Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 January 1894 — Page 6

THE BANNER TIMES. GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. MONDAY, JANUARY. I.ISRE

1

X-MAS

A

(’ARE IN ( IBH'HET.

Everybody wants to buy some friend something, but you say times are too hard. You can easily remedy that by

visiting the

T^ODEL

And buying something useful. Nothing would be more appropriate than some of the nice things you find in Neckwear,

{ 1 . c ,, iii .1 • c ' on the 30 of the preceding row. and 10 bought especi.'lll) ioi the holl(l«I\ trJKle, or n Jlilll (^t tlio^c s j n gi e cr(ill .het on the following single

new Silk Suspenders, or one of those handsome Night Robes, crochet.

or a pair of Gloves—anything from a 25c cloth to the finest Third Row-Teasi.^le crochet and 10

imported Kid (dove, a Rubber Coat or a fine Mackintosh, a Silk Umbrella, a Leather Grip, Hat or Cap, a fine Dress Shirt, or a half dozen of our new Collars and Culls, Mufflers, Silk and Linen Handkerchiefs—finest line in the city, a suit

of Clothes or an Overcoat would not be amiss.

CIRECJIONS FOR MAKING ONE WITH

A HOOO FOR A CHILD.

1 «* I’atU'ru Is an l-Ltfiv Onr Worked In a Semicircle It Is tlordcred With a I.am

Z£dcing How the I«:»ce In i'laile.

The H(ms“\vif(> gives these directions - Use ratlicr thick cream colored wool, and begin by crocheting on as many stitches ns arc wanted ior the depth. For a child

of ordinary height cast on 1)2 stitches.

First Row—Having made a chain <■' 32 stitches, have three stitches for the double crochet, and work 20 single cro-

chet. Cut. off the wool.

| Second Row—Twenty double crochet

After

MODEL ® CLOTHiflG ® STORE.

F. A. HAYS, PROP.

on the 20 of tls - preceding row.

these 20 cut off the wool.

Fourth Row One row of 30 double: crochet, on which 10 single crochet to : the inside, ami then 20 rows, cutting off the wool at the end of every row, repeat | the single crochet at each row. which i

gives the siiajie to tin cape.

At tin - twenty-first row only 10 double : ; crochet on the 10 of the preceding row, j plus 20, of win - i - 1(* single crochet, four other rows to follow of the same. 20 don- I • bio crochet and 10 single crochet. At the twenty-sixth row, only 10 double \ crochet on the 10 of the preceding row |

then the row following 20

C III. Hi In* : Tn U'«!U|kj I. in .iiu woiK. Hu* play. Tlu* lulling f, is \ da . • To t*>ca 1 H* Iioin all 1 l.avt* tlouo And all t ml remains lo do: To i* v- 't*H|i > . own from you. My only lo\o. and Imj A lone and free. Could I only aland Bel we ‘n gray moor and (gray sky. Where the* w inds and lhe plovers cry. And no man is at hand. And fwl 11** free wind blow On my ruin wet face, and know I am free -not yours, but my own— Free, and alone. For l he soft (Irclight And the homo of your heart, my dear. They hurl, l»einu r p 1 wayH*liere. I want to htaml upright. And to cool my eyes in the air. And losce how my hack ran bear Burdens-- to try, to know, To learn, to grow. I am only you! 1 am yours, part of you, your wife! And I have no other life. 1 cannot think, eannot do; 1 eannot breathe, cannot see; There is “us, M but there is not “mo”— And wor.*:t, at your kiss I grow Contented so. —New York Tribune.

The Parliament41—Of Religions! /It tfe Goluiubiari Exposition.

A Narrative

Ol the

Grandest Uieveiiient and Most linportant Event in Modern Ke lvins History.

NOW OFFERED BY

lie I) 1

B. F. dOSblN Handies the Highest Grade Brazil Blink

i ll)- Arval Dinner.

The iirviil dinner ;ij>iH'urs to Iw an ancient custom. This was properly a solemn festival on the day of interment: and when the corpse was exposed to 1

view. The relatives and friends were SE\a*! invited to attend, so that having inspect- : TsT, ~i

ed the body they might vouch that the death was a natnral one. and tints exculpate the heir and all others entitled to the dec. - . 1 .st d’s pnsses-ions from accuI Rations of having used violence.—West-

! minster Ibi^tT to.

>7^

V.;.-.; o. -v -y’ A'.-. ^ -

TWO VOLUMES

N ONE.

And the Best I’ittshurjrh and Anthracite. Foal yard opposite Yandalia freight office.

Is iho Best Good Enough? Surely the meat we have is good enough for anybody'. It is the best we ever saw and at the price wc ask is very much better value than anything similar to be ha I in the city. We kill no stock hut what \vc know to be good. Try our tender steaks, our juicy roasts

ond our sausifge.

