Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 11 December 1894 — Page 2

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lis tVMIi ItMLIiAiY

W. S. MuVfGOMER'1, Suitor and Publisher.

Subscription Kates.

OHe week

One ye .r

J. t:

:I

:l

10 cents

fi\co

_» J' II HIS ..-K. we».|c

fliscvvcic"1. i~ c~ urhli" nah bprrpl. The ex-boss is earnestly explaining thai tie doesn't linuw how it came there.

IHLKK ure ii\.» Hi*

_.u

Liuii& a or -7

Homes than there are room for. The refusal to iuimil iu nit.-.5 eases is a greathjmlsliiji, but cannot now be helped us the homes are already crowded. Some

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a surplus of ^S'JjUO'V1^'--

-1 "rely t'ose

etfi'tliio UceUlUK It coUHl Ob properiy caved lor in their dc'Iuing years.

Oy!• ye«r th"

JV

a if rk ?/nLs h.'U1

!.yinc?

Ml-.' in (bur

vjtulis. To-dry it 7 bcoii "oou-xi to £-J,000,000, which shows that §50,000,000 .a- b':-.:!i taken out to be used iu the business of the country and is now in circula-

gettin^, oeiiL-r aiiu uusme&o ui'isKer. What is-- true of New York banks is true, of -.'h.'v hflM-c. they too hfve f* out additional money and all knoT.v tlu-l money is circulating more freely.

IT is rather generally conceded now iuui ti us.ot:^ Indiana who all had their tei'nis of office extended few months will have the same shortened by the present Legislature so that they will retire next April

the new trustees to elect the county superintendents, contract at the proper time for teachers next year and make all other conLittcts iicccoa.n.j iw uaiiy on the schools. August is too late for such con-

TIIE agitation of the removal of the State University from Bloomington to Indianapolis is nov being seriously confide—1

5-:'1

»}l hWrodnced into

the Legislature to that ellect. The removal should be made. There are very many reasons why this should be done. jLei L' ':v near Indianapolis and then an Indiana University be b'li1^- i-p that would redoup«i to tho honor, erlorv and benefit of ail L-uusierdoiu. All ths alumni with whom we have talked favor the Indianapolis location. Oil t:

!*•nonrk

County

'Will Be in It.

State Gas Inspector E. T. .T. Jordan has been talking again. At Kokomo last

"I have been much misquoted. I have never said there was immediate danger of the collapse of the gas supply. I have eaid mr.n2* things to impress the people of the sin and fearful cost of the needless waste of the precious fuel that has been eoing on ever since we struck gas. On this largely depends the longevity of the supply. Enough has been wasted to have supplied the people many years longer than wo will have it. With proper saving the supply should last several years yet. After gas will come oil. The gas belt will never go back to wood and coal. This will be a gieat oil uc some day. As the gas diminishes oil gets stronger. I expect to be burning oil in niv residence

ftOlilC litlj iljuii .xuv «--v for that purpose. I look for this to be a fei'eat oil di2tr:ct in the ne*"* future. It is developing fast in the north and east poruuus cl tLe field, ard but a question of time when the entire gas district will be a solid oil field." "We have alret'^y bad a fair flow of oil from the Kariden gas well a miie north of this city. Hancock county is strictly in it while the gas li.oto and as we are also sure of oil our prosperity will continue.

12PWOKTH LEAGUE ENTERTAINMENT.

Masonic Hall, T.icsday Night, Deceniber 11th. Next Tuesday night the Epworth League and chuir

OL

v,e -ded:

Lac 7.1. E. church

will give a musical and literary entertainment at Mas .i:!a He." for the benefit of the League and choir. It will certainly be one of the best entertainments of the season. Tho following is the program so far as arranged now, other numbers will

Solo, Mrs, H. O. Bragg. Violin solo, friir-s Stabler. Male quartette, ^'e.^rs. Rhoadarmer, Bragg, Sparks and New.

