Greencastle Star, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 November 1881 — Page 5
MARSHALL’SCATARKH SNUFF. | 'T'T_T Tj* /\ ^ n ^ l1str y spranp up. Tho swamps wsre covered with growing For forty-six years this snuff has stood A 11 I ^ v > 1 >\-l\.. sunken forests lie in all shapes. Some timber as large as that which now lies at’the head of all remedies for Catarrh | t times the trees are found parallel, as j hek>w. Mr. William Hooper, of Cape ,n*d all its attendant maladies. It was., . . . ... . though a wind blowing from one quar-: May. who worked thirty years in the introduced by Chns. Bowen in 1835 and 1 ' rank A - Arnohf, hditor and Proprietor, ter had felled them. But usually they ! swamps, remembers felling a tree so
lie pointing in every direction, and large that standing by its side he could
J has proved itself to decidedly the best y article in the market for removing a cold in the head, all catarrhal allectjons and headache. Points to be remembered: 1st Catarrh will not cure itself. '2J. !t left alone it becomes chronic, 3rd. It readily yields to the use of jlarshall’s Catarrh Snuff. 4th. Its tendency is to heal the affected parts and remove the cause of the
disease.
5th. Persist in its use and a permanent cure is assured no mattir how violent the case may be. Be careful to notice the face simile signature of Chas Bowen on the label -as its great popularity has caused counterfeits to appear on the maiket. F. C. Keith, General Agent, •‘ImlM Cleveland, Ohio,
TUTT’S PILLS
HARVEST NOON.
Morn hnthlts matins, cnch morn now, Tbe evcn'nn bath ita vespers meet; Nor lacks the noon a service true. While wickets slntr the son* of heat. An hour-ion* truce the reapers keep With the n ite legions of the grains;
Through swath amt stubble spblcrs creep,
And web them with a filmy skein. The bees forget their errantry, l.apped In the clover white and red; The wind, grown faint with luxury. Leaves the ripe thistle-down unshed: Still, yonder, on the long, gray road.
It lives—a momentary gust,
That driven along, with noseless goad, A whirling phantom cloth d In dust.
The dreams of night? Noon, too, hath
dreams;
In fugitive, mysterious bands, Tney launch their Meet on quivering streams That How above the sun-bright lauds: I see their prows are southward set; And s on their sails the haven crowd. By seimruing dome and mliinret, And rich pavilion wove of cloud! —A'dltnA/. Ihomos, In AWmUc .WontWy.
; when, as occasionally happens, the wet 1 i soil sinks or dries, the mighty trunks j are seen piled upon each other as in a j Maine log jam. What are seen, too, I are but the uppermost strata of piles i on piles unseen below. One or two evidences may be cited to show not only ; the great depth hut the wide extension ! of the forest beyond the limits of the j swamp. Down near the tide waters of j the Delaware, seven miles away, where j no surface indications appear, a white j cedar log was fount! some years ago at the depth of twelve feet. At Cape
barely look over Us upper edge.
ited about eleven huu-
U pon
its trunk he counted about efe
dred rings of annual growth. What a king among our Eastern woods was this great cedar. Let us take a suggestion of the poet Holmes, and imagine a strip an inch or two wide cut from its circumference to the center. What s chronicle of more than a thousand
(uticiira Scrofulous, Itching and Scaly Humors of the Skin, Scalp and Blood Cured.
MIRACULOUS CURE.
I will now state that I made a miraculous cure of one of the worst cases of skin disease
chronicle o, more tnan a tnousamt ^ d o : u ^ r ir fl ^ n y V.;:. m fl^ f0 .^.TaM,l J i years of mortal l icissitude, of gory cam- nearly hi* wh' |V body pretented It frightful appaigns, of shifting dj’nasties, of ebb and I’faranco. Mad hud the attention of twelve flow of National life could be marked ; ^^("‘.'‘k^o':^'’^; th.^pSion" Itfll
: -.corrosivesubli
oil the arcs of this narrow yard-stick? , iodide potaneium, ar*eniclcorro*ive sublimate,
..... A single pencil dot on the microscopic »«ri»parilla. eu-. Hud paid »Mto for medical May. twenty miles distant, the tools of lines near the outer edge would stand upon him t.» use theCuticura Resolvent inter workmen digging an artesian well were for our war of 1812. An overlapping naily. and the Cutieura and Cuticura Soap ex stopped twenty feet down by a big ce- K mark perhaps a quarter of an inch ong | ! e d rna { l ll y 0 ^'‘hii'h^l’fV. e'^d'man'y nth dar log which, it was thought, would I would span the career of Napoleon cr parpot hi* body, which presented a moil discolor and defile the water if the from Toulon to Waterloo. Move a loathsome appearance, i* now a* soft and
liiinilrmt vanra nnaror flw> /-nntor -month as an intani *. with no scar or trace o! nuniireil years neater tne (.enter the disease left behind, lie ha* now been curAnother short line covers the reigns led twelve month*. Beporu-d by
of Louis the Fourteenth of France, of |
William and Mary, of Queen Anne and cpRnFin A QnnF the triumphant campaigns of Marlbor- i®Gnuruu« aunt.
