Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 June 1895 — Page 7
O not be deceived. ml'Mv 1 ^LLM. HLLlUa 'U ,kl M.tel unldllWm U'!! The following brands of - Using Doves for Comnasrcl*! Purpose*— It«nmrk»M«» Strength a Struct
Vhitc Lead are ft ill made by the ‘Old Dutch” process cf slow corosion. They are standard, and "ways trictly Pure White Lead fhe recoaur.endat h a of " Anchor,” “ Gonthcm,” “Eckstein,'' “B.ed head,” “Kentucky,” “Collier,” o you by your merchant is an vidence of his reliability, as he can jsell you cheap ready-mixed paints and bogus White Lead and make a larger profit. Many short-sighted dealers do so. , F° r , Colors —National Lead Co.’s Pure White Lead 1 inline; Colors, a one-pound can to a 25-pound keg or Lead and mix your own 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 ami color-card, free; it will probably •avc you a good many dollars. NATIONAL LEAD CO., New York. Cincinnati Branch, Seventh and Freeman Avenue, Cincinnati,
The Queer Existence of
Maids hi Ireland.
Their Lives ns Dull ns Dlteh Water Match Matsing un<l V. trrylng
About Th‘*lr Only
Diversion.
Best Route Southeast South Southwest is the Louisville and Nashville Railroad SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS TO PROSPECTIVE SETTLERS. Full Information cheerfully furnished upon application to I. L RIDOELY, 1. f. Pass. Agent, cmago, 111. C.I.ATSURE.Qen’l Pass. Agt., LonisTille, Ky. I
HUMPH 13 T! '5'S’ Dr. Humphrey.*' fcpertllr. ore selentmeally anil nrefally prepared Kemedlea, used for years in private practice and for over thirty years by the people with entire success. Every single Speclllc a special cure for the disease named. They cure without drugging, purging or reducing the system ami are In fact and deed the buverrigu Remedies uf the World. so. ensst. rairsa 1—Fevers. Congestions, Inflammations.. .'2T id—Worms, Worm Fever. Worm Colic ’*3 3— Teething; Colic, Crying, Waiefuluess .25 4— Diarrhea, of Children or Adults 25 T—Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis 25 L Neuralgia, Toothache, Faceache. 23 9—». mdaches. Sick Beadachc, Vertigo.. .25 10— Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Constipation .25 11— Huppressed or Fninfiil Periods .25 12— Whites, Too ITofuso Periods 25 13— Croup, Laryngitis. Hoarseness 25 14— Salt Kheum, Erysliielas, Eruptions.. .25 15— Uhruinntism, HluumaUo Pains .25 16— Malaria, Chills, Fever and Ague .23 19- Calarrh, Influenza, Cold In the Bead. .25 20- Whooplng Cough ,25 27 —Kidney Disenses 25 38—Nervous Debility 1.00 30— Criuarv Weakness ,25 31— Sore Tb rant, Quincy, Ulcerated Throat .25 11UMPIIKEYS’ WITCH HAZEL OIL, “ The Pile Ointment. , ’-Trial Size, 25 Cts. Sold by Druggists, or sunt on receipt of price. Ds. iniupusKTe Manual :H* psgw,) mailku rusv.. ■It SI’IIKSts’HKD. 10., Ill k uswinua It., IKlt VOBS. SPECIFICS.
Itif I Li!
XO DEIjAY.
SE0.M1A1I
No. 22 Sca!li JactsoB Street, GREEKCASTLE, IND,
Building Association stock bought and sold or takon as security
for loans.
