Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 57, Decatur, Adams County, 7 March 1935 — Page 2
Page Two
> * Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. ► * 1. Who was the famous naturalist of the surveying expedition of • The Beagle"? 2. Which President of the U. S. lived to the greatest ago? 3. Which country owns the island of Hong Kong? 4. Where is the city of Tangier? 5. N»ftie the Spanish conqueror' of Mexico. 6. In which city is the famous Doge's Palace? 7. Who is Charles A. Beard?
Public Auction 1 will sell at public auction at my farm, 1H miles north and \ mile cast of Ossian, on Saturday, March 9th, 1935 Commencing at 12 noon HORSES—lied roan mare, 5 yr. old, wt. 1.600 ibs. sound; Bay horse. 6 yr. old, wt. 1.400 lbs., sound; Sorrel mare, 3 yr. old. wt. 1,300 and Sorrel horse. 3 yr. old, wt. 1,330; Brown horse, smooth mouth. CATTLE—Roan cow. 8 yr; Roan heifer, 2 yr. old; Blue roan cow. 6 yr. old; Guernsey cow, 6 yr. old; Guernsey will be fresh with 3rd calf; Guernsey was frosh lust Sept, first calf; Registered Guernsey 4 yr. old. be fresh by day of sale; Guernsey bull coming 2 yr. old; Red cow was fresh in Nov.; Guernsey heifer fresh by day of sale first calf; Guernsey heifer yearling bred. HOGS and ShElP —3 big type PC brood sows and 1 Hampshire sow will farrow April Ist; 3 big type PC gilts bred; 15 Nov. pigs; 5 good breeding ewes and buck; 20 hens. IMPLEMENTS Binder 8 ft. in good condition; mower 5 ft; American 10 disc grain drill: spike tooth harrow: disc 8 on side, new; riding cultivator; riding , breaking plow; Oliver walking plow; wagon & rack; Gale corn planter, new wire; dump rake; milk house 8x18; hog house Bxl2. TERMS—Cash. FRANK FALLS, Owner ROY S. JOHNSON—Auctioneer W. A. LOWER—Clerk X PUBLIC SALE I will sell at public auction at my farm. miles South of Fort Wayne on state road No. 27, on Thursday, March 14, 1935. Commencing At 10:00 A. M. 2—HEAD OF HORSES—2 Bav horec. 12 yr. old. wt. 1.500; Sorrel horse 11 yr. old, wt. 1,400. GUERNSEY COW, 4 Years Old HOGS —'I brood sows; 13 feeding hogs. wt. from 60 to 120 lbs.: Duroc iwr billy goat. . SHEEP—4 ewes; 1 buck. FEED—B ton good clover hay baled; 6 bu. little red clover seed; 10 bit. more or less of good buckwheat. Doering binder; Dain loader; Dain side delivery: dump rake; John Deere mower; tedder; corn planter; John Deere riding cultivator; Oliver riding breaking plow; Cassidy plow; 2 walking plows; one fertiliser grain drill; one Hoosier grain drill; double disc. 14-16; single disc. 6 on side; extra tandem 14 disc; crow foot roller; drum roller; John Deere manure spreader; 3-section and 2-section spring tooth; spike \tqoth. harrow; 3 wagons; Gondola beet rack; hay ladders; clipper fanning mill; 2 double sete work harness; 2 sets hay ladder material basswood & elm; wagon tongues & other lumber; DeLaval cream separat--6? No. 12; mud boat; hay bailer, horse power; butchering kettles; 2 bbl. viWegar; Model T Ford ton truck; 2 platform scales; buggies & harness; many articles too numerous to mention; Fordson tractor fully equipped in A-l condition, 12 in, plows & disc. TERMS—Cash. N. J. WYSS, Owner ROY S.‘ JOHNSON and ERVIN DOEHRMAN—Auctioneers. Ladies St. Joseph Will Serve Lunch MS g '"IF j COMFORT and ECONOMY. Lump Coal $6.75 ... Cash Delivered. Burk Elevator Co Telephone No. 25. < 'LMtlt
THIMBLE THEATER SHOWING—“A CASE OF MISTAKEN IDENTITY” BY SEGAR - DIDN'T ¥OU ' X VOO HAUEN'T COT THE > K NOT TOAR-UOU MAKE |A:\ SME ONE of" \ "" " " 1 ... GOING TO KILL ME. BUT J DO AS I SAID, VOU BIG \ SENSE OF A JELLV FISH! ) BIG MISTAKE -TOO NO SCOLD \ VTHE JON P S RAVS ’) < HUNK OF BLUBBER!’.? > UOU’RE A BRAINLESS r> RIGHT MAH -ME MISTER A<\ < \oYr--'•JOU HAVE THE WRONG A I SAID TO KILL EVERVBOpJ FATHEAD!'. —> —i A—\ ZVJ'L»r,Z£k PERSONI SAID- JONES j ABOARD THIS SHIP’./-- 2 ta2o VOr ' \ JONES. -y~\ X l IS MU NAME - I’M ONEV v , , TOAR/YOU RE i z — x x —V- ' —VA jssssk ' Atk. \of the Jones eousZ 7— f 2) 1 y. z J^@A<K--v i WV L-| O «■ ( > F "Wo 1L aw m H~ kWI \ \ ~ j ■ 9NH —i ■•'• I wWJ a< WT 1 - - Zi^ 2 «.„> _ r
