Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 19, Number 105, Decatur, Adams County, 3 May 1921 — Page 6
HINT FOR OWNERS OF PETS Myatary of How Spitz Wat Kept W.'lte It Solved—Secret Learned From Washwoman. Another secret process wns unwittingly betrayed at u street discussion between two women recently. The women, elaborately dressed and seemingly of the "sheltered life” type stood, pets In leash, as they gossiped. The tone with the Japanese spaniel spoke first: "I have an awful time with Togo; he Is such a little aristocrat,” and she jerked at the chain as her substitute for a child showed a desire to greet a passing mongrel. "lie detests castile soap and 1 always use facial for his bath, but he just adores lilac-scented talcum powder afterward and X have a spray with lilac water that the both of us use. How’s little Snowball now?” (referring to the other woman’s ’Spitz). "We heard he was ill. You must have been worried sick. I often wonder how you keep him so white.” The other woman’s turn, as pampered pets milled about: "It Was terrible; Snowy had colic; ate too much squab—we have to get them especially for him, the little darling—but we got the best doctor we could find and he was all right in two days. Oh, yes, how do I keep him so white? Bluing. Always after his bath I put him through bluing; learned It from watching a washwoman once. She put her fine white clothes into bluing and it works just as well with Snowy.” —l'ortland Oregonian. DISPUTE ACCURACY OF CLOCK Heirs of Danish Nobleman Stand to Win or Lose Large Amount of Money by Decision. What time was it when the castle Clock struck twelve? Ten thousand pounds, normally about 550,000, hangs _on the answer to this question, explains the London Express correspondent In Denmark, which has been the subject of lively argument in the eastern civil court, Copenhagen. , » The clock in question is in the tower of Lystrup castle, the seat of one of Denmark's greatest landlords, the late Count Moltke, a life member of the ancient house of lords. Count Moltke died on the night of . December 19-20,1918, a few seconds after the castle clock sttuck twelve. The Danish parliament recently approved a' new and increased scale of death duties, applicable to the estate ; of all persons who died after midnight on December 19-20. It is contended by the count’s heirs that the castle clock was fast and struck a minute too soon. The count, they say, died on December 19, and j therefore his estate is exempt from | the increase in the death duties. Weavers. A typical Scots crofter weaving with ' the old-fashioned hand weaving loom ; side by side with the very latest pow- | er-loom, giving an idea of the great gain in output and quality achieved in i mechanical invention will be an inter- ' esting Item at the efficiency exhibition in London, where the use of invention and effort will be shown to be of greater value than mere personal application. Not only will the produc- ; tions be seen to be more quickly executed, but the worker will find'the proc- I ess less mechanical, strange as, this ! may appear. What will doubtless strike all visitors is the enormous increase in efficiency in the weaving industry brought about by labor-saving machinery. It seems strange, too that more workers are required to keep up with the efficient power-loom,—Chris-tian Science Monitor. Electrified Tourmaline. The crystal, tourmaline, has very remarkable optical properties, a fact known to most people. However, few < people have heard of its peculiar electrical properties. Tourmaline is capable of attracting small bits of paper and straw in much the same way as amber. This attraction is, of course, due to an electrostatic charge. When the crystal IS exposed to sunlight of a low temperature, it loses its electrical charge, but regains It upon being heated again. If it has a negative charge at first, it will have a positive charge when it is reheated. Several other precious stones exhibit various phenomena along this line, but tourmaline is the most interesting and spectacular of all. —Popular Science Monthly. New Silverplating Process. More than 100 per cent increase in the output of electroplating vats is gained by the recent- discovery of an English metallurgist. The method of applying the new process, as used j at Sheffield in silverplating, is merely to add potassium carbonate to the plating bath, Instead of neutralizing that already present by Introducing barium cyanide, as Is ordinarily the practice. The silver deposit obtained the new way is declared to equal, if not surpass, in quality any accomplished by the old method.—Popular Mechanics’ Magazine. No Conception of Money. Myrtle—lsn’t it too bad! She has absolutely no conception of what I money Is for. Jane-Yes; they say she even has a savings account —Kansas City Star. Talk It Up. Budd—Who originated the phrase, "Say It with flowers?" j omess it was the Ess who jjut "oral" in “floral.”
