Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 October 1893 — Page 7
Bogus!
Bofrus white lead would have no sale did it not
afford makers a larger profit than Strictly Pure White Lead. The wise man is never persuaded to buy paint that is said to be ‘just as good ” or “ better ” than
THE HELIOGRAPH IN WAR LAKE pumpedjdut for ore.
: Heavy
Seventy
A System of Great Importance In Military Science.
Strictly Pure White Lead
How Are Fliuhed Over tJrr»t nutaiier* by the Aid of Till* Unique Invention — The Old Method of roininunleutlnn.
The market is flooded with spurious white leads. The following analyses, made by eminent chemists, of two of these misleading brands show the exact proportion of genuine white lead they contain: Misleading Brand •‘Standard Lead Co. Strictly Pure White Lead. St. Louis." . Materials Proportions Analyzed by Barytes 80.86 |ier cent. Regis C’liauvenet Oxide of Zinc 81.18 per cent. Jk Bro., White Lead 6.46 pci cent. St. Louis. Less than 7 per cent, white lead.
Misleading Brand ••Pacific Warranted Pure IA] White Lead." Materials Proportions Analyzed by Sulphate of Lead 4.18 per cent. Ledonx & Co., Oxide of Zinc 45.01 per cent. New York. Barytes 50.68'per cent. No white lead in it.
ogus
chasing any of the following brands. They are manufactured by the “ Old Dutch" process, and are the standards; “Armstrong & McKelvy” “Beymer-Bauman” “Eckstein’ 1 “Fahnestock” “Anchor” “Kentucky” “Morley” “Southern” “Shipman" “Red Seal” “Collier” “Davis-Chambers”
/ The west is the true home of the hellograph, says the Washington Post. The 1 department of Arizona, during the re- : cent troubles over the late lamented Geronimo, made what might have been I termed a heliographic survey of the ' seat of the Indian troubles, and located | on the maps the available points of ob- : serrations with the direction and com- ! pass bearing of the other visible stations. In this way the .country was ■ covered with a network of heliographj ists, and the observers at each station . kept flashing into headquarters the 1 latest movements of the hostiles. The Indians, under this cross-fire of 1 mysterious sun signals, decided that the devij was in league with the troopers, and their superstitious fears, added j to the constant harrying from the j widely-scattered parties of cavalry, brought them to terms, as never could have been done but for the use of the
1 flash signals.
The distances covered by some of the ; heliograph stations were remarkable, i Fifty or sixty miles were considered
Deposit* of Iron Under
Feet of Water.
Few pieces of engineering work were ever undertaken that exceeded the pumping out of Lake Angeline, near Ishpeming, Mich., where pumps have been working for sixteen months. The water is all gone now, but apparently | the hardest part of the work has still | to be accomplished. The lake lies near i the southern part of Ishpeming, cover- ; ing one hundred acres, and was seven- !
ty feet deep in the middle.
It was for a long time the source of that city’s water supply, until the ' growth of the town about its shores contaminated the water. Under the bed of the lake lie the largest iron-ore deposits ever discovered. The ore was discovered some ten years ago, when a diamond drill was set on the frozen surface of the lake one winter, and a hole drilled six hundred feet down be- 1
LONG-LIVED RULERS.
Tho Gorman Fatherland Has
Abundance of Them.
WHERE IS THE GENTLE GIRL?
Has Sh** Oitplaceri by the A^jcren-
•Ive Young Itusinr** Woman?
One hears and rends much about tho gentleman who will keep his seat in a crowded street ear and will not spend
Time flies yet the still and beats time.
orchestra leader sit*
We can learn nothing about tomahawk from books on ornithology.
‘‘Why Is He So Irritable?"
