DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. i ' NO REASON FOR CONFUSION Christian Chronology Really Quite Simple Mntter, Though It Requires a Little Explanation. Using the birth of Our Lord ns n starting point for counting time did not become general until the Chris tian religion lind made conddornblc progress. Some confusion arises from overlooking the fact that the ancient nations had their own systems and their own stnrtlng points. For In stance, the Homans counted from the founding of their city, Home, and when Our Lord was born It was the year 753 according to Itomau chronol ogy, liming taken the jenr In which Our Lord was bom as tin Htartlug point or the new or Christian chronol vuy, the jetirs preceding that starting point could only be counted as years before Christ and the fai flier you go buck Into the pust the greater their number, Just as the greater the num ber the farther you come down from the Marling point towards the pres ent. There Is nothing confuting In this, and the same principle Is ap plied on any through railway time table. A transcontinental time-table counts distances from a terminal both ways, one way east and the of Mr way west. In our chronology thu-year of the birth of Our Lord Is th'e starting point, and the years are counted both ways those that had passed before that event nnd those tlirtf linvc passed since that event. This system Is, of courf-e, In use only In-Ojhrlsthin countries". The Jews be gin to count from the creation, nnd there Is no counting backwards be cause It Is Impossible to go back of that event. USED SYSTEM OF HIS OWN .' Professor Refuted to Allow Proper .-(Spelling to Weigh at All Heavily fr. Upon Him. 0.l course "enough" spells "nuff" unit yet. "calf" Is not spelled "eaugh." 3chool boys, seasoned business men, not to mention school teachers, often tlod the spelling of the English lan guage a bit troublesome. Hut here Is Uf one-time university professor and now eminent scientist who not only limits that spelling "gets him rattled," blt goes so far as to Invent his own tfain of spelling, which exactly follows out; the sound of the word, Hlence we rind such sentences as tljvsp In n recently Issued volume by tfto.Muithropologlcnl department of the unlvoislty museum: fV'lIlz hair waz stll black." j'I'hu two rltlngs when they wer don, oy.eourse wer not alike." ""Souie paragrufs ov III, own wer dront." ','1 say uz nearly az possible be cauz " UMiu author of the volume, which Is tlie'j translation of a legend of thu KeVchl Indians of auntcmnlu, Is Hob erUBurkltt, an Englishman. Complicated Prescription. She's sorry now that she didn't spend inoVo time studying and less time on prom class day and similar commit teos when she was In school and she's trying to ninko up for It by noting down every new and unfamiliar word t-ljei hears to be looked up later In the dictionary. This habit caused her u bjt.of embarrassment the other night. A friend hail told her a now remedy for'son? throat and had written duwn It'sloiiK numu on a slip of paper. 'Qolng to the busy prescription court, tec she handed a slip of paper to a clVrk. lie looked at It. Ho looked hard at It. The other waiting custom ers, were beginning to get Impatient before he llnully turned to the girl. ",';i can't figure It out," he admitted. -'jWhy, It's simple," s'i.o told him. "It's for sore throats, .seo ohl" She hail started to read the "prescription" titoud when she noticed she hud hand ed thu wrong memorandum to the clerk. On It were the Words: ,J "Precarious, Imperceptible." Accommodating, '8ome jears ago, before prohibition was in force, 1 was trawling, making irgreat many small towns. As n rule there was only one hotel In a town, und Invurlably a saloon In the saint: butldlug. I disliked this exceedingly, nnd determined to avoid stopping ul such a place where possible. One eve ning, ullghtlug from a train In a small town, I wne nccoMed by two local hotel hack drivers. ..'Hotel, lady!" thought to mysoir, surely both of these hotels do not nut suloous. So I said to the nearest driver, "Ones your hotel haw a saloon In connection with ltr -He replied, "No, lady, hut we will send out and get anything ym wiuA." , -Chicago Tribune. Paper Once Royal Gift. There was a tlmo when only the no bility, tbo great personages of hUtnry, could enjoy thu use of paper, and then in only the most menger Uiutltles. Only 1,800 years ugo Emperor Trajan otRorae wus the delighted recipient of a munificent gift consisting of '') reams of paper from the emperor of China. Iq that uge ami time, 'JO i earns of the precious fabric wus considered a royal gift Indeed, and only a potentate with the vast resources of China at his ills, posnl eould afford to give u present of such value. One can Imagine tho elation enjoyed by-Trajan upon receiving so gicat a quantity