Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 16 November 1908 — Page 3

M 0VDA1 NOVEMBER 16, 1906.

GREENCASTLE HERALD

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monev to loan

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X In nnr Film from $5 to $300 ❖

ittto, furniture, ve- 4

1,101, anil all other good per- 4

■ party, leaving the

ar. In your possession, thus .% ,'iv't ■ you the use of both . ind money. Our charges ,,, lihernl for expense of loan. .j. v. ,;p nothing out l.i advance a ami you pay the loan before ,j. (j„, we charge Interest for the .J, t ji , you keep it. We have a , in whereby you can prep < ntire loan in small weekly X 1! • 'y or quarterly Instaln . ;,t This company is com- , i of hoine people, therefore w lo not make inquiries a ’li; your neighbors and ,j, r Is as out of the city com.j, P :s will do. All our dealings

trlitly confidential. Fol-

.j. is our liberal interest

4 charges.

.? 20.00 one month 10c f,0.00 one month 25c 100.00 one month 50c amounts in same

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|; f>. Southard Block. Oor- .> n Indiana and Washington st First private stairway * it h of Ricketts Jewelry

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CURIOSITIES OF DIET, How Nature Adapts Food to Man and Man to Food.

GREAT VALUE OF CEREALS.

New Business Deal

I’htme No. no for Rubber Tired f ° r all trains or cky calls, day • •'ht. Price 15 cents. Prompt positively gunrai.teed at all Give ua your call and we I ' ll do the rest. s for parlies and funercls ou |" h r » notice. u \I1RV OOLI.IIJS, • '•or to II. w. GUI. Gncncastlt •Yansfcr Pomnany.

Why People Can Eat Bread at Every Meal Without Getting Tired of It. 1 The Fruits of the Burning Tropics and the Fats of the Frozen Arctic. Modern science has shown that nature provides food for mankind with marvelous care and foresight. The human system requires a certain amount of proteld daily to replace wornout muscle and tissue. Fish and meat sup ply this in large quantities. In hot climates, however, these spoil so quick ly that their use is limited. Nature, as if to compensate for this, has given to certain tropical fruits a much larger quantity of proteld than northern fruits contain. Thus government analysis shows that ligs have five units or calories to the ounce, dates two and fivetenths and bananas one and five-tenths. Apples have five-tenths, peaches muetenths and pears seven-tenths. Probably the figs and dates tested had lost part of their moisture, and some allowance should be made for this. The Arab can, therefore, maintain his vigor on a diet chiefly plucked from trees. Henry M. Stanley and his white companions subsisted almost entirely on banana (lour for two years in the African jungle. Their freedom from disease was In part attributed to the wholesomeness of this diet. The dried banana contains 20 per cent of proteld, about double that of ordinary wheat flour. At the ope mg of the mango season in Jamal a many of the natives practically live on this fruit for two or three weeks. They fairly revel in it. An Englishman who was familiar with the science of diet could not understand how they could not only maintain their health ou this fare, but actually grow sleek and fat. He knew that an effort to live on the fruits of bis native country would result in weakness, sickness and eventual death. Chemical analysis showed, however, that the mango contained enough proteid to supply (lie bodily needs. If nature has been thus kind In adapting food to man's uses, she has been equally so In adapting man to his food. Von may have wondered why people can eat bread at every meal without tiring of it. The dilllculty of eating one quail a day for thirty days is well known. Even such delicacies as asparagus and strawberries cause an aversion when served too frequently. Nature sends men a never failing appetite for cereals because they are altogether tin; most valuable of foods. They contain a considerable amount of proteld, their salts are of importance to the organism, they are readily digested when properly cooked, and they furnish a great deal of nourishment in small hulk. Thus wheat flour, cornmeal, oatmeal (dry) and rice (dry) have more (him 100 units to the ounce. Baked potatoes have 32.7 units, cabbage lias 0.2, spinach 7, asparagus 6.5, apples 1S.4, strawberries 11.4, spring chicken 19.5 and tenderloin of beef broiled 5.0. If a man tried lo get oven half of his nutrition from the coarse vegetables, which have a considerable indigestible residue, he would have to eat pounds of them daily, and his stomach would be sadly overburdened. Nature gives us the desire for a varied diet, and science shows (hat this is altogether the best for us. lu the arctic regions there Is little vegetation. Man must live almost wholly on animal foods. Fish ami meat would not suffice, because they contain only proteids. These would replace wornout muscle and tissue, but could not be burned in the body to generate heat and energy. Fats, however, consist of carbon and hydrogen, which are the chief components of the foods of vegetable origin and supply the fuel needed by the body. The polar animals have fat lu abundance, but residents of the temperate anil torrid I zones can eat It only In limited quantities. To them the mere thought of | chewing chunks of grease is uause- | ating. The children of the frozen north, however, are endowed not only with Jie ability to eat anti to digest large quantities of fat, but with a keen appetite for it. One who Is sensitive to sucli impressions must turn away j when lie sees the natives of southern i Alaska, the Thllnklts, swallowing seal i oil flavored by salmon berries with Hie gusto of a boy over Ice cream. The I Eskimos, farther north, will eat blubj her, slightly cooked in the flames, to j an indefinite number of pounds.—New York Tribune.

