Greenfield Evening Star, Greenfield, Hancock County, 6 November 1906 — Page 4

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-g-Cr.. nr.. 1 25 to N.C. L2lo p.in 5 5*» a. m. Riehm ilft'jj.fir 7 :S5 p. id.

Jufkhiks.

Sunt.

A. W. FISHER, M. D.

rue SPECIALIST

«£S When Buildings

tSKElANAPOLIS, IND.

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wRfenaffc81! IWii, S05?ES.Bi^«8j

S'he new Pare Food and Drug* i3L«aw will mark it on the label of -every cough cure containing opium, chloroform, or any other «fcupi£ying or poisonous drug.

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The club piazza was gay with the usual late afternoon crowd automobiles of every hue and smart traps lined the drive while waiters hurried about with tea trays, syphons and bowls of ice to the small tables where pretty women and men in flannels were grouped, telling new jokes and comparing new scores.

In marked contrast to all this noise and confusion, the last couple from the tennis courts strolled leisurely in, apparently absorbed in each other's society. "I hate to be beaten," said the girl earnestly, "but I hate worse to have you deliberately throw me a set, as you did just now, out of kindness or pity." "What really would please your ladyship, and it is yours, even unto the half of my kingdom," replied the man lightly, but his eyes deepened and his expression changed as he waited for her answer. "What a generous offer," she said gavly. "May I answer at my leisure, while we have tea, for they have saved us our pet table over in the corner? In 10 minutes, then. Au revoir."

A quarter of an hour later, fresh from his shower bath, John Graham joined the girl at the table reserved for them. "You are so good at look at, Jack," she said frankly, as she added the lemon and sugar. "And that is all he responded, t'rowning. "You regard me as you would a thoroughbred horse or dog. You never think of the me underneath. You've applauded my football playing, praised my cross country riding, heaped me with laurels for physical prowess these three years, and that is all." "What else has there been?" she asked, gravely. «. "Since you left college, captain of your eleven, what has there been? I had expected so much ,of you, Jack,

And you see nothing more in me. but golf or tennis cups and steeplechase trophies have been all that I could praise. Isn't that the honest truth? You have too much money and too little ambition to fight for the big things of life." "Ethel," he said quickly, "say you'll marry me, and I swear, you shall be proud of me. Say it!"

She drew her breath sharply. "I can't, Jack," she said at last—"you attract me, heaven knows, but the qualities I admire, brains, talent, ambition, power that is not brute force, you have deliberately pushed into the background. A man must be more than a splendid animal." "And you see nothing more in me?" he said bitterly. "Thanks! No wonder I could not win you." "Of course there is more in you," she answered sweetly, "and that is the pity of it, for you have stifled it to burn incense to your lesser gods. Jack, I should be'afraid of a future with nothing else in it."

The man squared his shoulders with a characteristic gesture. "Listen!" he said quietly. "My life of ease is over.. My grandfather's money has pretty well gone up In smoke. Some of it I've filtered, some of it was badly invested. There was never as much as the world thought, but it's too long a tale for to-day. Now to-morrow I start fresh. I go to Arizona. I didn't think you'd be interested, so I've never told you that my serious hours I have put in on engineering and chemistry. I'm not all fool. I've a cousin out West who knows mines, owns a few, and wants more. He is -giving me a chance at the bottom, and if I promise to come back some day eooner or later on top—and what I promise, dear, you know I'll do, if I live— will you wait for me? May I fe6l that I have the inside track?"

The girl's whole expression changed. "At last you are showing me your2" self," she cried. "For the you I have Just seen I will wait willingly, and confidently, until you come back to me again. An hour ago you asked what would please me and now you have given It to me, for you knew!" and In the fast gathering dusk the girl impulsively held out both her hands. "I would follow the man I have Just met, even unto the ends of the earth," she whispered frankly, and on the deserte^l clubhpuse piazza he gathered her tP his arms.

Marriage Brokers' Methods in

rVPF

4-

IJ.nerent t^O

Wedding customs in the French provinces differ from those of Pans. The old-time marriage festival, lasting at least three days, still prevails among the peasantry. The priests oppose it on the ground that the merriment frequently oversteps the bounds of propriety, but their protests generally go unheeded.

Preparations for a provincial wedding and the settlement of the allimportant question of dowry frequently consume several months, and even then the engagement is kept a profound secret until the compulsory publishing of the bans makes known the fact to the world. A certain liberty of courtship, under the vigilant eye of elders, is permitted. A contract dinner is given, attended by the families and relatives of the contracting parties and by the notary, who sees that the papers are drawn up in due form.

Sometimes the terrors of the law are braved by dispensing with the vexatious formalities of the civil marriage but the wedding in church is celebrated with all possible pomp, and to the richest man in the community belongs the pleasant privilege of giving the bride away. The procession starts from the bride's home to th» church, not in carriages, but on foot, and is enlivened on the way by hirert musicians—violinists if in Normanar, bagpipers if in Brittany. The* bride hangs on the arm of her father, the groom supports his future mother-in-law. The family and friends follow In couples, arm in arm, all brave in bright-colored ribbons, singing and dancing as they go.

