Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 July 1910 — Page 2
PAGE TURKU
GREENC/^TLE HERALL#
WEDXESDAV, JI LV i -
I»10.
iilii HERALD Founded muC PUBLISHED EVENING Except Sunday by the Star and Democrat PabliahinK Company at 17 and It* South Jackson Street, Ureencastle, Ind V. C. TILDEN - - - - C. J. AKNOLD —Editor*—
Terms of Subscrlptlou. One Year, in Advance 13 UU By Carrier in City, per week . o cents Single Copies 2 cents advertlulua Halva I |iou .%|i|illt'iillou WI9HELY ! CAR OEM) N HAT EstakUahed I Sub The olticlal county paper, sent to any 'ddress in the onlted States, (or fi.OU / year—Payable strictly in advance. Entered us second class mall mallei at tiie Ureencastle, Ind. Pos 1 '’" Telephone No. tin
The Crawfortlsvllle .loiirntil thinks that the fact that Koosevelt is supporting Lodge in Massachusetts and Beveridge in Indiana indicates that he has no favorites and that he will support both in-1 surgent and stand-pat Kepubll- j cans. The only result of such unbiased support will be to make the Roosevelt influence of none effect. Roosevelt has been admired because he had policies and opinions. Now to adopt the colorless position of an ordinary politician with no higher aims than the success of the party will be a shock to the tespect which tli' American people pay to this man The American people are looking for a man, not another politician. The country is filled with politicians. We give Roosevelt credit for having the sagacity to see that anofher politician of the yellow dog type is not now greatly desired. o The Martinsville Reporter is attempting to make war on Representative Moss because he asks for a mussel hatchery on the Wabash. The Reporter is unable to see any difference between asking for a mussel hatchery and a ship subsidy. The difference, of course, is that the ship subsidy simply takes the money from the pockets of the people and places it in the bauds and pockets of the ship combine, already very wealthy. The hatchery would stock the rivers of Indiana with wealth for the use of any of the people of the state who wished to take it. One is legislation for the few at the expense of the many, the other legislation for the many. The hatchery creates wealth, the ship subsidy creates graft. Tfie hatchery will result in the production of things of beauty, the subsidy lit further blackening the record of American legislation.
Work 1!4 Hours a Hay. The busiest little things ever made are Dr. King's New Life Pills. Every pill is a sugar-coat-ed globule of health, that changes weakness into strength, languor Into energy, brain-fog into mental power, curing Constipation, Headache, Chills, Dyspepsia, Malaria. 25 c at the Owl Drug store and the Red Cross Drug store.
Dust Laden Records. Searching for Important old manuscripts at the British public record of flee, whether by Shakespearean students <it lit hers, is disagreeable work. Nine-tenths of the manuscripts are covered with the dust of ages, and an hour uuioiig them makes the searcher us black as u sweep Some of the documents are so fragile that they can scarcely he ton li.d without their falling to pie. us, Mb h as iliose rescued from the house of lords (Ire In 18d4. which Weii. so hopelessly saturated with water ttiat bundles of them had to he 8i|iieezed dry In powerful presses. Ii lias been estimated that It. would lake Hft.v housemaids Ofty years to spring clean the contents of the record office
A Frightful Wreck, of train, automobile or buggy may cause cuts, bruises, abrasions, sprains or wounds that demand Bucklen's Arnica Salve— earth’s greatest healer, tjuick relief and prompt cure results. For burns boils, sores of all kinds eczema, chapped hands and lips, sore eyes, or corns, Us supreme. Surest pile cure. 25c at the Owl Drug store and the Red Cross Drug store.
