Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 261, Decatur, Adams County, 2 November 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

r CLASSIFIED I ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE , FOR SALE — Received new ship-, meat. 3.pc. Living room unite, 348. Bed room suite, *36. Mat tress, 15.50. Double deck coil spring, Jti. Lounging chair with ottoman, $14.90. Breakfast Mt, 313. Oil stoves, 34.50. Heating circulating stoves, medium size, $39; large i.ize, 343. Kitchen ranges, 313 up. Stucky and Co.. Monroe, Ind 257-6 t FOR SALE— 25 Leghorn pullets, laying, direct from Gasson Farm Dallas Goldner Phone 362. 1323! Monroe 6t. 360-3 t FOR SALE—Registered Guernsey | heifers and young Registered j bulls. Best Breeding at Farmer's Prices. Write, Shoemaker's Guernsey FMrm. Keystone, Ind. — 259t3x FOR SALE—Live stock, farm machinery, hay and grain at Joseph E. Gerber's aale Nov. 19. 4 miles west and 1% miles south of .Monroe. .... Oct. 19 Nov. 2-9-16 FOR SALE—Two good fresh cows with calves. Louis Reinking, quarter mile <$ Preble. 260-a3tx FOR SALE—44 new Louden drinkjm otitis for cattle stanchions. W. A. \Cterry, Monroeville phone, 3 uiilwNKwth Bleeke church. ■ ~ 270t3x FCTII SALE —Girl’s winter t»at, size 14 16 4 reasonable. Phone 657 or at g 9 ■'W Bth St. 261-3 t sXIE—2 soft coal burners. : Call 22. L. W. Murphy. 271-3 t FOR SALE—I92B Chevrolet coupe. lU. good condition. Inquire at K 163 Winchester St- 271-3tx ——m——— 1 I— II FOR SALE — Several good milk , cows.**“William Klenk, 6 miles ' egst ofSecatur. 271-3 t i . " FOR SATE —Used Furniture. One rftrflffg'Tboni table with 5 chairs. 11 Davenport. 2 Hard coal stoves. 1 Oil Stove. Stucky and Co., Mon- i roe. Ind - t!57-6t RUG AND LINOLEUM SALE To reduce our large stock of linoleum and congoleum rugs before I'.ffiftV. we now offer the following ruga,- etc.', at special low prices. CAtfpMer our, prices anywhere. T&<;re*Mwer OMJjfuSr 9xlU-ft., 6 medium *».2glit ruga 35.45 !MS2»fL or 9xlo-ft. - 6 heavy jtaight rugs .. 36.95 I.VS.ft .Congoleum rugs 33.25 T.fii9-fr. Congoleum rugs 33.75 3 ssuly Armstrong heavy rugs. Jize U.3x15-ft. each .. 312-75 1 wiily Armstrong Felt rug. J13x12-ft. for 38-95 9542 fed. Inlaid Linoflor rugs, Jach .... 314.95 IMt. wide genuine printed linoleum, per foot 31.25 9-S. wide heavy weight Tongoleum, per foot 60c ti-fi. wide heavy weight Tongoleum, tier foot 40c 6-Q wide genuine printed ♦.inoleum, per foot 60c Rjg Cushions, size 9x12. All♦iair. mothproof; edges tapj;d. Only 7 cushions left, ♦uy now, each ... 33.98 I'.'JJ? “waffle top' - rug cushions. mothproof, each . 34-95 9i{jß-in. Rubber Stair Treads, •urve nosing edge, each 12c i’lji'e Window Shades (no roll«rs) 36x6-71.., green or tanBach 12Hc th Window Shades with Tollers,. 36xti-ft., green or tan. JaiTi . 45c • NIBLICK & CO. « ..<> AND FOUND IJO.ST, STRAYED or STOLEN — ■Can 4pyl white rabbit hound. Answjrs to name of Jerry. Phone 905 on 232. 259-g3t J-Stox. Five dollar bill in A. and store 1 . Saturday night. Reward ifelvin Baumgartner, Phone 756. • ’ 260-k2tx ik

Eveready Prestone, Super Pyro, Zerone, for Cold Weather Dnving. 1 ENGLAND’S SA-*! TO PAR T S “ Retail Tst..Door So. of Court House Phone 282 _ A Gillette * Tires Latex Dipp--4 ed Process now unconI J»~r.jV. ’jirTJTW ditionally ■ tliUiUMliiiiiU guaranteed K for 18 mo. PB Sold on our new rental plan ffe 25 weeks to pay. B Porter Tire Co. |k Distributer M 341 Winchester Phone 1289 *

