Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 24 November 1910 — Page 8
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CHARLOTTESVILLE.
Mrs. Ida Hatfield visited her sou, Walter and family at Greenfield Friday.
Mrs. James Maxwell, of Sptirry, was the guest of her mother, Mrs. Miles Cook Thursday.
Dr. J. L. Allen and wife and Otto Montgomery and wife attended the funeral of Mrs. Agnes Bennett at Morristown Tuesday.
Will Oldham attended Grand Lodge at Indianapolis Wednesday and Thnrday.
Rollyn Hawkins, of Indianapolis, was here looking after the M. E. church furnance Tuesday.
Frank. Senechal. of Knightstown, attended lodge here Wednesday night,
Charles Roberts and family have moved in Charles Woods property on East street.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Price were at Indianapolis Thurday. Roy James and wife, of Knightstown, visited J. H. Bell and family Sunday.
Trustee W. T. Orr was called to Indianapolis Sunday by the sudden death of Newton Orr. Mr. Orr was a former resident of this plaoe.
John Furry was here today assisting in the moving of S. I. Harlan Tuesday.
Sylvester Davis has returned fco the home of his son, W. E. Davis. Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Jessup spent Sun iay with L. C. Jessup and family near Western Grove.
DeLoma Badger entertained her Larkin Club-of-ten and Economy Club Saturday afternoon. A two course luncheon, mainly of Larkin products, were served and favors"" of Larkin chewing gum was given.
Mrs. Morton Stanley and daughter, Kat-hryn' attended a lecture and visited Glen Rawls and family at Carthage Friday night.
It was reported that Mrs.Emma Cox was an applicant for the post office, but this was a mistake.
Mr. Sullivan, of near Knighstown, was here Friday to visit his son-in-law S. I. Harlan and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Mattix visited their son, James and family, at New Castle, Sunday.
Alexander McNew, wife and sen, Everett, were guests of Riley Watson and family Sunday.
Margaret Cross, of Shirley, is here to spend Thanksgiving. Mr. Van Camy and his [lady friend, of Indianapolis, were at the Stringer Hotel, Friday.
Mrs. W. L. Niles and daughter, Floss, spent the last week at Indianapolis visiting Cbas.Danner and family.
Leo Howard was here Wednesday. Mrs. Chas. Gra^s, of Ohio, called on 0. E. Evans and family Thursday evening.
Moll'.e Roland attended a Club meeting at Knightstown Wednesday afternoon.
Bert li. \vit", and daughter, Olive, of Indianapolis, ar«^ visiting relatives
herj.
Mr®. Frank Swiuohal, of K-town, called uij 1,'is iidn here Wednesday afternoon.
George LH iter, wife and sou, Berlin of Greenfield, were guests of Thud Joflericrs Sundav.
James Mo-Clure, wife and #ou, Beu Strawl, o: South Dakota, Mri Wilson and Ivlilo Wilson, of Greenfield, spent Stnday with J. C. Duncan and family.
George lierkless has been visiting liis brother. Alexander Herklews. at El wood.
Claude Whit^, oi Greenfield, visited his father, WJII Whin?, part of last week.
Nora and Cera I.aey, of Nameleaa Creek spent Sunday with Charles Cross and family.
S, Harlan and family moved to Beeson'rt Staf on Tuesday where Mr. Harlan v. il) bf t-rsiployed p/ a -legraph oj rem l-r.
A union Thanksgiving servuKt will be bald at le Oliruitian church Thursday morning ai 10:80.
Messrs. T. J. Preum, Chas. Stai/e and Teddy McGrow, of Indianapolis, were here Tuesday.
On Saturday Dec. 3, 1910*at Greenfield an examination will be held. to make certificiation to fill the vacancy of fourth class postmaster of.'class fiat Charlottesville. The office paid the postmaster $174 for the (last fiscal year. The age limit is 211 years on date of examination except in a state where women are declaredly statue to be of full age at 18 years. Women 18 years of age will be admitted. 1}
rl^must be properly executed and filed
IS IviJillwith commission at Washington within 7 days before examination §sg& otherwise it may be impractical to examine them.
