Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 129, Decatur, Adams County, 1 June 1933 — Page 4
Page Four
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JUNIOR TEAMS ARE ORGANIZED BY LOCAL POST Moose Lodge Sponsors Senior Team; Adams Post Three Juniors With the closing of the Decatur schools, sports interest in this city Is centering on the Junior American Legion teams of Decatur and Adams county. Paul Briede, athletic officer of Adams post of the Legion, announced today (hat a different plan will he followed this year in ' connection with the local teams than has been in vogue the past few seasons. Decatur will have one senior team, this team to be sponsored by the Decatur chapter of the Moose lodge, and will also have 1 three junior teams, sponsored by the local legion post. This senior team will be composed of the best junior players in the city and will represent Decatur in the district tourney. The three junior teams will play 1 a schedule and the boys on these teams will be eligible for selection j' on the senior team. Plans at the present time do not include the playing of a regular schedule of all teams in the county as has been done in past seasons, although such a schedule may later be drawn. The management of the Moose team is drawing up a schedule of games with other senior teams throughout the Fourth district and will play the first game against the Bluffton team at Bluffton Saturday afternoon. Two games have l been arranged with Auburn and other games are being scheduled. ' Candidates for the three junior teams held the first practice session Monday afternoon and a second session was held at 9:30 this 1 morning. Further definite an- I nouncements concerning plans for games will be made by Mr. Briede within the next few days. District Meeting Earl Blackburn. Decatur, Fourth district legion athletic officer, met with team managers and 'other legion officials in a district meeting la**—week at Fort Wayne. Seventeen senior teams have been organized in the district for play this year and nine junior team have so far been organized. Eleven teams last year played in the district tourney at Fort Wayne. Cities having senior teams this year are Decatur. Bluffton. Geneva, Monroe, Berne. LaGrange. South Whitley, Columbia City (2), Churubusco. Fort Wayne (3). Kendallville (2),' Auburn and Arceta. Monroeville and Zulu may afso enter teams. Junior teams in the field this
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year tire Decatur (3). Bluffton (3). Auburn, and Fort Wayne (2). The Fourth district tourney will be held between the first and 15th of July, the definite date anil loc.aI tion to he announced later 0 STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. New York 25 13 .658 Washington 24 18 .571 Philadelphia ......... 21 16 .567 I Cleveland 22 19 .537 Chicago 20 18 .526 Detroit 16 23 .410 St. Louis” 16 25 .390 | Boston 13 25 # .342. NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pct. j [Pittsburgh 24 15 .615; St. Louis ......... . .. 25 16 .619 New York 21 16 .567 Chicago 22 20 .524 Cincinnati 20 21 .488 Brooklyn 16 20 .414; Boston 17 24 .415; Philadelphia .. 14 27 .341; AMERICAN ASSOCIATION W. L.- Pct Columbus 22 14 .611 Minneapolis 23 16 .590, St. Paul 22 19 .537 Milwaukee . 20 18 .526 Indianapolis .18 17 .514 Louisville 18 21 .462 Toledo 17 22 .436 Kansas City 16 29 .356 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS American League Washington, 12-7; New York. 7-9. Only games scheduled. National League Chicago. 5; Pittsburgh, 1. Brooklyn at New York, wet grounds. Boston at Philadelphia, wet grounds. Only games scheduled. American Association Indianapolis at Toledo, postponed to make room for exhibition game. Kansas City. 7; Milwaukee, 0. j Columbus, 1; Louisville, 0. Minneapolis, 6; St. Paul. 1. Injured Men Better Indianapolis. June 1 —(UP) — Conditions o state Sen. Fred A. >Egan, 29. and David Bain. 39, both of Gary, injured in an automobile ' accident near here yesterday, were I reported “good" at Methodist hospital today. » The aerator ‘suffered a broken leg and Bain's chest and arm were crushed when the latter lost control of their machine. o Light Bulbs, 8c to 25c; Oil 45c gal; Tires as low as $2.98 Batteries. Klenk Tire Service.
