Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 11 July 1895 — Page 2

TEE EVENING/REPUBLICAN.

W. S. MONTGOMERY', Editor and |Publisher.

Subscription Kates.

One week.. .v.- -.'.:.:...,

O.ne year.

10

ty v^ureenneiu, ui said State will, present' pctltioft bvjtj -111 1 authryj^ed aUo» 5evf piirtni anttft a TfeSorntion ntlopted oii tl^ 5tii day of June, 18H6, bjiit.-s (.-omuion'Connc'l,' aiithori r!he tlie presetrtaaon of the f.aine.:foir thtf to ajid the ljictirporaUon Mitlun tiie lloii-.s df said ci ty1lie fr»flowing territory ,.WUliin,Vthe County ol HaHcock, arMi'^fate of Iijdiftria, Vi'zr

Commencing at, a pour, on tttirtorth the southeast fjiiartrr -of-- -5,- in- township 1.) north, of range hundre'l aud fifty-three and 12-ldO, rio: /eet-west,ol fcljc north'^ast ooVncr-tberchf, rnnnitig thencti «Oufh one .tliw^aod -one: i/ilurtiai^a tirrt (1,'^),iiyi .y,y_ni -ju .a lins jaratlfii tlie north lirto of (sajd ywarter ^.distance, ojfY,one tliousah« Torty-oriMfnd "1-10 (Klin rj"feet" (lietice novt^t-flfta line iiaratlol with tWe west-tir^e of said

six li«odroit tilnetettu aiid mbfin (-«W8) feet *tfr-the center of tlie Wr^'Diield and lii aindy wine gravel

roa?

£I'e1noe.oorthM-stwar^lly.- with th? center of, said tftkd tMfo-hfrndriid flffv mu i_ij fcot iUience jtysw.twi ir&'».(Tred

(,oe:oi

cents

.. v. 55.00

Entente! at Postoffice us Second-clkss matter.

A

window

,lfrl

glass trust has been formed

...•jpFhiclx takes in nearly all the factories west of Pittsburgh. It controls 3o0,000 pf the 380,000 boxes now stored, aDd has advanced prices 25 per cent. The Greenfield factories are not mentioned as being

the trust.- They will get the benefit of 'it however and sell all their glass at the .advanced price and a good profit and jet nplj beiiag in the 'trust, can, start up in the fall when they desire and make -good '^hione^-^efoi?e the other nten get started.

0TheyGr^enii«ld

juvl Columbia: gjas^. works

belonging teethe Wells Bros.••we believe '^s&Ve the best1 management Of any-#tfVks ^h tlr^'coiin'tryV The fi^nt, oha iBorrey has-the best, .olaeg.. of iuien,v anci they always turn outs superior Quality glass that meet? a ready sale y^lieti o^hui-'factories are storing glass.

Mr. S. R*'-W-eils'.^nperipr management ^.wassfcawil' wtoeh

!t-fte

l^ress,

-other' glass" -men

'Wi&re powerless fo do Whyth'ing with Con-

lie iu company with Hon. Ephriam Marsh, of this city, secftred' "concessions •fronv CobgrefS on tbe tariff question that niaderfrundreils of thpiisauds ol: 'dollars fqr the glass jvorkers of rthis cpuntry.

,:yj, WARRINGTON.

The Fourth was spent very quietly-here several of the citizens were

at*

other

places. ..,-Mias Irene Lawyer, formerly of this splice, but bdw'living iu Hamilton county Wi.u calling on friends here last week.

Miss Gertrude McC-leary, of Anderson, is the guest oi Miss Ida Gopeland. :"!tj Mi^j. J. ,YV. Trees visited relatives at •Zionsvilte last week. itvio tVAi.-rZ

..

Jesse Urr, wife and son ara' guests of the'formfers parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joliu

i\: r-c \.

