Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 17 September 1895 — Page 2
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know the succcssi'ul merchant of to-day caters to the wants of the public by lion-
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from the old skin grimes now feeMy worked occasionally. We do business on the broad plan of uuod values, making it to
Your
interest to trade at the Star Clothing House, because of the better class of clothing secured and money saved in low prices. This is true not only in our stock of suits, but also in hats, capsf shirts, lies and
Underwear.
J. KRAUS,
One Price Clothier.
SECOND
Furniture, Stoves, Dishes, Glassware, Carpets, Baby Cabs, Sewing Machines, Etc., Etc.,
For sale at the lowest living prices. Call atiid see my stock. I will pay highest prices for all kinds of second hand goods.
T. J. OER,
^Proprietor Second Hand Store.
•5S Wst Main St. 7f,-tf
Base Hal I.
AT CLEVELAND— II E Cleveland 4 0020010 x— 7 14 2 Cincinnati 0 0000000 0— 0 4 1
Batteries—Cuppy and Zimmer Parrott and Vaughn. Umpire—O'Day. AT BOSTON— E Boston ...0 2100001 0— 4 6 2 Baltimore 000010 5 0 1— 7 92
Batteries—Stivetts and Ganzel Hemming and Robinson. Umpire—Murray. AT SEW YOKK— E New York .2 0 0 0 0 1 0 2— 582 Philadelphia 1 10 15 0 1 0— 9 10 1
Batteries—Dolieuy and Wilson Carsey and Clements. Umpire—Hurst. AT WASHINGTON— E E Washington 4 0041106 x—16 19 7 J3rooklyn 2 1530000 1—12 16 0
Batteries—Mercer and McGuire Kennedy and Grim. Umpire—Heydle. AT WASHINGTON— E Washington 1 0 2 0 0 0— 8 6 5 Brooklyn 4 2 0 3 2 0—11 8 1
Batteries—Anderson, Malarky, Boswell and McGuire Abbey and Grim. Umpire —Keefe.
CA v. THE MARKETS.
Review of tlie Grain and Livestock Market*
'srl
I°r Sept. 17.
Pjttsimrg.
Cattle—Prime, $5 30(ga 50 good, $4 50@ 4 75 good butchers', $4 10@4 40 bulls, «uags and cows, $1 50@3 00 rough fat, 32 75@3 75 fresh cows and springers, $15 •4J40. Hogs—Prime light and medium •weights, $4 80@4 85 common to fair 4* 40(a}4 60 roughs, f3 00@4 25. Sheep— Export, 13 50(gb 80 extra sheep, 13 Oil® 40 good, 12 60@2 90 fair, (1 70@2 20common, 50c@$l 00 spring lambs, 92 00® 4 60 veal calves, 16 5u@7 00.
When a Roman child left home, it was commended totheoareof a goddosa named Abeona.
vV. S. MONTttOMGRl*, Editor anil Publisher.
subscription Kates.
One week 10 cents One year 55.00
Watered at I'ostotKce as s^-oud-class matter.
MR GLADSTONE is of the opiuiou that if London stands firm for the single gold standard that advocates or bimetalism and all the influences tliey can enlist will not bs able to overcome it. Just wny it is the great majority of the peopie want to be bamfoozied, is hard to uudei^tainl. The gola standard is simpiy in the interests oL the few.
THE Chicogo ter-()oan s-tys that Cleveland -seems to be at the mercy ot the sharks that swim uround the ship ot sciue, aad the ship itself is rudderless. The administration seems to have mistaken these sharks f.r the meueyed :nteie-.L or the country. This is much like mistaking the b^ar.- and bulls the Ciiic.v gor grain pit to the i-armers ot the whe.it and corn belts of '-he prune--,...
THK government delict. lo August was only $-4.000.000,0u0, widen is eon.-ii-erab'e of a gain. DemocratLC campaigners used to devote a cousnleraale pari oi their speeches to tin? enormous .surplus the Republicans were piiiujc u^. Since we have had a Dem .-.jratie President and Democratic legislation. the surplus has disappeared aud a dclicd promptly sho ^s itself each month. Grover bus hired some English Jens and other doou suckers, their New York al!ii-, to -it on the steps and tike charge of i.'ie S. Treasury. Such a lmmiliatiijg spectacle ikes the American p.-op.e sick. I'hey have had enough of tint kind nf' trovernmeut.
