Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 208, 13 June 1919 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE BICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM FRIDAY, JUNE 13, 1919.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM . . --. AND SUN-TELEGR KM Published Every Evening Ex eept Sunday, by v - Palladium Printinff Co. Palladium "Building, -'North Ninth iand Sailor Street Entered at the Post Office at Richm end. Indiana, aa Se ond Class Mall MaHer.

MEMDEB OP TUB ASSOCUirCD PRESS The Associated Press is excluslvel ) - entitled to the uM lor republication of all news dicpattiaes credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local ew published herein. All rights of :republlcatlon of pV elal dispatches herela are also reserxrfid.

$1,856,000 Wheat Ciop Here More than two million dolla rs will go to the fatrmers of Wayne county within the next three months for their crops, wheat.; alone bringing $1856,000 on a $2.26 per bust03l basis. The receipts for oats, corn and live stock will easily swe31 the total of the farm wealth far above the two million mark.

The government forecast pf Tuesday was for the unprecedented yield of 1,236,000,000 bushels in the United States. If we calculate the value of the crop on the basis elf the government guarssitee of $2.26 a bushel at Chicago, we shall find tihat value to be $2,793,00,000. The government estimate of feed graiius is 3,021,000,000 bushel 3. WitJh such yields" from the if arm in prospect in Wajrae county and the nation over we can hardly look forward to anything -but an era of continued prosperity. The farmers of Wayne county will have lots of monetf. and when the agriculturists make money other industries flourish.' - , Part of the money received tin Wayne county for the w&eat crop will be used tto pay debts, but as the number of farm mortgages here is insignificant in comparison with districts west of the Mississippi river, it is safe to :ofer that by far the greater part of the money vsH be deposited in the banks to be checked against for the purchase

have a monopoly on it. Such people usually see

of improved machinery and tbe acquisition of jro g00(j jn others. But they do detect all their

that of the men who drink lemon essence and silo

whisky for the same purpose. The only difference is in the means used.

If the world believes that the elimination ofj

liquor and beer will cure the craving of mankind for intoxicants and prevent efforts to indulge in debauchery, it has reckoned without considering a deep-seated and abnormal passion of the

race. The closing of the saloon and the stopping j

of the manufacture of intoxicating liquors has removed an easily accessible source for the grati

fication of this passion. A big step in the right

direction has been taken by prohibiting the manu

facture and sale of intoxicants. A bigger step still remains. It consists in educating the man to overcome the temptation of satisfying the bestial craving of his nature. His moral nature must be changed and irrevocably converted from a condition that enjoys gratifying the flesh to

a state in which he despises and scorns the means of intoxication and delights in being sober because this is and should always be his normal and habitual state.

Seeking Happiness Every one is on the trail of happiness. We pursue it with vengeance through many years, in many ways, by many methods. But to many of us the hope of finding it is as futile as trying to touch the stars, and so, finally, in the heyday of our careers or in the October season of life, we give up the chase, decide that the whole world is askew, resign ourselves to pessimism and make life miserable for ourselves and our friends. Perhaps, the real reason why so few attain happiness is because in their quest they think only of themselves. The happiness of their relatives, friends and associates never enters their minds. They want to be happy, not so that others may share their pleasure but in order that they themselves, shut up in their own selfishness, may

commodities that make for the comfort and en

joyment of farm life. Wayne county farmers belting to the most progressive class in Indiana. 'Their homes are furnished with the best furniture and household utensils the market affords. Iabor saving devises are freely used to lighten i:he burden of the housewife. Worn out and shab'f y floor coverings and window trimmings are quickly supplanted. Rooms are beautified by picture s and ornaments. Closets are packed with substantial clothing made from good materials. Books, player pianos, talking machines, and scores of ot liter diversions are provided for the enjoyment of i.he family. Bath rooms are being installed in ii lcreasingly large numbers. Automobiles are repl aced after one or two seasons. The wheat money, received "Tor the 1919 crop, will contribute to the wealth and increased comfort and happiness of the fjirmers of Wayne county.

shortcomings and weaknesses, and by persisting in being destructive critics of others rob themselves of the real happiness of life. Service is the only road to happiness, the only key that opens the treasure house of contentment. The happiest people in this world are those who serenely go about their business, boosting the fellow that needs a lift, comforting the weary, speaking words of kindness and cheering the lowly. Love thy neighbor as thyself is their guiding principle, and by exemplifying it they acquire a store of happiness that innures them against the hard knocks of life. : No happiness can exceed the pleasure arising from the thanks of a fellow mortal who has been helped by your benefaction or cheered by, your counsel. Riches, high station, honors, all yield to the happiness that comes from the knowledge of service well performed and charity well bestowed. He who cheers the lowly and downcast

