Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 42, Number 45, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 5 July 1923 — Page 2

AMERICA SEIZES JAPANESE BOOZE 'Rum Is Taken When Big Liner Enters the Port ot , _ Hojiolulu. ; I MORE SEIZURES AT NEW YORK Big Supply of Wine, Beer and Spirits ! Confiscated From French Liner Paris and White Star Steamer Cedric. ■ Honolulu, June 27.—United States customs officers here seized and removed 292 quarts of liquor from!' the Toko Kisep Ktibushiki liner Korea Mara. The Korea Mara ms the ilrat .Japanese vessel to arrive here sinee the pew rules governing supplies of liquor on board ships became eifeci iie customs officers’ left twenty-five quart's of liquor-on the vessel as; medicinal supplies. - The ship's officers 1 attempted to" Sfitiye the entire supply of j 217 quarts classified us for medicinal 1 purposes, but Dr. E. A. Sweet, chief quarantine officer here, ruled that the j '• twenty-live, quarts were sufficient,!-The ■ seized liquor included .sake, whisky, i and several varieties of wine. Liner Paris’ Wine Seized. New York, June 271—The French liner Paris and the White Star liner Cedric, the third and fourth vessels to defy American dry laws by bringing liquor into New York under government seals, lost their excess beer, wine, and liquor when customs officials un<l*r Deputy...„Survey or Curran went aboard n'hil seized' atr-Bdr'ffi'ddicffial supplies. On the Paris thirteen kegs of beer* were dumped overboard and almost 4,000 bottles of wine were carted away to government warehouses. The beer was poured out instead of seized on , request of the ship’s officers, In order to save the kpgs. After breaking the seals of the Cedric’s wtheroom, the officials carted away 7,391 bottles of beerr ninety-bot-tles of.spirits .and thirty-seven bottles of assorted liquors. Ship officers - said they-had received no word as to what action their line would take.

I. C. C. Orders Assigned Car Regulation Dropped Washington, June 27.—-Abolition of the "assigned car rule,” by wTiiefi railroads hate insured a supply "Os coal for their own use during mine strikes'. and other stringencies, was ordered by the interstate commerce commission. The ruling wtss made over the protest of the rnilrojfHs and Is the result of an investigation begun more than two years ago by the commission. Mexican Bandits Demand $15,000 Ransom for Yank Mexlra ."CftyT'June !2T.'—‘Federal*’ •forces in Durango are redoubling their efforts to round up the outlaw gang that is alleged to have.kldnaped It. A. Newman, au American, from a ranch' at Guatimape on April 25. The leader of the gangi. Is reported to have announced that ne will kill the prisoner unless a ransom of 30,000 pesos [roughly $15,01)0] is paid. Belgians Slay Four Germans Who Ignore Their Orders liner, Germany, June 27 pour Germans have been shot and killed here •by Belgian sentinels, and three others ' wounded. In eve'ry ease, .according to tlie Belgian authorities, the shootings were the result of "violations of orders by the victims. Comedian Savoy and Friend -2 Are Killed by Lightning Long Bench, N. Y'„ June 27.—iiert ' Sayoy, of the vaudeville team of Savoy and Brennan,-and Jack C. Crossman, both of New Y'ork, were killed by lightning Tuesday afternoon. Two other men-were injured. Savoy was well known as a female Impersonator.

General Gouraud Sails Rainbow Division Fete Carls, June 25.—Genera] Gouraud, Trainee's famous one-armed general, —sailed from Havre to attend Hie uni.aal reunion ojf the.American Rainbow division In" Indianapolis on July 15, the anniversary of the battle of in ibis. Winter Weather in Germany; Big Berlin School Closed ~2' Berlin. June 25.—The Goethe Lyceum of Berlin was closed because the cold , was so intense the girls could not work. This Is the first that), that the school authorities in Germany have ever been forced to grant vacation be-, cause of cold In June. ■~ ■ V British Turn Down Reds. London. June 27,—The Communist party, which had applied for adulation with the Labor, party, was turned clown by *-vote of 2,880,0 bi) to 300,0CX) nt tlie annual Labor party conference In London. Italy’s VielV of Prohibition. • ... Home, June 27,—Nobody , questions the right ojPtß[email protected]'ed Slates to en* force Its liquor-taws on passenger, ships, the newspaper Messaggero tiut the enforcement may cause em- , liurrnssnie.ut. und ridicule of America.

