Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 264, Decatur, Adams County, 6 November 1934 — Page 2
Page Two
f CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALK or TRADE - For sheep: Choice of three fresh cows. \V. M Kltson. Decatur, route 4 .’s2-k3tX FOR SALE Fresh elder and apples several varieties. J. O, Trlcker. 869-H.262*3t • FOR SALE—Good Guernsey bull, eligible to register. E. E. Bragg. Mile west of Willshire on 124. 263t3x FOR SALE —30 head of shouts and one gilt due to farrow February 15. Inquire at Frank Wrecking company, West Monroe street. 363g3tx FOR SALE Bed .springs and mattre~- Baby chair. Mrs. G. A. Thoms 314 North Second street. 263-g3t FOR SALE Ne w Remington typewriter. Phone 1275. 264t3x FOR SALE or TRADE-On city property—47’ a acres good farm | land, well improved. A. D. Suttles, j 262-g3t | FOR SALE Nine slioats at Charles Teeple farm, first house south of ilonmouth. on. U. S. Highway 27. 264.3tx -FOR SALE Krick Tyndall stock. Will sacrifice. Write Box J. C.. i Democrat. 262-g3tx FOR SALE—Barred Rock pullets, also White Wyandotte pullets. Jersey White Giant cockrels. 4 miles west. \ south of Monroe. W. C. Oliver. 263t3x FOR SALE—Three-day old Guernsey heifer salt, extra good breeding. Phone .1-866 John Walters. 263-3tx FOR SALE — Michigan apples. Grimes Golden, Johnathans. M . Intosh, Baldwins. Price 60 cents and up. S. E. Haggard. 1 mile north. 31miles ea.*; of Monroe. 263 g6tx V» AN i ED WANTED—Used gas stove. Must , be in good condition. Mrs. Nichols. 304 N. Tenth.264l3 WANTED To Let on Shares—lo or 13 herd of Ewes. Responsible party. Phil L. Schieferstein. R. 7. Decatur. 263a3tx WANTED Roomers. See Mrs. J E. Durbin, 1111 No. Second st.. Decatur. 263a3tx WANTED—Position as housekeeper in city or country. Good cook. Berne phone 16 or write 2t>B East Main St. Berne.363-kStx WANTED — For expert radio and electrical repairs call Marcellus Miller, phone 625. Member Radio Manufacturers Service Miller | Radio Service. 226 N. 7th st. 251tf ■ e —— ~ FOR RENT FOR RENT —6 room house near Decatur. 1 , with electric lights, lauge garden. Box 13, Daily Democrat. 264t3x FOR RENT—Rooms for llgu' housekeeping. furnished. Phone 124. inquire at 122 E. Rugg St., 262-aSt FOR RENT —•Furnished rooms located near Sugar Beet. Mrs. J. E. Ihtrbm. 1111 No. Second st.. Decatur. 263a3tx LOST AND FOUND LOST — Smooth hair Rat Terrier. Color tan; white spot on breast; long tall. Finder please call 59 Reward. 264-3tx LOST—Small beagle hound, long brown ears, black and white body. Whitr tip on tail. Reward. Phone 254. 263Gt3 THE PERSON who took the Mother ot Pearl Rosary from the Catholic church three weeks agj is asked to please return it to the jai suliage. ItX Dance Wednesday Sun Set. ■■•SsaeegOOOSmmsmOIWMBOOO. a* —maSS»«m«mmi ■ Model A Ford H 192 K to 1931 g MANIFOLD HEATERS I 95c fl ENGLAND’S b AUTO PARTS Mg Wholaaala and Retail Ist Door So. of Court House W Phone 282 II A ™ Latex Dipp-A-Yf- ed Proce»s , J now uncon- —— ditionally guaranteed for 18 mo. Sold on our new rental plan 25 weeks to pay. Porter Tire Co. Distributor 341 Winchester Phone 1239
MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL ► AND FOREIGN MARKETS . IJradi’s Market for Deeatur Berne Cralgvllle Hoagland And Willshire j < urectcd November 6' ■ No < jmmlsslon and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday. Wed* . ueaday, Friday, Saturday. ■. r'u to 3M Iba s•’• M ::-* 35 23 ’l6O to 200 Tbs. 15.00 1 300 to 350 14ms 65.00 J 140 <o 160 Rm 34.10 ’ ’ 120 to 140 lbs 13.00 | 100 to 120 lbs. ... 32.80 ? i i Stage ....— 32.00 down : Vealera —. 56.50 I Ewe and wether lamias 55.75 | Buck lamias 34.75 — FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK •I Fort Wayne, Ind.. Nov 6. —(U.K) j Livestock: Hogs, steady to 5c higher; 250-1 300 lbs.. 55.80; 225-250 lbs.. 55.60; . 