Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 14, Number 40, Decatur, Adams County, 16 February 1916 — Page 2

/ • . • •>• Cwyr!r>ti::3by ' &> jL.. < .. •' ...,.*.'* k R. J. Reynold* TubatHW Co. •>> L. '••- ':■. - ;X-.. A '.’ •*' \ wiise® w I ’ Prince Albert I g ! meets men’s tastes | all over the world! I g- I ? '$ -3 The patented process makes r Prince Albert so good in a pipe « or rolled in io a cigarette that f 2 ' s popularity /s now uni- $ versr 1 / It satisfies al! smoke £ desires! This patented process, r which also removes bite and I parch, is controlled by u& No » JL JUBEiBSI Jr other tobacco can be like Fringe Albert fAe national joy smoke Listen: Men who have stowed away gentle old jimmy pipes $ ir. e~y to ch.nc« th. a— for years, have brought them back to the tune of v to imitate the prince Albert Fimce Albert! Get yows out, for your confidence •&• Uayredtm,6anZMimpc«xi6/tf to Mutate the flavor of Frinco never will be abusea I We tell you Prince Albert will Albert tobacco! The patented , - 7 gg. process protect* that i set pipe free the tenderest tongue A ft And smoked in a makin’s cigarette, Prince Albert is so p rinC e/i»^—. § refreshing and delightful that it gives you a new idea of f? cigarette happiness. Any way you fire-up Prince Albert, it 1 will win you quick as a flash —it’s so good and so friendly I "„;4za«°A«m?Xr M R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO C(X» Winsten-Saks, N. C.

PUBLIC SALE. I will*offer for sale at my residence on the Kauffman farm, miles southeast of Willshire, and 2 miles east of Salem, on Tuesday, February ■ 29, 1916, beginning at 10 o’clock : sharp, the following property, to-wit: ' Ten Head of Horses: Blaek mare, 10 |

. ■d Danger ahead! '■ Go now to a mirror and examine your / \ mouth? Do your gums look “rinsed out,” / 'VI shrunken? Do you see a jagged appearance i \1 / r" in'the gum-line? A ■ ■■ ;Z 7f If so ’ see y° ur dentist. He will tell you 1 that you have pyorrhea, and that to save your Sts your Omiist twice vearty. teeth you will have to fight this dread disease Use Senreco twice daily. at once.

From pyorrhea come by far the greater part of all tooth troubles. Unless treated and checked, it will result not only in the shrinking and malformation of your gums and of the bony structure into which your teeth are set, but in the loss of the teeth themselves. A specific for pyorrhea has been discovered recently by dental science, and is now offered for daily treatment in Senreco Tooth Paste. Senreco combats the germ of the disease. Its regular use insures your teeth against the attack or further progress of pyorrhea.

—I »I ■■ ■■ 1 I*■ iiwni.K —■Uli ■■■!»» ■■■Ml—ll - flI II ■ I* num ■■>■»■ »■!»■< 1 I ■ lllllllill § I S /A # / ' M itR 'W Is tjjOpxWhy bear those pains? g A single bottle will ■ convince you * g I 1 Sloan’s JO 5 ’ Liniment 5 Arrests Inflammation. H i ™ Prevents severe compli- ■ OKs H H cations. Just put a few drops on the painful tai' spot and the pain dis- ■ BUS%S S’ appears - ISiEa

years old, in foal; bay horse. 11 years old: black horse .about 12 years old: ' bay horse, 4 years old; bay mare, 3' years old; bay colt, 2 years old; : i black mare colt, 1 year old; bay colt,: i 19 months old; horse colt, 10 months old; black mare. 8 years old, weight [ about 1,275. Eight Head of Cattle:

“But Stnreco does more. It cleanses the teeth delightfully. It gives them a whiteness distinctive of Senreco alone. Its flavor is entirely pleasing, and it leaves in the mouth a wonderful sense of coolness and wholesomeness. Start the Senreco treatment before pyorrhea grips you for good. Details in folder with every tube. A two-ounce tube jT I for 25c is sufficient for 6 weeks’ i daily treatment. Get Senreco y of your druggist today; or send 4c in stamps or coin for sample '-y/M tube and folder. Address The \ Sentanel Remedies Company 503 Union Central Building, Cincinnati, Ohio. f

