Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 123, Decatur, Adams County, 24 May 1933 — Page 4
Page Four
High School Conference Baseball Tourney Fridays
FOUR TEAMS TO | BATTLE ON NEW FIELD FRIDAY Decatur. Bluffton. Columbia City And Hartford City Entered The 1933 baseball championship of the Northeastern ! Indiana high school conference will be decided at a tournament to be held at the new high school athletic field on West Adams street, Decatur, Friday. Four teams are entered in the tourney. These teams are I Decatur, 'Bluffton, Columbia City and Hartford City. None ! of the other conference schools had : a baseball team in the field this j season. Arrangements for the tourney were made at a meeting of representatives of the teams entered ! Monday night. All games are sc:. d- ! tiled for seven innings, unless re- ; quired to go longer because of tie ' scores. The first game will be played at 9 o’clock Friday morning, with the Bluffton Tigers meeting the Col- I utn-bia City Eagles. The Decatur Yellow Jackets and Hartford City . Airdales will play immediately at- ! ter the first game is completed. The winners of the morning' games will battle at 2:30 P. M. for , the conference baseball champion- 1 ship. Bruff Cleary, well known I spurts official of Fort Wayne, will umpire behind the plate, and Earl I Blackburn local baseball authority, | will umpire the bases. Admission prices will be 10 cents for all school children and 25 cents ' for adults. In Great Shape Several days of intensive w-ork by Herb Curtis, Decatur athletic ' director, and high school students have put the new field into first ! class playing condition. The new’ field has all been sodd- . ed. with the base paths skinned. . A layer of clay and sand has been put on the base lines to furnish a perfect playing surface. Bleachers have been erected be- i hind the home plate and along the . first and third baselines. Lumber for the bleachers was donated by \ Bill Bel Land the Decatur Athletic | Club while the bleachers were 1 built by I. W. Macy. Carl Buffan,Larger and Marion Feasel. high school athletes, spent | yesterday and today painting the [ bleachers. Approximately 300 fans can be seated on the bleachers, which are placed far enough from the base lines to prevent any interference with players. The new’ field is one of the best I for any city in the state the size of I Decatur. The field is entirely sur- j rounded by a high wire fence. Out- . field fences are far enough remov- I ed from home plate that very fewballs will ever be hit over the bar riers. Left field is about 350 feet 1 deep while right field Is approxi- [ mately 300 feet. o AFPOIXTMEXT nt. 4;u;u IS IK "Notice is hereby given, That the' undersigned has been appointed Executor of the Estate of Catherine V. ctage.late of Adams County, deceased. The Estate is probablv solvent. John R. Gage. Executor Fruehte A Fitterer. Attorneys d V ■
For Better Health See Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 314 104 So. 3rd st. Neurocalometer Service X-Ray Laboratory Offic* Hours: 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. m.. 6 to 8 p. m. YAGER BROTHERS Funeral Directors Ambulance Service, Day or Night Lady Attendant Phone 105-44 Funeral Home, 110 So. First St y— — S. E. BLACK FUNERAL DIRECTOR Because of our wide experience in conducting funerals we are able to give perfect service at a very reasonable cost. Dignified But Not Costly. 500—Phones—727 Lady Asst. Ambulance Service N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted. HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays. 8 00 p m Telephone 135. I'"'!'X. ’ 1
I , B’Red- Ruffing • YANK fdOUMD ACE. WHO OFTEM WINS HIS OWN GAMES WITH HIS HEAVY SLUGGING • HE CAN HIT AS WELL 1 AS PITCH! And Ferrell A l ? e TWO OTHER HURLERS fl "JsSOsE WHO CAN HiT! \' A JI ••a great - “Red \ pitcher.. 7 5 <- i LUCAS BATS D I SO WELL THAT used As a of the Reas 1 pinch Hitter? -■———' Bo**x**
