Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 31, Number 130, Decatur, Adams County, 2 June 1933 — Page 2
Page Two
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE—Second hand Iceboxes at bargain prices. August Walter, Frigidaire dealer, 254 No. Second St, 109-ts FOR SALE — Extra early yellow dent seed corn, test 95%. Victor E. Byerly, % mile east Kirkland high school. 126a5tx ; FOR SALE —Geraniums, 15c or 7 for $1; large ruffled edge petunias, 5c or 6 or 25c. Decatur Floral Co., Nuttman Ave. Phone 100. 128-3 t FOR SALE —Fifty bushels of Soy beans (Manchu)' test 100%. $1.50 per bushel. John F. Miller, 4 miles north of Wren, Ohio. 129k3tx FOR SALS—AII kinds of garden plants. Large tomato and eabbade plants. 5c per dozen. M. Meibers. 1127 West Monroe street. FOR SALE —'New oil stoves and refrigerators at very low prices. Sprague Furniture Co. 152 S. Second St. Phone 199. 129-3 t FOR SALE —Blue roan gelding. 3 yrs. old, wt. 1450, sound, well broke. Clarence McKean, 3 miles south Decatur, first house west St. Paul Church. 129a3t FOR SALE —1 bedroom suite, dining room suite, living room suite all like new. Inquire at G. C. MeAlhany, Salem. Ind. 129t.’> FOR SALE —One Holstein springer j cow, five nice gilts, one tried | sow, will farrow soon; two Shorthorn stock bulls. Inquire Schmitt Meat Market. a-130-3t FOR SALE — Two Dodge sedans. One Hudson coupe. One Hudson sedan. All late models. Decatur | Auto Paint and Top Co. k-130-3t I ATTEND the auction. 80-acre | farm, 10 miles northeast of De-1 catur. Monday. June sth at 2 p. m. ' Peoples Loan & Trust Co., owners.' 130-lt I — FOR SALE — Fresh strawberries. I picked daily. Decatur Floral I Compar FOR SALE —Decatur's Super Qual-! ity baby chicks from culled and ■ tested stocks. Buy the best at our • new low prices for June and July. : Place your order now. Phone 497. ’ Decatur Hatchery, Decatur, Indiana. I thur-fri-mon-wed-fri. FOR SALE— Blood tested quality j chicks. English White Leghorns , and all heavy breeds $5.00 per hun-I dred. Custom hatching lc per egg. Baumgartner Hatchery and Poultry Farm 6 miles west and nine miles south of Decatur, Bluffton Route 4. Fir.-ts FOR 'SALE —South Bend Malleable steel range cook stove, like new; John Deere 1% h. p. gas engine, like new; two row Corn Plow, like new; several single row corn plows; two hay ladders; gas range. Peoples Supply Co., 203 So. Ist st., Phone 114. It FOR SALE—Baby chicks will grow if fed on Beto Chiok starter with cod liver oil or Burk s Big Chick Starter. $2.00 per 100 pounds. Burk Elevator Company, telephone 25. 109-ts WANTED ROOM and BOARD— For one or two gentlemen in private family. •Home privileges 203 South 11th St. Decatur, Ind. L2M)tx WE WANT—Rags, Paper, Metal Scrap Iron and Wool. The Maier Hide and Fur Co., 710 W. Monroe St. Phone 442. J-l-2-5-3t WANTED—Grace hospital. 219 W. Washington. Fort Wayne, will j take aged people in health, conval-; escent, mental, paralytic and incurable cases. Reasonable rates. 130-12tx-f-s-m WANTED Canners, cutters and fat cattle. Springer and fresh cows. Anybody having cattle to sell, call phone 274. Wm. Butler. 109a30t6-12 FOR RENT FOR RENT- Semi-modern house, good garden, at 224 N. Third st. W. A. Lower, phone 610 or 378. • , 129t3x FOR RENT -5 room modern house South First st. Dynois Schmitt, phone 79 or call at 413 Mercer Ave. 130t3 FOR RENT—7 room semi-modern house. Will rent cheap to right party. Inquire at 1127 West Monroe street. 130g-2teod o Women of Family, 948 Lba. Tyler, Tex. —<U.R) —There are only five members (all women) in the Bickley family, but it's the largest family In Smith county. Their aggregate weight is 94.8 pounds, or an average of more than 189 pounds each. Gigantic Structure Herodotus estimated that 100.000 , men were engaged for 20 years in . building the Great pyramid.
