Greenfield Evening Star, Greenfield, Hancock County, 23 April 1906 — Page 2
4
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OiATISM
IATICA
IUR8SQ0 UBmlO
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Louisville Ky.
PAUL BROWN. T. P. A. CHAS W. ZELL, D. P. A. Cincinnati.
W A. GARRETT. General AUaagtr.
W. C. RINEARSON Q. P. A., Cincinnati, O.
E NIGHT OUT
lorida New Orleans
reached in comfort
via
QIIEEI icurai ROUTE
AND
SOUTHERN RY.
THREE TRAINS A DAV Chicago & Florida Special
In Servlcc, January 8th, 1906. Through Pullman Ffrv:co from Chicago, Clevoia^rl, WManapclt* and Colun.bus, vii Bi^ I''our Uoulc I'ctroit anri Toledi. via Pcrc Marqueltn arid O li 6c 'Ay., and LouisvLie via Southern Railway connecting with solid Pullman trair. Icaviae Cin-inuati 0:25 P. M. for Jacksonville acd oL August o.
Florida Limited
Throvsh
ftlr. Bcsbee Intention
Original.J
Sfcsiu the smoking i-jcm of au iuciin.iis ocean I.nor two young .n: formed ju acquaint me, :b.' out? H. Augusiu iu boo, lii.j card read, the.1 o.hcr gene Kenton. Bu^'uee v."iis au lu.. lislim who ovulentiy e.^poc-tcd to si* wild animals running in tlia streot.-: of tho i)i"in ii1 cities in America. Ho iiifornitM Kc::tju that one of his father's brothers had eniiuratetl to t!:
United Sta'es, had i?ot rich and wa.s expecting a visit from his nephew, Solvent on g.itliereii from Mr. L»ug')oe's remarks that he was g.iing to America to un t'' the two brail, lies of the family by marrving his cousin. Miss Annette Medbury. A further inference was that the Engdshinan regarded his part in the matter a sacrilice which was only to be atoned for by the fact that the young lady was the sole heir of a weahhy man. Btigbee's plan was to visit some interesting points in the new world, then join his uncle's family in the mountains, naming J. as tlu place of meeting, whereupon Kenton remarked that his mother usually went to the same place, that he would bo there with her and might have the pleasure of meeting the young lady.
A week later Miss Medbury and Mr. Kenton were introduced in the parlor of the hotel in the mountains. Kenton refrained from mentioning having met her cousin. g§||
Miss Medbury proved a very agree able companion. Kenton looked upon her as an engaged young lady who was permitting him to be companionable to till the time before the arrival of Mr. Sugbee. He put off mentioning his having met the gentleman til! at last it occurred to him that he would appear as having played a somewhat undesirable role in keeping his knowledge secret. Meanwhile Miss Medbury showed unmistakable signs of an especial preference l'jr Kenton's society. One evening while they were sitting in a oozy corner of the hotel tlicy began (hat skirmishing which usually comes between an intimacy and outspoken love. "You go next week':'' said Miss Med bury, looking down at a flower witn which she was toying "You will be mueh missed here." .."Perhaps." replied Kenton, "some one will come along to supply the place I have taken, so far as you are concerned." "I expect no one who can fill the place you have tilled." "Possibly some day we shall meet •again. It may be in the mountains, ai the seashore, or perhaps you may be married and living abroad."
She looked up at him out of the cor nor of her eye. "Why do you say that?" "It has occurred to me that you would grace some old English home where your position would be better defined than here. With us the prominence given to blood has died out. There it is ^till a feature." "When it. is united with monev." "Yes." "You think," then, that it would be nice for me to marry some impoverished gentleman in England and take his rank. 1 might marry into my own family there. You know my father came from England." "Indeed!'' "Yes, and what you propose has been suggested. A cousin of mine is now traveling in America, and I expect him to join us here next week."
Kenton did not like the situation. In the lirst place, to think of the girl taking his advice, marrying her cousin and going where he would never see her again was horrible to him in the second place, when the lady should learn that he had met Mr. P.ugbee and had said nothing to her about the meeting she would give him the cold shoulder. "Have you ever seen him?" he asked. "No." "Miss Medbury," said Kenton,
have a confession to make." And he told her that he had met her cousin. "I can understand your position perfectly," she said. "Now tell me all about him."
Kenton was greatly relieved and resolved not to place himself in a similar position again. He gave a description of Mr. Bugbee that had he heard
No."
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General baiMr, 6ca. Paw'r AfMtt CIKOINNATI, a
"It seems to me you have'placed me on the horns of a dilemma—I am not to marry or remain an old maid." "I did not
m-
THE HOTEL CHILD.
