Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 253, Decatur, Adams County, 24 October 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR BALK—Eleven ewes. Inquire of ('lojje Beam. MHe north un.l mile antohalf east of Monroe. , 251k3tx FOR AAi*E or TRADE—I 927 Pontiac rmdster in goal condition. Will talffi' motorcycle in trade. Ed ♦word Game. Northeast of Decatur by Dent Jchool. 251-g3tx FOR SAKE —17 buck sheep. Ken- * neth Mtfchell, route 5. Decatur. • 253-g3t -NEW CATALOG FREE! Ulua- * trates and describes 285 desirable farms in Indiana and Ohio; *all sizes. Low prices, easy terms 55 to 33 —year mortgages. (No ■ trades). Write today! First Joint ’Stock Land Bank, Fort Wayne, -FOR SALE — 2 Holstein cows, fresh in Feo., also one 1-horse -wagon, and coal oil cook stove, *-good as new. Fred Steigmeyet, R •R. No. 5. 251a3tx ■ ■ J.TOR SALE—Special bargains in ‘ new fiumiture. Three piece velour giving room suites $48.50. eight piece •■dining room suites $65.50, four piece Jjred room suites $38.50. Studio Vouches $22.50. Four p ster beds 558.50. iron beds $6.00. Mattresses *46.95. Bed springs $3.00. New play»r pianosslso.oo. Many bargains in -used furfltture and pianos. Sprague Furniture Co., 152 South Second ..Street. Phone 199. 252-k3t 'FOR SALE —Good heating stove. • i' stove board and pipe, used 3 gShop. 251t3 PLAYER PIANO BARGAIN—FinaI .. Notice! Must be sold at once or reshipped to factory. This tine 4>iano located near you can be had Tor small balance due on same of only S3B 10. Reliable party just continue payments of $lO monthly. AVrite immediately Elmer G. Nettsow. adjustor, 5078 N. Cumberland Wlvd., Milwaukee. Wis., who will Julvise where piano may be seen. I Itx ’TOR SALE —Model T Ford sedan is in good condition. Cheap. Roy Johnson, phones 104 and 1022. 251a3t . “——— l 11 ————-—— IFOR SALE —Cabbage. priced right. * Mrs. John Durr, Decatur, route 6. * - 251-at TFOR SALE—Fifty white and barrg ed rock pullets. Daniel Stepler. •;One mile south of Peterson. 251k3tx ____________________ -FOR-SALE — Good hand picked * apple*— 65c per bu. and some ipears. Call Wm. Bleeke. phone ,694-H. 251t3x TOR -SALE—Heating stoves, kitchV en cabinets, dressers, breakfast Skets. beds, rocking chairs, kitchen jfhaira, tables, chest of drawers, oil «tovos. and many other bargains in Stsed furniture. We buy. sell, or (trader Daniels Second Hand Store. 253-3tx "■" • 1 ' IpOR-SALE — Stevens repeating * rifle, muzzle loading shot gun. Child* coaster wagon, dishes of all {finds, au*eral good laundry stoves, ’used tires and auto glass. Daniels Second Hand Store. 253-3tx FOR SALE—We have a few used sewing machines at reasonable Can be seen at Vitz Gift jjshoppe. Repair work and supplies. JPhone 925. 251-g3t RUG AND LINOLEUM SALE IT# reduc'd our large stock of linoleum, and congoleum rugs before —winter, we now offer the following rugs, etc., at special low 'Compare our prices anywhere. .They're lower. V9xl2 ft. or 9xlo ft., 6 medium ± weight rugs _... $5.45 “9x12 ft. or 9xlo ft. 6 Heavy t weight—rugs ... $6.95 Wx9 ft. Congoleum Rugs $3.25 *7.6x9 ft. Congoleum Rugs $3.75 only Armstrong* Heavy Rugs g size 11.3x15 ft., each $12.75 fl only Armstrong Felt Rug J 11.3x12 ft., each ... $8.95 p'xl2 ft Inlaid Linoflor Rugs * each ........ $14.95 Sl2 ft. wide Genuine Printed 5 Linoleum, per ft. $1.35 79 ft. wide Heavy Weight J Congoleum, per ft. 60c ft. wide Heavy Weight ’ Congoleum, per ft. 40c g 6 ft. wide Genuine Printed * Linoleum, per ft 60c -Rug Cushions, size 9x12, All • Hair, Mothproof, edges taped. Only 7 cushions left, buy now. each $3.98 ’9xl2 "waffle top" Rug cushions, mothproof, each $4.95 < 9xlß in. Rubber Stair Treads. ; curve nosing edge, each 12c §<Flbr6 Window Shades (no rollL ers) 36x6 ft., green or tan. £ ouch . ... yCloth Window Shades with ' rollers, 36x6 ft., green or tan. each 45c rmall Congoleum Mats, size 4 14x27. each 8c NIBLICK & CO. n 0 Get the Habit — Trade at Home

