Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 18 May 1895 — Page 2
Over Thirty Years Without Sickness.
ON AN OYSTER BOAT.
Mr. II. Wettsteix, a well-linown, rnterprising citizm of Byron, 111., ■writes: “Before I psiid much attention to regulating the bowels, I hardly knew a well day; but since I learned the evil results of constipation, and the efficacy of
AYER’S
Pills, 1 have not had one day’s sickness for over thirty years — not one attack that did not readily yield to this remedy. My wife had been, previous to our marriage, an invalid for years. She had a prejudice against cathartics, but as soon as she began to use Ayer’s Pills her health was restored.”
AYERS W Cathartic Pills Hedal and Diploma at World’s Fair. To Restore Strength, take Ayer’s Sarsaparilla,
ROASTED
COFFEE,
The best article in town, Also the fullest stock of
And
L. WEIK&CO.
^\\e 0\Ae*\ S\.ov«t v\\ C\rctwctv%\\.e
Best
5 Cent Cigars Verbenas, Cubanolas, Josephines,
KIEFER’S.
D. E. WILLIAMSON, u\. A.iu.v\n, GKKKNt ASTI.K, 1M>. Business in all courts attended to promptly RAILWAY TIME-TABLE-BIG- FOUR.
EAST.
fNo. 14, Night Express 2:60 am ♦ “ 2, Ind’p’lis Accommodation 8:42 am ♦ “ 18, 8. W. Limited 1:52 pm ♦ 44 8, Mail 4:35 p m ♦ 44 10, Knickerbacker Speaial 5:33 pm
WEST.
♦No. 7, Night Express 12:22 am ♦ 44 11, Knickerbacker Special 12:68 am ♦ 44 9, Mail 8:42 a m ♦ 44 17, S. W. Limited 12:49 p m t “ 3, Terre Haute Accomodation. 6:23 pm ♦Daily. fDailv except Sunday. Train 14 hauls sleepers St. Louis to Boston and Columbus, sleeper and coaches to Cincinnati. No. 2 connects for Chicago, Cincinnati and Michigan division points. No. 1H hauls sleeper for Washington, D. C., via C. & O., sleeper for New York and connects for Columbus, O. No. « connects for Cincinnati and for Michigan division points to Wabash. No. 10, “Knickerbocker Special,’’ sleepers for Y. Nos. 7, 11, 9 and 17 connect in Union Depot, 8t. Louis, with Western roads. No. « connects at Paris with Cairo division for points south and at Mattoon with I. C. for points north. Effective Sept. 30. F. P. HUE8T1S, Agt. VAN DA LI A LINE! Is effect Jaa. 20,1S05. Trains leave Qrecncai tie, It d., FOR THE WEST. Mo. 21, Dally 1:85 p m, for 8t. Louis. “ 1, Daily 12:52 p m, “ “ •* 7, Daily 12:26 a m, “ “ “ 6, Daily 9:01 a m, “ “ “ 15, Ex flea 8*10 a m, “ “ “ 8, Ex. Sun..... 6:28 p m, “ Terre Haute Trains leave Terre Haute, No. it>, Ex. Sun-... r.uo a m, “ Peoria. “ 77, Ex. Sun 8:55 pin, “ Decatur. FOR THE HAST. No. 20, Daily.__... 1:35 p m, for Indianapolis. 8, Daily.3:35 p in, “ “ “ 8, Daily.__ 8:32 a m, “ “ “ 12, Daily.2:85 a m, “ “ « 16, Ex. Sun 5:28 Dm, “ “ •< 4, Ex. Sun “ “ “ 2, Daily e.icpm, ‘ “ For complete Time Card, giving all trains and stations, and for full Information as to rates, through cars, etc., address J S. DOWLING, Agent, Oreencastle, Ind. Or W. F. Brpnneb, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Louis, Mo.
MONON ROUTE
i •
e>) louttviilt. NtwfaaAirriCMCMo RY.co.’b
Going North —1:20 a m, 12:05 p m; local, 12:05 p m Going South — 12:47 a m, 2:22 p m; local, 1:25 p in J. A. MICHAEL, Agent.
