Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 3, Decatur, Adams County, 3 January 1935 — Page 2
Page Two
COURTHOUSE — Poor Attorney Appointed State of Indiana vs John Hendricks. petit larceny. The defendant pleaded that lie was unable to employ an attorney and the court appointed John L. DeVoa* to de-j feud him. Motion Filed Einelia A. Tonnelier vs Joseph l J. Tonnelier estate. claim. Motion filed by defendants to require plaintiff to make complaint more specific filed. Defendants Default Trusteeship of Adams County' Hoard of Finance etal. trustee-1 ship, all defendants default. Petitlon submitted. Trusteeship term-' tnatid and funds ordered returned to original depositors. Demurrer Sustained Sophia Smith vs Richard E. Ton-. nelier and Rose l». Tonnelier. damages Demurrer submitted and sustained as io first paragraph of complaint. Exception- ' .NOTICE or FIX VI. SETTI.EttENT or r* r»i r. no. mm Notice is hereby given to tile iritlitoiM, h*irs and of Sarah* E. Fuller, deceased. t<» appear in tliei AtlaniM Circuit Court, held at Deca-’ lur, Indiana, on the I day of I’eb-i rtuiry, 1935. and >»h‘»w cauae, If any, why the Final Settlement Ac<-ounts| with the estate of »ald decedent , should not ho approved; and wild ijftira are notified to then and thenj make pranf of heirship. ami receive 1 their diMtributive shares. Ed A. A»l»ba»U‘ her, Exe» uh>.‘ ' Decatur, Indiana, December 27 11121. 1 Atl«*rae> <’. U altera Dee. 27 Jan. 3 a QAOTI( i: OF FIX M. SETI LEUEXT, OF XO. Notice iti hereby given to the ere-: lilura, heir* and legatees of Albert j IV. ItoHHman, deceased, to appear in' the Adams Circuit Court, held at De-, eatur, Indiana, on the 4th day of February, 1935, and show cause, if any, why the Final Settlement J Accounts with the estate of said decedent should not Im- approved; and sai<l heirs are notified to then! and there make proof of heirship,j and receive their distributive shares. The Peoples Trust and Savings Company of Fort Waynr Afiministrator Decatur. Indiana, Dre. 27, l!»:tl Attorney Morris, Newkirk mid Has try IX*‘- -< Jan 31 — o NOTICE <*F Fl\U> M! I”! I EMI-V! of esi % it; \o. swi» Notice is hereby given to the creditor*, heirs ami legatees of tlrorgej W. Knit th*, deceased, to appear in. the Adams Circuit Court, held at l)v-' eatur. Indiana, on the Ith day oil February. 1935, and show <ausp if any. why the Final Serikment: Account* with the estate of >aid decedent sliouhl not be approved and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares.) Glen M Knittie executor Decatur. Indiana Dee. 2f>, 1931. tttorary Nathan t. Nclmom !>ec. 27 Jan ... I
PUBLIC AUCTION FRIDAY, January 4,1935 Commencing at 1 O’clock sharp. HORSES. MILCH COWS, HEIFERS, BULLS, SHEEP AND HOGS. 250 ( hestnut Fence Posts. 2 Chester White Boar Pigs. 9 months old. DeLaval Cream Separator. Miscellaneous articles. • Consign your articles early. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES E. J. AHR—MANAGERS—L. W. MURPHY Irvin Doehrman, auctioneer.
COMFORT and ECONOMY. Lump Coal $6.75 Cash Delivered. Burk Elevator Co Telephone No. 25.
