Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 137, Decatur, Adams County, 10 June 1935 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Movie To Be Shown At Local Home Service Feature Final arrangements for an tin usual anil interesting Home Service School have been made by j Decatur Norge Sales, Norge deal era here, and a large attendance is expected, according to Mrs. Don Lutes. “We are conducting a combined 1 cooking and homcmaking school at the Decatur Library tomorrow. June 11. 2:30 and 7:30 p. m.” continued Mrs. Lutes. “A new feature of this afternoon session will be the showing of the movie. ‘Norging Ahead Together.' a c4ever and entertaining sound film | built around the theme of use savings and value of modern home i conveniences. This film marks the return to the screen of Bev- i erly Bayne, famous star of silent days who is lovelier than ever and e will have no difficultly in reestablishing hqjself ou the modern screen. “Miss Agnes Reaser. noted home t economist, will conduct the ses- , sione and demonstrate the uses ( and savings of home conveniences with particular emphasis I , on Rollator Refrigeration and the | new Norge kitchen range. New t and intriguing recipes will be | prepared and demonstrated at j each session and housewives will ; | be given an opportnity to exchange ideas and learn new ( methode in modern home-making. John B. Stults of the Home Gro- j eery and the Cloverleaf Creameries have cooperated in furnishing ; ; groceries and creams tor the I school. I I “Popularity of cooking schools : u rivals that of bridge parties j among modern housewives, and . i we are happy to be able to take . advantage of this, as it givw us I . an opportunity to express our ap- '. predation for the interest they . have shown in our products, by • arranging this educational and

I Thousands of mites of Transportation FOR SALE I • Ford Dealert* offer unusual values in USED CARS. Honest value. Liberal guarantee. Nearly all makes of cars. Prices to suit every purse. Any make of car taken in trade. Small down payihctk Easy terms. SEE THE NEAREST FOBB HEALER FOR TOE BEST USER CARS Q Cedar Chest FREE with the Purchase of a Bed Room Suite This Week Only Chest is a regular $25 value carrying a $l5O Insurance guarantee against moth for 3 years. Bed Room Suites. Walnut Finish, 3 and 4 piece. Our Price This Week—Cedar Chest FREE SBS to SIOO {Sprague Furniture Co® Phone IS9 152 S. Second St.

THIMBLE THEATERSHOWING—“WATER, WATER, EVERYWHERE” BY SEGAR VJE SAIL TO-OAS,.SPHINK J [POPETE IS GETTING REACT \l THE TRACKIS QUELLGREASED] P OH'.UHHI! \ Xll'Sp •'* ME DREAM IS COMIN' TRUE,, TO SAIL IN HIS ARK_I MUST 1 ANO SHE IS iff— I C LAE } s' .THANKS TO SER MONET r-> HIJRRT TO THE BEACH AND/ SLIPPING < |, V 3 UUU HttWDp.,/ /WT o\ Vt - LAUNCH MT ' NICELT INTO ) ~T ‘S'- V IT LEAKS! X /HlAv \ lAA - '■ STUROT SHIP ) /— x THE SEA z~< . >--a X / ll v 14a’ /r\ KOrk pffljlfe - / ®|v| xXi i ''W HgA* "wnr Mi- SF* — i 1 b *”/n X*. \ f—rSZA aL • J J ???* V ,_ bc ~ n~— i -** ~ s ~'l \v 22 -. ■> •— /0| ||lin*J / \ \ Xy \ —>w. i-_ -XT — A I I iH|f*Vl ’• I 1 tLd;ik.:;ii-ii:j:i:nT?!few* «.J ■ _• 19IS. Kin*Feittuto SwMxate, lac, Gw Irmin if *n<4 _ *

I entertaining program. We hope all home-makers will take advantage of this Invitation. In add!i tion. we have arranged for delightful surprises that will be interesting and valuable to all who I attend." concludes Mrs. Lutes. | Test Your Knowledge | Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. 1. Name the V. S. Senators from New York. 2. Who was Pietro Mascagni? 3. Who was Rin Tin Tin? 4. Name the composer of the Opera "Roeenkavaller” 5. Who is Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi? 6. What ie the apposite of art muelc? 7. Who drawe the Mickey Mouse cartoons? 8. Wbat is the military term for the losses of a force in war by death wounds, sickness, desertion or other cause? 9. Name the large city In Cook County, 111. 10. What was the maiden mime of the wife of the Duke of Y’ork? 1. Where hs the University of Kansas ? 2. Where was Mary Garden, American operatic singer, born? 3. In what language is the original Interior. 4. In what anguage is the original Mug pa Carta written? 5. What is the popular name for the larva of .butterflies, moths and saw-flies? 6. Name the most famous tenor of modern times. 7. WhaX relation was President John Quincy Adams to President John Adams? 8. Which state » popularly known •is th? “Bay State?" 9. Where is the University of Up-

