Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 July 1893 — Page 2

LOST IX ST KELT OAKS.

k Queer Collection of Articles Forsrotten by Passengers.

anyhow

7

It is the only bow (rinp) which cannot be pulled from the watc. To be had only with Jas. Boss Filled and other watch cases

stamped with this trade mark Ask your jeweler for pamphlet

KeystoneWatch CaseCo.. PHILADELPHIA.

he Office of • Cbtcafe Com parr That Ha liepuier Mt3i>eaa* of Curiveitlce —Evcrrthinif from » Nifht tiown to ad K»r Tmuiprl.

lllfif

d

6 PER CENT

CALL OX

GEOimil

No. 22 Sootl Jactm Strutt, GEEENCASTLE, IND.

Gas Fill aii Plcin

I will Rtteml to nil rders for gas fitting and plumbing promptly. All work thoroughly tested and Warranted to Give Satisfaction

And prict.- Tory low. Give me a call.

FR^D. WEIK.

TLon-i-

t*e

imrs „ -

2 • 1 • • ^r«-r • • a* hy5 Pi W VEI* CORSETS. 2 n P x —' R*;,r < ' • • • IlllllSejvi | t »i r t O fft r- v • •

fart

und seller or t ritxe s V k L r< ' u. the /.r O I IlLJU Ft r umu termorv • I 1 * ■ ■ ■ ■ \ L.

W. L. DOUGLAS

S3 SHOE NoTiAp.

Do yx wear there? When next in need try a pair. Best in the world.

$5 00L S400, $3.50 ♦250 ♦ 2.25 ♦ 2.00

rcR

jsaife,

I s 2 00 11.75 FOR BOVS 41.75

If yx want DRESS SHOE re»(j« In the latest styles, doe’t pay $6 to S8, t^f rry S3, S3.50, $4.00or $5 Ss». They ft ec.al to custc*™ r.ade and lock and wear as welt. Ifyoo »ish to eCMvoreize in ycurf;:twear, dc sc by purthas n^ W. L Debras Shoes. Ka-e and price Stamped on the bettwn, Icok for it when you bty. W. L. IH>rGLAS, Urwokton, Mas*. Soli by P R. CHRISTIE

\ ULCERS,

CANCERS,

SCROFULA,

VV* SALT RHEUM, \ RKSUMATISM, BLOOD POISON.

these and ertrj kindred disease arisiM from Impure blood enocesefnlly treaied by that never-failing ar.d beet of akll tonics and medicinca,

■W's Specific SSfv

Bock* on Blood and Skin

Disease* free.

Printed netimonial* sent on

application. Addreee

t*“ Swift Specific Co

ATLANTA.CA

d fckin \

seaton 5 CO.,

I'M. B. TRiSTaI

JOB. M. ALLS*

VESTAL ALLEN. -A. TJ cr -T X O :>r ETELF*. fc

GIIH K>< ASTT.K. Wiii attei 1) Laatt arder Ihrongb * *■ fT---e ilreec's 1 ' “t'r- ' • erery '» • :2re - . "

(•.e*n.‘ vt adirr.

