Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 July 1895 — Page 2

■1,. n — — 1 WVJST rI

Sick Headache Permanently Cured “I was troubled, a long time, with sick headache. It was usually accompanied with severe pains in the temples and sickness at the stomach. I tried a good many remedies recommended for this complaint; but it was not until I l>egan taking AYERS , Pills that I received any tiling like* permanent benefit. A single box of these pills did the work for me, and I am new a well man.” C. H. Hi re niNos, East Auburn, Me. For the rapid cure of Constipation, Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Nausea, and all disorders of Stomach, Liver, and Bowels, take

Alth; NOT R>K lUCHES.

Hoada cf tho Catholic Church Ar« Not Wealthy Men.

Cathartic Pills Medal and Diploma at World'a Fair. Ask your druggist icr Aysr’i Sarsaparilla.

ROASTED COFFEE,

The best article in town, Also the fullest stock of

ci Fri

And

31$.

L. WE1K&C0.

S\.ove v\\

G. M. BLACK S Lifery, Sain aat Faeil Stal Franklin St., near northeast corner public square.

13est Livery Kigs. Farmers’ Teams Fed. Horses Boarded. Call and see. tf2

HA ML tVA Y TIME-TA BLE' BIG FOUR. EAST. •No. 3S, Night Eipress 2:39 a m t '* 2. Ind'pUis Accommodation 8:12 am T “ 4, Flyer p m • “ 8, Mail 1:15 p m • “ 18, Knickerbacker 5:21pm WEST. •No. 35, Night Express 12:32 a m • “ H, Mail 8:50 a m • “ 11, Southwestern Limiteil 12:38 pm t “ 5, Mattoon Accommodation 4:36 pm 1 " 3 Terre Tianje \ccnpindot£om.. ~:30jm "Oal’y +t>:iii;-ex-ept Snucav No, 36, Night Express, hauls through cars for Cincinnati, New York and Boston. No. 2 connects with trains for Michigan divisions via Anderson an 1 to Cincinnati. No. 4 connects for Cincinnati, Springfield, O., and Wabash, Ind No. 13, Knickerbocker, hauls through sleepers for Washington, I). C.. via C. A O.. arid through slcepeis for New York ▼ia N. Y. C. It. It.: also dining car. New coaches illuminated with gas on all trains. F. P. HUESTI8, Agt. VANDALIA LINE. In ettect May 19,1895. Trains leave Oreeucastie, It d., FOR THE WEST. No. 5, Daily 9:44 am, for St. Louis. “ 21, Daily 1:36 pm, “ 1, Daily 12:25 pm, “ “ “ 7. Dsilv 12:26 am. “ “ “ 15, Ex. Sun 9:01 am, “ “ “ 3, Ex. Sun„... 5:28 p m, “ Terre Haute. FOR THE EAST. No. 29, Daily.l:35pra, tor Indianapolis. “ 8, Daily 3:35 p in, “ “ “ 2, Daily 6:03 p m, ' “ “ 6, Daily 4:30 am, “ “ “ 12, Dally 2:35 am, “ “ “ 16, Ex. Sun 6 IT pm. “ “ “ 4, Ex. Sun.. SiOatn, “ “ For complete Card, giving all trains and aratiuus, and all luiormatlon at tc rate, through cars “•■c.. -id *res« J ft. DOM 1 Ml. Agent, C. Mcastle, Ind. Or E. A. Ford, General Passenger Agt., r' ouis, Mo B

