Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 236, Decatur, Adams County, 6 October 1930 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
DECATUR sJAILY DEMOCRAT - published Every Kvenlug Except Sunday by THI DECATUR UEMOCKA' r C‘». | I H. Heller Pres. and Gen. Mgr A. K Moll house.. Sec'y A Hus Mgr Dick L). Heller Vice-President YJutered at tne Poet office at Deca-! .nr. Indiana, as second class matter: — Subscription Kntes Single" copies . I .02 One week, by carrier...™- 10 One year, by carrier 6.00 Oue month, by mail .36! Three months, by mall 1.00 . Six months, by mall 1.76 Oue year, by mail 3.00 One year, at office 3.00 Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Elsewhere $3.60 ones year. Advertising Kates made Known on Application. Nattenal Advertising Representatives SCHEERRE, INC. 36 East Wackei Drive, Chicago <l6 Lexington Avenue, New York Charter Member The Indiana League of Home Dallies Call at democratic headquarters and extend an offer to aid Chairman Ed Bosse in his campaign this i year. It takes the cooperation of I every one interested to roll up a ' jnajority and win an election. The Cards won both Saturday | and Sunday, making the rac:> for | the tffirld baseball championship an » even affair again. Th y played to-, , day again in St. Louis and tomor- J m row will return to Philadelphia to “ finish the contest. Z Its time to steam up on the camI -- yaign boys. Get busy and stay , Z that way until the night of Novem-1 .. her -Ith. Get the vote out should !“ be the goal and if that happens in ~ this county most any one can guess ~ the results. * . __ The big mill owned by the Hoim land-St. Louis Sugar Company will * open here tomorrow and for the !.] next several months will operate I continually. That means employ“tffent for a lot of men and will help in numerous ways. We are fortunate indeed to have this plant. Get ready to join the Hallowe'en crowd in Decatur. Its going to be a real party put on by the General Electric band with the cooperation of the business men of the city. 1 There will be music and fun and witches and funny masquerade costumes and a happy time. Eire prevention week. Observe it not only by seeing that every j precaution is laktn to prevent fire losses but by going over your insurance policies to ascertain whether you are sufficiently covered to \ make yourself safe if such a disuse r as a conflagration should l | happen. Amos Woodcock, Rational prohibition director, says we are only drinking an average of seven gallon!}., per p rson of Intoxicating iiqmfff in this country, which is less than we used befor- the prohibition laws went into effect by half. Now | the question becomes, is it better i
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T 5 T I TODAY’S CHUCKLE ♦ (U.fi) ♦ London—The King anil Queen | sent congratulations to Char- | | leu Wells and wife on the 66th anniversary of their wedding, j ♦ — ■ ♦ to drink more legally or less illeg- ! -xiir? Receipts at the Unlt?*l States i llteasury during the first three mithths of tills year were $869,000.- 1 lotto. Multiply that by four and you! j will surely admit it a neat sum, 1 about three bHlion dollars. We] I ought to relieve a lot of things! j with that bat perhaps the trouble j is that tile expenditures drop into j too few pockets. One farmer tells us that he has j six acres of beets which will average slxte; n tons to the acre and for which he will receive $8.25 per ton. With all expenses out he figures a net return of ninety-three ’dollars per acre, which is as much as some good land can be bought ! for. Certainly that makes a profi- j table return. | Pointing out that the employment situation in oth r countries j I is as -bad or worse than here cer- j jtainly doesn’t help the American, i laboring man any. Conditions have j lof course always been better than in the European countries and ought to be with our vast resources. Some one has muffed the j ball some where down the line or | we would not be limping around on | a two or three-day schedule. The president says he is shun- ; ning politics in his swing around I a circle of considerable size during | which he will make a number of speeches but we notice he manages to get in a sly r mark or two which ! | leaves'the feeling that he is still] a high tariff convert. His iieuten- 1 ants are having a tough time Ini defending the record of the administration to date and it isn't going over worth a lead nickel. i Looking for a real investment? Buy an Adams county farm or a piece of town property. Don't sell tills community short or you will tegret it. We are coming back already and many fanners have made] j a larger profit this year than in a j long time. Farms are now changing hands and you can own one if you wish. You can still buy them j right and easily finance the proposi-1 j Hon but we don't know how long it will last. Get in now while the | setting is good. According to the polittoal writers in the Sunday papers the pr-:s-,>mt campaign is about the slowest [evefr known in old Indiana, notj withstanding that it is a very important election which approaches. 