Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 July 1895 — Page 2
A Sufferer Cured
“Every season, from the time I was two years old, I suffered dreadfully from erysipelas, whieh kept growing worse until my hands were almost useless. The bones softened so that they would bend, and several of my fingers are now crooked from this cause. On my hand I carry large scars, which, but for
AYER’S
Sarsaparilla, would
SwJLIh‘ sores, provided 1
'was alive and able
to earry anything.
Eight bottles of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla cured me, so that I have had no return of the disease for more than twenty years. The first bottle seemed to reach the spot and a persistent use of it has perfected the cure.”—O. C. Davis,
Wfiutoma, AY is.
THE ONLY WORLD'S FAIR Sarsaparilla
AYER'S PILLS Promote Good Digestion.
ROASTED
COFFEE,
The best article in town, Also the fullest stock of
And
Wife
L. WEIK&CO.
OWtsX. vW
G. M. BLACK S
Lmj, Sale aail Feed Stable
Franklin St., near northeast corner public square.
Best Livery Rigs. Farmers’ Teams Fed. Horses Boarded. Call and see. tf2
HA IT. H A F TIME-TABLE-BIG FOUR.
ight Express aa'p’lis Accommodatior
. 2:30 a ra . 8:12 a m . 12:35 p m . 4:15 p ra . 5t2: p -»
EAST.
♦No. 36, Ni t “ 2, In
t “ 4, Flyer * “ 8, Men. * “ 18, K niolf orb acker
U 1ST.
♦No. 35, Night Express 12:32 a m * “ 9, Mail 8:50 a in * “ 11, Southwestern Limited 12:38 p m t “ 6, Mattoon Accommodation 4:36 pm t 41 3. Terre Haute Accomodation... 7:30 pm ♦Daily. tDaiiy except Sunday. No. 36, Night Express, hauls through cars for Cincinnati, New York and Boston. No. 2 connects with trains for Michigan divisions ▼ia Anderson and to Cincinnati. No. 4 con-
nects for Cincinnati, Springfield, O., and , iud. No. 18, Knickerbocker hauls
Waoasii, ...w. *,v,.
through sle. ptrs for Washington
D. C., via
v UivJ 14 Sivv*,.vl?. 4144 c4oIllI4^lv444 , 44. V. », , 1.4 C. Si O., auc! through sleepers for New York via N. Y. C. R. ft.; also dining car. New
coaches illuminated with .as on all trains.
F. P. HUE8TI8, Agt.
V<\NDALiA LINE.
Trains leave Greencas-
In eflect May 19,1895.
tie, It d.,
FOB THE WEST. No. 5, Daily 9M4 a ra, for St. Louis. “ 21, Dally 1:35 p ra, “ “ “ 1, Daily 12:25 pm, “ “ “ 7, Daily 12:26 a m, “ “ “ 15, E*. 8un_... 9:01 a m, “ “ “ 3, Ex. Sun.... 5:28 p ra. “ Terre Haute. FOR THE BAST. No 20. Dailv 1:35 pm, lorlndianapolis. “ 8, Dally 8:36 p ra, “ “ 2, Dally «:03 p ra, ‘ “ “ 6, Daily 4 30 a m, “ “ “ 12, Daily 2:35 a ra, “ “ “ 16, Ex. Sun.... 6:17 p m, “ “ “ 4, Ex. Sun 8 40 a m, “ “ For coraplet Card, giving all trains and stations, a:i<! i.jr full intorraation as to rates, through ca-s, e* ., '■ddress J b. DO f LINO, Agent, . ireencastle, Iud. Or E. A. Ford, General I’aasenKer A. . t *. Louis, Mo ■
C);lOUWim.NO»fcL8«inrtC6IC*tO Br CO 'p
CHEESE-BOX MAKING.
Vast Numbers Turnod Out Yearly by Expensive Machinery.
Competition .\u10n4 Manufarturers Haa Created a Great Industry —flow the Roxei Are Put Together.
. 1:12 a m •12:07 p ni .11:25 a m i
In effect May 12, 1895.
NORTH BOUND.
No. 4\ Chicago Mail “ 6 ,J , Chicago Express “ 4If, Local Freight
SOUTH BOUND.
