Greenfield Evening Star, Greenfield, Hancock County, 25 July 1906 — Page 2

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If You Suffer with Rheumatism

Dr. Stoop's Rheumatic Remedy Will Bring the Utmost Relief that Medicine Can.? *.,

The cae remedy which many physicians rely npoa 10 free the system of the Rheumatic Poisons wfcieh are the cause of all Rheumatism,

Lumbago.

Sciatica. Gout, is

MATIC

RKMEDY.

SHOOP'S RHEO

can turn bon.v again—sitae Butiteaii and from the

peiBoas caused in swelling. And end of the pain Che eta atf the sufof Sheramatism. Calls where a cure ... put spin tablet or lieither. You who have

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DR.SHOOP'S RHEU­

Dr. Shoop spent twenty years

in experimenting be-Afore he discovered the

combined chemicals one alrsost alway RheumaSiism. etc

ain and

thenthatisthe and swelling— ferine— the end, This remedy never possible. It is now Quid form—ask for suffered and are suf-

fc'erintrcwfay from pains and aches which you Kinipw to. be Rheumatism you who experience Sameness or twinges of pain in damp weather you who easily become stiff and lame without apparent cause—just try DR. SHOOP'S EHED MATIC CURE. It is just the kind of a remed fthat accomplishes results. Sold and recocr snen&ed by

"ALL DRUGGISTS"

Pennsylvania

•LINES-

SUNDAY OUTING

Special Excursion Tickets will be sold at reduced fares-very Sunday, beginning: July 15, 190b. at Ticket Offices on tfee [ndianapohs Division to any station on that Division at which trains are sfceduled to stop on Sunday,

SPECIAL LOWFARES

-O TO

MILWAUKEE

10,11, 1 Kafjit' Grand Aerie

MINNEAPOLIS

11 August 10. 11, I-—G. A. It,

The Annual Seashore Excursion

TO

Atlantic City, Cape May, Rehoboth, Ocean City, and other

Seashore Resorts,

Will be run Thursday. August 9th. Jf interested, ask E. WEAVER,Ticket Agt., (Treenfield

OFFICIAL T1J1K $iCHGUl'LE

©ff Che Indianapolis A Eastern It. R.

WEST BOUND b.27 a. m. & a 50 Lia ited *7.42 ...

8

.42

*9.io Limited 10.44 11.4? *i2.54 p. ni. Limited

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'•*d.54 Limited 7.42 a 8 42 Gfld only

U42

*10.15 Limited

yjs'M

ffiSS .Mlis

At

EAST BOUND

*5.4" a. m. 1 .Uo *8 ('8 *9.08 Limited *10 08 1108 •12-08 p. m. Limited *l.i 8

1

-*.12 s*i,54 Limited i.42

2 08

•3,08 Limited '4,08 jj.W *6.08 Limited *7.8 8,08 Gfld only *9,08 Limited 10.08 12.30 am L. to 'wn

-*^laks,lireCt con- ection for New Castle. "FREIGHT CARS RUN AS FOLLOWS "West Bound? 8 42a. m." 1 25 P- to N. O. 12.15 p. m, 5 5-' a. m. Riclim 1 56 p. m. 7 35 p. ni, (». JEFFRIES. Supt.

A. W. FISHER, M. D.

I PILE SPECIALIST

6s When Building,

INDIANAPOLIS, 1ND.

TtaiMMnSIeCall

httit tkaa

0

PtittniMll hJJjf'jW

ml any

other mak« «f saturna. TwbM

ml Mlkilr atria,

accanqr ana simplicity.

.. OM a«ba«riptlon(il Humbert) costs 00

«njr namL.. Every aubacrlbar gaU

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Subtcrib* today

afca*) and fraanlum Catalogue (ihewing 40* praaiitlB^ Mil frM. Aidma TUX McCAU. CO, H«w Y«fc

Where Tourists Will Find Humphreys'Specifics. Paris, 51, rue des Petits-Champs. London, 49 Hay market. Vienna, Stephansplatz, H. ^Brussels, 65, Boulevard de Wa- ,* ierloo. 'Lisbon, Rua do Arsenal, 148 and 152.