COHUISSIOXERS Cl. litis TO HE ALLOWED JIM-: Sth. 1933 County MlMcellancouß Ft. Wayne Pt£T. -Co O. Sup . 80.95 Berne Witness Co, Adv 53.77 City of Decatur L. & P. 97.86 Citizens Tel. Co telephone 56.40 Milton C. Werling- stamps 12.40 iCleo Weidin# salary 25,00 Milton Werling - furniture .... 23.251 Glen Cowan postage 10.00 Mary Cowan elk. hire 25.00 1 R. K. Heitirk h expense ... 6.001 John Wechter 3% fee . 267.82 Haywood Pub. Co treas. ex 2.00 Burl Johnson mileage 7.82 ! W. S. I\a-rley <8- Co S. stars 5.92! A. I’". Theime Sur. deputy 2.00: Walter Theime do 2.00; Ernest The hire do 2.001 Ma x Theime do 2.001 J. B. Roop do 4.00 1 Wm. Robinson do 2.""’ Joe Baumgartner do 2.00 I I Herman Ulman do 4.00 A. Beltz do 2.00 W. Beltz do 2.001 Fred Steigmeyer do 2.00 . EM W. Hendricks do 2.00 G. A. Hendricks do 2.00 J. A. Haggard do . 2.00 I Miles F. Roop do 14.40 Clifton E. Striker salary ex. 199.88' Margaret Myers salary 67.50 Matbelle Mvers salary ex 206.78, R. E. Heidrich Co. S. ex 20.00 j J. F. Felty salary ex 122.081 Nolde Ixibsiger assessor ex 3."" Robert J. Zwr k Co. Coroner j. W. Visard salary ' 20.25 Dr. J. C. Grandstaff H. com. 3.50 Amos Reusser do 5.75. Henry B. Heller Co. attorney 41.661 Dennis Striker Perlim Rd 9.001 F. O. Martin do 9.00 Janies Kenney County C. 8.00. M. Kirsch do 8.00; Henry Dehner do 8.00 Fred Wichenberger do Everett Banter do S i August Conrad do Ben Eiting do 8.00 Anton Thieme assessing 64.00 A. C. Stoppenhaigen do 16 Aug. Schlickman do 64.00 | Chas Marchand do Jq n I A. L. Stults do 39.00 A. L. Bowen do 2?”" George Dellinger do Ben McCullough do Dan O Roop do 64 0, Peter A. Habegger do ■ 64.0 . John Lobsiger do Marcella Habegger do 48.00, John Tanner do 160- « J. K. Yoder do 64.0% Alva I’e.ns termaker do J- ■■ " — F. O Davis do -s‘aal Harry Sipe salary »0-0« B. W. DeVor Ct. House , I The P. & H. supply < e. do I Theo. B. Robertson P. Co. do -M -. Ft Wanye B. P. X- s. Co do . • Decatur Lumber Co do Wilbur Ma> d ■ , f I Wm. MCClure do ’-’1 Chas Hitchcock do a. I Clem Jehl do Harold Sautter do Slno; Harry Bohr do . ->•'’!Jl i Xor. Ind. P. S. Co jail -- in' I Burl Johnson Boarding Pns. . 18. .1. Smith Drug Co jail • | Clara Eiting Mortg 1. L. 6’ | Mary E. Lliblj do | William Zimmerman do ■ . ißank of Geneva lax Refund ’ ( ‘ I Deila Parrish poll tax refund 4.0 Is E. Black S. burial ~ rj • Irene Byron t. )■. . • ! Decatur Democrat t o s. A. 4 Christe Bohnke assessing 64. Township Poor Reed Elevator Co Vnion 13.801 Geo. Applemam do .'Jr I I Nichols SI:,"- Store Root 4.811 Kocher L. &C.Co do ? I C. A Bell do 1-?®| i Holthouse. Schulte & Co d ■ - Williams Equity Exc. do ■ .0" The Home Grocery do . .. --a-H Fisher & Harris do Adams Co. Hospital Preble 4 i,.->, IF I. Grandstaff Kirkland I Dr. C. c. Rayl do .... 75.00 lc P. TToutner St. Marys . L-33 I Drs. Jones &■ Jones do <-'.»O | do | .]. \\ . rd do i I R A. Stuckey Washington I S.' E. Black do W E. Smith do Carroll C. * C. Co do 24-0® j Tile Economy Store do ’t’,’ Mary E. Potts do .. I Reed Elevator Go du ,J* >-I Dr. L. E. Somers do 31A-. Julius Haugk d>> s'--' |C. A. Bell do Henry Thomas do <-00] W. G. Roop do 3.7a, Teeplc & Peterson do H H. Lammiman do I Burk Elevator Co. do -3.