Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 271, Decatur, Adams County, 14 November 1934 — Page 2
Page Two
CLASSIFIED i ADVERTISEMENTS, I BUSINESS CARDS, • AND NOTICES ~~~ FOR SALE FOR SALE—(Plymouth Rock pullets GO uch. John Stetten 1 mile west 1 mile south Kirklaud H. S. CraigVille Phone. .'iß-3t.'. FUR SALE—CoaI or wood kitchen range with attachments tor burning gas; good condition. Moving. Do not need this stove. Phone 253. 138 N. 3rd St. Decatur. 270-3tx FOR SALE —New furniture. Studio couches, 121.50. 3 piece living room suites. 345.50. Kitchen cabinets $lB. Coil bed springs, $3.00. Mattresses, $6.95. Iron beds. $6.50. 2 us d pianos in good condition. $35 each. Many bargains In used furniture. Sprague Furniture Company, phone 199. 271-g3t FOR SALE—Ford teach. Model T. g- od condition. Bicycles, Stevens rifle, lard press, pmnp jack, feed grinder and many use tires. Daniels Second Hand Store, phone 1148. 27t-G2tX FOR SALE—2O Jersey giant pullets, 75c each. \V. C. Strickler, Route 6, Decatur. 2?l-g3tx Jggß SALE—Black coat for girl between ages of 17 and 18. Will sell 58 reasonably. Phone 657, 269-k3t BALE—3 day old Guernsey dreifer calf. Henry F. Gallmeyer. - FOR SALE —Puritan 3 burner oil " ’range. Call 412 So. 1 st. 7 271t3 FOR SALE—3 brand new 13 plate batteries. Cheap. Inquire Cort Theatre. 270-g3t FOR SALE —Young B. rkeliiro boar -about market price. Phone 865 L. 270-k3t FARMS FOR SALE Z 40 acres Union twp $3,590 • 40 acres Washington twp.. 4.000 Z SO acres St. Marys twp 5,500 ••Tf’ acres Monroe twp 7.500 160 seres St. Marys twp- 7,500 205 acres good black soil 17,000 Z 247 acres. 40 in timber. 20,000 • 11" near Decatur 18.000 “ Farms of America always have - been'hnd always will be the basis 7 ijf American prosperity. FluctuatJ . ing laffd prices have always come bacFli a higher level, making land 1 investment the finest and surest ot «• all liucchases. Suttles-Edwards Co., Decatur,And Nov. 9-12-14 FOR SALE —Building suitable for garage, 18x30, in good shape. ~ Call 443. 269-3tx FOR SALE -3 day old Guernsey male calf. 6 shoats, weight 100 „ Ibji. Gall E-562, Decatur. 2691 „ FOR SALE—Used circulating heattr; one iron bed: one dining table. Stucky and Co , Monroe, Ind. - 26i*-3t FOR SALE — Received new shipment. Circulating heaters, medium size, $39; large size. $49. Kitch. cn ranges $lB up. Stucky and Co.. • Monrp& Ind. 269-6 t FOR SALE — Received new shipment Spring tilled mattresses. slof coil bed springs, $6; bed room suite, $35; solid oak breakfast set, ■ sl3; living room suite, S4O; electric. washer, $39- Store open eveStucky and Co.. Monroe, link.— 269-6 t WANTED WANTED TO BUY—Fifty pullets. Leghorns preferred. Phone 261. 269-3tx " WANTED — Buff Rock hatching eggs. Model Hatchery, Monroe, - Indiana. 270-5 t „ WANTED — For expert radio and electrical repairs call Marcellus Miller, phone 625. Member Radio '- Manufacturers Service. Miller Radio Service, 226 N. 7th st. Zsltf Q Get the Habit — Trade at Home r;* Model A Ford li If>2B to 1931 ,] MANIFOLD HEATERS | 95c ' ENGLAND’S AUTO PARTS fee Wholesale and Retail - M Ist Door So. of Court House ’ W Phone 282 Gillette Tires Latex Dippft' etf Process a P® now unconH —_ ditionally E! guaranteed ~ ■> for 18 mOi "Sold on our new rental plan 25 weeks to pay. Porter Tire Co. Distributor W 341 Winchester Phone 1283
