Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 27, Decatur, Adams County, 31 January 1935 — Page 2
Page Two
|WAT IS L reBSSSGARDEN?!
A Pocket ’Kerchief Garden Lack of available space causes many families to forego the pleasures and benefits of a home vegetable garden. The city apartment dweller, who lives ou one floor of a large building, hasn't much opportunity to garden unless he secures a plot of ground away from his home. But the family which has even a small amount of backyard space, can and should utilize it, rfo matter how small it is. Any epace from a 5 foot square up may be profitably tilled into some kind of a vegetable patch. Thought and planning must, of course, go into such a tiny undertaking, but with careful consideration of the crops most suitable to succession, a surprisingly large amount of fresh, succulent produce inay be grown for the table. This problem of succession, which means to follow one crop by another in order to get two eleven three products from the same piece of ground, is a fascinating one. For instance, one row may be planted with radishes early in the season, and when they haye been harvested, beans may be planted. Also, a companion planting, early peas in the same row with carrots, the former coming up and used before the carrots are ready for the table. Mix a packet of early radishes with a late variety, and have two crops in the same row. As an alternative an early crop SALE CALENDAR Jan. 31—Chester Grubbs. 1 mile ! east of Montezuma, Ohio on state road 219. Closing out sale. Feb. 4—N. E. Dunifon. 1 mile cast of the Mid-Way Inn c-n Ohio State road 127. Feb. s—Fred Okeley, 4 mi. south of Pleasant Mills. Cloning out ■ale. Feb. 6—Schlabach & Billiard. 7 miles south and % miles east of ' Fort Wayne on the Ferguson road. Feb. 7—Waiter Fetter, 7 miles south, 1 mi. west of Rockford, O. Closing out sale. 10:00. Feb. 11 —Byerly & Alden, 1 mile south Fort Wayne ou state road 1. Closing out sale. Feb. 14- -Pete Dibert, 4 milee . east of Willshire, Ohio. Closing : out sale. ' Feb. 18 — Everett Lake Stock Farm, 14 mi. west of Fort Wayne. Closing out sale. Feb. 16—Wm. T. Jones. 1 mile • north, 1% mile south of Monroeville. Closing out sale. 10:00. Feb. 19—Adams Winnans, 1 mile east of Baldwin, Ind. Closing out sale. : , Feb. 28—Bert Marquardt, 3 mile, i north of Monroeville on Lincoln 1 highway. Chester White hog sale. |; 12:00.
HORSE SALE HORSE SALE Fort Wayne Union Stock Yards February 2,1935. Sale Starts at 1 P. M. 28 Head healthy Work Horses—lncluding 18 brood mares mostly in foald, and 10 Geldings. These horses are all well broke but three head. Doubly immune and will guarantee no shipping fever. Horses are scarce and going higher, BUY NOW. TERMS—CASH. CURT HENDERSON, Owner SHERWOOD. OHIO. E. N.* UYBARGER, Auctioneer, Westan, Ohio. e-.V ■ ■ - — ■ — PUBLIC AUCTION FRIDAY, February 1, 1935 12 O’clock „ HORSES — CATTLE — SHEEP — HOGS Miscellaneous Articles. 50 WHITE ROCK PULLETS DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES E. J. AHR—MANAGERS— L. W. MURPHY Johnson & Doeiinnan, auetioneeru. -i -■ ■
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TTST* V 7 , 1 - : I A Smail Kitchen Garden Takes U Only a Corner of Your Back Lot ’ ! of spring vegetables may be growl ! and used, leaving the groum available for annual flowers. Rad ishas, leaf lettuce, young onion and a row or two of greens (r’oir. ash or mustard) are good sugges tions. They will be ready for th< ' table quickly, and leave the groum in fine condition for flowerint plants or bulbs. Specializing in one or two crept which you like is a good plan Oftentimes city dwellers will make a bed of asparagus on a small plot, or perhaps they choose lima beans. The latter are excellent if a pole variety is grown, for by letting them climb most of the crop grows in the air and thus conserves space. Tomatoes make a good specialty. Grow some kind of a garden this spring. Plan for it now when the weather is inclement, and yon have time to spare. Then, when you have decided what to grow, get a good seed catalog and order what you need. Try a few of the All-Anterica selections of flowers and vegetables this year. The 1935 winners are exceptional. Lock over dahlia tubers in the storage basement and if they are shriveling sprinkle lightly. COURTHOUSE .. „ Real Estate Transfers ' John B. Tudor to Henry J. Kaiser et u.