Greencastle Star, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 October 1881 — Page 3
r.raml Jury** Indictment^ “** n ® [ (yy^'IIer bright smile haunts mo” ever
Ladies’ and Children’s UNDERWEAR MIIiUNERY AND FANDY GOODS. W, .1. KOWE^ Tukes pleasure In announcing to to the laJies of (ireencastle and Putnam County that she ha* placo«i in block a full and complete line of MILLINERY GOODS, Consistiting of stylish Hat*. Flower?, Feathers , Kibbons, ornaments, etc. Only e\i rienced trimmer* are employed, and our motto is to endeavor to please, Uer ! ' t and children’s Underwear and l »ney Goods will he found more full and complete than ever. STAMPING Done to enter and in a satisfactory manner. ROOM, in Taftjtin's block, secoml door south of the postoflice. omi!3
Him
THE STAR.
Frank A. A.rnol<i, Editor arid Proprietor
ROMANCE OF THE NINE-
TEENTH CENTURY.
At B. F. Earwick's. An immense Ftock and great variety of elegant patterns to select from* among which are the celebrated Garland Base Burners and a full line of Garland cook stoves for wood or coal. B. F. BARWiGK.
THE
Phcenix Saloon
-AND-
Tbis f tabliehment is prone n ed t all traveling men coming through Grecncastlo, as the leading saloon in this State in all respect?, ILral in -t\le and f nisb, and all of ti n they can get a hotter, cooler and more refreshing glass of beer, a better lemonade, and n liner, pnrei qn ility ol liquor an 1 win< than anywhere else. |@*Coii)e*and See for YourseK.^Mf ROBT. L. II1GEKT.
Proprietor,
It*s ft chilly day wbon two lovers can Not get Uie best of the girl's old man. Hrr dad approved of the young man’s
Position and character,
And yet o'errhrew all their fine plans:
Would U"t let him marry her. Paid he, with a smile unite pleasant: “ .lust wait a while If you will.
For to marry Just nt present My daughier'b too juvenile. But if she wait till she collars
Phe age that may suit my whim, Her full weight in silver dollais
I shall give with her to him
Vho weds her." This didn't Hurry Th*- lovers. They formed n plan tty which they thought they could burry The whim of the sternold man.
fbe tourist who visits Tunis This singular fact doth tell:
fhe girl who most like the moon is, In rdinpo, is the reigning hello; And the laolr* of that Nation,
On being fair-formed Intent,
flpve found out a kind of ration That w’.ll make them corpulent; And thl* maid, in view of gHinirtg lu weight, so her dad she d scare, Oct an on a course of tra nlng
U ith the Afric hill of fare.
And the father, wonder-stricken
And filled with great amaze,
Saw bis slender daughter thicken Eighty pounds in fourteen days; And hr saw, if long she grew so. Bhe'd claim on her wedding day A fearful pile. So her trous*eau He ordered made, right away.
Though married and hlcstiod with money.
Not happiness yet she's found; She has ceased to think it funny
To be ?• ven fi*«,t around.
And most anxiously she’s looking. Far and near and high and low. For the land where they have cooking That will make* her thinner grow.
—Bouton
ABOUT COMETS.
In old times men looked on n comet, or “bla/.intf star,” ns a si<jn sent from Heaven portending sonic dreadful mischance, as plague, pestilenee, or famine, some great war. or (what strangely enough whs looked upon then as mm h more distressing than the death of any one else) the death of some great
King'or Emperor.
It was not, perhaps, very wonderful that men should have had such ideas. For they did not understand then the
star. But as its retreat eonrtnued, a new tail was thrown wit, though not nearly so bright or so long as the one it had lost. The last of the groat comets was that called Cogg’a’s, seen in the year 1874. It had a long and conspicuous talk Besides the great comets, which travel for the most part in orbits of enormous size, passing far away into space beyond the track even of the remotest planets, there are others usually much smaller which travel in orbits lying within the sun’s planetary domain. The iirst discovered of these was one called Lexell's, after the name of the astronomer who calculated its path, in 1778. Astronomers were much surprised to find a comet, traveling in an oval path of no very great extent (passinga little beyond theorbltof the planet Jupiter) as compared with the enormous paths, some even limitless, along which most of the comets before discovered had traveled. But they were even more surprised by the subse juent behavior of Lexell's comet. It should have returned In live and one-half years after its discovery, and probably did, though it was not seen, the earth being unfavorably situated for securing a view of the stranger. But it should have returned a second time eleven years after its discovery, and it certainly did not do so, for astronomers searched carefully with powerful telescopes all along its track, ami no trace of it was seen. Inquiring iuio the cause of this, they noted that its course had carried it close to the giant planet Jupiter, so close tliat the mighty attraction of that groat body had turned the small comet out of ita course. It has never been seen
since.
