Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 June 1893 — Page 2

••03

,. . - ■

•jsiqdaisd aoj ispMaf jnoX qsy >jjriu sprai sup ^iav p.'Hiiurissastrojsmopucpsiii^

t

WONDERFUL INSECTS.

Plant Lloe That Aro Used as Cows by Anta

AXES UNDER THEIR COATS.

I While a i?reat many thlnsu are entirely

GOVERNMENT BUILDINGS. A QUEER NATURAL LAW. ^;“‘;:r i : v V tthey “ em ’“ 8ruleth#

Han Franctnco Police Carry Them to Smash the Doors of Fan-Tan Dens. The policemen’s sledye hammers nnd axes have recently been imsy in Chlna-

Tho System Governing Their Eroo tion and Coat

Atavism or the Term by Which It Is Designated.

popajsiMiaq i.uroi] <( ,oSu £uo[ i>ptui uooq i

dAmj 01 jqSnQ,, :uiibidx3 |[ia\ j

Treen aiul Dim til Water from the Rap or from the Atmom

phere.

i.*

,v ■ t| 3 no > OJ.IIU

A\OU SI,

-pnd p[o oqi sr.j' Oi{A\ osuos jo Uir J

pun ‘A\oq oqi jo mo Sind -dojp Aq paxteuiBp uoaq snq qD}BA\ osoqM uu^ Xj.TAg ‘jo>jood>{Did B Aq ‘(Suij) A\oq oip jo mo 3unj uooq sbij qaiBAt asoqAt UU^f Xj.TAg

li! to Looo!

T-

6 PER CENT

Almost every plant has its peculiar aphis, or plant louse, says the St. Louis j Republic, creatures which nature has ' endowed with wonderful powers of re- ! production. Among these odd insects 1 there may be from twenty to fifty generations in each year, each generation capable 01 producing others. A distinguished naturalist has given figures to prove that one pair of aphides in five generations, all of which could be brought into the world in less than ton days, would have descendants to the

number of 5,904,900,000.

Ants, although they cannot also be classed as the “most wonderful insect of creation,” are certainly the wisest. They use a certain species of aphis as their cows. The ant finds the aphis with his proboscis pushed entirely through the bark of some tender plant, slowly sucking its life’s blood (sap). Reason (it cannot be properly called by any other name) teaches the ant that if the aphis is irritated he will void" this digested sap. Straightway Mr. Ant marches up to the helpless aphis and proceeds to irritate the poor creature with his feelers, and forthwith the sap begins to flow from two bristle-like tubes, which are situated near the tail end of the aphis. This flow of sap is what the ant had reason to expect, and

-CALL ON

GI1TIAM

No. 22 Sonll JaclM Street, GREENCASTLE, IND.

Livery andPeed Stable, .

IF. It. FESTA L .1 SOS, Props.

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

a-ivo TJs a. Oexll For fine ri^s. (rood saddlers, andfine drivers

Gas Fils ai Flail

I will attend to all orders for gas fitting and plumbing

promptly. All work

oughly tested and

Warranted to Give Satisfaction

thor-

And prices very low. Give me a call. FRED. VEIK.

Forest Home Stock Farm.

» 11 1 o Miles East of Oreencastle ImL, on National Hoad.

I on si iVlikes 9 17942. Race record, 2:15. Bay stallion. 15 hands and 3 inches high; weight, 1120 lbs. The prettiest horse in Indiana. Pilot Hassell (15S51). The full brother to Maud 8., 2:08%, and Lord Russell, sire of the stallion king. Kremlin. 2:07%. Gray stallion, 15 hands and 2 inchts high; weight. 1050 lbs. Sired by Harold, sire of 60 in 2:30 list. 1st dam. Miss Russell, dam of Maud 8., 2:08%; Nutwood, 2:18%, sire of 90 in 2:30 list. Chestnut Star, Jr., 250, It. A. /*. li. The great saddler und 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 Ruck.

Da rid and (loliah,

lilack imported Jacks, 15 hands and 2 inches

and 15 hands high, will stand

I at same place.

