Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 11, Decatur, Adams County, 12 January 1934 — Page 2
Page Two
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE WANTED WANTED— Good, clean. bi« Rags, suitable for cleaning machinery. Will pay 4c lb. Decatur Daily Democrat SALESMAN WANTED Reliable. experienced, to call on selected ' customers. Must have good references, furnish bond. Adams county.. Call at Ric» hotel after 4 p. m. to-: y. Herman Depew. 10-lt FOR SALE—Estate Heatrola, medium she; Tanden Tractor disc: Oliver Tractor plow; 1*25 Ford T. ton truck with dump bed; truck tire, cross chains. Peoples Supply Co.. 203 So. Ist St. U-a3t FOR SALE Raby's reed stroller, good as new. Ch*ap if taken at once. Mrs. Guilder. above A and P. store. 11-gJtx WANTED—To buy <auuer and cutter cows. Phone 6SO-C or see Lew I Murphy. 10-3tX FOR RENT FOR RENT—Furnished light housekeeping apartment. First floor, garage, private entrance. Inquire 1127 West Monroe street S-g3t I FOR RENT— Beautiful farmhouse I with garden, garage and chicken i house, two miles from Monroe. In quire John J. Schwartz, Jr.. Route 2, Monroe. It'-gitx ’ FOR RENT— Modern 9 room house.' Madison and 4th Call 603 or see Mr. or Mrs. Herb Kern. 115 Marshall street. 10-3tx - ■ o— Cleveland - (U.PJ—lrked by 1,600 false alarms last year, which, lie says, have cost the city $630,006, Fire Chief James E. Granger is carrying a campaign against pranksters into the public schools. The chief s move followed a recent evening foray ot no-lire calls, in which 13 dead-end runs were made by the department Twelve of the calls, coming from the same : neighborhood were believed to have been turned in by the same alarmist. Granger declared that each call, based on the department's annual expenses, amounts to a $350 cost. Firemen, talking to school children, are repeating the chief's warning that in false alarm arrests he will ask the courts to impose maximum sentences ot 3109 and costs and six mouths in jail. Round and Square Dance Sunday, Sun-set. MIEBIFF'S stl.E In the Adams Circuit (’ourt, State of Indiana. Cause Number 14,757. .Metropolitan Life liisuiauce Company. a . orporati'Hi vs. James C. Frank, Della Frank, his wife. First Bank of Berne. Berne, Indiana, Centra! States Oil Company. _Jjy virtue of an •rd« r of sale to me directed and delivered from th* Clerk of the Adams Circuit Court, in the above entitled cause, I have levied upon and will expose to sale by I Publk Auction at the Court House floor, east entrance, firs t floor in said County, between the hours of ](»:OS o’clock A. M and I'm o c‘»( k ' F. M. on Saturday the 3rd day off February A. D. (93 1, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding b»ven years of the following - described real estate to-wit The Southeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter (SE 1-1 NK IT of Section Thirty-two ( 33), Town-1 ship Twenty-six North (26N), King* Fifteen East (15E); the East Half of the Northeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter (E 1-2 NE 1-1 NE 1-4), Section Thirty-two 12), Town-1 ship Twenty six North (26N) Range Fifteen East (ISE); also the Northwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter (NW 1-4 NW l-l), Section Thirty-three (33), Township Twenty six North (26N), Range Fifteen East (1»E) containing in all One Hundred (100) acres, more or less, situate in Adams County, State of India mi. And on failure to realize therefrom the full amount of the judgment and interest thereon and coats 1 will al the same time and in the manner aforesaid offer for sale th*' fee simple «»f the above described real estate,. Taken as the property of James <('. Frank, Della Frank, his wife, First Bank of Berne, Berne, Indiana, Central States Oil c-mipanv it the suit, of Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, a corporation. Si<id sale will l>e made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement law>. BURL JOHNSON, Sheriff Adams County. Indiana. 4 I.irk J. S.ntx and Jone* Humiuk nd nad HuNrumaua. Attorney* .Jan 42-19-26 \ ppoia (inrnt *1 No. :mmh> Notice is hereby given. That th* 4 undersigned has been appointed Ad]n«n»strat<ir of the estate of Hctt’.e Kaeaer, late of Adams county, de. • eased. The estate is probably solvent. John W Carnail, Administrator Eichhorn Gordon and lidris \ttorsey Jan. 11, 1931 Jan. 12-19..?. > ■■■■■■■■■WWmMaSMMMBSMMMMkMSa Roy S. LW Johnson H c Auctioneer tm- . Now booking WtT' winter ana opring WtajpA ■tie dates. My dates are filling fast, claim your date early. Jan. 13—Decatur Community Sale Saln'Barn. Jai>. 15 —(UP)- Otto Werlmg. AdtnT. 1 mi. south of Echo 9 miles west and 1 mile north of Decatur. General farm sale. . Office tn Peoples Loan & Trust Bldg. TalAnhnnp OWirp iflj Rnn 1022
MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected Jau. 12 Ko commission and no yardage 130 to 210 Iba 33.50 210 t 0250 lbs 33.40 250 to 300 lbs 33.20 I 300 to 350 lbs. 33.10 I 140 to 160 lbs 33.10 t 100 to 140 11m. $2.40 i Roughs .. ... - 32.25 Stags 31251 | Vealers 36.50] j Lambs .. — —- |LSO Decatur Produce Company Egg Market No. 1. dozen —— ——• I*> C No. 2. dozen 12v No. 3. dozen .... ............ 10c CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept, i Wheat S6’< .85% -86% I Corn 52% .54 .55% I Oats "<% -36% .35% I Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs 10 to 15c higher; 160-2001 lbs. 33.60; 200-250 lbs. $3.50; 250-1 300 lbs. 33.40; 300-350 lbs. $3.25; 150-160 tbs. $3.15; 140-150 tbs. ! $3.05; 130-140 tbs. $2.85; 100-130 | tbs. $2.50; roughs $2.50; stags j $1.50. Calves $6.50; lambs $7.75. East Buffalo Livestock Hog receipts 2.500; holdovers 500; active to all interests; generally steady with Thursdays' close; bulk desirable 160 to 210 j tbs. $4.10; one load 180 to 190 It> selections $4.45; 220 to 250 lbs. $3.75 to $4; weights up to 300 lb downward to $3.40; pigs and underweights $2.75 to $3.75. Cattle receipts 175; cows stow; weak to 25c lower; cutter grades $1.60 to $2.35; tew common steers and heifers $4.25; cutlery kinds downward to $3.50. Calf receipts 300; better grade 1 vealers 50c higher; mainly $7.50; common and medium $4.50 to $6.50. Sheep receipts 800; lambs active; steady; good to choice woolskins leiuiently sorted $8.50; mixed offerings $8 to $8.25; medium kinds $7.5# to $7.75; throwouts $6.75 dowu; few handy weight ewes $4; mixed sheep $2.25 to $3.50. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected Jan. 12 I No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs or better ...... . 7j c No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs. 76c Old Oats —33 c New Oats 3] c New Yellow Corn 56c Old Yellow com .... 60c Mixed corn 5c less Soy Beans a 50t-60c — o XIITKE in the Uniter ot liquidation ot The Peeples Loan and T rust Company The Department of Financial Ini stitutions by Clark J. Lutz, special i representative of The Peoples Loan I and Trust Company of Decatur, Indiana, upon order of the Adams CirI cult court and in compliance with I Section 57 of the Acts of the 1933 I General Assembly of the state of I Indiana hereby gives notice that he has filet! with the clerk ot the Adams Circuit Court, a statement of | the debts and liabilities of the said | The Peoples Loan and Trust Company from the 9tb day of September, I 1933, when said The Peoples Loan and Trust Company etme into his hands as such said special representative and said statement includes all debts and liabilities up until and including the day and date of September 9th 1933. That at any time after the giving of this notice and up until and including the 28th of March 1934, creditors, shareholders or other persons interested, may appear and by petition filed in the Adams Circuit Court, assert any Haims or priorities thereon or object to the allowances or disallowances recommended by the department. Any creditor who fails to appear and file his petition as above provided within the time fixed in tills noti' e or by an extension of ti.ae granted by the Adams Circuit Court, shall be forever barred from asserting any claim different from that recommended by the department, or from asserting any claim to priority or from contesting or opposing the allowance, with or without priority of any claim asserted by any creditor. Dated this 28th day of December 1933. CLARK J- LUTZ Special Representative of The Peoples Loan & T rust Company lleriHun 11. M>rr», Attornrj Dec. 29 Jan 5-12
Federal Farm Loans Make applications with the ADAMS COUNTY NATION-. AL FARM LOAN Association office with Schurger Abstract Company, 133 South 2nd st. ———— See me for Federal Loans and abstracts of title. French Quinn Schirmeyer Abstract Company. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined. Glasses Fitted HOURS; •;30 to H:3l> 12:30 to 3:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. ! Teleohone 135.
