Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 July 1895 — Page 2

Tt*** ■ ittiimm

SPECIFIC

For Scrofula. ► “Since childhood, I have been afflicted with scrofulous boils and sores, which caused me terrible suffering. Physicians were unable to helpjne, and I only grew worse

under their care. At length, 1 began

to take

ZL

M JLX 1 1 * - V 1 . X ” i urj l iar r jj>v jJiIII.TejSS.

a \iirr%

I rr T mf. m !

Intoreotlng Theory to Account for Thoir Lofty Homes.

AYER’S

Sarsaparilla, and s very soon grew bet'ter. After using ( half a dozen bottles I was completely cured, so that I have not had .a boil or pimple on any part of my body for the last twelve years. I can cordially recommend Ayer’s Sarsaparilla as the very best blood-purifier in existence.” — G. T. Reinhart, Myersville, Texas. AYER’S B THE ONLY WORLD'S FAIR m v SarsaparMla Ayer's Cherry Pectoral cures Coughs and Colds

Acme C8Mt, Wall Plaster, Portland and LcuUviUe Cements, Plaster Paris, Lime, Hair, etc., always on hand. ITL. 33. ZIXJn.X-.3E3Y, Wareroom, 416 East Seminary St. P. O. Box 773. Iy50

Protected AgaWi.t Floods—Warned by the Destruction ot Their People, the Survivors May Have Chosen the Clifts for Safety,

Advantages of Town Lire Blended with Dr. Fell* Oswald’s Intereetlng Contrlhnthe Charms of flural F.xlstenoe. I tlon to the Literature of Pood. Social changes of a marked character ' Dr. Felix Oswald contributes to will be wrought by the occupation of Health Culture an article in which he

the arid region. In this matter also Mormon experience la luminous, says William E. Smythe in Century, brigham Young sought to found his prosperity not only on industrial ethics, but also upon the happiness of the people. lie would not tolerate idleness, and the walls of cobblestones still

asserts that what are called “canine teeth” arc not canine In any sense or significance. They correspond, he says, to the eye teeth In man—instead of the eye teetli ia man corresponding to them, it will be noted—ami are enormously developed in several species of balloons that would unhesitatingly prefer a bunch of wild grapes to a porter-house steak. Dr. Oswald dix's not believe that

Important explorations, which are all

anV Nt^v^ liU’xiw.'^n^onVu'ct’im/'with I f a “ din £. ^ the older Po^onsai Salt

’vlillTlwelHugs'” Tiave^uot^-et'res'ulted church nii ^ ht P a . v for the of men j man is a carnivorous animal, and he dwellings, nav^ not jit resulted whu would otherwise hare V ,een tem- | terms the idea that man cannot live on

porarily supported by charity. As a ' a strict vegetable diet “the meat delu means of furnishing entertainment, ; sion.” Ho notes again that normal various diversions were planned, in-1 children have an aversion to flesh food

in its undisguised state, and ridicules the notion that meat promotes muscle

and conduces to longevity.

The conclusion is drawn from Dr. Os-

in any discoveries concerning the reason why they were built and inhabited. These clitf dwellings, says the New

York Herald, are found in very large ... „ . , . - . , , numbers in the rock bluffs that wall v ^ Sat » rda y n brht dance, led

by the bishops of the wards.

Tlie leader's wisdom is almost ar.

ROASTED COFFEE,

The best article iu town, Also the fullest stock of

C«eS Fri

And

li

es.

L. WE1K&C0.

^\ovt v\\ Cv v e ewe tvsWt.

G. M. BLACK S Liferf, Sale aat! Feeil SlaWe Franklin St., near northeast corner public square. Best Livery Ri’js. Farmers’ Teams Fed Horses Boarded. Call and see. tf 2 KAILU A 1' TIME-TABLE' BIG FOUR.

EAST.

♦No. 36, Night Express 2:39 am t “ 2, Ind’p’lis Accommodation 8:12 am t “ 4, Flyer 12:"6pm * 8, Mail 4:15 p m * “ 18, Knickerbacker 5:21 pm ♦No. 35, Night Express 12:32 a m * “ 9, Mail 8:50 a m * “ 11, Southwestern Limited 12:38 pm t “ 5, Mattoon Accommodation 4:36 pm t “ 3, Terre Haute Accomodation... 7:30 pm

■^Daily. tOaily except Sunday.

