Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 April 1920 — Page 2

J

PAGE TWO

\ 'ti

!!

HERALD

th e Second distiict, subject to tha „

decision of the Democratic primary itflLi DtLAvVARE RICH | electiori, May 4, 1920- —

Enured as Secou.l clasr 'nail matter | c Q M M I S S 1 O N E R—L M.l‘ OtliCf States COPitrib" at the Greencastle, Ind, postottice. chan , ber , ftin 1 of cioverdale township! j l)te the Cash,

" . J announces his candidacy for commis-

Charles J. Arnold roprie r, s ^ >ner j or 'p} 1 i r( j District, sub-

1*1 BUSHED EVKO)f aFTEUMOON Except Sunday at 17 and 19 S. Jack-

son Street, Greencastle, 2nd.

TELEPHONE 65

' arda of Thanlca. Card* or Thanks are chargeable at rale of 60c each. Obituariea.

jeet to the decision of the Demo-

cratic primary, May 4, 1920.

BIROS WON HONOR

Purse Overflowing With Fees From

Corporations From Every

Direction.

Dover, Del.—Most states are pover-ty-stricken by tbe hi!:!) cost of govern-

ment. Hut not Delaware!

As a flnr.r.cier Delaware has Wall

street I eaten SO ways.

This slate taps the purses of peon 1

All obituarie. are chargeable at the Pigeons Certainly “Did Their I in 'the states! rate of $1 for each obit..ary. Add - .- I 1

fional charge of 6c a lure is made for !

*ui poetry.

Bit” in the Great War.

POUTICAL AiiNOlifiCEMENT

FOR CONGRESS—Jacob E Cravin of Hendricks County announces his eandidany for the Democratic nomination as representative to Congress from the Fifth Congressional district, subject to the decision of the

Democratic primary election.

Achievement* Acknowledged to Ef Worthy of Mention In Record*— Thousand* of Lives Saved by Messages They Carried.

FDR REPRESENTATIVE—W. E. Gill, of Cioverdale, announces to the Democratic voters of Putnam county, that be is a candidate for the nomination for representative of

Putnam county-

CHARLES S. BAIT of Vigo County Democratic candidate ior Representative in Congress. Primaries ( May 4

1920.

FOR PROSECUTING ATTORNEY— Fay S. Hamilton announces his candidacy for prosecuting attorney of Putnam county, subject to the decision of the Democratic primary elec-

tion.

FOR TREASURER—Otto G. Webb of Marion township announces that he is a candidate for treasurer of Putnam county, subject to the decision of thu Democratic primary elec-

tion.

FOR SHERIFF—Fred Lancastei of Madison township, has announce.) his candidacy for sheriff of Putnam county, subject to the decision of the Democratis primary election. May 4, j

1920.

FOR SHERIFF—Edward H. Eitlejorge announces to the Democratic voters that he is a candidate for the nomination of of sheriff of Putnam county, subject to the decision of the primary election, May 4.

FDR SHERIFF—Allen Jiggers, of Jaskson township, announces that he i* a candidate for the Democratic nomination for sheriff of Putnam county, subject to the decision of the Primary election, May 4, 1920.

F’OR SHERIFF—Will GlMewell, of Warren township, announces that he is a candidate for sheriff of Putnam county, subject to the decision decision of the Democratic primary, May 4, 1920.

FOR SHERIFF OF PUTNAM COUN. ty—Sure vote for Jess e M. Hamrick, at the Democratic primery, May 4, 1920. Your vote appreciated.

FOR SHERIFF—Of Putnam county, E. S. (Lige) Wallace of Greencastle announces his candidacy for sheriff of Putnam county, subject to the decision of the primary election,

May 4, 1920

Membership In the A. P. 8. Is military honor no mere man may achieve. The A. P. S stands for the American pigeon service of the Dotted States

army.

When the history of the greatest of all wars Is written, these American birds will have their names In the

annals.

