Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 November 1893 — Page 3
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{b. 0 A*. Vol. 35, No 28
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ORB8NCASTLE, IND., NOV. 11. 1893.
Vol. 21, No 30
RHEUMATISM. NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, SPRAINS, BRUISES, SWELLINGS, BURNS.
BED ROCK PRICES < >n Bedroom Sots, Bed Lounges, Bedsteads, and Bed Springs, at HANNA’S FURNITURE STORE. Where everything is New. Neat and Nobby.
Special Attention Given to Undevtakiny. Embalming by Arterial Process. The best funeral car in the county. EAST SIDE SQUARE.
| The public school at Oakland, this I county, has closed on account of the
and Typrwritinff schixii, iiMitnniipoiiN iiuniima prevalence of diphtheria the chil^S , |:T■^pP 0 '‘I I ‘:iiAdu E a^nV,^ 1 c^ ! dr <‘n James Quinlan are the af-
flicted ° ne »-
I The Siamese Twins in the Bell
^ oslt< !Luo, window calls for admiration, yet there W V IT / < // aTe i' 11080 who sympathize with them \ ’Tt , because they are out in the snow and I AA J\ OUA C12 , frost, with only their most intimate
That our entire season will i’annels on.
be one continuous opening It is reoorled that a great step forof all the latest novelties in ward in the art of telegraphy has I&S 2|9* __ been ni ade by an invention of Messrs. EB 1 B 1111 ^1*^ # C. E. B-idges and T. J. McAdams, of
| th's county. Tne device is ea"ed a
Beginning with If cf/ne.s’f/f/j/, Ocf. self-c'osing circu't kev. We hope B brimmed work throughoitweet the / re ^ e hand9omel y on their
I- N. B.—Fine orders and mourning nventice ski.l.
work we make a specialty. You are The second annual Peace Dance of most heartily invited to call and see Otoe Tribe No 140 i O R iu i. us. Perfect satisfaction guaranteed. otoe ™ e > *0.140,1. O. R M., is to
Respectfully, take P lat ‘e m Browning & Baker’s MRQ D V PPPomnw Hal1 ’ Wedn e 8 day evening, Nov. 29. mrtcj. Di Jj. rttDblUJN. The gentlemen on the commiaees South Jackson street. having charge of the hop are John
MISS GENEVIEVE CHAFfGE, TRIMiVI'R. Mtf i Cannon, O. W. Sage, Jai ob K:efer, “ t Chas. Cooper, John F. Maloney, E. TH£ 4 P-DDECC H - Kleinbub, L. A. Steeg, John M.
Ha]i) wm Maloney, John Cawley, Dr. i Neale, Jas. Watson, Asa Smith, J. T.
Sntuiday, Nov, 11, 1898.
Fox worthy, Thos. Sage, A. N. Leyn-
See change of time on the Vandalia decker, J. E. Champer, W. A. Farmer, Line. J. O. Frazier and T. F. Murphy.
Mrs. Bosson is confined to the house rrr
by sickness A Runa way. Born, to John M. Allen and wife, a . ° a 8un t day aR ^noon a horse driven son on Nov 3 by Ll ’ ne8t Durh am was badly fnghtBorn, to John Gregory and wife, of ^ by tW ° West Lafavette, a son. Liberty street, and Ernest was thrown Mrs. Willard Bell is seriously sick the vehicle and dragged quite a with typhoid fever. ‘ distance He was earned to the resiMrs. Sapp, of Parke county, is vis- den ^ ofMf - Henry Grubb, and Dr. „ r ir n j/• Leatherman was called to give h.m
w ite .i*““f “T? Y« d ■»
Cloverdale, a son, on Get. 20. i «- a8 danseroosly injured, but he soon t. . „ a _ , _ rallied, it was found that no bones car RnssellvUl? n aZU' were broken, and it is hoped he will
soon be all right again. The buggy was pretty thoroughly demolished.
near Russellville, a ten pound daugh-
ter, on Oct. 31.
