Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 23 October 1895 — Page 2

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Ili'siisoM Men

Ave attractive when dressed

fc.habb'iv. Let us help Itlier of

•you to always look veil and save

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lors oitcii means good clothes and

no n'-'in^r. Buying of the Star

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J. KRAUS, Prop,

22 W. Main St.

SECOND

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

Jt^Wtsale'at the lowest living prices. Call and see my stock. I will pay highest prices for all kinds of sec-ond-hand goods.

T.'J. OEE, Proprietor Second|Hand Store.

58jWest Main St. 76-tt

J. E. MACK,

TEACHER OF

Violin, Piano, Cornet,

'fi, Residence, North Street, next to New Christian Church. d&waug

DR. C. A. BELL

Office '7 and 8 Dadding-Moore block, Greenfield, Ind.

Practice limited to diseases of the

NOSE, THROAT, EYE and EAR

d&wtf

DE. 3. M. LOCHHEAD, HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN and SURGEON.

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

Prompt attention to calls In city oi com? try. Special attention to Childrens, Womena' end Chronic Diseases. Late resident physician St. Louis Childrens Hospital. 89tly

W S. MONTGOMERY, Editor and Publisher.

Subscription Kates*

One year

......10 cents

85.00

Entered at Postnffic as seeond-class matter.

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ficial nest, ana uoing the young robin act by putting up their bills for just one more worm.—Kusuvillc Republican.

INDIANAPOLIS is making arrangements to secure I'.d'.*'

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•vr.crc the iitizeas coulu meet and gather !'cr

r-nd p'easure. Is there not

»ciK8 ven?thy "vjhllc spirited citizen, who wants t: leaves, fi'"e monument in J-UP

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NV'III O Il WIUIIE C1':-'Y CH.II BO giVF:U A 3RI£like appearance by each person keeping

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iiii.e uu ijntL tuc ouu it. The proper thing to do is for the government to acquire possession of those roads RDd run them in the interest of the people. In speaki: :c- matter Tuesday i'.e Indianapolis News siid: ''Western prejudice and enmity have made it difficult for Congress to give is matter fair consideration or to pass any measure whatsoever looking to an extension of the debt." It is a little stranj that men w"io have a knowledge of the frauds, the crimes and the thefts of many of the IToinoters and -'la-iageis of the Pacific railroads should bo prejudiced against them. Ag-uu, the Western railroads have held up the people of that section and literally robbeu thent by their high passenger and freight rates, especially the latter. We have heard of farmers who shipped stock and grain from ilie West to Chicago beintr compelled to pay the railroad eompumeri more money for freight than their' shipments sold for when they brought the regular price. Such thines hiive h. tendency to create a prtjudice and it ought. The Westerners have also seen many of the railroad promoters reveling in their ill gotten gains.

The Sewer TV-T:« TO GO On. A basis of f-ettiemeut has be'""i read e1:! between Charles DowniDg and M. Mathews & Co. contractors putting in the sewer system in vhib «-iCy. Whereby the injunction proceeuings will be dismissed by Mr. Downing nnd F. E, Glidden and the right ol way given to pass over their respective lands &o the work on the sewer will continue at once.

Boy Killed by The Cars 'ear Wilkinson. Willie Sturgis, seventeen years old, was riding from Sherley to Wilkinson on a freight train Monday, and while attempting to alight, the iron hand-hold gave way and he was killed by being thrown against the trestle work of a bridge. The accident occured a short distance west of the station. His body was so badly multilated he was hardly recognizable. Coroner J. H. Justice, of this city held an inquest.

Judge Gooding To Speak At Rushvllle. At the invitation of a number of his friends Hon. David S. Gooding goes to Rushville Saturday, October 26, where at one o'clock p. m. he will deliver a speech on "The Money Question" at the court house. The Judge has strong and earnest convictions on this subject which he will present in a plain forcible and emphatic manner. When talking of the money sharks and gold bugs he will no doubt take the advice of a Rush county auditor given to him years ago when makiug a speech there which was "Peel em Dave, d—n em, peel em.

CHURCH NOTJ5S.

A Sunday school rally will be held at the- Christian church on Sunday, Nov. 3, at 10 o'clock a. m. The object is to bring the congregation and children together in one meeting, at which the Sundayschool lesson of the day will be studied, wi ha corps of liftv teachers. At the conclusion of t'sis ssou, ofhwi* exercises will follow.—Rushville Republican.

