Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 December 1894 — Page 2

THE BANNER TIMEX GREEN CASTLE. INDIANA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7 I8!H

Ghristmas Tics

•Are the strongest of home ties and may be strengthened by a present to the loved ones of elegant ties selected from our mammoth stock. We carry the best of everything in Men’s Furnishings and our great Holiday Sale affords unexampled opportunities for bargains We have many new things in white and colored dress shirts and a full line of gent’s jewelry

Ladies' Gloves and Mittens. In Imported Kid Lined, with and without Fur tops. Also a fine Line of Australian Yarn Gloves and Mittens for men, women, boys and children. All suitable for a nice Present. THE MODEL.

WE DON’T PULL TOGETHER.

Why (ireeiif ttMtle IuXot ProgreHSive—Why Knter|»riH«*H I>o Not Succeed. Over at Effingham. 111., they have a butcher block factory, ar.d it is one of the most prosperous concerns there. At Paris, 111., they have a broom factory that is growing into a big thing. At Kokomo

A Barber’H Motions. “Now that you have finished shaving me, how many strokes of the razor <lhi it require?” asked the man in the chair, as he straight- | ened up to have his hair combed. “That’s pretty hard to tell,” said the barber. “Of course it is. But you’ve

they have a novelty works that I been in the business how long?”

DAILY BANNKll TIMMS

Twlilishod every aftern ><>n except Sunday »t the Hanneh TImks otlioe, corner Vine and

Fmuklin street*.

Target Practice.

Company I indulged in some target practice yesterday at their ritle pits Twenty four men entered in the first series, which was made at 100 yards. Upon this shoot depended the contestants for the next series at 200 yards, as an average of fifteen or better had to be made in the first to qualify for the second. Those qualifying in the first series were the following with their TT scores: Fee 20, Fry 20, Huffman AH communications should be stjpied with I

tin'imiin >i iiir writ t: ii )t n yi ".iriij for 22, Bettis 10, Allen 18, Browning

publici*L»n, but sis « deuce <>1 jpxhI tsiith.

A.. myini>;isc Maniiiulmitionacan iiot # be no-| X5 ? Evans 15, Murphy 17, O'llair

15, Pinnell 21, Adam Keising 20, George Keising 18, Stillwell 16, Wood 20, Calloway 15. The best I possible score was 25, so at 100 yards it will be seen that fifteen of

AovEnnsina. Reai>in<i Notices

6 cents per liii'*. < >ne line paragraphs charged

as occupying two lines space.

25 lines. 4 cents per line 50 “ ’.I* loo “ :i “ “ k * 250 “ 2 l i “ 2 “ “ “ Diep’ay rates made known on application. Cl.ai.gcs ft»r display a ivertiscinents must be banded in by 10o’clock a. m. eachday. Itoading advertisements will be received each day

up t » 1 o’clock p. in.s

Where <L‘li very i* irrf'gular please report sainc promptly at inDdleation ofiiee. Specimen copies mailed free on application.

or SUBSCRIP i

fV.o fa advmicf Sir mouthy Three months On* Mouth fVr week by ('infer

. $5.00

.* rn

105 t.be men got oyer the qualifying dead line. They stopped there, however, as they all but one fell

When delivery is made by carrier, all sub-I , . , . ... •erlption accounts are to be paid to thrm a-* ! uub II oil tllO —oo-y«l!*ti 86ri68. 111. they call and receipt for same. 1* a* 1 * 1

I Hull man uas the only one to qu.u

M. J. BECKETT Eubiuher | ify for the 300 yard shoot, his

HARttV M. SMITH. MaonginK Editor

Ad«lre«s all communications to The Daily Bannek Times,

Greencaatlc, I ml.

score at 200 yards being 17. This shows Hullman to be by far the

best shot in the company.

The target consists of two disks

There are some merchants in which revolve on a pivot. One of our city who are carrying holiday the disks is fired at five times and goods on their shelves and saying then is swung around and down nothing about them. There are into a pit just below it, the other others w ho have lots of the goods! target taking the place of the one and are already disposing of them fired at first. While target No. 2 for the simple reason that they , is being shot at No. 1 is being fixed watch the advertising end of the for another battering. The result business. That is the end that of each shot is signaled from the

target pit to the firing point by a

set of unique signals.

