Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 September 1893 — Page 7

You have noticed that some houses always seem to need repainting ; they look dingy, rusted, faded. Others always look bright, clean, fresh. The owner of the first “economizes” with “cheap” mixed paints, etc.; the second paints with Strictiy Bure * White Lead The first spends three times as much for paint in five years, and his buildings never look as well. Almost everybody knows that good paint can only be had by using strictly pure White Lead. The difficulty is lack of care in selecting it. The following brands are strictly pure White Lead, “Old Dutch” process; they are standard and well known—established by the test of years: “Armstrong & McKelvy” “Beymer-Bauman" “Eckstein” “Fahnestock” “Anchor” “Kentucky” “Morley” “Southern” “Shipman” “Red Seal” “Collier” “Davis-Chambers" For any color (other than white) tint the Strictly Pure White Lead with National Lead Company’s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors, and you will have the best paint that it is possible to put on a building. For sale by the most reliable dealers in paints everywhere. If you are going to paint, it will pay you to send to us Tor 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, Kcw York. Cincinnati Branch, —— Cincinna*! ... Ohio. — It A IL IIA 1 TIME- TABLE’ BIQ FOUR. Going East S:45 a. m., 1:48 p. m., 5:17 p. m.

2:37 a. m.

Going West 8:45 a. m., 12:50 p. m., 6:46p. m-,

12:30 a. m.

MONON ROUTE. GoiiiK North—11:40 a. m., 4:25 p. m., 1:27 a. m.; local, 12:10 p. m. Going South—2:55 p. in., 2:05 a. m., 5:17 a. m.; local, 1:55 p. m. VAN DALI A LINE. , In effect May 22, 1883. Trains leave Greencas- ! tie, Imb, FOR THE WEST. No. 21, Daily 2:10 p. m., for St. Louis 1 “ 1, Daily 12s>3 p. m., “ I “ 7, Daily 1*:12 a. m., “ “ 5, Ex. Sun....,'8:50 a. 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. KOK THE EAST. No. 20, Daily. 1:49 p. m., for Indianupclia “ 8, Daily- 3:52 p.m., “ “ 6, Daily: 3:36 a. m., “ “ 12, Daily 2:24 a. m., “ “ 2, Ex. Sun 6:20 p.m., “ “ “ 4, Eyf. Sun..'... 8:34 a. in., “ For complete Time Card, giving all trains and stations, and for full information as to rati-SJ through cars, etc., address J. S. DOWLING, Agent, Greencastle, Ind. C)t J. M. Chesbhough, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Louis, Mo. —— .MM —.-«■<■

THE QUEEN’S CHAMPION. An Official Whoso Duty It Is to

Throw Down a Glove.

WARDING OF-P SEASICKNESS.

A Chlvalrlc Title Which Has lleeu Held'

’ * V* •> v.- ’v t *. .. .h« * f/sj - 'nl i. .. t . t IX. Si oil . I>earriptl4:n of the vTiasllenge.

Keep Moving and Don't Eat Much the

First Day After Mailing.

There are countless remedies sug-

gested to the sen.-.ick traveler by means of which hope of speedy reooV-

i- heVI out n"d to • - J

er

SALTON SINK FILLING.

s »• c'-'.

'mere

t’.iat

THE BEST

GROCERIES and Provisions, IS »»<-sn!. IMes, C'i^ai's, TubacTO,

ETC.. ETC..

A T /.<> WEST WICES. At Kiefer Finest Luneh Counter in the Citi/. Conte and See.

- lOUI'.Vi.o 5iW*l9Airf»CHiaSP_STlfe>“ mm gives ITS PATRONS Tha r’ctil Worth of Thoi X.l uoy by TakL\gf Them Bafelynnd viuickly botweeu

Chicago ^ • Lafayette Indianapolis Cincinnati ^ LouisvillelZ

PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS ELEGANT PARLOR C A.RS ALL TRAINS Rta TRODuri atIO Tickets So!d ana Baggage Checker to '■'LStlnation. JT*Get ■'lit x:il: ua> 1* you wuc to V. :aot rally imormed—all 'fi-jii.-f ^ffents at Coupon Station*, navo Lnem — or inutt v-HH G. C. Veterinary Snrpn. Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College, __ 'and member of the Ontario Veterinary MediJU cal Society. All diaeaaes of domestic animalu \ carefully treated. Office at Cooper Brothers’ Livery Stable, Oreencastle, Ind. All ^calla, jJV • day and night, promptly attended. Firing | and Surgery a specialty. <♦#’ rntI«d. | Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Clerk of the Circuit ! Court of Putnam county. State of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of Charles Wiedemann, late of Putnam county, Indiana,

deceased.