The above co'ivevs an excellent idea. If the oilier members of the churches here would take an increased interest in th« oundaj-scnoois, it wcuid l)c of ^rcal: advantage in many ways.

Following is the program for the teachers' meeting at the M. P. church, Thursday night:

Devotional services, by L. Shumway. Lesson text, by F. M. Carpenter. Lesson surroundings, Mr. Wheeler. Lesson story, by C. J. Hamilton. Review of lesson teachings by all.

C. J. HAMILTON, Supt.

Rev. W. L. Martin and wife, of the M. P. church, left for Greensburgh today to attend the annual State meeting of the Christian Endeavor societies of Indiana.

Vi™ -eg

SPAIN GOES TOO FAR

Her Policy Toward the United States Criticised.

GEN. JOHN W. FOSTER'S VIEWS.

1 Wliy SlioulV "Tr r~?

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nrnm^niTti o«xf, Oi ?r.fot: oy

guilts as —Sj,.—A- i'«ocia5med Her Kecosr ji'inn 'tlie nY.uUjorn Confouer:icy Wis- Y*

Day

IPN-UPI \A/m, 1). Byuum

out of the youug robin business and a place on the crest of the Indiana. No niRii has been more persistent and faitnfullc asking -i oeing ready to receive pill Ola ..... J-amuub -'KtasB bun:?!'."

^-ark facilities and

to 1 Hi Liiur beautify the parks they uw\v have. T3o to_, ]-.st few years, has raised by taxation and sp?nt on parks, rjpjU'.'O.

TJSE

WASHINGTON, Oct. 23.—The interest taken in Spain in the policy and purposes of the United States to .wax! Caba is indicated by the arrival here of Senor Testifonte Galligeo, a special correspondent of El Heraldo do Madrid, one of the leading capers of the Spanish capital, \vno ior the purpose of pT'rassing 'h? «'Yt:meut among leading p-ablic men here.

Senor Gulli-ro sought to secure an interview win? Cleveland and Secretary Olney, but did not succeed, owing to. the d^p-irture of the former for Aflaifta and the engagements of Mr. Oiney.

Later ^.Ir. C- JI geo found General John W. Foster, who was United States \^-istar in the negotiator of the last, treaty wnn Spain and later secretary of Sk-at-c M-. -ui. iiairison cabinet. General i'osur, the ex-secretary of state, said that he was out of politics, so that ho had no information as to the policy of tills feovorameuc, but he added: '4It is mv opiiuun Emit if Spain dots i--'t les'iuiuatiug tks iiisoi'rccdou by nert spring, when the dry seuscn closes, she v/ui be confronted with the grave danger of losing the

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WALLER'S CASE DEFINED.

Mr. Etlielbert Woodford Tells What. lie Kiio.. ji.'oui.the Affair.

WASHINGTON, Oct.

2d.—Mr. Etliel-

bert Woodford, who was in Madagascar at the time the proceedings against ex-Consul Waller was in progress, yesterday presented his version of the case to Acting Secretary Uhl of the state department. Besides contending, as he did, strenuously, that the proceedings oi the French authorities were entirely unwarranted, and that the French court was without jurisdiction, Mr. Woodford presentod affidavits secured by himself from numerous persons iu Antananarivo to show that Waller had not been supplying the Hovas with arms, as was charged.

He also called the attention of the secretary to the mistreatment to which Mrs. Waller had been subjected by the federal soldiers on board ship coming from Mauritius to Marselles, lor which he thinks Consul Campbell of Mauritius is largely responsible, because of his failure to secure better accomodations for her. rii-s. Walcr Worn Out..

WASHINGTON, Oct. 22.—Mrs. Waller, wife of the ex-consul to Madagascar, now confined iu a French prison, has not been able to see any one since her arrival in Washington, being worn out and prostrated now her long journey is ended and she is among friends. She and her entire family are staying at the residence of Mr. John Sims, a personal friend of Mr. Waller.

MINERS' STRIKE.

It Is Growing and Liable to Extend in the 1'ttiiiisylviiiiia District. PHILLIPSBUKG, Pa., Oct. 23.—The miners' strike seems to be growing in extent. William H. Wilson, who has charge of the n, and who is in attendance at the massmeeting of miners at Houtzdal«, furnished the following list of idle mines and the number of men on a strike throughout northern and central Pennsylvania: Anita, 600 Helvetia, Adrian and Walston, 2,500 Glen Richey, 3U0 Dunlo, 300 Cassandra, 500 Portage, 500 Gallitzin and Lilly, 1,000 Reeds 250 Spangler and Baruesboro, 700 Dff Bois, Reynoldsville and Rathmell, 2,000 Toby Valley, 1,100 Coal Glen and Beech Tree, 500.

