Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 26 September 1895 — Page 2
Say.
Our fail suits are the nobbiest, best lilting" and cheapest in towu. That's saying a whole lot.
Do Your Mothers
buy your clothing at the Star Clothing House? It pays, We are the lowest :n prire and very particular to get strong suits that lit neatly. don't keep the big ''baggy" kind. You don't want to
W eai
0T\
•Vt
I J. 'raus,
I One Price Clothier.
Large size'jelly glasses, on
ly a few left, 27 cents perdoz,
to Close out.
Fine glass jelly dish, worth
double the money, only 5c.
Some decorated Vegetable
Dishes at 17c, 22c and 27c.
Coirie and see them.
Flower pots, plain and
painted. Prices right at
rank S.
SECOND
Furniture, Stoves, Dishes, Glassware, Carpets, Baby Cabs, Sewing Machines, Etc., Etc.,
For sale at the lowest living prices. Call a$d see my stock. I will pay highest prices for all kinds of secondhand goods.
T. J. OIIJLI,
Proprietor^Second Hand Store. 5B We^Main St. 7g-tf
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN.
W. S. MONTGOMER1', Editor and Publisher.
Subscriptioii Kates.
One week 10 cents One year 85.00
Entered at Postoffice as second-class matter.
THE speeches in the Hinshaw murder case at Danville are being made today.
Do not let the subject of across railroad die. It will do more to benefit Greenfield than any other one thing just now.
TIIE Republicans of Indianapolis, are doing right to attack the policy of the Democrat party there as a wide open one. The majority of people there bolieve in the preservation of law and order, and raising up- boys and girls, young men and maidens free from the numerous snares and wiles to which a wide open policy subjects them.
Last week six traveling men wore dining in an Anderson hotel. They were evenly divided politically. One man offered to bet that Tom Taggart would get more votes in the crowd than Trusler. Another mau remarked that he did uoc care to bet, but they would count just for fun. A. poll showed five for Trusler nnd
0110
for Taggart only the mui offer
ing to bet voting for him. lie said to one of the Deniociiits hy don't you vole for Tgggart. lie remarked "yes I i:m a Democrat but I don't want a wide open policy at Indianapolis. I do not want the men to run Indianapolis that furnished the money to put a saloon right in the shadow of the city High school buildihg to tempo boys and young men."
I have two boys and they gained their first knowledge of liquor at the High school saloon operated by the beer syndicate. No I wont vote for Tom Taggart Men who have boys and mea who them selves yield to temptation, should vote to elect Frestou C. Trusler mayor, so that law and order would reign and not beer and lawlessness, as Avould b: the case if the beer syndicate wins.
Deaths.
As reported by C. W. Morrison & £on undertakers. S. E. Jackson age 28 years of consumption at the home of his father U. S. Jackson on North State street Wednesday forenoon, September 25th, details of funeral not all arranged but will be under control of Kj. of P. and will probably occur SaturdaV or Sunday at residence burial at Park cemetery.
Jacob Froelke age 20 years of typhoid fever Wednesday forenoon, September 2!)th on South State street. The remains will be taken on the 10:33 train today to Yincennes, Ind. where Catholic funeral will occur tomorrow.
Ileal Estate Transfers.
recorded for the week ending Sept. 26, 1895, prepared by J. H. Binford, Attorney, Notary and Loan Agent per Mrs. W. F. Pitts, Stenographer, Notary and Typewriter: Nelson Bradley to Greenfield
Hotel Co. lot, city $ 3500 00 Henry St. Clair to John J. Carriger, lot Cleveland 30 00 David M. Carson to John J. Carriger, lot Cleveland 1500 00 Conrad Jennings to David M.
Carson, lot, Cleveland 3500 00 John Wilson to Geo. S. Wilson, 6.17 acres 1 00 Orlando Jessup to Martha J.
Duncan, land 135 00 Rufus J. Scott to Elvira C. Scott, tee deed 2i00 00 Henry Snow to Geo. W. Johnson, 28 acres G25 00 John Miller to Hiram Weed, lot, city 550 00 Reuben Roland etal to Sylvanus
C. Stanley, G8 acres 455 00 Samuel Grass to Lavina Carroll, land 425 00 Henry Childers to Henry Baker lot, Nashville 40 00 No. Transfers 12 consideration $12861 00
The Historic Route.
The Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway, the model railroad of the South in equipment, roadway and service is also the greatest in historical interest, more than fifty famous battlefields* and five national cemeteries being located on the various lines of this system. This is the preferred route to Atlanta for the Cotton State and International exposition, open from September 18, to December 31, 1895, for which very low excursion rates have been made. Through sleeping car service from St. Louis to Atlanta via Evansville, Nashville and Chattanooga. This is the route of the famous Dixie Flyer" through sleeping car line which runs the year round between Nashville and Jacksonville, Fla. Fofj further information address R. C. Cowardin, Western Passenger Agent, Railway Exchange Building, St. Louis, Missouri, or
1
W. L. DANLEY, G. P. &T. A., Nashville, Tenn.
l)o You Wiinl
To buy a farm?
2. To sell a farm? 3. To buy city property? 4. To sell city property? 5. To borrow money? 6. To loan money? 7. To rent a house? 8. To let a house? 9. To exchange propertiesj 10. Don't fail to see H. Snow, the allround real estate and loan agent, 14 South Pennsylvania street. d&w t&
CHARLOTTESVILLE.
Dan Burk went to Indianapolis Sunday to see his brother Joseph, who is fixing to move to Wilcox county, Georgia.
Joseph
Hunt and daughter are going to
Arkansas to teach school, where they have been for the past two years. They say that blood was nearly shed, not far from Louis Linebacks one night last week.
Rev. Albertson was called to the bed side of William Simmons daughter. He babtized her and took her in the M. E. church.
Brother Gard closed his protracted meeting on last Thursday night, Sept. 19th.
Mrs. Mollie Roland and daughter Pet, are going to move into their cottage again and Miss Pet Roland will go to school here this winter.
Bud Laughlin is moving in the Louse just north of the I. O. O. F. hall. Melvin Forts is moving in the house near the depot owned by W. »7. Tnovnbu g.
Frank Brandenburg is looking well and heaity. The:e is a large number of the "young ladies of this city working at the catmiu factory at Knightstowu.
Mrs.
Decker,
others were
-Mrs. Duty ahd several
hauled
to
tlii river by
Chas.
Brown for a days fishing, they good success well a« a good tim Re-/. A:be .tbon and others, Wedntsday at. the Soldiers Homo of Kuightstown. They report a time.
Rev. Morris ana wife and some others, were at the K. of P. convention at Wilkinson.
John Wii'dsor has bought him a new safety! you ou^ht to see John split the wind with that new wheel.
They reported that Rev. Morris wa going to leave, but when I called on him he said that he had come to stay, and he also wants to extend a special invitation to the young people to come and hear him preach.
Sick list—Charley Leamons is convalesing after a severe attack of flux. Dr. Cox is recovering from a sever attack of flux.
Mr. Louis Lineback is better after several weeks sickness. Miss Micha Butler is able to be out again after a weeks' illness also her sister Anna is convalesing.
Mr. King Riley is getting better after several weeks illness. Mr. Jerry Goddard is feeble since he had the last stroke of paralysis, but we think he is better.
Mrs. Rosana Brown's health is some better. Mrs. Ella Bell is able to be out on the streets again.
Mrs. Dau Roberts is still very sick, she has been sick for several months.
Florida and Southeast.
If you have any intention of goiug to the Southeast this fall or winter, you should advise yourself of the best route from the North and West. This is the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, which is running double daily trains from St. Louis, Evansville, Louisville and Cincinnati through to Nashville, Chattanooga, Birmingham, Atlanta, Montgomery, Thomasville, Pensacola, Mobile, Jacksonville and all Florida points. Pullman Sleeping Car Service through. Specially low rates made to Atlanta during the continuance [of the Cotton States exposition, and tourist rates to all points in Florida and Gulf Coast resorts during the season. For particulars as to rates and through car service, write, Jackson Smith, Div. Pass. Agent, Cincinnati, O. Geo. B. Horner, Div. Pass. Agent, St. Louis, Mo. J. K. Ridgely, N. W. Pass. Agent, Chicago, 111. G. P. Atmore, Genl. Pass. Agent, Louisville, Ky. sept21d-wtf
September
Is a splendid month in which to visit the Yellowstone Park. Shut up your house and take your wife and family to the Park. Have the greatest outing you ever will have. Two weeks in that mountain region, with such scenery, will do more to re-invigorate you than anything else you can do. Send Chas. S. Fee, general passenger agent of the Northern Pacific R. R., St. Paul, Minn., six cents for choid illustrated tourist book. 34tfar
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 a while take a lay off and |go 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 a new life. Send Chas. S. Fee, General Passenger Agent, Northern Pacific railroad, six cents for the new and Illustrated Tourist book. 34t6&d.
