Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 November 1894 — Page 2

THE BANNER TIMES. GREENCASTLE. INDIANA SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2l,l8iU.

Ti'he 'Furkeq’s Doom

NEWSPAPER RELIABILITV.

Why a N«*wnpa|»i»r Keport^r Soin»*tna«*H

»* port' r Ain

MakeH Print.

IndiiiimpoliH Journal,

q School Nolen.

The desire for a school paper has I again revived. Two years ago a paper 'vus edited by the class of ’Oo but itVas then impossible to print it. Since that time the school

named by our house.

A good, warm working suit for S4.00, S5.00 and 56.00. A good knock about suit for

$7.C'o, $7.50 and $8.00,

* 10.00 and 512.00.

Fine all-wool tailor made suits

in ENGLISH

DAILY DANNLli TIMES

Published every JiitcmDon cxet'pt Sunday nt the IIann 1 K f l i mks olMcc, corner Vine and

Franklin streets.

A PVERTlS! NG. Hk Notitks

f» cents per line. ‘ )ne line paragraphs changed as oceupyinir two lines f pace. •25 lines.’ 1 cents per line fVi “ 3Vi loo *» 3 ** r»<h» M M Id 3 * ' iv riles tnado known on application. ( uii.. . s tor dNpHv a Ivertisements nnist be tiauded In by 10 o'clock a. in. each day. Bead* iii>r advertisoMients will be received each day

up to I o'clock ui.

Will soon be written. It will be

a cold day when he gets left asj Now and then a newspaper writhe surely will be, and it will be er who is not content to be a re-

a cold day for you unless you porter <■ olves "takes” out of his board has purchased 'the printing are provided with warm clothing j imagination, but such instances outfit for the use of the schools and made as we are now having ours I are rare. The reporter obtains his u is now possible to publish a pa made, and you can easily afford information, or bis misinformation, per. It has been given the name to buy a full outfit at the prices from those who«re, or claim to be, of ‘ The High School Exponent."

tamiliar with the facts of the oc- Fred O^g is the editor-in-chief with eurrenees. If they are intelligent the following associate editors: observers and truthful relators, the Nellie Tribby, 95, alumni; Edith reporter’s account is nceurrate in Kagan, senior local; Nellie Landes, the main. He may not,give all the middle local; Laura Christie, junior

Extra •Miod all-wool suits foi-, ,n ' ni| te details, and some of them local; Lizzie Price and My rile Hid-

j may not be correct. If the re- path, literary; Mary Birch, ward porter gets the versions of several department. It will be issued parties he honestly endeavors to monthly and contain eight pages, give the most plausible account The price per copy will be five cent*, | which the testimony affords. It which is to pay for the ink. paper, j there are conflicting statements the covers, etc. All of the work will | reporter usually condenses those of he done by school pupils in the I both sides. Consequently, if news- high school building, and thus the papers reports, as general 1\ made, paper will be a true high school exare unreliable, it is because the j ponent. The first number will be sources of information are unreli issued Nov. 2*, the last day of able. The papers do not make j school before the Thanksgiving them: indeed, so far from that, the holidays. The alumni department managers of all reputable papers of the paper will be especially inimpress upon reporters the import-1 teresting to graduates of the school, ance of giving facts. If, as some Dr. Kidputh has contributed a very say, no one can believe the news interesting article to the literary papers, it is because no one can be- department. Copies of the paper lieve the people who constitute a may be secured by addressing Miss community. Those who make such Kid path or any of the editors, charges are further from the truth j The enrollment is 170.

than any newspaper can he, unless they give reporters statements as

After Pneumonia

and

Catarrh, Abscesses,

Dyspepsia

Mood’s Sarsaparilla Cave Robust Health and Strength.

IkiDlinnr

Esta

. , ' " 'liltf" ■ h’-ig.iii! " |„J M ’-" ll:l 'e v ’'"'I Dr vearl 11 an I tin le ^ l »• *1 l t ‘ l l"‘l t„ lllK I hat | J ‘•AMi:il l,i, v ,. r | ■ mdy to t0# J preenuo.