! CV/e AMERICAN iSLtGION® l * (Copy for Thia Department Supplied by the American Legion New Service ) •. GIRL GETS SERVICE MEDAL b a ■ —" - ■ ’ Emblem Presented to New York High i School Mies in Recognition ■ ■ of Patriotic Work. i ■ 1 As a tribute to her patriotic serv- ‘ lees during the World war. Miss Paul- ’ iue Henkel, u fourteen»year old New I York high school girl, was presented i with a patriotic service gold medal by i F. W. Galbraith. Jr., national comi mender of the American Legion, In behalf of S. Rankin Drew post. The presentation ceremonies took place in front of the Fifth Avenue public library In New York city. The guard of honor for Miss Henkel, who is known as the “Little Colonel,” wus composed of members of the marine corps under command of lieutenants Miller and Gumpertz and Sergeant Janssen, congressional medal of honor men. Although she was only ten years old at the start of the World war, the Little Colonel sold $3,330,250 worth of Liberty bonds, more than any other minor In the country, and also was recognized as one of the most effective patriotic speakers and war workers in America. With the return of the American soldiers to their native land. Miss Henkel is still devoting herself to their welfare, as attested by the following quotation from her speech of acceptance: “The happiest moment of my life Will be when it is a fact that the wounded, disabled and unemployed of our boys have been taken care of in a manner befitting the sacrifices they have made. The <ause of the disabled f' 1 I Jp# . ■ Li toli slgfj j gwgjfj MISS PAULINE HENKEL. ' should come above everything else in our hearts. Let us take care of she men who saved our country; we owe ! them an obligation we cannot afford j to ignore.” — LEGION POST ADOPTS CREED Member of Somerville (Mass.) Organi. zation Is Author of Paragraphs Worthy of Consideration. Somerville (Mass.) post of the American Legion has adopted the following creed, written by one of its members: “I believe the American Legion is a dependable organization. “I believe that the American Legion is a potent factor In the community. “I believe that the American Legion stands for equality for all ex-service ■ , men. “I believe that the American Le- ' gion’s ideas never will be shelved. “I believe that the American Legion . | will gallantly stand by what is right i and help to destroy what is wrong. “I believe that the American Legion’s principles are immovable by any violent or radical individual or organizaj tion. “I believe that the American Legion ' ! will help to bring peace out of chaos. “I believe that the American Legion [ is looking forward, not backward. “I believe that the American Legion is a constructive unit, not a destruc- 1 tive unit. "I believe that the American Legion is an asset to ex-service men, not a liability. "I believe it. Do you?” Sets 40,000 Members as Goal. With 24, 000 members at the end of 1920, Kansas department of the American Legion has set 40,000 Legionnaires as its goal for 1921. The state has a potential membership of 60,000. The department now numbers 314 posts of the Legion and 106 units of the Women's Auxiliary. ■ • Distributing Victory Medals. Although there will be no more army I recruiting for some time, the recruiting officers will continue to distribute Victory medals to members of the American Legion and other ex-service men.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY, MAY 3.1921.