\ 80 acres of land in French township for SI.OO. Ella Mutschler to Albert Mutschler outlet 68 in Detwtur for SI.OO. Anna Sprunger et al to Irene Schneck Stager et al part of outlet 6 in Berne for SI.OO. 1 am still cutting hair for 15e at 515 W, Madison st. We need your patronage please. W. A. Fonner. 25t2 o— —■ — See C. D. Teeple in his quitting business sale for unheard of bargains in suits, top-coats, underwear, white and colored dress shirts, jackets and dress sox. 1
_ * — —..—— ■ - < xj Test Your Knowledge ■ I Can you answer seven of these B ten questions? Turn to page I Four for the answers. I ♦ < I 1. What was the name of tin fl legendary female Pope? I 2. Who established Zion City I ; ni ? ■ I 3. In which ocean is SplUberg ■ en ? 4. What is a colossus? 5. Who originated the Bluet Simon mental tests? 6. In which street in London is the British foreign office? 7. Who is known as "the fore--3 runner of Christ"? 3 | 8. What does the word Ohio . I mean? 9 Name the largest and moat •> important of the so-called ductless 5 glands of the human body. 10. What is a moa? o jp Boy’s Single Shot .t Wounds Two Sisters in Cincinnati —(UP)— A single bul'’d let, fired by a 14-year-old boy, d‘ wounded two of hie older sisters. 08 who were brought to a hospital n- here. ' s ‘ Ths two. sisters of Dougkts Lin,e ville, 14, son of Forest Linville, Mt. ’d Olivet. Ky„ deputy sheriff, were shot when the boy fired his father’s iptetol, which he thought unloaded. ' 18 The bullet pierced the neck of l n. May Edith Linville. 17, then enter-1 :e ed the left side and lodged a half. II inch above the heart of Mildred Lin- * ia ville, 19. a school teacher. Physi-. if cions said the girls would both re- i y covere— o ” Patrol Wagon Thefts Rile Capital Police 8 Washington, —(UP) — Washingp ton t>olice have sworn to capture the 1 person who mn away with two of 1 their patrol wagons. ’ The first wagon was stolen from r in front of the Seventh Precinct at about 1:50 a. m. recently, just after a prisoner had been brought to the 1 -station house. Some time later the wagon was found abandoned on the ’ street. And then Officer Edw-ird Kelly discovered that the Third Precinct’s ancient van had vanished from its garage. It was discovered in an alley about one hour later. ——. o I 731 College Graduates in Pen Columbus, 0., —(UP)—Only 131 college graduates are listed among the 4,323 convicts in Ohio penitentiary, a survey has revealed. There r are 894 prisoner* with high school 1 educations and 2.982 completed grammar school work. The survey . showed that ages of 3,486 of the convicts comJ within the range . from 15 to 39 years- ' o A Real "City Father" ilcseburg. Ore.. —(UP) —A real “city father’’ is Or. E. V. Hoover, ’ Roseburg. He can claim the title 1 for having been mayor of the city • four times, but more important to ■ him is ths fact that in 38 yeans of practice he has brought nearly halt the population of the city into the ’ world. ' I .. —o— — • > I Diving Rod Reveals Presence of Fool’s Gold L 1 Omaha, Neb. —(UP) —T. M- Godi I frey didn't find his anticipated trea- ' sure hut he is convinced his new divining rod is a success. During search ct an old r sideuce here where legend had it $50,009' , wus secreted, the rod dipped wildly over a piece of plaster found under the floor, . Godfrey tlioug.it the chunk must contain a gold nugget but investigation disclosed it was mixed from Platte River sand which lias an unusually high content of “fools' gold".
