Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 122, Decatur, Adams County, 23 May 1933 — Page 4
Page Four
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PEPPER MARTEN IS COMING BUCK New York, May 23—<U.R)—Pepper Martin, dynamic Oklahoman who holds down the hot corner for the Sft. Louis Cardinals, is staging the most commanding come-back of the 1933 major league season. This big-boned, long-armed chap who thrilled the nation with his spectacular play during the 1931 world series, seemed destined to become one of baseball’s forgotten men last year. Hampered by leg injuries, he played in only 85 games and batted a modest .238. His work in the field was only fair. Ent this season Pepper is smashing hack- At bat 120 times in 31 games, he is tied with Sam West of the Browns for driving out the most hits in both circuits. 45. He has scored 27 runs, just two less than Lou Gehrig’s top 29. He is hitting .375, the third best in the majors. .Pepper starred again yesterday bv smashing out a home run in the 10th inning with two mates aboard and two out to give the Cards a 3 to 0 triumph over Boston. breaking up a mound duel between Big Ed Brandt of the Braves and Bill Walker of the Gards. It was the fifth straight Victory for Gabbj- Street’s outfit. Brooklyn replaced Cincinnati at fourth place in the National Itague standing by blanking the leading Pittsburgh Pirates. 3 to 0. The Dodgers snapped out of a four-game losing streak and bunched tour of their eight hits off Larrv French and Leon Chagnon for three runs in the fifth frame. After four unsuccessful starts against St. Louis, the New York Giants crushed Cincinnati, 9 to 0. behind Hal Schumacher’s three-
Watch^ : y° The size of your electric light bill depends on the kind of lamps you buy. Mazda Lamps give you all the light you pay for and have long life; cheap, inferior lamps give less light, use more current and burn out quickly. For good lighting at low cost insist on Westinghouse M AZPA lamps The Schafer Store HARDWARE and HOME FURNISHINGS SHRINE, Sunday, Monday, May 28 - 29 (FORT WAYNE) ■ ■■■ ■■ ]i r » OF f I ■ • T I IIA \HI 1933 flWVne 3 Performances xf / X/ I SUN. MAT. ~ Jj<7 « 3 P. M. SUN.-MON. NIGHTS, 8:15 P. M SUNDAY MATINEE—2Sc and 40c t SUNDAY AND MONDAY NIGHTS—2Sc, 50c and 75c, tax inc.* DE STMIDNIGHT Frolic ll:3Q p.m. A Seething Blast of Frivolity . . . Daring Night Club Jamboree such as the blase thrill-seeker might be regaled with at Club Guinan or in the gay resorts of Montmartre . . . FULL TWO-AND-A-HALF SHOW. A NIGHT at the FOLIES BERGERE Marcus Peaches in Costume (what there is of ’em—the costumes, we mean) as Usherettes . . . Bring your own horns . . . WE SUPPLY THE CONFETTI ... All Seats Reserved. Prices 50c, 73c, SI.OO, tax inc. NOTE: Owing to the Sophisticated Nature of this Special Performance (which is unrelated to the other bills in the MARCUS repertoire) Children under sixteen will NOT BE ADMITTED. MAIL ORDERS accompanied by remittance* in full and selfaddressed, stamped envelope will be filled in rotation.
hit pitching. First baseman Sam Leslie led the Giants attack with three singles and a double in four r tries. Phil Collins' relief pitching and L batting featured the Phillies;' 11 Ito 4 victory over Chicago. He I took the mound in the fifth and ' checked the Cubs rally. In the I I seventh, his triple with the bases r I loaded featured a five-run outs [ burst. ' 1 In the American league. New r i York bltmked Cleveland. 3 to 0. Philadelphia downed St. Louis, I I 6 to 5. when Ed Cihocki. rookie ’ shortstop, singled to score Jimmy 1 ! Foxx with the winning run in the ’i eighth. George Pipgras. recently 1 I acquired from the Yankees, turn- ; ed in his second straight victory ’ | for Boston as the Red Sox downed • I Chicago. 3 to 2. Another former ' j Yank, Dusty Cooke, clinched the \ game with a homer in the seventh. ’; Washington nosed out Detroit, 6 'to 5. Earl Whitehill and Al ' Thomas held the Tigers to nine ‘, hits. Whitehill drove in the win- | ning tally in the seventh with a ’ single. Yesterday's Heroes Pepper Martin, Cardinals — Hit home run with two on base and ' two out in 10th inning to win I game. i Phil Collins, Phillies — Took I mound in fifth with bases loaded, • ■ retired Cubs and yielded only two, II bits for rest of game. He also I ‘ tripled with the bases loaded. Enroll By .lune 15 11 lAdams county farmers interested I in five acre corn club work may en-' I roll at any time up until Jun-? 15. i ' This club, in which there has been [ • I considerable interest the past sevi era! years, calls for annual e'nroll- , I ment. Last year Laurence Blum won i II first place aid Carl Amstutz sec-. j ond. In addition to medals present-1 Jed. the Krick-Tyndall company pre- ■ sented merchandi.ee to the winners.
