Greenfield Evening Star, Greenfield, Hancock County, 17 October 1905 — Page 3

dNG TI^E Lr PAPER... •_ &

Closing out all surplus 4i lots to make room for fall jroods

Both Phones 74.

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NOW'S THE TIME TO BUY.

Embossed silk parlor papers, two toned cloth effects and tapestrv papers that were '25c to oOc, to close, a roll, 15c. Chamber papers, large florals. Dresdens and stripes, high-class and artistic styles, worth 20c, choice, a

ro^'

lGc. Large assortment gilt and high-colored papers, suitaole for any room, regular price 10 and 12c, now, a roll, Tcand 8c.

These papers are all new and up-to-date. Call in and see them. Mouldings to match these papers go at 2c a foot.

Stewart & Ellis,

22 West Mum St.

OFFICIAL TIME SCHEDULE

'Of the Indianapolis & Eastean K. K. Effective October 8, li©5.

WEST BOUND

5.30 a. m. 6.45 7.30 Limited 7.45 8.45 9.45 10.45 .11.17 .11.43 J2.45 p. m. 1.45

Inter. Lim

2.45 3.45 4.17 4.45 5.45 6.45 7,45 8.45 9.17 9.45

Inter, Lim.

Inter. Lim.

Makes counection for New Castle. Subject to change

NEWS NOTES.

Dr. W. A. Justice is at Indianapolis today. Prank Pitts is up from, Columbus visiting his wife. 'Thomas Jessup has moved from this city to his farm.

J. Haryey Dailey has resigned his position with the Lewisville Enterprise.

Mrs. William Marsh and Miss Emma Abbott spent Monday at Indianapolis.

For Rent—A three room house, $5.00. Dr. L. B. Griffin. *126t

Get your seats early for Friday night. Home talent—130 people—opera house.

County Surveyor O. H. Munger was in Brown township on official business Monday.

Wanted:—Two or three furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Call at this office.

Plenty of money to loan at 4J4 5 and 6 per cent. E. B. Grose, Masonic Temple, Greenfield, Ind.

Mrs. Margaret Ross and daughter Mrs. Gambrel were guests of Mrs. Kiuapp at Indianapolis Monday.

Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Johnson are at home after a two weeks' visit with Mrs. Johnson's parents at Gwynneville.

The ladies sewing society of the Presbyterian church will meet with Mrs. Lee O. Harris, Wednesday afternoon.

Will Butler, who had determined to return to New York, has accepted a situation in this city and will remain here for the winter at least.

F. M. Munger, of Madison ^county, is in the city preparing to begin work on the stone arch over the Potts ditch in the alley north of North street

Frank Dildine, of Gharleroi, Penn., who is working at the. Townsend bottle factory, will move his household goods to this city soon. His family is with the family of S. W. Dildine on West Main street.

Misses Thelma and Gertrude Binford retnrned to their home in Indian Territory, today after -a five months' visit here with re latives and friends. They were accompanied home by

1

their

viuncle, Frank Edwards, of Westan

A. C. Pilkenton is at Cormersville today, on business. Earl Martin, of near Eden, was the guest of friends of this city Sunday,

Nobe Jones will move from the north part of the city to Mechanic stjeet.

William Parsons, of Urbana, 111., spent Sunday with his daughter, Mrs. Claud Isgrigg.

For Rent^-A five room house corner South and Mechanic Sts. Call Mrs. Pitts at Citizens Bank. 16th

George Richman, county superintendent, is visiting the schools in Sugar Creek township today.

George Green and wife of Indianapolis are visiting the family of John Kiger of Grant St. this week.

vMrs.

EAST BOFND 5.15 a. m, from barn *6.10 7.10

1

•8.10

Lim.

9.16 Inter. Lim. 9.10 •10.10 11.10 *12.10 p.m. 1.1J

5

*12.10 p.m. 1.1J

Lim.

2.06 Inter. Lim. *2,10 3,10 •4.10 5 In *6 10

Lim.

7.' 6 Inter. Lim. 7.10 *8,10 *9.10 10.10

Mamie Miller of Foun-

taintown, was the guest Monday of Coleman Lisher of North Broadway.

Mrs. John F. Mannon entertained the New Century Card Club, at her home on N. East St. this afternoon.

Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Hayes and little daughter Mary Elizabeth have returned home after a weeks visit in Lndlow, Ky.

Your taxes are high enough without any penalty. So call pay your taxes and save the penalty. 17tl8

The Tuesday afternoon Club held a business meeting at the home of Mrs. Will Hughes on East Main street.

