Greenfield Evening Star, Greenfield, Hancock County, 13 November 1906 — Page 2
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Heart Strength
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Heart Strength, or Heart Weakness, means Nerve tbvngth, or Nerve Weakness—nothing more. Pos•filf, not one weak heart in a hundred is, in it Ml, actually diseased. It is almost always MMen tiny little nerve that really is all at fault. (Ms obscure nerve—the Cardiac, or Heart Nerve •imply needs, and must have, more power, more liability, more controlling, more governing ttnngth. Without that the Heart must continue 4D fell, and the stomach and kidneys also have -feeae same controlling nerves.
This clearly explains why, as a medicine. Dr. Ihoop's Restorative has in the past done so much lor weak and ailing Hearts. Dr. Shoop first sought because of all this painful, palpitating, suffocattay heart distress. Dr. Shoop's Restorative this popular prescription—is alone directed to these «wtk and wasting nerve centers. It builds fc Strengthens: it offers real, genuine heart help.
If you would have strong Hearts, strong digestion, strengthen these nerves re-establish Sum as needed, with
Dr. Shoop's Restorative
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"ALL DRUGGISTS"
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W. Morrison I
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N. R. Spencer. Pres. E. E. Davis. Sec-Treas. Ben Strickland. Vice Pres.. Gen. Mgr.
THE EVENING STAR.
Published Every Day except Sunday! by
THE GREENFIELD PRINTING AND
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PUBLISHING CO.
FRANK E. JOHNSON cy Editor
Both Telephones.
TEIiMS OF SUBSCKIPTION.
One week, delivered, 8 .10 One Month 1 .35 Six Months, by Mail 1.50 One Year by Mail 3.0o
Subscribers who fail to receive their papers will please notify the editor, ana all mistakes will be rectified.
Entered as second-class matter August 1. «04, at the postofficent Greenfield, Indiana, vnder an act of Congress. March 3.1879.
So those Toledo, O., ioe men must go to jail. The scales of justice have a pretty good joke on the ice scales.
Moran, of Massachusetts, declares that he has eliminated Hearst and Bryan. Doubtless the news hasn't reached New York.
A magazine states that California's capitol cost $2,500,000. That is hardly the price of a chandelier in the Pennsylvania capitol.
Mr. Edison's new storage battery may as he says, puc the horse out of business in another year, but as long as tailors and milliners live, it cannot put the horse show out of business.
After a visit from Vice-presi-dent Fairbanks, W. J. Bryan and B. S. McGuire, the Tulsa, Indian Territory Guide remarks: "Look out it will be Carrie Nation next." Evidently the Guide thinks they are going from bad to worse.
The railroads are said to have increased the wages of employes and arranging to reduce rates. ^They evidently are now willing to share their profits more liberally with their employes and the public. All of wkich will be thoroughly appreciated. •y&f
The Republicans can view the results of the recent elections as they choose. They may reason out the causes of sueh results one way or another, but no conclusions reached should satisfy any loyal Republican that the people are satisfied. On the contrary there ,is evidence of general discontent. Whether it is well founded or not, it nevertheless exists. To remove it, should be ttie great object of -all political parties. The Republican administration at Washington and in Indiana will have the first chance, but if they fail they may expect to reckon with a critical constituency at the next election.
OA8TORZA. S«u* the YGTTO Kind YOB Haw Always BomE ftgnatan
Comedy Week.
You can laugh and grow fat if you will attend any or all of the different attractions at the Indianapolis theaters this week. Take your choice of the following" comedies at the English and you will be sure to get more than your money's worth in
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'mirth and music."
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Monday and Tuesday night, "Captain CareJess." "Playing the Game" presented by William and Joseph Jefferson Thursday night: The Jefferson's are among the most popular comedians that appear at the Engglish. "Playing the Game" was especially written for them and it is said to be the very best of their productions.
Friday night, Saturday afternoon and night, "Forty-five Minutes from Broadwny" will be presented for the
second
time clt English s. This proved
to be one of the most successful
comedies ever presented at Indianapolis and after sucessful presentations, in all the largest cities of the United States it will no doubt be more popular than ever.
The I. & E Ry. Co is giving special attention to theater parties and those wishing to attend any of the different attractions at Indianapolis Theaters can secure information by calling on local agents of Interurban lines.
"A Jolly American Tramp."
A melodramatic comedy replete with striking sensational scenes and startling situations is the attraction at Gant's opera house Wednesday evening.