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS LOCAL MARKET Decatur Berne Cralgville Hoagland 'Corrected October 24 No commission and no yardage. * Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday. 250 to 300 lbs $5.15 200 to 250 lbs $5.05 160 to 200 lbs $4.80 300 to 350 lbs $4.80 140 to 160 lbs $3.?0 120 to 140 Ih* $2.85 100 to 120 lbs — $2.60 Roughs $4.25 Stage $2.00 down Vealers $7.00 Ewe and wether lambs $5.75 Buck lambs $4.75 CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Dec. May July Wheat, old 98 new 98 Corn, old 75% 77 77% new * 75 Oats, old 50% 47% 43 new . 50% Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs 35c lower; 250-300 tbs. $5.25 : 200-250 lbs. $5.10; 180-200 lbs. $5; 160-180 lbs. $4.85; 300459 lbs. $5; 150-169 lbs. $4.45; 140-150 lbs. $4.15; 130-140 lbs. $3.65; 120130 lbs. $3.15; 100-120 lbs. $2.65; roughs $4.25; stags $2.50. Calves $7.50; lambs $6.25. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y., Oct. 24 — (UP) — Livestock: Hogs receipts 1600; Holdovers 120; draggy unsold; scattered sales weights above 190 lbs. steady; most bids around 10c lower, few loads desirable 215230 lbs. $6.15-$640; 170-190 lbs. $5.-65-$6, 120 lbs. $3.85; picking sows $5.-$545. ’ 'Cattle receipts commercial 500; grass steers and heivers dull, steady, common kinds $3.50-$4.25; low cutter ami cutter cows sl.-$2.25 Calves receipts commercial 150; vealers unchanged $8 down. Sheeip receipts 600: Lamb trade at standstill; holding ewes an! wethers at $7; bidding $6.75; generally; scattered lots medium kinds sold $6.

LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected October 24 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or bettatim* , 87c No. 2 NWw Wheat (58 lbs.) 8«c Oats. 32 lbs. test _ 49c Oats. 30 lbs. test 48c Soy Beans, bushel SSc-TSc White or mixed corn 9Cc First Class Yellow Corn $1.02 o . WANTED WANTED—Housekeeper, more for home than wages. Inquire Mrs. Dora Merica, 944 High st. 251g3tx MAN WANTED -Get into the oil business without investment. Make immediate, stea'iy income — $25 to SSO weekly, taking erd-re for nati. nally known line of Super-Re-fined Motor Oils on easy credit terms from farmers, auto and truck owners. We deliver anti collect. Everything furnished. No experience necessary. Write P. T. Webster, Gen. Mgr. 6300 Standard. alt! Oct 24 GOVERNMENT WORK—this state. Washington. Open to Men-wo-men, sound health, age 18-50. Free particulars about examinations, write Civil Service Training Bureau, inc., Box B. care Democrat. MALE HELP WANTED — Man wanted to supply customers with famous Watkins Products in Decatur. Business established, earnings average $25 weekly, pay starts immediately. Write J. R Watkins Company, 250-76 North sth St, Columbus. Ohio. Itx WANTED — For expert radio and electrical repairs call Marcellus Miller, phone 625. Member Radio Manufacturers Service. Miller Radio Service, 226 N. 7th st. 251tf WANTED —Girl to learn complete line of Beauty Culture. For full details write Box B. C„ care of this paper. 251t3 o LOST AND FOUND LOST 32x6 U.S. Royal Cord truck tire on U. S. 27. Reward. Edwin Kleine, route 1, Decatur. 251g3tx STRAYED —Brown home, got out of pasture. Any ne seeing him notify C. H. iHarvey, Monroe. Reward. 251g3tx I TRUCK TIRES and TUBES All Sixes—Lowest Prices. Porter Tire Co. Di st. 341 Winchester st. Phone 1289.

Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of theee ten quseHsna? Turn to page Four for the answer*. « • 1. What river forms the tu unitary between Maryland on the north and east, and W st Virginia an 1 Virginia on the south and west? 2. In what country is the State

(ftURL in the FAMILY* * BY BEATR-ICE BUR-TON ♦

CHAPTER XXV in the three weeks she had known Allen he had changed everything in Susan's life, giving point and meaning to everything she did. Even these days of dullness and hard work were bringing her closer to the time when she could marry him and settle down to the real business of life, and the joy of it... “Marry and settle down.” The worn phrase sounded matter-of-fact ana dull enough, but all the enchantment and romance of the whole world were bound up in it for Susan whenever she thought of herself and Allen standing before a minister or going house-hunting — and she thought of very little else as she ran her hot iron over the old linen tablecloths and sheets or scraped gravy from the bottom of the roasting pan. She dressed herself with a sort of electric interest now, knowing that Allen’s eyes would rest on the whiteness of her organdy collars and cuffs, the little tie of dove-col-ored silk that matched her eyes, the gloss that a hundred strokes of the brush had given to her hair. On Wednesday night Allen stayed downtown for his law classes, but on Thursday night when Susan was getting dinner she heard him come in. She had the kitchen door open so that she could listen for him, and when she heard the sound of his key turning in the lock she went softly down the rear hall to the side door. The electric light that hung there above the steps had burned out a few days before and she stood waiting for him in half darkness. As he came up the steps she put out her hands and laid them on the rough cloth shoulders of his coat. “Dearest.” The little word came easily and naturally to her as if she had been saying it to Allen for years. She had never been shy with him as she always had been with Wallace. even after she became engaged to him. “Susan . ■ . Susan.” He took her in his arms and Susan leaned back ip them tilting her face for his kiss. “Susan, just think, some night PH be coming home this way to our house, and you’ll be waiting for me—” Then his arms slackened and he drew away from her. listening. A door closed somewhere in the front part of the house and footsteps came down the hall. Slow, heavy, shuffling footsteps. Uncle Worthy in his house slippers. Allen glanced toward the door that led to the front hall. The footsteps came very close, then stopped and the door of Uncle Worthy’s studv opened and closed. Susan breathed a long sigh of relief. “Savedl” she whispered and let out a little laugh that was hardly more than a breath. Allen shook his head. “I can’t say that I care so much for this hole-and-corner stuff,” he said flatly. “The sooner they know about you and me the better pleased I’ll be.” “What do you mean?” Susan s eyes were largo and questioning in the dimness of the cold little entry way. “I mean this —that the last thing in the world that two people ought to be underhanded about is their love.” he said, opening the door that led to the front hall. “If they have to sneak and lie about it—” He snapped his lingers as if he wanted to show he' just how worthless that sort of love was in his opinion, and went up the front staircase to his own room.

Back in the glare of the kitchen Susan thought over what he had said as she turned the veal chops in their sizzling pan and turned down the gas under the coffee pot. . . He was right about love, of course. It ought to be honest and unafraid. Like sunshine, for the whole world to look at. . . . And she supposed it did make him feel degraded to make love to her there in the kitchen hallway, like Herbst with Anna, while Wallace came to the front door and wa. received as an honored guest of the house. . . . Well, she would get everything straightened out as soon as possible. The door from the pantry swung opt-n and Uncle Worthy popped his head into the kitchen. “Didn’t I hear you talking to someone out here, Susan?” Sbe shook her own head. “There hasn’t been a soul but me in the k't.chen for at least an hour.” she said. It was the truth and yet it was not the truth. She knew that she ought to say, “I was just talking to Mr. Sholes in the entry way. Uncle Worthy.”

