Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 March 1894 — Page 7
^ i
I
I H
r n
Consumption
LAND DARONS OUT WEST.
Landlords Who Are neckless, Free-
Handed and Good Livers.
The divine injunction “in the sweat
It comes from a germ that takes Of thy face Shalt thou eat bread” has
GLORY SURPASSING SOLOMON'S London’s Lord Mayor Is a Gorcroua Creature When Arrayed In llin I lobes. The fountain of municipal honor in England undoubtedly springs from the Guildhall, London, which justly claims to he accounted the most ancient of our municipal halls, seeing that the lord mayors of the last eight
. i centuries are with justice assumed to
the law peculiar and interesting to have had prototypes in the Homan study, says Harpers. The landlords prefect amUho Si ; x .„ n fort o rt _ have no care but the gathering of ; ^vo. For a considerable number of rents and a general supervision of the ! years, says the London Telegraph, the
of Cod-liver Oil, with hypophosphites of lime and fn^ani^t reeklL^.d'li^r^'ami ^^en* h LdtLTomm,meounenorJ
soda, overcomes all the conditions which make con- ''' lth a tendency to dissipation.
; Most of them live up to their incomes
may be avoided
root and grows only when the System is Weak and .TvluST^S”^ 0 '.‘Xs
who, like the lilies of the fields, “toil not; neither do they spin,” furnishing
^ ^ ^ an example of class favoritism under
Emulsion
Lungs are affected. Scott’s
DAYS OF THE HOME MADE. Times When the Farmer's Clot lief Were
Made at Home.
The cultivation of Cax and the manufacture of linen were univeraal in the early days of New England. Nearly every house in the country had cards and great wheel and little wheel, reel and swifts, and dye-tub in the kitchen, and scarn, warping bars and loom in
SUFFICIENT UNTO HERSELF. '
Th© Vounc Woman Had No Need of Aim
Mi.ntanrn of Any Kind.
The kind-hearted old gentleman watched the young woman seated next to him in the elevated train with interest, says the New York World. She held a magazine in her hands with the leaves uncut. She looked through the table of contents and raised the cor*
chamber or garret. From the “History j nersof the leaves so as to get a glimpse
sumption possible. Physicians, the world over, cn- ni > , > ^' v acquire large bank accounts. i *, ' Your typical landlord’s home is the endorse it. rambling white-plantation great house
of ante-bellum days, with wide galleries, big chimneys and usually in a bad state of repair. An air of untidiness and neglect pervades the yard, to
Coughs, Colds, Weak Lungs and Emaciation pave the way for Consumption. SCOTT’S EMULSION cures
them and makes the system strong. Prepared by Scott & Bowne, N.Y. Druggists sell it.
The Mont SePftble misim TO SIGHT Id a pair of Gold Spectacles, and the only place to have them correctly fitted is at 105 i ist Washington street. No one every s<*i<! glasses so cheaply in Greencastle. Don’t trust your eyes to spectacle peddlers and
jewelers.
G. W. BENCE, M. D._ RAIL.WA V TIME-TABLE’
BIG FOUR.
.... 8:45 a. m. 1:52 p. in. 5:15 p. m. 2:33 a. m
* No, 9, Mail
' “ 17 8. W. Limited
fNo. 2, Local * “ 18, 8. W. Limited * “ 8, Mail * ’* 10, Night Express
WEST.
8:45 a. m. 12:44 p. m.
t “ 3,. Mat toon Local * “ 7, Night Express Daily, tDaily except Sunday.
No. 2 connects through to Cincinnati, Cleveland, Dayton and Denton Harbor. No. 18, coaches to Buffalo and sleepers to New York and Washington. D. C. No. 8 connects through to Wabash ami 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. f 12:05 p. m.; local,
12:05 p. m.
Going South—2:47 a. m., 2:38 p. m.; local,
1:45 p. m.
