Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 April 1895 — Page 7

HUHIUBHnB!

M

"DAINT cracks.—It ; the brain and the heart. I #r often costs more to prepare a ,f rr «>J>^rljr l»*.| Thry Laritely Karape

l(iuse for repainting that has been painted in the first place with cheap ready-mixed paints, than it would to have painted it twice with strictly pure white lead, ground in pure

linseed oil.

n>

Strictly Pure White Lead

forms a permanent base for repainting and never has to be burned or scraped oft' on account of scaling or cracking. It is always smooth

and dean To be sure of getting ^ stnedy pure white lead purchase { iulo u , tCT tho ncral urtorios of any ol the following brands: u„a..

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W/??.* Coco;?—Nation*! Lead Co.’* Ptiee yvti.te Lead Tintinjf Colors, a one-pound can to * 25-pound ken of Lead and m:\ your own paints. Saves time and annoyance in matching Shades, and insures the best paint that, it is pos-

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Send us a postal card and get our book on paints und color-card, free; it will probably save

you a good many dollars.

NATIONAL LEAD CO., New York.

Cincinnati Branch,

Seventh and Freeman Avenue, Cincinnati.

If Properly I se t They Largely

Senile I'allnre.

In his work on the senile heart Dr. Dalfonr tells us that there are two parts of the human organism, which, if wisely used, ’•largely escape senile failure," says the Troy Tiroes. These two are the brain and the heart. Persons who think have often wondered why brain workers, great statesmen and others, should continue to work with j almost unimpaired mental activity and | energy up to a peritxl when most of the organs and functions of the body are in a condition of advanced senile decay. There is a physiological reason for this, and Dr. Dalfour tells us what it is. ‘'The normal bruin,” he aClrms, “remains vigorous to the last,” and that “because its nutrition is specially

or a the

body begin to lose their elasticity and to slowly but surely dilate. They become, therefore, much less efficient carriers ot the nutrient blood to the capillary areas. Dut this is not the case with the internal crotids, which suppl3’ the capillary areas of the brain. On t he contrary, those large vessels “continue to retain their pristine elasticity, so that tho blood pressure remains normally higher than within the capillary area of an}’ organ in the body. The cerebral

MR. SLUDGE, THE MEDIUM. | HORSES FASCINATED BY FIRE.

The Aolmitlt Selied with » Strange Mad-

ness When In Peril.

The panic that is inspired in the minds of horses by a phenomenon so strange ns fire can be understood only

The Poet ISrownlng Detected an Imposi-

tion on Ills Wife.

Mr. Frederick Greenwood, in his personal recollections, written for the 1 “Realm," tells the following story:

“Everyliody who lives with books has ■ by those who have witnessed a fire in a heard that Robert Browning’* ‘Sludge, I larjfe stable where numliers of horses the Medium,’ reflected upon Home, and ftre kept, says the St. Louis Globe-Dem-most people liava also heard that the ocrat. The scene that ensues is one of celebrated^creaturc succeeded in bring- the most frightful that can lie conceived, ing Mrs. Browning under his influence The horses are rescued from the burn-

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Scott 5 s Emulsion

is not a secret remedy. It is simply the purest Norwaj I Cod-liver Oil, the finest Hypophosphites, and chemi j cally pure Glycerine, all combined into a perfect Emul 1 sion so that it will never change or lose its integrity j This is the secret oi Scott’s Emulsion’s preat success ; It is a most happy combination oi fiesh-^iving, strength ; ening and healing agents, their perfect union givinu

them remarkable value in ail

WASTING DISEASES.

ucv> „ u „ 11< „ LUU Hence its great value in Consumption, wherein it arrest?

many people known to them; was, in battery. When rescued they will often the Wasting by supplying the HIO it Concentrated HOUr his tea-party way. an agreeable sort ol break away from those who hold them ishment, and 111 Ante mha and . icrofllia it enriches and

vitalizes the blot d. In fact, in every phase of wasting it is most effective, hour* doctor will confirm all w T e say about it. Don 7 be/crzuai’.eJ to accept a substitute/ Scott & n IV :v,-, *,cv. Vor'.. All Druircrists. 50c. and Si.

