Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 November 1930 — Page 3

BiJSSH" GREENCASTLE HERALD PAGE THREE

the herald CHARLES i. ARNOLD—Publisher, rn'iat.lltihed in 1858 as "The Press’ ~ llU j as Second Class mail matter nt l e Greencastle, Ind., postofflce. P,,!,] h''d every afternoon, except .Still' iy at 17-19 South Jackson Street

Green astle, Indiana. TKLEPHONE 65.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES B' nail in Putnam County.$3.00 * outside Putnam County 53.60 ^ ,, j, it; in Greencastle by carrier. 10< J a we 3; advertising rates on applies

tlen.

(ireencastle-liiooniington ICtis l.ine

11 action Station Leave Greencastle \. M. 9:20 p. M. 1:00 I'. M. 4:25 I*. M. 7:30* I’. >!..l:45t

Phone 323 Arrive IlluiuninKton l«sS8 2:10 6:00 !* :05 11:15

DR. B.H. BRUNER HASANEWBOOK OFF THE PRESS

WHICH GOSPEL SHALL I PREACH” IS TITLE OF NEW VOLUME BY PASTOR OF THE GREENCASTLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH

Forest Fire Ruins 81,000,000 Property

Iiaily Except Sunday, t Sunday and Holidays Only.

ADVERTISE IN THE HERALD

66<5

i doctor’s Prescription for CCLDS and HEADACHES ]t i . most speedy remedy known. I -6 also in Tablets.

C !(iren Like this S;,re Prescription

Coughs and Sore Throat K< Heved Almost Instantly

S' ip children’s coughs and sore thi'm 1 11 betore these ailments lead to dan ituts ills. Use Tlioxine, a (loctoi 's

laiiii us prescription which britiKS re- | liiyitrei and more liet within 15 minutes, yet contains i powerful than any purely denontinaiio harmful drugs. tionnl or sectarian statement of the

<>n October Kith the Richard R. Smith, Inc., publishers of New York ' ity released from their presses H. 11. Bruner’s latest book. The title of i he book is “Which Gospel Shall I Freach?” It is a book of 239 pages, bourn? in beautiful black cloth with gold lettering. There are eight chapters iii the hook under the following Cities: “If I Preach Not the Gospel;” "When a Preacher Looks at His World; “When a Preacher Looks at the Church;” “The Gospel Jesus Preached;” “The Gospel of the First Christians;” “The Gospel in Christian History;" "The Gospel in Contemporary Preaching;” “Which Gos-

pel Shall I Preach?”

In the opening chapter of the book An Bruner says: “1 am not writing as one who, because of his high position of leadership or authority in the t lu rch, has any right to speak to preachers. I am writing as a private in the ranks, as one who has shared and expects to share the rations of the common run of preachers, who knows the problems of the Christian ministry not only as they are to be found in books, but as they are to be found in actual life as it is lived in churches which are not counted as great and are not in the limelight. I have purposely refrained from entering into l he very vital questions of the ordinances, the orders in the ministry, the forms of church polity, and the ultimate basis of a united church. I have tried to find for myself, and to •uggest for others, a gospel which is

inclusive and more

bath rooms, or printed ou our school blackboards incidentally until we have all learned to make them part of

ourselves.

1. Breathe fresh air. 2. Drink at least six glasses

water each day.

3. Eat clean, well balanced meals,

slowly and cheerfully.

L Bleep at least eight hours a day in a well-ventilated bedroom. 5. Be sure your bowels move each

day.

6. Do not slouch. Good posture keeps the organs of your body in

good trim.

7. Clean your teeth morning and

night.

8. Keep clean and even tempered. 9. Wear warm outer garments when out-doors rather than stuffy undergarments in and

outdoors.

iu.

out you

Clouds of smoke arising from a. a Ventra forest fire which already burned over 35,00 acres.

