Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 18, Number 85, Decatur, Adams County, 9 April 1920 — Page 3
Finest Wheat in the World Wfetw is*K c W. Wjfc . > i . IW ! DIADEM Fit • I PATENT FLOUR :. - '- \ ' MA,)( * r,,m the choicest soft red winter wheat the w heat which experts agree makes the ideal flour for every baking purpose. We " buy the pick of the crop at the season’s height, year after year, paying ( more for it, if need be, to be sure of the splendid flavor and wonjirst C/jo/cC <R-rful quality that you have come to expect in DIADEM ILOI R. If your grocer dots not carry DIADEM, <we nvill . ‘ e glad to give you the names of other grocers ' . 77'* U/f 1/ fuill he pleased to fill your orders. J/iosen/joAnow Noblesville Milling Company » Noblesville, Indiana r j-., ; iih « mjin» f BONIFACE, WEBER & ALLEN J ( Wholesale Distributors for Diadem Flour, Muncie, Indiana ;
notice TO m:i i :\iiw iState of Indiana. Atkin C- .nt — I > In the Adams Circuit Court, 1 ; i- ]< r arc Term. 1920. Cause No. 19 f)S O, to Quiet Title. Henry Hirst by, vs. Joseph c< iwr, t, et al. tr Now comes the plaintiff l.y c. L \\ Walters his attorney, and tiles iris jfl tomplaint herein, together with the th affidavit of a competent -..-i thai > tje residence upon diligent inquirt is unknown of the following named dt - xj. fendnnts, to-wlt: h Joseph Caayer, Joseph Zu ver. k» Mary Zwayer ;.nd W.ilte I'. r that the names of the are h [unknown and that they ire believed nj! to be non-residents of the St'te <.f w Indiana sued in this action by the th i following naifies and designations, ki to-wir: “The unknown husbands . I “\<s. >. 'respectively, of the follow ng named i< K>n», to-wi
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Zwayei ind Walter I>. *■ w iom are nknown to tile plaintiff; the tuw 1 mown w Mowers anti widows, Chilian. tl . -ndants and heirs, surviv- > _ spouses. creditors and administra- 1 is of the estate, devisees, legatees, instves .mil executors of the lasi V Ils nd T< staments, successors in flt erest ami assigns respectively of lie folh-.ving named and designated nd th .-as. d persons, ta-wit: Joseph Caayer, Joseph Zwayer. . Liry Zwayer anti Walter D. Ayres, whom are on - Os ti > e WO nee known by any of the names anti It signations a.bo' e stated. whose aims may have been changed, and < . ... ar- now known l>y oth»*r names .. names of all Os Whom are Ullmown to plaintiff; the spouses of . il of tie persons above named, tie- . ibed ami designated as defendants ( this action who are married, tie amt- <>f .ill of whom are unknown
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, I BIJMY, APBIL 9, 1920
■■■■■■■■ «■■■■■ -- 1.11.1 ■ • plaintiff; all persons and corpora- 1 .ions who assert or migmt assert any , 'itle claim or interest in or lien up"i the real estate described in his j ' ampin Int in this action by,’ under or ’iiraugh any of the defendants to this : • lion named, described and deslgnat- . d in said complaint, the names of all f whom arc unknown to plaintiff.” That said action is for the purpose •f quieting the title to real estate in 1 •he State of Indiana: that a cause of , action exists against all of said de- ' fondants; that all of said defendants tie necessary parties tn said action m 1 that they are believed io be nonresldents of the State of Indiana. . The following real estate in Adams county, in the State of Indiana is de- i t-ribed in said complaint, to-wlt: The south half of the southeast quarter of section thirteen (13) in township twenty-seven (27) north of range fourteen / 14) east. This action is instituted and nrose•uted by said plaintiff for the purpose of quieting his title to the Veal estate above described as against all demands, claims and claimants whatsoever. Notice is therefore given said defendants and each and all of them; that unless they be and appear before the Adams Circuit Court at the Court House in the city of Decatur, in Adims ci unty, in the state of Indiana on the 24th day of May, 1920, the same being the 37th judicial day of a term of the Adams Circuit Court of Adams county, in the state of Indiana, to be begun anti holdon on the 12th day nf \pril. 1920 and answer or demur to mid complaint the same will be heard and determined in their absence. In Witness Whereof I have here:nto set my hand and affixed the seal >£ said Court at the office of the Clerk thereof in the citv of Decatur, Indium. this Ist day of April, 1920. TORN T. KELLY. Clerk of the Adams ClrcuiUCourt. •Seal) C. L. Walters. Attorney -for Plaintiff. 