Greencastle Star, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 September 1881 — Page 3
At Bottom Prices !
Paints, Oils, Varnish, Putty, Glass, "Dye Stuff’, Paint i hit wash Brushes,
THE STAR.
Frank A. Arnold, Editor anil Proprietor
TO-MORHOW AT TEN.
A Newport Idyl. How tho band plays tonight all those loroiy Strauss airs That I danced here laxt year, or sat out on the stairs, With Malready and BUikesloy, and that English cadet i Of bur Majesty's service—little Beresford Drett I I Tum-ti-tum—there’s that perfect “Blue Danube. ’ Ohd<«ir! How I wish that Malready or Ulakeeloy wore bore I What’s t<►-day or to-night to tho nights that are lied? What’S the n>so that 1 hold to the rose that is deed? Uut speaking of roses reminds mo of those : That 1 wore at tho French frigate ball, at tho close Of the season. 'Twa* in early September, Just a little bit cooiish and chill, 1 remember, I But it heavenly fair night; and the band how it played! And how to its music we waltzed there! and staid Deep into tho midnight, or morning, before We thought of departure. Then unit rowing to shore In the chill and the dark, I shall never forget. At uiy left hand sat BUkosley, and at my right Brett, ' Whispering foolish soft nothings—Brett, not Hlakesley, I moan, For Hlakesley was dumb. But under the screen Of the darkness I saw him quite clear 1 Kiss tho rose that I wore above my left car. Ah: as soli on my check 1 felt the light touch Of his Incath as he b< ut there, my heart beat with such A wild pulse for a moment, that, giddy and faint, 1 turned to the breeze with a sudden complaint Of the air I found c lose: and the air was like wine— A strong wostern wind from a sky clear and tine. It was just ut that moment our boat came to land. And I stumbled and fell ns I stepped on the sand, And twus Brett’s arms that caught me, and 1 | never knew quite What I said In that instant, for I thought. In i the night. It was Hlakesley who held me; and Blakosicy, it seems. | Was Hum where behind, and— But what foolish old dreams ! Of that dead and gone time! for what do I care ! For iho things of la.st year, its mistakes or despair, i When here's to-day and to-night with such untroiibUyl skins. And laid ut my feet the season's great prize For my taking or leaving, and to-morrow at
ten
I I'm to give him my answer—this prize
| amongst men.
Of c uirwe 1 have made up my mind to accept. And to night 1 must burn up that rose i have Wholesale and retail dealers in From last year, and the notes signed T. B.,
and cease to recall
That foolish old time of the French frigate
hail.
i Tom Hlakesley, Indeed! as If I should rare
§0*1 Highest market price paid for country produce in goods or cash. Farmers ^Vii^r^stair— tUPi<1 "' t4lere 9 a are solicited to call on us for their supplies and bring their produce. And V told johu^to-night to say “Not at aw* JENKINS A CO., Southard Block, E. Washington St., Groencastle. .fiat To anT^rtall of my friend8 lhat ml(rhf ( . omo .
| And he's hunting mu out with some card he
MW 1 llHS BrOUght,
The donkey! Now, John—What! Mr. Blake*-
ley! 1 thought —
Garden Seed, Drugs, Stationery, Chamois Skins, Toilet Articles, and
Fancy Goods.
JOHK’lB STOKE.
BARGAINS!
In Dry Ciioods, Dress {woods,
Notions and* Millinery, at
LANGUORS FANCY BAZAR,
No. G, South Side Square, Greencastle, Indiana.
IN’en Cash Q-rocery. ISAAC JENKINS. JOHN BURLEY.
< JENKINS & CO.,
Fine Teas, Sugar, Coffee, Tobacco & Cigars.
Stnippw) Mid that, moreover, as tho sympathies of Buchorough In the late war had been of the Jingo oolor. he (Twiggel) had thought it would be in bettoi taste not to boast that he had borne arms in the Kusuiaii cause. As a wind-up to this little speech, Twigget
produced three photographs.
