Greenfield Evening Star, Greenfield, Hancock County, 28 April 1906 — Page 2

tfEfilO*

6 cr7

I PIMf?„LES

OlS.SKIN-'SCAlP

WHOSE MEDICINEC0.1

FACSIMILE

(Puolishod livery Oav excM»i Sunday.-fi

TKR.MS OF SrH^CKlPTION'.

One week, delivered $ .10 •JQC ijoulh .35 Six Montns, ly Mail 1.50 Dae Year by Mail.. 3.110

Subscribers who tail to receive their papers will please notify the editor, ann all Tiistakes will be rectified

Entered as second-class matter August 1.

i904, at the postofllce nt Greenlield, Indiana,

aniler an act ol Congress. March 3.1879

Bicycle license payers in this a city have aright to be protect 155 ed by the city officials against glass on the paved streets. The whole business of paying license to ride a wheel in a city where but a small per cent ol »the streets are paved is approved by but very tew people s® who will give the subject consideration. It takes but a heavy sprinkle of rain to put the bicycle on the shelf except along

Main street and around the scourt house and depotv squares. sThe fact is the bicycle owner in

Greenfield pays for something she does not get. Added to this. bottles that drop from junk iwagons are permitted to remain where they fall, broken into pieces that are gradually scattered and ground into hundreds of other pieces ready to puncture tires beer bottles are thrown into the street when •emptied. This is not fair to the man who pays for the privi lege of riding a bicycle.

"Hadn't we better tie down oui skyscrapers, until this earthquake is over.

Carnegie is the wisest of the Pittsburg millionaires. _•« He kisses pretty girls in public.

Unless all signs fail on a dry •canal, there will soon be a big job in Panama for the man with the whitewash brush.

Dissatisfied wives of Pittsburg millionaires, have no trouble in getting the world to to believe all they can say about their husbands.

Uncle Joe's "scat?" when the oft-recurring question whether he is a candidate for the presidency, is put to him, leaves no doubt in anyone's mind that the old gentleman is secretly pleased when the cat comes back.

HOSPITAL PHYSICIANS SAID:

'IT WOULD DELIGHT US TO FIND SOMETHING TO CURE THIS DEAB OLD SUFFERER." Mh. E. W. Kose, St. Louis, Mo. Richmond, Ind.,Nov. 20 1205. Dkah Sir: The charity patient In whom I am so much interested was seventy-flve years old at tlie time that she becau the use csf "Zcmo," and her weight was liWlbs. Ucr health has been poor for some time past, suffering mainly from spinal trouble, according to the diagnosis of the doctors in attendance. She has been a hard worker all her life, having made the living lor her family keeping boarders. Somewhat over a year ago eczema began to trouble her. It gradually grew worse and worse until her entire body was affected, the legs being a mass of sores constantly separating. The itching and burning sensation was so dreadful at times that it was impossible for her to sIpod

immmmmt guaranteed and sold by

C. W. Morrison FC

SON.

A. W. FISHER, M. D.

PILE SPECIALIST

65 When Building,

INDIANAPOLIS, IND.

BYRON JEFFmES

Is prepared to do

ANY KIND of PRAYING

-S!

PROMPTLY.!^

Call him when in need of haulmg or (I ray in 4- and you will be pleased.

THE EVENING STAR.

I

day or night. The doctors

(two of our best) pronounced the case incurable, and when I asked permission to use "Zomo" promptly said, '"It would delight us to find something to cure this dear old sufferer." "5ierno" was first used on the upper part of the body and soon relieved the patient of the terrible distress caused by the itching and burning. The doctors had been dressing thelcirs every "day. but as soon as they saw the wonderful change in the skin where"Zenib" had been used, they gave consent to haveit used on the legs. Gradually they began to improve and are now almost as smooth as the face. It was probably about a montfi before much relief was experienced in this part of the body, then skfci scaled off, itching, burning and aching gradually ceased. It seems now as if a testimonial might be given, but the patient thinks that she had better use "Zemo" a few weeks longer before saying that- she is cured. However, she is very grateful to all who have been instrumental in securing your wonderful remedy and thinks that it has a great ft- lure before it. ft

Respectfully. iS $

(MRS.) MARY PERRY BELLIS. Nur»e in Hospital.! No.

208

N.

8th

St.

ECZEMA, PIMPLES

AND ALL SKIN AND SCALD DISEASES CAN BE CURED BY

E O

A CLEAN LIQUID FOR. EXTERNAL USE PLEASANT AND CONVENIENT TO USE

Hyde and Alexander, late of the Equitable, have been drop ped from the directorate of one of the branches of the Coal Trust. Here's a case where "two Jonahs" go overboard before the storm breaks.