Said estate is supposed to be solvent. Dated this 18th ilay of August, 1H!«. ELIJAH GRANTHAM, Administrator. i Smiley A Neff', Attys. 3U9 J. R. LEATHEKMAN, PI1YNICTAN and I Office over Allen's Drug Store. Washington # reot.

DR. G. 0. SMYTHE,

Physician and Surgeon i Office and repidenoe. Vine street, botweer

Washington and Walnut ntreetp.

MONON ROUTE TO CHICAGO.

®5.35 Round Trip $5.35.

The death of Francis Dymoke, the queen of England's champion, which occurred at llorncastle recently, has reminded the world that even in the midst of the present prosaic and utilitarian age one knightly office, at least, is in existence, to contradict the assertion of Edmund liurke that “the age of chivalry is gone.” The late holder of tin office was a Lincolnshire magistrate ami an officer in the local militia; the two previous ones were clergymen. The office is not, as it has often been stated, hereditary to the Dymoke family, but is attached to the lord of the manor of Scrivelsby, which is held by the ancient tenure known as gram} sergeantry—i. e., where one holds lands of the sovereign by service which he has to perform in person. The service by which Scrivelsby is held is thus quoted by the New York World: "That the lord thereof shall be the king’s

champion.” |,

The championship has no salary attached to it. for. though the Dymoke family hold Scrivelsby on the feudal tenure of performing this duty, they have been owners of that manor for upward of five hundred years, and they obtained it. not by royal grant or out of the public purse, but by marriage with an heiress, the last of the proud line' of Marmion, granddaughter of Philip de Marmion. a name which recalls memories of chivalry and of the poetry of Shakespeare and Sir Walter Scott. There is no record of the office under the Saxon kings, but, according to the late Sir Bernard Burke, its duties were appended by William I. as an honor to the old baronial house of Manny on, or Marmion, the ancient owners of the manor of Scrivelsby. This manor, together with the castle of Tamworth, had been conferred, soon after the Norman conquest, on one Robert de Marmyon, lord of Fontenoy, in Normandy, ou condition of performing the office of champion at

the king’s coronation

The name o{ Dymoke is Welsh. The Pymokes, or Dymocks—for the name is spelled both ways—claim a traditional descent from Tudor Trevor, lord of Hereford and Whittington, and founder of the tribe of the Marches. The chief himself had three sons, the second of whom, marrying a daughter of the prince of North Wales, half a century before the Norman conquest, became the ancestor of one David ap Mailoc, who, in the Welsh tongue, was styled colloquially Dai Madoc, the word Dai being the short form of Da vid. His son and heir was David ap Dai Madoc, or David Dai Madoc. and by the usual abridgement Dai Madoc came in the course of time to he pronounced as Daimoc or Damoc, the transition from which to Dimoo or Dymoc and again from that to Dimos or Dy moke is easy andoobvious. The first, then, of the Dymoke fam tty who fulfilled his office as champion was Sir John Dymoke, knight, what married Margaret Ludlow in the reign of Edward III., and was present at the coronation of Richard II. His claim was disputed by Baldwin de Freville, the lord of Tamworth castle, hut after deliberation it was found that the right belong#l to the manor of Sorivelsby, as the caput haroniae or head of the barony of the Marmion family; and, us it appeared that the late King Edward 111. and his son, Edward, prince of Wales, known as the black prince, had often been heard to say that the office was Reid by Sir John Dymoke, the question was settled in

his favor.