1 “Frank Vermillion, Trustee of Clinton townsh'o. made a business trip
to Indianapolis on Monday.
jBeorge Stillwagon is here from Victor, Iowa, visiting his motherand
old friends and acquaintances.
Mabel, little daegoter of Mr. and
Services at St. John’s Episcopal Church to-morrow, Sunday morning, at 10:30 o’clock conducted by Rev. Edw. Saunders. All are cordially invited to attend. Two additional suits have been docketed in Montgomery county against W. H. Durham, F. P. Nelson and J. F. Darna'l, as indorsers for the Muncie Rolling Mill; the amount involved is $-1,000. A most enjoyable surprise party took place at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Hatfield, on Friday evening. The feast of good things which were toted there by the guests made a sumptions spread, and thecompany had a fine social time. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. T. W. McNeil - , J. M. Hurley, Chas. Meltzer, and George Hinton, Miss Emma Robe, Mrs. Mary Fussier and son and daughter. A newspaper man in Northern Indiana who has “been there” gives the following in regard to profanity: Profanity is the lowest and foulest vulgarity. A man who cannot talk without interspersing his conversation with oaths is not worthy the reeognicion of decent people. The young man who thinks it smart to swear misjudges the intelligence ofhis moral associate. Some men will not swear in the presence of professed cliristians but thoughtlessly pollute themselves in the face of those who are not allied to the Christian religion. Such persons ought to know that the so-called infidels have a disgust for obscenity and vulgarity, because it is debasing and beastly.” HERE IS A SUIT That Will Prove Interesting to All Concerned. On Friday Allee & Nelson, attorneys for the plaintiff, filed a suit for foreclosure entitled Eliza J. Brannan Nelson vs. Franklin P. Nelson, and Quinton Broadstreet and J. H. C. Nelson, assignees of Franklin P. Nelson. The amount for which the mortgage is given is $43,243.39, but there are several credits acknowledged, and judgment is asked for $40,000. The indications are that this suit will be warmly contested. Hon. S. A. Hays is representing those opposing the foreclosure of mortgage, and Geo. Knight, of Brazil, is of the counsel for the plaintiff. South Washington. Most of the fa. me is are done KiUherinRcorn Mrs. Mary Kightsell visited Mrs. Ksther Evans last week Samuel Asher and family visited relatives in Owen county last week Sylvester Neese has moved back to his farm Miss l.izsie Evans has been staying with her siste . Mrs. Surah Renters ..Sirs. Melv ! na Whitaker, of Clay county, visned her parents last week Albert Zenor ami 8am Ashe-are the boss horse trade's ....Henry Trester end faniii visited at John Neese s on Sunday E-ahk Celle's baby is ouite sick Subscribe for the Star-Press and met all the news. xx
Fineastle.
Hallowe'en was observed in our town Nellie Bridges spent Sunday with Nettie Beaton S. H. Walker and family are moviuff iu the house vacated by James Hendricks — Mrs. W. A. Kreigh and ^daughter, Mabel, and Miss Kate Walsh, of Stilesville, spent Saturday and Sunday with the latter’s parents Our band hoys fti-nished the music fur the Koi. hd .te hall Saturday night J. F. Evans r iO home folks the last of the week ico: H'ggles and family moved into t He i property this week Mr.
and Mrs. Oh i .e.- Bridges vi
Sunday.
ridges visited J. Grider's,
xx
Real Estate Transfers.
J. W. Buffington to Geo. Campbell,
lot in Greencr.Btle, $ti’0.
