Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 July 1893 — Page 7
Bogus!
Bogus white lead would have uo _ 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 While Lead The market is flooded with spurious 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: Midfading Brand "Standard Lead Co. Strictly Pure White Lead. St. Louis.” Materials Proportions Analyzed by Barytes Sii.WS per cent. Regis Chauvenct Oxide of Zinc S4.1S per cent. & Bro., White Lead 0.4U 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 I.lrt per cent. Ledoux & Co., Oxide of Zinc 45.04 per cent. New York. Barytes SO.Ob'per cent. No white lead in it. You can avoid'bogus lead by pur* chasing any of the following brands. They are manufactured by the “ Old Dutch" process, and are the standards: “Armstrong & McKelvy” “Beymer-Bauman” “Eckstein’' “Fahnestock” “Anchor” “Kentucky" “Morley” “Southern” “Shipman" “Red Seal” “Collier” “Davis-Chambers” For sale by the most reliable dealers in paints everywhere. 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 dollar; it will Only cost you a postal card to do so. NATIONAL LEAD CO., 1 Broadway, New York* Cincinnati Branch, Cincinnati, ... Ohio. ^MAILU A \ TIME-TAbLIh* BIO FOUR. Going East—8:45 a. m., 1:48 p. in., 5:17 p. m.,
2:37 a. in.
Going West -8:45 a. m., 12:50 p. m., 6:46p. m.,
IfeSO ;» in.
MONON ROUTE. Going North 11: 0 a. m., 4:25 p. m., 1:27 a. m.; local, 12:10p. m. Going South—2:5) p. m., 2:05 a. in., 5:17 a. m.; local, 1:55 p. m. VANDA LI A LINE. In effect May 22, 1893. Trains leave Greencas-
tle, Ind.,
FOR THE WEST.
No. 21, Daily 2:10 p. in., for St. Louis. “ 1, Daily 12:53 p.m., “ “ “ 7, Dailv 12:12 a.m., “ “ “ 5, Ex. Sun 8:58 ft. m., “ “ “ 3, Ex. Sun 5:28 p.m., “ Terre Haute. “ 1, Ex. Sun 7:05 a. m., “ Peoria. “ 3, Ex. Sun 3:00 p.m., “ Decatur.
for ti:f: east.
No. 20, Daily 1:49 p. in., for Indianapolis
a- r.O n m “ “
How New Mmaurrs Are Introduced Into
the Kiik1I.1i Parliament.
[ Always at the beginning of parliament there are a hundred members who, having found as many subjects calling for legislation, announce their readiness to introduce bills. The time- , honored process of bringing in bills is
t!' 1 :- described by the author of “A
'A .vos ar, the ;great bane of the Dkiryof thi: Parliament." j etock-raising industry in the west and ^ ho speaker, holding m h:s hand a
Montana and Texas Cattle Killed
by the Ravenous Beasts.
Stock Kaisers In These States Are at a
Loss for Some Means to Save Their Young and florae* from
Ilestruct ion.
Boston Women Who Have
tures on Their Persons.
Pic-
A Professor in the Art Makes Some Queer Revelations Concerning Some of the People Who Have I*;itron-
Ired Him.
Lineal Descendant* Who lluve Descended .lust as Far as the Duke of Yeragua. Fnr the last fifty-two years there has lived in Buffalo a lineal descendant of Christopher Columbus, and around the knees of this patriarch could be gathered to-day eight living children, thirty gmiid<hil,Iren. and six greatI grandchildren, so that there is little
• • •. . danger of the name of f'tdumbus beyou tell me," asked the pretty I coming extinct or forvotten.
southwest, and how tr» z“t rid of thorn * on fif o. notices tho day he- I Httle brunette, with the voluptuous I name 0 f this venerable descen-
. a ai_ •_ • • « a r* lie tlux iinmoc t I i i t , , !
or even to prevent their increase is just fore, calls the names of the members now of most serious concern to ranch- in succession. "Mr. Murphy!” calls the men. The trouble is not confined to speaker. Mr. Murphy raises his hat, any one section, for stories of havoc whereupon the speaker says: “The among stock and of helplessness to question is that leave be given to cope with the pest come alike from bring in a bill to ’ and he reads a depoints in western Texas and in eastern scription of the bill of which Mr. Mur-
Montana. P h .V has (f lren notice.