•I. M. IH RLEyI OIBco iivim- Klrst 1

• n ' m1 "||«i Haul

J

CLT^V AAZOrt^TtErDS OINLV $15.00.

ilcaw. Warm. Lori GVIFrnfiflflTfl and $ 5 - tivlitvi ' :. i.i'i,; !| S TT'.oO, $8 l;\tia li '.hlu.'i r I’oeI U J LUUUP 1 U ’+1-0 and $1.50

Best 25-cent Undo, wear Ever Sold for the Money. MOI )b\l, r> 1+OTH1NG HOUSE!

All cmiiHninicat inn:< shnnlfl he 8iyrni*<l with the mimf nf thf wiit*r: not nctu'.^urily for pulilii Dion, but n.H tn iil.-ncD of irood faith. A.ioiiyinous c nmmmicntlons cun not he notlcfil.

black eye everywhere. The result of the ballots on Nov. (5 showed that. Butler is greasing the ways for a great big thud. It had better fall on itself before tbe college people of Indiana fall on the college. Butler will lose on more than four downs on Thanksgiving day is the prediction of the Banner

Times.

Mr. Hm.. IF. Otis Ts » well known Marl;smith of Trenton, N. J. Ho writes Illustrating the great building up, blood purifying powers of Hood’s Sarsaparilla after serious illness: “G. I. Hood & Co.. I.owell, Mass.: “ I am pleased to make a statement of my experience with Hood’s Sarsaparilla. I am a blacksmith and contracted a severe cold which developed Into pheumonla. Before I got over the Illness, two large abscesses gathered on my limbs. Different medicines failed to do me any good. CaUirrh and dyspepsia Made Mo Very Weak und I lost flesh. I was advised to Dike Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Before I had used a bottle I began to feel better. I continued and have taken five bottles nml it has cured me of all my troubles V llTl

WE SELL THE Potters’ Celebrated I ^ilo F loss j AND I Wash Silk]

Isaiah Vermillion. 24-4w

and made me perfectly well. I now have a good

Hood’s 5 ;^ Cures

WIht'* tl 'Mvtry i** irre*rii!tii* please report taunt* promptly at tuLTe t!i ”ii ottlce.

Spuelim n coph h ii- Alt tl free on application.

MATES O'* ‘JUBS ^R.p I .ON. One Vtxu in .nfr (lire $i.r nwnths .... Ti■ ■ (ini . Per u'ff'U Ini r

Dun's report for this week, in spite of democratic croakings. says: There is some change for the better. The gain is slow ami in some directions not very distinct but the signs of it are a little more definite than last week. The most important of

yym them is l.-ugcr employment of labor,

. U:!T

insuring a better demand on the

•ib whole for manufactured products.

win'll i iiv iyi- ■ . i ■i’. nil sub- Most of this is due to the unnatur-

pcripli »n arc rmf- ;t! «* to be puid to them |

they oul! an 1 rcoctot lor hume.

M. .1. MPT’KI'T I ... HARRY M.SMI I'll.

... Hulilisher . Mnuat^mg EJitnr

A'Mn «s all fjoinnninleiitioiis to Thk Daily Hannkk Timks, Oreeneastle. Ind.

A Bl.muiiXGT n editor was robbed ibis week. Burglars entered his o'liee ami blew open the safe. No

loss. A thief who editor's safe for g

al delay ol orders for the winter, which resuFed from prolonged uncertainty. but it means actual increase in earnings and purchasing of the millions, and so sive promise of a larger demand in the future.^

Circuit Court.

Moore C. Dickerson, mimr, vs.

would wreck an ! Jo8e P hine Hice ‘* l al , h»n<l ^ale;

old should Be stricken from docket,

bored for the simples. He should D r Donnohue vs. Hammond be sent to the insane asylum rath- j es * H * e > n, de; judgment for .floofut. er than to the penitentiary. Wm. Rock way et al., ex parte,

Win. Roekway et al

| partition ; dismissed from docket, this; Joseph H. Clark vs. Jas. Allen The et a *’ 10 Quiet title; finding for

Among the fool tilings of

campaign is the bond issue,

bankers draw their gold from the j P* ,l ’ n,l| iU. S. treasury, and will on Monday Home 1$. L. A T

pay it back in the purchase of

bonds. This will be kept up until the republicans get a chance at existing laws. Democrats will give no legislation in the short term

beginning next month.