The Gentleman’s Magazine for 1821 contains a picture of the royal champion. Henry Dymoke, in the act of riding on his white charger into Westminster hall. and throwing down the glove or gauntlet of defiance, supported on either side by the duke of Wellington and the marquis of Anglesey, also on horseback, while two heralds stand by on foot with tabards and plumes. The performance of the champion on this occasion is thus described by Sir Walter Scott in a

letter to one of his friends:

‘•The champion's duty was performed. as of right, by young Dymoke, a fine looking youth, hut bearing perhaps a little too much the appearance of a maiden knight to be the challenger of the world in the king’s behalf. He threw down his gauntlet, however, with becoming manhood, and showed as much horsemanship as the crowd of knights and squires around him would permit to be exhibited. Ilis armor was in good taste, but his shield was out of all propriety, being a round rondache, or Highland target, a defensive weapon which it would bo impossible to use on horseback, instead of being a three-cornenpd or leather shield, which in the time of the tilt was suspended round the neck. Pardon this antiquarian scruple, which you may believe occurred to few 1 part ot me exhibition somewhat disappointed me, for I would have had the champion less embarrassed by his assistants and at liberty to put his horse on the grand pas, and yet the young lord of Scrivelsby looked and

behaved extremely well.”

The last time the ceremony of the challenge was carried out was at the coronation of (leorge IV., when I Henry Dymoke, the deputy of his father, a clergyman, threw down the j gauntlet in Westminster hull. This, Henry Dymoke, soon after Queen Victoria’s accession, was created a knight ns a recompense, it was said, fur waiving his claims to discharge the duties of his office at the queen’s coronation. Sir Henry was succeeded by his brother. Rev. John Dymoke. and he by

ft'-'-.-i safe to say

are given any number of sup-p»/sed-to-be sure preventives of tills troublesome but never dangerous illness The Philadelphia Times does not believe that there is any known herb, drug or line of action that will prevent seasickness if once you start in on that disagreeable path, but there are many things that help to ward off an attack which will indeed prove of

IiicliratloiiM That the Desert Will Again

Heroine a Sea.

The famous Salton sea is likely to reappear at a very early date. Whether it will make a permanent stay of it

tY

ROLLED IN A BARREL HURRAH! HURRAH!

THE

ThO

Unpleasant Experience Government Officer.

of a

5:

J ' ranc.3- j Wa« «ltT Duty, But rhnt liidia't fount

value to those who dread so much the crossing of the great Atlantic or Pacific ferries. It is advisable before one starts on such a voyage to he particularly careful as to his diet On the first day out keep as much upon the feet as possible anil do not be tempted to eat too heavily of the numerous palatable dishes that will be set before you. Walking up and down the deck continuously is advised by many by arguing that one more quickly becomes used to the motion of the vessel in this exercise, and the fatigue which it induces brings the much needed sleep. But it is useless to wear one's self out hoping to stave off the feeling of nausea if it once attacks you Lemons are most grateful to persons in this stage, a:;il there is no better settler of an unruly stomach than iced champagne. If you do not, feel inclined to eat do not force yourself to go to the table, for it is ten chances to one that the very sight of food will make you retire ignominiously from the festive board. A wellknown medical matt declares that tif teen grains of sulphate of quinine taken from two to four hours before sailing will prevent all feeling of seasickness, even to a most sensitive subject. Whether this applies in all cases we have no way of ascertaining, but it is simple enough to be followed out. and if it proves helpful is worth all of the confidence such an authority places

in it. THE INNS OF ITALY.

Condition* Which Would Not He Attree*. Me to All Travelers. Italian life is, even in small villages, all out-of-doors. The kitchen of an Italian inn, no matter of what degree, has always a warm hearth, ami its larder is more plentifully stored than a public house in England of the same description. The only faults—some one may think it is a long and a rather complete list—are noise, dirt and universal disorder and confusion. They never know what rooms they have; they bawl out to each other.*the landlord to the landlady, and the latter to the waiter: “Try number fifty-seven or forty-six!” till at last they find you a bedchamber. In the morning there is knocking at your next door neighbor’s, or by mistake at your own door, to ask whether it be not you who are to he off by the early coach at six; or maybe it is the waiter, officiously walking you up to inform you that "it is only four, ami you have still two hours for your slum-

oer.”

You always seem to catch them at the wrong moment, always find them unprepared, as if theirs were anything but an open house, and a traveler the most unlooked-for tiling in the world. 1’heir cordial greeting and friendly bus-tie help you to overlook the discomfort that every traveler is sure to experience. and t!i:* abuuiTmce of the table is on the plane with the innkeeper's appetit'* he is ever ready “to eat and let eat.”

< o Examiner •;*.•-». % rv.ysttJJ but that it is comi..g back is the opinion of old desert men. Two years ago the transformation of Salton Sink on the Colorado desert into a vast but shallow sea startled the world, ami for a time it appeared as if the great basin which centuries ago had been a continuation of the Gulf of California wasto return to its original condition. But in some way the break in the bank of the Colorado river whence the water etyne was closed, the supply ceased, and the rays of the sun soon knocked out

the same.

