Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 24, Number 236, Decatur, Adams County, 6 October 1926 — Page 2

TWO

CLASSIFIED’ AOVERtTsEMENtT NOTICES AND BUSINESS CARDS

• '■9RXXXXXXXXXXWX « CLASSIFIED ADS * FOR SALE FOR Nash touring Car. Laito . 1924 model. Extra good condition. See John Snyder. Geneva. Ind or Call 945 Decatur. 234-31 X FOR SALE I good used tires. rT" battery. L. F. Miller, 90S Guttman Ave Decatur. 235 2tc FOR SALE \Vhit<‘' Engl ah Leghorn cockrels, 70c each. High strain Monroe phone A-27.23413 bushel. John Illnck. Decatur R. 4. Preble phone. 234t3x FOJf’SALE 10 good Rhode Island Red puliets; also 6 Butt Orph ngton Pleasant Mills. Ind. 234t3x FOR SALE—IB6 acres near Wren. O . In Willshire twp. If interested write G. W. Diell Wren. O 234-6tx FOR"SALE - Day old ealf. male Ch~ W Andrews. R. 2. Decatur. Ind Preble Phone. 235 31 Fdfl Concord grapes. 17 mo FOR SALE—-Rhode" Island Red~Rose Comb Roosters. Full bloods. ink" 4 Prebl™ phonT_ lm _ a 2534t3x a eod FOR SALE -Dodge coupe. 1926 model. 3 mounths old Like new. At a bargin. .’ash Sales Service. G. A. P.u sick, dealer. Runion Garage. Phone FOR SALE —Fine shoats. full blood Durocs; heifer calf Lulie Walters R. R. 8. 236t3x FOR SALE—Cane Molasses at WIL Ham Klinks'. Phone 719 E. FOR SALE —Fresh cow with calf bv side. Phone 615 WANTED WANTED—Two or three furnished light housekeeping rooms. Cal 3901. 234t3x W A N T E D — Clean, washed rags, suitable to clean presses and type. Must be clean. Not Common rags or waste, or dirty clothes. Prefer muslins, calicos and like. No laces, heavy underwear. woolens or heavy materials. Will pay 7 cents per pound for the right kind if brought to this office, but they must be clean and the right size. Decatur Daily Democrat. WANTED—Janitor at Py thian Hour Call A. D. Suttles. 234t6 SITUATION - IVANTED—High school H rl desirous of taking care of chil dren after school and in the evening. Phone 693. 235t3 WANTED —Men to cut corn. Call or see Phil Q. S'hieferstefn. R R. 7, Decatur. Ind Interurban Stop 17. WANTED- -To do plain sewing ; "also comforter making a specialtv 1 Fhvao* 757. W-F-Sx i —WANTED— Rags, Rubber, Paper of all kinds. Scrap Iron, Metals and Hides. Also' In th» market for wool. We will call with our truck for any junk you wish to dispose of. Phone 442. MAIER HIDE &. FUR CO. 710 W. Monroe St. Near G. R. & I. Crossing. $9-W ts WANTED -■• Girl for general boo. vwork. Everything modern. No washings. Phone 258. 236-6tx WANTED TO RENT—Hens-, small barn and chicken coop with one to five acres of land within five miles of city limits. What have you? Leave address in care of Democrat. Address M. S. 237t3x‘ LOST AND FOUND LOST—A white autopoint ever- harp pencil between Marshall and D C. H. S. Finder return to Dick .Miller at 513 Marshall Street. 23513tx FOR RKNT_ FOR RENT -Farm Enquire of J W. p. me?* 1 . 234 N. First St. 236-3* x NO SERVICES AT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH TONIGHT There will be no services at tho , Presbyterian church tonight on account of the absence of the pastor. I man is as trO n g aS S 'Ji - r 'bowels are inacKrfinr FN *’ ve an d weak. / jT/' V./A't there is pressure ’ 'fr on the nerves at spine. Ad- ■ T nIS-EASE^ i* is{ments remove pressure. For appointment call CHARLES & CHARLES Chiropractors DWic* Hours: 10 to 12—2 to • t 0 g.oo '4? N Second PMM *2S

8 XXXMXXXXXXMXXXXX * x BUSINESS CARDS * IXXXXXXXXXXWXXXXX H. FROHNAI’FEL. 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 a.m. 1-5 6 8 p.mj S. E. BLACK Funeral Director * d Mrs. Black, Lady Attendant 11 Calls answered promptly day or night ‘ Office phone 90 Home phoue 727 ( ’ I.DFB Al. FARM LOANS : Abstracts of Title Iv al Estate. Plenty of Money to Loan on • Government Plan. Interest Rate Reduced October 5. 1924 See french Quinn 1 Offlce--Take first stairway south of Decatur Democrat N. A. BIXLER I OPTOMETRIST Eves Examined. Glasses Fitted ‘ * HOURS: 8 to 11:30 —12:30 to 5:00 Saturday 8:00 p. m. Telephone 185 J MONEY TO LOAN An unlimited amount of 5 PER CENT money on improved real estate. FEDERAL FARM LOANS ■■ Abstracts of title to real estate SCHURGER’S ABSTRACT OFFICE j II 133 S. 2 nd. St. o_ - Q ill FARM MORTGAGE LOANS 1 Planned for the advantage of the I ’ borrowing fartner. 