0 _ 0 Answers To Test Questions Below are the Answers to the Test Questions Printed on Page Two. « 4 1. Frances Folsom. 2. A civil wrong. 3. Scotland. 4. Methane. 5. The Mayflower. 6. Francois Domi:;ique Toussaint. i called L’ouverture. 7. An alloy of copper and zinc. 8. Mexico. 9. Methodism. j 10. The windpipe. CH ARLES DAWES~ NAMED ON LIST ' OF BORROWERS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) j ket.” The list was made public over I the protest of Morgan and his counksel. John W. Davis. They obiectied yesterday, when Morgan testiI tied that some of the loans were (overdue and that collateral depositled at the time had depreciated un- 1 ! til. in some cases, it was no longer 1 •sufficient to cover the amount due. • The senate committee decided in ; executive session to make the list public and it was presented when 1 the inquiry was resumed today. Another list, showing the names of those* who have benefitted by . privileges whk h permitted them to buy securities at “bargain counter” prices, was to be introduced in ‘evidence later. Richard Whitney, president of the New York stock exchange, was NOTH r. TO BIDDERS j Notice is hereby given that th*-, Board of County Commissioners of I Adams County, state of Indiana, will I at the office of the auditor in said f county on Tuesday, the sth day of June. and up until 10 o'clock!, A. M. on said day. receive sealed I bids for the furnishing of certain ■ labor, making of certain repairs and i installing of certain plumbing in the] Court House at I»ecatiir. Indiana: All bids must be made in accordance with the plans and speci fka-1 ti ms now on file in the office of the: | auditor of said county. Each bidder will l»c required to’ I file affidavits and bond* in the man j ner required by law. All w;ork to be done subject to the I approval and acceptance of the un-J j dersigned. their agents or represen-t tatives. I The board will reserve the right j to reject any or al! ‘bids. Dennis Striker F. O. Martin Phil Sauers Board of County Commissioners Attest: Glen Cowan. Auditor. Mny 14-31 , NOTH E OF liKMH.I TION It» I HF. *itM hiuii her* of i>f:< vri It HOME HI II.DEH*, a corpora tiaa Notice is hereby given that there; will be a meeting of the «to. khold>| ers of Decatnr Home Builders, at I the office of the leLajry, Leo | 'I Ehinger. Decatur, Indiana, on the I I ICth day of June l'»3J at 1<» o'clock I A. M. for the purpose of voting upon ' I the resolution adopted by the Board I j of Directors of said Companv on the | 22nd. day of May 1933 upon the I question “Resolve that in the opfnlion of the Board of Directors it is I for the best interest of all parties' ■ interested to dissolve Decatur Home • ! Builders, a corporation.” And to take 1 such further action bv said stoclrholders as may be to the best interest of said companv. John H. Heller Ureshlent. Leo Ehinger May 24-3? June 7 NOTICE OF INSOIAEM V In the matter of the rotate of Jonrph M. Peel, derrnord In the Idnmn Cirralt C ourt Notice is hereby given that upon petition filed in said court by Carrie M. Peel. Administratrix of said es- • late, setting up the Insufficiency of the estate of said decedent to pay i the debts and 1 ■' Ai’ - t hen Judge of said Court did. on the 17 day of May 1933. find said estate to be probably Insolvent, nnd order th»same to be settled accordingly The creditors of wild estate are therefore hereby notified of such insolvency, anti required to file their claims against said estate for allowance. Witness, thp Clerk and seal of said Court, at Decatur. Indiana this 17 day of May 1933. Milton Werling, Clerk John T. Kelly. Attorney May 17-24
