Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 21, Number 9, Decatur, Adams County, 10 January 1923 — Page 6
<r~ YES or NO? A Test of Your tntslllgsnc. k J The correct answer to on* of these] problems is YES, to the oilier NO. j STOP TO THINK! 1 —ls the Earth a p<-rfe<t sphere? 2. Is rain "fresh water" in spite oi, the fa<t that it may be first drawn from the salt ocrons by the sun? Yesterday's Questions Answered 1. —ls pink a color? Answer—NO. Pink is not a color, it is a shade of red. Pink is created by a blending of red ami white. 2. —ls the rainbow in the sky more n phenomenon of light and atmosphere than it is an optica! illusion? Answer —YES. The rainbow Is not' an optical illusion: the substance is real and is created by the reflex rays ' of the sun on moisture in the atmos i phere. Light and the crystal ele- * ment in clear water will reproduce all the colors of the spectrum. o Orders Issued By Secretary Hughes Today (Continued from page one) tanks, airplanes and armored cars, will take part in the peaceful “capture" of the wealthy Ruhr city' /.Hied engineers, including Belgian and Italian, will accompany the advance guard, it Is understood, and will take up positions immediately at j the coal mines. Great Britain Informed London, Jan. 10—Groat Britain has been informed of France's plans for occupation and understands the United States has been similarly advised. The cabinet today considered the, situation, in the light of information conveyed to the foreign office by the
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS ANNUAL REPORT SHOWING RECEIPTS AND EXPENDITURES FOR 1922 Receipts Expenditures Balance Overdrawn Balance Jan. 1. 1922 $ 43.472.45 Clerk of Circuit Court 2,271.86 4.969.77 County Auditor 143.90 5,479.29 County Treasurer 654.11 3,509.79 County Recorder 2.369.30 2.491.42 County Sheriff 1.599.45 3,077.31 County Surveyor 707.70 County Superintendent 4.285.64 County Assessor 1,413.45 County Coroner 274.90 County Health Coni. 367.29 Commissioners Court 1,034.80 County Council & Atty. 707.50 County Board of Review 810.00 County Board of Turancy 926.60 Expense of Assessing 6,139.50 Township Poor 3,510.66 3,660.23 Court House 2,800.49 County Jail 1.294.32 County Poor Farm 1,568.72 15,129.60 County Home for Orphans 4.325.94 Ex. of Inmates. State Inst. 592.99 Expense Insanity Inquests 1,293.90 Ex. of Epileptic Inquests 5.00 Expense of Elections 3.50 8,828.79 Ex. of Burial <Soldierst 1.500.00 Expense Public Printing 72.50 1,005.16 Highways. Viewers, etc. 288.64 Board of Charities 42.65 Farmers Institutes 83.75 Ex. Bridge Supt. Engr. j 153 80 Rent of Offices 216 00 County Agr Agent 166.66 1 774 1" Smith Bridge Interest 761000 Hospital Interest "anrun Hospital Board Exp. 2,250.00 " i"i "9 Taxes Refunded 83.82 ’’’ Examination of Records 49.09 “ Expense of Bridges Bridge Repairs H g™ Prosecuting Attorney *lo’l,> Changes of Venue ' *"••• Circuit Court. SpJ. Judge 890.00 910.35 Circuit Court, Jury Fees 36.00 Expense, Circuit Court 6,582.93 Interest from Depositories 7,973.28 Taxes, County Revenue 109,781.58 Ex-Officers Fees 306.17 Miscellaneous 45.00 e Total $181,255.35 $122,006.89 Balance County Revenue, Jan. 1, 1922 $59,248.46 * Miscellaneous Funds Principal, Common 12,259.61 11,697.61 562.00 Principal, Congressional 1,795.71 gpl 75 833.96 Principal, Perm. Endow. 