1 8. What la a buoy? 9. Name the capital of the Terj rllory of Hawaii. 10. Who composed the opera Tannhaueer? - o PETERaON NEWS Mr. aud Mns. Burt Aungst spent the week-end wiWi Mr. and Mrs Grant Ball. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fugate called on Mr. aud Miw* Glon Straub and family Sunday. Miss Jean Houck of Muncie apent j the week-end with ber purente, Mr. and Mrs. Roll Houck. Mr. and Mi's. Willard Mcßride and son Stanley visited Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Spade Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Fruchte and ■ daughter Leona of Mugley called on Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Brelner Saturday. Mies Anna Wulliniann of Berne •sp nt Tuesday night with Mias Velma Spade. Mrs. Wm. Johnson aud daughter Doris spent Wednesday with Mix. Charles Fuhrnvan in Preble. Henry Brelner was a buslnew oaler in Decatur Wednesday. The Beulah Chapel Ladles Aid will hold an all day meeting next Wednesday, March 13, nt the heme of Mrs. Frank Spade. Everyone is invited. — o Shot Down Stack Webb City. Mo.—(U.R>—High pow- . erect cutting tools are scarce here.; and so when the Southwest Mis- ■ souri Railroad wanted a metal smokestack cut down from its shops they had to adopt make-shift measures. They had an employe stand on a platform and shoot holes around the stack. When it I was sufficiently weakened it was; pulled down with ropes. o | Ducked In Sleep Rochester, N. H.—(U.R) —All the beds were occupied in her home | recently, so Emogene Furlong was forced to sleep in the bathtub. She slept peacefully until her foot accidentally hit the water faucet. , o VOTICK OF < <>MVll»sioxEll> *)LE OF HEAL ESTATE Notice Ys hereby given that the undersigned, James T. Merryman, Commissioner of the Adams Circuit Court, appointed to sell real estate in the partition cause of Marion Heber, et ux, versus Nancy E. Bowman, et al. in all respects agreeable to the order of the court for the sale of real estate in the above entitled cause, at the office of said Commissioner, in the Knights of Columbus Building in tne city of Decatur, Indiana, on SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 11*35 between the hours of ten A. M. and four P. M. of said day, will offer for sale, at private sale, for not less than the appraisement, and free of all liens except taxes for the year 1935, payable in the year 1936, the fallowing described real estate in Adams County, Indiana, so ordered sold by said court and described as follows, to-wit:- The East half of the Northeast quarter of Section 25 in Township 27 North, Range 13 East i containing 82 acres more or less. lERM’i One third cash in hand. One third in one year and One third in two years. Provided purchaser may pay all cash, if he so desires. Deferred payments to be evidenced by promiaory notes on the usual biank Bank form and bearing 6% interest from day of sale and payments thereof secured by a first mortgage on said real estate. | In the 1 event said real estate should not be sold on said date the said sale j will be continued from day to day; without further notice until said, real estate shall have been sold, i James T. Merryman Commissioner March 7-11-21-28 0 SHEHIFF SALE In the Ulums Circuit Cenrt, State of | Indiana. Cause No. 14556 Nicholas Rich vs. Isaac Beer, Tillman Beer. By virtue of an order o fsale to me directed and delivered from the Clerk of Adams Circuit Court in the above entitled cause, I have levied upon and will expose to sale by Public Auction at the 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 23rd day of March X D 1935, the rents and profits for a’term not exceeding seven years, of the following Real EMate toxv it: Eiftv-nine (59) acres off of the I west end of the southwest quar- , ter of Section eighteen 11SI in Town- , ship twenty-six (26) North of Range , fourteen (14) East, situated in Ad-j ants County Indiana. And on failure to realize there-' from the full amount of the judg-| nient and interest thereon and costs, i I will at the same time and In the manner aforesaid offer for sale the fee simple of the above described real estate. Taken as the property of Isaac Beer, Tillman Beer at the suit j of Nicholas Rich. