Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 July 1893 — Page 7

M

SKILLFUL SAFE BLOWING

The Clever Work of Two Expert

Cracksmen.

AN UNPLEASANT COUNTRY.

Some of the Objections to Living in North-

ern Borneo.

The northern half of the island of

DULL AND CONTENTED.

Graphic Sketch of the People in u WellOoverned French-Canarilitn Village.

„ . , , . In the quiet village, where the pood Borneo is the queerest and most un- . , • , ?, • ^ .... , 1 . ... eun-s word is law, there is likely to be

satisfactory place to lire that one can ,,7., '.r , a • , • 7 Iiy Their Knowledge of the Methods imagine, thinks the St. Louis Globe- ’ ' 11 ^ 11 1SS 1 rlI1Kin if> or

Employed In Ittirelsrtxlnii; Safes I Democrat. It is a land of constant re-

the French-t'auadians are neither

They Secure a Prize of One

Thousand Hollars.

some that, uro a firm «TI< J tt W a4JSli* 0mm0n ; 'n.c vegetat io.Mn Uiat half .T . . v .„ tne papers as an adrertiMment that it 1 ! " the . .. . .

You have noticed that some houses always seem to need repainting ; they Jock dingy, rusted, faded. Others always look bright, clean, fresh. The owner of the first “economizes” with “cheap” mixed

paints, etc.; the second paints with Strictly Pure

-White Lead . _

Ms inJe 8 sr tim d e V s h mn , c d h ^ ^ -r

lor paint in five years, and his bu<14- -•,not even excepting thatof Africa. The , iners never innlr ac w »ii prool sa.e, and to fiacl. up the state- 1 midnight the streets of the place are ings never look as well. ntT,. r ,.,t tim am., ti, ... o.. t cause of all the trouble ts the shallow , . , , , . Almost everybody knows that good n , , . f , ! e.mdition of the sea north of it great deserted, and a late wanderer need paint can only be had bv using stnctlv dollars in gold to anyone who could . . , . . . have no fear of tlrunl.cn hoodlums. A pure Whke lead tL d?Icuny is ^ int ° ^ the time nsuaUy 8h . 0 « 1 . 8 t*'** 1 ?* ^l mi ^ h OUt well-gov.mod Fr. uel.-c, lian vdl lack of care in selecting it. The fol- allotted safe blowers, says a writer in '' 1 1 ! l N ,.'. " <l ',"7 . i i ,' " l&ge, where the cure is thoroughly relowing brands are strictly pure White the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. rph e j h ngth. 1 oese slum s are covi rcd ,y a S p ecte( i because of his wisdom and Lead, “Old Dutch” process ; they are money was to he placed inside the safe, d‘' l>th ° f '' llt ', r ,10t ° Vtr ^ .‘‘i P'etv, affords a decided contrast to standard and well known—established and it became the property of the u 11 ' , ' UI ' v r ' inrrm -- ■ • 1 ■- mun y rural communities in English by the test of years: openers the moment the feat was ac- ! blow ln 1 mt ch ^ to ch f! VJe . V 1 h ’, lrrl ; Canada and on our own side of the bor-

“ Armstrong & McKelvy” complished. This challenge was a i-j canes and sweep the smaUernslauds of der

“Beymer-Bauman” “Eckstein” lowed to go unnoticed for some time, , ! u \; a ‘‘;, f ;!{,"! The people are not enterprising. At “pahnp'.tork” “Anrhnr” h 111 hnally one day a letter was re- , . , least this seems to be true of all hut a ..r_annestoCK Ancnor tvivtMi from New York city, written in u “H^ter exceptions . They Bre ,, (rtl .„ t to

i .. ... in itk /*nnmA ann ilri‘ni»hps t no is ami 1 ^

is sol»V( Srtt

cure s.-es to it that they are closed

LONGEVITY OF MAN.

^ In the n-c of?-n the result of ^ rderedaige.ti t : n -r.rv.t p pie know. | !