He makes the statement that in all 12,500 men are out and that in the northern district all the mines except the Horatio are out.

There has been no change in the situation in the mining centers of Houtzdale, Ooeola and Phillipsburg, where all the miners are at work.

Shot and Got Away.

COLLIERS STATION, W. Va., Oct. 23.— Negroes burglarized George Criss's store. A pursuing party organized and one of the negroes opened fire on them. A man by the name of- Wilson was seriously wounded. The burglars wer# not captured.

Japanese Ports Opened.

ST. PETKKSBURG, Oct. 23.—A dispatch to The Novoe Vreniya from Vladivostok says that the Japanese ports of Shimonoseki, Kokkaichi, Tokio, Sendai, Aomori ana Otarunai will shortly be opened to international trade.

The Female Criminal Excels the Male. Dr. Lombroso, the Italian specialist in criminology, lias written a book on "The Female Offender," in which he says: "The female bom criminal is far more terrible than the male. She combines the worst qualities of both sexes —the woman's excessive desire for revenge, cunning, cruelty, love of dress and untruthfulness, the man's vices, fickleness, fearlessness, audacity and often muscular strength. Celto wrote in the fifteenth century: 'No possible punishment can deter women from heaping up crime upon crime. Their perversity of mind is more fertile in new crimes than the imagination of a judge in now punishments.' Rykise said, 'Feminine criminality is more cynical, more depraved and more terrible than the criminality of the male.' 'Rarely,' says the Italian proverb, 'is a woman wicked, but when she is she surpasses the man.' Then comes Euripides with this crusher: 'The violence of the ocean

waves or of devouring flames is terrible. Terrible is poverty, but woman is more terrible than all else.'

Florida and Southeast.

If you have any intention of going to the Southejjist this fall or winter, y'o should advise yourself of the best route from the Norib k.iv.1 West. This is the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, which is running double daily trains from St. Louis, Evansville, Louisville ami Cincinnati through i,(. svv»\l0j 01"H. t«cooga, ,lr .?}*',.• sn A V, .«*..! i-t. .«.' hSonV* «.(* ci i.U It.'• itiiljiliii -st+i .?••»:••• 'nroiitrh -"v-uaHy \t'itii'a rsTii.' t-u« continuance of the Cotton States exposition, and tourist rs+es to all points in Florida ind Gulf Coa^t resor-•••: nn tig the season. For particular* as to rates and through car servic13. write, Jackson Smith, •Biv. Pass. Agent, Cincinnati, O. Geo. B.

EJoraer, ui\. -ent, oc. Louis, Mo.

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car-, 111. P- Atmore, '""--rl. Pass. ..f it-, L: .1'.:-. i—Kv. •'S'.t»l-wld-Wtf

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aitogwtnor. By that

time it will be ciitricuil, JI not impossible, to prevent the recognition, by the United 8. .it-. !,e aba us as belligerents, for the American people are V?i 'g awakened to r-hs fact that Spain piowaimwd her recognition of (.ue southern Confederacy within eight V,. CIAJ \J*. KJULILVOL WUS tired on."

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he NashvWe, C-'Stfanooga & St. Louis Railway, ii_o. ... -ili-jfJ of the Sou*.h iu equipment, roadway and service is also

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.w. ur."' live

national corrtot-«ri«s being located oa„ the arious lines e.f ait? system. This is the rreferred ror*« t: for the Cotton 'tats and inters alio aai exposition, oj-er. c.:?. --..bfirSl, lS9-"i,

Mr vvhj.rii vi-,y L:vv ui'.-iioa rr ps V.a. seen made. Through sleeping service from St. via Ev.iusville,

•onte the famous

1,r)ixie

Flyer"

throuJih '-,1 li-ip runs the yfcHi. iOuijsi .joOv! ~e/u v.\.i-1]vii.e find Jacksonville, Fia- 1'ov furthpr information

I',. sin­

ger Agent, llailw&y Exchange Buu-ing,

W. L, DANLKY, G. P. & T. A., Nashville, Tenn.

Call on Elijah Mannon the bo&s baker, for a ADS p\frr loaf homemade brdad, with J. H. Bragg, it Bo\n "s old stand, 19 West Main street. 20!Hi&w

lixcursion Kates, Atlanta Exposition. Round trip ticket to Atlanta, Ga., account the Exposition now on sale via Pennsylvania Lines at reduced rates. Persons contemplating .a trip to the South during the coming fall and winter will find ir profitable to apply to ticket agents of the Pennsylvania Lines for details. The person to see at Greenfield is Ticket Agent W. H. Scott. 38tfdw

House and Lot For .Sale.

