Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 20 June 1895 — Page 7
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CANCER CURB)
-AND A-
LIFE SAVED
By the Persistent Use of
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
"I was troubled for years with a sore on my knee, winch several iipliysicians, who treated me, called a cancer, assuring me that nothing could be done to save my life. As a last resort, I was induced to try
Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and, alter taking a number of bottles, the sore
began to disappear and my general health improve. I persisted in this treatment, until the sore was entirely healed. Since then, I use Ayer's Sarsaparilla occasionally as a tonic and blood-purifier, and, indeed, it seems as though I could not keep house without it."—Mrs. S. A. FIELDS, Bloomfield, la.
AYER'S
Jhe Only World's Fair Sarsaparilla.
Ayer's Pilis Regulate the Liver.
STEW
AND
Person8 having property for sale or for rent, city lots or farms, are requested to list them at our agency.
on Real Estate
Commercial Papar Bought and Sold.
If you want to buy, rent or sell a house or farm, call and see us and we can suit you.
BRRuMN5 IN RSI ESTATE.
No. 62. A valuable property on publie square, reasonable. This is bound to increase rapidly in value. I No. 65. About 8K acres, near Phila'delphia 7 acres in younec bearing orchard, a Trees carefully seleeted as to quality and variety. This is a good investment. 55 No 67. 114 acres best Buck Creek
7black
land, well drained, V/i miles north
-west of Mohawk. Also a good f*rm near Mt. Comfort. Both these farms are the ?best of land.
We have a number of other farm? and lean suit you sure. We have some fine city property for gsale, on Main, Walnut, State and North
Streets, and almost all other streets. Call and see us before buying.
HENRY SNOW CO.
Greenfield, Ind.'
14 South Penn. St. in REPUBLICAN building.
BUSINESS BUSINESS.
It is your business to buy where you can buy the most and the best goods for the amount of money you expend. We are headquarters on that proposition. Our
Spring Stock Is Now In.
l*SCv
We carry practically every thing our patrons desire in the way of Groceries, salted meats, prints and muslins, boots, shoes, hats, etc. Prices always the lowest. Highest price for country produce. Come and see us.
E. E. THORPE,
Warrington, ind
WM. H. PdWfSR
Architect, Contractor and Builder.
'Address, GREENFIELD or WILKINSON, IP.
^IPlftns and specifications furnished
AT LOW PRICES.
6, ngns who conemplate building, are invited to see me
4
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HOW TO BUiLD HEADLINES.
Interesting, Although of Little Use to the Geueral Public.
Headlines are the life of a paper. Tliey either make or mar the news. Good headline builders are the joy of every reporter. He knows they will brighten his "story."
To be able to build a clever headline embodies the essence of good editing. Judgment of news depends upon an editor's genius in seeing its striking points. These points are the illuminating stars upon which, as Emerson might say, are hitched the happiest kind of headlines.
To begin analytically, headlines attract the reader by what they do tell or they excite the reader's curiosity by what they do not divulge. In either case the circulation of the paper is extended, and that pleases the publisher.
Primarily a headline should be good natured. Often, it is true, the news item prompts a bitter line. But in the cold type this discordant sentiment looks bad and destroys the newspaper's harmonious whola
Alliterative headlines are now considered antique. Occasionally, however, they show welL
Headline builders should never make light of death. Biblical quotations are attractive, and upon certain kinds of news are singularly appropriate.
Interrogatory heads are elusive, but they are convenient, especially when the editor wishes to evade an answer or to avoid a libeL
Heads with rhyming lines are difficult to build, yet they occasionally crop out and always meet favorable reception.
A few papers forbid the use of figures in headlines, yet I have seen snch a unique arrangement of numerals in a head that the reader would be compelled to pause and peruse.
It has grown fashionable to hyphenate the names of happy pairs united in matrimony, but there are better ways of heading a wedding.
Two column, three column heads and heads even extending across a whole page are now in vogue. They are welcomed by the wise editor because he can say a world of thought in the wide, generous lines. But these heads are only for "big" news, and only men who have been tried and found worthy in smaller things are asked to build them.
Preserve continuity of thought. Be truthful. Be direct Be original. And remember that, after all, good headliners, like poets, are born not made.
How to Prepare Salted Almonds.
Pistachio nuts, peanuts and almonds are the nuts chiefly salted. The process is so simple that any housewife can easily perform it. First, the nuts are "bleached" by dipping them quickly into boiling hot water. This serves to remove any particles of chaff or dirt and to soften up the exterior of the nut. After being partially dried they are then placed in a bath of hot salted olive oil or butter and allowed to remain a minute or two. The olive oil is better than butter, but it is more expensive. On being dipped out the nuts are placed in an oven and baked or else crisped in a roasting pan. The process originated in Paris about 12 years ago. Probably the best salted nuts are Jordan almonds from Spain. They cost about 80 cents a pound.