10 year (a) 5%, small com. J | 10 year (a 5¥2 %, no expense to vou 20 year Govt. Plan. Interest paid annually. Borrower fixes interest date. CITY PROPERTY » ; I Mortgage Loans I Select Residence or Mercantile Buildings Low Rate of Interest 1 SUTTLES-EDWARDS CO. A. D. Suttles, Secy. Office 155 South 2nd St. , yftwr'wixiiuimT- - n « ix i ( Oi.uNEL" ' HIRED TO PREPARE BARBECUE HERE ICOMTISVKD i-’HOM PAGE OIB) !• 10 L berty Way and there the visitors via resister and secure a tag which will entitle them to the privileges of the day. Each tag will be numbered and this will be good at the gift disl tribution. Fred Ashbaucher, Joseph Hunter and O L Vance have been named as a committee to arrange tor street and parking privileges. All three being members of the city counc‘l will enable them to arrange the districts in the most satisfactory way for the citv. which is the desire of the Dairy Day committee. The program committee jvill meet' Tuhr-i'ay, night and announce the 'events for the entire day. Herman Myers, chairman of the advertising committee, is now busy getting out publicity material. This will be in ' various forms, including bills, cards. I programs, newspaper advertising and , picture show slides. His committee is also working out plans for securng the proper window decorations,! ! announcement of plans to be made, within a daj’ or so. 1 o 1 BIRTH — A ten-pound boy was born to Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Gilpen, of Four- , .'teenth street, this morning, and has , , been named Douglas Keith. Mrs. Gii- , pen was formerly Beatrice Butcher. j NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE I Notice is hereby given to the cre-tl-♦nrs. heirs and legatee* of Ernest I Korte, deceased, to appear In the Adams , I Circuit Court, held at Decatur. Indiana show cause, It anv. whv the FINAL I on the 2-Sth day of October 1 926. and < SETTLEMENT ACCOUNTS with the ' estate of sail de.cedent should not ,>e 1 approved: and s-afd heirs are notified : to then end there make proof of heir- * ship, and receive their distributive , shares CHRIST BORNE f Executor . Decatur. Indiana Sept. is. ’.s.C. 1 Fruchte & L.tterer. Attorneys ( Sept. 29 Oct. 6.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 6,1926.

MARKET REPORTS Daily Report Os Local And Foreign Marlrrta East Buffalo Livestock Market Hog receipts 3200, holdovers 70, r eady to ten cents higher; tops. $14.40; bulk 170 to 240 lbs. $14.25® 11.35; heavy butchers scarce, notn nally higher; pigs 25 cents and more lower; bulk $12.20© 12 25. few, $11.50 1 gilt lights $12.50© 13.25; packing owv'slo 75®11.50. Cattle receipts. .300 slow, steady to 25 cents lower; 1 steers $8.50; reactor cows $2.50® 13 75; calves receipts 300 steady; (op veals $1700; mediums around $18.00; 'sheep receipts 1500 strong: bulk lambs $14,750'14.85; culls, sll.oo@ 11.50. LOCAL PRODUCK MARKIT (Corrected Oct. 4 ) Heavy Fowls 19 f Leghorn Fowls 14c I Heavy chickens I®< Leghorn chickens He Old Roosters — 9< ■ Ducks — r — —l2 c Gbese -10 c Eggs, dozen 38c LOCAL GRAIN MARKKT / (Corrected Oct. 4.) I Barley, per bushel 60c | Rye, per bushel 80< New Oats (good) 32c Good sound mixed or white corn 90< : Good sound yellow corn 1.04 I New wheat- 1.2< I Good Timothy Seed $2.25-$2.5< I Good Alsac seed $12.0' LOCAL GROCERS’ EGO MARKET Eges, Mozen 3Si BUTTERFAT AT STATION Butterfat, delivered 43< DEVELOPMENTS COME QUICKLY IN PROBE TODAY (CONTINUED FROM PAOX ONX» squarely behind Adams in the Steph enson probe. Five republican editors at a meet ing here yesterday declared Adams was acting as a self appointed committee without authority of the association. Adams was to meet today with a committee of the Indianapolis citx council appointed to inquire into his charges that Stephenson exerted a dominating influence over* the Indi anapohs city council .durißg his regime as political goss. j Adams asserts Stephenson is ready to tell the entire story of his politics' activity, but that refusal of author! ties to'permit an intern lew with him Is blocking the investigation. The third of the series of letters which