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“DEAREST ENEMIES” BY SEGAR ojApFFDOTOW] /SAVVy?I YAM j Z'XHtHYA GtlS X 77" O|JL) .1 REMEMBER THIS-ILIKES r \ YCR PREM x J x (THAT MNP.TROLE.NE, A J 1 VaiA «I 5 EXPLAIN UIHY YOU mj ME,!! YA-I YAM Y£R FREN, r I am-Dai II J ToA '»**-& (BRINoVT TO TME EDGE I „ ( r AN'PAL T —->A WPALH/ ? xV XOF BLACK VALLtY^X_. I FREN ANPAL' i ---XXX)? \Socki> sE!gL£T, Xi [7 "XV G «dX2 X XXxX' i 'W. - 'll z»® I £T afi gxsxih fi&iiAw <x SRx *w? . 3t\- o /W i j CmSU fa ■■ wx QSL V?v Mxxiixwwai -y$\ —“0 Rv wOx isiA n, a_l x SHI laLZ_i_2__Jßß A > ten I > | llLs3i = 2^X £ . • IW, Ktn< FotutO Synjiote, tnc, Gwßnuin ngfta rwtfvrt I
I filed by plaintiff and overruled as to second paragraph. Exceptions i filed by defendants. Cause net tor I trial February 27. Riding Bailiff Appointed Leu F. Gillis. ex parte. Leo Gillig files application for appointment as riding bailiff of the court. Court appoints Gillig riding bailiff ; until successor is duly appointed i and qualified. Petition Filed In the matter of the liquidation lof the Old Adams County bank. Petition filed to compromise the 1 claim against Ed P. Miller and Maria Miller. The petition slated I that the claim was for a note j totaling $614. It further stat 'd that Maria Miller is now deceased ' und that her estate Is insolvent. At the time of the action there ' was 9298J0 unpaid on the note, i The bank asked permission to I credit the amount due to the estate. The court having exam-' J inod the petition and being fully' 1 advised in the premiers. ordered ■ the special representative credit the sum to the estate. Marriage License Clyde L. Vanuatu mechanic, PortI land and Pearl L. Bsehdolt. Berne. MDNROENEWS Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Meyers spent Sunday tn Fort Wayne, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. I). Lehman aud j family. 57f. and Mrs. Lee Miller moved I jto their home near Markle Monday. Mr. and .Mrs. Clarence Davis and Isons. Richard and Kermit, returnled to Dayton. Ohio, after spending | the holidays with Mrs. Davis' parents. Mr. and Mrs. David Laisure. Allen Valentine has returned toj his home in DeWitt. Arkansas, as- I ter attending the funeral of his I i sister. Mrs. J. C. Tritch. ‘ John Lewis Harvey of Angola I visited his grand-parents, Mr. and .Mrs. John Harvey. Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Hendricks re- : turned to their home in Jackson. Michigan, after spending the week ■ with Mr. and Mrs. Jim A. Hendri ks and Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Burk'head aud family. Howard Brandyberry returned to Indianapolis after spending his 1 vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Brandyberry. Mrs. Harriet Graham of Decatnr visited friends in Monroe for a 1 few days. Mrs. Cecil Franklin of Decatnr I spent Sunday with her grand parents. Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Rayl.
i Test Your Knowledge i Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page Four tor the answers, ♦ 1. Who was John Ruskin? 2. Do stones grow? 3. Where is Horseshoe Falls? 4. What is the nationality of a child born to American parents on the high seaS? 5. On what river is the city of Baltimore, Md.? «. Are bats blind? 7. What is another name for a [sage hare? 8. is a whale a fish? fl. Where do the Hottentots live? 10. Will pure tin rust? Divorced by Eraser Spiingfield. Mo.. —(UP) — Mary ' Thomas Keyer wanted to change I husbands, so she chosa the easiest way. She used some ink remover to obliterate the name of Frank Kayer from her marriage li enee and inserted that of Everett Baker, also changing the date of the marriage from 1932 to 1934. An observant city jet,- five broke Up the romance by placing Mrs. Keyer and ler sec:nd husband in jail. SCHOOLBOYS BUILD PLANE TO ENTER NATIONAL RACES CLEVELAND <U.R> — A racing ! plane built by schoolboys and flown by a school teacher, will be one of Hie entries in the 1935 National Air Races, according to information reaching L. W. Greve, president of the races. Students in the Delgado Trade School, New Orleans, have constructed a high-wing monoplane, with monocoupe fuselage l and j powereil with a Menasco engine. I’ilot of the students’ entry will be ■ Byron Armstrong, an instructor in the Louisiana school and former navy flier. Though no definite announcement has been made as to where 1 j
wwiSSSr ' /// WJ ! /// ' W Solid neck construction .. .No Seams ... No joints ... No wire BEFORE you buy a fiot water hag or syringe learn about Kantleek. Learn how it means money in your pocket to buy Kantleek rubber goods. Kantleek water bags are molded in one piece . . . guaranteed for five years. Come in today and we will show you. KANTLEEK water bottle $1.50 B. J. SMITH DRUG CO. HORSE SALE AT ZANESVILLE. IND. 13 miles south of Fort Wayne on State Road 3 Tuesday, Jan. 8,1935 Commencing at 12 o’clock sharp 50 HEAD OF HOUSES 25 head of 2 to 4 years old I if) head of .VJares in foal Some Good Broke May Have Some Muics. Few Head of Cattle. 6 Head of Spotted Horses. Arthur Merriman I EHenberger & Johnson, aucts.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JAXI’ABV 3, IllJa.
