Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 47, Decatur, Adams County, 23 February 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

f CLASSIFIED I ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SAIJS—SOO bu. of good corn. 200 bu. of oats and a lot of buzz wood, mostly oak. Julius Haugk, phone. 666. 45a3tx FOR SALE 8-16 International TraHor In good condition; 3 yr. uld gelding, some barley good tor weed. John Struse. Route 5, 3-4ini. Sorth of Washington School Phone y3-E." 46-a3tx | * Just received a shipment of Miring hats, prices reasonable. Jtaude A. Merriman, 222 S. 4th St. - 46-21 foil SALE -1 1080 Heavy Breed - Baby Chicks, one week old from Jloodtested stock. Model Hatchery, Alonroc, Indiana. 4' atit ■QI ALITY BABY CHICKS. These X chicks are produced from good flocks, all breeders Bloodtested ■Jor Bacillary White Diarrhea by 4he Stained Antigen Whole BloodTest, under our own Supervision; •reactors removed year 1933 1934. "All eggs net weigh 23 oz. or more gar dozen. Chicks priced reasonable. Order your chicks early' from Baumgartner Hatchery, 61 miles west and 9 miles south of; route 4, Bluffton. Craigville phone. < • Fri ts - ♦'OK SALE — Several good used j “ washing machines, spare ringer Soils and other repairs, at very low Ferd Klenk, Route 8 or jhoi>e'?l9E. 8 OR SALE- Nice young beef quarters. Herman Bosse, R. R. 5. 4 miles south,miles west of Decatur, or 1 niflo south and 1 mile west of Washington church. 45-”tX FOR SALE New quality furniture at—hargain prices. 2 pc. living loom suites. $35; 3 pc. bedroom suites. $45; 8 pc. dining room suites $65; 9x12 Axminster rugs, 125; 9x 12 felt base rugs, $4.95; kitchen cabinets. $22.50; Kalamazoo ranges, factor* prices; bed springs, $6; mattresses. $6; watch our windows for bargains. Sprague Furniture Co., phone 199. 44t5 WANTED WANTED Ladies to know that Mrs. Laura Stalhut of the Laura Beauty Shop. Fort Wayne, will be at the Becker Beauty Shop giving permanents. For further information Call .Mrs. Becker, phone 128(1. 45-31 1 WANTED —iMauied woman wants housework to do. Can cook or care for children. Cali 5651. 47-3tx FOR RENT FOR RENT—An eight room house, on 3rd St. —three squares from the Court House -O. L. Vance, 47-a3tx | Ford Plant Quits Istanbul <—•tUP) The Ford assembly plant in Turkey lias ceased ’ work, due largely to complaints of rival firms that the company .vas not fulfilling conditions of its stabIfsliQiCnt here. These conditions were said to require that Ford should manufacture automobiles in Turkey, whereas the plant has merely assembled cars here since it began operations two years ago. \ plMMfif mem oi rator Notice is hereby given That tin* ministrator of the estate of Mary E. Engl* late of Adams County deceased ■*1’11«- estate is probably solvent. WMliani 11. Engle, Administrator ™*T*ruclite iihil l.ltterer. attorney* lwlflßll \ A ’o / THERE’S little choice between the Robber and the Burglar. Os course, you know when you are being held up—while burglaries are "on the quiet ”. But there is no need to be out of pocket either way—-zETNA-IZE An z£to» Residence, Burglary, Theft and Robbery Policy will reimburse you for such losses. Aetna Life Insurance Co. Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. Aetna Automobile Ins. Co. SUTTLES-EDWARDS CO. Agents Decatur, Ind. Phone 358 llimi Aniiiill

