Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 187, Decatur, Adams County, 7 August 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

CLASSIFIED i ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, ’ AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE Fordson tractor, Oliver plows, first class shape. Work Irorse. Henry Artspattgh, Decatur, R, ft, 3, 188-31* FOR SALE — Elberta Peaches Wednesday and 'fhnrsttay morning, Aug. 8 and 9. Texaco Service station. Preble; C. S. Bryan, Kirkland township; Lloyd* Bryan. Monmouth; W. L. Gnnder by Defit School. Prices reasonable. tS72tx

FOR SALE-(Peaches. U. S. Mo. 1, 2 Inch. Call 7-N, Monroe, Coppe.-w Filling stat FOR SALE Pears. Hugo Thieme, 1197-0. 6% miles northeast of Decatur. DG-g3t FOR SAILE' 5 hrood sows, priced to sell. Will farrow in August. Orel Gillium, 6 miles west and 1 mile south of Monroe. 187-g3tx FOR SALE Burroughs Adding machine; Used Detroit Jewel gas range; New Occasional Tables and Occassional Rocker. Reasonably priced. E. A. Beavers, phone 403. 187t3x WANTED WANTED—Giri for general housework. Three adults in family. Box EAG. 185 k.'.tx WANTED — .Mother with small boy' wants work in motherless home. Address, Mrs. Flossie Wolfe, % W. H. Newton. Portland. In.l. It. It. t. lX7a2lx MALE HELP WANTED I WANT 3 MEN for local Tea * Coffee Routes paying up to S6O a week. No capital or experience required but must be willing to give prompt setvicO to approx. 200 steady consumers. Brand-new Fords given as bonus. Write Albert Mills. Route -Mgr., 6558 .Monmouth, Cincinnati, O. Itx

HIGH SCHOOL GRIAfDUATHS Liam Radio 'Engineering, the mowt outstanding and promising profession; taught thoroughly in nine months. (School established 1874. AU expenses low; some earn part. Catalog free. Dodge's Institute, Monroe St., Valparaiso, Ind. is>;-.ie'\ For RADIO or ELECTRICAL repairs call MARCELLUS MILLER phone 625. I specialize in auto radio installation and repairs. Miller Radio Service, 226 No. 7th st. 172tf FOR RENT FOR RENT—A 5 room furnished modern flat. Private entrance. Steam heat furnished. 4’3 Mercer avenin . Phone 79. 187-g3t R PLAY SAFE! Ma Ride on a set of new Bfi Inner Tubes. & ENGLAND’S 0 AC T 0 PAR T S Ist Door So. of Court House W Phone 282 Long Police Record Kansas City. Mo.—(U.R>—The police record of Harry Goldberg, 67, alleged by police to be a pickpocket of international notoriety, covers three pieces of legal sized paper, single spaced on a typewriter. Goldberg was arrested here recently during the International convention of the Elks' lodge. 0 tPi’OivrwHvr of e\i;< i ions Notice is hereby given. That the underpinned Have Ireen appointed Fxecutor and Executrix of the Estate of Mary Terveer late of Adams County, deceased. The Estate is probably solvent. Bernard T. Terveer and Mary Terveer ExeOutbr and EXeOutrfx July IS. 1934. August 7-11-21 O — Get the Habit —- Trade at Home MAG W&I.6AN "Wttf-CUAriNI THAT BtVoSti MAITh TOCLOTMIJSheets Bros. Cleaners N. 2nd st. Phone 359 M-O-N-E-Y To Loan On Furniture, Automobiles, Livestock, Etc. Any Amount up to S3OO Small Weekly or Monthly Payments to Suit Your Income. Special Plan For Farmers. AUTOS REFINANCED on (Smaller Payments. Extra Money if Desired. Loans made in a quick and confidential manner. Call, phone or write us lor details. Franklin Security Company Decatur. Indiana Phone 237.

