preserved in tho official records. Under date May, 1004, it is noted that a jackdaw How in at the window. This was considered ominous, and apparently it proved a bad omen for the bill in debate, as the measure was soon afterward rejected. Again, we are told by the veracious state chronicler that in May, 1014, “a dog came into the bouse, a strange spaniel, mouse-colored. ” About one hundred and seventy years later it is recorded that another caniue qtruder entered the house, taking his seat before the speaker and all the government. Not content to remain a silent spectator, the dog joined in the proceedings by barking loudly. Lord North, then prime minis! -r, was speaking, and jocularly appealed to the speaker, saying: “Sir. I i n interrupted by a new member.” The dog, unabashed, did not take the hint, but resumed his barking, whereupon the good-humored premierkept up the joke, protesting that “the new member had no right to speak twice in the same debate.” In much more recent times almost equally trilling episodes have been known to relieve mightily the tedium of political contention.

ORIENTAL MAGIC.

Fakirs Who Cora, to Life After Month, of Entombment.

“The stories of the remarkable power of the Oriental adepts to bury themselves for months have not been exaggerated in the least,” said Archibald C. Lewellyn, a Britonian, whose ruddy tan and sturdy frame bespoke the exposure and trials of many lands, to tho Washington News. “When I first went to India some years ago, like every other white man I was absolutely incredulous as to the ability of any man on earth to be hermetically sealed in a box and buried underground for six months, or six hours, for that matter. “One day my dhinga told me of a fakir who had just come into the little village, who, he said, could perform the feat. After a great deal of ceremony and by dint of a liberal bribe we set about to bury the yellow-skinned old rascal. lie was not a very lovable object, and 1 would have about as little trouble on my conscience in killing him as any human being I ever saw, but I felt like an accessory to a murder as we lowered him into a trench in my garden and heard the plunk of earth upon his coftin. He was swathed in bandages from head to foot. lie bud drawn himself up into a ball, had rolled back his tongue into his throat, stuffed his cars and nostrils with soft wadding, and was apparently dead ten minutes after he began his final preparations. “I put a white guard over that grave nigh. and day for six months. At the end of that time, as agreed, the natives gathered together and I sent for the officers of our mess and we dug him up. If I had seen Moses resurrected, if Julius Caisaj - were to walk down Pennsylvania avenue, I would not be more astonished than 1 was when I saw that fakir. He was covered with mold, and, while perfectly inanimate, had not decayed. “In about three hours he had fully recovered and was chanting the praises of Buddha.”

THE GOOD PHOTOGRAPHER.

Artistic Requirement, of a Thorough Craftsman of the Camera. The number of steps in the process of making a photograph which call for the exercise of tho same artistic powers that must be possessed by the painter will be surprising, says a writer in the New England Magazine. The artistphotographer must select his picture with reference to its composition of lines, masses of light, shade and texture. By his choice of lens, he determines the width of angle or the scope of the picture. In focussing and diaphragming, he divides his definition and his vagueness to suit the requirements of his sense of pictorial beauty. His development is almost as individual as the handling of a painter’s brush, which chooses between the minute exactness of a pre-Baphaelite or a Dusscldorf canvas, and the poetic vagueness of a Corot. In printing he has a wide range of j'vnj^yion Tic. L’. ... * a.’’’... .* I.-, -, ttiv: i'miu surface of Whatman’s drawing board, lustrous sheen_2pf ^ Jananese. rmnorw nr the rich depths of a carbon film. Although confined to monochrome, the various toning baths and the pigments of carbon films open to him an infinite variety of colors, comprising the lusters of gold, silver, platinum and other metals, deep charcoal blacks and the chalk reds of Botticflli. It is, however, not the wealth of materials so much as the artistic discrimination in the use of them which is illustrated by the amateur work of to-day, and in which progress is now being made.

The Cocoanut Palm. One of the peculiarities of the cocoa nut palm is that it never st ands up right. A Malayan saying has it that “He who has looked upon a dead monkey; he who has found the nest of the paddy-bird; he who hath beheld a straight cocoanut, or has fathomed the deceitful heart of woman, will live for-

WORDSWORTH ON WOMEN.

