Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 November 1895 — Page 2

IJTiVjWti

ws wa ■ aw For scrofula. “Since childhood, I have been afflicted with scrofulous boils and sores, which caused me terrible suffering. Physicians were unable to help me, and 1 only grew worse under their care. At length, 1 began to take AYERS Sarsaparilla, and , very soon grew bet- ' ter. After using half a dozen bottles I was completely cured, so that I have not had a boil or pimple on any part of my body for the last twelve years. 1 can cordially recommend Ayer’s Sarsaparilla as the very best blood-purifier in existence.” — G. T. Keinuart, Myersville, Texas.

TTTE ONLY WORLD’S FAIR Sarsaparilla Ayer's Chary rectors! cures Coughs and Cc!d:

The best article in town, Also the fullest stock of

And

£\ove v\\ CiveeweusWt..

G. M. BLACK’S

Have Lots of Sport wl h Two Now Members of a Greek Society.

Street t ur rmsrnijrr* Enterlalurd l>y Chicago l nlvrrslty Ilui« —llrutal Hazing by Fraternity Men ut New Wilmington, Fa.

; Passengers on a north-bound Jackson park cable train in Chicago the other afternoon were treated to a novel sight, which reminded one of the stories of I old Harvard and the initiations which have made the “Dickey” club famous. 1 At Ellis avenue two students entered : the car and at once became the cynoj sure of all eyes. Ore, 11. II. Smith, from 1 Auburn Park,w:». fantastically attired i in a mortarboard cap, with red tassels, ! white linen duster and shoes ornai mented with yellow bows. He bore in | his hand a long tin horn and a feather duster, with which he calmly dusted the advertisements in the car. The other attractive individual, M. D. McIntyre, of Milwaukee, was resplendent in a white plug hat guyly festooned with ribbons. The two young men were candidates for admission to the Omega club of the university, which is a local organization petitioning for a charter from the Psi Epsilon fraternity. A number of the members of the club were in the car and took great pleasure in watching Smith entertain their fellow passengers until Thirty-ninth street was reached, when he was permitted to remove the attire which rendered him so conspicuous. McIntyre was compelled to continue his journey downtown and there to visit the offices of several well-known members of Psi Epsilon. In their presence he gravely recited passages of Scripture applicable to the situation. Not so funny, at least to the victims, are the pranks of fraternity students ut Westminster college. New Wilmington, Pa. Patience has long since ceased to be a virtue, and now this Enited Presbyterian seat of learning is threatened with disruption. The non-fraternizing students are undergoing n brutal and systematic course of hazing by the members of secret societies in the college. The faculty has promised to root out the societies, but this was not deemed sufficient by some of the indignant students. and twenty-five left the institution the other day. A student named Erskin was taken from his room a few nights ago and covered with shoe blacking. Mr. Mnbon, while on the way home from a call on a young lady, was first beaten, then thrown over a fence and left in a field. This brutality was inflicted because Mahon would not sing sacred songs. Mabon has begun suit against fojir of his tormentors. lie has always been opposed to the Greek letter fraternities, and has done all he could to suppress them at Westminster. The societies exist contrary to the rules of the college, and all students not members have notified the faculty they will leave unless the fraternities are compelled to dissolve.

Franklin St., near northeast corner public square

COME EASY, CO EASY. i Count Castrllane Delightfully Duty Staking; tionlil Dol.Mrs Fly. Much comment is being made in Paris and at the fashionable French

Best Livery Rigs. Farmers’ Teams Fed. Horses Boarded. Call and see. tf2

HAIL H A V TIME-TABLE-

BIG POUR.

EAST.

No. 36 Daily “ 4, Ex Sun “ 8, Daily. “ 8, Daily

.... 2:39 a m 9:13 a ni 4:15pm 5:21 p m

WEST.