-> Adams Co. Hospital do V?'?S. E. Hite do I M. E. Hower do i Ge* Appleman do ■"'■-■'l J. Henry Faurote do IS'nn Frank Krick do .. .in Joe Bruonegraff do --‘no 1 Drs. Jones & Jones do 4n’-n‘ Decatur Lumber Co do • • >»•’' . Winnes Shoe Store do 8-Ji Kocher x- Co do Dr. C. C. Ra>l do , .. 8-J.OO C. A. Douglas d<f J?-"; I Nichols Shiw Store do Dr. G. J. Kohne do L'-- , Callow & Kohne do 60.69 The Home Grocery do s,'--Flsher X- Harris do Lawrence Cai ir. Blue Creek « Richardson Store do . -- nn Drs. Jones * J >nes do ‘? ?nl Berne Grain X- Hay Co do .... l-OW H. E. Rupert Monroe | IVerne Lumber Co do -T, John Badders do So X k ky do - 2o:ool ... 30:00 Adams Co. H' spital d" L'-n Drs. Jones and Jones do Standard Oil Co do F H. Tablet do ’2 ?'.' Runyon Ccoer French I Runyon Grocery Hartford q'-s Chas Roush do N' Perrv Olendening do ' n‘ Berne Equity do ?-«•) 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. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyea Examined, Glasses Fitted. J HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135 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 Aset. Ambulance Service
Kivger Store do 2.85 Central Grocery Wabash . 12.00 Ad4ms Co. Hospital do 48.85 Mary McManus do 2.00 Geneva Milling & Grain do 1.81 Snyders Grocery do 6.50 Rkiliardson Store do ... 8.61 j Bierie & Yager Inc. do . . 75,00 < omity Infirmur> Western Oil Co Op. l?x. 40 69 ' Niblick A Co do : Eastern Ind. O. & Sup Co do 31.28 H. P. Schmitt do 2.95 Reed Elevator Co. do 4.54 > ' Schafer Hdw .Co do .... 8.3.2 ! Carl Puinphdev du .... 10 00 V. A. Elche-herger do 20’.00 Burt Mangold do 2.00 • Dr. C. V. Connell do 87.15 Viiiu t- & Linn do 7.58 i Kocher L. & C. Co d > 36.15 ! A. R. Ashbaucher do 19.49 R. N. Runyon & Son do 11 •B. J. Smith Drug -Co do . 61.19 ’l'he Decatur Hatchery do 50.75 i Leo Ehinger insurance 5.00 Lee Hardware Co O pEx 55.30 Martin Gilson do 1.25 1 Fisher* Harris do 40.091 August Morgan labor . 35.00 ! Herbert La Fountaine do 35.00 Fl orence Lengerich do 35.00 IL-' . r L'isk do T. Hl.' Earl Martin do 2.80 Sam Bailer do 5.50 Hoard of tiiianliatiN Mair a McClure mother’s aid . 10.00 Mary Myers do .... 10.00 i Leuretta Whitman do 5.00 | Florence Bollinger do 10.00 , Laura Beerbower do 5.00 I Olive Reynolds do . .... 10.00 Merle Bristol do 10.00 Alice Walter do 5.00 Della Debult do 10.00 Margaret Ix'ichtle do 5.00 | Caroline Habegger do 5.00 Marie Anderson do 10.00 Bdna Ray do 10.00 Mary Hazelwood do 10.00 j Charlotte Gepharl do 10.00 I Mrs. H. Ehinger (Trustee) 5.00 Ida Hirschey do 5.00 Pearl Reed do 5.00 Anna Ripberger do 20.00 i Pearl Bryan do 15.00 Madeline Dunn do 5.00 Elizabeth Hortle do 10.00 Mary Arnold do 5.00 Ft. Wayne Orphan home . 416.00 i W. Guy Brown Mileage 26.32 Highway Repair District \o. 1 j Wm. H. Bittner labor 32.00 I Ed Haugh labor team 14.00 Martin Thieme do 15.25 Willis Whittenbarger do 13.00 Henrv Bauman do 4.00 I Lesley Meyers labor 9.00 ' John Bittner labor 18.75 ■ Carl Troutner do 7.00 Theodore Dague do 7.00 ' Ross Harden do 5.40 I Lesley Meyers d > 11.25 j Russell Raimsey do 11.25 John Elsey do 4.05 Rov Casse do 2.25 ' Marion Foor do 2.58 i Charles Roebir k <io . .. 