Trim Little Vessels That Are Seen on Chesapeake Bay.
Hew the Bivalves Are Dragged from Their Salt Water Dels — Tool, and Method* of Work of the Oyetermen -Selling the Catch.
FORTY-SIX MARRIAGES A DAY. CAPTURED BY MILLIONS.!
These vessels are usually manned by four or five men and a cook. A good supply of food is always taken on board before leaving port, but should this run short there arc plenty of the choicest 03’sters to be had for the opening. In Chesapeake bay, says the Washington Post, the oyster is indigenous, and there and In its tributaries are where the “beds” are located. To these the “sea farmer," or oysterman, goes, loads up his boat with "seed,” and, sailing to his “grounds," throws off his cargo of young oysters. Infant oysters so treated are called “layovers." Standing on the deck of each oyster boat Is a tall machine, consisting of two Iron uprights with a reel mounted between them, at the end of which is a crank and a system of cogs and ratchets. This is the “winder.” Coiled around the winder is nu iron chain, to which is attached the “dredge.” The dredge is made of an iron rod and a bagshaped web of interwoven iron rings, and a row of teeth fastened to the tooth bar is near the lower end. At the side of the boat are long iron rollers, over which the chain and dredge rolls, dredge catches and “chocks.” Such is the tackle used for the planting, transplanting, and catching of the oyster. The spawn of the oyster is deposited during the summer and adheres to some object in the water. An old shoe, a bottle, a lost anchor, or the cast-off shell of a crab is as good as anything for the young oyster to cling to until he has the nerve to let go and paddle his own canoe. In about two weeks it is apparent to the eye that these objects have become covered with enterprising young oysters. A single oyster shell will hold hundreds of them. lu a year they are as large as a nickel, and in three years they will be marketable. A great many oystermen raise their own seed. It is done by using the oyster shells which have been opened at the restaurants and bringing them to their beds, where they are thrown overboard. This is done usually between July and August. The spawn adhering to these shells soon forms thrifty young oysters. When inshore oysters are taken into deep water it is called transplanting. After they have been about a month in deep water they are gathered for the market. Sometimes strong winds so cover these transplanted oysters with sand and mud that the dredgers cannot reach them. Some oysters are marketable in a year, while others require from two to five years. When the oyster boat arrives at the “grounds” the anchor is cast and the dredge thrown overboard. A rope is always attached to the dredge to prevent its loss in case its chain breaks. Then the anchor is “shipped,” sail set, and the boat sails over the grounds, dragging the dredge behind. When she is “brought to” the cranks turn and the rattling chain brings slowly to the surface the dredge and its catch. It is hauled aboard over the roller, and its contents, consisting of crabs, crawfish, young sharks, fish, seaweed and oysters, are dumped on the deck. The fish are thrown back in the water, but if “borers,” “conks," or starfish are found they are killed, for they destroy the oyster. The dredga is dumped overboard again and tho boat sails back over the same ground, and so sails from daylight until dark. Before the dredge was invented a wide rake, with curved teeth and a long handle, was let down into the beds, and by hand the oysters were hauled on deck. This was called “tonguing.” There is as wide difference between a “tonguing iron” and a “dredge” as there is between a hand scythe and a two-horse reaper. From heaps of oysters on the deck the best are separated from the “plants,” undergrown oysters and “trash.” For this purpose the culler uses as slender liammer called a “culling iron,” that is round at one end and flat at the other. With this he hauls the oysters towards him and knocks the clusters of oysters apart and sorts them into piles called “cullings," “selects” and “extras.” The "plants," un-der-grown, and empty shells are tlirown back, as they help keep the “ground above the mud." The night is always welcome to the oysterman, for his work is ha-d, though accompanied by much novelty. The coming up of the dredge is always attractive, for its gatherings are never alike.
