Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 26, Number 110, Decatur, Adams County, 8 May 1928 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES —I — FOR SALE FOR SALE —1 Guernsey Male fair, 1 Guernsey Heifer Calf. Eligible to be registered, six weeks old J. A. Hendricks Monroe 108-3tx FOR SALE—3 piece bed room suite. Cheap if taken at once. Call 973 109FOR SALE- Manehu soy beans. 97‘ i germination testfi Also, some kiln dry Yellow Dent corn. W. A. Wherry. 3 miles north Blakey Church or Rt. 3 Monroeville, Ind., 109-tt FOR SALE —Reed stroller, blue body and cream colored running gear good condition. Phone 679. 109-3tx jS5r fc.ALE Roan cow, fresh, calf by side. Phone 815 Rudolph Welland. 109FOR SAlmE— Good - Chicken Coop 20 Hen coop in flue shape. Inquire ct Harold Daniel at this office Itx FOR SALE—Guernsey cow, will be fresh soon; and Six month old bull. Preble phone. Wm. Weber. 109-Jtx FOR SALE—2 Chester White male hogs; 2 Duroc male hogs; 1 gcod Hampshire male hog; 1 good 4 year old springer cow-. Schmitt Meat Market, Phones 95 or 96. 109-3 t FOR SALE—Spring onions, 5c per dozen. Lew Brokaw, 421 N. 7th st. 109t3x FOR SALE OR TRADE -Some~goOd gilts to farrow last of May. Also goor Springer cows and heifers, and hominy feed. Will sell or trade on feeding shoats or on cows and stock cattle. An also buying cattle and feeding hogs. Peter C. Miller. 2 miles south of Decatur on Mud Pike. Phone 876-A. 2,4,8,11,15,18,22,25 x FOR SALE-Ford ten panelled body truck good condition 611 So. Winchester St. Phone 1213. 110-3tx FOR SALE—Tract of land fronting Mercer Avenue. Directly across from Hospital. Inquire 816 High st 110- , FOR SALE—Five room house, lights water, Gas 2*4 lots located 347 Line st. Write Frank Young, Wren Ohio. 110FOR SALE— Indianapolis Piano House has player piano near Decatur. Want someone to take it and pay the balance due. Terms to reliable party. Will consider trade. Write M. Blocher, 35 Monument Circle, Indianapolis. Ind 110-3 t WANTED WANTED —Manager wanted for Decatur branch store. No experience necessary, 3300 cash deposit required on goods. 3300 up monthly. Manufacturer, 209 N. Main St., South Bend Indiana. 108-3tx WANTED —Rugs to clean. Call Willard McConnehey, Phone 5361. 109-3 t TELEPHONE or see me before you sell your wool. Will pay highest market price. Dr. C. L. Meyer, Monroeville x 110-181 WANTED—To clean "wall paper, cisterns and wash windows and bouses Frank Straub, phone 210 and leave| orders. 110t3x FOR RENT FOR RENT —4 room house, water and gas. Call J. A. Harmon, phone 9072 109-3tx FOR RENT—M'dem 7 room house at 219 North Ninth St. F. G. Bowers, or Phone 265 109-6 t FOR RENT - Modem house on M.-rcer avenue. Inquire of Mrs. M. Burdg at 1 the Burdg milinery store. 109-3t<

LOST AND FOUND LOST —Firestone tire and rim for Ford car. Thought lost North 2nd or on Ft. Wayne road. Finder please return to Ed Dornseif at this office. Reward. 109 3tx LbST —Indiana auto license plate, No. i 269-907. Return to Daily Democrat of fice. 109-t2x Youth Hurled 35 Feet Into Air When Flivver Hits Culvert; May Die Huntington, Ind., May 8 — (INS) — Roland Cressles, 17, of Andrews. Ind., i was in a local hospital today at the point of death as the result of being catipulted 35 feet into the air, across a ditch into a field when a collegiate flivver, said to have been traveling 50 miles-an-hour down a steep hill, a mile north of Andrews, ran into a concrete culvert. Fifteen minutes after the accident, Marshal William Tidrick reached the scene asd found .Cressler in the field. Young Cressler had a fractured skull and a fractured shoulder. NOTICE The expert wall paper man is back now. Wash painted walls, ceiling, wood work, porches, houses, paper hanging. Carry canvas. Also cleans cisters. All work done by H. A. Straub phone 1000 97-eod o APPOINTMENT OF EXECUTOR Notice is hereby given, that the i»n. dersigneu has been appointed Executor of the Estate of Frederick Peck late of Adams County, deceased. The Estate is probably solvent. Otto Peck, Executor Fruchte and Litterer, Attorneys April 30 1928 May 1-8-15

