Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 August 1895 — Page 7

1

WE OFFER fi REMEDY WHICH INSURES SAFETY TO LIFE OF MOTHER AND CHILD. ‘‘Mothers’ Friend” ROBS CONFINEMENT OF ITS PAIN, HORROR AND RISK. “ My vi ife only two bottles. She was easily and quickly relieved; is now doing splendidly.— J. S. Morton, Harlow, N. C. Sent by express or emit, on receipt of price, St.Oo per baltle. Book •• TO MOTHERS" mailed free. BRATFIEJ-D BFGCLATOB CO., ATLANTA, UA. SOLD BT ALL EHUOOI3TE.

To tfre South The Louisville C dsehville Railroad will .1 tickets on dates and under conditions as 1 low mentioned, at One Sinolb Fare for r .:n Round Trip, and one-way tickets at about ■ -•c halt the usual rate.

3.-iTES rorthesaleof tic ke‘s will be June I1 > July 5. August 7, September 4 and October 2, 1895. 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 return within 20 days. POINTS' 0 Which t' c k els will be sold are the principal Cilics, 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. ATMORE, Gen’l Pass. Agt., Louisville, Ky.

^HUMPHREYS’ VETERINARY SPECIFICS Pot Horses, Caitie, Sheep, Dogs, Hogs,

AND POULTRT.

SOOPageTtook on l^iunient^f Animals j FrTerfi t ronveNf ionH.lntlnmmnf Ion m iV 1 *>Ieuinglil!i, ill illi 1«*\ «*r.

r»»* ( 11 1 niilk Fever. IS.It.••Stru inn. La iiiciicmm, IC liruiiiaiibin,

C«C,««IMnteniper, NuniiI LiNcliargus* II.D.—Ilotn or Lrubn, Worms. h.R.««CoiittliM' Hraven, l*ii«‘iiiaonlfL* i'.F.—rolie or LriprM, Itrllyarbe. .l«.—3Iinrarriage. llRMiiorrliagcn. rinary amt Kiduey llineanen* I. 1.••Eruptive Dincanen, Mange.

J. H.»«J)iseases of £>igentiou, Paralysis,

FIngle Bottle (over 50 doses), - - Stable rime, with Speclfles, Manual.

Veterinary Cure Oil ami 3Iedlcatur, 87.00 Jar teteriuury Cure Oil, • • 1,00 Sold byDmrvl.i.; or «#nt prepaid anywhere and Id any

<;Q&Dllly on rvrrlpt of price.

Ill JU’HHEYh* MID. 10., 111 A lit WlUlaa fit, Sew York. lEYrMPHREYS’

HOMEOPATHIC fTk

ISPECIFIC No.60 In use 30 years. The only ancceasful remedy for Nervous Debility, Vital Weakness,

*nd Prostration, from* over work or other cau fl per vial, or 6 vials and larne vial powder, foi Sold by Urujglais, or #ttut poatpuid on receipt of price.

ausos. or $5.

HI JnMUikYVMID. CO., Ill A 113 UllUaM St., Now York.

Ill!

\0 DKI.AV

1 |

No. 22 Soolii JacSsoj Slreet, GREEKCASTLE, IND. ijuildint; Association stock bought and sold or takou ns security for loans.