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” DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 24, 1934.

of Sonora? 3. Who wrote the poem, "The Ancient Mariner"? 4. Natne the founder of the Jeuult Order. 6. Who wi« James Henry Hackett? 6 What Is s. mnambolLsni? 7. On what river Is Poughkeepsie, N. Y. situated? 8. Who is EJna Ferber? 9. Where are the Andaman Is-

And she hated herself for not saying it. But how, she asked herself as he drew his head back from 1 the doorway like a turtle retreating into its shell, could she tell the whole truth to Uncle Worthy? If he once got it into his brain that she and Allen knew each other well, he would watch them like a hawk; and he was quite capable of ordering him out of the house if he learned what the real state of affairs between them was. . . . No, she was going to play safe. She was not going to tell him or anyone else anything at all about Allen until the household storm over her broken engagement had blown over. • • • Just before dinner a telegram came from Wallace. It had been sent from a town less than a hundred miles away and it announced that he would be home that night and would telephone her from the station as soon as his train got in. Susan, in the role of housemaid, answered the doorbell when the messenger boy brought it and she said nothing about it to anyone in the family. But she took it with her when she slipped out of the house after dinner to meet Allen, who was waiting for her in the doorway of the Shoe Fixery on the corner, just out of sight of the house. They read it by the light of the arc light, their heads close together. It was belowzero weather and the street was almost deserted. A block away the footsteps of a solitary pedestrian rang like iron in the frozen stillness, and the stars were unusually large and bright above the roofs on the other side of the street. “If you’re going to have to see Steffen tonight you'd better not stay here, talking, very long,” Allen said when he had read the telegram and handed it back to Susan. His voice was sharp with the kind of sarcasm that is the result of jealousy. “You’d better go and get dressed for him.” “He may not want to come out tonight,” Susan answered. Her voice was like a gentle hand, reaching out to soothe him. “He only said that he was going to call me up—and, Allen, I wish you wouldn’t be jealous and bitter like this. You don’t have to be. I’m never going to see him again, or think of him, after I get things straightened out with him. But I am sorry for him because this ts going to humiliate him—” “But. sorry or not, you’re going to tell him exactly how things are, aren’t you?” In the shadow of the doorway he put his hand under her chin, tilting her face so that he could look directly down into it. “The sooner you get it over with the better it will be for everyone concerned, Susan. It isn’t fair to him or to yourself or to me not to tell him right away.” He left her after a few minutes, his whole attitude that of a man who is leaving the woman he loves to an uninteresting rival knowing that presently she will return to him. His face was almost sullen, and when he kissed Susan goodnight he did it with a sort of angry ardor, as if it made him bad tempered to know how much he cared about her when she was not yet free from Wallace. “If you don’t go through with this, you needn’t ever try to explain it to me, Susan.” That was his parting remark. • • * The train that brought Wallace back from the south was late because of a heavy down-state snowfall, and he did not telephone her until half past eleven that night. “It’s too late for me to come out, sweetheart,” he said, to her great relief. “I’d drive past to see you for just a second, but it would be after midnight by the time I got there and I won’t get too much sleep, as it is. Hard day ahead of me tomorrow, after all this loafing, too.” At twelve the next day Susan 'eft a luncheon of cold salmon and potato salad for her aunts and Uncle Worthy set out on the table, and went down to the bank to see him. She had telephoned him to say that she was coming and he was waiting for her, with a white carnation in the lapel of h's coat. She wondered if he always wore one when he was at work or if he had gone out so the flower stand in the lobby of the building to decorate himself with it in her honor. His collar was as white as the flower, and his face was reddened by the

lands? 10. in the U. S., where are copyrights registered? * 4 Adams County Memorial Hospital Nora Buchanan. Willshire, Ohio, route 1, major emergency operation, Tuesday night.

