Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 23, Number 195, Decatur, Adams County, 18 August 1925 — Page 4

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(“classified ADVERTISEMENTS, I NOTICES AND BUSINESS CARDS ■ ..... —— - ■ ' i■i ii ■ i ii ~irnrr' i rainy

• CLASSIFIED ADS ♦ FOR SALE FOR~§ALE-A few Rood used oil stoves and coal range*. The Gas Company 136 FOR violin outfit good condition. At reasonable price- inquire of E. F. Dornseif, Democrat Office Decatur. 11 FOft SALE- A choke lot of furor males for fall service. J- D. Nidlinger, A miles northeast of Decatur. • 193-ts FOR RENT—Furnished rooms in mod ern home. Inquire 221 N. Third st.. or telephone No. 1069. 194-Bts. FOR SALE—One willow rocker; One Film Rocker: One Oak rocker; Cent 9 r stand; dining room extension table. *S x 45 with four extra boards; Oak bookcase. 2x4% feet; Oarland gas range; Walnut mirror, 2 x 3% feet. For sale at Mrs. George Roop* real deuce. 330 N. 10 St., or phone 821 after 5 o'clock. 194 Bpd. FOR SALE—A good piano in excell ent condition, at a bargain. Inquire of J. S. Coverdale, phoue 187. 194tt FOR - SALE—Exira good apples? per bushel 75 cents. Monroe phone A-27 195-3 t F6R SALE Parts and repairs to !•> and 17 model Buicks, six cylinder, rims and tires. Inquire 416 Mercer Ave., as ter 5 p m. 19511 LOST AND FOUND LOST—A bunch of keys, call 580. and receive reward. 3t> FOUN'b- ‘iUtbm<llrile t|re ami rim Owner may have same by calling at this office, paying for this ad and identifying the property. 19531* WANTED WANTED—Salesman—Do you consid er yonruelf qualified to sell qualitv lubrication in drums, half drums, and quarter-drums on 30 day •Biers, 111 laffihqrvftp’ and Indus trial concerns in your rtectfop.’ We have several branches in the state and now seek depresentatation in agri cultural sections offerin'; c p n>i>nr cp portunjty to capable salesman who will invest only earnest effort. Must own auto. Age limit 30 55. Employment through personal interview. Address, Division Manager, Box 136. Camby, Indiana 194-3tx WANTED. TO RENT—A 6or 7 room house in the west part of city. Call 318. 195tt3 THE'SAW 'mILL on my farm will be in operation in about a week- Any one having any logs to be sawed please bring them at once. Old logs on the premises shotiid be remarked. P. B. Lehman. 1 195t3x Hartford City. — Robert Brown of Hartford City, dived too deep. His lower lip was torn from the gums. HARTFORD CITY—New traffic laws in Hartford City have resulted in many affidavits being filed against motorists by Mayor John L. McGeath. HILLSBURG—Mrs- Armilda Wayman, 101, the oldest person in Clinton county, is dead. She lived in this vicinity for the past fifty-three years. MONTPELIER—A new pipe organ has been ordered for the Methodist church here. It is to be installed soon soon.

THE PLACE TO BUY USED Qto f FTX- , Cash or on the Payment Plan —, ...... ,Q — 1925 Dodge Touring, fully equipped. 1918 Dodge Touring, in good shape. 1923 Ford Sedan, in good shape 1921 Ford Touring 1918 Buick Touring 1918 Overland Sedan 1918 Oakland Sedan, new paint and new rubber. 2 Fords for $25.00 each. ,I.— — ■■■■ ■ HILEMAN GARAGE Phone 763 Hi i *■■■; yjyyyif ■ ■ ■ I