1

M^j-jPlllie Trees goes.. Thursday... to KuoaeiliifLy where-she wiirspeifd a #'eek VvifthJher'i'riend, Miss Mabel Mtissleman. "and family' were guests iff AJr„£nd Mi's. Moses Fort Sunday, '. -. •j^Mi's. Rdb&t'Hayd ls: quite sic£r

SiV

fi¥?Bertct)rr: and Mfs's" B6lle'^hnson, y^q.oj^ve been attending sqhool at

:Vaj-

pai"8i$9w arft.gxpec.ted home next-Satcr-t£jJ. "C i.i •.' -u:-r Carl Vanlaninghain, '.of OakTaiici, formerLy"a teacher "here Was -calling on friends fche- first .of theweek.-

S100 Reward, $100.

'^hjr^a^eys olj.tAis^ap^wiji be pleaded t-

j(le^rrt,tbat..there,is

a,t,-least .ooe dreaded

tha^ science haj beew.uab.le to vcure

ioIf«llf:its atages.^and that: is Catarrh Ball's GAtai'rli Ct#e is-tlie only positive cure now known to The"ynied'ic^,.^raterbeing ,g «jnititiifitiojaal disease, iJtf&uires-.a .constitute tional treatnMflti Catarrh'Cure 'ii taken ih-ttfrnS-ft^ ac!tiiig(lirecUyl upon' the blood aii|Ihiucous wirface o-f the system, thereby jilestvs.Ting:the foundation of th'e dis-ease)-add giving the patient strength by birilditig,np the c&cstEttihon,and,< i^ist\ijgig nalurVm iioing its work. The proprietors ha,ye

BO.nrucbcftiit&iin

itacui-ative powers,"

that they Offer One HuAdred Dollar.^ for1 aiiy-case-tlidtit,"faiJs^to". cure. Send- for list-df^estTmonials-, ^ddr§^-i- :i »2 i. Fi J.tClinn*ev&C^i,"Toledo, O.! E^-Sold by TDmg'gKsts, 7flc.

a .a:!

SUItflTEK OUTrXtis

At Seaslioi e, Muuiidiiu ami Lake Resorts.

The Ocean Resorts—Atlantic City, Cape May, Asbury Park, Ocean Grove, Long Branch, and fatuous resorts along the New Jersey Coast ara reached by the Pennsylvania Lines. Asa direct route to Newport, Narragansett Pier, Cape Cod, Marcha Vineyard, Nantucket and the popular watering places along the Atlantic from Chesapeake Bay to Maine',' these lines offer special advantages.

Notice of Annexation.

To m»y concern: No^«e is lierehy RlTen-tkat at the regitt^r Weeti-'' nig ot tl»ejJ-!oarloiCouimissionpni of the.1 'ountv-of Hancock,' State oflndi

a line.paraiei with the

7/)-100 ^71:7^ -(^et. nortli Jjne-'of sajd (juarter hence uqrth oj dred'rthrety-^oneraiid 4-frrrI nTeet i.o said nprth

"IJ :l,r

Jine »oTu HTjtTtJoTi a nisiance^f, jesfin^-liiindrpfJ

oil aline paralletiyiWJi tion one hundred #nd sereuty (17^ feet to the place of beg: qfimttbitttuMJl J2i'if 1 tno^otnjirtJr^frajfetEa^AAa

By ordj-rjof tl^^i aiLxel -'US cjftorfcfte ICISS^- Ma4rttWaM,'lie €l%y wtrXi/Y'M.airM

1 ,w' 1 mjvm r»™, 1'^'i .'IiiO"'.' Ty- t'Lij

W

d,y

MinUXiihe -levt&ai< IM litter lit ntouicfl o^aimty^rnT'th®

thentjeyweHit 0 Mec»l'rd tllfilnAlbO.rttR'wiWf uromirnnHi ITTIR"f5T~Kai echAfMftoliMula-ed -Ailijfeverhty'if70)

SECOND

Furniture, Stoves, Dishes, Glassware, Carpets, Baby Cabs, Sewing Machines, Etc., Etc.,

For sale at the lowest living prices. Call and see my stock. I will pay liigliest prices for all kinds of second hand goods.

T. J. ORE,

Proprietor Second Hand Store.

"58 West Main

St.

