Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 163, 19 May 1920 — Page 15

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 1920.

PAGE FIFTEEN

Q

APT HE PALLADIUM

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Standardized and Indexed for Quick Reference, according to The Basil L. Smith Byiteffl (Copyright) Phone 2834 MONUMENTS IB JOHN P. EMSUS Monuments 15 South Tenth Street Phone 4022. LOST AND FOUND ennirPTtinnir T. ladle'. Oil Coun . ... ri,,K r-oi onntalnlne $10 ana change. Return to Woolwortb 5 and 10. Reward. . SILVER MESH BAG Loft between North 17 and E and North 8th and A, Reward. Phone o n " a tOCKETnOOK Iost; brown, contained two f 10 bills and atampe. Phone 3764, reward. vnTTKn T-trfnae No. 107213 Ind. Call Palladium. LOST License No. 47143 Ind. Palladium. . Return TTvrnMriTtTT.'R TTRE Found, new; call W. J. Hlatt. Room 211 over Union National Bank, and describe. HELP WANTEDMALE BAKER Wanted. Experienced all around baker to take charge of small shop. Address Box 80 Palladium. MEN WANTED Apply Factory Manager JENKI NSVULC AN CO. HOUSEMAN WANTED. Westcott Hotel. ITfAN Wanted to clean Nazarene church, Thursday. Phone 4772 or ill S. W. 2nd. TRUCK DRIVERS WANTED STANDARD SUPPLY & TRANSPORTATION COMPANY 75 Main Street. WANTED 3 men for inside work. Apply Atlas Underwear Company. TRUCK DRIVER WANTED Steady Employment TIGER COAL & SUPPLY CO. BOY WANTEDMaln. -Fehr's Style Shop, 903 WANTED TRACK MEN On Pennsylvania System, Columbus Division. Apply at the Supervisor's Office, Richmond, or Section Foreman or Agent at any point. MEN WANTED To Work in Cracker Dept. RICHMOND BAKING CO. WAITER Wanted. Union Sta tion Restaurant. HELPERS WANTED 50c per hour and car fare; also, men who make good to go on road, time and all expenses paid while travelling. Call fore foreman on construction at Joe Hill Plant, Easthaven Avenue. HELP WANTED FEMALE GIRLS WANTED IN PACKING DEPT. Call Richmond Baking Co. HOUSEKEEPER wanted; young widow with small child. Must have reference. Address Box B2043, care Palladium. Experienced Salesladies wanted in Ladles' Ready to Wear Dept. Address Box K 11106 care Palladium. GIRLS Wanted in sewing deparment. Good pay. J. M. Hutton & Co. (DINING ROOM GIRL and second cook wanted. Kcnmoro Restaurant, 328 Main. AGENTS & SALESMEN WANTED-7 ESTABLISH A BUSINESS FOR YOURSELF This and adjacent territory is now available for the sale of the most highly perfected Farm Electric T.ltrhf iimi Power Plant made today. i err l to r v .aircatiy uenvu d"v. wonaernu i tpuua ih.a - - for the future. Such an agency will he a valuable asset in a short time. We assist and train you in this line of work. Wire, phone or write John A. Morrison, Portland, Ind., for appointment. SITUATIONS WANTED 8 YOUNG MAN Wishes to get in touch with doctor or dental surgeon who needs an assistant. Seven years experience in that line. Box A-1084, Palladium. WASHINGS Wanted: 227 North 2nd. WASHING Wanted Strevt. to do. 14 N. 18th WASHINGS Wanted; 743 N. 15th. WASHING WANTED Work teed; 1616 North E St. guaranROOMS FOR RENT ROOM To lady or man and wife. N. ISth St. 209 FURNISHED FRONT ROOM Downstairs. - Gentleman preferred. 221 N. 14th. 7TH ST. South 119. Rooms for rent, furnished. FURNISHED ROOMS For rent. itti . bath. Also garage. J233 S. 4. FURNISHED ROOMS Suitable for gentlemen. 409 N. 17. FURnFSHED ROOM For rent, for woking girls. 619 S. A St; ROOM for rent to two working girls; use of entire house; 209 South 14th. ROCAISCooklng privileges or lodging. Phone 2256. - MODERN Furnished Room for gentlemen. Phone 1008.

