Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 September 1911 — Page 3

FB 1J)AY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1»ll.

GREHNCASTLE

PAGE THREE.

Monon Special Excursion Fares HOMESEEKERS Tu points in Michigan on sal.- 1st and 3rd Tuesday .-ach month. SUMMER TOURISTS Tu Norfolk, Va—New York and Boston on sat. June 1 to S.-nt 30, 101 i. lu points in Northwest—West Southwest including points in Onnuio ar.d Old Mexico on sale J un ■ I to Sept 3utli.

CONVENTION EXCURSION FARES For Further Harticulera cell on, J. D ELLIS, LOCAL AGENT.

A pleasant and easy way to Make Some MONEY! Ttiousands of people are doing tlris work profitably. For full particulars of very liberal casti commissions, extra casti prizes, free samples, etc., address Desk 90 SCRIBMER’S MAGAZINE 15S Elftb Ave. New York City A special offer open to those who write at once.

TOWNSHIP (RUSIEE NOTICES

Jackson Tonqshi|i. I will be at my home in Jackson Township every Friday to transact the business of my office as trustee. BENJAMIN WALLS. Floyd Township. •My office day will be Wednesday of each week at my residence. FRED TODD. Trustee.

Ever mindful ol your best interests The Spaiinluirst Osteopaths be;' to remit d you, kind friends, that 0SIE0PATHY is Natm 8 way to health—not a cure all, hut a boon to chronic suffers. No charge for examination. Phone 22G day or night. Lady Attendant. 301 S. Vine St. Greencastle.

Jefferson Township. I "ill be at my residence each Friday to transact the business ot my office. OLIVER STRINGER.

INDIANAPOLIS

Marion Township. 1 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 ft. RECTOR.

Madison Township. I will be at my office at my residence each Wednesday and Saturday to transact the business of Trustee of Madison Township. WILL STROUBE.

Mill Creek Township. 1 will be at my borne in Mill l reek Township on Wednesday and Saturday of each week to transact the business of my office. ERNEST KIVETT, Trustee.

75c Round Trip From Greencastle NEXT SUNDAY Liuiv<*s (i 6:52 and 9:08 a m

^NEWYORK ((tNTRA k lines

home visitors excursion

VIA

Bia FOUR ROUTR TO POINTS IN OHIO AND INDIANA

AND

LOUISVILLE, KY. Tuesday, September 12, 1911 P’HCINNATI and return $5.00 LOUISVILLE and return $5.00 JETTON and return $5 00 e?2L NCF,E, - D retuon $5.00 “^HOUSKY and return $5.50 COLUMBUS, O., and return $5.50 C0 l? i !5 0nd ‘ n « rates to intormediata P°"*ti. Tickets good going cn rogular Trains. Return Limit, 30 Days. For Particulars Consult Agents.

FREE BOOK For Every Living Thing on the farm Humphreys’ Veterinary Speeifks. 500 Page Book free, on the Treatment and Care of Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs. Uoga and Poultry, also Stable Chart to hang up, mailed free. LIST OF SPECIFICS. A. A. For FHVKR6. Milk Fever. Lung Waver. B. H. For SPRAIVv Lamenena, RheumalUm. C. C. For NOBEThroat. Kolxootlc. DLteioimr II. D. For W0BM8, Mola. Grub.. K. E. For COUGHS. Cold.. Influema. F. F. For COLIC. Bellyache. IllarrW. G. O. Prevent. MISCABBIAGE. II. II. For KIDNEY and Bladder dl.order*. I. I. For SKIN DISE ASES. Men*r. Kru.lloa. J. K. For IIA I) CONDITION. Indlae.iloo. At druggists or soit prepaid on raoeipl of price. 60 cts. each. HUMI-HKEYS’ homeo. medicink 00„ Cwm William and Aun SIreeW. Ke» York.

>ot ii Word of Scandal. marred the call of a neighbor on Mrs. W. P. Spanghn, of Manvllle, Wyno., who said: “she told me Dr. King’s New Life Pills had cured her of obstinate kidney trouble, and had made her feel like a new woman.” Easy, but sure remedy for stomach liver and kidney troubles Only 2&c at the Owl Drug store.

Oiarrhoea Is always more or less prevalent during September. Me pre-iMi-og f or Chamberlain's Colic, 1 llo *erft and Diarrhoea Remedy Is htoinpL and effectual. It can always depended upon and is pleasant to ^ke. Foy sale by all dealers.

