Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 24, Number 117, Decatur, Adams County, 17 May 1926 — Page 2

2

1 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, I I NOTICES AND BUSINESS CARDS |

IXKHKKBSC K K 3 K K K * B * CLASSIFIED ADS « IRtIKRSiRSRKKSIII FOR SALE FOR SALE — Seed Corn William Rupert, Monroe. 7fitf FOR SALE—About Son bushels good early seed corn, very cheap if sold at once. See Alfred Rauch, state road, 21. 4 miles south of Decatur. llUtf FOR SALK Irish Cobbler potatoes. Choice White Pine Evergreens, 25c each. Trout Farm. 114t6x. FOR SAI.K—Ford truck in Ad mechanical condition. Equipped with 3 good tires, $15.00 if taken at once. Address Box H. % Democrat, llottix FOR SALE —1923 Harley Davison motorcycle with aide car. A. D. Suttles. H6t.l yoK sAIK Vellow Dent seed corn, Tests 90. Peter Pearson. Decatur phone 870 R pipji^cod WANTED WANTED—Two oy three light house keeping rooms. Must he down town. Reference furnished. Address Box B. Daily Democrat. 116t3x j WANTED —A man with selling ability.*-' to represent a high class trade j school. Work part or whole time and make a good income. Write at once for an interview to A. Bremer, ?03 E Berry, Fort Wayne. 1153 t. u .aM hi). MALE HELP—Reliable man wanted by nationally known company to act as local distributor of their products. Highly profitable and permanent business. Every cooperation given. Experience unnecessary. Write The J. R. Watkins Comppany. 129-37 Chestnut St., Columbus. Ohio. 116-ltx. WANTED — Curtains to “stretch. Call 1128. llTUlx SALESMAN WANTED—LocaI territory. Must have auto and qualifications for building year round repeat ( trade on lubricating oils and roofing cement from farmers and industrial users in 25 mile radius. We handle credits, collections, shipments, from nearby branches. Age limits 28-50. Interview arranged. The Allas Oil Co., Box 940, Indianapolis, Ind. 117-t6x. WANTEI~T~Rent or Buy five or six room house. Modern or semimodern. Call phone 1031.___J17t2x FOR RENT FOR RENT—Studabaker home- i stead. Brick house. Modern in every respect. Rent reasonable. Located on Bellmont concrete road, near city. A: I). Suttles. Agt. H2t() FOR RENT —5 room house $15.00 per month. Phone 60S or see Roy Johnson. _ 117t3 FOR SALE—2 Ford tourings; 1 Ford sedan. Priced right. M. H. Fee, 409 N, 7th St. mtt’.x. MISCELLANEOUS PIANO TI’NING and repairing, mandolin attachments for straight and piayer pianos. . Gay, Zwick and Myers. _ _____ _Ust3t (lood”as new. Priced to sell. Call phone No. 367, 117t3. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Wheat; May new, $1.58%, old, $1.58%; July $1.34%; Sept. $1.31. Corn: May 68%c; July 83*4c; Sept. 77%c. Oats: May 40c; July 4114 c; Sept. 41-%c. NOTH K OK FINAL SErri.KMKXT OF ESTATE No. aoia Notice is hereby given to the ireilitors, heirs and legatees of I). D. Clark, deceased, to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur. Indiana, on the 10th day of Juno, 1926, and shew cause, if anv . why the l-’iNAI. SETTLKMKNT ACCOUNTS with tlie estate of said decedent should not he approved; and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares. MAKY V. CLARK. Administratrix. Decatur, Indiana, May 15, 1926. < . J. lilltZ, E. B. Adams. Attys. 17-21. — o NOTICE OF FINAL SETT LENIENT OF ESTATE No. »220 Notice Is hereby given to ,the creditors, heirs and legatees of Elizabeth !■ alt-child, deceased, to appear In the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur. Indiana, on the 19th day of June, 1 926. and show cause, if anv. why tlie FINAL HKTTLKMBNT ACCOUNTS with the estate of said decedent should not lie approved; and said heirs are notified to then arid there make proof of heirship, anil receive their distributive shares. (sEUTKCDE DAUBED. Administratrix. Decatur, Indiana, May 19. 1.926. C. J. Lutz, 1,. >i. Adams, Attys. 17-21. Get the Habit-—Trade At Home, It Pays Your spine stands Ru i~< 1 over your chiropractor stands guard over r - „ s 7 (Dwstcf«K.S>*rtMßimm frequently to avoid ill-health. For appointment call CHARLES & CHARLES Chiropractors Office Hour*: 10 to 12—2 to 8 • 8:20 to 3:00 |27 N- Second Phone 628 (

