Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 July 1910 — Page 3

ntIDAY, J1TLY 15, 1910.

GFiLENCASTLE HERALD

I’AGK TWO

LATEST NEWS

Vaiiitiun', Fulling Hair ami iuiiiug alp i'ur«*d, on Muney l$a» k.

W bat other people says of you, : sometimes has more effect, than what you say about yourself. Read

thest

“1 used one bottle of Parisian! Wage, and It did all you claim It would do. My bair is fluffy aud clean from daudrulf siuce I used the Sage, and 1 am goiug to keep It constantly on my dressing table lor toilet use.”—Mrs. M. Urltflu, 3tit* W. bth St., Davenport, Iowa. “I write in short that my head was almost running me crazy, and 1 saw your ad in the Times-Union. | I bought a bottle of Parisian Sage at once and tried it, and in a week 1 could see that my bead was almost well, and my hair was growing wonderful, aud 1 continued using Parisian Sage, and now I have beautiful hair aud everybody admires it. My scalp is always clean.”- Your customer, Mrs. S. Dingle, Jacksonville, Fla., Oct. 15

1909

■Parisian Sage Is certainly a wonderful hair restorer. My bus- } hand and I both have used it, and find it to he just as advertised.”—i Mrs. D. Schorling, 220 Wauson St. Toledo, O., Oct. 23, 1909. Parisian Sage is sold by drug-i gists everywhere aud by the Owi Drug Store and the Red Cross Pharmacy for 50 cents a large bottle, and is guaranteed to cure ; dandruff, stop falling hair and it-; ching scalp, or money back. It makes hair grow soft, lustrous and luxuriant, and is not sticky or greasy. The girl with the Auburn hair is on every bottle. Mail orders tilled by Giroux Mfg Co., : Buffalo, N. Y.

AND HE ONI) HAD A COLO IH THE HEAD That’s Whnt the Doctor Says About It, but He Can’t Cure It. ’’Akerchoo,” remsrked Mr. Bumpton, as he came sniffing down the steps leading to the doctor’s office, “Dhese doctors baku be die d. Dhey dhlg dhev are dealing in an advanced science and yet, by gracious, dhey can’t cure a nasty llddle cold id dhe

head.

"Id’s edough to bake addybuddy cuss to hear dhem go on. I said to dhe doctor, I said, ’Doctor, I’s Big,’ I said. ‘I’b very slg,’ I said. ’Id fact. 1 feel bum all over,' 1 said. ’What’ll I do?’ 1 said. " ’Oh,’ says he, 'do’d do addythig You've just got a liddle cold id dhe head. Dhat's all. id's dothing butch, id'll wear off.’ “Ai’d dhat sibly sickening? Here I go to a doctor who glalms he can cure dibtheria ad dhyphoid ad beaslcs ad all sort ob dhlgs. ad, by gracious, he can’t cure a llddle cold id dhe head. “ 'Id'll wear off,’ he says. I know dhat. Hut I do’d want id to wear off AkercLoo! I want to stop feeling sick, ad dhere’s dothing makes you feel sicker dhan a liddle cold id dhe head. “Dhe drouble is dhey do’d dhink it’s addythlng a Hdle cold, if you had subthing derrlble with a long Latin dabe dhe doctors would bay sub addentlon to you. Scebs like hey don’t have addy sympathy with a liddle cold id dhe head. "Ad. by gracious what cad you do or Id? You ca'd do addr thing but sneeze and snuff ad bake a dutsanee of yourself. Ad alother dhlng dhat bakes be mad Is dhe way ever) body laughs ad you when you got a cold Id dhe head. ‘T’d seems to be a fuddy Joke. By gracious. Id's no ioke for dhe man who’s got Id. Akerchoo!”—New York Sen

No -‘„*r for Music Then.

First Roman (while Rome is burning) Just listen to Nero’s playing Dost appreciate his marvellous technique? Second Roman Hardly. I’m la the fire Insurance business.

