Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 99, Decatur, Adams County, 26 April 1933 — Page 4

Page Four

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SENATORS AND YANKS BATTLE - New York. April 26.—(U.R)—Fol-1 lowing John Heydler’s suggestion j that more of the old pepper be in- ' jected Into baseball, the major lea-. gnes h’a v e adopted the song. I "Scrappy Days Are Here Again." for the new deal 1933 season. This refrain, inspired apparently by Prexy Heydler of the National circuit. went over with a wallop—/ in fact several of them—at its official inaugural in the nation's cap-| itol yesterday when the New York? Yankees and Washington Senators. | assisted by some 300 fans and a? squad of police, staged the best I free-for-all fight presented in the ! 1 majors for many years. Meanwhile Manager Charley I Crinim of the Chicago Cubs and' Rogers Hornsby of the St. Louis / Cardinals were threatening to take] one another apart, and the Brooklyn Dodgers and Phillies may give off an old fashioned brawl soon. They shoved one another about the bases most encouraginly in their recent meetings. The Yanks blanked Washington. j 16 to 0, yesterday, the most lop-; sided score of the season, but de- i tails of the game were almost for- • 1 gotten because of the fourth-inning? battle royal which resulted in three . ' players and several fans receiving I minor cuts and bruises. Four 1 players were put off the field and five fans marched off to jail. While Russell Van Atta, a re- j emit from St. Paul, was pitching a ( five-hit'game against the Senators ( in his first major league contest, and Ixiu Gehrig was clouting his/ fourth home run of the season, the ' ill feeling that had been smouldering between the Yanks and Senators since last season's fight between Bill Dickey and Carl Reynolds suddenly flared into a Li min- , me melee. It started when Ben j Chapman bowled over and spiked ( Buddy Myer as Chapman slid into second base. Myer retiliated by , hooting Chapman in the ribs —and the battle was on. The defeat enabled Cleveland to I replace Washington at third place in the American league by virtue of a 4-to-l victory over St. Louis. 1 Frank Pytlak. catching in his first 1 full game of the season, gave the! Indians a victory by driving out a homer with two mates abroad in the seventh. Boston advanced to sixth 4»laee by boating Philadelphia. , 6 to 4, tagging Lefty Grove with his first defeat of the season. Snowprevented Detroit's playing at Chicago. St. Ixuiis advanced to a tie with Brooklyn for fourth place in the National league by walloping Pitts-I burglTTO to 3. inspired by the pres-‘ ence of Rogers Hornsby at second base after an absence of six years. I HIM Hallahan registered his third victory in three starts. Shortstop Dick Barteii drove out four doubles' in four times up as the Phillies, downed Boston. 7 to 1.. replacing Brooklyn in \he league's third pllaco. Jim Bottomley's third home run I of the season with two mates abroad in the fifth spurred the tail-