HKHKaBBHXBBBSBB-** x BUSINESS CARDS s aBBHKBBKBKKKBBBa _________ H. FROHNAPFEL, D. C. DOCTOR OF QHIROPRACTIC A HEALTH SERVICE The Neuroeelometer Service Will Convince You at 144 South 2nd Street Office Phone 314 Reeidence 1087 Office Houre: 10-12 a.m. 1-6 8-8 p.m. S. E. BLACK Funeral Director Mrs. Blaek, 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 F.yes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8 to 11:30 —12:30 to 6:00 Saturday 8:00 p. m. Telephone 136 I MONEY TO LOAN An unlimited amount of 5 PER CENT money on improved real estateFEDERAL FARM LOANS Abstracts of title to real estate. SCHURGER'S ABSTRACT OFFICE 133 3. 2nd St. I o "° FARM MORTGAGE LOANS New Easy Plan. Low rate of interest. Office 155 S. 2nd St. First floor rooms. Suttles-Edwards Co. A. D. Suttles, Secy. i Iv 0 O ■" 1 ■_ Ji'if'il 1 ■1...""—..-1J 1 — ■ DR. NEPTUNE BACK TO WORK Dr. J. Q. Neptune, the well-known j dentist who has been ill for several weeks, has again resumed his practiee and will take care of any busi- 1 ness in his line. His customer** » ro ! asked to take notide. 116t3x notuk OF 1 IN \L SKmKWKNT OF ESTATE No. 2240 Notice is hereby given to the creditors. heirs and legatees of O. ‘tear*, dv'-eased. to appear in the Adatns Circuit i ourt. held at Decatur, Indiana, on the 4th day of June, 1926, and show cause, if «tnv. why tlie FINAL SEfTLEMENT ACCOUNTS with the estate of said decedent should he 9nnr OV r-L and said heirs ate notified to then ftnd there make proof 4>t heirship mid **_• cetve their distributive shares. MURI, I. LYBAKGER, Administrator.! Decatur. Indiana. May Ft, 1926. Lenhart, Heller & Svhurger, Attys. 17-24 o , NOTICK OF ADMINISTRATRIX SAI.K OF REAL ESTATK Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Mayme E. Cloud as administmatrix cvf the estate of Eliza J. Cloud, deceased, in all respects agreeable t«> the order of tire Adams Cireuit Court made and entered in the estate of said decedent for tlie sale of the real estate hereinafter described on Wednesday the 9til day of June, 1926, between the 1 hours of ten o'clock A. M and four, o'clock R M. hi said day at the east | door of the Court House in the city of j Decatur, Indiana, will offer for sale n' public sale to the highest and bes* bidder for not less than two-thirds of the appraised valud thereof the following described real estate situate in Adams County, State of Indiana, towit: Commencing in the center of the De- i eatur and Bluffton road at a point nine chains and seventeen links northeast of a point where said road crosses the half section line running north and south through section four in township twenty-seven north, range fourteen east, thence south parallel with said half section line ten chains and ninety-five and one-half links to the north line of the right of way of the Chicago & Erie Railroad; thence in a westerly direction along the north line of said right of way to said half section line; thence south to the southwest corner of the west half of the northeast Quarter of said section four, thence east to the southeast corner of said west half of said northeast quarter, thence north to a point eighteen rods and fourteen feet south of a prdnt where the said Decatur and Bluffton road crosses the east line of said west half of said northeast quarter of Section four, thence a westerly direction parallel with said road twenty-one and three tenths feet, thence north parallel with the east Une of said west half of the northeast quarter of sertion four, eighteen rods and fourteen feet to the center of said road; thence a westerly direction along ttio center of said road to the place of beginning, excepting therefrom the right of way of the Chicago and Erie Railroad across said land. Said real estate will be sold subject to a mortgage thereon in principal sum of $980.00 with accrued interest to day of sale in favor of First Joint Stock Land Bank. Fort Wayne, Indiana, and free of all other liens, except taxes for 1926 payable in 1 927, TERMS; One-third cash. One-third in nine months. One-third in eighteen months, from day of sale; deferred payment to bear 6% interest and payment thereof secured by a, mortgage on said real estate. Provided purchaser may pay all cash, if he so desires. Said sale to be made subject to the approval of said court. MAYME E. CLOUD. Administratrix. James T. Merryman, Atty. j M-10,17,24,31

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MAY 17, 1926.