Mo. 'i'l, liiiync’* Ktlo«-k, (irftencaMle, Ind., Dealer in Furniture, Metalic, Cloth-eovcred, Walnut and Rosewood Imitation Coffins and Caskets, and robes of all Mies. I have the finest hear in this part of the country and am prepared to attend to undertfikini? in all its branches, with neatness and dispatch. Satitiaction Kuaranteed in this line. 3m24 Ersaiii FioW.
work
In 1873 the City
proceeded.
Council of Capa May ordered that an artesian well should be dug to supply the city reservoir with water. At the depth of eighty-seven feet, after the
five iHonins. nepurici uy
F. 11 . BROWN, Eiq., Barnwell. S. C.
JAMES L. TIMMONS has opened a broom factory, corner Howiird and Depot streets. South (ireencastle. Custom work ittlended to promptly, an*l highest price paid for broom
3m 20
INDORSED BY PHYSICIANS, CLERGYMEN, AND THE AFFLICTED EVERYWHERE. THE GREATEST MEDICAL TRIUMPH OF THE AGE. SYMPTOMS C? A TORPID LIVED. I Loss of appetite,Nauaca/ouwei* costive, Pain in theUead.with a dull sensation m j the buck purt, Pain under the shoulderblade. fullness after eating, with a digin- | cUnatidh to exertion of body or mind, I Irritability of temper. Low spirits. Loss ! cf memory, with a feeling of having neglected some duty, weariness. Dizziness. Fluttering of the Heart, Dots before the eyes^YeUow skin, fleadache, Hextless- ;. t «e at night, highly colored Urine. IF THESE WARNINGS ARE UNHEEDED SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SOON BE DEVElOPFb TUTT’S FILLS a r« especially adapted to sueh canes,one dose effects such ucliiiiigv of feeling as to astonish the nutV.-rer. They IneceHSe tlie Appetite, snd ■ ; usvi! hoily to Tebe <>«• k'leotl. Ulus tin' -> ten I - no.-lrl.tied.loMi bvltli-lrTouti:- Actt.mon ll < lllge.l It e r ,||S. V( jglllnr Jir (tuced Price S ct Bl Wurrr * Wt., N.Y.
TWO PICTURES.
An old farm hou*o, with moadown wide. And sweet with clover on each side; A brigbt-eyed boy, 'shn i arks from ">it The door, with woodbine wrreathed about. And wishes hw one thought all day— “Oh: if l could but tly away From this dull spot, the world to set*,
TliTI’S HAIR DYE, Gray 11 atk or WmsKfrs chnmjed to n ur o*sv ItLAf IC by fl sillkrlf p ipll'M 'll hi iln^ Dv I-. It imparts h natuml cgIoi.:h i* InsteiitiuiiKiusly Fold by Bruugists.or »i*ni 1 v • . a-, ••u 11 OfVIco, 35 Murray St., Mow a !»r. 'N’TTH MAM VI. « f \:t .mlii. li.roriunM n nml 4||«rpl Him. ijlf *■ will III 1 llinllei FIIKK on nr-tUirn'I •ii.i'
How happy, h ippy, happy, How happy I should bel" Amifi the city’s constant din, A man who lound the world has been, And ’mid the tumult and the throng, Is thinking, thinkimr all day lomr: “Ohl could I only tread once more The hold path to the farm house door. The old preen meadow (*ould 1 see, How happy, happy, happy. How happy i should bol” —Portland Pres*.
9
THE SUNKEN FORESTS OF NEW
JERSEY.
