Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 12, Number 199, Decatur, Adams County, 24 August 1914 — Page 4
JicaocaoEaEasasacsi 8 THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS 8 i -JEJOEJOEjr-rnK E" Corrected Every Afternoon j| -ti— —irinrano i ir-M
EAST BUFFALO. East Buffalo, N. Y„ Aug. 24—(Special to Daily Democrat) —Receipts, 8,000; shipments, 2.852 today; receipts, 4.460; shipments, 760 yesterday; official to New York Saturday, 1,520; hogs closing steady. Medium and heavy, [email protected]; Yorkers. [email protected]; lights. $9.25; pigs, $8.75©59.00; roughs, sß.lo@ $8.30; stags, [email protected]; cattle, 5,000; slow; 15c lower; choice steers, $7.75© $9.00; heifers, [email protected]; cows, $3.75© $7.25; Stockers, $4.75® $6.75: sheep, 6,000; strong, choice lambs, [email protected]; yearlings, $6.00© $6.7’; wethers, $5.75®56.25; ewes, [email protected]. T. MURK. Corn $1.15 Clover seed $8.75 Aliske Seed $7.75 Wheat 95c Rye 70c Barley 45c @ 50c • Timothy Seed $2.00 to $2.25 Oats 40c NIBLICK 4 C«. Eggs 21c Butter 13 to 22 FULLENKAMM. Eggs 21c Butter 14@25 BERLSNGS. Indian Runner Ducks 8c Spring Chickens 14c Fowls 10c Ducks 9c Geese 8c Y’oung turkeys 12c Tom turkeys 12c Old hen turkeys 12c lid Roosters 5c Butter 16c Eggs 20c Above prices paid for poultry free from feed.
4EN our illustrated catalogue ex plains how we teach the barber trade in few weeks, mailed free. Write Moler College, Indianapolis. 193t6 FOR SALE OR TRADE—Eight room modern home in Marion, Ohio. Will take stock of goods In exchange. Chas. Brimfield. Mansfield, O. 197t3
SB.OO SB.OO NIAGRRA FALLS AND RETURN VIA CLOVER LEAF ROUTE August 16 and 3OtH, 1914 Lake Shore, Electric and Steamer Limit 12 days See H. J. Thompson, Agt for Particulars LOW RATE EXCURSION VIA CLOVER LEAF ROUTE ...T0... BLUFFTON, MARION, KOKOMO & FRANKFORT Every Sunday See J. H. THOMPSON, Agent Decatur for Information jj Rocobond n : Stucco A material used on any exterior walls, specified for wood walls especially. No cement, sand, lime or even water to be used. rt For further information write or call on | o GEORGE BAUMGARTNER, o [] BERNE, INDIANA Ready to meet any calls with samples or circulars. Makes a House Warmer in Winter and Cooler in Summer . | DWhen building new, the cost is very little more I j than siding and painting. JJ (Ly rri ■■
KALVER MARKETS. Wool 21c@25c Beet hides . 11c ’ Calf ISc Tallow 5c Sheep pelts 25c @sl.oo LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET, . Spring Chickens 14c Indiana Runned ducks 8c I Fowls 10c Ducks 9c . Geese 8c Young turkeys 12c Tom turkeys 12c Old hen turkeys 12c Old Roosters 5c Butter 16c i i Eggs 20c Above prices para for poultry free from feed. DECATUR CREAMERY CO. (Prices for week ending Aug. 24,1914.) Butter fat No. 130 c Butter fat No. 2 28c Butter wholesale 30c Butter retail 33c COAL PRICES. Stove $7.85 Egg $7.60 Chestnut, hard $7.85 Pea, hard $6.85 Poca, Egg and Lump $4.75 W. Ash $4.50 V. Splint $4.25 H. Valley $4.00 R. Lion $4.25 Cannell $6.00 J. Hill $4.75 Kentucky $4.50 Lurig $4.50
FOR RENT—Riverside barn. Possession Sept. Ist. Inquire of John Smitley, 221 No. Ist. street. ts. A GOOD 7 ROOM HOUSE—For sale i small payment down, balance same as i rent. Also Moving Picture show will sell cheap if taken soon. Erwin & 1 Michaud. ts
NOT HAUL) TO TEST DIAMOND Simple Methods by Which the Genuine May Be Dlctlngulehed From the Artificial. Marvelously beautiful as are the imi tat ion diamonds of today, an experienced eye never mistakes them for ths genuine article. The average person, however, can easily be deceived, and the following simple tests should assist him when striking a bargain. The facets on a real diamond are rarely so regular as those of really good imitations. With the latter the greatest care has to be taken in grinding and polishing, so that there shall be no regularity in the reflections of the light. A file cannot scratch a real diamond but quickly injures an imitation. A sapphire is the next hardest stone to a diamond and Is an even better test than the file.
