Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 227, Decatur, Adams County, 24 September 1932 — Page 2
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CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES »- ♦ FOR SALE Ftjß 8A1UB—1«M Biby Chicks 11 week old all heavy breeds at ape-1 trial price ('all Phone 44 Monroe I Hatchery. Monroe Ind. 322-61 ! FOR SALE—2 good work hcrsea; ■ 1 youhig horse and 1 cheap horse. William Aschlinian, Cialgviile! phone or Rt. 1 Monroe a225-3tx FOR SALE —A tine 8 room home. located on improved street; 4 rooms and bath down, 4 nice bed rooms up; open stairway; two car, garage; modern except furnace.! This is a beautiful home and must! be seen to be appreciated. See Roy Johnson, phone 265, Peoples l ! Ixtan £ Trust Bldg. 227a3t'j ■ 1 FOR SALE—Virgin wool comfort . ibats'plain and cheese clcth cov-i. ered. J. G. Niblick, Phone 191 225-tt, FOR SALE—Two' day oldTalt. Mrs.' Fred Bulmahn Decatur R. R. 7 . Hoagland Ph. ne. 226-:itx , FOR SALE — Guinea pigs. White j ‘ and colored. Feed like rabbits. ■ ’ Fine pet stock. Shamrock Caviary j 436 S. Ist St. k227-3tx ' FOR HALE —250 yearling hens t Tom Borron Strain big type Eng-■; lish White Leghorn 50c each John ! Steffen, Decatur R 2. Craigville u Phone. 226-3tx I FOR SALE — Ford transmission 1 ' bands. molded brake lining, spark plugs, piston rings, head | gaskets, auto paint, motor oil, 1 auto tires in all sizes. Porter Tire co. mta wanted i iVANTED—RADIO and ELECTRIC- < AL WORK. Tubes tested free.}) Phone 625 MILLER RADIO SER- , VICE. a 225-36 t 1 1 WANTED —You to knew that on September 26. 27 and 28 for three 1 days only, you can get a guaranteed I permanent for 98c. This will be Mr. I Leggett’s last trip to Decatur this !* year. So just bring a friend and get the first pernnnent at the regular; price, $3 and the next for 98c. Make ' your appointments now. Phone 1280 * Becker's Beauty Shop. g225-3t ' ——— ——— i WANTED TO BUY 40 acre tarm.| I hgye a cash customer for a 1 good 40 acre. Roy Johnson, phone ’ 265. 227a3t I — o 11 FOR RENT F.OR RENT—WiII Stepien's bouse ■in Monroe. Phone 3 long on 33. j 1 - 227a3t' : . 0 1 HARN MONEY AT HOME—Raise , •mushrooms cellar, shed, attic, j Gpiranteed ‘'Superspawn" Simplified, ‘bflorless. Crops purchased. . Book free. United, 3950 Lincoln. Ave.! Chicago. a227-ltx 1 VOWCK <»F rilHKl I.OSI RK lu_lhr C ircuit Court STATE OF INDIANA ; COUNTS OF ADAMS. SS. First. Juiut Stock I-ad<l Bank Fort Wayne vs. Paul Schulte. Emma ’ Schulte, Kufoene Ilunvon. Clara Runyon, Indiana Pipe Line Company,! Ollie Feller, Frank Jovien, Mrs. I Frank Jovken, wife of said Frank . Jovien,, whose first name is unknown to plaintiff, Charles Waddell.' Mrs. Charles Waddell, wife of said Charles, Waddell, whose first name is unknown to plaintiff. It appearing by affidavit, that the ( above entitled action is in relation* to real estate, and to foreclose ai mortgage on The west half Os the northeast! quarter of Section 21, Township 26 XartMiang* 15 east; the west half of the southeast quarter of Section! 15, Township 26 north, fCange 15 east) all that part of the southwest! qgarter of the northeast quarter of said Section 16, lying south of the: ljue Creek; also all that part of the’ southeast quarter of the northwest ! quarter of said Section 16, lying south <>f the Blue Creek (Containing all two hundred (2(101 acres, more nF less/ in Adams County, State of. iffiiana. and it appearing further that the de-i ffhdants, Paul Schulte, Emm* Sfliulte, his wife. Frank Jovien and AWs. Frank Jovien, wife of said 4 rfbank Jovien. whose first name isi i.Wk nown to plaintiff, are nou»re»idflits of the state of Indiana 'W ifdd defendants ah hereby notified to he and appear! iit the Adams Circuit Court in J tof- court house in the city of, Incatur, said county in the State of I ! FWttairti. on the 19th day of Novem-| her, 1932. and answer or demur to saM complaint. Failing to do so.! judgment will be taken against them' by default. • Milton C. Werling * 4’lerk of Adams Circuit Court Vtwey, Shoaf and Hoffman. Clark J. Lutz, Attorneys for n laintiff Jept. 21 Oct. 1-8. - ■, , -31