The traveler to Dennisvillc leaves the cars and a crowd of gav I'ape May pleasure-seekers at Woodbine, a little station on the West Jersey Railroad. A four mile ride through dense underbrush, clouded by mosquitoes of vast penetration and blue-headed horse-flies as big as bumble-bees, will bring him to his journey’s end. He will find Dennis-
tools had penetrated half a dozen strata ough. The tree was two-thirds grown I .^* v -. <f ,!t »i'i"s.his experiance , of gravel, sand or hard clay, an alluvial when Luther was summoned to ihi "! v i nc p n! v ii 1 ! e n *e ('n l e’’v t' h 1 "! * ar i * h fo m- r* 1 - | deposit was reached exactly like that in Diet of Worms, and when Columbus, j cured of a scrofulous sure. wliU-h was slowly which lie the cedars at Dennisvillc. In twenty-nine } cars before, found 0UI i ven't' inte'rnaUy''and'ic'uticurs U Rnd HcuPours | it was struck a solid log, four feet in continent. It was a stalwart trunk | Soap externally! The poison that had ft-d the j diameter, which was bored through, when William the Conqueror fought at i < l**®ii' , » »as completely driven out.
j and specimens brought to the surface. ' Hastings, and it was a lusty saplinp In digging an artesian well at the Co- ! when Charlemagne renewed the Holy I lumbia House, Cape May, some time j Roman Empire. If we call this tree old ago, pieces of wood were found at the j what shall we say of its ancestors a few depth of ninety-two feet. i feet down, whose circles include the Perhaps the most remarkable of all rise and fall of Rome, the coming of the the phenomena relating to the subter- Savior, the splen lor of Athens, the luxranean woods is the singular preserva- j ury of Persia and Babylon, the exodus lion of the logs, whose liber is as clean and wars of Israel, nay, perhaps ever
that period of the patriarchs of Scripture which lies on the shadowy edge of human history. Yet even these tree* were young in comparison with the sylvan monarehs ninety feet below thf
WILL TOU
and smooth as when their green tops, a hundred and fifty feet above the swamp, rustled in the breeze long eons ago. Dr. Maurice Beesley, the patriarchial Galen of Dennisville, to who*' courtesy
nisville, but no sunken forests. It seems more credible that there is some subtle and unknown quality either in the amber-colored water of the Dennisville swamps or of the peculiar alluvial I deposit which accounts for the plie- 1 nomenon. It is a well-known fact that
k At B. F. Barwick's. %An immense stock anil irreat variety of eleSant patterns to select from, ainosg which are ■lie oel< 1 rati i arland Base Burners and .• fall Mine of (tarlaml cook stoves for wood or coal. B. F. BARW9CK.
should not be similarly preserved. We
. have wooded swamps in New Y'ork ville a sprawling, dingy township of state as soft and deep as those at Den-
three thousand inhabitants, with its central group of houses on a causeway between two great swamps. The wet lands around are covered partly by solid growths of white cedar, partly by thick water weeds and partly by stumps and fallen logs of immense size. These are only the surface indications of the wealth below. The swamps covering ten square miles are underlaid by sunken forests which grew hundreds and thousands of yearsago. The seeming worse than barren wastes, for which the sharpest of Yankee farmers would deem lift^ cents an acre a swindling price, have been worth by the acre their hundreds of dollars. They have turned their own desolation into a hive of industry, built up a lively village, and made an addition, as legitimate as it is unique, to the wealth of the coun-
try.
"The huge trees which lie under the swamp to unknown depths are of the white cedar variety, and evergreen, known scientifically as the Cttpressns Thui/oiiles. They grew years ago in the fresh water which is necessary for their sustenance, and when, in time, either by a subsidence of the land or a rise of the seas, the salt water reached them, they died in great numbers. But many of them, ere they died, fell over
and kindness 1 am indebted for many | ground at Cape May, under strata, facts concerning the sunken forests, i which, in turn, are but a film of the and who has made them a special study, earth's crust, an4 a yesterday of her believes that the trees, as soon as they | geological past.—Dennisville (.V, l".)
are covered by the soil of the swamps, Cor. N. I’unt. become hermetically sealed, and that — • — they will remain preserved as long as | q’|, 0 jjan Who Heard,
the world lasts and the swamp soil still
surrounds them. If this theory be When Thomas Andrews took his sta-1 tested, however, it seems strange that lion on the mark, he held his hand tc wood placed at great depths in ordinary ! his ear and inclined his head toward the | soils and covered closely from the a r | court in very good imitation of a deal |
ECZEMA.
Sixteen months »ince, an eruption broke out on my let? and both feet, which turned out to be Eczema, and caused me great pain and an- | noyance. I tried various remedies with no : good results, until I used the Cuticura Kesolv* j ent internally and Cuticura and Cuticura S»ap externally, which entirely cured me, so that I
my skin is as smooth and natural as ever. LEN. M. FRAILLY , (A South St..
Baltimore.