Few of Them Have Paid Mnrh Attention to the .Lcrnmulutlon of Money— Some Who Have an Eye to Ituslneas. The late Cardinal Manning was wont to say that the proper way for a priest or bishop to die was without money and without debts. The great English prelate followed out his own teachings in this respect, and it has been tire usual rule with American bishops also. 1'ew, if any, of them have died posj sessed of any personal fortune, although the opportunity to amass j wealth was often present. Here in ! New York, says the Herald, for instance, the late Archbishop Hughes and Cardinal McCloskey could, if they had been so disposed, have easily accumulated fortunes through speculations or investments. Neither had anything to bother him at his demise. The late Archbishop Wood, of Philadelphia, was noted for his ability as a financier, having large experience in business before he entered the ministry. All his talent in this direction was exercised to improve the diocesan property. lie left nothing of his own. The pioneer bishop of Brooklyn, Rt. Rev. John Loughlin, was famous for his shrewd foresight of real estate values. He secured property all over the city in the best sites long before the city limits enhanced their value. With the resources at his command he could have easily been a millionaire. All he disposed of in his will was his watch and a set of old spoons, which he gave to his sister. A year before his death the people of Brooklyn gave him a purse of twentyfive thousanu dollars at the celebration of his sacerdotal jubilee. With this money he paid nlT the debts of some of the charitable institutions. The only modern prelate on record who tried to make money was the late Archbishop Purcell, of Cincinnati, who started a banking annex to the Episcopal palace. What a disastrous failure it was need not be recapitulated here. Yet it was his brother more than the archbishop that was to blame in the matter, and the object of the scheme was not for personal gain. It was a means adopted to better the resources of the diocese to meet the demands of the increasing population for churches and priests. Of the present members of the hierarchy of the L'nited States Archbishop Ireland,‘‘the consecrated blizzard” of St. I’aul, is probably the wealthiest. His personal fortune comes from land investments made before the marvelous growth of the western cities near his home and from railroad enterprises in which he had been Included by the intimate and powerful friends he has among the western trunk line magnates. According to his admirers, the bulk of his income goes to the poor missions and churches that form no inconsiderable part of his province. Archbishop Corrigan has a modest patrimony from his father's estate. It is doubtful if he has increased it from the salary of his office, which, as has already been explained, is well balanced by the demands continually made on it. He is now much in terested in the completion of the new diocesan seminary near Yonkers. His personal contribution to it is the erection of the chapel of the institution. This will probably cost him seventy-five thousand dollars. Cardinal Gibbons does not get a very large income from the small diocese of llaltimore. It is well known that he hesitated for some time about accepting the red hat, for the reason that he was too poor to incur the very considerable expense that accompanied such an honor. Archbishop Williams, of Boston, whose name has more than once been mentioned for a second hat, has also given this reason for a refusal. The other day he commemorated his sacerdotal jubilee, and one of the gifts from his admiring subjects was a check for fifty thousand dollars. Perhaps he may no v see his way to an acceptance of a seatia the senate of the church, where, it is said, the pope desires to have him. Archbishops Feehan, of Chicago; Riordan, of San Francisco; Grrw,. of Oregon; Ryan, of Philadelphia; Chupel'.e, of Santa Fe; Katzer, of Mk.viurUei; Jaosseus, oi Now Orleans, and Hennossy, of Dubuque, are all comparatively poor men. There is not a money spinner among them. Archbishop Elder, of Cincinnati, has a considerable reputation as a financial executive, but all his energies have been spent in getting the diocese out of the tangle into which the Purcell disaster threw its afrnirs

MONON ROUTE

cblwgvmt. kew ADitr' i CMicxto Rr co/q c-- w -yf- w ■ --"-a Tn . •Ter* May 12. NORTH BOUND. yr. i*, Chicago Mail 1:12 a m *• , Chicago Express 12:07 pm “ 4it. Local Freight 11:25 am SOUTH BOUND. jio. , southern Mail 2:47 a in •* , Louisville Express £:17 p m “ 43t, Local Freight 1:05 pm Daily. tDaily except Sunday. Pullman sleepers on night trains. Parlor ■ Ding cars on day trains. For com piste time cards and full informrtion in regard to rates, through cars, etc., address J. A. MIC HAEL, Agent. F. J. Reed, G. P. A..Chicago.

Related to tlie Oneen. Victoria, queen of Omit Rritain and empress of India, has just given her royal and parental consent to one of her relatives entering upon a professiua,ii carver in order to earn his living on the public stage. In an English paper the following business-like announcement appears among the court news: “A member of the queen's family is about to go on the stage as a professional singer. Countess Valda Gleichen, the daughter of the late Prince \ ictor of Huhciiiohe, the queen's nephew, more remarkable for her voice than her pocketbook, finds herself compelled to make her own living by sing-

ng."

The Ncwly-nich. Wealtli and ignorance sometimes go hand in hand. To a jewelry store in a small town there drove up one day a handsomely dressed lady, who entered, and, after some preliminary nourishes, «. ittcfi .or tt do..cn bo.. . enn A dozen souvenir spoons?" repeated the clerk, in natural surprise. “Yes," replied the lady, placidly, 1 a dozen souvenir spoons—to eat souvenirs with, you know. My daughter makes beautiful souvenirs.” The clerk turned pale, and exhibited a tray of orange spoons, on a venture. She selected a dozen and carried them away, and the dark is still wondering what she really wanted.