It will be told how the Huns were organized Into stiotgun squads to kill the winged messengers, but bow its per cent of them outdistanced the bullets and "tinmed" with messages that enabled American artillery to locate and silence the enemy guns, to destroy trains of the foes’ ammunition and to save thousands of American lives by re-enforcements and timely rescues. “Ileavler-than-nir" planes were nm the only ones who sailed above the enemy's heads. The army slgual corps had 10.000 pigeons overseas and 10.000 In America to be sent If they were needed. Birds carried -Ulit messages of Incalculable Importance, and at times when all oilier means of com tnnnication were unavailable. •‘The Mocker." with hla eye destroyed j by a piece of shrapnel and his head a welter of clotted blood, homed In splendid time on the morning of September 12. n few minutes after 7 o’clock. In a thick fog and heavy rain. Never faltering, be bore tidings of a particularly Important objective reached and gave the location of sevoral of the enemy’s heavy batteries which were doing terrible execution <?s the advancing American troops. With the Information American artillerymen were able to silence the enemy's guns within 20 minutes. The Mocker’s wounds were dressed, he recovered and Is now In the loft In Po-

tomac park.

No less valiant Is the record of “President Wilson." a huge blue bird of wonderful vitality and rapidity of flight. So gallant was Ids work during the operations of the tanks on the St. Mihlel front that he received the commendation of the signal officer of the first corps, lie aas then transferred to the Meuse-Arronne sector. On the morning of November 5. through heavy rain and fog. and with a leg shot off. the big blue arrived at his loft with an Important mestage. This was his second flight on this front am) he made over 20 kilometers (1214 miles) In 21 minutes. “President Wilson" also recovered find Is now In the Mall of Honor of the American

pigeon service.

Perhaps the most heroic bird that died on the American front was “Cher And." II" carried a tremendously Important message from Grand Pre. on tin* Argonne. over 25 miles of hills and |

dales, to his loft In Itamponf.

He shot up from behind the American breastworks like a rocket. Ills pigeoneer saw him falter and flutter In the air a moment, recover, poise In tnld-alr for a second amt then, like a fiavb of light, shoot away with hf«

head fMdntlng homeward.

Wherefore Sl.oOO.OOO excess funds now He In the slate treasury—the most money Delaware ever had. The easy income is derived from issuing charters to corporations. Delu ware has “board laws.” You can toko our a charter for a corporation dealing In anything from yellow gold to

blue sky.

Hundreds of corporations all over the country are chartered under Dela-

ware laws.

Pay Delaware a charter fee, seal your attorney around once a year to hold an “annual meeting," pay your yearly charter tax regularly—that’s all there is to do. Stock doesn’t even have to he paid for. only subscribed. The state has good us well as spurious corporations. The General Motors company last year paid Delaware a fee of more than $200.(k*) when It Increased its capitalization, because it

THE GftEENCASTfF HERALD WILL AGAItJ HONOR MAGELLAN CuacJri'rertennial of His Famous Voy-

age Likely to Be Appropriately Observed in 1S21. | March, 1921, will be a good time to

visit the Philippines, for it will then he an even 400 years since Fernando de Magallmes. ns he wns named In his native Portuguese, although better known, as English usage afterward changed It. by the name of Ferdinand Magellan, first visited the Islands, discovering and Hiking possession of thorn for the crown of Spain. And plans are now under consideration to celebrate that anniversary In a way to outdo any celebration ever held in the Orient. One will hear, no doubt, a great deal about Magellan In the next 12 months, and (be first navigator of the Pacific will reappear in newspaper columns and magazine articles; nor Is It unlikely that hi* counterfeit presentment will rediscover the Philippines In a proper pageant. The celebration, Indeed, comes at an appropriate time, for the Pacific ocean is only just_ assuming reality In the thoughts of the great majority of Americans, and it provides historic background against which the modern Islands can display their products, their development, and their opportunities for the Investment of American capital. Like Columbus, Magellan was not seeking new lands for Spain He set out to find a passage from the Atlantic to the ocean that Hal boa had seen some years earlier on the other side of the continent. and having passed through the

WEDNESDAY AIFR. 14—192 0

IftUUOiMCd m of mm Small and Agile Hands Are Specially Adapted to Certain Work.

many employed since war They Now Make Watches, Electric | Light Appliances and All Kinds

of Garment*—Many Married Women in the Industries.