"6-tf

.-00,001!- j-.3-r.9T O a-.J "3 t.Oflii'iZ-iitil •1! /IfK

tr.i

•££.T

i~ r"

i'j&rj-:

Are'diVeptjy OB^tjp"ii^.T9T^ yiV"

EKELLENT SERVICE

O

s-mizl

rerse Citvj-•-

e-^th -ta-\va ii- h, •j .::a v.:.'' 'J

Charlevoix.1,1 x. ..t Petosk^y,'

Bay 'Yiew,'

:r

Roaming Brook, Wequetonsingj Harbor Springs, Harbor Poiiit, Oden-Gden"

y'f -3«-

Mackinac Island

II pp6rP6ninsula PoilltS.

Tourist Ticket^' are

OilS U3/on sale

IJuly l-d&w-tf .arJH i-.i vt*

oir.1 y:

June 1st to

Sept returpvlinHfe QcU- 3JLst. .'

De$crriptivfe

OF TUB

NOR®Hm^^MICHIG'AK 1,-RESQ^

Time Cards and Ml ioforWatiti tnay be had by appiicatft^ •'tP^^tqk^ or addressing.*

1

r„f

T!j *TT

I'jii

:sere»ty-ohrflnd

.!e.^-'ie- W'' °/ieiui"

lin«» theime east on said north line to thfc'Wace" of beginning Also hegtnninjfW-a jfmvI 6it"tfi"e' fio^th line of.

x°fe ,&r*t

,iL

£, L. I^CKjWOOI), G. P.-& T. A,

To Mirthi'riH^,fine's1V. ^cSSj^°J6iao Itfllei-? £l«a.ti:iaa alia:RI^G«x:'--'-^ htn tisa. :1:T its-: jj

i'ity Of Greenfield, state of Indiana fli*,! with ti&

pSijfO^andsj-ea

^issaoais Aitn -'.civifiiia noora^iaj -WP ,aX -jOOM -ioa3 :i c-il if.-.iC-Ii-riiTOO -38009 4WTW

*{». .it +9:^rtiry.r* T( Wfi! i.s

....c

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.» .•

NEVER TOO LATE.

It is too late. Ah, nothing is too late Till the tired heart shall cease to palpitate. Cato learned Greek at eighty Sophocles Wrote his grand "GEdipus," and Simonides Bore off the prize of verse from his compeers When each had numbered more than fourscore years, And Theoprastus at fourscore and ten Had but begun his "Characters of Men.-' Chaucer, at Woodstock with the nightingales, At sixty wrote "The Canterbury Tales. Goethe, at Weimar, toiling to the last-, Completod "Faust" when eighty years were past. These are indeed exceptions, but they show How far the gulf stream of our youth may flow Into the arctic regions of our lives, Where little else than life itself survives. —Longfellow.

MY GENTLE FRIEND.

It was the winter of 1890. The new branch railroad into Phenix, A. T., had been running trains for two years, and invalids of the east were just beginning to learn that this metropolis of the southwestern desert land, with its dry air and abundant sunshine, afforded the finest winter climate on the continent. At the time I write the one train a day on the little branch railroad connecting with the main line of tho Southern Pacific wras well loaded every day, and the hotels and boarding houses were striving in every way to accommodate the influx of winter visitors.

As is usual in most new western towns, especially of the intermountain region, hotel accommodations were only mediocre, while the best restaurants were those connected with the big gambling houses.

For several days I had noticed a newcomer about the hotels and principal resorts of the town. His face had a strangely familiar look to me, yet I could not recall that I had ever seen it before. He was faultlessly dressed in clothes of the latest pattern, had a blond mustache, and but for his peculiar little gray eyes I should liave pronounced him a very handsome man.

He seemed to be a total stranger, and as I would see him of an afternoon around the Commercial House, or in tlie evening watching the games in "The Capitol" or "The Palace" and never talking with any one, I mentally set him down as the son and heir of some wealthy family who had sought a winter home in the desert that he might return in the spring a "new man."

