Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 October 1893 — Page 3
r' m
{ ' vU Vol. 35, No 24
wr-
^ U<HA ** SS'TSX,
A t tiaja.
GREBSCASILB, IND., OCT. 11, 189:).
{son.;. Vol. *21, No 26
BEP UOCI4 PRICES On Bedroom Sets. Bed Lounges, Bedsteads, and Bed Springs, at tANNA’S FURNITURE STORE. Where everything is New. Neat and Nobby.
I.
Special Attention (iiceu to Un(lcrtakin</. Imbalming by Arterial Process. The best funeral car in the county
EAST SIDE SQUARE
o/Zwi tnawet'
Typewriting School, lik<tiaii:t|M»liw Itimincnn ,ly«*PMlty. WBcu Block. Elevator. Oldest, l.ir -t bent equipped. Individual instruction by expert Book-keeping,PenmatiBliip,English.(Mil o etc., free. Clieug* l>oai'<n<i|r, tuition,
I*OMitat>iia M‘f'ur«><l ly our
ii p.
THE STAR-PRESS. Satuiday, Oct. 14, 1893.
orterw. Mniug,
M*v imyiuvntN. I'ONif M<*eui
kduut* 8. 1‘. •.•iotiful Illn (’litalogueand I’aiHT fb. 1AEEJB A i>S illiSiS, lndiaua|>olii>, lutl. 15 YEARS iwilLir r Our Years of Continual Success
Through Indiana.
it. wAi/rrjt
r
■las visited Greencastle for over four years B every four weeks and has cured ™ more patients of chronic dis-
eases than all other
specialists com-
bined.
WILL HE AT
C'OIII III <
in I IIonl.
aturday, Oct. 21, Ind every four weeks during the year. ■OME FACTS about the most successful k'sician in America, who iias spent many lutbs in the laboratories of the preat scf* lists of Europe, will visit our city every lr weeks to the patients who will call 1 him. Dr. Waiter is well known in this kte and section, as he has treated a great Ins afflicted people during his visits in this ■nity and they all speak volumes for him. hi TEE kT8 ' 1 E88I I LLY Acute b chronic catarrh, chronic diarrhoea, painI ippressed menstruation) imflamma■i of the womb) inflammation »»f the blad-
t
Inary and bladder troubles, Bright’s disir. tape worm, crooked and enlarged joints, lb foot, white swelling, nervousness and iieral debility, impotency, leiu orrhea. nim1s, blotchi s, < an* c r, (iropsy. gravel, gleet, porrhoea, hydrocele, h -art disease,hysteria, I Vitus dance, paralysis, rheumatism, Bhmu, female weakness, etc. All surgical ■rations perform'd i-.j ill psj or fiti p fcly cured. Piles c ured without pain, knife caustic. Blond and ^kin diseases cured by
proved and uev- r tailing remedies.
I YE, EAR AND NOSi: In diseases of the I, Dr. Walter is an expert. Crossed eyes K straightened in one moment of time and Ihout pain. Hoeadly remedies weak ami lery eyes, drooping of the lids, granulaps, sore eyes of any form wild hairs, cata[t, false pupils,spots, scums and turning of l lids. Roaring n -i -1- in the ear, partial Ifness, ulcerations, discharges, earache, J. , arc also cur.<l. N isa! » atarrli, that curse ihis climate, v. ith ; «.i its abhor, in f airs yields at on t> to the system c»f treatlit pursued by Dr.‘Walter. He can show a later record ot cures than any physician IeuaLB TROUBLES Lad •« wb > :ire afjted with headache, langour and the weakls common to the se\, lind a wc'nderful ^ud in Dr. Walter. He is skilled in the fctment of the troubles, especially in bloat1, nervous prostration, general debility, leplcssness, depression, indigestion, ovarii trouble, intlammation ami ulceration, ■ling and displacements, spinal weakness,
Eney complaints and change of life. I ORGANAL WEAKNESS.