No. 35, Daily 12:32 a m “ 9, Daily 8:50 a m “ 11, Daily 12:38 p m “ 5, Ex Sun 6:57 pm No. 36, Night Express, hauls through cars for Cincinnati, New York and Boston. No. 2 connects with trains for Michigan divisions via Anderson ami to Cincinnati. No. 4 connects for Cincinnati, Springfield. O., and Wabash, Ind. No. 18, Knickerbocker, hauls through sleepers for Washington, D. C., vis C. & O., a^d through sleepers for New York via N. Y. C. K. K.; also dining car. New coaches illuminated with gas on all trains. F. P. HUEST1S, Agt.

V<\NDALSA LINE. in efiect May 19,1895. Trains leave Greeucastle, Ii d., FOlt THE WEST. No. 5. Daily 9.05 am, for St. Louis. " 31, Datiy.. !..>.* pm, 11 *• 7, Daily 12:28 pm, “ “ “ 16, Daily 8:45 am, “ “ “ 3, Ex. Sun... 6:18 p in, “ Terre Haute. “ 76, Ex. Sun 7:05 am, “ Peoria “ 77, “ .... 3:55 pm, “ Decatur, FOR THE EAST, No. 20, Daily.™... “Tipra, lor Indianapolis. ** 8, Daily 3.36 p in, “ “ “ 2, Daily 6:03 pm, ‘ “ “ 6, Daily 4:30 a m, “ “ “ 12, Daily 2:86 a m, “ “ “ 4, Ex. Sun 8-46 am, “ “ For •’oroplete Time Cn-d, yivin.g atl trains and stations, and for full inVormation as to rates, through cars, etc., address J H. DOWLING, Agent, Greencastle, Ind. Or E. A. Ford, General Passenger Agt., St. Louis, Mo.

r-1 Chicago ffrco/Q

NORTH o.

No. 4% Chicago Mail •• 2 , Through train “ 6 , Mail and Accomodation “ 44t, Local Freight

1:12 a m ....12:09 p m 12:32 p in 11:26 a m

SOUTH HOUND*

No. S' 1 , Louisville Mail 2:47 am “ 5*, Mail and Accomodation 2:33 p m “ 1. Chicago and Atlanta Flyer.... 3:09 p m ** 43t, Local.... - 11:25 a m 'Daily. tDaily except Sunday. Pnllman sleepers on night trains. Parlor and dining cars on No. 1 and 2. For complete time cards and full information in regard to rates, through csrs, etc., address J. A. MICHAEL, Agent. F.iJ. Remo, G. P. A..Chicago.

IfnnoTT tn T nn/1 nt H riDvi nniH fiuldj IU LGliU Gl 0 PI UIIl By ALBERT A. DACGY.

watering places, says the Boston Transcript, over the extravagance of young Count Boni tie Castellane, who, since taking up his residence in the French capital after marriage with Miss Anna Gould, has already spent no less than 5,000,000 francs in the purchase of bric-a-brac alone. This does not include the lavish subscriptions to all those popular funds soi-distant in behalf of charity, but which the Parisian newspapers organize for the puriio.se of advertising and booming their circulation, nor yet the sums which he has dropped at cards and on the race course. When, in addition to this, it is taken into consideration that lie has purchased, without even making an attempt to discuss terms, several plats of land in the most valuable quarter of Paris, and that he is about to erect thereon, regardless of exjvense, a modern reproduction of Queen Antoinette’s Trianon, it must be confessed that the young French nifblemau is making the Gduld dollars fly at a rate which would have considerably startled the thrifty creator of the Immense Gould fortune. DRIVES A TRAINED HORSE. Hiss i£vn Ffiw«ril«, nf ‘\v York. ( «p* Neither Rnrile Nor HcIuh. Miss Eva Edwards, who has attained to considerable celebrity in the castas an equestrienne, has succeeded in training a thoroughbred horse to obev her voice and touv li when in harness, thus doing away with the necessity for either bridle or reins. She has repeatcd*y (ii Acn Boll our, i.s she calls Lei horse, along the streets ®f uptown New York city and never experienced any trouble until the other day, when the high-spirited animal almost lost control of himself and ran into an undertaker. Miss Edwards was cited to appear before a magistrate, which she did next morning, but as the man of coffins failed to appear she was acquitted, the magistrate, however,warning the young lady not to drive her horse in future without tlie usual harness. Miss Edwards is very much put out about this decision, declaring that she would have gladly paid a fine rather than have such a prohibition hanging over her head. Srnui; to Donth by a Ycllowjacket. George Holbrook’s 3-year-old child, while playing near the home of its parents in Letcher county, Ky„ was stung by a yellow jacket. The little one screamed and its mother ran to its assistance. The sting had entered its left leg below the knee. The limb beLit liktO spasms, and in ten minutes after the* insect had stung it the little one died.