December Forecast. ( rawfordsvllle Journal.

Sunday school attendance will begin to increase the first of December and will culminate into a regular storm period about the twenty-fifth. The little boy will line up in the class wearing a clean collar and a consecrated countenance for all he knows there is candy and orange in it for him and perhaps a red apple and a book tells how little Ralph Reed refused to go swimming on Sunday and had a situation otfered him as er rand boy in ;» bunk, and vooe vu,. idly to be president of the institu-

brings results and the Banner Times is the medium to talk

through. Try it.

John C. Zl ea i f, vice president

of the Citizens National hank, ol Jeffersonville, is a candidate for director of the state prison south, located at Jeffersonville. Mr. Zu-

lauf is a graduate of DePauw uni

versity, class of ’8o, and also a graduate of Harvard law school. He was one of the prime movers in securing the erection of the new Louisville and Jeffersonville bridge. His father, in an early day, was president of the J. M. <fc I. railroad

ami was a iaige Dioptrcy

Mr. Zulauf wa?* a candidate for

congress from the Third district | tion, which paid eight per cent two vears ago ou the republican {scot-annual dividends to the stock ticket and succeeded in reducing 1 holders and carried $5,000 each the democratic majority almost to | year to the surplus fund. On the tlie winning point. Mr. Zulauf j next day after Christmas the little

has had largeexperience in important affairs and his candidacy will

boy will trade his Ralph Reed book off for marbles and relapse into

wc hope prove successful. If all bArharism, persisting in his down-

out state institutions could be placed in the hands of men equally as well qualified and safe, we would never hear of any jobbery or mismanagement.

Common Neime

Should be used in attempting to cure that very disagreeable disease, catarrh. A - catarrh originates in impurities in the blood, local applications can do no

permanent good. The common sense Longfellow, but to us the most sol

method of treatment is to purify the blood, ami for this purpose there is no

ward course until finally sent to the legislature. There will be some snow this

month.

There always is and wc feel safe

in predicting it this year.

Longfellow says: “The silent falling of the snow is to me one of

most silent things in nature.”

This may have been the case with

emn thing in nature is the rent as it silently falls due each month.

,„-e,,aralion superior to Hood’s Sarsa- ^ W|)I ( , raw intere#t thir ty-one ,, , I days this month without any de

IIoou > I 111 > 1*11fit iimllull by Vi*-

storing peristaltic action to the ali-' Nation or discount or relief from inentary enun!. j the valuation and appraisement

, ; laws, and if collected bv suit an at-

A pet-on- i e-ir,,i t> > i> l " 11 '' " ' tomey’s fee of ten per cent shall be leave their names at the office of Alice , A N el-on by Thursday. Deeember 1.5. included in the judgment and t*xcd

45t6 | up as costs.

i

employs nearly a hundred men, making small turnings such as our Variety turning works do. At St Joseph, Mich., they have a knitting factory that employs about 175 girls. At South Bend, Ind., they have a shirt factory that employs over (500 women and girls. Chicago has one printing office that employs over seven hundred people. Greencastle can’t scare up 200 working people in the whole town. Wo are a set of do-nothings. We ought io he ashamed of ourselves. Every mother's son of us ought to find something to do. We are over educated — we don’t know anything that is worth knowing. Education is all right as a means, hut we have been making ir an end. Call a bait. Get out of the rut. See where we are at. See if we have not been moving up and down in the same old place, in the same old way for lo, these many years, and we have not advanced a foot. Young men, boys, before you decide to leave Greencastle for a more ambitious place, as all your ambitious and enterprising brothers have done before you, stop and think and see if you cannot invent some way of employing yourself and others, so as to advance the material interests of tour native town. True, you will meet with greater obstructions here than in some enterprising place where the people all move together to build up. and who are ready to ho!p those who are “worthy and well qualified'' and who are trving to help themselves. Here they will try lo hold you down if you are too ambitious, but the struggle will strengthen you for great achieve ments if you can overcome all difficulties. Here you will not find as congenial atmosphere for your plans to mature in, hut don't mind that, you can live on carbonic dioxide until you die or get used

io it.

