Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 22, Number 291, Decatur, Adams County, 8 December 1924 — Page 6
GENE STRATTON PORTER KILLED IN CALIFORNIA (Continued from Pago One) of tho camera department of "Hocreation," and two years on the natural history staff of "Outing." For four years snhsequont to that, she was a specialist In natural history photography on the "Photographic Times Annual Almanac.’’ She was e member of the Society of W< item Authors, the Audubon society and the National Geographic paratively few American authors society. Mrs. Porter was one of the comwhose books sell more than a hundred thousand copies promptly after pub-
lication or within six months after date of release by the publisher. She had held her place as a writer of popular fiction more or less consistently over a period or years, although in most cases certain volumes had proved far more popular than others. Among her best and most widely read hooks wore; "The Song of the Cardinal,” 1902; "Freckles,’’ 1904; "What I Have Done with Birds.” 1907; "At tho Foot of tho Rainbow.” 1908; "A Girl of the Limberlost,” 1909: "Birds of the Bible,” 1909; "Music of tho Wild,” 1910; "The Harvester," 1911; "Moths of tho Limberlost” 1912; "Laddie,” 1913; "Michael O’Halloran,” 1915; "Mornn ne Face.” 1916: "Friends in Feath-
11 ng r ace, laio, rrieiius in rwu* ers." 1917; “A Daughter of the Land," 1918; "Homing with the Birds," 1919; "Her Father’s Daughter.” 1921; "The Fire Bird.” 1922; "The White Flag." 1923; “Jesus of the Emerald.” 1923. She reached the public with her, early novels "Freckles.” and “A Girl of the Limberlost,” and she was one of the few authors to repeat her phenomenal first success with stories as her career progressed. Her first work to be adapted for motion pictures was "Michael O'Halloran.” Her ' "Laddie" was also among the best ' sellers of its day. Up until 1922 she spent much of ' her time at her summer home at 1 Rome City. Ind. There she main-
tained a delightful retreat away from the light of publicity and the eyes of the curious and prying. She named her summer place on Sylvan lake “Limberlost.” after the region in and about Geneva. Ind., which was the locals for her more popular novels. Only a fortunate few were admitted to her circle of acquaintances, but Mrs. Porter herself was very democratic and easy to talk to once one was numbered as a friend. She did not impress one as being the author of books and stories of nature, which brought her hundreds of thousands of dollars in publisher's
i,,;; Roy S." Johnson Auctioneer ■ IH Phone *.Phone 11122 Cj Decatur. Indiana Forty successful sales since ■jfejjjffi Sept. 1. l'-.’4 is i'.; ( best evidence jBB 1 have to that I can get for J" 11 ’•>' 'O'-ii’d le-'Ulls ilie lia- ‘ ffip&uiySScC 01 'our Auction. If ability as a SsfeX j- .-ah -man. hom-sty. energy and a ‘tfaF aWSBog kt•wl« <1 a• ■ <■! tin- prop.rp.aSragW ill n. ' lie I. |SiM9M| jygßjWflg JjaHSwl your sale, j have real service to /At ’rowlHßw ! ’ an< ’ - vou cannot afford to buy ‘ in . v other kind. i s< ll nearly lßF|gag||&y ’ di|Wß|Sfy every day; book your sale in s’-|S ts gBRE»jEH|’ PJ “Just ask any man I've sold for." PUBLIC SALE , ' I, the undersigned, having decided to quit farming, will sell at public auction at my residence 1% miles west of Decatur on the old Webber farm, on Wednesday, December 10, 1921 Beginning at 12:00 noon. The following personal property, to-wit: 2 HEAD OF HORSES Gray mare, 8 years old, sound and a good one; Gray horse. 9 years old, a good worker. 2 HEAD OF CATTLE Black cow, 5 years old, giving 4 gallons of milk per day; Jersey cow, 9 years old. giving 2 gallons of milk per day. POULTRY—2 dozen good laying hens. FEED 2 ton of good mixed hay; 20 double shocks of fodder in the feed; 100 shocks of corn in field. FARMING IMPLEMENTS I urnbull wagon, good as new; Macy Harris mowing machine, only used one season: Ohio hay loader, a good one; 16 ft. hay ladders, with gra n bed; disc harrow; 60 tooth spike tooth harrow; double shovel plow; riding cultivator; walking breaking plow; set of farm harness; collars; pitch forks; scoop shovel; mud boat. Other articles not mentioned. TERMS— All sums of $5 and under cash; on sums over $5 a credit of 9 months will be given, the purchaser giving a good bankable note drawing 8% interest the last 3 months. 4% discount for cash on sums over $5.00. No property removed until settled for. HARVEY B. WARD Roy S. Johnson, Auct. Old Adams County Bank, Clerk Dec. 1-5 8'
