Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 43, Decatur, Adams County, 19 February 1935 — Page 2

Page Two

™ ■ ii. ■L2T2T Royal Honeymooners on U. S. Soil J'' J vlOw J'( ‘iff gsL', -. M . wi \ I II / 'flifb 1 B Ln« ? ■ * Governor Blanton Winship (left) extends Uncle Sain’s welcome to the Duke and Duchess of Kent as the royal honeymooners arrive at San Juan, Porto Rico, on their aerial tour of the Caribbean, enroute to Miami.

Body Os Teacher Kun Amuck Found Leroy. 111., Feb. 19 —(UP)—Miss El. lel Howard. 32-year-old f rni?r school teacher who shot to death her brother and sister und wounded two other members of her family one fat illy, was found d=ad of exposure laist night in a sew r near her home. Posses of her f..nuer friends and police iiH-d searched two counties i for bar since sure became suddenly ’

Public Auction 1 will sell at public sale at my farm, 1 mile south aud % mile east of Maples, Indiana, on THURSDAY, February 21,1935 Commencing at 10:30 o'clock a. m. The Following Property To-wit: HORSES — COWS — SHEEP One Grey Mare, weight 1.500 pounds, good worker; one Jersey Cow. 8 years old, calf by side; one Red Cow. will be fresh in March; Seven Shropshire Ewes. IMPLEMENTS, ETC. McCoimick binder, 7 foot cut, in first class condition; Corn plantci, in good condition; Grain drill, 10 disc; McCormick-Deering riding cultivator, new; Walking breaking plow; Spike-tooth harrow; Springtooth liarrow; Mower; Hay loader; Hay tedder; Dunham cultipacker, new: John Deere riding breaking plow; McCormiek-Deering 14-16 disc, new; Manure spreader, a sood one; Wagon and hay ladders; Wagon box; Double set of breeching harness; set of single harness; Bob Sled: Dump board-s; many other articles too numerous to mention. TERMS OF SALE—CASH. CHARLES FIGEL, Owner Roy S. Johnson, auctioneer First Citizens State Bank. Monroeville, Indiana, clerk. Lunch served by Hie Ladies' Aid Society. PUBLIC SALE Having decided to quit farming - , I will sell at public auction one mile west and one-fourth mile north of Chattanooga. Ohio, on TUESDAY, February 26,1935 Commencing at 10 a. m. 3 HEAD OF HORSES —Mare in foal, wt. 1650; Bay mare, smooth mouth, wt. 1500; Sorrel mare, smooth mouth, weight 1300. 14 HEAD OF CATTLE —4 good cows, with calves by side; 4 good due to freshen soon; 1 cow. will freshen in July; 5 good yearling dairy heifers. HOGS AND SHEEP —2 brood sows; 20 feeders, weight 40 to 100 pounds; 10 good breeding ewes. POULTRY—I2S good laying heavy hens. FEED —4 bushels seed corn; 1% tons clover hay; 20 shocks of ! fodder. IMPLEMENTS Rock Island riding plow; Birch breaking plow; Oliver breaking | plow; double shovel plow; Avery cultivator; Case cultivator; cultivator; Hocder drill. 9-dise; Avery corn planter; Deering mower; Rock : Island hay loader; Weber wagon; set hay ladders; good stone bed; ' wagon box and! double side boards; GO-tooth harrow, wood frame; lap i harrow; Osborne hay tedder; disc harrow and tandem; McCormick 6-ft. hinder; fanning mill; 2 sets breeching harness; Primrose separator; kitchen cabinc ; bureau; bedstead and springs; organ; extension table and many articles too numerous to mention. TERMS—CASH. GEJORGE H. HOFFMAN, Owner Hoyt Johnson, auctioneer Dwight Raudenbush, clerk I Lunch by Zion's Ladies' Aid.