A Beautiful Complexion ia«—i V t L.M AV the entire »y»tera. purifies the blood and Imparts the (flow of perfect health. At your druggist s, 25 cents. DeKalb Drug A Cheat. Co., DoKalb, lu.

HARRe LIFE, SECOND yEAR

HfiJUfiX HAD IHCEX home ten dayi now. And while these Urst davs ol her return had not been all that sht dreamed they would be, still she hue been very happy, Though Warret was not as tender and affectionate at she bad hoped, yet he was far tnort considerate of her than he used tc be. 1 he heat had been very trying, ami made him at times most Irritable, iiui she coiRU see he tried not to vent his displeasure on her. And- that had bee: one of the things that had hurt bet most. Whatever the cause of his anger or discomfort, he used always tc make her feel that It was In sown way her fault. 1 hat fearfully hot evening they luii) taken the car ride had been the nmst unfortunate one since her return Warren had been undeniably irritab.c and sullen then, tie had hardly spoken to her on the way home. And she had gone to bed with a heavy heart, fearing that he was relapsing into his old spells of Irritability. But he had made up for It the next morning by saying as he started off: “Take It easy today, Kitten Keep . a* cool as you can, aud tonight we II i go to a roof garden That’ll be bertei than a crowded trolley ride. How about having dinner up there?" "Oh, no, Warren, we mustn’t dine out so much. You know how expensive It is Let’s have dinner here lirst —Just something cold and then go to the roof afterward. ’ “All right, economical little person!" as he pulled at a loose strand of hair. “Oh, you’re mussing me all up!" "You look prettier when you're j mussed,’' brushing her ball loosely j over het forehead “There, now, go ' look at yourself In the glass you look like the girl on the magazine cover." When he had gone she did run in to the mirror, aim not only was the sllgthly alsheveh . hair becoming, but her cheeks were soldy flushed and her eyes shining from Warren’s unaccustomed compliment He so rarely mid anything of this kind to her that she treasured every word. And now she was more than ever glad that since her return she had faithfully k- | ( the promise she had made hereell to always wear afresh and dainty house gown every morning f , breakfast and in every way to mak herself ha attractive as she could. Her resolve that he should never again see her carelessly or unbecomingly dressed, she had so far rigidly kept. And she felt that the compliment he had paid her this morning was worth all the time and effort it had cost. fto instead of spending an unhappy day brooding over his harshness of the night before, Just because he tiad laid what he did this morning, everything was "right'' again. And she went about her work bumming happily. That evening they went to a roof garden, and again the next night. But each day grew hotter than the one before. Warren vowed repeatedly that they would never spend another summer In this apartment, but he admitted it would be better to wait until It was cooler before they again went apart-ment-seeking. The papers had dally announced that the morrow would bring relief. But the thermometer kept steadily upward until now, the eighth day o the heat wave, dawned hotter than any that had come before. The air was stifling Warren had laid all night on a couch in thefront room aud Helen bad her bed drawn close under the window, but neither had slept Winifred, too, on her little cot by the misery window, had been most fretful. "Helen," Warren demanded suddenly, his chin In the air as he struggled with bis collar, "how long will it take you to pack up for a week at I he sea shore?" "A week at the sea shore!" “Yes, this thing has reached the limit. We’re not going to stay here another night lu this heat. We'll all be sick if we do.” "But where can we go?" “To one of the hotels at some nearby beach—there's plenty of them " “Oh, but can we afford it? You know how expensive It will be." ‘Tt’ll be cheaper than having all Of ns sick. Now, c^a you he ready by 5 and we'll go out thie evening?" "But, Wairen""Well, we're going, that’s all there is about It. I don’t Intend to spend another night like this Now don't take a lot of things—Just enough for you and Winifred to get along on. I'll be home in time to pack my suit case. ’ "But, dear, have you any Idea what it will cost?" "Now Just leave that to me. All you've got to do is to get yourself and Winifred ready by 5 o’clock. Can you do It?" “Oh, ye«; of course, I can." "Good! I'll be here at fi sharp. It’ll take me about twenty minutes to get my things together and we’ll be out of here by half past.” A week at the seashore! In spite of Helen's anxiety as to the expense, she was filled with Joyful anticipation. Somehow the thought of going away with Warrer for a week seemed to renew the romance of their honeymoon To many women the possibility of romance In married life ends before the first year, but with Helen two years had not succeeded ii crushing if. She was ever trying to make of Warren the lover And although he was far from that, what he lacked In sentiment her own vivid Imagination made up She was always planning scenes of tenderness and love to be lived through with him, and countless disappointments had not as yet crushed out this tendency. And now In this trip to the seashore she saw many possibilities of hours In which they could be very happy. She remembered luring their engagement, one wonderful day's trip to the beach, anu how they bad sat out on the sand lu the m^ ’’light and listened to the rushing waves.