Moslem Wives. Cuder the Moslem laws the provision for securing to the wife the free and uncontrolled possession of her property Is minutely stipulated in the marriage contract. A suitable sum Is also ar tanged fot her luniuieuance in accord auce with her linshand's rank
CASTOR IA For Infante and Children.
rhe Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears tio Iftgaature oi
Redeeming Mutilated Money. The United States government will pay for a mutilated hill provided that three-fifths of it are recovered The method of determing just what part of the note remains Is rather interesting Each mutilated hill is carefully pasted on a hacking of paper the size of the complete bill. The expert has a piece of glass the exact size of the bill This glass is divided into forty squares. When placed over the bill, if the expert can find that the remnants of the bill fill twenty-four of the squares, or three-fifths of them, the bill will be redeemed. Not long ago a Missouri farmer was leaning over to feed his pigs when ho dropped his purse into the pen. When he discovered his loss an hour later he searched the pen and found the purer 1 , but nothing of its contents. The pigs were slaughtered that day and the temains of the money taken to Washington Three hundred dollars were returned to the farmer. Burned money is the hardest for the government exirerts to work on. wi.h the possible exception of money which has been gnawed by mice. The department at Washington once received a cigar box full of money which had been sent from Philadelphia with the n *cessary affidavit showing that it hail been inside a poorly constructed safe ai.it had been bunted to the condition In which it was forwarded. Evidently wit It the idea that the original package ought not to be broken, the sender enclosed the charred pieces with some silver coins which had also been in the badly burned safe. In its passage through the mails the heavy silver was shaken through the charred bills till there was hardly a piece leit the size of the head of a pin. Mrs. Brown, who Is at the head of the experts who handle the mutilated money, called two of tier liest helpers and the three, by the aid ot magnifying glassee, soon brought out fi.iir fifty dollar bills, and wotliin an j hour recommended that they Ihj re- \ deemed by the Treasury. Only infinite care anti patience can bring any result with the mice chewed bills. Each of the pieces is laid out on a hard, smooth surface, and with the assistance of magnifying glasses they can be placed in their proper position in relation to one another The experts have a copy of every bill which has I teen issued by the government. The.-- are used as models as soon as enough of the bill has been laid out to establish i s issue The experts say that tiie best bills were printed by the govi rnment during the civil war period The grade of paper was superior to it , other use I and the engraving has never been excelled.
Who Shot I The Arrow?
It Ottered d Moor Hoy an hducation Anonymously
Ut V.tPV 4 HOW IKS
Copyright
1*10.
0y American Press •elation
s* >:• •> e* <• •> *;- iJiimpliie.v dillcr w is lying on the gross one .liitv itteruoon in the center of tile square nhoiit which clustered the village ol Atherton Humphrey was a typical case of a hoy horn to the plow who yearned for something better, at least more intellectual. He wished to go to college and study a profession. He was ready to work IBs way while studying, hut Just as tie was ahnut to matriculate bis fatlier died. the farni was soltl out midet a mortgage, and the hoy’s mother end sister were thrown upon him for support To hear this burden and his own as a student appeared to him a matter of sheer InipussiliiIity. He inusl fore m his projects, accept a situation offered him in a country store anil go to win It He w is ahum to arise and walk to n corner of the square where the store in question was located to iiimotmce th it he would begin his duties tile next morning when lie heard a whizzing sound and saw a short distance from him an arrow siaiiding with Its poi it tliihcddcd in the ground in the featll ered end hung a till of paper, whic.i. now that tiie arrow was al rest, floated Idly in the wind Humphrey arose, wen I In i lie arrow broke tin* string iliat held tin* paper and found the lei lowing words written in pencil: tin to college Vour mother and Bister w ill lie provnieii tor Humphrey swept with Ills eye t!.e square and the (muses that lined it The former was empty; the latter showed no sign of the person who Imil shot the arrow They were mostly dwellings, and Humphrey knew ueariv all of (lie people who lived In thei.i He began at nin c to eon over those among whom the mysterious arrln i might lie found There was Pelt r Owens, a friend of ids father, w ho was well to do. Inn Mr. Owens was not n man to hide a charity under a httshe: There was Harvey Dixon, his mother - cousin, lint Dixon had all he could d * to prov ide foi his ow n filiuily i’hei was his lutiiu.ile friend. Lob Cluit w ho had been left a leg i y l*v In grandniuiIni Hiitnphmv knew tli.B
Beginnings of Rich Men. Cornelius Vanderbilt terried itis own boat. John Jacob As.or sold apples in thi streets. Jay Could was a hook agent. John I) Rockefeller worked in a machine shop A T Stewart was a school teacher John Wanamaker began life at $1.2. a week. Autliew Carnegie begun life’at $2.5s a week. Benjamin Franklin was a printer. Elihu Burnt was a blacksmith. Abraham Lincoln was a rail-split-ter. James J. Hill began as a roustabout. William A. Clark as a young man was a miner. Henry Villard was a reporter. Thomas Edison began as a telegraph operator. Thomas F Ryan was clerk in a drygoods store. William Lloyd Garrison was a printer's devil. Daniel Drew began as a cattle-trad-er.