FOR RENI FOR RENT — Light housekeeping rooms. Josephine Baumgartner. 828 Dierkee Street. 270-3tx ——— o LOST AND FOUND LOST —• Pair of round rimmed glasses, in case. Finder call 656. Reward 271G3t MISCELLANEOUS SPECIAL for One Week Only! — HEMSTITCHING, regular 8< & 10c yard for only 5c yard. 229 N. Ist st., Phone 1174. 370t3 TO OUR CUSTOMERS and others —We have moved to 515 West Madison street and will welcome our old and new customers. Hair cuts 15c. W. A. Fonner. 265-ts MISCELLANEOUS—Service boar*, reasonable .price, leading Du rce strains, immuned. Kreiocher stock farm,. 10 miles east of Decatur on road 224. Address H D. Kreischer. Convoy, Ohio. 369-6tx 269a3t o MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS Brady’s Market for Decatur Berne Craigville Hoagland And Willshire Corrected November 14 No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday. 250 to 300 lbs $55.40 200 to 260 lbs - $5.30 160 to 200 lbs $5.05 300 to 350 lbs $5lO 140 to 160 lbs $4.15 120 to 140 lbs $3.10 100 tj 120 lbs — $2 85 Roughs $4.25 Stags $2.00 down Vealers _ $6.50 Ewe and wether lambs $6.00 Buck lambs $5.00 CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Dec. May July I Wheat, old 95% .99 .93% i Wneat, new 99% Corn, old . .81% .82% -82% Corn, new 81 Oats, old 51% .49% .46% Oats, new ... .51% Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs steady; 250-300 lbs. $5.80; 225-250 lbs. $5.60; 200-225 lira. ; $5.45; 180-200 lbs. $5.30; 160-180 Ib». $5.1)6; 300-350 lbs. $5.30. 150160 lbs. $4.50; 140-150 lbs. $4.25; $3.75; 120-130 lbs. $3.25; 100-120 lbs. $2.75; roughs $4.75; stags $3. Calves $7; lambs $6.25. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N Y., Nov. 14. — (U.PJ—Livestock: Hogs, receipts. 1.200; early sales to shippers fairly steady, packers i now bidding around 10c lower; de- ; sirable 190-250 lbs., $6.15-16.50, in- . eluding outstanding 202-lb. aver- ' ages. £6.40; 150-180 lbs.. $5.25-$5 60; j packing sows. $5.35-15.75. Cattle, receipts, commercial 300; steady; common steers and heifers. $3.50-14 25; low cutter and cut. ' ter cows. SI.IO-$2.15. Calves, receipts commercial 250; vealers slow, weak, good to choice, . $7.50, tew $8; common and medium $4.75-86. Sheep, receipts. 1,000; lambs fully steady; good to choice, in- . eluding weights up to 100 lbs.. $7; medium kinds and extreme weights $6; inferior throwouts, $4-$4.50. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected November 14 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 51c No. 2. New Wheat (58 lbs.) .... 90c Oats 32 lbs. test 49c Oats, 30 lbs. test 48e Oats, 30 lbs. test 46c Coy Beans, bushel 68c -80 c White or mixed corn SI.OO Old Yellow Corn — sl.lO New Yellow Corn ..... $1.95 o — Monmouth Plans Fall Festival The Monmouth high school will hold a fall festival at the Monmouth community building Thanksgiving week. One of the features of the festival will be a dame on Wednesday November 28. For Better Health See Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 314 104 So. 3rd st, Neurocalometer Service X-Ray Laboratory Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to 6 p. m., 6 to 8 p. m, N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyts Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8:80 to 11:39 12:80 to 6;00 Saturdays, 8.00 p m. Telephone 186.
