Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 303, Decatur, Adams County, 24 December 1930 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE- Pure bred Ayshire bull I 23 months old. Also calves. At | a fair price. Henry Aschlemen. Berne phone 4823. 293-33tx FOR SALE — iYesh meats. Beef, Pork. Will sell in quarters, halves, or by pound. Lard. Poultry, Sausage, Eggs. Phone 876-A, or see Herman Bosse. 296-10tx FOR“SALE—Michigan apples. Jonathans and Greenings. 31.00 per bushel. S. E. Haggard. 297-dtx i I OR SALE—Used fordson tractors. New and used tractor parto. I l ralgville Garage. 300-s*. FOR SALE — 40 acres, one mile I west and one mile north Mon . roe. 4-room house, garage, and hen : house. Good corn land. Easy and | 1 convenient terms. See A. D. Sut-j ties, or write J. E. Ohmart, Portland. Indiana. 301-2 t FOR - SALE—Rat terrier pups. George Fosnaugh, Decatur, R. 2. i 301t3x FOR SALE- Ladies coat and dress. Bargain. 227 North Fourth street ( FOR SALE—A 2 day old calf. John Selking, Monroeville, Route 4 ] Hoagland phone. 302-3tX | FOR T.-U.E Restaurant building. located on post office lot. Must ; be removed by January 20, 1931 | ■ A. D. Suttles, agent. 302-3tx i ■■, ... ————————— i FOR SALE— Bay mare colt coining i! 2 year old in spring. Phone 845-C. 301t3 eod 0 WANTED WANTED—For Frigidaire service call 9072. Calls answered prompt- I |y day or night. Win Affolder. Decatur, Indiana. 301-Jtx V, ANTr.D To rent an 80 or 100 acre I farm. Adolph Lamerick, Route 3 , Decatur, Phone 871-L. 302-2tx \, i nb - 3D or 35 head of shoats between 52 and 100 lbs. Wilmer 1 Worthman, Craigville Phone, R. R. J 301 3t eod.x I o LOST AND FOUND LOST—Rea hcund with all four fe"‘ I and logs of white, white nose. Lost in neighborhood of Decatur. Answ - er name Tierot ” Liberal reward. ‘ Ross Harden, phone 8110. 301-3tx , — ■■ 1 ““ — Secretary 35th Time ant aßosa, Cal.. —( (TP)—William | - H. Poole, for 34 years secretary I' of Santa Rosa lodge F. and M. w’as ! re-elected the other day. tor the 35 1 time. He is the dean of Masonic sec- ■ retaires in California. o p Rat Made Trouble Rats have been known to select . most unusual [ laces in which to : build their nests. A farmer In | Stratford. New Zealand, who uses Ids ear only occasionally was star tied to see smoke curling up be tween the floor boards as lie drove along, lie promptly searched for tlie cause of the smoke and found it In a rat’s nest which had been built on the exhaust pipe of the engine, and had been ignited by tlie ' heat of the pipe. o I ■ Color in Camels ■ Camels seem to lie singularly | free from tlie color variations that | affect so many domesticated animals I —melanism and albinism. Bln'k 1 camels, presumably tnelantics. ar« : rare. A breed called Nubian camel I is of a very light shade, This seems I 1 to be a regular color strain, how ) ever, nnd not a case of albinism. <, Name Is Welsh Bryn Mawr. Pa., was named i after the town of the same name ] in Becon county. Wales. It is composed of two Welsh words. I •‘Bryn,’’ meaning "hill.” and | “Mawr," meaning “big." tlie whole ] name meaning big hill." o Always a Catch It i> cheaper to live these days if a fellow can only find the money to buy the goods.—Atlanta Const! t tition Daughter Substitute Is Not Desired No daughter equals your own and no remedy is as asyour awn tried and genuine Carter’s Little Liver Pills. Toning up liver, starting bile flowing and relieving constipation, there is none better than Carter’s. Resent substitutes. Take Carter’s. Ped bottles. All druggists. Take \ irter’s. For 1931 License Plates Please See Winefride Kitson American Security Company Ist Dbor West of Postoffice
S.E. Black FUNERAL DIRECTOR Mrs. Black, Lady Attendant Calls answered promptly day or night. j Office phone KOO Home phone 727 Ambulance Service WIMMI ic. r • * -- • - •*sMBSS**eM«M« N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30—12:30 to 6:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135 Lobenstein & Doan FUNERAL DIRECTORS Calls answered promptly day or j night. Ambulance Serv.ce. Office Phone JO. Residence Phone, Decatur 1041 Residence Phone, Monroe, 81 LADY ATTENDANT ASHBAUCHER&MAYNARD Funeral Home, Inc. MRS. MAYNARD assistant licensed embaln.ee. Ambulance Servioe Phones 844 & 510 For BE ITER HEALTH SEE DR. H. FROHNAi’FEI