r F FD LUCAS | OH!AI.KH IN Rr^a] ^qtate. Insurance rj nH Coal I "• 21 H. ||„i. St,, Grccncastie, Ind. •’hone 2JWI.

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Her Object Attained. "Forgive me, my dear,” said the gossip humbly, “hut I thoughtlessly mentioned lo Mrs. Brown the things that | you told me in strict confidence.” "There Is nothing to forgive,” replied ' the wise woman pleasantly. “It was j for that very purpose that I told them to you in strict conllileuce.”—Chicago Post. — Getting Even. “You are half an hour late this morning.” said a schoolmaster to a I scholar. “A’cs. sir,” replied Hie boy, who had j been "kept In” Hie day before. "It was late yesterday when 1 got home!" —London Tit-Bits.

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We give altogether too little Importance to what we say to others and too much 4o what they say to us. -Eliot.

A MENTAL FRENZY. Some of the Things a Man Saw In Delirium Tremens. Charles Roman gives a record of Ids own experiences as a victim of delirium tremens. It is a remarkable psychological document, comparing favorably in interest and ns a piece of writing with De (Juiucey’s “Confessions of an Opium Eater." Following is a brief exlraet which gives some suggestions of Hie things Hie patient saw: "I p lo this point the zoological visitations had been intermittent. Pur ing Hie next few days, however, 1 saw all that 1 could stand. 1 saw such prehistoric creatures us exist nowhere except in museums. I saw rats as they man-lied past my door or flow through my windows or floated in my tub. Elephants strode in and out with lumbering steps and swaying trunks. At times they seated themselves and taunted me with their thunderous bellows or their ear splitting screeches. They Uuunted their snouts high in the nir and guffawed. Monkeys jumped from limb to limb in the trees outside my room. Snakes of all colors, of all descriptions, reptiles with fantastic figures upon their backs and with eyes of sapphire or ruby or of milk white marble, wriggled upon the floor or crept in or out of heretofore unseen crevices in the walls and dropped into the water in my tub. They swam around and around me, squirming under me, wilh their tongues darting in and out with ferocious activity. Giraffes craned their necks around Hie doorways or through the windows, chickens roosted over my head and cackled, digs and wolves ran around the room burking and snapping, pigeons ih \v from one corner to another and cooed. I.lons I heard roaring, and tigers I saw while they opened their mouths, like huge cats, in silent, angry disappt val, licking their whiskers and we.Hug their paws softly unil daintily this ami far more. "1 saw crocodiles in droves. Fat, scaly, glistening beasts they were, with frothy, foaming jaws, long, sweeping i ails, crouching upon or creeping along the foot of my bathtub or my bed and grinding their yellow teeth in gluttonous auger as they contemplated me, their prey. 1 saw Hie reeking, slippery body of a crocodile slide into the water of my tub. Then as 1 shrank in breathless horror to escape 1 saw his greedy, filmy eyes arise to the surface, with his cold, foul chin flush wilh mine. Ills icy beak touch cd my cheek. The hot vapor from ids lungs scared my flesh. I turned as cold as ice and trembled like a leaf in a storm.”—American Magazine.