At the recent annual meeting of the' “"ho is prepared to bring in this Montana stock growers the surprising bill?" asks the speaker. I hen Mr. fact was stated and corroborated by Murphy rises and rends out the names ranchmen from all parts of the state ^ le members who indorse his bill, that during the past two years twenty- an d the speaker goes on to the next on
ft ve per cent, of the young calves and i ^ s *' -
ten per cent, of thecoltson the ranges speaker approaches the end of have been destroyed by wolves. The list members who are to bring In sheep men of Texas agree that they bill 5 struggle for places at the har of s\iffer from the depredations of wolves i *be house. 1 he speaker calls on the more than from any other cause, and 1 member whose name heads the list, estimate their average loss at twenty R® makes his way through the throng percent, of their flecks. J. M. Camp- at the bar and advances toward the bell, who hasoneof the largest ranches c l or k s table, holding a piece of folded
in western Texas near Del Rio, where foolscap in his hand,
he has a flock of twelve thousand head ! This is understood to be the bill he of sheep, says he has had over three bringing In, but there is nothing thousand head killed by coyotes or w ’^bin but a blank sheet, elaborately wolves during the past year. i indorsed on the outside with the title. The number of wolves does not di- | ^ °i ibe measure \\ ill be deminish. "The fact is," says a Montana P osited in ,hl> bill oflice at some future
that wolves have increased convenient date
red cheeks, of the big policeman, "can J an t 0 f a famous man, says the I’hiiavou tell me where Mr.—er—I mean * ai./-v.
/ !jpf
*
STOP THIEF.
5 Dvspepsia n Wealing the roses from many [ J’ idles' 'as, and maxing many men s >
faces blanch.
newspaper,
in vast numbers within the past three years, and that all methods for their destruction have hitherto failed.” And Mr. Campbell says of Texas: "The wolves are becoming so numerous and bold that it is no trouble to trap and shoot them; but their numbers do not seem to decrease.” His fellow sheepmen say that the losses to their flocks from the depredations of
The clerk, carefully concealing his knowledge of the fiction, respectfully takes charge of “the bill,” recites its title—which is the “first reading” of the bill—and then asks: “Second read-
ing?”
“Eighth of May,” says the member. “Bill read second time flth of May,” says the clerk. “Read second time 8tb of May," echoes the speaker, and
the wolves in the past few years have the member disappears behind the
8, Daily 6, Daily 12, Daily 2, Ex. Sun 4, Ex. Sun....
3:52 p. m. 3:36 a. m., 2:24 a. m., 6:20 p. m., 8:34 a. ni..
For complete Time Card, giving all trains and stations, and for full information an to rates, through cars, etc., address J. S. DOWLING, Agent,
Greencastle, Ind.
Or J. M. Chesbhoucjh, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Louis, Mo.
w w«n 1. «o •
thi: best
GROCERIES and Provisions, 21 i»o:i<!. 8* ios, 4' i *4' i*s, Tu ton <* ro ,
etc:., etc.,
AT I A) ]\i:ST rJtHUS, At Kio foe’s.
Finest
the Citi/.
Li null Counter in
('onte unit See.
~Why Suffer? When you can be Cured Thousands are suffering with Torpid Liver-the symptoms arc Depression of Spirits, Indigestion, Constipation, Headache. Dr. Sanford’s Liver Irvigorator is a reliable remedy for Liver Disorders. It cures thousands every year; why not try Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator? Your Druggist will supply you. vuit ktttdlMII) * CHIC4S0 Rt {(<■)- ' ALWAYS GIVES
ITS FATnONS
Tho Fa'1 Worth of f Th”v TIoaeyby k
Tukins Thom
Safely and Quickly
between j Chicago ^ • Lafayette
Indianapolis
binci i.iati-
^ Louisviile
equaled, and in many cases exceeded, the profits from the business. Men who have raised sheep in Australia and other countries saj’ there is no better country in the world for sheep raising than Texas, but for the wolves. How wolves may kill sheep is not j difficult to conceive. Killing young steers and colts is a bolder job. The wolf, preying alone or as one of a band, picks out a fine young animal, leaps on its hind quarters and cuts the tendons of the leg. The animal is crippled and the feast is easy for the wolf or the pack. Usually but little of the animal thus killed is devoured, for the wolf prefers fresh meat, and calves and colts and sheep are plentiful and
easy prey.