MARKETREPORTS DAILY report of local AND FOREIGN MARKETS LOCAL MARKET Decatur Berne Crainville Hoagland Cdfreeted Angitst 6 No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday. 160 to 200 lbs. $4.88 LOO to 250 n>B $4.96 250 to 300 n>s $5.00 300 to .'<so lbs $4.85 140 to 160 IBs $3.76 120 to 140 tbs $3.00 100 to 130 fbs $2.50 Roughs $3.00 Stags $1.50 Venters $5.75 Ewe anti wether lambs $6.00

EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK Effat Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. 'U.PJ —Livestock: Hogs, receipts, 400; strong to 10c higher, quality considered; better lots, 160-240 lbs., with end of medium quality, $5,535 to mostly $5.45; selections quoted to $5.60; medium to good. 130-180 lbs., $4.25-$4.50. Cattle, receipts, 50; all classes and grades quoted unchanged. Calves, receipts, 25; vealers strong; good to choice, $6.50; common and medium. $4.50-$6. Sheep, receipts, 100; lambs firm; good to near choice. $7.56; common and medium, $5.50-$6.75; inferior throwouts, $5 and below. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Sept. Dec. MayWheat, old $1.08% $1.10% $1.13% Wheat, new 1.68% 1.10% Corn 74% .78% .82% Oats, old 49% .51 .53% Oats, new 49% .51 FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Aug. 7. —<U.R) — Livestock: Hogs steady to 5c loWer; 250300 ihs., $5.25: 200-250 lbs., $5.10; 180-200 Ihs., $4.95; 160-180 lbs.. $4.80; 300-350 lbs.. $1.95; 150-160 lbs., $4; 140-150 lbs., $3.75: 130-140 lbs.. $3.40; 120-130 lbs., $2.90: 100120 lbs., $2.60; roughs, $3.75; stags, $2. Calves, $6; lambs, $6.75. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected August 6

No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or ■better 98c No. 2 New Wheat (58 lbs.) 92c fats, 30 »>. test . He White or mixed corn 9"c First class yellow corn 95c Wool 20 to 25c o, . 11th Century Mill to Close Ixmdon.—(U.R)L—An 11th centnry flour mill, dating back to 1086, will ’close when the venerable mill loses its workers and milling to new works at Victoria Docks. At one time the property of the ancient Syon Monastery, the mill has passed through many an illustrious hand, including that of Henry VIII, who. after he dispersed the monastery, gave it to the ancestors of the Duke of Northumberland. . o Ohio Corn 11 Feet High Ashtabula. O — 'U.R)~"Knee high by the Fourth of July.” This old axiom is fardTliar to farmers, who consider that corn is normal if it reaches to the knees by that day. But corn growing on the D. L. Davis farm east of here has shattered alt records for corn hereabouts. One stalk on the Davis farm reached a height of 11 feet.

See me for Federal Loans and Abstracts of Title. French Quinn. Schirmeyer Abstract Co. A Rich Milk Food. Approved by Good Housekeeping N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glassei Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30' 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135. NOTICE S ERWAVB ... 20c Finger Wave, Dried 30c Shampoo and Finger Wave, dried _ 50c Manfclrre . . .... 50c Shampoo, Finger Wave AO Manicure and Arch ._ 'l.vv COZY BEAUTY Shop Room 5 K. of C. Bldg, 266

FUNERAL RITES HELD TODAY FOR VON HINDENBURG (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Austrians and Hungarians who died in the world war. Hindenburgs funeral wfis rfiarked hy tlie boom of 101 guns, whlen is the traditional death salute to

by JOAN CLAYTON and MALCOLM LOGAN ~

CHAPTER XXXVI I listened dazedly as the sheriff called Birch Cottage, to which James Ruxton had moved. I heard him repeat to Ruxton the damning indictment Mark had recited. I could imagine easily enough the banker's incredulous, then fearful, protests. If Loren were convicted, I thought, James Ruxton would not want to live. When the sheriff had hung up, he said, “He asked me to wait here a few minutes until he can get dressed and come up.” Mark nodded. He stared at the ceiling, as if his mind were far away. Then abruptly he sat up. “Don’t wait for him!” he cried. The sheriff stared at him. “Go down to his cottage!” Mark said frantically. “If yon want to save his life, get right down there!” "What do you mean?” Finn demanded. “For heaven’s sake, don’t argue,” Mark cried. "Oh, Lord, if I had a pair of legs! Leave Ixiren with John, and get right down there.” His conviction was so compelling that I started from the room. As I opened the door Loren cursed Mark and leaped at him. John Calvert caught his arms. I ran down the

corridor, the sheriff after me. In the hot sunshine, we panted across the lawn to Birch Cottage. When we opened the door of his room, James Ruxton was sitting at his desk, in pajamas and a dressing gown, writing. He we burst in. His face was ghastly. He ' seized a revolver on the leaf of the : desk. i Finn’s lunge carried him across 1 the room, crashing into Ruxton’s 1 chair. The two men fell to the floor I and the revolver went spinning 1 against the wall. Running after < them, I looked at the sheet of paper < on the desk. On it Ruxton had writ- < ten: j “I, James Ruxton, killed Seifert 1 Vail. I did it to save the life of my 1 nephew, Loren, for Vail would most 1 certainly have killed him had he 1 learned—” •• • i