■ mr ■ - SEEMED FUNNY TO PERUVIAN South American Unable to Understand Why Republicans Did Not Seize the White House. One day a Peruvian friend came to me in great excitement, waving a ! newspaper. “Seuor,” he cried, “there is a - revolution in the United States.” "What do you mean?” He showed me the paper. It contained u brief account of the Repub--7 llcun convention in Chicago, in which Senator Lodge suld several uncomplimentary tilings about President Wil- ! son. "You see," explained the Peruvian, j "the President's enemies -openly attack him. Is the army disloyal? Why do they not suppress the demonstration?" I explained to him that in the United States it is any citizen’s privilege to abuse the Chief Executive to his heart’s content, that no effort is made either by the army or by the President himself to check such demonstrations, and that the Republican party would wait patiently until March 4 instead of descending In a body upon the White House and forcibly ejecting Mr. Wilson. He smiled In polite Incredulity.' "What funny people 1” he' laughed. His own President had gained office by the more simple expedient of first winning the good-will of the army,j then walking Into the official palace to hand the former incumbent a ticket on the first steamer out of town. — ( Leslie’s. AIR GLIDERS IN COMPETITION — Remarkable Speed Attained at Recent Meeting in the Rhone District of Germany. / A German gliding and soaring competition was recently held in the Rhone district by the League of German Model Aircraft and Gilding Clubs. The meeting was marred by an unfortunate accident, resulting in the death | of the w ell-known pilot. Von Loessel. | This was due to breaking in the air at thp elevator of his glider. A number of monoplanes and biplanes were entered, reports the Scientific American, some of very novel design. Many of the entries had comfortable seats and landing gear as distinguished from the oldjtime gliders in which the oper- i ator's legs swung from below the I planes, ready to take up ttffe strain of hard landing, often at the price of serious injuries. The longest distance covered by the gliders was 1,830 meters, with a duration of 142.5 seconds. That record was made by Klemperer, with a height of 330 meters. The apparent gliding angle of Klemperer’s l flight was one in thirty-ope. More Than Two Years En Route. In June, 1918, some Canadian soldiers, crossing the Atlantic to join the forces in Europe, threw overboard in ; mid-ocean a sealed bottle with a note inside to the effect that they were on their way to the war and asking the i finder of the bottle to forward the note to the Toronto Sunday World. The bottle has just been washed ashore at St. Ives in Cornwall and the request j been carried out What would be interesting to know would be where the bottle has been during the last two years and a half, and what Is the drift that brings so much flotsam and jetsam into the harbor of the little fishing town on the Atlantic. There are many theories, one of which credits the Gulf stream with a memory for the old smuggling days and an intention, in the case of the Canadians’ bottle, to show awareness of these good new days which find fresh uses for things of unlovely repute. Ideal Lighting. According to an illuminating engineer, what is wanted today in home illumination Is the sort of good lighting that is found on the shady side of a tree on a sunny afternoon. Substi-tute-for the sun a new 100-watt lamp, for the sky the creamy ceiling of a living room and for the tree an opalescent disk or bowl from the ceiling you now get a soft radiance which .floods the entire room as though it were opened to the sky; from the diffusing disk ; you get a generous addition of light j directly beneath having the quality of j filtered sunlight. You have approxi- : ■ mated the charming effect of mellow | radiance that was apparent under the ■ tree. Tree's Peculiar Growth. Trees that grow with a spiral twist, concealing a ropelike fiber under a ! straight bark, are not unknown, but are generally regarded as arboreal curiosities. A recent instance in which j j a pine tree of this curious formation, i discovered through the agency of a 1 lightning stroke, is reported by W. M. Kern, of New York city. The bolt, in Its downward course, circled the trunk seven times, leaving a spiral channel in which a man’s arm could be laid, and disclosing the fact that the grain of the wood followed the same helical lines, though the bark and limbs ap- ! peared normal. —Popular Mechanics Magazine. Ripe. First-Class Scout —I found a little green snake this morning. i Tenderfoot —Better leave it alone. It I might be as dangerous as a ripe one. | —Boys’ Life. How*d He Get Them? Redd—l see a man down on Long Island has a collection of 15,000 fleas. Greene —That seems queer. The average man can’t catch one.