Tehms of Bhf.kiuno: 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 and suck; David and floliah 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. McHAFFIE & SON, 3m49 1' Milt s West of Stilesville, Ind.

G. W. Bence, Physician,

Office and R Hence ,’Vaphiji. t.v '■'*reo*. or#

Square o»et of National Bank. 0RKKNCA8TLE. IND. <*•

nimniifi

will take no

Ml ■■ Sg.ncy for tke HYrAlD CEIA CORSETS. in in Noother article for the H IM Sex will give ntieh aatU-

VX

v*'. -■ IlfeWs.-.p

will give iiucb a tion to both h

I fit'll

tit*

term* i

r bring mi the Ag«i

(hi

territory an

S-rvple Corset »dd're«6

VlSTISII tSDSIT CC . m. b."'

tts he is very fond of it he begins to

greedily suck it up.

Livingstone tells of a species of aphis which inhabits the fig trees of Africa which constantly distill water until it forms in great puddles on the ground underneath. There seems to be some contention among naturalists as to whether this Insect distills its water from the top of the plant which it infests or from the atmosphere. Livingstone found some of them at work on a castor bean plant and set about making an experiment. When first surprised at their work distillation was going on at the rate of one drop every sixty-seven seconds, or about five and a half tablespoonfuls every twentyfour hours. lie destroyed the bark of the plant below them, and, although it is known that sap must come from the earth, they were actually distilling a drop every five seconds, the flow being thirteen times greater than it was the day before. He then girdled the plant so deeply that it dried and broke off; still the little colony of insect wonders kept at work, regularly distilling one drop every five seconds, while another colony on a green twig only managed to distill a drop every seventeen seconds. There arc many other curious points about aphides, such as the idea that they are the progeny of ants, that they will turn to ants or that ants will turn to aphides—common errors.

ETIQUETTE OF GLOVES.

At I’lngHuh Levees Those Received by Royalty 31 ust Have One Hand Tnoovered. The prince of Wales is invariably gloved, and well gloved at that. He wears gloves whenever he stirs out of the house, and in the evening at the theater, or at private entertainments, his hands are always enveloped in wellcut, single-button, pearl-gray kids. He retains his gloves when shaking hands, but the person whom he thus greets is expected to bare his hand before extending it. Thus at the levees held by the prince on behalf of the queen at St. Janies’ palace the ushers and other functionaries of the lord chamberlain’s department who are on duty are careful to see that each man before entering the royal presence has his right hand bared and his left carefully gloved. In the middle ages the etiquette with regard to gloves was far mere stringent than it is at present. For instance, no one was permitted to enter a church wearing gloves, which were considered just as out of place as it would nowadays be to remain in any sacred edifice with a hat on. Nor were the great officers of the royal and imperial courts permitted to wear gloves while fulfilling their official duties. It was forbidden in France for the coachman and grooms to enter the royal stables without previously removing the gloves from their hands. Curiously enough, gloves went out of fashion almost entirely during the latter portion of the eighteenth century, and only reappeared after the groat French revolution, one hundred years ago. The first gloves that were ever heard of are those mentioned in the history of the Roman war against the Gauls. The latter, we are told, had their hands enveloped in coverings made of the skins of animals in order to preserve them from the cold.

A Hank 111 Her Throat.

Orassini, the great Italian singer, was very much interested in the young girls among her relatives, and always ready to encourage any talent she could find in them (>ne day a novice was brought to her with tl. •sr.p-.Kr.v-fyy. words: | “She is a spoiled contralto, and will : never do anything on hv stage.” Hut 1 1 \ r.-'.-l ..ibp yc-4Hl-g- | girl began her frightened trills, when : suddenly Orassini caught her in her I arms with delight. “Why, you are not 1 a contralto,” she said, “but the finest

CURES

SCROFULA

soprano in the world. Your voice is far

Mrs. E. J. Rowell, Medford, Mass., says her mother has been cured of Scrofula by the use of four bottles of alter having had much other treat- BSmK** nient, and being reduced to quite a low condition of health, as it was thought she could not live.

stronger than mine. Study well. You

i want none of my help; there is a rich | bank in your throat.” The little singer

was none other than Giula Grisi.

