Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 January 1894 — Page 3

(Rfeentagtfe

Vol. 35, No 36

GRKKNCASTLE, IND., JAN. G, 1894.

UA:., Vol. 21, No 38

ST. JACOBS OIL

Rheumatism.

cures . .

PERMANENTLY

Obiturry-George J. Leonard.

MILARD NORMAN.

Hone, yet ever with us. The gem of infinite memories has passed from his earthly state. Born, raised, lived and died a Christian, the helpmate of purity. “He that is holy let hint! be holy still,” and now the Redeemer’s will has called him to his eternal mansion, a place I

mm hock prices On Bedroom Sots. Bed Lounges, Bedsteads, and Bed Hprings, at HANNA’S FURNITURE STORE. Where everything is New, Neat and Nobby.

Special Attention Gwen to Umlertakituj. Embalming by Arterial Process. The best funeral car in the county. EAST SIDE SQUARE.

IndianapolisSusinessUniversitV Leading College of DumIiicah und Shorthand. Bryant A Stratton. Established 1*«0 When Block. Elevator. Widely Known. Situntlone aecured. Our endorsement pa?Bi>ort to beet positions. Enter now. Ea«y payntrr' . Individual inetruetloR. Cheap bourdUig. Beautiful Catalogue and Paper truo. Address HEEB <k 06BGRK.

THE STAR-PRESS.

Saturday, Jan. 6, 1894.

THE POISON OF THE COBRA.

So Far No Il«‘inrily Ha" Hern IM.oovoretl

(or It.

The bite of the terrible cobra of India is looked upon as meaning certain death. It is not surprising that experiments to determine the nature of this

p^p7re7folhtm.“ThrhZp“c"k,'ihover*7dS awful poison should attract wide atplow that were kept so bright by the hardy] tontion, when they are made in a liauds of toil will toon be encased in moth, scientific manner entitling their rcThey will rust, ami ere long mother earth suits to be accepted with confidence, will claim her own; but the spirit which di- Such experiments have recently been reeled those hands has laid up “treasure in conducted by Mr. A. A. Kanthack.

IN THE CHEROKEE STRIP.

Rev. Ora Merrill has been on the

sick list.

Mr. John Long, of North Green-

castle, is quite sick.

Dr. Poucher preached at Terre

Haute last Sunday.

John W. Layne has been at Hutchinson, Kan., on business. W. B. Vestal has returned to the country of sugar cane aud cotton. Albert Bowman, of St. Louis, is vis-

Chas. Bruner lias been confined to

the house by sickness.

Miss Anna Stone has been confined

to the house by sickness.

Henry Meltzer has terminated his re’ations with the revenue service. Chauncey Swope was here from

Terre Haute, last week, visiting rela- iting Chas. W. Daggy and family. tiveB - Dr. W. R. Farrow, of Almo, Ky., is Mrs. Bernhamer, of Indianapolis, here visiting relatives and friends, has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. The Democracy of Putnam were Chas. Kiefer. here in force on Saturday, betokening John Wyatt, of Cloverdale, fell a a grand victory at the election of 1894.

few days ago, and dislocated his knee

and fractured his leg.

THE HIGHEST AWARD.

Miss Belle Hays, who has been un-l „ , , „ der treatment at the Indianapolis Royal Baking Powder has all the

Sanitarium, lias returned to this city. CTty Attorney Moore has filed a lu motion for rehearing in the Supreme

¥ ■ w Pei

Honors In Strength and Value 20Per Cent, above its Near-

est Competitor.

