Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 22 May 1922 — Page 3
MONDAY, MAY 22, 1922
REEXCASTLE, INDIANA
Page 3
lotal news
Miss Dorothy Williams who is , l 0 yed in Indianapolis in the office ‘" -hV Kahn Tailoring Company, vis- '’ j wjt h her parents, Mr. and Mrs. jr Williams, on north Jackson 8tree t over the week end. Mr and Mrs. Robert Hamrick left today for Liberty, Ind., where they ,;]] visit for a week with Mrs. Hamrick's brother. Harry Richardson and Mrs. Richardson. They made the trip in their machine. Mr. and Mrs. John Clemens and daughter, Miss Marian, of Crawfords v jl!e, were here, Sunday, visiting Mrs. Omen's parents, Dr. and Mrs. W. Tucker and family, on the corner of Vine and Walnut streets. The baseball game between the miiana Portland Cement Company ea m and Bainbridge, which was icheduled to be played on the Cement "ompany’s diamond, near Limedale, Sunday afternoon, was not played on iccount of the failure of the Bainbridge team to appear. Charles Warner, of Indianapolis, was here Sunday, visiting friends. Mr. Warner formerly resided here. Miss Esther Jane Johnson, a sen. ior in DePauw University an,] a mem her of the Tri Celt sorority, won the sterling ■diver ladies dresser set, at the drawing held by J. L. Hamilton, Saturday evening. The drawing was in connection with the Souvenir Day, which is held several times a year, by Mr. Hamilton. The last one held, Miss [Lucille Young, also a member of the Tri Belt sorority, won the ptize. Royal Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs. lack Davis, south Locust street, who las been teaching for the past school ,ear. in the High School, at Glasgow Kansas, returned home, Sunday to pend his summer vacation in school it DePauw. Mr. Davis has finished a ■uecessfu! year as teacher of History snd Coach of athletics there. He grad nated from DePauw University, last year. He is a member of the Sigma N'u fraternity. Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Werneke, east Anderson street, and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Grose, north Locust street, mo tored to Brazil, Sunday to visit, Mrs. Werneke’s and Mrs. Grose’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Hill.
Arthur Kreigh, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Kreigh,, on south Indiana street, barely escaped a ser ious injury or death, Sunday afternoon, about four ooloek, at the corner of Vine and Washington street, when he fell from his bicycle, directly under [the auto driven by Miss Dorris Harris,, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Harris. Howar,] street. Young Kreigh was riding on his bicycle west on Washington street, and turned south [on Vine when he saw the auto just in front of him. He was going too fast to stop and he was right onto the machine before he knew it. The [driver of the machine saw him coming towards them, and stopped. Had it not been for this, Mr. Kreigh would have been run over, as he fell
under the machine, between the front and back wheels. M. F. Burdette, who resides on north College Avenue, spent Sunday with his brother, Hugh Burdette, and family at Bainbridge. Miss Ethel Hill, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Hill of Brazil, spent the week end with her sister, Mrs. H. S. Werneke, on east Anderson street. Dr. and Mrs. O. F. Overstreet and son Ralph, East Seminary Street, motored to Turkey Run, to spend the day, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Jones, east Washington street, motored to Turkey Run to spend the day, Sunday. L. C. Hammond, who is employed in the Bieknell-Coffman Hardware Store, saw the Putnamville.Brazil base hall game at Putnamville, Sunday. Mrs. Ralph Knoll, deputy county auditor, was in Brazil, Sunday visiting her sister, Mrs. S. K. Lewis and son, Herschell who recently returned from California. Otto Wehh, county treasurer, wit nessed the Putnamville-Brazil baseball game, at Putnamville, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Allan and ehil_ dren returned Monday morning from a motor trip to Farmersburg and Sullivan.
jipjrajrnirajfcjra
Principal or Interest?
Which is more important, an investment bond or the attached interest coupon? On a $1,000 bond the difference between a 3 per cent and a 7 per cent rate is only $20 in a whole year’s income. Obviously the bond is the more important. Yet many purchasers sacrifice absolute safety of principal for a few dollars interest.
Fix your eyes on the bond — not the cou-
pon.
We sell good bonds. Central
Total Resources over $1,000,000
National
Bank
i
MISSIONARY NEWS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
I have heard those lepers sing, for whom we Hindoos have done nothing I am not ready to become a Christian, but I do love Christ. I have seen what faith in God means to his
followers.”