■JJRjWxtB Cured my little boy of beredibuy scrofula which a;>pcared afl over his face. For a year I had —''^given up all hope of his recovery, when finally I was induced to use KjjSRSESi A few bo ttles cured him, and no symptoms of tho disease remain. Mas. T. L. Mathkhs, Mathervllle, MUs.

Out book on Blood an i Skin Ditcases mailed free. bwu'X iiiiwU'ic Co.. AiUnta. Ga.

Slavery In Mexico. Out of one hundred men whom you will meet in Tobasco, Mexico, scarcely ten are able to read, and two out of every three are held by their creditors as slaves for debt. There are about five hundred thousand Mexicans in this form of slavery. The people often fall into debt through paying the exorbitant marriage fee asked by the priest, and another large fee is exacted at the baptism of each child, each baptism requiring the entire wages of |t least two WAolra a

........-.cs, anil the i UThese writ

a state of demoralization, says the San Francisco Examine r. Nothing remains of twenty gambling dens but a vast wreck of doors and furniture. Insl the Mongolians sit most of the time gloomy silence, contemplating wreckage alxmt them and occasional! heaping all imaginable anathemas uprl the head of Chief Crowh# - and his men This onslaught of the ofiii ers h»,

’-‘■"■v'TVtrw ttiV.lfl—M . Art I I MM

Fniiii.eered and Put Through by CongrMsmen—The Need of

Proper Restrictions.

slrt'i

kar Depravity of Sonic Children — strange Freaks ol Heredity.

goes as she lays. “Brace Up”

Is a tantalii’inK admonition to those at tl:,. 11 1 all tin -1 nut. weak. w| out appetite and discouraged. But the

o i. I,.h

wonderful. So Wv »a> . t ake Hood » and t will brace you up." For the general family cathartic we cq

Among the many mysterious forms fldently recommend Hood’s Pills.

w fS ■e hi

“i’a mortifies me so,” said Miss Jinks

”He always will say sassiety instid of sa’J

ety.”

caused consternation throughout th Chinese quarters and what may come ( It ia considered a grave question. Th Chinese hint darkly at revenge, but o whom or how it can be wreaked not mentioned. Sergt. Gillin and h ■quad have made kindling wood < ] gambling tables and apparatus ant have chopped down dozens of massive iron-bolted oak and Australian iro«j wood doors. At present they can j axes under their coats, always rea< j for an emergency in case they shou J find fan-tan doors closed against therj But there is not a game in operation according to reports. A tour of LnspijJ tlon through the gambling alleys au

4

Don’t become constipated Take Beechaf

Pills.

Nothing pays a poorer interest on the! I vestment than wearing a long face. 1 I

Healed in Ten Days. ll

and traits in human life and character, there is nothing more wonderful than those which come from, or are developed in what is known as heredity or atavism. Heredity is an old term, the meaning of which is generally understood. It is a word somewhat broad in its sense and

application.

Atavism, says the Detroit FYee Press, is a newer term, and one with a narrower significance than that conveyed by heredity, although it may he considered as one form of heredity. The technical expression is sometimes written also “avitism,” from the Latin avitus (pertaining to an ancestor or an-

m a ii a. i “Do you have much trouble getting se eestrai). The <term usually applies to vantB in the ccun Watkins r’ “No, indee, some strongly developed peculiarity VVe , ve had eiK , lt cook8 , H ve waitresses ar or trait in character simply; to a mere three lauudre8 , e8 in two months,

mental or moral force or weakness

Mr. ,!:. ni t‘S Kerns, of West LaFayette, Ijl ■ i have used Morris’ English staM, llJ iment on sore shoulders and cuts nnd till. I, und it very satisfaetory. Had ahorse bell d bj a cow, tearing a gash in the tlajl heali d n in t> n days by the nee of this 111 ment. Think it tho finest remedy ever no.* for flesh wounds. Hold by Albert Allen, ji]