Solo, Dr. J. W. Sparks. Mixed quartette, Mrs. Bragg, Miss Myrtle Smith and Messrs. Bragg and New.

B»ss solo, Frank Rhoadariuer. Solo, Lillian New.

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R-.-i'- M" "I, WUi A. T'^ucrh. Solo, Lulu Curry. I Solo, Mrs. Bragg, with violin obligato,

Miss Stabler. A burlesque, "The Women Council of 1000," Tableaux, "A Modern Way of Settling Difficulties." "Benjamin Franklin'a Mornii-g Hunt for h'te ^oes." -'The Peacemakers." Holiday Excursion via i'ciinsyl vania, Lines

On Deccmder 24th, 25th and iilst, 1894, and January 1st, 1895, excursion tickets wili be sold from ticket stations on the Pennsylvania Lines West of Pittsburg to points on those liues, valid to return until Jan. 2d. 1894. For details please apply to nearest Pennsylvania Line ticket agent. d-11-29 w-49t3

H&W TO TREAT ¥yPJ-j$ID FEVER.

typHp Hi.

Be

The- Digestive App$ratu£ Should Cleansed by Freqaent Irrigation. Water is for many things a simple but sure remedy. Dr. Elmer Lee of Chicago first proposed curing cholera in Germany about a year ago by cleansing the stomach by constant washing out with sterilized water. Sterilizing kills all germs in anything. The same doctor now proposes this treatment for typhoid fever and on this subject says: "Fears were formerly entertained by me, as they are today by s5mo of my contemporary, that something would he burst by running a large volume of water into the bowels of persons sick with typhoid fever. No harm has ever been done, and neither is it likely to be caused. Several hundred cases have been so do!aged by me with large quantities of water, and in no instance has the result failed to be beneficial. The fear of doing harm may be entirely and forever dismissed."

It is specifically stated that the temperature of the water used for cleansing and washing the bowels should always depend upon the temperature of the body. If there is high fever, the water is more agreeable and useful to the patient when it is cool—viz, 75 degrees— but if the patient is chilly or has a low temperature the water should be. at blood heat, nearly 1U0 degrees. Darin the first week of illness the irrigation of the bowels should take place in the morning and again in the evening of each day. After this one douche of wafer r.hould be given each day until convalescence. The co-operation of tho patient it readily accorded. The treatment takes hold of his reason, which lends both hope and help to the management of th case.

Bathing the body is performed at regular intervals. Tho bathtub may be used when the patient is strong enough to be assisted to it. Where otherwiso, sponging with cold water is very refreshing rvcoful to maintain strength and lower tho heat of the body. As to the internal treatment, let there be no restraint in administering water. Torturing f^vcr patients with thirst is happily being abandoned on all sides in medical practice.

Typhoid fever is in many parts of the country, and particularly in the high and well drained hilly and mountainous regions, but too often the causo of widespread and fatal epidemics. There should be abundant opportunity to test the irrigation treatment, and it seems to merit careful examination.

How to Whiten lloujfli lied Hands. Keep the body clean by two warm baths a week. Take two cool baths a day to keep the skin in a healthy condition. Get the digestive organs in perfect order. Eat and drink temperately, get plenty of sleep and take moderate exercise. Make a lotion for the hands of rainwater, one-third as much glycerin and the juice of one lemon, to be used after washing.

How to Increase Flesh.

First avoid indigestion. The quantity of food wo eat matters not it is tho amount which is digested and assimilated. A diet of lean beef that has been finely chopped and robbed of the connective tissues, made into flat cakes, lightly broiled and seasoned, and a tiny piece of well toasted wholo wheat bread, with a cup of hot water, if persisted in for two or three months, will effect a cure. After that come back gradually to carbonaceous foods. Remember that the fats are more easily converted into fat than the sugars and starches, and all starchy foods must be well cooked. The light lunch at noon would be decidedly better, and then take your 0 o'clock dinner. After dinner rest plenty of time to digest and assimilate the food.