Fish Ucforo Meat.

Office at Hub Clothing Store, Green- 1 The fashion of serving fish befere

castle, Ind. 4t30 ‘ meal began in 1562.

• a * JOE V- AX A •

It 1»

Louise Michol, the Par'6 T.od, Who Threa:on sto Cooi»to L iarica.

M A Woman of Idea*, lint a To. I," In the rarlsian F.Htlinite «>f SJer—Eventful Career of ’i hi* Strange VI oro.tri. The published minor of the coming of Louise Michel, of 1’aris, “the queen of anarchy,’’ as she is culled there, has caused the greatest c xcitcmeut among the anarchists and advanced socialists in this country. The ostensible purpose of her visit Is to raise money to found u home in England for political refugees, but the real aim, it is. believed, is to Inspire the female anarchists and socialists in this country with some of the file and earuestnci.: which she exhibits in her work for the cause. Louise Michel is an educated woman. She was a teacher in theschoolsin Baris before the commune. She reads Greek, Latin and English readily,and hervoice and pen r.re ever at the service of the cause to which she hi s devoted her life. Her figure is slight,hut her physiognomy strong. In manner and conversation she is brusque ami impatient. Her complexion is fresh, though she lives in a miserable room in the garret of a large apartment house outside the fortifications, where she has two desks heaped w ith literary rubbish. She has a stove, a parrot and a dog to befoul the atmosphere and increase the dirt. A visitor once said: “The only clean thing in the unclean whole was Louise Michel.” “I cm an nnan hist, but I do not associate with any class of socialists,’’ said this famous iconoclast once in reply to a question, and then she added: “I am in favor of right and harmony instead of force. V.'omen must do their work individually. I do not believe in giving them the ballot. Look at the foolish things men have done with it! Would women he less foslish?” Louise Michel was born in 1S33, and It is said she has royal blood in her veins. She was never handsome, but when she speaks she sots Hie crowd aflame. Her voice is harsh, but her keen eyes and strong face thrust out seem to tatch hold of her auditors before she speaks. Before the war of 1370 she wanted to kill the emperor. During the commune she was in the thickest of the mischief, organizing clubs and revolutionary meetings. Wounded hi the defense of Fort Isy against the Versailles troops she wa afterward banished to New Caledonia. She was pardoned In 18:10 and returned to Baris to renew the agitation. For participation in the black flag riot of 1SS3 she was sentenced to six years’ imprisonment, but was pardoned by President Grcvy. “A women of ideas, but a fool,” is the Parisian silhouette of Louise Michel.

