Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 44, Decatur, Adams County, 20 February 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

f CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE—Farms tor sale. Now is the time to buy. See W. W. Hawkins, 2 miles west of Pleasant Mills. FOR SALE- Used Fordson tractor; 2 tractor plows; 2 cultlpavkers; ! rotary hoe; 2 Wayne air compres-I •ors, like new; 10 electric motors 1-4 hp. to 5 hp. See the new Fordson tractor. Craigville Garage. gFeb. 12. 15, 20, 32. 27 M.2x FOR SALE— Lets feed grinder and motor, riding plow, land roller, binder, gas engine and repairs for Fordson traetora. Frank , Wrecking Co., W. Monroe st. 43a3tx j FOR Correspondence school course. Can be exchanged for any desired course. Reasonable price. Write box ' AB" % Democrat. 44-31 X FOR SALE—Gray reed baby buggy nursery chair, 50 ft white p.cset fence, use new. 412 Short St. 44-3tx FOR SALE —30 pullets, beet laying strain, direct trom George B. Farr.s Farm. 8 month old. In December they laid 4SO eggs, January 4od. February to da,e *24. Pnone 362. 44-k3t FOR SALE—New quality furniture . at bargain prices. 2 pc. living room suites. $35; 3 pc. bedroom suites, $45; 8 pc. dining room suites $65: 9x12 Axminster rugs, $25; 9x 12 felt haso rugs. $4.95; kitchen cabinets, $22.50; Kalamazoo ranges, factory prices; bed springs, $6; mattresses. $6; watch our windows for bargains. Sprague Furniture Co., phone 199. 46-5 t WANTED WANTED — Light hauling, also hauling ashes and rubbish. Prices reasonable. Phone 1208. 42t2x WANTED — Canners and i utter cows Also fat cattle. Phone 22. L. W. Murphy. 43-3 t SALESMAN for Lubricating Oil ! and Pain'; two lines combined. Salary or Commission. The Royce Refining Co. or The Royce Paiui | Co., Cleveland. Ohio. altx I o ; < I Test Your Know ledge Can you answer seven of these tese Questions? Turn to page Four for the answr-s. ♦ * 1. What famous Prussian General created the General Staff organization of the Prussian and German armies? 2. Who wrote the novel “Vanity Fitir?” 3. What lake is the source of the Sesquehanna Rivet ? 4. Who was the first Chie f hist! e of the U. S Supr“ine Court? 5. Who was John Dryden? 6. What is a "jinx?" 7. What country owns the Moluc I cas or Spice Islands in the East I Indies? 8. What circus owned a famous elephant corned Jumbo? 9. What is the name for the prac- 1 tiee, formerly prevalent in India, for a -wife burning herself to death on the funeral pyre of her husband. 19. Which is colder, tie South or North Pole? i—o Egg or Chicken First? Salt !>ake City —(UK —The State Tax Commission is perplexed by the age-old question, “Which came first, the egg or the chicken?" Under tire state sales tax. a re-seller is not taxed for his sales. The com mission wonders whether it shor'.d tax the hatcheries that buy eggs! and sell chicks, or poultrymen who i buy the chicks and sell eggs. i ■■ - ~* ' ■■

L_ . ._L . . Roy S. LW Johnson R ? Auctioneer Ljr . Now booking W* ' '' winter ano spring sale dates. My J yjT dates are fllllni fast, claim you IBljg-. date early. Feb. 21—-George G. Shet.s. first, farm south of Erie railroad at i Wren, Ohio. Feb. 22 —DeWitt Brown, 3’A mi north, of Willshire, just north of Piqua road. Closing out sale. Feb. 23 —John Warthman, ad- j mlnistrator sate. % mile north and % mile east of Craigville. Feb. 24 — Decatur Community Sale in the new sale pavillion., northwest part of Decatur. Feb. 27-Mis. Paul Seesengutii. 1 mile south and 5 miles west of Monroe. March 1 — Monroeville Chester White Breeders sale of bred sows, pn the Bert Marquardt farm, 4 miles north of Monroeville, on the Lincoln Highway. March 6 —Orval High. % mile couth of Ohio City. March B—Jim8 —Jim Lee, I mile west of Townley on Lincoln highway. Office in Peoples Loan * Trust Ride.