T. Browning to S. P. Browning, land in Greencastle tp., $2,800. Chas. Leuteke to E. and S. Arthur,
Mrs. R. L. O’Halr, is confined to the lot ’ in Greencastle, $640. se by an attack of ecarlei, fever. P. J. Mdler to Bessie Brown, land tb. Winsor and daughter, Mae, in Franklin township, $2,200. have been vialting Mrs. Ames L- Miller to J. C. and B. Brown, an<| family, went to Illinois on Tues- land in Franklin tp., $2,800. day. Jane McGaughey to W. R. and M. The landscape artist has been en- E - Everman, laud in Russell tp., $700.
joyfcs himself and pleasing the pub- Edith Young to Jos. Rogers, lots in 1 f r ^ Tumdcd Thc't^'dij^UnS^at lie by the exhibit in Jones’ Drug Luckridge $100. | t^lhf ' c ^,^S^ ,, g^. o r. e Store. JjfOftllstreet, adllir., to R. Me- I’F 'lth H lly Costen ie the happiest man in The Ann Arbor Un’ve 'sVr foot ball Cammack, land in Jefferson tp., $500. m, cUng at'Pic'' !" K HuTcs. on'lnfurday team is to play the DePaows, at M. J. Conk to W. and A. M.Turpln.l5 , .^, t i5f*!l?_^ 'i?*T-. 8 A e,to H . an iL B ® an ‘f u
l
Mill Oi eek.
Hen it) ily Rood . Too dry for the growing u it .. Gathering corn now in order James St addle/ has moved to the north part of the State, hence the store at Broadj»ark is a thing of the past . Schools pro-g/cs.-'ing nicely.... A merchant is wanted at B oatlpnrk Philips is running his mill James Ham is convalescent The hicko y an 1 walnut crop was never better A thing
presided over tl S a r-Press an<
meeting Success to the .mocracy. Wander.
W Cloverdale.
Quiu a num >r of our folks attended the Baptist meeti; g at Mill Creek, in Jefferson township, on Saturday, Sunday and Monday Rev. John Tabor has been trading horses Miss Ella Wi'liams, who has been staying at Mr. Staples’, near Putnamville, is visitng parents and friends here t has. Turner and family visited f.-ieoda in this part of the township Sunday I.ouis Morrison attended
‘ George
Tailor's,
Sunday G. W. Burns and family, of Clay
Lynch’s Park, on Nov. 13—next ,ot in R °achdale, $1.
Monda”. Angel Mathewson to J. L. Randel,
Wm. Hartman, of Flncast'e. has a lot *n Greencastle, $5,000.
fino flock of imported Cheviot sheep, ' Larnard to F. P. Pratner, lot in
and thinks he hag some world-beaters Eoachdale, $100.
in the flock. W. D. Barnes to T. P. Prather, lot
Del’nuw footballists “knocked the in R °achdale, $'00.
•taffln " ort of the Indiana Unlvers’ty J ’ W - Sutfaerlin to J. M. Prather,
•l«V«u, at Bloomingcoa, on Salurdsv. lot * a R °aehdale, $100.
Sopre, 34 to 0. J’ Miller to W. F. Davis, land in
t»t#d in this citv on Nov 3 M-s Franklin township, $-2,200. Ross McCullough. v,ao is living nt Mr. Red-
Wray, wife of Jnn.Js Wray i E-BarnardtoJ- B ’ Wi,8 °"’ 5ot in ’
The ftmeral took place on Saturday Roac “^ V «’
afternoon from the familv residence J. L. Randel to C. W. Mathewson,! T'l'ey. dau-hter of Joshua Tilley,whoresid.s «_ ,, J xcoiuxiuc c. . , jus* over the county line in Owen, is very Mr. George Summers, of Washing- lot in Greencast'o. $2,250. i sick of typhoid fever Hucksters are sti l ington township, who was seriously! M. C. Mann to W. H. Williamson, | ^d^^in Vood"'.//™^” 'wX 6 *.^: 1 - injured in a runaway accident some 'and in Cloverdale tp., $300. |er and family visited in this end of tne 4 . . * 1 somi .j- ... , »* . t , . . | township Sunday There was an oyster weeks ago, IS convalescent and able T.. want to J. A. HOW, lot in ( supper at Poplar Grove Scho’. House, for the to be out again. Baiabridge. $400. ^on ^ur^V ^t.