The Royal Baking Powder has the

ourt in the salodfi screen ordinance. enviflble record of having received Entertaining and instructive papers the highest award for articles of its were read before the Indiana Acad- class greatest strength, purest ingreemy of Science, at Indianapolis, by dients, most perfectly combined Dr. P. S. Baker and-Frof. Underwood, j wherever exhibited in competition The Columbian postage stamps are with others. In the exhibitions of of the past-the government will is- former yearj, at the Centennial, at sue no more of them, so- if you wish Paris, Vienna and at the Various State souvenir stamps of this kind you i and Industrial fairs, where it has been should purchase of the supply now in exhibited, judges have invariably

the handf of postmasters Prof. Waldo has been elected Secretary of the Academy of Science of ' S this city, and Prof. Norman is the # Assistant Secretary. Dr. John, Dr. Baker, and- Profs. Underwood, Norman and Waldo were elected Fellows

of the Association.

awarded the Rojal Baking Powder

the highest honors.

At the recent World’s Fair the examinations lor the baking powder awards were made by the experts of the chemical division of the Agricultural Department at Washington. Tho official report of the tests of the

Eagle Lodge K. of P. has elected b ^ing powders which were made by the following officers. Wm. M. I thiB de P artment for the P ur - Brown, C. C.; Wm. E. Starr, V. C.; P. ! P 08e of ascertaining which was the B. Graham, P.; J. T. Newgent, M. 0 f I be8t > and whlch ha8 been made P ub ‘ W.; D. C. Hughes, K. of R. & S.; T .! Pc, shows the leavening strength of Peck, M. F.; James L. Randel, M. E.; | the R °y al to be 1(50 cubic im ' her of Kenzie Tucker, M. A.; Harry M. carbonic gas per ounce of ipowder

i Smith, trustee for three years; O. D. j: Swain, delegate to grand Lodge; W. | L. Denman, alternate. Report has it that Jesse W. Weik

Of the cream of tartar baking powders exhibited at the Fair, the next highest in strength thus tested contained but 133 cubic inches of leavening gas. The other powders gave an average

heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt.** His eyes have seen the sin and iniquity; his manly virtues have antagonized sorcerers, * ^ and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie.’* All is pure and hoiy where he now resides. “Thieves do not break through nor steal.’’ Why do I know this? Because Christ says: “Whosoever believeth in me shall not perish, but have everlasting life.** We are all mortals, and therefore must have some impurity, but those who take Christ as their model of perfection, those who steer “life’s bark” towards the shore of eternal bliss, those who practice what they preach, and those who do not only hear but hear and do what is right to the best of their ability, shall be, and are, when God shall call them home, pure and white as

snow.

Uncle George, the general appellation given him, our grandpa, was stern and rigid against those things w’hich he thought to be wrong. He was educated in the Democratic faith and throughout his home life turned neither to the right or left, but with pure convictions was the nucleus of a vast circle of friends irrespective of faith or creed. And this, after all, is what makes the man; decide upon a course and carve it out. How infinitely superior is the man who without blush or stammer can boldly face humanity and God, and state his rules of action, in comparison with the man who like the blade of grass will bend with the first rustle of an adverse wind. Christ, with all his angels, is repugnant against such rules of action. “Woe unto ye hypocrites,” and woe unto the men who follow the maxim: “If you are in Rome do as Romans;” such are hated by man and condemned by God. Better it is ten thousand thousand times to follow the maxim of that earnest and straightforward man, David Crocket: “Be sure you are right; then go ahead. Such men are the origin of a great good. They have the love of fellow creatures, and above all, the eternal, ever enduring love of “Him who died that we might live.” This was the motto of our grandfather. He de cided to the best of his judgment, then executed. He was social, charitable and ever trying to help a relative, friend or neighbor. No man ever did more for a loving wife, children, grand and great grandchildren to make them happy. And what a blessing it is to say this. No one better than the members of this family could in truthfulness and in all sincerity say; “Home, sweet home.” While it is true that our grandfather had no classical education, he represented a proof of Bacon’s maxim, “Reading maketh a full man;” always posted ou current news, had a superior retention of memory and speech that could elucidate fluently his thoughts. He leaves a numerous progeny, all of which I hope are accepting his standard of perfection. We should know the “fruit by the tree, and likewise the tree by its fruits.” “Like produces like,” and God help us, the

fruit, to be worthy of the tee.

