Greenfield Evening Star, Greenfield, Hancock County, 29 August 1905 — Page 2

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'ENING STAR.

(Hiblis'ru-ii Hvorv Dav :n sundav.i

TII'.oss PTION.

Onei\ Jc. lii iiverod... .to Ynn Mouth &> Six Moi'lf)'- l..Tt» One Vcar 3-(,0

Sul :jcri:H' :s -.viio ta-.l receive their 'ivil! V/leaso nntitvtin editor, ami all

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i. i)C reCli iir«l.

Eiiter as .secOiiu-ila -.s in-ilter Aug.ubt !. «904, at t. ..• p-.^lojlh-tt nt Jroeuiifld. Indiana, Uiiuor a... a-.'tot Consrrch.s. Maiv.ii 3.

Tiii-- quietest tiling in Greenlie id is ly politics. The platfor S v. hichwere to be forthcoming some time ago, have not liaise their a ppearance. Perli ^. .vhen they do they will Inject some life into the catnpaiiiii.

Tn:: a torr.ey general of Indiana states some interesting' facts iii iiis interpretation of the law regarding" stock running- at la*ov. .tie says stock may be allowed to graze along- the public highways if properly herded, but it does not relieve the owner from any damage done b) the stock. The land along' a road or street belongs to the O'.vner of the abutting proper^, for all purposes except foi L.-ic- as a public highway, lie ov\n-. the grass that grows on tiiat land and no one may use it without his consent. And, tiiert-Lir'o, though herding" is lawful, the herder must first get the consent of the owner of jutting- property before grass.

tlie v. using

Jl *U Oscar m. Wel.born, of •on Circuit Court, Ind'" ., is giving his instructions to rand jury, upheld the

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V~rv .w,-.-

aw

saying that the

on this subject is

compivhensive and wise, and that ,• law is valid in ail re.-pec'.H, The subject matter, sr-'-'l tbe court, is one for legisbtiv. regulation, and this has •bcci. c!o:'.e in a proper manner. Ti. *t urged the enforce infill of the law. He holds that is unlawful to keep or own ..cigarette papers or cigarettes, 3 a 'CP

I hat

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:'j ii lug WiieLii'-. 10 r'

d,-nc« statu acct" briHi ii. Lei .1 ci.W JliuLii

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a person was

evoking a cigarette or v-iie in his possession, or a paper with tobacco, it be done by a local •. loafer or cigarette [•her would be an eviji" the violation of the

As Judge Welborn is

1

one of the most jurists of the state, his :ation of the cigarette regarded with some

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MICHIGAN EXCURSION

T.v.".: Keu.ioed September 2d Over Pennsylvania Lilies.

Speoi,1! low fares will be in effect September iM for excursion to Novtli Michigan resorts via Pennsylvania Lines. Round trip \-ets to Traverse City, •Q .• a. or or t. to an A's-i* k'i!', City will be $10 from Vrcer1'"-ri, Indiana, on the date vi'Mi.sil to Mackinac Island pv.-i .. rn.

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-.ionists may remain a the famous healthful jon where hay fever and .ire unknown. No great need be incurred by a •ii sojourn. There are nt homes and cottag-es »1 camping sites where expenses may be made cj.

j\1 ii pl- ^. nid if in ii !f.^« 11

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ch Id •C. i' -full. af' vi

at home. The hotels i, conveniences. The tisli-

ing i. li i.equaled. Boating bathjTig go!''ng, motoring and all fasinoi!- ble pastimes are offered, toleepji ear berths may be book

I 1 'vc nee by application to K. "or Ticket Agent, PennLines.

M. Crider, the little Mr. and Mrs. M. S.

died last night. The will be Wednesday at the house conduct-

Thomas Williams.

MADAM JARRETT.

The Most Reliabis Palmist of the Present Day.

Madam .Jarrett looks upon tiie hand as an open book. In her readings she always gives perfect satisfaction. Call and see her and she will make you happv. She especially invites jthe voung to call as she points out the way to heal til and happiness. Fern Hotel, over postoflice for one week.

STATE FAIR TRANSPORTATION.

Visitors from over Indiana to the State Fair, which opens at Indianapolis on September 11, will lind that the steam and electric roads to that city have arranged for fine transportation facilities. The rate on the steam roods will be one fair for the round trip, good all the week, from all points in the State and from Louisville, Ky. When visitors reach Iudianapolis, they can take their choice of three fast lines from the city to the fair grounds. the Illinois street, Central avenue or College avenue. As crowds require it, cars over the city lines will arrive at the gates about a minute apart. All the interurban lines running into Indianapolis will have special cars in operation. [/The steam roads will hold their evening trains later than the usual hour that visitors may put in a full day at the fair and reach their homes in distant parts of Indiana without 'Inconvenience on the same evening. Two electric lines, the Indianapolis & Northern and the Union Traction, pass close to the fair ground gates, where they will unload and take on passengers, and the Lake Erie & Western and Monon tracks also run by the grounds. It is thought that the good transportation facilities, the low railroad rates and the big exposition will draw an immense crowd of Indiana j)eople to the Hoosier capital.