CH!N/t IAS NEW WHITING SYSTEMS May Transform the Celestial Into United Nation. REMOVES CNE BIS HANDICAP

»•». .h.rtoml her.. | h e„. V e B There’s so much money In the state ) ...

treasury the legislature at. Its coming

session will transfer $500,000 to the school fund, enabling counties to keep the school tax rate under 50 cents per

$100.

Fifty thousand dollars a mile is behig spent for 250 miles of concrete highways. The state will soon have Ooo fireproof schools. Delaware does not fax property—the rest of the United States keeps her rich.

he was steering for the Moluccas, or Spice islands. And so, incidentally,

he found the Philippines.

COMES OF ANCIENT FAMILY

Danish Minister to Iceland Traces Origin to First White Man Born in America.

MAKES RECORD FLIGHT

Information has been received from

| Copenhagen that the Danish consul-1 !nani w <R<'h ' general in London, .1. E. Roeggild, has i ls sur PHs!ng

I general in l.onunn, J. li. Roeggild, been appointed Danish minister to Iceland. Mr. Roeggild is widely known in America, having been Danish consul In San Francisco and Chicago, consul-general in New York and commerclnl adviser to the Danish legation

In Washington.

Mr Roeggild seems especially fitted

Chicago.—"The forewoman has come to stay," says Mrs. Anna Lnlor Burdick, special agent for trade and Industrial education for girls and women. federal hoard, for vocational education. "The typical watchmaker of the United States Is a nlneteen-year-old girl. The number of married women in Industry has Increased 100 per cent since the war. Certain Industries are limited In their expansion only by the number of woman employees to he ob-

tained.”

In the course of her work Mrs. Burdick meets all sorts and conditions of women. Following are some of her Interesting observations of women In

Industry;

Hand* Suited for Certain Work. “Women’s small and agile hands are especially adapted to the work of certain Industries. Women are needed In garment and hat work, the hosiery Industry and soapmaklng. The expansion of the hosiery knitting and garment making industries Is limited only by the number of women obtainable. "Women make and assemble the delicate parts of adding machines, office appliances, Mazda lamps, electric light equipment and appliances. In 1914 fiveeighths of Ihe employees of the Waltham watch factor) - were women. It

to know that the typical

watchmaker of the United States Is a

nineteen year old girl.

“Before the war there was only the foreman In all Industries where women were employed. Since Ihe war there are both the Instructional forewoman and the production forewoman in all woman-employing Industries. In the Betts Artificial Limb company.

I (>i the handicaps of the written inti. I gunge of China, the lenders of the Ni. w China have for some time been kci.ly aware. And the handicap is In fair way of being overcome. A now system of writing the Chinese lanrunp 1ms been developed and Its use Is being strong 1 )’ advocated by the Peking government. The new system is ci nese, hut the way In which the < nese characters are used Is trerm.. dously slinplled. The new sys’em I : ’!!> letters In all—24 initials, three niedluls and 12 finals. The new mstein, taught In the government srhoc ... Is meeting with notable success. ]• was taught to the Chinese lahor hat talions in France with equally happy

results.

THE “POOR FISH” IS RIGHT Winsted’s Pet Brook Trout Drowns

Himself In Greed.

Poor Jim, ihe pet brook trout! lie’s

dead—drew ned.