The church ceremony being over, the pageant returns in the same order, except that now tiie new husband and wife walk together. The grand

dinner, which has been preparing for

days, is held in the open air, in a tent or in a large hall. So eagerly has this feast been anticipated that parents have warned their children for several days beforehand to eat sparingly, so that they can do full justice to the wedding dinner. After the feed is over, the guests are not ashamed to gather up the fragments of goodies and take them home in baskets. This meal is but the beginning of the fes-

to toll the death bell, and will keep on tolling until offered some sort of Inducement to cease his grewsome racket. ^5

The ancient custom of the bride taking off her shoe and handing it to her husband, in token of his authority over her, still prevails in some of the remoter corners of France.

Germany has its marriage markets and Belgium its matrimonial festival, but France has an institution which is still more peculiar and characteristic of the businesslike spirit which dominates o.ver Cupid on the Continent, namely, the marriage agencies. Thes* are in charge of brokers who make a business of bringing young people together, just as the real estate agents bring together landloard and tenant. The walls of their offices are plastered with testimonials from former patrons. *8

The customer indicates to the broker as near as he can what sort of a wife he desires. He is shown a series of photographs, from whicu he may select one or moxe that pleases him most, and a series of interviews is arranged between the customer and the originals of the pictures. If the parties are not too hard to please a marriage is likely to result. Of course, there are tricks in this, as in all other trades. The unscrupulous broker may have in his pay one or more women who will grant interviews to customers, posing as candidates for matrimony. Since the agent is paid for every interview he brings about, and not according to his success as a match-maker, this fraudulent arrangement proves profitable to him and his female confederates, but his client will get no wife. If the broker be enterprising he will keep lady travelers on the road to hunt up girls to replenish the matrimonial market.

There are two other varieties of matrimonial agency. One makes a, business of bringing together unwilling young people and making matches between them. The agent gets his pay from the parents, who have set their hearts upon the union. The other sort depends for fees upon his success in keeping willing ones apart.

Ways of the Moslem.

A Moslem in the Bast will never pass or trample under foot a scrap of paper, lest thereon might be written 'the name of the Allah. He will pick it up and stuff it into the crevice of a wall, or even carry it .for days until he finds out from somebody who can read, whether it contains the hoi

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DRAWING UP CONTRACTS

One Agent Brings Unwilling Couples animals, and also from human teeth. Together and Receives Pay From None of these were satisfactory. The Parents—Others Paid for Keeping

Willing Couples Separated—Demand

THE WORLD'S GREAT MOUTH.

J-t Often Filled With American Art!ficial Teeth.

The

iyory

growth of the artificial teeth in-

dtistry is one of the most important

K--%^ ,of scientific advances, says the Scientific American. At one time teeth

were made from various ivories (elephant and hippopotamus tusk being favorites), from the teeth of some

0f

the

mus

Made Uptfn Widows or Widowers* action of the decomposing agents, anfl

elephant and hippopota

tusk was not impervious to the

soon became objectionable. The human teefi were better protected by enamel,', but the mere thought of using such teeth was enough to make one shudder. In time from this crude beginning the porcelain, or as it was sometimes called, the "incorruptible" tooth was ^evolved, and this is in use today.

With the invention of porcelain makers were able to do what they never could with the old ivory teeth namely, to color them to match the real teeth, and thus diminish the chance of detection in the mouth. In the great factories' where teeth ar3 now turned out by the million, labor of the most skilled kind is employed to make the teeth, match them and assemble them properly for the us. of the customer. Women perform an important part of this work, for their keen sense of touch enables them to quickly detect flaws in the finished article, and their superior education in the matter of matching colors makes it possible for them to detect a variation of the slightest shade in the teeth, so that teeth that to a raan may seem perfectly matched will to a woman's eyes show slight differences that are sufficient to impair their value.

But before the finished teeth are submitted to the keen eyes of the girl examiners for the final test, thev have to pass through a succession of processes. Porcelain teeth are composed of two parts, one being the body and the other the enamel. The first step in the making of the tooth is thr mixing of the ingredients for the porcelain. This is done by experienced chemists, for the material must be flawless. The body comprises various components, for each manufacturer has his own formula, and the?e. of course, are factory secrets. Brmtl

ly however it

tiyal of eating, drinking and dancing, elsewhere. Kaolin is merely the Chiwiiich will continue without inter^ nese name for porcelain clay. It is ruption for several days. ,r formed by the decomposition of the

If one of the parties to the mar- feldspar of granite hills, which washes riage happens to be a widow or a, down into the valleys below. It can widower there is sure to be a chara-

be

vari, in which the couple need expect country. no peace until they generously treat

their tormentors. Even the priest will making of the teeth are gold and its throw aside his ecclesiastical dignity oxides purple of Cassius, oxide of

obtained in various parts of the

The

'coloring materials used in the

magnanese, oxide of cobalt, platina spotnge or fillings, oxide of titanium, oxide of silver, and oxide of uranium.