Immediately cured and full vigor restored, ms distressing allliclion. which renders life ^urden and marriage impossible, is the baity paid by the victim tor improper inllgence. The most chaste must acknowlege ft the passions are the great magnet by hich Hit* whole world i- attract* *!. Destroy p*in and what have we? Man is no longer
verested i n \ he opposi t
■that blissful repose which now attractsoml Tterests the wliole wi.rld exists no longer; [in ceases to be what God made him; the brld is no longer interesting to him, and reloTseand disaiipointment ar« his constant Impanions. * ..rmult Dr. Walter at *ou**, Id you will find the sy muathy and r< lief that
In positively n quire t<> be happy,
phose \\ ishing treatment shoulab Ing from |e t*» four ounces of urine for chemical lalysis. Dr. Walter will return every four
p*eks (hiring the year 1«»3.
^)r. Walter will correspond with those who Isire to submit their symptoms. In writing p letters are held in strict confidence. The
f rmanent address is
Will Nutt is at the World’s Fair. Born, to R. Y. Williams and wife, on Oct. 6, a daughter. John W. Layne has been at the World’s Fair this week. Mr. Conant, of New Ross, is visiting j his daughter, Mrs. Brackney. Dr. Leatherman has returned from Chicago, well pleased with his trip to the Fair. There are but few persons left in Greencastle who have not attended the World’s Fair. Mr. Sam. Harris reports the Cloverdale schools in a very flourishing condition this year. W. B. Vestal is now at Austin, Texas, looking after the government’s interest in the sugar industry. Mrs. Jacobs and daughter, Mrs. Nash, of Youngstown, Ohio, are guests of Miss Emma Jackson. His heart and his fortune he laid at her feet And plead for a swift reply. In trembling tones she softly said “My hat, is it on awry?” You can’t invest a dollar in abetter way than by subscribing for the Star-Press, the local newspaper of Putnam county. On last Thursday evening Editor Julian D. Hogate, of the Hendricks County Republican, was married to Miss Etta B. Craven, daughter of W. R. Craven, a prominent farmer living at Center Valley. The Rev. S. P. Edmondson officiated. Farewell, dear friend of summer days. Fond memories around you float. But we must part. Go, big straw hat, Be fodder for the goat. An exchange talks to its subscrib ers in a very forcible manner as follows: “Don’t forget the editor when you have a news item. If your wife whips you, let us know, and we will set you right before the public. If you have company, tell us, if you are not ashamed of your visitors. If a youngster should arrive and requires food and raiment, buy a quarter’s worth of cigars and come around, and if you are a cash subscriber we will furnish a name for him or her as circumstances may warrant. If you have a social gathering of a few friends, bring around a big cake, six pies and a ham not to eat, but as i guarantee of good faith. We mention these things because we want the
news.”
How Would This Do for Greencastle? On Saturday I. I). Baldwin, district passenger agent of the Monon, asked the school board of Indianapolis to approve an excursion for the benefit of school children which the road proposed to run Tuesday for $1.75 round trip to the World’s Fair. He assured the board that the greatest care would be taken of the young excursionists and that the trip would be one of great educational value. Mr. Baldwin said that arrangements had been made for a ten-cent admission fee for the children, and that meals could be secured for 25 cents each and lodging for 20 cents. If such an arrangement could be made for the city of Greencastle, many children could see the Fair who could not do so otherwise. Broadpark. Wheat and pasturage much improved by the late rain Health generally good William Costen is convalescent ... School progressing nicely Dobbs & Wood are running their saw mill T. H.andJ.C. Broadstreet are visitors at the World’s l air David McAninch is erecting a dwelling in Broadpark, preparatory to moving thereto, ami Leslie Pritchard will occupy the house vacated by him James Buis has his house almost completed . M. F. M« Hartie is erecting a stock barn .... Ed. Butler has moved upon Joel Dobbs’ farm 11. A. Parker's wheat is still in the stack Benton Phillips has moved to Morgan county The corn crop is above the average James Stadler is our merchant Wm. Alice has moved to Mill Creek township ..Mat. Wright has moved upon the Sherrill farm, and William Wright has moved into the house vacated by him. xx