No. 3’, Southern Mail
“ 5 , Louisville Express 2:17 pm “ 43t, Local Freight- 1:05 pm
Daily, tDaily except Sunday.
Pullman sleepers on night trains. Parlor and dining cars on day trains. For complete
An idea of the magnitude of the cheese industry in this country is given by the fact that the boxes in which the cheese is shipped represent a cost of nearly half a million dollars annually. It is not many years, says the New York Sun, since cheese was shipped in any kind of barrel or box which would hold from one to half a dozen goodsized forms, packed in straw to keep them from being bruised or broken in the handling. It was only factorymade cheese that received such protection, while dairy cheese was sent to market destitute of any covering other than its own roughly bandaged rind, which in most cases proved invulnerable. Competition among manufacturers has changed all this, and at present the manufactureof boxes gives employment to a largo number of hands and necessitates the use of powerful and expensive machinery. It was customary in the early days of the business to saw the hoops, as the large body of the box is called, out of the log in planks about one-tifth of an inch in thickness. The waste of material was a most serious objection to this plan, fully fifty per cent, of the timber going in sawdust. The invention of the rotary cutting machine has prevented this waste und at the same time produced a better hoop than the sawed article. The chief timber used in making cheese-box hoops is the common swamp elm. No other timber seems to possess the same qualities of lightness, toughness and elasticity, so requisite for cheese boxes, as this oncedespised product of American forests. The logs, after being cut in the proper lengths, generally five feet for an ordinary cheese box of fifteen and a half or sixteen inches diameter, are thrown into long vats filled with water, where they are boiled from fifteen to twenty hours. The time required to soften the timber, or cook it, as the operation is called, varies according to the size of the timber and the season. Large logs require to be cooked longer than small ones, particularly when the logs are frozen. It is not uncommon to find the center of a log still frozen after fifteen hours of boiling. Experience is the best guide in this part of the business, and to know when the timber is thoroughly cooked and not overdone is one of the things acquired only by constant observation. When sufficiently boiled the logs are lifted in iron grapples from the vats and laid on skids, where the bark is removed. Then a log is lifted by a crane and swung into place in the machine, where it is held in a horizontal position by chucks or dogs that center it at each end. In this position the log revolves like a roll of paper in a printing press. The knife which does the cutting is very heavy and is bolted to a heavy head called a carriage, which is fed forward by screws toward the revolving log. In the most approved machines the knife has an end or oscillating as well as a forward motion. This reduces the strain on the machine and permits the cutting of soft, unsound and shakyhearted logs. As the knife comes in contact with the timber the inequalities of the log are first shorn off, and gradually the log becomes perfectly round and yields an unbroken sheet of lumber, like the unwinding of a roll of cloth. This sheet of wood is broken off in convenient lengths, which are passed under dividing knives that cut them into uniform widths, corresponding with the required depth of the box. If the boxes are to be made up at once the hoops are bent around iron cylinders to give them the form of the box, after which the bottom is pressed in and nailed in place. Comparatively few boxes are put together in the larger mills. In most eases the product is dried and shipped to the cheese manufacturing centers, where the boxes are completed. The boxes in the finished stutc a.M too bulky for eeonr>apical handling. The remnants which are not wide enough for hoops are used for the cover band and for the narrow band that goes around ! he bottom of the box. The bAxes vary in size both as regards depth and diameter. The most common size will hold a cheese of from «irty to sixty-five pounds. Such a box is ten inches deep and fifteen and onehalf inches in diameter. This is the size of cheese most in demand for export. The size for home consumption is ns a rule much smaller and requires a box from five to nix inches deep, but of the same diameter as the other. Various kinds of timber are used to form the heads of the box, but elm is the accepted material for the hoops. Owing to peculiarities of the soil, the timber in some localities is inclined to be shaky, the checks or shakes running around the log and following the grain of the timber. SucL timber was useless when the hoops were sawed, but in the rotary process much of it can be turned to good account. The bulk of the elm timber used in this business is brought in from Canada. The western peninsula of Ontario lying north of Lake Erie contained one of the largest tracts of elm timber on the continent. It has been greatly depleted in recent years. The logs are taken out in winter when the swamps are frozen and are skidded near the railways or on the lake shore. The bulk of them are taken to the mills by water in tow of powerful steam tugs.