RUINED BY PIE.

Love for This 1'aitry Haired Uln Out ©f the Pulpit and Drove Him to Forgery. A most singular case is now in the courts at Kingston, in this state. A young man living there was lately found to be a forger, and when he confessed he said he was driven to the crime by an ungovernable gluttony for mince pie. To satisfy his craving he had forged the signature of a wealthy man to a note for one thousand dollars, and had got the paper discounted, says the Buffalo Courier. With the proceeds lie went on a minee-pie spree, and had devoured sixty dollars’ worth of this pastry before he was arrested. According to his story ids extraordinary liking for mince pie began to show itself when he was a boy. He seemed even then to feel that there was something abnormal In his appetite, for he went voluntarily to Bloomingdale asylum in the hope of being cured of his gluttony. After he came out he believed ho was cured and began to study for the ministry. But in a fatal hour, about two years later, the mania for pie came upon him with irresistible power. He broke into the housekeeper’s closet in the Auburn Theological seminary, where he was a student, and gorged himself with mince pic. His relapse so preyed upon him that he went to the faculty, and they advised him, he says, to drop his studies, as it would be detrimental to the ministerial calling for him to enter it with such a fatal appetite for mince pie. He would be likely to suffer a seizure of his mania at a supper in the church parlors or at the table of one of his flock, and create an unforgetable scandal, lie took the advice of the faculty and went to peddling clothes-wringers ami bed springs, but his malady was now so deep seated that he subordinated everything to his craving. He developed an unusual cunning for stealing mince pie, or in getting the money with which to purchase it. “I would be tempted,” said lie, “and fall; go to a restaurant and eat a pie and a half or two pics. I became ns helpless a victim to the mince pic habit as the drunkard is to the drink habit. Sometimes I have pawned my overcoat or my watch when 1 have seen an uncommonly luscious pie in,a window and have not had enough ready money to buy it." Then came the forging of the note and the pie orgy which ended in his arrest. After hearing his story a commission was appointed to inquire into his sanity, and it is likely that, instead of being sent to a penitentiary, he will be placed in a lunatic asylum. He is described us a thin, nervous-look-ing man with a wild expression, which is disappointing, for many a man of New England ancestry would bo glad to cultivate this lunacy if it would not spoil his complexion and keep him awake nights.

HOW WOMEN'S WHEELS DEVELOP Only a Few Years A an Manufarturem Wonld Not Make Them. It affords the pioneer women cyclers no little amusement and satisfaction to recall the days when bicycle manufacturers, in reply to requests for women’s wheels, would say with emphasis: “We have never manufactured a woman’s wheel and we never will.” In those early days of wheeling, bicycles for American women were imported from England. One woman who had never seen a bicycle, but had read of them and was possessed of the true wheeling spirit, bought one of these cumbrous machines. It had wheels thirty inches high, weighed over fifty pounds, had a solid tire and cost one hundred and forty dollars. The first ride of the owner upon this machine of solid weight and worth covered ten miles, and produced a sprained ankle, a black eye and an entirely demolished gown. The rider’s spirit was unbroken, however, and, after a rest of two weeks, she mounted again and rode to victory. In these days of teachers, trainers and countless comfortable appliances, it is refreshing to know of these Spartan achievements. While many women ride diamond frames and an increased number will doubtless continue to do so, the radical differences between a man’s wheel and a woman’s will always be the drop frame. When the bicycle is regarded simply as a vehicle and not as a toy or machine for display, the majority of women will probably wear skirts. A short skirt of sensible length avoids the actual danger of entanglement in chain or pedals. Still the inventor who can find any method of placing the chain under cover in a drop frame, without adding to the weight of the wheel, will meet a “long-felt want.” Along this lino the especial development of the voman’s machine must come. Out of the multitude of counselors is finally coming wisdom on the subject of woman's bicycle dress. The latest results attained enable a rider to go fitted for any kiod of weather. She may start in low shoes, heavy woolen stockings, knickerbockers and lightweight silk blouse on a hot summer morning, with a soft, round felt hat or cap with visor to protect her eyes. She can also carry a small package, and, if it rains, take from that package a jacket with square rovers, which button back on themselves or across each other. The jacket, knickerbockers and cap are all rainproof. If it grows colder she may don leggins and skirt of a length above the ankles, also rainproof. Thus equipped, the can defy the elementst The greatest stress should be placed upon a jacket which will cover the ches. and protect the lungs if necessary.

