Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 November 1895 — Page 2
THE BANNER TIMES. GREEN CASTLE, INDIANA SATURD^ i HOY EMBER 301895
The Question of Economy. When great corporations are expending thousands of dollars in devices to save time, labor and materials, there is evidence enough that this is an age of economy. We wish to put the strongest emphasis upon the economical features of the , a jestic Zt This Range is the greatest saver of fuel, food and of woman’s strength and nerves. It brings the cost of cooking down to the minimum and keeps it there. No wonder it is turning the cook-stove business upside down, because it is a revelation in its way. The Majestic is no experiment; took 30 years to perfect it. COOPER BROS. HARDWARE CO.«t,
for a while had not the organette gone to his rescue and prostituied itself in order to aid the Ijqunr ele ir.ent. The Democrat with such a record as that shouldn't criticise any one. It should delegate that task to a “Veteran Democrat” or a “Citizen,”
M. & L. S. FECHHEIMER & CO. Clothing and Woolens, Nos. (41 and 143 Race St.
I # i>
V
Cincinnati, O., Nov. 18, 1895.
j\V
We make one or the best quality and fitting overcoat at
iso- 6 WASH ■
515.00. 7X. G. LESTER.
GEO, E. BLAKE, Greencastle, Ind.,
General
Insurance, Real Estate And Loan
Agent.
week. The combined editorial talent seems to work in unison on this and there is a suspicion that there is a pipe line connection between the editorial rooms of the two ex ponents. In the meantime the
The Democrat today opens up its columns to a lot of slush signed by “Veteran Democrat” and “A Citizen” in which the Banner Times is criticised. The articles hearing no names arc as cowardly as they are un'rue. They hear the ear marks, however, of having been written in Uie Democrat office and having been credited to vaporous outsiders, in order for tuat sheet to j get its opinions before the people without fathering the same—a favorite pastime of the organette wlun up a tree. The Banner Times has no time to waste on men who hide behind fake interviews and titles like “Veteran Democrat ’ or “A Citizen.” Until they uncover we cannot recognize them. There ana whole lot of people who like to hide behind a nom de i>litine when writing their opinions, and it is a very cowardly practice, whether in a newspaper interview or an anonymous letter, tuere being no differ-
ence.
Mr. F. A. Hays,
DEAR SIR:
Greencastle, Ind.
0 0 # t i 0
A*
Rei-cuj.icans in from the country today report the out districts as all feeling confident of carrying! F.itnain next fall for the entire j
Star Press has riot mentioned the | coun, 3 ; rL, P l ' bl,oan tickt ‘ t There i9 j new press and engine of its rival. I !l change of sentiment in J
Money Loaned
By the way we fail to see where the Star /'res* has torn any garments over the .remonstrance matter this week.
Call and see him before
ing elsewhere.
clos-
DAILY BANNER TIMES
Some cross road democratic newspapers, and democratic peanut politicians, are going about and saying “the democrats have put the republicans in the hole on the
At a Very LOW| Xieholson bill and that their action Rate of Interest ' vil1 lo8e the stute b . v 20 > 000 major-
ity.” The republicans are willing to'take due credit for all their temperance laws and their record in the legislature will not hurt them in the least. In the fight next year the democratic party will have enough to do without harping on an old question. The tarilf, money matters, their rapidly growing de-
, , , , t , licit in the public treasury and Changes for dlnpltiy advertisements must be . ^ banded In by 10 o’clock a. m. each day. Head- other matters too numerous to
iutf advertisements will be received each day |
up to 1 o'clock p. in. ( mention will put minor questions
The Nicholson law
will not he an issue next year. It is now a law and will remain so unless the supreme court knocks it out. There are other questions for our democratic, friends to ponder over in the coming campaign that
NATES or SUBSCRIPTION. ... .
On,. Fearmadvance $5.nu will worry them sufficiently with rhrTmUnih,. : . .. d* out taking up questions already
One month... ... -JO solved Ptr week by < arrier JO
Published every afternoon except 8111 at the Bannbk Times office, corner Vine
Franklin streets.