2-9-16 NOTICE or EYECITOKS’ SALE OF REAL ESTATE Notice is hereby given that the .dc-rsigned, as executors of the Will of Joshua H. Parrish, deceased, by virtue of the authority vested in them in' the terms of said decedent’s Will. ? ill offer each of the following <!e- < i ibed tracts of real estate situated • I Adams County, State of Indiana, .o-wit: TRACT %<L I Seventy-eight feet off of the south end of In-Lot number Five Hundred Eighty-sev n in Derkes and Bremerkamps Sub-Division of Out-Lot Numtown, non < ’ll \. of Decatur, Adams Comity, Indiana. TR ICT NO. 2 In-Lot Number Five Hundred Eigh-ty-seven in Derkos and Bremerkamps Sub-Division of Out-Lot Number One Hundred Fifty-seven in the town, now <’ir\, of Decatur, Adams County, Indi. ii.:. exc< pt therefrom seventyeight feet off of the smith end thereof. TR ACT NO? 3 The east half of the following described tract of real estate. Ui-wit: •’ommencing on the south line trr Jefferson street in the City of Decatur, at a point Sixty-six feet west of the northeast corner of Out-Lot Number One Hundred Fifty-six in Joseph Crabb’s Western Addition to the town, now City, of Decatur, Adams County, Indiana, thence west on the north line of said Out-Lot sixty-feet; thence south one hundred ninety-eight feet to the alley: them e east along , said tlley sixty feet: thence north One Hundred ninety-eight fecT to the place < f beginning. TR \CT NO. I The west half of the following tract of real estate to-wit: Commencing on the south line z of Jefferson street in the City of Decatur, at a point sixtysix feet west of the northeast corner of Out-Lot One Hundred Fifty-six in Joseph t rabb’s Western Addition to the town, now City, of Decatur. Adams ‘County. Indiana, thence west on the north line of said Out-Lot Sixty feet; theme south One Hundred Ninetyeight feet to'the alley; thence east along said alley Sixty feet. thence north One Hundred Ninety-eight feet to the place of beginning, for sale at private sale, for not less than the appraisement, free of all liens thereon, except the taxes for the year 1920. payable in 1921. at the law office of Merryman & Sutton in the I. o O. F. building in the City of Decatur. Indiana, on April 21 1920 between the hours oi Ten o clock A. M. , ;iml Three (fcloek P. M.. and from day to day thereafter If any of .said tracts are not sold on said day, upon the following terms to-wlt:* One-third rash on day of sa>e, One-third In six months, and One-third in Twelve months. ] deferred payments to be evidenced bv the notes of the purchaser, waiving relief from valuation and apprals< - ment laws, providing for attOVneys and bearing six per cent, interest from date of sale and secured by mortirnK" on the property sold or the purchaser nmy pay all eash on the day of -lie Said tracts will he offered for •■ale and sold separately. •JOHN K. PARRISH, FRANK PARRISH, IDA K. POLING. MARY BRAVERS. / ' E .ecutors of the Mill of Joshua It. Parrish, deceased. | Merryman & Sutton, Attys. 26-2-9-16 i APPOINTMENT OF EXECUTOR I Notice is Hereby Given, That the undersigned has been Appointed executor of the estate of Boston Hoblet, late of Adams county, deceased. The estate is probably solvent i John Hoblet, Jr. Executor. March 26. 1920. 2-9-16
THE GEOPHONE: A Listening Device Invented During War May he Put to a Number OF REMARKABLE USES Bureau of Mines Using It In Tests —Detects the Human Voice Washington, I). ('., April !). —After n series of important tests with the peoplione, a listening device invented (inring the war by the French Io detect and locate enemy underground operations, the Bureau of Mines, Department of the Interior, announces that tliis delicate instrument may bo put to a number of remarkable uses in mining and other industries. The most extraordinary result of these tests is that the bureau of mines hafe been able, not only to hear and locate sounds through fifty feet of solid coal and have detected the human voice fully 150 feet away. What this may mean in the near future can only he conjectured. An engineer oi the bureau was able through 300 feet of coal to distinguish nine out of ten different coal mining tools that were used at different times, so characteristic are the sounds. In one mine where experiments were being made at the face of a tunnel, the mine foreman who was listening heard workmen in another tunnel preparing to blast and ordered the engineers to retire until the blast was fired. The sounds were so clear he did not realize that the tunnel headings were over 300 feet apart. The greatest value of the geophone in mining, so far as known, will be in connection with rescue work in mines. Quite frequently miners are entombed in coal mines following explosions, and these men may be located quickly and accurately through the geophone. In metal mines also where ineu m iy be imprisoned behind falls or be barricaded in some part of the mine to which they have retreated in order to protect themselves from the fumes of a fire —these too, may be rescureJ through prompt location When the bureau first began its experiments with the geophone, it was questionable whether tlje geophone could hear sounds far enough away t” make it practicable. The experiments show that sounds can be detected through the earth a distance of 1,500 feet in a mined-out area in a coal mine through solid coal. 2.000 feet, and through solid rock about half a mile. The geophone is also of great practical value