MARKET REPORTS Daily Report Os Local And Foreign Markets Opening Grain Review Chicago, May 17—Grains opened irregular on the Chicago board of trade today. I Wheat opened irregular. In view of the fact that Saturday's bulge wus caused by technical operations and the reaction to the British 'strike settlement most traders are bearish and anticipate a dip. The strength of May is still the feature of the markeL It is maintaining its level despite weather reports and the unsettled conditions of. European markets. Corn opened irregular. The spread between May and July prices is the widest in years as there is little demand for the cash article. East Buffalo Livestock Market Receipts 3200, shipments 3610, yesterday; receipts 4800, shipments. 2850 today; hogs closing steady. Heavies sl3. 14.25; fnediums. sl4 50ft' 15.00; light weight $14.85# 15.10; light lights and pigs, $15.25# 15.50; packing sows rough $11.75® 12.00: cattle 2500; steers TO-26c lower: cows and bulls steady: steers 1100 pounds up,’ [email protected]; steers, 1100 pounds down $6.50®9.25; yearlings up to $9.75; heifers $6®5.75; cows $3®7.25; bulls $5.50®7.25; sheep 7000; best clipped lambs $14.75 culls sl3 down; best yearlings sll® 12.50; best aged wethers [email protected]; best ewes $6.50®8.00; calves 2800; tops $13.00; culls SIO.OO down. LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected May 17) Heavy Broilers 30c Leghorn Broilers 25c Hens 23c Leghorns 16c Old Roosters 9c Ducks 14c Geese 8c Eggs, dozen ,"25c LOCAL GRAIN MARKET (Corrected May 17) Barley, per bushel 75c Rye, per bushel 75c Oats 36c «»ood Sound Yellow Corn 78c Good Sound Mixed Corn ... 73c Wheat, No. 1 $1.50 ; Wheat, No. 2 $1.49 Wool 30® 35c LOCAL GROCERS’ EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen “ 26c BUTTERFAT AT STATION 1 Butterfat, delivered 38c o \OTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE No. 222 r» , . : . I I Notice iH herebv given to the creditors. heirs and legatees of Jar\»’ A.j Crabbs. deceased, to appear in the Ad- 1 ams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, Indiana, on the 10th day of June, 1926. and show rausc. if anv. whv 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 of heirship and receive their distributive shares. JESSIE A. DEAM, Administratrix. Decatur, Indiana, May 15, 1926. C. J. Lutz, !•;. B. Adams, Attys. 17-21. o • NOTICE TO I)F,FE \I) % NTS In the Adams Circuit Court April Term. 1926. Cause No. 1264!* Notice to Non-HcMldent Defendant* State of Indiana. ; Adams County, ss: j The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co., vs. I John S. Looks, I Norn H. Loußs. Henry G. VanOrsdel. VanOrsdel, wjfe of Henry G. VanOrsdel, whose trite Christian name to this plaintiff is unknown. Della VanOrsdel, , Ralph W. Scott. Scott, wife of Ualph W. Scott, I whose true Christian name to this plaintiff is unknown. Now comes the plaintiff by Howard A. Somer. and C. L. Walters, his attorneys and files his complaint herein, together with the affidavit of a competent person that the residence of the following named defendants in said cause are non-residents of the State of In- ! diana, to-wit: • John 8. Looks. Nora H. Louks. Henry G. VanOrsdel. VanOrsdel, wife of Henry G. VanOrsdel. whose true Christian name to this plaintiff is unknown, Della VanOrsdel, Ralph W. Scott, — Scott, wife of Ralph \\\ Scott, whose true Christian name to this pliantiff is unknown, that all said defendants are known to be non-resi-dents of the State of Indiana, hut their exact post office address is unknown to this plaintiff. That the plaintiff does not know the true Christian name of the present wife, if any, of Heffrv O. VanOrsdel, and of the defendant, Ralph W. Scott, and that such wives, if anv, are sued as above under the name and style of Van Orsdel. and Scott, whose true Christian names are unknown tc the plaintiff; that the defendant. Della VanOr.-del was the wife of the defendant. Henry G. Van Grade 1, and may now he his wife, and she is therefore made a party defendant; that the above action is to foreclose the mortgage on real estate in Adams County, in the State of Indiana, described in the plaintiff’s complaint in said cause, and is described, as follows, to-wlt: The west half of. the northeast quarter of Section 18, Township 26 North, of Range 15 ITast, and that all said defendants are necessary parties to the determination of said cause of action. Notice is therefore given said Je j fendants that unless they be and appear in the Adams Circuit Court, ot Adams County. Indian l. in tlio *i*y of Decatur, on the 6th day of 1926, the same being the first judicial day of the September Term of said Court, and answer or demur to said eompiaint. the same will be heard and determined in their absences. IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said court in the office of the Clerk thereof,in the City of Decatur, Indiana, this 81li day of May, A. D. 1926. JOHN E. NELSON. « (seal) Clerk of Adams Circuit Coart Howard A. Somer, C. L. Walters, Attorneys for FUioUff. 10-17-24