A fnrcJcM, Youth. "Cholly's in disgwace at the club again," saiii Willie Wibblcs ‘‘Dealt! D ali! You don't say so. tie's alwaysin twonbh - , isn't he? It was only lawst week that he came out without his twousahs wol'.t d up." “It's worse this titne.” "How?" “This uiuhniiig 1 forgot to bwush and comb his cluvysanlhciuum!"— Washington Star.

STONER 4. STONER, MEAT : MARKEI

M« issr’sold stand.

“Simplest and Best.'

THE FRANKLIN

Ikiked Apple Dumplings.

One quart hour. 2 tcnspoonfuls baking | powder, alabl spo >nfal powdered sugar, a pinch ol s ilt. Hilt together and rub a largo tablcspqoufnl of butter, add a

E. Waslilmrton street. I beaten egg and a half pint of milk; mix quickly, roll a half inch thick, cut

in -1 inch squares. Put on the center of each it large spoonful of chopped apple mixed with sugar and cinnamon, fold over the corners to meet in tho Center, crowd closely together in a shallow pan

and bake in a hot oven.

Tall Hat. at tlu - Tlu - liter.

Said a bright young lady who attends frequently strictly first class theaters: “I always remove my hat or bonnet in the theater if it is o? proportions to interfere at all with the view of those sitting behind me. I certainly think there is great ue« - d of reform in this matter of headgear at the playhouses. The mana-

double cro- 1 jrprs should formulate another rule and

I strictly enforce it—that big bonnets and ' hats lie left at home or removed at the amusement houses. Other rules are rigidly carried into effeetat the theaters, J and there is no reason why another and | one of tho most important of all should not find a place among them and be as

j carefully observed.

1 “The other evt long I leaned forward I and asked a lady sitting in front of me ! it' she would not remove her headgear, | as it interfered seriously with my view i of the stage. She gave me a look that was principally one of amazement. When sue had partially recovered from her astonisnment. she said that her hair was not arranged in a way permitting the removal of the article. Of coi rsc that is something to be borne in mind by ladies who are inclined to favor this new

first row of stitches tightly to make a j departure at the amusement places.”— | border or edge at the ! ottoniof the capo. | Cincinnati limes-Stur.

The hood is made of 13 rows of double

33 crochet. Without increasing < r . •• Mary Mandnleju*’, Grave, creasing, and at the end of each row Fifteen thonsand pilgrims annually cut off the woe:, a - in the cape., Al,. r | visit .St. Banme, in Provence, not far

l- the 12 rows ureo no. double the work in 1 from Mars; dies, where Mary Magdalene i jp connection With till

t.vo on the wrong side, putting the first : is 8il id to have spent the last 30 years of

double crochet of the twelfth re-.v against l u ' r l'f° -

the last of the same row, and sew up the The legend, according to the Nonvelle 13 double crochet on each side: work the Revue, runs that Mary Magdalene came hood on to tlx - cape by arow of tightened from Juda>a in a small boat with Lazastitches, which is also done on the two | rus, Martha, the two Marys and Salome, extremities of the cape notcovered by the j bringing with them the body of St. Anne, hood. On this row an intermediate space I the head of St. .lames the Less and a i is left by the separated double crochet few wee bones of the innocents massaby a single chain stitch. Tins space is I cred by King Hero l. But from early worked round by a bice edging, one sin- j ages tliis story has lieen disputed, and g!e crochet on the stitch that separates | the Abbe Duchesne, one of the mosteruthe two double crochets, four double cro- , dite writers on the early Christian saints

1

m.

A BOOK Or UNIVERSAL INTEREST!

cm in., cnocHKiKU c.u’t:.

caet; ID on‘ lie 10 of th -- i r ■ eding row, and 10 (>n the 10 of the following row. The tw it - -m \( - :ith row is linisjir'd off by tight rows of g double crochet and 10 o crocl I. Tho tir t h tlf of I ho c qic i; fini'-lw i’ ; the second half is differ e-|—10 rows n •••l, , d in all. Work the

Attractive in Literary Style. Popular with the Reading Public. A Campanion of the Scholar.

Of the (ireatest Value for Reference.

Unique Among all Publications.

las.

TYPEWRITER.

I

SIMPLE

J chet on the following stitch that sepa-

, caiiopcd Oystaim. thotwooth. r double crochet, one a quart of oysters and plump ^nglecrocheton the followingstitch, and

. , , so on to t lie end.

and martyrs, considers that the relf s of Mary Magdalene were probably sent from Constantinople about the sevuth century. A Greek breviary, however.

PRICt, $60.00.