Bull w lien lie was yiillligel had been fund >>t afeh. I *. Besides itch’s sislci Luchin had shewn by hci in t Ions tbs I site admired I in uplirey. Had md Lti clmt sniiiciInii" in dn with Hu* nniHei Humphrey Hiniielit nil the rest id the day iiImiiii tin* propnsisl heiiefiietluu llial in Hie evening weld III see Ifiee Wyman, a gin in whose judgment In* had great ennHdeiice. intending in ask her In tind mil Inr idin who bad sb'n Hie arrnw Ifuse did not live mi in * square and. having no menus, could tint possibly have had anything to do with tin* message lit* told her of the circumstance and Hint he could not nc eept the favor without knowing tin* donor and agreeing to repay in time the amount expended upon him. Would she help him'' Rose always took time to consider before reaching tier decisions. Finally site said: “If the person who shot the arrow wished to la* known lie or she would not have taken that means of communicating. To endeavor to discover tiie donor would lie ungrateful In you My advice to you is to accept the gift as it Is offered ’’
Henry H Rogers was a grocer's de livery hoy.
Oldest Artificial Leg. What is said by the “Brit sh Medical Journal'' to be the oldest artitieial 'ey in extr" net* Is now In the museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, it was found in a tomb at Capua, and is described in the catalogue as follows: “ Roman artificial leg; die artificial limb accurately reprcseiiis the form of the leg: it is made ot pieces of plain bronze, fgastened by bronze nails to a wooden core. Two iron liars, having holes at their free ends, are attached to the upp r extremity of the bronze; a quadrilateral piece of iron, found near the position of the foot, is thought to have given strength to it. There is no trace of the foot and the wooden core had nearly crumbled away. That skeleton had its waist surrounded by a belt of sheet bronze edged with small hivets, probably used to fasten a leather lining. Three painted vases (red figures‘on a black ground) lay at the feet of the skeleton. The vases belong to a rather advanced period in tiie decline of art (about three hundred yeais B. C.).”—Philadelphia Reeord. The Cause of Tobacco Specks. Many people seem to have an idea that the yellow specks on the outside ot cigars indicate that the cigars are of unusual quality, hut a tobacco grower from Cuba states that the specks have nothing whatever to do with trie quality of the tobacco and gives the following reason for their appearance. In that tropical country the tobacco is grown in mile long rows under the hot, blinding sun. Sudden showers come up which last only a few minutes, followed by the sun. which is quite as hot ami blinding as before. The planls are dotted here and there with Hie Immens raindrops peculiar to Culm and In the sunlight these drape l»e, (une burning gla.sses, concentrating the sun's heat just as do real lenses and burning the little yellow specks uu the leaves of the tobacco.