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws. DALLLAS BROWN, Sheriff Adams County. Indiana Herman H. Myers and l.enhsrt, Heller and SchurKer, Attorneys. Feb 21-28 March SALE CALENDAR Mar. 7—J. O. Haskell fc Son, 4 miles west of Berne. Pure bred Guernsey cattle sale. Mar. 9—Frank Falls, I'2 mile north and % mile east of Ossian. Mar. 11—Frank Garwood, 4H miles southeast of Decatur, H mile northwest of Pleasant Mills on state road 527. March 12—Troutner & Spitler, 2 miles south and 2 miles east of Willshire, Ohio. March 13 —Fred Barker. 2 miles north and 1 mile west of Convoy, Ohio, on Lincoln Highway. March 14—N. J. Wyss, 8% miles eouth of Fort Wayne on State road No- 27. ' Mar. 16 —Anna C. Burkhead, so. 13th st., Decatur; 6 room house 1 and 7 acres of land.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, MARCH 7,193 u.
“Copper" Copper Saves Dog He Couldn’t Shoot Mansfield, Ohio —(L'P> - Patrol- i man'Harry Copper just couldn't do! I his duty and because he was softhearted. •‘Calico," a varicolored tieogle Itoumi lives. Had "Copper Copper never looked into "Calico's” eyes, the scrubby beagle with a broken leg would >ave been ahot uud dead, as Copper was detailed tv execute him. But Copper leaked in the dog's eyes, put back bis revolver and took
I'The Cold Finger Curse" -1 by EDWIN DIAL TOR-CEFISON
SYNOPSIS During a party at her home, wealthy Mrs. Violet Elderbank is murdered and her jewels stolen. Among the guests were June and Jimmy Kirkman, her neighbors, and their tenants, St Gregory Vaicour, pseudo artist; Glenn Thurber, a newspaper reporter; and dignified Douglas W Coultney. a statistical expert. Marjorie darken, Thurber’s fiancee, and Roger Duane, a specialty dancer, are also present. The crime occurred while the house was in darkness and drums were beating for Roger's Zulu dance. Violet had been summoned to a private telephone in her bedroom. Her maid. Elsie, found her chloroformed and gagged. About tnat time. Price Merriam, Violet’s secretary and companion, who operated the lights for Roger's dance, had difficulty in turning them on after having put them out for Roger’s entrance. Thurber disappeared during the performance to make a telephone call next door. Valcour had gone there to get some of his paintings for Violet. Elsie the maid claims she was busy in the kitchen when the telephone rang, but both Merriam and Cuppies, the butler, state she was not there. According to Cuppies the call was from the telegraph office stating it had a message from Montreal for Mrs. Elderbank. A checkup reveals there was no such call but that Glenn Thurber telephoned at 12:21. Thurber is questioned. CHAPTER XIII "And it was a lot quieter, using the telephone in your apartment next door, ch?” Thurber looked at him shrewdly. “Why, I didn’t bother to go all the way upstairs to my apartment. There's a public telephone in the hall next door, downstairs, and I phoned from there.” “You did. eh? What time was this?” “I couldn’t tel! you, precisely. In the neighborhood of twelve-fifteen, I should say. You could check that at the office, probably, though they won't be able to give you the exact time. But I don’t see what it can possibly have to do with this case." "You don’t, eh?” The Sergeant, chin outthrust, leaned forward tensely in his chair, as though about to spring upon the man he was questioning. “Who helped you do Ulis job, Thurber?” “I don’t know what you are talking about. What job?” "Oh, don’t try to hedge. We’ve got you, and I don’t mean we're guessing. You went next door around twelve-fifteen, all right. And you put in a call from your apartment at twelve-twenty-one for Mrs. Elderbank’s private telephone—for the purpose of getting her upstairs to her bedroom, so you and the thieves who were working with you could kill her and steal her jewelry.” Thurber was