Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 258, Decatur, Adams County, 30 October 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

CLASSIFIED i ADVERTISEMENTS, 1 I BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALK — Michigan apples. Grime* Golden, Joltuatlieu*, Melutoah, Bawldlus. Price 60 cent* end u ; p. S. K. Haggard, mile north, 3% east or Monroe, 255-k6tx FOR SALE — Globe boy heating stove, good as new. walnut finish. Klorian Geinier, plume 7016. 256k3tx FOR SALE Short horn bull, coming two year old. Eular Hill, Wren. 0.. route 1. 267-:>tx FOR SALE — Received new shipment. 3.pc. Living room suite, S4B. Red room suite, $35. Mattress, $5.50. Double deck coil spring, $6. Lounging chair with ottoman. $14.90. Breakfast set, sl3Oil stoves, $4.50. Heating circulating stoves, medium size, $39; large size. $49. Kitchen ranges, sls up. Stucky and ('o., Monroe, ind FOR SALE —Good healing stove. 6 dining chairs, like new. Hand picked pears, 50 cents bushel. 1127 West Monroe St. - 258-g2t.\ NEW CATALOG FREE? lllus- _ trates and describes 285 desirable farms in Indiana and Ohio; all sizes. Low prices, easy terms 6 to 33 —year mortgages. (No trades). Write today! First Joint Stock Land Bank, Fort Wayne, Indiana. 20-23-25&30 FOR SALE —Csed Furniture. One dining room table with 6 chairs. 1 Davenport. 2 Hard coal stoves. 1 Oil Stove. Stucky and Co., Monroe. Ind- 257-St FOR SALE — Three cows, £art Guernsey, one fresh, others fresh goon. Ray Smith, phone 5621. 257-3tx FOR SALE or TRADE— 1 Dodge truck with oil steel dump body. $35 cash. 229 Grant St. 256 a3tx WANTED WANTED — Seed Corn and Oat Salesmen. Liberal Commissions. Write full qualifications to Mr. Barnes care of this paper. Oct 25-30 MAN WANTED for service station. $35 weekly lo start. Experience not required. SBSO (-ash deposit required on equipment. Manufacturer. 2LI4H-15t>3 Wesley St., Wheatoil. HI. 25%6tx WANTED —Quilting to do. Phone 396. Mrs. Herman Hoffman, North llsh St. 257-3tx WANTED — For expert radio and electrical repairs call Marcellus Miller, phone 625. Member Radio Manufacturers Service. Miller RaffTTT Service, 226 N. 7th st. 251tf , FOR REN! j FOR RENT—Two rooms for light j housekeeping, unfurnished. Call 522 St. Mary's St. 257-3 t LOST AND FOUND LOiST —Five dollar bill in A. and P. store. Saturday night. Reward Melvin Baumgartner. Phone 796 256-k2tx

8' Heaters Pj for Winter Comfort pi $4.95 up Eh Thermostats for all cars. ENGLAND’S f| AV T 0 PAR T S Eb Wholesa'e and Retail Ist Door So. of Court House Phone 282 TRUCK TIRES and TUBES All Sizes—Lowest Prices. * Porter Tire Co. Dist. ■ 341 W nchester st. Phone 1289. Curfew Ordinance Sought Canton, O. - (U.R) — Passage of a curfew ordinance, directed primarily at children, but carrying an injunction to parents, has been proposed (o city council by Councilman William Farrell- Farrell said -tr was costing SI,OOO to $3,000 anjjuwiij* for this city of 106,000 to repair playground equipment and buildings damaged by pranksters. 15,000 H. S. Grads lnte r viewed Cleveland.— (U.R) —Fifteen thou, sand Cleveland high school gradu-, ates of the past live years are being interviewed by FF.KA students of Fenu College. Y M. C. A. cooperative institution, in a canvass to determine what they are now doing. The students have deployed under direction of Dean IV. L. fiotclifeiss, of Fean'S business administration department.