completely. But the trick that undeceived her (we must suppose) is not so well known. It may have got into print, but, if so, I, for one, have never seen it. and tell the story us it was told

ing building with the utmost difficulty and only with the most serious peril to the lives and limbs of the rescuers. The animals go mad with fright, rear, kick and dash from side to side so wild-

by Browning himself. Home had been ly as to make an attempt at rescue as about the Brownings a good deal, knew perilous as an adventure on a hostile

person; und there were seances here and seances there; ‘and.’ said the poet, | easting a vague look about the room to express his bewilderment, ‘I don't know how it was. I did my best, but little by little he gained her over to believing in him; how much to my distress, i imagine!’ After awhile Home found a I yet more excellent way of working on the poor lady’s mind. She had lost a little child by death, and, her own 1 wishes running out to embrace the

break away from those who hold them and charge back at full speed into the hurning building, there to perish in the flames. They resist every attempt to take them out. They have been known to tear their rescuers with their teeth, to throw them to the ground and trample on them, to kick out their brains.; As the fury of the flames increases so 1 does the panic of the unfortunate anG mals. They scream out in their agony I as the lire reaches their Ixxlies, yet will! thej’ not for all that seek safety in tho'

promise, he began to hint that someday open air. They are erased with fear, j he would bring the little one's spirit | and yet remain to be burned to death 1

blood paths being thus kept open, the , j n t 0 her presence. But he was slow in ; when a ten seconds’ run would carry

brain tissue is kept better nourished i performing this promise—naturally; for, than the other tissues of the body.” I otherwise, he would have lost the adv ' ho Is there among those who have vantage of an excited expectation, reached or passed middle age that will 0 f t ,. n stimulated and as often baffled, r.bt be rejoiced to find such admirable \t, last an evening was named when physiological warrant for the belief i the mother’s yearning should be that the brain may continue to work, satisfied. In the customary way, light and even to improve, almost to the was shut out of the room when the very la~st hour of life 9 three sat down, and the usual rap-

HAD FAST TRAINS EVEN THEN.

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High Speed at Which tho Expresses Traveled Fifty Years Afjo* If anybody were asked what comparison exists between the speed of railroad trains now and fifty years ago ho would probably say that hardly any can be made. The difference, however, is far less than is generally supposed. In May, 1848, the Great Western railway engine Great Britain was driven by Engineer Almond from Paddington to Didcot, fifty-throe miles, in forty-seven minutes, starting and stopping. When we consider that the brakes in those days were very crude this is pretty fast traveling. Nor was this done once, but repeatedly. Tho broad-gauge expresses are frequently timed at tho rate of a mile in forty-eight seconds, or seventy-five miles an hour, and even a higher maximum was attained for short distances. The Bradshaw for 1843 shows that the morning express was timed to leave Paddington at 9:50 o’clock and start again from Didcot at 10:47. Allowing lour minutes for the stop at Didcot the train must have been officially timed at a mile a minute. The railway records show that the traiu often arrived under time. These facts should silence a great many persons who prate about the phenomenal progress recently made in railroad matters in general and rapid transit in particular. THE ’’CROWNER’S ’QUEST.*’ An Absurd Old Law Which Has Some Very UndeHlrablo llesiilts. Dickens, who so often studied with delighted interest the application of English law to particular coses, would have found a subject worthy of Ids grimmest immivr in the fact, cabled recently from London, that when the master of a fishing smack, cruising near where the Elbe went down, saw floating in the water a dead body, which was doubtless that of a victim of the great disaster, he made no effort to rescue it from the waves and carry it ashore for identification and burial. Instead he sailed past and away from tho doleful bit of flotsam as quietly as circumstances would permit,'not, as one might suppose, because he was a particularly hard-hearted and coldblooded mariner, but because "recently, after landing a body, be had been forced to pay the funeral expenses.” Curious as that experience had been and delightfully illustrative as it was of “crowncr’s ’quest” wisdom, the captain had no inclination to repeat it. One lesson had been enough to teach him tho great principle that common sense cannot be allowed to interfere with consistency in the enforcement of a parliamentary act, and what, in com parison with that, is tho continued agonized uncertainty of some German wife or motneri’