This question <s often heard and nearly aa
fluke's Hidden Wedding—The Benlga! ^is vacation at the popular summer ra- Often unanswered. Kuler of Meeklenlitirg-strelltz Ab- j sorts, but what litis become of the gen- ' h i 8 always remembered, as it should eented Himself, Thus Having j tie girl, inquires the New York .World ! V tl,e occasion of ill-temper and irrit*lllft People Kspente. | Where are those sweet, shy creatures buityisoftun to be found in the physical who used to wear lawn dresses and c ° n(lition ° f thc Persons .fleeted. What la
There seems to be something ^ m“ salubrious in the climate of Germany, ‘ * “TT nR i the 5“ ns P icuous ’ is tortured with rheumatism, how can he be particularly for persons of roval blood ) , ' , ' vh ° " ted to be .fable :.n I agreeable* Can a if one may judge from the ripe old am; ‘V l' 1 sa Tf 8 f™ ^ as rn ^ c ‘ n, ' s -and confirmed dyspeptic be expected to be cheerftU to which the heads of the various u'. 1 ! T i ^ ' i , , " > , 0 . r llus ' ho< ’’ and alwaya ready to t. U u funny story* The
kingdoms, duchies and principalities have attained. The celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of succession to the throne has been commemorated in several petty states of the fatherland
What lias become of blushing sixteen only way to remove the difficulty Is to got at and all those dainty, quiet young the cause. Dyspepsia, rheumatism, impure women who would rather "be sweet” blood and liver troubles yield to Hood's Sartban smart? Has tho gentle girl gone .aparllla; this is why it is an etiective tranwith the “hnz.zy," the work basket and quilizer, a peaceful messenger, and a preven-
within the past few years. The duke
. ....... of 8axe-Coborge-Goth», bfother of the ,, ,, low the bed of the pig-iron. Largeore lamented prince consort of Oueen Vic- B * reeable - Her motto seems to be to «; inches in length,
mrdies were cut by the drill, and the * »-j- -u
the tatting shuttle?
The business girl is too sharp to be
tive of domestic quarrels.
An Indiana man claims to have a cucumber
three mining companies owning the ^ sev^ra'r years. 1 The'grand duke 'of ha * BU ^now-what-youro-up-to kind ground under the lake began devising Saxe-Weimar, who lived in the beauti- ° f manm>r; sho sa - vs: “ I,ow iir ‘‘ y° u - means to secure this valuable ore. ' “ ’ 1
The greater part of the lake
We could not improve the quality if paid double the price. DeWitt s Witch Hazel Salve is the best salve that experience can produce.
owned by the Cleveland iron companies. The first and second named
companies did more or less work under the surface of the lake, but the ever present danger of a rush of water from above rendered it imperative that the water be taken out. Work was begun last spring before the snow left the
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.
were covered without an intervening
station.
The invention of the heliograph bei longs to England, and it lias been used extensively in her service in India and , Egypt, two countries where the atmospheric conditions are very much as in our own arid west. The instrument was first brought to America in 1874, and, like a great many other inventions of John Bull, was greatly improved by his Yankee cousin, so that the instruj ment now in use in our signal corps is
Going East—8.45 a. m., 1: 48 p. m., 5:17 p. ra., considered by experts the most nearly
(Join™ West 8:16 a. m., 12:50p. m.,6:46p.m..'. in worM.
12:30 a. ra. j The speed of the heliograph is not so
MONON ROUTE. great as that of the regular telegraph
NATIONAL LEAD CO.,
1 Broadway, New York* Cincinnati Branch,
Cincinnati, - - • Ohio.
RAIL HA V TIME TABLE'
BIG FOUR.