Damage is estimated at ? 1,000, 000. Highways and power llne^ crossing the area wore in con-

stant danger of being wiped out in fire zones. (tnt»rnttion«! N'ivrir**l)

Tl i.ine works on a different prin(iph t has a quick, double action it re ii 'i s the irritation and goes direct the internal ensue. Ideal for all i Idren because it is pleasant lastl and easy to take- not a gaig’ Ask for Thoxine. put up ca for use in 35c, Otic, and $1.00 bottl. If you are not satisfied your me ‘ " ill be refunded . All Druggists. Adv.

nm-pel could ever be—a gospel which may become, in the hands of those v ho arc thinking in larger terms than may be allowed in any of the present religious groups, one of the most effective weapons for the breaking down of those walls which have divided the church into warring camps and which have hindered the

coming of the Kingdom of God on emth. 1 have tried to find a gospel which men will instinctively recogni’/.i as ‘the gospel,’ not because it has any particular denominational gland upon it, or because they hear j it preached in a Modernist of Fundamentalist church, but because it finds 1 them in the deepest needs of their I so ils, answers their most persistent and perplexing questions about God 1 end life and immortality, ami driven them to repentance for their sins,

both personal and social.”

On the jacket of the book the pub-' lashers have used the following statement fiom Dr. G. Bromley Oxnam. j 'vho read the manuscript of the book vbeforc its publication: “It is a superb piece of work and calculated, I believe. to inspire large numbers of men to preach the Gospel. I smi particulary impressed by those chapters v.hii h have grown out of the author’s oV ti experience.” The publishers also have this statement of their opinion of the book: “Mr. Bruner came out of the war dista'tght. He could not accept the comfortable theory that I there are two gospels—one for the masses and one for the initiates, one I for peace and one for war, one for the individual and one for society, j AY hat he found as he faced his dil- j emma is told in this searching voi- j

Uo'.fc." This is Mr. Bruner’s fifth book since 1920, and the third one* which he has written since becoming pastor of the First f'hristian church in Urtencastle in the fall of 1920.

Winner of INoltel Priz‘‘ for Meclirino

TEN RULES FOR HEALTH

As the season .approaches when | Indiana citizens again prepare to tin mice another year’s tight against i tuberculosis by the sale of Tuberculo-; sis' Christinas Seals, the Indiana i I Tuberculosis Association call.s alien-j II ion to the fact that through a state-1 wide educational campaign and othei i jeeonomic, civic and sanitary adjustments. the death rate from "The I jGreat While I’lague" gradually i- he- i jing lowered. llooslers are becoming more undl more firmly grounded iu the belief j that sanatoria are needed to providt jenottgh beds for the tuberculosis; muses in greater ratio are needed H discuss prevention and sine of tubei ji.-ulosis in all counties; more cliui<-*| where the disease nitty be diagnosed | and tii< patient sent hack on tliei high road to health are necessary. , Tlie whole problem ol prevention ol |

Dr. Karl I.andj'ciner, eminent bacteriologist and pathologist, won th'i award of the Nobel Prize for Medicine. For eight years Dr. Landsteiner has been a member of the Rockefeller institute for Medical Research.

It pays to know

■1 \ THEN you spend your money for the seven and VV seventy things that are always popping out of nowhere to demand a portion of your income, you want to be certain they are returning the utmost in value for your every dollar. But how can you know the worth of the products you buy? Can you test them scientifically? Can you make microscopic examinations for flaws and imperfections? Chemical analysis for purity and composition? Physical machine-tests for stress and strain, strength and durability? Have you laboratories equipped for this work? Can you afford the scientists and research workers to perform it? There is a less expensive way to safeguard your purchases. A better way to buy. Buy products that have been tested by others! Products that have passed the most ruthless and rigid of all tests . . that of actual use! Nationally known, nationally liked, nationally used products! Advertised productsl 1 , Here, irr the advertisements, are products of sound worth brought to your attention. Products manufacured to standards of certain quality, that have been tried and tested by the most exacting persons . . . people who have bought them, and used them over and over again. Products worth your money.