MARKETREPORTS i DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL 1 AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET •Corrected Fob. 23 No commission and no yardage Veals received Tuesday Wednesday Friday and Saturday 160 to 210 lbs $4.50 210 to 250 lbs. $4.50 250 to 300 lbs $4.15 300 to 250 lbs. $4.10 140 to 160 lbs. $4.10 I 130 to 140 lbs. $3.20 I 100 to 120 lbw. $2.40 Roughs $3.25 Stags » - sl‘s Vealers - $7.00 Lambs 18.00 Decatur Produce Company Egg Market No. 1. dozuu - Itic No. 2. dozen —l4 c No. 3. dozen _ l- c East Buffalo Livestock Hog receipts 2.700; holdovers 1130; wuighta above 160 lbs.. ac-| tive; 10 to 20c higher with aver- ’ ages above 220 lbs. up most; bulk desirable 160 to 260 !bs., $5 to I $5.10; 120 to 150 lbs. $4 to $4.50; plain pigs and unfinished under ; weights draggy $3.25 to $4.25. Cattle receipts 450 slow; steers: unsold; cows weak to 25c lower; j ! cutter grades '3.25 to $3. Calf receipts 350; vealers ; steady: good Io choice $7.50; com ! mon and medium $4 lo $6. Sheep receipts 500; lambs tin i changed; quality and sorts consiiy ered; good to near choice $lO to $10.10; choice quoted $10.25; common and medium $8.25 to $9.5b. 1,1 | FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne. Ind., Feb. 23. —(U.R) i —Livestock: Hogs, 15 to 35c higher; 220-250 ■ lbs., $4.75; 160-200 fits.. $4.65; 250-; 300 lbs.. $4.65; 300-350 lbs., $4.50; I 150-160 lbs.. $4.20; 140-150 lbs . $4; j 130-140 lbs.. $3.75; 120-130 lbs.. | $3.25; 100-120 lbs.. $2.75: roughs, $3.60-43.76; stags. $2.25 down. Calves, $747.50; lambs. $9. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat .88 .86% .87% Corn .50% .52% .54% | Oats .35% .34% .34’4 LOCAL GRAIN MARKET ICorrected Feb. 23 Nc. 1 New Wheat, 60 Iba or Better 79c No. 2 New Wheat 58 lbs. 78c Old Oats _ —.... 33c New Oats 30c First Class Yellow Corn 54c Mixed corn 5c less Soy Beans — sOt-60c o Air Mail Pilot Forced To Land Taporte, Ind., Feb. 23 (U.R) Lieut. John Diggs. Hying SOO pounds| of mail from Cleveland to Chicago, was forced down here last night by a snow squall. He continued the flight half an hour later when the •weather cleared. | 0 | Mr. ami'.Mrs. Harry Young attended the graduation exercises at the International Business college, Fort i Wayne this morning. Tlreir daughter. Dorothy, was a member of tho j graduating class. Roy H. Andress Licensed Chiropractor | Phone .193 315 N. Fourth st. Hours by appointment. I • Federal Farm Loans Make application with the Adams ( ounty National Farm Loan Ass’n.. Charter No. 5152. office with the Schurger Abstract Co., 133 South 2nd street, Decatur. i Fire and windstorm insurance accepted in any old line or Rood mutual insurance co. For Better Health See Ur. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 311 110 So. 3rd st. Neurocalometer Service X-Ray Laboratory Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p, m., b to 8 p. m. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined. Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8.30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. ui. Telenhone 135.

J Test Your Knowledge ■ Can you anawer seven of these , : tese Questions? Turn to page Four for the answe-t. * —4 1. What Is money? 2. Ikrr water expand or cuutrue when freezing? 3. What religious body founder Swarthmore College? 4. In what Bay is Tangier Island' 5. Under what name dr. Finlej

Fit m. y— * IkM K\ By Allene Corliss _/Ml *T BY XJM* z==r==J

SYNOPSIS Stanley Paige, beautiful, young xnciety girl, is left penniless when her lawyer speculates with her money and loses. Stanley, however, cares little for the money, feeling that she has everything in the love of fascinating Drew Armitage. But when Drew breaks their engagement saying it would be impossible to marry on his income, she i«r heartbroken. Rather than accept aid from her wealthy friends, Stanley rents an inexpensive furnished room and disappears from her exclusive circle to try and make her own way. Her friends agree that a better way would have been to | marry handsome Perry Deverest. but Stanley cannot forget Drew. One day, she meets John Harmon Northrup, struggling young author. ( A strong friendship ensues and they become very necessary to one another. John Harmon is in love with Stanley but refrains from tell- j ing her because of Drew. Stanley . loses her position. John Harmon ' ' wishes things were "different” so she would not have ta work, but ( will not commit himself further. , Stanley assures him she does not . care ta go back to her old life be- J