Sunday
and
AU communications should he signed with the shade,
therameof the writer: not necessarily for publicitlon, but as evidence of good fa th. A.lonymous communications can not be no-
ticed.
Where delivery is irregular please report same promptly at publication office. Specimen copies mailed free on application.
ADVERTISING RATES.
IIIKPl.AY.
1’erlncli. first insertion Kiel.. " ** each subsequent Insertion 5 ets. - - per month $1.00 Guaranteed po.ltIon chariri-d per cent to 1(») percent extra. Position not iruaranteed for advertisements of less than 6 Inches. No diseount lor time or xpacr; five per cent allowed when payment accompanies order. KKAPINO NOTICES Brevier type, per line. Tie. One line paraxrttphs cliarjnal as oeonpylnir two lines space. The following rnt*-s will he allowed only tchiu cosh ncetimpanlatonler. 35 lines < centa per line mi “ :»4 loo “ II 350 “ 24 " “ “ 500 “ : 2 M. J. 'tRt KKTT Publisher HARRY M. SMITH Managing Editor AtidresK all comininileatloiiB to The Daily Banner Times. Greencastle, Ind.
“The “organette ih amusing. When delivery is made by carrier, all sub-j
seriptiou accounts are to be paid to them as When college opened tins year the they call and receipt for same. *
Banner Times departed from its custom in former years ami established a DePauw department sepa rating it from other news and adding it to the other features of the paper at additional expense and upon a separate page. The “organette'’ at once took offense and has since harped upon that department seeking to make capital out of it. That the department is popular is proved by the manner in which it is read; it has added a large num her of subscribers to our list and many advertisers desire their ads. placed on the same page as appears the college news. The Banner Times gives all the news on its lull of fare, and the organette should use what it wants and throw the rest aside. There is no compulsion about the matter. Still it is funny we say to see the organette and its cringing correspondents (who hide their names) criticise this paper when the organette has been constantly increasing its college de-
Telephones.
COUNTING ROOM editorial room
62 95
Send news to Telephone 96.
1’utnam and it is coming to the re-
pubiican party. Smith Hanged.
Charles N. (Pacer) Smith, was changed at Decatur, III., yesterday at 11:55 a. m. in the corridor ot the county jail in the presence of :10<) people. It was a smooth job with no mistake anywhere. Smith was nervy to the last and died while repeating the Lord’s Prayer. Three Catholic priests stood on the scatlold and Sheriff Nicholson and Deputies Holmes and Stabler did the work. Smith’s neck was broken by the fall of 7 feet. He was pronounced dead in 15 minutes. Last September Smith killed his little six year old daughter and Miss Edna Buchert. He tried to kilt his wife. She escaped. Yesterday Smith confessed that he took part in the torture and robbery of VVm. Klorey in 1894. He located the money but would not give up the names of five people who aided him in the job.
We begin next Monday to take our annual Inventory, and we would rather close out the balance of our heavy weight goods than invoice them. We have sent you by express today a sample garment each of the balance of our stock of men’s suits, men’s pants and men's overcoats, so also a sample of boys’ and childrens’ goods of all kinds. We have put upon them prices that you can readily see are about fifty cents on the dollar as compared with what you have ever paid for this same class of goods. We give you the first opportunity, believing that you can use all of it. In any event, you have the choice. We must hear from you by return mail, for if you are not interested, we have other customers who will gladly avail themselves of the opportunity. You will understand that these prices are to close the lots, and while some of them are large lots, the prices are so small as will make you wish that the lots were larger. Awaiting your reply by return mail, we are,
Very truly,
^ M. & L. S. FECHHEIMER & CO. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY. Dated Cincinnati, Ohio, 11-21, 1895. TO F. A. HAYS. The entire lot shipped today. You ought to have the greatest bargain sale everofiered. M. & L. S. FECHHEIMER & CO. We Now Have the Above Goods
On our counters, marked in plain figures, at the greatly reduced prices at which they were bought, which is
Forty to Fifty per cent Cheaper
Difficulties of an Editor. To run a newspaper without oe casionally publishing an item that is untrue or give offense, is like running a railroad without having sniashups and accidents. It can’t be done. No man in the world is so much imposed upon as the edi tor of a newspaper. Pushed with work continually, he must rely upon second and third parties for information as to the events that transpire. Frequently statements are received from reliable people, but which are subsequently discovered to be without any foundation in fact. If, therefore, kind reader, you fintl yourself aggrieved by any statement in your home paper keep the fact in mind. Do not “fly off the handle” but go to the editor and ask for a correction, and take our word for it, nine eases out of ten, if your ease is just, you will be received like a gentleman and the correction made with pleasure But, instead of this if you go around blowing about the editor and his paper, don’t be surprised if you get treated with scant courtesy when you visit the office. There are but a few of us who are entirely fault less.