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS Brady’s Market for Decatur Berne Craigville Hoagland Corrected November 2 Corrected November 1 No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday. 250 to 300 11* 35.10 200 to 250 lbs 35.00 160 to 200 lbs 34.75 300 to 350 lbs 34.80 140 to 160 lbs ..... 33.85 120 to 140 libs 32.80 100 to 120 lbs 32.55 Roughs - 34.15 Stage 33.00 down [ Vaalera 36.75 Ewe and wether lamb* 35.50 ; Buck lambs — 34.50 EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y.. Nov. 2. —(U.RI —Livestock: Hogs, receipts, 2,500; active, steady to 10c lower: mostly weak to 5c under Thursday’s average; desirable 220-230 lbs.. 35.90-36; 190-210 lbs.. 35.70-35 85; 170-180 lbs. ’ 35.40-35.65; 140.160 lbs., 34.50-35 25. j Cattle, receipts, commercial 925; government, 900; grass steers and heifers slow, weak; few 750-1,000 lbs., $4.50-35; bulk eligible around $4; cows unchanged; low cutter and cutters. sl-3225. Calves receipts, commercial 400; vealers suc lower, $7.50 down. Hheep. receipts. 1.100; lambs | draggy. generally, steady; ewes I and wethers. SB 75: strongweights and medium kinds. $5.50-36; com-1 mon. $5; interior throwouts. 34. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne. Ind.. Nov 2. —(U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, 5c to 10c higher; 250-3001 lbs.. 35.65: 225-250 lbs.. 35.45: 206-1 250 lbs.. $530: 180.200 lbs., $5.15; 1 Hill-1 Ml lbs.. $4.90: HMM lbs.. $5.15; 150-160 lbs., $4.50; 140-150 lbs., $44.25; 130-140 lbs., $3.75: 120130 lbs., $3 25; 100-120 lbs.. $2.75: roughs, $4.50: stags, $2.75. Calves, $7: lambs, $6.25. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Dec. "day July Wheat, old .59% .96% .89% I Wheat, new .99% Corn, old .. .78% .77% .‘7% Corn, new . 77% Oats, old .ir.51% .49 .44% Oats. , .51% ■W 1 LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected November 2 I No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better „ 88c No. 2. New Wheat (58 lbs.) 97c Oats 32 lbs. test 47c Oats, 30 lbs. test 46c! i Soy Beans, bushel 68c-75ci White or mixed corn SI.OO First Class Yellow Corn . $1.05 New Corn . 70c to 90c . e> Dance Sunday Sunset. o LOST — Brown rubber raincape and cap in rubber bag. Lost out of car last week. Finder please return to Mis. R. E. Garard. phone 895. 271t3x — o WANTED MAN WANTED for service station. ; $35 weekly to start. Experience) not required. SBSO cash deposit re- | quired on equipment. Manufactur-i er. 214-H-1563 Wesley St., Wheat-1 on. 111. 257_6tx[ WANTED — For expert radio and electrical repairs call Marcellus Miller, phone 625. Member Radio Manufacturers Service.- Millar Radio Service, 226 N. 7th st. 251tf WANTED — x Sorrel Belgian Yearling mare. Address, Shoemaker’s Guernsey Farm, Keystone. Ind. 2593tx r- o NOTICK TO TAXPAI El<* Notice is iiereny given that Monday, November 5, 11’31 will be the last day to pay your Pall Installment of taxes. The county treasurer’a office will be open from S A. M. to i p. m. during the tax paying season. AH taxes not paid by that time will iMjcome delinquent and a 3% penalty will be added. Also interest at the rate of X% will be charged from the date of delinquency until paid. Those who have bought or sold property and wish a division of taxes are ashed to come in at once. Call on the Auditor for errors and any reductions. The Treasurer can make no correct ions. The Treasurer will not be responsible for the penalty of delinquent taxes resulting from the ornmission us tax-payers to state definitely on What property, they desire to pay, in whose name it may he found, in what township or corporation it is I situated. Persons owing delinquent taxes should pay them Ht once, the law 1h such :that 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 1935 at 10 00 A. M. County orders will not be paid to anyone owing delinquent taxes. All persons are warned against th.em. No receipts or checks will be held after expiration of time, as the new depository law requires the Treasurer to make daily deposit. Particular attention. It you pay taxes in more than one township mention the fact to the Treasurer, also see that your receipts vail for all your real estate and personal property. In making inquiries of the Treasurer regarding taxes to insure reply do nut fail to include return po#u age. JOHN WKCMTER Treasurer Adams County, Indiana Oct 11 to Nov. 5

I* » Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these ten quee*ions7 Turn to page Four for the answers. >l. For whom is Halley’s Comet n a in-ad t » 4 C 2. In which French colony Is the town of Timm-buctuT 3. In what battle was the order given: "Itan’t fire till you see the whites of their eyc«!"T 4. Where w«u tort Duquesne? 5. Name the Bosnian student who shot and killed Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria and wife, and thereby started the World War.