“I must be developing a conscience,” Mark said. ‘‘l’m still feeling mean about the trick I played on Loren. But I had to do it. The only way I could reach Ruxton was through that boy who meant more to him than anything else in the world.” He lay baek on his pillows, watching the sun go down behind the mountains. Supper was over, and it was growing cool on the poreh where Sue, John Calvert, the sheriff and I sat with him. A robin was singing its evening song; for the first time since Seifert Vail was killed, the end of day brought rest and tranquility. James Ruxton was in the county jail at Cold Valley. He had dictated and signed a complete confession. “There’s a lot of things I want to know,” Finn said. “The first one is how you knew Loren was the fellow who stole Vail’s wife.” “The day after the murder,” Mark answered, “I learned that Loren spoke Spanish, and I tried mine out on him. He told me he picked up the language in Cuba, but he used two words that you never hear outside of Catalonia. Ho called Felipa ‘una hembra formidable,’ meaning a young lady who is a compendium of all the feminine virtues. A Cuban would have said ‘eontundente’ never ‘formidable’; and Loren used the Catalan slang word ‘noy’ meaning ‘fellow’ or ‘old boy.’ Obviously, he was trying to conceal the fact that he had lived in Catalonia. “When the Montague woman told us that Francine Vail and her lover had run off to Barcelona, I knew why. Os course, long before that I’d been suspicious of his uncle.” "But why did you suspect him?” Sue asked. “It still seems unbelievable to me that a man like Mr. Ruxton could commit two such terrible murders.” “Perhaps if he hadn't been a sick man, he wouldn’t have been a murderer,” John Calvert said. “You’re almost as smart as I am,” Mark said. “James Ruxton isn’t legally insane, but acute melancholia darkens his whole outlook on life. The one thing he wanted to do before he died was to assure Loren’s happiness.” He turned to the sheriff. “When I talked you into arresting Loren, for which I hope you'll pardon me—” “Top didn't fool me,” Finn broke ’ii. “I had a pretty good idea what you nc;e up tq.” We ail laughed, and he turned on us resentfully.

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING-“THE HOME GUARD” gy SEGA r ¥hAl U is" VNNPiPPVE.\ A ,X |> itch i 'X lio£'RE\ z iijuirc —XT “ — ihp Muvri B'lktiotVMßE, I'M) / < i Round up our. going ' ( CaT <1 C> a <“> GOING TO SEND MV ARMV7 ANO GO CONQuFftTUr . yj, TOI '"X I '-’A/A(tF S < ' -*zA Tj \ \ » TO NORTHERN NAHMA < ( BORROW SOME) _ .JWCOWERW CONQUER \\ I X \_\_ V UDITtWOO-H€ MUST/ ] HONE'/ ~ I®, ,(?~A <? THE uJu^ E \\ ( J/OOAJ/ k \ ' WW ’’tefc f> \ i Wot L . -r^-a-'’* c,a.,-.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. AUG ISI 7,193 L

1 n PritMl.in king. If Was (he first i time since 1888 that it had been accorded to anyone in Prussia. i The funeral was the most bril- ; liant military spectacle in Ger- , many Since the war, recalling vlv- ) idly the fatherland's pre-war military splendor. - i Uniforms ruled Supreme, Wuti numbering civilian aftfre 20 to 1 > in the wide, octagonal interior of

“Now. Mr. Finn!” Sue said. His frown became a sheepish, embarassed grin. “Ail right, al right,” he grumbled. “If you think I was fooled, let it go at that-.? “When I accused Loren,” Mark went’ on, "I attributed to him all the fears that drove his uncle to murder Vail. James Ruxton learned who Seifert Vail was, and undoubtedly he tried to persuade Loren to stop visiting him. But Loren had met Sue, and he couldn’t stay away. “James Ruxton’s greatest desire, then, was to see him married and safely away. Undoubtedly Loren would have been in real danger if Vail discovered who he was. James Ruxton’s morbid imagination exaggerated that danger until it became a fear that haunted him always. “He became obsessed by the Idea that there was disaster ahead and that he might have to kill Vail to save Loren. And, because he was a cautious, far-seeing man, he prepared for that unhappy possibility. When Vail asked him to exchange rooms, Ruxton learned from him that he was expecting a visit from his wife. To James Ruxton, there seemed nothing to do but to carry out that long-planned murder.”

