Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 July 1895 — Page 7
Rising
I have be -n a midwife for many years, and in each case where “ MOTHERS' FRIEND" was use i j| ;,ocoinplislied wonders ar j 3hori:-nat labor and lessened pain. It is the best remedy for RISINOOF THE BREAST known, and worth the price for that alone. Mrs. M. M. BrewstCr, Montgomery, Ala.
Sent by Express or ma!l. on receipt of price, Cl OO per bottle. Book‘ To Motkeia" mailed tree. BRAOFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta. Ga. eCLD BT AI.L DHUGGI3TS.
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 R1D0ELY, N. W.Pass. Aient, Cbiraso, 111. C. i. ATMOfiE, den'l Pass, ah, LouuTilla, Ky.
HUMPHREYS Nothing has ever been produced to equal or compare with Humphreys Witch Hazel Oil as a curative and healing application. It has been used 40 years and always affords relief and always gives satisfaction. It Cures Piles or Hemorrhoids, External or Internal, Blind or Bleeding—Itching and Burning; Cracks or Fissures and Fistulas. /* Relief immediate—cure certain. It Cures Burns, Scalds and Ulceration and Contraction from Burns. Relief instant. It Cures Torn, Cut and Lacerated Wounds and Bruises. It Cures Boils, Hot Tumors, Ulcers, Old Sores, Itching Eruptions, Scurfy or Scald Head. It is Infallible. It Cures Inflamed or Caked Breasts and Sore Nipples. It is invaluable. It Cures Salt Rheum, Tetters, Scurfy Eruptions, Chapped Hands, Fever Blisters, Sore Lips or Nostrils, Corns and Bunions, Sore and Chafed Feet, Stings of Insects, Three Sizes, 25c., Joe. and $1.00. Bold by DruKKiats,or sent post-paid on receiptof price. HI XI’IIHKYS' BUD. CO., Ill A I l> »IHU« »»., Saw Vork. WITCH HAZELJDIL
Mii ti Li!
:*(> S5SXAY.
H.MTM Ns. 12 ait JajtsonJrest, _ GREENCASTLE, IND. building Association stock bought and sold or tiikon u& security for loans.
built and that it will be finished sometime before the day of general judgment, like the Opera Comique, which is also slowly rising on its former site. The building of the Basilica has now been so long in progress that it would be almost a relief to hear that those who are organizing its construction had determined to take the scaffolding away and to let the church stand as an incomplete specimen of ecclesiastical architecture, like the Cathedral of Col-
ogne.
It U useless to tell I'arisians, as they arc informed to-day, after a long spell of silence, that the works of the Basilica are being pushed forward with activity, and that 500 men are engaged in putting the big dome In position. It was supposed that the dome in question would be ready last week, but now it is stated that it will require many months to complete it. The belfry will not be ready until the year IS'JO. The committee, down to July of last year, had received 27,594,000 francs, or £1,103,700. The subscription list was opened in J uly, 1873, but in spite of the large sum collected since that year, further appeals will have to be made to the faithful before they can hope to see the ch ureh even near completion.
Llttl* Ils. Hern Hrsr.t nr I.stn Atwut tbs Bassets s Ant of FaWe Teeth for III! ProjrreH. of Con.trartlon. | (.'hum's Mahy. Little has been heard of late about the | He was a bachelor, while the other progress of the construction of the Mont- man upon whom he was calling was a martre hill, known as the Basilica of young married man, and the visitor felt the Saorc Cueur, says the London Daily very much like a fish out of water, says Telegraph. The vast mass of masonry the 1’hiladelphia Record, glistens in the sun, which this after-' The year Before they had been insepnoou was summer-like in its intensity. 1 arable chums, with the same tastes, the The Basilica dominates the metropolis same habits, of F'ranee by its towering height. It, Now everything was changed, may be seen from various point 1 along The young benedict seemed to be just the boulevards, but hardly one Parisian as sociable and talkative as ever, but in a hundred seems to take any interest his old chum was ill at ease, in its existence. ! He felt like making a bolt for the Pilgrims and religious people gen-' door, and with difficulty restrained orally flock to it us the sacred huidmark himself. of the Mount of Martyrs, but the ordi- j Ills nerves were at high tension, and nary citizen does not trouble about it. 1 he sat watching the door pathetically, lie is content to know that it is being expectantly, like the felon awaiting the
coming of Ills executioner.