: sun. He had had three good days of golf, he told her. i As she shook hands with Wnllace, ; Susan felt shabbier than usual. In ■ comparison with his double-breast-t ed blue suit, his necktie of rich and heavy satin, his glossy black shoes, her old fur coat seemed to take on an extra rustiness and ‘‘rattiness.’’ But Wallace smiled down at her as if she were the most beautiful human being in the world, and the grip of his fingers hurt. “Susan. I’ve got to kiss you,” he said with a glance over his shoulder st an elderly man who sat at the desk next to his, “I wish old Barton”—he nodded in the man’s direction—“would go chase himself around the bank for a minute or two so I could do it.” Allen would have kissed her if all the bankers in the Fourth Federal Reserve District had been there to see him do it, Susan reflected, if she were openly engaged to him as she still was to Wallace. But she was glad that Wallace did not try to. She wondered, looking at his handsome uninteresting face, how she had ever let those rather pale lips touch hers, and how >-,he had ever mistaken a feeling of security for love. z He drew up a chair for her beside his desk and seated himself in his own chair, looking very busi-ness-like, as if he were ready to discuss stocks and bonds and second mortgages with her. Far back in his eyes was a questioning look as if he were wondering why she had .pome to see him. “Will you go out and have lunch with me after a bit?” he asked. “I can’t leave until half past twelve. I shouldn’t, at any rate.” Susan’s throat tightened and stiffened all at once so that she had to swallow hard two or three times before she could answer. “Thanks, but I don’t care for lunch, Wallace. I came down here to see you because I have a—a sort of confession to make to you.” She clasped her hands on the very edge of his flat-topped desk. In the palm of the left one was the ring x>x, held tightly as she had held her Sunday school nickel when she was a little girl. “Yes?” Wallace draped one arm over the back of his swivel chair and smiled at her calmly. “And what is this dreadful confession?’’ His smile implied that whatever it was it couldn’t be so very bad or so very important. He was very certain of her, and his certainty showed in his attitude. “It really is dreadful, Wallace.” Susan put her elbows on the desk and leaned closer to him sq that the elderly man could not hear what she was going to say. Something in the gesture, something in her face, must have suddenly convinced Wallace that she really did have something important to say to him. The smile slowly left his eyes and the questioning look deepened in them. “Our engagement can't go on!” She brought the words out in a rush. “It’s all over!” Wallace sat back in his chair as if she had reached out and slapped him across his face. He stared at her as if she were a total stranger who had brought him some shocking piece of news. “But how?” he asked finally. “How not go on?” Susan stared down at her clasped hands. “This is the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do, Wallace. To explain this to you, I mean. But I do want to be honest with you. When I told you I’d marry you I fully intended to do it. I was sure I loved you. But I’d never been in love before, and I didn't know what it was like." “Ah!” Wallace’s smile came back into his face, the kind of smile that is as bitter as a look of extreme dislike. “I see. You’ve found out since then what it is like to be in love. Is that it?” ‘‘l’m afraid it is.” She had not meant to tell him that. She had intended simply to tell him that she did not care for him enough to marry him, and then to get away from him as soon as posible. She saw now that it was not going to be easy to carry out that program. Wallace got out of his chair. “Let’s go somewhere and talk this over,” he said, "in private. I’m afraid I don’t quite get the hang of what you’re trying to say.” He got his overcoat and his rubbers and his hat. and side by side they crossed the white marble floor of the bank and out into the cold sunshine of South Main Street. (To Be Continued) Copyright. 1133, by Ring Feature* Syndicate. Ine.

