Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 March 1895 — Page 7
■DEMEMBER there ^ are hundreds of brands of White Lead (so called) on the , market that are not White Lead, ^composed largely of Barytes and ther cheap materials. But the .lumber of brands of genuine
Strictly Pure
White Lead is limited. The following brands are standard ‘‘Old Dutch” process, and just as good as they were when you or your father were boys : “Anchor,” “Southern,” “Eckstein,” "Red Seal,” “Kentucky," “Collier.” For Colors—National Lead Co.'s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors, a one-pound can to a 25-poun 1 keg of Lead and mix your own I paints. Saves time and annoyance in matching shades, and insures the best paint that it is possible to put on wood. Send us a postal card and get our book on paints and color card, free; It will probably save you a good many dollars. NATIONAL LEAD CO.. New York. Cincinnati Branch. Seventh and Freeman Avenue, Cincinnati.
Travel Is best ac commodated in the
Through Pallmnn Bullet Sleeping Cars running over the lines of the Louis* vllle & Nashville Railroad.
0 R 1 D A A N
This line runs double daily (morning and evening departure) trains from Cincinnati, Louisville, Evansville, and St. Louis to the principal Southern cities. This line affords two routes to poiots in the Southwest, via Memphis and via New Orleans. This line has double dally sleeping car service to Jacksonville, and the only through line of Sleepers to Thotnasville and Tampa. This line has three daily trains to points In the Southeast. The passenger equipment c! this line is not excelled In the South.
Vi'inter Tourists’ Tickets at low round trip rates on sale from about November 1st, good till
May 31 st.
Full information cheerfully furnisheil
upon application to
GEO. t. CROSS, N. W. Pass. A g t., Chicago, III. C. P. ATMORE, Gan’l Pass. Agt., Louisville, Kjr. Write for deacription of PTM THE GULF COASl
T n E G U L F C 0 A S
HUMPHREYS’ Nothing has ever been produced to equal or compare with Humphreys’ Witch, Hazel Oil as a curative and healing application. It has been used 40 years and always affords relief and alwavs gives satisfaction. It Cures Picks or Hemorrhoids, External or Internal, Blind or Bleeding—Itching and Burning; Cracks or Fissures and Fistulas. Relief immediate—cure certain. It Cures Burns, Scalds and Ulceration and Contraction from Burns. Relief instant. It Cures Torn, Cut and Lacerated
Wounds and Bruises.
It Cures Boils, Hot Tumors, Ulcers, Old Sores, Itching Eruptions, Scurfy or Scald
Head. It is Infallible.
It Cures Inflamed or Caked Breasts and Sore Nipples. It is invaluable. It Cures Salt Rheum, Tetters, Scurfy Eruptions, Chapped Hands, Fever Blisters, Sore Lips or Nostrils, Corns and Bunions, Sore and Chafed Feet, Stings of Insects. Three Sizes, 25c., 50c. and $1.00. Sold by Drufiffiftts, or sent post-paid on receiptof price. UnPlIRKYN' SKI). CO., 111 Jk I I * ttlllisai tH., Sew Turk.
WITCH HAZEL OIL
MAN AND REAR.
An Exciting Episode in Which Bruin Was Greatly Surprised.
Human Ingenuity Wa« Superior to Brut* la.tlnrt and the Man Kecaped Being Devoured hj the
Of all branches of railway engineering there Is none which brings the officer Into closer contact with a hard-working lot of men than the maintenance of way work. Sometimes there are comical features even in this department, and one of these was recently told to a writer for the St. Louis Olobe-Demo-crat by a well-known engineer, who hides his real name under the pseudonym of Jerry Sullivan. It is a tale of one Tim, a track walker, who came in lato one night and reported to the other occupants of the bunkhouse that he had
3*aaer
MAKING AN OCEAN CABLE. A Vast Amount of Work Before It Can
Be Laid In the Orean.