| FOR SALE Kalamazoo Stoves, Ranges and Furnaces. Factory prices. One ycat to pay. Sprague Furniture Co Phone 199
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY. JANUARY 31
J --u I ♦ Vegetative Growth Cure For Gullies Washington - (UP) - Farmers cannot expect to olreck the spread of gullies by filliag them with old ♦ automobile bodies, advises W ■ R w , Mattoon of the Agriculture DepartIntents Forest Servicey’l Hattoon said many farmers have, worked hard cutting trees, nr brush e ’ jor throwing wire, or even old auto- | mobile bodies into gullies in fruitI less efforts to control them. He said much time, labor and money have 'been wasted in attempts to keep lR more of the farm from wa.-hing
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CHAPTER XIX Doubts I The talk was of sudden wealth when Mark, still full of troublesome , doubts of Vanya, wandered over to ’ Loring's tree next morning. He found that worthy trading stories with one of the Ellice's crew—rumors of rich finds, giant pearls, treasure on remote islets. Mark lisi tened again—as who hadn't in the ' islands—to the story of the great black pearl that had made the fortune of “Luckless” Parks, the gem known in the markets as “The Eye of Allah.” , . _ , , Loring responded with the tale of a pearler trying his luck off lonely Haymet Rock. On the third descent, the diver, he asserted, had brought up a malformed oyster—a freak—and the men in the boat had pried it open immediately. There, in the fleshy folds of the mollusc, for just an instant, had flashed a veritable pearl of pearls! A great pink, radiant gem, perfect in form and gigantic in size, a fortune for its finders. Just an instant, and the great gem, slippery with oyster slime, had flashed elusively out of their fingers, and dropped into the clear waters. Loring told of the desperate faces craned to watch its sinking, and how, drawn by the luminous flash, a great Opah, the original king-fish, had darted in a rose and green streak from beneath the boat, and swallowed the priceless, shining globule! And how the pearler’s crew, abandoning diving, had taken to fishing, and had fished the vicinity for weeks in a vain attempt to capture the guilty Opah! “And they’re still at it!” concluded Loring. “The ships that pass Haymet Rock still bring back stories of the perpetual fisherman, and they say the crew is springing gills and growing scales from a steady fish diet!” The story was well received. The seaman guffawed, and departed to repeat it to his shipmates at the bar, and even Mark’s moroseness yielded a hearty chuckle. “Not even a drink,” mourned Loring. “I owe you a quart, and I’ll stand you a drink. Seen Vanya?” “No. And I can't use your quart —not by day-light. No fun at ail, getting spiffed by day; the cold light brings out one's deficiencies too clearly.” “You're a connoisseur of decadence.” "Just an artist,” grinned the beachcomber, “By the way, is this bruise in the shape of a boot-print a memento from you 1 ” “I needed your advice,” said Mark, smiling in remembrance, "which you gave.” He thought suddenly of Loring’s bemused answer to his query. “Try ths acid test!" Might be good advice, at that! “Listen here,” said the beachcomber abruptly, “My last night’s advice, whatever it was, is probably valueless, but I’ve an opinion i or two to render now, and the first is that you’re a fool.” Mark wasn’t irritated; the other’s manner had a disarming air of banter, underlaid by a serious tone. “I’ve been called so by those better qualified to judge than you,” he responded with a grin. “No one’s better qualified than I,” said Loring. “A fool is always a better judge of fools than any wise man. The fool knows his subject from the very fundamentals of his own experience, from the inside, as it were; the wise man gets all his knowledge of fools from hearsay.” “Then you qualify as an expert indeed," said Mark. "What of it?” “Just this: Your particular brand of tomfoolery lies in blinding yourself to certain very obvious facts, because, I suppose, they're unpleasant facts, or because they offend your pride, or some other equally valid reason.” “For instance?” queried Mark. “For instance Vanya. You’re in love with her, you know!” “I certainly ant not!” exclaimed Mark vehemently. “On the contrary. I dislike her strenuously. Simply because I admire her obvious beauty is no sign I’m in love with her!” “No one,” said Loring dryly, “could possibly be as beautiful as you seem to think she is. And furthermore. no person but a born artist will chase an impersonal idea of beauty over a whole ocenn. It's
away. There ia. however. Mattoon revealed, away to really heal or stop gullks. He said they am be healed .succesululy by restoring a vegetative cover. He bellevee the secret lies in either giving nature a chance to reestablish eonie vegetative growth, or in helping nature by ' planting trees, vines, grasses, legumes or other plants which in turn, must be 'protected from fire, overcutting and other-grazing. — O'" ■ Liquor Licences Popular Little Rock, Ark. —(UP)- Liquor dealers brought 72S federal licenses
not the beauty you were pursuing. It’s the lady.” , , . . Mark was thoroughly startled by “ Loring’s accusations. The possibile itv he had never admitted to him--0 self stared him in the face through e the other’s blunt words, and he 9 hardly knew how to reply. * “Moreover,” continued the beach- > comber relentlessly, “I don’t care * how you describe the emotion to 9 yourself—call it fascination, in--1 fatuation. or obsession; it doesn't ’ alter the fact.” ’ “Lord!” groaned Mark. "You’re 9 a brutal devil!” . "Like the surgeon and his knife,” said Loring. “For your own good. ’ You Yankees aren't made for the
Vanya was singing now. Her eyes passed coolly over Mark, ignoring his tentative smile.