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insane Sunday night and made her home a shambles. Iler father, j Charles W. Howurd, 78, died almost at the moment her body w.is found. Dsepondeney over inability to find mployment was held responsible for her aberration. Moose Sponsor Dance Thursday The Loyal Order of Morse will sponsor a dance at the Moose home Thursday night, for all members

11l ——U——«■! IIIIMI— I and Invited guetjta. Thin will be Uiv last Moose dance before Lent, and plans are being made to make it one of the beat ever given. ■ —O""- - MIEHII’F MALI! I lu lbe AdMUia Circuit < uurl, Male Os Indinnn, t iiiinv Ao. Il,47«» The Department of Financial InNtilUtionß of tlie State of Indiana by (’lark J. Lutz, Special Hepreaentutivc in the Matter us Liquidation of The Peoples Loan and Truitt puny vs. th'orve A. (laare, Minnie M O*ge. his wife. By virtue of an order of sale to me directed and delivered from the Clerk of Adame Circuit Court in the above entitled caune, 1 have levied upon and will expose to sale by Public Auction at (he Court House door, east entrance, first floor In said County, between the hours of 10:00 o’clock A. M. and 4 00 o'clock P. M on Saturday, the Hth day of March, A. D. 11*15, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years of the following Heal Estate to-wit: The southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of Paction 18; township 27 North, range 15 East, containing 40 acres, more or lees except therefrom a strip of land 75 rods long and 60 feet wide running in a Northwesterly course over and across said land and being the right-of-way of the Toledo, iHdphoa and Burlington Railroad, now known as the Toledo, St. Louie aid Western Railroad, containing 1.7 u a« res, more or less, containing in said tract after said exception 38.30 acres: more or less; Also commencing at the south- i ♦*ast corner us the southwest quarter of Section 18, Township -7 north, Range 15 east; thence running west H rods ami 13 links to the said right-of-way of the Toledo, St. Louis and Western Railroad; thence along said right-of-way in a northwesterly course 86 rods to tho west line of 5 the southeast quarter of the south- , west quarter of section 18; thence North 32 rods and 4 feet to the 1 Northwest corner of the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of said section 18; thence east 8v rods, i thence south 80 rods to the place f - beginning; containing 29.48 acres more or less; Also the Northwest quarter of tlie southwest quarter oil Section 18, Township 27 North Range 15 East, containing 4“ acres, more or j less, except therefrom ail that portion of said Northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of sajd section 18, which lies west and south of the public highway leading from ’»<•> a- ■ tur, Indiana, to the village of Salem and known as the angling road and > more particularly described as follows, viz: ‘Commencing at a point on The west line of said Section 18, which is 68 links south of a stone at the northwest corner of the southwest quarter of said section IS; thence running south in the center of said public highway 19 chains and 36 links to a stone at the southwest corner of the northwest quarter or the southwest quarter of said section: thence running east or. the south line of said northwest quarter of the southwest quarter 13 chains and 81 links to the center of the public highway; thence running North 37 degrees west in center of said public highway 23 chains and 5 1 links to the place of beginning, containing in said excepted tract 13.37 acres, more or less and containing in all the above described real estate, after said exceptions} 94.41 acres, more or less. Idxcept the following tract, sold off to James E. Ellsworth, to-wit: The Southwest quarter of th** ( Southwest quarter of Section 18 in . township 27 North, of range 15 east, containing 40 acres more or less. ■ Except therefrom a strip of land 62 1 rods long and 6“ feet wide running ; in a northwesterly course over and .across said land and being the right- . of-way of the Toledo, Delphos and , Burlington Railroad now known as tthe Toledo, St. Louis and Western 1 Railroad containing 1.41 ac«u», also except therefrom a strip of land < commencing In the center of the j Decatur and Salem Road, thence m . a south easterly direction 761 feet * them e north 626 feet, thence west 1 443 feet to the place of beginning f containing 3.19 acres except therefrom a strip of land 6 rods long and ( 60 feet wide running in a northwes- . terly course over and across fe|*id J land and being the right-of-way of I said Railroad containing .14 acres of j land and containing in said above j land and containing in said tract after said exception 3.05 acres of tract after said exceptions 35.54 5 acres more or less, hereby mortgag- I Ing 58.87 acres, more or less, situated in Adams County, Indiana. And on failure to realize therefrom the full amount of the judg- „ me nt and interest thereon and costs, 1 will at the same time and in the € manner aforesaid offer for sale* i the fee simple of the above described! j real estate. Taken as the property of t George A. Gage. Minnie M. Gage, his 1 wife at the suit of The Department] of Financial institutions of the State C of Indiana by Clark J. Lutz, Special ) I Ttepresntatlve in the Matter of Li- £ | quidation of Tlie Peoples Loan and ♦ j Trust Company. Said sale will be made without F any relief whatever from valuation g or appraisement laws. t DALLAS BROWN, Sheriff j Adams County, Indiana. Hermau H. Myers, Attorney Feb. 12-19-26 S o 1 Appointment ot Administrator Notice is hereby given, That the l undersigned has been appointed Ad- . ministrator of tlie estate of Anna 1 M. Hall late of Adams County, de- I ceased. The estate is probably sol- \ vent. *• Arthur Hall. Administrator (’. Ij. Walterw, Attorney Feb. 4, 1935 Feb. 3-12-19

