Greenfield Evening Star, Greenfield, Hancock County, 1 May 1906 — Page 2

E. W.

ROSE MEDICINE

«fc SON.

A. W. FISHER, M. D.

PILE SPECIALIST

65 When Building,

INDIANAPOLIS, IND.

BYRON JEFFRIES

Is prepares I to do

R7

a

In A nril and May.

Des Moins Louisville St. Paul

In May.

San Francisco

[11 -Iune find July.

Denver

4 In July.

For details about these excursions, fares to any point, and particulars about E'ennsylyania Lines passenge service, consult

E. WKWKR, Ticket Agent.

THE EVENING STAR.

(Published Every Day except Sunday. 1

TKliM"! OK SI I'.^CKJl'TJON.

eOneweek, delivered ...I .10 One Month .35 Six Months, by Mail 1.50

One Year by Mail.- 3.(Jq Subscribers who tail to receive their papers will please-nolity the editor, anu all nistakes will l*e rectitied.

Entered as second-class matter August 1. *904, at the postoftice nt Greenfield, Indiana,

-under an act ot Congress. March 3.1879. wm

Maxim Gorky says that he wants to

,ret

Mr. Ewing Young, Stonefort, III., Cured by Zerao After Six Ye arm* Torment and Humiliation

ZEMO

1_ POSITIVELY

I CURES I*

ANY FORM

OF SKIN

OR SCALP

DISEASE 1"^

READ

MR. YOUNGS

LETTER

DRAYINTC

KIND of

ij ^PROMPTLY.)*?- .«

Call him when in need ofJ hauling or drayinr and you will be pleased.

Pennsylvania

LINES

EXCURSIONS

Los Angeles City of Mexico

away from Ameri­

ca Well, who is asking" him to stay longer or to come a^ain?

It is said that the {San Francisco catastrophe has brought such a number of heroines and heroes tothe surface that Mr. Carnegie's medal factory is running" a night shift.

Bourke Cockran has something to say in one of his recent speeches

011

the "Incoherence,

discordance and dissonance of debate." It looks as if Mr. Cochran had been studying the literary style.

The son of (Senator lodge who is also his father's private secretary is a good judge of mummies and some one regardless of Sentorial courtesy explains that he has studied the subject in his father's house.

STONEFORT, III.,

O., St. Louis, Mo.

Dear Sirs :—It is a source of pleasure for me to permit you to use my picture before and after cured by "ZEMO," and to tell what "ZEMO' did forme. I doctored this case of (Acne) pimples for six years and spent several hundred dollars with physicians and specialists. The more salves and creams I used, the worse my face became. Mr. Ira Blackmail recommended",ZEMO Eight bottles entirely cured me, and I honestly believe "ZEMO" is the best remedy in the world for any skin disease. Yours very truly, O —J

GUARANTEED AND SOLD BY

April

I E

ICS

W. Morrison I

3, 1905.

-A cynicaljsinner'has said that those people who give themselves away are often anything but charitable.

AdmiralSchey says of woman: "Our arms are their defense and their arms are our recompence." But there is no denying that they make away with a man's competence.

In Munich the street cleaning is all done by women. A few years ago all the pavements in this country were cleaned by women, but trains on street dresses is a st}^le that is temporarily laid aside.

The suggestion of an inheritance tax is met with enthusiasm b}T those who have no expectations of inheriting anything just as an income tax is alv i} icceptable to people who have no incomes. Since these classes comprise the vast majority of the voters of the country the suggestion is a good one to launch about campaign time

S ETILEDATLAST

Street Car Company Waives Right to Use Street.

Richmond Palladium

After several unsuccessful efforts on the part of the city officials to induce the Indianapolis ifc Eastern Railway to waive its rights to the use of West Second street, when that thoroughfare is opened, a contract was signed yesterday by City Attorney Gardner and Vice-President Charles C. Murdock, of the electric railway, which gives up to the city the electric line's right to the street.

The conference was held yesterday afternoon and the full proposition made by the city, through attorney Gardner. Mr. Murdock was represented by Attorney Henry C. Starr, and after talking the matter o^er fully, it was decided by the electric line officials to relinquish the right to West Second street. This action means that the viaduct under the tracks of the Pennsylvania railroad will be built and West Second street opened from Chesnut to Center street.

By the terms'of the

The first thing that will be done will be to select one of the three sets of plans that have been drawrn. The improvement will cost from $30,000 to $45,000 and the city's share will be 40 per cent, of the cost, or from §12,000 to $20,000. If possible, the work will be completed this summer.

Men In Petticoats.

One of the medical papers has been discussing the Connemara custom of dressing grown up boys in petticoats and does not seem to be aware that it is merely a survival of what was once the general practice in Ireland. Half a cenlury ago young men of nineteen might be seen—and were seen—within thirty miles of Dublin courting in petticoats in the country lanes. These were worn with high waists and long skirts reaching almost to the ankles and a Holland overall resembling an English countryman's smock completed the costume, but there was no difficulty In distinguishing the sexes by their dress. The man's waist was right 1111 der his armpits, while the woman's was in the usual place. When they walked out together they resembled a couple of figures from the Noah's ark of the toy shop, a proof of the real antiquity of jthe.costume.—London Tat-

Chinese Porcelain.