E. W. Lang is one of the most experienced desert men in the country, and he has a large hunch of cattle now in the vicinity of Indian Wells. He is in this city and in conversation with a

XV/inevMi**' *1 ,Min«*tiinrr spotted Him hikI He Ha,I tu

It,* I’ihiIkIiimL

BIG FOUR ROUTE Will soil Fxcursion Tickets to moIAi¥iii>OL.IS

And return, account

tilth Aminat Eneoin/nnent

AT

St.

One Cent per Mile. September t. t ami 5, K( i<><1 returninR until September 16. liberal arrangement* will b« ; made for a side trip to Worm’ll Fair. Make your arrangements to go via the Big

For full information call on

Big Four Ron ss< nger Agt.. t incinnatl, O.

“Along in the ’70s,” said a guest at a Detroit hotel the other evening, according to the Free Dross. “1 was a deputy United States marshal in Tennessee. and you will find it on record that I brought a great many moonshiners to law. Dm free to admit that I feel sorry for most of them, but they

were law breakers and it was my duty. Four Route

to hunt them down. In the summerof "n l ' oar , ® on *e 18,tl 1 got a month off and I determined! Cincinnati. O.

to do a lit Qo prospecting for minerals

rt Postsd on till! Tariff?

in the Cumberland mountains. My I headquarters were at Clinton, almost' south of Cumberland Gap, and one day 1 got ready and started off, having a i

reporter said: "Yes. the water will pack on my back and a revolver on my If you are not, you ought to be. Ifyouare, come into Salton basin again this hip. ' ’ , re ni^and keep posted. The way to do it U year. Whether it will be as large as ‘‘As I wasn't looking for moonshiners, ' last time or larger 1 cannot tell, hut! it did not ooettr to me that I would run -Ux*. dr. \/S/ . XY JttSJtH the flow from the Colorado river has any risk. In fact, I hadn't done any | And get a pair of his

been going into the desert for some work to speak of in the direction of time past and may continue. There the gap. and flattered myself that 1 j

would not be recognized up there as a I

was a very large fall of snow last winter in the mountains of Montana. Idaho and Utah, and the melting of this has caused the present break into the desert. The overflow of two years ago

■Brilliant' Spectacles

I I T tit .YltAIVTEED.

| revemi 'r. Everything went all right| Js’^t'ock‘an’d low"^prices'^* 1104 * 11 *'

i for three or four days, and then I happened along to a house raising tine , afternoon. The event had called about

was the first in twenty years, but ev-! thirty mountaineers together, and for erything indicates that a few hundred ( the first ten minutes 1 was royally en-

years before the basin was literally a sea. as the beaches are still plain about the foothills, and the rocks show wa-

Larg -

O x Can IMe Mone? F / by getting a good ijb

high grade Cnminer-

ter wearing. “When the overflow of twoyearsago occurred the water followed the identical channels that hud become almost obliterated from age. The water is now running into the desert in two branches. One is Carter river, and leaves the (.'dorado about fifteen miles below Yuma. The other channel is New river, and is forty-five miles further down the river. Salton is about j two hundred feet below the level of ! the debouchements of these rivers. The water has been flowing Into both of the breaks I ha ve named for several J weeks past. Both New and Carter riv- j ers had advanced about thirtv-ftve

tertained. Then an old chap came out of the bush and gave me away to the I

, U-lsl School, turuiHiiing complete equipment whom 1 had captured and convicted tor business life. Practical Business, Short, about twenty months before, and he ,,an >D Typewriting, English, I'enmanstiip Ht- , , , f ,. ocution. Low Rates. Moucrn Methods, 1* irat-

Hcrvices of graduates Catalogue and Specimen

6m 18

was sent to your house of correction here in Detroit for twelve or fifteen

months.