VAN DALI A LINE. In etfeet Nov. 5, 1893. Trains leave Ureeucas-
tle, Ind.,
FOR TIIK WEST. No. 21, Daily 1:52 p. m., for St. Louis. “ 1, Daily 12.M p, m , “ “ 7, Daily 12:25 a.m., “ “ “ 5, Ex. Sun 8:50 a. m., “ “ “ 3, Ex. Sun 5:28 p.m., “ Terre Haute. Trains leave Terre Haute, No. 75, Ex. Sun 7:05 a.m., “ Peoria. “ 77, Ex. Sun 3:25 p. in., “ Decatur. FOR THE EAST. No. 20, Daily 1:52 p. m., for Indianapolis. “ 8, Daily 3:35 p m., “ “ 6, Daily 3:52 a. m., “ “ “ 12, Daily 2:23 a.m., “ “ “ 2, Ex. Sun 6:20 p. m., “ “ “ 4, Ex. Sun 8:34 a. m., “ “ For complete Time Card, giving all trains and stations, and for full information as to rates, through cars, etc., address J. 8. DOWLING, Agent, Greencastle, Ind. Or J. M. Cbesbrocoh, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt., 8t. Louis, Mo.
which is added a lack of taste inside when you enter. Still there is something about the surroundings—the orchard, smoke house, negroes, i>igs and poultry—whieh-denotes solid old-fash-
H© Keeps Tab on iTTconductor by Mean. 1 i‘ ,ned col " fort ll1 " 1 Arcadian content. <>r » silent Pocket lleglstnr. | Frequently you meet the lord of one of For several months conductors have U'cse man:,ions—a squaw nan—whose been watching men who habitually family claim no Indian blood, yet he
THE STREET-CAR SPOTTER.
enjoys, by virtue of a former matrimonial alliance, al! the landed rights of an Indian. It is really surprising
stand on rear platforms, says the Indianapolis News. That is the spotter's position. Professional spotters
never “give themselves away" by j ^ ,r! uuinoer of this class that are dicounting the passengers. The spotter v °rced from Indian wives or have becarrys a small noiseless register in one i l ’ ,,, ne widowers and remarried in their of the pockets of his overcoat. He is ' °"' n r;R ' L *- They constitute the largest most likely to appear on a car that is ; himlliohlers and arc very jealous of to carry a big load. He takes his ; lh, ' ir trih :i' rights when threatened by place on the rear platform and always ! "boomers, as they terra the opponents appears to he the most unconcerned ’ land monopoly and unequal privi-
man on the ear. The first thing he j ^ c R' os -
does is to glance at the register in the | -Hid what of the Indian, the fullfront of the car He makes mental whom this great and munificent note of the number of fares that have government of ours has in its wisdom been rung up. F.very time a passenger j re garded as a ward and heir to a gets on he presses the button of the | princelj heritage as a recompense for little register in his pocket. He never i ^ n gho-S:i.\on rapine.’ ^ ou will find appears to be watching the persons ^' In where the stillness of the forest is who are getting in the ear, but he must i ns unbroken, lie is there in his 12-40a m I careful not to miss one. He rides miserable little hut, a recluse from the on the platform until the faros of all the ' L r rent mad world he so distrusts and persons who have got on the ear since ^ 1 “ ars - living a poor hand-to-mouth exile took his position have been eol- isten ce, and rarely emerging to visit lected. His last act before getting oft th ‘‘ haunts of his tormentors. A scanty
is the mental registration of the number of fares Indicated by the register in the car. If he has another test to make before making his report, he will probably stop under the first electric light, write down on the blank furnished him the number of fares registered when ho got on the car and the number registered when he got off. lie subtracts one
THE BEST
GROCERIES and Provisions, 15 i»osicl. Pies, i' i*s, Tubarco,
ETC.. ETC..
AT LOWEST PRICES, At Finest Lunch Counter in tlte City. Come and Sec.
have been settled with a precision that none save the most reckless of innovators would presume to disturb. The lord mayor himself has his "gold” robe for the occasion of the annual Guildhall banquet, and for the times when he proceeds in state either to the new law courts or to the houses of parliament. The aldermen have their scarlet gowns, the slieriffs their distinctive and very handsome robes and chains, while the common councilors rejoice in gowns called "mazarines,” it being generally understood that mazarine is a term for a dark blue color, although, according to some lexicographers, mazarine also means a drinking vessel and an old way of dressing fowls. Then, again, when the sovereign comes into the city the lord mayor is bound to don a robe of crimson or purple velvet trimmed with ermine. At the time of his investiture he wears a massive gold chain, but when lie is honored by reelection at the expiration of his term of office
lie wears two chains.