cause es the terms — marrriage er charity. CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN “I wish you could stay here, ; Stanley, right here in this room, . before this fire, always!” John Harmon buried his face sudI denly in his hands, his hands were | ‘rembling. He hadn't meant to say t, heaven help him, he hadn’t meant to. The words had tumbled out of his heart into the room. It was very quiet for a space. The log in the grate crumbled into a thousand scarlet fragments, the elock on the marble mantel ticked mechanically. Stanley sat very still and stared at John Harmon’s bent head. She thought that his hair was like a very little boy’s hair, soft and sort of shining, and that it :lung to his head thickly. She wanted to lean forward and run her fingers through it, she wanted to lean forward and take his head in her hands and draw it back until it rested on her breast. She wanted to hold it there and lift his face

in her hands and kiss his lips; not as she had kissed Drew—with pasrion and desire and young abandon, but gently, with tenderness and wistfulness and a sort of beautiful understanding. “Why,don’t you ask me to, John Harmonshe said softly, her voice quite steady, her eyes on the fire. John Harmou dropped his hands from his face. He looked at her slowly, his eyes filled with a sort | of frightened joy and shy disbelief. “And if I did ask you to, Stanley?” His voice shook ridiculously, but itis eyes clung to hers unfalteringly. “1 think I’d like to stay here in this room, before this fire, with you, John Harmon—always.” She gave him her eyes now, and her hands. “You mean—what do you mean, Stanley?” He took her hands, held them tightly. ”1 seem to be asking you te marry me, darling.” “You mean — you’d marry me

Stanley?” “Kiss me, John Harmon — and don’t look like that. I can’t bear it!” He reached up and drew her into I his arms. Kissed her mouth hunI grily but with a certain sweet re- , straint. “Please heaven, I’ll never . make you anything but happy, Stanley. I couldn’t bear it any other way!” • “It won't be any other way, John ’ Harmon.” She stirred in her arms, held him away from her gently to ■ took into his eyes. “You understand ! —about Drew? This hour ought to . belong to just—us. But 1 have to be sure you understand about him I can’t give you what I gave him, ! l

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“THE COO-COO’S NEST" BY SEG HILLO.MYDEAR OlWt O'/U 2X* 1 MR RWRJHE POET,UALI\ HDIU RE VaTmvSTER RYMEPpH > /ZOhTCSEETI I va.vof I NEED INSPIRATION-1 AM BE HEP-E IN A MOMENT- BE \ SORE,GO RIGHT IN - MISS OVC \\Utt' I! Too'RE I WRITING A POEM ABOUT I NICE TO HIM BECAUSE I LIKE EXPECKIN YA/ ' \ -Wf I '( IMITATING XWfctA I'< , I MWDERPUL’ MARMELOUSJ RUOW SONG BIROS- COULD I SEE ) HIM A LOT-HE’S GOING T 0 L Jxt' \ »-'TTLt A MR.PYMuR/ \ WV7ST '4*v<iCsx q> ■ sESfe "'7 7 l tk k

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 23 1934.

• Peter Duuue. the humorL f. write ' 6. 1n military law what name is given compulsory enrollment for service? 7. Name the frst aucoMaful iron- * clad in the history of t ie U. S. Navy. L-t 8. What museum is u branch of | the Smithsonian Institution? ‘d i 9. What popular name was given I the Swedish singer, Jenny Lind? i? : 10. Name the Secretary of Agriculfflturo.