*— ♦ a Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these teee Quosticns? Turn to page 1 Four for the answers. 1. When does the winter so'.a lee begin? 1 2. What government office handles copyright applications? t 3. Who was James Russel Low- ’ ell? ‘ 4. What is tne Hawaiian n*.me tor
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CHAPTER FIFTY-TWO Patricia woke to that on the morning after the ball, woke to drifted newspapers, to piles of telegrams, to ringing telephones and frantic doorbells. Haverholt had not retired at all. He was unshaven and haggard, his white h»ir tousled; he was still in dinner clothes. He had spent the night with press agents and reporters, with eager representatives from a dozen smart hotels, with movie msn and radio men. He was weary, he was exultant; he was riding high. , . , At ten, the house was cleared of visitors and reporters. At ten. when Patricia came downstairs, her arms full of newspapers, the living room was a wreck, piled with empty bottles, smelling of whiskey and stale smoke, Uttered with plates messy with scrambled eggs and bits of toast. Haverholt was at the telephone. "Great,” he was saying, great ... An edition of fifty thousand copies though won’t be half enough. Sure, it was all my own idea. . . . Old Massa Blair talked himself out on a limb and I sawed it off.” Haverholt banged down the receiver. The telephone rang again, promptly. Haverholt let it ring. He stretched, yawned luxuriously, eyed the girl who had hesitated in the doorway. “Come in,” he said, still stretching. “Gosh, I’m tired.” “This place,” observed Patricia, glancing distastefully about the living room, “this place is certainly one grand mess.” “Newspaper men,” observed Haverholt, “like their liquor. There was one man, a chap from the Blade, I swear he polished off a quart of rye and single handed too.” , - , Remembering, he grinned. Instantly, he became grave. “Blair is scared,” Julian announced it pleasantly. “He’s shaking in his boots. Did you see whom hs picked for his partner?” “I saw. You mean, Horace Sand3TS.” “I taught Horace all he knows about bridge,” admitted Haverholt, although Patricia had not asked. Lighting a cigarette and expelling a long plume of smoke, he proceeded, “If Blair wasn’t paralyzed with fear he'd choose an old-line player, an old fuddy-duddy like himself. It’s going to be a circus to see him matched with Horace. Horace goes in for psychic bidding and Reuben hasn't the remotest notion of what a psychic is. Easy Pickings, Patricia. easy pickings for you and me.” The girl sat down. The telephone kept on ringing; the doorbell too was ringing. Julian talked on and on. He told her that a new printing of his red book, fifty thousand copies, was running off the presses. He told her that the storm of publicity was worth a million dollars to him, win, lose or draw—and he was bound to win. He told her several times that no bridge in the history of the world had ever approached the bridge he played. He explained the radio tie-up, explained the movie tie-up, explained that all America was watching him. Hi* voice rolled on like the ceaseless surf and every third word was ‘l’. She herself, Patricia thought, seemed to have no part in his plans. He never mentioned her. Yet, she was to be his partner; she was scheduled to play in the match. For proof there was the pile of newspapers in her lap. The name was there in black and white, Patricia Haverholt, niece of the expert and an expert in her own right. Her own photograph was there, herself in the blue gown, herself on Haverholt’s arm, smiling into the camera. Patricia Haverholt.
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“THE PLASTIC SURGEON” By sE gA ‘■M QuiTTiNG~ IM'“THROUGH RELLO KiJE RADRCGROSS THIS V I ''L-V tgC-s/S - VI r~ —7= . — WITH COMICS-THERE fMMT ORFiCE- SHIP ME ONE MORNING. BUT THEV ALL ) / BEFORE 1 hiRES < 1 LUONT “ NO MORE IDEAS-CM GONG . GROSS OF COMIC ARTISTS- GOT JOBS AS CIAM-» (VA THEYS sY)*£>7m' (STAN V-Oft Mr?. Z\ TO LEARN GET EM OFF ON THE NEf > DIGGERS- DE MIGHT ) I \ iMPoßTinwi U«Vk-DCUM 1 ' 11 < x r FiLhs l DOtiT VA GET TRAIN-THIS IS THE ‘ ScRAPE UP Six VMXjR PA|N 1 £ VODpiEBuRCDUEEKW SPLASH sSS 5M TO ML JB/ lsrW U jHLjfaF Mw ® Blbiflk ' ■ hK= JW WJ. sh 11 k iVH 1 is WkS > u —■ I. .Aft 3,1 j r „-| jil »
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 19J4.
