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

Does Your Stomach Bother You?

's Restorative Cures Afl

Distressing Stomach Troubles Through the Inside Nerves.

As Ttt* value your health and happiness don't neglect to care for the slightest stomach pain— «3oE't lea it go. At the first sign of distress use (Dr. Stoop's Restorative and end all these troubles. These aches are signals—they are eymjrtecBS of coming disease—is it wise to ignore $hemf You who never eat a hearty meal without A -cense of fullness A followed by a period

«iof lassitude or Neglect these condi sv,( Snvite (distressing become a sallow, ©epftic. Do you .of thesesymp- •_ Kress after fing of Jtifod cnswicg at

QchjumWing fing of nd, «Lite, 'heartburn,

j' Einess? If you shese wars, your there

is

drowsiness beware, tions and you surely indigestion—you'll miserable experience anjr toms? eating.returnto mouth, pit of stomof gas, belchloss of appeheadache, diz'sufier in any of 'duty is clear 'course open to yov— Serves—these special shake off forever this

but one'

strengthen the inside1 stomach nerves

3 tavideEceof disease. Put,vthe digestive nerves in conditio* to act as nature intended thev should. JDonMj drug, don't force—just give the inside nerves -natural force, irentle tonic, nature's help. ?Dr. 'Stwsp's Restorative (Tablets or Liquid) should toe taken to do this—it is the only preocriptiaa wnich builds up,or evea attempts to oestorasfte inside stomach nerves. Sold by

"ALL DRUGGISTS"

Pennsylvania

LINES

SUNDAY OUTING

5pecia'i

Excursion Tickets will be sold

at reaiiced fares verv Sunday, beginfiuisr July 15, 190(5. at Ticket Offices on the Indianapolis Division to any station on that Division at which trains as skeduled to stop on Sunday,

SPECIAL LOW FA11ES

MILWAUKEE

Aug. 10, 11, i'—'Ingle Grand Aerie

MINNEAPOLIS

August 10. 11, 12—(i. A. Ji,

Annual Seashore Excursion

To Atlantic City, Cape May, Kehoboth, Ocean City *nd other Seashore Resorts will be run Thursday. August 9th,

Niagara Falls Excursion

Wednesday, August 22, I90f, via Pennsylvania Lues to Clevelano, & B. T. Line Steamer to Buffalo, N. Y. C. H. R. R.the Kalis, affording a pleasant t-ip via the most delightful route known

If interested. isk

E.

Weaver,Ticket

Agl., Greenfield

OFFICIAL TIM NOHKDULK

©f sitec Indianapolis &. Eastern It. II.

i\"EST BOUND. n.i~ a. in. •5') Lin- ited "7.42 8.42

EAST BOUND

*7.08 *8(8 *9.(i8 Limited *10 08 11 08

Limited

10.44

*11.4? '•*12.54 p. m. Limited

•'.•12 *2

f12.US

p. rn. Limited

*1.(8 2.08

"3.51 Limited

t.l1

?rii.54

Limited

,7.42 •-S42 Gfld only -J.42 10.15 Limited

1

Limited

*1,08 5 "8 *6.08 Limited' *7.(8 8,08 Gfld only *9.08 Limited 10.08 12.30 am L, to K'wn

Makes direct conrection for New Castle. FREIGHT CARS RUN AS FOLLOWS West Boundi', East Bound 8.42a. m. -125 p. to N. C. 12.15 p. m, 5 o-i a. m. Riclmfd 1 56 p. rn. 7 -i5 p. ui,

JEFFRIES. Supt.

•A. W. FISHER, M. D.

SPECIALIST

65 When Building,

INDIANAPOLIS, 1ND.

3*

YWnmmnMoCtll

(MM

P»tiw»» —1* '"S'AjW

tku •(Mr ether male* «f pattern*. TUa tom mm th«lr (tvla, accuracy and limplioty. of PaaklMlkW lagmiln*. OM

MU*» MibMriptlm(ia nambere) co»t»

saShs

00

oal

l^icrlbi today.

MlMT, ft Nltli ET»ry »ub«crib«r geta

A Mats WAitnAi HindMi

-a Fn*. IiibicHba today.

£3

and Frunlum Catalegu* (iknta| 4» fra*. AddraM TH» McCALL CO« M«v

Where Tourists Will Find Humphreys' Specifics.

Paris, 51, rue des Petits-Champs. London, 49 Hay market. ."Vienna, Stephansplatz, 8.

Brussels, 65, Boulevard de Waterloo. I I-1

..V.V"I ..A.y-ivi.....

