Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 206, Decatur, Adams County, 30 August 1932 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES • < FOR SALE FOR SALE—4O acres soy liean hag, out ot field. $5.00 per ton JPhone 20. 204a3tx FtTRNTTURE FOR SALE - Little used and in excellent condition. 5 piece Walnut Bed Hoorn Suite; •Wwlnut. Gate Leg Table; Singer LprtgM Sewing Machine; Telephone* Stand and Chair; Radio Behch. Priced low for quick sale in lot or separately. Phone 353. 205-3 t ” wanted’ WANTED- RADIO and ELECTRICAL WORK. Tubes tested free. Phone 825 MILLER RADIO SERVICE. a!95-30t WANTED UHomes for 3 girls and 1 boy who will attend high school this year. Call W. Guy Brc-wn at High Bchool for Particuhrs. 205-3 t WANTEI~Live stock of all kinds at the Decatur Community Sale, Tuesday, August 30th. a-204-3t o _ FOR RENT ■PORJiENT —7 room house on So. i Winchester st. inqure 321 North Eleventh st. Mrs. Grace Everett. ■ FOtf £ENT— Six room house. Vi, * mite east of Decatur on Bellmont Road. Willard Steele, Phone 5424 a206-3tx • FOR RENT —6 room house and garage? Modern except furnace. Good , location. 321 North Third street. Phone Mrs. Liby 869-C g206-3t I COURTHOUSE New Cases Nellie Derickson vs. Blanche | • Vartgl. petition for guardian. . Summons returnable Sept. 10. Elica Berning vs. George Bern- [ ing. suit for divorce. Summons : returnable September 12. o ! MOLLISON AT HARBOR GRACE • ‘ , * CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE as weather permits. X -Before retiring at the home of -Dr. F reeman O'Neill. Captain' Mollison told the United Press: , “I left St. John with fog lying! on the coast, but it was compaja-' 'lively clear inland. I was about! ils miles inland from the coast. ‘ Jut wnen I was about 20 miles south ot Moncton, the fog started • Vn drift inland. •e “I was forced to climb above ( pie clouds and when I came out | ■ egain. I was near Picton, Nova ) > Scot ia. 1 flew over Pictou. then | • beaded south for the lakes o. j ) Cape Breton. When I reached I ‘ Sydney the fog was so thick that I , it took he some little time to get i Sown.” i T- ; Mollison telephoned his wife,l' > Amy Johnson, from Sydney, advis- 1 > fng her of his progress, and said ! , ie would talk to her again today ; r from Harbor Grace. o Sanderit Long Utcd , — Cuneiform Inscriptions of western ■ Asia Indicate that Sanskrit hns beer. ’ ttie main las gunge of Hindu liters , lure, religion and culture for up ‘ wards of SJSOO years. It has been I J Slanged slightly in this time, but j • remains substantially the same now ; ' u in the first records we have of , & Tlie language of the Vedic • fcymns differs from current Sanskrit ’ fbout as Homeric Greek differs . from Attic Greek • *' Morcly Catleriney Noabrnd , . Catherine the Great of Itn -.sia [ ; married the Grand Duke Peter, aft | trward known as Peter 111. He was I > the nephew of Empress ElDtabef’i, ) • and was her recognized heir. In • gsmuch as Peter was subnormal 1’ ' ‘ physique and in mf n ,} s nd his wife J despised him. ho does not play so » important a rt’.e in Russian his , • very as does Catherine. [ • STOCKHOLDERS WEETISG • *• Notice is hereby given that the - annual meeting of the stockholders • of the Citizens Telephone Company of Decatur. Indiana, will be i.eld at > the office of the Secretary of said •, Company, in the City of Decatur, J Indiana on Monday, September 5, If>32 t seven o’clock P M for the pirr- • Bose of electing five directors to ■ serve the ensuing year and for the J transaction of such other business as » may be properly brought before said ’ fleeting. » — Herman F. Fhinger. Sec’v. ’ ~ Y ~ ‘ 1 ■' !' L G. .1. KOHNE, M.D. . •• Physician-Surgeon • Jtinmjnces the opening of an office fc. at the corner of Third and • — Jefferson streets ‘ phones: 445 Office, 389 Residence . Office Hours, 10 to 11:30 a.m. J~l to 4 p.m. 6:30 to 8;30 pin. >.!■■■ - N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST • -Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted • r HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30—12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135