Wilson streeo, first west of the West school building, was surveyed Monday in preparation for its improvement.

Mr. and Mrs. William Baldwin, ©f Terre Haute, formerly of this city, were the guests Sunday of Dr. L. B. Griffin and family.

Clarence Hough and family, of Chicago, are in the city the guests of Hon. William R. Hough and family of West Main street.

Jess McPherson who has been at Elwood this summer driving a string of horses, has returned home. Jess says he has more coiners.

Albert Conwell, of N. East street entertained a three course dinner at six o'clock last evening in honor of Mrs. A. G. Selman, who will join a party of friends at Indianapolis today to leave for California to spend the winter.

Thomas Krammes, who recently went to Colorado to establish a home, is not satisfied with the climate and will return to Greenfield. Mr. Krammes is afflicted with a tendency to nose-bleeding and finds the altitude too severe. His family did not go West with him.

Fred Harening, Manuel Misel, C. F. S. Roesner, Henry Albrand, John Kirkhoff, Gus E. Rinam, John Lantz, Charles Custer, John Leonard, J. D. Vest, Homer Leonard, John Hubbard, Louis Hantz and John Misel, all of the southwest part of the county, are attending the Zaph-Sternaugle damage suit now on trial in the circuit couat.

Isaac Doles of this city has composed and just published "The Chromatic Two Step," which in style, title and design of title page is a decided novelty. From the standpoint of composition it is unusully interesting, having ascending and descending chromatic scales in connection with melody, harmony and a welldefined rhythm. It is admirably suited for chromanic scale practice, school or lodge work and will be pleasing to both teacher and pupils Wherever it is given. Send 5 two cent stamps for a complete sample copy (introduction price for next 30 days.) Address ISAAC DOLES, Pub. Indianapolis, Ind.—Indianapolis Staril

PAID

ON

DEPOSITS.

ASSETS,

$68,798.95.

THE GBEESFIfiLD

Building & Loan Association

15 West Main Street.

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. H. Peters will leave tomorrow for a week's visit at Rushville.

You have less than three weeks in which to pay your taxes for the fall installment of 1204. 17 tl8

The Helping Hand Society of the Christian church will have a market at Burk's grocery Saturday, Oct. 21. 6td

If every one waits until the last day for paying taxes it will be impossible to wait on all. So call soon and avoid the rush. 17tl8

The Morristown and Fairland foot ball teams played at Morristown Saturday afternoon the score being 17 to 0 in favor^of Fairland.

For Rent—A 9 room house, city water, cellar and cistern on Walnut street between High and West school buildings. Call at 325 Walnut street, City. 2t

Ed Scott, of New Palestine, who has been seriously sick for some months with a complication of diseases is much better, and is able to be about some.

The tax duplicates will positively be closed at the close of November 6, 1905. Those failing to pay their taxes at that time will be delinquent. 17tl8

Miss Edyth M. Cole will sing "In after years when I am old, at opera house Friday night. 150 of our home people partiicpate. Tickets on sale Wednesday at Sehnan's Drug store.

W. H. Latta and Millian J. Beckett, Indianapolis attorneys well known in this city, were each fined ten dollars by the judge of the circuit court at Martinsville Monday for atempting to fight with their fists while court was in session. "THE CHROMATIC TWO STEP" just published is quite a little novelty, has merit, fine melody and harmony, you will like it. Mailed to any address post-paid (by way of introduction) on receipt of 5 two cent stamps for the next 30 days when ordered direct from ISAAC DOLES, Pub. Indianapolis, Ind.

LEARN TELEGRAPHY and R. R, Accounting. $50 to $100 a month salary assured our graduates under bond. Our six schools the largest in America and endorsed by all railroads. Write for catalogue. MORSE SCHOOL OF TELEGRAPHY, Cincinnati, O., Buffalo, N. Y., Atlanta, Ga., La Crosse, Wis. Texarkana, Tex., San Francisco, Cal. -o

Men and Women.

He—I think every woman is etttitled to be considered man's equal. SheWell, if she is willing to bring herself down to his level I don't see why she shouldn't be allowed to pose as bis eaual.—Illustrated Bits.

A Repulne.

He—I would lay the world at your feet. She (laughingly)—My dear sir, It is there already. Don't assume credit for the law of gravitation.

A Glasgfow Cemetery.