Ap
plicants must reside within the territory supplied by fhis postoffice. Application forms and full information concerning the examination can] be secured from the postmaster at Charlottesville or secretary of board of civil service examiners at Greenfield v.** or from U. S. Service Commission, "^Washington, D. 0. Applications
His. David Rhodes, of Knlgiik-
town, spent Friday with Mrs. John Anderson, who is sick. Miss Edna Pearson, of Grant county is spending a few weeks with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Starbuck.
Mrs. George Benjamin was at Indianapolis one day last week. Inez Haywood visited J. S. Bates and family at Indianapolis last week.
Mrs. Earle Binford, of Westland. viaited her parents, J. R. Roland Friday night.
Marion Phil pott and wife visited Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Bennett at Wanamaker Sunday.
George Benjamin and wife visited relatives at Cambridge City Sunday. Ora Niles, of Indianapolis, spent Sunday with his parents, T. E. Niles and wife.
Lewis Dixon, wife and son, Ferrell, of Greenfield, was here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Crider, of Indianapolis, will come Wednesday to spend Thanksgiving with Nerius Cox and family.
A pie supper will be held at Rabbit Hash Wednesday night. Mr. McNeff and Mrs. Ross, of Belfountaine, Ohio, have been here looking after the insurance papers of their father, John McNeff, who was killed in a wreck near McCordsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Dr. J. L. Allen were at Indianapolis Thursday. Miss Effie Narvell, of Carthage, visited DeLoma Badger fropi Friday till Sunday.
Mrs. Clint Presnall and .daughter were at Greenfield Friday. Elizabeth White visited W. R. White and wife at Greenfield Thursday.
Lon Shields has returned home from Kansas.
NAMELESS CREEK
Mrs. Margaret McKown has been visiting reletives in Greenfield. Alvin Wales and family spent Sunday with John Wales.
Ed Harding and family sent Sunday with Lemuel Moore. Alva Apple and family entertained at dinner Sunday, George Apple and wife of Rush county, Audrey Jones, Charles Brooks and Arthur Miller.
James Flowers and wife are visiting Roe McKowns. Mrs. John Wales and daughter Eva spent Friday shopping in Knightstown.
Mrs. Nathan Cranfil and son, Irvin, have gone to Kansas. Mary Hannah and Edna Simmons spent Sunday with Louis Simmons and wife.
Will Orr was called -to Indianapolis Sunday, by the sudden death of Newton Orr.
Luella Simmons, of Earlham, spent last Sunday with her parents. Freeman Braddockand family spent Sunday with William Eilsbury and family, family south of Greenfield.
Mrs. Fay© Cooper aud daughter Annua May, Pearl Huston and Mrs. Johh Huston are visiting William Wilson and family.
Mr. and Mrs. John Vandenbark spent Wednesday uight with Frank Martindale and family at Indianapolis.
Mrs. George Smith gave a surprise masquerade party in honor of hor husband's :l5tii birthday, Saturday night. Oysters, pickles, celery, coffee, pie, cake, popcorn, apples and bananas were served. Over seventy-five guests were present to enjoy the happy time audwith George many more birthdays
1
Among ih« hiek are Henry Starbnck, Mrs. .John Anderson, Mrs. Warn pole, Fletcher Lemay, Wright Jeffries and George Burnett. Otho Hudson returned from Colorado, Thui sday night.
MAXWELL
The third quarterly conference of the Maxwell M. E. charge will be held at Willow Branch Sunday and Monday, Nov. 27th and 28th. Services will be held on Sunday at 1.0:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. The sacramental service will be observed on Suuday morning. The business
session will be at i):30 a. m. Monday. I While we cannot definitely so announce, we hope that- the revival services as conducted by the Rev. J. L.
Glascock, of Cincinnati, O., will continue until next Suuday evening. During the series many souls have found that for which they have much hungered. The Christ has demonstrated that He is ready to fulfill his promises as at any time in the past.