THE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS DAILY TALK TO THE WOMAN WHO DIDN'T SIGN ' ; H ER NAME : Recently I received a very beautiful letter of encouragement from a woman reader. She said that Bhe had made one big mistake twenty years before and that all these following years had been years of trying to live down that "one mistake." And then she ended her letter with the statement that she would not sign her name but would like to! I wish that she had signed her name. I would like to write to her the same kind of an encouraging letter which she wrote to me. And I think that here are a few things that I wouldhave Included in that 'letter: . ' . -v : . . '. There is no more a "one mistake" to a woman than to a man. Not a one of us but who has "fallen short," at some time or other. In fact, our daily lives are but factor instances In an Eternity of Mistakes toward Goodness, planned for here and how. But our mistakes are for the past not for the now. ' It does not do one ounce of good to remember the blunders which we have made. Instead of carrying them with us for twenty years, we should leave them BEHIND twenty years. After about that time, they become quite unrecognizible! I once heard an ex-Governor begin a great speech with these words: "I would rather have been a Monkey twenty years ago, and a Man then and a Monkey now!" And I have never forgotten the impression that that statement made upon my mind at that time. Mistakes are bad enough. But there is one thing that is worse to REMEMBER them. I never want to see a person who has never made mistakes. He wouldn't look human. Even Christ, of whom it is written that "He was tempted in all point3 as we, yet without 6ln," never condemned the mistaken Was it not Mary Magdalene, who came with that precious box of expensive ointment to anoint the feet of Him who had spoken so kindly and with such love when those who condemned her, stole quickly away at the sound of the voice of this great Man? I am sure that the woman who did not feel like signing her name Is a very uselul woman, and a very good woman. I hope that she will never think of her "one mistake" again and be happy!

Humorous Incidents About Richmond Folk

DOING TIME.

How Did Founders of City Decide on Establishing Town

Good E

I

ooa livening

BY ROY K. MOULTON

Gus Hafner, assistant to the county clerk, was telling about the large divorce rate in Wayne county. "Marriage must seem to some of these people as an experience did to the man who applied for a job as cook in a restaurant," he said. "Any experience in a kitchen?" the manager asked. "Seven years," said the application. "What-were you doing," questioned the manager. "Seven years," said the job-hunter simply.

! ... M

'pea cream ana otner queer names iui - r materials but this new shade has the i worst name I ever heard of." "What is it?" asked Brlggs. ! "It is called 'slapped baby.' Won

der what kind of a shade that Is?" "I should think," replied Briggs, who has had experience, "that it was a decided yeller."

TOTAL ABSTAINER NOW. -Ed J. Weidner, county treasurer, is authority for this one: "A local man went to see his doctor, to be treated for what they call a complication of diseases. The doctor put the usual questions. Absentmindedly he asked: "Do you use any spirituous liquors?" A wan smile appeared on the face of the invalid and he answered the medical adviser briefly but thoroughly: . Not any more."

Dinner Stories

The editor of the Wellsville Bugle'

is visiting cn his farm. The other day he tried to say in hi3 paper that a certain society woman took "her own big eats" to a picnic, and old Slim Crockett, the printer, made it "her own big ears."

JUNE IN HISTORY June has always been an important

month, even without considering the

weddings. The following important things have happened during the

Although the first settlements were

made on the present site of Richmond i month:

in the years before 1810 the town itself The Junebug was discovered. was not started until barelv more The circular wooden comb for bar

than a hundred years ago, long after

the Centerville and Salisbury settlements had become flourishing. The lands belonging to John Smith and Jeremiah Cox had been partially cleared and had yielded crops for ten years, before Smith proposed to Cox that they start a town. Cox was not much in favor of the proposition. "I would rather see a buck's tail than a tavern sign," he said. But Smith had his mind made up. David Hoover was employed to lay off the town, and in the summer of 1816, that part of old Front and Pearl streets, south of Main, were laid out. Main street was chosen because it was a section line and a natural boundary. Front street, lying along the hill at an acute angle with Main street, was already a country, road, and was allowed to remain. On the first day of September, 1818 the first organized step appears to

nave neen tauen toward Duilding a

ber shops was invented. The first nut tree was planted in Brazil. " Napoleon ate his first dish of fried onions. Henry Ford first visualized the flivver. , W. J. Bryan discovered the Chautauqua tent. John Wesley first preached in his shirt sleeves. Ellis Parker Butler wrote "Pigs Is Pigs." Lillian Russell was married. Some unknown explorer discovered June peas. Leon Trotzky bought a set of furniture on the instalment plan. Several Civil war battles were fought. Irvin Cobb left Paducah, Ky.