the 1935 races will be held, air race officials here hope the events will be returned to the sixth city. ——o BABY’S BIRTH PAID FOR WITH 3.000 PENNIES AUSTIN. Tex. <U.R) — A baby is worth slightly more than twice Its weight in copper, a local physician has discovered. The physician, who had delivered an infant for a young couple, ] was surprised one morning to find a sack containing 3.000 pennies on his desk. A note explained that the pen 1I nies were in payment foi the child, j The couple evidently had been ; saving them for a long time. When born the baby weighed, I
J'-BEACH BEAUTY*
CHAPTER XI.IV She managed at last to find her way into the city and to the neighborhood in which lay the address Pete had given her. It was an out-of-the-way section, the external character of which was a bit forbidding but absolutely without a clue as to Pete's situation. What he had been doing in such a part of New York when he was supposed to be on his way back to Florida or to New Orleans she had no idea. Kay found the street, then the building. It was, like those surrounding it, a grimy old stone flat building, undistinguished, inhospitable. She parked the car, hurried up the steps and in the hall searched for the name. Haggeberg. on one of the plates. Finding it, she pushed the bell beside it. There was a short wait when suddenly a door opened almost by her elbow and a woman’s voice came to her through the dim hall: “Miss Owen?” “Yes,” Kay replied eagerly. “Oh my,” said the voice sadly. “Come in.” “Whar’s the matter?” Kay demanded anxiously, as she stepped through the door. “Nothing!” the woman snapped as quick, strong hands seized Kay by the arms and shoulders; other hands thrust a gag into her month and a bandage over her eyes while she could do no more than groan and struggle vainly. The next she knew she was being borne by at least two men, through doors, up and down stairs, and finally into the cool night air. She heard an automobile door open, felt herself thrust into the tonneau and upon the floor, then heard the door slam shut and felt the car start. How far or in which direction the car went she had no idea, but at last it stopped and once more arms lifted her and she felt the cool, fresh air, a welcome sensation after lying gagged and blindfolded in the bottom of the stuffy sedan. When the men finally put her down she knew that she was in a chair. Hands fumbled behind her and the gag came off, then the blindfold. She looked up quickly and saw that she was in a wellfurnished room. She could not see who was behind her, but sitting across the room was a dark, heavyeyed young man who reminded her of a dapper villain in the movies. There was obvious vulgarity about him. He smiled at her, show ing extraordinarily white teeth, and puffed slowly on a cigaret which dangled precariously from the corner of his mouth. He had his hat on, a light-gray hat, almost white, tipped far back on his head of glossy black hair, and his ankles were snugly clad in gray spats to match the hat. His suit was brilliant blue.