GENESIS OF FEAR. Gray Cells of Our Brains Stamped With Ancient Terrors. The average man would sooner face a 200 pound human antagonist than a fifty pound dog which he could choke to deatli iu three minutes. 1 have seen a charging ram scatter half a dozen men, any one of whom could have mastered the brute iu a moment, and uot oue of whom was in ordinary matters a coward. There are instances on record of men who with their bare hands have held and baffled an ugly bull, but it was only the pressure of grim necessity that taught them theii powers. Put a man against an animal and the man looks around for weapons or support, whether he needs them or uot. There was a time when he did. For man, today the most lordly of animals, was once well nigh the most humble of them all. He has come up out of a state lu which fear was the normal condition of existence—fear o( violence, of the dark that gave opportunity for violence, fear of falling, of animals, of being alone. And into Hie plastic gray cells of our brains are stamped these ancient terrors, a living record of the upward climb of muu. The baby shows this record most clearly, lu him the prints of heredity are uot yet overlaid by Hie tracks of use and custom, and therefore iu him we may most easily read our past history. lie is our ancestor as truly as he is our n ini at nation, and his every shrinking g dure and frightened cry are chronicles of the younger world, tales of the age of fear. They tell of the days when man was not the master of the earth nor even a highly considered citizen of the same, but a runaway subject of the meat eating monarehs, whose scepter was tootli and claw, a humble plebeian in the presence of the horned and hooted aristocrats of woods and fields. They speak of Hie nights when our hairy sires crouched iu tho forks of trees and whimpered softly at the dark whimpered because the dark held so many enemies, whimpered softly lest those enemies should hear. —Eippincott's.

Bright Prospects. "My dear,” said the banker to his only daughter, ‘'I have noticed a young man attired in a dress suit in the drawing room two or three evenings each week of late. What is his occupation V” “He is at present unemployed, fa ther,” replied the fair girl, a dreamy, faraway look iu her big idue eyes, “but he Is thinking seriously of accepting a position of |if ( . companion to a young lady of means.”

An Everyday Suit. "That Ous is certainly a nifty dresser. He has a suit of clothes for every day in Ihe week.” "Why. he lias the same suit on every time I see him!” “Yep; that’s the one.”—Cleveland Leader.

The sweetest of all sounds js praise —Zeiiopbon.

[Copyright. 190S, by T. C. McClure.] It was a westbound train on the Union Pacific road iu the days when Cheyenne was its western terminus. Major Cicushaw, army paymaster, was playing cards with several men. A woman ou the train warned him by a look that they were sharpers. Her warning was unheeded—indeed, resented. When Hie olflcer was a thousand dollars ahead he looked back at the woman and smiled superciliously. She answered by shaking her head He was still holding his own when lie looked again. Siie was sleeping, or pretending to. Then of a sudden luck changed. The professional gambler does not always have to resort to trick ery. The fickle goddess is apt to smile on him as on Hie novice. There was a square deal of cards in which three of the four got good hands, and the lidling was lively. The major held four tens and kept boosting the pot until Ids winnings were at stake. Then lie ealliHl to find four queens out against him. One more hand cleaned Idm out to liis last dollar, and lie rose up to give place to some one else. He looked at the woman, and there was a smile of pity on her face. It angered him. He chipped will) government greenbacks. He won and lie lost. For two hours the major made three losses to one winning. Two of the others also lost. Luck favored only one innii Whenever during these two hours the officer looked tit the woman site was either napping or looking out of tile window She did not try to oatcli Ids eye again. She gave him no attention when he finally rose up and returned to Ids old seat. He hadn't $r> left in Ids pocket. He had used up over $5,000 of govcriiuient iiinncy He sat stiltl.\ in Ids scat, staring straight ahead of him. wondering how he should die. He was not Hit' man to liirn cur and mu away. All his friends combined could not raise that amount of money offhand. He lind lived under army regulations as an officer and a gentleman, and he would die that way. it was to lie suicide pure and simple, either before reaching Cheyenne or dlrectly afterward. The major didn’t shrink from Hie Idea. He was trying to plan Hie time and place. As lie was busy with these thoughts the woman rose up and passes! down the ear to the gang he hud played with. The three nieii were not playing at that moment. "Jim, how murh have you won?” asked Hie woman of the lucky man. “About $!».<iimi." “I’d like lo play a hand with yonjust till' I wo of us.” The three men looked at her in sur prise, and n number of passengers gathered a round. “1 mean It," Insisted the woman as she produced money and drafts. “We'll cut for deal and have a showdown. The biggest hand takes Hie stakes.” “That isn't regular. Besides, I’m playing iu great luck today and would be sure to bent you.” “Then you will lie welcome to my money Don't lie a Hunker.” “What arc the stakes to lie?” “Six thousand dollars." “Whew!” whistled three or four men in chorus, it was a big sum of money to be lost or won on a showdown. It staggered even the professionals. “If you will agree that we may discard and draw after the deal I’ll go you." said Jim after taking a moment to think and wondering if his luck would stand by him. “All right.” The woman sat down, the cards were cut, and Jim got the deal. With so many eyes watching him lie dared uot attempt any tricks. The woman said her fixe cards would do, and Ihe gambler held up two aces and drew three more cards. When he saw that he had drawn two more aces he felt sorry*for the woman. “We agreed ou a showdown, but 1 should like to bet ou this hand,” lie observed. “Well, let’s call the agreement off,” replied the woman. “What’s your bet?” “Only five hundred to begin with." "I’ll see it and raise you five hundred.” lu less than ten minutes there was $10,(XX) iu the pot. Jim had put up his last dollar and had to call. He laid down bis four aces with a bland smile. “A straight flush, queen high.” said the woman as she begun to gather up the money. The major hud neither heard nor seen. His face was turned toward the window, but he might as well have been blind for all he saw. He was thinking of the penalty. By and by a hand was laid on his shoulder and a package of money was laid on his knee, and the woman quietly said: “Jim Daily wants you to take lids back. He let you play just to win your money and show you that you were not in the game. Jim used to be a soldier, and he wouldn’t beat Uncle San.” “Do you mean it?" asked the major as he came to life again. “Of course 1 do, and if there Is anything over what you lost you may donate It to the hospital at Cheyenne.” “And—and they cheated me?” ‘‘Twenty different Hines. That's their business. You thought you could piny poker; but. you see, you don’t know shucks about the game. Lucky for you that Jim list'd to lie a soldier." “And let me go and thank him,” said the major as he rose up. “But lie’s gone forward to see a man, and here we are In Cheyenne. Remember Hie hospital if there is anything over, and good day to you." M. QUAD.

