Ligonier Banner., Volume 62, Number 23B, Ligonier, Noble County, 5 July 1928 — Page 4
Christian Church Sunday morning services at this church will be held as usual Bible school at 9:30 in charge of Chas. Cornelius. Communion and sermon at 10:30. Sermon by the pastor. Our attendance was down somewhat last Sunday on account of weddings, dedications sickness and some may have been absent of -visiting or receiving visitors. So far we have been able to give “Mr. Summer Slump’’ a rather cool reception. But he is 'liable to return unless everyone of us are present at our place in the line. We are hoping from noiw'ou our- Junior Supt. will be able to be preseni. So much depends upon her. _
Ne evening service at this church. We join in the Union Service at the U. B. church. The Christian pastor is to bring the message. The Gospel for the present will be the subject. ‘M. E. Church Notes, , Sanday schoel at 9:30, BEdward Bourie, superintendent. 'The attendance Wwas down again last Sunday. Now let every one do their best to get into the Sunday school during these summer months. v Public worship at 10:30. We are glad for those who are getting in the Sunday services. We shall look for you next Sunday morning. There will be no:evening service on account of the union services at the United Brrethren church. Rev. Grisso will bring the serman message. We were glad to see so many in the first union service last Sunday even-
ing. For these meetings to aczomplish what they should everyone must do their best and be present at each service. Bebe Dainels at Crystal Sunday and Monday. . \rs, Harry Gibson is visiting a son in LaPorte. ' , - Ligonier delaers are paying $1.60 a bushel for wheat. Tim McCoy in “‘Riders in the Dark” at Crystal Friday and Saturday. FOR SALE—Gooseberries. Mrs. C. C. Mann. 2823 t
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Double of Garrett spent the fourth with Mrs. Fred Starr. : ' Mrs. Harry Townsend of South Bend spent the fourth here with her sister Mrs. Will Green. “Laugh Clown Laugh’ with Lon Chaney at Crystal Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday. : _ Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Newton and son Richard are spending a few weelks at their Natti Crow Beach cottage. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Coda of Chicago were week end guests of Mrs. Coad’s parents Mr. and Mrs. Charles Graham. : Mr. and Mrs. Ray Green enroute for their home in Detroit having gone by auto to Florida stopped yesterday in Ligonier and will be guests of Mrs. Green's parents Mr. and Mrs. Squire Robinson. : |
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Schlotterback entertained the following guests at an afternoon ice cream lunch Sunday July Ist 1928 Mr. and Mrs. Ira Schlotterback Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Ira Schlotterback Sr.,, of near Ligonier, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Schlottesback of near Ligonier Mr. and Mrs. Jim Spurgeon and son Harry of Ligonier, Mr. and Mrs. Elva Vance and daughters Betty Jane and Helen Rose Mr. and Mrs. Cullen Prouty and thre children Rex, Donnabelle, and Betty June and Mrs. Wm. Prouty of near Bakertown.
Beauty “Aids” Not New
© Rouge, lipstick and eyebrow pencil _as aids to beauty were known at least 4,000 years ago, since Egyptian wom. ~en beautified themselves in much the .Bame manner as the modern flapper,
Royal Flower
Henry IV of England took a flower as his emblem, and Souviens de moj (Remember me) as his motto. The flower was soon known as the forget-me-not.
Like Eating Your Cake
Life is a series of choices. You can .order this or that but you cannot or, der both this and rhat without paying ‘an extra price.—American Magazine.
Judgment
' Intelligent people judge a writer by 'what he says;- cranks judge him by what they read between the lines.— Buffalo News. :
Fashion Defined
- Fashion is the science of appear‘ances, and it inspires one with the desire to seem rather than to be.— sChapin. -
One Point of View
. A good word is ar easy obligation, ‘but not to speak ill, requires only our 'silence, which costs us nothing.
If Work Bores You
- It your work bores you, that’s a .Bign you haven’t been doing your work very well.—Atchison Globe.
Healthy Children
- ‘There are two kinds of healthy chil. ‘dren: Noisy ones and those who will :not keep quiet.
Needed Application
What’s needed now is to apply intelligence to intelligence tests.—Deet News. .
Lesson for Misers . in Chinese Legend An aged Chinese, noted far «nd wide among his npeighbors for his penuriousness, was one day discovered running frantically up and down in front of his small hut, beating his breast and ecrying out in doleful lamentations.