1,232.29 1,232'29 Interest, Common 3,938.70 5’853'32 1.914.62 Interest, Congressional 913.90 L 107.77 193'87 Interest, Perm. Endow. 371.73 505.24 1335>1 Fines & Forfeitures 868.00 680.00 188.00 Hale of Bonds. Roads 192.595.36 181,915.44 10,679.92 Taxation Bonds & Con. 261.350.34 212,045.20 49,305.14 Tax Sale Redemption 1,456.24 1,456.24 Show License 60.00 ” 60.00 Bluhrq Interest 807.28 683.47 Bluhm Construction 2,677.76 2.677.76 Younkin Interest 1,051.66 938.11 113.55 Younkin Construction 213.89 101’61 109'28 Overdrawn Roads 2,139.20 2 139J0 Drains 23.98 ’ Clean Outs 57.02 573)2 State Tax 5,714.62 5,714.62 Benevolent Inst. Tax ’ 29,951.25 State Highways 16,487.32 16.487.32 State School Tax 36.546.17 36,546.17 State Educational Tax 24.913.72 24,913.72 State Vocational 2.490.39 2J90.39 Teachers Pension 994.19 994 19 Memorial 2,995.32 2 995 32 Agricultural Station 1.988.44 1 988 44 Docket Fees 348.00 306.00 42.00 , Township Tax 19,117x95 19 117 95 Local Tuition 137,824.69 137 824 69 Special School Tax 158,558.81 158 558 81 Road Tax 17,546.66 17,546 66 Common Schoo] Revenue 29,466.18 29 466 18 Surplus Dog Fund 3,626.90 3 626 90 Library Fund 4,503.02 4 503 02 Corporation Tax 97,625.12 97,625.12 Hospital Interest 4,007.30 4,007.30 Hospital r Construction 100,000.00 54:271 88 45 728 12 Inheritance Tax 1,338.14 1,338.14 Gravel Road Repairs 123,181.37 94,544.41 28,636.96 T °tal $1,484,293.58 $1,290,904.38 $195,631.20 $2,242.00 Balance all funds Jan. 1, 1923 $193,389 20 Respectfully submitted January 2nd,1923 ERNST CONRAD B. F. BREINER GEO. SHOEMAKER Board of Commissioners Attest: Adams County, Indiana MARTIN JABERG K Auditor Adams County, Indiana *
French amlnssador to the Court of St. James’ Germans Worried Essen, Germany, Jun. Id Hemmed In on the west by French cavalry, Infantry. artillery, tanks and airplanes, all ready to move toward Essen, first •object of France's definitive occupation plans, Essen was a city of strained nerves today. The popuatlon Is tense, but reservi ed. The uncertainty as to when the French troops will enter the city Is causing the most worry. Hotel guests were notilled they might have to give up their rooms at ary time. o —j Delay Action On Repeal Os The Primary Law (Continued from page one) ■ mittee on public morals. Abolishment of the state pun basing i agent was provided in a bill intro iluied by< Representatives Lew Gole, ■of Elnora. This hill if passed would mean the sacrifice of a $6,000 a year salary now going to Fred Robinson, campaign manager for Governor McCray. Representative Albert Plapp, of '.Marysville, presented a bill providing for abolishment of the Indiana motor police force and restoring the money spent in its maintenance to the highway commission fund. Thirty days' imprisonment for first offense bootleggers and a fine of SIOO to SSOO was provided in a bill introduced by Senator Oliver Dunn. An- ! other measure in the senate would i abolish the engineers' registration board. It was presented by Senator Hays. 0 ABOUT THE SICK Mrs. Vlinton Uautsenhouser, who has been seriously sick for the past three weks, is reported to bo improving today.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, WEDNESDAY, .IANI’ARY 10, 1023.