Terrapin Stages Comeback . Raleigh, N. C — (U.R> — Diamond- ■ back terrapin meat —a delicacy • much in demand during pre-prohi-
OR! IN the FAMILY*] Nk-J’ f BY BEATR-ICE BUR.TON > |
CHAPTER 1 Astrong blow came up from the West Indies and for a day and a night the wind and the rain howled through the Halifax River country, lashing -.he snpple palms, straining vainly at the mossy old live oaks, swamping small boats left carelessly at the docks and strewing the streets with leaves, small branches end palm fans. On the morning after the storm Kay Owen rose early and went out into the welcome semi-tropieal sun which was drying already the great pools of water left by the rain. Kay walked rapidly, but easily, with rhythmic, long-legged steps, her body slim, young and strong under the thin white hnen dress. A very pretty girl. Kay Owen, with jauntily bobbed hair of a dark red, skin somewhere between tan and gold. I and candid merry eyes that were I memorably green. She had a poise, a presence, that | was with her this early Florida I morning; was with her always. I This one quality alone would have I been sufficient to make her one of I the real beauties of the town. Already—and Kay was nineteen—it had won her leading parts with the I Daytona Beach Community Players i over girls who had more experience I and more social advantages. And in the money sense Kay Owen had few such advantages. The Owen family—Kay, her mother, and Bod--was undeniably poor and had been so since Ross Owen’s death the year the boom broke. Earnest young Bud worked in the bank, Mrs. Owen long since had opened the upper floor of their heme to roomers. and Kay finally had had to drop out of the teachers’ college to come home and look for a job which she bad not yet found. And here was Kay Owen this early morning, walking eight blocks to the bus line, a girl who in the big city might easily have a Rolls at her commend—if she only knew 1 it, and. mere important, if she were that sort of a girl. Which she wasn’t Not that she was even thinking about it Her mind was on the Kayo. The Kayo was the Owens’ surviving luxury. Really, it was more hers than the family’s, and less a luxury than it seemed. It was a small motor launch, just big enough for six or seven people to go “outside" in, out in the open ocean, fishing. Ross Owen had bought it in 1926 for his tomboyish young daughter, who could even then land a sea bass, a red snapper or a scintillating dolphin with more skill than many a man. The family bad sold the last of their automobiles, but the Kayo remained. It was not very expensive to operate and often a half day’s catch of fish more than paid for the gasoline and the time and trouble. And it was a release. On a moonlit night, with the millions of stars hanging low as they do only in the far south, Kay could pilot her boat down the channel of the broad Halifax river, in and out among the low, wooded islands, and within sound of the eternal surf which washed up on the beach a quarter mile to the east, and at such times the world I was very well lost. Two days ago Kay had heeded the storm warnings and had taken her boat into the shelter of the boat yard. Now that the storm was over I she planned taking it back up to the . city docks. At Main street, the i principal business section of the peninsula—really it was an island —side of Daytona Beach, Kay boarded the west bound bus and rode toward the river. As the bus went out upon the narrow bridge that led to the mainland. Kay looked up and down at the peaceful water shining so innocently in the morning sun. To the north she could see the Seabreeze bridge, perhaps a mile distant, and beyond that, hazily, the bridge at Ormond; to the south lay the two other Daytona bridges. Ahead lay the principal part of the city, white buildings, green foliage and a golden dome of a church shining in the sun. Only last night this had been a scene of fury The river had lashed up over the eoquina rock wall, into the narrow strip of park, the trees had been tossed and torn by the wind and rain and the entire city had been a place of rage and a ! certain dread. Once across the river, the bus turned south up broad Beach street from which the old town of Daytona looked out upon the Halifax, across the narrow little park. At the boatyard Kay found her little craft uninjured by the stdrm, sleek, serene and, nevertheless, sturdy, a boat to be depended upon except in an unusually rough sea. Having inspected the Kayo, she chatted a moment with the young man who worked for the boat yard. “How’s the show going to be tomorrow night?” he asked. , “Come and find out," she said. •T wouldn't miss "
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“SITUATION WANTED!” BY r-. aht tmf'vl RHETGFr - ARMEDGUAROS\ "”VJHAT VJE HEED UP AT THE KI VJE'LL HOP SACK H f • ' M-L AROUND BLACK VALUEV-\ 'THIRST-KILLER" IS A DANCE} T 0 THE NEXT TOWN-\ unQ . DON T LIKE INDIANS IN J ~ruthEW aETIN UJITHOVT ) GAL- WHV,THE'/AIN’T A / r _,_ . ~T T|f ] Ri $ W* . W '>*% ' ON ACCOUNT QP> WOMAHJ* BLACKVALLEV) ? G g T ) Jjwj ‘ LAOIES' | I$ NO GOOD // I COULD 00 -7 Jt I 1 / WORl’'jr - C 'W/ViX' \ r inrs» / >»*• « V x d ? xJT!. > fxA y - cooking rr *1 - ■ mor* -- ll— i.B ■ ~ lt ' \ '' ’ J U z -TV-fc. - I^ u *’ ».*/, ' " *~ // V - ?8 I' h ki — —LL—-1—■—-J ” ? 111 .t™ ..niiiiiiiiii u mTti .w. iliii"<lliiwuir —l—i±±*j lmll—==■
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1934.