HI • s | j t s } I 1 I j I 1 . ..... . 1

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 19. 193.».

SALE CALENDAR Feb. 90.- W. N. Robinson, 1 mile north and 1 mile west ot Ohio City. Closing out sale. , Fab. 30—Tobias Stetten. 1 mile west, and % mile south ot hlagley H. H. High. Am t. Feb. 21 —Chas. Figel, 1 mile so % mile east ot Maples. Closing out sale. Fob. 22 — Decatur Community sale, 12 noon. Chattanooga Stock sale, 6:30 p. ra. Feb. 23—H. E. Reldenbach, Iml east ot Convoy. Ohio on Lincoln Hiway. Filling statio nand 6 acres | land. Feb. 25^—Otto Jacobs. 1 mile west and 3 mile north of Gruverhill. Ohio. Feb. 26 —George H. Hoffman, 1 mile west and % mile north of Chattanooga, Ohio. Closing out sale. Feb. 27—J. F. Tapy, 1 mile west ot 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. 4—Andrew Mertz, 2 miles west, 1% miles south of Monroe or , 4% miles north, 1 mile west ot | Berne. Mar. &—G. W. Bulieiibacher, 1 mileu north of Chattanooga. Ohio

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CHAPTER XXXV She was being carried—a rather pleasant sensation, riding weightless through illimitable space. Afterwards, Vanya could recall almost the very moment when she lost consciousness; it was somewhere on that pleasant, effortless journey. For she remembered hearing Shene’s order to “Lay her over on that!” but she never recalled the actual completion of the act. The darkness had deepened so that there was nothing left—not even darkness. “Enough,” Mark grunted, as the prau rounded the point and the Cove vanished. “Stop!” The paddlers rested, giving an occasional stroke against the drift of the waves, whose slap sounded like Loring’s irritating laugh. “Beaten!” thought Mark dolorously. “The only thing I can do now is return and surrender. And how I hate it!” Ho stared morosely at the topmast of the Kermadec beyond the point. “Anyway,” he reflected, “Vanya’s made of stern stuff. She called this bluff of mine, and no mistake!” He grinned. “The graceful thing to do,” he continued, “would be to go right back, kneel before her, tell her I love her. and surrender on her terms. And that’s what I’m tempted to do.” He sat musing, while the sun dipped into the western ocean, and the brief tropical twilight was over him. One could almost see the progre»s of the darkness; stars were already twinkling. Then, thin and clear across the water came a shrill call, like a summons echoing out of a deep cavern. “Mark I” sounded Loring's voice. ‘Mark Talbot!” “Something’s up!” thought Mark. “Loring must think me far out of earshot, or else his infernal cleverness figured out what I’d do. Back!” he snapped at his paddlers. “To the beach—quick!” The prau swung about in a wide circle; the drift of wave and wind had carried it some hundreds of feet away from the coral spit. Swiftly they moved toward it, where it showed as a deep shadow in the gathering darkness. Yet swift as the craft cut the water, it seemed interminably slow to Mark: a nervous excitement had seized him; for some obscure reeson he was suddenly worried. As the prau rounded the point, a burst of song drifted out to him. Loring was singing; there was a note Mark had never heard in his voice—something wild and joyous. “With gun and knife there join in strife Two men of manner shady. One is a villain, one a fool, W ho—quite according to the rule!— Are fighting for a lady!” The craft shot like a hunting shark through the channel between the point and the anchored ship. Mark, now erect in the center, saw the lighted ports of the Kcrwadec; the crew was still at mess. A crash sounded from the Diver’s Helmet; he dug his nails into the palm of his hand, and strained as if he were thrusting the paddles. Loring’s voice rose again in that wild song. “Come closer, ishene—you dog unclean! I wish you nought but good! I merely think you need a bath To cleanse your filth and cool your wrath! I'll give you one—in blood! 1 '