Licensed Chiropractor and Naturapath Riadonic diagnosis and treatment Phone 314 104 So. 3rd St. Office Hours; 10-12, 1-5, 6-8 10 years in Decatur. FUNERAL DIRECTOR Lady Attendant W. H. ZWICK & SON Calls answered day and night Ambulance Service Phones; Office 61, Home 303 Yager Brothers Funeral Directors i Calls answered day or night. At night call phone 44. Day time call phone 105. Ambulance Service, day or night. Law Would Aid Autoists Chapel Hill, N. C. — (UP) — A statute to lie presented to the 1931 North -Carolina General Assembly would restrict the liability of an automobile drive rto a guest in ' cases of accident only to instances I where thed liver was guilty of gross negligence or wilful or wanton misconduct. Creme Prevention H. E. Barnes says: “First step | In preventl.ig crime is to see thn' I the human individual is well born; second, adequate education: third. ; sufficient manual or vocational ed j ucation to provide means of making I a living; fourth, efficient method” of aiding backward children wh< might become victims of erimi r • Suggestions “ —*" ' : i |||i'"'i||i|||i"‘H|| il I J I TRYING to see if it isn’t j possible to get along without Public Liability Insurance is like carrying /our profits in a wide* meshed sieve I For along comes a Damage Suit—shakes down your dollars — and wipes out your surplus! Yes, that can and does happen 1 y£T NA -1 Z E Public Liability Insurance Costs little! Saves much! i The Suttles-Edwards 'Co., Inc. Phone No. 358 . Over Niblick’s Store A j llliui Ainiim
- HIMUI.E THEATER SHOWING-HOW TO KEEP FROM GETTING BALD. tt ) . |WE SHOULD HRVt WNTEO FORI WHfLT WOULD HE 00' WHY, [( BtOW ME DOWN!) ~ —————-1 C I REftD AU ABOUT W POPEVe-ASMLOR DOH'7 HE’D KNOCK W »AORSC / ',A IM ADM’ V IH s r? crtJ no ) T\ AA KROW IXH'/THIHG fkBOUT • OUT WITH HIS FIST- . M riN \ AIHT GOMt-R SCFW.OP > / (pj HCSSES- 16UCH0ER VMAT HE’S LIKE THM_ A . ,/ \I T/ X aHE - SAVVV? //7\ - .‘7 < n 1 Mik/ -MA THREW? PROB&BLY ON FOOT JT W/A 4 . (A AND LOST IN THE A<2 Z L //SB » 4 t l<™ Km» Syn,l...'r. IH' <!-««■ r.thc rtwrvw ' - y-JL'.’/ IM l lki. __z—_ IS- — . —— Ur? BROAD OF WALL STREET B y Charles McMam, — - S, ( "' T 1—1 — "7- r MYPIVALj ~ WHATAQEYoO / T?-r??re K Cx 'ua-rArwiTt i \ , M GOING TO ) / HERMAN KNOOP 'l \ HOW DlO HE I /TL r DApAS ) "*1 WAITIN’FOR? (I To Tour FATHER I WHAT ABOUT. I \ HIM FOR j * ASKED PAPA FOR I> I MAKE OUT? \ ( HE CoTPA ) L_ ) ' i“ L ) / Ybuß SISTERS t HER HAND r~> ICy J \ FOOT. ? < ‘ | YESTERDAY ) 1 yf ? ¥• X sk ? ; • V- J M ft? XpK A “r )■ == >jy f " = — AX- t 1 T/S a! r f XL S< A \ \ \\r b \ w > hi \\\\ 4 > Hi c a Jj 1 L met* & u (CopyFtrt t x Vwsssx SP—W 7 C^.— f
MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET (Corrected Dec. 24) Hogs. 200 pounds down SB.IO Hogs, 200-250 pounds 8.001 Hogs. 250-300 pounds $7.00 Hogs, 300-350 pounds .... $7.70 Hogs 350 lbs up $7.60 and down Roughs $6.00-$6.50 Stags .... $5.00 , Vealers $lO. Lambs $7.50 East Buffalo Livestock Market — Hogs: Receipts 1,800; holdovers ’ ( j 100; market active mostly to shippers 15-25 c higher, bulk desirable. , 140-220 It). $9, few 120 It>. pigs I $9.25; 230-230 lb. $8.75-8.85; pack- ' ling ows $6.65-7.35. Cattle: Receipts 225, cows pre-i i dominating, slow steady. I Calves: Receipts 50; vealers un- | changed $11.50 down. Sheep: Receipts 900; lambs acjtive generally 25c higher, good to choice native and fed western i lambs $8.75-9; medium kinds and I i strong. $8; throwouts $7. — Fort Wayne Livestock Hog market 20c higher 100-14'1 lbs. $8.10; 140-200 lbs. $8.20; 200;250 lbs. $8.10; 250-300 lbs. $8.00; ‘3OO-350 lbs. $7.50 Roughs $6.50 Stags '55.00 Calves SIO.OO lambs $7.50 CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE — Dec. Mar. May July Wheat, Old .77% -SI .82 .65%| New .77% .81% .82% Corn, Old .64% .67% .69% New .63% .68% .69% .71 Oats, Old .30% .32% .33% New .33% — LOCAL GR.aIN MARKET (Corrected Dec. 24) I — .No. 1 New Wheat 72c I No. 2 New Wheat 71c ■ New Oats ....> 29c ' Barley 50c Ky o 50c j j No. 2 Yellow Corn, per 100 pounds 75c to 80c •LOCAL GROCERS EGG MARKET 1 Eggs, dozen 20c t BUTTERFAT AT STATION Butterfat 23c Largest Arch Bridge The largest arch bridge in the | world is across the harbor of Syd ney. Australia. The main arch Ims a 'span of 1.350 feet. The bridge cost s::<),ooO.fMM), and hits a maxi mum eapacfry of 108 trains (MX* 1 vehicles and 40.000 pedestrians a., hour. o Eastern Reckons. 