Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 105, Decatur, Adams County, 1 May 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, FOR SALE I'OR BALE — Roods yellow cleat corn, germination guaranteed. W. T. Itupert, Monroe, Indiana 10l gSrt TOR SALE — Mammoth Pekin duck egg*. 10 to 12 tbs. stock, lie each. Mrs. C. F. Rayl, route 6, Decatur. ’ 103a3tx FOR .SALE —Seed potatoes. Cobblers. We will deliver. Phone 356. loot:! FOR SALE —Ohio, Rose and Cob- ' • bier seed potatoes. At the Old Foundry Building on Elm street. lQ.'alltx • FOR,SALE—7 year old mare, or a three year old mare, or 7 year old gelding, smooth mouthed mare. Albert Dick, 5 mile* west and 3-4 mile north of Monroe. 105-g3tx ■ FOR SALE- If you have $350 and and want to own a beautiful country home with 30 acres of land.. Cali 1021. lo6G3tx FOR SALE Chicks from culled flocks. Large Leghorns and Heavy breeds 6%c. Custom hatching 2%c per egg. Buchanan Electric Hatchery, Wiltshire, Ohio, Route 1, 4 miles south. A-20-24-27 M-l-4-11-15 FOR SALE—Office desk. 10-ft. extension di-aiug room table. Inquire 61S is'. Second 106-3 U FOR SALE —2 used oil stoves: 1 used refrigerator; 1 used mattress; 1 used walnut bed and dresser. All in A-l condition. Cheap for cash. This is trade-in merchandise. Sprague Furniture CorapauA phone 109. 104g3t WAN TED W A N'T ED —Lots to plow Call 576-C. Victor Amacher. 105-3tx WE WANT Rags. Paper. Metal, Aidap Iron and Wool. The Maier Hide A- Fur Co., 710 W. Monroe "St.. Phoue 442. 97 ts eod WANTED — Paper hanging and painting. Satisfactory work. H. A. "Peck" Tempi in. Phone 5655. 103-3 U WANTED — Baby carriage. Write Box L. M. S Democrat office and state price. ll)4-g’tx WANTED —-Local insurance agent to represent Mutual Benefit Life Protection. For information write District Manager, P. O. Box 272, Pendleton, lnd. 103G3t WANTED—Radio or electric work. Call Phone 625. Miller Radio Service. 226 No. 7th St. Apr 9tf WANTED—Lots to plow. Call William Elston, 874-E. 163g2tx LOST AND FOUND LOST—Pair of ladies white oxfords on North lOtli st. Finder please return to 304 No. 10 st. dr j plume 1180. 104a2tx ; —l FUTILE SEARCH FOR DILLINGER < CONTINUED FROM rAOTS ONE) | buildings in (he immediate vicin-1 ity but found no trace of their quarry. Lieut. Leo Troutman of the homicide squad and Detective Lieut. Michael Hynes were in charge of the three city police squads who aided the federal agents, state police did not participate in the raid. Get the Habit — Trade at Home NOTH K OF FIX XI, SRTTIJ-'.WKVr l> I \TH M». .HtJ7 Notice is hereby given to the creditors, heirs and legatees of Andrew Funrman, deceased to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, Indiana, on the 26th day of May 193-1, and show cause, if any, whv 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. Herman Fuhrman Executor Decatur, Indiana May 1, 1934 Attorney James T. Merrynian. May 1-8 NOTICE TO TAXPAYER* Notice is hereby given that Mon- 1 day. May 7, 1934 will he the last day: to pay your Spring Installment of taxes, ihe county treasurer’s office will be open f.om 8 A. M. to 4 P. M during the tax paying season. All taxes not paid by that time will become delinquent and a 3% .penalty will be added plus interest at the rate of 8% from date of delinquency. Those who have bought or sold property and wish a division of taxes are asked to come in at once. Call on the Auditor for errors and any reductions. The Treasurer can make no corrections. The Treasurer will not be responsible for the penalty of delinquent taxes resulting from the ommlssion of tax-payers to state definitely ou what property, they desire to pay, In whose name it may be found in what township or corporation It Is situs tod. Persons owing delinquent taxes should pay them at once, the hw is curb that there is no option left for the Treasurer but enforce the collection of delinquent taxes. County orders will not be paid to anyone owing delinquent taxes. All persons arc warned against them. Particular attention. If you pay taxes in more than one township mention the fact to the Treasurer aluo aee that your receipts call for mil your real estate and personal property. In making inquiries of the Treasurer .regarding taxes to insure reply do not fall to include return postage. JOHN WOCHTTHK Treasurer Adams County Indiana, April 7 to May 6