You've left your umbrella. Is-Tt'" ami the conductor waved frantically in the air a parasol adorned with multifarious tassels. The lady addressed, who had just got off the car. turned, seir.ed the parasol and without a word of thanks disappeared in the throng which crowds Madison '■treet at the fashionable shopping hour. “Women are curious creatures." remarked the conductor to an observant passenger •'They're so forgetful, always leaving things in the cars, and when we ha]>i>en to notice them Wfore they get out of sight they never thank us. And. by the way. there's an awful lot of stuff left in the cars. I've found near!.. «-v» -- t! Last trip I picked up a lady's purse " “What Incomes of all the articles that are left?" asked the observant passenger, whose curiosity had been aroused. • Why. they are all turned in at the office If you have time a trip there would be interesting.” The office of the West division street railroad is located at the corner of Washington and Jefferson streets, and thither the observant passenger wended her way. says the Chicago Times. The young lady in cb rge of the lost and found department readily permitted. herself t" be int rviewed The office is a commodious one. surrounded by rows of pigeon holes, in which neatly ]a>>eled and ticketed is to be seen nearly every conceivable article that is capable of being “lost and found." “You see.” said the custodian, “our stock is rather low at present, because articles unclaimed after thirty days are returnei. to the conductor finding them. Quantities of fruit and flowers are found, but they are immediately returned to the finder, as is the rule with all perishable goods. This morning a package of canned goods came in. Perhaps you would like to examine my list." Here the young lady extended her record book for inspection. There were umbrellas by the score, with straight sticks and crooked sticks, and some with no sticks at all. There were gloves from the genteel suede to the one of plain brown cotton. There were rings from the noble diamond to the one of paste. An Episcopalian prayer-book had been left at the close of Lent, which awakens the ^uery: “Has its owner ceased to pray?" Next on the list was a nursing bottle. Its poor little owner of course went hungry until another could be procured at a neighboring store: the 1-oby meanwhile threatening, as best it could, to change its boarding place if it must be so cruelly treated. A lantern, an old-fashioned one. was there. Some Diogenes' search had been brought to a sudden close; or had he found it useless? Two items—things of much use— similar, yet not alike, were scrawled across the page: one a check for fifty dollars, and the other a pair of checked “pants.'' each infinitely useful while it lasts, but one representing more than the other, being able to clothe the whole body and the "inner man" with food as well. Here the observant passenger learned that carpenters lose saws, washerwomen lose soiled clothes and soap, barters lose cases of their dangerous implements. “men of all work ' lose old hatchet-. farmer- lose carpet-bags, deaf persons lose their ear trumpets, workmen lose dinner pails, lovers forget candy boxes and opera glasses, and ladie:— well, la-lies sometimes lose their night gowns. Even a bottke of consumption cure had l>een left with no one to cure. A blundering youth had mislaid his tickets for a theater—more perishable goods. Rut there were three small wax rabbits. Who lost them? Crinoline? Yes; one package. Its loss to the owner will never be known, but one thing is assured: one conductor's wife, at least, will lead the fashion next bunday in a fin de siecle skirt. At last, but not least, was found a rosary. Its sight recalled “Sister Dolorosa." with a wealth of sweet flowers that grew in the Kentucky convent garden. What new penance would this pure creature have to perform for losing the string of brown beads, over which her hands had passed for years? None, hoped the observant passenger, as she left the office just in time to see a fat woman “lose her grip" on a trailcar and indent the wet block pavement with her plenteous personality.

AIR-TIGHT PIES.

Th* Man with the Ginger Beard Tail* a Story of Karly Colorado ISaya. “Them fellers at Chicago is a makin’ a whole lot of money in the hasli business.” said the man with the ginger beard, “but I jist bet they ain't none of them got on to the scheme that a feller out in Colorado did oncet." The grocer sat looking dreamily out the .. imiow, wondering wher. Vs commission was coming with the postmastership, says the Indianapolis Journal The man with the ginger beard noticed his at "traction got insulted, walked across the street, thought better of it. came back and went on as though the grocer had exhibited the deepest interest. “It was jist like this." he said. “This here feller made a thousand dollars in one year a-sellin' air-tight pies.” “What is air-tight pies?” “Air-tight pies," said the man with the ginger beard, “is pies which is airtight. The feller made 'em this way Them pies was made out of two crusts, and the fillin' was wind, which he blowed into them till they was about two inches thick. You see. he sold them pies to the tourists, to be et off the premises—mostly when they was out explorin’. Feller would buy the [ pie. thinking it was the thickest pie I for the money that ever he had bought, I and so it was; but when he come to bite , into it his teeth would come together j so sudden that some of 'em was jist as , likely to break off as not Rut then 1 tenderfeet is made to be skinned, and 1 when the Loud ■—flu r, ne a good man's way he is a sucker himself if he don't ; do him up as he should be did.”

SHOOT ONLY AT ONE THING.

Hauler* as Well a* Other Professionals Have Their Specialties That there is such a thing as a specialty among professional hunters ! will strike some people as peculiar . The commonly accepted idea is that if a man can shoot at one thing he can at another. Rut such is not the case, says the St Louis Glol«e-Democrat. Not ! only that, but by trying all kinds of i game a hunter may ruin himself for The man who hunts snipe is gen-

j erally through when his seasons end If he shoots any other game it is for j his own use. He some days sends in , two hundred birds as the result of one j day's work. Strings of eighty, ninety, and one hundred are not infrequent His harvest is at the season of the year when the birds sell at two dollars and j fifty cents and three dollars a dozen. The duck hunter is also of a class to ( himself. This is particularly true of j the wood-duck hunter. The chicken and quail hunters are generally the same, and in large part they are known as farmers. Deer and wild turkey 1 also go together. They are found in the same section of c >untry anti at the same time. Their turkeys average them over one dollar each, and when they run across a flock it is an easy matter to get ten or twelve out of it This hunter is supposed to spend the balance of the year in chopping railroad ties on government land, drinking moonshine and keeping out of the way of revenue officers. The woodcock hunters also stand out alone. Squirrels and rabbits alone are hunted by anybody and everybody:

AT THE 'PHONE.

