Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 250, 30 August 1920 — Page 11
THE PALLADIUM CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Standardised and Indexed for quick reference, accprdlryr to The Basil 1 Smith System (Copyright).
ADVERTISING RATES 10 cents per line, per Insertion. words to the line. No ad taken for less than 20 cents cash or less than 30 cents charare. No ade accepted after 11 o'clock on day ot publication. Tor contract, call phone 2S34 or 2872. Phone 2834 MONUMENTS 1B JOHN P. EMSLIE Monuments 15 South Tenth Street Phone 4022 PERSONAL TAKE adjustments from Richmond s Lady Chiropractor, Miss Straley, 243 Colonial Bldgr. LOST AND FOUND 110 00 BILL lost between Second Na tional bank and KnoUenbergr'a. Return to Palladium. nvv'ttnctAT lost. Friday, between 310 N. 18th and 34 South 5th. Reward. Return 34 S. 5th. LAUNDRY CLOTHES dropped between N. 16th and 100 N. 18th. Friday evening. Return to 100 N. 18th. Reward. HELP WANTED MALE Twn TmcV Drivers wanted. Sam Jaffe. 804 Main. . HOUSEMAN Wanted. Westcott Hotel. CLERKS, (men, women) over 17, for Postal Mall Service. $135 month. Examinations September. Experience nnnuMurv. For free particulars. write J. Leonard, (former Civil Service Examiner) 1041 Equitable Bids., Washington. P. C. WANTED Fifteen men for trucking freight Part' handle freight house. Good wages. C. D. SLIFEIt, Freight Agent Men Wanted in Cracker Department Call RICHMOND BAKING CO. HELP WANTED FEMALE WOMAN wanted as companion and as sistant with housework, in country, Write Box D4164, care Palladium. GIRL or WOMAN Wanted for general housework; part time Phone 4253. PASTRY COOK wanted. Kandy Shop 919 Main. GIRLS wanted. South 9th St. Richmond Casket Co.. AGENTS & SALESMEN WANTED 7 AGENTS 11.00 accident policy and key registration. $1 a year. Great sellers. Atlantic Registry Co., Richmond, Va. Dept. A. SITUATIONS WANTED 8 5TTITATTOV WANTED Married man aee 27: steady, reliable; 10 years' of fice and mechanical experience; wants oonection with live business concern bv Sept. 15. Best reference as to char aoter and ability. P. O. BoxJ67. WASHINGS wanted. 41 S. 6th St. ROOMS FOR RENT 9 19TH ST., NORTH. 533 Modern rurn1 s hed roo nr. Phon e 2 277. TWO rooms for lisht housekeeping. 226. N. 7th St.; private entrance. MODE RNsTeep In g rooms. 12N. 7th St. MODERN furnished room. 130 S. 11. Phone106 2OR 3 furnished or unfurnished rooms for rent; modern. Phone 1324. ROOMS FOR RENT 9 FOR RENT Furnished room, with or without housekeeping privileges; well ventilated; light and pleasant; $3.50 per week. 206 No. Sth St. John N. Koll. BUSINESS SERVICE 12 DON'T LET OTHER PEOPLE EXPERIMENT ON YOUR TYPEWRITER Phone 1010 and let experienced mechanics do your work. THE RICHMOND TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE Multlgraph Letters and Printing 17 North Seventh St. HEATING AND PLUMBING 14 PLUMBING, heating and lighting contracting; repalrins and supplies, at Meerhoff's, 9 South 9th. Phone 123S. MOVING AND STORAGE 16 FORREST MONGER For local and long distance Furniture crated, stored or hauling, shipped. AUTO MOVING VAN 200 South 7th Street. Phone 2608. MIRRORS RESILVERED 17 Auto Reflectors Resilvered Why buy new ones? Lahmann Plating Works Across the Bridge 09 West Main Phone 2753 for' ALL KINDS OF PLATING WELDING 17 "For Quick Service See" H. & B. Welding Co. Geo. Heath E. Eletry lob Welding : Tank Building 41 Richmsnd Ave. Phone 3332 MISCELLANEOUS REPAIRING 17B L.AWN MOWERS sharpened; baby cabs re-tired; all kinds of repairs. Work called for and delivered. Pictures framed. New bicycles; reasonable prices. J. C. Darnell Co. Phone 1936. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 21 SILO California Redwood silo, 12x38 roof, lightning rod and cable complete, excellent condition. Wm. F. Hofford, Modoc, Ind. TOR SALE Drafting outfit, including 15-piece Eugent Pietzen Co. Drawing Instruments. $32.50; Mannheim Slide Rule, $4 00; Multiples Slide Rule. $5.00; T Souare (24 inch), $1.00; T Square (36 inch) $1.50: 17 Assorted Transparent Celluloid Triangles $2.00. Price entire outfit $42.50. Telephone 3244. 400 College Ave. rHOTOUX-Stevens. 16-gauge, double barrel, hammerless; never been used. 414 S. 14th. .d'R SALE One Garland Base Burner hard coal stove; In good condition. O. A. Balr, 202 X. 7th St. Phone 1772.