fiKRIL in the FAMHLY // | » BY BEATFLICE BURTON » |

CHAPTER XXXIII “Susan, this may sound childish to you,” Allen went on. “but you’ll have to ehoose between those people and me now. There’s no real reason why you can't come with me now. Tonight. . _ . And tomorrow I'll start getting somo kind of home together and you can come to it as soon as you're ready. But I want Steffen and your people to know you belong to me. I want to know it myself.” Susan was standing with her face toward the house. She saw Lutie come to the open door and speak to Aunt Edna. Then both figures disappeared into the house, and the front door closed. “I can’t leave tonight—not even for an hour or two.” she said. “In i two or three weeks perhaps —” She began to back away from him. drawing her hands from his, hating to leave him, knowing she must. “Susan, please get this through your head. If I go without you tonight, I'm not coming back to this place. I’m going for good.” He didn't mean iL She was sure of that. He was just sore and hurt because Wallace was in the house I after she had told him she was ! through with Wallace forever. He threw one arm around her, drawing her back to him. “Listen to me, Susan. Think of Connie — She dropped everything in the world at a few hours notice and went out to an unknown place with John. She didn't even go down home to say goodby to her people. She walked out on her job,” he said. “That’s what a girl does when she’s really in love, Susan. That s what you’d do now if you really gave a hang about me. . . . Look here, we could get Anna back here for a few week*. I could scrape up the money to pay her—” • “And give up law school! Susan finished the sentence in her own way. “No, indeed!” He wasn t going to spend a nickel on her,'she told herself, until he was making money as a lawyer. He had so little, and he needed it all. Every cent. “The thing for you to do is to pass your bar examinations and then talk marriage, darling. I’m not going to hang around your neck like the well-known millstone. She tried to put her arms around him but he pushed her away from him. “Goodnight,” he said. And then she w as running up the front walk and Allen’s tall shadow was moving across the lawn as he started toward the corner where the I street car stopped. It was not uni til long afterward that Susan, going over their conversation in he’ mind, remembered that he had maoe no engagement with her and said nothing at all about calling her up. The moment she opened the hall door the vague feeling of impending disaster that she had not been able te shake off all day deepened into quick alarm. Wallace was standing at the foot of the stairs, his forehead bent against the newel post, listening. From upstairs came an odd rattling grating sound that ! seemed to fill the house. It was a sound utterly unlike any sound that Susan had ever heard before and for a* few seconds she did not realize that it was Uncle Worthy’s breath- : ing. Then all at once she knew that I that was what it was. She dropped her coat on the floor and raced up the stairs to the sickroom.

Lutie and Aunt Edna were planning their future. It was the Sunday after Uncle Worthy’s funeral. The smell of 1 flowers was gone from the house, and the winter sunshine streamed in through the Battenberg curtains. The rooms were warm once more, as if it had been Death and not the zero weather that had made them so cold the day that Uncle Worthy died. Aunt Edna ant} Lutie were in their armchairs and the parlor was filled with the sweet inky smell of their dyed black dresses. Susan was in black, too. Black crepe de chine that brought out the gold along the ripples of her hair and made her mouth icem unusually red against the honey-whitenes» of her skin. John, with a black band on his eoat sleeve which Lutie had insisted upon sewing there, sat in his

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“STARTLING NEWS” BYSEGABI I pFATHER 70trO BETTER\ SoT'x "1 U)E SURE HAD SOME AOVENTuRfSI TRADING GUM'DROPSf] zAlaI >. Illvi V THET RL '"I LOOK OVER YOUR MM. ] >0 BETTER Do) .DOWN IN NAZILIA.DIDNT WE?J WHITE SAVAGES ) x OVA. X /and Th' “spS ''l YOU KND'O YOU’VE BEEN/ <THAT RfGHT JZ f Gooo\ . FOP MORNING.) \ (EVERTHING SEEMSYaMeT'I I 6EI IT WASN'T-ARP ARFPIV G ZOT SOCH A / 7who> WHAV < ~Z\ I M cJSzW 85 3r® zszw h-' : iA WK x Oo ( * A w AV /1 cs —-—■m \-AT k <au i _ J JMBjKtii/ C \it I HMr J ' " [ \ 7 \ ’ i) >«> Kaaflu ■ ! Ww .-fl f 0... jMiWMa >( —I re Ul a- —ijimiuuii it jM c \ ■■»- - '«m

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1931.