On account of the quarterly conference at Willow Nov. 27 thera will be preaching at Curry's Chapel or Eden on that day.
The Maxwell parsonage is being reshingled, the members of the charge doing the xvork themselves.
Charles Chambers has razed a portion of his building on Main street and is preparing to erect a modern business room on the location of his blacksmith shop. It is to be the ticket office for the Honey Bee and the auto traction lines.
The report is current that the chain shop is to be moved to Hammond, Ind., thus taking from Maxwell her chief source of employment.
Mrs. Link Shepler, Mrs. John Howard, Edna Clark, Ola McClarnon, Anna Duckett and son. Sylvan, Jos. Lorman, Elmer and Sam Trusner and a host of young people have attended tha revival meetings at Willow Branch during the past week.
Owing to a Honey Bee car getting off the track in Indianapolis Sunday
Spot
GREENFIELD REPUBLICAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1910
By the
afternoon traffic was delayed for some time. After the 4 p. m. car there was no car until 7 p.m., this car haying been backed from the city to our town, then turned on the east of town and headed for New Castle in regular fashion.
Mrs. Moses Gant is very low at this writing.
WILKINSON.
E. B. Byrket, of Anderson, was here on Sunday the guests of J. L. Justice and family.
E. C. Martiudale is in the south part of the state lecturing before agricultural institutes.
Rev. George W. Kuhn delivered a talk on Thanksgiving at the Christian church last Sunday morning.
The annual meeting of the Stockholders of the Wilkinson switchboard aud Telephone Company will be held on December 1, 1910, at one o'clock in Wilkinson for to elect their officers and directors for next year.
Mrs. Lewis Bowman who has been here with D. M. Cooper's will leave on Tuesday for her home in [Chicago. She has been here for several weeks.
Mrs. W. A. Kesling is visiting relatives at Waidroii.
Several from here are attending the protracted meetings at Willow Branch that are in progress.
J. C. Wood and wife were at Greenfield on business Monday. J. L. Justice and family and Frank Marsh and wife visited Wm. A. Justice, father of J. L. Justice near Markleville on Sunday afternoon.
There was an entertainment given by Miss Vivian Easthorn in the I. O. O. F. hall on Saturday evening under the auspices of the Commercial Club. There was a large crowd and the program was said to be good. Jesse F. Evans and family visited relatives near Carters burg Thanksgiving Day.
D. M. Cooper and wife were at Indianapolis on Thursday. Marshall A. Wales had a sick spell on Monday night while out in town. He fell and hurt himself. Dr. A. M. Benjamin attended him'at once.
Marriage License
Orval Ward Adams to,Flora Goldie Shumway. Harold Davis to Pansy Cox.
Charles Ohappell to Jennie E. Caudell. 'KSz Frank L.
Walker. Wilbur Viokery.
Hamilton to Augusta
Lynatii to Glenna V.
Now' In
NED E
Three Deaths of Aged Ladies Have Oc
curred In Blue River Township
In Past Week
During the past week the death of three aged ladies have occurred in Blue River township, whose combined age was 240 years and probably more, making the average to be 80 years. The ladies were Mrs. Agnes Bennett age 72 years, Mrs. Morgan age 86 years and Mrs. Lucinda Gates 82 years. Mrs. Morgan claimed to be over one hundred years old but her relatives placed her age at 86. Oak S. Morrison who had charge of the three funerals of these aged ladies was called to Fountaintown Tuesday evening to care for the body of another lady who was 77 years old.
PETITION FOR RECEIVER
The Cumberland Bank has filed a suit against the Cumberland Printing Company petitioning that a receiver be appointed. The petition was gtanted. Mr. Benjamin Strickland proprietor of the Cnmberland printing office and editor and manager of1 the Marion County Times, published from that office has moved to Indianapolis.
Ladies' Home Reading Club. The Ladies' Home Reading Club will not meet Thursday on account of the day being Thanksgiving, but will meet Thursday of next week, December 1st, with Mrs. E. W. Felt at Irvington. •r y'
Revival is Progressing.