MARKETREPORTS * ■ DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET ■ Corrected August 30 i No commtsslen and uo yardage. ; Pigs J 3.60 Hogs 130 160 p nods $3.80 160-210 pounds .. 84.00 210-250 pounds $3.85 250-300 pounds .. ... 83.65 Roughs 82.75. Stags 81.50. Vealers 87.00 Spring lambs 84.75. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Sept. Dee. May Wheat, old .53% .57% -62% Wheat, new .53% Corn .31% .34% .39% Oats .17% .19% .22% East Buffalo Livestock Hogs: On sale 1.700; weights alxtve 170 lbs. 25c under Mondays average; bidding 35c and more lower on lighter averages: general trade very slow; good to choice 171X210 lbs. 84.75; 230-260 tbs. 84.40-4.60; indication pigs and underweights $4-4.25. Cattle receipts 200; fleshy grass I steers barely steady 625; dry fed unchanged: cutter grades 81.78- | vearlings held about $8.25: cows | 2.75. Calf receipts 75; vealers slow. ' steady at Monday s late uneven advances; good to choice 88-50;, common and medium 85-7. Sheep receipts 100; lambs unchanged; good to choice ewe and 1 wether lambs $625. — Indianapolis Livestock Hogs 65*0; hold overs 224; steady 20 off; most loss on ligh’s and underweights: 160-280 lbs. $4.31X4.40; 280-350 Tbs. 84.10-4.25; 100-160 tbs. 84-4.15; packing sows 83-3.75. Cattle 2500; calves 6*o; ste*ri supply excessive, including num-1 erous loads to sell from SB-9; better kinds held around $9.50. none here to command extreme) value; all buyers going slow with, bearish ideas; she stock little; changed; several heifers above; $7; low grade $4-6.25; most cows $2.50-4; practical top $4.50; low cutters and cutters $1.25-2.25, veals steady $7 down. Sheep 2300; lambs around 25, up; good ewe and wethers largely $6; several $6.25; bucks $1 off;! ttUMKUUte- down to $3 and below.! Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs 15 off; pigs $3.75-4; light, lights $4-4.15; lights $4.15-4.25; L mediums $4.10-4.20; heavies $4-4.10 light roughs $3-3.25; medium < roughs $2.50-3; stags $1,511-2; calves $7; ewe and wether lambs $5.25; bucks $4.25. LOCAL grain market Corrected August 30 N>-. 1 New ,Vheat 60 lbs or better 45c - No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs. 44c ! Cyd or New Oats 13c 1 Soy Beans 30c') New No. 3 White corn 33c ■ No. 3 Yellow corn 38c LOCmL grocers egg market Eggs, dozen 14c o )i ft erld Crows Smaller In this age of flights, continents have become merely neighbors.— I’dlllp*''® Wool i v DR. C. V. CONNELL VETERINARIAN Special attention given to diseases’ ot cattle and poultry. Office and Res. 508 No. 3rd st. PHONE 102. Roy IL Andress LICENSED CHIROPRACTOR North 2nd St. Above Schmitt Meat Market Phone 1193 For Better Health See Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m. Itos p. m., 6toßp. m. j Phone 311 Hit So. 3rd st. S. E. BLACK Funeral Director When the hour comes your final tribute need not be costly to be of fitting dignity. 500 — Phone — 727 Lady Assistant Ambulance Service. E. L. Mock, M. D. announces opening of an office In! the K. ot C. Building, Decatur, j Phone Iftfi Special attention to diseases and surgery of eye, ear, nose and throat

