Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 263, Decatur, Adams County, 5 November 1934 — Page 2

Page Two

F CLASSIFIED ( ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND N QTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE or TRADE—For shop: ChoiOJ of throe fresh rows. W. M. Kl.son. Decatur, roulj 4. 262-kStx FOU SALE-Fresh elder an J apples several vari.lfes. J. 0. Trlcker, bw-tt 2<<2-3: FOR SALE —Gurl'a winup ecat, size 14 or 16, reasonable. Phpae 657 or • at 303 N. SihfrSi. 361-3 t FOR SALE—Good Guernsey bull, eligible to register. E. E. Bragg. Mile west of W illshire on 124. | FOR SALE —30 head of shoats and ' one gilt due to farrow February I 15. Inquire at Frank Wrecking i company, Wosi Monroe street. FOR SALE—Bed springs and mattrees. Baby chair. Mrs. G. A. Thoms 51-4 North Seesnd /.rec.. 263-g3t — .. ■— .»■ ■ i FOR SALE er TRADE—On city pr.jerty—47% aerco goo) farm tend, wall improv'd. A. D. Suttles. 262J%)R SALE—Krftk Tyndall stock. ® Will sacrifice Write Eox J. C,. % Democrat. 262-g3tx FOR SALEh—Barred Rock pullets, also Whitt Wyandotte pullets. Jersey White Giant cockrels. 4 miles west, % south of Monroe. W. C. Oliver. 263t3x FOR SALE —Three-day old Guern-1 sey heifer salt, cx.ra good breeding. Phone J-566- John Walters. 263FOR SALE —2 soft coal burners. Call 22. L- W. Murphy. 261-3 t FOR SALE —1228 Chevrolet coupe, in good condition. Inquire at 1u63 Winchester St. 261-3tx FOR SALE — Mi lligan apples, Grimes Golden, Johnathans?®Me4ntoshr Baldwins. Price 60 cents and up. ■?. E. Haggard. 1 mile north. 3% miles east of Monroe. 263-g6tx Ffrtt SALE — Several good milk cows. William Klenk, 6 miles east of Decatur. 261-3 t WANTED _ WANTED To Let on iShares—lO or 12. held of Ewes. Responsible party. Phil L Schieferstein R. ", • Decatur. 263a3tx ■ WANTED—Roomers. See Mrs. J. E. Durbin, 1111 No. -Second st., Decatur. 253a3tx STEADY INCOME —I will start you with Tea and Coffee route paying up to 360 a w. ek. New Ford Sedans given producers. Write quick. Albert Mills, 6652 Mon. Ohio. 263-ltx , WANTED —-Position as housekeeper | in city or country. Good 900 k. Berne phone 16 or write 268 East ■ Mawr St. Berne. 2.3-k3".x MAX WANTED —. Supply custom.3*'» with famous Watkins ProthicTT ia Decatur. Business established, earnings average $35 week)v. wav starts immdiately. Write J. R. Watkins Company, 250-78 N. sth St.. Coiumbus, onio. 263-ltx MAN WANTED — in this locality as- direct repressntative of well knnwn oil company to sell small town and form trade. Big business right now taking orders for hum; iiate and spring delivery. Experience* n<jt necessary. No investment required. Chant tor Wr'te P. T. Webster. General Manager,' 631 Standard LLnk Building, Cleveland, .Ohio ?62altx WANTED — For expert radjetsand electric j] repairs call Marcellus Miller, phone 625. Member Radio Manufacturers Service. Miller Radio Service, 226 N. 7th st. 251tf — o-. ■. —— LOST — Brown rubber ramcape and cap in rubber bag. Lost out of oar last week. Finder please return to Mrs. R. E. Garard. phone 535. 261-3 U I Give Your TOP Longer Life with TOP DRESSING 29c ’’ip i ENGLAND’S AUTO PARTS Wholesale and Retail Ist Door So. of Court House Phone 282 Gillette *’> res Jgg* y Latex Dipped Process f now unconditionally LALAfAutAj&b&LI guaranteed for 18 mo. Sold on our new rental plan gg 25 weeks to pay. S Porter Tire Co. Distributor 341 Winchester Phone 1239

