Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 April 1920 — Page 3
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TUESDAY APRIL 20, 1920 OPERA HOUSE
A. COOK, Prop. & Mgr. Doors Open at 6:30 Two Shows Show Starts 7:00
irtfc CrfEENCASTLE H-EKALU
PACE THREE
PROGRAM SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE
Jesse D. Hampton Presents William Desmond IN THE FIVE PART PHOTO PLAY “THE BLUE BINDANNt” A Western Photo Play Robartson Cole Company Production Pathe-Rolin Comedies Mutual Strand Comedies
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CAMERAS & KODAKS
Do You Believe In Kissing?
Kantfinff in price trom $2.GS to j S2Mt.OO. All Rood ones for t ie J price. 4 ^ Ei(ms and Film Packs all sizes, ^ Kodac Albums and supplies. We develop and print films. Our work is done by an expert Workman. FILM DEVELOPED AND PRINT. ED ON A TWENTY FOUR HOUR •CHEDULE. TRY US
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YOU DREAM Or i TA REAMS of the (lend tire exoeedLr inply ciMiiinon and are generally wry vivid; which is ascribed hy Ellis I In llie fact that in such dreams two | opposing groups of memories eontend In one of which our relatives or friends are alive and in the other ‘lend: and the effort of the ilrentn consciousness to adjust these two groups causes mi Intensity in the dream emotion experienced. The conflict of these opposing forces Is the reason that fre(lliently In our dreams of the dead we are ut first perplexed to find our dear ones with us and say to ourselves: "Rut he (or site) is dead." Rut the "sirentn of Images which represents them n« alive comes front an older | and richer source. Is the more powerful,” so that it overcomes ihe other and tiie dream consciousness seeks to adjust itie difference hy some such thought ns that the person dreamed of Is not really dead hut was only reported io have died. Sometimes ihe older emotional stream Is so much the stronger that we do not experience 1 this perplexity. In all cases where I we see our dead In dreams as alive I our dream consciousness accepts it ns a fact that they are alive. To the mystics to dream that we see the dead alive is accounted a very faI vornlde omen, especially If they speak j to us. if they look reproachfully at 1 us. or demand of us an accounting of i some of our acts, it Is a sign that we | had better hasten to correct our lives and take greater heed to our behavior. ( In this connection the words of Doctor ! Radcllffe. the eminent English Investl1 gator, are Interesting. He says: "You I are more nr less at liberty to believe | that the dead and living may exist together In a world of spirit in which the so-called living are less living than the so-called dead: and that, in fact. Ihe dead may couimnnd, as they do in dreams.” For u long time materialistic writers. Herbert Spencer among the number, have attributed the belief of primitive man and savages In a I spirit world to dreams of the dead. I'.el'ote IS'.io no attempt was made at a i scientific analysis of dreams of this type hut they are now attracting much 1 attention. (Copyright.)
Jones, Stevens Co-
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COME TO US FOR PRINTING That falls Goods
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Lew Cody . in “The Beloved Cheater” Will convince anyone T MOVIE Wednesday
NOTH IE
Tuesday April 'M I!t2(t
No 1 and 2 i‘ack Mill ofTTie American Zinc Products Co will start at 7 no p in today .Stab Mill will start ai
l-A M Wednesday
T iie |iack .Mills will work K hour turns Oils week Rollers will work on
the following schdult*
7 P. M. today Beltz AWilliamson 1 A, M. tonight Ros.m <& R W.Hiil
7 A. -Vf. Wednesday ..Owens A;Ralph grated cheese to
Hill.
1 P. M. Wednesday _.Chris*.y dfc Hu?.! key. i
Notheri Cook Book i ^ 1 We play at our house and have all sorts I of fun. An' there's always a game when the supper is done. I An* at mir house there's marks on the walls an' the stairs ' An’ some terrible scratches on some of i the chaliH. ! An' ma says that our house Is really
fright.