“I stood up and lied like a trooper, for my life was at stake, but he was equally earnest in his assertions. About half the crowd believed me and the other half him. If they'd all believed his story it would have been good-by to earth with me, for those men do not regard it as a crime to put a revenue officer under ground. As the case stood they didn't think it just to kill me, but yet they wanted to appease the wrath of the old man who

etaHS instruction, always in demand, of Writing Free.

miles when I left, and 1 think the wa**' had suffered imprisonment. It was, ter will be into Salton in a few weeks , therefore, decided to give me a ride in more. A number of large lagoons a barrel. They had a big one and a have already been filled between ' stout one with water in it. They

the Sink and the Colorado. One of these is fully ten miles square. It

| emptied out the water and ordered me to get in. Of course I protested and

will not take long before these depres-' argued and coaxed, but it was no go.

sions between the river and the Dig | To save myself from greater violence I basin are filled, and then the water got into the barrel ami they tied ropes

John H. James, Atty. Sheriff’s Sale* By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Putnam Cirruit Court, in a cause wherein the State of Indiana ex rel. Frank A. Horner. Prosecuting Attorney, is plaintiff, and John W. < liadtt, David M. Chadd and George M. Black, Auditor, are defendants. I will expose to public sale to the highest bidder, subject to a school fund mortgage of one hundred and fifty dollars, on MONDAY, THE EIGHTEENTH DAY OF SEPTEMBER, 189:}, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o’clock p. m. of said day. at the door of the court house of Putnam county, Indiana, the rents ind profits for a term not exceeding seven years of the following described red estate situated in Putnam county. State of Indiana, to-wit:

will slide over into Salton.

THE BALTIMORE’S GOAT.

Effects of Cave Air.

The remarkable physiological effects of cave air are well known. A traveler who visited the Mammoth cave in Kentucky says that on emerging the sense of smell was intensified to such an extraordinary degree that most common objects such as trees, plants, animals ami even people had strong individual odors, mostly unpleasant. One tree could be easily distinguished from another by its characteristic odor. The effect lasted about half an hour and then passed off. The guides say that this is a usual experience. Other writers have noticed a similar effect from the sudden change from the peculiar oxygenated air of the cave to that ol the outside world. The sense of smell is greatly intensified in almost every case. This intensification of olfactory perceptions is explained by the rarity of olfactory stimuli in the cave. On emergence, in accordance with a physiological law, the perceptive powers for these particular stimuli, having rested, are intensified, so that odors too delicate to make an impression under ordinary circumstances are power-

fully felt.

Hard to Satisfy.

A man who had undertaken to climb a certain steep cliff on the Shetland islands to gather wild fowls' eggs was neither very experienced nor very brave, although he boasted of being both. He pushed upward, however, briskly, without loi’iking behind, till he bad got up about a hundred and fifty pause iv.is t'.*C... U; ,..s a possession, and he called out in tones of terror; “Men! men! . I am going—I am going!” l(is comrades, having been thus warned, moved the boat out of the way, so that the poor fellow came sheer down into the deep water. Mighty was the plunge, but at length he rose to the surface, when he was instantly caught hold of and dragged into the boat. After many gasps and much spluttering of sea water from his mouth, his only remark was: "Eh, men! this is a sad story—I have lost my snuff box!" '

DenrribfMl the Charffe*.

Speaking* of railway rates, some one tells this story: In an advertisement by a railway company of some un-

the letter 1

The liriLulle Butter Which Is the Pet of

a Steel Cruiser*

The name of the goat on the steel cruiser Baltimore is Bobby. He hadn't any name when he was shipped, says the New York Advertiser, and no one knows how he came to be called Bobby. Perhaps the fact that he wouldn’t answer to any other name had something to do with it. As goats go he is a fair to middling sort of an animal, lie isn't white, he isn't black, and he isn't any other distinct color. He is a brindle goat, and his horns are short and stubby, and his eyes sort of sad. like those of an alligator. Ilis years are few and his experience larpe. He has been an investigator ever since ho was led up the gang plank and made part of the ship’s complement forward. It is difficult to imagine a j more independent goat. He does not! ask to be fed. When meal time ar- | rives he is aware of the fact and i proceeds to put himself in direct communication with a meal. If there are no cabbage leaves or tender sprouts from lettuce he doesn't delay eating. Die is good enough for Bobby, so are cake and bananas and fruits. If it happens that all these are out of his reach he has been known to sigh. One sigh is

over the open end to keep me in. “Just lit front of us was a side hill which des ended into a valley a ipiarter of Q mile away. To tell the honest