Headline says: "West Point Cadet Qualifies as the Perfect Man." That is going to be an awful blow

town when a. report of a meeting of 'to a couple of actors we know.

citizens showed twenty-four votes the entire voting strength in favor

of an incorporation and none against

it.

There are only four empty cells In Sing Sing. . Now think hard and see

An act of the state legislature j if there are not four people you would

passed January 1, 1817, was the au

thority invoked for the resolution. Robert Morrison, Ezra Boswell, John McLane, Thomas Swain and Peter Johnson were elected trustees of the new town on September 14, by a poll of the entire twenty-four votes. The town was first called Smith

like to have fill them.

There isn't any such thing as a friend. Nobody is a friend until he has seen you at your worst several times and is still "for" you.

Old Farmer Spuds was very keen on a deal. Last week he managed to sell an old crock in the shape of a horse for $40. "I'll tell yer mate, that there mare's got two faults." "Only two? A dozen. I should think! But what are the two?" "Well, once yet let that mare out ter grass it'll take yer about a week to catch her; and when you do catch her, she, she ain't worth catching! Otherwise she's all right.

"Well," remarked Tripper, "I've heard of crushed strawberry, elephant's breath, ashes of roses, whip-

Memories of Old Days In Thit Paper Ten Year Ago Today

Big preparations were being made for the Wright celebration in Dayton. A .parade of Richmond persons was proposed. Raymond Mather jumped from a carriage to the back of a horse, pulling the carriage in order to save himself and his companion.

President William O. Thompson of Ohio State university, delivered the baccalaureate address at Earlham college. Mrs. Elizabeth Eshelman, well known nurse, died unexpectedly after becoming ill on the street

When a women says of another's baby. "What an interesting child!" she means to convey to the mother that the infant i3 homely and the mother knows that's what she means to convey.

THIN PEOPLE SHOULD TAKE

HOSPKATi

Nothing Like Plain Bttro-Phoophnte 4s Put on Firm, Healthy Flrxh and to Increase Strength, Vigor nnd Xerve Force.

GOES ALMOST

ABOUND

Hair Tonic as Liquor Substitute Various are the substitute used for liquor and beer, and devious are the: methods of the

men who sell them. From fa r off "Porto Rico , i

comes-the latest contribution to - the list of drinks that acre alleged to tickle the .palate while they deaden the senses and corrupt the moral fiber. Hair tonic, said to contain more; than 60 per cent alcohol, is reported to have b i en selling for 15 cents a. drink. More than 4,00() bottles were consumed before the insular authorities discovered the practice and stopped the n-anuf acture. The passionate longing of j man for intoxicants aad narcotics dates bacjjc to the earliest day of tjhe history of the race. Centuries of civilization have been unable tonegate the desire cr eliminate the means of pacifying it. Some men will stoop to the lowest cl egree of infamy and sharae to satisfy their looging, sacrificing their manhood and forfeiting tlui respect of their fellows. The addicts are found an all classes and stages of the social structure. The indulgence of the natives of Porto Rico in 1 sair tonic does not

himself partakes of the joy engendered in the I name did not prove satisfactory.

Other. Hatminess cannot be bought for gold and! Thomas Roberts, James Pegg and.

., , , . j l David Hoover, according to the latSllver. It comes to US Unsought m return for ter-s manuscript, were appointed to

the happiness we create in others.

POINTED PARAGRAPHS

NOW A HISTORIC SPOT New York Telegraph. In Washington the guides on some of the sightseeing automobiles on passing the White House announce: "Here is where the President of the United States used to live."

select another title. Roberts proposed "Waterford," Pegg "Plainfleld"' and Hoover, "Richmond," and the latter was the choice.

ROBBERS WOUND POLICE.

GETTING IDEAS FROM BASEBALL Detroit Free Press. Proposal is made that a league of small nations be formed. To be known, posibly, as "the bushes."