which manifests itself at irregular in- Mr. Chauncey M. Depew’s advice is, “G

a..„.k .......... ... an ,” The

houses of Chinatown will yield stfj

prises, and the strange sights and cu ning devices met at every turn are i| teresting. Side doors and trap doo passages and halls interminable ma the strongest impression, but the p liceman's work of destruction is striking a reality to be missed. T doors, although constructed of douA planking studded with holts, have bc’H hewn in parts or torn from their fa8t l ‘i ings Hy crowbars. All that reraainr^x the interior furnishings are pi lei lJ u broken lumber on the floor. Hiy>.,jD

gaining an entrance into many piacesfu the police had to cut through three of’’

these barricades. There was never before such a condition of affairs in the Chinese quarters are now. The Chinese who conduct these games live and sleep in hack rooms that open on passages leading to the gambling-rooms. As the policemen will cut down any door locked against them in the approaches, all gambling places must be left open at night os well as by day, and the result is clocks and other portable articles have been stolen. The Chinese, however, are now keeping watchmen on the doors all niftht long, not as lookouts, but to protect the property.

, , T . South youne man.” The best inducement , c tervals in particular families. It ap- »., ,i ;t the natural resources of the Qrea pears to bo governed by no general South are now offered by the Mobile N: Ohi 11 laws as havo been observed in the ef-, K K ‘ 8ee atlverti9ement8 -

ie : S« y\ se st

r y

re

J*

Cv

fects of heredity in tho physical system. , Mow did Poorley ever get up the courage But it may apply to infirmities or dis- to join the expedition to the North Pole? HI eases sir owing themselves in the blood read over the ice billa of last summer. after lapses at generations in families, j wfty £ a Jmall doctor btU but tha AI Kleptomania is often a form of : all it will cost you to cure any ordinary < :i*S atavism. The innate disposition to , ’ , 'F heu, , , ' ati “ m if / ou uaeCiK.mherlaina Pal , , , , , .... , Halm. Try it and you will be surprised at tM filch, to steal slyly and adroitly, is, prompt relief it affords. The flretapplieatioB sometimes irresisible and ineradicable '^j' 1 quitthe pniu accent bottle* for sale iB . , . , ... . i . • -i i 1 Albert Allen s Drug Store. jnefl

in certain people. It is a taint in their ,

■ J nature something like tlie instinct of! Miss Touchey would imikv just the wife fcfl L 1 an animal of the tower orders, a force som* struggling doctor. Why? She la alwayl

diificult to control where nature is al- tr> vin U " 0 ‘ue one fits.

' lowed free course. The following is an , The breaking up of the winter is the sigrj L illustration of atavism: ! for thl ' breaking up of the system. Nature

RAILROADS IN AFRICA.

Town* In Mafthonalaml No Longer of

Mushroom Growth.

A recent issue of the Engineering Magazine has an interesting survey of * T? Cl 1 1 4- s w* A O

‘Railroad Development in Africa, from the pen of Cyrus D. Adams. Only five years ago, he says, a magnificent harbor was discovered at the moutli of Pungwee river, about one hundred and fifteen miles below the Zambesi delta. It is about two miles wide and six miles long, and on its northern shore has risen the town of Beira, where five hundred Europeans, half of them British, are now living. Beira is one of

Africa’s latest marvels.

Probably no white man six years ago had overseen the barren promontory of sand it occupies. November ‘28, 1893, a locomotive that had been put together in Beira puffed through one of the streets and a little way out of town; for Beira Ls to be the port of Mashonaland, the region of mountain and plateau where British enterprise is opening new gold fields. A month ago thirty-five miles of the new railroad had been completed. The route for nearly half the w ay to yassikesse lies along the Busi river. Its total length is 14ss than two hundred miles, its longest bridge has a span of about three hundred feet, and the cost of the road is estimated at about five million dollars. The Mozambique company, a Portuguese corporation, is carrying out the work, but. by arrangement, the British South Africa company is to have certain privileges in the management of the road, and will build an extension from the Portuguese frontier at Massikesse to Fort Salisbury, the seat of government in Mashonaland. The Portuguese line is to be completed by the end of this year, and then the British extension will be pushed forward. This line will give to Mashonaland— which, in agricultural and mineral resources and the salubrity of its climate, is one of the most favored parts of Africa—its shortest outlet to the sea. Beira is destined to be a port of large importance, and lots for business purposes are now selling for fifteen hundred to twenty-five hundred dollars apiece in a place which not many months ago w-j(.s a barren waste. Five years ago only two or three white men had ever visited Mashonaland; its present population includes three thousand

white settlers.