“Kentucky’

“Morley

“Shipman’

“Southern’’ ”bmpr “Red Seal’’ “Collier”

“Davis-Chambers”

a disguised hand, in which it was pro-

posed that the writer and his comrade I with it ° ften H frathers up sand, . ^e happv'faTth that" thrmorrow will should make a trial at the safe, but the i £ reat t ,n f ss< 1 ‘ s <* »t. from the clear- bri ^th it Its daily bread. They tirin must agree to grant immunity to 7'’7 _ s 77 a '.", UI {, SI . ' r ., n V ’ s are averse to breaking in new lands,

For any Color (other than white) tint the authors of the proposition, as the mgli over tlie isiana, carrying it into ancl ah the aro large, the the Strictly Pure White Lead with climate of Massachusetts had not been ” 1 ' ll1 ' , si '7i ,ri " , 1 '7 ' division of tlie farms generation after National Lead Company's Pure White to their liking for several years. The " ' ' 7 '• i ' Sl , lni . s ' s generation finally result in such small Lead TmtmgCoiors, and you will have missive was signed by “Teddy the ' n ' ,t end with that. Entire lion!) that 80me o{ the children

the best paint that it is oossible to nut us „...i s. „ i shoals of fish, of all sizes, have been . ... ...

"u^buddfng 1 t * lat ^ * S ^° SS *^ e t0 :UI immediate reply was up tijne*'and again^b'y^the^fierce “tiat seek employment elsewhere if all For sale by the most reliable dealers in r' . *7 t:™, ? i .. n .7.^ i wind with the water and sand and ari ,' 1 . t0 1 ' . 77 f* " 111 ' ln paint, everywhere. safe to a Praetical test, made all neces- | T „ ■ " dlmg to go to the new lands of Man-

If you are going to paint, it will pay you sarv arrangements with the New York sc att *“red about Borneo. In some places it()1)a an( j t j ie northwest, but tliev find

r l rr uity > ,,e ^rnr n m ^

will only cost you a poatal card to do so. granted them if they should he sue- . , “ , i , , .i i i They are admirable

People Who Have Attaiued to llemark-

«ble Old Age.

It was Prof. Hufeland’s opinion that the limit of possible human lii’e may he set at two hundred years—this on the general principle, says the SL Louis Republic, that the life of nearly all living creatures is eight times the years, niontl . or weeks of its ^period of growth. That which quickly comes | to maturity quickly perishes, and the : earlier complete development is I reached the sooner bodily decay ensues. More women reach old age than j men, hut more men attain remarkable I

longevity than women.

Horned animals are shorter lived I than those without horns, fierce longer than timid, and amphibious creatures longer than those which inhabit the ; air. The pike will continue t>> live for one hundred and fifty or one hundred and seventy-five years, and the common turtle is good for at least a century. Passing up the scale of life to man and skipping the patriarchs we find many recorded instances of ex-

traordinary longevity.

The ancient Egyptians lived three times as long as the modern lotus eaters. Instances of surprising and authentic longevity among the classic Greeks and I unans are not at all rare. Pliny notes the fact that in the reign

of Emperor Vespasian (73 A. D.) W3 North Illinois str<i t, Indianapolis, Ind., ,,, i- • • v •, , olhrs an Improved sn. ntitie treatment for • vere 124 meu living in a limited the cure of Liquet m Cocains m3

tin tl * _

0 m g ■ ttnli ktep peace i n a

w ? i L L by

# Aia aa *« t-imiim-u**, ^ WVihk Mtoraach, fm)>Htr<*d Iliut-ai i<»n, J Illsurtlrr«d M vv?r. C'anallpntlon ond # .*.11 mid \t»rvoua I)laordt*r«

•* urlalo^ fr*»m ctau****.

a v'tivered with a IiiAGlpss & Soluble foAtlrur. € Of all druggists. Price 2ft cents & box.

J New York Dei»ot, 3f)'» ranal St.