4.05 I Denny Tinkham do 2.25 Otto Lembert do 4.05 Roy Burkholder d 0... .... 4.05 Earl Tumbleson do .. 4.05 Doyle Daniels do 4.05 ' Herb Okley do 4.05 Dale Death do 1.05 I Frank Smith do 4.05 i Glen McMillen do 2.25 I Wm Huston do 2.55 i Perry Vine do 4.05 Fred Hilton do 2.55 ‘ Joe Dur lien do 2.50 i Milton Chronister do 2.55 ' Perry Walters do 2..>5 I Cl in to Death do 2.2a 'David Sovine do L sn I George Smith do 1.801 Harvey Welkie do 1.80 District No. 2. Elmer Gerke labor team 16.9a Hug > H. Gerke do ... 31.8 » • Adolph Beiberich labor 1.40 ! Fred Fuelling do 2.80 i Harvey Hieman labor team 5.20 Henrv Gerke do 6.00 Hilbert Hoile do B.So Robert Gerke do 2.2a Frank do 4.05 Bennie Harkleas do 4.05 j J. C. Harkless labor I SO ! George Geels do i Ralph Shively do i James Elzey do • *‘-11 • W. M. Jones do 9,<a I Harry Miller do H i Alva Sudduth do ' Harvey Sudduth do j Harvey Brunner do 11.77 District No. 3 Rudolph Buuck labor IV.O'» Elmer Dodane do ■ l-OH i S. Fuhrman do 5.60 Elton Rupright labor team 6.00 Jesse Slickman do 6.00 Aug. Blomenberg latw>r 4.0»» Herman Stoppenhagcn labor 4, »o. Wilbert Stoppenhagen do 4.0 n i ’ Philip Strahm labor 4.00 Harold Strahm labor team ! Chauncey Sheets do . I Otto Wefel labor ]O.BO I Bile Huener do ' Ed Bortte do -*• District No. 4 J. A. Hower labor i Silvin Strahm labor team I S. D. Hens-hen laN>r Homer Arnold labor team 26.2 d Ralph Freely <1" ■ I John Mj. i do I Fred Kauffman do I Francis Crozer repair .»» ;w F. Robinold labor 3 ' Glen Straub do • J-"® I Dick Morningstar do ■ , Joel Reinhard do Grant Ball do L» Di.trict .1 . Herman UlemaJt labor Ray Johnson do • «•!!" Bernard Brown- do 21. i ■ Francis Howell do | Georne Losehe do I Henrv Lensreri. h lal«>r J '" Tax on Bank Checks tax . ... 1.66 Homer Gause labor Jesse Gilbert d > , ' I Melvin Galloely do l’-8« Ollie Mills do ,- An Wm. McClure do I;' 1 .. Jesse Niblick do <•*» Alton Richards do Kenneth Secant do Russel KmitUy do . •' I Chalmer Werst do Chas. Smith do J ? Geo Kahn do '-J' Tony Shoemaker do Dorus Stalter do C '. K J I, nd Stexens do John Shaw do Clarence Roop do «»3 q i,.0 Bentz do - Geo Losehe do "fi'-.t John Knavel do •-;, i J. B. Anderson do • ■ • 1 Lester I »rake do • ' I Robert Evans do Adrian Elzey do Tm Gamer do / ' Clyde Hit< hus k do I Glen How er do J. 10 I Jacob Huffman do Perry Johnson do J F. E. Kelley do LjO Joe Krick do -■ 1 *> ILuk MaJlmaau ■>■9"’
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“LONG LIVE THE QUEEN!” BY P HOL'/ /iHHKfcX VJHERE IS THE ONt-B'/EDI [~7 77 \ rr_rr 7 ——TJgU-A MKCKEREtI IwJ MfcH's n I Q ’ * vV =X/ uTf\Nl . • • y Y,— z ' — <--/ o > \\ J ' i / t «? <. l /1M ' 1r - K^ x, 'y - '/yo X rtW 700 8 XX - <* JrSk ( iIX aa wy*>>y a- 1 -fW&x ~vXw\7 ' {iQfeX - 4—b 1 a , T Bt ' T — < . w* .<» nv»Wßitl.w»'f*t<-»«rw r** *«* ’ ■•*»"
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1933.