The mace of silver gilt, surmounted by a royal crown and the imperial arms,is carried before the mayor by the authority of the charter of Edward III., while the city possesses no less than four swords—one called the pearl, presented by Queen Hess w lien she opened the first royal exchange, and so called
of various illustrations. The old gentleman drew out his pocketknife hesitatingly. He opened it still more hesitatingly. The young woman seemed entirely oblivious of his acts and evident intentions but their fellow passengers were able to uronso a great! deal of interest in the proceeding.) Finally, just as the old gentleman)
the hatchel and the swingle. Hy this means the flax was thoroughly bruised without cutting, and the tow and coarse, woody parts separated from the finer fibers of true linen. It was then combed to complete the separation. and was ready for the wives and daughters to spin and weave into gar-
ments.
Woolen cloth was also made at h ime. The wool was curded into rolls by hand, and then spun and woven into
cloth.
All garments were likewise made at homo, not only for everyday wear, but the go-to-meeting dresses of the women and the breeches for the men, even the suits that the minister wore in the pulpit and the clothes of representatives to congress, all were home
made.
The first carding machine was introduced by Eliplialet Horne in 1811. It
from its being richly set with pearls, caused much excitement in town, and The sword precedes the chief magis-1 set the old people to shaking their
f rejoicing and heads and asking what the girls would
of Ilochester,” N. 11., we cull the fol-
lowing description:
Every farmer set apart a portion of his land for fiax. It was an indispentablc crop, and the manufacture of oil from the seed became a profitable
business.
The fiax was carefully pulled up hy the roots and stacked in the field till
thoroughly dry, when the seed was S reached forward, extending his knife,) thrashed out. It was then soaked in th ' > yo un fr woman dexterously drew 1 water for several days, and spread ou ! " ut a hatpin and began cutting the the ground to be vetted, frosty nights 1 leaves of her magazine. The old genhelping to whiten it. I tleman leaned back and delivered hiraAfter a suitable time it was stowed | sulf °* il confidential aside to the man
away till spring, when it was brought next to him:
out to be dressed by use of the brake.
I have heard,” he said, “that women can do anything with their hairpins and hatpins, but at any rate they’d need a knife to sharpen pencils.” And at that moment the provoking young woman drew a pencil from her reticule, bit the wood off the top of it, and made a note on the article she was reading. r l he ear giggled and the old gentleman began to read his paper
with an injured air.
Naturalints claim that a single healthy •wallow will devour 6.000 grubs every day. Rothschild requires of his cook a differeut kind of soup for every day in the year.
15 TEffi A SPECIALIST. Four Years of Coniirual Success Through Indiana.
'Si
patch of corn, a few poultry and mast fed hogs, with what game and fish fall prey to his skill, go to supply his meager larder and furnish employment for his squaw and himself. Once in a great while there is n per capita payment, and a pittance falls to ids share after the professional redruen of the tribe have made the disbursement to their satisfaction and paid their “at-
from the other, and has before i Forney’s fees.” It is a rare thimf to find him the number of fares the conductor ; ,L f ll ll"blood in the Indian territory who
Kiefer’s
If you want a fine
Roast orSteak
Or boiling piece call at
t5\o\\ev & s
MEAT MARKET.