A Novel nreton Custom with M*ny Plctoresqos and Mirthful Features. The peasants of Brittany and their quaint dress and customs have long furnished ri«h material for the artist* aud writers who flock thither in summer. It Is in the winter, howev- , er, when the painters and frivolous Parisians have flitted homeward, j that a unique ceremony takes place in ; the picturesque comfnune of Plougastel. | ‘ Since time immemorial, says the New j York World, it has been the custom ; there not to marry during Advent, aud i so early in January each year there is | a day set apart for the wholesale wedI ding of those who have succeeded in arranging their affairs of the heart during the holy season. The number of couples united on these occasions is generally above a score, but the record was broken this year when forty-six I were married in a single day. There is no hotter example of the 1 proverbial thriftiness of the Bre- i tons than this custom. The fami- 1 lies of the young people com- ! bine and secure from the inn- | keepers a considerable abatement in 1 the cost of the eatables and drinkables 1 which are consumed in large quantities : after the ceremony. A great number of people from neighboring towns are al- I ways present afl this annual knot-tying, i which is made exceedingly attractive by the picturesque costumes of the participants. The maidens wear white caps from which stream long, brightcolored ribbons. Their dresses are trimmed with gold fringe or yellow satin, and they wear light green or greenish yellow aprons. About the waist is bound a gold-fringed sash of blue silk. The men wear short trousers of brow f n cloth, round jackets of various shades of blue, worsted belts of tlie same color, green vests and black hats ornamented with white and blue ribbons. The religious ceremony is preceeded by the civil one at the Mairie, or town hall. At this, in order to conform with tho French law, it is necessary to read to each ccuple that lengthy portion of the code which relates to marriage. The strain upon the voice of M. Nicole, the mayor, was so great at the last occasion that he was compelled to devote two entire forenoons to the forty-six couples. After the ceremony at the church the newly wedded pairs, observing an ancient custom, proceed in a body to a shrine of great antiquity outside the village, after which they scatter among the wine shops of the town, where feasts have been prepared for them and their guests. This year the accommodations wore insufficient, and many ate in tents. The fetes which follow the weddings last a week and are marked by a vast consumption of food and drink, the singing of Breton songs, and general mirth and Jollity. For generations none of the inhabitants lias ever married outside of I’lougastel, for he or she who seeks a mate in the world beyond the narrow bounds of the commune is cond sinned to perpetual and complete ostracism.
How Shad and Herring Are Taken in Chesapeake Bay.
Immense Nets Which Require a Large Number of Men to Handle Th»m— Something About the fish Trade.
Not Merely an Ornament. The prince of VV’ales is said to have nn extraordinary' and accurate knowledge of the signs, colors and membership of all orders of merit. It is a matter in which he permits no trifling, too. At a recent state ball, a beautiful young girl wore a glittering jeweled decoration on her breast. She danced opposite the prince. When the quadrille was over, he said, gently: “That Is a pretty ornament. May I ask to whom It belongs?” “To Lord Blank,” said the'fTightened girl; “he is my fiance. He allows me to wear it.” “Can you unfasten it easily?” “Yes, your highness.” “Then may I ask you to take it off, aud to tell Lord Blank that it means something more than a bit of gold and a few diamonds to be worn merely as an ornament, even by a charming woman?”
