Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 February 1920 — Page 4
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rin uRKENCAJSYLE HER Alt
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY
H. 1920
HOW TO GET RIO G? YOUR COLO The quick way is to use Dr, King’s New Discovery
M SlilFM MM
yvON’T put off itnMl tonls'it wlint jl 1 you cnn do todny. Slop into vo ir dnigCi* 1 a n n, l l" 1 .'’ n bottle of I)r. Kln^ New Dlacov* cry. Start tnkitiitfll :i! one*. B> llic time you rc.iyii home you’ll 1»’ on the wiiy to recovery. This s: indnrd fnmll.v frioml hns lovii lireiih ug folds, couslis, Kfippc ■ i.tncks, mid Ciont> for more thim ■ fiv \ours. I/s used wherever surelire re' oi’ I* appreciated, (’hlldren nnd (frowi tfps alike cnn use it— tl'ere is ito.d'silKreenhio nfler-effect. Your dru jC'sf luis it. tIOo. and J?l.-0 I>otties, filve it a trial.
^O’lV^ls Desging for Help Torpid liver t leading for ns.slstence/ I low careless to neglect these tldu/s when I >r. King’s New l.ife Pillt s i (iroiuptly. mildly, yet elTec-
lively ome to their relief!
(yenvini, the system uncleaned, , loggo I i iwels unmoved, results In ll-alt:, I siructive after-effects. Let i i ■. u-. tonle - ’a - action Dr.
' . 1.!’' 'Rills bring you the . : cgular, normal bowel
II me dtig. Keep feeling
• \i it of a man or vvo|i|(l- ,s‘ di lu it. sVU
too.
•it. .:.ii man v
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MAKING BUTTER WHEY.
Farmers Must Utilize All Byproducts
Possible.
As competition in various lines of business becomes more and morn keen, it becomes necessary to utilize all the by-products possible. Thus, il happens that within the past three or four years tin* Cheddar cheese factories in this country have taken up the practice of making who;, butter. A recent Wisconsin hull' n, No. CIS, published at Madison, WIs., statr.that atHiut 125 pounds of whey butter can be made each week at a cheese
factory of medium size.
The market value or whey cream is largely detetniincil by the condition.-; under which the milk is produced and the rare which is given the cream a f - ; ter separation. While the practice of slumming cheese whey about doubh s Its value, churning increases its value only from one fifth to one-sixth, be- < line of the fact that whey cream can be sold for ice cream purposes. For this reason it has been found th<* mea t j profitable for the small cheese facto- I rios to sell whey cream to larger ceo | tral churning companies or to ice I
cream makers
Ordinarily, in the manufacture of American cheese, about nine-tenths of j tiie fat which is in milk Is retained j In the cheese. On this basis it is seen that ttiese is enough fat left in the whey by product of cheese to make ten to twenty pounds of butter for each cow contributing milk to a factory for a year Though this saving is not large, it has been found front actual practical work that it is great enough to pay for the interest and expense of skimming, to pay the cheesemaker a profit for his work and to increase the price of milk to the patrons from 2 to cents per 100 pounds.
—Ohio Farmer.
Agricultural Schools Shoulo Wor1< to Keep Farmers’ Sons on Land. Specialists of the department of agriculture who have been making an investigation into the use of land by high schools In teaching agriculture and in the encouragement of boys to carry on supervised home projects, make the following suggestions as to how the agricultural Instructor may help to solve the serious ihifting-ten
ant prolilcm.