Rural
Scott’s Emulsion
is useful to children, especially in two ways. It is Cod-
Structure lie-
ThereTr somewhat'eus-1 inTierdoS^Tpalt rVtt^ibert Children are always thin and pale when they do not tom of selling* birds by the mile, a bird warehouses in Idverpool, belonging* to B-SSlttlllclte CllOUgll fat. This SCeiTlS Strange, perhcipS, having made the five-hundred-mile the Mcriey d,.< ks and harbor board, it but it is literally true. UttleSS there is a healthy aS-fllg-ht being sold at a cent a mile, and for oeeurred to the assistant engineer In „ • ,: t „ a • ^l c j ai i c i i a j longer flights bringing proportionate charge of the work t ) make some in- SimilatlOn 01 tat 100(1 the blOOd becomes depleted, value, says the Washington Post. Some v< v i;-: lions into the strength of the tisSUCS Waste away, vitality beCOniCS low Pgpd the body
»tat r uaryr.™ h w ot h»a.S lan K uishe s for the need of proper nourishment
his loft of homers, and advertised them bricks, laid in ground mortar made
The life of a y "1113* ^i;-l In Ireland, if in one of the homin|v journals as a with Flintshire lime. This lime Is in a she be in a provincial town or in the whole loft for sale at a cent a mile, hiph degree hydraulic and has a repueountry, Isas biu^irish ns that of her Soon after he had a letter from a would- tation of making mortar of exception-
Fufr'i i ' sicr-. with fewer resources be purchaser inclosing a two-cent ally good quality. The Journal of the . _ _ . . _ than tin.* Uaglish pirl lu.s. It is In the stamp and asking him to ship a pair ol Royal Institute of Urilish architects, liver Oil emillsionized, tllUS being easily clSSimilated and country that ennui dry rots. The Irish birds that had flown a mile each. ! whieh describes the investigation, rendered palatable, with tllC HypOphoSphitCS Of Lime maiden of whatever cla-s has few re* The price of the noted homers of the states that the engineer conceived the It; 1^11 I* + ^ ‘ sources. K.'.ys the New York Indepen- country would he regarded as fabuloiv: happy thought of leaving a piece of it oOCla atKlecl tO tone Up ttlO ner\ T OUS System and dent. If she be of the 1’rotestant and by an outsider. Such bird.' a.s Ruby In the form of a horizontal beam, hav- nourish the bones. This Combination of these potent gentle class - the term Is nearly Mine, Darby, Luciana and I’eriott, ing a twelve-foot span and measuring niltripnt*; i<4 wLmf thin ohilrlr^n no^rl tr, rrino them synonymous- r he is reared In a drowsy who have broken the record of five hun- about two feet square in sect!, n. sev. n “ Ulrlenl S “p; 1 Uim CUlldren need tO gl\ 6 them and gentle conservatism that excludes, dre.l miles, could scarcely be brought ( courses in the height of a two-foot wall. UCSIl, COlOF and Vitality. Almost all children. 111.6 it, as a rule, books, except of the most for any price. The ends of the beams were not cut Don't be bersuadrd Ai acrebt n cuhctitutp / goodly sort, art, politics, and any inter-j The prices of other strains of fancy free from the rest of the work. This _ on P $ OStltUte / est in her neighbors She is generally pigeons are even higher, as there arc beam was then loaded with all the Scott & Bownc, New York. All Druggists. 50c. and £1. wrapped in love or in cotton wool, is fewer breeders who handle them, and : weight that could be conveniently piled ——--—i—. - ■— .
gentle, and most innocent of the world , they arc not prolific. Our Washington 1 upon it, with no appreciable deflec-I and all appertaining thereto. Irish j fancier sold half a dozen tumblers, tion or other sign of weakness resultgirls have not the training of the fin- after the New York show, for one hun- | ing. Two courses were then cut off gers that the English girl usually has; dred and sixty dollars, besides about ' and the whole weight again put they have not the resource of needle- j thirty dollars the birds netted him in on, but without result. The beam work or fancy work except to a slight ' prizes at the show. lllondins, owls, j was further reduced by a course, extent. Any departure, such as lit- ; dragons, turbettes and jacobins all leaving it four courses, or four-
crary inclination, would be little short have their fanciers from a purely artisof scandal. The wings of home brood tic standpoint, but the runts, so called,
bttmil
Mr
I>ry I^and Ilerdof
POLAND CHINA SWINE.
over such a girl, and in the shadow of them she is likely to have dreams of discontent if she be of the imaginative kind. There are not even the poor to visit as there would be in England. Of course for a score of families such as tliis there is one which enjoys itself, whereof the young women follow the hounds and the mother rides to the meet in her pony phaeton. This is the class which gives its daughters a season in town and has relays of visitors, and entertains the officers from the nearest garrison towns. l!ut as a rule the lives of Irish gentlewomen are narrower, more colorless, and far more conservative than those of their Eng-
lish sisters.
The dearth of young men in every place but the metropolis is a melancholy feature of social life in Ireland. Families cannot afford to keep their sons at home idle, while in all classes except the most humble it is a tradition that the daughters should stay at homo and go white-handed. 1 have heard of evening parties where half u dozen cavaliers, ranging from eighteen to eighty, were apportioned to thirty or forty ladies. True, I have seen nearly as much disproportion at a Norfolk tennis party, but there one did not so pity the maids, who were in many eases birds of passage, and in other places had many
opportunities for pleasure.
