Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 July 1895 — Page 5
mis. Amid wge, ffntj ui caDeputy tt, S, Marshal, Columbus, Xar,., says:
“I was delivered of TWINS in less than 20 minutes and with scarcely any pain
after using only
two bottles of
llglrMOTHERS’ vm-m* FRIEND” EXI> NOT STTFTER AFTERWARD.
IIZZ: “bToII-
BIULTII U) nECUUTOU CO., ATLVMA, CiA. SOLD liV ALL DRUGGISTS.
Orient by Tic
S I OO per tuatied free.
H To the South *i he Louisville A Nashville Railroad will ’.I tickets on dates and under conditions as ' .'low mentioned, at On:: Single Fare for • ' e RorND Trip, and one-way tickets at about v c half the usual rate.
f° r the sale of tickets will be June II, July 5, August 7, September 4 nnd October 1,1S95. Tickets will be sold for the Regular Trains starting from Cincinnati, Louisville, Evansville and St. Louis, and from Stations of our Connecting Lines in the North to connect with those trains. Tickets good to rcturu within so days. POINTS IO l * c ' cels w ''l be sold are the principal Cities, Towns and Villages in the States of Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, North and South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. * Full information cheerfully furnished upon
application to
J. K. RIDGELY, N. W. Pass. Agt., Chicago, 111. C. P, AIMORE, Gen’l Pass. Agt., Louisville, Ky. ^HUMPHREYS’ VETERINARY SPECinCS For Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Logs, Hogs,
AND POULTRY.
COO Pnac Rook on Trent rarnt of Animals
a ml Chart >eut Free,
crura $ Ferer«,Congpntlone. 111 flrivnnintIon A.A.(Hpinul Meuiugitia, Illilk Fever. H.K.—StrniuH. Laitirnefts f K lie a mutism.
!>i.Nieinper, Nasal Dlmhargea. D. I).»Hotfl or (arubs* \> oniiM. E. Ef-CoiiuhN, Heaven. Fneiiinnnia* F. F.—Colic or <*ripeM. llellyache. G. G.—.TliHCiirriuge. Hemorrhages. |1.II•••Urinary and Kidney DiMeaHen*
ptive DipirnMPM. IVIange. of lligentioiit I’arnly*!*.
11.II.-I 1 I. I.—Ertip J. K.«*lli»
iseaseo
Single Bottle (over SO doses).
Stable C’a**e. ManuAl,
• GO
Veterinary Cure Oil an«l Medicator, ST.00 Jer Vcteriuary Cure Oil, - • 1.00 Bold by or *rnt prrpaid anywhere and la any
quantity on rrrtipt 0/ prlre.
UI XI’IIKKTB* XF.D. CO., 111 A 11S Wlinaoi St., Raw York.
rM
IHUMPHaBYS* HOMEOPATHIC f> f% ISPECIFIC No oil
In uae 30 years. The only aucoessful remedy for Nptvous Debility, Vital Weakness, and Prostration, from* over work or other cause*, tpl per vial, or 6 \iale and large vial powder, for #5. > il«i l-y l»ru^ci«ta ( or »**nt youpaidon r«c«lp» oi price. ni’nrimkYB'ai:u. cc.,in a ila wiuiLm sc. Srwv>,rk.
ISucf
ifl.HMMI Vn 01 ^or|f)i ToplfCRU St^ppt it U i Lsu JJUliUi UUw.auv.* Clip A TT TVTi XliJU, UNiJ. Buiklintf Association plock bought ami sokl or takou r.s security for loans.
LONDON'S ALDERMEN.
D. K. WILLIAMSON, ■KWocwev^ t\\ IjClvv-, GIIRKNCASTTjK, IXD. Business in all courts attended to promptly Three Crops a Year Can prrnwn on thp .am" land in F.nstprn Mississippi ami Southern Alabama along the line Mobile .V Ohio Railroad. The summers are cooler, the winters are milder, the death rate ts lower, than iu the Notch. Imuiuveo farms, till to $)5 per acre, unimproved land f! to t:, an acre near railway stations. It is the heat portion for raising fruits and early vegetal,lea, stock raising mid general farm crops. Lands are advancing, now is the time to buy. Very low rate excursions monthly. The Mobile .V Ohio has put on two through fast trains each way daily between 8t. Louis and Mobile. It ia the shortest and quickest route to the South. An illustrated pamphlet telling all about’ our country will be sent free to all who wish :* tvr?v*o p w Orcertc Uenerai Agent. No. Irts North Broadway, Bt. Louts, Mo., or to E. E. Posey. General Passenger Agent, Mobile & Ohio Railroad, Mobile, Ala. tf
Oocar Webster, the old reliable, wnu na» iweir iiutigiim paper lor our
RIPENING
OF WINE.
