Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 17 October 1895 — Page 3

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sciatica, neuralgia, muscular atrophy, neavous diseases, the dibeasaa of women, «tc. The treatments are pleasant,promi in ae' »oa and permanent in effect. There is no shock, pain or exposure. Dr. Loghead is to be congratulated upon his enterprise in securing this valuable line of ,v 'V''treatment, for v&' i-h there is certainly an '--j -immense field o£ Action. It has received ilv -the dtroigest eny!rs of the medical "^profession.

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Local and Personal.

A'-yW. S. Gaiit was at Mohawk today. C. M. Gibbs left last evening for Columbus, O.

The Council meets ia adjourned session tonight. Re^hH Orr, daughter of A. S. Orr, has the uiphtberia.

TVa regular jurors have been dismissed fr-r cnis term of court. F. E. (JJliddea left this morning for Lewisville on business.

Harry Strickland and Tom New were at Fortville today on business. Ed Custer went to Maxwell, Mohawk, Eden,and Willow Branch this afternoon.

Mrs. ./ jiiii Shelby aud Mrs. W. T. Allen are visiting relatives iu Cambridge City.

G. V. Vn'kfry, the blacksmith, harl h!s foot badly mashed toiiay by a horsa stepping upon it.

MRs "Wnlitt, of Indianapolis, who has Sr-j been vi^iciug Mrs. J. R. Boyd letfc for her home this afternoon.

Mr nnH Mrs. W. A. Tolan, of Wabash, are in tne city attending the funeral of Charles Tolan's little boy.

Ed Shelby left this morning for Seymour and other towns in the southern pp." "l. auti to make his fall delivery of fruit trees.

Miss Grace Reed left this morning on & visi'" with relatives and friends in Rush and Shelby counties. She v»iil return about. December 1.

H. PuntieKi, who travel:1 for the Auburn Buggy fWnp.-uy, is in the city visiting his chi! .'ven, who make their home with Geoige W Duncan.

George WT. Reed and wife left today for an exieusive visit with relatives and friends in northern Indiana and north-•ca-U O

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They will be absent for

about six weeks. Miss Flora and Mrs. Ed Jackson left this afternoon for Ardmore, Ind. Terr, where they will arrange the affairs of the late Ed Jackson and then return to Greenfield, where they will make their future home.

W. S. Montgomery, of the

CAN,

REPUBLI­

returned today from a ten days' trip to Nasiiviiie and Chattanooga, Tenn., and Atianra, Ga. Later he will write of some ol tbe many interesting things be saw. Mi's. Montgomery went on to Noblesville, but will come home tomorrow.

Dr. J. M. Lochhead has purchased of W. F. Howe, Potsdam, N. Y., the Howe Combined Electro-Thermal,^Turko-Russian afad Medicated Vapor Bath Ap^rparatus, which has been placed [in many \$s£hcolleges, hospitals and sanitariums. It 151v*is partioulcirly adapted to tie trcal^ncnt /'•. of chronic diseases,^such.as rheumatism,

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There is more Catarrh in this section the country than all other diseases put ^'"together, and until the last few years was

I supposed io be .incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced^it a local '."'•disease, and prescribed locul remedies, and by constantly! failing to cure with {local tieatmont pronounced it Incurable. |Science has proven cattarrh to be a constitutional treatment disease and there fore require? constitutional* treatment.

Hall's Catarrah Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful, It acts directly ongthe blood and mucous surface of the system. They offer one hundrel dollars for any 'if* i' cas it fails to cure.. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address. "X F. J.CHENEi &Co., Toledo, 0.

Unsold by Druggist, 75.

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A Big

Verdict.

The case of Richard N. Yonng vs the Ciiizens'Street Railway Co., of Iudianapof|s, was decided by the jury today. He Was awarded $12,500 damages for injuries received by being run into by "a \r. He asked for $25,000. In a preius

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h® ^een awarded $5,000

the company secured a new trial, nt it to Nobleville on a change of venand then it was sent down here. The .aintiff's attorneys were Henry Spaan, iidianapelis, Christian & Christian, of blesville and R. A. Black, of this city. fhe defense was represented by John B. lam and W. H. Latta, of Indianapolis, and Marsh & Cook of Greenfield. jr.

Deaths.

As reported by C. W. Morrison & Son undertakers. Hazel A*. Havens, age 11 years daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Havens on

Pierson street, Wednesday evening. Private funeral at Park cemetery, time not yet arranged.

Charles Poston, age 21 years, of typhoid fever, Monday night, Oct. 14th, at the home of the father, John Poston in Gwynneville. Funeral Wednesday forenoon at Hanover cemetery Services by. Elder W. S. Smith.