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS LOCAL MARKET Decatur Berne Craigville Hoagland Corrected Octobi r 30 No commission and no yardage. Veal* received Tuesday, Wadneada.v. Friday, Saturday. 259 to 300 llw $5.00 200 to 250 lbs $4.90 MS tO 290 His $4.65 300 to 350 lbs ?4.70 140 to 160 lbs $3.75 120 to 140 lbs $2.70 100 to 120 lbs $2.43 Roughs $4.00 Stage $2.00 down Vealers $7.00 Ewe and wether lambe $5.50 Buck lambs $4.50 FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Oct. 30 —(lj.R) | —Livestock: Hogs, steady tp 50c lower; 250300 lbs., $5.35; 225-250 lbs.. $5.20; 200-225 lbs., $5 10; 180-200 lbs., $5; 160.180 lbs., $4.86; 300-350 lb#.. $5; 150-160 lhs., $4.40; 140-150 lbs., $415; I*o-140 lbs.. $3.65; 120-130 lbs., $3.15; 100-120 lbs., $2.65; roughs, $4.25; stags, $2.50. Calves, $7; lambs, $6 25. East Buffalo Livestock Hog receipts 700. rather slow, steady; desirable 220-260 tb.55.90-l 6: 180-200 lbs. quoted $5.50-5.75; j few decks mixed quality IG3 Ib.i $4.75. Cattle receipts commercial 23; | market nominally steady. Calf receipts commercial 50: i vealers slow, barely steady; good to choice SS; common and medium $5-6.30. Sheep receipts 200: lambs unchanged; good to choice ewes and wethers $6.75; medium kinds and! strong weights $5.50-6; common | $5-5.50. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Dec. May July Wheat, old .95% -05 .89% Wheat, new 95% Corn, old .75% .75% -77 Corn, new 75 Oats, old. .49% .47% .43% Oats, new .49% LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected October 30 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better S6c No. 2 New Wheat (58 lbs.) 85c j Oats 32 lbs. test 47c ! Oats, 30 lbs. test 46c j Soy Beans, bushel 6Sc-75c | White or mixed corn 95c ’■ First Class Yellow Coin $1.00: Gross Income Tax Receipts Higher Indianapolic, Oct. 30 — <U.R> — * Gross income tax receipts for the first 29 days of October exceeded July collections by approximately $42,000, Clarence Jackson, director of the gross income tax divi- j siou. announced today. Collections during the first | month of the July tax paying I period were $2.053,564 and for the \ first 29 days of the October pay- 1 ment period were $2,125,641. o HOUCK TO TAIIMITIO Notice is nereoy vrlven that Monday, November 5, 193 4 will be the last day to pay yojjr Fall installment of taxes. The county treasurer’s office will be open from K A. M. to 4 p. in. during: the tax paying nation. All taxes »of paid by that time will become delinquem and a »% penalty will be added. Also interest I at the rate of 8% will be charged from the date of delinquency until paid. 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 t'pr the penalty <*f delinquent taxes resulting from the ommission of tax-payers to state definitely on what property, they dt sire to pay* in whose name it may lse found, in wliat township or corporation it ia situated. Persons owing: delinquent taxes should pay them at once, the Jaw is such tiiat there is no option left for, the Treasurer but enforce the collection of delinquent taxes. The annual sale of delinquent lands and lots will take place on the second Monday in February 1135 at. 10*00 A. M. County orders will not l*e paid to anyone owing delinquent taxes. All persons are warned against them. No receipts or che ( ks will be held after expiration of time, as the new depository law requires the Treasurer to make daily deposit. Particular attention. If you pay taxes In more than one township' mention the fact to the ‘J reasurer, also see that your receipts call for all your real estate and personal property. In making inquiries of the I reasurer regarding taxes to Insure reply do not fail to include return postage. JOHN WBCHTKR Treasurer Adams County, Indiana Oct. 11 to Nov. »i See me for Federal Loans and Abstracts of Title. French Quinn. Schirmeyer Abstract Co. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: „ 8.30 to 11:39 12:30 to 6.00 Saturdays, 8; 00 p. m. Telephone Wh.

