Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 14, Decatur, Adams County, 17 January 1933 — Page 2

Page Two

■cifiniiijiii niaw—i iji j * CLASSIFIED " ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES * FORSALE FOR SA LB—Strawberry roan horse 5 year old, also dapple grey horse 8 year old, sound and good workers. Christ Macke, Jr., Route 4 Decatur. 12a-3tx FOR SALE —80 used piano rolls % price; New Studio Couch and pillow, 110; New Oil Stoves from $4.98 to $55. Sprague Furniture Co., Monroe st., phone 199. 13t3 FOR SALE—I Poland China sow, immune from cholera. 7 Shoats. George Brown, first house south of the Dent School. g3t-x FOR SALE—3S acres of land, 1 mile east and % mile south of Monroe. W. S. Smith, liquidating agent. Monroe, Indiana. g4-6teod FOR SALE —One sorrel mare in foal;" five collie pups. Call Floyd Shoaf, phone 0-885. 12t3x FOR SALE—A milk rout with 1% Ton Graham Brothers truck. Price reasonable. Want to sell on account of health. Inquire Box M, K., % Democrat office. g!6-3t i o WANTED WANTED—Canner and cutter cows fat cattle and hogs. Anybody having fat stocik to sell call William Butler, -phone 274 glO-tf LOST ANI) FOUND LOST —Black and tan hound dog. Peter Everett, route 6, Decatur. 12G3tx HOUSE PASSES” SIX MEASURES KILLS 3 BILLS ' i CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE recommended, however, that the ’ original draft was almost com- , pleteljr changed. The bill now provides that couhty commissioners be given 1 full responsibility to choose their highway supervisor. Originally it ' had been planned to place the f work under direction of county surveyors. 1 ■ 0 < RICHARD STONE BURIED TODAY CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE Inger, Abbott Johnson and Dr. T- >- - Was Club President Mr. Stone, whose residence was at»7lo East Main St., was a member of the First Baptist Church aiicT the Delaware Lodge of Masons, as well as a past commander of • the Muncie Commandery, Knights Templar. He had been president and district governor of the; Exchange ■ Club and state president of the United Commercial Travelers, of which he was a fouhder. He was recently elected trustee of the Muncie chapter of the Masonic Lodge. Born ,at Decatur, Ind.. Mr. Stone attended school at Valparaiso College. He came to Muncie from Trenton. N. J„ in 1902 to superintend the insallatfon of the Dela wape County independent telephone system, later bgk-nming connected with the Warner Electric comnffhy. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Stone; a daughter. Mrs. Marvin W. Smith, of Muncie; a sister. Miss Victoria Stone, of Chicago, and three nephews. Herbert A. Ijockie, of Indianapolis: Richard Stone, of Fort Wayne, and Lloyd Stone, of Los Angeles.” t <o Get the Habit — Trade a Home SALE CALENDAR Jan. 18 — Al Gage. 2% miles : south of Decatur on Pleasant Mills road. Closing out sale. Roy? Joi’hAon. auct. Jan. 19 Clyde Noffsingrr, 1 i-4 mi. west of Decatur on Archibold Road. Tain" road that runs by Old S< Itafer Saddlery Building. Closing out sale Roy S. Johnson, Auct. F<d> 20 -Frank Morton 3-4 miles j southeast of Poe on the River Road Stock Sale. Roy S Johnson, Auc-' ttoneer. Jan. 20 and 21 Adams County Auto Company, Madison Street, Decatur, 'lndiana. All garage equipment, tools and automobile accessories. Roy S. Johnson, Auctioneer. Feb. 23—Bert Marqaaardt 3 mi., north of Monroeville on the Lincoln Highway. Chester White brerd sow? sale. Roy S. Johnson, Auctioneer. Jan. 25—Graham and Parrish. 4 miles south of Decatur. Chester White breed sow and gilt sale. Roy ohnsoa, auctionesr. Jan. 26—Nelson Lahrman 3 mi. east of State Road 16 and 3-4 ini. north. First house south Unto Chapel Church. Schnepp and Drew Auctioneers. Jan. 28 — Decatur Community sale Jam. 36—Carl H. Tielker, 8 mi. north of Decatur on State Road 27. Closing out sale. Roy S. Johnson. Auctioneer. Feb. 1-Charles Miller i> mi. east , of Decatur, % mi. north and % mi j east of Calvary Church. Closing out sale. Roy S Jnhnsrm. Auctioneer. I