Has fewer parts by lialf, 1 and weighs less by half,

than any other type-bur machine. Standard Keyboard—forty keys, printing eighty-oue characters. Alignment perfect and permanent. Work in .sight ns soon as w ritten, and so remains. Interchangeable parts. Constructed FI 11 D A D | C | entirely of ,•petal,o,f UUnflnUt file best quality, aim ny uio inosl skilAu workmen. Unequaicd for manifold and mimeograph work. Carriage locks at ond of line, insuring neatness. Type cleaned in five seconds, without soiling the ting' - ! -- . ilattdsome in ap-

pearance and character of work. Speed limited

only by tbo skill of tho operator WSend tor Catalogue and sKClmen of work, ». FRANKLIN EDUCATIONAL C9. 280 dfc V.’abash Ave. CHICAGO.

Drain

them b ■ heating a tablespooufnl of butter in a trying i.an until hot, and then spread the oysters on the bottom and turn cart fully to plump Isith sides. Take out the oystcii with a skimmer and add a heaping tabh - K]>oonful of butter, a salts]H)onlT’l of salt, half n one of pep-

-nrii'kie d nut iii'"''' 1 Wl'oii'ihc* mixture chuin ’ olle ' crochet put before call la beaute du diable; also a beauty of boils, thirke:' 1 !t^udth tuv'lespoonfuV'of ^e first of the following row and not “ugliness," of “old age" and of “thin-

This work is profusely illustnitctl with most beautiful and expensive full-page engravings of the Art Palace, Portraits of the Speakers and Delegates, Principal Officers and Foreign Representatives. It contains a full account of the Origin of the Parliament of Religions, Proceedings of every Meeting of the Parliament, Speeches delivered and Papers read at every session of the Noted Gathering. A lucid explanation of the G eat Religions of the Earth; the beliefs of the various Religious Denominations. Narrative as to many gatherings held

Parliament.

Notices of leading men representing Catholics. Evangelical Protestants. New Church men. Thcosophists, Friends, Mormons. Jews, the Ethical Culture Society, and Religionists of other kinds. Opinions of Imminent Divines in regard to the Parliament. Influence of the Parliament upon Religious Thought of the World. An index rendering all material at

once available.

Opinions and Indorsements*:

rr F.\

FREDI UK K (

from .Mai

mum to iIh

l-..\position It is iiivaliuil»!c as body of stati'liiuiits ol' rulijiioii

crouds.

HEMn IlFHOWITZ. IL I> . Pliil|>dcl|d»ia.— ! Futuro vonorations wil . I doubt not, date f'roin tliis ovont thuopooli of gviH’itil roliHfioiis

i liborty.

PBOF DAVID >WING. « hioiuro. 'Mit ol all

! those intiuiries and tfrccilnips someth lug now

is eotninir namuly, a yroat roligioo.

M MM A I WATI I! M.KLY. Hu liirl.t and ' of nobility of ideas dlspiaytd in the (.’onyross 1 *-* of RoHgh ns by Brahtuins, Mohainniedans and other oriental philosophers has heeo a sur-

prise to the whole occidental world.

The lace is worked in t wo rows. The • baint ns having died at first is beLjuii at onv side of the cape; six Ephesus.—New \ork Recorder,

chain stitch on the fourth, a double i

crochet on the second, not on the edge; Beauty** Varieties, a double crochet on tho second stitcli Tint French say there are several following on theodge of tho rape, finish-i J,s veil ns kinds of beauty—the ing off the first double crochet; three | beauty of mere youthfulness, which they

P( o|

rid s ( olumhiau

presenting a us beliefs and

SPEEDY.

flour wet in cohl water: utir until smooth ami add the oysters. Butter u pudding dish, and when the oysters have boiled jsair tiie'ii into it, and cover the top with line bread eruiiibs that have lieen well seas 'Ued 'vi!*i butter, pepper and salt. Bake in a but oven until nicely browned. Some prefer celery salt to mace andnutmeg for seasoning, or both can ho omit-

ted if preferred.

'< 1 •/ t • » • . < f v t ti > t • . . . *

rt Ixglg'* !"

S< - * n« m ny “tnall ' - n«tnrd enp* »- von nave gn - *•! - 1 in :i pan "t luiiimij water and put a s: - nf'jJ of highlv seasoned gravy m < aeii cup When tiie gravy heats, drop in a fresh egg. Set back the pan and cover it closely. When the eggs are ni'-. ly and tenderly cooked.

the first of the following row and not on tho edge, 0110 double crochet—after tho first following double crocket worked into tho cape—ending ti e first double crochet; three chain, and so on to the end. Wori; t.iis row in silk—one stitch on the first stitch of the three.making the double crochet—five chain, onestitch on the third stitch; four chain, one stitch on the second double crochet; work on to the cape on the right side; four chain,

i i ■ ;i e i ‘

“ugliness," of “old age" and of ness.” called la beaute du singe. Frederika Bremer, the Swedish novelist, lad the beauty of "plainness.” She was so very plain of face that her expression of trustfulness, as though appealing to you to find some other qualities iu her than mere “looks,” shone out with a perfect radiance t l- at ennobled her face and drew friends to her, because she had no other beauty. But Miss Bremer took . ,»> v . [l • t ' i V . , r

I which

NUN' Y<»|{|\ WolM.D. W. |{ Ilou^litou has i-ompih*'! the purfeut record of that im inoi-

ilble coufereiiec.

