Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 February 1895 — Page 2
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RAILWAY TIME-TABLE' BIG FOUR. BAHT. fNo. 14, Night Express 2:50 a. in. * “ 2, Ind’p’lis Accommodation H:42 a. m. * “ 18, 8. W. Limited ... 1:52 p.m. * “ 8, Mail 4:35 p. m. ^ 11 10, Knickerbacker Speaial 5:33 p.m. WEST. ■^No. 7, Night Express. 12:22 a. m. * “ 11, Knickerbacker Special 12:58 a.m. ,f “ 9, Mail 8:42 a. m. * “ 17, 8. W. Limited 12:49 p. ra. t “ 3, Terre Haute Accomodation. 6:23 p. m. ’’Daily. fDaily except Sunday. Train 14 hauls sleepers St. Louis to Boston and Uoiunious, sleeper and coaches to Cin cinnati. No. 2 connects for Chicago, Cincinnati and Michigan division points. No. 18 hauls sleeper for Washington, D. C., via C. & O.. sieepei for New York -ud connects for Columbus, O. No 8 connects for Cii.cli.nuti and for Michigan division points to Wabash. No. 10, “Knickerbocker Special,” sleepers for N. Y. Nos. 7, 11, 9 and 17 connect in Union Depot, St. Louis, with Western roads. No. 9 connects at Paris with Cairo division for points south and at Mattoon with 1. C. for ji.di.ts rt:»r!h. Effective Sept. 30. F. P. HUBBT18, Agt. VANDALIA LINE! Iu ta clJiku. 2C,1S8:-. *.-£ira !f?rc nr~pr!C».. Me, It d.. FOB THK WRST. No. 21, Dally l:8fi p. m., for 8t. Louis. “ 1, Daily 12:52 p. m., “ “ “ 7, Daily 12:26 a. ra., “ “ “ 5, Daily 9:01 a. m., “ “ 15, Ex. 8uu 6.40 a. ra., " “ 3, Ex. Bun 5:26 p.m., “ Terre Haute. Train, leave Terre Haute. No. 75, Ex. Sun 7:05 a. m., “ Peoria. “ 77, Ex. Bun 3:55 p.m.. “ Decatur. FOB THB BAST. No. 20, Daily 1:35 p. m., for Indianapolis. “ 8, Daily 3:35 p m., “ “ “ «, Daily 8:32 a. m., “ “ •• 12, Daily 2:35 a. m., •• “ 16, Ex. Bun.... 6:28 n. m., “ “ ~ 4, Ex. Bun 8:«i i ra., “ “ “ 2, Daily 6:li p. m., “ “ For complete Time Card, (riving all trains and stations, and for full information as to rates, through cars, etc., address J 8. DOWLING, Agent, Greencastle, Ind. Or W. F. Britbnbr, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Lonis, Mo.
A NOVELETTE. By William Earle Baldwin.
Copyright by
the Author. Ue served.
All Right!
that girl. I want to know if If she is the daughter of a certain Col. Montague, who died abroad ten years ngo.” Langford looked at him in wonderment. His eyes flashed as he spoke and he clinched the back of a chair aith his Un-
gers.
“Lot’s of men are In the same box,” Langford said, laughing. “They mud meet Gladys Moutague, they must love her, and they must be rejected. I tell you what 1T1 do, old fellow. We’ll go ou a still hunt for her, If you like. It’s about right for Newport now, and we’ll go up tuero if
you say so.”
The outcome of the thing was that the following day the two friouds were in Newport. But M : ss Montague was not there. They dawdled about and wont to Tar Harbor, but she was not to be found. Every time they missed her Davarls be-
CHAFTER I.
In low, sweet tones like the rippling ol
the water on the sands, like the wind [ came more and more Impatient, blowing peacefully over the seas; then Finally they went back to New York with a vigor and intensity like the boating Langford ran into his friend’s romis one of the Herce waves upon the shores| day shortly after in high giee. He had at passionate, throbbing, pulsating, came last discovered the girl they were looking
the voice of a violin from the half open door-way. The notes would almost die •way and only the lingering memory ol the melody remain, to bo followed by a shrieking and crashing that was savage in its contrast. Then in sweet, pathetic cadence the violin would speak and the
for. But he did not lind Davarls there. The doors were open, so he went in and wandered about. Down sta rs bo thought he heard Davarls’ voice In the rooms of a
fellow artist—Compton.