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end Cincinnati Reds to a 5 to 3 victory over Chicago. It was the Cubs' fourth consecutive defeat. Mel tit! contributed a four bugger with two men on base in the second inning as New York trounced j Brooklyn. 8 to 2. Three Brooklyn errors aided the Giants. Yesterday’s Heroes : Catcher Frank Pytlak, who in ; ■ his first full game of the season 1 for Cleveland, drove out a home run with two aboard for the Indians’ victory. Shortstop Lie:: Bartell of the Phillies, who drove out four doub- | les in four trips to the plate. Earl Combs of the Yankees, who j made a triple, a double and three jsingles for a perfect day at bat. Russell Van Atta. Yankee recruit, who started his first major, league game by limiting Washington to five hits. He made four hits himself. BALLPLAYERS ARE SUSPENDED Chicago, Apr. 26. —(U.R) —Charles 1 "Buddy" Myer. Washington second > baseman, Earl Whitehill, Washing ! 1 ton pitcher, and Ben Chapman, 1 New York outfielder, were indefinitely suspended today by Presi-1 dent William Harridge of the Amer | ican league for engaging in fist 1 fights yesterday during the Yan-1 kees-Senators game at Washington I No penalty was meted out to Dixie Walker. New York reserve outfielder, as Harridge ruled that he had merely tried to protect Chapman and had no part in the | outbreak of the fisticuffs. Harridge leaves tod.i yfor Phila- ■ delphia where he will confer with! Umpires Moriarity and Geisel who? handled yesterday's game. He will; made a final rilling on the case at ? that time after talking with the I umpires and participants in the out-’ break. The ruling today was made on ! ! telegraphic evidence submitted to I him by the umpires. The fights; 1 yesterday were considered to be a : renewal of the Yankees-Senators , feud of last year which started when Bill Dickey, Yankee catcher, slugged Carl Reynolds. Washington outfielder. Reynolds’ jaw was I j broken and Dickey drew a 30-uay: suspension and a 31. mm fine. It was not considered likely such I severe penalties would be imposed j ■ for yesterday’s affair although ; Harridge would make no statement regarding the ultimate outcome. o Beautiful assortment of 52.98 Dresses suitable for all occasions. Just arrived. E. F. Gass Store. VOTIt E TO TIICB i:«s Notice is hereby given that Mon-|. J day. May 1. 1933 will he th* 1 last day | to pay your Spring installment of| taxes. The county treasurer’s office ! will be open from S A. M. to I P. MJ 1 during- the tax paying season. Alli, i taxes not paid by that time will become delinquent and a 3% penalryl i will l>e added plus interest at the| ! rate of SS from date of delinquency.! (Those who have bought or sold pro-1 j perty. and wish a division of taxesi I are asked come in at once. | Call on the Auditor for errors and’ {any reductions. The Trea-surer can} | make no corrections. The Treasurer will not be responsible for the penalty of delinquent; I taxes reeuking from the om mission' (of tax-payers to state definitely on[ ; what property, they desire to pay,! in whose name it may be found, ini ; what township or corporation it is' situated. Persons owing delinquent taxesj I should pay them at once, the law is! • such that there is no option left for ■ the Treasurer but enforce the colI lection of delinquent taxes. ; County orders will not be paid to (anyone owing delinquent taxes. All I persons are warned against them. Particular attention. If you payj i taxes in more than one township’ I mention the fact to the Treasurer! | also see that your receipts ‘ all for; Jail your real estate and personal I ! property. 1 Tn making Inquiries of the Trea-t I surer regarding taxes to insure re|l»ly do not fail to include return posI tage JOHN WBCHTER i Treas irer Adams County Indiana April 12 to M-1

