Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 74, Decatur, Adams County, 27 March 1930 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

I CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, | BUSINESS CARDS, * AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE — Feeding tankage- at , the Decatur Rendering Plant, ' ton lotk or more delivered free of charge. Phone 870-T or 513. 2011 FOR SAI.E— 1 full"blooded"Hob stein cow, eligible to be register-' ed. Will be fresh Mar. 27. A good one. Jesse A. Ray, 110116 south, 4 miles east Monroe. 71t6x FOR SALS—White rock eggs for hatching. Also gooseberry and rhubarb plants. Phone 8474. Mrs. Ed Beery. 72-31 X FOr’SaLL’' Modern' 7 room House. Hot water heating plant large basement full lot, garage. Priced for quick sale. Address Box L. % Democrat. 72-3’ OR SALE —Good 7 year old horse sound weighs 1700 pounds. Fred StasKes, 3% miles south of Decatur. 72-3tx FOR SALE —Lulless oats recleaned. Hartman and Dodderer, Bluffton Ind. 73-3tx FOR SALE —Sound mare, 11 years old. 1 mile east of Decatur, on Piqua road. Peter L. Miller. 73t3x FOR SAtli—9o-<iay seed corn. $3 per bushel. William Miller, route 8, Decatur. 70-6tx-eod FOft SALE- t freslt young cows. Inquire at farm first cross-roads south of County Farm. 74-3 t FOR SALE—Guernsey heifer Calf. 5 months old Chas. Lonkenberger It. 7. 74-3tx WANTED WANTED—Farms and city properties to sell. For quick, satisfactory results, call 265, the JohnsonBartlett Auction Co. 72t3 VIALE HELP WANTED — Respon sible man wanted for Decatur sore. $50.00 per week to start and substantial profits. $850.00 cash deposit requires on goods. District Manager of stores. 118 No. May Street. Chicago. Mar 26-27-28 1 HELI* WANTED-Exeprienc-ed girl wanted for housework in Decatur home. Three in family. Must be experienced. Telephone 532 at once. 73-2UI WE WANT | Rags. Auto Tires, Inner Tubes. Newspapers, Magazines, Mixed Papers, Scrap Iron, Scrap Metals, such as Brass. Copper, Lead, Zinc. Auto Radiators, Batteries, etc. Also in the market for Beef Hides, Calfskins, Horse Hides, Greece, Tallow and Wool. We will cal! with our truck withri a radius of 10 miles, if you have a load. Phone 442 MAIER HIDE & FUR .CO. 710 W. Monroe St. Near G. R. & I. Crossing FOR RENT FOR RENT—-5-room house, semimodern. Barn suitable for gar-| age. Phone 799. 72-3tx ; FOR RENT —Furni.-hetl apartment for light housekeeping. 703 North 1 Second street, phone 1071. 72-3: ! FO klS>PT—Six room flat above ' F. and M. Pharmacy Phone 162. FOIURENT— Light house keeping rooms. Modern 2 rooms on the I ground floor, private entrance. 310 ; N. 3rd St. Phone 511 72-ts ; FOR fIENT —5 room house, mod- I ern exz-ept furnace. Inquire at 604 N. -Third st. 73t3x LOST AND FOUND FOUND—Ger,man police dog with license number. Owner may ha.e same by’calling at this office and paying Mr ’his ad. 1 - _ —i* <» \ ntent of Uhiiinist rahir No. 27 Notice, i« hereby tfiven. That the limit ryi4nv<l has be n appointed A i-i itiinlslr;i£or ot the estate of Mar-] , Kartet' 8. J’urhs late of Ailainn County. <!ei;e«uivd. The estate is probablj i solvent, . Milo Fuchs, Administrator March 19, l!»30. 1 Lenhart, I Idler and Sehurgcr Attvs March 20-27 A-3 : COURT HOUSE I I Real Estate Transfers Isaac Lehman et ux. in lot 686. i Berne. Io David D. Lehman for $350. | 0 | “CONGRESS TODAY * S. <u.R> ♦ House Debates District of Columbia ap- ! propriafion bill. Judiciary eommfitee considers ad t ministra’ion prohibition enforce t tur'nt bills. Senate R-etes-ed until F.;hlny'. i ' — . —o — I Card of Thanks . We wish in thia manjinr Io ex press rut appreciatkrti to lhe neigb hors and Iriends, the minister, and i singers for their kindness shown I us ami lor all the floial offering-, given during the recent Illness am! death of our 'mother. Mrs. Jenni Brown. The Children.

