Star-Democrat, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 February 1909 — Page 3
KrUlJiy February ll». Osteopathic Notes
8TAR-DEMOCKAT
I’a^e Thre«
Tin"
you May Know at Osteopathy
V,i<1 What it is Ooiuti for
Humanity.
I rm.a weekly by osteopathic pby- ' il'ians of the Spaunburst Insti- , nine years, fifth tloor. State , ; ’ Bidg.. Indianapolis, Green,a’tle Tuesdays and Fridays.) Eatln g is one thing and digesting quite another. Osteopathy cures Isick stomachs. (inie to correct disease is bel f0 i, It is developed. Osteopathy If,-guards against disease. Which will you choose—Osteop- . ,, move the cause, or drugs I®' the symptoms? Palliation is not a cure. u-,.,., it not for the forees of nair.ing creature could recover i 01 sick. Osteopathy L atl i P .-- surest and safest helper. 1 N , the constant protector ol I . ; idual. She is abundantly b l ( ;i , • laim or regain health if hev promptings are obeyed and fol-
1/, tv i (1
Osteopath how to When prevention,
1'0,'m ‘i -teopatliy. is fully underLmod the need of a cure will be Lyoided heca »e the osteopath will |i„. (imsulted before the individual ■becomes bedfast as the dentist Ishmild tie consulted before the teeth
| a re hevond repair.
I Ii is said that ninety-five per cent. | 0 f the human family show rheumaItism in the blood with or without I Osteopathy has no equal Iji, ov. i-coming sciatica, lumbago, Irhcumatism, headaches, neuralgia
land kindred aches and pains. Him does your account stand with
■Nature? She is a sure and accurate ■book-keeper. Begin the new year ■right by squaring your health acKount They may be consulted with|out charge. Tuesdays and Fridays,
111; s. Jackson St.
C 0 D N T V .N I- W S
As Reported by Hustling Correspondents.
Leant of the
■avoid sickness.
Big Four Route
|,ONG UltANCH. Mrs. Lourie Quinlisk has been staying at Greencastle the past week and assisting in nursing her uncle, Edward Hibbett. Ben Dickey talks of moving into the Amos Wells house on Earl Ellis' place. Mrs. Eliza Reeves who has been making her home for some time in a house near Isaac Irwins’ will move shortly into her own house, near Center school house. Mr. Merry weather of Terre Haute is still staying at Saul Marshall's. The Greencastle trunk line telephone company held their annual meeting on Monday, Fetoruerj at Vivalia. .Limes Lancaster was elected president; Fred Lancaster, secretary and Isaac Brattin, treasurer. Barton Pauley of Boone County is spending a few weeks at Marion Wright's. Telephone lines numbers S and 9 are being repaired. Tlie Bible reading w as held at Will Hancock s last Saturday. A good attendance notwithstanding the bad condition of the roaiis. No. S telephone elected officers on Monday as follows: James Layman, president, and David Skelton, secy. William Boswell who moved from this township to Indian Territory in 1907. has returned with his family to make his future home on his farm near No. 10 school house. Charley Shaner has bought the Susan Day farm which joins his on the east.
LOW RATES
Washington?, D C
AND RETURN.
Account
INAUGURATION
President-
Elect.
I
|W . H
■Tickets sold Feb. 28, March I and 2.
Pl'TN'A M VILLK. Mr. A. MeAninch went to Indianapolis Sunday to see his wife, who is in the hospital. He reports her getting along nicely. Dr. MeAninch of Roachdale was here over Sunday. Henry Mann continues very low
with senility.
Homer Smith has moved from the west to the east part of town. Samuel Blue of Belle Union visited
here last week
POPLAR GROVE. Cleo Wyant is on the sick list. Mrs. George Bales was called to the bedside of ln-r sister in Greencastle Thursday. Harvey Moreland of southeast of Cloverdale is sawing wood for Jacob Morrison this week. Mrs. Will Alien spent Friday in Putnamville with her brother-in-law, Henry Mann, who is seriously ill. Mrs. Mary Hales has returned home from an extended visit with relatives in (Jreencastle. M. D. Lasley and family spent Sunday with George Lasley and fam-
ily.