Yielding to a luddeu fancy she had made him give her a pencil and a bit of paper The back of an envelops was all he had aud she had torn It In two and told him they must each write the thing they wished for most In the world and then bury their wishes deep in the sand with a little prayer that they would come true. He had laughed and called her a sentimental little kitten, whom ht supposed he had to humor. Then she had found two clam shells in the sand and putting the tightly folded bits ol paper between them, had buried them deeply. On hers she had written:—“That he will love me always as much as he loves me now!” Although she had never asked him, she had often wondered what he had written. As they left she had tried to mark the place in her memory by an Imaginary line from a tree and a distant cottage. She smiled now at the fancy, fot long ago the waves hod washed the shells away. But now all day as she got theli things ready for this trip, she dreamt of that wonderful night. And she was filled with fluttering expectancy thai they were again going to the beach and perhaps to the very same place, they would once more sit out on the sand In the moonlight and listen b the rushing waves.

A Visit to the Wail Club

FOR THE REASON that he so rarely ai>l»ars at the Walling Blare, the w rilei h there were requested last evening to make room for l.ysai 1 -. John Appleton, and to pipe their wails in a minor air, letting him carry the tune “I see," he walled with his face tc the wall, "that the women are giving it to the men because they do not keep as husbands (he promises they made as lovers. The women expect this, though eve y mother’s daughter of them hae cry mother’s daughter of them lias too the blossoms are on the tree. "A nmn’s home is conducted on the Tav-a —vou-enter’ plan, and he Is expected to throw In with every pay ment a kiss, a compliment or an embrace, an,] some wives alio demand poetic effusions. "Naturally he loses all sentiment, but If his wife Is the helpmeet she promised to be she also loses that sort of foolishness. If he reniatnfoollsh enough to want to hold hei hand, when, If she keeps her antenuptial promisee, will he And It when it hasn’t a broom, a frying pan, or a baby's bottle In It? "If he wants to kiss her, and her mind is properly bent on her affairs, when will he find her mouth when It hasn't a safety pin In It? "The men are abused because they don't discuss public affairs with their wives, but there Isn’t a father of a new baby living v.’ho can say to his wife tonight, ‘War has been declared with Japan,’ who will not get a reply something like this; “ ‘Is that so? The new food we got for the baby seeme to agree with him.’ "Let him add: ’An earthquake has -ubmerged half the United States,’ and she will look mildly surprised and reply. ‘Do you know I believe the baby's eves are going to be blue after all.’ ‘Naturally he grows discouraged, and begins to read his paper without comment, and after the baby Is through teething she notlcee his Indifference, resents it, and writes papers of It to read before her club. "She Is disappointed In him, and the world gets out Its rocking chair, prepared to rock and wall with her. but let a man admit his disappointment and It jumps out of that rocking "hair in a hurry and grabs for a club." Then Lysander John concluded his wail, and fled, and none too soon, for when the husbands and fathers who had gathered to wall about their own women folks heard his ungallant attack on womanhood, It aroused the warhorse In them and every man grabbed for a club.

Stuffed Tomatoes Six largo, firm tomatlee, six sods ’nickers, two onions chopped, three teaspoons of butter, salt and pepper to taste. Wash each tomato, cut off the tops, and scoop out the seeds and pulp. Sprinkle the inside of the tomatoes with salt. Roll the cracker, mix the pulp, chopped onions, and seasonings with the cracker crumbs and refill the tomatoes. Place the butter on top and bake In a hot oven twelve or fifteen minutes.

CURRIED EGGS—This dish calls for half a dozen hard boiled eggs and one pint of white sauce for four people; In making the sauce cook In the butter one tablespoonful of finely chopped tart apple and a teaspoonful of curry powder. Add flour and milk as usual, and, when smooth ind thick, the sliced eggs. Stand yver hot water for fifteen minutes

Missionary—"And do you know nothing whatever of religion?" Cannibal—"Well, we got a taste of it When the last missionary was here."