Fresh beef, veal, pork, mutton always on
Laud. Also a full line of cured meats, at lowest prices. 3m27 J. D, TORE, OAKALLA, IND.,
should have registered. Then lie looks at his indicator, and if there is a discrepancy between his count and the count the conductor registers he reports the fact to the company. A conductor who is discharged is never accused of having stolen money from the company. The charge is “improperly collecting fares.” it is not often that a conductor is discharged the first time it is reported to the company that he is "improperly collecting fares.” The test is applied to him frequently, and if it is found that he is habitually not ringing up fares for all the persons who take passage on his car he is dismissed. Conductors believe that the means employed by spotters are unfair. They say that it is often impossible for any man to get all the fares on a car; that it is an easy matter to get all the fares when a car is not crowded, hut when fifty or sixty persons board a car bound uptown it is next to impossible to collect without an error. Often persons will get off the car before the conductor has reached them, and. hampered as he is by the crowd, they say, he cannot prevent this. Then per ons are getting on and off, exchanging seats and doing other things that mystify the conductor as ho pushes his way through the crowd in search of the nickels that are due the company. FOLLOWING A PRECEDENT.
is living comfortably on as much as a quarter section of land under cultivation. There are some, but they are
striking exceptions.
Old Hill Ilnttfl Had Found the Heathen 1'lilnoo Not at All Accommodating. A good, honest fellow in his way was Hill ilotts, but he had never had an opportunity to study moral philosophy us taught in the colleges and universities, says tiie New York Herald. He came from Ifiddeford, in Devon, and very likely some of his ancestors Irad helped Drake “wallop” the Spaniards. He had followed in their footsteps hy enlisting in the navy to fight for his queen and country whenever called
upon to do so.
\Yhon he returned from a voyage to China he brought with him a present for a gentleman who had been very kind to his old mother during his absence. It was a curiously fashioned Chinese garment made of hits of a species of straw strung together. “1‘lase, sur, you must excoos un being torn,” he said, bashfully, when he presented it, “the Chinaman wouldn’t
part with un aisy.”
He had run across a Chinaman wearing it somewhere in the streets of Hong Kong, and the unfortunate celestial not undi-rstanding his summary request to “hand that over heie” he had simply yanked it off him. To the suggestion that his conduct had hardly been consistent with strict
honesty he replied:
, “Hoggin’ your pardon, snr. he wur
^ . 1 only It haythen, an’ I never heard that
taking things from a haythen counted DVV lllv. as stalin'. “Well,” replied his. friend, “if many
Li 2 h ! Br.hm». Barred Plymouth I i't?? !±
BREEDER OF
TIIOIHH GHGSICfl'.E)
Poland China
Rockl Black Minoren, Mammoth " v 'LLo*he IkdS’elpL-v‘Zuid Brown Turkovs, Tmilooso (iei sc. be; so I’ll keep the heathen’s
Pekin Ducks
Fow Is.
and and
iiuvV gar-
HE WAS IN A HURRY. Only Four Huy. to Spend .\l>roa<l ami All Europe to See. “Speaking of being in a hurry,” said a traveler to a Now York Sun man, "reminds mo of a man I once saw in the tower of London, one of a little party that was being piloted through by a beefeater. He kept all the time just ahead of the pilot and seemed anxious to go faster and get through. Everybody else wanted to see everything. but this man would have liked to skip some of these tilings; still he couldn't say anything, for the pilot made good time right along until he came to the figure of a big man on a big horse, both in heavy armor and the man holding a great spear, a most impressive figure, representing I forget now who, but somebody famous in history, and the beefeater talked a little longer than usual. Here the man who was in a hurry broke in. 'Yes, yes,’ he said, 'that’s all right, but we can’t stand here all day looking at that, you know,’ and he moved ahead a little and waited, all ready logo on. We all hoped that the beefeater would pay no attention to him; we need have had no fear on that score, for he paid absolutely no attention whatever to him. An hour or two later we stood at the gate and bade the beefeater good-by. The impatient man and 1 walked away together. He wasn't the worst man in the world hy any means. He was from Hoston. He said lie was a busy man and had very little time to spare; he was going back in the steamer he came over in, and, as he had only four days to do Europe in, he really felt as though he ought not to spend half a day in the tower.”
trate on all occasions
festivity. The sword of state is carried before the lord mayor as an emblem of his sovereignty within the city proper; the black sword is used on fast days in Lent and at the death of any member of the royal family, while the fourth sword is that placed close to the lord mayor’s chair at the central
criminal court.