Adams said were written by Stephenson was said to have beer smuggled out of the prison to Court Asher, a former lieutenant of Stephenson. Tie letter, a .cordinc t<9 Adam> ' ■ stenii'i .. X;. '• lof security a written contract with a ' high state official” promis'ng to pay $825,000, or three times the amount I Stephenson claims he expended for Ahe official's election. The letter further claims that Stephenson has notes for $825,000 signed by the official and written acknowledgement by the official that Stephenson spent $275,000 in behalf of the officer’s election It Is also claimed in the letter that Stephenson had written agreements v- th the mayors of three large Indi ana cities to let ‘‘certain persons" make all appointments toy them and I 'nd ng them to pay three for one on all money Stephenson asserted he spent tot them. The letter Stephenson bolds two photographic copies and the plate of an agreement between h m and the mayor of ‘‘a large city” in which the mayor agreed to allow h'ni to name all the city appointees of a certain class. Stephenson, the letter asserts, had contracts with thirty or forty minor public officials agreeing to repay him for funds advanced for campaign purposes. Will Not Remarry Divorced Persons New York, Oct. 6.—“ The guilty party to a divorce” cannot in the future be remarried by a minister of the I nlted Lutheran Church in Ameftca, and instru< t’ons to that effect will be inserted in the order for marriages in the Luthern Common Service Book, if the special report on "Marriage and Divorce,” pre pared by the Committee on Moral and Social Welfare for presentation to the ghurch is adopted at the United Lutheran bennial convention in Richmond, Va., the third week in October. Further, the committee I asks the church to recognize no ground for divorce save that of adill-i tery, ahd adds, a rider opposing all contraceptive devices on the ground

I of thoir use being contrary to the ) teachings of the Christian church The last convention of the United Lutheran church, held two years ago in Ch cago. 111., referred to the com | mlttee on Moral and Social Welfare, the entire question of "Marriage and ■ , Divorce" with instructions to draft a ! • statement for the guidance of ministers, which should be presented to , the 192 G convention fpr discussion > and adoption. The committee, after' l a serious and careful consideration ' of all references to the subject of divorce and re-marrlage appearing in i i both the Old and the New Testament, 1 has prepared a clear line of forceful argument, leading up to twelve heses. which it asks the church to usert. | In these theses it is evident that 'he Lutherans consider marriage ‘‘a 1 covenant Indissoluble for life,” and • •he marriage relationship a problem 1 'argely unsolved by the individual, toi which both home and church must; rive immediate attention. A distinction Is drawn between legitimate di-, >'orce through the unfaithfulness of me party to the marriage and legiti ' uate separation, which does not per ' n't a second marriage Emphasizing the necessity of spirl-' ual and physical control in marriage J based upon both love and understand ' ug. the committee asks the church to leclare all artificial means of birth imitation to be ''antl-t’hristfan." i 'COURTHOUSE : « JMXFKM -VXHaaMOMa Suit On Note | A suit on a note, in which judgment for S6OO and costs is demanded, was' field in the adams circuit court yeatrrday by the Wells County Banks, if Bluffton, against Godfred Smith and other-s. Attorney eGorge Mock, of Bluffton, is counsel for the plaintiff. * Pleads Not Guilty William S. Andrews, of near Berne. 