darling. What 1 feci for you is different. I’m sorry, John Harmon, I wish I could give you that other love. Are you sure you can lie content with—less?” He looked back at her unflinchingly, his arms tightening about her slim shoulders. "I think I understand, Stanley. Are you trying to tell me that you still love him?” “Part of me does. I’ve tried to deny it—but things have got to be straight between us. haven’t they? We couldn’t go on any other way. Do you want what I can give you—knowing what I can't?” For a moment John Harmon closed his eyes, pressed her face hard against his shoulder. When he spoke his voice was steady, beautifully sure of itself. “That you can give me anything at all, however little, is more happiness than I ever expected to know. What you feel for this other man is between you and him and doesn’t concern me. What you feel for me is yours and mine and is precious to me beyond words.” Against hi s shoulder Stanley’s eyes were wet with sudden tears, but she answered him clearly and at once. “And to me, John Harmon.”

mon. r• * * They spent two confusing, exciting weeks haunting second - hand '• shops, uncrating boxes that John *» Harmon’s Aunt Martha sent down from Vermont, and making small ’ but important purchases. It took 8 Stanley four days of intensive shop9 ping to find a wing chair that was 1 exactly what she wanted at a price she could afford. Chintz for the three high windows demanded an • even longer search. Unpacking the ’ boxes from Vermont was perhaps '■ the most exciting thing of all. Aunt 1 Martha, at John Harmon’s request, ' had sent down some lovely pieces ) of old handmade furniture and sev--1 era! softly faded, really beautiful, ; old hooked rugs. There was a pink '■ tea set, too, that had belonged to John Harmon’s great-grandmother and a pew-ter teapot and some quaint, twisted candlesticks. After a great deal of discussion, they had decided to rent a small adjoining room and bath. This gave John Harmon a workroom. In there

1 they put his table with its type- “We’ll cat out a lot. I can't let j • writer and litter of manuscript y° u 0T too much of that sort 5 paper and scribbling pads. In there, of thing. It isn t as if you were 1 too, they put the cot which had used to it,” said John Harmon, and I been John Harmon’s bed and the he thought, “she is frightened—but < bureau which had held his clothes, ‘■hejt, so am I. Badly." , l lt was to be his room, in which he "It isn’t always being used to 8 could work unmolested and behind things that makes them easy. Can’t 1 a closed door. Y ou see that. John Harmon? It’s , 3 “It’s an added expense,” he had wanting to do them, don’t you < r agreed, when they were discussing think?” t it, “but it’s out of the question, “Perhaps. All the same, I wish I ■ asking you to live in one room with could do more for you —a better ’’ a pounding typewriter and a strug- plscc to live, for instance.” t gling author! You'd walk out on Stanley looked him straight tn '• me inside of a week.” the eye, shook her head slowly, n “In that case,” Stanley had con- “You don’t really mean ?hat, darh ceded hurriedly, “let’s take it by l' n K- You know perfectly well you’d e all means!” hate living anywhere else. You'd r hate for instance, a modem apartThey were married quietly three ment with an elevator and an eleci, .days later. Very quietly and with trie refrigerator and a telephone! d no one but an absent-minded look- Besides, we found something rather ing minister and two frankly bored wonderful in that old room —no ■o house servants to witness the. cere- other place can ever give us quite rnony. But to Stanley, standing, as much!” e, straight and slim, her chin lifted “When you talk like that, Stan-

slightly, her eyes clear and calm, beside John Harmon, the service was very real—and very sweet. She i was marrying John Harmon—she was promising to love, to honor and ■ to obey him. She held his hand ‘ tightly, and when the minister had > quite finished she smiled at him. ‘ It was a slow, quietly comprehending smile. It made John Harmon’s i throat ache sharply, made his eyes , blur, suddenly and annoyingly. > “You’re so sweet, Stanley,” he I told her, in the moment that they > were left alone, in the faintly soft ) glow of the little vestry before they stepped out into the clear. Novem- , ber twilight. “1 can't believe that

Frog to Be Freed Hoquiam. Wash., —(UP)— After months of aunoyanoe to city hall employes. Hoquiam’s entombed frog is going to be released even If a section of the building has to be torn down. The frog for months had croaked from somewhere Inside the wills of the building. His croaks ccuit’l racv’itly when an opening was u.ade tor him to escape. City councilmen believed their troubles over until he resumed his noise when the hole was sealed up.