and 5'4 miles south ot Willshire, < Ohio on State Road No. 48. Mar. 6—J.G.Giesler, 4 mile east and l*u mile north of Wren, OhlQ. Closing out sale. Mar. 11—Frank Garwood. I'/s miles southeast of Decatur, *4 ml. northwest ot Pleasant Mills. Indon Road 527. Closing out sale o * Test Voui Knowledge Can you answer seven of these teu questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. ♦ ——• 1. What was the title of the two chief magistrates established in Home on the expulsion ot the kings in 509 B. 2. Name the maid in the Morrow houeehold who committed suicide Hollowing the Lindbergh kidnaping. 3. What is the name of the furnace fitted with a bellows used by blacksmiths? 4. What position in the federal government is held by Harold L. Ickes? 5. Who was Dion Boucieault? 6. When did President Roosevelt first use the expression “new deal”? 7. What is the legal term for disobedience of. or disrespectful or disorderly conduct in the presence of a court? 8. Name the lake that is the source of the Susquehamia river. 9.. Who was W illianl Kwart 1

The prau grounded; Mark leaped r on the instant into the knee-deep water, and rushed across the clearj. ing toward the door of the Diver’s f. Helmet. As he touched the beach, e the song rose fiercely, with a note of .. triumph. s “Face in the gore upon the floor, Shene, like all villains, lies—l” r A shot crashed! The song ceased e abruptly, then sounded in a differe ent, faltering tone. For a moment e the words were inaudible, then as . he was almost upon the single step that rose before the door, the words s were plain, high, thin, wavering, e “The fool? Os course—he—dies I” Mark burst in upon a shambles. 1 Projecting from behind the bar was t the gigantic frame of Shene; blood 1 still spurted from the hilt of the knife imbedded in his great corded • neck. And Loring—Loring was sit- ’ ting on the floor, leaning against ’ the bar, his legs crossed as he was t wont to sit beneath his tree. He ■ smiled as Mark burst in. “Good boy!” he said faintly. “I ' rather thought you’d be along.” ' “You’re hurt!” said Mark. ’ “Nothing at all,” murmured the beachcomber. “I think the lady’s in ' there.” He nodded toward the room beyond the piano. “And I think ; you’ll find her drugged.” Mark dashed to the door, and crashed it open. Vanya lay with closed eyes and pallid face on the steamer chair. Her robe was in a ! heap on the floor; she lay in her dancing costume, with one tiny red slipper missing, and the throat of her scarlet blouse was torn open. Mark bent over her frantically; he placed his ear to her breast. Her heartbeats sounded slowly, but strong and unvarying. “Loring! Loring!” he cried, rushing to the door. “What’s happened? What did he do to her?” “I think she’s all right,” said the beachcomber wearily. “It’s likely he gave her chloral—just knock-out drops.” “You’re hurt!” said Mark, approaching as he noted the bloodstained shirt of the beachcomber. “You’re hurt badly! I'll get you to the prau, to a doctor in Taulanga!” “Don’t bother,” said Loring. “It's quite useless.” “We’ll go immediately,” said Mark, kneeling beside him. “What a fool I’ve been!" "No more than most! Do you know—l never had a drop of that quart you staked mo?” He coughed slightly. “But I’ve realized my life’s ambition, nevertheless.” “What’s that?” “To die like a gentleman!” said Loring, and—he did so. Mark rose slowly; bitter, anguished thoughts were in his mind. But for him, Loring might still be singing, drinking, living Ms life like a natural spirit under his tree He turned heavily back to the room where Vanya lay. He tossed her robe on his shoulder; the glint of the red slipper caught his eye from beneath the steamer chair, and he slipped it on her foot. He passed his arms beJ!e a th her shoulders and knees, and lifted her from the chair; hs twisted her through the narrow door out into the bar-room. He turned his head away from Loring; he didn’t want to imagine reproach in tho expression of the beachcomber’s face. A flash of motion caught his eye; he glanced at the bar to see Hong’s vast round