200-225 lbs.. 35 45; 160-300 lbs . I 55.30; 166-180 lbs.. 55.05; 300-3501 ■lbs., 35.30; 150-160 lbs, $4.50; 140150 lbs. $4.25; 130-140 lbs . $3.75; I 120.13 U lbs.. $3 25; 100-120 lbs... j $2.75; roughs. $4.50; stags. $2.75. Calves. $7: lambs. $6.25. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK Ea«t Buffalo. N. Y„ Nov. 6. <U.R>' —Livestock: Hogs, receipts 206; steady to 10c higher; desirable 220 |hs.. $6 25: > 190-205 lb«., $5 80-56.05; other I w eights nominal. Cattle, receipts, commercial 150; I moatly re.ctlve cows: steady: low j cutter and cutter, sl-$215. Calves, receipts, commercial. 50; vealers strong to 50c higher; good j to choice. $7.50-38; common and | medium. $5-36.25. Sheep, receipts. 6UO: lambs tin- ! changed; good to choice largely, I $6 60; strong weights and medium kinds. $5.50-55 75 — LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Carr.-cted November 6 No. 1 New Wheat. 60 lbs. or better 89c j No. !. N w Wheat (58 lbs ) -88 c Oats 32 lbs. test 47c 1 Oats. 30 lbs. test 46c I Soy Beans, bushel 68c-75c < White or mixed corn 31.00 1 First Class Yellow Corn $1.05 New ilorn 70c to 90c French Cabinet Members Resign Paris. N v. 6—lUPl— Eqouard Herroit and five other radical mem- : bers of the cabinet handed their j resignations to premier Gaston \ Doumergue today, precipitating, a 1 new crisis which may lead to re-sig- t | nation of the salvation government. 1 The resignations, effective only If Doumergue presists in asking for ; a vote of confidence Thursday on ; th? government’s plea for three i months credit, came as parliament j assembled for a new session which ' may be momentous for France and ail Europe. A tumultuous political situation has threatened to end the Doumergue aud lead to a requlsit for dissolution of parliament, new elections and cinstitutional reform. XiHM.intinent nt Vdmtelstrntor ’ Net: < i» herebj given, Thai ;hc, undersigned lie* been appointed A t- i mlnistralor of the estate of Austin; T. Kran.-r late of Adams County. <ie- I ceased. The estate is probably solvent. W. A. Wells, Adminstrator C. 1.. VV alter*. Mtwrney October 23. ISS4. O t. 33-tO N-i» MCI K E OF t OMWtg'IONF.H’s *■ M.E OF KF. 41. ESTITK Notice is hereiby given, that the undersigned commissioner, appointed bv the Adame Circuit Court, to maksal.- of real estate, ordered sold in the ca.se of Wilfred S Smith. .*xe- . utor of the last will and Testament of Oliver T. Hendri- ks. deceased agninst Maria I, Hendricks *t"' 1,1 all respe. ts agreeaible t<> the order of said court in the matter of said sale ON SATURDAY. November 24t'>. 1»34, between the hours ot ten neloek A M and four o'clock P. M.. at the east door of the Court Hi use in the citv .if Decatur. Indiana, will offer for sale, at public sals, to the highest and best bidder for not les* than two thirds of the appraised value the following described real estat", so ordered sold and situated in Adams County, State of Indiana, to-wit: , , Inlot number six in the town o< Monroe. Adam* County, Indians. TERM* One third .ash on day ot sale, one third in one year, and One third in two years from date of sale. . * Deferred payments to be evidenc-e-1 by promissory notes, bearing six per cent Interest from day of sale and secured by a first mortgage on the real estate. soW. Such notes to be executed on the usual blank Bank form of note. Provided, the purchaser or purchasers may pa> all of the puchase money in cash. , if he so desires. ' Said real estate will be sold free --t liens except taxes payable tn island subject to the approva. of said court. James T. Merryman Commissioner N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays. 8.00 p. m. Telephone I’s.