The play is from the pen of the author of "A Poor Relation" and "Peaceful Valley," two plays that have made Sol Smith Russell famous. It is a portrayal of an American trampnot a repulsive, ever-to beshunned outcast, but a man who through misfortune was compelled to wander upon the face of the earth but whose heart, well knowing his own distress, still bleeds for others' woes and who offers even his life to help right the wrongs of others even more unfortunate than he. The locale of this drama is laid in rural New England, and the motive is greed for gold with which even a husband is sometimes over powered, and for which lie terribly wrongs his life's partner. The story is incompleix and will be well worked out by a competent cast of gifted players. In the cast are such well known artists as Miss Juliette Newell,- Miss Grace Euler, Miss Lillie S. White, Miss Vera Wilson, Messrs. Jack Allen, Wm. S. Ely W. A. Cavanaugh and Maurice Irvington. Laughter chasing away tears, bright scintillating flashes of wit dispelling gloom, and catchy specialties aiding in making the hours fly like minutes, are promises held forth, --m
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.
Card of Thanks.
I desire to thank my' many friends* for the kindness and sympathy shown me in the death of my husband, William A. Watson.
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W MRS.' ROSA WATSON|J§ I SSlSft
When the tip of a dog's nose is moist, that dog is not sick. ^A feverish dry nose means sickness with a dog. And so with the human lips. Dry, cfracked and colorless lips mean feverishness, and are as well ill appearing. To have beautiful, pink, velvet-like lips, apply at bedtime a coating of Dr. Shoop's Green Salve. It will soften and heal any skin ailment. Get a free trial box, at our store, and be convinced. Large nickel capped glass jars, 25 cents. All dealers.
'WHAT CALIFORNIA HAS DONE.
When, in 1850, California, peopled by the gold inrush from the four quarters of the globe, knocked for admission as a state before the politicians in Washington had time to organize it as a territory, it precipitated the sec tion contest in congress which incited the Clay compromise of that year— the last of the concessions and deals ever arranged between the North and the South, says Leslie's Weekly. September 9, the date of California's admission in 1850, has been celebrated by her every year since that time. It is a great national, howeyer, as well as a state, landmark.
The California gold discovery of 1848 swung civilization's advance line, then at the Missouri river, as far westward in a single year as it had moved in all the previous 240 years since Newport, Gosnold and Capt. John Smith established their settlement at Jamestown, Va. It drew the center of the country's political gravity far into the Mississippi valley, made the west the dominant section socially and politically, gave the free
states the
t- bled them to preserve the Union when
preponderance which ena-
war came a dozen years later, and ex-
erted an influence on "United States history and development which will be felt while the country remains on the roll of the nations.
On world history California has had a profound sway. Its gold discoveries threw so much of the nation's great money metal into trade channels within half a dozen years that it gave a new impulse to industry and commerce on every continent, immediately to the United States, incited that search for gold all over the earth which resulted in the discoveries in Australia in 1851 by Hargreaves, a returned Californian in Comstock's find in Nevada, in 1858, of the worldfamed lode, chiefly silver, which bore his name in the locating of the gold nnd silver deposits of Pike's Peak in 1859, and Montana in 1863, which peopled all these localities, and in the discovery in 1884 on the Rand, in South Africa, of the field which has since developed into the greatest gold producer on the globe.
From Marshall's time to today California has added $1,500,000,000 to the world's gold stock.
Animals' Endurance in Water. The polar bear carries the blue ribbon on long distance swimming. spends much of his time in the water. Journeying across polar wastes from continent to continent, his body is immersed in freezing water, which is the greatest detriment to man in lnog distance swims. If one member of a family is a good swimmer it may be taken for- granted that all the rest of the family are. Several animals, as hedgehogs, rats, etc., who would at first glance be considered bad performers in the Avater, are in reality' t'airly respectable swimmers.
When forcibly thrown into water squirrels are first evidently alarmed at the thought of trusting themselves to so treacherous an element, and at starting some of them will spring into the air as if inclined rather to fly than to swim, but once well afloat they paddle away with such rapidity as to exhaust themselves in a few minutes. In this action the head and shoulders are carried very high out of the water, while the rest of the body sinks deep beneath the surface, in direct contrast to the pose of hares and rabbits, which in swimming are like an ill ballasted ship, "down by the head." Like the squirrel, these two animals show great timidity in the water, and naturally so, for their head is so low and stern so high that the slightest ripple on the surface sends their noses under water and so drowns them. In perfectly still watei both can swim considerable distances.