bit ion days—ls again becoming a i “best seller’’ among sea foods. Ter | rapin nuat, served especially al | beer parties, was nearly forgotten |
“Welt, see chat you don't 1 think i it ought to be good. We’ve worked i like the dickens on it." , “What’s it about?” * , “Did you ever hear of Noel . Coward?” “No, I never." “Didn’t you—well, you come and i see it.” “What’s the name of it again?" " 'Private Lives.' ” “You got the main part haven’t you?” “The leading woman’s, yes, but you wait till you see Dick Potter as the hero.” “I can wait plenty long for that What I want to see’s you.” Kay gave the young man such a smile that for the next hour be was misplacing his tools and stumbling over his own feet She turned the flywheel of the Kayo a few times, heard the good old motor take hold.
■ at tA;'?/ i < xjX —l*l' V' iy/7/ ■ iafWwMK ---"Tn \ j M There he was, within a stone’s throw, Earl Harrow, producer of Broadway hits, master of stars.
and prepared to leave the little canal and go cn down the river to 1 the docks. As she drew near the city docks < she saw in her usual place a large i yacht of a size and splendor one sei- i dom saw on the Halifax. Such boats, drawing considerable water and be- 1 ing able to withstand almost anything the Atlantic had to offer, usu- 1 ally went down “outside.” Coming ' alongside Kay read the name on the . graceful stern: Commander 111, New York. The Commander 111 was new to her, a handsome craft that meant a millionaire, no less. Such a handsome craft, in fact, that Kay forgot to be annoyed because the skipper had tied up in her place. She went on down a bit and made the Kayo fast, then walked up the dock to give the new arrival a closer inspection. One of the professional skippers sat on the dock, scraping the inside of his pipe-bow] with a broken knife. “How you, Kay? Didn’t have any : trouble with the Kayo?” i “Not a bit. Mike. Mike—who bc- . longs to this skiff?” . Mike cleared his throat and spat into the river. ! “Earl Harrow," he said. The name was surprisingly fai miliar. Kay tried to remember. I Harrow? Harrow? Then she said I suddenly: “Not Earl Harrow, the : producer?” , Mike kept gouging at his pipe. > “He’s a big show manager,” he said. ! Kay Owen felt giddy. Earl Hari row here in Daytona Beach at this time of the year. The Winter season ’ hadn’t even begun. t “What’s he doing here?” i “Got pushed around some outi side,” Mike said. "He come in from - the inlet to take the kinks out and - get his boat looked at.” 3 Before she could ask another o question Kay heard a car draw up - from the road and turned to look. Out of it stepped two men. one e short, hard-looking, the other tall, ; slim and sleek in his yachting unil. form, the perfect society boatman - out of the pages of the smart magazines or off the movie screen. She recognized him at oi.ee by his black, spilled mustache and his pallid, long
i during the years when prohibition pent alcoholic beverage* Into back I , alleys. With the advent ot proln i bition repeal, however, according |
< and rathar sad face. * face that J J spoke of dissipation, cynicism and yet a definite gentility. There he was, within a stone’s ‘hrow, Earl 1 Barrow, producer of Broadway hits, master of stars, one of the most widely publicized, most powerful I men in a glamorous world. He walked slowly toward his t-oat, following the tough little man in white flannel* and blue sweater, and di*- ; appeared within the deckhouse. “He’* going to lay up here a spell, ; I reckon/’ Mike said, not even navi ing noticed Earl Harrow’* arrival. “He its" Kay said, speaking really to herself. “He it!” This was the sort of thing she never imagined happened in real , life. This time the mountain had come to Mahomet Ear) Harrow lifted his highball glass, gestured with it languidly.