Fortune** Fr*»ik*.

In unexpected turns of the wheel of fortune, elevating the unknown to places of power and dethroning the mighty without warning France leads the nations, not excepting America, when- the gra-dson of the millionaire may hi a k boots for the grandson of the crossing sweeper. The installation

enue office is es

' V| Some years ago a youth of luflii- i ^WinV^r-fararTna^is of TiJZe.Uon.

this operation. Albert All,

.... .....a BIOS 1 j J , IMS-Vin s ■ •t'lilLh rt"'’) ,V "branch of £ ence ODe °* ver y best families of assistance iu s a > is c , or a >r e ° , a pi-i nc jp a i city, a youth, who from the ’

s operation.

the pension or the land office.

force of necessity had never knovjn oc- How about the races; did you come ouleve

Under such circumstances it is cheap-I casiontoBteal , n order u , supply his | Wel >-t&ere wa» nothin* odd about it; I 1o

er for the national government to in-

erect buildings titan to continue to pay who6e t the young lnan was at the ! with Dewitt’s Sarsaparilla. A fbe

rent. The only question is, at what tlma Evidences subsequently revealed ! * *

ur hea ert Alh

point it becomes a matU-r of economy, d , selo8od the fact that the same youth j be man who seasons sausages m to build rather than to hire, | had T>eon for y( . arfl enf7aped in ^ eora . 080p ,er ’ he ° ften ha8 a sage

Naturally the people of a growing town are convinced of the necessity for a public building long before congress can see the matter in the same light. The congressman from the district, anxious to make himself popular, urges the importance of the building on

mission of similar crimes. His petty pilferings had araouted in the aggregate to hundreds of dollars, many of the things stolen being articles for which the fellow had no earthly use. Investigations into his history betrayed the fact that one of the young man’s

was a

his associates, and sometimes succeeds ancestors four generations back „ m obtaining the consent of congress to , noted thief, the bad blood manifesting the project before the building is really | itself in thls one instance (and in this

Morris' English Stable Powders

Not only cures but prevents disease. _ to your horses two or three times a day w keey them in splendid condition and siri'

make them Slick. Fat and Gloss Changes the entire system and puts them good shape for work. Full pound packae 25 cents. Sold by Albert Allen. jm

needed.

Formerly authority to erect buildings was inserted in appropriation bills, and there was a great chance for “leg-roll-

one instance only, so far as the records could be known) after the lapse of seventy years. This is not only a striking illustration of atavism, but tho fact

ing that is, < ongressman Smith would j a j so proves the truth of the old society hi ip on Congressman Jones scheme if aphorism that “ii takes more tlian two

Congressman Jones would help Con-

gressman Smith. At present each building is autltnrized by a separate act, but there is still some opportunity for log-

rolling.

generations to make a gentleman.” A very interesting case of atavism has been recently discovered in one of our large cities. A minister of great piety and retirement in character has a

All government building is done un- hripht) promise »o n , wh o, in defiance

der the superintendence and.control of the treasury department. First, congress authorizes the building and appropriates money for the site and the structure. Next a lot is selected, approved and purchased. Flans arc made by tho superv ising architect, and the building is erected. The custodian—though he may be. and frequently is, the postmaster—is under the direction of. and reports to, the secretary of the treasury. The reason for this is. perhaps, that in the early days government buildings were chiefly for the offices of collectors of customs, who are under the secretary of the treasury, and only incidentally

for post office use.

