Star-Democrat, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 November 1909 — Page 2
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STAR-DEMOCRAT
Friday, November 2«.
ItMW,
» R^emington
The name that stamps the character of your
writing machine as certainly as your letter head signifies the character of your business.
T he name of the FIRST practical Typewriter — the name which to-day distinguishes the BEST Typewriter - the name which
tne ins Type-
writer. TaB
/
Remingt
Branch Office
The name that stands for the latest and greatest development in writing machines.
See the new models 10 and 11
Remington Typewriter Company
(Incorporated)
New York and Everywhere
Branch Office No. 37 E. Ohio St., Indianapolis.
HURTV PRAISES
KWAN root
BONDS HELD
TO BE VALID
Sajs Someih r.g About America Council for the Bond Brokers Sure of Women and the Chinese Ladies. Sfanding of the Township Issues
GIVE FEET MORE CARE CONTRACTS ARE IN DOUBT
THOUGHT Of MUCH VALUE!THE DAMAGE WAS SMALL
Work Reported iu 1010 is Said lo lie Much til-eater Tliaii Ever Before.
The work of the census takers in mu will be greater aud require the services of more men than ever before. Several new sets of statistics are to be compiled, not only requiring more men than ever before, but of men who are expert accountants and rapid calculators. One of the things that Uncle Sam is determined to find »ut next year is just how many egg producers there are in the country and every
Greeneastle was threatened with two fires Thursday, both of which were nipped in the beginning by the prompt action of the firemen. The first was about 10 o’clock last night at the Murphy restaurant on north Jackson street. The fire was found burning on the second story, which is used only as a storw room. The lire had caught near the head of the stairs and had burned up the wall and was breaking through the roof when the fire department appeared upon the scene. Linle water was necessary to put out the blaze. The firemen returned to ihe en-
city, village or county poultry
farm whose annual output exceeds gj ne house and were scarcely well <200 in volue, will be called upon | j n | )e( j before an alarm called them
to declare not only the number of t0 t j, e home of Mrs. Hillis on West
eggs they lay, but must divide the . Wa inut Street. The fire was cans
matter into two sections those un-! p( j by a coal dropping from the
grate upon the floor. The carpet
der three months old and those ’
°' er ’ j took fire, a hole was burned through Of course the cen«its man is not fl oor> an j (j,p fire was making
going' to back the chickens into a corner and insist upon knowing how many eggs each one had laid in the past, but the chicken raisers will have to be ready to give all information they can concerning (heir money making pets. There will be no
"counting chickens before they are fhe floor an(1 a daniaRPd rarpP t hatched." but if the census proves )hp Hin|s hnTm , that there are really more young
chickens raised and disposed of than
good progress upon the underside of the floor and in the cellar when the firemen arrived. The blaze was quickly extinguished. The damage In each Are was small. A hole In the roof at the Murphy restaurant, and a hole in
it
.1. A. Gainor of Loganspor;. own-
old ones, the boarding house land- P r of the livery barn In which Ehe lord will have to get some new ex- Clarence Vestal livery is located was ruse when he smillingly announces j n town Sunday arranging for ini that he can’t get young and tender provemenls in the building. The fowls at any price. work will be begun this week.
Save Money in Cereals m/ The best and biggest bargain a housekeeper can buy is a o I other’s Kit
Man has been described as a parasite, bulbus at one end and lifurcated at the other. He certainly Is the arch parasite, preying off all creation, but he is more than bifrucated at one end, for the bifurcations have termini) structure of remarkable and exquisite adaptability and beauty and a mechanical perfection which cannot be surpassed. It was the foot that made the head possible, and yet, ever since the beginning of the molicular movement of the wouderous convoluted mass which fills the dome of man, the foot has been regarded with contempt, no credit being given to It for the great part it has played in his development. The foot was imperatively necessary during the arboreal period of our existence, and had it then been encased as It now
More and more the financial sky is clearing of the clouds of doubt that for the past few days have enveloped the township bond issues for the purpose of building gravel roads under the three mile law. The judge of the supreme court who wrote the decision that made the law unconstitutional states that he believes that all the bonds issued under the law while It was believed to be valid will be held good. At any rate they were not invalidated by the recent decision. Other attorneys hold the same view, and the Indianapolis banking houses are relatively certain that all gravel road bonds for completed roads are good. This morning the Indianapolis Star said: Counsel maintained that the decision merely determine the constitutionality of the la\» and does not touch the bonds issued, while it was regarded as a fitting statute. Lawyers declare there is no danger of
is, the conversation of natural re- financial loss in full light of the law sources would never have been con-j ant ^ sa ^ Eears that the decision insidered for the proud parasite who i val,date d the paper are without jpst
has in the name of development so cause ’
energetically conducted his campaign of devastation, would have been easily snuffed out in the struggle for existence. We have so neglected the foot, yes abused and deformed it, when it has been, is now and ever will be, an all Important factor in our existence. Among civilized peoples the encasing and resulting deforming of the foot begins almost immediately after birth, and after ten years of age, all feet have been more or less deformed.