Pidith of BLUE J LAKE RANCH r-*JACKSON GREGORY COPYIUOKT BY**** OHARLU iOUBNtX* 80M

i ’ "*’ J * 1 Synopsit * CHAPTER I.—Bud Vt*. hor«» for*nin of th« Blue Lake ranch, convinced Bayne Trevors, manager, !• de-, llberataly wreoktng the propertyowned by Judith Sanford, a young woman, her oouatn, Pollook and Timothy Qray, decide* to throw up his Job. Judith arrives and announce* ahe has bought Gray* share in the ranch and will run it. Bh* dlechargea Trevor*. CHAPTER ll.—The man on the ranch dlallke taking order* from a gjrl, but by subduing a vicious hors*r and proving her thorough knowledge of ranch life, Judith win* the beet of them over. Lee decides to etay. CHAPTER lll.—Convinced her veterinarian. Bill Crowdy, Is treacherou*. Judith discharge* him, re-engaglieg an old friend of her father*. Doc. Tripp. CHAPTER IV.— Poßock Hampton, with a party of frltr.de. comes to the rar-h to stay permanently. Trevora accepts Hampton's limitation to visit the ranch. Judith's messenger Is held f up and robbed of the monthly pay roll. CHAPTER V.—Bud Lee goes to the city for more money, getting back safely with It. though his horse Is killed under him. Both he and Judith ; *ee Trevora’ hand in the crime. Hog I cholera, hard to account for, breaks out i on the ranch. Judith and Lee, Investigating the scene of the holdup, climb a mountain, where the robber must have hidden. CHAPTER VI.— A cabin In a flower- ! planted clearing excites Judith's admiration. It Is Lee’s, though he does not say so. They are fired on from ambush. and Lee wounded. Answering the fire, they make for the cabin. Here they find Bill Crowdy wounded. Drsgrlng him into the building, they find re has the money taken from Judith's messenger Besieged In the cabin, th'ey are compelled to stay all night'. CHAPTER VII. — Hampton, at the ranch, becomes urw-asy at Judith's long i absence. With Tommy Burkltt he goes lo'seek her. arriving In time to drive the attackers off. and capturing one man. known as "Shorty." CHAPTER Vlll.—"Shorty" escapes from Imprisonment in the grainhouse on the ranch, to the disgust of Carson, cow foreman, who had him in charge. Lee begins to feel a fondness for Judith. though he realizes she Is not his womanly Ideal. Marcia I-angworthy, one of Hampton's party, typical city girl, is more to his taste. CHAPTER IX—The discovery Is made that pigeons, with hog cholera germs on their feet, have been liberated on the ranch. Lee captures a stranger, Dick Donley, rea-handed, with an accomplice, a cowboy known |as "Poker Face." Donley has brought ; more pigeons to the ranch. "She made a mistake there, ghough," he said regretfully. “A better cowhand 1 never ask to see, Bud. An’ you ought to see the game of crib that man plays! Nope, Judy; you’re wrong there.” But Bud Lee, the mpn who did not approve of the sort of woman who did man's work, said with unusual warmth: “Don’t you fool yourself, Carson! She hasn’t made one little misplay yet I" CHAPTER X Judith Triumphant Though, under the surface, life upon Blue Lake ranch was sufficiently tense, the remaining days of June frivoled by ns bright and bonny ns the little meadow-blues Uirting with the fieldflowers. j Since from the very first the ranch 1 had been short-handed, the hours from dawn to dusk were filled with activity. Carson, who, true to Judith’s expectations, had brought back some new ld< ■as from his few days at the experimental farm —ideas not to he admitted by Carson, however —bought a hundred young steers from a, neighboring overstocked range. In the lower corrals tlip new milking-machines were working smoothly, only a few of the older cows refusing to have anything to do with them. Tripp had succeeded In looting and getting back some of the meft who had worked long under Luke Sanford and whom Trevors had discharged. It was a joy to see the familiar faces of Sunny Harper, Johnny Hoijge, Bing Kelley, Tod Bruce. The alfalfa acreage was extended, a little more than doubled. Plans were made for an abundance of dry fodder to he fed with the lush silage during the coming lean months. Bud Lee broke his siring of horses and, with Tommy Burkltt and one other dependnble man, began perfecting their education, witli an pye turned toward a profitable sale in January. Quinnlon, perforce, was left undisturbed upon the sheep-ranch, whither Emmet Sawyer had followed him. Against Bud Lee's word that he had had a hand In the trouble at the old cabin were ttie combined oaths of two of the sheepmen that he had been with them at the time. i Hampton’s guests, who had planned for a month at the ranch, stayed on. But they would he leaving at the pnd (JI Tune. That is, Farris anfl positively; the Langworthys, perhaps.' The major was content here, and toi stay always and always, would be an; unbounded joy—of course, with little! runs to the city for the opera season and for shopping trips, and a great, Jolly house-party now and then. ! The only fly in Marcia’s ointment was Hampton himself. She confessed as much to Judith. , She liked him. oh, aver so much : Rut was that. lo.ve.’LSha

