Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 16 September 1927 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE POST DEMOCRAT
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1927.
Business and Professional Directory
ROOM FOR MORE (.Continued rroxn Page One;
1 1
EARL EVERETT
Plumbing, Heating and Gas
General insurance, Fire, Auto, Combination, Plate Glass, Tornado.- Burglary, Holdup, I adjust aii claims. 109 S. High St.
Fitting.
CLARK BROS. Phone 247 317 E. Main
Phone 2642
—wnrrrfl iiii I
■
LOOK!
When you buy a Homer Warm Air Heating System, you provide ideal conditions for comfort and health. See the furnace at Siple’s Barber Shop, 208 North Walnut St.
Thomas V. Miller Attorney-at-Law
WHITELY TIN SHOP. Herman J. Michaels, Prop. 925 E. St. Whitely—Phone 4789
1 512 Wysor Phone 1535 :
Phone 812 South Office 1345 Mulberry FRANCE COAT, CO. It’s a Black Business Bui We Treat You White Wm. F. France, Mgr.
Muncie, Indiana.
Notary Public—Office Phone 429 J. WILBUR SIMS Attorney-at-Law IO21/2 N. Walnut St. MUNCIE, INDIANA
C. A. (Bill) WARFEL Slate, Iron and Tin Roofing, Spouting, Skylights, etc. Prompt service. Estimates cheerfully given. With W. H. Warfel 20 years. All Work Guaranteed. 1224 South Elm Street. Phone 4313-W.
DEPENDABLE SHOE REPAIRING Ladies’ Turns and McKays Our Specialty FLEXIBILITY GUARANTEED By use of U.S. Stapling machine “NIGHT BOX AT YOUR SERVICE” SERVICE SHOE SHOP 8th St. and Hoyt Ave.
NOTICE OF SALE OF BONDS.
DRAINAGE
mmm
J. N. HOWER
South Side Lunch Room Sandwiches of All Kinds Home Made Pies Special Meals 25c Home Cooking. Short Orders. 902 SOUTH WALNUT Formerly at 1002 S. Walnut St.
MONEY TO LOAN AT 6% On strictly modern Muncie dwellings. On five, ten and fifteen years’ time. Interest due each six months. B. R. BRADBURY Room 5 The Anthony Blk.
G - L - A - S - S Window Glass—Auto Glass PLATE GLASS. Mirrors Resilvered A. B. HOOVER The Glazier Replacement in any part of city. Call Phone 479 723 N. Jefferson
WHEN YOU PAY FOR WORK GET GOOD WORK Ask Sclieidegger
Dr. Rollin H. Bunch Specializes in Diagnosis and Treatment of Chronic and Blood Disease Office 201 the Johnson Open 10 A. M.—8 P. M.
ELECTRIC SUPPLIES
No. 5 Western Reserve Phone 5238
Bldg.
Notice to Property Owners If you are thinking of roofing, call phone 3956 and ask us to bring our samples and quote prices. Terms if desired. All Material and workmanship guaranteed. W. J. DANIEL Phone 3956
GLENN’S Sheet Metal Shop See us for Skylights, Metal Ceilings, Slate, Tile and Metal Roofing. Blowpipe ami Job Work. Gutter and Leader Pipe. Rear 213 E. Main St. Phone 310
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Phone 2319 Kirby and Hackley CRIST FURNITURE
CO.
New and Used Furniture, Rugs ind Stoves—Furniture and Stove Repairing, Upholstering. We Call for and Deliver Muncie - Indiana
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Announcement G. M. GILPEN Chiropractor Wishes to announce change of of location from Rivoli Theatre to Columbia Theatre Building. Hours: 9-12 a, m.; 1:30-5; 6:30-8 p. m.
WANTED TO DO—Interior decorating, painting of all kinds. Old work a specialty. Wall paper samples shown in your own home.
PRICES RIGHT.
J. A. Driscoll. Phone 1448
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W. H. DORTON Plumbing and Heating Estimates Cheerfully Given Ph. 4816-W—900 Wheeling Ave. Muncie, Ind.
LOOK! LOOK!
Just Think of It!
Old Mirrors made new. Also general carpenter, contractor and repair work. All Work Guaranteed. INDIANA MIRROR WORKS.