Market reports I ! DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL Ij AND FOREIGN MARKETS LOCAL MARKET t Decatur, Berne. Craigvlll .Hoagland Willahire, Ohio t Corrected May 1 ■ No commission and no yardaga i Veals received Tuesday Wednesday Friday and Saturday ! 160 to 210 lbs $3.50 i - 210 to 250 Ihs $3.60 . 250 to 300 lbs $3.60 1 300 to 250 lbs. $3.30 ■ 350 to 400 lbs >3.00 - 140 to 160 lbs $3.15 1 120 to 140 lbs $2.26 . 100 to 120 lbs $2.00 ; Roughs $2 36 t Stags $1.25 I Vealers $6.00 Wool lambs 19.00 : I ~ ~ FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK I Fort Wayne, lnd., May 1. —tU.R>— I Livestock: ( Hogs, sto 10c lower; 250 300 lbs., ; $3.75; 2«0-250 lbs., $3.70; 180-300 • lbs., $3.60: 160-1880 lbs... $3 60; 3001 350 lbs., $3.40; 150-160 lbs.. $2.30; 1 1140-150 lbs.. $3; 130-140 lbs.. $2.80; 120-130 lbs.. $2.25; 100-120 lip., $2; roughs, $3.75; stags. $1.50. Calves, $6; iambs, $9.75 down. » : _______ EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., May 1.-s(U.R> • —Livestock: Hogs, receipts. 600; steady to lrtc under Monday's average, weights 1 above 200 lbs, off most: desirable 1 1160 to 230 lbs.. $4.15 to $4.25; plain■ier kinds and mixed weights, $4 to ■ > $4.10; 120 to 150 lbs.. $3.25 to $4. ! Cattle, receipts. 50: cows uni changed; cutter grades $1.65 to j $2.75. 'j Calves, receipts, 100; vealers ' steady. $7 down. Sheep, receipts, 300; only odds I and ends offered: choice shorn . 1 lambs quoted tew culls to , i medium kinds sold $6 to $8.50; i ! shorn ewes mixed quality, $3. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat .78% .77% .75% ICorn 44% .47% .49 'Oats 29% .29% -29% LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected May 1 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lb» or better 66c No. 8 New Wheat sSibs- —66 c , Oats 25c First Class Yellow Com 54c u ‘ Jftxed com 5c less l ° — Community Meet Thursday Night A community meeting will be heki at the Kirkland gymnasium Thursday evening at 7:30 o’clock. A program has been planned for the ! meeting which will include a piano l.solo by Delores Neuhauser, devoI tionals l>y Rev. David Grether and j recitation "This is the Place’’. Mus- ! i will be furnished by a male quar- ! tet and Mrs. Mabel Marshall will ’ give a reading Community singing will be led byLouis Worthman and an address j j will be given by Mr. Lehner. Per- : • eons having the sociability song j books by Rodehaever are asked to bring them to the meeting. Phoney Francs Being Made Paris. —(U.RI -Counterfeiters have been busy making bright and shiny five and ten franc pieces in Paris, and merchants are now effUtpped with marble slabs at their cash registers to test the coins. The • phoney money markers are confining their efforts to the small denomination coins, as the 26 franc ■ pieces are more difficult of fabrication. I )*» If you don't have the ready eash to pay your taxes —see ua. You can quickly get any amount up to *3OO and repay cm terms to suit your convenience. Interest charged for just the time you use the money. Full Information without co6t or obligation. Call, Write or Phone FR AX KLIN. SECURITY CC Over Schafer Hdw. Co. Phone 237 Decatur, lnd. — ■■■ ■' '—■■■■' —■■■ 1 ■—~ See me for Federal Loans and Abstracts of Title. I French Quinn. Schirmeyer Abstract Co. j N. A. BIXLER ) > OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS; 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. * 5 Telephone 135.