COLD STORAGE CATS. Peculiar Effect of Low Temperature—Cannot Now Live in a Warm Atmosphere. The direct effect of environment in rarely shown more conclusively than in the ease of some cold-storage eats, about which very sensational articles have been written. The truth of the matter is this: A quantity of mice were discovered in a cold storage warehouse. A cat was taken from the ordinary atmosphere of the building to the ctld rooms and kept there, hoping thni; she would make way with the mice, which were n serious annoyance. While In cold durance the cat had a litter of kittens. After awhile, when the kittens were old enough to take care of themselves, the cat was carried back to her original quarters. She at once began to pine, and got so weak and languid that the warehouse men became concerned about her, and, thinking tl?at the change of the temperature might have affected her, took her into the cold atmosphere, when she Immediately revived and was as frisky and strong as ever. It was found impossible to keep her in good health in the warm rooms. Shu did not apparently suffer upon being taken into the cold originally, but the change back would, it was thought, cause her death if she were left there, so feeble did she become. OTHERS WANT IT. Mexico Formally Asha for an Exhibition of America'* Liberty Hell. The Columbian liberty bell committee has received from the government •f Mexico, through Pr. side ut a.t invitation for the exhibition of the bell in that country immediately after the close of the Atlanta exposition. It is intended that ceremonies shall be held with the lie)] nt the grave of Hidalgo at Juarrez and at other points in Mexico mnde ancred in the efforts of that nation for liberty. '■* i« t>.!so srggerted that the he!! shall visit the lowest point reached by a railroad in Central America, and there have an appropriate ceremony suggestive of the proposed connection o t \ rail between North and South America. It is understood that the full expense of the bell while upon Mexican territory will be borne by the government and the citizens of the nation inviting It there. Their Courtship Was Rapid, Samuel Richards, aged 84, and Mrs. Martha Heath, aged 77 years, were married the other day nt the homo of the bride in Boone county, Ind. They met by chance Sunday afternoon, fell in love, and before the sun had set nil arrangements for the marriage were complete. The groom is hale and hearty, and one of the largest land owners in thecountry. The bride is also wealthy. Cricket In Namoa. Brizes of pigs and kegs of salt beef are the objects for which the Samoans play cricket. The game, which is enlivened by the music of a native band, takes a large number of players, sometimes thirty cr forty being entered on a aide.

M

^id to IE* a Great Improvement

Over il»« Old Model.

A new caboose car constructed on j lines suggested by conductors and brakemen is beiug tried on the Pittsburgh division of the Panhandle road. The ear has eight wheels, and the cupola Is 15 inches higher than the old pattern, the top of the roof being 15 feet from the top of the rail. There is no ladder on the outside of the ear, 1 access to the roof being had through doors 21 inches by 2° inches in the ends : of the cupola. The i acks are arranged for 36-inch wheels, us being the size of standard w heels, u.-.ed under passenger ears, which when partly worn ere transferred to cabooses. The new car has eight longitudinal sills, two pore than have hitherto been used. The platforms ere 31 y t inches long, being 10 inches longer ; than the old standard. A safety bar i is provided in the gangway at the een- ! ter of the handrail. The frame of the j ear has been made stronger, the posts and braces being V/ t inches by Z\' a j inches, while in the cld car they were 3y 3 inches by I Vi inches. The cupola being higher, it is braced with iron braces running down the side plates. There are two stationary outside seats upon each end of the cupola provided with safety liars and handrails. The roaf of the cupo’.a is made circular in form, with a radius to conform to the roofs of the smaller tunnels upon the road. The car has a water tank, a wash bowl, a folding table and large lockers. There are drip pans to catch r.ll leakage and overflow from the oil cans. A stretcher is kept under the bunks. There are no projecting iron handrails or steps in-

side the car.

BURIED 040 FEET. A Charred Oak Struck by Weil norrrn in

California.

The drill of the Santa Barbara Ice company, w hich is boring a well in the lower part of the town, has passed through a charred log some 2 feet in diameter at a depth of 340 feet. A careful examination of specimens obtained indicates that the long-buried tree is an oak similar to the speaues growing above ground to-duy. Much speculation is rife ns to how this tree came so far beneath the surface of the soil, but an intelligent scrutiny of the Santa Clara valley gives a clear geological explanation of certain conditions attending this dis-

covery.

Each end of the valley nt Santa Barbara on the one hand and at Ooleta on the other has ut some time been an inlet of the sen. The lower lands received the wash from a great extent of mountainous country. The detritus from the hills, constantly carried down by winter floods and deposited below, at length filled up these inlets and gradually advanced the shore line, ns it is doing to-day wherever the wash from the hills follow its own course, while constantly burying from sight the vegetation of a past day. This charred log once lay at the bottom of the sea. !t was found in n stratum of blue water rand, and determines the great depth of what was once a fine harbor, extending probably n miie or more back of the present beach.