Councllmcn Who Are of Excepti nal Mental Attainment
Sharp Contrast Between JlnnlcLial (iov. eminent In Arneriea and England — Personnel of the Fogiinh Board.
The orpranization of tho council is ol a type quite familiar to Enjrii-h citizens
How the Juice of the (irupe 1m Treated
In Switzerland.
The wine iu Switzerland is left in the casks till tlu* following spring, and it is here that fermentation takes place and the mout Is converted into wine, says the Cornhill Magazine. The change begins almost immediately; the liquid becomes turbid, eurljolic acid gas is evolved, a scum is thrown tip on the surface and the temperature rises. A climax is reached; the intensity of the fermentation diminishes.
threngh their city charters, but s range subsides; the scum settles as a slimy to Americans. Of its one hundred and deposit at the bottom of the cask and thirty-seven members, one hundred and a clear yellow liquid is left above. The eighteen are councilors, elected by the grape sugar has almost entirely disapparliamentary coustit jencies of Lon- peared, a corresponding amount of aidou, two. from each constituency and cohol has taken its place, and the sweet four from the an -ient city. The nineteen taste of the mout has given place tothe remaining members, or about one-sev- characteristic vinous flavor of the
enth of the whole body, are of the so- wine.
called aldermanio rank. These alder-1 In the early stages of fermentation men, writes G. L. Fox in the Yule Ue- enormous quantities of carbonic acid view, are chosen in two divisions trien-' gas are given oiT, and huge lines are nially for a term of six years, by the made in tho cellars to drive it away, council, elected itself only for three. Hut at the time I write of (October, years, and in this matter acting as an | 1HD3), when the vintage was the finest electoral college. The electorate which. of tho century, when barrels to hold chooses the council differi from that of mout could not be purchased for love
the same area whose representatives sit in the house of commons. Peers or women who are householders or rate payers may vote for councilors, while a certain class of parliamentary voters are excluded from the council register,
or money, when every cellar on Die lake from Geneva to Villencuve was packed with casks of mout, so great was the amount of carbonic acid gas in the air that, in spite of every precaution, several deaths from suffocation
and plural voting, tiiat is, voting iu j took place among the workers. In the different electoral districts by the sarm spring the wine is drawn off clear into elector—a system which prevails in the I other barrels, then bottled; vinordinelections for the house of commons—islaireis not bottled at all, but simply forbidden in council elections. The J drawn from the wood. This is the wine main basis of suffrage for the council is sold at all the little wineshops with the payment of an annual rate, that is, I which Switzerland abounds. It is local taxes, which are paid by occupiers | drawn off into quaint little glass deto overseers of the poor, while those in canters containing half a liter each.
work in this line, using muscle and skill, and no wind; he guarantees satisfaction, and does the work as cheap as anyone. Don’t contract
for your paper hanging before seeingj sentative of the liquor interest him. Stf sonu non grata in the council.
service and lodgers, although they vote at parliamentary elections, are excluded from the council electorate. Practically all legally qualified electors are eligible to membership in the coun-
cil except women.
The particular features of the council which impress an American as in sharp contrast with our own forms of municipal government are these: The aldermanic rank; the fact that all elected councilors are elected for three years and go out of oflice at one time; the absence of an3- qualification requiring residence in a constituency on the part of a councilor; and the concentration of all power in a single body, which, within the limited sphere of its functions, exercises both executive and legislative powers combined. The personnel of all the councils thus far lias been notable and of high quality. The success of the first council in organizing the machinery and in starting the wheels of municipal government in London was largely due tothe abilities and laborious devotion of Lord Itosebery. He was chairman of the first council during most of its existence. His successor was Sir John Lubbock, the eminent banker, writer and member of parliament. The next chairman, Sir John Hutton, presided over the council longer than his predecessors. He devoted all his time to the work of the council and was an admirable, businesslike chairman. The chairman of the new council, Arthur Arnold, is a brother of Sir Edwin Arnold, a former member of parliament and writer on economic topics, whose books on “Through Persia by Caravan” and “Social Politics" are known a little in this country. He is not at present'a member of the council, but was alderman in the first two councils. Frederic Harrison was an alderman for several years, and his brother, Charles Harrison, a prominent solicitor, is one of Die most tireless workers of the council and was vice chairman of the last one. The council soon after its organization divided into two parties, namely, the progressives, who favor radical reform, and the moderates, who opposed most of Die measures of the progressives. Naturally, most of the members are from the middle and upper classes of London, but the wage-earners and laborers are also represented. In tho first council John Burns was about the only labor member, but in the second he had a dozen colleagues in the labor interest. In each council there has been an average of a half dozen peers, usually peers of the right sort, namely, those who have won their title and position in the house of lords by their own brains and energy and have not had the distinction thrust upon them by the accident of birth. The moderateivictorjin the last election lias brought into the council chamber some peers of the latter sort, and it remains to be seen whether the earl of Ihmraven r.nd Lord Montmornes will give to Loudon, needs as much able and devoted effort as Lord Farrar and Lord Welbj- have
done.