No. 36, 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 Wtibash, Ini. No. is. Knicicerhocker. hauls throiigh sleepers for Washington, D. C.. via C. & O., and through sleepers for New York via N. Y. C. R. ft.; also dining car. New coaches illuminated with gas on ail trains. F. 1>. HL’ESTIS, Agt. VANDALIA LIME. In eflect May 19,1895. Trains leave Greenc&s-

tte, Ii d.,

FOR THE WEST.

No. 5, Daily 9:44 a in. for St. Louis. 41 Hi, Daily 1:35 pm, “ “ “ 1, Daily 12:25 pm, 44 44 44 7, Daily 12:26 am, 44 44 “ 15, Ex. Sun..... 9:01 a m, 44 “ 44 8, Ex. 8an M ... 5:28 p m, 44 Terre Haute.

FOR THE EAST.

Nn *>n, Daily p m, for Indianapolis “ 8, Daily 3:3.5 pm; 44 “ 44 2, Daily 6:03 p m, 4 “

M o, Daily 44 12, Daily 44 16, Ex. Sun.

4, Ex. Sun.. «v< i» i.t,

For complete Card, giving all trains an l stations, an ; u full information as to

rates, through carj, etc , address

J 8. MNO, Agent,

^ ^ v 'ncastle, Ind.

Or E. A. Ford,

General Passenger Agt., Si Louis, Mo ■

4-3u a m, 2:35 a m, 6:17 p m. 40 a m,

SSv.

MDNONROUlE

Cji tOHIWIU£,H[W IcSAkT t CeiCASC HY.C0. j

1:12 a m 12:07 p m ,.,...11:25 a m

In effect May 12,1895.

Nonrn BOUND.

No. 4 , Chicago Mail “ 6 , Chicago Express “ 14t, Local Freight . SOUTH BOUND. No. 3 , Southern Mail 2:47 a m .. , LuUibVille Expies. 2 : l< pm 43t, Local Freight 1:05 pm Daily. tDaily except Sunday. Pullman sleepers on night trains Parlor ami dining cars on day tialns. For complete time cards and full informrtlon iu regard to rates, through cars, etc., address Pin c „ J ' A ’ MICHAEL, Agent. x. J. Reed, 0. P. A..Chicago.

in the principal canyons of the territory where the Colorado, Mancos anti other rivers make their way toward the sea. The most important of these situations is the Mesa Verde, a plateau extending through southwestern Colorado and New Mexico, and rising to a height of from one thousand to two thousand feet from its base, which is, again, seven thousand to eight thousand feet above the sea level. It was very well described four or five years ago by Dr. W. It. Dirdsall iu a scientific publication. The area investigated for cliff dwellings is about three hundred square

miles.