♦ BUSINESS CARDS * ■■■ ■ H. FROHNAPFEL, D. C. DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC A HEALTH SERVICE The Neurocalometer Service Will Convince You at 144 South 2nd Street Office Phone 314 Residence 1087 .Office Hours: 10-12 am. 1-5 6 8 p.m. S. E. BLACK Funeral Director Mrs. Black, Lady Attendant Calls answered promptly day or night Office phone 90. Home phone 727 FEDERAL FARM LOANS Abstracts of Title. Real Estate. Plenty of Money to Loan on Government Plan. Interest rate reduced October :5, 1924 See French Quinn Office—Take first stairway south of Decatur Democrat. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eves Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8 to 11:30— 12:30 to 5:00 Saturday 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135 MONEY TO LOAN Ab unlimited amount of 5 PERCENT money on improved real estate, FEDERAL FARM LOANS Abstracts of title to real estate. 6CHURQLKB ABSTRACT OFFICE. U 8. 2nd St. ~ o I DR. C. V. CONNELL | VETERINARIAN Sliecial attention given tn cattle and poultry practice. Ulfice 120 No. First Street. Fhone: Office 143—Residence 103 1 1 —J . - ■ - -Q PORTLAND—Daun Newton, fifteen year old Portland girl, at Ft. Wayne, married June»2 to John Newton is seeking annullment of the marriage. Greensburg—Greensburg is contemplating establishment of a municipal market. Some civic body may handle the affair. ■ o— MARKETS-STOCKS Daily Report Os Local And Foreign Market* Chicago, Aug 18 —(United Press) —Mixed action feature opening deal. ! Ings on the Chicago board of trade. Bulls ’prevented a break in wheat. Crop and weather news was bearish. Those in favor of higher prices think that despite occasional depressions, there is no apparent sign of weakening in the domestic situation. Corn's opening trade was featureless. Traders were inclined to follow action in the bread grain. Oats were independently strong. Provisions dropped on packing house selling. East Buffalo Livestock Market Receipts 2400. shipments 1520, official to New York yesterday, 4940; hogs c'osing slow. $13.75@14; medium $14@14 35; light weight sl4 35© 14.50; light lights and pigs $1450@ 14.75; packing sows rough 812; cattle 500 dull; sheep 300; best lambs, sl4 75; bes’ evyjs [email protected]; calves 300; tops sl4. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Wheat: Sept. sls7%,Dec. $1.57%, May $1.60%. Corn; Sept $104%. Dec. 87c; May 89%c- Oats: Sept. 39%, Dec. 42%, May 46%c. LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected August 17) Fowls 18c Leghorn Fewls 13c Heavy Broilers .120 c Leghorn, Anconas and Black broilers . . 15c Old Roosters 8c Ducks 10c i Geese 8c Eggs, dozen 30e LOCAL GRAIN - MARKET (Corrected August 17) Barley, per bushel 75 Oats, per bushel 34c Rye, per bushel —— SI.OO New Wheat, No. 1 M 56 New Wheat. No. 2 $1 5 r LOCAL GROCER'S EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen 28c *T Butterfat ; 39c

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1925.