6. Wliai is a deqiilatory? 7. WlMit Im an annuity? 8. Name the Emp.ror of India. 9 What are halogens? 10. Name the preiomiuant religion in P.dand. — —— 0— — COURTHOUSE New Case ChrUten Bauman vs. Victor C. Graber and Rudolph Steury. note, complaint filed. Summons ordered to sheriff of Adams county for defendants returnable, November 19. Report Filed The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co., va. Victoria B. Owens et

old chair with Susan beside him on a stool, and all of them were listening to Wallace Steffen. It had been Lutie who insisted upon sending for John. “We can’t find out where your father is, and John’s the only other man in the family,” she had said to Susan the morning • after Uncle Worthy’s death. “It’s only right that he should come and look after things for us.” But Susan wondered now why she had been so insistent. For now, as she sat in her black clothes, she was telling him that Wallace could see to everything. “Edna and I think he’s the logical person because everything that we own—this house and The Broderick Arms—are mortgaged, and the First National holds the mortgages,” she pointed out. “And the worst of it is that the interest on the mortgages hasn’t been paid in ever such a long time. At least, that’s the way 1 understand iL Wallace —?” She looked appealingly at Wallace, and he took up the story. “The bank's real estate department will have to sell the two pieces of property and pay the bank the money that’s due iL” he explained slowly to John. “I’ve made clear to your aunts that that is the only thing to do,*s?nce the mortgages are so large. There’ll probably be a fairly good sum of money left after the bank has deducted what the Broderick estate owes it. I’ve told Mrs. Broderick and Miss Lutie that I’ll show them how to invest it when the time comes so that they’ll have some kind of sure income.” He turned his face to Aunt Edna. “That’s what you want me to do, isn’t it?” he asked solemnly. It was all Greek to Susan who knew nothing about business and had never had more than twenty dollars at a time in her life. All she understood was that somehow her Jnither a*i her uncle had made ‘Mufka a*l drakes,” as Aunt Edna put it, of the large fortune that Grandfather Broderick had left. They had mortgaged the house and The Broderick Arms to the hilt. They had sold government bonds and gilt-edged stocks, and there was no record of what they had done with the money. Certainly they had not reinvested it. Wallace, who had spent hours in Uncle Worthy's little office, going through his desk, said that there would be nothing for Lutie and Edna except the money that the bank would turn over to them from the sale of the house and the apartment building. Morris Broderick would receive practically nothing for he had borrowed more than what would have been his share long ago, and actually owned the estate several thousands of dollars. In a pigeon-hole of Uncle Worthy’s roll top desk, Wallace had found note after note that Morris had given Uncle Worthy for sums ranging from a hundred to two or three thousand dollars each. Notes that , he had never paid. “If I were you,” Wallace said to Aunt Edna and Lutie, “I’d sell the furniture and all the silver in this i house, keeping out just the things . that you’ll want for your new home . when you get one. I’d sell it right away and settle down in a flat j somewhere. It must cost a fortune > just to heat this big place."

Susan saw the two women exchange a swift glance, and then Lutie spoke up with something like a return of her girlish brightness and vivacity. . “We had an idea,” she said, “that if we could lay our hands on any ready money v.c’d go away for the rest of the winter. We’ve had so much housekeeping that we’re sick and tired of it, and you know how sick we’ve both been for weeks. We’d like to go down to Florida or out to California where it’s warm. I thought if I could just lie on a beach and bake that rheumatism out of my knee —” “If we could just borrow a little money on the strength of what’s coming to us when the places are sold!” Aunt. Edna quickly interrupted the indelicate conversation about the knee. “Or o,i the money that we’ll get from the sale of the furniture and the silver —Unless we could sell the things right

, al. Not foreclosure and appointment j of receiver. Report of receiver til,ed. Estate Case Estate of Leona Hilgeman. Proof of mailing of notice of hearing flle.l. Report submitted finding net value of estate is $6,712.11 and that taxes are due as follows: Walter Hilgei ninn, $47.12; Jvhn Felty allowed the sum of $16.44 and the same is onler- | ed certified to the county auditor. Real Estate Transfers Loywl Order of Moose to Roy Lehman et ux inlot 943 in Decatur for S9OO. Henry Hirschy et ux to Alfred Hirschy et ux 80 acres of land in French township for