ITALIAN LEGAL FUNCTIONARIES
Mlaor Officials Who Are Poorly Paid for Their Services. In Italy any unfortunate who owes 10 per cent, finds his little debt run up by sheriffs’ officers, tribunal expenses and all the manifold charges of notaries, attorneys and advocates to 300 per cent, before he has time to breathe or realize the situation, and the forced sales are so conducted that the property sold produces nothing for anyone except the state and'the auctioneers. The state takes its percentage first, says the Fortnightly Review, before even the creditors, and thus is caused the avidity by which all state officials and myrmidons drag to ruin, by intrigue and extortion, a large majority of the Italian taxpaying public. Note the salaries paid to the officials of the tribunals in Italy and judge If such officials are not invited and forced to ruin the mass of the people. Where a county court judge in England has £1,000 or £3,000 a year, he receives here the equivalent of £40, or perhaps £30, per annum. All the lesser functionaries are paid in proportion. The giudice conciliatore, who answers to the juge do la paix in France, and to the police magistrate in England, is paid sometimes at the rate of £30 per annum, sometimes not at all; the pockets of the appellants at his court must maintain him. It can readily be understood that all these hungry functionaries of the law, big and little, live on the public perforce, and that almost any iniquity or injustice may be obtained under their rule if money be largely enough and secretly enough expended. "Your splendor is my dishonor,” said Bacon to his magnificent liveried serving men, who rose to meet him when he entered court to stand upon his trial. The Italian functionaries may say to the Italian Themis: “That wo have coats to our backs and rings on our fingers is your dishonor, for you do not pay us enough to enable us to get either honestly.” Notwithstanding this miserable pay which they receive, It-
aly spends on the administration of law 135,000,000f.—i. e., 7,000,000f more than France (in comparison to the population) and 12,000,000f. more than England. The public who contribute all these millions get little or nothing for their money.
A Llttla Overawed.
W. S. Gilbert, the celebrated librettist, was lunching, not long ago, at a country hotel, when he found himself In company with three cycling clergy- I men, by whom he was drawn into con- I versation. When they discovered who 1 ho was. one of the party asked Mr. Gilbert “how he felt in such a grave , and reverend eoippany.” "I feel,” said ; Mr. Gilbert, “like a lion in a den of I Daniels. ” ‘
Too Drank to Prsy. A citizen of Montreal lately on a visit to Ottawa, says Life, while passing down the hotel corridor to his room at a late hour, happened to hear violent groans and sobs issuing from one of the ^ rooms. As the door was open, lie entered and recognized a fellow Montrealer, prominent in political and business circles, and famous for his religious and alcoholic tendencies. He was kneeling at his bedside, clinging to the side of the bed, and sobbing as though his heart would break. “What’s the matter, old man?" inquired our friend, touching the sufferer on the shoulder. “I'm so hl.rsted drunk I can’t say my prayers," was the tearful re- j spouse. I
Few outside of those living along the waters of Chesapeake bay have an idea of the quantity of fish taken during a successful season, nor are they cognizant of the means by which they are captured. They meet their destroyers immediatwly upon entering tho bay at Cape Charles and all the way up they encounter pound nets stretching out across their pathway like a fence from every point of vantage. This mode of fishing, says an eastern exchange, is a fixed trap fishing day and night, requiring no attention after it is once set except tho raising of the pound to take out the fish. It is unlike all other modes in use in its continuous fishing, and for this reason deserves condemnation. All the other devices are out of use some part of the day or night, thus giving the fish some chance to escape destruction. This moans of fishing extends up the bay on both sides until near the headwaters, when it is confined to the eastern shore alone.