eala? 10. To wililih religious denomination do the King and Queen of Engand belong? COURT HOUSE Find For Plaintiff The court found for the plaintiff in the suit to enforce a truat brought by the Department of Financial Institutions of the Old Adfims County bank against Minnie Niblick. A Judgment was awarded. New Trial Denied A motion for a new trial in the replevin suit brought by the International Harvester company of America against John McCarty was overruled. An exception was taken by the plaintiff. Receiver Appointed Evidence was heard in the petition for a receiver filed by the First Joint Stock laind Bank of i Fort Wayne against Lizzie M. Tapp. The court found for the i plaintiff and a receiver was appointed. Case Dismissed The damage suit brought by Daniel F. Knoll against Willis Augsburger was dismissed and the costs paid. New Trial Denied A motion for a new trial of the damage suit filed by Margaret Welle jgalnst Arthur C. Meyer and others was overruled. Exceptions were taken by the defendant. Petition Submitted A petition for the allowance of attorney fees was submitted in part in the matter of the liquidation of the Peoples Loan and Trust company. Case Continued By agreement of parties the suit for the foreclosure of a mechanics lien filed by D. Abromson. Inc., against the Hartford Oil Co., was continued. Divorce Granted Lodemus Chase, defendant in the divorce action »egun by Horatio S. Chase, defaulted. The court ruled the prosecuting attorney to answer. The prosecuting attorney filed his answer. The case was submitted, evidence heard and the divorce granted. A Judgment was given the plaintiff for the costs. Judgment Awarded An answer in general denial was filed by t*ephus and Nettie M. Melchi In the suit for tin* collection of a note brought by the Old Adams County bank. The court found for the plaintiff for $1i'4.85 and costa. Ask New Trial A motion for a new trial in the suit for the collection of a note filed by Amos Hlrschy against Arthur D. Suttles, Sr. was submitted and taken under advisement. Petition Heard A petition to compromise the debt of Mary Niblick was submitted and the evidence heard in part in the matter of the liquidation of the Old Adams County bank. Further hearing was continued until June 26. A petition to ratify and approve the assignment of a mortgage was sustained. A petition to Kell Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation bonds was filed, submitted and sustained. The special representative was authorized to sell the bonds in the sum of $3,000 at the market price. A petition for the appraisement and sale of real estate in the state of Michigan was filed, submitted and sustained and the spe-

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MON DA V, JU NE 10, 1935

dal representative was authorized i- to sell the property at not less I- than the appraisement, subject tn the approval of the court. A petition to pay pay roll and reoccurring expenses was filed, submitted and sustained. Hesrlno Continued Evidence in part was heard in . the action for separation filed by t Margurlte Hulliuger against Ells ward Hullinger. The further I hearing was continued to June 2f. Find For Plaintiff i The court found for the plain- , tiff In the suit for account brought by tjie Crummies Creek Coal com- , > i>any against George W. Adams. . The court ruled that the plaintiff f is entitled to recover the principal r sum of $313.36 with interest at i the rate of six per cent and the interest in the sum of $24.07. making a total of $337.43 with re- , . lief. A Judgment wa» given. , Marriage License j t Henry A. Straube, madhiniet, 1