Kay waited for him to speak. He was a long time about it, studying her with unconcealed amusement as if savoring her helplessness and perplexity, until finally he said, "Howzit, kid?” Kay made no answer. He chuckled to himself. “Put together, ain’t you?” he said unctiously. There was evil in his very voice. Something about it made her think of a lizard. “I suppose you’re going to keep me here?” she asked. "How’d you guess it? How'd you guess it?” “Where’s Pete Ryan?” she demanded. "Pete Ryan?” the man said. He began to chuckle again. “She wants to know where Pete Ryan is. You’re a dumb twist, ain’t yuh?” "It won’t hurt you to tell me,” she remarked bitterly. “Is he hurt? Is he in danger?” The man laughed again. He seemed continually amused. "Yuh slay me, kid,” he said. “Why don’t you just button up your lip and sit there before you get me burned up enough to walk over and hang one on yuh? If there’s anything I can’t stand it’s a talky twist.” He rose languidly and hitched up his high-waisted trousers. His eyes on hers, he began to come toward her, chuckling a little under his breath. She began to draw back instinctively and wished she could I vanish within the chair. She could not tell what he intended to do. but as each step brought him nearer
———— just 4CV3U pounds. The pennies |( weighed sixteen and a half pounds — "—o — — Canadian Fliers Flan Air Service To London WinniFeg, Man. (U.R>-A reg-/ ular 48-hour air service between , Winnipeg and London Is being , planned by a group of prominent Canadian fliers, it is learned here. The sponsors of the plan are i Roy 1 Brown. Ted Stull. Milton Ash ton and Jack Moar, all well-known northern Canadian fliers. They believe that such a project is feasible and are convicned that a regular service between England and Canada will be in
her fear and loathing of him increased. She tugged at the cords binding her wrists but without success. The movement didn’t escape him; it made him grin broadly. When he was standing directly tn front of her, he leaned over and touched her hair. “Looks like the McCoy, he said. “No henna, huh?” His hand stole down to her throat and his long, moist fingers moved over her skin as if they were so many cold worms. Cupping his hand under her chin, he lifted her face to the light “Not ba-ad,” he commented, slowly. “Tasty little dish. Well, kid, me and you are going to get along, ain’t we?” • • * At Harrow’s Long Island house the party was going on gaily. For a long time no one noticed Kay’s absence, until Boris began to hunt for her again and failed to find her. He ran upstairs, taking the steps three at a time with an easy lope, and went to her room. The door was open and the room was dark. “Kay?” he called. There was no answer. He went downstairs, puzzled and began another search when he passed a servant. “Could you toll me where Mr. Harrow is. Mr. Warren?” Boris helped locate Harrow. “Telephone, Mr. Harrow,” said the servant. Harrow went to the telephone, lifted the receiver. “Harrow speaking.” “Well, Harrow, get a load of this. We got the Owen kid where nobody’s going to find her and if you want to see her again all in one piece you better listen to what we got to say.” Harrow’s teeth clicked together and he gripped the telephone viciously. But, as usual, he had himself under stem control. “Spill it!” he snapped. “That’s the way. Okay then. There’ll be a letter for you in a can behind the white stone where the road turns to the right up above your place. Get it and read it. Then do what it says.” The receiver clicked. Harrow jiggled the signal frantically until the operator answered. “Get me the supervisor. Have that call traced." He jumped up and began to hurry about the house, issuing orders. Within a few minutes he and Spike, with three of the bodyguards, were at the whitewashed stone which marked the turn in the road. Spike jumped out of the car, ran forward and found the tin can. “It’s here,” he said. Harrow seized the envelope, ripped it open and read the typed message: GET FIFTY GRAND CASH AND NO PHONEYS OR FAST ONES AND HAVE IT READY WHEN PHONE CALL COMES TO YOU AT HOME TOMORROW AT NOON IF YOU WANT TO SEE THE OWEN KID ALIVE. • « ♦ Pete Ryan had no knowledge of the time. It was day and he was awake again. That was all he really knew: he was awake and therefore still alive. In a few minutes, he supposed, he would see the lily-faced boy again, sitting there, silent, liquid-eyed but cautious and suspicious as a cat. Funny about that boy. He was slight, pale, with an unwholesomely sweet face, yet Pete sensed a definite impression of deadliness when he first saw him. Somewhere, under that tight little gray double-breasted coat, would be a gun, maybe two, and it was a safe bet that the kid could shoot a fellow’s teeth out with them, one by one. What day was it? Pete thought it ought to be Friday, maybe Saturday. By now they had Kay. The thought made him set his jaws and tighten his fists until the nails gouged the palms painfully. Kay in a trap, held for ransom probably, and him the Judas! The fierce resentment, the hatred and rage born of futility, was making him reckless. And he was afraid of this. I Not that he minded taking a chance now. He hated himself enough to die for what he had done. The trou-
onoration within two years°PtS route they have under consideration lies on ™ west to cast line from Winnipeg, across Hudson Bay. Greenland and Iceland, to tie Faroe Islands, and then wo’»‘* the northern-most tip of Scotland -a distlnce of 3.790 miles. The longest flight across water would be 195 miles. —-o— “ Biggect Hor».t Saie Billings. Moat., —(UP)—The naition’s largest one-day horse sale) was believed to have been record <1 here recently. The Billings Liveet ck Commfealoii Coml' -ny »olil 1,004 horses at auction one and two at a time.
