Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 April 1894 — Page 7

Children must have proper nourishment during growth, or they will not develop uniformly. They find the

food they need in

Scott’s Emulsion

THE GYPSY MOTH.

Some Sinsrular Facta Aonut Deadly Enemy to I'rooa.

Through *ui EntomologUt'a CareleMinoAa the 1’cst lutroiluretl Int*» MuNAiachuar^tts Where It Now <>re»> Iluvoc,

Not so very ionjr afro a scientific v' iseacre of Massachusetts, who liai! never had the pleasure of meeting with a

gypsy the

. . I ture had not journeyed into the old There is Cod-liver Oil for healthy flesh and hy- Hay state at the time, aecordiny t<> the pophosphites of lime and soda for bone material. ' orlt Sl 'n. R ent word to a friend * —- 1 1 - - In the far-away land, the home of the

Insect, sayinff: “nease send me a

I gypsy moth right away; I want to look r~r>t • ^ • I J at him; 1 want to study him.” So the J |^|fl Cnlldren friend, who was an obedient chap,

j went into his garden, and with no

are not known among those who take SCOTT’S EMUL- trouble caught a gypsy moth, one of a

large band of moths who were encamped there and had eaten about everything in the neighborhood except the house and toughest part of the fence, and ho put him in a ven tilatcd l>ox and mailed him to the en-

tomologist in Massachusetts.

The gypsy moth arrived safely at his destination and the scientific sharp went to work with his jacknife at his cage to <1 isontomb him. He was so lively that he easily stood on his head and scraped his hind legs together in the air, so that the wise man might know, perhaps, that he was glad to know him. lie was just as lively after he had been carved out of his mummy

Physicians, the world over, endorse it.

'-. "'ION. Babies grow fat and chubby on it, and are good

natured because they are well.

Prepared by Scott & Bowne, N. Y. Druggists sell it. DiRfDEFlES THE KING,” THEN SAPOLIO IS GREATER THAN ROYALTY ITSELF-

AHEAD CF THE COWCATCHER.

It 11m ItMin a Flourishing Trad* for at chairman Tauhrnork t ails on the Friends I.east Four Centuries. j of Mirer to Com* Into Ills 1‘arty. Much curious Information Is con- Washixgtos, April 2.—II. E. Taubetalned In Sir John Evans’ article in neck, chairman of the national com Longman’s on t’.ie “Forgery of An- mittee of the people’s party, has issued

WEIGHING A LIVE TROUT. MANUFACTURING ANTIQUITIES. ; POPULISTS PROCLAMATION.

Deceptive Appearance, In size, of the Fish

at l.arge In ths Water.

A few days ago a party of anglers visited the hatching house of the state fish commission at Cold Spring Har-

bor, Long Island and were estimating thpiities." Loth counterfeits and a statement which, after denouncing the weight of the larger trout which forgeries, ho says, abound in every do- the message of President Cleveland were swimming at their feet, says the pnrtmcnt of archeology. , vetoing the seigniorage bill, concludes

New York Sun, One very large sped- ^ fabrication of lapidary inscrijv a.*, follows;

men attracted their attention, and a tions is said to have begun some four ‘'The only compromise oflired In ihe veto veteran aneler said- "That fellow will centuries ago. The number and verb message U the suegestlon that the Fnlted vet. ran angi» r saio mat, leuow WUi . , , Slews mls-ht be allowed to coin and i*e *>«.- weigh six pounds." , similitude of the forgeries in the first .miu 8 ,. lk ,„i,, ruK ,. In th.- treasury if unlimited “Hct you a cigar that it won’t go over °f ** , ' s century was so great as to authority be granted by congress to Issue bonds '■ t'ni.l -irwohor reduce considerably the value of genu- and perpetually mortgage the resources of the lour sai l an )L. er. Ine antique gems. United State, to the money power. I 11 split the difference with each of , t js ' , )able that more than half of such "rms f "• r "““X 1 you ami take both figures that the fish *t , Vi. , , • , - shock every principle of humanity, but when will wtMirh over and under six nmmds M t 0 < )ros< ^ cn c ^ ina now ex r K)se ^ ^ or the money jxiwer through their agents tell the 1 th’ 1 pounds, Ka)l> is counter f pit . . | peopU , of ^ e UnUed state8 thttt they shall not saM a thiru. i The forgery of ancient carved ivories coin and use their own mone/ without subju.lust then the superintendent, Mr. has developed two distinct schools 1 ^“Gnir themselves and posterity to » bond-