a wreath or garland? 5. Os what country Is Mozambique a colony? fl. How many women have served in the United Statea Senate? 7. in what country >■ Scmersetthire a county? 8. Where is the city Cf Tlppe-j tary? 9. During the American Revolution what was the name for those who remained loyal to the British Crown? 10. Can the President veto a pro-
“What," cried the girl, suddenly angered by his obliviousness, "what about tne?” As the man paused, she added in sudden bitterness, “Have you forgotten that I figure somewhere in this?” “Why, my dear * “Don’t you ‘my dear’ me! What are you going to do about me?’’ She snatched up a newspaper, shook out the crackling pages, so that the photographs were outermost. “What about that picture? Dozens jf people know that I’m not Patricia Haverholt, that I’m not your niece! Dozens of people who knew me as Patricia Warren will zee that picture.” She rattled off the names like hail. “My stepmother will see that picture, Eileen Sycott, Phil and Leda Kennedy, the grocer in my oid neighborhood, the drug store man, dozens and dozens of people I used to know!” She stopped for breath. Haverhok was frowning. He was sober enough now. He was not frightened, not as Patricia was. Still, he was obviously more nervous than he pretended to be. “I thought of that,” he admitted reluctantly. “I thought of that,” he repeated. “Oh, so you did spare me a thought,” observed the girl ironically. “How very considerate of you.” “There’s no use getting huffy,” he suggested, worrying his lip between his teeth. “This means something to me,” he reminded her with an anxious look. “I don’t see how it could,” he continued nervously, “but a scandal now might blow up the match. The sainted Reuben would pass out cold if he guessed at any irregularity in our relationship.” “What a fearful shame that would be!” • Irony was lost on Haverholt. He stood a moment in deep reflection, grinned all at once, and began with confidence renewed: “Cheer up, Patricia. It can’t make a bit of difference now. Reuben's hooked. He can’t wiggle out. Patricia Haverholt or Patricia Warren, it’s all the same. To the public now you stand for bridge. Even if some newspaper should stumble on the truth and print the facts, aside from some blue nosed fussing, you can’t be hurt.” Patricia felt a sense of defeat and irritation. It was useless to hope that Julian Haverholt might see her side of it. Useless to hope that this man might consider a young girl’s reputation as important as a bridge match. Perhaps it wasn’t Perhaps, she thought in sudden bitterness, perhaps Haverholt was right. After all, of what value was her reputation ? What had it ever got her? Her good name had not made her happy. Why then should she fret and stew? “Let's pray, Patricia,” said Haverholt bracingly, “that your awful past does stay safely buried. I’ll admit a resurrection might be a little awkward. Only awkward though, not fatal.” At that very instant, the butler appeared in the doorway, his usual decorous face obviously perturbed. “A gentleman to see you, sir.” “I’m seeing no one,” said Haverholt indifferently. “Tell him to come back this afternoon. I’m going to bed.” “You’ll see me,” broke in a savage voice that brought Patricia in terror from her chair. The butler was bowled aside as a thick-set, swarthy, slick-haired man elbowed his way into the room. Bill McGee! Patricia saw him, saw the gun that he had fished from his pocket, saw the butler’s terrified retreat. “And who are you?” inquired Haverholt, coolly glancing at the weapon. He suggested, “You might
posttd Constitutional Amenlmcut? arrivals Mr. anti Airs. Joe Sowards »•* Bluffton ar» the parents of u Fkl I baby born Wednesday eveuiug. -lan uary 10. at the Wells County HosI pital. This is the first child in the ■ I family. Miw Sowards was formerly i Miss Bartha Baughman, daughter I of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Baugh- ■ man of thlsjiity.