Emperor William IfrBuing His Imperial Orders bj Wires. Emperor William II. has his own imperial way of using the telephone, says the Appeal-Avalanche. Despite mistakes caused by the emperor's refusal to name himself at the opening of his conversation, as other people do, he invariably introduces his telephoned orders, merely with the words: “I command that." and so forth. As soon as a chief of department hears these words he motions that his subordinates mu-t at once leave the room. The significance of this arrangement is supposed to be that the chief is having something like an audience with his majesty, and that it would be presumptuous for a person not summoned to hear the imperial voice to occupy the room into which its tones are conveyed. At the end of the conversation the emperor walks away without saying “goodby,” and the chief with whom he has conversed must listen for five or six minutes afterward to make sure that the imperial orders have been completed. Then he calls back his assistants, and the usual etiquette is resumed.

The Mudstone Myth.

“Here's something that will interest you." said a physician, as he placed a lump of slaty-looking stone in the

hands of a scribe

DUTY TO GOD AND MAN

DRESS REFORM IN RUSSIA.

Va Athletic Prelate Who Declined to Shel-

ter Behind the Cloth.

The late Rishop Selwyn. of New Zealand and Melanesia, was well known during his university days at Oxford as a devotee of the noble art of selfdefense. says the Washington News. He incurred a great deal of animosity ; from a oertnir' section in New Zealand, ; * • • , . - - - . . .

f to his

during the t* »t. une day he was asked 1

“There, that’s one lie that will stick,"! the druEcnst to himself as he fastened oB

l**ter the Great Oocw Knforre,. a Drastic lexetid. Thu never fails to cure.” on tbti

Rule Atiionir Hts People. of a porous plaster.

Peter the Grvat. who ruled

Strong nerve*, sweet sleep, good apps

When ^ Russia from IP. 2 to 1 •‘35. returned from Wealthy digestion, and best of all pure bl England and Holland, where, dis- %Te given oy Hood's Sarsaparilla guised as a peasant, he had learned to — build ships and had educated himself The Mistakes V, us Other trades, the semi- of life are many-aome great and some a^ barbarous attire of his subject* classify them as w» feel their effec* j

..says th- h-thier and l"** :V b l!L“!

t. . ,» ' <-r K- , t r »r- • • 1 -i. ^

uuring tne war. I strong contrast to the gart ft “I bv a roueh in one oi t*ie r-acK streets ^ 3 Tberecan be nu Uiisiakc in taking tae K J Auckland if he was the “bishop who of the lands he had jxsited, Itato, fc, itou.cklyreiu

1SSUM an edict tnat Russians ammul Don . t makf , he mi , uke of keUing aDJ . t

wear, instead of the long, ungainly else for Malaria.

garments to which they were ac- j customed. clothing similar to that “What's the name of your new boat?’ worn in western Europe. In order to n » m ed it Bridget, after the cook, becatd hasten the reform Peter levied a tax makes sack heavy rolls. on beards and long coats, and samples Q ur old Fire Company. i‘. of modern clothing were exhibited j “That was a gay old company that w| outside the gates of the cities. If a longed to. Joe; away back in '68. when* subject refused to pay his tax before ail (j 1 W i t h tbe machine.' Do yoj

bishop who

backed up the Maoris." Receiving a reply in the affirmative, the rough, with a “take that, then!" struck his lordship

in the face.

