Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 38, Decatur, Adams County, 13 February 1935 — Page 2
Page Two
| WHAT IS MMggARDEN? Healthy Teeth in Healthy Children
. ■ ’ ' H.'.«♦ <4» “ ■*■'' • * Although home remedies should not supersede the doctor in cases where disease has already set in. there are certain preventive measures that every family should know and practice. One of these concerns teeth, and especially children's teeth. Five foods are essential to the proper development and health of the teeth, and they may all be found in the home vegetable garden. They are Vitamins A, C and D, and the salts of calcium and phosphorus. We do not plan a row of calcium phosphate, or a bede of vitamin D, to be sure, but all of them are contained bountifully in the carrots, tomatoes, turnips, spinach, corn and other crops which, when they are fresh, home grown, make dinnertime such n pleasant occasion. The teeth are composed of about ■ one-fourth inorganic substances | and three-fourths mineral sal's, chief among which are calcium and phosphorus. These two ele-, meats. which are violently active metals in their free state, and . would kill the strongest individual | if taken internally, combine with less active substances into phos- ■ phates. The phosphates are di- I gestible. mid are taken into the blood stream as materials for building strong teeth and bones. Should there be a shortage of them, growth is naturally stunted. leaving the individual with decaying teeth, undersized, with i weak bones. In order for the body to absorb. these minerals, however, it, is ! necescsary that an adequate supply of vitamins be present, as they ' arc- the regulators of this process. < Exactly what function they fill is i somewhat of a mystery, even to the scientists, who have discovered only that their absence causes such diseases as pellagra, scurvy, beri-beri. and others. As in the case of the minerate.; vitamins grow freely in the backyard in the form of vegetables. It has been found that plants with I brilliant green and yellow pig- ; ments contain many vitamins. | Carrots, turnips, spinach, tomatoes (although red), and others are rich in vitamins, and it has
gal AUTO LOANS s?. money—want to buy a cat—reduce j x““", OftowKun. Over Schafer Hdw. Store Beeatar. Ind. rhone tM xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxrxxxxx For Better Health See Dr H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 311 104 So. 3rd st. J Office Hours: 10 to 12 am, 1 to 5 p. m., 6 to 8 p. m. Naurocalometer Service X-Ray Laboratory. ■ :- _ /
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING— ‘ ON THE Q. T.” gy SEGAR Q r A MONSTER NEAR \ thws the <V4EVL Lodk>tfKx)T forl 7 ZTTrrx r-—, O r- r 7 X ~'“' 1 \l KILL HIM 0 WBOOH’T HE (MQNSTep. T- /la/ELLX P-S-S-T-ls MY FRIEND,\ YOOHMCNT_S€€NJ MONSTERS ABOARD, IKILUT? I ) P-S-T |Oo <JUE, STRftNG€R»)4> rV| \FOR~'J M's y: g w ~~y — i<m 4 Srioi jo yjiiiiß'iiii LLy h ———————J W< 111 ■■ . . _ t~~T —I. S7 fa| 15) ra»u,n-mdigir Im, SIS
«. - * ‘Star’ Gardener 1 VwKf i • * ■ *• ■ Gardening is a favorite recreation in Hollywood. Jean Muir, motion picture star, is shown transplanting a clump of mont- ■ bretias which grow luxuriously in I the garden of her home. ! been suggested that the ripening qualities of the sun put them ' there as the sun also does in the ■ human body. I Although these unseen foods , are essential to all regardless of ’ age. children, nursing and expec- ■ tant mothers, and backward indiI vidua’*? are especially benefited i by an adequate supply. Grow the I vegetables which furnish them at 1 home, where you can keep them in the ground, fresh and full of nourishment, until yon need them i for the table. o Balancing the Food Budget How to keep