I * Test Your Knowledge * Can you answer seven of these , \ ten ques'lons? Turn to page | Four for the answers. 1 Which genus of moaquitocn I communicate malaria? 2. Where is the Zam.ieri River? 3. Who wrote '’Progress anti 1’ v-
fiURL in the FAMILY'''' f BY BEATRICE BURJTON »
CHAPTER XXXVI I.utlo, shuffliog up the stairs in her soft-soled house slippers, came upon her standing there and gave her a sidewise and knowing look. “I hope you aren’t mooning over Mr. Sholes, Childie." she said. “You know, if he’d really cared anything about you he’d never have left the j house without you that night!’’ The knowledge that she had gleaned from years of reading about redblooded two-fisted lovers was in her face. “He’d have swept everything aside, and taken you with him—or he wouldn’t have gone at all!’’ Susan turned and flashed a look on her that she described afterward as “just brazen” to Aunt Edna. “And if I’d had any brains I’d have gone with him!” she cried out. Anger flared up in her for an instant and then died down almost at once What was the use of saying anything now? It was too late. Everything was spoiled. Everything was over. , "What’s the difference, though? I I’ve lost him and there’s no use talking it all over. Lutie.” she said * quietly. She knew clearly at last that she had given Allen up. She would never see him again unless she bumped into him on th? street or went to the Cullens. He was gone. She was almost too tired to care. Her head ached and her fare felt stiff and wooden. She went back I into her own room, flung herself across the bed and went to sleep. It was midnight when she woke up. She lay for a moment listening to the familiar and depressing night sounds of the street outside her win- ; dows. The rattle of a late street car going along, almost empty at this time of night. The sound of somebody's radio spilling faint , dance music into the neighborhood, the banging of the front gate in the ; wind. All evening she had been filled 1 with anger toward Mary Cullen, 1 with a feeling that Mary had done an unfair thing in taking Allen away from her. and her heart had hardened itself toward Mary. But now. as she lay thinking things over once more, she remembered that Mary never had had the faintest ' inkling that she was in love with Allen. So far as Mary knew, she was still engaged to Wallace Steffen and planning to marry him in the summer « • • A little before seven when Herbst came around to the back porch, bringing with him the last bottle of milk that he would ever deliver to the Brodericks, Susan war waiting for him. Making very little noise, the two of them went upstairs and carried Susan’s trunk down through the silent house end out tc the milk truck in the side yard. At nine o’clock when Vera Whittail’s men were bringing their rolls 1 of burlap into the house and backing their van up to the front porch a messenger boy br- ught a telegram from Susan’s father. It was addressed to Aunt Edna and it had been filed at San Diego. "JUST RECEIVED YOUR WIRE SENT LAST WEEK STOP OKF.H WITH ME TO HAVE BANK HANDLE ALL AFFAIRS STOP PLEASE PROVIDE SUSAN WITH SUFFICIENT MONEY FOR PRESENT WHICH I WILL REFUND TO YOU SHORTLY’ AND ADVISE HER TO STAY WITH CULLENS UNTIL MY’ RETURN IN MAY STOP WITH LOVE MORRIS BRODERICK ” "Provide Susan with money which ! he will refund to us!” remarked Aunt Edna with a loud scornful miff’.'ng sound. "When did Morris Broderick ever pay anybody anything that he owed. I ask you?— That's a fine thing for him to wire when he knows that Worthy had note after worthless note of his when he died! "I like.” she finished, “his nerve!” “YVell, even at that. I’ve got to be nrovided with something. Aunt Edna.” Su«an turned to her desperately. “I can’t be left with only ten dollars to my name, which is all I nave this minute!—Surely some of chese things must have belonged to my father—these things that you’re selling. 1 ought to have some mon?y. At least a hundred dollars, I should think.” Her Aunt opened the new felt mj that she had bought for her mourning outfit. “I can’t let you have that much—but here’s fifty." she said. “And it's not true that anything in this house belonged to your father. Everything in it of any value was bought by his father, i and he’s had more than his shard of
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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, NOVEMBER (>, 1934.