included in the loin list, as was I Myron C. Taylor, identified as chair- ' man of the board of the United States Steel Corporation and a director of the First National Bank, of New York. The Taylor Iran was repaid but .the list showed the Whitney loan* j still was outstanding. The unpaid loans numbered 24. : I about one-third of the list, j STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L Pct I New York,... 20 11 .645 , Washington 20 15 .571 Chicago IS 14 .563 • Philadelphia 16 14 .533 ; Cleveland IS 16 .529 1 Detroit 13 19 .406 , St. Louis 14 21 .400 j Boston 11 20 .355 , NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct. , i Pittsburgh 21 11 .656! New York 19 13 .591’ St. Louis .... 19 16 .543! Brooklyn 14 15 .483 | 'Boston 17 19 .472 Cincinnati 15 IS .455, 'Chicago 15 19 .441 j i Philadelphia 13 22 .371 • AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L. Pct i ■ Columbus IS 11 .621 Minneapolis IS 14 .563 , St. Paul 19 15 .559 'lndianapolis 15 13 .536 Milwaukee 15 14 Hl7l Toledo ..................... 15 17 .469: Louisville T 13 19 .406 1 Kansas City 13 23 .361 YESTERDAY’S RESULTS American League Detroit. 7; Washington. 1. Philadelphia. S; St. Louis. 6. New York. 8; Cleveland, 6. Chicago. 7: Boston. 0. National League Boston. 3: St. Louis, 1 (10 innings). New York. 6: Cincinnati. 4. Philadelphia. 9: Chicago, 5. Pittsburgh, 3; Brooklyn. 0. American Association St. Paul. 9; Kansas City. 5. Minneapolis, 19; Milwaukee, 5. Louisville, 9; Toledo, 6. Outline Program For Calf Cluh Pollyanna Lehman, chairman of j 1 the calf club program committee 1 in Adams county. Huldah Steury i | and Treva Baumgartner met recent i 1 !y at the county agent's office to i 1 complete pl ns for the year s pro-1 ■ gram. Several meetings will .be : held this year. Demonstration team and judging It-ams will be started this year I Calf club members interested are ! : urged to enter contests at the next : 1 meeting. Plans also are being made : to hold a picnic fn July. It is likely 1 that the best judging tyam will go jto the Indiana state fair for one ' day.
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MTDNESDAY, MAY 24, 1933.
LOCAL TENNIS TEAM WINNER Rolland Reppert, for the last three years conference singles I champion, was eliminated from the conference tourney today when he was unexpectedly de- i seated by Barnes of Central 3-6 6-2, 6-1. Rain stopped the tourney this afternoon and weather permitting, the meet will be fin- . irhed tomorrow afternoon. Beat Central The Decatur high school tennis team turned up for the Northeastern Indiana conference meet today j with a 5 to 2 victory over Central] | of Fort Wayne at the North Sev-| I enth street courts Tuesday after-1 j noon. * Desantr made a clean sweep of I l the four singles matches without! (losing a single set. Central players, ! won only ten games iu the four. I matches. Decatur won one of the three ) doubles m itches, losing one and ' forfeiting one after losing the first ' set. This last match had no effect i i on the final result of the match 1 ; and was forfeited because of the' ' late hour. Results of all matches are as fol-1 I lows: | Reppert. (D) defeated Barnes. : 6-3, 6-1; Cowan. (D) defeated Tuck-
MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected May 24 No commission ant no yardage. i 17© to 250 lbs. $4.55 ’ ' 250 to 325 lbs $4.40 140 to 170 lbs $4.20 ■ 100 to 140 lbs. .. v 3.75 [ Roughs — $3.50 I I Stags $1.50 Vealers $5.00 ! Spring Lambs $6.00 ( Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs 5c up; 100-140 tbs. $4.05; I 140-160 lbs. $4.50; 160-190 lbs. $4.80; 190-250 Tbs. $4.90; 250-300 j lbs. $4.80; 300-350 lbs. $4.70; i i rouhs $4: stags $2.75. (Tipped lambs $5.25; spring' i lambs $6.50-7. Calves $5.50; steers good to] ' choice $5-5.50; medium to good! $4.50-4; common to medium $3.50-1 4; heifers good to choice $4.50-s;' medium to good $4-4.50; common to medium $3-4; cows good to •h' i<. $2.50-3; cutter cows $1.752 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 $3-3.75. , East Buffalo Livestock Hogs, on sale 1,500; fairly active to packers. General?- 15c under Tuesday's average: bulk desirable 170 to 250 lbs. $5 35; bid $5 on 280 Tbs., butchers; weights below 150 tbs.. $4.65-4.85. Cattle receipts 200; cows unchanged; cutter grades $2 15-2.60: : ■medium bulls steers held around $5.75. Calf receipts 150; holdover 200; vealers slow, barley steady; good to choice $5.50; common and medium $4-4.75. Sheep receipts 400; old crop ■ lambs steady, springs strong: good to ’choice clippers $6.50; similar grade spring lambs inj eluding bucks $8; few throwouts downward to $6. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Dec. Wheat 7044 72»4 73% 76 Com . 44% 45% 48% 49% ] I Oats . .. 25 25% 25% 27% ] lOCAL orain market Corrected May 24 — No. I New Wheat, 50 Tbs. or better 71c ; No. 2 New Wheat 581bs. 70c Oats 22c Soy Beans —35 cto 75c' | White or mixed corn 50c 1 Good Yellow corn 55c | Rye 25c
