Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 April 1920 — Page 3
Wednesday apk. 14—1920 —
iHE GREENtASTLE HERALD
PAGE THREE
“ *£ , Txr
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CAVE-MEN IN MAN'f LANDS ^
A. COOK, Prop. & Mgr. Doors Open at 6:30 Two Shows Show Starts 7:00 PROGRAM SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE^.
William Fox Presents Gladys Brockwell In the Five Part Photo Play ‘The Devil’s Riddle’ The Drama ol a Woman Who Pawned Her Heart Fox Standard Production Louis Bruston Presents THE MYSTERY OF “13' Episode Number Five
Some of Their Dwellings Are Net Without a Fair Standard of Modern Comfort.
Troglodytes, cave men, living In their cave dwellings, are to lie found ** In Mexico, the Canary Mauds, i* the i Crimea, as well as in Simla. I'rance. I'alv and England, according to Hnr- | old .1 Shepstone, in the Wide World i .Magazine The Italian troglodyte dwellings at Bart are little more than houses which It has been found simpler
IfL’ic by McClure NVurttpaper Synuicele j Riltle Mrs. Carey frowned at tier
monthly budget.
•Three dollars and nineteen cents left this month. Last mouth if was two dollars, and the month before It was oiie-lhirty-seven. That is a lot of
to out out of the soft rock rnther than | "tomy lor a college graduate to
to go to the trouble of collecting build-
ing materials.
Tae chief headquarters of the Spanish troglodytes is the village of Burgasot, near Valencia. Their dwellings
squander, isn't It? I know Jim can’t give me any more, besides I suspect he Is worried over his magazine. It would lie loo had for him to have to suspend publication just as he has
are practically entirely beneath the | "orked up a good circulation.
ground. Many of these dwellings have been recently excavated and offer a fair standard of comfort, often having a handsome palm tree In front of the
ent ranee.
Throughout the whole of Crimea there are endless successions of cave
‘Wish 1 could help him." she mused. “What good is my college-trained tnltid If it can’t think up a scheme to earn money at home? It certainly was not much use when 1 begun to care for a baby and a house all at once. Boor .lltn, wlmt chaos he lived in for two
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dwellings, but the only oucs s-tlll In- I Tears, until I tried to make a house-
hold efficiency expert of myself.” An Idea like » Hash sprang iuto her
mind.
"Why can't I at home train a few cOiV-ge girls so th**ir Uusbinds won’t have to suffer as Jim did while I was learning my job? They could come here from !l till . r >, one girl in the morning and one in the afternoon, or two nil day. I'll charge two dollars for a three-hour lesson, three months’ course. Maybe the dean will let It count one half point toward a degree. I’ll go right over to the co lege tills
afternoon.”
The dean of the near! y college allowed Mrs. Cafey to presen. -.ter plan
to a gathering of the girls.
Humorously she described her own helpless floundering uhen she was trying to begin housekeeping. Then she explained h u- Idea of allowing girls to
habited are In inkerniann. a name which itself means “cave castle." There are vast holes and cozy rooms, with ledges of stones which were doubtless bedsteads in prellstoric times. There is also a wonderful cave church, fitted w ith columns, a choir loft and elaborate sarcophagi. The altar and the toss are of so unique u form that util quartans are unable to connect then with any known.sect.
WEAR DEAD HUSBAND'S SKULL
Andaman Widows Carry Grewsome Relic for Full Year, and Then
Take Another Mate.
BILL HEAD PRINTING on W E iMf mm
The Gasoline Problem
r T" , HE grave problem confronting the i serious-minded men in the petroleum industry today, is to keep pace in production with the seven-league strides of the demand for gasoline. In ten years the production of crude oil in the United States has increased only 96 per cent, while during the same period the output of gasoline has increased 560 per cent. The demand for no other commodity in general use has increased to a degree that even approximates the mark reached by gasoline. In ten >ears the Standard 0:1 Company (Indiana) lias increased its output ci gasoline from 150 million gallons to more than 600 million gallons a years. It is apparent that this could not have been accomplished except by intensive application of improved, scientitic methods of refining. As a matter of fact, the price of gasoline is held in hounds only by the sheer force of science. Except for the ability of such institutions as the Standard Oil Company ^Indiana) to make a wide range of useful produc ts from that part of the crude oil which is not used to make gasoline, you would be paying a much higher price for gasoline than you pay today. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is bending every effort to increase its output of gasoline to meet the demands and to sell it to you at as low a price as possible. Standard Oil Company (Imdima) 910 So. Michigan Ave., Chicago 10M
Widows In the Andaman Islands mourn on the denth of their husbands by detaehing the Jaws of the dead,
placing die heads on a pV’form in a i ( >ome to ho - own home, where by netreo for the birds to pick, then clean- j , ua i eyierl jnce ih.s. could learn the Ing and ornamenting them with shells routli* wo k of a house, and wearing them on their hacks for a ''Buying and dressmaking «ll! also year, even while working. At the end he Included,’’ she added. "Now don’t of the year they are free to marry think that your trained minds can
easily master the Intrkfcaeies of hnuse-
The widow lias n warrior picked out keep | nK< That Idea. I believe, Is for her by the chief, and he is usu- j wrong. A girl without college training ally accepted by her at sight. Then win take more kindly to housework she goes to some lone spot, buries her | because her mind has never had the hoboed skull and returns to the camp advantage of advanced study, which to tens: and dance, she soon, how- has tht tendency to make the routine
ever, returns to the skull and spends a week in praying and fasting in Its company, nflcr which the skull is unearthed and brought to the village, where it is stuck on a pole and made to look on at a stone of feasting and dancing. When the marriage ceremony is over the skull is hurled some-
where and forgotten.