IIow to get rid of the wolves is a problem much essayed but still wholly unsolved. The Montana stock growers debated it for six hours and left the case open. The unanimous opinion was that only two suggestions were consideredat all workable, one for their extermination by stag hounds and the old one of a bounty to hunters. The sly beast will not touch a poisoned carcass unless driven by ex treine hunger, a condition unlikely with j'oung stock so plentiful and easy | to slaughter. The stockmen say that j strychnine, even when eaten, for some strange reason or other, now rarely takes effect on a wolf. Offering an increasi 1 bounty is an expensive and risky business. It might mean as much expense as the loss of the stock the wolves kill, for if the bounty were large wolf scalps would be imported from Canada and neighboring states for bounty purposes. Mr. Campbell, the Texas sheep raiser quoted, has a new scheme for exterminating the pest, about which he is very hopeful. Fie trapped seven wolves recently and penned them with a dog badly afflicted with the mange. In several weeks the wolves had all caught the disease, and, having made it sure that they had it bad, Mr. Campbell turned them loose in Val Verde county, Tex. He believes that the disease will spread so rapidly that within two years that there will not be a healthy wolf in Texas. Dogs afflicted with mange do not breed, and die in a short time, and he believes the same effect will hold good in the case of the wolves. Mr. Campbell proposes that the legislature should establish stations in every county in western Texas for the propagation of mange among wolves. The sheepmen in his section have great faith in his experiment, and with stockmen in other parts of the union are looking with much interest for results.
speaker's chair, and so on through the
hundred.
GIVE THE BABY GOOD LUCK.
. * „ CJKSiSKA r?A
' '
fc'-.:
A Snake Laboratory Founded.
An enlightened Bengali, Baku Govind Chandra Laha, has contributed fifteen thousand rupees toward the expenses of. a snake laboratory at Calcutta. Two main lines of research will be followed in the laboratory. Socalled cures for snake bites will be tested under strictly scientific conditions, ami the properties of the snake poison as such will be investigated. The laboratory will be the only institution of itskind in the world, and the
The First Thing !■ to Have It On I'psla'.m Before It Goes Down. Think of a baby twenty-four hours old climbing a step ladder!” exclaims the Washington Star. “It was rather an undersized infant for that age, too. Of course, it could not climb up by itself. so the nurse carried it in her arms. It did not cry, but clapped its hands delightedly. The child was a little boy, and the climbing of the ladder took place in the very room where he was born. The mother regarded it as important event, evidently. It was by her orders that the performance took place. Her interest was none the less because it was all for the sake of gratifying an old-time superstition. “Monthly nurses all agree that If a baby goes downstairs before it goes upstairs its path in life will be downward and ill-luck will attend it. Accordingly precaution should be taken against such an omen. In this instance the child having been born on the top floor of the house, it could not be carried upstairs and, therefore, its mother had suggested the ingenious plan of having a stepladder brought into the room so that nurse could mount it with baby in her arms. But that was not all. A small Testament was attached by a string to the child's arm and in itschubby little fist was placed a gold dollar. Thus reasonable certainty was secured that the boy would grow up both rich and pious. At the same time it seems very odd to see such superstitious observances practiced in Washington in the year 1893. Some people say that it is very bad luck, indeed, for a baby to see itself in a mirror before it is a year old. though why this should be so it would be difficult
to tell."