THE SEVENTH SON.

The (ireat Foet Did Not Elke Literary Strange Power. Commonly Attrllmted

Women. to Him.

Wordsworth indulges not infrequent- Civilization has not carried us entire-

- \vho ty beyond the reach of superstith

tained a tuoUsd objection. It is said the Fittaburgh Commercial-Telegraph, that after Miss Martineau took up her we are superstitious there are very few

residence in his neighborhood, this abhorrence to authoresses sometimes took such active expression that the deaf lady was frequently obliged to see what she could not hear, ami, perforce.

who can say they are entirely free from

it.

A great many people believe a seventh son has some occult healing power, but it is not generally known

to recognize that her presence was un- that a particular ceremony must be ol>-

welcome at Rydal Mount. She herself, however, omakes no mention of anything of the kind, when alluding to the Wordsworths and her intercourse with

them.

On ope occasion, says the Comhill Magazine, after unsparingly condemn-

served at the moment of the infant's birth in order to give hinr his healing power. The person who receives him in his arms places In his tiny hands whatever substance she decides he shall rub with in after life, and she is very sareful not to let him touch anything

ing a work by Miss Sedgwick, he eon- else, until this has been accomplished, eludes his criticism thus: “Such produo- If silver is to bo the charm she has pn>tions a< 1*1 to my dislike of literary ladies vided a six-penny or threepenny bit; —indeed make me almost detest the but as the coinage of the realm may name.” And further on again I find , change possibly during his lifetime, the rather sweeping announcement and thus render his cure valueless, she that “bluc-stockingism is sadly at en-. has more likely placed salt or meal on

mity with true refinement of mind.” ’ the table.

This last is said in reference to Sara j Sometimes when the parents arrange Coleridge, whom he rather pettishly ae- | that he is to rub his own hair the father cuses of monopolizing Mr. Quillinan's kneels down before his new-born son attention on one occasion, during the and the little fingers are guided to the time of the latter's engagement to his | head and helped to close upon a lock of daughter Dora. Perhaps, as the remark ] hair. It is essential that whatever subis made in a letter to QuRlinan himself, ■ stance a seventh son rubs must be worn

something in the nature of a tacit reproof may be included in it for him also That Wordsworth entertained a high idea of womanhood in the abstract is undoubted, and is evident in most of his poetry; but it is equally true that lie could ill support contradiction or interference from the ladies of his own family, from whom, by the way, he was likely to meet with very little of either. He was lord paramount in his home; the central figure of a group of devoted and faithful admirers, who could see no Haw in anything he said or did. His sister and sister-in-law resided constantly with them, joining wife and daughter iu one invariable chant of praise of his great gifts and veneration for his genius. U nder such circumstances who could wonder at the growing weakness for universal approbation which is said to have beset, In his latter days, the grand old Lake poet?

THE SNAKE NUT.

A Oueer Vegetable Production of the West Indies. A nut which should be classed with such wonderful vegetable productions as the “Vegetable Worm” of China, the “Vegetable Fly” of Australia, and other plant oddities of that ilk, is the snake nut of Demerara. This paradoxical vegetable is saitl to also grow in some parts of Cuba and British Guiana, the first specimen in the British museum having been sent from tho latter country. These remarkable nuts vary in size, some being as large as a goose egg. others not larger than a walnut. The kernel of each and every one does not simply “bear a close resemblance,’ v but is a perfect counterpart of a boa constrictor, lying coiled up as if asleep —the head, general taper of the body, spots and everything being true to life. When the kernel is ytt unripe It may be unwound or uncoiled and straightened out. In this state, although it is then without the spots, the resemblance to the body, fangs, scales and tail of a reptile is simply extraordinary. Those who can overcome the natural aversion to tasting such a thing declare that the nut is one of fine ilavor, being equal in every particular to the cream nut or the. English walnut.

THE TERRI3LE COBRA.

A Oe.crlptlon of Some of It* Marked Pe. cullsritle*.