ROOMS FOR RENT

11TH STREET, North 38 Furnished front room, modern, suitable for man and wife. ROOMS OR BOARD WANTED 11 B-ROOM HOUSE Wanted or 4 unfurnished rooms. No children. J. A. R. 204 N. 8th. BUSINESS SERVICE 12 FOR HOUSE PAINTING And Interior decorating:. Call Yanzar and Stain brook. Phone 3038. DON'T LET OTHER PEOPLE EXPERIMENT ON YOUR TYPEWRITER. Phone 1010 and let experienced mechanics d.o your work. RICHMOND TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE Multigrraph Letters and Printing 17 North Seventh St. FOR PAPER HANGING AND PAINTING phone 3761. Oscar Bridgford. LAHMANN PLATING WORKS FOR ALL KINDS RE-PLATING Auto Parts Brass Beds Table Ware Hardware Chandeliers Mirrors Re-Silvered 209 W. MAIN S. PHONE 2758 Housepainting, interior finishing and decorating; efficient workmen, prompt service. E. C. Sims, phone .2571. LAWN-MOWERS sharpened and repaired; called for and delivered. Frank Brunner. Phone 2516. HEATING AND PLUMBING 14 ELECTRIC LAMPS And supplies, water and steam supplies, at Meerhoff's. 9 So. Bth Phone 12S6. MOVING AND STORAGE 16 AUTO MOVING VAN for local and long distance hauling. Furniture crated, stored or shipped. FORREST MONGER 200 South 7th St. Phone 260S FOREST MONGER, STORAGE The new, up-to-date storage house. Each person's goods in a room to itself. The only real, modern storage house In the citv. Steam heated and well lighted. Phone 2608. MISCELLANEOUS CLEANING 17A HOUSE CLEAN I NG TIME Now is the time to get that new piece of furniture and we will take your used in exchange on dressers, beds, springs, mattresses, library tables, rockers, &c, or we will buy your used furniture and pay you all It is worth. We still have a few gallons of house paint to close out at $2.50 a gal. Towsend's Used Goods Store, 533 Main. Phone 1296. PAPER CLEANING For .good cleaning call C. Burton, 403 N. 13th St. Phone 2519. CARPET CLEANING Phone 1904. W. Walters. 107 S. 9th St. MISCELLANEOUS REPAIRING 17B LAWN MOWERS Sharpened, screens made and repaired, baby cabs, clothes wringers repaired: pictures framed. We sell high-grade bicycles, new and second-hand. We repair everything. J. C. Darnell Co., 1020 Main, phone 1936. LAWN MOWERS SHARPENED, Bicycles, all kinds repairing. Wesley Brown. Phone 3086. INSURANCE 19 AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE Let us show you our rates before buying your Auto Insurance. We do our own adjusting. Satisfaction guaranteed. Long & Pickett Realty Co. 718 Main Phones 162S-2017 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 21 HOUSEHOLD GOODS for sale; complete line, all practically new; 10J0 -V II Street. HOUSEHOLD GOODS for sale, includ" Ing sideboard, kitchen furnishings, etc. 28 South Second NEWLAWN MOWER for sale, cheap; 412 S. 6th. EVENING DRESS for time. Phone 2713. sale; worn one FOR SALE16th. -Household goods; 110 S. CARPET for Sale; 33 N. 12th Street. REED-BABY CAB for sale; 203 S. 12th Street. We Buy, Sell or Trade for Used Watches; also, complete line of new watches, priced very low. Buy your high-grade spectacles of us at about half the usual price. C. E. Keever, 1020 Main St. PAINT Closing out 200 gallons house paint; good quality, desirable colors, $2.50 per gallon. Varnish and white enamel at sacrifice prices. Townsend's Second-Hand Store, 633 Main St. Phone 1296. WANTED To- buy antique post bed, office desk, linoleum, dressers, mirrors, iron beds and springs, ice boxes, gas ranges, ovens, tables, rug, carpets, davenports, etc. Thompson Nichols. 430 Main. TOP WAGON wanted. In tion. Phone 3453. good condid17CT PRICES paid for second-hand Btoves of all kinds. Phone 3498. Furniture and stoves, all kinds; good prices. Home Supply Store, 181 Fort Wayne Ave. Phone 1862. Furniture Wanted We pay highest prices for used goods, stoves, etc. Brammer & Foster, 17 S. 7th. Phone 1876. CIGARS FROM MAKER TO YOU Save Middle Man's Profit Mi Corona 5c; worth 7 704 6c; worth 8 Club Especial 8c; worth 11 Richmond Rose ....7c; worth 10 Cordores Sc; worth 10 Imperia 10; worth 13 F E L T M A N'S CIGAR STORE 609 Main St. ELECTRIC SWEEPER For sale, practically new. Franz Premier electric s veeper, cheap. Phone 2995. 6-K LE RANGE Coal or wood. Bed, walnut with box mattres. 221 N. 17. GAS HEATER And laundry stove for sale. Cash or payment. Frank R. Chamness. 812 N. I. Phone 3461. SIDEBOARD And pictures. For sale. 15 N 8. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED 22 WANTED To buy used copies of Nielen Book and magazines. Phone 3461. CASH Paid for second ,hand clothing. Phone 3231. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 23 NpiANO For sale. $50.00: first class .condition. W. B. Fulghum, 1000 Main.

