Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 December 1920 — Page 2
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THE GREENCASTLE HERALD
FRIDAY. DECEMBER 10 1920
HtRALD
•,oter<H. an Sevond Clacr sail mattar at ih» Grrvncastlc. lnd_ poatoffica
Good Soup—When tiiHKtt'.* Vi: eiab!e soup huy a quarter of a pound of Hamburg steak Instead of soup bone Soup then ear he made In the Uma It takes to cook vegetables.
The proof of the pudding may he the doctor's bill.
uharles J. Arnold.
Proprietor
t UAUSHED L\ERY AFTERNOON ~.icepi Sunday at 17 and 19 S. Jack* tun Street. Greencastle, Ind. TELEPHONE (5
A Don t-Worry. Jack—How do you like this wrath tr't Old Crusty—What difference doe* It make how I like it? It wouldn't be changed, no matter how much I objecter' t» It—Siomervllle toumal
Well Matched. A sailor was called Into the witness box to give evidence. “Well, sir.” said the lawyer, “do you know the plaintiff end defendant?” ”1 don’t know the drift of your word*." answered the sailor. “What, not know the meaning at ■plaintiff' and 'defendant?' eonlinucd the lawyer. “A pretty fellow you, to come her as a witness. Can you tell me where on board the ship It was this man struck the other?” “Abaft the binnacle,” - '-t the sailor. "Abaft the binnacle?” said the lawyer. “What do you mean by that?” “A pretty fellow, you." responded the sailor, "to come here ns a lawyer ami don’t know what 'abaft the i/itmttcle’ means.”
EARLIEST TEXANS WERE CANNIBALS
| CHARGED WITH DESERT SAND
STOMACH CHURNED LIKE A MACHINE
Remains Found by Smithsonian Institute’s Anthrapological Survey.
HISTORY IN ROCK MOUNDS
Refuse Heap Reveals Human Bones That Had Been Spilt Apart In Order to Get at the Marrow—These Cannibals Antedated Indiana.
AT’STIN, Tex.—In an age of the dim and distant past a race of cannl-
What Is Known as the "Red Wind” Makes Life Miserable Along the Mediterranean.
Sojourner* in the Mediterranean for nny length of time see the red wind ns well as feel Its oppressive Influence. It blows from the deserts of Africa and derives Its name from the particles of red sand with which It is charged. Should rain descend while this wind prevails, the sand becomes n ml. and thence arise the “mud showers.”
In Its dry state It is more oppressive by far, than any' other wind known
I to the Mediterranean, not excepting | the Mack "sirocco." Its effects are ■ In ninny ways remarkable. The sand, of excessive fineness, enters between your eyelids and your eyes; It gets Into your nostrils and down your throat; It adheres to your skin and works Itself Into your watch; It Increases the annoyance of mosquitoes, and It Is so dry that, as you write or read, the paper curls up ns if exposed to fire-heat. Tables and chairs of seaSoncd wood and of old manufacture, crack with a report almost like n pis-tol-shot. and no quantity of drink has much effect on your raging thirst. All ' this time your skin is hard and dry. and without the relieving Influence of
What’s Your
Hurry?
You'll find out in tomorrow night’s paper.
bals Inhabited the greater part of the region that Is now embraced In the state of Texas, according to anthrapological discoveries that were recently made by Dr. J. Walter Fewkes, head of the bureau of ethnology of the Smithsonian Institute, and ,T. E. Pearce, professor of anthropology at
"m i B'V'Tgi* PIIFSS1NG A- I the University of Texas These early (,Ah COLLECTED I RESSING A nd prehl( , tf)rir inhabitant8 livod a n(v tiAINSI HIS HEAR1, • ' : mad like existence, roaming from one SHORTNESS Oh BREATH LI1 S , p ar t 0 f the widerness to another and TURNED BLUE, SA^S I h EEL | killing with rude stone weapons.
THIS MAN HAD SEVERE CASE OF HEARTBURN, SICK STOMACH.
LIKE ANOTHER PERSON
TER TAKING DRECO
Chwstm
“I don’t believe any one ever bad a wore case of heartburn and vomiting I
than mine I had to stop work and j kuchen mMdenV.""rhesTm*^nds
members of their own race for food. In dlcusslng the results of research work made by him and Dr. Fawkes.