within the family food budget and yet increase the ' quantity and quality of the family meals, is a problem which many a housewife ponders from breakI fast to dinner. (hie good way to answer them I is to i>lan for a vegetable garden i this spring. All of the vegetables ' on the market may be grown at home With little work, and trifling i expense compared to their cost if i you were to buy them. What is 1 more, you can raise varieties i which are unobtainable in the : market and enjoy a quality which i money cannot buy. Your initial expense is almost , negligible. First, you need a I rake, a hoe, and a spade, which I you no doubt already have. Secj end. yon need seeds, most importi ant factor in garden success, .yet . most inexpensive ot all garden ' needs. A packet of lettuce seed. | for instance, will furnish enough I fresh, crisp, health-giving salads ■ for the average family all through j the harvest season. Other seeds I are proportionately ( heap. Almost any piece of ground, i from a 10-foot square on up, is suitable, if the soil is in poor I condition, a little fertilizer or ■humus will do the trick. A surI prislngly large amount of produce may be grown in a small area by - careful succession, that is,' plan‘- | iiig one crop to follow another . For Ihdtanee, airing beans may be : planted to follow lettuce or radishes in the same row, or later
varieties of the same may be | planted. Tomato plants can be set out among the peas, to take j the place of the latter when that ■ crop has matured and found Its ■way into the kitchen. Dollar for dollar, the small exi pense ot planting a vegetable I garden as compared to the value lof the produce grown, is much greater than could ho expected ■front otheer means of whining the food budget, and in line flavor and tenderness, most of the home garden products so far excel market produce that there can be no comparison. ———— Cr ——— j A ♦ Test Your Knowledge ■ — | Can you answer seven of these j i ten questions’ Turn to page I Four for the answers. ♦ -♦ 1. In which country is the city of Bologna? 2. What is the highest inhabit- ■ ed place in the world? 3. What animal is named leviathan in the Bible 4. When and by whom was the mouth organ invented? 5. On what island is the volcano Mont Pelee? 6. Name the books by President Roosevelt now in print. 7. Who invented the instrument 'known as the bolometer? 8. What is the surface distance from the South to the North Pole? 9. Name the third book of the iPentateuch. 10. What are "shavetails"? : MONROE NEWS j Mr. and Mrs. William Liby and ■ Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Liby spent Sunday in Decatur, the gti"sio of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Yost and family. Calvin Coppess of Coldwater. Michigan, spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Coppes s. J. C. Tritch and son Max Allen of Fort Wayne visited relatives in i NOTICE or FIX VI. SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE Ml. ZMI.X Notice is hereby given to the cred-I itors, heirs and legatees of George) E. Bobenmover, deceased, to appear' in the Adams Circuit Court, belli at Decatur, Indiana, on the 2nd day of March. 1935, and show cause, if any, whv the Final Settlement Accounts with the estate of said decedent should not he approved: anil said heirs are notified to then and there I make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares. Samuel K. Beeler. Administrator I Decatur. Indiana, February 5, l»3a.' Ix-uhart, Heller and Svliurger. Xltys. Feb. 6-13 SALE CALENDAR Feb. 14—William Spade. % mile west of Vera Cruz or 5% miles east of Bluffton on the north side of the river. H. H. High, auct. Feb. 14- -Pete Dibert, 4 miles east of Willshire. Ohio. Closing out sale. Feb. 15 — Decatur Community sale, 12 noon. Chattanooga stock sale, 6:30 p. ni. Feb. 16—Wm. T. Jones, 1 mile west and 1% mile soutn of Monroeville. Closing out sale.' Feb. 18 — Everett Lake Stock Farm, 14 mi. west of Fort Wayne. | Closing out sale. Feb. 19 —Adams Winnans, 1 mile east of Baldwin, Ind. Closing out sale. Feb. 20.