Danger!) Tlint Genet tlic Luckless Offspring of tteKtles-s Parents.
It is not the material aids to existence which are the bane of the hotel child it is the mental uid spiritual altitude accompanying tLu.s life whicU is to be deprecated. It destroys a democratic spirit through emphasizing the difference between the servant and the served, it exaggerates the power of money, fosters a spirit of dependence and unfits the pampered individual for any other kind of life, and, worst of all, in a child so brought up there can be no understanding or love of home. There may be some future for the child who knows nothing of art, some function for the one to whom literature makes no.appeal and who not. sensitive to music, but there is place in the state for the man who has neither initiative, self reliance, patriot ism nor love of home. lie is a social menace, a disease. The community better off without this satellite of tlie manager, parasite of the bell boy and source of supply for the waiter.
If there is one child in our com'.nuiuty who is superfluous it is the hotel child. As places for temporary occupation by homeless and childless adults hotels are to be tolerated, but as residences for children they are without the possibility of excuse.—Miss Martha S. Bensley in Everybody's Magazine.
nM
linisb -~-r io
islies Avas graph.
"I
it
must have delighted that gentleman. Miss Medbury listened till he had fin ished. "I wish," she said, "to ask you a question to which I expect a reply on your sacred honor. Do you think my cousin a man of whom I would be proud?" v-*. "That ia not a question for me to de cide." "I consider you a friend," she con tinued after a brief silence. "Now tell me, would you like to see me married to the gentleman you met on the steamer?" "I would not." "Why?" "I should not like to see you married to any one." "What! Would you have me remain an old maid?"
one
of your quest'i a would have you marry no one except myself." Miss Medbury burst o.ut laughing. Kenton looked rueful. "Mr. Kenton," she said, laying a hand on his arm soothingly, "my cousin wrote of his meeting with you and said you would be here this summer. He spoke of yoti ver** "nkindly, at the same time me agaicst him i.i other
When uic- cousin, appeared he found the lady engaged. HiROLD OTIS.
mm
iii
FIVE MINUTES.
Under Some Circumstances It Seem* a Very Long Time.
In a murder trial before a western court the prisoner was able to account for the whole of his time except five minutes on the evening when the crime was committed. His counsel argued that it was impossible for him to have killed the man under the circumstances in so brief a period, and on that plea largely based his defense, the other testimony being strongly against his client.
When the prosecuting attorney replied, he said: "IIow long a time really is five minutes? Let us see. Will hi^ honor command absolute silence in the courtroom for that space?"
The judge graciously complied. There was a clock on the wall. Every eye i:i the courtroom Avas fixed unon it as ihe pendulum ticked off the seconds. There was a breathless silence
We all knoAV how time which is Avaitod for creeps and halts and at last does not seem to move at all.
The keen witted counsel waited until the tired audience gave a sigh of relief at the close of the period, and thee asked quietly: "Could he not have struck one fjta\. blow in all that time?" /t
The prisoner was found guilty, and. as it was proved afterward, justly.
OR1GIN OF PARISHES.
Avas
the
They Were Fonnded In ((iS by ArcIillslioi of Canterbury. Theodore, archbishop of Canterbury in f)0S. is regarded as the founder of the parochial system. Parishes Avere originally measured by and made to follow the linos of existing townships, a parish being, in short, the township in its ecclesiastical character. Where a township
too small to require
or to support a separate church and priest two or more townships were united to form one parish,
In other cases the clergy of manorial churches built by the nobles had no jurisdiction over a parish extending to the limits of their lord's estate. Thus no legislative act
Avas
ishes
Avere
needed, and par
mapped out gradually, as
the multiplication of churches and clergy, which Theodore did so much to effect, made it desirable to define clearly the areas within which the clergy had to work. It was not till long after
..
r,
Theodore death—Green says about the middle of the eighth century—that
this division the country into par.
completed. London Tele-
Tlie Folly of Betting-.
Lord Brampton, better known as Sir Henry Hawkins, the great English criminal lawyer, judge and sportsman In his reminiscences, in telling of what cured of betting, relates that Harry Hill, one of the "characters" of Tattersails, gave him this piece of advice aa a youth: "Mr. Hawkins, I see you come here pretty regularly on Sunday afternoons, but I advise you not to speculate among us, for if you do we shall beat you. We know our business better than you do, and you'll get nothing out of us any more than we should get out of you if we were able to dabble in your law, for you know that business better than we do."