1

Xisbon, Rua do Arsenal, 148 and 10-.^ Barcelona, Ronda S. Pedro, 36. Madrid, Calle Tetuan, 3. Alexandria, rue Cherif Pacha. Manila, 107 Escolta. Rio de Janeiro, Rua deS. Pedro. Buenos Ayres, 446, Calle Florida. .Mexico City, Calle del Coliseo, 3.

At all drug stores in Canada, Cuba, Central America, HonoPorto Rico, the West In--ddes, and in every city, town and hamlet in the United States •of America. Humphreys' Homeopath^ Medicine Co., N. W. Cor.

William and John streets, New York.

1

N. R. Spencer, Pres. K. E. Davis, Sec-Treas. Ben Strickland. Vice Pres., Gen. Mgr.

THE EVENING STAR.

Published Every Day except Sunday, by

THE GREENFIELD PRINTI} li AM) PUBLISHING CO.

|l|jgijliilt

FRANK E. JOHNSON,...- ..City Editor

Both Telephone!*.

TKIOIS OF SUBSCRIPTION.

Jne week, delivered .10 JueMonth .35 5ix Months, by Mail 1.50 One Year by Mail 3.uo

Subscribers who lail to receive their papers will please notify the editor, ana all nistdkcs will be rectiiied.

Entered as second-class matter August 1. $04, at the postofflce nt Greenfield, Indiana, ander an act of Congress. March 3.1879.

With today The Evening Star begins its' third year. Much could be said concerning its remarkable growth in circulation during the last year and more and the appreciation of the way it has been received, but all this is generally understood. We are content in joining our friends in "wishing it many more happ^ birthdays."

"Much ot the excitment on the Bryan band wagon nowadays is being created by the parties who are gradually edging backtowards the tail board," says a Republican contempoary. Not on your life—we would like to know the name of one.

We don't know what the trouble between Salvador and Guatemala is about, but we suspect that Mrs. President Cabrera turned up her pretty little nose at Mrs. President Escalon'about the wash.

When Mr. Bryan touches Louisville, the natives are going to do their best to make him think he was born in Kentucky, and is along lost son, coming home.

Wealthy young socialists who are eager to "get oack to the soil" will have little difficulty in exchanging ""wordly lots with ambitious farmhands.

All that glitters is not gold, and our Consul General in Rio Janeiro, warns Americans that everything that sparkles io Brazil is not a diamond.

London makes unkind re marks about the "American invasion,'' but the money of the invaders looks sfood to it.

Pittsburg's $60,000 theft has dwindled to about |(j worth but there is no depreciation in the divorce cases.

The Standard Oil Co. is threatened with competition in Ohio. Like wise with litigation. Also with a big*stick.

Populists claim Roosevelt, Bryan, Folk, Lawson on LaFollette. However, none has yet pleaded guilty.-

George Fred Williams, of Mass., is out against Bryan. Nebraskan's luck seems to have turned.

What's in a name? M. Stickinsky, Russian Minister of Agriculture, was forced to get out-sky. 1*^

The unfortunate Mr. Thaw seems to* have developed an embarrassing case of mother-in-law.

Czar Nicholas says he wants the good will of his soldiers. That's about all he has left.

The hearings in those Pittaburg divorce cases ought to be held in a padded cell.

Of course, that bulky bundle in your pocket is a buWch of Panama canal bonds.

The Republican leaders are only hoping that the voters will "stand pat."

Phenamid5:"'

acnes

VALUABLE MEXICAN TREES.

Some Contain Medicinal and Anti» septic Qualities. Consul Despinasse, of Tuxparn, says there are trees in Mexico that may be made as valuable to commerce as are the rubber trees. He says that ia the dense woodlands of Vera Cruz there are numerous plants reputed to possess mediciflal virtues and ethers 'which could be profitably utilized for commercial purposes. "One tree," he states, "yields a deep brownish red, thick sap of a slightly resinous odor. The process ot extraction is simple slight superficial incisions are made in the bark, terminating at the foot ot the tree a medium sized leaf or strip of palmetto is inserted underneath the bark, so as to form a gutter into which the sap drips, and as it overflows it drips into a receptacle placed underneatn the leaf. When 'exposed to the atmosphere the sap does not epear to undergo fermentation, but becomes slightly denser. A bottle was lett open for a year, but no apparent cnang9 appears to have occurred. Small quantities are exported to Germany. Buyers claim that it is employed in the preparation of carmine ink this is doubtful. It