royalties. In conversation her diction was i .i.-edlngly simple, although always ' correct. Her literary artistry, how lever, was not forcibly brought to t tlm front for the purpose of effect, i She was very mode t in appearance., The most impressive thing about , r her personal appearance was her. eyes of uncommon alertness and v beauty, which missed nothing and I were keenly observant of people she I met. This was perhaps the only v hint of her highly romantic nature In a glance, it seemed, she had catalogued all that was worth while s knowing about a person or thing. | The summer retreat at Romo City I was a show place for vacationists and excursionists who visited the 1 lake. It was carefully guarded, how- '■ i ever, and no one was allowed on the
r premises without special permission. ’ ( Th<‘ l ouse was constructed of logs’ i- brought from Wisconsin and the r, grounds were carefully kept in a state 1 'of wild preservation and beauty by I caretakers. Mrs. Porter did much of her writing at Rome City in the’ f summertime, until she went to Cali-. , fornia to oversee the filming of her; . novels. The estate at the lake be-! , longed to Mrs. Porter at the time of , her death. Last fall she offered to , sell it to the department of conser- . vation of Indiana to be used, and j dedicated to the lovers of the outdoors as a preserve for fish and game, for which she lived and wrote. , Her early successes were written while she was living at Geneva.
where her husband is a prominent banker. It was while living there that she became interested in birds and flowers and led to the publication of her first books. The books became best sellers and with the favorable reception by the public, Mrs. Porter was encouraged to continue her writings with the result that she became known as one of the world’s greatest writers on nature study. Practically all her novels are based on themes written around this love of nature and birds and bird life. Surviving Mrs. Porter are one daughter. Mrs. James Leo Mehan, of Los Angeles, formerly of Fort Wayne; three grandchildren, Jean-
ette Monroe. Gene Mynroe and James Leo Mehan. of Los Angeles, and one niece. Miss Leah Stratton, also of Los Angeles. Two sisters of Mrs. Porter live in Fort Wayne. They are Mrs. Ada . Wilson, 437 Arcadia court, and Mrs. , Florence S. Compton, 715 Packard .avenue. > Quality Coal. Phone 199. Emerson Bennett. 273tf r O f High grade coal at low price. ’ Julius Haugk. Phone 660. J 2X9tsx
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, MONDAY DECEMBERS. 1924.
Robbers Loot Safe; Money In Refrigerator i Brazil, Ind , Dec. 8. - Bandits who i blew the safe in the Todd grocery •store yesterday got >lO3 mid overI looked fl.'.-m hidde n in u refriger- • al or. | - — o— Brother Os Adams County Woman Dies In Texas 1 William K. Snider, a brother of 'Mrs. Mlrrlam Rup'.ight, of Adams county, died Sunday at Electra, Texas, following a two weeks illness. Mr. Snider formerly re ided in Wells and Allen counties. He is survived by a widow and two children. The body will be returned to Wells county for burial. o — Bandits Hold Up Bank In Milwaukee, Wisconsin . | Milwaukee. Dec. 8. —(United Press) —Six armed bandits held up the Northwestern Mutual bank at Lisbon and North avenue here today and made their escape' in an automobile with >IO,OOO in cash and $390,-' 000 in securities. o YOEMAN NOTICE There will be no public social tonight, but one for Yoemen only. All Yoeman are invited to come and enjoy the evening. Business of importance will be takt-n care of. G. C. Steele, foreman business.