- you are going to belong to me. 1 rs I almost afraid to believe it.” r "Don’t be.” she told him quickly - and caught his face between hei slim hands, and pulled it down sc - that she might kiss his lipst They stood so, for a brief in- - stant, wrapped in each other a ; arms, then they went out into the ” November twilight. o A sharp wind whistled around e comers and scuttled up alleys ! carrying with it bits of paper and . a scurry of dead leaves; lights - twinkled in shops and houses and on street comers; and people hur1 ried homeward, arms full of bun- ? dies, coat collars turned up, faces i lifted to the night, tired but oddly , eager. i “I like this time of day,” Stan- - ley said softly, slipping her fingers i through John Harmon’s, “it holds i a sort of promise—of food and rest 1 and companionship, don’t you think i so?” s “I think I’m always going to like • any time of day or night that has you in it,” answered John Harmon i huskily. Then more matter-of-fact- , ly: “But isn’t a marriage always I celebrated with a feast? Where do we dine?” They decided on Lisette’s where

they could have sweetbreads a la Napoli and watch a lazy cat stretch . its sleek blackness before an open d fire. It was a place they had disn covered early in the fall and they n had haunted it regularly ever since. 11 Tonight they crossed the Square k and turned up an alley and went . down shallow brick steps into* s room filled with the warmth of e much candlelight, a sputtering fire e on a wide stone hearth, and the n smell of cooking food. e “Last week we came here and s we weren’t maYried,” Stanley t thought, preceding John Harmon’* tall figure to their own particular s corner, “and now we are. I'm going . home with him tonight ” ( “We mustn’t be so extravagant c very often,” she said, trying to j make her voice sound light-hearted r and only succeeding in making it ' > sound thin and sweet and rather ' shaky. “I’m sure I can manage the < k cooking quite easily. It’s really simI pie enough when you have once < . learned what to boil and what to i fry!” J

ley, you make it very hard for me to eat my dinner.” “I'm sorry. I won’t any more. I’ll talk about—things. Don’t you think the chintz curtains are very, very successful, John Harmon?” “Exceptionally so,” replied her , husband gravely, and they both burst into laughter. Stanley had i demanded an answer to this ques- ; tion every day for a week. "They're so gay and defiant looL- • ing—l’m quite sure they don’t mind r the old wall paper and the funny i ceiling. It's going to be fun living ■ with them, I expect.” (To Br Continued) Copyrtgiit. 1932, by Allene CotlfM ' Distributed by King Feature* bjmdica’e, Inc.