tropics. Your cool, logical charac-1 ters soften, disintegrate, go to pieces, under the equator, like mine." Mark had no reply to make. He was dazed, upset, and thoroughly puzzled. “That's your danger,” proceeded his tormenter. “Suppose you had her under your familiar temperate sky: suppose this exotic, romantic, fioisoning tropic background were acking. How would you feel then? Would she hold her eharm in your eyes? Would a prosaic background destroy her lure? Is she attractive only by virtue of contrast with her undesirable associates, and would the competition of cultured women topple the illusion of her superiority? What do you think?” “I don’t know,” muttered Mark. “What do you think?” “What I think doesn’t matter. The moral angle, which means so much to you provincials, doesn’t affect my opinion, and that makes my likes and dislikes utterly meaningless to you. But personally, I like her, despite her poor estimate of me. In fact, her prejudice does her credit!” “Oh Lord!” groaned Mark. “If I only believed her story!” “So she told one, then. That’s ’ the moral question again, you see. Is she fit for the company of decent women? Could I take her into my home, to meet my sister, my mother? The New England standard!” “Haven’t you any standard?” flared Mark. I “I have my code. Didn’t I just ■ refuse your offer of a drink? Now . I feel I’ve earned the right to one, ■ after this conversation. I’ll accept i your next offer gracefully.” “The devil! You’re as consoling , as an ugly-tongued traffic cop.” > “And I servo a parallel purpose. ■ I point out wherein you’ve failed to i observe certain well-established i rules and regulations. The amount : of the fine, of course, is up to you.”
I in dry Arkansas during 1934. Revo . nue Collectors Homer M Adkint > said. Hot Springs, resort city. l«u i the state with 74 authorized dealers . Little Rock, capital, was second ' with 60. Th • federal retailers tax M $-5 per year. An excise tax of SI,OOO also is applicable baeuust Arkansas is a dry state but liquor ' dealers are fighting the levy In fed ': eral court. 11 — With Railroad 54 Year* Marion. 0., - <UV) — Oortez E Sargent, with 54 years of work with ’ the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad. has retired. He is 73.
“One couldn’t believe anything bad of her," muttered Mark, to look at that lovely face of hers! “How old is the lady?’ queried Loring irrelevantly. “Fourteen the first year of the war—that makes her twenty-one. "Well,” mused the beachcomber, “one can fall a long way in twentyone years. It took me only s decade longer to reach my level. ’ “That’s a consolation.” “It is. Vanya can’t possibh be assigned to the same level, you see; she must, by logical inference, occupy a higher one, since she looks down on me. That’s a self-evident fact, isn’t it?” “Your cursed verbal pyrotech-
| nics!” snarled Mark. "A lot of help they are!" “Have they earned me a drink?” grinned Loring. “Come on.” Mark paused suddenly. “That’s it!” he exclaimed abruptly. “That's which?” “I’ve got it! The acid test—the Trial by Fire!” * • * “She’d be a sensation on the American stage,” observed Mark, watching the flash of Vanya’s white supple limbs through the rents of the vagabond-like costume she wore. “Wrong as usual,” contradicted his cynical companion. “Her features are too delicate to cross the footlights, though she might make the