A part of the west half of the northwest quarter of section twenty 20 , township fourteen (14) north, of range three i3i west, bounded as follows, to-wit: Commencing at the northwest corner of said half quarter, running thence east on the north line thereof seven 7 chains, thence south parallel with the west line thereof twenty-eight (28) chains

truth. I didn't anticipate it was going ami forty-two u links to the center of the to bo much of a'shower. as the sayiug^tvS^.^Ve'es

is. and was glad to get off so easy. 1 expected to he a little dizzy at the end of the voyage, but that wasn’t going to use me up. When all was ready they tipped the barrel over and let 'er.go Gallagher. I hadn't got fairly started before 1 found that I was off in my calculations. While it wasn't a tight fit as to breadth, I being a small man, it was as to length. Having to seroueh to save my head, I couldn’t get a brace, and I simply rattled around like a pea in a quart bottle. Gentlemen, I hope to live a thousand years, and if Idol shall never forget one turn of that barrel. It was like nothing above or below the earth. It was a sort of combination of going up in a balloon, falling down a coal mine and being whipped around a shaft revolving five hundred times a minute. I wouldn’t have believed that anything created by the hand of man could revolve as

fast as that barrel did.

"It makes me seasick to even tell the story. 1 felt as if my head nnd legs had been severed, and the pieces were tumbling over each other. Talk about an eternity of time! Why. I have al ways believed it took that barrel ninety days, with three days grace

sixty-six 66 am)

south sixty-nine and one-half

all he heaves. Then he gets right . , , , , ,, down to business. If a coil of rope is a ‘ lded ’ to * et , down , ha , t hi , 11 an,1 . ha handy he will begin to nibble the wa - v a . cr « 88 11 the valk '}'' 1 ' vas d tough sisal fiber. In the abscence of wht ' n u hnaU ^ sto PP e ! 1 ’ but ,' had k,8 1 t rope ho boldly tackles an anchor | consetousness kmg before. I hey took

chain, a gun carriage or the forecastle j gangway. By this time some one will note the fact that Bobby is hungry

and he will be invited to mess with the port watch. Bobby is far from timid. He has undertaken time and again to climb to the military top and on one occasion went down the narrow iron steps to the engine-room, whore he noted with evident satisfaction that the ship was keeping tip her record in speed, as indicated by the revolutions of the screw. During a storm Bobby is as brave as any blue jacket in the crew. He ta|<es his place alongside the boatswain’s mate and watches the movements of the men in response to the piping of the whistle. Bobby was one of the attractions during the Columbus events in New York harbor. He was prettily decorated and marched up and down the spar deck with the air of one who had an important part to play. On the next anniversary of tin Loin idling lb" BaitimoFe the j immediate friends and associates of Hobby will present him with a collar

befitting his station.

me out and carried me to a cabin and put me to bed. It was one hour before I came to, and two days before I could stand on my feet. I was 'barked’ from head to heel, and it was a week or more before anything would stay on my stomach. When I finally felt able to walk the whole earth seemed to be rolling over and over, and I had to hire a cart to get down to Clinton. It was a full year before I was entirely rid of the sensation, and l tell you I never want another experience of the sort. Tie me onto a wild horse a la Mazeppa- ride me on a rail—give me a seat on the back of a Texas steer or a Kansas cyclone, but don’t roll me in barrel down a side hill in Tennessee or

any other state.

A SEDENTARY OCCUPATION.

plenty of sitting down nnd not much exercise, ought to have Dr. 1’ierce’s Pleasant

re«e*s to go with j^has a little

It. They absolutely 1 and permanently cure Constipation. One tiny, sugarcoated Delict is a

corrertive, a regulator, a gentle laxative.

two-thirds J ,; links, thence

ilf (69 l 4) degree*

west, six chains and fifty-four i54) links to the west line of said half quarter, thence north on said line thirty (30 chains to the place of beginning, containing twenty-one •21 acres, more or less, situate in Putnam

county, Indiana.

If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest and costs, I will, at the same time and place, expose to public sale the fee simple of saia real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Said sale will be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. FRANCIS M (1 LI DEW ELL, Sheriff of Putnam County. August 23, 1893. Itf

Teacher: He walked with a lumbering gait. What does that mean? Bright Boy: That is, he walked as if he were carrying a plank. What Do You Take Medicine For? Because you are sick, and want to get well^ of course. Then remember, that Hood’s Sarsaparilla

cures.