Wilbur May do 900 Lauren Miller do 7.50 Claude Patsel do 4.50 Geo Raver do 4.73 Geo Reynoils do 11.7'1 i Sylvester Schroeder do 6,53 Wm. Schraluka do 2.03 John Shook do 5.03 Cliff Boring do . 7.28 Chas Brown do 7.28 Luthur Brown do 7.1$ Jesse Case do 8.78 1 Alf Debolt do 5.85! t meet er i •♦bolt do | Jeeß ] iebolt '!•■> S.TI Harold Greenlee do 7.50 t •Chas Hitchcock do 8.85 Cliff Hart do T.M District No. James Everett laibor 3.80 L. L. Troutner d«> t. 78 John Tinkham do 2.25 Perry Vine do .... 3.15 Sidney Dague do 2.85 Wm. Huston do Herbert Aklev do 4.20 Glen McMillen do 2.85 . Joe Durbin do 2.55 . Marion Foor do 90 Jon us Everett do 3.20 L. L. Troutner do 4.00 I Marion Foor do 2.40 1 John Elsey do 2.40 ' F. Smith d<> 1.40 Otto Lanurt do 2.40 Charles Kebuch do 2.40 Roy Chase do 2.40 Roy Bronholder do 3.60 W. B v nner do 3.60 Theo Dague 5.25 J4ay Wialters do 2.25 Perry Walters do . 2.70 C. W. Roch <to . . 2.25 G. Ans worth d“» 2.70 Frank Smith do 2.70 Clint Death do 2.70 *C. P. Troutner do 36.25 Harry Troutner labor team 21.00 T. Archer do 10.00 William Watkins do 8.75 Carl Burkhart do . . 8.75 Fred Bender labor 13.60 Herman Brunner labor team 7.00 Sam Hauger do 6.30 Homer Dague labor 8.00 Corden Rail labor team 10.50 Orvil Morrison do 7.00 Fred Hilton labor 3.00 William Houston labor 6.00 Ernest Ehrman do 11.55 District No. 7 Ed. Miller labor team 56.25 Auther Dearman do . 18.00 Harvey Tinkham do 8.50 Chalmer Miller labor 11.00 Henry Tum’blcson labor team 21.00 1 Roy Miller labor . 11.00 I Clifton Glespy lab>r team 2.00 Leu Bixler labor 3.00 W. F. Meyer do 1.00 W. F. Meyer labor 13.20 Leo Bixler do g.tfi H- i.!'\ <’l nk db ■Clarence Ixingenbarger do 9.60 Theodore Bower do 6.60 Ralph Jimenez do 3.75 Pedra Zalona do 3.00 David <’o->k do L' l 5 T. Cotes do .77' District No. S Arman Habegger labor team 57.50 Paul McClain do 31.00 Albert Huser labor 13.001 Wm. Brunner do 3.00 A. Gottschalk Tile 2.41 Berne Lumber Co S. & cement 20.60 James V. Hendricks labor team IL2O Dan Striker do 36.00 Lewis Hendricks lalx'i Virgil Hemiricks labor 16.75 Pete Martin do 10.05 K'-I.Hiiii Kiser do 8155 Theates Johnson do 6.4 5 Prior Gilbert do 7.95 , IM I‘c Sut ter <L» | | Godfrey Smith do 10.05 i John Thatcher do 1.80 I Sam Art Mittmer do 10.05 Vernon Uhrick do 7.95! District No. !» Mannel Jaurgin Libor 12.30 Tupule Jaurgu do 12.30 Henry Costello do 12.30 Emtuin Aval do 12.30 L. Burk head du 23.50 Emil Baumgartner do 12.30 Wilbert Beer do 12*00 Vilkamia Tours do 10.80 Chester Brodbaek do 1.5" George Ringger labor team 17.25 Raymond Ringger labor 6.0 n Ervin Isch labor team 4.00 Homer Beer labor 7.40 Albert Duback labor team 6.8"!' Joel Schwartz do l'fio J. J. Kaufman do 14.001 T. R. Schiler do 15.75 1 Elmer Isch labor 1.20 Arthur Bollinger labor .60 Harold McCanc do 1.2" ' District No. 10 Rufus Meshberger labor team 39.75 : Sam Yoder labor .. 1.2" Sam Neusbaum do 4.4" John Duff lal»or team 2.70 P (’has Studler do 10.8" i ' Fred Beeler do 2.401 1 Milo Sales do 4.4";: Richard Meshberger do 8.001 Goldie Gottsc halk du 2.00 •' Frederick Duff do 2.00:1 Mile Reynolds labor 2.00 ! ( Clyde Striker labor team 6.75 i’ Ellis Pointers do 6.00 Austin Krick do 11.004 L. Martin do 6.00 District. No. II W. M. Striker labor team 47.501 Vernon Pontius labor 10.60., Eli Campbell lo 16.40 Earl Phillips do 15.80 ( Paul Striker do 13.001 Tilman Ass »lder labor and team 4.00 Charles Mann do . 3.60 Charlie Phillips labor Tom Sullivan labor team 10,00 Bill King lalwir 9.80 Fred Mathys labor team 10.00 John Derickson do 12.00 ( Lybarger Gravel Co gravel . 7.20 Fred Honnie do 6.00 Ben Farlow hardware . 3.7" Geneva Lumber Co. lumber 43.87 M. E. Hutton grinding tools 7.55 Berne Lumber Co wire 1.00 C M. Striker labor 20.0" Charbes Eidelwine do 15.00 lorn Haviland do 4.50 Bill Mi haels do 4.50 Harold Runkel do 6.75.1 Merl M<*’roskv do 6.0" John Hendricks do 6.00 Norman Mann do 8.25 Eli Christman d<» 3.00 George Vauzlvu: do 5.25 Tim Imnyon do 3.0 p isador Brown do 3.75 WPf-ed Murgess do 2.25 Geo Green do 3.75 i: H GSllowaj to W. M. Wooders do 3.75 George Bucher do 3.75 District No. iU Adams Reef labor 15.00 Herbert Dailey do 9.00 Ralph Derickson do 9.00 Hat h y J Reef labor team 4 8.75 Paul Butcher do 28.00 Pat Moran do 36.0 u James Murait do 33.5" < manty Garage Carl Baumgartner labor 87.501 Clarence Durkin do 66.9" Ralph Martin do 65.4" I R. F. Sauer do 64.50 1 Edwin Spichiger do 72.0" | Ernest Striker do 58.50