—W. N. Robinson. 1 mile north and 1 mile west of Ohio City. Closing out sale. Feb. 20—Tobias Steffen, 1 mile w-est and % mile south of Mag ley H. H. High. Auct. Feb. 21—Chas. Figel, 1 mile so % mile east of Maples. Closing out sale. Feb. 22 — Decatur Community sale, 12 noon. Chattanooga Stock sale: 6:30 p. m. Feb. 23—H. E. Reidenbach. 1 mi east of Convoy. Ohio on Lincoln Hiway. Filling statio nand 5 acres land. Feb. 25 —Otto Jacobs, 1 mile west and 3 mile south of Groverhill, Ohio. Feb. 27 J. F. Tapy, 1 mile west of Waynedale on Lower Huntington road. Feb. 28 —Bert Marquardt, 3 mile north of Monroeville on Lincoln highway. Chester White hog sale. 12:00. Mar. 2 S. W. Miller, Van Wert, Ohio. Implement sale. Mar. 5—J. G. Giesler, 4 mile east and 1% mile noijth of Wren, Ohio. Closing out sale.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY. I T bßt AIU 13, LW-
Monroe Saturday. R. O. Johnson and OSestcv Johnson of Gary, Indiana visited relatives and friends in Monrue Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Jim A. Hendricks entertained Rev. Thomos J Frost ami Rev. and Mrs. Elbert Morford and Mrs. Harriet Graham at dinner ( Wednesday. Mrs. Elizabeth Stanley and Mrs. Helen Lelchty of D catur and Lewie Lammimun of Toledo. Oiiio. were', the guests of Mr. ami Mrs. Raymond Crist and family Sunday. t Mtes Thelma Johnson of Richmond spent the week with her par- I ents. Mr. and Mr.i. S. V. Johnson
TitTW MARGE - ’THEXjhDI /Bp/LEO
CHAPTER XXX Shene and Hong were leaning on the bar together. Shene nodded as he entered, removing an odorous pipe from his mouth. “Leaving tomorrow?” he said. “Yes,” answered Mark shortly. “We'll be sorry to lose Vanya,” said Shene, with a yellow-toothed smirk. “We'll be sorry to lose her,” he repeated. Something in Mark resented Shene’s use of the girl’s name. “She’ll be happier in the States," he said. “Doubtless—doubtless!” rumbled Shene. "This is a hard life for a girl.” Mark passed on, and mounted the stairs. Vanya’s door was closed; he rapped softly on the panel, and entered at her low reply. She was sitting on the bed, engaged in her interminable mending: she looked up gravely as Mark entered. Without a word, his mood of romance still upon him. he stepped to her side, leaned over her, ami kissed her. Her arms stole about his shoulders; she held him tightly to her for a moment. "Dear Mark!” she said very softly as she released him, and he stood erect. It was then that he noticed what garment she had been mending—the loose crimson blouse that was a part of her dancing costume. “Vanya!” he said. “Why bother to mend that? You’ll have no more use for it here.” “A ship comes in tomorrow," she replied, still gazing at him with serious eyes. “I shall have to dance.” “No, honey! Whether you’ve promised or not, about the dancing, you won't have to dance here tomorrow night. You’ve forgotten that the mail packet sails day after tomorrow. Tomorrow we go to Tauianga; I’ve ordered a prau here to take us.” “I haven’t forgotten the mail packet, Mark.” “Then why bother mending that? We’ll be gone before evening.” “We won’t,” said Vanya. “I’m going to dance tomorrow.” “I tell you we’ll be gone!” "You will, Mark. I can’t go through with it.” “Go through with it! Vanya, what do you mean?” “Our bargain,” she said gravely. “Mark, I can’t do it! I’m not going!" Depasture Day “She won’t get away with it!” muttered Mark, finally giving up the attempt to