Gladstone? „ . , . 10. Os which etate is Rutty foou the governor? Shkhiff sai.k In Ike A<l«»- < ' I nil in nil. CHURF laj * • Tlie Federal Land Bank Os V»ul*’ vllle a >KMIy "’■ l?or?t,K.7w^aH.r---!r;S a,, ?te 1 .!? , %n: W hH'wJe. "‘Br'Jktue of an order of sale to Public Auction at tn<* ’ , UII llouJe door, east ' ,n,rftnc '' ‘ and i‘r f ;lrru er u. no, (U) of th. N->rt; West quarter (U» of (16) in townahip twent)-rhe <•»> north of ranife fifteen (15) east, eoitllning eight (50) •««•••’of lesa in Adams County and BUte oi In And a on failure to reallae therefrom the full amount of the Judgment and interest thereon and coats, 1 will at the same lime and In the manner aforesaid offer for »“>« ‘J* fee simple of the above dea-r bed real estate. Taken as the Property ot Adams A. Heef and Ruth ReeT. his wife, Harley J. Reef, Mlas Iv'ef hi, wife, Eloise J Butcher Paul Butcher, her husband, b. Daniel Reef Mabel Heef. his wife at the suit of The Federal Land Bank of Louisville a body corporate. Said sale will be made without any relief -whatever from valuation or appraisement lawe. DALLAS BROWN, Sheriff Adams County l.ruhnrt. Heller and Sehuraer. Attys. Feb. 12-19-26 o 1 — Get the Habit — Trade at Homo

d face rising from behind it like the p rising of a yellow moon. ■- Hong might have a weapon, s Mark was sick of tho thought of i, blood-shed; he shifted Vanya to his f shoulder, where she hung with her head and arms down his back, her silk-clad legs caught in his right arm, and dashed for the door. d There were lights on the deck of ■- the schooner as he sped toward the t beach; the crew was coming ashore, s He ignored the excited chattering p of his paddlers as he laid Vanya s gently on the bottom of the prau, and sat with her head on his knees. ” “Taulanga!”heordered. “Quick!" * * * b Tongatabu had long faded into j the night, and the prau moved as B if alone in a world of stars and 1 water. The natives, guiding them- .. selves by the configurations of the » glorious, now familiar star groups 5 of the Southern Hemisphere, drove s the craft silently forward. Mark sat with Vanya’s head upon his - knees, and stared again at the 1 splendor of the Southern Cross, the misty, infinite remoteness of the , Magellanic Clouds. i He glanced at the drugged girl; t he had spread her robe over her t against the spray from the glistening blades of the paddles. The I moonlight shone very bright on her immobile face; it was as pale and , beautiful as the face of some statue ’ of antiquity. Mark noted the slow . rising moon that glistened on the I group; it was three-quarters full, ' even a little more than that. How long had it been since he had sat J gazing at a full tropical moon? He ; remembered the night; it was that . first evening he and Vanya had sat ' together on the coral point — the night he had first watched her ■ dance. So short a time as that 1 The satellite had not yet completed a single ; cycle from full moon to full moon. He wondered that so much of life and death could be compressed into so little a span of time. He gazed again at Vanya; he bent over her and listened to her breath- ’ ing. It was soft and regular now, , though at the very beginning of their journey it had been heavy, labored. He had been worried, afraid of poison, or an overdose of whatever drug she had taken; for the first hour a spectral fear had pursued him, that still another catastrophe might follow his aimless blundering. But then Vanva had opened her eyes, looked at him uncomprehondingly, and dazedly murmured his name. Her eyes had closed again almost immediately, but now she seemed to be in a natural slumber. Mark felt reassured by her quiet even breathing: Loring had seemed confident that she was in no danger In fact, she was etirriag now. Mark raised her head in his arms; she muttered something impossible to understand, and opened her eyes. For a long interval she simply stared at him. “Mark!” she said finally. “Oh, Mark! Have we--have we left?” “Be quiet, dear,” he answered. “Tell me how you feel." "Feel?” she echoed vaguely. “1 feel all right—no, I don’t! My head aches.” She struggled to a half-sitting posture; for the first time she saw the impassive, laboring natives, and the rush of waters beside her. (To Be Continued) CopyrtahL 1934, by Kln« VuiurM SjMk»t. 1..