A Jonriiry of Eight Ituudrpd Mil.* with Many Hardships—(ireat Mountains of Ice Seen Through Fog and Storm. John Muir, aftor . liosn the largest glacier in the world is named, writes a paper for tin; Century on ‘‘The Discovery of Glacier bay.” Mr. Muir say^: "My first visit to the now famous Glacier bay of Alaska was made toward the end of October, 1S7'.I, when young ice was beginning to form In the branch inlets occupied by the glaciers, and the mountains were mantled with fresh enow ull the way down from the highest peaks and ridges of the Fairweather range nearly to the level of the sea. "I had spent most of the season exploring the canyon of the Stickeen river and its glaciers, and a small portion of tlie interior region beyond the Coast mountains, on the divide of some of the southerly tributaries of the Yukon and Mackenzie rivers. When I got back to my headquarters at Fort Wrangel, about the beginning of October, it seemed too late for new undertakings iu this icy northlund. The days were growing short, and winter with its heavy storms was drawing nigh, when avalanches would be booming down the long white slopes of the peaks, and all the land would be buried. “But, on the other hand, though this white wilderness was new to me, I was familiar with storms, had enjoyed them, knowing well that in right relations with them they are ever kindly. The main inland channels, extending in every direction along the coast, remain open all winter; and their shores being well forested, it would be easy to keep warm in camp, while in a large canoe abundance of provisions could be carried. I determined, therefore, to go ahead as far north as possible, with or without companions, to see and learn what I could, especially with reference to future work. When I mode known my plans to Mr. Young, the Wrangel missionary, lie offered to go with mo, and with his assistance I procured a good canoe and a crew of Indians, gathered a largo stock of provisions, blankets, etc., and on October 14 set forth, eager to welcome whatever wildness might offer, so long as food and firewood should last. * » * \v e made a journey more than eight hundred miles long; and though hardships were encountered, and a few dangers, the wild wonderland made compensation beyond our most extravagant

hopes.

“The first stages of our journey were mostly enjoyment. The weather was about half bright, and we glided along the green and yellow shores in comfort, the lovely islands passing in harmonious succession, like ideas in a fine poem. The rain did not hinder us, but when the wind was too wild we stayed In camp, the Indians usually improving such storm times in deer hunting, while I examined the rocks and woods. Most of our camps were made in nooks that were charmingly embowered, and fringed with bushes and late flowers About noon we discovered the first of the great glaciers—the one I afterward named for Geikie, the noted Scotch geologist. Its lofty blue cliffs, looming up through the draggled skirts of the clouds, gave a tremendous impression of savage power, while the roar of the new-born icebergs thickened and emphasized the general roar of the storm. An hour and a half beyond the Geikie glacier we ran into a slight harbor where the shore is low, dragged the canoe beyond the reach of drifting icebergs, and, much against my desire to push ahead, encamped, the guide insisting that the big ice mountain at the head of the bay could not be readied before dark, that the landing there was dangerous even in daylight, and that this was the only safe harbor on the way to it. While camp was being made I strolled along the shore to examine the rocks and fossil timber that abound here. All the rocks are freshly glaciated even below the sea level, nor have the waves as yet worn off the surface polish, much less the heavy scratches and grooves and lines of glacial contour. “The next day being Sunday, tho minister wished to stay in camp; and so, on account of the weather, did the Indians. I therefore set out on an excursion, and spent the day alone on the mountain slopes above the tainp, .uni to the north of it, to see what I might learn. Bushing on through rain and mud and sludgy snow, crossing many brown, bowlder-choked torrents, wading, jumping, wallowing in snow to my shoulders, I had a desperately hard and dangerous time. After crouching, cramped and benumbed, in the canoe, pui.liteed in wet clothes and hlnnketQ night and day, my limbs had long been asleep. This day they were awake, and in the hour of trial proved that they had not lost the cunning learned on many a mountain peak of the high

Sierra.

“I reached a height of fifteen hundred feet, on the ridge that bounds the second of the great glaciers on the south. All the landscape was smothered in clouds, and I began to fear that I had climbed in vain, as far as wide views were concerned. But at length the clouds lifted a little, and beneath their gray fringes 1 saw the berg-tiiied expanse af the bay, and the feet of the mountains that stand about it, and the imposing fronts of five of the huge glaciers, the nearest being immediately beneath me. This was my first general view of Glacier bay, a solitude of ice and snow and new-born rocks, dim, dreary, mysterious. I held the ground

water works is making more trouble

than some persons very many thousand Ur Walter n»i«i C h Won » Novri wag-r

from Qurrn Ell*»l>*>th —A Fortune Stnkoil on tlie Shape of

a Man'* Leg.