H COUNTY AGENT'S ] COLUMN ♦ A modification of the corn-hog contract sow permit* limited purchase of extra feeder pig*, In 1934, by a hog prodneer from other <x>ntract signers, iu excess of the average number purchased by the produ- er tti the 1932-33 period, according to. word received from the Agricultural Adjustment Administration by County Agent Artchbold, Under the original interpretation of the contract, a producer was not permitted to buy feeder pig* in 1934 in excess of the average number purchased iby him during the past two years. The amendment was prepared by the Agricultural Adjustment, lAdministration to accomodate the producer, particular-

‘Titf Ifflft natfir W by LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE 11

CHAPTER XXXVI ‘Don't let him con you into thinkin' he’s just an innocent kid and hadn’t no hand in this show.” the gunman persevered. “He's gummed into it up to his ears along with the rest of us. Ask him yourself. if you don't want to believe me.” She said in a low voice one word: “Maurice!” “A lie out of whole cloth," the boy with a shrug assured her. “Yet, I confess, like most lies it has a certain substratum of truth.” In the same voice of contained emotion, but now in French, the girl demanded: “You confess it?” “It is true,” Maurice told her in the tongue she had preferred to English in order that, he supposed, their confidences might be private. “I am beyond trying, or even wishing, to deceive you, Fenno. It’s true I am a thief, much as my father was in his day, and that I planned to take advantage of your friendship and steal, when opportunity offered, the emeralds. It is true, if you must know, that I had stolen them once already, the first night out on the Navarre; but that time it was my father who out-thought me. found' t hem where I had hidden them, restored them to your ' mother —” “I thought as much! And the next time—” “You wrong me if you think that—” The protestation was interrupted by a bitter echo: “Wrong you!” “I swear to you, Fenno, I had nothing to do with that affair, except that it was I who found fcem hidden in my father’s trunk, and having substituted the zircons, threw them in through the purser’s i window in the packet marked with ; your mother’s name.” < “Why?” r "Because I conceived, like a i dunce, it was my father who had stolen them, and feeling certain that his luggage would be searched, i thought to shield him. Also”—the i boy took a deep breath and braced himself to bear her gaze—“because I had been thinking the business I over and come to the conclusion ; that it would be more sensible to i wait till the emeralds had been brought ashore before I tried 1 again.” 1 "Did you have to tell me that?” ] “I intend that there shall never i again be anything but the truth between you and me, Fenno.” “Oh, these mad infatuations for ' the truth that men contract from I time to time—and always when it’s I most untimely!” The girl gave a i broken laugh and moved away a lit- 1 tie, averting her face. “You might i have spared me!” I “But I think it is myself that I am not sparing!” “Os course you do—being a man ■ and thinking, therefore, of yourself i only!” “Could I—loving you as I do— i let you go on believing me other I than I am?” She looked at him again with a 1 wistful half-smile, a tired smile, at i once understanding and reproachful. “You love me?” "You know it” “Then you might have let me go on hoping—” “You are telling me you cared enough tc hope?” “I may have thought I did—until tonight” She begged the issue with a weary movement of her shoulders. “Not that it matters,” i “It matter* like life and death to me.” “You ask me to believe that after what has happened here tonight! After you have allied yourself with common criminals to bring this to pass!” “If you choose to believe this thug against tho evidenee of your reason.”