••Would vou like to see how I looked in liveryP” he said, laughing, to Miss Lucy. “Here I am in full dress; here on horseback; and here in undress.” Oh, Twigget, Twigget! Then this egregious falsehood was not uttered on the spur of a moment; but had been craftily premeditated. That visit of yours to London the other day was for
having paid him sufficient reverence at starting; but in secret Twigget cursed
both Lucy's folly and his own.
He hired a charger in London on the great day; he purchased a be saddle-cloth, and he chartered a
beautiful
groom
to go down to Windsor with the Y»orso. As for himself, he went to Windsor on the day before the review, look a room at the White Hart, and did not array himself in his gorgeous attire until the time came for starting. Now it most not be supposed that Twigget did all this without much inward commotion lest he should be found out, hooted otf the review-ground and taken into custody. He was, indeed, so nervous that
the purpose of being photographed in a , he swallowed a whole bottle of Hurgun-spick-span new set of uniforms, pur- j dy while dressing; but, on the other chased from a costumier, find with a lot 1 hand, Twigget was a sharp fellow, and of medals and decorations, ordered when the wine had given him courage from the I’alais Royal, in I’aris. And | lie reflected that if he rode calmly on you interviewed a printer, too. who to the ground as if he knew what he
- i > < waa ijoing, nobody would think of
stopping him; and that if ho kept his mouth closed nobody would be able to detect that he was an Englishman. It was accordingly with a “do-or-die" expression on his features that he marched down stairs as soon us the waiteriuform-
struck oil' for you a number of little slips of paper, labeled, “ Bolski-l’ho-tographie, Bucharest,” which you pasted at the back of the cartes, so as to conceal the name of the English photographer. And then you purchased some old newspajHirs, in which the
(uticuTa The Great Skin Cure.
INFALLIBLY CUBES Itching mid Mealy IHsca>cs. Scrofulous Humor*, Fleers, Old Sore* and Itlrreanal A licet ions when all other Human Ageueles Fail. T'HK CimcURA TREATMENT, for the A cure of Skin, Scalp and Blood diseases, consists in the internal use of Cuticura Resolvent, the new Blood Putifier, and tne externa; use of Cuticura and Cuticura Soap, the great
Skin Cure.
For Sunburn Tan and (ireasy Skin useCuticura Soap, an exquisite toilet bath and nursative, fraarant with delicious flower
ad healing balsams.
ery san
odors and healing
brave doings of a namesake of yours, edliim that his charger had been brought who died in the Koumauian army, were round. There were a great many ' recorded, and after this you went to a officers in the passages ana f
fcuriosity shop, whoie vou collected old ] swords, fragments of shells and flattened bullets, with the intention of say-
on the
et!
But your dozens of lies served tlioir purpose, for they were swallowed as readily as oysters. Lucy Light was
SALT ICHEl 11
Will McDonald, 2S42 Dearborn »t Chicago, gratefully acknowledges a cure of Salt Rheum
... j. , , - .on head neck face arms and legs for sevenofflcers in the passages and in the front teen years; not able to walk except on hands
teueu uuneu<, wiiu me intention oi sa ing that you had picked them up on tl Held of Plevna. Perfidious Twigge But your dozens of lies served the
Ligl
twinged with remorse to think how she
hall, with all of whom he exchanged salutes; and the crowd outside the hotel who saw him mount wore greatly struck with his splendid uniform. He heard several ladies exclaim, “What a magnificent officer.” And they speculated as to whether he were a Prussian or a
Russian.