Another comet of short period and small path was discovered in 1818. it is called F.neke’s. It circuits its path in about three years, four months, orthree times in ten years. As its path seems to be getting smaller—though very slightly—simic astronomers believe that the com. t. i.. resisted in its movements by some ethereal matter occupying the i regions thr ugh which it travels—just as a light ball is resisted by the air. I However, it has not yet been proved , that there is any real change In the movements of this comet which should require us to accept this explanation. Another comet of short period, one
, , . . whose history has been full of interest, laws according to which comets move; ^discovered i,, 1826, by an Austrian and whatever wo do not understand ts o! n C er named Bielo. This comet has ver} apt to appear to us something su- a p ur j 0 d almost exactly twice as long as pernaturat. , . . Encke’s, going round the sun once in Moreover to anv one who docs not • , ix v0 . u £ > ht months, or thrice in
tmderBtand wbat has bea i -I ■ i re I ^ v . of late years respecting “comets.” that durin
there is something dread:ul and threatening in their aspect- Some look like
3m20
HEADQUARTERS
-FOR-
SHINGLES
AND
LATH,
Ami all kinds of
FINISHING LUMBER Worked ready for nee at Mill Prices, Also NEW YORK MIXED PAINTS, We guarantee every gallon sold by us to give satisfaction.
Ofiice and Yard near North Depot, GREENCASTLE, INI). RallilT& Grubb.
3m IS
mighty swords flaming in the heavens. Others have been compared to the “besom of the destroying angel.” and certainly some comets have looked singularly like swish-tailed brooms. Others have suggested the idea of cimeters, lance-heads, great flames, or the heads
of uncouth monsters.
In modern times these fears have been removed. At least they aflect, now, only very ignorant or else very foolish persons. Astronomers have learned to understand the movements of comets. Every comet as soon as it is detected is carefully watched until its
motions are understood.
Years before the time of its return in 17.09, Halley's comet was in the toils of
ars. Also it is to be noticed faring two of these three return’s
the earth's position is such that the comet can be well seen, whereas during the third the earth is so pi.iced that the comet is in the part of the sky lit 141 by the sun, and therefore cannot be
seen.
In February. 1816, when it returned, a singular tiling happened. Captain (then Lieutenant) Maury, of the Washington Observatory, discovered that the comet had divided into two comets, each with a nucleus, head and tail of its own. These traveled along side by side, drawing farther and farther apart, until the distance separating them was about two hundred and thirty thousand miles, lu 1S52 both comets returned, but now they were about one million two hundred and fifty thousand miles
t h e in athc in a 11 c i an ^ It w as far b e'onVl :l P alt * h 1,1186 ' J th °y m! *y have returned.
the piercing vision of the telescope: it was wandering in depths where only the sun and planets had power over it.
looked for, that being the time when the comet would be unfavorably placed
„ , „. . 1 .1 • I for observation. In 1866, however. But Clairault and other mathematician': . mil in 187 o when the two comets were calculating its every movement; sh(luU , havo been well seen, they were and when in I,.,: it returned to the look( . ( , for 5n v . l;Ili tll0u;jh ftt i tho best neighborhood of the sun it followed lc] es in Europe and America were the very track which mathematics had i ili8te( \ in the search. It appeared assigned to it. that the process of breaking'up which In former times, comets were usually hftd begun in 1816 had m„ie on in such noticed first when already presenting I a way M to change tho double comet ft very str iving appearance—with a into many cornels, too small to be sep-
blazing head and n long taiL But i’i arately visible.
our own time nearly all comets are dis- ' q- 0 enable you to understand tho rest covered long before they have become 0 f (he stury. 1 must tell you of a strange thus conspicuous. • discovery respecting those bodies called
meteors, or falling stars, ««
When thus first discovered, a comet appears generally as a small, rounded patch of diffused light, or like a woolly nail. As time, passes and the comet draws nearer to the sun, this ball changes into au oval, and later into a long streak of misty light. The length of this streak of light extends always directly from the sun, and the end toward the sun is brighter than the 1
oilier.