The making of an ocean cable is a ! task involving no small, amount of skill ' | and mechanical ingenuity, and it is something to the credit of the first cable ' makers that their pattern has not j greatly changed in thirty years. When [ the Commercial Cable company decided I to lay a m w Atlantic cable last year, ' the work was intrusted to the firm of biomens Brothers, of Woolwich, London. As this firm has constructed no less than eight out of the eleven cables now linking (Ireat Britain and the United States, says the new Science Review, its method of manufacture may he watched as typical of the best. The first care of a cable manufacturer is to secure the very best materials. The copper wire, which forms the heart and ' essential part of the cable, must he of the purest metal, since the purer the metal the higher its standard of conductivity j willbc. Every strand ami every coil of 1 wire that goes into the cable is ex-
TWO $AD MEN.
A Brace of Wild Westerners Who Wero Both Ablo Killers.
been delayed by an extraordinary encounter with a hear. “Near the ind of
the section,” said Tim, “close to the old I K ‘ cted ^ reach a certain standard; and tie camp. 1 was cornin’ along about half I to such 11 ,U '8 Tee of excellence is the past three o'clock, ami just afther rnakin ? of ' virl ‘ for electrical
1 purposes brought nowadays that the material submitted is more frequently
crossin’ that little bridge I heerd a nize of sumthin’ rustlin’ in the bushes down at the bottom of the dump, and think in’ it was a rabbit I fired a rock down into 1m, and in a second there was a terrible slashin’ around in thim hushes, and I see a big cinnamon hear come out sneezin’ and rubbin’ his nose, and thin, before I rightly come to me sinses, the hear seen me and up the dump he come. Well, I started down the track as tight as I could go, but I hadn’t went two telegraph poles until I look hack and sec the bear still cornin’ and girinin’ on me ivery jump. So I dropped me adze and rineh and stretched mcsclf for all I was worth. But it was no use, the bear was still gainin’, and 1 was wonderin’ what on airth I was goin’ to do, whin I see the iron pipe under the track near the cut, and 1 made for that and wint in just clear, whin the hear jammed his head in at the inti. But he was too big to go in, and he couldn't reach me, and so he pawed around and snorted and bit the ind of the pipe, and tried first one side and thin the other. But I was safe, and I lied there and panted and blessed the man that invinted iron pipe. “Well, I thought the hear would go away after awhile, hut he didn't; he stayed right there, wid his head in first wan ind of the pipe and thin the other, and when lie came round to the upper iml I wished 1 had held on to the rineh so I could hit him a belt over the nose. After bein’ in there over two hours I begin gittin’ cold, and I see somethin’ hail to be done, and I thought I’d try smokin’ him out. So I managed to light mo pipe, ami thin I smoked for all I knew how, but the boar still kept his head in the hole, anti I crawled up closer and blew the smoke right in his face. He snorted a little, hut wouldn’t back out, and seemed to be gettin’ madder all the time. Thin, whin I was nearly froze to death, I happened to think of the stick ot giant powder in me pocket, and, thinks I: ‘Now I’ll settle your hash.’ So I puts a fuse in the stick of giant, and crawLs up and threw it right under the bear's head, and thin touched off the fuse and hacked down to the other ind of the pipe. I guess that hear thought I was going to run away, for lie run across the track to the other ind; thin, whin I crawled back to get me feet out of his reach he crossed back again and stuck his head and neck into the pipe just as tha giant wint off. Widout thinkin', I had made a big cannon out of the water pipe, and whin it wint off I was fired out and landed in the middle of the river and was nearly drowned before I knew just where I was at. But I finally struck the other hank and got out and wint up to the station and flagged the passenger and rode home. After climbin’ up the bauk I looked hack and saw smoke coinin' out of the lower ind of the pipe and the hear still lookin’ at the upper ind and tryin’ to see phwat in blazes had happened."