Mrs. Alcany Farmer and son, Elmer. attended the teacher’s Institute at Quincy Saturday. Roy Leonard of near the Shaker Church, spent Saturday night and Sunday with his uncle, A. .1. Williams. Mrs. Wm. Hall, who has been sick lor the past few weeks, is better at the time of this writing. Fred Allen spent Sunday with Elmer Farmer. John Ditmore is on the sick list.
1,1 ci!,!S‘ h m'nSS! s« t ur. GOATS AS FIRE FIGHTERS
I day and Sunday evening at Fillmore. I
Sam Campbell put in a new tele-1 ’
phone last week.
Clay Garrett has been sick for
several days, but Is ibetter.
Mrs. Susie Siddons spent last Thursday afternoon at Sam Camp-
bell’s.
Joe Garrett and wife spent last Friday at his father’s Frank Gar-
rett’s.
Mrs. Bertie Nichols and Mrs. Rebecca Shuck spent last Tuesday at Jess Elliotte. Their baby has bronchial pneumonia but is better. Clyde Walls and wife attended the lecture at Coatesville last Monday
night.
Three TIioiimiih! of the Little Animals Are to be Placed in the Foothills of California to Protect the!
Forests.
CKOVKLAMh Guy Shepard is able to go to school this week. Aunt Jane Ader spent Friday even ing with Mrs. Belle Allen. The Eastern Star Ladies met at the Hall to practice Saturday after-
noon.
Alfle MoVay moved to our town Thu rsday Mrs. Linnie Evans has been on the sick list for several days. Miss Pruden e Evans entertained a number of her friends Thursday night in honor -jf her friend from Greencastle. Mrs. Maggie Brown spent Saturday night and Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Walton. Tlie funeral of Mrs. Pike of Greencastle, was conducted at Clear Creek Sunday morning. Some from here have been attending meetings whi'-h is in progress at
Our high school basketball team 1 Coatesville.
is pleased with its success over '.hel Rev. Cra.itr, failed to till his ap-
Madison hoys Saturday night.
IMA R DI OR AS New Orleans, Mobile, Pensacola, Tickets sold Febuary 1(5 to 21. iHome Seekers’ Excursion (West Northwest, Southwest, South and Southeast, Feb. 2 and Ifltli.
. Protracted meeting commences ” A P" I Sunday at the M. F. Church.
Mr. .Masten will have a well sunk in the school house yard in a short
time.
Luke Johnson is having lumber sawed for a new house. Mr. Beaman is to move to Putnamville from the Frasher farm and Mr. Dora Hunter is to occupy the house vacated by Mr. Beaman.
pointment her, Sunday evening account oi the had weather.
Vor information Apply to Agents. 1 ‘MIG FOUR ROUTE” Ii. F. <). 91. H. J. Rhein G. P. A. Cincinnati, O.
PUBLIC SALE We will sell at public auction. Km the (j. O. Gorham farm, S miles northwest of Fillmore and 4 and ftme half miles southeast of Hain-
nridge, on
Elss,ck
SOUTHEAST ELOYD. Alva Gowen aud family have moved into the house vacated by worth Brown. Mrs. I. M. Vickers is on the
li£t.
Tom Bohanon and family are all suffering from bad colds. Mrs. Alva Vickers returned home Saturday morning from a visit in Indianapolis. Several attended the funeral at Clear Creek Sunday. Quito a number attended the valentine box at No. S Friday. Charles Christie sold a horse to Joe Eads List week. Alva Vickers is doing some fencing for John Iddings . Marion Miller delivered mules Monday.
BOB TOWN. an interesting
Quite an interesting series of meetings go;ng on at Mill Creek
Church.
Mrs. Carrie Neese and son of Rosedale visited her father Daniel
t'ra 11.