o — Chinese Rounded Up In St. Louis Tons War St. Louis, Mo.. Dec. 8. — (United Press.) —Thirty Chinese have been rounded up and are in jail today following the first outbreak of the tong war here in which Lem Gow, laundry man and member of the Hig Sing tong, was shot down in the street by a gunman. o ; Fairmount. — The Wesleyan Methodist State conference will enlarge the camp grounds here. Lafayette. — Mary Ruth Morrison' and Gordon Taylor have been chosen for the leading roles in "The Girl with . the Green Eyes.” the play to be giv- | en by the Little Theater Players at Purdue University. I Atlanta. —John Kauffman is acting postmaster here in the absence of his father. A. G. Kauffman, who is . ,H - 1 1 Terre Haute—Authorities will take , I Andy Reinhard. 60. to the hospital f for the insane. Police rescued him when he dived, fully clothed, into , the Wabash river. Muncie. — Hungry burglars broke into the Home Restaurant here and stole 1,000 cigarettes, sixty pounds
of lard. Brazil.-—Flowing a doze at the wheel Cecil Sutton, of Greencastle, awakened to find his automobile going down a steep embankment. The car turned over three times and Sutton is suffering severe bruises. Edinburg. — A bronze tablet to Joseph and Nancy Young is to be erected on a large boulder near here in memory of their work as pioneers in this county and establishment of the first Presbyterian church. Blountsville. — Blountsville is to operate its own electric plant for light and power. At a special election it was decided that the present pri- ■ vately owned plant should be done away with by a vote of 67 to 0. Plymouth.—Marshall county is organizing its second cow testing association. This will result, it was said, in putting the raising of about fifty herds in the county on a scientific basis .and setting examples for proper feeding and selection to other dairymen. Fort Wayne. — Because she would not even let him escort her to shows or sit with her in the same pew at , church, Reuben T. Scoles, here, has . sued his wife for divorce. I Frankfort. —ln reply to an exam1 ination question a school boy in the! I 5-A grade here wrote, “Our national government lives in Washington, D. C. I think his name is Ed. Jackson. 1 He got elected this year by the people all over the United States and in all the counties.” | Alexandria. — When five automobiles piled up at the foot of the Lincoln Ave., hill due to a slippery pavement, Alexandria police closed’ the street for a day. No one was hurt. o Getting Self-Conscioug Jud Tvnklrs savs th.-re has been so many Insinuations about his being de- ' Bcended from monkeys that he’s getting bashful about ordering a piece of ’ coconut pie. f — o The Meal-Tub Plot England was upset in 1679 by thi discovery of a conspiracy agalns Protestants by one Dangerfield. I' was called the meal tub plot, becaus. the papers were kept in a nte..i tut. t It proved u '■<->::X.
'' Snappy Town to Live In By RALPH D. PAINE by Doubl«4»y, Pact * Co.) IT WAS the tragic fate of Johnny Beni, aged eighteen, to be a clerk In a small town hardware store when he should have been pacing a spray-swept quarter-deck or riding the open spaces among red-blooded men. He said so himself, ns often us anybody ten. If customers edged away from his word pictures there wus always the pretty cashier with the bobbed hair and the smile that beat any closeup ever flashed on u screen. Johnny told her ti ls to her face. Instead of rebuking him as a fresh gink, Miss Ednu made him dizzy with another of those mil-llon-doilar smiles. | “Not that I want to run wild or pull any freak stuff, Edna, for I’m too sensible for that. But I simply have gotta express myself somehow. I am terribly ambitious. That’s what ails me. And ambition is bound to make a fellow restless. My gosh! Nothing ever happens in this soggy dump of a town, and nothing ever will.” "Adventure? Is that the big Idea, I Johnny?" I "You said It, Edna. More to it than ' that, though. It’s up to me to make a stake somehow. What chance have I got here? You tell me.” Miss Edna ceased checking up a pile of monthly statements .and gazed at the young adventurer with fond amusement. Then she powdered her pert nose and inquired:
"Why the stake? You can take me out and buy me one for supper, If you like. What’s the hurry to get rich? « You have a good job for a kid." i "So I can marry you, Edna. Haven't t I told you that fifty times?" “I am not a fortune hunter, Johnny, dear. You better hustle and earn a raise of salary. Heavens, but you are a handsome boj’ when you look at me 1 like that. Now run away, or I’ll do I something rash." "Listen ! If I had a stake of five thousand dollars would you marry me?" persisted the impassioned suitor. “No, for I’d drop dead in my tracks ' before you could be a widower. For i the love of Mike, shoo! I am a poor < working girl.” As a brutal anti-climax the boss bawled from an alcove: "Drat you, Johnny. What In time do I pay you for? You come get this sprayer and load it with bug poison. Then you trot around to Doctor Merritt’s house with I it and show him how to spray his pertater patch. He phoned that the mixture was no good and had the nerve to tell me bis bugs got fat on it.” I “The old dumb-bell don't know how to use a sprayer,” said Johnny Beal. “I watched him putterin’ in his back yard. All right. I'll show him how." Expertly, Johnny measured a proper dose of the prepared poison and dumped it into the two-gallon galvanized spraying tank. Then it occurred to him to make it sure death and so avoid more trouble with the unpleasant Mr. Merritt. So he added, at random, some arsenate of lead, a dash of blue vitriol and a rich seasoning of paris green. "That ought to put a crimp in ’em,” said ne, as he poured the sprayer twothirds full of water and vigorously I shook it. He slung it over his shoulder by the st£ap and hioved briskly out of the store. As he walked along he plied the plunger to build up air pressure in the cylinder and get ready for action. In front of the bank he paused to look at a shade tree whose leaves were I badly eaten by caterpillars. The fuzzy pests were crawling along the twigs, so many of them that Johnny unlimbered the sprayer for a practice shot. He might as well make sure that V ie machine was ready for business. The caterpillars appeared so disgusted that he gave them another volley. The breeze carried the fine spray against the side of a closed car standing at the curb. The courteous Johnny hastened to wipe off the white spots with his handkerchief. The man behind the wheel swore and told him to go chase himself. Johnny resented his . rudeness and advised him to seek a ! torrid climate. Just then’a pistol shot was heard In tlie bank, then another. Out from the entrance, ‘aking the stone steps in a leap, came a burly figure of a man, a * small satchel in one hand, a pistol in the other. He charged straight for the closed car at the curb. Johnny Beal stood petrified, his mouth open, too scared to budge from the path of the outlaw. The pistol was jerked up to fire and clear the way, but Johnny was quicker. He did not mean to be. One finger happened to be on the nozzle valve of the sprayer. That finger tightened convulsively. The nozzle was pointing straight ' ahead, with plenty of air pressure behind it. The fleeing bank robber caught it ' full in the face—prepared poison, ! arsenate of lead, a dash of blue vitriol l and a rich seasoning of paris green, i Blinded, he swerved with his hands to I his face and crashed into the maple ; tree. Falling to the pavement, he groaned that he was dying, just before Johnny Beal banged him over the head I with the loaded sprayer. "He fits the description of Three-t Fingered Jake Dorsey,” said the chief of police, after he had snapped the handcuffs on him, “though that mix- | ture in the sprayer surely did muss his mug -up. There’s five thousand dol- I lars reward out for Jake, dead or alive.” “Oh, boy 1” blissfully murmured Johnny Beal. “Watch me beat it back to the store. Some snappy town to live in. I’ll tell Hie world.”
XOTK F TO XOX-III'*II»I’>TM 4 The i’tiite of Indiana. I Adam, County. HS; I 10 (he Adams Circuit Court. Novem- ■ her Term. 1924. No. »»»4». , 11 Dean. ('llnninrer vs. h---rt i«y<ler, | uiiu-i- Christian name I* unknown. ill 11 if ; .'iriii'. from affidavit, filed In n the iil.uii- entitled cause, that K---H II i. |er, . hoM . Im-ii.in name Is I li 1,,.vn tin- ilmvo named defendant, I ■ is i< non-resident ■of the State of In-, j N, 11. , Is therefore hereby given 1 til said K---B Lyder that In be and 4 tummi- before the lion. Judge of th” I Adams Circuit Court <>n the 2nd day 1 of I’elirumv. 1925. the same being tin--Ist .lurldl- ini Dn> of Hu ni -.t regular . term thereof, to lie liohlen nt the c.i..-t lions, in the City of Decatur. ron>ment’lhi' on Monday, the rttd day r ~i IT-hruarv A. D. 192.9. and plead by 1 answer or demur to said complaint, or tile same will lie heard mid detorinln- , <-d In his absence. nl, Dec.. 1924. . J*. WITNESS. mv name. and the Sea! of | anld Court hereto affixed tills sth day i (Seal) JOHN 11. NELSON, Clerk. | Lutz and Adams. , ~ Atty«. for Plaintiff. 8-15-2. j - ■—o— MARKETS-STOCKS' j Daily Report Os Local And Foreign Markets CHICAGO GRAINS (United Press Service) Chicago. Dec. 8. Grain futures advanced sharply in initial trading on the board of trade today. j The local wheat market gathered i strength from sharp advances in j t Liverpool. Better spot demand and 1 upturns in American markets S; urday were responsible for the , strength there.