MARKETREPORTS ' DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected Jan. 17 ' No commission and no yardage. 140 to 220 pounds $3.20 ■ ■ 220 to 250 pounds $3 no 250 to 300 pounds ... $2.90 1 300 to 350 pounds $2.80 100 to 140 pounds $3.00 j ‘ Roughs $2.00 ’ Stags , SI.OO Vealers - - $6.00 Lambs $5.50 FARM BUREAU ASSN Paying Prices No. 1 Eggs, dozen 17c No. 2 Eggs, dozen 14c No. 3 Eggs, dozen 12c > Poultry Market Heavy hens, Tb. ..... 11c Heavy Pullets, lb. 11c Leghorn hens, lb. ._ 6c Chickens, lb 8c Leghorn young roosters lb. 4c Old Roosters, lb 4c Fort Wayne Livestock < Hog market steady; 100-200 Tbs. < $3.40; 200-225 lbs $3.30; 225-250 lbs. $3.20; 250-300 lbs. $3.10; 300- , 350 lbs. $3: roughs $2.25-2.50; i stags $1.50; calces $6: ewe and wether lambs $6.25; bucks $5.25. t EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK f East Buffalo, N. Y., Jan. 17— tU.R) —Livestock: j Hogs: on sale, 1.600; active, strong to mostly 10c under Mon- t day s average; weights below 210 t lbs., at full advance; desirable 160210 lbs., $3.75 to mainly $3.80 and i $3.85; 235-260 lbs., $3.50-$3.65; pigs J around $3.50. Cattle: Receipts. 150; little done) on steers, one load medium kind , 870 lbs, $4 75; 25c or more under Monday; other bids corresponding- ' ly lower; cows scarce, steady; cutter grades. $1.60-$2.25. Calves: Receipts, 150; vealers unchanged; good to choice, $7; ! sparingly, $7.50. Sheep: Receipts. 200: lambs' steady: quality and sorts consider-; ed; medium to good handyweights, i $6: few fat 95-lb. lambs, $6.25; choice handyweights quoted above $6.50. Indianapolis Livestock Hogs 7800, holdovers 62; most-1 ly steady; few lights 5e up; 120210 lbs. mostly $3.30-3.40; top $3.45; 210-235 lbs. $3.20-3.30; 235-!. 275 lbs. $3.10-3.20; heavies $33.10; packing sows mostly $2.25-1 2.50. Cattle 1400; calves 600; slow on weighty steers, others active, about steady; good-choice fed steers and yearlings $5.75-6.50; top $6.75 for choice 1050 lb: bulk plain slaughter steers $4-5; butcher heifers largely $4-4.75; light fed heifers mostly $5-6: few $6.50, beef cows mostly $2-2.50; few to $3; low cutters and cutters $1.252; veals steady $6 down. Sheep 600; fat iambs steadystrong; no fed westerns here; sorted natives $6-6.25; few choice I lots up to $6 50; throwouts mostly $3.50 down; fat ewes sl-2. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat : 47% 47% 48% Corn 26% 27% 29 Oats 17% 17% LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected Jan. 17 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 tbs. or belter 4"rl No. 2 New Wheat. 581 gs 39c j Oats 13c' Soy Beans 40c!, No, 3. Old White Corn 20cit No. 3 Old Yellow Corn 26c ; I New Yellow Corn 22c!* Rye 25c 11 o I, ARRIVALS *' Mr. ind Mrs. Christ Knipsteiu,|< jlloute 1. Decatur, are the parents of a boy baby bom at th- Adams : .County Memorial Hospßal, Mon-' ' 'lay night. ~ j There is a toicl wave coming and you can buy an overJ for half the regular N. A. BIXLER r OPTOMERIST Eyes Examined. Glasses Fitted, i HOURS: 8:3" »o 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135. s . E . BLA C K Funeral Director I It Is a comfort to know that when I Hie time comes for the last farewell the last rites can safely be entrusted to us. 500—Phones—727 I I.adv Asst. Ambulance Service

• THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“STICKING TO THEIR GUNS” AR ' ——c- 7 heXr'/e» HEWRYe* <’l 7UA I g° see | ahoy,wngtyouhKrdA ( m d) (7) Z/0 * THIS IS ELECTION DAYJ . ( nA“R000 ‘ ) HOVJ THE ELECTION SOMPIN \ ®!HW‘. YOU MM)6 I IIU CC’<Jy/ C> ANO t MAKE IT A c \ FOR THE HOLIDAY; is coming along-holiday ANO / . HOLIDAY FOR ALL-j/L \ LET ME KNOW IF THERE) A YOTE CASTED YfT; g VERY SOOY WENT*/ ' IS MUCH EXCITEMENT-/ U /f 1 RftS , ■ Polls and I . A / I i hope w sheep tol R nobody on to / k kvOTe-r-'fW ,I ; '' 1 / ARE PATRIOTIC THE STREETS | L C ■ i TO T? / STWjS R At ® Ji efifli IP C^'Sri6.n’r.' li ta7aJ l Cej‘‘ I S' \~ T /Il \ V >/\ \ — jij ' 1933, Kin/t Ftatures Syndicwe, Inc., // HHIHn \ <| I x 1 —1 — »

f Test Your Knowledge I Can you answer seven of these test question? Turn to page Four for the answers, 1. To which country does the African Gold Coast belong? 2. What does ‘ibid.” mean? 3. Where are the scenes of Verdi’s opera Aida laid? 4. What is the atomic weight of: oxygen ? 5. In which battle did Jiackson. earn the nickname “Stone-1, wall?" 6. Where did the disaster to the | excursion steamer "Eastland occur?: 7. W'hat is a bi-metallic currency system? 8. What color is beige? 9. Who coftiptosed “St. Louis Blues?” 10. Who .is next in line of Presidential succession after the Secretary of State? MAY RESTRICT RELIEF BILL TO TWO PRODUCTS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE cessful. as would wheat.” He explained that 60 per cent of thej cotton crop is available for export. whereas almost the entire wheat crop is for use domestically. Smith said he personally favored a plan whereby the government would ■ buy up the cotton surplus this year and sell it back on credit in proportionate amounts to those farmers who agreed to make drastic production cuts. The cotton would be held until fall and then resold presumably at a profit due to increased market prices resulting from lower production and the lack of a surplus. Smith said he believded the transaction could lie carried out under the regional agricultural credit corporations set up under the Reconstruction Finance Corporation act, which he said had “almost unlimited credit and discount privileges." “1 went over that with the gov ernor in detail," he said, “and he said the thing for the cotton people to do is to get together and decide if they prefer that plan." “He said," Smith continued, “it would be agreeable to him for the cotton people to agree on some plan which would adopt cotton to the bill and to Include* their idea of what would give relief to cotton. “He was not familia" with the details of the bill as it passed the house, but he did insist that dairy products, peanuts, hogs. etc.— in a word all but cotton and wheat—be eliminated, and that cotton be so modified as to meet what in the opinion of the cotton people was the thing to do. Smith said the president-elect’s first thought had been to try the bill on one product, wheat. —-— o—xotk>: xox-Kf:sn*>:xis In the Adniux < In-ult Court. November Term, 1»32. (none No. 145:10. STATE OF INDIANA COUNTY OF ADAMS, SS: I 'avid D. HMbegger eml, vs. Ezra Hahegger etal, Comes now the plaintiffs l.y Lennart. Heller and Si liurger, their attorneys, and tile their intnpla hit lie,Tin together with affidavit ~f a pomp etent person that the following i name,l defendants are non-residents [,,f the State of Indiana, towit- Peter Hal>egg<-r, Mary Leluiiiin. 11.-mo K Habegger, Etiud Habegger, and' Melina Knutson; that said a. lion Is for the purpose of partition of i< al estate tn tile State ■ f Indiana; that a cause of n.-tlon exists against all, of said defendants and that said de-. 1 fondants are ne-essary parties to said action. Notice Is therefore hereby given said defendants that unless they be' and appear on the 22 rtav of tli»i Februarw Term inn.'t nt the Adams t'ireiiit Court of Indiana, la-log the. 2nd dav of March 1333, to be begun! ad hold"" on th- 6th day of Feb. ruary 1333 at the Court House tn! jtlio city <>.f Decatur, in said county i and .‘■tate. and answer or demur to Isafd petition, th" same will be lieaixl and determined in their absence. | 1" Witness Whereof 1 hereunto set; my hand and affix the sea! of said c ourt at the office of the Clerk j tbereol In the city of I>e-atur. Indiana, this Ifttli dav M January 133::. Milton C. Werling I Cleric of the Adams Circuit Court 1 nihiio, Heller and *u burger, tttornrya for I'laiutlff. — ■■l —’a." 1 ■■ AUTOS Refinanced on Smaller Pay. ment*. Extra Money if Desired. Quick Service. Franklin Security Co. Over Schafer Hardware Store Decatur, Ind. Phone 2-3-7