Langford strolled Into the room Davarls use 1 for a studio. A chair in front of an
long-drawn, trembling notes toll a sad easel was overturne 1; near it was Dillfe story. I vans’ palnllng coat, daubed with many One could almost see a man standing j colors. Hero and there were bits of paper
alone on a headland by the sea; the
waters below dashing fiercely against the foot of the cliff, seething upward and hissing furiously; the sky dark and frowning; the whole aspect of the earth unfriendly; and the man himself with his hair tossing wildly about his forehead and his eyes strained In looking far away over the waters. Then the sky clears; the wind
or canvass. Langford looked idly about the floor, and saw that one of the bits ol paper was a te’egraph blank. Almost without thinking of what he war doing, he picked It up, and In an instant
had read:
’’Como at once. Important discoveries
“Helenb.”
.. , .. The message was dated Paris. Could it ceases; the sea grows calm; the sun comes . out be that had ca.led Davatisaway for thost
five weeks? Langford crushed the paper and dropped It. He felt a sense of guilt In prying into his friend’s affairs. Who was ’ He.ene?” Could it be that Davarls hao
a love affair abroad?
out.
With a few short notes the violinist ended his improvisation, and began to play a gavotte with many runs and trills. He was thus engaged when a tall, fairhaired man came up the staircase two steps at a time and, hearing the music, paused for a moment at the doorway. Then he pushed open the door without ceremony and entered the room. It w as one of the many drawing rooms which always accompany certain bachelor apartment houses, and was furnished in the best of taste, being hung with rich tapestries; on the walls were pictures and german favors. Opening from this was a sleeping-room and another room which evidently was used fora studio, judging from the easel which could be seen through the open doorway. But the visitor hod no eyes for the surroundings; ho looked at the violinist eagerly. And well he might. His well-s aped head liending with the chin resting caressingly on the violin; his large, soft black eyes ra sed in quiet surprise at the Intruder; his long, thin white fingers holding the bow, those of the other hand resting on the frets lightly; his smoking-jacket rolling back from his neck, revealing a white throat; he made a very effective appearance. In truth, Philip Davarls was always what Is called effective. In evening dross, especially, he looked remarkably well. It takes a good figure to properly set off the rather absurd costume which is regarded by the civilized world as full dress, and Davarls had a good figure. Ho was a little too tall perhaps, but his limbs were molded symmet-
rically.
When the young fellow came Into the room Davarls jumped up, laid his violin down, and graspel him eagerly by the hand. He greeted him cordially as ’ Langford, old fellow." Langford returned his greeting and looked at him curiously. And well he might. Davarls had done something very odd. Five weeks previously ho had gone away. No one could lind him. He left no word at all. He did not write even a note telling where he was or when he would come back. Five weeks ago Langford had come to his rooms at his usual hour; Davaris was gone. Each day following he came, hot Davaris was not back. After a week had passed he gave it up. He
was puzz e 1.
Davaris was vr,-y scrupulous about Social usages, but he broke many an engagement In leaving as lie did. Society wondered where he had gone; talked about bis strange disappearance and then forgot all about the clever young Greek, whom they had patroniz'd for a year or more; forgot about the man who could paint such charming pictures, who could hold his own at a musicnlo. Davaris was foigotten in the live weeks ho was away,
by all but Langford.
The two had been classmates In Harvard —the practical, good-natured American, the affectionate, passionate, Impulsive Greek. They had graduated together on Class Day they had climbed to the top of the “tree’’ together, and flung down flowers to certain fair oaes who wat.-4t<-l then; with wonder. Afterward D.-.varls came to Now York, and went much into society; from a small Hon he became a lion of some magnitude, yet he was forgotten lu live short weeks. And now wnen chance had sent Langford to his rooms again, he found him there as of old, playing his violin. He found him there as if it were but yester-
day they had parted.
Langford had a right to demand an explanation of the Greek’s odd actions. But Davarls looked troubled when asked why he went away It was a private matter, he declared. He was awfully sorry, but he couldn’t tell his friend about it. It was something very important that had taken him away; something that he wanted to
forget, if ho could.