C. W. KESOT, Prop.
Res. Phone 2965—Muncie, Ind
.. .
DOMESTIC COAL and SUPPLY CO. Coal, Cement, Roofing, Brick, Plaster, Tile, Sewer Pipe, Etc. 500 S. Monroe St. Franklin E. Fantz, Mgr. PHONE 271
ST. JO HN HOTEL
New Management ALBERT REES, Prop.
327 EAST JACKSON ST.
Telephone 162 ,
ROOMS BOARD
DAY OR WEEK. ALL MEALS 25c HOME COOKING ALL BUSES HALF BLOCK OF
HOTEL
REAL HOME FOR WORKING MEN.
Murray & Scott Jewelers & Diamond Merchants. 265 Johnson Bldg.
HARRY J. STONEBERGER Lawyer llOVz East Main Street, Phone 4700 ■
Clendenin & Son Builders of Small Homes. Four to Six Room
Houses from $1,500 to $3,000 Phone 1936-W
State of Indiana, Delaware County.
Before the Board of Commissioners of Delaware County, in the
State of Indiana.
In the matter of the proceedings for drainage hy George F. Heath
et al.
Notice is hereby given hy the undersigned, Auditor of Delaware County, Indiana, that pursuant to an act of the General Assembly of jthe State of Indiana of the 1919 ] session, at pages 775 to 781, inclujsive, of the Acts of 1919, that at j the hour of ten o’clock A. M. on the list day of October, 1927, at the !office of the Treasurer of Delaware County, Indiana, in the Court House in the City of Muncie, in j Delaware County, State of Indiana, 'the Treasurer of Delaware County, | Indiana, will proceed to sell to the Ihighest and best bidder, for cash I at not less than the face value 'certain drainage bonds of the face or par value of $4,800.60 bearing interest from and after the 7th day jof June, 1927, at the rate of six per cent per annum, payable semijannually, on the 15th day of May and the 15th day of November of [each year for a period of five (years. Said bonds have been issued !in strict compliance with the laws | of the State of Indiana and pursuant to and with an order of the [Board of Commissioners of the I County of Delaware, in the State of Indiana, authorizing and ordering the issue and sale of said bonds for the purpose of providing funds for the construction and the costs and expense incident thereto of the drainage reported in the above entitled proceedings and known as the George F. Heath et. al drainage which, drainage was petitioned for by George F. Heath and others in the Delaware Circuit Court of the County of Delaware in the State of Indiana and established by the said Delaware Circuit Court of Indiana, and which proceedings is now pending in said court. Said bonds will be ten in number, dated June 7, 1927, each being for the sum of $480.06. The first of said bonis will be due and payable on the 15th day of May ,1928, and . two each year thereafter until all of said bonds shall have been paid. The right is reserved to reject any and all bids. Dated Muncie, Indiana, September, 8, 1927. W. MAX SHAFER Auditor, Delaware Coutny, Indiana. Sept. 9 & 16. CITY ADVERTISEMENTS
nouncement of the big event. The names of those who have been nominated appear below: DISTRICT NO, 1. Mrs. M. Schweitzer, 605 W. 9th St. 5,000 Miss Agnes R. Dill, 217 E. Seymour St. 5,000
Charles Kern,
214 E. 7th St. —-5',00G Miss Glida Stewart, 1905' E. Highland 5,000 Mrs. Effie Dowling, 1200 W. 2nd St. 5,000
Mrs. R. Bigelow,
1729 S. Elliot St. 5,00i»
Mrs. Elizabeth Swank,
317 So. Monroe St. 5,000
Mrs. Liefenbaugb,
216 E. 12th St. 5,000 1 Miss Betty Williamson, Yorktown pike 5,000
DISTRICT NO, 2.
