Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 111, Decatur, Adams County, 8 May 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FORSALE FOR SALE—3 acre tract of ground, 5 room house, with basement, summer house, small barn, poultry house; garage, coal and cob house, good well, plenty ot fruit trees, 1 mile south, 414 miles west of Monroe. Henry Meyer, Bluffton. Ind., R. R. 4. 109-3tx FOR SALE —Porch Gliders $10.50 to $16.50. Porch swings $2.75 Io $5.00. Lawn benches $3.50. — Sprague Furniture Co., phone 199. i lot :t FOR SALE Dunfield soy beans 98'. test SI.OO per bu. William Miller, Route 8. Un-a3tx FOR SALE -Farm wagon, hay loader, 192 s Whippet sedan, 1926 Ford teach. All kinds ot used furniture. Brice Daniels. Pleasant Mills. 11'-3t FOR SALE Manchu and Dunfield soy beans. Floyd Barger. Decatur. R. 2, Craigville phone. 110-3tx FOR SALE — Red Star gasoline range, like new. Call Mrs. John S liai, r at \l llp-g2t FOR SALE—Used 8 piece dining room suite a-1 condition, $25 cash. Sprague Furniture company, phone 199. Hl-g3t FOR SALE — Fordson tractor or will trade for mare. Also 7 year old fresh cow. €. O. Manley, route I 6, Decatur, 4 miles east of Monroe.; ni-g3tx| FOR SALE —Oue tractor disc, 14 j discs wide, including truck and 1 eaveners for horses; one tractor plow. 14 in. Earl S. Landin 3 miles west of Monroe. 107a6t.x | FOR SALE We have just received a large ship-1 ment of Congoleum Rugs, in all I sizes. 9x12 ft. size at $4.95, $5.95. $6.95. 6x94t. $3.50; 7.6x9-ft. $3.95; 9x10.6ft. $5.75: 11.3x12-ft. $10; 11.3x15ft. $12.50. Free with each 9x12 Congoleum Rag at $6.95. two small mats, slje 18x36. (Saturday only). j Ten Axminster Rugs, size 9x12-ft.. < •oumless. good quality and pat-1 tfijms, each $22.50; 2 -Tapestry rugs, seamless, 9x12. "each $15.00 3 Tapestry Rugs, seamless. 8.3x12.1 cell $15.00 2 Tapestry rugs, seamless. 11.3x12. j each $20.00 I 1 Yjplvet Rug, seamless, 11.3x12-ft. each $22.50 1 Velvet Rug. 11.3x15-ft., seamless, each $28.50 All Hair Rug cushions, with waffle top. mothproof, 8.3x10.6 or 9x12-i ft. size, special price, each $4.95. See our rugs before you buy. large selection of better rugs at $29.50 and up. NIBLICK & CO. FOR SALE Cabbage, tomato and mango plants, 7c per dozen. 3 dozen 20c. Sweet potato plants later. Arthur B. Miller. 803 Mercer avenue. lllG3tx eod WANTED WE WANT Rags. Paper, Metal, Scrap Iron and Wool. The Maier Hi<le & Fur Co., 710 W. Monroe St.. Phone 442. 97 ts eod WANTED —Radio or eiectric work. Call Phone 625. Miller Radio Service, 226 No. 7th St. Apr 9tf ’ 'WANTED TO RENT — Furnished rooms for light housekeeping Box TW. % Democrat. 110-k3tx WANTED — Paper hanging and painting Satisfactory work. H. A. “Peck'' Templin, Phone 5655. ■ 110-3tx WANTED —To do work with tractor any time or place. Henry Anspaugh, Decatur R. 3, inquire Murphy Saie Barn. 109-3tx LOST AND FOUND “ LOST —29x4.40 spare tire between », my home anti Hanna Park. Retward for return. Ira Bodie U5-a3tx FOR RENT — ■■■-«— ~ ' FOR RENT—3 rooms, suitable for — offices. Newly decorated, plenty "" ot light; heat and water furnished. ... Inquire Niblick Ac Co. Illt3 ' -■ - o NOTICE—i! have moved my beauty ” Shop to 803 Monroe street, corner •• of Monroe and Eighth street. Call *“820 for appointment. Charlotte B. 'Everett. Hl-3t Oil Tanks Explode, One Man Badly Injured Greensburg. Ind., Maj’ B—(UP8 —(UP) — Explosion of two oil tanks of the Decatur County Co-operative com- _ pany here late yesterday critically • injured one man and threatened to the North Side factory disstrict. " Sgott Buell, assistant manager of Z.thetoompany, who wax opening the -puthp house of the company's oil “station when the blast occurred, -Was burned severely. " All the local fire fighting apparatus wa ■> used in confining the fire to theawo tanks lighted by the explosion.

'MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL H AND FOREIGN MARKETS | LOCAL MARKET I Decatur, Berne, Craiqvill .Hoagland Willshire, Ohio , Corrected May 8 No commission and no yardage Veals received Tuesday Wednesday Friday and Saturday ; 160 to 210 lbs $3.40 ' 210 to 250 MM. $3.45 ' 250 to 300 lbs $3.40 ' 800 to 350 lbs. $3.30 350 to 400 lbs $3.00 140 to 160 lbs $3.00 [ 12'i to 14* lbs. $2.13 100 to 120 lbs. $1.90 Roughs ............................ $2.40 Stags $1.25 Vealers $6.00 Wool lambs $8.75 Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs 5 to 2O< lower; 250-300 lbs. $3.85; 200-250 lbs. $3.65; 160200 lbs. $8.55; 300.350 lbs $3.40; 150-160 lbs. $3.15; 140-150 lbs. UM; 130-14 ÜBl $2 1.5. i o| " lbs. $2.15; 100-120 lbs. $180; roughs $2 75; stags $1.50. Calves $6; Lambs $9.75. East Buffalo Livestock Hog receipts 500; fairly active; weak to 5c lower; desirable 150 to 280 lbs. $4.15 to mainly $4.25; 120 to 150 lbs. $3.25 to $4. Cattle receipts 100; steers unI sold; cows steady; fleshy offerings $3.35 to $3.75; cutter grades | $1.75 to $2.90. Calf receipts 100; vealers unI changed; good to choice $7.00; j common and medium $4.25-5.50. Sheep receipts 100; only odds land ends offered; all classes and I grades quoted steady; best shorn I lambs eligible around $9.35. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat 85% .84. .84% Corn 47% -49% .51% Oats 34% .33% .33% LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected May 8 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs or better 66c j No. S New Wheat 581bs- 65c Oats 25c ' First Class Yellow Corn 54c Mixed corn 5c less ♦ > Test Your Knowledge i | Can you answer seven of these tese Questions? Turn to page Four foe the answers. ♦ ♦ 1. Which two nations fought the French and Indian War? 2. How is the Speaker of the U. S. House of Representatives chosen? 3. Name the city at the southernmost end of the chain of Florida Keys4. What does the Spanish phrase "Que Tai" mean? 6. Where is Aherammergau? 6. Who said, "Face the ohter waynoys, we are going back?” 7. Name the capital of Louisiana. 8. Who were Alice and Phoebe Cary? 9 How did the coin known as the florin get its name? 10. To which political party does the Chief Justice of the U. S. belong? 1. What is floriculture? 2. Where is Westminister Abbey? 3- Which of the chain of Great Lakes is nearest the .Atlantic Ocean? 4. Can the President of the U. S. resign from office? 5. Name the victim of the famous Honolulu assault case of 1932. 6. Who wrote the “Essays of Elia?” 7 Who said that he told that President Roosevelt was the “Kerensky of the American revolution?” 8. Name the first man to affix his signature to the Declaration of Independence. 9. Name the yacht on which President Roosevelt made his recent fishing trip. 10. How much did the U. S pay for Alaska? . NOTICE Anyone having burial lots in Tricker cemetery—l will clean and keep clean tor the season any lot at one dollar per lot for entire season Write or call on Roy E. Lautzenheiser, Route 2. Monroe. 1 mile north of cemetery. 111-g2t o — NOTICE—WiII be in Decatur Thursday, Friday and Saturday of this week tuning pianos, Leaves orders Box W. at Democrat. W. E Sawyer, official tuner of station WOWO. kllo-3tx Get the Habit — Trade at Home N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135.

| Canadian Product* In Demand k M IMI (U.R) hi' VMM* d<- " in.ind for Canadian farm pfeftMta in the United Slates has accompan-1

’ fflf m Hafir son" bu LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE II 11

