Ligonier Banner., Volume 63, Number 27A, Ligonier, Noble County, 29 July 1929 — Page 4
THIS SPACE REESERVED FOR | AMERICAN srAlr BANK el L Towh 0 sor | e
Cars washed and polished. Phoue 347, Boy Scouts. White clover honey for sale. James Adams, Ligonier. o aßbdte J. C. Kimell was a business visitor in Elkhart Saturday. - Joe Kimmell, Jr, is enJoving a much needed vacatiof. - , Dewey Bakt;r of- South Bend spent Sunday .in Ligonier. : Cars washed $l.OO. South Side Carage. Telephone 480: 26ait Melvin Drain had his tonsils removed by Dr. Lane this morning. = Dr: and Mrs. C. G. Keehn spent Sunday in Fort Wayne with the Nusbaum tamily. : _ Mrs., Luther Cooper Is visiting her daughter Mrs. Arvthur Dillon and family at Culver, Mis. Mary Butz visited the. Clyde Fought family at Topeka one day last week; : Mr. and Mrs. George Moore of Fort Wavne spent the week _('»nd with the Ed Smith family. The Long families held a remunion at Shipshewanna lake Sunday with a lirge attendance. Mr. and Mrs., Chet Hile were guests last evening at the George Boren home in Garrett. Dr. Black reports thg birth of 2 daughter at the Frank Mabley home northeast of the city, : e e » Miss Barbara Lyon spent several days last week at Tippecanoe lake with Mr. and Mrs. Biggs. It thrills, it charms, it amazes: ““The Pagan” at Crystal: Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. James Kinison was too active while gitting up a few days and has been ordered back to bed for a rest. Fredonna Barnhart, Velma Deardorff, Irene Nelson and Thella Shisler spent Saturday evening in South Beund Mrs. Frank Wood who had an attack of illness is much better and now makes the rounds in the Wood home, A romance of dreamy tropic seas and strong men in struggle “The Paguan” Crystal Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.. ) The Benton-Richville W. H. M. S. will meet Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Chauncey Miller on the Pierman farm. Mrs. Henry Burkett, Mrs. Lena Keasey and daughter Catherine and Miss Marie Burkett were Goshen visitors Friday afternoon. . John Fox of Guyman, Okla., who is vesiting relatives and old friends in Noble county spent yesterday with Mr. and Mrs. A. Howard Smith. - Mrs. Earl Creps who submitted to a goitre operation last Tuesday at the Elkhart hospital returned to her home in this city Sunday afternoon. A Mrs. C. G. Keehn attended a one o’clock luncheon at - Dewart loke Thursday given by Mrs. C. A. Brown. There were twenty-four guests, Dr. €. B. Croxall will hold the second quarterly conference for the New Paris-Benton charge at Richville Tues day evening at 7:30 standard time. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Selig entertained over the week end at théir home. on West Third street Mr. and Mrs, 1. B. Jacobs and daughter Elsa and Leonard Selig of Chicago. . - Mr. and Mrs. Walter Robinson and sons had as their Sunday guests Mrs. Ort Sigler and sons Paul and William and daughter Mildred and Miss MarJorie Gage of LaGrange. ; The York Township sewing * and food preperation club announce that they will hold an ice cream social Thursday evening, August 1 at the York Township Centralized school.. ' Read The Ligonfer Banner. Wi
. Cars washed ‘and polished. l’h(md ITHT. ' Boy Scouts. | Mrs. J. B, Schutt is in Goshen Lhis; aiternoon. y | Car Washed - $l.OO. South Side Largae. Phone 480. ‘ 26a . 4t Rev. and Mrs. ¢, B Smith had as a dinner guest Earl Creps. e Mr. and Mrs. James Stump and sons spent Sunday in Fort Wavne. q . Kdd Banta spent Sunday in Benton Harbor, Mich., with ;\lrs.__Hzmtzx._ Mrs. Helen Vallance and daughter Alice were South Bend visitors Friday. Mrs. 1 S.t,ei.nl)zn'ger of Elkhart township is contined to her bed by illness. : o Me. and Mys. Jack Hire came from South Behd Saturuday to visit relatives, : Mr. and Mrs. Charles Simmons are home from a pleasant vacation trip in the east. : ; The AMisses Caroline and Catherine Wilson of Rushville arve visiting Miss Margaret Kelley, ’l“h,_?en voung -iadies who held a iouse party at the Kinnison cotrtage at Wawasee returned home last night. Thriils, beauty ‘romanc® and a tremendous cilimax. “The Pagan’ at Crystal, Tuesday. Wednesday. and Thursday. - . The directors- of the Indiana Farm Bureau Federation will meet in third quarterly session July 30 and 31 at the offices in Indianapolis. Mrs. Harry Inks, Miss Louise Inks and Phil Schloss visited Mrs. Phil Schloss and son at the Epworth hispital in South Bend Sunday. | The- Jolly Workers 4-H Club met at the home of Mary King, Tuesday, July 23rd. A social time was enjoved by the members present. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin . Tully and ;daughter and Mrs. Iva Tyler of Ligo(nier were last week guests of H. H. iPincheon and family at Alhion. . ; Mr. and Mrs. George Schlemmer and three sons Vern, Donald and David: ;of LaGrange were in Ligonier vigiting {with Mr. Schlemmer's hrother Carl ;S«hlemmer and t'annly. ,’ Mr. and Mrs. Rayvmond Vardonrn of ‘Danville Illinois his mother and sister of Catlin in the same state were guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Quail ilast week. , : = F L e | | The body of William Klinger 63 was ifound in a truck patch at his -home at 'Warsaw Saturday evening. Death iwas’ due to a heart attack induced by ithe heat. . o { Mrs. Joseph Kendrick and son, of Detroit, Mich., are visiting relatives .in Albion and Ligonier. Mrs. Kendrick will be remembered as Miss Faye Hite. ' . i e : : Sam Long and daughter of Sheldon {ll, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Benuett and tMr. and Mrs. .Dunwiddy of Sturgis, l&;‘ich.. were recent visitors at’ the _home of Mr. and Mrs. William Qu‘ail.k : I Charles McCoy and family of Chicago spent the week end with his sistter Mrs. James Adams, Sunday in {company with Mr. and Mrs: Adams land Mrs Lena Keasey they attended ,the Logan family reunion at Plymouth . . Lo b . Mr. and Mrs. Hal Green and little i son Richard left by automobile today ifor their new home in Jamestown, "NeW' Yor kafter an extended visit ihere with their parents Mr. and Mrs. ‘John L. Henry and Mr. and Mrs. Chariles Green, : : - ! The Jolly Workers 4-H Club will ;meet with the leaders Mrs. Cecil Leslie iand Mrs. Floyd Leming Thursday lvaftmfin at 1:15, August 1 at ‘the home of Mrs. Leming northwest of the city. | A il attendance is decired ag business of importance will come before the meeting. o L | | Car Washed $l.OO. South Side -Gargae. Phone 480, < 26a 4t
Wild-Flower Cultivation Witd tflower gardens need little care auiside of the usual watering, weeding and applicaticn of manure .or bune meal, but - neither manure nor limeshould be applied under any circum stances to plants requiring acid soil, as both are fatal to them. Acid-loving plants slould be given "every fall & mulch of decaying oak leaves, pine pneedles or sawdust. Aluminum sul phate can be used if these are not available. : Epicurean Shark . In the capacious interior of a sixfoot mun eating leopard shark, caught at Miami, Fla.,, a taxidermist found a porcupine fish, two leather juck tish six rabbit feet, six chicken legs and a sprinkling of feathers, two pigeons, banded on the leg numbers, six anchovies, a cowfish, a lizard fish, a sabre fish, a toad fish and a variely of unidentified specimens.—New York World Magazine. e , fdea Won Fortune - ~ Louis Guttenberg came hmueffi'mn sthe Civil war with two army uniforms and looked around for a jobh. \Wearing uniforms at dress parties was very ‘much in vogue then and Guttenberg found he could rent out his two army suits for this purpose. That was the beginning of the largest costuming business in New York city, perhaps the world, and the foundation of a fortune. , _ . Greeting Poet Laureate | An English book brings up again the anecdote of Robert Bridges' arrival in - America. The poet laureate refused . firml_\' to see reporters and felt highly erutified in putting them to rout. He was duly vanquished the next morning to read the headline “King George’s Caniry Refuses to Twitter.”—Sporting and Dramatic News. L Damp Organ Keys . ‘ | When an organ gets wet, causing tne keys to stick, they must be taken out _and allowed to dry slowly, then rubbed with fine sandpaper and replaced. Care must be taken that the instrument be kept in a room that is not damp, or the trouble will return. Little Nuisance Truck Driver (telling of crash with a small car)-—1 see the little devil coming and I thinks—"There’'s a fly on my windshield.” Then the thing dashes through the radiator and knocks the tops off all me spark plugs. —Weekly Scotsman. . Or Anywhere Else Although the United Siates senate may be the most ‘auvzust deliberative body in the world, it really makes a poor showing compared with the overplump person who tries to pick out 1,500 calories in a cafeterla.—Seattle Daily Times. ~ '