NATURAL GAS GOING OUT.

Coal Again the Fuel In the Large

Pittsburgh Foundries.

The Supply of Goa ll»* Also Failed In Other State* Since ISHS the De-

mand for Coal II:it Heen

Inerraatnc.

A Steady Inereaee Reported In Their Num-

ber In Thl» Country.

The latest newspaper directories show that there has been an increase every year since 1S77 in the number of daily publications issued in the United States. On the other hand, says the Cleveland Leader, the number of triweeklies has now fallen to one-third of

t,. c . ... .. , . what it was as far back os 1809. There

ural gas exclusively was the Etna iron ".'rpulflicntion "'Issued .cmi-.veek- LEAVES ITS MARK works, in Allegheny county, a few i , \ , ^ —every one of the painful meffularitiee miles above Pittsburgh and this es- ' an '* 1 1L> ' veu 1 ^ P a P tr * h.m .i. ->o weaknesses that prey upon women.

J * increased, though slowly of late. There They fade the face, waste the figure, ruin

’, ‘ . . V, J ‘V t,le las y. to are fewer biweekly and semimonthly the temper, wither you up, make you old a.mndon this fuel in the li tsourghdis- publications now than there were five 'xtere your time^ , , , „ triet. After twenty years of dependence . .. ;♦ Get well: That s the way to look well, uoon natural ff is s ivs the I’hiladel- ^ a 8‘°’ these stateraenta* Cure the disorders and ailments that beset pit la R ml. the'proprietors 1 of this r °?. d , ^ to the you, with Ur. Pierce’s Favorite Prescripplant have removed the pipes and are There was a^greaTincrease in the’ It regulates and promotes all the proper now returning to thy use of coal, long * t ,• ,• i.,, functions, improves dure&tion, enriches the after most of the other mills had sur? yT 7 t'em TT h £ b ''V*- dis I >e, » «^es and pains, melancholy rendered to the ehe'i-> biliim’motis fuel between 1870 and 1891, but now there > and nervousness, brings refreshing sleep, , , , ! , ‘ are fewer of these than in 1803 and 1893.1 and restores health and strength. It's a which ha.l always been the cheap foun- Xho i UL . roase over last year is small, powerful general, as well as ntenne, tonic dation of Pittsburgh s great industrial Tlu . re ha8 been a decided decrease iti; v,K ° r anJ strtngth prosperity. The dummshing supply the numW of bimonthlies since 1801, t0 tbe entlre SyStem - and the consequent increase in cost aml the quarterl i e9 have also become Mrs. Anna Ulrich, ofF/»n o«v*. Buffalo Co., have necessitated the abandonment of lt . s , than they were in 1892,1 gli he"hh t'hlnks^tS natural gas by most of the large manu- lKI:5 or , , , 4 The dailies alone have to

facturmg establishments in the I’.tts- no . faile , to in numbers every &&&&, burgh district, and its use is being m , r sinca ls £ ,, owt>r publications 1 Sp**® ^

= “r I •rr s i I

* ‘ , r ^ and smev then there has been a 1

come the smoky city of fifteen years i

^ 11 • ♦ i * x xi loss, one year or more than one, m all ago, alleviated in some measure by the kinds of ' io(li( . als except the daily use of fuel oil and manufactured gas, p?per> The figures for every class, as

given in the Rowell directory for 1893, which is just out, arc as follows: Dailies, 2,050; triweeklies, 40; semiweeklies, 331; weeklies, 14,083; biweeklies and semimonthlies, 383; monthlies, 3,670; bimonthlies, 55; quarterlies, 183. The relatively greater and more constant growth of the daily papers, as

compared with other classes of period- Diseases maiiea scaiea, on receipt or ic icals, means that the American people c " nts in stamps for postage. Address, are more and more hungry for the mTTv T sotlA latest intelligence of the world’s doings, * ’ ’ * °’ '