Mrs. Lizzie Hinote of Manhattan is visiting here. Walter Senter has sold his farm to Levi Neese and will have a publie sale February 20. George W. Demick who has been on the sick list is able to be out. Voia Kaab has lung fever. Rev. Wm Eggers has been on the sick list. Lillie Honsicker of Jordan village attended , hureh here Saturday night, Mrs. Maggie Bundy and children have returned home from visiting her daughter in Illinois.
rela-
ISVednesdav, February 24,
Piihlir Sale.
I will sell at my residence, 3 miles
T . . „ . , I south of Reelsvflle, on February 24. ■ he following personal prop- ;lt 10 a m , tiin p. r.heon •rt>: horses, cows, 32 head of mare, i good 3-year-old colt, - Fopheep, | stack of timothy hav, land China brood sow- (bred), is
shoats, 200 bushels corn in no N tons baled fodder. 1 wagon and harness, phaeton and set of harness, [disk wheat drill, c ru planted. ti.r,.v, ' cutter anJ other farm implements w2t2G-pd W. R. McElroy.
■logs, wagons, buggies, machinery
pnd harness. (j. O. GORHAM
JACOB HUFFMAN
ilohn Sharp, Auctioneer.
NOR i'H H \RIMSON. Mr-. Abe Jones visited with
lives at Quincy.
Curry Hart and family spent Thursday with Ini parents. .Millard Blaman of Quincy spent Wedn* - 'lay with Gailard Nichols. Elizaixth Jones has been on the sick list, hut is better. Chari, s Graham and wife spent spent part of last week with ills father near Patricksburg. Mrs Nella. Jones and children visited her mother, Tuesday. Georg 1 Hart. E-nest Mugg, Walter Jones, Charlie Gorham and Curry Hart attended the Red Men lodge at Mart:nsv,lle T e-day night. ijora ,oii,*s. and thinily spent Sunday nfternoi n with Elizabeth Jones
and family.
GOLDEN HILLS. Adam Fiseus Is on the sick list and Master Lawrence Walton has been very sick but is some hotter. Mr. and Mrs. James Meadows and family are going to California next month. Tlie heirs of Uncle David Pickett will have a sale March 10. Albert Runneils has sold his farm and rented a house in Coatesville where he will reside until July when lie intends to go to Oklahoma. Thomas Henry has moved to Albert Ogle's place. Mr. Ogle having moved to Coatesville. Several have opened sugar camps. Lawrence Hurst, John Prichett and Jake Shoemaker, Ott Herxl and Mr. Reeves have all opened sugar camps. James Walton made a business trip to Fillmore last Thursday. Wm. Walton who lias been visiting hit uncle, James Walton and family, lias returned to his home in Coatesville. Harry Mason has gone into the bee business. ACCIDENTS DUE TO GAMBLING Tlie declaration of Dr. R. W. Co win, of Pueblo, Colo., division surgeon of the Missouri Pacific Railway, in an address before the National Association of Railway Surgeons in convention at the New York Academy of Medicine last week, that gambling was an element to he reckoned with in seeking the causes of railway accidents, is something new and will give the casualty underwriter something to think about for some time to come. Fidelity and surety companies have long reflected sadly upon the gambling monster as their arch enemy, hut that the accident people must now put It on their red list is diverging somewhat into the paths of psychic phenomena, it would seem. However, Dr. Corwin speaks as one with a hook, and in the courts of his address before the association on “Negligence of the Employe from Disease and Overwork,” had this to
say:
“An engine driver, who backed
his train Into an excursion train, was found to have been worrying over the fact that tlie night before he had
gambled away his pay check. “Tlie employe who uses his hours
of recreation for gambling, drink and smoking to excess Is no more fit for work than is the man who lias been on duty eighteen to twenty hours, it may be necessary to reorganize tlie medical departments of the railways of the country, it is far better to keep men in good physical condition than to effect cures: to provide employes with good environment. 1 am told that the greatest trouble the manager of a large railway hud was to provide counter attractions to the saloon and gambling halls to which
hi' men resorted when off duty.