But pa says and 1 say that mir house is all light. —Edgar Guest.
Meat Substitutes.
, Moot, though wholesome nnd well | liked hy the imijorlty of people. Is not ' ess-entlid in n well-bnlaneed tnenl and tunny housekeepers who nre Interested In lessening the food hill, substitute some other foods equally or more nourishing nnd nt less cost. Foods to take the plnce of meat should he rich Iti protein and fat. Cheese Is a staple food with which everyone is familiar and one which may he used
in a variety of ways.
in substituting cheese or any food for meat, especlu) pains should be taken to serve dishes which are well liked by the faintly.
Cheese Custard.
Spread sufficient slices of bread to supply the family, rather generously 1 with butter. Place In a shallow baking pan and p<mr over a custard using one egg for each cupful of milk, salt and paprika to taste. Rake covered until the custard Is set and serve at once while puffy and light.
Rice Croquettes.
Warm two cupfuls of cooked rice In st double holler with enough milk | to soften It. Add two tablespoonfuls of butter, salt and cayenne to taste, with two tahlespoonful of chopped parsley. Spread the mixture on a plate In cool, then shape. Roll In tine crumbs which are seasoned with salt and pepper, dip In beaten egg and roll In. crumbs again. Cook In deep fat a delicate brown. Serve hot with etieese sauce. Add a cupful or less of
white sauce.
FX)R RENT:. Two furnished rooms 417 E. Washinvton St. Phone 771
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^FURNITURE SALE: I wil sell at public auction my entire household .
Pittsburg Potatoes.
Cook one quart of diced potato with one small onion until the vegetables are tender, using suited water. Then add half n can of sweet peppers cvft in pieces and cook five minutes longer. Drain and put into a baking dish. Make a sauce of two tablespoonfuls each of flutter and flour, one teaspoonful of salt and a pint of milk. Cook
Good rugs ami good furniture Thurs. Hn tll thick then add half a pound of day April 22 at 1:30 P. M, ,710 Crown grated cheese. Pour this sauce over
street. Harold Burks,. Dobbs & Vestal " ~
auctioneers. Paul Albin,cler!.' ( . 2t
the potatoes and bake a golden brown.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY Sunday morning service in the Ader block on the second floor at 11 o’clock. Sunday School at 10 o’clock. Wednesday evening testimony service at 8 o’clock. Everybody welcome.
Cheese and Celery. Select short white stalks of celery with deep grooves In them. Mix cream cheese with salt nnd finely chopped pecans. Fill the grooves with the mixture and chill. Serve cut In small pieces, on lettuce with French dress-
ing.
REMARKABLE FORM OF MANIA! I Women Evidently Thoroughly Believed Ttuy Had Communion With
Spirits of Evil.
In these days, when the civilized world is being stirred up by the wave nf occultism, spiritism and the demand for psychic phenomena, it will he interesting to read of Ihe cases of two women—Margaret and Phillippu Fh .ver—who were burnt for the alleged crime of wltcheraft tit Lincoln. England, on March 11. Kil8. With their mother, they had bean confidential servants of the earl and countess of Rutland, and. becoming dissatisfied with their employers they were led into the practice of hidden arts in order to obtain revenge. According to their own confession they had entered Into communion with familiar spirits hy which they were assisted In their wicked designs. The mother's familiar spirit was in the form of a eat. which she called Ituttei kin. These women used to get hair of a member of the family and htiru it. It may he remarked that this same practice is Indulged In hy the old southern negroes in our own country. They would steal one of ihe earl's gloves and plunge il Into boiling water, or rub it on Uutterkin. In order to effect bodily harm to Its owner. They would also use frightful Impreca Rons of wrath nnd malice toward the object of their hatred. LT-on the earl and members of his family they worked their spells, and his son died and others became very ill. On being apprehended the mother denied Iter guilt, hut tiie daughters confessed and described visions of devils. There were three other women Implicated in the affair, and all of them made confessions to the same purpose—that they summoned spirits In the form of eats, dogs, moles and other animals.