No doubt the eagerness of communities to obtain a costly and ornamental building at the government expense has caused this system to be abused. Attempts have been made to lay down certain conditions which must be satis fled before a town or city shall be deemed to need a government building. Thus, it might be required that the population shall be so many, or the receipts of the post office so much, or that there shall he other uses than the post office for such a building. No such restrictions have been made, and whether a town is to have been a building or not is frequently a matter of favor, or even ol accident. Inasmuch as a government rarely takes a backward step in such cases as this, the chances arc that hundreds of new buildings will be erected during

the next few years.

of all education, in defiance of both precept and example, has become a confirmed habitue of livery stables and sporting circles. He is a patron of tho race track particularly. lie has no moral weakness except in the penchant, to bet on fast horses. Where did this young man first receive the touch or force that led to such a career? Every element in his training has been in efforts to take him in a contrary direction, from that of hif present habits. Recently the discover; was made that the great-grandfather of the boy was a breeder of fine running horses, and that one of the passions o his life was in betting at the rac< course. Tills is an example of avatism in the fourth generation. Early in this century an immoral woman came to New York from Europe. She raised a large family of children, nearly every one of whom landed in a prison in early life. The criminal records of the country show that three hundred of the progeny of that woman have been notorious felons and inmates of penitentiaries and other prisons in various parts of the country. The Riots doubtless Illustrate the laws of both heredity and atavism in their fullest

degrees.

FAMOUS HOUNDS KILLED.

I'li-asures ot Life in India.

A band of pojsoners is believed to be at work on the railways in the Northwest Provinces, says a Bombay paper. There have been during the past few months a large number of deaths in carriages among the native third-class passengers traveling on the East Indian

railway. The bodies are handed over

One Hundred Thoroughbrnd Docs Killed

Because of Lark of food.

One hundred of the finest-bred hounds in this country were killed recently at the Stokes & Whitohouse ranch on the Laramie plains because there was nothing for them to eat, and the man who was in charge of them thought it more merciful to shoot them than to let them starve to death. He did not dare to turn them loose to range the country in their hungry con-

dition.

A few years ago the ranch was the

.of Mme. Grew in the Elvsee is a happy • awakened the suspicions of the police, instance. She was the daughter of a | or perhaps they have recognized their tanner, and earned her living in Paris incompetence to prevent or detect such as a bonnet maker. When she married, crimes. As, however, the native passenher whole fortune was less than five gers contribute over ninety per cent, of hundred dollars; at her death she , coaching receipts, it is high time some leaves something like a quarter of a efforts were made to afford them promillion to her daughter. She did not tection for their life and property. invent an ancestry with her promotion, | nor assume fine airs with her rich i A Critical rase.

A .L e You Interested in the Southl

„ - your own terms, In the most nrolfort vi anl

by the raihvay authoritie's toThe^lice, ! ofd^untr^ r .g 'T “ Sfri and Ahniu^" ,hc Y"'1 who dispose of them os expi*itiously as i i. i Vi 1 u'* 1 ."i . nn t ! le Matter descrintivc of the advantages of thJ possibk* In most cases there is little or ^ oroT^h ° . T u Home Heek rT^'J!’’';" "P<*4 . , ,, , ,, ■ imported Iho owners sank five him- t. K< r -’ excursion tickets at ei?

_. a --... -

■nL“L.~Z SS'-SSSSS *

The rnnch v. ab thou p/acticall. ubau-' semYm ,l ''’* n Ihbro or. Er.?-; doned. It took a hors .1 steer each 1,'' ';', p'"'' ; '“".so ofeight room* .l»y to foci jh. hounds thuru US* aXrt'MnST’.jT no more such animals left on the ranch i u il A. mills.

the keeper killed all. Tho ranch is |

by man and;

Carawrj; Do you think that Othello any right to kill Desdemona?. Latenight*(sa agely): Certainly I do. Any woman who so pi bed ought to he killed.

Files of people have piles, but De Wit Witch Hazel Salve will cure them. Albe Allen, agt. ly

Chappy: I weally believe I will study lanj guages, doncherknow. MUs James: How per fectly delighul! Yon will commence wit|

Englsh, of course?