Soon after, the difference between the head and the tail of the comet becomes still more marked. It is seen that the head or brighter part near the \
which no
doubt you have often seen. A full account of the discovery would occupy mu h more space than our here ne spared, yet without a full account you anuot thoroughly understand how complete is the evidence on which the discovery rests. The discovery is this, that me 1 cor . or falling siars, are bodies traveling in the track of comets. They j do not belong to comets’ tails, but follow in the track of tho comets (tho tail never lies in this tra k, and seldom lies
] even near to it).
Now it chances that the path of Bie-
huniU'r make to order wiotons of nil descriptions in the best possible manner. WiiRons
and carriages
1C F t* A I It F D,
Promptly, at reasonabhcprices. Twenty stars’ experience in tlreoneastle insures eu.-tOTuers
ttu beat material and worn.
Horse Shoeing and Blacksmithing. TP. ,7, Ml IJOOINf"* is still at the old stand, and will yivo prompt attention to horse shoeinK and all otherwork in the blaeksmithiuK
sun is formed of a bright spot (called la’s comet passes very near the path of tho nucleus), surrounded by a sort of I our earth. So near, that when, in 1872, halo, or glory, of soft light, wliich, on j the comet—though unseen—hail certhe sides farthest from the sun, seems 1 tninly passed tho place of nearest spto sweep off, ivs if tho hair of the j proach only a few weeks before the comet’s head were combed out in that earth came that way, it seemed reasondirection. Or one may aptly describe able to think that a number of tho the appearance of the comet at this small bodies which produce falling stage and afterward by saying that the stars would lio behind the comet and in ! | comet looks as though the sun had the way of the earth when she reached D raised a sort of cloud all round the side that particular part of tho orbit. This j of the head toward him, and that then 1 would happen on November 27, 1872, I a mighty wind blowing from the sun ( and certain astronomers (1 was one of
the number) ventured to announce that probably there would at that time be a display of falling stars. This actually happened, more than one hundred thousand falling stars being counted on that
night.
It ought, however, to bo mentioned
A. J. SMEDLEY
Has leased the waaoti shop formerly occupied , had swept away tins cloud-like matter by r ',f., "!‘T; J'f'j| ‘, l j-y'',/,iL ami" w m'kr.'''Tin ' n a ' 01| £ Hiil streaming out iutlic oppo-
. — ■ 1 ' c _»1 .1. •. hit o (1'rnnt ion
lino.
Iy44
JAMES L. TIMMONS has opened a broom factory, corner Howard and Repot streets. South Ureeneastle. Custom work attended to 1 romptly* and bifl £ price paid for broom corn. ’ 3m20
For Siilr or Trarfo.
Farm of H<» juroi, I'j miles north ofdrccnea?tle,on Kocln illo roa^l. Good house, stockwater from springs that never dry or freeze up. “A. No. 1for fruit* dairy or pardoning
purposes-
i„. 1. ,u, 11 uii.* uuiry ur Ksmcu All in urufls. i’lcnty o| timber. L. II. Kudisill, LMWlHf,
Notice Oi Ai>|»OUII,m »|t. Notice is hereby xiven that Ilia imiir xncil has been appointed ns executor > f tho list will and testament of Elizabeth l):i»is. daceafed, lateofPutnnm County, in tho State of tjudiSaid estate is supposed to he iksol JAMRS I*ARKS. U- iWr Grecncastlc, Ind., Sept. 19, 19»). '<*#
site direction.