pings and questionings and invocations went on for a time, and then— then the child’s spirit was to appear. And, sure enough, there did arise above the edge of the table something that was whiter than the dark, that seemed to have a motion of its own and the luminousness of a living thing, and that might veritably be what poor Mrs. Browning fancied it. But, conscious of her trembling state of mind, her husband was in anotherguess sort of passion. ‘I suddenly sprang up, dashed my arm across the table, and took hold of—what do you think? The scoundrel's obscene foot!— naked!’ The flaming anger in which Browning finished the story—after so many years, hx>—left no doubt about what happened next to the celebrated medium—Home. He was instantly and literally kicked out of the bouse; his shoe and stocking after him, no doubt.”

NO DELAY

No. 22 Soutb Jackson Street, GEEENCASTLE, IND. Pailding Association stock bought .M" ami sold or takon ns security

for loans.

POLAR BEAR AND WALRUS.

them to liberty. But they never make tho run, and, as a rule, are burned alive in their stalls, where alone they seem to fancy they can find security. There is but one way to get them out and that is to blind them with some convenient cover, sucli as a coat or a blanket, and thus, unable to sao the dangers about them, trembling in every limb, apparently ready to fall to the earth witli fear, they may be led out. But the cover must not be too quickly removed from their eyes; in fact, it should not be taken off until the animals are out of sight of the* burning building, otherwise they will break away from the persons leading them and, in spite of the stoutest efforts at restraint, will dash back to per-

ish in the flames.

CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK GFREETSrC-A-STLIE, ustid. Cav\\yUA, Sy\.y\\\ays, ^^,000

i>i nrccTonwi L. O'Hair, Pres; M. F. McHafie, Vice Pres; M. D. Bridget, Cash ; J. L. Handel, Aisf. Cash.; E. B. Evans, IF. H.'Allee, F. A. Arnold. S A. Hays, Quinton Broadstreet.

IlDIES. CCDIEjl^II

Strange AgRociatlofi Ex'stlng: Hetween tha Two Animals. Old voyagers in Behring sea tell of a strange association between the walrus and the polar bear. The walrus furnishes the principal foood of this great carnivore, which is his deadliest foe, in fact, yet to see them together, as the}- frequently are encountered, one might think they were boon companions. Lying upon the field ice will often be seen “patches” of walrus containing from thirty to fifty, and with each of these groups will be found the polar bear. They all are apparently resting together in the happiest sort of unity. Occasionally a walrus flops into the water and sinks leisurely into the depths, while others will be seen emerging therefrom and climbing up on the ice. The bear becomes hungry and decides he will dine with the walrus that day. lie rises to his haunches and sways himself heavily upon all fours. After a yawn and a stretch he saunters to the nearest walrus and swings his powerful paw in a crushing blow on its head, instantly killing the animal. lie then proceeds leisurely to make a comfortable dinner off the unfortunate object of his selection. This performance, apparently, does not startle the others. They continue to bask undisturbed, seemingly indifferent to the fate of their comrade and awaiting their turn like stoics. The female walrus with young, however, does not tolerate the presence of the bear. She regards him with merited suspicion, and promptly takes to the water with her offspring on his appearance.

TIPS IN ENGLAND.

On© of Lincoln** Answer*. Speaking In a recent speech of certain Washington experiences in Lincoln’s time, Mr. Dopcw said: “While I was there Mr. John Ganson, of Buffalo, was a member of congress. Ills face and his head were hairless and polished like a biil'arrl ball He wns a democrat, but supported the president. The conditions of the army were very blue in the east and in tho west. Ganson came in one day and said: 'Mr. President, I am risking my reelection in supporting your war measures The campaign seems very unsatisfactory. Of course I will not give out anything you tell me. What is the situation at the front?’ Mr. Lincoln, in his searching and sad way, looked at him for a moment as if he were about to reveal the secret of the whole army, and then tumbled Ganson out of the reception room by saying: ‘Ganson, how clean

you shave.”’ Th« Ftrat Metal.