WHOSE WIFE ? |l GLADYS SHAW ERSKINE. and IVAN FIRTH——4I

CHAPTER XIV Clues I Cyrus K. Mantel waited Impatiently at the door of 784 West Fifty-seventh Street. Inspector Ingles was to meet him here and they were to go over together the scene of the murder. The preceding day, the day following the tragedy, had been a busy one and had ended in his obtaining the release of Vane on a bail of $25,000. Now, for the first time, he, Cyrus K. Mantel, was at the actual scene of the murder, and that dearest of all things to his detective heart could be searched for ... clues. He walked around to the side of the big building and took note that the servants’ entrance came from the basement through an open areaway which ran between this building and a new one in the preoess of construction. The fire-escape sprawled its green ladder down the side of 784 in the rather narrow space allowed it between the wall of its own building and the steel frame-work of Its neighbor. “I’ll have to make it a point to go down that fire-escape,” he muttered to himself, “as much as I dislike the idea. I’ll certainly have to do it.” Quietly he atudied the areaway, the fire-escape, and the skeleton frame-work of th* new building, then walked back to the main entrance j’ust in time to meet Ingles as he got out of his car at the door. “Shall we go right up?” The question was superfluous but served as a greeting. On the way up in the elevator, Mantel said, “I suggested to Vane that he go to a hotel for the night ... as soon as he got out on bail. He didn’t like the idea of coming back here." “I can understand that,” Ingles was grim. ‘Tossibly not what you think at all,” countered Cyrus K. “Possibly something quite different” “Well, let that pass —we won’t argue on the value of a word, my dear fellow. The point is that I asked Vane to meet us here at this hour.” “But I thought you wanted to Investigate,” protested the Inspector. . “I do,” Mantel assured him, "and there are certain things that I can investigate better with Mr. Vane on the premises.” The elevator came to a stop, ana the two men got out and moved to the same door through which the Inspector had passed to such a shock two nights before. A police officer jumped to attention at sight of Ingles, and stepped aside as the two entered the apartment of death. "Nice place,” said Mantel, looking around. “Good taste. I like the brocades—good one. old and not too bright in color." He walked over to a table. “Nice bronze.” he said, picking up the figure of a dancing faun. “Clean cut line ... and a fine patina.” He glanced at Ingles. "Unquestionably a person of taste furnished this place. Vane? Or . . . Isohel?” He sniffed the air like a hound on the scent. “Too much perfume,” he said. He looked at the Inspector, his eyes narrowed. “That’s funny, that’s an awfully heavy perfume . . . seems out of place here with all these finely chosen things." He lifted his eyebrows enquiringly. “The finely chosen things, as you put it,” Ingles answered the gesture, "are representative of Lawrence Vane. The too-obvious, heavy scent is—or rather was—lsobel.” “So?” Cyrus K. pursed his lips “So? Where was Vane when you found him night before last?” “Right here in front of the fire slumped over in his chair.” “Was he unconscious?” “He appeared to be out cold .. .* Ingles hesitated. “I hate to say it but wt first, both the other officeri thought that he was foxing. Latei re felt sure that he was doped.” Cyrus K. nodded. “Find anj dgns of a struggle?” he asked.

Portland and Gretchen Herbst, si amstresa. Geneva. Bather Beery, reetetered num*. Decatur and Perry Huffman, radio engineer. Fort Wayne. Dolores Elzsy. stenographer, Deatur and Robeit Shiuluka, salesman, Decatur. Paul W. Stahly. elevator employe, Geneva and Mildred H. Nouenechwander, proof reader, Berne. Oldest Apple Tree Nebraska City. Neb. — (UP) — John Roll claims title t > the oldest apple tree in eastern Nebraska, a section noted for its fine orchards. His tree is 63 yearn old und was pbmted by Roll’s father. Nicholas Roll. —o Firemen Out Fiddled Nero Pittsfield. Mass. — (U.R) — Nero, who was supposed to have fiddled while Rome burned, didn't have so much on the Lanesboro volunteer fire department. A house owned