► ♦ Test Your Knowledge Can you answsr ssvsn of thsso j ton quosHons? Turn to page Four for the answers. * * 1. in mus|c, what ia a prelule? 2. On whuit body of water is Morocco ? 3. VVhal i* another name for the wind-flower? 4. Os which country is Alberta a proviacef 5. What sort of material Is hair cloth? 6. In which war was the Battle

(fiIRL in the FAMMLY" 4 BY BEATFLICE BURTON *

CHAPTER XXX Allen glanced up at Susan again and smiled. The smile was more than Uncle Worthy could stand. He always suspected John of laughing at him in secret, and the thought had maddened him. He was maddened now. "You’ll get out of thi ■ house! NOW! Tonight!" His whole body shook with rage and his words slid together as they always did when he had been having an overdose of hit bitters. “That’s all right with me, Mr. Broderick,” said Allen quietly. “I was leaving tonight or tomorrow in any case—just as soon as Susan could get ready to go. If you’ll be kind enough to let me pass—” The black wail parted and he came up to where Susan stood. ‘‘l got the license today. The clerk in the bureau is a good friend of mine, and he let me have it even if you weren’t there,” he said, his arms around her. "I knew everything about you except the date of your birth, and I guessed at that.” He grinned. “We can be married tonight. Get your things together and I’ll get mine.” Uncle Worthy came up the steps. Susan saw that one side of his face wore its dark flush, looking as if an east wind had cut it. She wondered, with some remote part of her mind, why only one side was flushed. The other was ghastly pale. He took her by one shoulder with a hand that shook violently. “You’re not going to leave this house tonight!” He glared up at Allen with eyes that looked smaller than usual and olood shot. “You hear what I’m telling her? She’s not going to step one foot out of this house tonight!” “That’s for her to decide, isfi’t it?” Allen asked. There was infinite tenderness in his face as he looked down at Susan. “How about it, Susie? You’re coming with me, aren’t you?” It was Aunt Edna who spoke then, her face shaking piteousiv, all her forcefulness gone from her. Standing at the foot of the steps she began to cry. “Susan, what are you thinking of?” she sobbed into her handkerchief. “Even if you weren’t engaged to poor Wallace you wouldn’t think of walking out like this would you?—Lutie sick and I with my knee in such shape that I ought to be"flat in my bed this minute! You can’t run out of the house at a moment’s notice like some common creature, to marry this fly-by-nighter that you hardly know!— probably desert you in a week the way Lutie says his father deserted his mother!” “As far as that goes it begins to look as if my father had deserted me, doesn’t it?” Lutie blew her nose and cleared her throat. ‘Td leave my father out of this if I were you!” she said loftily. “The rest of us have certainly been goodness itself to you, all your life, and I think you ov.e it to us to think things over carefully I before you throw away your chance to marry into one of the tc ;t families in this town.” She broke down then and began to cry. In a muffled voice she sobbed out all her troubles; the poverty that had come to ell of them, the way Mr. Dillon had talked to her in Hart’s store, the disgrace of Susan jilting Wallace just when she had the opportunity to marry into the wor! d of j position and money where the Brooericks belonged by righ r . the cruelty of Susan who was walking out on them just when they were all sick and too poor to hire a nurse or a housemaid. “That’s gratitude!” she wound up. “That’s gratitude for you!” Her face was twisted and mottled with her crying and she kept putting one hand tight against her throat as if her tears were strangling her. Susan lifted a blanched face to Allen. "I’d better stay tonight, at any rate.? she said. “You can see for yourself that I can’t leave now.” “If you don’t leave now you probably never will,” he answered. She felt his arms fall away from her. He turned and went upstairs to his room, and after a few seconds Susan went out to the kitchen filled now with the savory smell of the dinner cooking on the stove. Mechanically she went out to the little ice box room and took a head

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, OCTOBER JO, 1934.

of Verdun? 7. To which country do the P; 1- j bllof Islands belong? 8. Which country Ims two rival's j name! Dee? ■ 9. What is an angel? 10. Whom did Dolores Costello j marry? * PREBLE NEWS 7l ♦ « Mr. ami Mrs. Douglas Eiaey had , as their gust* for dinner Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Kittle of Coldwat.r, Ohio; Mr. ami Mrs. Steve Frank of Montezuma, Ohio; Ihillas

