Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 June 1895 — Page 2
ttti
The umy une To Stand the Test. Rev. William Copp, whose father was a physician lor over fifty years, in New Jersey and who himself spent many years preparing for the practice of medicine, hut subsequently entered the ministry of the il. E. Church, writes: “I am glad to testify that I have had analyzed all the sarsaparilla preparations known in the trade, but AYER’S >.is the only one of them that I could recommend as a blood-purifier. I ha v e given away hundreds of bottles of it, as I consider it the safest as well as the best to be had.”—Wm. Copp, Tastor M. E. Church, Jackson, Minn. AYER'S ■ THE ONLY WORLD'S FAIR m ^Sarsaparilla When in doub^askforAyer’s Pills
r. VJ V'A X.W/IVO
Prof. McLean’s Advice to Doth Old and Young.
Jadge a Man by What He Head*—The Power of Concentration If Necet»ary to AH Who Desire to l*o Cultured.
Portland and Louisville Cements, Plaster Paris, Lime, Hair, etc., always ou hand. 3TL. ZC. ITXJU.XjTEI'ST, Wareroom, 416 East Seminary St. P. O. Box 773. Iy50
ROASTED COFFEE,
The best article iu town, Also the fullest stock of
And
L. WEIR & CO.
OXAvsA. »5\OVt Y\\. C\x*ceY\cus\\g.
G. M. BLACK’S imi Sale anil M SlaUie Franklin St., near northeast corner public square. Best Livery Bigs. Farmers’ Teams Fed. Horses Boarded. Call and see. tf2 ItAIL HA 1 TIME-TA DL1> BIG- FOUR.
EAST.
•No. 36, Night Express 2:39 a m t “ 2, Ind’p’lis Accommodation 8:12 am t “ 4, Flyer 12:36 p m
“ 8, Mail - 0 “ 18, Knickerbacker
WEST.
No. 85, Night Express ♦ ** 9, .Mail * 11 11, Southwestern Limited t “ 6, Mattoon Accommodation... T “ 3, Terre Haute Accomodation '■’Daily. tDaily except Sunday.
No. 30, Night Express, hauls through cars for Cincinnati, New York and Boston. No. 2 connects with trains for Michigan divisions via Anderson and to Cincinnati. No. 4 connects for Cincinnati, Springfield, O.. and Wabash, Ind. No. 18. Knickerbocker, hauls through sleepers for Washington, f» via C. & O., and Ihiough bleeper.--* for New via N. Y. C. U. H.; also dining car. New coaches illuminated with gas on all trains.
F. P. HUESTIS, Agt.
4:15 p in . 6:21 p m . 12:32 a m . 8:50 a ra . 12:38 p in 4:36 p m . 7:30 p m
In ciiv tie, li
VANDALIA LINE. fltci 3 19,U'85. Train* Ica^e nrocncts
FOR THE WEST.
No. 5, Daily 9:44 n ra, for St. Louis. “ 24, Dsilv. 1:8S p m, •• “ “ 1, Daily 12:25 pm, " “ “ 7, Daily 12:26 a m, “ “ “ 15, Ex. 8uu.„ 9:01 a m, “ “ “ 8, Ex. Sun—. 5:26 p ra, “ Terre Haute.
FOR THE EAST.
No. 20, Daily 1:35 pm, torlndiauapolis. “ H, Dally 3:35 pm, “ “ 2, Daily C:03 p m, ‘ “ “ 6, Daily. 4:30 am, “ “ “ 12, Daily 2:35 a ra, “ “ •* 16, Ex. Sun 6:17 pm. •• •• “ 4, Ex. Sun.... 8:40 a ra. “ “ For complete . Card, givinE all trains and stations, anu to full iutorrautiou as to rate*, through cars etc., a tress J H. x^C TNO, Agent,
e . ocastle, Ind. Or E. A. Ford,
General Passenger Agt., Si. Louis, Mo.B
mmmm
ti JOULSVIUC.hEWALBAS’r iCmicaso rtco/Jj • ■ 1 ■ • V • ■ ■ 1 In effect May 12,1895.