AN AUTUMN REVERIE.
Til©
have to do now.
Happy Drill© Was Entranced by
Natum and So Wan John.
It was in the month of October and they had been married four weeks. Four blissful weeks they hail been to her in that lovely country house among the quiet hills, says the Detroit Free
Press.
Day after day the autumn sun had been painting the trees in wondrous shades of tints, and now the mountains were great banks of rich maroon, and the valleys, flowing silently between, o'er streams ot grass-green waves and
scarlet foam.
This afternoon she sat with him on | ;l restaurant for dinner or to a hotel lie the long, low piazza and gazed dream- ! gazes helplessly at the bill of fare and Uy on the lovely picture spread be- sees many things of which he does not
DON'T KNOW HOW TO EAT. Too "Iany Americana Woefully Deficient in That Hranrli of Education. “When my children got to the proper age," said the man who was smoking a briar pipe, "I intend to have them taken in hand by some competent person and give them a thorough instruction in the art of eating, and, further, in the science of finding out what to cat and ordering." "What do you mean?" inquired a buffalo Express man who sat. next to
idm.
"I moan this: The avorage American citizen is woefully deficient in knowledge of what, lie can get to cat. He falls down when it comes to ordering a dinner. The great majority of people in this country arc brought up frugally at home and do not know anything but the commonest dishes. The consequence is that when a man goes into
Has visited Greenoastle for over fou
avery four weeks and baa cut more patients of chronic dis-
cas**® ill specialists com-
bined.
ryet
red
I.orations of the Capital. The capital of the United States has beeu located at differeut times at the following different places: At Philadelphia from September 5, 1774, until December, 1770;at Hal timore,from December, 80, me, to March, 1777; at Philadelphia from March 4, 1777, to September, i7 i i’; at Lancaster, Pa., from September 27, 1777, to September 30, 1777; at York, Pa., from September 30, 1777. to .Inly, 177K; at Philadelphia, from July 2, 1773, toJvne 30, 1783; at Princeton, N. J., from June 30, 1783, to November 20, 17K3; at Annapolis, Md., from November, 1783, to November, 1784, at Trenton, N. J., from November, 1784, to January, 1785; at New York, from January, 1735, to 1700, when the scat of government was changed to Philadelphia, where it remained until 1800, since which time it lias been at Wasniugton.
fore.
At first she talked to him sitting there so comfortable in his great rustic chair, but her voice'grew softer and softer until it died away in whispers and she was still. The mystic, restful touch of the sweet October days was upon her, and it was blissful peace to sit idly in the sun and look upon the beauties of the scene—silent she, as it was. The old life of her girlhood had gone and she stood upon the threshold of this new life—this wondrous hall of womanhood, extending fur, far before her, us were the valleys spread below the mountainside. There was upon her soul the ineffable calm of autumn time, and the magic of the afternoon fascinated her. And it was not for her alone, but him; this man who now was part and parcel of her life. He, too, she felt, must feel the rapturous thrill, the weird and witching spirit of the hour. "John,” she whispered, softly, as the hum of bee that knock s at the door of every honeyed flower. Put John did not respond. Ah, he too, is clothed in this charm, she thought.
know the component parts. He dares not order anything that he is not sure of for fear of ridicule, and he falls back on roast beef and mashed potatoes. The fact is, lie doesn't know anything but roust beef. Name way in a restaurant. When a waiter shoves a hill of fare under a man's nose nine times out of ten he will look it overand then say: ‘Gimme a steak and some fried potatoes.’ Now, the man who does this day after day doesn’t want roast beef. He is sick unto death of steaks and fried potatoes, lie loathes ham and eggs, and yet he keeps on ordering them in dreary and dyspeptic succession, because he doesn’t know any better and he is too proud to confess his ignorance. It's that way with me, and PH bet it's that way with most of you. I am going to relieve my children of all these tilings. They're going to know what's what when it comes to eating. ‘No roast beef domination” i shall be my household slogan.”
VITIATED AIR.
Impurity of Hi© Atmu.p!icra of Steam-
llmttcil DuilUluzH.
