Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 245, Decatur, Adams County, 18 October 1922 — Page 6

BOX SOCIAL Kverylmdy I* cordially Invited to attend the Box Sot Ini to he given nt the Koiueenr school I mile north ot Monroe next Friday evening. Oct. 20. Albert I'opii'SH, Nellia McGath, 243t5x Teachers. 1 — o I NOTICE TO TAXPAYER* ——— i Notice fa hereby given that , Monday, November 6th, 1922 ( wil) he the last day for paying yonr fall installment of taxes. The treas urer's office will be open from 8 a. nt. I until 4 p. tn., daring the tux paying f season. All taxes not paid by that . time will become delinquent and a penalty of 10 per cent, will be added. ' )to not put off your taxes a. they

must be paid, and the law points out the duty of the treasurer. Those who have bought or sold property and wish a division ot taxes should come in at once. Don’t wait for the rush. No receipts can be laid away for anyone, so do not ask for it. HUGH D. HITE, Treasurer of Adams County. 237-NOV.4. _• - NO HUNTING ALLOWED Hunting or trespassing on the farm of ,ne undersigned near Pe.erson is forbidden. W. B. Weldy, owner. Geo. Squier, tenant. 242t4x — o NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE

No. 1906. Notice is hereby given to the creditors. heirs and legatees of Ezra MeBarnes, deceased, to appear in the Xdams Circuit Court, held at Decatur. Indiana, on the ;’4 day of October, l!«22. and show cause, if any. why the (FINAL SET I LEM ENT ACCOUNTS with the estate of said decedent should not be approved; and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and receive their i distributive shares. LYDIA McBABNKS. Administrarix Decatur, Indiana. Oct. 3. 1922. Dore B. Firwin. Atty. 4-11-18 , NOTICE TO HUNTERS No hunting or trespassing will be allowed on my farm, located in Union 1 township. Please take notice. ; r.teod x EDWIN SCHAMERLOH O O t J. N. BVRKHEAD Monroe. Ind. Live Stock and General AUCTIONEER My years of experience mean ■ successful sales for you. I Use Decatur-Monroe phone at ! mv expense. O 0 O ———o HARRY DANIELS Live Stock and Farm Sale AUCTIONEER Phone 861-N at my expense or see me at Vance & Linn’s on Saturdays. O— 0 o o FRED W. BUSCHE AUCTIONEER Experience with training assures you of a good sale. Mouroe or Decatur Phone I O O —-rwc A

BABY'S BATH means a lot to baby and a lot to you, too. Therefore why not put in one of our sanitary, up-to-date, snowwhite, spotless, tubs? Baby’s bath will be an event then. Let us show you the real economy and added pleasure from having a sanitary bathroom such as we install and eulp. The cost is nothing when the comfort Is considered. P. J. HYLAND West Monroe Street Water Bills are now due 10 added after ♦ next Friday. Water Bent,

FOREIGNERS ARE NOT WELCOME IN GERMANY — H alted Press Service. 1 Berlin, Oct. 18. Americans nnd other foreigners w ill be unwelcome In Germany this winter. Already, a keen spirit of resentment, especially among the working (■lasses. Is setting in against what an(•ailed "valuta-strong foreigners." And. part of this resentment it may' bo said in nil fairness is attributable { to the conduct of certain traveling foreigners, who have been swarming | over Germany this summer. They have made It difficult for

J Americans and others whose business ' requires them to remain in Germany. I They have flaunted in the faces of i waiters and shopgirls their dollars and their cheap marks; they have boasted of how cheaply they can buy , food-s and goods in Germany, and have said they would lie "glad to get rid of this junk"—meaning the marks they bought hy the bale. Tile German has seen this; he has read, too, daily of how many marks can be had for a dollar, and of howl the foreigners were "buying out” the! country, taking along not only luxur-| ies but necessities. He lias heard of I

