Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 25 March 1920 — Page 3

THURSDAY, MARCH 2r». 1920.

I HE GREENCASTLE HERAU)

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■iiMii»rfi'iMiaiiii i 'wiiiiiiiiiwiiiiiiiiiM

OPERA HOUSE A. COOK, Prop. & Mgr. Poors Open at 6:30 Two Shows Show Starts 7:00 S .. PROGRAM SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE ... S — Paralta Photoplay Presents J. WARREN KERRIGAN In the Five Part Photoplay “A Man's Man” From Peter B. Kyne’s Popular Magazine Story Produced by Pathe Photo Plays Carl Laemmle Presents MONTAGUE LOVE In the Two Part Melodrama

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“She’s Everywhere” Stage Women’s War Relief Series KMIM u 3KCMIV-H

* *

****!(.

Friday and Saturday Grocery Specials

S NAVY BEANS, 5

i|

Our regular price, 43c.

JSALMON, three No. 1 tall cans 63c

Our r egular price. 72c.

FANCY SILVER PRUNES, 2 lbs 69c

Our regular price, 82c.

FANCY LAKE PEARS. 2 lbs 75c

Our regular price, 89c.

WALKER’S CHILE CON CARNE, 10 oz. cans 10c.

Our regular price. 13c.

THOUSAND ISLAND DRESSING. 10 oz. bottle, ...... 19c

Our regular price, 24c.

K PURE WHITE CORN MEAL. 5 lbs 20c

Our regular p'ice, 30c.

YELLOW EGG PLUMS, three No. iy 2 cans 79c JJ] Our regular price, $1.05. packed in syrup. S GROUND BLACK PEPPER. I lb can 39c g ^!i Our regular price, 53c. g 1 SUN MAID SEEDED RAISINS, 15 oz. pkg 22c S Less than wholesale price. g 1 hurst! co. | $ GRF.ENCASTLE’S BIG DEPARTMENT STORE ^ A Good Place to Buy Everything

SPECIALS

...FOR . Friday & Saturday, March 26& 27 jyy H ar d Wheat Flour, 24 lbs 1.90 White Lily Hour, 24 lbs 1.50 ‘andalia Flour, 24 lbs 1.45 Big 4 Flour. 24 lbs J 45 Belle High Grade Flour, 24 lbs _ 1.40 Aunt Jemima Pancake Flour, 3 pkg 40 rv our Excelo Cake, lemon or Vnilla 35 hoenix Corn Flakes, 2 pkgs 25 tinkle Corn Flakes. 3 nkgs 25 Navy Beans, 5!b : .40 Pmto Beans, 5 lbs .40 Prunes, per lb .20 W Cu r ed Bacon, per lb 35 fuail Shoulder Meat, per lb 28 S°ur Pickles, per doz 25 JWute Herring, salt fish, per lb 10 ^dlon Peches 75 Gallon Apricots 90 Crr* Fruit, each 05 f3 ib, ; 2 5 riow Borax Soap, per bar * 05 See us 5or prices on seed, potatoes, and onion sets, ugher market prices paid for country produce.

Phone 51

FJ W. HEROD

715 S. Main St.

LOCAL NEWS

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* week including room and heal'd. * FOUND—Ring with M H. S. In- * signia and owners initials. Owner * may have same by calling at this * office and paying for this advertisI ing.

Dr, W. M. McGaughey was in Bain i bridge Wednesday night in consul-1 tation with Dr. Cully on the sick- j ness of Mrs.. Joe Ruark. Greencastle Commandery of Knights Templars have accepted an invitation to attend the tabernacle meeting Easter Sunday afternoon, April 4. . | Dr. A. E. Ayler of this city will go to Indianapolis Friday to attend the Shrine ceremonial which will be held at the Murat Twmiple, March 26. John Wysong of this county will Ik; one of the candidates. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Lann of Cloverdale ar e the parents of a baby boy, Doyol Raymond, bom Tues day, March 23. John Allen, colored, son-in-law of Todd Wagner of this city, was arrested late Wednesday afternoon charged with drunkeness. Allen, who resides in Piqua, O., is here visiting his wife’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. •Todd Wagner, who reside on North Indiana street.