ful tow n * * made f a mous' *1 > y ^ (ioe t he. >'«« -me ^0 her present and j or that money can 1 uy. Albert Allen, agTS Schiller, Herder, Wieland and Liszt, b,, * bs y ou straight in the eyes without For first-class dreHsmaking call on has reigned m»:re than fifty years, and the glimmer of a smile or a trace of | Miss Serena Spaulding, corner of has celebrated the fiftieth annlversarv eml,arrBSSm< ‘ nt - s!ie bosses the oflloe 1 Indiana and Liberty streets. 2t25 .x sz £ u» ^sr-
w„/rx s h‘z., 2; A/ci,
Saxony is white haired and seventy,”, lu Th ., uiriswho show the least Hon Bainbridge. 24tf
and the grand duke of liaden and the ness, ine girtsuno snow tnc least
- - , , irronnl Wb no t duke of Meiningen'are men approach- -''^atiox for the saleswomen are Genuine Round Oak Stoves at Phefs
nothing unusual, and on one‘ reach” ground, when a rotary pump with aca- ing the time when they will be called, the best customers; they have money son’s, Bainbridge; coal or wood. 24tf
hundred and twenty-five miles pacity of twenty thousand gallons per The prince of Lippe-Detmold died only ' >Ut n '’ manners - ^ clerk who has — minut, . .. anchoretl I. . W In «... . „ « W,.d.rf«l Obtained bj
_ ... _ ! much as possible, because of tlwir inl ut none of the petty German sov- solence . ‘ ]n this house , which ?ives
\v*ir S 't' *1 • 00 P, a ,' V1 mperor em pi 0 y mcn t to about eight hundred
william L, his great chancellor and i • i , V ,, ..
,. . 1 , • women and girls, the clerks call them-
mmor , ta marshal in the re- se l V es‘‘salesladies,” and their colabor-
creation of the German empire is more ( „. s in (1rossmaUinfr !tnf , upho i Ktory '
avow, However, remains a serious L 0 - 1 !!' <l , 1 l '. ran . < . r ' < departments "shop girls." So proquestion to be settled. There is a bed U lllla,n ’ < f Mecklenburg-btrelitz. Only nouncea is the feeling of the “ladies”
deep • Celubrat rV 1 the B T‘- co “- who sell goods against the girls who
‘ ,1 tenmal anniversary of his marriage to . ..
Thla Grand Duehess Augusta, his cousin, o^te on suits, corsets, wraps, mat-
who was born a princess of Great Britain. I
center of the lake, and began pumping water into a big flume elevated twenty feet above the surface of the water. The pump has been going day and night, allowing for occasional breakdowns, and the water has only recent-
ly been drained all out.
Now, however, remains a serious 1
Using H rb Bemedies in Treat”
ing Chronic Disease.
of mud from two to forty feet over the bed of the former lake, mud is kept moist by underground springs, from which the water bubbles up. liig tubular stand-pipes, pierced
The
with myriads of small holes hardly „ 1 ^T"", "T’ 1 ; si
int are l.ei™ P ° st ' ,S clo8el y r ‘‘ latt * <l
GoiiiK North—11:40 a. in., 4:25 p. ra., 1:27 . . i.i u m , > _ a. m.; local, 12:10 p. ra. ' instrument, although the Morse alphaGolug South—2:55 p. m., 2:05 a. m., 5:17a. m.; bet is used. Ten or twelve words a local, 1:55 p. m. minute is considered good work, and is In effect May 22, 1893. Trains leave Greencas* 11 vast improvement over the old tie, Ind., ‘ method of signaling by flags, with FOR THE WEST. » f rom three to four words a min-
No. 21, Daily.. “ 1, Dally “ 7, Daily “ 5, Ex. Sun. .. “ 3, Ex. Sun.... “ 1, Ex. Sun ... “ 3, Ex. Sun....
2:10 p. 111.,
12:53 p. m., 12:12 a. m.,
8:56 a. ra., 5:28 p. in., 7:05 a. m., 3:00 p. 111
for St. Louie.
Terre Haute.
Feoria. Decatur.
ute was the most that could be done. An ally of the heliograph now in use by the signal corps is the flash lantern, where messages are sent at night over stretches of from ten to fifteen miles.
grand duke, says the Chicago
to the present
generation of the Hohenzollerns. He was born October 17, 1819, and was the son of Grand Duke George, brother of the famous Queen Louise, the mother
any heavy object thrown on it is quick- " iHuun, and -- - • - i Grand Duchess Marie, daughter of
Hesse-Cassel. After
larger than a needle’s point, are being forged into the mud, and into these the water filters and is pumped out. ' The surface of the bed of the lake is more treacherous than quicksand, for
ly engulfed. Several narrow escapes j from drowning have taken place. It will take sixteen months longer to get
rid of the mud.