Obituary. Lett* Elisabeth Bowmen died on her birthday, aged six years, of lockjaw. She suffered intensely, but bore her pain without a murmur. She was conscious to the last, and when the neighbors called to see her she would talk to them in her sweet, childish way. Her disposition was such that drew people to her—she was loved by all. She was not only a family net, but a pet of the whole neighborhood, ami her death is much grieved by all who knew her, and she will be sadly missed from the family circle. (rod has taken the tender bud and transplanted it in Heaven above, where it will never wither or decay. Who thought when Etta said, “Mother, we are going one by one, and we know not who may be next,” that the youngest would be first. But let the relatives find consolation in the thought that our loss is her gain, xx South Washington. William Connerly, of Cloverdale, was in this corner last week Amos Kunkle's baby has been quite sick John Moore has bought the H. Burns drug store at Poland .... The Trustee visited our school last week ... Walter Senter has moved into the house vacated by John Neese William Evans and son were at Bowling Green last week ... Hamuel Asher’s baby has been sick The Superintendent visited our school on Thursday of last week ... Items scarce, work plenty, and the Star-Press on the gain. ’ xx
THEIR VERSION OF IT.
IN BONANZA DAYS.
When Pai'lflc Slope Mine Suprrintcmlecit*
Each Tells the Whole Story In
Got liig; Fay.
Her Own Way.
Times have changed on the western
slope of the Rocky mountains since
\ \ 1 i
But Both Disclose the Plain Unvarnished Truth. There Is No Getting Around Such Facts As These.
Waterbuhy Centre, VT.-This is a small town, but often intarestiiiK happenings take place, even in a small town. This will be found interesting news. Mrs. C. O. Town, a well-known resident of this place, tells the following story: "I was suffering terribly from nervousness, she says, caused hy female weakness, kidney troubles and backache, and was so weak 1 could not walk across the room without help. The nerves of my eyes were so affected that I feared that I would lose my sight. “I saw Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood and nerve remedy recommended so highly that I thought J would try it. I had not taken but one bottle of this wonderful medicine before my eyes were cleared of their dull aching, and all other pains and aches left me. “I grew stronger every day until I am now well and able to do my own work. 1 cannot do half justice in the praise of this medicine, and I give these facts for the benegt of others who are ailing.”
•J l -w-—-s-. ,
superintendent of the Ophir mine, bought a sealskin overcoat and paid $1,000 for it. Financial darkness has settled on the region where at one time men holding positions similar to the one named drew all the way from $1,000 to 89,000 salary per month. Then
A blow with a Hammer on the thumb, crushes it and the nail turns black and comes off The thumb swells and is poulticed and the man “lays up. 1 ’ Now look at another case. *—• The thumb wag smashed just the same but the man was not laid up an hour! He had a
bottle of Dr. Fenner's Golden Relief.
Real Estate Transfers.
Addison Daggy and wife to Wabash College, land in Greencastle, and \
Cloverdale tp., $400.
James T. Darnall to Jos. B. Naylor and Mariah M. Naylor, lot in Green-
castle, §700.
James A. Flanagan to Edward L. Flanagan, land in Warren tp., $5,000. Fred Steele to Lucinda Earp, land
in Greencastle tp., §25.
Thos. J. Mouns to Wm. Inge, land
in Russell tp., $700.
John W. Earp to Lucinda Earp, land in Greencastle tp., $500. George M. Williamson to Wm. H.
Reiigioug Impostor*. Not fewer than four false Christs are mentioned as having appeared between the years 1614 and 1083, among them Sabbathia Zebi, the greatest of all the many Jewish pretenders. Zebi made a great noise in the religious world, imposing himself upon the Jews as “king of the kings of the earth.” lie finally tried his hand at converting the orient and was only saved from being pierced by poisonous arrows by embracing Islamism and agreeing to labor for that faith. Of the other three one was Mordecai, a German Jew; the names of the others are not given in
history,
Or
A ,uot.r Superstition.