; Jersey cow, 6 years old, with calf by j !her side; Jersey cow, 5 years old, will. ; be fresh by day of sale; 2 milch cows. I ' will be fresh on or before day of sale; 12 heifers, coming 2 years old; 3 yearlings. Sixteen Head of Hogs: Duroc brood sow, farrow April 1; 15 head of shoats, weighing from 75 to 90 lbs. each. Poultry: 100 chickens; 3 turkeys. 2 hens and 1 gobbler. Farming Implements: Two 2-horse wagons, John Deere breaking plow, Osborne • disc harrow, spring tooth harrow, Os,borne hay loader, used one season; Deering mower, hay rake, bob sled, hay ladder, top buggy, Sharpless cream separator, log chains and stirrups and many other articles not mentioned. Terms of Sale: —All sums of $5.00 and under, cash in hand; over $5.00 a credit‘of 9 months will be given, purchaser giving a bankable note; 4 per cent discount for cash. No property removed until settled for. JAMES RHOADES. Jeff Liechty, Auct M. A. Ripley, Clerk. - i PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will offer for sale at his residence. 1 mile west, 3 miles north of Preble. % mile east and 1% miles south of Friedheim, on Thursday, February 24, 1916, beginning at 10 o’clock, sharp, the following property. to-wit: Four Head of Horses: Black mare, 7 years old, in foal; heavy team blue roan horses, coming 4 and 5 years old; bay mare colt, coming 2 years old. Ten Head of: Cattle: Cow, 5 years old, fresh in | March; cow, 5 years old, fresh in; April; cow, 6 years old, fresh in May: ! cow, 6 years old, giving milk; cow, 7i years old, giving milk, fresh in July; I cow, 3 years old, giving milk; two 2! year old red heifers, 2 yearling caltex. I I Five Head of Hogs: Sow, with nine! pigs, 2 months old; 2 sows, will farrow in April; 2 sows will farrow 1 soon. Farming Implements: 3-in. tire •Studebaker wagon, double box; 2-in. tire wagon, old wagon, spring wagpn, Milwaukee binder; grass mower, 5 ft. cut; hay loader, side rake, haytedder hay rake, Richmond drill, with fertilizer attachment; Black Hawk corn planter, with fertilizer attachWILLIAM KOLDEWEY. ment; two 2-horse walking corn cultivators, new Deere sulky breaking ‘ plow, spring tooth harrow, spike tooth i harrow, 14-diac harrow, just new; 2 land rollers, IG-ft. hog rack, bod >slcd, fanning mill, platform scale, 2 sets I farm harness, set double buggy har- ! ness, saddle, cider mill, Sharpless . cream separator No. 4, 2 churns, live I tons hay in mow, about 255 bu. corn in crib, 125 bu. oats, corn fodder, 150 . chickens, and many other articles too ! numerous to mention. I Terms of Sala:—All sums of $5.00 land under,,cash in hand; over $5.00 a credit of 0 months will be given, purchaser giving his note with approved security, bearing 8 per cent after maturity; 4 per cent discount for cash. No property removed until settled for. Noah Frauhiger, Auct. ' o— Democrat Want Ads Pay.