which have assumed importance with the decline of natural gas in the last four or five years. Natural gas was not a factor of very great importance in the Pittsburgh district until early in the '80s and the point of greatest consumption was reached in 1888, after which the decline began. It has never been feasible to ascertain with accuracy the quantity of natural gas consumed each year, but Joseph D. Weeks, of Pittsburgh, has prepared for the United States geological survey an estimate of the value of the coal disdisplaced by natural gas, which has been accepted as the most practical measure of the consumption of gas. In the period of its largest use the natural gas consumed in Pennsylvania, measured on this basis, was valued as follows: 1885, $4,500,000; 1886, $9,000,000; 1887, $14,749,500; 18S8. $19,383,375; 1889, $11,593,989; 1890. $9,551,025; 1891, $7,834,010; 1893, $7,376,281; 1893, $0,480,000. In Ohio the supply of natural gas has failed even more rapidly than in Pennsylvania. The largest ejnsumption in Ohio was in 1889, when it amounted in value to $5,215,000, hut in 1893 it had fallen to $1,510,000. The suddenness of the failure of the supply has caused much inconvenience and loss to manufacturing establishments, which in many instances were deprived of fuel almost without warning. While the supply of natural gas in Pennsylvania and Ohio has been diminishing a new productive region has come into prominence in Indiana, and interest in natural gas is now centered in that state. In 1886 the value of the gas consumed in Indiana was estimated at only $300,000; in 1888 it was figured at $1,320,000, anti in 1893 the value was placed at $5,718,000. The opening of this new field has stimulated the development of iron and steel and glass enterprises in Indiana in a marked degree. Notwithstanding the abundance of the present supply in Indiana there is no assurance of its continuance for a longer period than in other states, and a return to fuels more stable, if less convenient, is merely a question of time. In fact, it is claimed by geologists and gas experts that the point of greatest supply has been reached. While it lasts there is no fuel that possesses so many advantages as natural gas. The uncertainty of its duration is its only disadvantage.

A GREAT TIMEPIECE.

A Watch That Has Hun Since 1754 and

Is Still u Good Timepiece.

Judge Frederick W. Moore, of the superior court, is the possessor of an heirloom in the shape of a watch that no amount of money would buy, says the St. Louis Republic. And, besides its value as an heirloom, it has u hi.sj

toric interest.

The timepiece is of the open-face bull’s-eye pattern. As with all oldstyle watches of the pattern mentioned, the outer case must be removed before it can be wound. The outer

Ifcr Only Chance. On the corner of two Boston streets a voung man was peerin' through a surveyor’s leveling instrument and making signals to his partner, who stood in front of theschoolh ntsr above. A little girl, Coming from out the solioolhouso later than Iter mates, caught sight of the instrument, smoothed out her dress and posed in front of it. A big policeman came along. “Move on, little one,” said he. “I can’t,” simpered the child. | “Don’t you see I’m getting my picture

1 took?”

FACTS ABOUT DAILY PAPERS.

and that the eagerness of the nation to keep in the very front of progress is more marked than ever before. The improvements lately made in the telegraph, the telephone and railroad service Jiavo served the daily papers well, and they have made the most of their opportunities. More and more they are becoming the typical American periodical, more popular and more powerful than any other. The indications are that in the future their relative multiplication and development will show, even more than it has in the past, their superior vitality and the leaning of the American people to the paper which is never belated and never out of date. In the age of electricity the periodicals of less frequent issue than the daily paper, great, beautiful and popular as many of them are, can hardly hold their own, relatively speaking, against the publications which arc full of the nervous energy, the freshness and the terse strength of the telegraph. YOUNG MEN IN THE SENATE. More Numerous Now Than In the Days of

Zaeh Chandler.

At the time Zuch Chandler was first a member of the senate he was one of the youngest members of that body. Besides having a youthful appearance, all the other men seemed quite old to him. On the last day of the first term of Senator Mitchell, of Oregon, Chandler and he sat in the barber shop and chatted about events of the session, and finally Chandler began talking about his earlier career, says the Wash-

ington Star.

“When I went to Detroit,” he said, “theie were not more than fifty houses in the place. Now it has become one of the leading cities in the west. Michigan was a territory, and we had some pretty hard times there, but I stuck to it, and have been rather successful. Why,” he added, rather proudly, “I was elected to the senate when I

was forty-four years old.”

“That’s nothing,” aswered Senator

Mitchell, laconically.

“Nothing!” exclaimed Chandler. “Well, I consider it a great deal to have been elected to the United States

senate at forty-four.”

“Well,” replied Mitchell, quietly, “I have served six .years in the senate and

am not forty-four yet.”

“I give it up," responded Chandler. “You have the best of me. The further west we go the more push we have.” Senator Mitchell is still a younglooking man, yet there is only one man

<Hil Eeople.