Dennis Eggers to Deiila Eggers, Not ''• Good books are benefleial to the tm-
i. -I a_.„ ’pils Rev. John Tabor was horse bitten last
land in k’oyd township, $750. week, and it is no laughing matter. H. C. Summers to C. O. and N. Country Girl.
- »y Ml
church nt Manhattan on Sunday Bales and family visited at A. J. Sunday G. W. Burns and family county, visited in these pa ts last week
Ross McCullough, who is liv
THE ENVY OF KINGS. The Princee of the Earth May Envy the Poor. Riches and Power Cannot Make Life Pleasant or Happy. The True Way to Find Happiness for Those Who Have It Not. Wealth does not make happiness. H does not make even comfort. Sickness blights everything. Kings and princes may envy the poor the b'essing of good heaiih. If you are in pain or suffering you cannot be happy. This is why the remarks of the well-known Harriet Robinson, of M Snell St., Fa.I River, Mass., have so much weight and are woHhy of all attention. “I fi uily believe,” she s yd, “that I should not be living to-da • if it had not been for Dr. Greene's Ne -vura blood and nerve remedy. Such awful pains in my head and haci, and my stomach, oh, it was so bad! I now am well and eat naturally. I have no pains or distress. Thanks to Dr. Greene's Nervu a I am well again. It was over two years ago that I was cured, and no trace of the disease has returned.”
itw
Elders B. F. Querry and J. B. Dobbs, of Illinois, will preach at Bethel Church, on Little Walnut, at 11 o’clock a. m. and 6 o’clock p. m., Thursday, Nov. 16, 1893. All are cordially in-
vited.
Leg Fractured.
On Saturday Nathan Bates, an em-
ploye of the Hillis quarry, had his left leg fractured at the ankle jo nt, (»Bd will b<< more are less seriously crippled for Pfe. The Injury was caused by the premature dumping of
stone. He was taken to Dr.
Summers, land in Jackson tp., $1,800. state op Oiuo.Citv op Toledo, > D H Huber to F C Rr i ’inemn n ; Lucas County, ,
, “ , uranneman, Frank J. oheney makes oath that ho is the land in Cloverdale tp., $100. senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney tt M. A. Robinson to M. A. Fe~ y, County'and b State S »fo”es l :!id. < and'thar'sa'ui
land in Warren tp., $100. iV^.L^r^
Susan Grimes to I. E. Grimes, lot in cannot bo cured by the use of Hall's
4 , 1n ’ Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY,
oainnriuge, !f-iu. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my J. Clifford to Michael Clifford, land rrosenco, this 6th d»y of December, a. D. ishb.
in Russell tp., $800.
J. 8. Booker to Hugh Thompson, land in Jackson tp., $500.
i i
i
A. W. GLEASON, Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure ia taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
HAKKlhT BOUINSOV. Another widely known lady. Mrs. N. Hiatt, of 73 Mulberry street, Newark, N. J., speaking in the same ve n, says: ‘I have been suffering with pain in the back and head. I tried doctors, but found no relief. I was recommended to try Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy. I now sleep soundly and nave no pain, aad am well, thanks to Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood anti nerve remedy.” If you are a sufferer from disease it is plain'y your own fault if you do not i?et cured. This wonde-fal medicine, Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood and nerve remedy will certainly cure you. Ills pureiy vegetable and harmless. It is constantly prescribed and recommeiided by doctors. It is the discovery of a phys ciau, Dr. Greene, of 35 West 14th 8t., New York, the famous ami successful sper a 1 - ist in curing all forms of nervous and chronic diseases. He can be consulted without charge, personally or by letter. Duttinx Infidels to Flight. Rev. T. DeWitt Tolmage is still stirring sinners up. He was always original in his methods. Sir. Talmage says he does not believe there is an infidel alive who has read the Bible through carefully. He offers to give $100 to the unbeliever who can prove by one witness that he has read the Bible through twice. The condition attached is not difficult at first blush. Bnt the more one thinks of it the more ho is convinced of the genius of this valiant soldier of the cross. The infidel must prove by a witness that he has read the Scriptures through twice. Soineliody, of course, must have seen him so read. Ho must not have skipped even the genealogical chapterdealing with the “begats.” Naturally the infidels squirm at this, and thus their forces are routed. They say in