Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 January 1894 — Page 7
Coughs and Colds
WESTERN EXPERIENCES.
are signs of weakness.*^ Don't wait until you are weaker and nearer Consumption. Begin at once with ,
Scott’s Emulsion
of Cod-liver Oil, with hypophosphites of lime and soda. It strengthens the Lungs, cures Coughs and Colds, and builds up the system. Physicians, the world over, endorse it.
Wasting Diseases of Children are speedily cured by SCOTT'S EMULSION. It stops waste and makes children fat and healthy. Prepared by Scott & Bowne, N. Y. Druggists sell It.
m
The Ulost Sensible
misM n sight
Ib a pair of Gold Spectacles, and the only place to have them correctly fitted is at las
it„ * x-' . _ _
place to have them correctly fitted is at 10.S East Washington street. No one every sold glasses so cheaply in Oreencastle. Don’t
trust your eyes to spectacle peddlers and
jewelers.
G. W. BENCE, M. D.
It AIL HA V TIME- TABLE' BIG FOUR.
tNo. 2, Local * “ 18, H. W. Limited
8, Mail.... “ 10, Night Express...
WEST.
’ No, 9. Mail..
» “ 17
.... 8:45 a. m. 1:52 p. m. 6:15 p. m. 2:33 a. nr
17 8. W. Limited..
t “ 3,. Mat toon Local * “ 7, Night Express "Daily. fDaily except Sunday.
. 8:45 a. m. .12:44 p. m. . 6:34 p. in. ,.12:40 a. m.
No. 2 connects through to ’ Cincinnati, Cleveland, Dayton and Renton Harbor. No. 18, coaches to liull'alo and sleepers to New York and Washington, D. C. No. 8 connects through to Wabash and Cincinnati. No. 10. coaches for Cleveland and Cincinnati and sleepers to Cincinnati and New York.
F. P. HUESTIS, Agt. MONON ROUTE.
Going North—1:27 a. m., 12:05 p. m.; local,
12:05 p. m.
Going South—2:47 a. m., 2:38 p. m.; local,
1:15 p. m.
VANDALIA LINE. In effect Nov. 5, 1893. Trains leave Greencas-
tle, Ind.,
FOR TilR WEST.
No. 21, Daily 1:52 p. ra., for St. Louis. “ 1, Daily 12:53 p.m., “ **
“ 7, Daily 12:25 a.m., * 1 ** 6, Ex. Sun 8:56 a. m., 4 44 3, Ex. Sun 5:28 p.m., * Trains leave Terre Haute, No. 75, Ex. Sun 7:05 a. m., ‘ 44 77, Ex. Sun 3:25 p. m., ‘
FOR THE EAST.
No. 20, Daily 1:52 p. m., for Indianapolis. '* 8, Daily 3:35 p m., 44 44 44 6, Daily 3:52 a.m., 44 44 44 12, Daily 2:23 a.m., 44 4 4 44 2, Ex. Sun 6:20 p. m., 4 4 4 4 44 4, Ex. Sun 8:31 a. m., 44 44 For complete Time Card, giving all trains and stations, and for full information as to rates, through cars, etc., address J. S. DOWLING, Agent,
Oreencastle, Ind.
Or J. M. Chrsbrouoh, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Louis, Mo.
Terre Haute.
Peoria. Decatur.
THE BEST GROCERIES
ani Provisions
1
Up cad. Vies, l ilacs. Tubaoco,
EXC.. EXC.. AT LOWEST Eli ICES, At
Finest Lunch Counter in the City. Come and See.
Kie fee’s
If you want a flue
RoastorSteak
Or boiling piece call at ‘ft'UiwtV Sc SWwtY %
MEAT MARKET.
Fresh beef, veal, pork, mutton always on hand. Also a full line of cured meats, at lowest prices. 3m27
J. D. TORE, (MELA, IND.,
BREEDER OF
THOHOUGIIISHEH
Poland China
Swine.