ble was that recklessness might overcome caution and strategy an., dead or wounded, he would be even less use to Kay than he had been What he feared was that he would rush the kid next time he came in, getting at least one smack at that pale, angelic face before the guns started to talk. Hi* hate had to have a concrete object and the kid was becoming just that. Pete heard a knob turn. ■ Jock click; then slow, soft, steps. That would be the kid, coming to visit him. for what reason no one seemed to know. Certainly there was nothing in this stuffy little bedroom that could be used to defeat their purposes, unless the sheets as a rope to lang one's self, and even so, where could it be fastened, and why should they care? There was no furniture but the bed, there was no way of getting out unless by breaking the window, and even then it would be a long drop into a cement-paved court. Most of the time the door was kept locked and what lay beyond it was a mystery to Pete. The door lock clicked, the knob turned and the kid came in to take his vigil on the window sill. Pete sat up on the bed and rubbed his face. His fingers encountered the stubble of a neglected beard. He must look just swell, not having had his clothes off in three days, he thought. Three days? Two days? Or four? How long had they had him? He smiled grimly to himself at the thought that he might be going just a little “squirrelly.” It all fitted in with his desire to toss the lily-faced kid around a little. Well, the kid came in. No expression, as usual; just the soft liquid eyes, like a calf’s, the easy, quiet walk. He went over and sat gingerly as usual on the window sill, stopping, as usual, to give it a flick of dust with a large white silk handkerchief. The mere sight of him made Pete begin to feel perverse. “Why do you come before breakfast?” lie asked. The youth was a long time answering. That, too, was as usual. Pondering the kid’s habits when Pete first had seen him, he wondered if it wasn’t because he was trying to decide whether it would take more energy to put a slug through you than answer your questions. Yet always his face was as beatific as if he were an altar boy during high muss* Finally the kid said: “Why?” His voice was thin, uncertain, not at all the smooth instrument one would expect in such a silken, cat-like creature. "Because I could eat better if I didn’t see you first,” Pete said with a cool pleasantness, a saccharine smile.
The boy’s long lashes fell; rose. He made no sound, no further movement. “I suppose you muggs have got what you were after,” Pete suggested. “You did, didn’t you? You got the girl, didn’t you?” Another of the kid’s pauses, until he said: “It don’t matter to you. You want to know too much.” “I do, do I? Well, all I want to know is how long I’m going to have to camp in this louse-infested dive. If you’ve got the girl, what are you keeping me for?” This time the boy answered promptly: “I don’t know!” That was all Pete needed to know. Accidentally he had come upon the stratagem that told him his answer. They did have Kay. That being the case, there was nothing he could do here without needless risk to himself. But he gave no sign of having understood. Pete remarked sullenly: “You don’t need to get sore. The least you can do is answer a fellow’s questions. I only asked you if you’d got the girt Naturally, I want to know. that. For one thing, she was my girl for a while, and for another. I do want to get out of this amp.” But evidently the kid had realized his slip and was making no more of them. Talking, obviously, wasn’t one of his accomplishments or pleasures, and he knew it only too well. (To Be Continued) Copyrtent. 1331. Klar JTwrturei Smdlepu.