I er. 6-1, 6-2; Moyer (D) defeated i i Falks. 6-3. 6-0; and Townsend (D) 1 swamped Wyatt, 6-0. 6-0. Reppert-Burk (DI. defeated i ■ Barnes-Curran, 6-3. 6-3: ShreekI Yarnelle (C) defeated Odle-Feni-j more. 62, 6-4; Falks-Tucker (C) ! won the first set from Cowan-Moy- I I , —-—
|"STOLEN LOVE" Z>« HAZEL LIVINGSTON COFYRI6Hr BY KINO FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. - ' 1 -
, WHAT HAS HAPPENED SO FAR. Joan Hastings, seventeen and beautiful, lives a secluded life with her two 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. Ordered to water the rose garden, Joan sinks down on the running board of the . car and weeps because of her loneliness and restraints. Bill finds her, and distressed by her grief, tries to , comfort her, NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. CHAPTER 5 Bill hadn’t the time for girls. He had been struck with Joan’s beauty when he first saw her framed in ! the red velveteen curtains that first afternoon. She hauuted him, as a bar of music, or a line from a poem can haunt one, and all the next day as he went about his greasy chores in Gerwin’s Garage he thought of her, slender and gold and remote in the window. But she lived in "the Van Fleet mansion,” and she was only a kid. He would never had thought of her as a possible sweetheart. Big Bill Martin was almost twenty, and had worked on the docks. Nor would Joan have made the first advances. They might never have known each other, had he not come upon her that April afternoon I crying in the old stable. Were they really strangers? Joan looked up at him through wet, thick lashes. Her seagreen eyes were deep pools of wandering tenderness. "We—we’re like the story of the sleeping princess in the fairy tales,’’ she said in her clear, childish voice. “You know—she's been asleep for a hundred years, and he finds her, and kisses her—” She broke off, and grinned in sudden embarassment. “I mean because we didn’t know each other before—and all of a sudden, we just did.” He hadn’t meant to kiss her. not even when she talked about the fairy tale, but she was so near, her sweet mouth was so soft and red. Their lips met, then Joan drew back in sudden fright. “Oh—why did you?” she whispered. “Well, I guess I better get busy on the car,” he said with forced cheerfulness. “That's what I was sent around here to do —be losing my job if I don’t look out,” And then, lower, anyiously, "You—you aren’t angry—are you?” She shook her head. "No—not angry—” He squeezed her slender hand in his brown paw. “Then it’s all right. Say, can I use the hose on the car?” "To wash it with? Oh. yes. And I’ll take it when you're finished." They went out together, and Bill screwed it to the leaky faucet near the south hedge. "I’ll hold it for you!” "Oh no—” "But I want to!” In the end he let her, and then he dragged it back to tne rose garden for her, and returned to the car to finish his work. From her place in the garden Joan could watch him. She saw him in a golden mist. Already she I was fitting him into all her bookish dreams. She saw him mushing with a dog team through the frozen north. A flash of red—the Royal Mounted, getting his man. A sweating khaki figure leading a charge into No Man's Land. An engineer in tropic white, beating his way through some South American junI gle. Her heart beat crazily against her blue serge side. How hard he worked on Ewie’s car. His khaki shirt was open at the neck. She had never noticed that boys had pretty necks before. Well, not pretty exactly—but nice. How blue his eyes were. Dark hair and blue eyes—’TUy father had dark hair and | blue eyes!” she called to him across -he bushes.