of lettuce and four tomatoes from the vegelator. She was holding the lettuce under the cold water faucet watching the leaves part under the spray when Allen came in. He laid a piece of paper, torn from a memorandum pad, on the sink beside Susan. An address and a telephone number were written upon it. “This is where I’ll be tonight," he said. “It’s the boarding house where I lived before I came here. I'll be back in an hour or so for the rest of my things. I’m taking most of them now.” « Susan’s head jerked up and down in a nod. One of the things she never would forget, as long as she lived, was the night when he had brought those two battered old wicker suitcases to the house. She would always remember little trivial things about it—the wind and the smell of snow when she threw open the windows of Grandfather Broderick’s bedroom. The way her eyes and Allen’s had met in the old mirror, and how hard it had been for her to look away from him. The feeling of pity and tenderness that had swept over her at the sight of his frayed coat sleeve. Small unimportant things that were the very threads of life, giving it color and pattern. “You can call me up tomorrow and let me know what you want to do,” he said. “I’ve told you what I want you to do. .. . The rest is up to you.” Aunt Edna pushed open the swinging door of the kitchen and stood in the opening. Allen turned his head and saw her. Then he stooped and kissed Susan goodby under her disapproving eyes. No one ate dinner that night but Aunt Edna. Lutie went hack to bed and had a tray there, Susan was not hungry and Uncle Worthyclosed himself into his study and refused to come out when Susan told him that the soup was on the table. “I feel very queer—very dizzy,” she heard him say to Aunt Edna who got up from the table to try to coax him in to dinner. “I couldn’t eat a bite, thanks.” It was the first time that Susan had known him to refuse to come to a meal and she watched him close the door on Aunt Edna with troubled eyes. The flush seemed to have deepened on one side of his face and he fumbled for the door handle. He was still in his study when Susan came home from the drugstore at half past seven and carried the bottle of medicated oil upstairs to Aunt Edna who was sitting beside Lutie’s bed. Lutie was crying again as she lay propped against the pillows, and Susan knew as she stepped into the close air of the room that she and Aunt Edna had been talking about her. “Susan.” She looked up at her niece with wet and puffy eyesJ!‘You can’t set yourself against your own class, your own family." “John’s with me in this, and so are the Cullens,” said Susan sturdily. “They all know Allen, and they ’ike him—and just as soon as you’re both over your sick spells I’m going to marry him.” “Why be in such a hurry about it ? You can seat yourself on a rubbish heap for life any time!” retorted Lutie. Susan went into her own room and took off her wraps. The room was dark and through the windows the could see Center Street blue- | white under the moon, the lighted windows of the little shops across the street pinkish yello w rectangles in the darkness. She stood there telling herself that she had done exactly the right thing that night. It j would have been cruel to leave the house with Alien, but she had made It clear to him that she would leave just as soon as the two women were able to look after themselves. After ail, she did owe them something— As she stood there she heard a sudden terrifying sound from downstairs. It sounded like a chair or a table going over onto the floor, and then there came the thud of something else falling. She stood dead still for a second and then rushed down to the lower hall. .“Uncle Worthy?” she called as she went. She knocked on his door but there was no answer; and after an instant sha turned the knob and went in. Her uncle was lying on the floor with his big head rolled to one side, his eyes closed and hi 3 face swollen

Elzoy of Fort Wayne; Mr. and Mrs. Delmu Elzey of Decatur and Robert Rinehart of Elkhart, Ind. Mr uni Mr*. C. C. Sheet* and Mr. and Mr*. Harold Sheets of Fort Wayne visited Mr. anti Mrs. Douglas | Elzey Sunday aftvruouu. Mr. and Mrs. William Frletag and Mariyn Hoffman spent Sunday visiting Mr and Mrs. Anthony Hoffman amt daughter Louise and son Kenneth iff Wolcottvllle. Mr. an 1 Mrs. Glenn Baumgartner and family had es their guests for dinner Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. Albert Werling and daughters flea and Iverna; Mr. and Mrs. Orval Snarr