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
CARDINALS IN FIGHT FOR TOP New York. June I.— (U.R) — The St. Louis Cardinals today had a [chance to climax an impressive; winning campaign by wresting the , National league lead from the; Pittsburgh Pirates. The Carfl.s, victors in 11 of their [ 1 j last 12 games, were opposed to the I ! [Cubs at Chicago, while the Pirates [ 1 were idle. The Corsairs were only I |a fraction of a game ahead of St.j '■Louis after dropping yesterday's 5 Ito 1 decision to Chicago, in the | < i only contest played in the National circuit. ] ! Although the Pirates outhit the Cubs 10 to 7, Charley Root on the Chicago mound was effective with men on base. , Rain and wet grounds prevented i the other two scheduled National ! contests; Brooklyn at New York atid Boston at Philadelphia. In the American league, the leading New York Yankees and sec-ond-place Washington Senators I split a double-header, the only competition scheduled in the circuit. A five-run burst in the eighth inning gave the Senators the first; game, 12 to 7. but the Yanks came back to win the night cap, 9 to 7. Tony Lazzeri hit a home run in the second inning for the Yanks. In the night cap. the Y’anks piled up an eight-run lead in the first two innings. They collected 16 [hits, with the mighty Babe Ruth contributing a single, double and triple. Joe Cronin of the Senators got a home run in the fourth. a _■ * MAGLEY NEWS ~ * » « Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Peters entertained for dinner Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Fr d Bloemter. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bloemker and daughter Irene. Miss Minnie Bloemker, and daughter Irene, Miss Minnie Bloemker. Mr. and Mrs. William Worthman and son Carlton, and Jacob Bloemker and Mr. and Mrs. Gilbe rt of Preble Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kruetzman and son Richard, Mr. and Mrs, William Kruetznun and sons Loren and Russell Eugene, Otto Kruetzman and Mr. and Mrs. George Lies I of Spencerville motored to Fort Wayne Sunday and spent th? day with Mr. and Mrs. H..rrv Kratz ■ and daughter Helen, the occasion I I being a birthday surprise for Mrs. I Knatz. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Oettinger I ! were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. | ; ami Mrs. G. F. Ki.l and family. The ; children, Phyllis and Joe. returned 1 home wit?, them and will spend a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Alton Howr ot Garrett will also spend a few Ippointiiirnt of Idmlnlutrator .Notice is hereby given. That the undersigned lias lieen appointed Administrator of the estate of ,laco, ..nrad late of Adams County, vent k ‘‘‘ <state is Probably sol. Daniel VVeidFer. Administrator , ~ •'.'■uehte and l.itterer Attys. .uaj JI, 1933 June 1-8-15 ‘•IIEHII I- su.if In the Giants < In-alt < ourt. stnte of Indiatui: cause number 1 mgs 1-irst .bent Stock Land Bank of '', avne - Indiana vs. Albert J. I elz Losa A. Pelz. his wife. Edward D. Bresnahan, Lambert wJ I Bowen or Lambert Bowen. lona ' X","’'?’'(*’• -Margaret Marshall, ' Marshall, her husband. The i J ju-otatc- Loan and Trust company. , first and Trl-State National Bank I r 5" Kt company of Fort Warne, I l irs-t National Bank of Fort Wayne. I By vir'ue of an order of sale to I me directed and delivered from the ■ < lerk of the Ad<tqts Circuit Court m the above entitled cause I have i levied -up.