WILLA S. CATHER

Miss. Wilin ;s. father, American novelist, photographed in Paris where she luid just received word that her novel, >( tm- of Ours,’’ had been awarded .the Pulitzer prize of SI,OOO for'the' American novel published during - the year which best, presents the whplesoiue atmosphere of American life. -

TRAGEDY HITS TRIP j ■ President’s Vacation Outing Darkened by an Accident. ~ . - - — f- —.. Two of Party Die in Plunge of Automobile Over Cliff in Colorado Mountains. Denver, Colo., June 23.—Tragedy broke into President Harding's western trip here with the death of Sumner Curtis, representative of the Re-' publican national; committee with the party, and the injury of two newspaper men in an automobile accident in the mountains 25 miles from Denver, Air. Curtis was killed instantly when tlie automobile plunged over a 75-foot embankment in Bear Creek canyon. Tommie French, a statistician for the Great Western Sugar company 'of - Denver, who was driving the machine, sustained injuries from which he died before he'could be taken to a hospitnl.

j—The l two newspaper men Injured were Donald A. Craig, manager pt-the Washington bureau of the New Y’ork J Herald, anti Thomas F. Dawson, for 20 yeafs a member of the Washington staff of tire Associated Press, but now director of the historical department of tlie Colorado Historical and Natural History society. Both were taken to' Denver hospitals, where it was bei lieved they would recover. The car was rounding Looking Glass curve, one of the sharpest bends i in the Denver mountain park highway system, when it was seen to swerve toward the edge of the road, crash i through a_ S.tqJl£,-PjJlnr and wire, cable protecting rail, and tumble down the jagged Incline almost to the waters of Bear 75 feet below. t $213,000,000 Spent by ”

-*r— U. S. on Pennsy Road Waslilngton, June 23. —The govern--ment expended a total of $213,0uu,000 | j for betterments and other Work chargeable to capital account In its pe4rtod —of- control of the ‘Pennsylvan!a railroad system. It was learned her:. The carrier last Week” reached a settlement with the government under which It will pay $90;000,000 before j 1020. • n. ■ , . ■ _ Sicilian Priest’s Fight on Mussolini Angers Vatican ■ (tome,- June 2*.—Don Sturzo, a Sic.ll- . | Inn priest, who organized and is the ! j leader -of the ("ajhajlc Tir Ponulistj party,|is In disgrace at , the Vatican. Mgr. Enrico Pucci of the Vatican chancery*wrote an article inuhe.Corriere d'ltalia, a Catholic newspaper j lfl Home, In which he virtually tells-tbe--I Rev. Mr. Xturzo7"to withdraw from political (.Mexico Is About to” Seize Part of W. R, Hearst Ranch , Mexico "felty, June-®?* —W. M. Ferris. manager, of- the Bah 1 cor a rnnsh in Chihuahua state, owned by William (Randolph Hearst. lias received word j from Gov. Ignacio Fnrkpiez flint the Chiliualiuu’ agrarian commission Is i about to take over part of the ranch property under the agrarian' law. Arbitration Treaty Between U. S. and Britain Renewed Washington, June 25. —Secretary"- of Sfffte ilughes and.Sjr AueUlund Ged(des, tlie .British ambassador, signed lap agreement under the terms "of [which tlie treaty of arbitration he- ,! tween , the two countries is., renewed I for u period of, live years.” St. LoUIS Plasterers Win sl4 Wage. | St. Louis,- June 27.—Union plasterers here announced they hail .won their fight for sl4 Jor this-.eight-hour i! day.' This is said to he. the highest ■ wage paid. these craftsmen In the United States., "-. .j Bandits Rob Nebraska Sank. i Lincoln, Neb., June 2t-—Two ban dlls held up the eashler of the state ■ hank at Walton, Neb-, and pseapi>d in , mii automobile, according in InformaI tlon rearhltifb here. The amount of . i tlielr loot wus said to be about $2,300.