MJIIIKETREPORTS daily deport of local and FOREIGN MARKETS Brady’s Market For Decatur. Berne, ’ cXvill*. Hoagland .nd Wlll.hlr. Uorrected January 3 No eommlssfon and no yardage Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. 250 to 300 lbs. J; ;’’ '' 200 to 250 lbs. ’I ” 300 to 350 lbs. . ■llBO to 200 lbs. J®'” | I 180 to 180 lbs. ”” [ 1 wo to IN IN ICO to 130 lbs J* « Rough* - ~ ’“J® Stags » 3 -’ 5 Ewe and wether lambs I Buck lambs * 7,25 i
CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat 99* .»3% -»»Jj Corn . -*9 ■ lB5 . Oats - ,n A— »—» East Buffalo Livertock Hog receipts 300; unevenly 1520c under Wednesday's average; weights below 200 tbs. showing maximum downturn; desirable | 200-258 lbs. 9815 and sparingly ; 98.25; plainer kinds 97.75; 160 180 lbs. quoted 97.25-7.90; 140-150 , lbs. sold 97. Cattle 75 market strong to | higher; few good steers $8.25. eoinmon kinds downward to 94.75: 1 tat cows $4.25; low cutter anti cutter $1.75-2.90. Calves 50; vealers unehanged, $y down. Sheep 400; not enough lambs here to test market; all grades steady. $9.25 down. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne. Ind. Jan. 3—(UP) - 25C-300 lbs. $i7.65. 225-250 lbs. $7.50; 200-225 His. $7.35; 170-180 lbs. $7.25 160 to 170 lb*. $7.15; 300-350 lbs. $7.25; 150-160 lbs. $6.50; 140-150 Ills. $6.35; 130-146 lbs. $5.75; 120-130 lbs. $5.50; 100-120 lbs. 95; Roughs $6.25; Stags $4.25. iCulves $7.50; Laiuta $8.50.
NEW YORK PRODUCE Dressed poultry, firm; turkeys, 19-24 c; chickens. U’i-27c; broilers, 17-25 c; capons. 22-30 c; fowls, 9%-19c; ducks, 1618 c; Long Island ducks, IS-lS’/ic. Live poultry, firm; geese, 1122c; turkeys, 20-27 c; roosters, 11c; ducks, 11-17 c; fowls, 14-21 c; chickens, 13-21 c; capons, 18-27 c; broilers, 18-20 c. Butter, receipts, 20,153 packages; market firm; creamery higher than extras, 33ti-33%; extra 93 score, 324 k; first 90 to 91 score, first 88 to 89 score. 28^-39%; seconds, 27’4-28: centralized 90 score, 31; centralized 88 to 89 score, 2814-2944; centralized 84 to 87 score 2714-28. Eggs, receipts, 22,385 cases; market firm; special packs, including unusual hennery selections. 3436: standards, 32-33; firsts, 29’~30; dirties, 26-26 (4.