The institution at Allahabad is only a type of what the misisonary of the Presbyterian Board is doing for the lepers on many other roads in India, and in other places in Mission lands where these needy folks are met "Th. re are yet cynical people who assert that only intellectually inferior men and women go as missionaries,, hut is the missionary doctors who have discovered that leprosy is cur.
aipifanijniinijpjrnjrajajfrjcj
I
^ , able and the means of its cure.” kjjThc Roaf] of Opportunity:—
The Triangle Club of the Christian Church will meet with Mildred Crawley at her home on Beveridge Street at 7:30 o’clock this evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Swahlen and family, who have been residing in Detroit, have removed to St. Louis, where they will make their future home. Benjamin Swahlen is the son of Mrs. VV. F. Swahlen who resides on east Seminary street. Dr. W. W. Tucker has gone to St. Louis to attend a meeting of the National Medical Association. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Hays were in Indianapolis, Monday. George R. Christie was in Indiana]! olis Monday. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Allen Jr. were in Brazil, Monday. Dr. an,| Mrs. George R. Grose have issued invitations for the marriage of their daughter, Mary Frances and Edwin Henry Whitman to be solemnized at their homo on East Seminary street, on Thursday afternoon June 8 at 4 o’clock, J. W. Lemmink and sons will begin work on their new house south of the ;city in a few days. Mr. Lemmiek will !build a two-story house where his brick house now stands.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lord and [ daughters, Ethel; Edith and Dorothy ! of Elkhart, wfio came here Sunday , to visit Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Kelly | and Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Sloane and ; families returned home this after i noon. Mr. Lord is salesmanager of the Sidway Mercantile Company of Elkhart.
Woo! Woo! Woo! We are paying the Highest Available Market Prices for wool and give you a Good Grading Phone 175 Greencastle Produce Co., Inc.
nnual May Music Festival Greencastle Public Schools May 24-25-26 ^ednesday, 8:00 p. m. Meharry Hall R° s e Maiden, a cantata, by the High School Horus, assisted by artists from the DePauw Wiool of Music. Admission 35c. 1 jWsday, 2:30 p. m. High School Auditorium. °ncert by Grade Schools, Admission, 10c. JVsday, 8:00 p. m. High School Auditorium. 10 m ( lass Demonstration Program, ecit al, Vocational Music Class. Admission, 15c. [ rid ay. 8:00 p. m. High School Auditorium. ra nd Concert, High School Orchestra. Admission 25c. ^ as °n Ticket, admitting to all performances 75c ® e *P to make this a big Community Event!
TOMATO-SEED CAKE AS FEED
FOR SALE:—All kinds of garden plants, large pansy plants budded. S. A. Grismer, 327 S. Bloomington St.
Value as Source of Protein for Live Stock Has Been Demonstrated By Experiments. The value of tomato-seed press rake as a source of protein feed for live stoek lias been demons) rated by a series of experiments recently conducted In the protein investigation laboratory of Hie bureau of chemistry. United States Department of Agriculture. It bat been previously estimated by the department that over i’.ixki tons of tomato seeds are largely wasted annually as a by-product In the manufacture of catsup and omer products by the tomato pulping plants In the United States. Tomato seeds contain approximately 22 per cent of a valuable oil. The press cake which remains after expelling the oil contains about 37 per cent of protein, which chemical and nutritional experiments have shown to lie of high food value. Young albino rats were fed on a diet In which tomato-seed press cake furnished the only source of protein, the diet having been made adequate in other respects by the addition of the other essential dietary factors. On this diet the rats were enabled to grow nt the normal rate, showing that the pro teins of the tomato seed contain all of the amino acids essential to the growth of animals. It was also found that the press cake contains sufficient amount of the water soluble, or antl-heri-l'.ri vitamine.
JUNK:—I am buying old paper, rags Magazines, iron and all kinds of Junk.—Will call at any part of town—Tel. 561—Harry Bohard.
RAPE GOOD SUMMER PASTURE
Takes High Rank for Furnishing Succulent Feed for Hogs or Sheep —Easily Grown. Among the crops which can he grown for succulent pasture for hogs or sheep during the summer and fall months, rape takes high rank. It furnishes abundant food which is greatly relished by those animals; It is easily grown and can be sown most any time in the spring or early summer after there is no further danger of severe frost. It will endure severe Yost in the fall and can be pastured r.te provided stock Is kept off wbca ,t s frozen.