VOTM K <*• MaSTI R’9 «•*> »■. I Bv virtue of h decree In tne Illsr met Court of the t’nited State, for 11' he Northern District of Indians. Fort Wayne Division, made and »nS wred on Uie 17th d*>' of li I‘isi tn a certain suit pending In „ sanl District Court entitled Mctro- , Ipolltan Life Insurance Company, a I corporation. Complainant, ya. Boy<l P ! l,»<l<l. Fern Mdd, hl" wife, tdici dan Moon*. Sparke L. Hrooka. W llllan. * A MeDnniel, The Farmer, state , Hunk of the Town of Convorae. Iml- ' lana, George S Gala. la*li< M Gels, r j Iteluv Motors Corporation, Kmanuci . Jonty. Mike lilherstelii, Defendants, 8 lielna cause No 209 in i'ktulty, a yert> nfieil copy of which decree was duly I Issued to the undersigned Special Master In Chancery In said cause by the Clerk of said District Court, together with a proper precept or sale; and In pursuance to said precept of .sale and said decree, the uiHiersi<n» vd Special Master in Chancery, in paid cause and Court, will on the 6th day of Marell 1931. at the hour of ten o'clock, A. -M. Central standard Time, at the door of the court houae in the City of Decatur, in the County of Adams, State of Indiana, offer for sale and sell, at public outerv to the highest bidder, the rents and profits for a term ot seven (< > years or less, year by year, of the following described real estate m Adams County, Indiana, to wit: Th.- south half of the southwest quarter (SUSWt,! of Section Twenty-two <32). Township Twentysix North CON). Bang, Thirteen Hast (US), containing Seventy-six (7«) acres, nivrv or less; and the North half of the Southwest Quarter (Nt4SW’%> of lection Twentytwo 122>, Township Twenty-six North iriiNl, Range thirteen East I il.iEi, except therefrom commencing at Hie Northeast corner of <>>l" Southwest Quarter (SW > of said Section Twenty-two (221: thence West .10.5 rods; thence Soutli <!*■■> rods: thence East 30.6 rods; thence I North 79.6 rods to the place of begin. Ing, containing Sixty-four (6G acres more or less; and containing in all One Hundred I'orty (H»l acres, more or less, which real estate Is subject to the lien of said decree In favor of the complainant tn the sum of Seven Thousand Six Hundred Seventy-eight and Seventy-four Hundredths Hollars ($7,678,711, and to a second Hen In favor of the defendant. Relay Motors Corporation, In the sum of One Thousand l our Hundred I'iftv and No Hundredth. Dollars < $1.4.50.001, with interest on each of said amounts from the date of the decree uutil paid, ami costa accrued and 10 accrue herein, and reference is here zm.de to said decree for further provisions thereof relative to the rights of the parties in raid entitled cause. If the rents and profits of said real estate fol a term of .seven years or less shall not sell for a sum sufficient to satisfy said decree with interest and costs. I xxill thereupon, at the same time and place, offer for sale and sell, at public outcry, to till* highest bidder for cash In hand, the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as shall be sufficient to satisfy said decree with interest and coats. Said s..le shall be mad'- without < relief from valuation or appraise, ment laws of the State of Indiana and subject to the statutory year of redemption, and also subject to all taxes and assessments that may then he a lien on said premises, ami sub-, ject to the approval of the District Court of the Untied States for the Northern District of Indiana. Fort Wayne Division William I>. Remmel Special Master in Chancery. Mentor-Kraus ami Jones, Hammond | ami Buschmann, Solicitors tor Com-1 plainant. Feb. 9-16-23 Mar. 2 Hili’* I'OK ELECT!IKIOTIfN %n«l Elxturrw Notice is hereby driven that the Board of Commissioners of the voun-n ty of Adams, state of Indiana, will on Moiwlax. Man’ll 5. ] 934, ;tml up j until 10 o'<’l‘H’k A. M. on said dayi receive sealed bids for the furnish- ' ing One complete metal, folding, election booth and of election box suitable to be used at the various elect ions. The bovtli to comply in ail things with the election laws us the state i of Indiana; The bid must be accompanied with a complete detailed speeifiait- I tion vs the booth and cle< tion box L purposed to be furnished. The bid to be for the booth to be I delivered at any railroad or expressL Mation in Adams county, the Ranier i'.? be designated by the commission-1 ers al the time of aevcptanei’ of bid.! The board reserves the rigiit to reject any or al! bids The board also reserves the right 1 to purchase at the price natnod in the bid aw many of such booths or election boxes as the* needs of the county may require. iN’nnis Striker !’. O. Martin Phi! Sauers Board of Commissi' oners Attest Glrn Cowan, Auditor Feb. 16-23 I K I o| | | \ Xi l l I I Ml X l OF ESTATE \O. 21»7s Notice is hereby given lo the creditors, heirs and legatees of l<ev.| Julius A. Scimetz deceased, to appear} in thi’ Adams Circuit <’ourt. held at I UccHlur. Indiana, on the II day of March, ami show cause, if any,l why the Final Settlement A<«ounts with the estate of said decedent I should not be approved; ami said heirs arc notified to then and there make pr*ovf of heirship, ami receive their distributive’ shares. John O. Fisher, Exc<utoj Decatur, Indiana February !«, 193!.| Attorneys I'ruchtr and Lhtrrrr Feb. 16-23 —o IIIDN I’Oll < lIMMEKt IAL I'EHTfLIZEH Notice is hereby given that the Board of County Commissioners of Admits county, state of Indiana, will on Monday, Mai<*h 5, 1934, and up until 10 o t I M-k A. M on said day, at the auditor’s office in city of De••utur, Indiana, receive sealed bids I for the furnishing of eight and one-1 halt (K’/j) tons of 2-12-6 cointnercia! fertilizer. th<- same to be properly mixed, placet! in 12i» pound sackif and delivered at the county infirmary '• mile.w soutli-cast of Ueeatur. Th<- Board reserves th'- right to reject any or all bids. Ueniiis Striker F. o. Martin » IPhil Sauers Board of Commissioner; | Attest; ‘lien Cowan, auditor. Feb. 16-23