0 ; CHAPTER XLII With his free hand then disengaging the arm from the stand of nn- _ other instrument that bore a dial--5 device. Lanyard signaled Crane'a i) ntimber—but without releasing any j one of the trio from the grasp of r his attention. “Is that you, my friend?” he presently hailed. "But how good it ’ is to hear your voice again! What 1 would I overdo without you! Here [ am I with three desperate characI ters on my hands, and no idea what ( to do with them—except to call on you for help and guidance.” "What's the joke?” Crane cautious drawl responded. “Are you kidding me or something?” , “You shall see for j-ourself, if you will be good enough to come at once and bring with you, or see that they follow you without delay, a sufficient number of policemen to i take care of Madame Boyce and Mr. Isquith and his brother. But don't be longer than you must, if you would be sure of finding me still in command of the situation.” > “I’ll trust you— ’’ i "But there is no knowing how aoon henchmen of theirs, that have been already telephoned for, will turn up here in force. And I am facing odds of three to one already—” “But your one, old-timer, is as good as any dozen!” “I’m not so sure. ... Arrange for an ambulance to call too, please, from the nearest hospital. The surgeon should come prepared to administer first aid to two drugged young people—” “What’s that?” “My son and Fenno Crozier—” “Good God! Where are you?” Lanyard gave the address and the floor. The apartment of that ambitious Monsieur Isquith. Do you understand me?” “Why, dern your flea-bitten hide!” Crane gave the groan of a man bitterly aggrieved. “I might < have known it would be this way—if I let you out of my sight a single minute, you'd make me look like a 1 correspondence-school dick on his i first excursion to a sure-enough 1 city!” At five o’clock, or thereabouts, ] in the afternoon of the sixth day l following the arrival of Michael Lanyard in New York, he rose from i a desk in a room that might have been a study in an Eighteenth Cen- : tury ducal hotel of the Faubourg St. Germain, but actually was his I private office as mangaging director of the Fifth Avenue establishment ’ of Delibes et Cie., Paris—got up with a smiling if a rather careworn , countenance to greet a caller, a ; pretty, plump lady of a certain age who, in spite of bobbed hair that i time had bleached clear of all color, didn’t look it. •My dear Mrs. Crozier!” he said i over the hand that he bowed to sa- I 1 lute, in a murmur so pitched that an innocent bystander might pardonably have looked twice to make ; sur* that the lady's becoming and modish black costume was not mourning. “How very good of you to come to see me!” “ ‘Good’ of me—fiddlesticks! testily Fay Crozier retorted. "If I’m being good to anybody, it's to mysalf, though I’ll be blessed if I can see what good I’m doing anybody bv barging down here to see you, when I know, as I don’t doubt you’re thinking, if you knew any news you’d telephone it. It was just that I simply couldn’t stand it another minute, sitting up there and twiddling helpless fingers while that pathetic husband of mine pattered about the house emitting woe-be-gone bleats like an old muttonhead that has mislaid its ewe-lamb!” She sank into a chair, and extended an open hand. “Give me a fag, for pity’s sake, lanyard; and quit making sad eyes at me—you remind me so much of Innes that I can't bear it! You haven’t any news, of course?” she added, bending over the flame that Lanvard tendered to puff the tobacco afire. “If you had, you’d have shut me up long enough to tell it.” “I am sorry,” he said, putting away his cigarette-case and lighter and sitting back. “Mr. Crane promised me he would call up as soon as he learned anything, and”—French habit spread both hands in eloquent disappointment—"nothing!” “Oh— gothl" the woman explodad. “Ifeanything really has hapFened to those two precious infants, 'll never forgive myself.” “But surely yon cannot blame yourself, madam —” “I’d like to know why I can’t.” Fay transfixed Lanyard with indignant blue eyes. “I'd like you or somebody to tell me how I can es--1 cape blaming myself for being a greedy old woman. If I hadn't been

