Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 7 May 1896 — Page 2

4896

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THE EVENING REPUBLICAN.

W. S. MONTGOMERY, Editor and Publisher.

Subscription Kates.

One week cents One year .$3.00 Entered at Postoffice as second-class matter.

HUB5DAY, MAY 7, 1898.

REPUBLICAN

POLITIGAL BULLETIN.

ANNOUNCEMENTS.

EDWIN

O. HUNTINGTON, Of Sugarcreek township, desires to announce bis name aa candidate for the nomination ef OommlikiMsr of .Western District of Hancock county, subject the decision of the Republican nominating conntion.

THE Tribune thinks that the Mayor's salary should be cut down from $500 to $300. We don't. Greenfield does not want a $300 Mayor. When it says, We know the best men iu the city would tak»it for that mioney," it is away off. The best men in the city would not take it for that money. We defy it to name its best men in the city who would take the office at $300. We will guarantee it would not include a first-class, professional man, a successful business man, an A No. 1 mechanic or skilled workman of any kind now holding a good paying job who was in any way competent to fill the position. The duties of a Mayor practically require all of a man's time

and none of "best men of our city" would take it at $300. The majority of the class of men referred to would think $500 too low rather than too high. The people now believe in competent officials and a sufficient remuneration. $300 is not enough.

Fascinating, Novel and Instructive. The approaching visit to Indianapolis of "Buffalo Bill's" Wild West and Tournament of World's Rough Riders is an event of much more thanpa3siag importance. It is nearly ten years since this exlbitlon of profound human interest has been seen here, and in that time it has been seen wordered at and applauded in every import aat city in Europe, as well as at the World's Fair in Chicago, and the Paris Exibition. The story of its wanderings and its reception in the Old World reads almost like a romance.

Energy, skill, perseverance, enterprise aad large capital were requisite to accomplish this marvelous series of journeys, which extended from the plains of America to the foot-hills of the Pyrenees, the Alps and the Caucasus. But all difficulties were surmounted and their story is one long unbroken series of triumphant successes.

The Kings, Queens and Potentates of the European Continent all came to pay their tribute of respect to the unconquered and unconquerable' but fast disappearing, red man and to wonder at the skill, barddihood and daring of the American frontiersman, who drove him back from foothold to foothold, until this whole vast continent was opened up to the commerce and civililation of the world.

The added and highly facinating, as well as instructive feature which shows in action all the world's primitive horsemen and the heavy cavalry os Europe and America is now first presented here and should be seen by all. The magnitude of the undertaking is almost in crediable. They oarry a portable grand stand, seating 20,000 people, an enormous portable electric light plant of 100,000 candle power, and shelter, food and forage for 200 men and their horses. In the nature of things, this exposition can be seen but little longer the historical personages in it are fast passing from the scene of action the buffalo has passed away and his compeers are following him rapidly to the happy hunting grounds of the hereafter.

In the morning there will ba a free street cavalcade with detachments from every division, enlivened with three bauds of music, including the famous Buffalo Bill's Cowboy Band.

It is hardly necessary to say that this remarkable entertainment, which combines so much of instruction with entertainment of the most unique character, merits a most liberal patronage. Buffalo Bill will appear at every performance.

The Wild West exhibition will appear iu Indianapolis Friday and Saturday, May 8 and 9th.

How's Tills!

We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.

F. J. CHENEY & Co. Props, Toledo, O. We the mndersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo O., Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists Toledo, Ohio.

Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free.

Call at J. M. Havens's an(L_jsee how cheap you can buy goods—harness, whips, dusters, etc. I will not be under-: sold. 18t2

We hare a number of Champion late improved mowers that we will sell for thirty-six dollar*. 14tf GtBiis & THOMAS.

Attother big lot of these' flne$2 roikiiig chairs jostrfceivel at Lee C. Tbtyer's.

THE LISTENER.

Theodore F. Shuey, who has been appointed tin official reporter of the United States senate, is descended from French Huguenots.

Joseph Chamborlain.is sanguine as. to the possibilities of sisal arid has had sisal plants planted on his estate on one of the Bahama islands.