It is a remarkable peculiarity of most poisonous reptiles that they seem to have a great reluctance of putting their deadly powers into operation. Before inflicting the fatal bite the rattlesnake always gives his note of warning, and the same may be said of the cobra di capello, the most deadly of the many poisonous reptiles of India. The cobra warning is unmistakable—he dilates the crest upon his neck and gives a hiss loud enough to be heard distinctly fifty feet away. The cobra’s crest is a flexible membrane or hood with two black circulars joined together so as to form a very good representation of a pair of spectacles. When the hood or crest is in position its eyes seem to blaze with a devilish luster, and the continued hissing gives the very air a noisome smell. According to the best authorities the cobra never bites while the hood is closed; and so long as that particular membrane is not erected the creature may be approached and handled with impunity. Even though the crest be spread, if the creature continues in silence there is no danger. One hiss, however, is a sure sign that the reptile is angry and searching for a victim.

by his parents as long as they live. Not long ago a Dublin shopkeeper, finding his errand boy very dilatory in his iuties, made inquiries as to the cause. To his surprise he found that the boy— being a seventh son of a seventh son— was often wanted for his services among the poorer classes and was consequently detained.

PETER, THE MINT BIRD.

Phtlttdelphla'ti Pet Eusle and 111* Sad End. If you have a silver dollar of 1830, 1838 or 183U, or one of the first nickel cents coined in 1850,says Harper’s Young People, you will find upon it the true portrait of an American eagle that was for many years a familiar sight in the streets of Philadelphia. “Peter,” one of tho finest eagles ever captured alive, was the pet of the Philadelphia mint, and was generally known as the “mint bini.” Not only did he have free access to every part of the mint, going without hindrance into the treasury vaults where even the treasurer of the United States would not go alone, but he used his own pleasure in going about tho citv, flying over the houses, sometimes perching upon lamp-posts in the streets. Everybody knew him and admired him; and even tho street boys treated him with respect. The government provided his daily fare, and he was as much a part of the mint establishment as the superintendent or the chief coiner. He was so kindly treated that he bad no fear of anybody or anything, and he might be in the mint yet if ho had not sat down to rest upon one of the great fly-wheels. The wheel started without warning, and Peter was caught in the machinery. One of his wings was broken, and he died a few days later. The superintendent had his body beautifully mounted, with the wings spread to their fullest extent; and to this day Peter stands in a glass tjase in the mint’s cabinet, where you may see him whenever you go there. An exact portrait of him as it stands in the case was put upon the coins named.

TOBACCO-LOVING ANIMALS.

AFRICAN JOURNEYINGS.

Queer Caremonlc* Performed by the

Natives.

There are places in Africa where three men cannot be sent on a journey together foi, two of them mnv eom- - — - - n - -- -

has determined on a journey he must consult the on 1 ele by means of divinatfczr.- — xtre -T.-.t: —comuiom'y—“■*

CurlouH Effort* of the Smoke on Various Quadruped*. In the Berlin zoological gardens. Prof. Haul Meyerheim, a painter of animal life, has been trying the effects of the fmgrant weed on various denizens of the gardens, with results as novel as they are undoubtedly amusing. Chief among the subjects of his experiments was the brown bear. He declares, according to Pearson’s Weekly, that the “common brown bears" are genuine enthusiasts for tobacco. “When I pulT my cigar smoke into their cage,” he remarks, “they rush to the front, rubbing their noses and backs against the bars through which the smoke has penetrated.” The professor, with some temerity, once experimented on the lion. The creature was asleep, and this was the moment selected for pulling a volume of tobacco smoke in his face. Did he at once wake up with a savage growl, lash his tail, and, springing at tho bar, shake the massive iron? Not at all. He awoke and “stood on his legs,” which seems a natural-enough attitude to adopt, and “sneezed powerfully.” Then he quietly lay down on his side and “elevated his nose for a second dose.” It may be news to some to hear that goats, stags and Hamas all devour tobacco and cigjirs with remarkable satisfaction.

Rose: Does Mr. Verydull know anythinR? Lillian: Know anything? He dosen't even suspect anything.

Rich, Red Blood As naturally results from taking Hood's Sarsaparilla as persona! cleanliness results from

HARD TO KILL.

A Story of a Fish's Remarkable Tenaci-

ty of Life.