TENNIS TILTS HERE TOMORROW Tennis championships in the . Northeastern Indiana conference j will bo decided at the annual tour- , ! ney which will be held on the ‘ I North Seventh street courts in this ( j city Wednesday. i i Three teams, Decatur. Garrett 1 ’ and Auburn are enter,- d in the meet ’ ■ First round matches wil start at 1 19:30 tomorrow morning in l>oth I singles and doubles. Final matches > will be played Wednesday afternoon, probably starting at 2 o'clock i Drawing for the tourney will be I made shortly b fore the matches I are scheduled to start. , Roland Reppert, Decatur senior, will defend his singles championi ship, which he has hold the past j threg years. Fort Wayne Central was scheduled to meet Decatur on the local courts this afternoon. A return match is scheduled with Central I Friday afternoon and Huntington i . also will app ron the local courts 1 sometime the latter part of this j week. Members' of the local high school I team finished work on the courts this morning and have them in excellent condition. Dean Dorwin, ' coach of the high school team, asks I all players to stay off the courts | until the conference meet is comI pleted tomorrow afternoon, j STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. Pct. New York .19 n .633 i Washington .. 20 14 .588 .Chicago 17 14 .549 I Cleveland 18 15 .545 'Philadelphia .. 15 14 .517 ISL Louis 14 20 .412 i Detroit 12 19 .387 Boston 11 19 .366 NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct. i Pittsburgh .. ... 20 11 .645 jNew York 18 13 .581 | St. Louis 19 15 .559 ' Brooklyn . ... 14 14 .500 [Cincinnati 15 16 .469 Boston 16 19 .457 Chicago 15 18 ,455 i Philadelphia 12 22 .353 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pet. 'Columbus. 18 10 .643 ; Minneapolis 17 14 .549 I St. Paul 18 15 .545 ' Milwaukee 15 13 .536 Indianapolis .... 14 13 .519 Toledo 15 16 .484 Louisville 12 19 .387 Kansas City 13 22 .371 YESTERDAY’S RESULTS American League New York. 3: Cleveland. 0. Philadelphia. 6; St. Louis, 5. Boston. 3: Chicago, 2. Washington. 6; Detroit, 5. National League Philadelphia. 11: Chicago, 4. New York, 9: Cincinnati. 0. Brooklyn, 3: Pittsburgh. 0. St. Louis, 3; Boston. 0 (10 innings). American Association St. Paul, 5. Kansas City, 0. Minneapolis, 14: Milwaukee, 3. Louisville, 3; Toledo, 2. Early Varieties Os Corn Needed ■ The lat !■ ess of the season may cause some farriers to want to ' plant some early maturing varieties of orn. such as Woodburn, M. A. C.. Clement’s White Cap, Golden Glow, Clarage, or other varieties. > County Ag nt Archbold has the namea a>:.d addresses of a number of people outside of Adams County who have a limited amount of the earlier varieties. lie would like to know the names and addresses of I Adams County fanners as well as the amounts and varieties of any early corn that will be suitable for seed. If this is crib corn, tests • • made to determine gerMllll I <il PIVWI. VKTTI.K«EVr oi i;» i \ 11-. mi. gttv.-. Notice is hereby given to the creditors. heirs and legatees of Margaret I’uw), deceased, to appear in the Adams Cit< ult Court, held at Decatur. Indiana on the Sth day of June and show cause If any, wliy the Final Settlement Accounts with the estate of said decedent should not lie approved: and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares. Noah A. Pusey. Administrator Decatur, Indiana May 16, 1933.. Attorney C. 1.. Walters. May 16-23
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1933
mination. An effort is being made by the county agent to locate available I sources of soy bean seed. COURT HOUSE . Real Estate Transfer Nqta Niblidk et al to Mary P. Niblick, out lot 83 in Decatur for I SI.OO. Marriage License Noe Joseph Jubenville, office clerk, Detroit, Michigan, and Louise Peltier, Detroit. Michigan. Case Remanded Korte Brothers, Incorporated, vs. John Jacobs, suit on account, by agreement of parties the case was remanded to the superior court of Allen county. Ordered Committed Aldine Ginter has been ordered committed to the Easthaven sanitarium at Richmond. o Answers To Test < Questions ' Below are the Answers to th© Test Questions Printed on Page Two. 1. Herbert Hoover. 2. The French. 3. Projecting wing at right angles with the nave and aisles. 4. English statesman and economist. 5. By Act of Congress. 6. William Z Foster. 7. California. 8. In Lorraine, France. 9. "Old Lady of Threadneedle Street.” 10. Los Angeles. Calif.