1 vas arrested late Tuesday on a charge >f failure to provide for his wife and ! ■hild. He pleaded not quilty when ar anged before Judge Sutton in circuit :ourt and he was released under S2OO aond. Set For Trial The case of Adam C. Butcher vs. lacob Wagner has been set for trial - in November 4. Estate Settled In the estate of John Schurger, the inal report was approved, the admin strator discharged and the estate adudged seettled. MARKING PROBLEM AGAIN TAKEN UP BY CITY COUNCIL -cavTHinen from >arking space would relieve the conested condition on the principle treets, especially on Saturdays, dowever, no definite plan has yet been worked out in the Dimer. J.ua lor .n .iSiiiug two solid rubier tires fur the large n>ty tru'k vere received arl epene. oy the ouncil. Prices iCnged from $145 00 >er tire to $157.50. On motion, the 'ouncil rejected all bids and author zed the street and sewer committee o purchase two tires from local dealrs. The tires are 36 by 12 inches In size. John Hill was awarded the con•ract for building the cement sidewalk on Johns street. His was the only bid filed. No objections were filed on the Russell street sidewalk improvenent and the resolut'on ordering the mprovement and fixing November 2. is the date on which bids for Its • construction would be received by ‘he council. Engineer Arvai Harruff reported he completion of the Walnut street sidewalk. The preliminary assessnent roil was filed and November 2 'ixed as the date on which objections against the assessments would be beard. An agreement wt’th Jambs Cowan ?.nd the city of Decatur to permit the city to tap into his private sewer was filed. The plans and specifica?ons for the Acker district sew»er were filed and the resolution order Ing the improvement and fixing Nov. l 2, as the date of hearing In the matter was passed and adopted. ) M. J. Mylott, city light superintandent. reported that street lights had been placed on Ninth street, at the corner of Monroe and Thirteenth and at the corner of First lind Rtigg ' streets. < An ordinance appropriating $91.00 ] from the general fund to the travel- ' ing expense fund was passed. The contract with F. J. Schmitt, S city garbage collector, was filed and , approved. The finance committee allowed the ( bills and the meeting adjourned. p Crawfordsville—The sophomores in- , Itiated the freshitien in to the myst- s eries of Wztbdsh college when they ■-•on the annual Freshti.'.an-Sophomore scrap here. I

ARKANSAS HOLDS STATE ELECTION J. E. Martineau. Democrat, Elected Governor Over , Republican Opponent Little Rock. Ark . Oct. 6—(United , Press.)/ —John E. Martineau, derno Icrat. has been elected governor of. I Arkansas ou the face of scattered re-1 turns in yesterday's general election I over his republican opponent M. D | Bowers. Early reports this morning I Indicated the republicans did not get I a single man In the major offices of 1 ' the state. | | Harvey Parnell, democrat, has a I mbstantial lead over Judson N.' Iloutsy for office of lieutenant*. I governor, while Jim B Higgins, is 'assured of victory in the race for I secretary of the state over Victor M ' Wade, republican. Plan To Stimulate Beef Cattle Business In State I r ' I I Rushville. Ind., Oct. 6—(United, Press)--Plans for stimulation of the beef cattle business in Indiana were' ■aid at a meeting of representatives' of the Indiana Beet cattle association.l of this section here. The cattle men plan to form, as an experiment they believe will grow to i state wide proportions, a boys' cattle' I feeding club for Rush county with a membership of 20. | With these of the twenty who showgenuine interest in the feeder project . they plan to form a bred heifer club to serve as a nucleus of a herd, so i that logal cattle feeders might get their feeders at home Elbert 11. Garv Says ' What We Need Most Is More Competition New York. Oct. 6—(United Press) Rcfleoting the‘same optimism concerning business conditions that other figures in America's business world have expressed recently. Elbert H. Gary, has made his own prophecy. I | The .chairman of the U. S. Steel Corporation will be 80 years old on Friday. ' w | He said he,, was convinced that business will remain good during 1926 “and probably during 1927.” | | Periods of business depression are no longer necessary in America, he believed. As for competition, Gary viewed the most damaging to American industries as likely to originate in America rarther than out. The Ford plan of a five day week was uneconomic, in his opinion. He was not satisfied that men can dp as 1 ■ .. " ill bIA. “What we want is competition,'' he* said. "I would dislike to see any business so controlled that prices could be maintained regardless of whether they were fair or not.” ' o I Smith Threatens Expose Os Campaign Expenditures Lawrenceville. 