Bright Side.

VIA THK MONON ROUTE

Summer Tourisls Fares to Summer Resorts iu North and Noitbwest on sale daily to September 30th; also special low rates to Norfolk and Old Point Comfort Va effective July 12th to September 30th. Low round trip fares to various points In North, West and South, on Buie the first and third Tuesday of each month. Heven Hours from (ireeuraslle to Detroit. Excursion fares July Gth to lltli acount Reunion Grand Lodge Benevolent and Protective Order of ElkB. 91.50 $1.50 Monoii Excursion to Chicago, Ills. ftandu), July 17, 1910. Special train leaves depot at 5:30 a. in., returning leaves Chicago at 11:30 p. m. Special train will stop In both at Cellar lake. Baseball park. Cubs vs. Brooklyn.

Soreness of the muscles, whether induced by violent exercise or injury, is quickly relieved by the free application of Chamberlain's Liniment. This liniment Is equally valuable for muscular rheumatism and always affords quick relief. Sold by all dealers. MONEY TO LOAN on hordes, cattle etc See the Hom,. Loan and Real Estate f i'h,|p:ini Those Pies of Boyhood. How delicious were the pies of boyhood. No pies now ever taste so good. What’s changed? The pies? No. Its you. You’ve lost 1 (lie strong, healthy stomach, the vigorous liver, the active kidneys,! the regular bowels of boyhood. Y'our digestion is poor and you ! blame the food. What's needed? A complete toning up by Electric i Bitters of all organs of digestion —Stomach, Liver, Kidneys, Bow els - Try them. They'll restore j your boyhood appetite and appreciation of food and fairly saturate your body with new health, and Strength and vigor. 50c at the Owl Drug Stoie and the Red rro o - Drug store.

Shoricish Ml •> PI.inks if I do not wir. your han,'. I shall’die. Miss Plunks oh, l don’t know' Working for one’s living isn’t necessarily fatal. Chicago News. The Old Days. "What s the matter, Henry?” asked the first wuitei “You don’t even seem ihterertod in tips these days.” ”N’aw," replied the other waiter, “tips ain’t what they was. 1 was reading in a book the o her day about a gent that gave hi; birthright for a mess of pottage.”

A Frightful Wreck. of train, automobile or buggy may cause cuts, bruises, abrasions, sprains or wounds that demand Bucklen’s Arnica SnLe— earth’s greatest healer Q il k relief and prompt cure results For burns boils, sores of all kinds eczema, chapped hands and lips, sore eyes, or corns, its supreme. Surest pile cure. 2 5c at the Owl Drug store and the Red Cross Drug store. First chauffer - in- v lind out wee you have run over ' Sec i,J ('Irunfe Of couise; I at way- read the papen* --New York Sun

For Rosy Cheeks & Ruddy Health

When the children call for coffee or tea, or when they want a hot drink, or something before going to achool, give them Bonano, the new hot fruit drink made from the meat of bananas. It will add to the roses in their cheeks and

put rich red blood into their veins.

A cup of Bonaao before they go to bed will make them sleep like tops and wake happy

aud cheerful in the morning.

And Bonano is best for “grown-ups,” too. It makes clear skin and bright eyes, sound digestion and a clear head, gives you “snap” and “go.” Bonano is made from varieties of luscious bananas, fully ripened in the sunshine of the tropics, peeled and dried, then granulated, roasted and blended into a mixture which makes a most delicious, fragrant beverage, with a fruity flavor and nourishment all its own. Bonano is the drink for morning, noon and night- a drink that is always palatable, nerve-bracing and satisfying. ♦ It produces vigor, health and strong nerves—the feeling of vim and energy. Bonano is a drink for rich and poor, for sick or healthy, for man, woman and child— all the time. . , Being made of fruit only, it has a regulating effect

on the system — does not clog nor cloy.

Get a can from your grocer today. A can will make 75 cups and is therefore more economical than

any other beverage.