Written Language Being Simplified and the Government Is Strongly Urging General Use of New System— Great Drawback to tbe Develop, merit of National Spirit Is Overcome —Old System Had e.C'W Character*. Of the harriers to national self-con-sciousness in China, not the least formidable Is Ihe harrier of the Chinese

written language. We can readily tin-1 Everybody hereabout knew Hm „ derstand from phenomena dally oh- i was „ h , K f ,. llo . of - • and lived for years |„ a wn;i, ,| t

at Highland lake. Wlnsted Conn, it, answer his name when you called hla and even take worms or flies f r „ m your fingers. Once, they say, he sw.,1 lowed, headfirst, another trout weigh-

ing nearly 11 pound.

Ills greed evidently caused hK drowning. He was found with his bead and gills wedged between tw»

served In our midst how great u handicap to ttie development of a national spirit in China are the poor conimunlcntlons, the decentralization of the functions of Its government nnd the deep-rootedness /.f its localisms. Rut In Chinn in addition to the poor cointnunfeation between its component provinces and a relatively weak central government, there has existed from time imiuemorial, to work

,re.,. u.ne i.i.ii.emoriiii. ro wont. K tones. Apparently he had cha",.!"" against tin- spirit of nationalism, the f r „ K or „ lln i,„ r fj;.,, lnfo th( .

handicap of a written language that Is between the stones symbolical Instead of alphabetical. . jammed fast.

The extent to which the symbolism ' p 0O r Jim ! He will he missed.

crevice

had hem

of its written language has hindered

on Htn,

the arousing of a Chinese national j Takes Out $5,000 Insurance spirit Is revealed by a Chinese writer | A white leghorn hen owned hv Dr In n recent Issue of the Far Eastern • Tancred of Kent, Wash before she Republic, says the Boston Transcript, was placed on exhibition hv a poultry Western civilization early devein a fe ,. ( i company, was Insured for v.,,,-

Insured for $5.(kifj

the demand of her owner.

for this post, as he has Icelandic blood 1 , , . 2

. 1 ii 1 Hammond. Ind., women are adni tted In tns veins. On the maternal side he . .. , .

, , . . . , , to the classes In foreman training Is descended from the Tullnlus family [ , ... . ' ‘ "

of Iceland, which traces Its origin back

to Thorfinn Karlsefnl. one of the famous Norsemen who discovered America nearly one thousand years ago. Karlsefnl, of whom a statue was ro-

clong with the men Women in Many Lines.

“In the Betts company women also do the set-up work. Certain machines have to he ‘set up’ to run a Job lot

written language .of the type known'.,, Itlc „ r llpr „wm T she as alphabetical; China. In common| ti, e egg-laying record of th.

with India and other Asiatic nations, 1 world UNCLE SAM KNOWS HIS BOYS gunge permits the creation of a great I

literature. I Sy*t«m of Finger Print Identification

Of the Chinese Masterpieces. In perfection of style, in power of delicate expression, In artistic charm, ♦he symbolical language used In the Chinese masterpieces yields in no re-

Makes Errors in the Navy

Impossible.

“King Solomon,” said the navy re j emltlng officer, "was the original Iden I tific.ntloll i.voert i»,,........e..« 1

used In the literature of the Western| "hen two women claimed tin

peoples, from the days of the classic models of Greece and Borne. The es-sem-e of the Chinese ’written language is the “radical” or root symbol. For example, zoological objects possess 1. zoological clu merer ns their key sym

child, he threatened to give ench them half the child to carry awry? And how the one who didn't «i>h the child harmed was adjudged the real mother? Well, the navy recruiting service hasn't King Solomon on Iff

— —> --- ’ ’’ , through. Formerly a ‘set-up’ man set rently erected In Philadelphia, was t in ^ machine and a woman operated first white man to settle in America, , ^ nla( . b j ne f) „( ,,f „rder and

she raised two fingers n« a sign for

spending two years in “Wlneland,” where his wife, Gutrid, gave birth to a hoy. who was called Snorri. From Snorri descended a numerous nnd d 1 o tlnguished lineage, among whom Is numbered the Tullnlus family, and the new minister to Iceland can thuu lay

the set-up man to come. Today wom-

en do this set-up work.