Faultless No-belt Shorts and Pajamas are what every man has been looking for— for comfort. flyrixxJsiEwl XCHUITeSTjO. W DvcAtur, Ind. S.E. Black FUNERAL DIRECTOR x Mrs. Black, Lady Attendant Calls auwend promptly day or night. Office phone 500 Home phone 727 Ambulance Service For BETTER HEALTH SEE DR. 11. FROHNAPFEL Licensed Chiropractor and Nutuni-piilli Phone 314 104 So. 3rd St. Office Hours: 10-12, 1-5, 6-8 N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30—12:30 to 5:00 I Saturdays, 8:00 p. ni. | Telephone 135 ' MONEY TO LOAN Au unlimited amount of 5 PER CENT money on improved real estate. FEDERAL FARM LOANS ; Abstracts of title to real estate. |: SCHURGER ABSTRACT OFFICE 133 S. 2nd St. i Lobenstein & Maynard FUNERAL DIRECTORS Calls answered promptly day or ( ujght. Ambulance Serv.ce. Office Phone 90. I Residence Phone, Decatur 346 or I 844. Residence Phone, Monroe, 81 LADY ATTENDANT • 1 —t? !() Q| I R I G I I) A I R E Sales and Service Household and Commercial AUGUST WALTER Distributor Phone 207 N. 2nd St. I • H O —t) LOA N S no livestock, implement., furniture, autos, etc. 20 .Monthly Payments. Special Straight Time Loan for Farmers. Call, write, phone. Franklin Security Co. Schafer Bldg. Decatur, Ind. Phone 237 Miirnj KOO-J 3 Superstitious sam says 1930 adds up 13 ! (One plus nine plus three!) Who cares? ’Specially if they’ve insured their luck with one of our Accident Policies! Away with superstitions! /ii T N A • I Z E The Suttles-Edwards Co., Inc. Over Niblick’s Store Photic No. 358 I Decatur. Ind. lihiHimiill

■IllJIttU. CHEATER NOW SHOWING "A FI.V-WEIGIIT CHAMPION" f— — - —' -~r' " F vOO HOO ! ) n* IM GOING Toy 00,CASTOR / ANO NOW -rni tap FOLKS \ ’(jO. FAMHV / , , <* * F ‘ A ’F UU ' —»< v IO xX \ Mtk OH / , FOR DINNER X/ <- >l' • ' z —r x\YOUR HW> ' </ 'WI/ ' \ ~~~ 1 I E 4/ \ \ ( WELL \ ' s f ~ -J 1&T 1 1" MR. BROAD OF WALL STREET By Charles McMaJ (" VJELL IVE LEARNED THEV/ORDS3 ii Mie ,„ T gueunir RREEIE I TTI |C SOMEONE LIKES MV "i I CUT OUTTHENoiSt ; ’ BY HEART - Mow FOR THE Jz» U . plF 1 iX- \ __ Izz BROW v r=~j 1 * 'ft* ® X'B i r~ ' === il ’s* ZjT - v-- -> 'r'‘' jk | i V 7 iWI 7;: — —UHz • 1 \x / _ | «'««««H<4«». ] I c.M‘i«i H

MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS Corrected March 27 90-120 pounds . $8.85 ; 120-140 pounds $9.25 140-160 pounds ... $9.90 160-200 pounds ... $10.50 200-230 pounds $10.35 230-260 pounds $9.90 260-300 pounds $9.60 1300-350 pounds $9.35 Roughs ... s7.oo<sS.Oo , Stags $5.00-$6.00 I Calves $13.00-13.50 [Lambs $9.00 Cattle: fanners s3.ot)-$4.0U J I Cutfcn s. . . . $4-00-si.so Medium Cows $5.50-$6.00 Goods Cows $6.00-$7.50 Steers $7.00-11.00 Heifers $3.00-11.00 Butcher Heifers $7.00-39.00 , Bulls . $6.00-SB.OO I CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE — - I March May July Sept. Wheat $1.05% 1.n6% 1.05% 1.07% Coin .83’4 -Ws .85% Oats .42% .43% .43% .42% < East Buffalo Livestock Hogs: Receipts 1,000; holdoverj jail, Unevenly 15 to 40 cents higher.; i mostly 25-35 cents over Wedues day's average weights above 220 lbs : n-p mostly; balk 130-210 lbs $11.50, 220-250 lbs $10.85-311 40; 260-325 lbs. .10.00 $10.60; packing sows $8.90. Cattle: Receipts 200; steady, medium steers $10.75 $11.50: all cutter 'cows $3.75-$6 25. Calves: receipts 50; vealers fully s e idy. $15.00 down. Sheep, receipts 400; part of run arriving late; steady; good to i choice Woolskins $10.25; medium i and good short lambs $9.00-$9.25. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected March 27 No. 2 Soft Winter Wheat 95c No. 2 Hard Wheat 92c No. 2 White Oats 38c Barley .......... 50c , Bve 80c ! Corn 85c LOCAL GROCERS EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen 23c BUTTERFAT AT STATION Butterfat . 35c — ■ <> Holiness Campes Society Columbus, Ohio, —(UP) —A new ; organization has appeared at Ohio I State University here which frowns ; upon caching of evolution, dancing and the use of tobacco. It is the Holiness League. Although the league is especially opposed to co-ed I using tobacco, it will attempt to persuade all students to forswear its use, league officers said. The organization does not condemn solo dancing. but it heartily disapproves of that form of the dance which requires the male students to be close to he co-eds. ■ o — Says Dog Is Suicide New Richmond. Ind., March 27 (U.R) Mrs. Rose L. Work returned to New Richmond to bttry beside her husband's grave a pet bulldog, which she claimed committed suicide. The dog had been the companion u»f Work for ten years, and after his master's death two moiths ago, the pet was listless, ret’, sed to eat, ami would not live in the house his master had occupied. Mrs Work -aid she believed the dog deliberately ran in front of thy auto which killed it.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THCRSDAY, MARCH 27, 1930.

“LOST WORLD" 1 HUNT LEADS TO PIT IN FLORIDA Dr. S. H. Williams Again Goes In Quest of Early Animal Life New York. March — (UP) Dr. S. H. Williams, the scientist who probably journeyed farther toward the Lost World than any other white man. Is again on the trail of ■ to sons and animals who lived so [ MMg agwAat their hones are worth fortunes. Florida is the scene of his latest I adventure, and already he has found ; a tooth of a prehistoric horse that appareii ly was twice the size of the ; I present-day animals. The pit in Flo-i i ida is believed to hold many more Lady, 70, Freed Os All Ills By New Konjola Suffered Two Years Then Found New Medicine and Quickly Regained Health r/*’ g 1 ' * . SSJS JO MRS. MARGARE f WITTENDORFER "For more than two years I suf [ sered from a severe case of stomI ach trouble,” said Mrs. Margaret Wittendorfcr," 1731 North Capitol J avenue, Indianapolis. "No medi- ’ cine I tried helped me. 1 bloated j terribly after meals and the pres-, ‘.sure against my hea.it made me | short of breath and often dizzy and i ‘ nauseated. My sleep was fitful be-; : cause of the accumulated mucous • from a bad case of catarrh. 1 was [ i losing weight and strength. "The first bottle of Konjola in- 1 . dicatod what this great medicine I f could do for me, ami as I- continued , the treatment all my ills vanished. | J Today I eat what I wish and suffer no subsequent distress. lam gain- | ing in weight and energy and my i system Ims so ImprovM* that my [ [catarrh has practically vanished-1 In fact my genera! health has not! • | been so good in years as it is to-; . day.” Konjnlu is -old ill Decatur at the ’ Bi J. Smith dry store, arid by all | • the best drugg sts in all towns' ' throughout this entire section. i Colds arc serious. Eveu mild . eases are dangerous. Remcnniei I I . KONJUULA COLD COMPOUND (tablets) is giving amazing re lief Io thousands of cold sutler err every year. These table are ' of the same high quality a C I Koujola. A J|

secrets that may change scientists' conception of prehistoric times or. the North American continent. Williams' work on the Lost World plateau of British Guiana already has established him as one of the nation's leading research experts. He penetrated that wilderness to a point where he ran against a clif: , 1 8,000 feet high. Before he could scale that obstacle, he contracted I fever and was forced to return to j civilization. Before he did that, however, he ; exchanged trinkets wi h yellow Indians; saw a giant type armadillo and mice that resembled kangaroos reported water falls higher than Niagara; and sighted millions of ants that moved in regular formations. driving all animals life before them, and found also a lizard of great size which ran on its hind legs, almost ere?:. The lizard he