times its size. Its present occupation appears to be driving tlie inhabitants | of Middletown to drink, and although ' scientists are after it hot hooks it goes'

right on thriving. I r> ,

Some of these same scientists, says ’ '■ n " ls . a “'• nian weannecs hy no | the New York World, gave this dimin- “'T. th ° w *K orin S »* \ utive beast the name of uroglena vol- 111 ' 'V, <>n M x,r * n '? * ' , ' u * a - In all ages, vox. But tlim mouthful of dead * ay3 th< “ W k World, it has been language didn’t exactly fill the bill, so f® mrnon to settle D-ml ’ of difference s >me male person of Middletown tacked ' J 1 ' , a . r ' r 1 ‘ " ttcc ' l>I ; 1 ‘^ 1 ''h gucat feats on the adject ivo “odorous." Now all Undcr ‘‘* e of h “ '<*?» « ^c, folks who live in Middletown call the "'V"’ 9 ° ,n an down m Heatucky intruding organism the “odorous urog- T °r\ nevor 1 toou 1 t h * ^ until | glcna volvox,” and try, as far as possb UeUry Clay WaS ek>1!U '‘ l P residont ’

O-KEEITCA.STLE, IJSTID. V. u\\y\u\., ^£vvv\\V\v%, ^10,000 MIUKCTOrtSs B. L. 0 Hair, Pres.; M. F. McHaflie, Vice Pre».\ HI. P. Bridges, Cash.; J. L. Handel, Asst. Cush.; E. B. Evans, ir. H.'AUee, F. A. Arnold. S A. Hays, Quinton Broadstreet. WHEAT~FERT!UZERS

U

D. E. WILLIAMSON, •KWovwva^ TuUVV-, GKK.K.M ASTI.IC, I.MJ. Business in all courts attended to promptly Three Crops a Y'ear Can be xrown on the same land in Eastern Mississippi and Southern Alabama along the line Mobile A; Ohio Railroad. The summers are cooler, the winters are milder, the death rate is lower, than in the North. Improved farms, (10 to $15 per acre, unimproved land $3 lo $5 an acre near railway’*tx*inn« It the best portion for raising fruits and early vegetables, stock raising and general fnrm crops. Lands are advancing, now is the time to buy. Very low rate excursions monthly. The Mobile .V Ohio lias put on two through fast trains each way daily between St. 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 it. Apply to F. W. Oreene, General Agent, No. KM North Broadway, St. Louis, Mo., or to E. E. Posey, General Passenger Agent, Mobile & Ohio Railroad. Mobile, A'a. if Oscar Webster, the old reliable, who has oeen hanging papet for out

people lor over thirty years, is still and wrote a few lines in mv note i wnlc " ls u ' su ‘ a oy cnemicat analysts. skill, nnd no wind: he guarantees crossed the muffled shifting nr-tlnnche i “ n “ ^ - the expansion, nnd thus

satisfaction, and does the work as cheap as anyone. Don’t contract for your paper hanging before seeing liim. 8tf

ble, to keep it out of their midst. The odorous whadjeeallem’s particular forte is dying along all the water mains in tlie Connecticut borough. Scientists who have pried into its family affairs say that before it gets into the water mains it lias no effect upon the fluid. But in the hurly-burly of jostling through the pipes with unaccountable

was really a vow, but it was also a bet. The man bet against fate and fate won. A rash young Ilarvard graduate recently went around the world without a cent of money in his pockets when he started. It was given out that he had laid a wager of five thousand dollars that he could make the trip without money. It has since turned out that

millions of its 'kfnd ii g^lb^ ^ "“7^ , th * “ "klelyi* * * « , * . advertised article, Llection bets are up, disintegrates and gives to tlie water .. . ar e .1 . . < *• i i h , , , sometimes made which require the the taste of fish long dead, but un-ii * u i .i • .1, burie j K ’ loser to wheel the winner in a barrow