The
and knees for one year; not ableto help myself for eisht years; tried hundreds of remedies; doctors pronounced his case hopeless; permanently cured by the Cuticura Remedies
hod mistaken your modest valor; Strap-
per’s hatred for you was crushed under detected as an impostor and a load of respect; it was his turn now scorn as the price of his unsc
to feel small, and utterly out of conceit with his humble duties. What were the drills on Bun’s Piece beside the fierce, gory battles around Plevna! 1 All’s fair in love and war. Twigget had heard this proverb, but his conscience, which was not callous, seemed to swell up into lumps inside him. Ho surveyed himself in the glass when he went home and thought he looked like a villain. He laughed bitterly to himself, and said: “Ana! so much forStranper!” but he well knew that having told
his lies he must now stick to them, and [ rewo beside tins gentleman the rc he set his teeth for this puri>o.se, recol- . the day ami founa him a charming
I'SOKIASIS.
j II. E. Carpenter, Esq. Henderson, N.Y. I cured of I’soriaris or Leprosy of twenty years' J standing by the Cuticura Resolvent internally
...v justice of story telling should snd Cuticura nn I Cut!-ura Soap externally, compel one to own that Twigget was J Dteo'UY , .r^ e r , Ju7.r.c 0, or;rc li -Iv?" ^ „„ — — —i rea p e( l prominent citiiens. All afflicted with Itching
‘and Scaly diseases should send to uc lor this
mseemly prank,
but nothing of the sort happened. He rode past sentries and policemen, past scores of battalions and companies of volunteers; was saluted by commanding oflicers, bowed to by Generals, ogled by ladies; and he made his way with the greatest ease to a clump of mounted of-
lesiimoniat in full.
forty toreign officers, and, having sred one who addressed him some
Wall Paper
(
Largest Stock! Greatest Variety! Lowest Prices!
Also, Paints, Oils Glass, Putty, Varnish, etc., at COOIET'S ZDIR/CJO- STOGIE.
/trmrm
h'^trinrf fin* r*eco,r*-i *n*iu/rit hy f/ir mefO-
< 1VNTLKM>;*■. i v,A» v.fT-'ring from Ktuernl <1*1,;lity such Ml eitenr thsi
A Tiu.'iitl.m of a month di! not givs me much rt.lief.hu
■ and unking ' '
dsn,onia to me.
increased pi
allied almost im
imonth did not give me much relief, hut on t]
ition end ftiuXuiK rliUiH. At tliiu time I begeti itir ute of your I
medkile nnd wonderful reeulte. Theold energy returned uad 1 found that my natiu.d ■utly ftlir.lod. I hate nrcrl three holt lee of the Tonic. Since using it 1 Imre doue twice t
aud with double the ease. With the tranquil
rear
tree not perraanrutly abated. I hate need three bott
bor that I ever did hi tho same umo during my U’tiess. end with i and tlgor of body, h.ia oosie aim a cleernese of i bought never beb work, I know not what. 1 g.ve It the credit. J. P. Wa
jieo/eeeion,
Ifynin-VKiu. 4.9 ItrhilUy. trmul
e.usre. VI .inf o/ I Utility, .Vet-foue fVo.ifi rlHon, unit CfDJMMgfMs Iwenee/Yorti/rnrs .at ray lubor WHieiceedlngly bur- ! the contrary, was fo!h>e»d by J Ikon Toni. - , from which I ro- 1 found that my natural form
tho la.
I reoottA-v e tsierf t-ft • tl, /or 1 ■ eii.iturf a lift f>ie- H '/• I it III- ■ -r oof I II M nvnli'm- W verN.iiT /
UK
j Ob, Tom! Tumi lot mo gu. How cun you—
bow date—
Wbat, you thought that I chose little Ben*-
foid thoro
That night In tho boat, and that you— Lot m#
go. Hlr.
You ro the stupidest man— A whole year!
Don't you know, sir.
That to-morrow— Wnat is that?—In Egypt
and Romo
All this year—and mooting hist month little Hrott, you came homo In tho very next stoamor—and twaa love,
love, you say.
And dospair, that sent you, ami kept you
away?
H-m!—well, it may bo; but, you see, other
men
Have not Iwn so stupid; and I—well, to-mor-row at ten I’m to give— Wbat is that?—you've boon ill ail this year?— Como homo but to die? Oh, Tom, Tom, my darling, my dour, Not to die, but to live; and I—yes, to-mor-row I'll give My refusal at ton; and you—ah, you U stay, Tom, and lire! —Mora Prrri/, in Harper's Magazine.
staff. Twigget found himself among
some
answered
remark in French about the weather, he rode beside this gentleman the rest of
com-
panion. Nobody asked him who he was, or where he had served. HisstraL agem succeeded as completely as it de-
served to fail.