NORTH bound.
No. 4 , Chicago Mail 1:12 a m “ 6 , Chicago Express 12:07 p ra “ 41t, Local Freight 11:25 am
SOOTH HOUND.
No. 3”, Southern Mail 2-17 a m “ 5 , Louisville Express 2:17 p m “ t3+, Local Freight ... !:<?5pm ‘Daily. tDaily except Sunday. Pullman sleepers on night trains. Parlor and dining cars on day trains. For complete tii->c cards and full inforrartion in regard to rates, through ears, etc., address J. A. MICHAEL, Agent. J-. J, Reed, G. P. A., Chicago.
A man may usually bo known by the books ho roads, its well as by the company ho keeps, for there is a companionship of boohs as well as of men, and one should always live in the best company, whether it be of books or men. All dangerous, useless, irreligious, trashy and sensational books should be avoided, says the Jewish Messenger, notr only as a sinful waste of time, but because such reading is demoralizing to the taste for fine culture. Such works are the poison weeds in the field
of literature.
‘•Ignorance is the curse of God; knowledge the wings wherewith we ily to heaven.” Knowledge cannot be stolen from us. It cannot be purchased or sold. We may be insolvent, and the snerifT may come and sell our effects and leave us both homeless and penniless, but he cannot lay the law's hand upon the jewelry of our minds. Endeavor to accumulate a choice and well-selected library, and add to it constantly as fast as your circumstances will pfxrmit. Money spent for good books is always well spent, and the investment will afford more profit, comfort and improvement than any other possibly can. Hooks introduce us into the best society; they b3- their perusal bring us into the presence of the greatest minds that have ever lived. We have what they said and did, we participate in their thoughts, their experience becomes ours, and wo feel as if
they were onr friends.
Genius is a rare gift, but every man has talents of some kind, and all may acquire tact. Most of what men call genius is a talent for hard work. No greatness was ever acquired without patient, persistent and well-directed
labor.
The superficial person who has a smattering of so many things, but knows nothing well, may pride himself upon his gifts, but the wise man humbly confesses, like Newton, that he lias only been engaged in picking shells upon the shore, while the great ocean of truth extends itself all unexplored
before him.
The most efficient culture of all resolves itself into self-culture. The education received at school and college is but a beginning, and is mainly valuable in so far that it trains us iu the habit of continuous application and facilitates self-education after a definite plan and system. Economy of time is as necessary to the student as to the business man. Take an inventory of your time as you would of your capital, in order that you may invest it wisely. Lay aside a certain number of hours every day for regular study and
reading..
It is only by meditation that a man can understand himself. Yet all other knowledge without this is splendid ignorance. Close examination will be requisite for the forming of a true opinion of one's own powers, temper and disposition. Ignorance and self-conceit tend to make us overrate our personal ability. Common sense is defined as sound practical judgment; the prompt decision of imperverted reason. It is practical wisdom applied to everyday affairs. The possession of sound common sense is a rare and valuable gift, and can only be acquired by thorougli self-knowledge and judicious mental
culture.
Moral and intellectual philosophy is not only a useful and practical study, but it affords a valuable means of high culture and mental development. It teaches the principle of sound reasoning and enables the student to cultivate those habits of correct thought which are as necessary to success in life. However, by attempting too many studies the student incurs the risk of becoming superficial, and by devoting too much time to a single study he must neglect others. The chief object of mental culture is not merely to fill the mind with other men's thoughts and to be the passive recipient of their impressions of tilings, but to enlarge our individual intelligence and render us more useful and efficient workers in
our sphere of life.
To study effectively the mind must be concentrated on its work. Make it the first object to be able to fix and hold your attention upon y our studies. He who can do this has mastered many difficulties, and he who cannot do it will never succeed as a student. The most profitable study is that which is conducted with a definite and special object, all reading, attention, observation and reflection being directed upon it for the time being. By thoroughly mastering any given branch of knowledge we render it much more valuable
for use at any moment.