MUSICAL INSTRUMENAS 23

MACHINES FPR SALE Also Expert Repairing. RICHMOND REPAIR SHOP Phone 1014 1029 Main St. A. R. Chenoweth R. P. Whisler 1 SOME Specially Good Bargains in 88note Baldwin player and upright piano. Will save you dealer's profit. "Walter B. Fulghum, 1000 Main St. EXCHANGE Your piano for a Victrola or buy a used piano through me and save the dealer's profit. Walter B. Fulghum, 1000 Main St. SPECIALS AT THE STORES 25 HARNESS and collars for all size horses I and mules. We trade, repair and oil harness some secondhand work harness cheap. BIRCK'S, 611 MAIN MAGIC MARVEL Saves clothes and labor. Ask your grocer for it. I. W. Walters, 107 S. 9th St. FURNACES 258 THE HOLLAND FURNACE CO. is responsible to the user of a Holland Furnace for the heating job complete. The commodity we sell is satisfactory heating. H. L. Householder, 319 Randolph. Phone 3163. FARM & DAIRY PRODUCTS 27 KIRCHER'S MILK for quality. Phone 4096. BABY CHICKS And scratch feed, $4.25 per hundred, also small potatoes. Roberts Feed Co. Phone 3494. DAIRYMEN Try some feeding molasses to Increase the milk flow. Hoosler Feed & Feeder Co., cor. S. Cth and A. LIVE STOCK & VEHICLES 31 BULLS For sale. Young AberdeneAngus bulls, recorded. Chas. S. Brown, R. F. D. 6, Newcastle, ma. WAGONFor sale; good heavy spring wagon and plow. Phone 4.i()J. AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE 33 FOR SALE 1 ton truck, good condition, cheap if sold at once. C. G. Spencer, phone 8275, Eaton, Ohio, R. R. 4. FORD For sale. 517 N. 17. First class condition. FORD TOURING CARS. 1018 models. One roadster. 1917. Electric piano. We buy, sell or trade for any, thing. J. C. Jarrett, Lynn, Ind. FORD TOURING for sale, 1916; phone 1713. FORD TOURING CAR. fully equipped. Phone 1724. 545 South E. FORD ROADSTER For sale; in good repair; will sell cheap if sold at once. Call at 306 North 9th St. FORD DEUVERY for sale; 4 new tires, three extras, just overhauled, with good top. John Scheid, phone 210, Cambridge City. AUTOMOBILE for Sale; 1916 Ford Roadster price $250. Phone 4644. STUDEBAKER Touring car for sale; good condition. $250. Easy payments. Apply Scully Richmond Battery Radiator Co. TIRES AND ACCESSORIES 35 FORD Top and Windshield for sale; 302 North 8th street. MOTORCYCLES & BICYCLES 37 USED EXCELSIOR Motorcycles for sale. Elmer E. Smith, 426 Main Phone 1806. INDIAN MOTORCYCLES AND BICYCLES Second hand Motorcycles MEYERS & TROXEL 14 N. 6th St. We don't fix 'em. We repair 'em HOUSES APTS. TO RENT 38 $5 OFFERED for information leading to renting of 5 to 7 room house; mod ern. I. J. Gardner, E. W. Steinhart Co. HOUSE Might consider renting to desirable parties who can afford to pay good rent of approximately $60.00 per month, modern eight room home, never been rented. Or will sell, small pay ment down and balance like rent. Located at 312 S. 12th St. Address E. G Kemper, 205 E. 33rd St., Indianapolis. WANTED TO RENT 41 WANTED To rent two bedrooms or small apartment. Phone 2270. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 42 FOR SALE A full modem 10-room flat, close-in on Main street. A hargain. A double, modern, 7 rooms to a side; close-in, on Main street. A 6-room full modern on Lincoln St Priced right. These properties are all modern and priced right. A. M. ROBERTS Office 18 S. Eighth St. Phone 4171 Evenings or Mornings HOUSE For sale; good modern double, centrally located, at a bargain. Write Box E-5036, care Palladium. FOR SALE Modern 8-room house on 18th street, square and half off Main street; basement and large lot. This is a real buy at $4200.00. Modern 7-room bungalow, large basement, garage and 3 acres of ground, out of city limits, on car line. Priced to sell ?7000.00. We have a nice list of city property and farms to sell. If you are in the market, let us show you our list; and, if you have any property to sell, list it with us we have the buyers. GREEN & RAMSEY HITTLE BLOCK 9th and Main St. Phone 2576 TURNER W. HADLEY, 2nd. Nat. Bank Bldg., buys and sells properties. Homes sold on payments like rent.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 42