Frc.1 Matto-. cam, out „f th. taHMh*. in nouthem I .anc. th. n-n, an,I at once they appealed to !„m .n , CoIo,mc. , th.rUbwSl men

chorus: “Major, how much will that The (lerman TJeckcr teems to have "in the future the people cun lake their fish weigh?” i been the modern prince of antique choice, cither aid in strengthening the chains “About eight pounds,’’ was the reply. 1 coiners. He engraved dies for upward 'gerve u e^a'i^ s’ nYuie repuMca'n'and

or untie before It Is too

Let out the big

Tlie Mosl Sensible

MSISTlil 19 i a pair of (iold Spectacles, and the only place to have them correctly titled is at 10. r > East Washington street. No one every sold classes so cheaply in fireencastlc. Don’t f‘list your eyes to spectacle peddlen and ■jwelers. G. W. BENCE, Nl. 0.

THE BEST GROCERIES and Provisions, IIi*Cad, Pies, i* s. Till? u ee o.. ETC.. ETC.. AT LO WEST VIt ICES, .11 Kiefer’s*

t .

^ Finest Lunch Counter in -* the Citij. Come and See. il l|’ -. If you want a fine i Roast or Steak

Or boiling piece call at

'tsX.owcv & »s\o\\cy s,

MEAT MARKET.

YJw

■’jl Fresh beef, veal, pork, mutton always on I C hand. Also n full line of cured meats, at | lowest prices. 3mi7

I*oW t!»e Klertrlc Iloidliprlit Is Now I'scd

on Numerous Italiroads.

The electric headlight is now used on j case, but the entomologist was lighti many railroads, and . 11 Sparks, who fingered also, and he expertly caught j is interested in a southern road, rc-j his visitor by his tailfeatliers and then | cently told a writer for the Pittsburgh j went out on his veranda to scrutinize j Dispatch that his company had found j him in a strong light through his mag it a very profitable investment. The nifying glass. Hut the gypsy moth lights cost about three hundred and j was smarter than the scientific man, seventy-five dollars each, fixed on the evidently very much smarter, and he locomotive, and they cost no more i hadn’t traveled over land and water than the oil light to maintain. The ' several thousand miles to be stuck on old headlight would not throw it. a pin and to make an entomological light on a very dark night more than | Roman holiday. He bided his time, one hundred and fifty feet, and it is : and when the learned man had Hipped impossible for an engineer to slow] him over on his back, holding him still up his train in that distance, even j by the tail, but with a slightly slackwith the emergency brake. Quite an ened grip, and was about to chuck his item in the expense of the road used i microscope down upon him, presto! he to be claims for cattle killed. During ' suddenly gathered himself into a knot, the rainy season the lands along the spasmodically yanked himself away line of the road become very wet—In from the glass, slid down to the verplaces they are entirely covered with nnda lloor and was off into the garden

tub and the scales,

trout and weigh it.

Within ten minutes the net brought up a mess of great trout, which were allowed to escape, all except the big one. The washtub. two feet in diameter, was sunk under it. then lifted, and the party saw within it a magnificent brown trout that could not extend its tail within the limits of its confinement, whose breadth and depth were surprising. The angler who had bet on six pounds wanted to make it twelve, and the four-pound man became interested in the flock of wood ducks and teal near by, which are one of the sights of the place. “A fish in the water,” said Maj. Mather, “never looks as large as when out of it. The depth is greatly foreshortened, and even the length and breadth do not seem to show their full extent. Boys,

weigh the tub.”