a typical newspaper man. alert, armored with a mild cynicism, usually surprised at nothing. But this seemed more than he could accept with equanimity. “Why. what the deuce are you talking about?” he shouted at the detective. “I didn’t go near my rooms. I didn’t know Mrs. Elderbank had a private telephone, in her bedroom or anywhere else. Who handed you this poppycock about a call from my phone?” •‘You'll think it’s poppycock,” hissed Darden, “when you burn for it! The record’s in black and white at the telephone office—an automatic witness that can’t lie. We’ve got a picture of it. You take my advice and come clean—there may be a chanee to save your carcass if you make it easy for us. Who helped you?” “You look here!” rapped Thurber belligerently. “You’d better be sure of your ground before you go making wild statements, get me? If there was a call from the telephone in my apartment somebody else did the calling. I wasn’t there at twelve-twcnty-one and I can prove it.” “Where were you — climbing through the trap door to the roof, so you could get in this house? Who put in the phone eall for you?” “At twelvc-twenty-one,” declared Thurber hotly, “I was either talking over the public telephone in the hall next door,-or I was at the; ciga’ - store down the street buying’
I Calico to headquarter*. where he I flopped him down on the floor and d stroked his head. Then, noticing I Calllco’s courage his silence in spite | of a leg break, aud his pleading other officers striked Ills head and scratched him under the jaw ••It'll cost about *2 to have the leg .set." one of the officers remarked. They made up a purse, called a veterinary. Calico’s leg is in splints now and he’s licking the hands of the police department boys and railroad detective, who made up the purse. When It's hunting
cigarettes. You might try checking that, before going off half-cocked with your accusations. I don’t suppose you’ve been next door, have you.” he added scornfully, “to see whether anyone broke into my apartment?” “There are quite a few men next door,” said Darden coldly. “And you’re going there right now, with me. Price Merriam did not accompany them, for he had told Darden it was his painful duty to put in a cal) for Montreal—Mr. Elderbank had not yet been apprised of his wifes tragic death. Doctor Haight, the assistant medical examiner, was coming
Pi'L n wl UP IS Thurber produced his key-ring, “What the —” He examined the key* with evident astonishment. “There’s only one here —
downstairs as they wen* out into the hall. "Anything I ought to know?” Darden asked nim. The shrugged. “Chloroform. Suffocation. About half of each. They gagged her so tightly she couldn’t breathe, and then poured chloroform on the towel—sixteen ounces of it, evidently; it was all gone. It killed her very quickly—eight or ten minutes, I should say. was sufficient for the job.” “What of the ammonia?” “Oh, they sprayed it in her face to blind and choke her, first, I should say. That was no contributing cause of death. I wish I could help you more, Sergeant, but I don’t see how I can.” “That was unusually broad adhesive tape they used. Doctor. Any chance for us to trace that?” "Perhaps. I think only a limited number of drug stores or hospital supply houses would carry that kind. Nobley, by the way, has something of interest for you. I beh»ve he said he was through here. Shall I call the Department and get them to send for the body?” “1 suppose so. Doctor. Thanks.” Glenn Thurber asked permission to say a word to some one in the library before they went next door, but Durden refused. “Never mind,” said the Sergeant. “You’ve done enough talking for to-night. You come with me." Thurber opened the front door of Two-Sixty-Eight with his latchkey. June and Jimmy Kirkman were sitting in their living-room, talking to Fritz Runkel. The door was open, and they saw the detectives pass with Glenn Thurber “Why, what’s up?” called Jimmy, coming to the door. “Where’s your public telephone?” ' asked Darden sharply. ' “In the back hall.”