The door opened finally, and a woman wearing a white cap and apron entered with a very young baby in her
arms.
“Here he is,” said the married one. “Here’s my son and heir. Isn't he a beauty, Jack, eh?” Jack made some idiotic remark about the baby’s sex. “Oh, yes,” said the father. “Hadn’t you heard? It's a boy, of course.’’ “Certainly, I might have known,” Jack gasped. “It's got hair on its
head."
The father laughed, but Jack looked solemn. “Baby’s got a tooth,” said the father, proudly. "Only one?” queried the bachelor, and then he had a bright idea. “Of course, that needn’t worry you," he said; “I should think you might get a false set pretty cheap. Such a small kid, y’ know.”
ALL LOVE A WIDOW.
Let Ilxr He Yonns ami Tretty anil the World I* Hera. 'If I were a woman—a young woman—it would be my first ambition to be a widow,” said a young man to the Atlanta Constitution man. “I was in a big store one morning and a pretty widow came in. She wore becoming black and a high and wide Gainsborough hat. The clerks rushed over one another to wait on her. “A little, insignificant looking fellow with a thin, sandy mustache and light hair was the lucky man. She gave him a smile that fairly made his head swim. "The other clerks were simply consumed with jealousy. ‘‘She wanted to look at some dress stuff and she toyed with it daintily. She paid more attention to the little clerk than to the goods. “She looked at every piece in the store and consumed three-quarters of an hour of the little fellow's time. In the meantime a number of men came in and attempted to lounge around where they could get a good view of her. “F’inally she bought one of the costliest pieces in the house and the clerk was so agitated he made three mistakes in fixing tjjc check. “That was not all. She had completely demoralized the whole store. The clerks had eyes for nothing but her. “And it was all because she was a widow and wore black. There's an occult fascination about widows that I could never fully understand.”
STATISTICS FOR IDLY CURIOUS. CninputattonH on Smoke Puffs, Kisses* Air
Pressure and Politeness.
A German lover of figures has made the following curious calculations, says the Berliner Abend Post: A man smoking a pipe of medium size blows out of his mouth for every time he fills the pipe 700 smoke clouds. If he smokes four pipes a day for twenty years lie blows out 20,440,000 smoke clouds. If two lovers spend four hours together and the lover takes or receives 200 kisses—low ealeulation—and eawh kiss lasts ten seconds.'in five years' time the lover would have 305,000 kisses, and their lips would have been united for the space of forty-six days and six
hours.
If the entire population is considered to be 1,400,000,000 the brains of this
How LI Huns: (Tvtns Palil R-Terrace to If in Mot tier's Alrmory. A Chinaman, be he king or coolie, is devoted to his father and mother. When either parent dies, custom ordains that the sons shall resign all honors ami employments to repair to the ancestral tomb and mourn there for a long period. Our former minister to China, John Russell Young, tells in the Review of Reviews how the Chinese premier. Li Hung Chang, waa prevented from nunetiliously observing the custom by an imperial decree. The aged m >th ‘rof the great Chinese statesman died, an 1 he hurried to celebrate the rites e.t her grave, accompanied by his brother, the viceroy at Wuchang. Everyone was expecting the premier’s resignation, r.n 1 hi i enforced retirement from all official positions. His enemies thought that Li had gone finally; his place would be filled by another, and his power become a memory. Suddenly there came a decree from the throne commanding Li to lay aside mourning and, at the end of three mouths, resume office. His brother was permitted to remain at the tomb and do the filial reverence. The decree was without precedent; but the emperor was sacred and Ins command supreme. Li Hung Chang returned to Tientsin, his home. When Mr. Young saw the premier's yacht anchored in the harbor of Ohcfoo he went on board to pay his respects. The premier looked like a starving Ijeggar. He wore the coarsest raiment. His beard and forehead had not been shaved, and his queue hung down from a clotted mass of hair. Lines of sorrow streaked his face, and his hands were grimy. The first man in the empire, noted for his carefulness iu raiment and cleanliness of person, appeared as the meanest subject, that he might, by privation and penance, do reverence to his mother’s memory, according to the creed of 'his ancestors. A few days later, when Mr. Young met Li at Tientsin, the beggar’s mien had vanished, and he was again the wellappointed nobleman. WHITTIER AND HIS POETRY.