MARKETREPORTS I DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL I > AND FOREIGN MARKETS . Brady’s Market for Decatur Berne Cratgville Hoagland And Willshire Corrected November 5 ■ No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday. Friday, Saturday. - ■ 1 253 to JOO Lbs , $5.25 ! ' 230 to 250 lbs $5.15 | 180 to 203 lbs $4.90 I ;; SOO to 350 1b5.......54.95 | j 140 to 1W lb? $4.00 120 to 143 ths $2 »5 1190 to 130 Iba $2 70 I R.ugha . $4.25 I Stage $2.00 down Vealew $6.50 I Rw. and wether lambs $5.50 I Buck lambs $4.56 I CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Dec. May July Wheat, old 98% 96% 90% new 98% Corn, old 77% 78% 77% new 77% Oats, old ... 51% 45% 44 Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs steady to 5c higher: 250®3OO lbs. $5.75: 225-250 tbs. $5.50; 200225 lbs. $5.40; 180 200 lbs. $5.25; 160-180 tbs. $5; 300-350 lbs. $5; 150-160 lbs. $4.50; 140-150 lbs. $4.25; 130-140 lbs. $3.75; 129-130 lbs. $3.25; 100-120 lbs. $2.75; roughs $4.50; stags $2.75. Calves $6.50; Limbs $6.25. East Buffalo Livestock Hog receipts 6100; active; generally 10-15 c over Friday’s average; desirable 200-220 lbs. $6-6.15: few 24** lbs. $6.25; 180-200 lbs. $5.75-6; 140-160 lbs. $4.65-5.35; pigs downward to $3.50. Cattle receipts commercial 2300, government 400; dry fed steers scarce, 25-50 c higher: strictly good 950-1200 lbs. $8.508 75; short fed steers $7; heifers $5.65: fleshy grassers $5: sparingly $5.25; bulk common steers and heifers $3.50-4.50; fat cows $34.40; low cutter and cutter $l- - Calf receipts commercial 850, vealers steady $7.50 down. Sheep receipts 7100; lambs generally 15c lower, active at decline; ewes and wethers $6.50 to mainly $6.60; strong weights and medium kinds $5.50-5.75; tew $6. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET i Corrected Ncvcxber 5 ® No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 89c No. 2. New Wheat (58 lbs.) 88c Oats 32 lbs. test 47c Oats, 3o Iba. teat . 46c Soy Beans, bushel 68c-75c White or mixed corn SI.OO ! First Class Yelljyw Corn $1.05 i New Corn ’ "Oc to 90c FOR KENT j I FDR RENT—Room# for light house-1 keeping, furnished. Phone 124. in-1 quire at 122 E. Rugg St., 262-a3: j FOR RENT—Furnished rooms 10-| rated near Sugar Beet. Mrs. j. E. Durbin, Illi No. Second st.. Decatur. 263a3tx f.(557 andTol’ND . — LCST— Small beagle hound, long brown ears, black and white body. White tip on tail. Reward. Phone 254. 263Gt3 .. ■. A ILoan. 1 Need It Sudden and unexpected needs | of money hit all of us at times, i * At such times you can get j money from us quickly, easily, confidentially. Our company will lend you up to S3OO on your own signature and security, at lawful interest rates. You can pay us back in small weekly or monthly payments. FRANKLIN SECURITY CO Decatur, Indiana Phone 237 »—MraweawaM**". For Better Health See Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath I Phone 314 104 So. 3rd st. Neurpcglometer Service X-Ray Laboratory Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. m., 6 to 8 p. m. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8.3® to 11:3;6 12:36 t® 5:09 Satuj-d«sto, B.o® p. m. Telephone U? 5.

L Test Your Knowledge I Can you answer seven of these | ten questtone? Turn to page Four for the answers. 1. In the Now r<wtament, win* • wi re Priscilla Sand Aquila? 2. Who ••aid. "L'etat e’est mol!" (1 am the 6tnte|? 3. Who was Fratw Hals? 4. Nume the German founder of} [ Protestant Christianity. 5. For what purpose do doctors I | administer an anodyne? 6. Os whnt country was Don Pe- ' i dro 1 the Emperor? 7. Who wrote the novel "The! Professor”? 1 8. Where is the Yser canal?

