Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 September 1910 — Page 3

H'E&DAV, SEPT. 27,

1910.

GREENCASTLE HERALD

PAGE THREE

This U the^B Stove Polish 1

ft

YOU Should Use

IT IS so much better than I other Stove poll.he. •*., * It’s to » olass all by

Black Silk Stove Polish Makes a brilliant, silky polish that does n >t rub off or dust off, and the shine lasts tour times as lonir as ordinary stove ^Used on sample stoves and sold by

hardware dealers.

All we ask Is a trial. Use It on your cook stove, your parlor stove or your uas range. If you don't find it the beat •10*0 polish you ever used, your dealer la

lorized

■s...o. l BMeiKs r p5S2f y -

Don't accept eubetitute.

Mailt- iu liquid or paate-one quality.

black silk stove polish works

Sterling. Illinois

Drying Iron Enamel on

istii

r- Black Hllk Air Dryli grata*, rtiglatft«tvva-plp— ProvotaruaunM.

Get a Can TODAY

IOWNSHIP TDUSIEE NOTICE

.Iiukhou Toivimbip. I will be at uiy bouie in Jacksou Township every Friday to tranaaci the biieineas of my offlce aa trustee BENJAMIN WALLS.

Floyd Township. My office day will be Wednesday gf each week at my residence. FUEL) TODD, Trustee.

Jefferson Township. I will be at my residence each Friday to transact tbe business of n y office. OLIVER STRINGER.

Marion Township. I will be at my residence in Marion Township on Friday of each week and Tuesday at Fillmore to transact the business of my office. OTTO B. RECTOR.

Madison Township 1 will be at my office at my resilience each Wednesday and Saturday to transact the buslties of Trustee of Madison Township. W. STROUBE.

Mill Orees Township. I will b« at my home in Mill Creek Township on Wednesday and Saturday of each week to transact the Business of my offlce. ERNEST KIVETT, Trustee

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Wanted a Handsome Picture. “Photographers,’ ^ys a ptctvers man "got some peculiar ruj uea ts. hut a friend of mine, in the business iu a Connecticut town, tells uie of the funniest ever. “If seems that he received a call from an especially pnprepossesing young man, evidently from the interior, who desired to obtain a photograph of some person possessing a resemblance to him but of better looks. “ ‘What do you mean?" demanded ml friend. “‘It's this way,' explained the s,ranger. I'm engaged to be married. The young woman, who lives in the west. Is going home tomorrow She knows I'm all right and doesn’t mind my being so infernally ugTy, but U's different with her friends, she thinks So she wants to get a good looking picture to take home to show the girls."—Elgin Burroughs.

Stomach Feels Fine

Less By One. The first time a man speaks in public he probably suffers more agony in a shorter space of time than at anyf other part of his career Young Fraukington felt the truth of this verk keenly the other day when he found himself facing an audience of free and independent voters at an election. He had prepared a very fervid oration in support of his fath er’s candidacy, but for the first few moments he could do nothing but gasp. Then, in response to an encouraging cheer, he began to speak. “Mr.—-Mr. Chairman,.’’ he stammered. "when I—when 1 left home this evening only two people on this earth —my father and myself—knew whet I was going to say; but now—well, now. only father knows."—Tid Bits

Knew When to Stop. The shrewd lawyer knows when to stop questioning, and none is more shrewd than the one who, conducting a case of bribery, questioned a man the other day who is rated high in the business world. "Have you yourself ever refused a bribe?" he asked "No, but”— "That Is all,’’ said the lawyer. At a later time he was asked why he had dismissed the witness so soon “Because," he replied. "I knew by tihe 'but' that he was goiug to tell m. no one had ever attempted, to bribe hint."—New York Times.