A pole over the shoulders of two men held the scales, and when they straightened tip and the tub with its contents cleared the ground, the scale Indicated ninety-two pounds. The fish was then carefully lifted out and sent swimming away, and the tub and water pulled the scales at eighty-three

pally Roman, and as most of these late with the popmUla for liberty, equal rights were struck in gold—a m“tal that does [ and au Americau tiuaaeial system.”

BIG POOL IN STEEL.

“lint I see you look incredulous. We’ll ' of thre*' hundred types of coins, princi- j d0mocral i c partis*,

find his weight precisely. ’I’eter,'” said 1 ’’ ~

the superintendent to one of his men,

“get all hands, the deep seine, a wash- not change in appearance with time—

he realized large sums from unwary

collectors.

How to take off the appearance of novelty from the freshly-struck coins was a question of difficult solution.

He solved it thus:

New t'otulillie Formml with a Capital of

ftt.qou.nuii

Ci.kvei.ano, (>., April 4.—Six of the leading steel casting companies of the country have formed a combination

He had a small box constructed,] known as tiie American Steel Castwhich he part'. v filled with Iron fllings,I h'g company, aad have organand screwed to the springs of his car-! ‘led under the laws of New Jersey, riage. and in this box he placefl his| with capital stock of f4.'-M0,000. 'Ihe

water and the cattle come upon the track seeking some dry spot on which to sleep. When the old headlight was in use as many as thirteen cows have been killed atone time and the damage claims have sometimes amounted to over one thousand dollars per month. Now the electric light throws it- rays ] from half to three-quarters of a mile in front of the engine. Obstructions ; can be easily seen al that distance and some of the engineers insist that a switch disk can be more easily made out by it at night than in the daytime. The lights, moreover, do away with switch lights, which is quite a saving to roads that use them to any great extent. Mr. Sparks says that the engines using the electric headlights on his road have never killed a cow, and he is confident that the saving in stock claims alone will more than pay for all the headlights on the road within two

yoars.

pounds, leaving nine pounds as the

in a jiffy. The scientific man gaped at i weight of the trout, liiir incredulously for an instant and ' "That fish," said the major, "is the then set off along the garden walk and t common brook trout of Europe. I imacross the green sward, treading down ! ported the first eggs after taking the sweet peas and clover blossoms In a j fish with the fly in the ’Illack Forest’ perfectly futile endeavor to recapture iu (lermany, and it is destined t.; bo a

him. That gypsy moth got entirLdy away and never came back, and keen aud sore was the disappointment of

the entomologist thereat.

Sore also has been the disappointment of the old Hay state therefor ever since the luckless escape of the

favorite when better known.”

newly-struck coins, and then, ns he ex pressed it, “tool, his old gentleman a drive" on the road between Frankfort and Offenbach. The coins eame out of the box still fresh, but with the too-glaring bloom of youth judiciously toned down. Wherever excavations are carried on . . . when coins are inquired for they nr- sure to be produced. The making of “paleolithic" implements takes rank as one of the fine arts in the valley of the Somme and in the neighborhood of 'London. So with neolithic implements. A certain artificer of this craft, nicknamed “Jack Flint,” when from their abundance his forgeries lost their sale, earned a somewhat honest penny by publicly exposing his tricks of trade. Objects of the bronze period are also obligingly

prepared.

The writer concludes with the con■oling reflection that "great as may be the forger's skill, not one of his frauds In a thousand escape detection," and that the existence of fraud sharpens and tests archeological discernment. INEXPENSIVE PLEASURES.

THIRTY MILLIONS.

Speculation Rogardlnu the ropulatlon of

l.oudon Half a Century llenre.

The London county council has been

gypsy moth took place a number of ] studying into the growth of .that city,

whose population seems to be decreasing, beoause the people are moving into the suburbs. The investigation

years ago. Hut though he is gone ho is by no means forgotten. The gypsy moth of the scientific man followed the

\

J.D.T0MMIU1,

BKEKDER OF

THOKOIHIIISICIIE) Poland China Swine.