Thrust a diamond ring into a bowl of water and the stones will glitter through the liquid, but an Imitation stone loses all Its brilliancy under wa ter. If you look through a diamond at a black dot on a piece of white paper you will see one black speck quite clearly. If the dot Is blurred or multiplied the stone Is probably not genuine. Place one drop of water upon the face of a diamond, touch it with a point of a pencil—the drop will keep Its globule form and the stone remain dry. If the brilliant Is an Imitation the water at once spreads out. BY LIGHT OF THE EARTH Somber Region* of the Sky Illuminated by Reflection* From Our Own Planet It has been remarked that the globular light from the whole sky is superior to the sum of all the quantities of light sent to us separately by the stars. Even the most somber regions seem lit by a diffused light which truly has Its origin In the terrestrial atmosphere. It Is the light of the earth. Different people have endeavored to evaluate the Intensity of this earth light and have found that it is of the order of one-tenth part of the intensity of a star of the first order of magni tude. It is attributed, at least partially, to a permanent aurora borealis which Is revealed by the characteristic green ray which Is observed on obscure nights in the whole heavens. There is probably something else; the continual bombardment of the upper atmosphere by meteoric swarms and cosmic dust may also illuminate. The mass of meteoric matter which would suffice to explain the observed phenomena has been calculated and the figure found is In good agreement with that given by a direct calculation of the quantity of cosmic matter which strikes the earth. Microblan Life. Microbian cultures are often very difficult, says Chemical News. M. Adrien Lucet, member of the Academy of Medicine, has just shown that a regular agitation by shaking of the liquid mediums used in bacteriology, contrary to the opinion that is general ly admitted, acts favorably on these Infinitely little creatures. By making these bouillons undergo a slow and continuous movement he has, in fact been able to obtain cultures as many as eight times more abundant of the microbes of cholera, typhus fever, car buncie, diphtheria, the glanders, dysentery, and even of lockjaw, the microbe of which can only be cultivated without the penetration of any air. It was M. Chauveau who communicated M. Lucet’s study to the academy. Fighting Fire at Sea. The terrors of a fire at sea may be mitigated somewhat by an apparatus which has been devised to assist sailors in extinguishing fires that may break out aboard their vessels. Dense smoke often makes it practically impossible for unprotected fire fighters to reach the vicinity of a blaze. The apparatus, which looks like a diving outfit, and resembles It in some respects, enables a man to go through any quantity of smoke and reach the center of the trouble. The fire fighter dons the smoke helmet and a constant supply of fresh air ie pumped in to him through the supply pipe by means of bellows. The air-supply pipe also serves as a speaking tube, the special connection enabling the officer to keep in constant communication with the fire fighter.—American Boy. Word for Doctor*. The physician who says a man Is saturated with disease and makes bold to give that information concerning his patient secretly to a third party, is not true to his trust. Men who are sick go to their physicians to be healed, and not to furnish a subject for gossip. And it is well for society that this bond of secrecy exists; If it did not the word of a physician would be doubted in some circumstances requiring that great reliance be placed on it.—Brooklyn Eagle. Nature as Sculptor. A really remarkable natural curiosity is the tree known as the “Black Boy,” near Tallangatta, Victoria. It gained its name from the curious formation assumed by a portion of the trunk in its process of decay, the likeness to a boy about to make a leap being extraordinary. Owing to Its elevated position, this "statue" ! stands out in quite a startling man