And so, of course, Langford had the good sense not to press him on the subject. They smoked their cigars quietly for an hour or more. Then by some chance
i/' 6 a
Dni'arin n'artnl up from hi* chair and bf. gun pacing up ami down the floor. Langford started to leave the room, but his foot caught in the coat that was lying on the floor, lie stooped to take It up. and a sheet of paper fell from a pocket. He picked it up mechanically, saw that It was dated Paris. Ho was about to put It back, when his eye caught a certain name on the paper. But he suddenly dropped It. He heard a step on the stairs, a voice he well knew in the bail, and he hastened Into the outer room just In time to meet Davaris. He looked at him a little curiously, for he had seen In the letter from Paris the name of Gladys Montague, not once, but many times. Langford's face was flushed, however, and his eyes did not return Davaris' frank gaze. It is the first time he has ever acted the Paul Pry. It was very wrong of Langford, of course, but his curiosity had been greatly aroused, and he had acted on the impulse of the moment. He thought for an instant, the letter would have been replaced iu the coat pocket unread. As it was, however, he had merely glanced at the sheet, but it had told him a good deal. There could scarcely bo any doubt about Davaris's acquaintance with Gladys Mon-
tague.
The next day they left New York for the Berkshire Hills. They arrived late In the evening and took their rooms at the one hotel in the village. This resort was not a summer resort In the ordinary sense of the term. It was merely a New England village which had been taken iwissession of by a certain set of New Yorkers, who when In town formed a very exclusive circle of their own. They had built their couutry houses, they had their own house-parties, their own dances and dinners, and hotel people and birds ol passage fared very poorly indeed. But most of the hotel people w ho came here were intimate friends of the cotiager»; t^e biiU» of passage at&yod a day or a week as It might be, and went away iu disgust. The Cplaco was scarcely live hours from New York, and the last ol August and the month of September was the height of the season. Frequently the cottagers stayed until late in October, and some even kept their country bouses open all winter. DavaHs managed to shake off Langford late in the evening, and after making a few inquiries at the hotel office, went out of doors. It was bright moonlight; everything was quiet and still excepting ut times the distant barking o? a dog, or the rumble of a carriage as it came down
the street.
He walked rapidly and presently stopped on the summit of a small hill. To the south was Mount Everett, but how changed It looked iu the night. A mist was iu the valley covering the tops of the smaller hills, and making the summits ol
iun^foM happened to mention the name ‘!! e " the i r9 islands in the sea.
threw himself In a chair, and opened the letter with trembling hands. He knew the writing; he hod seen It many times before. Ho read the letter; his face grew pale as he proceeded and grim lines shaped themselves around his mouth When he flulahed reading he throw tbs
paper down.
“So she has come to New York, has she?’ he said. “And sue is coming here, and is going to surprise me! Bah! But what
can Ido? Nothing -nothing 1’’
Fora long time he sat there, his face covered with his hands. Thou he picked up the paper from the floor and burned It over the gas Jet. He watched the letter shrivel and turning from white to brown, glow and drop in ashes; he saw the smoke curled up. aud at last, when the pnpet was completely destroyed, he slowly pre-
pared for bed.
LAND VACCINATION.
lnt«ra«tlog Experiments Made In France and Germany. One of the strangest things In recent science has to do with the “vaccination" of land. Everyone knows, says the Philadelphia Press, that itenriches, instead of impoverishes, a field to plant It with a leguminous crop, such as clover or lucerne, the roots of which have a power of absorbing and retaining more nitrogen than they take from the ground. Hut where the nitrogen cotnes from is another matter. The uir suggested itself at once when people began to study the problem; and Messrs. Lawes and Gilbert, among others, spent many months in fruitless endeavors to trace the source to the
made by Herren Hellriegel and Willfarth, of Germany, that the absorption was due to minute organisms (a sort of disease) in the roots, which, when the supply of nitrogen in the soil began to fail, ap-
air, coming at last to a negative con-
Langford did not see Davarls until they elusion. The discovery was eventually
met the next morning for a late breakfast. The September sun was shining brightly into the windows of the long dining hall when Langford, who was already
seated, was joined by his friend.