Professor Roentgen has received from the Prince Regent of Bavaria the Order of the Grown, "Pour le Merite," which implies the distinction of nobility.

Paul da Chaillu, the African explorer, spends most of bis time in ¥*ew York at ^present. He is no longer a young man, but retains the vivacity of youth.

Thurlow Weed Barnes is one of the wealthy violin amateurs of New York, and an enthusiast on the subject. He owns a Stradivari us which is appraised at about tid oob.

Senator Hill Hevotes his leisure, while other men in congress (ire Absorbed in those social Amusements which he deprecates, to the study of the works of William Shhkespedria.

All the English.papers note with .a trace Of astonishment fchftt the noble Marquis of Tfrallibariline has failed,to. get through the fttfiot examination of the war office for a position on the staff in Egypt.

Ex-Senator Philetus Sawyer is a man nearly 80 years of age, but active and olear headed. His enoznious fortune has been made in lumber. It is s$id of him that he still takes pleasure in driving a sharp bargain.

Professor Sylvester, F. R. S., of Oxford, the mathematician who earlier held professorships at the University of Virginia and at Johns Hopkins, has been eleoted a foreign member of the Turin Royal Aoademy of Science.

The Rev. Frederick F. Sherman (Episcopal), a chaplain of the United States navy, has resigned his chaplaincy because he has become a Roman Catholic. He is a son of Judge Sherman of the supreme court of Massachusetts.

When Count Herbert Bismarck telegraphed to his father, Prince Bismarck, that his latest baby was a girl, the prince telegraphed back: "Have patience! Marie was only a girl." Marie was the prince's firstborn, and then came two sons.

Secretary Hoke Smith's new private secretary is William McKinley Cobb of Georgia. Mr. Cobb is a lawyer and has been connected for some time with the ponsion bureau. He received his name before William McKinley came into prominence.

It is thought in Washington that Justice Fiold of tho United States supreme court will retire from the bench within a year. His bodily health is excellent, but ho has becomo subjoct to attacks of forgetfulness, which at times alarm both himself and his family.

J. B. Darnell of Odessa, Ky., CI years old, splits rails with a wedge 200 years old which his great-grandfather brought from Scotland with him. He hauls the rails with his mule, Katy, 34 years old. He shaves once a week with his razor, 42 years old, and has a reap hook 45 years old.

M. Loyson, better known as Pero Hyacinthe, having been reported to have joined tho Coptic church, has written to Le Figaro to explain that he merely attended the Coptic services at Cairo, but is still a "Gallican." Ho has been lecturing on Moses, Mohammed and Christ and hopes to reconcile Islamism and Christianity.

PERT POLITICS.

Sometimes tho bee that buzzes in an ambitious politician's hat turns out ,to bo a wasp.—Washington Times.

Nails have gone up 40 cents a keg, but the business of nailing campaign lies must go on regardless of expenso.—Kansas City Journal.

The eager candidate for office does not differ much from a small boy crawling into a circus tent. They both push the canvass.—Indianapolis Journal.

The hope of a number of presidential aspirants seems to depend on tho successful execution of some very thrilling feats of dark horsemanship.—Washington Star.

The greatness of this country is confirmed by the fact that it has never produced a favorite son who thought the vice presidency large enough for him.—St. Louis Globe-Domocrat.

Statesmen seem to be somowhat different from good little girls, who are seen and not hoard. Statesmen have to be seen in just the right way or they are bound to be heard.—Detroit Tribune.

A woman in London advertises, "Sympathy offered to those who are in trouble and have no one to whom they can tell their sorrow." Sho could do a rushing business in St. Louis iii June.—Chicago Tribune.

HUMAN NATURE.

Tho beings of the mind are not of clay. Essentially immortal, tlioy create and Multiply in us a bright ray and more boloved existence.—Byron.

Happiness is in the tasto and not in tho things themsolves. Wo are happy from possessing what we like, not from possessing what others liko.—Rochefoucauld.

The imagination has a shadow as well as tho body that koops just a littlo ahead of you or follows close behind your Jieols. It don't do to let it frighten you.—Haliburton.