“Spike,” he said, "get a small load of that out there.” Spike Winch blinked and looked down at the dock where Kay Owen stood talking to Mike, the squatty river pilot. “I always told you it was a healthy country, boss.” Harrow shook his head slowly. “Funny thing, Spike,” he said. “Nine out of ten of the stars look ordinary close up, yet you can come to a little out-of-the-way place like this and see a honey like that standing on a dock.” “Prettiest doll I ever saw was • waitress in Salt Lake,” Spike said. He sighed heavily. “I’ll never forget her. Turned out her busband was a cop. About two pounds lighter than a horse.” “If a girl like that one out there only had brains,” Harrow continued, “think what she could do.” He sipped his drink. “Funny world we live in, Spike. More and more, I’m a fatalist. Why am I where I am? How is it I can afford to sit here in this boat and pay you to listen to me? Because I happened to lose a job as a hank clerk in Omaha and went to New York to get a job in Wail Street. The nearest I got to Wall Street was the old Ashland theater as an usher.” The slim producer tilted back in his chair and looked into the amber highball glass as if it were a crystal globe in which he was reviewing his past. “I remember I wrote to my father that I had a job where I was thrown in with the best people. I was ashamed to tell them what I was really doing. And then what happened? And then they needed a skinny kid to walk on in a show and I just happened to be standing there when old Louis Derasee looked out in my direction. I can see him now, looking as solemn and dignified as a high church bishop. And he called me up to the stage,” “Was that my fault? Was it my fault he made me his office boy, then his secretary? I did keep my eye* and ears open, yes, but there were at least six ushers in that theater as smart as I was or smarter. Breaks. Spike, just breaks I” . I (To Be Continued) r I Copy:t«bt 1134. King FaUufM Syodlcau, Ui
|to the state Division ot Comraer- : clal Fisheries, terrapin* have I “come into their own" once more. 0 — * Test Your Knowledge Can you answer sevon of th*** ton qustflsns? Turn to pag* Four for tho an*wer*. I 1 Name the sixth wife cf Henry i Vlll of England? 2. Who was William Harkness? 3. Give the title of the presiding officer of the British Houme of cAmmou. 4 WlMt i* the scientific name of the extinct flying llzarde. fo«il« of which 'are found in Mesozoic rock*? 6. Who Invented the reading machine? 6. Whet is aphasia? 7. Name ths two aviators who wen the recent England to Australia flight, 8. Who wrote "Brewster’s 'Millions”? 9. Name the river that sepiratea Manhattan Island from the Bronx, N. Y. 10. How many members haa the U. S. Civil Service Commission? COURTHOUSE Real Estate Transfer* Ciayt a E. Byrd, ex , to Aloysiue Schneider et ux iulvis 9 and 11 in Decatur for $462. —— —o - — REGION BANKS MEETING TODAY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) pany, Chicago, a member of the executive council ot the American Institute of Banking. William P. Flynn, viee.president 'of the Indiana National Bank. Indianapolis, and treasurer of the Bankers Association, Herman B Wells, bank supervisor of the Indiana department of financial institutions and Don E. Warrick, secretary of the bankers association, were introduced at the meeting T. F. Graliker. of Decatur, president of the region, presided at the meeting which was held at the new Garrett hotel. H. M. Brown, of Garrett, served as secretary of the region. Visiting bankers wore greatly interested in the discussion of present and intended activities of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, as explained by J. Leo Johnson. The meeting began at a noon luncheon. Representatives from Adams. Allen. DeKalb. Huntington. Kosciusko, LaGrange. Noble, Steuben. Wells and Whitley counties attended. o Mrs. Douglas 'Haney of Fort Wayne visited in this city yesterday. Roy S. Johnson Auctioneer P. L. & T. Co. Bl Phon** 104 Jk'W , and 1022. 1 ™ k' \ > Claim your date I * early as I sell J » every day. SALE CALENDAR Nov. 15. Theodore Lugiubill, 3 miles south and % mile went of Willshire on the old Austin Evans farm. Closing out sale. Nov. 16-Decatur and Chattanooga Sales. Nov. 17—'Harold Gillfou, 1-4 mile south and 1-4 mile west of Maples. Nov. 21—‘Sarah & George Hoff- , man. 7 miles east and 3 miles i south of Berne. 60 acre farm and personal property. Nov. 22 —John F. Sidle estate, 2 mile west of VanWert on road 224 Nov. 23—'Decatur aud Chattanooga sales. Nov. 24—Mrs. D. C. Myers and heirs, % mile west of Pleasant Mills on State Road 527. 66 acre farm. Nov. 26—C. P. Foust, I*4 miles north aud 11-2 east of Monroeville. Nov. ;;o—Decatur and Chattanooga Saletc. Dec. 11—Dwight Wade estate. 3 miles east and 5 miles north of Decatur. I Dec. 12—William 'Dcttmer, % ml. north of Echo.