Fruit Trees . Will fruit trees grow from. seeds? Fruit trees will grow from seeds, but the varieties do not come frue. A large proportion of seeding trees produce fruit of an inferior quality.— New York Telegram, ' Snow Houses in Labrador The first known record of any snow houses built by Indians occurs among the Nakapi of Labrador who were investigated recently by the .RawsonMacMillan expedition of the Field museum of Chicago. = ' R Pink Eyes Freakish The White Flemish and -the American white rabbits are white. These breeds do not have pink eyes. White rabbits having pink eyes are albino and they occur In any breed. Women Coal Passers Nagasaki, Japan, is the only place in the world where the boats are coaled by women, who pass the buckets of coal up by hand in a human chain, swiftly and cheerfully. ' Fed Angry Gods 4 . Sailors of gancient Greece thought that storms at sea were caused by the anger of the gods, and to disiract and please the deitles they would throw pleces of bread into the sea. Famous Breed of Horses A “barb” is a Barbary horse, one of a race of horses related to the Arabs, noted for speed and endurance, introduced Into Spain by the Moors. Yum-Yum Place a thin slice of Swiss cheese on top and season with a little tobacco and Worcestershire sauce.—Seattle Post-Intelligencer. , : Hold the Horses _ © America faces the responsibility of handling more power than ever before was entrusted to a nation.—American Magazine. .
~ Enormous Rat ‘ . A rat 26 inches long and believed to be the largest ever grown, was killed on a farm near Sheffield, England. ; : ; Point to Be Considered ~ That they speak evil of me is not the point; that they do not speak it justly, that is the point.— Plautus. To Avoid Sourness A man should be guidéd by his admirations. not his disgusts.—American Magazine. . : Make Work for Themselves - Men spoil women, and then try to reform them —HB. W. Howe's Monthly ‘ Notice : The junk shop formerly owned by Joe Miller is under new management and the highest prices will' be paid for junk. Harry Fox. Phone 433. 27a4t* Wow is the time to pay your Banner subscription—DO IT NOW!
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
Various Humming Birds
' The vuby-throated humming bird 1s found in Canada and in the United States east of the Mississippi river. It winters in southern Mexico and agther Central American countries. It is thé smallest bird found In eastern North America. However, it is not the smallest humming bird, as there are some Central and South American ?pecies,that are only about two-thirds | the size of the ruby-throated bird. | ?! - Natural Wonder | | The St. Jolin river, draining an area of 20000 square miles! discharges its flood inte the Sg John harbor through &1 rocky gorge. famous in Indian lore. The famous “Heversing falls” are so called beciuse at high tide. the water of the harbor is above tlie level of the river and hus @ perceptible drop upiclream. « The ocmrrmice is unique and is considered one of the natural wonders of the world. o ~ Covered Holy of Holies - The veil of the temple of Jerusalem was precisely the same as the original veil for the tabernacle built accordinz to the specifications given by Moses, of bhlue, purple, and scarlet, and fine twined linen. The exact - dimensions of the veil arenot given, but it was suflicient to cover, without any opening, the ‘entire Holy of * Holies, into which the high priest alone might enter . . ’ How Do You Write Yours? .We have before us the signature of a number of Hurtford gentlemen as customarily attaclied to their correspondcnce. Not one of them is legible. Were it not that .in some in stances the writer’'s nanie is type-writ-ten benecath the mystic charasgters one would be at loss to know whence the letter came.—Hurtford Courant. It’s a Hard Life . The kid who longs to arow up so he won’t have mother around to be everlastingly forcing him to swallow castor oil reaches that age only to find he’s got a wife who's everlastingly poking spinach. under his nose.—Cincinnati Enquirer. . - ) ‘ Health Hint o | Even oceasional pains in the- joints ghould be ini‘vsti;;iim!. especially in bér,\}un;&' past middle life. The condition of the teeth are important fac‘torvs in this regard, and the function of the kidneys should also be looked into. - e “ Purposeful Man Wins 4 The man- without a purpose is ke a ship without a rudder—a waif, a nothing. a no man. Have a purpose n ‘life, and having it, throw such strength of mind and muscle into your work as (iod has given you.—Carlyle. j )Growthsof Human Hair f The average rate of growth of hunan hair on the head varies from half :rn inch to one inch a month. The ‘r%ate of growth Is. greatest between twelve and thirty years, and diminishes after tlie age of fifty. 3