Let mo not inflame the bereaved and tender hearts which so greatly mourn the one who has gone before. He has gone to his eternal habitation. He has “passed over the river” and “is resting in the shade of the tree.” “He has run the race;” he has fought his earthly battle; “he has finished his course.” Henceforth he shall sail on the

pacific of God’s love.

Well do I remember the last words he spoke to me on that autumn morn. Giasping my hand before my departure, with a paternal grasp and with tears in his eyes, said: “Milard.be a good boy.” What better mandate could he have given me? It is tho great in-

junction of Christianity.

O time and change!—although his hair was

gray

When last I saw him on that fall day, How strange it seems with body gone That his life and love will ever live on. Ah mother! Ah sister aud brothers! Ah grandma! Ah aunts and uncles!

The Experience of a Drummer In the Rush for Land.

lie Found He Had Made a Great Mistake and Was Glad to Get Out of the Country Alive—Trials of Other Would-Be Sooner*.

lhas been reappointed postofifico bl -;c>f m. The Royal, therefore, was ] ,spector. Thisoffice comes under the found of20perce»t,gaeaterleaveninp;

‘civil service regulations, hence the 'opportunity for putting Republicans out and Democrats in is somewhat

hedged. Mr. Weik assured a StarPress reporter that ho wanted the office no longer, and that he would

.resign within 39 days. Election Law Changes.

One of the changes in the election law, by the last Legislature, of general interest is that which provides that the time of holding the election of township trustees, justices of the peace, assessors, constables, road supervisors, etc., has been changed from the April election, and all such township officers shall be elected at he general election to be held on the st Tuesday after tho first Monday in November, 1894, and every four yuars thereafter. The names of the township officers are to be printed on separate ballots of a yellow color and deposited in separate ballot boxes from that of the State and e*) t^ty

ballots. The ballot boxes are aW

be painted yellow

this change was approved March 2,

1893

strength than its nearest competitor, and 44 per cent, above the average of all the other tests. Its superiority in other respects, however, in tho quality of the food it makes as to fineness, delicacy and wholesomeness, could not be measured by figures. It is these high qualities, known and appreciated by tho women of the country for so many years, that have caused the sales of the Royal Baking Powder, as shown by statics, to exceed the sales of all other baking

powders combined. South Washington.

Died, on Dec. 2S, of old njre, Duke Anderson, aged SI years. He leaves four sons, four daughters and a large circle of relatives and friends to mourn for him; his wife preceded him to that hotter land about three years ago. He was loved by all who knew him Hiram Tresner and family, of Itrazil, liave been visiting relatives anil friends in these parts John Neese, Sr., is on the sick list There was a family reunion at the residence of Mrs. Ksther Kvans, on Christmas day. Of nine children all were present except one daughter, who was absent on account of sickness; grandchildren all present except three; numbering in all 25. The day was enjoyed by all, •he taVn heing gount'ful'y spread ’ Stay they all live to enjoy many more reunions John Tresner has been sick at his grandma's, ee Ith the chlicken pox ... Miss Zora and Sula 01 raft spent Christmas at Mrs. Ksther Evans' 86 . Mrs. Sarah Kvans and daughter visited

The law making 201<eury Evans and family last week. xx

Hood’s and Only Hood’s I Hood’s Sarsaparilla is carefully prepared * Sarsaparll’a, Dandelion, Mandiake. hs-k, i ipatBsefta, Jumper benUe aud other -'fi known remedies, by a peculiar combination, proportion and process, giving to Hood's Sarsaparilla curative powers not posssed by other medicines, It effects re•rkable cures when other preparations faiD ood's Pills cure billousnesi.

Det us in loving kindness console each other, For his kind words, his emblematic brow Cannot meet around the family circle now. Grandpa’s dear face whereupon From hack aud forestich the blaze has

brightly shown;

Henceforward, listen as we will, liis. the voice of that hearth, is still, i.ook where we will the wide world o’er, His incarnate face we see no more.