Change of Time Takes Effect Tomorrow

Beginning tomorrow, August 29tli, interurban cars west bound will leave the I. & E. waiting room at State and Main Sts.j Greenfield, at forty-five minutes after each hour during the day, instead of fifty minutes after the hour as heretofore.

This change is made with the intention of giving- a little quicker service between Greenfield and Indianapolis. East bound cars will not be affected leaving the station at ten minutes after the hour as they have been doing.

Now For Wallace Shows-

Within recent years there has been a noticeable revolution in the methods employed in the management of circuses. In former years the promises of a circus man were considered worthless, and the statement of circus advertisements. were invariably discredited.

This is changed now. The modern circus is, as a rule, in the hands of worthy and honorable men, they are reliable and agreeable in business relatiods. The "greatest and most satisfactory change is the line of advertising. For instance, the Great Wallace Shows are advertised to appear in Greenheld on Friday, Sept. 8.

They advertise that they will present certain new and marvelous acts. They name the performers, picture and describe the act, and people can go to the show expecting to see everything as advertised.

It is not a question of whether or not Wallace will show all he adbertises, as people have long ago learned that his show is an amusement bargain counter, that the Wallace Circus invariably exhibits a great deal more than it advertises.

that will net fi to 7 per cent and free from taxes. Ca 11 or address

Eastern Loan Co.,

Rooms -7. 2* Baldwin LJlg., Indianapolis. I New phone 5b^5.

$10.00 Round Trip to Famous Michigan Resorts Por Health and PleasureExcursion September 2nd via Pennsylvania Lines from Greenfield to Mackinac, Traverse Ci ty, North port and other lake havens in the land of no hay fever and no asthma. Particulars freely given by E. Weaver, Ticket Ag'ent, Pennsylvania Lines.

No Hay Pever No Asthma North Mich igan Excursion via Pennsvlvania Lines.

September 2nd to famous health resorts—M acliinac Petoskey, Traverse City, Omena, Northport. Only £10.00 round trip from Greenfield. See E. Weaver, Ticket Agent, Pennsylvania Lines.

Excursion Fares to Indiana State Fair at Indianapolis Via Pennsylvania Liner September 11th to 15th. inclusive, excursion tickets to In dianapolis, account Indiana State Fair, will be sold via Pennsylvania Lines at 00 cents round trip from Greenfield, g"ood returning until September 18th, inclusive. Call on Ticket Agent for full information.

Excurtion Fares To Chicago Via Pennsyl vania Lines, August 30th, aist, September 1st, excursion tickets to Chicago account Meeting- Gentlemen's Driving Club will be sold via Peensylvania Lines from all ticket stations. For full information apply to Local Ticket Asrent of those Lines.

The Face Is uu Index.

The face is an index to the state of one's physical well being. Symptoms of disease can be detected from it almost before the patient is aware that there is anything the matter. For instance, excessive pallor indicates poor circulatiou aiul possible heart trouble. Incomplete exposure of the eyeballs, rendering the whites of the eyes visible during sleep, is a symptom of all acute and chronic diseases of a severe type. Twitching of the muscles is a herald of nervous exhaustion. Widening of the orilices of the nose with movements of the nostrils to and fro points to embarrassed breathing from disease of the lungs or channels leading thereto. Contraction of the brows indicates pain in the head. Sharpness in the nostrils is a symptom #f pain in the chest. Bagging uinler the eyes, when not a facial characteristic, points to kidney trouble. Twitching of the eyelids associated with oscillation of the eyeballs or squinting, heralds the Visit of convulsions.—American Queen.

A Kipling' Lament.

In Laurence Mutton's "Talks In a Librar he tells as follows of meeting Kudyard Kipling at a luncheon given to the latter by Richard Watson Gilder. "Another engagement made me late, and I entered the room as the party was breaking up. I was introduced to Mr. Kipling, with whom I exchanged the traditional few formal words, and we drifted apart, but a moment or two afterward he placed himself on the arm of a chair in which I was sitting and said: 'I didn't realize, Mutton, when I met you a moment ago who you were. Dear old Wolcott Balestier, your friend and mine, tried so hard and so many times to bring us together in London and elsewhere, and now he is gone, and I can't understand it all. lie died so suddenly and so far away we had so much to say to each other, and now I have got to wait so long before I can say it.'"