GUARD LIBERTY CELL. The Four (slant* Who Protect the Hacreti Ilelir from Vandal*. Robert Mofflt, Horry Helteroth, Francis Wcstpl.al and James Robinson, the four reserves who will guard the Liberty bell during the sojourn at the Atlanta exposition, are big enough to frighten any man or gang of men who might have designs on tiie bell. All four are w»ll over 6 feet in height and over 200 pounds in weight, says the Philadelphia Record. Their combined weight amounts ta nearly 1,000 poumN, and their combined height measures more than 25 feet. Mofflt was appointed in 1884. lie weighs 230 pounds, and is 6 feet 3 inches tall. For more than eleven years he has jireserved the pence and directed traffic at Eighth atid Chestnut streets. Helteroth weighs 280 pounds, and is f> feet 2 inches high. Both Helteroth and IVestphal (who is 6 feet 2 inches tall and weighs 210 pounds) are stationed at the East Market street entrance of the cit., hall. Helteroth was appointed in 1886 and Wgstphal in 1802. Robinson is the tallest man of the four, standing 6 feet ?% inches high and weighing 223 pounds. 1 in was appointed 111 ISii.i.and i is usually on duty nt the Market street ferry. GIRLS KICK THE FOOTBALL. Pontlsc (Mich.) fllq^h School Murpi Intln'gc la Hair Pullin£. The young ladies’ football team organized a short time ago by the young misses of the nigh school ot Pontiac, Mich., held the first practice game the other afternoon in the back yard of the girl who plays left tackle. At 4 o’clock the eleven assembled, arrayed in sweaters, short skirts and small caps. The eoacher, older than the others, took her place in the center of the ground, gathered her warriors around her, grasped the leather sphere firmly, stopped a moment to give further instructions ns to signals, passed the ball to the athletic young lady standing back other, and the practice began in earnest. Though hair-pulling was general, the entire team was alive the rev' day and occupied their usual places in the school room.

Called Seven f.ouim* Wife. Levi Cain, a well-known citizen and quite wealthy, died at Maysville, Ky., the other morning after a lingering illness. He had lieen married seven t imes, and, strange to say, each of his wives had Louisa as her given name.

Taking a Hath In Illndoostnn. The Hindoos content themselves with cleaning tlu-ir bunds with eotuhiou clay or soap nuts, which answer the purpose I better than one might expect.

Cigarette Card* Are III* Wares and lie Doe* a Good DuslneH*. One of the queerest of many wavs of getting a livelihood is that adopted by a boy who runs the streets of Louis-. ville, Ky. This boy is gener: By to be found among the newsboys and boot-’ blacks, but he never sells a [taper or blacks a shoe, says the Louisville Com- ' niereinl. His business is the buying and selling of cigarette pictures, and he seems to make a good thing of it. Small boys are inveterate collectors of these pictun s, and generally they get them from him. The name of the little picture merchant is Willie Dreyfus, and he has the name printed on a card, which he carries with him. Willie gets his pictures in a very systematic manner. He goes around to all the centrally located saloons and gets permission from the proprietor to pick up any pictures which lie may find. Very often the barkeepers collect pictures for him, and when they do this he ! generally pays them a small sum. Then, 1 too, he hunts up the email boys whohave collections of pictures w ho want j to sell out. These collections he buys i at a bargain and sells at a good round ,

price.

That the business is a profitable one is shown by the prices which Willie gets for his pictures. For new pictures! which have just come out of the boxes 1 be gets twenty-five cents a hundred. Sometimes he has special pictures which bring r.s much us one cent apiece. Not very long ago he sold 1,000 pictures for eight dollars. As he lias practically a monopoly <>f the business, Willie finds out how badly the prospective purchaser wants the pictures and charge:: him cccoidingly.

nlloW h'V

t itf

m

KIDNAPED BY A TRAMP. Tcrrl’.ile Experience* of a Denver Yontli Found by 111* Stepfather, Henry Alger, who claims to have been kidnaped by the “Cairo Spider," a tramp, was restored the other night to his stepfather, John Benton, of Denver, by the Chicago police. Yoim». r Alger claimed to have been kidnaped from Denver two years ago by a tramp, who is known to the police and the profession as the "Cairo Spider.” The man compelled him to beg, he says, and shortly after the kidnaping deliberately broke his arm and hip in order that liis condition might look more piti-

alle.