away—” She left the sentence hanging in the air, and her eyes questioned Wallace. "That sounds like a fine ides to me," he replied. “Tomorrow when the appraiser comes to look over the house for the bank, why don't you ask him to tell you what you ought to get from the sale of the things in the house? He might be able to tell you where to sell them, too.” Wallace stayed for supper, eating cold roast beef and celery and toast with great appetite, and afterward he came out into the kitchen to help Susan with the dishes. He tried to catch hold of her hands as she piled the plates and eups in the wire basket on the drainboard and told her that she was his girl, and that he wasn’t going to let her get away from him. Not by a long chalk. She hated everything about him. The gloss on his hair, the slight fullness of his cheeks when he smiled at her, the odor of spearmint gum on his breath, the purple and white checks in his satin tie. She found out then what every normal woman finds out some time during her life—that when she loves one man, any other man who woos her becomes at once the most objectionable and loathsome creature under the sun, so far as she is concerned. "WaHrtee, I wish you’d go in and talk to the aunts.” she said to him, pulling her hands away from him and putting them under the hot water as»she rinsed a plate. “They love you to talk to them.” "And you don’t?” “Not right now. Not—at any time.” He went away and then, after a moment, he came back. He stood beside her and put his face down close to hers. "I*l me get this straight . . . Have you been letting me break my neck lately, straightening out your family’s affairs, because you thought I wanted to do it—enjoyed doing a lot of extra work?—You knew I was doing it for you 1 Doing it because I thought you’d forgotten all that hooey that you told me at lunch that day!” In the crack-up of his romance Wallace’s polish was rubbed off entirely. “Doggone you, Susan, you can’t do this to me! Turn to me when you want me, and when you don’t, kick me out of the way like a yellow dog—” That was what he said: “Like a yellow dog.” He paced up and down, an elegant and impressive figure of a man, saying inelegant and unimpressive things, flinging out his arms like an orator as he went from one end of the big kitchen to the other. “I thought you were just looking after your bank in this,” said Susan, “and I still think so. After all, what are you or the bank doing but selling us out, paying yourselves what we owe you and handing the rest to Aunt Edna and Lutie?—You’re doing just what you did to that niee young couple when you bought their house in cheaply because they couldn’t pay off the mortgage or keep up the interest—” “It’s business,’’ said Wallace, and he said it with a roar. “It’s just as straight and honest as business can be! Every bank under heaven does

“Well, just don’t try to tell me that you’re doing the Brodericks a favor then,” said Susan mildly and went on washing her dishes. Presently Wallace went away and soon afterward she heard her aunts saying goodnight to him in the front hall. They were talking him over when Susan rolled down her sleeves and joined them in the parlor. “He’s a lovely person,” Lutid declared. “You could go farther than Wallace and fare worse, Susan.” In spite of everything, they took it for granted that Susan was going to marpi him. She wore no engagement ring, she had told them that she was in love with Allen, but that did not change their attitude in the least apparently. . . . They believed what they wanted to believe: Wallace and Susan were friends again and everything was as it should be, therefore. (To Be Continued) Coprrtckl. 1163, b, Slug rutuiM Syndlctta. I*