Childish Char.-cteristks. Tha prominent characteristics of childhood are Innocence, truatfulnesß, • sensitiveness and curiosit), und on our treatment of these qualities the future development of th? child will largely depend. To keep the childish | bloom of innocence as far as possible untainted: to honor tnißtfulm'J by unswerving truth and the firm intention never to deceive; to meet sensitiveness with tender consideration and not with hardness and lack of sympathy; to treat curiosity as mindhunger and not to starve but feed it-| these are considerations of vital moment. The child's sense of wonder is a lovely endowment t which should never be chilled or discouraged. For the child the world is full of surprises. The whole earth, tbe heavens above and the waters beneath, the color and scent of flowers, the wind in the trees, the songs of birds, the flight of the swallow or the butterfly, all are beauful surprises in which the child should be encouraged to find delight and in-| struction. —Rev. R. P. Downes, LL.D. Pillar of Cloud by Day. With reference to this method of directing the march of caravans across deserts, Linant Pasha points out how modern times furnish an illustration of it. The great caravan which every year sets out from Cairo to Mecca has a conductor on a camel leading the way. Day and night, whatever the weather is, he remains without any covering, naked to the waist. With him march men with large torches which are kept alight during the night and illuminate the column of smoke above them, so that it appears a pillar of fire. During the day, when the head of the caravan is difficult to see on account of intervening hills and mounds of sand, the torches are kept burning, so that instead of the light which served during the night, a column of smoke indicates to the straggling caravan from afar the direction of the march and the time and place of a halt. Big Boiled Dinner. The chefs in our big hotels may think they prepare meals on a big scale, but it is doubtful whether any of them have ever equaled the feat of wholesale cookery achieved at the little town of Liss, in England. At a barbecue held there not long ago an ox was boiled —not roasted —whole. This is how the thing was done: A | large hole was dug in the ground and lined with brick, inside of which was built a tank large enough to hold the ox. The carcass was then lowered into the tank, having first been placed in a case formed by heavy crossbars, to which chains were attached. Pulleys from a scaffolding above were used to raise and lower the ox. Many vegetabies, such as carrots, onions, and potatoes, were boiled with the meat. The boiling required several hours. Ways to Disguise Milk. Many children dislike milk as soon as they have passed their babyhood days. The food values it contains, however, are very essential to the proper growth of the child. Many mothers are therefore at a loss for ways in which to disguise the despised milk, so as to make it palatable. Probably one of the-best ways is to give the child a pure cocoa, made entirely with milk. Most children like I cereals, and these can be cooked in milk instead of water. When served with plenty of milk the child eats unknowingly a goodly quantity of this food beverage. Simple cream soups will also prove a welcome addition to the child’s diet list. The Thing That Lasts. It has pleased Providence to place us in such a state that we appear at every moment to be upon the verge of some great mutation. There is not thing, and one thing only, which defies all mutation; that which existed beI fore the world, and will survive the fabric of the world itself; I mean : justice- that justice which, emanating from rno Divinity, has a place in the breast of every one of us, given us ' for a guide with regard to ourselves, ! and with regard to others, and which I will stand after this globe is burned I to ashes—our advocate, our accuser before the great Judge, when he ! comes to call upon us for the tenor of a well-spent life.—Edmund Burke. Better Have Left It Alone. Duncan’s wife had the reputation of being a firstclass shrew. When , Duncan died his neighbors put a tombstone over his grave, with the epitaph, “Asleep in Peace.” Widow Duncan was wild. It was meant as a slam ct her and she knew it was. It meant that she did not him sleep in peace whervalive. The neighbors assured her thht it was not meant that ' way. “Then It ought to say so.” To please her they got a stone cutter to add. ‘‘We all believe that he did have i peace here, when he slept, ’ much to ■ the merriment of the neighbors. i i Ready for the Burglar. , A Brockton (Mass.) lawyer recently bought a revolver for self-protection, ' I and after considerable thought decided i that the best place to keep it was ih 1 the safe, so that If a burglar unexpectedly drops in all the lawyer will '- have to do is to walk to tho safe, ar- • I range tho combination, open the door • | of the safe, hunt in his vest pocket . for tho key to the inner compartment, unlock the inner door, pull out the revolver, find soma cartridges and then ! turn on the burglar