MARKETREPORTS i ——. DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected May 22 No commission ana no yardage. 170 to 300 lbs $4.85 I; 300 to 350 lbs $4.70 11140 to 170 lbs $4.50 i 100 to 140 lbs $4.00 [.Roughs ’ 3.70 ,' Stags _• $1.75 ; i Vealers $5.50 Spring Lambs $6.00 ; EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK , East Buffalo, N. Y., May 23.—(U.PJ ; —Livestock: • Hogs: on sale, 1,100; very slow, , few early sales 10c under Monday's I average; bulk unsold; few decks c 190 to 210 lbs.. $5.40; scattered [ lots 160 to 170 lbs., $5.15-$5.25. Cattle: Receipts. 75; mostly cowsj, cutter grades, $2-$2.60; few tat cows. $3.25. Calves: Receipts, 400; vealers draggy; weak to 50c lower; good to choice,. $5.50; common and medium. $4-$4.75. Sheep: Receipts, 50; all classes and grades quoted steady; odd lots common lambs, $4.75; good spring- . ers, $7.50; handy weight ewes, $3. ; FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., May 23. —(U.R) —Livestock: Hog market, 20 : 25c higher; 100140 lbs., $4; 140-160 lbs., $4.45; 160190 lbs., $4.75; 190-250 lbs.. $4.85; 250-300 lbs., $4.75; 300-350 lbs., I $4.65; roughs. $4; stags, $2.75; calves. $5; dipped lambs, $5.25; spring lambs. $7. Cattle market: Steers, good to ' choice. $5-$5.50; medium to good, $4.50-$5; common to medium. $3.50$4; heifers, good to choice, $4.501 $5; medium to good. $4-$4.50; common to medium. $3-$4; cows, good ' to choice, $3-$3.50; medium to good $2.50-$3; cuttei cows, $1.75-$2.25; 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 bulls, $3.25-$3.75. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Dec. ’ Wheat ' .68% .70% .72 .74% Corn .43% .45% .47% .49% ’Oats .. .24% .25% .25% .27% r LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected May 19 n t ' No. 1 New Wheat, SC-lbs. or s better . ... 73c L No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs 72c 22c '',Soy Beans 35c to 75c I White or mixed corn 50c I Good Yellow corn &5c 3 Rye —25 c
Circus Holiday Always Popular A circus holiday Is perhaps as popular as any holiday. The next such holiday for Decatur will be W’ednes.day, May 31. Just as holidays are different so are circuses. There was a time when it was alleged that all circuses were alike —but this does not seem to hold good in these days. The progressive showmen have modernized their show equipment and to visit a circus today is a more comfortable thing to do than formerly. The Russell Brothers three ring circus which exhibits here soon carries its own electric light plant and keeps its grounds well lighted even after the night performance is over. There was a time when a circus advertised rain proof tents which proved not to be as advertised, but now all the modern circuses use tents that are thoroughly water proof. Account of so many modern con-
"STOLEN LOVE" by HAZEL LIVINGSTON 67 COPYRIGHT BY KINO FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC.