Jwaaon again. Calico’* benefactor* will have turns at using him. o Too Much Fleteherixlng Seattle.— (U.R) - Failure !o eat paper tut euough was oue reason Alvin Harrison, 33. got a two-yea: prison sentence. He was charged with burglary aud denied he had had any money for month*. U hen i detectives caught him chewing a paper, they made him cough it up. ■ it was a receipt for a 129 suit, purchased the day before. —o : Trade in * Good Town — Dec*tur
Darden went to the instrument i and noted the number above its mouthpiece. “I’ll have you make ■ another trip to the exchange, he i said to Mabry. “Check the calls ’ registered for this pay-station—yoa heard what he said about calling his office around twelve-fifteen?” 1 “Yes, sir,” said Mabry, and departed on his mission. The Sergeant gestured to Thurber ■ to precede him up the stairs. “Nothing of importance, Jimmy, called Thurber rcasurrmgly. . “They’ve got the wrong telephone ; number, that’s all.” Darden paused before the closed door of Glenn Thurber’s top-floor apartment. Two policemen were on
post there. Captain Nobley and his assistant were making a minute examination of the ladder-like steps in the hallway that led to the skylight trap. They were making use of a machine which sprayed into the air a cloud of fine aluminum powder, whictL settling on walls, floors and articles of furniture, was designed to afihere to latent finger-prints wherever the oil exuded by human finger-tips betrayed their presence. Once the aluminum powder was thoroughly distributed, a stream of air was turned on from the same machine, which dissipated ail aluminum powder not clinging to the telltale marks. It was the last word in finger-print development and a great improvement over the old and tedious, hit-or-miss method of employing a hand-bellows. “Think I’ll have something for you, Sergeant,” said the finger-print specialist, with a searching glance at Glenn Thurber. “All right,” replied Darden. “In a minute.” He turned to Thurber: "Good lock you’ve got on this door, . isn’t it?” “Best to be had,” admitted Glenn. “Jimmy-proof. And nobody seems to have tampered with it” “Got your keys?” Thurber produced his key-ring. “Sure. Right here. Hey! What the —" He examined the kevs with evident astonishment. “There’s only one hole—l had two, mine and Fritz Runkel’s. What the devil!” “I suppose somebody stole it," said Darden with elaborate sareasin, “and you’re just finding it out.” “Why, the ring has been in my pocket continuously — I don’t see when— oh, I know—” “All right, say it It won’t d« you any good.” (To Be Continued) CoanUht. I|;|, b/EJwlnD T«|IM DUlrlbuud br Klnt WMurw Spidtatb. Im.
MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS I Brady'* Market for Decatur. Berne, I Cralgvllle, Hoagland and Willshire. i Close at 12 Noon il ,' Corrected March 7. No commission and no yardage Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. ’ 1100 to 120 Ibs 26 ’5 1120 to 14() lbs 17.65 , 1140 to 160 lb*. >8.45 160 to 190 lbs 89.80 'l9O to 250 lbs 89.50 I 250 to 300 lbs 89.35 300 to 350 lbs 89 05 Roughs 88.00 '.tags 85.50 eals 89.50 !we and wether Lambs 88.00 luck Lambs 87.00 NEW YORK PRODUCE New York, Mar. 7. — (U.R) — Produce: Dressed poultry, firm; turkeys, 19-SOc; chickens. 15H-28c; broilers, 8-30 c; capons. 26-32 c; fowls. 13Long Island ducks, 20c. Live poultry firm: geese, 09-13 c; urkeys, 19-28 c: roosters, 14c; ducks. 11-17 c; fowls, 21-23 c; chickens. 15-25 c; capons. 20-30 c; broilers. 10-28 C. Butter, market steady; receipts. >.616 packages; creamery higher | ’ian extras, 3IM-3214c: extra 92 ore. 31 He: first 90 to 91 score. -31Hc; centralized 90 score, 31c. Eggs, market firmer; receipts, 1,359 cases; special packs, Includig unusual hennery selections, 3H-25c; standards, 22%-23c; firsts !-22Hc: seconds, 21Hc; mediums, 21%-21%c; dirties, 21H-21Hc; cxs, 20>i-20?6c: storage packs, -2-%c. ' CLEVELAND PRODUCE Cleveland. Mar. 7.—(UB —Produce: Butter, market steady; extras, 34c; standards, 35c. Eggs, steady; extra white, 21c; jurrent receipts, 21 He. Poultry, firm: fowls, 6 lbs., and under, 20c; leghorn fowl, 18c; i ducks, young, 24-25 c; ducks, old, 20c. Potatoes, Maine, 81-81.10 per 100 lb. bag; Ohio mostly, 70-75 c per 100-lb. bag; New York, 80c per 100 lb. bagFort Wayne Livestock 1 Hogs steady: 200-250 lbs. 89.75; 250-300 Ibs. $9.60; 300-350 lbs. 89.30; 180-200 Ibs. $9.65; 160-180 lbs. $9.55; 150-160 tbs. $9; 140-150 Ibs. $8.50; 130-140 Ibs. $8.25; 130130 ibs. $7.75; 100-120 Ibs. $7.25, roughs $8.25; stags $6. Calves $9.50; Lambs $8.50. — chk ago grain close May July Sept. Wheat 96 .90% .89H Corn .82% .78% .75% Oats 48% .42% .40% EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK | East Buffalo, N. Y., Mar. 7. —(U.PJ I —Livestock: I Hogs, sc; all weights nominally ; steady. . Cattle, 100; cows steady to weak; j fleshy cows, $5.50-26.25; low cutIter and cutter, $3.25-85; few heifers. $6-$7.75. Calves, 50; vealers steady; good to choice, $10.50; common and medium, $6.50-$9.50; inferior lightweights downward to $3.50. ’ Sheep, 50; lambs unchanged; ’good to choice. $9; medium and mixed generally, $8.25-88.75; shorn iambs, SB. LOCAL GRAIN MANET Corrected March 7. No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 87c No. 2 New Wheat (58 lbs.) 86c Oats, 32 lbs. test .... . 47c Oats, 30 lbs. test.. 46c Soy Beans, bushel $1.15 No. 2 Yellow Corn. 100 lbs SI.OB CENTRAL SOYA MARKET No. 2 Yellow Soy Beans $1.15 Delivered to factory. o Two Adams County Students Honored Weldon L. Soldner, of Berne, stjrfiKMtore in tlr? school of science, and John A. ißilderback of Decatur, senior in the school of science, qual--1 ified for the rating :n distinguished student at Purdue University for scholastic work completed during the first semester of the present , GILLETTE Super Traction ; TRACTOR TIRES For all makes of ’‘■'tC Tractors. ''l See them at — < • A PORTER TIRE CO. W* 341 Winchester st. Phono 1289 Wiy