Landgrave of nesse-i assei. Alter a thorough preparation for a university course by the professors of the gym-
tresses and carpets that they have separate entrances. The shop girls, for reasons best known to themselves, do not put on as much style as the downstairs beauties, although they earn considerably more money, their wages varying from eight to thirty-five dollars a week, while the average salary for the saleswoman is one dollar a day. Mrs. Astor would bow to her laundress if she met her in the street, while these “salesladies” would not stoop to notice a waist finisher or a fitter. Perhaps
, nowhere is the incivility and rudeness
nasnim at Ncustrclitz he entered the () f <mr y 0un g women more remarkable U niversity of Bonn in is .n. He was ! than in the street cars, and it makes
. though, under favorable conditions, ' A N - egro 8at ou th „ Safety VmlTe> IIoUHni| roL°A Jan-T Z 1 dim ‘ rt ‘ ncu whetheP the P aM8t ' n -
j with night glasses, the messages have ( Down the steam. ! advent at the old institution was disheen sent forty miles at a single reach, j The famous race between the Hanni* * cussed far and wide. His example has
MAN-O-WA.
,o, — - OLD-TIME STEAMBOAT RACING.
No. 20, Daily 1:19 p. in., for Indianapolis •‘ 8, Daily 3:52 p. in., “ “
“ 6, Daily 3:36 a. ra., •* 12, Daiiv 2:24 a. in.,
“ L Kxisullr' 8:34 a." In!) •• " | The old method in night signaling was , ^al City and the Ocean Spray, which been foUowed by hundreds of princes tricts the faces are cross-looking the
For uoniplete Time Card, giving all trains to use two torches after the manner of occurred in 1859. is the subject of an since tiiat time and to-dav it is
,nd stationa, and for full information as to; tlioso ' 1 - - J 1
WHO IS HE?
j gers come from normal college, famii lies in good circumstances, boarding schools, workshops or shopping dis-
nuu BVBtl 'IIo, turn* luzvaau rates, through uars, etc., address
J. S. DOWLING, Agent,
Greencastle, Ind.
manner is aggressive, the voices are
flag signals. One of these, known as j article in a St. Louis paper. Prior to 1 much a matter of course that the scion shrill, the gaze is steady, and the gen-
Or J. M. CuK.snnocoH, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt.
the foot torch was placed qn the ( this rjtce the Ocean Sprav had splendid ] of a ruling house spend several years tie girl is conspicuous by her absence,
ground in front of the observer, to give records. The race was from St. Louis at a university as it formerly whs that
St. Louis, Mo.
1 his location to the receiver at the other 1
■4’ai»i Mir
THE BEST
GROCERIES and Provisions,
S * a “ Y 4 iul. 2 * i e s. Uijgai-.s, Tulmvco. ETC., ETC.. AT LOWEST PUK ES, At
Kiefer
Finest Lunch Counter in the Cit!). Come and See,
iopllr
> 2 'I'M
ioBlli ilB low CHiCiltO Dtlfc-
HWAYS G1VF.SE ITS FATP.OHS
Th0 Tail “Worth of
Their Money by Taking Thera
Bafely Hud Quickly
between
Chicago
• Lafayette Indianapolis Cincinnati* ^ Louisville
end of the line, and the “fly torch” on the end of the long pole was used in 1 waving out the words. This method was afterward superseded by the use of lanterns with dark shutters worked by a key, as in the | telegraph sounder, but these arrange- ; ments were likely to get out of order | in the! field, and now the energies of the corps are bent to perfecting a brilliant lantern of light weight, which ' can lie obscured by a regular helio- , graph screen. The lanterns now in , use in the corps are fed with a mixture of kerosene and sperm oil, but experiments arc now going on with a magnesium tape, fed before the reflector by clockwork. It gives a very brilliant light at an expense of about fifty cents an hour. The heliograph is regarded by army officers as one of the most practical and useful inventions of modern military science, and in the ease of a beleaguered city would furnish a means of communication with the outside world that would discount balloons, carrier pigeons and the magnetic telegraph. us the line could not be cut by the enemy and the messenger could not be captured or shot in transit. In the ease of Washington, should that city ever chance to be blocaded, the heliograph would furnish a very certain means of communication for a radius of thirty miles around, and a signal observer stationed on top of the monument could flash messages almost if not quite to Baltimore, if the conditions were, at all favorable.