About one-sixth of each council have been graduates of Oxford or Cambridge. In occupation a large majority of the members are active or retired bankers, lawyers, Including both bar risters and solicitors, merchants, manufacturers ami doctors, with some young men of the Arnold Toynbee type, who, inheritors of wealth and leisure, find their pleasure in the service of the municipality. The membership of the council is not only for those who sit in the chamber at spring gardens, but for those who arc conspicuous for their absence. That bane of municipal governments iu America, tinsaloon keeper, who is known in England as the publican, is rarely found there as a municipal legislator. Of the whole number of one hundred and thirty-seven the liquor interest was ostensibly represented in the first council by one stray brewer, and in the second by only one whisky distiller and two ev-pnbllcans To tho London moder-
and so served tothe unhiyrying Swiss, who drink it round little tables under Die trees on the sunny pathways or over wooden benches inside Die red-cur-tained wineshops. USE OF THE SHOTGUN. Proper Caro In Mandling to Prevent Accldonts. A good sportsman is familiar with his piece, and bra to enough to be afraid of it, says Harper’s Round Table. From the time lie takes it cut of the case the muzzle of Die barrels is on bis mind until he has taken it to pieces, cleaned it, and put it away in his case. When he starts out in th< morning, he takes out the barrels, and pointing them towards the earth as he holds them in his left hand, he springs the stock into its place with his right. Then having fixed on the little piece of wood which clinches the two parts together, he passes his right arm around the barrels so that as he carries it Die stock points up and behind him at an angle of about forty-five degrees, and the barrels point down toward the earth at a similar angle in front of him. Around his waist or in his pockets lie carries cartridges. No charge goes into ids gun until he has not onlj' left tne house, but actually arrived on the grounds where he expects to find game. If he has to drive to the proper woods or the shooting-stands or blinds, he places the piece in the bottom of the wagon, pointing out toward the rear, never once allowing it to point towards himself or anyone else who may be standing by. If he is near enough tothe woods or shore to walk he carries the gun as described, unloaded, until he reaches the proper place. When climbing over fences, whether with cartridges in place or not, he places the gun under the fence flat on the ground, climbs over or under, and then picks it up from the other side. Resting a shooting-piece against a fence or wall in an upright position shows the greenhorn or the careless and therefore poor sportsman. MESSENGERS OF THE SKY. About tho Ucniurkable Kite* Mario by the JapanoHO and Chinoae. In the making of kites shape is no consideration. A square, circle, man, star, fish, dragon, horse or shield will fly equally well, but they must he equally proportioned. In Japan one sees a whole menagerie at once in the air—horses, cows, monkeys, bats, fishes, crows and snakes, as well as dragons, babies which cry, boys with their arms and legs spread out, hunters and sol-
diers.
“Fighting kites” are seen everywhere iu both China and Japan. The armed kite is usuallj’made about two and a half feet high and covered with cambric or silk. The tail may be made of strips of bright-colored cloth about one inch' wide, securely tied in the middle to a strong twine. The destructive part of this kite lies in tho tail, to which are attached sharp pieces of broken glass called knives. Fasten three of these knives together with wax, so that each shall point in a different direction, bind on three slips of thin wood lengthwise to hold the wax and glass firmly, and cover with cloth or kid. A much simpler weapon is made by dipping the ten feet of string next to the kite in glue and then rolling it in pounded glass until thickly coated with a glistening armor of sharp points. The object with botli is, of course, to cut your opponent's string. The skillful maneuvering which this requires is very good practice in training one to act quickly. It is considered dishonorablc to out an unarmed kite.
ItlavkxniltIi'n Farm.