CUTICURA. The Cuticura treatment for the cure of Skin . Scalp and Blood Diseases, consists in the internal u?e of Cuticura Resolvent, the new Blood
Purifier, and the external use of Cuticura and Cuticura Soap . the Great Skin Cures Price of Cuticura, small boxes. 50c; lame boxes. 81. Cuticura Resolvent.?! per bottle. Cuticura Soap, 25c. Cuticura Shaving Soap,
15c. Sold by all druggist**.
Depot, WEEKS &. POTTER . Boston, Mass.
Have an
person, ago, but
He was here only two weekf he has shaved clean, parted
his hair in the middle, and expects tc
pass for a stranger.
“The charge is drunkenness,” re-
marked his Honor.
“ Hay?” shouted Thomas. “The charge is drunkenness!”
“Yes. I'm a stranger here. Got here last night from Rochester. Fine town
What’s the population against you is drunkeii-
in certain peat formations of Great you have here. Britain human bodies can be preserved , of Detroit?” for many years without losing their “Theeharg
rotundity and freshness. Perhaps the | ne*s!” shouted the Court, as he bent
analogy apples to the big archaic trees over the desk, of Dennisville. j “ Drunk? Eh?” The age of the sunken trees opens a “Yes!” long and shadowy vista for research. | “Me?”
The ago of a single tree is readily found “Yes' The ollicer says he found yon
by counting its rings. Doctor Beesley lying in an alley.”
has thus counted ten hundred anil! " California! Never was there in my eight rings of a white cedar stump life! I’ve got a brother in Oregon, representing an age of the same num- though, ami may be you mean him. ’ ber of years. But this stump was only ! “ You were in an alley!” five feet in diameter while some of the j “Can't catch it. 1 shall stop here trees have a diameter of seven feet. The for a day or two and then go on to Chi-
CATARRH.
SANDFOED’S RADICAL CURE. I'oiiiifrleu* TreiitmoBit
For $11.00. Hanford's Radical Cure, Catarrhal Solvent and I *nproved Inhale/, wrapped in one package. ith full directions, and Fold by all drutri- m for one dollar. Ask for Sanford’s Ra*. i al Cure. From a .>imp]o cold or influenza to the rotting, sloughing and death of the senses of smell, taste and hearing, this great remedy is supreme. Prisonous mucous accumulations are removed, the entire membrane cleansed, disinfected. soothed and healed, head and voice cleared, smell, taste and hearing restored and constitutional ravages checked. Thus, externally and internally, does this great economical remedy work instantly relieving md permanently curing the most aggravated and dangerous forms of Catarrh .
V Brace?
THE XMost Perfect Device
Supporting Pantaloons No ruhbor. No springs. A Trial Free. Price from 25c. up. For sale by F. A. HAYS, Fa-t fcidc Square, Greencastle, Ind. ot27
N K W Al» V KKTI HE M F.NTH. 'jOLD MEDAL AWARDtD THE AUTHOR A new .v great Medii ail V rk, warranted the bnetaud cheapest, indispensable to eveiy man, entitled “the Science of Ijie.” bound in iinest Frenrh matdin,embossed, full gilt. :im pages.rontain* beautiful Kteei engravings. prescriptions, price only if l ’.in s**nt by mail: ^ illustrat. 1 sample, 6 c.; send oy. Address I’eabody Medial Institute or .'>r W l! PauI MYSELF. kkh.No -I Bulfincbsi boston.
THE
Phoenix Saloon
-AND-
rings near the center are perhaps threeeighths of an inch apart, while toward the circumference they are so crowded that they must be counted with the microscope; so that the ratio of seven to live cannot be used to find the longevity of a seven-foot cedar which probably lived some two thousand yeans before it fell. The absolute age of the underground logs—that is the
as living trees and were covered slowly Ume that has lapsed since they sprouted by the deposits of muck and peat which | —is ascertained only by approximations.
cago.
“This man seems to be stone-deaf,” said his Honor, as he fell back in a help-
less state.
“Awful "hot weather,” shouted Thomas, as he gave his face a wipe. “You may go ” replied the Court, in an ordinary tone of voice. Thomas promptly wheeled about and headed for the door. “You may go up for sixty days!”
“Hay?”
“Or shall I make it ninety?”
Thomas scratched his ear, knit his
Piffl’S r
t* 9 .\GEH
GINGER, r.rciir, MANDKAkE. and many of the host medicine.' known arc here combined into a medicine •»! su^h varied powers as to make it th«* greatest Blood Purifier and the
Best Health an i
Used.