It is when our budding hopes are nipped beyond recovery by some rough wind that we are tho most disposed to picture to ourselves what flowers it might have boruo if they had flourished.—Dickens.

Humility is like a tree, whose root, when it sets deepest in the earth, rises highor and spreads fairer and stands surer and lasts longer, and every step of its doscent is liko a rib of iron.—.Jeremy Taylor.

Almost every ono has a predominant inclination to which his other desires and affections submit, and which governs him, though perhaps with sohie intervals, through tho whole course of his life.— Hume.

THE CYNIC.

People do not go crazy cranks drive them crazy. It is age that makes a man look old. In a woman's case it is "trouble."

When a man expresses his real sentiments on any subject he does not wish to be quoted.

Tho patience a woman has with her children is sometimes learned in her efforts to hind a husband.

Every man who'has hoped for a lot of things that never come to pass has had a romance in his l$ife.

If a wife wt»uMfoe as.good to her husband a* sliojis to her imother, the husband wo^,AlWitys bo satisfied.

Sajcried,

ipAj(atherogives a bride away when«h8 hut it is generally her mother! rthp. briifgd iiiattpra up to this poliit.—, Atchison-(jlbtw. -ftr -4":

THE TATTLER.

The wife of President Kruger is one of the best breadmakers iu tho Transvaal. Mrs. Elizabeth White of Jamestown is said to be the only registered pharmacist in North Dakota.

Mme. Carnot, at the Pantheon, fremtfently spends long hours in. prayer before the tomb of her late husband.

Sister Gon2aga of St. Joseph's Orphan asylum, Philadelphia, issaid inDonahoe's Magazine to be the oldest sister of charity in the world, having been born in 1812.

Mary Anderson Navarro has left England for a protracted-tour of the continent. Her health is broken, and she goes to southern Europe with the hope of improvement.

The Duchess of Marlborough will make her first public appearance in England at Oxford on Juno3,when her grace will open A bazaar on behalf of the Oxford Labor home.

Miss Locke, an architect of Nashua, N. H., submitted plan s, in competition with several architects, for a five room schoolhouse to be built this summer, at Sturbridge, Mass. Miss Locke's plans were accepted.

Mrs. Robert Goelet of New York, who, by the way, is a tall, handsome blond, is as practical in regard to housekeeping affairs andas attentive to details as if her income were only $500 a year, instead of $500 a day.

Mrs. Mary Harlan of Coxville, Ind. mother of ex-United States Senator HBTlan of Iowa and grandmother of Mrs. Robert T. Lincoln, was 100 years old on March 20. At the birthday reception there were present a daughter 78 years old and a son 76.

Two women, Miss Bettie Munday, aged 98, and Miss Lucy Munday, aged 92 years, reside near Harrodsburg, Ky., and since coming there, in 1804, have not been more than a mile from home, have never seen a train or steamboat, nor have they been sick a day in their lives.

Miss Pierpont Morgan has a vast number of watches, some 72 all told, and all are of the time of Louis XVI and as near alike as the proverbial two peas. Noarly all have miniature paintings of Mario Antoinette or some grand dame surrounded with a circlet of pearls.

Mrs. Alary E. Leaso of Kansas will not engage rogularly in pulpit work for two years. She has a year's lecture engagements to fill, and after that will make a trip around tho world, delivering her first foreign lecture in Glasgow on the invitation of Kier Hardie, tho noted socialist.

Mme. Modjeska is an admirer of a London fog, and the first time she happened to see one sho ordered her carriage and wont for a drive in the park, that she might have the pleasure of seeing the woird effect of people and vehicles emerging from the mist wtyich enshrouded them

DREAM SUPERSTITIONS.

Rats seen in a dream indicate enemies. Dreaming about knives indicates coming lawsuits..

A dream about keys means that tho dreamer will shortly become rich. To dream of eggs means that you will succeed in the enterprise in which you are engaged.

To dream of a monkey signifies that you will be deceived by the object of your affections.

A dream that you stand among buildings means that you will shortly change your residenco.

To dream of seeing guns fired means future difficulties, generally of a business character.

To dream about a sheet of white paper means that you will marry a person yon do not love.

Dreaming of an adversary signifies that you are to overcome obstacles which are in your way.