Presently the Commander-in-Chief rode out of the Castle gates, followed by a large staff of English oflicers, and th*m all the others fell in behind after an immense deal of saluting. All notions were mingled higgledy-piggledy and the procession ambled on amidst a clattering of scabbards, a prancing of hoofs and so much cheering from the crowd of spectators that anything like talking was out of the question. 1 his was, of course, just what Twigget wanted. He passed the Bunborough Rifle corps and saw Strapper, covered with dust, reeking with perspiration aud
so, as Twigget’s modesty contrasted so looking more military than picturesque; happily with the overbearing demeanor then he passed by the stand where j of sundry half-pay officers who lived in Lucy Light and her parents were, witli | the borough. It was all very well for a number of other Bunborough people, these old fellows to pooh-pooL the Rou- He had the proud satisfaction of lilting | manian army and to laugh at the notion " 1 J ' 1 ‘ ’ * '
of a man winning a Colonelcy during a
NKrV DISEASES.
F. II. Drako, Esq. Detroit Mich, suffered beyond all description from a skin disease which appeared on his head hands face and nearly destroyed his eyes. The most careful doctoring failed to help him. and after he failed he
Beers, who were waiting at the Castle | a r '7('utb'nr 1 r i a s l ,no ! 'eit, < rn. l iVv trn “ l ! y ,1 ' ,i< ' ur 1 end of the Long \\ alk to join the Duke’s and remains perfectly well to this day.
lecting that he had played such a stake ! with his character as ho must win or
else be morally ruined.
When a man tells lies he never fore1 sees all their consequences. Twigget : had requested Lucy and her parents not to denounce him as a Kussophil (that was the way he put it); hut of course j tho story of his distinguished servL'es : were soon circulated in Bunborough. I The newspaper extracts which he left in Lucy’s hands for a few hours and which she read with glistening eyes, for the deceased Twigget had been a Very j brave man, removed all possibility of a I doubt as to his veracity; and many of our friend’s fellow-townsmen began to feel proud of having sucli a distinguished man among tnem, all tho more
THE LOVE OF UNIFORM.
As the day of the Volunteer Review approached Mr. Twigget could not con-
vrork, 1 know not whut. 1 Rive It JTh* From Titni* 4* a imrmmmrtotion o/ fVo-
\tajridr nf ir»n\.
I f aun Hark, mnd t'Ltts\tthatnu, .**»*■< ti ' tt I ** »//» Ike y+getuhle 1.4 ro»►•*»#<>«. H nrrv+N I ^rs-: y puritan* *cher+ \4t Tonir Ut **•+•**ytt t y.
i!«. tne e<«j. with the tninqiiit ner o eeal from himself that he was bein<v ATHow.Yiuibi'r chri.rien' cimnqi! 1 q>oj, F |U “ [ meanly cut out of his place ill the afl'ec-
singlecampaign; these jibes, which would have ha*' some point if Twigget had bragged of his deeds, had none at all when the hero was the first to-disclaim glory. As he would not sound his own trumpet others did so for him without stint, and several of the half-pay oflicers were put to shame by being asked to state whether they themselves had ever seen such hot fire ns Twig-
his hand to his helmet-peak and of seeing Lucy redden to the brow. There could be no mistake about his preponderance over Strapper then; that unfortunate Captain became an utterly contemptible figure in the eyes of the fickle fair one who had erst worshiped
him.