exhumation that nobody alive can prove by a witness that he has read the Bible through twice. In order to do that, it is necessary to read it through aloud to some other person and he sure that the other jierson hears every word and never dozes oil for one single wink. One of the unbelievers went to Mr. Talmage and asked him if he himself could prove by one wituecs that he had read the book through twice, whereupon the reverend gentleman very properly answered that that was his own lookout and declined to discuss the matter at all. As it is, ho certainly has the infidel on tha hip. During October and November it is not unusual for Italian unemployed laborers to go home for the winter. They can get the trip home and a winter’s living cheaper by that means than they ca-i get a mere living in America. During t] ■ months named the emigration of Italians from the port of New York sometimes exceeds the immigration. Rut wh n gentle sjiring returns the gentle Italian returns with it, serene ami smiling, ready to dig or ragpick.
How Not to Take Cold. Many persons spend a considerable portion of their lives wondering how they have taken cold. Mr. Chari, s A. Hough is in much better business when in The Cosmopolitan magazine he devotes a chapter to telling them how not to take cold. The scientific explanation of “catching” cold is that the skin suddenly becomes chilled, the blood recedes from the tiny arteries on the surface and buries itself in the deeper ones. Not being provided with its due supply of warm, briskly moving blood, the skin remains cold and turns blue and white, and the person feels as if a stream of cold water were trickling over him. If the hioixl refuses for a considerable time to come to the surface and move briskly through the small arteries, then serious disturbance results. The individual lias alternate chill and fever, headache and inflammation of the mucus membranes. The remedy is not to hermetically seal your windows and plug up all the keyholes and put on thick and heavy clothing. Taking cold is due entirely to sluggish circulation. The person whose circulation is active and whose warm, red blood goes coursing through his veins like a race horse does not take cold. The remedy for the unfortunate who is prone to it is simply to make the sluggish circulation active. The best time to begin this is in the autumn, when one can gradually accustom himself to exposure to that healthful cold air which makes the body tingle with warmth. If one wishes to cultivate a muscle, he exercises that muscle. In like manner, if we want to make the skin a- live, we must exercise it. There are two wu. s of doing this, both necessary. On is to keep the skin entirely cl ,.n, the oth rt rub and massage it briskly every day. Besides that, it is necessary to enrich th blood by proper food so it will have more life and circulate better. It has been found that the Russian or steam bath, followed by the cold plunge, will make the most thin blooded person glow with life and health. The same result is produced partially by dancing about f< >r a few minutes in a cold room on rising in tlie morning and exposing your body to the air. Dashing cold water over the body, following it by brisk rubbing, is good. It should be continued for months. Gradually harden yourself at the same time to sleeping with open windows.
At quick at teat! Cures toothache In one minute. It cures ant pain Immediately—Dr. Fenner's Golden Relief. It cures corns and felons, and It also cures bronchitis and consumption, and the trouble 1* not to get the cures, for they follow lt» use as surely as the day follows night—it never disappoints—but the n .1 difficulty is how to tell of them without exciting incredulity. And it is not to be wondered at, for there is a wide chasm between "a corn ’ and a “pulmonary consumption.'’ Still it is true and Dr. Fenner has got somehow to malto “the people" know it. Is Golden Relief a "cure all" » Well, not exactly. It is known to cure ONE disease. It is a veritable specific in it. That disease is Inflammation. It cures it wherever found I Many diseases have Inflammation for their base. Th* list is long. It includes corns and consumptiuiL No inflammation, no corn. No inflammation no consumption. Isn't this the solution* No opiates or mineral poisons In It. Safe and certain. Never disappoint- Money refundcl If sstUfaotlon not given. Talto a bottlo home today
15 YEARS A SPECIALIST.
Four
Years of Ccnlirual Success Through Indiana.