I suppose I had noticed him for about a week or ten days before either he or I had the temerity to address the other. I don't know now which of us spoke first, but anyway it came about in that free, open handed way of addressing a stranger which prevails in the south and west. I had been quail shooting that day, and returning rather late in the evening went down to The Palace restaurant for my dinner in my hunting suit rather than disturb the folks at home with getting me a late meal.

An old California comrade had been with me all day, and after ordering our dinner we went out to the bar to try one of Frank's cocktails. Frank, by the way (or Francois, I should call him, as he was French), was a comparative newcomer from New Orleans, and as a mixologist exceeded anything ever before seen in Arizona. At least so all the boys about town said, and the old Hassayampas re-echoed their sentiment with hearty "that's what!"

Mv comrade and Iliad disposed of the first concoction and were discussing the question of another of its same splendid quality when the stranger spoke of the superior excellence of Frank's mixtures. I don't know how it came about, but presently one or the other of us said in the most brotherly fashion, "Won't you join us?" to which the reply came, "Tlie pleasure is mine!" and of course it wound up by the pleasure belonging to both of us before we again repaired to the dining room.

Our newly found acquaintance had ordered liis dinner about the same time as my comrade and myself, so we all sat Sown to the same table. I felt rather honored at this attention of the stranger, for in all my observation of him I had never before noticed him talking with any other Phenecian. He had a voice as soft ami smooth as a woman's, and as he:talked his language indicated the polished graduate of Yale or Harvard, with a finish of European travel.

Now, thought I, I will learn something of th,is man, where he is from and who he is

As the meal progressed I had occasion to ask hiip to hand me the pepper. As he did so:-he commented upon the fact that( mostyof the black pepper served on restaurant tables was not pepper at all, but a conglomeration of dried leaves and drngsy much cheaper than the genuine article/- His talk was learned, even classical, using medical terms and formulas with the familiarity of a chemist. From that he drifted on to places to spend the-jYsqnteir.ftnd incidentallyaf^feifi red to the fact |hagc£he last,? tli-Pfsq "win-. ters previous to this one he had-.speafer .*,on the Riviera. ,.

K-'" 3't, VO.tiJJLisMiOi-M dS-J-VL r. .' A question a,bout

uiera

T1

W

'fit-y, 5^hic'^eBf«iTO^}^Q||te«Silly "I© ttiJiCt* i-M Clldui&i "iMi 'iOOg 0' W*Jtea£ replied iskebtftil

to

JSce(i

two hours when a messenger came in from my friend, the surgeon general, saying he had just been called on for an important surgical case and asking if I would not accompany him and administer the anaesthetic. My California comrade and myself voted our new found acquaintance a most charming man and a capital fellow generally, though afterward I remarked to myself that I had not as yet found out anything about where lie came from or who he was.

Busy for the next few days, I thought but little more of this entertaining stranger. About a week later, however, I dropped into The Palace, just to see who was there, and the stranger, quiet and uncommunicative as usual, was watching the games, never standing over any one table for more than two or three minutes at a time.. From hero I stepped into The Capital, and Bert, the head man, not being busy, I began a conversation with him. Presently the well dressed stranger came in, and I noticed Bert's eyes take on a rather defiant flash as he watched him pass to the rear of the room. "Bert, who is that man?" I asked. "I've seen him about for some time now, but he never seems to speak to any one. He must be some easterner here for the winter, isn't he?" "Why, don't you know that fellow?" was the quick response. "He knows better than to speak to me. He's the blank of a blank who killed Jim Fallon in Prescott five years ago. Why, you remember his murder, don't you, general?" "No I don't recall it, Bert. That was when I was in Montana, and I reckon the trial and all took place before my return." "Well, it was the most cowardly murder I ever knew, and if that duck had his deserts he'd have stretched hemp for it long ago. You knew Fallon, of course, who used to run a 'bank' in Tombstone, and after the flush days there he moved to Prescott?"