sleep as dawn lightened his windows. He swung out of the rumpled bed and set about the routine of dressing. Vanya hadn’t yielded. Endless arguments of the preceding night had left both sides exhausted, but Vanya had won. She wouldn’t even answer questions save to reiterate that she couldn’t go. Yes, she hated the Cove, but she couldn’t go. Yes, she wanted to enter the States, but her end of the bargain was off. And indeed yes, she still loved Mark —but she couldn’t go. And that was all. “She’s bluffing!” raged Mark as he laced his boots. “She wants to bargain, and it’s unworthy of her. She wants—l suppose—marriage!” He slipped into the empty hall, where the daylight dimmed the pale oil-lamp, and at Vanya’s door ventured a faint rap. “Won’t wake her if she’s asleep,” he thought But her voice came instantly. “Mark?” “Yes.” Her muffled footsteps sounded, a key—his own latch-key, twisted creakily, and Vanya peeped out wrapped in her flowered robe. She locked out at him questioningly. Her features betrayed as sleepless a night as Mark’s had been; her dark eyes were heavy, and a tinge of red colored the lids, as if from weeping. “What is it?” she whispered. “Let me come im” She open- i the door a trifle wider; Mark entered, and she closed and rc-locked it. i-i :■ dropped to the edg of the rumpled bed, and Mark sat on chair, suit< ying her. For o. ‘ .-efl, sleepless, ■ - -rv. (■ th tjght I’.er intensely beav.ti nt "What's tl>» ■i;.'::.tter?" ro-
und family. , Mr. and Mrs Clarence Smith of Preble and Mr. and Mrs. Gejra* Smith .md son Terry were the Itueata M Mr. and Mrs. W. 8. smith Sunday. Mr. and Mrs; Franklin Wagoner and son Dick of Huntington visited Mr. and Mrs. ».ra Wagoner Saturday. S. V. Johnson returned io his home Sunday from the Memorial Hospital at Deixitnr. where bo received medical treatment. Mr. and Mrs. Milo Heller and family of Zanesville, visited Mr. and Mrs. Philip Heffner Saturday evening. . Mr. and Mrs- George Harvey aim
peated. “Oh, Mark, you haven t i come to renew that useless, heuft; breaking argument of last night, i "No,” he said, shaking his head. "I gave up trying to sleep, and I wanted a walk to—to help clear things up in my mind; end as I passed your door, I thought you ’ might be awake. I knocked lightly, not to disturb you if you were sleeping.” .. “I was awake, she said. I couldn’t sleep either.” “This is what I came to say.” Mark said, still in a low, almost whispering tone. "I’m going to leave you alone today —all day. I’m going on a long walk, or I’ll hobnob with Loring—at any rate, I’ll not be near you. And I want you to think this over, carefully and finally. The prau should he here by the middle of the afternoon: I’ll return then for your final answer.” “There’s no need. Mark. I can’t change what I’ve said. I can't go through with it!” “But you’ll do what I ask?” he murmured. “You’ll think it over?” “Os course. Could I help thinking of it? Do you believe it means so little to me that I could forget it?” “No. I don’t think that, Vanya. I think you want something more of me—something I can’t give.” “I suppose you’re right,” said the girl dully. “I suppose you can’t give what I w-ant—the only thing that would make this unholy bargain possible to me!” “And then, Vanya, it wouldn’t be an unholy bargain?” “No—not then! But I’ll think of it, if that will satisfy you, though I can tell you now that the answer will be the same.” “< promised not to argue, dear, but—” “But you promised not to argue,” cut in the girl. “Please, Mark, don’t let’s get into another bitter quarrel. It can’t help matters, and I—l simply can’t stand another battle.” “Then I'll leave you,” said Mark, “until this afternoon.” He kissed her gently, and stepped quietly into the empty