I lALlfmOh ON HEREDITY.
A DEADLY DISEASE OF TO-DAY.
The Great Incream- In the Nmn’>or of CaHee of I’areele. In connection with the cock-sure statement of Mr. Howells that the present race was never so healthy and strong r.s now it Is Interesting to read the following paragraph, written by Dr. T. S. Clouston, superintendent of the Morningside asylum, Scotland, says the Medical Record, lie says: “One terrible form of brain disease, with mental symptoms, is certainly increasing. * * * That malady may be described as a breakdown of the great center of mind und motion in the brain; it always goes on from bad to worse till it renders its victim utterly helpless in mind and body and kills him in a few years. No cure and scarcely any mitigation of this latterday curse has yet been devised. It is a disease of cities, of restless lives, of active brains in their prime; sometimes of dissipation and debauchery, of life at high pressure commonly.” During the past year the asylums of Scotland received 150 new eases, those of England 1,400 and those of Ireland 52. The asylum statistics of this country show an even greater number. In a single asylum of this state, for example—that at Ogdensburg—there were among the 053 admissions 21 cases of general paresis. This would make the proportion of general paresis over 4 per cent. Among seven state asylums, to which 1,343 patients were admitted in 1S90, there were 00 eases of general paresis, or a little over 3 per cent. If 4 per cent, be the general ratio for this disease in the state of New York then the total number of paretics among the 10,000 Insane would be about 040. As a matter of fact, the number is much greater, because the proportion of this disease is larger in the New York and Kings county asylums than in those of the state at large. Hut even if there were but 4,000 cases of general paresis among the 100,000 insane of this country it would be an extraordinary evidence of the development of a disease which in the last century was certainly not known, even if it did exist.
THE QUEEN'S DONKEY.
Once the Property of a Poor Daoqne Peasant. Queen Victoria, during her recent sojourn at Citniez, on the French Mediterranean coast, was often seen to drive, on pleasant afternoons, a very sleek and comfortable-looking donkey. The aged queen, holding the reins herself, seemed greatly to enjoy her drive, and the complacency of the donkey suggested that he almost understood the honor which was being done him. This donkey, whose name is Jocko, has an interesting history. During a previous sojourn in the same district, says the Youth's Companion, the queen *’as one morning enjoying herself incognita, in the open air at Aequisgrana, when she saw a peasant leading along by the bit a donkey which looked as if he had once been a tine animal of his kind, but now seemed to bo almost starved. lie was lean, languishing, evidently suffering. The queen asked the man if his donkey was for sale. “That depends, signora,” said the man. “If I were to sell him, now, how should I get my living?” “How much did you pay for him?” “A hundred francs.” "I will give you two hundred, and you can buy another donkey.” The man sold him to the unknown “signora,” and poor Jocko at once began a new life. Abundantly fed and carefully groomed, he blossomed out as a royal favorite. The story spread, and the queen eonld take no more promenades with convenience, for she was certain to encounter every day several peasants who tried to sell her decrepit and half-starved donkeys. She bought none of them. During her late visit the queen drove through Aequisgrana with Jocko, and his former owner, the peasant, saw the equipage go by. The donkey was fat, glossy and glittering with buckles of silver und gold. “Alas!” exclaimed the peasant. “When I sold the donkey, why didn't I throw myself in?”
FOND OF LETTER H.
! resuit: ‘Charles
Cheap Gas In IHrmlngham.
The city of Ilirmingham, England, j supplies pure coal gas to its citizens at
2:47 a m 54 cents a thousand. The municipality
bought out two private gas companies at a price which makes an annual cost
SATURN’S RINGS.
Innum»rable Satellites of Minute Proportions.
Men Use It for an Initial In Names When Any Other Would Do. “It's a peculiar thing,” said the knowing clerk in a hotel which is noted more for its hospitality than it Is for its inquisitiveness into the character of its guests, “it's a peculiar thing the fondness that the average man has for the letter II as an initial. Now, I don't suppose that there are more middle names beginning with 11 than with any other letter—M or H or S or H—but nine men out of ten, if they are in doubt about a middle initial, decide on H,” quotes the New York Sun. “Now, my middle initial is W, but for every letter I get, except from people I know well, that has my initial right, I get three in which it is put down II. It's very seldom, too, that you'll find a man with sufficient strength of character to leave out the middle initial of the man he's writing to if he doesn't know it, so he claps in an II and lots it go. There seems to be a prevailing superstition that a man isn’t just wlint he ought to be unless he has a middle name, and that the chances are very strong that that name-begins with the eighth letter
of the alphabet.
