Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 November 1909 — Page 4

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GREENCASTLE HERALD

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER !M, l»ow.

I FIP<E

■^! FIRE! FIRE! Fires in the city and fires in the country. *i\ er y ,lii y y ou r< ‘ a ^ or hear of some one beinu bome>i out or bouse and home frequently they have no insurance (fenenilly ajout un '‘‘f 0 urtl) to one-half enough to cover thelosses. W hy not fully protect yourself by taking out an juIditional policy in one of our strong companies? The rubes are so low that you cannot afford to be without protection*

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PERSONAL

THE CEPMTRAE TRUST CO.

Thanksgiving: Offer Oysters Cranberries Celeiy lettuce Radishes Oreen Onions fc KK Plant cauliflower Jersey Sweets Pine-Apples drape fruit drapes Assorted Nuts ERINEST A. BROWINIING, Orocer PHONE 24.

t:,VVE OF WtSTMlNSTCR ADiiZV.

of Its

Building

Years.

D-irirg 15J i

♦ 4 ♦ THE SPICE, OF LIFE «

«

PLEASED HI1S MAJESTY. The flai l nionamh from sunnyfAflea I wus betas shown over an engineering , V’.ac-e in ijalford hy the man. gw, who. I in evpliilnlng the working of certain ! tnarlilrwny, ulifortunately got his coal (ails, caught in it, and in a moment, was being, whirl‘»l round at so many revrjiutinns tier minute. Luckily for tlw? manager, his garments were imcqiftil to the strain ot more than a few revoluticns, anil lie was hurh'd | disheveled and dazed, at the feet of

I the visitor.

I That txai'ed peisonage roared with J laughter end said something to Hs

| interpreter.

"Sah," said the functionary to the ! manager,! • his majesty say he am nervy pleased with de trick, an' will you j'letise tod! again? - '—Sketch Bits.

SOME MOT KUN PROVERBS.

Plessed ftre the meek, for when the l ivt trenp sounds a great many peo1 le will find that their heads are too

; l irge to fit.au aureole.

--.go. >-f ...... , The nten who stands in his own way Henry IV the w-^k ceased al^gether. l3 , not n ecwcaril> blt.cklng the traffic. Henry V atoqed for this b.v lur.king No man t , V er got the better of his Iniselr responsible for it. He gu\e • v> -jfe in an argument without regret-

1000 uijuks a, year, and one of htn „

ccunuiisbloners was the fiaonous ‘ Dick ' A rolling stone gathers no moss, but Whittington, in this feign the !ri- warts to be a moss back? fuiium was completed, the side aide • Whoso mocketh a married man, let rooted, and the clerestory walls well f ,, lm lakf h ,, ed ror a fo,,! ^ bo,. n ev advanced. UnforLutately Henry V „ ,. v ,, |jM . |U , and the nilK .ker himself died after nine years, and Henry Yh f:l | lolh by tht . wav& ide.-Smart Set. did nothing fpif the abbey. The worlw languished unUl I't" j ROOYKYHLT STOPS CHAIRJK wlien AJtbot Ueorge Norwyeh w;> *• “ 4 OF til T GE RHINO, posed by a revolution in the con-eeDt, '

At a meeting of the British * dfcn.y the deau of We' tniinist. • pre-Lciii.-ti a paper of unusual^ piutotical In,crest. The paper was jas. d on inviatigations of the Wjstmliisiet la.r; rolls, and stated that the navo o. Westminster was 150 year a iu b'dld iiii,. Tile nuyney for it eciut ir.vjm tc, tain of the revenues of the myna.;tfcry which were assigned ko il,. Kevin.. opus, and were admiiuist^ed Ly is garden who was reapolegible lei tl.ie hui/ding. These reveftues come irej-. t Longdon in Worcestershire, t'n f c hoct-ts iu Kinlf, street and Tc'iJ.J fcircet, W Uni aster, from the »muoi.» H^de and Paddington, y.id lau-.. t(ro w lands in West bourne and K< n siugton. But further luJp \\a., need cd. and it is historica.'iy iptere tiujg to trace the share in, tin* wo t tak/-ui t.y kings and abhyts. its origin was. due to Cardinal aiimpn i-anghaiij, who hud been abbot of Westminstciy auti fortified t(J' his pecuniary he,'p Nicholas Litlyugton laid the Si#t stone <4{ the new nave ou Manuh :k U70. Richard 11 helped th^ work, in ilie last lo years of his reign, wheu Uv marble pillars we;;® set up. Under

FARM LIFE SAVES CITY MEN ^^3 fRQM

J

Paul Strouse of Rockville visited friends here today. Lamar Grubb and Gordan Thom-1 as went to Indianapolis today Mr and Mrs. S A. Hays are spending Thanksgiving in Worthington,

Ind.