-n and will expose to sale i hv public AUCTION, at the Court | House Door, east entrance, first J floor in said County between the hours of 10, O’clock A. M. and 4 o’clock I*. M., on Saturday the 17th I Day of June a. D. 1833, the rents j and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following des- : cribed real estate, to-wit: The norfh half of the northwest quarter of section six (G) Township twenty-seven (27) north, range fifteen H 5) East, containing Eighty : (S<») acres, mure or less: And on failure to realize there from the full .amount of the judgement and Interest thereon and costs I will at the same time and in the manner Aforesaid offer for sale the fee simple of the above d«*scribed real estate. Taken as the property of Albert J. J‘elz. Rosa A. Pelz, his wife Edward D. Broanahan, Ltirnbert W. Bowen, or Uambert Rowen k lonia Bowen, his wife, Mararet Marshall Brian Marshall, her husband. The Tri State Loan and Trust Company, First and Tri- State National Bank and 'fust Cornpanv of Fort Wayne. : First National Bank of Fort Wayne, at the suit of First Joint St <k Land Bank of Fort Wayne, Indiana. Said Sale will be made without [ any relief whatever from valuation or Appraisement laws. I Hurl Johnson Sheriff Adams County, Indiana C. 1., Walter*. Attorney. May 2-~» lune !-<*
- . May 25 June 1 fc " w • ■ THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“THE RESULT OF SPINACH” BYSEGARI H < R WITH | l(lH€ MEN OV TWS TRIO 6 AREI THAT «ITLE<IT' V4OMAn"wHO Oft#* I « SsSfeß I I tTT’ - i -rv ■ Pf J W (Qiov/ K FT HO / ft *4* <jhs ;f> fl k i \ BjjOjaß/?) utile ; rIEI m P' .. I / . — — . i“KßlSsSui' .—.— ,(? *
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDrt JUNE 1, 1933.
days. Lewis Worthman, Sr., and Misses Amanda. Ethel and Ida Belle visitJil Mr. and Mrs. Milton Scherry and family Sunday afternoon. Rev. and Mrs. D. B. Garber and Misse» Olive a,nd Emma Miller were supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. •E. J. Miller and family Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kolter visited Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Kolter and family Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Beib?rich and family of Fort Wayne Visited Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jaberg and daughter Donna Sunday evening. Daniel Scherry and daughter Marie were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Fruchte and family Sunday. 0 Indiana Fanner Finds Fortune In Old Coins Bedford, Ind.. June 1 —(UP) — Two silver coins flashing ini the i sun led John W. Staggs, farmer and i father of 16 children, to the hiding i
("STOLEN LOVE"! hu HAZEL LIVINGSTON COPYRIGHT BYKIHO FEATURES SYNDICATE, IHC.
WHAT HAS HAPPENED SO FAR. • Joan Hastings, seventeen and 1 beautiful, lives with two old maiden aunts, Evvie and Babe Van i Fleet, in a house long -un to seed. < Joan, lonely and impi essionable, falls in love with Bill Martin, , whose social status is far beneath , her own. The aunts plan to send j her away to school. Bill is arrested, the innocent victim of a bootlegging gang, and Joan, frantically asking for money to bail him out, confesses to her aunts ' her love for him. Horrified, they 1 put her on a train, bound for school, in charge of a Mrs. Marden 1 of the Travelers’ Aid Society. NOW GO ON WITH I THE STORY. CHAPTER XII. At Sacramento when the train , stopped, she got up, strolled to the door. The porter helped her down. , ‘•l’m—just going to walk up and . down!” she said, in a small, choking voice. j A hand touched hers. Mrs. Mar- j den’s voice purred. “It’s so warm. ( Let’s go into the station. I think we can get an ice cream cone!” | “All aboard! All aboard!” They 1 had to hurry back to the train. < “Don’t you like your ice cream, dear?” “Oh yes—it’s lovely. But I can’t swallow. I’m—l’m not feeling very , well.” “Homesick,” Mrs. Marden said ] kindly. “No place I'ke home. But I ( know you’ll be happy with your dear cousin in Philadelphia! What < a fortunate girl, to be going so far , to boarding school!” , “Yes,” Joan agreed miserably. 