Light Brahma, Barred Plymouth Roc-k, Black Minorca, Mammoth Brown Turkeys, Toulouse Geese,
ONE FAMILY PROVIDED FOR.
It Includes the Monarch of Every European Country. Intimately as the ruling families of Europe were allied by blood and marriage in the middle of the sixteenth century, when Mary I. was queen of England, the prese nt day displays still more intimate and widespread connections between them. Take the English roj-al family as the starting point. It is connected, first, with Germany by Empress Frederick. The present emperor is Queen Victoria's grandson. The duke of Edinburg married into the Russian family. The prince of Wales married a princess of Denmark, which house is also connected with Russia. Denmark produced the present king of Greece. The representatives of the Wettin family have been, during the present reign, the prince of Wales, Ernest II., duke of Saxe-Coburg; Leopold II., king of Belgium; Ferdinand, prince of Bulgaria; Albert, king of Saxony; the king of Portugal, grandson of another prince of Coburg, who, by marrying the queen of Portugal, became king of that Country. The English family again is connected with the Oldcnburgs, thus bringing in the Scandinavian family. The king of Denmark's daughter is the princess of Wales. There are also George I., king of Greece; Ernest, duke of SchleswigHolstein, the grand duke of Oldenburg, and Alexander III., emperor of Russia. Alexander III. again is a Romanoff. In other directions, again, the emperor of Austria enters into this royal family, and on his side also the grand duke of Baden, the queen regent of Spain and her little boy king. In fact, there is not a royal family-in Europe at the present day which is not more or less intimately connected with the rest by kindred or by marriage.
A llRiik SuHi>en<l». Red Wing, Minn., Oan. 17.—The Bank of Zumbrota, capital stock of f45,000, has suspended. It failed last fall, but increased its capital stock and resumed.
HrUtived Their tVatfe* Ten Per Cent. Toledo, O., Jan. PI.—A reduction of 10 per cent, in the wages of the employes of the Columbus, Hocking Valley <fc Toledo railway went into effect Monday.
SHUT YOUR MOUTH.
By Keeping It Open You Endanger Your Health.
Don’t be offended. The admonition is not meant as a reflection upon your talkativeness. Talk ns much as you please, but keep your mouth shut when you are not talking. People who keep their mouths closed except when they are talking, eating or drinking, rarely contract colds or coughs. Savages, even those living in northern latitudes, seldom take cold. Scientists say it is because they are close mouthed. Disease germs floating in the air find a direct route into the lungs of a person who breathes through his mouth. They are arrested by the tine, sieve-like network of hair in the nostrils of the individual who breathes through his nose. Keep your mouth shut and you may defy pestilence. The teeth suffer from too much and too frequent exposure to the atmosphere. Sudden changes of temperature, whether liquid or atmospheric, are hurtful to them. The best teeth in the world arc those of the savage tribes, whose members always keep their mouths r,hut except when talking or eating. Throat and lung diseases are often contracted by persons who go about open mouthed. The frosty air of winter inhaled directly into the lungs through the mouth is a frequent cause of bronchial disorders. Taken through the nose it is modified and sifted of many of its dangers. Keep your mouth shut!