The study of the higher mathematics, besides being a mental discipline, is especially useful to one whose calling requires such knowledge. A course of mathematics is also a good preparation for any pursuit requirinu - habits of close, exact reasoning, careful analysis and minute investigation. The study of natural philosophy opens up a field of investigation which is as interesting as it is unlimited, and a knowledge of the principles of each of the physical sciences is not only a necessary part of a liberal education, but a most use-
ful and entertaining pursuit.
Schools and academics, however useful. are not absolutely necessary to the attainment of the highest mental culture Many of the greatest minds have been self-taught, and have reached the highest plane of intellectual development by persistent study and force of, will. School education, even the best, j very often fails of effect through the indolence of the student. The character ox gi cut men ..j c.xt,t ntxtxx.j their own work. Education must come from within, whether aided by all the arts of the schools or worked out under every difficulty by strength of will perse-
verance.
xxxjii.x>c_i xx»/ .iixjx’icTr^rnr"
Naw Departure In a PltUbu rgh Kollln*
MIIL
Six sturdy women in this city are cutting out a line of work for the sex that may have interesting effects on the wage-earning opportunities for men, says a 1’i.tsburgh correspondent of the j New York Press. Up to this time when , women have boldly entered fields hitherto monopolized by men those lines ■ of work have been chosen that called for comparatively little physical effort. Or, to put it in another way. the ambitions of the new woman are intellectual
Traditions Regarding Their tency in Diseases.
Country I'rartltlonem IT ho Were Experienced In the I of Nature’s Remedies for Human Ills — Home Extraordinary rollon*.
Ilaring-Gould has contributed to the Sunday Magazine a curious paper entitled “Country Uemedies,” from which we learn that in spite of the revolution
.. , * , , x, . .,,i which has taken place in the materia rather than physical. In the iron mills | lnodica of tlle j ;riti 4h p harmr .., 0 p,ia in here Intelligent women are doing work | mfKlt , rn t}n)( . s la favor of mineral med-v.-hich heretofore has been dene ^ icincs and other more powerful drugs, men or strong, growing young fellows vm .. w|so mon .. acd women still
“boys" they are called.
These six women are employed by the Monongahela Tin-Plate company to manipulate the heavy iron sheets be-
fore the metal is trimmed.
Mrs. Hattie Williams was the first woman to make the experiment. She is the wife of a hard-working Welshman, a tinmaker by trade. Site knew something of the work before she began, for she had seen women working in the mills and mines in Wales. Her example was soon followed by five other
women.
The labor at which these women spend their time is termed “opening," and the operatives are known as "openers.” The duties consist in sopaarating the sheets of thin, rolled iron, after they leave the rolls, and preparing them for the process of tinning or being soaked in molten tin. In rolling out the iron sheets from which the tin plate is made, the block plate, after jeiug given one pass through the heavy rolls. Is doubled and again sent through, when it is once again doubled, this being continued until, when the plate is finished, it is made up of eight sheets. These sheets, after being sheared and then gradually cooled, are separated or “opened." The work is accomplished by blows from a hammer on an Iron instrument, shaped like a chisel. Once this is done the plates go to the tinning department. This is the only known instance where women have worked right in among the heavy machinery of the sheet mills. To the women themselves the labor is not disagreeable. Mrs. Williams declares that she prefers the work to scrubbing. It is not nearly so hard, she says, and, while it may seem rough, it really is not, except on the hands. In handling the thin tin the fingers are often cut or torn by sharp points or ragged edges.