Cure
HATS, JIM E, Roaches,Water Bugs and Red and Black Ants eat ravenously PARSON’S EXTERMINATOR and die. 1 No fear of bad smells - Barnes, gi nneries,
Slrenoth Restorer
• Complaints of Women nnd dis-
eh8cb oi me St- maeh. Bowels, B ings. Diver and Kidneys, and i* entirely diflerent from Bitters, Ginger Essence*, and other 1 onie«, as it never intoxicates. cUc. imd $1 Si/ *s. Barge Saving buying 81 size. 11I6C0X A C0-. 4t28 Chemists, N . i,
UcALSTEE’S
All Healing! All Healing !
X T.
KVEliVWHEHK to sell ttir best I ainily Knit
his fists and |
brows and followed Bijah into the cor- apciy—ci’tr MYTH ridor, where he jumped clear from the , MliCW I o Whci I LU
floor, struck the air with his fists and
hissed' 20ni.mites. It will aisu knit a great variety ta fab
, r , work for which tbere is al wavs a real y market ven.j
“ HrillJJ 1118 HIV match lor a fool Jill I for circuittMHMl tcnnstoth»*'iCwomSGv r . -O* I’ll make jelly of him in a York min- MaeHi«cto..4uuwMi,ir. -
Lite!”—Detroit Frit Press.
This establishment is pronounced by all traveling men coming through Greencastle, as I the leading saloon in this State in all respects, first in style anti finish, and all of them say | they can get a better, cooler and more refreshing glass of beer, a better lemonade, anti a finer, purer quality of liquor and wines here
than anywhere else.
fcd^Coineand See for Yourself...,??®
fill the swamp. These trees that fell | Doctor Beesley, however, has made over by the roots are known as “ wind- I some valuable and suggestive infalls” to distinguish them from the vestigations of the subject, in one “break-downs.’ The trees which (case he found a tree six feet broke off are the ones most sought for through and about the same number commercial uses, and they are found ,,f feet underground. This trunk was and worked as follows: The log-digger \ accidently discovered by workmen enters the swamp with asharpened iron , who had exhumed a smaller log above rod. Ho probes in the soft soil until ho it. On top of the great log was found strikes a tree, probably two or three a large underground stump live feet in teet below the surface. In a few min- ; diameter, and a smaller stump was utes he finds the length of the trunk, | superimposed on the larger one. As how much still remains firm wood and the tree of the larger stump could not at what place the first knots, which have begun to grow before the large
will stop the straight “ split” necessary | tree-trunk fell, and the upper stump j wa y." As much resembles an American j for shingles, begin. Still using his prod 1 belonged to a tree that germinated on railway as an ocean steamer docs a like the divining-rod of a magician, he j the trunk underneath, by counting the 1 C anal-boat, street car a long carriage j manages to secure a chip, and by the | rings of the stumps—or the rings of < on rar which la seemingly not essential
trees of the same size—and also the 1 whether car runs on track or not Paris | rings of the underlying tree, the mini-| has brought the tedious system of mum age of the latter was ascertained, street cars to perfection. Grand oh- j It was twenty-one hundred and fifty jeet i n Paris is to run as few cars as 1
i)..» I J i
Tltis reniarkablo Ointment contains no ^1^curial or other Mineral substance, and nothing can be found in its composition that can injure ihe lender infant or unduly effect the I the Hired or infirm. Bei*»fr a Vegetable Brepar-
, .-•• ation the ALL IIKAMNU OINTMKNT will
uicl household* often Geared in a single night . ()r i|l|tlr ,. ,„ lt 0IU1 bt . lls ,. lt w jth impunllert ami cheapest vermin killer in the world. irvb y AL L.- | t * healing powersareaonderN» allure in-O yea.*. .very hex warranted. | f,-, • , „ Br0)lt m .u«aUoi. it ha* ae,,aired oi’.L'.v-’' 1 rroeer- „nd druggi*t*. A*k lor , 1|lri ,, aiit f, ,,. ar> * p ,.«k* volume* of PAK80N 8. "Mailed for2.e hv praise for It* merits/ THIS OINTMENT h*a | li.4 WLbkS A Por n-K. Boston . Mass. P THE po y ER T0 CAI SR AI.I. KXTBRN\1.
Sores, Scrofulous Humors, Cutifneous Eruptions. Common Itch, Felon nnd Poisonous
r,7r»o»/j*’ PurvaUve 1HU1, riake New Kich Wounds to li*chir«e their putrid matter ud Blood, and Will complete]]! change t Id- l»i*»ot! m i4 :..M ; ,1!^ p: ■■••• •' t'll.oW'. Burn.- and S'.ills the entire svstem In three ii.eniii-. \i' |,*r-nn ( apped aad
Mho will take* 1 pill each nightfrom 11<» I'Jwccks i .
in i\ lie restored to sound health, if such a thing < Fe< ' I Lim s and ChilolaiDt nre be possible. Sent 1 _ i rs Itch*
m RICH BUSQO!
e pr
formrrly /’"i,v... ° ’ Hast., , are SPEEDILY kiudicatbd.