Two MJ-o-ua Tablets Drive Away Get a BO cent box of MI-O-NA tablets at the O w l Drug Store today and learn for yourself ho\ V easy it Is to put your out of order stomach in perfect condition. Mi-O-NA stomach tablets give instant relief—and do more They build up the stomach so quickly that in a fe w days belching, sourness, heartburn, heaviness, biltusuess, headache and dizziness will disappear. MI-O-NA stomach tablets are guar anteed by the Owl Drug Store to cure indigestoln and all stomach ills or money back. “I have had trouble \yith my stomach for two years. I tried everything I heard of. MI-O-NA stomach tablets did me more than $25 00 worth of good. They are the best in the w orld”—Dennis Stephen, Coudersport, Pa , Feb. 1 Fifty cents for a large box of MI-O-NA at O w l Drug Store, and druggists everywhere.

SUPERSTITIONS OF THE FRENCH

It Saved His I,eg. “All thought I’d lose my leg.” writes J. A. Swensen, of Watertown. Wis "Ten years of eczema, that 15 doctors could not cure, had at last laid me up. Then Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured It, sound and well." Infalliable for Skin Eruptions, Eczema, Salt Rheum, Bolls. Fever Sores, Burns, Scalds, Cuts aud Piles. 25c at Owl Drug Store.

Vacation Time’s Here

LET

THE DAILY HERALD FOLLOW YOU.

MONEY TO LOAN. On Our Easy raymrut Plan.

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tt THE HOME LOAN AND ** REAL ESTATE CO.

We loan on most any good ekattle security and allow .von to pay back In small

dribs.

We are In our offlce every

day in the week

See us for lowest rates and

easy payments.

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Her Dying Wish ..Donald Brain of "The Merry Widow,” is responsible for the libel on womankind. "A pale, wau woman iu her death bed said in a week voice to her husband : “Henry, if 1 die promise me one thing.'' " ‘Gladly nry poo: darling WThat is it 1 am to promise?' Promise me that you will marry Mary Simpson.' "The man started. ’’ ‘But he said. "I thought you hated her." •| do, Henry,' the dying woman whispered. ‘I want to get even with her.’ " Wise Boy. For four consecutive nights the hot*l man had watched his fair, timid guest fill her pitcher at the water cooler. Madame," he said on the fifth night, "ring the bell when you want water and the hoy will bring it to you." "But where is my bell?” asked the lady. “The bell is beside your bed," replied the proprietor. “That the bell!” she exclaimed. "Why th bov told me that was the fire alarm, and that I wasn’t to touch it on any account."—Success Magazine.

Now that vacation season Is uiron us and you expect to enjoy a week or so away from liouie don't overlook the fact that you can have The Daily Hprahl follow you anywhere inthe I'nitiil States, or abroad, if you like^Phoiie tt5 and the paper office—Phone Ofl ami the paper will prove a welcome visitor and we will Ih- pleased to place your name on our list for your vacation.

H Room 5 Southard Bldg II Cor Indiana dt Wash II

$$ ing'ton Sts.. Green- II II castle Ind. $$ $ $ Phone $ $ T II No. II

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LIST YOUR. PROPERTY for Sale or Kent, with Hays & Cooper Over Zeis’ Store. Telephone 57 ItiHiirauce—City aud Farms.

Breach of Etiquette. The two women stopped in front of a dentist's showcase on Tremontst “There, mamma,’' said the young er woman, pointing "I want a set just 1 ke that." ”H : it my child.’’ commanded her mother, “don't you know that it's vulgar to pick your teeth on the at eet."

^‘b It Evkr Oo uk To You That OSTEOPATHY I* nature’s way to rolieve pain, add b^lth, prolong life. Investigate. charge for examination. Every f'teidav aud Friday, 117 South Jackson Street, Greeucaatle. IHE SPAUNHURSi OSUOMHS.

Works In New York. "And what do you do when a pal gets pinched with a stolen watch on Ids person?" • | pose as a solid citizen protesting again the arrest." explained the. pickpocket. “Then, while the cop is busy arrestin’ me. me pal makes a getaway.”