At race tracks persons desiring to bet on the result frequently manage to touch the hump of a hunchback, believing thrt this will bring good luck. According to the beliefs of ancient Arabians ami Germans, hunchbacks were the pets of fairies. The latter frequently removed or increased the humps, and hunchbacks who had thus been treated by the fairies were supposed to poi-sess some mystic power. They were supposed to bring good luck, and this might he imparted to persons who came into contact with the humps the fairies had given them The oldest flute in the world is made 01 the i thigh bone of a sheep and was found in a
tomb on the Nile.
MRS. C. O. TOWN.
Just over the State line in Champlain, N.Y. lives a lady widely known, Mrs. It Wilson by name, who also tells an interesting story. “I have heed seriously afflicted,” she says, “with rheumatism for over 20 years and I did not think that;ever could lie cured. “I have taken only two bottles of Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood and nerve remedy and am now taking the third, and I can truly say that I have not been so well and free from
pain for twenty years.
“What induced me to use this remedy was seeing the wonderful cure it wrought in my
husband—it saved his life.
“I feel it my duty therefore to tell the great benefits I have received from the use of Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood and nerve remedy and to advise ail who are ailing to try this
wonderful medicine.
A * •' 4#^
:
- '**’V
.... ....... MUS. U. WILSON. “ I have the most unbounded confidence in the curative powers of Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy.” Take this medicine now if you are not feeling just rit^ht, if you are weak, nervous, run down in health and strength; if you do not sleep well nights, and if you wake mornings tired and unrefreshed with little or no appe-
ternally, actin
directly on the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they oifer One. Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Semi for list of testimonials. Address, F. J. C’HENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Williamson, land in Washington tp.,! *' s°>d hy Druggets, 76c._ oct
*As fencing is such a manly art it is odd that
, there is so much feinting in it.
$100 Reward, $100.
The reader of th * paper will he pleased to learn that there i .it least one dreaded disease that science is been able to cure in all
its stages, and tli is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh I tita for breakfast. Take it for headache, Cure is ihe only sitive cure known to Ike constipation, stomach, liver or kiddey com-
medical fratern y. Catarrh being a consti- ...... , 4 ‘ ,
tutional diaea^ . requires a constitutional It is purely vegetable and harmless,
treatment. HnTs Catarrh Cure is taken in- Druggists sell it for $1.00.
1600.
Fleming McCray to Richard F.
Rogers, land in Washington tp., $2,000. ! One word describes it—"perfection." .. . James F. Darnall to OlRrence Abia-I obstinate sores, burm, akin di! laeiandlaaa ClevHend firm, and do what be could
iMAN P, WALTER, M. D>,! the, lot in Greencastle, $700. ' wvi!'kiJ(.»st.u.cf..i piles, .\iurt Alien,ast. ly. i, y letu-r )„• could n..t got a .M-ttleiuent.
It should not be classed with ordinary patent medicines, for it is the discovery and prescription of Dr. Greene of 3.5 W. 14th Street, New York, the well-known and successful specialist in curin nervous and chronic diseases. The doctor can be consulted free in
any ease, personally or by letter. He Was Not an Hxceptlnn.