The pair traveled all over the country, the boy says. A few days ago at a point 30 miles north of Chicago he escaped from the captor and made his way to Chicago. Arriving in Chicago he went to the newsboys’ home and from there to St. Luke’s hospital, where his hip, which was still suffering from the mistreatment it had received, was eared for by doctors. It was on the advice of his attendants that he went to the police. To bear out his story the boy exhibited a crooked arm which, he said, the tramp had purposely made so by means of specially prepared splints of Ins own manufacture. Alger said he had been made to hold out his arm and the “Spider” deliberately broke it with a club. Louis Springle is said to lie the tramp’s real name. NEW HALIBUT BANK. Dlscoveroil Norttioant of NewfoundlandGloucester Fishermen Pleased. An announcement of great interest, not only to the Gloucester fishermen themselves, but to those who love halibut steaks, was made a few days ago. It is that u new halibut bank has been discovered northeast of Newfoundland, said to he teeming with fish, vessels having no trouble in loading to the gunwales in two days’ fishing. This industry was nearly ruined last winter, says the New York Tribune, and the new find is a source of great encouragement to the men who have been fighting against hard luck for a long time. The bank is apparently extensive, and so far there has been no choice of spots developed, one part being ns good as another. It costs about three and one-half cents a pound to shin Pacific halibut east, and seven and one-half cents is as low ns ii can be profitably sold for. The Atlantic halibut readily brings two cents a pound more on account of its superior quality, and Gloucester people are looking forward to a harvest from the new bank.

MADE MUSIC IN HER MADNESS. Insane Itutislan Princess Flood* Hospital vrifh Pofffj Vcru Ke’nuuton, u beautiful young woman, said to be a Russian princess, was taken tenderly from a Bellevue hospital nmlnnance the other night into ine receiving ward for examination as to her sanity. The young woinai:’: ideas, ns well as those of her husband, were too liberal for the land of the czar. The husband get involved in poljHpnl conspiracies and was banished from the empire. He came to this country three years ago and, as an artist, got work occasionally from some of the newspapers, and the princess joined him two years ago. Had U not been for the sudden attack of insanity they both expected to return soon to Russia, hi« period of banishment having expired. When the ambulance bowled up to tiie police station the princess, whohad been brought by two policemen from her home, was filling the halls and corridors of the big building with sweet music, and crowds gathered in the streets to hear. She can scarcely speak a word of English. Total Eclipses of the Sun. There were two total eclipses of the sun In the year 1712 and two in 1869. This rare phenomenon will not happen again until the year 2057.

%u%.J

man in .

cannot follow h ■ natural inclination, His enjoyment c life is limited. I) cannot eat what Is wants to—he is lin ited to a very fnigig diet. He is alive t, be sure, but lif doesn't possess vtr many advantages Are not all these things equally true of a dyspeptic ? For nil of the real enjoyment lie gets out of life, lie might as wc'* be in jail. He caj not eat what he lik nor as much of it he would like. If he transgresses any of the rules of his diet,

^ h. is punt hed for it.

H c sutlers much,

ST gets little sympathy. ^ Dyspepsia starts

with indigestion, and

I may lead to almost

anything. Indigestion means a variety

of things — it shows itself in many ways. At firsi, perhaps a little heaviness in the i stomach, a little sourness, windy helching^g' and heartburn Headaches begin to come - pretty soon after that, and biliousness and 1 a foul taste in the mouth in tiie morning. I Chronic constipation is almost inevitable, i| and it is pro' lily the most serious trouble | lb it ever takes hold of a man. Its seeming 'I simplicity is he thing that makes it most 1 dangerous, because it leads to neglect. 1 Constipation means that the body is hold- I ing poisonous, impure matter that should j b< gotten ri of. The poison is being re- I absorbed into the Wood and the whole body II is being filled with it. Impurity in the I blood may lead to almost any disease. J There is no telling what may come of it. |i Constipation ; s the start of it all. And yet people are i eless about it. It is the most serious thin- in the world, and the easiest to cure if yoi go about it right. Dr. Pierce’s 1’le.i ant l’< ts cure constipation. Cun it positively, certainly, infallibly. Cure it so it stays cured. Cure it so you can stop

taking medh ine.