put that gun away. They always make me nervous. Do you know this gentleman, Patricia?” he asked the girl. She was too frightened for speech. McGee had seen her, was advancing, gun in hand. “Get up, you ■ —he snarled. “You're coming along with me!” "You can't speak to my niece like that!” “Your niece, is she?” demanded Bill, whirling upon the other man. He gave a sneering laugh. "You’ve lost your job as uncle then. She s going to be my niece now.” It happened with nightmare swiftness. His face as white as death, Julian sprang for Bills throat. The gangster did not fire his gun. It was whirled from his grasp at the first wild charge. Julian’s fist sent him sprawling across the room. As Patricia sank trembling, sobbing, to a chair, Haverholt collared the younger, stronger man and dragged him to the foyer. With the butler’s help he kicked him down the steps into the garden outside. It was the bums rush for Bill McGee. As a final, ironic touch Julian picked up the fallen gun and hurled it through the door and to the lawn where McGee, dazed and shaken, was just then crawling to his knees. “And that," said Julian Haverholt, returning to the living room, “is the end of Bill McGee.” In which prophecy he was entirely wrong. Life was moving fast, so fast. Patricia was torn a dozen ways at once. The bridge match and the arrangements pertaining to it filled her every waking minute. She was far too occupied these frantic, unreal days for worry or for heartaehe. Except for the incident of Bill McGee, that incident that had been so pleasant a sop to Julian’s vanity, there had been no echo from her past. If her stepmother, if Eileen Sycott or any of the old neighborhood acquaintances had identified the countless photographs of Patricia Haverholt as Patricia W’arren, the girl herself had had no evidence of it. She could not worry now. She had no time for brooding. Sometimes she thought of Clark but vaguely as of some half remembered dream. Other times, in moods of weariness and despair, she knew that underneath the tumult and the shouting, the froth and the excitement there was a vacancy, a sense of bitter loss. There had been no word from Clark. Marthe was in and out the house, bright-eyed and flashing as some tropical bird, but never Clark. Clark’s slow and memorable smile, his special gestures, the way he had said her name, these things would tug at Patricia’s heart. Resolutely she would thrust them from her mind. The bridge match must be got through. All else must yield to that Just now to the girl, as to Julian Haverholt, the coming marathon was the most important thing in life. The living room was always jammed with people who talked of nothing else, Patricia must see to them, must offer tea or cocktails, must keep a thousand threads at her fingertips, Patricia, dressed in her favorite shade of blue, serene and gracious, her red hair shining, as she smiled and listened or added her own little comment to the general babble, Julian’s hostess and his nieee. “A little beauty, isn’t she?” “She'll take the prize on looks, all right. At that, I hear her bridge is good.” “Good! That girl’s a wonder. She fills up all the holes in Julian’s flashy game.” Be Coatiuuefl) C 1932. hr King Features Syndfeale. lae.
