Pike County Democrat, Volume 25, Number 36, Petersburg, Pike County, 18 January 1895 — Page 5
SftUoOU -trill Con Colio, Cliolen OUphaat ft Co., Druggists,
What is this anyhow ? ■ It is the only bow (ring) which ^cannot be pulled from the watch. To be had only with Jas. Boss Filled and ether watch cases JBfci ^taraoed with this trade mark, law A pastel will bring jm a watch east epewcr. Keystone Watch O&se Co»j . PHILADELPHIA. ■ IAA DOLLARS PER MONTH In Your Own Locality made easily and honorably , without capital, during your spare hours. Any man. wornaft^tef, or girl can do the work handliy, without experience. Talking, unnecessary. Nothing like it for moneymaking ever offered before. Our workers always proper. No time wasted in learning the business. V/e teach you in, a night how to succeed from the first*; hftur. You can make a trial without expense to yourself. We start yon* fhruish everythin? needed to carry on the business successfully, and guarantee you a»nim>t failure if you but follow our simple, plain instructions. ^Reader, if yon are in need of ready money, and want to know all about the best paying business Indore the public, send us your address, and we will majil you a document giving you all the particulars. TRUE & CO.v Box 400, Augusita, Maine.
ST ST LESS THAN HALF THE-PRICE-OF OTHER BRANDS *f POUNDS,20* + HAIVFSJO* QUARTERS^ SQtP'IN CANS ONLY patent ISaCAYtAi \ i mi MARKS V COPYRIGHTS.^ CAW I OBTAIN A PATKfTf >» » prompt newer and an hoi*set opinion, write to flUKN At CO., wbo hare had nearly Arty years' e«perecce in the pat ant business. tions strict! y con MentiaL it Halt_ formation concerning Patents and bow to obtain them ser.t free. Also a catalogue of mochanteal and set entitle books sent free. Patents taken tbrongb liiuno A Co. metre sr?t ia) riotieeinthe MentStc American, and thus £ « brought widely before the public without cost to tbe inventor issued weekly, elegantly UinntratecU t lamest circulation of any scientific S3 a year. Sain-ce copies a ton. monthly, $l50a year, a. Beery nut ' world. Vi ■ Building opiea, ‘i3 a year. Sain-ce KAtti copies, ‘AS cents ttral pistes, in colors, and mthe latest daslsns and secure contracts. A< MUMM &CO, Single ■ beansboVthe houses. w.th plans, enabling 1 “ * ■ ‘ * id secure cjq __ Hiw Toss, 361 Bbosdwat.
"ss^REVIVO RESTORES VITALITY.
iW *>ay. i •* ** rr 15th Thty. O^HAT sotli i>*y.
Made a .Well Man [ of Me.
j&m-jeejs rvi r.ux w.tu’!'"'. the atiof® results In 30 day*. It acta ,x .* ;••■ ally .-.:d ■uickJy. ctm when all others fail <«*w m u ' ai regenx their lost manhood, and old v! ■; 1*1 '.tew** their :routhlol vigor hr using 'T»~- It ouicklyend6urelyrestoresNerrouaVitality, Im potency, Nightly Kmiwdonfc .. =■< Pouair, Failing Memory. Wasting Diseases, and il t **; cte of self-abuse *:r excess and indiscretion, ' i.icli jn£ tsocefors*udy. business or marriage. It <■* or.ij cures hy starting at the seat of disease, but • :'“3t r.wn tonic and blood builder, bringi •' the pink ■slow to pale cheeks and re‘edia* the ura cf youth. It wards off Insanity * comuaarticQ. Insist on haring RE VIVO, no It c&n he carried in rest pocket. By mail. I ,-30 per package, or sis few SS.OO, with a pogl w to earn or rshai •♦'•••*’ wriitwa guarantee «2te ir-'uey. Cmuiar fn,e. Address «6V A MEDiCtNE GO.. 63 River St. CHICAGO, RL FOKSALEBX Berjreri & Olipliaut, Druggistsan-: ygv .mi; a bearas. ia<upnapr '.1$ Jitiuiiiea VasYe-.-stiy. When block. Elevator. Oldest,largest v ' seat ipyed. IndhidUal instruction by reecixurs. b<-.»«aepirg. Penmanship, English Trai.ua?. «te., free. C*»e,sp bnnrdlnc, tuition, •itty puysmita PeddMa seeund b ^radnatea. Bountiful Ml by our land Paper