THIMBLE THEATER “HE DOESN’T GIVE A SNAP FOR DOUGH” I# sßj [EXCUSE ME A AOWNt/mR \ ffTCOST Me FOURTEEN CENTS \ S* VOO ARE THE HOW SEE HERE \/ANR\PPI_E -\| ~T w jvJpHES-UwtSH TO LOOK UPJ AN ACRE-VU. TRV FOR < ' ACME OF FEM'.NINiT'A-N TIME (S VALUABLE- ILL 1 XTT\ / iil i"o°Di \c£i -Pfr ThE FACTS ABOUT THIS NINETEEN- tF HE SQUAOIKS) I THR\LL AT VOOR / GWE YOU TEN POU-AftS AN ) ( «?SV) \ /• u - , . H^

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, MAY I, 1934.

I! ly the cattle feeler, whose »owa tail [to farrow or who does not save 'enough pigs In 1934 to fill hi# mar p, k stable bog allotment. ? In order to qualify for the extra •'feeder pig purchase privilege, a eon , tract signer will file a request with • I the county allotment committee, In•1 (Hearing the number of pigs to be -(bought, from whom they are to be -1 bought, and the reason* tor such - ! purchase. This request must be 1 signed by a member of the commute ! ity committee and approved 'by the l'county alotment committee by lore !| the pigs can be purchased i The feeder pigs bought under the ■ | term* of the amendment must have i been farrowed on farms located : in the same county as the lam* un I der contract and by sows owned by ■ j persons who have executed corn re-1 - daction contracts as producer* and '

“What evidence'” •'Yon see me here, risking my life to save you—” “ “Really?” She made a skeptical mouth. “Interesting if true. But if true, why do you do it?” “Because it is tonight that 1 have learned what love is, tonight that has taught me, when it was discovered to me what danger you are in, that to love you is my life, just as to lose you must be my death.” “Your death? But ‘men have died,’ my dear, ‘and worms have eaten them, but not for love’." "You know what I mean: the death to me of everything worth living for.” "Yet you expect me to give my heart and faith to a thief!” “I am done with all that. Now that I know what to love you means to me, I have only one desire, one hope, one determination, so to live that I may deserve your love and faith. As it was with my father, so it is with me. When love is more than life, one can not go on living lies.” “You think so now, I know.” Voice and look now were both a little softened. “It sounds very extravagant and old-fashioned and—yes!—sweeL I think I should like to know if you are of the same mind when you are less wrought up, my dear—who this is past and ail but forgotten, you may talk to me of yourself again. But now—” “You have reason. I am a lunatic to lose so much time trying to persuade you, when the one problem is how to get you out of this.” “I am sure,” the girl said, “you will do your best.” “You may well believe it!” And revgrting to English, Maurice called to the gunman: “You may get up now, if you like, monsieur, and turn around and lend us your counsel.” The man turned a blank stare over his shoulder. “Lend you what?” “I am inviting you to confer with us, tell us what to do, how to escape—” “Don’t kid yourself. You can’t.” “Don’t say that Take time to think it over. I have already found your second thoughts most useful,

remember. There must be a way—” “Yeah? And what do you think would happen to me if I knew any way out and told you two about it? It would be as much as my life is worth.” “It will be all your life is worth,” Maurice pleasantly reminded him, “if you know of away and refuse to tell us. What about the service entrance? That can hardly be such a gauntlet as the public lobby would be. How do we find it? By the service elevator, no doubt? There must be a service elevator.” “There is, if you want "to know. But how’re you goin’ to get to it without the dame on the floor clerk’s desk knowin’ and telephonin’ the office to have a reception committee waitin’ for you at the bottom of the shaft?” “I see. Then it is for us to invent a means of silencing the floor clerk.” “You said it. And I’m here to tell you it’ll be one swell trick—if it works. Try and do it.” * * « • The cab that took Lanyard pere and Crane uptown from the pier lost both at the main entrance to the Biltmore; and the hotel, in its turn, took the two men in only to lose them —they were leaving it in another minute by the little-used doors that give on Vanderbilt Avenue just above the corner at Fortythird Street. Five minutes more saw them well out of the world in an apartment located on the top floor of a decayed dwelling in Fortyfirst Street beyond Park Avenue. "Discreet." Lanyard accounted it. “yet eminently accessible.” “Had to be," Crane pointed out. “or I’d never have hired it. Guy in