The marriage of John F. Cash and Myrtle Ruark was solemnized at the Chrfstian church parsonage Wednesday afternoon at 3 o’clock by Rev. Levi Marshall. Mr. and Mrs. Cash will make their home on th e groom’s farm, east of Greencastle. LEARN TO BE A NURSE—An excellent opportunity for medical and surgical training. Two and three year courses. Liberal salary, room and board included. Graduate registered nurse in two years according to Illinois law. For information address Montrose Avenue Hospital, 2. r >46 MJontrose avenue. Chicago, in. Private nurses earn $35 to $50 a Fresh Fish Friday Fresh Beef and Pork all the time, priced so you can afford to eat it. Fancy lx - af Lettuce, per lb. .20 Fancy Kale, per lb. .20 Fancy Bananas, per lb, .10 Green Onions, per bunch .10 New Radishes, per bunch .10 Fancy Cauliflour, lb. .15 ■New Cabbage. 3 lbs .25 Spinach, per lb. .15 Sweet Potatoes, 4 lbs ,25 White Onions Sets, per qt. .15 Blue Onion Sets, per qt. .08 Red River Seed Potatoes, per lb .08

The O. L. Jones Co. Phone 583.

Ti'aiiftcoutineiital Travel by airplane will give us for the brst time u birds-eye view of the whole continent, seen continuously, like a great panorama. For the uirt lanes will doubtless fly across the tontiiiciu between sunrise and sunset before long. The transcuniiuental traveler now goes to sleep in t^e east, wakes up in the middle west, retires again in Kansas, and opens bis eyes on the Rocky Mountains. These sudden ( hunges of scene are stimulating, but how much more Interesting it will be to watch tae graduations by which the changes are made. The traveler by rail must make the journey many timis before he gains a true idea of blji country's topography. The airman will see, spread out like a map, the rich and thickly settled area of the Atlantic coasta. country, .splotched with great cities like sit-ins on a fina green fabric Then the Alleghenies will rise up miner him. lifting .^-een summit within a few thousand feet of him. and opening valleys of tremendous depth, with silver threads of rivers at their bottoms. By noon he will oe over the middle west, where the world is one vast grain field and Hat as a floor, and the little sprawling wooden tew ns will look like dominoes on a lawn. Gradually the cout. ry will becomeless settled, as he speeds over Western Kansas, where the farms hug the valleys of wide muddy rivers, and seemingly endless prairies, dotted with cattle herds, spread out on either side. Then the Rockies will lift before him and for hours he will ride over a country of great earthbillows with snowy mountain tops taking the place of foam-crested breakers. His last lap will be across the dead brown expanse of the great American desert; he will clear the narrow coast range in half an hour and see the white line of foam where the Pacific breaks, just as the sun is going down. Fifty years ago the same journey took two months.

Truth Spoken In Jest. The trouble with roost of the advice Is that it lias generally been offered at the wrong time.

NEW TU.VGSTEW Has Filament Jiouutlug On Spring Suppoil In Take Cp Vibration Despite tile many improvements j introduce!' in the manufacture ol tungsten 'amps, they have remained delicate until tho present. There was a time, of course, when tungsten lumps had to be handled with extreme care lo avoid jarring and shattering the delicate filament; but in more recent times the tungsten iamp has come to he fairly rugged and available for almost any purposes save in the mills, printing plants, and other places subject to intense pounding or shocks. It had remained for one of our leading electric lamp manufacturers to introduce a new type of tungsten lamp which incorporates a shock absorbing feature. The filament mounting, instead of forming an integral part of the glass stem as is usually the case, is spring supported. This feature makes this lamp servtcable and preferable under almost all conditions where carbon lamps have been used heretofore.

A GOOD PLACE TO BUY EVERYTHING

r. Jam 1881?"

HURST BLDG.-Greencastle 1 COMPLETE DEPARTMENT of l

The woman who wants to vote 1 should be able to sharpen a pencil I with which to mark her ballot.

One charitable act will occasionally cause a man to pat himself on Die back for many months.

Some men refuse to take physical exercise for their health because it doesn't come in bottles.

THE

Cash Store

COLDS brse'i and s ? «,: :y, ' KILL THE COLD AT tWa ONCE WITH t&L HELL*® ^

CASC

' StnrvVM rr.'.d Tzmcly f'r 20 year* NroKYv — n t*** 74 * 4 -' K’inj-—sale, cure, no NTVfV°! ' a ' € *—breaki? up a coid in 24

hours—rclievci

.v V <W Money buck

grip

if it fails. The

geruine box ha 1 * a Reel top with Mr. Ililia

picture.