3 Satnvut Is an abbreviation of the Sanskrit word "Samvatsara." which means a year. Sanrvat 1* the method of reckoning time used gen erally In India, except in Bengal Christian itates are reduced tn samvat try adding 57 to the Christian ■ year. o Golden Gate Deep Channel 1 The waters of San Francisco hay I are generally shallow fat out from 1 the shore, hut the Golden Gate and 1 the part of the hay adjoining Situ ’ Francisco, us uell as a central ■ channel running through its whole 1 length, time a depth of 31) to more j than 100 feet.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1930.
ChristmasTustoms come from t lllrinil Lands’*
Tradition —that strongest link in v any chain that ties the human race to any of the customs that its many lands and people share in | v common — has been since time; ■ immemorial the keystone upon 1 . which has been built the whole ' r „ - A ! G structure of Christmas. I Back 2,000 years before the birth i. of tire child Jesus in the stable at f Bethlehem, there are historic evidences of the keeping of a season , that was in spirit much like the essential character of the Christ- ‘ mas season that tradition has ( brought down to us, despite the ( natural inclination of the Christian world to date the great festival 1 ‘ from the birth of Christ. I ( Authentic record of the actual % I date and season of the year : n : which the Christ was born has ; | never, however, been established, j ind historians disagree as to them , 1 both. It was many years after his ( ■ life on earth, however, before De- ] cember 25th was fixed as the ] •late for celebration of His birth- s day, and from that time on Chris- , tians united in accepting the day < as sacred to His birth and to His 1 service—the Christ-mass. Forerunner of Carols Going back before the Christian ■ era students of the festival have found traces that most of the naI linns of ancient time recognized i., | the period of that which we know as the winter solstice as a season ! of rejoicing. The return march of 1 the sun up into the heavens, and the season's turn from short days! and long nights to days of lengthening light and warmth, impelled a natural demonstration of pleasure that it was so. The Roman Saturnalia, which fell at such a period, was such a festivity of rejoicing, marked by privileges and hailed as exempt from ills, with the spirit of mirth and unbounded license •broad everywhere. The hymns of] this time to the sun were forerun- i ners of our Christmas carols. ■ Pr< sents ■were passed from friend to friend. Gifts were made to the poor quarrels forgotten and feuds ended. In the northern countries, of ancient Europe the God Thor was the object of similar celebration at the same season, the song, dance end feast ttnivtral and mingled with the savage religious rites. Some authorities find the origin of the word "Yule” in the name of this celebration — “Yule,” “Jule,” Tul,” or “lol.” Origin of Festival The Christian festival of the Nativity has incorporated the character of these early celebrations and appears to have been appointI ed very shortly after the establishment of a new religion. It is first definitely recorded in the history nf the second century, although there are Indications that it was in order even earlier. Students of Christmas, while disagreeing upon the exact time of the birth of 1 Jesus, agree that in the early years . of the Church there was a union i celebration of the Nativity and 1 the Epiphany in the belief that the I b rih of Jesus coincided with the I appearance of a star in the East
which revealed it to the Gentiles. The word Kris' mas is held to be “Christ's mass, however, and the word Noel is from the French word "nouvelles” meaning tidings. Druids Romans. Saxons, Jews, Anglo-Sax ons have all kept such a festival marked in the days of the Roman' by temporary equality of slaves and 1 masters, of the Druids by the use ' of evergreens and the mistletoe in temple rites, by Jews with a dedication of their temples, and in the days of the Anglo-Saxons by the elaborate customs which have long endured and which marked the Middle Ages. Then the great “halls” of the nobility offered hospitality and entertainment to the poor. Then were rhe splendid