WHAT WOULD HE CALL IT NOW? Pittsburg Gazette-Times. Mr. McAdoo says the railroad situation was a disgrace to America. "Was" Is good.

THAT WILL BE A REGULAR JOB Baltimore American. President Wilson's job of straightening out Europe Is easy compared to what he will have when he gets home.

Taxation and Democracy

From the Chicago Tribune. . , ,..., . . M

TH economic, social ana pontic iu structure we can civilization has been severely ehaken and in some parts of the world has fallen.: Alarmists declare it is all to come down. Yet in our csn country the great house we live in remains unmoved. Radicalism throws a brick through a window now and tSiem, but the household goes about its business In quiet confidence. Why? The answer has more sides than can be given here, "but it might be epitomized, perha ps, in the assertion that the great mass of Americana are not only fairly comfortable but have confidence and reason for confidence that they are going forward -cpnstantly to better things. Inequalities, bad adjustments, 4 Injustices, unnecessary suffering, we are all conscious of, but we are equally conscious that there Is a constant efisiirt to abolish them and good reason to expect they will ba got rid of. American common sense, which is the product of long experience In self-government, does not expect to meet the millennium osver night. Americam conditions are not fcuch as to drive Americans to desperate remedies. 'We axe not ready to destroy, because we "iave built too much ,that we know is good. The note of tliie effective American mind 13 confidence In, the future But at this time of special strain there are certain concrete facts which have had a gocfi deal to do with the Bolldity of our condition. Consciousness of a broad and honest effort for the square deifl is supported, for ci-ample, by war taxation. The larg profits which are inevitable where there are such enorfiious needs as war ; develops have been heavily taxed. Maey, of course, has been made, but jwhen in the first yearj of the warpexcess

1 profits were taken up to SO per cent and personal income I Ti:on, oT!ii?ii!it1 at stppTilv as was t.houtrht comoat-

Cil- O . . f5 t.uw X J w . ible with safety, there could be no fair complaint. The second year saw taxes still higher. Revolution came to Russia because under the old regime there was not only present suffering but hopelessness of relief. In Hungary the sense of fundamental wrongs was deliberately maintained by a highly privileged class. In America the way forward lies open and all America is marching. The most hopeful fact of American life at this critical moment in the history of civilization is the general determination of almost all classes to make American life better for us all. The recognition by employers of the needs of their employes was never before so intelligent. There are, of course, exceptions, but the whole tendency today in America is toward the solution of industrial problems and the relief of social inequities by voluntary private action rather than by revolutionary government action. The extent of the profit sharing movement has been indicated in Arthur Evans' article in The Tribune. Wages have been increased repeatedly in recognition of the high cost of living. There is an increasing recognition of the justice of labor's claims to a greater control over conditions of work and the spirit of friendly co-operation is effective in all spheres of industry. This, The Tribune thinks, is the line of real progress and a far better way to broaden our democracy than by political action or legislation, it squares with the American ideal of self-help and individual , freedom, and it will produce a more Intelligent, a deeper and more genuine democracy than laws or revolutions have ever brought forth or can creafGe. -

ST. LOUIS. Mo., JJune 13. Four men stole $20,000 from the Meramec Trust Company bank at 2 o'clock this afternoon. Three of the robbers were captured after they had shot and fatally wounded two policemen and had slightly wounded an eighteen-year-old girl.

SULTAN'S PALACE BURNS.

CONSTANTINOPLE, June 13 The palace of the Yildiz Kiosk, inhabited by the Sultan, was destroyed by fire.

HER FRIENDS SAY SHE LOOKS WELL

Indianapolis Woman's Rapid Recovery Draws Comment At Capital.

Mrs. Elizabeth Plunkett, 23 South Alabama street, Indianapolis, is being congratulated by all her friends who tell her she is the very picture of health. Mrs. Plunkett has charge of a large apartment building at the above address. She is very enthusiastic about Pepgen. She says:

"Gefs-II" Peels My Corns Off!

Any Corn or Callus Comes Off Peacefully, Painlessly. Never Fails. It's almost a picnic to get rid of a corn or callus the "Gets-It" way. You spend 2 or 3 seconds putting on 2 or 3 drops of "Gets-It," about as

u

Use "Gets-It," peel off corn this way. simple as putting on your hat. "GetsIt" does away forever with "contraptions," "wrappy" plasters, greasy ointments that rub off, blood-letting knives and scissors that slip into the "quick." "Gets-It" eases pain. Your "jumpy" corn shrinks, dies, loosens from the toe. You peel tne corn painlessly from your toe in one complete piece. That's where the picnic comes in you peel it off as you would a - banana peel. Nothing else but "Gets-It" can do it Get peaceful, common-sense "Gets-Ii."