THIMBLE THEATRE NOW SHOWING—“BLIZZARD S LAST STAND. SEGar ‘ . rivm hmtiE HIM MR LOT /TH [GOOD MEN:/. 1 THK? SHOUTs HOUJ OUM3 MvJ [look: BUZZARD) CylS. BUT iF BLACKHEAD WASN'T TIED LET bO- IM BUZZARD sAN OLD HE BROKt THE f (BW lb-HAbN'r SENSE jL 15N T AFRAID 01-J IT HJOOLD RE A DIFFERENT STORY 10 SS OUT FIGHTER! V* ROPE-fiJN FOR/ J-.J \ ENOUGH TO RtJN ! . HiM- LOOK HE D TEAR YOUR bILLV LITTLerhd’.no’j ■'•rTwkr l -> J i 4/ I IK ■I - iW- 7 <- v\ A); W— Z ® ' SEE TOMORROW, 1 .) ■“ ' - —

— LOA N S — ON MODERN CITY PROPERTY at 6% for 5 years, 10 years or 15 years time. NO COMMISSION ON FARM LAND at 5. 5' 2 and 6% —according to the amount borrowed. for 5 years, 10 years, or 20 years. The 20 year loan is on Government Plan, with new full pcymeui plan that is advantageous to borrower. We specialize in all kinds of INSURANCE, rere.enting 14 Old Line Companies. We will sign your bond. THE SUTTLES EDWARDS COMPANY Corner 2nd & Monroe Sts. Niblick Block Decatur, Ind. o 0 S. E. BLACK FUNERAL DIRECTOR New Location, 206 S. 2nd St. Mrs. Black, Lady Attendant Calls answered promptly day or niß ht Office ph me 500 Home phone 727 Ambulance Service o D. F. TEEPLE State Licensed Truck Line Daily truck service between Decatur and Fl. Wayne I Decatur Phone 254 Fort Wayne Phone A8405 I O -0 I) --0 Roofing—Spouting—Tin Work HOLLAND FURNACES Auto Radiators Repaired. Torch work. Will appreciate an opportunity to serve you. I Teeatur Sheet Metal Works t E. A. GIROD 220 North Eighth St. Phone 331 Res. 1224 () Q o — ~ =6 LOBENSTEIN & HOWER FUNERAL DIRECTORS Calls answered promptly day or night. Ambulance service. Office Phone 90. Residence Phone, Decatur 346 Residence Phone, Monroe, 81 i LADY ATTENDANT O - -0 H. FROHNAPFEL, D. C. DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC A HEALTH SERVICE The Neurocalometer Service Will Convince You at 104 S. Third Street Office ana Residence Phone 314 Office Hours: 10-12 a.m. 1-5 6-8 p.m.

N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST ( Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8 to 11:30—12:30 to 5:00 Saturday 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135. 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 133 S 2nd St Million Baby Salmon Trout Planted In Lake Michigan Near Chicago Chicago May 8 — (INS) —There are cue million (count 'em) more fish in Lake Michigan today than there were yesterday. The sudden increase in population resulted when Lincoln Park ccmmissioneta took 1,000,000 baby Salmon trout from the pick hatcheries | rowed 15 miles out and gently dumped them overboard, No. children, the iitie fishes wan't drown. ■lll—rt If ■I—CTWMM6 Do You Want To BUY, SELL, or TRADE REAL ESTATE See H. S. MICHAUD 133 S. 2nd St. Phone 104 1 --e-r>-zz=_- —- DR. C. V. CONNELL j i VEI ERIN ARIAN Office 120 No. First Street Phone. Office 143—Residence 102 | Special Attention given to cattle and poultry practice n —n

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1928.