I Miss Sarah Lineback,
Albany 5,000
'Miss Pauline Sollars,
! R. R. No. 8 -5,00(1
j Miss Helen Rinker,
Oakville — 5,00u j
j Mrs. Paul Saunders,
Shideler 5,000
I Miss Mary Hiatt,
j Gaston 5,000
Mrs. Dot tie Wingate,
Selma 5,000
Miss Vera Richman,
Daleville ' 5,000 Mrs. Maudie Reynolds, Cowan 5,000
Henry Waldron,
Yorktown, R. R. No. 2 —r-v/OiTTf
0
Department of Public Works Office of the Board City Hall, Muncie, Ind. Notice to Contractors and to the
Public:
Notice is hereby given, to the |public and to all contractors, that the Board of Public Works of the City of Muncie, in the State of Indiana, invites sealed proposals for the construction, in said city, according to the respective improve ment resolutions below mentioned, and according to the plans, profiles, drawing and specification therefor on file in the office of said Board of each of the public improvements herein below described
towit:
I. R. No. 299-1927, For grading and graveling of Fourteenth Street from Walnut Street to Franklin
Street.
I. R. No. 331-1927, For cement sidewalk on North side of 12th Street from Port Avenue to Utica Avenue: also cement sidewalk on South side of 12th Street from Port Avenue to Rochester Avenue. I. R. No. 344-1927, For, cement curb and gutter on both sides of Linden Street from North Street to Riverside Avenue. Each bidder is also to file with the Board an affidavit that there has been no collusion in any way affecting said bid, according to the terms of Sec. 95, of the Act of March 6th, 1905. (Acts 1905, p. 219) All such proposals should be sealed, and must be deposited with said Board before the hour of nine o’clock in the forenoon of the 20th day of September, 1927, and each such proposal must be accompanied by a certified check payable to said City, for the sum equal to two and one-half per cent. (2%%) of City Civil Engineer’s estimate which shall be forfeited to said City as liquidated damages, if the bidder depositing the same shall fail duly and promptly to execute the required contract and , in case a contract shall be awarded him on such accompanying proposal. Said Board reserves the right to ject any and all bids. BY ORDER OF THfi BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS. Mary E. Anderson, Clerk.
THE “(NEVER (Continued from Page One) dozen delegates. As it was the impossible Wilbur Ryman came within twelve votes of defeating him. It has taken him entirely too long to get mad. He is giving utterance to sentiments which are right and proper hi their place, but why didn’t he enlist when the war was on, instead of watiting until it was over to do all his shouting? Mr. Gilliom is assuming too much the role of Christopher Columbus, who made the first discovery of an evil which the Post-Dem-ocrat recognized and began battling as early as the spring of 1922, two years before Mr. Gilliom was first elected to office. As a matter of fact there were few recognized politicians of either party, in Indiana who had the nerve to take issue /with the Klan while it was a going concern. Even at this late date, with the Klhn as dead as a mackerel, there are some dumb democrats in Indiana who persist in laying flowers on the grave of the deceased. The twelfth district democrats held a meeting near some lake in Northern Indiana Wednesday. The inevitable “leaders from various parts of the state” were there and these great leaders were quoted by the Indianapolis News as say-1 ing that Indiana will go JTfa.fUH) I republican next year if Al ’Shnitli I is nominated for president. The imperial wizard and Lee j Smith, the Indiana dragon, sue-1 cessor to the illustrious Steve, say the same thing so that, ought to make it unanimous. Only it
doesn’t.
Personally I would rather see Al Smith lose Indiana by a million and he defeated in every state in the union, than to try to look pleasant over the election of a democrat for president endorsed by the imperial wizard. The democratic Party in Indiana can easily suvlve another licking at the polls, but a few more meetings like the one near the lake will mean taps and
I don’t mean maybe.
A plan is on foot to hold democratic meetings in every congressional district in Indiana and it can safely b e predicted that the state “leaders” will migrate from place to place, putting out the hunk about Al Smith, when they know that a straw vote among Indiana democrats would show Smith
to l)e a ten to one favorite.
The rank and fil e of both political parties are preparing to part with discredited leadership. f rhey aie sick and tired of the same old
faces and the same old hunk.
The railing and the raving of professional windjammers has ceased to enthuse and enthrall. The elaborate discussions in daily newspapers hy so-called political vi iters (so-called because they knows less about politics than a new horn babe) is a pain in the tummy for the suffering readers The voters of Indiana are’irW dean through. They are demanding a new deal from a clean deck. They ar e tired of being cold-decked hy known cheaters who deal them
deuces and nine-spots from top, bottom and middle.