I nodded assent, and he went on: "This fellow, Jack Underbill, Thimble Jack, who was nothing but a low down 'tin horn' anyway, got full one night and raised such a disturbance at Fallon's table that he finally got up and kicked him out of the house. "Underbill was furious over this method of ejection, and for several days went around threatening that he was going to get even with Fallon. Some of Jim's friends told him he had better look out for Thimble Jack, as he was a treacherous cuss and would probably stab him in the back. But Fallon laughed at them, declaring that Jack was too big a coward to attack a child, let alone a man. "So the matter run along for almost a week and nearly every one had forgotten about it, when one night about 10 o'clock, as Fallon was standing by the bar talking to some friends, this cowardly dog shot him in the back without the slightest warning. In the confusion he managed to get away and hid in the house of a frail woman. Talk of lynching was so strong the next day that he sneaked over to the sheriif's office and gave himself up. Fallon lingered along for three weeks before ho died. "When the trial came, this fellow's family or some of his friends, or some one in the east, put up the money for him, and he had half a dozen of the best criminal lawyers in tho southwest defending him. For myself I always believed the jury was too, for they only brought in a verdict of manslaughter and he simply got a sentence of five years, and what with good time he's out now. "I hopo you haven't spoken to him, for no self respecting white man like you ever wants to speak to such a cowardly dog as him."

And so this was my entertainer of a few evenings before. Then it dawned upon me why his face had always seemed familiar to me. As a territorial official I had often visited the penitentiitry at Yuma, and here had seen my friend of the Riviera, my friend the gambler. —General Edward S. Gill in New York Recorder.

Puzzled.

"Say, mister, how long before the mail man'11 be round yere?" was asked of Officer Barter yesterday by a very verdant hayseed who is toying with the lock attached to a United States mail box at Fifth and Morrison streets. "Why? What do you want to know for?" inquired the officer in turn. 'Cause I've got a letter yere that I want to get to my folks up the valley." "Well, look at the card on the end of the box that will inform you when he'll next call for the mail." "I have, but I'can't wait so long," responded Mr. Hayseed, 'cause my sister is up yonder street with our team. I've a great mind to break th&Vgoidurned lock to get my letter' iii^ ?is I want^y^olk^a.flpi tlie ivalJeyt tojknoW righ^gfl khat w&'y&jg'ot Jjta ffi§§§ies

ojir.plara.

and, Monaco

seemed to ei&rag^'h^', and He went on with felo^n^ ^scriptioS of' tlie'se ••famous rlssorts:^ **Aifd, bh, wB&t argfoft^' "OUS .duiva-it istalohg4fr6

G5rniclfeIK)aai

'he with th®. neve»«ndifig' PanfFJln*?' o&.hay.rai^dJiky. rwith wll (their various tints and the magnificent mftjgflM?h«8ris,sKfeMrr noth!ng ly America a^jd, |^e%xe, nqth-.,

'ing fii fl&Wfif'to equal it, $leno and Bordigliera

-0—

.jesor^'-raiiff-^i^fsi tor a£ittfcfr Walters fmf&niflit ^as^Hy f^k

feir/iTOS ToobadyouhW«*#w: TJiiv" La Riviera di Ponente, •lMi^oliPC1,^ vwrrte^^u^:' coUnta? 79 .(•Avis j-jMaik'fta -ioikii ^1^Spttftffll!0n9B4¥§|11ldij

,se©a8i»coiaBftth)pcc cx

WJOX(} a&ta booanuawoii: nj

1

/iSCdiaT*JPCltiMifat&t vtfifr.'£-c

.""l''6

'48wpfcSDiBcs6iie:'giitriitill$to6

%3?r

3UR,

rj,.f

..

When3 Officer' Barter showed ."th©/v^r,vdah£ onfe haft 'it^d?op^his fetter into^the boi£^ithoxft^ib^mpdttn^'with'f the Jocic

Mri^Hay^'d'^g^e wfif^tle exclaiming:^- «aiA ../l&sveao is. !6kldiirn:melJ^iYerecl'v«^eit' Vftiltc fag ^4&Hug&tg oii tMaorhounsfQi! that

lettSP

lopk of Jiktf gok

they lhvonE Chat newfamled,machine'

1

lllyv.v

-ad cHT rc .- .L-.tvico- -.so jo. bo* Bfi

W

arms when sh© said, Walter, it is too

bad that maiM^is^suah a^rouble to

dlj ,-tf

19JK

., na ad «S0crmw -M *m£S aw»t

Among all the structures that[make up the human body, the nerves have been until recently the least understood.