“Now, here's another instance: Cast your eyes over this page of our regis- j ter. That is mostly late guests who drop 2a hero Into nt night and simi ' j names other than their own. See the
IntereRtliiR DUcoverle* .Made hy A.tronomer* During tlie Last Quarter of a Century — Methods of Study.
!
WIT OF GREAT MEN.
noth
nearoiiadeld and Spurgeon Were
Liberally Endowed.
The prompt wit of the late Lord | Beaconsfield is well known. On one | occasion when he was a member for Bucks, he presided at the annual din- j ner of the county agricultural society at Aylesbury. Among the company, says the New York Post, was a farmer In the neighborhood, a sou of the Em-
Ilf. PlEKflff
Golden Medical
The announcement made bv Prof. ,, , , , ... ,. ,
Keeler, of the Mount Alleghany ob- t ' raM IsU '' a,ul a
•ervatory, regarding the rings of Sat- ! comn f neement of Mr Disraelis urn, has awakened general interest in 1 fP eeehe ? " us £f ? q ' le , n 1 tl y characterized that subject among astronomers. While ’ an ,lhnost Da ’ nfu j hesitation, ami on Prof. Keeler’s statement may possibly thls occasion the faltering was even require additional facts in order to se- ! niur , e noticeable than usual, but the cure Its acceptance, says the Boston I restlesa eye* "'ere very bright, and the Advertiser, there is certainly no doubt 1 nmster of fence was readv with narrv
that the assertion itself has awakened a widespread and renewed interest in the rings of Saturn, as it is announced that Prof. Keeler has secured practical proof that the so-called rings of Saturn are composed of innumerable satellites of minute proportions, or what astronomers call “cosmic dust.” The rings of Saturn have for many years been the subject of much speculation and discussion. It is remarkable that Saturn, among all the planets of the solar system, should be the only one to be inclosed with rings. Certainly the smaller planets have nothing which may be satisfactorily compared to the rings of Saturn, and Jupiter, which is about three times as large as Saturn, has nothing which corresponds to these rings, which lie in the same general plane, although they have varying degrees of density. From the inner edge of the ring to the planet the distance is less than six thousand miles, while the total width of the ring is about three times as great. These rings of Saturn have been known to astronomers for nearly two centuries and a half, and they have during that time been a source of much wonder and speculation. During the past twenty-five years especially, however, the rings have been studied with much closeness and perseverance. From all over the world searching telescopes have been pointed at this mysterious phenomenon night after night. In 1870 M. Teovelot began his series of observations at Cambridge. About six years later be announced that the matter composing the ring nearest to Saturn “is agglomerated here and there in small masses, which almost wholly prevent the light of the planet from reaching the eye of the observer.” Two years later Prof. Crofthnll, of Washington, gave additional testimony in this direction, describing the dusky part of the ring as “somewhat like particles of dust fioating in a ring of light traversing a dark chamber.” In 1881 a Swiss astronomer, Dr. Meyer, began a series of observations which partially demonstrated the fact that the ring was composed of separate particles, moving round the planet as satellites, perhaps to some extent like the meteors which circle round the sun. What Prof. Keeler has done has been to furnish proof that the conclusions reached by the early astronomers were correct, and to give also the speed with which the minute satellites circle round
the planet.