If your grocer doesn’t keep it, send u« the attached coupon, and we will send you a sample package and a

booklet.

K2221 INTERNATIONAL •'BANANA FOOD COMPANY

CHICAGO. ILLINOIS.

Please send me eample of BONANO

and Booklet.

Name

The HERALD One Year For $2..SO To Rural Route and Mail Subscribers— beginning to-day—the Herald will be sent for $2.50 a year, payable in advance. Subscriptions not paid in advance will be at the rate of 25c a month $3.00 a year. Those now in arrears on the Herald will—until July 1st—be allowed to pay arrearages at the rate of $2.50 a year, provided they pay a year in advance. SuHwwrilTe novv zincl fill tlit; nc?vvs—till the time

Foriu

rtc: i i

Does .of t. L.* into fin’s La, worn

The \

very foundation of all love loses its lustre ■' Worn ! h( s t reguineu . . tho o o .

umy oriti'-n the

tf' Vff

. hi-nl i , n ici fin^ tiio o l fortiim. For without iu-ulth r >!J i hut dross. rq irtJ nun tFnerally he r. .. .i s i , j\orito Prescription.

Tf. is i*r tri ' - ' r over UO yeans, been curmu flclieal •, u « ifc. pain-** racked women, by the hnulr f:i ot thousands and this too in tnc privacy of their homes Mithoui their bavin;} to snl:n:ii to indell* cate questionings mad offensively repugnant examinations. Sirk women urc invited to convult Dr. Pi-Tee hy letter/rre. All correspondent ' Vddms World’s Di»p»—ry Medical A* oeiiUi ri. K. \ I 't-rce, M. 1)., President, Buffalo, N. Y. Du. Puii' i ( I am 1 1) 1 > >' urn Hoot, I he Peoples Common Sense Medical A r ■ *J up-to-date edition l)k)') ( -s. answers in i wl ch ever woman, single or married, ought to I free, in plat i « < ippet to address on receipt of 21 on« cei iding for 31 stamps.

HUMPHREYS’ Humphrey!*’ Y< ej Diary Speeifles 1 For-Every Living Thing on the Farm.” Hor jj. Cattle. Sheep, Hogs, Dogs, Poultry. \. A. I’or I'E’tr.ltri, Mlik Fever, lannr Fever *1 II. For HFIlA 1 .%>*, IjHJiiene*»H, IIiifimmllMm. t . 1 t.rKOil•’ I'lirci * r.pi/.oolit- Ulittmiper. I) !>• t or liotn, <i>ruJD4 li. E. For COl roMu, fnlluen/n. V. F. For < OI.lt . Slellyneho, Diarrhea. (j.li. Fievftila V.l-d \»ttllAi:i’ il II. For 5IDAI I a id I llbidder disorder*. i. I. F.ir eS.vlA DleFAHF* Manue, Frupiioua J k For UVD < OAUITIOX, 1udi«e»ltoD At ihnigyists or sent prepaid on i ei ■ ipt of price <50 i t each.

BOO piipc Hook ami Stable Chart t<> hung up mailed tree.

HrMT’URF.VS 1 II t •» i uud Aun

MKDICINE C O. Corner •w York.

LiiT-’ ’nit It In. 1 i ! ’« 1 i , •: iipi 1 the co • t e ’’nr - XL- I <>\;• $ i.OOO for h« i Lm .• i tlHIl I 1 ? Y' >. And didn’t i:he testify that !i-’ iii'l) never lo\e another? Yes. Now I understand she is pnii;;; ii marry Jones. She is. Y’ou see, Jones and her former sweetheart are enemli and in* thinks it will make him v.tiUo to see Junes gpeildiliK Ills moil' ) Not So Mik Ii Needed hike most minister's families, they were not extensively blessi I wiili this world's goods. She, how-ver, was tlie youngest of ten ehildren until her father explained to her of the baby sister who had come In the night. "Well," she said, after due thought, ”1 'pose It’s all right, papa, but there’s many a thing we needed worse.”