We may tread the path that he has worn, We may sit beneath his roof and think, Ah

well!

This place, these thiugs within themselves a volume tell. We may view, like him, the orchard trees. We may hear, like him, the hum of bees, And rustic of the loaded corn; We may turn the leaves that he has read, His spoken words we ponder o'er, Hut in the sun they en«t nn shade No voice is heard, no sign is made, No step familiar is on the floor Yet love will linger, and faith will trust (Since he who knows our needs is justi, That somehow, somewhere, meet we must. Alas for him who never sees The stars shine through his mental trees! How sweet to know that those who follow Christ's commands, As did our grandpa, pure, good and grand. Khali in the last with Him and angels stand. “Who has not learned in hours of faith, The truth of flesh, and sense unknown, That Life is ever lord of Death, And Love can never, lose its owni” Nothing does the work so well.—Mr. P. Byrd, of New Grand Chain, Ills., w rites: “Being exposed to all sorts of weather I am more or less liable to have pains of some kind. I have tried a number of different so-called remedies, but nothing docs the work so well as Salvation Oil. It is the best liniment I have ever used." One of the Attractions of Indianapolis. Persons visiting Indianapolis should take their meals at the Commercial Club Restaurant, on eighth floor of the splendid new Commercial Club Building. It is one of the best

The venom was obtained by pressing the heads of living cobras, by which nerve-trying operation the deadly fluid was squeezed out of the fangs. The fluid dries very quickly, says Youth's Companion, and leaves a yellow substance resembling gum arable, or the dried albumen of egg. which is easily pulverized. The activity of the poison is destroyed by prolonged boiling, a concentrated solution of it withstanding the effects of boiling for an hour or two before entirely losing its poisonous action. A weak solution could be rendered innocuous by being boiled from twenty minutes to half an

hour.

Rut, of course, this can give no comfort to any victim of a cobra bite, since the venom, once injected into his blood, could by no possibility bo subjected to such a process of boiling. Ammonia and chlorine water also proved capable of destroying the poison if applied to it for a considerable time in strong solutions, and carbolic acid considerably delayed its poisonous ac-

tion.

As it lias been shown that pigeons can be rendered practically insensible to the poison of a rattlesnake’s bite by being previously treated with minute injected doses of the venom, Mr. Kanthack tried a similar experiment with the cobra poison. Rut the result was not encouraging; all the animals thus treated died when a more concentrated dose of the venom was given to

them.

Some hope had been raised that doses of strychnia might prove a means of euro, but the experiments showed that there was no foundation for this hope. So far, then, a cure for the bite of tho cobra remains to be discovered. A BURGLAR DEMORALIZER. How It Worked and Why the Inventor

Didn't Get It Patented.

“I once invented,” said a man who lived in the suburbs to a New York Sun reporter, “a burglar demoralizer that was very effective in its way, but I never got it patented, because didn’t think I ought to. It was a very simple contrivance. It consisted merely of a stout wire stretched across the floor at such a distance from the door and windows that anyone entering would get under headway before reaching it, and low enough so that he would fall over it. There had been number of burglars in our town, and so I fitted up the lower floor of our house with the demoralizer. We adjusted the wires the last thing at night, when

we were locking up.

“One night—about three nights think after we had set them up—we heard a noise at the back door, and we knew that somebody was coming. We gathered around the head of the back stairs and listened. The burglar got in without much trouble and closed the door softly behind him, and then for a moment everything was very still. Then there was a great thud that fairly shook the house, then another moment of stillness, and then the suppressed, but steady sound of a human voice. It was the burglar sitting on the kitchen floor and cussin’. "After awhile we moved around a little upstairs to let him know we were on deck, and he got up and went away. He didn’t take anything, but Mrs. Suburb said she had rather he had taken everything there was in the house than to hear him *wear so, and that is why 1 never got the demoralizer patented. It was effective, hut it would have seemed like offering a premium

on profanity.”