The higher education lias scarcely reached the Irish country homes. In Dublin there is an excellent women’s college, the Alexandra, but its pupils are mainly drawn from the professional and mercantile classes of Dublin itself. In the country places women are leading very much the stagnant lives of the women of the 30’s. They have the gentler virtues and are not numerous enough—if that be not an unfair and ignoble explanation—to form the little coteries which in other lonely 1 places are apt to degenerate into tattlers and gossips. They have little outdoor life. There is no reason why Kathleen and Eily should not be amateur gardeners, for instance, and assist the old gardener, who is rather handicapped for help; but there is the old tradition of the helplessness and softhandedness of the young ladies, often enough they pine and fret in the lonely and lovely country. For, if you will observe, the beauty of a place becomes meaningless to the blunted senses of
people lonely for their kind.
In this class match-making is, no doubt, going out of fashion. It y’et prevails in the smaller farming class and among the shop keepers of the country towns. It demolishes honest sentiment where it exists as a custom. A girl said to me one day in a country shop, a handsome, clever girl: “What for should I save my money? If I stinted and scraped year in and year out, what good would it do me? There’s nobody in this town to marry only ould shows of widowers, an’ they’re lookin’ for a girl with three hundred dollars.” I had said nothing of marriage, and her non sequitur meant that in her mind the possession of money was closely connected with getting a husband. She only sniffed a scornful disbelief when one hinted at the existence of such a thing as love. The match-making customs have been too often described for me to go over them here. My father l,»i.-» oftsu assisted at them when cattle-buying in Munster, and has even brought one or the other to terms by “splitting the difference” in the number of pounds or cattle or sheep that were to make the dowry. There is generally a convenient Intermediary of this sort present, though it is with outward reluctance the parties give in, ami ''only because they wouldn’t go ag'in Mr. ’s word.” All the time the boy and girl are gazing shyly and awkwardly at each other in an adjoining room, not knowing whether they are to bo husband nnd wife, or if the “bargain” will be
broken off.
The strange tiling is that the system works well. Irish women are of all women most faithful to the marriage vow. Domestic ties in Ireland are very close and tender. Occasionally there is such a tragedy as a girl coming fresh from a convent, school beincr handed over to a man fit to be her grandfather. Even then the tragedy does not end in unfaithfulness; and an unfaithful wife, even where the .people are less innocent
are a very profitable marl^-t breed who, for practical utility, outclass even the homers. They grow almost as large as chickens, and while common pigeon squabs bring only from fifteen to thirty cents, the runt squabs are worth from
fifty cents to one dollar.
Another class of birds that are reared
teen inches deep, and the ends were also cut free from the other work—the mortar beds of the twelve-inch bearings being left untouched. A centrally placed load of five tons fifteen hundred weight was then gradually piled upon it, mid was borne for several days without apparent effect upon the brickwork. Finally the weight was increased to six tons nine hundred-weight twenty-three
CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK
G1K, EIS :sr C-AMS-r Zj!
1 AST HD.
V*\yy\\\av.«., ^>0,000
1 > I UEOTOItJ^t
R. L. O' Hair, Pres.; M. F. McUafie, Vice Pres ; M. 7). Rridjes, Cash.; J. L. Handel, Asst. Cash.; E. B. Evans, W. ll.'Allee, F. A. Arnold. S. A, Pays, Quinton Broadstreet.
by the thousands every year fur com- | pounds, which was sustained for thirty mercial purposes is the snow-white ; hours, when the beam collapsed during pigeons, which, when stuffed and j the night and came down in pieces mounted, form the “doves” in funeral more like broken timber than anything floral decorations. There is one firm I cdso. Other tests were made with simi-' in New Jersey that rears these birds by larly astonishing results, but the above\ the thousand, stuffing and selling them I are sufficient to show what really firstfrora nine to eleven dollars a dozen, and | rate brickwork in hydraulic lime will
supplying nearly the whole country
with them.
::el_ oxd:
HINDOOS OUGHT TO EE GOOD. For They Itcllavo in 130 Frlzhtful and Separate Divisions of the Bower World. It is a mystery to enlightened western nations how the Hindoos ever man-
stand.
JAPAN’S HIGH AMBITION. She Hopes to He the Center of a New
and Hlsh Civilization.