Dallas Brown do 12.00 J P. Kirsch & Son batteries 15.59 Auto Electric Garage parts 6.1 U Ashbaucher’s Tin Shop iron S. 2.10 Riverside Garage parts 2.35 Butler's Garage parts .. Dierkes Auto Wreck. Co. parts 8.55 Walter Brintzenhofe parts 7.45 Ft Wayne P. * S. Co do L Kiger A Co do 75.50 ’l’he Arc-o Co paint ; R. N. Runyon * Son gas 25 4.87 | ! Decatur Insurance Agt. insur. 182.44. Decatur Lumber Co. cement 11.12 I Kos her L. & C Co cement, tile 16.Hl I i HiWay Service Station tires 83.591 Ernest Coffin parts 106,50 The Krick Tyndall Co brick 43.95 The Suttles Edwards Cq insur. 76.02 W. P. Robinson Co plant posts 46.27 i D Fisher labor 5.00 | Ralph E. Roop stamps 2.50 1 Ralph E. Roop salary M. 171.021 Lucius Somers gravel 60.001 Plymouth Rock C. Plant stone 682.02 , The Erie Stone Co do 2 1"."" | Blue Creek Stone Co. do 2,1 22.82 1 Meshberger Bros. Stone Co do 684.38 Certified this Ist day of June 1933.* GLEN COWAN Auditor Adams County June 2-? MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected .Tune 2 No commission ans no yardage. 170 to 250 lbs $4 60 250 to 325 lbs ... $4.55 140 to 160 lbs $4.30 100 to 140 lj>s $3.70 Roughs $3.50 Stags $1.50 Vealers $5.25 Spring Ijinibs $6.25 FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., June 2. —(O.R) —I .ivestock: Hogs. 10e up: 250-350 lbs., $5; 200-250 lbs., $4 90; 170-200 lbs., $4.80; 140-170 lbs- $160; 100-140 lbs.. $1.25; roughs, $4; stags, $2.75. Clipped lambs, $5.25; spring lafbs. $7. Calves. $5.50: steers, good to choice. $5-$5.50; medium to good. $4 50-$5; common to medium. $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 good $2.50 $3; cutter cows, $1 75-12.25; canner cows. $1.51.50; 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. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., June 2.—(U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, on sale, 2,800; fairly active to all interests, weights above! 190 lbs., firm to 5c higher; lighter averages. 15 to 25c higher; bulk desirable ISO to 250 lbs.. $5.25$5.35; only weights over 220 lbs., eligible at outside figures; 140 to 160 lbs., $4.50-$5; pigs mostly $4.25. Cattle: Receipts. 300; cows predominating; steady; cutter grades !$1.85-12.50; two loads plain steers [unsold. Calves: Receipts, 600; vealers active, strong to 50c higher: good to choice mainly $6; common and medium. $4.50 $5.25. Sheep: Receipts. 800; open market supply very light; bulk lambs !run direct to millers; market active, fully steady; quality and sorts considered; good to choice 60 to 70 lbs., lambs, leniently sorted. SB.OO- - CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE July Sept. Dec. [Wheat 73% .75% .781, Corn .47% .47% .50% Oats 24% .25% .26% LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected June 2 No. 1 New Wheat, 50 Tbs. or better 71c No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs. 70e Oats 22c Soy Beans 35c to 75c White or mixed corn 50c I Good Yellow corn 7..... 55c Rye —25 c Rainfall Record Broken Aberdeen. Wash.— (U.R)- —Aber-1 deen claims to be one of the wett-1 est cities on the Pacific coast this ; year. More than nine t it of rain fell this year, breaking all time records by six inches. "Dead ■ Bear Was Alive Kelso. Wash — (U.R) — W. - H. Elwood shot, thought he killed, a ' hibernating bear. He put it in the: I kitchen. Returning later, he found' j bruin sniffing tor food. Elwood shot again. IJitr Penny Dance Sunset 1 Sunday.