O-I^IEIEIfcTCJLSTXiIE, TILT30. C u\\Y\wV, •?}\00,000. £wy\\\av%, ,000
1>I FtECTOItSSt A. L. O' Hair, Pres.; M. F. Me Ha fie, Vice Fret; M. I). Fridges, Cash.; J. L. Jxandel, Asst. Cash.; E. B. Evans, IT. H. Alice, F. .4 Arnold. S. A. Hays, Quinton Broadstreet.
The Day We Celebrate.
Once n year :t comes With its rttiRs and drums, With .t.s cannon loud, With its rockets high And their starry crowd
Filling all the sky. Music in the air. Powder everywhere,
Crackers making noise, Snapping at vour feet,
For Itu* happy boys All along the street. Then, hurrah! I say Independence Day
Comes but once a year, With its noise and smoke,
Let us hold it dear, Dig and little folk. Let us take our part With a loyal heart.
Be our dags unfurled. Little maid and man, Proudest in the world,
Free! American!
—New York Independent.
VEN CHAM
20 llis. Standard Granulated Sugar, Ul.i O. Baking Powder, l"e a lb. and up, 4 cuus Pens or t ora, 25c. All kinds oj' Canned and Dried Fruits at Hottom Prices.
Best Bucket Syrup, (>0c. Best Lake Suit. £1.10.
Kidder W Sou’s best Flour, A
gues*., that they desire to see at their great No. 1. repasts. The first is dispatched two days Screen Doors, S.Tsb, Glass Rud
«»:*«•“ *•«»«* '»m*~
engagement; and the third just before thelP^*^®®'
hour has struck, so as to show how impatient I
they are to see their friends arrive. The best tea in Japan is raised iu districts where snow often falls to the eaves of the houses. Many plants will survive under such snow that are not hardy even iu the Southern States. By the same rule some varieties of Japanese lilies will survive Vermont winters I that are not hardy iu Missouri. Rubies of the t rue pigeon blood color are so rare it is estimated that they are worth ten times their weight in diamonds* To catacombs of Rome ccntain the remains ^ about six n illions of human beings, and those of Paris about three millions.
B. F. BAR WICK No. 11 North Side Square, GREENCASTLE, IND. emis
John Vane© Cheney Says lie Was the
Hums of America.
“The homespun work of John Greenleaf Whittier will outlast the finer fabrics of Longfellow, Lowell, Bryant and Emerson," was the belief voiced by John Vance Cheney the other night, in his lecture on the Quaker poet. Despite
number of human beings would weigh Whittier’s occasional crudeness and
When the devil noes to church he generally
dresses in whiteill Your Blood.
Is the cause of that tired, languid which ! COlT&Ct.
afflicts you at this season. The blood is 1 ... ,, impure and has become thin and poor. That J-OU A16 COldlQllj Kl\ 119(1 to C&lL
is wny you have no strength, no appetite, '
cannot sieep. Purify your blood with
iTSisrsL 'Xlfjstjz. . •' «>» *•»
orate your nerves.
DOGS AND DOG LAW.
1,022,712 tons, or as much as ninety-six Ironclads of the ordinary size. The air pressure on a person of ordinary size is thirteen and a half tons. A man of fifty years of ago has in ordinary cases undressed himself 18,350 times, and, of course, dressed himself
just as many times.