Liffht Brahma. Barret! Plyniontli Rock, Black Minorca, Mammoth Brown Turkeys, Touloose Geese, IVkia Ducks uni and Guinn Fowls. 3:n 10 £\.oi:Yl vvwAViOMjts ^ov ^

THEIR FIRST DISAGREEMENT. How a llrlilrtl Couple Fell Out Over Their Breakfast Menu. There was n, newly married couple at one of the down-town,hotels the other day, says the Washington Host, and they were as dead in love with each other and as anxious to let nobody else find it out as such people usually are. He was all attention, aud the waiter noticed when they came to dinner, which was the first meal served after they reached the hostelry, that he ordered everything she did. Sh wanted her beef well done, ard so did he. She ordered a glass of milk and rye bread, and he immediately did likewise. When she took a sip of the fluid he followed suit with gallant alacrity, and a man with half an eye could have seen that he was drinking her health every time. When they were through and had left th ■ room the waiter remarked to the star boarder under his care that "Dey wuzn' no useter gib soch fokes two sets er deeshes. Dey dess et de same stuff, an’ ortcr had wun plate betwix um.” fi’lie star boarder happened to be at breakfast synchronously with the devoted twain next morning. They ordered everything alike until it eame to egg-;. “How huz yer want yernigs?” queried the waiter. “Soft boiled,” replied the sylphlike bride. The groom struggled manfully with himself for a moment or two, and then grew red to the roots of his hair. "Gimme mine fried on both sides,*’ lie said with a great effort. A big pair uf bin, eyes looked at him reproachfully across the table, while he discovered something interesting in the butter dish. Then she sighed. It was their first difference, and s'uc let him kuow that she reseated

it.

liiblical injunction: “Multiply and re-] has brought out some remarkable plenish the earth," and the point of I figures, says the Westminster Budget this history is in the fact that that lit- ] l f wc do not add any more to the poputle incident by which the entomologist Nation than the amount per decade that let go the tail-feathers of his gypsy I ba- been added since IHSt it seems that

motlilias co d tho ! setts over two hundret

lars in the last four years.

I’.ic gypsy moth got away the Bay state ! crease of births over deaths there will had to appoint a state commission, I be nearly 11,000,0011 in London in that

year. If we reckon that London will grew at the average rate of the last three decades we shall be over 14,000,000, but if inner London and outer London go on together growing at the rate they have been giW.ving icr th?

Cr.S OI hiS cypsv 11U ‘ > Ui Cli tttiucu muuu Uihrrur-i luul * ’.‘e' f Masvw’ni- 'T ? should have a population in 1941 of ; , • .rod thousand Hoi*! clo.'.e upon W.jOO.ow. If wo ellcv; for .•ears. Soon after a growth at tho rate of tue natural in-

apjic

whose bu ‘ness it was to go and find him, together with his progeny, and the commission found him easily and in a large majority. Each yearn iwthoy keep on looking for and finding him in a steadily augmenting horde. No trouble at all. He is always on deck. Last year’s work of the commission.

■ t

three tons of years we ar? io expect a London population in 1941 of a trifle

according to a Springfield paper, "in- ] over 17.509.000. If we look at the mat-

ter in another way and ask what population greater London will contain when it has attained throughout the mean density of well-known areas, we get the following appalling calcu-

lation:

If greater London were only peopled as densely as Hampstead, it would contain a population of 13,-

000,000.

If it were peopled on an average as densely as Fulham is now, the population would be 20,000,000. if it were peopled at the rate of St. George’s, Hanover square, the total would rise to 30,000.000. Whitechapel is three times as densely peopled as St. George’s itself. The moral is obvious.

WANTED SALESMEN W line of Nursery Ht-ock and Seed Liberal salary or commissid paid weekly, j

Permanent and paying positions to good

n. Bpecia bi gii ner* ’ „i a pool eh I

a jicmsive territory given it neairen. Write

eluded the examination of four million trees and the destruction of forty-six thousand one hundred egg clusters, all belonging to the gypsy moth, and over one million caterpillars. Now,” comments the same journal, “an appropriation of one hundred and sixty thousand dollars with which to find and light the gypsy moth is asked, and it is a choice between constant fight to the extermination and the loss on the other hand of something like one million dollars yearly by the ravages of

the pest.”