GOOD LOT Phone 146. In Reeveston addition. HOUSE For sale. Frame house, six rooms, located in south end. Cash or payment. Write Box 6014 Palladinm. FARMS 1 ACRE 6-room house, big barn, chickenhouse; plenty of fruit trees and berries. Right in town $3,600. 40 ACRES Good improvements, 6plendid location; close to city. 72 ACRES Seven-room house, fur nace, big barn, plenty outouiMings, orchard; well fenced and tiled. Several others any size, price or location. See us bfore you buy. Always a large list of city property for quick possession. HARRIS AND KORTEWEO S. W. Cor. Main and Sixth Streets Office Phone 2278 HOUSE 5 rooms, modern except furnace. Just painted: now vacant; cash or payments. 318 Richmond Ave. See E. E. Orr, 101 Richmond Ave. or 600 Pearl. Phone 4747. PUBLIC SALE AT 2 P. M. MAY 20TH. . Frame Residence, 226 S. loth Brick Residence, 29 S. 12th 15th St. Property to be sold first. W. B. REID, Commissioner Phone 3289 or 3191 COTTAGE for sale, 4 room, good condition; inquire 427 South 10th. Phone 1727. OVER 30 HOUSES LISTED FOR SALE With C. E. Keever Co. Office 1020 Main. Phone 2169. Here's a Real Bargain MODERN 7-ROOM Location South 8th St. on car line. Has all improvements, bath, furnace, electric lights. gas, both Kinas or water in uouse, garage for 3 cars. Possession in 10 days. Priced right. We have a few vacant homes that we can sell on payments and easy terms. THE LAND MEN 13 North Ninth Street Phone 2558 HOUSE For sale 7-room frame house in east end, $500 down, balance monthly payments. Frank M Price. Phone 4745. HOUSE FOR SALE Double house, fine location; garage; all in good repair, nice home and splendid Investment. Terms if desired. Address Owner, care Palladium. PETTY BROS. Real Estate, Farms and City Propery. 710 Main, Phone 2328. GOOD CITY HOMES AND FARMS PORTERFIELD. Colonial Building FOR REAL ESTATE and FARMS see A. M. ROBERTS. Liberty Ave., oince 18 S. 8th. Phone 4171. GREEN & RAMSEY Real Estate, Rentals, Auctioneering and Insurance. Hittle Block, 9th and Main. Phone 2576. DOUBLE HOUSE, South End 7 rooms to side, Immediate possession; can be bought on payments; also several others In different parts of city. H. C. Bullerdick, 137 South 13th. Phone 1419. REAL ESTATE WANTED 45 Want to exchange well located double paying 12Vs tor well located single. Address S, care Palladium. HOUSE and' LOT or lot wanted to buy, not to exceed $10,000 in value. Call 430 Main. Phone 1905. LEGAL NOTICE 49 NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the undersigned commissioner, appointed in an action for partition in the Wayne Circuit Court, wherein James M. Pyle et al are plaintiffs and Olive Bradley et al are defendants, for the partition of certain real estate therein described, to sell the real estate described in the complaint In said cause will, by virtuo and order of said court, as such commissioner, on the 28th day of May. 1920, offer for sale to the highest and bst bidder the following described real estate in said County of Wayne, State of Jndiana. to-wit: "The north half of that certain real estate conveyed by Joseph L. Smith as sheriff of Wayne County. Indiana, to said Ruth A. Pyle by deed dated January 19, 1S77. recorded in Book No. 30, page 576, of the Deed Records of said County, same being described in said deed as follows: The northwest quarter of Section Thirty-five (35). Township Fifteen (15), North, Range One (1) West, In Wayne County Indiana, excepting forty (40) acres off the west side of said quarter section purchased by Edward Hunt of Joseph Brown, and also excepting forty (40) acres off the south side of the remainder of said quarter section purchased by Mary Pyle of James P. Addleman, same containing eighty and eighty-six hundredths (80.86) acres. Excepting therefrom the one (1) aero conveyed by said Ruth A. Pyle and Davl.i Pyle, her husband, to William S. Pyle, same being described as follows: Beginning sixteen (16) rods west of the northeast corner of said quarter section; thence south sixteen (16) rods; thence west ten (10) rods; thence north sixteen (16) rods; thence east ten (10) rods to the beginning. The premises herein intended to be described as the real estate of which said Ruth A. Pyle died the owner contains thirty-nine (39) acres, more or less." Terms of Sale. One-third cash, onethird in nine months, and one-third in eighteen months, purchaser to ffive bankable notes secured by first mortgage on said real estate, to said commissioner for the deferred payments, waiving valuation and appraisement laws with 6 per cent Interest from date, payable semi-annually. Sale to be made subject to the approval of said Court. The sale will take place on the above described premises about one mile southwest of Whitewater, at the hour of two o'clock p. m. of said day. Dated May 3, 1920. (Signed) DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY. Commissioner. Gardner, Jessup & Hoelscher, Attorneys.