above that standard than below. The single wires having passed the test for purity and conducting power, eleven similar strands are taken ami spun into a slender rope in lengths of one mile. Gutta-percha insulation is then applied in sheets prepared from the raw material as it comes to hand from Singapore and other Malay ports. These sheets are wrapped by experienced hands so firmly and smoothly round the wire tnat not an air bubble can remain between the copper and its insulator. The “core” is then ready to be submitted to a galvonometer test, to ascertain whether the insulation is perfect, or as nearly perfect as that very elusive agent, electricity, will permit. That test having been satisfactorily passed, a workman, whose sole business is to attend to the joining of the lengths of cable, splices the ends of the mile lengths. Again the insulation test is applied. The galvanometer indicating no very appreciable loss of electricity, even under the strain of an alternating current of 5,000 volts, the core is passed into the hands of the sheathers, whose care it is to surround the copper and gutta-percha with a more substantial protective covering before they are submitted to the rough action of the sea. And now the weight and size of the cable become appreciable. Already each mile length has in It some 500 pounds of pure cupper and 840 pounds of pure gutta-percha. Over this Is a spun of coat of jute yarn j
Thvy Srhetupd for a Wholo Afternoon to Let the Drop on Farh Other Without Nurre..—riea.nnt Hlver-
•loHa of Gun Klcbtere.
"One of the things tiiat strikes a tenderfoot with surprise," said a western land surveyor to the New York Sun man, “is the way the tough men in the far west, when they happen to run counter to men of their own kind, will refrain from shooting until one gets the drop on the other. So quick and ready are the shooting men of the real sort that when facing each other on guard neither one can lire so quickly that the other will not return the shot before falling. Thus it may happen that two bail men who have sworn death to each other may meet often without exchanging shots because neither one can catcli tiie other unprepared. Take the ease of Wild Bill and Jim Currie, for example. Both men of undoubted nerve and skill, they were enemies for years — by some accounts they exchanged shots nnee at long range—hut they never pulled triggers on each other at close quarters, and when Bill was assassinated by a wretch years afterward at Dcadwood it closed the feud. “Clay Allison, the New Mexican dead shot and mankiller, found one man who wasn’t afraid to stand up to him and was just as quick with hLs gun as himself. That man was Mace Bowman, some time a deputy sheriff of Colfax county. They spent a whole afternoon together, each trying to get the drop on the other, hut neither one could accomplish it. It was a performance. though, of a kind to make an inexperienced man shiver. There was had blood between them, and this
For Twenty Years
Scott’a Emulsion has been endorsed by physicians of the whole world. There is no secret about its ingredients.
Physicians prescribe
Scott’s Emuilsio*? becaus 1 they know what great nourishing and curative pronerties it contains. They know it is what it is rep-esented to be ; namely, a perfect emulsion of tho best Norway Codliver Oil with tiie hypophosphites of lime and soda. For Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Weak Lungs, Ciucunption, Scrofula, Anamia, Weak Babies, Tain CniLnn, Eicketi, Liarasmaa, Loss of Flesh, General Debility, cud t.l! ccuiiitioua cf Wasting. The only genuine Scott’s Emulsion is put in salmoncolored wrapper. Refuse inferior substitutes! Send for pamphlet cn Seott'i Emulsion. FREE. Scott it Bowne, N. Y. All Druggists. 50 cents and S I.
CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK
I3STD.
UTIlEC’TOItWs li. O' flair, Pres.; M. F. Me Ha fie, Vice Pres; M. D. Bridges, Cash ; J. L. Handel, ffssf. Cash.; E. B. Evans, FF. 11.'Alice, F. A. Arnold. S. A. J/ays, Quinton Broadstreet.
Sixteen pints of the Juice or sap whi<h makes India rubber is frequently taken from one tree. Have you ever noticed how your system 8?ems to crave special assistance in the
weighing nearly COO pounds to the mile. , gether Bowman, with his whisky half
afternoon when they met in Lambert’s the hip r^uirert is given by
barroom and got to drinking the enmity 101 8 • arsa P ftrl •-
began to rankle. It was perfectly understood between them that if either one got the drop on the other, the slower man would die, and this being agreed on both men maneuvered for un opening. Facing each other with such pleasant intentions they laughed and joked and drank together, all the time watching each other like eats. As a diversion in the proceeding they would lay their pistols, the barrels crossing, on the bar counter, step hack to the other side of the room, and then, at an agreed signal, make a rush for the pistals. But neither could seize his weapon quickly enough to get the ad-
vantage of the other.
"Once as they were taking a drink to-
A. R. TURNEY, The reliable dealer iu Harness, Saddles, etc., is now located in one of the Finest and Best Equipped
The largest library is in Paris, the National, con'.aining 2,203,000 volumes.
A Good Thing and Nothing to Pay.