6tofiei of the Froutlerwmati and the Tenderfoot Soldier from the Pant. The western frontiersman often seems to hold in slight esteem the soldiers who are sent for the protection of the border. Having learned Indian methods by many hard knocks, ho doubtless fails to exercise proper charity toward those whose experiences have been less extended. His ordinary state of mind may be illustrated by some extracts from “An Historical Rocky Mountain Outpost.” An Indianfighter, speaking of newly arrived soldiers, said: “They bo the greenest sot, and the sight of an Injun jest about scares ’em to death. I never saw any of ’em I was afraid of, if I had any sort of a show. “TVhy, back in ’59 I undertook to take a young man back to the states, and we started in a buggy; a buggy, do you mind! When ho got down the Arkansas a piece we heard the red skins was pretty thick, but we went right on, only keeping more of a lookout, you know. "But along in the afternoon we saw fifteen or twenty coming for us, and wc got ready to give ’em a reception. We had a hard chase, but at last they got pretty sick of the way 1 handled my rifle, and concluded to let us alone for awhile. They kept watchus, though, and meant to get square with us that night. “Well, we traveled till dark, stopped just long enough to build a big fire, and then lit out. When those Injuns came for us that night we were in some other place, and they lost their grip on that little scalping bee. "They didn’t trouble us any more, that's sure. And when we got to the nevt post, there were nigh a hundred teams, six stages and two companies of soldiers, all shivering for fear of the Injuns. It rather took the wind out of ’em to see us come in with that buggy; and they didn't want to believe we had come through. But we were there, and they couldn’t get out of it.” That there are some things about frontier life which are more enjoyable than others the frontiersman is free to admit. Among the few matters he would have otherwise, ho gives the first place to the tough “range" or “snow-fed” beef upon which he must needs subsist. “I heard a story once,” said he, “about a young man. a tenderfoot, who after long wondering what made the beef so fearfuUy tough, at length arrived at the solution, as he thought, and that quite by accident, lie was riding out with a friend, an old resident, when they chanced to come upon a bunch of cattle. "The young man seemed to be studying over something, and finally he pointed to an animal which bore the brand ‘B. C. 45.’ “‘Look at that!’ he exclaimed. ‘How can you expect those antediluvians to bo anything but tough? Why don't you kill your cattle before they get to be two or three times us old as Methuselah?’ ”
WHAT MEN EARN.
Growth of Coral*. Corals increase by eggs, spontaneous division and germination. The rate of growth (ins not been fully determined. Prof. Agassiz, indicates the growth of reefs at Key West at the rate of six inches in one hundred years, and adds that if we double that amount it would require seven thousand years to form the reefs in that place and hundreds of thousands of years for the growth of Florida.
| Pekit; Ducks unci and Guiua
Fowl«
For sale, 20 extra choice Barred Plymouth
- ‘ ~ •' r Bi ‘
ovot
For *8 ,
bock Cockerels, $1.00 each; 2 yearling Barred ^^KPlymouth Rock Cocks, |2.00 each; 5 8. C.
Leghorn Cockerel*, extra fine. ^^Lch;2t '
PtHLOu ea< 1.
Catarrh in the Head I* undoubtedly a disease of the blood, and as such only a reliable blood purifier can effect a perfect and permanent cure. Hood s Satsaparilla is the best blood purifier, and it has cured many very severe cases of catarrh, i Catarrh oftentimes leads to consumption. I Take Hood's Sarsaparilla before it is too late.
It Pays Better to He a Maker of War Than a Preacher of Peace. 1 It has been said that the world pays most to those who kill, generals and great lords; next most to those who amuse, singers and actors; while those who preach, teach and write for the papers come along somewhere near the bottom of the list. There’s a good deal to bear out the theory, remarks the New York Recorder. Marlborough, for his victories, got the magnificent estate of Blenheim and lots besides. Wellington became extremely wealthy. Napoleon's generals were rewarded with crowns. Von Moltke was made rich, and might have had much more money if ho had eared for it. Even little Lord \Volseley has made a heap of money—second class wars. The number of actors and singers who have accumulated half a million, besides living expensively, is quite large. Sir Walter Scott made ns much as that by his pen. Mr. Gunter has made nearly as much by light-weight novels. Mark Twain has made more than that on his copyrights, and some from investment. Bronson Howard must soon reach the half-million mark. Zola, Nardou and perhaps Daudct long since passed it. About the top notch of income for a New York law firm is 8^50,000 a year, half of which may go to the head man. Some firms may run rather above this. But the most responsible judgeships pay only from 83,000 to 88,000. Ex-President Grevy, of France, in the Dreyfus guano case, received a fee of 8300,000. The Laekwar of Baroda paid 800,000 to Mr. Paterson ns a fee. Sir Pharles Russell once received 8T00U for three hours’ work. Methodist preachers in sparsely settled districts frequently receive 8100 a year from each of three churches, preaching three times a dnj’. Pupil teachers in British hoard schools earn at first 2s. to 4s. a week. A Mexican peon gets 20 cents, upward; a Chinese or Indian coolie at home 7 or 8 cents a day. Hard work on the Manchester ship canal paid 02>$ cents a day. Chain makers on Cradley Heath and hobnail makers at Bromsgrove, Eng., earn 82 to 83.50 a week by working overtime and live on bread and tea.