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING “ROCK OF GIBRALTAR” IJYSEG® I THAT FELLOW YOUI / GOOD \l f I’M LIRE YOU. POPEYE, I THIHkTI T'h'eLLO, POLICE A I" IMAGINE MM BEING A X I DON'T CARE IVW YOU <£] VJHKTLL I DOT’R I CALL POPEYE — HELENS ) JHAT FELLOU) IS A FAKE - L /STATION, SEND AN ) CRIMINAL AND A GUEST | ITHEIR LOVE AFFAIR JUST SO HE VDON'T LET M 1 : T ftKL W 7 I EP-. | HAPPEN TO V7i» FATHER THINKS HE CAN JUDGE loFFICER TO MY < INMV fa/TT.- n k ~) YOU BREAK IT TO JAIL-IN 1 KNOW THAT HE'SJ MEN AND HE'S SO STUBBORN , —VHOME AT ONCE J RunALONG \S MR vffilA / UP- IF YOU I'VE NEVER SEEN A CRIMINAL-HE'S TrtE IDONT GIVE INF- HE'S PROBABLY i-v k/ CAovu - I'll SEE. YOU) ) To THUNKTMArI SUCCEED I'LL POWERFUL FILLOUTJ I kSssS Y ®w~s>i .I ' \\ .Ip I I

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. MAY 8, 1931.

led the unfolding of President ■ Roosevelt's recovery plans. In the eight months ended Feb. 28, the exports of farm products to the Unit

a crazy fool stxiut jewels to begin with, if I'd never set niy covetous heart u:i owning those devilish cmeraldv, if I hadn’t been rotten mean enough to try to cheat, my country —if I'd had them shipped over with an honest declaration instead of trying to smuggle them in on my person—none of this agony would ever have happened.” "You must not think so harshly of yourself,” Lanyard deprecated. “After all, what you did was merely to prove yourself as human as you are charming.” "Many thanks; but pretty speeches won’t put mo in good humor with myself today. When I think what a goof I've been, taking it for granted, just because that wretch of an Isquith and his crew were in jail, that we’d heard the last of that business and everything was simply lovely—” She bent a morose glare on Lanyard. "Why didn’t you tell me your friend Crane said Isquith had such powerful friends in the underworld that we might as well be prepared for a flare-back—some attempt to avenge his arrest?” “I hoped, to tell the truth, he was drawing an exaggerated picture, and wanted to avoid alarming you without real reason—” “Well! I’ve no doubt you meant well, but 1 wish you hadn’t been so darn considerate. If I’d dreamed that anything like this would happen, I’d have stuck to Fenno like her own shadow, never have let her out of my sight a single minute. ... What are you making that funny face about?” “Forgive me, but I found the thought amusing—” “That’s most ungallant of you. If j’ou think I’m not still spry enough to keep up with that chit—” “I think it would take a bit of doing.” “The girl does go, I grant you, once she gets started. I admit it would be as good for me as a reducing diet.” As Faj’ paused to give the thought a rueful smile, a chirp sounded under Lanyard's desk, and the lady had a start. “What’s that —the telephone?” “It might be Crane, reporting progress.” Lanyard nodded as he took up the instrument at his elbow. But it was with a look of some vexation that he listened, interjecting in a faintly startled voice, “Who?” and ending with: “Oh, very well. Show him in, please.” With an apologetic look, he turned back from the telephone. “I hope you don't mind. It’s Monsieur Pion of the Surete, calling to take leave, I suppose. He's going home with the Navarre, I understand; and she sails tonight at midnight.” “I don’t mind, of course—though I will say I wasn’t infatuated with the creature, the horrid way he behaved to you, coming over.” “He was very kind to me in the upshot, however. We must not forget that. If he hadn’t proved himself a fair man at heart, if he hadn’t overridden the Captain and set me free, that night—” His response to a tap on the door brought in a familiar, starveling, wizened shape tricked out in curious elegance, as for strolling of a Sunday in the Bois, in morning-coat with gray-striped trousers, varnished boots and spats, Icmon-col-ored gloves, an ebony stick and a lustrous stovepipe topper. “AA, mon- ami.'" he piped at sight of Lanyard, opening his arms; but in the next instant, discovering the handsomer presence, he caught himself up and subdued his transports, performing to admiration the Continental bow from the hips. “And Madame Crozier! But what pleasure I Figure to yourselves that one had no suspicion of such good fortune, that one would be permitted to—how do you say?— slay two birds with one rock.” “How is that, pray?” “But it was my intention, naturally, to inquire of my friend Monsieur Lanyard where I could call on Madame Crozier to pay her, also my homage and felicitations.” “What is the man talking about? ‘Felicitations!’” Fay Crozier cried. “Upon the happy event of this day, madame—” “Are you mad?” The lady indignantly bridled, and then, reminding herself that the agent of the Surite couldn’t possibly know what had happened, made her manner more gracious. “But no, monsieur. I quite see that you do not understand—how should you?—that this is anything but a day when Mr. Lanyard and I can weicome any sort of felicitations. It is, to the contrary, for us a day of sad anxiety.” “Ah, madame! But what calamity can possibly hava been visited upon you?”