Old people whorequire medicine to reft late the bowels and kidneys will find t true remedy in Electric Bitters. This me cine does not stimulate and contains whiskey nor other intoxicant, hut acts as tonic and alterative. It acts midly on t stomach and bowels, adding strength a iriving tone to the organs, thereby aid! Nature in the performance of the functioi Electric Bitters is an excellent appetii and aids digestion. Old People find it it exactly what they need. Price fifty cents t bottle at Albert Allen’s Drug Store. When the heart and flesh fail, God’s t

portunity has come. Tiro Liven Suvetl,

Mrs. Phoebe Thomas, of J unction City I was told by her doctors she had consul! lion ami that there was no hope for her, b two bottles Dr. King's New Discovery co plelely cured her ami she savs it saved h life. Mr. Thos. Eggers, 139 Florida St. 8 Francisco, suffered from a dreadful co approaching consumption, tried withe result everything else then bought one b tie of Dr. King's New Discovery and in t weeks was cured. He is naturally thankf It is such results, of which these are sampl that prove the wonderful efficacy of tl medicine in coughs and colds. Free tr bottles at Albert Allen's Drug store Hoi

lar sue 50c. and $1.

Everybodylwoald be perfect if everybo

else thought so.

Belie/'in Si.r Honrs.

Distressing Kidney and Bladder diseat relieved m six hours by the "New On

- —- South American Kidney Cure.” This i

supposed anomaly has heen the sub- remedy is a great surprise on account of ioi't’ . Tiiti.tVt .V. ,.A I* ... exceed 1 II i? 1)1*0 111 lit i tv mlinx’ivtrr

case of this watch is of hammered , , . , .

gold, and all the work on it was done man ’ J’ et tlu ‘ re ls onl y one man by hand. While this is apparent from ' n the ^ate who was a senator when the workmanship, it is further proved ie w . as ‘ rst . sworn m w ^° has served by the date on the inside, which is f n -4* n -&u:.ly. T.itit Is lio-Hatoi Mori hi, 1754. There is an inscription on the Normo " t ’ Gherman, of Ohio, anti inside as follows: “Daniel De St Leu J ' to "' art ' of Nevada, were members of Servant to Her Majesty. London.” Her the s ‘' nate a \ tlie titn e Senator Mitchell majesty tlien was the queen of George '' as elected, but both have been out, II., the then reigning k/ing of England. nUt ° r slu '” man as secretary of the The authentic history of this valu- * roasur r V ,r f,,ur 9' 0a . rs - ani1 Senator able timepiece is this: In the years pre- ’ u ‘" ar? s;x J’ oilrs > while another man ceding 1754 William Augustus, duke of rt T n ’ st ’ nU ‘ <1 Nevada. Senator Mitchell’s Cum Wiliam, the second .sou of George tirst term ,,t ‘ sran in 187:< serving II., was the commander of the British ? 13 7'f ars hc v ’ as defeated, n democratic armies. In the Scottish campaigns and e ^ lsla , ture having been chosen. Six in the campaigns against the Prussians l ‘ ar! i :lU ‘ r he was again elected, and

and the Russians, and when he was at has since l,e l n recl ‘ ! <*ed. the head of the British, Hanoverian „

and Danish forces ..f Hftv thousand , * " ,,,-M Work men, Dr. Frederick William"Schwartze . ln A, " , ' ru ' a lt has been observed that a Hanoverian, was on his staff as sur- ,0, , >s ofU n hore tubular corollas in geon. At tbe close of the campaign . ‘‘ r , to F et ut lhe uco,ar of dowers, against the Prussians and the Russians ' n ™ '-ntering by the mouth, as the duke had three watches made like liun ' 1, ‘ t ’''ees do in Europe. In essays

the one Judge Moore has, and of which on the crossfertilization of flowers this it is one. The watches were presented ? Upposci1 8no,nal y has been the sub- remedy is a great surprise on account o to three officers of the duke’s staff by ^ the bmrUk 0 ld n P ey. e ,*baci andVveFy P pY him as a mark of his esteem. One , . w bumblebees of Luropo anU the urinary passage in male or female went to Dr. Schwartze, ns a llano- ^“Vrtho manneT^thDh ^ ^ u" ‘na U Yim^s't'fmmedUul^ ^“you : verian. one to a Ilritish officer and one ~‘ 11 ‘ 1 manner in which the visits fiuick relief and cure this fe vnurr ren to a Danish officer. The presentations " U 'I' rs aro made ’ an<1 that Is the b >’ Albert A11 ^- Druggist, Greenes

were made in 1755. After the doctor's ®* ass °‘ bisects known as the carpenter services had ended in 1757, and the b °?’.? r U, ° borer, which works In the duke had returned to London, it was cr ’ ltsllU ’ mann °r indicated,

expected he would succeed to the throne, but the birth of a son to his

elder brother cut him out.