tubercnlofilH in rhiblhnoil needs mm •• [intensive study. But perhaps as important a* any of these is a wider distribution of tho [simple knowledge of health habits under which any man, woman, or child cun live with prospect of complete success in keeping free personally of the ravages of the disease. To this Intensive educational campaign in right living; much of the efforts of the ninety-two tuberculosis association in Indiana now is being directed, and under this phase of its activities the Indiana Tuberculosis association calls attention just now to ten simple rules for health which can be slipp'd under our desk pads, or hung in our

Llritish Air Vet T; -is New T\ pe Plane

Get the habit of reading the advertisements. It pays.

Commander Glenn Kid ton, only survivor of the disastrous crush at C roydon, England, last year, in which eight persons were killed, tries out a new type metal Lockheed Vega plane at Roosevelt Field, L. I. Kid ton also crashed on another occasion in the African jungles 100 allies from civilization. Vliitu naii»nal n«nare*l)

TELEPHONE US NEWS

~Tl

Your co-operation will be ap predated ami you can help to make the Herald even a more newsy paper by railing 65 and telling the reporter it anyone has--Died; Eloped; Married; Divorced; I.eft town; Embezzled! Been hurt; Had u fire; Sold a farm; Had a baby; Been arrested; Bought a home; - •» ConiuiiUeii murder; That’s news—Telephone u*.

Go to your doctor to find whether you are as well as should be. i

Very simple It is to keep well IC each of its w ill work at it, and eachi of of us will gain us our neighbor gaina knowledge of such simple preventative measures In the field of publiq health. Education of the whole population of Indiana in such pttblio hygiene methods is the goal of tho tuberculosis associations. They ask once each year for just enough mom y to allow them to carry on this ami the many other phases of their work. We give them tin money by buying the little Christmas Seal in the holiday season. Let’s buy seals this year in the holiday season. Let's buy seals this year in greater amount than ever when they are offered to us right here at home by the tuberculosis as-

sociation.

AFRICA SPEAKS

PAUL l. 1 WOGFLER. STRANGEST PICTURE EVER TILME f PUBLISHED BY ARRANGEMENT WITH ■’COLUMBIA PICTURES

Wf/AT BAS HAPPENED BEhOUr: (Colorado African Expedition headed ly Paul L. lloefier and his companion, Charles, have set out from Denier, Colorado, with motion picture cameras and sound equipment to cross equatorial Africa. They arrived at the little villa oe of Aka so on the mvd flats of the Nicer River and after equipping the expedition sailed sou miles of the stream 4u an old-time wood-burning stern wheeler. The party disembarked at Lakoja, where they tremeferred their lupjjage t> trucks and started to cross the try. ftt the interior they came eome frenchman, who through a twist of fate had settled there.) NOW CONTINUE WITH THE STO/l)'

counacross queer

Chapter Two The crossing of the River Chari presented a difficult problem and It was not until Hoeficr succeeded in locating a trader with a small portable motor attached to a row boat that the problem was solved. Then the 100 or more natives en

at one of the natives, “Get in there

and help the men.”

They pulled and tugged until finally the heavy vehicle was pushed

onto firm ground.

After days of similar difficulties, the party arrived on the edge of the great Iturl Forest in which ele phants, the largest of all animals; and pygmies, the smallest ot all humans are to be found. The trail of the elephant was easy to follow because the animal tramped down everything in its way. But the cumbersome camera and sound equipment made it difficult to Hack the pachyderm. The elephant Is the wisest of all African animals while the rhino is tiie most stupid. Although their sight is very bad the elephants have a keen scent and

gaged at 25c a day, fashioned a highly developed heniing, making

7no ol a TiiOr ol Vfilingi Smayrs Wrtc ir. 11,1. rivilhnl vitrhi. tram AtrUa’. .lari r.t ririith. i, il/i ’iiouth.. nwl Hf* i those i • retorted to ly tin llanyi (>. ilm.-'iiirnfie il.mi caytui* by the Anils duniij the sine raid day., flimsy raft ot three dugout canoes. [ thorn the most dangerous to ap “That doesn't look very safe proaeh.