ses out necessities. tie nas neuru oi the foreigner feasting with cavier. lobster and champagne at rates comparatively low when reckoned in American or British currency. Further, lie has observed that many >t tile foreigners were leading a loose life wine, women and song. Then he lias turned the page, and read how many hundred marks his meat and his butter and his bread and potatoes are costing and will cost. He lias reckoned that up in terms of a ; weekly wage running between 2,000, and 4.000 marks at present and has! •ome to the conclusion that the econo-! mic situation is all wrong. And. along witli it, he has gathered t sullen dislike for the foreigner. Tile result is a distinct spirit of hostility. A few cases'have come to light . in tile last couple of weeks where per-; sons speaking English on the streets were hissed. The foreigner wonders at such treatment and resents it. On the other j hand, though, the German resents the | boorish impoliteness and loud mouthed braggadocio which too many travel-: ers assume. Harding Predicts New Era Os Prosperity Washington. Oct. IS.—United Press. Predicting a “new era *of activity and prosperity” for the United States, President Harding today promised the nation's farmers that they would be among the first, in that new era to get “the substantial recognition" that they must have. The president’s promise, coupled with a statement that the Harding ad-

ministration has already done much for the farmer in helping restore 1 prices and markets, was read to a : farmer's gathering at Washington ■ Court House, Ohio, this afternoon by Secretary of Agriculture Wallace. Harding said prices for farm prod ucts are still too low. It is apparent. he said, that the farmer is not being adequuately compensated. The ; Washington administration has recog- . nized this condition and has done evi erything in its power to restore nor-j ’ mal balance between prices and costs 1 of production. A great deal has been | accomplished and lam glad to say that > the trend is strongly toward better conditions for the farmer. The president predicted that the American farmers never would unite ’ on a program of decreased production, I such as has been threatened recently by some farmer leaders. o TOM THROWS 'ER IN HIGH Indianapolis, Oct. 18 —Tom Taggart came up from French Lick today and threw the Indiana democratic cam paign into “high." Taggart will remain in Indianapolis until after the election Nov. 7th directing the democratic efforts to elect Samuel M. Ralston to the U. '

S. senate and to break the solid republican ranks in the lower house of congress. NEGRO FARMERS MAKE PROGRESS St. Mark community, Lee County.' Ark., furnishes an example of substantial progress made by negro farmers who have benefitted from agricultural extension work. According to a report received by the United States Department of Agriculture, of 75 families in this community, 50 own their own farms, comprising 3,800 acres i valued at about $200,000. In accord f with the safe-farming system advocat ed by extension workers in Southern States, these families for the most part raise food and feed sufficient to' meet the needs of themselves and their stock each year by growing corn, legumes, hogs, poultry, and good gardens, in additions to their cotton crops. -J • ■ s—s_s—WANT ADS EARN—s—s—s

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 18, 1922

GIVES AIMS OF INDIANA H.S.A.A. Secretary A. L. Trester Sets Forth Purposes of Athletic Association i So few people really understand the real purposes and aims of the Indiana •High School Athletic Association that ! secretary A. 1.. Trester, ot' the Asso- j jciiitlon has made the following sum mary of its stand on important school issues. 1. No Proselyting. No prosoly ting and no recruiting. The han is on the importation of players. Students! and others get the wrong attitude to ward High School athletics wherever j such is practiced, ('ommercialism I enters here and our doors should be locked securely against such, 2. —Sportsmanship. The "win at any cost’ ideal is a low one, very 'much too low to use in the training lef boys and girls. "Play hard and win 'by fair means" is a much higher ideal I

'and will make far better citizenship. 3. Education First. Athletics and physical training are elements only in school work. A proper sense of relative values is necessary. Toe many games, too much time away from home, too many recitations missed. too little attention to scholarship, are teeth in the arguments of critics that need extraction. 4. —Fair play of Athletics They are students in a democratic High School ' and are deserving if they are deserving. Athletes should not be passed or I dunked in subject matter just because i they are athletes. No favors and no 1 spites shonld be shown athletes. 5. Intra Mural Sports. Provision for more games between classes, groups, leagues, etc., within the school so that all may benefit. Critics i use this argument and school men i must turn the argument to secure add cd facilities in the way of equipment directors, gymnasiums, play fields. I etc. The only thing necessary to so-' ( lire general participation in sport is ’ an opportunity furnished by facilities, equipment and the personel to direct. Leadership. No physical directors, no athletic managers and no coaches who are not clean, competent, fairminded men and women with high ideals and who know boys and girls, their aspirations, yearnings and needs.; Real genuine leadership is absolutely , ' necessary in athletics and physical . training work. ARTHUR L. TRESTER Permanent Secretary I o Gove.nor McCray, of Indiana, proi poses to honor Paul Dresser, writer of the Indiana State song. “On the