A SUBLIME STRUCTURE. The llollent anil Most [ liiiiou. of the Karly Iluilillilst Shrines. One of the most beautiful as well as the holiest and most famous of the few surviving Buddhist shrines of long ago is the Temple of the Tree, at Buddha-Gaya, near 1’ulna, Bengal, which was once the center of the Buddhist religion, and is still a place of pious pilgrimage. The temple is now occupied by a Brahmin college, but a movement is on foot among followers of Buddha all the world over to establish a Buddhist college there and restore the ancient shrine to believers of the primitive faith. The temple is square, with a projecting porch, and from its top soars skyward a pyramidal tower of nine stories, all profusely embellished with a graceful upper pinnacle and gold finial. A small tower stands at each corner of the roof of the lower structure, and there is a broad walk about the base of the great tower. Over the porch which ( fronts the east a triangular aperture is pierced whereby the glory of the morning sun may fall upon the gilded image of Buddha seated in the sanctuary within. This
you tell me where Mr.—er—I mean ( apt. McKay's studio is ’" The color in her cheeks went an inch higher and
assailed the faultless temples. ‘Never heard of him. Who is he, j
anyhow?” The big policeman bent his ' head for further information. The i pretty brunette looked very much con-
fused.
Well, my brother said he was right along here on Tremont row. You see, 1 heard him tell Will Adams what lovely tattooing he did, and without the sign of pain, too. He said lots of girls went there just to see his work. Well, I'm crazy about tattooing, you know. Oh, not at all; oh, my, no, not upon myself! I just like to see it. you know. I think it is lovely. So I thought I would just look at some of the designs. Four doors down? Oh, thank you,” and the brunette told off four doors and bustled into the last one without a turn of her head. Only ('apt. McKay and the pretty brunette know what happened within during the next half hour. True, the janitor says hi* heard a very* indistinct little squeal several times through the keyhole. That was all he knew of the matter. But when the brunette, with an expression of guilt upon her countenance, hurried out into the street ('apt. McKay told an Every Saturday man the little tale on the understanding that names should not be used. “No, it has not quite got to be « fad yet. But it will be soon. I have pretty girls with the daintiest of arms and legs come in here every day for me to operate upon. Yes. most of them decorate their arms. Take this young lady, for instance. She is a student at the Conservatory of Music. Come from somewhere in Indiana, I think. She
delphia 1’ress, is Alexius Columbus. He is ninety-six years old. There is no doubt about his age or nativity, for these matters were verified by his son, John Columbus, with whom the old man makes his home, and who for that purpose paid a visit to Quebec, near where Alexius was born and reared. The old man is in fairly good health. His skin is swarthy and his hair is snow white. His children are all lighter complexion, except one daughter, Mrs. Rosa Columbus Sours, of Chicago, who inherits her father's dusky skin. Since the.death of his wife, last spring, at the age of seventy, Alexius has been steadily falling in spirit. Alexius Columbus was a ship builder by trade, as were his ancestors. He is the only one of his generation who came to the states. His sisters and brother^ lived in the province of Quebec, though it is not known that more than one of them is still surviving. An uncle of Alexius lived to the age of one hundred and fourteen. The old man is a great lover of tobacco, lie constantly chews or smokes. He has always drank, and to this day has his bottle of whisky in his room, from which he takes a nip whenever he feels so inclined. Of late the old man has not been regular in his drinking habits, and will sometimes pass a day or two without taking a dram. His sons attribute this to approaching dissolution, and think the old man has
not long to live.
“I have been asked several times,” said John Columbus, his son, “if father would go the world's fair. Some of my sisters are very anxious that he should go, but I oppose the idea. I think the old man would better pass the remainder of his days in quiet here
BEECHAM’S • ILLS S."”5.'“™'n5S:I
I Roaotai^r vigor und ctilnri
{ w'.H viif »* Sick IIrndachr, acting Hk»\
1,1 ver and;
0 a ctiurrn on the Stomach, I,
d Kidnevs* Prico cents a box. , . ti n t! v ith a Tasteless and Solublefofttin*.
New York I>trp<»t, ^65 Canal St.