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STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE — W. L. Pct. I Pittsburgh 7 2 .7781 New York 5 2 ' .714! Philadelphia 5 5 .500 St. Louis 4 5 .444 ' Brooklyn 4 5 .444 i Cincinuatai 3 4 .429 Boston 3 5 .375 Chicago .3 6 .333 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pet. New York S 2 .800 I Chicago 8 3 .727 iCllevelami ’... 6 5 v .5451 I Washington 6 6 .5001 [Detroit - ... 5 a .500 I Boston 4 6 .400; j Philadelphia 4 8 .333 | St. Louis 3 9 .250 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pct. Minneapolis 5 4 .556 > [ St. Paul 6 5 .545! | Louisville 6 5 .545 I Kansas City 7 6 .538 i Milwaukee 5 5 .5001 I Indianapo’is 5 6 .455! [Toledo 5 6 ..45a! | Columbus ... . 4 6 .400 i YESTERDAY'S RESULTS National League I Brooklyn. 2; New York. 8. Boston. 1: Philadelphia, 7. [ Chicago. 3; Cincinnati. 5. Pittsburgh. 3; St. Louis. 10. American League Philadelphia. 4; Boston, 6. New York, 16; Washington. 0. | i Detroit at Chicago; snow. ! St. Louis. 1; Cleveland. 4. American Association Minneapolis at Louisville; post-! iponed after four innings, rain. 1 Only game scheduled. o NOTICE— Local affiliate piano? harmony and music theory teach[er of Sherwood Music school. Chii eago. Lessons fifty cents. Lesson , taught in homes.. City or country? ! Mamie P. Teeple. Phone 938. Decaj.tur route S. 97k-3tx mic.iuit * \ I I In ihr \rinnix. Circuit Court, Stat? wi Indiana: rauwr number 1452 s r Clark Lutz is Caul S< hulte. * Emma Schulte, Frank Jovien, Mrs. Frank Jovien. wJioge true Christian i ■ name is to plaintiff unknown, Fred | I Mutschler, FMgar Mutschler, Albert] Mutsrhk‘l’. Ben Srhrover, doing busii [ ness under the name and style of [ Mutschler Packing Company Meat’ Market. Holthouse I»rug Company,: ’ a corporation. Charles Waddell. » By virtue << an order of sale to | me dire' ted and delivered from thej Clerk of the Adame Circuit Court in • the above entitled cause 1 have { levied upon and will expose to sale; >by Public Auction, at the Court! J House l>oor. east entrance, first', i| floor, in said County between the; i| hours of b»:00 o’clo< k A. M. and 4:001 o'clock P. M. on Thursday the ISth ‘J day of May, A. D. 1933. the rents' ! { and profits for a term nut exceeding: seven years, of the following des-! • cribed real estate, To-Wit:-<’ommencing at a point sixty-two ‘ (63) rods and eight (8) links west of! 1 the north west .corner of the east! • half (’%) of section eleven (11 > | township twenty-seven (27 north.' ', range fourteen (14) east in Adams! ‘I County. Indiana, on said section line [in the middle of the Decatur and! J Willstiire mad, thence east to the | center of the Saint Marys river,} • then<e in the center of saidi river up its meandering course a' distance of twenty three <23) rods.! to the lands now owned by one Conrad Gillig, thence in a SKtuthl westerly course to a point on the’ yict tine of said Giltig’s land which | I said (»oint is seve»p mda and four-1 teen links due east of the said west, line of the said east haJf of sai/i section eleven 111) the said point in the tenor of the sahi De- | catur and Willshire road, thence! I along the center of said road in a i iM<rth wester!j- direction to the place l I of beginning, which said tract isl estimated to contain twenty (26> i acres -of land, situated •’lb Adams • j Counts. State of Indiana. And on failure to realize the full, | amount of the judgment and inter-j I est LlwTeon and costs, I will at the] i same time and in the manner afore-| I said offer for sale the fee simple of ! the above described real estate. 'Taken as the property of Paul . S hulte, Bmma Schulte. Frank Jo. ’ vien, Mrs. Frank Jovien, whose true! I Christian ’name is t>o plaintiff un-l I known, Fred Mutschler, F>lgar Mutschler, Albert Mutschler, Ben Bchroyer. doing business under the' j name and style of Mutschler Pack- ! ing Company Meat Market, Holt-1 house Drug Company, a corporation' Charles Waddell at the suit of Clark I { J, Lutz. Said sale will be male without ' any relief whatever from valuation , i or appraJaemant laws. Burl Johnson, Sheriff Adams County. Indiana Herman H. Wyem, Attorney April 26 May 3-10 Appointment of Administmtor Notice is hereby given. That the I i undersigned has been appointed A<l- - minitrtrator ul the estate of John I Beeler, late of Adams County, de- | ceased. The estate is probably solI vent. I Fred W. Beeler, Administrator Frwehtr A l.ilterer. Attorneys April 8, 1833, . April 12-19-28

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY. APRIL. 26, 1933.

Triplett To Drive Indianapolis. April 26—<U.R)--Ernie Triplett, two-time winner of the Pacific Coast championship and veteran of the local track.