{* AC All Drug Stores

i Sugar, per lb. 3 pounds Navy Beans 2 Cans Sweet Corn 2 Boxes Shredded Whole Wheat | 1 pound Good Coffee 5 bars White or Ttrown Soap ’ 1 Box Armour’s Corn Flakes , 1 pound Now Cabbag,! 1 Guart Cranberries , 2 Cans Pork and Beans ! Can Apricots ' Irish Potatoes and Sweet Potatoes ! for seed.

J. E. Cash i East Side of Square

Special Friday & Saturday 24 pounds Vandalia Flour $1.50 12 pounds Vandalia Flou r * 75 I pound Bulk Coffee 30 I pound Crystal Coffee 32 I pound Farmers’ Pride Coffee 42 Navy Beans. 5 lbs 25 Lima Beans. 2 lbs 35 Red Beans. 3 cans 25 Salt Fish, per lb 10 Tall cans Carnation Milk 13 Two cans Hebe Milk 15 Matches. 6 boxes 25 Dried Apples, per lb : 25 Com Flakes, boxes .25 Shredded Wheat. 2 boxes 25 Rice. Per Ib 10 Compound, per lb 22 Pure Country Lard. Ib 25 Napha Soap. 5 bars 45 Grandma’s Soap. 7 bars 40 Flake White. 6 bars .45 White Line. 6 pkg .25 Snow Bov, 6 pkgs 25 Light House Cleanser. 6 boxes .. v 25 AIoj Lunch and soft d r ink3. A. F. CRAWLEY Corner Broadway & Bloomington Sta. Phone 167 GIVE US A CALL

The it.wk City One of the most fascinating places of the near east is the Rock City, Petra, In Palestine. In the day* of Egyptian and Roman grandeur, Petra was a great city and Invincible stronghold. Caravans from all parts of the east met here for trade, for the Rock City, protected by Its mountains and narrow, well-guarded entrance, was one of the few meeting places safe from attacks of bandits and thieves. Petra became a veritable treasure house and the great metropolis of the land of Edom. The avenue of approach to the old valley strongholc was, and still is. along the bed of a stream runuing for two miles through a narrow. winding defile in the cliffs. Out of this narrow entrance way. you come suddenly upon Petra, and first of all upon Pharaoh's Treasury. This building, standing guard at the gateway of the city, is taken as a significant of Petra's financial standing in the ancient world. It is an imposing building, very like a twostored Creek temple, with columns, rooms and decorations all cut out of -he wall of sandstone. This sandstone which lines the valley and from which the city was carved contains veins of rich purple and crimson and, to a lesser degree, of all the other colors of the rainbow. Pharaoh s Treasury, for instance, seems almost barbaric, cut as it is out of stone streaked with yellow, rose, violet and white. All over the ruined city, loo, there stand out altars, columns, and temples cut from stone veined in such gorgeous colorings as are seen '.n our Rocky Mountain canyons. All the walls of the valley and the lanes and fissures in the rock are lined with the .still distinguishable structures of the only city ever cut from solid stone. POINTED PMtACRAPHB (Chicago News.) Getting up a concert is a sound understanding. * • • Rome men just can't foot up k bill without kicking. * • s Some finished orators don’t seem to know when to quit.

Shoes

Groceries

Gent’s Fu'nishina:

Paint

Dry Goods

Auto Accessories

Stoves

Furniture

Electric Supplies

Rugs

Hardware

Implements

Tires

Roofing

Harness

STANDARD QUALITY-REDUCED PRICES J You Are Always Welcome ♦ HURST & CO. ? *

All the world loves a with the exception of the

winnerloser.

A milkman milk if there

doesn't cry over split 's a pump handy.

The wor t of it for others means the beat of it for the undertakers. * * * Steam may be a good servant, but it occasionally blows up his master

Imagination swallow'.

is a bitter pill to

contains a lot ol

An empty head

useless luformntR \

+ * «

How n man does hate to be grate- 1 for au ilKine favor.

• * •

Bandits lie In wait, but tff people I usually lie about half their weight.

• • *

The vanity • f girl with a small brother gets many a jolt.