I i Award Contract 1 (Continued from page one) the Floyd K. Stoneburner and the A. ’Volfe road. The contracts for the building of the above roads have (been awarded by 'he i onimlssiuner • and following the sale of the bonds, j work on the construe 1 ion of the high- ■ ways will be started. Sell Next Month • i Bids will be received at the June • ■ tension on Tuesday. June 7th, for the 1 construction of the following roads: ■ The Adam Bienz road, the E. S. ', Christen road, the E G. But chai ! road in Jefferson township, the Frank ' He'stand road in Jcferson townsnip , and the Peters-Rupright road. The ! viewers on the above roads filed their I reports, the reports being accepted i by the commision“rs. A re-estimate . was fl'ed on the Peters-Rupright road and the John M. Frtsluger road. A conference with the bondsmen on the L. W. Franks contract for tue construction of the William Kukelhan macadam road was held yesterday afternoon and the matter wacontinued until next month. The formal acceptance of the A. .J. Smith bridge was entered upon the docket today and the superintend ent released from his duties. The viewers on the John W. Hellet [ macadam road filed their report and ; Mrs. Josephine Bolds filed a remot. I itrance against the proposed improve | ment and asked for $3,000.00 damages. The matter was referred back j to the viewers. The superintendent of the county ' infirmary filed his monthly report ' which was approved and the commi<■ , stoners authorized him to sell three J calves and some hay. Mr. LaFountaine is now the superintendent of ' Hie infirmary. Ida M. Galloway filed a petition ’ with the board asking that a new highway be located in Wabash townI ship. They appointed D. D. Mettles, I Peter M. Moser and C. C. Beer as viewers on the proposed improve , ment and the petition was referred to them. Hope for Peace Brighter Today (Continued from page one) latest note to the German government will be delivered today to Foreign Minister Simons. Secretary Hughe*' note, late last night under dramatic circumstances, states that this government finds itself unable to reach the conI elusion that the proposals (recently ' made by Germany through the United I States afford a basis for discussion acceptable to the allied governments and : that these proposal.-- cannot be enter- ; tained. ‘This government, therefore.” the | note concludes, "again expressing its I earnest desire for a prompt settlement , iof this vital question, strongly urges' | the German government at once to ■ make directly to the allied government clear, definite and adequate proposals which would in all respects meet its just obligation.” Hughes' note caused complete surprise in Washington today, tlie mast common comment heard being tha the secretary had allowed the leadership in settlement of the reparations ques tion to slip from his hands. Patis, May 3. —(Special to Daily Democrat)—< French troops crept to-1 ward the Rhine today. The fervor of 1914 was reawakened | as soldiers gathered everywhere for transportation to the German border | under the new mobilization orders. I ready for a quick dash into the Ruhr ' valley. The class of 1919 was called up and 1 j 130,000 troops were inducted into the service. The only provinces not : i contributing were the (jevastated re ■ gions. A force of mining engineers was ■ formed at Mayence. A division ot | cavaDry under General Simon will I ' meet them at Dusseloorf to escort | I them into the Ruhr. The armies ot occupation are mobil , izing under the command of General Degoutte, commanding the Dusseloorf area. France is prepared also for naval ' ac tion. Vice Admiral Sagot Duvuaroux will command the French blockading forcI es unless the British participate when one of their officers will be assigned I command. A naval mobilization order is expected to follow a conference in London toJay between Admiral Grasaet and Premier Briand. The Germans are believed to have 7500 soldiers in the Ruhr who probably will .withdraw before a French advance. A strong cavalry force will be sent in with the engineers, however, in view of reports German mine owners are planning to provoke labor troubles which they can charge to the French. Cavalry forces will be sent in with the engineers, however, in view of reports that German mine owners are planning tj provoke labor troubles which they can charge to the French. Cavalry officers were prepared for clashes if the miners carry out their alleged plans.