Statistics From Chicago Show 2.">.immi Inquiries For Country Places in One Year, Strong Evidence That Populace is .Migrating to the

Farm.

OUR CLUBS

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George Knauer and family spend the day with Mr. and Abe Hillis.

ROThlNG LIKE LIFE CN THE FARM

will Mrs.

Happenings Among Greencastle’s Social and Literary Organizations

CALENDAR AND DISCUSSION

Miss Florence Wood who is teaching at New Albany is home for Thanksgiving. Arthur and Earl Lynch are spending Thanksgiving with Mrs. S. J. Burford in Louisville. W. P. Stevens of Mancie is spending Thanksgiving with his son Lewie Stevens here. . Allan Brockway of Rockville is in re to spend the day with his mother, Mrs. Brockway. Miss Louise Kiefer has returned from Rensselear where she has a position in the high school. Jacob Hirt and son of St. Louis are here to spend Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. Alfred ilirt. Jesse Earl of Logansport is home to spend Thanksgiving with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Orvil Earle. Mr. and Mrs. John Sutherlin are in Plainfield to spend the day with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sutherlin. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Connelly and daughter have gone to Rockville for a visit with Mrs. Connelly's parents.

The little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cicero Bird who live about zfour miles is reported better today. , j Ed Coffman is spending his Thanksgiving in Floyd Township, where turkey is said to be at its best. , R. L. O’Hair is getting up a Thanksgiving dinner hy helping his n en in shredding fodder at his farm ii. Monroe township 'this morning. Mrs. H. S. Werneke is spending Thanksgiving with her brother, Ed. Whitaker in Anderson H. S. Werneke will go to Anderson this afternoon. , Miss Mabel O'Hair is home from Rockville where she is teaching this year to spend Thanksgiving holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

R. L. O’Hair.

*H(! the next year Thomas .Willyng took up the work with rent v/n vigor. He roofed one bay, and ills vork w.vs carried ou to its eomplptlmi b.v ttaj abbots who succeeded him, and w m appointed themselves wardens. .,,.11yng became abbot in 1109, and when Edward IV’s pa,-on fled to Wes’ minster lo take sanctuary in 1470, Miilyng received her hospitably, and stood Bodiatbvp- to the young prince, Edward V. who was born in his house. Consequently after Edward IV’i; return he with the queen and prince gave gifts to the work, amounting m all to C5S0; and soon alter Milling was made bishop of Hereford (14,4>. John Esteney, who had been wnden since 1471, HiKceeUtd him as abbot; and in his long wardenship of ' •» years he roofed the nave, vaulted five bays of the nave and the side aisles, and finished the great west window, iu fact, Esteney practically completed the fabric, and of all the huildeis (except perhaps Henry V) most de-

serves our gratitude.

His successor, George Fasset (149S1500), gave CtiOO to the work, which was finished hy the last great aobot, John Islip (1500-1592). He finished off what Estebey had left undone in the vaulting and at the western gable end. Then he glazed the windows In 1507-1510. paved the fl »or (1510-1517), and put tip some stop® screens under the towers which have now disappeared. We may date ihe completion « of the work 1528- Islip enjoyed ihc confidence of lle-’ry '"I. who had done nothing for the abbey in latency's time, but tif'.er Islip hud b '-onio abbot began to build the greit la'y chapel which bears his name.; and the abbot put Henry’s badges upon his new vaulting. Islip ul w, rebiill' the chapel 0/ St. Margaret's, and hi was at work upon the western towers when he died in 1592. His (hath was practically the end of boih of the new work and of the convent itrelf. The last fabric roil dates from !5J31534, and almost Ihe last r'c-ce of wo k was the preparation of the -■!. ir 'h end sanctuary for the coronation of Queen Anne Boleyn ou Whitsunday, 1539.