AL.L. DKSIRE

-FOB

MATTOMAI T t7 a n rr\ cessful. A day was set for a public

HLfiN/Tl- LC.AU L.U., trial, and promptly at nine o’clock in 1 1 D B T77* y ’ f ' ew ' ort ■ the morning two nattily-dressed young

fellows stepped off the train and asked | to be directed to the offices of the com-

ItAlIjU A 1 / IME-TAHLitl" pany. They carried nothing about BIG FOUR. ! them except small hand bags, which

Going East ~S:4S a. m., 1:IS p. m., 5:17 p. m., , , Mne-t ear.otil liailil t apt ores » Thirty. -37 a. m. F p *; they seemed to guard with special j Two ,,„ ulld t Hrp ,

A number of citizens and rival

Cincinnati Branch,

Cincinnati, - . . Ohio.

in the cities.

, 4 * • aitqr> axv? mechanics and population for weeks, lint such luck ^ . , , , 4 , 4 .. x *1 i are most loyal and devoted servants, is no reparation for the evil the winds *> , ... , , l 41 . .. says Hei*ry Loomis Nelson, in Harpers

do, and consequently the northern half J

will never be inhabit l by those who 1 * , l' r i i

J The Scotchman or Enfiplishmnn who

value their lives. A BOY’S PLUCK

GoiNiiWnsf 8G5 a. m., 12:50 p.m., 6:4« p.m.,; care, a uumoer oi ciuzeas am. nvai , A n exciting combat between a nine MONON ROUTE. , manufacturers hail been invited to the | yea r- () i d hoy and a thirty-two-pound

Going North 11:10 a. m., 4:25 p. m., 1:27 test, as the inventors felt confident of j ^ erman car - ) Uyok place on James plovracnt or I t. GtoVa^ith-ifMm.. 2:05a. m.. 5:17 a. m.;' the i “P rtf » nabili ‘y ,° f tbe *?*? an , d 1 Moore's farm, near Bristol, says tin- ; purpose of engaging in ventures for “ j wanted to get the benefit of the ad-i philadelphia Record The Neshaminy himself will ever enter a Freneh-tana-

is at the head of a great establishment prefers the Freneh-Canadians to his own countrymen as subordinates. He will tell you that the Frenchmen will remain with him all their lives; that no such thought as seeking new em-

tbe old for the

I ■ I Q, TT O IR. PERMANENTLY REMOVED.

THE EMPIRE INSTITUTE

area on the River Po who were 100 years old and upward. Three of these were 140 and seven others over 130. Cicero’s wife lived to be 103. and the Roman actress Luceja played in public after she had celebrated her one

hundred and twelfth birthday

A NOTED MISSION IN LONDON.

Tobacco disease. Not a single failure or unfavorable physical re>i:;i l as occurred. No detention from business is necessary. Call and witness treatment. liigiiest references. l\ s. The Indinnapoli- Institute is the trainiiiKschoo! for !“ ''i.msnnd laboratory for.tbe United States. 3m4

Founded by Frederick Charrlngton. Who

Did Not Fear to lie Disinherited.

vertisement. I ho young men were \ creo ^ j n rainy seasons fills the ditches «1 cl-wv *•<-*<4 v vv ♦ g-v ♦ Vv OTTil ♦ft.. ♦xXWTXTfc; ! • e *1 e

| of adjacent farms with water from

. I eighteen inches to two feet deep. The

j A orkers were to lie given one hour in | (1 tj ler da y l) av id ChetTj', the voting son which to do the work, and no unusual , of John Cherryi of this pi ace , and two

is or were - -• * x? i. • . i

cal, 1:55 p. m.

V AND ALIA LINE.

S 2 * MKL Trains leave GreencaH- ushered into the office and the terms for the west. ! °^ " ere announced. The New

o. 21, Daily 2:10 p. in., for St. Louis.