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected Feb. 20 No commission and no yardage Veals received Tuesday Wednesday Friday and Saturday 160 to 210 lbs. $4.50 210 to 250 lbs. $4.40 250 to 300 lbs 34.90 30-0 to 350 lbs $4.05 ilt'tolßOlbs s4i‘> IN to 140 lbs <3.30 luO to 120 Ibe $2.50 Roughs SB.OO Stags $1.75 j Vealers s7.bt Lambs $9.20 I Decatur Produce Company — Eqo Market No. 1. dozen —...—.....— 16c No. 2. dozen 14v No. 3. dozen - -12 c EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. t.. Feb. 20. —itl.Rl —Livestock: Hogs, receipts, 2,500. holdovers, 240; fairly active to all interests, teady with Monday's average; bulk uesirable. 150 to 230 lbs.. $5 to $5.10; 230 to 250 lbs., $4.95 to $5, neavier weigh.s and plainer quai ity downward to $4.75: pigs anu underweights. $3.75 to $4.75. Cattle, receipts, 75: strictly good 1,140-lb.. steers unsold; hold arouiiu $6.75; cows steady; cutter grades. $2.50 to $3.25. Calves, receipts, 25: vealers steady at Monday's full decline; $7.50 down. Sheep, receipts. 50; lambs quoted steady wiih good to choice woolskins. $10.25 to $10.40. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne. Ind . Feb. 20.—,U.R) —Livestock: HoHgs. 10c lower. 160-200 lbs., $4.65; 200-350 lbs.. $4.55; 250-300 [lbs., $4.45; 300-350 lbs. $4.25; 150160 lbs.. $4.25: 1400-150 lbs.. $4; 1130-140 lbs., $3.75; 120-130 lbs.. $3.25: 100-120 lbs.. $2.75: roughs, ; choice, $3.50; stags. $2. Calves. $7; western lambs. $9.50; native lambs. $9.25. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. I Wheat 881-4 86S 87'4 Corn 50 52 54 Oats 34 s , 34'* LOCAL GRAIN MARKET* • Corrected Feb. 20 Nc 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs or Better 80c | No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs. . 79c ■ Old Oats ........................... 32c i New Oats 30i First Class Yellow Corn 56c Mixed corn 5c less Soy Beans sOt-60i COURT HOUSE Set For Trial j State of Indiana vs Edith Bailer i and Samuel Bailer, contributing to delinquency, set for trial March I 15. State of Indiana vs Bud Morris and Edna Moms, contributing to delinquency, ret for trial March 15. 0 15 pounds for 49c is a big bargain. “Farr Wav” phone 134. Appointment of AdininiMtrator Notice is hereby given, That the undersigned has been appointed Administrator of the estate of Sarah Heller, late of Adams County, deceased. The estate is probably sol- . vent. Pearl Smith, Administrator Earl R. Arinin*, Attorney | Feb. 13 193 4 Feb 13-20-27 i NOTICE OF FIN AL SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE NO. 2W»I Notice is hereby given to the creditors, heirs and legatees of Amos Troutner, deceased, to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, Indiana on the 7th day of March 1934, and show cause, if any, why the Final Settlement Accounts with the estate of said decedent should not be approved; and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares. Hubert Zerkel. Administrator Decatur, Indiana, February 9 1 Attorney C. L. Walter*. Feb. 13-20 rm——

Don‘t forget the sale of Mary Miller real estate Wednesday, at Lenhart, Heller & Sehurger office. fc-n Voo Can Borrow I ......./A. •" S3OU on lour ■ Own Signature — Loans «£=’ Call. Write Phene-—No Obligation*! FRANKLIN SECURITY CO. tian lxj i’bon* 287 l>Acatur Ind N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS. 8:30 to 11.30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m.