Ducks, Geese, Praire Chickens.
And Grouse can all be found among the wheat fields and on the prairies of Minnesota and North Dakota. Send four cents in stamps for our new game book. Chas. S. Fee. Gen'l Pass. Agent, Northern Pacific Railroad, St. Paul, Minn. 24fcf
Family Driver For Sale.
For Sale an A No. I six-year-old, well broke, gentle, high bred family mare for sale at a bargain. Call at the REPUBLICAN office. 246 tf.
Kit Oil' lier Tongue.
SPRINGFIELD, O., Sept. 26.—The 5-year-old daughter of Henry Tyree of Donnellsville was thrown from the eeat of a carriage in such away that her«teetli fastened in her tongue, which was bitten off.
TO SEND MESSAGESTHROUGH SPACE.
Experiments Which Prove That. This Invention la Practicable.
The continued success which has attended experiments in sending telegraphic messages through space promises to lead to remarkable developments. An English eleetrician says it is difficult to .forecast the future of this new telegraphy.. So far signaling has been carried on by this means in one direction only, but there is no reason why messages should not be duplicated, or even quadrupled. Further details are now at hand of the establishment of communication between the island of Mull and the mainland near Oban a few week ago, when the connecting cable broke clown. It will be remembered that an insulated wire was laid along the shore of the island, and messages through it wcro sent to the mainland, across two miles of intervening space.
The official report stores: ''"An ordinary Morse circuit could not have given bettor results. Thu chief difficulty was the incessant scroamin..? of the wild fowl." W. H. Preeeo. in commenting on the achievements, finds a very different explanation of this supposed "screaming of the wild fowl. He says that strange, wierd and mysterious sounds aro frequently heard on long linos of 1 olograph in the calm stillness of the night, but whether they are due
to terrestrial o.v to
cosmfd
causes re-
report mains to be. discovered. The sun's photosphere, when disturbed by spots, may be subject to violent electrical storms, and the vast jets of incandescent hydrogen that flame up with terrible velocity may excite electrical oscillations through ethereal space of such a fluency as to influence our terrestrial circuits. It may thus become possible for us to hear on earth the electric storms of the sun. —Buffalo Express.
p. nt "aili zood
I
Coat of Livrinjr In Paris.
An ablo statistician has been estimating tho cost of living in Paris at the present time and 3ms compared it with that of 40 years ago. He 'shows that in the fifties an average middle class family could do with a budget of 10,000f, or £400, annually. That did not mean luxury, but it was sufficient for comfort and required no economical engineering for the purpose of making both ends meet. Nowadays the case is. different, and an official with a wife and three children dependent on 10,000f a year has to work miracles of saving in order to avoid getting into debt. Accordingly in less than half a century the conditions of life in Paris have been completely modified. If is no exaggeration, in fact, to say that prices have doubled, and with them has increased the desire for-a more luxurious mode of living than that led by the average Parisian 6f the fifties. The statistician has revealed nothing new, but his figures serve to emphasize the fact that the French capital is the most expensive place of residence in Europe.—London Telegraph.
Eyeless Fifili From a Well.
Workmen engaged in ^putting down an eight inch artesian well on the ranch of Bufiord & Williams,near Ora Granda, San Juan valley, southern Colorado, had an odd experience a few days since. The w7ell had been drilled to the depth of 188 feet when all of a sudden tho tools appeared to penetrate a cavern filled with water under high pressure. Drills, rods, ropes and pulleys were, thrown high in the air and scattered in all directions by the torrent of water spouted from tho opening. Tho excitement was intense for some minutes, but when quiet was again restored it was fouild that "%)e ground was Mterally covered with small eyeless fish, white lizards and clear colored bugs that had been forced from thoir homes in tho pent up reservoir beneath. On careful examination it was found that the water had a temperature of 88 degrees and was strongly impregnated with medicinal salts.—St. Louis Republic.
Turkey's Subjects and England.