Just see what Dr. Orceneoffers to do for
all weak and suffering people. He is the most successful living specialist In curing nervous and chronic diseases. His unparalleled offer to consult with anyone, free of charge, by letter correspondence, is doing wonderful good. Ifyou have any complaint which you do not thoroughly understand, and which you would like cured, write the Doctor a letter stating just how you feel and what symptoms trouble you. He will au-
Then the cable is made the center of a twisted sheath of steel wires of tho stoutest kind, averaging more titan 4,000 pounds to the mile. And finally a compound of tar is laid over the whole, which brings its own weight of 800 pounds to the mile. After the tar is applied the cable is coiled and left to
way to his lips, suddenly smashed the glass to the counter and drew his pis- , tol. But as it came up Allison’s revolver met it half way. The men werelooking into each other’s eyes, and a sign in cither's that a trigger was to be pulled would have meant the death of both men, which was more killing than
soak in tanks of water until such time ! cither one wanted,
as the cable ship shall be ready to lay I “This dalliance with death went on it in its last resting place. Such a cable ! through the afternoon, until at last, at as this is made at the rate of fifty to j the coming of evening, the two men,
fifty-five miles per twenty-four hours.
EFFECTS OF SUGAR.
becoming savage, declared that they would bring the duel to an end. They cleared tho room of spectators, and had already taken their places in corners diagonally opposite to begin shooting, when W. It. Morley, of Cimarron, a
in
No. 22 Soolb Mot Street, GREENCASTLE, IND. Building Association stock bought and sold or taken as security for loans.
I>ry I^and Herd of POLAND CHINA SWINE.
Funeral Honors for a Dog. “Black," the beloved dog of an American lady and gentleman living at Vaueresson, outside of Paris, during the summer, having died recently was buried, says a Paris letter, with the full funeral honors usually accorded to human beings. The canine pet was placed in two caskets—one of oak, the other leaden—was then conveyed in a hearse covered with flowers to Vaueresson and there burled. The funeral was followed by the Americans and their friends, all the mourners being in carriages. A monument, which cost sixty pounds sterling, was erected to the memory of the lost favorite. Tho expenses of the caskets, the funeral, the tomb and the memorial amounted to 0i.1v. huudicu pounds'axelRug. TIw *audertaker who carried out the order was rather puzzled at first, and mentioned the matter to a police commissary, who advised him to get a death certificate of tho dog signed by two witnesses. This counsel was followed by the Pompes Funebres official, who was thus able to fulfill his contract without any fear of interference on the part of the representatives of the law.
SaUI by Scientist,* to l>e Ilcneficial to the
PhjKlcal System.
There are certain medical authorities , * • i , % , » ... , 4- 1 : strong friend of both men, rushed who have for a lonp time been arpuinp . A H . ,, . , ...... - - ” , - between them at the risk of his life, in favor of a more general use ox sugar . , , , • . . , - ,. . . 4i * and by expostulations and entreaties as an article of diet. They claim that J .. - ... 1 # • *1 1 managed to get them oil the idea of the
a liberal use of sugar increases tho . , * . ^
- ... - .y , , . duel and mutually to agree to separate power of resisting fatigue, and enables . . ^ \ 1 .
, without further trouble, bo the two the individual to perform much more , , .
dlfcs
l have some extra good Fall Pig* for .ale and two Summer Qilts bred to Claude’s Su-
erlor No. 11343, to farrow In June, anil F.ggs
lug
horns, Silver l.aee Wyand
pe. fro
om three pnze-winnin
pens—8. C. B. Legnttes and Barred P.
labor than is possible without it. A report made to the Royal society irf England shows the influence of sugar in this direction. As an experiment, a laboring man fasted one day, taking nothing hut water. His conditions, strength, fatigue and labor performed were carefully noted. On another day, five hundred grains of sugar were added to the water, and the same account was taken of the man’s physical state. It was found that the sugar Increased the muscular strength about 70 per cent., and greqtly prolonged the period before fatigue was noticeable. In another experiment, sugar added to the food was observed to produce a surprising increase in muscular energy; 200 grams with a meal gave a maximum of 89 per cent, more strength than was discoverable in its absence, and 250 grams of sugar to a meal greatly increased the resistance against weariness, and enabled the man to perform, without undue exertion, an average of 12 per cent, more work than he was able to do without it. There is a growing opinion among the best scientific authorities that the craving of some persons and almost all children for sugar is not oulj iviisonrahlc, Lul r-i- direct uucord with natural law. Pure sugar is not only wholesome but neeessary, and when growing children crave it should
never he denied them.
contestants backed out of the room at opposite doors and rode ont of town different ways, saving an encounter which would almost certainly have re-
sulted in tho death of both."