Mail for tlie McHaffle Bin Stock ■ale. It will be held during the
■rst part of March. 'Wait.. tfd-tfw john U. Garrett! Mayor, Girard. Ala.
“Suffered day and night the torment of itching piles. Nothing helped me until 1 used Doans Ointment, it cured me permanently.”—Hon.
t
R. J. GILLESPIE Licensed Embalmer and Funeral Directot
GREENCASTLE, IND.
Phone, Day or Office GBo, Residence BOd.
?
BLACK HAWK. Lon Evans is sick. Walter Sentej has sold his farm to l>*vi Neese. Mr Senter will start for Texas on March 2. Considerable excitement was stirl red up Saturday night by the report that a tramp was trying to break into a house in Bobtown but was Anally routed oat by neighbors, i John Bandy of Kansas is visiting old friends in this corner. The protracted meeting at Mill Cr-ek bun-h will close Friday night Mrs. Carey Neese. who has been visiting :n this part returned home Monday. George Kiser h visiting at Cunot. Report is that Black Hawk will soan hav, ..anther sawmill.
P’X-:--X.;..VX"!«-X <*-X-X“X"X~X~X-X“X"X"X~X«'X~:* MAMA. — —— — ' ' i -- !!l,l .Mis. Re- )»»»♦♦♦♦♦» rnoon'
F“X-X"X»X~X~X~X
INDIGESTION ENDS
Misery from your Disordered Stom-
ach goes in Five Minutes.
* x i ? x
Mr. S. S. Mecum, Embalmer and Funeral &
x I
E. B. LYNCH. Undertaking
PHONES-STOBE S9; RESIDENCE 108 AND 60!.
Director.
Mrs. Ran- nil end daughter. Eva, went a (ire in .. st le last Friday. Mr:. Mary (V y'/ioII and daughter Flora, of Coat,-vilh and Mrs. Will shuck spent lest Thursday with Mrs. Sam Campbell. Miss Mary Shuck visited Miss i Marie Ransom school last Saturday. Jqe Garrett lias bought a farm of i Mrs. Ransom. Will Shuck and family visited at Henry Phillip l ist Sunday. Arch Ficklin ind wife spent last at Sam Camptrall'a. Sam Goodwin and family visited
ineules d«ys’ treatment for $1.00. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded.
For tlie Kidneys, Bladder and Rheumatism. RELIEVES BACK-ACHE
For H*l« by B*dgrr M Cook.
You can eat anything your stomach craves without fear of a case of Indigestion or Dyspepsia, or that your food will ferment or sour on your stomach if you will oeeassionally take a little Diapepsion after eating. Your meals will taste good, and anything you eat will be digested; nothing can ferment 01 turn into acid or poison or stomach gas. which causes Belching, Dizziness, a feeling of fullness after eating. Nausea, indigestion (like a lump of lead in stomach) Billiousness, Heartburn. Water brash. Pain in stomach and intestines or other symptoms. Headaches from the stomach are absolutely unknown where this effective remedy is used. Diapepsin really does all the work of a healthly stomach. It digests your meals when your stomach can't. Each iriangule will digest all tlie i lod you in eat ind leave nothing to ferment or
sou r.
Get a large 50 cent caee of Pape's Diapepsin from your druggist and start taking today and by tomorrow you will actually brag about your healthy, strong Stomach, for you then can eat anything and everything you want without the slightest itlBeomfort or misery, and every partide of impurity and Gas that is in \om- stomach and intestines is going to he carried away without the use of laxatives or any other assistance.