In an irtiele contributed to the Philadelphia Uccord by Dr. I’. A. Ad-
“John,” she said, again, this time ! mus -
the
Utiina ments.
, .... ,-<.l!ll'l. it.,
.... \ ve c t* \ year, cuimixuiiK ui more than oe.uou
£\oeV c%\aA \\iVfw%}ov ru\Ac , layi
W G.OVERSTREET 0.F.OVERSTREET OVERSTREET & OVERSTREET,
33 JNTTX S T ® .
n at ur*'* teetAf. 0 “cffl os' A n* 1 W" 1 Ia m »o a' ^1 ookt conlumptlonit is incomparably the best' pre-
<U>vc*iie Fir»t National Rink. paration made.
with eager tone, as if to call him from his reverie and share with her the raphsody that moved her very
soul.
I tut to her ears no answer came to lay its soft response upon her heart. John was sound asleep. THE TAME CROW. Little Love Waatcd on Him by I1H Wilt!
Jlrot hrrs.
It is a well-known fact that wild animals and birds do not care to receive back into their society a member that lias lived a season with man as a pet. This was illustrate ! in a noisy manner out near Pleasant liidge, according to the story told by a witness to a Cincinnati Times-Star reporter. “A tame crow,” said he, “had for several years cawed around the farmhouse of our neighbor, and was seated on a fence away out on the farm cawing when a great flock of crows came along and settled in the field. Tlio tame one grew frantic, cawing and scolding till the attention of the flock was at racted to it. liisbv cn mass., the flock circled around and alighted on the fence about the tame one, which became frightened and flew up. It was followed by tire others, which crowd-
inquiry is propounded
foi'miiouae and >■>..
lot o..., , e. t. eleot WoeKl. | , . ,
There they all set on it and peeked it ] blulBh - and verging into purple ns it
, , ',.i. . , . i-Sirens. 1 his has been tested and
The adaptation of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup i to the cure of all diseases of the throat and ! chest is certainly marvelous. For cold t coukIi, croup, whooping cough and incipient
The Prayers of Indians.
Prayers are an important part of ravage custom. The Society islanders prayed before almost every net of their lives. In Guinea a daily prayer is; : 'G God, iicip as; we do not know whether we shall live tomorrow; we are in Thy hand." A Bushman says: “O Cahu, give us food; both hands
the longest j „ 4 n „t|,p r r-" to | this time they kent up a terrible
ol our day rice and yams, gold and aggry
beads, slaves, riches and health; make me active and strong." But a savage in his prayers thinks neither of morality nor of a future state. Among the Cherokees, Aztecs, Mayas and Peruvians, “the rite of baptism was of
immemorial antiquity.”
WILL BE AT
Com Hotel.
Saturday, March 10,
AND EVERY FOUR WEEKS DURING THE YEAR.
SOME FACTS about the most sueeeGsful physician in America, who has spent many months in the laboratories of the preat 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 athietc 1 people during his visits in this vicinity ami they ail speak volumes for him. HE ‘TREATS SUCCESS!- U ELY - Acute ami chronic catarrh, chronic diarrhoea, painful or suppressed menstruation, imfiammation of the womb, inflammation of the bladder, diabetes, dyspepsia, constipation, kidney, urinary ami bladder troubles, Bright’s disease, tape worm, crooked and enlarged joints, club foot, white swelling, nervousness and general debility, impotency, leucorrhea. Dimples, blotches, uuncer, dropsy, gravel, gleet, gonorrhoea, hydrocele, heart disease,hysteria, St. Vitus dance, paralysis, rheumatism, asthma, female weakness, etc. All surgical operations performed. Epilepsy or fits positively cured. Piles cured without pain, knife or caustic. Blood and skin diseases cured by
improved and never flailing 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 ami watery eyes, dropping of the lids, granulations. sore eyes of any form, wild hairs, cataract. false pupils, spots, scums and turning of the lids, kosring 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 featuers, yields at once to the system of treatment pursued by Dr. Walter. He can show a greater record of cures than any physician
liivng.