pageants and banquets such as those King Arthur's court knew well, with minstrels and gleemen. harpers and jugglers, pipers dancers, log fires immense and of long duration within, hunting wrestling and jousts without. Intemperance was prevalent, and the ale and mead tlowed widely while there was thelighting of the Christina log, the bringing in of the boar’s head, and the ames dice, chess and baegam mon. As Hamlet Said 't Shakespeare has Hamlet recall the general feeling of the erriness •of the holy night before Christmas shared by many; an age and race 'when he recites: 1 "Some say that ever ’gainst that season comes Wherein our Saviour's birth is celebrated. The Biyd of Dawning.singeth all night long; And then, they say, no spirit stirs abroad; The nights are wholesome; then no planets strike. No fairy takes, nor witch has power to chain, | So hallowed and so gracious is the time.” Crowned on Christmas Day A succession of Roman emperors that began with Charlemagne was crowned on Christmas Day, including Alfred the Great (whose defeat by the Danish host, is held to ha’ e .lappened betause be would not interrupt himself and court in t.heii twelve days’ celebration of the sea son even with the enemy horde a* the gates) the Danish king Edward and Edward the Confessor and his son Harold, whose cot oration took place together with the consecration of Westminster Abbey in 1066 The next Christmas day saw IlHam the Conqueror crowned there, but it was in the days of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries when "Merrie England’s” Christmas celebrations rose to their height of splendor with /their Anglo-Saxon rites and customs. It was then that baronial castle and manor house rang with the merriment of the season and every villabe inn kept Itosid table cheer. The Yule ivg ’-wred and the wassail bowl was everywhere. The ale went round and the stt'-ar and-einnanion-sweeteneil water toast hailed friend to triend. Old . Father Christmas rode his goat 1 through the Streets of the city and . the lanes of the villages, and as he
rested at the hearth from house to house, his kind hearted sons looked , in upon the poor. Everybody kept holiday then but the cooks. The turnspits watched' great hunches of Christmas mutton I and “sitlyons” or beef brown ami I sizglc above the open fires, capons I and geese turned merrily round i . pen the "pits. and the ballads of ‘ the day sing the "plumb-perridge ’ and "plumb-puddings” and "nrinetd pies". The < ustomary pewter pots for wine and beer were spurned as beneath the dignity of the occasion, and there Is a singing of the serving of the salmon, the wild boar, venison, hogs heads of honey, kilderkins of mustaid, bacon, swine, pidgins, teal and mallard, pancakes, apple 1 pie sand custards, “cider of our own” raid Gascon wine. Mock ceremonial, quaint humors and the spirit of fellowship marked the celebrations of these times. From the days of the early Norman conquest to those of the Common wealth in England, down through the reigns of Henry VHI, Edward VI, "Bloody” Queen Mary and Good Queen Bess, into those of James I, Charles 1 and into the days of the Puritans, there is record that the • Christmas reveals made their way and customs presisted through the centuries. The Puritans, however, would have none of the "nonsense and in New England in 1621, Governor Bradford rebuked a bevy of young men lately arrived from England. when they objected to working on Christmas day and insisted upon giving it at least two games and sports while lie looked on aud frowned. Virginians Observed Day It was byway of the Virginias that Christmas observance came to 1 America, and in England the restoration of the royal family to the throne restored the rites of Christmas there. It was not until IGal’. ’ nowever that the law against its celebration was repealed in New England. With this halting by tne ’ Puritans the Christmas festival be- ’ gan a languishing from the irn ■ mense elaborateness of its earlier : celebrations that had gradually ’ grown, but Christmas, one truly be- ’ Hevea, will never become e tinct. r Amiri changing custom the spirit of the season still survives, ahd while uproarious merriment thev 1 have passed by the lioard, the pet--4 iod of its commemoration continues 1 to exist as a time of celebration ail ' over