111., Oct. 6.—(United Press)? —An exposure of campaign expenditures that will “rock the state of Illinois” is threatened by Frank L. Smith, republican nominee for U. S. Senator, who last summer was the center of a senate investigation of campa'gn expeditures in the Illinois primary. This new challenge by Smith, who' accepted $125,000 from Samuel Insull. the utility baron, to be used in his primary campaign, followed Smith's denial that "anything has ever been HOUSEHOLD SALE 1. the undersigned, will sell at' Public Auction at mv residence, at Monmouth, Ind, 2 miles north of Decatur. Ind., on State Road 21. on FRIDAY, OCT. 8, 1926 al 1 o'clock P. M. The following property: One Heat'ng Stove; 4 Burner Oil Stove; 1 Asbestos Lined Cook Stove; 1 Dining Room Table, 6 Dining Room Chairs; 1 Easy Base Rocker; 1 Morris Rocker; 1 Sewing Rocker; 1 Center Table 1 Kitchen Cab net; 1 Dresser with LArge Mirror 1 Dav Spring Bed; 2 Enameled Beds; 1 Square Top Stand Table: 2 Mattresses; 1 Sapitary Toilet; 1 Oak Sewing Rocker; 200 quart of Canned 1 Fruit; 6 bushel Potatoes; 1 dozen Chickens, and numerous articles nbt mentioned. x *' TERMS: xiade known on day of ' sale. MRS. M. S. RAMEY R. N. Runyon, Auct. 5-6-7

wrong in my political life. Smith charged that already a slush fund amounting to between $300,000 and $400,000 is ready to be thrown Into the campaign in behalf of Hugh S. Magill, independent republican, one of Smith's opponents. • Smith has challenged "any and all to search my political record and find any diaerimination or anything wrong." REVIVAL WILL END THIS WEEK (< ONTIN I Kl» FflOM OW Christ our Lord.' • "Sin crucifies our Christ. It matters not so much, whose wicked hands seizchrtet. and hang"d him upon the c roes of Calvary, for the fact of most ' moment Is, that If It was not for our sins Christ would never have needed I to die upon the cross. It was not the 1 nails that held him. upon the cruel i tree, it was our sins that kept,him I hanging there In agony. I “God forgives our sins. He literally cuts us loose from them. Divine forgiveness includes forgetting (kid'does not rettiember our sins against us. God ' also blots out our sins. Jeremiah said; Though I wash me vith much soap, 'and take me much lye. yet is my ini- ' quity marKed before the laird But ! the blood of Christ, cleanses us from : all unrighteousness. Yod caats our stns . behind him as far as the East is from the West.' ” Mai Daugherty’s Defense 1 Os Brother Under Fire I New York. Oct. 6. —(United Press.) —Attempts to shake Mai Daugherty's defense of his brother, Harry M. Daugherty, attorney general in President Harding s cabinet, will be renew cd by government attorneys today at Harry Daugherty's trial in federal court. The former cabinet officer is charged with criminal conspiracy in connection with the award to Swiss claimants of the $7,000,000 assets of the American Metal company, impounded as alien property during the war. Former alien property custodian Thos W. Miller is a co-defeudant. Besides battering Mai Daugherty's testimony of yesterday which was calculated by the defense to absolve i ————————— How Farm Renter May Become Farm Owner I have a farm tor sale on a plan that crop payments will make you the owner. Many city and farm renvers have 'paid enough rent to purchase a home or farm. -The tenant is a servant, a farm ,owner is a master; he cannot be ord ered to vacate The rent cannot be raised He can change and improve as he sees fit and the time spent adds to the value of his own property. He feels more secure and more enocur aged to make is-attractive and proti table. The independence and encouragement adds to energy and the in rtntcnr to u IMi MBd •* 'the rent yon would pay a land lord pay the debt, which a renter pays but niier become; the owner. Let me give some renter this chance, low- rate of interest and crop 'rent payment plan. Open for a sjiort (time only, DANIfcL N. ERWIN. Decatur, Indiana. i Thirty minutes walk, five minutes jitney from this farm will take you to I Decatur, market, school, or church Interest rate s’a'v- St