Prof. Pearce said:
“The life history of these people has been read from the records they left In their burned rock mounds of
Christmas iClub” is no mere child’s plan; it is also
OUR
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to bed for I was all irr and felt like I was going to die. The gas pressed against my heart and lungs, my lips turned blue and myb reathing was so bad I was alarmed. The sour gas gave me cramps and my bowels were so constipated that I was completely ex*
Keep this up for FIVE YEARS, let th e money STAY in our bank untouched and you will ACCUMULATE a FORTUNE
hausted after every movement I was i Mexico so dizzy that I could hardly keep from I “These
piles of broken and charred bits of limestone three of four feet high and sometimes as long as 100 feet. They are made up of the kitchen refuse of these prehistoric people who had regular camp sites at frequent Intervals along the Edwards Plateau, extending from Austin westward to New
people evidently were ad-
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falling and my stomach churned and turned over like a washing machine,” declared Mr. August Poulsen of 425 W. Maryland Ave., Evansville, Ind “Dreco has enabled me to get back on the job and I feel sure of the future for I know what to do now when I need help. My stomach is soothed nerves quieted bowels move at regular times without a bit of ( straining, have no more gas. I eat j like a hungry nia n should and sleep j sound all through the night.”
vanced to the stage of paleolithic culture, an earlier age than the period of neolithic culture, to which most of the American Indians belong. These early Texas Inhabitants had arrows and spears tipped with flint points, chipped but not polished, nor did they engage in any form of agriculture. They were, however, skillful skin dressers, for we have found skin
scraping tools made of flint.
"The kitchen middens which we discovered are the only thing of their kind in America, so far as I know, although they have been found In other parts of the world. At these sites
Dreco being an herb juice medicine
combines pleasantly with the juices of | camps were located with a great firethe stomach, and the results are place In the center, over which huge quick and lasting j slabs of limestone were placed as a
All druggists now sell Dreco and it
is being especially introduced in |
Greencastle by R P Mullins.
sort of a primitive stove upon which to cook the meat the inhabitants kill-
ed.
“We know these people were cannl- ! bals. for among the refuse heaps have been found human bones spilt apart , In order to get at the marrow. The j soft limestone slabs, being exposed
U. S. Army Goods Store
Big Reduction in Prices
To stimulate the Xmas Holiday business we have made further
Price Reductions
to the weather, broke from time to time and were cast aside nearby, to be replaced by new ones. “In the course of our investigations we have completely examined some 15 of these mounds and In them have found thousands of splendid specimens of chipped arrow and spear heads, as well as sampling tools and other implements. Rones of the deer which were prevalent rn this region, are found in profusion, indicating that this was the principal article of diet." The repori of the investigation Is to be published by the Smithsonian Institute The University of Texas will retain possession of a collection of material unearthed. This will form. Prof. Pearce said, the nucleus for u musel'.m In anthropology. When the present investigation on the Edwards Plaieau has been concluded work will he started upon the “Funeral Mounds” in East Texas, which tire the work of an entirely different race of people, according to Prof. Pearce. These people, he said, lived in a later period. Their potter and polished Weapons have been found In the mounds.
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The Christmas Center
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TEN iVI I MUTES’ PAY.
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Franklin and Jackson Sts.
This Stipend, Pe- Week, Will Satisfy Alimony Claim. CHICAGO, Ilia.,—Lieutenant Eddie Nelson, an air pilot formerly in the Government service, must devote 10 minutes of each week to earning hi* wife’s alimony. She will have him “up in the air” for that length of time In order to comply with a decree Issued by Judge Trude. Nelson has been negligent in the matter and his wife brought him into court. "He gets a dollar a minute for carrying passengers," she explained, “1 think he can easily pay the $10 a week the court ordered.” “Yes. I believe he can give 10 min utes of his time each week to caring for your needs." agreed Judge Trude. “He owes me $20 hack alimony," ventured the wife. “I’ll add £0 minutes work to the order,” replied the judge. Nelson was willing to pay He evon offered to give his wife’s attorney a free ride.
Garage Declared Public Nuisance. ; HARRISBURG, Pa—Judge C. V.
Henry, of Lebanon County, specially presiding In the Dauphin county court, declared a garage and automobile repair shop in a residential sec tlon of Harrisburg to be a public mili sane*. The action ia the first of the | kind in this city and had attracted j considerable atUmUon as It was in tha canter of the nesPJantlal part of Harrisburg and t&acra vj* much Htlgatioa
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m
tife
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SONORA PHONOGRAPHS Several (Beautiful Models on the Floor
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Complete line of latest OKEH Records
Desirable Gifts for the Youne Ladies
Ivory Toilat Article* Parfumas and Toilat Watara
Johnstons and Huylers Box Candies
Plaah Lights, Safety Razors, Pockat Books
R. P. Mullins, Druggist West Side Square