So Twigget had its triumph for what it was worth, but what was it worth? When the review was over he did not return to Bunborough. but went to Lon-
bS3
lions of Miss Lucy Light by Mr. or Captain Strapper, of the Bunborough R. V. C. This Strapper was not \ ounger, handsomer or richer than Twigget, hut he wore a uniform and looked “nuts” in it. He had a helmet, a scarlet tunic
MnJMifAITKIt] et IDE OR. H A A TER ME. 01C I IS <• CO.. 118. 2ta k8«IH hah S’BUT, *T. IM!*. j and a sword much like all officer of the
lino, and he had passed an examination of some sort which quite justified him in sporting the title of Captain. He also decorated his breast with a medal won at Wimbledon. There was no end to the airs which the creature gave himself; and, when he drilled his company on Bun’s I’icce of an evening, it was a pity to sec so sensible a girl as Lucy Light shower admiring glances on him while she turned a cold shoulder upon
poor Twigget.
Twigget was frenzied. There are are men who would have borne the humiliation resignedly, trusting to such solid advantages as Twigget possessed —a good name, a comely presence and a nice little income of £1,000 a year; ] but Twigget was too much in love to I bite the dust complacently before a rival j like Strap per. U he had been eclipsed I by a Captain of Hussars, covered with j the glory of campaigns in India and ] Africa, he might nave sighed in submission to his lot; but to be accounted
HOG- CHOLERA! HOG CHOLERA! c. a. c. COOK’S CEKT^-Iisr OTJiKkE]. ritRokJ tlie following testimonial from a Putnam County firm', r who hns usoil it for several years: Fincasti.k, Isd., May 25. 1878. I have used Mr. Cook's Hog Cholera Mwlirino for the last throo or four years, with perfect success, having never lost a hog in that time by cholera. B. C. BURKETT. COOIKHS JOIR/TTO STOIR/E!
CURES ALL DISEASES OF THE
VE
^kidney* stomach and ♦ ^JBOWELSsv OCMIRAL DEBILITY^, CONSTIPATION DYSPEPSIA PILK S A i
get? Before long the half-pay officers | don and gave himself up to fretful medaud their martial orethrea of the voluu- | Rations. He was stupefied by his own teers thought it prudent to sing small | audacity and by his utter foolishness
and to pay Twigget marked honor, lest they should seem to be jealous. Oue evening when Twigget had strolled down to Bun’s Piece to see the volunteers drill he was quite unexpectedly treated to a general salute. As soon as he showed himself on the ground the Commandant gave the order to form in a line; the men presented arms and tho band played “See the Conquering Hero.” What a moment it was for Twigget, who. bare-headed and blushing, had to acknowledge this courtesy ; with a few soldierly words. Lucy Light trembled with emotion and actually clung to his arm that slie might be seen publicly to share his triumph. But Twigget did not avail himself of this '• opportunity to propose to her, and tho damsel began to oe rather seriously
in assuming a part of which he should now be obliged to play to his life’s end. He had, in tact, condemned himself to an endless course of lying. Unless he should publicly proclaim that he had perpetrated a hoax, he must hold himself always ready to talk about his campaign on the Danube and to enact the part of a connoisseur in military matters. Twigget was a man of peace and, generally speaking, a man of truth, so that the prospect dismayed him. He asked himself whether he love 1 Miss Lucy Light well enougb to tell her the truth, or to live for her sake in chronic untruthfulness, and he answered in the negative. 'The upshot of his musings wa- that lie resolved to go abroad for a fewLvwars, and took his departure without writing to any friends in Uunbor-
alarmed, lest by tlirting with the gaf- ough, except his banker and his house
laut Strapper she had mode a goose of keeper, to announce his intentions,
herself. i 1’oor Lucy Light! It was a dismal
But now the day of the Windsor re- b,ow lo lier wbeu she heard how the
view was approaching, and Twigget had ! r albint h 11 *', faithless Twigget had
promised to consummate his kudos bv JnYanted. Everybody showing himself attired in his full war- been suggesting that he has 1.
harness and riding in the Commander- | eastward by the prospect of some more in-Chief’s stall'. Lucy Light and her fi g llt,n g ov .e r Ihe Turkish question, but parents were going to see the review; bu ^ m:i y> Miss Lucy is likely to but Lucy softly confessed that the only r e |na,n ■“Muried for a while longer, as attraction of this pageant in her eyes Captain Strapper seems quite indisposed
MB
IEYER BROTHERS&CO!