l who have no feeder pig bases. The i purchasing producer, however, can- • not buy any number of extra feeder pigs over tula regular feeder pig 1 allowance, in excess of any abortage in the cumber of piga which i he is permitted by hla contract to • produce from his own sow*. For i example, if Farmer A is allowed to > produce from his own sows in 1934, i a total of 100 pig* for market, hut ■ on account of disease or other cause*, only 80 pigs are actually ■ produced for market, then Fanner • A. with the consent of his local corn hog committeemen, might buy not • more than 20 extra feeder pigs from other contract signer®; that is. Farmer A. might buy a total of not more than 20 feeder pigs in excess j of any feeder pig allotment he possesses under the terms of the xon- • tract.

•• ■ »'*fi my line’s get to have his hide-away i plumb in the heart of things; oth«wise it won’t be much use to hws-L---1 stands to reason. There’s a dozeq t ways of doing a duck Into this street, through the hotels and s buildings that have side doors to ft. t without much risk of being aptioOd - —I mean, any time you’vs ffOfLjjn , idea, somebody’s tailing ypU. gawi s nothing to brag about." d ?ji apology for dull; rsffiinMiMKr ? rooms and fqtiguqdpiflurtiishings, » “but good enough to flop is—and a safe place for our confab. I’ve got > a lot to unload on you, hombre, that i I wouldn't take a chance on saying in that taxi.” r “No?” Lanyard prompted, making himself at home without more r urging. “You mean on account of i the chauffeur?” s “I don’t have to tell an old hand s like you every last taxi-driver’s a 1 listener-in on all his fares say; and , some of them are fan-tails.” > “‘Fan tail*’?” ; "Stool-pigeons that keep their tails spread fan-wise to catch any ’ dirt that’s in the air and sell it - wherever they can get a price. If • people in general onTy realized how - much they spilled about their per- ; sonal affairs to stools posing as i taxi-men, and waiters, maybe they’d r be a little less careless— just as if t everybody that drove a car or juggled chow was a deaf-mute, and a dim-wit into the bargain!” “I well believe you. There is more > that I should know, then, about the - disappearance of my son and Fenno ’ Crozier? There are clues you have i not yet mentioned?" “Plenty, and all pointing in the ! same direction—dead up a blind al- : ley.” r “You encourage me—” , “I wouldn't want to, feeling as ■ friendly toward you as I do; not the way the situation shapes to me now. ! Os course. I’ve only had a few hours to mull it over, since landing; but this is my town, I claim to know the i ropes here, and the only leads I see in this business peter out as soon as I start to trace them up, or else trail ' off to nowhere.” i “None the less.” Lanyard smilI ingly persisted, “you do encourage _ n »» me.