WHERE LINCOLN “KEPT STORE.” Crayon In the Capitol liulldlng of the Old Salem Water Mill. On the wall at the head of the main stairway of the eapitol building at Springfield, 111., hangs a largo work in crayon. It is just below a historical picture representing Col. George Kogers Clarke and a party of well-fed, plump soldiers making a treaty with a number of unusually clean, well-groomed Indians of large stature. The crayon picture is the work of Miss Kate P. Degge, of St. Louis, Mo. It is an accurate representation of one of the most noteworthy spots in Illinois. Its subject is the old water mill at Salem, on the Sangamon river, in Menard county. Salem was something of a town a good many years ago, and Mr. Lincoln for a time the postmaster of the village. Water mills were scarce in Illinois when Salem was a thrifty place. There were but few of them in all this country. Salem has disappeared off the face of the earth. Not a house remains to denote the location of the town where Lincoln “kept store.” The mill was torn down some time ago. Before it was destroyed Miss Degge. who was a great admirer of Mr. Lincoln, made a trip to Menard county and sketched the old mill. From this tracing she has worked out the picture above referred to. She has presented it to the state with her compliments and obtained the right to photograph the picture. The only condition accompanying the gift, aside from the question of the photographs above mentioned, was that she should be permitted to select the location for the picture. She came to Springfield some weeks ago, accompanied by her brother. and at her request the picture was hung where it is to-day. Secretary of State Ilinriehson, who is by law the custodian of the eapitol building, accepted the compliment in the name o' the state. The legislature should take action in the premises anil by joint resolution signify to Miss Degge the appreciation of the people of the state fur her thoughtfulness and care iu preserving an accurate representation of the-old mill.
“cull simples" here and there, and even continue to inspire neighbors with faith iu their power of healing by divers superstitious practices. Nor is the country people's confidence in the village herbalist, iu Mr. Gould’s opinion, altogether misplaced. The old race of these irregular practitioners were, he believes, endowed with very considerable and wholesome experience, and they were the depositories of traditions regarding the properties of certain herbs in the treatment of certain maladies which wore sometimes fur from being mere fanciful. It is noteworthy that to this day many of our field and wood plants derive their names from the popular belief in their virtues as specifics
for certain complaints.
Mr. Gould gives a remarkable account of one of the last remaining “wise women” who has long been known to him. Judging from certain indications, she belongs to the west country. Her recipe for a sprain will hardly. W’e fear, receive respectful consideration. It is as follows: "Two ounces oil of turpentine, two ditto suillowcs, two ditto earthworms, two ditto nerve, two dittooppidillidock, two ditto Spanish lleas.” Mr. Gould opines that the turpentine, the opodeldoc and the Spanish tlics (not lleas) are the valuable part of this remarkable pre-
People of the North Migrating | n a New
Direction.
It would not be at all surprising if for the next ten years the rate of progress in the south were more rapid than in any other section of the country. It is, of course, somewhat misleading, says the Boston Herald, to class under one comprehensive designation states Whose material conditions differ so widely as those of South Carolina and Texas, Louisiana and West Virginia. Hut even limiting the inquiry to the older states of the cotton belt, there are forces at work destined to put a new face on southern development before the century has run out. The extension of cotton manufacturing is but one of these, though it is an undeniably important one. Two points in regard to this were strongly impressed on the Massachusetts delegation in their recent tour of investigation. One was the comparative abundance and intelligence of the white labor, and the other the extent of the still untouched resources of water power. With the new facilities offered for electrical distribution, this is certain to be a very important element in the coming development of the south. With the crudest appliances it liras already contributed largely to the economical working of the cotton mills, and with more scientific methods of conversion and distribution it cannot fail do be a fruitful
source of wealth.