‘ 1, Daily 12:53 p. m., “

‘ 7, Daily. 12:12 a. m., “ “

:: S’ Zu vzS n m ’ “ Terr ; Haute ! n 7 ise was to accompany it. xvor were . SInall companions went fishing up the ” ?: il: Sull :: £: .• Peorta f he y ^ have any other assistance than , crel . k . ln ono of the 0 p P „ ditches on 3, Ex. Sun..... 3:00 p.m., “ Decatur. is usually 7 afforded to the practical , ^loore farm the lads espied three No. 20, Daily * 7:19 p. niTTor IndianapoHa safe blower. 1 he one thousand dollars ^ ■ ,g e car p Hopping about, the water 4 8 * P fti .!>' 3:52 p.m., “ 44 w as placed in the safe and it was being 1 too shallow for them to swim • U 2;“S:E:’ “ •• IP ubUcl y miarantecd to them should wlthout greatly disturbing the sur- ‘ 2, Ex. §un 6:20 p. m.’, “ “ | tRcy ^ >e successful. ! f ace , David, pluckier than his plav-

»ii‘‘... l „J., Atele v eno ’, C } 0cks , harl) ‘‘ Teddy tbe Imates, jumped into the ditch ami For complete lime 4 tiiri, Rising .ill train® iitwl rm.1 to \voi*k 1 ind stations, and for full information as to 1 ’P er au<l nis I nu "cm 10 worK.

rates, through cars, etc., address

J. S. DOWLING, Agent.

Greencastle, Ind.

Or J. M. Chksbroi’gh, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Louis, Mo.

, seized the largest of the monster fish.

| Their first act was to remove their j q- ke noar ly as Dig as the boy, had

! shoes and coats. —

TIIK HKST

The latter were

| placed in front of the safe to drown I the noise of footfalls. The next thing j was to open their handbags, out of i which drills,' chisels, a “hog-jawed”

the advantage, being in its native element. Young Cherry had tight hold of it, but the carp plunged through the water and mud, dragging the lad behind. The boys on shore thought

i screw, powder and fuse were taken their companion would surely be , I he hog-jawed screw was the first tool drowned, for often his whole body was

r~i 13 T T-t (3 tllkt ' n U P- . 11 " tts a . Peculiar instru- , undor water. At lust the fish grew so ti \ I \ j LL ll 1 U i O 1 ment. having two thick, heavy jaws weary in his mighty efforts to escape

and Provisions

K 1* f*;! «l. 1* i t‘s.

1 like a bull-dog. The jaws were con- ! trolled by a screw of terrific power, \ easily worked by a short piece of steel j which could be inserted into notches, i That part of the instrument containing 1 the notches resembled a wagon hub ' without the spokes. The whole affair 1 could be taken apart and put in a

i 1 i <»»;| |»*«;, r |’li I) SI C* <* O • handbag no larger than those usually

carried by ladies. This tool was set on the floor and its iron jaws placed around the knob of the safe. The two men worked with the greatest quiet and rapidity, one laying out the tools and the other adjusting them. The screw placed on the knob, it was rap- , idly tightened tip, and inside of two / minutes the knob was literally dragged ] out by the roots. It came with a slow

tjm Citt/. Come ami See. I wrenching noise which must have ‘ | reached the hearts of the manufae-

———————II »-»'«r»vT » » • - r mw • urers.

VO 11 ICllOW ■ No time was lost, however. One J VfW ■mB I of the men had the powder and fuse ?hat more ills result from an ready, and the former was inserted in fUnhealthy Liver than any t»>*‘ h '» le - Th '’ coats were picked up [other cause-indigestion, Consti- ** ^ ^

ETC., ETC.,

IT LOJi EST PlilCES, A KielVp’s. Finest Lunch Counter

his captor tliat he could he thrown out upon the bank. Then all three boys jumped upon the carp and held him to the ground until he had gasped out his life. They lugged their trophy home and put it on the scales. The fish

weighed thirty-two pounds. DANDIES IN THE ARMY.

to smother the noise, the fuse was arnon ,, ] ds 0 jji cers .