HEROISM OF A LUMBERMAN.
Women la Husiliv.
Americans who have exercised themselves about the restricted freedom of persons living in Russia will naturally he surprised to learn how much freedom and power women enjoy in the land of the czar. In some parts of Russia women are not only members of school boards, hut also serve as principals of workhouses and poor guardians. For instance, in one small province last year there were forty-five women in office as superintendents of workhouses, one hundred and twenty-five as poor law guardians, and two hundred and eighty-three as members of school hoards. In Finland the women do a great part of the work that in other countries is left to the men. Most of the oldest and best orchards there were planted and cared for by women, and the author and publisher of the first Finnish work on pomology was a woman Throughout Finland women
LHe Sxvlnc on the Ire. An English gentleman has invented a life saving apparatus for use on a lake on his 0,4 1. p.aco is sooiiiip.c thai, one like It cotdd easily be put ou every sheet of water frequented by skaters. Two broad planks, about eight leet long, arc placed on sled runners, and these are joined together by a rope fully twenty feet in length. A life preserver is fastened to tho center of the rope, and in case of accident, two people, by throwing themselves <«i the planks, could easily steer them to the hole, one on either side, when the life preserver could be grasped by the one whose life is in danger.
4 arrylnu a Wounded 4'onirada Forty Mile.
Through Cold and Snow.
A young man, Henry Brault, a resident of I’etcrboro, Ont., recently performed an act of heroism, actuated by friendship, which is worthy of record among the heroic deeds of heroic men of any age. Tiie Manchester Union says that Brault and another young man, John Jamieson, wero at work in the wild Modawaska region for the St. Anthony Eutnher company. Jamieson met with a severe accident which rendered him delirious, and Brault started with him for civilization, where surgi cal treatment could bo had. They had traveled on foot but a few hundred yards when Jamieson's strengtli gave out and he became helpless. Brault determined to save his companion if in his power, shouldered the Invalid and started on his long, cold tramp of some forty miles to the nearest railroad. iUiouI a moment a sleep, aim bearing, besides his human burden, a pack of provisions, Brault continued his journey for four days and nights, through cold and snow, until finally, almost us helpless from exhaustion and fadgue as his friend was from illness, he had the supreme satisfaction of reaching tho eud of ids journey and placing Jamieson where ho was able to be properly treated. Such a feat of endurance seems almost incredible, ami only a seasoned woodman, inured to hardship, could have accomplished it; and among those capable of it it is rare to find so striking an example of disinterested friendship, even when a human life is at stake. Whatever his station In life may he, young Brault deserves to rank
among nature s noblemen.
Houses in the State, and remember he carries tiie largest and best line of Trunks, Traveling Bags, etc., of any house in the county, and can give you
the lowest prices.
Driviny Harness prom $0.00 up. Work II i mess prom $10.00 up. And everything in proportion. If you are contemplating a new set of harness for spring don’t fail to examine my stock of leather and get mv prices, as I can save you money. 1 also carry a large stock of Whips,
... ... , , Blankets,. Robes, etc., that will dis-
swer it, giving a complete description of your | ( > 0 u Ilt Huv house for quality and low
case, explaining the meaning of every synip- •
tom, and telling how. you can surely get well aod strong. He gives most careful attention tueach letter, and explains your case so tioroughly that you understand exactly wnat ails you. All this costa you nothing, you have no doctor’s fees to pay, and you don't have to leave your home. The Doctor makes a specialty of treating patients through letter correspondence, and they nearly always get well. He is the discoverer of that wonderful medicine. Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy. Write to him at his office, 35 West 14th St., New York City, and you will undoubtedly he made
strong and well.