BALKING THE UMBRELLA THIEF.
A Washington Man lias Inrrntf-<1 an Automatically Returnable Rain shield. Another long-felt want is about to be filled. Drawings for the invention were received at the patent office only a few days ago, and the man. who, by the way, is a \\ ashingtonian, is preparing to build him a now house in the most fashionable part of the city with the prospective funds from this invention. It is nothing less than an automatically returnable umbrella. That is, one that will make its own arrangements for its return to its owner when lost. The nomadic habit of umbrellas, especially when left unchained in the neighborhood of a crowd, has long been a subject of comment, and it has been a serious question whether the trouble were altogether with the morals of the umbrella, that would go off and lose itself, or an innate depravity of the umbrella-using public that made findings keepings without much inquiry as to the identity of the loser. The new, non-losablo umbrella does not differ essentially from the ordinary article, says the Washington Post, except that it has a little stouter handle. Herein is concealed the working part of the device. It is a compactly arranged phonograph, with a multiplying reverberator, enabling it to be heard for, say, the length of a street car or in a good-sized hallway. In connection with the phonograph is a combination lock which sets the machine for action. The owner of the umbrella on setting it down simply switches in the combination and as soon as it is picked up the phonograph gets in its work. The remarks can be arranged according to the taste in oratory of the man who owns the umbrella and can range from a politely couched request not to disturb the rain protector to a stentorian cry of “Stop, thief,” or “This fellow is stealing another man’s umbrella,” or any other exclamation of a more forcible nature, the strength of the language being only limited by the local municipal ordinances regarding profanity.
LICORICE HARVEST IN SYRIA.
LIKE A GIANT CORKSCREW.
III DU UUgUUI 11 V
oh; 2 Silver Hpuugled Hamburg Cockerels, Lou each, if taken at once. Call on or admph Forreat Ellis, Bainbridge, Ind. 25tf
Hood's Pills do not purge, pain or gripe, but act promptly, easily and efficiently. 25c.
For only $1.50 we will send you both the Star-Press nnd Indianapolis Weekly Sentinel for a whole year— cash invariably in advance.
A Great Matchmaker.
The first Napoleon was the greatest matchmaker that ever lived. After repeated refusals the doughty little soldier himself finally won the hand of Josephine, and devoted his matrimonial instincts to the affairs of others. No excuse was admitted from a bachelor. Two officers who pleaded that they might be kiiuxi m battle he answered: “The more reason for haste.” To those who urged that they
could not find a wife:
Fourteen Times Around a Mountain Between Base and Summit. There is a mountain fifteen miles from Tumacacor, but so near the international line that it is not known positively whether it is in Arizona or Mexico, but it is believed that it is United States property. Miners, says New York Recorder, have always called it Babel mountain, and it is a most appropriate name. It is of a soft sandstone and pumice formation, and the work of making the road was not a difficult task. The road commences in a canyon of the foothills and.rises at an easy grade, corkscrew fashion, going around the mountain fourteen times before the summit is reached. The road is about fifty yards square when it starts at tlie base and gradually gets smaller until it is only ten feet wide at the top. In many places the road has been washed out by the storms of years, but it is still possible to take a horse to the top. In many places, where the sides overhang a little, the mark of the builder's pick can be plainly seen on the wall of rock. To ascend the mountain a person must follow the road, and this is a two days’ task, as it is about thirty miles, as near as can be calculated without actual measurement. The lowest road is a little over three miles long when it goes around the mountain once. However, this is vrry irregular and goes around several spurs of the mountain. The roughness of the road is undescribable. and a horse is of no use for a week after the trip. The top of the mountain Ls about seven thousand feet above the plain. There is nothing at the top. and the adventurer wonders, when he gets there, what the road was built for.