WHAT HAS HAPPENED SO FAR. Joan Hastings, seventeen and beautiful, lives a secluded life with her two old maiden aunts in a house long run to seed. Aunt Evvie, discovering that Joan has visited a dance hall, angrily reveals to her the story of how her mother had won her father away from Aunt Babe. Joan, alone in her room, clasps to her heart a miniature of her mother and refuses to believe she was anything but good. Aunt Evvie buys a cheap auto and engages Bill Martin, a garage worker, to care for it. Bill, looking up from his work, sees Joan watching him from her window. Aunt Evvie has forbidden Joan to go with Hilda Sedgwick, the most popular girl at school. Therefore, the other girls snub Joan and she is lonely. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. CHAPTER 4 Whenever the loneliness pressed too hard, she shook her hair back furiously and tried to concentrate on Bill. Bill loved her, Well, if he didn’t now, he would pretty soon. Already she was planning the wedding. White satin. No, ivory satin. And her grandmother Van Fleet’s rose point veil, with tulle. Lilies of the valley and gardenias, like Hilda’s oldest sister Alice had when she was married. Hilda could be a bridesmaid. She’d forgive Hilda for being so mean, and they’d be friends again. Hilda could wear nile green, made something like that dress she was raving about—with little puff sleeves . . . Buzz ... the electric buzzer jangling. Reeess was over at last. So Joan got through the first two days of her ostracism, thinking about the boy who looked up at her from the rose garden. Building aircastles, wistfully dreaming. The third day she couldn’t stand it any longer. She had to walk past Gerwin’s Garage. It was six blocks out of her way, but she would walk down town, and pretend she had tc buy something at the grocery. Hurrying along the little boardwalk near the ferry, where the big boat for San Francisco, and the little boat for Tiburon squeaked at their moorings, old Captain Horner hailed her. ’’Hello, Johnnie Hastings, what you doing down here?” The quick scarlet dyed her cheek. “Oh. I’m—l’m going to the grocery.” Her tongue tripped on the lie. She looked at him appealingly out of big, troubled, gray-green eyes. ‘‘Goin’ to meet your sweetheart—that's what!” Old Captain Horner, who remembered when she was a baby, chuckled. Veronica’s little girl with a sweetie! The very idea. Well, well. “Os course, I’m not!” Joan gasped. She looked at him in horror. How could he have possibly found out? “Well, you will be pretty soon. Getting prettier every day, Johnnie. ’Scuse me. Guess I’ll have to be calling you Joan now, you’re such a young lady, or mebbe Miss Hustings! Hee, hee!” Joan laughed too, with blessed relief. Oh, the silly she was! Os course, he hadn’t meant anything—how could he? “Goodbye!” she flung over her shoulder. “Goodbye, Captain Horner!” Now she was almost at the garage. Her steps got slower. Slower still. The boy was out in front, doing something to a truck. His strong brown arms flashed in the sun. A little pulse began to beat in Joan’s throat. Should she speak
veniences being demanded by the public even with the circus, as well as cry for acts that thrill and are daring as well as novel, the circus r manager must ever be alert in arranging his program. The Russell Brothers emphasize quality of perI tormance more than they do quan- * tity. They insist "on presenting a 'truly high class performance, and ; for this purpose they carry an army of arena stars as well as ’ clowns who keep plenty of life before the crowds in the three rings Hand on the hippodrome track. I I Almost two solid hours of clean Hamusement, guaranteed to be much i more 'than an individual can see Jat one time, is the promise of the '[Russell Bros, three ring circus I when it exhibits here in Decatur. ' | Wednesday, May 31, afternoon and j night. Guest tickets are being distributed by local merchants and by the Dally Democrat. Get the Habit — Trade at Home