The comments only go to show that the east and north is full of the confidence that actuates far-sighted southern business men. The financial strain to which the country has been subeeted was only a preparation, or time of probation, and our section is now on the eve of an era of prosperity and happiness. After making due note of our agricultural and lumber industries, the article pays its respects to our immediate source of wealth, and passes down the line in the following words that cannot fail to give encouragement to
those inclined to be doubtful:
The rapid strides made in the utilization of the coal and iron beds of xMa-
scription. "Suillowes’' is supposed to
stand for squills, which is not of much I l"”
nnn external nnnlieation. ' ,iU l na nre but a , f m P ° <,f what 15 * lIr «
to be witnessed in other states, notably
use as an external application. Of the potency of “earthworms” it is
more difficult to judge, but Mr. Gould assures us that it is precisely this decoction of wriggling worms which impresses tlie west country rustic into
in Tennessee. The fact that the rapidly growing trade in phosphate fertilizers in South Carolina and Florida is of very recent origin has not been generally
something very wonderful, and the oil of nerves strikes him as reasonable. His nerves arc suffering; therefore he must decoct the nerves of bullocks to supply what he lacks. The rationale of the thing seems not unlike that of the “oil of crowbars” which Mr. Punch's hairdresser recommended to the customer whose hair was “getting rather weak.” When Mr. Gould's children had the whooping cough his coachman’s wife entreated Mrs. Gould to let her doctor them. She brought little silk bags to be tied round the sufferers' necks, each containing some hair cut from the cross on a donkey's back. This she had learned to believe was sovereign against whooping cough. For remedies of tide class Mr. Gould has no apology to offer; nor has he anything to say for the “charms” and cabalistic formula which are still in some favor in the country—some samples which he cites certainty do not say much for enlightenment in the west of England. Fits, when they are “terrible bad," are, in the belief of some, only to be cured by wearing a silver ring, manufactured from coins which have come out of seven parishes. Gold, it appears, is not efficacious. Mr. Gould knows a parisli in which the parish clerk draws—or did till lately— a revenue for the cure of children with fits. This is what he does, or did: He takes the little sufferer up to the church tower, holds it out at each of the angle pinnacles and pronounces certain words. What the words are Mr. Gould has not learned. Profitable trade secrets are apt to be jealously guarded, but he knows that for these mysterious practices tiie parish clerk receives an
honorarium.
th.c»vlcllon«b...h.remed,mu.tbe JS.
of the world, and now Tennessee is coming into the field with deposits of considerable extent and richness. The manufacturer of cottonseed oil is also a comparatively new industry, and it means for the south a solid addition of wealtli from a produce formerly all bfit worthless. The ports of the soutli are beginning to claim a share of the import commerce, to which t hey have long been strangers, and are trying to utilize the advantages of geographical nearness as distributing points for places like St. Louis, Cincinnati, Louisville and Kansas City. Nearly all the manufacturing enterprises of the south have yielded of late years a profit above the northern standard, and much of this profit has gone to the extention of works and factories already in existence or the building of new ones. Briefly, j the soutli is in the field of commercial and industrial competition as it never was before, and its progress in this direction is bound to have in the immediate future a greatty accelerated rate
of speed.
She SnppoiPd They Knew.
A story at the expense of the Appalachian xMountain club in Boston is related in Happy Thought. An excursion party from the eiub, it appears,
had gone to a rural part of the state, obtained cnccl in brilliancy and doli-
ARTIFICIAL SILK. Process Recently Patented by Which It Can He IManufactured. The sill: worm has a formidable rival in the personage of Dr. Lehner, of Zurich, who has patented a process and formed a company for the manufacture of this commodity. By a simple chemical and mechanical process the inventor has succeeded in converting wood pulp, cotton or jute waste, when mixed in the form of a liquid product, into an unbroken thread of even diameter and any length. The thread, as thus spun by the mechanical si'i: worm. can. sins the Scientific American, be twisted into an3- desired
diameter.
The features of the process are the never-failing supply of raw material, uniform price of same, and the cheap
production of the silk.
In dyeing and weaving no special treatment is necessary, and the shades
and in default of suCicient hotel accommodations, some of the members were obliged to seek quarters in a farmhouse. Simplicity was the order of the •lay, Everything was scrupulously clean, but there was a natural absence of some of the luxuries of high-priced city hotels. Some of the ladies of the party discovered that there were no keys in the locks of their rooms, and waited upon the farmer's wife. The good lady Aas surprised. “Why,” she said, “we don t usually lock our doors
cacy those of the finest natural sill:. Its low cost will open up a large field among manufacturers, and an unlim-
ited variety of ornamental anil decora- favorab'y and Mrs. Toy Yec will leave
HER HUSBAND’S SERVANT. Only as Suoh Can Airs. Toy \eo Return to ThU Country. Because the new Chinese treaty makes no specific provision for establishing the status of a Chinese woman who may desire to leave this country with intention to return, says the Philadelphia Hecord, Mrs. Toy Yee, the wife of Lee Hoe, a wealthy Uacc street merchant, has applied to Collector Head for permission to accompany her husband to China in the capacity of a
servant.