university as it formerly was* that
to Keokuk. The early part of the race he entered the army. The sons of the was very close, and the excitement ] present emperor are not only to bewas intense. When nearing Hissell’s come students at Bonn, but are to at-
* 1 the gymnasium or college at for nine years, taking the full
nibal City passing her. The mate on tho Ocean Spray, one Davis, becoming desperate, ordered the head of a barrel
Kiel
course of the institution.
The young grand duke hereditary of
of turpentine to be knocked in. Hisi Mecklenburg-Strelitz spent several
PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS ELEGANT PARLOR CARS ALL TRAINS M TROUGH SOlID
Tickets Sold and Baggage Checker to ’■'e-stinatiori.
a an* •’tit ‘xin.. - • ui-. li vou war. to be usrt fulij iniOrmsd —oil Tinuc Auents at Coupon ^itatiorio pave toem—or adaieHS
The South Invites Northern Vim and Energy to Investigate Her
Many Advantages.
For those wishing to change their locations
and secure health ami prosperity, here is a
The Mobile A Ohio railrond has
chance. The Mobile & Ohio railrond has ar ranged to run Home-seekers' Excursions at cheap rates to Oitronella, Ala., and return'on September 26, October 24, November 11 mid 28, and December 12, 1893 Stop-over privileges and ample limits granted on tickets. Thousands of acres of productive land for sale on your own terras in Misssissippi and
Alabama.
Southern literature and full particulars furnished on application to K. w. Greeno, general agent, 108 N. Broadway, St. Louis, Mo., E. E. Posey. O. P. A.. Mobile, Ala., or to Land Agent M. « O. R. R. t
B. VK8TAL. 408. M. ALLKN VESTAL & ALLEN, LXJ0 , X , IO3VrX*JI3IL» OHKKSH ASTI.B, IND. II attend . nd make sales on best terms, nvo onlera with us personally. «r addreHi •ough postoflice, Oreenoastle. In<I. •ales of stock every Saturday afternoon i public square.
P. II. I^iiminerN.
Wvywfcwvw wyu\ Suvoccox
Hp Smelt ’Em. “It is curious,” said a father, “how deficient young people seem to be in some of their senses and how acute in others. For instance, the other day my boy and I went crabbing. When it got along toward noon we both got very hungry and my son sent me ashore to buy lunch, while he went out upon the river again and went on crabbing. I went up into a nearby village and bought some pies and cakes and sarsaparilla. I carried these down to the wharf and stood there and shouted till I was hoarse, but my sou never heard me. Then an idea struck me: 1 was
to the windward of him and I took a pie out of the bundle and held it up in one hand ami I held up a bottle of sarsaparilla in the other. He turned his head toward me instantly, and then I saw him make a grab for the anchor; the next minute he was coming for me as hard as he could pull."