"MARY FAITH* .. Beatrice Burton COPYRIGHT, 1931, BY SYWD/CATB, ZATt

SYNOPSIS Mary Faith, comely young orphan, gives up her position as secretary to the wealthy Mark Nesbit to marry Kimberley Farrell. Kim, a young, shiftless lawyer, lives with his mother. When the latter objects to the marriage, Kim brusquely startles Mary Faith by breaking the engagement. Later, when he sees her with Mark Nesbit in a jewelry store, selecting a ring, his jealousy is aroused. The next morning he appears at Mary Faith's boarding house and overwhelms her with his protestations of love. She again leaves her position and, after a hasty marriage, they spend an ecsta’ic two weeks’ honeymoon in the house of Kim’s aunt in the country. Returning home, Mary Faith moves to the Farrell apartment Kim’s friends, Claire and Jack Maldon, find Mary Faith a dull companion for their jazzy parties. Mary Faith realizes Kim is irritated by her failure to drink and gamble. During the winter Kim attends the parties alone. Mary Faith takes care of the house but knows nothing of Kim's finances. When he hints at being pinched for money, Mary Faith accedes to his request for S6O. Later, he admits taking that sum from the firm’s collections for his own use. The next Wight, at dinner, he tells Mary Faith he has lost his position. He then persuades her to let him have a thousand dollars to open his own office. Mary Faith, learning that she is to become a mother, joyously visits Kim’s office to tell him the good news. She finds him flirting with a girl. Kim is furious. Mary Faith decides not to tell him of the approaching event. Back in the apartment, Kim tells Mary Faith and his mother that he is getting out—that his marriage is a failure. Mary Faith tries to scop him from leaving but he is adamant. “We made a mistake,” Kim said. Mary Faith tells Mrs. Farrell that her baby is to be bom in January. They decide to stay on in the flat. Without informing [ Kim, Mary Faith mails S6O to his former employers. Mary Faith looks for work. CHAPTER XXV “Os course, Florrie will give you , a job,” Jean said. “She knows what slick work you do, and she’ll be mighty glad to get you. I’ll fix it you first thing tomorrow morning. . . . What happened between you and Kim. Mary Faith?” Mary Faith put her head to one side, thinking. "Well, for one thing he was bored. Jean, and 1 didn’t know it. 1 didn’t mind staying at home nights or going to a picture show with him. As long as he was with me 1 didn’t need anybody else. But he got tired of me. it seems....” “Tired of you, bah!” cried Jean with infinite scorn in her voice. “He marries the best-looking girl and the nicest girl in this town and gets tired of her in five months! He didn’t have sense enough to appreciate you. that's what! I’ve known you for five years and I’ve never been bored by you. . . . It’s too bad you didn't marry Mark Nesbit. Mary Faith, when you had the chance. And you did have it. Everybody at the office -knew that he was absolutely hay-wire over you.” . She took a vanity case out of her tan silk bag and powdered her face before she finished what she had to say: “The trouble with Kim Farrell is that he has a heart as big as a hotel. He falls for every girl he meets. ... 1 never told you at the time but he even tried to date me up while you were engaged to him; and 1 was always bumping into him when he was out stepping with other girls. Remember how 1 used to urge you to marry him before he left you high and dry? . . . What are you going to do ■ now? Divorce him?” Divorce. . The very word was paralyzing to Mary Faith She stood staring blankly at Jean for a full minute before she answered her. “Oh. no. I'd never divorce Kim, Jean. What nukes you ask me if I would? You’ve seen him lately with sorr-. girl, haven’t you?” “No. 1 haven't, but he's left you. hasn’t be? And. so Ur aa I can

will drive a car owned by Bob I ■White, California, in the annual i 500-mile race at the Indianapolis' Motor speedway, May 30, it was ! announced here today. Triplett has l>een drlv i n g j