Dr. Shirely Palmer tells a fish story that is calculated to make the members of the St. Louis Hunting and Fishing association (to use a strictly original expression), “turn green with envy.” ; — - rr ’ " " i '—■w

employed : re as follows: The magician takes a quantity of flour and lets it fall In a steady stream on a fiat stone placed at the head of the traveler’s bed. If it forms a perfect cone as it falls the omen is good; if not, there is an end of the matter at that time and by means of the Hour cone. Sacrifice must now be offered to propitiate the offended spirits. When the cone is perfect it is

Mr. Palmer came into possession of a fine brace of tench. They wore a live-■•rSaBj-bOTuituir ~7UiT”cTioo- -

uer Uluruughiy exp, is BofbitAKi -.u i-1 n, «. m and all other impurities and build* ups every organ of the body. Now is the time to take it.

The highest praise has been won by Hood's Pills for their easy, yet eBicent action, bold by all druggists. Price 25 cents.

In the blind mans country the o«e-eyed man s king.

A Philosophical Family. Amelia has pimples, and sores in the head, From humors internal her nose has grown red •She’s a boll on her neck that is big as a bell. Hut in other respects she is doing quite well. And pa has dyspepsia, malaria and gout, His hands with salt-rheum are all broken out; He is prone to rheumatics that make his legs swell, But in other respects he is doing quite well. And ma has night sweats ami a troublesome cough, That all of our doctors can't seem to drive off: She wakes every night and coughs quite a spell, Rut in other respects she is doing quite well. There is nothing like philosophy to help one bear the ills of life, but in the case of this family what is most needed is a good supply of Dr. Pierce’s Holden Medical Discov ery. It would cleanse Amelia’s bad blood, cure pa’s ailments, and check ma’s cough. The “Golden Medical Discovery,” by its action on the liver, cleanses the system of impurities. It cures humors, ulcers, boils, scrofula, salt-rheum, erysipelas, and all kinds of sores and swellings. The only guaranteed blood-purifier.

Your Fainfe.

has often wasted time and material trying to obtain a shade of color,, has even resorted to the use of re mixed paints, the ingredients of wh . he knew nothing, because of the diS

winTe"iead. »Tuis wastecan be avoid*, by the use of National Lead Company’ll

Pure White Lead Tinting Colors

These tints are a combination of pet^ fectly pure colors, put up in small cans, and prepared so that one pound will tint 25 pounds of Strictly Pure White Lead to the shade shown on the can. By this means you will have the best paint in the world, because made of the best materials—

and pure colors,

of the brands of white lead that are

Strictly Pure White Lead

Insist on having one

standard, manufactured by the “ Old Dutch" process, and known to be

strictly pure:

“Armstrong: & McKelvy

“Beymer-Bauman” “Eckstein”

“Fahnestock”

“Anchor”

“Kentucky” “Morley” “Southern” “Shipman” “Red Seal” “Collier” “Davis-Chambers”

Talk little ami well anil you will be taken for somebody.

Mr. Chauncey M. Depew's advice is, ‘‘Go South young man.” The best inducements to visit the natural resources of the Great South are now offered by the Mobile & Ohio R. R. See advertisements. 5tf

To do good to rascals is to pour water into the sea.

The promptness and certainty of its cures have made Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy fa-

mous. it is intended especially for coughs, colds, croup and whooping coughs, and is the most effectual remedy known for these diseases. Mr. C. B. Main, of Union City, Pa., says: “I have a great sale on Chamberlain’:

Cough Remedy. I warrant every bottle and have never heard of 1 *"" r.-iii.,.. —

Aari

J 1 |ne failing to give entire

satisfaction.” 50 cdht bottles for sale at

Albert Allen’s Drug Store.

May

There is no more dangerous water than that which makes no noise.

These brands of Strictly Pure White Lead and National Lead Co.'« Pure White Lead i Tinting Colors are for sale by the most re-1 liable dealers in paints everywhere. If you arc going to paint, it will pay youl to send to us For a book containing informa-l lion that may save you many a dollar; it willl only cost you a postal card.

NATIONAL LEAD CO.