A Mountain of Hornstone. Mount Kineo, which rises precipitously seven hundred feet out of the
men were then ordered to dip the wood in this turpentine before putting it in the furnace, the object being to quickly increase the steam pressure. The Ocean Spray was supposed to carry only one hundred and sixty pounds of steam, but Davis thought that by "put ting another negroon the safety valve” he could run the pressure up to two hundred pounds and distance his rival. In carrying the dripping woojd to the furnace the track became saturated with the turpentine, which caught fire from the open furnace. The flame quickly reached the barrel. An attempt was made to throw the barrel overboard, but it exploded, and, the burning oil being scattered all around, the boat was soon a mass of flames. Scott Matson was captain on the Hannibal City. lie was a brave and generous man, and in this instance these two qualities made his name famous. Notwithstanding the imminent danger he ran his boat alongside the burning one and rescued every person on board. Davis, the mate of the burned boat, was afterward convicted
and sent to the penitentiary for such gross violation o? the rules of safety.
He was later pardoned.
SHARP EYES.
Small Things Which Arc Kruillly Detected by Trained Optics. We never see everything that is about us, and no two of us ever see precisely the same things. Each sees what his previous training and his habit of mind have prepared him td see. When Hudson was in Patagonia he fell inwith a gambler, who told him that always after the first few rounds of the game he knew some of the cards as they were dealt; he recognized them by a difference so slight that another man could not detect it even when it was pointed out to him. Mr. Hudson is an ornithologist, and he says that this same preternaturally sharp-eyed man was greatly surprised when he was told that half a dozen kinds of sparrows were feeding and singing about the house. He had never seen any difference in them, he said. In size, color, shape and actions they were all alike, and they all sang and twittered alike, so far as he had ever noticed. Native Patagonians, like other savage peoples, have very keen eyes for certain things—things which their
FREAKS OF AN IOWA TORNADO.
A ItooNter Escapes Without u Scratch, But
Loscm Every Feather.
J. W. Bradley, formerly of this city,
years at Bonn studying law, history and political science. After leaving the institution he passed a year in traveling in Italy and Switzerland. At the suggestion of his cousin, King Frederick William IV., he then entered the Prussian army to prepare himself for an active military career. In 1842 the prince hereditary became engaged to Princess Augusta, daughter of Duke Adolf, of Cambridge, the son of King (ieorge III. of England and tjueen Charlotte, who was born a princess of MecklenburgStrelitz. In September, 1800, he sue eeeded his blind father as grand duke. Since that time he lias devoted himself assiduously to the welfare of his little country. Many of its most famous institutions are duo to his liberality. He took an active part in the wars of 1806 and 1870-71 and then gained the lasting gratitude of Emperor William
and his supporters.
The report that Duke George of Meiningen intended to abdicate in favor of his son, the brother-in-law of the German emperor, has been officially denied. The rumor arose from the resignation from the army of the duke hereditary and • his return to Meiningen. Few people in Germany, however, would be surprised if the rumor should prove to he founded in fact. The reigning duke has long suffered from illness and has been unable to spend more than a few weeks each year in the beautiful capital of the little duchy. The duke was married morganatically several years ago—after the death of his wife—to Fraulein Helena Franz, a member of the famous Meiningen theater. She was created Baroness de Heldburg upon her marriage. The couple have lived happily together, caring little for society or
the pomp of court life.
The prince hereditary, who will succeed his father sooner or later in the control of the duchy, is a man of literary rather than military instincts. His wife Charlotte, the eldest sister of the German emperor and known before her marriage as the “Venus of the Hohenzollerns," was never deeply in love with her husband, and the marriage in consequence has been unhappy Her cleverness and beauty have brought many men to her feet. The duke would have been engaged in duels had it not been that his
He is the benefactor of humanity. He ia the well known Herb Doctor who has cured so many suffering people around Greencastle
during the oust two years.