PUBLIC SALE I I will sell at public auction at inv resilience, 1 mile w'dh an«l 3* •> miles oast of Monroe, Ind.; 5 miles southwest of Willshire, mile north and one-half mile west of Salem, on TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12,1926 Commencing at l(i o’clock am., the following property: 2 HEAD OF HORSES —Sorrel mare. 6 year-, old. sorre horse. 5 vears old, a real work kam; both sound. . 9 HEAD OF CATTLE—Roan cdw. 6 years old. will b( WS" Nov. 25; Spotted cow, I years old, will be fresh March 2#; cow. 6 years old, will bt fresh March 20;. ?. Jersey cows. heavy springers; Jersey cow. will be fresh Nov. 20; 3 spring hem calves, one almost a full-blood Guernsey. 57 HEAD OF HOGS—3 sows, with pigs by side; 2 <>]" " sov ?.. Dfiroc male hog. year old; 45 feeding shoals, weighing from ’ Io 125 JJOtmds each. 3 HEAD OF SHEEP—Ewe. vear old; 2 ewes. 3 years old. 125 CHICKENS—FuII-blood Silver Lace Wyandotte; some nice young roosters and cockerels. GRAIN—IOO shocks of corn in field; 100 bushels, more or jless. of good. black seed oats; one bushel of red clover seed FARMING IMPLEMENTS. etc.—Weber wagon, ju llk new; McCormick mower, a good one; Dain hav loader, in shape; Gale corn plants. good ds new; McCormick binder. 7»eiif; tbngue truck, in excellent condition; single disc. 7 on a . s l , ‘ just like mw; knife drag; spike tooth harrow; Oliver ridmfi breaking plow; walking breaking plow; John Deere cultivate*, Qofti shelter; DcLar.nl cream separator. HARNESS—Set of breeching work harness and some horst collars. i I ERMSAII sums of $5 and under, cash. On sums over S- 1 a credit of 12 months will be given, first 6 months without interest’ last I, months so draw S'T’ interest. Font percent oh « or M 5 on sums over $5. No propertv to be retribved until settled for. w. H. MYERS V\. H. Patterson, Clerk Roy Johnson; Auctioneer Ladies Aid of Salem M. E. Church will serve lunch-

Harty Daugherty. P s « ofy'R. Buckner, also lltav pr *’ witness lodav t< )r fur'lim- - . ,ll ’ ™ of the sources of thr m-tnoy paid for President Hantm.-, S palga. c ‘* H Manager Os Decatur Stoiu E Has Infection On l| h | Albeit LuFolbit.-. i t ,., n , 4 . r ( . g Mcrile Five and Ten < .H city, has gone to the frt>i n „ t||| ■ ents, Mr. and Mrs \\ h E In Portland, ami Is un.b of treatment for an mt., • i .. S left side of his faci’. tin, j.]., . 9 gave the opiulon that th, tn,.., tl fl caused from a mosuitn,, fl another physician l><-|i, >. ~, m lion is a carbunkl,. I' «tj| lu. , fl days before Mr LaE’dl.-tt, «t|| | )e |h to resume his work l>< r, 9 Gloria Swanson in "HN£ ■ MANNERS" Sunday and y| on . 9 day at Adams Theatre. w .f 9 Thursday night a hard times E dance at Sun Sei Park, l.udc, ■ orchestra. Conic. I o _ 9 Box Social. Bobo school, Fri- E day night, Oct. 8. 235-31 II Get the Habit—Trade at Homt, ttp l y| 9 Roy S. Johnson I Auctioneer I Decatur, Indiana I Phone 1022 Phone 181. I COMING SALE DATES I Book Your Sale Early. I Oct. 7—(). Brown. r« milt I east of Dent school, farm sale. I Oct. 9—Butler & \hr, Dea- I tur, Ind. Stock sale. I Oct. 12—W. H. Myers, 1 milt I south and 3'j miles east of ■ Monroe: farm sale. I Oct. 13—Alva Sovine. 5 mite II south. 5 miles west of Decatur. I Farm sale. I Oct. 11—William Sellemeyer, I 1 mile north of Magley. Farm I sale. I Oct. 15—J. L. Cardwell. Bluff I ton. Ohio, cattle sale. I Oct. 16—J. L. Cardwell, O | • (ambus Grove. Ohio; cattle salt. I Oct. 18-19-20 — Registered | i Hereford cattle. C. G. (oehm I estate. Hwys. Kansas. | Oct. 22—-M. K. Downing. 4 I miles southwest of Convoy, 0, ! general farm sale. I Oct. 23—Butler & Ahr. Deca- I tur, fnd. Stock sale. I Oct. 25—Roy Brod heck, 1 I mile east and * 2 mik south of I Boho. Farm sale. I Oct. 26—Otto Longenberger. I 1 mile east, mile north of j Monroe. Farm sale. I Oct. 27—W. AV. Murphy. 1 | > ’vJ*-’ -t nf Ann AA c'-* <’” I'”' J 1 Oct. 28— AA eigman and AValt- I t ers, 2 miles east and 3 miles I north of Decatur. I arm salt Oct. 29—JefT Manley. 10 mile ' east of Decatur on Decatur and Aan AVer! road. Farm sale. Nov. I—Fred Ahr. 3 miles east of Decatur. Farm sale. Dec. 14—Mrs. Ira Smith. miles west of Poe. farm sale. * ■aamMMiHiXKaaiiaK*** J ...