ed States were more than three I times as great as in the like period I In 1933. The Increr.** in values | was from $2,147,300 to $6,670,600. |

i ‘We are not yet sure, monsieur," s I.aiiyurd rep’ict., “that it is truly a - calamity. We merely du not know. 1 It ia since e't an o’clock this morn- i f ing that Madarr.e’s daughter, Mlle. ’ i Fenno. left her heme to do some ■ F shopping. Elie was to have returned { r in time for a luncheon that Madame ; 1 was giving eome friends. She did not. So far as we can ascertain, she I , visited none cf the shops she was to i have gone to, and did not call at the I home of any of her friends. Mme. , Crozier feels certain that, if noth- I ing untoward hail happened to her, , if she had simply been detained, say by some unforeseen accident, she i would have telephoned her mother , 1 to explain.” “Ah madame!” The Frenchman produced a most lannntablc groan "One’s heart aches for ymi--” “Nor is that all," Lanyard pursued. "My son. too. haj <l. -apptared He left tne shop here half an hour before noon, saying he had sonic as fair to sec to before luncheon. Noth ing has been heard c£ him since. I» is our fear that hotß yot ng necple have been made the victims of some scheme of vengeance plotted by such members of the Bellamy mob ar have thus far avoided arrest.” “But that puts another light on it!” Pion protested, all at once the sympathetic, grieving friend no more. “If Monsieur Maurice disappeared at the same time, and the two kept you in the dark as to then intentions—it is simply that they were thoughtless, as young people ' preoccupied with the romance of life are apt to be. When you know ■ the truth be sure you will forgive i them.” “ ‘The truth’?” Lanyard demand ed. “What is this that you are so unfeelingly declining to tell us?” “Shall I be a spoil-sport?” Pion ! expostulated. “But no. There is no | need. I have indeed called in an auspicious hour, my friends!" But nobody was listening to nini i now—for the door had unceremo I niously been thrown open, and Fen ' no herself was on the threshold— Fenno transfigured by drinking deep of the joy of life and its beauty —with Maurice showing a face happy over her shoulder. “Mother! What luck to find you here!” The girl fairly threw herself into her parent's arms. “W---were on our way home to tell you, and only stopped in for a minute to tell”—she looked round impishly to Lanyard and flung out a hand to him—“to tell Fatherl We’ve been out of town all day—such a divine day—motoring up to Connecticut to get married.” “Married!”' Fay Crozier gasped. “And we’re sailing tonight for a honeymoon to France. Say you forgive us and—bless us.” “It was that, you comprehend. Pion put in, “that brought me up here to tender my felicitations, Mme. Crozier, and you, monsieur, my friend! When I saw that the brida suite on the Navarre had been booked for Monsieur and Madame Maurice Lanyard, it was r natura, conclusion, surely, to one who ha seen what I had seen on the voyage over, that the bride would be Mademoiselle Fenno. And I had a happy inspiration,” he brightly prattieu on while Lanyard and Fay Crozier were recollecting their wits. “It seemed to me that a certain special wedding present to the bride was indicated, and I had the hope that I she might be gracious enough to permit me—” He conjured out of some recess ( in his garments a little box wrapped in fair white paper and bound with a white satin ribbon, and with a profound bow placed it in Fenno’s hand. “But, monsieur," she breathlessly protested, "this is too good of you!” “Not so good of me as it will be of you, madame, to accept.” “But how wonderful!” The ruby ring of the Rajah of Ladore blazed on the white velvet bed of the box that Fenno had opened. “But before you do me so much 1 honor, madame, let me tell you a secret.” Pion impishly chuckled. “That ring you see there was not come by honestly. That is the truth, madame. It is a souvenir of my first and last step aside from the ways of legal honesty. Yet I am sure your father-in-law will tell you. too. that you need not hesitate to take it from me—there could be no more fitting wedding present for the bride of the Lone Wolf’s son.” “Pardon, monsieur," Maurice interposed. “There is a small mistake there. Forgive me if I venture to correct you.” He crossed to his father and took his arm. “The L*ne Wolf’s son no more, monsieur—but M. Michael Lanyard’s.” THE END