Still tliis description is not perfect, for tho tail is not straight, but slightly curved, as if after tho matter had been swept into the tail by a sort of out-
breathing from the sun it had been car- that none was seen in 1879, when next riod off by a side wind acting more and , such a display was expected. But there more strongly upon it the farther it had i was !l bright moon on that occasion, traveled from the head. But lam hero Astronomers do not in tho least undcrspeaking of the appearance of comets’ tand how t.lio tracks of comets come to tails, not of the way in which they arc 1 bc occupied in this way by meteoric actually formed, a matter about wliich bodies. Nor do they know how the .
we know little or nothin >•. tails of comets are formed. In fact, _—Experiments demonstrate, says I hr. Usually a comet’s tail grows longer j though many very interesting discover- Voolcker, that on a great majority of and brighter ns the comet draws nearer h ,s have been made about comets, mid 1 soils in fairly good condition the addito the Tun; and after the comet lias though some seven hundred of those | thm of potash salts toother manures
passed its point of nearest approach to bodies have already come under astrohim the tail gradually diminishes in nmnical scrutiny, comets still remain
among the most perplexing ofscienliiie mysteries.—I’rof'. H. A. IVoclor, in
Youth's Companion.
Our Agricultural Progress.
Perhaps the most interesting part of \ ;he new census will be the statistics ; thowmg the advance of industrial ini .erests in the last ten years in various | j ;>arts of the country. The Census Bureau has just issued its bulletin contain- i | ng the preliminary report of the pro- j iuction of cereals in the several States ! »nd Territories, including as such Iniian com, wheat, oats, barley, rye and ouokwheat. The statistics cover the production for the year 1879, and are | sompared with those of tho last census covering tho yeat 1869. The compari- ! sou is somewhat impaired by the fact ! that the acreage is given now for the ; first time and that 1869 was rather an unfavorable year,on account of drought. But the great increase in production shown by the figures substantially indicates tho actual ad vp.nco, which has been stimulated by opening the way into foreign markets, especially for Indian corn and wheat. The apparent increase in Indian corn is 13;1 per cent., and the three States of Iowa, Illinois and Missouri produced more in 1879 than the entire country in 1869. The advance in Illinois is from 129,921,895 to 827,796,895 bushels. In Kansas the production increased five-fold in ten years, and iu Nebraska at a still higher rate, the advance being from 4,786,710 to 65,785,572 bushels. In these two States there was a heavy immigration, and much new and fertile land was brought under cultivation. But there was a considerable increase in nearly all the States, even those in which tho advance in population was small, and the gain is especially noteworthy in the South as indicating progress in diversifying crops. The general gain i t tho cotton States is
forty per cent.
Tho increase in the general production of wheat for the whole country was sev-enty-three per cent, for tho decennial period. This was preceded by gains of sixty-six and sixty percent., respectively, in the two previous decades, so that the advance since 1850 is especially worthy of note. All tho States and Territories, except Florida and Wyoming, have reports of wheat production, but in several of those on the Atlantic and Gulf coasts there is a diminution. Seven-tenths of tlio entire crop is produced Jjy the following States, named according to their rank in this respect: Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Minnesota, Iowa, California, Missouri and Wisconsin. The greatest relative increase in these States is shown by Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin, but here again the young and growing States of Kansas and Nebraska show the heaviest relative gain of all, tho yield.in 1879 being six times for Nebraska and nearly eight times for Kansas what it was in I860. There has been an important advance in certain sections of the ijouth, notably the Piedmont region of Georgia anothe Carolinas atid the north central counties of Texas, but the Northern Mississippi Valley and the Pacific coast maintain their precedence as wheat-growing regions. Oats also show au increase largely in excess of the advance in po(>ulation. This appears chiutly in the West, though in certain portions of the South, which, on the whole, is an unfavorable section for this grain, there is a very notable advance, Georgia, South Carolina and Texas, for instance, multiplying their product several fold. Four-tenths of the area and nearly half the production of this crop is found iu the>four States of Illinois. Iowa, Now York aud Pennsylvania. California and New York produce half tho barley of the country, but Wisconsin, Iowa and Minnesota made tiie heaviest gain iu the ten years. In the South there is no appreciable advance. Tho production of rye has declined in proportion to the population of the country, and Pennsylvania, Illinois, and New York produce half the crop. In some Western Stales there is a decided gain, but in other quarters there is a heavy falling off. The growth of buckwheat has not kept pace with tho increase of population, it is scarcely raised at all in the South, but little in the West, and two-thirds of the whole crop is produced by New
York and Pennsylvania.