“None at all, and that’s a funny thing too. Everything -/as in perfect order—even the bee “What do you mean by that?” Cyrus K. was surprised. “We 11... Vane said his wife had retired and went to call her and went into hysterics when he discov- ' cred that she was not there and that the bed was undisturbed.” “Did he go alone to call her?” “No. Officer Larkin went with ■ him. His report said that Vane was beside himself when he found that Isobel was gone, and that he rushed about trying to find her." “So?” said Cyrus K. “He was anxious to find her?” “Oh! he knew well enough where she was all the time.” Ingles grunt- i ed. “I can’t blame him for trying to get away with it though.” “And where was she?” Mantel’s question was mild. Ingles looked at the little man for a moment before he answered. He had a disagreeable idea that Cyrus K. Mantel was having a bit of fun at his expense. That little question, < dropped into the tense atmosphere just in that mild way had all the earmarks of one of Mantel’s famous sly jokes. Ingles would have given a lot just then to know what the little detective was really thinking, what his idea of the whole case - was. "Y?-j know that,” he answered briefly, “you know thst we found her body on the terrace." “Qh? yes ... the body.” Cyrus K. moved across the room as he spoke, “is this the bedroom?” he asked. Again Ingles looked at him suspiciously. He knew it was the bedroom before he asked—what was he up to anyway? But the Puck-like face of Cyrus K. Mantel was composed into the most serious of expressions. “Nothing has been touched, I presume?” again his bushy eyebrows questioned Ingles. “Nothing.” “No sign of any struggle here. Things just look as they would if a very luxurious lady had just passed through." “Lady?" Ingles took up the word. “Wasn't Mrs. Vane a lady?” Mantel was innocent. “Depends 'on how you use the word,” Ingles said. “Lady . . . yes, in beauty and charm and allure . . . and also in all the arts -of those others who are called ... ladies of the evening." “Now that’s interesting," said Mantel in a conversational tone, “that’s very interesting. Didn't she ever have a lover?” “Lover?” Ingles laughed. "Use the plural there and you’ll hit closer to the mark.” “Yes, but what about some man that she really loved? Was that Vane?” . “Supposedly eo. She married him.” “What for?” again the simple question dropped quietly, like a plumb line into the stillness of blue soß> water. “That’s a thought?" Ingles puzzled. “I never thought of it before. I always wondered why Vane married Isobel... but someway I never thought of the other side of the question.” “Why did he marry her?” asked Mantel. “Beauty, gorgeous figure, the lure of the eternal siren . . . and propinquity,” summed up the Inspector. “Propinquity?” "Yes, she was n model of his for a time, you know?” “No. I didn’t know," said Mantel. “What about this reputation of hers —that would sicken an aesthetic artist of Vane’s type." “He didn’t know about that,.” Ingles told him. “How come?" At tithes, even Cyrus K. was slangy. “Well, Lawrence Vane has always , been a recluse—very few people that i he really liked or bothered with. • And one thing he always forbade in his studio, and that was gossip, i Bo no One ever told him about leobel, and if he had heard anything.

by Mrs. George Brigg" ot Chicago burned before the Lanesboro fire truck could bo located. The Buck was fetching freshly fallen snow for a maple sugar eat sponsored by the firemen. ' — - Old Copper Caee Excavated Providence. R. 1.-(U.R) Workmen tearing down the home which Jeremiah Remington built 75 years ago dug up a copper case containing old newspapers and coins. The newspaper found in the box hailed the opening of the pony express service, and one of the coins bore the famous Pinckney legendary slogan: “Millions for defense, not one cent for tribute!” ————-—o— ————~ Chain Department BELLAIRE. O <UJ»—Chain letter news oddities became so numerous here that the Beilairo Leader, a dally, has run a column on them, titled. “Chain letter notes.”

he would have discounted it as jealousy. So he looked up to the woman .. . and believed her to be as pure and perfect as his own idealism painted her.” Ingles turned aside and spat into the empty fireplace. “So if he had suddenly found out the truth, about his wife,” said Mantel, “it would have . . . supposedly ... er ... upset him?" “I’ll say it would 1” the Inspector was vehement, “It would have killed him.” “And yet," murmured Cyrus K., "it seems to be the lady who was killed." He moved toward the bathroom. “Find anything here?” he asked. “Larkin found a bottle of Veronal,” Ingles said. "Finger prints?” snapped Mantel. "A woman’s, apparently,” Ingles replied. “The expert is examining them now.” "A woman's, eh? Interesting. We’ll have to wait for the report before we can do anything there. Kitehen here?” he moved into Its undisturbed tidiness, glanced around, took note of the service for two, of the quiet orderliness of the whole place, picked up the glass with its rim of congealed milk and sniffed it, then said: “Let’s get onto the roof—all this can wait." The two men went out onto the terrace. It presented a far different appearance than it had two nights before, when the moon was just breaking through the storm clouds and there iff the flash of his torch Ingles had lighted his gruesome find. “Here’s where we found the body,” he said. “Condition of same known," Cyrus K. said. “Nude ... headless.” Straight as a homing pigeon he went toward the fire-escape that he had studied from below. “I must go down this," he muttered. “Hate to do it, but I must.” He walked to the parapet, stared over at the house opposite, then at the steel frame-work of the place being erected next door, took from his pocket a small note book and began to sketch. “Very interesting,” he muttered, “very interesting indeed. Inspector Ingles,” he called, “does anyone that knows Vane live in the house across the street? Do you know?” “Sure. That's where the phone call came from that told us about the fight on the roof here,” said Ingles. “Wilbur Kenton lives there. He is the one who called up.” “Very interesting,” repeated Cyrus K. softly. “Want to look at anything more here?” asked Ingles. "No—no—not now. I can come again.” The two men turned to go when Mantel quickly stooped ana picked up something from the floor of the terrace. "Anything interesting?” asked Ingles. “Well," Mantel studied the object in his hand. “That depends. It is a piece of mortar chipped from a wall. Odd. Very odd. Can I keep thia, Ingles?" » Ingles laughed. “I don't see why not I cannot see that it has any bearing on the crime.” “Thank you,” said Mantel. “If you want it later I will let you have it, of course. What crime is it you refer to?” “Why, the murder of Isobel Vane by her husband!” “I do not think," replied Mantel very slowly, “that this has anything to do with that particular crime." Before Ingles could formulate a proper retort, he was startled to see Lawrence Vane come toward them across the wide expanse of the terrace. “I asked Vane to come here," Cyrus K. told him swiftly, “because I , wanted to look at some of his sketches of his models—in the nude ’ —and I want him here—and you—i when I do it.” (To Be Continued) Cooj,l|ht. I >]«. »f Tho MimoliV Co. DlitrttoMd br Klrtg Futuna SyfltHea’a, Ina.