It can safely he assum'd that the average boy leaves school at 18 years of age. From the best information available the average farmer does not start farming on his own account until he is somewhere between 25 and .".0 years of age. In other words, there is a period of a farmer’s life, when he is between 18 and 30 years of age, when he Is not working on h s own farm nor is he his own master. It would seem that vvnerever thd home project method has been introriuced an effort should be made to follow up the boy and, if nossible, atrange In some way so that he contint.es his home-project work and gradually become a partner with his father in the farm busines . This feature should bo a part of the extension work of the agricultural instructor. Farmers are recruited from two sources, from the sons of farmers and the sons of agricultural laborers. In going over the original census schedules for farmers of Iowa county, Wis.. this rather interesting fact developed that where the tenant, and landlord hail »he same surname the tenant had been on the {arm that lie was on the day the censfts was taken for a much longer period than where their sur names were 'different. It was found that 21 per ient of the cash tenants who were related to the owner had been tenantsfon the farms which they were on, at the census date, for two years or lesi, while the per cent fot those where- no relationship existed was (!.■; Forjshnre tenants the figures were 50 andijv) per cent respectively. In other words where there is reialionship then' is less of the shiftingtenant problem than where relationship docs not exist. From other records it was learned that of the total
MINER’S DREAM OF GIRL SAVES HIM FROM DEA1 H Says Visionary Figure Warned Him of Dangers end Told Him Her Name and Address Syracuse, N. Y.—How dreaming about a girl ho had never seen saved the life of a mining engineer in Alaska may sound like a fish story. Neverthe less, the facts of the case are known here and are believed to the very la.'t detail. The girl in the case is Miss Ethel Williams of this city. The engineer is Donald Mack, of Juneau, Alas-
ka.
Miss Williams, who lives with her father and sister, recently received j postcard on which was the piclute of a dog team and the following message penned in a masculine hand: "If you will write to this address 1 will tell you why I have sem this
card.’’
She did. Ho did. Miss Williams received the following story from the man in the North: “I am a mining engineer. Ordinarily I finish my work and reach the settlements before the lakes and rivet.* close and am able to make this trip fiy boat and canoe. Last fall 1 delayect too long, and was obliged to come out by sled, a distance of 700 miles. "Shortly before I reached Lake Tagash I fell in with three Indians and a Frenchman on the trail. We started to cross the lake, stopping midway on <t small island, to rest and sleep. While i slept, I dreamed. 1 saw a young girl dressed in light summer clothing standing in the deep snow around me. It. was so real to me that I asked her who she was and why she was there. She told me her name was Ethel Williams and her home in Syrac use N. Y. t he said she knew it was my intention te keep on the direct route over the lake, but that disaster lay in that direction, as there was open water covered by drifting snow. To he safe 1 should go about twenty five miles up the river, where I would find a safe
crossing.
“At this point I was awakened by the howling of dogs and the souts of | I Indians. ;t was 3 o'clock in the morn- j mg. They wore making ready to go. I told them of my dream and they laughed al me. I followed the instructions
of the dream girl,and when I reached
man had been a tenant, he I •'iineau tla» Indians and Frenchman had been a tenant on the farm whet'' | f-ttd n °f been seen. I headed a searchlie wa at the time the records were i n 8 party down the lake to the point taken 76 per cent of the total time i where they would have reached tho when there V ' - no relationship. Tl:« | mainland. \v c lound (lie canoes and
THE JESTERS In ancient times tiie gifted joker was chartered by the king, who muttered, ’’By the holy poker, this gent of quip and fling must stay around my throne and cheer me, when I am sad and sore, when there are yellow fantods near me, and life itself’s a bore.’’ And so a humorist stood chaffing around each royal tiirone and kept his nobs, the monarch, laughing, until he broke a bone. Then funny men were scarce as thunder, and so became a power; for In those days—It Is no wonder—most men were grim and our. Their talk was all of siege and battle, of scaffold and of block; and blest the fellow who could rattle a sprightly lino of talk! And life today is pretty dreary, for men are commerce mad; they chase along, all frayed and weary, to gain the shining scad. So nervousness with them is chronic, resulting, from the stress; and when they feel they need a tonic, they dbek it in tiie press. They have no time to read a volume on "Kow to Save Your Goat," but In ttio Bugle's funny colyum they find an antidote for many of the woes that scar them and make them gray and old. for many of the cares that jar them and turn their trilbys cold. When fierce reverse or threat’ning rumor brings to the heart a pain, how blessed is this balm of humor, that keeps us calm and sane! The joker of the press is only a fall guy, like ourselves; and oftentimea his heart is lonely, and bare his cupboard shelves. You’d think, to read his merry twitter, his life was one glad song, that nothing in that life was bitter, that nothing e'er went wrong. But fifty-seven kinds of troubles he knows and deeply feels; he does not sit 'round blowing bubbles or kicking up his heels. Too often, after writing jingles, he has to pawn the spoons, while in his creaking stomach mingles ids fare of staw and
prunes.