“In Milwaukee. Wis„ a street car advertisement from some factory which

needed woman workers exhibited n , ”’

-- J picture of n hrldef groom and preach- i ! <,n langntige has brought with I' c claim of being descended from the I pr Underneath were the words, quantify of provincial dlaleeis first white man born In America.—De-1 -yjany marriages are made In nur 1 The language of a mail in Peking may

1 plant. Come down and pick out your I be utterly nnlni''ligllde

Job.’ Then there was a long list of

applb d for enlistment. Their

hoi; botanical objects a botanical i s,alT ’ ,HU “ ■* “imilfir problems character, etc. By this arrangement I “very day In the week. Twins recent-

shades of meaning Infinite in numhci j become possible, together with the creathm of 11 literature extraordinarily plastic. The Chinese system, however has produced an extraordinarily larg< vocabulary. For ordinary purposes : knowledge is necessary of some (i.iMie characters. To learn these requires at

least eight years of study.

The symbolic character of its writ

trolt News.

- u

4 / ■Ui

^ v

Maj. Albert Smith, United States army aviator, who has established a one-day tlight record by piloting a lie llnvllimd filune from Camp Lewis, Tacoma, Wash., t> Rockwell field, San Diego. Cal., In 11 hours 1!) 111I11utes of Hying time, lie demonstrated the practicability of air travel from

Cook With Oil on Warship. The Hood, the monster mystery bat-

tleship, launched from the Clyde the other day. Is fitted out with a larg» oil-fuel cooking galley. For Severn/ years past the use of oil fuel has been common in the British navy for propulsion purposes, but its employment fie- cooking Is quite an Innovation. The galley referred to Is capable of cooking for 1,200 men. Tbe heat Is obtained by means of special burners, which consume the oil under pressure, compressed air being ised to atomize ♦be fuel. The result <s a white flame of extraordinary hef. and cleanliness, which leaves no res'.due whatever and Is easily controlled. There Is an entire absence of smell—a usual disadvantage in cooking by means of oil— | and there Is no chance of the food

his enm-

Ev«u the most Is understood In

patriot la Canton.

the social advantages aecntlng to the! wideh •o'' 1 .;!> girl who would work In that factory.! hut 1 > prove' s. Noedless to say, tho factory did not | Hew Sy&Um for China,

expect the girl to quit work after her The peculiar nature of (he written murrlnge. ' language makes impo-sIMe the use of “Married women In Industry have In- 1 a telopboi ■ lilrc. Pir)'. as no alphabet. Creased 100 per cent since the wnr. 1 leal an; 1 :' a 1 f wonts Is possible. “At Grand Rapids. Mich., the furnl-■ It pi ts lai ' i:!e"n dl’i'anltles in th" ture factories advertise for housewives J way of tl ■ use of the 1 r ating press,

who will work at least two hours a 1 It n aki .l.c sending

day. suHIng their own convenience CR labor m : ir-

! numb'.'ieCn

to when they will come.”

if telegrams a ach character la '-J'l.'.NH): a tele-

mother had never been r ally sun which was Tom and which Harry, ari' informed the recruitIng officer that stie never had known whether sin were spanking the right one. Fivi minutes afterward she wa« assnn 1 that her hoys would never get rnixi

again. How? Finger prints "Loss of memory (i ph' s' ') ;■ I

such rare causes of Moss cf idiniiiy’ arc easily handled In the m vy. t’lc .