Ami that is something that no othet remedy in 1 ■ world will do. .-I*-—s- m-mim White lie* are the gentlemen Ushers of the

black ones.

Rheumatism Rune Riot o* When there is lactic acid in the blood. Liniment and lotions will he of no permanent benefit. A cure can be accomplished only by neutralizing this acid and for this purpose J!j Hood’s Sarsnparilla is the best medicine |] because Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the only true blood puritier prominently in the public

eye.

Hood's Pills act easily, yet promptly and effectively, on the liver and bowels. 25c. Several Oklahoma attorneys have divorce ngencic-s in New York and Chicago. If your hair is inclined to fall out and become thin use Hall's Hair Renewer.

■st j

-

Order a sack of Vandalia Mills “Best High Grade Flour,” ard give it a trial; none other as good. Sold t| in cotton sacks. 3ltf The real martyr never counts on having an audience. • ^ MarrioKO i* a failure whenever it i* a disappointment. God loves to lock into the heart that i gratefu . The Empress Joshephine was fond of orange water. There is always an ill-feeling between a doctor and hi* patient. InrensF* was almost iavariabley used in all heathen sacrifices. j| Sbakesphere mentions perfumes as of com- ^ nion use in hi* time. The principal animal perfumes are musk* civet and ambergris. The hair o r the cashmere go:it is about eighteen inches in length. About four million of people in China are i constant opium smokers. V Kussia is going to spend 10,000,000 rubles a year for fovty years on a system o! local railroads. In most parts of Europe it is considered unlucky for a hare to cross the road in front o: a traveler. For several centuries an infusion of nutgalls ti-’-t’ 1 w ’h ilphate of iron composed the only known ink. A Dexter (Me.) farmer is storing his woo arainft better prices. He h is severgil yeais’ clip on hand. t

.>.1^ .*/ «•. •

SIX O'CLOCK.

WEARY W03IEN WATCH FOR THAT BLESSED HOUR. Help for onr Working-Girls and Women Near at Hand.

I.ongest Tunnel. The longest tunnel, including all approaches, is that of Chemnitz, in Hungary, 10.27 miles. Cheap I-rlcr*. In England in 3313 u lamb was worth five shillings; two dozen eggs threo

[SrECIAL TO OCR LADT BKAHFR* ) the stroke of six ends the lv^ Vday’s work al stores, office*, fe t factories, mills, where women

are employed. But their neces-

sary work at %

home, sewing, mending, etc., ) must be done after that time, umi Iheirwork is never done.”

All women work; some for ambition,

some for economy in the house'’o’r), Jyjlt the great mass of women work for their daily Ln ad. AH aie subject to the

.hum* «« sa " ie physical

* ;i " s < a " s,| ff pr

..iiiiiiialike from tho WPnl’i” 1 IrA . imu i i. ’e'l snree physienl li 11 disturbances, SrS'If and tiie nature

Of their duties often quickly

drifts them into the horrors of all kinds of female complaints, ovarian troubles, inflammation, ulceration, falling and displacement of the womb, leucorrluea, and perhaps irregular or suppressed “ monthly periods,” causing severe backache, loss

of appetite, nervousness, irri-

tability and woaknocs.

Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound is the unfailing cure for all these troubles. It strengthens the proper muscles, and cures displacement.

Backache, dizziness, faint-

ing, hearing-down, disordered

stomach, moodiness, dislike of friends and society — all symptoms of the one cause — wil! be quickly dispelled. ( ’’.Vrii.c Mrs. Pinkhaiu about)

your trouble.

Y ou can tell tho story of __ your pain to a woman, and &

get the help that only woman ” ^ 6ive. Mrs. I’iukkam’s address is

Lynn, Mass. *