This mesa, or tableland, is covered with scrub oak and cedars, and broken by perpendicular canyons, so that it looks as though the ground had been split into innumerable fissures. In certain spots the overhanging rock, which seems to run iu layers, has made galleries, varying between a few feet in extent and as much as a thousand feet in length and fiftj’ in width. On these narrow ledges the cliff dwellers, like swallows, fastened their stone houses, and the question is often asked: “Why did they build so high?” The onlj- answer that soience vouchsafes is the simple one that “thej’ built where they found caverns in which to build.” That this answer is insufficient is shown by the fact that the base of these canyons has, from time to time, afforded cave accommodations for different races, while more than a thousand square miles, not far from this very locality, but on the lower lands, show signs of occupancy at some time by hundreds of cities and towns, prehistoric and forgotten. The answer given is, therefore, not sufficient to satisfj- the mind. And certainly it must have taken some powerful motive to induce the prehistoric races to climb so high for a dwelling place, when this could have been obtained at the expense of so much less trouble and danger, by planting them siraplj- where tens and hundreds of thousands did at some time, two or three thousand feet lower down. Evidently the reason for their not doing so was that they’ lived and builded at a period far anterior to that of ces autres, and when the existing conditions must have been widely different. At present these localities are unfit for the use of man or beast on account of the complete absence of fresh water—except whatever rain and melted snow may be caught in hollows worn in the rocks. Winding around the bluff or sheer wall by narrow ledges, the explorer at length comes upon a great cliff, towering upward, beneath which, on the ledges below, rise the ruins of a cliff town. Then it is seen that the dwellings present an appearance of infinite variety. There are little corners of the rock which evidently formed the houses of the lower classes; others there are, complete structures of stone taken from the cliffs above and around, and fashioned into substantial buildings, made to adapt themselves to the shape of the caves and to the limitations of space. In some instances the ruins of these buildings indicate towers, or communal houses, of large extent. They are all built of blocks of sandstone broken or cut into regular forms, laid in an adobe cement, and the crevices between filled in with stone chips. Where curves in the gallery existed the walls were also curved, or angled, to utilize the space. Anyone who will take the trouble to read and collate the existing writings concerning the traditions of the extreme western and Pacific coast Indians, will find that the tribes all agree in the possession of traditions concerning a great deluge which, at some long past period, covered all their territory, and from which but few escaped. Such traditions extend from Oregon to Mexico. Of course, iu such a ease, those only would escape who reached the highest lands. The idea that those who are responsible for the construction of the cliff dwellings were the ones who escaped from the great American ffnpd is certainly not without probable reason on its side, though writers on the subject generally give it a wide berth, being unwilling to accept the conclusion which must necessarily follow the adoption of so startling an event as an actual fact of prehistoric

days.

American Wit.

Lord D., a proverbial hater of America and Americans, was dining in Paris. Next to him at a table sat a noted Newport belle. The conversation had drifted to a discussion of American topics, and Lord I). expressed his usual hatred of all things on this side of the water. Finally he made the assertion that he saw nogyod manners anywhere in America. This angered the Newport girl, but she replied with apparent unconcern: “What poor letters of introduction you must have had, my lord!” There w as no more unpleasant talk about Americans that evening.

Wool from Wood.

The latest wonder among the textiles

clearly exhibited in his social scheme as in his plan of industry. The central idea in it was the farm-village. A village site, generally a half-mile square, is selected in the midst of a tract of five thousand or six thousand acres to be colonized. In Utah there are many small valleys between the towering mountains, and the village site is generally located near the center of the valley, and near the river from which the water is diverted into eanals on each side at a sufficient elevation to command the irrigable lands. The half a square mile is then laid out into blocks of four acres, with broad avenues between, and the blocks are divided into lots of an acre each. On these acre lots the farmers have their homes. Here also are their commodious barns. Here they have their poultry and swine, while considerable space is devoted to a market-garden. The farmer then has his farm on the outlying lands, which are divided into lots ranging from two acres up to twenty acres. From the public park in the center to the farthest outlying farm is onlj r two and a half miles. Most farmers traverse a much shorter distance to reach the farm from their homes. On the other hand, the women and children enjoy the important advantage of having near neighbors, while the church, schoolhouse, stores and post office are near at hand. Under this system the advantages of town life are blended to a verj’ considerable degree with the charms of rural existence. It is a system full of delightful possibilities. The Mormons have realized its substantial advantages in neighborhood association; but thsir model will be much improved upon by many colonies of more recent establishment. Farm life under the old conditions has involved isolation. The hunger for human sympathj’ and companj* has driven thousands from the country to cities already overerowded. This factor is responsible for manj’ a social tragedy, as well as for the problems which have arisen in congested city populations. There is no reason why farm villages patterned after those of Utah should not have a social life and an outward beauty quite as pleasing as, for instance, the suburbs of Boston. There the architecture seems almost uniformly pleasing. Attractive lawns, with trees, vines and flowers, are everywhere. People of small means will be able to surround themselves with similar advantages in the farm villages of the arid region, while realizing all the benefits of independence and equality inseparable from the industrial scheme

of irrigation.

WEAPONS INDIANS FEAR.