Max/ people are penny wise and pound foolish. They watch the spigot carefully -vhile the contents of the barel run out through the bung hole Laws have been pas-ed by the legislatures of Indiana in ieg«rd to catching fish with a seine or dynam.ting them aul yet, when the big Yoiktmvn piper mill dumped its refuse in Waite River .-above Anderson and killed ten million fisb, there seems to be no adf qi$te punishment. The water was so polluted by the dead and decaying fish, that Anderson's water supply had to be shut off for a time. A man would be punished for throwing a dead horse in the river. What has been or will be dont with the straw board comoauv.
TIIE West indulges in some odd feasts. Since Eastern Kansas has this year raised the most enormous corn crop ever known in the history of the State, the event is to be properly celebrated by a big two days' corn festival at Atchison. It will be corn, corn everywhere. Rocky Ford, Col., indulges in a water melon festival, when 20,000 or 30,000 melons are piled up, and all visitors are treated until they can eat no more. Oiher sections of Colorado noted for fine peaches have peach festivals, while the sections around Greeley that grow about the finest potatoes in the world, run in big excursions and give a potato festival. The West is a fir.a believer in advertising.
LORD DUJSRAVEN need not feel so badly about his yacht, Valkyrie III, being defeated. The cup has remained in this country ever since 1851, when it was first sailed for. Eight contestants have been previously defeated. The facts are, the Americans have always defeated the British every time they tackled us except in one instance. They have succeeded in establishing the single gold standard in this country which is greatly to their interest. We believe they will not be able to make it stick, however, since it is against the interest of America and all her people except a few bond holders and brokers in New York who have already secured too much blood money from the U. S. government. It would be well to give the common people a chance now, and they will get it, for they can take it if they will only look after their own interests.
Deafness CMInot be* Cureil
B/locil applications a* they cannot reach the dise..3ed portion of the ear. There is only one way to cura deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused ty an inflamed condition of the macDUP mui* of Eustachian tube. Whr. thi I gots in/! aimed you have a "nmbliD? sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely [closed deafness is the result, and unless the infiamation can be taken oi.! au this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give one hundred dollars for' any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
OSIPSold by all druggists, 75c.
A Yellowstone Park Trip
Will do more to over come that feeling of lassitude or laziness which ever you prefer to call it than all the medicine in the apothecary's shop. Get out of the harness for awhile take a lay off and Tgo to the park and become renewed in body and mind. See the geysers play, hear the paint pots pop, the cataracts roar, climb about the canyon walls, catch trout in the Yellowstone lake, take on anew life. Send Chas. S. Fee, General Passenger Agent, Northern Pacific railroad, six cents for the new and Illustrated Teurist book. 84t6&d.
THEIR TENTS PITCHED
Thousands Camping on Chattanooga's Battlefields.
THOUSANDS ARRIVE HOURLY.
The Thrniij of Visitors Are Largely Made Ul of Wteraii* anil Their Families or F:ie:ils, Who Will Participate in the
Greur. National l'ark Dedication—Preparing Kor the Great Event.
CHATTANOOGA, Sept.. 17.—This, thriving, energetic business center of the south is us active as a California gold mining town during a boom. With evorv hour that passei the population is increased by thousands and buses, carnages and wagons and multitudes ot people throng tlie principal street.-}. The throngs of visitors are largely made up ot veterans and their 1 annuls or friend.-, who have come to see the g/e.it national park dedicated. on the sight uL tne bat-tii-iieid of Chattanooga. U\vi!i» to the tact that tne park extends o\er distance oi nearly -.'0 tulles, there na* bcon no cru.sn in me city. bo:ne ut the Msirors are lodged at Lioi.»ko.it jlountaui. some along jvLssion Ki.lge, MHHJ at Kossviiie and some at biuulyia:?.-! llill ur in tliat vicinity.
The dedication of the park wiil mark the .second great historic event- of this rtgHiti and the people upprecnito it-. Tne bauie in memory of wtne-h tins park is to bo dedicated was rile lirss. At tlxe second coauiien'onitiou there will bo present more governors, temporary kings, as it were, than the world ever saw so far as known before. They will represent millions of people and the stares over vriireii they rale represent billions in money. Twenty-iive governors wiil be present, the vice president- of the United States will be here, President Cleveland's caoinet, ^2 senator, -12 congressman, many generais of the army mat was in the days of lbUl to lyGu. Here, is a Jist of tne states with the governors that will represent them:
Alabama—Governor W. C. Oates, with staii' and several representatives of the state.
Colorado—Governor W. A. Mclntyre, with five state officers. Connecticut—v.i overn-or V. O. Coffin, with a large party.-
Georgia--Governor W. Y. Atkinson, with a staff and military escort. Illinois—Governor J. ir\ Altgeld, with staff.
Indiana—Governor Claude Matthews, his staff and a. number of citizens and the Indiana commission.