“My friend." said the bishop, “my Bible teaches me that if a man smite thee on one cheek turn him the other," and he turned his head the cither way. His assailant, slightly bewildered, struck him again. “Now." said his lordship, “having done my duty to God. I will do my duty to man,” and, taking off his coat and hat. he gave the anti-Maori champion a most scientific thrashing. On another occasion he was going down the river Waikato with a Maori, when the latter, who was very lazy

he was permilted to enter the city his member thst big fire in Hotel Row, one't beard was shorn and his coat was ing night, when fifteen people were j l shortened. The provisions of the out of their burning room, and came J edict were rigidly enforced, to the the ladder in their night clothes: ae4 | groat amuaement of the c-urtiers. but ‘Dick'Green brought down two‘kids ail • i>efore it had OMM many bloody ; —one in bis arms, the other ilungtoh:* I insurrections The people 'strongly ' Dick " He «° l Ihe catarrh dread! | oppo-ed the order, owing to the incon- fro “ f0 much "d suffered fr

it brought. De- fiT « y«»rs or more. We thought once h

privedof their beards and long coats S^^^C^rh^^l

tried it. and it cured him up as sound

; flint. 1 tell you. Joe, that catarrh remd

a great thing. It saved at* good a man i brave a fireman as ever trod shoe leathe

left off paddling the canoe, at the same | rired of their

time mattering that if Selwyn were the EussiaTls suffered f r „ ra co i d aDl1 not a bishop he would-well. “go for handreds died . The protest of the him. In a moment the bishop told rlch and th( , u , ars of the ^ we re the man to turn the canoe ashore, I ithout avai] for lhe monarfh . a] . where, stripping himself of everything thoutrh of a commendable,

he “ ld- P° lDUn? to 1 j ambition to improve the condition of | a wise and good men does nothing ft “-ri v v it .s .v 1 his people, extended few favors. The but e vervtbing for the sake o

“The bishop lies there: the man is ' ;va> weU pleMed wi th the result , rt l.

of his reform, and during the re- |

mainder of his reign the uncouth clothing of the past was rarely seen.

here I am quite ready: come on. The Maori did not “come on." however. but quietly resumed his work

without another murmur.

MEXICAN DRIED FLIES.

THE DARKIES OF OLD POINT.

It Never Fails to Cure. And for that reason every dealer is a ired to guarantee Dr Wells New Coug, and wiil refund the money in every c not satisfactory. Price 11 cents: trial t

free at Albert Allen's.

How the Indian Takes Sweet Revenge on

Hi* Winged Tormentor.

"No matter what it may be. if an article brings a fair price I deal in it," said a commission merchant to a writer in the Waverly Magazine. “My

Visitor: Why, Dottie. you have your

As a Natural S-rvitor the Negro I* Work

Ing Out a Perfect salvation. j eyet h avn't you’ Dottie: Yetb. h “The ever-looming smile of the cour- d on -t m j n d. She hath mine. ■ teous head-waiter, whose long service j , I has made him an authority on matters ‘ rtA’.' ’^“'duie' V'y^rg’X*f.n'r has h£?J

germane to Old Point, mitigates the ployed in makingDeWitfs Little F.arlyM last venture consists'of dried flies, just | situation and robs grumbling of its j Altort AUeml

common flies which come from Mexico. 1 sharpest edge. The way the soft anPeople buy them for their singing swersof that kindly son of Ham turn birds. I sell them retail to the deal- ' away wrath is the greatest triumph of era. Flies are plentiful in the tropical Christianity 1 have witnessed fur many

valleys and the time of the Mexican a long day. | "One of my emtomtrs came in to-dai Indian is not particularly valuable.) “The pattence of Bagroea, who 1 “ k J d I “* ^

ork from daylight to late into the , Newman Grove, Jfeb. “Of courae 1 if

j “Doe* Jaggs seemed changed any ainl stay at the gold cure* " Yes. he'* all drink any kind of at get now.I

When he can no lontrer sleep in his hut work from daylight to late into the Newman Grove! Neb on account of the swarms of flies at-' night. appeals to me. savs a writer in ’"'p Ghamberlain's Cough Remedy, al

1 -..T* 7 _. . * . . nid not Risk vn s#**- anv ntnpr. I harp I

“ 1. . ' , , ,7' I “**•*“• rvr tv r. ' ... did not ask to •«* anv other. I have I traded by the filth which accumulates j Kate r lelu s It asningt n, ns t- -thing y < t s< M a medicine that would looaea al

It is one more Beve a severe cold so quickly as that Ra

about his fr >nt door he sometimes is ! else has in old Virginia.

stung into a desire for revenge on his I proof of the splendid qualities of a race S'^t^sixiy daya and^F/nooTnow'oL th *

| bert Allen, Druggist.