“You ve got a lot of horse sense it) that tiead of yours, liose." was the reply. “I'll lake your advice.” Humphrey nTt her, wondering bow a girl no older than himself could have so much foresight Belying upon her judgment, he acted on her advice, went to eollege that autumn, rang tin* college bell for his tuition, did all sorts ot odd Jobs and in his third and fourth year tntlghl school. Besides litis, he read the first hooks used by students ot law The promise of his unknown friend to provide for Ills mother and sister was kept, hut Hie amounts provided were small and at times irregularly paid. Humphrey, remembering Rose's words that It would be ungrateful for him to endeavor to discover who was the donor told his mother not to look into any checks sin* might receive and If any came that revealed the secret uot to tell biin The remittances were all made by check, signed by the cash ler of the Atherton bank. But, obeying her son's instructions. Mrs Miller nev er Inquired at the hank from whom the money came, though It was tint prohn hie if she had done so she would have received any satisfaction. Rut the one elew Humphrey pos sessed as to Hie identity of the un known donor-the fact that Boh Clark had been fond of archery when a boy —took possession of the student’s mind and kept its place there all through his college course. Attached to the clew was a feeling which kept him In a stnte of constant perplexity. What if Lucina Clark had persuaded her father to advance the means sent Ills mother? That l.iiclna had shown a predisposition fot him was evident. At the end of ills studies it was to be expected that the secret would come out. If Ltl clmt had been Instnimentnl In the inniter it would lie Incumbent upon him to bestow ii|Hin Iter any return sin* mlgtii desire Suppose she should wish the j offer of himself! Lucina was an attractive girl, nr.d [ such a result did not appear especial j ly distasteful to him Indeed, the as ! Hociatlon of her with this (to hlm>
great benefaction was gradually draw- i lug him toward her during the whole j or his college course. Each year lie was growing oldei and al the time of j Ins grmltmtioil hud nttained the season j when one hegius to think of bis domestic future His thoughts during this period were all of l.uclua Clark. While lit college Humphrey took one or two scholarships which brought him monetary assistance, but beyond this tie had too much on bis hands to study for prizes or honors In his class At the time of bis graduation nearly all Ills friends at Atherton, including Lucina Clark, went over to attend the exercises at the college. Rose Wyman had become the principal of a school for small children, and the exercises of tier own pupils prevented her from seeing her friend graduate. Humphrey had studied enough law while in college to enable him to gel a situation In an office that would pay him a meager salary and give him such n legal education as may be obtained front office practice. Therefore he did not attend a law school. Ho preferred to stop Hit* payments of bis unknown friend lie therefore directed bis tnoih er to return the first payment made after he hegyu his duties and ask the cashier ot the hunk from which it came if he might not now know to whom be had lieen Indebted. The cashier after taking time for consultation with bis prim ipal returned and answered that whenevei In* felt abundantly able to repay the aiuotiut the donor’s mime would he given him Until then there could la* iioitiiiig gained liv furnishing Hie desired information Humphrey was iriucli disappointed Ho thoimbt of charging Boh Clark witli being a party to Hie matter ot his benefactions; but. thinking that if Ids sister were Involved without his knowledge it might raise a delicate complication, tic desisted Since Hu* only clew he bad was in connection will) tin* Clark family there was no ono else for him to consider, in his perplexity In* remembered that lie bad been guided by Bose Wyman's judg ment ilius far and ii would perhaps be bettor to take counsel will) her lie fore going any further. Rose confirmed ids idea that if Lu cina Clark had hail auythiug to do witli (in* matter, should lie speak to Bob. complications might arise, in deed. Bose was ot Hie opinion that it any woman hud been the donor the sit uutioti might become very embarrass ing She advised Humphrey not to let tin* benefaction influence him in tiie matter of love. Ii lie lows! Lucina In* should tell tier so. shutting Ids eyes to the fact that sin* might have secured fot Idin