The joker is a man of sorrow, of great and divers woes; he never knows but that tomorrow the sheriff will foreclose. And often, iilled with milk and sago, lie turns his bright quips out, while in his back lie has lumbago and
in his feet the gout.
But, still, oil, brave and patient mortal! ho hits the lettered keys and turns j out things that make us chortle and 1 yell and gasp aad sneeze. He hands I to us tiie golden chalice of gladness and content, e'en while he leaves his four-room palace because lie can't pay rent.—By Walt .Mason from Judge.
WATERING
The Worst Kind of Mortgage Is it not a disheartening tiling to go
returns also indicated that where latlonship ousted 23 per rent had a! I tended high school, but where their
their sleeping bags and other camp , through life under tiie harrow of debt.
outfit floating In the open water. "So, Miss Williams, I consider that
was no relationship onlv 18 per rent ; T <,u Im"' saved jn.v life, and mailed
bad attended high sehool. In other words, if through the sehool the farm- j era rould be made to take an intere-t , in the agricultural training of the boy i and they rould he established in partnership relation, the shifting-tec-ant problem would be partially solved. |
tiie card to you from Juneau.’’
SMITTEN BY SMILING WOMAN
FEEDING HARD BOILED EGG Hard boiled civs make an excellent food for young turkeys if fed with care md judgment, hut ponltrymen v lio hai'' never fed the eggs will ftvfluently have trouble with the chicn:In feeding them the first time. The chirks are vvy fond of the cegs aid If given bal: a chance they will ove;-
f n P(l OH Ihf’TYY.
This tin
Carden of Herbs Is Valuable. Why not have a garden of herbs’
In a few feet of ground >ou can grow all the herbs you can use and you will he surprised to find what an addition
they will make to your table. Lettuce and tomato salads are great-
ly improved by adding a few chopped j leaves of thyme, tarragon, sage and ! chives to the dressing. Sauces, fish | minces or rioqurtte* all rain in fla-
vor from the use of these herbs,
t The seeds of dill, anise, coriander, caraway and fennel are useful for j flavoring in bread, rookies and cake'. I Catnip, tue. saffron and tnnsv have | medicinal qualities, wl ile laver*le , , and rosemary yield aromatic oils am?
j waters.
An l.cih garden should he started early in the spring, in rarefutly pre
Having Imbibed Freely, He Hutfjid Wife by Mistake, Got Swift
Punch
Winnepeg, Manitoba—“Tiie promise in a woman's smile—Oh! Who can explain?’’ run the chorus of u popular tong hit of a year ago. Today Sam Buka, 20D Euclid avenue is asking the same question. And, while asking it ha write in his ledger of life. “To experience. $5.35.” Sam harkened to the call of a woman’s smile. lie wits fined $3 ami costs amounting to $2.35, in tho police court as tiie result. • There was a wedding celebration at S un’s hou e tha: night. Comely women iillench d. Sam's daughter wa» about to many a Ruthenium swain. Wine flowed Ireely, and S.im imbil>ed. Toward midnight the feeling that Shakespeare de>< ribed as coming Lorn thoughts of spline crept over him. Then—a comely maiden smiled at him. j bam was only human. Ho smiled hack
pared and thoroughly cultivated ! He forgot his wife altogether with ground. A. light, s tidy soil ts most | the second smile. Although he did not
to 1'id .teas it cor mixing '' effect hut in their i
satisfactory. The seeds should he P’antrd ,n shallow rhills and the soil 'tail r > onlv v :!l tend j fl- n ,iv pressed down.
■ir throes if fed jus
Ill'll
? '‘.Oil •)ki:it
that
It
all. a i I
hoi of
We do f. (ill |g make an chicks, a e ■; : for is effecle carefully overcome
d «r will
is iml
• wi-h r, (hsciMii -■ hui d hnihd ev r , , 'xceilent feed for I by using the l it is purpose, a groat I.ut one must feed r the evil resulting he good.