Call on John A. Evans for robes, blankets and all other goods put in a barness shop, will be sold cheap for cash, No. 13 S. Penn. street.

New .Crop v!

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Figs, Prunes Raisins, Peaches, Apples, Apricots, Currants.

Our stock is the largest and best ill Greenfield and our prices are the lowest.

AilllY

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UQhite Qrocerg

THE OLD RELIABLE

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Mill

Is now in running order ancl I wouid thank you all for your patronage.

First- class Work Guaranteed.

59 W.

Main

St.,

Gant block.

LOUIE L. SING, Prop.

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House and Lot For Sale.

Bv order of the H^acosk Circuit Court lot number 7, in block number 5, in Wood, Pratt and Baldwin's |flrst addition, (No. 27, Wood street) is now offered for sale at private sale. For further information see W. P. Bidgood, Commisoner. 272tf.

Notice to W. It, C-

Thfl inspector will be inspect Samuel H. Dunbar Corps Friday, October|18, at 7:30 p. m. All members are requested to be present. By order of President.

For Sale.

About fifteen acres of good corn, two miles north of Greenfield. Calltat the office at Spencer & Binford. '^Jggdundw

Kev. W. M. Ward Not Coining Here.

Dr. W. King announced at tbe prayer meeting at tbe Christian church last night that Rev. W. M. Gard, of Kuigbtstown, had written him that he could not except the call to the Christian church here. The pressure from both the members of the Knightstown church and citizens generally wa3 so urgent that he felt it best -to remain there. That speaks highly for his popularly and usefulness in that

field.

Heal .Estate Transfers.

recorded for the week ending Oct. 17, 1895, prepared by J. H. Binford, Attorney, Notary and Loan Agent per Mrs. W. F. Pitts, Stenographer, Notary and Typewriter: WinE Ashcraft to Caroline Vansickle lot, New Palestine .8 1200 00 Cbas O Eakin to Albert O Steele, lots,

Mohawk 9OTPQ Albert O Steele to Laura Eakin lots, Moll aw 900 00 Elizabeth Brazzelton to Noble Warrum, 237 a 1 00 Jno Mothershead to Lola Collins, lot, Fortville 100 00 Ida A Mueller to John E Martin, 385,71 a 1 00 Jno E Strahl et alto Jno Webber, 55 acres 2571 43 Benj Wilson to Jno Webber, 55 acres 285 70 Andrew Tague toO Eastes, lot, city... 950 00 Jasper N Bills to Adam E Wilson, 9 a 1 00 JcoL Mothershead to Tilghman Yanzant, lot, Fortville 200 00 Effle A Cochran to Wrn McMillan, 18 acres 900 00 Mary Warrum to Christy Ann Adams, lot, city 500 00 Philip Yearling to Phoebe Riglesber, 40 acres N A 5 00 Augustus Dennis to Margaret E Lowden, 80 acres 1 00 Effie Walker to Geo Cooper, land 500 00 Adam Wilson to Jasper N Bills, land,.. 1 00 Noble Warrum to Henry White & wife 25 acres 1375 00 Cornelia Lineback to S Gooding, lot, city 1 00

No. transfers 18 consideration |10393 13

FOR SALE.

13 acres choice land, within corporate limits of city.

JOHN

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MATERNITY'S TRUST.

RE.

Sho looketli well to the ways of her household and eateth not the brtiul of idleness. Her children arise up and call her blessed.— Proverbs iii, 27, 28.

Most mothers need not be directed with the counsel of the text. But the many uiiirftmcd chilciren of rich and poor alike that are seen upon our streets bear witness to the fact that there are soruov nany l'uithlessmothers. The government of these children is in the hands of those who taint their purity, blunt their manners and destroy their souls. These neglected little ones tell us that their mothers keep on in the old gay life, while they discharge their duty for an immortal life by prosy. I am spcc.k: .^ now of those who have the opportunity to do better.

An artist once said that he could not paint the face of a child, for it reminded him so much of heaven. It is from the motbnr that the child receives the first secret impulse in the line of its eternal destiny. The mother's very life will go down into the child. How solemn is the mother's trust, how fraught with eternal issues

The Nation's Need.

Our nation needs virtuous citizens, aud they must come from homes where Christian mothers keep watch. To the mothers God has committed the destiny of the world, and when we rcmenibcx that in this land there are 4,000,000 of mothers with millions of infants to be molded by the mother's love the prayer rises from our hearts to heaven that God may bless the honest mothers of our land. The great element of power and surest hope for our country lies in the homes. Who are the illustrious among men today? They are those whose mothers were the good old fashioned women who believed that the home was the mightiest institution on earth. The vulgar, the criminal, the men of corrupt influences are the men whose mothers found the duties of home too commonplace and the Ten Commandments an inconvenience.