tin* assistance which bad euu bit* I him to oliialn a college education it he itul not love her for herself with out lids t ii.i pot bet teal i favor lie should Dot propose lo bd i .i account of it. Humphrey left bis trieud. having gained a new item ot knowledge, tie had spent four years tit college and come home to learn Hint a girl with a common si liuol education had more sense tban be bail lie felt like saying witli the poet. "Knowledge comes, bin wisdom lingers “ lie made up his mind not to act in tin mallei without Rose's sanction But he seriously considered offering himself to Lucina Clark. He believed that there were nine chances in ten that sin* was at least indirectly con cerned In Hie mutter, and If she were the whole would make a very pretty romance. But. not being sure of his love for her, lie concluded to wait. It struck him. moreover, that he would not like to confess to Hie practical Rose that lie was influenced by this supposed "pretty romance.” He had conn* to dread Bose's uiiromnutie way of looking at tilings. He thought that if stie bad only bad a little of the ideal In her nature be might have cousid ered her a sweetheart Instead of a friend But Humphrey could uot make up his mind that he loved Lucina Clark exclusive of the gratitude be felt for her supposed favor. One day he went to Rose and told her this. He also told her that he bud borne the un certainty attached to the secret long enough and it was time lie was re lieved of it He also desired to comtiienci* to make small payments return lug the amount he bad received. To do this In* must have the name of the donor and In* bad been told that it would at such time be proper for him to make Inquiries to that eud. Bose considered aw Idle replying, then advised him tlmi if such was bis intention lie might with propriety ask the cashier if ho would reveal (he se cret. Humphrey was so delighted that be was about to go to the bank at once when Rose stopped him. “You have plenty of time.” she said. ”1 make it the rule of my life to sleep over important decisions whenever ii is possible Go tomorrow." "Just like you, Bose,” lie exclaimed"no in pulse, no romance! But you make up the deficiency in mighty good sense ” Humphrey went to the bank next morning and asked for the name oi his benefactor. He expected that the cashier would ask for time in which to get tiie consent of his principal. In this Humphrey was mistaken. He had already been authorized. “Rosalie Wyman,” was the reply. Humphrey gaped at the mau for a while and then without a word rushed out of the bank and did not stop Yill he found Bose. •‘Bose ” In* said, "1 would like to torture you and then burn you at tiie stake How did you do it?” ‘‘Worked and saved." "Wed. all I have to say to you is ttinl it you have any use for a natural born fool there's one at your disposal." "Think over it: there’s plenty oi time " “Not one second " "Well. then, there's been a long wait for me. I'm glad to tiave It over.”
LUCINDA’S EXPERIENCE.
si—.im^—tm .■—nil—ici ■ —.im^—le > ‘'Isn’t It funny.” said Lucinda, "how fo.ks get caught onto each other in the street? Why, 1 suppose four hundred such things must happen every day, and they might happen to anybody in the most unexpected way. "Why, only this morning 1 sawtwo young women walking along together, 'liking and chattering and very mu-h engaged over what they were talking about and never giving a thought to anything happening and then the first thing you know one of them was brought up, as my brother Claude would say, all standing. ‘‘This girl had on a shoulder cape that was trimmed all around Its edge with half circle loops of silk cord, and as the two girls walked along talking, the wind got under this cape and blew it out and one of those loops somehow caught on a button of the coat of a man w ho was passing them coming from the opposite direction. ' Really it didn’t seem that there was one chance in a million that it would happen so; hut that's what did happen, 'Hid it stopped the girl right aw ay, or she. stopped the minute she began to feel the tug Of course it stopped the man too, and then he and she went to work to get the loop off the button. “You might think that this would be a simple, easy thing to do, but it wasn’t. Astonishing how tiling'', can get twis'ed up sometimes; and it seemed as if that silk loop must have got twisted around that button at least fourteen times. "And now the girl that had got caught and the man stood there and tried to untwist it. The other girl when she saw what had happened