xxvi an Ill-starred president

r s -n -71 W t rf n z' ' - fQC ,-rt

ANGELICA SINGLETON VAN BUREN Daughter of the President and Mistress of the White House

THE most notable event of Van I Buren's administration was the! occurence or one or me great panics from which in the 19th century the country regularly collapsed every 15 or 20 years, as In 1819, 1837, 1857, 1873 and in 1893. Those periodic prostrations always followed wild debauches In speculation, but since it is convenient and consoJing to blame some one else for our own sins, the President invariably has been made the scapegoat in each period of hard times. No doubt Jackson's removal of the public deposits from the United States Bank caused financial disturbance, and his distribution of the federal surplus among the state treasuries also was disturbing. The government, the banks and the people generally had all merrily joined in sowing the wind. whose harvest was the whirlwind of 1S37 The nation had been indulging in the first of its big western booms. The river steamboat aided to open up new regions, where musforoorn states. in ambitious emulation of New York LEGAL NOTICE 49 NOTICE TO HEIRS. CREDITORS. ETC. In the matter of the estate of Andrew S. Brook, deceased. In the Wayne Circuit Court, April Term, 1920. Notice is hereby given that Dickinson Trust Company as administrator of the estate of Andrew S. Brooks, deceased, has presented and filed his account and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 5th day of June, 1920, at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said court and show cause. If any there be, why said account and vouchers should not be approved. DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY, Administrator. BENJAMIN F. HARRIS, Attorney. May 12-19-26. NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OF EXECUTOR Notice Is hereby given that Bretonna Lamm has been duly appointed and qualified executrix of the last will and testament of Thomas C. Davis, deceased. Said estate Is supposed to be solvent. BRETONNA LAMM, Executrix. FRANK T. STRAYER, Attorney. May 12-19-26 MONEY TO LOAN 46 FARM LOANS Low Rates H. B. CUSTER 710 Main Phone 2962 $$$ LOANS $$$ On Furniture, Pianos, Live Stock, Autos, Talking Machines, Etc. Get our terms before borrowing. 1 to 20 MONTHS TO PAY All transactions strictly private The State Investment & Loan Company Room 40 Colonial Bldg. 3rd Floor Phone 2560

MONEY TO LOAN 46 MONEY TO LOAN 46

EOR ANY AND EVERY OCCASION Your Credit Problems Are Quickly Solved If You Will Se U3