When a person on the street raises his hat, makes a bow, the work of a second, he is carried by the movemont of the earth 500 meters round with the planet, three miles round the sun, and nearly a mile forward with the sun. FUNERALS HIS HOBBY.
i). E. WiLi.LA MbON, u\ Lwvv-, (JHCKNrASTI.K. INU. Sasl^cst !n al! courts attended to promptly
<4
A
PERFECT CURE FOR
MALARIA
IKS-rino »>nr«L'«»r_n» nf STFKFTF.P.’S DRY
iiiit.'-i-\’i' 'U ""’All .'‘I <1 HI. Indigestion. |
Pain* ii the Stomach, Fever m anal m tciHn !h.* v end ItlaiMcr; the* b« t |
1 with oi
medy kr
lion* on each iwu kage. Sold by Pniggista or sent by I ail. postutre pretmid. Sh'ice HO cts. for single, or I
RiUupi nthe Kidney* nn<
Tonic known. Can be used with or without spirit*. | • j-ltv far the cheapest remedy known. Full dm
“ *- • “old by Dr
onic known, t an tx» ns rjJ-lt’H far the rhea!Hist i s on each |>ockago. S
Pri— • t
I rackets ior f»U cl*. G. £>. Biauipd u*ivLii m j
ment. Address,
mi
two
payment. Address,
GEO. G. STEKETEE. Grand Rapids. Mich
Art ‘Always mention this paiwr.
COLORADO
Some of the Illegal Foollahneiii to Which Owners of Canines Submit. Dogs have not the same property value here that they have in England, and this is so notwithstanding the fact that dogs are property here and they are not property in England. This seeming paradox may be explained from the fact that according to the old English laws felony was punishable by death, says Harper's Weekly. If dogs had been property then, to steal a dog would have been felony, punishable by death. It was not considcrered right that a man should die for a dog, and, therefore, dogs were held by the courts not to be property. There are foolish dog laws in nearly every city and town in the United States based on the presumption that dogs are not property, but such laws would not stand investigation and the interpretation of the higher courts. A dog catcher who "seizes nogs and puts them to death is acting without warrant of law, whatever the local ordinance, for property cannot bo taken from a citizen without giving him an opportunity to be heard in a court of law before a jury. The owners of fine dogs arc usually so careful of them that the dog catchers and poundkeepeis have oma*. ctiunco to cupvuro them. MASS FOR HOMER. The Caro Cleverly Turned the Table* on
Ills Jokers.
Tty order of the archbishop of Paris a requiem mass in the nature of a ceremony of reparation was celebrated lately. It was fitting that this should take place at St. Eustuche, where the coffin of Moliere should have been taken after his death, as that was his parish. The artists of the Comedie Prancaise, the Odeon and the Opera
vvi-i'i- pr,-f,i‘!it.
The day following the Moliere mass, two young jesters fresh from the boulevards presented themselves gravely at the sacristy of one of the largest churches and aGred to see the oure, He
gave them audience.
“We desire,” said the holder of the pair, “to have a mass said for the re-
pose of the soul of Homer.”
“It is a very goxl idea,” replied the
United States Treasury Has a Man Who Enjoys Them Exreedlngly. In one of the bureaus of the treasury department is a man who has a chronic desire to help bury people and attend funerals. The other day, says the Washington Post, he was transferred to a new division. The first day he asked his chief for leave of absence during the afternoon. “What for?” asked the chief. “I want to attend the funeral of Capt. Smith.” The chief had hardly got acquainted with the man and sent him upstairs to his former chief to ask if he had been permanently transferred to his division. The man came back with the announcement that he had been transferred, and lie was excused for the afternoon. The same day this chief met the chief of the division where he had formerly been employed. “Why did you send the man to me to inquire if he had been transferred?” “ile asked for leave of absence, and I wanted to find out whether I had any authority over him,” was the reply. “Did he want to attend a funeral?” “Yes.” “I knew it,” said the other. “It’s a regular thing with him—a disease. He has a mania for attending funerals.”