walked on a few steps ami waitt 1, and I thought that was a wise till g for her to do, because if she had waited she could not have done a;:> good, and standing there by h r friend she would have made three of them halted there together and so have helped to attract a crowd. "So the girl and the man stood there and struggled with the loop and the button. First she tried apj failed—I guess sbe was a littlo nervous over it, as I should think anybody would have been—and then they both worked over it at the same time, hut that didn’t do; and then she let go and the man took hold, and he looked to see first just how the loop was caught around, and then he untwisted it in a jiffy and set himself and the gill free. Then he llftei his hat and went on his way and the girl hurried on and rejoint* i tier waiting companion. "tjiiite an experience, that, wasn’t it? But such things are happening all the time; 1 saw another just like it, only different, Just yesterday afterloon. "There was a man and his wife walkin along together in something of a hurry, the man carrying a suit case— 1 guess they were going to catch a train-—and coming from the other direction along the same sidewalk was a little girl about ten or twelve years old with her hair in a braid hanging down her back. And how in the world this could have happened I don't know, but as this man and this little girl were passing she swished her braid around—she just happened to, you know—and it caught on a button of his coat and stopped him. "His wife hadn’t seen this, didn’t know anything about it, and she kept right along, but she missed him in a minute, and when she looked around after him there he was standing back there on the sidewalk with that little girl beside him. He had set his suit case down on the walk, and now he was bending over and apparently very much interested in something, and when she had got back to where he was she saw that what he was trying to do was to get that little girl’s braid clear of one of the buttons of his coat. "He got it clear finally, and then the little girl shook her braid and looked up et him and laughed, and he looked down on her and smiled, and then he picked up his suit case and hurried on. “Now, really, wasn’t It curious that the little girl’s braid should get caught so, when you’d had hard work to fasten it around that button so that It would stay If you had tried to? But don’t people get caught In all sorts of odd ways? Catch their umbrellas In people’s hats and clothes? Don’t women get their veils taught on other women’s hats and hat pins? Don't people get • aught to each other in all sorts of ways? "I tell you, girls, you never can tell what's going to happen."—New York Sun.
Preserving the Proportions. A little Scotch boy’s grandmother was packing ids lunch for him 'o take to school one morning Looking up Into the old lady’s face, Hie boy asked; "Grandmother, does yer specs magnify?” “A little, my child,” she answered. "Aweel, then,” said the boy, "I wad Just like It If ye wad tak' them off when ye’re packin’ my loonch
Tbe Kind You Have A' T»oug-1it, and which Lag been in use lor over P .-is, h e; borne the sigiuituro 0 f i I S. tv, Loen made under his per. y , Sl t» .-npervision since its iniunev. S'*-tcA&Z. Alh- w no one todeceive you in this. All Counterfeits, liiuia;q*« >od *• Just-as-good” are hut Kxperiincuts that irifE* u R tt ami endanger the health of Infants and Children-ILtperieuce against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Casforia is a. tinrailcsg guhstiluto for Castor Oil, l»nr<v p-. tc. Drops and Sanihing Sjrups, It is Pleasant. It ^ ,«utains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Mareotio ftiihstanee. >ts age .s its ;*t) laniee. Ft destroys Worm* and allays Fet» rLimess. It euros Diarrhoea, and \Vim» Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures ConsNpnllou and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tha Htoniaeh and How els, guing healthy and uatimH sleep, 'The Children's Panacea The Mother’s Friend.
CENUtKE CASTORIA ALWAY Bearn the Signature of
The Kind You Haye Always Bough! In Use For Over 30 Years.
th- CCN1AUM COMPaN / , FT MUPN# V •TX)tKT. N C WV VO R H Cl i V
INTERUKHAN TIME TABLE. IN EFFECT FEB. 21. East Bound West Bound
A. M
A. 1
fi: 05
1:45
7:11
6 45
8 1 1
7:45
9 28
Limited
8:46
10: tl
Limited
9:3*
1 1:11
10:45 11:45
P. M
P. M
12:28
— Limited
1238
t: 1/
1:45
2: l»
2:45
3:28
—Limited—
3:38
t: i i
4:45
5:1*
5:46
6: 2f 7- 1 1
—Limited—
638
Limited
8:27
9:08 11:02
1 '.mited
10:38
1.
1!
MONO.V TIME r\U|).