Jerty”? 4 Who oaid. "If thia be treu.-on. 1 make the must of It!"? 5. In th? Book of Esther, who was J ! hanged on the gibbet he had pre-pir-d for Mordecla? 6. \\ no wrote "Adam Bede"? 7. What shape is a St. Anthony croM? 8. Name the principal outer genI ment worn by Roman Senators.
the estate, as you know just as well n as I do. I'm simply gti mg you this c- nionev. 1 wish it could be more, Fue san, but we're getting less than a I thousand dollars from Mrs. Whit- -. tall, and I think she has a feeling a that that's too much. It’s just r enough to take Lutie and me down e south and keep us there for three or e four months—until the house and ,i the apartment are sold. Wallace - says he’ll have our affairs all r straightened out by Spring.” ; She took three bills from her bag, r two twenties and a ten. They were old and dirty but they smelled of t the heavy perfume that she used. 1 "This does seem dreadfully little but the Cullens will look after you. 1 and your father will be back soon. . Y’ou’d better get in touch with him - —and, Susan, why don’t you tclet phone Wallace and patch things up [ with him? He’s the chance of y-?ur . whole life.” Susan smiled. “I’m not going to be at the Cullens', just in case you ’ want to reach me. Aunt Edna.” - “You're not going to be at the I Cullens?" her aunt repeated stupid- : ly. "Why, what do you mean? - Y'ou’ve said all along that you were. 1 going tc stay with them. Y’our ; father w ants you to.” > “Well, I’m going to do something on my own hook for a change.” said . Susan. “I’m going to live with the ; Herbsts—with Anna. The Cullens had rented their room before I said anything to them—ln fact. I haven't said anything to them about going there. I think it's go- • ing to be a good thing for me to get away—«nd do something different—” ‘But the Herbsts!” said Aunt Edna in a moaning voice. “Oh. Susan, how could you do such a thing? To make your home with a woman who’s been a servant in the family—” She broke off suddenly as if if had just dawned upon her that there was no longer any family to be disgraced by what Susan did. a * • Anna’s house was in Clay Street, on the very outskirts of the South Side. It stood, plain and narrow and yellow, behind a bright yellow picket fence. Behind it, facing on an alley, was Herbst's dairy. Across the street from the house was tbe little store where he sold eggs and butter and milk, and Anna divided her time between it and the house, keeping both of them in a state of shining spotlcssness that was amazing to Susan. For the South Side was a place in which it was very hard to keep anything even reasonably clean. It was a region of smokey factories and brickyards, railroad tracks and stockyards that wafted the most evil smelling odors imaginable upon the air both day and nigh*. Soot rained down upon Clay Street constantly and lay upon : w-indow sills of the little houses like black sugar pills, worked its way into every building, and covered the leaves of trees or bushes like a blight. It was Spring now, the first of April, and Susan had been living in Clay Street for eight weeks, xhe windows of the room that Anna had given her looked down into the back yard where Herbst kept his trucks —the one that he drove and the one that his younger brother. Joe. who lived next door with his wife and baby, drove. Across the narrow upstairs hall cf the house was the bedroom occupied by Herbst’s mother, an nld German woman with snow-white hair, like spin-drift around her face, and a piece-of knitting in her gnarled mottled old hands from morning until night She kept a G rman Bible open on a little table near the chair where she sat and rocked most of the day and she spoke very little English. Sometimes she would come to the doorway rs Susan’s room and make brief cheerful statements, half English and naif German—"lt’s nice out. So tarm wit Sommer, ja?" or “You look schon today. Schr sehon." Next door to her room'was the bathroom with a clean pink rug on the floor, cheap perfumed pink soap in the wire racks and plenty of cold water that came gushing from the faucet marked “Hot” as well as from the one marked “Cold.” There was no hot water in the house, and whenever anyone wanted a bath hot water had to be heated on the coal range in the kitchen and carried upstairs. Susan had not been able to find any work during the first three weeks of her stay at Anna’s, and - as she was able to pay only five dollars a week toward her board , until she did find something to do, she insisted upon helping with the