Notice of Petition to .Sell Real Estate In the Circuit Court of Putnam County, Indiana, November Term

1908.

John T. Edwards, Administrator, of estate of John Owens and Elihu Owens, deceased, vs. Jonathan Owens

et al.

To Stephen Owens, Nancy Wilson. Beniethie Wilson, Nancy Runyan, Hattie Randel, James W. Burrcss. Thomas J. Burress, John H. Burress! Flora Burress, Julia Thornbro, Pardy McKerns, John Hawthorn, Eliza Baxter, Jacob Burress, Lucy Hays Katie Otterman. 1. The unknown heirs at law, legatees and devisees of Stephen Owens, deceased; 2. The unknown heirs at law, legatees and devisees of Wilson Burress, deceased; 3. The unknown heirs at law, legatees and devisees of William Kentlle and —Kendle, his wife, both deceased ; 4. The unknown heirs at law, legatees and devisees of James Burress deceased; 5. The unknown heirs at law, legatees and devisees of Martha E. Bur- I rcss, deceased; C. The unknown heirs at law, legatees and devisees of Amanda Jackson, deceased; 7. The unknown heirs at law, legatees and devisees of Hanna McKerns, deceased; 8. The unknown heirs at law, legatees and devisees of Maggie Harris, deceased. You are severally hereby notified that the above named petitioner as Administrator of the estate aforesaid, lias filed in the Circuit Court of Putnam County, Indiana, a petition making you defendants thereto, and praying therein for an order and decree of said Court authorizing the sale of certain real estate belonging to the estate of said decedent, and in said petition described, to make assets for the payment of the debts and liabilities of paid estate; and that said petition, so filed and pending, is set for hearing in said Circuit Court at the Court House in Greoncastle. Indiana, on tho 9th judicial day of the November Term, 190X, of said Court, the same being the 25th day of November, 1908. Witness tho Clerk and seal of said Court, tills 22nd day of October,

1908.

JAMES L. HAMILTON. (Seal.) Clerk. J. H. James, Atty. 4tw Notice of Petition to Sell Heal Estate In the Circuit Court of Putnam County, Indiana, November Term,

1908.