How to Clean Fruit.
Day by day it is proved that bacteria make the larger proportion of the air we breathe, the water we drink. Caution, however, is another matter, and belongs to all who own common .sense, and it is specially required in dealing with modern dirt, which is in manj' cases synonymous with bacteria at their worst. The human animal is unluckily an extremely dirty one, and the fruit which has passed through the hands of the great unwashed may better never be eaten without cleansing. Street dust itself holds foul forms of dirt, and when to this is added the handling of scores of people, it is plain that these surfaces unwashed are not for any rational human stomach. Even strawberries cannot be exempt, but they must never soak. Only let water run on them, a Hre basket being the best method of securing its immediate passing off. Grapes require the same treatment, but in either case only enough should be done at once for a meaL
How to Care For Matting.
Matting should never be washed with anything but salt and water—a pint of salt to half a pailful of soft water moderately warm. Dry quickly with a soft cloth. Twice during the season will probably be enough for a bedroom, but a room much used will require it somewhat oftener.
How to Remove the Smell of Faint.
The simplest remedy is air obtained by leaving all doors and windows opening on fresh air open until the paint has hardened. If this is too slow, burn a few handfuls of juniper berries on a charcoal fire in the middle of the room, in the same way and with the same precautions as in disinfecting with burning sulphur. The windows, chimney and door must be stopped as closely as possible, and if the room be opened after four and twenty hours the smell of paint will have disappeared, and nothing that has been left in the room will have been injured by the fumes. Hay sprinkled with a little chloride of lime and left for one hour in the room is also an efficacious remedy, and if some open vessels containing water be stored in the room, after a time the water will be covered with a film and the smell diminished.
How to Make Tough Meat Tender.
Cnt the, steaks the day beforo they are required into slices about
Tf7
2'inches
_,
Saved fly Life,
for I had almost given up hope of ever being well again. I was a chronic sufferer from nervousness and could not sleep. I was also troubled with nervous headache, and had tried doctors in vain, until I used your Nervine, MRS. M. WOOD, Ringwood, ill.
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Chronic Nervousness
Could Not Sleep, Nervous Headaches. Gentlemen:—I have been taking your Restorative Nervine for the past three months and I cannot say enough in its praise. It has
Dr. Miles' Nervine Cures.
Dr. Miles' Nervine is sold on a positive guarantee that the first bottle will benefit. All druggists sell it at $1, 6 bottles for 85, or It will be sent, prepaid, on receipt of price by the Dr. Miles' Medical Co., Elkhart. Ind.
GREAT FALLS
YELLOWSTONE PARK.
Is the WONDERLAND of the world. As the tourist rolls through the PARK in the1 large, roomy FOUR-HORSE stage coaches, over the finest roads in the country and upon which the United States Govl. ernment has spent HUNDREDS OF
THOUSANDS of Dollars, the glories of the ALMIGHTY are revealed so lavishly as to almost surpass belief.
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MAMMOTH HOT SPRINGS, GOLDEN GATE, ELECTRIC PEAK,
^•*VT?/^giV?*j:W^*/'f^ ''v^ Hf.- *-.
THE GEYSER BASINS,
GIBBON CANYON YELLOWSTONE LAKE, GREAT FALLS,
'iSEENFIELD REPUBLICANTHUESDAY JUNE 20 1895
GRAND CANYON,
these are but a few of the wonders that have moved thousands to exclaim: Great and marvelous are thy works
Witch Hazel Oil
Oh! Lord.
THE NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD has a line extending directly to the Park. It also publishes a book that is much beyond the ordinary railroad publication, and pictures and describes not only the Northwest in general, but the park in particular. It is called
Sketches of Wonderland
and will be forwarded to any address upon receipt of SIX CENTS in postage stamps by
CHAS. S. FEE.
Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Paul, Minn.
HUMPHREYS'
Nothing has ever been produced to equal or compare with
Btuaphreys'
as a
CURATIVE
HEALING APPLICATION
and
It has been
used 40 years and always affords relief and always gives satisfaction. It Cures PILES or HEMORRHOIDS, External or Internal, Blind or Bleeding—Itching and Burning Cracks or Fissures and Fistulas. Relief immediate—cure certain.
It Cures BURNS, Scalds and Ulceration and Contraction from Burns. Relief instant. It Cures TORN, Cut and Lacerated Wounds and Bruises.