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1933.

PARTY LEADERS ARE AFTER LONG ' CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE emphatically states that the country is going to pot and can be saved only by redistribution of wealth and some form of currency inflation |or expansion. A group whose numI bers have not yet been revealed ' stands ready to help Leng sabotage ! senate business pending currency relief. And in the house the inflation tide is swelling toward the flood.

Af’W >^l G ! Sabatini I -i inZ.RsteelSataM Ct M p MribuMby Cjl ■ ■ King

CHAPTER FIFTY-TWO I Bundry turned his clay-coloured i face to de Bernis, thrusting out a 1 lip and shrugging his disgust. I ‘Tve done what I could, Charley. 1 You’ve heard." Monsieur de Bemis was very sol- l emn. “I’ve heard. 1 understand. It I is finished, then.” He too, shrugged. “The fortune of war.” Himself he ' lifted over his head the silver-en-crusted baldrick that carried his I sword, and protfered it to Sharpies in token of surrender. : The Lieutenant, took it, inclining ’ his head a little in acknowledg- < ment, and handed it to one of his i men who stood by the bow of the i stranded longboat. “And now Tom Leach, if you i please,” he said, looking round as i he spoke, wondering, perhaps, that i he had not yet seen that redoubt- I able pirate, and that he should not i have been present at this parley. i “As, yes,” said Bundry grimly. 1 “Tom Leach, to be sure." He heal- i tated a moment, his piercing eyes upon the fair young face of the i lieutenant. “Dead or alive was the condition,” he said, between question and assertion. i Lieutenant Sharpies stared. “What? Is he dead already?” Bundry nodded, turned, and started off up the beach towards the massed buccaneers and what lay behind them, screened by them. Monsieur de Bemis went after him, caught and held him a moment by the shoulder whilst he murmured something to him. It was something that made that pallid mask momentarily change its set expression. Then, with a grin and a nod. Bundry went on, and de Bernis came slowly back, and at a word from Sharpies entered the waiting boat Watching ever from the red bulwarks of the Royal Mary, Priscilla saw and understood. A little moan escaped her. “The cowards! The treacherous cowards!” she cried. “They have surrendered him. Surrendered him to save their vile skins.” The Major, careful to betray no satisfaction, answered colourlessly. “Naturally. Could anything else have been expected of them?" He set an arm about her to steady and comfort her as she faltered there, suddenly overcome, her senses swimming. Tenderly he supported her as far as the mainhatch. and gently lowered her to sit upon the coaming. There, with her elbows on her knees, she took her head in her hands, abandoning herself to silent misery The Major sat down beside her. and his arm was soothingly placed again about her shoulders. He could go so far as to stifle jealous resentment of this overwhelming grief. But he had no consoling words to offer her. An officer, pacing by the rail of the quarter-deck, looked down upon them, as did. too. from the other side, some of the hands lounging on the forecastle. But Miss Priscilla heeded nobody and nothing. Grief and horror dazed hei senses It was as if some part of her had been violently wrenched away She was aroused at last by the gusty passage of the large gaudy I figure of the Admiral, who crossed | the waist with elephantine tread a couple of men following him As in a dream she remembered having just heard someone say that Sharpies was returning. She looked up to see Sir Henry reach the bulwarks and then she heard his brazen voice raised in passion. “Where the devil's Leach, then? Sharpies hasn’t got him. after all. Damn him for a fool! Below there,