A HOSPITABLE PEOPLE.

How’s This!

TTc offgr One fl’intirod DoUn-v Rew»—« fnr any raNsof Catarrh that cannot be cured by

Hall a Catarrh Cure.

F. J. Cheney A CO., Props., Toledo, O. We the umterslyned have known F. .1 Chenev for the Inst IS venrs. and believe him perfectIv honorable in all business transaction and financially able to carry out any

obligation made by their firm.

West & Trdax, WholesaleDruggista,Toledo,

Ohio.

Waldtno, Kinnan & Mabvin, Wholesale

Druggists, Toledo, O. I view over the city as far as the eye can reach. HaTVs Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act- Persons going to the State Capital should i ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur- not fail to visit this restaurant, which ;is one faces of the system. Price Ific. per bottle., of the attractions that Indianapolis msy well Bold by all Druggists. Testimonials free, jau I be proud of. 6teow

.% Country Where Strangers Arc Always

Welcome*

The Piedmontese arc to a great extv nt the untraveled inhabitants of nn untraveled country. Curiosity mingles witli kindness in their eagerness to see strangers within their doors, and any wayfarer who chooses to make himself agreeable, and can break the monotony of their sequestered existence, repays them amply for his entertainment. Tin* author of “Country Life in

Piedmont” says:

Unbounded hospitality is characteristic of all thriving agricultural districts. Those who gather from a plentiful land the fruits which most immediately contribute to man's sustenance are always glad to share with friends and guests the bounties which might

otherwise be wasted

Every one has heard of the peasant girl who pressed a king to partake of some apples, assuring him that what he did not take “would be given to the

pigs.”

I once threw a word across the hedge to a group of rustics who were gathering their walnut^ to congratulate them

on the bountifu! narvest.

t pm," they cried out, joyously, hold

No less tha^i eight traveling men were seduced into making a run to the Cherokee strip In search of quarter sections or town lots ami the number which returned disappointed and disgusted was exactly six. As I was one of the number and hence am telling a tale on myself, says a writer in the Mt. Louis Globe-Democrat, I cannot be accused of malice, unless it be against mankind in general and the interior department in particular. I paid twenty dollars for a turn to register, and have ever since looked upon the man who made the sale as a remarkably smart individual. I obtained a certificate and at twelve o’clock commenced to ride a bright looking horse into the strip. 1 might have got a good claim if 1 could have controlled the horse. But I couldn’t. The animal simply did his l»est to beat everything else in sight, taking the fastest horse for peacemaker aud following with praiseworthy assiduity. I have been uniler the impression that 1 could ride, and if sticking on a horse’s back means good riding 1 have nothing to be ashamed of, for I certainly did not fall off. Otherwise I was a complete failure as a rider, for the horse went at his own gait, turned when he wanted to and treated my desires with a contempt which was supreme. It was nearly three o'clock before he got so tired out that 1 was able to stop him, and by that time he had got me into one of the worst sections in the strip, where the ground did not begin to be worth the amount the government asked for it. Whether those who obtained the claims got in on balloons or whether they sneaked in over night I am not prepared to say, but every claim with pretense of herbage or winter on it was occupied, and one man hail a house half built. It did not take me long to make up my mind that the sooner I could get back into Kansas the better, but I had no idea of the enormous distance 1 hud traveled until 1 had got well into the journey L on an exhausted horse which needed F both food aud water badly. I had to camp out all night, and finally got into town on Sunday morning heartily ashamed of myself, and with enougli dust on me to have started a small vegetable garden. My only consolation was that hundreds of others were equally unfortunate, and I believe there was more grumbling and cussing to the square incli all day Sunday in this town than anyone present could possibly realize. W., who travels for a St. Jo dry goods house, did not turn up till just after supper on Sunday evening. Exactly what happened to him no one will know until he regains his temper. At present lie will give no information whatever, and all that is known is that he went into the strip on horseback and came back as an extra passenger in a prairie schooner or ex-boomer's wagon. A Chicago man who went in with us on horseback from here got hopelessly lost, and finally found himself at Kiowa, where lie sold the quadruped and took the cars back here. Another man of the traveling fraternity, who has always boasted that lie never got left, joined a town-site colony a few days before the opening and went in with them. Half a dozen sooners were quarreling over the quarter section they had designed to make the metropolis of the Indian territory when Uu*y arrived at it, and all they could do was to drive back. Our brother in affliction gives a most humorous account of his experience. Three of the number made the run on horseback, the balance following in wagons. When they met at the coveted spot and compared notes they decided to camp out for the night and come back at their leisure, as they had enough food and drink on hand to give indigestion, if not gout, to the entire party. A remarkable difficulty then beset them. Every inch of ground of the vicinity was claimed, and no one wonid allow them to camp, fearing lest it was a trick for the purpose of securing evidence in a projected contest. Finally their resting place was selected on the edge of one of the countless branches of the Arkansas river, and after a hearty supper and a good wash in the river an attempt was made to sleep. The darkness brought with it thousands of mosquitoes and millions of insignificant creeping things which stung wgfese than could be imagined, and camp was broken before nine o'clock. After that two or three more attempts were

