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The Indiana Gazette from Indiana, Pennsylvania • 6

Location:
Indiana, Pennsylvania
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Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

wwcww Twaa; lira jsvnu m.MJUHMm wr" 1 vnimiviiiPiiiMMllMMPllllVMBPPHI INDIANA COUNT GAZETTE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4. 1891. 6. A REMARKABLE LUNA I IC IIMJ SOM KANSAS WRITERS. What is Au Expeaslve Commodity.

A gentleman traveling in Sweden aeked the price of smoked salnlon. "One dollar and a half." replied the clerk. "What does fresh salmon bring?" he inquired, in wonder. "About thirty cents a pound at retail." "And what is labor worth in the" smokeries?" "Something like twenty-five cents a day. 1 believe, uir." "Then." said the traveler "theu smoke must be very dear here." Harper's Magazine.

Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants aud Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Captor OU, It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Millions of Mothers.

Castoria destroys Worms and allays feverislmcss. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic. Castoria relieves troubles, cures constipation and flatulency Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Castoria is tho Children's Panacea the Mother's Friend. Castoria.

Castoria is so well adapted to children thai I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me." H. A. Archer, M. Ill So. Oxford St Brooklyn, N.

T. Our physicians in the children's department have spoken highly of their experience in their outside practice with Castoria, and although we only have among our medical supplies what is known as regular products, yet are free to confess that the merits of Castoria has won us to look with favor upon it United Hospital and Dispensary Boston, Maaa Allen- C. Sarrn, Pres Castoria. "Castoria is an excellent medicine for children. Mothers ha repeatedly told me of its good effect upou their children." Da.

G. C. Osgood, Lowell, Mass. Castoria is the ix-st remedy for children of which I am acquainted. I hope the day is not far distant hen mothers will consader the real interest of their children, ami use Castoria instead of the nost rums -n inch ore-destroj injj their loved ones, by forcing opium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sending them to premature graves." Da.

J. F. KiscncLOE, Conn ay, Ark. The Centaur Company, T7 CLOSE ON i. wi Y) KIOHK oni Murray Street, Now York City.

HER TRAIL. the i-iivi-tics oi winter society win ic upon iiHiiniiii Jin-tne liiune 01 cxlnictin Iut full oi' cnjovinrnt t'roni llit M'jiHiii. AW- iv not out of the world In re, liy any ihcjui-. Jorytliiiiii ncedccl to contriluitt' to jiood tinu'- ood appear-jincc arc witliin vnf' rcarli. mm mm fake the nialtiT of clothes, for instance.

Who ever THE KING! OP ALL COUGH CURES; DOCTOR EM Sold in England for Is. and in America for 26 cents a bottle. XT TASTES GOOD. Dr. Acker's English Fills; Cure Sickness and Headache.

Small, pleaaant, a favorite with the ladle. W. H. HOOKER KEW YORK. JimiUWIIIIIUIUIIHIUINIIWIMt laucbertv Indhiua 2V WE SELL GOOD SHOES VERY CHEAP.

WE HAVE ALL WIDTHS IN LADIES' SHOES FROM AA TO EE. IN BOOTS-HIGH INSTEP, LOW INSTEP, PROM TO OUR LINE OF GOOD WEARING SHOES FOR BOYS AND GIRLS IS UNEQUALLED. ALL RIPS SEWED FREE. THE RED ERONT. FOR THE BEST Chipped Dried Beef! IN TOWN GO TO Hasinger Bros.

BAKERS and GROCERS. B. 8TAHL, OONTRACTOS AMD BUILDER, HOMB CITY. PA Ohlldron Oryfor Children Oryfor CWrcn Oryfor ENGLISH lURC I ILLS' SO 4 A Courtly Old1 VI, llc.stH of ueori' foster is ueaa. lie was known as "Count." ami had the haii dis.

tinctiou cf being the oldest ltiinnto of Bloouiindale Insane asyluiu. New Vork city. tic k.v-vm ot a notod family, and bom in 1805. WliL'ii not yet thirty years ot aire he fell in love with a houthern yirl. who refused him.

The rejection turned his brain, and he was count IWLH. consigned to Bloomindale. where he passed the re niaming iifty-six years of his existence. At no time was he violent, he was generally allowed to go and come at will, lie imagined the asylum to be his private property, and received guests with grave and lofty politeness. He dressed elegantly, and made it a point to attend all the funerals iu the neighborhood.