Capital City’s Nickname : | The epithet “City of Streets With-. out Liouses? was applied to Wash-' ington, in ils early days. The city was planned and streets laid out in n;n[}Em' an ambitious fashion before much building was done, i e e e i P ~ Where Does It Stop? = § The keenest collectors of autographs ! dX‘e now said fto be concentrating on obtaining the autographs of autograph ’ hunters who have obtained the most ! prominent autographs,—Troy Limes. | ; G T Makes a Difference | | If you bet on three kings, that’sf gambling; if you bet you can make | three spades, that's entertainment; lf§ you bet wheat will go up. that’'s big | business.- -Lincoln Star. i | May Be Great Comfort i ' A cultured man has:a lot of infor- | mation that doesn’t: make him money, ’ but enables him to understand what is : going on in the world.—Terre Haute | %rlbune. G : b Success Explained | . “Why Singers Succeed” is an inter- l esting article, evéry reason being pre- | sented except the chance that they | can sing.~-Boston Evening Transcript. . Death’s Sting o { | “Death Proves Fatal to Stockmah,’fi reads a headline in a Klamath Fallg ! (Ore.) paper. That is the sad fact} about death.—Capper’s Weekly. i Burial in. Arlington ’ . A President of the United States is not eligible for hurial in Arlington’ cemetery .unless. he has had - active | ‘fni]itary service.. . ‘ | ‘ . Clocks Carefully Tended i | The clocks at the Naval ol»servaii tory at Washington are Kkept in. an | nnderground vault and are wound b'y’ electricity. . . J Needs Strengthening - ’ " Love that 'has nothing bul'be‘autyi te keep it in gond health is short- | lived, and apt. to have ague fits.— | Erasmus. - : : ’ \ Another Test = : A man alsc may be pretty accurately judged by the company that he keeps | out of.—Capper’s Weekly. . | Ohio’s First Penitentiary : ’ The first penitentiary .building in | Ohio was begun in 1813 and completed | in. 1815 at Columbus. ; :
Ligonier Banner wonnen R 0 TE Xear
Courtship by Song
~ A vivid description has been given of the courtship of the golden plover: « The male bird mounts about 100 feet and starts tosing, fiving slowly around the spot on the beach where his desired mate is listening, Sometimes several males will vie for one mate, but they make it purely a singing contest |} rather than a fight. Tle song carries |: over a great siretch of moor, attract- |i ing females in the vicinity. .. ' 1 . Black Snow o Though sometimes discredited, 1t 1s |, an actual fact that black snow some- | times aggurs. The color is produced | by the action of innumerable fungi, known as the “Micrococcus’ nivalis.” | It has also been reported from time ! to time that snow either red, blue, or | green in color, has fallen 'in certaln | localities. ' This is caused by the action of such- fungi. The black snow | is comparatively rare. L - Iron Nails Not Used Vitruvius was an architect of Rome, engaged in the practice of his profession a few years before the beginning of the Chrigiian era. lle published. the vook which bears his name about B. C. 25. Vitruvius mentions. that floors of -ouk” were nailed’ with iron nails. Oak floors today are nailed w_ith steel " cut or wire cut nails—through the side tongue—Kknown as blind nailing. : Wifely Immolation " Suttee is the name of the former practice in India for a wife to place herself upon the funeral pyre of her husband, and be burned alive. This. practice ig now illegal, although some writers claim that it is still continued in secret. Similar customs prevailed among Camanches, and throughout the Congo regign in Africa; also in I‘ol.ynf;s.iu and Malaynesia wives were sacrificed. S , : ; Englishman No Lover : A Rumanian woman who wanted to divorce her: English _hushand gave as her reason that “Englishmen did not know how to love The Bucharest judge agreed with the woman and commented that “as love was primarily essential to a happy marriage the Englishman’s inmate inability to bestow it justified the complainant’s request for a divorce.” ' Lightning Protection ' The bureau of standards says that a galvanized iron roof properly grounded will give good protection against lightning. It I 8 necessary to place air terminals on chimneys and see that all geparate parts of the roof, as porch roofs and main roof, are bonded together so that they are in electrical eontact. e Spirit That Wins The job may be ever so big, but that doesn’t mean a thing to an up-and-at-'em American. No task is too big for anyone, providing that one hgs= the proper equipment. Remember, ‘“the bigger they are the harder they fall,” —Grit. . , ; e e Largest Water Bird The albatross is the largest of the water birds, its wings often meas_ur.-l ing more than 10 feet from tip to tlp.'{ It lives mostly on the wing, following a ship for days, lighting on the water only to snatech a bite of food.
