Star-Democrat, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 November 1909 — Page 7

hiday. November

C • A R • D E M O O R A T

Tage Three

mm case

Mul You Have Always Houyptity ami lx pti for over 30 years, has borne the signature of ami has been made Under his jmvSonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and “Just-as-Rood” arc ?mt leriments that tritie with ami emlan^er t!ie health of nits and Children—Experiein e against Experiment. What is CASTOR IA Btoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pa repie, Drops nml Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It Itains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic ^stance. Its age is its guarantee, ’t destroys WYnus allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and V» ia<l c. It relieves Teething Troubles, cure*. Constipation Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho pnaeh and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. ^e Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. Inuine CASTORIA always Bears the Signature of

i~wr>

Lciai Couri s Ui; HHd in Fa; Reail.mg DiC.sion Ihis Mcriiing.:

WILL STLP SOCIAL GLUSo

On Tuesday A. T. Riley receivI ed a telephone message from .ntI torney General Bingham in Indiana- | polis to the effect that the Supreme Court had just passed upon the case of tlie State against John Skelton charged here with selling a keg of beer direct to a consumer under a wholesaler's license. The higher court affirms the decision of the local court which founu agaiirst Skelton. The court linds that a wholesaler has no right to sell to a consumer under his license and that as an agent of the wholesaler Skelton had no right to make the sale. The decision is far reaching as it practically puts out of business the many social clubs that have been running in several parts of tho state. The brewers who have been shipping direct to the consumer will now be liable under the new court de-

cision.

The credit for the winning of this

case lies primarily with Prosecutor ■ I j> Hughes, lie contended from it for crying. The complaint al- the first that the wholesaler had no leges further that the defendant has right to sell to the consumer, in any been guilty of unchaste conduct quantity, whether five gallons or with several men unnamed, and that more. This was a new contention when the plaintiff was abien from and has been bitterly fought all the

Mni.iM is-in - ii> Break the

|H^m home because of his business of a way up from the mayors court here, ^^■d- of .Matrimony I iiiting Him trave jj ng man the defendant Invited It is decided in favor of the conten-

pfi Kind You Have Always BcnC i

in Use For Over 30 Years

TMC CCNTAUR COMPANY 77 MURRSV fcTRCVf, NCW VO»K CITV.

BKHEi

S SUIT FOR DIVORCE

^Blmxic I,. HnlTman.

Bui was Tuesday filed in cir-

Nlfourt by Wm. Hoffman asking tbe custody of the child forjB divorce from Roxie L. HoffThe complaint alleges that and Remedy. ^Krties were married in 1904 ('hamberlaiYs Colic,

( hoi era and Diarrhoea Remedy for

together several years for diarrhoea. I con

other men to his home and there tion of the local prosecutor. carroused with them in an unseemly manner. Kill Her Foe of 20 Years. The plaintiff asks for divorce and The most me^iless enemy I had

| for JO years,” ueclares Mrs. James | Duncan of iiuynesville, Me., "was

I suffered intensely after

The complaint f'f*' '/ ^ remedy I have ever

tried for that trouble. I bought

Dyspepia

eating oi drill a ing and could scarcely sli ep. After many remedies had failed and several doctors gave me up I tried Eii trie Bitten-, which cured me completely. Now I can eat anything. I uni 70 years old and am

andph it they have lived

till ■<’ present year

furth-tr alleges that the defendant bottle of i; a few days ago from ! overjoyed 1 °

t t i *• ii r» »'/-\.\i»ts r i 1 haAien guilty of cruel and

ueui in that she kept their pi

heat tii and For Indigo*

. . our druggitt. Mr. If. It. Brooks. [| in n-'in luu..gain. ' shall ever be glad lo speak a word in tion. ',o-s oi \;r "tiie. Kidney I rou whep | have the oppor- i ie, Lame Back. I'euia!e Complaints faulty.”- Rev. .1. I). Knapp. Pastor jits i:nei|iiaed. 0u)> 7.0 ouits a ih*

^^■ear-old child long periods v( E church. Miles Grove i’a

Wlthclut food or sleep and then wliipt by all dealers.

Sol 1 | Owl Drug store and Red Cross Drug

store.

SWORN STATEMENT

OF

TEe Central National Bank

AND

TiTe Central Trust Company To the Cuojptroller of the Ctirreuey at llie clo^e of huxinesd November K), 1909, and the Auditor ot iState, •Septeiuiief LM, 1909, ^howiuj; totitl ussets of mote ih tn One Million One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK STATEMENT

II 8 YV YY XX ft ?t n t' •H t • • •:•••• ft u ft : :t i :• •• *

RKSOTIG KS. Loans $403,(WO. 19 T. S. Rends to’secure circulation 100,000.00 I '. S. Bonds to secure Government deposits 1 .IKK).00 Bonds 108,831.90 Ranking House 10.000.txi l asli in Banks $139,830.90 i'asli in Vault. 74.800.15 21 4,037.Oo

LI ARILITIES.