The Necropolis cemetery, Glasgow, as originally planned, contained almost exactly twenty-four acres available for burials, and it was suggested that each division of one acre should be narited after a letter of the Greek alphabet, which contains twenty-four characters. For various reasons this idea has not been fully carried out, but fifteen sections of the cemetery have been so named from alpha to omega, the monosyllable letters between these being omitted. The names have not been applied in any particular sequence, but with the aid of a small map they are useful in locating any particular spot in what is now one of the most densely filled graveyards In the kingdom.

ELECTRICAL LIVING.

Americans Cook and Cnrl Their Hals With Electricity Now.

How the twentieih century American would live without electricity is hard to imagine. That he does more things with it than any European or Asiatic and that he is consequently just so much further along on the road to economical industry and comfortable living is not surprising when one thinks that Benjamin Franklin, who first drew lightning from the clouds on his kite string, was followed by Morse with the telegraph. Field with the transoceanic cable, Bell with the telephone and Edison and Tesla with the electric light, the storage battery and a score of other present day necessities and conveniences.

The uses of electricity in American homes are a great deal more numerous than one is likely to imagine without stopping to count them up. All manner of electric stoves are made, to be attached to the ordinary light fixtures with a little portable connecting plate. There are electric chafing dMies, broilers and ovens, electric curling irons and electric heaters for warming water. The electrical housekeeper will boil an egg or "drop" one ami toast the breail to serve it on with the same little steel disk that heats the water in which she will later wash the dishes. There are electric stoves that can bo. packed in one corner of a dress suit case and electric irons which the fastidious may carry with them when they travel for doing a little pressing on their wardrobe.

The manifold uses of the telephone have become pretty familiar, but new ones are being discovered all the time, and novel ideas in telephone equipment are constantly being worked out in the laboratories. The latest is a movable instrument, especially convenient for doctors, which, after doing service in the library or Avaiting room all day. is disconnected at night, carried upstairs and connected up again in the sleeping room. Many large private houses have little telephone systems connecting the different lioors or apartments, and in others there are several signal bells, placed in different parts of the house, while the telephone itself occupies the most central and convenient station.

The electric street car or runabout In which we travel, the electric light which turns night into day in our city streets, the electric motors that run our machinery—all have a part in making this century the electrical age in very fact and this country the land of electricity more truly than is any other.

When Mr. Roosevelt IVodtled. If President Roosevelt had been as punctilious a stylist as lie has proved himself to be potent as a peacemaker he would not have addressed a telegrain of thanks to ''his majesty William II., emperor of Germany," for, to begin with, it is not strictly correct to add the Roman numeral to a sovereign's name during his lifetime, as the sovereign himself never does so. Our own king, for example, simply signs himself "Edward," leaving it to the drafters of bills to put in the numeral which distinguishes him from others of the same name. On the other hand, William II. is not "emperor of Germany." but only "Deutsche kaiser" —a very different thing. The former title implies imperial sovereignty, which is not an attribute of the kaiser, who is only an imperial president, as Mr. Roosevelt is a republican one.London Chronicle.

A Convincing Illustration. The magic lantern has been used ingeniously in the campaign against the yellow fever mosquito carried on during the epidemic in New Orleans. In order to convince the skeptical that pouring oil on standing water would kill the larvae in it Dr. Kohnlce, head of the board of health, prepared an illustrated lecture, which he delivered to crowded houses all over the city. A vessel of water filled with the "wiggletails" was projected upon the screen after the larvae had been studied in detail. The wiggletails were seen rising to the top to breathe. A film of oil was then poured over the water, and the wiggletails could be seen struggling vainly to thrust their breathing apparatus through it. Balked there, they darted frantically about in all directions, to sink at last to the bottom and die of suffocation. It was a convincing illustration.

Little Dorrlt.

Morrison

1

Next to the Duke of Rutland, the place of doyenne among "living people in famous novels" belongs to Mrs. Mary Ann Cooper, who was the original of Charles Dickens' Little Dorrit. She was in her maiden days a Miss Mitton, was born in Hatton Garden in 1813, and her father had a residence at Sunbury, where Dickens, his friend, often visited. Dickens used to call Miss Milton Little Dorrit as a nickname, and one day he told her that he was going to write another book (it was in 1855) that was to be called "Little Dorrit." as he should put her in it. Mrs. Cooper, though now ninetytwo, is still active and is naturally extremely proud of the honor that'has been hers.—London Tit-Bits.-

Snllivnn and Fnt.