1 Broadway, New York j Cincinnati Branch, Cincinnati, - . . Ohio.

The breaking up of the winter is the signal for the breaking up of the system. Nature is ' hr< ’ - ~

opening up the pores and throwingoff refuse.

Dewitt’s Sarsaparilla is of unquestionable assistance in this o[Vration.

Albert Allen, agt. ly Take your friend to be loyal and he will he.

The most painful cases of rheumatism mav be relieved by a few applications of Chamberlain’s Pain Balm; its continued use will cure any case, no matter of how long standing. It is equally beneficial for lame back, pain in the side, pain in the chest, lameness, and in all painful affections requiring an external remedy. A piece of Hannel saturated with Pain Balm and bound on over the seat of pain is superior to any plaster. For sale at Albert Allen’s Drug Store. May

Wonen and glassware are always in danger. you lack faith and love health? Let ua

ilish

Do

estab

1 your faith and restore your health with Dewitt’s Sarsaparilla. Albert Allen,

agt. i y Fortune gives her hand to courageous men

Piles of people have piles, hut De Witt's Witch Hazel Salve will cure them.

Albert

ly

Allen, agt.

Of women and sardines take the little ones.

tor took them homo with the idea of slaughtering' them for his Sunday dinner. Placing them iu a pail of water he put them into the larder and thought no more about the matter. That night at midnight he was aroused, so he says, by a groan proceetiing from the aforesaid larder. Inspection of the room explained the mystery. One of the fish had sprung from the basin or pail and

covered by an inverted pot and left for gasping upon the Uoor, every now the night. In the morning the pot is anc * then uttering sounds similar to removed and the cone examined; if it is those which hail disturbed Mr. Palmer, still whole and in the exact state in Next day both fish were prepared for which it was left when covered, there dinner, but sueh was their tenacity of Is nothing further to be done beyond | that both, after having undergone

“There is a salve for every wound.” We refer to DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve, cure* burns, bruises, cuts, indolent sores, as a local application in the nostrils it cures catarrh, and always cures piles. Albert Allen,agt. Iy

If you want to marry well, marry your equal. Cured of Consumption.

Four years ago T commenced using Wells’ New Cough Cure. The Doctor said I could not live till apiing. I coughed continually. Had night sweats and was reduced to a skeleton. My cough was stopped and I am now able to do a hard days work. PERRY TAYLOR, Lafayette Ind. Sold by Albert Allen. may

One day’s fast means three bad days for bread. Bad complexion indicates an unhealthy

state of the system. DeWitt’s Little Early Risers are pills that will correct this oomli

tion. They act on the liver, they act on the stack,moy th caet on the bowels. iy

A stewpan that boils much wastes flavor.

While Mr. T. J. Richey, of Altona. Mo., was traveling in Kansas he was taken violently ill with cholera morbus. He called at a Jr

store to get some medlcihe, and the druggist recommended Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy so highly he concluded to try it. The result was immediate relief, and a few doses cured him completely. It is made for bowel complaint anil nothing else. It never fails. Sold at Albert Allen’s Drug Store. May

The friend of everybody's is nobody’s friend

Go and see Throop’s pictures. Cabinets, $2 per dozen. Satisfaction currantecd.

Southwest corner of Public Square. God sends the cold according to theclothcs.

Nearly every family in the United States keep a bottle of whiskey in the house. This applies as well to Iowa, Kansas and Vermont a* to States where its sale is not prohibited. Some keep it as a beverage, some as atonic, some as a medicine. In either case it is important that it should be old and pure. I. W. Harper’s Nelson County, Ky., Whiskey has been examined by the leading chemists throughout the country and its purity has in every case been highly commended. Hold by Higgins & 1’rather, Roachdale, Ind. 6m4D

Are You Interested in the South? Thousands of acres of fertile lands are now ottered fur sale by the Mobile & Ohio Railroad in tracts to suit, at low prices anil on your own terms^ui the most productive and

.ti-F- '..i-* .luu,.mi

.'latter descriptive of the advantages of the Mouth and information regarding special J-Ltltt'-. - —’--.b--- — —- tn mely low rates, furnished on annlTcation

tremely low rates, furnished on appli to F. W. Greens, General Agent, 108 N. I

way, St. Louis, Mo.', oV~E.''5‘."p'o*7vq' 'v ting General Passenger Agent, M. & o RaiiroaiL Mobile, Ala. 5t f ’

When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria Wk’-'lffle had Children, she gave them Castoria

HAlLUi Y TIME- Tl BLE.