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MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 21 FOR SALE Buffet, oil stove, etc. Phone 1507, or call 25 No. 12th. FOU SALE: Base Burner, hot plate. lounge and dress form. 181 N. 6tn. FOR SALE Kitchen cabinet. 412 S. Sixth St. GARDEN HOSE. 80 ft. long; refriger ator, holding 100 lbs., for sale, uu phone 1048. FOR SALE Household goods; some an tiques; Monday and Tuesday, ai.o-i Main St. STOVE for sale Florence Hot Blast. 317 South 13th. FOR SALE Davenport, gas range. kitchen cabinet, other articles. Call Sunday. S04 N. 21. INVALID CHAIR, 3 wheels, for sale; extra good; cheap. Phone 4S14. FOR SALE Barn; to be" removed from lot. See W. B. Dye, at Kelley & Hanoley"s. Phone 2150. IVORY wicker baby cab for sale prac tlcallv new 134 Rnufh Rth - . - - WE BUY, SELL OR TRADE, for Used WaffthAo olan rrr r eta 1f-n ftf T1PW 1 watches, priced very low. Buy your high-grade spectacles of us at about half the usual price. C. E. KEEVER, 7 South 11th. REED baby cab and Columbia graphophone for sale. 643 N. 19th. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED 22 SHOW CASE Wanted to buy: floor show case. 4 to 6 feet long. Adress, " Show Case." care Palladium. FURNITURE AND STOVES All kinds; good prices. Home Suply Store, 181 Ft. Wayne Ave. Phone 18G2. GOOD USED FURNITURE of all kinds wanted. See us before you sell. Townsend's Used Goods. 633 Main. Phone 1296. ELIASON FURNITURE EXCHANGE Good used furniture bought and sold. See us before you buy or sell. We pay highest prices. Kliason Furniture Exchange. 520 Main St. Phono 1469. JUNK Before disposing of any junk, call Richmond Junk Yard. Highest prices will be paid. Prompt attention. 1001 N. 10th. Phone 3498. FURNITURE WANTED We pay highest prices for used goods, stoves, etc. Brammer & Foster, 17 S. 7th. Phone 1876. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 23 Expert Piano and Pipe Organ Tuning and Repairing Herbert S. Mikesell, headquarters Waiter B. Fulghutn's victrola Store, 1000 Main SL Phone No. 2275. 9 We have in stock or can make parts to repair any piano or player piano Piano Refinishing We can refinish any piano the same as new, no matter how badly dam aged. Piano Tuning Our men are experts and we guaran tee all work. ESTIMATES FREE Opp. Postoffice Phone 1655 WE CAN SAVE YOU DEALER'S PROFIT ON A USED PIANO OR CAN TRADE YOUR SILENT PIANO FOR A VICTROLA Our salesman, Mr. J. R. Jones, has had rirteen years piano experience. His ad vice is free. WALTER B. FULGHUM 1000 Main St. RECORD EXCHANGE 23A USED records bOUirht. SOid. crrligmrM Nellie A. Booker. Miller Harnes Store. MACHINERY AND TOOLS 24 FOR SALE One 10-h. p. Internationa gasoirnc engine; in extra jrood condi tion; mounted on trucks! nrlrn ritrht Geeting Auto Co., West Manchester, O. SPECIALS AT THE STORES 25 When In need of carpenter, plastering, garden, and cement tools; we have the best tools at the lowest prices. BIRCK'S 611 Main FURNACES 25 B WOLVERINE FURNACES E. J. Knapp. Ph. 187i. Office 17 S. 7th. See R. J. BEHRINGER FOR YOUR FURNACE REPAIR WORK. 812 South C St. Phone 1923 FARM & DAIRY PRODUCTS 27 HENS for sale; white leghorn yearlings. Phone 4428, or 3494. FOR SALE Hand-picked fall and winter apples. $2.00 per bushel, delivered Phone 3106. KIRCHER'S MILK for quality. Phone 4096. BUILDING MATERIALS 28 IS IT A FARM BUILDING? BniM with CbnQgteKgc BvBerisi2feo& Phut 3250f PAINTS AND VARNISHES 28 Compare These Prices on ROOF PAINT 5-gal. lots 65c per ral 10-gal. lots 60c per gal Barrels 50c per gal CLENDENIN & CO. 257 FL Wayne Ave.