Sam knows Ids hovs not o"lv lc lie

middle mimes, bn, also by th" i t’ 1 '

lines engraved on the ifin ■>( tie fingers. It’s alw iutc ; > aa-i se r ' guard fi 1 'be boy - '■ 1'

ai d ildr families. I'c" i’> ■ ■ alter of that. Hi" "bole now -V'-icui of eurlri't fir bs pun lu>s been pcrfrrn to tbe finest p-dpt. Diet c 1 relsf inedb' l pud desttal nttcii'ioa, nil ari arraned In acconlarice wbii die lrb" Informritlon on tbe subjects. It talo-

good m*' man good shir ■"

like a plummet be dropped, striking bis loft breast first. Sergt, Knckbr. bis trainer, found the message tube was hanging from the ligaments of his leg. nnd he bad a bole In bis lirenst.

son of Greencastle, formerly of! ’‘('her And" died from his wounds and Marion township, announces that he | bis body is mounted In the Smithsonian |

FOR SHERIFF—Harklua L. Jack-

. Canada to Mexico in daylight o, a j b) .|pg contaminated.

At Rninpoiir straight out of the sky j single day, although his own landing 1

1 ’ was made after nightfall. His flight | The Earth's Crust

was of approximately 1.:«»0 miles with TllP m<)Sf 1ln p 0rttint nclentlflo InIhrec stops en route. . vestlgntion of the past year In any

CHINA BUYS BEER MACHINERY

i* a candidate for sheriff of Putnam county, aubejet to tht decision of the Dtanocratic primary election,

May 4.

■ O FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER For comimiasioner of Second district, Reese R. Buis of Marion township announces his candidacy for

institute.

Perhaps the busiest bird on the American front was "Spike." “Spike” Is the color of the sky, flies like greased lightning nnd eluded the Roche bullets, lie delivered 52 Important messages, never made n mistake nnd didn’t get a scratch. He, too, is back

In Washington.

No. 07552 has no name yet. As far as Is known he was the only German

commissioner of the Second district, bird captured alive. He was taken by

subject to the decision of the Demo-| ^

lean pigeons In Potomac park.

cratic primary election, May 4, 1920. FOR COMMISSIONER—Third district, David J. Skelton of Washington township announces his candidacy for commissioner of the Third district, subject to the decision of the Democratic primary election, May 4, 1920.

FOR COMMISSIONER OF THIRD DISTRICT J. J. Hendrix of Washinyton township announces his candidacy for commissioner of Putnam county from the Third district, aiibject to the deciaion of the Democratic primary election. I

Last of the Baron*.

The last holder of the Judicial title of baron tn Great Britain passed with the recent death In Dublin of Chrla* topher Palles, who was heron of the exchequer In Ireland. The title of baron wa* abolished when the court of exchequer wna merged with the queen’s bench, and Lord Chief Baron Palles was the last bearer of It He was the solicitor general for Ireland In 1872. and the same year was promoted attorney general. After holding the latter office for two years, he become lord chief baron and held

that position nntll 1910.

He was one of the ablest lawyers ou the Irish bench and one of the wittiest

1 Works of Morris. III., Brewery Dis-

mantled for Shipment to the

Orient

Morris, 111.—The machinery of the brewery here is being dismantled for shipment to China. Chinese agents have been active In making purchases of this kind throughout Illinois since the prohibition law went into effect. A number of the central Illinois breweries have been converted Into food inanufacturirig plants, while others are Idle. The representatives of the Chinese government have not Indicated the purpose of the machinery secured, hut It Is presumed here that It is to be used for the manufacture of beer. It is said that Ihe machinery of various abandoned automobile factories has nlao been acquired.

been tho at-

tbe earth’s crust. Wo know very little about the shell on which we live. Scientists have been studying the problem In Hawaii, Tuscany and Salvador, where the opportunities for investigation are especially favorable. Jinny data new to science have been collected concern Ing the shell. Its composition nnd prob able age. Still other tests have been made In New South Wales, where a great reservoir concentrates an Immense weight of water on a limited area, and Instruments have been devised to measure the movement of the earth’s crust under this weight. New light has thus been thrown on the action of volcanoes.