1 !We will vote on the question of I whether or not we will spend a I million dollars or more far a con-1 stitutlonal convention and only j thos o organizations which favor it; ! are making any effort. The com-1 j ins legislature will be a mighty tm- j nortant one otherwise, one of the! matte:j coming up being the re-1 districting of ttm state for cofigressmen. The people ought to j awaken to the fact that a campaign s on and that some issues of imItortance are involved. o • « big features 1 OF RADIO ! » * Monday’s 5 Cost Radio Features Copyright 1930 by CP. WABC fOBS network) 6 45 p.m. | CST —Sinclair Program. WEAF> tNBC network) 7:30 p.m ! CST.— A. A- P. Qypsies. YV'.iZ (NBC network) 7:30 p. m CST—ingrain Shavers. WABC (Cl I network) *8 p. m. ( ST.—Symphony Hour. W'ET'F (NBc network! 8:30 pm C3T.—Gcn'ral Motors FamTy. D\ end Mrs. J. R. Pets son and •liiidrcn of Terra Haul- visited here over the week-end. BA! C, UN'S: — Bargain,. In Living R.-om. Dining Room suits, matand rug*. Stucko7 and Co, Monroe Our phone number is 4i i '7681*
if TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY | | From the Dally Democrat File | ♦ ♦ October 6, 1910 Meyer and Scherer are gtvlng a manufacturer's; Coit sale of furniture. Miss Faye Smith gives reading "Kenilworth” at high school. Cong, essmsn Adair is recovering front a serious attack of typhoid i :over. President TAft signs order ntsk-! i g assistant postmaster's Jobs pet-! manent. , Missionary convention opens at] ! Methodist church. Jam s Klee goes to LaGrange to act as judge at horse show. Many from here attend the Shrin!eis’ Madris Gras at For? Wayne. O. R. Smith and R. S. Peterson apj iMiinted election commissioners. 0. —*! Modern Etiquette I * By ROBERTA LEE I • (UJB • Q When making a formal Introduction, which word is preferable "present" or "Introduce"? A. Present” is preferable, as “Mr", j Brown, may I present Mrs. Jones?" I Q. At a dinner, after rising from the table, should one push back his j ( hair into plae.-? A. No. Q. Should a young man ever stoo la gi.l of his acquaintance on the street and talk with her? A. No: if he wishes to talk with , er. he should walk along at her i side. - * « i 1 Household Scrapbook | jl B y ' ROBERTA LEE A Handy Towel While working in the ki’ch.n, fasten a loop at one corner of the hand towel, to slip over the apron string, or pin the corner of the towel to the l»elt. Each time the hands must be wiped, several steps will be saved. Kid Gloves Kid gloves can be made to look, like- new, after cleaning them, if 1 they a;e rubbed with the while of an egg. Onion Odor If onions are kept immersed in cold water while ’hey abe being pur-! (I. they will leave practically no ! odor on the fingers or hands. —L. . ()•■ ; ». ♦ Lessons In English I ♦ ♦ Words often misused: Do not say, ’I shall go providing it doesn't rain Say "provided it doesn't rain.” Often misprounounced; Nuptial. Prononnce ntip-shal. n as in "up" a unstressed, but not nup-' hal. .Often, mispronounced: Nuptial, ion o: "ever") ere (sooner than), err ito go astray.) Synonyms: Ossiduous. attentive.] [devoted, diligent, presistent, sedu-1 lions, indefatigable. 1 Word Study: “Use a word three j j times and it is yours." Let us in-' c. :ase our vocabulary bv master- j | ing one word each day. Today s' I word: Enigma, anything inexpiic- 1 able; puzzle. "He lives alone and is! | an enigma to his neighbors. SEVEN SURVIVE AIRSHIP CRASH; PROBES BEGIN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | oil the trans-Atlantic flight. The bodies of the victims were] burned beyond recognition. Work j of Identification was postponed j pending the arrival of relatives. Meanwhile the remains were put into bare wooden coffins and ! placed in tl>° tiny school rqom of Allonpe. Each bote the scribbled i word, "unrecognizable.” French peasants brought white' ] curtains to be hung on the school, I loom walls and picked wild floW- ! ers to be placed on the rough I caskets. All available coffins in i the village were requisitioned and | even one child’s casket was oft'er- ! ed to authorities. I I she positions in which some of the charred bodies were found, 1 with fists clenched, testified to the fearful struggle against death that the victims made. It appear- i ed many of them were awakened by the lurching of the ship, and | fought desperately to escape the lames. * « ; A subscription was started , among the villagers of Allonne an<T ; Beauvais to ratee a memorial on j the spot where the ship crashed, j Upon it were to be inscribed the ' Words of the French air minister ! Aarent Eynac ; "To the heroism of i the men who risked their lives for! I the grandeur of their country.” British and French flags were at j Nearly Killed by Gas —Druggist Saves Her "Gar on my stomach was so bad , it nearly killed tne. My druggist ! •old me about Adlerlka. The gas is gone now and I feel fine.”—Mrs. A A dam ok. S'mple glycerin, buckthorn, saline, etc., as mixed in Adlerika, ! helps GAS on stomach in 10 mln"toe! Most remedies act on lower BOTH Upper and lower bowel, rej bowel only, but Adlerika acts on moving poisonous waste you never , krr w was there. Re'iffvei constli; rou. R J. Smith Drug Co. • pation in 2 hours. It will surprise
UECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, OCTOBER fl, W3O.