"Good morning, old man,” was his ,
greeting. "You are looking tremendous- peared in the form of small exly pale.” I crescences, drew nitrogen from the “Ara 1?” returned Davarls, languilly. air. and so caused the enrichment. He sat down and was silent. When this had once been settled “Tell mo about those people I am U it became a matter of Importance to meet this morning,” he said suddenly. | foster, and, if possible, hasten the "Tell you about them? What do you growth of the disease in the fields want to know? They are quite the regu- , sown with leguminousae, and extenlar thing—with one or two exceptions, sive experiments have been made in It's a sort of a house-party—a very small France and Germany with this object.
of Gladys Montague-evoryone know | each side were a.^ Gladys Montague, the new beauty, the “i*vor, and so near did they seem that Da-
varis bent his head tolisten, thinking that lie could hear the sound of the water on theshoies. Then he walked on until h<
ing North—1:20 a. m., 12:05 p. ra.; local, Ill - nng South 12:47 a. m., 2:22 p. m.; local, 1 >. ra. J. A. MICHAEL, Agent.
Highest price paid for hides, p*-Ha nd tallow by V&uaittavt) & Don. lltr
girl whose praises had been sung all winter In far away San Franclso, the girl who was to spend the summer East, first at
Bar Harbor, then at Newport, and finally. <ame ^ a ,1b started to entei at Lenox. The instant her name was the urched Katawa 5 r ’ Then he P a,,sel1 fo1 mentioned Davarls started up from his a carrla «® Wa8 coming down tho road, chair and began pacing up aud down the He »tepped quickly behind a hedge until floor I It had passed. As the people got out tc “Did you say Montague?” he asked. I f. 11 , 1 * 1 tba , house he hcard someone cal!
Langford wstehed him with half shut Gladys,
eyes, and sent a stream of smoke upward. 1 * b,wa la Pi u *>' walked bate to the ho“Yes,—know her?” * el with downcast eyes. When there th* “I don’t,” said Davarls, firmly. “I want clerlt ba “ ded bim a letter wblch had Just you to promise me one thing. Langford oon ‘ # ’, 1>avari9 P ut “ 1“ hisepocket and For a very particular reason I must meet w,,nt hla ro °®. lighted the gas
house-party—a very jolly house-party. To begin: There is Mrs. Hamlyn, fair, very fat and fifty, mother of the most adorable—but form your own opinions; there is her daughter, Constance—you won’t like her—too sarcastic and all that sort of thing; and then there is Gladys Montague, dazzling, dark and extremely llirta'lous. I hope no one U overhearing me, by the way. But if you don’t fall Lead over heels In love with her I’ll have nothing mote to do with you. Sh > Is by all odds the most gloriom creatuto you ever saw. You'll like her, I know. Let mo give you a pointer ” "Don't mind about th it, but toil me " "Oh, you want to Know about the rest. Well, there Is young Charlie Huvermeyer —a harmless Idiot, who lisps and makes au all around fool of himself; Mis. Haverraeyer, his mother, who is a cipher pure and simple, aud Lawrence and Thurston, tho appendage. Thurston is not a bad sort of a fellow, and Lawrence—well, he writes for the newspapers on the sly, so that f ettles him. They are jolly enough fellows, know how to play ^e uis, ride well in the paper-chases, can talk and llirt—I supp se that is ab >ut all that Is required of them. I think youwilalmit that it’s a very congenial sort of a crowd, however.” When tho two young men mounted the steps of t o Hamlyn cottage some time later, Davaris was about to ring the door bell, but his compat ion told him not
to do s >.
