Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 29 September 1910 — Page 2

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Speciul to the Daily Reporter.

Waiting On Crushed Stone Contractors Joe Wilkinson and Bill Wood are daily expecting the last lot of fine crushed stone to complete their contract on the Interurban street from Main street to the traction station.

Oh, You Waterworks

Saifley's water works is still here, but the water seems to be absent, and by the last few weeka, it looks as though they will remain in this condition. There is nothing apparently doing with them, and the people are clamoring to know why there is not, something doing to complete- the working of the plant.

Must Go to Kennard to Vote We are informed that the voters in the west precinct in Greensboro township are compelled to go Kennard to cast their votes this fall.

Working Full Blast

The Shirley canning factory is far superceding last year business, as ths tomatoes are coming in in a much better qualiiy and a better yield. The farmers are well pleased with their tomatc enteryriss this year, and will make some money, which is very encouraging and its hoped that there will be a good output next year.

Off For the Horse Show

Everybody is expected to attend the Wilkinson horse show, which promises to be an excellent affair, as Wilkinson just knows how to entertain the large crowds which they expect.

iNeeds High School

Shirley needs a high school, as she has so many pupils that have to either go to Kennard, New Castle or Warrington, which is a great inconvenience to many parents.

MOHAWK.

Mr. and Mrs. John Baity called on Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kingery Sunday evening.

Mr3. James McCan is sick at her -home in Mohawk. Several from this place attended the dance at Ott Bolander's Saturday night.

Willie Wilson, of near Mohawk, who had his fingers cut off, is getting along nicely.

Mr. and Mrs. Leon E. Wiley and daughter, Luciel, called on T. H. Pope and wife.

Chris Kingery and Opal Marosky spent Sunday evening with his parents, William Kingery and wife.

Ethel Eakes called on Eva Pope Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Webber spent Sunday with her daughter, Mrs. Fred Kingery and family.

Almeda Kingery, who has been sick, is some better. Several young people of this place attended camp meeting Sunday night.

Mrs. Nellie Pierce, Mrs. Lillian Alford, Mrs. Eva Dobbins, Mrs. Ida Williams and Mrs. Flangen called on Mrs. Fred Kingery Sunday evening.

The Mohawk base ball team played the Indianapolis boys Sunday at Gifund's park. The score v/as 5 to 4 in "ivor of Indianapolis.

WESTLAND.

G. P. McCarty and wife, of Rushville, were visiting his sister, Mrs. Robert Brooks and family over Sunday.

The funeral of James Veatch was largely attended Wednesday by friends and neighbors of this community,

E. C. Elliott and daughter, Mary transacted business at Greenfield Monday afternoon.

Mrs. A. F. Cox, of Chicago, arTived at the home of her sister, Mrs, R. F. Cook Monday evening for a visit. They all went to the home of their mother, Mrs. A. Binford a little later in the evening and had a most pleasant family gathering.

E. C. Elliott and wife and Elma Binford left Tuesday morning for the Friends' annual gathering at Richmond.

Iola Stafford went to tho Yearly Meeting Saturday. Mrs. A. F. Cox returned to her home at Chicago Saturday night after brief visit here ^Albert Binford returned Friday from a visit with relatives at North Dakota.

Ralpb and Benjamin Lindaniood arrived at the home of their parents, James Lindamood and wife last week affer spending a few years in Dricoia.

FROM OTHER TOWNS OF COUNTY

Takes Up Newspaper Work Miss Anna Foutz, who has been in the employ of Noble VanMeter in the store business for several years, has resigned and accepted a position with the Shirley News, as assistant editor.

Big Auction Sale

A. O. Deering, Centerville's auctioneer, is here selling the stock of gents' fnrnishings for William Reddington. Sale began last Saturday and will continue from time to time, until all is sold.

Improved in Health

We have recently been informed that Everet Camplin, who has been very low and doubtful of his recovery is some better.

Nearing Completion

Ed. Fahl, Shirley's contractor, who has the repairing of the Schomber room on Main street, as the contractor, and has the work well under headway, and expects to have the job completed in a few days. This room when completed will have the appearance of a newly built room and will add much to the appearance of Main street. This room belongs to Sam Ham now and will have much better care than it has been having in the past.

Local and Personal

Miss IPearl Welker of Anderson, spenl Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ver-cil-Madison of Kennard.

Harrv Spangler spent Sunday with his old schoolmate, Vercil Madison, at Kennard.

Vercil Madison, one of Greensboro's successful farmers, was in Shirley on business Saturday.

The Breeders Gazette, the finest stock paper in the west, and The Daily Reporter by mail $3.00. 15tf

We have the circulation that is ]yjr

why Reporter an* bring results.

R. F. Cook transacted business at Indianapolis Monday. Mrs. Lucinda Gates remains quite poorly.

Caryl Cook, who was operated on Tuesday at the Bruner sanitarium, is reported to be getting along reasonably well.

Meetings conducted at Sugar Grove continued throughout last week. Wm. Backous and wife called on W. P. Binford and wife Sunday afternoon.

MCCORDSVILLE.

Fortville defeated McCordsville at base ball Sunday at the latter place by a score of 5 to 1.