NORTH BOUND
I Chicago Mail .... fi Chicago Express . .
10 F. Lick and Laf. aero . 9 12 F. Lick and Laf aero . 5
SOUTH BOUND
Louisville Mail .... 2 Louisville Express . . . 2 Laf. and F. Lick acco . . 8 Laf. and F. Lick acm . All trains run dally.
N. B. Reed
I l
•i
New Business Dca
Phone No. fi ;
Trains arrive here from Terre Haul3 dally ui 8:11 p. m. and 12:35 1 i. m. and stay at Ureencastle atallon
»ve * night.
I
HARRY POLLIN'
Chamberlain’s Stomach and j Liver Tablets gently stimulate the | liver and bowels to expel poison-1 ous matter, cleanse the system, • cure constipation and sick headache. Sold by all dealers.
PULE Mumifactpret?
ICt
QHIUHESTER S l iLLS w THE IH AMH M» HI* Y V A -/ Ah* J our l»n i /A ’>. * iil-vhpH-lpr'M IMuiii •ii. T '"" '/cji
I'ilUin Kid an.I C..I.I V/ .~v I * xes. sealed with Blue » 'i'l'Lo Iio other Ituj t.f > •*■ y. *, I f fjy DrugglMt. A-.i. ft»«
it.
u> ot yuur
HI
D I ll.l H, luf lift
Vcais kuuwn as I'.est, Sal t
hOLb BY bllliiliiShLUK'.HNLKl
-•i|rirlMt. A i. L>r 4 II1
t: I I HAND I III »4
i. x K rII
We are prepared to serve our patrons with a good quality of mamtfaciurej Ice every day.
'AI L PHONE <157 GARDNER BROS
Dealer la
ifBaJ Estate, Innuranc* and Coal
,5 aa 23 pa 42 an 4 8 pH*
:'0 an IV pM 25 uu -i pa
Ageat
l or rubber tired cabs for aii tralua or city calls, day or .light i’rlca li • eids Prompt servin' poMtivali guaranteed at all Mines (live ** yoit • all and we will do the test. Cabs for parlies anil fauuri la •>■ hort notice.
•iccessor Li II. \V. GUI, Gici iic.o.'l* Transfer ik.inpuii)
t;RD LUCAS
No. 21 No nth Indiana Street, tireso* raslti, Ind. : ; : Phone WWJ.
Location oi Fin Alarm Boxes.
For Fire Dept, r ill Hu n.. Mo t i faOUATION. NO College Ave. and 1 Jh'* ty . . . . jjj Hanna and Indiana n Ipckson a ltd Daggy ... ... * i Madison aud Uner.y f,i
Walnut and Madison . . •Fire Dept. HeadqMarters Hanna and Crown Bloomington and HDdersor Seminary ard Arlington . . 'Vash'^i-tou and Durham •‘'isnlngtou and Ixinui'l
“einlnary an? LocuiM Howard an j Crow*
Main und Oi.io '.ollego Ave. and DtMotie
liicu.it ind Sycanior" . '-* -2—1, Fire Out.
•Box runa for all ten imime • -*u.
Mi.-J
6'. 321 32 O 52 5? 7? !! I 2 23 43
f.: fi’
Electric Bitters
Succeed w.ien everything e-w
• n nervous prostration and fi '•** raknesses they are the supn'ne .etnedy, as thousands have testihedFCP KIDNEY,LIVER AND
STOMACH TR JUBLE
't is the best medic .ne ever J
ox er a d.ug, ist’s coutiAr.
YOU " \KK THK HKRH.U*
** ■ . *rwr (»(»%[
L B. LYNCH Hours Furnisher and
Faueral Director
Japan Increases in Area. As a result of its war with Russia the area of Jaapan's territory was raised from 180,000 square miles to 283.000 square miles, and her population Increased by 10.000 000.
GRKENCASTKE, IND,
12 and 14 Not Hi Jackaon St‘
Tclephonri 140 and IW
> on cm 1