Ik swiping the public funds make an “aggressive” democrat then Green Smith Tills the bill. The re-

S. A. vs. Hardy

W. Burns, foreclosure; judgment

for $18113.21.

E. B. Evans vs James H. Sandv, note; judgment lor $65.10. Washington Wilson vs. Bradford Scribner, note; venued to Clay

county.

You SIumiM (iet It. Should got what? Why. tbe Rev. Irl It. Hicks’ splendid almanac for 18i)5. He lias kindly sent to this office a copy

publican press is not forgiving ,,f the same, and we speak advisedly Green lor being aggressive. When in saying that it is a rare publication— Smith visited I’utnam county for j tlie v «Lv hitest and best of all that has , , . _ j •‘inauatt-d from the lieu and brain and two speeches .luring the campaign , tt . Hrt of thi8 ^ k , |1((W|1 fri , 1|d (lf t , „ the Banner I imes showed up his ,,,,1,11,.. The liistory of tills man’s work

now an open book to all America—

odious record to such an extent that the attorney-general got real

angry. In fact ail

ami a casual glance at ids almanac for

ilie wind was couviucat u- that hi; vitally useful

and instructive book ought to find its

] appetite and weigh flvo pounds heavier than 1 ever before. I cannot recommend flood’s Sarsaparilla too highly." Wm. W. Otis, s»9

Unebling Street, Trenton, New Jersey.

Lawrence DeMotte, Jess.' Preston,

, , , .... Morris Tribby,’94, and Will Woods

far Irom tlie truth as their |udg- • • , ,

’ 0 visited the school last week.

ment. But the point the Journal would emphasize is that the newspapers, as n rule, state matters of news as they get them. They do not improvise. There is a good deal of gossip printed in many papeis, but it, is the gossip of the community or of persons in it, and not the creation of the reporter.

I ninn of Two liuliaua Conferenceg. Dr. G. L. Curtiss has the following iu the II enteru l'hrintian Advo

•‘ate t his weeiv :

The Southeast and Indiana con-

N’ellie Matson sang a solo Tues day morning of last week and Miss Flowers and Josie Armstrong played a piano duet last Friday. Ha Hie Bridges, ’91, was present for a while Tuesday forenoon. The senims are examined in geometry next Monday afternoon and in history next Wednesday afternoon. The middle Latin class has begun Caesar. Those of the middles who do not take Latin are taking

ference appointed a commission to ! , ' s y ( '* 1 °l"S.''. arrange details for their completed The game with the Crawfords union in September, 1895. The viBe boys is stirring up great en joint com mission met in Meridian thusiasm. The boys have been Street church. Indianapolis, No- s >t‘i'JiIy practicing and have not

vein her 7th. There were present

from the Indiana conference II. J. Talbott, W. R. Halstead, M. S. Ileavenridge, J. M. Baxter and T. H. Willis; and from Southeast Indiana conference II. A. Buehtel, J. W. Dashiell, C. C. Edwards, E, L Dolph and Geo. L. Curtiss. It

lost heart in spite of their recent defeats. Although they are not

heavy men their playing is made to count by their quickness. One ot the comments on the game with 1900 was that the high school team played scientifically. The high school team at Crawfordsville to-

was agreed that the session of the I l * a .V W 'B be made up as follows: conference should he held in Cen-| Center, Lighter; right guard, Bortrul Avenue church, Indianapolis, den; left guard, Lane; right tackle. Drs. Buehtel, Dashiell and Tal Curtis; left tackle. Ellis, right end, holt were constituted a committee Barnaby ; left end, Durham ; quar to arrange the program for the ter back, Daruall, right half back, conference sessions. Kelley; left half back, Zink; full It was agreed that the name of Lm,.^ Burlingame. Substitutes, the united conference should be Higert, Donnohue and Brockway. “Indiana.’’ The committees of c x-1 aminations are to act each fur the ,,,, part of the conference for which Seashore gunners hold that the they were appointed, und accord- wil J goose can count two, but not