T!i© Difference In Days.
A “solar day” is measured by the rotation of the earth upon its axis, and is of different lengths, owing to the elllptieity of the earth's orbit, and other causes. An “astronomical day'* commences at noon and is counted from the first to the twenty-four hours. A “civil day" commences at midnight and is counted from the first to the twelfth iit au , and then again from the hi'at hour of the day till the twelfth at night. The ‘ ‘nautical day” used by ship captains, explorers and some 1 few others is counted as a “civil day," only that the reckoning is begun at noon, as with the
“astronomical day.”
Heggary Preferable to Slavery. Henry Fisher, the earliest licensed pilot in Delaware, was a man of substance when the war for Independence broke out, and besides serving as a major in the continental army he freely gave his wealth to aid the cause. When about to part with his savings he was interrupted by his wife, who said, according to tradition: “Henry Fisher, will you make beggars of your children?” and the pilot's answer was: Better Be Beggars than slaves.”
stiffness of style and diction, notwithstanding he had essayed to make “Banner” rhyme with “Susquehanna,” “cotton” with “fortune” and had attempted to force “onward” and “looking” into rhythmical juxtaposition in the same line, yet his spontaneity, simplicity. strength, enthusiasm, warmth of color, humanity and granitic intensity dowered his muse so richly as to make these minor blemishes but as spot, upon the splendor of a sun. More than any of America' > native bards ho had the gift of the lyric muse. He was and is the Ameri ;an Burns, singing songs to the hear: ( of the plain folk Whittier’s anti-slavery poems, his lyrics of New England, his songs of labor were reviewed by the lecturer, their faults pointed out and their clustering beauties commended. Not so finished in his style as Longfellow, not gifted with as lofty imagination as Bryant and not showing such dazzling flashes of genius as Lowell, still Whit tier surpassed them all in pathos, simplicity aiul that indescribable witchery of melody that leads captive the hearts of the people. A MIXED-UP FAMILY. Story of a .Man Whoso Son I* III# Hrotta-er-ln-Latv. Here are the raw materials for a headache: Dr. King, of Adelaide, a widower, married a Miss Norris. Shortly after the doctor’s honeymoon the doctor's son married a sister of the doctor’s
wife.
Then a ’brother of the doctor’s wife married the doctor’s daughter. In other words, the doctor's son became bis stepmother’s Brother-in-law, and the doctor's daughter became her step-
mother's sister-in-law.
The doctor, by the marriage of his son to the sister of the doctor’s wife, became the father-in-law to his sister-in-law, and the doctor's wife, By the marriage of her sister to her stepson,
Emm liiiMiiY
Everything pertaining to headwear can bo found at Mrs. D. E. Preston’s. Styles and prices al-
MRS. D. E. PRESTON.
trimmers ever in the city, has charge of the Trimming Dept.
Hood's Pills are easy to take, easy in
action and sure in effect. 25c.
P. O. Colliver, Atty.
Shoes were blacked as early as the Tenth Century. The substance used seems to have been lampblack mixed with rsneid oil; for in
an old romance a man is ejected from a com- | Circuit Court! in
Sheriff’s Sale.
By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Futnam
cause wherein Dome tarings Association is
blacked his shoes, and they could not stand aut * Thomas 13. Burns is defendant.
pany of polite persons because he had just Building, Loan and Savings Association is
1 * ‘ ’ll—' f '
the smell. I will expose to public sale to the highest
bidder, on Sometimes,” said Uncle Eben, “de folks
dat finds it dehah’dest ter git deir minds WEDNESDAY. THE SEVENTEENTH DAY oflf’u money am de leas’ successful in giltiu* | OF JULY, 18‘J5,
d ih hands outer it.’*
between the hours of 10 o’clock a. m. and 4
The beard may be colored brown or black
by Buckingham’s Dye.