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

laM'ation of Fire Aluriii Boxes

For Fire Dept., Call Rhone No. 4 1 LOCATION NO College Avenue and Liberty.... 21 Hlanna and Indiana ....••31 Jackson and Daggy ’ll Madison aud Liberty 51 Walnut and Madison Cl *Fire Dept. Headquarters...... 32 1 Hanna and Crown.. 32 Bloomington and Anderson..... 12 Locust and Sycamore..... .... .03 Seminary and Arlington 5^ Howard and Crown 23 Main and Ohio 4 3 College Ave. and DeMotte Alley.52 Seminary and Locust 212 Washington and Durham. .... ..02 Washington and Locust........ 72 •Box rung for all telephone vails

1—2—l.Flre Out.

Not a Ponular Way. “He has a queer way of celebrat ing a holiday " "What Is it?” ^ "Instead of blowing all of his mon en on foolishness he goes around pay ing his bills "

A Real One. Tommy; "Tell us a fairy tale" Guest . "Once a man who had a baby that didn’t cry and a dog that didn't bite went to live in a suburb without mosquitoes."—’Harper's Bazar.

Just Like a Woman. “Hhar woman never has a single Idea.” ‘‘What does she do when she comes to see you?” "Just talks r light along regardl^ss." Nobody ever argues to convince his opponent, hut solely for the sake of Judging how his theories sound when they are vibrating on the seutlineut atmosphere.

Don't Break Down. Severe strains on the vital organs, like strains on machinery, causes break-downs You rjhn't over-tax stomach, liver, kidneys bowels or nerves without serious danger to yourself. If you are weak or rundown, or under strain of any kind take Electric Bitters the matchless, tonic medicine. Mrs J. E. Van d« Saude, of Kirkland, 111., writs: “Thai I dldnot break down, while enduring a most severe strain, for thres months is due wholly to Electric Bitters.” Use them and enioy health and strength. Satisfaction positively guaranteed. 50c at Owl Drug

Store.

The "inessaKe stick” is a sort of flag of truce used by the natives of Western Australia, when travelling hexoud the boundaries of their own

tribe.

Importance Attached to Dreams— Man with a Horror of No. 7. Most Frenchwomen vttaih great Itnportauce to their dreams, and if after a diligent study of the "Clef des Souges' they are still In doubt as to the interpretation of their visions they go to u professional astrologer and gel an explanation. Dreams, however, which only involve everyday subjects are capable of east solution. in France if you dream of eggs or see a visi >n of dirty water, that meaus trouble; hut if you see a fire iu your sleep, you may be happy—that signifies good luck. To dream of blood means victory, and if you see ihe dead, that means that you will hear of the living. To dream of babins. is bad, and if you see cats in your Uroams be sure you have ait enemy. U on the other hand your slumlK-rs are disturbed by Die coming of a horse, you may turn over on the other aide with the pleasing assurance that you have a good friend. The French are convinced that the appearance of a comet presages massacres aud war, hut they believe on the other hand that it makes the wine better. The breaking of a mirror in this country, writes the Paris correspondent of the I oudou Globe, means seven yeais of bad luck, and he who turns a loaf of bread upside down, puts Ids rigtit boet on first or lights three cigarettes with the same match is laying up trouble for himself In passing 1 may remark that among the working classes ii is a common :utng to see u woman make the sign of tbe cross before cutting a new loaf. if one wishes to steer cleat of misfortune one should not try on mourning garments when one is not in mourning nor cut through a marriage cortege and when one gives a present of a knife or any sharp edged article or instrument one should he careful to exact the payment of a sou from I the recipient. Many people, especially among those who gamble, have a profound belief in lucky and unlucky numbers. I once knew an old Italian woman at Nice who was an inveterate player at the loto stakes which are decided by numbers. She had no system properly socalled. hut wherever site went she kept her eyes open for numbers and whether it was on a tramway car or a steam-1 er, a sai k of coal or a matchbox she used to regard the numbers she collected in this haphazard way as good for her petits billets. Some people consider the number seveu as specially lucky, but M. Grisler, who was formerly maua u ,er of tin Ambigu Theatre, held it iu horror He would never undertake anything ot 'mporlance on the 7th of the month and always avoided cabs on which the number llgured. in his theatre the plays always arrived at the "century" more quickly than elsewhere, for there was never a seventh performance nor a seventeenth, nor uiy other which contained the fatal number. From six he jumped to eight, from sixteen to eighteen, and so on. M. Georges Courteline, the clever playwright, objects, like a good many others, to sit down to a meal at which the guests number thirteen, and when he turns up tlie eight of spades at bridge he Is very uncomfortable, for he feels certain that it portends bad luck oi