> . sltor: Why are you in pris<! poor fellow- Convict No. 1313: Excua but 1m not at liberty to aay. mum. ■

enemies. Revenge is sweet. and : Iselonging to the soil and only needing j case where it failed to give the most d sweeter if there Is any money in it- He industrial and moral training to be a so cent bottles for sale If

goes to the woods and collects a num- blessing to themselves and to the

her of green twigs of a certain tree, public. They are the right people in These he lays in a pile on the floor of the right place, and when I hear palehls hut. with some dry twigs under | faces declaiming against lazy niggers.’ them. Then from another tree he gets j I wonder where their eyes are situated, a gum which he boils into a thin [ There are 'lazy niggers.' lots of them, sirup and spreads on the walls of his 1 just as there are white tramps, but all

hut. The flies are attracted by its j negroes are not lazy,

fragrant and far-reaching odor. They “I've never rung my t»ell but it has gather to feed on it. When the hut is , l>een answered promptly by black boys black with them the Indian sets fire as courteous and painstaking as their to the twigs on the floor and closes the , elders in the dining-room. The chamapertures from the outside. The , bermaids are equally civil and goodtwigs emit an aromatic smoke which natured. and 1 shall return north, more kills the flies and they fall to the and more convinced that the negro is a floor in thousands. Then the native's natural servitor whose defects are due wife dries them while he goes to sleep to slavery and neglect. With enlight-

again.'

A MINK TRAGEDY.

enment and opportunity the black race will fulfill a great mission. Assertion and insolence are the growth of ignorance and wrong. Abolish both, and these people will redeem themselves."

STIMULATING GROWTH.

Tbp Mynt^rlou* CIobp of the Life of m

Cruel Animal.

For a couple of months I have been trying to solve the problem of a dead mink I found lying in my barn on my

return home. The mink had been dead A rr * < ' ,, c» l and scimtiflc l »* I ut B short time, and had no wounds HtaltJ In France. it except at the throat where i ^ practical, scientific use of elec-

of Flec-

upon

two small holes had let out its life trieity is made in France to stimulate blood. How it came to this end has growth and increase the product troubled me ever since, says a cor- fiv—. crops. An apparatus which respondent of Forest and Stream, h** been successfully used is called the There were no cats in the barn, and geomagnetifer. says the I’hiladelphia the rats “instinctively had left it" as ; K e(, ° r d. and consists of a high pnjle set well, during mv absence from home. I | field where the pvotatoes or at length concluded that two maj* ; other crops are growing. It support* minks must have had a quarrel in the Ul1 i r,su laG*d head of galvanized iron, bam and one had become a victim of ""bich terminates in the air in a sort the fight. ' of plexus of punts and branches made The bam is close to the dam of one co PP t ' r ' T-'-'s c >1 lector of electriciof my p>nds. and had been frequented *- v c ' mmunicates by wire with a netby minks in pursuit of the chickens wor b other wires, which ramify which sometimes took up a night's through the earth ar< >und the foot of lodging in it. But as they were re- pxile and among the growing roots, moved to other quarters the minks '“ect.s. cab-ages, puatoes or other crop must have had the building all to buried deep enough to be out of tbe themselves. I skinned the body, which j wa . v in cultivating the crop, could not have been dead many hours. 1 If i* found by expiericnce that this and the marks in the throat showed apparatus collects the electricity which that only'one firm and deadly grip had “ 1 I , ' a . vs cxi'-ts in the atmosphere, and been taken. It is interesting to know : w hi» is made especially manifest by that these cruel leasts have no bowels storm-, rain. wind. etc., and transmits of compiassion even for each other. it to the earth and the stratum of air nearest the earth. The resulting An Ocean Traveler'* Plaint. i -timulus to the crop is very marked.

toilet to >on*K< «|4|on 1

Tbe -uie ,.f Indiana, Putnam County. In the Putnsm Circuit Court, S«pt*inber

Term, p '. A. (rad R. Mathews

v».

I .o-rt 1: Irixerton et al. Comi.Dint “ Ml? To i i’et title to real estate. New comet :_,e PLirtiff. by Smiley A Nef. ais Attorn v-. and files crmilaint herein. Vogettier with i»n atfil .yit tbst said defendant. tbe unknown bH-f nt Samuel M Rodeer*. drceased. are 1. t resofents ol tbe .state • f

Indiana.