academic year, uccordm-, " nouneement ma*. . ol P-iil nt E ( In order for u llld ; i)t ll t T M 'Oistingiiisheq'' schulaatlc h uu . r due, it is necessary scholastic index <rf Sfto ßa( *’4i wl-ieh, in effect. average o ( »o, ur al)0 “ 'Ut taint'd for the . lnui)l( .' r i addition to the sehol llt J ? rk ’ volved. Studer q Uallry ** rating are entitled to th. Lr certain registration t s.mester immediately qualification. U 1 1” i UUASSIFrEiT' 1 ADVERTISEMENT? BUSINESS CAffl AND NOTJCg FOR SALE FOR SALE -Chicks— heart | $7:50 hundred; white v ? and heavy mixed. $7.25; breed $7; 3% discount on 7 14 days in advance, another ii cash in full with order; J, hatching, hen egg, 2i 4 w ~ chick; turkey eggs. Of *. poult; duck eg gs , 414, Hatchery 3nt west cortl Monroeville, route 2. J I- OR SALE — One aia olt , Fordson; three used Forh SSO and up; 4 Donham packen hoes; 32 by 56 Baker ie M We will have our new Ford™ display by March 8 crair Rarage - FOR SALE -One 1930 Podfe like new; one 1.30 Ford w good shape; one 1923 Chee sedan; one 132 Ford V-j a 19 electric motors. 3, to 251 Cralgvllle Ga-a’e * .jja F )R SALE—Y flow Den a State taged ..nd graded. In and Burdg. Phone 19 j SPECIAL RUG SALE IG Cor-go’euni Rugs, size 9x121 or 9x10.6, very good Tile t Floral patterns, each | 8 Congoleum Hugs, 6x9ft.,«.$ . 2 Congoleum Rugs, size T.to ( i each $ 2 only Armstrong felt bate sixe 11.3x12 ft., each | 2 only Extra Heavy Arasttq felt base rugs. 11.3x15 ft each g 9 ft. wide Heavy Weight C» I goleum by the yard, at Hit 4x7 ft. Rag Rugs, each I i 9xlß Rubber Stair Treak tl nosing. Reg. 15c, sale, ad Cottage Window Shades, st 36’’x€’, with rollers, ui ( green colors, each “Clopay” Fibre shades, .jn or lau colars ino roller)! Ruffled Curtains. 2% yd. log pair NIBLICK & CO. FOR SALE — Fordson tndi good repair. Wil! trade fori stock. William Patterson. Ml route 2. a wanted". WANTED — Live pigeons. ' Paul Roussey, Payne, Okie. ' 115. * I WANTED — Rags, rubber,« iron, all kinds of scrap n ' and paper. Th Maier Hide i company, Monroe street P 442. ' ' WANTED For ripen ’tdie I electrical repair* call 'lrt* | Miller, phone «25 Memb'» Manufacturers Service $ Radio Service. 226 N ■ ~~FOK~i?EN1 _ ' FOR RENT—7 acres of?’ ground. Also wood to shares. Inquire 1306 MonW I or phone 805. l FOR RENT—2O acre farm.)* I north of Willshire. , Ross. Willshire. Ohio. >' LOST AND : LOST—P' rketbook containi**' cn. two one dollar '■ some change at Burks Leave at Democrat. Re’**! > II —; Lone G. 0. Pv f -nil > North Wilkesboro. V ' John R 'ones of h orih | boro holds the i the only Republican [ North Select your ne» Hat at Deiningers i stock. Si.so up- : I will be out Os town ; Saturday ' dr. c. c. R' tTL ! | Drop in and the least of in Spring Sul *- Ties. Shirts, m » M that men wear at <-• Baruain "n. A. BIX^ eR < OPTOME TR|ST Eyes Examined. 8:30 to 11:30 B . Saturdays- p Tp|p^‘ l ‘ )r,e l