Tho cereals are still to be rated as Northern productions, and the Census | Bureau has not yet furnished us with tho statistics of the special products of the South. Tho bulletin for tobacco is, however, at hand. The general increase for the last ten years appears to be eighty per cent., but this is said to be au exaggeration of the actual ad-1 vaneo, as the crop of 1869 was a light j one. Kentucky holds tho Iirst rank as a 1 tobacco State, raising thirty-six per ] cent, of the entire product of tho country. Its total yield in 1879 was 171,- [ 121,134 pounds, against 105,305,869 in | 1869. Virginia holds the second place and Pennsylvania has advanced from twelfth to third since 1870. Of the fifteen States which produce ninety-nine per cent, of all the tobacco of the country, seven are among those generally rated as Southern and eight arc Northern States, including t'onnecticut. New York and Massachusetts. The largest relative gains iu production arc in tho North, and the yield per acre is generally twice as great in that section as in the South. These statistics suggest that the great source of our National wealth is still tho soil and tho country’s greatest industrial achievements are in agriculture. Wliat improvement has been made in adding value to new material by the process of manufacture has not yet been shown, but if it lias kept pace with the increase in agricultural production it will bo a marvel.—N. Y.
Times.
(iiticnra
PY/EMIA
OR BLOOD POISONING, WHICH RESULTS
IN IBS 1SSKS, » 1
CARBUNCLES. BOILS AND
ITCHING HUMORS,
CURED.
F«‘v«»r Sore.
What I tell you is the truth, told for no othI er purpose but to testify to the merits of the Cuticura Keundies. Mr. Frederick Ycaton, ul this town, ha? been troubled for years with a ! Fever Sore on one of his le#*. Last tall and all winter he could hnrdiy walk a step. I induced him to take your remedies. lie has taken about four bottii-s (bit i -lira Resolvent. and used the Cuticura and CuGcura Soap externally. His Ick to*day is almost well, and ho walk? with 0.180. It v. jig a sight to behold—black, and swollen very badly. I wish you could see his log to-day. The change would astonish you. CilA>. H. TKIPP, Alfred, Me. Will McDonald, 2 r >42 Dearborn St., Chicago. Kr.iteiuliy acknowledges a cure < f tmlt Rtieum on bend, neck, furo, arinsandleg* f r seventeen years; not able to walk, except on hands ami knees, fur 'oie year; not able to help himself for eight years; tried hundreds of remedies; doctors pronounced nis case hopeless; permanently cured by the Cuticura Remedies.
<■14*111 ItllHHl ?I<*4lt4’ilC4*‘
The half has not boon told as to the areat cur* I ative powers of tho Cuticura Rem* dies. Ihavel paid hundreds of dollars for im I i--i j.%s to cure i —
diseases of the Mood and skin. and never found i rwft w T? \ TTY ’ < Old ' ' »«»abin,, T , to v} ,,.|,heru«i : ., , Kfiueilic.. ,£/ STOP V.X 111 AS A. \V ILL,IAM>, 1 ro\ ideoce. K. 1.1 > KAN’IKI. K. IlKATT.
Akv. X',A ' f( A
• ••
\Y. SJ1YTIIE, No. •d’i. Itlovk, Groencftstle, Ind., Dealer In Furniture, Metrtliu, Cloth-coverod. U ;i! G n t and Roc iwo “i Imitation Coflinc and Caskets, and robes of nil sires. I have the finest hear in this pnrt of the country and am orepnred to attend to undertaking in all its ra tea. with n latnesa iod dUpatch. Satisfaction guaranteed in thir line. 3ra24 4on long credit and i easy terms, in a in lid climate, five fr»-:n heavy snows, bUuhtIng frosts, and exMILLIONS OF ACr.ES «“»■«»« Min*,
for stlo la tha
GOLDEN BELT of Kansan, by the
UNISN PAG>FIG RAil.WAY, of a*» rirli Soil n« the sun ever ahone on, with k<mm! nmrketM eu*i iin«l neat. Fur Descriptive and Hfustraltd Jiook, with Maps, Sent Free, Address LAND COMMISSIONER,—Kansas Dlvlsio.i
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI. HI IV ADVKRTIMKUKNTK
Tho Cutieur* treatment for the euro of Skin . I Scalp »n<l Blood llisenHev, cnn.Utn in the inter- j mil use of Cuticura Resolvent, the new Wood Purifier, »ud lilt- external use of Cuticura and
Cuticura Soap, tha Orcat BkittCurt, Price of Cuticura, rmall boxi*. 50c; hiritc
bnxoe.Sl. Cati< ura Kerolvent, (1 Per bottle. Cuticura Soap, 25e. Cuticura fchavinK Sonp.