"It Is too awfully formal," he said. "Let’s wilk around to t:.e corner of the piazz i. Constance is usually there In tho hammock and then everything will come out 'naturally' as you always say. These people are the most hospitable iu the world. They wou't think it at all peculiar.” So they went along the broad p.azza and turned ti.e e irner by the side of u.e house. Then they su .v a pretty pictur > near the hammock. Sianduig erect, wit i her arms above Ler head trimming off a lew sprays of the honeysuckle b nssoms wide i covered tuo lattice work, was a young woman Her trim, lithe figure showed 11 the best advant igo as s ie stood there partly turned awray from the two young men, raised upon her toes striving to readme p irticulaily tempting blossom. Back of tier was an arch of these vines, tnrough which the hills aud mountains could b < seen loosing glorious in their bid.Hunt verdure aud far to the southward, dim an 1 blue iu the distance was a big i mountain. The girl had not heard the two as t:iey came along the piazza. Slightly averted from them, they coul 1 plainly see her tiue profile, her clear olive complexion glowing with health—not yellow or sallow, but mingled with a smooth, delicious damask, her luxuriant black hair, and her red lips slightly parted. For the instant they stood there, Langford looked at Davaris rather than tho girl. He wanted to see how his friend acted wnen he saw Miss Montague. If he had planned aud connived most ski.lfully to take Davaris off his guard he could not have been more successfu'. For when he first saw her, he stopped short, clinched his hands tigutiy together aud tecolled a little; not uoticsuble, but to Langford’s eyes ho seemed to s irluk buck. For an Instant in theslience all three s.oo I there aud Langford could hear Davarls breathing loudly and it seemed to him that he could almost hour the beating of his heart. Taen tne girl turned; looked slightly surprise.!, aud ca.r.e forwa-d w'th a • 't'UelemUe.say'ng. "1 ara very glad t.o see you, Mr. Langford. Aunt Mary will be here in a moment,’’ aud she louked as if she was going to leave them there, when Langford replied to her greeting and steppe 1 fo rward. ' Miss Montague, may I present Mr. Da-
varis,” ho said.
And Davaris—what did he do? Instead of smiling and saying some easy polite nothings, he was bowing there, pale, silent and evidently striving to retain his self-possession. •
[to bb continued.]
An excellent quality of illuminating gas
has been made from peat. Now Ib the Time.
The benefit to be derived from a good medicine in early spring is undoubted, but many people neglect taking any until the approach of warmer weather, when they will like a tender flower in a hot sun. Something must be done to purify the blood, overcome that tired feeling and give necessary strength. Vacation Is earnestly longed for, hut rainy weeks, perhaps months, must elapse before rest can be indulged in. To impart strength, and to give a feeliug of health and vigor
Fields have been literally “vaccinated" by sprinkling over them soil in which tuberculous crops have been grown, or even water in which they have been soaked. In 1890 a tract of old peaty land was sown with clover, and vaccinated with about one and a half tons to the acre of an old clover field. Scarcely any other manure at all was used. A more convincing experiment still was performed in Prussia, where large Reid was sown with lupins and divided, one part being treated in the ordinary fashion, the other inoculated . from an old lupin crop. The yield in |
GOLDEN
MEDICAL
DISCOVERY
Many years ago Dr. R V. Pierce, chief consulting physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., com pounded this medicine of vegetable ingredients which had an especial effect upon the stomach and liver, rousing the organs to healthful activity as well as purifying and enriching the blood. By such means the stomach and the nerves are supplied with pure blood; they will not do duty without it , any more than a locomotive can run without coal. You can not get a lasting cure of Dyspepsia, or Indigestion, by taking arti ficially digested foods or pepsin—the stomach must do its own work in its own way. | Do not put your nerves to sleep with socalled celery mixtures, it is better to go to the seat of the difficulty and feed the nerve cells on the food they require. Dyspepsia, j Indigestion, Biliousness and Nervous Afj fections, such as sleeplessness and weak! nervous feelings are completely cured bjl the ” Discovery. ’* It puts on healthy flesh, brings refreshing sleep and invigorates
whole system.
Mrs. K IIenkf, of Ao. 8y6 North Hahted St., Chicago, ///. writes: “I regard my improve-j
meat as simply wonderful. Since taking Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery in connection with his ' Pleasant Pellets ' I have gained in every respect, particularly in flesh and strength My liver was dreadfully enlarged and I suffered greatly from dyspepsia. No physician could give
relief.
Now, after two months I am entirely relieved of my disease. My appetite is excellent ;
fixxl well digested ; bowels regular and sleep
much improved.”
iFREE URAVF.I. HOAD
TICK.
the latter part was five and a half times Meellnic olllie Honrcf of Fr«« no no ♦lxr»A tin/4x*«* ♦lxr» tt rir* tti n 1 , M , II I* il || | §4 4 a 1)| g i_
The Board of Free Turnpike Dirctor* of Putnam County. State of Indiana, will meet at the office of ihe County Auditor, in the Court i House, in the city ot Greencastle, Putnam \ County, Stata of Indiana, on 1
treatment. A remarkable point in these operations is that each variety of the leguminousae has Its characteristic microbe, and that it is no use inoculating a field of clover, for instance, with lucerne, or of lupin with clover.