'Chinamen have been exporting their porcelain' to the west for at least a thousand years and probably longer. Mediaeval Europe could make nothing like porcelain and therefore regarded it as a magical product endowed with uncanny powers. It was said, for in stance, that a porcelain cup would break if poison were poured into it Travelers declared that porcelain was composed of various substances, which after Vieirg tempered, were liidde in the gronnd for ages before being tit for use. Even so erudite a man as Sir Thomas Browne, writing in the later seventeenth century, was "not thoroughly resolved, concerning poreellane or china dishes, that according to common belief they are made of earth." The secret of the true Chinese porcelain Avas first discovered in Europe a generation later by the German chemist Bottger, the inventor of what is now known as Dresden china. '1!

rieanoii For Anxiety.

A large pawnbroker's shop was on fire, and the firemen were busy trying to prevent the conflagration spreading. Among the large crowd of onlookers was one woman who was evidently in an agony of excitement. Every now and again she would urge the firemen to more strenuous efforts, and as the flames leaped higher her grief became violent. "What's wrong, missus?"' said a sympathetic bystander. "Don't you upset yourself. There ain't no one in there. What's the row?" "Row!" exclaimed the lady through her tears. "There ain't 110

Tlie Mosquito Plant.

In northern Nigeria there is a tre6f called in scientific language Ocimum viride, which mosquitoes cannot tolerate. Two or three plants kept in every room and placed along the veranda are enough to shut out trespassing insects. A mosquito gently inclosed in a leaf of the plant will lose consciousness in a few seconds. The bruised leaf has a scent not unlike that of wild thyme and eucalyptus. The natives of northern Nigeria prefer an infusion of its leaves to quinine in malarial fever both for themselves and their children.

IIUKO no an Eng-liMhman. A woman who was called upon to write a paper at a suburban current topic club 011 Victor Hugo went to the Carnegie library erected there and collated her facts from a number of encyclopedias. When she had finished, having a quarter inch of space at the end of her paper, she thought, she would add something original and wrote, "Whatever we and succeeding generations may think of Victor Hugo, we must agree

011

one thing—that he wrote

good English."

Contract

which the line holds, the use of every street in the city is granted. The Pennsylvania railroad agreed to pay 60 per cent, of the cost of the proposed viaduct, if the street railway company be refused its use. This could not be done unless the officials of the electric railway gave their consent. This matter has now been cleared up and the work can be continued.

I-'"-. Kanlc Carelessness. A New Yorker who. being rich, employs a man servant said to his valet one morning, "Iloskin!" "Sir," said the man. "You are getting careless, Hoskin." Oh, sir, I hope not, sir." "You don't brush my clothes regularly any more." "Oh, sir, I assure you"— "There, Iloskin, that will do. I left a dollar in my white vest pocket yesterday morning and—it is htill there."

.1^ Twenty-two A**res. Competent statisticians declare that twenty-two acres of land are necessary to sustain one man 011 fresh meat. The same space of land, if devoted to wheat culture would feed 42 people if to oats, 88 potatoes, Indian corn and rice, 17G, and if to the plantain, or banana, over (5,000 people.

Human lVnture.

All boys think they will be richer than their fathers, and all girls think they can keep house better than their mothers. They continue to think this until they are fathers and mothers themselves.

Keys of bronze and iron have been ftund in Greece and Italy dating from at least the seventh century beforu Christ

six

and

"J V''

row at all

at present, but there will be if they don't get that fire out soon. My old man's Sunday suit is up that spout, and he don't know it!"—London Answers.

Worils That Have "0 Iilivme. There are about sixty wor.ls English that have no rhyme. As given in "The Rhymers' Lexicon." by Andrew Lang, they are as follows: Aitch, alb, amongst, avenge, bilge, bourn, breadth, brusque, bulb, coif, concli, culm, cusp, depth, doth, eighth, fifth, film, forge, forth, fugue, gulf, hemp, lounge, mauve, month, morgue, nwtirned, mouth, ninth, oblige, of, peart, pint, porch, pork, poulp, prestige, puss, recumb, sauce, scarce, scarf, sixth, spoilt, swoln, sylph, tenth, torsk. twelfth, unplagued, volt, warmth, wasp, wharves, width, with, wolf, wolves. A critic adds that it is not clear why Mr. Lang places "mouth" in this list. It seems to rlmne with "south."

SOUTHERN RAILWAY

FROM

Cincinnati & Louisville TO ALL IMPORTANT CITIES South,

Southeast,

and Southwest.

H0MESEEKERS' TICKETS ON SALt FIRST AND THIRD TUESDAYS OF EACH MONTH TO MANY

POINTS SOUTH. ,C :?V

For Information and Rates Addresi H. HUNdERFORD, D. P. A. Southern Ry. ksis Louisville, Ky.