Bt-tore the war many rich families had their country houses near Bloommgdale, and with of them the count was on cordial terms. lie made a specialty of New Year's calls. "Then." one who knew him, "it was a revelatiou of grace to bee the count enter a drawing room. No Chesterfield ever bowed more eloquently. The fiftieth anniversary of Foster's residence at the asylum was celebrated by a grand ball.

The count led the dance and shone as a social leader. From his entrance until before his death he kept a voluminous diary. lie had an annuity, and was extremly exact in set tling Ins accounts with the asylum. At the last he conversed sensibly, and pased awav regretted bv all who knew him. Hi bodv was lnt'-ricd at Jamaica.

L. l'i Visit itiil'orunl anil Mexico via tlie JVnn-vIvuJiIa liailrttacl. Xo new feature ever inaugurated by the Pemi'-yhania Railroad Company attracted such uniersal comment and attention as thu se-ies of tours run early this ear to the far Prcific Coast, and now that another scrioi is announced lor 1S92, nut only covering the Paula- 'a -I but an indhid- tour to Mexico, the hind ol the Atee, i- wonder ful growth of the personally conducted svtem of and the progrcssne moeof this wo ld-lamod railroad. Kach toai will li" liuit-d to certain number of ii.isM-iif." r- ho ill trafl in a Pullman Mstilmli trim, i-ii nilu-d with the apji'. "tiiio'ts the nclust hcane.

it Lulus' st, nojrraphcr, and pc-Mil r. ii'c-i. bath a'lfl li'- irv rooms, and an olis-rvation oi' in fad reprod, clion the t.imous Ijiiuited. 'J'hc first tour IriM, New Vork January 13, and speeds d.iectl to tin. J'acili C0.1M.

ia St. Ijouis, Kansas Cit Las Yejras Santa Fe. The M'coiKi tour, the Mexican, leaves February 10, running d'n ctl. to the City ot Mexico via Cincinnati, Mammoth Cave, Birmingham, Montgomery and Now Orleans, wit'i incidental stops ri routt: The third. February 21, runs directly to Xew Orleans via Cincinnati and Mammoth Cae.

and thence, after the Mardi tJra.s festivities, to the Pacific Coast. The fourth and tilth, both through California tours, will leave March 21 and April 20, respec-tu cly. The inauguration of this last car was the theme for universal comment and the warmest credentials of praise bear testimony to the high standard and perfection of every detail promoting the comfort and enjoyment of the tourists. Such an opportunity has never been presented before to the people of the East of thoroughlv seeing the vn-st domain of the country they so valiantly boast of, as well as such an opportunity of visiting the interesting land of the Aztec, replete with ruins garlanded with mythical lore. The rates for the round trip are exceptionally low, and include not only all necessary traveling expenses vn route to the Pacific coast and return, but also side trips to the attractive resorts in California, and several carriage and stage rides of interest.

This applys as well to th Mexican tour, where the objective point will be the City of Mexico and side trips made from there, the rate including eerv necessary expense as well as hotel accommodations and side trips. Itineraries presenting the full details of the tour are in course of preparation, and will be issued at an early day. In the meantime more detailed information may be secured by addressing George V. Boyd, Assistant 'General Passenger Agent, Philadelphia, Pa. A Fatal Mistake.

Physicians make no more fatal mistake than when they inform patients that nervous heart troubles come from the stomach and arc of little consequence. Dr. Franklin Miles, the noted Indiana specialist, has proved the contrary in his new book on "Heart Disease," which may be had free at Tom J2. Ilildebrand's, who guarantees and recommends Dr. Miles' un-equaled New Heart Cure, which has the largest sale of any heart remedy in the world.

It cures nervous and organic heart disease, short breath, fluttering, pain or tenderness in the side, arm or shoulder, irregular pulse, fainting, smothering, dropsy, etc. His Restorative Nervine cures headache, tits, etc. Opinion- of tho Traclo South. I find Chamberlain's medicines very excellent, particularly Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. B.

E. Etheridge, Hallettville, I have tried Chamberlain's Cough Remedy with great success. R. Tan-NERET, Waveland, Miss. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy cannot be beat W.

L. Davis, Liberty Hill, La. I have used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in my family, and consider it tne best I have ever tried. W. J.

Flowers, Doraville, Ga. 50 cent bottles for sale by Daugherty Bros, druggists, Indiana, and W. I. Moore, Homer City. nov Guaranteed Cure for La Grippe.

