Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 22 February 1896 — Page 3
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What's To Be Done?
Why, call at our store, of course. We wish to exchange groceries f«»r cash or produce. A look at our elegant line ot fresh, new, and firstclass Groceries, Fruits, Vegetables, etc., and our low prices, will convince you that you should alway go to the
Prompt Service. Quick Delivery.
flA'illlY
STRICKLAND.
Opposite Court House.
•:A
BYES EXPIRED EREE.
Thorough Examination with Ophalmoscope and Retinoscope,
ALL WORK
WARRANTED.
HUSTON
GRADUATE
OPTISIBH.
With L. A. Davis. Jeweler.
You Want
•'M--yv-i y'.'l.1
*'0
-4
'fy •A*
I"
ToJ'iave your laundry done up in first-class shape, that is, washer! clean and ironed glossy, the only place in town to have it done is at the Troy Steam Lauudry. They have all the .latest improved machinery, and will guarantee all work they put out. II you try them once you will go again.
HERRING BROS.
Bob Gough, Solicitor.
'J
The Indianapolis Daily and Weekly Sentinel circulation has reached immense proportions by its thorough service in receiving all the latest news all.over the State and from its dispatches from foreign countries. Every reader in Indiana should take a State paper, and that The Sentinel.
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WANTED—A
fttto-home
fcH?-
reliable lady or gentleman
distribute samples and make a house,to canvavau for our Vegetable Toilet Soaps. $40 to $75 a month easily rsnad?. Address Croft & Reed, 843 to 850 I abU1»
Arwue, Chicago, III. d55to7$.
Local and Personal.
Grand jury adjourned yesterday. "Peck's Bad Boy" at the Opera House tonight.
Harry Regnla the baker went to Indianapolis today. Be sure aud si ''Peck's Bad Boy" tonight at the Opera House.
Mr & Mrs S. Bnr»ertof near Cleveand are eenou&iy ill with t« gr'P Geo Alig of Indianapolis tiie owuer of the ove louuory is in ttii t.v loiiay.
Eunice Birreit, a school teacher ai Eien is viaitiug her si-ter, Mrs. N *etou Khue. m- Kiifrni* ttert Tox'-i barber sliop issuff-rn from ast-vereat act of the grip
Try a can of Hopkins' Ste-uued Hominy (-lulled Ooru) It is delicious. Fuil qi. l(K 37.1 w4
E Kniz'.p princepal of the Cnarlotsville High School is visitiug friends here to.lay.
The lmprovei Oriler of tied Meu will celebrate VVrtStua^toii's bLtlilay ao their hall tonight.
Cou.ity »in ni-jsi mec la-risc who h'ts bet-u AT-i I«JU-O I.I IS &omev\ hit BC-tier and able it ft
Rev R. W Thompson the Baptist min rster of this ciy vv-ni to Aiplii lud today to preach a funeral.
Mi.is Hattie Reeves if Knightstown will spend Suuiay wall h--rfiieud Adits Belle Peltrs OL south ritHie street.
Mis? Letilia JoUus-ou, of Bright wood, is tne guest of her cuiisioii, viies ticrtrii'.ie (J t,,., YVi-sst Walnut street.
Mrs. Ovid Auam-, of Rushville, who has "c uii iug tier unole, Dr. M. M. Adams, returned ine today.
D. A. Ha^s the vice president of the buttle blowers association leturned to this city yesterdny from his home New,uk O.
Eider T. Sweeny of Coluiubu-s will be entertained while here at the home of Alie r'. Cooper aud W. S. Montgomery.
Rev Moore pastor of the chiiotiou church at Ma linsvi will heie to attend ttie clinc^tou exeicisesuf the v.lnisLiou church tomorrow.
Junn w. De of Brandy wine township who had the typhoid fever id much better aud his niauy mends will be glad to learn that he will get wed.
Persons who have a farm or town property tor sale or rent, or persons who want to reut or buy any kind of property, should call on Henry Snow & Co., 14 S. Penn^yUauia street. tf
Robert H.iyes who has been visiting relatives and friends at Brovvnestown lud for the past two week returned last evening and will resume his work with Geo, Hopper in the meat market.