Here Is a list of the most useful herbs that are not difliru!’ to rnLe: Balm For cooking puTOfes. Basil Sweet—Used for flavoring Borage Leaves us* J fur salad.■ Coriander Reeds aroma.ic Dill—Seeds for flavoring. Lavender For oil :ind distilled water, dried flowers and used among lin-
cn.
Mint --Travel used for flavorin'*. Rue -Medicinal qualities Saffron Medicinal and flavoring al o u-ed in dyeing.
know it, his wife, Mary, watched Ids every movement At that time she was following “the girl who smiled” out of the room. And .M iry followed him. All was dark in the hall. Sam couldn't see where his new acquaintance
Went
Iter form however was outlined in silhoutte. Sam did not observe ids wife) ‘iillowing him viiep Tie left the room and the natural conclusion he jutu iecl to was that the woman who ramr on the veranda after him was his "lady
rf the smile.”
Ileadvam i toward her. The woman rmlled. It was enough for Sam. lie tried to bestow an endearing embrere. Instead of a response to his endear-
struggling to get release under circumstances that give no hope of relief? Is it not unfortunate to feel that we can never lift tiie mortgage from the home, that in spite of all our efforts it must finally he sold over tho heads of those dearer to us than life itself? But all this is nothing compared with tiie mortgage of vice upon t.he character which blights the life. Many a man lias died without being able to li<t tiie mortgage from his home, yet lias been a real success, (or lie kept ids manhood clean, his integrity unstained, and, although he left no material wealth, he has enriched
the lives of all who knew him.
The nicotine mortgage upon your vitality, the nicohol mortgage which hardens your nerve fibre, benumbs the brain cells, paratyzes the power to achieve, and makes you a slave instead of a king, are encumbrances compared with which tiie mere mortgage upon
your home is a blessing.
I If you are mortgaged to the cigar- | r tte liarbit which demoralizes your amj hition, poisons your blood, benumbs yrjur norvss and vitjates your aim; if you have a whisky mortgage, an immorality mortgage on your character which you have been trying for years to lift, this is infinitely worse than your chattel mortgage or real estate mortgage. The mortgage on your home may not touch your real self. In spite of it you may be a man, respected, looked up to, admired. If your life has been clean, you may have made every acre of land in your vicinity worth more. But if your character ts mortgaged to a demoralizing iisbit; If you are the victim of a degrading •/ice that holds you down, cripples your advance, tills is a thousand times wor/e. It loses you not only your respeel, but also the respect of tlio-o
who know you.
th'
SU
! OR THE HERALD
£***<•«« r r> - ^-Stop Out* ' ^ ^ J: j this! ■iH h I At first signs of a cold or crip
take
liANES COLD TABLETS
O'AttANTCtO
np
J
Growing of Lillies.
Lillie.) can be grown in any rood garden soil. Heavy soils should be J ti’a h» rich and i< ovided with gooa i drain: ze, light soils should be made : rich and protected from the hot sun
by a suitable mulch.
Lillies are impatient of extremes — they suffer from too much water and dislike extreme heal as much ns sc- !
vere cold.
I’rost-r pre; -,ration of the lily bed Is ec-cntlal. Tiie soil should he re I' ovrd for :t d juh of two feet and at the bidtom fork under six Indies of well rotted manure. Then add another idx inches of the top soil and on
thi* six inches of sand.
Place the bulbs upon the covering nf sand nnj lover them completely with sand: ttifn fill up (lie bed with j tho remainder of tiie topsoil. Never let the manure come in contact with
tho bulbs.
As a rule tie autumn Is the best | time to plant, n though In the early j spring fucces iful planting may hoi done. | When th* plants have heroine es-j tabli.-iied the bed hotild not lie Pis-1 turbed as lo:iT a* the plant* bloom
satisfactorily.