The Methodist Episcopal revival is progressing nicely. A good service was held Tuesday night and a fair sized crowd was in attendance, 'y-
Thack Galbreath remains quite sick with catarrhalfever.
Our Big Co-Operatlve
onder Demonstration SALE
The supremacy of this great sale is ably demonstrated from day to day, as it passes through its course in reality, and its leadership over previous attempts as to true value giving is easily as plain, by the enormous crowds that have taken advantage of the great bargains since its opening.
Be Here Sure Friday and Saturday
As these two days will stand out as record breakers in money saving.
Foil Blast!
Co'-Operative Store
Fop
Old Scribe Sketches.
"Thou crownest the year with thy goodness. Enter into His gates with thanksgiving, and into His courts with praise."
Yes, the Lord always does his part, but how about ourselves? We waste our substance under the impression that we can make good all the time whatever may arise. People starting in life should cooly count the cost, and then use prudence and economy. The scientific proportion of the income of the home to its various needs is one of the things the girl student in the Chicago high schools household arts course is rerequired to learn. She is taught what is the just percentage of her husband's income to be devoted to house rent, fuel, light, food, insurance, clothing, etc.
Instructions of this kind will serve to open the eyes of young women to just what a given sum of money will do. Too much for show and not enough for the substantial things of life is the rock upon which many a home has been wrecked.
The determination to miss nothiug in pleasure, parties, theatres and various amusements, of a flimsy character has wrought havoc in many a family circle, where the greatest advantages existed, for laying up for a rainy day, but they fail to do so. Of course, when we count the cost of living, and all its attendant drain from different sources, such a -charity, church and divers benevolences requires a steady income of no small amount, to meet them all, but then it becomes more imperative that we anticipate the dawn of a day when we shall find that proudence and economy haye their reward. The call of epportunity may be long and loud, but if we fail to have ear to the ground at the proper time, it may never be repeated.
However, it is not necessary to miss the good things of life, simply to accumulate wealth. Miserleness and economy are not kin. The glad Thanksgiving day with all it implies, should be properly celebrated, by meeting and greeting long absent ones, and be made an occasion of rejoicing, thanksgiving and praise,
Feasting is one of the methods used by the American people to express their pleasure in life as it appears to them, or to celebrate any auspicious event. The appetite for good things came along with the May Iftower from Europe when the plot tor
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the People
When you see a pair of glasses think
The name Beery stands for glasses of quality, because of the skill and painstaking care given to every case.
BEERY, THE OPTOMETRIST
Rooms 9-10 Lee C. Tbaver Bldg.
"Leathes Stocking Tales," was being laid in the wilds of America. It still exists to a marked degree, and a "Candy man", told me on the train that he had sold enough candy to Greenfield merchants to fill jam full the biggest freight ear on the T. H. I. & E. for their trade the forthcoming Holiday season. This is in accord with all joyous occasions, when we rejoice we celebrate, Perhaps not as thankfully as we should for all his goodness. Then let us "Sing praise unto Jehovah, ye saints of his,
And give thanks to his holy memorial name. For his anger is but for a moment,
His favor for a lifetime. Weeping may tarry for the night, But joy cometh in the morning.
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OLD SCRIBE.
TOlJOOOD
The promise made during the campaign by Hon. George W. Williams, of Kaightstowu, that if Jefferson township, Henry county, went Republican, he would "set up" the oysters to the township, is to be mad8 good. Cards are out for a recoption and banquet at Sulphur Springs, Friday, Nov. 2fth. [Mr. Williams has always, during his entire life, "madegood."—Editor.
Miss Gladys Teel went to Willow Branch today and will spend Thanksgiving and school vacation with Miss Ethel Smith on route 2. 'lC
Mrs. C. C. Prabher has returned to her home in Indianapolis after a few days vi9it here with hefc sister, Mrs. Charles Vance. .1
B^yor Ora Myers united in marriage Saturday evening Frank Lee Hamilton and Augusta Walker. The ceremony was perfomed in the office of theoountgr olerk.