It Cures BOILS, Hot Tumors, Ulcers, Old Sores, Itching Eruptions, Scurfy or Scald Head. It is Infallible.
It Cures INFLAMED or CAKED BREASTS and Sore Nipples. It is invaluable. It Cures SALT RHEUM, Tetters, Scurfy Eruptions, Chapped Hands, Fever Blisters, Sore Lips or Nostrils, Corns and Bunions, Sore ana Chafed Feet, Stings of Insects.
Three Sizes, 25c., 50c. and $1.00. Sold by Druggists, or Mnt post-paid on rocaiptof prioe. HUIPHKKT8' IN. CO., Ill M113 William St., law Twk.
WITCH HAZEL Oil
DR. W. M. ELLISON,
DENTIST,
Successor to A, J. Smith,
ROOMS 3 and 4 L. C. THAYER BLOCK,
GREENTFIKLI). IND
R. A. BLACK,
•r
-A.ttorn.ey
at
Baft,Notary Always in Office.
thick.
Bub the surfaces with a little baking -aodtb Next morniilff wash'Off the soda, •afcttie xn^yin|oth®5 shaje and. t%k»,
Law
Booms 5 and 6 L. C. Thayer Blook,
6yl
Abstracts of title prepared and carefully examined. 7tf
Elmer J. Binford, Attorney at Law.
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ALPACA AND MOHAIR.
GOODS THAT ARE HANDSOME, SERVICEABLE AND ECONOMICAL.
Some New Patterns—One Will Be Worm by a Saratoga Belle—Other Handsome Dress Goods For Autninn Wear—An Attractive Dress at a Low Price. [Special Correspondence.]
NEW YORK, June 10.—Among the very prettiest materials produced during the last ten years are the alpacas and mohairs, with their variations. They do not crinkle, crease nor lose their rich luster or their firm solidity. In black there is nothing that can approach them for usefulness when of good quality. They make serviceable house dresses, to which nothing will stick, and they ivo almost as dressy as silk. Tho alpaca is silk warp and mohair filling. This quality is 40 to 44 inches wide, and
FOR THE RACES.
no matter how old it always looks like new. That with cotton warp grows rusty after a year or so. The new varieties, chief among which is the sicilienne, are coarser in thread and much like canvas, but always with the same rich gloss. There are blue, green, grays in all shades, white, ivory, cream, brown and others where the whole surface is flecked with tiny dots of a contrasting color. Some of the grays and blacks are treated to some process which causes them to resist rain. These are made up into long dust and rain proof wraps for outing purposes, and nothing could bo richer or more perfectly adapted for the purpose. Many are brocaded also in dainty swivel patterns.
These goods are treated with as much respect as if they were^pf the richest silk. I saw one beautiful dress made for Saratoga. The skirt was deeply plaited in the back, but otherwise quite plain. The material was silver gray sicilienne, with ruby flecks. The waist was of ruby velvet richly draped and fastened to one side with a long jeweled buckle. Over the shoulders were laid plaited epaulets of the goods set with fancy cut steel buttons. The sleeves were plain gigots. A ruby velvet and silver spangled lace bonnet was provided to wear with this.
Among tho choicest novelties in dress goods to bo advanced for the coming autumn is a woolen brocade called laticina. Tho effect is surprisingly like that of marvelous old porcelain. There will be an underlying color of dark faience blue, with the irregularly cracked and broken surfaco of a lighter shade of the same color. This is produced in wools now, but they are light and intended for handsome gowns. It is also produced in all black, the effect of shades being obtained by the clover use of two kinds of wool, like the soft, dead black of the Australian sheep and the lustrous mohair. One would declare that the finished fabric was in half a dozen shades, when in the right position one sees that it is all one uniform rich black. An imported gown of this beautiful black laticina had tho skirt laid in one deep double box plait in the back. All around the bottom was very narrow design in embroidery wrought in chenille. The waist was a plain gathered French waist, with a pointed belt covered with chenille embroidery. The collar and manches were also decorated with it. There camo a cape at the same time, and this was full, nearly a three-quarter circle, and lined rather stiffly. There was a rose plaited ruffle of black lace all the way around it, and on the shoulders all the way around a superb ornamentation of passementerie in festoons. The cape was of bengaline. At the neck there was a thick ruffle of bengaline headed by another of black silk muslin. Down the front was a superb bow of heavy moire ribbon, with ends reaching nearly'to the knees. The large rough and ready straw hat was literally covered with black bows, with two large aigrets, and a mass of pink, laurel and close pink bows. This outfit was sent to a young married lady, whose toilets are the envy of her less fortunate sisters. I do not know for oertain that her sister women do envy her, but that is the proper thing to say under the circumstances.