PAUL BROWN, T. P. A. CHAS W. ZELL, D. P. A. Cincinnati.

W A. GARRETT, General Muinr.

W. C. RINEARSON. Q. P. A., Cincinnati, O.

TRANSFERS OF REAL ESTATE.

Joseph C. Sewell to John F. Wiggins, $225. Ollie Westlake to William II.

Larrabee, et al., lot in New Palestine, $1,400. Win. A. Hough, comissioner, to

George Hawkins, iW acres in Blue River, $3,420. Joseph M. Henry to Mary C.

Hooton, $700. Harry Apsel to M. J. Davidson, $700 Allen Creed to Harriet E. Noe. et al., lot in New Palestine, §650. City of Greenlield to Sarah E.

Brown, lot in new cemetery, $15. Fred N. Evans to Titus E\ Dodd, lot in Shirley, $500. M. J. Kuntz to Mary E. Decker, lot in Shirley, $1,000. Q. A. Wright to Lon Swords $250. James A. Hatfield to lihoda M.

Offutt, lot 46, in original plat City of Greenfield, $3,000.

Death Eeported by H. Eshelmau. George Furry, at his home northeast of city, Monday evening, April 30. Funeral service at Little Sugar Creek church, Wednesday at 10:30 a. m. Interment at Little Sugar Creek cemetery. Friends of the family may call at the home from 4 till 9 this evening.

The Strongest Fence

Science proves

SHIMER, PAGE and LION,1N

ONLY RAILR0AD|

SOUTH

EQUIPPED WITH AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC BLOCK SIGNALS

ROUTE

AND

that the strongest fence, because

constructed throughout on scientific lines, is the

ELLWOOD FENCE

SIMPLE—SCIENTIFIC—STRONG

58 INCH

50 INCH

42 INCH

34 INCH

26 INCH

THAT IS ALL THERE IS TO ELLWOOD FENCE

Heavy steel cables lapped about and held together by steel wire, forming uniform meshes. Simple, isn't it? No chance for weakness in any part uniformly strong. The reasons for the superiority of ELLWOOD FENCE are not hard to find. This company

owns

large fence factories—either one of the sis being larger than any other fence factory in the world. These facts should be convincing.

^T 4

•»_

Also the following-well-known-makes of square-tnesh fences

Have a nice line of Yard Fence, also Cedar, Locust and Chestnut Pence Posts. In fact, anything in the fence line can be found at my yard two squares east of the Court House, on South street. Give me a call and get prices. Botb Pnones.

LADIES:

*«sfsa

S- i. rtn S 8 a •Cj'

.'

-1

i'

ii?rrisf» U'HhJ

1

pi

The Reasons:

1st—Each horizontal extension of the ELL* WOOD is a steel cable,

wires intertwined.

BOTH FARM

LOUIS ROGERS, iVIanager. A. B. ROGERS, Proprietor, ED AYERS, Salesman. Greenfield, Indiana.

.(©). X®i l(@X

consisting of two heavy

2d—Each of these cables is tied to each other cable by a continuous heavy wire lapped tightly about every ciible— not tied in a crooked "knot" or twist to weaken the strength of the tie wire at the bending point, Wrap a wire around your finger and the wire is not weakened tie a 18 INCH

w'rc UP

'n

a

hard knot and you cannot untie

it without breaking, it is so much weakened.)

and operates its own iron mines and furnaces its own wire mills

and

Are you aware that wecan make beautiful Moss Eu^'S out of your old carpets, Brussels aim Ingrains that W) von consider worthless? You can decorate your homes at a very small cost. Will last for years See them at No.

{.)

South East street.

We buy and sell second hand On pi-'ts and Furniture. W

SECOND-HAND STORE,

HEH soil

SWFN no to

(1

&

J'

id. a

POULTRY

((@5)

ti ia

IMM8 Oomiani

Of

ZL&HART, BND.

A t:.iencei3c Agent (either sex) wanted in every jj vs. i'revious experience not necessary. Must be able

references.

'vV.f*» 3 or a Ii on

W. H. WINSHIP, Manager,

Indianapolis office, 324 LAW BUILDING,

PHONES, NEW 5080 OLD, RED 3072 INDIANAPOLIS, IND.

Each set consists of a triple silver-plated handle and 12 double-edged blades (24 keen cutting edges) in velvet-lined case. You simply lather and shave. Each blade is tempered so hard by our secret process it will give 20 to 40 velvet shaves.

As\ your dealer to show it to you and explain its extra:•«•:ordinary merits, or write us for free specially illustrated booklet.

Gillette Sales Company "imks'wh'abJ^ New York

EMlNAOire

((@vi

JVo. 1) South East Street.

O A N I E IN 885.

13! 2

IIPNIII MINI

ii

Lii & ii V,:. ...j

EAU DE QUININE HAIR TONIC

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BT

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