and purple. The swivel chair was overturned beside him, and ths “bitters” bottle lay on its side on the desk, staining the blotter and some loose papers with the brownish slued that trickled from its neck. As Susan dropped to her knees beside him Aunt Edna and Lutie came down the hall. “What is it, Susan? What’s happened? — Oh, my dear Lord!” It was Aunt Edna’s voice and it rose like a scream as she saw Uncle Worthy’s prostrate body. “Get the doctor! Get Doctor Kendall, Lutie! Don’t stand there —get him!” With one hand pressed to her swollen knee she knelt on the floor beside him. “He must have struck his head on the corner of the desk as he fell," Susan said, holding her handkerchief to a dark mark on her uncle’s temple. “It’s bleeding.” Aunt Edna looked up at the comer of the desk as if it could tell her what had happened and Susan’s eyes followed hers. A pink glass paper weight stood very near the edge of the desk top, and under it lay a large sheet of writing paper. Uncle Worthy had taken it from the box some time during the day for it had not been there that morning when she dusted the room. She saw that it was covered with circles and triangles and numbers, and all across it, from corner to corner, the word “bankrupt” had been scrawled three times. . . . BankrupL Bankrupt Bankrupt. • • • It was eight o’clock. Dr. Kendall had come and somehow or other he and Susan had carried Uncle Worthy upstairs and put him into the four poster bed where he had slept all his life. He lay now as if he were asleep, a heavy rolling sound like constant snoring coming through his lips. But he was not asleep. He had had a stroke and he was unconscious, Dr. Kendall told them. - “He came to see me at my office about two weeks ago,” he said, speaking very quietly as if he were afraid of disturbing Uncle Worthy. "He said he’d been having dizzy spells for a long time, and he had had a very bad one the night before that had frightened him.” Aunt Edna’s tears poured down her face. “He never mentioned it to me. Doctor. What did yon do for him?” “The only thing I could do in a case like his. I told him to stop eating red meat and to cut his food intake in half—and to stop drinking.” Dr. Kendall’s glasses glinted as he shook his head. “He told me he’d rather be dead than cut out everything that he enjoyed in life.” “How long will he be like this?” Lutie asked from her post at the foot of the bed. Dr. Kendall did not know. ‘No one can answer that, Lutie. He may recover after a few days. But if he does I doubt that he’ll ever be very well again.” “What caused the stroke, Doctor?” asked Aunt Edna, shivering so that her teeth chattered. “Wrong kind of food and too much of it. Alcohol. Worry—mental strain. A sudden shock. Any of those things,” the doctor replied. “I told him Christmas day that he was drinking far tdo much for a man of his age—of any age.” “A sudden shook." repeated Aunt Edna. “He’d had a great shock to his nerves just before this happened. Susan—He had been trying to manage something for Susan—" She turned a look on Susan that said plainly as words, "You did this to himj” and rushed out of the room waving her hands in the air. From Lutie’s bedroom, where she took refuge, came the sound of loud tearing sobs. “Tell her to go to bed in there and 11! give her something to make her sleep.” Dr. Kendall said to Susan. “And you and Lutie had better take turns sitting here tonight to watch for any change for the worse. Telephone me if you need me.” “Oh, please don’t ask me to sit up tonight,” Lutie said to him quickly. “I’ve been half dead with a cold all day myself. That’s why I m not dressed, Doctor. But I’ll keep the door of my room open and if Susan needs me she can call me. I waken at the slightest sound.” (To Be Continued) Copyright, lift, by Kin* Syndicate. Uc

In Romance or Just Friends? William Powell and Jean Harlow, prominent stars of the screen, have been engulfed in a pool of reports and rumors since they began to attend functions, social and otherwise, together in Hollywood Some of the reports hint at a romance, but Powell and Jean insist they are just friends. They arc shown attending a recent wrestling match in the cinema capital.

amt daughters Marjorie and Opal, family; Mr. and Mr*. Elia* LiglHensteiger and family of Decatur; and Mr. and Mrs. Milton Werling and Mrs. Mary Werling and children of Pleasant Mill*. Mr. ani tire. Victor Bulteinaier and family vialied Mr. and Mr*. George Bultemeier and daughters Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Shady and daughter Ethel spent Sunday visiting Mr. and Mrs. Dortlia Shady and i sons. Mrs. Harry Fraubiger attended the j Mission Festival held at the Bluffton Reformed Church Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Zimmerman and daughter Onalee «vut Sunday visiting Mr. aud Mr*. Doriba Shady and sous. Dallas to Erueriain Oil Men Dallas. Tex.-IU.R> —The American : Petroleum Institute will hold its annual convention herff’eiov. 12 to 15. More than 1,560 of (be 5,000 delegates expected have made hotel i