Notice is there! te hereby riven raid defendant*, that ut.letf they t>e and at rear on tbe first day of the next Term of tke Putnam Circuit Court, to holden on the 5th day ofkei'temb* r. A D 18?'. at the Court H-ust in Gremc o'le. in said County and rdate, and

cenur to said complain, tbe same

answer or

w , t,eard and determined in iL»ir ab>*ne*| Witness my name and the seal of said ” r urt, affixed at Greenrastle, this 5th day of July.

A. D.ltKC.

DANIEL T. DARN ALL, Clerk.

The Feanire We l-ose. Small coppier coins are lost in such enormous numbers that the government is obliged to keep on coining cents at the rate of s-vera' million* "f them every month. They change hands so often as to l>e subject to a multitude value, they are not taaen care <>f. This i> iio" , .1. — ,,f regret to I ije.lc rn. inasmuch as he buys the pseunies in blank from a firm in Connecticut at the rate of i.OOb for $1. On reaching the mint in I’hiladelphia. whence all of them are. issued, they have merely to lie stamp>ed. There are 119,000.000old cop pier p>ennies somewhere Nobody knows what has become of them, e xcept that once in awhile a single specimen turns up in change. A few years ago 4.500,000 bronze 2-cent pieces were set afloav Three millions of them arc still outstanding. Three million 8eent nickel pieces are scattered over the L'mted Ntatea. but it is very rarely that one is seen. Of LOO.OOO haif-eents, which eorrespyond in value to English farthings, not one has been retumep to the government for recoinage or if

In most modern shipys everything ! In one test within a supyerfk-ial area of

A patient of mine sacrificed to big social halls—, thirty-two meters the pyotato yield, in gave me that this morning with as smoking and music rooms, huge sa- ; pr.tpyorti di to the yield of a<ljoining grand an air as If she were giving me loons, etc. The modern sleeping areas not electrically stimulated, was a silver dinner service. No doubt she ! c»Wn one can barely swing a kitten in, as ninety-one to sixty. Another repyort thought it hail as great a value. It's a and. worst of all. there is. in most showed *ixty-th-ee kilograms of pwitamadstone. You've read accounts of shipys. not a place to put away a thing, t «• - as against thirty-eight them. Put them on a dog bite and Imagine the discomfort on a voyage to grown under ordinary conditions,

j they will suck it and give off green Australia, of having to drag out one's froth, and all that sort of rubbish ! trunk every time one wants a handkerThere's no such thing as a madstone chief or change of clothes. The Mes-

. in the work! Touch the stone to your sageries Maratimes and the New North sandmls for Horses. ' tongue. Notice anything? Sticks. German Lloyd boats supply wardrobe,) Mud shoes for horses are common in I doesn't it? That is because it is anhy- cupboard and drawers in large airy ' certain parts of Washington state, be-

Other root crops and grapyes give equal-

ly good results.

drous. It has gone through a slight cabins. In the English boats we are ing used on horses in plowing the low

Ignorance of the merits of DeWitt's M Early Risers 1* a misfortune. Th( <.el jiills regulate the liver, cure headach* pepsia. bad breath, constipation and bt

ness. Albert Allen, axt.

The fool seeketb to pluck the fly St mule's hind leu but tbe wise man letl

job to the highest bidder.

DeWitt's Witch Hard Salve cures :il® DeWitt's Witch Harel isalve cures •"( D< Witt s W - h Hare) Salve cures ’ DeWitt's Wit,h Hare! Salve cures ala

Albert Alien, act.

- R:;T il get wind of it. it was no fault of |

bodies.

M: ' 1 a 1: • . M !>. ; ew's advid South young than." The best inf I - 0.1th are 1. w . t*. r t ’ • • the Moby 1. !. a t rt, o'-.:.--.

Weren't yon surprised when hej N Wh, -l.oiild 1 • " Ever| was."

Distemper Among Hd| Cough*. InSuenra. Enirootic, tsrrha! affections of the horse po

speedily cured by the use t • • - Q !> ■ ' — I •• : - 1 iea-i ng f '■ : ! .rt: ■ - ,r . t -frtitn evs I’nce 50 cents. Sold bv Albert Allen

A light bonnet adds height to a figs, ers worn under the brim of the bat s.

one look taller

Fora cut. bruise, burn or scald nothing equal to Chainberlan'* Fait

It heal* the parts more quickly tB

other application, and unle

ess the

very severe, no scar !s left. For saff bert Allen. Druggist.