two Giynti A mighty giant <mce there A gentle giant he. Whom all m?n km-U where’er he wca* And none win known to flee.. Bo Heed within a eaatle fair, And gicut aa hi* waa etrong,. A~t thoao who pawed when ho was than Coaid hear «. t&ppy aong.* Bia heart waa kind, hia hand win tree, , Hia aonl wait set to mirth. A«/i all a»a a aid. '•’Tis joy to li ra With him open the earth.” Bia thee waa bright with pleamz.t amilea. Bia laugh waa good to hear. While round about him ererywltero ; *Twaa rammer all the year. Swift flew this time. The giant grew Full old and weak of frame One day unto the eaatle fair Another giant came. aa the gimtte giant waned The other waxed in might. A of solemn mien waa h% Nor glad unto the sight. The eaatle old grew silent, oold Nor any mirth came out, And where the summer long had Iliad The winter stalked about. Whenever that they could. They dreaded him as they had loved The merry giant good. No aong waa ever on Us bps, |, His eyes were hollow lights; The castle teamed a haunted, pila And dark and chill o’ nights. And round about it rone the mm And, lo, an island where The gloomy giant dwelt akam, The picturfc of despair. And those who knew the ginnt twain The truth with tears conf.*»: “They brotliero were, and one was Grief, And one eras Happiness. ’* —Chicago Record. f The conduct of war resembles the conduct of life. There are roles and principles which it is well l-o know, but for success more is needed than knowledge. The successful man sees the world as it is, grasps tlte situation before him, goes straight to the point and keeps to it We say of him, in one aspect that he lias character; in another, that he has common sense, and common sense at its best we call genius. The command of au army is a matter of character and common sense. In Napoleon’s words, “A la guerre los homines ne sont rien, c est un horame qui est tout. ”
Of general s not mere ciphers there are three kinds. There is the commander who has the force of will, but whose intelligence is not cultivated. He makes a good subordinate —a Key or a Bonedek—but isflprone to fail when left to himself. Then there is the intellectual man, apt to take in more learning than he cam carry. He becomes a Brunswick, a Masscnbach, a Colley. Sometimes, hut not often, a powerful miud is coupled with a very strong backbone Such a mart, when he has a chance, does great things. Moltko’s problems are not conclusive evidence as to character, but no one can study them without recognizing Jhe master quality of mind. Their author may have had infinite learning, but has been digested out of sight. What is visibio is the perfection of common sense.—.Spectator. Saved ljy Sneeslnc. “Yes,” said the sublime falsifier, “a fit of sneezing is a disagreeable experience, generally speaking, but sneezing saved my life on one occasion. How’s that? Why, it was in war times. 1 was on picket. J heard a squad of soldiers coming; knew they weren’t our fellows and hid behind a tree to keep shady But they weren’t more’n 50 paces off when I had to sneeze. The enemy quickened their steps. They were on to me, but when I continued to sneeze 20 or 30 times they slackened their pace, halted and finally turned iind ran off on the double quicks It seems, as I found out afterward, that from the number of my sneeze® they thought I was a regiment or at least a company. ”—Boston Transcri pt