Street Railways in Purls.
Versailles is reached from Paris bv what is termed the “ American Rail-
As a remed> for D] T I.'U 1 I’ri. e . et*. per box. It is a Sprcii riL'bO Soldbyalldrnggiata,
or muildd tree en reel ip' 'll V. by HALL A KUCKEL, Druggist*.
4I2S 218 (ireenwich Bt., New York.
real
worn!
itlc 4'o,.4UU Washit -
igc;
smell Knows whether the tree is a windfall or break-down. Then he inserts in the mud a saw like that used by icecutters, and saws through the
tin 20
roots and muck until the log is i years. But counting
iwxijrp I II l? L) T reached. The top and roots are thus [ overlaying soil, and al It GDI • B. IlluBii 1, | sawn off, a ditch dug over the tree, the j which lay over the
’roprietor,
4-
JOITES’ Art Galleri!
Bayne’s Block, GREENCASTBE.
Is prepared to do all I kinds of work in the 1 very best manner.
Satisfaction Guaranteed. CABINET PICTURES A SPECIALTY! R. T. JONES.
A. J. SMEDLEY IListca*ed the wagon shoo formerly occupied hv Mr. James Gifford, on East Washington St., oppositethe Catholic Church, and will keep on hamlor mnke to orilvr w ngons .,1 Hlldesi rii tion* in the best possible manner. Wagon* and carriage* ic i: i* a i ic e n, Promptly, nt reasonahlo’nriee*. Twenty years’ experience in lireencnstle insure* customer* the best material and worK.
trunk loosened, and soon the great stick, •ometimes five or six feet thick, rises and floats on the water, which quickly fills the ditch almost to the surface. The log is next sawed into lengths two feet long, which are split by hand and worked into shingles as well as Into the staves -used for pails and tubs. The wood has a coarse grain which splits as straight as an arrow. The shingles made from it last for sixty to seventy years, are eagerly sought for by builders iu Southern New Jersey, and command in the market a much higher price than the ordinary shingles made of pine or chestnut. In color the wood of the white cedar is a delicate pink, and it has a strong flavor, resembling that of the red cedar used in making Tend pencils. The trees once fairly buried under the swamp never become water-logged, as is shown by their floating in the ditches as soon as they are pried up, and, what is more singular, as soon as they rise they turn invariably under sides uppermost. These two facts are mysteries which science has thus far left so. The men who dig the logs up and split them earn their money. Tlie work is hard, exacting, be-idcs lusty manual labor, skill anti experience, the swamps are soft and treacltcrous, no machinery can he used, and long stretches oi mud and water must be covered with boughs or bark before tbe shingles can reach the village and
i civilization.
! The number of the trees which lie below the surface of the ten square ! miles of swamp is almost countless. In many place* (lie probe will be sunk many times before it fails to strike a log. As tbe workmen only dig for those near the surface, and none but
the age of the so a covered tree upper stump, the
doctor concludes that the big tree underneath all germinated thirty-one hundred and fifty years ago. Another test the doctor applied in the following manner: He found half covered in a cedar swamp a log with the ends cut evident-
ly by human hands.
PPeLLGWSV .Com bounS i f£S W*r<_ Consumptson, Bronchitis,Asthma
Dnothjlo OrRimp, 18 useful 'tops, 5sets reeds, Uudll» u only 8' **. Pianos $12 up Ulus-Cata-log, free. A tldrfs* Bkatty,Washington,N.J. 3’10 Agent* uanted for the Lite and Work of GARFIELD
The O'lty rompl'-t** story of his noble life and tracie
death. Fresh, brilliant, reliable. Ele,
ft;ri|£li»h »o<l (Jet
ryantly printed in
ifiillyilfus!
|»ntli. I
Do not buy tin*
nt, •m Fa
lan ; beaut
hHoffsomely bound. FaMent telling ! ii-hed. Bv Joint*'. Iti«i|»ntli. 1,1*. fl>.