Tlie fish which have successfully escaped the pounds next encounter the “gillers" In tho upper part of the bay, and judging from tho quantity of gill nets used from Poole’s island to Port Deposit one would think the shad would he annihilated, but not so. It is true they are not so plentiful now as in former years, but this is largely due to tho increased fishing operations further south, and were it not for the great assistance afforded by the operation I of the United States fish commission, which annually hatches and distributes from seventy-five million to one him-' dred million young shad fry, the sup- ’ ply would be wonderfully shortened.' There are about one hundred gillboats having headquarters hereabout, requir-! ing upward of three hundred men for I their operation. Tho boat used Is a round-bottomed skiff, with two leg-ol mutton sails. It is run by several men. About forty pounds of netting is used, made from linen thread as fine as cot-; ton. It is from three-fourths of a mile ^ to a mile in length and is put out at a j certain time of tide. The catch of these one hundred boats varies with the seasons. but with a moderately good year ■ it will reach about two hundred thousand shad, which are sent to the New York, Philadelphia, and other markets. It is when tho gillers have commenced fishing above Spesutia island chat tho Battery fish-hatching station is put in operation with the employment of about forty persons, mostly for the purpose of taking spawn. These workers are taken in a steam launch and distributed among the fishermen just before night and gathered up again after tho "drift” is made, all being provided with pans and implements neces sary for spawn taking. This is a source of revenue for the giller, as they are paid twenty-five cents for each shad squeezed and are allowed to retain tho shad, which is sold with their others, not much of the roe having been taken. There are operated from Spesutia Island northward a dozen or more huge hauling seines, some from the natural shore and some from floats, all of which catch quantities of fish, and some of which make a circuit when casting the net of at least three miles, requiring about four hours to make the haul, and the assistance of sixty men, and cither a steam engine at each end or several horses. These large seines give employment to about one thousand men each spring. The main dependence of these fisheries nowadays is mostly In their catch and pack of herring, although more or less shad and other fish are taken, owing entirely to the location of the fishery. There are salted in this vicinity annually about forty thousand barrels of herring, the approximate number of fish required for this pack being twenty million. Adding to this the estimated number sold fresh, the annual catch here of herring probably reaches close to thirty million. Herring have not been so plentiful for the last two or three years, although some big hauls are still made. It is not unusual for three hundred to four hundred barrels to be caught at a single haul.
With Nothing Hat Chine.* Metllclne* *n<. « Fair ot Hoots to Kat. A Chinese miner, who, with a com panion, was lost in the snow amid Iht rugged mountains of i’iumas cour.y. has been found, nearer dead than alive. For ten days, says the Oroville Mercury, he lived in a hollow tree, with nothing to eat but some Chinese medicine and scraps of leather cut from hi.s boots. When rescued by a party of white miners his feet, from which he had cut the boots for fool, were terribly frozen, and he was sc weak he could hardly move. The searchers could hud no trace of his companion, who is certain to have perished. There was a large number of Chinese mining at Brown's Hill, and February 2.7 two of tiie number left the camp to go to La I’orte. a distance of sixteen miles, to procure some Chinese medicine, for the use of the members of the camp. Then the weather was good, and the two Chinese proceeded safely over tho snow to La Porte, procured the medicine, stayed over night and started back the next morning. During their trip back on the 20th a snowstorm came up and the Chinese became bewildered and hopelessly lost in the rough, mountainous country. They each had different ideas as to which direction to take, and finally quarreled and separated. One of them had not gone far before he found a hollow tree, wherein he was somewhat sheltered from the storm. lie had matches with him and built a small fire, and, crouching over that, he lived for ten days. When their companions did not return to Brown’s Hill the Chinese became alarmed and went to La Porte, where they ascertained that they had been there and started back. Then the white men about Cascade and Lumpkin were notified and search parties went out. The other day John Kitriek, while searching with a companion for tlie lost man, noticed smoke down in a canyon. He went down there, and in a tree found tlie poor Chinese nearly dead. Leaving him there, Mr. Kitriek went for help, and the unfortunate man was taken to the settlement on a sled. His experience during those ten clays had been fearful. As the pangs of hunger came upon him he took off ids boots, parched them over the fire, and ate them and drank tiie medicine. When he found his boots were all gone and his feet frozen and he was so weak he could not stand, he had given up all hope. So grateful was lie that when camp was reached he gave his rescuers fifty dollars in gold dust, all that he had. He will recover.
GIVE AWAY’
A Sample Package (4 to 7 doses) ot Dr. Pierce’s-
PJeasant Pellet
To any one sending name and add res us on a postal card. OSCE USED THEY ARE ALWAYS IN FA VC * Hence, our object in sending them
broadcast
— OS TRIAL.