Barcelona, Ronda S. Pedro, 36. ^Madrid, Calle Tetuan, 3. .Alexandria, rue Cherif Pacha. LManila, 167 Escolta, \tHio de Janeiro, Rua deS. Pedro. \^uenos Ayres, 446, Calle Florida. V&Mexico City, Calle del Coliseo, 3.

all drug stores in Canada,

Cuba, Central America, Honoamau, p.orto Rico, the West Indies,' aivd in every city, town S\and Siamlst in the United States of America. Humphreys' HomeoipatliicMedicine Co., N. W. Cor. "William and John streets, New

York

N. R- Spencer. Pre3. E. E. Davis, Sec-Treas. Ben Stiickland. Vice Pres., Geu. Mgr.

THE EVENING STAR.

Published Everj* Day except Sunday, bv

••THE GREENFIELD I'iUMING AMI ,.s i'-f -.^.puBUsraco..

FRANK K. JOHNSON City Editor

_•

which made possible certain cure for that

DR.

MATIC REMEDT joints into flesh impossible, ill drive .blood tbe

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Botli.'Tclephones. .-5v'v:

TEltMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.

One week, delivered, 8 .10 3ne Month

...i

more

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Six Months, by Mail 1-50 One Year by Mail— 3.uo Subscribers who fail to receive their papers will please notify the editor, ana all nistakes will be rectified.

Entered as second-class matter August l. {904, at the postofflce nt Greenfield, Indiana, ander an act ot Congress. March 3.1879. •.*

The person who is despondent as to the luture of Greentield is desturbed without cause. It is true that there are a few empty tenant houses in our city. Jt may be there are more such houses than there have been within the past ten years, but any industry that would bring 25 families into our town would make vacant houses scarce. Greenfield is not over-built either in business or resident houses. When the bottle factory rebuild there will be an urgent need of

dwelling houses. Greenfield isnot so large but that the surrounding county will make it a good business center. Hancock county will support a countyseat of six thousand population. Greenfield property is not extremely high neither is it extremely cheap. It simply holds its own in a good fair condition. Greenfield is a good conservative, quiet up-to-date city. It affords most desirable conditions for enjoyable home town— far from the expenses and objectionable features of large cities and still close enough to avail one's self of the advantages. Greenfield will never go back,but on the contrary she will corrtinue to grow in the future as in the past—not rapidly but surely and substantially. She is unsurpassed in public improvements by aliy other city of her size in the State of Indiana, and any resident who is not proud of her is not a loyal citizen.

It is our prediction that the falling off of new business in life insurance within tbe year of 1906 will be very perceptible. This will not be due to the fact that the people do not believe in life insurance, nor be the result of impressions made by the exposures of extravagance and graft. The conviction that much of the wrong, being exposed. is due to the over charge of premiums is taking deep hold. The enormous and unearned salaries being paid is sure to impress not only the policy holder but everybody. The insurance needs great reform and if the old companies do not rise to the occasion, new ones will be organized which will meet the emergencies of the times. .i„~

A peculiar feature of the political conditions of Indiana this year is tbe fact that the Democrats generally are acting as it they had no hopes of carrying Indiana this fall, while on the other hand many prominent Republicans are badly scared about the state ticket and some of the leaders say that they think the chances for Democratic victory is the best that it has been for twelve years. These facts indicate the great uncertainty of the peculiar conditions under which this fall's election will be held.

A Perfect Bowel Laxative for constipation,sallow complexion, headache, dizziness, sour stomach, coated tongue, biliousness. Lax-ets act promptly, without pain or griping. Pleasant to take-Lax-ets—only 5 cents. Sold by all-druggists.

THE ORIGINAL

LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP

For all Coughs and assists In expelling Colds from the sys tem by gently moving the bowels. A certain relief for croup and whooping-cough. Nearly ali other cough cures are constipating, especially those' containing Kennedy'sOpiates,

Laxativ*

Honey & Tar moves this bowels, contains no Opiates.

KENNEDY!

Tbe Red Jlover Bios* torn and tbe Boney Be# is on every botue.

LAXATIVE

CONTAINJSG

HONEYMTAR

PREPARED AT THE LABORATORY OP

E. O. DeWITT & CO., CHICAGO, U. S. A. Sold by M. C. Quigley..

Habits of Some Rich Cranks. A short time since there died at Como a rich man who was noted tor very strange eccentricity. Although for years he had never been outside his grounds, h« would proudly inform his visitors that he had that very day walked to certain villages in the neighborhood.

What he actually did was this. Whenever he made up his mind to visit a distant village or town he maae an estimate of the distance, and covered it on foot on a carefully measured walking track in his grounds. When he wished to call on his friends in the district he would not only do it by proxy, but would conduct a conversation for hours by sending a servant to and fro with questions ana answers.