The $2,400,000,000 (B) veterans’ bonus drive has been reborn. A bipartisan bonus caucus met yesterday. House inflationists found their ranks reinforced by representatives who would issue money with which to pay the former soldiers. The inflation movement scarcely can expect more than to hear itsself talk at this short session. But the long filibuster Is inexorably drawing President-elect Roosevelt into a position from which, soon after March 4. he will be farced

Aldersly. Bid Benjamin stand by with his gun-crew. He’ll be needed in a moment. I’ll shoot them all to bits! I’ll teach the dogsl Do they think they can get gay with Henry Morgan?” * He leaned far over the bulwarks to speak to someone immediately below. “What the devil’s this, Sharpies? Where’s Tom Leach?” “A moment, Sir Henry!” sang the lieutenant’s voice from below. The boat scraped and bumped against Use sides of the Royal Mary as ft brought up at the foot of the ladder. A pause followed, and then the staring, fearful eyes of Priscilla beheld the figure of Monsieur de Bernis gradually rising above the bulwarks, until he stood there, steadying himself by a ratline, at the head of the en-trance-ladder. Calm and smiling, as she had ever known him in the face of every peril, did he now appear. It was incredible that a man should meet his fate so gallantly. Sir Henry, standing below him and a little aside, looked up to meet the Frenchman's debonair smile with a scowl, whilst the head and shoulders of de Bemis’ servant, Pierre, began to come into view as he climbed close in his master’s wake. “Where the devil is Leach, then?” Sir Henry trumpeted. “What does this mean?” Steadying himself ever by the ratline, Monsieur de Bemis halftukned to Pierre, and held out his left hand. The half-caste proffered him a bundle in coarse sailcloth, the natural grey of which was smeared and stained with blood. Monsieur de Bemis took it, balanced it a moment, and then tossed it forward. It fell at Sir Henry’s feet, with a soft thud. The Admiral looked down at it, and then up at Monsieur de Bernis, frowning. “That’s all of him you need,” said Monsieur de Bemis. “All of him you asked for. The head, on which you set the price of five hundred pounds.” Sir Henry breathed gustily. “By Jupiter!” His face empurpled. He looked down again at the gruesome bundle from which a stain was slowly spreading on the yellow deck. Then he touched it with a foot that was shod in a gaudily rosetted shoe. He touched it gingerly at first, then kicked it vigorously aside. “Take that awayl” he roared to one of the men who attended him, and upon that gave his attention once more to de Bernis. "Ye're damned literal. Charles,” he snorted. De Bernis leapt lightly down to the deck. "Which is only another way of saying that I am as good as my word. Or as good as my boast, if you prefer it. It needs a thief to catch a thief, as Major Sands there thinks they knew who made you Governor of Jamaica." Sir Henry looked across at Major Sands where he had come to his feet tn his bewilderment He stood beside Miss Priscilla, who remained seated staring, scarcely daring to believe what was suddenly being made plain at least in part. "Oh? Him!" said Sir Henry “He ’ thinks that, does he? Bah!" And I he shrugged the pompous Major i out of his further consideration, i "We've other things to think of. t There's a deal here that needs to I be explained .” 1 lou shall have all the explana- ■ tion you could wish when you've s paid me the five hundred for that head, and the other five hundred ' you wagcred me that 1 could not • get it for you." , Morgan made a wry lace. “Aye.

' j to choose between the conservative ■and progressive groups of his ■! party. Long vehemently claims 1 Mr. Roosevelt as a supporter of his • I creed. r The Kingfish is gleefully scorn- ' ful of the senate. His colleagues are angry and if they can arrange it, there is in store for the talkstive newcomer a thorough — and they hope effective —spanking. The way to save money now is to buy at Teeple & Peterson’s half price sale.

