Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 8 July 1895 — Page 2

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Turniture, stoves, Dishes, Glassware, Carpets, Baby Cabs, Sewing Machines, Etc., Etc.,

sale at the lowest living prices, and see my stock. I will pay .est prices for all kinds of sechand goods.

T.

ORE,

J.

Proprietor Second Hand Store.

West Main St. '(5-tf

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S. MONTCrOMEUl", Editor and PuVlisiier.

.Subscription itc\-.

('ne weet One year kntere

sL'voad-clas.s matter

Winers that the sale surpressed

v. ry of the fallen. The hat are destroyed, the more .rts that are made to bleed nd what a curse the school of -Ex.

.mean mid Marshall Scott f./e

their

P'-'W*? to make this

l!Avtr\ city-

1" doing SO they hive

numeak diffucaitits to contend with. They hVe the lawl-ss to look after, a-- a matter course and tJ:en a Urge mruber of naturally law abidi ciiizeil,

TOWAsHII- TKC-'l KJ OUkSTJON

AgitatiiiK Many Minrig

the proper time. The matter was taken to the courts and Albaugh was victorious. This gave him another four years term, and as the term* of all the trustees was extended by the last legislature, he is now holding in his niuth year. He has been holding so long, it saems that nothing but death or a special act of the legislature would cause him to lose hi.? grip on the office. His name is 'Dennis" iu this case, however, no rnauner how strongly his Jacksonian principles may impel him to hang on.

There will be contests in about 80 of the 1014 townships of the State. On ac-

count

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of commissioners and for other reason.-, there were 80 trustees elected for what is known as the short term, or from last November until next August. These trustees do not propose to give up their offices, but say they wiil hold right ou. la Washington township, Shelby couuty, the man who was appointed was not a candidate, but a man was elected for the short term, and another for the long term. The appointee refused to turn the office over to the man who was elected for the short term and the latLer instituted suit. /Che court held that if elected at all, t^jflTt the man was elected for four year.?, as Nth law said nothing about electing for a short term. The short term men who are now in are claiming that they are iu for four years. They base their claim on the above decision, and as they are ih, propose to stay in. Where an appointee is still in he bases his claim ou the giound that two names on the same ticket for the same office invalidates the tdection of any candidate

was elected to the long term and surrendered his office to the short term man, and now the laner refuses to give the office on the above grounds.

Out of the 80 short term and appointive trustees who are now holding, only one is- willing to give up his office. The other ^9 propose to .'hang on until the other fallow or the courts take their offices aw/ay from them. It seem's that the offices |jf the ustees and the county superintendents are all getting rather squi '!.lly. It a poor example to the pupi•.' for men placed over schools to try

to ban not enl

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who

are very rori^tf.-i!, or think their breaking the law jW a !ir.t:o won't, hurt anything. E/ery citizan tliould obi-y uia law and it is the iuty of. all officers to see chat they do so. When men wh nn everyne expects to obey tae law break it, the wless are made .vorse and it l^a-Js to &rchy. Obey ail iaws and if they are I ^repta'. them at once. I I .. I

D^i. C. A.. T3ELL

*0. ace 7 and 8 Dudding-Mooie block, ,•'et i.llelcl, Ii:d.

Practice limited to diseases of the

SERVICE. T0X

A JVuMi1or

are I'r.!•»«:,t Hold (vi-r

$ ship tr:ouice is an imthe j.-ople oi. the State of '.nd spend a very nioney paid iu by adtically un--"^sass'unds In

and

AOSE, THROAT, EYE

d&wtf

of I A, -''.ud

-and conditions, sweet morsel, to to be ret^ned as ^ool name, \an exintensifies and a 'ds -obese people always

N33 \TS£* A P32 JJ

he i3 now serving his niim i.cetsive year as trustee. He was elea for cue term of four years and accoria.ng to law was ineligible to a second terni A man was elected to succeed Albaugfo, but died before his term began. The commission- the workings of a ers appointee, a man bus Alba'jugh would clos lv, judging by net turn the office over to hjtm. Then "One of the great they ordered that a trustee Welected at paper profession is thati. l£at fall's election, whicl. was lone, but pelleri to see more of ti 'agair" Albaugh refused to turn over the world than any otht office, claiming the election was not at• Through every newspapero\

Uut They Cov#f tlie Broad Rev. Dr. Talma

EAR

MICHIGAN RESORTS.