|w , , !!■■■ —' < usMH*l»»i<»nrrn < lahMN To Hr 'owriiitorr Mla<*rllanroua Ft Wsyne Frig Co. off. «UP 311M3 Deratur Democrat Co. supplios * Adv, Cltiscne Telephone Co. tel. 74.47 city of Pecetur light & pow. 107.ftp Leo Khlnger Ins IJ-jJ Ira Fuhrman do J'j’® P. F. Teeple, drayage | Cleo Wei'Hng, dep. hire JM Iverna Werllng. registration Jj.OO David P. Pepp do Kuth Macklin do Vlrena Fravel do J*’® Helen Heuseer do 14-00 John A Meyers do .... J. M Doan do Forest E. Deltseh do . Bari L. Sanders do ’•? Mrs. Geo. Tenter do -J-,' Lula Swearing.-r do J-*® Elsie K. Stanley do --J0 Mary C. wan d..p hire 7-..0V I John W. Tyndall postage .. G.«« 1 Delmore wechter, dep. hire Ace Office Hop. Co. treae. ex. 1.75 Ruth Knapp, dep. hire io.vu Jtoscoe Elsey, Emerg. Dep. Sheriff J»-®» Burl Johnson, mileage -J.o* Frank Mtllick. dlteh exp. J.OO W. M. wendel do , James Kelley do LJJ Ralph Perlckson do ‘O.OO T. R. NoM do J-** Blue Creek Stone Co. do »•»» Berne Lumber Co. uo - 39.®# W. Q. O'Neal Co. do — Noah Rich do U. 04 Daniel Yod«r do } Harvey I'randel do Geo. 8. Gutttochalk do **«®» Ered Geimer do LyLarger Gravel Co. do A. F. Thieme do J J JO George Ringger do W. W. AHbott do Krick Tyndall Co. do Are Office Sup. Co. Surv. exp 1.«5 Cliffton E. Striker, sal. & post. 149.30 Margaret Myera. salary Cliffton E striker, trav. exp. 33 70 L E. Aithbold, salary 70.33 Mildred Koldeway do L. E. Archbold, exp. 8B.&3 Commercial Print Shop, Proaevutur'a Exp -- 00 J. F. Felty, sal. & I-oat. 91.'"' Robert J. Zwiek, inquest 2e.no j W. Vizard, sal. A post. a11.20 Dr. F. L. Grandstaff, Health r Comm. Exp. .'J Florence Anderson <lo Margaret Kiting do t 5.00 George IVelllnger, assessing 7.00 Henry B. Heller, salary ®0 00 Ralph M. Jahn, Old Age PenAon burial os.oo J. W Schumaker, salary 75.00 Mai* McClure do ■■ 2“-“® SclAfer Hdwe Co,, court hse. -.57 Smith Drug Co. do 2.40 Riverside Nursey do '-00 B. W. I'eVor do Hurl Johnson, bid. of prisns. 50. W Nor. Ind. Public Ser. jail G-03 Hr G. .1. Kohne do 3 n " Dr' J M Miller do »®« Kohne Drug Store do 1.50 David D. Depp, election H.M David D. Depp do 1 • H Berne Witness, legal adv. 141 "» Irene Byron, sanatorium — 197.10 Township Poor C. A. Dugan. Trustee, trustee's rent DiO.oo Dr. L. M Glthens, I'nlon 30.00 Frank Krick do t C,Dr. G. J. Koliue, Ruel le -j> Kroger Store do 1 1 : ’O J. J. Helmrich. Preble H. A. Breiner, Kirkland ■ 15.00 Dr. J. C. Grandstaff do 8.25 Fisher A Darris. St. Marys .. 3.00 Bell s Grocery do Jf-00 C. A Douglas do 11.34 Dr. .1. W. Vizard do .. . — 30.00 C. P Troulner do Frank Krick do Smith Drug Co. do >-74 It. f 4. Everett do \V. E. Spitler do L>.Bs Dr. V. C. Itayl do 05.00 Adams Co. Hospital do G Peterson A Everhart, Wash. '.s# Dr. palmer Eicher do Joe Hrtinnegraff do ».7» Fred Patterson do , t.oo Mrs. J. B. Anderson do 10.00 Charlie Voglewede do -12. M Burt Mangold do .... - Adams Co. Hospital do Sa..» Drs. Jones A Jones do - 3<. ; “ George Appelman do l<<a Dr. J M Miller do ......... 00.00 M. E. Hqwgr do '4.70 Frank Krick do Dr. S. p. Beavers do Smith Drug Co. do — Ni hols Shoe Store do 4.-4 Mrs. Daisy Richard do IZ-O» Niblick & Co. do 7..» Boll's Grocery do .... C. A. Douglas do 5-1? J. H«nry Faurote do Holt house Drug Co. do - S. J. Hain do J®-; 1 ® S. E. Hite do Fisher A Harris do Dr. G, J. Kohne do Walter Deitsch do »*.•« Julius Haugh do Home Grocery do Kohne Drug Store do l.aFontaine Handle Co. . >-•" Sam Acker do *-®’ Adams Co. Hosp. Blue Creek 7.‘ s ? I. Carver do J4..m Dr. C. C. Rayl do ® Mrs. F. H- Tabler do I" " Monroe Market do ■ »-®“ Adams Co. Hosp. Monroe Richardson Store do »» ■ ’ Dr. M. L. llabegger do J®*-®® Heller Groc. do ‘j ’ ’ Mennonite Book Concern do 4E. H. E. Rupert do “ 00 Bd Roe do Drs. Jones A Jones do Dr. Palmer Eicher do -- » Dr. C. C. Rayl do ‘j-®“ Standard Oil Co. do West Main Grocery .Io Burk Elevator, French - »»• Bierie A Yager do ->«-®® Reuben Meyer do - ('has B. Roush. Hartford Berne Equity do Chester Runyon do "■!' Christ H. Roth do ’ Adams Co. Hospital, U abash Dr C. F- Hinchman do -*■>“ Dr. M. L. Hibegger do ’e j ll Dr. C. 11. Price do ■ Central Grocery do Snyders Grocery do Geneva Equrty Lxrti. do “ Geneva Mtllg. A Grain Co. do 14. « Harlow's Market do I##® Richardson'S Store do • ■ Wells Bros, do k ’ ®’ CiiarUs Roush do Clair Shoemaker, Jefferson .. 10.00 Berne Milling Co. do 4.58 Dr. W. F Schenk do 20.0 n Spangler Bros, do 7.92 Kroger Grocery do Dr. C. C. Rayl do -40. W < oiinly Infirmary 11. P. let Fontaine, salary .. 150.(Hi Clara LaFohtalne do 33.33 August MarKuti, labor . ::5.00 Herbert I-aFontalne do 35.00 Florence Lengerich do 35.00