Roy H. Andres? LICENSED CHIROPRACTOR North 2nd St. A&ftve Schmitt Meat Market Phone 1133 OTHO LOBENSTEIN FUNERAL PARLOR Monroe, Ind. M's. Lobenstein, Lady Attendant. Business phone 90—Residence 81. Free Ambulance Service 24 hour service. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Glasses Fitted HOURS: ~ 8:30 to 11:30—12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135
MARKETREPORTS 1 — i DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected September 24 No commission ana no yardage. I ' Pig* s‘t.7."> 1 199-180 pounds $4.00 1 180-250 pounds .. $4.15 I 291>-300 pounds $4.00 Roughs $2.75-33.00' Stags $1.75 I Veals $6.75 Lambs - $4.75 INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK Indianapolis, Ind., Sept. 24. —(U.K) I —Livestock: Hogs. 2.000; holdoversr, 256; i mostsly 5c off; 160-250 lbs.. $4.25$4.30; 250-300 lbs., $4.10-34.20; 300 lbs., up. $3.8544; 140-160 lbs., $4.15$4.25; 100-140 lbs., $4 $4.10; pack-' ing sows. $3-$3.75. Cattle, 50; calves, 100; for week I —most slaughter classes 25-50 c off; some heifers off more; choice weighty steers, $9.75410.15; others largely. $7.25-$8.75; some $9 and $9.25; heifers generally, $5.2546.75; load or two $7.50 and $7.75; com mon down t* $3; most cows, $2.75$4; odd head. $4.2544.75; low cutters and cutters, $142.50; veals steady, $7 down. Sheep, 200; lambs tending low,er; ewe aud wethers, $5 5045.75; bucks, $1 off; throwouts down to $2.50. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne. Ind.. Sept. 24. —(U.PJ — Livestock: Hogs, steady, 5c off; pigs. $3.75$4; 140-170 lbs.. $4.15-$4.25; 170-250 lbs.. $4.25-14.35; 250-300 lbs.. $4.20$4.25; 300-350 lbs., $4.10-34.20; roughs. $3-31.25; stags, 32-42.50; calves. $7; ewe and -wether lambs. $5.25; bucks, $4.25. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., Sept. 24. — ill.FS —Livestock: Hogs, on sale. 1,300; active. 1015c under Friday's average; good to choice. 160-200 lbs., $4.75; few decks 210-240 lbs.. $4.85; pigs quoted. $4.50; extremely plain pigs and underweights, $4. Cattle: Receipts, 75; holdovers, 175; Saturday's trade nominal, for .week steady; good to choice dry feds steady to higher; medium and , lower grades 25-50 c and more low-j er; late trade very dull; clearing! complete; choice steers and yearljings, $9-$9.50; good, $7.75-38.85;! 'fleshy grassers and short feds. $5.50-$7.25; common steers and |heifers. $3.75-35.25; cows 25c low'er; medium to good. $3.2544; cutter grades. $1.5042.50. Calves: Receipts, none; vealers ! steady throughout week. $8 down. Sheep: Receipts, none; lambs iunevenly, 15-40 c lower for week; ! , supply moderate; .good to choice,! | s6-86.25; top, $6.35; common and! ; medium. $4.5045.25; inferior throwouts, $4 down; bucks. $5; handyweight ewes. $2.5042.75. — CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Sept Dec. May I Wheat, old .51% .54% .59% ! .Corn .27% .29 .34%' Oats .18% .21 uOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected September 24 ’ No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better . 42c N . 2 New Wheat 28 lbs 41c | Old or New Oats 13c! Soy Beans Me New No. 3 White Corn ... 30c No. 3. Yell w Corn 35c: LOCmL GROCERS EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen 18c o Get the Habit — Trad* at Hom* i
YAGER BROTHERS Funeral Directors Ambulance Service, day or right. Lady Attendant Phone 105-44 Funeral Home, 110 So. First St. ; For Better Health See Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m. Itos p. m., 6toßp. m. Phone .314 104 So. .3rd st. 1 1 G. J. KOHNE. M.D. Physician-Surgeon announces the opening of an office at the corner of Third and Jefferson streets Phones: 445 Office. 389 Residence Office Hours, 10 to 11:30 a m. 1 to 4 p.m. 6:30 to 8:30 i>.m. S. E. BLACK Funeral Director When you are troubled by grief it is a comfort to know your cares will be fittingly I taken care of. 500 — Phone — 7kZ Lady Assistant Ambulance Service.