MARKET REPORTS! DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne. Ind., May 8. — (INS) — Livestock: Receipts—Cattle, 150; calves, 100; hogs. 500; sheep. 50; market steady to 20c higher; 100 lbs., down. 37.00; 1100-110 lbs.. $7.75; 110-130 lbs., $8.50; 130-140 lbs., $9.16; 140-150 lbs.. $9.40; 150-160 lbs., $9.65; 160-170 lbs.. $9.90; 170-200 lbs. $10.10; 200-225 lbs. $10.35; 225-275 lbs.. $10.20; 275-350 lire.. $9.85; roughs, $7.00-$8.0o; stags, $5.00-$6.00; calves, $14.00 down; wool lambs. $14.; calves, $14.00 down; wool lambs, sl4. down. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK Hogs, receipts. 400; holdovers, 1,205; market, 15-25 c up: 250-350 lbs.. 310.15-110.85; 200-250 lbs., $10,65-SU.; 160-200 lbs.. $10.60-$11.00; 130-160 lbs., $9.50-$10.50; 90-130 lbs.. $8.75-$9.50; packing sows. J 5.25-35.75. Cattle receipts, 50; calves receipts, 50; market steady, calves steady; beef steers, $11.50-313.75; beef cows, $7.50-39.50; low cutter and cutter cows, $5.00-39.00; vealers, $14.50-315. Sheep receipts, 500; market steady: bulk fat lambs, $16.00; bulk cull lambs. $ll.OO-$13.00; bulk fat ewes, SB.OO-$9.50. PITTSBURGH LIVESTOCK Hogs, receipts, 500; market mostly steady to 5c up; 250-350 lbs.. $10.25$10.65; 200-250 lbs.. $10.65 $10.80; 160200 lbs.. $10.55-$10.80; 130-160 lbs., $9.50-310.65; 90-130 lbs., SB.OO-39.50; packing sows. $7.75-38.50. Cattle receipts, 10; calves, receipts , 200; market steady, calves steady; beef steers, $12.00-314.00; light yearl- ■ ing steers and heifers, $10.50-313.25, beef cows, SB.OO-310.50; low cutter aud cutter cows, $6.00-37.50; vealers, $13.50-315.00; heavy calves. $9.00-sl3. ' Sheep receipts, 800; market steady; top fat lambs, $16.25; bulk fat lambs. $12.75-316.00; bulk cull lambs, $9.00$12.50; bulk fat ewes, $6.50-$9.00; bulk spring lambs, SIB.OO-320.00.

CLEVELAND PRODUCE Cleveland, May S.-(U.R)—Butter, extra in tub lots, 46%-48%c; extra firsts, 43%-45%c; seconds, 39%-41%c. Eggs, extras, 33-33%c; extra firsts, 32c; firsts, 29%-80c; ordinary, 28c. Poultry, heavy broilers, 45-48 c; Leghorns, 37-40 c; heavy fowls, 27-28 c; medium stock, 27-29 c; Leghorns, 2324c; old roosters. 16-17 c; ducks, 2528c. Potatoes, 150-lb. sacks, round white, Ohio, Wisconsin, Michigan. $3.15$3.25; Minnesota, $3.00; 110-lb. sacks, Idaho Russet Burbanks, 12.35-82.50; Florida, Hastings, $6.00-$6.25; Texas. 100 Mb. sacks. Red, 83.75-84-00. 14,000 Chicks Burn Darlington, Ind., May 8. (U.R) — Fourteen thousand baby chicks perished when lire destroyed the Wilbur Wheeler hatchery three miles south of here. Chicago Grain Close Speculative grain close: Wheat: May $1.60%-%, July $1.60% 1.61, Sept. $1.59%-%. Oom: May $1.08%, July $1.11%-%, Sept. 81.11%- %. Oats: May 64%, July (old) 57%. (new) 58%, Sept. 48%-% LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected May 5) Fowls —2O c Leghorn Fowls 11c Chickens 20c Leghorn Chickens 13c Old Roosters 9c I White Ducks 15c j Geese 14c Eggs, dozen ......... 22c

LOCAL GRAIN MARKET (Corrected May 5) No. 2 Wheat ... $1.86 Old Yellow Corn per 100 sl.(>o New Yellow Corn per 100 $1 to $1.35 Mixed Corn 5c less Oats 60c Barley 85e Rye 9« LOCAL GROCERS EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen 21c I BUTTERFAT AT STATIONS ' Butterfat 42c o BIRTH I Mr. and Mrs. Tom Fisher have reI gened a message announcing the birth I pf a girl' baby, to their son and datsglti jer-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fisher, j If Rock .Springs Wyoming. The. little piles has been named Marilyua May. Harry Fisher is a school teacher in ) the Wyoming town.