Itejevtoil Supreme Bench Nominee*. The record shows that there have been thirteen nominees for the i'nited States supreme bench rejected by the senate besides Mr. llornblower. Those were John J. < rittenden of Kentucky, nominated by John Quincy Adams; Roger B Taney of Maryland, by Jackson; John Spencer and Reuben II. Walworth of New York, Edward King of Pennsylvania, and John M. Read of Pennsylvania, by Tyler; George X. Woodward of Pennsylvania, by Folk; E. A. Bradford of Pennsylvania, by Fillmore; Jeremiah S. Black of Pennsylvania, by Buchanan; Stanberry of Ohio, by Johnson; Caleb Cushing of

Massachusetts,

PRAIRIE DOGS,

They Are Small Hut Exceedingly Annoy.

Ing to TVealevafre.

“The prairie dog.” said a traveler, “is apparently a very harmless little animal, but, although its bite is not poisonous, it can wreck more goods anil chattels with its little teeth than an animal twice its size. Three or four years ago, says the St. Louis GlobeDemocrat, just after the opening of t he

Rock wood llmir ' ] first portion of Oklahoma, the country

was infested by tens of thousands of prairie dogs, and one source of revenue among the settlers was catching Hie little animals and selling them to visitors, who seldom hoi hereil withthem

They Are the Best In I.ife, Say the Phil-

niio pliers.

The comparatively cheap pleasures seem to he the best in life generally, says Harper's Weekly. There is so very little that the very ricli can buy for themselves that need stir envy in people who are just comfortably off, Warmth is such a delightful tiling in winter, but you and I can get as much as we want of it. and a millionaire can have no more. And there are so many •heap, ordinary tilings to eat that are just as good or better than the expensive tilings. An epicure who lives in the western part of this state was “ig the other day that, having a p.'..ticular dinner in view, ho sent to a judicious man in New York for the best fish that the r. urket offered They sent him a fresh cod. and he admitted that no fish could be better ami moralk'-l «’ho;_s! d”? t.’s r:’';''" 1 :'. above) ort the cc::.; -•.•ativo cheapf-v * of th? fleshly gratifications that were really best, su ?n a ; potatoes and chicken > ami fresh air, and tea and water (warm aud cold) and soap and sleep. When one considers how good a big five-cent sandwich tastes when he is really hungry, and how little difference there is between good wine and good water when it lias once passed one’s gullet, and how much of that difference is in favor of the water, it really lends a dungcrous charm to economy and simple living, ami makes one wonder that thrift is not more catching and that the delights of avarice should be so generally monopolized

by tiie aged.

One of the cases where a cheap article is often at least as good as a dear one is in the matter of sons-in-law. How often it happens that the plain, cheap son-in law who exacts no bonus and even in some eases contributes to ids wife's support, turns out in the end to be really more valuable and satisfactory than the bankrupt loafer prince who costs a million or two at the start and all that he can lay his hands on afterv.-ard!

new company lias taken charge of the plants and the business of the following companies, all of which have ceased doing business on their own account and have become part of ttie new con-

cern. They are'

The Pittsburgh Steel Cas'ing company of Pittsburgh, the Sharon Steel Casting company of Sharon, Pa . the Syracuse Steel Casting Company of Syracuse, N Y . the Norristown Steel Casting company of Norristown. Pa.; the StanJarl steel Casting company of Chester. Pa ; the Solid Steel company of Alliance. The new concern includes all the steel foundries in the cottnlry except two, which are not regarded as competitors. J. K. Hole, of this city, lias been elected president of the new or-

ganization.