Safety First. ‘‘There is no chance of my ever adjudging the wrung limit insane.” sa.vs a Topeka alienist. “Whenever I am called in an insanity case I always have .mmi.c otic po.iil the patient out I* me beiniv 1 make the examination.”— Topeka Capital.
CLASSIFED ADS
SPRING CHICKENS 2’i lb.—Phone 307.
lbs-—50c
LOST:—White hull dogon head —name on collar Rewind.
■black spot
Call 7S9
SALESLADY— WHY NOT SELL FOR YOURSELF?—An opportunity is open in this locality to sell the best golf ball manufactured with absolute guarantee or money refunded direct to golf players -Commission Write—ARIEL GOLF BALL COMPANY. INC., 47 West 47th Street, New York City, N. Y.
the the
AUCTION:—Farm and Personal Property, Thursday May 25th, 10:00 a. m. The undersigned will sell without reserve 160 acres 1 mile southwest of Patrieksburg, Owen County, Indiana, 6 room house with good cellar, cistern and well; Good barn, and granary; Sheep barn; Old house; Poultry house; and plenty of other outbuildings. 18 acres wheat; Oil and coal prospects good. Liberal terms. Will also sell personal property. Adrian Yeager, Owner. R. C. FO-LAND AUCTION CO. Auction-
eers, Noblesville, Indiana .
SALESMEN—WHY NOT SELL FOR YOURSEI.F’?-An opportunity is open in this locality to sell the best golf ball manufactured with absolute guarantee or money refunded —direct to golf players—commission. Writ< ARIEL GOIF BALL ( OMPANY, INC..—47 West 47th Street,
Now York City, N. Y.
Rocks Are Very Old. Calculations of the rule at which radium decays Into lead, lead to the estimate that the oldest rocks of which we know anything are more tliau fifteen hundred millions of years old. World Growing Worse? Diogenes carried a ianteru ia his hum for an honest man, hut there are pessimists who insist that lie wouldn't have .been successful even if he had possessed a searchlight.
So Different From Her Own. ‘‘1 do enjoy those films with children in ’em." reinuiked a tired-looking little woman. ‘‘When the children romp around on the screen they don't make a particle of noise.”
Blissful Ignorance. "A bachelor is but bait a man and doesn’t know It," remarks an exchange. "A married man Is reminded of it ofteu.”—Boston Transcript.
FOR SALE:—Beautiful flowers. Come down to Addison Heber’s flower garden for flic finest roses and beautiful peonies. Also other flowers —Telphone 794. FOR SAT,FI:—Baby carriage, 426 Anderson Street. WANTED:—Two or three furnished rooms for light housekeeping—Modern—June 10th —Inquire Herald
Office.
FOR SALE:—Beautiful peonies. Red, White and Pink—408 West Franklin
Street.
F’OR SALE:—6 acre modern country Home—One mile from Square—Bargain—R. H. Newgent, Phone 363.K.
WANTED:—The drag, which was borrowed from the County Tool House, some time ago, returned.—■ Elmer Blue, County Road Superinten-
dent.
NOTICE:—The Dahlia bulbs ordered last fall are now at Eitel’s greenhouse—Please call and get same—
John Eitel & Son.
The Home mission money given by the Koreans is used in sending out evangelists in their own districts. The money does not amount to very much hut it has done a good deal. One man sent to an unevangelized district in the Spring of 1920. reported in the summer of 1921—sixty Christians. In the Fall the little schoolhouse was jammed with 125 people. 40 were admitte,] to the catechumenate. All had been keeping the Sabbath for at least six months, had gi'in up drinking and spirit worship. etc. They took up a collection and nut ur> a church building of their own. Their money ran out and they offered to pay for the food of the evangelist if the missionary would < make up the rest of his salary while they built the church. They studied th* Bible three or four nights a week. A; the officer’s class this year, this ch’irch had the largest delegation of
any.