THE BEST MAN. Uw Bald He tVai noil Pat Came to th« Conctualon That He tVaa flight. An Irish teamster asked for a half holiday for the purpose of attending his sister's wedding, and the request was granted, says the New York Mail and Express. When he made his appearance the next morning his right arm was in a sling, there was a plaster across his nose, and a raw oyster in a poultice against his eye. His left ear looked like a cauliflower. “Why, Pat,” said his employer, “I thought you were going to your sister's wedding. You look ns though you had gone to a cyclone festival.” “I wor at th' weddin', sor,” said Pat. “ ’Twas th’ thruth I tould yez.” “Well, how did you get bunged up this way?" inquired tho merchant. “I'll tell yez, sor," replied Pat. “D’ye see, whin I got there and wint in th' people were standin* forninst the priest, an’ lie the side o’ thim wor a man in a pintail coat, and a big, sphlatterin’ white shirt. I lucked at um an’ he lucked at me. ‘Oh, ho,’ sez I till myself, sez I, ’an' ye think yer a jewd.’ Wuth thot I got a wee bit closer arv' lucked at ’um wanee moore. He gave a twist till his lip like, an' turned his back. ‘No Gallagher ever took that,' sez l till myself agin, an' I taps me laddiebuck on the showlder. “ ‘An’ who may yez be, me bould buckoo?'sez I, feelin’ that the blood o’ the Gallaghers had been insulted. “ ‘I’m the best mon,’ sez he. " ‘Th’ best mon?’ sez I. “ ‘Thot’s what I said,' says he, ‘the best mon,' ard, sor,” said Pat, as he shifted the oyster on his eye, “he
wuz.”
QUEEN WILHELMINAS JOKE. Her Majesty of flollaml Has Nome Fun at the llxpense of Her Governess. The Figaro tells a rather amusing story about the twelve-year-old young Queen Wilhelmina of Holland, prefacing its narration by the statement that the alarming news which was cireulated concerning the health of her majesty in August last is quite unconfirmed, and saying that the story in question is proof of the good spirits of
the young queen.
The governess of her majestj’, an English lady, Miss Saxton Winter, had given the little queen- ns an extra task.
SATURDAY. THE 23d DAY OF FEBRUARY, 1895, To transact all business that may come before them requirin* th. attention ot .-»id Board of c no Turnpike Directors. J- F.MULBOLN. Clork ol Board,
The smallest coal-burnin* locomotive in, Americe 1235 pounda) waa made by C. D.
Young of Denver in 1891. The Gold Flower.
This flower so fittingly called Gold Flower j was produced by M. Moser, of Versailles j France, and introduced in Kurope laat sea’- / a in, the planta selling at a very high figure , only a few planta coming to America. The 1 tiowees are to three inches across, of a bright ' shining, golden yellow and bearing nutuer-l ous handsenie stamens. The plant is of low ' spreading, branching growth, with hand-’i aonie leaves, the upper side much darker 1 t ran the lower. It la perfectly hardy, forms! an excellent border, or is grand for bedding' while as a single pot plans it is charming* with its clean, bright green foliage as a back-1 ground for the flowers, great, shiny yellow' disks, brilliant in their reflections as burn-
ished gold
This year an enterprising firm is offerit it at the price of ordinary plants, viz.*
a plant.
By sending to cents to James Vick's Sons' Rochester, N. V., for Vick's Floral Guide!' which amount may be deducted from first order), you will learn all about this heatifulplant Hypericum Moserianium. and also re-1 yarding their offer of |300 cash for a name for the New Double Sweet Pea. J Egyptian lamps, dating, it is believed,! from 3,000 B, C., have been discovered in thel catacombs along the Nile. n
nsT ie.l
Cure flor llrrnlnrhe. As a remey for all forms of Heacache Elec-, trie Bitters has proved to nc the very best. It effects a permanent cure and the most, dreaited habitual sick headaches yield to its' influence. We urge all who are Btflicted to, procure a bottle, and give this remedy a fair trial. In cases of habitual constipation Electnc Bitters cures by giving the needed tone to the bowels, and few cases long resist th,i use of this medicine. Try it once. LarZi bottles only Fifty cents at Albert Allefi Drug Store.