in metal mines where two tunnels have to be ’ connected. At times in spite of as correct surveying as is possible the two tunnel headings fail to come together. Just recently Bureau of Mines engineers were in a mine where the two ends of the tunnel failed to meet, and the geophones, locating the error, showed the miners the right direction. Observations with the geophone have also been made at mines which were on fire, where it was found that the fire made noise enough to be heard some distance, either because of its drawing air or the breaking off of bits of coal and slate. The geophones by thus locating the information whicii may enable the mine'management to erect fire stopping in the propper places or to make a direct attack on the fire as for example by drifting holes for injecting water to the seat of the fire. It is also the custom in some mining localities to drill a hole from the surface into a mine to carry pipe lines or cables. Oftentimes these drill holes do not go to the right places, and it is with considerable difficulty and expense that tunnels are driven meet the drill hole. With the aid of the geophone, the drills can be guided better, especially since drilling can be detected for nearly a mile. Very satisfactory results have been obtained in attempts made to locate leaks in water mains. The water circulating in the ordinary city main can hie heard with the geophones when they are placed on the. surface, ten to twelve feet above the pipe. In the business district of Pittsburgh, one leak was located within a few minutes, although the water department had been trying to find it for two weeks. DEMOCRAT WANT ADS PAY BIGI Don’t Risk the Kill that Cold I DO YOU know that a bad cold is the beginning of mo winter sickness? Can yon afford to take chances on being sick —having the Flu—with doctor bills—and inability to work? Stop the cold right now when it is just starting— Sou can do it easily—in less than 24 hours you take a few LIGHTNING LAXATIVE QUININE TABLETS Will Not Gripe or Sicken • They are safe, reliable, satisfactory, used by thousands of households. You’ll say they are the best possible treatment for a cold. Try them—only 25 cents at your druggist or dealer.
1 NOTICE ’I’O \ON-RI>HH'.N I s Stntn of Indiana, County of Ailhhih. hm.. I In the AdnniH Circuit Court, INdiruir\ Term, 1920. I Nellie Meyer vh. Annn l*L Miller ntul [ her hiiHbunil, If mnrrleil her husband's | mime Is to plaintiff unknown, ul. c.ihc No. 10071. Complaint to Quiet ’I itle. Comes now Uie plaintiff )>y her Attornovt S<•hurger & Son and Petennon biiicl'.to ami files her complaint ami 1 affidavit together with an affidavit of a rompetnnt person, that the residence upon diligent Inquiry van not be as-1 1 6Ttalnod and Is unnkown of ih« following: named defend.!nts to-wlt: — \IUK- 1: Mill I, — I I'sband of Anna IL Milh r. If she bo married, whose name is tit the plaintiff unknown. All the t'hlltlr«*n, heirs, legatees, devhees, creditors, executors administrators ami nssigns of Anna IL i Miller, if she be tlwcfuiHed, All the children, heirs, legatees, devisees, | t reditors, executors, administrators and assigns of— ,* husband of Anna IL Miller, If she be married, whose name is to the plaintiff unknown, If he he deceased and whose true names are to this plaintiff unknown. 1 Al! the women once known by any of the names above stated who have t hanged their names or who uro now known by some other name, the names of all of whom are unknown to this plaintiff. The creditors, the administrators an<l executors of the estate, the legatees. devisees respectively of all or any of the above named or described defendants who. ipay deceased and of their deceased spouses, tint names of whom are all unknown to the plaintiff, the spouses ol the persons above named or described as defendants to tills action who are married, anti whose spouses are not named as defendants, the names of all of whom I art unknown to this plaintiff. That all of said defendants are believed to l>e non-residents of the State of Indiana and not. residents thereof. 1 That this cause of action is brought for the purpose of quieting the title in the plaintiff to the following; described real estate in Adams county, in the State of Indiana, to-wit:— Commencing eighty-seven (87) feet west of the southeast corner of in-lot number four hundred thirty-eight (438) in Joseph D. Nuttman’s Northwestern Addition to the town (now city) of Decatur in Adams county, State of Indiana, running them e north parallel with the weal hm- of 1 >e< atur Street one hundred thirty-two (132) feet to the alley, thence west along the south line of the alley fifty (50) feet: thence south parallel with the west line of said Decatur Street one hundred thirty-two (132) feet to the north line of Marshall Street, thence east along the north line of said Marshall Street fifty (50) feet to the place of beginning. Thai this cans.