"Why was Vesuvius quiesent last October when the sun spots were at their greatest period of disturbance:" asks Professor John A. Brashear, of Pittsburg. Really, Professor, we do not know, but we suggest that you ask Vesuvuis direct while she is in a spouting mood.

THE POTATO CROP.

Important Whether It be During Dark!or Light of Moon.

•'How do you plant your pota toes in the moon or in the ground," is a favorite query at this season of the year. Most people asU- the question in a light vein, but there is more in it than many think. A number of people who have followed the custom of planting vegetables that mature in the ground in the dark of the moon, and those that mature above the ground in the light of the moon, say that the orbit of night has a very notice able effect on such things. All the older inhabitants observe this custom, and while they ad mit that good seed must be selected, and that a favorable sea son is also necessary, they aver that it is all for naught if the moon calendar is not observed in planted.

Others observe the signs of the zodiac, and it is said that if seeds are planted in the dark of the moon, potatoes,for instance, when the sign points to the Bowman, representing the thigh of the figure, the tubers will be very large and in abundance.

People who cling to the custom say that peas should be planted in the light of the moon when the sign is in the head/

Be this as it may, it is noted that the man who observes the signs usually has a good garden which he attributes to his sign theory and the fellow who does not believe in it says it is just the man's fool luck. So there you are, now take your choice.

Thjo Dean Cigar—Guaranteed to be the best 5c cigar on the market. Sold only at Spot Cash.

Two Onrion.s KntTfH,

When Sheffield first became famona (or its cutlery a peculiarly shaped knife, designed for a variety of uses, was made with great care and sent to the agent of the Cutler's company in London. On one of the blades was engraved the following challenge:

London, for thy life.

Show me such another knife.

The London cutlers, to show tha* they were equal to their Sheffield brothers, made a knife with a single well tempered blade, the blade,having cavity containing a rye straw two and a half inches in length, -vtwfly surrounded by the steel yet, notwithstanding the fact that the blade was well tempered, the straw was not burned, einged or charred In the least! It Is needless to add that the Sheffield cutters acknowledged themselves outaor* in Ingenuity.

THE SUNDAY SCHOOL

BY W. C. GOBLE.

The Parable of the Sower

The parable of the sower found in the fourth chapter Mark, and our lesson comprises the first twenty verses.

Jesus drew out an explanation of his parable in Jast Sun day's lesson but in today's les son he gives the explanation himself. In last lesson he showed Simon how the heart may become hardened tln-ough pride and selfishness in this we see that the word of God can not grow in such a heart. The fruits of repentance are love, forgiveness and peace the seed of the word of God brings forth into life the fruits of the spirit, thirty, sixty, and a hundred fold.

TRANSFERS OF REAL ESTATE.

John M. Pritchard to Mary J. Gundrum, 195 acres in Sugar Creek township, $12,000. Anna E. Luddington to A. A.

Denk, Sugar Creek, $1,500. George A. Garver to Ada 1m. Garver, lot in New Palestine, $700. Hannah Stanley to John W. Rozell, 5£ acres in Warrington, $000. 4v'-/fl John L. Mothershead to John and Sada Horton, lot in Portville, $50. S. A. Van Duyn to Sebastian

Lykens, lot in Shirley, $400. George W. Ham to Sarah Van Duyn, in Brown township, $1,400. John W. Rozell to Porter V.

Rigs, lot in Warrington, $450. John C. Sewell to John P. Wiggins, Green township, $225. Ollie Westlake to William H.

Lafrabee, lot in New Palestine, $1,400. Charles Mathes to Holy Recruit church, lot in East Greenfield, $20.

Reac. THE STAR.

of

It was during the autumn of A. D. 28, somewhere along the shore of the Sea of Galilee that Jesus spoke these words to his disciples and the multitute. f£

The theme brought and in thi lesion is the different ways of receiving the word of God, and our aim in presenting it should be to show the importance of keeping- the heart in a receptive condition to right influences The result of seed-growing largely dependent upon the con dition of the "soil" of the heart

is

The slow growth of Christ' Kingdom was somewhat per plexing to his disciples it is al so perplexing to his followers today. But in this lesson Jesus shows that this slow growth is due, not to unfaithfulness of the sower, nor to the lack of vitality in the seed, but to the presence in the soil of conditions adverse to its reception and growth. The preacher in a church may be earnest and true, the teach er in the Sunday school may be ever so faithful and the seed scattered by both be the very word of God, and yet the truth may fail to grow to attain ex pected perfection and fruitage, because of wrong conditions of hearts into which it falls.

Opposition to Jesus was now assuming a more pronounced form. Some of the Pharisees had openly declared that He was in league with the Evil One. His family were much distressed about him and desired that he withdraw to the quiet of his home. But the time bad come when there must be a di vision between those who were the true followers of the VIaster and those who followed him from curiosity. The first class were more able to receive the deeper truths of the Kingdom while the others followed large ly for physical benefits they received at his hands. Hence forth, much of Jesus' teaching is in parables.