Esther Lusk do 35.00 Charles Cook do • 20.65 J. B. .Millet do 7.00 Ur. C- V. Connel. up«r. exp... 58.00 J Rev. A. M. Clouser do 4.00 H. Knapp A Son do 1.83 Krick Tyndall Co. do 7T 64 August Walter do 14 7,> .Schafer Hdws. Co .do 18.35 Kocher Lum'b. * Coal Co. do 11.87 Decatur Electric Shop do . 27.45 | Lee Hardware Co. do 52,82 Millers Bakory do . 39.15 i Fisher & Harris do . 518.04 'Schmitt Meat Market do 23.01 . Standard I'll Co, 10.20 Burk Elevator Co. do <3.90 ..Monroe Grain Co. do 7.57 Auto Electric Garage do 5.0 u Nichols Shoe Store do 12.55 Niblick A Co. du . 208.3? Burt Mangold do L®" Huntington iMlmrulories do 0".32 Smith Drug Co. do ... 21.91 Tom Boss <|<> 8.001 Hoard Ilf liiiardlana Mara Mo’lure, mother's aid. 15.0 n Leuretta whitman do 6.00 olive Reynolds do 30.00 Merle Bristol do . ,16.011 Olla Debolt do 10.00: Margaret Myers do 10.90 Marie Anderson do lu.oo Edna Hay do Mary Hazelwood do 16.00 Mrs. H Ehinger. Trustee, do 5.00| Pearl Heed do 6.00 Leota Beery do 5.90 Anna Ripberger do 20.00 Elizabeth Hodle do 10.00 Gertrude Schurger do a.OO Madeline Dunn do 10.00 Opal Myers do — 20.00 Alpha Yaney do 20.00 Mi'llal White do 10.00 Eva Tunil»les,»n do . 19,001 Emma Beer do 20.001 Mary Reynolds do ,2 0 " William Soiiinnis do 15.99 Catherine Roe do 5.00 Vada Roe do “-J0 Laura Beerbower do 10.00 Delota Beery do 5.00 W. Guy Brown, mileage . Jo 48 Ft. Wayne Orph. Hme. bd. gd. 176."0 Highway Keixiir Itlstrlct No. 1. Wm. H Bittner, labot* 42.09 John Bittner do . 13.75. Hugh Meyers do 2.50 Glen Jackson do 4.751 Hugo Blakey do •-?•! Clint Beard do - Erwin Biena do ... 7.50 Hugo Blakey, labor &' team.. 10.00 Jacob Wagner do 8.90 Amiel Bien* do 30.00 Edward Schearer do *9.99 Holley Croaler do 1.50 IHatrlct N«, 9. Hugo H. Gerke. labor ■ •*.“? James Mlzey do , Elmer Gerke do J.®-;:' Jim Watts do *-7» Amos Gerke do '■ Henry Gerke do * *® Robert Gerke do 1-50 Julius Haugh, material ... • IHetriet No. 3. Aug Bloinenberg, labor Herbert Blouietiberg do ’8 j-« Herman Scheuman. Ibr.-ttn. 19.90 Henry Gaßmeier do J® 09 Hugo Fuhrman, labor 11.69 L. F. Fuhrman do .4 34 2o Herman Blilerdlng. Ibr-tni. .. 5.00 Herman Schakel do “-00 Elmer Fuhrman, labor John Mann do Wilson .Mann do <-"® Dlsi Het No. I G. 11. Hleeke. labor ' John Beal. Ibr. A team 23'10 Richard Arnold do -j" Gilbert Whlerdlng do Milton Dettinger do Lawrence Bleeke, labor J.7» Floyd Arnold, Ibr & tm. .. I 3 “» Evan Yake do • }«-“® Giant Ball, labor - ‘j?" N. W. Abbott do „ S.eO lliatrlet No. 5 Herman l ieman. labor. Albert Braun do Ambrose Spangler do 19.7“ Clyde Hitchcock do K;" Roscoe Elzey do — - —I District No. «. C. P. Troutner, labor - Pat Coffee do Homer Dague do *»-*“l L. L. Troutner, Ibr A tm. ... *».09 Loren Troutner do ■ Wm. Watkins d«x- JO.IM) A. Sheets do Fred Bender, labor -3 ®“ ■Clyde Hitchcock do 3”!Ivan Allen do “■•■’l Clint Deatlt do I Clyde Beam do 19.9« District No. 7. . I James F. Parrish Ibr Atm. . 9->.lj: Ivan Byers do ' Charles Brunstrup do .. 11 Rons Wolf do ’.eO Aaron Wittwer do Wayne Wittwer, labor l Fred Bilderback llu-tm Will Beat do Will Neadstine do Clair Carver, labor L -j Will 4auggli do .... * Homer Hobhlet do •:* Gerald Edwards do Don DeArmond do - ID. M. Swart* do J. I Ernest Girod do . .. | F. Merriman do • Therinond Wolf do .’. i'’; Gorden Burkhail do - Roy Hook do 1® ®® Hoti Merris do Frank Myers do - “® District No. ». Arman llabegger, Ibr. - tm. Paul McClain do ' Arnold Simon, labor ..’-?® , J. V. Hendricks, ibr. A tm. - ■ i Joi Sapp do ? , u IMMtrict So. George Kinggtr, Ibr - tm. ( Joe liHiimgartner, labor ■ ' ( Dan Kipper do , Joe Gerber do Homer Beer do ’ i L. K. S<diindler do ” J. J. Kauffman do .«!! L. K. St-hiUdler do b DUtrivt >o. 10. t llufua Me»iibei>er, Ibr - tm. ’ Robert Meshbertfer do Charles Studler do . .- , Kichard Meshberger du Albert Steiner do 2‘V!! , Milo Sales do * Charles Studler do Goren Gottschalk do jj 'J. Milo Sales do i Dan Studler do • ‘ ’ John Duff do y.-H Clvde Striker do H.OO Ellis Pontius du b’red Heeler do . — •’•bO Otto Hofstetter, labor . DlNtrirt >o. it. \V. M. Slrikt r, Ibr - tm. Lee Sidiell, labor * Ar Bill Haviland do J.” [ Ed Meyers do • ‘<’l Bill Kelley du 4 * iToni Sullivan. Ibr. - tm ‘ Theron Fenstmaker, labor iEd Nevll, labor ? 1 Fred Mathys, Ibr. - tm. Herman Mathyn, labor . Fred Hanni, Ibr - tm. 20.0 > • John Cook, labor .... "'-bo