PUBLIC SALE OF LIVE STOCK. • Tho undersigned will offer for pub-1 lie auction at his residence. 2 miles I {east and 1% mile north of Monroe und ■ miles south of Decatur, on the ’ county farm road, on what is known ' as the Abe Railing farm, on Thursday, February 24, 1916, beginning at 1 o’clock p. m.. sharp, the following property, to-wlt: Horses und Mules: Brown mare, 12 years old; gray work horse, black gelding, coming 2 years I old; sorrel gelding, coming 2 years | old; bay mare colt coming 2 years I old in June: bay mare colt, coming 2 years old in August; black mare colt, coming 2 years old in April; spring mare colt, span of mules, coming ■■ years old in June; good ones and broke double. Six Head of < attle. Red cow, 6 years old. will be fresh by day of sale; red cow, 6 years old, fresh March 25; Holstein heifer, coming 2 years old, fresh March 15; red I heifer, coming 2 years old. fresh Mar. 20; Jersey, coming 2 years old, fresh March 7; Jersey cow, giving milk, will be fresh in May. Sixty-four Head of Hogs- Four brood sows, one O. I. C., will farrow March 20; one O. I. C., will farrow March 16; 1 Duroc, will farrow March 15: gilt Duroc, will farrow March 30; 60 head fine shoats, weight 60 to 100 lbs. each. Terms of Sale:—All sums of $5.00 and under, cash in hand; over $5.00 a credit of 9 months will be given, purchaser giving a bankable note; four per cent discount for cash. No property removed until settled for. WM. DURBIN. Gary Martz, Clerk. Jeff Liechty, Auct. PUBLIC SALE. As I am going to leave the farm 1 will offer at public sale, at my residance, 10 miles south o' Decatur, 2 miles south and 3 miles east of Monroe. 114 miles west of Salem, on what is known as the John Berning farm, on February 18, 1916, beginning at 10 o’clock, sharp, the following property, to-wit: Eleven Head of Horses: One black mare, 12 years old, in foal, weight, 1400; black mare, 11 years ol(|, weight 1350; bay horse, 11 years □la, weight 1400; sorrel mare, 11 years old. weight 1100; roan mare, 13 years old, weight 1200; black colt. 3 years old, weight 1100; bay colt, 2 years old, weight 1200; roan colt, 2 years old, weight 1000;” gray driving mrtre, sorrel horse, 4 years old; iron grg,y mare, 4 years old. Ten Head of Cattle: One cow, 8 years old. giving good flow of milk; cow, 3 years old. giving good flow of milk; cow. 3 years old, giving good flow of milk; heifer, 2 years old, fresh Ist of May; steer, 1 year old; caif, 3 months old; fresh cow. calf by side, good milk and butter cow-; Holsteii) cow', 3 years old; yearling calf. 2 year-old heifer, fresh soon, a good one. Ten Head of Hogs: Brood sow, will farrow April 1; male hog, 8 shoats, weighing about 60 lbs. each. Farming Implements: Deering binder, good as new; Deering mowing machine, good as new; Deere corn planter, grain drill, good as new; 2 lumber wagons, buggy, disc, roller, 2 surface corn plows, Monarch corn plow, spike tooth harrow, walking plow, manure spreader, sulky breaking plow, just new; 3 sets work harness, set buggy harness, bobsled, about 500 bu. corn, 200 bu. oats, some hay and fodder. Five White Embden geese. Household Goods: Base burner, range, laundry stove, oil stove, book case, safe, 2 chiffoniers, rocking chairs dining chairs, bed steads, queensware, 2 dining tables, sewing machine, DeLaval cream separator, 100 egg Old Trusty incubator, all household goods and kitchen furnishings which arc too numerous to mention. Terms of Sale:—slo.oo and under, cash in hand; all sums over SIO.OO, a credit of 9 months will be given, pur chaser giving a bankable note bearing from date of maturity; 6 per cent off for cash. HENRY SAUNDERS. F. A. WYCOFF AND J. N. Burlthcad and Jeff Llechtj-. Aucts. • Cary Martz, Clerk. Lunch will be served on grounds. PUBLIC SALE. Having sold my farm, 1 will offer for sale at public anclion at my residence 3 miles north and 4 miles east of Berne, ir 3 mlb.r, south and :: miles northeast of Monroe, on Friday i .February 25,*the following personal | property, to-wit: Five Hcr.d Horses: : . Lay geldmg, 5 years old, weight about 11500; bay gelding, 4 years old .weight about 1600; smooth mouth . .gray mare, weight about 1500; 2 g-, ( ;d ' 1 colts, 2 years old. Twelve Head of : ( Catt!e: Holstein cow, 5 years obi , giving milk, to be fresh in fall; Dur- ( ham cow, 3 years #ld, giving milk, to t be fresh in fall; Jersey cow, 3 •,ca-<- ' old, giving , milk, will be fresh in i March; spotted cow, 3 years old. giv>ing milk, will be fresh in March.spotted cow, 3 years old, giving milk’ e 1 will be fresh in May; 2 cows, 7 and f 8 years old, to be fresh by dav of b sale; 5 spring calves. A red sow due t to farrow Ist of March; red male hog r ' weighing about 175 lbs. 15 doz. chief” <■ ens ami a pair of ducks. Im P ] QmP:lts ‘. pwo wagons. 2 h».y tedders nnd « bods; gravel bed, 2 hog racks, 2 ’ (breaking plows; John Deere riding 1