German Soldkeni \\ ho lledork Tli<nn*el vn»

with Finery.

Referring to the recent order of the German emperor with regard to the dandyfied irregularities which hail become common in the German army, says the London Globe, a correspondent at Berlin calls our attention to the fact that the kaiser himself is not altogether free from affectation of this kind, inasmuch as he himself sets the fashion of “bangle” wearing. In most of the many portraits of the kaiser tlia bangle is brought into special prominence by the position of the arm. Hut though addicted to the bangle, he never condescended to the earring, which formerly was very commonly worn

lighted and the operators stepped behind the --afe. In a moment there was

'pation, Headache, Biliousness, ■and Malaria usually attend it.

Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator j a muffied explosion and the entire is a vegetable specific for Liver front of the safe was split open in Disorders and their accompany. 1 J^ired creases. The whole system of a T , i bolts an l inner machinery was ex|ng evils. It cures thousanc . p 0ged tH v i ew \ few raps with a ivhy not be one of them, iake 1 ^^^ and Teddy gave the holts a Dr.’Sanford’s Liver Invigorator. j sharp jerk. They responded to his I Your Druggist will supply you. j touch and he swung open the door. ” ! Reaching in he seized the bag of coin

i and in a few minutes the professionals ' were ready to depart. , As Teddy was about to leave one of the firm asked him: “Can a safe be

made burglar-proof?” “Yes,” replied Teddy.

“How?” the manufacturer asked in a

pleading tone.

“If I would tell you that my business would be gone,” replied Teddy, and d | bidding the party a polite good-by he ' and his companion left the city on the next train. The job took just twenty

, , minutes.

~<r i

ll!

NON ROUTE

gHuoisyuii »twAie;n»CHiCAv. L «<V‘-i

IllWAYS GIVES 6 ITS PATRONS

t© Fall Worth of their Money by Taking- Them ife 1 y hu • I Qu ickl y

between

fhicago ^ • Lafayette

tintianaiiolis

linoinnati Loi'isvilie

HJxlman sleeping cars ELEGANT PARLOR CARS rilTRAINS Riiit mSOUSH SkQ Tickets Sold aia Baggage Checker to (''mt in at ion. W~<3> • uam -ru imo i. i. you wm: u. t). jon rul)> miQim.d —all Titi;.,' Amenta at Coupon X> El 3V TI Ki TTT. Artifii’ml teeth The bei>t filling, neat and heap ; extracting by local Hiie.thrties, at OK - K 1GIGr HTTaKY’H OETVTAE OFFICE, B.ite HTAR-l’KKSS Office. Greenca.tle.Ind

j B. VKHTAI.. JOS. M. ALI.KX VESTAL & ALLEN, GKKKNUASTI.K, IND. I Will attend end make .«alea on best term). Leave order, with ua porsonally, er address I through ii.i.-itofiice Urecncaalle I' d. I Sale, of .lock every Saturday alteraoon [the public square.

New l ,c for Hutiber.

Good results are obtained by using L ; | rubber in connection with an anchor : ! rope in equalizing and relieving strain in dredging, and in measuring the depth and swiftness of currents. Formerly a severe strain was caused by

In the time of Frederick William II., when the German army was resting on the laurels of the great Frederick, dandies flourished in great numbers among the officers, in spite of severe official condemnations of foppery. The mon strosities and extravagances differed but slightly from those of to-day-sharp-pointed toes, ridiculously high collars and short overcoats without seams! Latter-day exquisites have also adopted the plan of crowding on the finger as many rings as possible—ho who can carry the largest number on the ring fingers and at the same time bend his finger being considered to

have the bluest blood.

dian’s head. lie will stay by his old employer all his life, and his son will succeed to his own or a better place in the service of the house. On the other hand, the Englishman or Scotchman will take the first opportunity to go into business for himself, ami will use his employment as a stepping-stone to

something better.

AN IMPORTANT EVENT. A Prince’s Footstep Commemorated by a

Monument.