Capital Surplus Undivided Prolits Circulation Deposits

$837,489.20 CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY STATEMENT

$100,000.00 . ino.ono.no . 5.072 27 . 99.0,70.1 K) 532,700.92

$8.37,489.10

....

kESOURCF.S.

Loans $222,812.31 Bonds ... 03,004.75 I'uriilDire and Fixtures .... Gash in Banks

LI \Bl LITIES

$280.117.09

r>oo.ou

32.892.38

Capita) Surplus Undiv;ile<! Prollts Deposits ami Trust Eunds

..$ 25,000,09 .. 12.0tMI.(K) ,. 1.010.25 .. 281,793 22 *319.809.17

K L. O’HAIW, President

I A. ARNOLD, Vice-President

Ouinton Broadstreet, I

$319,809 47

Officers and Directors

. J. L. RANDHL, Cashier and Sec. 8. A. MAYS, Vice-President

Evans, Bascom O’ltair

ft XX •' V n tt tt :o: tx S Y.Y ft XX

880T LEtlOEnS ARE CAUGHT

3ftic0!s MuL CcoJ Haul on Saiurday ajd Sunday Morni g.

LAHGE BOTTLES TAKEN

The raoyar’s office was the only wet place in town Monday morning. Placed in a prominent position upon the table in the mayors room were a number of bottles of amber colored fluid that haa been taken from various persons by the officers on Saturday night and Sunday. One bottle was from Indianapolis and had a good rich color. The other bottles were from local though unknown sources and had been docored till here remained little but the smell of whiskey. Omer Welsh who gave a dollar for a drink Suula> declared that tli» teadache that the doctored stuff coufd produce • as soii.e.iniig be,on t descrip;ion. A number of persona were before be mayor on various charges rel- • 1 >e volnciiig Uio liquoi-law. Wu am Bundy was there charged with ><•<•? legging, r. M. Nelson was there barged with intoxication. Jerry Howard was also charged with intoxication. The Bundy trial came llrst. Omer Welsh testified that he had given Bundy a dollar and that Bundy had .aken him to a closet in the rear of ilie Banner Block aiuf bud given him a drink from a bottle. He had not finished the bottle nor his drink when arrested by Marshal Beeves and Officer Stone. Bundy acknowledged that he had received the dollar but declared that he had turned ii over to Harry Thornburg who was the real, according to Bundy, dispencer of the booze. Welsh declared, however, that lie had not seen Bundy give the dollar to Thornburg, and that tie had the liquor from Bundy. This was enough for the mayor and be assessed a fine of fifty dollars and imposed a jail sentence of thirty days. Jerry Howard was then arraigned for drunkenness. ile was arreste Saturday night by Officer Stone for inioxication, immediately after meeting two men in the court house yard, A full bottle of the same dope whiskey was taken from him that had been taken from Bundy. He declared ho secured the liquor in Lafayette. But the officers refused to believe that whiskey of that quat By was dispeneed by me regular salons of the wet city. He persisted in bis story, and the prosecutor urged that since this was the third arrest for intoxication and since he refused to assist the officers by revealing tlie persons who had sold him tie booze, he be given the limit The mayor responded with llfld fine and thirty days in jail. On Sunday night Tony Wilson was arrested near the Interurban station the limit for that charge, $lou and Williamson. He resisted and struggled all the way to jail. He pleaded not guilty t othe charge of intoxication and Officer Williamson not b"ing present the trial was postponed till afternoon. Tlie officers of Greeucastle have been suspicious that illegal selling was going on for several days and have been unusually alert. They declare that drunkenness and boot legging will get the limit if they have their way. That Greeucastle has been voted dry and they propose to see that it is dry. If intoxicated persons refuse to reveal the source of their supply of liquor they will have to take the consequences in the limit for that charge. $100 and sixty days in jail. A word to the wise ought to be sufficient, the officers believe. They say further that the stuff that is being sold here will put a man out of business before he thinks he is in danger, so that arrest for intoxication is likely to come wheu least expected.

Forced Into Exile. Wm. Upchurch of Glen Oak, Okla . wl an exile from home. Mountain air, he thought would cure a frightful lung racking cough that, had doffed all remedies for two years. After six months he returned, death dogging his s:epe. “Then I began to use Dr. King’s New Discovery,” he writes ..ud after taking six bottles I am as r..l as ever.” It saves thousands yearly from desperate lung dieases, nfnllible for Coughs and Colds, it ispels Hoarseness and Sore Throat. Cures Grip, Bronchitis. Hemmorrh•iges, Asthma. Croup, Whooping Gjt.gh. a ■ nts and $1.00. Trial bo:tle free, guaranteed by Owl Drug store and Red Cross Drug store.