half must on tho town hall today. A drizzling rain foil over the vilInge. The same furious winds which battered llte great ship to earth whistled through the twist!ed and charred framework. The I ruins of the once majestic craft : were outlined against a dull, drlp- ' ping sky. Os the survivors, Engineers Arthur V. Bell and Harry J. I-each ! were able to eat hearty breakfasts j and take short walks. A few sorrowful, and sometime'* hysterical, wires and relatives be- ! gan to nrrive today. It was believed that the bodies would be returned to England en masse on a battleship for a national funeral, to be given a common burial. It was understood that no offlchil statement as to the cause of the accident would be made until after the official public hearing in I England, to which French wltI nesses would be called. The inquiry of the British air ! ministry, which started today in an effort to fix responsibility for the disaster, was considered likely to examine the following possibilities: First, faulty instruments, par- \ tictilarly the airship's altimeter. Second, structural or mechanical failure, such as covering torn front a fin or a blocked rudder controlling parallel flight. Third, faulty navigation. Fourth, faulty construction, such as straiu on other parts of the ship caused by the recent operations which added 35 feet to her length. Fifth, atmospheric conditions. | A study of the wreckage allowed I that the ship's structure was ae--1 broken at the top. amidj ships, hut it could not l>e determini ed whether the break occurred in mid-air, which would have sent the ship's nose down, or whether it was the result of violent contact with the ground, which would cause buckling. Pitching, the resul’ of cross winds which were undoubtedly violent, might have caused the ship’s circular rib to snap, but this would be difficult to detect in the mass of half-melted metal. It was clearly noticeable from the wreckage that the ship's rudder fins governing altitude were pointed so as to drive her nose downward. French police, those of the British survivors who were able to work, and British officials who I arrived by airplane from London worked together in the mass of wreckage seeking some possible indication of what occurred aboard the airship before it plunged to destruction. It appeared plausible that the loss of the rudder fin, found in a field a mile away from the remains of the R-101, caused the ship to lose altitude and to drop from 1.000 feet to 200 feet before i the surprised crew could right it. j Flight Lieut. H. C. Irwin, in command, apparently did not have | time to send an SOS call, else he i had confidence in the craft to ride i out the storm as it had ridden ’ previous weather disturbances. Tite largp. silvery bag, buffeted savagely, dipped lower and lower j toward the earth and finally crash[ed into a hillock. Irwin came i down with his ship, stayed at the controls, and was burned to death. The fin controlled the parallel flight of the ship, and its loss ! accounted for what eye witnesses | described as the "tangoing" of the | R-101 through the air. It could ; not hold to the course after the 1 fin was gone. Irwin had full meteorological i 1 information showing a storm area ■ between Rotien and Beauvais, and j it was believed that under ordi-1 nary circumstances his ship would . have come through the storm successfully. Twelve men were on duty at the time of the accident. They were Commander Irwin, one engineer in each of the five engine gondolas, a pilot and navigator, two wireless operators, and two riggers. The remainder of the ! men ahpard. including all the civilians, were asleep. Several of the passengers who were fated or trapped in the flames had retired early due to air sickness. -J o — I -Mr. and Mrs. Merril Schnitz and sons. Bobbie, Dirkie. and Ralph Allen spent Sunday in Fort Wayne 1 the guests of Mrs. Schnitz'3 par- . ents^lr^n^^lrs^^rank^Snyder
iftQNEffoF HOUSEKEEPERS We beva h'lped hundreds of families in this community by lending them enough money to square bo all their debts. Our tv/enty-payment pbn makes the repayment easy. If yen I any amount from SI6 to S3 n 0 v.’e wnl advance it to you quickly. ATI dealings confidential. C ‘ ’■’orr v "*■>. Franklin Security Co. Over Schafer Hdw. Co. f’hono 237 Decatur, Ind :j