How can he cure people expected to die* How can lie cure those terrible Chronic diseases with which so many are afflicted* liy using a new system of medicine new to the white race, but well known and hundreds of years old to the Indians. His medicines,
over 2,000 in number, are not poisonous drugs, hut the natural sweetness of the earth. Sick
people are doctored even by self-styled specialists on poisonous mineral drugs. If healthy
composed of
largest mass of that mineral in the j known world. There is no true flint j in the United States, but hornstone so , closely resembles it that it takes an expert to tell the difference. This rock supplied arrow* heads to Indians hundreds and thousands of miles away. The discovery «f these arrow heads in the Mississippi valley has led to the belief that a system of commercial exchange must have existed among the reomen in former centuries. Accord-
ing to an
tain is the body
ble that they should notice. In other words, they are specialists, and as a matter of course they excel in their
many
station in life precluded his giving or accepting a challenge. He cared little for ills military duties, although he held the rank of lieutenant general, and secured so many leaves of absence
mailer oi course mev excel m men i , ,
, zi , i. i . I that he was rarely with his division, own particular line. But it does not „ , ” . * - - - He is by no means a handsome man.
Hiu dislike of the soldier’s life does not
follow that they have better eyes than are possessed by men of civilized coun-
tries.
Set one of them to find a reversed “s” in the mididle of a printed page, says Mr. Hudson, and the tears would run down his brown cheeks and he
Office-Id Central National Bank Buildiug. ‘ alu "
1 that was slain by a giant.
would give up the search with aching
Indian Yra.Yition the momi-! eyeballs. But the proof reader can find of a monster moose i the reversed letter in u few moments
and never straip his eyes in the least. ir .
add to his popularity in a country so devoted to militarism as is Germany. He is a clever man, however, a composer of merit and the author of a number of plays which he has translated into modern Greek. Although he is more popular in Athens than in Meiningen, there is little doubt that he will make a wise and faithful :tion-
but now of Pomeroy, la., says the Columbus (O.) Dispatch, was on the prairies within about six miles of the fearful cyclone near Pomeroy several weeks ago, ami tells of some miraculous performances of the wind. He could see the dark, death-dealing cloud across the level prairie, and watched it as it apparently struck the ground, and after traveling the earth for a distance would ascend, only to swoop down and wipe up everything in its path. He went to examine the work of the cyclone the next day, and with others came across a house that had been wrecked. Work of clearing away the debris was commenced to see if any person was under the ruins. The only evidence of life about the the place was a live rooster that ran out after the boards had been removed, but the bird had been plucked of his feathers. In fact, not a single feather remained on the rooster. It had been completely stripped of its plumage, but was otherwise uninjured. At another point close by a farmer was some distance from his house when the terrible wind struck tho building. As soon as it was possible to got to the spot he went to looking after the welfare of his family. Fortunately they had got in the cellar, and the building, every board, was raised from tho foundation and swept away. This was done so f“»\ickly that the wife stated she lookiAfV /> when the house blew away and beheld a clear sky. The barn on the same farm was whirled in the air from the sills as if sawed off, leaving horses standing unharmed on the floor. Mr. Bradley found the key to the organ of a church three miles away, and has it with him as a memento of the great disaster. lie states that the track of the cyclone could easily be followed without regard to the ruin that stalked in its path. The grass, green before the storm struck it, had afterward u dead appearance, as if it had been burned by a hot, dry snn. There was no wind or atmospheric disturbance a few feet from the parts where the houses were
wrecked.
people trietl to live on them they would certainly die. How. then, can the sick expect to live on them? The best foods tor man or
beast are veKetable, therefore they ought to
e the best mcnicines for the sick.
be and are 1
DR. MAN-O-WA only uses vegetable inedicim s, coinnosed of roots, harks, gums and herbs which, prepared into a tea. will nourish the body and make the blood pure and
healthy, by drawing all noison from the system and restoring health, strength I “ *
gth and vitalindorsements
ity. The Doctor has strong
from liD many friends in Putnam county und
in fact from all over the State.
U. C. Titus, ex-Sheriff of Boone county, Ind.: Gtir physicians could ueilliet give us any encouragement nor the boy relief. Dr. Man-o-Wa made a thorough examination and prepared treatment for liim. und through his constant and scientific treatment our
baby hoy has been saved to us.