I GENEVA NEWS Mr. ami Mrs. Olen Coolmaq aud daughter of Portland, were Sunday visitors of John Shoemaker. Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Armentrout and family, of Portland, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jess Callihan. Mrs. H. A. Baird and mother Mrs. Watson, of Albany, spent Sunday with the* C. N. Brown family. Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Greene were at Portland Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Mac Whiiuiev of Decatur spent a few hours in Geneva Saturday evening. M.s. Esmond Houser and son of Gary, are visiting her parents Mr. aud Mre. C. N. Brown. Roy Butcher, of Fort Wayne spent the week-end with his family here. Mis. Frank Haughton was brought home from tiic hospital Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Miller and daughters Iva and Mary, of Macklin were Sunday callers in Geneva. Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Smith of Berne, spent a short time in Geneva Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Reasoner were in Fort Wayne Sunday. Mrs. L. L. Mason has returned to her home in Fort Wayne T. E. Kraner, of Sistersville, west Va., spent the week-end with his family here. Mrs. Addie Hoskinson and Miss Johnson, of Richmond, spent Saturday and Sunday with the Hoskinson family. Mrs. Ida Linton and daughters have moved from Portland into Mrs. Shoemakers house on Shackley street. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Pontius were in Decatur Saturday. o ¥*¥¥¥¥ ¥¥ ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ * THE * * CAMP A1 G N * * LOG * ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ —(U.R>—

Herbert Hoover conferred with his New York managers on plans for the general election campaign in ease he wins the Republican nomination. It was said plans for extensive use of radio and moving pictures have been approved. J. Bruce Kremer, Democratic national committeeman from Montana, said Montana would give its eight votes to Governor Smith at the Houston convention, under the unit rule, and he predicted the nomination of Smith on the first ballot. Slight interest was demonstrated in the Maryland primaries Monday. Tar name of Herbert Hoover was the only one placed on the presidential ballots?

Hartford City High School Coach Resigns Hartford City May B—(U.R) Don V. llolwerda, athletic coach and physical training director in Hie Hartford City high school for the last yea-, has resigned his position, effective at the close of the present schol year, and will become connected with the Equitable Insurance company, of lowa. Mr. llolwerda will reside in this city during the summer. Providing he does not accept a position in another school, he will remain here next year, also. Mr. Holweida is a former basketball star at Purdue University. He came here last fall to fill the vacancy caused by the lesignation of Blair Gullion. another former Purdue and all conference star, who is now basketball coach at Earlham College. o NOTICE OF SALE OF SCHOOL vimi'EH rv . Notice Is hereby given that tin- undersigned. Orlen S. Kortnev, Trustee of St. Mary s Township of Adams •own-, tv, Indiana, and of St. Mary’s School Township of Adams County, Indiana, will at the location of the school lot in district No. 2 in said township 'known also as the. Helm School) and on the real estate hereinafter described offer at public sal<- on Saturday. May 19th 1928, a* one o’clock P. M. on said day the following described real estate, town: Commencing at the southeast corner ’ of the northeast quarter ('i » of section , six HD, twonslilp twenty-seven (21) north, range fifteen (15) east, thence north along the east line of said section sixteen (161 rods, thence west ten (101 rods, parallel with the south line of said section, thence south parallel with the east line of said section six - | . teentltii rods, theme east to the place, of beginning. containin one (1) acre, in I Adams County. Indiana. Said real estate and school building i thereon will be offered separately and j as a whole and sold to the highest ; bidder at not less than two thirds of Hi" appraised value thereof and for cash ORLEN S. FO’tTNEY . Trustee of St. Mary’s Township of , Adams County. Indiana ant ot Si. ' Mary's School Township of Adams . County, Indiana. April 24 Ml-S i ■ o—~ — i Get the Habit—Trade at Heme, It Pays