THE TOWNSHIP'S ANN UAL , REPORT TO THE ADVISORY n BOARD Os Kirkland Township. Adams •> County, Indiana January 1934 ■erelpta January „ u 5.7* i 4 Farmers Mate Bank la' i rXri state lunk ini. -J" : 14 Farmer® Sta Bank resenue ./-’jgp 14 Farmorn State bank do.. | - I Farmers State Bank lut. I State Bank Int. -r.n'oo 7 ; Fanners Stale Bank revenue <o< 8 “$ Firmer. State Bank Jug tax 31 | 1 i Farmers State Bank Int. Fanners State Bank Int. ~i n,, i * ■> Fanners State Bank dog laK sl! is LY’Vnncre Stale Bank rev. SoJ. - , 24 Farmers State Bank do . 24 Farmers State Bank d ' . 24 Farmer® State Bank do , 7 Farmers State Bank trail. s»® »®' I 7 Farmers State Bank I“}', tsu 00 : 5 Farmers State Bank trans. 15 Fanners State Bank Iran. 140 00 ( : 1» Farmers State Bauk do — ui | ''farmers State Bank rev. .ISO.#.’ . 3 Farmers State Ban* '"*• ■ . )x :t Farmers State Bank ,l "‘- **• .goo! 21 Farmers State Bauk dog tax to State Bank lut. . Hi :l Farmers State H*” l * 'I* 1 '.., 175 S 3 ; •3 Farmes State Bank 1. tax lre»- ; Xovember . 2 21 1 4 Farmers state R“ n * ln *; 3(M | ; 13 Farmers state Bank rev. December 1.481 6 Farmers state Bank.Utt 5 J 82 | 23 Farmer, state Ba.ik .ev. 23 f armers State Bank do -,«IV 123 Farmers State Bank ' 23 Farmers State Bank do - a* o - 0 • I) in bar ■J a 3 U H y Greist Ret. fund 15' 5 Sate Treasurer «nkin« in Zimmerman t • t o 13 L<>ren< e Biebriek hrbot U Samuel Barker repans * . 17 B. W. DeVor supples , fto •3 Glen Straub labor ’ . . i 24 A.hbaueher Tin S. .uppb« 24 Schafer Hdw Co ’■ | ■7 IL J Mann Teaching — 27 Albert Coppess do , 27 Glennes Arnold do . (( 27 Lucile Beavers do 27 Edna Borne do ( 27 William Griffith do J 27 Oscar Geisel do 35'00. 27 Nell Coppess do 27 Pauline Buckmasler do I ■7 llaedel Andrews do , 27 Charlie S< hladenhauften Jan. 4- 0' February 5O.»0 1 Elmer Bryan Transfers * 4 Berne Witness advertising I Decatur Daily Democrat do 4 State Treasurer sinking fund J. 4 1 Kiger & Co books e<-’an 7 Paul Seesenguth ecnietery -• 21 Farmers State Bank lights >-] 2 4 Owcar Geisel teaching c.. . !5 It. J. Mann do ’7. 27. Albert Coppess do 1 25 Glenne. Arnold do ,■ ; 125 Lucile Beavers do 25 Edna Borne do .... “ ’’i 25 William Griffith do * ■ 25 Nell Coppess do 25 E’auline Buck master do 25 Rcadel Andrews do . 25 Charlie Schladenhaffen jam 2S Henry Breiuer Height 14-. J. March .>« . 4 Daniel S< herry expenses 4 State Treasurer sinking fund 4 -& 16 EM Jorary repairs .2 •’ 18 R. A. Stu. key coal 20 Lorence Blebrieh labor 7„:,j! •4 August Walters repairs ... l- -" ; 25 Oscar Geisel teaching JJ-O®! 25 Glenncs Arnold do ■» 25 Raedel Andrews do 2.1 It I Mann do ;• 25 Albert Coppess do '- 25 Lucile Beavers do 25 William Griffith do **<'o 25 Edna Borne du ' ' 25 Nell Coppess do i 25 Pauline Buckmaster do 25 Charlie Schladenhaffen J- la.' . Zimmerman Dr. bill '■ '] 3 William Johnson repairs, 6 State Treasurer sinking fund o -"I 6 The Harter Pub. Co, diplomas -T..9 25 Albert Heyerjy Swine killed L 0» 3 Eli Beer de ’ "5 Peter Hclmerich raldiits do 2.5 Wilson Dettinger sheep do 6.M 25 William Yake do 26 K. J- Mann teaching 26 Albert Cqppcss do .. . 1 26 Glennes Arnold do 26 Lu< ile Beavers do 26 Edna Borne do on.. 26 William Griffith do 26 Oscar Geisel do 26 Nell Coppess do - 26 Pauline Buckmaster do _’G Raedel Andrews do -jOTO 26 Charlie Schladenhaffen J. • 26 Indiana Service Corp lights I v 1 Barton Reece Pogue speaker 10.00 4 John Schaefer driving bus « ;> State Treasurer sinking fund 4 O IL Greist retirement fund l-M.”*' 12 Albert Stoltic supplies n 1 23 H. A. Breincr freight . 14 I.JO Estate Treasurer sinking fund J-J* 10. K. A. Stu< key coal 11 K. B. Kerr repairs *• li \V. J. Conroy labor 21 Loreiifce Biebrieb labor 32.00 121 Louis Yake turkeys killed -1 <»* I 23 Robert Beery S. ditches -- J 0 2 4 Farmers State Bank note I L .4 2 4 Farmers Stale Bank note 1,000.00 24 Farmers State Bank lights 10.95 24 It. .1. Mann leaching ... 