WANTED STOVES

Wanted second hand stoves at John Riley’s Phone 193.

WANTED Becond hand goods at John Riley's store. Phone 193.

The huge beast was staidnng in

enirely open country, although there were a few scattered trees ot no graet size at some little distance from him. We left our horse in a dip of the ground and beagn to approach; I cannot say that we stalked him, for the apporach was too easy. The wind blew from him to us, and a rhino’s eyesight 1» dull. Thirty yards from where he. stood was a bush four or five feet high, and though it was so thin that wecould distinctly see him through the leaves, it shielded us from the vision of his small piglike eyes as we advanced toward it, stooping and in single file, I leading. The big beast stood like an outcouth statue, his hide black in the sunlight; he seemed what he, was, a monster surviving over from the days when the beasts of the prime ran riot in their strength, before man grew so cunning of brain and hand as to master them. So little did he 'dream of our presence that when we were a hundred yards off he actually lav

down. / y Walking lightly and with, eve-v

sense keyed up, we at last reached the bush, and 1 pushed forward the safety of the double-barrelled Holland rifle which I was now to try for the firs time on big game. As I stepped to one side of the bush so as to get a clear aim, with Slatter following, the rhino saw me and jumped to his feet with the agility of a pony. As he rose I put in the right barrel, the bull°t going through both lungs. At the same mouien he wheeled, the blood spouting from his nostrils, and gal— loped full on us. Before he could get quite all the way round in his headlong rush to reach us, 1 struck him with my left barrel, the bullet entering his heart . At the same time Captain Slatter fired, his bullet entering the neck veretrae. Ploughing up the ground with his horns and feet, the great bull rhino still head toward us, dropped just thirteen paces from where we were standing.— From “African Game Trails’’ by Theodora Roosevelt in the December (Christinas) Scrib-

ner - - i A i.i IL,

A number of 'Greencastle nlmrods are out in search of the cunning r bblt and the festive quail this n orning in order to induce a proper Thanksgiving appetite. Mrs. Adams, mother of the student seriously sick with scarlet feverat his room on west Poplar street came last night and will help care for her son and Mr. Town who is sick with the same disease as her son.

A

Thanksgiving is yearly being more universally observed in Green castle. Today the barfks, barber shops, many of the busines houses and several of the offices in the court house were closed all day, and praeticadly all businessi on the square closed at noon. It Is not so many years since business went on nearly all day Thanksgiving.

Evidences multiply on every hand that a distinct movement of the population from the city to the country has set in the United States. About hirty years ago census report: and other statistical publications showed that young men and women were fast leoving the farms and seeking positions of one sort and another in the cities. Conditions thirty years ago on tlio American farm, wnile not oppressive, were such as to make almost every American boy and girl restive, especially if they obtained an occasional glance at the better social advantages which the cities then offered. No doubt many lived to regret the step when it was too late, hut it is probably true that the majority of those who cut loose from the country environment met success in larger measure in the factory, busness office and othe avenees of labor. At all events, a great many positions of trust in this country are now filled by men who followed the plow iu boyhood and who earned the first money of their fortunes at the business end of the hoe and tho pitchfork. Conditions Change Rapidly. But within thirty years conditions iu the cites have vastly changed, as they have in the country. Factory life has begun to take on the semi-sefdown that has characcorized it for a hundred years In the old countries. It no onger holds any glomour for the American boy, and he hjjs learned In the hard school of experience that the ‘trade’ is not always the open sesame 10 competence and independence. In tiie. last tne years it has been incieasingly more difficult for tin* countrybred boy to make his way in

the cities.

Over against the grinduig toil of tl.e cily and the poorly houser and fed family has grown up in the country conditions of increasing It is probably easier for the. farmer with a few acres today to make a living and save a little than for any other unit, of American industry. 1 he city people aro now Hocking to country whereever chances are given them. The city man most always strives to get the chance of going to the country.—Terre Haute

Tribune.