15c. Sold by ail druggirt*.
Depot. WEKKS k PuTTER. Boston, Mass.
CATARRH,
SANFORD'S RADICAL CORE. ('oirjjrlclv TreatmiMiit For ^1.00.
IlE.Vm ’S 0HC ’V .14
ONI.V J90.
rxv.
Warhington, N. .1, pimnurarc Cured Conpliiints of Women nn l (U.-' iisf'*-mT the 8t"macb , Bowels. Lmiys. Liver .n i Iv'-l neys, »ird is entirely different from i tt rs. Ginger KssenceR and other Tonioe, ftd it never intoxicates. f>0c. and tl-izes. Large •• ving buying SI size. IIISCOX &. CO.. 4t24 ObentidtF, N. Y. WONDERFUL DISCOVERY. illKTAl. TIP I.A.llf WICK&SSe I’nl’d Dec. 7, I8SO. Circs a Brilliant. White aud Steady^
for
\2
\ B
Clear heed and voice, eiigy breathing, sweet breath, perfect smell, taste and hearing, no cough, no choking, no distress. These happy conditions are brought about in the fever* cases ol Catarrh hot that most iigreeabh economical, speedy safe and never-failn g specific, Saudi'or l’g Kadical Cure. Complete und infalliblo treatment, consisting <»I one bottle of the Jlatiical Cure, one box of Catarrhal Solvent aud one Improved Inhaler, all wrapped in onenackago. with treatise and directions ana sold J by nil druggists for $1. Ask lor Sandford’a !
Kadical Cure.
General Agents, WEEKS A POTTER,
Boston, Mass
ii . requires no in mining,
months. Sample wick 10 cts, it wicks < wicks for 75 cts postage paid . Have w iz»‘j and I> A gen Is wanted Aduress MET.'u iiL LAMP WH K n>. Tic rtl U,.l m N. . 5: i oold_medaI awarded the 'author.
A n»-vY gT- ; t ’T.-ti. Wo k,
•d tha bevtand hnnp-
warranti d ih.ii.* .itan i
eat, indiat.. ni.t.bUi to (*> • ry inva. entitltui “f.ho P.t imt •* of life.” hound in fir.* e! 1 - nch
Tnasliii.ern^--* i.ful
pi^o^.i r-rtainHbeaut ti.l*-!* 1
engraving-,.. ]^r, j rescrip!
ice <»n.y J1»•*• ”t by niTii;
once omy f ’ ? > ?»• rt by tut. j llltMtrao>.] *• : mnlf,(i c.; n-;i 1 ''J’fftl n nr. Irnes l ,, Tib"iiy M
r oM Imtitufocr I)r W il Pa .. £ 4C 4 TH78ELF. KKU,N*».4BuiiimUrt.l^-8U.D.
rf 'fi f !vA l # rtvtinii4 k >ifly 7)ni^ot s4»( i?i4* ^4*14Si* ait4l Miiei. CutituTft Bcm^H - are f-r ‘ <le by s:!l drug-
giste. Piloi "I Cnticura, u Medicinal Jelly* mall boxes ; Ingot! *x« s. M. Cuticura Bi 1 ent, tne now Blood Purifier, Cl i u bot*
Cuticura Me»licinal Toilet S 'iip, 2.>c. Cut-
KAI>, MCf i:. Roaches.Water Bugs and Rod and Black Ants ••at ravenously I’AKSONLS EXTEJl MIN A TOR and die. No fear of bad smells
-v - —Barnes, graneries,
and households often cleared in a single night. Best and cheapest vermin killer in the world. No failure in ilU years. Every box warranted. Sold by all grocers and druggists. Ask for
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fi§§s |p AVID. LAND RETH& SONS «_PH S LA-
Send for oil* New Illustrated Price-List No. 30, for Fall and Win-
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*\
tlo. i<*u for
pal Depot,
ra Medieiiml Shaving Soup, 15e,; in bars barbers and iurg consfimers. 5dc. Princi*
M EEKS X POTTER.