Site, pends going.

in the case of a m whether it is

dollar, decoming or

Thur. Friday & Saturday Tall cans Caration Milk, per can 13 Tall cans Pet Milk, per can 13 Tall cans Hebe Milk, p l 'r can 10 No. 2|/2can Yellow Free Peaches 35 No. 21/2 can Apricots 35 No. 2 can Lily Pineapple r 35 No. 2 can Raspberries 35 No. 2 can Sugar Corn, 2 for 23 No. 3 can Pork and Beans. 2 cans 23 No. 2 can Tomatoes. 2 cans for , 25 No. 2 can Red B‘'ans, 3 cans for 25 No. 3 can Tomatoes, 2 cans for .55 No. 3 can Hominey, 2 for 25 No. 3 can Kraut, 2 cans 25 Pumpkins, 2 cans 25 Tall can Salmon, 2 cans fo r 35 Flat can Salmon, 2 cans for .25

.93

73 93 1.85 1.35 80 95 95 25 20 35 25 32 42 40 28 22 25 35 30 40 08 70 75 10 25 25 25 25 25 25 45

Rub-No-More Naptha Soap. 6 bars 45

Gallon can Fancy Table Peaches Gallon can Fancy Pie Peaches

Gallon can Fancy Apricots

Gallon can .Fancy Red Pitted Cherries Gallon can Fancy Black Berries Dark Karo Svrup. per gal Gallon can Light Karo Syrup

Gallon can Pennant Syrup

Dried Peaches, per lb Prunes, per lb Dried Apricots, per Ib Bulk Coffee, per Ib. Crystal Coffee, per lb Farmers’ Pride Coffee, per Ib. Good Brooms, each Pure Lard, per Ib. ^

Lard Compaund, per Ib.

Hams, 8 to 10 pounds, per Ib.

Sugar Cured Bacon, per lb. r Sugar Cured Squa r es, pT lb.

Navy Beans, 5 lbs Pnto Beans, per lb

Lima Beans, 5 lbs Rine, 5 II)-- ......

Salt Fi-h. pci H>.

Aunt Jemima ’’ancake Flour, 2 pkgs for Cirginia Sweet Pancake Flour, 2 pkgs for

Qats, 2 boxes

Com Flakes, 3 packages for Bulk Macaroni. 2 lbs Palmolive Saop. 3 bars Flak'' V/hit Soap, 6 bars for

Sail Soap, 6 bars Magic Soap, 10 bars

.25 .35

Too ‘Pretty To He Worn’ Anything that will keep the feet from the ground is considered a -hoc in Serbia. In the remote rural districts of the country it is said that many of the people live and die without owning a pair of shoes. In the bitterest weather they travel through mud and snow without adequate foot covering. They consider themselves fortunate if they can eecure old gunnysacks or heavy cloth which they tie about their feet with twine in winter. The first American-made shoe* that were distributed by the American Red Cross created a tremendous stir among the people of the distant villages. One old woman who had never owned a pair belore took the shoee that had b«en given to her to her home and put them on a shelf above the fireplace. She wae as pleased aa a child to own them, but nothing could Induce her to wear them. She eald that ahe intended lo save them for fetes, or perhaps for her burial. They were "much to beautiful to be worn," she said.

S. D. EARLY GASH GROCERY

South Grecncaxtle

‘Corner Maiu ant! tlroaifcvay

PHONE 4>3

Order* Over $1. Delivered-Phone Your Order Elariy

CLASSIFIED ADS.

A Short Answer Scout—1 want my hair cat. Barber—Any parti ular way? Scout-Yea! off.—Boy'a Life.

Wood working haa been made easier by the invention of an electric hand saw.

WANTED TO BUY—Good top buggy. V. C. Hurst, 6L1 Crown street. FOR TRADE—Two guod lota, Fairview addition for Ford car Call. Black 701.

EAcSTER SUNDAY is April fourth. See the Easter cards L&ngdon’s Book Store.

WANTED io KENT—Before March IS a modem furnished or unfur nished cottage or three or four modem light-housekeeping rooms. Fam ily of two. Will lease. Call phone 409.

FOR RENT—Modem 6 room apart roent near college. Phone 467 — o - 0- - - BOY WANTED—Lueteke’s Bakery. o MORTGAGE HXEMPTIONS — See J. B. Harris, Court House. ARCHITECT, CONTRACTOR, and landscape gardening. W H. Evens. Greencastle, Ind.

FOR MORTGAGE fcX EMPTIONS—• 8e e county recorder, O. T. Ellis

FOR SALE—Single cosnb brown leghorn eggs. E. R. Ollair, Fillmore, Ind.

CHICHESTER S PILLS TUB BRAND. A HI* to He 4 » ~J Vmtd —JTYUPl l-oaes, aealcd with blue RitU-i*. V/ ^ 7 prutoi'xSto*rsi.r f iA!XViR4 IH ’UOIU* 14K % NIf PILLM, f.w you* k nuwrtA* He* t. SUtot. Always Mroat w SOI D BY DRUGGISTS fVERYWHME