CLASSIFIED WANT AD!; FOR SALE - FOR SALfe—Cap fuses and o dynamite. Fornax Milling i' Co. 1 ‘ FOR - SALE—A few “second-hand oil stoves and coal ranges. The Gas „ Co.. Third sti%et. 81-tt FOR SALE—An eleven-room double house, now renting for $32.00, within two blocks of court house on best ’ street in town. Call at 312 Win- ! cheater street. 94-tfx FOR SALE—Cinders. — Holland St. Louis Sugar Co., Fifty cents a roll. 100-ts i , FOR SALE 4 year old dapple gray , marc and a 3 year old buy mare. . Frank L. Roop, I’4 miles north from I Old Adams County Bank. 103-3tx • FOR SALE—I whole corn sheller I with power attachment. ’Phone R--863. 103-3tx i FOR SALE Yam plants. Inquire of ’ Burt Wolfe. R. 9, ’Phone 879-N. 103FOR SALE Diiroc boars; Defender’s Jr. King 165803, two-year-old; Joo Orion Hero 196755 Jr., yearling; and one September Hoar, line bred, Defender. R. C. Harvey, Decatur, R. 5. IX)R SALE —Combination coal, wood and gas range, reed baby carriage, ivory finish; also good row boat. Call 718 North Second street, or ’phone TO. FOR SALE — Jersey sweet potato plants and yams. 50c per 100. 512 South Thirteenth street, ’phone 674. FOR SALE -Anker-Holth cream - p arator. No. 5, good as new. Clarence McKean, West Main Monroe. Indiana. I(l4-tl2-eodx FOR SALE — An ■ upright piano in good condition, mahogany case, or will trade for Ford automobile. Call at 122 North First street. 104-t3x FOR SALE—Child’s white bed, in gooi condition. Inquire 244 North Second street. 104-3tx FOR SALE —1 have a fine line of ladies', misses’ and children's trimmed hats that I am selling at a great ,i eduction. Would be pleased to have you call on me at my home, three I doors west of the M. E. parsonage. Mrs. Maude A. Merriman. Monroe. In<L_ 10546 FOR SALE —Yam plants. Mrs. Jacob Koos, R. K 8, Decatur 'phon? 879-. J. 105-t3x FOR SALE—A John Deere beet drill . with fertilizer attachment, in goo.l condition. Only been used a little. W. W. Hawkins. Decatur, Ind., Route 10,19646 MISCELLANEOUS LANDOLOGY SPECIAL NUMBER just out, containing 1921 facts of clover land in Marinette county. Wis■consin. If for a home or as an investment you are thinking of buying good farm lands where farmers grow rich, send at once for this special number of Landology. It is free on request. Address Skidmore-Riehle Land Co., 285 Skidmore-Riehle Bldg., Marinette. Wise. 86-t26x MISTAKE — Overcoat taken from looses’ cigar store. Call at Studebaker General insurance Agency. 10 4WANTED WANTED —Reliable energetic sales men, should have car, good pay to work for a reliable established corporation. Address Fred C. Phinney. Fiscal Agent, Box No. 202, Kendallville, Ind. 101-6 t SALES“MEN~WANTED — Hustlers with auto, can easily earn SSO-S6O a week selling Heberling’s medicines, extracts, spices, toilet articles, and etc., direct to consumer. Wonderful demand, steady repeats, liberal profits, and you are your own boss. No investment in goods. Selling experience unnecessary. Write quick for I full particulars and secure your home county. Heberling Medicine Co., box ; 38, Bloomington, 111. ‘ 101-4 t FOR RENT FOR RENT —7 room house, semimodern, close in, possession by 9th of May. See Norris ft Steele at Graham & Walters, after 7 p. m. anyevening. 103-2tx TO RENT—S rom house on North 11th St. 'Phone 737.. John Wag- | oner. 103-2tx |TO RENT—FIat. Call 2527 104“3tx TO RENT—House of nine rooms. ! , ’Phone 519 or see Mrs. Geo. MumI ma, S. 13th St. 105-3 t Regular Meet (Continued from page One) ing of the minutes of the previous session. Reports were heard from th ' various committees. H. J. Yager of the membership committee reported six new members and promised more for the next meeting. Mr. O. F. Kneubel, of the I'nox School c-f Salesmanship, Cleveland, Ohio, gave an hour’s talk on salesman ship and human nature that we wish every business man and farmer and citizen in this locality should have heard. It was instructive, entertain Ing and interesting and those who heard it were delighted. After talking about the fact that most of the present business depression is due to our own pessimism he took up human nature and picking out men from the audience he described them with almost startling facts. He will be here again Wednesday evening with Mr Wisehaupt and !i« is a business pusher worth knowing.