the civilized world. Northern Germany hold tbe faith ■ that Mary and the Christ child pass through the lanes and streets on ' Christmas Eve, and in Austria a--1 rises our adopted custom of plat- ’ ing candles in the windows Christs mas Eve--that the Christ Child 1 passttig by in darkened ways might 1 not stumble. e . Paris has originated a more seen- '• lar celebration of Christmas Eve, '' staging Rs “rcvillion” in cases with ' its climax in midnight Christmas suppet. in Russia "Kolenda” comes e witli its Christmas Eve procession ' tltrottgh the streets, its carol-sing--11! ing for copers, the masquerading ot * 1 revelers as animals, significant* of rt |lbe manger, and with its trees in e ' the homes of noblemen.
i Scandinavia has given us many fa Christmas custom. Peace prevails for all the season thgre, with old feuds forgotten. Tbei'e the shoes of the family are set in a row with their retiring that its members might live inpeace throughout the year to come. There is found the ; Yule log, the dancing and the sl<at-[ ing and it was a custom of long-1 standing in other years, and may I still Ise followed in rapts of the pen- ’ insula, to celebrate the season with j the yearly bath, the great wash tub s dragged out into the center of the 'house for the series of ablutions. | Candles burn all night for “Knsftine” who brings the gifts, there are games until the carolers burst in upon the revelers, masked performances and pantomime and 1 mock military drills. Many countries claim the Christ-, mas tree. In Scandinavia there is ’ the legend of the “service’’ tree sup . posed to have sprung from the soil' where a pair of lovers were killed] by violence, and where the tree* mysteriously appeals with its my-1 riad of lights at the Christmas time when no winds blow. A thirteenth century romance features the gigantic tree ablaze with burning candles found by a questing hero, I with the haloed child shining at its] ..op, tlie whole aflame with candles,: of humans, good or bad, the child I of the Christ Child. Germany, keep-! ing Christmas, often welcomes its I gue-ts with green branches ornamented with lighted candles. One of the loveliest of its legends tells ‘hat Martin Luther, walking over the snowy winterhills at night and observing the beauty of the glitter ing stars against the dark set up for his children a tiny fir, with candles representing the stars. Celebration in Egypt Back so far as to the time of ancient Egypt is traced the origin of the custom of decking our homes with greens, for then branches of the date palm were hung in homes , during the w inter solstice, symbolic of “the life triumphant... the symbol that our Christmas greens today interpret. It was during tlie reign of Queen Victoria and her marriage to a German prince tliat the custom of the , Christmas tree was brought into England, and German emigrants brought it to America. Carols had their beginning back to a few centuries after the birth of Christ when bishops sang them in the churches to their clergy. Not ■ wil the 16th century did they take ■ the finisli and form in which we. hear them sung. They then became festal chants introduced by the ’ man French into England, but repudiated by the Puritans along with . Christmas. The ballad form appear- : ed about this time, and it was then I that the “waits” made their rounds ’ of the homes before dawn on Christ • mas morning, singing in payment of i ebins. The word caiol comes from I the Latin cantareito sing) and rola (the interjection of joy) i The Christmas card originated in i England in 1840 as a successor to i the “Christmas pierce,” a roll of or-
PUBLIC AUCTION - HOUSEHOLD GOt® I I will sell at public auction on the (premises at 603 L street, Decatur, Indiana, on „ -»s Saturday, December 27, 1930, at«l • ; - The following property: p,,!! t< ’ Wooden bed. mattress, springs; 2 Dressers; 2 f'omm''' |lri , n j I desk; Solophon® Victroia. excellent condition; ilxl-’ i.i-uiiv ’ Vacuum sweeper; 2 Dining room tables and chairs; 2 .i , n (] Gi i rocker: 5 Rocking chairs; 2 Morris chairs; 2 Davenports, i stove; Kitchen chairs; Porch swing; some Dishes. < oom • . I crocks, jars, and oth«{ articles too numerous to mention, t | One Lennington Sewing machine. TERMS—CASH. , >H II Daniel Sprang, 0" ra > ! Johnson-Bartlett Auction Company.