f DRI'GTRAI I l( IN ENGLAND Underworld Artillery Threaten* Great ' Damage To Great Britain i-1 By Lyle C. Wilson * I London, Jan. 10.—Underworld nrtll ~'lery, belching projectiles more deudly (than steel and TNT. is in action 24 ■ hours a day In the freeport of Ham >■ burg, ami the target of this gruesome * hall is England. *1 More sinister than wars, of armed 11 men this vicious offensive of the Ger man half-world Is of the subtle, utterly destructive sort that alarmi.’ti writers prophesy will mark the next r i holoctist of nations. No mere armistice can hinder it. A; peace treaty is useless. Yet Englund' 1 is as surely under a deadly fire as though the tnemorabltj meeting on t November 11. 1918, had never occur- . red. The human debris left in the wake] I of this monstrous engagement Is com * posed of wrecks more heart Tendin';' than the blind, the lame and the maim . i ed heritage of the World war. English men anil women themselves, art- aiding the successful operation 01. J the unseen army. Frantically they; ■i strain to assure success to those whO| | plot their ruin. They would be the last to admit that a war is in progress Unrecognized by international courts, without the pale of decent humanity, i it is here, nevertheless. It Is The War Os Drugs An English weekly magazine has ex posed the master plotters in Hamburg 1 Their slimy tentacles are coiling, about the very heart of England. Scum from the ships of every na ( tion has left its quota of indecency at Hamburg. The cunning and calm cl the orient has vied with the less ad vanced talent of the Occident in giving the half world of Hamburg the, most subtly degenerate means of en-' tertainment. Denizens of the Hamburg dens ot l horror have discovered that the golden key to excess is represented in 1 the little packets of morphia and its derivatives delivered to England. Matter Os Price It was no special hatred of the Eng lish that directed the flood of drugs' toward London. England is the best market because highest prices are obtainable there. Highest prices are obtained because efforts to keep the drugs out are less sincere in other countries. In Hamburg, according to the report just published, cocaine in ounce packages may be obtained for the equivalent of a few pennies in Eng lish money. Transported a few miles across the gleaming | water of the channel the little packets appreciate. in price many thousand per cent. It is a means of soft livelihood that can not be overlooked. The drug is smuggled over by sailors. Some comes across ( in shipments of German goods. A few high-1 ly connected firms, principally those that supply the wealthy snow sniffers or the English wholesalers, send private messengers with thousands of dollars represented by the little packets secreted about their persons and in their luggage. Hardly a day passes but there is a dope arrest or a death chronicled that is attributed to the drug. Piccadilly Circus, the hub of London's night life, is the most frequent scene of arrests, i Haunted from sunset until midnight by hundreds of women who must have the precious powder to steel them selves to the lives they lead, the Circus offers bounteous harvest to one with the cocaine and the nerve to sell it. Profits Are Rich Profits are rich. Even for effecting the introduction of addict, to one who i is in a position to supply the drug ’ will often bring a handsome tip from I both parties. Women haunt Picadilly and its dark I side streets. Their ranks are thinned by the law and by the horrible deaths so frequently the reward of the followers of such a life. There is no' falling off in the nightly numbers. The night chibs keep the supply coming in steadily. The drug agent gets his soon after the pounding of the streets begins. It doesn’t take much of the vicious circling about gaudy, crimson-tinted Picadilly Circus to turn the weary girl to anything that promises relief. That drugs are coming into England in a growing stream is certain. The investigator just returned from 1 Hamburg is convinced that the headquarters of the deprived ring is located in the underworld of Hamburg. It is an attack, without particular malice by the port riffraff of the defeated country, and unless it is checked may do harm comparably to that wrought by the belching guns of the World war. .. Old Chinese porcelains cannot be duplicated as coloring matter used came from mines now exhausted. When a child is absent from school in the Virgin Islands, without a proper excuse, the parents are fined 20 , cents for each day’s absence. They are also fined 10 cents every time a pupil Is tardy.