“Woe is me!” he cried, “woe is me!l Some one last might stole away the treasure which 1 had buried in my garden, and left a stone in its plage.” “And why do you weep?” asked a neighbor. “You mnpever used your treasure. Bring yourselt to belleve that the stone is still your treasure, and you will be as well off as you ever were.”
The neighbor was right. A burled treasure is of no more value to the world than a buried stone. One of the pathetic truths of life is that so many fail to realize this fact. Had the old miser been generous enough to have shared his treasure with a needy world, he could at least have had the comfort of knowing that many would have joined him in bewailing his loss. But he had lost that which was of value to no one. Not even he himself had made use of it,
Long Sentence Made Matter of Complaint
What is said to be one of the longest single sentences in English on record—a statement of 593 words, covering 56 typewritten lines—was the subjeet of complaint by counsel in the Court of Appeal, says the London correspondent. of the New. York Herald Tribune. Analysis of some of the phrases in the averuge income tax return form is difficult enough, but in the protested instance of circumlocution and ambiguity it was set forth that a Chinese lawyer could not have supplied more redundant or roundabout language to convey his meaning. : The sentence, stretched word to word in one line, would reach approximately 35 feet, and to utter it would be a breathing exercise almost equal to climbing the whispering gallery in old St. Paul's. - The sentence, it was stated to Lord Justices Atkin and Serutton, appears in the finance act of 1927, and purporis to explain “relief in respect of losses in business set up after April 6, 1923.” :
A Veiled Criticism
E. Berry Wall, whose portrait by Tade Styka is a hit of the Paris salon, maintains in maturity that good taste in dress which won him in his youth the title of “king of the dudes.” There is a story to the effect that Mr. Wall ran across a New York friend in a hotel the other day. The New Yorker wore vast Oxford bags of the new bois de rose tint, his coat was cinnamon brown with brass buttons, over his brown shoes white spats were drawn, and his shirt collar, tie and handkerchief were in various shades of pink. Mr. Wall shook the New Yorker by the hand and said in a low and sympathetic voice: “Are you in mourning for some one, Bill?’—Pittsburgh Chronicle-Tele-graph.
Old Sailing Vessel
Perhaps the best account that has come down to us in writing, from which a description of a boat in Roman times can be had, is the account of St. Paul's journe; in a wheat ship to Rome.
During the storm on the way from Crete to Malta the sallors cast cargo overboard; they nearly lost the ship’s boat trailing behind; they undergirded the ship with a cable; they let go their four anchors; the crew tried unsuccessfully to escape in the lifeboat, and finally they cast off their anchors, set a foresall and ran the boat onto the beach.
The Price of Silence
The bill collector found that the family he was about to dun had skipped, taking the goods with them. After some inquiry*he managed to locate the van driver, but that worthy claimed to have no recollection of where he had taken them. “Come now,” said the collector, producing a $5 bill, “this ought to rouse your memory.” *“lt ought to, sir,” the | van driver admitted, “but you see mine | ain’t no ordinary memory an’ it’l; takei a deal of rousing. Why, it cost $lO to | put it to sleep.”—Boston Transecript. !
Ham and Eggs
A Hoosier wife was serving the cus-; tomary coffee and toast for breakfast.' The husband, who had recently re-! turned from a trip to the old homeplace in a neighboring state, was talk-| ing about the many changes that had| occurred. i
“I suppose you had so little in com-:, mon with the folk back there it was dull,” said the wife. ¢
“Dull? Not by a long shot. We had! a great time talking about the days| of ham and eggs for breakfast,” replied the vivacious husband. ;
Impressed
A negro arrested on a banditry charge came before Judge Rosalsky in gencral sessions in New York ung; was held in bail of $25,000. When| statement was made from the bench to this effect attaches were surprised’ that the negro was undismayed. Rath-! er there was a look of admiration in' his eyes. As he was led toward the' bridge of sighs and jail he remarked:’ ‘Dat ge'man sho’ does talk in mag-: aificent figures.”—The New Yorker. ‘!
Miss Velma Deardorff and Wendel} Nichols spent the 4th with Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Peterson at Mishawaka.
Dr. and Mrs. A. J. Hostetler and dauughter Marie of LaGrange were guests on Wednesday of the Walten Robinson family.
Science Routs Idols
Science and youth zre lessening the belief in powers of weird faces carved on poles in Korea. According to a recent report of a medical missionary, there, many of the old superstitions! are being replaced by modern health, practices, and the fuith in the healing powers of the carved figures is dying out. Young men of the country are studying medicine, dentistry and public sanitation, and are spreading the knowledge tu others.