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NOTH H Til UFFKMIiNTS TO QI IFT TITLE In the IdutMN Circuit Court September 'Ferm, 1R32 - .STATE OF INDIANA: ADAMS COUNTY SS: » Rebecca el al. v». David ’ Coffee, et aI. Now comes the plaintiffs, by Hubert R. M<' 'lenaluin. their attorney, and file their eonkphiint herein together with the affidavit of a competent person, that the following named defendants are non-residents' of the state of Indiana: to-wit: Georffe PhUlilKs and Max David Phillips. that said action is for the purpose of quieting title to real estate in the State of Indiana; that a cause of action exists against all of said. , defendants; that all of said defen. dants are necessary parties to said iu tk>n and that they are believed to, be non residents of the State of lnd-j iana. The following real estate in Ad-' ams County. State of Indiana, is des-[ cribed in said complaint, to-wit: ' The southwest quarter (% > of | the southwest quarter (> <»f Se< -| , tion eight <Si, township twenty-sev-I . »-n (27) North Range fourteen (14 li East, containing forty (40) acres off land more or less. Tliis action is instituted and pro-| seauted by said plaintiffs for the' : purpose of quieting its title to the! ! real estate above described as i against all demands, claims, and. ’ claimants whatsoever. Notice is therefore hereby given* said defendants that unless they be and appear on the first-day of the NovenMber Term. 1032, of the Adams 'Circuit Court of Indiana, being the list day of November, 1932. to be | begun ami holden on the 21st day I of Novembber 1932, at the Court! | House In the City (formerly town) of Decatur, in said County and State and answer or demur to said com- j ! plaint, the same will be heard and; determined in their absence. In witness whereof, I hereunto set I ‘ my hand and fix the seal of said! Court in the office of the Clerk | thereof in the city of Decatur. Indi iana this 21st day of November 1932. Milton C. Werling. Clerk of Adams Circuit Court I Hubert R. McClenahan lAtt’y for Plaintiffs. J Sept. 24, Oct. 1-S| s \LE In the tilMin* <4r<uit Court. Mate of Indiana. 4'»■«• dumber I 4X* Ibe Mutual BeaefK Life luMurancr < out pan > si Corporation, vw. Jacah M. Hoffman, etal. By virtue an Order of Sale to me. directed and delivered from the] | Clerk of the Adams Circuit Court nW the above entitle cause, I have levied; ‘ upton and will expose for sale by{ public AUCTION at the Court House f I Door, east entrance first floor in; said County between the hours of! in o’clock A. M. and I o’clock P. M I on Thursday the 2bth day of (h tober» i A. D. 1932. the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, I of the following described real es-; tate TO-WIT; The southeast quarter of the south east quarter of section 8, containing I 40 Acres, more or less; except onehalf acre out of the southwest corner thereof, being 10 rods, north and south, by 8 rods east and west,! for Schcool purposes, and leaving- , after said exception, 39 Vj ax.res, I i more or less. Also the northeast 1 quarter of the northeast quarter of I section 17, containing 40 acres more i or less, all in township 26 north. I range 15 east, and containing in the I aggregate, after said exception. < 91*: I acres, more or less, in Adams Coun--1 ty. Indiana; | And on failure to realize the full < amount of. the judgment interest i , therein and costs, I will at the naine | I time and in the manner aforesaid of- l | fer for sale the fee simple of the i j above described premises. j Taken as the property of Jaeofo M. I Hoffman, et al at the suit of The | Mutual Benefit Life Insurance ComI pany A corporation, I Said Sale will be made without any < I relief whatever from valuation or j i Appraisement Laws. Burl Johnson, Sheriff Adams County, Indiana i H. M. De Voss Attorney. Sept. 24-Oct. 1-8 1 Get The Hu bit — Trade at Home
| AUCTION MEANS ACTION AND THE HIGH DOLLAR Your Real Estate, either farm lands or city property, Live Stock. Farm Machinery and household furniture can be sold quickly and • for the cash and you will realize the highest dollar possible, if it is properly advertised and the sale conducted by a competent i Auctioneer. Property of all kinds totaling ' thousands of dollars converted into cash each year for my many customers is the best evidence as s ’to my ability as an Auctioneer. The Auction way is the fairway !to sell it. If you want Action and satisfaction Phone or write Roy S Johnson AUCTIONEER Decatur, - - Indiana Phone Office 265—Residence 1022. Office Peoples Loan & Trust Bldg.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24,1932.