It would be against all principles of equity, one prominent legal adviser said, for a court to hold that the bonds are worthress when the improvements were commenced in good faith and the ^-.oney received by the township and the people stood by without remonstrating and enjoyed the benefits. Supreme Courts have always decided that the issues must be supported when such cases arose, the lawyer remarked. Principles of estoppel proceedings apply there, the attorney
ii (. Hina. ’ no male •■jot .s iicaret explained, and make the issues good
l:o norm:.! then ameug the patent • oru.hcr uatienr. but in the Flowoiy iCln^doni. ihe : n-nla foot rivals ;.i its deformity that of her sister of
and valid. In those cases where the bonds have been issued and value received by the township under the enact-
Christian lands. For any one who ; nient 1905, now held uuconstihas a trace of artistic sense or an | !l ' , l° nal a, > d the work of const rueiota of appreciation of beauty, it is I 1 0,1 commence i aud not coinple'*!, a shock to behold the feet of today. T‘ e * aw J ers who icne studied th P The anatomist, when he conteni- t points involved say it ts plates the mechanical excellence and T os8 * 1, * e lo st01 ’ '' )nt« rest pay-
ments and redeem be. issues w’th out flnacial loss to dealers ani
holders.
..it
KILLS M \N, SIONTEVCKII.
Italian Prize Fighter Pleads Guilty lo Manslaughter Charge; Gets Two to Twenty-one Years
Go to your grocer and ask him to show it to you. A cf.mplctc assortment of different delicious cererA. for every palate for every meal. Not only is it economy to buy youi staple cereals in sufficient quantities at economical prices, just the same as it is clivaper to buy flour by the barrel and butter by the crock, but in every M ktr’s Kit tlicre i: i i ;.cL til n to the .caving in cadi a .1 1 in less Cooker CcrtiFcnte, equal to IS coupons,
" i.ich u hen added to the coupon- from the packages in the kit enables yon to secure a wonderful Tireless cooker
1\ merely adding 89 cents.
A Mother’s Kit consists of eighteen assorted f.ckaye of Moih.cr’s Cereals, packed in sanitary sealed packages, in which they are guaranteed to keep in per-
fect condition indefinitely.
>
8 Ptcltager oi Mo'Ser’s Oal.-i, stamlnrd niz*. 2 Packages of MoCicr« ’i allow Corn Meal. I Package of Mother’s While Corn Meal. 1 Package of Mother’s Wheat Hearts. 1 Package of Mother's Corn FlakesL toasted).,
1 Packago r l ’i- trs Old fashioned Steel Cut Oatmeal.
1: Pack.vis of Mcthe.-’s Grarulated Homin
7-
2 Pctik.-’g-s cf i'. Caarre Pearl Hominy.
This kit grocer’s 1 implj paying $1.95. The grocer himself w ill either redeem your coupons and deliver the $3.75 Tireless Cooker, or, if you so desire, send tlie coupons und 89 cents directly to us and we
will ship tlie Cooker to you, express collect.
If your {jrocer d h:-: not hr. p Mother's Cereals, write to us, givinii his name and jours, and we will send you free a useful souvenir.