1 “You’re easy pleased — seeing : that you don’t yet know the half ■ -of it.” “Still, I gather that the police ; have been busy since last night doing the groundwork for us—dear--1 ing away the undergrowth, uproert- , ing the useless and misleading i clues, and leaving the terrain open for the more painstaking investiga- , tion that you and I will now proceed I to give it.” “Maybe we’d team up pretty good ; as brother dicks at that, old-timer, with your farsightedness and , finesse and infernal foreign savvy ; in general, to eke out my crude two- • fisted American methods—” ■ ”"Please!” Lanyard amiably pro--1 tested, wondering if he were iriis- • taken in thinking to hear a note of piqued amour propre. “Is it friend- • ly, then, to turn my bead with flattery? But rest assured, my frieml, I am well aware that yovr New Tp» K ! underworld is not my jungle; I would be lost in it without ycur guidance. Two heads are sometimes better than one, notwithstanding; ’ and since it appears that we ait -i put ours together—” ’ Lanyard wound up on a note o* ' interrogation—to which, feowt-.c, j Crane didn't respond til’ he had ■ rummaged out a bottle and briiv'...-d 1 two liqueur- glasses. “Get me right, old boy,” he t! cn , begged in quiet humor. "If I w»sr. t , for you first and last and nil the , way through, believe me, I'd nevj- . try to kid you. Here's to the f. .i old d»vs and the better o> = r~ ■- ing. That’s the real st ji—'h put more heart into j s H I've got to tell you. i (Toß*C;t^..:;

e, tin case a contract signer owned, or will own no Interest In any 1934 hog litters, lie may purchane. In ' 1934, with the consent of local oorn--8 hog officials, a number of feeder , pigs not to exceed 75 per vent of 1 j the number of hog® produced for 5 [market from 1932 litters or 1933, r! yters, which ever i* higher. In j * j cases where the contract signer has ■ •mi hog base or feeder pig Ua*e or! I j has not obtained a transfer of hog r i base from a retiring producer under *[the term* of the contract or Admin- : r I Dtrattve Rulings, he may purchase I I up to ten feeder pigs in 1934 COURTHOUSE New Cases Frank Mower v*. Martin C Kies* ' damages, complaint filed. Summon* ordered to sheriff of Adams county i for defendant, returnable May 15. Claude Patchell vs. Martin C. j Kiess. damages, complaint filed, i Summon* ordered to sheriff of AJ-1 ains County for defendant, return- j aJ>le May 15 Martin W. Beery et al v*. Ray : Sowers et al. Complaint filed by clerk of superior court of Allen. county ae a cause in this court. The Department of Financial lneituations of the state of Indiana by j Iludoph Schug. special represents tive vs. John F. Morningstar and Effid Morningstar, foreclosure of mortgage. Complaint filed. Summons ordered for defendants to sheriff of Adams county returnable May 15. Final Report Filed Alvira Cade et al vs. Arthur Madden et al. partition. Final report bycommissioners filed, examined and approved. Distribution reported, commissioners discharged Citation Ordered Gladys Smith vs. Archie Smith, divorve. Appearance *for citation filed. Citation ordered returnable May 5. State Cases Dismissed Edward Wright fraudulent check. Bert Mast, failure to support wife and children. L. Broughinau. fraudulent check. Ernie Smith, petit larceny. James Varnette, assault and battery with intentB. F. Burnham, fraudulent check Summons Ordered John Hilty et al vs. Christ L. Lieohty et al. partition. Complaint filed. Summons ordered for all defendants returnable May 12Files Appointment David Depp ex parte, appointment of clerk of lAdams circuit court. Comes now David D. Depp and fih» his appointment as clerk of Adams circuit court, and also files his oath of office. Marriage License Joe Zarifes, cigar store, Bluffton and Nora E. Railing. Decatur. o | Test Your Knowledge I I Can you answer seven of these j tese Questions? Turn to page Four fo r the answers. ♦ ♦ 1. Who was Jim Fisk. Jr.? 2. Os what country is the Straits Settlements a possession? 3. Who wrote the grrwt work "Novum Organum," which led the way to the development of modern inductive logic? 4. Which nation owns the Kurile Islands? 5. Who was Anthony Trollope? 6. Who becomes Vice-President when the Vice-President of the U. S- succeeds to the Presidency? 7. What distinguished American inventor horn in Connecticut, was one of the first to apply steam to the propulsion of boats? 8. What is a carboy? %9. n music, what are nuances? 10. Who was Henry Watterson? WILLIAM ENGLE QUITS SERVICE (CONTINUED Fling e»r,n ONE) length and route two 67 miles long. It is presumed that about eight miles of former route one will be added to the Hoagland post office. Mr. Graham stated. Ray Smith, carrier on route four will take over route five and the route will be known as route four. Route eight will be known as route five and Harry Crownover, present carrier on route eight will cover it. No changes will be made ou routes three, ;ix and seven. o Get the Habit — Trade at Homs