may

have

other and more valuable uses, which are not divulged. It may he u&ea in the arts or in the making of medicines. "As there is no regular demand, price cannot be determined, and samples. small or large, are paid for according to the time a laborer employs in extracting the sap. The natives say it is an excellent dentifrice and mouth wash, healing ulcerated parts, it is a powerful antiseptic, being employed with excellent results on fresn or old wounds: it congeals and checks the flow of blood. It has been employed as an indelible stain wood treated with it, when thoroughly dried afterward, does not appear to be alfected by water or diluted acids, the stain remaining unaltered. On clotn it acts as a perfect dye, acids or alkalies seeming to have no peree.ptibie effect on its color. The foregoing are statements made by persons who have experimented with this sap, hence ought to have weight. "rl he palo de leche" tree is quite common in damp or marshy locations the sap is milk white and atyout the same consistency as rich milk it is a powerful caustic. Partial or total i!indness may result when this sap has by accident been injected into the eyes the natives claim that a strong decoction of the Chili pepper, if applied in rime, will dissolve tne thick film which gradually spreads ov-sr the eyes when atacked by this fluid. II: is averred that a tew drops in a glass of water acts as a violent poison, often proving tatal: it is employed by the natives in dinted form, v.-hich they spread on the surface of streams or lakes to stupefy fish, wnich they consume. If properly analyzed this fluid might prove valuable samples, however, are very difficult to outain. as the native laborer cannot be induced to approach the tree, ot which he has the greatest fear. However, there are some who will take the risk if tney are well paid, which, no matter how large, is* but a trifling amount compared with the danger to which they imagine tiaey will be exposed. "The honote tree produces a very fine, Ifcng fibre (ten to fifteen feet), which is extracted from the inner surface of the bark. Each tree will produce from four to five pounds of fibre. "The ojiote is a wnc from one to four inches in diameter, growing in slightly damp and shady locations. The vine furnishes a white, milky, gummy juice, which is employed as a cement to unite leather, and' the united! parts will hold with great tenacity when subject to severe tension. A section of vine about eight feet, long and three inches in diameter is chopped into short lengths and allowed t.o drip, producing in this-crude manner about four to five ounces of the milk, but, as it coagulates rapidly, only a small portion is extracted."

Women Who Command Regiment's. European -women are popularly supposed to possess fewer rights than their American sisters yet one distinction enjoyed by them is little known on this side of the ocean. In the Prussian army alone the commanders of fourteen regiments are women and, although the position is purely formal, yet these female colonels enjoy like military rank with the male holders of the title, ana, on occasion, wear the uniform of ttieir office. The distinction is not confined to German women, although rereserved for those through whose veins flows royal, or, at least, princely blood,

Those who have been thus honored are as follows: The Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, the Grand Duchess of Baden, the Empress Alexandra of Russia, the Crown Princess of Greece, the Empress Augusta Victoria of Germany, the Duchess of Connaught, the Queen Dowager of Holland, the Princess of Sachsen-Mein-gen, the Queen Dowager of ltalyi, the Princess of Schaumburg-Lippe. the Princess Frederick Karl of Hessen, the Princess Karl of Prussia, Queen Wilhelmnia yt Holland, and the Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg. Of these befrocked commanders eight belong to the infantry, three to the guard de corps, and three to the cavalry.

"So she married that awful Jack Rounder? Why, didn't she know that he had been blackballed by every club in town?" "Yes—that's why she took him. She thought there'd be some chance of keeping him at home evenings."— Cleveland Leader.

DeWITT'S

WITCH HAZEL

SALVE-

THE ORIGINAL*

A Well Known Core for POes.

Cures obstinate sores, chapped hands, eczema, skin diseases. Makes burns and scalds painless. We could not improve the quality if paid double the price. The best salve that experience can produce or that money can buy.

Cures Piles Permanently

DeWitt's is the origin*! and only pure and genuine Witch Hazel Salve made. Look for the name DeWITT on eveiy box. All others are counterfeit,

PREPARED BY

E. C. DeWITT A CO., CHICAGO.

£Sold by M. C. Quigley.

Dr. Shoop's Re to ativ brings lasting relief ia Stomach, Kidney and Heart troubles trough the inside nerves. No matter how the nerves became impaired this remedy will rebuild their strength, will restore their vigor. Remember it does no trood to treat the ailing organ-the irregular heart, rebellious stomach, diseased kidneys. The}* are not to blame. Go back to the nerves that control them-treat the cause-use a remedy that cures through the inside nerves. Sold by all druggists.

Lincoln B. Cole has traded his house on North State street to Mrs, Tracy M. Case for 29 acres of land in Blue River township. Mr. £ole will give possession September 1st, and will probably move to his farm near Morristown.