1 “Yes, indeed.” She slumped down in the corner ; again. The miles sped by. “I’ll have I to wait until it is dark, and I can i pretend to go to bed,” she thought. 1 “And it will be so far ... I’ll never ' get back. ...” 1 “I declare I don’t think she’s quite normal,” Mrs. Marden confided to I the lady across the aisle. “She looks at you so vacantly—like some i kind of a sick animal. Gives me the ’ creeps. And she hasn’t eaten a thing all day—not even the cone I bought • her myself in Sacramento—” “Well, that’s the wav it is,” the ; other woman agreed. “You try to do somebody a good turn, and they take advantage. Now last year when Mr. Simpson and I were doing the Grand Canyon—” They launched into a long, intimate conversation. The porter touched Mrs. Simpson’s arm. “Excuse me, lady, but I got to start in makin’ up my berths—” “Well—isn’t that exasperating. It isn’t eight o’clock—” “Observation car in the rear, lady—” “Oh please—won’t you make mine instead? I’m so tired—” It was Joan’s voice. “Yes—start with hers,” Mrs. Marden said. Her eyes telegraphed “Then we can go to the observation car in peace!” She was a conscientious woman. She saw that her charge was properly tucked in the berth, the light out. and the window open. “Well!” she said. “That’s over with!” The two ladies swayed down the aisle, toward the observa tion car. In a comfortable corner an elderly woman and her middle-aged son fingered a deck of playing cards. “I was wondering—" the elderly woman said in a sweet Southern voice, “Do you ladies play bridge? My son and I— ’’ The ladies did. Mrs. Warden and Mrs. Hawley had all the luck.
place of a small fortune. Staggs was plowing on his farm one mile east of Buddha Lawrence i county, when the coins attracted ' his attention. He dug deeper into ; the ground, and uncovered $7.0611 more. Many of the coins dated back as' far as 1818. but were in excellent I condition. Staggs said he sold three of them to coin collectors for sl.500. He buried most of the silver a-1 gain, to keep it away from robbers, i o Washington Post Sold At Auction Washington, June I—<U.R)~The1 —<U.R)~The Washington Post was sold at public auction today for $825,300. George E. Hamilton. Jr., a lawyer who declined to disclose whom he was representing, submitted the high bid. o i Get the Habit — Trade at Home
“Game!” she cried, as the train stopped at Truckee. “And thirty aces—” , “Shall we get out here for a minute—a little air?” Mrs. Hawley suggested. “Let’s wait till Reno—they stop a little longer there, I think. Let me see, your deal I think, Mrs. Hawley. . . • • • Joan waited in the station until the train had gone. Then she came out on the platform, and looked up at the sign. “Truckee. San Francisco, 208 miles.” The tracks stretched dimly into the night. A long street, parallel with the tracks, was splashed with lights. There were stores over there, and a restaurant. For the first time in twenty-four hours she was hungry. Terribly hungry. “Besides, I ought to eat something—l’ve go\a long way to walk. Two hundred and eight miles. Maybe somebody’ll give me a lift, though!” Aunt Ewie and Aunt Babe had both warned her repeatedly against it. The cool mountain air refreshed her. Her spirits began to rise. After she had had a big cup of hot coffee, and a thick fried ham sandwich she felt almost happy. “Anyway, I’m off the train, and Bill will know something happened. He'll know I’m coming. His mother will tell him!” She was on the highway now, the long, long highway that stretched all those miles to San Francisco. It was pleasant walking by the side of the road in the soft, weedy ground. Cars whizzed by. “After a while one