POOR EXPLOIT THE RICH Writer Says Yucatan Is The Land Os Topsy Turvy United Prenn (Service.) Mexico City. Mexico ißy mnll to J United Press. —Yucatan is the Ijind -of Topsy Tuny. It is a land where things are done j different than in any other country or' state in the world. i his a land when- everything is done I in the shade of the r< <1 Hag; where th< poor exploit the rich. Ninety-four per cent of the people ' 'living in this vtate of Mexico have | rod cards. Churches exist but many of them are in ruins. Up to April 1915, slavery ns foul as I civilization ever produced existed in : Yucatan. Natives were forced to work, in the fields, were beaten and lashed.' land women were assaulted by the' ' wealthy land owners. Sundays were 1 days of lashings at the whlplng posts. Hut in April, 1915. General Salvador Alvarado entered the state at the head [of a revolutionary army, freed the. Indians, established new laws and gave away land. He issued his famous land decree which provided "no 'one is entitled to the exclusive own ership of sunshine and air and in the same way no one is entitled to the es elusive owership of land." Socialism spread rapidly until I March, 1919, when over one thousand i Socialists were killed by an invading federal army under orders from Car-. ' ranza Upon Carranza's fall, however. I , Socia!> in again became strong. On November fi, Felipe 1921 Carril-1 10, the apostle of Socialism, became governor and he still holds that office. The vote at that election was 60,043 for Carrillo, while all the other parties 'combined had a vote of only 4,367. This gives a indication of tlie strength , of the Socialists. Carrillo is 46 years of age. of Indian 'descent. He is an intense radical. Before beoming the Moses for this new 'faith, Carillo was a railroad laborer for nine years. Iziter he b'-ame a ‘drayman and attracted notice when he began dividing his profits wit)' his workers. He served several terms in jail, the first time under Pre- - Profirio Dias for sedition, when he translated the Mexican constitu ion into the Maya language, which is the language of the natives of Yucatan. When Carrillo heard of the revolution against Carranza, he went toj Mexico and was appointed commend-er-in-chief of the revolutionary troops in the south-eastern district, However, when he returned to Yucatan. General Alvarado was there and Cat rillo became chief land distributor. | Carrillo defines revolution as being l very much like an elephant which | stalks through a garden and during its ciumsywalk crushes the pansies, the li! es. the flowers, the vines, but leaves the big trees, which have taken so many years to grow. His highest dream is that ev?ry person shall have his own home and land. I Besides being overnor of the state, Garille is also the head of the Social ist party. He spends his mornings at the Socialist headquarters and writes to himself as governor requesting certain things for his party. In the afternoon he assumes the role of governor and then writes to himself as presi ,dent of the Socialist party, granting the requests that he applied for it, the morning. I The Socialism of Yucatan, however, is a different kind of Socialism than does exist in any other part of the world. It's battlecry is for “Land and I Liberty.” o SENTENCED AFTER 29 YRS. Man Murdered Bride And Kept Secret For Many Years (United Press Service) Raleigh, N. C„ Jan. 10. —Thirty-one ' years ago Ves Winkler, a prosperous young mountaineer, married Candace Miller, a pretty girl, and took her to live in a rough log cabin. For two years to all appearances they lived happily together and then one night the young bride was found unconscious and dying from injuries received. Winkler said, when she fell from the loft of the cabin. But retribution stalked from out of the shadows of a crime that had all but disappeared from the memory of I neighbors and Winkler was sentence 1 to from 25 to 30 years' imprisonment for tile murder committed twenty-nine years ago. Last June Winkler had John Shep herd, a neighbor, arrested for maltreating the youngest daughter of bis second marriage, a child 9 years old. When Shepherd was brought into court he declared that he was overwhelmed by a wave of repentance aim made an affidavit that Winkler had admitted to him in 1891 that he had slain his girl bride and that he had threatened to to kill him If he told. Shepherd I swears that it was not revenge that I caused him to reveal that crime, but a desire to have relief from the burden of the hidden crime. On Shepherd’s affidavit and the tes-