FEMALE TROUBLES—Ladies who are afflicted with headache, iangour and the weakness common to the sex. find n wondenul friend in Dr Walter, lie 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.
ORGAN AL WEAKNESS.
Immediately rum! nnd full v’-jor restored. This distressing atliiction. which renders life a burden and marriage impo>sible, is the penalty paid by the victim tor improper iu•lulgcnce. The most chaste must aikaowlfcjje that the passions are the great magnet by which the whole world is attracted. Destroy them and what have we? Man is no longer interested in t he opposite sex, the interheange 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 longer interesting to him, and rcmoise and disappointment are his constant companions. Consult Dr. Walter at once, and you will find the mualliy ami relief that
you positively require to be happy.
Those wishing treatment should bring from one to four ounces of urine for chemical
whether the immense increase of steam-heated office buildings, in which the fjreat majority of rooms have no adequate means for the renewal of the air to be warmed, may not in a larov measure account for the prevnieuce of pneumonia among 1 middle-asred men. Many of these buildimrs. Dr. Adams says, are admirably constructed to keep out air, whether cold or not: this very perfection contributing to their insalubrity. In these hermetically sealed office rooms that abound in business buildings thm stenm heats the atmosphere to a delightfully comfortable degree, and the occupant breathed and rebreathes the air during zero
days when an open window cannot be endured, the effect bein* to silently :^. 8 durin; the‘ve 0 . r r"^ r * lara f ° Ur
undermine his powers of resistance, so that when lie £oes forth, exchanging
such tropical air for the keen breeze of unrestricted nature, it happens that, through some subtle change in his system which has robbed bis lungs of their power of resistance, their capacity to endure the onset or transition is gone and the subtle poison of unrenewed air does its deadly work in the form of pucuiuouia.
A Strauge Z’lunt.
In the island of Reunion is a plant
weeks during the year 1883.
Dr. Walter will correspond with those who desire to submit their symptoms. In n riting all letters are held in strict confidence. The
permanent address is
LYMAN P. WALTER, M. D., 213 State Street, Chicago, Illinois.
cd about it in its flight and forced it t<. t M ,
lly farther and farther away from the |
\itticr to Xon- ttesi<f<>ntn. The State of Indiana, Putnam County. ^ In th»* Putnam Circuit Court, April Tci m, idOL Milton A. Bridges et al.
vs.
John H. Burgess et al. Complaint No. 5273. Now comes the Plaintiffs, by Smiley A- Neff, their Attorneys, and file their complaint herein, together with an affidavit that said
and clawed the poor thing till its flight , ^l )ens * ^ wun marked witli leathers fulling. Ail i
ing and calling. They would undoubt- j ioUvr b 1 ’ 10 *’* * ie P r °duct is called edly have killed the poor bird, but it ! "nmssaenda, and can bo used spied a man at work in the woods and :ll ' ,ne or mm '‘ 1 with P ure coffce ' 11 ls dropped down to him. Ho proved a 'mnouneed that about twenty-four friend, and Jim ( row was soon perched : thousand acres of tins plant arc now on his shoulder cawiug defiantly at his *“ ‘ n £ cultivated. It is most likely, relatives who had cast him from ; lowevc D that chicory more than cofumong then, but who now Ucw to a ^ oe ’ "ill suffer flora tue n.trouuction
own heirs of John H. Burgess, deceased, not resident; ofthc State of Indiaua. Ami
known 1
are l this action is to affect the interests of said defendants in real estate by removing a lien
• ■ e *ji thrr< • ”i.
a> equal to coffee and ut a much | Notice is therefore hereby given saici De-
ietuiauls, taut antes. thc> ue ami appear on the first day of the next Term of the Putnam Circuit Court, to be holden on the fourth Monday of April, A. I). 1891. at the Court House in Greencastle, in said County and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in their absence. Witness my name, and the soul of said Court, affixed at Greencastle, this 21st day of Feb-
ruary, A. D. 1894.
DANIEL T. DAUNALL, Clerk. By W. H. H. Cullen, Deputy. 3U5
respectful distance.’
of “tnussaeudo.’