corridor; he tiptoed down the creaking stairs. Below, the bar-room was deserted; even Hong, who never seemed absent from his post, was invisible now. The sunlight slanted across the tables, bringing out in curious shades the dust that had settled on them since the visit of the men of the Caroline. The room, for all its open windows, had a musty, abandoned smell. Mark opened the chest behind the bar; nothing to eat was there save several clustered bunches of bananas. Lacking ice, of course, breadfruit spoiled too quickly to warrant keeping, but he had hoped for a jineapple. He tore four of the mown bananas from their cluster, and slipped them into a paper bag from the bar; they’d do for breakfast and lunch, should his walk prove lengthy enough for two meals. He stepped from the door of the Diver’s Helmet into the blinding sunlight of full tropical day. The gulls were gathering on the beach; their raucous squawks sounded familiarly pleasant to him—he had heard the sound on island after island for many months. The surface of the cove itself was almost glassy in its calm, but beyond the point, out in the open Pacific, small rollers flashed in tne morning light. Behind him, the g;.<n hills of Tongatabu, with ilic’r mystery, glowed emerald; he turned and glanced up at them toward the village where he and L. ling had watched the dance of the virgins. There was, of course, no visible sign of that settlement; nothing but lush jungle stretched from the edge of the clearing to the top of the highest visible hiil. Loring was sprawled on his side beneath his tree, apparently asleep; save for his presence the clearing was as deserted as the bar-room Mark had just quitted, and nearly as quiet. He walked quietly across the clearing, past the unstirring beachcomber, and along the broad white sand that he and Vanya had followed before, on the walk they had taken together. He passed the great fallen tree they had clambered over, and he passed, far beyond, the corai
Lon Richard nnd Mro. Verna Plush ft of Indiatiap Ite, visited Mr. . vey’s fathir. John II ! Paul RW»re Corner.tone B aton (UP) The original Mt ■ lof the ll''-yeir-old I SUB' House te officially recorded . a S »133,88333. Its cornemlone was ’ laid by Puul Revere. I —o —- * «■ — 1 Hens Laid Huge Eggs Sh«M, Oie. -(UPI-Thrre e«a. I an weighing more than t.ir.e und I one-eigMh ounces each. la recently by hens owned by Harve) j Tharp. The largest weighed three l and five-eighth ounees.
t outcropping on which they had - rested, and where Vanya had con- ’ fessed to Mark that she loved him. Where now was that love of here, [ he wondered. Had h® killed r Small blame to Vanya if she had [ cea?ed to care, or if she had JJ ev ® r i really cared! He had been at fault, grievously at fault, throughout the - whole miserable affair; yet, after all, could he have acted differently7 [ Mark knew well enough that he couldn't have; he had done only ■ what his training, his ideals, his t morality, had made it inevitable ; for him to do. He couldn’t have . offered marriage to Vanya, not with . the stern social code of half a dozen I generations denying him the privii lege. Not even loving ner as he I now realized he did. , So he tramped on along the dei serted beach, far beyond the place ■ where he and Vanya had turned . back. He passed a pineapple grower’s establishment; natives were 1 abroad in the fields, moving among the palm-like spikes of the plants. J Each worker, as Mark passed, turned and stared silently at him ■ for a long minute or more; strani gers, he reflected were doubtless : rare beings along that coast, especially strangers trudging alone . along the beach. And the sun rose ' inexorably in the sky; when it was nearly at the zenith, he paused, , threw