THE COLD SNAP. The Crop Hutlettn ays It Whs Disastrous to I rult himI Vegetables* Washington. April 3.—The monthly crop bulletin says that within six days over a large portion ol the country east of the Rocky mountains both the higliest and low est temperature yet observed during March were reported. The freezing weather ruined early fruits and vegetables in the southern states. In Missouri wheat and clover were injured. Illinois and Indiana reports are con dieting, fruits being seriously damaged if not killed. la West Virginia some wheat and oats frozen, in Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Colorado, Montana, New Mexico, Washington, California and Idaho there was no damage, while in Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska fruit is badly iajured. CHOPPED HIS HEAD OFF.

Massachusetts, and George II. Williams

of Oregon, by Grant.

f?

jl rat vnee for terms to 4inl2 f I mMi Nursery Co.. Rccteter, N. Y.

ArtiScin! teeth The beet filll!,r* nes' »nn

Ghent'; extracting hy IochI anesthetics, st

D1C. IV IGl <» I I 1 t. 1. Y ’

ITl’.NT’.YI, Ol'KK'j:,

Opposita STAIt-PRESS Ofiice. <ireencastle.Ind

11. L^ammei’s,

^V\Y\\Y>U:\VVV\ tVVYtX. y'lYVVUfCOW yOFPicK—In Central National Bank Huibling

Proposed ship Channel In France. Tho proposition for a great shipway

through France, between the English more than three or four hours' ride and

4 rock on the top • • P in Ca’lfor- ! ‘• ! ' a '‘'“’* Mediter.au«| then let them goin dk Th* prai*

before the chamber of deputies a^ain rie dog can eat its way out of almost recently. The plans submitted at- any box that is made, and it lias a I There is at present a colored i ris >ner in the ^^.,^..1 RnK . h attention and were reAlsbama mines who speaks 12 different j p orto a as “favorably considered.” Na- | guages. poleon HI. was vastly interested in The cabbage is the development of a rom-1 this mn j, n lfl opnt project and favorable .non seaweed which grows wild on every ■ tQ u , nlt the nat i ona l exchequer was cons,, ui Euiope. I never in a condition to wui riuit hisbeTibcriM,Palcst:.ic, has a meteorological oh- R i uo l uff U, 0 word. The project turns servotory situated 6-2 feet below the level «=* U p every once iu awhile, and it is protne Mediterranean bea. | dietea tha( . it wiH snre , y he BC compSome of the Comstock mines are so deep lUhcd and at no distant date.

Atrocious Murdor of Lewin J. Hrttliff at Howardstowu, Ky. V Lebanon, Ky., April 3.—Lewis J. Ratliff was killed at llowurdstown Sunday by a man named Mahoney. Ratliff went to Mahoney's distillery early and quarreled with the owner, who struck him a fearful blow in the head with a hatchet. The infuriated man then dragged Ratliff's form a shert dir.tanc$ and plqc^ !ng his neok acroxs a log, completely havered the head from tae body.

A GERM-DESTROYING ELEMENT. Healthy Hlonri S*ld to He Sur® Death to

Bacteria.

About ten years a^o a medical sclentist advanced the theory that, in its normal condition, blood contained an element that instantly killed many forms of bacteria, iu this healthy state blood lias been injected into the veins of diseased persons for this purpose, and lias begun the work of destruction. Tiie results had not been satisfactory, as tho amount of blood required was so great as to make continued experiments unwise. Recent investigations have confirmed tho original idea, and a series of experiments of late conducted at the university of Michigan reveals most inter-

that r.c means has yet been ilevlspil to over-!

come tho ezccs.ive heat.

The blcssom of the prickly pear has bei n adopted as the State flower of Montana. The British House of Lords cannot lie abol-

1'oi'Nnh', a* first-class piano. Call Ishcd legally without its own consent

at of Smiley A: Neff tf37

fondness for leather, which seems to show its appreciation for a popular proverb. I remember one night in the

early history of the territory ordering | esting possibilities. ’Ihe destroying a carriage from the livery stable to principle has been separated from the drive me to Kingfisher The eon- i blood, and with it germs of cholera vevnneo eame round very early in the ! and anthrax have been killed. 1 ins morning all right, but I noticed that j element, to which tne name of noucllu when the driver got out to attend to . lias been given, is colorless and transsomc defect in the harness he wore parent. The vital essence of it seems but one boot, and although this was j tenacious of life, as high degrees of j large and long enough to make up for heat, even lo the boiling point, do not In southern Europe the p asants al- i the deficiency, I was curious to know