Willie: “Oh-o-o-o! Is that great big dUb’. of ice cream for you, grandpa?” Graadpa: No, Willie; that’s for you.” Willie: Umph! What a little bit.**’—Judge.
o'clock p. m. of said day. at tho door of the court house of Putnam county, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years of the following described real estate situated in Putnam county, State of
Indiana, to-wit:
The east half of the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section twenty (20), and the north half of the northwest quarter, and the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section number twenty-nine (29), all in townanip thirteen . north, rang* four 1 west, containing one hundred and
Several very encouraging efforts have recently been made to spread a knowledge of art among people who never have a chance to visit galleries and museums; and, in the July
Forum, Hamlin Garland will explain the * forty (140 acres more or less, situate in Put-
exhibits held in many Western towns by the nam count}', Indiana.
Western Art Association; Mr. A. C. Bernheim . if such re net 8 and profits will not sell for a will tell the results of picture-exhibitions on ! sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, interest
the East Side in New York City; and Miss Jane Addams of Hull Hcase, Chicago, will explain the methods and results of the circulation of pictures by that famous institution. Dashaway: “Have you ever seen this pencilsharpener, old man? One of the best things you ever saw.” Cleverton: “Is that Then why don’t you iharpen your pencil?” Dashaway: “1 left my knife home.” T/ie Discovery Saved his Li/e, Mr. G. Cailouette, Druggist, Beaversville, 111., says: “To Dr. King’s New Discovery I owe my life. Was taken with I^a Grippe and tried all the phpsic ans for miles about, but of no avail and was given up and told I ; could not live. Having Dr. King s New ‘ Discovery in my store I sent for a bottle and began its use and from the first dose began to get better, and after using three bottles was up and about again. It iS worth its weight in gold. We won’t keep store or bouse without it.” Get a free trial at Albert Allen’s Drug Store.
lace,
id
and costs, 1 will, at the same time ami p expose to public sale the fee simple of real estate, or so much thereof us may be sufficient to discharge said decree, interest and costs. Said sale will he made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws.
FRANCIS M. GLIDEW6LL,
June 19, 1895.
Sheriff of Putnam County. 10
In a Fish’s Stomach.
An extraordinary discovery was made in 'the stomach of a fish of the lin# species at Liverpool wholesale market
cure, without so much as the lifting of j the other day. The fish weighed fifteen ^*y^»hro\v. I poUXids, *iy»« * ii» x'iicy ovomadi were v»vo ‘•nnd when will you say the mass?” , smooth cobblestones weighing over five asked one of the young men, a little ! pounds, which had evidently been used i Rprprised. i us sinkers for a deep sea fishimr line.
CJoIpj* o?i# ftiere fliU Summer ? If “When brfng the The «o far could be seen, did ii«u , u»To , r’«ori , . VU W " aUtl IM,0r,na ’| notice of his death,” replied the cure, not appear to have suffered from tho ° ' ;whoooortecffialy conductedhfa yidtort j(wmobmof ^uch nwylyhtitt ItadtQBi*
AddressB. 1. WINCHED., Ch?eim»n Blk, Denver, Col.
to the door.
1 *oh.
Three Crops a Year
Can be grown on the same laud in Eastern Mississippi and Southern Alabama along the line Mobile &> Ohio Railroad. The summers are cooler, the winters are milder, the death rate is lower, than in the North. Improved
, .. iiotowper ^re*. uqjipuro’^.i la* d
became stcpinotner-in-law to ner own *•> »o t5 .of? aere rear r^Mway ‘•tation^.. !t is sister. the best portion for raising fruits and early
l!y the marriafre of the brother oi the doctor’s wife to the doctor’s dangiiter the doctor beeamc father-in-law to his brother-in-law, and the doctor's wife Became stepmother-in-law to her
own brother.