fftTownTaljc Word has been recalved from Mr. and Mrs. 11. H. Myers, who left Wednesday for Lebanon, Tennessee where Mr Myers will study law, that they were all settled In their new home. Mr. and Mts. E. F. Gass and daughter Beatrice. Mr. and Mr*. Carl Gas* spent Sunday afternoon I visiting friends at Mangle. Miss Mary Yost and Leonard Saylors spent last evening lu For' j Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. Ben DeVor and daughter Helen of this city, and Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Smith of Mon-! roe spent Sunday at Urbaaa, Ohio, visiting with Mr. and Mrs. George Smith. | Dr. and Mrs. Fred I. Patterson left today for Logansport where ‘hev are attending the Northern Indiana Dental Association meeting. They will return late tomorrow. Dick Engle. Russel White, Herb Braun, Charles Magle.v, Glen Beavers, and Raymond Baker motored to Fort Wayne lust evening. Mr. and Mrs, Frank Devor of Frankfort spent Sunday in this city visiting with relatives. Mr. DeVor returned to his home, while Mrs. DeVor remained in this city to visit with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cloud. VYss Geraldine Joker of Fort: Wayne spent she week-end in this city visiting with relatives. Miss Kate Beatty and Herb Fuhrman of Fort Wayne visited relatives and friends in this city and Bluffton Sunday. Mrs. Mary E- Franks, who has been visiting relatives at Indianapolis for the past several weeks, is visiting with her daughter, Mrs. Jphn Keller, and other relatives here. Miss Alice Gladienx of Fort Wayne visited friends tu this city Saturday evening. The Misses Opal and Teg Gilbert and the Messrs. Ray I.ennington and Bill Ellison of Monroeville visi*ed in this city Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stef f en of Chicago llltnofs, have returned to their home after enjoying a visit with Mrs. William Barkley of North Fifth street. Mrs. Barkley accompanied the Steffens on an Eastern trip tlnough Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio to the many relatives liv ing there. W. A. Lower and D. B. Erwin went to Indianapolis today to attend the state meeting of the Pythian lodge. Rev. Harry Ferntlieil left today for Indianapolis to attend a synodical session of the Presbyterian! church. W. A. Klepper is looking after business in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Moser and sons Max and Ned and Mr. and| Mrs. Harve Shroll motored to Mun-j cie Sunday where they visited with’ the Misses Martha Moser and Cath-j erine Martin, who are attending Ball State Teachers college. Harold Lee and Hershel Robbins of Blnffton visited with friends in this city last evening. Miss Doris Peters of Fort Wayne spent the "Week-end in this city visiting he* mother, Mrs. Letta Peters. Mr.’ and Mrs. Raymond Gibson and Mrs. Mary Tague of Fort Wayne spent the week-end In and near this city visiting with relatives. Gordon Vizard of Los Angeles who is visiting his father at Pleasant Mills, called on us and says he believes Adams county is in the I j best condition in about every way ■| of any county he has visited beI I tween the coast and here. • i F. E. France is home from a sev- ' eral months visit at Lake James. Dick Durkins of Logansport spent Sunday with his mother here. ' D.. and Mrs. S. D. Beavers and grandsons James and Robert. Mr. ' and Mrs. A. J. Beavers and son Law- ! fence Edward motored to North > Manchester Sunday where they > were the guests of Mrs. Rachel
NOTICE! AUCTION SALE! « The DECATUR COMMUNITY SALE will be hefd at Breiner’s Barn on Monroe street, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18th. Anyone having farm machinery or live stock you wish to turn into cash, list it with Roy Johnson, auctioneer, Dutch Ehinger or with Lew Murphy at the barn, so that it may be included in the advertising. DECATUR COMMUNITY SALES i wmummmmmmmammßmsammmmaammmmmmmmmmmmmmtm Public Auction I will sell without reserve to the highest bidder on the premises at 1410 West Monroe street, Decatur, at 2:00 P. M., on SATURDAY, OCT. 11, 1930 7-ROOM SEMI-MODERN HOME I ,j House in good state of repair. Fell size lot. On improved street. For inspection of property, call phone 265. TERMS cash, balance $20.00 per month. Immediate possession. 4 BESSIE ANDREWS, Owner .lohnson-Bartlett Co., auctioneers.