I. G. G. FORBIDS NEW COAL MINE . . .<* Makes New Departure in the Field of Railway Regulation. -—“—’ , . -r-' 1 * ’ ’■ yv' '* TOO MANY MINES NOW, CLAIM Bars Mile of Railroad In West Virginia cn the Ground That Additional Fuel Operations Are r';- Unnecessary. ~ \v shTiigPin, June 20.—0n the sole ground that there are enough,.coni mi lies in the country', the interstate commerce commission denied the application of-the Virgiii’ihn railway for permission to build a one-mile; branch in West Virginia to carry coal from mines being opened hv tlie Pocahontas Buej company. Tlie commission's decision Is ilie first of its* kind and is ’expected to act as-a-precedent If simitar. applications are made by rall-

’T’l.cre are at present more, mines in the country than is consistent with the efiicient use of carriers’ equipi ment and their aggregate car supply.” | declared the commission.Fewer mines, according ’to"the rul-4-ttgfi would produce more coal than is now mined. The reason given for this I assertion is that, with fewer mines, | there could be a better concentration of railroad facilities and rolling stock. In the last year, according to the -commissioner, The Virginian railway for periods amounting to twenty-eight week? was unable to supply more than j the number of cars which were orj dered by mines already existing. Railroad officials expressed Interest In- tlie ruling, which departs utterly from the commission’s practice of granting every application for new railroad construction except where financial difficulties loom. -Sometimes tlie commission lias overruled „nn ’application for-an extension on the ground-that the new line vj-ould I not yield Sufficient return on the in' vestment. On other occasions the commission has denied applications because it seemed doubtful that the applying road could finance.the construction. *^ r ”- ■ j . -i —Neither —of those objections was raised in the case of the Virginian railway. ■ .

German Banks Wallow in Gold While Mark Plunges

Dusseldorf, June 25.—While New York private banking houses were being pulled under by tlie German mark, i banking houses In Germany are making money so, rapidly they can hardly keep account of it. Selling marks for foreign values and sequestering the latter apparently, is the main business today. Ildw long this can continue no one knows. But there is no reason why the Germnns should check such a good thing, any more than have tlie Russians, whose printing presses began turning out their trillions in 1917 and are still at iL --

Elgin Doctor Drowns While Young Bride Looks On Elgin, 111.. June 25.—While tiis bride’of less than n year and a party of friends ahd colleagues from The State Hospital for the Insane at Elgin -looked on, Dr. W. 11. Tliorwaldson, formerly an Interne at the Wesley Memorial hospital ,ut Chicago, and a graduate of Northwestern- in '2l, was •drowned .while swimming in an "abandoned stone quarry south of Elgin. Rock Island Road Raises f a y 0 f sj X Thousand Men Chicago, June 20. —Wage advances to G.OOO clerks and station employees of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific railway amounting to $276,000 a •year have been granted by the road after conference with representatives of tlie employees.,Jt was uanounced here by J. L. McLean, chairman of tlie Rrotherhood of Clerks .of tlie Rock Island.

Baldwin Tells Commons 0 Breaking British Seals Proper London; J line 20.—American authorities are - within ti'eir rights In hreaFTng British customs seals In American territorial waters, Prime Minister ..Stanley Baldwin declared in answer T 5 j a question from the floor of the house (if commons - ! ■ .' • .* Bishop'Blake Pledges*ss9,ooo to the Russian CJiurch Paris, June2o.—-Bishop Kdgnr Blake, in eh urge of the Methodist Episcopal church; with headquarters In Paris, i says that he has pledged $50,000 to the Russian church to finance its. educational progpim. Ruhr Miners Get Wage Boost. Dusseidorf, June 27.—Ruhr miners have received an Increase of 25.000 marks dally, making their Wage 75,000 marks daily. This |s equivalent to 00 cents, The minors Want 100,000 mnrks dally. SIOO,OOO Given Michigan "University. Atm-ArbnrrXtlffiu June 27.—unnatpetr umn Jiag liresented tlie University of Michigan with ' the . sufr of $f()0,0l0 to conduct archeological research work In the Near East. It “is announced here. .