Kins George's Fat Poclietboolcs. George IV. from the time he was a young man constantly carried a pocl etbook. into which he thrust bank notes, letters, trinkets and keepsakes. As soon as the pocketbook became full he used to put it away and substitute for it a new one. This Avhen filled was laid aside and replaced in like manner. When the king died it devolved on the Duke of Wellington to examine the
an entire chest of drawers filled with fat pocketbooks. which contained not leas than $50,000.
Assured of It.
Dentist (who has pulled the wrong tooth)—1 see how I made the mistake. I counted tb« molars from the back instead of the front. You don't seem to have cut your wisdom teeth yet, young man. groaning Patient—Thafs evident from the choice I made of a dentot!—^Chicago Tribune.
JdTinny Vu Good.
"I'm afraid, Johnny," said the Sunflay school teacher, rather sadly, "that I shall never meet you in the better Band." 'C"Why? What have yon been doiaf
r-PIck
Me Up.
v1-
Grand Opera House, Indianapolis.
The Indianapolis vaudeville goers will be impressed, iu g-lancing" over the roster of next week's programme, with the fact that there will be but one contributor to the performance who has been seen at the Grand before. It is a bill replete with novelty, seven of the eight acts on 1 he programme being entirely new to Indianapolis. In a season of thirty-eight weeks of vaudeville, it is a difficult matter to offer a show containing so many brand new acts, and General Manager Anderson feels that next week's bill will be one to attract the attention of the most critical patrons of the varieties. fHfThe headline feature will be Emmett DeVoy & Company, presenting a sketch that is credited with being- amusing from start to finish. The piece is a one-act farce entitled "The Saintly Mr. Billings," with Mr. DeVoy in the leading rele, assisted by such competent players as William McKee, Miss Herminie Shone and Will Gaylor. This sketch has been making a great hit in the Easter vaudeville houses. The engagement at the Grand will be Mr. DeVoy,s first appearance in the mid-west in his new farce. Rosaire and Doreto, a pair of famous- .^international eccentriques, who have just returned to America from a highly successful tour of Europe, will have an important place on the program in an act that is full of •fun and novelty, and another team of newcomers will be the
Dionne Twin Sisters, whose specialty is said to be a most attractive one.
Beatrice McKenzie and her company will appear in a bright little farce called lABute Prom ^Montana," that is said to be a "delightful affair. Miss McKenzie is a charming young entertnin||er, well remembered for her successes in several of the big Imusical1 comedy ^productions.
Still another big act on the bill will be the presentation of the comedy, "Too Many Darlings," by the comedienne, Georgia Gardnar and her associate players. Miss Gardner has earned an enviable reputation as a feminine fun-maker, and her offering is sure to prove interesting- and diverting.
Phyllis Allen, the well-known singer of popular songs, will be the one contributor to the performance wno has appeared at the Grand before. She is a local favorite, and may always be
counted upon for a pleasing
contribution. The BoundingGor-
donS} jn
a
splendid acrobatic
act and Melville and Conway "the clown and the soubrette," will present specialties that are well worth while, and the bio-
scope will put the finishing touch to this great programme with an interesting array of novel moving pictures.
Panhandle Nurseries.
We have a fine lot of flower-ing-shrubs such Jas Snowball, Weigelia, Spireas, Hydrangeas, Lilac and European Althea. Also a fine lot of Clematis just in rom Holland, in colors of red, white and purple. Morrison phone 426.
J. K. HENBY & SON.
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ANTHONY HOPE'S NEW STORY
'Sophy of Kravonia," Said to Be Mere
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The mysterious country of Kravonia lies in the same roman tic region of southern Europe as Zenda, but the new story has no connection with that of the famous Rudolph Rassendyil. Its central figure is a still more interesting person—a courageous and beautiful heroine, who rises from lowly life to the throne. Sophy de Grouche is her name, and she loves tlie brave but unfortunate Prince Sergins, as she proves in a series of the most exciting events in modean fiction. Her trials and triumphs are due to the existence of two fractions in the court. One is loyax to the true heir apparent, Prince Sergius, and the others seek to place up ou the throne the little son of Countess Edenbur^', the kings morganitic wife. The conspiracy leads to many dramatic scenes, one of the most tbriling being that in which the old king dis^
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EXCURSIONS Los Angeles City of Mexico
In April and May.
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E. WEAVER, Ticket Agent.
covers the guilt of the countess and drops dead at a moment when things are in a perilous condition for Sergius and his bride. How Sophv co^ of this tunn- of in.
0ue
V-
battle
tears and joys. Anthony Hope reveals in his own inimitable style,
The first installment of "Sophy of Kravonia" will appear April 22. On accouuf of the great demand for thie cinating story it will be': order your copy of The Sunday Record-Herald well in advance.