er, 7-5. and the match was then | forfeited to Central. A return fnateh will be played at Central Friday afternoon. — — o Jews Became Confused Eugene, Ore., —(VP) —Two Jewish children who write their names ;
“Did he?” The color rose in the boy’s freckled face. He stole an- | other look at the girl in the sun. i “Your hair is awfully pretty!” he . said. It was his first compliment. . He had never had a girl. i A warm blush climbed to the roots of her crinkly gold hair. “Do you I think I’m pretty?” she asked, very : low. . He nodded, embarrassed again. He had never had a girl, but he had never heard of a girl like this one! Like some sort of shy wild thing, bold one minute, and getting ready to run the next. And how lovely she was, all gold and ivory and slender. ... With a convulsive movement he stuffed the rags he had been polishing the car with, under the seat. “See you next week. Goodbye—” And he fled. • • • The rose garden was soaked. Joan was winding the hose when the aunts came home after the meeting of the Sewing Circle. “I don’t think I’ll care for much dinner,” Aunt Babe was saying.
He hadn’t meant to kiss her, but she was so near, her sweet mouth was so soft and r ed.
“Mrs. Thomas always serves such rich refreshments.” "Did the boy clean the car?” Aunt Evvie demanded, making for the stable. 'Joan went on winding the hose. Her eyes were starry. There was a radiance over her that did not cor.’.,from the last slanting rays of the afternoon sun. “Yes—he was here,” she said. “Well, it looks pretty good.” Aunt Ewie came out, and bolted the heavy door. “New brooms sweep clean.” Something in the pose of Joan’s lithe blue figure, something in the way the sunset glorified her burnished, wind-blown hair made Ewie catch her breath sharply. It was as if she were seeing Joan for the hrst time, seeing tne ivory and rose of her youth, her round slenderness, her delicately perfect profile. “Veronica all over again!” she thought bitterly. “And grown up—grown up like a mushroom, overnight!” When nine o’clock had come, and Joan had closed her books and gone to bed, Ewie turned to Babe, who was sewing on a white canton flannel nightgown destined for the Foreign Missions’ Christmas box. ■ “We'll have to do something with i Joan,” she said decisively. i “Haven't I always said—” i “Oh yes, you said a lot, but thei-e I wasn’t much point in it before. ■ She’s growing up so fast. I don’t i know as I want the responsibility. ■ Do you suppose Cousin Belle would ’ take her? A school like Belle's is • what Joan needs, and she could help t Belle in some ways.” “But chink of the fare to Philat delphia, sister? Why it would t cost—” ’ 1 “Belle ought to pay it. She prob- . ably would. It would pay her in the . end. I believe I’ll write—” r Old Mrs. Heeley who always listened in on the evenir.,T confidences 1 byway of the kitchen keyhole, s straightened up, and rubbed her chilled ear tenderly.
[ from right to left with letters up- ; side down, were studied at a Porti land school by Irving 'Anderson, I University of Or gon psychologist. ] Anderson said that the children I had learned to read and write He- : brew and English at the same time [and had become confused.
“So that’s it. Humph!” she addressed the kitchen alarm clock she was preparing to take upstairs with her. "Sending her away to school, eh? Well, 1 remember when they sent Veronica away. Old Mr. Van Fleet thought he was terrible smart. Like Miss Evvie. But he was too I slow. Miss Evvie’d better look out she ain’t too slow, that’s all I got to say!” And upstairs Joan leaned out of her window in the moonlight. There was a little ghost of a smile on her lips, but her eyes were heavy. Heavy with sleep, and yearning for Bill. Bill who had kissed her, and put his strong, brown arm protectingly about her shoulders. “Your hair is awfully pretty!” She said the precious words over in her heart. Bill had said that to her. He thought her hair was pretty. She covered her burning face with her hands. On the road, the other side of the hedge, a boy passed, whistling. He had walked up from the hollow, just to pass by the house. It was quite dark in the old Van Fleet place.