This was accomplished not by any absolute observations of the particular atoms within the circle, as some newspaper reports would seem to imply, as such a proceeding is practically impossible under the limitations of science to-day. The method pursued, while perhaps less romantic, was, however, almost equally satisfactory. Observations were made with a spectroscope, and by comparing the rays of the spectrum furnished by the eastern edge and the western edge of any body of satellites, it was possible to calculate the speed with which the circle itself was moving around Saturn. This method has already been used in connection with observations regarding the speed of the revolution of the sun; and Prof. Keeler's observations have shown that the speed of any of the satellites of the inner ring may be taken as between thirteen thousand and seventeen thousand meters per second. There is one peculiar feature of Prof. Keeler's discovery which has not yet been emphasized. Astronomers generally have supposed that the great discoveries regarding the rings of Saturn would be made in certain periods which were supposed to be especially favorable for observations of that planet. Such a period occurred in 1884-815, when the rings were in such a position as to invito special observations. After that period had passed, it was supposed that no more important discoveries would be made again until 1914, when especially favorable conditions will return. Yet, curiously enough, although the great refractor of the Washington observatory was used repeatedly during the period of 1S81-S < 3, no striking discovery was made at that time; while it was fire years later ilu 1SS9) that an observation of an eclipse of one of Saturn's satellites showed that the ring caused a shadow almost, if not quijte, its dark as that planet itself, thus proving that the satellites which compose the ring are thick enough to prevent effectually the transmission of light. And it is in 1895, nineteen years before the next “favorable period,” and ton years after the last one, that Prof. Keeler's ingenious and important test has' been secured.
master of fence was ready with parry or point. “Speak up,” cried the Irishman; “get on faster.” lie had fallen into the trap. “Wait, my friend,” said the member; “it takes some time to bring my ideas down to yours.” Many anecdotes, more or less apocryphal, have been current as to the wit of the late Rev. C. H. Spurgeon. One, however, which is perfectly authentic, is characteristic of the man. On one occasion he was much annoyed by three young men, who persisted in wearing their hats. lie appeared for the time not to notice them, but proceeded to tell his audience of a visit he had paid to a Jewish synagogue. “When I entered,” he said, “I took off my hat, but was informed that the great mark of respect was to Iceep it on. I did so, though I can assure you I felt very strange wearing my hat in a place of worship. And now, as I paid this mark of respect to tiie synagogue, may I ask those three Jews iu the gallery to conform equally with our rules, and kindly uncover their heads?” The men col-
lapsed.
TO BE IN GOOD SOCIETY.
Culture and Refinement to Have I*reeodence Over lUrth and Hank. High moral character and education, whether it be of book dore or that of observation and good example, polish of manner and good habits are the requisites of good society. One whose ideas of social equality were rather democratic than exclusive, says the Philadelphia Press, was heard to remark: “One man is born just as good as another, and a great deal better than some.” Unless the son of a gentleman be a gentleman he is no more entitled to the name suggesting refinement than a man is entitled to the name of general whose father before him was a general. One must win his own laurels or go uncrowned. Birth to a marked degree is an accident, and those who are considered to be well born are oftentimes the most objectionable elelnents of society and the most dangerous associates. One need but watch closely the daily record of those on both sides of the Atlantic, whose birth gives them prestige in society, to prove that education and cultivation of high morals go further toward making refined society than all the good or blue blood that ever flowed through the veins of royalty and the nobility. Of course, it would be the height of absurdity to argue that all men are born equal, and would be as illogical to argue against the superiority of blooded animals of the race course over the ordinary draft horse. However, the nobility of culture and refinement should have precedence over the nobilitj’ of birth and rank.
AN ATTRACTIVE HAT.
A Forpptful Treacher I>I<1 Not Remove the Wrapping Taper. A distinguished preacher of somewhat arbitrary manners was engaged to preach in Belgravia, and purchased a new hat for the occasion, says Pearson's Weekly. He was met outside his residence by a young man who was to guide him to the church. His guide, after what the parson thought a rude stare and smile, said: “I beg your pardon, sir, but j’our hat—” “Oh, yes! never mind the hat, but mind your own business,” the parson interrupted curtly; and the young man was silenced. The people they met stared and smiled too. “Strange how many people notice when one has got a new hat,” thought the parson The church was reached and the worshipers approaching naturally turned to observe the noted I preacher. The vicar met him nt the vestry door to welcome him, but, hesitating, said: “Pardon me, canon, but pray, why do you wear your hat so?” The tile was doffed and the outside found to be still covered with white paper which the absent-minded divine had not removed.