Some weeks ago Lee Hoc sold out his business to Lee Chow, and determined to make a visit with his wife to their old home, near Hong Kong. Lee Hoe has been registered with Internal Revenue Collector Doyle, and his credentials as a merchant, with some thousands of dollars to his credit, were all right. It was the intention of Lee Hoe and his wife to remain in China not longer than a year, and when they filed their applications for privilege to return with Collector Read, and gave him their photographs, they were surprised to find that there was a barrier against Mrs. Toy Yee. The law was plain enough so far as Lee Hoe was concerned, but nothing was said about the wives of 1 hinese merchants. The law did say that the servants of merchants might enjoy the same rights as their masters, so Mrs. Toy Yee bought a new hat. arranged herself in true American fashion before a phot'graphit’s camera, and soon brought her picture to the collector’s office, where it was filed with her husband’s photograph, and the whole matter given to the special treasury agents for investigations. The treasury agents have reported
Hard Work and Indigestion go Hand in Hand. Concentrated thought, continued in, robs the stomach of neee ,iry blood, and this is also true of hard physical labor. When a five horse-power engine is made to do ten horse-pow r work something is going to break. Very often the hardworked man coming from the field or the office will "bolt" his food in a few minutes which will take hours to digest. Then too, ra.iny foods are about as useful in the stomach as a keg of nails would be in a fire under a boiler. The ill-used stomach refuses to do its work without the proper stimulus which it gets from the blood and nerves. The nerves are weak and “ready to break,” because they do not get the nourishment they require from the blood, finally the ill-us .d brain is morbidly wide awake, when the overworked man attempts to find rest in bed. The applivati m of common sense in the tr .-tment of the stomach and the whole system brines to the busy man the full enjoyment of life and healthy digestion when lie takes Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets to ulicve a bilious stomach or after a too hearty meal, and Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery to purify, enrich and vitalize the blood. The “ Pellets ” are tiny sugar-coated pills made of highly concentrated vegetable ingredients which relieve tlie stomach of all offending matters easily and thoroughly. They need only be taken for a short time to cure the biliousness, constipation and slothfulness, or torpor, of the liver; then the “Medical Discovery” should be taken in teaspoonful doses to increase the blood and enrich it. It has a peculiar effect upon the lining membranes of the stomach and bowels, toning up and strengthen:r.? them for all time. The whole system feels the effect of the pure blood coursing through the body and the nerves are vitalized and strengthened, not deadened, or put to sleep, as the so-called celery compounds and nerve mixtures do —but refreshed and fed on the “bod they need for health. If you suffer from indtgestion, dyspepsia, nervousness, and any of the ills which come from impure blood and disordered stomach, you can cure your sc,'/ with Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery which can be obtained at any drug store in the country.
Best 5 Gent Cigars Verbenas, Cubanolas, Josephines, AT KIEFER’S.
D. E. WILLIAMSON, ■KWOVWCV^ w\ ^SaLYYXN, GUEENCASTI.K, IND. Busiuess in all courts attended to promptly
The .Most Sensible
mim io sigh
Is a pair of Gold Spectacles, and the only place to have them correctly fitted is at 105 East Washington street. No one every sold glasses so cheaply in Greencastle. Don’t trust your eyes to spectacle peddlers and
jewelers.
G. W. BENCE, M. D.
Do not marry until you are able to support a wife.
tivu results nmy be expected.
Might Ouxlssloa.