270.00 24 Albert Coppess do 212.971 2 1 Glennes Arnold do 133.00 2 4 lait’ ile Beavers do X 32.02 2 4 Edna Borne do 203.00 21 William Griffith do . 223.77 2! Oscar Geisel do I*o.oo 21 Nell Coppess do 102.97 2 1 Pauline Buekinaster do . 192 97 2 1 Raedel Andrews do 1*2.12 25 Andrew Srhirock S. killed 10.00 25 Daniel Seheny salary. .. 370.n0 29 William Bracht labor 7.00 30 Louis Yake Turkeys killed 9.00 J uly Suttles & Edwards Co insur. 17.00 7 It. J. Mann teaching . 100.00 7 Mr. and Mrs A. Coppess do 200.00 7 Farmers State Dank bond 37.80 7 State Treasurer sinking fund. 1.71 7 D. 11. Goble Ptg Co supplier 7.61 7 The Fronter Press Co do 39.00 s Decatur Lumber Co repairs 50.6 4 8 Clifton Striker supplies 25.32 8 Schaffer Hdw Vo do 19.7 4 8 Krick & Tyndall tile 15.96 21 E. W. Schladenhaffen S. K 15.00 26 Herman Barger labor 7.00 27 Leonard Stolte labor 100.00 28 J. J. Holcomb Mfg Co F. B. 2.65 29 Glennes Arnold teaching 130.00
i V Stat." lle 7 "’ ,P Jl’i H ’ h. W DeAor (un(| 39g H J “ b ° r sS.o® / <i william Br»>'>R “°. 3im p i" Harvey Manavy u > 14 75 re j H Smith papering ij 1 5 i eScott driving bun e.jU 7." Kiger * .'’“; 1 "" P, ’!‘, e “,ru-hee I*o I Il Palmer I r<Hi u <t 5j ulf H. High , lk light’, 4.-8 8 ”1 Farmers Stat* nan* • *» ii»;i! Il MW. Rethert auppliee H.»> j £ 35 Huntington lAb do J( 35 D. M. Goble Cad" 5 0( , ■ r 2 6 J H. Moore abur xfl „ ■ 36 Earl Arnold laboi 2# w ,| •x B D*' ,or supplies .: ii Robert Beery labor P”" September son J t Harold Barger labor . ! I 2 Earl Arnold painting )( I •» Noah Henschen oiling I j Gwrge Keaber pnintTng 1J »• j 2 Charles Beeis do 5000' 7 Elmer Bryan transfer , 7 The Stole Treavurer * lnh ‘”« ’ I 7 Dan Neuenechwandt-i I P'»'". | 7 Decatur Daily Demucrat adv. 8 Berne Witness ' o do (| i II H. W. DeVor ’uppliea «■ 16 Noah Hen ache 11 painting •1 William Bracht janitor ■>!.3* I *•» Indiana Reformator brooms ■>.Jj | 1 5i William Yake sheep killed | j, n. J. Mann teaching JoiS 25 Abert Copper do ISS.W ;•» Glenne* Arnold >h» 1(|0 0(> l latcile Beaver, do J® Robert 1 rown o on.no, ' 20 William Griffith do ffl 26 Elisabeth Leyiw do | 26 Lavon Chrietner do < J « j t 29 Oscar Geisel <b» . , 29 Raedel Andrews do ’ 29 Edna Borne do - 0, ] ?cSriie Schladenhaffen labor 1P.«« l« 5 State r Treaiurer° ainking fund M3I ■ 16 Lb'hty Brother, plumbing 1.1 821 Kaufman Latumer to .up. 24 E. W. S> hladenhauften b. K. B.th I 28 William Bracht janitor A'« ! 26 K. J. Mann teaching 28 Albert Coppe.* do .“sol. 28 Glennes Arnold do 128 Lucille Beavers do »-| J 28 Robert Brown do s, ,o I 28 William Griffiths do - •' I 28 EHsabeth Ley« do ] ] 28 Edna Borne do I 28 Os, ar Geisel do 28 Raedel Andrews do .- m ; 30 B. W DeVor supplies | I |3# Robert White teaching November . , , ..... I ' ,6 State Treasurer sinking fund .... 6 Fred Adler labor | I 15 Henry Breiner coal '•; ’ ■25 R. J. Mann teaihing 25 Albert Coppess do ; 25 Glennes Arnold do c 7-.> ' |25 Lucille Beavers do ; I 28 Robert Brown do 25 William Griffith do 25 Elisabeth Leyse do 35 Edna Borne do 25 Otcar Geisel do I 25 Raedel Andrews do «.» >• ” ( 25 William Bracht janitor I 25 Joe E. Eckrote supplies . 28 Farmers State Bank lights r>cember r 6 George Ehrman sheep killed • 6 State Treasurer sinking fund 1 5 A- P. Highland plumbing I 23 R. J. Mann torching 23 Albert Coppess do , I 23 Glennes Arnold do 23 Lucile Beavers du I 23 Robert Brown do '23 William Griffith do , ,-- {23 Elisabeth Leyse do ' 23 Edna Borne do !«; •' 23 Oscar Geisel do . *n4rews do ' *3 Robert White do music 37.501 ' 23 William Bracht janitor 23 R. E. Heidrich repairing 6»» 00 i 23 Farmers State Bank lights 13.25! I 23 Daniel Seherry salary 391.00 ' 23 Harve Beery Adv board 5.0® I ' j 23 John Borne du •}.<>« : !23 M. Zimmerman d<» 5.901 ' 26 Robert Beery labor 25 Farmers State Bank note 100.86' 26 Andrew Schirack labor 3.00 ] ‘ 28 Krick & Tyndall tile 1.93 ; ' 28 Decatur Luntbtr Co. supples 29.78! 28 Schafer Hdw Co., do 14.30 28 Lee Hdw Co do 22.33 | i 28 Smith Drug Store paint 36.55 28 B. W. DeVor supplier 30.75 j 20 Farmers State Bank bond 317.80 1 statement *»hti«inK ttf Ml