of paper, and thus know that through such generosity he was to alig nment the number of volumes coutalued is "his library. THINKER'S LOT ONE OF JOY But He Hat to Travel a Long and Weary and Rough Road to Attain It. Your education begins when what Is railed your cducntlon Is owr when you no longer are stringing together the pregnant thoughts, the "Jewels fivc-words-long" which grent men hnve given their lives to cut from tho raw material, but have begun yourself to work upon the raw material for re sults which you do not see, cannot predict, nnd which may be long In coming when you take the fact which life offers jou for your appointed, task. No man lias earned the right to In tellectual ambition until he has learned to lay his course by a star which h has never been to dig by the divin ing rod for springs which he may never reach. In saying this, 1 point to that which will make your study hemic. For I say to you In all sad ness of conviction that to think great thoughts you must be heroes as well as Idealists. Only when you hnve wo.-ked alone when you have felt around you n black gulf of solitude more Isolating than that which surrounds the dying man. and In hope and In despair haw trusted to your own unshaken will then only will you have achieved, Thus only cau you gain the secret Isolated Joy of the thinker, who knows that, a hundred years after he Is dead and 'forgotten, men who never henrd of him will be moving to the measure of his thought the Btibtlu rapture of a postponed power, which the world knows not because It lias no external trappings, hut which to his prophetic vision Is more real than (hat which commnuds an army. And If this Joy should not he yours still It Is only thus that you can know that you have done what It lay In you to do can say that you haw lived, and be ready for the end. IYoin Collected Legal Papers by Ollwr Wendell Holmes. ORIGIN OF POPULAR SAYINGS Many That Have In Time Become Household Words Can Be Traced to First User. "A red-letter day" Is an expression which arose out of the old ecelesla.s tlcal calendar, In which festivals and high holidays were llrlnted In red Ink. These Important days consequently be came known as "Red-Letter Hays" hence the term today. "Murder will out" Is a phrase which Geoffrey Chau cer originated, although la the first In stance It was spelt "Mordre wol out." '"Truth Is stranger than fiction" Is a well-used saying, and perhaps it Is not generally known that It was originally employed by Ilyron In his "Don Juan." Escaped with the skin of his teeth," It Is Interesting to observe, originates In thu Bible Job, chapter 11), verse 120. "pi..i,i" n,.it,.ii ,.,.....,. 1.....1 i. i.i. in, i,, ihiiitiu., mi-mil until mi WHICH trees had been "felled" or "tleld." "Necessity Is the mother of Invention" Is well over two and u half centuries old. These well-known words were llrst found In Fran'ek's "Northern Memoirs," written In 10.18. "Eaten her out or house and home," a phrase, In view of the present price of food, un doubtedly repeated by worried house'. wives, was originated by Shakespeare In Ids "Henry IV." "Anything for a quiet life" Is an expression which arose from a play by Mlddleton. bearing that title. "Turn over a new leaf," by the way, was llrst used In tho same play. Death Valley Once Lake. In support of ti(j vlowVfhut Death valley in California waafmerly the bed of a lake, Is tho$llscovery of traces of an nnclent 'Miter-line run ning along thfi-yjhinkH of the enclos lug mountains at' n height of 000 feet. The bottom or the valley Is 200 feet below soa-leTol. The winds from the Pacllle cross four ranires of iiioiin- talus before reaching the valley, and by that time they liiive been drained of their last drop of moisture. It Is said that no spot on earth surpasses Death valley In aridity or Tophet-llke heat. The lake that once tilled It Is believed to have been fed by a river which has now also van Ishe.t The borax deposits of Death Valley are commercially Important, but labor Is all but impossible in a place where to be without water for u single hour In summer means death. Fake Teeth for Bears. Autnial dentistry, says a dentist cor respondent, Is as risky as it is fascinat ing. The tilling of rough or uneven teeth of a lion or tiger requires not only strength but nerve, for you cannot put a wild animal under gas as you can a man or woman. V.'o extract an mdmal's tooth Is far from an easy bus. nest-, and In many cases It Is easier to P"t a screw from a piece of oak by menus of a pair of pliers. " A well known menagerie owner oncu had an old pet. bear fitted out with a com plete set of false teeth. The plates had to he "glued" to the mouth of the beast In order to keep them In place. Crooll Crooll Outside it was cold, dark and rnlti), but from the lighted windows of the regluieiital