The role of the nerves in the digestion and assimilation of food is a highly important one. The question whether the food shall nourish or become a mere load 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 exhausted the disgestive processes are obstructed, the body is weakened and pains of neuralgia, indigestion, rheumatism, invade its parts. During repose the nerves and great nerve centers feed upon the nutritive matarial that is stored in the blood aud tissues. It is when this supply of nourishment is prompt and abundant that the nerveus system is able to recuperate, but when the system has

tampered with, become too tired to appropriate sufllcieut nourishment and tlie nerves too shaky to get the the rest they need, that best of all blood purifiers, nerve foods, and nerve regulators, Paiue's celery compound, should be given at once.

Paine's celery compound has brought health, strength, aud freedom from nervous weakness to thousands of tired women, "run down men, aud sickly children. It makes lliem able to sleep soundly, to digest their food perfectly, and to win back health and strength. The tired brain and nerves are rebuilt and thai wasted parts repaired during sleep, and where neruousness, irritability, and inadequate nutrition of the nerve

i'

WORSE THAN POVERTY.

Poor Blood and ISTerves oi.it of Order —-Take Paine's Celery Compound.

4

•••n3 lt.iL a:I tc.: J. -.

.£l. V.

x£.t

'J -J'i'-Oi its"1' ii: JCO'i 8:

•i--

-.""ciO'cy. ,33 ,•{ jjjicn

V.

i3R

if

rax.

Si

vvv\\N\V1Cv-?-«.S.

vms.'iii

We invite all tlie citizehs of Hancock aud adjoiftg counties to in and inspect onmewsture^ ,B

New Fixtures,'- J!New"' Drugs. New Sundries, Nciw' Stock-efltll-Klfitls.

l.ii'i

jii rint-^, lOTT-'U'lib

•jnoei i^i'38ei .no'oijL jiil.

ceuters do not permit WTi lent sleep, nervous prostration, las-itu !e aud desponency are sure t» fol'o v. Paiue's celery compound guards against all this by promptly feeding tlie exhausted nerves and making the blood pure, abundant, and nourishing. It cures nauraglia, rheumatism, all forms of nervous weaknees, despondency, skin diseaas, audi affections of the heart, liver a ad kidneys. It sends pure, vitalized blood to every organ,and thus makes people well. Paine's celery compound has found its way originally through prescreptions by physicians, into every city and smallest village in the country.

It would be very difficult to find a mau or women oE mature agi who has no1-* either been helped by this remarkable remedy or has heard of its nurvelous prop erties at firsthand from sonii enthsiastic friends or relative. Paine's celery compound is the only great popular ramady that pkysicans of every school prescribe for disorder.-* of the blood and nerves.

Say Mrs. Kate Manuel.

216,1.^

-Ird ave.,

Minneapolis, whose picture is above: "I have been greatly benefited by Paine's celery compound. I hnve tikeu six bottles of the wonderful remedy, and recommend it to all who are aflicted as I was. For years I have suffered from indigestion, aud know not ho.v to give due thanks for the relief that I have reciive I while taking P,line's calery compound. My sou-in-lay has tak^n two bottles for similar trouble and it has nn.de him will.

Open and Ready IV Business.

iCm") i' t: i- tl

Bill i.iu^l-1 .snr/

u£.(lfill Ml-iTvM

The store will be in II. gcirfiiate of the" IVdue Unive.-8it}- aey.

'•0 7TOi[f3r} tJii' »X

E. corner Public Squaift^^rijj^

call

8'!1

1

o:.t.or.!

TI.M

\V ibs^

Mi

'aoi"K

JiK'*? :i

......Mahirr

.ajMnld

\W

i. a

Pm-