will pick me up,” she thought. After all, she had beaten Aunt Ewie. Beaten her at her own game. And Mrs. Marden—wouldn’t she be mad in the morning! Joan laughed out loud. She was only seventeen—and she was on her way back to Bill! She quickened her steps. A little blister began to form on her heel. The high heeled oxfords were beginning to hurt. Another ten minutes, and the little blister was turning into a big one. Joan sat down on an old barrel by the side of the road, and poked an inquiring finger into the shoe. Maybe it was a little stone, or something that was making it hurt so much. . . . “What’s the matter—tire trouble?” A long limousine had stopped beside her. The driver, a big, red faced man with a diamond horseshoe in his necktie beamed at her good naturedly. His little deep set eyes twinkled, his gold teeth—he had three of them—right in front —twinkled too. He seemed a very friendly person to Joan. “I’ve got a blister on my heel,” she smiled back. “I’ve been walking—quite a long way—" “All right—hop in, Sister. Which way, and how far? I’m bound for Frisco myself.” “Why, so am I!” He looked at her a long time. “Frisco! Say—what’s the gag? You’re no hobo. Come on—tell papa—who you running away from? Cruel stepmother—harsh husband—orphan asylum—” His little blue eyes weren’t laughing now. He made a move as though to go. “Sorry, kid, but I got troubles enough of my own—” She jumped on the running board. “Wait—it’s all right I'il tell you—” “Now listen,” he said. “It’s quite a while since I fell off a load of hay. Don’t waste any time spinning a bedtime story for Uncle Walter. Come on—who are you—
• « Answers To Test Questions Below are the Answers to the Test Questions Printed on Page Two. ♦ ♦ 1. Medieval poets, wandering 1 singers of war and love. t 2. Oregon. 3. Pants log. 4. Hamilton, N. Y. 5. Great Water. 6. Troy. 7. Olivi r Cromwell. 8. No. 9. Colima. 10., A Semitic people, mentioned in the Bible. COURTHOUSE Marriage License John B. Heller, laborer of Portland, and Leah B. Priest of Geneva.
where you going—wnere you from —and why?" She told him. The whole story in a dozen words. Her aunts didn’t want her to marry the man she loved. He was in trouble. She had slipped off the train. She was going back if she had to walk—every step of the way. “Get in,” he said. “I always was a chicken-hearted fool. Get in. I can see trouble ahead for Uncle Walter. Never mind—get in. We are about to break the records for San Fran!” The telegraph poles slid by, close together as pickets in a fence. Headlights loomed ahead, and were gone in a quick rush of wind. Joan clung to the seat, breathlessly. On the long grade he talked. “Now tell me about your sweetie’s trouble. What did he do. and why did he do it?” She poured it all into his ears, all about Milt, and Begoni’s and the milk truck—and Bill, innocent, in jail. “Oh, my Gosh!” he said at intervals. “Oh, my Gosh!” “It’s funny I should be telling you all this, isn’t it? I guess it’s because I’m so tired. I don't know what I’m doing. . . .’’ “Funny!” he chuckled, and threw his chewed cigar out of the window. “That ain’t the half of it! Oh, my Gosh . . . poor papa!" “About this here Milt,” he began when they were making another steep grade. “What did you say his name was?” He looked at the girl when she didn’t answer. She was sound asleep, her head fallen almost on his shoulder. One narrow white hand still clutched the handle of the door. Her thick, tawny lashes were long on her pale cheek. • » » » “I don’t know why you’ve been so good to me!” Joan said gratefully. “I don’t know either!” Walter Dunne said, and slapped his black and white checked leg. “Well—well —Uncle Walt in the Santa Claus business. Haw— ’’ They were having