Banks of the Wabash, Far Away,” by establishing a Dresser state park somewhere along the Wabash, with a monument to the memory of Dresser. The governor learned that Dresser's body lies in a neglected grave in St. Boniface Roman Catholic Cemetery. Chicago, and proposed that it be reinterred in the new park. o IMPROVEMENT IN REINDEER HERDS L. J. Palmer, in charge of the Gov- i ern mentis reindeer experiment Station at Nome. Alaska, has just sent' in a report to the United States De : pariment of Agriculture that condi- , tfons among Alaskan reindeer herds are the best this year in the history of the industry. The fawn crop has been unusually large, and favorable eon ditions have greatly reduced the ordinary losses. Herd owners who have adopted recommendations of the Bio logical Survey for improved handling of the herds report marked gain in size and condition of animals, and a reduction in the losses from those experienced under former methods. Reindeer introduced two years ago on Nunivak Island are doing remarkably well, with the young much larger in size than animals of the same age on

the mainland. o ISTATES TO SAVE IN FREIGHT ON SURPLUS WAR MATERIAL The various Western Stated will : ' save considerable money in paymen' j of freight on surplus war material < through new rates that have been secured by the Bureau of Public Roads of the United States Department of Agriclture. I>arge quantities of material are still being received by the bureau and allotted to the States for use in I road construction. Recently, through representation of the bureau as to the character of the material and the use. to which it is to be put, consideraly lower rates have been granted. On transcontinental shipments, motor vehicles now take a rate of 60 cents per hundred; against a former all-rail rate of $5.35; machim ery. 60 cent/ per hundred, and similar reductions on other classes of material. I S_WANT ADS EARN—s—S—s

CONVENTION AT PLEASANTGROVE Root and Union Townships Sunday Schools to Meet On Next Sunday The Root and Union township joint 1 Sunday School convention will be held '..t the Pleasant Grove ehureh, five {miles northeast of Decatur, on next, Sunday afternoon nnd evening. \ fine program has been arranged for ! both sessions and n large crowd is ex- ' pected. The convention will be in I the charge of John Hibson, the town [ship president. Following is the pro-; {gram to lie given: Afternoon Session. 1::0 p. m. Song Service. Devotional* led by ('. S. Mumnia. Quartette, Moser Sisters of FortWayne. Address— Mrs. Emma Daniel. Male Quartete, from Decatur Meth-, odist church. I Address, Hy C. L. Walters. 1 Qnfii' A 11 il

Song by Audience. I Announcements. Evening Session —7:00 p. m. Devotional*. , Song, by Moser Sisters quartette. ’ Address, hy the Pastor. ' Song by Quartette. Addreis. by township chairman. Song by Oliver Walters and John) Walters. Song by audience. Short talks on Sunday School work. John Gibson, township chairman. MAY CHANCE HIS PLEA TO CHARGE Peculiar Circumstance Arrises in Case of Floyd Biberstine, Berne Floyd Biberstine. of near Berne, who recently pleaded guilty to grand larceny in the circuit court, appeared in court this morning to receive judg ' ment in the case. The case was continued until October 25. Biberstine is charged with taking a horse and buggy belonging to Virgil , | Ford on the night of August 9. He oli-j tained the outfit in Geneva and when I. he reached a farm belonging to one lot his neighbors, he unhitched the : horse and turned it into a field, it is said, and then pulled the buggy and j (harness to his home. A charge of ■ grand larceny was tiled against Biber I • stine, hut he cannot be held for the > theft of the horse since he did not con- . .- . T'l,.. zxf