They Don’t I.lko to Fare Talescoplo Siffhtu an 1 II<*Avy Rnlleti. "Indians sometimes face light firearms with great courage, but thej- fight shj’ of the attentions of any weapon that sends a large projectile,” said Col. F. A. Blake, who has had wide experience on the western plains. “The rush and scream of the heavj’ bullets frightens them, and thej’ prefer to keep away from their range. To that not unreasonable prejudice is due the fact that the buffalo hunters of the early '70s, who in following their business were constantly exposed to the attacks of hostile Indians, were molested comparatively little by them. The long, heavy rifle, with its telescopic sights and the knowledge of the deadly certainty of the buffalo hunter’s aim, almost invariably served to make the red man keep his distance, and set him temporarilj’ free from the notion of scalp hunting. “One buffalo hunter by the name of Murdock, that I knew, was creeping upon a herd on the Staked Plain when he .qued ^ baud of Comanches riditnr toward him. He instantly leveled his gun upon them as a warning that they should not approach too near. Checking his warriors, the chief of the band pointed with his hand to a buffalo in the distant herdfthen mentioned in the Indian language that the hunter should shoot it. Murdock fired as the chief indicated and the buffalo fell. The Indians gave a loud ‘How’ of approval, waived their hands, turned their ponies and swept cn past the hunter, leaving him to pursue his shooting of the buffalo unmolested."

IHttlft Slaves In England.

"Does slavery survive in England?” nsks the London Christian World, and this is the answer: “After reading Saturday's ‘special’ number of the ‘Schoolmaster’ on the subject of ‘Halftimer--. we find it difficult to answer that question in the negative. An inspect.'-- vu-ites: ‘I examined a child who . at 5:o0, worked at a mill, and then \. ..iked a couple of miles toexamination. Another girl of eleven rose soon after 5 a. m. and walked through the frost and snow nearly two miles to the mill. Work commenced at 0 and continued till 8:30, when there was an

, , , , - , interval for breakfast—the child not

is a fabric woven from the fibers of | leaving the mill. At y work again till wood which has been put through a 12 :3 0’-sLx hours in all-‘ar.d then dinspecial chemical process. This im-! n e r nt the mill At 1<> > hiH portant method of treating wood fiber,| trudged off to school.’ U..,w many which renders it equal to wool or cot-: British children are liable to this sort ton for all practical purposes, is of Ger-j of experience? Not less than 170,000! man origin, and is known as the “Mes-, shame on us!” Such facts are a shame terlich process of chemically treat.ng i nde ed, to any civilized, not to say

wood pulp. It was introduced during Christian community,

the year just closed.

wald’s investigations “that a total abstinence from fiesh food would promote the cause of moral as well as phj’sieal health,” and would contribute no little to advance “the blessings of international peace,” and if it would certainlj’ do either there would be sufficient warrant for organizing a society or something to popularize the cause he advocates and persuade people to carrj’ his ideas into general effect. The world will probably go very slow, of course, in giving up its savory “steaks,” “cuts,” and such things for an exclusive diet of barley bread and dried figs, even with ghee and beans thrown in for the sake of luxurj-, but the good doctor’s essfty will not be without its use nevertheless. If our farmers in South Carolina will not raise sheep and cattle in order to supply themselves and us-with the beef and mutton products which our souls, so to speak, so persistentlj’ crave, there is considerable comfort to be derived from the assurance of so high medical authority that we are all the better and brawnier without them. FAILURE OF INDIAN MISSIONS.

