Herald-Democrat, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 April 1920 — Page 3
F K1DAY, APRIL 23. 1920.
non-uksidents
A
W-— _ ,
Instate'‘of Indiana. Putnam ■ ' Mavy W. Dryden, et al, vs. “ j,d H. Douchew. et al, in the| ■U Circuit Court March Tenn.
Complaint No. J ««8.
T , lhl> ^Plainfffa by An-
* F Durham, attorney, atul file
_ , .^plaint herein, together with ■ ' ffijavit that the residence of ■ defendant, Oliver P. Donnohue. | ,n. and that dlli K ent m- ■ n . hl . been made to ascertain tie
of said defendent, but that
THE HERALD-DEMOCRAT J
#<"■
PAGE THREE
■T :.',uiry has not disclosed the
■“der.ee of defendant.
said defendant.
-. tl ^ .; s therefore hereby given ^ defendant, that unless he be and — )eH r on the 31st judicial day of
sti
_ MiV term of th e Putnam Circuit the same being: the 7th day of ■ \ 1) 1920, at the Court House KreencasUe, in said County and ■te und answer or demur to said ■ the same will be heard and
Knnined in his absence.
■ w , whereof, I have hereunB,, mv hand and affixed the seal ,',i 'Court at Greenoastle. Ind., I, 5th day of April. A. D. 1920.
Barky w MOORE, Clerk.
B ' ;j T w., Apr. 9-10-23. ■tick oi itnal settlement
T of estate
lot. ; is hereby given to the credJ and legnteee of Adeline B , I to appear m the B Circuit Court, held at Green■i,. Indiana, on the 3rd day of B; uio and show cause, if any, ■ .h final settlement accounts ■ estate of said decedent shobil not be approved; and said he j,L notified to then and there ma i ■, of of heirship, and receive
■r listributive shares.
clerk of said <
t'4 Ci day of April. 1920. T W MOORE, Clerk PutH lit Court. “ T. W.. Apr. 9-16-23. M in OF FIN AL 8ETTLEMENT
OF ESTATE
It hereby given to the ere 1 H appear in the Put niw held at H . 0 on ll-Uh (lay of April, 1920. Hr iirse. if any, why the final unts with the estate (.cedent should not he api aid heirs are notified B' there make proof of heir. B r-ee.ve their distributive
J ■ clerk of aald co irl. H April. ~B.['.RY W. MOORE, Clerk PutH Court. | i T. W„ A.ir 9-16 !3 ■ 01 PINAL SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE V hereby iriven to the ered. H and legal <• f William ■ deceased, t-r appear in 'he 'a ,!.. Circuit C i .. held at t Indiana, on f l ( 10th day ••IS It 1 and show eai'-’ if any, whjr : INAL SET Fi.KM ENT AC COIN v th the estate-nf said to. i nut h ( . approve i:and ai 'l are notified to then and ■( 1 • proof a leirship. and n. uihutive shares. the clerk ef laid 1 !o irt, April IP'JP ■ ,m < ireuit Court. ' 1 23, :10, May 7. ! A^SI-S HEAR TILOEN
B 1 r ' Tilden gave his address
I 'nts of the S'tate Normal at r hour this morning The us. riod wa , extended to ,.n
m address might im* given ■ Tilden spoio at tlie B luritaton of President l^ir
The lecture y afternoon ns.ste ( | th; * hear it a i hour this
si ’ < •iih d for P t i' nt Par
.A • school -rd dnsses
f 'r that
•n
• •qotyw hiiD^uig ,iiuu.*c *«' hrank Gilmore is coi firuv to t; • on Vine street by illness,. itmcnt in the Methodist h' .n Indianapolis has return.
;, iie -iq i.ioqA\ smor] is uioj; a M Blanchard has returned 'sisiiuotas fo uoijuoAUoa
CORD
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m: '«r ■ skip
TSiliiS !]