TIIE VAPPANEE ADVANCE-NEWS

LOUIS L. Co[' New porjralt of idem. Gov. Louis 1.. Collins of Minnesotfi who will become governor if Preus is elected to the United States senate to succeed the late Senator Nelson.

U. S. MARKET REPORT Weekly Marketgram by Bureau of-Agricultural Economics. Washington.—For the Veek ending Jti'ne 23—FRUITS AND VEGETABLES—FIorida Tom Watson* watermelons, medium sizes mostly,’ s6oo.oo(4}SuO.Ou leading r mar•kb'ts; Georgia melons, 24-30-lb. average, ! S3SO.OO('OtXK).OILL o. b. cash track to gfow- ; era. Texas tomatoes. midwest- | erp cities. Georgia vpeaches, early vari- ! etles, mostly in (j-basket carriers. Southern filiss Triumph potatoes. $2.50(53.50 per 100 lbs. mid western mar--1 kets, $2.00 f. o. b. California salmon tint cantaloupes, standard 45 s. eastern markets. SL7S f. o. b. GRAlN—Chida&o cash market: No. 2 ’■•rad. winter wheat, $1.11; No. 2 hard winter wheat. $1.06; No 2 mixed corn. 85c; No. 2 yellptV corn, 86 . No. 3 white oats, 43c. Average farm price; No 2 mixed 1 corn In central lowa, 73c. LIVE STOCK—Chicago prices: Hogs, too, $7.46; bulk of sales. $6.75<g7.35; medium and good beef steers, sS.2o<3l6.'i's'; butcher cow'sa.nd heifers. [email protected]; feeder steers, $([email protected], light and medium weight veal* calvgs, SS.25 i gio.2s. HAY—I timothy, Cincinnati, s24.oo,Chicago, ss*o St. Louis. $17.50 Minneapolis, S2G.GO Atlanta. $27.50 Memphis; 1 No. 1 prairte. $23.00 St. Louis. $17.00 Min- [ neapotts; ' FEED dran, $20.00. middlings. flour middlings, $28.75; rye middlings. $24.00 Minneapolis; gluten feed, $37.15 Chicago; white hominy feed, $31.50 St. Louis. Chicago;. 32 per cent linseed meal. $38.00 Minneapolis. DAIRY PRODUCTS-Butter. -92 score. Chicago. Cheese prices on Wisconsin primary markets " Twins, 22*4c; daisies, 22Hc; double daisies, 22c; young Americas. 22%c; longl orns. 22\c; squaro prints. 24c. Nickel Plate Merger Is

Approved by the I. C. C. Washington, June 23.—Tlie project of the Van iweringen group, now in control of tl e New York, Chicago & St. Louis rai road, to consolidate that property with the Lakq Erie & WestUrn, the Toledo, St. Louis & Western, tlie Fort Wayne, Cincinnati & Louisville railroad and;-Hie- -Chicago .& State Line railroad- was approved in its entirety by the interstate comtnerce cotninissioh.