himself on the sand, and con- ■ sumed his warm and very soft • bananas. He sat for a while thinking. He thought of Loring, mysterious, ; clever, ineffectual, and of Hong and Shene, whom Loring hated, but for ■ the most part he thought of Vanya. He thought of her at first as she had looked in the crimson blouse and black velvet shorts in which she danced. A wave of longing swept, over him at the picture he ■ evoked of her slim, graceful body. He closed his eyes, and deliberately - turned his mind from that image he found so dangerously alluring. He forced himself to consider Vanya’s inexplicable revulsion and her refusal to uphold her end of the bargain. His mood of longing changed gradually to a slow feeling of indignation. “She wants marriage," he thought, “and that I can’t in honor give. Black sheep or not. I’m still a Talbot!” He glanced at the sun; it was already, he thought, a bare hair’s breadth past the zenith; he had to be leaving. He rose, crumpled the empty paper bag into a ball, and tossed it into the backwash of a Pacific comber. He watched it drift, for a moment, and then set his face on the return route. Somehow the return seemed quicker; some excitement or expectation within him made his footsteps much hastier than on the first half of his long walk. “Vanya’s to me like magnet to steel,” he told himself. “I leave hel- - and with effort, but I bound back with such celerity that it sur prises even myself." He passed the pineapple plantations, the coral outcropping, the mighty fallen tree, and the curve of the Cove lay before him. He rounded the bend of the shore; a vessel lay at anchor in the tiny harbor, a great schooner-rigged ship with men busy about the deck. Loring, peeling a bread-fruit, was watching idly; he looked up at J.ark’s approach. “There she lies!” he said. “The Kc-ntodcc, with her crew itching to enrich Pearly Shene.” “Just in?” said Mark. “There's no oue ashore, from the look of the tender.” “She s been in an hour, at least H..-stens not the man to give his crew shore leave until they’ve put m a fu.l day’s work. Not a man ashore untfl well after dark, unless he s changed his nature. He’ll keep them swabbing docks and polishing brass, whether it’s needed or not "2.rs*ir- ■ h " d »“ “Shene must love him for tbai'” "Shene doesn’t care. What money the crew has will be his anyway before they sail. But look—there’s your transportation I” Mark turned. The native craft tS’b^ch ro,Sllding the point toward (To Be Continued) Cwjrigbt. 1«3 4 . M Klnt
MARKETREPORTS daily deport of local and foreign markets Brady’s Market For Decatur Berne, CreigvlHe. Hoagland and Willshire. Corrected February i'l No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday. Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. 190 to 250 lbs - 1810 250 to 300 lbs $7.96 160 to 190 lbs $7.80 300 to 350 lbs —- $7.70 140 to 100 lbs $7-20 120 to 140 lbs $6 35 100 to 120 lbs $5.50 Roughs - $6 50 Stags SLSO Vealers ' - $8.50 Ewe and wether lambs $7.50 Buck lambs - - $7.35 East Buffalo Livestock Hogs 100; steady with Tuesday s full decline; few loads desirable 160-240 lbs. averaging above 190 «>s. $8.65; blds $8.75 on 200-240 lbs; 140-160 lbs. quoted $7.758.20: off quality 110 lb. pigs $5.50. Cattle 150; mostly 25c lower; low cutter and (Utter $2.75-3.75; floshy offering $4.75-5.25; aleers unsold. Calves 150; vcalers unchanged, $lO down. Sheep 200; lambs active 15-25 c higher: good to choice leniently sorted $9.50; medium and in between grades $8.35-9.00; fat ewes i $5-5.50. Fort Wayne Livestock Hogs 10 cents higher; 200-250 lbs. $8.25; 250-300 tba. $8.10; 300-1 350 lbs. $7.80; 180-200 lbs. $S:15;I 160-180 tbs. $8.05; 150-160 R>a. $7.50; 140-150 lbs. $7; 130-140 lb. ; 12u.!:!u ft.H. $6.25- 100-I ?O lbs. $5.75; roughs $7; etags $5. Calves $9; Lambs. $5.75. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat 97 .89% .88% Corn .85 .79% .76% Oats 51% .44 41% CLEVLAND PRODUCE Cleveland, Feb. 13. (U.R) — Produce : Butter, market steady; extras, 40c; standards. 40cEggs, market weak; extra white, 30c; current receipts, 29%. ; Poultry, market steady; fowls. 19-20 c; leghorn fowl. 16-17 c; ducks, young. 24-25 c; ducks, old. 19-21 c; ' turks, young, 20c. Potatoes, Maine. $1.15-$1.25 per 100-lb. bag; Ohio mostly, 75-SDq per 100-lb. bag; Michigan, 80-85 c per 100-lb. bag. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected February 13 I No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 89c No. 2 New Wheat (58 lbs. 188 c Oats, 32 lbs. test 49c Oats, 30 lbs. test 48c S..y Beans, ash 1 $1.15 No. 2 Yellow Corn bu $1.12 CENTRAL SOYA MARKET Soy Beans, bushel $1.15 Delivered to factory. o - ■ Eyes of Fish React To Types of Light Cambridge, Mass. —(UP)—Different types of light striking the eyes of a fish cau-te nerve secretions that moke the protective color chang.s in fish, according ta tests being made at the Harvard Biological Laboratories. The nerva secretions act upon the dark pigment in Hie lells of the skin of the fish, causing the pigment either to disperse through th ? cells or to be aggregated ut the center of the cells. o— Bank Orders 10 Tons of Pennies To Meet Demand Cleveland — (UP) — Those requests, “One i. nt. please." ever since a sales tax went into effect in Ohio recently have foreed the Cleveland federal reserve bank to rush in 10 tons of pennies. Ten tons' worth of pennies, the bank exxplatoed, is about 3,(hm). 000 or SW,OOO worth. The bank only had five tons on hand when demand throughout the state increased so rapidly that a rush order was sent for more “coppers." o— Get the Habit — Trade at Home
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1 ■ 151 SIXEs S(’J®| iIHII / wi I LijK S.\! E K Rii! ■■■ * l: ."'roj' H, i: . r •' ''■'■ hli 3'»Utl) I' I, 011 s bU|i ' S " 8 ' r ‘ ' Kl! -h.'X ( >( k ■ , mins!., 11 ■ G " r 1 ■' ■ ■ . ' ~j Ind, r > ij, G FOR sAi.i-: ■„ ~J| ami FOR SAI.H Tv.., care of ii. ■,■.> I FOR S Ai-i: l'bo:i, c I'olt KALE ' I sl ■ FOR SA.'. ... KlhiTa. H FOR SA-.E S ver. 57. H FOR SALE mixed y.-ar_. about A FOR S\LE 11H H black .... .. jS Dec o pia ; gjiß soiiila'. ,i . . s H Scott .r < • . v r.:«aiH Bluffton. Iml. H FOR SAL:. ■".. Psi* afl farrow in .. gilts, will A;-:. Lfl Fox. Hire - w'-st(fl thr< I rOe TO I FOR SALE Mui Jonafl...!,- ' . 'LSfI wins, '."<■ p, 1 i r.;,.. anc qfl Haggard. 1 i:iib' r>dh.sfl east of Monrot. 9 u — WANTED | WAX'! I ll '■: privileges, in nudem, fl closO-ln ho!"". State sition. Address Ct’ ca»TO _____l WANTED To lease: t«fl tion. cent rally locWiTO choice of gasoline. Attfl office box T'li Mark:?- hi 9 WANTED—'Em in this kfl direct icpresentative fl known oil company te Mifl town and tar •■ trade «efl lit terms. Experience s«J Isary. No investment Chance foi an mediate stW come. Writ- i’. T. eral manager 62? S'.anfl Ing. dev, held. Ohio. 1 — ~~ WANTED Brooder t* Sladenlianffcii. Deiatw (R Craigville phone 9 on !*■ J WANTED '' "'I for work. Mns: be P™* l e* l competent laundress. L. A., care of WANTED —For electrical repairs c»n 8 Miller, phone 625. Mem Manufacturers Sen *?.‘ Radio Service. 221 WANTED TO Bl'Y-f 1 tor. R. L. Wilson. Decsß L .-J WANTED Furnished wf inhed apariinent, ® dress box < ai>ehart- « Democrat. -J WANTED Experie ll '’*! once to do Phone 633 after 4 o“ ocll ‘j FOR FOR RENT- -120 acre 1029. FOR RENT Fann 7k miles from town, $250 cash to right pt _ dress box G y N. A. BlXb® optometrist Eyes Examined, Gla» tei HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 Saturdays, F Telephone 1&