In “The Far East,” a book by Mr. Henry Norton, appears the following speech, made by Count OUuma, cx-min-
aged to evolve such a frightfully exag- ; ister of foreign affairs, in the Japanese gerated idea of hell—as much of an diet just after the present war began, enigma, perhaps, as our fantastic ideas j It is probably a good summing up of of the infernal regions will be to the | Japanese hopes and feelings.
more enlightened races of the coming ages. The Hindoos believe in a plurality of hells, one hundred and thirtysix in all. This gigantic apartment
The European powers arc already showing symptoms of decay, and the next century will see their constitutions shattered and their empires in
house, which has been especially pre-j ruins. Even if this should not quite
pared for the souls of the damned, is of unthinkable length and breadth, and has walls more than one hundred miles in thickness. The intense heat of the interior keeps these walls at a white heat, and through their many loopholes shines light of such intense brightness that it bursts the eyeballs of all who look in that direction, “even though they be removed from the fires by a distance of four hundred leagues.” As each soul is taken from one apartment to the other it is invariably met by Yamaki, the Hindoo Plato, on exaggerated devil two hundred and forty miles high, who has hairs on his body which stand out like palm trees. In each of these subdivisions the tortured one is treated to something new and unique in the line of misery. In one he has his toe and finger nails plucked out, and the empty sockets which formerly held his eyes filled with molted wax, and then ha* horns inserted in the places which in other days were oc-
cupied by the organs of vision. In an-
other he is forced to have his teeth pulled and heated to a white heat, and is then compelled to swallow them, along with large quantities of pepper
cakes and boiling oil.
Thackeray'* Joke.
While Thackeray was delivering in Boston his lecture on the “Four Georges,” he was a constant guest of Mr. George Ticknor, the author of a work on Spanish Hterature. Though the two men were great cronies, they disagreed on many a point. Ticknor was small, but combative Thackeray towered above him, and generally managed to have the last word. Mr Healy, in his “Reminiscences of a Portrait Painter,” tells a good story of Thackeray's humorous way of ending a discussion. The discussion had been very lively—it was about some point in history—when Thackeray, suddenly putting a hand on each shoulder of his host and looking down upon him, exclaimed: “It would never do for two such broken nosed old coves as we arc to fall out and quarrell” A general laugh ended the dispute. Thackeray, when a boy, had his nose broken by accident; whereas Ticknor, by a freak of nature, had a queer little pug nose that had a broken look.
happen, their resources will have be come exhausted in unsuccessful attempts at colonization. Therefore, who is fit to be their proper successors if not ourselves? What nation except Germany, France, Russia, Austria and Italy can put two hundred thousand men into the field .inside of a month? As to their finance, there is no country where the disposal of surplus revenues gives rise to so much political discus-
sion.
“As to intellectual power, the Japanese mind is in every way equal to the European mind. More than this, have not the Japanese opened a way to the perfection of a discovery in which foreigners have not succeeded even after years of labor? Our people astonish even the French, who arc the most skillful among artisans, by the cleverness of their work. It is true the Japanese are small of stature, hut the superiority of the body depends more on its constitution than on its size. If treaty revision were completed, and Japan completely victorious over China, we should become one of the chief po.vers of the world, and no power could engage in any movement without first consulting us. Japan could then enter into competition with Europe as the representative of the oriental races.”
cures of appar-
The doctor’s name is familiar to the citizens of Putnam county ns many of the leading journals and newspapers of the day in reporting
his remarkable
ently hopeless cases have said that if miracles were performed in this day many of Dr. Weaver's cures certainly 1 elonged to this class. Dr. Odbll Weaver of the Weaver Medical Institute, Terre Haute, Indiana, has been visiting Greencustlc for one year. He has established a branch office at the Commercial Hotel, Greeiicastle. Indiana. The Weaver Medical institute is the laroist institution of its kind in the West, being fully equipped, employing a staff of eminent specialists skilled in the treatment or special and chronic diseases. Dr. Weaver does not claim to have any mysterious gift or supernatural powers, but owit’g to YEARS of EZPERRIENCE and CONSTANT ASSOCIATION AND PRACTICE with the WORST forms of chronic diseases he has attained a degree of perfection whereby he cau 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 none kLL MEDICINES FURNISHED SPECIALTIES: Catarrh, Asthma, Ai ? Diseases op the Head, Throat and Lungs, Blood Diseases. Skin Diseases, Chronic Diseases, Diseases 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 nervousness. leading to loss of manhood and insanity. All diseases ok women treated successfully without the use of rings, pessaries or sup-
porters.