DU. WALTER Has visited Greencastle for over four years every four weeks and has cured more patients of chronic diseases than all other specialists combined.
J
WILL BE AT Oomiiioi-cfitil Hotel. Saturday Nov. 18, AND EVERY FOUR WEEKS DURING THE YEAR. SOME FACTS about the most successful
physician in America, who has spent many months iu the laboratories of the great scientists of Europe, will visit our city every four weeks to treat the patients who will mil
on him. Dr. Walter is well known in this State and section, as he has treated a great many attlieted people during his visits in this vicinity and they all sneak volumes for him. HE TREATS SFCCESSI I LLY Acute and chronic itarrh, chronic diarrhoea, painful or suppressed menstruation, imtiammation of the w omb, inflammation of the bladder, diabetes, dyspepsia, constipation, kidney, urinary and bladder troubles, Bright's disease, tape worm, crooked and enlarged joints, club foot, white swelling, nervousness and
The South Carolina Liquor Law. The American edition of The Review of Reviews remarks of the South Carolina liquor law, which permits no traffic in intoxicants except by the state it-
self:
Despite the many legal difficulties which have beset it, the South Carolina experiment of restricting the sale of liquor to the public dispeosaries bus thus far made an astonishingly good record. Whatever Governor Tillman's fault*, lack of determination is not one of them. With an iron hand he lias put down the sale of liquor at private hands. On one occasion, at Sumpter, Ids constables were at-
taeki d b., a mob while confiscating a stock of g™^^
contraband liquor, but Governor rillmaim pies, blotches, etneer, diopsy, gravel, gleet, forlhwith armed his officials and gave them gonorrhoea, hydrocele, heart disease,hysteria, orders to shoot if molested. Thus far shooting Vitus dance, _ paralysis, rheumatism,
ha* not been necessary.
In quite a number of counties the freeholders have refused to petition for a dispensary, and In these—according to the Charleston News and Courier—tiiere has been up in date real prohibition. Where the dispensaries have been established the room is always a plain one, and no liquor is sold in the evening, or to minors or inebriates, or at any time to any one to bo drunk on the premises. Tills means that while citizens may buy liquors freely to drink nt their homes there are no loafing and treating places in the state. The moral results of this change, as described even by its opponents, are all the friends of the experiment hojxd for. The legal difficulties with which the experiment has hud to contend have not been so serious as the press dispatches have indicated. The decision of one local judge that the law was unconstitutional was promptly superseded, and the flaws that have been found In the law relate only to such minor matters ns the control of the railroads which bring the liquor into the state. When the liquor is once deliv-
asthniu. female weakness, etc. All surgical operations urrforraed. Epilepsy or fits positively cured. 1 lies cur- 1 without pain, knife or caustic. Blood and sl< diseases cured by improved and never fat..ug remedies. EYE. EAR AND NOSE—In diseases of the eye, Dr. Walter is an expert. Crossed eyes are straightened in one moment of time and without pain. He easily remedies weak and watery eyes, dropping of the lids, granulations, sojc eyes of any form, w ild hairs, cataract, fulsV pupils,spots, scums and turning of the lids. Roaring noises iu the ear, partia.'. deafness, ulcerations, discharges, earache, etc., are also cured. Nusul catarrh, that curse of this climate, with all of its abhorent featuers, yields at once to the system of treatment pursued by Dr. Walter.' He e.iu show a greater record of cures than any physician
liivng.
FEMALE TROUBLES—Ladies who are alflicted with headache, langour and the weakness common to the sex, And a wonderful friend in Dr. Walter. He is skilled in Hie treatment of the troubles, especially in bloating, nervous prostration, general debility, sleeplessness, depression, indigestion, ovar-
ian trouble, inflammation and ulceration,
ered, it is subject to the state law, and so long I falling and displacements, spinal weakness, a* Governor Tillman remain, in control there complaints and change of life, is little likelihood that the old system will be T , pROAFAA'veakness.