PUBLIC SALE =

As I have rented my farm I will sei at public auction at my resl, **’ n^ r(>b . miles north and Mt »H° j le 7 miles northwest of Decatur, * /i 1 milA west from Stop m ' l6 R ° U .. ” r Wavne * Decatur 19 along the bort Majue interurban, 3% miles 0 T, “' 9day : tv Feb 3‘ Xe of sorrel X 4 Xs Old. weight 1600; bay lllare , 4 years old. weight 1500; W horse, 3 fears old, weigh 1200, ba horse, 7 years old, weight 1150. bay horse. 12 years old. weight 1700; baj colt 2 years old; roan colt, 2 years o!d; sorrel colt, 2 years ohl; roan eolt, 1 year old. Twenty-five Head of Cattle, consisting of one % Jersey. 1 years old. fresh by day of sale; Jersey cow, 4 years old. fresh in about 4 weeks; Holstein cow. 3 years old, fresh Ist of May; Holstein cow. 3 vears old. fresh Ist of July; Durham cow. 7 years old. fresh 12th of May; black cow. 10 years old. fresh 25th of May; Black -4 Jersey cow. 3 years old, fresh 20th of May; Jersey and Holstein cow, S years old. fresh Ist of June; these cows are all on a full flow of milk; % Durham and Jersey cow. 4 years old, fresh 4th March; H Durham and Jersey cow. 3 years old. fresh 15th of March; Holstein Durbam heifer. 2 years old, fresh sth of May; good Durham bull. 2 years old: 5 head yearling steers, 1 yearling heifer, 5 head fall calves, 2 head of winter calves. Twenty-five Head of Hogs: Six brood sows, all bred to registered Duroc hog, will farrow by March 15; registered Duroc male hog,