cinema. Still, that hint of intelligence in her face might kill even that ehance, judging from some of your screen epics.” “You’re a cold proposition," laughed Mark. Vanya was singing now. Her eyes passed coolly over Mark, ignoring his tentative smile as she had done all evening. She finished her song and vanished without a sign of recognition. Loring gave Mark a questioning glance. “Yes." said Mark. “Now the Trial by Fire.” “I’ll wager our current quart you lose.” . “I want to lose. If I do, I’ll know she’s straight.” “No bet?” *‘J’R d° this,” said Mark thoughtfully. “I’ll stand you a quart if I do lose. If I win—we all lose.” “Fair enough! Do you mind if I consume the current quart?” “Any time at all!” growled Mark , ’Then,” said Loring, draining his giass, “I’m about to bestow on you an ancient and honorable title. I hereby dub you—Easy Mark!” ‘“Easy Mark’ is right,” snapped , the other as he left the table. “7 mean ‘Easy Mark’ was right.” (To Be Continued) Copyrtfht, 1934. by King FMiurti Syndicate, ia*,
: marketrepokts s. d DAILY DtPORT OF LOCAL X AND foreign MARKETS )f — e Brady’s Market For Decatur, Berne, >' SraiQvllle, Hoaqtand and Wlllahlre Corrected January 31. No commlseion and no yardage Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. ! l i»0 to 2W Iba. J* ' !50 to 800 lbs - •>••0 800 to 350 H*. 16u tq 190 lbs 140 to 160 lbs. ......— 85 120 to 140 Ibe- — - 86 05 100 to 120 lbs 15- 30 loughs Stags — —- Vealera ...» - 19.85 HJwe and wether lambs 18 50 Buck lambs $7.50 GARARD—P M CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat 88H 87’4 Corn 84*4 8o’» 771 s Oats 50 43*4 41 New York Produce Dressed poultry firm. Turkeys, 19-30. Chickens 15 27*y. Broilers 16-32. Capons 24-31. Fowl's 14?2\i. Long Island ducks 19-19%. lave poultry firm. Geese 10-18. Turkeys 20-17. Roosters 13. Ducks 12-18. Fowls 20-5'3. Chickens 1623. Capone 20-27. Broilers 10-18. Egg receipts 14016 cases. Market steady. Special packs, including unusual hennery selections 31%4J%; standards 31: firsts 3030%; mediums 28%-29; dirties 2929%; cheeks 27-27%, Butter receipts 10,730 packages. Market strong; creamery higher than extras 38-38%; extra 92 score 37%; firsts 90 to 91 score 35%-37; firsts 88 to 89 score 34%«35%; centralized 90 score 35%-34%; centralized 88 to 89 score 34%-35’i Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs 5 to 10c higher; 200-250 lbs. $7.95; 250-300 ibs. $7.80; 300350 Ibs. $7.45; 180-200 Ibs. $7.80; I 160-180 Ibs. $7.70; 150-160 Ibs., $7.30; 140-150 Ibs. $6.80; 130-140 Ibs. $6.30; 120-130 Ibs. $6; 100-1201 tbs. $5.50; roughs $6.50; stags $4.50. Calves $10; Lambs $8.75. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., Jan. 31.— U.R>—Livestock: Hogs, receipts, none; market I .nominal.. [ Cattle, receipts, 300; scattered! aales steers and heifers, 25c and more higher; bulk unsold, with sharper higher asking prices re- : tarding factor; good mixed year-! lings. $9.25; common to medium steers, $7; cows and bulls strong to 25c higher; fat cows. $5.25-$5.50; low cutter and cutter, $2.60-$3.75; medium bulls, $4.35-$4.65. Calves, receipts, 150; vealers active. mostly 50c under Monday; good to choice, $11; common and medium, $6.25-$9.50.. Sheep, receipts, 50; good to choice lambs quoted steady, $9.60: holdovers around 105 lbs., $9. CLEVELAND PRODUCE Cleveland. Jan. 31.