Americans are not the only people who show an undue reverence for a lordly title. The author of “Around and About South America” tells of his visit to Stanley, Falkland islands, the southernmost town on the globe, where an incident convinced him that a name sometimes equals an event. The decidedly English expression of the town is greatly heightened upon going on shore, where I land upon a small jetty, at whose extremity stands pyramidal brick and stone monument. hearing on a tablet the rather inexpressive communication: “Alfred, '24tli February, 1874.” Knowing that many nations hail at different times claimed possession of these islands, ami that several conflicts had resulted, it was but natural to suppose that this proud pile distinguished the spot where some British Horatius Codes had. Kingle-hamled, repelled the landing cutters of several French or Spanish men-of-war, and that his appreciative countrymen had thus made the fact known to such of the great world as might by accident stray thither. The very first citizen I met I begged to tell me more of this brave, this doughty Alfred, apologizing, of course, for a memory defective in matters of historical detail. And my blood almost congealed within my veins and my heart stood still with awe as I learned that here, here on this very spot, a “real live” English prince had once set his foot, on coming ashore to pay a visit to the governor. My informer stood solemn ami serious, lint there is no use in denying that [ was profligate enough to laugh.

G-. '\7SJ-. TrYtlTVOEl

And fcet a pair of his

Briiiianf' Spectacles

a

sudden jerking in a pitching vessel. _ This is now overcome by ivliat is called j llpol ' 1 th ‘, fivc ^ill-slits and elaborated a rubber accumulator, which consists the whole in a hearing organ. This

The Perfect Ear.

In McClure’s Magazine Prof. Henry Drummond discusses the question of where man got his ears. Nature, he holds, seldom makes anything new; her method of creation is to adopt something old. So when land animals were determined on. and nature started out to manufacture ears for them, she made them out of old breathing apparatus. She saw, Prof. Drummond contends. that if water could pass through a hole in the neck, such as fishes have, sound could pass likewise, thereupon she brought certain species adapted to her purpose to shore, and set to work

The best ever broiiidit to Greencastle.

est stock and lowest prices

FIT tit .YU.VNTEED

Larg-

rimrton mission, which is held in a ; If you are not, you onvht to be. If you are. long, narrow mom, double galleried a ,“ d lteep ,,09tcd ' The way to do il u

all around, the coughing (from the fog) was more like Fourth of July with conglomerate firecrackers, church bells and cannonading than one would conceive as possible issuing from a merely human assembly, says a London correspondent of the Hartford Courant. Just a word about this Charrington mission, which is a feature of the east end. Frederick Charrington belongs to a wealthy family of brewers. About seventeen years ago he began to do a sort of street missionary work in East London, near his father’s brewery. ilis father threatened to disinherit him, but finally left him a share, though not a full share, in the business. Once, on being taunted on the street with wearing the blue ribbon—“what does it cost you to wear that ribbon?”—he was able to reply: “A hundred thousand dollars.” He sold out his interest in the brewery to his brothers and built in Mile End road the great assembly hall, which had been projected but never begun by Keith-Falconer. Every Sunday night three thousand or more people gather at the evangelistic service of the mission, and its fellowship society, with the constant religious educational and entertainment work centering at the great assembly hall, makes it a power for good in a district which contains a

number of powers for evil.

Just Look at the

eople who eat

LOSiSffiS BREAD They are Fat, Healthy,

and Strong

<*ood Rob White.