The beaver hits more skill than a government engineer. The dams constructed by beavers are never washed away, while every freshet witnesses! the destruction of a portion at least of the goverojnent’s works on thjft river. I Pinole is a Mexican corn dainty. The com is roastexi, ground to a coarse meal, mixed with sugar and spices and then stirred with water. It is very nutritious mid often forms the sole food of travelers cm long journeys. __ Bye is said to grow wild in Anato-j lia and Turkestan, as well as between j the Black and Caspian seas. Its original home is believed to be some-j where between the Austrian Alps! and the Orals. The wife of Rohanlt, the philosopher, took her seat at the door of his lecture room and would not allow poorly dressed or ill favored people to enter. «_ Charleston, S. C., was at first called TTing Charles Fort in honor»of Charles L Charleston vras snbstitnt- j ed for the earlier designation in ! 1783. >_ Many birds have the srick of turn* Wing along on the ground ahead of a sportsman in order to draw him away firom their nests. The Jftamita, in Penmwtvania, was named from a tribe c /living cp its tanks. ™ - .; 4
THE BfVHJS CWti HWE, Some time ago X heard of a gold none that inis said to be in existence in the Chantaboan province. An old villager that I met told me that the mine had never been worked. He recollected in his ch ildhood, about 60 years ago, that a party with four elephants visited the place, bat he does not remember whether they found the mine or not Two or three Cambodians are reported to have found nuggets in the bed of the stream, but no one 'has ever been adventurous enough to follow the, stream to its source. The greatest, possible amount of superstition exists about tills mine. Scone allege; that those who go there never re-1 turn. They either die of sickness, 1 the influence of the; evil one, or fall i a prey to wild animals. Three Eng-1 Hshmen attempted 'to reach the] source of the stream where this mine! is reported to be, but had to abandon ] the idea for various reasons. At starting they hail to take a narrow path that had been made by “cardamom” gatherers. After keeping on this path two da^s they reached a pool of dirty water. Here their guide took them aside and whispered to them not to talk of tigers, as the forest in that j part was infested with them, and that they would surely visit the camp if they only mentioned the name. Promising to be discreet, they went down to examine the pool, and found ' the whole place actually trampled down by wild boars, with a few tiger footprints. Here they rested for the night, and next day proceeded on their journey. If the footprints around the pool led them to believe their guide's reports, of wild animals, they were now perfectly convinced, for on either side of the path they saw the destruction worked by wild elephants. A little farther on they came to a spot where the mammoths had rested for the night. That evening they found that one of the carriers who had charge
of the provisions had taken to his heels. As they had no cooking utensils, they -were compelled to cools their rice in a tobacco tin, and along •with a steak of a civet cat (meo-pa) managed to make a dinner. At this spot the guide informed them it was imjxsssible to go on unlees they walked along the stream barefooted. After walking in this manner* for about five honrs they came to the fells. Here they had to plimb up rocks 30 to 40 feet high by means of the roots of trees growing through the fissures, the guide pointing them out places where gold bad been found. After climbing up higher they came to the junction of two streams, and the guide now told them that he did not know the road farther up, and that he w$s afraid. One of the party got dysentery here, and they then determined to hurry back, especially as they had on ly rice with them, and not even a bam^ boo. to cook it in. ^his excursion can only he done in the months of Jimnary, February and March, It would be a good opportunity for a sportsman who desired to combine business wjth pleasure. Ponies and pack animals could not possibly go. Tfee only way of transport would be by carriers, and it would be very h'ird to obtain more than two or three men, as the people are so superstitious.—Siam Free Press.