Unfavorable weather which has ' i slowed up tho movement and growing fears of injury to the now Ai’fcentine crop due to low temperatures strengthened tho corn market. Oats advanced with oilier grains. The provisions list was strelffcthenod by higher cables and moderate local buying. Fort Wayne Livestock Market Hogs—l3o lbs. and down [email protected]: 130 to 150 lbs. [email protected]; 150 to 190 , tbs. $8 [email protected]; 190 tbs. and up $8 85 : ©9.25; roughs $7 25©7.50; stags $5 ©5.50. , La nibs —$13013.75. Calves—slo.sooll.oo. Wheat—Dec.. $1.59 7-8: May, $1.64 1-8; Julv, $1.45. Corn—Dec. $1.21 3-4; ! May, $127: July. $1.27 1-8. OatsDec. 57 5-8 c; May, 62 7-8 c; July, 61 l-2c. Receipts, 12.000: shipments. 7.890 yesterday; receipts. 17.699, shipments 6,650 today, official to New York, j Saturday, 6.080; hogs closing slow, bulk, $9.25; heavies. [email protected]; few’ $9.75; mediums, [email protected]; light weight. $5.50©59.25: light lights, [email protected]; pigs, $6.00©57.00; packing sows, rough. $7.75©58.00. Cattle, 3.125; yearlings, 25c to 50c higher; others, steady to 25c lower; canners, 10c to 15c higher; steers, 1.100 pounds up. $6.50© $10.00; steers, 1100 pounds, down, $5.50©510.50; several loads yearlings. [email protected]; one load fancy 1400 Shelter, $4.50©57.50; sows. $1.75©55.50; bulls. $3.00©55.0u; sheep, 10.000 best lanmbs, 155 culls. $13.50 down; best yearlings, $ll.OO ©12.50; aged wethers, [email protected]; best ewes, $8.00©»$9.00; calves. 2.400 tops. 1.200 culls, SB.OO down. The local market quotations under- ■ went a change over the week-end. Oats advancing 5 cents and is now quoted at 52c per bu. No. 1 and No. 2 wheat also advanced, No. 1 now be-. ing quoted at $1.53 per bu. and No. 2 at $1.52. Butterfat dropped three cents and is listed at the stations 1 at 41c. (Corrected December 8.) Yellow Ear Corn, per 10b ...$1.45 Oats, per bushel 47c , Rye, per bushel 90c Barley, per bushel 75c New Wheat. No. 1 $1,531 New Wheat, No. 2 $1.52 DECATUR PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected December 8.) All poultry purchased must be free from feed. Leghorn Fowls 12c Fowls 17c ; Chickens 17c : Leghorn Chickens —l2 c! Ducks 12c : Geese 10c i Old Roosters 8c Eggs, dozen 57c LOCAL GROCER’S EGG MARKET ] Eggs, dozen 57c BUTTERFAT AT STATION Butterfat 41c Public Sale Calendar Dec. 9 —John D. Baker, 4 miles west of Decatur; 1 mile east of Peterson. or first house west of Beery church. Dec. 10 —Harvey Ward, 1% mile west of Decatur. I Dec. 10. —J. J. Doner, 13 miles east of Decatur, 4 1-2 miles of Willshires, on R. 8. Croghan farm. Dec. 16—Mary E. Bollinger, 1 mile south, 3 miles west of Monroe. Dec. 18—Grover Liby, 5 miles 1 southwest of Decatur, 1 mile east &' 1 mile south of Peterson.
I CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, 1 NOTICES, BUSINESS CARDS
4.** + *4> + *«« + **»4 ♦ CLASSIFIED ADS *i ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ FOR SALE FOR SALE—lh'tro t J<-w«»l gus range in good condition; blue reed baby carriage like new. Phone 379 or cull at 393 W. Jackson st. 255ttx FOR SALE Horse and Rublter Tired buggy, in good thtipe. Phene 87GI* R. R. No. 19. , 289t3x Fili; SALE .leney < ow. 7 yea rs old; will be fresh in one week. G. D. Koeneman, Decatur 11. 4. Preble j,hone. 289t3x FOR SALE —Good Jersey cow. 7 yrs. old. Inquire at Adams County Auto Co. 290t3 FOR SALE—FuII - blood Holstein cow frosh soon George Scbeiderer, 4’A miles east of Decatur on R. R. No. 8. 290t3x FOtl SALE—Soft coal burner Inquire at 327 North Eighth street. Bort Bailor. 290t3x FOR SALE—Favorite base burner, in good condition. A bargain. Arthur Koeneman, Decatur. R. 4. 290-Gtx FOR SALE—Fresh cow with calf ~C. R. Noll. Decatur R. R. No. 10, phone_ 885-L. “2212* FOR SALE Shorthorn bull. 17 mos" old. T. B. tested. Phil Scheifer stein. DecatOT R. RJ7. 291t3x eod FOR SALE—Fiill blooded spotted Poland sow. with 6 pigs six weeks old Priced right. Call evenings at Ford Garage. lx -ton truck in first das/ condition, new battery, all new tires, used one week, extra never used. Price S2OO. D. E. Studabaker, Decatur. Ind. 291-6 t FOR RENT FOR RENT—Seven-room. strictly modern house and garage at 504 N. 2nd Sf. Innuire of C. D. Teenle ts FOR "RICN’r - 155 acres fartm Fine i land, unless you can give good reference. dont’ apply. J. F. Arnold. i LOST AND FOUND LOST—G. A. R. Commander's badge. | Has a blue field and silver eagle. Finder please return to Daily Democrat office. 2!)Q-3tx FOUND—One sow. Owner can have same bv paving for board and this ad. Phono 542 Blue. 290t3x WANTED WANTED —Man to employ and manage agents to distribute large catalogs listing over 3,000 staple articles at cut rate prices for old established house, (’an start on part time. Full time should pay S3OO up monthly. Experience not necessary. Permanent. Exclusivtl contract. Cash bond of $250 required. Apply ! n person to Mr. Eldred, salesmanager. at Murray Hotel, all day Monday. Dec Bth. 289t2 ♦.io.C'iit iitia ( otnpany wants man to sell Watkins Home Necessities in Decatur. More than 150 used daily Income $35 SSO weeklv. Experience unnecessary. Write Dept. H-3 The .1 R Watk’ns Co.. 242 N. 3rd St., Columbus. Ohio. 291t3x i W7)MEN—Earn big money making j Bungalo Aprons at home during spare time Enclose 2c stamp for particulars. Rosemary Apia n Co., I Asbury Park. N J. lx with tractor to plow 40 acres of ground at once. J. H. Carmody, Sugar Co. 291t2 0 I XPPOIXTMEVT OF AnvilXtSTK ATOIt Vo. 2221. Notice Is hereby given, That the iimlorsigned has been appointed Adi'tir istrator of the estate of Pearl M - Collum, kite of Adams county. deceased. The estate is probably solI vent. W. F. McCOLT.IW. Administrator Gee. 8. 1924. John T. Kelly. Atty. n-lfi-23 I ° Muncie Man Held In Jail After Accident Muncie, Ind., Dec. B.—Orville Wolfe, : Muncie, was held in jail here today ' pending a coroner’s investigation of ■ the auto accident which cost the life > of William Hughes, 59. Hughes jumped from Wolfe’s car > wheq it side-swiped another machine l and was fatally injured. i o MIT K F. OF FIA'At, SF.TTI.KAIKAT OF ESTATE ■ No. 2118. Notice is hereby given to the creditors. heirs and legatees of Frank S. Ernst, an absentee, to appear in the ■ Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, | Indiana, on the 20th day of December, 1102 4, and show cause, if anv. why the FINAL SETTLEMENT ACCOUNTS with tlie estate of said decedent should not be approved; ami said heirs are notified io then and there make proof "■ heirship, and receive their distributive shares. CHARLES C. ERNST, Administrator Decatur, Tnd„ Nov. 29. 