timony of old residents of th" tian country. Winkler was ctmvl.ud I und sentenced to from 25 to 30 years Imprisonment. He appealed the <as'. but the State supr. msustained the verdict. 1 Now. Winkler, a broken old man, will soon begin sentence which for, a man at his age Is practically a lite ( jterrn, after keeping his secret twenty-1 nine years. . , DECATUR G. E. BAND ELECT E. W. Lankenau Chosen President Os ; New Decatur Band _____ 1 Officers were elected by the Decatur < General Electric band at a meeting held Monday night. The new officers j are: E. W. Lankenau. president; Roy ( i E. Mamma, secretary and treasurer. , Mr. Lawyer was appointed chairman j ' of a committee on rules and regula- ' I , I t ions. The band under the direction of Professor W. R. Lawson, is holding ( regular rehearsals on Monday night of each week, and splendid interest | lis being shown by the members. The' band is improving with each rehear- 1 sal and Decatur is assured of a num her of splendid band concerts and , public entertainments during the com I ing summer. • A grub of the wood-boring variety is threatening to destroy many of the j ancient architectural wonders of Lon | |don. Westminster Abbey, the Guild ] hall and Saint Paul's Cathedral are 'among the buildings being atta<! ed. ; markets-stocks I Daily Report of Local and Foreign Markets ■ ■ 1 East Buffalo Livestock Receipts 4800 shipments 3610; official to New York yesterday 5130; hogs closing dull, bulk unsold up to I noon; medium and heavies s9.oo(fi 9.15; mixed $9.10(39.25; yorkers lights < and pigs $9.35(39.40; roughs $7.25; < stags [email protected]; cattle 1500. steady; | sheep 600; best lambs $15.75; ewes [email protected]; calves 100; tops $14.50. Indianapolis Livestock Market Hogs—Receipts 1000; market 104? 15e up; best heavies $8.75®8.85; medium mixed $8.80(38.90; common , choice $8.90(3 9.10; hulk of sales $8.85 @9.00. Cattle —Receipts 1000; market 10c up. strong; steers $8.50(310.50; cows and heifers [email protected]. ( Sheep—Receipts 50; market steady. Calves—Receipts 600; market 25»- : lower; top $13.50. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected Jan. 10 No. 2 Wheat, bushel $1.201 Good Yellow Ear Corn, per 100.. .9'' I White or mixed corn, per 100.. 85c Oats, per bushel 40c Rye, per bushel 75 Barley, per bushel 60 . — i DECATUR PRODUCE MARKET for Delivered Produce Corrected Jan. 10 Chickens 16c Fowls 18c Ducks 11c Geese 11c Old Roosters 8c Leghorns 12c , Stags 8c Eggs, dozen 35e , Local Grocer* Egg Market Eggs, dozen 40e Butterfat Price* At cream buying stationsoc i—. ! " . | Calendar Jan. 11—J. H. Case and E. W. Moser, stock sale, at L, J. Cliffton residence in Wren, Ohio. Jan 18—Sellemeyer and Pflueger, 3 j miles north and 1 mile east of Preble; 6 miles northwest of Decatur. Jan. 18—Wm. Stepler and Frank Hannie, 5 miles west of Monroe or 7 miles east of Bluffton. Jan. 18—Jos. Murphy estate and Frances Murphy, admx., 11 miles southeast of Decatur or 5 miles south east of Monroe. Jan. F. Mumma, S. 11th St. Household goods. i Jan. 23. —Calver &. Hoffman, General farm and livestock sale. 4% miles J south ot Decatur; 1% miles north of Monroe. Jan. 23.—Public farm sale. Mrs. • Anna Brodbeck, 8 miles northeast of Decatur and B*4 miles southeast of Monroeville. Jan 25.—Fred Roth, 4*4 miles south- ■ east of Decatur, January 30.—Perry 2. Walters, 4 , lies east of Decatur and one-half mile . south, or 1 mile west of Bobo on the i Piqua road Jan. 30—Perry C. Walters, 4 miles east of Decatur; south and 1 1 mile west of Bobo. Feb. 20—Lew Keller, 8 miles north , east of Decatur on the old Koldewey farm. J Feb- 20—Perry Hunt, 1 mile north i and 1 mile west of Wren, Ohio or 6 . miles east and 1 mile south of DecaI tur. t ?U7‘J jOnta V ’ Davif >on, 2 miles south of Willshire, stock sale. 1 J b „ 22 — Holthouse and Faurote, ) 41-2 miles south of Decatur, or 1 mile north of Monroe. F ® b ' 2^ —c - c - Brown, I*4 miles north of Decatur.