Boston, Mass.
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§•
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are. It avc
t ana
man ” or ** one idea ” maclilne, aa oui< ;>h!^ t he (K le* I *4 «»t (*J Ih’I ’m a’ul i u f. Htur**? and fxmvennmceH.
Jtffli I ItUUt (' t Ci'/I.
rd nn«l
:M ‘vAt *(4
It is targe, Ught-rui.ning,
nt, aura'i 1 , and rimjd*. A\ nrnuilc'l nn»l
if in rrpr.ir free tor .j yt urw. «'ircularsw itl.
n H*uit frt*e on r*-*piest. THh surely tne will prove it Hou’t full to -*ee it
prove it Don’t lull lo -ee it
b* forc you buy. Mam'Fa* n uli* nv l 1 1 ’KKNCL M KCIU NU () , Flormce, Mars.; whoi eralko i"t i-L.n !’ 'IF.M .-1 and W Jtu:kH.iU M-.i:i..aufO. ^
amuit
kept in repair 1 ! il J .f dcrieiipti' ’ll ‘-< l
A trial will
'ore you buy. Man U’ln Ni# <:<)., Flore iiJLu. P. BF.N V. ‘I an*
5,000 RGCTTS WANTED FOR THE LIFE OF _ ii fi Mi ^43 A full history of his ewntful Lf. fr. ni tho era lie to tho Millions are waiting f r this l . k. It is the '."•fit
gravf. Millions are ’ ailing chance of yonr lif»» to make tm thentic and fully illustrated Lifo
A.!
U* <m. n is vl»0 DC
This is tho only an-
belov»*«i Pr« si-
ic and fully illustrii
dent. Most extraordinary inducements
•nte who send immediately for t- nua and oircuiars to
After num succeeded i
aero us experiments, Mr. Fellows i prmjueing > this combination ol
length, until when the comet is about to puss out of view it presents merely tho same rounded, cloud-like form w hich it had when first discovered. This, however, is not always the case. Some comets have been far more splendid after than before the time of their
—Germany has nearly 400,000 shoemakers and cobblers, or nearly 90 to every 10,4)00 of her population. This
produces no decidedly beneficial effect upon the crops to which it is applied. On poor, sandy laud and on wornout pastures and peaty soils, however, in conjunction with dissolved bones oi superphosphate and guano, potash salts have been employed with marked ben-
eficial effect.
lortion than in any coun-
Englarid. Italy Then corao, in tho j
—Ginger Reer.—Boil six ounces ol bruised ginger in three quarts of water,
for half aw tu
nearest approach to tho sun. In one j is a larger prop
U, have entirely changed in char- Franco, the United States and Sweden, quails more of water, and stiam acter soon afterwards: it no longer had ! It is a curious eireamstance that warm 1 irough a cloth. \\ hen it is cold put a lull, or even the cloud-111.e envelope t Italy should havo within a. fraction of in the whole of an ogg and two drams round tho head called the corna. In lOo cobblers to 10,000 of the population. | ^ essence of lemon. After standmy fact, for the time ll looked just like a I aud cold Sweden lea. than 18. I or foul ‘ bu bottled.
Hypopbi i > hioU hw not ■•uly r him to liculih. l ot Ihh finoo buen found so mi ■ rosfful in the treatment of dis.'o<e einanatint; from lof, ofn'-rv. rowor, ami conaeiiuently
muscular relaxation, viz.:
Aphonia Cloaa of voice). Neuralgia. Amcmin. • Nervoua Debility, Chronic Diftrrhtca, *) booidtnr Cough,
Dyspepsia. Congestion "f J.uima, [.'ever anil Ague* PfilpiLtfiou ol Heart,
Melancholy,
Mental Uei»re?8ion,
Fever anil Aj^ue.