The regular meeting of the Woman's league of College Avenue Church was held yesterday after1100 in the church parlors. Nearly a hundred of the ladies of the church were in attendance, and enjoyed to the utmost the exceptional paper read by Mrs. U. V. O'Daniel upon the subject, “What Constitutes Descipleship?’’ There was also excellent music, a solo by Miss Grace Jordan being especially appreciated. During the afternoon the members of the league prepared for distribution of a number of baskets of the genuine Thanksgiving variety which were distributed by a committee of th league during the afternoon. The meeting was one of the best of the year. The meeting of the Boston Club which fas to be held on Friday evening at the home of Mrs. Chas. Zi is has been indefinitely postpon-

ed.

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OPERA HOUSE, ONE WEEK COMMENCING IL/Eond-a-sr, ZLToTrenn.'bex 2 © - Harvey 1>. Orr Presents HARVEY STOCK CO. In a Repertoire of COMEDIES, DRAMAS AND VAUDEVILLE

Popular Prices’

Admission 30c. (lallery 20c. Children IQc.

Opening Play “RAGGED PRINCESS’* Lvlies Free Monday niKlit with each 30 cent ticket if

purchased l> fore (’> o'clock IV M.

SLA IS ON SALE AT BALKIER & COOK’S DRUG STORE.

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THANKSGIVING DINNER. AT COLLEGE INN

Ellis murder trial on

A! m Charged With Killing N I*. Willis of Indianapolis, who Was Weil Known Here.

ALL

IIAKYHY STOCK COM BA NY

Th!e next attraction at the Opera Houwe will he Harvey Stock Company, who will play a weeks’ engagements at popular prices 10. 20 and 30 cents, commencing on Monday night, November 29th. Their! opening play will be a sensational comi }dy drama “The Ragged Princess,” a story of the south, founded on facts. Refined vaudorille featur will be introduced between the nets. This will avoid the long and tirwaome waits in fact making it a ( tmitinuous performance. Ladies will he admitted free Monday nighj. if, ao (ompanled by a paid 30 cent ticket. The company is a very large one, s aid to be one of the best traveling, a l cheap prices.l

IRON MAY BK GONE BY YHAK OF 1041).

711,000,000 Tons Are Already .Mined and Only 4,4400,000 Tons in Sight.

and I hnrrlirrr-a Remedy. “I have c t<*d Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy for several yeat r* for diarrhoea. I consider it the "hest remedy I have ever tried for tli W trouble, i bought a botU e of it a few days ago from our druggist^ Mr. R. R. Brooks. i sha/’l ever ho- glad to speak a word in its praise when I have the oppor* tut;) ty.”—R t*y. J. D. Knapp. Pastor M. J J. Chun li. Miles Grove Pa., Sol i by all dealers

Advertisu, it in rite IIKKXKD

it has been lately announced by a prominent steel trust ofticial that at tiie present rate of increase in the use of iron and steel all the commercial ore now in srght, or of which there is any knowledge, may In consumed within the next forty years. Unless more desposlts of tljis now universally used metal are meantime discovered the world, or America iu particular, may then have to pass out of and beyond the. age of steel. The prospect is one of tiie wide concern to all interested, producers and consumers alike Intai Production $.511,0041,000 Tons The total production of ron ore in tho l nited States iu the twenty years 1589 to 1908, inclusive, is estimated hy the geological survey at 511,000,000 tons. An allowance for imports and exports in the period makes the apparent consumption n the period about 525,000,000 tons. '1 hough there are no accurate siatistics experts agree in estimating tiie production of iron ore in the United States prior to 1889 at about 200,000,000 tons. Thus the total production to the begnnning of 1909 is approximately 711, 000,000 tons. Of this almost 38,000,000 tons was produced in 1908 alone. By the end of 1909 about 750,000,000 tons will have been produced. Much of this ore it is said to u of a very poor grade which show in sight about 75,000,000 of nonavailable ore..