P. 0. came sounds of mirth and Jolllllcatlon. "Suy, buddy," sutd Post No. 2, Just over and green to the Job, "what does I'. ('. stand for, anyway V" "Oh, thatr answered Post No. 1. an old-timer. "That means pinochle club." 1 Exinauje. MOST TALK NOT CONFESSIVE Assertion Made That Anecdotes Com- pose by Far the Greatest Part of Conversations of Americans. Tor hours a group of men will talk, and all pioblems fall like ducks on n rllle range before their vell-almcd epigrams. It mny be a brilliant ses sion, but we cannot forbear thinking that not many serious thoughts are expressed with fervor, that few hon est emotions hnve adequato utterance. A gathering often Is devoted to nnec dotes, quips and the cracking of kes, like the biblical thorns, under the conversational pot. Of course, much conversation is nee esvnrlly anecdotal, but two truvelers who meet In the smoker of u train crossing our American plains do not tell anecdotes merely, says the New York Sun. There the anecdotes take on more meat and grow In length they become tales. Again, ' however learned we are, we forget our pedan try when we talk In a smoker. Vet over a meal among those we know nod will meet again we slough off our Impulse to modesty nnd sincere sclf-cxpriVslori nnd launch forth In all our drab erudition or else we sparkle In anecdote and say nothing to the point ; forgetting that the hct Jests, aside the point, seem point less. In short, there Is not always enough confess! w conversation between Amerlcins. In France and In Latin America the art of conversation has become an art of confession of the confession, Indeed, of one's faiths, foi bles and fancies. As for us, we feel that no one Is so sympathetic per haps, as to merit listening to our pcrsdnnl histories, or, what Is more to the point, the emotional accom paniment of these histories. WRITER'S RIGHT TO BORROW Highest Authority for the Practice In the Works of the World's Greatest. One reads for thought and for quo tation not less; If he tlnd his thought more finely conceived and uptly ex pressed by another, let him quote with out hesitation or apology. He has the highest authority for the practice. How rich Is Plutarch's page, Mon taigne's, Bacon's I And what they bor row Is of a piece with their own text, giving It added strength nnd grace. I know the fashion of our time affects disdain of borrowing. Hut who is rich enough to refuse, or plead honorably for his excluslveness? Somehow the printer happens to forget his quota tion marks, and the credit of origi nality goes to the writer none the less. The plea Is that quoting oftn Im plies sterility and had taste. Then Shakespeare und his contemporaries were wanting In wit and fine rhetoric. Hear how Montaigne Justifies his practice: "Let nobody Insist upon the mntter I write but my method In writing. Let them observe In what 1 borrow, if I have known how to choose what Is proper to raise or relieve Invention, which Is always my own; for I make others say for me what, either for want of language or want of sense, I cannot myself well express. I do not number my borrowings, I weigh them. And had I designed to raise their es timate by their number, I had made twice as many." Ilronson Alcott. Their Playing-Cards Different. American playing cai;d manufac turers have a prolltable market awaiting them In Mexico and other Spanls.peaklng American countries. ll.it curds must he of patterns differ ent 'from those to which Americana are accustomed. People In those countries demand the Spanish pack, which consists of only -Hi cards, and tens. Furthermore, the face cards are different. The ace (culled "as") Is much like ours; the "rey" (king) Wenrs a crown,, the queen Is repre sented by a young woman, mid the Jack ("caball") Is a horse. Most of the playing cards ued In Spanish-American countries are Im ported from Spain, and are smnller than ours, Commonly they are thin and flimsy, so as to he hard to shuf fle, and tearing easily. History of Potato. "The potato entered this country," Dr. I.uufer said, In an address before the American Association for the Ad vancement of Science, "not us surmised by De Candolle, through tin alleged bund of Spanish adventurers, but In a perfectly respectable niuimer from llerniuda. where It had been Introduced some years previously from England. It Is a prank of fortune that the potato, originally a denizen of Chile and Peru, appears as a naturalized Englishman In the rutted States. The potato bad arrived hi England about iSStf. or a little later." Rather the Contrary. Carried away by the beauty of the heroine on the screen, he murmured, unconsciously, "Isn't she lovely I" "Ewry time you see a pretty girl you forget you're married," mmpihm! Ills better half. "You're wrong, my dear; nothing brings home the fact with so much force." in the Whirl. Dlobson