* THIMBLE THEATER

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* — Test Your Knowledge I Can you answer seven of these test questions? Turn to Page Four for the answers. : ♦ 1. —ft’hst was Abraham Lincoln's middle name? , 2.—What is the largest species of. bird? II 3. —Where is the city of Bruges? I 4. —What is a feline? , s.—ln what year was Halley's comet last seen? 6 Name the capital ot Syria? 7. — What is the real name of Bull! Montana? 8. What is the name for that department of medical science that relates to the treatment of childrens diseases? 9. —Who was Alexander Graham Bell? 10.— Between what cities does the Boston Post Road run? Training Ship Visits Sweden GOTHENBURG, Sweden <U.R) The American training vessel, I "Nantucket" has made a call here) on its annual cruise. There were ! ?18 cadets on board. From Nor- ) folk, Va.. the 1.200 ton vessel had made the Azores. 2.400 miles in 31 days. From here it cleared for Hull, and after visiting Gibraltar, the ship would touch Madeira on the way home. o ippolntmrnt of %<1 miniMratri% Notice is hereby given. That the undersigned has been appointed Ad- g ministratrix of the estate of Henry Mayer late of Adams County, de- s ceased. The estate is probably solvent. < Sue Mayer, Administratrix Wchorn Gordon an-l Edris Attys. ’ Aug 24, 1932 Aug 27 Sept 3-10 t O •; | Appointment of AdininlMtrntrlx Notice is hereby given, That the undersigned has been appointed Ad- I ministratrix of the estate of John . Hoblet. Jr.. late of Adams County ’ deceased. The estate is probably solvent i olive E. Hoblet, A<hninistretrix Clark J. Lutz, attorney | 1 August 23, 1932. Aug 23-30 S-6 < o .MITICE IFF F.XEf t TOR’S SALK ' OF RE 11. ESTATE f STATE OF’ INDIANA i COUNTY OP’ ALLEN. SS: Inre: Estate of Celina Heavier ' deceaMd. | The undersigned. Executor of the last Will and Testament and Estate I 1 of Celina Hessler .deceased, herebyl gives notice that by virtue of the I power conferred by the AV ill of said t 1 decedent, he will, at the hour of ten f o'clock, in the forenoon, on the day of October, 1932, at the office of 1 Ed A. Bosse, located at Number 153 p South Secon 1 Street, in the City of! c Dpratur, Indiana, and from day top day thereafter until sold, offer forh sale, at private sale, real estate 1 ] pf said decedent, located in Adams! described as follows i | towit: i The Southeast Quarter of the! I Northwest Quarter of Section Eight!' • N), and the Southwest Quarter of Ij the Northeast Quarter of Section [ Eight (B>. all in Township Twenty- * seven (27 > North, Range F'Mirteen (14» East, in Adams County, Indiana, A’so the Northwest Quarter of the ‘ Southeast Quarter of said Section | Eight (8). Township Twenty-seven I '27) North. Range Fourteen (If) j East, in Adams County. Indiana. < Said sale will be made subject to the approval of the Alien Superior Court Number 2. for not Tess than the full appraised value of said real estate, and upon the fallowing terms and conditionsTerms Cash, or one-third cash I one-third in bine (9) months and I one-ttprd in eighteen (TO months 1 : | i the deferred pavments to be evidenri ed bv promisor?’ ,notes of th* pur■'ha«er hearing Interest at the rate of si'- per cent per annum from date j j of sale, waiving relief from valp-’t-j ' ♦lon and Appraisement laws, providI ing for attornev fnes and secured by o first mortgage on the real estate sold. HOWARD W MEYERS. Executor nf the la«;t Will and Testament of Celina Hessler. Deceased

W—l^—— WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE—WITHOUT CALOMEL And You'll Jump Ont of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go if you f-el boot and rank and the world looks punk, don’t swallow a lot of Mite, mineral water, oil. I a retire candy or chewing gum and expert them to make you suddenly Sweet and buoyant and full of sunshine. For they can’t do it. They only move the bowels and a mere movement doesn’t set at th* cause. The reason for your down-and-out feelinc is your fixer. It should pour out two pounds of liquid bile Into your bowels daily. If this bile to not flowing freely, your food doesn’t digest. It just decays in the bowls Gas Moats up your stomach. You have a thick, bad taste and your breath is foul, skin often breaks out in blemishes. Your head aches and you feel dowa and out. Your whois syetem is poisoned. It takes those good, eld CARTER'S : LITTLE LIVER PILLS to get these two I pounds of bile (lowing freely and make you , feel “up and up.” They contain wonderful, hartlasa, gentle vegetable extracts, a Hissing when it comes to making the bile flow freely. I .Butdon’taakforlivwpnis. Ask for Carter'r | Little Liver Pills. Look for the name Carter', Little liver Pilto oa tbs red label. Resent t anbatttutm Uc at aU atera. O1»*1C. M-Ca

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1932.