A Detroiter,of a very mild and placid temper,had some business attended to, or pretended to be attended to, by a
nobody was more prosperous than the He poured *.o ra ;7n“to a cupTnd dipped men who dug gold and silver from the his thumb in it as soon as hurt HU ground in Nevada, hut now the sum- now covered with a thin piece of cloth mit of Mount. Davidson is occupied by and kept wet with the Relief Reworks the lean spirit of economy. Salaries af * usual. It is not sore though yet raw. must be slashed and all other expenses ^ has not sw.lleH Vo 11 ,
reduced, says the San Francisco Call. When Mr. Didesheimer was bossing operations at Virginia City he was paid from $1,500 to $2,000 a month for his services, and he, like the other superintendents, could afford to spend lavishly. (»neof the first superintendents, Mr. Palmer, who had charge of Ophir, had an annual salary of $25,000 for several years, and none of them received less than $1,000 a month. Tfie other day the salary of Superintendent Keating, of the Savage mine, who is one of the oldest and most experienced mining men on the coast, was cut down from $400 to $200 a month, and the other superintendents will naturally have to come to the same terms. William II. Patton, who was superintendent of Consolidated Virginia and a few other mines, received altogether from $1,250 to $1,500 a month for years. Charles Strong, of the Gould it Curry: Hank Smith, of the Belcher; Mr. Osbiston, who was employed by the Gould A Curry, and other men long enjooed a salary of $12,000 a year. When the big Gould A Curry mill was built the company gave Mr. Strong a present of $10,000 as an extra mark of appreciation for his
service as superintendent.
That mill was another example of the free manner in which cash was disbursed when the glory of the mines was at its height. Over eighty mills were running around Virginia City at that time—the year 1863—and when I they first began the charge they made j was $30 a ton. There was a sudden I drop to $15 a ton before long, and then gradually the price came down $1 a ton at a time until the present rate of $6 a ton ($7 a ton in some mills) was reached. Even this rate is deemed too high now on account of the depressed condition of the mines, and the mine managers
say that it must be reduced.
HONEY FROM FRUITS.
213 State Street, Chicago, Illinois.
O. Phillips,
r — Chas. Phillips to W !' IT / V IF lot in Russellville, $900.
ro , \ C !rxr r ' MaryJ. Conk to Wm. D. Parker,
FU tj 1 lot in Roachdale, $300. That our entire season will! Alex. Moran to Isaac Sinclair, lot in
be one continuous opening j Cloverdale, SP25
of iill the latest novelties in
I!!Ui illinery.
Woman may be a conuudrum but the world
will never give her up.
Unanswerable Demonstration. We have received and read with a degree of wonder ami surprise a publication recently ! issued by the Humphreys’ Medicine Co., New ! York. It contains nearly a thousand testiI moniala of the efficacy or Humphreys’ SpedSheriff of Putnam county to Jacob fic-H.
, i . a,These testimonials are the unsolicited of-
Reigal, land in Cloverdale tp., $10U. ! firings of those who have experienced and
William H witnessed the wonderful curative effects of ** ima . t | iege specilics. There are some three hun-
dred from publishers ami editors, one hun-
Finally he went there in person and
settled the matter.
“It's the worst I over saw,” he said,
in parting.
“We've attended to a good many people’s business,” argued the head of the
Grin.
“ But not as you have mine."
“Yes. quite the same.”
“O, come off," exclaimed the disgusted Detroiter. “You can’t stuff that down my throat. If you had treated
Herries, I’eaohcs and Grapes Injured by the ItnvHge* of tic's. Nectar in flowers is not honey, says a writer in Meehan’s Monthly. This nectar is gathered by the tongue of the j bee and enters what is called the honey bag, from which it is regurgi- j tated by the bee on its return to the ' hive and deposited in the honey cell. ' Even then it is thin and watery, and | does not become really honey until the watery parts have evaporated. In collecting the sweets the bees do not confine themselves wholly to the flowers. The writer of this paragraph has for u next neighbor u professional bee keeper, whose bees depend almost wholly on the flowers from the writer's garden that is to say, there are few other flowers, except wild ones, on which the bees can collect their material. Unfortunately for him they are not satisfied with the flower, buti also carry away the fruit. It is almost impossible in raspbt rry time to j get enough from his garden to make a respectable dish for the tea table; nearly every berry is sucked to pieces before it is absolutely ripe. It is the same with the grapes. In order to secure them from the ravages of the bees they have to be protected by paper bags. Last season, and for the first time, they have been found to carry away peaches also. How they first penetrate the skin is not clear, hut it may possibly have been from the puncture of thccurculio. The curculio frequently cuts the skin without depositing the egg, and this single break may be borne along without injury to the peach, permitting it to ripen. It is possible that they get a first entrance here. At any rate, certain it is that before the peach is fairly ripe little is left of the peach but the stone. Other fruit growers likewise complain of the ravages of the bees, i Bee keepers contend that this cannot be; that the bee is incapable of perforating the fruit. Tjiis may or may not be; certainly what perforations might exist before the bees discovered them would not injure the fruit. The following up ot tins by the bees is just as Ljtd us if they made tl.r original perforations for themselves.