They absolutely cure Sick Headarho M iousTU-?*, Constipation. Coated Tongue, ly | Appetite, Dyspepsia and kindred d.-rang*
ments of the Stomach, Liver and Bow3
!-
Don't accept some substitute said
"just as good." I
The substitute costs the dealer less. It costs you ABOUT the same. ,] HIS projit is in the "just as good.Cl WHERE IS YOURS? ]
Address for Free Sample, yji
World’s Dispensary Medical Association, - ^ A’o. 663 Mala St, BUFFALO, N. DQ G. M. BLACK’S J
Lifer?, Sale aM Feed Sian
Franklin St., near northeast corn?? public square. So
Best Livery Rigs.
THE MALARIA MICROBE.
Au I(i<:lvirtual Organism of Independent Growth.
Farmers’ Teams Fed. Horses Boarde
tfiat
Oc
Call and see.
Wool Wante
Ot
tot an
Bridges & IHmlei '
FILLMORE, IND.. £
Pay the highest market prices for wool. them before selling. ba
Old Birds. A Georgia correspondent sends to the Youth's Companion tho true story of twoold geese: Mrs. Nancy Elder, a lady Bring near Griffin, Spauluing county, Ga., has a pair of geese that were given to her os a bridal present by her mother forty-seven years ago. They were procured for that purpose from a neigh-! bor, and are supposed to be at least a! half-century old. The old goose has! faithfully contributed eggs to tlie fam-1 ily table for all these years, having laid ’ last spring, and nprieuriug to be good I for some time yet. Tlie gander has not been so fortunate. He lost one eye some years ago, and recently a small negro boy knocked out the other one. j lu his blind old age, too, ne has been deserted, for Mrs. Elder has just bought Mother Goose a new mate.
An eminent Italian scientist, who is an acknowledged authority on malaria and its causes, tells us that no matter how saturated with moisture soil may be, it is not of necessity unhealthy. The malarial microbe is not a production of the soil, neither is it tho cause or effect of decaying vegetable matter. ! It is an Independent organism, and has as much an individual growth and development as sheep and cattle. It must be present in the soil in order to bring about those conditions known as malarial. It is an established fact that this microbe exists, as it has been cultivated and carefully observed. For its perfect growth aud increase, a temperature of about sixty-eight degrees Fahrenheit is necessary, and there must be a certain amount of humidity in the soil as well as free atmospheric action. Perfectly dry soil, or even that which is only slightly damp, will not present a favorable breeding-ground for malarial germs, and they either perish altogether or remain dormant until moisture puts the earth into more favorable conditions. The favorite and predisposing situations for malaria, then, are low places where there is 1 stagnant water. The colony once well established, the broiling sun of summer and the continuous and steamy moisture cause these small but mighty creatures to multiply with amazing rapidity, and the atmosphere becomes literally charged with them. To remain in these localities is to inhale and absorb them by the million. There is one saving possibility in the situation, and that is the cultivation and drainage of the soil. Malaria will not flourish on a thick sod. therefore a liberal sowing of grass and a reasonably thorough system of drainways and ditches are the safest remedies for this evil. Tree-planting is useless; even the eucalyptus has no preventive or counteractive quality whatever. To sum up the whole case, a good hay crop is the best Huti-malarial agent that can be applied t,-> low ground; for where grass roots form a thick mat, there is little or no atmospheric action on the soil, and, consequently, no microbes of this
much-dreaded sort.
“She umierstands perfectly.” “She ought to after tending a soda fount ) three seasons.—(Detroit Tribune.
A Humorous Fact |
About Hood’s Sarsapaiilla—it expels n humor and creates good humor. A ball for blood is what Hood's Sarsaparilla vig * oasly fights, and it is always victorious ^ e spelling foul taints and giving the r J fluid the quality and quantity of perfJ health. It cures scrofula, salt rheum, )>t| and other blood diseases. i#
Hood’s Pills act easily, yet promptly i efficiently on the bowels and liver. 25c.
Haydn had a long nose, an almost invarii
peculiarity of genius.
Use the best preparation to cure gray ti and baldness,—Hall’s Hair Renewer. 1
It is very hard to admit that a man you|
than yourselfhas more sense.
USE OF OLIVE OIL.