Many women of our time sigh for fame. They seek for their mission in the world outside tho home, but there is no mission so holy as to make a home wherein God delights to dwell, where the head of the house is re-enforced for tho duties of life and the children are so trained that they will rise up and call their mother blessed.

No "Moods."

Norman McLeod says: "Oh, sunshine of youth, let it shine on! Let love flow out fresh and full, unchecked by any rule but what love creates, and pour itself down without stint into the young heart. Make the days of boyhood happy, for other days of labor and sorrow must come, when the blessing of those dear eyes and clasping hands and sweet caresses will, next to the love of God, from whence they flow, save the man from losing faith in the human heart, help to deliver him from the curse of selfishness and be an Eden in the evening when he is driven forth into the wilderness of life."

The best legacy that you can leave your children is the memory of a happy childhood. This will brighten the coming days when the children have gone out from the home, and will be a safeguard in times of temptation and a conscious help amid the stern realities of life.

And just a word to yon, fathers. You have duties too. However busy you are, find a few moments at least every day to romp with your boy. The father who is too dignified to carry his boy pickback, or, like Luther, sing and dance with his children, or, like Chalmers, trundle the hoop, lacks not only one of the finest elements of greatness, but fails in one of his plainest duties to his children. One of the inalienable rights of your children is happiness at your hands. Remember that the children belong as muoh to you as to your wife, and it is only just to her that the little time you are in the house you should relieve her of those cares that are her daily portion. 1

The Acta of the Apfotles.

The purpose of the book called the Acts of the Apostles appears to be to show how the religious system and company founded by Jesus Christ expanded after his death from a small Jewish nucleus at Jerusalem to worldwide dimensions and a universal scope, including all nationalities. With this thought as a clew to its meaning every incident and all its teachings have an orderly progression from beginning to end. Nothing needed to a clear understanding of this expansion of the Christian ehurch to include the gentiles is omitted from the record. Its value for all ages is incalculable. But for it great difficulties, if not insuperable obstacles, Would be met in connecting the existing Christianity with the Jesus of Nazareth.

Her Severe Criticism^

Re—Who is playing? She—Miss Pounds. But I had an idea the was working. —Indianapolis Journal.

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DR. PETERS MAKES A PLEA FOR OLD FASHIONED MOTHERS.

Thousands of Untrained Children Bear Witness to Maternal Ncglect—Home la tb" restitution—Duties of Paronf"- -.'s 'J.

Tho of Rev. Dr. Madison C. Peters* seru-oJi on Sunday evening, Oct. 6, at the BlooiuiJi«da.'o church, Ne^ York, was "The Mother's Trust." Following is the gist of his discourse:

Have You

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Have no "moods" with your family calvl»ate by -:tiict di.-oipline a disengaged temper, that will always enable you to enter into your children's playfulness. Let there spring up a friendship between you and your children let them feel that you are their best friend. Lay aside your dignity and lead in your children's fun and frolic. You cannot afford to let your children grow up without weaving yourself into the memory of their golden days.

I LIGHT AND AIRY.

A New iVheeling Song.

See the ladies on the wheelsHappy wheels 1 What a bored society this latest craze reveals I How they twinkle, twinkle, twinkle

Up and down the dusty track, With here and there a "sprinkle" And a smart frock all a-wrinkle,

With the dust upon its back I How they turn, turn, turn In a sort of social churn, Keeping'tune in rhythmic measure with their dainty toes and heels To the wheels, wheels, wheels, wheels, Wijuels, wheels, wheels, To the whirring and the whirling of the wheels! —St. James Budget.

The Way It Goes.

"Will the low neck and short sleeves be fashionable this winter??" he asked. "Certninly," she replied. "Why?" "Oh, I'm only trying to get the thing straight in my head,'' he explained as he watched the bloomer girl go by. "It's low neck and short sleeves in the winter and high neck and short trousers in tho summer, as near as I can make it out."— Chicago Post.

A Yearn.

Oh, poetry! How I would like to write up to date poetry— Bostoncse poetry that does not rhyme! Ah, me! How I yearn to yank the Muse from her lofty heights And be a sad eyed singer of youthful paeans That crystallize far down In the amethystine depths of the soul I Or rhymes like a Whitcomb Riley lay That ramble around like

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by famous

authors we have been publishing lately? We have on hand at present original stories by the following writers:

A: tonan Doyle W. C^rk Russell Alfred R. Calhoun Robert Barr Florence i. Guertin I. Zangwill Mrs. E. V. Wilson John Habberton Rodrigues Oitolengui

jagful

Joy.