But above all, young man. you must never be discouraged. If you get that way, you area “goner.'’ You will find critics here. They’ are thicker than warts on a toad’s hack, but don’t mind that. They are just as harmless. All you want to do is to let them croakicise. But you keep your eye on your business and push it. They will keep up their song, but it is all for their own doleful amusement and for your good. You want to do something. Y'ou don’t want to he a critic—unless you can draw a salary. Y’ou want to he employed in a useful way at a good pay. You want to combine your own energies and knowledge and capital, if you haye any, with others and you will accomplish great good in the world. Great industries have been built up from small beginnings. You may fail, but you will have the consolation of knowing that it was not all your fault. You needed help and sympathy and encourage*m*«f ••nti g"t kicks and erjti'jjsjw and discouragement. If you fail it will be because you could not sue ceed without helpfulness, and that

is prohibited.

Friends, neighbors, fe!!o w citizens, everybody, do \ou see the | point to all this? We must quit pulling each other down and help each other. In so doing we help ourselves and our town.

“Fifteen years.” “Y’ou ought to know by this time about how many stiokes of tliej razor it requires to shave a man, | supposing that you go over his face a second time.” “I might make a guess at it.” “All right. What's your guess?) Remember that I have a hard I beard.” “Well. I should say about 125.” j “You’re a good guesser, I don’t think. Some time ago 1 gut into the habit of counting the strokes of a razor every time I was being! shaved. It’s a gooil way to employ I your mind. In shaving me you j just made 732 strokes with the razor.” “I wouldn’t have believed it.” “No man believes it until he takes the trouble to count. In my case I never knew the number to fall below 500, and it has gone more than 800 at times. I call it a stroke every time the razor is brought forward and then drawn back. I should judge that there are no less than 500 strokes in a first class shave. Y’ou remember that, and you can probably win a few bets.”—Chicago Jtecord.

Soulli C«reencitstIo. Fred Mann, of Indianapolis, is visiting Mrs. Walker. Dr. II. A. Gobin preached at Lueteke’s hall last evening. Mrs. Stubbs and daughter went to Knightsville this morning. A number of young men met with Sherman Nelson at the “soldiers’ home” last night and organized a Young Men’s Christian association. The following election of officers is reported : Omer Welch, president; James Pierce, vice president; Sam Mills, chaplain, and Will Albright, guard. They will meet Saturday evening and frame a constitution and by laws. The masquerade party at the residence of Ross Grismere last evening was a very pleasant affair. About forty well masked guests were present to enjoy Mr. Grismere’s hospitality, and all present report a glorious time. K«‘ul Fatal«* Transfera. F. M. Burkett to Effa B. .Shannon, land in

Kusstdl tp., $9oo.

Mary F. Cheek et al. to M. E. and L. S. Crouch, land in Greencastle, $2000. Bertie L. Hall to Charles Sillery, laud in

Franklin tp., $1500.

Mr. 1\ S' hltizlo Washiiifrton, \ r t. Blood Poisoning 13 Running Sores Cave Way to Hood’s Sarsaparilla. “C. I. Hood & Co.. Lowell, Mass.: “Gentlemen—Thirteen years ago I was In Cour De Alette, now called Fort Sherman, Idaho. While there I went in swimming one day and caught cold, chilling the bone In my leg, causing a fever sore on my limb. The sore continued about three months, continually rotting my leg until It got up to my knee, when I had the limb amputated. My leg was so rotten that after the limn was amputated the foot dropped oft. From this state 1 got blood poisoning and had Thirteen Running Sores on my body. These sores eonttnued f otn three to lour years, my blood being In a terrible condition. After this I commenced taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. I used three bottles and found it did me good, so 1 kept on until I had used ten bottles or more. My blood was comHood’s 5 ^ 11 ’Cures pletely cleansed. The sores stopped running and have not troubled me any now for six years. Mv appetite and digestion are good and I am perfectly well. I owe my cure to Hood’s Sarsaparilla. 1*. S. Kinzie, Washington, Vt. Hood's Pills are purely vegetable and perfectly harmless. Sold by all druggists. tlSc.