THE CRADLE OF GREAT NEN.
A Dlstlngulsliatl Public-lit Says tho West Is Their Birthplace. The typical Americans have all been western men. with the exception, let us say, of Washington. Washington had not had much of European culture. The qualities that made him a great commander and a great president were qualities which would have made him an equally great frontiersman. You cannot imagine Hamilton, or Madison, or Livingston, or John Adams, or the Pinckneys living tolerably on the frontier. They are not Americans in the sense in which Clay and Jackson and Lincoln are Americans. We may wish that the typical Americans of the past had had more knowledge, a more cultivated appreciation of the value of what was old and established, a juster view of foreign nations and foreign politics; that they had been more like Webster and less like Jackson; and we may hope that the typical American of the future will be wiser and better poised. But in the meantime the past is to be understood and estimated as the facts stand, and only a thoroughly sympathetic comprehension of these men who have actually been the typical Americans will enable us to effect that purpose. The fact that Clay rather than Webster, Jackson and not John Quincy Adams, represented the forces which were really predominant and distinctively American in our development is commentary enough on any theory that makes either of the peculiar sections of the Atlantic seaboard the principal or only theater of American history.
The Lions In the Moon. Wo always speak of the lines and spots on the moon's surface as "The man in the moon,” but it seems that others have entertained a different opinion. Bishop Wilkins says: “In some countries the figures on the moon are supposed to bo two lions in deadly combat; in most Oriental countries the
Guthereil In Sacks and I’arrled on Camels
to the Seaboard.
In a scries of articles describing the planting, cultivation, preparation for market and transportation of licorice root, appearing in the Pharmaceutical Era. there is the following interesting descriptive bit: In digging licorice root in Syria the usual way is to start a trench the length of the place to be dug over, about two feet in length, and work from that, each man placing in a pile the root he has dug, and at the end of the day or longer time it is taken to the scales, weighed and paid for at a special rate per pound. An allowance is always made for the dirt that clings to the root. The root is then spread out for a few days to slightly dry and is piled in stacks about three feet wide and four or five feet high, rounded off at the top in order to shed rain, and the piles are nar-
row enough to prevent heating.
At the end of the rainy season tho root is spread out to dry for about two months, being turned over from time to time, during which process all the adhering earth dries and falls off, leaving it clean and ready for transport to the point of shipment. It is then put into canvas sacks, each containing from two hundred to two hundred and fifty pounds, two sacks being a load for a camel or a mule. F’or the transportation of the root from the place where dug to the port of shipment, varying from two to five days' journey, a contract is usually made with some Arab or Bedouin sheik for a certain amount of cantars (of about five hundred pounds each) at a certain price, he to furnish camels and men and the owner
to furnish and fill the sacks.
About fiftj- camels go in one caravan or drove, for which five men are sufticient. Sometimes, if one hundred camels are used, the caravan goes in sections; one man riding a donkey leads the first camel and the rest follow the leader, while tho other men walk, keeping any camel from straying or lagging too far behind. They usually start early in the morning and go ten or fifteen miles, when a halt is made, the loads are taken off, and the camels arc allowed to browse on the thorn or other bushes for three or four hours, then loaded again and about the same distance traveled, when they arc again unloaded and the night is spent in the open air, and an early start made the next morning. And so
until the seaboard is reached,
15 YEARS A SPECIALIST.
Four Years of Continual Success
Through Indiana.
WALTER
Ha* viaited Oreencastle for over four years every lour weeks and has cured more patients of chronic diseases than all other speci »list« corad
WILL BE AT
Commoreiitl Hotel,
Saturday Feb. 10,
AND EVERY FOUR WEEKS DURING TUB YEAR.