The highest price paid for a modern painting was $110,600 for Millet's “Angelas." Iteliep in Six Hours. Distressing Kidney and Bladder diseases) relieved in six hours by the "New Great South American Kidney Cure." This new remedy is a great surprise on account of its exceeding promptness i* relieving pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary passage in male or female. It relieves retention of water and pain in passing it almoHt immediately’. If you want ijuick relief and cure this is yourr remedy. Sold by Albert Allen, Druggist, Greencastle, Ind. lylO The deepest coal mine in Europe is at Lambert, Belgium, depth 3,490 feet.
Free Pills.
Send your address.to H. Fl. Hucklen A Co., Chicago, and get a tree sample box of Dr. King's New Life Fills. A trial will convince you of their merits. These pills are easy in action and are particularly effective in the cure ol Constipation and Siek Headache. l or Malsria and Livat troubles they have been proved invaluable. They ire guaranteed to be perfnotlv free from every deleterious substance amt to be purely vegetable. They do not weaken by their action, but by giving
prices. Remember my tfoods are bought to sell aiiil must go regardless of hard times, All goods guaranteed. Stop in when iu town or write me uiid I will make prompt answer. Remember the Flnee—Opposite the
Postoffloo, Bainhridge, Ind.
MONU.MKNTS. Meltzer Ale In tosh,
Manufacturers and Dealers in Mnrble and Granite
ITCOraUMElNITS -
Best work and lowest prices.
Office ami Salesroom lOff E. Frank-
lin St., Gjeeneastle, Ind.
tone to stomach and bowels greatly inuigoi - ute the system. Regular sin- 25c. per box.
Sold by Albert Allen, Druggist.
Wanted to trade a spring wagon for a horsa; call on Gap Renick tf For sale, one Barred Plymouth Rock cockerel, and one Black Langshan cockerel. Apply to or address, Charles Arnold, E. Seminary St., Greencastle, Ind. td47
Seed Potatoes.
We will have on hand for planting time, a fine lob of the best varieties of
seed potatoes.
td Bboadstrkkt & Son. Garden Seeds of all sorts the very best, at Broadstreet & Son 1 *. td The lint cron <»f tea grown in Natal was in tie year 18R1. T»-<iay Natal tea is commou. The nearest approach to the North Pole was on May 13, WM, when Lieutenant Lockwood stood within 393 miles of that coveted apot
Motive of Administrator's Sale tip Heal Instate. Notice it hereby given that the undersigned. Administrator uf the Estate of James It Sallust, w ill sell at private sale &ir not less than the appraisement, the following deaciioed Real Estate in Putnam county, in the State of Indiana, to-wit: The east half of the northeast quarter of section twenty-three (23) and twenty i'JOi acres off of west side of the nnrtwest quarter of suction twenty-fiatr (24), all in township fount, n !l nort h. ra range tour I 'vest, containing one hundred Ido) acres more or
less.
Said real estate will be sold as an entirety. Ires from right or < Inimof the widow. Said sale of salu real estate will be made at the Ri al Estate Office of Quinton Hr xadstreet, in Southard's Block, in the City of Greec-
caitle, Ind., cn
SATURDAY, THE 20TH DAY OF
APRIL, 1895,
At 2 o'clock p. m., and in caso said sal© sJiould m>t be made at said time, said real estate w .11 be offered for sale unc^er this notice from day to day thereafter uutil the same is sold acc&rdi&g to the erder of the court. Applications of purchasers will he received at the said Heal Estate Office of said Broadstreet, iu Ihe City of Greencastle until 'l o’clock p. in. on the 20th day ot April,
1885.
TERMS. Ono-third r»*h; the residue in two eqpal payments of nine and twelve months from date of sale, the purchaser giving notes at 6 percent interest, waiving valuation and appraisemcat laws, and secured by murlgaKu upon said rfral estate sold. UULNTON BROADSTREET, March 11 „ !t<96. Administrator. John 1\ Alice, Attorney. U43
aruitry
YOUNG
We Offer You a Remedy Which 1 Insures Safety to Lifo of Mother and Child.