CAUTION. rhirn the country
ilraj
my muritrated, book ever pub-
catchpenny.
nijned campaign books with i Hooded. They are utterly
; an outrage upon the memory of the great
dead, and a buse fraud on the public. 'Tim book is ciilit'ely The only w i k worthy tb“ t heim*.
fcoml 50e. in Nt»ii!)>* for tgentN Outfit. voTHFKS X CO., Publishers, Cmcionati.
rovthless_ lead, and i
JONEf* Bio
{jetwaen sTrll W E a?. E o F t5r^a.%rr le n B ^ P t u, wt^h ?t for passengers. Passengers must go to imiloubtcdly yidit* in Consumiition 11ml other
at each station. Conductor carries a
5L«'
Horse Shoeing and B!.?cksmithing. T. •!. (> I i* "lib at the old
stand, and will give prompt attention to bor*e I -hooin, and .11 other work in the blaek.mithln, th(J be8t trees aru se | ec ted, it is certain V AAliaas HabitCwrodtatwownkvlhfve «mly a small fraction of the logs ’ 0 PI UNI UK BENDER hm !i "r ii i ^ uve been oxlnimed since 1B12, when
•• waybill” of passengers after the old "i" 1 tl >'' < ’ nti IJ i 0,1,h8 is , i l,y £.'’ n ' , ; -. . - , . . . sumntion alone. II the syrup 1* u-ed perse-Stage-coacfi fashion. \ a-t amount OI veringly it subdues the tendency to I'onsump stamping and sealing. This for each lien, and in many oa*e*. a* in that of the inpassenger who wants .0 ride forty T# 1 “'S i r ( ;, , | t t | , 0 V^rhlbUuaYco.tly.nM. almost) roils, stamping 111 ulut; ink, stamping always arino from weakness of iho nerves ami in red- Dignity and fuss of oflicials V^^;u'^ n: V;;xipo/nd m ,^V'oi A^ful to contemplate. But ft lIYl*6PliOSI > lirfES has proved itself of tlie Frenchman thinks that a pin dropping greatest service. The evaeuations soon bein Paris drops a little louder than & “witl cureViilmonary Consumppin drops anywhere else, lop of street I lilin in (f,,, ({„ t (tnK c, and will goo K r. o roears furnished With seals; called LTm- ! lief and prolong lifo in tho scoind anil third, periale; fare outside five cents, inside i 11 "j, 11 ( ' ll 1 ro Asthma. 11 rjnchiti*, 1 .aryngft 1 *
It was found that
the lot* had been cut for an adjacent saw-mill which was running about one hundred years ago. Old citizens of Dennisville whose memory retraced seventy years of time could recall r.o period when tho locality of tbe cut log had been worked either for living or sunken timber. The inference, then, was just that the log had been cut for the old sawmill and was at least one hundred years old.
Four inches of peaty soil had accumu-j keep warm. Fuel"and heat very expen-
lated up the sides of the log. Here | 8 j ve j n Paris. Takes them ten minutes " >■> find th'* Syrup of
then was a unit by which the rate of accumulation of soil over tho big trees could be measured. Each four inches represented a century’s growth of the alluvial mud. The bottom of the big tree under the stumps was twelve feet
beneath the surface of the ground. By I Napoleon, and .0 whom time is no <>b-, ^'^1^^.•i.iZn’Zd'SnU^
dividing twelve foet or one hundred j ec t. My daily experience and obser- satisfaction.”
SEND j
ToxOor JDAVID.LANDRETH&SONS. PHILA
.'A-rSi
1317 &t 2
fTMiE 1’hyslcians in <
six cents. Better air and view outside, ing* f r nM'w an t ’! f"m ii * 101 far' Ac ti or? 71! d ‘ S!
Gauls object to open windows and fresh \ "u* Force,
air. Will bear any sort of a smell to g,.,,,,,.. S p,. akor , S , 1H |
inestimable value. A
111 twu iiiiiitiiuB 1 ( i oge nhould be taken before speaking or sing-
to change car horses. Same old bar-: i Dfr .
ness, with ten times tho necessary num-1 Aphonia, or tho l,os* of Yoiee. i* usuniiy , . . . 111 -.u i-iirod by a few dose*. Wc hnve known vases her of straps to unbuckle, as used with whe,.,. a *iQg]<> dose ha* been vifi'etual. state coach of Louis XIV., and two aged s< j AniB< m. d., st. John, N. 1L, write* Bremen hostlers to buckle and unbuckle, ha ,| 0 ci-a*ion to a*o your Syrup in a vase who drove stage in the time of the First , of Aphonia which would not yield to regular f to whom time is no oh- I treatment: it P^ved to^heaU thetyoueUiBiea
; i". E!h S.-Mt, 3". LOUIS, WO.
tMiLiolJ aiwl wpI! knowa
,»lur h'l ftauulLi in me«iicin«jftnd eg cHry. Yvf.irs of F-.rt). rtv-n e iti the trentmont of (j: \ ic Diseaafa . j i ii : ptill pn-i ebilify a-x mu. fi f. ■ 11if!riot’ tO 1.1.it 1 ‘! t riO Of'!'.ItBTV p; lu't it IfJOHY, .vh %■* r'i i'i'tml riT'ittfttiua tlirounli
■ *
Produ
1 . .r 1 • •
■
.c:
sot r f f.iuoa. .Kn • - L'.u*
com. wltbnut «3t r i«r Vo-c*u. y or j’ol.'