Charter No. 168* lit port of Condition of the FARMERS STATE BANK of Preble In The State of Indiana, at the close of business on October 17, 1934. BANKING ASSETS Loans anil Discounts ... - $72.280.,6 Overdrafts - 30.33 U. IS. Government Obligation*, direct and fully guaranteed... 30,668.34 Other Bond* aud Securities 21,1M7.64 Lanking House $3,200.00; Furniture aud 'Fixtures $2,600.G0 6,800.09 Other Real Estate Owned .... 2.555.22 Cash on Hand and Balances with other Banks 29,567.46 Exchanges and Cash Items 161.28 Securities Borrowed None TOTAL BANKING ASSETS $162,411.03 BANKING LIABILITIES Demand Deposits —Individual $45,813.15 Time Deposits, including Time Cert, of Deposits . 62.841 12 Savings or Thrift Deposits 4.380.66 U. 3. Government and Costal Savings Deposits None Deposits of the State and Political Subdivisions 17,551.83 Deposits of Other Banks, Cashier's and Certified C'ks None Total Deposits $130,588.76 Bills Payable * None Rediscounts — None Securities Borrowed 1 None Reserves for depreciation ami losses None Other Liabilities Funds received tor payment of called U. S. securities 1,599.15 TOTAL BANKING LIABILITIES $132,185.91 Capital Account: Capital Stock $25,090.90 Preferred Capital Debentures Nque Total Capital ........ . $25,000.00 Surplu* 4.100.00 Undivided Profits—Net 1.125.12 Reserves None Total Capital Account . $30,225.12 Total Banking Liabilities and Capital Account $162,411.03 includes proceeds of $12,500 of debentures sold to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and $2,500 of debentures sold to local interests. which debentures are subordinated to the rights of creditors and depositors. included in lataits aud UiscougU are Loans to Affiliated Companies None Included in Other Bonds and Securities are Shares lo Affiliated Companies None Included in Deposits are First Lien Trust Funds None Included in Total Deposits are Deposits Secured by Loans and investments * None Loans and Investments Pledged to Secure Liabilities U. S. Bonds and Securities None Other Bonds and Securities None Loans apd Discount* (excluding rediscounts) ...* ; None Total Pledged (excluding rediscounts) None - stale of indiana, County of Adams, gt>: i. C. R. Smith. Cashier of the Farmers State Hank of Preble, do solemnly swear that the above statement Is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. „ , , C. R SMITH, Cashier Subscribed and sworn to before me this GOLD day of October, 1934. ,Seal > Emma F. Ureiner, Notary Public My Commission Expires Nov. 21, 1937 I

reservations. R. B. Whitehead, chairman of the reservations committee. said indications were the 1934 meeting would be the largest in the institute's history. o \lH»vlDtiuriil of lduifnlMtrut«»r Notice is hereby given, That the undersigned has been appointed Administrator of the estate iof Klizabeth Kraner, late of Asdams County deceased. The estate is probably solvent. \V. A. Wells, Administrator C. I*. Walter*. Attorney j October 22, 1934. Oct. 23-30 N-ti >orit t?i i>r pivm* s>eth i;>ii;>t nr EM %TK >O. 2»r»«i Notice fs hereby Kiven to the creditors, heirs and legatees of Christian StoppcnhaKen, deceased to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at l>ecatur. Indiana, on the 22nd day of November, 1934, and show cause, if any, why the Final Settlement Accounts with the estate of said decedent should not be approved; and said heirs are notified to then and j there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive Shu res. Herman St Copenhagen. Administratin' Decatur, Indiana. October 29, 1931. \ t torn*.' j * Fruetalr aud Mtlerrr I. (>■! ■ ■

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fjoin - -, iaa * i \ Claim 5* V Vs it early lll ''N,3v ■ ever? <#■ SALE CALENW Oci ■ . ivicii E. W No. Sci - a - 1,1 . « J miles ca- "i Stat.- I N 1 Nov. " H* »i' v 11 1 , miles oas< and.* Oeeatnr tales » school, t I"" 111 - |l;l1 s j Nov. li lb 'Utur lliu * at Sale Barn , Nov. 7 -Juhu and 1 mile uor | ll „ ilef «l miles north untl <> 1 J Chattanoo: ■■ ‘ lllia sale. tJI X -v. 10 Theodore J! ijifles south an ■ » -j Wiltshire on the AMW | farm. Closing out l