J. E Ratcliff a school teacher who has been teaching at College Corner and whose school is out will finish leaohiDg the West land graded school for Aldus dLaroid who has tj to stop teaching 011 ticc-juui/ ot bad health
The bell is being taken down fiora the old court house today. It has called the citizens of this cou ity OH MH H. imp rtant occasions aud rang out for numerous fires. These old bells would have many interesting things to tell if they could only see, hear and speak
Peck's Hail loy.
The Frost & Panshaw Company made more trieuds last night in their grand yroduction of D. E. Emery's imous orama the "Two Orphans." Tae costumes were very aborate and beyond expectation of all present and those who were there lost a treat. The play was given in all its entirety. The acting of Miss Flora Y. Frost deserves special mention and it would be hard work to be improved. The other members carried themselves in a very artistic manner through the whole seven acts. The company close their engagement tonight by presenting tnat very funny comedy "Pecks Bad Boy."
Bcv. Z, T. Sweeaej's Lecture.
In view of the many high priced lectures that hive been given in this city during the past season it has been decided by the management of this lecture to charge only twenty-five cents but they will guarantee the lecture to be one of the best if not the best that has been given here this year regardless of price. Attend this lecture at the Christian church Monday night.
Sweeney Lecture Tickets.
All petsotiS having tickets to sell for the Sweeney Lecture are hereby authorized to sell them for twenty five cents and to refnnd the difference to persons who have already paid fifty cents.
CHAKLES
T.
REEVES.
Cheap Excursions to tlie West and Noi tliWest. On March 10 and Apiil 7, 1896, the North-Western Line (Chicago & North Western R'j) will sell Home Seeker' ex cureion tickets at very low rates to a large number of points in Northern Wisconsin, Michigan, Northwestern Iowa, Western Minnesota, Nebrsaka, North Dakota, and South Dakota, including the famous Black Hills district. For full information apply to ticket agents of connecting lines
or address. A. H. Waggecer, T. P. A., 7 Jackson place, Indianapolis, Ind.
Hundreds of Children,
The Frost & Fanshawe company's matkee this afternoon was largely attended the capacity of the hall being tested. All the children were made happy with a bag of candy, rii to
ppa
CHURCH DEDICATION.
THE NEW CHSISTLAN CHURCH TO BE DEDICATED TOMORROW.
A?1 Citizens Corilb-lly Invited to Attend tl»e Fit«t Servii e* Oue of Indiana's Handsomest Cl»nr« lies.
The uew Chr stian church, having been completed, will be dedicated to morrow to the service of Almighty God. The decica'ory sermou will be paeached and the dedicatory services conducted by
J-'V
I1P®((S1
EL^Ert SWEENKY,
of Columbus, !ud late Cousul-General tj Turkey U!iiei' President Harrisoi^ Eld Sweeney is one of the most able and queut tni:ii-ter.s in the Christian church, and a lii'itfnily, entertaining and instructive speaker.
The tnus'c will be furnished by a choir of forty voiC'-'S
and
au
O'Chtsira
under
the direction of Prof. E. Mack, and pro'iu es to be fine. Miss LiFevre, one of Uuion City's line-t singers, will assist in the music.
May this church, so dedieafed, hug stand as a power aud influence for good in this community.
It one of'he best, handsomest and most convenient churches in the S'ate. All our izens, irrespective of church membership, are proud of it. I et all of our lepreseutative citizens, church members and non-church members come out to the dedicatory exercises, which will occur at 10:30 a m.
In the afternoon at 3 o'clock there will be a joyful congratulatory uuion service, in which all the ministers and churches of the city will participate. It is hoped to make this a joyful jubilee meeting. In the evening at the usual hour there will be regular church services. The sermon will be preached by Eld. Sweeney.
The public are cordially invited to all these meet ngs.