Largest '^retail

shoe business in the world

iS

THE CHURCHES TOMORROW.

Some Announcements of Services and Pastors' Subjects.

"Mr. Alcuzai", a Hebrew, born in Jerusalem and a member of one of the most prominent Jewish families, will lecture in the Presbyterian church Sunday evening at 7:30. His subject will be "The Story of My Conversion." His conversion is as interesting and dramatic as that of Saul of Tarsus. Mr. Alcuzar has lectured for two seasons at the Winona Bible conference, and this year the Rev. Wilbur Chapman has invited him to give another lecture. The public is cordially invited. The pastor's morning subject: "Satan's Sifting-"

A rally service will be held tomorrow at the Second M. E. Church, and at the evening service a special program of music has been arranged that will appeal to lovers of music The pastor is a splendid singer and will take part. Mrs. Retta Curry and others are among the musicians. The public is cordially invited to attend with theii* purses, as the special service is expected to materially aid in the contemplated improvements of the building, which includes electric lights, a new carpet, new organ,^etc.

The Rev. E. B. Barnes will preach at the Christian church morning and evening. A full attendance of the membership is jed, and visitors will be cordially welcomed.

The Re»v. Edgar Stranahan will preaeh as usual at the

Friends' church tomorrow

The pastor's subject at the M. P. church tomorrow morning

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AT THE

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We give you "six=dolIar quality at the wholesale price"—and we prove it before you buy them. I 114 Regal stores, 29 of them in Greater New York where the styles originate. The same identical new styles are on sale in this store the same time as in the New York Stores. 'f-* And the seventy-five Regal styles are NEWEST styles—as new and correct as the most exclusive and expensive models of the fashion=creating custom makers.

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will be "Loveliness of Christ," and in the evening his^theme will be, "Burial Among the Kirm-s."

Preaching as usual tomorrow evening at the U. B. church by the pastor, the Rev. O. F. Lydy The Sunday school at this church is 2:30 p. m. and a cordial invitation is extended to all. The prayer meeting was held this week on Thursday evening that the members might attend the convention last night, but the coming week the meeting will be held on Friday evening as usual.

At the Bradley M. E. church tomorrow morning at 10:30, a converted Jew, Mr. Isaac Alcuzer, son of a rabbi, of the city of Jerusalem, will give his lecture, "From the Rabbinical seat, to the foot of the cross."

The pastor's evening subject will be "The Origin of Evil.",

Grand Opera House,Indianapolis.

The headline attraction of the Grand's vaudeville bill next week will be Lee Harrison, the well known comedian who has scored so many hits with various important Broadway musical shows. In the famous old Casido productions Lee Harrison was wont to shine at his best, and helped carry through :-many a big musical show to success and along New York run. He has been seen in Indianapolis from time to time as one of the star members of big musical comedies and extravanzas, and is no doubt pleasantly remembered by loca theater goers. Mr. Harrison decided at the opening of the present season to enter the

field of vaudeville, and seems

y.^j'

134 stores in principal cities from

London to

San Francisco

Watson, Hutchings and Edwards, will, be til- next feature of importance on the bill, appearing in the amusing travesty, '•The Vaudeville Exchange," with which they scored such a hit last season. Harry Watson is known as one of the best of Dutch comedians, and Miss Alice Hutchings is a feminine fun-maker of much talent. Mr, Edwards is a light comedian with a penchant for good clothes and a neat stag'e presence. An act tffat will be brand new here, and one which is credited with being a wonderful offering, is the exhibition of the brothers Dierickx, three Austrian gymnasts and strong men who execute feats of strength and equilibrism that would appear to be impossible. The act comes from the big vaudeville houses of Europe, where it has gained an enviable reputation.

Janet Melville and Eva Stetson, a pair of popular singing comediennes, who are old favorites with local audiences, will contribute a clever number to the program. The team of Melville and Stetson has been before the public for the last eight years, and the specialty of these two jolly entertainers is always well worth while. The Musical Byrons, in a pleasing fifteen minutes concert, will make their first appearance at the Grand, as will also Charles and Edna Harris in a novel sketch entitled "The Inspector and the Maid!" Frozina, a celebrated European musician, whose specialty is said to be a most remarkable one, will held the stage for an interesting contribution, and John Birch, "the man with the hats," will afford a lot of amusement with his original act. Mr. Birch gives what he terms a "melodrama" all by himself, playing the

cJ3aracters

ous

to have been succesful from the I and an assortment of comical hats, very start. He may safely be

counted upon for a bright con-, out. The bioscope will, as usual tribution containing plenty of be the concluding feature of the good fun.

by means of

It is a clever idea wel, worked

tshow,

That funny trio of farceurs, of splendid motion pictures.

displaying a new series