1 yearned for a man who woiiidf tlirill: I her through and through, and Hump-| ton didn't alway* do that. Just after his heroic capture of the terrible Shorty, Marcia was thrilled to her heart's content. But there were other days when Hampton was Just Pollock Hampton. If It could only be arranged i so that she could stay on and on, with j no day of reckoning to come, no matrimonial venture* on the horizon . . . "That's simple, my dear," Judith smiled at her. "When you get through being Pollock Hampton’s guest, you ! can be mine for a while.” Hampton was now a great puzzle to Mrs. Langworthy, and even an object of her secret displeasure. Not that that displeasure ever went to the limit of changing Mrs. I.angworth.v's plans. But she longed for the right to talk to him us a mother should. For, seeking to emulate those whom he so unstintedly admired, Bud Lee and Carson and the'rest of the hard-handed, quickeyed men in the service of the ranch, Hampton was no longer the careless, frankly inefficient youth who had escorted his guests here. Ha went for days at a time unshaven, having other matters to think of; he came to the table bringing with him the aroma of the stables. He also wore a ptrtr of trousers as cylindrical in the leg as a stovepipe; over them he wore a pair of cheap blue overalls, with the proper six-inch turn-up at the bottom to show the stovepipe trousers underneath. | The overalls got soiled, then dirty, then disgracefully blotched with wagon grease and picturesque stains, and Hampton mad£ no apologies for them. Twice he left the ranch, once to be gone overnight, intending that It should he a mystery where he went. But, since he rode the north trail which led to the Western Lumber camp, no one doubted that he had gone to see Bayne Trevors, in whom he still stoutly believed. Retween the 15yt and the memorable 30th of June, Bud'Lee saw little of Judith Sanford. She was here,’ there, everywhere; busy, preoccupied. Marcia he talked with twice; once when they rode together while Hampton, racing recklessly down a rocky slope for a shot at a deer got a fall, a

firestone TIRE DEALERS Serve You Better We Are Tire Specialists Our experience and equipment help you get the most mileage, comfort and safety from tires. Gum-Dipping—the only known method of insulating every fiber of every cord with rubber —gives the strongest construction possible. And the special Steam- Welding process makes Fitestone tubes both leak-proof and long-wearing—further 7 ~ j increasing the life of the tire. We Also Sell and Scrvico The proo f is demonstrated by the i Oidfield Tires and Tubes biggest taxicab and bus fleets — by • These u-eii known t;.-M s-e built m race champions and in everyday the economical Firestone factories and . c *l-,r\ncarui p > Os carry the standard guarantee. Service Os hundreds Ot thOUSaHUJ ui We offer them at these low prices. HlOtOriStS. HIGH PRESSURE CORDS ‘ _ „ f ; rp g oro 3o X 3i/ 2 Regular ci sia.2j Let us see that your tires 31x4 s.s. 10.00 for. 32x4i/ 2 s.s 23.70 We repair your tires, when nece. lalfli:::::::::::::::::: 23 nary, by the new and better m*** cver-size balloons method. hi equip your car with I «&£::::::::::::::::::::: llil welded Tubes. We will takey °\ J 1 — - - allowance for unused mileage. Runyon & Son 116 S. First St. Phone_772