“Yet It Is a Great Tale”
Human life as Joseph Conrad had seen and experienced it since childhood was for most people a qulet desperation. The history of men on this earth, he remarked, might be written on a cigarette paper “in one phrase of infinite poignancy”: “They: were born, they suffered, and they: died. . . . And yet 1t is a great tale.” —Wilbur Cross in the Yale Review. '’
Odd Trogp.cal Diseaze
Vitiligo is a disease characterized by the disappearafite of pigment from the skin. While comparatively rare in America and Europe, this disease is common in tropical countries. In most cases white patches are formed, around whose edges the pigment 11 darker. Gradually the spots coalesce, and finally the white area may cover, the whole body, !
Colder and Stiffer
A man’s wife who is a capable back seat driver accompanied her' husband. on a long trip. The weather turned severely cold and the husband was speeding for home and warmth. His wife implored him not to go so fast. “I'm cold and stiff. I want to get home,” said the husband. “You'll probably get colder and stiffer if you don’t slow down.”
Pigs in Marble Sties
Pig sties of marble are becoming the thing in a district near Pretoria. Builldings cemented with pure white marble are also becoming common. Stone equal to the best Parian marble has been found there, and because there is no transportation to get it to the outside world, natives are using it for local buildings.
Seem to Flow Uphill
In mountainous regions there is often an optical illusion when traveling beside streams that makes them seem to run uphill. This is due to the fact that mountains in the background make downgrades look like upgrades.
Turn Potted Plants
Do not keep your potted plants always in the same place, but move them occasionally, so that all may get their due share of sunlight. And never allow a plant to be too much drawn in one direction. Turn it around.
Future Gasoline Supply
While there still is plenty of natural gasoline available, scientists are working on processes for the manufacture of motor fuel. Among the plans under consideration 18 the use of distillates from soft coal.
Uncle Eben
i “I goes to church on Sunday,” said ‘Uncle Eben, “an’ I sits 'way up front 'Bo’'s not to be reminded of all dem other sinners dats lookin’ foh a quick, .one-day cure.”—Washington Star.
Guidance of the Past
There is nothing like the dead cold +hand of the past to take down our tumid egotism and lead us into the 'solemn flow of the life of our race. - —Ollver Wendell Holmes. ' ———— -
Expert Tattooing
. The New Zealanders trace artistiq and elaborate patterns under the . Bkin, producing the most beautiful effects known, if. the word beautiful ‘ may be applied to the art. :
Goes Back Centuries
The expression, “A cat may look at & queen” is evidently a paraphrase of the title of a pamphlet published In 1652 called “A Cat May Look at a King.” :
Look to the Light
. Lift thyself up, look around, and ; see something higher aud brighter than ' earth, earthworms and earthly dark. ;nm.—lean Paul Richter.
Explanation
- The reason why the, woman pays !an_d pays and pays is because shq ~buys on the installment plan.—Ar | kansas Gazette,
Aluminum Plentiful
* Aluminum is more abundant through. » out the world than any other metal, ) It forms over 8 per cent of the earth’s erust.
Which Are You Doing?
" There is a difference between tak- , ing pains and making your work ri. * diculously hard.—Open Shop Review.
Heavy Oils
Sassafras 011, clove oil, creosote oil and som& crude petroleum oils areq heavier tiin water.
Intention Is Everything
An evil intention perverts the best actions and makes them sing.—Ad. dison. E
Not Proud of Them The things we all make, but never brag about, are—mistakes.
Bebe Daniels in “Feel My Pulse” a clever comedy at Crystal Sunday and Monday.
Dr. Arnold Elson registered podiatrist, will be in Kendallville next Monday Tuesday and Wednesday on a professional visit. ’
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
- Slow Canicra Action Slow motion pictures are usually! taken by a special camera. This scamera is hand-driven and turned by ‘the camera man in the same manner a 8 a regular studio camera. It operates at least ten times facter than the ordinary camera and thus portrays slow and more detailed action of the objects taken. lHowever, there is an attachment which rakes slow‘moticn pictures that is used on the ‘regular studio or news reel caméras.
Almonds are of two kinds—bitten and sweet. The bitter almond is culd tivated to a limited extent in Mediter rianean countries, and the nuts are used in the manufacture of tlavoring sextracts and of prussic acid. The sweet, or edible, almond is grown on a commercial scale in the south of LEurope, in California and in some other countries: : o
Once owned by Dickens, a meerschaum pipe was disposed of at a sale in London for £54 ($270). With the pipe was a letter written by Dickens in July, 1862, lending his meadow to the Higham Cricket club and stating that he had a sincere desire to be “a good friend to the working men in his neighborhood.”