The “Road of Opportunity” a«
Chosen is wide open. Bishop Burris says:—
"I wonder if you know that in Idaho Conference 50 percent of
preachers have suffered deficits aver- j agin* $329 per man? This is due to | the husincses depression following a! fv o years drouth that has complete- ’ ly shattered ministerial support. T,ast month Minnesota gathered and shippel three carloads of foo,j and clothing into one of our counties where two thousand families were trying to get awav because they were in dire need. The Board of Home Missions and Church Extension has helped splendidly in extreme cases; without their aid and the Woman’s Society 8u percent of the Helena Area would have to go out of business. Brother F , has worn out his old Ford in carrying the Gospel to nine cornmunit' os —one of the largest circuits in Montana; he is a splendid young man who is accomplishing tasks in the face of the drouth and privation which are almost impossible. He and one other of our preachers are the only Protestants in the county, both of whom count not their lives dear for the sake of the Lord Jesus. Yet not a man has refused his task even at
the point of real suffering.
The first distinctly Sunday School paper for the hoys and girls of Japan has just been issued. There am more than 175.000 in the Sunday S* hools of that country. For some years the Yorokohi Otozure” has been published as a childrens’ paper, hut it was not conducted strictly as
a Sunday School paper.
Following the example of Ameri- * an Baptists in “filling a ship in fcl1* wship” for the needy in Europe, the Baptists of England are raising funds to send a Baptist Relief train to Russia. They are co.operating with the general Russian Relief Agency, headed by Dr. Nansen, the famous
explorer.
It is reported that the efforts in India on behalf of prohibition have so attracted the support of non ( hristians of that country that Moslems, Hindus, Parsecs and Sikhs are working in harmony with the mission M-ics to rid India of the drink traffic. Prohibition is likewise bein.v promoted by every Indian legislative body and by all newspapers owned by Indians. few of whom are Christians. “There is a plan to hold a Christmas tree celebration early enough in the year to he able to get the gifts off to the foreign field ,n time for the Christmas celebration proper out there. Last September such a party was held by the Bible School of the Buena Memorial Presbyterian Church Chicago. This is a good suggestion for Baptists.” “The dreamers are the saviours of the world.”
OPERA HOUSE | A. COOK, Prop. & Mgr. Doors open 6:30 2- Shows -2 ' Show’starts 7:00 fj Program subject to change without notice^ _ ia iitI3EI213I3151SI3®EISf2i3.’5!i. , L'E5It.'L r S.t.'Si.'5J3I3E.’3,’S5EiSl?U3JtJ3J3l35ISE®5I3I3 Monday TEXAS GUINAN In the Western Play “The Stampede” ADVENTURES CF TARZAN Episode Ten “The Simoon"
* a
Tuesdav
HOOT GIBSON In the Western Play “The Bearcat’
CENTURE COMEDIES PRESENTS A Dog (tone Good Cast In “Mutts”
■—■HiHii ■■uni linn 1 —iii | ci«»rnraima»-3»e-- 1 '
increases the value and appearance of your property. For quality paints and varnishes of the BEST BRANDS SEE R. P. Mullins Druggist
i I I l i I I 1 i
WANT ADS. IN THE HERALD PAY
Could You Change Flat Tire Gn Your Car In 12 Seconds?
Salty. Salt beds covering an area of forty square miles exist in Nova Scotia. Cue bed alone is said to be 900 feet wide and eighty feet deep.
Daily Thought. The history of a nation, In the sense In which 1 use the word, Is often besi studied in works not professedly historical.—Macaulay.
Stringing Him. The man who is entirely wrapped up In himself carries a mighty small package.—Boston Transcript.
WHO IS “THE NEW MINISTER” Come to the Presbyterian church, Tuesday evening, May 23, at 7:45 o’clock and find out. The Christian Endeavor Society will reveal the iden tity of the New Minister through the chorus, solos and clever acting for a second time. Admission 25.
Buy a Ford and Bank the Balance
1
Dr. and Mrs. Black of Warren, and Dr. and Mrs. Grayson of Huntington, were the Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. James I. Nelson, on east Wash-’ ington street.
ADVERTISE IN THE HERALD
NDIANAPOLIS, IND.—A ear dashes into the pits, a new tire already mounted on a wheel is slipped on and in the twinkling of an eye the driver is back in the chase for the $100,000 prize hung up for the FiOO-mile race on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Great rivalry exists annually among the pit crews in the making of changes and will again be true on Tuesday, May 30. In the illustration is Howard “Nig" Shank, chief pitman for Howdy Wilcox, making a change in 12 seconds. Not always can such skilled workers as ‘‘Nig” get the driver away in quick time as a year ago Jimmy Murphy, the only American to
JlMMV MURPWV -» win a Grand Prix in France, not only needed a new tire but was forced to lose many precious minutes while he put in a new steering knuckle for his left front wheel.