TELEGRAMS URGE PROTECTION OF BEET SUGAR (CONTINUED FHOM I'ACIIS ONE) and that “they need not be worried about the outcome of the sale' of the local plant. Mr. McMillen .mid lii.-t associates will continue to I operate the factory, I ean assure

— ■ - — .ui...... .axi. ■ jiimi.n l ■. i i i iw x*. ..aujK-Mg-:-g."-.--a ■ \ Allene Corliss / L—— A COPYRIGHT BY'ALLENE CORLISS • BTSTRJBUTED BY KIN 6 FEATURES SYNDICATE. INC. f • I

SYNOPSIS Young and beautiful Stanley Paige loses her fortune through market speculation but a harder blow comes when her fiance, the fascinating, irresponsible Drew Armitage, tells her it would be madness to marry on his income and leaves town. Penniless and broken-hearted. Stanley refuses to seek aid front her wealthy friends. Desiring to make her own way, Stanley drops out of her exclusive circle and rents a cheap furnished room. After a week of loneliness and trying to adapt herself to her poor surroundings. Stanley calls on Nigel Stern, one of her society friends, and asks his aid in securing a position. Nigel urges her to marry the handsome and wealthy young lawyer. Perry Deverest. who has loved her devotedly for years, but Stanley’s heart is with Drew. Nigel suggests that she think it over, and then, if she still wants a position, he will try to place her. Stanley does not go back to Nigel, realizing it would mean meeting all her old friends. One day. when Stanley is more lonely than usual, she meets John Harmon Northrup, a struggling young author, and is touched by his sincerity. Stanley finally procures a position and grows euriously content. Then. too. having John Harmon waiting for her at the end of the day. helped make things brighter. He and his ready smile become very important to Stanley. Then Stanley receives a proposal from Perry by letter. He feels, if she had not met Drew, she would have married him. Stanley agrees with him but rejects his proposal. CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR She thought of Drew, too, but only occasionally. She no longer watched every tall, swinging figure w-ith a trembling heart thinking it might be he. She no longer ran through the mail on the hall table with shaking fingers searching for a letter from him. Yet when she did remember it was with the same poignant sense of loss, the same aching desire to lie in his arms, to know his kisses on her mouth, that she had felt during those first, torturing weeks after he had left her. At these times she belonged to him as completely as when he had held her close to his heart and robbed her of her very breath, on the night they had run away from Nigel's party. At these times she felt she still had a long way to go to achieve the peace and forgetfulness she so terribly desired. But there were other times when she felt that she had done —just that. Achieved peace, and if not forgetfulness, at least a sort of pleasant contentment. Uncomplaining, oddly detached, even gay with a rather hesitating wistful gaiety, she was a puzzle to Valerie. To John Harmon she was something much more precious. He was very careful not to analyze his feeling for her, not to define it in any way. He knew without ever having discussed it with her that love had hurt her very much. So he had offered her friendship. And she had accepted it. It had taken them a long way. It had been the most exquisite thing that had ever happened to John Harmon. When he allowed himself to thrnk about it his heart stood still. The relationship that existed between them was such a firm, yet such a breathlessly fragile thing. At times he was seized with an overwhelming fear that something would reach out and suddenly destroy it. This was when he was away from her When he was with her he forgot everything except that someway, somehow, he must make her forget that once she had been terribly unhappy. • • • So summer slid into fall and the

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 20. 1931.

you." The field representatives slated that approximately 11.800 acres hud already been contracted for < the beet crop this year. Several of the fieldmen have already completed their territory canvass and the maximum acreage of 19,M0 acres will be reached in a few days. Thia year, Mr. Calland stated. It was a matter to allot the acreage In the different terri- ■ , — - __...