All we usk is, that in taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla you will do so with perseverence equalling or approaching the tenacity with which your complaint has clung to you. It takes time rnd care to eradicate old and deep seated maladies, particularly when they have been so long hidden in the system that they have become chronic. Remember, that all permanent and positive cures are brought anout with reasonable moderation. Hood’s Sarsaparilla attacks disease vigorously and never leaves thegeld until it has conquered. Very often a merchant is obliged to sue pend himself because ne has “hung up” to© many customers.

The brusque and fussy impulse of these' days of false impression would rate down all as worthless because one is unworthy. As if there were no motes iu sunbeams! Or comet© among rtags! Or cataracts in peaceful rivers! Because one remedy profasses to do what it is not adapted to do, arc all remedies worthless? Because one doctor lets his patient die, are all humbugs? It requires a fine eye and a finer brain to discriminate—to draw the

differential line.

“They say’’ for a weak system there’s nothing better than the “ Discovery,” and that the “Favorite Prescription” is the tonicand bracing nervine. And here’s the proof— Try one or both. If they don’t help yo«* tell the World’s Dispensary Medical Association, of Buffalo, N. Y., and you get your

money back again.

Mamma: Ha^e some more ice cream, Willie? \yillie: I guess so: my stummick only

Smallpox ami Darkness.

It was several years affo that Galla-, They’re the smallest, the'easiest to take, vardin drew the attention of French | and the most natural remedy—no reacpraetitioners to the advantag'es of tion afterward. Sick Headache, Bilious treating the smallpox according to the Headache, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, plan originally suggested and carried :l,ld stomach and bowel derangements out by John of Goddesden and Waters. arc prevented, relieved and cured.

The treatment in question consisted

simply in keeping the patients absolutely away from all solar light, anil j this solar darkness hail to he. from first ' to last, complete and uninterrupted, I I otherwise no beneficial results could 1 be looked for. The same authority has recently published the results of his experience with this method, covering a i

Little vegetable liealtli producers: DeWitt’* Little Early Risers cure malarious disorder* and regulate the stomach and bowels, which prevents headache and dizziness. Albert Alien, agt. ly Housekeeper: Here is a telegram; your nephew is dead. Growl: Humph! Now I guess he wants money to bury himself with.

Don't Take Poison!

Cheap whiskies are a mild form of poison. Consumer* are warned against their use. I W. Harper's Nelson County Whiskey is n standard, hi^th grade Kentucky WhUey which reaches us direct from Kentucky, and whdSe

A “COLD IX THK HEAD” quickly cured by Dr. Sages C'a-1 purity we can conscientiously guarantee to torrh Remedy. So is Catarrhal those seeking a stimulant for medicinal or Headache, and every trouble social use. Respectfully, caused by Catarrh. So is Ca- «m m Hiooins & Prather, Roachdale, Ind.

tarfU itself. The proprietor* offer 1500 for any case which

they cannot cure.

, — - „ called-for goods. — his son, Henry Lionel Dymoke, whom] dropped from the word “lawful.” The Francis Seaman Dymoke, just de- \ notice read: “I’eople to whom these

ceased, succeeded in 1875. The pres- packages are directed, are requested no period of suppuration, and. in con-

Daily half fare Excursions to the World’s I en t “champion” is his only son, also to come forward and pay the awful sequence, the subsequent scarring is

Bfci' I T.',",' 1 ,-,'' \m.', 1 ,t* ° n a1 ' *’****'" named Francis Seaman Dymoke. 1 charges or. the same," infinitesimal.

. , , . . For sale, a beautiful home on East period of some sixteen years, showing Seminary street; house of eight rooms, that, if this plan be carried out, the ln.r^e shade trees, large lot, choice

Ball on J. A. Michael, Agent.

notice read: “Deople to whom these great advantage ensues of there being fruit of all kinds, tf H. A. Mills.

Highest price paid for hiiles, pelt 'and tallow by Vancleave & Soil lit

Mr. Chauncey M. Depew’s advice is, ‘‘O© Bouth voting man.*’ The best induceVnents to visit the natural — "* '‘ ~

i ■ i I I

The horse has a smaller stomach in proportion to its sire than any other quadruped. If you can afford to be annoyed by sick headache and constipation,don't use De'Witt’* Little Early Risers, for these little pills wiL cure them. Albert Allen, agt. ly

resources of the Great

I South are now offered by the Mobile ,t Ohio 1 K. R. See advertisi mints 5tf

mam