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RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND4
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 30 BAKERY, Knights town, Indiana, closed account Mortgage . foreclosure. Complete with uptown salesroom. Small amount of cash will handle this, with or without Ford Delivery Truck. New Castle Loan Co. New Castle, Ind. LIVE STOCK AND VEHICLES 3 HORSE wagon and , harness - for kale. 816. North PET STOCK AND POULTRY 32 FOR SALE Bull pup. Boston Terrier, 10 weeks old. Phone 1852. or call at 223 S. Seventh. AUTOMOB1LE8 FOR SALE 33 MAXWELL Touring; 15 model; low. Call S02 No. 8th St. priced FOR SALE OR TRADE 1 Lexington Six, closed . top. 750; 1 . Light Ford truck; 1-17 Ford Touring. $350; 1 Davis inuring, 1150.- Geo. wi tr, South 9th. Phone 290 inuring, ii50.' Geo. worley uarage. fcicUEBAKEK 4-cy Under; 1916; very fine condition; good tires; for sale at the right price. O. K. Dunbar. Centerville, Ind. FIVE-PASSENGER Touring; good tires ' and new battery. Fully equipped; will consider diamond or Liberty bonds. Phone 24S1. For Sale ' l-TONTRUCK Chain drive, stake body, closed cab ; excellent condition. THE WAYNE WORKS RE-BUILT TIRES 35 To Make Money Watch Your Buying GRANT REBUILT TIRES Exchange Fabric Prices Non-Skid 30x3 9.60 $11.33 30x32 ... Rib 30x3 30x3 ... $ 9.60 $11.90 More? Why Pay Feltman's Cigar Store Grant Rebuilt Tire Exchange Main Phone 2033 60" VEHICLE REPAIRS 35A BODY BUILDING Auto repairing, woodworking, Sedan tops. A good hardwood closed truck cab at $9S. Work guaranteed. H. M. KENDRIC 900 South West A Phone 4848 GARAGES FOR RENT 36 GARAGE SPACE for small car. 1049. Phone TAXI 39 TAXI, TRUCK & TRANSFER See Harris Bros., -Phone 5294. Headquarters at Golden Cigar Store. Anderson's Taxi Service MULL & WILLIAMS. Proprietors Special attention paid to merchants' delivery and transfer. Day and allnight service. 28 North 7tlT-Phone 1370 MOTORCYCLES AND BICYCLES 37 GIRL'S BICYCLE for sale.Phone 2980. INDIAN MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES Second - Hand Motorcycles MEYERS & TROXEL Opposite City Hall Wo don't. FIX 'cm: we REPAIR em HOUSES APTS. TO RENT 38 FIVE-ROOMS, modern: heat furnished. B. Clements, Fountain City. WANTED TO RENT 41 WANTED Immediately, two unfurnished rooms for light housekeeping; no children. Phone 4322. 6 OR 6 ROOM HOUSE, wanted to rent; toilet And bath or modern. Mr. Wintrow, Starr Piano Store. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 42 FOREST H. MEEK, auctioneer and real estate. Phone 4095. FOR REAL ESTATE AND FARMS, see A. M. ROBERTS. 18 S. Sth. Phone 4171. C. C. HAWLET & SON New Parts, Ohio For Farms and Real Estate of all kinds For Sale by Owner ONE 5-ROOM COTTAGE In excellent condition; Immediate possession. Call phone 1492. GREtN & RAMSEY Real Estate. Rentals. Auctioneering and Insurance. Kittle Block. Dth & Main. Phone 2576. 44 ACRES Good 7-room house, barn and silo, on good pike. Only $6600. 80 ACRES New 8-room modern house, good big barn and outbuildings; all level, mostly black; extra good fences, well tiled; on pike, close to market; $24,000. Fall possession. 153 ACRES 9-room modern house, large barn, good tenant house, plenty good outbuildings, everything in good repair; land level, two-thirds black; good fences, well tiled; on main pike, close to market; $37,500. Fall possession. 130 ACRES Modern 9-room house, large bank barn, silo, good fences, well tiled, land slightly rolling but in high state of cultivation; right at market, schools and churches; $175 per acre. Some real bargains in city properties. ir m tne market can ana see us Defore you buy. HARRIS AND KORTEWEQ S. W. Corner Main and Sixth Sts. Res. Phone 3014 Office Phone 2273 TURNER W. HADLEY, 2nd Nat. Bank Building, buys and eells properties; Homes sold on payments like renL
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SUN-TELEGRAM. RICHMOND,