—(U.PJ — Produce : j 1 Butter, market firm; extras, 39c; 1 standards, 38%c. Eggs, market weak; extra!' whites. 27c; current receipts, 26%c. '< Poultry, market steady; fowls, < colored, 4% lbs., and up, 19-20 c; I ducks, light. 15c; ducks, a lbs. and 11 ap. 20c; geese, 1415 c; turkeys,!: young, 20c. Potatoes, Maine $1.15-$1.25 per,: 100-lb. bag; Ohio best mostly. 75- ; 80c per 100-lb. bag; New Jersey, $1 I per 100-lb. bag; Texas, $1.25-$1.40 t per 100-lb. bag. local grain market Corrected January 31. No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 1 No. 2 New Wheat (58 Iba.) B€ci‘ Oats, 32 lbs. test 46e I { Oats, 30 lbs. test Z. 45c 1 Soy Beans, bushel $1.12 ■ Yellow Corn jg 1 central soya market No. 2 Yellow beans, bu $1.12 v Delivered to factory
N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted ‘ HOURS: 8:30 to 11::jo 12:30 to 5:00 ; Saturdays, 8:00 p. m ‘ n Telephone 135. t' —— I I—' ■' —f. Why run on smooth, worn Tires when you can rent a ’ GILLETTE TIRE for as low as 20c a week. ' After 25 weeks the tire v M is yours. Porter Tire Co. ' o Distributor 1 341 '.Viiivhesier Phone iHS £
Ku,i ■!"'. r .. ,l Wi al 115 N, !H|, st, *’ ■ foßsuj: ed alMlfa <• s west ol’ K'j ■,<!,„„! Hi£ ,'« M FOR SALE11,1,1 1, ” : " hat< liui.; . chick*- uc .iti mi,,, Ch:, k . „'>B Hat. I;. FOR Mab ' 111 ~ ■•“■I W'o’i:-.- . . rOlt SALE-.. ,rui k Sl IPIII 1,1 -- b trai stove; . .. ~l t vice fore. Walter Calib , neg FOR SALE Bab SI every M. :..Ey and Chicks stock S; . y l: , Red >: a,, , raj SALE SMAnTZvJB MAN \\ AW Ro" l '' ' 1 Adums . ■ leigh port. ill.. ( r o. R. 2, Mom .. 1a.,. |S Jun. U-ID-] W A electi. Miller, i-ic-: Mamit'.ii i.:: Radio Service. 226 N IVANTEI . I of bedfa" ...c.-i man. Oswald \A:‘. or Dr. Nyff! It.rn-. M SALESME.k ■ ed for R.iwWigh roMfl families. V ■ t0i1,.;., Dept. Ina -A. 'C'-rpciM '.'ra WANTED on shai ' - an Box ”H . . H .. ■ . LOST AND FOJ STRAYED | old pup. p.' • .' -a 4m ! Finder pb Rt houseFOR RENI FOR RENT 7 room » right kind it parly oil) 805. — u — Tocsin Bi’rk Report Filed At Bit ®4uffton, Ind.. -lan. 31-1 current repori of the OUj County Ban):. i'er lord of Tocsin, nt’tie by Leo 1 Iquidating agent ' liit 0« I County Bank, a: ; coverilfi I fed fro.n October M. ifiw i ember 31. IP ’.l .-it w.- tlw| I chargeable with mial rad] of $19,292. During the ' " 'al a#l distribution anioiitm’il ’» and admini-str.!.:'" ■os $2,939. Ca.- "■ hai> l D: 31, 1934, is giv assets still cbaraeaWe ■ total to $40,712 71- « itli M ties outstajdlnc. $->l.*>49Revival Services At Pleasant i Revival servb e will "I* l Pltttsant Valley friends cated one mile non'a and east of Monroe. Sunil l ) February 3Rev. Paul Tdd JonwM bo the evangtlwi uw! Keisler of Van V> • ; 9 charge of the siuyin-' will start each .veiling at, □nd will continue fora The public is invited to«t« Canada to Get Airport p Montreal Qu ltl ’',. the mest recent and [lanes developed i» States, the 12-pl■ ' ' Electra airplane. short ‘ ; manufactured in < ana'l-'■ to an linnouncenient w »■ Pasmore, president Aircraft Limited. — o „ , . .uTTII AOHCE Ol •L'.V. so. 3Sfl OF K«TVH Notice‘ s bereby c ■ (f itors, heirs amt . Appeal Appelmati. at Adams Circutt , ! h ; - tur, Indfana, nil th* yuai’y, 1V35, and ieU i A ll why the Final >’ '"/"‘'.id with the ‘“late <' should not be ■’>’ t)iell aif I,«ii>s are notified t" aUd j make proof of ' ' ... their distributive '', ~ m a!4 Decatur, Indiana Lenhart, Heiier an- jjZ