ing to the methods each has prev-

iously adopted. The hoards of stewards are to gather the information concerning all conference claimants in the two conferences, and place in the hands of confer enee the first dav of the session in

three. According!}’, it is customary in preparing to shoot wild geese from a blind or some detached ribbon of marsh, for three men to row over to the station together, and for two ot them to return to the mainland. The geese.

Hood’s Pills cure all Elver Ills. Biliousness, Jaundice, Indigestion, Sick Headache. £>c.

The levelling I’nper.

Eaeli season the evening paper is more indispensable to business. It

Doeal Timf^ Gird, BIO FOUR.

GOING EAST.

No 10* Veatlbuled Expnm

No t’l 'ndliiimpolls -i n',! No 8 h woHlern 1.1 ml, cl I ' p S' Ho 14* 7.7.7. 1.”I’

m .. . going west.

No 1 Veatlbuled Express p *.

No 9* Mall

No 17* Southwestern 1.1 milnd I 1 ri, ! n No .1* len-u Huutr Accommodation. |,

Dali* + i xoept Sundit}

Trnln So. 14 h ulls aleepers I , Bosi,,,, „ n ,i I o uuibiis, sleepers tuul conehi s i , uu A" -. e.niiieets for I’hli-nr ( levelHiid Hiid Mlehlirnn HIvkI,.., ...

niel Mlnblaan division'p . \ , » » - **’ - V hi 1 , ,v 111

IS hauls sleepers f.ir WHshiilirtnii

sleep r fur N ew York and e nini ets r „ V' uintnis No. s eonneuts for < incimi n (1 i

is the home companion, telling the j •• r K"hd(ouY',7L l 'r'spiiuYY“!i'Yp.'rIi h 'f,ir' \ J

news of the day after after tlie , Un^n 'wul, 9 ^^

day's work is over. It is liesh and s'm j am!,!' u'r m 1 : i', I |', ,n' 'wiu,' Y'i" •" 11 l "’‘

un iting just at the hour when men,

women and children have a little! leisure and gather quietly about the ev< ning lump. The morning paper is hurriedly rend at the 1 breakfast table and then east aside. | No one has time for more than a glance. The men are off’ to work ; ; the women have their household

for points

E I*. IftlESTIS. .Went

' —— -Ol touisvniE N[walbahy£ Chicago Ry

In olfpct Sunday, Hay ST, 1HK1. .. , north hound. No 4 I liloaRu Mull . N° H* *’ Express .

duties, and the children are called NoWf , ' ocal

to school.

But at night it is different, and the family, all the family, want the evening newspaper, for already the morning news is stale. So the evening paper, which is

No 3* EonlsvIlluMnii No 5* ’-oilt In ru Express.

No flit luteal

Daily, t Except Sunday.

.... 1:3' ;t m .... |X:0R 3i ....IJ:(V> p in

3:17 i in 2:53 |i n f:4."i p ni

VAN DAL]A Li NE.

Truing leave t.roonoHstle, Hid . In effeot Sept •M), 1H94.

dean, cheerful, intelligent, com-1No 5 Ex. s,, n . F '.! K ^a^jor s t . ixiuis

prehensive, catholic; which can j No i give the news of the markets, the No'a ex s.

Daily Daily

. in, for Nf. Ltmis. IY: 3 p m, for M. Louis, j:Kip in. for «t. Uniis o/JH p m, foi Tern* Haute,

reports from every political field I No 4 Ex. 8,,n.Indtanjipoli..

iinda review of the world’s hap-j No » Dally' 3:86 pm; penings, without crowding out lit- j n« is Daily'*38S1",'•• •• erary features, fashion reviews, so-1 N ° U l,rtl1 i‘E<uu a'd“vTm()n eiety gossip, marriage engagements | . 7:( « B m . , OP Pporlll and divorces, will always be ‘he i a c ; .n,p.'ote tl'me oa^';. , ;:n f ; r a!i > ^ 1 "„ r .

favorite companion at the winter |

tt Z lde '. W F Brunner. J 9 DowL, ^ A Sio. lo w in this position und retain asseOen i i*a««. art.st.iajui*,Mo.