One little thing omitted! IVhat a dif-
ference it makes sometimes, especially safeguard of strict compliance with the
for Hong Kong via Richfield, Vt.. in a few days. The government takes a IjbpTm! view i.f the ease anil looks upon the husband and wife as one, but the
in cooking. A Frenchman, having eat-. law has been adhered to, en plum pudding for the first time, was j so delighted with it that he asked his Nice Army to right with. English hostess for the recipe, which, I In a letter from an English officer
party best. The visitors did not in-
sist upon the keys.
linckfin's Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Fleers, Salt Rheum. Fever sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For Sale by Albert Allen. ly5i Save when you are youug to speud when
you are old.
here, and there’s no one here but you. j of course, she gave him. He carried it' employed in the Chinese army, he says: But then, I suppose you know your own home, gave it to his wife, and at the ‘ “Since I have been here I have had no 1 M ” M ''' ' same ti:na gave her an enthusiastic no- regular appointment to any Chinese
count of the delieaej*. Not long after- force, and 1 have had no pay, only a ward the dessert came on the table in a few hundred dollars for expenses. 1
isolated Town*. soup tureen, and was ladled out into have had three ribs broken, been blown Although the counties of Maryland soup plates. “What is this, my dear?" about ten yards into the air, and had lying between the lower Potomac and asked the Frenchman. “Ploom pood- all my men desert me on every possible
the Chesapeake are only from twenty ing,” answered his wife. He laughed occasion. I cannot fun fast enough to VI . Illlrl . u we lrle(| to one hundred miles from Washington, at her, and she produced the recipe, keep up with the fighting line, and up 1 Dr - Ki,1 8 s r ' ,e "'discovery ami at the end of they nre curiously isolated from the which, she declared, had been strictly to now they have shown no disposition J win not be^without It'hcreafter^as'our'expYr* rest of the world and out of the line of followed. .\nd so it had been, for the to wait for me. A nice army, this, to I ience prove* that it cure* where all other travel. Calvert and St. Mary's and the English Indy had omitted all mention go fighting with!” The Chinese prison-! co’In 0 -Why i no t — |rive >C thi« ^mt^medP’i Ht * te eastern part of Charles preserve many of the cloth. The ingredients hod been era at Tokio aid, by the way, fed by ! i’ -.,.1 >“ antiquities, and are difficult to reach, put, according to directions, into a pan contract. The price is something un- ^J^r^ben’* Drug store. Regular *ize 50c. The county towns arc mostly small vil- of boiling water, had been cooked for der one-half a cent a head per diem, | " — luges, and tie news of the region trav j tlie prescribed •tune, and had come out but then you can get considerable rice If you think too little you will be sure to
What the church need* 1* not better preaching, but better practice. Everywhere we Go Wo find some one who has been cured ty Hood's Sarsaparilla, and people on all hand* are praising this great medicine for what it has done for them and their friends. Taken in time Hood's Sarsaparilla prevents serious illness by keeping the blood pure and all the organs in a healthy coudition. It Is the great blood purifier. Hood’s Pills become the favorite cathartic with every one who tries them. 25c. per be x. It is said that King Humbert of Italy is an expert cook. It May tin as 3lveh for You. Mr. Fred Miller, of Irving, 111. writes that he had a Severe Kidney trouble for many years, with severe pains in his back and also that his bladder was affected. He tried many so called Kidney cures but without any good result. About a year ago he began use of Electric Bitters and found relief at once. Electric Bitters is especially adapted to cure of all Kidney and Liver troubles and often gives almost instant rc’.L.’. One trial -.vill prove our statement. Price only 5uc. for u large bottle. At Albert Allen's Drugstore. Ambition is the rope by which the mind hangs itself. Relief in, Six Hours. Distressing Kidney and Bladder diseases relieved iu six hour- by the "New Great South American Kidney Cure.” This new remedy is a great surprise ou account of its exceeding promptness m relieving pain in the bladder, kidneys, bark and every part of the urinary passage in male or female. It relieves retention of water and pain in passing it almost immediately. If you want quick relief ami cure this is yourr remedy. Sold by Albert Allen, Druggist. Greencastle. Ind. lyio By ignorance we mistake and by mistakes we learn.
Knights of the Maccabees,
The state commander writes us from Lincoln, Neb., as follows: “Alter Irving other medicines for what seemed to be a very obstinate cough in our two children we tried
i cla slowly to the outer world
—soup.
in Japan for half a cent.
talk too much.