LITTLE ROCK. Ark.. November 25.—Tiie hearing of testimony in j the case of W. Y. Kllis, a prominent I lumberman, charged with the kill- i ing of N. P. Willis, a business man of Indianapolis, began today. The defense will contend that Ellis, although previous and susequent to tl e killing was perfectly ratiouai, for the time being was insane and irresponsible for his action. This condition, it is contended, was brought about by pen»ecution of Mrs Ellis formerly Mrs. Willis, in eon— n -etion with litigation instituted by Willis in an effort to obtain the cust< dy of their six-year-old daughter. Because of the prominence of the principals, the case is attracting unusual attention, and the couhtroom was crowded today. A party of friends and relatives of Willis arrived early from Indianapolis. The impaneling of the jury was completed late yesterday, after two days’ examination of talesmen and the exhaustion of several venires. The twelve jurors finaally accepted are all long residents of Arkamaand, with one exception, of southern birth. Eleven are married.

BEAN AND CORN FEED. Chen Properly Prepared Make Ah Excellent Hog Ration Prof. Shaw of the Michigan Statt; a ghes the following suggestions a to ihe preparation and feeding of

b ins. He says:

Beans can be fed to swine only is t ’.* cooked form. The pig seems to 1 unable to utilize beaus which are w til! hard or firm, even though t have been boiled for some time, 1 ace it is very essential that the.* I thoroughly cooked. To supply a s igle feed of half-eookcd beans to n pen of hogs, robs them of their ; ;.elites and rell U for their food i indeed it does not put them oft f *d. The cooking should be con- <! icted in an even more careful man»>r t han it would be In preparing t .em for human food. It v. II mat rialy shorten the cooking period : id give better results, If the beans a * soaked an hour or two, or better.

MlilNU

Oysti r Cocktail olives

Wafers Clercy

Roast Turkey

(i ravy

Hugo Dressing

Snow Flake Potatoes Asparagus Tips on Toast Cranberry Jelly Pine Apple Sherbet Marshmallow Salad

Mince Pin

Cak*

Pumpkin Pie

Maiascliino Nut Sundae

(’nickers

( lieese

Nuts

Raisins Cafe Niar

Fruit

Dinner from 12:30 to 2 o’clock—60c. Reserve your place earlj ...Phone 412.

<• •; •> •> *;*v •>>*.*•> •> •> •> t- ❖ * ♦ :• HERALD WANT ADS •>

< er night, before the cooking pro $ ^*> I r Is begun. -X v Pails used should be rinsed after irou SALE—Wood from the BittW

. 1 Handle Factory. We will take or-

b taken to clean the kettle or bar- , , ... , . . ( ers for this wood from this time

; fter each cooking and i

,ur mouldy material to collect on. O. L. Jones and Company.

\v

. .out the food receptacle. More t: ..n one case of supposed hog cholivn has been traced to ignorant or c, re less neglect in allowing old s.ill to accumulate in a barrel ius;ead of emptying tiie barrel each time before the new material is dumped into it.

DRESS SUIT FOR SAuE -Dress suit and Tuxedo coat only slightly ■vorn- will sell reasonable — Beil Bros. Dye Works.

Willis was well known here. IIL mother formerly conducted a hoarding house in the 'building opposite the county jail and her sou, was then living in Indianapolis, often

visited her here.

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WANTED STOVES Wanted second hand stoves John itilev’s Phone 193.

ADVERTISE IN’ THE HERALD

Why Ho Wants Mor - ; Mr James R. Keene, who n a;: I 1 at 'ortunrs and who played wit' a,Mi •> >t cUiilai'a as a child wouh! i y •> u t heap of sand, was once ; ■ having weal h to sath y, lie : r >t give i;p the game of mone - r ; b<n i;ul seek peace, comfort and eonl'mtrr.ent. The answer vouchsafed by Ke :e •ray he regarded as that, which w:>u' 1 1) > offered by many anot’ioi- man the same question were put to h c “Why do I want more m ui*'7” said Keene. “Why doe* a dog want another rabbit? A’our dog will < the millionth rabbit as thouch i‘ the first he had ever seen. lie will strive and strain in the pursui i 1 to the point of heart-break; < might suppose his soul's life depen cl on the capture. And yet, should he overtake it, he will cast it aside v. hen killed and begin quartering the ground to start another. To the la. i t sp of his breath that dog will ii <• his rabbit. When you tel] me wl.v hat dog wants another rabbit PI! tell you why I want more money.”— Strand Magazine. , Sunflower Philosophy. A woman can look in • vhen she isn’t, but a man can't c > it The dictionary should mak > ! in and raised” a correct' express''u; ever; txxly uses it. What Is the biggest lie in tile wo d? We believe it Is tho old toiy about §!n being enjoyable. The pictures should lie changed. Cupid is no inn'-or a boy child with an arrow, but a girl chi] t with a gun. It is always Impolite to say that a woman, or butter, is old.