The male quail, or “Bob White,” deserves honorable mention among gallinaceous birds because he is particularly good to his wife. He always helps her to hatch her eggs, and if anything keeps her away will take the whole duty on himself. This is particularly attested by a writer quoted by Capt. Bendire in his “Life Historiesof North American Birds.” He says: “In June, i88fi, while I was on a visit to Dr. J. M. Pickett, of Cedarville, Ala., he informed me of having seen a male Boh White incubating. He had visited the nest at various times on different days, and always found the male bird on the nest. Wishing to be an eye-witness of so interesting a sight, I rode several miles with the doctor to the nest. There w r e found Bob White faithfully warming his treasures, hut not into life; the eggs were never hatched. Dr. Pickett frequently went to the nest

THE TERM -YANKEE.” VarioUH TheorleH Which Have Been Advanced an to Its Origin. The theories which have been advanced as to the origin of the name Yankees are numerous. According to Thierny. it was a corruption of Jakin, a diminutive of John, which was a nickname given by the Dutch colonists of New York to their neighbors in the Connecticut settlements. In a history of the American war written by Dr. William Gprdon and published in 1789 was another theory. Dr. Gordon said that it was a cant word in Cambridge, Mass., as early as 1713, used to denote espec ial excellence —as a Yankee good horse, Yankee good cider, etc. He supposed that it was originally a byword in the college, and being taken by the students into partsof the country gradually obtained general currency in New England, and at length came to he taken up in other parts of the country and applied to New Englanders as a term of slight re proach. Anbury, an English writer, says tiiat it is derived from a Cherokee word canker—which signifies coward and slave. This epithet was bestowed upon the inhabitants of New England by the Virginians for not assisting them in a war with the Cherokees. The most probable theory, however, is that advanced by Mr. Ileckewelder—that the Indians in endeavoring to pronounce the word English, or Anglais, made it Yengees or Yangees and this originated the term.

Water Level of Two O'-eann.

When the Panama canal was first proposed, there was a great cry about the dangers courted in opening up such a “ditch,” some extremists declaring that the ‘’lives of millions of human beings were at stake.” This

until lone after the period of incuba- i . , ’

tion had elapsed, andLding that the alar “ was < ; ansed ^ thear ^- 11 a a u i i * i i ment that the waters on the Pacific eggs wou i no & c , .i c ts rojet 9 j de 0 f t j H , isthmus were hundreds of them to prevent the useless ocoupa- | ^ higlu . r than wero those on the A „ tion o it n ® s V " n ” 1 7 u 1 , lantic side, and that the great rush of male had probably been dead some watpr U) ^ up the difference in the

Former Mall Servlet*.

Go and Do Likewise.

2m 8

W. Ber/e, Physician, ifflrf. a .it Hoii4enc< , IVantiini:' ..i. ’Oroet, onm

• 4tt*rc .<*“ c National Bank. ■ HEKNC ASTLE. IND. 38tf

G. C. Neale. Veterinary SnrgooB. Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College, nd member of the Ontario Veterinary Medir cal Society. All diseases of domestic animals carefully treated. Office at Cooper Brothers*

day and night, promptly attended, and Surgery a specialty.

Firing

mm

' M0DCI^

A

"29 IBS.Liaison'

|Th°rceM(§S5ady(3 >oi»o6u« Bicreu Disu^s, 6j Woboskasr^l Western Agents. rtu ’ ^ J 3hhp fon (Vyowt. L n 103 Q.|

Are You Interested in the South? Thousands of acres of fertile lands are now offered for sale by the Mobile «Y Ohio Railroad in tracts to suit, at low prices and on your own terms, in the most productive and most healthful States of the Union, Mississippi and Alabama. Matter descriptive of the advantages of the South and information regarding special Home Seekers’ Excursion tickets at extremely low rates, furnished on apnlication to F. W. Greene, General Agent, 10* > . RroaiV* way. St. Louis. Mo., or E. K. Posey, Acting General Passenger Agent, M. & O. 'Railroad, I i * at Don’t Take Poison! Cheap whiskies are a mild form of poison. Consumers are warned against their use. W. Harper's Nelson County Whiskey is a standard, high grade Kentucky Whisey which reaches us direct from Kentucky, and whose purity we can conscientiously guarantee to those seeking a stimulant for medicinal or social use. Respectfully, 6m49 Higgins & Pratheu, Roachdale, Ind. A chance to rent a brick store room 21x80 PL Main street, Hainbridge, Ind. Address M(Jordon. Hainbridge, Indiana, or N. W. Adet, Orlando, Fla. 10tf That roast coffoe that Pherson is selling is A1, and can’t be beat. Try it. Pherson, Bainbridge. tf.