,v trains. For complete t' 10 cit Y of 1291,000. This amount
timecards and full iuformrtion in regard to | has been paid for seventeen years, und rates, through cars, etc.^ldres.^ | the people of Birmingham have reaped a
F. J. Ri ed, G. P. A..Chicago.
1 net profit on the investment during
II. Jones,’ ‘John II.
Smith,’ ‘George H. Robinson,’ ‘A. 11. Brown,’ ‘F. W. Brown,’ and so on. There arc ten names on that one page the middle initial of which is II. Now, that letter Isn’t any easier to write than any other letter; it certainly isn’t any more ornamental, and I can't see that in any respect it has an advantage over the rest of the alphabet. Yet the , human race sticks to it with a fidelity j worthy of a more important cause. Pd | like to have some wise roan tell me ,
Literary Men Who Were Shy.
Mrs. Julia Ward Howe tells two new anecdotes of the shyness of literary men—one of Hawthorne, of whom such anecdotes are common, the other of Irving. Irving, she says, attempted to make a speech at a dinner given to
that Unit of »3,570,WW.
why.”
Charles Dickens, but nfter mumbling a few words indistinetly he remarked: “I can't go on," and sat down. <>f away. Hawthorne’s timidity she had a glimpse while calling with her husband on Mrs. Hawthorne in Concord. While they were in the parlor they saw a tall, slim man come down the stairs, and Mrs. Hawthorne called out: “Husband, husband, Dr. Howe and Mrs. Howe are here!" Hawthorne bolted across the hall and out through the door without even looking into the
pa 1 lor.
Two Eloquent Hnntora.
Maj. Champion, in his book “<>n the Frontier,’’ describes a deer hunt, in the course of which ho found his dog astride the dead body of the deer, while an Indian stood a little way off, bow and arrow in hand. By signs he made the white man understand that he had wounded the differ ami the dog pulled it down. Then he cut up the deer, tied the forehalf of it up in the skin and placed it on one side. The other half he laid at Maj. Champion’s feet, delivering himself of a speech in the 1 'to language. The white man understood his meaning, but not a word of his address. The Indian and the dog had killed the doer together, and the dog’s owner was entitled to half the game. The major was equal to the emergency. He rose anti delivered in full the classical declamation: “My name is Norval,” with appropriate gestures, just as lie had many times gi\cn it at school. Nothing could have been better. The Indian and the white man shook hands with effusion, and on< h with his share of the venison rode
Insect* on the Track.
In Russian Turkestan a train was re-
cently stopped by caterpillars. The insects were crossing the track when the cars struck them, crushing them into an oily paste, which made the rails and wheels so slippery that another locomotive was required to move the train. The same thing happened in Kansas
during the last locust invasion.
DISCOVERY
Cures Shitty-eight per cent. 0 f a cases of Consumption, in all i Earlier Stages.
Although by many believed tobeiact — ble, there is the evidence of liund-»ds * living witnesses to the fact that, in'jji earlier stages, consumption is a cu ' disease. Not every case, but a tarr? , — icntage of cases and we believe', percent, are cured by Dr. Pierce’s Gojp Medical Discovery, e ven after thn aJj has progressed so far as to induce rtpeit bleedings from the lungs, severe !ini t s cough with copious expectoration ;in c i, ing tubercular matter), great loss of fl, and extreme emaciation and weaknesi Do you doubt that hundreds of such
reported to us as cured by “ Golden JlJ ical Discovery ’’ were genuine e
dread and fatal disease ? You need m/.tfl
our word for it. They have, in nearly evM instance, been so pronounced by the- hi and most experienced home physiciafl who have no interest whatever in representing them, and who were of^™
strongly prejudiced and advised agai® a trial of .' ('.olden Medical Discover® but who have been forced to confess r?