Oh, Muse. Where is thy sing? —Vancouver Idea.

Why He Was Late.

""What makes you so late coming to school this morning?'' asked Mr. Leonard, a teacher in one of the New York public schools, of a tardy pupil named Horned Brooke. ''They arrested a burglar in Fifty-eighth street, and ma sent me to the station house to seo if it was pa," was the reply.— Texas Sittings.

Wanted, a Tenant.

She wore a locket around her neck— A locket of shiniqg gold— it The shape of a heart and large enough

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A picture petite to hold.

I opened the locket to ascertain Who was her particular pet, But instead of a miniature photograph

Was a sign which read, "To let." —Spare Moments.

In the Moonlight.

Miss Bloomers—I wonder when Charlie Newboy will ever learn to ride properly? Miss Knickerbocker—What's the matter now?

Miss Bloomers—Why, he works so hard pedaling that he doesn't have breath enough left to propose.—Bangor Commercial.

They're Autumn Girls Now. They've left the beaeh and mountains all And other summer stations, And now they're ready for the fall.

Engagements and flirtations.

They leave the mountains and the shore-

To disappear? Oh, never! The girls are with us as before And Just as sweet as ever. —Boston Courier. •'Miff S 1

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The Right Time.

"Why are you so naughty, Johnny? It seems to mo that, with mamma worn out and papa with a broken arm, you might try to be good." "Oh!" said Johnny, "that's just the time to be bad no one can lick me."— Tit-Bits.

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Waiting.

With joy my eyes grow bright again My heart beats quick, and hope inthigh. I hear her step approaching now,

And with her peace will come me nigh. 'Tis not perhaps the gladness keen That greater poets frame in song.J She only brings my dinner in,

For which I've waited all too long. —Detroit News.

A Good Man.

Hazel—I have one of the nioest dentists you ever saw. Nutte—In what way?

Hazel—Why, he pulled out the wrong tooth the othor day and wouldn't charge me a cent for it.—New York Herald.

A a A

The Sugar creek Horse Thief Detective Co. will hold its semi-annual meeting at Gem, Saturday, Oct. 26th, '95'

Spot Cash.

I WE'VE GOT 1 IF* RAMI

"We're g-oiijq to kncx the Life Oat of High X3rices.

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Kitchen Queen (cook) ISo. 8 ®8.25^ Novel' sold before for less than ^12.00. 4 Farmers' Friend, with reservoir lik cut S18.00

You can't touch this stove for less than $'20.00 at regular stove stores.

Always get our prices.. We'll s«yo you money.

II: B. Thayer, G-r-eeriflelcl, Ind.*

I have started my Kirkville Meat Market \Varon. loaded "with a choice line of meats, which I "will deliver right at your door, thus saving you a trip down town.' I will carry nothing hut

And will guarantee it both as to the quality and price. Remember that I Trill only the finest cattle, and each piece of meat you buy of me will be first-class. Watch for my wagon..

EDWARD CUSER,

Married, Mr. Frank Oran Niles and Miss Hattie May Pierson, at the Methodist Parsonage in Charlottesville on Sunday, October 13th, Rev. E. F. Albertson officiating. After the wedding ceremony an elegant supper ^as served at the home of the groom's father, Wm. Niles. Only the relatives were present but many others are ready to offer congratulations.

KIRKVILLE, INDIANA.

W. C. ATHKRTON,

,, President

Mrs. Jennie Binford very pleasantly entertained the Ladies Helping Hand Society, of the Christian church at her home three miles east of the city yesterday. A splendid dinner was served which was the special feature of the occasion. In the afternoon an enthusiastic business meeting was held and the rest of the time was spent in social conversation, after which the ladies bid their hostess farewell having had a most enjoyable time.

Frnit Trees For Sale.

Go to D. H. Goble's nursery, one mile west of Greenfield, north

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iVCda.

J. E. MACK,

TEACHER OF

Violin, Piano, Cornet, Mandolin.

Residence, North Street, next to New Christiau Church. d&w auf

DR. G. A. BBLI

Office 7 and 8 Dudding-Moore block, Greenfield, Ind.

Practice limited to diseases of the

NOSE, THROAT, EYE anfEl

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Bide

of

National road, and get your own choice of trees. Apple, pear, plum, cherry and quince trees, blackberry, gooseberry and currant plants all cheap. 42 4t

DR. J. M. LOCHHEAD,

HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN and SDRSI01

Office and residence 42 N. Penn. street, west side, and 2nd door north of Walnut street.

Prompt attention to calls In city or country. Special attention to Chlldrens, Womena' and Chronic Diseases. Late resident physician St. Louis Childrens Hospital.