CURED OF ANNOYING HABIT Stuttering Englishman Routed Affliction by Silencing Hl* Preliminary Efforts to Speak. As to the stammerer* and stutterer* who are seeking a cure from their disorder, even in picture show* —may I repeat the personal cure? At about fourteen 1 was attacked by a bad habit of stammering and couldn't start a remark without it, says a writer in the London Chronicle. The other boys laughed at me, and elders projected complicated cures. But the absurdity of the situation appealed to me. Why couldn't I say "I” at once, without the preliminary stammer? It was obviously necessary to stutter, often before saying “No.” Well, why shouldn’t I stutter to myself? The method was adopted. When a sentence was to be started the stammer was carried out In silence —if a dozen “ns” had to start a "No.” And after a few days of deliberate speech, with the stammer done in silence, I was delivered entirely from the habit. There are, of course, the stammerers who cultivate the art in conversation, and who have not the least wish to be cured. Because, as with Charles Lamb, the point of the remark Is delayed for the moment by the hesitancy. Curiosity, expectancy, anxiety are aroused, and then the amazing word comes. The tremendous fluency of our present political speakers raises a certain longing for a stammerer on the platform, for the man who could make you wonder whether he were about to burst —what he was about to burst with—and then after the dreadful suspense—said it. But the word must have been there all the time. WHEN HEROISM WAS WASTED Small Boy* Sadly Disappointed in the Nature of the "Enemy” They Went Forth to Fight. A small Irvington boy discovered one evening a light flashing fitfully from the window of his neighbor’s chicken house. The neighbor was away from home, so it could not be a legitimate Invader of the hennery. The small boy felt the thrill of the situation and set his wits to work. It chanced that the air rifle craze had struck that locality with the result that there was an abundance of militia material, and in 15 minutes the youthful general had organized an air rifle brigade. Guards, paired off to bolster up each other’s courage, were set all around the place in groups of two with strict Instructions to “shoot to kill” if the robber tried to escape. Then a bunch of picked warriors, their deadly weapons ready for instant use, sneaked under cover of a fence nearer to the danger zone to learn whether anything could be heard. All was quiet. In fact the light had disappeared from the window. Marveling much, the scouting party withdrew to their former station for a conference, when lo! the light shone forth again. Here was an element of mystery that certainly added spice to the adventure, but it was also awe-inspiring. Then some one more observant than the rest discovered that the ghastly illumination was a reflection from an arc light at the street corner half a square away.—lndianapolis News. If There Were No Flower*. Can we conceive what humanity would be if it did not know the flowers? If these did not exist, if they had all been hidden from our gaze, as are probably a thousand no less fairy sights that are all around us, but invisible to our eyes, would our character, our faculties, our sense of the beautiful, our aptitude for happiness, be quite the same? We should, it is true, in nature have other splendid manifestations of luxury, exuberance, and grace; other dazzling efforts of the superlative forces; the sun, the stars, the varied lights of the moon, the azure and the ocean, the dawns and twilights, the mountain, the plain, the forest and the rivers, the light and the trees, and lastly, nearer to us, birds, precious stones and woman. These are the ornaments of our planet. Yet but for the last three, which belong to the same smile qf nature, how grave, austere, almost sad, would be the education of our eye without the softness which the flowers give!—Maurice Maeterlinck. Bargain-Hunting Habit. A Kansas City matron, whose family often had occasion to laugh at hei bargain-hunting campaigns, decided re cently to issue upward of a hundred invitations to a social function. While down town in company with her daugh ter attending to some preparatory matters, the daughter suggested that they stop at a post office substation in a department store and purchase stamps with which to mail the invi tations. "Oh, no,” replied the mother. "We need so many let’s go up to the post office; maybe we can get them cheap er.”—Kansas City Star. Zealous Enforcer of Law. “Sorry, gentlemen,” said the new constable, “but I’ll hev to run ye In, We been keepin’ tabs on ye sense ye left Huckleberry Corners.” "Why, that’s nonsense!” said Dubbleigh. “It’s taken us four hours to come twenty miles, thanks to a flabby tire. That’s only five miles an hour ” "Sure!” said the new constable, “but the speed law round these here parts is ten miles an hour, and, by Jehoshaphat I’m goln’ to make you ottermobile fell era live no to it”