®SocTet7

PUBLIC INVITED TO ATTEND PARTY The publtv is invited to attend the bridge and bunco party to be sponsored by the Knights of Pythias and Pythian Staters In the K. of P. Home o4i Third street. Friday night. are being aold by the memb ra for twenty five cento, and a good crowd is expected to attend Members selling tickets are asked to imake a report of the ticket sale Thursday night at the K. of P. Hom?. MISSIONARY SOCIETY OBSERVES ANNUAL MEETING The annual open meeting of the Women's Missionary Society of the Baptist church w<as held Tuesday night in the church. Mrs. H. N. Shroll was the leader forth? evening's (program and the subject was "Good Citizenship." The opening prayer was offered by Mrs. H. Abney, followed with song an.l devotions by Mrw. Shroll, who also gave a short talk on the subject, reviawing the many disadvantages and hardships of the pioneers and comtparing them with the improvements and luxuries available today stressing that this change come through Christianity. A playlet, "Thinking for Myself" was presented <by MLsb Ann Elizabeth Wlnnes. Mrs. Herman Lan ' kenau. Miss Ruth Wlnnes. Miss Helen Shroll and Harold Strickler.! A social hour was enjoyed and j ret'ershments were served by the. committee, Mrs. S. E. Hite. Mrs.; Gettys Parmer, an 1 Mrs. C. E. Pet-' ers on. The W men's Foreign Missionary ' Society of the Monroe Methodist | church will sponsor -i Seth Parker I program Sunday evening at seven ’ o’clock at the church. The program , will include old ti ne hymns, quar-; tet and sol > numbers. INITIATION OF C. L. OF C. CANDIDATES Initiation of twenty five ". andi-d-ites was hel I by th ? Catholic Ladies of Columbia Tuesday night, ini the K. of C. Hall. The local degree I team put on the work. Following tl: • initiation a lunch- , ecu. was served and a social time .was enjoy J. Th? committee in of the arrangements included Mrs. Bertha Miller. Mrs. Arthur Myers and Miss Clara Miller. The candidates who were present' at the n>-eting last night were Ma-; rie Zeser. Thelma Cook. Mary Mil-' ler. Mary Ann Wertzberger. Ursu’-F Stults, Marceline Gage. Hilda la-o-nard, Mary K. Ulman. Lucille Miller, Mary K. Leonar 1. Marie Sch- 1 mitt, Agn- -s Braun, Virginia Geimer. Marie York. M-ircella Schmitt, j Frances Braun, Clara Mcßride, Rose Mary Omlor. Mary Case. I Agnes Lfi htle, Margaret Gage. Mag-! dalene Schmitt and Mrs. Robert; Miller. ECONOMICS CLUB HOLDS MEETING The Jefferson township Home! Economics Cltih met recently in the; Jeffers n township school. The; meeting was opened by the club! members signing the club song -ind repeating the creed. The roll was responded to by the members naming their favorite salids. Th? regular business session was followed with instructions on 1 altering sleeve patterns, by the 1 leaders. The use of various patterns were discussed. Attractive smock! and sleeve ipatterns were (Hstributed. The scrap book was inspected. I The hostesses, Mre. K gle and Mrs. Mosser served refreshments. The Ladies Ahl Socl-ty of the Evangeli-al church will hold an important meeting in the church par-1 lore Thursday afternoon at two o’clock. ECONOMIC CLUB ELECTS NEW OFFICERS The Root township Home Eco-i r. rules Club met with Mrs. Uleber Feasel, Tuesday, for an all day' meeting. IMrs. Juloyd Bryan and I Mrs. Fnnklin Franz were the as-’ sisting hostesses. A pot-luck dinner was served at' the noon hour after which the election of officers was held. Mrs. R.

CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, It A. M. Mlaa Mary Macy Phonaa 1000—1001 Wednesday Zk«i Reformed girls choir, church 7:30 p. m. Zion lO'forml'd Phoel,.’ Bible class, p nbponed indefinitely. 'Historical Club, postponed. Five Hundred Club, Mrs. Fred Deiningen 8 p. m. Union Twp. Woman’s Club, Mrs. Hubert Zerkel, 1 p. m. promptly. Evangelical Loyal Dorcas class acup sale, church, a. m. Zion Walther League masquerade party, Lutheran school 7 ip. m. Thuraday >W. O. T. M. observance, Moose Home, 7:30 p. m. Evangelical Ladies Aid Society, church .parlors, 2 p. m. St. Paul Ladies Aid Society, Mrs. Fi.-rest Durr, all-day. Catholic Action Clubs Unit 3, K. of C. Hall, 7:30 p. m. Pinochle Club, Miss Marie Zesar. 6:30 p. m. So Ch* Rea Club. Miss Marie Murtough. 7:30 p. m. Pleasant Grove Missionary Society, Mrs. Ross Harden, 1 p. m. Young Matrons Club 'Halloween party. Mrs. Dave Campbell., Bluffton, leave Decatur 5 p. nt. Eastern Star stated meeting, Maj soafc Hall, 7:30 p. m. Zion Reformed G. M. G. masqueri add party, Mrs. Wilbur Robinson, ; 7:30 p. m. M. E. Ladies Aid S clety, Mrs. E.l Whitrigbt, 2:30 p. nt. 1 Ladies Shakespeare Club, Mrs. D. D. Heller, 2:30 p. m. Friday ! 'Decantr Home Economics Club ; masquerade party, Mrs. George i Squiers, 7:30 p. m. Pinochle Club, Mrs. Jess Edgell, ! 7:30 p. m. Mt. Pleasint Ladies Aid dollar i social. Mt. Pleasant school. 8 p. m i Baptist Philathae class, Mr. an l ! Mrs. C. E. Bell. 7:30 p. tn. K. of P. anfl Pythian Sister public Bridge and bunco party. K of P. . Home, 8 p. m. i American Legion auxiliary, Legi n Hall, 7:30 p. m. Saturday 'Presbyterian Ladies AH plate supper, church. 5 to 7 p. m. i. W. Rice was chosen pr sldr'it’’MrC ‘ Fred Kitson, v: -- president; Mrs. Mabel McCoy secretary; Mrs. Sherman KTinkel, assisting secretary; Mrs. C. D. Kunkel, treasurer; Mrs. John Magley. n ws reporter; Mrs. ; Bryan and Mrs. Arthur Hall, lead ers, and Mrs. Albert Johns n and Mrs. Stiegal. alternate. The program committee will include Mrs. I Lloyd Bryan. Mng. bee Fleming land Mrs. Albert Johnson. Two new members were taken in- ' to the organization, and twenty eevi en members were present. The next ; meeting of the club will b? in the ' form of «j guest day at the comt munity building on. November 27. | MR. AND MRS. KELLER ; SURPRISED AT PARTY A number of friends of Mr. and i Mrs. John Keller pleasantly surprised them with a masquerade I party at their country home Tues day night. A social time was enjoyed during the evening. MOOSE WOMEN TO OBSERVE DAY Mooseheart Day will be observed by the members of the Women < ; the Moos? and their families at a pot-luck supper and -program in the Moose Home Thursday night at seven-thirty o'clock. The observance will be in honor of Janies J. Davia.cn, head of the | Mooseheart Home. A spacial pro- . gram for the children, including games will be given. songs, recitations, readings, and games will be given. — j The ladies auxiliary of Adams ' p st number 43 of the Am riean ' Legion will hold a social and business meeting at the legion hall . Friday evening at seven thirty o'- | clock. All members are urged to atj tend. o Get the Habit — Tratre •«. Home