8 Shows Increase -J (Continued from page one) |r The enumeration also snows a total I' of 245 soldier- In the city of Decall t«rs .f ; , t . PIANO TUNING Leave your Piano tuning orders 1 with Gay, Zwick 4 Meyers. Our i- | tuner has had tnxteen years’ exx perience. 'Phone 61 Decatur, or 76 Bluffton. Frank Shigley. 105-5 x !. ■___ I I. f VOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE. w Notice Is hereby given to the credit- • ors, loirs nml legatees of Jonathan A. . Merryman, deceased to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, < Indiana, on the 2Sth day of May. - 19J1. and'show cause. If any, why the “ final settlement accounts with the estate of said decedent should not be approved: and said heirs are notified 5 to then and there make proof of heirship. and receive their distributive f shares. JAMES T. MERRYMAN, Administrator. ( T'e<ntur. Indiana. May 2. 1921. Merryman & Sutton, attorneys. 3 2-10 3 ~~~~~—— I PUBLIC SALE Mrs. Jacob Meyer will offer at public < rale at her residence, 131 North 1 i Eighth street, <ui Saturday, M*ay 7, at 1 O'clock, I the following: •! One brown leather davenport, 3 r; genuine leather rockers, 1 oak library , table, 1 oak book-ease. 1 Victrola, , 1 oak bed-room suite with dresser and commode, 1 white enameled bed >' springs, dresser and rocker; 1 oak buffet. 6 oak dining room chairs with genuine leather seats: 1 oak high- ’ chair, 1 dining table, 1 refrigerator, 1 ■ kitchen cabinet, 1 base-burner, 1 elec “ trie washer, 2 rugs, 9x12; 1 porcli > wing. Many other articles too num ' <>rous to mention. I TERMS—Cash. i J. N. Burkhead. Auctioneer. i John Starost, Clerk. 10049 i ' NOTICE! 11. A. Straub, the expert wall-paper ■ cleaner, the man who knows how, ■ will make that dirty paper look like ’ new. Small or large jobs; also rugs ’ and chimneys cleaned, porch washing and cisterns cleaned. I will save your water. Trices right. All work guar- ' anteed. Leave order at Daily Dema ' crat office. 94-ts MARKETS-STOCKS Daily Report of Local and Foreign Markets I New York. May 3. —Oils were mar ‘ ket leaders when the stock exchange ,I opened today. I The buying which developed yesterday on ■denial of reports that the ; Mexican supply was endangered, continued today. Mexican Petroleum was up 14 at 149% and quickly ran up 'to 150%. Ccsden sold between 39% ; and 41. General Asphalt sold at a new high 1 since being listed on the exchange, going to 75 after opening up % at 71. Steels and equipnjents were strong. ; Studebaker was sold at the opening, traders laying it to the emphasis with which motor interests denied the possibility of a merger involving Du rant motors. > New York Produce. New York. —'Flour, dull and irregular; pork weaker, mess $26.00-$27.00; lard, steady, mimddlewest spot $9.75- ! ?9.85; sugar, dull, raw $9.89; refined. 1 steady; granulated $8.50-$8.60; coffee, • Rio No. 7ton spot 5%-8; Santos No. 4 54i-9%; tallow, firm, special 5, citv 1 4: hay. quiet, No.‘ 1 $1.45-$1.55; " 3 sl.lO-$1.25; clover 95-$1.45; dressed 1 poultry, quiet; turkeys 35-60; chickhens 28-48; fowls 25-39; ducks 30-40; live poultry, firm; geese 14-16; ducks , 26-32; fowls 30-36; turkeys 35; roos- : ters 17; broilers 40-50; cheesa, weak- : er. state milk commfln to specials 1 15-22. East Buffalo Market. East Buffalo. N. Y.. Mav 3.