Nicholson cabinet pictures are the best ami the cheapest, postotficc gallery, open every day. 2!i e o tl. Subscriptions for any mneazire or paper taken at tins office. We will save you money tf
I ban they were ever bought before. We have also marked many lines of our present stock to correspond with these great bargains; only to be found at THE: MODEL: MIHC: HOUSE. F. A. HAYS.
THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. to tollow Christ? Stop, men and
women, where art thou? Be men and
Large Antiiences the Kale at the Moyer- women; lie Christian, begin now I conMrower Meetings. Sunday's program. j llre you _ , be8ee ,. h( [ j nl p 1()re you to “What to do and how to do it to come to Christ. Come now, come and be saved,” was Mr. Boyer’s subject ^yoim heSS”* pleatli " g ' “ n,ir,len at the Christian church last night. | Mr. Boyer possesses the highest He said: conception of his mission andin“This is an old question. Mr. Inger- dulges in no sensationalism but soil said it is the greatest question ever j workg wjth occa9ional toucheg of
asked by man. It is an earnest awful [ .
question. When Mr. Inger soil talked P leasin g humor > beautiful stories on the subject be was greeted with an ^ descriptive drapery that ex-
Whilk the democratic papers of Putnam are chasing around so vio
lently for an issue, they shouldn't' l’ nr,menl unlil ir now gives over a overlook the coining bond issue, column of its valuable (?) space to They might get their minds off the'DePauw university, and that, too, Banner Times for a few minutes if ' u nonpareil! Ihcre is about
they pay attention to the nation’s a9 ,n,1, ' h consistency in this raving finances a little. ,jt the organette on the college u«n-t rorgn. question us there is in its temper- Don t foiget that next week there Star /‘rex* takes its turn ancc talk. On May 15, 1893, it is- w ‘'l be one of the largest exhilti-j pupdiee,]/
The
this week in defending the poor sued a special 10x8 edition for the t> on8 poultry ever held in Putfarm management. The Democrat purpose of securing license for sa nam county, at Greencastle, Ind.
was at it last week and will no loon applicants, one of whom Tr i, by panels at NiAoIsou’s $1.00 a |“let his light »»,ine ; "to"‘‘Voitiu.Ve'iu- dream, and a dude would lose half j
laughter clapping of hands and stamping of feet. I believe in fun, laughing U right if yon laugh at the right thing. A 111a 11 would not laugh over the eoffln of his child. A man will not laugh at Gotland Salvation. * * * What do we mean by being saved? Not work, not physical infirmities, old age or death. We must all tile. Mr. Ingersoll says saved from the clutches of an orthodox God. I don’t like his spirit. Man’s greatest lesson is to learn that God is first—knows more than all of us
put together.