RUNS ON RAILS OF WOOD'
Alaskan Transport System Supplies 15 Miles of Territory and Doe* Excellent Work. O. p. Ganstnd of Fairbanks. Alaska. Is owner uml operator of one of the “farthest north" railways In Ihe world. His railroad “system" consists of 15 miles of wooden mils Unit slretch between the head of nnvljpttiou on the Tolovnna river to the rlcli placer mines a I wive, some 75 miles overland from Fnli-hanks. The motive power of hi« railroad is a motor car, and it has done heroic work for the last two seasons In imitnting n genuine steam locoinollve. Mr. Gnustad went to Alaska in the hiu rush of '98. “I have a sawmill half way between the Tolovnna placers and the head of navigation on the river.” he said recently In Los Angeles. "For two years I have operated the railroad to haul logs to my mill, nnd from there to haul the sawed lumber to the miiios. The track is 15 miles long and Is <>t wooden rails. The motor car is, of course, equipped with Hanged wheels, and hauls a little train of three cars behind It. “In this fashion I have hauled loads as high as six tons. In addition to the lumber 1 haul all supplies from the head of navigation on (he river to the mines, and get S(><» a ion for transporting them. Sometimes I make eight or nine trips a day. nnd litis year the ear covered over 0.000 miles in Ihe course of the season. “The war brought great hardship to the gold miners of Alaska, for, suing to the depreciated value of the dollar, their gold is worth lint Illlle more than half what it was five years ago. Consequently many of the mines are shut down, for the producers figure it Is not worth while to pay eveessive labor rusts to mine gold worth only half price. “Few people realize the Immense distances In Alnskn. From my railroad. for example. It Is 1 .fk 10 miles to tidewater, by wav of the Yukon river “The gasoline I burn In my car costs me 85 et-m^ a gallon."—From the Fa ellie <'(itanicrelaI Advertiser.
Queer War Monty. Some vrty odd kinds of money were brought it.to circulation dm/n-T the
war. owing t
and nickel, (lertanny l-sued Intndirds of millions of five-pfennig ami tenpfennig Iron coins, the latter output
of these pieces being conn'd will, zinc j ^.iura.-iory.
to pivvHlf Hist lr hi coins were likewise iiiint(M) hy the i:«|vrrmw»nls of Sweden Nnrwny end !>«nmnrk. The tSerimin** issued one prenn!£ pieces of nlutnimuu. nnd In Alyerin n!so nluniinum coins of five centimes nnd ten centimes mnde their nppeiirmnce In clrculntion. tJernmny Issued muslin notes, nnd the |ne:ll uoverumeuts in flint com.try tind In A list r 1st f»rlnfetl pnper tnoney of the smnlleM '-Mhie cv« r known, represent ini: one-fifth of n cent. Kven more ctirhuis w:is the pnstelionnl money Issued In some of the ctiemyoecupled cities in FTsince. It wns In detiomir.Miions up to five francs, nnd wns of d,fr»*r» nt colors »ml sluipes— square, nnmd octagonal, oval and diamon I shaped. This‘Vnnl money'’ was trtinrnnieed hv the local inunicipalily. find was pood only for use In transaction with merchants of ilie town where
it wns issued.
NOT “MUCH” RIVER Historic Thames Not Imposing to Americans.
Captain Seth Qullock's Humorou* Aivecdete Matched by Comment Made by New England Teach-
er on Famous Stream.
When (apt. Seth Bullock, pioneer roughride' - und long-time sheriff of South Dakota, was invited hy his friend, Theodore Roosevelt, to Join him in London, one of the reasons for the invitation was that after his strenuous African und Egyptian experiences and in the midst of his -areely less strenuous social nnd politb-al ones In England, “the colonel said he wanted some fellow over there that could help him laugh," so Captain Bullock
related, “and 1 was elected.
“Upon my arrival, seeing that the colonel was being overworked by his many official engagements of stale,” he continued in a conversation which Mr. Travers 1>. Carman recently reported in the Outlook, “I decided that he needed relaxation with some plain chap he didn't have to bother about, so I walked him over the Thames river bridge. The river was at extremely low tide, and knowing that the Thames was to an Englishman what the Mississippi or Ihe Hudson is to an American, I waited until n particularly huiight.v-looking Englishman with a carefully adjusted monocle approached, and, without an inkling to the colonel of what I Intended, asked if he could tell me Ihe name of the creek. The pitying, pained nnd bored way in which the Englishman replied, 'That, my good fellow, is our river Thaiiiet,’ served it> purpose, and kept tin* colonel chuckling at Intervals for
the remainder of the day.”