* of action la prosecuted by the plaintiff to quiet the title to the real estate hereinbefore described. as against all demands ami ! claimants whatsoever and as against the world, and that the plaintiff has 1 named as defendants all persons within her knowledge through wlemi iny hostile claim might be asserted. 1 That a cause <>f action exists against each and all of said defemi- , ants that they are all necessary parties to this action and they are be- ' lieved to be non-residents of the State of Indiana. Notice is therefore hereby given ’ said defendants and each one of them that unless they tie and appear, on ‘ the 24th day of the Anril ’rerm. I*>io . of the Adams Circuit Court being th<* 20th day of May. 1920 to be holden on r the 20th day of May. 1920 at the Court House in the City of Decatur, Adnns s county in the State of Indiana and 1 ans .v< r or demur to said complaint Die same will be heard and determined in their absence. In Witness Whereof T hereunto set - my hand and fix the Seal of said o Court at the office of the Clerk 0 thvvof in the City pf Decatur. Adams p Cointv. Indiana, this 26th day of March. 1920. JOHN T. KETJ.V, Clerk of Adams (’ircuit Court. s (Seal) 1 Schurger Son. Peterson & Fruchte, d Attys, for Plaintiff. 26-2-9 1 PUBLIC AUCTION ’■ Os Watches. Clocks and Fine Jewelry j o Saturday, April 17th t At Auth's Jewelry Store, Decatur, Ind On account of ill health and being s unable to carry on business I will I- sell at public auction my entire line >. of Jewelry. There wilkbe offered at this sale a lot of the Finest Jewelry, Watches! 9 and Clocks. Rings, Necklaces, Lava-, i. Tiers, Scarf pins, Chains. Society 3 Emblems, Cuff Buttons and some, Silverware. In fact, everything in! the Jewelry line, some rare bargains! ? to be had at this sale. , Anyone entering this store on the! day of the sale will receive a chance, f on prizes to be given away on that! 1 day. The holder of the winning tick- 1 3 et must be present when the number. . is called. Terms of SaIe—CASH. PAUL AUTH. i Sale to be begin as 1:00 o’clock p. m. I J. H. Brunton. Auct. 7-9-12-14-16' » I HURST & CU Buys and sells all kinds of second hand furniture and stoves.! Corner First and Madison Sts. Across from Madison Hotel. Phone 117. 45-eod-tfl
DEDICATION General Electric Co’s. Plant, Decatur, hid. Saturdays April 10th AFTERNOON and NIGHT BETTER TH AN A COUNTY FAIR | BAN!) CONCERT DANCING VAUDEVILLE MIDWAY WONDERFUL MECHANICAL AND ELECTRICAL DISPLAY An Opportunity to Inspect This Ideal Building, Containing 75.000 square feet of Floor Area—Constructed in 60 Days. ADMISSION 25c
After Whooping ' Cough-What? , ••• ——■— - This is No. 4 of a series of advertisements, prepared by a competent physician, explaining how certain diseases which attack the air passages—such as Pneumonia,. Influenza, Whooping Cough, Measles or even a long continued Cold—often have these organs in an inflamed, congested state, thus .dTording a favorable foothold for invading germs. And how Vick's VupoRub may be of value in this condition.
Whooping cough is the “meanest” disease that childhood is heir to. While rarely fatal in itself, except to children under two years of age, still it hangs on so long—the coughing paroxysms are so violent, preventing proper sleep and digestion —that when the disease does disappear it leaves the child weakened and run down. In addition the violent coughing racks and strains the air passages and after recovery this irritation frequently remains. During this period of convalescence the child should be most carefully watched until full strength is restored and the air passages regain their normal tone. A prominent authority even goes so far as to say—“ There is more criminal neglect in connection with whooping cough than with any other disease.” * While the disease is active, Vick’s Vapoßub usually helps to lessen the violence of the coughing, but it is during convalescence that Vicks is most valuable. Because Vicks acts locally by stimulation thru the skin to
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draw out the inflammation, attract the blood away from the congested spots and relieve the cough. In addition the medicinal ingredients of Vicks are vaporized by the body heat. These vapors are breathed in all night long, thus bringing the medication to bear directly upon the inflamed , areas. Vicks should be rubbed in ; over the and chest until the skin is red —then spread on thickly and covered- with hot/ flannel cloths. Leave the cloth- • ing loose around the neck and . the bed clothes arranged in the form of a funnel so the vapors ■ arising may be freely inhaled. If the cough is annoying swallow ; a small bit the size of a pea. ■ Children’s digestions arc delii catc —easily disturbed by too , much “dosing.” Vicks,'therefore, is particularly recommended, since it is externally applied and > so can be used often and freely ■ without the slightest harmful • effects. Samples to new users v.rill be • sent free on request to the Vick ' Chemical Company, 234 Broad > Street, Greensboro, N. C.