CONSULTATION AND EXAMINATION FREE and solicited. The doctor will be at his
branch otllce at the
Commercial Hotel, Greencaslle, Saturday, June 8. C.»U early as hia rooms are always crowded. Permanent address, 114 South Eth Street,
Terre Haute, Ind.
She Wanted It All.
A three-year-old stood with her nurse at a soda fountain one afternoon and experienced her first glass of soda water. First she watched the mixing of the beverage with the gravest and intensest interest, her big brown eyes following every movement of the operator. Then she insisted upon taking the tall tumbler in her own two tiny hands and draining it all by herself, without the aid of even a spoon. Up, up, tipped the glass and all the syrupy liquid slipped down the three-year-old's appreciative oesophagus, until there was nothing left but several inches of foam. Then the throe-year-old took her face out of the tumbler. Two big tears were in her eyes, and
her lips trembled. “Why, what’s the
and primitive than of old, is practically matter, Maggie?" cried the nurse. And
a thing unknown.
Maggie burst forth: “I—I-
the suds!”
■ean’t drink
Il<ta<l niifl Heart.
The views of the elevator boy on tlie HI® One t irtue. new woman are worth repeating. Said The late Uev. Dr. Lord, of Buffalo,
he: “They talk about the new woman; officiated at the funeral of one of i although her husband warmlyprotest-
I haveRnme pies' for' Rale ^ I don’t know what she is exactly, but Buffalo’s notoriously rich and wicked ! ^ The result, according to hearsay.
HE WANTED TO LICK ENGLAND. Amusing Interview with an Irishman Which Hocretary Gresham Enjoyed. Secretary Gresham usually walks from his hotel to the state department. The other morning, says the Washington Post, while on his way through Lafayette park he was stopped by a little, white-haired old Irishman, who doffed his hat, and, holding it in his hand, thus accosted him: “Is this Judge Gresham?” “Put on your hat, my man, or you'll catch the grip," the secretary replied. “I am the judge.” "Well, judge,” the little old man replied, ‘ ii n justr tills way: I have been reading in the papers that we stood a good chance to have a war with England. I have been waiting for such a chance to get in a few licks for the old country ever since I left St. Patrick’s blessed land. Sure, and I hope you are not going to take it away from me
now.”
“And so you want, to go war?" the
secretary asked.
"Indeed I do, if England’s the spalpeen to bo licked, though I know I would get killed. But when I came back, judge, sure I would vote for you
for president.”
“Well,” said Secretary Gresham, restraining a smile, “send your address to the state department, nnd if we have war I'll notify you in time to get
ready." I.mly Randolph C h irch'.ll’H Taltoolnc.
Lady Randolph Churchill, it is said, is the only woman in the English peerage who can boast of having been tattooed. The operation was performed while traveling in India and was suggested by noticing the process being done by a British soldier on a sailor. She had the artist Drought before her and asked for some designs. Ho suggested the symbol of eternity—a snake holding its tail in its mouth. Lady Churchill was pleased and decided on it,
Xe^tiiig of lioiinl of Jlevieir. Tn pursuance of section one hundred and fourteen of un act of the General Assembly of the State of Indiana, approved March 1, 18.r>, notice is hereby Ktven that the County Board of Review of Putnam county, Indiana, consisting of William Broadstreet, County ‘ Assessor; George M. Black, County Auditor; I HuorgeW. Hughes. County Treasurer. Ueorgt* W. Hutherlin and George E. Blake, will meet [ at the Court House, in the city of (Jreencaa- , tie. in said county and State, on THIRD MONDAY IN JUNE, 1895, Being the 17th day of June, for the purpose of review of assessment and the equalization of the valuation of real and personal property, as the same is returned ny the several township assessors of said county. GEORGE M. BLACK. Auditor of Putnam county. Dated at Greencaslle, Ind., May 24, 18U5. td A man never learns how to step on the tack of adversity with comfort to himself. Epworth League, Chattanooga,
Tenn.
On June 25,26 and 27, the Monon Route will sell excursion tickets, on account of Epworth League, to Chathanooga, Tenn., at one lowest limited fare for the round trip. Return limit 80 days from date of sah Choice of three routes from Louisville, with privilege of side trip to Mammoth Cave. Time tables, maps ana pamphlets furnished or mailed on application to J. A. Michael, agent at Greem asile. For Land anil Hoinetai'hers. Half fare excursion South, June 11. IflO 1 ).— The Mobile & Ouio will sell tickets for this date at one tare for the round trip to all points along its line in the States of Mississippi and South Alabama with s op-over priv- ! ileges For tickets apply to nny railroad ticket agent or to F. W. Greene, General Agent. 108 N. Broadway, St. Louis, Mo. E. E. POSEY, OvnrtAl Pas-usiiger Agcrl.