'over a certain distance. A famous

Scientists who have brought it be-! vx, / n i , . , lalu ' jus neath the cold, tins -rupulous eye of a .V . ^tball player once laid a wager miscroscope say that it is a minute mass 1 *'‘ l .' ""i ozan eggs at of jelly. The Middletown people say sittn ' g ' II1 , aC ' tho,1 V. 1{rul ^’ that it may be jcily, but that it leaves JUmp ° rS m e ^ , '‘1 f ° r a a taste a “darn sight larger than a "T"' J ° J . W 1 1™ forced minute”—some hourslong, in fact. And bettors to pay thc.r debts. A remarkathc whole town waits to sec what « XrT^S? s? M ^ ^ m' learned biologist can do to clean the ^ 0ll ^ rt , a * aln! f Sir Murk M. uroglena volvox out of the reservoir. I ^ a dW ‘ r pa f y He says, just at present, that the atom ! , ! ^ °''. n Y”" 80 f 1 is washed down into the reservoir from A u ''iTf 3 "i 1 « " ’ aZ ' :! ° v ' ^ l e , 1 the hills above and that it looks as if it ll c ° f Bonaparto " as has come to stay. Meanwhile the Mid-1 ° n 0a ° hundred

dletownian

umbol) externally cider has gone up.

IKE HORSE SHOE BRANDS BONE FERTILIZERS I WHEAT GROWERS

FOR THE

LEAST MONEY.

One bag per aero insures good Wheat and Grass Crops. Write for circular and prices. N. W. FERTILIZING CD., Manufacturers, UNION STOCK YARDS, CHICAGO, ILL.

a^wiates with the thing- 1 f^ •nally, and the price of hard onK Wd xvltb Si‘"m" Z \ i'

f Gilbert closed with Sir Mark, and sent'

the one hundred guineas, and the latr

MA DE OP A COFPINKD CORPSE. ^Z‘!X“«5S oiisstly ,Tol> hn Artiat t’ndertook to 1’I.naap (.cclined to pa^ a.ij longer and an ac*n Baderukker Friend. I t'* 011 was brought to enforce tho payA well-known artist of Syracuse, N. ! ment. It was contended by the deY., amuses his friends with an experi-! fendantthat lie had been surprised into ence he had some time ago that lias a | t,,e l,et by the clergyman’s hasty actinge of the uncanny. It seems, says ccptance of it, and that the transaction tho Washington Star, that tlie artist "' as an illegal one, seeing that Mr. Gilhas a friend who is an undertaker, nnd bert, having a beneficial interest in the who at that time was badly in need of life of Bonaparte, might, in the event assistance. It seems that tho under-! 0 * an invasion, use all his means for taker had accidentally spilled a fluid ' tbe preservation of the life of an enemy upon the face of a body he was prepar- j °* his country. The jury loyally ing for burial, and on account of his i brought iu a verdict for the defend-

carelessness the fluid had acted upon I ant -

the skin and turned it black in many \ Another queer wager is the one popplaces. The undertaker realized that I ularly believed to have been won by something must be done, and that very j Sir Walter Raleigh from Queen Elizasoon. It would be out of the question both on the debatable question of how for tlie family to learn of the accident, j much smoke is contained in a pound of

NOTICE.

Notice is hereby Riven Hint the Township Trustees of the several townships of Putnam county, Indiana, have made ami returned their einiiiierations of the white male inhabitants over the axe of twenty-one years of I their respective townships. The said Township Trustees of the several | townships of said county of Futmim have also made and returned their enumerations i ot tlie colored male inhabitants over the uxe ! of twenty-one years of their respective town- ! ships. Said enumerations as returned are ! subject to the inspection of the public at tlie I A un it or'soffice.iwHl I invite an examination , thereof with a view to the correction of anv errors, mistakes or omissions therein. The followinx is a statement of tlie axxrexate number of white and colored male inhabitants over the axe of twenty-one vears ! in each township of the countv. and the axxrexate number in the entire county, accordmx to said enumeration and return.