Pipping sheep Twice a Year. Sheep should be dipped at least l .1 ■ a year with the double object in view of ridding them of e.iernal . .i n.sites utul various skin diseases i which they ate subject. Tho first Loping should he immediately after shearing, at which time dipping will ; • most er.ecilve. The second dlp1 Ing should be given in the early f I! so itiai the Hock v.ill go into v inter quarters entirely free from i raiitea or skin diseases. Flock owners will consult their own In- .’ In following tills suggestion, . it Insures tho health and comfort a the sheep, which are necessary laditions if the (lock is to go trough the winter in vigorous health. Dippings is essential for two reans the growth and condition of t 'o fleeeee and the thrift of the flock. No sheep can be maintained iu good health if ticks and lice are worrying it day and night, and lack of condition is certain to show iu the ileece. if the fiock is free from parasites and in good health there will bo no wool pulling or shedding during the winter season both ot which are common in neglected flocks, and *entail heavy loss when tho clip is marketed.

HELP WANTED —Good men wanted. Steady employment. Hydraulic Press Brick Company, Brazil. Ind.

Raise Sugar Ik’ets. Sugar oeets are the best known roots for keeping the hog in a healthy condition. Every ranchman should plant from one to three acres in sugar beets every year for his hogs, and he will find that they will ; ay him a handsomer profit than any other crop oi four times the acreage. .4 ir b • ts, together with a forage ere:, peas or bailey, completes tho ration or the bacon hog, which has been demonstrated to he the most profitable for the West.

When h’hoce Declines. Generally a fie a e begins to dcclino In value and yield after a sheep t»o- - and pH mey an to considerable extent d e to the secretions of the skin. A clear pink or yellowish skin Is an i' iii lion of a goad (| lality of wool, while a pale or bluish skin is generally accompanied by an Inferior fleece. Th” yolk is the oily secre lion which gives color, softness pliancy and luster to the fleece. WANTED SECOND HAND GOODS WANTED at John Riley's store. Phone 193.

A HERALD Warn Ad Will Get

ADVERTISE IN T '« HERALD

SPCIEAL: —Gardners' Ice cream turkeys for Thanksgiving, please leave orders hy Wednesday. Phone 290. 2t d

GASOLINE ENGINE FOR SAI.E three horse power I^ambert engine iu good condition. Can be seen running at Herald office any day. Large water tank and gasoline tank will go with It. Price $7 5. If you want a good engine at *• reasonable price you should see this one at once as it will soon s. II at the price quoted.

ML TANK FOR SALE—Fifty gallon tank w'.th on pump. Splendid condition. Can ue seen at the Herald office.

FOR SALE—A few dozen strictly fresh eggs each week. Phone N • 59 SOUTHEAST EIjOYD. Charley Christy shredded corn this week. The Cenler High Scahol gave a Thanksgiving G o'clock dinner at T. Timmons’ residence Thursday evening. Jim Coffin has moved his family west of Greencastle. A lady from Ohio Is visiting Mrs. Effle and Mrs. Katie Switz. Alva Vickers and family and Marion Iddings visited John Iddings and family Sunday. Mrs. Florence Iddings and her daughter, Goldie Iddings and Miss Myrta McVey were In Greencastle Saturday. Wm. L. Heavlns is Improving slowly from the burn he received from the coal oil explosion which happened last week. Forest Kelley was in Indianapotlis last week. Ben Smltz and wife called on his laiher, George Smitz and daughter, Nora Saturday evening. Miss Marie McVey returned from Auburn last week where she has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Lola Christie. Bad weather has stopped the work on the church at Canaan. Corn gathering is about done here. Wm. Alkire and family of South East of. Cloverdale spent Friday with M. I). Easleys’. John Harrison was called to Indianapolis one day last week to attend the funeral of his fath r, Wm Harrison who was accidently lilh-d by a street tar. . M ’ Several from here attended the I ox sun er nt Oak Point Stluol house Friday night.