| Legend and Mystery About Nevada Lake ‘ From the earliest settlement of I Serafin the legend of a gigantic aerI pent inhabiting the depths of PyraI mid lake bus been told. The serpent I la Mid to enter the luke through n r rast underground passage extending | from the Pacific ocean apd Is supposed j io have existed since prehistoric times. • Basking in the depths of the lake, it ' Ilea in wait for lucklesa adventurers.* ,' Draws down boats and cunoes and de | yours its victims. The legend has been Investigated by many scientists and ' gome contend that the serpent Is really l an enormous mass of worms that j breed In the usually placid waters. But this opinion Is jeered by Indians f snd the old white settlers who have • caught fleeting glimpses of the mam'moth snake. I'yramld lake la an inland sea of mystery. Situated 800 miles from the | ocean, Its isles swarm with vast i flocks of seagulls and pelicans. The ■ lake receives the discharge of the I Truckee river but has no outlet —yet t the waters are fresh and abound In r trout and other fish. Four-Leaved Clover Has Long Been Luck Symbol That a four-lea veil clover will bring , luck to tlie one who finds it is an ■ ancient superstition, and there can i t>e no way of, learning for a certainty how it started. Old writers suggest • that its resemblance to the form of I lhe cross is the root of the notion. “The person who carries a leaf of [ tile four-leafed cruciform clover about ■ with him,” asserts one of these, “will ' lie successful at play, and he will dream of ills beloved, or the maiden ! may, by slipping a leaf Into her lover’s , shoe without his knowledge, as he is I about to set out on a journey, secure ills sure and safe return to her eml brace." | It may be noted that tlie threeleaved clover also had some virtue, because it symbolized the Trinity, and 1 the tradition is that St. Patrick con- , verted the whole Irish people to ! Christianity by showing them, ,' through the trifoliate leaf of the sbam--1 rock, how the three persons In the Godhead might exist and yet be one. Earliest Book Plates It probably was because books were so few and precious ip that early dawn of bookmaking and printing and Illustrating that the first book plates were not as book plates are today. A king , or queen or lord or lady did not have > printed a mere tag, reading: "This book , belongs to Beatrice Aragon.” Instead, 1 Beatrice of Aragon, for her book plate, ' had her picture together with tlie pic- ’ ture of her husband, Matthias L Corn- ■ inus, king of Hungary 1443-90, at the foot of page two in their joint book. I “De Spiritu Sanctn," written by Sigis- , rnumius de Sigismundus and illuminated by Attavante deli Attavanti. All in all, those early days of books bad much in their favor. You didn't have to worry much about borrowed volumes. You had no worries, either, about sectional bookcases. Your one j volume was per sea first edition. Island Is American I Palmyra island came under Ameri Iran sovereignty with the annexation of the Hawaiian islands in 1898. It was originally known as “Eainarang” and was discovered by Captain Savvle of the American vessel Palmyra in November, 1802. An expedition conducted by Capt. Zenas Bent took possession of It in the name of the Hawaiian kingdom in 1862. It was annexed by Great Britain in May, 1889, 1 and later became a possession of the 1 Hawaiian islands, being included in them when these islands with all their dependencies became a part of the territory of the United States. Explaining “Monads” A monad is one of the elements con1 tsining within themselves the principles of both substance and form, by the combination of which the universe is constituted and by whose activities its changes and developments are explained. According to Leibnitz, they are nonspatlal, self-acting forces, or immaterial units, each one representing the same universe, but representing it from a different point of view, and each attaining its activity through the will of God, in Himself simple actuality and perfection.— Washington Star. Museum Gets Treasure Hawick museum has been enriched by the reception of a Chinese porcelain grotto or shrine. This was brought from China some hundred years ago. ■ and the British museum authorities' have furnished thh following Information: “It is what Is called a ‘grotto piece,' and is probably quite fanciful, I giving a suggestion of a mountain ! , shrine or pleasure place with figures | jof visitors. Such pieces were made commonly in the potteries near Fatshan, to the Canton delta.”—Family Herald. Evil Spirit Scorers No wonder the gateway of the Indian medicine man keeps the evil spirits sway. Tbs Flathead Indians, who inhabit the western slope of the Continental Divide in Glacier National I park, built these grotesque “entrances” with the oddest of “nature's carvings” , found on dead trees along the mountain sides. They form clusters of “scare-crow” figures that would make a white man's deg start those omi- 1 nous notes a funerai-to-Uw in the imejediate neighborhood.

The Woman Pays ‘ & T3QVA NtcaJi

Pola Ncffri’a bankroll has been reduced exactly $57,(100 at a result of the screen star band ing over to Uncle Sam t’ttxt hul in duties and fine for ne-’leci ing to declare valuables on het return from Europe.

| Court House

=I Suit On Account A suit on account has been filed iu the circuit court by the Tipp Fireworks Company, of Ohio, against Chick* Aeschelman. of Berne- Judgment in the sum of $430.35 is demanded. Attorney Wade L. Manley, of Geneva, represents the plaintic. Marriage Licenses Faris D. Whitesell, minister. Decatur, to IrMne E. Franz, Berne ■— o— ■ ■ ■ Clinton—When a traction pole fesl t < aught a new roadster belonging to Harold Lyday. The automobile was badly- dented. Elwood —After a trip to the Pacific coast, covering approximately 7,000. miles, uu Elwood train is back home. More than 109 residents made the trip- Sixteen states were covered. Greensburg. — Mr. and Mrs. Wil-! liam E. Jackson, of Greensburg, newly | weds, were locked iu the county jail Jy friends. Marion. — Marion police say Leroy Smith, Marion man. has confessed to robbing his best friend of $220 and buying an auto with the money. Seymour. — Jackson's county’s famous black berry patch is a total failure this year, Seymour farmers say.

COMMUNITY SALE To be held at the Park View farm, one-half mile east of Decatur on the Harding Highway Thursday August 20 1925 2 p.m. 10 - Head of work Horses - 10 One team of bay mares. 4 and 5 years old. weight 3300; one team of black geldings, 6 years old, weight 3200; oiu black marc, 5 years old, weight 1500 and one gray mare. 8 years old weight 1500. 30 — Head of Cattle - 30 Consisting of 22 head of milk cows. These, arc all good cows, straight and right in every way. Some are in milk now and the balance are due to freshen soon. And 8 head of good stock calves. 26 — Head of hogs — 26 These are two tried sows, bred for September farrow. And 24 stock pigs that weigh about 110 lbs. all immuned. 14 „ Head of Sheep - 14 All niouthe d ewes, mostly high grade Shropshire's. J, A O IVI IWI A ■ 111 Al IT TI XZ One Deering mower, 6 ft., one McCormick corn binder, t* iIICIVI If I, I |y| If It * n<? If ° eere I’l°"’ 16 in. and many other articles of Consignors please notice: Anyone wishing to consign property to this sale may do so bv bringing it to the farm Thursday morning and listing it with the man in charge. So commission for sel’ins ’ TERMS MADE KNOWN SALE DAY. REPPERT AUCTION SCHOOL STUDENTS, Aucts •' Roy S. Johnson, Clerk. 1 • ' l -' - - '