" Good in All Weathers There is something good in all weather. If it doesn’t happen to be good for my work today it's good for some other man’s day and will come around for me tomorrow.—Charles Dickens: . A S ee e e ‘ Telephoto Valuable The telephoto &ystem has been found particularly valuable in China, for by its means the complicated Chinese characters can be sent in a telegraphic message. Wise Words ; The only hope of preserving what is best: lies in an immense - charlty, a wide tolerance, & sincere respect for the opinions which are not ours. —Hamerton. : Birds’ Periscopes Within the eyes of \ground birds nature has provided tiny periscopes, reflectors which enable them to observe ‘the approach of enemies from behind. Dangerous Future America facing unrivaled prosperity is like a river at flood. If it goes wild it w;ll wreck everything in sight.— ‘American Magazine. ; : : - From the Clouds Approximately.* 16.000,000 tons of rain and snow fall upon the face of the earth every second, according to expert estimates. ‘ : “She - Scientists are. at odds about the age of the earth, which is aptly referred to in the feminine gender.—Loulsville Courier-Journal. o - Oratorical Latitude = A good speaker must be somewhat of a poet, and therefore cannot adhere mathematically to the truth.— Bismarck. Some Distance 7 A parsec, astronomical * measuring term, is equal to 3.25 “light years,” or about 20,000,000,000,000 miles, . “ Sheep’s “Innards” - A sheep has four stomachs, each of which has a different function.
‘BANKS IN GOOD CONDITION - Only Two Failures Recorded im In- | - diana This Year While Mergers | Aid Financial Institutions -|, Indiana though not yet out of 'the‘l woods, as far as agricultural depresi‘siou is concerned is in a considerably improved position over that of a few | months or one year ago. :l' ~ This is the opinion of Luther F.| Symons state banking 'commissioner“] interviewed today regarding the state! of business and the condition of In—‘ diana banks in general, ! ‘Citing the fact that aside from twfio! ipurely local situations in Wells und‘l Sullivan counties due to léesl causes, there have been only on» Uif't\\'()i bank closings this year Symons said h’ej,belie%es Indiana’s troubles are gradually being “ironed out.”- : The tendency toward mergoers and consolidations seerr in othec- lines of business also exists in banking. Symons sayvs and. mhny of the towns where only one bank can cxist profit{ably are tending toward the merger idéa. e (Capital is seen as a .(‘bmmtfimi'tiyl peacemaker in some such cases, by | Symons. He pointéd out that where two banks exist with their «'ons«lqu»mi rivalry there often eaists two fa(»i tions throughout community arfairs, and that only long continued }osses! will . bring such fgcti(ms o _theirl senses. o _ | Indiana’s wheat crop now moving to market is swelling bank deposits land bringing liquidation of some long standing debts. The crops varies in value from $10,000,000 rto 323,000,000 each year. : | Little chance of & repetition in Indi;}na of the recent Florida epidemic of bank closings is seef by the commissioner. “Indiana’s agriculture is top well established and - diversified to® permit such a situation.” o : Obituary. o " Miss Luella Harper, a well known resident of the, Richville community, passed away after an illness of several weeks, at four o'clock: Monday afternoon, July 2%, at the age of 61 years, three months and fourteen days. Futeral services were held Wednesday at two o’clock from .th Richville chureh, Rev. R. J: Hutsingiller, - pastor of the church officiating. Burial was made in the Hire cemetery. - Luella Harper, daughter of John and Elizabeth Milner Harper, was born April 8, 1868 and spent her entire [ife in the community in which she was born. : She was a member of the Richville M. E. church, a great student of the Bible and faithful in attendance upon all of the services of the church. . Surviving relatives are a brother, E. M. Harper, and two sisters Mrs. .| Rosilla Lint of Kansas City, Kan., and Mrs. Maggie Noble—of Valparaiso. Other relatives include a niece Mrs. Dorothy Lane of Bloomington, who prior to her marriage made her home with the deceased, and Riley Wantz of Goshen, a cousin who was reared on the Harper homestead. , ~ The family desires to thank neighbors and friends for their kindness and helpfulness during the sickness and death of their sister. Mr. Mrs. Harry Gilbert drove to Fort Wayne Sunday and attended a reunjon of her family. : - Mrs. William Jerales of this city visited last week with her sister Mrs. Etta Feldheiser at Cromwell.. Mrs. Grace Spurgeon Mawhorter is enréute to her old home in Noble county for a visit from California. ' Mr. and Mrs. Albert Weaverfarrived 'home last evening from a vacation trip lin the east. They were accnmpanied |home’ by their son and wife who will spend the wéek here. < A : Notice of Appointment ‘ Notice is hereby given (that the undersigned has been appointed administrator.of the estate of Curtis Cole deceased late of Noble Cotinty, Indiana, Said estate is probably solvent. Edwin D. Smith, Administrator W. H, Wigton, Attorney. = 27b3w l' Pay your Banner subscriptions.