"Gets-It," the money back corn re

mover, the only sure way, costs but! of the above nature,

a trifle at any drug store. Manufact-it has relieved them of catarrhal Ills ured by E, Lawrence & Co., Chicago, iand the many symptoms that catarrh

MRS. ELIZABETH PLUNKETT "Any person who sees me now would scarcely believe that for ten years I suffered with catarrh. I honestly believe I would still be suffering if I hadn't taken Pepgen. "Frequently my nasal passages would 'stop up' and then I could feel mucus dropping down my throat. I am told this mucus i3 very poisonous and will affect every organ in the body. It finally affected my kidneys and bladder. "My kidneys became badly deranged. I had pains in the small of my back. My feet and ankles swelled at times, until I could hardly bear the weight of my body. ' My bladder trouble was almost unbearable, "Of course I was very nervous and couldn't sleep soundly. My head buzzed and my ears rang. I looked like a mere shadow of my former self. My sister asked me to try Pepgen, and as she recommended it so highly, I tried it with the result that I am now feeling fine.' - Mrs. Plunkett Is not the only person

who recommends Pepgen for ailments

Scores tell how

IN VMSEARGH

Dollars Seeking Health

Restored by Tanhc. Like the man who went to Alaska in search of gold, leaving a lump of the precious metal worth a fortune lying .under his doorsteps, thousands tour the country annually seeking relief from their many ills. The health resorts are thronged, the hospitals filled, and millions of dollars are spent by those suffering from stomach

Judging from the countless preparations and treatments which are continually being' advertised for the purpose of making- thin people fieshv. developing arms, neck and bust, and replacing ugly hoi-

1 o w s a n .1 angles b y the soft curved lines of health and beauty, there are fvlden tlv thou sands of men and worafn who

keenly feel

1

SU -pN. their exces-

Thinness v , jC- i a n i w e a k -

""-4rv-'r",-"

ness arrf I often tiu'i '4 to - starved

GEORGIA HAMILTON. bodies' need tr-re phos phate than is contained !n modern foods. Physicians claim there is

P . f jw gi j I notning- mat win supply this acricienr - dpent UVer rlVe 1 aOUSSnO i so well as the organic phosphate known

aziiuiiis ui ugisi eta uitiu-iinipii-n', which is inexpensive and is sold by the Conkey Drug Co. in Richmond and most all druggists under a guaranteof satisfaction or money back. " Ey feeding the nerves directly- and by supplying the body cells with the ncc-s-sary phosphoric food elements, bitrnphosphato should produce a welcon;transformation in the appearance: th increase in weight frequently being astonishing. Increase in weight also carries vih it a general improvement in the hca'.tii. Nervousness, sleeplessness and lack of energy, which nearly always accompany excessive thinness, should soon

trouble and the many complications disappear dull eyes ought to hrigh.cn ..,., .. t . i and pale checks glow with the bloom of resulting from it when, if they would ; Derfect health. Miss Georgia. Hamilton.

who was once thin and frail, reporting her own experience, writes: "EitroPhosphate has brought about a magic transformation with me. I gained 1 r po'inds and nevr before felt so well." CAUTION" : Although l.ilro-r.hos-phate is unsurpassed for relieving nervousness, slcepit s-n.'ss and general

weakness, it should not. 'owing to its

onl; believe it, relief often lies within

reach and at a cost alomst too small to mention. The evidence regarding the value of Tanlac in the treatment of all forms of stomach trouble is too conclusive to even admit of doubt. In every city,

town and community throughout the ! tendency to in

L rated btates and Canada there are many living, enthusiastic witnesses to the merits of the Master Medicine. One of the most interesting of thmany statements recently received was made by Mrs. W. A. Southerlsnd, residing at 530 South Second street, Springfield, 111. Mrs. Southerland is one of the best known and respected women of Springfield. She said:

What Tanlac has accomplished in

cas ; we: snt.

by anyone w'.ni dO'

on flesh. Adv.

be used

ire to put

Notice of Commissioner's Sale of Real Estate

The undersigned Commissioner, by virtue of an order of the Wayne Circuit Or.urt. made and entered in a

my case has been the most complete cause therein pending, entitled Joseph

burpnbe or my me. i can naraiy nna'A. Day. Administrator, vs. Myrtle M. words to express the gratitude I real-; Marshall et al., and numbered 18514 ly feel over what it has done for me. lupon the dockets thereof, hereby gives I had been suffering from stoma;!: -,0tice that he will receive bids for trouble and nervousness for el?v-? -he sale at pirvate vendue, for not less years and have been treated by sor.i ,-Lhan the full appraised value of the

111.