A New England icncher traveling a few years ago with a party of tourists had the pleasure of hearing n comment on the nul-nlvvays impressive Thames, ultcrcd in all sincerity hy an Am.Tii an of primitive type from the land ot far-stretching prairies and the vast Mississippi, lie hail Inherited n fortmie. ami to please his y ittug
the sr.itio v of (npoer , im,; consented to a himcymooii
irip abroad. Europe, he admitted, bad In some respects exceeded his expectntions, hut in others it was distinctly
This river Thames.
now—
"Lizzie.” be demanded, turning to bis wife, “you sure this is the
Thames?"
Lizzie "as sure.
“The Magna Chorta Thames?” he
pursued insisti tilly.
Lizzie's guide book was in her hand and she was siti* of that. too. “Well," mused her husband in a meditative drawl, "if us Americans had signed the Declaration of Independence In Dan Skinner's medder. say, or some such handy .sp'etch of land along Skunk creek, mebbe. fer the sake of history, we'd have named the creek over and turned it into a river. Mehhe ’••would have ocen the river Skames. or something. I guess it uiusl have happened that way with ilo' Britishers. If it wn'u’t fer hislory, l.izzi ■. I'd bet my bools tliis creek
| would be a creek!” No Eirtbday Anniversary.
It Is possible for a baby born 'Ids
veto- oevor again to have a birthday. ,• i- . .
... . appear between tin* ages of six years
For tl-s is leap year, and n baby born J • '
oe 'be right spot
almost ce-'iiiidv have no birthdays
The Troublesome Teeth.
The permanent teeth, l!'J in mitaher,
keep. This hos actually happened to a httby who was born during the voyage from Yokohama to San Franciseo on the last day of February, F.MU.
v, jk-A v-Vn"'^
' ' •
i j
■ MMMM Does ViUer
I : .
|t |s vve’l known tluit In
inl<*r lo
make the ui'ltiiil miinher of
-'iii’isos
and smi-ets experienced du 0
■r m vny-
J age round Ilie world eorresp
1 w\th
! the calendar 11 n exlrn day mo
In* ln-
tercalnleil nr "thrown over ,,
!.” nr*
[ eo''ding to the direction trnv
!. This
1 ad.liistmctit Is made at r ■
.. !«‘!tl «»f
I crossing ihe one hundred a
ihllcHi
I meridian, which runs to the
of
Ibe mid .v ay point between
* 11 im«1
1 Calll'nrnia.
I And n baby born on F,
•rv M)
1 must be cen ent to do v >h
hirt li-
Idnvs, unless be or e shoiT
1 to be on a similiir spot ■
'«*
time In some future leap
r. whirh
the righ- time will I «> twenty-five years, more or less. Ihe
I |;isi to l»«» rut nro iIh* wisetont looin, In uhotit -17 prr c«Mit of mlults, one or nil four tuny nevor ileveloj). An ul* t*t' r< 11 <m I tool It Is nt) nhsivss nt the root of tho tooih. It Is ennsefi J>> r»«*irlect of n clentytMl tooih. When tne cnvlly oaIoimIs too near the nerve in Ihe center of the tooth, the nerve heroines Infintnei] anfi tooth n he is the result. Thus the nerve nnd the decayed muterial In the pulp cavity causes nn nh scess nt the tip of the root In Ihe Jnw bone. This mny profluce n ^unihnll or hrenk through on the fnce. eausint: ti smr. It mny produce serious results, ns dnitutjre of hiw hone, hlood poisoning. niiendn, kidney trouble, henrt
dMoot'diim upon thr nlTectcil hy the poi>
port of th* »n uhsorhed.
hod/
Juw »
,4
OweWith
Few men r-cc err' l^rs ’ ith '•'■Hial cash, but mary irfn oo t to think that the phec 1 ' - an ks hey give out I'-pr- sen’, m" aiul if.at fraujulcnt a/leialion of a check may mean serious loss, i Protect yourv i bv us.ng paper i that betrays alteration — tinn I Paper. W r can tell you rn<..’■•.• ( about it and shew you how wo j can protect your c.nsh, yoai checks, notes, drafts, and receipts.