THIS NEW SCHOOL HOUSE
It Will Soon Be Ready for tJuse. The seats and chairs for the new City High School building have arrived and are being placed iu positioa. A-) the c:atractors have ab ut put the finishing touches on their work the building will soon be
ready
for use. It is now expected
to occupy it on Monday Mtrch 2nd. This building means much for Greenfield *in the v«y e-iuca 1 advancement and literary culfuie. It not only furnishes the High School scholars and other advanced pupils with abuudant room and i.mple facilities but makes room for new and improved,up to date,apparatus whereby S'luieuts niav be assisted in their studies This building also hag a room especially set apat and appropriated for a city library and reading room where not only the pupils but also citizens gen-e-ally can secure good books and cultivate their minds.
There are now a nnmber of books in the library which should be very largely added to at once. All our citizens should tate an interest, in this libr try and contribute liberally towards building it up. The reading room should contain all the latest publications. We will have mere to say concerning this library and reading room later. All should rej )ice that Greenfield has such a magnificent High School building, with all that that implies. May the work done in this building be conducive in the building up of noble, grand and splendid characters in the boys and girls of our city and may their lives be monuments that will justify the expectations of the promoters and builders of this beautiful structure.
Going Up To Jerusalem.
We announced in Thursday's issue that the lecture of Mr. Sweeney would be illustrated by stereopticon views. We did this because the writer once heard him on the same title, at which time it was so illustrated. But the lecture proposed for Mon lay night will be a regular platform lecture, and from what we have will be vastly superior to the stereopticon talk. It is not to be a dry lecture on the Holy Land, but a sparkling, humorous and racy description of the sights seen and the impression made upon a traveler going up the city of the Great King. The price of this lecture has been reduced from 50c to 25c, so that all nitty have the pleasure of hearing it.
The Jolly GleanerB Banquet. The Jolly Gleaners social club No. 1, a degree of the Improved Order of Red Men, gave asocial and banquet at their hall last night. All the members were present and Bpent a pleasant evening In playing games and Enjoying music. M. K. Camming farnisfned the sapper.
:-'1j f«:U• CI -THE NAIL MILLS. W "i *1 -4
We pub ish oelow a peui which was published in the Aurora Independent, which stio'vs how they regarded the rol'ing mill vviieu it was operited iu that city. The additional work which the nail aud ro'.ltug mill would furnish here would certainly m*ke Greenfield hum with bus ness prosperit- during 189G, as we abe-tdy have numerous lactones in operation WHEN OUR ItOt.LIN' MILLS WAS BUN-
KliVANDOOlt i^AlL MILLS CUlTli' MAILS.
When our rolliu* mills was runnin' and our nail mills cutlin' naili. There was'ui. auy duunin' cause there wasn't auy snails Al. our peojj.e was a workin'—rna^in' money ev'ry day There wasn't auy shiikiu'—ev'rybody got good pay. .. When our rolliu' mills was runnin' and our nail mills cuttin' uaiis. There was bustle ou the street—there was business ev'rywhere— Times was lively—life was sweet—for our people had no care There was money iu the pockets of all our boys aud men, Our wo i.eu wore gold lockets, diamond rings, silk dres.ses then— When our rollin' mil was runnin' and our nail mills cuitin' nails. All our lact'ries was a runnin'—a runnin' on full time, Twas tasier to git ten dollars then than now to git a dime, For our peop all had money—plenty of it in theirs cocks, Life was ihju as sweet as honey—money plenty then as rocks, When our rot in' mills was runnin' and our nail mills cuttin' nails. Oh, tliem was good old days when the smoke was rollin' high, From the stnoise stacks of the rollin' mills almost up to the sky When the furnaces was glowin'with great tons ineiiiiu'
And the puddlers and the rollers was worfcin and perspirm', When our rollin' mills •-vasrnnnint anil our nail mills cuttin' nail'. Then the helper got his dollar and fifty cents a day, Aud the puddlers and the rollers the price of a ton ol hay There was money—money—money, there was money ev'rywhere, Ev'rybudy got some of it and nobody had a care, Whe.i our ro'lin' mills was runnin' and our nail mills cuttin' nails. Ev'ry grocer had two wagons of his own upon the street, And the dollars kept a daoppln' in his till in music sweet, For our people all had money and they got it all so easy, Thatit slipped thro'their fingers just like as it was greasy— When our rollin' mills was runnin' and our ,.nail mills cuttin' nails. When our rollin' mills was runnin' and our nail mills cuttin'too, Our whole tovvu was makin' money—that was all we had do: For them mills paid out the dollars— four thousand er'ry pay. And the bjsses and their helpers went and spent it right away, Spent it here in our own city, in ev'ry shop and ev'ry store, For they unow'd where they could work ag'in and git a plenty more, When our rollin' mills was runnin' and our nail mills cutlin' nails.