Sign* Caution Hortetnen Bost* -(UPI-fThere (.re few hone* left In Boston, but Btreets in the »<*«>«» HUI e 001100 " Btlll (launt Si .t the bottom of fftades cam Honing driver* to "“«*"* a,MI rest your horses S°t n S uP hln ■—oSofa Pillaw* Won Divorce Salem. Mttk.s'Tui’l Dorothy L Buckley wua uwarded a divorce by Judge Edward B. O’Brien because tier hu.*»l»nd threw het down on a couch, put sofa pillow* on her hetul and then sat

SPECIAL COFFEE PRICW / 1 ON THE WORLD’S MOST I (A l J FAMOUS BRANDS | S O’clockw gm RLjlk The World’s Largest Seller i |l g pounds || -—— —— RED (WLE COFFEF n/W, W, 00 ov« naw BO KAR A’OFFEE ... c 2 lbs. H Maxwell House, Del Monte, | Chef or White House One Pound Tin ** CONDOR COFFEE, lb. BEECHNUT, .<II,OOO in CASH and Sliced Salmon, lb 7 Automobiles FREE Sliced Halibut, lb A.k About Th.. Contest y p When Buying Flour GOLD MEDAL ~f Hudock 9 ' 24'/z lbs. ... M. 03 2 lbs. — FELS NAPTHA SOAP 1<» bars SOAP CHIPS. Kirkman's. SHRIMP. Parker’s Isabel. 1 tb. size 2 cans PINEAPPLE. Del Monte Sliced. No. 2. 2 cans SUGAR. 10 lb. bag 4Kc 25 lh. bag 100 lb. bag $4.59 BREAD, Grandmother’s pound CORN. Medium sixe 4 cans APRICOTS. lona. Large size 2 cans SPARKLE. Gelatin Dessert « pkgs. FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES BALDLWIN APPLES I lbs. BANANAS. Yellow. Ripe Fruit I lbs. POTATOES. U. S. No. 1 peek 3->cK “No Bologna”]' WE WILL ACTUALLY GIVE \W FREE • Lump ( oal' ] to the I2tl> candidate to announce himselt ami file the Sheriff nomination in the on-coming In the meantime if it is field, poultry or fencing you’re going to need this spring sec us Our fence is made by an old reliable fence turer. guaranteed full weight, length and piupejl zinc coated copper bearing wire and righiltiii' Posts—He carry in steel, red and white Large assortment of sizes in either so you "ill sure to get what you want here. E Roofing—Canadian 5X red cedar cei shingle, asbestos, asphalt and corrugated sheet Prices have been advancing weekly in all line- and M honestly advise you to place your order as soon convenient if price has anything to do with purchase. 9 H e have bought heavily in all lines; however stock is daily diminishing at prices we replenish. Cash Coal & Supply I R. A. Stuckey 9 Home of Stuckey’s Hog-Glad. 9

NOTICK OF Ftsxt M -, T 9 OF «MTAT« x„ %29 Notice l« hereby dltorg. heir* end le» H te", I'oliiieller. de< enK. ,1 („ .. .. ■ A.lnniK Circuit Court, tur, Indlanu, on the ?m,9 March. 19J4, and ,h<>w J why Hie Hnnl xrif | PI „. with the KKtate of nn|,| ‘fl -h"ul<l nm hr npn„ )V „n fl heirs are notified i„ ■ make tniK.f of hvn-xhn, , ' ■ tlit-lr dlatrlbutlve ahin<- ■ Itl' liurd 11. T"nnr|l,.fl Administrator r>,. With will annexed "■ Decatur, Indiana, Febm-m ■ Attorney Fruehte and Get the Habit — Trade atl