Electricity in Next War. That the use of high explosives In modern warfare has about reached the end of its development. Is the opinion of a French inventor of one powerful compound of that nature. Neither can poisonous gases, It is Indicated. he made much more dangerous than were those contrived In the world war. Flying mechanisms of various types promise much greater menace, and It Is probable that any new developments in scientific warfare visible in the next international disagreement will he electrical in their nature. Electricity's use In tiie lust war was relatively small.—Popular Mechanics Magazine.
Fireproofing M ne Timbers. A coating of magnesia cement on the timbers of mines Is declared to he an economical and efficient assurance against tire, especially In the arid regions where timber become? highly Inllammahle nnd is difficult to replace. The magnesite stucco, which I? ahundantly available on the Pacific const, Is applied in two coats, oft'-h U In. thick, putting the second on before the first has set. When dry. it is elastic, adheres firmly to imost any surface, and is stable and ■ i"ralde. It Is an Insulator, nnd resists tire, water and climatic changes. Popular Mechanics Magazine.
A GOOD PLACE TO BUY EVERYTHING
-i.
The Success Trick. John Adams Thayer, the serretnry if the New York Publishers’ association. said at a dinner: "The successful publisher must he quick in the uptake. He nitist tie the first, or nearly the first, to discern the merit in new writers. Of him above all men it may he said: "‘It Isn’t enough that he should know a good thing when he sees It— j he must seize a good thing when he
i know s it.' ”
HURST‘BLDG.-Greenca*tle
COMPLETE IDEPARTMENT of
Shoes
Groceries
Gent’s Fu r nishines
Paint
Dry Goods
Auto Accessories
Stoves
Furniture
F.lectric Supolies
Rues
Hardware
Implements
Tires
Roofine
Harness
Wice Old Sea-Dog. Cnpt. A. Thompson, who retired the other day from the service of the Scnndlnavlan-Amerlcun steamship line, kept going until he had reached the age of 71. He made 22.T trips across the ocean without suffering a single solitary mishap. He dealt with storms nnd men and with things under till sorts and manners of conditions. Now he is through and content to retire to the shade of his own vine and tigtree, spending the evening of Ills life In comfort and content. Lucky Captain Thompson! Retaining the vigor and strength of a young man, the old sea-dog has this to say: “You ask for my rules of living? i never have worried. I have faith in mankind. I flee from fanatics. I eat plenty, hut not too much. I try to get nt least five hours sleep a day. I keep my feet warm, my head cool, my conscience clear and my lungs full ot good fresh air.” Not such a had nor yet a rigorous recipe, is it? A Matter of Rings. Kenneth Jeffries, who was graduated from Technical high school In January, 1!)18, was selected ns one of th<‘ marines to escort President Wilson on the trip to France. One day when the liner was plowing through the middle of the Atlantic, Jeffries was viewing the water from the deck. Another marine, approaching him, inquired about the Tech graduating ring on Ills finger. “I have a right to wear that.” answered Jeffries. "I'm front Technical high school." *T have one to match that.” answered the other, and produced a similar ring, lie was a member of the first Tech graduating class of 1912.— Indianapolis New s. Double O Fools Them. What's in a name? Well, there's Frank L. Moore, first aid to John R. Orman, manager of the Indianapolis Automobile Trade association's automobile show. “Funny thing how tunny people call me Wood," said Mr. Moore. “I guess tiie double O in my name fools them. And 1 have to he careful, too, about how ! give my name, although Moore is almost as ordinary os Smith, Jones and Hrown. When I give my name to a person who doesn't know me I always saj : ‘Moore, Frank I..' If I don’t they put It down Frank Elmore."—Indianapolis News. Ferocious Artists. “What are those Palis Apaches we hear so much about?” “Denizens of ihe underworld, my dear." “Are they as desperate as we have been led to believe?” "I hardly think they nre ns wildly wicked ns they are made tn appear In the movies. If they were they'd drink hlood Instead of brandy.”—Birmingham Age-Herald.