You never doubt yourself, do you, Charles?” f “I’ve never had occasion to. But I have been doubting you for three mortal days. Three days late you are at the rendez-vous here, and for three days I’ve been in torment from anxiety, and forced to endure that dead dog’s intolerable insults. But 1 paid him in full when you hove in sight this morning. It was necessary, too, so that I might be literal, as you say.” “We are quits on that, anyway,” grumbled Morgan. “For ye’ld be in mortal anxiety now but for my stratagem to bring you safely out of their hands. Where would ye be if I hadn’t demanded that they should give yon up?” “Where I should deserve to be for trusting to a fool. For only a fool would have overlooked aijything so obvious.” Morgan blew out his cheeks. “Oddsfish! I’ve never known the like of your assurance.” “Don't I justify it? Have I done less than I undertook?” “Oh. I’ll confess to that. I take it luck favored you.” “A little. It saved me the trouble of going after Leach as I intended. He just came blundering across my path whilst I was on my way to Guadeloupe. But it would have made no difference if he hadn’t, except that I’ve saved the Government the expense of fitting a ship in which to go locking for him.” "Come below,” said Morgan. “I want to hear about it.” • • • In the great cabin of the Royal Mary sat Miss Priscilla with Major Sands, Sir Henry Morgan, and Monsieur de Bemis. It was by the I Frenchman’s request that those i other two had been brought below, I so that they might learn at the ■ same time what yet remained to be learnt in explanation of events > which they had so closely shared. They were seated about the table, , and with them sat Captain Al- , dridge, a spare, lantern-jawed, mid-dle-aged man of a sallow complex- , ion, who, under the Admiral, Sir Henry Morgan, commanded the , Royal Mary. i Monsieur de B-mis was quietly . talking, giving them closer details l of the adventure and of the manner in which he had gone about carrying out his undertaking to secure the coveted head of Tom Leach. \ Priscilla, so abruptly lifted out of her terrible apprehensions, sat with senses still swimming from the shocks they had sustained that • morning, scarcely daring to credit what she heard and what she had , seen. Major Sands was wrapped tn gloom. His feelings were mixed and fraught with apprehensions He could not even pretend that he re ' joiced in this solution, although he , could scarcely yet analyze his true feeling* i Morgan alone was in high glee despite the fact that he had lost a wager of five hundred pounds R e . lieved of the shadow that had been I hanging over him. the dread of 1 ?vv st ,* ction him at , Whitehall if Tom Leach were to . continue his ravages upon the seas he was boisterously hilarious Once . or twice he interrupted the narraI tive with ribald comments deliv. . ered in explosions of laughter, and in the sing-song tones that ' pro. claimed his Welsh origin. > He was loudest in his hilarity when de Bernis gave him the facts . of the boarding of the Centaur by , L.each and ’he manner in which he t had met the pirate. 1 1 (To Continued) Copyright l»Jz. t>y R,ue| s abitllll • Dinritllltcdja. k-mx Synd“t» 1„