How to Make Chocolate Caramels. Boil'together a pound of white sugar, a quarter of a pound of chocolate,

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ta-

blospoonfuls of molasses, a cup of sweet milk and a piece of butter as large as a walnut. When it will harden in water, flavor with vanilla and pour on a buttered slab. When nearly cold, cut iu squares. J'

How to Crystallize Flowers. Arrange some basket forms of any desired pattern with pliable copper wire and wrap them with gauze. Into these tie to the bottom violets, ferns, geranium leaves—in fact, any flowers except full blown roses—and sink them in a solution of alum of a pound to a gallon of water. Wait until tho solution has cooled, as tho colors will then be preserved in their original beauty, and the crystallized alum will hold them faster than when formed in a hot solution. When you have a light covering of crystals that completely envelops the articles, remove carefully and allow it to drip for 12 hours. Those baskets make a very unique ornament and long preserve their freshness.

How to Prevent Choking From a Fishbone. A raw egg swallowed immediately will generally carry a fishbone down that cannot be removed from the throat by the utmost exertion and has got out of reach of the finger.

lIo\v to Wash Underwear.

Never wash underwear in tho same suds which have served for white things. Aside from the dirt held in solution, the water is charged with linty particles that are sure to cling and abide in the elastic mesh of knit goods. To wash colored knit silk garments dissolve a handful of powdered borax in a pail of warm water and soak the things in it for 15 ministes. Then wash rapidly through a good white soapsuds, rubbing as lightly as possible. It should be about blood warm. Squoeze out of tho suds, but do not wring. Rinse in two waters of the same temperature and hang to dry without any wringing.

How to Renew Stained Floors. To renow stained floors that have grown a little dull rub thoroughly with beeswax and turpentine. Repeat this whenever it is needed.

The Commercial Clubs of the to Meet

at Indianapolis to-morrow, To-morrow and Thursday tig'" Commercial Clubs, Boards of Trade and other organizations of the various towns and cities of the State will meet with the Commercial Club of Indianapolis. The meeting is for the purpose of forming a State organization to include as many of the commercial bodies in may desire to join it. Thf objects of the proposed organization, as stated in the call for the meeting, are co-operation ir. developing the commercial interests of the State the interchange of ideas on organized public work and the stimulation of activity in advancing commercial and industrial interests and municipal welfare in Indiana cities and towns, the formation of at least one strc-ng commercial organization in each importaurt ti'iiUe center, ana to assist in tormuliiiiug and scouring legislation for the ad.uuceineiii of commercial and municipal interests and to oppose harmful legislation. These are some of the subjects that v.ill be discussed: "What Inducements Sh-.uid Be Offered by Cities to Secure New Industries:-'" "Municipal Government as a Matter of Business." "Organic .1 \Vork in Advancing Public 'Interests." "Ob jectio/iable Booming." "Indiana Cities and the Mutual Interests." "The Metalling of Streets, a Chief Factor in the Improvement of Cities." "The Samlati'.-n oi: Cities." The meetingwill close Thursday afternoon with an address on "legislation Affecting Business Interests, by C. C. Binkley, of the Richmond Commercial Club, followed by miscellaneous business, permanent organization and the election of ollicers.

Greenfield should be represented at. the above meeting either by some member of our Board of Trade, the Mayor or one or more of our Councilmen. Greenfield is one of the progressive, prosperous cities of the State and must be kept to the front.

McCIure's gazine.

FOR 1895.

Volume IV begins December, 1894. A splendidlv illustnitod life of

NAPOLEON,

the groat feature of wlrcli will U-

.Seventy five Portraits.

of Nip ik'OM, sliowiiii lit i: iroin youth iodt'-ulh also portraits of 1 lis family and contemporaries and pictures of famous icittlelields iu all nearly

200 Pictures.

Begins in November and runs through eight numbers. The Kiglit Napoleon Numbers. #1.(10

TRUE DETECTIVE STORIES

by authority from the archives ol tho

Pinkerton Detective Agency.