The ruminant family all take freely to the water except the wild sheep and the camels. Of pigs it is commonly reported that so queerly fashioned are they that if they attempt to swim they cut their throats with the fore feet, but this is only an old wife's fable. Whether wild or tame, they are all good swimmers, but owing to the shortness of their legs they just touch their throats with their fore feet and beat the water very high. Many of the islands of the southern seas are now inhabited by wild pigs which are the descendants of those who have swum ashore sometimes great distances from wrecked issj vessels. Camels cannot swim. They are buoyant but 111 balanced, and their heads go into the water. They canhowfcror, be taught to swim rivers with tho aid of goat skins or jars fastened under their necks. During the B&loochistan expedition of 1898 the camels were lowered into the sea from the ships, and their drivers plunging overboard clambered on theif charges, causing the animals' heads to come up, and thus assisted they were successfully piloted ashore.
Germans Shocked at African Manners. The natives of German East Africa have contracted the vulgar habit of drinking soda water directly out of the bottles instead of pouring it first into a glass. To check this the government officials have issued a regulation that all natives discovered drinking out of bottles will be liable to severe r^ "oral punishment or imprisonmont, lest refilled boittlesi so used should find their way to tables of Europeans.
A candidate for Parliament from Bodimin, England, a fishing town, 1b canvassing some of his constituents at sea in a'steam launch.
The Old Reliable....
In
8tates' Billion and a Half Yield Gold Altered History of World.
Back in the Harness
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LON LOW
giglg®
81ft 4 Again solicits a[share of your transfer business, and promises the same care for your business as in the past. jf|j
Work Hours, All Hours.
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Res. Phciie, Morrison 386. Office, Both Fhcne® 45.
Greatesf of Expositions
Of'all exhibitions held in the United*States since the Philadelphia Centenial in 1876, the Jamestown Ter-Centenial,to be held on the shores and waters of Hampton Roads, 'near the cities of "Norfolk, Portsmouth and Newport News, Va., April 26 to November 30, 1907, is to be the most^unique, and in originality and novelty mwII completely eclipse^all previous Expositions.
The site of the Exposition is locatedJ||witbin twenty minutes' ride of the {tidewater cities of Virginia.[reached^either by trolley or steamer, and nature has combined with the ingenuity of man in making a beautiful and picturesque spot. The grounds covergmore thanfriOO acres, with two"miles of water front facing the greatest waterway in the world,!|and commands an unsurpassed view of innumerable points of'national Jand historic interest.
More than twenty-five exhibit palaces"arej now nearing completion, comprising Auditorium, Manufacture and Liberal Arts, Mines and ^Metallurgy, Marine Appliances, JMachinery, Food Products, Arts and Crafts, Transportation, ^Social Economy, etc., in addition^) the Government "and^State buildings and pavillions. They will be of semi-permanent construction and in appointments will excel any similar'group of buildings ever erected.^ In architecture they will'be of^the colonial period, forming an| appropriate setting tojthe natural beauties of the environment, r'
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Many!!™ reasons"! 'combine to make the celebration the most successful ever attempted, and he re id touches an electric*button April 26, of ne«t year, signifying the formal opening of the gates,the thousands of visitors will not be disappointed iji the wonders and attractions of^the Jamestown Ter-Centennial
Grip, Influenza.
Influenza, Cold in tha Head, Watery Eyes and Running Nose, with fever and hot flushes, chilly, creepy feeling-, are cured by Humphreys' "Seventyseven."
A Hard Cold, the stubborn kind «that "hangs on" and is likely* to run into Catarrh, Bronchitis, Grip or even Pneumonia is "broken up" by the use of "Seventy-seven."
t,Seventy-Seven"consists
of a
small vial of pleasant pellets that fits the vest pocket, handy to carry.
At Druggists, 25cents or mailed. i^"°Doctor's Book mailed free.
Humphrey's Home© Medicine Co., Cor. William and John Streets, New York.
I AY-Pfc Sweet t* L,uA*vi
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BACK ACHE?
Sometimes you have such a severe backache—a backache which is so painfnl that liniment and other applications seem to be of little use. When such backaches attack you, the safest plan is to use REX BELLADONNA AND CAPSICUM PLASTERS. These plasters are recomended by us to the exclusion of all other plasters. We have had a great deal of experience with plasters—the popular and greatly advertised plasters as well as others, but none of them have brought as much satisfaction among our customers as the REX BELLADONNA AND CAPSICUM PLASTERS. Therefore we never lose an opportunity of recommending these plasters to customers who buy all their drug store goods of us. They are easy to apply, and easy to detach, They produce almost immediate relief. Price 25 cents. jv»
Mrs Fannie Mathis, Payne, Pa., says: "I have been trying your Nosena for catarrh and have been entirely cured. Send me the price for a dozen cubes, as I want it for some of my 1 neighbors.
Large tubes 50 cents, at all druggists, or sample tube on receipt of ten cents in stamps by mail. BROWN MF'G CO., Greenville, Tenn., St. Louis,Mo.