9. hi ancient Greek drama, what * was the name for that part of a play I which came before the entrance ot !the chorus? It). In which State te the Merced River? —o Werlintf Farm Sold At Public Auction Col. Fred Reppelt, as auctioneer
1 housework and making het self as > useful as possible in the creamery - across the street. i After she had helped Anna with - the breakfast dishes she would t htvry down to the corner of Clay t Street and Twenty-fifth Street, i which was the main thoroughfare r of the South Side, and buy a mom- I 1 ing paper. She would go down the > columns marked “Help Wanted— I Female” and put a little pencil mark after the positions that she , thought she might be able to fill. There were very few of them. She could not typewrite and she . knew nothing about shorthand, so ■ the office jobs were closed to her. , She knew that it would be useless . to answer advertisements that read i “Experienced Milliners Wanted” ot “Fine Opportunity for Woman -■•ith S —'ll Capital to Put into x> vain,? B ,sin- ." She had neither vxp< icnce nor capital. One morning an advertisement headed "Wanted: Marker Girl for Laundry” caught her eyes and she went to answrer it in a taxicab hoping to get there ahead of any other applicants. "Marker girl for laun- . dry” sounded simple, as if almost anyone could become one. But when she reached the laundry, a one-story, whitewashed building with "Sunbeam Laundry” painted all across its front, the position had been filled. So had a place in a photographer’s studio by the time she got there, and she went back to Anna’s and cried tears of discouragement as she cut up the potatoes and cabbage and chuck beef for the Swedish stew that Anna had at least once a week for dinner. Dinner was eaten at noon in the Herbst house, and at six o’clock the family sat down to supper, a meal that consisted usually of leftovers from dinner supplemented by thick crusty slices of pan-rye l bread and fresh hot eoffee cake. The Herbsts washed down every ; meal with coffee and the big gray, granite-ware pot stood on the back of the kitchen stove all day. After supper Anna and old Mrs. Herbst would cross the muddy yard to Joe’s house with a tray of food for Elva. his pretty, dark-eyed American wife. Sometimes Herbst and Anna would dress themselves I in their best clothes, which always smelled faintly of mothballs, and walk over to the Scandinavian Club to dance or play cards. On Sunday nights they went to the German “Turn” hall on Twenty-fifth Street. Susan and Mrs. Herbst would sit in the living room until eight or nine o'clock, talking. In her broken English the old woman would tell Susan about her girlhood in the j Rhine country of Germany with its hillsides of grapes and its sunshine. "Always I am tilled with I ‘se...-ucht’ for the old country,” I she would =ay wistfully. “This | America—mit 1L» baker’s ’brot’ and its laundries so the women shall net have to work.” She was not at all fond of Joe's i Elva who never, according to her, had baked a loaf of bread or an “apfelkuchen” for Joe and who j sent ail her sheets and spreads to ' the wet wash every week, if you could believe it! “Nein. and I do not like the way ' she paints. Even in the bed she sits i up and curls her hair.” she would i say disapprovingly. “When I was young I only wash the face and put the hair down mit lard, and it is gmng. Aber the Elva—” and she would throw her old hands in the air to indicate just how hopeless Joe's wife was in her opinion. "You do not have a young man. nein?” she asked Susan one night as they sat talking in the glow of Anna’s pink georgette lampshade that hung from a chain above the table in the middle of the room. "No one. Miss Susan?” Every member of the household called Susan "Miss Susan." Anna had often forgotten the "Miss” in the Center Street days but she never forgot it now and she never let anyone else in the family forget it. “No. I don’t have a sweetheart, Mrs. Herbst,” Susan answered her, running her needle in and out of the stocking she was mending. "1 had one, but I lost him.” “He’s dead, ja?” The old blue eyes—faded as if almost all of the color had been washed out of them by the tears of a long lifetime—pitied Susan. "Oh. no. He went away from me. I think he likes somebody else now," said Susan and thought of MaryCullen. (To Be Continued) 1333. w K.ar. • lot