fOWNSHiP IHUSlfct NUIICE J lick son Township. 1 will be at my home in Jackson Township every Friday to transact !*e business of my office us trustee BENJAMIN WALI.e. o— Floyd Township. j My office da) will he Wednesday •t each week at my rcsideuce. FRED TODD, Trustee o Jefferson Township. I will lie at my residence each friday to transact the business of I uy office OLIVER STRINGER. • Marion township. I will at my residence In Marion Township on Friday of each | week aud Tuesday at hi 1 1 more to transact the business of i v v office OTTO B KEC\ )R Madison I ow nshi;-. I will tie at in« office at my resi j deuce each Wodiiesda) and s.itur day to transact the business of Trustee of Madisiiu Tiiwnsliip W. STUOUHE. o Mill t’reek iowiiship, I will he at my home in Mill Creek Township on Wednesday and Saturday of each week to trnusucl the business of my office ERNEST KiVETT, Trustee o (’Union lownsliip. I will lie at my home each Friday to transact the 1 usiness of my iiflire. ED. THOMAS, Trustee

Stomach I )cad Man Siill

Liv^ s

People Abo suffer from sour stomach, fermentation of food distress after eating and indigestion. and seek relief in large (hunks of artificial digestors, are killiii : their stomachs by inaction just as surely as the victim of morphine is deadening and injuring beyond repair every nerve in the body. W'liat the stomach of every suf-feri-i from indigestion needs is a ood piesrriplion that will build ui) liis stomach, put strength, eni rgy and elasticity into it, and imik' it sturdy enough to digest a hearty meal without artifleial aid. The best prescription for indigestion ever written is sold by drug lets everywhere and by the Owl Drug store and the Red Cross Dnu store and is rigidly gtiatanteed in build up the stomach and cure indigestion, or money hack. This prescription is named Mi-o-na and is sold iu small tablet form In large boxes, for only 50 cents. Remember the name, Mill in stomach tablets. They never fail The) contain ingredients that give quick relief (other than strong digesters), hut they are compotiuded fur the purpose of makinr tlie stomach strong and energetic enough to do its work with- ! out ti>e aid of harmful drugs.

J

For Sale by

*ZEIS & 60., GrOGCD

International Banana Food Co., Chicago, 111.

HAV’-iAN GIRL 3 RIDE ASTRIDE. Cobtume Resemble* Traillnfl Gown o* a Mediaeval Noblewoman. It is of little Importance to Hayti and its people what Ute other Powers tl k of it. The bit;*! black republic goes right ahead with its voodooisiu Idol worship and other strange eus toms without regard for tlie feelings of the missionaries rtationed there. Naturally enough the civilized custom of a woman using a side saddle foi horseback riding does not appeal to the semi-savage nature of the inhabitn 's. Of course, not many Haytinns are prosperous enough to own horse for use solely under tlie saddle. But tl-iise who do dress their women in • strangest riding habits yet dovised. An the riders are ignorant of Hiioh an invention as the side saddle, their riding habits are built to fit the lines of an ordinary leather saddle In effect those garments are simply a boggy pair of trim 'i s, ending at the I ankle in front hut hanging in many folds alinust to the ground at the! back. Seen a slight distance away,; however, the costume resembles the trailing gown of a mediaeval noble wo ; an when riding, and its pictures- ; qr.eness is enhanced by the Ilaytian style of headdress.

I nk ind to Children. An advertisement of a nursing bottle printed In a Canadian newspaper concluded with tlie following: “When the baby is done drinking it must be unscrewed and laid iu a cool place under a tap If the baby does not thrive on fresh milk, It should be boiled.” Fw-diing the Air. "Is this section prosperous?” “You bet It is," answered tlie Kansas farmer. "1 kin spread a net any lime and snake a grand piano out of a cyclone.” The world’s best medicine for bowel complaints is Chamberlain's Colh', Cholera, and.Pairrhoea Remedy. 11 has relieved more pain and sugcring, and saved more lives than any other medicine 'll use. Invaluable for eiiil dren and adults. Hold by nil dealers.