77i« tali of til#

town. Its beea a

great problem with Dr. Fenner—not »4»

^ bring his GoUte*

Relief to cure ailments having so many different names, but to so

represent it as that,

the people would understand and believo It. It really is a specific in one disease, viz.: Inflammation. But that disease has K>

many forms and names. Thus: By its external ippllcation It cures any toothache in one minute. Any neuralgia or rheumatic pain in one to eight minutes. Any headache In 2 to5 minutes. Any backache In 8 minutes Cold sores on tips, one application. One drop cures an Indolent ulcer Any cut, bruise, burn or rheumatism it cures at once and without soreness or matieratlng Can work with comfort while ths wound is rav By its internal use, colic, or pain in stomach, 5 minutes. Dyspepsia, relief at once. Radical cure follows Diarrhoea, dysentery or flux, cures at once. Sorethroat, bronchitis and consumption, when used in time, cure follows

as surely as day follows the night.

People are beginning to understand and to talk about it. It searches out and cures inflammation wherever it exists. No inflammation, no sote throat. No inflammation, no consumption. No Inflammation, no swelling, no pain, no toothache. Not so complicated after all Contains no narcotics or mineral poisons. Safe and certain. One tablespoonful dose cures La Grippe. It never disappoints. Money refunded If aaliattaction not given. Take home a bottle to-dsg.

15 YEARS A SPECIALIST. Four Years of Continual Siccess

Through Indiana.

I>lt. WALTER

Has visited Greencastle for over four year* every four weeks and has cured

more patients of chronic dis-

eases than all other

specialists com-

bined.

restaurants in the country. It has been the aim to make it a feature of the building, and for the pitrroRr* of popularizing It !*♦ the

greatest possible extent the prices are made' * c-n, wxajj-v,» .v-x. v-w, v—, low. Ad elegant table d'hote dinner of xix injf up their baskets am! aprons. “Have

have some! There's enough for

The service is exclusively for (dub mom-) cats amt do^rs ibis year. * hers on the aeventh tioor, but ou the eighth t * floor it is open the general public, includ-1 in * ltt ' ie8 - — 1 Children Cry f or

Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.

Coinni«*i*ci«l Hotel,

Saturday Jan. 13,

AND EVERY FOUR WEEKS DURING THE TEAK.