fiIRJL in the FAMILY*! » by BEA.TR-ICE BUR.TON » ||

CHAPTER XXXV Lutie’s voice broke in upon her thoughts. “Busan, someone’s at the back door." "11l see who it is.” Through the pane of glass set in the back door she could see Anna’s face as she crossed the kitchen. Anna was smiling broadly at her, but above her wide mouth her eyes were filled with anxiety and sympathy. Where other people might have sent flowers or a note of condolence Anna had brought the coffee cake on a green glass cake-cooler carefully wrapped in v axed paper. She set it on the kitchen table and then peeled her gray cotton gloves from her hands to show Susan the ring that she wore, a narrow white gold wedding ring engraved with tiny orange blossoms. “Herbst married me on Tuesday," she explained. “We was married in the justice’s office downtown. How you like my suit? In it I was married.” “ ‘Married in green, you’ll live like a queen.’ That’s what they say. you know. Anna.” Anna’s big laugh filled the kitchen. “Ach, you should see me, how I live like a queen already!” she cried. “All day I run the creamery across the street from Herbst s house, and help Herbst and his brother clean the milk cans. His brother’s wife, she used to do it, but last week she have a baby, so it is good thajf I marry Herbst His mother, she is sick—Susan, you come by me some day and see my house? I buy all new lamp shades last week, and new table runners, and I make al) new cushions. It’s nice now ” “Any house of yours would be nice, Anna,” said Susan without flattery. Any house, no matter how impossibly ugly and ordinary its furniture might be, would be beautiful and shining with cleanliness if Anna had the care of it just as the Brodericks’ bouse always hafeieen under her care. She had scoured t-.e ancient tin bath tubs until they shone like sheets of silver, kept the high windows free from steam and dust and the crystal prisms of the chandeliejp glittering like newlyformed icicles. For eight dollars a week she had performed a miracle of housekeeping for the Brodericks, who had always found fault with her. . “The first day I have to rayself PH come to see you,” Susan added. “Just noW" I don’t like to leave the house. Mrs. Broderick and Miss Lutie don’t like to be here alone since my uncle died. And then, we’re awfully busy. too. We re giving up the house in a few uays. Susan had often read the phrase’ ■‘her mouth fell open in her astonishment,” in books, and she saw now. for the first time, that it actually was an accurate description of what a mouth could do. bor Anna’s mouth really did fall open in amazement, and her eyes widened until thev were like large round blue marbles. “No! You never go away from this house 1” She shook her head in its pale green felt hat trim Died with a single Dink velvet rose. . “Oh. yes, we’w go in £. Anna. John’s gone already—” and she went on with the story of the happenings in Center Street during the last two weeks. “And Mr. Sholes? Where he gone?” Ann asked when she had finished. , “He’s gone to live at Mrs. Cullen’s house. In Miss Sayre’s old room.” Susan answered. “What you going to do?” Anna asked next, settling herself in her old kitchen rocker. “Marry Mr. Steffen right away, I guess. Susan shook her head. I don t know exactly what I am going to do, Anna. I haven’t thought it all out yet.” As she spoke a glow of excitement ran over her. All day she had been worrying about her future, wondering just where she would go and what she would do now that it was not possible for her to go to the Cullens’ without turning Allen out of his room. But now it struck her that her position had a certain advantage. Wasn’t this

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1934

9. Who was the aecond aon o(| | Noah. iMineJ !n Genesis? ' 16. On which Egyptian river ia the | ; villago of Luxor? — 1. In which State is Province-j town? 2. Os which State U Albert C.! ■ Ritchie the Govi rnor? 3 Who was Goorg fricdrich Han i Idel? 4. What does Upt .n 'tin-lairs E P I C plan stand for? 5. What is (he nume of the Mer-j , i hant of Venice in Shakespeare's ( {play with that title? 6. Name the smallest inland I 7. Where is Brigham Young Uni-j I versify? 8. Which is the largest lake In 1 South Amerini? I ■9. What was the Hanseatic Lea-