namental paper note paper bead greetings from eng) avers appn tices to their friends. One Thom Sharrock is credited with orig ating the first Christmas card, t the first one of which a copy exii was by Sir Henry Cole and l.u impressions of it were lithograph ! and hand-colored tor sale in U | don. It was not until 1881 bower I that the card was revive.! and printed in color process tor gene: use, and from that tini-. the po; llarity of the <ard rose rapidly. Ki IGre”naway was but one % there brausl artists who 1 eeeived ?o pprices for original paintings I cards. Cards were fringed and (ro led and padde an scented (the made of silk) and their snbja I were generally children, kitta | puppies, sprays of flowers a ' scenes. Then as later, the relijlo Icard was not so generally proc ' able. America originated the mo 'generous wuse of holly and mist I toe on cards and added the po I sett la because o fits ’asonal i ness and color, in the 1890’s. _ (i Buffalo Surplus High Buffalo N. Y. —tl P) —Butfal capital surplus for the fiscal yt ending June 30 was more than}’ 1600,000 Comptroller William A. E< ■ ert revealed. o —— — Get the Habit—Trade at Hon TREASURY DEPAKTIUENT, ( five of tlie supervising ariliitl Washington, D. C., I'eeember l»3o.—Scaled bids will lie openei this office at 3 p. ni.. .la’ ' '. for tne construction <•! the 1 on i States post office, etc., .it I‘e.ati j ind. Drawings and spei it ’ ati'.ns, n exceeding six sets, may la obtain I at tills office in tlie dis. r. ti ll ot t supervising architect by anj sat factory general i-ont ra'im. an** P; viued a deposit of JU. 1 "' i-* mans * each set to assure its m.impl | tarn. Cheeks offered - I must be made pay aide 1 tne ora lot tlie Treasurer of tin l.nite-l .••> •Us. A. Wetmore, Actio- > jperviM) Architect. |l - i ’ SHEHII’i-’ ‘ » 1 I; , Cause NTiiuber 13*113 I The Union Central Lit' Company, VS. Alta V i ’" l ' F. Arnold, Hora, i E. I tut ter, Ella Butler, anil William l.ai I o By Virtue f an .rd; r "I '" e 1 , directed front 'lie Clerk ' .'I ams Citx uit Court, of Ad.rn's *•*% Indiana, 1 will exp*;* ''' t „ sale to the highest imlJ*' day the B'tn day oi IWI, between thwhoui oft *’ A. M. amt t o'el ..k I ’ ~o (( . dav at the east do".' " ,h ; House, in Adams ' « tlie rents and profits !•” •' 1 , |n , exceeding seven years, f ".'.‘mi ing described real estate. 1 , The northwest 'I" ”’L ( the northwest quart. I 1 nol southwest quart, r ' ■. ; 11 ' |h „. ( west quarter, and '■; i;il quarter, (’4 ) of tne > - ter ( % 1 of eeetlon H ■ , r and also the easlt L ’ ' east quart' r * j > quarter (’.. ) ot *•;<;. 1 ’ ; (32) all in towns."t ; 0 i L’S* 1 n rth range fom "’ • , ( a , containing in all m.u forty acres, mon- or ■ County, Indiana. |( ,. fi And on failure I” amount of judgmimt ■■ . costs I Will a* th'; ' 7,I' place expose 1” m* l,l , , taken simple of\sa!<l re *. ( A ,.„ > ♦he prs>ni«rtv A • . hu»’< Hll« <>. Butler, and V 'jlJmrßl L nt th<‘ suit of th»» I r.i; •■* wi || TnMurajw e t'onipf.ny. ' ia it v made without nny i' ll from valuation or : ‘P!%iiciii f Ilarl Hollings"' 1 l ullil na Adams Count* 1" ' Dore R. Erwin. Attorm