66 The

Welfare Sys

Loans in amounts of $10.00 to $300.00 can be made on your farm Implements, Live Stock, Piano, Household Goods, or Automobile, for ONE MONTH or TWENTY MONTHS, to suit your income; at THE STANDARD WELFARE RATE of 2Vs percent per month, or ONE PERCENT LESS than the rate allowed by the state. A CREDIT SUGGESTION: Call on us today, or phone us and our representative will call at your home, and explain "WELFARE LOANS" to you. Welfare Loae Society 9 North Tenth St. Phone 2509 Richmond, Indiana. Under State Supervision.

i PUBLIC SALE 40 PUBLIC SALE 48

PUBLIC SALE Owing to death of my wife I will sell at my home on 36 Laurel sereet, Saturday, May 22, 1920, at 1 p. m., the following goods : Kitchen cabinet, refrigerator, 75-lbs.; dining table, set dining chairs, 2 rocking chairs, linoleum, rug, widow shades, iron bed, sanitary cot. 2 mattresses, base burner, hot plate, gas heater, electfic iron, washing machine, boiler, tub, ball bearing ringer, rabbit cages, canned fruit, Jelly, preserves, pickles; porch swing and other articles too numerous to mention.

T. F. CONNIFF, Auctioneer.

1837 Martin Van Buren Inaugurated eighth president, aged 54. Revolution in Ontario Revolution In Texas The Seminole War. 1840 The Sub-Treasury Law Van Buren defeated for reelection. 1844 Defeated for nomination 1848 Free soil candidate for president 1862 July 24, died at Kinderhook, N. Y.. aged 79.

and its Erie canal, ran wild in appropriations for the building of canals. Van Buren was the first presidentelect to ride in a train even part of the way to Washington, and the expansion of the steam railroad system was beginning to inflame the national imagination. When the day of reckoning and remorse came; when bread riots broke out; when laborers stood in line near New York to get jobs at a wage of $4 LEGAL' NOTICE 49 NOTICE TO HEIPS. CREDITORS. ETC. In the matter of the estate of Charles I. Scott, deceased. In the Wayne Circuit Court, April Term. 1920. Notice Is herebj- given that Lewis W. Harris, as administrator of the estate of Charles I. Scott, deceased, has presented and filed his account and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for ex amination and action of said Circuit Court, on the oth day of June, 1920, at which time all heirs, creditors, or legatees of said estate are required to ap pear in said Court, and show cause. If any there be. why Faid account and vouchers should not be approved. LEWIS W". HARRIS. Administrator. FRANK T. STRAYER, Attorney. May12-1 9-2. NOTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS. ETC. In the matter of the estate of Eliza beth Marsden, deceased. In the Wayne Circuit Court, April Term, 1920. Notice is hereby given that Harry H. Tubeslng as administrator of the estate of Elizabeth Marsden, deceased, lias presented and filed his account and vouchers In final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for examination and action of said Circuit Court, on the 5th day of June, 1920, at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause. If any there be, why said account and vouchers should not h approved. HARRY II. TUB ESI NG. Administrator. GARDNER. JESSUP Sc. HOELSCHER, l2"!9!?!- Attorneys. NOTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS, ETC In the matter of the estate of Josiah Outland, deceased. In the Wayne Circuit Court, April Term, 1920. Notice is hereby given that William A. Lewis as Executor of the estate of Josiah Outland, deceased, has presented aijd filed his account and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 5th dy of June, 1920. at which time all heirs, creditors, or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said court and show cause, if any there be, why said account and vouchers should not be approved. WILLIAM A. LEWIS. Executor, RAY K. S HIVE LEY, Attorney. May 12-19-26. tem 99

HOWARD T. SNYDER

a month and board: when bank! suspended payments In coin, and "when, business houses were tumbling into bankruptcy, the bankers and business men. who had always been violently anti-Democratic, turned upon Van Buren and pointed their accusing fingers at the White House. The toremost man of business In conservative New England. Abbott Lawrence, did not hesitate to hint to a public meeting in Boston the incendiary suggestion that the time might come for forcible resistance to the government, when the crew, as he said, would have to mutiny and seize the ship of state. Van Buren faced the gale without bending. He arose above political maneuvering and the temptation to flatter the mad passions of the hour and preserved aa attitude of masterful inactivity! In his philosophy of government, as in that of his opponents also, (here was no solution of the pressing problems, and he bluntly