Mr. lugcrsoll was taught that Got) had decreed a part of the race to eternal hell, and 1 can’t blame him for wanting to escape that kind of a God. Most of us do. Man wants to he saved from sin, spiritual insanity,despair, remorse. Something must be done and man must doit. God has done a great deal. He is still doing a great deal and will continue to do a great ileal. I know he never fails. I may. If I can find out what he expects of me anil do it I am safe for time anil eternity. It. makes my heart leap for joy ! There is a way to he saved ; at peace with God the infinite Gotl. Think of it. Tha.ik God for It. Accept it. do it, now, right now, while 1 talk. God help you do that and he happy, fail tint) he lost. Different men come to Christ in ditterent ways—110 two just alike, but ull'can come, liars, drunkards can be saved and even politician*, for all things are possible with God. Men have to turn to the Lord in all Hungs in which they are separated from him. lu Acts 10th chapter an ignorant man was taught about Jesus and commanded to believe in him. This obedience began with faith. In the second chapter of Acts a great multitude who did believe were commanded to repent and obey Christ. They already believed. In the lOtli chapter of Acts Paul who had obeyed Christ in faith and repentance was commanded to “arise and he
He did so anil Got! blessed
him. After a man becomes a Christian he is expected to become humble amt gentle and pure to “run with patience”
As a Christmas gift for a young laity a roll of-wallpaper or * A ROLL OF THUNDER is less appreciated and less acceptable than
%
A MUSIC ROLL designed for carrying sheet music. The roll comes in both cylindrical and fiat patterns, is useful, handsome and of great durability, being made of leather and sealskin. In view of the approaching holidays this is a hint thrown out to the wise, the otherwise and the weatherwise.
EMANUEL MARQUIS
Music Dealer.
cites the universal admiration, an evidence by the throngs who tiock to hear this eloquent speaker and listen with marvelous attention. Mr. Boyer is exceedingly fortunate in having the able assistance of John Brower, of Chicago, while conducting evangelistic service in this city. Mr. Brower is a vocalist of rare culture and power in song. His solo last evening was entitled, “Troubled heart, Thy God is Call ing” and was rendered with exeelcellent effect. Subject tonight “Otf the Track and How to Get On.” Sunday morning “The Gospel in Promise, Fact, and Monument.” At night, “Sin and Its Cure.” Sunday school at 9:15 a. tn. Y. P. S. C. E. at 6
p. in.
Th«- Mouth.
The mouth is the aperture to the cold storage room of your anatomy. Some mouths look like peaches and cream, and some like a hole chopped in a brick wall to admit a new door or window. The mouth is a hot-
bed of toothache, the bunghole of I oratory, and a baby's crowing, glory. It is the crimson aisle to |
your liver. It is patriotism’s lonn-
tain head, and the tool-chest for pie. j
Without it the politician would be a wanderer on the face of the earth, and the cornetists would go down to unhonored graves. It is the grocer’s friend, the orator's pride
and the dentist's hope. It puts in " ne X 1 1 way, New York City, will send you a list ol over
some men on the rostrum and some <u ven • r r*t°t*>y»and Kiris. Writefnrit.
- we Rive you free, an Oxford Bible,
Gold Ring
Special Sale
OF
MILLINERY.
My Entire Stock of Trimmed
and Untrimrned Goods,
EVERYTHING - - - - Must Go before Christmas,
ibtiti
My $1.98, $2.49, and $3.67 Ready Trimmed Hats.
Mrs. Anna Banning
V
8 B-St
in jail. It is temptation’s lunch counter when attached to a maiden. and a tobacconist’s friend when
given free-o bo rs and cirls. Send for list.
attached to a man. Without it j 1^*°' married life would be a summer (dr Girls, School Rar-S, Bl.-« it hoards, I.awn Tents*
Hammocks, Rochester Lamps, Handsome Silver
do you want a PrintinR Press, Watch
DU f a and Chain, Steam Enitine, Air Rifle,
I'ool Chest, MaRtc Laniern, Fisher-
man s Outfit or Pocket Knife without 8| endinR any •y for it ? Sunbeams PublishinK Co., 234 Broad-
New York City, will send you a list of over
.ifts ttiven '
6IRLS Piano, Beautiful China Tea Set, Elcflam Manicure Set, or your choice from over 100 valuable article!
Riven free'o bovs and ebls. S« ‘ ' MOTHERS gf
doubt take its turn again next i could not have been in business ’ dozen.
21) end. j scant in prayer.” Who would refuse J of hi ; * attraction.
of Sunbeams PublishinK Co„ Broadway, New 1 York City. Write for cataloaue. „