Tb« Dear Little Angel's Win**. Apropos of the old fat satin sachet, with its painted Cupids, here is a true and quaint little story : A vrise 4-year-old maid named Florence lives in New York, and tells her mamma about heaven and her experience there before coming down to earth. “And so, ” said mamma one clay, after a long and detailed explana tion of thipgs from Florence, “you came down on a ladder with diamond handles that God afterward pulled up? Why didn’t you (fly down? Surely, yon had wings in heaven.” “ ’F course,” said (Florence promptly, “but you know I’ve got to wear them when I go back, mid God didn’t want ’em astroyed, so he put ’em away”—thinking very hard—“ in a blue sachet” . Somehow one can’t tell exactly why there seems neither irreverence nor bad taste in the notion of a dear familiar God thus preserving that little pair of wings for future use.— New York Press. 8k* Doubled. Jennie was learmng-tQ^r^cT and spell, but it was v^ry hard for her to remember whather teacher told her about pronouncing a double letter when she came to one. She would say “a a” or “e e” or “t t” instead i of “double a” or “double e,'' etc. Her teacher had one day drilled her considerably on this matter in 5 (polling. Shortly afterward Jennie was called on to read. The paragraph be- j gan, “Up, up, Lucy!” and Jennie read it triumphantly, “Double up, Lucy!”—Organizer. A Wtae GlrL A little girl is reported to have written in her examination paper, “The Arctic ocean is chiefly used for of exploration. "
LATIN QUARTER IN PARIS. * At ttatoriMa SmUm oC Mm Gaj Cayftkl Nobody save the thieves, beggars *. sod the dramshop keepers expressed any sorrow when in the early years! of her majesty's reign the greater! ]nsti of the old and infamous St j Giles’ was demolished, and with■ equanimity did respectable New York witness the introduction of light And sanitation into the wretched slam known as the Five Points, described so vividly in the “AmeriIBan Notes” of Charles Dickens. There is scarcely a ghetto left in any dty of Italy, and no voice of protest was audible in the Italian press when the old quarter at Florence was torn down seme two years ago. Still would there seem to exist among the j studious youth of Paris a feeling of genuine regret to learn that the old | Latin quarter, which was almost palled to pieces by Baron Haussmann under the second empire, is doomed structurally and at no distant date to total disappearance. Long since the Rue St. Jacques was modernized, widened and prolonged from the Petit Pont to the Rue Suffot, while the Rue Ecole de Medicine has likewise been prolonged to the Boulevard St. Germain. And now has come the turn of the Place Maubert, the narrow streets blustering about which interesting j relic of old Paris arp to be cleared I away by the municipality. The Ruej St. Severin des Anglais is in particn-1 lar to give place to a brand new avenue or boulevard. Three cabarets, our Paris correspondent told ns a few days since, are to vanish. These are the establishments known by the signs of Pere Lunette, the Senat and the Chateau Rouge. This first is a literary rendezvous. Senat has a somewhat doubtful reputation as the favorite resort of ragpickers, cabotins and the stripling candidates for, the bench of the accused at the assize court, hut the Chateau Rouge, not to be confounded with the elegantly dissipated Monlin Rouge in the Champs Elvsees, has long enjoy
ea gemuiio ceieunijr us n ijrpiuu xratnre of the Quartier Latin, scholas-1 tically treated, and as the happy hunting ground of the male and female students of the left bank of the Seine. One famous, or rather infamous, inhabitant of the Quartier Latin, where he also met death, was Jean Paul Mari'.t, the evil minded Swiss, who had been splendidly educated at home by his father, who was of Sardinian extraction. But it would not seem that Jean Paul was ever a student of the Quartier Latin. The wretch lived in Hue Ecole de Medicine, and on the 13th of July, 1793, he was stabbed to death in his bath by the modern Judith, the heroic Charlotte Corday. Under the consulate and the first empire the young gentlemen of the student region were fain to keep, politically speaking, extremely quiet, since France was ruled by a person called Napoleon Bonaparte, who, like Oliver Cromwell, “stood no nonsense.” Still, always patriotic, generous and high spirited, the students forgot in 1814, when Paris was menac )d by the allied armies, how heavi y the imperial regime had weigh d on them, and the members of the faculties of law and medicine, r aking common cause with the pu ils of the Polytechnic school, orga ized a strong force of infantry, cavalry and artillery and f ought mostva iantly at the defense of Charenion i ad the Barrier duTrone. Comparative tranquillity was enforced in the Latin quarter during the restoration, but the studious youths, togethe r with the cadets of the Polytechnit burst out again in a furious spasr of re nnKlioaniam -Trtlv