first, or would he? Now he was turning toward her. Panic gripped her. She seemed to be standing still —rooted to the spot—staring. But she wasn’t. She was walking right along, walking right by, passing him! She tried desperately to speak, to say “Hello!” nonchalantly, but she couldn’t. Her lips were too dry and stiff. His cap was pulled so far over his eyes she couldn’t be sure that he saw her. Anyway he pretended not to. He turned away from her, and wouldn’t look. Joan's heart almost stopped beating. She was suffocating, but her feet carried her right along, round the turn of the road, up the steep road that twisted above the town. After a while she found herself sitting on the grass, on a hill, all spicy smelling with budding shrubs, and a tangle of creeping vines. Down below she could hear the water lapping on the rocks. Some little birds chirped in a thicket. She sat there a long time, on the pleasant Sausalito hillside, with the lovely panorama of the bay, the islands and the little boats, spread out before her. The sun was setting when she clambered stiffly to her feet, and knew that. a was cold. The wind had risen to a gale. “Well—that's the end of that, all right!” and she trudged on to the house. Now her defence was down. She had no more rosy dreams to warm the long, dreary days. She wasn't anybody's fairy-tale princess. She was just a shabby girl, in a funny old-fashioned dress. But she’d be boiled in oil, cut up in little tiny pieces before she’d let them know she cared. • • • “No, thanks, I don’t want to play. I hate basketball! I wouldn’t play for anybody!" she cried vehemently, when one of the girls offered to let her play for a few moments until someone else got there. “What did I tell you?” Hilda said. “There’s no use bothering with her —she’s stuck up I" And all the while Joan’s heart was crying, “Oh, please, let me play —please take me back. It isn’t my fault I’m queer—l'm not really. It's just Aunt Ewie. Oh, talk to me again—be nice to me again—I’m so lonely—” Lonely! The ache of it pressed down on her like a great weight on her head. Recesses that were once too short, stretched to etefnity. Days lasted forever. The memory of yesfc day’s slight rankled, and the dread of tomorrow’s were almost more than she eould bear. “It’s mostly because I look so funny. If I had a new dress they couldn’t laugh at me anyway. I’ll ask Aunt Ewie—” It took courage to ask Aunt Ewie, but she finally did. “I'd make it myself—it wouldn’t cost much. Cotton crepe, Aunt Ewie, and the pattern I want doesn’t take much goods!” Aunt Ewie, a little late for the sewing circle, didn’t even answer. She just gave Joan a withering look, and strode pest her to the front door. “Hurry, Babe, if you're coming! You’re always so slow ” And Babe, snubbed because the frizzing of her hair had made them late, turned peevishly on Joan. “I should think you’d be ashamed to ask for money now, with everything going out, and nothing coming in,” she said. “Besides, you look very neat and nice, the way a young lady should look. Most of them look like —chorus girls!” “You might water the rose garden!" Ewie flung over her shoulder as she creaked down the stairs. “I think you might do that much around the bouse without being told!”
Joe Savoldi Wins New York, May 23. —(U,R) —Jumping Joe Savoldi evened his bcore with Ed ‘’Strangler'' Lewis last night when he pinned the Kentucky vetern in 43:07 of the scheduled finish wrestling match before 7,500 fans at Madison Square Garden. The match ended when Savoldi leaped into the air, planted both feet on Lewis’ chest and kicked him to the floor. A body slam finished the veteran. Savoldi lost last week when he missed a "drop kick” and fell out of the ring. o_ . Churubusco To Hold District Meeting Churubusco, Ind. May 23. —(Special! —Bert Davis post number 157 of the American Legion in this city, will be host to the Fourth dis trict of the Legion and auxiliary Thursday. June 1.
“You’ll never have to ask me again—l-—l’ll flood it!” Joan muttered making for the patched old hose that had been stored in the stable during the rainy season. She winked hard to keep back the tears. It wouldn’t have cost much for a blue crepe dress. If your own family would rather have you look like a scarecrow than spend two dollars on you. . . . It was almost dark in the old stable. She had to climb over the car, to reach the hook where the garden hose was hung. She scraped her skin against the fender, and tore her nail. The tears came. All the stored up tears of days and weeks and months. Tears for her bleeding finger, for Hilda, for the horrible shiny blue serge, and the boy who looked at her in the sunset and didn’t mean it. She sank down on the running board of the car. Oh, the relief of it! Ths relief of being able to cry all alone in the dark, with Aunt Evvie and Aunt Babe both out, and no one to know—• No one to know. She could cry as much as she