Tho girl Is very keen to get In tho whirl. Taylor Then tell her to come down to our olllci. and come In by the re volving door when a crowd of tnessoti ger boys are "going through. Houston I'est, TEAR UP ' FAMED COBBLEWAY First Pavement Trod by Warbound Yanks In France Is About to Undergo Repairs. The. cobblestone roadways of the quays of Brest, France, are being re paired. Veteran cobblestones that felt the trend of armies from a new land or bore upon tkom the weight of pris oners from the country beyond the Rhine as they worked and watched these same new armies disembark are passing Into the discard. Long and well they have sened their time, giv ing place to new nnd younger ones which are being laid by men us old as the service of those others. Not much sentiment about cobble stones, think the old men of Brest as they dig them up and toss them con temptuously aside for the newer und less worn ones, yet back in America the cobblestones of Brest will linger long In the memory of almost 2,000,000 men. The cobblestones of Brest offered to countless men of the new American armies their ffrst inarch on the soil of France. What doughboy will ever forget tlfem as descending from the Mcuuicr with heavy pack and title, he Mumbled and clattered across them? As they were the first of French soil to be beneath his feet, so were they the lust, as with victory In his kit. with the mud of the Argonnii still on his shoes, he slipped gleefully over them to the waiting transport and home. Worn smooth by nrmy trucks and the tramping of men. the old stones have done their hit. The only echo of those other days that has come to them has been In the trucks of the Amerlcnn Bed Cross, which continue still to roll from enrgo boat to ware house carrying supplies that the peo ple of Europe might live. Poisoned by Spider Bite. Even the true tarantula Is scarcely more venomous than the spider, of which Dr. T. T. Turpln o'f Esmeralda, Coahlla, Mexico, surgeon of the Sier ra Mojnda mines, writes to the Journal of the American Medical association: "The spider that I have known as a poisonous one Is found In many places In southwest Texas and north ern Mexico. It Is small and black, with a white cross on the back. The bite Is distinctly painful and produces swelling. The spot bitten Is generally so small that It Is hardly notlcenble the next day. After the first hour there Is nn noticeable local symptoms, but within a short time after the bite there la Intense pain In the chest, pal pitation of the heart and dlfllculty In breathing. "I was the victim of such a bite and 1 have seldom had more severe pain. I have never thought myself in more danger of death than I did during the two days when I was III, during which I felt it necessary to take nearly a grain of morphine with atro pin. "None of my other cases seemed as severe as wus my own, but several pntlents were quite stele for two days." English Strolling Players. Ten strolling players six women and four men are truvellng the high wars and byways of England carrying a theater neatly packed- up. They represent the Arts League of Service, one of , the objects of which Is to take art in every form Into the heart of rustic life. The players trav el In easy stages of about ten mllqs a day by motor lorry and use local halls wlfcre possible, blit sometimes pluy In the open air. The lorry's acetylene headlights, they find, make excellent "limes." "We put up at vei-y varied places," one of the party told a reporter. "One night we are the gilests of the local squire and the next, perhaps, we are enjoying the hospitality of a miner's family." The programs consist of three short plays together with songs and dances. The sclTeme is beginning to be self supporting, Canada's Auto Industry. -A preliminary Biiney of the auto mobile Industry for the culendar year of 1010 has been completed by the Dominion bureau of statistics. Three different sections cover automobiles, accessories and repairs, respectively. The capital Invested in the Industry totals $.17,000,000, of which Ontario accounts for more than $18,000,000, with a total of 040 out of the 1,280 plants throughout the Dominion. The total number of employees Is K1,0S4. with a payroll of over $15,000,000. lit 1010 there were 01,257 touring cars manufactured In Canada, with a value of over $52,000,000. Trucks numbered 7,527, with an aggregate value of $-1,850,000. Delaware River Power Plan. Announcement of a proposed plan to develop over a half million kilowatts In water power on the Delaware rlwr, at a total cost estimated at 200 mil lion dollars, appears In u recent Issue of Electrical World. Active work will be commenced us soon as authorlru Hon Is received from the federal wa ter power commission. Thu plun calls for the construction of four- dums, with an average head of 80 feet. A steam power plant with a capacity of one hundred thousand kilowatts will be erected somewhere In New Jersey in order to supplement the hydroelectric plant during seasons of low water. Surprising. "It's surprising." "What is!" "How ruany bad things the neigh bors' children do which their parents are sure they wouldn't do.'