Mrs. Jennie Ashley, Frankfort, Ind.: I was a great suflerer with dyspepsia, neuralgia, calarrli of throat and eyes, nervous debility,
catarrh of throat and eyes, nervous debility, und after taking two months' treatment I
was completely cured.
Mrs. E. H. Spivey, Cyclone, Ind.: I had been a miserahle sufferer for years. I had severe catarrh of throat, with complete loss of voice; could only speak in a whisper; was having chills und (ever; was also a constant sufferer from diseases peculiar to my sex. After taking four months' treatment I was
completely cured.
Mary Hopkins, Frankfort, Ind.: My life was miserable. I was only too anxious to die and get relief. I could only get ease when under the influence of laudanum. After five months' treatment I have been broken from opium habit and am enjoying life as I have
not done before for years.
Joseph Culler, Harmony, Ind.: After hegin-
In a Snakes’ Den. An awful battle with rattlesnakes and copperheads was lately fought by three men, says a Mount Carmel correspondenfcof the Philadelphia Record. While hunting on the mountain near Brush Valley Schardel VVlest, Aaron Mummah and John (irwig went through an experience calculated to raise their hair and set all their nerves twitching. Wiest fell down through a hoi# in the ground that was screened by a clump of bushes upon a very big nest of reptiles. Before the startled snakes had recovered from their surprise Wiest drew quickly away from them and fired a shot into their midst. Ho then started to beat them with the stock of his gun. He knew that he was in great danger, and yelled for help. Wiest was almost exhausted when Mummah and Orwig came to the rescue and fired so many shots tiiat the snakes gave up the battle. Thirty-two rattlesnakes and three copperheads were killed-
niiiK your treatment I improved wonderfully, had been told ray ctxsv was incurable.
as I had been told ray
After three months’ treatment I find that I can do as much work as the average man of
my age.
MAN-O-WA.THE INDIAN HERB DOCTOR has successfully treated many others in this section who were alllicted with Catarrh, Stomach, Liver, Kidney and Bladder Disease, Heart Trouble, Epilepsv, Rheumatism, Syphlis. Spermatorrhea, Night Emissions, Nervous Debility, Female Weakness, Bronchitis, Wasting and Chronic Diseases, which only a skillful specialist can cure. Are you discouraged? Have you thought you could not get well? The Doctor knows better than you whether you can or not. Call and see him. He can tell your disease at once. If he can do this he knows how to doctor you. If he can cure or relieve your suffering let him do so. His examinations are free. He will plainly tell you just what can be done for youu Mnii-o-Wh will be at Coin inertial House, Oreriicastle, on
WEDNESDAY. OCT. 25.
Xotire of Appointment of A .s.s if) n ee»
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned,
ielson.
Quinton Broadstreet and James H.C. Nelson, have been appointed by the Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court, as assignees for the benefit of all the creditors of Franklin P. Nelson, of Greencastle, Putnam county, Indiana, and that said creditors are hereby notified to file their claims with said assignees as the law requires, for allowance or disallowance of the same, and that all persons knowing themselves to be indebted to the said Franklin P. Nelson or who have cross accounts with him
are required to call at the office of Quinton Broadstreet, in Southard's Block, in the city
1 VXTV, 1X1 tl’lllIJisril O 1*1(11 K, 1X1 1,11*5 Vivy of Greencastle, Indiana, and pay or adjust
the same with said assignees. QUINTON BROADSTREET, JAMES H. C. NELSON,
Greencastle, Ind., September 30, 1893. it®
Xotire of Athninistrntion.
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 W. Dixon, late of Putnam county, Indiana,
deceased.
Said estate is supposed to he solvent. Dated this 6th day of October, 1893.
ELIJAH GRANTS
Smiley & Neff. Attys.
GRANTHAM, Administrate,-,,
6. C. Neale, Veterinary Sr
Graduate of the Ontario Veter and member of the Ontario V? cal Society. All diseases of S
carefully treated. Odice at Livery 8table, Oreencast > day and night, promptly and Surgery a speci» ^