The court and harem of the Suite key numbers in all 5.000 persona.

All the talk in the world will notl yon so quickly as one trial of DeWil >1 •« affections and piles. Albert Allen.

In Braril the illiterates amount! cent of the entire population.

How's Your Horse]

Morris English Stable Liniment lively cure h:s lameness. Sprains. Sweeney* Galls. Puff*. Poll Evil, SC Callouses, Cuts and Flesh wound*

dhscription. No other preparation ftT promptne***- safety anci econonn®

bert AlW

Lord Dufferin. Kngland ambassadoJi

25:. and fl.OO. Sold by Albert AU*

is an expert bicyclist.

k^il^v^etable health producer 6 : J Link Early Risers cure malarious & and regulate the stomach and bowenl prevents headache and dixziness. ■ Allen, agt. .

Are You Interested in thej I h isands of a< res of fertile lat^ r .. . m tracts to suit, at low prid

— - - .-wit, a t 1'

>"ur own terms, in the most prodl

mo t henlthfu! States of the Vi

sinpi and Alabama.

M kb r descriiit i ve of the advantL South and information repardiffi 1 Seekers Excuraioa tickel

chemical change anJ has lost a part of going backward, says London Truth, and wet lands of the val’ev north of Trc v lowVa* dkn p a r-. »w... 4 . 4 V. w »—. ^ — _ 4 — — * * v . a V. --1 f. I *3 _— \ _ 4 t . *. 3 3 — —. _ — v »»*. 4 —. 1. tv' t * — — — , . . _ _ tor ' v,

the water thatwas in its original com- the older L-ats of our leading com- Numner nearly every spring. The mud 1*® 1 ''J'' Grf ? ne 't* enera ‘Agent. 1®’«| position, so that it readily absorbs the panies having better cabin aceommo-, shoe consists of a heavy board about General !*a™*eJi-lr'A°* »• ! moisture. It will stick to a cut c-r u datlor tfea» Iba new Wo area ' * . oite or anything else that is we L and ienng pec,pie. and it seems ineivd* t. n inch, > long, rou'n', : ,• in ^n>nt On: '

j that is all there is to it. But it s a R-de the public stand this unnecessary this board a redhot shoe of the i:ze I , harmless sort of superstition, and if it discomfort. j worn on tnc horse s fooj f u r which it is i makes any poor devil comfortable, for Aatioilr of somUced ChoHw ! intended is P 100 ^ ‘‘ burns into g-oodness sake let him believe in it” Q v , * • P v ' it to a depth almost sufficient to burv Surpliced choirs, wearing tbe vest- it6elt It * i# Decessarv that th< . ^ i

ment now used under teat name, date jj ave a j on l( ' 1 snoe

1 lie lied of thf* i'ar ifir.

If the Pacific could be laid bare we should have a most singular spectacle There would be a number of mountains with truncated tops scattered

over

and long corks. A

piece of circular band iron to fit over the top part of the h.xif is then attached to the board and over the hoof

back to about the eleventh century when that particular mollification of the ancient alb and rochet was introduced and the name was also invented.

it, and those mountains would At that tt— It waa toand awkward to foot One end of the band is faken^ i have an appearance just the reverse of old narrow sleeved vest- to the boanl with a screw, whk h when ■ that presented by the mountains we ^ dr * fcfte * vrWch tightened holds the l»oan] n- Miuan lv sec on the shore. The mountains on dignitaries began to wvar U. pro: ... ‘ nl n )UarcI - v

When Baby waa sick, we gave her ( When she was a Child, she cried for ( Whtsn she became Mias, she clung to ( W? l -~ 1 ' tkr had Children, she gave themt

to hold the mud shoe solidly to the

S.-’-r ^ Fltehe® h .‘casS

p > „ C , hi ' dren c ,'

mountains would 1 at '“’'V ^ ^ j working in thorn. By this tnoan^fi' P'tCher’S CaStOflj

WO C f W*S ♦

mud shoes horses would mire down. Pitcher’S CdStOridi

'.Y” ;