ST.LOUIS AND KANSAS CITY
Thcvc nittern nre uot un intoxicating; toevernsje, but n Mecy elnc of real merit, and pfeasant to the taste. - ' foySnfp by atj~ Druifi/ints. I’rice, $1.00 pe r
Indianapolis. Sept. 7.—Wheat firm «t $136^(8137. Corn sti »dy nt 68>^. I Oats dull at 38,’..OMIT,. Mabe Worrell, a counterfeiter, was killed by a stroke of lightning while lyi the woods at Knoxville, to avoid
At Kenton, Ohio, lightning went thro’ ■•oof Of Jos- | h 1’aliTs barn, and thro’ ■to the floor below without
small in comparison with a Captain of Bunborough Rifles was maddening. Despair makes some men heroes, of others criminals; it made of Twigget % something between those two eatfv gorics. for it caused him one evening, in an excruciating paroxysm of wound- [ ed vanity, to tell the biggest lib he had | over tillered. Twigget Coasted that lie was himself a Colonel in the Roumanian army, that he had served in the war against the Turks and that the fame of hisexploits had rung all down the banks
of the Danube.
" I shall probably attend the review at Windsor,” he coollv said, in conclusion; “but 1 shall ride in the Com-
mander-in-Chief’s staff.”
Twigget -said this in his calmest tone, and Strapper collapsed. Lucy Light looked at first as if she could not believe her ears; but Twigget was not addicted to drawing the long bow; besides, it was well known in Bunborough that ho had spent several years touring in the East, and there was nothing impossible in the account
cattle. $4 (M@t) 00; butchers, $3 C0@ l- which Tie gave of his adventures. The • >0, Receipts, 390 head; shipments, 17'> only marvel was that ho should never head. I have alluded to them before; but he Sheep—The demand is active an*l i e\))lained this plausibly enough by sayprices a shade higher ut $3 50(« l 75 ing that he saw nothing to brag about Receipts, 510 head; shipments, 180 , in the fact of having faced lire in the bend, I company of hundreds of thousands of
i other men (here a meauing look at
Indianapolis, Sept. 7.—The Drovei.*
•Journal reports:
lie's—The market is sir ng and higher; packers and shippers, 50(80 £5; com moil grados, $1 50(2 0 2i. Receipts, 3,TOO head; shipments 2,000 head. Cattle—Tiiges aro higher: shipping
would be Twigget iu his beautiful uniform. A beautiful uniform indeed it was. for when a man improvises a fancy costume he may as well make it as brilliant as possible, aud Twigget, having not the remotest idea of now the Roumanians dressed, had ordered tho uniform which ho thought would best suit his complexion. It was light blue, with white facings embroidered with silver, aud with silver epaulets and aiglets. A silvered helmet, wkh light blue and white plumes, buckskin breeches and tall hoots, like those of the Horse Guards, completed this equipment, which was further set off by a red ribbon of Knighthood hanging around tho neck, aud by a mcdai and a couple of crosses on the breast. Lucy Light, when she was
to overlook the contumely with which
he was treated.
So much for a maiden’s love of uniforms.—London Truth.
sisters on purpose to i hands in wonder and
see it, clasped her would have liked
Twigget to put it on straightway and walk down the High street in it. But Twigget wisely resolved that he had belter show hifiiself for once—and once only—in his full splendor on horseback and in martial company, leaving upon ( Lucy’s senses a beatific vision never to i be forgotteu. If the truth must be told, his love for Lucy was beginning to cool. Her infatuation about uniforms, which ; had been tho primary cause of his tib, | made him feel spiteful against her for I having forced him to degrade himself in his own eyes. His spitefulness was j just of the kind which makes a man de1 light hi ovarwhelAitng a woman for not
MHOFUL.A. lion. 'Vm Taylor, Boston, says: After three months'use of tbu Culirura Remedies, and 12 years of constant suffering from humor of the face neck and scalp as was ever endured I can say tiiat I am cured, and pronounce my case the most remarkahle on record. I have been so elateil with my success that lhave stopped men on the street who were afflicted and told them to get the Cuticura Remecies and they would cure them.