Are directly on the line of the

GrandRapids& Indiana Railroad.

EXCELLENT

Traverse City, Ne-ah-ta-wan-ta, Omena, Charlevoix, Petoskey, Bay View, Roaring Brook,

r, Wequetonsing, PI arbor Springs, I Harbor Point,

I -Ofien-Oclcn,

VMACKMACJ^MVR

Upper Peninsula Points.

ist Tickets ate on sale June 1st to Sept 30th, retlnra limit Oct. 31st.

tps and Descriptive 7

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MICHIGAN

1 "'SORT region, ^jcl full information in^ Mition to tijCket

day go all the weaknesses oi all the vanities that want

vacancies filled by appointment ial and reportoriai rooms all the follies

ajd that leaves him in. One appointee pointed, but they learn tolerance. They smile satirically at the weafenessv-s of humanity, but they are not misanthropic because of them. On the contrary, they are most kindly and sympathetic in their attitude toward mankind. Toe ability to penetrate shams does not necessarily em bitter them, it makes them better able to appreciate the good which exists, in spite of humbug and vanities. Possibly the disillusionment might lead to more general distrust and skepticism were it not that the born newspaper man possesses a sense of humor which is his sal vation. It enables him to laugh at the foibles of human kind and carries him safely over all the depressing incidents of his work. He laughs because he is amused, and not becausd he is soured.

on to offices that they are clearly itled to. Those offices should not

be he! 3 by technicalities or the skin cf th, as it were.

the tep

For Hale.

10 cents 55.00 q' A -bree-year old horse for sale cheap. ]»irjqui peat the Guymon House b.irber bop. 82tf&vv

to'\

a the revenges that want to be' ali tbe mistakes that want to be rected, ail the duil speakers that want be thought eloquent-, all the meanneso that wants to gee its wares noticed gratis in order to save the tax of the advertising column, all men who want to be set right who were never right, all the crackbrained philosophers with stories as long aa their hair and as gloomy as their finger nails in the morning, bereft of soap—all the bores who come to stay live minutes, but talk five hours. Through the editor-

aud sham of the world are seen day afti-r day, and the temptation is neither to believe in God, man or woman. It is no

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surprise to me that in this profession! there are some skeptical men. I only wonder th^t newspaper men believe anything." I

What he says of this acquaintance with shams and follies and weakness is true. Xewsptper workers have the seamy si le of human nature revealed to them, and early iu their professional life taey learn not to accept as truth all that seem4 on its surface to be such. They become quick and accurate readers of character, and cease to be surprised at any of the revelations which insight and circum-

man. They do become cynical after a fashion, but it is a mild, good-natured cynicism. Having ceased to have illusions concerning their fellow-creatures, tbey expect nothing. sad are not di'-ap-

Perhaps ha d^es not look upon life with the seriousness that it deservts, but ha is unable to see that to take it seriously I would beuefit himself or oiliers, and so he laughs at it and is able to bear what it brings.— Indianapolis Journal.

Programme of tlie Laying of tin oi-sicr Stone of the New Clirintmn Church Tomorrow at

stances may make neveitheless, it is not cost $3. Then came a stand, at $1.50, true, as Mr. .Talmaga seems to imply,

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an(l

that they are ••pt to doubt fcoth God and I (onIy

O'clock.

Overture by the Greenfield band. Song—"AN Hail the Power of Jesus' Name."

Scripture Reading. Prayer. Anthem—By the Church Quartette. History of the Church—13y A. K. Branham.

Short Speeches—3y Revs. D. R. Van JBuskirk, E. S. Conner, Hon. G. G. Oft'ntr, .Mayor G. W. Duncan and the pastors of the various city churches.

Song—"liocic oi Ages," (during which workmen will place the stoue Remarks—By B. F. Dailey, pastor of the cuurch.

Striking the Stone—Hon. Morgan Chandler. Reading the list of the contents of box —Dr. VV. R. King.

Depositing the box in the stone—John \V. Ryon. Pruyer—By Eld. E. S. Conner.

Son —"Doxology." Benediction.

Attmition.