THEY TORN! THE FIRE LANES Three thousand Angora goats I herded out on the brush-covered foot hills of California are going to do some hard work for Uncle Sam during tlie coming two years, beginning this spring. The experiment will be unique both as a stock raising proposition and as an engineering and tree culture problem. The little white animals whose long wool is of such great value are ■j ing to he put to no less a task, than constructing mile after mile of tire line through the bushy chaparral growth in tlie national forests, saving much labor by tlie United St.ites service engineers and making way for forestation by merchantable trees. Not the least important feature of the experiment, which for the first two years will he confined to the Lassen forest, is the fact that tiie task will be performed during the regular grazing by tlie goats which will not even realize they are doing
a valuable work.
Plans for carrying on the work are outlined in a co-operative agreement drawn by the forest service and the owner of a band of Angora goats grazing on the Lassen national forest in California. The scheme is to run fire lines parallel with the contour of the slopes hj cutting trials about SO rods apart. Those trails are to serve as guides for the Angoras. They will graze in each direction from the trails, killing, it is estimated. a strip of brush about :500 yards wide. The wide lanes cut out and grazed by the goals will serve as ideal tire lines in protecting the forest revered lands lying beyond and around the chaparral areas, and a! > make a place for reproduction of
merchantable trees.
For the last two years tlie government has been carrying on permanent improvements in the national forests on an extensive scale, and the construction of fire lanes and trails has been one of the most important features of the work. The task of clearing the ground and providing land far good forest trees is, however. perhaps the most important expected to come out of the experi-
ment.
The proposed work of the Angora gusts may finally solve the chaparral problem which lias been troublesonie in the State of California for . any years. The bushy chaparral yrowth chokes out seedlings of valu- ; ■ !e commercial trees which may get . start, and when dry is one of tlie worst kind of Are risks. Often a '■(’all blaze which starts in it gains s ,'h headway in a few minutes as to ::avel hundreds of yards and lick into valuable stands of merchantable t: in her. The protection to he afforded by iiji goat built fire lanes, therefore may at last bring relief to the state, v! . h in the past has tiad its full share of timber loss through destructive forest fires. At the same time, a large amount of chaparral will be killed out to make room for tin* growth of good trees that produce Limber. If proven successful at tlie end of two years the work will he carried to national forests in other f, lions where chaparral has choke 1 o il good forest trees and created a dangerous tire risk.
ITCHED MRS
Suffered Terribly from Eczema which Made Hands and Feet Swell, Peel and Get Raw —Arms Affected, Too —Gave Up Hope of Cure. USED CUTICURA AND WAS QUICKLY CURED
“I suffered from eczema on my hands, arms and feet for alsnit twelve years, my hands and feet would swell, sweat and itch, then would become callous and get very dry, then peel off and get raw. 1 tried most every kind of salve and ointment without success, only got temporary relief. As soon as I would leave off using them 1 would lie as bud as ever. I tried several doctors, took arsenic for two years and at last gave up thinking there was a cure for eczema. A friend of mine insisted c.n my trying tlie Cuticura Remedies but, supposing they wen- the same as other ‘cures’ I had tried, I did net give them a trial until l got so bad that 1 had to do something. I secured a cake < f Cuticura Soap, a box of Cuticura Ointment and a bottle of Cuticura Resolvent and by the time they were list'd 1 could see a vast improvement and my hands and feet were healed up in no time. I used several bottles < f Cuticura Resolvent. This was over a year ago and have had no trouble since. 1 think I am iritiiflv cured. Charles T. Hauer, R.F.D. 05, Volant, Pa., Mar. 11. 190*.