— „ m/ic luougu yei raw It has not swelled. No matter will form He will work with it right along ami in a day or two it will be well. Inflamm* tion cannot exist where it is applied, any more than the morning dew can continue under the bright snn rays. Used externally and internally and cures colic, summer complaints, flux, dyspepsia, etc., etc., also 5 drops on a small lump of sugar once in two hours cures sore throat and consumption. In fact it cures any disease that has Inflammation in it. One tablespoonful dose cures La Grippe. Never disappoints. Safe and certain. Money refunded if satisfaction not given. Take a bottle home to-day.
HOW SAVINGS GROW.
A Pretty Little Story That Will Make
You <««*t a Hunk Itook Now.
This incident, told in a St. Louis newspaper, shows how a small sum, deposited where it will draw a moderate rate of interest, will accumulate in the course of years. It ought to convey a lesson to young persons who think their savings are too small to be
worth investing.
Some years ago a man entered the Boatmen's savings bank on Second street in St. Louis with a somewhat diffident air, and looked inquiringly about him. as one not quite positive of his hearings, lie scrutinized the building closely, looked about the interior, and presently found his way to the
cashier's desk.
“There used to be a hank here in the old times,” he said, “called the Boatmen's savings institution. 1 suppose it is dead long ago. This hank, of course, has nothing to do with it.” “It’s the same bank,” replied the cashier, “only the name is a little
changed."
“Ah!” exclaimed the stranger, with surprise. “}Vell. when the old institution started, I was one of the first do- i positors; hut I put in only one hundred j dollars. I reckon, after so many ups and downs, that it must have been wiped out long ago.” “Who are you?” the cashier asked, "and what is your name?” “My name is Jefferies.” “Thomas Jefferies?” cried the cash-
ier.
“Yes, they called me Tom then.” "Where have you been.Mr. Jefferies, those long years, and why haven’t you written us?” “In Californy; and, of course, I thought the one hundred dollars was a dead duck, and it's only your sign that called me in now." “Well. Mr. Jefferies, if you have been idle.’* said the cashier, taking down and opening a great folio, “your one hundred dollars lias not. Here it is. Your check on this hank to-day is good for seven thousand eight hundred and seventy-five dollars. You have only to get some one to prove your identity, and we will pay it over.”
A chestnut tree 212 feet high ami 2,000 year* old stands at the foot of Mt. Etna. A Good Liver. Keep your liver active and you'll not suffer with biliousness there's the secret. Win * bilious try a 25-cent package of Simmons Liver Regulator powder. Take it on thr tongue or make a tea. You'll take uo more pills. Tobacco was discovered in Cuba in 1102, but was uot introduced into Knglaud until 15M. The Best of All. Mr. 3. H. Jackson, of Roberts, hid., write* as follows: “IMca«c send me one do/cu more of Dr. Well’s New Cough t ure. I find it the best seller and most satisfactory Cough Medicine I can get. My customers say it is the best of all. Trice 25 cents. Hold by Albert Allen. oct
A heart that has often been tendered is tough.
Jease B. Johnson
, Johnson, land in Madison tp., $600.
Beginningwith U eflnrftthtf/, <M. I j Frank Bracken to Thomas I.
. rn special display of Bnicken lan( i in Clinton tp., $50.
rimmed work throughout the week. , . . sr-n . . \t ir v T n-ir
N. B. - Fine orders and mourning Sophia A. Miller to • • •
ork we make a specialty. You are nail, land in Franklin tp., $715. the pap .....