The Operetta, "Carnival of Flowers," will be given in Masonic Hall July 10 and 11. The Operetta is a very taking one, consisting of the beft talent in the city. The solos and sjleists are beyond criticism, and t(he drills are indescribable. Tickets on sale at White House grocery.

The Sunday Schools.

Sunday, July 7th, 1895. Attend'e. Christian 134 if.. E. Church 208 Hreobyterian 72

/fl.'i1 iff a Totals -c.i«

Hello!

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When you news item call the Central oflic» and ask for No. 31, the EVISNINO REPUBLICAN office. We want all the news. lAlso call us up on business.

Summer Colds.

imer colds, including Hay 'Rose Cold, are promptly reliev Ired by Dr. Humphrey's Spe *,ar sale by all druggists, pi

sale by all druggists, pi pr

I

•ycllns Oat

..fTo TJian 18100.

jv

-fi't for the expense, I think W

a

wheel myself," said a

Psan, in ro -whose ears talk j|ag hud been dinned all year. ||'herc you make the hif.rge.st your life,'' declared one of

.\s. "Why, that's the thing cling—it's so clroYou for your machine, and that Yor -jet a guarantee for a year *er the cheapest and best fun of 'e."

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it's what the "fellows said when ot me to buy that yacht," reed the first speaker dubiously. "It vras only a little boat, and they said that after I paid for her the running expenses would be a mere trifle. You know liow that turned out. It cost me $1,000 to have the bow remodeled. I had to get new sails and everything else new. The skipper robbed me right and left and ran the yacht on a rock up the sound. I was buying things and paying for things -week in and week out, and the summer's sport cost me just double what I set out to spend." "Of course it did," said the friend. "Yachting always does. But bicycling is different. You couldn't spend $150 on it all summer if you laid awake nights studying up schemes to do it. There is no call to entertain your friends, as there is -when you own a yacht. I

There was a further discussion, and it wound up in the purchase of a bicycle I by the man who wanted to economize. I After all, £100 seemed very little for six months of fun, and .so he was persuaded that it would be best to buy a special I make of a wheel, at a cost of $125. Of course he must have a bell, but that was only $2, and a lantern, and that was $5, as cheap ones would leak and wouldn't I I stay lighted, and a cyclometer, winch

too clips, at $1, and lubricating oil

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cones), and illuminating oil

(only -10 cent.!'), and graphite (a mod^ 25 cents), lock and chain (§1.50 was thj figure for these) and a pump ($2.50).

When it came to 'clothing, there was a pretty penny to pay. A handsome ,'uut cost $25 to make. It was so light in color that mud would ruin it, so the clubman before long bought a second one for possible rainy weather. This one was $15. Kangaroo bicycle slices cost §4, two pairs of Scotch woolen wocldngs two woolen shirts $7, :.nd a sweater .j The young man want:-d to go t'Miring, and $3 more went for road maps. A leather luggage cavi-iid*, also for trips out of town, was i" .J.50. One of his tires

sprang a leak at the va!\ and had to be sent back to the factory, he bought an extra one for T.50 to use meanwhile. Ee had one collision, and came oft'pretty luckily, the bill for repairs being only $0.50. It cost iiJ to have two punctures mended. A watch to be fastened to the handle bar, with frame, was $4. His first saddle didn't suit, and a second one involved tlie expenditure of another §5. "Well, how do you like bicycling?" some cue asked the young man who was economizing. "It's great. I Lope to have a complete outfit of sundries by next spring if they don't invent too many new appliances in the meantime. Expensive? Well, it isn't as cheap as it's ci'acked up to be, but it's away behind yachting—several thousand dollars behind.''—New York Tribune.

1 A Short Way With Intruders, Hans von Bulow was taking infinite pains in drilling liis orchestra for an early performance o| Beethoven's Ninth

Symphony, and the musical epicures of Meiningen wore reveliug iu tlie anticipation of a huge treat. A high personage at court, more impatient than the rest, expressed an ardent wish to attend one of the rehearsals. The conductor was greatly annoyed, but could not decline I the honor. However,-he planned a little scheme for speedily getting rid of his unwelcome audience.