Test Your Knowledge I Can you answer seven of these I test questions’ Turn to page Four for the answers. ♦ ♦ 1. In which country is the tsetse i | fly native? | 2. Is the Ukraine in Europe or ' 3 What does the abbreviation I
I ’STOLEN LOVE hu HAZEL LIVINGSTON COFKR/<3//T JSr/f/JVO SnfDrCATir, EA/-C.
WHAT HAS HAPPENED SO FAR. Joan Hastings, seventeen and beautiful, lives with two old maiden aunts, Evvie and Babe Van Fleet, in a house long run to seed. Joan, lonely and impressionable, falls in love with Bill Martin, whose social status is far beneath her own. The aunts plan to send 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 put her on a train, bound for school, in charge of a member of the Travelers’ Aid Society. Joan slips off the train, and Walter Dunne, a kindly motorist, gives her a ride back home to Sausalito, Cal. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. CHAPTER XIII. As Joan settled comfortably beside him in the deeply cushioned seat he reached over and placed a plump, ringed hand on her. “In a minute I’m going to be too busy hitting it up to talk. Now listen, I’m a poor, chicken-hearted fool, but they aren’t all like me. I ain't always sprouting wings myself. Take it from your Uncle Walt, and don’t go riding in any more strange cars —get me?” She laughed at him delightedly. “Why—you sound just like Aunt Evvie!” He started the motor. “Well—next time you take Aunt Ewie’s advice.” They sped silently, smoothly over the long gray ribbon of road. He did not speak again, nor did Joan. She was truly grateful for the lift, but her thoughts were all for Bill. The miles slipped by, every one bringing her nearer —to Bill. “Don’t think I’ve failed you—l’m coming fast—fast as the wind—” • ♦ • Another woman was coming to Bill. Dolores, with her warm dark eyes, and the cloud of blue black hair, so faintly, finely lined with gray. “It’s my money!” she said sullenly, when Gerwin demurred. “If I take a notion to bail hfm out, is it anything to you?” “You’re my wife!” “Oh, forget it!"“It seems easy for you to forget.” “Don’t be a fool.” “I'm no fool,” he said stolidly. “It’s you.” But he let her go. What else could he do? It was, as she said, her money. Her dark eyes were hard when she came back to the shop some hours later. “They let him go before I got there. Dropped the whole thing. ■■ Milt Rosemer didn’t know anything about it. He said he didn’t know who could have pulled for him, but Begoni’s went to the bat—got it all fixed up.” “I told you you were a fool to get mixed up with it.” “Oh dry up!” she cried in a high, quivering voice. Her eyes were fixed on the yellow turrets of the Van Fleet house on the hill, just visible through the small, dirty window. Gerwin followed her brooding gaze. “Old Captain Horner saw— Bill and the little Van Fleet gfrl up near the Power House once—together.” “Horner’s in his second childhood!” she said contemptuously, and burst into tears. » » • “Don’t think I’ve failed you— I'm coming—fast—fast as the wind!” Joan’s love went winging over the miles. “Joan —wait for me!” the boypanted, as he plowed through the dusty short-cut to the hill. A night and a day and a night since she had put her slim hands on his shoulders, and kissed him and said—“l’ll always love you—and I’ll never be sorry—ever!” A night, and a day, and a night... a thousand years . . . she should be on her way East now, but she wasn’t, i “She'd never go off that way—l know—true blue—she’ll be waiting—” He struggled through the soft sand, grabbed at the root of a tree. There —he was up on the road. The big old house loomed ahead, yellow : against the eucalyptus trees. 1 By the south hedge he stopped, almost expecting to see her waiting
B. T. U. stand for? 4. Where is Maryland State University? 5. Who wrote “Midsummer Night’s Dream?” 6. To w-lut empire does the Island j of Tsushima belong? 7. Which Pope promulgated the | dogma of the Imaculate Concep- [ lion? 8. Is copper or iron the better ' , < onductor of heatt
there, dear, faithful, loving Joan, too good, all too good for him. . . . I “I'm not worthy of touching her 1 dusty shoes!” he thought, extrava- ! gantly, and his arms ached to hold . her, tightly, tightly, never to let _ her go again. , He crawled through the hole in , the hedge, stood looking wistfully | across the lawn. Over there, near . the garage, he had kissed her first, i in lilac time. He remembered the . way she had looked, slim and gold I against the purple blossoms. A - princess out of a fairy tale. t A lump rose in his throat. “Not body else would ever forgive me—- . but she will. She won’t care. She’ll ■ understand. She’ll know it wasn’t i my fault I got mixed up in that . dirty Begoni deal—” An uncontrollable impulse to see her now—this very minute—seized him. He couldn't wait—not another second. There had been too much clandestine meeting. From now on . it was going to be right out in the