We authorize our advertised druggist to sell you Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, upon this condition: If you are afflicted with La Grippe and will use this remedy according to directions, giving it a fair trial, and experience no benefit, yon may return te bottle and have your money refunded. We make this offer because of the wonderful successor Dr. King's New Discovery during last season's epidemic. Have heard of no case In which it failed.

Try it. Trial bottles free at T. E. Hildebrand's drug store. Large size 60 cents and fl.00.

Pltchcr'o Cactorlo. Pltoher'o Cootorla. I Pltehor'oCcstorlo. THE WELL KNOWN AUTHORS THE SUN.FLOWER STATE. OF Editor Done wt Work on New Novel of Stttniroliglouit Nature Cliurlen Moreau Uarur'N I'erMinal lotularity Other Story ul Venn Ukni.

Of Kansas writers there is none, perhaps, who has achieved the am prestige of Edgar Howe, known tr the world as the aiuthor of "The Story of a Country Town." Mr. Howe if thirty-six years of are and has won place in the realm of letters by Ins own indomitable will and keen powers of observation and analysis. His college woe the printing office, and a varied sort oi knowledge was gathered during hi? youthful wanderings through the fur west. In partnership with his brothei he established, about fourteen years ago. the newspaper which, from a single email sheet, has since grown into the Atchison Daily Globe.

Mr. Howe's latest book bears the mybterious title ot "An Ante-Mortem Statement." Of th "Mystery of the Lock" and "A Man's Story," it is said that the author would give much of his well earned fame to recall them. Mr. Howe is at present pre paring a semireligious novel with thr 1 CHARLES JIOIUUU IIAKGKK promising and smut-what lemrt'iy title of "The CViife-Mon i WlnUock Late Preacher of the Charles More.ui ILulii-i li young man whu tliu van tage of new.p ipiT work to the lurrarj aspirant. Mi.

il.ircr l-utti Rochester. Is'. an 1 ilu.it"l from a claics'l school at the na ol eighteen, llw wrHiiiL- distiuctly ol th- wk 1U is in a printing ofli'-i- t.u.' it 1 1n jmiii Kansas nh-a how a-, prni cipal in the city si-nooK. and now h.i. charge of the cdinmil dep irtinciit of the Abilene Daily Il flc ctir.

Mr. Haiger is onlv twi-ntv-oiht old. Hi woik li.ih thus far. outside his editorial writing, been most-! ly bright, trenchant ski'tchi-, of wotern lifeandoccasion.il lie is one of the officers, of the Woti-rn Authors and Artists' club, with heaihiu.uters at Kansas City. Personally lie is Ihe most genial of men, and it is pleaantlv said of him that he is claimed ns a lm-nd by ever' man, woman and child in central Kansas.

Mrs. Theodore G. Jenness is a Kansas writer who has lately moved to Minnesota. She has, been for years a contributor to St. Nicholas.

Wide Awake and The Youth's Companion. Her "Two Young Homesteaders" is a charming story of Ka sas. Tom P. Morgan writes humorous articles for Puck, Harper's and Frank Leslie's. Miss Genevieve Lei Hawley, of Fort Scott, is a writer of love stones.

She is so intensely 103-al to the state of her adoption that she lays the plot." of most of her tales among the picturesque prairies of that region. She is as sweet and demure as a wren, and about as diminu- GENE VIE VK L. HAWLEY. tive. She is an ardent defender of equal suffrage, and valiantly sports her yellow ribbon in the face of popular prejudice and popular opinion.

She is eminently able, with her facile pen and witty tongue, to defend her cause. Eugene Ware and Albert Bigelowe Paine, of Fort Scott, are both poets. Paine is a young writer of great promise, and his verses find a ready market Will Lisenbee, of Cherokee, is a popular and prolific writer of stones for youth. Edward Ellis says of him, "Lisenbee is original, graphic and has the true, unmistakable genius of the born story writer." Ellen P. Allerton's "Walla of Corn" prour sea to become national property.

Hattie Horner, of White Water, also writes poems of western life. Mrs. Nan W. Healey, of Wichita, is an occa-lional writer whose poems bear the unmistakable mark of the "divine fire." Thomas Brower Peacock, of Topeka, has published a book of poems, now in its third edition. Saixib Touch.

Rajah Brooke, of Sarawak, Borneo, has proclaimed his son. Vyner Brooke, Us meeeasor, and has decreed that Im shall attain his majority at the age of Wvwtesn. Om gees aa Idea of the Tastnee of the afeaaoa learmimf that the pope re-MrtrMffftJOO bed ia.1t at the die- the franca pUcrbas free frlv think-, oi' jMiini; to the city for a dre suit now-a-days? We arc local headquarter for tho (inost material, most stylish cuts and he-t workmanship. Put those three qualities into a coat and you have perfection. Our fall stock is cominir in dailv.