.' Detroit Free Prvsj. , DO MOST WORK ON THURSDAY Statistics 8how That British Factory Employees Are at Their Best About Midweek. What Is the best workday In Amer ica? lu England It Is Thursday. That Is the finding of Industrial re search board' Investigators of that country. The London Chronicle reports that over a period of twenty weeks the output was registered and "graphs" were made. The workers gave their best on Wednesdays and Thursdays, but the output on Saturday was Invariably low. When doubled (to equalize time) It Is often less than 75 per cent of that on other dayp. Another Important conclusion was thnt the skilled workman Is much more regulnr In his output than the worker not so well qualified. He does not get the "tired Saturday feeling" so soon. In some factories the output arises until Friday, but among the less skilled workmen It wna found thnt Thurs day was tho best working day. An Important consideration which the Investigators kept In mind was that of the atmospheric condition in which work Is done. Records of the air conditions have been taken with the output records. In various plants the Saturday out put was so low that employers found It unprofitable to operate, so they closed down. From this It would ap pear that on a half day the worker does not give the nverage of n half day of production. Itlchnrd Splllane In the Philadelphia Public Ledger. TAITHFUL UNTO DEATH. Mike Mctiorilgal and Jerry McUuf flu, nationally unknown, had been buddies iti the rock-blastlug gang. Owing to a premature explosion, Jer ry got blasted with the rock, and Mike, hi a quandary, wired for In structions. He was told to ship the remains to the nearest undertaker. Mike scrupulously gathered up all Mcfiultln's belongings, even to the broken clay pipe, and sent them to the undertaker with this telegram: "As per orders of The boss 1 ship jou the remains of Jerry McGuftlu. But what will I do with the body?" TICK II KHALI) FOIl MOWS LJ2UAL NOTICES First Pub. June 30, 1921 2w SIIKKMT'S SALE Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an order of County Judge, S. W. NcKinley, of Dakota County, Nebraska, directed to me, Geo. Cain, sheriff, within and for Dakota Coun ty, Nebraska, commanding me to sell a Ford Coupe automobile, bearing engine number 410113, which auto mobile has been declared a common nuisance by said court as provided by law in the case of State of Ne braska vs. Glenn Davis. The said Glenn Davis was on the 25th day of June, 1021, found guilty in the Coun ty Court of Dakota County, Nebraska, to the complaint of unlawfully trans porting intoxicating liquors in said automobile. I will on the 11th day of July, 1921, at 10 o'clock A. M. of said day, at the south front door of the Court House in Dakota City, Dakota Coun ty, Nebraska, sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, for cash, said automobile. Given under my hand this 27th dnv of June, 1921. GEO. CAIN, SheriiV of Dakota County, Nebraska. STATEMENT OF INDEBTEDNESS Of The Farmers' Grain ie Supplj Company of Dakota City, Nebraska I, Elmer H. Biermann, secretary of The Farmers' Grain & Supply Com pany of Dakota City, Nebraska, here by certify that on June 15th, 1921, the indebtedness of the Farmers' Grain & Supply Company was noth ing. ELMER H. BIERMANN, State of Nebraska, County of Da kotu ss. Sworn to and subscribed before me this inth day of June, 1921. HARRY H. ADAIR, (Seal) Notary Public. First Pub. June 30, 1921 4w SERVICE BV Pl'BLICATION. In the District Court of Dakota County, Nebraska. Edith E. Tague, PlaintilV, vs. Otto E. Tague. Defendant. To Otto E. Tague, Defendant: You are hereby notified that on the 21th day of March, 1921. the above named plnintifV, Edith Tague, filed her petition against you in the Dis trict Court of Dakota County, Ne braska, the object and prayer of which are to obtain a decree of di. vorce against you, bused upon the charges thnt you are an habitual drunkard and that you were cruel and inhumnn in your treatment of the plaintiff, and that though amply able, you failed to support the plain tiff and your family, nnd deserted them for more than two years past,' and further that plaintiff may be de croed thf custody and care of your infant child, the issue of said mnr-rine-e, to-wit: Alice E Tague. i You are required to answer tho said petition on or hcfnr Monday, the 8th day of August. 