-uuriiiviii -■nnnirm tinoHHI 111 i Opposile BELLAS pHO! Court . h.us« Cash Grocery ® Bl Y ( RYSTAL YY HITE Granulated Sugar. 10 IM FANCY DELICIOUS APPLES, 6 lb. 25c; basket HUBBARDSON APPLES .. 8 lbs. 25c; Basket JU YY AGNER APPLES 8 tbs. 25c; Basket 85c and SB YVEIMER PURE SORGHUM,.. </, gal. 45c; GaLU PALMOLIVE SOAP 5 lor 3 POLAR BEAR or PILLSBURY FLOUR ■ . «1 FANCY COUNTRY GENTLEMAN CORN. cans! lOILEI TISSUE—. 3 - 1000 sheet rolls Macaroni, 2 lb. box 15c Large Tangerines Catsup. II oz. bottle 10c dozen .. 15c and! Syrup, Golden, gal He Cabbage, solid, lb- J Black Figs. lb. 10c Onions, 10 lb bag 3 Can Rubbers. s d„ 2 . jj, *gj“ ~U !’, a *'?* n / ars « eat ‘h.. *' )C Green Beans, •> cans 3 1 o •i ( i as . kers ’ Large 2 !b. pkg. . - * ‘ 25c Rolled Oats H tnef I eas, very good Fancy Pop Corn. «•.. ; lbs 2 Mustard, qt. jar ... 15c Hand I’ack Tomatoes Large Grape Fruit.. 5c .3 cans > Martha Washington Coffee, vacuum quart jar ® t hoice Cuts in Quality Beef and Pork - K V steak ’ lb - • 20c Fork sho - Steak 2lh J Roasts,.. 15c, 10c Fresh Side, lb? Sausa K e - ,b 10c Lean Bacon, ck. lb. « YYeiners, I ranks. Smoked Sausage, Oyster-. Sliced Bacon, Dried Beef, Bologna. I’uddm
Monies Paid in ih r . l>» I■.i.iT’bL".?' l ' ' ItriCipt.M during .e.ti 1M n>iiil of lt.il ttn ,i |.,. I il.-lmi -cm,-lire , Final Balances * *|»rrln| %r|,o«| HQ ' ■ “IM UecelplK cluriiiK Total of Hal an.l , ; iisbuiM'iiiriiis ,|. r „ Final Bhlan<«a * Ta1t1.,,, lu,,j Kto Dec 30. 1333 Bala: ■ Kecvlpts uuiing \,.ir I'otnl of Bal Hint H,., I>ixhurM< niviit.i .1, . s ' Final Huluiicvh — l**'K I uh, Bpl l>,c. 30. 1633 Bal., lieceipts during Total of Bal. an I i; W vlo , DlsbuiHemeiitK .1 . ; u .... Final Balan.th jm| Boihl Fang BP Receipt* during >. , u Total ot Bal an.l I;. Bjgjl DiHburnementH ,r. r :iK ~. - l ilial Bulaiii e» S£9| Total ot \ll > W ’ Dec, jo. '33 Balan < „n ■" Hei elpta durian Total of Bal. an.; , Disbursement!, dui.u.I'lnul Balances BR Total balun.-.- a> a., this report Warrant ■« he k December 31. 19. T: total balam iH a: warrants. Dr,. Ji, ijjj Cash in depository l>< 1. Daniel S lurrj, tin K kland TownIndiana, do Holm" firm I that the ; '' Uc. ciptH, Dlabur —tn, r.ts alli es is true and 1 believe; and I t I'lat tne Htnna will, <vi,i i i in tills report are all t received by no. Hems "f expemlv ■ - been fullv paid : ire and without - or agi eenient that a shall be retained n or me or any other I" t->u. liter de. laro, and that i have i< ■■ article of value, m , any contract by u.. ar this Township. ■ DANIEL si'HEWqB l i ii.'i. e "f Kirkli ’ Subscribed and rwi.rn me. the Chairman -I th. Board of this Tow 11( , uarv 2 .lay ul Jami n I 'HAitVE M BKEItY t'wM of Advisory Bo.ird .f ITiis report w.< and appr'vc.i bv ; m. of this Township at meeting this the . !av of 1831. Hl Harve M Beery ■ John H. Borne C sl. Zinimeiinan ■ Advisory Board KuKUHIM
Roy H. Andrea Licensed Ch rosrtdr Phone 1193 315 N. Fort Hour* by appomtmeg For Better Health Si Dr. H. Frohna?! Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 311 iiOSe.a Neurocelometer Senna X-Ray Laboratory Office Hours: 10 to 12s 1 to 5 p. m.. 6 to Bsi