death.

He recently stated to a fiend that when M. Urisier was staging the ‘“Oaltes ile i'Esoadron” he made a terrible fuss when he discovered that the play was divided into seven tableaux. Yielding to his supplications, M. Courteline rearranged the manuscript and announced his play as consisting of a prologue and six tableaux, it met with an enormous success, and the manager of the Ambigu was always convinced that the removal of the fatal number seven from the combination had saved the play. As In England, so In France, the number thirteen Is most unpopular. No Frenchwoman would think of inviting her guests to dinner if the total number at table made thirteen, and all over France on Fridays the takings of the railway and omnibus companies and the sales at the large warehouses are always much Inferior to those of other days of the week. When the FTiday happens to fall on the thirteenth of the month there is no name for the perils one risks on that day. and people who consider themselves reasonable do not dare to leave their homes for fear of the inevitable catastrophe. A young lady of my acquaintance told me quite candidly that when she was at boarding school she never dated her tasks the thirteenth but always 12bis, which is both original and picturesque and is besides the method adopted by many hotel proprietors in order to avoid the "chambre treize” and by landlords who respect the superstitions of their tenants.

The Way of the Reformer.

Every new truth which aflects life must pass through a period in which it is hated before it attains the period in which it is loved. What people dread is change; what they wish is to be let alone. They will kill the reformer, if they can, and only those reformers who refuse to be killed, but j who for years together go on savagely, patiently, tenderly reiterating the same message, in the end have their I way. and are believed. Rev. Elwood Worcester’s “Tbe Emmanuel Move-

ment” in the Century.

IT IS DOWN HILL TO THE MONON When you get started you don’t stop until you buy one of those cheap Summer Tourist or one way Colonist Tickets. They are so cheap you cannot afford to stay home. Phone 59 and get particulars.

Why Pity the Farmer?

Mr. Mann of Geuda Springs loaded a large, fat hog into his automobile and took it to market in Arkansas City, where he got a good price for the porker. It took him a mighty short time to get the hug to town and get the cash for it. A few minutes' scrubbing fixed tbe auto so that it did not smell like a barnyard, and the hog probably enjoyed the ride. What’s the use holding meetings trying to improve conditions of farm life?- Witchlte (Kan.) F^ugle.

Jamaican Women Want Ballot. . The latest part of the world to bo i reported as making a commotion in | favor of giving women the ballot is ! the British West Indies. In Jamaica | the other day the legislature killed the bill enabling women to vote by j the slenderest of margins, instead I of being discouraged, the women of ! Jamaica declare their willingness to j tight a hundred years or longer for their rights. Jost Like Father’s. The other day I took my young nephew to the barber for the first time. I hated to see the soft little curls cut off. but his mother decided they must go. As the tiarber tied tintowel under his baby chin lie ren.ai ': j ed, "How do you want your hair cut young man?" Wif a little round hole \ in the top. like my fuver’s." Mustard a Mouth Soap. For chronic dark brown nauseous taste a pint of luke-wartn water and | a tenspoonful each of salt and ground mustard queen bee of household erne tics. Cleansing, toning and antlsep tic to coats uf the stomach Ground mustard is good for hand and mouth

soap.

He Doubted It. “Your tickets were complimentary, were they not?" "Well,” replied the man who had seen a painfully amateur entertainment. "I thought they were until I saw the show.” Tit-Bits.