The ladies of Greencaslle 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.
.‘id Door East Central yational JianJi, South Side Public Square. 3m47
Three Crops a Year
The Mo»t Sensible
ISSISliSI TO SiGH Is a pair of Gold Spectacles, and the only afiacc to have them coitectiy fitted i» at bast v> AHiuiurton street. No one every sold glasses so cheaply in Greeiicastle. Don’t
Can be grown on the same land in Eastern trust your e\es to spectacle peddlers aud
Mississippi and Southern Alabama along the jewelers.
line Mobile & Ohio Railroad. The summers p RrtlpC M n are cooler, the winters are milder, the death Ui Vf . ulivuCj m« U»
rate is lower, than in the North. Improved
frirms, flO to per acre, unimproved land ■ < to $6 an acre near railway stations. It is Notice of .4«liniiiiNtri«ll<»tl the best portion for raising fruits and earlv Notice is hereby given that the undersigned vegetables, stock raising aim gencr.d fai m t )een appointed bv the Clerk of the Circuit crops. Lands are advancing, now is the time (> ourt Q f Putnam countv, State of Indiana, to buy. Very low rate excursions monthly. ^of ‘ of i lie Mobile Ubio has pui on two ihrougn shoptaugh, late of Putnam county, Indiana,
fast trains each way daily between St. Louis f i., rP L R .. ( i and Mobile. It ia the shortest aud quickest
route to the South.
An illustrated pamphlet telling all about
our country will he sent free to
ing
> all who wish
it Apnlvto F W Greene, General Agent. ' No. lob north Broadway. St. Louis, Mo., or to E. E. Posey, General Passenger Agent, .Viobile J* Ohio Ruiliotid, Mooiie, /iia, tf
Said estate is supposed to be solvent. Dated this 14th day of May, 1895.
3t5
JAMES T. DENNY,
Administrator.
Notice of AiliiiiulMirnllnn.
Notice is hereby given that the ueflersigned has been nppoinua by the Clerkof the Circuit
' l>n,i * - *■
Srailev & Carpenter. A ttys.
DREW W. ALdPAUQH,
Executor,
3t6
and two Summer Gilts bred to Claude’s Su-
perior No. 12343, to farrow in June, and Eggs from three prize-winning pens—8. O. 11. Leghorns, Silver l.see Wyandotte- and Barred P
if she ain’t like the old kind we don’t citizens. After noting the deceased's j a beautifully executed snake coiled want her.” For this and other doubt- parentage and date of birth, he closed i ronn (} the arm above the wrist. As a imr Thomases the assurance Is given his tribute by saying: “Our dead friend ! rule, a broad gold band covers it. but
Sr “18™ 'ioA»o«Tn r o “! that she Is like the old kind, only she is bed one noble virtue He always get pci .^ uu i friends have seen it and heard
eunm p»n. GEORGE W- SHUEV.^RflPRIEIOH.^^; - bla ; uo ua well aa her heart | up early in the morning.”
pc
i the story of tiie tattooing.
Epworth League, Chattanooga. a of U “ U -?: vineY'Naskvi 1 le^R«* roaS*!•'Via Mammoth of Putnam county. Indian., Cave, America's Greatest Natural Wonder. M ini est-ite Ir RiinnoRed tn be solvent ?c P eV!o'CTer^of 9 Epworth ^ »"*> lw , • —
Through Nashville, the location of Vauderhilt University, the nride of the Methodist Church, and along the line between Nashville and Chattanooga, where many of the I most famous Battles of the war were tought. | Send fol maps of the route flout liuciuuttli. Louisville, Evansville nnd 8t. Louis, and particulars as to rates, etc., to C. P. Atmore, General Passenger Agent, Louisville, Ky. tt
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castcria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
Highest pficf* paid for hides, pelts i and tallow by Vanctetive A. lion, lltf
We
Employ Young lent for a high i
to distribute ntir Advert!**
ado Acnu
al. Ni
Xm, on approval
| work done until the bicycle arrives and prove*
I satisfactory.
? Young Ladies «“?***?«“* > If bovs or irlrls apply they immt b« well reoomX mended. VVrite for particulars. ACME CYCLE COMPANY, ELKHART, IND. »♦ ♦ M > M MH1 »