BABIES CURED Ol Torturing, Disfiguring Humors by Cuticura. The suffering which Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment have alleviattsi among skin-tortured, dis- \ 'A figured infants and eiiil- , dren, and tlie comfort jrV 3 : ^ they have afforded womT out and worried parents , have led to their adopc* xn tion in countless homes -X, ' as a priceless treatment for the skin and blood. . J Eczema, rashes, and ^^ every form cf itching, scaly humor are speedily cured, in the majority of cases, when all else fails. Templetc Extem&l and I r' t-mal Treat mint f,,r Fvery Humor nt Infants children and Adults e,,nret. of Cuticura Soap ,2.V.i to cleanse the Shin, cutl'-ura ointment ffine i to Ileal the skin and ' ntleura Resolvent (50e.)_ mr in the form of choiolnte Coat al nils 2. r »e per vial of fin . to Purify the Him id. Hold thmuahotit the world Potter 11rue A chein. C’orp . Sole props . Poston, Mass ay-Mailed t ree, Cuticura Hook
i on Skin Insoowe
I n r>' t rrtnuuc
FuD
a NEW TRIAL
Judge Rawley was here Saturday afternoon to hear the arguments of the attorneys in (lie Yemm ease for a new trial. The ease is one in wldeh Yemm sued the Vandalia Coal Company for personal injuries, at the last term of court. Yemm got a verdict of $10,000 damages. Tlie attorneys for the coal eonipanj immediately tiled a motion for a new trial. The arguments were heard Saturday but Judge Rawley has not given his decision yet.
University to Have Own Water. Indiana University is to have a water works lake and plant of its own, If the present plans of the university authorities can be carried out They now have an appropriation bill before the legislature for $20,700 and if it parses an entirely separate system from that of the Bloomington plant will be constructed.
Washington Once Gave Up to three doctors; was kept in bed for five weeks. Blood poison from a spider's bite caused large, deep sores (o cover his leg. The doctors failed, then “Bucklen's Arnica Salve completely cured me.” writes John Washington, of Bosqueville, dex. For eczema, boils, burns and piles its supreme. 25c at the Owl drug store and Red Cro8» store.
Streams Rising. The heavy rains of the last few dit'.k have tilled all tlie creeks and branches in the country, except Bloomington, and there is no longer a scarcity of water for any purpose, aud the railroads will he able to abandon their water trains. At Bloomington, however, the heavy rains of last week only raise the water supply a Unless there conies more week, it is claimed that works pump will have to close down again Saturday.
served to few Inches. rain this the water
The Rev. \V. T. Belfry will preach both morning and evening next Sunday at the Union chapel. Tlie subject of his evening sermon will he “Daniel in Babylon.”
FOR SALE—-High grade Black Langahan Cockerels. One dollar each. R. L. Craver, Greencastle. R. R. 8. Tel. Clinton Falls. 2t25
In telling of the Snodgra 'Url Four compromise damage suit in last week's issue it was stated that Nile, | tv Hughes were attorneys f Mrs i Snodgrass. Tlie Star-Democrat i ihonid have stated that Jackson' Boyd and Alice & Hughes were the attorneys for Mrs. Snodgrass. .Mr., Boyd tiled the suit and was the orig-j inal attorney for Mrs. Snodgrass, j Later Alice <k- Hughes were employed i to assist him in the ease. Mrs. Snodgrass receives $5,000 in the eompro-i rnise. Judge McGregor of Brazil, also had been retained to assist in the | trial of the case. Mr. Boyd and Mr. Alice, however, arranged for the
compromise.
Card of Thanks.
I desire to express my thanks to my friends and neighbors for their many kindnesses to me and my family during the Illness and death of my beloved wife. \Y. M. Silb ry.
How To
Gain Flesh Persons have been known to gain a pound a day by taking an ounce of Scott 's Emulsion. It is strange, but it often happens. Somehow the ounce produces the pound; it seems to start the digestive machinery going properly, so that the patient is able to digest and absorb his ordinary food which lie could not do before, and that is the
way the gain is made.
A certain amount of flesh is necessary for health; if you have not got it you can get it
by taking
Dentil of Mrs. Wm. Goodwin. Mth. William Goodwin, of Limedale, died at 5 o’clock Tuesday morning. Death was due to cancer.
SCOTT’S EMULSION
Send this advertisement together with name of paper In which It appears, your address and four cents to cover postage, and wc will send you a ' Complete Handy Atlas of the World.'' SCOTT ft BOWNE. 40» Pearl St. New York