tert it to his own use. The value of the buggy and harness is said to be less than $25. and since the amount taken must be $25 or more before the t harge is grand, larceny, charge made against Btberstine is said to bi faulty. Biberstine is preparing t«.: chartge his pliea to not guilty to the the charge of grand larceny, it is said. ’ however, he could be charged with pe:tlt larceny f<k stealing the bijtjgy and i harness,.-and with malicious trespass for removing the horse from the hitch ■rack in Geneva to the pasture field, ft i i.» said. MAKING GOOD COFFEE Good coffee can be made in an or f dinary coffee-pot. although the modern i I I percolators give better results. The . ideal coffee-making tensil is the elec- » trie percolator which can be placed .' on the table. The advantage is that r' the coffee can be brewed and served , I the moment it is done. i Brewed coffee, once injured by -cool- ’ ■ ling, cannot be restored by re-heating. i. j Coffee grounds are valueless after n> boiling water has passed over them, j-'so that the common kitchen practice [i' of adding a little fresh coffee to some n I old grounds, or brewing coffee an

hour before it is served, is a culinary ; crime. As for the quantity of coffee neces j sary for each cup. this varies with the grade of coffee used and the method lof brewing, and above all, with inI dividal taste. However, a rounded. ■ tablespoonful to the cup seems to be' the usual practice. Whether coffee should be served 'with cream and sugar or with one or the other, or without either, also' seems to be a matter of taste. I can only speak for myself, having ’been raised to take both cream and | ' sugar in my coffee. Ten years ago I ■ decided to try it. without cream, and i have never used a drop since then. I have also cut down the quantity of I sugar to less than a teaspoonful to i the cup—Editor of Type Metal Magazine. ; —; —o • Mrs. Mabel McKinley Baer, favorite ■ niece of President McKinley, is an “insurgent” Republican candidate for the assembly in Westchester county, 1 New York.

noth r. of mu. mitti i’.mi.nt Oi B<*TATN Nntlic Im hereby Ki ven to the rroill* mi'M, heir* nn«l Ivtmtee* Hen jinn In , HiHiinirnrinor. tn appear in th. \ I iiiin Circuit Court, held at i , < us ii. Indiana, on the da> of •*<>' . nnd k!h»w 4‘iihhi‘, If any, why tn<* ' i i.v.\i. seiti.umen't accihni;I will, state ot said d<'<e<lent i should not !><• apnroved; and said heir* , .ire notified to then and there inuK' i 'proof '<f heirship, and receive their I distributive la,lts. M Alt! liAfMGARTMYIt. Administratrix I liecntur, Indiana. Oct. 17. 1922 I is' burger * Son. Attys. IS-.;, MARKETS-STOCKS Daily Report of Local and Foreign Markets New York, OH. IS—Mexico Pete at :;lie opening today showed the effect .of an all too rapid advance and after I gaining on the initial sale at 227sold off to 225Vj. | Standard Oil of New Jersey was up : '•» at 215. Coppers, equipments and ■ specialties continued to display trength. Anaconda gained H to 53%. Baldwin after opening unchanged at 1140%, ran up quickly to 141% while 11 ullman was up 2% at 134. Steel common advanced % to 109- % but Studebaker lost % to 136’j. The rails were firm, New York Cen- <>•*»! nn«l fimithorn Pacific showing.