CLEVELAND PRODUCE Cleveland. Jan 3. — TJ.R) — Produce; Butter, market firm; extras, $5; standards. 34. Eggs, market steady; extra white. 29; curcnt receipts. 26’4. Poultry, market steady; fowls colored. 4>4 lb«. and up. 17; ducks light, 16; ducks, 5 lbs. and up, 19; geese, heavy, fat, 15-16; geese, ordinary, 14; turkeys, young, 21-23; old liens. 18; old toms, 5; No. 2 turkeys, 19. Potatoes, Ohio mostly. 70-75 per 100-11>. bag 40-50 per bushel. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected January 3 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or bettor ... xSc No. 2 New Wheat (58 lbs.) 87c Oafs, 32 lbs. test so t Oats, 30 lbs. test 4<j e Soy Beans, bushel 91.12 Old Yellow Corn $1.20 New Yellow Corn 80c $1.12
CENTRAL SOYA MARKET No. 3 YetEwbeans, bu 11.12 Delivered to factory -——-o— American Girl Is Freed By Germans Berlin, .1 m. :r. urp) Mias Elsa Srltell, American held at Waldmohr on a ■ hnrge of insulting Retehsufohcror Hiller, was freed at 4.:» p . nt . today. “ O— — ■ Fancy IJaby Beef quarters. .>0 to 65 lbs. each, 7*/> and O’i cents lb. Heavier quarters 6 and S cents lb. Trv halt a quarter. Schmitt Meat Market. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eye« Examined, Glaasea Fittoo HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 6:00 Saturdays, 8;00 p. m. TAlAnhnnp I®K »
< i..v;sinTTri r,s BUSINESS CARijH AM) XQI, | FOR >\l7j USED BARGAINS MSL'i Globe range. Brilliant tug heater, Cablimts. - Chest ot Drawers. springs; Mutli-es,-,H, u Tables; Baby Cnb- : :l " Ides; Chairs, Ro<k m; 1/1 ports; Commode-. Electric Washers. | We handle grates, trout hbNHI 1 back wall for all n : ik. , n ( ■ ' We luiy. sell or trade. Snolld Hand Stole 1 ’ ' —K Il Ht S ALE l’.i2« Ihnlr,. sedan >n first . also Atwater Kent irk radio in first , Roy Johnson. 312 N ith 1' Phone 1022. FOR SALE— Stoves, rag... Mgr, and electric radio-b--droo:n .- ■ W*!, ... -e: a. (painted, in. . -i; mats for every .! >ll.i- yo S l R{ U-. Mtll’lih.v'.s I |.'i’.[^^K ß :l>( South ** USED MERCHANDISE W ” BARGAINS Gitin': . S-day < b>< ’ i gal. sizes; e1.,1; looking Utcli-11-..a l many other I i. ■ >nd 11 ;ti:<l H .. t onditton. Phone I-?.' SALE l o-d pup- docs. I’lloll' USED CAR SPEC'ALS 'I > <>ach. If ye : buy or -i’ll a used > Si child M J WANTED M ■ WANTED—I arm bond I tlwdßM .1 865’1.. W ANTED TO RENT - : ’”' f furnished apartment m’ I hmisi keeping by youi ’ Can furaidi ri’l'cit uci- ” 1.. Neii. Gem rd Didiv.
CLERKS: Men-W., In Experience .AH 1 :nn, duration '■■ lor •vvri'.m*-li’ to $17.1 monthly. Wilt, • vtl ployee Training, Inc.. i: \ 1., Democrat. dSH -i. VICES NO! ■Wo Stahlhut of la»uri B< < Fort Wayne, will be ai ,v Snm V, due-da > •' Hi| Call 1280 for appointment ■■ COOK WANTED— A a tween 30 and 45 years, ■ ■■ cook in small restaurar Spot Case, 116 Monroe . i tnr. Ind. Bl WANTED—To buy used off: and small safe. Noth’.' I'-nt ’‘ i ß| ■ Demoerut office. ! WANTEDFor expert radio | electrical repairs call Miller, phone 625. Member K B ■ Manufacturers Service. I Radio Service, 226 N. 7th st. ---■ FOR RENI I FOR RENT Goal 6i ' ’B with basement. Reul ret; to right party. M. Meibci "W West Monroe St. ■'’'B LOST AND FOI N 2.1 LOST—Black cocker spani ‘WB male. Name, Prince. notify Roy Price, phone 11'- •' l '*B rot. “.J" pi, * wl '~’ ■ -- ■ I Why run on smooth, worn I Tires when you can rent a I GILLETTE TIRE I for as low as 20c a week After 25 weeks the t' re is yours. Porter Tire Co. Distributor 34t Winchester Phone 12*" ______ OFFERS SSOO REWARD FOR I RETURN OF trained OC Q __ <’LEVELAND (U.R) -A reward" SaOO was offered hen; for re' n, *i of a trained German shepherd dt* stolen here Sept. 6. The V. C. Willard, O j c aIl( . iVallcy- K>; made the aimoiinceiueiit thi'juc Cleveland police. Willard teld Folic- Chief •J. Malowitz tha-thia dog. 1 from hi., aotuuwbile holtdo 72 stunts, and had appeared a large vaudeville circuit.