I ALIVlAUt ON HEREDITY. A Thou.ami Year. Cannot OMItrrate Fai I!" Chararterl.tlr.. Now, the longer I live the more I believe in blood—good blood, bad blood, proud blood, honest blood, thieving blood, heroic blood, cowardly blood, writes Uev. T. DeWitt Talmago in the Ladies' Home Journal. The tendency may skip a generation or two, but it is sure to come out, as in the little child j'ou sometimes see a similarity to a great-grandfather whose picture hangs on the wall. That the physical and mental and moral qualities are inheritable is patent to anj’one who keeps his eyes open. The similarity is so striking sometimes ns to be amusing. Great families, regol or literary, are apt to have the characteristics all down through the generations, and what is more perceptible in such families majbe seen on a smaller scale in all families. A thousand years have no power to obliterate the difference. The large lip of the house of Austria is seen in all the descendants and is called the Hapsburg lip. The house of Stuart always means in all generations cruelty aud bigotry and sensualitj’. Witness Queen of Scots. Witness Charles I. and Charles II. Witness James I. and James II., and all the others of that imperial line. Scotch blood means persistence. Dutch blood means cleanliness and good breeding. English blood means reverence for the ancient. Welsh blood means religiosity. Danish blood means fondness for the sea. Indian blood means roaming disposition. Celtic blood means ferviditj’. Roman blood means conquest. The Jewish faculty for accumulation you may trace clear back to Abraham, of whom the Bible saj’s: “He was rich in silver and gold and cattle,” and to Isaac and Jacob, who had the same family characteristics.

REVENGE OF THE FAT WOMAN.

A Natlvo East Indian Declares Christian AlUslnna a Sheer Waste of Money. Punishotam Itao Telang declares in an article in the Forum that it is a sheer waste of money to spend it on the missionaries. It does not help the people of India. On the contrarj’, it only strengthens their own religious faith and creates international prejudice. The people bitterly complain against them for their interference, not only in religion, but in politics, too. What benefit is it to India or America if a few pariahs are Christianized at an enormous cost? I again affirm that it is a waste of money. Send your missionaries to those who have no religion —for instance, to the interior of Africa and the South Sea islands and to the cities of the United States. Let the aim of the missionary be to civilize and educate the savages and barbarians. To India send machinerj’ instead of missionaries. Millions of people are kept back for want of education owing to intense poverty. Send good schoolmasters, mechanics and scientists, and teach your practical arts to our people. This will cost j’ou less than the missionaries. But let us bo friends, and, as children of one God, forget all differences of opinion. You have your religion and you think it the best. If it is the best, keep It yourselves. Christianity is best suited to the western nations. As a religion we do not show disrespect to it, because every religion tends toward the same end, namely, salvation. Christ taught beautiful things, and if all Ills teachings were strictly followed, the whole world would be a paradise. IS A SPANKING GOOD JOKE. How a Htato Sen itor'a Blunder Filled a Slpoplntj-Car with Screams. A prominent state senator lately gave a dinner at the state capital to several of his colleagues on the condition that they would not make public his name in connection with a little affair that recently occurred on the Albany midnight train, says the New York Herald. The senator is of a lively disposition ml somewhat inclined to practical joki:' ' Ho and an assemblyman occupied a s’etion jointly. The senator v nit into the smoking-room about nine o'clock. The a '.semblyman, who had the lower berth, said that he would retir - for a sh irt nap. The senator about half an hour afterward walked down the aisle of the ear and stopp ■ 1 opposite his .section. The curtains were tightly drawn. By way of a “good joke" on his colleague the senator carefully lifted aside the curtain. administered a rouslny. $lup on the form in the lower berth and hastily retreated to the smoking-room. A succession of piercing female j-ells followed. “Great Scott!" ejaculated the senator, attracted by the screams. “Wh—what does this mean?” “What’s the matter?'' inquired the assemblyman, peering out of an adjoining upper berth. "What arc you doing in that berth?" asked the senator. “Why, there was a lady who had this berth and as she did not like an upper one I exchanged with her. I forgot to tell jou about it.” Republic or Monarchy. In 1 71, before the French national assembly had decided whether the new constitution was to be monnrehial or republican, the count of Paris visited the palace at Versailles. As he entered the door Jules Simon met him and bowing snid: “If we are in n republic, you are in my house and I shall be delighted to do the honors. If we are in a monarchy, I am in yours.” The count laughed and said: “Let us go in together.” Queer Dnningo Su'.t. A man returning recently to a provincial town from Paris, with a portmanteau containing an urn in which had been placed the ashes of a leading citizen of the town, lelt the cremated , remains in charge, temporarily, of the baggage master at a railroad station. 1 : By mistake the portmanteau was handed to another, and the family of the dead man have instituted a suit for * ffiamages-against the company.