Leucorrhcoat
Malaria,
sans living in malarious districts mny prolett themselves Irom attacks lor fever by tlu* use nt Feu ‘." S* CoMPorsn Svitt r or In t*o pnoHi’mTKS. Its eflfeets in toninxup the system enables u* toward off eontnsrious (iisordors,
and successfully combat disouse.
The poluble pboRphites and the otlur li:esHstaining principles conipnsinv f ellov.s’ Hypoph^sphltes are so cnrolully proportioned and m» judiciously mingled, that their actions upo*) thv 1 norvi s, muscles ati'i men»ontnes in impart irg vitality, strencth and healthy action is
'■yappar« ut within twenty four hours, ^ood effects experienced arc of a percharacter. For sale by all druxgists.
Nervousness. ITInlaria. in inalariour
.es from attack
districts b tor fovt
ary ii)<Pie«'tiient9 a:e > liately for t rma and ei
W. E. DIBBLE & M., 51 VMti! $!. Cllttaatl.0. M) F'ifs *• iSSfiHSARY
k-.F*S LjW H * (J LV
JHM ... 'Ml e.80Hmt,BT. LCCS 49. • pltE Phyaiciar.** m chi.rii««of ti.lsold and wsiikuo\—1 F inatitutiou HfO . • ► .»*.ir crnd iM n i*: roedlclit® Rud »ii*v» ,r ) - . ’i'earri*’!’ y.*p.*ri*iui •» in th** troutM*»nf ot ni-onlc I Isous * bus*/ nm.l-j tlv**:- bkill act ability .- ip . » 8 ;ri* rLo-to tri.at ol t i ■ arr prarfill > :* », f tit tii. > l .r/H ui ovt ^ n.»i.yual ru. utatiou Lbror-xh ;; ■ i- i ti. in-.'d, h. *i »r f *t'i 8, * i* M..rl wttb
: >!“-* , u r >’ or roiHono'i-A itledieint
i.l t fioso o? ir.idd'
.«f». w ii I,.nit lai i g .'i*--*'!.
It'K
generally
ami the mnnent
f'O'll t l- « o cts M- . * VK i.v.ni -r liT? :; ’ Of UHU j m - ; i . r ,M >~-v,f • • • •* . r - ‘ ■ •J. Lm . ? qun>' .* in *.o i • I r m • treii» r on* wv1*d f r«*B »'■ » I !r»»» *•. >| i>l < » I >ti. a Ftrvniui nifferl-H hi.plnr« •!»<,•. Id ■•Ad thrlr mMr. •i.^x \i , nr’ Fun lo tbcfr »'f*tr,f It t« ni.t • tr’i**' ^ Con. n i, ii .rati" 1.1 .irictly eontidt. rial, i ahoild Li aJdr**.*^ ±H. MlTTa. IXNortla SlL ’t, M QTARTLING O DaSCOVERY! LOST MANHOOD RK8TOHCD. A victim of youthful in priulenc ’ causing Preraa* j ture Decay, N- rrocs l)cbility, L<’st Manho d. vt having tried in vain every known remedy, lias disCovered u simple self cure, wbicJa be will send FRF.B to Ids Mlov -•nfi.'n -4, addivf-s J, H, Rfc;|?'.V V'.S, JS 4'BAtIlftKI Sat., Ai.
M
Notice of Administration. XTOTICK i* herchy given that the under. i\ sigui dl.n- i n || inteil l.y th" Ju !^' ihe C • ■ f Putnam County . St»t. „f tn.lhinn. n.lminislrator nf the irtntc <it Kllinhcth Nicholson, lute ofPutnnm County Said fftnte is fununsed to he solvent. Ii!.:.VI AM IN Nll'ltol/.>0N, uiiiuini. tr itor. September 13,1991. 3U--I
j'JCKE THE ATME07. /'ti ' h rcn.iln erre for Kc-X'Cl.O t Tep Oobility, Srjrrinr.l WeaU- - t 1 ’ s' s , Irnnotonro,otc. 1 he TL'.\. < 'id la my praitiei fir H&yo.vx
tod I k bl C I'... ' ; [j - f. (
" ■ ti ..' fn- -o'; treutmeut. soflt froft. Add:'SO u£- X. WILUAMS. 435 I. Htta it.. Mvwi c. V:*