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 42 BRADBURY & BAILET Real Estate, Insurance, Loans and Surety Bonds. 202-203 Colonial Bldg. C E. KEEVER CO. has a fine list of houses. Office phone 1C41; res. 2169. Office 7. S. 11th St. See us for bargains. GOOD. CITY HOMES PORTERFIELD. Colonial Bldg. FARMS FOR SALE For Sale A FINE 80-ACRE FARM Level, all tillable and very fertile. Good 6-room d"welling,bank barn 40 by 60, silo, double crib, new poultry house, good young orchard, cistern, 2 good wellis; on good road, 4 miles nii . . . irum nicnmona, a gooa larm ana a bargain Price only $13,000, and on easy terms. C. C. Hawley & Son New Paris, Ohio LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed by the Circuit Court of Wayne County, Indiana as Administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Susan Beard, deceased, late of said County. Said estate is probably solvent. GLENN B. HEARD, Administrator. BENJAMIN F. HARRIS. Attorney. Aug. 30. Stpt. 6-13. LEGAL NOTICE State of Indiana, Wayne County, ss.: Benjamin F. Harris vs. Ida May Carmin, et al. Wayne Circuit Court, April Term, 1320. No. 191S1. BE IT KNOWN. That on the 21st day of August. 1920, the above named plaintiff by his attorney, filed in the office of the Clerk of the Wayne Circuit Court his complaint against said Defendants in the above entitled cause, Complaint on note and mortgage, together with the affidavit of a competent person, showing that said defendants not residents of the State of Indiana. Said Defendants, Ida May Carmin and John E. Carmin therefore are Iiereby notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint against them and that unless they appear and answer or demur thereto, at the calling of the said cause, on the 16th day of October, 1920, a day of the October Term of said Court to be begun and held at the Court House in the City of Richmond on the first Monday of October 1920, next, said Complaint and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will be taken as true, and the said cause will be heard and determined in their absence. WITNESS the Clerk and seal of said Court at the City of Richmond this 21st day of August, 1920. LINUS P. MEREDITH, Clerk. WINDSOR B. HARRIS, Attorney for Plaintiff. A ue". 23-30: Sept. 6. PUBLIC SALE
PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY ' The undersigned will sell to the highest bidder on the Bert Colvin farm, one mile east and three-fourths mile south of Abington, Wayne County, and one-half mile west and three-fourths mile south of Smithfield on MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1920 Sale to begin at 10:00 a. m., the following described property: HORSES AND MULES Six head ot mules, one roan 'driving horse, family
broke; one bay team, 9 and 12 years old, weight 2300; one black team, 7 years old, weight 2200; one young team mare mules, 4 and 5 years old, weight 2400. All good workers. CATTLE AND HOGS Seven head Shorthorn milk cows, one black 2-year-old heifer, one black 2-year-old hull, five yearling calves, six spring calves. Twenty-four head brood sows. 70 shoats, 5 with pigs at side on day of sale; one boar 18 months old. These hogs are all full blood Duroc and double immuned. ' FARMING IMPLEMENTS 2 Scotch clipper walking breaking plows, 13-in.; 1 John Deere 14-inr.h 3-horse sulky breaking plow, new; one 3-horse 16-inch Zanesville riding plow; one 12-inch gang breaking plow; 1 John Deere 1-row corn plow; 1 Zanesville 1-row corn plow; 2 Zanesville 2-row corn plows; 3 single disc wheat drills; 1 Kempt manure spreader; one 2-horse Rude hoe drill, 1 log roller, 1 wood drag, 12-foot; one 4-horse spike-tooth harrow; 1 Zanesville double disc harrow, 1 Zanesville single disc harrow, 1 Black Hawk corn planter, fertilizer attachment; one 8-foot Deering binder, 2 Deering mowers, one new; 1 Osborn hay loader, new; 1 Osborn hay tedder, 1 American clover buncher, two 2-horse wagons, 2 flat beds, 1 frame bed. 1 gravel bd, 1 storm buggy, 1 set breeching harness, 2 sets chain harness,
1 set buggy harness, 2 sets fly nets. 1 Duplex feed grinder, one bU-galion stove kettle, 1 lard prtss, 1 sausage grinder. 1 DeLaval cream separator, 1 wood heating stove, 1 soft coal heating stove, 1 range cook stove, doubletrees and singletrees and other articles too numerous to mention. 80 acres of good corn in field. Timothy hay in mow. Terms Made Known on Day of Sale. Clifton Ladies Will Serva Lunch J. H. BRADBURY & E. H. COLVIN W. F. Howard, Auct. T. E. Rodefer, Clerk. C. D. Johnson, Cashier.