Mothers’ Friend
Robs
How They IHstingralshed Their Flock*. A little eastern town of Long Island has still preserved among its town records the ear-marks of tha cattle that were pastured iu common upon tho broad meadows down from Moulauk point. Among the marks were the nick, the slope, the “L,” the hole, the slit, the hollow, the “U" and the half penny. All corresponded pretty fairly to the names. An exactly similar device were the swan marks in Great
All Head anil Mouth.
There are many curious forms amo*g the fishes known to inhabit the very deepest portions of the deep sea, but there are few such unique specimens as that recently reported to the Berlin institute from the coast of Morocco. It was brought up from a depth of one and one-half miles and was a wonder lo behold. The creature was only about twenty-nine inches long, but fully fourfifths ot its entire length was head ami mouth. It is estimated that if the body had been severed just behind tRe
Confinement of Its Horror and Risk.
l>Bn,
After using nn« hottlr of “ MmfhrrsI Friend” 1 suffcri'd but little pain, anil did ' not experience that weakness afterward, usual in such oases.—Mns. Annib Gac.c, i Baxter Springs, Kan. rsmt hr Mali or Fiprr.s. on r-'-Mpt of prico, II per bottle. Book to M.iiher. mallwl 4 rev. Sold by ,.d Diusgi.19. I BRADFIELB REGULATOR CQ.. Ateta. Gi. a. Neale, Veterinary Smbou.
Notice to Non-Residents. The State of Indiana, PtUnain County, as: In the Putnam Circuit Court, Fenri
Term. 19#5.
August F. W. Bauer
va,.
Evaline Woodruff et a’..
Complain:_No 5510.
Now comes the Plaintiff, by Lewis & Corwin, bio Attorneys, and files his complaint 1 hcivUi, togitilici ..ill. wu uffidki it tuiiW tiie aald defendants, Evaline Woodruff, Samuel * Woodruff, Henry Pcothera, the unknown | heirs at law of J ulia Ann Brothers, deceased, Kmi)y Gardner, Siu-iue! Qardtir, Mai . Auu Thompson, Benjamin Thompson, Thomas Franklin Hensley, the unknown heirs at law of Thomas Franklin Hensley. deceased. Mollis Day. the unknown heirs st law of Martha G. Vaughn, deceased, Charlsa Osborn. Surah E. Hensley, Char ea P. Henjloy, Oliver Hensley, the unknown heirs at la.v of Milton Hensley, deceasud. Aaron Hensley, the unknown heirs at law of Aaron Hensley, deceased. Louise Vaughn, ’.he unknown heirs st law of Louise Vaughn, deceased. Samuel P. Hensley, tue unknown heira at law of Wesley Hensley, deceased, Michael Wilson, the unknowt heirs at Uw of Michael Wilson, deceased, David Wyatt,.the unknown heirs at law of David Wyatt, deceased, John J. Wilson, the unknown husrs at Uw of Juim J. Wilson, draeased, tlKrunkiursrn heirs at law of Abner doodwin, deceased, James W Talbott, dei'eased, the itnknown heirs at law of Jacob Buckneli, de-eased, are non residents
of the State of Indiana.
Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants that untesH they be and appear on the "ta judicial tiay oi lire next term ot the Putnam Circuit Court, the same being Monday, the 29th day of April, A. D. 1H95, at the Coart House in the city ol Greencastle, in said county and Slate, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and
d in their ahaenoe.
egularly engaged jt) agricultural | Britain solemnly set down in the pulfllo | could have been stowed
I record!!, * great poucli-liUe stomach.
Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College, and member of the Ontario Veterinary Mcdp
nau Dt*ru sfvrruu juat in-muti mv ca i Society. All diseases of domestic animals i ouri, amxea at ine cuy oi hinges of the law ten such “bodies” 1 carefully treated. Office at Cooper Brothers’ r! a*nf Ma-clu A P f»£
. . • u I Livery staple, ureeucastle, ind. A i cabs, DANIEL T. D
have been stowed awaj in [ d ay and night, promptly atteiulotl- KUtng By W II. II. Cullen, Deputy.
end Surgery a ipeciult)’. Lewis 1 Corwin, Plff.’a Attys,
determined
Witness my hand, and the seal of said Court, affixed at the city of Greencastle, this
arch • D MW DANIEL T DARNALL, Clerk