MARKETREPORTS t DAILY DEPORT OF LOCAL ANO FOREIGN MARKETS ‘ • “ Brady’s Market Far Dacatur Barna, < r Cral«viH«. Hoagland and Wlllahlra. > 0 corrected February 19. < C No commission and ao yardage. » « Veals received Tuesday, Wed- ' e nesday. Friday, and Saturday. t f 190 to 350 lbs H-80 . , 250 io 300 Iba M-<5 | ,i 160 to 190 lbs IMO : 300 to 350 lbs. 88-20 | 140 to 180 |ba >?-70 ' i» 120 to 140 lbs - 56.55 1 " 100 to 120 lbs 86 08 Roughs " ! Stags , 1 5 - 00 1 ' Veal« ■ KM 1 • Ewe and wether lambs - 88.00 ( " Buck lambs 87.00 e ( CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE y ■ . May July Sept. . i Wheat »8U .91% -90% | J Corn 87% -82% .78% 9 ( Oats 52% .<4% .41% FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK I n- i Fort Wayne, Ind., Feb. 19. —(U.R) ’ i. —Livestock: » Hogs, loc higher; 200-250 lbs, $8.75; 250-300 lbs., 88.60; 300-350 ’ lbs., $8.30; 180-200 lbs., $8.65; 180180 lbs... 88.55; 150-160 lbs.. $7.90; 140-150 lbs.. $7.40; 130-140 lbs.. ( $6.90: 120-130 lbs., $6.65: 100-120 , lbs.. $6.15; soughs. $7; stags, $5. • Calves. $9; lambs, $8.50. ' I EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., Feb. 19.— (U.R>—Livestock: Hogs, receipts, 50; holdovers. 100: strong to higher on scattered sales; 170-230 lbs.. $9.25; equivalent to $9.50 for selections; mixed weights. $9. Cattle, receipts 75; cows and bulls steady: low cutter and cutter , cows. $2.85-84; few fleshy offer- < ings. $4.75-85.25; medium bulls. $5- j $5.25. Calves, receipts. 50; vealers steady, $9.50 down. Sheep, receipts, 50; nominally unchanged; good to choice quoted, $9.25. NEWYORK PRODUCE New York. Feb. 19.-<U.R>—Pro- ' duce: Dressed poultry, steady; turkeys 19-30 c; chickens. 15-28 c; broilers. 16-32 c; capons. 25-31 c; fowls, 1322%c; Long Island ducks. 19-19%c. Live poultry, firm: geese, 10-15 c; turkeys, 18-26 c; roosters, 12c; ducks, 12-18 c; fowls, 17-21 c; chickens, 13-22 c; capons, 22-26e; broilers, 08-19e. Butter, market steady; receipts, ' 12.908 packages; creamery higher than extras. 35%-36%c; extra 92 score, 35%c; first 90 to 91 score. 35%c; first 88 to 89 score, 34%-34 ■ !%<■; centralized 90 score, 35%c; . centralized 88 to 89 score, 34%34%c. Eggs, market firmer; receipts, ' 20,563 cases; special packs, includ- 1 Ing unusual hennery selections. 33- ' 33%c; standards, 32%-32%c; firsts 31%-32%c; seconds. 31%c; med- ■ iums, 31-31%c; dirties, 31-31%c; checks. 30-30%c. CLEVELAND PRODUCE Cleveland. Feb. 19.—(U.R) — Produce : Butter market, steady; extras, 39%e; standards. 39c. ; Eggs, market firm; extra white, 28%c; current receipts, 28c. Poultry market, sTeady; fowls. 19-3iic; leghorn fowls. 16 17c; ducks ' ] old, 19-21 c; ducks, young, 24-2uc: turkeys, young. 20c. Potatoes, Maine, $1.15-81.25 per 100-lb. bag; Ohio mostly, 75-80 c per 100-lb. bag; Michigan. 80-85 c per 1 100-lb. bug; Texas, $1.50 per 50-lb. 1 bag. ’ f LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected February 19. No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 90c ' No. 2 New Wheat (58 lbs.) .... 89c 1 Oats, 32 lbs. test 49c ' Oats, 30 lbs. test.. 48c * Boy Beans, bushel $1.15 No. 2 Yellow Corn, 100 lbs $1.12 £ CENTRAL SOYA MARKET Soy Beans, bushel $1.15 1 Delivered to factory. 1 o Appnhitiißriit ol idmiuiMtrator UI <i» Notice is hereby given That the nnflcrsigned has ln» u appointed Administrator of the estate of William 1 bre(|ri< k D»ltH< h late of Steuben ' County, dereaged. The estate is pro- 1 bably solvent. ' Nida Deiterh, Administrator 1 Earl 11. IdmiiM, Attorney. Feb. 18, 1&35 I’eb. 18-26 M-'»- ’