what she had always wanted? The chance to step out into the unknown world beyond Center Street and see if she could stand on her own feet? Try her own wings? Find out what she was made of? . . . Al! at once she saw that the future just ahead of her wore the very face and features of the adventure she had always been looking for! “I have a room to rent now in Herbst’s house, myself.” Anna was saying. “It was my room until Tuesday when I marry Herbst. If it was in a nice street I think I could get s>x, maybe seven, dollars a week fcr it." She got up from her rocker. “Could I go now to speak with Mrs. Broderick before I go? I must get home early to making supper.” Anna was not in the dining room more than two or three minutes, but by the time she reappeared in the kitchen Susan was ready for her. “Look here, Anna ” she said, “some of the things in this hoqse belonged to my father and mother, and when Mrs. Broderick sells them on Saturday a little money will be due me. How would you like it if I came down to your house to live for a while?” • ♦ • On Friday morning Aunt Edna telephoned to the neighborhood photographer and asked him to take a photograph of the house while tie curtains were still at the windows and the chimney still flinging its thin plume of furnace smoke into the air—while it still looked “lived in,” as she said. Susan heard her tell the man to send the photograph to her in care of a tourists’ club in a Florida gulf town called Clearwater. “We’re going there for the winter,” she said to him in a proud globe-trotter sort of voice. “We’ve been to Europe we di*l considH California this year but Florida’s so easy to get to. isn’t it?” Susan smiled to herself as she listened. She could imagine Lutie and Aunt Edna showing the picture to other women wintering down south, hoping to impress them with it and probably succeeding. No matter to what second rate hotel or boarding house they went they would undoubtedly set it up on their dresser, carrying with them always the glory of the Brodericks! Early Friday afternoon the telephone service in the house was cut off. Not until then did Susan really give up hope that Allen would call her up. For days every time the telephone had rung she had waited with every nerve in her body tense for Aunt Edna or Lutie to call. “It's someone for you, Susan.” At five o’clock she went upstairs, put on her hat and coat and came downstairs to tell Lutie and Aunt Edna that she was going out for a breath of air. She had been indoors all w’eek and she fairly ached to get out into the crisp keen winter air and get some exercise. At the back of her mind was the thought that she slight run over to the Cullen 11 ’ for a minute or two. She missed them, and she might see Allen. “I may stop in at the for a minute,” she said, and Aunt Edna merely nodded. It was the first time in history that she did not raise some kind of objection to Susan's going there. Usually she had said. “What on earth do you always want to lie going there for. Susan?” or “They’re good plain people and they are your relatives, of course, but they're in an entirely different walk of life.” Now she had nothing to say. If Susan preferred common people like the Cullens to people like Wallace Steffen, why, it was nobody’s misfortune but her own. That was Aunt Edna’s attitude. As for herself, she was going with Lutie to some old ladies’ Paradise in a sunny climate where the two of them would doubtless find plenty of bridge players to help them pass the time away, the time that had always crept like a snail in the back parlor of the old house. “Try to be back at six.” she said sharply. She liked her meals, and she liked them on time or a little ahead of time “I aepiec you’ve

gi»e? 1 10. When is De I’huw University? — o t|i|H>lntniewt *»t VdialHhitrittor i Notice j. hereby glvsa, that th*' iinderHiglieel h»i* beeu appointed Ad- 1 mlnlatrator of the estate of Ernest i I F. Keller, late of Adams County, de-1 l . eased. The estate is probably solj vent. I J. sepU T. Gernidot, Administrator I,••hart, Heller, and Sel*ur»« r 4IO» i oct. 2". is:i4 o* l 2| N“v. 4-12 - ■ tnaiIVIMI'AT <>»' EXtut Volt Notice fa hereby aiven, Thai the I undersigned has been appointed Ex- , rutin- of the Estate of .lames A. Baiklev, late "f Adams County, de- , .eased. The Estate Is probably soiX el.l 'Oriel 8. Barkley. LJx.culoi IvnSmrl. Heller aa*l sel*Mr»er, i ll,1»34 Oct. -‘9 Nov 5-12 O ———— | Mtes Josephine Archbold of Ind--1 ianapolis is here for a visit with I h r parents, Dr. and Mrs. Roy Archbold.