breakfast in a little roadhouse just off the highway. A bleary-eyed waiter in a coffee-stained white coat brought bacon and eggs and buttered toast. At the back of the empty room another waiter mopped the floor, with resentful eyes on them. “They don’t seem to want people for breakfast!” _ “No—breakfast ain’t their specialty—haw, haw!” and he roared again. Joan looked at him, faintly puzzled. She had never met anyone who laughed so much. At her slightest remark he turned purple and broke into wheezing roars and shouts of laugher that always ended in a fit of coughing. “You’re the soundest sleeper 1 ■ ever _ come across,” he grinned, pushing the bacon aside and lighting a very black cigar. She flushed, really embarrassed ■ now. “I was so awfully tired—” “Yeh, you must have been. There we was, going hell bent for election and bang—my back tire blows up. ■ Noise like a cannon. And she don’t turn an eyelash! Well sir, I got ■ out and jacked her up and put on the spare, and never a wink out of you. Then at Sacramento 1 gets out and does some long distance tele- : phoning—took me rear half an ' hour, and you don’t wake up then. • I was beginning to think you had . the sleeping sickness—” j “You’ve been so good to me—” “Well, if you've had enough we'l] . be on our way.” He tipped the • bleary waiter, and led the way back ; to the long blue car. “We’l! soon be > in San Fran, now.” (To Be Continued Tomorrow)
MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corriocted June 1 No commission anc no yardage. 170 to 250 lbs $4.60 250 to 325 lbs $4.55 140 to 160 lbs $4.25 100 to 140 lbs - $3.70 Roughs ; $3.75 , Stags - - $1 50 ; Vealers - $5.00 Spring t Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs steady, 10c off; 250-350 It> $5.90: 200-250 lbs. $4.80; 170-200 ' lbs. $4.70; 140-170 lbs. $4.50; 100140 lbs. $4.15; roughs $4; stags, $2.75. Clipped lambs $5.25; spring • lambs $7. Calves $5.50; steers good to choice $5-5.50; medium to good $4.50-5; common to medium $3.504; 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 good $2.50-3; cutter 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, $22.50: butcher bulls $3.25-3.75. East Buffalo Livestock Hogs, on sale 1,900; slow; weights aimve l9Vi lbs., 10 to 15c under Wednesday's average; desirable 190 to 250 lbs., $5.20-5.25; some held higher; pigs and underweights steady at yesterday's late decline; 130 to 160 tbs., $4.25-4.75; plainer kinds downward to $4.00. Cattle receipts 250; medium steers bid $5.50. steady; cows, steady to strong; medium kinds $3-3.25; cutter grades $1.90-2.60. Calf receipts 125; vealers firm; good to choice $5.50; sparingly $6; common and medium $4.25-5. Sheep receipts 500; lambs unchanged, all factors considered; good to choice 70 !b. Kentucky lambs, around 50 per cent bucks $8.25; few natives $8.50/ CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE July Sept. Dec. Wheat 73% 75% 78% Corn 45% 47% 50% Oats ... 24% 25% 27% LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corneicted June 1 No. 1 New Wheat, SO lbs. of better 72c No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs. 71c Oats 22c. Soy Beans 35c to 75c White or mixed corn 50c Good Yellow corn 55c Rye ' 25c Woodchopper Was Wealthy Oranstons R. I. — (UP) — When Antone F. Jones, 88-year-old wood chopper, died recently, hi.