Is the blacksmith’s trademark i>. scowl? A writer on "Trades and Faces,” in Blackwood’s Magazine finds the following to say about him: Inmost blacksmiths the constant exercise of the corrugator supercili muscles causes " permanent frown, nnd gives the face
ntes or conservatives belongs the ibs- a somewhat haid expression; but creditable distinction of haring put for-, whether there is any inward and spirward sever, candidate* representing the j itual .date corresponding with this outiiqiitn iincir.-,11 hi tie, ei.Vt election. | ward and visible sign 1 am not quite fortunately only tiiree of these were sure. Whether their characters in any
The Fewer nnd Intlueiwe of the Supreme
Court of the lulted States.
The supreme court is not an elective body, and 1 suppose tiiat might seem to the English radical a sufficient reason for sweeping it away, says the Nineteenth Century. The judges are airpointed for life by the president and they are responsible to no popular tribunal not even to public opinion. They sit as a court of pure law, the 1 final authority from which in all Amor- j ira there it, no appeal. Their jurisdiction, strictly defined though it be, is coextensive with the whole union. It! is the one instance in history in which i popular sovereignty, acknowledged as i supreme in the 1 mg run for every other I purpose and every other authority to I which it has delegated power, submits | to a master whom it did not appoint 1 and cannot nun.**.- and cannot escape. Everybody submits; the states then-1 selves, sovereign as they still are for' certain purposes, submit: congress and the president, the army and navy, the !
people themselves, all submit.
In the hands >f the supreme court democracy itself, if it seeks to pass an unconstitutional law, is powerless. A unanimous vote of the people, a unanimous vote of the house and senate and the approval of the president would not j make a statute law if this tribunal says it is not a law. But do you ever hear
CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK
X25TE. SvVY\\\\W
l>IIlEOTOIt«-is
Ji. L. 0 Hair, Pres.; J/. F. Me Ha fie, Vice Pres; M. D. Bridges, Cash.; J. L. Ban Ul, As.sf. Cash.; E. B. Evans, IF. H. Alice, F. A. Arnold.
•S’. A. Hays, Quinton Broadstreet.
WHEAT~FERT!LIZERS
H0RSE SHOE BRANDS BONE FERTILIZERS
^ vVy ?:isKI WHEAT eR0WERS ” H "
LEAST MONEY.
One bag per acre insures good Wheat and Grass Crops. Write for circular and prices. N. W. FERTILIZING CO., ^anufaoiurcrs,
UNION STOCK YARDS, CHICAGO, ILL.
Specimen
of Ueftnl Phraseology by a
ilural Justice.
Tlie pioneer lawyer, in whatever
1JlIlr country his fortune may be cast, is of a proposal to abolish the supreme certain to have experiences worth recourt? Why not? It is not only that ! nicmbering* Officers there are usually the court has been a great court of not ' elected for any special qutfiificagreat judges, its honesty and ability t ' OIls - hut because better men are not and wisdom alike recognized, but be- 1 available. A correspondent offers a cause the American democracy has the 05186 * n ‘-avs Die Youth’s Com-
good sense to see that, under a written ' P a nion.
constitution like that of the United' ln R western village a certain I States, such a tribunal is essential to 5 “^I'dre” Thomas was elected justice j Die working of all its parts, and that, j the peace, and as his bailiwick was : check and all-powerful check though it' lna ny miles distant from the county be upon democracy, it is also a guar- j was furnished with blank anty to the American people that, in the affidavits for use in cases returnable to words of the preamble of their great’ the county court. These blanks eoncharter, justice shall be established \ clu dod with the statutory words, “con-
trary to law and against the peace and
dignity <>f the state.”
anil the blessings of liberty preserved to themselves and their posterity.
A REGULAR GOLD MINE.