For a moment lie was nonplused, but his mind shortly turned to his artist friend, and he thought that he could

relieve him.

“It was at night when he called," said the artist, in narrating the story, “and I had retired. At first it seemed impossible for me to attempt such a job as he laid before me, but his sad plight touched me, and I finally consented to do the best in my power. I went to the house witli my box of paints. The undertaker entered the front door, but he feared that suspicion would be aroused if 1 was seen. According to arrangements, I waited outside until he had reached the death chamber. Then he silently raised the window, and I crawled stealthily In. For more than an hour I labored silently upon the spotted face, carefully painting over the black places, and finishing the whole with that effect which betokens death. “It was a ghastly job, and I never want another like it. After it was all over the body looked as lifelike as possible, and no one ever knew that the face was entirely made up.”

IN A CIRCULAR GALE.

Exciting Experience' of tho Ship Jame*

Nesmith.

Circular gales are a species of disturbance at sea which every mariner fears and seeks to avoid. The American ship, James Nesmith, which arrived here recently from New York, says the San Francisco Chronicle, reports having encountered one of these “spin arounds" when only three daj’s out of the clearing port, and, according to the crew, the vessel was in serious trouble for several hours. The gale came up with such suddenness and fury that all efforts to keep the ship to her course were fruitb."“ She was forced by the gale to describe a series of circles, just as if she had been caught in a maelstrom. The revolutions finally ceased, and, after a hard struggle with a fresh blow off shore, the Nesmith eventually escaped. She was rather badly crippled, however, having sprung a leak astern which promised to do eousiuc-iabie damage to her cargo. Capt. Starkey turned his men to the pumps and headed the ship with all sail for Bermuda. From Bermuda to this port she enjoyed splendid weather. Tlie Nesmith was alt igether one hundred and forty-six days making the voyage from New York.

The Bent Metal for Rifle Rnlleta. Tungsten, which is about one and a

half times heavier than lead and almost as hard as steel, is considered the bast metal for rifle bullets, now that the diminished calibre of rifles has led to the use of a smaller bullet. It is desirable under the circumstances to have for the manufacture of rifle bullets a metal heavier than lead, and of greater penetrating power. A tungsten ball penetrates a steel plate three inches in thickness at a distanee of 050 yards,

I haf so dearly won for an hour or two, ! " * 1 ^ e a similar one of lead only ponesheltering myself as best I could from 1 * ru * 09 a two-and’a-half-inch plate at the blast, while with benumbed fingers i’ 31 " 1 * 1 ’- •^ s a ru ^° bullets are made I sketched what I could seeot tnc land- i r"T !f *nd, the mi rite „? —j - - a— ii j , I which is tested by chemical analysis