YOUfC iSF'l ' :i f nn r.: .vhjMr© ■A.y&iLnr'spic 1. a n « i it>Ti 1 ' iii i.l ert M*tM of a T**"Y.’.:»t i.mli • .t u v. 1 iGii f r tu'.'./i' s:*or aiarriafiOi
i^rnmn^ntlv core'!, nt irioriernt^ r*p»*nup.
mssmm s td. Liil of qusstiosi to b« antwtred bv | tu U dsniriaf tfSSI*
nifnt mailed free t-i any »ddr» »* on api licalion.,
J I » r»i n» sufTering ^•un» .ipi 1;r** should eend thi lr a "and l-snrn aou'etulng to Usdr uditntago. It I m-f » iruae.F
I... ImT*
TART LING DISCOVERY!
LOST MANHOOD RESTORED. A viotim of youthful Imprudence causing Premature I'ecay. Nervous Debility, L"*t Mauh<*id t etc., having tried in vain every known remedy, ha* diacoven d a simple sell'cure, which he will nd FREE tn l.iv fellow.sufferers, uddn-ba J. II. Klllr:? FN, 43 t hallium »t., A. VYfciF 7mm ent. /JOJi:;. A fen iln core for Nervous v ~ifDebility, Seminal Weak-
>ttll BU
and forty-tour inches by four we get thir y-six hundred years as the time since the log first sprouted from its little seed, which wits about one-quarter the size of a buckshot, or, say, oneeighth of an inch in diameter. Of course all calculations of the foregoing kind arc rough and inexact. In the case of the tree cited the accumulation of debrut a thousand years ago might have been more or less rapid than now, nor can the interval that elapsed between tho growths of the stumps and the tree be estimated. But the coiupu-
vation on riding home from Paris to St. Cloud via Route deal Reine. Often see four street ears in line filled with people above and below, waiting to start. Interval of fifteen minutes’ starting time between each car. Last ear of the four one hour to wait. But these Gauls seem to like it. seem to have learned tc wait; not to “ labor ami to wait,” but simply to wait. -Prentice Mulford, in
San Francisco Chronicle.
—^ ^—
—An instance of faithfulness in the
liV-Dii not be deceived by remedies hearing u similar name ; to other preparation i* > *uhItitute |nr this under any circumstances.
For sale by all druggist*.
For Nsilo or Trsulc.
Farm of Sti acre*. IJj miles north ofdrecn-
a 1,11
cattle, on Rockville road. Good houj*e, .‘•lockwater from gjiringp that never dry or freeze up. “A. No. 1.” lor fruit, dairy or gardening purposes- All in grass. Plenty ot timber._
B. It. Kudisill. 15tf,
Moore’s (Lens Shaped^
Pilules Wurc Curt* lor 4 hills 50.*>0. The Urcat Malaria 1 Antidote. Sold by Druggists, or Dr. C. C Moore, 78 l 1 Tilarult St. New York.
Invaluable to cv.sry family.
1 at ion of thirty-six hundred years for management of an estate is revealed In . 'he old tree is probably below rather th e estate of the late Catherine h. Har-
than above tho truth. r ' 8 ' o{ . ^ , . ,l
The time is within the easy memory years it hud increased Lora YJi.000 to
' of living num when the Dennisville 1 over $1)0,000.
boss, impotence, etc.
iho Rccinc* .-t u in r.y practice for 2a Years llnal dl 16O pages r i n z fbll di ructions for self trontim r. t, sent free. Addrcpa DR. T. WILLIAMS. 435 B. Uatcr hu, Idnaukcc.
♦ind
LADIES
§ rof. IInrrU* |*itui|>hli>r > p 1
i’laiei) giviug U scriptlon or his Kcinedy, and show mg u« »p. plication. The l amphlet is valuable to n y Udy j,, Jrl..
calc health, being a thoroughly practical
teal Frrc.
by P rlicj
J ' > I Oil)
a thorougbl v i-rartu al tirafivt* r»n this di«r. HABBil* CO rr IOIMC M«