IN FULL SWING (CONTINUE# FROM PAGE ONE) Tuesday. I Morning—Children’s Hour. Miss ’ Bond. Lecture, “As a Man Thinks' — 1 Mr. Mills. Admission 25 cents, chil- _ dren 15 cpnts. t Afternoon — Concert, Welch-Chris- ! tensen Baker Co. Monolouge, “A • Mesage from Mar*,” Mr. Newens. • Admission 35 cents, children 15 cents., ’ Evening—Concert. Welch-Christen-1 • sen Baker Co. Lecture. “The Haunt- ’ ed House, Edward Amherst Ott. Admission 35 cents, children 15 cents. Wednesday. ’ Morning—Children’s Hour. Miss i Bond . Lecture, “Fiddles and For- ■ tunes” —Mr. Mills. Admission 25 1 cents, children 15 cents. 1 Afternoon —Concert. Haymar & ’ Neff Company. Lecture, "The | Heart of Tropical Africa”—Dr. Col- . ledge. Admission 35 cents, children ■ ■ 15 i Evening—Concert, Haymar & Neff 1 Company. Drama: "Shakespeare's “Twelfth Night." Ben Greet Players. ’ Admission 50 cents, children 25 cents. Thursday. ' GRAND MUSICAL FESTIVAL. i Morning—Children's Hour. Miss i Bond. Lecture, “The Passing of the I Third Floor Back” —Mr. Mills. Ad- ' mission 25 cents, childretf 15 cents. ’ Afternoon —Musical Recital —MarI cus A. Kellerman. Admission 50 cents, children 25 cents. Evening Concert. Westmister choir. . Admission 50 cents, children 25 cents. Friday. GRAND MUSICAL FESTIVAL. Morning—Children’s Hour. Miss Bond. Lecture, “The Melting Pot” — Mr. Mills. Admission 25 cents, children 15 cents. Afternoon —Ban Concert. Bohumir 1 Kryl and his Band. Admission 50 cents, children 25 cents. Evening—Band Concert and Grand , Opera. Bohumir Kryl and his Band. . The Denton Grand Opera Company. I With Mme. Cafarelle. Admission 50 cents, children 25 cents. Saturday. ' Morning—Children’s Hour. Miss , Bond. Lecture, “The Case of Becky” , —Mr. Mills. Admission 25 cents, chil- ’ dren 15 cents. Afternoon —Musical Prelude, Sam • Bellino, accordeonist. Lecture, speak1 er to be announced later. Admission, 35 cents, children, 25 cents. J Evening—Children’s night. Sam Bel- > lino and Merton & Colby. Admission, i 50 cents, children, 25 cents. Sunday. I Afternoon —Sacred Concert. Kellogg- ’ Haiues. Lecture-Sermon —Montaville ’ Flowers. Admission 35 cents, children , 15 cents. Vesper Service. Evening—Sacred Concert. The Kel-logg-Haines Singing Party. Admission i 35 cents, children 15 cents. Admis- ’ sion to children’s Hour free to all. 1 o 1 FOR SALE. At Belmont Stock Farm, 2% miles r northeast of Decatur, % mile north of . Dent schol house, ’phone 8-L, Hamp- ' shire hogs at farmers’ prices, pigs, ’ boars, bred sows and gilts, Holstein • cattle, bulls, all ages, a few good reg- ’ istered cows, Shropshire sheep, two ’ good bucks, Shetland ponies, White ’ Plymouth Rock chickens, pea fowls. I Write for prices or come and see ~ them. We can please you. t m-w-f ROY N. RUNYON. 5 O NOTICE. 5 t W’e, the undersigned clothing deal- ) ers, agree to close our respective . clothing stores at 6 o’clock p. m., evr ery evening of this week, excepting ■ Saturday, on account of Chautauqua f week: p Holthouse, Schulte & Co. 3 Teeple, Brandyberry & Peterson. . Vance & Hite. The Myers-Dailey Co. o — F HAVE YOU ANY DITCHING TO DO » ON YOUR FARM? » _____ As I have my ditching machine in p L this city I am in a position to do any y kind of ditching work on your farm t or any other place. All those figurihg d on having any ditching work done 0 will do well to see me. Leave word at 1 the Krick & Tyndall Tile Co. Thomas Lahey. 194t6 ; o ( NOTICE. I will start my cider mill Tuesday Aug. 18th and will make cider every v Tuesday and Thursday until further i, 'notice. P. KIRSCH. ts b| —o IFOR SALE —Good Holstein bull calf, h i Chris Marbach, R. F. D. No. 8, Box 3 60, Decatur, Ind. 199t3 FOR SALE —A fine new eight room cottage with a good cellar, drove e well, city water and cistern, electric jr lights, telephone and rrult trees. Lot J has a 38 foot frontage. Located at 610 i North 3rd st. See J. A. BLEW, the •horse shoer. ts