MARKETREPUSTS DAILY RKRORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS ■rady’a Market for Decatur, Berne, Cralgvllle, Hoagland and Willshire. ’ Clots at 12 Noon Corrected Jurib 10. . J No commission ana no yardage j Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, aud Saturday. t t 100 to 120 lbs. J $7.80 ( 120 to 140 lbs $8.35 j 140 to 150 lbs — $9.20 , 160 to 210 lbs. $9.60 ] 210 to 250 lbs $9.50 ( 250 to 300 lbs $9.30 ■ 300 to 350 lbs $9.10 1 Roughs —. $8.25 Stags - $6.25 I Vealers - $8.75 Ewe and wether lambs $8.50 Buck lambs ........ $7.50 , Yearling lambs ■. SB.OO : — FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK 1— ..I— Fort Wayne, Ind., June 10. —(U.R) —Livestock: Hogs: stea(?y; 160-200 lbs., $9.85; JOO-250 lbs., $9.75; 250-300 lbs., $9.65; 300-350 lbs., $9.50; 150-160 lbs., $9.65; 140-150 lbs.. $9.40; 130140 lbs., $8.15; 12T73b lbs., $8.90; 100-120 lbs.. $8.40; roughs, $8.25; stags, $6 25. ‘ Calves. $8.50; lambs, $9. New York Produce Dressed poultry steady to firm, (cents per lb.) Turkeys 16-30; chickens broilers 18-28; capons 29-35; fowls 15Vi-l"\s; Long Island ducks Live poultry, weak; Rents per lb) geeee 7-9; turkeys 12-22; roosters 14; ducks 9-12; fowls 18-22; broilers 14-26. Butter receipts 13,059 packages. Market weak Creamery higher than extras 24%-25)4; extra 92 score 24*>a, firsts 90 to 91 score 2354-24 >4, firsts 88 to 89 score 2354-23%. seconds 22%-23%. centralized 90 score 24, centralized 88 to 89 score 2354 23%. centralized 84 to 87 score 22%-23%. Egg receipts 30,524 cases. Market irregalar. Special packs, including unusual hennery selections 2554-27%. standards 26-25’4, firsts 24%, medium* 23-3354, dirties 2354. checks 21’4. storage packs 24%. East Buffalo Livestock Hog receipts 1600; active; strong to 5c over Fridays average; bulk desirable 160-240 lbs. $10.40; few bids $10.45; 260 lb. butchers $10.26; 140-160 lbs. $lO- - Cattle receipts 1300; steer and yearlings slow-, weak to 25c lower; strictly good and choice steers $12.75; good steers and yearlings $10.25-11.75; medium to good mixed yearlings $9-10; plain grass steers and heifers $5.25-6; fleshy cows $6-6.75; low cutter and cutter $3.85-5.50. Calf receipts 800; vealers unchanged $lO down. Sheep receip’e 1200; spring lambs mostly 25c higher; good to choice ewes and wethers $10.50; bulk bucks included $10; others downward to $9,.50 and below. Cleveland Produce Butter market weak. Extras 23. standards 28. Egg market weak. Extra whites 2354. extra firsts 32%, current receipts 2154. Poultry market weak. Heavy fowls 20 medium fowl 19-2 o; ducks voting 19-20; ducks old 17. Potatoes: Ohio 55-90 c per 100 lb. bag; North Carolina cobblers $2.90-3 per 100 lb. bag; Alabama Bliss Triumphs $1.66-1.75 per 100 lb. bag; California long white $2 per 100 lb. bag. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE July Sept. Dec. Wheat 83% .84% .86% Corn .82% .75% .63% Oats 35% .33% .3554 LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Correoted June 10. No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better No. 2 New Wheat, 58 lbs 74c Oats, 32 lbs. test 3^ c Oats, 30 lbs. test • • • 3 ® <: Soy Beans, bushel 75c to 9- 1 ' No. 2 Yellow Corri, 110 lbs. sl.l-> Wool, lb 15 to 20c CENTRAL SOYA MARKET No. 2 Yellow Soy Beans....’. 9Bc Delivered to factory. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur Trade In Your Old Tires for New j GILLETTE or PHARIS Tlree, # 1 10 to 50 per cent / trade-in allowance. PORTER C® TIRE COMPANY BL 341 Winchester street. Phon* 1289,