Sold In Richmond and recommended as the world's best corn remedy by A. G. Luken, Clem Thistlethwaite and Conkey Drug Co. Adv.

causes. - s; Get Pepgen . at "" Clem Thlstlethwaite's drug stores or from any other lirst-claes drug store anywhere. Adv. - .

of the best specialists, not only in this

country, but also in London, England, and Old Mexico. We have traveled almost around the world and spent over five thousand dollars trying to get my health restored but nothing ever helped me; in fact, I kept getting worse until I began taking Tanlac. I suffered almost beyond words to express from cramps and pair.s in my stomach after every meal, and was so nervous that I just trembled all the time. I could not sleep and and was right on the verge of nervous prostration. I could find no comfortable position at night; my head throbbed and seemed to beat against the pillows, and when morning came I felt exhausted. "Some of the specialists called my trouble nervous indigestion. Anyway, I could not even eat milk-toast without suffering, and for a long time I lived almost entirely on milk. When we came back to Springfield I was so discouraged and down-hearted that I told my husband there was no use trying any longer, that there was no help for me. About this time I began reading what others said Tanlac had done for them and decided to try it as a laEt resort. Well, I soon had a good appetite, got so I could digest mv food

and my suffering ceased. So I bought j

more Tanlac and a few bottles have completely restored my health, and

not only myself, but my husband and all who knew of my dreadful condition, have been surprised at the results I have gotten from Tanlac. I am never the least bit nervous any more, never know what it is to have a restless night, and enjoy three good meals a day and never have a pain or an uncomfortable feeling afterwards. I no longer have that tired, wornout look with that dull swarthy color, but my complexion has cleared up and I look and feel like a different woman altogether. I am making this statement because I want the people who may be suffering as I did to know they can get relief without traveling the world over as I did. 1 can never praise Tanlac enough." Tanlac is sold in Richmond by Clem Thistlethwaite's stores and the leading druggist in every town. Adv.

below described real estate, at any time prior to 2 p. m. Saturday the 2S A day of June, 1919 at his office. No. 7104 Main Street, Richmond. Indiana; and if no bid is received that is deemed sufficient then he will sell such real estate at public sale for n. less than two-thirds the full appr": ed value, on the premises in each vistance, as follows, to-wit: Lots Numbered Ten (10) and Eleven (11) in Highland Terrace addition to the City of Richmond. Wayne Coun- - 4

ty. Indiana. If not disposed of as otherwise provided in this notice, to be sold at public auction at 2 p. m. Mondey, June 30. 1919. Lots Numbered One hundred fifty (150), One hundred fifty-one (151), One hundred fifty-two (152), One hundred fifty-three (153), One hundred fifty-four (154), One hundred fiftyfive (155) and One hundred fifty-six (156), in Earlham Heights, Wayne Township, Wayno County. Indiana. If not disposed of as otherwise provided this notice, to be sold at public auction at 3 p. m. Monday, June 30, 1919. Part of the South one-half of the lot in the west division of Block Twentynine (29), East of the River and North of the National Road, in the Town of

Cambridge City. Wayne County, Indiana. If not disposed of as otherwise provided in this notice, to be .sold at public auction at 9 a. m. Tuesday, July 1, 1919. The undivided one-fourth interest In and to the Lots Numbered Fourteen (14), and Fifteen (15) cf the Connersville Carpet Comnany's Plats of

Root's addition to the Town of East Connersville, Fayette County, Indiana.

if not disposed of as otherwise nro-

vided in this notice, to be sold at pub

lic auction at 6 p. m. Tuesday, July 1. 1919.

TERMS OF SALE One-third cash in hand: onehlrrf in

six months; one-third in nine months.

yurcaaser gmng notes for deferred payments in the usual bankable form.

- & y;i tcutara to c) per annum from date, toeether u-iiin w,.:

gage on the premises purchased to secure payment; or purchaser may tay all in cash.

J PAUL! A. BECKETT, Commissioner.