SOME FACTS about the most successful physician in America, who ha* spent many months in the laboratories of the K^at scientists of Europe, will visit our city every 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. HE TREATS SUCCESSFULLY — Acute and chronic catarrh, chronic diarrhoea, painful or suppressed menstruation, imtlamraation of the womb, inflammation of the bladder, diabetes, dyspepsia, constipation, kidney, urinary and blauder 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, gieet, gonorrhoea, hydrocele, heart disease,hysteria, St. 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 and never failing 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, sore eyes of any form, w ild hairs, cataract. false pupils, spots, scums and turning of the lids. Roaring noises in the ear, partial deafness, ulcerations, discharges, earache, etc., are also cured. Nasal catarrh, that curse of this climate, with all of its abhorent fea-
where they are unloaded, the root is | m^u'puriu* r^' Vl^callUL^'a
weighed, the sacks emptied, and re- greater record of cures than any physician
VI1B.
FEMALE TROUBLES-Ladies who are afflicted with headache, langour and the weakness common to the sex. find a wonderful friend in Dr. Walter. He is skilled in the treat meat of the troubles, especially n bloat-
turned to be again refilled in the fields for another trip. On the Euphrates and Tigris thy root is obtained near the banks of the rivers and, after be-
ing properly dried, is loaded in bulk nervous prostration, Reneral" debility, *..• 4 nit i 1 sleeplessness, depression, indigestion, ovaron native boats called bupalows, car- ian trouble, inflamma.fon rnd ulceration, ryinc’ from fifty to 100 tons, which} SL 1 * 11 * alld d i 8placemea s » s: in*l v'cakwess, float down the river, or sail if the wind] “ " ej ‘'•'“Pj""** of life, is favorable, or at times are towed byi ^Immediately cured and full vigor restored.
men as far down as Bassorah. whereȣ
, , , , i • .
the root is unloaded mid. pressed in J penalty paid by the victim lor improper inbales ready for shipment. |^^t^^pJsYoE's^aVf ritr^reat mainly
which the whole world is attracted. Destroy
KNOCKEDTHE BRIDE SENSELESS
- picture is thought to be that of a single , . , , ,
Be thatmyi lior others will only have it to be ^tboat before a big wind; as gentle
Only an rnfortunatn Incident Growing Out nf a lirtdal Custom. A well-known New York drummer returning from a southern trip relates the following story as of actual occurrence at a negro wedding in Charleston. S. C.: After the ceremony had been concluded in the most approved style the groom, who was employed at one of the phosphate mines, a few miles from the city, bundled his bride into a rude cart, loaded some household effects into it and prepared, among salvos of cheers and best wishes, to take her home. At this stage in the proceedings one darky, who had traveled and been present us a waiter at the wedding of some white folks, suggested that the proper thing to do was to throw shoes after the tieparting couple as they drove away. The idea took immensely, nnd such n scrambling as followed when the colored belles and beaux began to divest their feet of boots and shoes of various sizes and weights! Many of the men had no stockings on beneath their shoes, but that made no difference. They all hung back, suppressing their enthusiasm until the happy groom brought a hale stick down on the back of the mule and starred his bridal trip. Then with a howl of joy the guests hurst forth and began a fusillade which was by no means relished by the happy pair. The air was filled with flying missiles. One gigantic boot struck tho groom in the small of the back and drew from him a wild yell of agony. Another hurtling through the air with unerring aim struck the bride full on the head and knocked her senseless. This was too much for tho groom. Leaping from his cart, with his bale stick in hand, he set about to thrash every one of the guests. As might be inferred, a wild riot ensued, or was about to, when a policeman came up and put a stop to it. Nothing, however, could appease the dusky groom until the ofiicer assured him that he was not the victim of an indignity, but merely the object of a bridal custom such as white folks always observed.
them ami what have we? Man is no lunger
intfursted in theoppoiite si x, the interheange
of that blissful repose which now attracts an interests the whole world exists no longer; man ceases to be what God made him; the world is no longer interesting to him, and remorse and disappointment are his constant companions. Consult Dr. Walter at once, and you will find the sympathy and relief that
you positively require to V.e happy. Those wishing treatment should bring from
one to four ounces of urine for chemical analysis. Dr. Walter will reluru every four
weeks during the year 1893.