How to Fill the Churchei
A method of sermon collaboration which may exercise great influence upon the vexed problem of church attendance was regently tried at Lea Angeles. Nine ministers of that city
i mi nts, he was struck on the face willi 8 0t together and produced one sermon i fist. He had tried to hug bin wife. ’ J ~ -
The melee that followed brought both belligerents out on the sidewalk
where they were latrr separate 1 oy patrolman. Ram was arrested on
< I arge of drunkenness. Honest Dog Gets Reward
New Rochelle, N. Y.—BUI, a bull ter-1 r.cr, 4 months old. owned by Miss Ln- | rettn Cody, daughi'T of Folico Lieu ] tenant Frank Cody of New Rochelle, j is developing into a valuable Oog. Last | week he began to bring home old ■ shoes nnd cans from rubbish heaps.! K.iturday he brought a hag of rolls j a.id yesterday he came home spnttere 1 V’lth milk, having tried to bring a hoi
th of m Ik and ipillod it.
Sinec then Bill carried home a lady a hand bag containing $12 80, some via- ! king cards and an automobile veil. ; Tie cards were those of Mrs. Steepbj en \7. Huntington, wife of the vice pr . id nt of the city council of New Rochelle. When the property was returned to hei’ Mrs. Huntington said H e had dropped It out of her automobi.e on Drake a.enue. She bought Bill a new collar as a row-aid for hla lion-
osljr.
nnd on the next Sunday nine congregations listened to the same sermon, one of the best they had ever heard. Sucli a plan makes good u-e of diversified gifts. One preacher ma> ha skillful In the use of illustrations, another particularly happy in literary and historical allusions, a third a master In theology, another gifted with evangeilstlc i< rvor, and so on through ail the elements that may eater into a
sermon.—From Leslie’s.
Death muEt be a welcome relief to the man who Is compelled to hustle eighteen hours daily in order to keep his life Insurance premiums paid up. Seme men wa't for tilings to turn up, and some others turn them up while they wait.
Eren the woman who enjoys a good cry may have a perfectly normal sense of humor.
Many bluffed.
at* called, but Inure are
The path of By and-By lead* to Nowhere.
CAN FOR PLANT,
Aid to Floral Beauty Duvised by In-
genius Scheme
When potted ferns and ether plants are set on high shelves, or in bankets out of easy reach, the daily routine of watering them ts frequentiy a troublesome one requiring the usa of a stepladder or its equivalent. An ingenius device which eliminates this procedure consists of -a cylindiica! can held in a fori' at the end of a long handle. This mounting is sim-
ilar to that of the average kerosene | County, in the State of Indiana,
torch and allows the can to tip either forward or backward. Near the brim of the receptacle a piece of wire, about an inch long, is soldered. By lifting the can to the edge of a flower pot and engaging th s hook, thus allowing the container t*be tipped forward, the water may tie poured freely.—Popular Mechanics
Children of OrchardisU Raise Pigs. The pig club of the northwest is meeting a very entnus.astic response, especially in the states of Oregon, Washington and Idaho. For some time the Hood river country has been noted for its extensive orchards, but there is now an embryonic industty starting, which may in time induce a wider diversification in crops. Hog raising is being introduced by children, the sons and daughters of the orchardists. Recently a carload of brood sows was sent from the Pottland Union stockyards to the Hood river valley for distribution among the children. These are furnished on credit to those who agree to ralso them in accordance with the prescribed instructions and to make reporta of their efforts. The sows were selected from purebred stock, of the breed designated by the applicants and have been bred to boars that won prizes* at the big agricultural fairs last fail. The hogs have been immunized against hog cholera and are good, healthy animals. The boys and girls will keep an accurate record cf all costs in connection with their work, nnd as the little pigs arrive the expense of keeping the mother and l»er brood are to he carefully enumerated. 