By order of the H-iucosk Circuit Court iot number 7, in block number 5, in Wood, Pratt aud Baldwin's first addition, (No. 27, Wo jd street) is now offered for sale at private sale. For further information see W. P. Bidgood, Comraisoner. 272tf.

I do not have to run a wagon all over Hancock county to get to sell two or three rnore^loaves of bread than other bakers. I take the expense of running a wagon and put it in my bread.^Therefore if you want five cents worth of bread come to me an you will get it, the best and largest, ready for inspection any time. Harry Regula—between Thayer and Toil en's meat markets. Main street. 210 tf &

FOB SALE.

13 acres choice land, within corporate limits of city,

JOHN CORCORAN

feb26 mol

John Habberton

The author of Helen's Babied," has written a number of other tales that are quite as good as that popular story. One of them is

What Was He Made For

A. delightful short story which irill be published in this paper.

Other Splendid 5tories by^-^a^ Famous Writers In Preparation

The Banner of Light is, as every one knows, one of the most successful denominational publications issued in this country.

THE BANNER1 OF LIGHT. Editor of a Great Paper Cured By Paine Celery Compound.

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 public importance outside its principal field.

Mr. 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 OH the market such a nerve-easing and and soothing remedy as Faines' celery compound. It was brought to my notice by a friend who had himself been greatly relieved by its use, as I have also been. "I have frequently taken occasion to wm-..ouu r»»dc celery compound to others, and I do not know an instance wherein, if faithfully tried, it has not worked a benefit. ''Yours truly, John W. Day."

ROMANCE

"»W

OUE CXJ^ES.

THE MONTHLY MAGAZINE of COMPLETE STORIES.

ROMANCE

is made for that multitude of people who love stories in the good old sense of the word—not merely "studies in character." nor "stories with a purpose," nor "mosaics of style," but, first of all, stories that are good stories, full of life and vigor and action—the sort of thing that arrests the reader's attention at the start and engrosses it to the end.

ROMANCE

has printed stories by Robert Louis Stevenson, Mary E Wilkin ?, Rudyard Kipling, Alphonse Daudet, Frances Hodgson Burnett, A. Conan Doyle, Octave Thanet, Erckrnaun Chatrian, Moritz Jokai, Leo N. Tolstoi and a host of other famous writers of all lands. It is edited by the well-known writer, Mrs. Kate Upson Clark, and will publish during 1895 a series illustrating different varieties of the short story, which possess a distitctive charm.

ROMANCE

has been reduced in price during the past year, and is now the cheapest as well as the best story magazine 'the world. Subscription pr*ce $1.00 a year. A sample copy will be sent for three two-cent stamps. ROMANCE PUBLISHING COMPANY.

Clinton Hall, Astor Place, New York.

C. W. MORRISON & SON,

UNDERTAKERS.

27 W. MAIN ST.

Greenfield, Indiana.

&

Mr. Day's portrait is given above. He is a member of the Masonic, Odd Fi ows Grand Army and other fraternal organizations, and is highly t.steemed by his brethern and others in the social valks of life.

His gratitude for the good that this greatest of remedies hr.s done him is in no sense remarkable. Thousands who have been made well \$ Paine's celery compound have sent their unsoclicitedtestimenials tothe-proprietors of the remedy or direst to medical journals or newspapers.! telling for the benefit of others the results that followed the use of thej remedy that is food tor the nerves and brain, that enriches the oiood, that make) the weak strong, and is the one nervefailing specific, prescribed by physiciang and recommended by all who have ever faithfuhy used it, for insomnia, nervous debility, neuralgia, rheumatism, indigestion and the many ills that come from de, ranged, worn-out nerves and impure blood.

You Want

To|have your laundry done up in first-class shape, that is, washed clean and ironea glossy, theouly 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. I you try them once you wil go again.

HERRING BROS.

Bob Gough, Solicitor.

I A N S

The modern standard Family Medicine

Cures

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the

common every-day ills of humanity.