work of a house seem petty.
“That does not mean that I object to college training in the home. On the contrary, the college bred women will attack tin? confusion caused by her ignorance of housework with u 1 keenness that will make her more efj rlelent than her sister with the un- * tnifned mind. She will give to the
The dead man is of no Importance j home and will surround her children to the tribe. At the banquet the | with an atmosphere which only edu-
people gorge themselves and whirl ami [ cation can give.”
dance like mad things to the sound of the yeninga. a native Instrument, until they drop one by one from sheer ex-
haustion.
Alexandria Modern City.
Alexandria, founded by the world conqtterer. Alexander the Great, Is an Egyptian city that is eager to lose Its connection with the far away past anil
Eight girls responded to this appeal. Six of these could start the next j week and take three lessons a week. , The other two, who were to be married soon, wanted to come together 1 eveiy morning for three mouths. Mrs. i Carey went home jubilant. She even i decided to teach her pupils to bathe
| her baby.
The success of the plan was far he-
become completely modernized. Fate \ . v ”»'l l>cr expectations. For two years
“Y" MOVIE Tonight “The Turn ? fe In ThegRoatT Helen Jerome Eddy Pauline Curley Bennie Alexander Winter Hale 4 *** George Nichols Lloyd Hughes Full of Laughter and Tears a screen play that will make you happier because you have seen it.
“Struck Out” Snpreme Comedy ?To Admission 15 cents
CLASSIFIED ADS.
We have farms to trade for city property. Brown & Moffett. 2t Apr. 9—10
FOR SALE—Single comb, b"own Leghorn eggs. E. R. O’Hair, Fillmore, Ind.
I
favors this ambition, for the wonders that Cleopatra knew have been eaten by tire or swept away by the sea. Alexandria is a city of trade and fashion, dominated by prosperous Europeans too deeply Absorbed in tile stock exchange to be even vaguely Interested in tiie romantic side of their
city.
Except for a few si tors who have r--iol a little history and are wildly Inqiii'ltlve regarding Cleopatra's palace and Pompey's pillar, the ruins of Ali xandrla rest peacefully, uaphotogrnphed and ttnchlppcd by souvenir hunters. One thing against the popu Inrlty of Alexandria’s ruins Is their scanliness. For the most part, they consist of a few carved stones and some "sites.”
Because of You. Because of you. Is the world any better off? Because—never forget—it is because of you that a great many things in this world are as they are. Because of you are there more smiles than tears? Because of you, how many people are going to he glad that this day came around? Because of you. Is the contribution to human character enlarged? Are there people of bigger vision, finer Ideals, broader sympathies and more tolerant opinions—hecHttse of you? Would things slack up a little If you | were to go away—hut then grow In j power and widened usefulness through ' the influence you left behind? Because of you, is there more beau- I ty In human association and more zest | for enduring things? Is the day better off and are you glad that It came? I —Milwaukee Sentinel.
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Achievement Follow* Work. A reasoning age demands respect for the person of others no matter what the sex or social station. It’s folly for u man to Imagine that he is strangely destined to rank above hid f“llows. You may be on the road to power, but that will result from fitness rather than from any endowment of divinity. The old idea that nature bestows exceptional gifts upon certain Individuals Is pretty much fiction. It’s nice for the gifted but rather hard on the common, ordinary chap. But experience shows that achievement Is a matter of work and not of gift. The world Is dally awarding prizes to those who dare to toll to the limit for the sake of winning place. Men who rise to remain leaders are those who fit themselves to hold high .-Uijnc
.sic? had pupils every day, and at the end of that time had $2,800 in the hank. The best of it was Uiat Jim never suspected what was going on. lie was working night and day himself. yet did not act like a prosperous ninn. Several times sin* tried to urge liitn to tell her his troubles, hut In* evidently decided to spare her as long as possible. I'i rhnps she did not press the matter suflieieuily, knowing that tin* day for her surprise would surely
ciime.