1 he children will pay for the sow by selling the pies, the stockyards charging 6 per r ent Interest en tt e selling price of Hie sow. TIds places th* 1 transaction on a strictly business basis. Tiie r-ehool ollicinls in’e-ch county will have specir.l - I’.pei*. i ion of t he work Among the prize; to l,.> awarded in each state to the e who have the lie-t reports will he f.r,e scholarship lor 1’ie state univerdtips. Preserving Sucp'us Eggs, Tiie art of presetting eggs when they were cheap nnd selling them later at a big profit Was until recent, years practiced onlv by storage companies. Of late, however methods nt preservation have been perfected until tiie average poultrymnn finds it easy and Inexpensive to pieserve his surplus. The cheapest, simplest and most effective of these methods is the use of the watergiass solution. In giving directions for the .proper w-ay of doing this work, J. !a Heltnerirli poultry expert of the Colorado Ani cultural roll-’ge says: "Eggs to be put in waferglass shotiln be fresh, sound and • clean. Thej should he gathered daily and preseived the same day. Infeilile eggs are conductive to the best Success “Take one quart of waterglnss, which can he obtained from any drug store nt about $1 a " illo'f, and mix it w ith 10 quarts of water th.'* has been boiled and linn cooled. Stir thorough ly and place in a crockorjl vessel. Never use galvanized or tin Vessels. Place (lie vessel In a cool, vdl! ventilated eellnr, and add egg; ns ( vou gather them from day to day. alvinys keeping the solution o ip inch ainWe tin* egg-; Keep the crock covered with a lid to prevent too much evaporation. Eggs preserved In lids manner will ke ■ i perfectly for one year. The waterglnss solution will not injure tly- hands. Do not use the solution mo/e than one
year.
“It will he found hard ;q boil water glass eggs, but by puncturing the large end with a needle, to allow tho air to escape, and allow ing I tie water to come to a boil g'adu.ilflv. vou will not experience niurli trouble"
NOTICE OF ISSUE AND SALE OF SCHOOL BONDS Notice is hereby given by the School ^Trustees of tne Consolidated School District of Greencastle School City and Greencastle School Township, Putnam County, in the State of Indiana, that the School Trustees of the Consolidated! School District of Greencastle School City and Greencastle School Township of Putnam
will
create and incur an indebtedness of the Greencastle School City laniounting in the aggregate to !$17,80i).i)0 by issuing the bonds of said Greencastle School City to the aggregate amount of $17,800.00. Such bonds shall be in denominations of $500.00 each, except une .bond which matures July 1, 1921, which shall be of the denomination of $:100.00, and shall bear interest at the rate of 5 per cent per annum, and such interest shall be payable semiannually on the first day of January and the first day of July of each year, and the sai^ indebtedness so to be created and the said bonds to be issued shall become due and payable as follows: $80000 July 1, 1921. $1000.00, January 1, 1922. $1000.00, July 1, 1922. $1000.00, January 1, 1923. $1000.00, July 1, 1923. $1000.00, January 1, 1924. $1000 00, July 1, 1924. $1000.00, January, 1, 1925. $1000.00, July, 1, 1925. $1000.00, January 1, 1926. $1000.00, July 1, 1926. $1000.00, January 1, 1927. $100000, July 1, 1927. $1000.00, January 1, 1928. $1000.00, Ju.y 1, 1928. $1000.00,’January, 1, 1929. $1000.00, July 1, 1929. Notice is hereby further given that the School Trustees of the Consolidated School District of Green-
Greencastle School Township i n tle aggregate sum of 41,000.00 doi.ars. Said bonds will be offered for sale at the office of the undersigned School Trustees, in the High School Building in the City of Greencastle Putn-m County, Indiana, on the '>i day of February, 1920, at 10:0) o’clock a. m. Said bond issue will be accompanied by the written approval of Smith, Remster, Hornbrook & Smith, attorneys of Indianapolis Indiana. Witness our hands this 30 day of January, 1920John McFarlanc, Eugene R n aln rick, James Stoops, school trustees of the Consolidated District of Grew.. castle School city and Greencastle School Township, iPutmam County, I n . diana. 3 T D.—-Jan. 30, Feb. 6-13.