'"'"r I'ot.. I ■" v K l,isi b' l ' '■ i>iv' ■* h■ '■m ■ - . . wlm I '■ 1 " "R th' I '," 1 .Hll ; ' •a.,i , , 1 • - • hi’ I I 'nsii |, [■ ~,|], ’•"’I- Im - i . ” ..S|| siliiot'.'l l-ersotiM Hhoul.l |, ~ "'""lUent “"'.'“l 'I"-" .••nt '"''IBS he innds , i|k r "" ■' M “G -Wi e.,untv W(ll -.■Mg after ex|.ir..i,, r t1 ,,; surer f. „,„k. .. .i.,;.,,, '" I'arli. ul:i, .'inn:,,',,' |," v> Mi taxes lt> t |, t „ ■ mentum th. all .'out property. “ ln ■ a... urer renal.l" tut; i.. u, .a,),. 1 re.ts.it. \.I . - ■ Auctiontel Phonei 1$ A ’ nd I < H ear| y «iM .j * every dar. SAI J] CALENDAR! Oct. 25—Mrs. J I, rase. miles non h. .t w jtiH Closing out sale. H Ge 1.26 I'. ha. at Sale Barn. H Oct. 27 Harry C.iss.l, J sS» southwest of Fori Wayne miles south". ■' ut WayndH Closing out sale. Oct. 29 Max Vu k<>rs and fe neth Carter. I nitle south miles west 01 Baton. i'lmiu* sale ()< l. ::•• Fr. drick MWi Marbatigli. I mi ■ - soii'ti sail miles east .>t I'h it'aiiooga. OH E miles west of Celina on "as 32. then 3 miles north. I'.. wt and % mile east of burhii | Oct. 31—Clayl"u E Byrd. IK Jtb. fcecoul St, J houses MB a. m * Oct. 31-Geo \ Mellon is tk Gale Hook faun, itots.' sale.lik south of Willshire at 12 cdlti noon. Nov. 9 -De. aim Riverside to at Sale Barn Nov. 7-- John Cross, I milaad and 1 mile north of Berne, »l miles north and 3 miles w«t< Chattanooga, Ohio. Closing A sale. REI) BAR Storage H batteries H $3.95 up |Q exchange ENGLAND’S ■ AU TO PARTS S Ist Door So. of Court Houk W Ph (Xie 282 For Better Health See Dr. 11. Frohnapfd Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 311 104 So. a™* Neurocalometer Servlet X-Ray Laboratory Office Moura: 10 to 12 •- m ' 1 to 5 p. m., 6 to Bp. fN. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Gla»«M F,ttell HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5-W Saturdays, 8:00 p. ®- Telephone I’s.