Kansas Govorno'r Merrill, with party. Louisiana—Governor Foster, with party.
Massachusetts Governor Fred T. Greenhalge, with state officials and others.'
Michigan—Governor J. T. Rich, with staff, ex-governors and distinguished oitizens, numbering 40.
Minnesota—Governor Nelson and party. Missouri—Governor Stone and party.
Montana—Governor J. T. .Richards, accompanied by staff. Nebraska—Governor Holcomb, with staff and party, numbering 16.
New Jersey—Governor J. T. Werts, with staff, president of the senate and two members of the senate, speaker and four members of the house, etc.
New York—Governor Morton and staff. Ohio—Governor McKinley and staff, citizens and part of the Ohio guard.
Rhode Island Governor D. R. Brown, with staff. South Carolina Governor J. G. Evans.
Tennessee—Governor Turney, staff and militaty escort. Texas—Governor Charles Culberson, staff and committee of 10 oitizens.
Vermont—Governor Urbana Woodbury, with staff of 20 or 25. West Virginia—: Governor W. A. MacCorkle.
Wisconsin—Governor W. N. Upham. witli staff, party numbering 12. Florida and North Carolina will be represented by commissions of citizens.
Mayor Ochs and the leading business men of the city declare they will be able to care for the multitudes they have be^n assured will come.
It is estimated by the various passenger agents centered here that 35,000 visitors have already arrived and the number is rapidly increasing. Hundreds of excursion trains have been advertised to come from Atlanta, St. Louis, Cincinnati, Louisville, Chicago and other metropolitan points. Some of the passenger agents estimate that there, will have arrived from 60,000 to 75,000 strangers by tomorrow morning.
The thrift and energy of the people of" Chattanooga has been displayed in the vigorous preparations they are making to handle the crowds. Every person who owns a vehicle and a team within a radius of 30 miles has been advised to bring it in to aid in hauling the visitors from tlio electric and steam, railway limits to the National park. Strict watch will be kept by the city police in connection with those of the park to prohibit exorbitant charges. All the citizens of the town have agreed to wear white ribbons on their right arm so that the visitors iuay know them in case they want information.
SONS OF VETERANS.
Annual Encampment, and Reunion in Knoxville. KNOXVILLE, Sept. 17.—The ninth national encampment of the Sons of Veterans of the United States is being held in this city. Commander-in-chief Wil-. liam E. Bundy of Cincinnati presiding. Every state division with the exception of Colorado, California and Oregon is represented. Three thousand visitors are in attendance. Many of them are men of national importance.
Yesterday morning the Tennessee veterans and invited guests had a parade and reunion at the famous Island Home farm. The national commahder also held a brief session. In the afternoon the features were a grand free concert, barbecue at Fountain City, racing, ball game between the All Professionals of Cincinnati a\tfd the Knoxvilles, and excursions to historic points about the city.
The city is one mass of flags and bunting and at night is brilliantly illuminated with electric and gas arches. The encampment is the largest ever held by the order.
ODD FELLOWS' CONFERENCE.
Meeting of tl«e Sovereign Gruml Tjixiffe at Atlantic Citj, X. J. ATLANTIC GITY, Sept.. 17.— The Sovereign Grand lodge of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows assembled here yesterday for a week's session. Grand Sire John W. Stebbins ot Rochester presiding. The delegates present represent 800,000 members of the American branch of the order.
The grand secretary's report shows the following state of the ordor for the past year: Total number ot grand lodges 56, a gain ot one total number of grand encampments, iiO total subordidate lodges 10,3!)2, a gam of 207 subordinate enciimpments 2,(J 10, a gam of 53 iiebekah lunges o,(i~7, a gain of 335 lodge initiations, 63,845 encampment initiations, 0,407 total lod:,re membership, 790,795: encampment meinoors, 134,330: Kebekah memuors, .225,189 relief pant by lods'cs I-.ordi Ainewca, $2,!»9:j,457.i renet paid by encampruputs, s*2S4.5-iO.C»: ay iiebekah lodges, !?45,313.94 total relict panl, -i,323,311.96 revenue received oy lodges in North America, .4i 4.32.V.06 by encampments. :j015.:Jo2.o7 bv Iiebekah lodges, §337.o4v} total iv\ enue, •io.42i ,b?0.5J.
The report tnen yives some interesting statistics ot the order from its inauguration in North America- in 1M0 ui) to Dec. 31, 1M'4, mciuding Germany, Denmark, owii^erhuul and Auhirana. Ilie lnUiation subordinate lodges were 2.014.27^ memuers relieved, 1.002,502 widows and families relieved, 216,178 members deceased in that tune, 184,y'J4 total relief paid, $67,828,670.47 total receipts, $1« 6,786,202.00.