Gold, because it was found pure and fairly tractable, was probably the first metal used by man. Copper, it is true, is found as a metal, but only in one comparatively restricted locality. Occasionally gold fish hooks have been discovered in graves in New Granada. In mining a tunnel in Cauca a gold

.oiac *0='■ Fall hook .va„-fouui ill 1 ? fifty feet under I *d .wo Summer OUt. bred to Claude ...Hu- ^ of ^ ^ ^ ^

what must have tho bed of a river. Copper fish hooks have been found in

I>ry Imnd Ilcrd 0C

[POLAND CHINA SWINE.

perior No. 12313. to farrow in June, ami Lkks from three prize-winning pen»—8. C. B. Leg* SSkhx, Silver Lac* Wyandotte* and Barred P. Tv,. *, 41 annnr or*? for2*ittintr* from

irr-w-v . t' 25D?r sitting, orfor2Bitting* from SVw'Tv ‘ C50PPF W shiify, proprietor 4 WO “ I

i,'eueniff . U n. f many of tho ancient iniriui uiounus ol Bklnbridge, md.i J. ¥ru ^ —*

Gamekeeper* Scorn Anything L©*§ Than a Five-Found Note. A retired Anglo-Indian officer has published his notions on the subject of "tips.” Thackeray’s Col. Newcome, It will be remembered, made a sort of royal progress through England on his return from a long sojourn in Cue east, rewarding postboys with gold and making waiters happy with handfuls of silver, says the London Daily News. This reminds the Anglo-Indian officer that there ai4; no tippers so hardened and profuse as Anglo-Indian tippers. It is so novel for them to be waited on by white faces that they feel inclined to reward the most trifling sen-fee They are, moreover, pleased to be at home again, and touched with the civility they meet with in their journeyings to and fro their hands arc everlastingly in

their pockets.

'ihe retired Indian officer does not object to tips in the abstract, but ha enters a protest against the giving of gold to any domestic in a house where one has been staying. It spoils the market and is unfair to those with slender purses. Five shillings, ho considers, is a sufficient reward for a little extra trouble. This is very well, but what about the gamckei ^ers a large class, as some of us know to our cost— who are accustomed to return tho shooting guest’s sovereign with a polite intimation that they never accept “less

than papery

Kept Iloth Placca,

When the czar was made colonel of the Uoyal Scots Grays an officer of the regiment said to his orderly: “Donald, have you heard that the new emperor of Russia has been appointed colnim! of the regiment?” “Indeed, sir," replied Donald, “it is a vera prood thing." Then, after a pause; “Beg pardon, sir, but wull he be able to kvvp both

pUeus?" ...

TOURNAMENT AT BOMBAY English and Kpglment* .Join n Military and Athletic 8ports. A great deal of interest was manifested in Bombay, recently, in the naval and military tournament. Encouraged by tho success which attended a similar programme previously given, Gen. Gatacre and the committee decided to add many new features, with the result that crowds assembled on each day to witness tho various contests. Tickets wore resold at a premium, and even trees overlooking the oval were thronged with sightseers. The second evening, says a foreign exchange, tho tournament was attended by the governor general. Lord Harris, who, as a famous athlete, enjoyed the capital sport provided. Little Miss Braekenbury, attired in the royal artillery uniform und escorted by troops, rode up to his excellency and presented him witli a programme. Immediately afterward a bugle sounded, and the military tattoo commenced. All the tunes were Scotch, the pipers of the Royal Scots regiment opening the proceedings. Five hundred men next marched in line, carrying colored lanterns, while twenty military bands concluded the music with a splendid rendering of the “Old Hundredth.” Driving by the royal artillery, and exhibition of skill with Indian clubs by two native regiments, tentpegging, trick-riding, and gun drill by men of the royal navy were warmly appreciated by the multitude. The Parsec volunteers from Peona were especially popular. A CRUEL PRAYER. Mohammedan* Plead for the Destruction of Unbeliever*. The following is an exact Jran.slation from the Arabic of the official prayer of Islam, which is used throughout Turkey and daily repeated in the Cairo “Azhar” university by ten thousand Mohammedan students from all

lands:

“I seek refuge with Allah from Satan, the accursed. In the name of Allah the Compa isionate, the Merciful! O, Lord of all Creatures! Oh, Allah! Destroy the infidels and polytheists, thine enemies, the enemies of the religion! O, Allah! Make their children orphans, and defile their abodes, and cause their feet to slip, and give them, and their families, and their households, and their women, an<i their children, und their relatives by marriage, and their brothers, and their friends, and their possessions, utal theii race, and thi ir wealth, and their lands, us booty to the Moslems, O, Lorfl of all Creatures!” In all the other religions of even the semi-civilized nations of the globe there can be no prayer found to parallel this cruel appeal of Islam to the spirit of inhumanity. Bulgaria. Damascus, Lebanon and Armenia may or may not be mer** hotbeds of nnti-Turkish intrigue: with such a national prayer Turkey stands self-condemned in the eyes of the world.

The doctor’s name is familiar to the citizens of Putnam county as many of the leading journals and newspapers of the day in reporting his remarkable cures of apparj ently hopeless cases have said that if miracles were performed in this ) day many of i)r. Weaver's cures l certainly belonged to this class.

Dn Odbll Weaver of the Weaver Medical Tnstiti tr, Terre Haute, Indiana, has been visiting (ireencastie for one year. He has established a branch office at the C ommerctal

Hotel, (Jreencastle, Indiana.

The Weaver Medical Institute is the largest institution of its kind in the West, being

fully equipped, emidoying a staff of eminent specialists skilled in the treatment of

special and chronic diseases.

Dr

ecial and chronic •

)r. Weaver doe* not claim to have any mysterious gift or supernatural powers, but owing to YEARS of BXPERRIENCB and CONSTANT ASSOCIATION AND PRACTICE with the WORST forms of chronic diseases he has attained a degree of perfection whereby he can locate your disease and determine whether or not it is curable in a few moments. The doctor’s hospital advantages on both sides of the Atlantic have been surpassed by

n< no M l Ml DI( i NI - I ' RNI8HBD

SPECIALTIES: Catarrh, Asthma, All Diseases of the Head, Throat and Lung*, Blood Disease*. 8kin Disease*, Chronic Diseases, Disease* of the Liver, Kidneys, Bladder

and Rectal Diseases.

SPECIAL: The doctor has for years treated successfully all private diseases of men. The most difficult of these diseases he guarantees to cure, such as seminal emissions, drain in urine, nightly losses resulting in loss of memory, lack of confidence and nervous-

ness, leading to loss of manhood and insanity.

All diseases of women treated successfully without the use of rings, pessaries or sup-

porters.

CONSULTATION AND EXAMINATION FREE and solicited. The doctor will beat his branch office at ti e Commercial Hotel, Greencastle, Saturday, April 27

Call early as his rooms are always crowded.

T -rre Haute, Ind.

Permanent address, 111 Soutb 5th Street,

MILLINERY.

The ladies of Greencastle and vicinity should call and see Mrs. Lillie Allen's new stock of Millinery. No old goods to display, but everything new and the latest in spring

and summer styles.

FOUTLAM) AND LOV18Y1LLE CEMENTS Royal or Acma Cements, Wall Plaster, Plaster Paris, Lime and Hair, always ou hand

and Cheapest prices.

Wareroom, 416 East Seminary St. Box 773 XX. X3. IXXJXtXjXDY,

GREENCASTLE, IND. Iy30

7 Door East Central National Hank, South Side Public Square. 3mi7

The Most Sen slide

mm] TO SIGHT Isa pair of Gold Spectacles, and the only place to have them correctly fitted is at 106 East Washington street. No one every sold glasses so cheaply in Greencastle. Don’t trait year iyou to ■] rs and

jewelers.