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The undersigned will sell at public sale on our farm, three miles north of Centerville, on TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1920 at 12:30 o'clock, the following property 6 HEAD OF HORSES One bay horse, weighing 1540, one brown mare weighing 1530, one brown mare weighing 1420, one bay mare weighing 1600, one brown horse weighing 1160, one filly weighing 1270. 30 HEAD OF CATTLE 8 cows with calves, 12 head of yearling steers and heifers, one springer, one registered Angus bull. 69 HEAD OF HOGS 15 sows, 8 with pigs; 43 shoats, 1 boar. v HAY AND CORN 10 tons of clover, 15 tons of timothy, .100 bales of straw, 30 ac'res of corn in field. FARMING IMPLEMENTS 1 Janesville planter, 2 single row cultivators, 1 two-row cultivator, 1 sulky plow, 1 walking, plow, 1 three-section harrow, 1 tandem disc harrow, 2 five-hoe disc wheat drills, 1 two-horse wheat drill, 1 Deering binder, 1 Johnston corn binder, 1 Johnston mower, 1 hay tedder, 1 Rock Island hay loader, 1 cultipacker, 1 Rude spreader, three two-horse wagons, feed grinder, hog tanks, silo filler, Appleton corn husker, tractor disc, Case tractor with plows, storm buggy, Davis 6-cylinder automobile.
COL. THOMAS CONNIFF, Auct JOE BLOSE. Clerk.
IND.. MONDAY, AUG. 30, 1920.
Five Minutes with Our Presidents ' wwMMn mm mm i ' : By JAMES MORGAN
LINCOLN The 6tone walls of the white house no more shut Lincoln in from his fellows, from their hopes and sorrows and pride than did the unhewn logs behind which he shivered in the cabin home of his youth. One night he aa n Vi a waa In a prnwii whml ' some one recognized him as president, and exclaimed in surprise, "He is a very common looking man." Whereupon he answered, "Friend, the Lord prefers common looking people. That is the reason he makes so many of them." Lincoln liked people and always kept in touch with the mass. He did not have to take the. word of politioMONEY TO LOAN 46 $ S LOANS S S On Furniture, Pianos, Live Stock, Autos, Talking Machines, Etc. Get our terms before borrowing. ONE TO 20 MONTHS TO PAY All Transactions Strictly Private The State Investment & Loan Company Room 40, 3rd Floor Colonial Bldg. Phone 25G0 FARM LOANS 5 years at 6 and small commission. See me before a raise In rate3. H. B. CUSTER 710 Main St. Phone 2962 PUBLIC SALE ale C. J. & ADA A. CROWE
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AND TAD LINCOLN'S CHILDREN. Robert Todd, born August 1, 1843, now living in Chicago. Edward Baker, born March 10, 1S46 died in infancy. William Wallace, born December 21, 1850, died February 20, 1862. Thomas, born Aoril 4, 1853, died July 15, 1871. ians or newspapers about what the country was thinking. He went to the source. In truth, he needed only to look within himself to find a mirror of the popular mind. As he finished his daily wrestle with senators and the big-wigs, he plunged with zest into what he called his "public opinion bath." Seated in his chair, with one leg thrown over its arm, he received the motley crowa that poured in through the wide open door of his office. Those who approached him in awe found themselves at ease in the presence of a friend, whose manner said to everyone what he said in speech to a regiment: I bappen temporarily to occupy this big white house. I am a 'living witness that any one of your children may look to come here as my father's child has." The man fairly exhaled democracy, fraternity, equality Frederick Douglas said that Lincoln was the only white man he ever met who did not show consciously or unconsciously -that he recognized his color. Sympathy flowed in a constant stream from its fountain in this great PUBLIC SALE PUBLIC SALE The undfirsisrned, having decided to quit farming', they will offer the following articles for sale on the farm 4 miles southwest of Lynn, and mile east of tiloomingport, on FRIDAY, SEPT. 3. 