80MK FACTS about the most successful physician in America, who has spent many months in the laboratories of the great scientists of Hurope, will visit our city everv four weeks to treat the patients who will call on him. Dr. Walter is well known in this State and section, as he has treated a great many afflicted people during his visits in this vicinity and they all speak volumes for him. HK TREATS SUCCESSFULLY — Acute an«l chronic catarrh, chronic diarrhoea, painful or suppressed menstruation, imfiammation of the womb, inflammation of the bladder. diabetes, dyspepsia, const ipat ion, kidney urinary and bladder troubles, Bright’s disease, tape worm, crooked and enlarged joints^ club foot, white swelling, nervousness and general debility, impotency, leucorrhea, pimples, blotches, cancer, dropsy, gravel, gleet, gonorrhoea, hydrocele, heart disease,hysteria, 8t. Vitus dance, paralysis, rheumatism, asthma, female weakness, etc. All surgical operations performed. Epilepsy or fits positively cured. Files cured without pain, knife or caustic. Blood and skin diseases cured by

improved aud never failing remedies.

KYK, EAR AND NOSE- In diseases of theeye, Dr. Walter is an expert. Crossed eyes art straightened in one moment oi time and without pain. He easily remedies weak and watery eyes, dropping of the lids, granxiations, sore eyes of any form, wild hairs, cataract, false pupils,spots, scums and turning of the lids. Koarixif} noises in the ear, partial deafness, ulcerations, discharges, earache, etc., are also cured. Nasal catarrh, that curse of this climate, with all of its ahhorent Centners, yields at once to the system of trejt;ment pursued by Dr. Walter. He can show’ a greater record of cures than any physician

fiivng.

FEMALE TROUBLES—Ladies who are afflicted with headache, langour and the weakness common to the sex, filial a. wonderfu* friend in Dr. Walter. He is skilled in the treatment of the troubles, especially in bloating, nervous prostration, general debility, sleeplessness, depression, indigestion, ovarian trouble, inflammation and ulceration, falling and displacements, spinal weakness, kidney complaints and change of life.

ORGANAL WEAKNESS.

Immediately cured and full vigor restored. This distressing affliction, which renders lifea burden and marriage impossible, is thepenalty paid bv the victim for improper indulgence. The most chaste must ack now lege that the passions are the great magnet njr which the whole world is attracted. Destiny them and what have we? Man is no longer interested in the opposite sex, the interheauge of that blissful repose which now attracts and interests the whole world exists no longer; man ceases to be what God made him; the world is no lunger interesting to him, and rc morse and disappointment are his constant companions. Consult Dr. Walter at once., aud you will find the sympathy and relief that you positively require to ne happy. Those wishing treatment should bring from one to four ounces of urine for chemical analysis. Dr. Walter will return every font weeks during the year 1893. Dr. Walter will correspond with those who desire to submit their symptoms. In writinjr all letters are held in strict confidence. The

permanent address is

luade to secure a decent resting place,

and finally it was decided to keep LYMAN P. WALTER, M. D.,

moving as the best opportunity for comfort. Several miles were covered during the night, and in the morning the hearthreakimr discovery was made

21k State Street, Chicnyo, Illinois.

The buililiny, which in much the llnent in Indianapolis, is provided with fast elevators, I and from the public dining hall one has a

The only instrument used purely for punishment in English jails nowadays is a crank handle weighted heavily with lend and work-

that they were ffoinff south instead of in({ hel , vi , y ilisi(le a box .

north. They retraced their steps and j J n haa no fewer Uian 700 e . rtflquate ots _ finally 'pot back into town in a v ®ry g erv { ng stations icattered over HHe Empir*. dilapidated and dirty condition and , . t ^ „ ... „ . * c „ •» The number ofinsane persons in Irelusa:

with an immense amount of conceit ' ,, ^ ,

. has increased from 219 per 100,000 pop'UauiXi

knocked out of Them. We propose to . ,

t , in 1880 to 369 per 100.000 in 1892. resume om ordinary aroctiUonsas soon

as wc are rested up.

There is one love that never dies, »a<l it its

the love for money.

A four-year old child aptly described i»»agiuation ns lookinp at thing" you eannor

When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. WEfTitfle bod Children, she gave them Castoria

Highest price paid for iiidrs, peltand tallow by Vancleave Si Sou. lit Children Cryibr i Pitcher’s Castoria.