G. W. BENCE, M. 0.

Notice of A <hn in istrotion.

Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed ny the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Putnam county. State of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of Hannah Williamson, late of Putnam county, Indiana,

deceased.

Said estate is supposed to be solvent. Dated this 4th day of April, 1886.

SOLOM

Stiff

Frank D. Ader. Atty

AON O. ADER, Administrator.

A MORAL AND NICE BOOK.

EVEN CHANGE

Pound can Barwick’s Best Baking Powder and 20

pounds Standard Granulated sugar, for $1.00 q, c. Neals, Veterinary Snrgeon.

Ornduate of the Ontario Veterinary College,

r. * j) r p ,i,. i> 1 and memoer Of itie oncario VctcTiLaiy MeJi tyt'Cf* JkrOUllOt iLjn.1 awoou, j ca j society. AL diseases of domeaticanimal* Farlv Ohio thft Rural carefully treated. Office at Cooper Brothers’ r.aiiy Limo, tn« »urai LiTery 4 ublCi Greencastle, Ind. All calls, lorkers, 4iNI bushels per acre, i day and night, promptly attended. Firing Seed Sweet Potatoes. r> '

Nolle** of 4«fniiiilNlriiilon

s TS1 n A Notice is herein-givc-1 that the mderRiKn' d

GiiA am Flower

l Moser, lato of Putnam county, Indiana,

Best Green and Dried Fruits.

Tobacco, 25 cents per pound. Tea, - 25 cts per pound.

. dcC.-a.>cd.

Said estate is supposed to he solvent. Dated this 15th day of April, IK95.

HIRAM

i, of April, lM9o.

Si OS EH,I Administrator.

What a Young Lady Thought of tho Nov Testament. It was once tho good fortune of a Harper’s Bazar writer to read, in the Island of Fnyal, a letter just written by a young lady of I’ortutruese-Hngli.vh birth who had been reading the hew Testament for tho first time. It was t\ orth while to see such a letter, for many persons must have felt, first or last, with Thoreau, that it would be a delightful thing- for anyone to encounter those wonderful narratives as a fresh discovery, in mnturer years, apart from all the too familiar associti tlons of Sunday school and sermon. Such, as any rate, was this young lady’s experience, and her statement of the result was at least a little astonishing. She wrote, in her half-foreign F.nfflish. to an American friend in these words: “Did you ever happen to read a book called the New Testament? If not. I advise you to do so. 1 have just been reading It one of these days, and 11 find it a very moral aad nice bwU "

B. F. BARWICK

No. 11 North Side Square, GREENCASTLE, IND.

^oii**** «■! AitminlMirHiton. Notics is hereby given that the undersigned has bci-n appoint; a by the Ciirk of the Circuit Court of Putnam county, State of Indiana, Administratrix of the estate of John M. j Howard, late of Putnam county, Indiana,

deceased.

: Haid estate is supposed to he solvent. 6mlf> Dated this 17th any of April, 1H95. CATHARINE HOWARD, J H. James, Atty. 311 Administratrix.

NHllMERY MILlHiTRY

E. al-

Everything pertaining to heail-1 wear can bo found at Mrs. D. Preston’s. Styles and prices

ways correct.

You are cordially invited to call. MRS. D. E. PRESTON. Mies Mary Stephens, one of the best j trimmers ever in the city, has ; charge ?f the Trimming Dept.

We

Employ Young

Men

to distribute mir ndwertise-

DU bl<

tents in jmrt payment for a high grade o?k clone Diitll tho bicycle aixlveb'aoU* roves

satisfactory.

Young Ladies m ^ T ^™L h0 If boys or girls apply they muat be well recointueudod. W rite fur partloularu-

ACME CYCLE COflPANY,

ELKHART. IND.

.*...»

Hitrhesl price paid for liideb, pett« ami tallow by Vaucleave a Bon. utt