sore shoulder and nmile TTTs nehuTln: certain new swear words; once when 1 sll of the guests, with the exception] of Karris, who was painting the trait of the stslllon, Nightshade, end the major, who had "letters to write,"], came out to w»toh the horse-breaking. This time. Introduced to Mrs. Lang-] worthy, Lee got for his bow a remark- i ably cold stve Others might forget, | here In the open, the distinction be-, tween people of the better clsss and their servants —not Mrs. Langworthy, If you please. Having created his Imaginary woman, I.ee was ripe to fall In love with her when she came. He had thrilled to the touch of Judith's hand that night In the cabin; Ills thoughts, many and many a day, centered about the, superbly alive beauty that was Judith’s. The fact disturbed him vaguely. The thought that he was very deeply Interested in her In the good old way between man and maid, never, entered his stubborn head. She was as far removed from his ideal woman as the furthermost star in the infinite firmament. Perhaps It was this very disquiet within him, caused by Judith, which now turned hU thoughts to Marcia. x "That’s the sort of woman," he told himself stoutly. "A man's woman! his other self, not Just a pardner; tho necessary other side of him, not Just the same side In a different way.” , Marcia had little, feminine ways of helplessness which turned flatteringly to the strength of the other sex. Judith asked no man to aid her In mounting her horse; Mnrcia. ooquetttshly slipped a daintily slippered foot Into a man's palm, rising because of his strength. _ — (TO BE CUMTIXI Kill

I PUBLIC SALf 318 South Third Street Am leaving town and will sell my Household Goods at Public Auctiomt 318 South Third street, commencing at 2:30 p.m. SATURDAY, MAY 22 Over-stuffed living room suite, in excellent condition; l Victrola with an assortment of record.*; upright piano, like new; library table; 1 Spanish leather davenport; 1 reed settee: 2 reed rockers; 1 reed stand; 1 mirror, 18x40; fumed oak dining room set, consisting of buffet, S-tt. table, 6 leather bottom chairs; 1 rug, 11-3x12; 2'axminster rugs '9xl2; 1 axminster rug. Bxlo-6; 1 fiber rug. 8x10; 2 oak dressers; 1 chiffoner; 1 hratss bed with mattress; 2 iron beds with mattress and springs; 1 chihls bed; 1 oak rocker; 1 Sellers kitchen cabinet, like new; kitchen table; 6 kitchen chairs; 1 ice box; 1 Garland gas range; 1 reed porch swing; 1 porch rocker; cupboard; 1 nei 8 gal. barrel churn; linoleum; lawn mower; 20 dozen fruit cans; -5 dozen jelly glasses; 2 sets dishes; 1 store cracker case; numerous pieces of odd dishes; cooking utensils; 1 walnut library table; 1 oak library table; 2 reed porch chairs; leather rocker; pedlstal; 2 mirrors;’linoleum; and numcrof other articles not mentioned. TERMS —CASH. GILES V. PORTER Roy Johnson and Jeff Lcichty, Aucts. Jack Brunton. (leri

notice Back at thel^r' lloo , Straub, the expert \VallnJ D ' H ' L the man that knows hnl Perri# *»«t .that dirty paper look like’nei" ““to |or large jobs Washing ! hlin K‘ n R. that are cleaned terns cleaned. Prices S', guaranteed. Phone lOfto ' A11 *°fk Tkr Dally notice CITY WATER USERS ' mat X- : city water for wgStaf'fi ,1.7* convemenced because „tit,h I lo ' ' T'> overcome this ad h n aril " e,s ' spoonful of Rub-No-More w v" 8 ' Powder (the Original 5c oner) to each g 511,,,, of ”ff r Soll ’ | IT SAVES SOAP. y w ‘ lef . , Besides Its 15 househeM „„ ’ is the only cleanser that w u *7 11 sinks and tubs and dissnlvi leu xr "«y%s 1 1 Ashbaucher’s | * FURNACES i | LIGHTNING RODS SPOUTING SLATE ROOFING I I j Phone 765 or 739