The people of large districts of Persia hart no other artificial light than that obtained from petroleum. Ruckten'* Amirn Solve. The beat aalve in the world for Cuts, Bruises Sores, fleers, Salt Rheum, Ft ver Sores, fetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains. Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale byi Albert Allen ly51 «
Near Modena, Italy, the petroleum gatherera dig a hole in the ground and it is speedily 1 filled with oil.
Uie diftAlag ntM coloring of a mup of [njr^uVimott^immeiuteiy^ I*. 21 T* i iT'Xfx 114124*1 11 xjrx lavisl v it 1 -- 1. . (till f* If T-fxItxxf ti tv «1 CV «« r.,. t V. :..
Relief in Siur Hours.
Distressing Kidney and Bladder diseases I relieved in six hours by the “New Greal F South American Kidney Cure.” This new remedy is a great .-..rpiis, on account of iti ; exceeding promptness iu relieving pain ii the Madder, kidneys, back and every part o j the urinary passage in male or femaje. II i
in paei ;i
quick relief and cure this is yourr remedy. } Sold by Albert Allen, Druggist, Greencastle, \ Ind. lyl0 Among the curios unearthed at Troy by Dr
Europe because she had not known her lesson in Turkish and Chinese geography as well as the governess deemed
she ought to have done. The queen n »».ira.. . - - - » agreed U do tho ext™ task Imposed ™ ( , ‘ eVer ‘ l1 ll ““ p8 daU “« fr °“ upon her, saying: “Very well; I will do the map, because I moaut to be obe- The llisroverf/ Sored His Life. dient. But—you will see." Mr. G. Callouette, Druggist, Beaversviile i i . 1*1., mu>m. To Dr. kiiiK'n New Discovery 1 in due course the map was drawn <> y,. ,„>• hfc. \\ a» taken with i.a Grippe
tried all the physicians for miles about, bu
and colored and handed to the governess. The young queen had made the British Isles very small, about the size of the Balearic islands, and had covered them with “London fog" colored paint. But Holland, on the contrary, was of enormous size, occupying a large part of that space which in ordinary maps is sea. This immense tract of land was glorified in the most brilliant colors. Miss Saxton Winter laughed. Tho young queen was delighted with her joke and the map was
passed round the court.
Deriding Term*.
"Wojen,” the opprobrious epithet - which the Chinese apply to tho Japs,
throughout the ayatem, there ia nothing belongs to an interesting class of names
equal to Hood'a Sarsaparilla. It aeema perfectly adapted to overcome that proatration caused by change of season, climate or life
bestowed upon nations by more or less
unfriendly neighbors. Such
| foreign people, and in America the In many parts of the Weat Indies shark oil people who called themselves Dakotahs
j wore known to their neighbors, the
is used In lamna.
For weak
Bart
ga aud feebleness, Chase'* 0 jibways, as Sioux or “enemies." It is Hariiy Malt Whisky ia an excellent Tonic, said that the word Esquimaux is a It is absolutely pure, full of nutriment, and Fy ( , r , P l, nnemvnftnn , a in rra:
build* un the system. Jno. Cawley, Juo ^rencii ^ormptionof the ( hippowa or —■^ ^ ’ Greencastle' L ' 8ole B 8 ent » feb f °r j Cr j^ UshUium, X , K. OF “raw-flesh ] Pitch C f’S CaStO****
of no avail and waa given up and told I coult not live. Having Dr. King's New Discovert in my store I sent for a bottle and began iti use anil trom the first dose began to get bet ’> r, and alter using three bottles was up am about again. It is worth its weight in gold We won't keep store or house without it 'I Get a free trial at Albert Allen’s Drugstore^ Ten gas ermpanies had, in 1365, a monopr^f of the lighting of Paris. ”
I
When Baby waa sick, we gave her Costorla. When she was a Child, she cried for Castorio. When she Wame Mis*, she clung to CistcHo. W hen she had Childrja., she gave them Costorla.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for
Pitcher’s Castoria.
Children CWfo
■m
IB