“You haven’t answered Sue’s question, Mark,” Dr. Calvert said. “All that is quite clear now, but why did you first suspect Ruxton?” “There were several things. The first was a cold in the chest.” He grinned at our amazement. ‘‘A few days after Joe Barker was found drowned, it was discovered that Ruxton had been trying to conceal the fact that he had caught cold. His explanation was that he had an engagement to go out to dinner with Sue and Loren, and he didn’t want to miss it.” He looked quizzically at his useless legs. “I can quite understand what a rare privilege that would be for anyone here—to get out of the sanatorium for an evening—but it seemed to me that to a man as careful as Ruxton, health would come first. “It was apparent by that time that Joe had neither drowned accidentally nor committed suicide. He had been murdered. It seemed to be a singularly cold-blooded and unnecessary crime. Why would anyone want to kill Joe? Only to make it appear that Joe was guilty and had committed suicide, to close the investigation and get rid of the sheriff. But we were getting nowhere, and no one except a man harassed by unreasonable fears, an over-cautious man, would have done such a thing. “It was not difficult for Ruxton to speak to Joe during the one day the gardener was at liberty and to persuade him that Felipa had drowned herself in the lake because she had killed Vail. Poor, simpleminded Joe, believing him, trusting him, sneaked out of his room, got the grappling hook from the tool shed and went out at night to help Ruxton drag the lake.” “Ruxton simply pushed him overboard, trusting in the grappling hook to pull him down. But Joe upset his calculations by clutching at the boat, and Ruxton had to break his finger to beat him off. During that grim adventure, Ruxtan became chilled and caught cold. Then, being too careful again, he tried to conceal it for fear someone would leap to the improbable conclusion that he had caught it drowning Joe.” We were silent for a minute and then I asked, “Was that all the proof you had, Mark?” “Oh, no,” he said. “I found plenty more when I began to consider Ruxton as a possibility.” He lit a cigarette. “The most logical suspects, of course, were the surviving patients in Lakeside Cottage. Cross was too afraid of hurting his precious heart to commit a murder, much as he hated Vail. Clendening lacked the courage. Only Ruxton seemed to me to combine the intelligence, physical capacity, strength of will and especially the caution of the murderer. "It was evident that the murderer was a patient, confined to the sanatorium grounds but able to move around freely during exercise periods, as Ruxton was. The proof of that was the murderer’s taste in weapons. A pair of hedge shears! What a clumsy, ridiculous instrument of murder! If they hadn’t been found with the gardener’s overalls, they wonk) have seemed completely fantastic. How much easier for the murderer to conceal a knife under the overalls. Obviously the author of the crime had to build it out of such materials as be could find here.”

the fortress Ilko battle memorial. To the field grey uniform <>f the reichswehr or regular army were added the green of Hermann Wilhelm Goering's special police, the black of Hitter's bodyguard, and the blue of a company of marines. The grandstands weYe pitched with remedaled generals in the uniform of the old Imperial army

He turned to John Calvert with a smile. “That eliminated you, with a hundred nice, sharp surgeon’s knives to choose from, and Loren, who could easily have gone to New York and picked up a better weapon. Os course, the two of you complicated the case as much as you could, but I’ll forgive you for that.” “Stupid of me,” John Calvert said. ‘‘l should have had as much confidence in your intelligence as you have.” “Strangely enough," Mark went on, "Clendcning, with his childish idea that there was some code message in the words of ‘Waiting For You,’ with his everlasting nosiness, helped to pin the murder on Ruxton. The day he dropped dead from excitement, he found outside the cottage the button which was missing from the overalls. Did Ruxton tell you where he put the overalls after the murder?” Finn nodded. "He went back around the house, peeled them off, shoved them under the porch and then climbed back through his window. That night he dropped them in the lake.” “The fact that the button was found so near the cottage pointed again to someone who lived there. If the murderer had been from any other part of the sanatorium, he wouldn’t have taken off his disguise and walked home in plain sight without it.”