' I.L M STI DKB A K Kit, < 'nnillllsHionor of I hr \N oi ld's » oluuibian l .xposition. I iielim ethat tlu* Parliament of lt(‘liaio!is will result iti brin^ini; rellg:louH denoininations closer to-

^■et her.

It A Bill ALK\. II. DIISM \U, New York. Two features of this niainiillccnt Kxposltion prc-einim ntlv type the pro«-ress of the centurv- the fleet rieal display and the t onirress of IteliaiotiH. I nitv is the text of both. Klcetriclt> briugs • ai*th v ii ends Into mi ntul un ti . tin* ( onuress points eurtli's spiritual unity in huiiiiui lirotlicrhood and IMyine fatherhood.

following rows; three chain, and so on, 1 winch she used to say, “Even hands repeat. The hood is edged with the | h”ve their momenta” of charm,

same lace, and sew on two bows of rib- I bon at each side of the seam and run a

ribbon tbrouijli (be boles bow in front.

The wheat sent to the “NX aid's fair

l

drop in a bit of butter and a slight sea- from Oregon weighed heavier than that 1 weighs 'J marks 0 ounces (almost exactly bound in l ine Engli-h < l"l h, Iinhl Ike I, and Side Siain|

soiling of salt and pepper and serve at from any other state. Its average was - • • - „ ,

obce. between 62A and 6B jionnds jw»r lutshel

READ cue PROPOSITION. Tin: Diu.> III \ N lai Tim in uill Tninisli lbi> great work In an.i one al lln - priees named below, wbieli are Ihe regiilnr siihseriiitioii piic - -, and. in addition in the hook will give oih - inoiiili’s suliseriplion In Tin; Daii.i Hanni:i; Timks, tle - eost of ivhich i- included in the regular price for the bonk. No coupon i- required. The work may be seen at Tin Bannkii Timks olllee, where it will be delivered on receipt of iln price and an order for the Dm v Han Mat Timks fur one niontli

will lie booked wtllouit exira charge.

■' •'•■■I V . a a .... , , , ; '.rY,Uuu 4 *oii',e\U1i<},fi,' weighing a linn! ix pound -. will !" fiiriii-li. ■! for Ihe I > guiai -ubseripl inn jnie. ; and you abo get Ini: Daii.a Kan x ku Tim is uue inoiilh wilboul ext ia i barge. Satisiactioii Guaranteed or Money Refunded.

j. ne lAUiigariafi crown Avorn at their i

so as 1,1 lie H ax cession 0v the cinp; rors ot Austria as q - |... paid aaIH b, mo-l . lie.iTulii nlmided lo any noi perle.llv -ali-

km^s ol Hungary is the* identical one b«*d. if tin* book U rcliirned within tw<» tlnvs after it- receipt. made for Stephen and used at his eoro- “ TWO YOLLMKS IN ON K—Kt’M.A I I.M’STU*AThl>. A magnitlciMit hook nation over 800 year^ago. The whole is ! for any library. Indi^pcn.-ihlc lo the Si'holar, Tu icher and Read *r.

of iniro gold, except the settings, and

, 1 jf,-2 ;,(»

14 pounds) i uouiin in run .'•iu-v|'. innai A oiyie . I (HI

/

Bound in Full Sheep, [.ilirafx Slyle

book> on exiiiidlinn uini readt lor delivery al I'm Baxm it Timi m nHI< - e, t*t-<ltiy.

THE GREATEST CLEARANCE SALE OF

Dry Goods, Jackets, Flannels, Underwear, Hosiery, Blankets,Yarns, Etc. ^ Ever inaugurated in Greencastle. Winter goods MUST GO. We have put the KNIFE into prices, which will enable you to buy Dry Goods at less than cost. Remember, this

Great Money-Saving Sale commences

..( 11 * • 4 ( < * * t • 4 ■ '1. v 4 4. ; \ \ 4. .

4 ‘ A • . , ^ . 4

\Vecli\eiS(luiN T Morning, Uartnary 3d, 1S04.

BOSTON STOBB,

BARGAIN GIVERS OF GREENCASTLE.

QUALITY THE BEST. WHAT THE BOSTON SAYS IS SO. 1,500 yards of Swiss and Hamburg Embroidery at 7 cents per yard. Worth 10c., 12 ' /2 c. and 15c per yard.