j luwivw vu mjiiis.siu.il. "America Will Ask New Pact Barring Air War on Gities ‘ Washington. June. 23. —Whenthe senate nieets again President Harding j will submit to it anew treaty, which |ls calculated, to control wartime "ncj tivities of aircraft, j The treaiy v nl- | ready in draft form, has been prepared by a commission, empowered by the Washington ’"cbtiference no the nißtfip' tlon of armaments, which held, its first meeting nt Tlie Hague fljecember 10, 't'7 ■ V ■■iUt-.JB- ' —-rs . Canada Premier Asks U. S. Parley on Rum Running Ottawa, June 26- —The Canadian government has" invited the United States To' send officials here at" tho clpse of the present session of .parliament to discuss further co-opebhtion concerning' shipment of liquor across ; the border, Premier King announced in the house of commons. Brooklyn “L” Train Plunges to PaveTnent; 8 Die; 83 Hurt New York; June 26. —Eight pursuits were killed ami eighty-three " Injured when two wooden cars on "the FI fill avenue line plunged from a Brooklyn elevated structure Into the borough's, busiest traffic intersection nt the Long Island rail wu y statipn. ~ ——| —

Third Victim in Harding Party Auto Accident Dies ■Denver, Colo,, June 26.—Tlidmtis F. Dawson, Colorado state lilsTorian and nationally known newspaper’man, died Monday mornijjg In a Denver hospital, the third victim of the.automobile .accident In Bear Creek, cnnyoi^. —; p' ■ ■' - ■ -■ . , , gHarJing to Enforce Dry Law. , Denver, Colo.,- .Tupe 26.—President Harding In an address here aunoum'ed that he Intemh-d to see prohibition enforced even If the stntes should throw the entire burden of enforcement on -the federal government. & cMany Die In Storm* ! * St. Pain, Minn., June 26. —A score or more of- ’ deaths and great property damage (Vaulted from Sunday’s storms In tlie Northwest, reports fro nr nor+tiwbstem Minnesota unil North Dakora i reveuled

I INDIANA 1 II . State | !l Happenings § R. R. Cromwell, principal of the Anderson high school until recently, has been offered a position in the udtninis-' tratlve department of the Cleveland, (O.) schools, Mgthodlst Eplseopal’ church at Connersville, which will replace the building damaged by tire April Ifi*,- lias been laid. Setenty-one girls, representing six | of tlie nine townships. of Fayette J county, ha.ye eurulled for stimiiier club j work under, tlie direction of the l’urdue university extension division. Will A. Burton of Franklin was reelected secretary-treasurer aad business manager of Frankltn eollege for the fourteenth consecutive year at the recent meeting of the board of directors of l-'raqklin. Sheep-killing dogs are causing much damage in Bartholomew county. Os a flock of sixteen sheep at the home of Walter Schedit, near Coluaibus, thirteen were killed In one night. Heavy losses also have been suffered by other farmers. I Rev. Otlio Wlnjfir,'president of Man-1 | Chester college at AVabash, Was named j moderator of the Internationnl Church { of the Bretlymti fpr tlie second timft ■ according to- word received at the college. The conference this year was i belli at Calgary. AJherta, Canada. Tiie state of Indiana won a sweep- ! ing victory over the alleged Bedford stone trust when Judge Z. K. Dougan j in the Hendricks -Circuit court susj talned tlie state’s anti-trust suit against fourteen defendant stone companies; according to word received hy Attor;oy General U. S. Eesh at Indiauupolis. | Harry Aalnsworth of near Greensburg ai-i-eptcd a, position as vocational agriculture teacher in the' Knights-" ; town high school; Mr. Ainsworth was j in charge of -the-•vocational work at. ! Mt. Summit five years ago and lias since been, engaged in, farming neari Greens burg. He is a graduate of the University-of Illinois. . —* Residents of the soul hern part of Crawford county, who were frightened recently by an earthquake shock, have’ learned that -a landslide on the IndK ana shore of the, p hio river, abput two miles above Alton, was responsible for | the tremors, The slide was where the Indiana shore rises in towering bluffs J opposite the mouth of Wolf creek in Kentucky.