College Diploma or Marriage Certificate??? «««« ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Survey Finds the Craving for a Cap and Gown Often Writes Finis to Girl’s Chances of Donning Bridal Veil. -’Hr ’’ i .<-1 1 Ov 1 EM y VO L' ** -J i a— Career or Bridap Veiv

New York.—Girls, yon can't havep a husband and a career at the' 1 same time. Yon must take your ' i i choice between a college diploma , l or a marriage certificate —a cap'? and gown or the wreath of orange j blossoms —a kitchen or a classroom | a typewriter or an egg-beater— ; babies or books, but you can't have the whole shooting match. i A survey recently made by the. < Institute of Women's Professional,! Relations, and issued at Teachers’' < College. Columbia University, cites t impressive figures to show that' i gir's who go through college have 1 ! less chance of acquiring a husband than girls who stay home, attend I to their knitting and wait for h Prince Charming to come along. 'i A perusal of the imposing docu-, •, ment leads to the conclusion that 11 the more erudition a girl accumu- < lates the less chance she has of I ever treading up an aisle to the < stately strains of Lohengrin. True ■ she may gain in earning power. | But. as the songwriters say. what , is life without love? And what does it benefit a maiden if she gain the I whole world and lose the power to I, unake the male of the species go off 1 I his food and write atrocious poetry?. To the layman who knows very' little about psychology and such i things, high flown phrases like “in- 1 | ♦"reunion CALENDAR Sunday, September 4 Urick fami'y reunion. Sun Set ' ' Park, rain or shine. Roop family reunion. Legion Memorial Park. Annual Brown reunion. Sunset Park, Decatur. Kelly reunion. Louis Kelly, Monroeville. Indiana. Monday, September 5 Twelfth annual reunion of the , E C. Johnson family, home of Mrs. Ela Johnson. Tocsin. Lenhart annual reunion. Sunset Park, southeast of Decatur. Reunion of Millinger family, Sunset Pirk Decatur. Sunday, September 11 Eighth annual Barger-Smith families reunion, Foster Park, Fort, Wayne. o First Woman to Fly PARIS (U.R) — Madame Dazare Weiller. first French woman to fly j in an airplane, has been promoted to Chevalier of the Legion of Honor. She is the widow of the senator from Be ••Rhin. and the mother of the engineer-aviator. Patti-Louis Weiller. Madame Weiller made her first trip in a plane Oct. 9. ISOS, piloted by Wilbur Wright. — Monday Busy Day at Parks DETROIT (U.R> —Monday is the big day of the week for ctty park employes, who have to clean up the city’s recreationai centers after the week-end picnic rush. At the three parks. Belle Isle. River Rouge and Chandler, more than 50 tons of refuse, papers and bot-

NOW SHOWING—“UNSEEING EYES’’

dcpendent ego" and "complicated I cosmos" are so much Greek. But i the most unlettered of the stronger < (sexi will agree that the bride who < can hake a good pie is more de- ' sirable than the one with the alpha-. ,bet after her name who makes,; known her expertness in ologies i and Isms. i Never yet was there a hungry man who could reconcile himself to ' dissertations on ecology or ancient ' literature on returning home from work. No. sir! He’ll vote every < time for the girl who can line him 1 with steak, even though she be-it lieves Einstein to be an authority 1 on uncles and aunts. i Then again, the average man ; likes to air his knowledge. Imagine ,1 the embarrassment of the bridegroom unable to tell his bride something she didn’t already know. Not Icnly that, but think of the terrible blow to his vanity as the more educated half of the fami'y con- i stantly adjures him to "stop read-1 ing those trashy detective stories I and read something that will ini I prove your al'eged mind.” Yes. girls, the average man likes, a clever woman, but she must notbe too clever. That means she must ,be just a few shades less clever 'than hubby, if the family is going; !to live harmoniously. Os course a real’y clever woman would never { ties are gathered up. This in adds--I tion to that carted away by rag- 1 ' pickers. o Swarming Bees Caused Fright Utica. N. Y.— (U.R) —A swarm of i l>ees that invaded tire porch of a j ; home canned so much fright that, police, the Department of Public' I Works and. finally, a bee expert . were cal’ed. The expert advised that if the bees were left undis 'turbed, they would leave of their town accord. o Swedish General Honored Stockholm, Swed. —(U.R) —Czechoslovakia paid honor recently to Johan Baner. Swedish general in the army of King Gustavus Adolphus, who died three hundred years ago. A m r nument was unveiled at Schmiedeberg, in the presence of thousands of people oBeach May Aid Jobless Dartmouth. Mass.—(U.R)—Colonel ■ j Edward H. R. Green, son of the 'ate 'Hetty Green and administrator II of her wealth, has offered to open Cthe excellent beach on his Round i'Hill estate to the public for a 1011 cent fee. the money to go to the • j City of New Bedford for unemploy- -' ment relief. ■ a Harvester Catches Fawns Chico. Ca!.—(U.R)-—J. P. De Bock, owner of a ranch near here, picked • up a novel crop In his harvester 11 when two doer fawns, estimated to j be between six and eight weeks old, - became tangled In the machinery, t Both were slightly injured by r blades of the harvester. After treati fnent. De Bock took the youngsters -fhome and will raise them as pets. I