Manv heautiful new patterns. Call and see us. VOGEL MERCHANT TAILORS, Opposite Jail, Indiana. In Hi Wroujj Place. She (near midnight) Pal don me, but your necktie is out of place.

(looking iu the nniroi) 1 don't bee anything the mattei with it. What's the Slit It ought to be home. Clothier and Furnisher Hired Man Tone. An ol-l'sh couple, who had come in by tho Eiii load, wt-re losing on a Pa- voma fen boat ye.steida when the wife asked lu-l ilti-banil about the tune of day It was about 2 o'clock by the right time. but he l.ioki-d at his silver watch aud replied that it was i.

thv' -aid wed thcie il-out she pioti st( "Tiain ln-rn l.itf It ijiutc the-clot in tln- ilejicit." "lie took ort hi bulls iin fur li.oi'i'-i lit 1 I lip'ohlsi 11 to see if it is an-, and tie siidliul e- 'Oi haw! I'm an honi ad! I've had I 1 s. I 1 tie- liiitd 111 111 to git up by and lorgot turn "1 1 Yolk l.M-illIlg Woil.i No I.il tin Go. Tin was such a ciow of onlookers to ovt-rM 1 lie cal)l' c.u ei avatnig in Uroadw-ay, Fulton street, the otliei day th.it a policeman sel.cd aoung man li' the arm and said: "Here, ou go on about our business'" "Mj biZiiess! My biiiess!" Ihe man. "I guess1 vou don't know me." "Ale Mm one of the "No, sir: but I've been hanging around hero eveiy day for the hist font weeks to see how this thing was done, aud 1 don't propose to let go now, not if 1 know myself!" -New York Evening World. Tin Ai-mo of Grrutin-ss.

Johnny Let's play war. I'll be the Duke of Wellington and ou can be Na- polean Douap.tt te. Willie That suits me. Bonaparte was a good deal bet tor general than the Duke of Welliiirfum. Johnny lie got licked all the same.

Willie That's cause he had bad luck. He could down any of 'em when it come to bein a general. He was a regular Anson that's what he was? Chicago Tribune. A I'mI verslll Proline! Quester Since 1 built that conserva tory my wife has lxvn ciazy to have one side of it filled with palms Do you know of an that is indigenous to the temperate Jester Oh, es. There is one palm that flourishes in anv climate.

Quester What is it, pray' Jester The "Itching palm." Huston Conner. Ilth Could rin it. Young Mrs. Sipiizzle was remonstrat ing with her husband, a dissipated for ins conduct "Dear wifey." said he. "I am like the prodigal son: 1 shall reform by and Mrs.

Squi7zlu replied, "I will be like the prodigal sou, too, for I will arise and go to my lather." Texas Siftings. A He Yes. darling, and it shall be the purpose of my life to surround you with every comfort and to anticipate and gratify your every wish. She How good of you, Harry! And nil on twelve dollars a week too! Bos ton Transcript. Taken Hla Word.

Seedy Individual Can't yer let me nave a dime, boas? Dressy Individual Bml Charity begins at home. Seedy Individual Well, if yer don't mind, then, mister, 111 walk wld yer to fer door. Texas Siftinxa. Hildebrand's For more than thirty years Hildebrand's Drug Store has been noted for the quality of its DRUGS AND SPICES. Nothing but the purest chemicals are purchased, and therefore in the compounding of your family recipes and prescriptions you are as sured that none but the best and purest drugs enter them.

Drug Store. markets afford, ground by the best we cannot recommend. WINTER. 1892. Our pices are the best the spice mill in the State.

We keep no patent medicines Fine Stationery, Family and Pocket Bibles, Pocketbooks and Purses, IN GREAT VARIETY. eSTReinember tat when you want the very best of anything in our line at the lowest price call at the OLDEST and MOST RELIABLE Drug Store in Indiana county. Yours respectfully, Tom IE. Hildebrand. 1891.

FALL wD. lJCsThe largest and most complete assortment of Foreign and Domestic Suitings. You can get any style, color or figure your fancy may picture beauty in design and variety in pattern, PENNINGTON'S Great Tailoring Establishment A nt om.

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About The Indiana Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
396,923
Years Available:
1868-2006