A CHARMING WIFE.

And above all a

it the evening paper has to he.

A G0,)|) husband,

taint none of it with malice or vulgarity: it must mingle with local news, the news of the world, und give the voice of the world as it is heard in art, in literature, in sci enee and in politics, and all thisl must be of today, not of yesterday.

Subscribe for the Daily Bahnick

Times and get in with such a paper

. Sweet To nd Piano

1885. The board of bishops Hrp j being unable to count above two,

taken out of Smith’s argument, ^ iut0 ,. v ,. ry ^ ;md requested to hold the conference i believe when the - v 8e « the two men

and had In made, two mor»‘ upeeubes . htime ^ the T!ic &rtt . c of llje in Putnam, those fevv votes tin* re nook—only 26 cents—could not to our publicans lacked would have been knowledge be investe I for any one forthcoming. Send Smith in again I thh'K more profitably. It contains 84

, I pages, printed on line book paper, with

next campaign, gentlemen, and , . . . , ' 1 ’ , ' r> > j elegant covers in colors. Ills for side you will assist the republicans , by al , neWBdealt . r8 . TUIs „ llt . a i 1IianH ,. j 8 greatly. | given as a pi'emiuni to every yearly

I subserilier tp tlie Kev. Irl K. Hicks’

The Thanksgiving foot ball j vvell known and deservedly popular

foot ball

game is attracting great attention ! paper, Word and Works. This unique and is causing much well placed .h , '"'" al *« >* 1'eerless educator of the .. . . i, . ,i„„i masses, and is fast becoming a housecensure to attach to the Butler , .. . , ...

hold guardian and necessity in the

tean There is a breaking of all | , lome9 of A . I|eri( . a Thow , who want precedent in Butler's notion, and j to keep up with all tbe advanced the managers of that club should . thought of the age in science, religion either give up claim to a division'“m 1 al1 social, commercial, intellectual of the "honors und finance of tho ! a "d domestic subjects, should subscribe

for Word and ^Vorks. SulGeriptions

eoilege association’s final day or yesr# Y ou can end 1 r

bctvrccn

1895.

Sc-jfU wb»; 15 and' 33, ] friurnin-u that no enemy Va- beer

as named above. Ctneinnntl «3.ao.

The Big Four will make a rate of $2 •'>() to ('iucinnati and retorn tlekefr good going on s|>i-fial train leaving (im-tu-asi ic 2 ion iSaturdny night. Nov I 24, and returning until 2<>th. I* B M.u:-!:::, G. I’. A:

Make life wortli living. If you an not thorougbly conversant witli tin qualities tiiat make tlie iiigb grade, sweet tone I pianos, pay u- a visit of inspection. \ h-itors a re not asked to buy, but you will lie charmed with the beauties of our instruments. They are the

STEINWAY

• C»v * SMITH «: NIXON *TT V Y Y iSSAN 'l. BKIGC.S 8CHUBKRT. KINGSBURY

j left upon the marsh, and approach [the spot without fear. It is as

A (areal HttMle

• n • „» 1 I sorted that if only two men no out Is contlmmllv on m tlie Iniinan , J ® system. The demon of impure blood ! and onl V one returna . the geese will

strives to gain victory over tbe constitution, to ruin health, to drag victims to the grave. .Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the weapon with which to defend one’s self, drive the desperate enemy from the field, and restore bodily health for many years. Hood’s Fills cure nausea, sickness, indigestion and biliousness. 25c.

eurefolly avoid the

blind.

region of the

Today’H fl-orai Market*.

[Furnished the Daily Banner Timks daily by K.W. Allen, manager of Arthui

•Iordan’s poultry house.!