Frankfort-i n the-MsIn U raiuus the number 13 in her street numbers. Bright Spring Days. The spring s', o dd be pre-eminently a season of contentment, happiness and hope. In these bright and pleasent, months the country should enjoy its highest degree of tranquility and prosperity. But spring, it is well known, is often a period of discomfort and disturbance in the physical system. Important organs of the body become torpid or irregular in their action, and the fact is in stantly reflected in the mental condition of the individual. A disordered liver means disordered nerves and a dull and unsteady brain. Anything which will bring the physicil system into harmony with bndding Nature confers nn enormous benefit upon the nation, besides the mere allaying of physical di.comfort. Hood's Sarsaparilla does this, as thousands of grateful and happy men and women can testify, and increased use of this standard spring medcine is of more real practical importance in promoting health and quite in the business world th in reams of abstract theorizing. Single Comb Brown Leghorn Eggs for sale at 50 ets. per setting of 17. Call on or address Geo. W. Shuey, Bainbridge, lad. 4t51 lont i ni:GitirFi; A

Tho AmurL-an .'Moc'e*

ways eat fruit in its natural shape and | wb y he favored one foot and log at tiie | never think of treating it to doses of ) ex p Cnse „f the other. His explanaj hugar. salt or other seasoning. Around . t j on wi)s ludicrous, if profane. The , , | Naples and in Malaga the people bite j „ight before he had caught four prairlo

, *“ L tdciU is ~ far cemrnny *• o- • a hoi, Li tki ..rang?, suck o»tt the juice • .. t 0 flR aR order # rom a tourist., and 1 of germ-poisoning, it immediately beFruit culture is more profitable to was establLhed during tins reign o! Hemy an( j throw the orange away, bad placed them in a Rtnall box in his ] gins its benollceut task of riddling the the farmer now than Ins other croj s 'HI. ^ _ I Some American people often do the solitary room. As usual, they had ' system of the enemy. Thus a new

seem to diminish its activity, if this discovery does all that it promises, it marks an incalculable advance in medical science. Injected into the veins of persons suffering from many form *

Brown Bros. <’o. the most extensive nursery house in the U. N , have

c The largest r-d'.iuad .hops in the world arc Hame, but the American must try kin their way out of the box dur- field in medicine is opened, the ulti- - . . . n ttmscof u>e nig huu: at Bciieiouiaiiie, o. i i mm i a t improving nature, bo he puts a ipp the night and had somutiluieJ ou<» mate rc alts of which even Hie most vacancy in this seotion. Write them The fall* of Niagara are traveling backward lump of sugar in it. An orange planter ofjd.s boots that it was impossible to comprehensive mind eau acarcelyeutiat Chicago, III., for their terms. 51tl u the average rata Ofnln* f..t a year. ’ thinks suzh a thing a desecration. I wear it." 'mate.

Test I moia; of Hie Tiftvrlli»n A Kent III!-

iiols Criatrnl Kailrnai!.

Mr. L. U. Phclpn. Your Four C Remedy i* certainly a remarkable medicine loo much cannot be said in its favor. My daughter fluttered from an attack of La <»rii>pe that finally resulted in Tonsiliti*, with ulceration of the throat. Less than one bottle effected a complete cure. (1BO. E. Minks,

39-2 57th Street, Chicago, III.

If Four O fails to give °'iti«factlon In T.a Grippe, Asthma, bronchitis, or any iuug Ironnlc we will refund your money. Allen's Dnifl Store

ALBERT ALLEN, Prop.

3iuU 3 a

ML.

j lllitw J lllUUItgCIIlCUl.

.iso

|is the guest of Mrs. Myra Curtis.

i athakine Howard; J. H. Jani»^. Atty. (3t Administratrix.