"Nobody loves a fat man anyway," observed the Hon. John L. Sullivan when the sheriff closed his fifty-fourth saloon. Mr. Sullivan threw too much emphasis on what was only one among the causes of his declining popularity. The disappearance of comely outlined in his body weighed less with the fickle public than the loss of his ability to plant his fist upon a fellow being's jaw with such momentum that the aforesaid man and brother would instantaneously cease to feel or think.—Collier's Weekly.

"CUT IT OUT

says the doctor to many of his lady patients, because he doesn't know of any medicinal treatment that will positively cure womb or ovarian troubles, except the surgeon's knife.

That such a medicine exists, however, has been proved by the wonderful cures performed on diseased women, in thousands of cases, by

WINE

0F

WRITE US A LETTER

freely and frankly, in strictest confidence, telling us all your troubles. We will send Free Advice (in plain, sealed envelope). Address: Ladies' Advisory Dept., The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn

CARDUI

Woman's Relief

It has saved the lives of thousands of weak, sick women, and has rescued thousands of others from a melancholy lifetime of chronic invalidism. It will cure you, if you will only give it a chance.

Sold at every drug store in $ 1.00 bottles. Try it.

PROF. RYON.

Clairvoyant and Palmist,

Special Medium of the World. Goes into Trances, Locates Any Lost Articles, Transfers People into Mediumship,

Gives Love Affairs.

Sits and looks at you tells your past and future of your life- Gives satisfaction to every one who goes to him. Gives satisfaction to every city in the Union. Natural horn pi ft to him. Come early to avoid the crowd.

Sanford Furry now has anew porch. He was assisted in its construction by Mr. Lowe and Orville and Royal Kinder of this city.

Raymond Kinder with others worked on the electric railroad Sunday.

Ed Francis still comes regular to our town each day from Locust Hill Farm. Ed is a hustler and keeps everything on the farm in good shape.

Ide Payne still resides on the Munden farm. Come over and reside in our town.

James Hunt now lives in our town in the property recently purchased by Sam Allen of Mr. Miller. ~Sam will also move here in the near future.

Will Davis was at Charlottesville transacting business with trustee Burnette one day last week.

Rev. Jones will go on his Regular trip for the Chemical Company next week and be gone several days.

Rev. Jones and wife and others have been attending revival meeting at Maple Valley the past week.

Morris Barrett was in our town one night last week on his

RESIDENCE 19 WEST SOUTH ST.

Hours, from 8 in morning till 10 at night: Sundays, 0 a. m. till 10 p. m.

Readings, 50c. Trance Readings, $1.00.

CLEVELAND.

Mr. and Mrs. Helms and sons Fred and Lacy who have been living" at Brazil for several months where they have been engaged in contract work have returned to their home in this place. We were glad to wel come them back.

Chester B. Murphy transacted business last Saturday with the George Williams Company and the Citizens Bank of Knights town. ,•

Phone, 4.64. GRliiEXl1 IELD, IND.

99

GAVE UP SUPPORTER "I wore a supporter for years, for my womb, which had crowded everything down before it, writes Mrs. S. J. Chrisman, of Mannsville, N. Y. "1 suffered untold misery and could hardly walk. After taking Cardui I gave up my supporter and can now be on my feet half a day at a time." *.

For Comfort and Sight,

"Monument Hats"

Are just right.

Ask your dealer for them.

way to hold meetings at or. near Warrington. Morris is in grea^ demand wherever known.

Eli Reece is now in Scott county where he is erecting a wind pump for Elmer Binford on his large farm. There is also a large lot of plumbing to be done in connection with the same. Mr. Reece is an expert in these lines.

Bert Jackson and' -family visited their old home last Sunday.

The Bell boys gas well drillers have iust completed a good \Yell for Charlottesuille.

Uncle Morgan Miller who wa3 reported sick last week has about recovered.

Aunt Patsy Bicknell is now about like she has been for over one year, still unable ^to sit up. Outside of her age she seems about the same as for several years.-/

Sylvia Patterson and Dora Murphy who spent part ot last week in your city have returned, home.

Evangelist Hatfield preached at the M. E. church last Sunday.

John Meek has a fine field of corn adjoining our town. He is a first class citizen and farmer.

The boys after the marriage of Irven Young and Mattie Kinder had a grand time one night. Well I can't spell that big word but you all have an idea what they done.

Nobe Rawlings and family visited with the family of Sansord Furry last Sunday. /•".

W. C. Dudding left this morning for Bloomington, 111., to pack fruit trees for his fall de* livery. V'J