DANDELION AS A BAROMETER. Clover Leave* When Rain Is Comlnj —Poor Man’* Weather Glass. The dandelion Is a dandy barometer, one of the commonest and most reliable. It is When the blooms ha*« seeded and are in the fluffy, feathery condition that the weather prophet faculties come to the fore. In tine weather the ball expands to Die full, but when rain approaches It shuts like an umbrella. If the weather Is Inclined to be showery it keeps shut all the time, only opening when the danger from the wet is past The ordinary clover and all Us vj. rieties, including the trefoil nnd the shatnrork, are also barometer' When rain Is couildg the leaves shut together like the shells of an oyster anil do not open again until the weather is assured. Fipr a day or two before rain comes their stems sw- l to an appreciable extent and stiffen so that the leaves are borne more uprightly than usual. This stem swelling when rain Is expected is a feature of many
(lowering grasses.
The fingers of which the leaves of the horse chestnut are made up keep flat and fanlike so long as line weather Is likely to coiminue. With tin- mining of rain, however, they droop is it
to offer less resMtance to the weather,
castle School City and Greencastle , The senrlet pimpernel is tii knamril School township, Putnam Go, Ind,! the "poor mini’s weather gL s’’ or will create and incur an indebted-I ' vin ' 1 a!ld Us Hou " ,s on,r , . . ■ , in tine weather/ As soon us ram is ness of the said Greencastle school) in ,| le H | r j, shuts up and remains
Township amountirtg in the aggregate to $21,700.00 by issuing the bonds of said Gzfeencastle School Township to the aggregate amount of $21,700.00. ! I
closed until the*shower or storm is
over.
The common ! garden coino vulus crumbles up Ha delicate in within the spar* of half an hour If raindrops are oij| the Way and It
• i u • 11 < * i * > |/n ci i «< T!
Such bonds shall tie in denomina- ! keeps them thus nniil the hud weaihrr
lions o; v ’500.00 eaety, except one bond 1 has passed.
which matures Jul^ 1, 1921, which! shall be of the denomination of $200
Cold cash often melts marble hearts.
The popular belief That birds untley ordinary circumstance:, 'find ocean flight wearisome, and Hint. iMer laboring with fired wings acro.-s the seem Ingly endless waste ibev sink exhausted on reaching land, is dlsproven by facts l( semis rather that the power* of locomotion with which nature hr* endow i d many birds are so vvondei ful Ih.ir under normal conditions flit', can easily crocs the Gulf ef Mexico at Its widest point nnd ev*-n pass wilh out pansc o' er the low. swampy eo.r .t al plain to the higher territory, t« yond. So little me *■ are birds to an ocean flight Hat ninny fly from eaern Texas to tiie gulf coast of south ern Mexico though tills tnfi miles ot water journey hardly shorten* the distance of travel by p.n hour's fll.-lii Thus birds avoid the lot, treolo.-,s> plain' and 'cant provender of sout’i ern Texas hy a dire'd fl gh: from l lie moist. Invert teeming fore: s of norilr r:n Texas to a similar country Li
southern Mexico.
A sandy soil makes the he it pool try run. Filth Is soon washed out ol it and it (Lies out soonest after rain Thru liit grit In It Is of value. If y.vj have only a siimll lot and your soil is h'livy Muck, It will pay to lni> a Ic. ii of ‘.wo of sand every ycur and
sp: 3.;d over it.
.tnti each bond shall bear interest at the rate of 5 percent per annum, and such shall be payable semi-annually on the first day of January and on the first day of July of each year, and the said indebtedness so to be created and the said bonds to be issued shall become due and payable, as follows:
1000.00, July 1, 1922.
$1000.00, January 1, 1922.
$1000.00, July 1, 1922-
$1000.00, January 1, 1923.
$1000.00, July 1, 1923.
$1000.00, January 1, 1924.
$1000.00, July 1, 1924.
$1Q00 00, January 1, 1925.
$1000.00, July 1, 1925.
$1000.00, January 1, 1926.
$1000.00, July 1, 1926.
$1000.00, January 1, 1027.
$1000.00, July 1, 1927-
$1000.00, January '1, 1928.
$1000.00, July 1, t928.
$1000.00, January 1, 1929.
$100000, July 1,15(29.
$1000.00, January il, 1930.