< Why run on smooth, worn Tires when you can rent a f GILLETTE TIRE for as low as 20c a week. After 25 weeks XT the tire is yours. e • J PORTER >* TIRE CO. Distributor 341 Winchester st. Phone 1289.

AIH Bl s INESsSB F ” l: G. H. < ’. ,k.- v Ul,i ’ _ B 11 1,1 11 l’!«.| Decatur. 11. 4 and ( | u „ U. I ■ . 4111 ■ Km!su - ; ' "‘I ■ Stoves . lllv H 1,011 A1 ,. Gl “ ni '' 1 -•■’l N U!h S' 1 OR roil SALE alluu. , • .... up ' S ! 1 •> % < a ' >1 i:,'-,,., FAR.v.S ni:; SALE I”-- J.T., ■ A " ! ” land. qH > 1 ' m«H| Coyiv j.», _, ton. Indian.: WA NT ED iron, ail k, al- ~f (iri| W and . b-B WANTEDt/ B . diß . B in 1 arc ..-/a-, MALE HELP W«vß I WANT I iilir.l MEN iB tea «">i ' • niß to sl.’ 50 -A.. k N expert v, Ulin.- . -fl ■.-.. fl nish • »> :i.i- rifl ducers. H Ijfl MoIH-.i: 1 ■ WANT.:'> W 3 - S .-;. B ings or li.c:- work, Mxfl Master. s' Maiys « ■ WANTi:;. r (Xpert rB electric..l pairs call isl Miller, ph, Gk’ Manufactur Service. ■ Radio Service. 22i N.?ti J WANT I-.!' fl to farm im-> iiimdrdfl House and buildings, fl Address G, care Democrat J WANTED To I’li?. « modern or -• iiii-modertifl Decatur, geed ’u, aticu. Gnfl desci iption aid locution i»J addressed to KAY. care ■ Denio. 1:. | WANTED T. H..iruw si»fl Decatur prop, rty us dotfl value. Addr >s Lex 45, fl Democrat. FOR REN\ TOR RENT -Field for 0,1 W. Moser. — Delaware County ln< Tax Has Wide P. Wilmington. Del-irPH come tax wi 1 a rang® “I uatre down to :.e«»l>oys v) SIOO or mor .1 year has bea fective in New astle Count) est of the tin ” counties" ware. Pierre S. lin Pont. ' mUsioner. h.i- estimated d will bring 1 year» uue for New c stle law, first > f ils k‘' ld 1:1 lh ' is valid for two year omy Exemptions of sl.» for marriwl persons and* each dapendt.it Single P* 1 ’ no d»? pend cm ; l iave 110 eX under the law- Tlle 1 per cent up to $3,0000* Hll>s i-i:n i Notice is Boni-.l of Will county, stun '"" 1 f tl id; Off!.- of <h.on Tucydiix Hit ■ ~r (. e | vi 1J135. at 10 o’ch" k 'V L hkol*' ed blds lor lb. nf 2-12-li coinin' " h, ‘ .., e same to be * County Infirmary, m and properly m.'' 1 *: , b . ;I .H Bond ami aft < , a ». pqny bld as re.|>J«« “ glll u Board reaer'es me any or all bids com l " 15 j Board of < "imA . tl A»® By John "• •' l "‘

N. A. BniU® OPTOMETRIST j Glasses f* Eyes Examined, u , HOURS- .| , "... 12:30 t» "■ 8:30 to H-W 1 „. Saturdays- !■* p Teleplwue 1&