: MEMBERSHIPS OVER 700,000 (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) day will swell our (otal to more than 700.010. Plummer said, j “Onr meinhorsiiips dwindled during the depression years for obviou* [reason* but the tight put on by the ; Legion this year for increased vet-1 erans compensation and the return

NOTICE^^i TO DEPOSITORS OF PEOPLES LOAN TRUST COMPAQ Clark J. Lutz, special representative for the iw ot Financial Institutions of the state of Indiana ot Liquidation of the Peoples Loan & Trust Como tur. Indiana, hereby notifies all depositors tf.at h ![* a distribution of funds beginning Friday, 4 [qu' 11 ' office in the Erwin Building, and continuing eacfca * after until each and every depositor receive* hu ** share ot said distribution. Depositors are requested??! their checks between the hours of 8 to 12 A. M anq , *4 This distribution will be made subject to the an-,,, Adams Circuit Court. " 1111 CLARK J. LUTZ Special Representative, . Department of Financial i- rt y Public Auction 2—Farms, 85 acres and 40 acresv-J To settle estate, the undersigned administrator wif. auction, without reserve, sale on the pre-ni-. <. ; milt* Decatur, lnd.. % mile east of Piqua road. : n . wtqonr^ THURSDAY, May 10th at 1:30 P. M 85 acres good sittidv loam soil, well drained; 8 nm;<m house, basement 14x28, summer house, burn 'filxf.n; house, grainary; all building* iu good state et repair. j 40 acres adjoining with good 5 room frame house; bars XU ether out buildings; drove well at each farm; cistern: lrtt;j timber. Will lie sold as a whole or iu two separate tracts of Ba TERMS- One-third cash, one-third iti -ix month!, nine months. Will also sell the following household goods on tie list Morris chair; 3 stands; commode; mirror .'lxiS; manteldn door cupboard; cook store range: Wilson heater; nrai; pieces of carpet, sizes from" 9xll to 15x15; 4 feather ticks; cU 3 iron hods: antique cord bod; antique iln t ~f drawen; wheel and winder; 2 walnut tables; extension table; 11 tbdß ing chairs; 1 rockers; lot of dishes; cooking utensils art■ cles too numerous to mention. Terms on household goods—Cash. CLARENCE VV. RRODBECK. Ai Sold hv National Reality Auction Company, ted. Fred Reppert and Roy Johnson, Auctioneers. Decatur, Indiana. ( rimjiod Oilier Disk* nil Str<»ngth for Tractor Diski MeCormiek - Woerii Disk Harrows THE performance of your ting edge longer w tractor disk harrow they arc made « depend*, of course, on its quality saw steel, <P* disks. All MtCormick-Dccr- heat-treated. Ing Disk Harrows have disks Thorough harreua made with crimped centers ,J or ie hv these McG* l which practically double Dccrings: the rear 1 ; their strength. And these cannot trail the front* disks will hold a keen cat- The two sets of d**® C Rigidly braced t (1 P rf \\ _— \\ / There are severs)lijj \ sizes and -ivies of ndck-Dceringpi^ H *" bLISj kShcfefeWe are showing most suitable for UJ lricl, BetterdWpUl THE SCHAFER STO« ' HARDWARE AND HOME FURMSHiN^

of briliT bu:.| Mc^ hel l‘ p ' l FlVlffly to membership "('<jfl.es" i„ n of til, |J 1 ■•'■ ' "its V,. ar J i u„ (ll j] members "‘>B " A l" "»■• louatc k membership* ai(i|) . j lu the I .■■■.■ 11la I li "" s ' ,l “' auxilimTSf and 8." ' *■