Governor McCray, continuing his efforts to aid the farmers in harvesting crops, issued an appeal at -Indiana pfltls to labor to play flltr with the farmers in the matter of wages. Pay ef-jSite $7 a (lay. which is .demanded In some parts of the state, means half as much as the. farmer will realize for a whole yenf's work on an acre of wheat, the governor asserted. Tlie\ chinch twig has appeared In Cass county almost'a month early, according to W. It.. Zecliiel, county ■ agricqitßfV'*aMit at -Logahsport. An gnnnsnai tbiag-aliont the -coming -of the Insects this year, the county agriculture, ngent says, Is that,they appeared ! Indarge numbers in the localities least -nff ectcrt-Tn ii)22. whilg. in those neighborhoods where they were the worst last year no signs of-them have seeiT found thus far. r Tlie general con tract for the new building for the Madison County Orphnns’ Home was awarded to-Ben F. Wright, of Anderson, on his bid of $102,000. The contract does not Include heating, plumbing andoleofrlo wiring. The building Is to be erected on a -250-nCre; tract, bequeathed for that purpose by Calvin Bronnenberg, now dead, which lies two miles east of Anderson, adjoining Hie west side of j" Slouiiils park.sy ; Indiana’s gasoline tax of two cents | a gallon was -ruled cimstlfiitlonal an'd, valid by the decision of Judge'Lend J. I Pare in .81. Joseph Superior court, No. 2, who sustained the demurrer filed in behalf of Robert Bracken, ! auditor of state, and Oi'a Davies, treasurer, of state, by U, S. Lesli, atI tqmey general. The demurrer, was filed to the s suit .of Hop, (infill, of : South Bend, Jo. enjoin tlie defendants i from requiring users of motor vehicles , to. pay.gig Hccnag feg.jis: iirq.vitei ja the acf'of 1923. ♦— Announcement hns been made by Edgar H. Evans, of Indianapolis, national ehalnnnn, of the endowment campaign j committee, that Wabash college at j OraWfordsville, will soon enter a cam- ! palgn fpr raising an additional SI,OQQ,000 for the, college’s endowment fund. .. ■ <s ' .- E. B. Thornton, a Bedford stone operator, luis hought a ten-acre tract of lieavjly wooded land Inside the city I Unfits, of the'Kramer heirs, and after .beautifying it by landscape gardening, will present It to the cltv for a children’s playground

Mrs. Silas Kessliug, wli.u were married, fifty years ago, celebrated their anniversary fit, their home west of 1 Vrij where they luive lived foi- 33. years. Prof. J. H.. ’lertin of Dundee, 111., lias boon-engaged to siforeed Prof, t’liarles Strict or, who has resigned as a member of tlie SI. John's Lutheran school faculty at Luportc, 'Ptre crnirra(T WTfs' fnvarileit '.for the" new Evans’school, to be built at a cost of $54,00(1, to : G. W. HeiiiziuUnn & Son, of Marion. Work on the nevT building, to take the place of one condemned, will begin soon. <!> The 1924 state conclave of-Knights Tem'plar will h’e held at Ft. Wayne. This "‘was decided at tlie closing business session of tip- sixty-ninth conclave at Winona Luke. Michigan" City ah>v extended an invitation. Tlie fortyuthird- annual commencement of the Harrison public high school In Harrison township was held - iir the ; Harrison Methodist Episcopal church, when 27 members of tlie senior class received their diplomas. Tlie large barn on die William Williamson farm in tlie eastern part of Hamilton county burned. Six horses were cremated and a large amount of grain burned. Tlie Toss was* esth" mated, at slgjoop,. less ftarrrinrlf-Vo}--which is covered by insurance. Automobile sales in Indiana in May totaled,, 13,948, as compared with 13,815 ,‘n April and 13,594 In Mareli, said H. D. McClelland, superintendent ,the| automobile registration, division in the office of Ed Jackson, secretary of state, at Indianapolis,