$1000.00, July 1, 1930. $1000.00, January 4, 1931. $1000.00, July 1, 1931. $1000.00, January fl, 1932
(The money obtaiqjcil as a loan up-! on such bonds to |e issued will be j issued in the purchase of the foiiow- j ing described real pstate, situated in | the City of Greencastle, County of j Putnam, State of Indiana, to-wlt: Part of lot numbi-r o n, ‘ hundred and ninety-three (193) in the old plat of the town (now cit^) of Greencastle, bounded as follow’^, to-wit: Beginning at a point in the east line* or said lot seventy-sdx (76) feet and ten (10) inches sohith of the northeast corner of said lot; thence west one hundred and rYinetecn (119) feet and one and one-half (I'i) inches; thence south liltyJsix (56) feet an.l six Hi) inches; thence east one InmI dred anj nineteeh (119) feet and one anfl one-half (•iVi*) inches, to the east line of said lot; thence north with 1 the east line of isaid lot fifty-six j (56) feet nnd six) inches (6) inches ! to the place of beginning, together
Porcbi Gossip.
Porrh talk: <>• hot evening* It H Impossible to IlglK up the house suit read, so people gather on port lies :ind talk nnd talk. !l<ve are some thingi discussed on an Atchison porch on i recent night: Ole woman -uld she had a hired girl 4l;o a,e ^' r '* spoonful; the giiT said she 'udo:<'il'' lard Another wopinn said she had a friend who ale toilet soup; one wo man, with children, said thii ii"t long ago an AtchBon b cried. The niothoir sent for L)r llryn ing, a great baby* doctor, and h» undressed the baby himself to ■■ tied 1111 pins were sticking it and i n it * ' not broken out with heat «’ ' “ I"’ found nothing of that kind »..< th” matter b* gav* th# bab thartic and found it had sua la* 1 ' 1 twelve potato bugs. That rcmiiil 1 some one on the porch that her hrodi erin-law ale peaches wih cream and salad dressing ' little girl on the porch said ''v' 11 ' when we have liaeli alv. vs ••)) 1 wilh sugar.” One of the v r.'ii 11 ' the porch seemed bine and fin: ' 1 gan to talk. She said she 'M c 0 ' ] know what to do: that a cUa" '' I 111 told her to write frankly an' 1 SI1 whether It would be (Oii' , nit , ni 1 the relative to visit her. rim had written to say that It "" ' I "’ very inconvenient this summer " her fo have company, and Hm n i'i'* replied that she was .omimt
Lumbering on the Pacific Coavt “Of all the Ingenious mechanisms that help to quli ken tin' P r<l " dissecting a Pacific-const to:' 1 ' none so half-human, so gori ! ' ' 1 ’’ 1 its suddenness. Its more than ' 1 strength, as the 'nigger.' wtdes Kimberiy Muniford in Harper * ' ' ly. “There conies a trembling of t woodpile,' a grunt of unseen and rocker bars far below, and up the air, seven, eight, feet, r' ' i''' ’ awful bent arm of solid st«' " hand ts a spike a foot in len 1 - 1 ^ perhaps three inches in d'''' ( the base, and sharpened down 1 instant th'* * r " thing poises high above th- m _•
of t t,p hullet 'o
point, thing |
then Hite the leap
with the buildinJ thereon and the equipment, fixtures and supplies therein contained, to be the Jolnc property of the said Greencastle School City and said Greencastle
School Township.
Dollars a"d Cent*-
Counting
ciuts, how much
cost you? A man muy
it only in dollars in
did that last cold
not
stop work when he has a ' m*' ^ perhaps it would be better n “ ^ It takes about ten days to U' 1
mia'M
pletely rid of a cold under ,1k u
treatment. That time can
i.uu. i ii.-mi.jj treatment. tiio- ——- — There now exists an outstanding shortened by taking Cham iff. ^
bonded indebtedness against the said Greencastle School City in the aggregate sum of 44,300.00 dollars. There now exists an outstanding
bonded indebtedness against saia ^ spring months.
Cough Remedy and proper your seif, in fact, a bottle ®f remedy in the house is a mPf' 1 J ^ investment during the v ‘ l,ltt