1 Modesty Beach Belles’ Motto This t, 0 B-ac ; r • ■ kif I „ 'JI ft A I fl ’v mW Unlike last year’s comedy on Hollywood beaches when cops plied measuring tape on fair hathtns J /S if swim costumes were inside the law, the Summer of 1934 may go down in history as the w s . belles went conservative. New swim suits for milady are modest in the extreme. While all expanse of back, most are designed to achieve a total eclipse of the front. Above, | ( ft, blue knit baby pants with striped bandana bodice. In center, she poses in a heavy ribbed t atring belt At right, Toby Wing displays her favorite—a dark top with white t'oi Jtrs and

I what is I^^^gARDEN?! Vegetables Keep Best In Garden

■ A 'C- ' • . 3?- Wj fHE 6APWH IS THE > &EST Pl ACE TO KEEP ’ GATHER ONLY EHOUCH FOR YOUR DAILY USE. ! The garden is a better place to | keep vegetables fresh than the re-; frigerator. The economy of a gar-1 den is sei lorn considered from this I viewpoint but it is an important one. There is no waste from storage The vegetables are kept at j their best quality while growing. | They may get over-matured if left to long in the soil but they keep where they grow, and only a quantity sufficient for a meal need be gathered, leaving the rest to remain in tip top condition for another day an 1 another meal A garden saves a lot of room in ; the ice box and provides better | quality vegetables than can pos-; sibly ibe gathered from the refriger-1 ator or from the cold storage plant' of the grocery. Home-grown vegetables do not suffer as do market ■ supplies from wilt from being left ! in the sun and they are not passed through han is of whose cleanliness and sanitary conditions there is grave suspicion. Home-grown vegetables are cleanest, of best quality, and a real economy. Clean spinach for the baby is the incentive for many a garden start. The wilted and sand-laden greens often on sale at the green grocers cannot compare with the fresh, I crisp leaves that may be gathered J

t in the back yard patch from a nickel package of seed plus a little healthy exercise in the way of spading up space to plant it. But proper diet for the baby is no more important than proper diet for the n hilt and although it is usual ' io treat a baby with more cone kier ation than a grown tip when it I comes to food, there is no goo I rea- | 'son for doing so from a strictly | hygienic standpoint. Start a vegetable garden this i.vear as a measure of health and i I economy. .If it is no more than a !spinach pat h it is that much clear . 'gain. Tomatoes may follow the spin . Inch and two staples of the menu I [are provide 1 for the season. o WANTED—Gvo<I, clean, big Rags, suitable for cleaning machinery. Will pay 4c lb. Decatur Daily Democrat.

Public Auction I REAL ESI ATE I As I have purchased property in |)> lur andwlO there, t will sell at public auction to lie highest bife I out reserve, the following described r< d estate. M U the town of Monroe. Indiana, on SATURDAY, May 12th At 1:30 P. M. S room, (wo story house, *> rooms dm\n i er-. anilJj H upstairs; both kinds of water in lion-'. AreoliJ H plant; drove well; 2 big cisterns; ham. equipped 1,1,1 I age. The buildings are i.n a good stale "I repair; M I is very nicely arranged. A lot 00x132. hriibber' jm I ers: fruit trees; in fact an ideal home, and mtisl be* ■ ;be appreciated. It may he inspected am d<v piw ■ [sale. Will also sell a vacant lot. 00x132 adjoiningl] perty, an ideal building lot. Will give p<.session by I Will Sell the Following Household Goods I Oak dining room suite, table, bulb I and t> chaitSl I I glider swing, bought new last year. TERMS--1-2 cash, balance’a credit ol one .«* I jli’i interest. GROVER H. OLIVER. Ort I I Sold by Hoy S. .Johnson, auctioneer Decatur, Indiana.

I\ <»11 < t »i \\ i ’ R„ - - I”3 1 it;-! BHaVCT iH*’ 1 • ad. Byou ft ■BjwS -.id F |he*!d Get — FARR-WAY * leaning ilfcuM St li- II \ h «, ' TOP ' OATS | u ■».v . See me far l AbdracU French Scliirimaer Notice! I a C j Phone Bls tv- C ■ A-tificial P'ompt de!ivertfl ED. u