ii I !, ‘“" i 'B-n' I ' Pl ■lsm - \. . . ' I ■ Jaini'N .\jiud' i n ‘ 'BUI IHsIH.i N„. u Carl Bit iiiijf ;'c Icnnug l'-","‘,' k " M l-n ---IBS Haymc-.-l Lev llai ;<r t . p Lulu it.- ■, ~r ' " l ’ **»_ !?' t ', k '"Dll '■(>. ,|, " ''.'He;; ll'c l lz t -, 1 l„, (t !*, \ ; '' 1 ; * *'n jo 11. i.. Krin ,|,, I Sells'■' II Iw, I ;' slu ' a " ■ ■ Tin Shot, J,-™ H I'b-IT A 5.,„ ,|. ’’n® •vs C . H '''' ■ ■ •— -l ’ Ik .Stiiixlir.i -in G. V. Porter ,I.,'* Sim-I.r- . ,u r „ Amlien L Jcff.,-c B. 1:. Fin ,i, wg M i. ii cm , Mrs. Cl .... s, 1,;,, .j,, ‘ ' .Johns-':, l.' j' iir Shep Bel lie 1. . iili.-r I’., dy ’ * MBS Decatur A .1 . !■„:„( . T Ante 17l«- -I. L.iiae.. ■)., *1 Dierkcs \ut . p ;lrls ai) —■« Decatui s .. : MIU —gg Butlers i.h.ik, da SS Englan,l \ U |., Parts Mesh , , Zelma I ;k M Ralph I-:. 1;..,.),, sal . tp.uj Yost Li '• • -. matu;a|' iC. D. Tail", ,|o > ~3 Lucius s u,. rs ,1,. Plyni'Hilii I. ■ k ''rsh. pit*l ' Dt k Tonm-lu r' ,lo Him- 1. ii. ,|„ j Mcshi-' ik, it-, - >. Kopia-I - I’: ,"i I. Is dn a Certified tills let da* -f j ber 1941. JOHN W -tj Auditor Aduifil Plenty of Pio's K-xig Duiitlalk. cut. feet in frmii anil an sung hind a ids ov.netl by W causing considerable | here, up- porker, weighig] IVO pounds, n-i-s all seteil transportation

—- im| johJ ! •rV AuclJ ? ' 1* ( ;\. ":■ \ \l \ ,? ' ir! - “ ‘wW —ev- ry ta SALE ( ALENDM Nov - 11 miles ""' Decatur ' ms nartb t school. < :■• i’ll* sale. O Nov :i ihmrealt|M at Sale Barn I || Nov. 7 -■ t and 1 mil- ii "t miles north jBH Chattano. 1 sale. Ha N V. !’• ■:>:■■ I-iirM.3 miles snirli niile WilL-hir. -I farm. hS XnV 1' gw Sales. I Nor. t' mile* « . ' ft 1)11 Nov .1' ' ga -ali M Nov. 26—1' I’ |, ' lllll ’ il 1,1 "jM north and I 1 Nov. :?i ■ a:1 ' : ga Sales. ■ | I). .-. 11 I "■'•* '*Si mi' -s ea>: catur. ..Ml Dec. 12 ■ ■ north For Beller | Dr. IL Frohnapttl Licensed I Chiropractor and I Naturopath ■ Phone 311 101 Ncurocalorreter Service ■ X Ray Laboratory | Office Hours: 10 to I 1 to 5 p. m., 6toBP J N. A. BIXLER I optometrist I Eyes Examined. Glassei HOURS: ■ 8:30 to 11:30 1 Saturdays. 8:00 P- I Telepin” lo I