llow She Got Itather More Tlmn S'ven with the Hetweeu-the*Acts Store. Apropos of the theater, I saw something one other night within the last seven that filled me with a totally unholy glee, says a writer in the Washington Post. A woman sat in front of me. She was decidedly’ plump—in fact, she was what Illinois people call cornfed. She was bareheaded, too, bj’ the way, aud before the play began and after every act she had to stand up ami let a man who sat near her pass out. It was a tight squeeze every time, and as the man did not say "Pardon me,” “Beg your leave,” or anything else to sho»v the faith that was in him, I could see the tide of that fat woman’s wrath rise till its crimson edge made the straggling fringe below her back hair bristle indignantly. At last the play was over, and the man wanted to rush out to join two women friends-uudoubtedly he’d have called them “lady friends"— whom he had noticed near. But did he rush? Well, if he did his rush wasn't visible to the naked ej’o. That fat woman sat down and put on her rubbers. Then she replaced her gloves which she had taken off. Then she stood up, blocking the passage, while she put on her hat, adjusted her veil, and buttoned her cloak. And all the while the man was dancing with impatience, unable to get out, and the two “lady friends” were passing out the door. At last the fat woman moved, and the man — well, inasmuch ns nothing so much angers a man as a punishment he knows he deserves, you can imagine how he looked. For my part, I thought it was-delightful, and If I ever meet that fat woman I mean to tell her so.

HOW PEANUTS GROW.

The Staple Food of the Circus Requires

Hut Little C ultivation.

All boys, and a good many of their sisters, are fond of peanuts. Everybody’ knows that no circus is complete without them, but probably not many boys, nor girls either, know just how they grow, says the New York Times. The peanut is supposed to be a native of Africa, where it forms the chief food of certain region s, but it is found, too, in South America and Europe, the species varying slightly in the different countries. Here in the United States it is cultivated chiefly’ in Virginia, North Carolina and Tennessee. The seed planted Is the meat kernel, and care is taken not to break the skins. The plant grows like a vine, and the nuts hang on to it like pea pods. A single vine will, it is estimated, produce about one hundred nuts, if it is of the average good condition. At this rate the yield pc- acre L, iciiy bushels. Three varieties of these nuts are grown h ^ the white, the red and the Spanish. They are readily distinguished, us they have individual characteristics. The next time yon eat a peanut with two kernels very white, with pink skins, you will know it is of the white variety, which is the most important. The shell of the red nut sometimes holds three oy four dark kernels, and its skin is of a decidedly dark red, so you cannot mistake that; while the Spanish nut is so much smaller, with a lighter skin than either of the others, that it will not be mistaken for either. Nearly five million bushels of peanuts are used in this country’ every year.

big bulky pills were in general use. Like the blunderbuss” of that decade they i were big and clumsy, but ineffec- j live. In this cent-1 ury of enlightenment, we have )!>. Dr. Fierce’s " Pleasant Pellets, which cure all liver, stomach and bowel derangements in the most effective way. Assist Nature a , linfie now and then, with a gentle, cleansing laxative, thereby removing offending matter from the stomach and bowels, toning up and invigorating the liver and quickening its tardy action, and you thereby remove the cause of a multitude of distressing diseases, such as headaches, indigestion, or dyspepsia, biliousness, pimples, blotches, eruption? boils, constipation, piles, fistulas and maladies too numerous to mention. If people would pay more attention to properly regulating the action of their'b, bowels, they would have less frequent occasion to call for their doctor’s services to subdue attacks of dangerous diseases. That, of all known agents to accomplish this purpose, Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are unequaled, is proven by the fact that once used, they are always in favor. Their secondary effect is to keep the bowels open and regular, not to further constipate, as is the case with other pills. Hence, their great popularity, with sufferers from habitual constipation, piles and indigestion. A free sample of the “ Pellets,” (4 to 7 doses) 011 trial, is mailed to any address, post-paid, on receipt of name and address on postal card. Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.

Best 5 Cent Oigars Verbenas. Cubanolas’ Josephines, AT KIEFER’S.