Rottenstone mixed with oil to a creamy consistency is the common frictional agent used for removing tarnish from copper, brass and bronze. After this cleaner has ‘been applied the metal should be polished with a soft cloth. A final rubbing with dry rottenstone or whiting will give the metal an even brighter luster.
- In some Alaskan streams salmon -have at times appeared in such massed numbers as to make it seem .that the channel was almost solidly -filled with fish. This, however, occurs only during brief periods at the height -of the annual runs or migrations of .adult salmon from the sea to streams rfor spawning purposes.
The ukulele is not of Hawaiian +origin. A white man in Hawaii is sald to have designed the instrument, .using the Portuguese taro-patch violin as a model. It was soon adopted by the Hawalians.
~ Horses and mules working in coal ‘mines retain their health because us.ually they are given a sufficient amount of exercise and rest in the ‘sunshine to counteract the time spent fin the mines.,
. In 1862 an arc lamp was installed /In a lighthouse at Dungeness, Engyland, and supplied with current from a scumbrous magneto-electric machine, +This was the first regular electric light yin service. ' A
Our feeling that there is a God is ,at best an inadequate proof of his existence. A stronger proof is the 'fact that we are capable of doubting 'Him.—Arthur Schnitzler in Vanity JFair,
- “Musie in prison brings repentance,” 3says a newspaper headline, ell, ‘we're pleased to hear there’s some -place that will make a musician re.pent.—New Orleans Times-Picayune.
: A hunter who went to Africa to kill off lions and leopards reports that he ‘had many narrow cscapes including jcharges by a rhino, a buffalo, an eleap‘hant and the steamship company.
. “This check,” declared the deter‘mineqd diner to a friend who was mak}ng ineffectual feints at reaching for ‘his wallet, “will be paid on a com#enionate basis.”—Detroit News.
* What is believed to be the oldest inn in the United States is the Elm Tree inn at Farmington, Conn., which .dates from 1670.
Its situation upon a river was so -similar to that of Memphis in Egypt ‘that the name was given to Memphis, "Tenn,
° The term “big game” is elastie, but ‘is generally understood to include all ;wild animals larger than the common rtox : 9500 .
- It is said that labor sweetens rest, ‘but to many persons rest seems sweet enough as it is.—Boston Transcript.
: No Phrenology Required { Another way to veud character by :the bumps is to listen to a motorist as ;he drives over a lumpy road. : s
~ Small bodies with velocity have a (greater momentum than large masses ¢ withouts i[.~l.fl_cml.
- The Unknown is ap ocean. What ‘s conscience? The compass of the 'Unknown. : .
Read the Advs. ~and Shop in Ligonier
Almond Var:ciles
Dickens Relics Soid
Removing Tarnish
Salmon in Millions
Designer of Ukulele
Get Sunshine and Rest
First Electric Light
God and the Doubter
Now Jail Them
Heavy Charges
Dutch Treat
Ancient Inn
Took Name from Egypt
“Big Game” Animals
Needs No Addition
Velocity
Nugget of Wisdom
Dress-Alike Party
Perhaps the dinLiest dance 1 have been to lately was Lady Joram's. All the dancers were dressed exactly alike —up to the masks, which grinned There were some charming embarrassments. And the queer thing was that’ when éverybody unmasked for break.’' fast, even then, somehow, we all seemed alike. Quite remarkable, wasn’t it?—“Lady of Fashion,” in G. K’s Weekly. -
No Presswork Necessary * The cowboy had just discovered w."nes and he had his appetite with hiti. The first order disappeared in record time and another supply was called for. Order after order followed, but the waflles did not come quite fast enough for the cowboy, 80 he said to the waiter: “Tell the feller out there he needn’t stop to put the printin’ on them; jest send 'em in plain.” .
Vicible Stcrm Clouds
The weather bureau says that the distance at which storm clouds are ‘visible to the naked eye varies greatly with one’s position and the kind of .clouds. If a person is in an open flat country aund the¢ clouds are of the -broad stratus or layer type, he may .not see them more than 30 or 40 miles away. .
Small Congregation
¢ Declared to be the smallest congre;zation in the world the membership of a tiny moorluhd chnreh at Exmoor. England, apparently refuses to grow. iThe average attendince during the fpast generation hizs heen only three, sincludiug the org.nist., and the. larg‘est number - has ncver - been above reight .