Herman Sack Wayne Overalls ~ Full cut, 220 weight der’yim,~ sizes up to 46 at o TUNIEINON e 0 wd,a" O @ w ® O & Every other Monday and maybe you will get a pair FREE. ‘ WORK CLOTHING ~ Work Shirts up to Size 20
. Boost Elkhart County ~ Horizontal increases in tax assess: ments were made by the State Tax Board in Elkhart and Hendricks .counties the only two .to be changed after hearings in 16 counties. . ° e . ~ Visit In Benton. . ) Mrs. Matilda Thunander and' son Mr. and Mrs; Wayne Thunander and daughter Bertie of Kimmell were res cent dinner guests at the Methodist tparéonagéat Benton. L !Xotice of Sherifi’s Sale o 1 Keal Estate |. BY virtue.of ‘a juggmént decree and order of sule to me directed from the clerk of (he?.\'o_ble Circuit L‘qu'tv,‘ ot Noble County, Indiana, in a Gause wherein State Bank of Kimmell, Kimmell, Indiana, is plaintift and Earnest R.‘Slults and Hattie ). Stults, Orie Tyler, Grant Tyler and the First Nati(‘ma'l Bank of Ft. Wayne, were' defendants._lxn'e(miriug me to:make the sum ot three thousand four hundred ana fifty--nine (iollars and tifty-four cents, | With interest thereon at phe rate ot !six pe reent per annum from July Sth. 1})29 and costs including “costs of this sale, 1 will éxpose and offer at public sale to the highest bidder on Sat‘ux'day. Alxglxst 31st. 1929, between the hours of. 10:00 A. M. ;m(l.‘4:‘oi' o'clock ’P.TM. of said da¥ at the east door of |the court house in the town of Adbion, ‘in Noble County, in the State of Tndiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven vears of the following described reud estate sithated in’ Noble County in the State of Indiana to-wit: The east '.one-half of the southeast quarter of section thirty-six (in. Township thirty-four north, Range ‘leight east, containing. eighty acres imore o 1 less, 'less any portion that {may be included in the public high,iw_ay' if any. : ! ’
2 H such rents ‘and profits will not sell for a sum sufficient to satisfy said decree, interest and costs, I will at the sdme tinmie and place expose “and offer at public sale to the highest bid.der,'.the:'t‘ée simple of said real estate or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisty and - discharge said decree, judgment and costs. Said sale will be made without relief from valuation and appraisement laws. :
e JOHN: SINGLETON, : . :Sheriff Noble County, Indiana. - W. H. Wigton, attorney for plaintiff. . i T 27a3w
MONDAY, JULY 29th. : The Office Scandal With Phyliss Hauver, a 3 the most sophisticated sob sister - that every. vamped a police judge. Her trials and tripulations in following the scent of a baffling murder ' mystery—her battle for the soul of a man—and her °, triumph, pringing with it a sweet remance. : e TUES., WED, THURS, JULY 30, 31 and AUG. Ist . i The Pagan Romon [Navarro tops fine cast in stirring dramas. Actually filmed. in the Palynessian Islands “The Pagan’ is thrilling photographic Ewcordv of palm fringed lagoons, quaint iribal dances, sparkling reas, and a vivid story of love interique in which a native charmer vies with the lover of a white adventuress. Rener Adoree, Dorothy Janis and .Lenald- Crisp are featured in native cast. ; COMING : o August 6, 7 and 8, “Careers” with beautiful Billie Dove and all-starr cast. ; : ' Al%o Comedies, News Reels and Revues. - ' -
Guest Coupon Good With One Paid Admission on -‘Monday