I
ALil« DESIRE
-FOR-
Xj IQ, TJ O IR PERMANENTLY REMOVED,
THE EMPIRE INSTITUTE 643 North Illinois street. Indianapolis, Ind., offers an «'•!» .1 title treatment for , the cure ot Liquor, loi phine. Cocaine and J Tobacco disease. Not a single failure or unfavorable physical result l as occurred. No detention from business is necessary. Call .ind wftni'ss treutim.-nt. Highest referencea. P. 8.—The Indianapolis Institute is th# training school foi i 11;.. icians and Laboratory j forithe United States. 3m4
was crazy to have an American flag ; than to he exposed to the danger of upon her leg. I know she was, but she | travel and the fatigue. Beside I hard-
had scarcely the courage. 1 put this
I3’ think the old gentleman would enjoy It. He is not a learned man. He never had any schooling. Be cannot read and he hardly appreciates the significance of the Columbian exposi-
tion.”
His son John, it may be added, is a well-educated and prosperous man. Alexius, the father, is still an active man and possessed of no mean physical powers. The wife of Alexius was
The oi l system of jabbing with a J an English woman. The grandchildren needle by hand has gone out of vogue. | (){ this mi j on retain the athletic mold,
though their features are American,
not continental.
little scroll upon herarm. away around here on the side of the muscle. No, it didn’t hurt her in the slightest. She uttered just a little squeal—more of surprise that the needle did not hurt more than it did than anything. Now the ice is broken she will he back in a week, and perhaps then her courage will he better. She will have that flag
put on there or I'm mistaken.
m Yoa PssM oiiMrifl? If you are not, yon oiiRht to be. If yon ar«, read and keep posted. The way to do it ta
to go to
X3X’. Or. ATT/ . X3TOKTOE1 And get a pair of his •BriSliant' Spectacles The best ever brought to Greencastle. Largest stock and lowest prices. Just Look at the People who eat WEE'S BREAD
They ure F«t, Healthy, and Strong.
. magnificent temple is almost the last committee of the Calcutta zoological! one remaining of the eighty-four thou gardens which has taken the matter! sand erected by King Asoka to the
in hand expects that it will be larcely ! memory of the great teacher two hun ^ resorted to by the scientific inquirers drod and eight, in years after Buddha's j u ” vn clergyman within a week.
PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS ELEGANT PARLOR CARS ill TRAINS RliN r HS0l!uH SliilD Tickets Sold and Baggage
Checker to ’^i-Stinaticn, ITGet. nap! .u« Vjl: i. 1-you war. tc
uort rul'j iCiCrm.d—ail T: .t'.'jr«u*sntCoupon
Stut ipti.. nuve Uit-m or . - l8 33 nnMTX ***T?TT.Ar.
Ardfirfil teeth The h..,T filling, nent and
cheap: eiirneiiiuc by local .<iu*atn*tiea. at 1)1*. KlvIIO 1ITL, DKVTPAI. «»I I'ICE,
Opposite STAR- 1’KI! -S OfSee. ilreor.caatle.Ind
who vy G OAU during the cold weath-' death.
(•r. (■ etonordance with the practice of; * .... ... ,, , A Tnlc* of the Orient,
scientific laboratories in Europe a.
charge will be made for the use of the I I,L ‘ re is a romantic story in real life tables and instruments at a rate sulfi-, "hieh reads like a novel. The scene cient to cover working expenses. «« ln Turkey, where service in the
behalf of the govern- *rmy is compulsory. It was discovered
Capt. McKay uses electricity in his work. The instrument employed is Edison electric pen with a larger eccentric so as to give the needle the play* it requires. The play of the needle is about one-thirty-seeond of an inch. Ordinary cell batteries are attached to it. The same power, however, cannot be used in tattooing all persons. It is regulated by the condition of the skin of the patron. Two cells are sufficient for a person with the softest skin. Harder skinned people take all the way to six cells, the full force of the battery. The outlining is done with a single needle. The shading requires seven needles, which are placed in the machine side by side. But two kinds of ink are used, black India ink and Chinese vermillion. These are the only colors that can be used with perfect safety because they are not poisonous or injurious. Vaseline and witch hazel are used to relieve the soreness when the design is com-
pleted.