Lincoln and Pinkerton (Nov. 1S »4, tho Mollv Mu .urea Allr." rhtfc- :-r- i's I If.- rStorii .-' ot t' pture of Train-robber.- forgers. Bank-robbers, etc. each en'-'v1 •, o"

Short Stories By

W, D. Howe'ls Kudyard Kipling Conan Doyle Clark Russell Robert liarr Octave 'I hanet Bret IIarte Capt. Km'_c

Joel Chandler Harris and many oUicis.

Noted Contributors-

.Robert Louis Mevenson

Marion Crawford Archdeacon l-'ariar Sir Robert Ball I'rof. Druminond Archibald Forbes Thomas Hardy

Kend three two-cent stamps for a sample copy to the publishers

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S nPHE RIPAJfS

TABULE3

Nettle ltash, tion, l'implca to tho llead, plexlon, Salt Hen

regulate thei stomach,

ft 1 liver and bowels, pvft-ify Oio blooa. ^-pk^ 8 aatto 'i ioiuiJalwayseaoctu»1« A'clip,.lo remedy Xor UiliousucKH, felotebes 6h the iaco, lSiifclit's Disease, Catarrh, Collo, Constipation,

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l'nintfuMtfgca-Kushof.-WooU

impure Inood or a failure in tho proper porlormanee of their llinctioim liytlie stomach, liver ana ink-htiues. Persona given to over-eating are benefited by takfnpr ono tahulo nftor-each.tneal. A continued use o£ tho lUpnnaTnuUjOivisthcsurMtj euro for obstinate constipation.. They contain- .. i./ mnar,

euro for oOstinnte consupnnuii.. W not,hint that CKII be injuriouH-tofthe most dolla I re 2 1 2 $ 1 2 5 1 4 9 1-21 KTOS3 Hi eeuts. Keiit Jjy niaiVips^^paid. O Addren') THK I.'TT'ANH cnfcmCAl/COMPANY,

P.O. Uoz072. Now York. JK

VIOUNA. $2.00.

(Jur i^aEicus

LaGies, Shoe.

A'V. Ct}2

'0T0GRAPHS

.'O. MILLER.

1 'stShito'

AT

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Yon will find every thing iu the way of tiMeul, Lunch, Oysters, Bread, Cakes, Pies, Buns, Candies, Oranges, Lemons, Apples Cigars, Tobacco, and all. things kept in a first-class restaurant.

Fresh Oysters: a: Specialty.

MRS. ELLA BOHM, PROP.

JOHN TINDALL, Manager.

The CENTURY!

IN 1895-

Taking advantage of the general revival of interest in the great Emperor, The Century will print during ISSio

A New Life of NAPOLEON Magnificently Bound.

The Century is famous for its great historical serials, aud never in its history has a greater one lieen projt-cted than tills new "Life of Napoleon', written by Prof. William M. Sloan, of Princeton, who lias spent many years in preparation ior his work. Thus far no biography of "the man of destiny" has appeared in either English or French that IK free from rancor and attention to the laws of historical criticism. The Century has .secured it—the great, all-round, complete aud interesting history of the life of one of the most marvelous of men. Iso matter how much you already know of Napoleon, you will want to read tlns-liere is the concentration of all tlie lives and memoirs. The illustrations will be magnificent —the wealth of the Century's art department will be lavished upon tlieni. Two members of the stall have just returned from Paris, where they have been securing ali that is best of Napoleonic material. New portraits will be printed, great, historical painting reproduced, and Castaigne and other modern artists have drawn auew some of Napoleon's life for this history.

Ill addition to this there will ho a new novel by

Marion Crawford..

The title is "Casa Braecio," and it is a romance of Italy, lull of human passiou and exciting episode, A new novel by

Mrs. Burton Harrison

will be published during the year. It is called "An Errant Wooing," and i* a tale of wandering (and love) among new sceneesof travel iu Northern .Africa and Southern Spain.