Hardest Tool-Steel Yet Diecovered. When a tool becomes dull, time 1* required to sharpen It, and time In a machine shop Is expensive. A tool that will cut hard materials and still keep Its edge saves both time and money. Eleven years ago Professor J. O. Arnold, of Sheffield, England, Invented the alloy of steel In which the metal vanadium was IntrriMuced to provide a cutting power greater than that of

Well Filled With Pigs.

. , , , .w > evmvKH O A Dari ^ ,ia, Y ■ K r, * at regard for the dignity } New Haven, Ky.—Mrs. Dennis Dunn r ta dZ | of bl - ™ urt ’ He eighty-nine yean | of Howardtow u. who had missel her

Democratic voters of Putnam tounty

Belgian* Teach Glau Making. London.—A new Belgian process of

glass manufacture Is being introduced Into this country. A factory already

established at Wlllesden Is being ex-, .. . , . ,, , . other steels. As • result very rapid (ended for the purpose and Belgian ..... .w, ,» ». - _ . . n Li u . .. I production became possible. He has experts will teach British workmen the . j ^ *

■ now produced a steel of even greater cutting power in which the alloy molybdenum replaces the tungsten present In all vanadium-alloy steels, forming six per cent of the steel Instead of the eighteen per cent of tungsten

process which so far has been secret of Belgian manufacturers.

the

pigs for some davs, found 17 of them U ,he '’uttlng power of all I floating In an abandoned well, the lt * P''l'Ular Mechanics Maga-

? Dog Ends Five-Year Vigil, ’ Dying on Master’s Grave Faithful unto death. This is the tribute that can he paid to Jack, a homeless yellow cur, known ns the graveyard dog, found dead on his master's grave near Hamburg. »)., having perished in a recent blizzard. For five years he hud kept a lonely vigil over the grave of John Dindore, leaving it only long enough to obtain food in the neighborhood each day. County ministers have preached sermons on the love, devotion and grief shown by this dog.

5SE5

STAKE NEW DIAMOND CLAIMS Adventurer* Start Ruth in the Pretoria District of South Africa Mine*. Johannesburg.—A rush of diamond Reekera to stake claims Is reoprted from Beyenspoort, In the I’retorla district. where rich deposits are said to have been located. Two thousand men. Including lawyers, civil servanta. business men. land owners, artisans and clerks, took part and the whole ground was pegged out In a few minutes. Some of the more corpulent employed professional runners to secure the claims previously selected, says a news agency dispatch received here. 80 Shine* a Good Deed. Dayton, O.—A little matter of $16,000 left him by a man he had befriended years ago did not disturb Harry Levy, a tailor. He Is still at his bench and will stay there. He says: “Fifteen thousand dollars is not as much as It was In the days when 1 knew my friend, but I have forgotten the good turn I did him which brought

Net Contents 1'Fluid Hrachu

If* htj* i viHl

CmiTTER

CASTOR^

j ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT. AVetjelable Preparation for;\s simdutintttherood by Kegulatin$ the Stomachs and Bowels rf

mi

m

Thereby Promoting Digestion Cheerfulness and Rest.Canute neither Opium. Morphine nor Mineral. Not Narcotic] j^arouDcsumman PumpJun

&nna

MtrhM JMk

Amm Stmt •*mn Smd

f/mn/MSkftt KiktfmJi /Itrtr

.A helpful Remedy fcr

Constipation and Diarrhoea nnd Feverishness and

Loss of Sleep in 4 therefrom-in IrAnty Fac Simile S id nature te Zhz CrXTAXW G0HMW&

NEW VOHK.^J

At 0 inoitith* °l | '

35Poses 40 Ct ^| N

Exact Copy of Wrapper.

Ji III ^■■lA For Infants and Childrtu. Mothers Know That Genuine Castcria Always Bears the Signature, of

In Use For Over Thirty Years mM