1920 AtUO o'clock a. ni., sharp 5 HEAD OF HORSES 5 Consisting- of team of Black Mares, one Black Gelding. 4 years old. well broke; one Black Mare. 4 years old, well broke; one Gelding:, 2 years old. 1 JERSEY COW; 1 SHEEP FARMING IMPLEMENTS Consisting of 1 Troy Wagon and Hay Ladders, 1 three-horse Van Brunt Fertilier Drill, 1 John Deere Corn Planter with fertilizer attachment: 1 Hoosier Corn Planter, l Adriance 5-foot Mower, double -Discs i one-horse Fertilizer W heat Drill. 1 Oliver Sulkv Breaking Plow. 2 Oliver Hand Breaking Plows, 1 Moline Scotch Clipper Hand Breaking Plow, i Ohio Cultivator, l Roller, Lrun"",hne Prinz-t0(h Cultivator. 3 Spike-tooth Harrows. 60 gallon Feed Cooker. 1 SheeD Dinning Tank. 1 Platform scales, l Kerosene Tank wiih Pump, 1 Blacksmith Vise, 1 Galvanized Hog Feeder, Uravel Bed., one 50-gal. Hog Water Tank, Harness for 10 horses. 1 Stewart Power Horse Clippers and other articles too numerous to mention. FEED Consisting of 13 acres of Corn in field, and Oats Straw in mow. HOUSEHOLD GOODS Consisting of 1 Davenport. 1 Buffet, 1 Side Board. 1 Bookcase. 1 Kitchen Cabinet, 2 Bedsteads, 1 old-fashioned Bureau. 1 Dresser. 1 Sofa, 2 Mattresses. 1 Library Table, 2 Morris Chairs, 1 Rocking Chair, 2 Kerosene Stoves. 2 Bed Springs, 1 Heating Stove and other art ides. TEItMS Made known on day of sale. Lunch will be served by the Willing Workers' class of Blooniingport DEMPSEY C. OZBUN, H. M. HELMICK. Oren E Ross. Auct. O J. Pierson, Clerk PUBLIC SALE
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The undersigned will offer at public sale at his residence one mile north of Cambridge City, on the cast Hagerstown road, beginning at 10 a. m.. on FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1920 the following property: 5 HEAD OF HORSES AND MULES One bay mare, 10 years old. weight 1300; brown mare, 4 years old, weight 1320; 2-year-old gelding; span of bay mare mules 5 and 7 years old, 16'2 hands high, good workers. 7 HEAD OF CATTLE Four head of good milk cows, one yearling heifer, one yearling and one 8-months-old steer. HOGS Four sows with pigs by side and 18 spring pigs. FARMING IMPLEMENTS Johnson wheat binder, Superior corn planter with check rower, Oliver 14-in. sulky plow, Syracuse 16-in. walking plow, drag harjow, Ohio spring-tooth cultivator. Richmond Champion 1-horse wheat drill with fertilizer, tandem disc harrow, Deering mower, 1-horse cultivator, double shovel plow, Birdsall wagon with flat bed and hog racks, gravel bed and log bolsters, good buggy, harness for four horses, set of brass mounted breeching harness, set of hip strap harness, set of good buggy harness, set of work nets, collars and halters. About 12 acres good corn in field. HOUSEHOLD GOODS Majestic range, 3-hole burner oil stove, hard coal burner, soft coal stove, kitchen utensils, tables and chairs, two bedsteads, dresser, commode, davenport, library table, piano, dining room suite and chairs, dishes, rugs, DeLaval cream separator, lamps, glass jars and other articles. Also 90 chickens. Terms made known on day of sale.