NOTICE TO VOTERS OF ADAMS COUNTY. INDIANA. Notice Is hereby given that the Board of Commissioners of Adan s County Indiana, at their reguhtr A • gust seston for the year 1914. b> P p-- order duly entered of record, did fix and establish the following platein which the Registration r <l the several precincts shall s t and hold their sesions, botth regt Bar and special, for the - vei,r J ' Wo , d Name of Precinct and Place of Ho Ing Sessions. East Union- Regular voting place, Kohr school house. West Unkn- Regular voting place, Brodbeck schoolhouse. East Root Regular voting place. Aber school house. . West Root Regular voting place. Monmouth school house. . North Preble- Regular voting place Freidheim school house. South Preble Regular voting place, school house No. 5. | North Kirkland-Regular voting place, Peterson school house. South Kidkland Regular voting place, Honduras school house. i North Washington—Regular voting place. Ben Eiting's residence. South Washington Regular voting place, Reinker school House. North St. Mary’s—Regular voting place, Bobo school house. South St. Mary’s—Regular voting place, Pleasant Mills school house. North Blue creek— Regular voting place, school house No. 7. South Blue Creek—Regular voting place, school house No. 6. North Monroe— Regular voting place, Monroe schol house. Middle Monroe —Regular voting place. Election school house. Berne “A”—Regular voting place, Cottage hotel. Berne “B”— Regular voting place, town hall. French— Regular voting place, Election school house. North Hartford—Rear room of Bank of Linn Grove, Ind. Soutli Hartford—Regular vot’ng place, rear room of Perryville store. North Wabash—Regular voting place, Election school house. Ceylon—Regular voting place, Ceyon school house. Geneva “A”—Regular voting place, caliboose. Geneva “B”—Regular voting place, C. Haviland's building on Line street. East Jefferson— Regular voting place, Booker school house. We:, Jefferson—Regular voting place, Buckmaster school house. Decatur, First Ward “A”—Regulai voting place, Linn & Patton shop. Decatur. First Ward “B” —Regular voting place. Decatur Egg Case office. Decatur, Second Ward "A” —Regular voting place, basement of court house.
Decatur, Second Ward “B”—Regular voting place. Nichols tin shop. Decatur, Third Ward "A" —Regular voting place, Hilthouse livery barn. Decatur, Third Ward “B” —Regular voting place, blackhmith shop. Notise is also further given that the several boards of registrations will respectively meet at the places above indicated in each of said precincts. The first or special session of said board will be held on Saturday, September 5, 1914, and shall be known as the September session. The second or regular session shall be held on Monday, October 5, 1914, and shall be known as the October session. CHRISTIAN EICHER. WILLIAM REPPERT, DAVID J. DILLING, Board of Commissioners. T. H. Baltzell, Auditor of Adams County. o- . . For Wayne & Springfield Ry. Company. TIME TABLE. Northbound. Cars leave Decatur at 5:,50. 8:30 11:30, 2:30, 5:45, 9:30; arrive at Fort Wayne at 6:53, 9:40, 12:40, 3:40, 6:55 and 10:40. Southbound. Leave Ft. Wayne at 7:00, 10:00,1:00, 4:00, 7:30, 11:00; arrived in Decatur at 8:10; 11:10; 2:10; 5.10, 8:40, 12:10. Connections are made at Fort Wayne with the Ft. Wayne & Northern Indiana Traction Co., The Toledo & Chicago Interurban Railway Company, The Ohio Electric, and Indiana Union Traction Company; also with the Pennsylvania, Wabash Nickle Plate, L. S. & M. S„ C. H. & D„ and G. R. & I. railroads. Freight Service. Freight service consists of one train each way daily; Leaving Decatur at 7:00 a. m. and returning, leaving Fort Wayne at 12:00 a. m. This enables shippers to telephone orders and receive shipments promptly. W. H. FLEDDERJOHANN, General Manager, - . Deca ir, Ind. — o— CAR LOAD OF MULES. We have lor sale at the Decatur Horse Sale Company’s stables 16 head of choice Missouri Mules which we will sell at private sale to farmers or anyone needing teams to do all kinds of work with. These mules are all well broke, and range in size from 1100 to 1300 pounds and are from 3 years to 5 years old. They are as good a bunch of mules as you ever looked at and you can buy them at a big bargain. Come in and look them over. BEERY & AHR. 191t6 — —— o_ _______. LOST—A sue eighteen, open face Keystone Silverine walcli. No. 5,560,398. Return to thi- office. 198t3