Quinton Broadstreet, executor of estate of Polly Curtis, deceased, vs. John I). Curtis et al. To Aaron M. Curtis. You are hereby notified that the above named petitioner as executor of the estate of aforesaid, lias filed in the Circuit Court of Putnam County, Indiana, a petition making you defendant thereto, ami praying therein for an order and decree of said court authorizing the sale of certain real estate belonging to the estate of said decedent, and in said petition described, to make assets for the payment of tho debts and liabilities of said estate; and that said petition, so filed and pending, is set for hearing in said Circuit Court at the Court House in Greencastle, In-j diana, on the 7th judicial day of the | November Term. 1908, of said Court, the same being the 23d day of November, 1908. Witness, the Clerk and seal of said Court, tins 19th day of Octobi t 1908. JAMES L. HAMILTON, (Seal.) Clerk Allee & Hughes, Attys for. exr. 419

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GREENCASTLE, IND.

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Telephones 86 and 108

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PHOINK OO

Successors to T. E. Evans

TRAVEL OPPPORTUNITIES

Bij; Four Route

NOVEMBER, 1908.

All-Year Tourists RaUs newTvV. NORFOLK. VA OLD POINT COMFORT. VA . VIR I lilNIA tit ACH. VA On sal< bi-ginning Nov. 10th

INTKHUIU1AN TIME I..BLE. BAST BOUND

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tlON AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LA. -old Nov. 4th lo loth tni'luBtve.

'4 Tickets

Notice to Non-Residents. The State of Indiana, Putnai County, ss: In the Putnam Circuit Court, No vontber Term, 1908. Complaint No

7CG7.

Mary E. Daugherty et al vs. Fran

Davis et al.

Now come the plaintiffs, by S. A Hays their attorney, and file con; plaint herein for Partition of real e:

late, together with an affidavit that y;.} er T mlrc To California Muico. Aiuona said defendant, John Gillen, is a nor iT'illbl lUUIo New Mexico, Texat, Florida the resident of the State of Indiana. Dll Coast Cuba a-d t-orto Rico

Notice is therefore hereby give-’

said defendant that unless he be an 1 tyokanB, Y/aSh , 3ud RstUm. N *App?e appear on the 25th day of the next r ’ ....

Ilchnond Va., and Raturn. prIs"n* l ONf.REiS lT"kt Is-dll N..V, nth to 15th iome Seekers' Hares, io^HwIsY .OUTHWESr. MICHIliAN. MEXICO and bHIT'SH

J 0SSESS|0NS.

term of the Putnam Circuit Court the same being December 14, A. D 1908, at the Court House in the Cit of Greencastle, in said County an State, and answer or demur to sai I complaint, the same will bo heard and determined in his absence. Witness my name, and the seal o' said Court, affixed at the City

Show. Tioketa aolxi Dec lot, 2nd and 8rd

Notice of Ailniinistratlon.

Greencastle, this 21st day of October

A. D., 1908.

JAMES L. HAMILTON. (Seal.) Clerk 3tw F. S. Hamilton, Deputy S. A. Hays, Plffs.’s Atty.

Notice is hereby given that the itiLirsigned has been appointed by tho Judge of the Circuit Court ot Putnam County, State of Indiana, Administrator with the will annexed ° ! | >f the estate of Emily Johnston, late

Mind Your Business! If you don’t nobody will. It is youi business to keep out of all the trou hie you can and you can and will keep out of liver and bowel trouble if you take Dr. King’s New Life Pills. They keep biliousness, malaria and jaundice out of your system. 25c at the Owl drug store.

if Putnam County, Indiana, deceas-

ed.

Said estate is supposed to be solent. Dated this 9th day of October, 1908. It. BENTON JOHNSTON. Administrator. f. H. James, Atty.

Lv. G. C.

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Map of Greencastle. A new map of Greencastle showing interurban line and station, new Carnegie Library ami new Big Four line, printed on good paper at the Herald Office for ten cents.

RUPERT BARTLEY.

SPECIAL IN FLOWERS

$1.50 roses, $ LOO $1.00 roses 75 cents Carnations 50c doz Chrysanthemums 10c each

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.or Hale by Badger & Ore**.

Lor ihe Kidneys, Bladder and Rheumatism. It.ELI EVES K-ACHE

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