Salt for Glazing
The bureau of standards says that ‘for salt-glazing bricks., sewer pipe. chemical stoneware and similar prod.ucts, the grade of salt generally used ‘lB that known as “‘rock salt” of about lthe' same degree of fineness as that -used for mixing with ice to manufac‘ture ice cream.
A Reminder
At a recent wedding, says the Humorist, the happy couple left the church under an archway of spades. This, perhaps, can be construed as a hint to the bridegroom to stay at home in the evenings and dig the garden,
Bristol Old Port
7 Bristol is one of the oldest ports in England. Its history is generally be. ‘lieved to go back 2,000 years. when it was the terminal place of barter for ‘the Phoenician traders. It was later used by the Reman navigators.
: Mind’s Power Supreme + No barriers, no masses of matter, ‘however enormous, can withstand the powers of the mind; the remotest cor--ners yield to them, all things succumb, the very heaven itself is laid open.— Manilius. :
Exactness Demanded
The joining betwéen marble blocks in ancient Athenian structures buili ‘of blocks of marble had to be so ex ‘act that the joint must not be percept: ‘ible when the finger nail was drawn ‘over it. s
Fantastic Is Not the Word
Greeks from up-country in breecheg of fantastic size, in which they car rled their possessicns — pack-mules, ‘donkeys, and an occaslonal camel.— From a monthly magazine. -
Where the Law Halts
. Bvery good citizen has a good opin fon of the law, but the opinion of some would be better if the law knew how to keep bad eggs off juries.—Bos ton Transcript.
The Snowshoe
i The snowshoe which provides meang by which the weight of the body can be distributed over a large surface of snow was first used by the American ‘lndian. :
' Slave Became Immortal + Aesop, immortal writer of fables, I supposed to have lived from about 62( to 560 B. C. He was a slave, sald f¢ ‘have belonged to Tadmon of Samons
The Whole Story
“Yes,” said the reference, “when hgq 'was in our employ he was not only ‘trusted and tried, but also eonvicted. —Boston Transcript. :
High Magnification
- The bureau of standards says thal ‘microscopes may be purchased having -a magnification as high as 3,000 di ,ameters.
Quarries No: Worked Out
Many of the ancient quarries it Greece are heing worked. The supply of marble is practically inexhaustible
Joy of Life
A righteous act, a worthy achieve i ment—these are the sources of real ‘achievement.—American Magazine,
~ Should Be Happy Years : The time that the average man puts ‘in working amounts to eight years ol ' his life, :
About Ourselves
Our blessings are the least heeded, ‘pecause the most common events of
Ben Glaser had his tonsils removed by Dr. Lz2ne this forenoon. - - Mrs. Ted Braden of Toledo is visiting friends and relatives here. Tim McCoy in “*Riders in th& Dark’ at Crystal Friday and Saturday. FOR RENT—Pasture for cows and sheep also corn for sale. Phone 271. There was one birth against two death in Ligonier during the month of June. - : o ' i L.on Chaney in “Laugh Clown Laugh at Crystal next Tuesday Wednesday rand Thursday.
- Wallace Berry and Raymond Halton in .“Partners in Crime” Its their best comedy tonight. George (gshorn who has been in declining health for some time has had his teeth extracted. : Mrs. A. Diamond and two children of Chicago are. guests of her parents Mr. and Mrs. Joe Miller. : 4 Lo ' Miss Hortense Christnor spent several days at Diamond lake the forepart of the weel. the guest of Mrs. Harry Gilbert.
Miss Rachel 1. Schlotterback of near Merriam is spending the week with Mrs. Cullen Prouty and family ) near Bakertown. ‘
Mrs. Leslie Yoder who was here for 1 brief vigit retruned to her home in Teledo Monday accompanied by her mother Mrs. George Sack. :
Mrs. Roy Stocker of South Bend and Mrs. Elmer Whitner of North Webster underwent tonsil operations at Dr. Black’'s office Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs,.G. G. Minix, of Richmond returned home Monday after a week’s visit at the home of C. V. Poyser, their daughter Marguriet remaining for a longer visit.
Miss Olive Glant spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Poyser and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Zimmerman and daughter Anneta, of Kendallville were callers in the after noon. ! = :
Guessts of Mr. and Mrs. Will Green the 4th were Mrs. Sophia Banks Miss Mary Banks Fred Banks and family Fort Wayne, H. ¢. Townsend and family Sotuh Bend, Mrs. Jennie Dickey Mrs. Rose Swihart Miss Martha Swihart South Whitlev.