Ruckmaster. They ulso visited !ho| new Presbyterian home fqr the aged which is under construction on the west side of the city. Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Smith and son John Leslie of Berne were Sunday guests of Mrs. Clara Anderson and S. W. Hale of fhlß city. Mr. and Mrs. O. Nesswald and family were She Sundny guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Nesswald at Fort Wayne. Miss Erma Gage Is spending ft vacation visiting with friends at Pitrdne. H. M. Gillig is at tending L> business in Indlunapolls today. A A Butler of New Haven was it caller here this afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Sehrauk, and Mrs. Robert Htllegas motored to Goshen, Sunday, where they spent tho duy with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Maley and family. I Mr. and Mrs. diaries A. Dugan had as their guests Sunday evening, Miss Charlotte Hamilton, Frank Leslie and Clarence Kohne, all of Van Wert, Ohio. Miss Mary Macy and Dick Grab er spent the week-end visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Panl Bohn in Fort Wayne ami were the dinner guests of Dr. and Mrs. V. Weaver and family in Churubusco Sunday evening. Miss Wllhelmina Schnitz speift the week-end in Fort Wayne, the guest of .Miss Olga Re inking. Mrs. Clara Baumgartner went to Fort Wayne Sunday to visit with her daughter Miss Juanita Baumgartner, a nurse at the Lutheran hospital, who is ill suffering with appendicitis. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Merry mail, Miss Herretta Elzey and Donald Stump attended the Emboyd theater in Fort Wayne last evening. o 1 HOSPITAL NOTES Miss Aleta ITahnert of Monroe was admitted to the Adams County Memorial Hospital today where shK is receiving medical treatment. j Mrs, John Baltzeli. Decatur. Route I 5, submitted to a minor operation j at the local hospital this morning. _o 7 Card of Thanks We desire to extend our sincere thanks for the kindness shown the family and relatives. (Due to distance traveled from Fort WaVne to the cemetery it was thought best to ieave the casket unopened also the aged mother and sisters were nnahle to stand additional grief). We were very sorry to dissappolut the many neighbors and friends at the cemetery who congregated to pay ’heir last respects. We thank them especially for thetr kind words of sympathy. The Babcock family V’*’ '"w Decatur Chapter No. 112 R. A. M. will meet Tuesday night at 7:60 o'clock. H. P. A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy cheeks —sparkling eyes—most women can have. Dr. F. M. Edwards for 20 years treated scores of women for Hver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave his patients a substitute for calomel made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients, naming them Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets. Know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the Hver and bowels, causing a normal action, carrying off tire waste and poisonous matter in one's system. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, take I one of Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets | nightly for a time and note the pleas- ! ing results. Thousands of women and men take Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets —now and , then to keep lit. 15c, 30c and 60c. 1 •
LABOR GROUP DEMANDS BEER (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) or of the modification of this act so as to provid > for tho ratnufac tare, sale, and distribution of beer! containing 2.75 per cent alcohol by j weight." With reference to unemploy meiit, the report said th.it "to pro vide atd In finding employment"! was labor's foremost duty. It pro- j posed an unemployment program! which would embrace reduction in ! hours of work, stabilisation of Industry, efficient management in production and in sales policies, a nation-wide system of employment exchanges, keeping of adequate records, use of public works to meet cyclical unemployment, vocational guidance and retraining, special study of technological tin employment, study of relief propossals, and education for life. . The plank concerning reduction in hours of wotk in the unemployment program urged by the executive council stated that "instead of laying off employes as produc tivlty increases, the work day should be reduced, the work week shortened, and provisions for annual vacations with pay should re duce the work year." The report revealed a total paid up membership in the American Federation of Labor as of August 31 1930, of 2.961,066. an increase of 27,55s over the membership a year ago It is estimated that those who hat! not paid their tax during the yenbecause of strikes and unemployment numbered some 500,000. A prayer by William Cardinal OTonneJl, Roman Catholic arch bishop of Boston, opened the convention. Addresses of welcome were made by Governor Frank G. Allen, United States Senator David I. Walsh, and Mayor James M. Curley. These were answered, for the 4 106 delegates, by President Wii-