Two sets of- gravel road bonds, aggregating $72,000, have been sold by ■the county treasurer to 'the Citizens State bank of Nohlesville a.t par And. accrued interest. Another issue for $7;500 for the ctvfistruction of tlie Fauc-ett roiiil, which lms-’hwtf oil the market for a month, lias not been sold. Residents of North Anderson, who protested against .annexation of the suburb to Anderson, have virtually lost tlieir-Jegnl-.liglit through a ruling of 'Judge Bills'of Superior court tluit only owners of unimitted territory have the fight to remonstrate." Few owners of this kind havh signed the remonstrunce iietltion. Within less than" 24 hours after they held up Cecil Bi Brooks, cashier of tlie State bank at Mohawk, Autis (Jack) Walsh, nineteen years old; ,Homer Dasey, eiglrteen yeilrs old, and Join) Borman, alias Vinson, eighteen years old, .were sentenced,in Circuit court at Greenfield by Judge John T.’Warner to 1 terms of 10 to 25 years. While returning to Corydon from church-in his uutoinoblle with his wife and daughter, >J. R. Davidson ran over a large cow snake.- Stopping, lie looked hack to see the death-writTs ings of the ’reptile.' Instead lie saw tliteNurake climbing up tlie side of the automoliile, Davidson and his family deserted the car, and the snake held possession of it until it was badly s injured and'dragged out. Tlie Eairbind, Eranklin and Martins* vßie lira.ni-li of tlie Rig Four niilroiiil... is being-improved anil will:be ready, in September for heavier 'traffic, offieial.-. of ttie road snv. —A crew of men js at work on tlie line- improving the roadbed,; placing new ties "In position and 'raying new rails. The new rails -are lieaiier rtiTiji flic rails now on tlie. road. Increased’ freight • business on the branch rmul .made the Improvements a necessity, it wiis said. . .Tuftge Tfolm P. Jeffries, in circuit court af Terre Haute, denied u motion for a plea jin alialeinent entered by attorneys for John L>agon. Indicted for -Tlm-numler .ot-Giairgn, Diiu ilorf. a lew months ago. Arguments oti flic motion were lioari two —weeks-uego ii lll l tbo matteg taken under advisement by the eourSP Tlie legality' of tlie jury was attacked on tlie grounds that tlie jury commissioners, ..when placing in (tie jury box the names 'of possible Jurors • for the year, failed to. empty the bnx of names it nlreudy contained, maktng It possible for a juriir to lie drawn in two successive years.

Entries In the Shelby county fiveacre Tors contest closed at Shelbyville with forty farmers of tlie county enrolled to eiiter the ■ competition for honors in tliIS branch of the agricul-' tural. club 4 work. An effort wilt be made by the officials- of the "‘Shelby county farm bureau to induce all tin l entrants to. remain iii flic contest tmUl The close of Ihe program." Thirty-eight were- .signed up for the chits it .'year ago, hut only |ni,i( the number, com-' pleted Ihe eiiulest and submitted records (fit their production-. Two. gold meiTals 'Were awarded Shelby, county club mafnhers last year for having grown'an Hverng? of more than UNI hiisliels a,n iuire as members of tlie Flvo-Acrd-oUdv. —'-w —- The- MoitlU tlie”corner of Central avfnue and i'lftn street, ('onfterSViUe, hns been sold to Mr. and Mrs. Dora Bourne sos '551,0()p.„ The property was sold at commissioner's sale. Jackson and Jennings county coin* mlssloners Ipive nwardeil a contract of $8,033 to Mettert and Montgomery of Seymour for the construction of a section of a county ,l(no chad, eight miles east.of Seymour. It connects with another ‘‘road already under contract to ‘he Improved, which Is a .lateral to State Highway No. 4.