• Immediately cured and full vigor restored.
resu reu. This distressing.aftliction, which renders life
[a burden and mairiago impossible, is the
The Kulf storm was even worse than penalty paid by the victim for improper in-
. , dulger.ee. The most chaste must acknowlegc
that on the Atlantic coast a few weeks .that the passiona are the great magnet uy ago. The Sea island storm destroyed ! demand 6 ^'Uv 0 ; wef 8 “Man‘f.^no lo^ 1,000 lives. That on the gulf drowned | interested in the opposite sex, the interlu ange
and crushed to death 2,000. The Sea is-! ^
land disaster left not less than 5,000 peo- man ,f1 a8es f° l)e ) vhat niade him; the plo destitute because their crops hud morse and disappointment are his constant t^n destroyed. The gulf cyclone was | ^"‘wlfi findTh^lLnqmt^tmTrcd'ief thS SO awful tiiat it left few alive to tell the ! yon positively require to oe happy,
tale, ihose few are aii strom.-. robn.st young men. The old, the weak and the , wee
ng treatment should bring from ounce** of \i- ; for chemical
one (<• i>un' a o* <*f
analysis. Dr. Walter will return every .' v . ~
ks cf —
during the year 1S93.
ailing yielded quickly to the fury of a j l\ r - Walter will correspond with those who wall of water 15 feet high, driven by u\Tletters l> !'I' , 'lIIlJ m r s?r™t P co“H'dence Trl Th?
wind traveling nt a velocity of 115 mile perimmi-nt ,u111res^u
an hour. A more terrific war of the forces of nature ha« rarely Ixen witnessed on this continent. In some ef the places ravaged not a child was left alive. 1m many parts of the coast of Louisiana the land is only three feet above sea level. A Louisiana geologist
LYMAN P. WALTER, M, D.,
213 State Street, Chicago, Illinois.
oi fitone. xi© wits Lakcu to Dr. A. Kelly to J. H. and J. E. Lewis »>f the system. Send for testimonials, free. . C, Smythe lor surgical attention, land in Jefferson tp., $800. ' wao’d by'Druggist. GO., ToUdo.^).
More than one United States senator finds himself today flocking by himself politically, with his constituents behind him abusing him. The best medical authorities say the proper | way to treat catarih is to taka a constitu1 tional remedy like Hood's Sarsaparilla.
. Tg R. TKSTU. JUS. M. AU.SF YEvTAL & ALj.lN, i /.V V J O J? X 01SJ ■ .TS AT* XXL»
GRBKNCASTMC, IND.
I WHI i J i»d in tko gitlo* on best tnrms. ; I.v vt rder* with u« porn »n illy or addrenr
expresses the opinion that the state was ; v .'iw*-'i ">-VT.■ *(Lranon
stdtled 800 years too soon and should | th" p'l'ilic «qu. r».
have btien left till the overflow of the -.r i n ■ ...... , , , . . , For sale, 20 extra choice Barred Plymouth Mississippi and the gradual rise of the Hock Cockerels. }1 OO each; 2 yearling Barred
land along the coast had made human
life safe. The only satisfactory reflee- each; 2 Silver -pangleii Hamburg Cockerels. .. ... , , , , • ,, , )1.00 each, if taken at once. Call on or adtlou IU tills melancholy business IS that dress Forrest Ellis Baiubridge. Ind. 26tf
those who escaped the storm’s fury are
in all cases ablebodied young people who can make their way without trouble.
Congress will soon have to adjourn i
order to bo measured for its winter over- sou’s, Baiubridge; coal or wood.
coat.
Don’t forget that you cun buy a Wood Pump cheaper of Pherson, Baiubridge, than anywhere. 24tf Genuine Round Oak Stoves at Pher-
241/