NOTH'!-: OF NDWINISTRATOR’S | ■ Tlie undersigned Joseph C. Rich, as administrator of the estate of Peter Hii h deceased, hereby gives not" " i that bv virtue of an order of the, Adams Circuit Court of Adams Countv Indiana, he will at the hour of; lb o'clock A M on the 26th day ol January 1933 at the east door of the Court House in Decatur Indiana, ’ offer f >r sale at public sale the following described real estate towit: The North half of the Southwest quarter of Section nine (9) Town- . a fourteen <H) East, containing 1 right} (80) a.rt: mor< or less in 1 Adams county, state of Indiana. i I Said sale will be made subject to I I • the approval of said court for not I less than two-thirds of the full ap-j praised value and upon the following, terms and conditions: Cine-third of purchase money cash in hands, the. 'balance in two equal installments; 'payable in one and two years from] .dale of sale, deferred payments to !be evidenced by notes of the pur-| Lhaser bearing six per cent, interest; from date, waiving relief, providing for attorneys fees, ami secured] by mortgage on the real estate sold, 'or purchaser may pay all sash on day of sale. i Said real estate will be sold free lof liens except taxes for the year ; 1932 payable in 1933, and also subject to a balance of $2008.97 of a I mortgage lien held by First Joint Stock Land Bank of Fort Wayne ' Indiana, with interest, thereon at p er cent, per annum from October 21st 1932. said mortgage being •recorded in Mortgage Record 70] j I Page 128 in the recorder’s office of| | Adams M'unty. Indiana. j . Joseph C. Hi* h. Administrator] I ! Lenhart, Heller and S< hurger, Attys. ’ Dec. 27 Jan .3-10-17 O NOTICE OF NALE OF BONDS Notice is hereby given that the Adams County Board of Finance, of Adams County, slate of Indiana, I will, at the east door of the Court (House in the city of Decatur, said ’county and state, at 11 o'clock A. M. :on Thursday 26th day of January, ; 1933, offer for sale and sell to the highest and best bidder, the following bondsFive (5) United Stales Treasury (Bonds of 1916-191.1, dated June 15 1931, each bond calling for the sum of $.’>,000.00; One (1) United States Treasuiy Bond of 1946 dated June 5, 1931 call-] jing for the sum of $10,00" uO. | i’4 n MM» ! mitr'd <»?’,«<■ < ’• -U p • -3* Ou ■ each due March 15, 1333, and each calling for the sum o>f $500.0u. Said bonds and certificates are I held by said board of finance as coI-( lateral security for the payment of . the public funds deposited by Adams * County Indiana, in Old Adams' County Bank, Decatur, Indiana. Said bonds and certificates will be! sold for cash to the highest bidder;, the sale will I* conducted by the au-' ditor of said county for and on be-I half of said board of finance. Adams County Board of Finance of Adams County, Indiana i (Attest: Albert Harlow, Auditor of said county and Secretary of said! I board. Dec. 27 Jan 3-10-17 —O NOTIUE TO AON-I<EMDE\T* i The State of Indiana, Adams < mniy in the Adams Circuit Court November rerin, 1932. Clark J. Lutz vs.' Paul Schulte, Umma Schulte, I’rauk Jovlen. Mi s. I | r lank Jovien, whose true ••hristia” I : "atm- Is unknow n to this plaintiff? 'Oomplaint No. 1 1528. I Now comes the plaintiff, bv Her- I I man H. Myers his attorney, ami files his complaint herein, together with an affidavit that .Gtd ’"d.-h-mUnt's! I* -’--I .<nultv, Emma Schulte, Frank M ,' s ' lß "’ k Jovien, whose true ihiistian name is unknown t" ■^1 Slai ," l 1 ,ft .: iri ’ n«t residents of the m Mr "J‘ ana; lllat Bald IS for Mortgage Foreclosure andi Appointment of a Recc ,r and that! said non-resident defendants are' necessary parties thereto. ' i therefore hereby given! sanl Defendants, last named, that! un <■”' they be and app< ar on the first la> of the next term of the Adams Circuit t'mrt, to be hoi den on the [* r st Monday of March A. 1). 1933 al the Court Hous.- in Decatur in said County and State, ami answer or demur to said complaint, the same will absence?* dettn,line ‘> >" their Witness my name ami the Seal of su, 11 He 1 "'; at tl>li l»th day of January A. I>. 1333. | r-i l. J l ,' 11 '’ 11 Werling ■ ■ * ’’‘K A ' la,lls Cii-i uit Court Herman 11. Myers, attorney I ' 17-24'

Public Auction ni. take road that runs by Old Schafer Saddlery Hiding THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1932 ■fencing at io a. M. 1690 n,s: Ea - ,B " k th... i>oth good workers. 6 yea^d^iu,, 1 '"r ne! l1 b * d “y of Url) "’ n S *'V months old. S ta.lon a day; > wo yearling heifers; HeKer. one Duron sow 'h'X'i' th?" brood Knws * iU f " r,ow **' K<:K XT CHICKENS— 12a White Wyandotte Pullets. L,X'Z .P.-* Grain drill; Spike t> h" a ' ,lun,p y; Mower, Riding „ <r; Wagon; Hay ladders *'w»'I i H “ roeßs ; Gas engine; Ohio »’»> >w Hot Blast heating stove.’ i'i *‘? X; Broo<ler house ’ 1 " !tlZ ’ u »dil inarhine; Hand wish'n ' X ‘ Gil| oleiitn mg; Horton powci »» -ogan, K,;X cXt n? 1 ' I '"' Sl " >rl Bfd Uavenport. <* cook stove; ntanv ir-kdn gra y enamel; Home ComfoH 1 TERMS-CASH 00 nu “ lero "« mention. iucI CLYDE NOFFSINRER. O»'H« 1 W. A. Lower, clerk. „ . , Hot Lunch will be served.

BY SEGAR

Tim Wate Bills are du and must be paid! on or before I Jan. 2 I A 10% penalty will J added if Wils are nol paid by this date. I City Wate Dept CITY HALL