warned the people not to look to the J helpless government for relief. The president did call congress in extra session, but only to recommend the adoption of the sub-treasury system. The banks having failed, he proposed that Uncle Sam, like a timid old woman, should lock up his money in the bureau drawer. And the economic folly of the sub-treasury was persisted in until the establishment of the federal reserve system. It was squally weather all around, with the costly Seminole War dragging its slow course through the malarial everglades of Florida; with embarrassing revolutions on both sides of us, in the revolted Mexican provinces of Texas and in the British province of Ontario. Although he had appealed to the "sober second thought of the people" a phrase which ho popularized they mistook his independence for indifference, and from mouth to mouth passed the false story of a cold and haughty aristocrat in. the White House, eating from gold spoons and disporting himself with "English sen-ants, horses and car riages. With a New Yorker's more luxuri ous tastes the White House did tak on a somewhat different air during Van Buren's tenancy, but without the extravagances that were charged to him by his political opponents. Until his eldest son, Abraham, brought a bride to the mansion a cousin of Dolly Madi6on only the sons of the president lived with him. The best remembered of these, "Prince John" Van Buren, a really able lawyer and distinguished figure in society, coined an election day slogan that has carried more than one contest at the polls: "Vote early and vote often." The defeats of the Democratic tickets in the off years plainly fore-shadowed the ill-starred president's own defeat in his candidacy for re-election in 1840. No prophet was needed to write the refrain of the popular campaign songs of the Whigs: Van! Van! Is a used up man. Nevertheless Van Buren remained in active politics 10 years, as will be recorded in later chapters. For still another 10 years he lived on in retirement at Lindenwold, his country estate in his native village, where he died in the midst of the civil war. Cook Book Reads Like A Fairy Tale (Boston Transcript) It is with a feeling of gentle melancholy, mixed with hopeless longing, that we glance over the pages of an old cook book. We are struggling to find a palatable dessert which requires no sugar, eggs or butter. Could it be possible that we ever made angel cake? We glance with awe at the nonchalant, carefree beginning of the receipt. "The whites of ten eggs, beaten to a stiff froth!" Here is a pound cake which we once ate so freely and untlinkingly. One pound of but?r is the first requisite. We pass hastily over this page and hunt for a sour milk, one-egg spice cake which may pass muster in the family circle. It is interesting to read the names of receipts, especially those of the conserving variety; they are at least truthful, for they profess to be but imitation delicacies. One dessert, tried once, and once only, was called mock maple pudding. When taken from the oven and served it was found to have a distinct maple flavor, but in substance and color it resembled a liquid glue so strongly that we were tempted to mend the broken table with what was left of it (which was a good deal). Mock mince meat is very good, if you have never tasted the real article; but eating it reminds one of the Mock Turtle in "Alice in Wonderland," sobbing so plaintively his life story: "Once I was a real turtle., The casserole is a dish of suspicions; it may be very tasty and appetizing, but we know it is composed of leftovers; everything in the ice chest has been thrown into the casserole, and it has "gently simmered," or "moderately baked" for three hours and a half, in order to amalgamate the contents into a harmonious, If unclassified whole. The dish known as "poor man's pudding" never was very popular, and it shows that, after all, there is something in a name. The ingredients are simple and cheap rice and milk; but if it had been called "snow flake cream" it might have tickled our fancy, if not our palates. "Bird's-nest pudding" may be a little suggestive of Chinese tastes, but it proves to be a harmless combination of apples and tapioca. "Devil's food" is dark but very delicious cake found to have no harmful effect on character, whatever it may have upon t j A v . ... uigcoiiuu. .viaccaroon mile proves occasionally that "trifles light as air are to the dyspeptic a heavy burden". "Hermits" are not at all well named; a delicious spiced cooky filled with nuts and raisins surely not a hermit's fare. The colored advertisements of salads, fruit jellies and layer cakes in the magazines allure us, and stir nameless longings in our breasts. Oh. for a similar'' salad, or ham and eggs so delectable! As for the jellies, which the birthday children seem to prefer to ice cream, something deep and elemental within us makes us doubt their sincerity. The jellies are all very" well, but we wish a plebiscite could be taken. No more does brandy sauce, wine jelly or tipsy pudding figure In our menus. Our lobster Newburg is unsherried, our Welsh rabbit unbeeredV Ve eat concoctions that we never thought we could eat. but we find that Sey satisfy 'hunger and seem to nourish our bodies. Still, It, 1s not like the "good old days".