Blanch Harker, of Mt. Vernon, O., and Mabel and Flora Sullivan, of Jennings county, are visiting S. Burchill and family.

A few people from here went to Fortville Saturday to see the Boston Bloomer girls play base ball against the Fortville team.

W. A. Pilkenton, of this place, is building a large modern home in the new addition near the I. U. T. station. It is nearing completion and is one of the most costly homes in McCordsville. He will move into the home in the near future. Mr. Pilkenton has been a druggist here for years.

Plans are being made to improye the M. E. church. Cement steps and platform will be built and cement sidewalks are to be put in along the west and north sides.

The McCordsville high school base ball team played the Oaklandon high school team Friday afternoon and defeated them by a score of 10 to 7.

Cora and Lena Johnson, of Indianapolis, are visiting Ford Wood and family who live northeast of McCordsville.

Goldie Jarrett, of Eden, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Homer McCord. Bertha Pope is visiting relatives in Shelby county.

OTTERBEIN.

Mrs. Joanna Crump is much worse at this writing. Nettie and Ola Sanford were guests of Maggie Griffith Sunday.

C. L. Black is building, an addition to his house. •, H. W. Robbins, Edward ^Parker and wife and Myron Gardner were guests of T. E. Scotten and family Sunday.

C. P. Martin and family, of Pendleton, have returned home after a two weeks' visit with his wife's parents, C. W. Parker and wife,

Henry Hawkins and family and Stella Snider, of Amity, took dinner with

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day.

W. Griffith and family Sun­

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Gladys andHovey, and Chauncey and family visited Lee Fuller and family, of Sugar Creek, Sunday.

Leonard Duncan has taken the contract to build a $3,500 addition to the house of Campbell Parker.

Thomas Elliott, wife and daughter Alice, Hiram Crump and family, George Crump and family and C. W Parker and wife visited Mrs. Joanna Crump Sunday.

The officers for the Sunday uchool for the coming year were elected here Sunday with George Land, superintendent Alice Griffith, secretary Ernest Sanford, treasurer, and Irene Scotten, organist.

John Heim and wife, of Gaston, are visiting his sister, Mrs. Joanna Crump.

E. E. Scotten died Wednesday aft ernoon. The funeral was conducted by O. F. Lydy, here Friday morning at 10 o'clock. Interment at Philadel phia cemetery.

Albert Suits and family have moved to Illinois, where Mr. Suits will work on a farm.

Flossie Hurley will enter school at Terre Haute Wednesday. Charles Crump was in Greenfield Monday.

Sunday school at 9:30. CUMBERLAND. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hartman and Mrs. Anna Wiese, of Morris Station. Mr. and Mrs. William Luebking and daughter, Ester, of Indianapolis, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Wiese Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Ricer were guests of Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Ricer, Sunday. David West, of Dayton, Ohio, who visited his sisters, Mrs. Sarah Harvey and Mrs. Jane Wray, for three weeks, returned home Saturday.

Gospel services are being held each evening this week at the New House Hall.

Mr. and Mrs. Marion Cotton, of Indianapolis, visited Mr. and Mrs. JohnNewhouse Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ropkey, of Indianapolis, visited Mr. and Mrs. George Huntington and daughter, Mrs. Maud Gil son, Sunday.

Mrs. Ellen Huntington, Mrs. Anna Wiese and Mrs. Lizzie Wiese will entertain the Baptist Ladies Aid Society, next Thursday afternoon.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Perkins visited

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Preaching services at the Baptist church Sunday morning and evening. Claribel Wiese visited Fay Cotton Sunday.

Irene Huntington left last week to enter Franklin College. Viola Sanford is attending the high school and boarding with Mrs. Alfred Bonge.

Children Cry

FOR FLETCHER'S

A S O I A

Wlil Go to Oklahoma.

Mr. and Mrs. Steve White will leave tomorrow for Oklahoma. They have been visiting at the home of William G. Scott for some time. Mr. and Mrs. White have been located in Texas for the last three years. This winter, however, they expect to spend in Oklahoma.

It is not idle trade talk to say Chat McCall's at 50 cents a year including a free pattern is an extraordinary bargain. A look at one copy proves this conclusively. With such big value as a basis you can certainly see the possibilities of making a most attractive club or premium offer, especially in view of our low price to you. If you use McCall's Magazine we will accept yearly subscriptions from you at 30 cents each and will include a free pattern to each subscriber without extra cost to you. d&w

Russell Strickland, who entered Indiana University this fall, is reported to be a pledged Beta Theta Pi. His brother, Dr. Clarence Strickland was a member of the fraternity when in college, and their uncle, the late James A. New was a Beta when a student many years ago at old'Asbury at Greencastle.

The charity entertainment given Saturday night in tne I. O. O. F. hall, at Wilkinson, by Miss Dora Arnold, of this city, was highly received. Miss Arnold was at her best and a return date will be made soon iby the girls of the Christian Sunday school in Wilkinson. There was a large audience and several from here atVtfled.