LUMBER WORTH HALF MILLION

Sta-ss From AT.Lh Most of the Cut Corns This Ye^r,

;.ESo LiMcEH

iS

USED

WASHINGTON, Nov. 22, 1909.— Washington, Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas, and Wisconsin, in the order named, constitute the Big Five in producing the country’s lumber supply whose valuation for last year runs far above the half billion dollar mark. Texas, Michigan, Oregon, Minniesota and Pennyslvanla came after the first five states and others followed in decreasing amounts down to Utah; the lowest on the list, with Nevada and North Dakota having little timbered area, not rated at ail. While the total valuation of the lumber, lath, and shingle production reached $541,545,640, this amount represents a decrease of 23 per cent under the previous year’s output. The number of mills reporting was 31,231 and those manufactured 33,221,369,000 broad feet >f lumber, valued ar $510,675,822 and 2,9St>,6s4,000 lath valued at $0,791,323, while the shingle makers turned out 12,106,483,000 shingles valued at $24,178,490. The average value of liwr.ser at thte point of manufacture was $15.37 a thousand feet, $2.27 a thousand for lath and $2.00 a thousand for shingles. Yellow pine of the South which lias been far in the lead In the lumber production for more than a decade, more than maintained its supremacy last year, contributing slightly more than thirty-three per cent of the total cut from all kinds. Douglas fir of the Northwest ranked second and white pine third. Practically all kinds showed a marked decreased out, and for the first three kinds of timber there was a falling off of fifteen, twenty-two and twenty per cent, respectively. Oak and hemlock maintained their relative ranks but showed decreases of twenty-five per cent each in amount produced, and spruce dropped eighteen per cent. Louisiana was the heaviest producer of yellow pine lumber, supply ing nearly one-fifth of tlie total production. Texas, Mississippi, Arkansas, ami Alabama followed in the order named. The state of Washington, alone, supplied more than three-fifths of the onglas fir cut while the bulk of the remainder came from Oregon. Minnesota produced about a third of the white pine, followed by Wisconsin with about fifteen per rent and New Hampshire with ten per rent. An interesting feature of the report is that , wo Nov England states Maim and Massachusetts, produced more white pine than Mirolgan, which for many years led the country in producing this valuable timber. Oak lumber manufacture now centers in Kentucky, West Virginia and Tennessee. Wisconsin comes first in tlie production of he lock, taking the position held b> Pennsylvania for so many years. Altogether the lumber report bulletin, which is free, by the way, contains fifty-seven pages, ancr gives detailed figures upon the quality and value of forty-five kinds of lumber manufactured in the United States last year. The work on it was conducted under the supervision of a committee of four, consisting of W. M. Stuart, chief statistician for manufactures and J. E. Whelchol, expert chief of division, representing the Bureau of the Census, and R. 3. Kellog, assistant forester and A. H. Pierson, forest assistant, representing the United States Forest Service.

For sore throat, sharp pain in lungs, tightness across the chest, hoarseness or cough, lave the parts with Sloan’s Liniment. You don’t need to rub, just lay it on lightly. It penetrates instantly to the seat of the trouble, relieves congestion and stops the pain. Here’s the Proof. Mr. A.W. Price, Frcdonia, Kans., says : “We have used Sloan's Liniment for a year, and find it an excellent thing for sore throat, chest pains, colds, and hay fever attai ks. A few drops taken on sugar stops coughing and sneezing instantly.” Sloans Liniment is jasier to use than porous plasters, acts quicker and does not clog upthe poresof the skin. It is an excellent antiseptic remedy for asthma, bronchitis, and all inllammatory diseases o f the throat and chest; will break tip the deadly membrane in an attack of croup, and will kill any kind of neuralgia or rheumatic pains. All ilrutrgists kepp Sloan's Liniment. Prices 25c., 50c., S $1.00 Dr Earl S. Sloan, BOSTON. MASS

THE

Grocery Tlie Best Ploce tn take Your Produce

Highest Prices Pendant! Goods Sold tlie most Reasonable PHONE 68.

TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE NOTICE .lackson Township. I will be at my homo in Ja< i.sou Townahip every Friday to transact 'he hiis'aMtus of my office as Trustrc BENJAMIN WALLS

Monroe Township. ! will be at the Bainbridgo Bank »ach Wednesday ami at my residence an Friday to look after township 'usfaess. D. V. ETCHESON

Floyd Township. My office day will be Wednesday it each week at my residence, louse. FRED TODD, Trustee.

What Would You Do? In case of a burn or scabl what would you do to relieve the pain? I Sub injuries are liable to occur in' my family and everyone should tie oroparo ! for them. Chamberlain's •’•alvo applied on a soft doth will re’ove the pain amost instantly, and i

Jefferson Township. i will i>e at my residence each Friiay to transact the business of my •tkc*. OLIVER STRINGER

mk“ the injury is a very severe •tie, will cause the par s to heal \ itl out leaving a sear For sale by ill dealers.

Marion Township. » will be it my residence in Maron ^—^ship on Friday of each and Tuesday at Fillmore to rannact the basinets of my office. OTTO B RECTOR.

CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought

Madison Township. I will be at my office at my reslicnce each W~d esday and Saturday to transact the business of Trustee if Madison Township 7. W, STROUBE

Bears the Signature of

Mill creek Township. I will be at my home in Mill Creek Township on Wednesday and Saturday of each week to transact the business of my office. Ernest Kivett. Trut.'d.