Easy to Tell the Time. One of the cleverest of foreign i clocks now common among the exi ilonghhoys who had an opportunity to go shopping abroad, is the clock without hands, it in nowise resembles tiie ordinary clock with round fnce, hot is made with groups nf cleverly arranged clusters of celluloid leaves. The leaves In one cluster turn every hour—in the other, every minute—so It takes hut a glance to see the exact time Stilted in | (ilain Arabic figures.
Fcr Government Regulation. "I pie-iimc you're mighty glad the war Is over." “Well. I don’t Jos' know about' d."t." amwered Maudy. “'Cose Fse glad to have my Sam had; home an' all dal. hut I Jos' Iciow I ain't never gwine <’ g,-t inoiiiw !-,im I 'm so regular as I ihd while he wuz in de army on’ dr govenmu i:t witz handlin' hl> fitiatt'i."l
■YdlCHESTEFl S PILLS ^ 1 HR a l.nd l« a I Afck your t fo f » l( CL vU i hl-ohfA-tcr * iManioml llrnnd/#V> IMIIa in Kt-d a.*d C*'o'd nwijilLe^^yr i£Xvl T»l? no other Huy of>our ' - ft’ Ornnlftt AxWfnrrilM III s-TFlIO I L Hit A N D fot 85 ’I O years knowsHts lie* t,Safest, Always Kelia' le SO! 0 BY DRUGGIES I VLKYWflf RC
CLASSIFIED ADS.
I STANDARD^QUALITY-REDUCED PRICES J You Are Always Welcome] J HURST & CO. ,.v j-f . J—s ; -t-J
We have farms to trade for city property. Brown it Moffett. 2t Apr. 9—10
FOR SALE—Single comb, brown I Leghorn eggs. E. R. O’Hair, Fill- ! more, Ind.
Unfinished Business. Sambo—Say, Doc, what was that you gave me? I dreamed I was chasin’ a large chicken ami Just ns I was about to grab im I woke up. Doctor—Why, that was u quarter of n grain of morphine. Sambo—Please squirt 20 more grains In me—1 wiintnlt ketch that chicke—Medical Pickwick.
Kind to His Relative. “Ma. Is Mr. Fnlhouse very old?” "N'o. dear; why did you ask?” “I think he must he, ’cause I heard pa say last night that he raised his ante.”—Boston Transcript.
Appropriate Path. "This Is n (ymipllcnted sort of place to get anywhere. How cau I find the ■Mi
FOR SALE—Single comb brown leghorn eggs. E. R. O'Hair Fillmore,
Ind,
o FOR MORTGAGE r.XE^FTIONS— Se e county recorder, O. T. Ellis. ■ —o WANTED—ALL KINDS OF TRUCK hauling.—Phone 210
FLOWERS ALWAYS ON TABLE With a Little Planning, Housewife May Have Blooming Plants During the Winter Months. One of the problems before every housewife is tiie making of her home a blight and attractive plnce, and not at too grout an expi ttso. Flowers always give the cheer and sunshine so admired, hut we usually think of (lowers for the home and table as luxuries to be enjoyed on Christtnos. Thanksgiving, birthdays and other special occasions. However, hy using care and judgment In the selection of tiie plants one can have blooming plants the entile winter. There are a few varieties that we can make no mistake in cultivating. There nre the primroses. They were our grandmothers* favorites and they nre still admired. The seed can he secured nt any seed store, sow n In a box In June, in the fail transplanted Into pots In rich, loose soil. Hive them a bright window nnd keep them moist. If allowed to become dry Just once it w ill check their blooming, and they never will he so beautiful. If rightly cared for they will furnish a center piece for the table all winter. Then there tire the cyclamln. They are a rent investment. They are as dainty as n flock of butterflies when in bloom, and will hloom for months. These two come from the seed and must lie kept moist. There are n number of varieties of blooming begonias that are beautiful in foliage and bloom.—Thrift Magazine. CLOSE STUDENTS OF NATURE Examination Papers Proved That Pupils Must Have Made Keen Observations of Their Subjects. A nature study and biology teacher sent the Nature Study Review the following from her pupils' papers, regarding their observation and conclusions in the domain of nature: “Organic mutter Is when you have something the matter with your or
gnus.”