TO STAGE GREEK PLAY AT WESTERN The Senior class of Western College will present the "Antigone” of Sophocles, on Tree Day, May 15. An unusual privilege is offered the community in the opportunity to hear this play. Productions of Greek dramas have not beeu numerous in this country, especially in the Middle West. Though these plays of a bygone era may seem to many remote from our life and times, yet so universal is the appeal of the Greek drama that wherever such a play has been presented the audience has been carried away from America of the twentieth century and transported back to Athens on the fifth century before Christ. Tlie play is particularly appropriate to present at a woman's college for all the action centers round the noble girl, depicted with such understanding and sympathy that as Richard Jebb, the great English -scholar has said: "Nowhere else has the poetry Os the ancient world embodied so lofty or so beautiful an ideal of women's love and devotion." The Ernst Nature Theater, with its suggestions of the theaters of the Greeks, will make a wonderfully beautiful and appropriate setting for the play. The whole college is cooperating in the production. The beautiful music of Mendelssohn is being used for the choral songs. These are to be sung by a double chorus that is being trained by Miss Elizabeth Driver of the Department of Vocal Music. .Miss Grace B. Daviess of the Department of Physicial Education is in charge of the dancing. The whole play is under the direction of Miss Gertrude Leonard, Professor of Spoken English. THE BIG FIVE

Flayers G AB R II HR Pct. Ruth .19 65 23 23 6 .354 Gehrig . 19 69 17 23 3 333 Cobb ... 15 67 9 22 () .328 Hornsby . 17 64 14 21 1 .328 Speaker 15 64 10 16 1 .250 Q COLLEGE BASEBALL RESULTS —(U.R)At Ann Arbor— Michigan, 9; Wisconsin, 1. At Minneapolis — lowa, 2; Minnesota, 1. At Evanston — Indiana, 5; Northwestern, 4.

z/v New York Giy Convenient to Everything You'll Find THE HOTEL BRISTOL 129 WEST 48-ST. Comfort, Cleanlineti Convenience Food of Excellence RATES *3 per day for One; ? 5 for Two (with bath) Otrnprihip * Mnnnprnienl T. ELLIOTTTOLSON

Waterloo — (U.R) — Thirty head of Hereford cattle fiom one of the best het ds of the breed in the country have been donated to the Purdue University school of agriculture by Hemy W. Maishall, of Lafayette, for-

PUBLIC SALE I will sell at public sale at the Wm. House farm unZhZir mile south of Bryant, on State Road 27, on THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1928 beginning al one o’clock, the following property: Horses and Mules. Cattle—3s head—Fresh springer cows, stockers and fat cattle. Hogs—Bs head—Sows, pigs, feeding shoats. Sheep. Soy beans, potatoes, and other articles. GOMER HOUSER

MORE and better wik BREAD .fig Y —FOR SALE BY4 1 I / Fisher & Harris, Decatur Miller & Deitsch, Decatur Hower Bros., Decatur ffi-.-i' Taber Grocer}’, Monroe Bower Grocery, Magley Fol Williams Equitv Elevator Co, Hv Williams. Ind. FLDLiR Spitler & Son, Willshire. Ohio I Everett Grocery. Pleasant Mills i f ; Berne Milling Co., Berne a Homer Crum Groc.. Honduras e » Lenhart Grocery, Wren, Ohio BX Preble Equity Co., Preble, Ind. i— Geneva Milling Co., Geneva, ind

mi i All Well - and good to “day dream” abo u I tl«<* li oin c you’d like to build. BUT-dreains d on’t get you anywhere. Your equity in your lulu r e home is the MONEY you must first set aside before you can buy the land and build Hie house. SAVE TO BUILD. Start now with a 4% Interest - Earning Savings Account in the Old Adams County Bant “We Pay You To Save.” —■ ’I, Hl., ..I ■ . —•'

mer acting president aud d la | r]| , a 'hub ard of trustees at the U illVm ? it was amioneed receatly Get the Habit-Tr.de at Home/