“Ruxton realized that, and again he tried to be too careful. He insisted that someone had attacked Clendening, or at least frightened him. He said that because, for once, he had an alibi. Cross had been in the room with him when Clendening died. “There was one final thing. If, as I believed, the murder had some connection with the visit Vail expected and with the phonograph record that was playing when he was found, then Ruxton had to be the murderer—for he was admittedly the only person who knew why Vail asked to change rooms with him.

“Once we found the Montague woman and established Loren’s connection with Vail, it was perfectly clear, but I had to frame Loren so that you. sheriff, believed the story. It sounded plausible enough, and you and his own fears convinced Ruxton. He saw everything falling to pieces. He had killed to save Loren, and now Loren himself was accused, and there seemed to be a damnably complete circumstantial case against him. There was nothing for Ruxton to do, loving the boy as he did, but write a confession and kill himself while wc waited for him in my room. “When I told of the attempt on my life, Loren realized what I was doing.. Did you see the look of horror on his face? He had told his uncle that Bob was going to the city, and when I accused him, he knew that his uncle was a murderer.”

Finn stood up. “Well,” he said, “I’m glad we got a confession. I’d hate to have to go to court without one.” He pulled a cigar from his pocket and reflectively bit off the end. “I promised the reporters s story, and now I got it.” “Don’t use my name!” Mark said. “What? You lie here on your back and solve a murder and don’t want any credit for it?” Mark grinned. “And nave reporters bothering me for a month? No, that grief goes with your job. The credit’s ail yours. I hope it gets you into the Assembly.” Finn squeezed Mark’s hand. He said warmly, “If I’m elected and you ever need anything, you know where to come!”

John and Sue arose as the sheriff left. “It’s my turn to thank you now," the doctor said. “Mark, I—” “I’ll let Sue thank me for both of you,” Mark said. “Come here, sweetheart, and give us one last kiss.” She walked to him proudly and put her arms around him. When she straightened up, Mark -.aid gayly, “I get another at the wedding, don’t I? John, you big oaf, the moon’s risen. Take Sue for a walk. You’ve got a lot of time to make up.” When they had gone, I said, “Your murder mystery’s over, and your nurse is going to marry the doctor. Where does that leave you?” “Right in bed where I started,” Mark said. He leaned toward me, and his eyes were gleaming. “I’ve got a wow of an idea for my next play, Bob. Listen . THE END Copyrijht. 1 hy Joan Clayton and Mslcnlm LofftD I Distributed by Kin* Feature* RVmhceie Inc

<ovoral of them as oM as th ■ deceased field marshal us well w many from European armies, such as red-coated Britishers and Austrians in blue. Gold-braid'* diplomas also wore much In evidence. t Amid the military splendor stood the coffin of the dead president, concealed by a German black and while lion cross ami flags, and crowded hy Hindenburg’s spiked helmet. Fifteen feel away, conspicuous by contrast with the splendor surroundng him, sat Hitler, Hindenburg's successor. His hands were folded In his lap and he sat slightly hunched forward with his| Lead bent, a most unmilitary figure. I —-o— — * Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these ten question*? Turn to page Four for the antwera. •a — ♦ 1. Name the fifth book In the New Testament. 2. Who was the Socialist candidate for President in 1932? 3. Where is the Tadjoiira river? 4. What is a semester? 5. Where was John Brown hanged? 6. Where is Al Capone serving his prison sentence? 7. What is the basic salary of the Vice-President of the United States? 8. What President was nicknamed “Old Rough and Ready?” 9. What body of water encircles the North Pole? 10. Did the U. S. go off the gold standard during the World War? o Many Reunions Scheduled For Summer Months