“Five devices hy which seeds arc scattered are wind, water, explosion, torn up, taken out and thrown away." “The peculiars of an Insect are some of them tiring diseases, others destroy food, suck the blood, spoil the flowers, lay eggs and kill bahics." “Tiie grasshopper, when he walks, either jumps or hops." “The jaws of a grasshopper move east and west.” “A larva Is an unfinished animal.”
oiinsi’ uiey come into me w»(iu wimont the power of speech. "Dear me!” remarked the old Indy, "Just to see what It is to have a physical edlention. I tie right glad I nxad you. I've axed my old innn a hundred times that there same question, and oil he would say was: * ’Cause tin y he.’"—Boston Transcript. Where Ignorance Was Bliss. 1 A farmer saw u hoy picking apples from one of ids best apple trees, lie tried to catch him. says the Weekly - Telegraph, hut the boy was too quick for hint, and so the farmer changed his tactics. "Come here, my little son.” he said 1 in a soft voice, with a counterfeit j friendliness, “come here to me a tnin- ! ute! I want to tell you something.” “Not I'.kely !” replied the hoy. “Little ones like me don't need to know j everything.” Life’s Little Problems. “George, dear!” began the worried
woman,
"Yes. wollslt?” grunted George, without looking up from his newspaper. “Would you mind helping me w ith a little hit of arithmetic?" she pleaded. I “Not at nil.” "Well, If we pay the new cook the wages she wants will we have enough money left to buy anything for her to cook?"—London Answers.
All Spoiled. Her Mother—1 think Harold's vnrntlon plan Is a tine one and I don’t see why you oppose it. It's what you’ve always wanted. Mrs. JuKtwcd—I know I've nlwnyn wanted it. But, don't you understand, mother. I forgot to mention it and so he proposed It fir-l Had Enough. “Wlmt’s the fuss nt the fountain? ('holly hits been drinking there all day." "Yes, nnd the druggist bus refused to sell him any more Ice-cream soda.” —Louisville Courier-Journal.
Architect, Contractor ami Landscape Gardening. \V. H. Evans, Greencastle, Indiana.
FOR SALE: S. C. White Leghorn eggs for hatching, Earl Bunten, Fillmore.
WANTED—All kinds hauling. —Phone 210. Thompson.
of truck Raymond
Kemp’s Balsam WillSiop that Couch
GUARANTEED 0
Free Tin Boxes. There are countless uses for tin boxes. Most dealers In cigarettes have on hand boxes of tills kind, eleven Inches long, six Inches wide nnd four Inches deep, which are thrown away. Some dealers are glad to Hccoiiunodate persons who desire these tin receptacles and will give them away without cost. The following are some very good ways in which the tin boxes can he utilized : Lunch boxes when out ramping or fishing, ns they will hold ti good siijs ply of lunch. Covered with n white enamel nnd used ns a cake-box or bread-box. Keeping food away from ruts, mice and other pests. Painted and used as a flower box.— Thrift Magazine. Cause and Because. “Doctor,” said a beldam of a rural village, “can you tell me how It is that some folks be born dumb?” “Why — hem — why, certainly, mndatr ” reel led the doctor "It i«
You Gan t Drive a Nail With an Apple <11 Poor printing on poor paper never paid anybody. Get work that is good enough to bring you good results. Use an economical paper such as and come to an economical printer. That’s us. Quick service and good work at reasonable prices. Use More Printed Salesmanship — Amk Urn
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