Hughes Walker, of "i^aianapoliH, spent Sunday with his mother, Mrs. Emma H. Walker. Mr. Walker is employed as chief clerk in the Maintenance Dept. of the Central Union Telephone Company, having received a promotion last week. Z.

B. A. Sunderland returned Thursday from Genevah, Ohio, where he was called by the sickness of bis father, who died before the son reached the bedside.

Mrs. Amanda Carson and Mrs. Fred Carson were guests Friday of Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. Williams in Jackson

& -&* »v $r «l* -if GREENFIELD REPUBLICAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1910.

Charles Harting a part

of last week. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiese were guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. John Deel.

STATE STREET

Residence of John L. Fry Entered,

Money and Watch Taken With

No Clew to the Thief.

Monday morning John L. Fry, of North State street, arose at 4 o'clock to be ready to take the first traction car out of the city and discovered he had received a visitor during the night. The dining room window was up where an intruder had entered and made his exit. Investigation revealed that a gold watch and four dollars in money had been taken.

The city officers were notified and they in turn sent a description of the watch to the Indianapolis police department. It is a gold hunting case engraved with the words "James Welch."

The watch was found today Ed Boring along the sidewalk on State street in front of Mrs. Morgan's property.

The burglary is supposed to have occurred about 1 o'clock Monday morning, as a light was seen at the Fry home abcut that time.

It is also believed that the burglars expected to get a considerable sum of money, as it was known that Mr. Fry paid his employes on Monday morning and expected him to have the money there. The burglar was evidently frightened away as the larger sum of meney was untouched.

The Lash of a Fiend

would have been about as welcome to A. Cooper of Oswego' N. Y., as a merciless lung-racking cough that defied all remedies for years. *It was most troublesome at night," he writes, "nothing helped me till I used Dr. King's New Discovery which cured me completely. I never cough at night now." Millions know its matchless merit for stubborn colds, obstinate coughs, sore lungs, lagrippe, asthma, hemorrhage, ctoup, whooping cough, ar hay fever. It relievos quickly and never fails to satisfy. A trial convinces, 50c, $1.00. Trial bottle free. It's positively guaranteed by M. C. Quigley.

The Westland high school baseball won from a picked team Friday evening by a score of 6 to 4. Cox and Davis formed the battery for the high school and Jackson and Chandler for the outsiders.

"Can be depended upon" is an expression we all like to hear, and when it is used in connection with Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea it means that it never fails to cure diarrhoea, dysentery or bowel complaints. It is pleasant to take and equally valuable for children and adults' Sold by all druggists.

JUSTFill

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This Delicious

to prove how wholesome and good Bonano really is, we make this offer— out and mail us the attached coupon and we will send you an order on a grocer in your city to sell you a 25-cent can of Bonano with the distinct understanding that you are to have your money back if you are not entirely pleased with it. You will hold our money-back order until you have used the whole can. If Bonano has not entirely pleased you. if you do not find it a perfectly delicious beverage. wholesome and beneficial, then present our money-back order to the grocer and he will return your 25 cents.

Bonano is a perfectly blended food drink for all ages. As inspiring as coffee, as refreshing as tea, as nourishing as cocoa. Its only effects are good effects. It Is rich in nourishment, aids digestion, induces sound, healthful sleep, builds up the body and brain. Made from different varieties of the

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S S Address.

HANGS HERSELF IN THE BARN

Greenfield Physician Called to See

Woman and His Patient Found

Dead When He Arrives.

What is attributed to a recurrence of an old affliction, bordering on insanity, is thought to have caused Mrs. Mary Mithoefer, fifty-one years old, who lived eight miles west of this city, to commit suicide Thursday by first swallowing a can of concentrated lye and then hanging herself in the barn in the rear of her home. She was once adjusted insane by an insanity commission.

A peculiar circumstance surrounded the finding of the body in the barn. Dr. John Groff, of this city, was called by the woman's husband when she complained of being ill. After discussing the nature of the affliction with the husband, he asked to see tho patient. Search disclosed her absence and an investigation revealed her dead body in the barn. She had tied the rope around her neck and thrown herself forward, choking herself to death.

A Man Of Iron Nerve.

Indomitable will and tremendous energy are never found where Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and Bowels are out of order. If you want these qualities and the success they bring, use Dr. King's New Life Pills, tha matchless regulators, for keen brain and strong body. 25c at M. O. Quigley's.

Mrs. Harry Thomas has returned from Rockwood, where she has been visiting her sister, Miss Malinda Kissell, who has been quite sick, but now much improved.

If It Fails to Delight You

Won't You Try At Our Risk

Made From Banana

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International Banana Food Company

Corn Exchange Bank Building, Chicago, Illinois

Please send me your order on a grocer In my home town for a 25-cent can of •ONANO. with the understanding that when I have given same a thorough trial, tho grocer will refund my money if I am not fully satisfled.

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ELMER J. BINFORD

Attorney at Law

Lee C. Thayer Building, GREENFIELD, ^INDIANA Practice in all courts of the United States. Prompt and careful attention to all business.

Chauncey W. Duncan LAWYER

SURETY BOND

AUCTION!

J. E. FROST

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ABSTRACTS

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AUCTIONEER

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