Other Features

will he several familiar papers «u Washington In Lincoln's Time," by Noah Hrooks, who was on terms of unusual intimacy with the War l'resii- "The Cathedrals of France," by Mrs. Schuyler Van llensselaer, with illustrations by Joseph Pcnncll. Many more serials will he anniiunced later.

RUDYARD KIPLING

contributes his first American Mtory to tho December number ol the Century, I is $ 4 a a I

1

1 li 1 KILL

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ula',Sick Kiulrascs.S oil Feelinff,Torpid %Va'tor Brash er symptom epults from

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We carry two of the best Shoes that modern machinery can produce. The Vicuna Skin Shoe is very soft, pliable leather, easy on corns, keeps out water, very dressy, and ever) pair wnmnted.

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UNION SQl' A I'I'-, N 10 W VOKK.

Send for our beautifully illustrated pamphlet-. "The Century Co, and lis Work." and mention where you saw this. You can subscribe at the [{UIMUILICAN office.

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Price's

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Awarded Gold Medal Midwinter Fair, San Francisco.

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Wc arc prepared to execute fine pictures, Foto or Cabinet pi/e, all times. We can do as well in cloudy as in fair weather. Our pictures are firstclass and prices reasonable. Satisfaction guaranteed or no pay,

Gallery over Post Office.

FRED S. KEELER, vtist.

Special attention given to pupils. Lessons in Drawing and Painting, 50c.

Studio, 1-2 West Main Street,

Mason Block. Open day and evening. I am permanently located here and ask a share of your patronage. FRED S, KEELEfL.

DR. C. A. BBLL

Ofiice with D. W. R. King, West Main Street. Greenfield, Tnd.

Practice limited to diseases of the

NOSE, THROAT, EYE and EAR.

C. W. MORRISON & SON,

UNDERTAKERS.

27 W. MAIN ST. Greenfield, Indiana.

"And the Leaves of the Tree Were for the Healing of the Nations."—Rev. XXII-2.

MAN 0 WA,

4S

To whom it may concern: Wc the undersigned business men of Frankfort, Ind.. certify that we have known Ir. W F. Pelliey (Man-O-Wa) the past, two years, and know him to be not only a good citizen, honorable and square in all his dealings and reasonable in his charges, but also as a skillful physician, and that lie has h:id a large and extensive practice during residence here:

G. V. FOWhKR, liditor Frankfort Times. STALKY A HCRNS, Publishers News-lanncr, A.i. KHUUY, Psisior Baptist Ciiurcli. T. C. DALKY, Postmaster. J. II. PA UIS& SONS, Dry Hoods, II AN" A MATTIX, li.Ms ..:id Shoes. FISH 101! BKOS., Novelty Store. DAVIPT. II1LL, ("iheritl' of Clinton County. W. P. S'TKY I0NS iN, Furniture. (TSSIWA I UK is. Confectionery. A. A. LA I III), Druggist. N.C. DAVIS, M. 1). Ol Anti llatdaciie Fatue. L, lllLSINUKIi, AniericangKxpress Agent.

Dll. MAN-o-W A For over one year niv daughter, Vira, was a constant sufleri"- fiv.m" Cystetis. She was eonfined to the house. lie was greatly reduced in llesh and streiigi !i. she was treated by several prominent physicians, but no avail. We had dispaired of ever having hei'cured. But wo are happv to say that alter four months use of your Indian Herb Extracts, she is enjoying perfect health. UictiAiu* M. DAVIS, tieenlield lnd.,.luly '2-f, '(J-t.

Dr. Man-O-Wa treats, and elives 8"i per cent, of all chronic di.-oases given up by other phvsicians as ineuvable. O'lice in Wilson's New Block, Greenfield. Ort'ec days, Friday and Saturday of each week.

N11'money required of responsible partie.s to begin treatment. Terms ^i.OU to Ifb.OO por 111011 Hi.