plow, new-ground plow, 4 harrows corn planter, 3 cultivators, 3 shove plows, new Deering binder. 8 ft. cut; new low-lift manure spreader; Me Cormiek mower, Indiana drill, doubk disc with seeder attachments; singk disc, land roller, beet tools; Superioi drill, cultivator and lifter, 3 sets work harness, single set harness, carriage storm buggy, copper kettle, iron ket tie. Primus cream separator, bed. 1 tables and a Wilson heater. Between one and two hundred bushels of corn about G bushels of selected seed corn, about 100 bushels seed oats, some clover hay, about 8 acres of corn sod der, several tons of baled straw, 15 bushels of potatoes, 15 or 20 bushels oi apples and numerous other things. Sale begins at 10 o’clock a. m. Terms of Sale: —For all amounts of ■5.00 and under, cash in hand. For amounts over $5.09 a credit of nine months will be given. Note bearing 8 per cent interest after maturity, with approved security, and waiving valuation or appraisement laws will be required. No property to be removed until settlement is made. A discount of 4 per cent will be given for cash on amounts of over $5.00. FRANK C. WECHTER. J. A. Michaud, Auct. Clerks. John Weehter and W. P. Merryman, Lunch stand on the ground. 39t6 PUBLIC SALE. My lease having expired, the undersigned will offer for sale at the old Samuel Houk farm, located on the Allen-Adams county line, % mile east of Williams, or 2 miles south, miles east of Hoagland, 2 miles east of St. John’s, Stop 19, on traction line, on Tuesday, March 2. This will be one of the largest sales of the season. therefore sale will have to start at 10 o’clock sharp, all the following property: Fourteen Head of Horses: Bay horse, 8 years old( weight 1500; black horse, 8 years old, weight 1600; roan mare, 9 years old, weight 1300; Jay mare. 7 years old, in foal; bay mare, 8 years oid, weight 1200; gray mare, 4 years old, weight 1400; bay mare, 3 years old. weight 1300; roan n 0:.,!.. , years cWi weight 1300 . match team of Chestnut sorrels, 2 and 3 years old, will make good ones; match team of bays, 2 years o m year . mg co ... 2 year old pony. Thirty Head of Cattle: Two red cows, 6 >e?rs °‘ d ’ wc; g!'-t 1200; each both Ja.-e call by side; 2 roan cows, 5 and years old, with calf by side blaek cows, 1 f£ h Z A S : Je: 2 Durham bulls Ty ea J U old 8y : 3 “umber of\C Duroc gins °’ f Hogs: Sev- ■ : 1 to 15;' 8 hens G ’ 14 tur keyß, - » young toms; io <t, l7 , °us; Shepherd dog 2 1 h good one. Fa-mi-.-'i - earß a No- 1 mplement3: New la st XtVS r ’ j “ Bt er, 8 ft. cut „ ew Deere bindBe won; lalokallonai I ?'*’ “ Sed ° ne SX“™"L w ,'" d ' and Osborne 5 ft> Deer 'ng 5 1 buncher, rake lr lV u / CUt ’ clov er tedder, new OsbornJ hay ‘ rake, hay rake (Vi v delivery 1 attach..,,? <«• I walking 2 ruiir . n cultivators •> >

.. ■—• —- A. I 2 years oldt 18 head shoats, w e | K w I from 100 to 125 Tbs. each. F arn . 10 . Machinery: Osborn grass m (lu ',ii t used 1 season; Osborn double di s mt 1 used 1 season; Buckeye fertuLbu drill, used 2 seasons; Osborn n fi loader, used 2 seasons; Oliver rid) g cultivator, used 2 seasons; Gale r i on ■ Ing cultivator, used 2 seasons; I bar steel roller, used 2 seasons; Gj 81$ 3-horse walking plow,.used 1 sean,. y« Oliver walking plow, Bradley riffe an plow, Korn King manure spread,' cc Champion binder, Thomas hay tedd ¥ ‘<l ■ Thomas side delivery rake, B |, -ar 1 tooth harrow, spike tooth harrow, ril itt 1 ber tire top buggy. Storm King b« ! *r ! gy; these buggies are all new; ed spring wagon, ton wagon, so ter sleigh, Studebaker wagon, wag o ,>w, with logging bunks, farm with 2 sets of wheels; set new breed ar< . jng harness, never been used; t t used breeching harness, set cin : °KB trace harness, with hip breechin? I )r, l sets buggy harness, hog rack, r elk 1 ladder, 2 feed cookers, iron kettk lies [ about 200 bushels oats, about 6f D P** bushels corn in crib, hay in mow. u rs > I der in barn, DeLaval cream separat# ay 1 used about 8 months, 100 head yoan er ‘ , chickens, and many other articles te rUl numerous to mention. tec. Terms of sale:—ss.oo and unde low ’ , cash in hand; all sums over 5.(M )oth credit of 9 months will be given, pt oubl . chaser giving note with approved » ,ow ’ ’> curity; 5 per cent off for cash. arne Martin C. Heckman. bu Bunn and Baumgartner. Aucts. th Lunch will be served on the ®rott on