What relations, asks 1’icaroon in Pall \L>U Budget, are the children of the contracting parties to each other? A Good Omen. Not long ago there was a Frenchman who had a large family, and who was haunted by the idea that when he died there would he no one to look after LU children. While thinking of this, one spring day, ho noticed two nests in a hedge close by each other. Each contained half-fledged birds, whose parents were lying dead, lie went away sad, thinking that tho young birds must die. What was his surprise, however a few days after, to see them quite happy and appurcutlj Well fed. He stood apart an^ watched, and presently he saw the parent Birds of other nests come to the young birds and feed them. They had adopted tho little orphans—a fact which the Frenchman naturally accepted as a good omen with regard to his own little ones. Difference In Voice*. One's surprise in the fact that no two person's voices are perfectly alike ceases when one is inlorineu l»v an authority that, though there are- only nine perfect tones to the human voice, there ere the astonishing number of 17.502,113,014,■115 different sounds. Of these, fourteen direct muscles produce 10,382, and thirteen indirect muscles produce
173,741,828,
jt.'jlice to Non-He aide nts. Tho *t„te of Indiana* Putnam County, as; In the Putnam Circuit Court* September Term, 18*.6. Alla McUgh
vs.
Ellen Stack and John Stack. Complednt No. 5558k Now onies the PliJntitF, by Lee D Mathias, Esq., her Attorney, and files her complaint herein, for foreclosure, together with an affidavit that said defendants, Blien Stack and John Stuck, are nou^residenta of the State of
Indiana.
Notice is therefore hereby given said De fendanfts, that unless they ba and appear on the 1st day of the next Term of the Putnam Circuit Court, the same being Septewber 2, A. D, 1895, at the Court House in the City of Greancastle, in aaid County and State ami answer or demur to said complaint, the sfjne will be heard auddetermiiied in their
absi iC4
\Vitiit-Ss n»y na'iie, and the >eu!t ofsald CoiiTt, affixed ut the city ot Greencastle, this 20th
B / W. H. H. Cullen, Deputy. Lee D. Mathias, Pltf.’sAtty.
3tl0
tne uesv poriiuu Itti.-IIUK nuuiauuu j , « . tV , uoi;
crops*"Laud*8°are aiivancinv.^now‘fs th'e Ume DANIEL T. DARJIALL, Clerk,
to buy. Very low rate excursions monthly. The Mobile & Ohio has put on two through fast trains each vuy daily between St. Louis and Mobile. Tt ia the shortest and quickest
route to the South.
An illustrated pamphlet idling all about our country will be sent free to all who wish it Apply to F:W. Greene, General Agent, No. 10.8 I^orth Broadway, St. Louis, Mo., or to E. E. Posey, General taMsetigvr Agent,' jMobile & Ohio Railroad, Mobile, Ala. tf
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castorla. Children Gry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
to distribute our ad rertise- <
fments In part payment f-ra high grade Acme Liiicyuie, wnicU v.o aoiul thorn ouapproiaiT No ♦ work dono until tho bicycle arrives and proves
{satisfactory.
| Young Ladies
t If tors or girls apply they muat be well recom*
X mended. W rite fur particulars.
ACME CYCLE COHPANY,
ELKHART, IND.
Baby was rick, wo Rave h"r CasSorla. When she was a Child, sho cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria.
Vv hen she hud ChihirsU, sho gave thaiu Casloria.
■ -sS'. O~-—>
I>ry r.nnci I lord of
Oscar Webster, the old reliable, POLAND CHINA SWINE. who has been hp.neing paper for our . . f . people for over thirty years, is still j and two summer util's bred to Claude's suin the field and does the very best I ?« rior No -*°. fa, T 0 ' v J? 11 ! 1 .
in the field and does the very best pcdor No. mis. lo f.rrow in June. »nd
work in this line, using muscle and :
sm) no wind: be iraarsntees : Beei-s;*ii r.ee.s”*ini orsTe-i.i'Meesfrom
9IGRGE W SHUEY, PROPRIETOR, Bainbrulye. Ind.
sk'll, snd no wind; be
satisfhetion, and does the work r.s ] i’ < ' n cheap as anyone. Don’t contract,
for your paper hanging before seeing Higliest price paid for hides, pelts him. Stf and tallow by Vancleave & Sion, UU