r let friend husband see that her mentality and cntdiTion were sev- | _ era! jumps ahead of his. But when , did woman ever pass up an opportunity to score over the male? ( Getting back to the survey. We I are told that older women who are 1 college graduates stand a better • chance of taking the stroll on the ( bridal path than the younger grad- • uate. This may be accounted for by the fact that as we grow older, i we lose a lot of that independence cf spirit that marked our youth. Or it may be 'that the years teach isomething that is not contained in , the weighty tomes of col’eges and universities — that old age without j ■) a companion is a paradise com-! pared to the inferno imagined by ;' the immortal Dante. Even when college women do I mafry, they don't seem to be very , much in favor with old Doctor i Stork. According to figures con-! tained in the survey, out of 6.665 ; ' highly educated women studied) j there were only 4.143 children in ; the entire group. That makes approximately six tenths ot a child . per matriculant, or 1.1 child per) ; married woman. Mothers outside ) 1 the college group averaged 3.35 ! children. So there you are. glr's. think it | over and don’t say yon weren't wanrf-d. Foster Mother Starved Chicks Altoona. Pa. —(U.R>—-Two bantam i chirks starved to death because) ) they unable to eat as a pigeon i does- from the mouth of the mother. The bantam eggs were hatched by a pigeon along with a number lof pigeon eggs. The mother pigeon accorded her mixed brood the same treatment, feeding all with her bill. The pigeons thrived, but the chicks, unable to take food from the bird's ( month, died. Estate Settled After 47 Years Placerville, Cal.— (U.R) —ln the j courts for 47 years, the estate of Henry Wulff, who died in 1885, is just being closed. His son acted as admintsfrator during the time, but technicalities prevented sett'ement ' or distribution. Two attorneys retained to handle the affair, died before it could be completed.

MICH I G A N PEACHES Large Elbertas and South Haven H. F. GILPEN ) 221 North Eleventh st. 11 block north of Lutheran Church) I Phone 816

CONFESSES TO KILLING GIRI Farm Hand Admits Striking School Teacher on Head With Hatchet Crawfordsville. Ind., Aug. 30. — (U.R) — Confession of the hatchet slaying of .Miss Lila Jones. 33, Richmond school teacher, was made, authorities said today, by Morris Green, 22-year-old farm hand ) employed by the victim's parents. Dying of wounds apparently inflicted by a hatchet. Miss Jones was : found in the yard of her parents’ farm home near here. Four deep gashes had been struck in the head.) According to the confession Green was said to have given authorities, the attack occurred while they were the only persons at the home. Green told authorities, they report I'd. that he became angry after he and Miss Jones had argued, and that he struck her with the hatchet. Green was arrested shortly after, the slaying, after he had summon•; ed physicians. He told them he •