TANLACRESTORED THE WHOLE FAMILY Self, Wife and Four Children _ , Amazingly Benefited, DeClares Engineer, "My wife, myself and our fourchildren have been greatly benefited by- the Tanlnc treatment,” recently snld Max Llvn, well-known engineer, living at 222 S. Eiglith St., West Terre Haute, Ind. “Two years ago I had the flit, anil since then had been weak and worn Out, suffering from stomach trouble, bloating, "biliousness, headaches, nervousness and loss of sleep. I just felt -all Out of fix In every way. "My wife was much tlie same as myself, perhaps worse. She underwent an operation, which left her in a. nervous, run-down condition, with no appetite and a terribly stpmacli. i “Tunlae is the best pun-luise I ever made,-for it rid us entirely of nil our •tfouhles/and brought health and happiness Into our houie. All Your of our children have taken Taiiluc’ with jisplendid results too. We are using >t 'i>ow a. .-.onk ftoily medicine, ah 4 wouldn't be without it.” Taniac 4s for sate by all good drug-" gists.. Take no substitute. ' Over 37 million bottles sold. / (/ Tanlar Vegetable Pills are nature's own remedy ? for constipation. Sold everywhere.—Advertisement. Grasping the Wrong Sleeve. My husband and I were goifig tlirough tlie 10-cent store. He asked me to go to anotlier counter with him.When I reached, the counter I readu-il for his iirni and suldi-.."Dq. you jtnow, today I want to buy a wash boft?r.” A St range yoiCje.aflSW.ered : "Do you ?" Looking tip. I discovered I was hold- v lug the arm of a strange limn, I heat , it out of the store while the strange *nnin and ids companion were laughing.—Chicago Tribune.

Watch Cuticura Improve Your-Skin. On rising and retiring gently smear the face with Cuticura Ointment. Wash off C'ntment in five minutes yvith CuLcura Soap and hot water; It Is wonderful what Cuticura AvfU do for poor complexions, dandruff, itching and red, rough hands.—Advertisement. ’ Very Satisfactory. The bright young tiling was jnterviewing tlie boss regarding tlie vacant' post of confidential typist and secretary. lie asked her att the usual questions and got satisfactory, answers in every case. “Tell me," lie said after a while, "what would you do if I were to te)l you tlmt my wife proposed visiting the office one day?” Tlie reply came promptly: “shit oil my oldest frock and make -myself look as old-fashioned- and frumpish as possible, and cuil you ‘Sir.’ ” j/KiJ'gaged on-the - spot. T ~ Fresh, sweet, white, dainty clothes for baby, if you use Red Cross Ball Blue. Never streaks or injures tiiem. All. go.od? grocers sell it.—Advertisement." ' - ; ■ . ; , t.:“Not Me,” Said He In enteriug.tr p'lii,yliouse one evening the. rny ticket, and I said. "Tin- man helilnd has it.” / You can, Imagine m.v feeling ttlien the man behind replied, “ Not me/’ • My hnslmnd trad stopped to talk to someone and I bail walked right in.— Exchange. Most of the .things that are to be had for tlje-asking benefit the giver more than (lie receiver. , ,

rag*-- a 4 ] Ml VMM j. r>ll l ® You can’t X \dvl feel so good ** but what N? Vl\ will make V L feeT better. 1 B*t • r"*~TTi . - 25 °- I Box. At I

CASH GROCERY Clearing S6OO Monthly Long with flat above. HlKh-cluiw Atm*rIcan'locality on biiay street Finre /fixtures, , largo < Ivan stock; $4,000- cafK.' Willl allow, ('loscsf investigntlou. , owner leavlnK city on-other business. N/ (' McCiFJK, I'-ITOO ]'. JpffpnMin, DKXKOIT. Mil 11. VISIBLE BOOKKEEPING USE BOOKKEEPING CHART - (t’opyriKhttfd) FOR STOIiEKEKPEItS. MERCHANTS. MANI’FAI TTU HER S Kspscially h.TpluLto tu<lt4nts. bexTnners an<t tf'iosi* unfitmlliHr w’lth bo'r>kk-ilnK routine I>outil> *’.ttjry method A. little prncHcL will make, 7 you a sklflod flouble entry bookkeeper. Wimple. ConclM. Price $3.7&. Send money ordtft only 800 If KEEPING CHART 246 Fifth Avenue. NEW Y4)RK K' IT Y

BAf MOTORIST, CAR ACTS. TIRE SHOPS 2.5 c SAVES Turn VALVES Vow need our New B B DIcrLATOR and Valve Wrench. Juat'what you-ire lookinir for. Send 26c ih.ailver or money order for our flew, wpnderful tool, •film Wwlrt BENSON k SATTERSTROM. HASTINGS, MINN.