- iiin' —ai b—— 71 DONALD cSPYJUOHT, 1930, BYTOD3 FEATVRSS STNPICA TC, INC. " ' * ' * ' .'■j _ IL*L _ii il— i ii i' » ~~~
CH AFTER FORTY-FOUR “You said one day, you thought Jimmie loved his wife," observed : Mrs. Brownley as Patricia sliced 1 some tomatoes. “Why do you think ' he loves her? They haven’t lived ' together in a year.” “No, and that’s the reason for you,” said Patricia brutally. “The only reason. It's also the reason . for me,” she added. “They were i living together when I came on the scene. But they were at one of those ’ impa.ises that married folks seem i to reach at one time or another; resentful toward each other, proud, ■ avoiding explanation that might have brought understanding, and ] generally discontented.” “But he told me,” gasped Mrs. Brownley, “that there was nothing between you and him.” “There ’ wasn’t And because there wasn’t he probably imagines , he still wants me. It’s an awlui ' muddle.” Mrs. Brownley made pictures n« the tablecloth with a fork. “You really are rather bitter. Have you teased to care for him?” “No. And I’m not bitter toward him. I couldn’t be. I can see his side of it too clearly. I feel more sorry for him —a great deal more than I do for myself. And I feel sorry for you. And for Aunt Pam. I don’t know which of you is the more to be pitied.” “Well, of course, I'm in the worst fix. She has an independent fortune of her own. and he'll settle a large sum on her. I have nothing but the dividends he makes for rae >n the stock market. And naturally if we break up, that would stop. And I won’t trust my little principal in anybody else’s hands." In a flash, Patricia saw the answer to several things that hsd cricked at her mind. For all that Mrs. Brownley talked of having so little, she had lived two months at the Edouard VII, at sever dollars a day; and though she said she didn't care for clothes and had only one or two good things, Patricia had discovered she had a great many good things. That Jimmie must be furnishing the money seemed certain; yet Mrs. Browrley was not the type to take mongy from a man. Jimmie had gotten around this diffculty simply by 'aking her small capital and pretending to gamble with it in Wall Street, thus enabling him to give her lavish “dividends.” Patricia wondered that the woman never thought of this herself. Perhaps it had been she who had thought of it first, and put the idea in Jimmie’s mind, thus saving her from lowering herself in his esteem, and at the same time accepting all he could give her—Oh, no—l must have a nasty suspicious mind — It i was his idea, of ceurse—and she's exactly the type who never give it a thought. “In the circumstances,” said Patricia, “maybe Jimmie could win some money for you.” “I don’t want him to win it for me, unless—” she choked, went on, “nnless he is mine. I thought he was. Now I see he isn’t—and I don’t i know what to do about my life. I You're lucky in every way. You • I have your work—something to look forward to if yo« don't want to marry. And if you do want to marry, you have Jack, young, good looking, rich. For roe a blank — if , I lose Jimmie.” She blinked back . the tears and smiled. “Don’t bother I about me. J don’t often do this. I Sometimes it gets the best of me , i though, when I thmk of the fuJ tore.” “I haven't Jack,” said Patricia J “He's gone." i “Why don’t you get him back?”!