A well-known Italian count, w^o died recently at an advanced age, had for many years defied the weather by drinking a solution of camphor, whicli he considered an efficient substitute lor clothes. Suminer and winter alike be would sleep without a particle ot covering and with the windows of his room thrown wide open, and would walk for hours in his garden on a bitterly cold day in the garment most people devote to night wear. /I'

There is in Cape Breton a worthy and much married gentleman who has .iust taken his eighth wife to his heart and home. And a grewsome hon:f- it must be to greet a homecoming wife, for seven of his rooms, each paintel in black and white and liberally garnished with skulls and crossbones, are dedicated to wives Nos. 1 to 7. J"

As the birthday of each of these departed spouses comes round the by no means disconsolate husband entertains his friends at dinner in the room specially devoted to her memory and improves the occasion by telling anecdotes to illustrate her many virtues.

In Vienna there is living today Count a wealthy nobleman of Polish origin, who occupies a sumptuously furnished flat in the most fashionable part of the city.

When he wants his servants he summons them by bugle calls, much to the annoyance of his neighbors. His favorable pastime is to hire an omnibus and, dressed like an ordinaryi driver, to drive his cumbrous vehicle wherever aristocratic equipages. ar» thickest.

He spends a fortune every year on the costliest of clothes, vet never wears any but suits discarded by his valet appears in the ballroom decided from head to heel in white, with the exception of a bjack shirt and tie and when he dines—always at one of the most exclusive restaurants—he begins his meal with a cup of black coffee and, working his way backward, winds up with the soup.

Not? long ago, too, there lived near Hastings a gentleman whosQ eccentricities very naturally excited considerable attention. Punctually at the stroke of noon each day he would appear in his front garden with a gay]y colored turban on his head, his feet shod with richly embroidered and jewelled sandals, and with a coolie cloth around his waist, and, quite indifferent to the amusement he was providing for a crowd of sprotators, would first pray aloud to the sun, "the father of light and good," and then prostrate himself before a quaint miniature temple in which was enshrined a grotesque idol with diamond eyes.

To give but one more example of eccentricity up to date, there is a certain lady in California who once every year performs a singular act of self-imposed penance. Many years ago her husband, to whom she. was very devoted, lost his sight, and Mrs. Williams—for that is' the lady's name— made a vow that if he recovered it she would, in gratitude for answer to fcer prayers, cra^l on hands and knees once a year from her house to the church, a distance of a quarter of a mile. This vow she has religiously kept for more than twenty years.

SAD.

There was once a young man in Mo. Who suffered such terrible pe. At getting the mitten

When he Was love-smitten That at last he went wildly inse.

THREE STAGES.

Great big sunshade by the seashore Plain umbrella after marriage After while in blissful season

Parasol on baby carriage. —New York Sun.

BY An CYNIC.

Fair woman's mind is ever clean Whichever way she ranges it, Which,

is

but natural, I wean,

For she so often changes it. Browning's Magazine.

FORTUNES IN LOST REMEDIES.

Drug Secrets Which Have Died With Discoverers.

"Talk about your lost gold mines and hiddden treasure," sniffed the gray headed druggist, "there are more iortunos lying around in the drug trade than have been buried by all the pirates and robbers since the world began. Millions are often made from a good drug formula that will give the quietus to some disease or other. "There is a fortune waiting for a man who can get hold of a South American herb called 'korocco,' make it up in tablet form for the trade and advertise it well. Korocco is the only known perfect antidote to nicotine. Some of' the South American tribes are the heaviest smokers in the world. They smoke roughly made black cigars that would kill an ordinary man. They would hurt these savages, too, il th'Sy did not chew the leaves of the korocco plant. Of course, you know that a drop of nicotine put on the tongue of a cat will instantly taKe every one of its nine lives. If tne nicotine-is mixed with korocco it is harmless. "Fifteen or twenty years ago a company was tormed to' exploit korocco as an anti-nicotine. For some reason the project was not a success, although the tablet was as efficacious as the meagre advertisements claimed it was. But that was before the day of big advertising. Moreover, men did not smoke such heavy cigars as they do now. Any one wno gets that herb now, has his tablet properly prepared and advertises it well, has a fortune beyond the dreams of avarice. What wouldn't the confirmed smoker give to be able to putt away at a good stout weed to his heart's content and then take a korocco tablet and obliterate every evil effect? Korocco will do all of this and some day scgne enterprising man is going 'to climb into the multi-mil-lionaire class by its aid. "Speaking about lost remedies," con tinued the druggist, "reminds me ot a cure for rheumatism compounded by a bright young pharmacist named Zimmer about twenty years ago. At first he compounded it only for his own customers, but the results were so sensational that he was led to believe he had hit upon an infallible cure for the .painful malady. For a year or so he devoted all his time to its manufacture ancl sale, and he laid the basis of a big fortune. He had more orders than he could fill, although he did no advertising. It was not long before drinit got the best of him and his business went to smasn. "He drifted from bad to worse, and went from city to city, little more tnan a tramp. Finally he turned up in New York at Bellevue in the alcoholic ward. When he got better his talent was discovered and.he was put to work the dispensary as a pharmacist. A wealthy drug manufacturer heard about him and entered into negotiations for the purchase of the formula for that rheumatism cure. Zimmer was grimly bitter in his refusal. Nothing would induce him to reveal his l'ormuia. Not even the argument that he ought not to let the secret die with him, nor the offer of $10,000 and a life job could make him open his lips. He died less than a year later as tne result of his excesses.