Wc Have MONEY To Loan Pay back as your income permits, if you are worried by creditors who want their money immediately; or if it is the FALL NECESSITIES, that can be bougnt so much cheaper with cash, call on us and convince yourself at what little cost you can take the worry off your mmo. Loans on household goods, pianos, livestock, implements, etc. Brazil Loan Company NorthwestiCorner Vine and Washington Streets

BRlDOirS 1 UK I'KACTK’AL HATTKK ('lollies ( ieaneil and Pressed. Order called fur and delivered. HENRY BRIDGES Phone 519.

(iBO. COT I OP. UPHOLSTERING All kmd~ of eltair Re-Heating and Furniture Repairing. Cor. Jackson & t-ranklin St.

Mr. Horse --Say, you look hor rid with your hat on one side. Mrs. Horse—Well, I can t help It. I've lost my hat-pin.

AVOIDED THE OTHERS

Criticism. Of all the cants which are canted in this canting world though the cant of hypocrites may be the worst—the cant of criticism is most tormenting Laurence Bterne.

Don’t waste your money buying plasters when you can get a bottle of Chamberlain’e Liniment for twen-ty-five cents. A piece of flannel superior to any plaster for lame back, pains in the side and chest, and much cheaper. Sold by ail dealers

If You Can’t Find What You Want (in t i tlie only up—to—date Second Hand Store and tlnd Mud it. A full line of hardware. Sei- his ?lh Steel Range - Fully guarantee I and recommended. JOHN RILEY South Main Street NO.(721. ■MBBaMMPMMaamaBMaBM

She I vd seen twenty cold, drear} winters. He You like the South tbeu?

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, tbe matchless regulators, for keen brain and strong body. 25c at Owl Drug Store.

THE HERALD

Between 12 and 15 churches • day. or between 4,000 and 5,000 a year, are built in thlo country. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy Is today the best known medicine in use for the relief of bowel complaints. It cures griping, diarrhoea, dysentery, and should be taken at the first unnatural looseness of the bowels. It is equally valuable for children and adults. It always cures. Sold by all dealers.

ADVKKTIME IT IN THE HERALD

Here is further evidence that the Japanese will not become Americanized: A Japanese young lady, who was married iu New York the other day. gave her occupation as "staying at home."

Singers would please better if they sang fro i behind a screen. No one's mouth looks pretty in singing The mouth of a hurried man at a lunch counter is fully as ornamental as the mouth of a girl who is singing.-

He—But. do you think. Miss Madeline. that your father will accept me for a son-in-law?" She—I shouldn’t wonder iu the least —we rarely thiuk alike!

Drink It Because It ; s So Good r T v Ht'RE is nothing strange about taking the meat of A choicest Trcr ic-ripened bananas, roasting it, granulating it. and making from it a hot table beverage. Not Sc) unusual, when you come to think of it, as taking die bitter cofree berry -poisonous in its natural state- -roasting an grinding it and serving it as a hot drink. Or b ming a beverage from the dried and hand-rolled raves of India and Japan. We of Am have our cofree, tea, cocoa, chocolate, and no\ - BONA^O. .s .ere any reason to presume that BONANO - made from the most delicious fruit that grows - may not be "s, the lai hot drink, baler than those you have been accustomed to? U is, and we want you to know it. We wart >ou to enjoy its tempting aroma, its spicy, appetir mg flavor. We want you to see how it strengthens, nourishes and refreshes. Di ini. BONANO for its own delicious goodness. That’s enough reason. And you will feel better for diinsing it, too. Let the children have all the BONANO they want. There’s nothing in it that can ham t them much that will do them good. BONANO- pure and clean - handled in a sanitary way from the time the luscious, naturally ripened fruit is picked until you open the sealed package in your own home—is sold by your grocer. A 25-cent can of BONANO makes 75 cups of the jest hot drink you ever tasted. For sale bv ztis s GO.. Grocers

International Banana Food Co., Corn Exchange Bank Bid,.. Chicago, tit.