’ ♦ 4 , I Test Your Knowledge ,j | | Can you answer seven of these j , I test questions? Turu to Page I • ' Four for the answers. I « 1. What is amAbattior? | 2. Name the candidate for Presi- [ dent of the Socialist-Labor Party? [I 3. What is an Alcade? 4. Who is known as “The Bard of | Avon?" 5. Who was Adelim Patti? 1 6. Where is Westminster Abbey? 7. In what country is the city of Riga? I 8. On what body of water is the
NOW SHOWING ‘NOT AT THE END OF HIS ROPE*
“I doubt if I eould.” “Everybody says he's crazy about you. He’s a peach. I met him the day you left Palm Beach—we got to talking. Then 1 saw him a few times in New York. Really, I could love him if I weren’t so in love with Jimmie.” Patricia pondered this. Strange Jack had never told her about meeting Mrs. Brownley. Os course her name had never come up. . . . But there was something very disagreeable about the idea that the woman had met both Jack and Jimmie in Palm Beach, and had seen both in New York. Os course people talked at resorts; but unless they were fnends they so rarely met again. “I must run,” she said. “11l be late for my lesson. Be back about four. You can stick around and read or do whatever you like if you don’t feel like getting out.” She ran out, her mind troubled by the problems of the woman she should have hated; but somehow liked. Something in the softness, the very helplessness of Myra Brownley appealed to the sturdiness of Patricia. ... I ean see why Jimmie cares for her. ... And I can see too, why men loved women of the olden times more easily and tenderly than they love us. . , . She really is in an awful fix. . . . And so is he. Well, I’m the one to get out. Having set*'.ed this question, a lense of youthful heroism swept her. She felt she was doing a rather fine thing in stepping out for another woman when she knew the winning cards were in her hands. For the first time in a year, her conduct impressed her. She had loved Jimmie so long; waited so patiently; yet she was deliberately determined to give him up for another woman; because that other needed him more. She sent off a wire to Jimmie, in care of his London bankers, saying: “Mrs. B. needs you. I don’t. Goodbye.” Maybe 11l back out, she kept thinking that night as she fell asleep. I’m feeling great nox. but when I cool off I'm going to suffer horribly. The following day her heroic world collapsed. It began around eleven o’clock when Mr. Braithwait received a phone call from Pamela. She had arrived the previous evening and wanted him to have lunch with her. She inquired about Patricia, but did not ask her to come along, nor to the phone. Pamela wanted his advice about something. Mr. Braithwait didn’t know what Patricia felt as if she had received a blow. Accepting at first Pamela’s word for it that she was disillusioned and bored, Patricia had in the beginning dismissed all thought of Pamela’s reaction or feeling tn the matter between herself and Jimmie. But Jimmie’s talk in the Regence had revealed many things.... First, that he loved his wife ... a thing that had not once occurred to Patricia. His fancy for her she had taken for love She now saw, as she had told Mrs. Brownley, that love includes something more than that. She had been greatly shocked by his entanglement with “aaothcr woman" while he supposedly loved her — and also she saw that, loving Aunt Pam. but srightiy estranged from her, it was quite within the possibilities that she herself had represented but an entanglement with “another woman”. What he had told her about the closed, Ijut unlocked door, showed that Aunt Pam had not looked I upon the closing of that door as
port of Odessa? 9. Who was Euclid? 10. W’ho was Jkoquin Miller? COURTHOUSE Named Executrixes Mrs. Lucinda Yager aud Mrs. Mary Pease have been appointed executrixes of the estate if the late Samuel H. Hocker. The will was i prcibated this morning. Real Estate Transfers John Thimas et ux to Grace I. Wyer, 40 acres in St. Marys towu-
final; but had merely retired behind it in' her hurt and humiliation, waiting for Jimmie to come to his senses and sue for pardon. He himself said he now knew this was all it had meant. When he had turned to another woman instead of back to Pamela, she had decided that the matter was graver than the mere infatuation of a man in the thirties for a fresh young face. And she had —locked the door. From the moment Jimmie had told her all about this, Patricia bad realized the enormity of what she had done. She had said to herself, “But I didn’t know. I didn’t know. She lied to me. She has nobody to blame but herself.” However, Patricia had not the comfortable faculty of being able to appease her conscience with selfdeception. . . . Oh, I can lie to myself till I’m black, but