Probably Turkish rule in Armenia is not much worse than in Macedonia, and if the Armenians aro to be pitied so are the Macedonians, for the Turk is a blighting curse $o every subject race within his dominions. If we are sincere oar fervor for good government in Turkey, we must renounce the idea of sacrificing these races to our political aim of maintaining Turkey as a bulwark against Russia. This was the doctrine of Mr. Gladstone, and roundly has he been abused for it. The contrary doctrine has been that of Lord Salisbury and Lord Rosebery. Mr. Gladstone recognized the paramount obligation of conscience. Lord Rosebery, Lord Salisbury and many of their predecessors subordinated conscience to what they regarded as the Exigencies of policy.— London Truth.
Dug Up a Jar Containing Old Coin.
Thomas Moore, Jr., and two other workmen, while excavating for pipe connections at Market square, in Chester, Pa., on Thursday morning unearthed a small preserving jar, containing gold and silver Spanish coin, estimated to be worth at least $150. Some of the coin bore the date of 1800, and other pieces a later data An old market house, erected in the last century, stood on the site where the money was found, and it was torn down in 1857. It is thought the money was buried by one of the marketmen.—Philadelphia Ledger.
Houses of Wood Pulp.
You can build a house out of sheets of wood pulp now if you incorporate sheet wire gauze in the material. It can be made waterproof, fireproof, coldproof and stronger than planking. Moreover, the material can be made to represent almost any other material and can be molded into*almost any shapa Great is wood pulp.—Paper Mill.
S3 The Fuel Question In the West.
The race between corn and coal for the honor of being the cheaper material for fuel is interesting this year.—-Chica-go Tribune.
•M
Mm
MS
:"Yb
The Banner of Light is, as every one knows,erne ®f the most successful denominational publications issued in this country.
In its 77th volume it is at once conservative and bright, discussing not only modern Spiritualism, but frequently lending its influence fearlessly in matters of pubiic iiup )rl:iace outside its principal field.
Mf. John W. Day, who is the editor and one of the proprietors, writes in The Banner of Light as follows to the proprietors of Paine's celery compound: "I owe you a debt of gratitude in placing on the market such a nerve-easing and and soothing remedy as Paines' celery comjiound. It was brought to my notice by a friead who had himself been greatly relieved by its use, as I have also been. "I have frequently taken occasion to commend Paine's celery compound to others, and I do not know an instance wlierefn, if faithfully tried, it has not worked a benefit. "Yours truly, John W. Day."
EI
TO
Benton Harber and St. Joseph,
MICHIGAN.
VIA THE
BIG FOUR RY.
OCTOBER 1,1895.
FROM
Fortville, Ingalls and Pendleton.
$1.25
For the round trip,
For all information address
T. W. GARDNER, Excursion Agent Fortville, Intl.
C. W.MORRISONS SON,
UNDERTAKERS.
2.7 W. MAIN ST.:
THE BANNER OF LIGHT.
of a
Great
Paine's Celery Compound.
OUB CTJI5ES.
Indiana.
Paper Cured By
I®
'X n'MAwrTtJE*
You Want
mwmmsm
Pfllltt®
SlflSliS
r'llV
Mr. Day's portrait is given above. He is a member of the Masonic, Odd Fellows Grand Army and other fraternal organizatioiis, and is highly esteemed by his brethern and others in the social walks of life.
His gratitude for the good that this greatest of remedies lias done him is in no sense remarkable. Thousands who have been made well by Paine's celery compound have sent their unsoclicitedtestimenials tothe-proprietorsof the remedy or direct to medical journals or newspapers! telling for the benefit of others the' results that followed the use of remedy that is food for the nerve brain, that enriches the blood, that* the weak strong, and is the one nervefailing specific, prescribed by physicians and recommended by all who have ever faithfully used it, for insomnia, nervous debility, neuralgia, rheumatism, indigestion and the many ills that come from de. ranged, worn-out nerves and impure blood.
To have your laundry done up in first-class shape, that is, washed clean and ironed glossy, the only place in town to have it done is at the Troy Steam Laundry. They have all the latest improved machinery, and will guarantee all work they put out. If you try them once you will go again. &•*
Ii
HERRING BROS.:.'
Bob Gougli, Solicitor.
RI-P-A'N'S
The modern standard Family Medicine
Cures
the
common every-day ills of humanity.
1