first week of October brought a sudden change in the weather. The cold and rain that had swept over r the city during the last of Septemp her disappeared as if. by magic and a soft, mellow warmth possessed ’ the days. So summer was apt to go. e thought John Harmon, sitting on J Mrs. Foley’s steps, waiting for Stanley to join him. First like ° a petulant sweetheart, tearing away in a sudden fit of temper. ' leaving behind biting wind and J slanting rain; then creeping back, 1 softly, penitently, to lay a last ’ ardent, tremulous kiss on the face r of the lover she was deserting. s “Day-dreaming?” Stanley came down the steps, slim and holidaylooking in a yellow sweater and ’ small beret. ' “Sort of,” he admitted, jumping ’ to his feet. “I was composing an ' ode to this particular kind of a ' Sunday morning. Isn’t it swell ?’’ “Exquisite. Did you order it spe1 cial or anything?” “Not exactly. I think I just hoped ' awfully hard!” ! Two hours later, having left the 1 bus and walked a couple of miles • toward the ocean, they found that • the little tourist inn they had dis- ' covered early in the summer was ' closed for the season. The broad ’ verandas were piled with boxes and ' gaily striped awnings; mattresses were loaded onto a van; flowers ! stood stiff and neglected in windowboxes. A man in blue overalls was 1 putting out a bed of tulips, his 1 teeth clenched about a stubby pipe. ’ They found Mrs. Pepper busy in ’ the kitchen, packing canned goods into enormous wooden boxes. She 1 greeted them with upraised hands. “Heaven love you! I’m shut up—the last two weeks I lost money every day! Besides, we’ve got to get back , to get the children into school. And you’ve come all this way for a meal!” She looked at them as only a woman could to whom food was not only a necessity but a vocation. It was Mrs. Pepper’s business to feed people—in the winter she ran a successful delicatessen shop. She was never far away from the stove : and the smell of cooking food. “I tel) you,” suggested John Har- | mon helpfully, his eyes on an ar- 1 ray of cold food, laid out on the 1 kitchen table. "Couldn’t you fix us up a lunch — some chicken and ; pickles and maybe some cake—we < could picnic down on the shore.” < Stanley was promptly enthusias- i tic. “That’s a perfectly gorgeous t idea. We don’t need much, honestly < we don’t, Mrs. Pepper.” She added the further entreaty of a pleading i smile. 1 “Well now and I might be able i to do that for you. 1 haven’t it in 1 my heart to send you on hungry— i it being Sunday and all. There’s not a thing fit to eat in the place i but if you’ll take what there is ” 1 She hurried off to find a basket and ! colored paper napkins. i They carried the basket between < them to the shore, found their own 1 particular cove, and flung them- | selves down on the warm sand. It I was one of those days when the ’ sky hung blue and hazy overhead i and the air held the touch of gently caressive fingers. It was a day in which smoke lifted slowly and sentences were left unfinished; it was a day to cling to and accept a bit breathlessly. They loitered over their lunch, talking lazily or not talking at all —content to sit there together, to let their fingers drift through the warm sand, to watch the waves advance and retreat upon the white beach. John Hannon had brought the fifth chapter of his novel but it lay forgotten in his pocket—not even so precious a th:rg as his beloved book could intrude upon the intimacy of this iir.-ir in which they found theti’s-’.ves, an intimacy which was as intangible and delicately conceived as the very magic ■ of the day itself. John Harmor lay on his side and

I torlea. the company having requests for more acreage than the total to be contracted. Farmers generally were more than pleased with the financial results from the crop last year and the obtaining of acYengo this year was largely voluntary on the part of the grower. Final disposition of th'' sales of the Decatur, and Holland and St. Louis, Michigan plants, of the

i stared at Stanley’s partly averted ■ face and was at onee terribly r afraid — and terribly exultant; afraid because never before had h« I realised just how fragile was the 1 distance between the safety and , security of friendship and the dani ger and uncertainty of love, ex- • ultant because it was so fragile, so ■ conceivably shattered. ; And yet for them, for Stanley , and himself, he felt that this was I not true, that there was something , between them that no magie hour of intimacy would ever shatter — i and he looked away swiftly and with stricken eyes. If Stanley sensed anything different in this day from other days they had shared together, she said nothing. But her eyes were soft with contentment and when she talked her voice lingered tenderly over careless words. She was perhaps happier than she had been at any time since Drew had left her. “Let’s swim, John Harmon,” sha suggested, sitting up abruptly, yawning frankly. "We're being much too lazy. Besides something tells me this is our last day out here this year. Come on, toualahead, I’ll race you to the inn!” She sprang up and was running swiftly up the beach. But halfway to the inn John Harmon’s long legs overtook her. “I'm no good,” she admitted ruefully, quite oat of breath. “I’m all out of condition.” “What you need,” John Harmon told her, his eyes frowning, “is a whole month out here—away from the office.” “I’ll be away from the office soon I enough.” Stanley’s voice was deliberately gay, but her eyes were worried. “That girl’s coming back next month. You know, the one whose place 1 took. I’ll be looking far a job again in a few weeks.” “Perhaps they’ll keep you oa there ” “Not a chance,” she shrugged, “but let’s not talk about it today. Today belongs to us, John Harmon, let’s not let anything spoil it!” They changed into their bathing suits and went back to the beach. The water proved deceiving — all gold and blue and sun-kissed on the surface — stinging cold and touched with ice beneath. They swam through it vigorously, gasping a little, thrilling to its chilly embrace. Stanley’s scarlet cap moved close to John Harmon's wet, brown head, their eyes met through a blaze of sun and a drift ■ of spray. |, “Don’t you love it, John Har- | mon?” Stanley’s voice was a gasp, i lost almost immediately as an enor- I mous wave rolled over her and I flung her, gasping and helpless, I against John Harmon. I For a shattering second she lay I in his arms, her mouth slightly I parted, her eyes clinging to hia I from beneath drenched lashes. For a second he held her so, his arms closed tightly about her slim body, I his heart racing madly with mingled terror and delight— terror at the fiercely sweet desire the contact aroused in him, delight at the sheer physical nearness and dearness of her. Then he let her go. Let her go out of his arms, let her cut ahead of him, a streak of scarlet, swimming under water. The ocean beat against his body, washed against his face. He swam after her furiously, his eyes closed. “I’ve held her in my arms,” he told himself fiercely, “I’ve held her against my heart. But it must never happen again. I mustn't even think about it. I must put it out of my mind—forget it ever happened to me. It's the only way I can go on.” And even as these wild, incoherent thoughts tumbled over each other in rapid succession and the water surged - over his flushed face and closed eyes, he knew that he would not forget and that he would go on as if he had. (To Be Continued) Copyright. 1932, by Allene Corliss Ditttibuted by King t eal >r-« Syndicate, Inc.