tral and Southern Pacific showing, fractional gains while Atchison was, off %. Further sharp advances in high I priced stocks occurred in the second i hour. Tobaccos which had been neg- [ 1 le. ted in the search for issues in po- 1 sition to make capital distributions developed sudden strength. Liggett & Meyers spurted 1% to 25; Lorrillard 4 to 176: American Tobac- I co. 5 to 167; American Tobacco B, 5%': to 163%. Special movements in individual stocks was the feature of the first ; hour. National Biscuit, new. sold up ; to 36% on the curb, which made the cld stock on the big board worth around 253 on the present basis of ordering. United Fruit made a new high for 1922 at 159 and Baldwin at 142%. Cleveland Produce Cleveland. O„ Oct. IS.—Butter, extra in tubs, 49{i49%c; prints, 50@50%c; firsts, 47%@48c; eggs, fresh gathered' northern extras, 44c; extra firsts, 43c; Ohios, 41c; western firsts, new cases. 38c. Poultry, live heavy, fowls, 24<@26c; roosters. 14© 15c; spring ducks, 20® 25c. Potatoes. a bushel. East Buffalo Livestock Receipts 16«M>; shipments 1520; of-i I’cial to New York yesterday 4940; I hegs closing steady; all grades gen-j >raly |[email protected]; roughs $8.00; stags [email protected]; cattle 275, slow; sheep 1200; best lambs $15.00, few $15.25; ewes |7.oo(ii 8.00; calves 150; I tops 5i4.00. New York Produce Market Flour —Quiet. Pork—Quiet; mess $29.00(7129.50. Lard—Steady; middle west spot $11.50 IT 11.60. Suar —Raw—Firm $5.53; refined ! lirm; granulated |6.25®6.00.

Coffee —Rio No. 7 on spot 10%c. Tallow —Firm; special 644 c; city 544 c. j Hay—Firm: prime No. 1 $1.25; No. , S sl.lg; clover $1.0061.20. |< Dressed poultrjf—Steady; turkeys , 30653 c; chickens 216 30c; fowls 1:> j 634 c; ducks 30c. Live poultrv —Quiet; geest 216 25c; lucks 223630 c; foyls 20fc27c; tu.keys 38 6 50c; roosters 14c; chickens, broilers 24626 c. ( Cheese—Firm; state milk, common , 'to specials 19446 26c; skims, com-1, mon to specials 19c. Butter — Firmer; receipts 6391; creamery extra 4544 c; state dairy tubs 4664644 c; imitation creamery firsts .16 4444 c. Egs—Firm; receipts 11406; nearbv white fancy SBo*S4c; nearby mixed, fancy 56 6 64c; fresh firsts 386 56c; Pacific coast 42@78c; western white ■firsts 62666 c. Liberty Bonds U. S. Liberty 3%s $100.82 U. S. Liberty 2nd 4s 99.00 U. S. Liber'” Ist 444 s 99 04 U. S. Liberty 2nd 444 s 99.00IT. S. Liberty 3rd 444« 99.10; IT. S. Liberty 4th 444 s 99.02 .Victory 4%s 100.26 Indianapolis Livestock ; Hog receipts 10,000; market 15c@ 20c higher; best heavies $9,706’9.75; .'medium mixed. [email protected]; common choice, $9.60. - Cattle receipts 1500; market steady, • steers $11.50@12; cows and heifers, 1 , s6@9. I i Sheep receipts 500; market, steady. ' to higher, tops $5.00.

Calf receipts 700; market $1 high-' |er; tops $14.00. Foreign Exchange I New York, Oct. 18.—Foreign exchange opened irregular. Sterling 446%, up 1 7-16; French 0747; lire 0423%; Marks 0003 7-16; Belgian' 0696. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET ' No. 1 Wheat $1.05 I No. 2 Wheat 98c | No. 2 White Oats 40c j White Corn 85c i Yellow Corn 90c! ■ Rye 65c 1 Barley 50c Timothy Seed SI.OO to $2.00 Alsiko $3.00 to $7.00 Red Clover SIO.OO Decatur Produce Market Large Hens 16c . ’ Leghorn Fowls 12c Leghorn Chickens 12c 1 Heavy Spring Chickens 16c • 'Old Cocks 8c Ducks 13c Geese 10c Turkeys 14c ’ Eggs, dozen 36c egg Markrt . Eggs, dozen 36c »-« Local Creamery Market ‘Butterfat 38c

CLASSIFIED j NOTICES, BUSINESS CARDS ’

♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ CLASSIFIED ADS ♦ FOR SALE ' F'Oit t;ALE— I.unip rock salt at 1c a lb. Adams County Equity Ex- ) change, Mouroe St. &G.IL & 1. Phone 233. 218tf FOR SAI.FT A few choice Du roe spring males. W. E. Nidlingvr. 241t6 FOR SALE—Colonial velvet rug, 113x12. Good as new. Phone 410. FOR SALE—White Wyandotte cockerels; $1.25 each if taken before December 1; Grant Owens. Decatur, route 5; Monrqe phone M-107. rtilt SALE - Appleton 2 roll cornshredder. Just the right size for your own use. Priced for quick sale. We have no use for it is our corn is ail on the shock. See it at once. Decatur. 5. Frank FauVote. 243-3tx.

FOR SALE —Spring service boars. Selected Big Type Poland China. Priced to move them quickly. See them at once. Holthouse A. Faurote. Decatur. 5, 243-6tx. FOR SALE Fresh cow with calf by side. I. F. Yaney. One-half mile south of Kirkland high school. 244 3t3 FOR SALE—White Wyandotte Cockerels from pedigreed stock. Their Dames all have egg records ot over 200 eggs in their pullet year. Their i sires and Dames were the winners at the Chicago National Poultry Show in 1921. If you want to build up your ' flock for heavy egg production, got some of these cockerels. Dr. L. K. Magley. 244-stx. FOR SALE —A mule colt; mare. In | quire of Frank Carrier. 2% miles South of Decatur. R. 6. 245-34 X WANTED BOARDERS WANTED—Men preferred. Phone 540 White 243-vt WANTED—Practical nur.-e; telephone 903. 243-3tx, WANTED—Gentlemen boarders. Call 950 White. 245-3 t. For Reni FOR RENT—Large front room; soft water bath. 325 North Third st. LOST AND FOUND ! LOST —Key ring and keys; return to J. F. Arnold or to this office. 244-3 t STRAYED OR STOLEN—BIack “and 1 tan hound. Leather hitch strap around neck. Reward. H. Harvey. 250 So. 3rd St. _ 244-3-x. STRAYED OR STOLEN—BuII dog, brindle. Finder call 619. Reward. 244-2tx NO HUNTING allowed on my farm. . C. D. KUNKEL. 243-Itx. NO HUNTING ALLOWED Hunting or trespassing on the farms of the undersigned is forbidden: ( (Christ Sheets, Philip Strahm, E. Fritzinger, Chas. Cook. Chas. Longenber- , tier. David Cook, Tise Baker, Harlo W. Mann. Tue-thur to Dec. Ist-x MEN NOTICE If you are in need of a rain coat this fall don’t fail to see the $3.98 gua-

rantee water proof coat. Frank Young j authorized agent. Phone 825 and 2. Will call and show you samples. 245-2tx. —o DRAY LINE Long distance and local hauling. Call phone 938, Oscar Sprague, Decatur, Ind. catur. Indiana. 245t3x Pope Pius is to have the first ponti fical automobile. The people of Milan have presented him with a machine of the latest Italian model. It is mauve colored and bears the papal coat ot arms surmounted by the triple crown and the pontifical keys. O O JEFF LIECHTY AUCTIONEER A successful sale and the high dollar. I Berne Phone. o <5 o o DECATUR STAMP WORKS Rubber Stamps made to order. 1 Call after 6 P. M. ! 2nd floor K. C. Bldg. lo 6 .; --; " k ;/f 5 Sale ’ Calendar c ______ C October 17—40 head O. I. C. pure '' bred hogs. P. B. Dykeman, Decatur, c R. R No. 9. c | Oct 19—Tone Andrews, 2 miles e south of Decatur. • Cl Oct. 24—Julius Johnloz, 5 miles c south and 1 mile west of Decatur or 1 c mile west and 1 mile north of Monroe. Nov. I—Otto Lambert, 444 miles c northeast of Decatur. | Nov. B.—Fred Busche, 5 miles south | west of Decatur. Pure bred Duroc Hog c sale.