NEW MILLINERY STORE, .Imported Felt Hats and Bonnets at reasonable prices. Latest shapes in VELVET HATS, CHILDREN’S HATS AND CAPS.

Mourning lints and Veils. Opp. PostolHee. MISS IRENE M. KLEIN. 277-18wk

THE

“BIO f ROUR” wishes vor a MURKY CHRISTMAS

AND A

HAPPY NEW YEAR! An in Accordance with an OLD-TIME CUSTOM Announces VERYLOWRATES FOR THE HOLIDAY’S, BETWEEN ALL STATIONS. Tickets Will be on Sale j DECEMBER 24, 25 and 31, i»l)4,

AND

.1 A NT ARY’ 1 IRO.'i. <•oou Returning until January 2, Isbd. E. O. McCormick. D. B. Martin, Pass. Traffic Mgr. Oen.Pass.Tkt Agt Cincinnati,

She

■Sun.

Special Engagement, Will remain Three Nights, Longer TM, Friday, Saturday Dae. 6. l and 8.

l T N APPROACH ABI.E!

ASTOUNDING!

M A It V KI.oUS!

The Unparalleled Success

The

ByPHflTIST SUPREME.

E

Whose Marvelous, Miraculous Hypnotic Exhibitions Electrify and Astonish the Public, Press and Scientists. A RARE PROGRAM EACH EVENING. PURE COMEDY. INTERESTING EXCEEDINGLY INSTRUCTIVE Tilt; GREAT KIM K-IIKE.4KING TEST Given on Opening Night A huge six hundred pound rock will he broken on the breast of a hypnotised subject, as shown by out on large bills. PRICKS 25. 35 AND 50 CF.NTS. SEATS ON SALE AT LANDES* ROOK STORK

/mK *' (jk • J". 11 “are, ± , !‘‘ , l»'''l us to re. ‘Ill unctions | hat the U ’£■ <»«ual buyer hm iw oniy to see to a,,. prem,e - 1 mwiv

WE SELL THE Potters’ Celebrated Hio Floss AND Wash SHk. Isaiah Vermillion. 24*4 w Locdl Time Gard. BIG FOUR.

going east. No is* southwestern Kimlted I vj No 8* Mail L-.K® No 14* : -uvi! rn GOING WEST. \° i: X e ?[ lbl " ed Kx l lri ' (,K 1-:—' a in No 17* Southwestern Limited i-tjj j' 2 Vo at Terre Haute Accommodation . . Noll* lU-aSnm • Daiiy t Except Sunday. Train No. 14 hauls sleepers t > Boston and Columbus, sleepers and coaches to ('in,-in uati. No. 2 connects for Chicago, Clneluimii B < levcland and Michigan division point- \- is hauls sleepers for Washington via i . ,v i > sleeper for New York and connects fni Col umhus No. s connects for ( Iticlnnuii ml Michigan division points at Wabash. \,> pi “Knickerbocker Special” sleepers for \ w York. Nos. 7,11 H and 17 connect Insl.l.ou;Unlon depot with western roads. No '.i , n neetsut Paris with i aim division for points south, and at Muttoon with I. c fo r points north. E P. ItnnsTig, Agent

m-imi

m

-£)j_U'UI5VI!IE, NtwAlBANY A CHICAGO Rl

In effect Sunday, May 27, MKJ.

NORTH BOUND.

No 4* Chicago Mall No «* “ Evil

No44t Local

Express

SOUTH HOUND. No il* Louisville Mall No 5* southern Express No 4(11 IsH'al * Daily, t Except Sunday.

. 1:20 a rn .12:05 p :n 12:05 p m 2:17 a m 2:22 p ni . 1:45 p in

VANDALIA LINE. Trains leave Ureencastle. Ind., In effect Nov. A 2"), 1894. r

No 5 No 7 No 1 No 21 No II

MRS. LAURA GIFFORD, FASHIONABLE MODISTE,

i places mem

Respectfully solicits the patronage '

C ^ .... 'I llGY* 6 Vul

ui UrecuOasiie uulies. 1 use the FRI-NCH TAILORS’ SYSTEM.

Work and Fit Guaranteed.