tobacco. A pound of the article was weighed, burned and weighed again in ashes, and the question was held to be satisfactorily settled by determining the weight of the smoke as exactly that of the tobacco before being burned, minus the ashes. The fact of the ashes having received an additional weight by combination with the oxygen of the atmosphere was unthought of by Elizabeth and the knight. An amusing bet for the small sum of five shillings was laid in 1800 in the castle yard, York, between Thomas Hodgson and Samuel Whitehead as to which should succeed in assuming the most original character. Hodgson appeared decorated with ten-guinea, five-guinea and guinea notes all over his coat and waistcoat and a row of five-guinea notes around his hat, while to his back was fastened the words “John Bull.” Whitehead appeared like a woman on one side, one-half of his face painted, one silk stocking and slipper, while the other side represented a negro in man’s dress, with boots and spurs. "John Bull” won the wager. A gentleman of the last century laid a wager to a great amount that ho could stand for a whole day on London bridge with a tray full of sovereigns fresh from the mint and be unable to find a purchaser for them at a peuny apiece. Not one was disposed of. Wagers have sometimes taken a grim form. It is creditably recorded that in the last century a wager was laid for one of a party of gay revelers to enter Westminster Abbey at the hour of midnight. Ho was to enter one of the vaults beneath the abbey; in proof of his having been there he was to stick a fork into a colhn which had been recently deposited there. lie accomnlished his object, and was returning in triumph, when he felt hi, 's»if suddenly caught, and was so overpowered by terror that he fell in a swoon. Ills companions not being able to account for his absence found him in this condition. The fork which he had fastened into the colhn had caught and pinned his cloak and so occasioned a fit of terror which nearly proved fatal. Sir John Pakington, called Lusty Pakington, and by Queen Elizabeth “My Temperance,” laid a wager of thirty thousand pounds sterling to swim against three noble courtiers from Westminster bridge to Greenwich. but her majesty interposed to prevent any further procedure on the bet. A gentleman named Corbet, of distinguished family near Shrewsbury, bet bis leg was the handsomest in the country or kingdom, and staked estates worth eighty thousand pounds sterling on the subject. He won the wager, ami a picture is still preserved in the family mansion representing the process ot measuring the legs of the different con-

testants.

Of the queer recent wagers, one has just come to light of a New Y'ork business man who made a bet sixteen years ago that he would not look at himself in a mirror for twenty years. He has kept up his end of the bet, which has still four years to run.

TI’-xr Wled ^*x* t* In ?!r?£!» ncl

Earl Russell is utilizing his recent experiences in a London divorce court in

reached camp about dark, wet and i arc m &dt by compression, weary, but rich in a notable experi-1 ^ho lead being just squirted into long ence. ” rods and then formed into bullets in a

I machine,

He complains that the marriage laws of England compel an iU-matched husband and wife to lead stunted lives.

TOWNSHIPS.

Jackson Franklin R ussell.. Clinton Monroe Floyd.. Marion Oreencastle.. M adison Washington.. War ran Jetferson Mill Creek cloverdale ...

Totals..,.

o

0

E

n

o

j

388

0

368

512

0

512

340

2

342

256

1

257

338

5

813

273

0

278 I

357

0

357 1

1247

6,1

1316

2

266

410

0

440 1

243

0

243

286

0

236

138

0

188

445

0

445

79

6584

State of Indiana, Putnam Couhty, ss. I, George M. Black, Auditor in and for Putnam countv, Indiana, hereby certify that the above and foregoing statement contains a true and correct aggregate number of white ami colored male inhabitants over the age of 1 h • ntj -one years In »ach ton nship i nam county, and the aggregate number in the entire county, according to the enumerfition and return of the several Township Trustees of said Putnam county. Witness my hand and official seal this 20th [seal] day of July. 1895. GEORGE M. BLACK, 3tl5 Auditor Putnam County.

EVEN CHANGE

20 lbs. Standard Granulated Sugar, §1.00. Baking Powder, l n e a lb. and up. 4 cans Peas or Corn, 25e. All hinds of Canned and Dried Fruits at llottoni Prices. Best Bucket Syrup, GOe. Best Lake Salt. $1.10. Kidder A Sou's best Flour, A No. 1. Screen Doors, Sash, Glass and Hardware of all kinds at bottom prices. B. F. BARWICK No. 11 North Side Square, GREENCASTLE, IND. emis