Hens

Kwinirs.choice

I < fcks, yountf .

pull out of the combination, before j 1, ot |, (lir^.t to Word and Woi«ks Pub-1 Uocks.oKi

....3

getting kioked out bodily. There lisbing Co., St. Louis, Mo.

is no honor in Butler's ac tion, and iredici that the same result 1

Two dozen old newspapers at

we predict that tlie same result . ,, ,, , , the Banner Iimes ollice

will blast that Cc.'leges l florts on, . er. i.esn r« , , r n . ; ( ' l * ,lts ' I hese papers will be found 1:1,uor. No. 2..

i hanksgiving dav, as has fallen to . , very useful In many wavs. They

the lot of all other perfldv and dis ' . . " , , ~ .

are nice for pantry shelves, under

Turkey hens, choice fat Turkeys, young,in IBs and over Turkeys, old toms Ducks

Geese, choice f. f. slim and over

,. „ 1 Geese, plucked 26 lOr live KirgH. fresh, subject to Incndilncr IK

nutter, fresh roll H

6 4

4%

..its

Mounting I'liotiigrapliM.

The satisfactory mounting of photographs is a troublesome operation, and the following sugge stion from a contributor to The Outlook may bo of assistance to amateurs: “I leave found a method by which a photograph or engraving can bo monnted on the thinnest paper without curling or wrinkling. If the picture is a photograph, it should bo ironed out smooth with a hot iron and then trimme d. Mix a little gum arabio in hot water so ns to make n rathe r thick mucilage. Place the picture on the page in position and mark

New Tariff and Income Tax law.— I'he Gorman farin' law, passed reccntlv by congress, has been republished by flu* Tribune in pamphlet form, 52 pages, giving the language of the aet In full, and eompsring its rates with those of j the McKinley bill. 'Ibis is tbe only complete and accurate comparison of j llte two laws, i be pamphlet also eon-j tains the new income tax law, which congress ordered to take effect January 1, 1895. The new rates of duty have discouraged agriculture, lowered* wages, decreased the revenue, and frightened employers. Every reflecting man will tinu, first in the threat of this legislation and next its actuality, the source

of the bard times.

TV.? r’-ociv-' goods ditect from the makers and sell at the low est pi ices uml on easy lerius.

Newhou&e & Jeffers,

Fine Tuning a Specialty. ** Ivr Office—Room 3, Music Hall.

10 cent s ;i

copy. For sale at the Banner Times j Now in operation

d&w-tf ! *

office.

THE BANNER TIMES

Book

Bindery

v in operation

Is turning out some of the

Do Vou E»at Bpc.ad?

Well, well, that is a silly

just inside the corners. Remove the question to ask. Of course 1 !

picture and take some of the mneilage j t . on a ruling pen and draw a heavy line ’ 1

of mneilage front otto point to another, | P" ^ C F

so ns to make a line of mucilage allT},^

aronnd the place where the pictnro is to IOU can get it at

Handsomest Styles.

honor deals this year.

And tin n carpets and in other ways. Re-

is but little doubt that perfidy and member the price—two dozen for dishonor has been given a pretty live cents. tf

1’lg Foul' S<A«'Ot'ni«»l)ft.

Home seekers excursion to southern slates Dec. 4. half are. 20 days limit. To Hot Springs, Ark., account medi- curl."

F. P. Hekstih, Agt.

be. As soon as the mneilage is sticky nearly every grocery store in put the picture in place and a book over Greehcastle and also Vtf Lie if f. I..Ill if flit Whan ,lrv- nUll N-X lV-dll_clNllC, <1110 aiSO Of IMS

Of binding ever shown In the city BANNERTIMES BUILDING.

it to keep it flat. When dry, yon will , ‘ ’ V • , , 11 : At the Banner Times bindery have a smooth uio’MP that will not Supply wagons which HO doubt ! take one inch thickness of pitmo mi

1

pass your door. I ’ 2V-3m

mend ami bind it in

for two dollars.

we

f piano music, hftiibsnme style

ut6&wtl