Dr. Black reports the following births: a daughter born July 3 to Mr. and Mrs. Silban Bover east of the city and a son born July 4 to Mr. and Mrs. Addin Chiddister of South Bend at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Speckeen. .
Sacks Orchestra under the direction of Miss Madeline Sack violinist will be the musical feature’ of the union services at the U. B. church Sunday evening. The selections are all ¢lassical and of the highest musical order. Program elsewhere in this issue. Those assisting from out of town are Messrs John Morrell and Leland Miller Topeka, Howard Parks Kendallville. ! .
S fi’; ‘- _.__\_‘\ : o eL N 5 1/ ’\\\\ , "z. \‘ %' / g BATHING SUITS , One and Two Piece ; $l.OO to 5.00 Straw Hats ™" Sipes ™™ $2.00 to $5.00 P. J. Carney Clothing Store
Niagara lalls
Saturday, July 14 Low Round Trip Fares Regular Train Service
La Porte $17.75 South Bend 16.80 Mishawaka 16.65 Elkhart 16.25 Goshen 15.85 Ligonier 15.45 Kendallville 14.85 Waterloo 14.35 Butler 14.20 Bryan 13.60 ‘Wauseon 12.80 Toledo 11.65
S ! VR i N Final Return Limit July 29 : - sfl‘“wx\‘ Tickets will be honored in Pullman Cars W . ; upon payment of Pullman Charges. o‘; For further information and Reservations (sy A : Consult Agents A -",’.%.\_ . g s v“ s : 2 : “' New York Central L QLA L
e Card of Thanks. We wish to express our deep appreciation for the kindness shown the beautiful floral pieces tnd sympathy extended during the illness and death of our loved ome Floyd Ramsby. ~ Mrs. Mildred Ramsby and family ‘Mr. and Mrs. George Ramsby and t' Family : Bebe Dainels at Crystal Sunday and Monday. tL : Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Minix and daugh ter Peg, Mrs. C. V. Poyser, Mrs. J. L. Henry, Mrs. Hall Green and son Kick spent Friday afternoon in Elkhart the gest of Miss Olive Glant.
: Notiee to Bidders Notice is hereby given that the Board of Commissioners of Noble county, State of Indiana will at one (1) o'clock P. M. on Thursday July 26, 1928 open. sealed proposals for the furnishing of all labor and materials for the construction of three bridges complete and one pair of bridge abutm¢nts. Such bids and proposals shall be filed with the Auditor of said Noble County and may be filed up until the said hour of the opening thereof and - must be made in form as required by law and accompanied with non-collusion affidavits and with good and sufficient bond equal to double the amount of the bid. ~ Said items and work are knowns
as 1928 Dbridge projects Nos. 6,7, 8 and 9, of said Noble County, Indiana, and are located as follows: No. 6, between section 21 and 28 in York town ship; No. 7 between sections 25 and 36 in Green township; No. 8 between sections 9 and 10 in Green township, and No. 9 near center of section 16 in York township. | Specifications for each of said projjects are on file and may be seen in the office of the Auditor of said County. The Board reserves the right to reject any or all bids submitted and to continue said sale from day to day until all contracts are awarded. ' Given by order of the Board of Commissioners of Noble County Indiana. - Edwin Smith Auditor Noble County - Indiana. - ; - 23b2w
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT State of Indiana Noble County SS: | In the Noble Circuit Court October Term, 1928. o In the Matter of the Estate of : E. W. Sorgenfrei, Deceased
- Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Executor of the es-
tate of° E.. W. Sorgenfrei deceased has filed in said court its account and vouchers in final settle. ment of said Estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and aection of said Court at the
Jourt House at Albion Indiana on the Ist day of October 1928 at which time and place all persons interested in said estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause if any there be why said account should hot be approved..
And the heirs, devisees and legatees of said decedent and all others interested. in said Estate are also hereby required at the time and place aforesaid to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part ot said estate. , Citizens Bank Exectuor Posted July 2 1928. : Bothwell & Vanderford Attorneys el ' 23b2w
\.' ; ',vi‘.‘ | RN )TR et
Bristol $15.95 White Pigeon 13.55 Sturgis 15.15 Burr Oak: 14.90 Bronson - 1465 Coldwater 1430 Quincy 14.05 Jonesville 13.65 Hillsdale 13.45 Pittsford 13.15 Hudson 12.90 Adrian 1225 Blissfield ~ 1225