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TH IF. VIM M Tn the Matter of determining the Tax ftetes for Certain Blue ('reek Township, Adams County, Indiana !’..! ••• the Board. ggg Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Blue ('reek Tnwn«h:p, County. Indiana, that the proper legal officers of suit] m i: ; ipa'.;'?. regular meeting place, on the 6th day of September 1332, will the following budget. Ml HI IM.F.T < I. tSSIFtC VITON FOR TOWXMIIP’* n 'l'owxnMhtp Fihul Salary of Trustee 600.00 Repair of Equipment .. Office Rent 60.00 School Furn. anti Equip rag Trustee’s Expense School Supplies rai a. Traveling 125.00 Janitor Supplies .. Records and Adv. 125.00 Fuel for S<•hn.»!< rag Public Pitches 75.00 Loans, Int. and Insurance rag Pay of Adv. Board 15.00 Transportation <>f »'hildr*n Miscellaneous: '2«»»n<r» Light and Power rag Total Twp. Fund 1200. M I Miscellaneous MM Tuition Fuud Total Special School Fund Pay of Teachers 3800.00 1 Mi School Transfers 3600.00 1 Rond Fund Mg Total Tuition Fund 7600.00 Ronds *»|x*« inl School Fund j Interest Repair of Building and I Total Bond Fund .... ‘ Ground 300.00 I rag ESTIMATE OF FINDS TO HE IDI*I I) ■ I nn n«hip I‘nitinn Fund Fnnd Total Budget Estimate for incoming year 1200 7600 De4Tuct Mist*. Revenue interning year gS (estimated on former year Misc. Rev.) Mg Subtract line 2 from line 1 .... 1200 71"* Unexpended Appropriations July 31 of SB 1 of present year 1200 gg Total (of lines 3,4, 5 and 6) 2400 7434 Actual Balance July 31st of present year 3*> 698 Tax to be collected present year 4 _ra| (December settlement) 4<»5 gg Total (of lines 8, 9. and 10) t 443 3658 W S ibt’a< t line 1! from lin»- 1957 3774 Est Working Bal. for six months after close of next year (nM greater than of line 3 Amt. to be raised by tax lOvy _ . __ (add lines 12 and 13) 1147 gg PROPOSED LEVIES . W Levy oh Ftfad Property ,k W Township .. -13 Tuition ‘ ® , Special School .35 Jg| i Bond — .12 H ro ■ X omptiratl%r Statement of Taxes Collected and to be ( Collected < ollerted ( olle<ted < Fuads |,ex j 1831 Levy 1’.»3- Lexy Township ... 860.59 858.46 H Road 430.29 28t.t5 Tuition 6454.48 6 438.51 6K2.H0 M Special School 6597.91 4578.48 H| Bond 1147,46 1144.92 V Poor , M I Total 1 ; ♦•»«».i13306 ' !.M "Taxpayers appetising .‘•hall have a right t » be heard t r>nn. Al« ■ tax levies have b*en determined, ten or more taxpi • feelini ra | selves aggrieved by such levies, may appeal to th” S'ate Hoardjra I Commissioners for further and final deffon thereon. »■ filing a l therefor With the County Auditor not late than the fourth Monday«■ l tembcr, and the State Board will fix a date of hearing in this era That at gaff meeting 81296 for the pay of transfers, ? 00 f nr teachers and >.?08 fnr the transportation of children will (PP ro »ra in the Special School Fund available for the year I *. ■ Dated August 25 1932 DAA’ID D HABEGOTW August 30 Sept. 6. Township ■■ *■ ■ ■ — — ■ — —. . _ - . .

Public Auction 40 —ACRE FARM —4O I will sell at Public Auction without reserve my 40 j farm, on the premises, 5 miles southeast ol Decatur, I miles west of Pleasant Mills, miles east of St. I church, on SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3rd AT 1:30 P. M. 10 acres, all under cultivation, good productive oilstrained; 8 room’house in good condition, cell ir. ,a '•50; granery and hen house. Plenty of fruit, strawiK, raspberries, etc. Electric power line at front of h |r "'’ is a very tine It) acre farm home, an ideal locatm • markets, schools amt church. Possession on or before March 1. 1933. who now lives on farm will show prospective Imye the farm at any time. TERMS -SI,OOO cash day of sale. Terms on >’J lor further particulars see Roy Johnson, auct., Deca JOHN THOMAS, Owner Roy Johnson, auct.

"Y Sl*

f"' 11 "! . ~ yard. WS Miss .1..,.. s r,,|l " L ' '""I Tea. lie,-.. a , She . t „,| Re hin.-e! ■ . . , Lidd., 8 The origin of , h< about walk eg „.„fp r , known fact tiist in Mrlr • - n t>rlts were h ,. w BV N-'.-S pro].;,..- Ri , »-vera in rhr - e-.-,-b«.' fork « " ander n holder. e„ • ish. In E: v'nn < ■>„ Ms tlißf „J, walks ut.d r and er . tuarrl',l for a rear. To Ifeving this j ,-< •]. n!t fonsldered . k-, ~ W|| M-ler blug . > . e gr... ln .L I on ( \Vor«, 1 nngnngr ■ , are eomM' e<i ,n ore called holo;.- ■ I rfhin -ong .ee . Th*' often ■ i or. t , , , fence Into n 00-,|. -he *h|>-l> Is ofteo re-nerknh!,