Paul," said Charles "But It’s better than nothing.'' Iloeller replied. "You are not going to put lhai truck upon the raft?" Charles in quired with misgivings. “Certainly 1 am." the explorer re plied. “And 1 am going to take the chance of walking back if anything happens midstream." After many trips back and forth on the crude raft everything was landed safely on the other side. Tired from the work and de pressed from the heat, lloclk-r was overjoyed to meet some lonesome Frenchman who, through some queer streak of fate, locati-it iu this God forsaken place. Ttiu Ktemii man treated them to wine and a very fine dinner. "How did you get here"' inquired the man. “We came from the West Coast by tuotor and are making our way straight across the contineut," Hoelter answered. ’’No one has ever done that be fore." said the frenchman “1 know It," laughed Moeller. “That's just why we are doing It. “But you will find many dlfflcul ties and almost unsurmountahlc obstacles," cautioned tbe French man who had lived loug enough in the country to know that the un beaten trails of Africa assured no path of roses. So had Iloeller for that matter, but with the spirit of “never say die" and a staunch deter niinatlon to ninko good he forged, ahead. After leaving the Frenchman the explorer's real troubles began Night* spent in swamps, heavy rains that made the landscapes a »ea ot mud and the help down with fever, checked the progress so that when the patty made five miles a day forward It was an exceptional event. _ “Give her gas. Paul “ said Charles. “We don’t want to spend another night in the swamps like this.” But try as thsy would tbe trucks refused ta shove off. the motors ehugeed and the -wheels revolved in the mire, and Ibe vrcblcfe sank dee per and deeper. “Hoy you heavyweight," he yelled

"They are very loyal to their com rades." said Hoefler, as he and Charles approached a group of huge beasts "They have been known to carry a wounded pal away from danger, supporting Ins immense body between litem at the risk of their own lives " "Those elephants would he tine in a circus,'' said Charles as Hoefler started to grind off the film. "The African elephant." Hoefler replied busy focusing his lens, "Is unlike Ills namesake in that he has never been successfully trained for Hie uses ot man . .” Bui he sol no further for Charles exclaimed, ‘Pan! look there." One of ih" smallest human being# hi evidence Jumped out from the indcrbi ush "Those aro pygmies." exclaimed Iloeller. Get a bag of salt quick.' Charles obeyed the command wurrylng to the truck. "What art* you going to do sprinkle salt on their tails." be In q it lied. "Never mind, hurry," yelled Hoef ler forgetting his elephants for the notice. "Part of my Job here Is to locate these pygmies and we can t miss the opportunily." Ho giaspcd the salt from Charles and pouring some Into the hands lie called. "Boy! Juki—bapa—Kujt —hap pa!” Tbe lad turned towards the sal: and stood looking timidly. "They love It. like a child loves candy.” said Hoefler. “It's very scarce iu the forest." Pouring out more salt so that the P.'gmy might »ee tt he c..l!ed. “Chumbl. Chumbl mlngl’ Kugl— Cbumbi GiuI, IQ Manana!" The pygmy moved towards ttatm. held out hie bands to receive the salt, exclaiming "Dios! Dloe!” “What does be any.■• asked Charles. "He says that be will lead us to th« pygmy cltartng It we take plan ty of salt with us." explained Hoefler. “We had better bring plenty ol water.” laughed Charlee. "tor some (t ilng tel la nte that he will be plenty 1 thirsty, the way be la ea’.iug It by h.ibdfuls. ^ ^ ^ To Be Continued.