Curiosities of Railroading.

The driving wheel of an engine traveling sixty miles an hour makes 250 revolutions a minutes, and often has behind it a train weighing 200 tons. Yet the axle of the wheel upon which tfcis gigantic strain is placed cannot be made straight and true, like the axle of a carriage wheel. It must be, in the nature of things, a crank axle and it may be imagined by any cyclist how greatly the massive cranks add to the strain.

The difficulty of keeping an express up to time is enormous. Given a perfect engine and a good driver, he'must also be provided with the best of coal and a fireman who knows how to use it. On a run of, say, 500 miles, he will use at least 3,000 gallons of water. If he carelessly uses more he will exhaust his supply. Wind has to be allowed for, and wet lines always mean delay.

There are two or three hundred signal men to be passed each of them has his share in the punetuality of the train. One careless platelayer among nearly 1,100 who look after the line between England's and Scotland's capital may delay the train by his failure to screw up a fish bolt. The whole train may be brought to a standstill by a greaser having allowed a pinch of dirt to get into one of the many grease boxes. As may be imagined, only the most rigid discipline can run a fifty mile an hour train on time.

The taunt is often hurled at British railways that they are expensive. French and German fares are held up as contrasts to be copied. The public forgets that in Britain a reasonable amount of luggage is carried free abroad, none. It fails to remember that most foreign railways belong to the government, while British ones are forced to pay from two to five per cent, of all their earnings into tne national exchequer.

Tom's Advantage.

Tom Catt—"What? Going to blame that broken jam jar on me, too? 1 don't think that is fair-"

Bobby—"Well, you see, you have nine lives and I only have one. .you can stand the most knocks."

Two women, in lighting a picnic lire on the slopes of Waterman Mountain, San Bernardino county, California, the other day, discovered asphaltum deposits. A rush followed, 20,000 acres have been located and an oil boom ia „In process.

'wsr»K

as Pi S®

Mr. Ewing Young, Stonefort, III., Cured by Zemo After Six ar*'Torment and Humiliation

ZEMO

POSITIVELY CURES ANY FORM

OF SKIN OR SCALP DISEASE

READ

MR. YOUNGS LETTER

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roNEFORT, III. april 3,

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O I E

HOMES FOR THOUSANDS

One and a quarter million acres to be opened to settlement on the

SHOSHONE RESERVATION

Dates of registration July 16th to 31st.

EXCURSION RATES

Low rates from all points, less than one fare for the round trip from Chicago, daily July 12th to 29th via

The only all rail route to Shoshoni, Wyo.„ the reservation border.

W. B. KNISKERN, P. I. M., Chicago & Northwestern Ry., Chicago:

Please send to my address pamphlets, maps and information concerning the opening of the Shoshone or Wind River reservation to settlement.

THOMAS A. EDISON SAYS:

I WOULD RATHER BEGIN NOW AS A POOR BOY, THAN TO START AGAIN IN THE CONDITIONS WHICH SURROUNDED MY EARLY LIFE."

Don't Hit to read James Creelman's remarkable character sketch of Thomas A. Edison in Pearson's Magazine for August.

Fifteen Other Qreat Features and Articles.

accept^ )aur resident newsdealer can handle your order and pake a commission

WushVhg

'"kamon

1905.

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