Paloting, tirainiuB a»u Olaalng Furniture, finishing, upholstering, enameling & c. J. M. Price. Phone 3b. The old reliable painter corner of R. R. and Pennsylvania. 74cf
The Problem Solved,
If you are« wise and desire to regain your health, then you will heed the advice of thousands and use the finest flour
Jn
earth. To do this you must use the "Leader Brand" where you get purification. Ask your physician.
j-" -UM "Vj
4
To be Sold and Probably Operated in the Hear Future., J. H. Moulden, receiver of the Nail Mill company, has negotiated with a nnmber of parties in the past yeir to se cure a buyer for the Greenfield Nail aud Rolling Mills. The negotiations, however, u^u illy fell thr mgti wita for various reasons, the chief of which geueralty was that the prospective purchasers did not have a sufficient Mm »unt of capital to buy aud opera the plant. Now, however, a sale has practically been made to some Cincinnati pt.riies who h've the capital, the knowledge and the ability to buy aud succes-fuliy op-rate the plaut The pap rs and rec^r is are now bei' investigated by attorney Nathan Morris, of the firm of Moni-j, Newberger & Uurtis, of Indianpolis, and if evtryihiug is fou sttisfactory it is, no doa t, the sale will be closed up at OQ^. It is the intention of the purcuasers to op^r tte it oere. Such a ve will causs much rejoicing iu Greenfi-dd a? the Nail and Rolling Mills turuistied work for a large number O'" our citizens and distributed tnucu ney We trust chat tae sale will be ma le aud the mills set in operation at au early a date as possible.
BIG
VEW BROJT.
STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO,
WILL
88
LUCAS COUNTY.
Frank J. Cheaey makes'oath that he«ia the senior partner of the Arm |of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid and that said Arm will pay the jsum of one hundred dollar* for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence,this 6th day of December. A. D. 1880.
Seal A. W.GLEASON, Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally and acts directly on the blood and Mucous surfaces and the system Send for testimonials, free. ijp# IP J. Caduay & C), Toledo, O..
f^-3old' by Druggists, 75c.
1
•.
Jeannette Gild«r Gives Her Ideas Concerning the Talked of Creatu* e. The new woman of the novelist is merely one of Dr. Max Norclau's degenerates. She is the creation of a writer who is hysterical and degenerate, and the world takes her as something thatreally exists. To be sure, there are plenty of women with "pasts" and with "yearnings," and there always have been and probably always will be, but It doubt if any woman outside of fin insane asylum talks the rubbish about spiritual impacts, tells that "we are tones of one chord," and about the "vile slavery" of marriage, as do the women of Misa Pendered and Mr. Grant Allen. Writers of this sort do not represent the women of the day any more than the painted women of the streets represent the women of good society.
The jaundiced writers of "The Yellow Book" cannot be expected to give us pictures of healthy lives. Their tastes run to worm eaten fruit. They have no liking for that which is red with the hue of health. They prefer the yellow hue of decay. Dr. Nordau is quite right when he calls it disease. The heroines of "The Yellow Book," of "Discords" and of "Wreckage" might have been taken from Lombroso's study of the female offender. If they exist outside of their creator's brains, their cases will be found recorded in scientific studies of criminology or in the ordinary police reports.