Prince Defends Mrs. K 9k ’'x '•T I .J Prince Gottfried Zu Hohenlohc and hi ; wife are pictund ]■ board upon their arrival in New York City «hc t- T W testify in the trial of the habeas corpus a•, ,of Mr. GJ’ I Vanderbilt to regain custody of her dauel,t r, G'.-v dismiseed inrinnntions made in court by ‘ ■? Vanderbilt and himself as “Lie*, IKs—jun a PUBLIC AUCTION FRIDAY’, November 16, 1 o’clock Horses —Cattle—Sheep and Hogs. 59 Whit, Leghorn pnHutd horse wagon. 1 International Truck. S 36. I'.. ten. hewy<i wheel base, dual wheels. 6 cyl.. 1929 stake In ' Household Furniture*—Victor Victrola and iveonL; ••wing machine; Brass bedstead; Iron Bed t-ad; Dresser; sl4 upholstered chairs; 2 stands; 2 pedestals; 2 buffets; wfiiup* gas range; 2 soft coal heating stoves; 3-pi.<e mabogur tad overstuffed living room suite; china clos'' talik. room chairs; small ice box; Bed. springs and niattrenaj Library table; 7 tube electric radio; kn ■ ahinet. flooral 9x12 rug. Tills furniture is in first class ."tiibtiou. Msad article*. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALE Roy Johnson and Doehrman. auctioneers. PUBLIC SALE 60 ACRE FARM and PERSONAL PROPERTY We will sell at public auction without >■ ■ i v•. the (uikUj scribed real estate on the premises. 7 mil ‘-t and 3 mfasd Herne. Ind.. !'• miles north and G% mil. H south autl 1% tulles west of Chatanooga Olm or I 1 : u«*| Jefferson high school, on WEDNESDAY, Nov. 21,19& At 1:00 P. M. 60 acre farm, level black sandy loam -oil ■ tiled; 7 room, 2 story frame house, barn a 1 with granary 24x32; erib and hog house. I:.’' ' ; ■h«d. J«WI 12x36; good drove well; water suppl, ,ank. tMI fruit of all kind; land is all under eulti' “ This ■- small farms in Adams county. An ideal 16school, churches, markets and on a good si<u>. road to be appreciated. Land values are inn. ‘•■"(td are very scarce. Do not fail to see this .■ . and attend USB will sell without reserve to the highest bidder. Will also sell 1 good cow with calf by id, '• Shropshire ewes; 4 ton bean bay; 1 ton of <> noth; i.' corn; 70 bu. of wheat; 7 ini. of good -< ed corn. selectMmi large cooker kettle; iron kettle; l'j h.p c . ... in, several other articles, , TERMS—B6OO.OO cash 'lay of sale, ssuo 1 loan lhal may be assumed by the purchaser Tit il i«' (.Xa 1935. one-third in 6 months, one-third ‘ :t r possession. Sarah R. Huffman and George F. Hull man, (M Sold by Roy s. Johnson,) Auctioneer, Decatur, Indiana. 'public sale 66—ACRE FARM 66 In order to settle estate. I will sell a' 11 ises, % mile west of Pleasant Mil!-. Ind.. ‘ on State Highway 527, on SATURDAY, Nov. 2? WM At 1:30 P. M. , . . indie celUr 66 acre farm, with 8 room. 2 story fraim ' well, barn 36x72, all necessary ostbuildim : , Tait' vation, except a few acres of timber. Tl“ one desiring a small Carpi, .suitable for di' 1 jTirW l and |>oultry farm, located on a new paved . ' ’ , aide. This farm will sell without resei' TERMS—I-3 cash, 1-3 in 3 months. 13in c The Heirs of the D. <\^ ve MRS. D. C. MYERS. W , Sold by Roy S. Johnson, auctioneer. , Decatur, Indiana.