HARRY WEBSTER GETS A LETTER SIGNED “DUTCH" .Continued from Page One) man gang Inquest Is Secret .¶ Newspaper men were excluded from the inquest and identity of the witnesses or the substance of their testimony was not revealed. .¶ It was known however, that the witnesses included three men from Yorktown, near Muncie, who said they saw Wolfe and a man resembling the description of Anderson in Yorktown a short time before the murder. .¶ Police Chief Randolph said several new witnesses had strengthened the case against Wolfe. It was indicated a grand jury indictment against him would be sought after the inquest Seek Missing Witness .¶ Attorneys for the accused man were seeking a man in a red touring ear and two small boys who saw the shooting at close range. .¶ The touring car stopped a few yards fro mthe [from the]scene of the shooting to avoid a collision with Hance s auto and taht [that] of the outlaws. .¶ The man sped away after the shooting and has not been located. Wolfe s attorneys believe he can establish definitely that Wolf [Wolfe] was not among the assailants of Hance and his wife. .¶ Agents of the federal government, operatives of the Indiana Banker's association and private detectives have joined the local police in the attempt to trail Anderson. .¶ While some of the investigators said Anderson might still be in Mun-

BUY SEASON TICKETS yllM 0 llh* F August 31 to September 5

Dangerous Varicose Veins Can Be Reduced Never mind what people say. If you have varicose or swollen veins and want to reduce them to normal, go to any live druggist and ask for an original two-ounce bottle of Emerald Oil (full strength.) If he hasn’t it. he can get it. | Apply it to the enlarged veins as <t;rected and improvement will be noticed in a few days Continue its use until veins return to normal size, it is guaranteed to rdduce swollen veins or money back by Smith. Yager & Falk, and all good druggists.

cie. this belief was discredited because of the thorough manner in which the city has been searched. .¶ Numerous reports that Anderson has been sighted in Indiana cities or adjoining states have caused renewed excitement but all reports have failed to bring any tangible clew to the hiding place of the master murderer. .¶ Another angle was injected when Harvey Wagoner, insurance man of Anderson, Ind., told authorities three men forced him at the point of a revolver to drive to Cincinnati, O., last Saturday night. .¶ A new theory as to the motive for the shooting is advanced by some of the investigators, who say Anderson feared Hance "knew too much" and would turn him in as he had Chapman .¶ The general belief is that Anderson with no thought of his own-safety slew Hance and his wife in vengeance for the betrayal of the pprince [prince] of bandits. .————o———— .¶ Seymour. — Seymour has fifty-fifty burglars. Elmer Streinberger had two one-dollar bills and four half dollars in a drawer. One bill and two halves were taken.

AM. j* ir ’ He Has Never Missed A Pay Day A certain saver is proud that he iias never missed making a pay- 9 •H (lay deposit this year. He finds 3? saving fairly easy now that he w has got the habit. It is easv t<» get the deposit || habit through our Systematic J ' || Savings Plan. Try itI II I f ip I r and Surplus Ctecatutt *

Four Youths Held For Burglary At Terre Haute Terre Haute. Ind., Aug. 18-Fern Patchett, 18, her married elater Jewell Shannon, of Rochester, in/ 16, Melvin Sanders. 23, and For««t Medley. 23, of Kokomo were arrested here Monday afternoon by Deputy Sheriff Withrow under advisement of Perkins L. Patchett. father of the girls. The girls were being field t n the Vigo county jail Tuesday pending their return to Rochester, where they are under charges of burglary Tho boys are being h<4ld for inveitlgallon, it being thought that thede are charges against them at Kokomo The quartet were living at a rooming house. The glrla were at liberty on tlie charge under bond signed by their father but at their arrest here he withdrew the bond.

CORNS • F i Quick relief from painful I I corns, tender toes and Iff I U 1 pressure of tight shoes, ■ks,/ DTScholls ****«■ I