make out, he’s left you without a cent to bless yourself with. I should think you’d want to be free from a man like that—after the baby comes, of course. It’s just possible that, in the course of human events, you might want to marry again sometime, you know. Such things have happened." “No, I’d never want to marry again. No matter what happens there never will be anybody but Kim for me, Jean —and there’s just a chance that he’ll come back here to me if he knows that I vvant him.” Jean's lips, painted the bright red of sealing wax, curled in a smile that was half tenderness and half contempt She shrugged her shoulders once more. “I must go," she said. “I have a date with a man from Phoenix, Arizona. Burr sold him a car the other day and brought him out to the house last night to play cards with us. He’s a whiz—tall and tanned and blue-eyed. You ought to see him, Mary Faith; and you ought to hear him talk abou* his ranch down in the Salt River Valley. He grows everything on it, from cantaloupes to cotton. Well, I hope you’ll enjoy working for Florrie. I think you will. I’d work for her myself but I don’t believe relatives ever get along in business, do you?" And she went away to keep her engagement with the ranchman from Arizona. On the first Monday in June Mary Faith started work as a stenographer for the Write-O Stenographic Service at twenty-five dollars a week. The office was a big, up-to-date one on the ground floor of the Arcade Building on Spring Street a few blocks away from the Towers Building where Kim had his law office. The Arcade Building was the largest building in town. It had its own restaurant, its own barber shop and beauty shop its own newsstand and shoe-shining parlor, its own circulating library. It was a little city in itself. Florrie Bond employed two girls besides Maiy Faith, and she herself was busy all day long answering the telephone and making appointments or arrangements for bringing work into the office. She was a pretty, clcver-lookmg girl with black hair and eyes and a tall slender figure She never wore anything but black —lustrous clinging black—and a string of pearls. “I’m going to let you stay in the office all the time. Mrs. Farrell." she said to Mary Faith when she came to work that first hot June morning. “Sometimes the other girls go out to take dictation or do typing in the other offices of the building. Sometimes they fill in as substitutes when the regular stenogrvnhers «re ill or on vacation. But Jean tells me that you want to be as quiet as possible.” She gave Mary Faith a desk near the big windows that looked out into the lobby of the building. And there Mary Faith sat eight hours a day, typing lawyers' briefs, manuscripts, letters, anything that came her way. Once again her days were filled wtih the click of typewriter keys, the ringing of the telephone, the slam and rattle of filing cabinet drawers, the sound of the downtown traffic outside the front windows of the office. Every morning she pack'd her lunch in the cool breezy kitchen of the flat—usually two tomato sandwiches and a thermos bottle of the coffee that was left over from breakfast She ate it. sitting at her desk, with a book from the library lying open on her typewriter before her. Every night she walked part of the way home, because Di Thatcher had told her that she ought to take plenty of exercise. She and Kim’s mother would get supper together, and afterward, when the dishes were done they would stroll around Haltnorth Park or go to the moving picture theater, a block from home “For a couple of deserted women we get along very well, don t we?” Mary Faith SutnetiaMs ashed cheer - fully when they were walking along side by side through the warm breathing darkness of the summer nighU “I wonder what Kim would

White's cars for two years. He was forced out of last year s race at 312 miles after leading the field for 14 laps. Dance Tonight Sun Set.

think if he knew that we were still living in the flat.” They never heard from him. “That’s because we’ve had the telephone taken out." Mrs. Farrell decided. “He’s probably tried to cal! our number, and because he can’t get it he undoubtedly thinks we've moved out.” “He could find out by telephoning Aunt Ella or Mrs. Puckett," Mary Faith reminded her. “We'll hear from him pretty soon. Certainly he’ll begin to wonder where you are and whether you're all right or not.” But the June rosea withered and died in Haltnorth Parti, and July came in bringing with it midsummer heat that was like the breath of a blast furnace, and still they did not hear from Kim. One night they came home from the picture show and found him sitting in his roadster in the street outside the apartment. When he saw them he got out of it and came across the sidewalk to them. In the fan of light from the vestibule he looked very big and handsome in a pale gray suit that Mary Faith had never seen before. At first she thought he had come back to her and her knees turned to water and her heart beat like a triphammer. “Why, Kim!” she said simply. “I want to talk to you, Mary Faith.” He gave her a cold level look from his gray eyes, and turned to his mother. “How are you. Mother, and what are you doing here? UntH tonight I thought you were safe and sound in Garrettsville with Aunt Ella." “No, I'm safe and sound right here where I belong.” said his mother. “Mary Faith and 1 thought we’d be more comfortable here, so after you left we stayed on.” " “How do you manage it?” He followed them into the flat and waited while they turned on the lights in the little sitting room. Then he sat down on the arm of the Turkish leather rocker just inside the door, balancing his gray hat on one knee. It was Mary Faith who answered him. “I got a job, Kim.” she said, “and we cut down expenses here. We had the telephone taken out and we stopped eating meat and doing a lot of other little things that meant spending money. We get along very nicely, don't we, Mrs. Farrell “We certainly do. We may not have all the luxuries of life,” admitted Kim’s mother, "but at least we’re not accepting charity from anybody, and we’re not stuck in a bearding house or a miserable country town. ..." Kim wasn’t listening to her. His eyes were on Mary Faith's face. “Did you send sixty dollars to Mclntrae and Westover about a month ago?” he atked her. “I did, Kim. I knew that you wanted to send it yourself, in all probability, but that you were too stiff-necked ever to do it. and so 1 sent it for you. Why do you want to know about it. Kim? Have you heard from Mr. Mclntrae?” He nodded his blond and handsome head. "He sent for me last Friday.” he said. “He told me that he admired the spirit that prompted me to return that money, and pulled a lot of that sort of talk on me. 1 didn’t know what he was driving at but I had brains enough to keep my mouth shut. He told me he thought I’d learned my lesson, and then he told me 1 could come back to work for him if I wanted to." "And did you?” “Os course. I was starving to death down there in thes Towers Building. If 1 hadn't gone back to him I'd have had to get a job somewhere else. . . For a week I've been wondering about that money, and tonight it occurred to me that you might have sent it to him. I knew that you and Jack Maldon were the only two people who knew that I never had turned it in at the office. 1 telephoned Mrs Puckett’s but she told me that she hadn't seen you in weeks. So I came around here.” (To Be Continued) INI. by Beatrice Bur tan Dietribaled by hiag FeataxM Syndicate. Ina.