Itow » JuBtlre of the Peace Mulcte.1 Ulcjele Killers. “There’s a justice of the peace in a country town not far from here," said a bicycler to a Ibttfalo Express man recently, “who has a scheme that will make him a millionaire if lie sticks to it for a year or two. ‘‘You see the town has an ordinance forbidding bicycle riding on the sidewalks. A good many wheelmen go that way, so what does this justice do but scoop out a hole and make a great big mud puddle clear across the street right in front of his office. Of course, when a wheelman comes along, rather t hau ride through the mud, he turns upon tho sidewalk. That’s what tho justice is wafting for. He has a constable on the watch, and the two rush out and nab the cycler. "I was caught in the snare one week. Though I protested I only intended to keep on the walk till I passed the mud, it was of no avail. I was fined five dollars and had to pay it. I got a chance to look at his lx>ok when he was re'ling my fine, and there was a record of some twenty wheelmen who had been served the same way that daj’, nnd it was still early in the afternoon. "It made me mad, and I began abusing the old fellow for having such a mud-puddle in the street. “ ‘Why don't you fill it up?’ I asked, if you want wheelmen to keep in tho road?’ “He grinned iu a most exasperating manner, and answered without so much as a blush; “ ‘ ’Spose we're goin’ to destroy such a source of revenue as that mudpuddle is? I guess not. 'John.’tnrning to tho constable, ‘you better take the hose and soften it up a little bit read}* for the next sucker.’ ”
M CHANGE
20 11 >s. Standard Granulated
Sugar, 81.00.
linking Powder, D'e a lb. and up. 4 cans Peas or Corn, 25c. kinti* of Canned and Dried Fruits at Dot-
tom Prices.
Best Bucket Syrup, OOe. Best Lake Salt, 81.10. Kidder A Son’s best Flour, A
No. 1.
Screen Doors, Sa-li, Glass and Hardware of all kinds at bottom
prices.
CUMBERLAND TALK.
Oilil
Fxprexnionx In Cue Among the
Native*.
“Whims” is the local name In Cumberland for furze, and appears to be the Gaelic word quins, sharp points. ■’Ilenf” is a very peculiar word, (derived from the Old Norse haefi, a share,) and Ls applied to the part of a fellside common allotted to a particular flock of sheep, says the Gentleman's Magazine. Each flock keeps to its own “henf.” Nome very quaint expressions are “bride-loaf,” a wedding cake; “see-ing-glass," a mirror; “clout-hat,” a woman’s sunbounet; “ridding-out keam,” a hair comb; “fireworks,” a magic-lantern display; “moley-man," a mole-catcher; “leg-weary," tired; "leg up," to trip up; “sneck up,” to wind (literally to latch up) a clock. The verbs “feel” iu the sense of to smell, and “lame,” in the sense of to injure any part of the body, arc peculiar. We may add “pipe-stopple,” the stem of a tobacco pipe; “butt, ek," a footstool; “thinkler folk,” the gypsies; “last dress.” a shroud, which children are taught to work at school, and afterwards to present to their grandparents and other aged relatives —a kindly act, but one which betrays that lack of humor and sense of the ludicrous which is characteristic of northern folk. A Cumbrian who goes to have his photograph taken announces that he lias come to be “struck.”
The first affidavit the county court received from the newly elected justice
read:
“Before me. a justice of the peace, appeared A. B., who, being duly sworn, deposes and says that on the day of C. I». committed an aggravated
assault upon the person of A. B. by j * tj ■T'T7T/' 8 iT7' throwing a rock the size of an egg at _Q. Jl . JLJ.CjlAv W JlL'xV
Die head of the said A. B., which would j have hit the said A. B. on Die head and ] killed him, if lie hadn't ’a’ dodged contrary to law and against the peace and dignity cl the state.” |' Not knowing whether to indict C. 1). for throwing the rock, or A. B. for dodging contrary to law and against the peace and dignity of the state, tho attorney compromised the matter hy
dropping the ease.
No. 11 North Side Square, GREENCASTLE, USD.
6m45
Best
5 Cent Cigars
A Chinaman'* Ariventure.
There are a large number of Chinese engaged in mining in northern California, and two of these Celestials had a )
quect adventure during the closing \ - t /"i 1 1 days of last winter. Three Chinamen \ L 111 )tl 11 Ol BSj
in camp were taken ill, and two of their companions volunteered to go to the |
nearest town, sixteen miles away, for' I (mPI ill 1110 4 medicine. The weather was clear, and i
the town was reached in safety. But
on the return trip a snowstorm came —VT—
up, and the Chinese became hopelessly : bewildered in the rough, mountainous ' country. To add to their troubles, they each had different ideas as to which direction to take, and finally quarreled and separated. One of them had not gone far before he found a hollow tree, into which he crawled. He had matches with him and built a small fire, and there he stayed until rescued, tea days
later. « Watchmaking Japan.