“Gable? He Won't Get a Hit With Us I -1 e' I ’ I > I . / \\a * wl 1 r/ 9 x .. . ' Y 8 b--
The Dean boys—Daffy and Dizzy—who were large* ly accountable for the fact that the St. Lotus (. ar* dinals won the world series, have entered the movie*. Ihe alar pitchers are shown at a baseball
for the National Realty Company, I Saturday sold the forty-acre farm 1 of Mrs. Werling, near Pleasant. Mills-for $1,825, a price satisfactory to every one concerned and; evidencing a better price for farm . lands In this territory The farm 1 was purchased by Clarence Case; for his son. Oren, who will occupy! it. Col. Reppert has just returned from a successful trtp through the! ' west where he held a number of j - good sales, prices on live stock he-: Ing the best average oi five years. Get the Habit — Trane *t Hom« \ppointniru t o f minlMfaltir Notß e if hereby <iven. That the undersijrned has been appointed Ad-1 mlnistrator of the estate of Eliza-1 beth Kraner, late of Adams (’<»untv j I deceased. The estate i* probably s d- I vent. W. A Wells, Administrator I 1.. Walter*. ltt«»ro< •> October i> 4 • ■ ■ N--Norm; of ii\\i *kiti.emi:\t OF l %TE \O. 2U3H Notice is hereby gio n to the < r- ditors, heirs and iepatees of Chriisimn Stnppt nhagon. dec eased to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at l»e- --| ratur, Indiana, on the 22nd day of i Novemtwr. and show cause, if I any, why the Final Settlement . Acixjuuts with the estate of saiti de-i cedent should not be approved; and j said heir* are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and, receive their distributive shares. Herman St T‘P‘ nhugen, Administrator Decatur, ind nna. Cm tober 29. 1934. ittornejM l-'rurhtr aud l.iitrrer Oct, 30 Nov 6 -Q Get the Habit — Trade at Home Roy s - Johnson Auctioneer P- L. 4 T. Co. Bl Phones 104 and 1022 ’ 4 3 ‘ Claim your date ' 11 ’ early as I sell • every day. SALE CALENDAR Nov. B—HenryB—Henry R. Anspaugh, 2 * miles east and 3 miles north of i Decatur or 3 miles north of Deut 1 school. Closing out sale. Nov. 9—Decatur Riverside Sales at Sale Barn Nov. 7—John Cross. 4 miles east j and 1 mile north of Berne, or 3 i miles north and 3 miles west of a.’ Ohio. Closing out sale. Nov. 15. Theodore Luginbill, 3 miles south and Yi mile west of Willshire on the old Austin Evane farm. Closing out sale. Nov. 16-Deeatur and Chattanooga Sales. Nov. 22—John F. Sidle estate, 2 miles west of Y’an YVert on Road 17. j Nov. 23 —Decatur and Chattanooga sales. Nov. 26 —C. P. Foust, 1-4 miles I north and 1 1-2 east of Monroeville. Nov. 30—Decatur aud Chatt>m;o-' ga Sales. Dec. 11 —Dwight Wass estale. 3 ? miles east and 5 miles north of Decatur. Dec. 12—William Dettmer, l-j mi.! north ot Echo.
I d field in Brooklyn v. * :is . pany, and Williair. I --. Cardinals, whil-. r- . So, watch out Clark G .;...! I (]
Envoy Helps Secure? cwOtß i® 'a! l ' I\l -11 I 1 I \ Il / (I t .. fee. I Dr. Artur Rodzintki^^^| Back of the presentation of “Lady Macbi I opera, at Cleveland’s $3,000,000 S< peiformar,tngue. Dr. Artur Rodzinski, condu-•’< r o •rchestra, had to enlist the cid of V | gador to Russia, to clear the path a ’ | new work by the nol-id Russian <* ■ ■ - 1 Former Chorus Girl Freed Os Suspicion | New York. Nov. S—(UP5 —(UP) —Mary I Nolan, former chorus girl and movi. | Icctreaa. was cleared today of sue- :ra' . | I picion of taking $3,04*0 from a New ; ___■ | Jersey theatrical agent. I “Complaint withdrawn, do not I First ”sea j wunt Mary Nolan, accused faleelv.'' Mr fl dailv nr ' -r p' said a telegram re.-elved by police ( tho ~.. ■ j PUBLIC SAW I will sell at public .aiction at my i - miles north of Deeatur, or 3 mil, s north Commencing at x, HORSES S- . old. weight 1500. „* CATTLE -Jersey cow giving 2 4 gal. per day; Guerirsey cow. giving 4 yrs. ofd. giving 4 gals, per day; Jer ? milk per day. ~ HOGS —Chester White sow. b d pigs by side. POULTRY—2 geese, 1 gantkt 1" FEED 100 bushel of corn in til-. I clover hav. t' ft J IMPLEMENTS—McCo! mi. k m ; bed; low wheel wagon; corn planter: .*« diac, 14-16; Fordson tractor in -ood - sist : drill; hay rake; buzz saw; 1 hors cult ' )E? g spring tooth harrow: shovel plow. donl>’collars; horse clippers; and many articles t TERMS—CASH. , HENRY R. ANSPA' ’ H | Hoy S. Johnson, auctioneer. I W. A. Lower, clerk.