♦ ♦♦♦♦♦ + ♦♦ ♦ BUS!NESS CARDS /♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦J Pain, in the back ar. , y you should not allow to continu. u ‘ heeded. Kidney trouble. , re dl where they reach final stage®, ’ Let me examine your case My corrective methods will n d V6ll of your kidney worries. 7 " FOR BETTER HEALTH BEI DR. FROHNAPFEL, D C Chiropractic and O«teop.th| 0 ’ Treatment, given to suit your «... .t 144 So. 2nd St. .p hoM 7j Office Hour. 10-12 a. m—l-5 Mp m S. E. BLACK UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING Call, answered promptly day or nfcin Private Ambulance Service Office Phone: 90.

Home Phones: Home Phone: 727 tgent. for Plano, and Pbonoin tnllt DR. H. E. KELLER Decatur. Indiana CENEKAI. PRACTICB IFFICE SPECIALTIES: vomen and children; X-ray m.X!' tlons; Glourseopy examination? of 7?; nternal organ.; X-ray and electrlSj reatments for high blood nrem?. ind hardening of the arteries reatments for GOITRE. TUBKnc?’ LOSIS AND CANCER. Office Hours: I to II a. m.—l to 6 p. m.—7 to Id , Sundays by appointment. Residence 110: Office oi N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Ryes Examined. Cdasses Fitted HOURS 8 to 11:30—12:30 to 5;00 Saturday 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135. Closed Wednesday afternoon. DR. C. C. RAYL Surgeon X-Ray and Clinical laboratories Office Hours: 1 to 4 and 6to 8 p. tn, Sunday., 9 to 10 a m. Phone 681. FEDERAL FARM LOANS Abstracts of Title. Real Estate. Plenty money to loan 01 Government Plan. See French Quinn. (ffice—Take first stairway south Decatur Democrat 0 0 DR. FRANK LOSE ; Physician and Surgeon I Located in offfce formerly occt i pied by Dr. D- D. Clark. I North Third Street Phones: Office 422; Home 413 Office Hours—9 to 11 a. m. 1 to 6—7 to 9 p. m. Sunday 8 to 9 a. m. 0 - - ■-0 Callow & Kohne Sell Hoosier Paint—lt's the best 0 ~ - - — -0 DR. S. J. ZURBUCH, D. C„ PH. C. CHIROPRACTOR Rooms 1-2-3-4 K. C. Bldg. Office Hours; 10 to 12 a. m, 1 to 5 p. m. and 6 to 8 p. mPhone day and night, 189. (Lady Attendant)

J : —0 ~ 11. S.MICHAI D Dealer in Real Estate. Farms and City Properties For Sale or Exchange. 133 S. 2nd St. Decatur, Ind Office Phone 104 Residence Phone 496 — o — NOTICE Improved farms for sale at $125.00 per acre and less. I also make lons time loans without commission to borrower. See Wm. Norris, 512 South Thirteenth St., Decatur, Indiana. Phone 67 4. 239-<t ' e — NOTICE TO HUNTERS No hunting or trespassing allow* on the farms ot the undersigned os ers and tenants: William Ehrman, Milton Zimmerman, Edward Arnold. Floyd Ston • burner, Jesse S. Byerly. . 237-MWF-2wkx "-■l FT, WAYNE & DECATUR TRACTION LINE Leaves Decatur Leaves Ft. WafM 5:45 a.m. 7:00 a. B. 8:00 a. m. 9:00 a. m10:00 a. m. 11:00 a. b. 12:00 p. m. 1:«> P2.00 p. m. 3:09 p. B. 4:00 p. m. 5:30 p. B5:30 p.m. .7:00 p.m. 7:00 p. m. 9:00 p - m ' 10:00 p. m ' ll:® 6 p - “■ Freight car leaves Decatur •••• 7:4a a m , Arrives’at 'Fort Wayne ..9:30 a. B Leaves Fort Wayne... .12.0® n Arrives at Decatur 1:3« PP. f. RATMOND, A$* L Office Hours 7:30 a. m., 7:00 P-®-