To dream of a ben and chickens means that your sweetheart will desert you and marry another.

Walking in the street in a dream signifies that some ono is waiting a chance to do you an injury.

To dream that you see ants running to and fro is an indication that you will bo a loser in your next business enterprise.

To dream that you are looking at beautiful paintings means that you are soon to be drawn into unfortunato speculations.

To dream that you are washing your face is a sign that some long standing quarrel will soon be settled to your profit.

A dream about an earthquake means that your businoss will experience a groat change of some kind, favorable or otherwise.

FOREIGN FOLK.

Tho dervishes call it a holy war, but to tho Egyptians it will bo a holy terror.— San Francisco Call.

The whole world, with tho oxception of tho British and the harbors, admires old Oom Paul Kruger of Transvaal. Wichita Eagle.

The island of Raiatea is in tho south seas. The French, who havo taken it, aro on the high seize just now.—Milwaukeo Wisconsin.

Tho Prince of Wales wants an increase of salary. This in another of the littlo touches of nature that make the whoio world kin.—Cleveland Press.

When England askod for Egyptian money to pay for that march to Dongola, it never expected a chock on the banks of the Nile.—Philadelphia Times.

It is a great pity that the sultan of Turkey does not develop some of the ambition to become civilized which is distinguishing King Menolok.—Washington Star.

Professor Quidde of Berlin has been sentenced to three months' imprisonment for speaking disrespectfully of Kaiser Wilhelm. If the cathode rays ever reveal a man's brain, half tho population of Germany will be imprisoned for life.—Cleveland World.

OUR GIRLS.

California women are said to be making an eanrest fight for their rights. Wo had nupposed that bloomers had been conceded to them long ago.—Chicago Post.

Talk about "poor, weak woman!" Here's Miss Helen Gould stopping a $30,000,000 elevated railroad deal with a nod of her pretty head.—Philadelphia Press.

Some of tho samples of tho coming froman that have boon submitted this Ipring induce us to hope that sho will pass light by without stopping.—Chicago Post.

To tho girls: Do not let young men frighten you at the beginning of tho season with tuberculosis storios. It is impossible for tho germs to exist in icecream.—Scranton. Tribune.

Tho ladies of Maj'sville, Ky.. havo mado a Fosdick theater hat law unnecessary, so ifar «J that toWrt Is conoorned. They comb itlieiir liHir. ond ore not ashamed to take off their hiats .lh ^ho theater.—Cincinnati Commercial Gazette.

Jti

IF

Headquarters

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You are looking for new Water Hose, the largest and best lino in the city, hose that is fully guaranteed for one year, with guarantee that means if your hose gives out in twelve months, ust bring it in and get others, you will find what yon are looking for at

Jeff C. Patterson's Bicycle Store,

No. 57 W. Main street, Gant block. We sold over 7,000 feet of hose in 1895, and out of the whole lot we only had four sections (200 feet) to go wrong, and these were very promptly replaced and no questions asked. We also sold in 1895, twenty-one sections of hose to take the place of alike number of sections sold by other dealers who refused to make their guarantee good. We also sell Bicycle Clothing of all descriptions. We can hav* Bicycle Suits made to order, and guarantee a fit. We have th* b«st line of Sweaters in the city. You will find here the begffc line of Bicycle Hose, both foot and footless at prices that ard right. We have added to our line the White Sewing Machide^ and we expect to reach rock bottom prices on sewing machine* as well as everything else. We have cut the price of the celebrated Waver ly Bicycle $20. You can now buy Waverlys-4&r $65 cash.

I have a full line of Ladies', Misses' a:i I Childr«3a3' Ha* fej both trimmed and untrimmed, ribbons, flowers, etc. All new' and first-class. Latest styles, lowest prices. Inspect my stock.»

1 LILLIECOCHRAN.

Over Early's drug store, W Main street.

HAVE YOU EXAMINED THEM? Many Improvements Heretoiore Overlooked by Other Manufacturers.

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NEW DOUBLE SWEET PEA Bride of Niagara True to name. Packet 25 cents, half Packet 15 cents.

Crimson Rambler Rose

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