Ter s. borne spring tooth harrow, 3-sertk nd t el spike tooth harrow. 2 land rollers, s cre i; igle cultivator, 2-horse potato plant’ urch . c- 2 seed sowers, 5 hp. Calloway le’line engine, on truck equipped vtft er le 18 in. friction clutch pulley, 2% y, r ca >r gasoline engine and pump jack. k € ttle< ■k tire wagon, complete; narrow tr wagon, farm truck, with steel wh«i j y, t- 16 ft. wagon box, 2 sets hay ladi-- j h 2 good as new; 2 sets dump boards u. 1 n horse evener, for wagon; bob m 8I i, mud boat, spring wagon, road wap — i, 7 sets work harness, set single tas e harness, set dollars and harness . 1- bu. white seed corn, chains, t». , 5 rope and numerous other articles s sf mentioned. ast 0 Terms of Sale: —$5.00 and ti v’ilish cash in hand; all sums over $5 id K< if credit of 9 months will be given :ry, 25 r chaser giving bankable note, be aarp, e 8 per cent interest after maturi wo F g per cent off for cash. No good; eara 1 t, moved until settled for. >8 3) g HENRY KOENEMA lle l 11 Elmer Sturn, S. R. Rose, Asets. I Hl,rl C. H. Getting, Ed F. Koenen dead 1 k Clerks. ilves a Lunch stand on the grounds. o Mves PUBLIC SALE. 3ar * ‘ erefoi The undersigned will offer for hw, 6 ; on the Menno Liechty farm. 1 he cow . north and 1% mile west of Moan yearmiles south and miles wes (arch. Decatur, on Monday, February uroc 1916. at 10 o’clock sharp, the fol pril; ing property, to-wit: Seven Headhina ■ 1 Horses: One mare, 8 years ed; 3, y weight 1300; mare, 8 years old 'ib. t foal, weight, 1400; mare, cominj Term: years old. weight 1400; 6 year nd und •’ horse, weighing 1350; 7 year old tn’edit o i | heavily in foal, weigh’ If laser i ■ one driving mare; spring marc irity; ! Belgian. Nine Head of Cattle: »o prop 'stein heifer, fresh in March; one $ I ing 3 years old, fresh in May: J- N. ■ coming 6 years old. fresh in Lunch cow, 6 years old, fresh in June; « 4 years old, calf by side; cow. B’jgj old, fresh about 17th of March j w m heifer calves, 6to 7 months old. j] es Head of Hogs: Two sows, due to I. Jeg row April 1; 2 young sows; 4 shoats, weighing about 60 lbs. e-’ Seven hundred bushels good coriLSO a. crib: also 6 bushels number 1 “orses. corn, 300 bushels number 1 W ds; dr oats, 5 tons of hay. 38 large sliACkney corn fodder, 20 bushels good gt * m Wj| Farming Implements: Wash 3x10; water tank, Blue Bell seps- ® s in good shape; soft coal stove, f" • TM stone, ditch leveler, hay sling’- ’ 1 ,ar >WB wi box, truck wagon, hay loader, rack, mowing machine. br< ’ at _ ffhorns plow, riding cultivator, walking ° vator, double shovel plow. sing e fl p] em8 * el plow, spring tooth harrow. - , ed |ftgt tion spike tooth harrow, good as er disc, new; ground plow, disc new; set dump boards, bod sled, boat, buggy, hay fork, log ring tQ cross-cut saw, gasoline stove. in good shape. Four turkey chickens. , übl e ha Farming Implements: Pipe f 01 1” . hay t mor.d breaking plow, wagon an bined hay ladder, two light korw harness; wash own i ea in good shape; 10 dozen chicks’' turkey hens, 1 gobbler; 3 port> kj kin ducks. , hay in n Terms of Sale: —All sum. shels ol and under, cash; over $5.00 a T erms; _ 9 months will be given, purcm* •’ gr $ 5 00 ing note with approved nkable per cent discount. No goods rs . 2 until settled for. anVflri « MRS. C. E. JOl Al ,-s.?S‘S J. N. Burkhead. Jeff Liechty f j C. E. Estell, Clerk. much c: .