The manufacture of watches tas at-1 tained a considerable degree of importance in Japan. That empire now supplies British Hong Kong with watches. Yokohama has the finest watch making 1 ■wachinerv fnuu this country. The North Foie Moving; So*th. For the past forty or fifty years the 1 geographers and astronomers have sus- I pected that on account of a “tilting” in j the earth's axis, the latitude of all j places on the earth’s surface is gTad-| ually changing. A few years ago (1802 ! the astronomers decided to make a “test case” of the matter, and cow report that Die theory is correct. For exan> pie, they have proven that Berlin was fifty-one feet nearer the pole in September, 1803, than it was i.p March of the same year. If Peary and Wellman will only be patient the pi to will cc«u«
to them.
KIEFER’S. Acme CieM, Wall Plaster, Portland, and Louisville C-ements, Plaster Paris, irinie. Hair, etc., always ou hand. n. IB. IIXJBBBY,
W.i 6 erooni. 416 East Seminary St. P. O. Box ’.T3. Iy50
The Mom! ?
mm] ifl sight ts a pair of Gold Spectacles, and the only place :o hare them correctly flttnl is at IDS Fast Washington street. No one every sold glasses so cheaply iu Oreeucastle. Don't trust your eyes to spectacle peddlers and
jewelers.
G. W. BENCE, M. D.
We
Employ Young
iMen
to distrttrate
Weak and Nervous.
Describes the condition of thc.isamls of people ai this season. They Lave no appetite, cannot sleep, and complain of the pr<astratiug effect of warmer weather. This eoT'di-
tion may be remedied by Hood’s Sa-sapari- , wnirn wo acrid them on ai.nroval n„ 11a. which creates an appetite and tones up j work done until ttu blcyclo arrives and Droves
all the organs. 1 gives goo i health ty mak- -satisfactory.
I Young Ladies tSr&ffif
I mr advertiser aicii.o iii l ajiii; • • fu” a h’gj*. Aero* ♦ Dioycle. wnirh wo send them on approval. N<
future that tho London nominating J pressions 1 did not discover; there was committee and constituencies will taka a grave courtesy in their demeanor warning of the experience of American j while in hospital which was singularly cit.es, and always look upon a repre- dignified and pleasing, although ai-
p >111*-
ac ur
r
Classics.
An ancient controversy has recently been revived in England by Die question as to what really constitutes a classic. Some define it as. “an ancient author, highly approved, who is tan authority on the subject ho treats of.” (ioethe on the other hand, protested against the confusion of what is classic with what is merely old, and declared that aii ’ healthy work,” no malUst whether modern or ancient, is classic. The French Academy, speaking ex cathedra, defines classic authors us | “those who have become models in miv language,” while Sante-Beuve declares that a true classic is an author who has “enriched the human mind.” Indeed, no two opinions on the subject seem to coincide, and what appears to be a classic to one sort of people is refused that quaiiflcatioa by others.
Big Four Excorsionj.
To Wai -av., „oing ■cllt! , . Aug. 31. returning | L
15 day* from date of sale H.GS.
Bethany Faik. July 2T. to Aug 21, return I
limit Aug. 24, $1*5.
Rome City, fud.. July S9 to Aiijp 14, rerarn I
limit Aqg 1'. Id.50.
Lima, O., Aug. 5 and <s return limit Aua. 10, 1 #5.M. : „ Boston. Aug. 19 to 21. extreme return limit I K
gent . 12, hall
Columbus, O., Aug. 20 to 22, return, limit i
Allg. 28, fs.m.
Call on K. P. Huestis, agent,for particulars.
ACM 12 CVCI.F con PA NY, ELKHART, IND.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Ca&toria. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cry for Pitchers Castoria*
/\ , s'swyr I
X>ry .1 .imd Ilexxloi' POLAND CHINA SWINE I have some extra good Fall Pigs for said* anil two Hummer Gilt* bred to nauae’s bu- ! perior No. 12343, to farrow in June, and F.ggs j from three prize-winning pens—S. C. B. Leg- ! horns, Silver Lace Wyandotte* and Barred P. I Hock*, pi. for^s’Hirgr:- ft*nm either pen GEORGE W SHUEY, PROPRIETOR, 4t23 I' tiuiirHiy... j ml.
When Baby was sick, wo gave her Castoria. When sho was a Child, sho cried for Castoria. When sho became Mias, sho clung to Castoria When sho had Chililrun, sho gave thorn Castoria,
Xollce of lrMlIon. Not!.. :- reby ven tb*»t tho under.jimod has been appointed by the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Futiiam county, State of Indiana, Administrator of the estate of Elizabeth Farris, lato of Putnam county, Indiana, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. Dated this tith day of July, 1H95. HERMAN PARRIS, Administrator. L.’wid & Corwin, Atty«. 3U3