"Guess she's in bed by now!” The ' whistling grew fainter, blew away on the salt wind. Aunt Evvie’s letter went rushing on its way, and Spring who knows no letters, went leisurely about hers. Te.ider, green, leaves, pale and new, made a delicate lace canopy throt gb which you could look up and i -e the sky and the big white clouds drifting over the old orchard. The hills teemed with wild flowers. The green waters of the bay, specked with white foam, sparkled in the sun and the little boats anchored there bobbed joyously up and down. It was all new to Joan —all the vid familiar sights and sounds and smells of Sausalito in Spring—because she was sharing it with Bill. And when the big yellow moon rode low in the sky, and the lanterns on the little boats over Belvedere way glowed like fireflies in the night, the beauty was almost more than she could bear. If only she could put out her hand and touch him—know that he was loving it all, too— There must be a way—they must find away to meet at nights, too. At first it was enough to meet on Wednesday afternoons, when the two old ladies had gone primly into town, and he came to wash Aunt Ewie’s car. Enough to stand near, and talk—about anything. To smile at each other wordlessly, and find funny little excuses to touch each other’s hand or hair. “Oh—you’ve blackened your fiziger nail. Doesn’t it hurt?” Just that—and all the while she was yearning to hold it against her heart—his poor hand. "Hold on there's a piece of cypress tangled in your hair. Wait —l'll get it out!” His fingers were so big and rough in her soft tawny curls. He was disgusted with them ! for being so clumsy. (To Be Continued Tomorrow)
(' LASSI FIEIPw business iaHE AM) NOT!® JI for SALe'b -1 2 last y. inirtiHs. »t dealer, 2--.4 N,.. Second' FOR SALE-27 slmts. 2% miles east of Decatur otS road 16. FOR SALE - guaranteed to grow. Ly tß di|f ■ art. 2 mil- mil , Wren, Ohio. FOR SAIF Plants: tanl cai)i>ac,‘. pj lnMltow cauliflower, wilt resistant M. Meiller-;. 1127 West MmZM I FOR SALE - Tomato, Mangoe planN. doz. 11054 V. Oak >■ r.--:;.-FOR SALE — I Mangoes. , w ,.r plants. H nr\ H.eigk.’ 2ti< sS 10th St. -Phone 677. » FOR SALE ' a.indy sixes 69c. I dresses. y; wash Hemstitching Ic. s<- and Iw.lH tonholes, any size s<-. Shop. Phone 925. H FOR SALE—key eggs. Mt>. SL-rnrn K«B I Decatur B FOR SALE- 10 18 Case M Will trade for a 1-2 or 3 ya 3 I mare colt. J. 1.. Sipe, WiM I Ohio. R. R. 1. ■ FOR SALE - or trade fresh Mt I W. M. Kitson. Route 4, Dectno 24i .—_ j FOR SALE Il.iy leaders TJ Spike Tooth Harrow, d ' (’ultlvatnrs. <■ ■ Bend I Range Cook stoa,-: Irartoruß i 12-inch Oliver Tractor P||9 Other farming Implements. !■ I pies Supply Co . ■■:; So. Ist saM Phone 114 1B [ FOR SALE Y- !■-w r-om. I tion cuarant- ■' Hoc of | Ruperts. j FOR SALE -Baby chicks vilß if fed on Be-eo Chiilt starterß cod liver oil or Burk's Big dfl Starter. $2.00 p-r Im- ;«wls.M : Elevator Compose. telephouelO .a , WANTED | AVANTED — I.'v-- Slock aui A kinds of property. IVcatur munity'Sale. Fri.l::y evening,lf 26th., 7 p. m. n-131 | WANTETs— T P - s---rera! sial of bees W. Hawkins, Deed l phone S6l 0. i WANTED -To r. sharpen jotrl razor blades, like new. 3c doubles 4c. Leave hUdu* Vance and Lin: . “WAMED J fanners, cutters and fat cs* Springer and fre-h cows. And* having cattle to sell, call 274. Wm. Butler. 10*M| FOR RENT _ FOR RENT —S,-:i’i-ino<lem R at 123 N. Fifth St. Call 81 j FOR RENT—Se>-n room bon*! mile east of De : ir. ' patch, chicken park. Incpossession. $7 month. or 312. FOR RENT 2 furnished roonfll light housekeeping; first W private entrance Modern Phone 511 or inquire 310 5 ™ Street. LOST AND FOUND, LOST — Brief c se and qi®* music, on. mud pike R' ll1 '’ this office or call L-5. — U ’ Card Delivered Atter J’ Y 'fj. LA acorn a. Wash.. — (H' Schroeder received a I" 1 ’ j mailed in San Francisco 1926—eevon years