1921. Dated .Inn '7th 10?l. EDITH E. TAGUE. Plaintiff. By Win, P. Warner, Her Attorney. First Pub, June 9, 1921 iw PROBATE NOTICE TO CRKDITOIVS State of Nebraska) Dakota County. ) S3. In the Matter of the Ivstnte of Oltf F, Mogensen, deceased. Notice is hereby given, thnt the creditors of the said deceased will meet he administrator of said es tate, before me, County Judge of Dakota County, Nebruvku, nt tho County Court Kooti in said County, on the 21st day of Julj', 19Ut aid on tho 22n.l day of September., :12!, nt 10 o'clock A. M. each day, for tho purpose of presenting their cIM'ne v for cxmniurtlon, adjustment ard jlf lownnce. Four months are allowed for creditors to present the!.' claims, and one year for tho administrator to settle said estate, from the 21st day of May, 1921. This notice will be published In The Dakota County Herald for four weeks successively prior to the 21st day of July, 1921. Witness mj" hand, nnd seal of .saik' court, this 21st day of May, A. DA 1921. SHERMAN W. McKlNLEY, (Seal) County Judge. Fi' .l Pub. June 9, 1921 -Iw. PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Cotintv f!nm-t nf ltnL-r,i., County, Nebraska. In the Mntter of the Estate of Charles Fosselmann, deceased. Notice is hereby given, that the creditors of the said deceased will meet the Executor of s.ilil .tnto 1,. fore me, County Judge of Dnkota County, - Nebraska, at tho County Court Room in snid county, on the 25th dny of July, 1921, and on the 22nd cay of August, 1921, at 10 o clock A. M., each day, for the pur pose of presenting their claims for examination, adjustment and allow- v ance. Three months nre allowed for creditors to present their claims nnd one year for the executor to set tle said estate, from the 21st day of May, 1921. This notice will be pub lished in The Dakota County Herald for four weeks successively prior to the 25th day of July, 1921. Witness my hnnd, and 3eal of said court, tills 21st day of 'Mav, A. D., 1921. SHERMAN W. McKINLEY, (Seal) County Judge. First Pub. June 9, 1921 -4w NOTICE. Estimate of Expenses of the Village of Dakota City, Nebraska, for the liscal j ear, beginning on April 2(i, 1!2I, and eliding on the last Tires- daj lu April, 1922. Be it resolved by the Chairman and Board of Trustees of the1 Village of Dakota City, Nebraska, that the expenses of said Village for the fis cal year ending the last Tuesday in April, 1922, be, and is estimated as follows: Interest on Water Bonds, and and Sinking fund $1250.00 General Village Purposes, including Salaries 1000.00 Total $2250.00 The total amount of revenues of said Village for the preceding year, amounted to the total sum of $071)2.49. Be it further resolved that the foregoing estimate of expenses for the said current fiscal year, he pub lished in The Dakota County Herald for four successive weeks, as requir ed bv law. WM. BIERMANN, Chairman Board of Trustees. WM. P. WARNER, Village Clerk. (Seal) First Pub. June 16, 1921- -Iw ROM) NOTICE. To Whom it JIaj Concern: The commissioner appUntol to li cate a county road petitioned for ny Fred Bartcls und others, described as follows: Commencing at .the point i f inter section of the Jackson, and Hubbard road with the noith.linc of trt IvW J4NWK, Sec. 12, Twp..2fe, Range 7, East, thence tunning cast on '.he noi th Fection lino of Section 12, Twp. 28, Range 7, and on the north section line of Sections 8 and 9, Twp. 28, Range 8, to the corner of Sections 3, 4, 9 and 10, Twp. 28, Range 8, thence running south on the west line of said Section ten to the easterly tine of the right of way of the C, St. P., M. &. 0. Railway Conlpany, thence running south easterly and east along the easterly and nrrth line of said right of way to the point of inter section with tho north and south public road running through the cen ter of said Section 10, Twp. 28, Rnngo 8, and there terminnte, has reported in favor of the establishment there of, and all objections thereto or claims for damages must be filed in the County Clerk's office on or be fore noon of the 20th day of August, 1921, or such road will be established without reference thereto. GEO. J. EOUCHER, (Seal) County Clerk. fi Webster's New International DICTIONARIES are in use by bust Ticss men, engineers, bankers, judges, architects, physicians, farmers, teachers, librarians, cler gymen, by succestful men and women the world over. Are You Equipped to Win? The New International provides the means to success. It is an all knowing teacher, a universal ques tion answerer. If you seek efficiency nnd ad vancement why notmake dally use of this vast fund of Inform ation? M.000Vocnbulary Terms. 2700 1'aftM. fcOOO Illumrutloiis. Colored I'luttt. 30,000 rironraiihlcal Subjects. 12.000 Dionraphlcul Entries. Regular nd Inda-Paptr Editions. Wrlteforapeo- B imcn paget, iltuitrationi, etc Free, a t of I'ocket Mup U you name this paper, G.&C MERRIAM CC I SprlnjfUld, Hm. mSEZBBBt . ill -, m s mr - ( V 1 Ml !n "w ""-AH" TX,Vmfilr4ritK- ae-