of seventy rubber discs or buffers on »I^ a ^ess, but th* slow houra b ® fo « fte m»ie found th* nest, leV{{1 of thp two oceans wnv.H drown middle rod, so arranged tnat oy com- laborofa?es but j iliallywaspr0(luccd serted; hence u.o e„gs earned and , al] SolltIi ,. rn America and most of

pression they act as a spring, ihe the perfect ear, and man was not ere- wou.d not hatch,

bugers are cylindrical in shape, two a ^ ed ul ,til the work was done,

and one-quarter inches in thickness, and separated from one another by |

Mexico and Yucatan. Would-be en-

A Wonderful Feat. gineers and sensational editor.-, passed

Two Americans in the employment thl ‘ ir opinions or wrote editorials on

metal discs one-eignuioi HU men cmcK, I Less than fifty years ago there was of the government of British Columbia th” subject. It now transpires, as a and two inches larger in diameter than really no postal system in this country, recently accomplished a feat hitherto result of actual survey, that the Atlanthe rubbers which on expansion do Previous to 1847 the mails were carried ! deemed Impossible by crossing the Sel- tic and not the 1 acifac, is the higher of no overla ' th n o sm faces In by private firms, and rates varied ao- kirk mountains in the depth of winter, the two oceans and that in place of not o\criap tne meiai suit ate Carriers often The object of the trip was to ascertain the difference being hundredsof feet,

si'on can^be'had of"five''fee^ whicl^is travel on foot or horseback and the! if >t were possible to lay out a pack as had been affirmed, the surface of sufficient to dfstrihntl the strain along progress was slow. In 1840 some of the' and cattle trail over the range from 1 the water on the cast side of the isththfeatire Lngth of the ship The ap post offices issued stamps of their own,' Golden to Kalso. The men traveled «nus *s exactly six and one-half feet plication is made by running the rope called “provisional issues.” The ad-‘one hundred and fifty miles on snow- higher than His onthc western side,

from a reel located aft to the middle of hesive stamp was first used In this shoes, fifty miles over the w ildest

Moslem Grn\«'a.

the foremast, and then passing it Country in 1847, and prepayment was mountain country, where glaciers; when once filled in a Moslem grave through the rubber accumulator to the made compulsory in 185(1. In 1863 the, abounded. They found a pass .i an i 8 never reopened on any account. To emi of the anchoring boom, which is a stamp containing the head of Andrew altitude of six thousand five hundred remoT e the faintest chance of it being spar thirty feet long. From this the Jackson was issued, and from then feet that is practicable for cattle and thug detUed a cypress tree is planted rope with s Hvo hundred-pound weight until 1885 the style adopted contained pack trains in summer, ihethermom- after every interment, so that the cemeattached is dropped vertically into the the profiles of presidents of the United ^;' r " as hel °"' J’-e-o during most of the tcries resomlde f orests more than any .

sea.

thing else.

A No. 1 wood pump only $2.25. H. Pherson, Bainbridge. tf. Exchange your produce for groceries, hardware or cash at Pherson’s, Bainbridge. tf For sale, a beautiful home on East Seminary street; house of eight rooms, large shade trees, large lot, choice fruit of all kinds, tf H. A. Mills. Rain troughing and spouting, tin and iron roofing. Pherson, Batnbridge. tf. Call on Andrew Hanna for the Cleaveland Fence it is handsomest and best. tf-52 Binder twine at Phersons, Bainbridge. tf. Highest price paid for hides, pelts and tallow by Vancleave & Son. lltf Hay carrier track, forks, ropes, pulleys, hooks, bolts etc.,all combined tor $8 sod up, according to size of barn. Foo cheap to go without, Pherson, Bainbridge. tf.