- , — Zt '-vt.ieas it surpasses, in curative power over • w fatal malady, all other medicine- w z( which they are acquainted. Nasty c.qH liver oil and its filthy "emulsions” mixtures, had been tried in nearly all th* cases and had either utterly failed to be fit, or bad only seemed to benefit a little M a short time. Extract of malt, whisk ft and various preparations of the hypopf H phites had also been faithfully tried in v; '2j The photographs of a large number T , those cured of consumption, bronchi 1 lingering coughs, asthma, chronic n; "J catarrh and kindred maladies, have b skillfully reproduced in a book of I pages which will be mailed to you, on a ceipt of address and six cents in stan Address for Book, World’s Disptns J Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. 4
Grand Excursion
iagara Falls |
VIA
0!0 FOUR ROUT TUESDAY, AUG. 6th, At the following Exceedingly Popular Ra^ Niagara Falls $ .'J Put-in-Bay w Luke Chautauqua fJ Toronto in Thousand Islands 10<j Our patrons know the excellent qualit;! these excursions via the “Big Four,” \v;| is the natural route to the Falls via Butfl Elegant Wagner Sleeping Car accommfl tions will be provided for all. Solid Trafl of Parle r Cars and Coaches run throi without change. For full particulars call at once on Fj Huestis, Agent “Big Four,” Greencastle 1 E. O. McCormick, D. B. Marti 1 Pass. Traflic Mgr. Gen’l Pass. & Ticket G. C. Neale, Veterinary Surgeon. Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary CollJ And member of the Ontario Veterinary M cal Society. All diseases of domestic anii carefully treated. Office at Cooper Brotn Cilery Stable, Greencastle, Ind. All eg day and night, promptly attended. Fil and Surgery a specialty. coim Goins out tlirre IIiIm Summer7 I, let mo Hen,1 yon vletVM itml iufor| tiou as to reHortN—
I
AddressB- L. WINCHEIL, Cheesman Bik, DenverS
He—“Tie been watching for a chan kiss you for the lost ten minutes.” “You must be near-sighted."
Good is positive. All evil Is so much or nonenity.
Keep the hair healthy and. of a t| color by using Hall's Hair Xenewer.
He who always rre&ces his tale with if ter is poised betuiAn impertinence and I
l"«*n Mr
Free.
Those who have u, e d Dr. King's New | oovery known Ita vubc, and those who [ not. have now the Opportunity to trv it ' Tall on the advertised Druggist and u Trial Rutile. Tree. Bend vour namel address to H. E. flurklen Si Co . Chil and get a sample box of Dr. Kings] Life. Pills Free, as Gel! as a copy of (.nkl Health and Household Instructor AJ1 i*f which is gn.irf. lr t*.e,| to do vou and cost you noihiiia-. AluettAbcui ‘ store. \
Bad men excuse t/eir faults; good menfl them.
i'rme I’ills.
Send your address, to H. K. Buckler Chicago, and get a Wme sample box King's New Life Pi^ls. A trial will c you of their merits j These pills are i action and are particularly effective core of c.ins'mst 4..o and Si.-W Ho Tor Malaria and Lflver troubles tin been proveil invalumble. They are teed to he perfectly^ free from ever t.-rious substance annd to be purely
1475 u i/.-s ' v. t/tr purely ble. They do not weaken by their but bv giving tone to- (tomach and greatly invigorate Lhs sywm. Rcgu 25c. per box. Sold by n Ali>ert Allen'-
gist. 1
The birds with the "^lightest featli not sing the sweetest.
Itrliii in Six y v ipurs.
sing Kidney and'*
Distressing Kidney
relieved in six hours by Ompjlyy ' *
Sooth American Kidney i lyruj » 7 remedy is a great surprise or (>pera m t[f exceeding promptness In re auppo. the bladder, kidneys, back amlhcss
;! • 1 i - v |. i--;,ee in mule and j relieves retention ot walei auJ , Uff-a ing it almost immediately. If you
quick relief and cure this is yonrr re JeA.” Wold by Albert Allen, Druggist, Ureencastla Ind. lyl41
The devil won’t let a stingy men have anl mercy on himself.
Jl nr It l in's Arnica Salve. The Best Salve In the world for Cut Bruises. Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fevi sores. Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblain* Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positl vely cures Piles, or no pay required. It i guarantee!! to glto ,.vifeel »alUfai.t!jZ • money refunded. Price 25 cents per boy For Sale by Albert Allen. lyoit
Motion Excursions. To Michigan City, Wednesday morning July 24; very low rate. To Bainbridge-Fair, July 29 to Aug. 2. on and one-third fare. Special trains will b. run between Crawfordsville and CloverdaU Aug. 1 and 2. at half fare rates. To Rattle Ground camp meeting, Aug. 1 t 2, one and one-third fare. To New Albany, Aug. 6 and 7, to Red Men ( Pow Wow; half fare. t To Denver, Col., Aug. 11 and 12, half fare.' Call pn J. A. Michael, agent, for particular
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