Located at

FOR TilK WF.ST Ex. Sun 8:5(1 a m, for St. 1/mls. 1 tally 12:2*1 a m, for St. Ismis • tally 12:21 p in, for -t. Lmiis ■ hilly 1:11* p in, for -t. 1-oiiis Ex. Sun 5:28 p m, for Torre Haute. FOR THK FAST. No 4 Ex. Sim .. 8:84am.for Indianapolis No 20 Hally 2:20 pm, •* No 8 Daily 8:85 p in, " No 2 Ex. Sun 0:20pm, “ “ No 12 Dally 2:28 am, “ ” N'o B Dally 3:32 a m “ ** PEORIA DIVISION Leave Terre Haute. No75 Ex. Sun 7:()fi a m. lor Peoria. No,77 ” " 3:55 pm. for Decatur. ror complete time card, gly.ivg all trains and stations, and for full Information as to rates, through cars, etc., address W E Hrunnkr, ‘ ""“' 'c^enca^tie. Asst. Gen I Pass. Agt. St. Ixuils. Mo.

plot /1|u;ay5 do people get all the real enjoyment out of life that is possible. Not always. If they did you would never find a home that did not contain a Conover, Smith & Nixon. Stuyvesant or ^ Kingsbury.

All are of

HIGHEST ARTISTIC EXCEL-

LENCE,

and an* prepared and bought by the

.•Div: * ,• . fjj , r -X. .

tonal force, combined with deptii of I sonority ami musical qualities which places them in the foremost rank of fine

Common Sense from the South Samuel Mlnturn Feck, the Alabama poet. I think the giving of presents at Christinas is a pretty custom which American vanity and love of display have perverted into a gross abuse. Expensive gifts should never he made ex-j cept in those eases where the closeness of the tie hy blood or inai riage would render the gift of an equivalent in money not indelicate. I believe a feelinij of relief would pervade the land if a sumptuary law were enacted and en- ! forced forbidding the acceptance at Christmas of any gilts of more than fifty cents in value, save in cases of guttering.— From “The Common Sen nr of Chrutma* (lift*," in I> nioreal's Muyixine for December.

The First of American Newspapers CHARLES A DANA, EDITOR. The American Conelifittion, Hie American Idea, the American Spirit. The first, taut,and all the time, forever. Daily by mail - $G a year Daily&Sunday by mail$8 a year The Weekly - $1 a year tEbc 5unba\> Sun is the Greatest Sunday Newspaper in the World. Price 5c a copy. By m til $2 a year. ADDKE.SS THE SUN, NEW YORK

402 E. HANNA-ST.

292-tf

vour home r I .er.'« “tart Y ,, o "o

the road to happiness by showing you our magnificent line of pianos-anu we’ll -iell von one ns cheap ns you can hoy it in London, New Y'ork. Chicago or San

Francisco. Catalogue free.

Newhouse & Jeffers,

Fine Tuning a Sp^-ialty.

.83 lyr Office—Room ,t. Sfusic Hall

REMEMBER THAT III. LQoore Will supply the people with flrstolass GROCERIES at the lowest living prices. I also keep a full line of Glass" ware and Queensware. Doeorated Din ner Sets, I owls and Pitchers, and Tin Ware of all kinds. Salt by the barrel. I keep a tine line of Toilet Soaps. Ali kimls of Fruits, Nuts and Candies for Holiday Trade. Last hut not least, will give with every box of Mascott’s Baking Powder—price 25 cents—a child s quadruple silver set, embossed knife fork and spoon. Just the thing for a Christmas present. J. \Y. Moore, N. Side Square. Abram’s Old Stand. 44-d3m

When You Eat You Want The Best. Lueteke’s Bakery supplies the best in O the BREAD

line. Pies, Cakes, Rolls, Doughnut . etc., to suit the most fastidious taste.

LDETEKE.

The Greencastle Baker.

Vuinlnlia Line Kxcuraions.. To Cincinnati; fare round trip, ffi.-'h Tickets good going only on train No. 12, leaving Greencastle at 2 :2S a. in., Sunday, Dec. i). return limit Dec. 10. J. S. Dow UNO, Ag’