It ua * two and one half years after the teaching had been Inaugurated that In* came nml slumped wearily into a chair. "I’ve bad news to tell you,” he said. “I shall have to go Into bankruptcy th'g week, and for only $i>(M, too. I've trieil everywhere to raise tin* money, but I can't do it. I am ashamed to bring this on you. The little home will have to go," In* added, brokenly,. ‘Tm sorry for you. I have tried— I guess I’m n failure. You ought uot to have married me.” “Not another word.” whispered his wife, kissing him. “Just shut your eyes nml I'll get n surprise for you." In a minute she had put in his hand* her savings hank book. Jim looked at the cover and then at his wife. “I don't understand,’’ he said slowly. “Open It,” said Mrs. Carey, eagerly. “It Is all yours. 1 did It for you.” After her explanation he looked up from the total figure to the face of his wife, saying In a low, reverent
voice.
“You can't realize what this means to me." He took her face between his palms and drew it to him. "It Is your kind, dear, that make men worship women. Thank God that he let me marry you."
Would Take Ltaion From Nature. It Is curious to note that from Scandinavia, the home of beautiful wooden houses and abundance of timber, appreciation Is being expressed at the proposal to revive the ancient method of pise de terre In building. A writer In Sweden shows how It should follow the example of rockranklng In nature, pounding, stamping ard filling In every crevice with fine particles of earth, substituting for the weight of sen water some other form of pressure that would not require so many centuries to complete the operation. He does not suggest that we should return to cave dwellings, but that we should take lessons from the concrete examples In nature.
FOR SALE—Single comb brown leghorn eggs. E. R. O'Hair, Fillmore, Ind.
MORTGAGE EXEMPTIONS — See J. B. Harris, Court House.
FOR MORTGAGE EXEMPTIONS— Se e county recorder, O. T. Ellis.
WANTED—ALL KINDS OF TRUCK hauling.—Phone 210
Sleep? V** Doesadryoough keep you awake? KEMP S BALSAM will stop th* tickle u ~ .that makes you cough. V GUARANTEED.
Cameras & Kodaks
Ranging in price from $2.6tt to $286.00. All good ones for the price. Films and Film Packs ail sizes. Kodak Albums and supplies. We develop and print Elms. Our work is done by an exp< rt workman. Film developed and print* ed on (a twenty fonr hour •chedule TRY US
Jones Stevens Co.
A GOOD PLACE TO BUY EVERYTHING
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STANDARD. QUALITY-REDUCED PRICES You Are Always Welcome' HURST & CO.
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SPRING IS HERE BUT ARE YOU READY TO PARTAKE OF PLEASURES OFFEREG TRLTONA IS DAILY WINNING UNSTINTED PRAISE FROM HUNDREDS FOR OVERCOMING TIRED DRAGGY ”NOAUCOUNT FEELING SO I’REVALKNTT DUR-
ING THE PRESENT SEASON.
Does the coming of spring with not wonder why they feel so Uiv;L all its pleasures mean anything to sluggist. Lifeless, an<j generally oat-* f you ? j fix, when they know they should t -j "That all depends,” may be your full of “pep" and vitality, in perfent answer and axltmittedly “it all de-1 harmony with the invigorating pend.-,’’—it all depends upon wheth- breezes and sunsltnny weather *-.’
cr or not your system ha.s withstood ' spring.
the exacting siege of winter that! Thousands of people are now ta .- leave in it wake so many, many ling Trutona. the Perfect Tonic, t? thousands of people with completely overcome this weakened physical o - run-down systems. j dition so prevalent at the elore t} In fact, conspicuously in the min winter and hun4"ad» of public
ority art* those who have completed; avoided the "ravages of winter maladies. True, there are thousands who were successful in warding off attacks of inouenza and still more thousands who escaped pneumonia, hut WHO IS THERE THAT DID NUTT EXPERIENCE AT LEAST ONE HEAVY COLD DURING THE PAST SEASON, Remember, only second in severity to pneumonia and influenza, is the heavy, winter cough or cold. Like pneumonia and influenza, winter coughs and colds tend to weaken and materially affect almost every vital organ of the body. P«* pie who have suffered a heavy winter cough, yet feel that their systems have escaped the strain of winter weather, are sadly mistaken. If they could hut grasp the facts, they Would
dents now being m:id 0 daily, pro/ • that none has been disappionted • Trutona as a reconstructsve ager, y, system pur’fier and body in* i go rant. Trutona does it* work quick. 1 ; ’t: speedily attacks the impunt.es iu the blood that might, if left alone tri-v* serious ream its. It rebuilds broke 1 1 down tissues, strengthens the ner centers and produces f-ouer digestion and assimilation of food, at the stare - t me throwing off any decayed Tiuit' that may ha*> accumulated. In sh<»; Trutona thoroughly and efficiently tones up every organ of the and Ifives to your physical being the vigor and vitality, which alone can place Within your reach the many pleasures which spring offers to the
healthy man and woman.
Trutona is sold in Greencas+le ;-t
R. P. Mullins druggist.
BATTLESHIP —Tor a fragrant eye opener" at H£ WC breakfast—forthe“cupthatch*era" at lunch—for genial good humor at dinner. For flavor, wholesomeness and quality—always. r Cofftm— 77l« Perfect Drink THE CANBY, ACH A CANBY CO. DAYTON. OHIO