“Oh, yes,” said the captain, “they call for all sorts of designs. There's the crucifix; I have perhaps more calls for it than any other. They want it put in the queerest places too. Why*, I hail a man in here one day who wanted me to put it ou his spinal column so that the crowned head of the Savior would appear just at his collar button. I have tattooed bracelets on the wrists of pretty girls and garters on their legs. A young woman who is well known to the theater-goers of Boston has a serpent reaching from her ankle to a point well above her knee, which I did for her. The work took several days. It was a delicate job and required great care. When 1 finished she gave me twenty-five dollars and you never saw a more pleased girl in your life. The wife of a wellknown steamboat captain has the design of a sailor’s farewell on the fleshy part of her arm. Hhe came and told me her husband had a similar one and she had determined to have one like it. It would never do to tell him about it though. I happened to know that the captain detested the design which he bore within a year after I tattooed it, I dare say if he ever discovered the one his wife had they had squally weather in that household. I have had at least twenty-five Harvard students here within six months. Th*y mostly have such designs as the American coat of arms or something patriotic. You see that ‘Rock of Ages?’ I pricked that design upon the left arm of an out of
He
A ROYAL MOTHER-IN-LAW.
G: and Do Likewise.
2m8
j paid me two dollars
highly pleased.
for it and was
A Woman Who Holds the Fear* of Eu-
rope In Her Hands.
It is the popular idea that in the hands of the czar of Russia lies the fate of Europe. The situation is something like this: One the one hand is the triple alliance—Germany, Austria, Italy. On the other hand is unrestful France, and, through its natural enmity to Germany. Russia for an invincible ally. Russia, with its legions of men, machines, its cannon, its war ships, its gold ready to be thrown against the peace of Europe, is at the command of one mind, one will—that of the czar. No other such potentate exists on earth. Yet the popular idea, it seems, is wrong. Not in the hands and at the |
will of this powerful monarch lies the .ff
peace of Europe. It rests between the P 08 gentle, frail palms of a woman, the czar's mother-in-law. According to M. de Blowitz. in an article on the situation in Europe in McClure’s Magazine, but for the queen of Denmark Europe would be a battleground, ami the civil- j ized world would resound with the groans of the wounded and the cries of the women and children who are bereft. The queen of Denmark loves the young Emperor William, whom she affectionately calls “my angel.” The czar loves the mother of his wife. It is her gentle diplomacy that brought about the meeting of reconciliation between the two emperors at Kiel. It is to gratify the kindly affection and not to grieve the affectionate heart of a woman in her declining years that the two proud young turkey-cocks of emperors are forbearing to slay one another’s subjects and drench Europe in blood. Surely the power of affection and the influence of woman was never shown in a more interesting manner. But what is best worth remarking is that the destiny of Europe is In the keeping of a mother-in-law.
G. W. Bence, Physician, OBee and Heri leni-i', Washington Street, nil,
Sdnarr nisi ■ ' Nations! Bank, 'lRKKXCAoTLE.INI*. Mtf
&. C. Neale. Veterinary Surgeon, Graduate of t he Ontario Veterinary College, and member of the Ontario Veterinary Medical Society. All diseases of domestic ani mala carefully treated. Office at Cooper Brothers Livery Stable, Greencastle, Ind. All calla^ day and night, promptly attended. Firinf
and Surgery a specialty.
PM
lT ^a
'as us tiynson
Work done on
ment will also be charged for according to a regular scale.
4 few days ago that a young girl hail been serving for three and one-half years under her brother's name and had distinguished herself by especially good conduct. An investigation was immediately made, and it was found that the girl had taken this heroic step
Tile I’hoto-Oorrrclor.
A London photographer has constructed an instrument to which ho gives the name of “photo-corrector,”
the object of which is to regulate and —which means even more in Turkey correct the various proportions of the than it would here—in order to free body, irrespective of the pose which her brother, who was her mother’s the sitter may select. The result is only means of support. The sultan, 1 that wliile the actual likeness is faith- when he heard of the sacrifice, be-
I
fully preserved, the hands and other stowed the Schisaket order of the third parts of the body which are distorted class and a life pension of five Turkish by the ordinary process of photography pounds a month. The girl was sent
V\vv\%U'V(V\\ (YV\(\ Swviv UOYV ar< ’ at onco brought into harmony hoBM and her brother remains free
Osiick In Central National B.nk Boldin*. 1 with the face and the rest of thefigure. from serving
P. II. L-iiminers.
A Monster Tree.