When Your Finger-Tip Taps the Key—What Happens/ Your most delicately sensitive nerves direct the mos^ delicately responsive mech-

anism of the

L. C.. Smith & Bros. Typewriter

(BALL-BtAKING. LOSG-WEARING)

Key-lever, typehar, carriage (and shift, if you write capitals)—really all essential operating parts of the typewriter—leap into action and perform their functions with the perfect ease, smoothness and absolute precision of ball bearings, made and adjusted with scientific exactness. The nerves of this typewriter are sensitive to the nerves of your finger tips, and just as instantly responsive as the finger tips are to the brain. ^ TT~ This immediate, omooth, symp ithetic action, duplicated in no other writing machine, is easiest for the operator and most advantageous to the machine.

Both wear longer.

Send for descriptive literature Moo Xyir :: • ^ '••cTsSt L C. . mjth & Bros. Typewriter Company

Nc. 5 Market Street,

IN DIAL' A FC L IS, II DIAMA

Bullett Do Not Pierce. A Mltune.se barrister, Signor Amedo Buccl, has Invented a HeviliU fabric, somewhat resembling leather which no bullet or hard steel insiru ment Is able to pierce. Signor Hucc made a tour around a large square ii Home with a motor car. the tires ot which had been covered with ttu fabric. Nalls of large dimen ions were stuck In the ground, point up ward, and the car passed over then without damaging the rubber tires Later on the Inventor called on tht Minister of Marine, who personal!} experimented on a piece of the !' bri< which he unsuccessfully tried to i» r forate by firing several revolver shot: at it.

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When a woman spesks of her bilont secret suffer! i£ rt.o trust I you. Mill: " I t - stow.d thi.i marl, of Co- - deuce on Dr. 1!. V. 1 ’ . i‘ri‘, of LutT.iki, N. l.vvi'where there ere worn i v t bear wilne-,-, to t'iJ ,.ud rworkin;!, lurim!-,’ • Pierce’s Favon: Pu —which save* ti.o sn s frot i , t

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Painters' Colic The painters and decorators wcr. at work In the dining rcom, and th« good housewife was nnxio :sly smn teriug about, giving orders as to liov this and that should be done. One o the "artists” was telling about hiattack ot painters' colic when sin said: "I should think you would ge sick- Why don’t you keep you mouth closed while you work? “Huh, missis." replied the man. "Be like to know what kind o' p.iinte you'd make. You’d be deni will colic inside of a year; your mouth ii open all the while." The rest of thi job was finished in silence.—Net York Press. The most extensive cemetery in (hi world Is that of Rome, in which vo 6,00(1,000 human beings have biei buried >'o Need to Slop Work. When your doctor orders you to stop work, it staggers you. “I can’t” you say. You know you are wmak, run down aud failing in health, day by day, but you must work as long as you can stand. What you need Is Electric Bitters to give tone, vigor | and strength to your system, to prevent breakdown and build you up. | Don’t be weak, sickly or ailing when Electric Bitters will benefit you from the first dose. Thousands bless them for their glorious health and strength. Try them Every bottle 1s| guaranteed to satisfy. Only f>0c at I the Owl Drug store.

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What We Can Do For You Pay you compound interest on your money. Sell you a Putnam County tax exempt Bond. Act ns Guardian, Administrator, Trustee, Executor, Receiver, Commissioner or Agent. Loan you money on first mortgage Putnam County Real Estate with priviledge of partial payment at any interest period. Insure your buildings and live stock against tire; lightning aud windstorm. Sell you farm or City property. Make you a Surety Company Rond. THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY CAPITAL $25,000.00 SURPLUS $18,000.00

R L. O HAIR, President,

S A. HAYS, Vice-President

J. L. HANDEL, Secretary,

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PE2UISAP MOTEL, The Dinning Room at the.Belnap Hotel is open for regular meals. $3.00 for two meals a day, per week, $4.00 for three meals a day, per week. — 35 Cents Sunday Dinner Rest service andjfirst'classjmeals will he served.

Monon Route Excursion Fine*. Convention Excursion.

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Homeseekers’. Michigan points selling let and 3rd Tuesdays; return 8- day limit, j Southern— Southwestern. Middle Western points 1st and 3rd Tuesdays; return 25 days Slimmer Tourists. Summer Tourist* on sale dal.y to various summer points; return limit | Oct. 31. Norfolk, Va., Old Point Comfort. | New York and Boston on sale dally ! return 30 or 60 days. J D. ELLIS, A gen,

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AN EXPLANATION. "How much the baby looks like Its father!" "It’s only the warm weather. The chlU Is neually bright, cheerful and haad«on«."

"I have a world of confidence im Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy for have used It with perfect success,’ j writes Mrs. M. I Basford, Pooles j ville, Mo. For sale by all dealers

Good Groceries

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HAZELETT’S for Good Groceries

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