rare beauty of the normal human j foot, is filled with admiration of the Omnipotence which created it; but
vb.. M he beholds the twisted, knotted pugilist, WHOSE ONE BLOW
behunioned, becorned monstrosity of today, he sadly says—only man is vile. Fable lias it, that the peaeo'k.would die of pride if it were not for his feet, but curious man has
made his feet ugly, because of his Pride. He first sought to protect Charles 8. Wiltsie, special judge ihem, for this became necessary in the Criminal Court, sentenced when he abandoned arboreal life. Charles Packey. an Italian prize but presently he began to confine fighter, who attacked Jacob A. them closer and closer, the sandal King on Ihe street without provocawhi.h carried Caesar's legions to tion and caused his death, to a term victory, being abandoned for the de- of two to twenty-one years in the forming tight leather box, now uni- 1 Indiana Reformatory yesterday, versally used. It was false pride when he was arraigned, following that invented and developed the the second partial report of the mlshappen ugly shoe of today, of Marion County Grand Jury. Pacey, which, Inasmuch as it violates twenty-three years old, was indlctevery canon of ymetry, beauty and ed for man slaughter and the judge mechanical usefulness as reflected disposed of the cn e quickly afier from the normal foot, constitutes a Prose utor Hooton entered the miscarriage of the human brain. prisoner’s plea of kuilty. Pacey did Pride, vain glory and hypocracy, j not seem at all afT ted when the assisted much by stupidity. Invented sentence was read. — Indianapothe point and chooked shoe of to- lis Star. day. Had we possessed the slightest 1 appreciation of the natural symetry, Jacob King was formerly a resi-
the beauty and the mechanical ex- i dcn * °T Greeneastle, having been reliance and usefulness of the hu- employed at the Rittle Handle Fa--nian foot, we w'ould not now be suf- ,nrr - fering to such a degree from spinal
and nervous disorders.
i:
R. J. GILLESPIE
Licensed Embalmer and Funeral Dlrec or GREENCASTLE, IND. Phone, Day or Niijht. Office 335, Residenp< v ,o:j
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MORE WHEAT USED NOW
bushels. The annual
Reports show Increase in Use of Wheat—Great Demand for Break Making Sturt'.
FAHMEHS MUST RAISE MORE
The continued decline in the exportation of breadstuffs lends interest to a statement just prepared by the. Bureau of Statistics of the Department of Commerce and Labor, which shows a steady increase ; n the share of the wheat crop of •lie United States consumed at home and thus a decline in the quantity sent abroad. The evporations of wheat during the nine months ending with September, 1909, amounted to only 27,768,901 bushels against 68,178,935 bushels in the same months of lOOR; and
Per capi
consumption averaged r, 7} but in the five years ending with md 5.5 bushels In the five years endu with 1899; 5.46 bushels in the ji years ending with 1901 and bushels in the five-year period »J ing with 1909. These figures d cate not only a larger oonsumntJ
as a result of increas.M
but also a larger coiisuim on The share of tlie doumstic miB3 duct exported which at , 0 Ml
per cent, in the th< r
ending witli 1884, I Vi l and liijMfj fell to ::o.7 per cent in the year period ending with "><>), 17.25 per cent, of the total intSi
five-year period ending w <i. The shortage which tl, c onsumption by the p. United States casues in of wheat availahlo f,,r
tries is, apparently, lieina hm part by increased prod n i
porlations on the part
• spi
Wheat
#*1
of Argent ia in I 9ns u,>. .
it flour. 6,288,283 barrels, against and Canada
9,438,347 in the same months of j
last year, suggesting that the calen-1 lionB in the preceding five lar year I Mop will show a smaller | (hose ()f Canada> 54I ., „ ;i i lion! | exportation of wheat than any year’ 1!)08 against about 37 million* J in the last decade with the excep- aunum jn the p reced , ng flve ye J rions of 1904 and 1905. ! though Australia, Russia and Ind The statement as prepared by the; show in 1908 wheat expor s m ,J
l )ro ‘ tally below their average for thebl
The Fren-h
high-heeled shoe is an Instrument for public ill boalth, not equalled by all Ihe bad smelling dead nnim il rendering estahlshments belonging
to our cities.
HERMINA EITEUORG
The Great western Cf.rf.ai, Company
AKRON
OPtRAIING MOPK OATMr.V. .MIL! S THAN ASV OTHER ONE CONCERN BOSTON * NEW I1AVI N NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO pinsBIROH ALBANY ST. LOUS
The remains of Miss Hermloa Eiteljorge, who died on last Saturday in New Mexico, where she bad gone in search of health, were brought home here Tups, reaching the city shortly after noon. The funeral occured at the family residence on West Washington street Wednesday afternoon, 2:30 o’clock The services were conducted by the Rev. Van Dyke. The mother and sister of the deceased were with her at the time of death and accompanied the remains on the journey home.