There is a tree at Tulo, state of Oaxaca, Mexico, which rivals in the extent of ground covered by its branches some of the famous monster trees of the orient. A traveler who saw it recently ; says that he found resting under its 1 branches a detachment of troops numbering five hundred and twenty-nine. |
Most of them belonged to the neigh- cine of its kind Is go certain and effective borhood, and their wives and children j that it can be sold so. Is any other had come to the rendezvous to meet > likely to be “just as good”? them, and there were under the tree j As a blood-cleanser, flesh-builder, and besides a number of vendors of all , strength-restorer, nothing can equal the sorts of eatables and several horses. ; “Discovery.” It’s not like the sarsapaAll these had plenty of room and they rilliis. or ordinary “spring medicines.
’lapanes* Lacquer. A piece of genuine Japanese lacquer costs the native artist almost a lifetime to perfect, and is produced by hundreds of thin coats of lacquer laid on at considerable intervals of time, the value consisting rather in the labor bestowed than in the quality of the material used. Firss-class lacquer work can scarcely be scratched by a
needle.
BE FOOLED
by the dealer who b.V , •"g' , out something else, that pays him better, and says that it is “just as good.” Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is guaranteed. If it don't : benetit or cure, in ‘every case, you
have your money back. No other modi-
iThorsen ^ (assady (§ 1 Leading Gun « Bitrsn DlAiET^J, 60 WobastBwJ W*stem' Agents. • - VNJ^G’ 3e*ti jiyip fon L HIC a y 0.
Are You Interested in the South 1 Thousands Of acres of fertile 1 ;i mis are now off< I-- d for sale by the Mobile & Ohio Railj road in tracts to suit, at low prices and o: your own terms, in the most productive an most healthful States of the Union, Missis bij'j.i and aiabama. a Mattel descriptive of the advantages ol the South and information regarding special Home Seekers’ Excursion tickets at ea tremely low rates, furnished on applicatia to F. W. Greene. General Agent, 108 N. Hroad way, St. Louis. Mo., or K. K. Posey, Actfn General Passenger Agent. M. O. Kailroar Mobile. Ala. 5tf I. W. Harper's Old Nelson Count;
Kentucky Whiskey
Has been recognized for years as one of thi foremost and finest whiskies placed hefor the American public. Like every article c fineness it caters not for the bulk of cor sumers, to whom one whi skey tastes but liti tie different from another, but for the appri ciationof the connoisseurs only. It is, i short, j gentlemen's beverage, and intende for gentlemen only. Higgins A: Prathu Roach dale, Ind. rtinlD
A t ham t to rent a brick store room 2ix80f Main street. Bainbridge. Ind. Address 5 Gordon, Bainbridge, Indiana, or N. W. Adej Orlando, Fla. ^
iOtf
That roast coffee that Pherson selling is A l,and can’t be beat. Tr it. Phereon, Bainbridge. tf. A No. 1 wood pump only $3.2 H. Pherson, Bainbridge. tf. Exchange your produce for groce ie.Sj hardware or cash at Pherson’ Bainbridge. tf For sale, a beautiful home on Ea Seminary street; house of eight roon large shade trees, large lot, choii fruit of all kinds, tf H. A. Mills. Rain troughing and spouting, and iron rooting. Pherson, Bat bridge. tf. Cal’ on Andrew Hanna for t Cleaveland Fence it is handsome and best. tf-5S
were all within the wall which surrounds the tree, while its branches extend some twenty feet beyond the wall on every side, affording shade for quite
as many mere.
At all seasons, and in all cases, it purifies, invigorates, and builds up the whole system. For every blrrt>d-taint and disorder, from a common blotch or eruption, to the worst scrofula, it is a perfect,
permanent, guaranteed remedy.
Binder bridge.
twine at
Phersons, tf.
Rai
Highest price paid for hides, pe and tallow by Vam leave & Non. 1 Hay carrier track, forks, rop pulleys, hooks, bolts etc.,allcomblr tor f8 and up, according to size barn. Too cheap to go witho Pherson, Bainbridge. tf.