An Educated Land Turtle. A land turtle that without fail for twenty-six years has regularly appeared at the home of Michael Mackey, at Parker Ford, Chester county, Pa., came to time a few days ago and is being proudly exhibited around Portstown by Mr. Mackey. That gentleman asserts that there can be no mistaking his turtle, as the Initials of his name are emblazoned on its shell. He says that its training has been so well developed at his home that at the sound of the dinner bell it comes into the din-ing-room to receive its allotment of food. It stays around the Mackey premises until September and then goes off to its winter quarters. Oxculntlon Slay lie a Crime. In nearly every country stealing kisses is illegal, and in some it is held to constitute an assault. But such thefts do not always land the thief- in prison. There are authenticated instances where the thief has been rewarded with the heart and liand of the uninjured party. In a case recently reported In the papers, the name of the thief met the eye of a wealthy relative, who made him his heir, and tho fellow married the woman in the case, and now they are rich and happy. In ancient Rome to augurs could not meet each other without laughing. But two bores could. She—Let us sit under this grand old oak and chat. He—Beautiful tree. And did you plant it yourself? Vaecticn Time. Is at hand and is gladly welcomed hy all especially those whose duties in life have caused them to greatly run down their system to meet the requirements, physical and mental, forced upon them. With these and others.it is important, whether at home, at the seashore or in the country, that some thought be given to diet, and as further as sistance to Nature, a good building-up raedicine iixn Hood * Sa. saparllL LuJ besi be resorted to. If the digestion is poor, liver deranged and frequent headaches seem to be the rule, Hood's will changed all this and enable everyone to return to their home and business iu a refreshed state of mind and bodily health.

Best 5 Cent Cigars Verbenas, Cubanolas, Josephines, AT KIEFEK’S. Aci CenMl, Wall Plaster, Portland and Louisville Cements, Plaster Paris, Lime, Hair, etc., alwa} s on hand. T\. 33. I3XTX3-3L.TT! Y, Wareroom, 118 East Seminary St. P. O. Box 773. Iy50

Tlie Moat Seimllile

ASSISTANT TO SIGHT N a pair of Gold Spectacles, and the only I place to have them correctly fitted is at n>5 East Washington street. No one every sold glasses so cheaply in Greeneastle. Don’t | trust your eyes to spectacle peddlers and jewelers. G. W. BENCE, M. D.

We Employ Young

to distribute

♦♦♦»♦*«»♦? our advertise- : t for a hltfli grade Acme J

ppraviw. No j

cycle urrives and proves ]

emjdnypd on t ho

same terms.

raents in payment fore v> ■ ’V done until tho V^cvclo 1

satisfactory.

Young Ladies

If txiTsorxIrls apply Ihev must ho wellrecom* I ituouOod. v> rive »oi punivid.jb j ACME CYCLE COHPANY,

ELKHART, IND.

To go to the door with him and keep him talking a little longer ia no way to speed parting guest. Buckingliam’s Dye is the best preparation made to color the beard a brown or black. Children Cryfor Pitchers Castoria. Children Cryfor Pitcher’s Castoria. Children Cryfor Pitcher’s Castoria.

I>ry X^mici 11 ord ot

POLAND CHINA SWINE. I have some extra good Fall Pigs for sal© and two Summer Gilts bred to Claude's .Su-

perior No. 12343, to farrow in Jun*», nnd Fpga from thru© pn fp-winning pens—S. C. B. Leghorns, Silver Lace Wyandottes and barred F.

Rocks; fl.25 per sitting, or f2 for 2sittings from either pen. GEORGE W SHUEY, PROPRIETOR. f 4123 Bkinbridge.lnd.

Big Four Excursions. .. _ . . , . m , | To Warsaw, going until Aug. 81, returning f. her. Eioy v.a-a.---fc, TO .raw Vr Ca-tor'a. , ,- ,, 4 . , ,.r » H i„ j, r..-,. When ahe was a Child, the cried for Castoria. in'mt ^u ' ^ l ° AU ®' * 1, return When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. . Rome i^ity, Ind.. July 29 to Aug. 14, return W hen she bud CbiMr.S/, she gave thorn Castoria, ! finstnn^A ox. 19 to 2?. extreme return limit I-sent 12. half fare. Columbus, O., Aug. 20 to 2'2, return limit Aug. 26. f«. r 0. Call on F. P. Huestis, agent, for particulars