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKET’S BERNE MARKET Corrected April 26 No commission and no yardage. 160 to 240 lbs. $3.85 240 to 300 lbs. $3.45 300 to 350 lbs. $3.30 140 to 160 lbs. $3.40 1(H) to 14 i lbs. $3.10 Roughs $2.60 Stags - $1.25 Vealers $4.50 Spring Ijainbs . ... . $5.50 FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Apr. 26.— (U.R) Livestock: Hog market, steady; 160-200 lbs.. $3.85; 200-225 lbs.. $3.80; 225-275 lbs.. $3.75; 275-350 lbs., $3.75; 140160 lbs., $3.55; 100-140 lbs.. $3.25: roughs. $2 75: stags. $1.75; calves. $4.50; lambs, $5.25. Cattle market: Steers, good to choice. $5-$5.15; medium to good. $1.50-$5: common to medinnL $3.50$4: heifers, good to choice, $4.50$5; medium to good. $4-$4.50: common to medium, $3-$4; cows, good to choice. $3-$3.50; medium to godd $2.50-$:?; cutter cows. SL”S-$2.35; canner cows. sl-$1.50; bulls, good to choice, $3-$3.25; medium to good $2.50-$3; common to medium, $2$2.50: butcher bul's, $3.25-$3.75. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Dec. Wheat .68% .68 H .69% .71% Corn .35% ' .37% -39% Oats * .23% ,24% .24% EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y.. Apr. 26—(U.R) —Livestock: Hozs: on sale. 1.000; active to all interests; steady at recent advance: hulk desirable 170 to 240 lbs.. $3.45-$4.40: 150 to 160 lbs.. $3.90-$4.15: lighter averages, $3.50$3.85; packing sows, $3.25. Cattle: Receipts. 150; cows active. fully steady: cutter grades $1.40-$2.25; few good heifers $5.50. Calves: Receipts. 300: vealers slow, steady; good to choice. $4.50$5; some held higher; common and medium. $3-$4. Sheep: Receipts, 500; lambs active. strong to 15c higher: good to choice clippers. $5.50-$5.60; medium kinds around $5; few 40 lb., spring- | ers, $7.50; 55 to 65-lh.. weights. SB. LOCAL grain MARKe’T Corrected April 26 No. 1 New Wheat, 10 lbs. or better . 67c No " New Wheat 58lhs 66c Oats , : 21c Soy Beans 35c te 75c White or mixed corn 41c Good Yellow corn 46c Rye .. 25c FOR RENT ! FOR RENT -5 room modem house on South First St. Dynois Schmitt 413 Mercer Ave. Phom- 79. 97-3 t FOR RENT—Six room modern house on N. Sixth street. Possession May 1. B. J. Rice 237 N. Fifth St. Phone 184. 9b-3t FOR RENT — Strictly modern house on N. 2nd st. Phone 183. Mrs. Rose Clark. 98t3x FOR RENT — Modern residence, near bustneM section. Rent reasonable. Inquire A. D. Suttles. 99G3t FOR RENT HouscTgood location Sixth street. All kinds of fruit. Ren* reasonable. Inquire 1128 West Monroe st. W-F-M o j Dance Tonight Sun Set. ♦ « Answers To Test 1 Questions I I ! Below are the Answers to the | Test Questions Printed on Page Two. 1. Alaska. 2. Three: Farragut. Porter and Dewey. 3. To John. « 4. Every ten yevrs. 5. Stanford While. 6. Light Gray. 7. Africa. 8. No, 9. Charles I, 10. Bread.