“JSt heartily invited to call and see Pollv Ann Reeves et al. to Chas. pany for • copy and read What People Bay. • Two-thirds of the gold now in uso in the ^ - - 1 * v/ny , ... . , world was hscovereil during the lust 50 years.
ii 1 A : *•/-»« tino ut I r> Til Kv .{f il I An ntrif iif inn in vvlilskv riroipa—nlifikimri ■— ——
dred from dealers, and others from every very many people as you have treated grade of society, and all with one accord tefl me, you would have been killed long the none story, the wonderful curative ef- v « , h „ • f „ . fects of Humphreys'Specifics. oeiori » vt r I n. am oi you. and with Surelv one thing is settled beyond contro- that burst of anger In 1 walked out perversy Humphreys'Specifics do euro Bo say feotly satisfied. — Detroit Free Press.
‘' --.•">ers. So say we all. Semi to the Com-1
™J’erfect satisfaction guaranteed.
B Respectfully,
■MRS. D. E. PRESTON.
South Jackson street.
SpiEVIlVE CHAFFGE, TRIMMER. 24tf
Pursell land in Greencastle tp., $2,300. An agitation iu whisky circles shaking
Rachel G. Pureell to Harvey A. dice for drinks^
Reeves, land in Greencastle tp.j^ £700. you cun a ff 0r( j to be _aunoyed_
For sale, 20 extra choice Barred Plymouth
Barred
Rock Cockerels. £1 *X)each; 2 yearling ' Ply mouth Rock Cocks, *2.00 each; fi S. O.
sick'White Leghorn Cockerels, extra fine, $1.00
cl
Samuel H. Davidson to Wm. 1). Par- ““‘jA »: ker, lot in Roachdale, $765, cure them. Albert Allen, agt. ly
Cockerels,
once. Call on or ad-!
{ dress Forrest Ellis, Bainbridge, 1ml. 25tf i
Intelligence of IHrils. !t is certain that all creatures on the desert show remarkable intelligence, ami how they acquire their information is decidedly a puzzle. Suppose, for example, alfalfa seed is sown. The place may not have a bird about the day before the seed is put in, but next day a cloud of them will descend upon tile spot and faithfully eat every seed. They do their work thoroughly and with praiseworthy industry. Poisoned wheat will cheek the entire removal of the seed, but the sparrow is never deterred by death, though there are some who affirm a few dead sparrows will have a chastening influence upon the rest. The first English maga/im was published in u;;i2. A single sponge has been ue i i the coast of Florida 5 ft. ii in. in cireumstam es.
All that honesty', experience and skill can do to produce a perfect pill, has been em ployed in making!JeWitt's Little FarlyRisers Th. result is a specific for sick headache, bill ousness and constipation. Albert Allen, agt.ly Probably the biggest thing on ice is the price. "I consider Chamberlain's Cough Remedy a specific for croup, it is very pleasant to take, which is one of the most important requisites where a cough remedy is intended for use among children. I have known ol cases of croup where I known the life of a little one was saved by the uso of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy.” J. J. LaGrange. druggist, ’ v • ' 1 ' "'It liott l.o - to r sill' V A r . rl Aneu. oct The maids of old were not necessarily old maids.
“During the term of service in the army I contracted chronic dlnrrahcea,’' says A E. Bending, ot Helsey, Oregan. "Since then I have used a great amount of medicine, but when 1 found any that would give me relief they would injure my stomach, until Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diurrabu a Rem edy was brought to my notice. I used it and will say It is the only remedy that gave me permanent relief and no bad results follow.' For sale by Albert Alien. oct The ring and letters that a girl returns are slight tokens. Attention Farmers! If you have a horse that has poor appetite is isngtiid,hair rough and rundown generally use Morris' English Stable Powders and lie will speenily recover. For the removal of worms it has noequal. Will make your hoise Slick, Fat and glossy. Contains no antimony or injurious drugs. Pound packages 2ftcents. Sold by Albert Allen. oct Hitthest prioe pnid forhul>>. pelt arnl Utllow by Vain:l. f., o. m,u. lit