- estate was valued at only $1,500. Since that time 13 bank accounts opened by him under assumed names and totaling $17,000, have been discovered. NOTICE FOR RIDS FOR FOAE Notice is hereby given that the Board of County Commissioners of Adam® county « tate of Indiana, will on Tuesday, June 6th 1933, and up until ten o’clock A. M. unsaid day, receive bids for the furnishing coal for the several county buildings and institutions for the ensuing year as follows, towit: Two rars nf White Ash dellvere-d in the basement of the Court House at Decatur, Indiana Three cars of White Ash unloaded in trucks at Decatur, Indiana for the County Infirmary. One ear of Pocohontas lump or bigg ooal (size to be specified in bid) delivered in the basement a-t the county jail. One car of White Ash unloaded in trucks at Decatur, Indiana for the county garage. Bids will also be considered for other qualities of coal delivered in the same quantities and the same place as above specified. , The board will also reserve the right to buy larger quantities for the above buildings or institutions, if the of the county should require. Each bid must he accompanied with l>ond and affidavit as required by law. The l*oard reserves the right to reject any or all bids. All coal furnished will be subject to the approval of the Superintendent or custodian of the building or institution where the same is to be used and to be delivered at such time or Mmes as the Im Maid may order at the time of awarding contract. Dennis Striker F. O. Martin Phil Sauers. Board of Commissioners Atjest. Glen Cowan, auditor M'iv or. Tn nA I
si t ANI) NOTICES 'V' FOR SALE FOR SAI. at bargain Al| Frigid.,itfok sa, 'K tractor nd diSC ' Go< " > ' ' ; able. William c \Vc rl ; n .” north of PrPeble. ' ’ FOR SALE (lent seed emm. t,. s( E. Byerly. % mil. ~a st v I highschool. HI) FOR SALE—Gman a for $1; large ,■„•■;,. d P(ig „ po „ |nj 5c oi 6 or 2m-. I>, , :irEl Nuttman Ave, P| lonp 100 FOR HALE ■?.. tractor and - Icas. j> llPe 1 white Collie pup. Half Inile t'l of Kirklaml Higi, W FOR SALE Fifty bushels beans (Manehti) test $1.50 per bushel. ,j 9 ], n F 4 miles non!, of Wien. Ohio. Hpt; un d _ t FOR plants. Lar.e tmnato and # hade plants. 5e per dozen, y J 1 hers, 1127 West Monroe street^® b FOR SALE frigerators at ,ery | nw pric( Sprague Furnitu:, r.. if,,, s t ond S 4. Phone imi. Now is the tin,.- to buy tir»^fr ir land as they are advancing ril price. 80 acre farm, 10 northeast of D.-cmur will be S: to the highest bidder. Monday,■ * June 5 at 2:00 P. M. Easy tenatH F FOR SALE n, iv 9x12 1 leum Rug- -ni-ir $.-■.s on sale at 6x9 size $2.98 ; ,; x 9 s j M ijjjV 9x10.2 size 12x15 ft. Genuine Linoleum Rugs 12x12 ft. I.nmii um 11.3x1.-. Armstrong Fei; Hase Rugs Rag 'ixii ft., a dudy^K r low price rug for any only 15 rugs left. Buy now fore they're gone. Each Rubber S'air Treads, size 9xlß maroon color, w.ih curved ing on edge «;t ■■> , ',■ > s . SpeciilHKi Price, each . 11 3x12 ft. Velvet or Axminstet Rugs ' Ozite Made" Rug Cushions, 9x12 ft. with waffle top, proof, only a few left at low price, cadi Seamless Axmin.-t.r Rugs siie^Mt 9x12. all m-w patterns. good quality, each Window Shades, iv', fi.. Tan or Green, each NI B LJCK&CO___M u FOR SALE - Blue griding. yrs. old. wt. 14‘m. sound. broke. Clareiie. M< i<--.v:. south Decatur, iv <t house St. Paul ('liurib FOR SAI.E r. dining room suite, living room suitt^B n all like new. Inquire at G. (' Albany. Salem. Ind. FOR SALE-Baby chicks willgro»B if fed on Bea o Cuiek starter witi ■ cod liver oil or Burk's Big Starter s2.o<» p ' b-mwiids. BuriM Elevator Company. ■ ;■? lOS-tl V ■>' WASTED ■, ROOM amt BOARD - IMr one dßr two gentleme' in icivale t Home privileges .- -'ll D&atur. Ind — . WE WANT Rag- I'.p-r, Scrap Iron ami Woo! The Hide and Fur Co . WSt. Phone 442. J-imJ WAXTKI) B Cannprß, cutt»* ~ Springer and tv v AnyWMi having cattle to sell, call 9 274. Wm. Butler. FOR REVL-^V FOR RENT -Semi modern ho«s«,B good garden, at 2°4 N. Thi 9 W. A. Lower, phom- ■>!" or Light Bulbs. Sc to 25c; (WB 1 15c gal; Tires as ow ■„ Batteries. Klenk lire_B£Vice ■ Get the Habit - Trade at_Home ■