• taken your mother’s picture down i from the wall, Susan. You needn't > have done that. If you’d asked for ! it, I’d have given it to you.” H«r t chins quivered as if Susan had hurt 1 her feelings. They seemed to be i much more sensitive than the rest -of her face, as if they had a sepa- • rate life of their own. “I was afraid my father would i get the picture, and I didn’t want it > in Mrs. Hopper’s house,” Susan I said bluntly. She had taken it down ! from the wall and put it in the I bottom of her-trunk that morning, i thinking that neither of her aunts would notice or care what had be- . come of it. • • • It was dark when she reached the Cullens’ and somewhere along the i street was the appetizing odor of : ham frying. But the white house i wjis dark from cellar to attic and «%en Susan rang the doorbell there , was no answer. Only the sound of - the bell itself as it buzzed in the . kitchen. i She went on down the street to i Uncle Arthur’s store. Sometimes I Aunt Nell slipped out to get some • forgotten item for a meal from the store, and she was probably there now taking down a jar or bottle from a shelf or asking Mr. JenI nings, the butcher, to wrap up eight ' veal cutlets for her and to please be ; quick about it. But whon Susan entered the i store no one was in it but Mr. JenJ nings himself, sitting behind the I delicatessen counter, reading the evening paper. “Mr. Cullen’s been gone since four o’clock,” he told Susan. “He ■ and Mrs. Cuilcn went down to the commission house to see some pink ; grapefruit that had just come in down tjjirit Shaddock, it’s called.” , He cocked an eye at the clock. “They ; ought to be home soon Been gone { nearly two hours.” He leaned forward in his chair , and picked an apple from a crate , that stood on the fluor near him. , “How about a he asked, ! and held it out to her. “Don't you want to sit down and wait?” “No. thanks. But will you piease . tell them I was here?” Susan was only a few yards from ■ the store when a street car stopped ; at the corner to drop two of its passengers. A slender girl in a red . hat and fur coat and a tall broad : shouldered young man who seemed to tower above her as they started [ up the street side by side. Instantly Susan recognized them Mary Cullen and Allen. Their ■ heads were turned toward each : other, and Mary’s, scarlet hat was like a live coal in the glow of a , s.reet lamp that they passed under • as they came along. Susan could hear their voices through the still ! cold air. She could hear Alien's ; laugh. Moving like a breath she crossed ' the street and watched them from : the shadow of a tree. They went very slowly, and it seemed an age before she heard the opening and I closing of the Cullen’s front door. A light flashed out from the win- ■ dows of the living room. Not until . then did Susan move . . . 1 She never remembered her walk • home that night. But presently she • was there, walking past the iron . stag in the front yard and going up . the stone steps. After dinner she went upstairs and finished packing her trunk. Her . books and her desk set, the six dotted muslin dresses that had been her entire wardrobe last summer, her underthings all hemmed by 1 hands, her one evening gown, the blue flannel dress that she had worn ■ the first time she saw Allen, the vio--1 let toilet water whose scent reminded her of the cheap little bunch of i violets that he had bought her on the library steps three weeks beforeAnd when she had put everything ’ in and had locked the trunk she 1 went out into the carpetless hall and I stood for a moment looking into the . room that had belonged to bim. In the mirror above the dresser she I could see her own figure silhouetted i against the light in the hall. (To Be Continued) ‘ CoDi-rlgh'.. 1,33. Kiug Peuuna Sndieau. Ice.