BEWARE THE COUGH FRol COLDS THAT HANG « Coughs from colds may lead to so- elements whi. h ™thc aaf tious trouble. You can stop them inflamed r ’,i, rlni , mi) now with Creomulsion, an emulsified ritalion. » . creosote that is pleasant to take. the stnm.-u-li. is ahmrW Creomulsion is a medical discovery blood, altk the >■ it nf the with two-fold action; it soothes and and <he. k- :m- crusth nf the heals the inflamed membranes and in- Creon: . - I- rurtnti-J hibits germ growth. tory in tie u-i ni rt ,i Os all known drugs ereosote is rec- Colds. 1 1 chi' ,u !n. i ogniied by high medical authorities bronchi.il . -riMtand is as one of the greatest healing agencies for build.:.: ‘ten iftet^M lor coughs drom colds and bronchial or flu. Money refundet BB irritations. Creomulsion contains, in Kevcd aft> - takmz arcr-ting addition to creosote, other healing tie ns. Ask vuurdn. srta^^B CREOMULSiOI FOR TH£ COUCH FROM COLDS THAIFAMM THE ADAMS THEAM| TONIGHT and TUESDAY 2«e-40c ■ Adventure to thrill you! Romance to stir you Beauty to dazzle you! Glorious outdoor spectacle ctra “Under A Texas Moonl With Frank Pay, Myrna Loy, Raquel Torres. N«h Arn* ADDED—OUR GANG Comedy Scream "P^Slstcj WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY I I , ■§: The Surprise Sensation of th? C ode ■ Cyril Maude in “GRI A1 i’A ■ Comedy romance rmash with Ph ps Holmes. ■ star of “Devil’s Holiday Friday and Saturday—Wm. Powell in "b OH
Public Auction As I have purchased a farm In Wells count' nee 4k' the Miller farm, I will sell at public auction at ir ( . :lUUty 1 south of Decatuy; Vis-mile north of St. road, on TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1 k 1930 Commencing at 10:00 A. M. 2—HEAD OF HORSES —- Bay horse, 8 years old, weight 1600 n>».. *on ,! ,l Bay mare, 10 years old, weight 1500 lbs., o dand\ 7-HEAI) OF CATTLE—' p ]llher j Largo Brindle cow, S years old. due to frcsic ~o n(i fl i Guernsey cow, 5 years old, will l>e fresh May ‘ j un * real winter cow; Guernsey cow, 6 years old, will , shl giving good flow now; Guernsey cow', 9 years old. sth; Guernsey cow, 2 years old, w r as fresh in dune. [jybrud giving good flow; 2 Guernsey heifers, due to fre ln‘ii real pair of heifers. 20—HEAD OF HOGS—2O ffcets Two lino Chester White sows, each with 0 Ph’--HAY AND GRAIN , ~ i d Ten acres of good black ground corn on stall' 1 )ia) . ■ more or less; 2 ton of sov bean hay; 7 ton of good 'U' l IMPLEMENTS AND TOOLS Moline manure spreader, new; Deleting hinder, jj' Kt i. H. C. disc, 14-16. practically new; Deering mower. 1 Oliver ri Thomas hay loader; dump rake; 2-row corn cilltivat jj breaking plow; walking breaking plow; spike tooth (i(|| ., grain drill, double disc. Monitor; Double set work it- , „ f j cutter; buzz outfit; 2 h.p. Fairbanks gas engine, ' ' |, er ; power corn shelter: platofrtn scales. I,Odd lb*- 1 ' ' j* press; sausage grinder; % h. p. electric motor; brood. > 1 t ’ jj, good one; dining table; and many articles too mimcimi TERM8 —All sums of SIO.OO and under, cash; °' rl 1 |. ;| y,. credit of 6 months will be given, purchaser to give a ; Ul ' — bearing 8% interest the la.t 3 months; 4% discount tot above SIO.OO. GUY PARK ISON ROY JOHNSON”, auctioneer DT it 1 I i x St. Taul Ladies Aid will serve luucli.
~illn ill |||n SB COURT Ho|]| ’lf.-O Trang J lv7' lJ " '“""ZM )(' Kl 'MI!.. 1-1 j|| f , “J^i 10.. w • 11 j l *"' l v » '• In 111,,. r 'M ! ax for 81 m 5 Males loa|. Mt l Years V O J The skin iif yn„th 11,,,. J of new u <xuli-rftil \n9 O’ 1 The pZS ' ' ,m, l| !.n<‘Ht No flak,ups i irritation 1 ■ Fr, ' Ul ' l ' ""ss makes M more mu ; v - ln ,| .■ . s N '° wore i-hia/S -.fays on Imiyor ' GLO. <■ I Get the Habit-TraATj —
■BnuoL # /41 yi\ / rad! 8 Tube I Screen Grid Super HtUtJ CON SOLI : SB6-00 £ Decatur Electric Shop