QUIT MEAT WHEN KIDNEYS 801 Take « glaw of Salt* before breaks if your Back hurts or Bladder m troubling you, No man or woman who eat* meat Isl rly con make a mistake by flunhitig £ kidneys occasionally, says a well authority. Meat forma uric acid whiot excite* the kidneys, they become ov» r . worked from the strain, get sluggi*h and fail to filter the waste and poiso M the blood, then we get sick. Nearly ijj rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts or if th s urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, stop eating m<a> and get about four ounces of Salts from any pharmacy; take » tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast and in & few days your kidaen will act fine. Thia famous salts is from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with litbia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate the kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no logger causes irritation, thus ending bladder weakness Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent litbia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complication*. o — SAGE TEA TURNS GRAY Hl DM It’s Grandmother’s recipe to bring color, lustre and thickness to hair when faded, streaked or gray. That beautiful, erven shade of dark, glossy hair can only be had l>y brewing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Your hair is your eharm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray, streaked and looks dry, wispy and scraggly, just an application or two of Sage and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundredfold. Don't bother to prepare the tonic; you can get from any drug store a 50 cent bottle of “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy,” ready to use. Thia can always be depended upon to bring back the natural color, thickness anil lustre of your hair and. remove dandruff, stop scalp itching and falling hair. Everybody uses “Wyeth’s” Sage and Sulphur because it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair has disappeared, and after another application it becomes beautifully lark and appears glossy, lustrous and abundant QPUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will offer at public sale at his farm residence I’g miles west of Willshire and known as the John Walter’s farm on Thursday, September 3, 1914 Beginning at 12:30 o’clock p. ntThe following property, to-wit: Horses and Cattle One Bay safe family horse, weight about 1200 lbs. one heavy team, weight 3200 lbs., good workers. One 5 year old Red Cow, fresh weeks; % year old Jersey cow, will be fresh the last of December. Hogs and Sheep. One Brood Sow, will farrow by day of sale; ten Shoats, 5 months old. Six head of good young Ewes Farming Implements. Sausage grinder, 2 Stillyards. Hand corn planter, Cross cut saw. Gardea plow, Harrow, Stone bed. Double shovel, Brush sythe and barrells. Turnbu wagon, Set of hay ladders, 20 foot ladder, Hay rake, Tomato Crates. ■> shipping chicken coops, Fork anil shovels, Walking breaking plow. Hiding breaking plow. Hand feed cutter. 2 check row corn planters, 1 having fertilizer attachment; Disc. VVhM corn cutter, Deering binder Storw cab, only been in usj 8 months; se single buggy harness, set good double breeching harness, Galvanized hottrough, Riding cultivator. Hay f°J Kand hay rope. Iron kettle and ket. rack, 2 kitchen tables, stand and a dozen jars. Brown “Leghorn Hens. This entire stock must be sold as am going to leave the farm. TERM: A 9 months credit will w given the purchaser giving a bankab < note. 4 per cent, off for cash. JIM G. BILDERBACK RALPH HILEMAN, Auctioneer. WANTED—GirI for genral housework. Inquire of Mrs. J. Q. N’ep ,uu? - ’Phone 23. 199,3 WANTED—Salesmen, local ami traveling to reach every town in Adann Co. To right man exceptional o|<P lb tunity. Weekly commission seto ments. Write today. Brown Brothers Nurseries. 196t2 Rochester. N. 1 TWO SALESMEN to sell our oils. greases and paints in this territorj Experience unnecessary. Our salesu> en are best paid on road. INDUSTRY 1 - 'REFINING CO., Cleveland, O. 19 8tl I LOST—A hub tap off of City Fire i Truck. Anyone finding same pb' return to the City Fire Department ” FOR SALE or TRADE—House on P street. Will trade for vacant lots property out further on good Inquire of Frank Johnston. 199,J