!MINNIE ZWICK IS FOUND DEAD I (CONTIXUBD FROM WAGB ONE) .Mi's. Lulls*' Gerke of Allen county and Mrs. Henry Dlrkson of Adama I county, aipo aurvive, , Funeral services will be hld •'l'fuesday ulli ruoon al 1 '9 o'clock > at the Lawreqc® Zwick home 1836 .: California avenue. Fort Wayne aad • at 2:30 o’clock at the Mt. johua .Lutheran ehurt'h ®B '!*e Fort Wayn®4tecaiur road. liev. A. R Truelsweh. pastor of the ehureh and . . Rev. Walter Klauaiug of Fort Wayne will officiate and burial will I be in the church cemetery. 'five body was removed the Lawronce Zwick home this after{noon truip the W. H. Zwick funenal ! home in this city, and may be viewled until time for the funeral. o — COURT HOUSE Real Estate Transfer Albert Buckmaster et ux to Rachael Buckmaster land in Kinkland ; township tar $209. Adeline B. Davenport to George | B. Davenport, land in Washington township tor $1.90. Marriage License Walter J. Bockman, county recorder. Decatur, ind .Mabie C. Staley bookkeeper, ivecatur. Cleo V. Werling, deputy clerk Pr hie, ami Richard Arnold, farmer. RoyS. Johnson ' Auctioneer * P. L. & T. Co. BL j Phones 104 \ ant * I ®^ 2 ' 1 * V A Claim your date \ 11/ early as I sell every day. SALE CALENDAR Nov. B—Henry R. Anspaugli, 2 miles east and 3 miles north of I Decatur or 3 miles north of Dent school. Closing out sale. Nov. B—Decatur Riverside Sales at Sale BurnNov. 7—John Cross, 4 miles east and 1 mile north of Berne, or 3 miles north and 3 miles west of Chattanooga, Ohio. Closing out sale. Nov. 15. Theodore Lugiubiil, 3 miles south and U mile west o? Willshire on the old Austin Ev&ia farm. Closing out sale. Nov 16-Decatur and Chattanooga Sales. Nov. 22—J.hn F. Sidle estate, 2 miles west of Van Wert on Road 17. Nov. 23- Decatar and Chattanooga spits. Nov. 26—C. P. Foust, 1-4 miles north and 1 1-2 east of Monroeville. Nov. 30 —Decatqr and Chattanooga Sales. Dec. 11—Dwight Wass estate, 3 miles edSt and 5 miles north of Decatur. Dec. 12 —William Dettmer, % mi. north of Echo. SOTirK OF* FIX AI. SETTI.EWKTT OF ESTXTF. W<». XWS® Notiie is hereby given to the creditors, "heirs and legatees of E’rank J. Ineichen. <|e< eased to appear in the Adams ('(reuit Court, held at l*«iat'ur, Indiana, on the 26th day °f N*>vemser. l'*3l, and show cause, if any, Why the Final Settlement Accounts with the estate of said decedent should nut be approvad; and said heirs are eetlfled to ’hen and there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares. Chloa I. Inet'hen, Administrator Pecalur, Indiana. Nov. 3, 1934. Lenhart. Heller and Schuiner tttxs Vote for FLOYD ACKER Republican Candidate for COUNCILMAN at Large City of Decatur Pol. Adv.

l 1^, «

By HARRISON CARROLL OojU/ttvaf. 1934 Cm* I'catNrei 6'padiiuto, Jna. HOIJAfWOOD, . . . — Filmland chuckled when Joal McCrea and Johnny Welnamuller jumped into the ocean with fishing lines in their teeth | and actually suei caedcd in bookmg a bari-aciiiiu. K' Hut Henry Wtlcoxon. the Eug- J*' 1 iish star, tops < then,. Out mi his ’ small yacht ths Ek w■; other day. ho g* donned undarwat o r xogcles. ; a, rm e d himself ■gwak*■ Mißngrt with a fix <■-toot spr-ar and dived " overboard. lift gaffed three sheepsheada As a matter of fact, Wilcoxon is one al Holly woods strongest swimtncra. He was born in Dominica and lived In Barbados Jamaica until the age of 1«. He is the only person • who has been able to dive completely i un*lei* the keel of Cecil B. De Milie s yacht There has been a marked decrease ' of appllcan f>x the one Hollywood actor's rok ii- China Roars'*. And no wonder Columbia troupe will ; sail up |he jurate-inteeted Yaag-tse rivey and will epeuu many months , on the Gobi desert and in Inhospit- ’ able Mongolian territory. But worst of all are the multiple vaccines that the studio will insist administering. Typhoid, smallpox and diphtheria are routine and will be given to the troupe before it leaves here. In China, will come the real grief. Some of the diseases that may be en- ’ countered are Asiatic cholera, kalaaza (dumdum fever), malta fever, frambegia tropica (yaws), pappatacl , fever and two such jaw breakers as ? tnppansomiosis and tsutsuganushl. ‘ Director Clyde Elliott, one actor and about 40 Hollywood technicians will face this alphabetical nightmare. , Very funny about the netvsreel j men and the Union Pacific streamline train. The boys ali gathered to shoot the start of the cross-country dash of this modern miracle of transpori tation. It was dark, so they provided themseives with one-minute flares. Tbe idea being to light them just 30 seconds betore the train ’ pulled out. [ But when the flares were lit. there wgs a slight delay. You'll never hear them, but the sound tracks on the , film are hilarious—a wild chorus of ’ "Start that train) For crying out • loud, get going!” i The uwtei mobster slithered av ay Route 1. Decatur. , Otto Dunivan, farmer, route 1, ' Decatur and Irene M. Eachern. Cooks, Micighau. o —— Beekeepers To Hold Annual Convention , liKlianapaiis, Nov. s—General die- ' cessions of beeke -ping and ita problems will feature the two-day convention cf the Indian*! alate bee-