An Aiificnt Time.

"We Won't Go Home Till Morning" is not a modern song at least the air is not modern, for it dates back to the times ol' the first Duke of Marlborough. It is the old French air of "Malbroulc s'en va-t-en guerre Dieu salt quant reviendra" ("Malbrouk has gone to the war the Lord knows when he will come home again"). The second verse hinted that the Duke of Marlborough would be a long time away. "II reviendra-z-a la Paques, ou la Trinite" ("He will return at Easter or Trinity Sunday"). In south Yorkshire, in England, that air exists as a children's song:

FINANCIAL. The Septamber "Smart Set.

Owing-to our connections with Molly Elliot Seawell novelone of the larg'est financial in- tte, "Ilie Chateau of Montstitutions of the East, we loan pla.sir, which opens the Sepmoney at 41 and 5 per cent for tember Smart Set, is just the live or ten years on business I kind

01

property and farms, with privi- read ^arm weather. It is leg'e of partial payments and n~ delight! uiiy humorous Irom bedelay. Loans made on approved g'hming- to end, and, while some collateral and personal endorse- the situations are hilariously ments. We have for sale niort- laughaUe the author never gages on liig'hly improved I arms over*tepn the bounds ot proband Indianapolis real estate ability. Those readers who re-

htory one wishes

member Miss Seawell's "Papa Bouchard"—and who does not? which the same magazine published

a oo ut

four years a^o.

know what a pleasant hour is in store for them in this last piece of work. Miss Seawell lias never given us a more rollickingand genuinely witty story, nor one so full of the very spirit of comedy.

Stephen French Whitman, who contributes a powerful short story called "Hashimoto" to this number, is a name quite new to magazine readers yet this brief and vivid Japanese tale should win him many admirers. It is a long- time since a more striking short story has appeared. Elizabeth Duer is always entertaining: in "The Man on Horseback" she is at her best, and every reader will be quick to discover what famous person she had in mind when she wrote this little tale. "Studio Sweepings'' byJamesL. Ford, is one of the keenest satires on bohemian New York which this clever author has produced. James Huneker is represented by a remarkable short story, which he has entitled "The Eighth Deadly Sin,'' and Henry Sydnor Harrison, in "The Measure of His Greatness," tells another Ware River Club tale, full of cleverness and truth. Frederick Trevor Hill, Ruth Kimball Gardiner. Catalina Paez and Cecil Carlisle Pang man have stories of refreshing- originality, while Kate Masterson contributes a short, entertaining story, called "The Masque of Venus,'" wherein she places under a white light many feminine foibles. There is the

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usual story in French, and much meritorious verse by Wallace Irwin, Mabel Earle, Theodosia Garrison, Edith M. Thomas, Madison Cawein, Arthur String er, William Griffith and others equally as well known. How the Smart Set maintains its high standard of excellence each month is one of the wonders of the magazine world.

$22-35 to Colorado and Eeturn Prom Greenfield Over Pennsylvania LinesG. A. R. excursion tickets will be sold at the above fare. Their sale will begin August 2Dth and continue daily until September od. Tickets may be obtained to Denver, where the National Encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic will be held September 4tli to 7th, and to Colorado Springs or Pueblo.

The fare is an unusually low one, and the occasion presents an exceptional opportunity for a sight-seeing trip to Colorado and the West. Excursionists may go over one route and return over another, making the trip via Chicago, returningthrough St. Louis, or vice versa. Full particulars may be ascertained by consulting-F. A. Meek, Ticket Auent, Greenfield.

The Pacific Northwest.

A complete and interestingpresentation of the scenic beauty and the rich natural resources and rapid growth of the Pacific Northwest are set forth in a beautiful illustrated booklet recently issued by the Chicago & North-Western R'y, which will be sent to any address on receipt of 4 cents in stamps.

The Lewis and Clark Exposition with the very low excursion rates and personally conducted tours in connection therewith over the North-West-ern line from Chicago and the east have created an interest in this subject never before equaled. For full particulars address W. B.

Kniskern,

P.

Write or cai! on

Hartman alleg'es he is the inventor of a patent medicine and asks for an injunction restrai ning the defendants from inducing or persuading-, directly or indirectly, relative to the purchase and sale of the plaintiff's medicines or preparations, j'or from in any way defacing, mutilating, breaking-, altering -or destroying the wrappers or 'offering any of the remedies ior sale. md a

LEARN TELEGRAPH R. R, Accounting-. £50 to sl( month salary assured our graduates under bond. Cur six

schools the larg'est in America and endorsed by all railroads. Write for catalogue. MO/RSE SCHOOL OF TELEGRAPHY, Cincinnati, O., Buffalo, N/. Y., Atlanta, Ga., La Crosse, I

Wallace's Circus Bigger Jhaii Ever. I

Bigger and- better than ever, the Great Wallace Circus will soon be with us. Every depart ment has been enlarged, Four hundred arenic performer^: over a hundred cages contain the Million Dollar Zoo, ar/id the show is completely tilled with new and absolutely (liferent novelties.- In reenii^ld on Friday, Sept. 8.