Not all the most pleasing garments are feo ornate. I saw a very attractive drew today that did not cost a fraction of that
CHALLIS GOWN AND ALPACA CLOAK, one last described. It was Qf mossy green and brown striped and dotted challie. The skirt was laid in side plaits, with three rows of tan ribbon down betweon the plaits. Tho vest front and belt as well as the stock collar were all of tan china silk, draped full. The rest of the corsage was of ecru lace, laid over moss green silk. Tho sleeves were full draped gigots. The back of the skirt was shirred closely.
Piques in buff, mauve and, in fact, all the colors, are being made up rapidly to fill the demand. They are very strong, rather stiff and do not soil easily, so that they are well liked. If ironed on the wrong side, they look like new after washing. Many of the dresses for summer wear have the sleeves made with a deep puff* and a fall of laoe at the elbow. The forearm piece 10 arranged th&t it can lie unbuttoned,
SP $
ft
Marvf by
THE LYON
of
MEDICINE -~Co.
INDIANAPOLIS IND.
5T0MACH
FOR SALE
BY ALL
Send for Catalogue. Free at any
Columbia Agency, or by mall for two a-ceut stamps.
3*1 3*1
TERMS
Coacher B. will make the season of 1895 at my barn, 2% miles southwest of Cleveland, Ind. Persons parting with mares bred to the horse or Jack, or betraying them, forfeits insurance money, which immediately becomes due. Money due when eolt stands and sucks. All accidents at owner's risk. 14tf
r..v?£*
INDIANAPOLIS, IND., Sept. 18,
DRUGGISTS, iuiiuuiumuiiuiuiuiu
BLUERIVER STOCK FARM
James Pearce, The Fine Youngjack.
Parties desiring to raise mules should call aDd ?ee this Jack. He is a splendid specimen, of flue size for his age, a sure breeder and can show some elegant foals. Terms $10 to tnsure a living colt.
COACHER B.
Description and. ^Pedigree:
Cuacher B. will be nine years old June 15th, is 15hands high and weighs 1200 pounds, is a beautiful bay, with fine style and action, and can show a 2:30 gait. He is of a very fine disposition—kind and gentle. Any one can drive him with safety. Goacher B. was sired bv Coacher G.: he by Gill's Vermont, by Downing's Vermont, by Hill's Black Hawk, sire of Ethan Allen, etc. Gill's Vermont's dam by Columbus, Goacher's dam by Moore's Black Lander, a grandson of Ball's Florizell, by Imp Diomed, grand dam by Wild Traveller, by Independent Whip, out of a mare by Tom Hal. her dam by Copper Bottom: Coacher B.'s dam by Old Daniel Boone (2:22%) by Stucker's Rain how, sire of Kramer's Rainbow, the sire of Crazy Nick, Nellie Davis (2:18) and (2:22) Win. (2:19£) etc Second dam by Billy A., he was by William G., by Old Mohawk Chief, coacher B. is a sure and superior breeder. He is finely bred and is connected to 500 or more horses with records better than 2:30. Among them, Hal Pointer, 2:05% Little Brown Jug, 2:11% Axtel, 2 12 Phyllis, 2:17£ Adelaide, 2:19% Daniel Lambert, sire of oyer thirty 2:30 trotters. Coacher B. is believed to be the best recorded Morgan horse in Indiana standing at $10 to insure a living colt.
JAMES VEATCH.
COhUMBIAS-Thejr almost Oy.
Bicycling for
Physicians recommend bicycling. Dame Fashion says it is "good form.** Two new models for women's use in—
Columbia Bicycles'
MODEL 41 COLUMBIA MODEL 42 COLUMBIA
Model 42
COLUMBIA
has been especially designed
for the many ladies who prefer to wear knickerbockers rather than cumbersome skirts. Ladies' wheels also in
HARTFORD
prices—580, $60, 50.
*sr
9*
1894.
I was a sufferer with indigestion and sour stomach for three years. After trying all the medicines in my store that were re mmended for such troubles I was permanently cured by taking two boxes of LYON'S SEVEN WONDERS.
S
L. H. RENKERT,
Proprietor Granger Drug Store.
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Bicycles at lower
'BRANCH STORES) Boston New York
Chicago San Franclaoo Providence
Buffalo
Slx hudaom* paper dolls, showing ladleB* blcytte c&itttafciby noted deaignars, will be mailed for five a-centstampa.
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