|! AND NOTICES FOR salFI jFOR SALE hair Ihing rocm suites. davenport. Refrtg eil |3 new.sl9. Dining room Übhg chairs, like new. $18.50. 3, ' room suite. Sprague compniy. i:? 4 West 199. J FOR SALE- I’.ahy chicks if fed oil Been (’hick cod liver oil or Burks BigQ Starter. $1.,5 tier 100 pounii| Elevator Company, (elephoaej ja j I.OR SALE A .lersi-vjM heifer. A good one. Brett 1 | M 87(1. ! FOR SALE-Apple, Pwk, j Plum and ( berry trees, ft I foot, strong, sturdy trees m i teed to grow. While they tat I for SI.OO. Schafer HardwJ FOR SALE Fresh cow ag” High test and an extra gocii Ray Smith, phone 5621. « I FOR SALE Strawberry(l “Delk ions Dunlap.” Big j | dark red berries. Grow ing and climates While they ta. 1 per li!o. Schafer Manhunt j Real Estate Eargaim AYe are closing the Hoawß ers Corporation and offer fori The double house at the a lof Elm and Winchester $1 j for SI,OOO. Also have number of to | Hanna addition, just west 61 1 plant that will bo closed ■ very low figures. Paymmti be in cash or <x]Uivalent. * ! ness of-company < an be tint ! interested see W A. Lowers (Dutch) Ehinger in People'oß (t Trust Co. building. FOR - SALE “a I i moden I well located resident* prog( Corner lot. garage, brick to . Will sacrifh e for (illicit -iM ; can be handled with snialim lof cash. Address box T.ll ( care of Demoi rat. Y I F^r'slTle'^N~ F'urniture.SW dining room sate. $49.50.4t0 I bed room suites, romplttrl ! springs and mattresses, SBS. Living ri* "i suites. slls. Occasion;. ■ hairs, i Innej spring mattresses, i Sprague Furniture CoapWJ West Monro- street. Phone■ !4 ■ — 4»—— —rt* 1 WANTED J ; WANTED- -Cm tains to stretch Mis. Haw S ! phone 968. J WAITED—LADIES! Lm* l ] permanents for $2.5$ nnwg Hoagland Beauty Shop.!®! | Eighth street. Phone 8.16 j j WANTED—IT -1 nm*' position as housekeeper inM led widow man L-one in citytri . try. Address B<»\ 4'3 in i office. J I WANTED— To clean wall $1 wash houses and wirtdoWM i out cisterns. Call 216. ( I Straub. _ WANTED- To build ''•‘■js erns. Inquire 1122 West EM WANTED — Bov with '" quire after 6 p m. er Street. —a WANTED—lndies to KM’! Mr. Liggett will teed permanents for $2.50 for one day oklf ”’0 Bxdeer’s Beauty Shop. C»B appointments .J WANTED TO BI'Y- liaß J Will pay cash llpslr * . close to town Address care Democrat. ~2j| WANTED TO BI’Y or Rf^ 1 ! room house, good lo™ J description in letter add . ' G.E.J. care Demon at - . WANTED—Piano an hour. 25 cents hal » , Dora Akey. phone 11-1 ’ 6 to 8 o'clock. a LOST AND STRAYED—YeIIow m»l’ * cat. Answers to nani* Finder please call W*