They were tolerably quiet during the reign of Louis Philippe, jut the epoch was a halcyon one fa them, so far as extreme sportivonossand unabridged gayety were concerned. Those were the roaring times of the i Chaumiere, a noted cabaret, whither tlie students and studentesses re- i paired in order to dance the cancan, ; the tulipe orageuse and the Robert Macaire, exercitations long since prohibited in Paris by the police, j although pale and limp imitations of j them are occasionally visible in Eng-; had. Garvani loaned his matchless ; pencil to the task of delineating the habits and manners of the students | and the engaging tricks and manner j of their female friends, the grisettes, the last class which may be said to have entirely vanished from the j Rive Gauche. —London Telegraph- i The ^object of the porter leads nafc- • urally to the English system of han- ( dling baggage. It is simple in the ex-| treme. The porter gets from a con- j venient case beside the departure; platform a label bearing the nameof t your destination, which he pastes on your “box,” which goes in the lng- j gage van. Ton get no receipt of any f form, nor is your baggage registered, j On arrival at your destination you must claim it. Theoretically it is a bother to have to look up your hag* gage, and articles ought frequently to go astray, and when they do it is a matter of but a few hours tQ got them,^Seribu§r’a, , r.k£^ '.Jr.*.»' rifc
FORTY MILLION CAKES YEARLY. vNHinnmtHmiiiiiiiDiimiiiiiiuiifmiiiniimiima»1ii\<t TWO LOAVES OF ■ ’ . ■ • ‘t v 1 Bread Given Away. z With ever; purchase of One Dollar’* worth of Groceries for Cash I will give Two Lnsv& of Bread, free. We are headquarters for all kinds of Groceries. Oysters, Oranges, Banannas, Apples \ Cali and see us when in the city. Lunch at all hours. 1 "NVvM. LIIBSNl THE cItVbAKERY 11 m i ii i u ii in Iimiimi iimmi III immminm i m i m 11 m in 11 n m f ni 11 in m m i«iinn i minify
ICINE Co. IHDWWPOU!
W. R. Hart, Traveling Salesman, ° Dayton, O., says: “ Like many other* traveling men, I made the acquaintance of the railroad sandwich, who afterward introduced me to old 'General Dyspepsia,' an ac- { quaintance I was unable to shake until I met with LYON’S SEVEN WONDERSl which I am happy to say, has put the unwelcome guest to flight Dyspepsia and headaches are things of the past. I feel like a new man and can eat anything.” . Could >ot Sleep id Night. To whom it may concern: Following an attack of la grippe and typhoid fever, I was left with a bad condition of blood and serious stomach troubles. I had no appe- • , tite, was exceedingly nervons and cohld not sleep at night. To tell the story briefly, LYON’S SEVEN WONDERS cured me.
For Sale by all Druwistsi County Recorder’s Office. Residence, ifa Hoyfc Ave. .Indianapolis. TIxe* 5i PDf TTY RPfiin AftSFRTlflN t BUT we will live up to it for a short time f rtft II T OKU MU MPPLItllUm ^ias turough invoicing and finding oat that 1894 n:»K ht«ii a prosperous year for us. we feel tl» *t we (tan sell a few goods at Coat or a little (less in order to make room for m< re diiferent varieties of goods. «LOOZ AT * THESE * STTJNNIN3 * PRICES* * - ; ■/: - . , . • California Peaches. 16c per can; worth 36c. Exit Plums, 16o per can; worth 36c. California Apricots, 16c per can; worth 23c. ’■ , Coffee advances, hut we still sell two packages for 43a. Three one-pound packages Pie Grapes for 28c A fine line of^tftne~S3Hces and Catsups. 20 pounds Granulated staar for $1 00. ' * - 22 pounds Light Brown Sugar fur |1.00 10 pounds Cracked Beans fur 23c. King's Self-Rising .Buck wheat PbHir. two packages for 35o. Tilting Patent Churns. 22.00; worth $6.00. . * Be Quick. This is only for a limited time You re Truly, ' • - ■ ' ‘ ' - ?- ' « 6 T. EC. VIEHE <50 CO., Exop’xs.
[insist on
BMW ARE •f trade marks j and labels.
ARM AHP HAMMER SODA
«C. X. BURGER & BRO,(®THE FASHIONABLE MERCHANT TAILORS* S ... Main Street, Petersburg, Inch -• :r. Have a Large Stock of Late Styles **f consisting of tbe eery bat Stiitinus am! hew (inmk , ♦4PERFECC FITS AND SOCLES GUARANTEED*^. ’ U ■ /