bvsinessS ' OR sale' For sale - plants. ix.gtur phone 100. veai-old ho,> ’ ihreshing machine lhr< shing iiuchiiiH. gl)u(1 . steam engine, 1 Wal(> . 15O ' n t-c.ixZ *'“t’’r hose, all 81les ‘ “ hoes and packers , t a ' Craigvilie Garage. -ai.e bush, C.-untry Club mu < farm road. BOR SALE— Cabbage and flo«ei l-.anir ,a Jul H 204 S. 10th. Phone 417. FOR SALE — Deoatur Hau Super Qnali-y Bred Chick lai for week o f June M E. W. L-g horns. Book yow now atur Hatdiery. pho, M- 1.: _... ; FOR SALE—(load camping i Large umbrella tent, fa able. Phone Monroe 12(. Hocker. Monroe, FOR SALE — Three vanetj late cabbage plants ready | out. William Speakman, mt Decatur. FOR SALE—Black chow pn beauties. Eligible tor rq Lloyd Bryan. Monmouth, | 7182. j FOR SALE 1 Poland pig; 75 bushel extra good beans. Charles A. Friend. R Stock Farm. | Vanted " WASTE!i Au bilious youg to work with sales manin learn selling. High school | ate. Tuesday !La. m. 11! Monroe St.. Decatur, Ind. 1 WANTED <h>od prices sound used truck rasing, able for retreading pnrposa.l year Service, corner T!ii:i Madison Streets. Decant. 1 l MALE HELP WANTEU Ambiitions. reliable men « men wanted io suppiytsa with famous Watkins fn here and in nearby « Cham e to obtain lifettiif able connection. Write J I kins Co. 250-58 N. sth St.o bus. Ohio. j WANTED Girl for genenlii work. Inquire a' 412 S. ft or phone 841. I WANTED Housework, by# perlenced in this work. 0 604 Jefferson Street. « FOR RENT_ FOR RENT—7 room modern! 419 N. 3 st. Phone 611 Harry Helm. Whip Became Huge T* Prescott. Kan. — l U.PJ "" Charles Coon drove his ok W Kansas 68 years ago and • on a farm near here, he sh® willow sprout he used for * into the ground and it S" make a tine tree and slud house he erected. This’t* ever, the tree has not le»M the family fears be drought was Trade in a Good Town - 06 NOTICE -We are now* jobs to combine. Get ou 1 ’ on combining smah gram grass. Steffen Brothers, phone, Decatur route i ’ii:vr ot No. That eeutor of the h'Stiile• ’ ,-„ un ty, i: a h "ed. ,, Th a e tt Est*te Is Vent ‘ Frank S. Johnson, June 1, apiwlnlinent <>r Noth'c is herem * app „ in tri . undersigned as est«t» °L John I- * MiitjL> For Belter Hea' th * Dr H. Frohnapfe Licensed Chiropractor . a,li > ~^ ,Ur Sso> Phone 311 Office Hour 6 - 0 g, ! to 5 P- «- 6 10 I N. ATB> XLlilt ' o?T° MeTBIsT „ med GlaSM’ E '“ “ 8:30 toll: 30 t Satutday’' TtlephoP® ‘