Hliirk I.ukc In Mexico. u) IM'fi increased 02 per cent., accord- veiy cures riles, or nu pay In the midst of the volcanoes of Mex- $S to statistics recently Compiled. Ia

Ico is the “Lake of Ink,” which covers r.ngland the supply is stationary, while For Hl * !e b >' Al, »>rt Alien. 1 about an acre of ground. The body of ‘ n °tbcr principal European countries ~ water, or ink, or whatever it is, is | i* has nicreasod dining the same time ! .r „ ■ , x ^uisioi

e adjacent from 30 to 35 per cent. It is stated that nn^Vee thfrd^are 0 'siect” t°-^- g ' ^

Jlnrhlin'n Arnica Salre

i oal In the l'nited States. The Best Salve iu the world for " C The production of coal in the United Bruig es. Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum. F States during the ten years from 1883 CoXilttZu' SkWup^nt anft' to ly'J3 increased 02 per cent., accord- vely cureH Piles, or no pay required.

Dr Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and 'Golden Medical Discovery.’ I was under doctors' care for two years with womb disease, and gradually wasting in strength all tlie time. I was so weak that I could sit up in bed only a few moments, for two years. I commenced taking Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription and his 4 Golden Medical Discovery.’ and by the time . I had taken one-half doz* fen bottles I was up and going wherever I pleaded,

^ and have had good health

MRS. ILRICH. a nd been very strong erer since—that was two years and a half ago.” A book of 16^ pages on “ Woman and Her Diseases ” mailed sealed, on receipt of io

Grand Excursion TO iagara Falls, VIA 1^0 FOUR ROUTE TUESDAY, AUG. 6th, At the follow ing Exceedingly Popular Rates Niagara Falls § 5.5( Put-in-Bay 4.5( Lake Chautauqua o.Ot Toronto fi.ot Thousand Islands 10.5C Our patrons know the excellent quality o these excursions via the "Big Four," wliicl is the natural route to the Falls via Buffalo Elegant Wagner Sleeping Car accommoda lions will be provided for all. Solid Train: of Parler Cars and Coaches run througl without change. For full particulars call at once on F. P Huestis, Agent "Big Four," Greencastle E. O. McCormick, D. B. Martin, Pass. Traffic Mgr. Oeu’l Pass. & Ticket Agt G. C, Neale. Veterinary Surgeon. Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College and member of lhe Ontario Veterinary Medi cal Society. All diseases of domestic animal carefully treated. Office at Cooper Brothers Livery Stable, Greencastle, Ind. All calls day and night, promptly attended. Firin, and Surgery a specialty. Gossip is the bullent in the gun of idl curiosity.

Trust is the strongest link in the chain association.

With some of us hope never comes to full bloom.

Probably no one approves of the way an man amuses himselt.

Nothing costs so much as doing the thi the devil tempts us to do. To kte? gray hair away and prevent bal ness use Hall’s Hair Renewer.

A common calamity is a great teacher human brotherhood.

Ind. Satan is a lazy fellow and never chases

man who runs.

covered with ashes from the adjacent volcanoes as to appear a part of the surrounding ground, which is all of the

the utilization of coal represents a greater surplus of wealth than the ex-

• w mull is ail OI tlie ouipiuaui wt/tum ililin me oxsame dull gray tint. IVhere this liquid : P° r tation of the same amount. It is incomes from, what its chemical proper- | ^cresting, therefore, to note that the ties may be or what the supply is, are 1 ni, ed States uses practically all the matters of conjecture. 1 -'°ul mined within iis lifiiiVSs

run between CrxwfordHViYle and'nover

Aux* 1 Jui<l 2. at half fare rates.

To Battle Ground camp meeting Aue

2. one and one-third fare.

Po T w 0 w e o:; A h^f7a're AUg - 6am,7 ' toRed J r?iP^ V , er i C u. ’u Au f’ 11 ,ll,d 12 ’ half he <- all ou J. A. Michael, agent, for partlcu