The material for the body of the teeth is first heated to a white heat and thrown into cold water. It is then broken into small pieces, freed from impurities and ground in a mortar till it will pass through a sieve of No. 9 bolting cloth. When the material has been finally treated and fused and mixed with silex and kaolin, it is of a semi-translucent appearance. With this material the ski\led workers in the factory mould the teeth to the desired shape. When new teeth are ordered—and there are fashions in teeth as well as in ever? other line of commerce—it is necessary first to make a mould. Tho greatest care is taken by hand workers to the preparation of these moulds, which must be shaped and tooled with the utmost precision, in order thst. the teeth may conform to the style desired. In one of the big factories the writer was shown an immense fireproof room in which were kept the moulds of hundreds of different varieties of teeth.

When the composition for the boc'y of the tooth has been placed in tte mould, the cover is shut down, and it is put aside in readiness for the firing. Workmen are busy all' day long, in rows, filling the moulds with composition and placing them aside for the men to go around collecting them for the ovens. The operators at the ovens bake the composition to the proper hardness,' and then send them to the trimming department. Here workmen take the hundreds of moulds that pass through the ovens daily, turn out the hardened teeth, trim oft the rough edges, and shape them for the second baking at a, tremendous heat, the teeth are ready for examination and the last touches by the' women workers. After examining for defects and discarding the teeth that show to their practised touch ard quick eye the presence of some slight flaw, the girls polish and finish tho teeth ready for shipment.

Down in Emmons county there waa an epidemic of burning ears whlca sorely t. oubled the doctor who was also afflicted with the same malad '. It subsequently developed that on the day the trouble appeared an old fashioned "seeing society" han been in operation.—Hope (N. D.) Pioneer. "Speaker Cannon is obstinate/' says a headline. O, no, not obstinate, not a bit obstinate Just firm.—Boston Globe.

a

1

may'be said that the

"body" of the artificial tooth is m-v:'* from feldspar (usually called sp."r). silex, and kaolin. The enamel is made from feldspar with a little silex and coloring matter. For the information of the the exacting reader, it may be said that the feldspar is composed of silica, alumina, potash, lime, and oxide of iron. It is found in various part of the U. S, near Boston. Philadelphia, Wilmingtrji, Del., and

Sit

W. B. CORSETS

in

Style 407

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

'••y .: Asfa your dealer to nhotv it to unit and explain its extra-

ordinary merits, or write us for free specially iliuMaled bookiCt

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Are you going to Michigan soon? Don't make up your mind fully until you see the & "Book

Ask any Ctl&D Agent, or address W. B. CALLOWAY, General Passenger Agent, Cincinnati, O.

-Si. ,•?.

WE HAD 93 CALLS

"s for Ktenosraphers and Hook keepers in July, and filled only 57 ol'tliem. Second largest school in the world, hut other students not qualified to send out. WRITE, phone or call at

ORIES'

Indlanapollt

226 East Ohio St.

Largest In th* State

H. D. Vories,

f^J^Y^jXTre

That torturing pressure on the chest and abdomen is absent from W. B. Ere# Form and' W. B.

HUFOR*

a They Ht without strain,

Made in ir.ar.y [Texan! shapes

ar.d priccs to O. l.J persons r.s v/c:l (13 L.-l pursrc. \7 B. N.

:m Ccrsclj c.nawer fasnicn's

command figures be natural

—busts LijLer £r.d waiits

rounded into greater slender-

nessc

On sale at ell dealers. "S

Nuform 404

Avcr.ie.e I of OMi-'T I Mode) or C. uul

Erect Form 73 [S 1.00

Erect Form 9J2

3lencW

N.ocl-1

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in v.VTI, Vai

Gillette Sales Company nui:.* x»*5mrk INew or»

5

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PretidenU

Oneland a half squares eastfof I*. O.

Gillette

NO stroppinc.no honing. A\ A/ III

Set consists of it double-edged blades

/a rV

W '.

7#

fr-,

(24.

triple silver-plated handle, in velvet-lined case. 20 to 40 shaves from each blade. Blades never have to be sharpened Ask your dealer ov write for free illustrated booklet*

^GILLETTE SALES COMPANY. Times Bid?* Times S&, Hew Yock*

keen cutting edges) with

f''

1.00

Nuform 4C7-- S 1-50'

Erect Form 929 & !£c*S 5°

Erect Form 958 -of Cou.il 2.0C

Nuform 415 of Ca»«• "3.00

Erect Form 208 -J 3.00

'^5 iKOARTEf BROS.. Mak«ra, 377-379 Broadway, Hew York

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