I know I've been an absolute little rotter. I've broken up Aunt Pam's home. She may have locked him out over Mrs. Brownley; but it was I who prepared the way for Mrs. Brownley. And now I think I’m a heroine because I’m ready to step out like a gallant lady and let Mrs. Brownley have him. . . . What I’ve actually done is take Aunt Pam’s husband away from her, then turned him over to another woman. In reality. I'm trying to railroad him into marrying Mrs. Brownley . . . that ia. I’m helping her to do it I wonder if that woman doesn't see how she's bound Jimmie up? And if sh e didn't see I'd see it when she told me all that? Maybe she knew I am just the sort of little fool who would make just the < sort of heroic gesture I have made. Oh, poor Aunt Pam! She was crying over the phone. . I could tell by the way Dadums talked to her. And for Aunt Pam to break down. , . , She jumped up suddenly, went to the mirror and stared furiously into it. “Patricia Braithwait.” she said, “you are a darned little rotter. But if there’s a single truthful bone in your vile little body I want you to answer one question. Are you so big and broad and kind and sympathetic that you’d quietly step out of another woman’s way if you actually wanted a man yourself You know darn well you wouldn't You know the reason you liked the woman in the first place was be cause you didn’t want him any more, and you didn’t have the gall to say to him, ‘sorry, old dear, that I’ve upset your affaire, but count me out of the mess. I've changed my mind’. It hurt your vanity abominably that he hadn't spent the last year mooning over you; but outside of that you were relieved, and grabbed at the woman as a life saver. . . . “Now you know the truth! And it serves you damn right that you’ve lost the man you did want.” She walked over to the easel and stared at the deserted scene. . . . That’s what I've done to myself Maybe done to Aunt Pam and Jimmie. . . . Well, the least I can do is try to get them out of the mess I'm going to see Aunt Pam this very night and tel) her just what Jimmie told me. And I'm going to have a talk with Myra Brownley right now. . . . She went to the phone. Mrs. Brownley was just getting up. Was almost dressed. Would be delight ed to have lunch with Patricia It would be her breakfast. She'd be over in twenty minutes. Patricia charged about the room, calling herself every vile name sh? could think of. And also doing some real thinking. iTo Re Cons nued) Cing F« -atare* Ryadicate, Tnt.
| ship for $2,000. • New Cases Filed First Joint Stock Land Bank vs. I Paul Schulte »t al, suit for foreclos- ‘ ure, demanding judgment of $15,000. Clark J. Lutz is attorney for the plaintiff. Augusta Schamerloh vs. Charles E Baxter, for tossessi.n of real estite. Fruchte and Litterer are attornes tor the plaintiff. o BARGAINS — Bargains th uivmg Room, Dining Room Suita, Mat fr-sses and Rugs. Stuckey and Co. Monroe, our Phone number le 44 ct. Get the Habit — Trade at Home
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Public Auction | HOUSEHOLD FI RNITURE J As I am leaving the city. I will sell at Public Auction at n I donee, 316 North hSrst street. Decatar, Ind . oa ■ THURSDAY, SEPT. 29th 1 Comnieneing at 10:00 a. m. I Marshall A Wendell Piano and bench; three Jacquard Vekwl | ing room suites; one sure w;th pillow arms; one witii 4 aTe J j Victor combination Radio, used one year; Spartan Jr. MidtnH Victor Orthophone Vlctrola; two large overstaffed chairsextension gate leg table, mahogany; 4 ladder back <hairs. neirß mataogauiy library table; Five 9x12 rugs; several small rugs BeJ Walnut dining room suite; Mahogany serving table; 6 suite ; 3 piece Walnut bed room suite; solid oak dinette set 3 desk and chair; mirrors: several floor lambs, table lamps and M lamps; .New metal l>ed complete; two narrow hall tables . )Ue J antique table: glass door cupboard; square diniug tahleandt J 4-buiner white porcelain gas stove; piece linoii-uui 11x12, refrigerator; gray breakfast set. Leather upholstered chairs; «J dining room chairs; lawn mower; 50 ft. garden hose; a lot 71 dishes: Stein set. porcelain lined and pewter lids Antique J Pewter candle holders; Electric Hammond office dock; $3 mantle clock; many articles too numerous to mention. 1 This furniture is like new. I TERMS—CASH. I MRS. FREEMAN FISKE, OwnJ Roy Johnson, auct. I 1 I A Great Love Story i A Greater t I i Football Story A I J ♦ An epic of the gridiron, built 1 around the Rockne system and the i I personality of the greatest football coach of all time . . Written by a master story teller * whom Rockne endorsed as the best fitted of any contemporary writer X to tell a football story. I I I Don't Miss It! Begin “HUDDLE!” October I »« Daily Democrat 1