The new woman as I find her outside of the pages of fiction is an industrious, healthy minded, healthy bodied young person, with a certain amount of independence, who cares more for out of door sports than for indoor follies, and who if she has work to do does it and does not waste her time in telling about it. Her spirits run high over the adventures of A Gentleman of France,'' she laughs and cries by turns over "Trilby" and thinks "The Dolly Dialogues" great fun, but for "Yellow Discords" and the like she has no use.
I am happy to say that little of the hysterical literature of the day originates in this country. It is almost entirely of English origin. Some of our younger writers have tried their hands at it, but they do not take to it naturally, and it is fast going out of fashion.
There always will be a handful of people who like erotica, but I think there has been a turn in the tide which even at its highest never swamped the writers of purer fiction. Rudyard Kipling and Mrs. Humphry Ward have many more readers than Grant Allen and Mary L. Pendered, and in this country our writers of clean fiction are the most popular.—Jeannette Gilder.
Old English Mnslei
EARLY'S
DOUBLE DRUGSTORE We
have
N
Get our
Long before the stream of Norman minstrel art sacred music was exercising a benefloial influence. The early British church possessed/sacred music, but this was gradually driven out before the onward march of that new church music which Augustinfo brought with him from Rome (A. D. 697). The Gregorian music (evolved by Pope Gregory oat of the Greek tetrachords and some Axis tins Ambro$ian johante) TSas heard
both our stores
packed with
A mammoth it jjic ot Toys, Hobb/ Horses Sleds, Fancy Dishy*. Drums, Games, Albums, Toilet Sets, Perfumery, Cigars, etc.
A nice line of Heautiful books—juvenile and standard. Our stock of P-.i ary Candies is immense.
prices
before you buy.
V. Lliaiiv's Hi-' IWilc I)iw $
Odd Fellows' Build in ami Jo W. Main'St.
GREENFIELD IPERA HOIIE,
A.
flONDAY, FEBRURARY 17.
-OF-
FROST & FANSHAW SUPERB REPETOIRE CO.
PECK'S BAD
NEW WOMAN IN LITERATURE.
PEIOES 10, 20 aacl 30 CENTS.
Children's Matinee Saturday afternoon and each chili® gets a bag of candy. Admission 10 cents.
GOODS!
0
HOUGH, Man ager.
Engagement For One Week Commencing,
BOY
Indianapolis CoJIege of Commerce
Aetna tuiMi.es-, ior t-ui is. stea-.i of theoretical bookM'epiui. Uxpen cuuit reporters teach sli-'-rthund. ProtVusi. na! jj--inuen uive in-siri-ici ions in writing, daily. Large-1 and best 'tiiMness .scho-il iu Iinlinna. aiiy years of suc--es-.. H'tudre«l upon hun'Iml- .'jf former pupils now iu excellent lotions. Si-n'e ts assisted t® iooil situ itio..s fiw Ciitnl'^ues for asking. Joiini't) Hiding, .Monument 1'lac I Kite"-! U(!• STOS JilKlSTEli, Pres.
This Is the Heroine
Of Will Lisenbee's powerful story entitled
Casinca
Which we are about to publish, with appropriate illustrations.
Casinca
Is a tale of mystery that will puzzle and astonish you.
Casinca
Has some remarkable characters not easily forgotten.
Casinca
Is a treat that no lover of
-j.
en
tertaining fiction can afford to miss.
and loved wherever Augustine anu uw monks built a church. By its means a deep impressiou was left upon the minds of those who heard and joined in it, but it is curious that we miss altogether the ecclesiastical flavor in the earliest ex' amples that have come down to us of English music during the first quarter of the thii teentb century.
The free aud uncontroled secular mnsio was the first to reflect itself in permanent manuscript form. Church mnsio per se was not progressive the chnroli tones for the "service"
and
"mass" mu
sic were fixed, and only a heretical offense was the outcome of tampering therewith, but no such restrictions hampered secular music. Blackwood'# Magazine.
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