J old Holland St. Louis Sugar conie! puny. scheduled in J* der,, i s I court today, before Judge Thotn.is 11 W Slick In South Bend » AMENDMENT TO 1933 FARM ACT — (CONTINUED I Gon on 'll permanent basts appeal s ■) In a pamphlet written by W allace | I for the foreign policy association . j He wrote that the 1933 act com-. I taint’d wide permissive power.i, I but added: "Os the present congress, we | i shall probably ask amendments permitting an oven wider and far more selective retirement of acreage on a more permanent basis. "At the present none of our s production schedules for export rops will be adjusted to a strict-i v domestic basis. Our foreign rade in these crops has very seriously dwindled, hut we still have foreign customers for cotton, ■obacco and certain foodstuff* We want to keep that trade if possible and get more foreign ; rade if we can. Our immediate j effort is to organize American \ agriculture to reduce its output o domestic need, plus that amount which we can export with profit. ; 'What we have done has been -ankly experimental and emeryacy in nature, but we are works' on something permanent." The key to the plan is Waiice's use of the word "selective." V'th authority now possessed, he Announcement Singer Sewing Co. will be represented hereafter in Xdams County, by Al Farr New machines, parts, needles. Old machines of all makes reconditioned. At present for demonstration or repairs. Address Box A. F., n o Democrat.

Horse Sale Zanesville, Indiana Friday, Feb. 23, 1934 commencing a* 12:30 o'clock P. M. 30 head of Horses and Mules. Also two Spotted Saddle Horses. Art Merriman, owner Hoopengardner & Lespie, auctioneers. I Notice To Depositors, The Peoples Loan & Trust Co. By order of the Allen ; Circuit Court the under- i signed Receiver for the | stockho'dcrs liability fund will make a 2'. distribution to depositors, Monday, February 26, 1931 and daily thereafter. Checks will be ready for delivery to depositors or persons authorized to receive same at the Law Office of Lutz and Myers, Room 2. Erwin Building. Decatur, Indiana. Herman H. Myers Receiver

,-xih.cu by tlw end «'» 10 I out of production 43,000,000 (M1 I acres, an area larger than lllinola. laud containing some ol the fin‘»' j j . rop lahds In tide countryHOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. Rebecca Emery. 235 Grant I latreet, Is a medical patient al the : Adams County Memorial Hospital- j Mrs. Homer Üby. Bellmont' I Park is a path 'lit at the local hoa-