Cascasweet makes sweet babies sweeter. A vegetable corrective for colic, summer compla'nts, belching of sour curd, diarrhoea, dysentery, constipation and loss of sleep. Tastes good—is good—harmless. Crying,2peevisli,fretful children like the taste of Cascasweet. A vegetable corrective for teething, colic, belching, diarrhoea, dysentery, constipation, loss of sleep and the many stomach and bowel complaints of infants and children. Sold by M. C. Quigley. ..

Women with weaknesses should never forget Dr. Shoop's Night Cure. This magic-like local treatment is use2 at 'bedtime,. all night while the system is at rest, it is constantly building up the weakened tissues, soothing the inflamed and sensitive surfaces and will surely clean up all catarrhal^and local troubles. Solci by all druggists.

Does evil still, your whole. *. life fill? .** Does woe betide?

Your thoughts abide on suicide? You need a pill! Now for prose and*facts—DeWitt's Little Early Risers are the most pleasant and reliable ptlls known today. They never gripe. Sold by M. C. Quigley.

Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar is the original laxative cough syrup and combines the qualities necessary to relieve the cough and purge the system of cold. Sold by M. C. Quigley.'

4

1

CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH

ENNYROYAL PILLS

Original and Only Genuine.

SAFE. Always reliable. Lcdle*. nsk DrugRirt

for CHICHKSTKK'S KNGLISH In KEI ac«l (void meiaUfo boxes, .sealed with blue ribbon. Tstkc no other. RefttM lUvgerouR Substitution* wid Imlta* tiwnH. Buy of your llruffgHt. or 4o. i» stamps for Particular*. and

4412e.ilcfKMMM)I••Hf.nottialH.

for LafUcn.1'Testimonial# i't fctttr, by re*

turn Mad* Sole*' Druggists. Chlche*t«r ('hcnttoal

MeaUaa this paper. Hadlaoa Square* rillLA..

60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE

ATENTS

hade mwino

DESIGNS

COPYRIGHTS AC.

Anyone sending a sketch and description ma? quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communications Btrictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest fluency for securlnfrpateiits.

Patents taken through Munn St Co. receive tpecial notice, without charge, 4u the cs

Scientific American.

A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest ciirdilation of any scientific Terms, $3 year four montha, Sold by newsdealers.

Co«?fl.8t«Journal.NewD.

MS

81Bro*Washington,

dwayall

York

Branca Office, C.

4

4,

ft (Cut out this Coupon)

"FISH AGAIN IN MICHIGAN"

Are you going to Michigan soon? Don't make up your mind fully "until you see the & "Book s@of Tours" to Michigan and Canada

Ask any & Agent, or address \V. B. CALLOWAY, General Passenger Agent, Cincinnati, O.

HOMES FOR THOUSANDS

One and a quarter million acres to be .Opened to settlement on the

SHOSHONE RESERVATION

I 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.

fegW. B. KNISKERN, P. T. N!., Chicago & Northwestern Ry., Chicago: -i Please send to my address pamphlets, maps and information concerning the opening of the Shoshone or Wind River reservation to settlement, ss

&D

The Michigan Line

v..

Jiest of Service to

TOLEDO DETROIT

And to all the Famous Summer Resorts of

MICHIGAN and CANADA

THrotigH Cars to

CHARLEVIOX

On and after June 25.]

BOOK OF SUMMER TOURS

FREE FOR THE ASKING.

W, B. CALLOWAY, General Passenger Agt, Cincinnati, Ohio.

PATENTS

Free adviec, how to obtain patents, trade ir-~ke, I copyrights, eta, |N ALL COUNTRIES. Business dirfrt with Washing to- "ives time, money and often the patent.

Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively. Write or come to us nt 023 Ninth Strwt, opp. United States Office, I

WASHINGTON. D. C.

GASNOW

ONLY RAILROAD^

SOUTH

EQUIPPED WITH

AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC

BLOCK SIGNALS

AND

SOUTHERN RAILWAY

FROM

Cincinnati & Louisville TO JUL IMPORTANT CITIES

Sooth, Southeast,

and Southwest.

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

POINTS SOUTH.

H.

For Information and Rates Addraaa C. H. HUNQERFORD, D. P. A.

Southern Ry. Louisvilla, Ky.

PAUL BROWN, T. P. A. CHAS W.ZELL.D.P.A. ritlnUw.^l

W A* OARRETT. General W.

6. RINEARSON, Q.

P. A*

Cincinnati At

BYRON JEFFRIES

Is prepared to do

ANY

Kim.'DRAYiNf,

S3 ^PROMPTLY.bS-

Call him when in need of haulor draying and you will be pleased.