Tlie Most Sensible issisw 10 sism is a pair of Hold Spectacles, and the only place to have them correctly BUed is at 105 East Washington street. No one every sold glasses so cheaply in Greemastle. Don’t jewelers' 11 6168 t0 Bpectacle Peddlers and ,G. W. BENCE, M. 0. In the city of Parchim is a group of 33 lindens—the most frequented playground for the children. These trees were planted to commemorate the visitation of the city by “the plague” or “black death,’’400 or ScOyears ago, when only 33 men were left. They formed a guild, which exists to-day, and celebrate yearly their anniversary, when they also march under the lindens.

A Roman Catholic street preaching mission is being organized in Cleveland. Its work will be similar to that of the Salvation Army, but it will not adopt the fantastic methods of that organization. Oneofthe most prominent workers in the movement will be Father Elliott of the Paulist Fathers' Church of that city, who is an enthisiast on the subject of propagating Catholicism among Protestants. Robins and goldfinches have been seen among the sunbirds high up the mountains of Africa, while one species of the humming bird lives perpetually some 12,000 feet above the level of the ocean.

A good appetite and refreshing sleep are essential to health of mind and body, and these are given by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. The Russian peasant never touches food or drink without making the sign of the cruaa.

Cure for Ileadarhe.

As a remedy for ail for all forms "f H.-rd-aehe Electric Hitters lias proved to he the very best. It eftects a permanent cure and the most dreaded habitual sick headaches vizld to its influence. W’e urge all who afflicted toprocure a bottle, and give this remedy a fair trial. In cases of habitual constipation Electric Bitters cures by’ giving the needed tone to the bowels, and few cases long resist tlie use of this medicine. Try it once. Large bottles only Fifty cents

at Albert Allen’s Drugstore.

Douson, Jr., was making an evening call, when his adored one’s little brother approached him and begged the loan of his whistle. “Whistle?” queried Mr. Dobson. ”1 have no whistle.” “Well, papa says you have,” said the little wingless angel, "and that you are always wetting it.”

liftief in Si.r Honrs.

Distressing Kidney and Bladder diseases relieved in six hours by the “New Oreat South American Kidney Cure.” This new remeiiy is a great surprise on account of its exceeding promptness relieving pain in the bladder, kidneys, bto— 1 every part of the urinary passage in male oi ..male. It relieves retention of water and pain in passing it almost immediately. If you want quick relief and cure this is yourr remedy. Sold by Albert Allen, Druggist, Greencastle, Ind. 1JT0 The French Government has decided fittingly to observe the anniversary of the death of the late President Carnot. The official ceremony will consist of a visit by President Faure and the Ministers to the Pantheon for the purpose of placing wreaths upon M. Carnot’s sepulchre. These public mourning will also be ordered for five

stories included Kipling’s “Bimi,” Poe’s days, which corresponds to the period be“Murder in the Rue Morgue;” the tween M. Carnot’s going to Lyons and bis “Death of Nancy Sykes,” Buhver’s public obsequies in Paris. “House and the Brain.” and nart.s of the ! "Talc of Two Cities.” In the morning ! linrh/in's Arnica Sa/re.

two very sleepy aud somewhat cross

A Gruesome Night’s Reading.

Two college girls at home for thoir spring vacation conceived a brilliant idea the other day. Every girl knows the pleasure of reading or listening to “creepy” stories and being so frightened that one daren’t look over one’s shoulder. They determined to try this delicious sensation to the uttermost possible to them. They sat up all night, with plenty of candy and a substantial luncheon, and a pile of books from

which to read to each other.

The Best Halve in the world for

Bruises. Sores, Ulcers. Halt

Kheu m.

Cuts, Fever

young women declared that one would " oriSi Tetter,’Chapped Hands, Chilblains, not believe how difficult it was to sit Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, ami positidown in cold blood and make up one’s guarantee.! l 'to tH give ‘perfect r satilVaction or mind to lie scared. “You can’t doit money refunded. .Pfice 25 cents per, J 1 ”, 1 ’

deliberately,” was their conclusion.

money reiunueu. i-nce ■ For Sale by Albert Alien.

lysi

mi