The Wallace Show is truly a mammoth institution. When one has seen it from end to end, outside and in/side, !nd has formed an inventory has seen and learned nominal fee, how mi pleasure and benefit

Lines. For full par garding fares, time return limit, etc Local Ticket Agen|t lines. I

townsl Green turne morni

T. M., 215

Jackson Boulevard, Chicago.

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ORGANIZED f-- 885„

WE INSURE and OJ WOMEN yp t( Age

&& 2

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Of

ELsCH

A Reliable Energetic A.^snt (either sex) wanted in every town. Previous experience vft necessary. Must be able to furnish good rererences.

.-W. H. WINSHtP, Manager,

Indianapoiis office,

324 LAWl BUILDING,

PHONES NEW 5080 OLD, RED 30lr2

4

[Reprint From Cincinnati Enquirer, Thursday, June 1. 1905|.

Samuel B. Hartman, of Columbus, Ohio, through attorneys E. VY. Hinkle and F. F. Reed, began an action in the Federal Court in Covington yesterday against J. D. Parks & Sons.

Patent Rights Involved. BIG BAND AT STATE FAIR

1

Wis.

Texarkana, Tex., San Fran*. Cal.

isco,

what he »r a \-ery ch real it has

been, he can easily understand why a big three-ring (lircus, of the hig^h standard of th|: Wallace Show occupies the enviable position in the a'pusement world that it does.

Excursion Fares to Philadelphia via Pennsylvania LinksSeptember lrdh.

-1Kith

and

17th, excursion ticketis to Philadelphia, account Meeting, Odd Fellows, Patriarch's Militant and Sovereign Grajid Lodge, will he sold from all ticket stations oil the Pennsylvania

ticulars re of trains, apply to of those

Miss ijoanna E.verson and Miss F. C/lora Burk Wood St. spentSutiday with! the Misses Caraway! of rural nlrnte No. 4.

Otis Jjessup, wl/io lias been with t/ie Tribune-Gazette at Terre liaute for the past sixteen uJontbs, spent last week with lfirf father jin Blueriver ip and with friends in eidund Cdrthage. He reto Terre Haute Monday

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INDIANAPOLIS, IND.

J. S. Duss, Millionaire Bandmaster to Give Concerts

For several years the Indiana State Fair has had as a strong feature one of the big band organizations lor a series of concerts, and thousands of people heard the programs. A new band is coming to the State Fair during the week of September 11th, and it will give four popular concerts at the grand stand. The bandmaster is J. S. Duss, who has suddenly leaped into the place of one of the great conductors of America and lie has a band of about fifty men. Duss is a millionaire, who directs his own band chiefly be cause of his love of the work. He has had an uncommon career. Early in his youth he went to Economy, Pa., the famous communistic town near Pittsburg", and spent several years with the Harmony Society there, as the mutual ownership organization was called. He later went to college, was a breeder of fine cattle in Nebraska, and went back to the peculiar colony in Pennsylvania. When thirty years old he had become a trustee of the colony, which was gradually becoming extinct because of its stringent laws. He rose to the financial head of the colony and soon straightened out the difficulties of a savings bank in the organization, paying the 3,500 depositors in full. He also saw that the coiouy's debts, amounting to si,500.000, wese paid in full. He went through eigiityears of litigation iii the courts over the property of the colony and tinall\r won. Then he sold out his holdings and turned his attention to organizing' one of the greatest bands America ever heard. The programs at the State Fair will be made up of popular music.

Salesman Wanted.

We desire to secure the services of a real live, energetic and competent salesman in every count)7 in this State, to represent us among Farmers and Stockraisers. Guaranteed salary and commission. Address Superior American Stock Food Co., Findlay, Ohio.

Labor Day Fares on Pennsylvania LinesSeptember 4th excursron tickets will, be sold from all. ticket stations on the Pennsylvania Lines to any station on those lines fifty miles or less from selling point. Return coupons good until September 5. Inquire of Pennsylvania Lines Ticket Agent for futher inlormation.

For Sale.

Choice pedigreed Poland China pigs from the best ol Strains at reasonable prices.

W. T. BAKKK,

Fortville, Ind.,R. 2.

Residence .j: miles east of Eden."' w2t*