. Dr. Waller will correspond with those who desire to submit their symptoms. In writing a>l letters are held in strict confldence. The
permanent address is
LYMAN P. WALTER, M. D., 213 State Street, Chicago, Illinois.
HUMPHREYS’ This Precious Ointment is the triumph of Scientific Medicine. Nothing has ever been produced to equal or compare with it as a curative and healing application. It has been used 40 years and always affords relief and always gives satisfaction. Cures Piles or Hemorrhoids —External or Internal, Blind or Bleeding -Itching and Burning; Cracks or Fissures; Fistula in Ano; Worms of the Rectum. The relief is immediate—the cure certain.
WITCH HAZEL OIL
The Heathen Woman.
With the except ion, possibly, of the Christian woman, the Hebrew woman, the Mohammedan woman and a few other women, there is no creature more interesting than the heathen xvoman. She possesses all the qualities that contribute toward making the contemplation of the feminine part of humanity tho most engaging, delightful and bewildering process that occupies the mind of man. The heathen woman has virtue, wit, reverence, love, whims. Independence, tantrums, tears to shed and smiles. She is as headstrong as a
care, he “aid, and the same ! tho picture of a man’s face, as the moon
the affair would be arranged. The is represented. Albertus thinks that
poor received dowries and trousseaux. lt shows the picture of a lion with his One day by decree tho emperor married face toward the west and his tail tool? six thousand soldiers at once. ! xvard the east. It is as much like a Anotherday his great court dignitaries fion as that in the Zodiac, or us Ursa
were obliged eu masse to marry. | M u j 0 r is like a bear."
us Ju*ibo. She is a delightful entity, made up of things very good and things not very gooti, the good far outweighing all else. The heathen woman lias in as high degree as her Christian, Hebrew, Mohammedan or other sisters, that crowning glory of womanhood,
maternal love.
Cures Burns, Scalds and Ulceration and Contraction from Burns. The relief is instanL Uures Boils, Hot Tumors, Ulcers, FtsDiHo, i iM s,,ro< i itching Eruptions, Scurfy
or Scald Head. It is infallible.
Cures Inflamed or Caked Breasts and Sore Nipples. It is invaluable. . , Price, 50 Cents. Trial sire, as Cents, Fold by Druggist*, or fnst-|>»li n n re^-lpt of prleo. , ill irtIUm>’MED.CQ., Ill* ilk Wiiiiaai 8i.« KBIV \0RK«
THE PILE OINTMENT
CAUTION.—If a dealer offers W. I*. Douglas NhoeH at 11 reduced price» or says he has them without n a me stamped on Bottom, put him down as a fraud.
f -iiiMuiinil w LH 11 I L W If/iTS ; Guys 5$
W. L. Douglas
S3 SHOE
BEST IN
THE WORLD.
W. l. dcuglas :^ At ■ *:>\ t—> r.u tiny, and «ive better satisfaction at the prices advertised than anv other make. Try one pair and be convinced. The stamping of \V. L. Douglas* name nnd price on ♦hr bottom, which guarantee:: their value, saves thousands of dollars smuiallv
the
to those who wear them. Dealer* who push th
• l'* Douglas Shoes gain customers,
which helps to increase the sales on their full line of Roods. They can afford to sell at a less protit, and we believe you can save money bv buyme all
your footwear of the dealer advertised below.
5m38
P. R. CHRISTIE.
u*
I
• cue is eresn uervavement:
UianiB denying.
Gettroerngy oY MPT