— (Special 1 to Daily Democrat I — Receipts 24 -0; shipments 570; official to New York • yesterday 8660; hogs closing about : steady; mediums and heavies $9.25- • $9.35; other grades $9.50; one deck 1 $3.65; roughs $7.00-»7.25; stags $5.50. down; cattle 150; fifteen to quarter : higher; sheep 1000, steady; clipped lambs $11.25, down; best clipped ewes ‘ $6.00-$6.50; calv.s 250, tops $ll.OO. Cleveland Livestock. Hogs, receipts 1500, market 55-15 c '|iiigiier; Yorkers $9.00; mixed $8.90 $9,110; meJiums SS.9G-$9.00; pigs $9.00; roughs $6.25; stags $4.25. Sheep and lambs, receipts 1,000; market steady: tops $ll.OO. Gattie, receipts 150, steady. -| ' Calves, receipts 300, market steady; tops $ll.OO. Cincinnati Livestock. I Cattle, receipts 600, market steady; ! shippers $8.25-$9.00. I Hogs, receipts 3500, market steady Ito 25c higher; good to choice packers and butchers $8.75. I fembf market steady; fair to good SIO.OO-$10.50. Sheep, receipts 300, market stondv; extra $5.50-$6.00. i ■ — | Cleveland Produce. , Butter and eggs—Unchanged. Poultry—Live, heavy fowls 28-30; roosters 16-18. ) —. LOCAL MARKETS > Wheat, No. 1, $1.10; new oats, , 32c; barley, 50c; rye, $1.00; wool, 20c: good yellow assorted corn. 65c; mixed or white corn 60c; clover seed $9.00; ‘ timothy $1.50-$2.00. * LOCAL EGG MARKET r Eggs 18c LOCAL CREAMERY MARKET • Butterfat ;.., 25c
TO GIVE SALE Watch for the announcement ot auction sale to be conducted > Pleasant Mills Baptist churc?May -. 10443 ATTENTION, BREEDERS Moineau de Booe. Sorrel n-i , 'Stallion, and Bayard de OuJi „ aB s Belgian Stallion, will make he son at the Red Riverside tur Ind Cali and see these befbre breeding. u °rses 9M2t * C-JJUCE. owner * AUTOMOBILES AND ' ♦ TRACTORS REPAIRED Can repair your auto, tractor and other machinery on short notice. Experienced workmanship at lowest price. Shon in | Bellmont park. 1 1,1 Shop telephone gm Residence telephone . 4 r ft OTTO REPPERt ’?' 4> NOTICE TO FARMERS I will stand my stallions at Preble on Mondays and Tuesdays, and at mv residence, one-half mile south and one-half mile west of the Friedhein church, the balance of the week AUGUST CONRAD. 86x-3tw for 3 wks DENTAL OFFICES CLOSE All dental offices will be closed on Wednesday afternoon 8 , beginning April 6, until further notice. J. Q. NEPTUNE ROY ARCHBOLD FRED PATTERSON 80-3Ot BURT MANGOLD. 4 — AUGUST WALTERS Plumbing and Heating 119 N. Ist St Shop Phone 207 Residence 507 ♦ : ♦ ♦ —< JOHN SCHURGER & SON Abstracts ot title to real estate. Money to loan on Improved real estate at 6 per cent, interest. Office in Laman building, opposite court house. — ♦ Have you tried that All Pork Sausage at the White Meat Market? 'Phone 388 and let us send you some. Four deliveries daily. Brushwiller & Bed. Abstracts of Title Real Estate and Farm Loans See French Quinn, The Schlrmeyer Abstract Co., Over Vance & Linn Clothing Store. MR. AUTOMOBILE OWNER Now Is the time to make applica tion for your 1921 Automobile License Do it today. See me at the Democrat office. Richard Ehinger, Notary Public. BLACK & GETTING UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING Calls answered promptly day or night Private Ambulance Service. Office Phone —90. Home Phones: Black 727; Getting 945 Agents for Pianos and Phonographs. DR. H. E. KELLER Decatur, Indiana. GENERAL PRACTICE OFFICE S^ClALTlES—Diseases of women and children; X-ray examinations; Flourscopy examinations of the internal organs; X-ray and electrical treaments for high blood pressure and hardening of the arteries. X-ray treatments for GOITRE, TUBERCULOSIS AND CANCER. Office Hours: 9 to 11 a. m.—l to sp. m.—7 to 9p m Sundays by appointment Phones: Residence 110; Office 409. N. A. BIXLER OP-TOM-E-TRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted. HOURS: 8 to 11:30—12:30 to 5:00 Saturday, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 136. Dr. C. V. Connell Veterinarian Office: Horse Sale Barn, Ist street. Office Phone Ll 3 Residence Phone... DR. C. C. RAYL 105 North Second Street Practice limited to Surgery and diagnosis of Abdomino-pelvic Disease Office (1 to 4 & 6 to 8 p. m. Hours (Sunday 9to 10 m ’ Phone 581.