NOTICE I THE DECATUR COMMUNITY SAl.esß’" WILL HOLD THEIR NEXT COMMUNITY SALE. Il MARCH 3. AT THE SAME OLD PLACE. ■ l> : Will have Horses, Cattle, Sheep. Hogs and Farm for sale. If you have anything to list for this sale see Murphy or Roy Johnson. W L. W. Murphy, sales manage® vE Roy Johnson, auctioneer. PUBLIC SALEI As I am moving to Mich.gan. I will sell at public auction at^V a I s. T. Walker larm, 3H miles north of Willshire or 6 miles of Decatur, on THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, i9:J4 B Commencing at 12 Noon, C. S. T. <B 5 HEAD OF HORSES—I Sorrel horse. 6 years old. weight j 1 black mare. 7 years old. weight 1700; 1 sorrel horse, snioolii I weight 1600; two 2-year-old bay colts. x |K 5 HEAD OF CATTLE— Jersey cow. 4 years old. due b, day cf sale; Guernsey cow. close-up springer; Guernsey s old. giving good flow of milk; Holstein cow, closeup springer; * cow, 3 vears old. fresh by day of sale. 7 HEAD OF HOGS 6 shoats. weight 100 pounds each, 1 ( White gilt, bred January 25. SHEEP—4O head of Shropshire ewes. HAY -3 or 4 tons of mixed hay; some bean haj FARMING IMPLEMENTS. ETC.—2 walking plows, spike harrow: double shovel plow; 2 corn plows; 1 wagon; one 16 (t ladder; triple wagon box; Oshorne hay tedder; Keystone hay Osborne 6ft binder; brooder house. 10x10; Upright stove -i?bed. some stove wood and other articles. TERMS—Cash. ■ DeWITT BROWN Bi ttov Johnson, auctioneer. - - PUBLIC SALE I I will sell at public auction at my residence one mile south 5 miles west of Monroe, or 2 miles south and mile i-.i-f < : on TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1931 ■ Commencing at 12 Noon One Plack horse. 1 years old. weight 1500 lbs., sound. 1 c one Guernsey heifer. 3 months old; one Poland China : 200 bushels, more or less, ot gooff corn; Doering Binder. 7 ti. Tractor and plows; Tractor disc; 14-16 John Deere dis- Dain loader; Tedder: mower; MeCorniick-Deering corn planter -Oth attachment; end gate seeder; 8-disc Superior grain drill M Deering corn cultivator like new; Spring tooth and spike to, th rows; Oliver riding breaking plow; Walking plow: Large kettle: New Ideal manure sprqader; Studebaker wagon; I'. ft I hay rack: mt;d boat; single set work harness; fly nets, in ■ | fence stretcher; and many other articles. Terms—Cash. , MRS. PAUL SEESENGUTII, Owneß Roy S. Johnson, auctioneer. NOTICE OF SALE OF PERSON AL j PROPERTY ■ Nojlce is hereby g;- .-". that the undersigned. adminisii.' Ti >r of estate of Charles W. Warthman, ffeceaepd, will offer for sab auction at the late residence of said decedent., onc-b.-If ’ ■ i and one-quarter mile east of Craigville, being seven miles of Bluffton, Indiana, in Lancaster township, in said conn') : ! on the 23rd day of February, 1931, I the personal property of sniu estate, consisting of one Deering threshing machine separator; 10-20 tractor and p'"' All tractor: corn picker; combine reaper wtth power take tractor discs; Deering binder; manure spreader; two ri-i'r rotary hoe; hay loader; two wagons with racks; two box; clover buncher; spike tooth harrow; corn planter; ni'"' r row corn plow; single row corn plow; hay tedder; Hoos"' drill, two walking plows; hay rake; hog feeder; fanning ' press; hob sled', grain cradle; set of fence strotchers; Ko' >l pump: wood shingles; 1938 Willys-Knight coupe; and large .-••■•’in'W miscellaneous articles. Live stock consists of one year obi i >l. fresh soon, sorrel horse four years old; sorrel mare three -’.trs in foal. M Said sale to begin at 10 A. M. ■ Terms of Sale—All sums up to SIOO.OO cash. (Sums $l"0 25 per cent down and bankable note bearing 7 per cent in' -t annum with sufficient sureties or security thereon accept 1 administrator. No articles removed until settled for. ■ JOHN R. WORTHMAN, Administi aloil Auctioneers—Jesse Ellenberger and Roy Johnson. ■ Clerk —Gideon Gerber. Lunch by Craigville U. B Lai -a

| pftal receiving mednal Mrs. Mattle Hynl. (io I admitted to the A<la ms r 'B | Memorial Hospital t ,„. W ireatment. w Mary Ann is th,. ■ girl Imby born to Mr. , n ,| ■ Milton Bwenringvn at if,, .■ County Memorial lb ,|,n al ■ ; day. ■ — —■ Halibut Frexn |{„ n l Perch and HI Fathom i 9 Schmitt Meat Market. 1