Lunch by Willing Workers of Pershing. VANDERBECK & SON, Aucts. PARK GIPE, Clerk.
PAGE ELEVEN
heart. A mother's tears, a baby's cry. a father's plea, a crutch or an -empty sleeve never failed to move Lincoln. "If he has no friend. Ill be his friend." he said, as he stopped the shooting of a soldier, under sentence of a courtmartial. "My poor girl." he said to a woman who pleaded for the life of her soldier brother, "you have come here with no governor or senator or member of congress to speak In your cause; you seem honest and truthful, and you don't wear hoops, and IH be whipped if I don't pardon him." He hated Friday "butcher's flay." as he called It because that was th usual time appointed for carrying out death sentences In the army. "Thej are shooting a boy today. I hope 1 nave not done wrong to allow IL" "There are already too many weeping widows; don't ask me to add on more to the number." On one pardon he wrote, "I think this boy can do more good- above ground than under it." And here is another characteristic message: "If you have not shot Dennis McCarthy, don't." Even the coward had a friend in this brave man. "If God Almighty gives a man a cowardly pair of legs, how can he help them running away with him?" A pigeon hole in his desk was stuffed full of those "leg cases." as he labeled them. A soldier, whom be had spared a dishonorable death before a firing squad,, was found dead on a battlefield, and in his pocket was a photograph of his deliverer, inscribed "God bless President Lincoln." Like this is the oft-repeated story of the sleeping sentinel. Lincoln went personally to see and to pardon that Vermont boy. who repaid him in his first battle by swimming a river under fire again and again to carry the wounded to safety, until he had given his life for his comrades. This native democrat never put on presidental manners He did not need them His inborn dignity protected him. "Good morning," he surprised a passerby at the white house gate at 6 o'clock. "I am looking for a newsboy. When you get to the corner I wish you would send one up this way." The hard muscles and steel nerves of the railsplitter enabled the president to bear responsibilities, labors and annoyances such as would have broken perhaps any other man in the presidential line. He still could grip an axe by the end of the handle and hold it out even with his shoulders. His sense of humor was his safety valve. "If I couldn't tell these stories. I should die," he explained to a solemn congressman who impatiently protest ed that he had not come to the white house to hear jokes. The man who kept all great decisions to himself could not enjoy a littlo joke alone. See him stalking the white house corridor in night shiit and bare legs to read to young Nichelay and Hay, his secretaries, a punning conceit from Theodore Hook, unconscious that he . . . was infinitely funnier," said John Hay. Heris another snap shot from Hay: "Ho read Shakespeare to me, the end of 'Henry VIII' and the beginning of 'Richard III' till my heavy eyelids caught his considerate notice and he sent me to bed." Lincoln's office was almost his prison cell through four terrible years. The shouts of his two little boys at play always were welcome notes or joy to their care-weighted father. Ho never objected to their noisily bursing in upon him, and ofter he joined the children in their boisterous games in the white house grounds. In the dark days when the nation itself was at death's door, one of the boys died. For weeks the grieving father strove in vain to win a spirit of resignation, dropping his work for a day at a time and surrendering to his sorrow. Doubtless the fortitude he gained at last in that wrestle with himself became part of the heroic faith which lifted him above the general despair when the fortunes of the union sank the lowest. After Willie's death, the other boy received a double share of paternal affection. Tad was in the habit of emrtz to his father in the evening and ! making a report of all that had happened since morning, usually falling , uT r , asleep in the midst Of his prattle. Laying the little fellow on the floor i by the side of his desk, Lincoln roturned to his heavy tasks until hi , . . ' . OwH lonS dav was done. hen ne took nis sleeping Doy on nis snouiaer ana carried him off to bed. Peter Karpor, a prisoner at the Columbia County Jail at Bloomsburg, Pa., toolc off his clothes, squeezed through a small opening in the door of his cell and hid behind the main entrance door, so that' when the door was opened by the sheriff he got out. Early the . next morning somebody broke into the jail and stole some eggs, some cake, some canned fruit and the sheriffs badge, and Sheriff Hidley is dead sure that Karpof did the trick. Palladium Want Ads Pay. PUBLIC SALE CLIFFORD HOWARD
Sale