PENNSYLVANIA 1 LIMES Infiian;; polls 75c Excur' ion Next SUJOAY

no i i: t (-.e i* ix rii <: m i: \i,i.

.1 li ly '

It’jiVf (r i'' t h 1 5 : Mini a. in.

h Mi(i

Chamberlain's Ston ich

and

Liver

Tablets '.Lent 1 y 1 i in; 1

h* the

liver

and bowels Io expel

poison-

OUR

matter, deans 1 ' the :

i vs 1 pm,

cure

eonst ipatlon and 1

1 'ad

m he

Fold I.) nil de l< >

ifMKOUKtD HUN O catarrh or money hack. Jus, i Jomplt to utiit, including Druggist*

nt I l; MSI I 1 v tiik HERALD

Work ‘21 Hours si Day. The busiest little tlimes ever made are Dr. King’s New Life Pills. Ever) pill is a sugar-coat-ed globule of health, that changes weakness into strength, languor iut'i onei v, brain-fog into mental power, curing Constipation, Headache, Chills, Dyspepsia, Malaria. 25 c at Hie Owl Drug store unit the Red Cross Drug store. •ni’ii i !\ nil HERALD

Lorer Should Pay Tinder 10 Per Cent. "If you lost a watch worth $100 what reward would you give the finder for its return?” “Oh, $10 or $20." “Ten per cent., eh? Well, that la i bout right," sai l 1 ecocq, tno dc.ee the. “U is more, though, than the aver g ■ person would give. “Here in America, in lost and found case-:, there hi no recognize percentage of reward, 1 t In Engl "d there '3 Mich a percentage namely, half a own to a pound that is to say, al.o.t ii) per cent. Ten per tent. Is v. . . ii.o i.ndor m. I he paid ia Eng iiiiil, j ovided h< t Yc- his find to a police station or to Scotland Ya d 1 . a' .v.i vs does i o. es otherwise the • j r pr to \ • him lm; ! than the ( 1 It) per cent. I hwi iu a 1 of:- loti cab a 1 t lm ' - rth ■;.•). The ki <> \% was t. urned i>y t •• i liiliy io S- el d i.a 1 and I • t • . .. fur l.:.a iacily a r> ..-d of .* . if ■ lug had be> i wo; Hi ?2 (>0) I'd 1 he n charier < ? 1: ;ai! at out ‘ ). hut that is what Pit Ir ve hr. 1 to d-1 lie'iire the (leottand Y’ I’d f dk-s would have given n,e my property. “V.’lton you lose rnythirg he prz pare I io give at least 1 • per tent, to the healer. Ten per eem. is the reocq,Hired reward in lost and found c c:s abroad and It choi.M be the -cognl/.ed reward heru. That is litile one .h and they vho give b s are, to ny udutl, ciiaUi.ue.jt."- i—cay.; (":r' 'cle. | ADVERTIHF l'»’ ” ' : ' Do YOU TAKta. 'I HE IH DVI.n

The Finest Train to Colorado— California or Pacific North-

west points is the

St. Louis—Colorado

Limited

Leaving St. Louis daily at 2.15 p. in.

over the lines of the

Wabash and Union Pacific

•'The Safe Road"

Ask about our personally conducted tours to Yellowstone National Dark. For rates and information call on or address R. G. Thompson, D. P. A. W. H. Connor, (>■ A.

'Dustless, f>er'feet truck—electric block signals— dining car meals and service "‘Best in the U or Id."

Wabash K. K. Co. 412 Traction Terminal Bldg. Indianapolis, Indiana

Union Pacific R. R. Co.

53 E. Fourth St. Cincinnati, O.

OH)