Th «p pear nice of j-nur l-tter-b;»d may in.-an sivct a fjT.u-e. Do - I : .islice in the quality .v-urfi mafs mast engar. We do not advocate extravagance. We recommend the use of a ver- moderate priced standard paper — w hich has won recognition for its quality and lha service it givea. We are prepared to furnish that paper and to print you a letterhead that la a dignified repreaentative. See What We Can Give Yon Before You Place an Order
Printing Safeguards Year Money Protect your cash not only with holt. and bars and h. ;iks but with busineg.'liku printed forms and records far every transaction you unc’crUke. We can show you a paper — $mrt Paper—that betrays crp ;uie and prevents fraudulent clteration o' your enreks, notea, drafts and receipts. For letterheads and general printed forms wa use and recommend a standat J paper BSJ4S) that we know wdl give you satisfaction.
would be II inlher w ild l!iiprnbabilit.v.
—Mum lio-der < finirdinn.
Dagdad’s Cbanr;* of Dress.
might a wonderful
'■ dud, not
tiunge of of India, imlny ihe
. 1 i desire to
The vvur bus rbiirigp in the o
———— — I He* leai-1 of vv I Donkey Gave "Fa-Ha.” , (lives, neeordin, 1 wns strolling ulung a shady lune | vvldeb says: w|tb the L'.l'l of in' eliolce. (lit tile j vouug bloods el
other side of Ihe lener wns n don .i y j ^dopt European dr - i mint lmIn n iiiisMmc l hardly notb-ed him nglne why anyone should wind to illsfori wus Irving to fnime n |ii'o|ier pro cird the (del m C'lpi.- Arab headdress ousel. Jus. linn an initomoblle Intel it, exebenge for a blllycnel, lint, but of om- ai 'iunllitun 'i s steal ulnug Ibe there is tin neeminllng for taste. Ileliighwny n '*h"ri d.-i arn'e frmti ns. nnd j , ,.f „t get ting rid of Turkish m snile ' aovving they musi aave notieed mv j i,,,,) prestniinhly to be cell''ruled In i adeai ng nuinner t<i"> rd my eontpnlt- j (.nine way or other und the i (itilsltlmi Ion. I hi uame etnbairie sud However. | ,,(■ ^,,11 elntbes. even if they
I mu utgtsl to blurt out ma rrhige ; w b(Teilpoa Slallding llie a- - I del \ woke Up eliongh to lift
bray, to ll
till VV el
1 |>i'opositl of the donkey. *i|lv, saddlml' Ids bead uml
n iniise.aent of our friends. II fleitr (*no.igl| to bear it.
are rently-mndc reaeli fne-dowus. Is nndottfiledlv an event vv lib'll v.nnld ItpI«•; ' 1 1 tin ti.n o -lad vv’lm. Ille* mils nil over .lie world, winds lo be unlike his elders.'’
ko .nil 1 lie el;mu'., the g rl also gavi
me the h i h i -Ex'hang ^
Australia’s Oil.
While Aiistraliu i offering a bonus of tltl.lgNt for tbc (li.scevery of commi'ti ini oil m Ilie eoiiiimmweulth, Mex-
g-gen to Oatfle in April, 1918.
Aim lean romluit div jslmi.s v .-re - |jl;(ilv |o oi| j v i,i,. M bailie 11 l.urnpi' Im -C’ " pS some lime, iiecording lo the verdict lv mnvi'!». of Vnrll. HIV whe„ the| M . [( Ml . . rt lirs, reguhir division, ufier long trail,- ^ hiw |„ weslein Amerl»- ""I”' seclnrs. Plilered nn uotlve , |(;( ,, . |r . sh}s -emm m, the Fleurdy front. Hnfll »l,e • ^ s „ peavdy emnmit- ~ ' tml 11. Mexico thnl Australia's bonus Is
"nn da '"'V were engaged In 1.1 tun ,,,,,, , , . tint a lira ell ve.
tor opt tlnn«. of vvitden 11 were Joint I enf r rises with ihe French. British j
nr, i'ullnns, and iwu were (ilatlactly
A " ,wk> "' ! bearing territory.
The ilrlllali nail Ans-
nallan govcrnnienis. how ever, barn agreisl to test ilmroiighly former Uer■utiu New Guinea and Fapuu for oil-