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the
Relics Recall Early Days of Golden West A gold pen that was used by Gen. George A. Custer to write the first account of the discovery of gold in the Black bills is in the possession of the city of Chicago, with a number of other relics on exhibition there. The pen was presented by Custer to Col. W. F. Cody, “Buffalo Bill,” who later presented it to Mrs. Michael Russell of Deadwood. Among other valuable relics “n the Russell collection are a highly decorated buckskin coat and a rim-fire revolver that was carried by “Wild Bill” Hiekok. The coat was given (0 “Buffalo Bill” by a squaw on the Pine Ridge reservation and was worn hy the famous scout during the European tour of his Wild West show when he appeared before many kings and queens. Other articles listed are the ox yoke used on the first “bull team” that came to the Black hills, a buffalo skull picked up on Custer’s trail in the hills in 1874, and a hatband worn by Sitting Bull.
Phone 1206 Yards al Mock Street and Ohio Avenue. Famous for Fine Fuel A Better Fuel for Every Purpose.
SERVICE QUALITY
FRIENDLY DEALINGS
Phone for Our Prices.
Props-Dunn Motor Co.
225 N. High St.
Plume 824
ALL USED CARS PRICED IN PLAIN FIGURES 1927-Chevrolet Landau Sedan. 1926-Chevrolet Coupe. 1925-Ford Coupe. 1925-Ford Sedan. 1925-ChevroIet Coach. 1925Tord Touring. 1925-Chevrolet Coupe. 1924-Ford Roadster. Open Evenings—Sunday Until Noon
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DELAWARE COUNTY CENTENNIAL 3^>aturing HAMMWRICAL PAGEANLSPfCTOJ
Because there’s absolutely no waste when you heat your water with gas, ■Because neither time nor fuel is wasted in “firing up.’’ Just turn on the gas and hot water flows in a steaming flood. -Because you do not have to provide storage space for gas fuel, -Because you don’t pay for it till after you use it-no money tied up in a storage bin. -Because you pay for nothing that’s not actual heat, no smoke going up the chimney in a total MAY WE GIVE YOU A FREE ESTIMATE OF THE COST OF INSTALLING A LAS WATER HEATER IN YOUR HOME AND EXPLAIN ABOUT OUR EASY PAYMENT PLAN?
Central Indiana GAS COMPANY
Phone 754
300 E. Main SL
m.
Performances Daily at 8 p.
Gen. Admission, $1—Reserved Seats, 50c
inclement, weather performances held on first day
In ease of favorahle-
Big Industrial, Educational, Agricultural I Parade, Wednesday, Sept. 28, at 2:00 p. m. I Free Entertainment 2:00 p. in. Each Day — Court House Yards.
ECONOMY
DURABILITY
P. R. K. Keeps Its Promise We make a new car out of your old one with P. R. K. The lowest priced, most durable paint job on this earth. i P. R. K. is O. K’d. by public approval. Let us refinish your car at the price you want to pay. We invite comparison. Come in and get your chance on a free paint job. Shops from Coast to Coast. P. R. K. AUTO PAINT SHOP
RANDOLPH COAL & SUPPLY CO.
BLUE BLAZE — SUPERIOR BLOCK AND POCAHONTAS COAL
Order Now. Earl F. Randolph, Mgr. Phone 2081
Cars on Track 208 Hoyt Ave., Muncie, Ind.
1310 So. Walnut St. 36 HOURS’ SERVICE
Phone 294; SATISFACTION
Cat Commits Suicide A constable patrolling his beat at Blackburn recently saw through the window of a room at the side of a confectioner’s shop a cat, apparently dying. The constable forced an entrance, and found the cat had turned on the tap of a gas main. Artificial respiration was applied to the cat, and It revived. A new tap was put on the gas main, but a few days later the cat again turned on (he tap and was dead when found.— London Mail.
Desert Cannibalism A teacher in Indiana told her primary class about tne likes of th* desert children; their games, clothing, food, etc. One article of food they had for dinner was roast kid. The next day she asked class mem-: bers to tell what they had learned about the children of the desert. The first hand raised was not that of a red-headed boy on the back seat, but the bright-eyed boy with raven locks, sitting near the front, who proudly answered: “They had roast bov for dinner.” ^ .. j
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