liked, and she did,' An orgy of grief. And into it, all unsuspecting, walked Bill. He walked in to get Miss Van Fleet’s second-hand car, and he almost fell over the weeping girl. Ke would have fled, but Joan heard his step, heard him stumble back to the door. She looked up and saw him. With a tremendous effort she swallowed her sobs, and made a few ineffectual dabs at her eyes. “I'm—l’m crying!” she said rather unnecessarily. She meant it as a sort of apology. “I forgot it was Wednesday.” “Oh—that’s all right,” he murmured, feeling foolish. “I’d stop, but I’ve used up all my handkerchief,” she wailed, and hid her streaked face against the side of the car. “If ywi’il just go away —for a tninu'e—” Bill backed tc the door. There was something so helpless, so childish in the girls bent neck, in the ruffled glory of her curly hair, in her very abandonment and tearstreaked dustine«s that his own embarrassment melted. Bill reached in his pocket and brought out a large, clean handkerchief. “Here—take this one—” She looked up through wet, thick lashes, and reached out a timid hand. Their fingers touched. Her slim body was shaking convulsively, she buried her nose in Bill's big white handkerchief and cried afresh. Gingerly he steadied her with his hand. Almost automatically he sank to his knees beside her. His arm had slipped around her. Feminine tears were no noveity to Bill. His married sister, Eunice, was what old Mrs. Martin complacently referred to as a “champion crier,” but she never cried like that. “You—you weren’t sick or anything?” he ventured nervously. “Can I call somebody—or something?” "Oh, no—no—l’ll be all right in a minute—” The sympathy in the boy’s voice, his concern for her, completely overwhelmed Joan, who had never, in her seventeen years, received any. With a little grateful sigh that was half a sob, she snuggled closer in his protecting arms. And so big Bill Martin who had never cared much for girls, and little Joan Hastings who had never known any boys found their first shy love in each other’s arms. “Water the rose garden,” Aunt Evvie had said. A task to fill Joan’s idle afternoon, and its consequences filled her whole life. (To Be Continued Tomorrow)
advertisement ’ FOR SAuT FOR 2 last year models. at C Prices. August Walter dealer, 254 No. FOR SALE dition. 127 v above O. K. Barbershop FOR SALE— 27 2% miles east of Decat®? road 16. FOR ’ALE guaranteed to grow. art. 2 miles nt)rth> % m * Mr»n, Ohio. — — FOR SALE Plants: YelhT? tant cabbage, pimentos, J cauliflower, wilt resistant toinJ. M. Meibers. 1127 West ;-H| FOR SALE Tomato. Mangoe plants. 5c dot. Son, 105 W. Oak St. Phone 838. FOR SALE - Cabbage,’Z Mangoes, cauliflower. 3a Jl plants. Kimry Hougk. 2>4 u 10th St. Phone 677. 2 FOR SA LE Yellow com, tion guaranteed. East ofMoJ Ruperts, | FOR SALE —Baby chicks It fed on Beco Chick cod liver oil qr Burk's Bij a Starter. $2.00 per 100 Elevator Company, telephoMl J WANTED WANTED — Live Stock ig, kinds of property. DecatarCh munity Sale. Friday 26th., 7 p. m WANTED —To Buy several irg of bees W. W. HawkktDa phone 861-0. HELP WANTED—YowgS learn a business. Must be to work and be able to city. Address Br. Democrat.H W) ANTED —To razor blades, like new a 3c doubles 4c Leave hliia, Vance and Lin ffl ~\NTEi) ‘ Canners, cutters and find Springer and flesh having cattle to sell, alljk 274. Wm. Butler. bSiM ~ FOR RENT~ FOR RENT Semi-nwdetill at 123 N. Fifth St. Ml' FOR RENT- Seven roooM mile east of Decatur, largeti patch, chicken park, tali possession. $7 month. Phoal or 312. *3 FOR RENT 2 furnished ro« light housekeeping; first la private entrance. Modem k Phone 511 or inquire 310 lift Street. 3S XOTICE OF mil »ETrt® OF l > I S I E M). Notice is hereto given cHtors, heir< and legatee! Sprunger. <te> • .<ed to -ta* the Adams ''o 'lit Court Me Decatur, Indiana, on tla I sl June 1933. and -how awl> why the Final Settlement *■ with the estate of said *• should not : r! .-ove4>k< heirs are notif:-'i to then aa Make proetf "f heirshp. their distribute shares. 1 Bldon !•!. — Admtnistrat ; with will i" 1 Decatur, Ir.di.o y,v 1? Attorney < lurk .1. I <■<». j
S. E. BLAd FUNERAL DIRECTOR Because of our wid« fI in conducting funerali ’• able to give perfect sert» very reasonable cost. Dignified But Not Co*# 500 —Phones—727 Lady Asat. Ambulance * N. A. BIXL® OPTOMETRIST Eyea Examined. Glasses HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to ■ Saturdays. 8:00 PTelephone 13S