Sunday, August 12 Eighteenth annual reunion of Hntker family, Lake Side Park. Fort Wayne. Feasel-Ruby reunion, Legion Me-, morial Park. Martz reunion, Lehman park, Herne. Dailey reunion, Lehman Park, Berne. Annual reunion of Durbin family Legion Memorial Park. Tumbleson reunion. Legion Memorial Park, Decatur. Hitchcock reunion, Cora B. Miller home on the state line. Rettig and Reohtn, Sunset Park. Beinz family reunion. Sunset park, east of Decatur. Steele reunion, Sunset p?'k, rain or shine. Dellinger family reunion, Sunset Park. Sunday, August 19 Nineteenth annual reunion of Leimenstall-Martin families, Mrs. George Martin home, I’/a miles south of Peterson. Brentlinger reunion, Legion Memorial Park, Decatur. The Crist reunion will be held Fort Wayne. Suringer Brandyberry reunion, J. N. Bunkhead home Vfe miles west of Monroe. McGill reunion, Sunset Park, near Decatur, rain or shine. Butler family reunion, Sunset Park, Decatur. Smith reunion, Sunset park, rain or shine. Sunday August 26 (Fifteenth annual Davison reunion, Clem Gibson home, 1 mile west of Kingsland. Seventh annual Johnson family reunion, Legion Memorial Park, Decatur. Hakes reunion, Sunset Park, east of Decatur. Droll family reunion. Sunset Park.

Schnepp and Manley reunion, Sunday, September 2 Urick reunion, Sunset Park. Sunset Parti, rain or shine. Kelly reifnion, Laird grove, south of Convoy, Ohio. Monday, Labor Day, Sept. 3 Sixteenth annual Stalter reunion Legion Memotial Park, Decatur. Lehhart reunion, Sunset park, Decatur. Harper family reunion, Suuset Park. Sunday, September 9 Bowman family reunion. Sunset Park, Decatur. ■ -a NOTICE—Cider Mill at Wren is now in operation four days a week. 187k4t;<

Finds Rabbit’s Foot inCoaciTß iUHLMitrv •» bk & Jw >• * Iff ■ScL. f ' « ||W 21 ®F J Determined to do everything within his power to win one cf mH 24 urtiversity scholarships being offered as awards in the 1934 jBody Craftsman’s Guild competition, the youthful builder of this ture Napoleonic coach placed a rabbit’s foot inside. Walter ner. formerly the head of a family-owned concern that began state carriages for European monarchs during the reign of Wilhelm HI of Prussia and the designer of the coach that tnousa-djjH boys in the United States and Canada have reproduced for entry in competition, discovered the appeal to Lady Luck when the model placed before the judges at work in the General Motors building at iH Century of Progress Exposition. He is shown here holding the above the coach in which it was found. Winners of the $51,000 in versity scholarships being offered will be announced in Chicago day, Aug. 22.

PUBLIC SALE 53— Acre Fann —53 Will be sold to the highest bidder without reserve, sale e* i premises. 1 mile north, 6 mffCs east of Bluffton, hid., 11 miles sm west of Decatur. Ind.. 1 mile west of Honduras, oil TUESDAY, August 14,1934 At 1:00 o'clock P. M. 53 acres of level black high productive soil, one of the best fan in Adams county. The corn prop on this farm Is proof of the fertin < f the soil. The house. 7 tootns. electric lights. Large barn, machi shed, corn crib, all necessary ontbnhdfngs, good orchard. The lawl welt drained, the fences are fair, with a little painting ami r. pair s lie made one of the most desirable farms in the country. Located m Kirkland high sehoool. near churches, and markets, on a good Now is the time to buy farm land before prices begin to ri This is your opportunity to secure an ideal home, nu.ke a sate inve meat and provide an income for life. TERMS $500.00 cash day of sale, suitable terms can be arrani on the balance. For further information write Fred Reppert, Poop Loan & Trust Bldg., Decatur. Ind. HUGH ANDREWS, Owner MONROE, IND. Sold by National Realty Auction Co. Fred Reppert and Roy 8. Johnson, auctioneers J’ecatur, Ind. We get the buyer and seller together.

PUBLIC SALE REAL ESTATE I will sell to the highest bidder the following descrito real estate: sale on the premises, at 216 South Ith st.. Deca tur. Ind.. MONDAY, August 13th at «:30 C. M. Scmi-niodern home, 8 rooms and bath; small cd-ai cement hiock foundation. Large cistern. House in repair, new paint and roof. Good barn equipped for garagi Large lot, 66x132 ft. One of the finest locations in Decatur. Don’t merlw this opportunity. Property can be inspected any day. Teirtts 1-3 cash, balance in ‘.MI days. „ , u J. D. DAILEY, Owner noy Johnson, and.