'

“There Is a salve for every wound. ' We rB fer to Dewitt’* Witch Hard Salve, cur* burns, bruises, cuts, indolent sores, ss a lot* application in the nostrils it cures catarr* and always cures piles. Albert Allen, agt I

“I have iust been enjoying myself amom th* breakers,” as the young man sdidwhoha

boon talking to the kitchen girls.

Are you insured? If not. nnw i«, iho ti n ,„*

A" you insured? If not, now I* the time I provide yourself and family with a bottle 1 Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and DiarrlnJ lt( no dy as an insurance against anv serio* results from an attack of bowel complai* during the summer months. It is uln

ci rtain to 1 , nei ded and should be proeur* 'I ■ 1 1 No other remedy e.,:i lake it- ; sJ

or do its work. 25 and 50 cent bottles for at Albert Allen's Drug Store. jnel

The cremationist is never a loafer. Hi firmly believes in every man timing his dusl

Bad complexion indicates an unhenltbi state of the system. DeWitt’s Little Earl! Kisers are pills that will correct this condi tion. They act on the liver, they act on thfl stach.moy th eact on the bow<Is. lyl

Wagner music is being experimented with >1 a rain producer.

Nearly every family in the Cnited StutJ k-, 1^ a bottle of whiskey in the house. TUfl

as well to Iowa. Kansss and Vermonw

a.- Jn .states wher. is not prohibited! Boom keep It as a beverage, some as a t onicJ aoine as a mi lieine. In eilhar on#e it s

portant that it should he old and pure.

i. \. Harper'aNelson County, Ky., Wbfcl key has been examined by the leading cheml ists throughout the count ry and its purl tv haa

been highly commended, j-ol!

6m*

by Higgins A Prather, Roachdale, Ind.' A teamster often loses his back board,

does a boarding-house keeper.

Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy

Is famous an a

Cure for severe colds.

Famous as a

Preventive of pneumonia.

Famous as a

Preventive and cure for croup. {•‘V nous ** or relief it affords in case of w hooping cough. I ainous as a safe and pleasant Medicine for children. Try it. 50 cent bottles for sale at Albert Allen’s Drug Store. , jne

-«o ami see i nroop’s pictures. Cabinet! a A” r ‘ 07t 'n. Satisfaction gurranteedl Southwest corner of Public Square. 5tf

now entirely deserted

beast

^ hi n Baby was sick, we gave her Castorla. When she was a Child, she cried for Castorla.

gowns. Her manners were character- One of our city physicians recently

ized by simplicity, her accounts were received the following letter from a York the other evening a clergyman carefully audited to the smallest de- country physician (?): “Dear dock, I j illustrated the importance of persistent tail, and she set her face against court have a pashunt whos phisieol sines agitation as follows: etiquette. | shows that the windpipe was ulcerated i In a can of milk bound for market

j of, and his lung have dropped intoo his : were two frogs. One of the frogs be1 stumick. He is unabel to swoller and came despondent and said: “What is

A ytieor IlluKtration. In an address to young men in New Wht ' D ^ bocAn,e she clung to Castoria.

4c had Chffitrun, she gave them CastoriAi

Wanted to He IlltHuadeii.

An American paper published in Paris | tear his stumick tube is gone. I hav , the use of kicking any more? I’m going recently contained the following unique giv hym evry thing under heaven with- to tho bottom,” and he went. The advertisement: “A young man of agre,»- out effeckt. his father is welty Onerable other one kept up a deliberate kicking, able presence and desirous of getting an d in fluenshial. he is an active men>- and when the can was opened at the married would like to make the ac- ber of the M. E. chirsch and god nos I | end of the journey he was found to be quaintance of an aged and experienced don’t want to loose hym. what shall I j alive. He had kicked so hard that he 1 gentleman who could dissuade him from due. ans buy return male, yours in had churned out a piece of butter, and

taking the fatal step.”

Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castorla. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castorla. Children Cry for

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Pitcher’s. Castorla.