PUBLIC SM As I uni leaving the farm, I will sell at i iic anctioif.l 4 miles Last and 1 mile North of Berne, 01 NortH# ’ West of Chattanooga. Ohio, on WEDNESDAY, November 7th Commencina at 10:30 A. M. 3—HEAD OF HORSES—3 Bay mare. 6 yrs. old. wt. 1400, sound ; i good horse. 1 yrs. old, wt. 1200, sound; Strawb ri mouth, Wt 1200. sound anti a good worker. . 9—HEAD o'F CATTLE-9 ■ Durham cow. 8 yrs. old. giving good flow ' > milk. 5J • April 15th; Jersey cow, 6 yrs, eld, giving - “1 fl""': j old, giving good flow, will freshen April Durban, old, will freshen in December; Guernsey < ' 9 . vrs 0 in November; Jersey cow, 9 yrs. old. fresh "y day ot cow, 9 yrs. old. giving good flow, will fri - n in Febma’lutll calf, G months old. 51—HEAD OF HOGS—SI . 10 feeders, wt. from 90 to 125 tbs.; 35 h. ad " f tee ® 30 to 60 lbs.; 5 brood.saws; 1 Chester W t»»ar. IMPLEMENTS AND TOOLS S-.IG International tractor, in A-l conditu ■’ chains «•" new; 14-16 lIIC double disc, first class; 1" drill, fertiliser attachment.; Sl4 skein old ht< k" l ' l ' " a - on . 5 ft. McCormick mower; S hole Superior grain plow. 12 in.; cprn cultivator; double set >" work#" shovel plow, apd many small tools. HOUSEHOLD GOODS Round oak dining room table; cupboard. " !l ' lll sewing machine; victrola; axminster rug. xi - I grinder; lard press; At-Water Kent 6 tub, .a’’ ra ‘" other articles too numerous to mention. TERMS—CASH. JOHN CROSS,!* Roy S. Johnson, auctioneer. I W. 11. Patterson, clerk.

in mek us n »*ny a nat, lw '*k What xouthf u | s . u „ having of »•«* menta, j Ust from "Kl't of th. *| of her B«mg a bank. r. J w ,, h havo to iasg ls u™ 1 I of ** jGomh. II But. Tc. to t**> 1'.U.H,., |Usl ■■ ,i ’i" l - ■ i h' J 3. H Tl >c other nh;ht. lU , Minna » , 0 M dine i KI . lores 1. They ' some K presort., i, r th , M kids am! tnade a big hit |3 So much ss that young John, Jr I pravers this way: "God blue niammeju, sister and Mis, nice man—Mr. ' A certain stag, m* r, actor, with a reputatixj bad boy, just got , ia , again ! y arreoing to in act with a w,ii-kaown and then leaving her to at the last minute... ,ij hear about the rft tfc| nett pulled on MarkKdti sports editor, wbentini, scribes w ent east to wr«| burgh Umvereity of tornia footiol! game. Beery will take little Qe* San Antonio. Tex, for "West Point ot th| she'd have to makt&g train with her nurse out on letting her vide ba , . . Wonder who ui t blonde with Max Baeray Street theater? She Mai her name. . . . Maum] was back on the MSI other day and wia is t| her reie in ' David Tile Carl Brissons are jrg Beverly Hills house Ml into an apartment hoti., reward for tbe fine cost costuming “A MxisuM Dream". Max Ree tula Reinha: It in the ;«tsi ! . . . And the Ciareoak| for home scon on the Eh DID YOU KNOWThat Rudy Vallee tMU a w eek projectionist *» theater at Vi esiiirook, b keepers' .'-enciafion «w held in ’he house of rifli at the state house il id on Thursday awl Friigl 9. Several hundred MM ■ ill partes Os the state b| to attend the . 4|Une<l with an -diratl Weber t Huntington, ■ president. - - —— ——O—’flwi Get the Habit - Trail