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open. The devil with the aunts—he’d take Joan away— He bounded up the front steps, pulled the heavy knocker firmly. Darned if he’d sneak to the back door. He knocked again. Miss Evvie Van Fleet answered the door herself. They stood measuring each other for a moment, the thin lipped elderly spinster, and the impetuous, no less determined boy. “I didn’t send for you—yet!” she . said. “And w-e have a back door—for tradesmen and servants.” Bill moved forward, as if to enter the hall. “I didn’t come to see : you,” he said, biting each word off • shortly and hurling it at her. “I came to see Joan—and that's why I came the front way!” “We'll discuss that.” She motioned him into the long, dark li- , brary, and they stood at opposite sides of the old mahogany table, facing each other. : “Joan is gone. I said she's gone, i Don’t you understand? Gone!” “No!” he cried. “She wouldn’t ; go—she’d never have left me that way—” > “She’s gone,” Evvie said harsh- ■ ly, “on the Overland. She’s half way across the United States by now.” , “When— ’’ he gulped miserably, “did she go?” “Yesterday morning.” Bill looked at the towering, i square old woman, at the spacious ; book filled room, and the long red velveteen curtains through which ' the light filtered dimly. Then he i looked down at his shapeless old shoes, his rough, scarred hands. He : saw Joan again—as he had first i seen her—slender and gold and reI mote against the red curtains. I “Have I been dreaming?” he . thought in a sudden, cold despair. ■ “Did I imagine everything?” He choked. Air—he had to have . air! He clutched his cap and I brushed roughly past her, for the door. Her hand, large and strong as a t man's, tightened on his shoulder. . “Not so fast, young man. not so ! fast. We’re just beginning— ’’ r» » » “She’s gone—half way across , the continent by now!” : Evvie Van Fleet was looking at
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him contemptuously, aBII . dead and gone Van F!e e ", d jJ hind her. creeping out onL owy corners of the ,1 >ng a him eontemr/tS But he didn't care forth, wasn t gomg t let th”* best of h,m that wav. I t L?, ter about th ■ Van Fleet 1 Joan . she was from him, turning into S minute ago she was warmatS She was part of the warn™ the gentle wind. To think, was to feel her close i h * her breath on his cheek. 2 he couldn t reach her X just a young girl «hohad’i him from a window. It WM dream, a mad dream tnatkad happened. ’ He brushed the tumbled hair his forehead with the bad
grimy hand. “I see” he said 11 going. I'm sorry I troubled™ Ewie's lip curled. "Yes. sJ away. You’re quite safe. I<■ touch you w '.h- • harmingmjiil and myself m- re than I r.arr.J Run away—you scum!" I Bill wheeled. It was no dial It was real. Joan's love mill and the woman knew it. She ™ separated them. She had ml Joan go—it wasn't Joan—J™ would never have left him. 1 careful what you say—beciwl going to marry your niece. Y«fl have men in your darned old M ily whether you like it or not-™ I don’t like it any better than jj do. You sent Joan away—allrj| —but you can't make her stay i™ she's of age. You'll see— I “You’ll never hear from M again!’’ He laughed. All his comml was back. Joan was near 1M He could see her smiling—herd outstretched “I’ll always Iwtl —l'll never be sorry—ever!" 1 had promised. She would rail “I'll take a chance on that, I said arrogantly J Two bright spots burned vie’s cheeks. “Six weeks andafl be wondering what she ever a*J you—a girl like Joan, a and a beauty and you- Okl know girls she won't ba™ ing of j/oi< long ,1 “You don’t i now Joan, thffl/1 “You don' 1 even know nJ she’s gone. I changed my PR He shrugged. “No matlnj find her. I'll find her if I »>"! trail her for ten years. AB I wait for me—till I do. 1 He picked up his shape®’R cap. -i chH “Wait—" Evvie said. wetting her thin, blue bps - tip of her tongue. Do }o° love her?” she asked in a # unnatural voice. iJ And now it was Bui ’ . contemptuously ~t " cr , spread his big. rough ■■ - hopeless gesture, and tu door again. “Because if you <<»• breathing fas’. • ’ ‘ " her. You’ll let l.er ; org'« “Let her forget. hc ... “Do you take me for a (To Be Continued -s/1 i