Community SALE Our next community sale w ill be held at Craigville Saturday, Mar. 29 beginning at 12 o'clock noon Horses I<> head Mate It am of brown mares, weight 3200 lbs, 5 and 6 years old. sound and good workers; Mate learn of bay marcs, weight 2900 lbs., 0 years ohK sound and good workers; Brown 5 year old horse, weight 1 100 IBs.; Bay mare, 5 years old. weight 1300 lbs.; Bay Gelding, weight 1200 pounds; Bay mare,' 11 years o’d. weight 11W) lb. Team of Bay mares. I and 5 years old, lull sisters, partly broke, sound, little thin and of the coach type. Cattle and Hogs OE ALL KINDS. Bro< <1 sows, pigs. We have a buyer ; for 1.000 head of shoals. Bring Ihem in. Implements 1 goo«l incubators; 2 good wheel harrows; spring tooth - harrow: 00 tooth spike harrow; RCA elcclric radio complete; Savage repeating rille; 2 row John Deere corn plows; 2 disc grain drills; doub'e disc; I’ord one-hall lon truck w ith I stock rack; set of harness; 2 dozen pullets, Bull’ Ix'ghorns, are laying now; 3 turkey hens, one J'om, good turkeys; 2 drv m ish poultry feeders; soy beans; I lid laundry stove; buzz saw with good ITame; platform scales; 25 bushels oats; 10 bushel rye, and numerous other articles. 11. 11. High, auctioneer. Gideon Gerber, e’erk.

thought might be a uesceiulant of| the dinosaur. . It was this plateau in British Gut ana that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle! had in mind when he wrote “The I.ost World." At that time readers believed the book to Ik* sheer ima j gination, but Williams has uncover-: ed data that leads scientists to sur j I mise that perhaps Sir Arthur s fie-' tion was nearer truth than anyone I suspected. _o Babe Born With Tooth Princeton. Ind.. Mar. 27.—U.R; — Seeing is believing, but the doctors of Princeon had to see the new daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Mounts, before they would belief' the report that the infant was 'born with a perfectly formed fror.t! upper tooth.

I Jeanette Rose, tiie subject of the i unusual development, ami ner I mother, were doing nicely. ■ - -— " "O — ——————— Making Drinking Pleasant Buffalo. N. V.—(UP)—No more! ' do Buffalo's drunks mind being ar-1 rested. For Police Commissioner

Public Sale 1 As I am leaving the farm 1 will sell at public auction at 1 mile south of Williams; 6 miles north of Decatur. on road, on FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1930 I at 10 o'clock a. m. B 3—HEAD OF HORSES AND MULES—3 One team mules, sound and excellent workers will weigh I pounds; Bay mare, general purpose. M B—HEAD OF CATTLE—B ■ Red cow. 5 years old, calf by side; Jersey cow 7 years side; Black cow, 7 years old. calf by aide; Jersey <■>>«. s years I fresh in January, giving good flow; Red cow, 5 years old. I Brindle cow. pasture bred; Jersey heifer, 18 months old. opes; ■ heifer, 2 years old. B ONE BROOD SOW. B POULTRY—SO White Leghorn Hens. B HAY AND GRAIN—2W bushels of Good Oats: I nos IMPLEMENTS AND TOOLS B FORDSON TRACTOR and 12 inch JOHN DEERE PLOWS: pion Grain binder; l»eering mower; Osborne mower; section spring tooth harrow; spike tooth hdrrow M H ormitk fertilizer grain drill bought new 1 year ago; disc and corn planter; Keystone gearless hay loader* John D ere side rake; hay tedder; International riding cultivator lohn breaking plow, a good one; Clipper walking breakii plow; tweJH Turnbull wagons; two hay racks; double wagon box. manure SM in good condition; corn shelter; gas engine 2% h.p.: pump jack;! bed; Storm King buggy; two sets ot work harness i rods Ml woven wire fence, 2 rolls barb wire; 2 dozen steel posts; F single shovel plow; double shovel plow; many art ■ s too uu«< to mention. TERMS—AII sums of $lO a;id under, cash: abov $1" 1355 time, purchaser to give a bankable note without interest if paid « due. if not paid when due 8% from date of sale. 4 discount ford on bills amounting to more than SIO.OO. OSCAR BULTEMEIER, Owner Roy Johnson and Irwin Doehrman, aucts. Dutch Ehinger, clerk. Lum h will be MR ______________ r~l

Planned Finances * Just as the successful farmer plans his ahead, so should every man plan his finances lor future. A good system of crop rotation that is folio'' ed through is bound to win out in the long run. Your business afiabs can be planned ahead. 1 00, \\ hy not come in and talk with one of our oluie 1 hey have helped others with financial plans and may be able to he'p vou. It doesn't cost anything a confidential chat. The Peoples Loan & Trust Company BANK OF SERVICE.

Austin .1 he Buffalo ' i<di<-e and iligb -sjts, 'them leei'ot'- into