The report- of Isaac Sheppard, grand treasurer, shows receipts of §90,601.85 paid out from certificate No. 6268 to No. 688, §32,083 balance in treasury, $28,601.02. The report shows that the assets of the Sovereign Grand lodge atthis time consists of cash in treasury, $28,410.4',' £30,000 in Lehigh Valley railroad bonds, and $15,000 in Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore railroad bonds. The total available assets as per his report of Aug. 20, 1894, were $63,251.21, showing a loss in the year of -i4,650.23.
An early adjournment was taken and the delegates attended a clam bake at Longport, given by the local committee of Odd Fellows.
A special session of the grand lodge of New Jersey was held in the afternoon aiic! visited by the members of the grand lodge of Connecticut, who witnessed the exemplification of degree work.
LEGAL EXECUTION.
Isaac Kdwards Hanged in tlic Annex of the Ohio Penitentiary. COLUMBUS, O., Sept. 17.—Isaac Edwards of Hocking county -was hanged in the penitentiary annex at 12:11 this morning. His neck was broken and the body was cut down 12 1-2 minutes later. Edwards was the first Welshman ever hanged in the state and. strenuous efforts were made by the Welsh people to save him from the gallows. He murdered Mrs. .Mary Sellers of Murray City who had cared for his motherless children, because she would not desert lier husband and live with him. Edwards displayed remarkable nerve.
Hons. W. T. Lewis and N. R. Hysell called on Governor McKinley yesterday and asked him to save Edwards, but he refused to do so, saying he would abide by the decision of the board of pardons. He declined to review the case at all in view of the fact, that the board had given two hearings to the case and was unanimous in rejecting it.
WANT SIXTY CENTS.
'Every Miner in Ohio May. strike on October 1. MASSILLON, O., Sept. 17.—Local operators construe the Pittsburg agreement to mean that Ohio will pay 9 cents less than the cash rate in Pittsburg on Oct. 1, which is 56 cents. The miners claim that they should receive 9 cents less than the Pittsburg company's store rate, or 60 cents.
President Mossop of this district has made a claim for 60 cents, and declares that anything less will be a breach of faith on the part of the operators and will involve the district in a strike. The issue will be drawn in this district, and if the operators fail to yield, the entire state will come out Oct. 1.
Insurance Must Be l'aid.
ST. LOUIS, Sept. 17.—Judge Thayer, in the United States circuit court of appeals, yesterday affirmed the judgment of the trial court in favor of Nancy K. Florida against the Aetna Life Insurance company, on two policies on her husband's life, aggregating $16,000. Alonzo K. Florida took poison April 27, 1893, and the Aetna company refused to pay the policies oil the ground that Flordia contemplated suicide at the time he took out the insurance.
Caught the Tramps.
BRADFIELD JUNCTION, O., Sept. 17.— Four White and two colored tramps seized an east-bound freight train, but Conductor Mclnery succeeded in putting them off after a hard struggle. A train with Yardmaster Heaton and Marshal Stolz was dispatched from here, caught them at Summit and placed them under arrest for stoning the trainmen.
Letter From Absonder lewip. COLUMBUS, O., Sept. 17.—Z.T.Lewis, the absconding bond manipulator of Urbana, has written au open letter to his creditors under a Dayton date, but it does not reveal his whereabouts, and little credence is placed in it. Lewis says he is now trying to raise a portion of the money due his creditors and satisfy them that he had no intention to defraud, them.
Kevolt in China.
HONG-KONG, Sept. 17.—It is reported that a rebellion has broken out on the border of the province of Fo-Kieii. The insurgents are said to have occupied the town of Heng-Leng, from which the officials fled, leaving the people to the mercy of the insurgents. A detachment of imperial troops are advancing to give battle to the insurgents.
Forgery Charged.
TROY, O., Sept. 17.—Harry Milton, a young man from Versailles, it is charged, forged a check and attempted to have it cashed at tiie banks here. As the officials were on the lookout for him, lie was arrested and has been taken to Darke county for trial.,
Killed by FaMins Slate.
GALMPOUS, O., Sept. 17.—-Poter Bofczell was fatally injured near Pomeroy, by falling slate in the Peacock coal tuiues..
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SIR?
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You Want
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In its 771 volume it is at once conservative and bright, discussing not only modern Spiritualism, but frequently lending its influence fearlessly in matters of public importance outside its principal field.
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Editor of a Great Paper Cured By
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wmm
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CTJISES.
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