1924. Lenhart & Heller, Attys. 1-8 O I NOTH E OF FIAAI. SE'rri.EAIEAT OF ESTATE No. 2128. Notice Is hereby given to the crediiti rs, heirs and legatees of Joshua 'Sprunger, deceased, to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, I Indiana, on the 24th day of December, 1024. 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 to then and there make proof Inf heirship, and receive their distributive shares. OTTO STUCKY, Administrator Decatur. Ind.. Nov. 29, 192’.. James T, Merryman, Atty. 1-8
BUSINESS CARDS * I H. FROHNAPFEL. D C DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC A HEALTH SERVICE Neuroclometer and Splno a r aßh For SERVICE ’ > Location p 0 .iti at 144 South 2nd Street Office Phone 314 Reeldence ton Office Hour*: 10-12 a .m. 14 M.. s. E. BLACK UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMIk Calls answered promptly day or si*. Private Ambulance Servlet. Office Phone: 90 Home Phone: 737 N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined. Glasses Fitfr HOURS: 8 to 11:30—12:30 to l:M Saturday 8:00 p. ■. Telephone 135. Closed Wednesday afternoons. DR. C. C. RAYL I SURGEON X-Ray and Clinical Laboratoriet Office Houn: 1 to 4 and 6 to 8 p. a 1 Sundays, 9 to 10 a. m. Phone 581. t FEDERAL FARM LOANS ■ Abstracts of Title. Real Estate Plenty of Money to Loan on Government Plan. v Interest rate reduced October 15, 1924 f See French Quinn. - Office—Take first etalrway south of Decatur Democn ~ MONEY - TOTLOAN^ An unlimited amount of 5 PERCENT money on improved real estate. FEDERAL FARM LOANS , Abstracts of title to real estate. )- SCHURGER’S ABSTRACT OFFICE. x 133 S. 2nd St. « O — K JOHN W. CLARK DENTIST i127 N. 3rd St. Office in connection h with Dr. F. W. Lose !•- t 2 ° ° NO HUNTING No hunting or trespassing will be e allowed on the farms owned or tene anted by the following: Charles A. Cook. Jesse L- Singleton. Charles x Lonponborgor. John E. Mann, Harlo W Mann. Francis Fuhrman. David , Cook. C. C. Sheets. E. Fritzinger. Boh . Fritzinger. Tise Baker. Roy Hannl--1 Jon. Frank Kitson. John Hinck. Philip Stratum William Macke, Joe Kintz, Joe Steigmeyer. o M-Th til Dec. 18 !• 0 ' 1 Rebuild—Pianos, Talking and Sewing machines, and tune pianos and sell as a side line. Phone 1012 North end city limits. D A. GilliomCall in the morning and •’'’eiunns e only. Terms, cash. M-W-Ftr o : Tops and Side Curtains Repaired, Celluloid sewed in. r I Harness repaired. Good 3 storage for the winter. Oa • land Garage, North FuM * 1( t 0 XOTK E TO 'j'.::*,, ( lIIATI r X "V„eX.'' imccml.l'.' » ’noar.t ..f -J'-X for furnishing the suppl . •, itutit)ns several county offices an r for tlie year 1f12 .\. c0 " s ' ‘ printing bonks, blanks, an I P fnr e and all other supplies • oj , th( , the conduct of the bu. . f county government al ' rihPl ] in (fems are set out and sni( ] the specifications adopted - [h Hoard of ''ommissioners on i( . h are -lay of October. 19 a ”J Auditor now on file in the offic jnsp ection of ~f said county for the n• 1 jnter . anv and all bidders and panic L Witness my hand and official seal a this 6th day^A^lN m jABEI*. Auditor Adams County, 7 4 e notice to biooehs f Notice Is hereby Five" f tJ ’ I \ ( | a ms Board of Commissioners _ rP County will on Jnninr, uge( ] a t r celve blds for supplies to ( (hrae the County I n P rma T r a nU 'irv ,st - ? months beginning file in the ns per requisition now Auditor’s JABF^’ - ° HARRY DANIELS j 1 Livestock and Farm 1 AUCTIONEER . . ( ; I havo been in the bus ne < i twentv-one y par \ an l o^D fn Ad--1 | Bales In every . adjoining e ams county and als widely f counties. Acquaintance known. See me any day garage, phone No. 8 ' residence, BK3-Gr eeD — 8.0 * -