I CLASSIFIED I NOTICES, BUSINESS CARDS Jj
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦l • CLASSIFIED ADS ♦♦♦♦♦♦*********. for sale , j?OK-SALEOR ‘“untry , ’ ground. 3-25 acre of ground at 1«L1 W Madison St., with Croom house. 23 fruit trees; good cistern, ( all 6- 8. Walter Sudduth- ; 4 I'bß Overlands, model s) cheap; 900 bushels of corn, $1 1 per’ioo poimds. CaR at Ben Lennlnr er farm, Decatur_route 2. for SALE—Barred Rock cockerals: < large healthy and best ofstock. $2.50 each. Mrs. Sherman Kunkel. Deeatur. Ind .R.R. ?• Phone 8.2-H. , FOR S\LE ”6 Rat terrior pups; some ' baled .trnw. 50c per bate deUrertrt. 1 spotted Polan China male hog_K ( . Shoaf, Decatur. Ind. Phon ® !..()!{ s.\LE -Fresh cow and good cnlf. Price is right. Ben S. Co ' ( ® r ' 5-5-S-. ”-3tx , FOR house and lot 75x150 in Preble, Ind., well located, will sell right; see Jeff Kloppfenstein. V’l Home avenue. Fort Wayne, Ind. 5-3tx-e-o-d < FOR - SALE—Some full blooded Buff ( Orphington roosters; also full I blooded Silver Saeed Wyandott ] roosters. Martin Kirchner, R. R. i Decatur. Ind., Preble_phone. Bt3 I For Rent , FOR RENT—IOS acre farm at the ( south corporation line ot the City of Decatur- Consisting of mostly river bottom land and is used as a Dairy Farm now. Equipped with a milking machine, and a herd of tubercular tested high grade Holstein cows. Call Dyonis Schmitt 413 Mercer Avenue. ( 297-ts. FOR RENT—64-aere farm, French I township; grain or cash rent. Possession March Ist. John Mosure, De - catur. 4-6tx. FOR - RENT— House at Monmouth. Call phone 469-Whi£e. 7-6tx FOR - RENT—7 room house with 6 ' acres or 18 acres of land southwest end of Decatur. Good chicken and truck farm. J F. Arnold. 7t3 LOST AND FOUND LOST —Auto license No. 271206-1923; also tail light, at Monroe, Return to Rueben Reinhart, Crainville R. R. L7-3tx. FOUND —Pair of skid chains. Owner may have same by describing property and paying for this ad. 8-3tx LOST-Bracelet wrist watch; between Porter's grocery and high school. Finder please call Decatur laundry. 9-2tx. LOST —Monday morning, a ten dollar bill, between 409 Winchester street and creamery. Please leave at this office and receive reward.9-3tx LOST—Brown calf skin pocket-book containing about SI.OO in change. J. at K. of P. home. 10-3tx FOUND—Suit case addressed to K. Buckingham. Geneva. Owner can have same by calling at this office and paying for advL9-2t WANTED SALESLADY WANTED—For Decatur and surrounding territory, for a high class line of hosiery. Call in person nr write 213 Caroll Bldg. Fort Wayne, Ind. 9-3tx IO o WILLIAM NORRIS 5% Farm Loans, Real Estate and Insurance of all kinds. ' Phone 674, Decatur, or write 512 So. 13th st., for further information. O o 1 mo o
O —0 ROY RUNYON Live Stock and General Auctioneer Phone 944-White Decatur, Ind. o- O 3t wk ts — • . o J. N. BURKHEAD Live Stock and General Auctioneer ( Monroe Phone 103-D 0- 0 . St wk ts , 0— —- 0 CLYDE L. FUGATE AUTO REPAIRING In the Otto Reppert shop, ■ N. 11th st. & Nuttman Ave. ; Phones, Res. 768. Shop 904 I 0 7t6x| Best meals in the city, 35c. Hough’s case, north of court house. mon wed. fril-10x ■ •- . Texas. Regular attendance at school was denied them during their childhood because they lived i n an isolated ‘ district. The theological seminary is his educational goal as he wishes to i qualify as minister to large congrega- ' tions. — . i The Fandsti of Italy forced each! landowner to hire a stated number of , laborers for every hundred acres of ' land he owned or operated. This was i done to abolish unemployment and increase production. I
♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ B ♦ BUSINESS CARDS . ■ Pain, in th. back «r« »y mp t 0 H you »hould not allow to corrtln ui .. K heedad. * K Kidney trouble, ar. d. nairo(J » where they reach final ata flei . U Let me examine your cate. H My corrective method* will r ig y K of your kidney worrlea. ■ FOR BETTER HEALTH SIM ■ DR. FROHNAPFEL, D. C ■ Chiropractic and Oateop*th|« * H Treatment, fclven to .ult your nt,* B at 144 80. 2nd St. >p hon< ■ Office Houre 10-12 a. m.—l-5 M P m H S. E. BLACK I UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMIkg K Calle answered promptly day or ■ Private Ambulance Service. ■ Office Phone: 90. ■ Home Phones: H Home Phone: 727 R Agents for Planoe and ■ DR. H. E. KELLER I Decatur, Indiana I GENRHAI. PRACTICI ■ OFFICE SPECIALTIES: ■ women and children; X-rav examtu ■ tlons; Gluvrscopy examinations ot ■ Internal organa; X-ray and electrics ■ treatments for high blood pre„ ur . ■ and hardening of the atloriee; x-n, ■■ treatments for GOITRE, TUBERCU. ■ LO3IB AND CANCER. ■ Office Houre: ■ Itoll s. m.—l to 6p. m.—7 to l» » ■ Sundays by appointment. ■ Phones: Residence 110; Office <oi ■ o ■ -6 I FRED W. BUSCHE 1 AUCTIONEER B Experience with training as- ■ sure# you of a good £ sale. . ■ Monroe or Decatur Phone ■ 0 — — 0 g o -0 ■ JEFF LIECHTY I AUCTIONEER 9 A successful sate and ■ the high dollar. I Berne Phone. ■ o. 0 » N. A. BIXLER I OPTOMETRIST E Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted E HOURS: I 8 to 11:30—12:30 to 5;00 I Saturday 8:00 p. m. ■ Telephone 135. ■ DR. C. C. RAYL Surgeon X-Ray and Clinical Labor .dories Office Hours: I to 4 and 6to 8 p. m. Sundays, 9 to 10 a. m. Phone 581, FEDERAL FARM LOANS Abstracts of Title. Real Estate. Plenty money to loan o« Government Plan. See French Quinn. Office—Take first stairway south Decatur Democrat Q -Q DR. FRANK LOSE Physician and Surgeon Located In office formerly occupied by Dr. D- D. Clark. North Third Street Phones: Office 422; Hom. 41S Office Hours —9 to 11 a. m. 1 to 5—7 to 8 p. m. Sunday 8 to 9 a. m. I 0 — - ■ ■■ ■ 0 0 0 , 5% MONEY On improved Farms. LONG TERM LOANS Decatur Insurance Agency ; E. W. Johnson, Mgr. Phone 385 Schafer Block I 0 0 -0
I CHIROPRACTIC Adds years to your Health and health to your years. If you are not perfectly well let us examine you and make the proper adjustment to suit your need. Also Baths of all kinds. SMITH & SMITH. D. C. Drugless Physicians Over Morris 5 and 10c store, DECATUR, IND. Phone 660. 4 i 277t3wk» —— 5 FT. WAYNE & DECATUR TRACTION LINE Leaves Decatur Leaves Ft Way” 6:45 a. m. 7:00 a. m. 8:00 a. m. 8:00 a. m10:00 a. m. 11:00 a. tall: 00 p. tn. 1:00 p. 1:00 p. m. 1:00 p. 4:00 p. m. 8:18 p. * 6:80 p. m. 7:00 p. 7:00 p. m. 3:00 p. 10:00 p. tn. 11:06 p. ®- Freight car leaves Decatur - » Arrives at Fort Wayne..9:3o a ® Leaves Fort Wayne.... 12:00 noon Arrives at Decatur 1:30 p ® P. J. RAYMOND. Agent Office Honrs 7:30 a tn., 7:00 P-