When the exalted lady and her at1 tendants had taken their seats and the rehearsal was about to begin, Bulow called upon the bassoonist to play his part alone from beginning to end. The man obeyed, and began to draw from his weird instrument a series of ineoI lierent grunts and groans which were painful to listen to when unaccompanied by the other parts. It was the most horrible solo that bud ever been heard. Bulow occasionally stopped the performance, demanding a repetition of certain particuhtrly discordant passages with suggested modifications, and when the bassoonist had finished lie ordered him to play the whole of his part over again.

This was too much for the great lady She hastily rose aud confessed to tlie conductor that the affair had been rather different from what she had been led to expect, adding that "it was very interesting

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doubt, but soniowhat fatigu­

ing," whereupon she took her departure. Bulow's face beamed with satisfaction, and ho gave the signal for the rehearsal proper to commence.—Musikzeitung.

Doom of Witty Frenchmen. "Great wits are sure to madness

event

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(near

allied. Tlio doom of witty Frenchmen who cater to the amusement of the public seems to bo the madhouse. Djprflfier, thovgrentest of French caricati his mind by throwing awjj and retiring to vegetate^ Gill, Grevin, Guy de^ lunatics. It is Jouy, the comjj irresistible £j ditties.

penci rantry it died

Jules

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Among all trie structure* that make up !he human body, the nerves have been until recently thi least unne' stood.

The role of the nerves in the digestion and assimilation of od is a highly important one. The que-ti 'u whether the food shall nonrish or become a mer9 loud npon the system is a question of nerve force.

Neglect to satisfy the demands made by the nervous system carries heavy penalties. When this nervous force is ex-hau-ted the disgestive processes are obstructed, the body

i-s

weakened and pains

of neuralgia, iudig^stion, rheumatism, invade? its p-u-ls. During repose the nerves and great nerve centers feed upon the nutritive malarial that is stored iu the blood and tissues. It when this snpplv of nour'shijient is prompt aud abund'.nt thH' the nervens system is able to recuperate, but whew the system has become too tired to appropriate sufficient nourishment and the nerves 00 shaky to get the the rest they rued, that best of all blood purilh-rs, nerve foods, and nerve regulators, Paine's celery compound, should be given at once.

Paine's celery compound has brought health, strength, and five loin from nervous weakness to thousands of tired women, "ru-i dowu mm, and sickly children. It mtke then aMe to xbjep sound y, to digest th-iV fo perl'ectly, »"d to win back heal' and strength. T.,1- fired H-aiii and nerves are rebuilt a.:id th-'i wasted parts repaired during siccp, and ivh -reneruousness, irritability, and iuadr-ciuate nutriciou of the nerve

New Fixtures, Simdr^g New

Tbo store will be in cl) Purdue University School cj

If

AVe invite all tlie citizens of Hancock and adjoing counties to oall' in and inspect ouv now stove.

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THAN POVERTY.

i: oor Blood and Nerves out of Order5 —Take Paine's Celery Compound.

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ceuters do not, permit .• -e it sleep, nervous prostration, las-iiaic aid desponency are sure tv fo:'«••. Paine's celery compound guards a«» iall this

and making the blood pun-*, fbuodant, and nourishing. It cures nMtr tglia, rheumatism, all forms of n-vvms weaknees, despoudenoy, skiu .a=!, and affections of the heart, liver a nl kidneys. Tt sends pure, vit iliz.id b'ool -o every organoid thus makes people web. Paine's celery compound has fon-d its way originally through prescreptions by physicians, into every city an 1 smallest village in the country.

It would be very ddlv/.ult to find a man or woTJen of miture who has ait either been helped by tli's remarkable remedy or has he ird of its marvelons prop erties at firsthand from som. enthsi-istic friends or relative. tint's celerv compound is the only great popular remedy that physicans of every school prescribe-, for disorder.* of thg blonl and uer/es. I ?ay Mrs. Kate Vlatuvd, '2l(\]4 3rd ave.,' Minneapolis, whose picture is above: "I have been greatly benntited by Paiue's celery compound. I h.u-? taken/ six bottles of the wonderful remedy, aud reeommenl it to all wh-j are a filled as I »vas For years I have suT'r-1 from in ligestion, and know not ho to give due thanks for the relief that 1 have recdve 1 while taking liu-j's c^le comund My soa-in-lav his tax two bottles for similar trouble and it has nude him will.

OPENED NEXT WEEK.

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New Drugs, Stock of all Kinds.

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