III IlOK* Mrs.8. E. Whipple, Decatur Mich, writes that her head face and some parts of her body were almost raw. Head covered with scabs and sores; suffered fearfully and tried everything, I’crmanently cured by Cuticura Remedies, CETICFRA Remedies are for sale by all druggists. i’riee of Cuticura, a medicinal jelly, small boxes,58cents; large boxes II. Cuticura Resolvent, the great blood purifier, $3 per bottle. Cuticura Medicinal Toilet Soap, 25 cents; Cuticura Medicinal Shaving Soap. 15 cents; in bars for barbers and large consumers, 5U 11 nts. Principal dept t. WEEKS St POTTER, Boston, Mass. wA'AII mailed free on receipt of price.
COU-IN^ ed^cVK. VOLTAIC OjuiCTllO 15 ot *' ^ f"
^USTE^
Voltaic costing
superior to
every other electrical appliance before the pudlic.
__ They instantly relieve Dyspepsia. Liver Complaint. Malaria, Fever and Ague, and Kidney and I rinary difficulties and may he worn over the nit of the stomach, over the Kidneys or any affected part, Price
25 cts, bsld everywhere.
WEKKS k POTTER, ttoston, Masi.
JIM DAGGY, ifjP I'iisliioinble
1 AILiOlf H
NATIONAL BANK BUILDING.
All Work And Fits
Guaranteed.
‘foil.
DO
in the town has has been allured
4Stf.
Bond for our Now Illustrated Price-List No. 30, for Fall and Win-
ter of 1881. Free to any add reaa. Comtains full description of off kinds of goods for personal and family use. We deal directly with tho consumer, and sell ail goods in any quantity at \cholesaU prices You cau buy better aud cheaper than at
home.
'M0NTG0HEBY W ARD & CO. 227 and 229 Wabash Avenue.Chicago.IU.
An Indiana Summer Resort. Within two hours’ ride of Terre Haute
can be found a spot where the thermometer never registers more than fif-ty-four degrees, while the heated mereury is dancing around a hundred in this city. This place is called the “ Shades of Death, and is located in Montgomery County, four miles north of Waveland, or forty miles north of this city. The "Shades of Death” is a canyon, as wide as Ohio street, and
aiCQ n,
about three squares long. On each
_ side of the canyon are steep hills rising shown this uniform at Twigget’s luvase, ' * ro,n 0,u ’ hundred and fifty to two hunwhither she went with her parents and ^ ue L I'hfh. Lb® s ' ( les of these
hills are pine, hemlock and cedar trees, interlocked so closely as to prevent the sun from ever shining into the depths below, causing a perpetual shade. The ground everywhere abounds in ferns mmi one to three feet in height. Within this canyon are three delicious springs, throwing ont a large volume of ice-cold water. At the lower part of the canyon there is a cascade with a fall of about forty-five feet. — Terre
Haute Express.
—Dr. Chapin, of Charlotte, N. C., after celebrating his 100th birthday, said that he did not believe he was fiver going to die, ana that he wad tired of life. Thou he committed suicide.
all a.
This establishment is pronounced by trat cling? men coming: through Ureeneastle the leadint? saloon in this State in all respects, first in style and finish, and all of them say they can t?et a bolter, cooler and more refreshing tfl&ss of hour, a bettor lemonade, and a finer, purer <iuality of liquor and wines here
than anywhere else.
tsir Come and See for Yourself. ..?*t
ROUT. L. 111GERT,
Proprietor,
;'m20
Broi Factory. JAMES L. TIMMONS has opened a broom factory, corner Howard and Dopot street.. South Ureoncastle. Custom work utteudod to promptly, ami hiBhoet prico paid for hrro, H corn. 3bM