Uncleaned Filters. A correspondent of London Invention writes, with reference to the relative efficiency of water filters in the prevention of infective disease, which must certainly alarm those who rely on filters for the purity of their drinking water; "Some time ago 1 came across one of the charcoal type which had been accidentally broken, and after splitting the block in half it was found to contain in the center, at the mouth of the passage to the reservoir, a great number of living bodies, somewhat oi the shape of tadpoles and visible to the naked eye. Surely this must show that these filters not only do not arrest the germs, but, what is worse still, they r*>jiictinie» offer in themselves a place where these germs can multiply to any extent.”
In Ancient Times It Was Tin ployed in Various Ways. It is a curious and interesting fact that those fruits which in time past came to us from over the ocean, bathed in the atmosphere of the enchanting orient, are now acclimated upon the western coast of our own countrv. Of these one of the most noteworthy and picturesque is the olive. To all appearances one orange tree is precisely like its neighbor. But not so with the olive. No two are alike. Slow of growth, indescribably tortured and wrung by the elements, clinging to life with intense persistence, it wrests from earth and air that rich oil that fills a place subordinate to no other material. In the days of old it was used for sacrificial libations, as well as for anointing the person and hair; for food and as a vehicle for preparing other foods. In the days of Roman splendor olive oil was used much as we use butter. Like the Greeks tho Romans believed that the frequent anointing of tlie body was favorable to vigor and suppleness. With both nations it was an indispensable adjunct to the bath. Olive oil ranked next to breadstuff's in value asau agricultural production.
Marvelous Itesults,
From a letter written by by Rev.* J. d ?rmun, of Diamondale, Mich., we are mitted to make this extract: “I have hesitation in recommending Dr. King's : Discovery, as the results were almost n velous in the case of my wife. While I pastor of the Baptist Church at Rives Ji lion she was brought down with Pneumc succeeding La Grippe. Terrible paroxy of coughing would last hours with little terruption aud it seemed as if she could i survive them. A friend recommended King’s New Discovery, it was quick in work and highly satisfactory in resul Trial bottles free at Albert Allen Drug Stc
ReguUr size 50c. and fl.00.
The devil runs from the man he can’t
courage.
Relief In Six Hours* i Distressing Kidney and Bladder disea<
relieved in six hours bv the “New Qm South American Kidney Cure.” This ifl remedy is a great surprise on account ofa exceeding promptness ir* relieving pain?) the bladder, kidneys, back and every paral the urinary passage in male or female ! relieves retention of water aud pain in p#g ing it almost immediately. If you wR quick relief and cure this is yourr rern« Sold by Albert Allen, Druggist, Greencam Ind. ijfl
The mission of trouble is to show us
we need God.
Burhtin's Arnica Salve, f Thp Rest. SaU'e !»i (he wjr!d for 'll Hrniee.. Sores, Veers, Salt liheuui, I'm a; res, Tetter, Chapped Hnnds, ChilblX Corns, and nil Skin Eruptions, and pofl vi ly cures Piles, or no pay required. li jtuaranteed to Rive perfect satisfactioil
cent, per M
1.1
p--- per.
money refunded. Price 25 cents
For Sale by Albert Allen.
Through Buffet Sleeping Oar ’
Michigan Points.
CommencitiR about the middle of Ju and continuinR until the latter nart of 8 tember, the Vandalia Line will place in * vice elegant Bullet Sleeping Cars to be through to Petoskey-Bay View,
u K u vu ietosKey-nay view, via i< Haute, St. Joseph, Grand Rapids, Travc and Charlevoix. This will be the c
City
..■'J ‘ , • *■«* •« * v/» A. xtlia will lie UIlt3 4 line of throuRh cars from St. Louis to delight fill and cool resorts of Michif Only one chanee of cars to Mackinac Isl* F° r detailed information address oen Vandalia Line Agent, or E. A. Ford, Gem
Passenger Agent, St. Louis.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cryfor Pitcher’s Castoria.
When Baby was sick, we gave her Coatoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had ChildruLr, she gave them Castoria