BIG FTlUU.

G.iini. East 8:45 u. in., 1:48 p. m., 5:00 p. m.l 2:37 a. m. _ Goin.i Y’est 8:45 a. m., 1:01 p. in., 6:46 p.m ** 12:30 a. m. 1

MONON ROUTE. ^

Going North 2:17 a. in., 12:29 noon; locKll*' 11:30 a. m. ^ Going South—1:58 a. m., 2:22 p. m.: local

1:20 p. iu.

VANDALIA LINE.

In effec t May 22, 189). Trains leave Greencas

tie, Ind.,

FOH THE WEST.

No. 21. Daily 2:10 p. m., for St. Louis. “ 1. Daily 12 53 p. m., “ “ 7, Daily 12:12 a. m., “ “ “ 5. Ex. Sun 8 6 a. m., “ ■■ “ ?• !*>£"" 5:2* p.m., “ Terre Haute 1, Ex. Sun 7:05 a. m„ “ Peoria. 3, Ex. Sun 3:00 p.m., “ Decatur.

for thij: hast.

5*4!^ 1:49 p. ni., for Indianapolis!

“ «, Daily 3:52 p. m., “ «. Daily 3:36 a. ni., “ 12. Daily 2:24 a. m., 2, Ex. Sun 6:20 p. m., 4, Ex. Sun 8:34 a. in.,

For^complete Time Card, giving all train*

iformation as

and stations, and for full in rates, through cars, etc., address

J. 8. DOWLING, Agent,

Greencastle, Ind.

Or J. M. Chrsbrough,

Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Louis, Mo.

■ VowraK/r .o>«?***'* i

TH K BEST

»n 18 T i:

GROCERIES" and Provisions, *

Ui * T : OuiMM * I ETC.. ETC., y A T JA> WEST JUICES, At

It nest Euneh Counter in the Cittj. Conte and See.

Boston Millinerp And Xotio)i Stove, Xe.rt Door Past o] I’ostofflre. the Latest a ail Best in Spvimj (loads in stork amt to Arrive dnriay the entire season. Trimminr/ yuavant' ed, Prieis ynn rant red.

3iu46

Kill MSi I. Mllfi.

- « ... *

'aso*: •* r—r.or MaMaanamac

I>i\ L. 1W. U.IWA, \ Office, No. is Kant Walnut St it .7i < iVV’:.^ l ..V':J: ;,, "!.'.' t - The Doctor %

dav' and° U niwh, t ,he ,° mce at »>> times” both da) and night, when net professionally

engaged.

DR. G. C. S1IYTHE, Physician and Surgoon Office and residence. Vida street, betw - U; ** h * n Kt<>n and Walnut xtreeti*. G. C, tale, VelEniiiryliiei'”

ur Hn>;iHrs'|

< >u r Maohine haw a re* 9 * ■ "' i ' 1 *>tary motion f • : : •»'»; h t J’pi:kT i.owki ] u "• 1 "<),i r. ,s. givilit: j true hand-rubbing] principle. For terms 1 a 1 »1 • i; lar.-s adilrt-SS j CRYSTAL WASHING MACHINE COMPANY, Columbus, Ohio, ttl

presenting a thank offering of rice, flour or fowl to the ancestral spirits and set out on the journey. Should there be a falling of the cone, even a small slip down its side, it is a sign not

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the process of scaling and evisceration, I Pitcher’S CQStorla sprang from the pan and wriggled g%u*i«j

about on tho floor as though they had 1 CPII IGPen Cry ^OP

but recently been removed from their Pitcher’S CaStAfln native element. 1 a ■ < cJ •

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_. 29 lis.liyr sow j%C5en$(assady(!

to be disregarded, and the oracle, after i above is told as a scientific fact, ! 1 - “ r v “ ’ * * —

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