Bureau of Statistics shows the luction of wheat .the imports, the exports, and thus the consumption for each single year since 1880 and also the annual average for fivevear periods. The exortations of wheat (including flour in terms of wheat) averaged 150 million bus.iels per annum in the five years '’tiding with June 1894, 171 millions per annum in the five years '’tiding with 1904, and but 113 millions per annum in the five years ending June 30, 1909. tlie exports for the single year 1909 being 114
million bushels.
This reduction in exports of the wheat seems to be due to increased ‘onstimplion at home rather than to ’ny de line in production. The an■inul production in the five calendar ears preceding the close of the flsI year 18s) averaged 451 million bushels; in tlie five years ending with 1889, 4 40 millions; in the five years ending with 189 1, 483 millions: in the live years ending wdth 1899, 512 millions; in the five years ending with 1904, 626 milions, and in the five years ending with 1909, 656 million bushels. Thus the average annual production during the last flve years has exceeded that of any earlier five-year period, yet the average exportation in the five years ending with 1909 was but 113 million bushels per annum, against 192 millions in the immedfa;e|y preceding five years, a decrease of 40 per cent, in exportations in tlie last five-year period, although production in Ihe last five '•ears was greater than in any ear-
lier period.
Nor can it be said that ihe Je-rea.-e in exports of wheat is due to low prices offered in other parts of the world, since the price at which Ihe exportations of the year occured ranged from 9 Scents per bushel in June, 1908, to $1.23 per bushel ii June, 1902; while the fact that the home market consumed an unusually large part of the product indicates thal the prices paid at home compared favorably with tho» off-
ered abroad.
This falling off in the exports of wheat in the face of an increased production indicates, of course, an increased home consumption. The Bureau’s figure of consumption in the United States show the average annual consumption for the five years ending with 188 4 as 302 million bushels; for the 5-year period eudinf with 1894. 324 millions; for the five years ending with 190 1, It’.:! millions, and for the five years "tiding with 1099, 543 million
mediately preceding flve \ears.
Dean’s R -guiets enre , -•iratiaM tone the stomach, stiniula ^
er, promote digestion ami apirti
ami easy passages of ihe bowels, m vour druggist for them. 2.'i cenMil box. b
KFFI* THE KID.NFY S \\ I I,I.
Health is Worth Saving, and s© Greeneastle People Know How I To Save it.
Manj Greeneastle people lives in their hands by iieglectlsjH the kidneys when they •. • .•» <nH| organs need help. Sick ■ 'In'.'-a’H responsible for a vast , ’Mount suffering and ill health. / ’h-zH? is no nee.| to suffer nor in :• uiaiuii^l danger when till disease- id and pains due tn weak k g bequi.kl. and permaneinl the use of Doan’s Kidney I 1 !N. is a Greeneastle citizen s ' dation. MM Seth Kvans, 702 lllimi Greeneastle. I ml., says: H past three or four years I i. we keeping Doan's Kidney I’il!- ::: 3* H house and have used them off aii'loil J with the greatest benefit. I wassiltH jeet to spells of backache 'itfc'l years ago and I also noticed thatnj kidneys were sluggish. When heard of Doan's Kidney Pi i P* cured a supply at the .lone st’'’-' Co.'s drug store and a short times 1 ter I began taking them. I "a- ft* from pain. 1 have no oh.' tion t publication of this statement For sale by all dealers. Price 9 cents Foster-Mil burn Co . Buffs'* New York, sole agents for the I'tt'*! States. Remember the name Doan'sand take no other.
Electric Bitters
Succeed wuen everything Fs’ M 5, In nervous ptostration and female weaknesses they are el e scpreme remedy, as thousands have lestif-e-FOR KIDNEY, LIVER AND STOMACH TROUBLE it is the best medicine ever aolA over a druggist’s counter.
Tlie Farmer’s Friend riu Ohio Farmers InsuranctCil
Has paid the farmers of Ph 111 " County more money in the laid t» l years than all other Insurance ccapanics, doing a farm business, la
county.
Richardson $ HulI
t HONK NO. 9 SOUTH INDIANS 51.
* * 4
OUR WINTER ARCTICS Are jrivut fool protectors on a co d I
J I
E. B. LYNCH, Undertaking
Un.r r’.s daw No other Brandi can iqunl the hr-andN we scl;, when it comes to wear and tit. No inferior qualities or job lots. Christie’s Sh je More.
PHONES—STORE 89; RESI0E\CE 103 AND 601,
x Mr. C. S. Mecum, Embalmer and Funeral* 5’ * S Director. J
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