For sale by all druggists.
Complexion Secrets-
To remove pimples, moth spots, sallowness, blotches, clear up the complexion and put the bloom of youth in the cheeks use Laxakola tablets, a positive cure for constipation,'trial size, 5 cents. Vincent L. Early.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
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A. C. PILKENTON, Druggist.
Without question, an indispensable adjunct to a lady's toilet table exceedingly meritorious in preserving hair and causing it to retain its lustre."— Lillian Russell. "Indispensable"—"Meritorious"—'"Preserving tHe hair"—"Causing the hair to retain its lustre."
YES, and these truths have been proven and attested thousands of times. Men of prominence and women of beauty—people ^f refinement— everywhere, insist on having the genuine
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
October 16th and November 20th From Cincinnati TO MANY POINTS IN ALABAMA, KENTUCKY, GEORGIA, LOTJ-1-L^ ^SSISSMI, NORTH CAROLINA, SOUTH CAROLINA, TENNESSEE AT73 VIRGINIA. FLORIDA—$2Q.QO FOR THE ROUND
POINTS EXCEPT JACKSONVILLE AND KEY WESi
Monroe
Y/TTHIN A RADIUS OF TWENTY-FIVE MIL£b_r JalK^NVILLE AND POINTS ON FLORIDA EAST cOAbi TacKets limited Thirty Days with step-ove* privileges.
For Information Address:
Catarrhal Deafness or Chloric Catanhal Headaches 1 will be instantly relieved by the use of Nosena, a soothing Catarrhal Balm. Relief guaranteed, or money refunded. Nosena contains no cocaine or harmful drug. Will immediately relieve the worst running cold, rose cold, nasal catarrah, bay fever, throat troubles, hoarseness etc., by tenderly soothing the inflamed, diseased membranes. The well known catarrhal ache can be instantly relieved by the use ©f this remedy.
The Texas -Wonder
Cures all Kidney, Bladder and Rheumatic troubles. Sold by all druggists on two months treatment by mail for $1. Dr. E. W. Hall, 2926 Olive street, St. Louis. Send for testimonals *Apr 12, Herald 1 yr.
Children like Kennedy's Laxative Hbney and Tar. The pleasant and best cough syrup to take, because it contains no opiates. Sold by M. Quigley
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EAU DE QUININE 1 HAIR TONIC
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ED. PIMUD'S EAU DE QUININE HAIft TOMIC FR£E
Pinaud'* Eau de Qpnine Hair Tonic for three application! enough
r. Brae Eicbaumee Violette. lor fire times, and famous
JX1R DENrRIFICE for five bmes. Send 10 cent, to pay postage and packing. "K« To-Day. M. Ptnsnd Building
ED. PINAUD'S AMERICAN OFFICES HEW 'YORK CIVf
CHEAP ROUND TRIP RATES
QUEEN & CRESCENT ROUTE.
—a
TRIP
TO ALL
ArlD
PGIWIb
Cincinnati
EAMON'S BROWNIE CALENDAR
One of the Handsomest] 1907J Calendars".Gotten Out for the Tear. ,J'
The Raymon's Brownie Cal endar for 1907 is almost an education within itself, containing a vast amount of useful information. This Calendar consists of twelve pages, 12xlS inches, handsomely printed in three colors on best paper. One inch figures show the days soplainly as to be easily read across the largest room. Holidays are in red. Changes of the moon,weather conditions,length of days, church festive days, signs of the zodiac and much other useful knowledge. This beautiful Calendar usually sells lor ten cents and will be mailed on receipt of stamps direct from Brown Mf'g. Co., Greeneville, Tenn. Ask your druggist and he will tell you how to get one free.
Why Suffer With Piles?
My patrons know that my guaranty is good and when I say that I guarantee Dr. Colwell's Egyptian Pile Cure to cure any case of piles, you may know that I will do it. If it fails to satisfy you, I will pay you back he puicLa^e price. DK. JOHN SMITH.
A Card From Dr. John Smith.
I have secured the agency for Dr. Oolwell's Egyptian Pile Cure, the most certain cure for piles ever discovered. I personally guarantee it, and will refund the pnrrhttse price on every package that fails to give satisfaction. DU. JOHN SMITH
To Judee a Remedy
you must know its father and mother, and so understand the reason for its existence Ramon's[Liver Pills and Tonic Pellets, a Treatment for SickHeadactoe, Dizziness, Pains in the Side, Constipation and Biliousness, is based on the fprmular of one of the greatest physicians ever known. Your leading druggist will guarantee Ramon's Liver Pills and Tonic Pellets to cure sick-headache, or refund your money. Whole Treatment 25cts. All Druggists
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