Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 176, Decatur, Adams County, 26 July 1935 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Comfort at Little Cost lirWilWFTWiX.xziit■V't;" v- ...,/ ■ ■ ' .« A. felt ’ JBBSHKBBBBi' ■ ■ 4| • ■ . Effective results in modern decoration are obtained in the living room shown above by the combination of built-in bookcase*, wallwidth. ceiling-high mirror, and brick fireplace. Continuation of the mantel as a top shelf for the bookcase provides additional space for incidentals. Many rooms in existing dwellings may be transformed into livable, comfortable places for the family to gather. Sueh improvementH are inexpensive and funds for such work may be obtained from any private lending institution cooperating in the modernisation credit plan of the Federal Housing Administration.

SHEA TELLS OF CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) them. The demonst-.arion of Saturday. June 15, about which few liCa’rd. was perhaps the most important. Approximately 15,000 demonstrators marched through the principal streets. So important ww it that the government forces confiscated all snapshots of it." Mr. Shea was generous in his prtdeeoj the hospitality shown to hinjioU-and fellow Rotarians by the~Meikan government and the pepp'e there, stating that the consideration shown for the visitors' welfare extended from high officials down to ordinary citizens met

Public Auction REAL ESTATE We"will sell al public auction, without reserve, on the premises, in .he -village of Salem, Blue Creek Township, Adams County, 10 miles Smrth of Decatur, on WEDNESDAY, JULY 31,1935 At 6:00 P. M. (S. T.) *. The" following described real estate: Lots number 2,3, and 9, comprising about one acre of land; 7 room house, 5 rooms down, 2 iboms up; frame bulldiiig. sided with asphalt shinglees; good roof; 2,' car garage. These buildings are in good condition. Plenty of fruit all kind. An ideal garden and truck patch. Good drove well. ■ Anyone desiring a good home where your living expense# are very lbw, where you can raise chickens and keep a cow which means so jpuch toward the living of the average family, should attend this sale, prepared to buy. TERMS—I-3 cash, 1-3 in 6o and 1-3 in 90 days. Eli Bixler and Grace Bixler, Owners by Roy S. Johnson, Auctioneer Oeeatur, Indiana.

i PUBLIC SALE : - 2 —FARMS —2 Tuesday, July 30, 1935 w w commencing at 10:00 o'clock A. M. on the premises » The .Mark Jahn farm of 80 acres located 9% miles northeast of Wuffton 5% miles northwest of Mcnroe, 8’» miles southwest of $ catur or l', 2 miles northeast of Honduras. — • • ,» ThiS is one of the very best farms in Adams county. Good proctactive soil. 7 room semi-modern home. Large barn, corn crib, tool ■fled and. all necessary outbuildings, well fenced and tile drained. A sjlim'iiwKnetghhorliood. 'Selling in order to close up the estate. .-EasyTerms: *SOO cash, terms on balance. Mark Jahn Estate Owners. ** " "* At j ■ nt) o'clock P. M., the 53% acre farm known as the Beery farm, 7"nses northeast of Bluffton, 3% miles southeast of Craigville, 1 mile wa-sL-of Honduras. * -This is an ideal farm, fertile soil. 7 room house. Large barn, corn cjjb7 granary, poultry house and all necessary outbuildings, well fenced .tad tile drained. Easy terms: SSOO cash, terms on balance. JACOB KAEHR, Owner * These farms sold by the National Realty Auction Co.. Decatur, Indian a. Reppert, Auctioneer. " .fiiow is the time to buy real estate, the safest of all in- “ vestments. Farm lands are advancing in price and will * 'continue to do so. Buy now.

fHIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—’’WHY BRING THAT UP?” BY SEGAR ’. ,~| F vant wives- A K/w/'. shush.'J "1 1/i mme~l'i I FMr sph'.hk kept 1 Zkv tiW'i rW'SH I (DbGUST'.PhTEO - POPE'i& f ROM BRINGING I BETTER GO MftKE ilSlSr POORRISH, \ jV\>! \ ' WOMENTO'SPIN&CHOVA/- s'Vsfa ANO IS GONER } \ ZZk a f-iPbd'LFMFM i J TIIESJ > v /7kj J >-<( POOEV )'x ~J . (quiet woounV, m&re a ( 1 UtNktMt & TH6V I Mg / i /> speech -/V'TBP^I i AIN'T i . •'—FaW/1 /Pi •->, _3±JLs NO / (Jfj}\ j £~5 Z •X <> JO’®. RB zf w flEx^V i'; c^ > Wm 2 I v&ZZz- I ■*■ ®G> /; zz z k,';, r «-— t n.uj I ——J . - ~.. .. , ~~„ „, , ~. J L_gy-<z> XX' -

with on the street.. Discussing Mexico's natural beauty, the Fort Wayne newspaper man said that the most impressive sight was that of the twin volcanoes, Popocatepetl and Exfachuatl. located near Mexico City. He told of approaching them by auto through the mountains, on a cloudy day, and. "as if by magic, the sky cleared suddenly, and standing out in all its glory was that extinct volcano, Popocatepetl, with its summit covered by eternal snows : c'early defined against the horizon. A wispy, purple thread curled upward above the pinnacle, possibly smoke from the crater or merely a ! cloud. One such sight of Popocatepetl, with a further vision of

Etachuatl Is something that one can never forget." Mr. Shea failed to find pleasure in Mexico’s favorite sport the bull-fight-asserting that his preference would continue to be baseball. The speaker declined to touch upon the religious controversy in Mexico, expressing the be’ief that a wellinformed discussion of the subject by a casual v-isitor to Mexico would be impossible.. Rev. Charles M. Prugh was in charge of the program. o—- * Test Your Knowledge | Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page I Four for the answers. J 1. Who was NikoH Vasilievich Gogol? 2. Where is the University of Michigan? 3. What is chocolate? 4. of what country is Kabul the capital ? 5. Name the capital of the province if Milan. Italy. 6. Does Soviet Russia have the same calendar as the United States, 7. Name the extremely, very valuable, bright yellow metal, with a resplendent lustre, with an atomis weight 197.2. 8. Name the capital of Missouri. 9. Who was Frederick Francois Chopin? 10. What is the official position in the U. S. Government of Homer S. Cummings? 0 Spray Eradicates Thistle Ames. la. — (UP) — Perennial weeds, sueh as thistle, creeping jenny, pepper grass and quack grass, ace being eradicated by lowa farmers through applying methods. Sodium chlorate has proved the best remedy. o ApiMtint Birut of VdminiMt rat or No. 330* Notice i» hereby given That the underaiffned has been appointed Administrator of the estate* of James M. Brunnajrraff, late of Adams County, deceased. The estate is probably solvent. Joseph B. Brunnagraff, Administrator l/Tiihurt. Heller and Srhurgrr, Itty* July 18, 1935 July 19-26 Aug. 2 NOTH K TO NoN-KKSIDFNTS In the tdnuiM Circuit Court. Vacation Term. r.KVk Complaint No. 17.33* The Federal Land Bank of Louisville, vs. Carrie <M. Peel et al Now comes the plaintiff, by Arthur E. V«*glewede attorney, and files Iris complaint herein, together with an affidavit that said defendants John Linton, Emma Hanni. Elmer Hanni, W. C. McKelvy are not residents of the State of Indiana; that said action is for foreclosure and that said non-resident defendants are necessary parties thereto. Notice is therefore hereby given said Defendant, last named, that unless they be and appear on the 7th dav of the next term of the Adams Circuit Court, to be holden on the 9th day of September, A. D. 193 d, at the Court House in Decatur in said County and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard an ddetermined in their absence. Witness my name and the Seal or said Court, affixed at Decatur Indiana this 18th day of July A. D. 193 d. David D. Depp, Clerk Arthur E. Voidewede Atty. July 19-26 Aug 2. For Better Health See Dr H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 314 104 So. 3rd st Office Hours. 10 to 12 a /n. 1 to 5 p. m., 6 to 8 p. m. Neurocalometer Service X-Ray Laboratory. MONEY TO LOAN AT NEW LOW RATES You can borrow up to S3OO on your own signature and security, quickly and confidentially — through our new LOW COST personal finance plan. Also investigate our low rate AUTO purchase and refinancing plans. SEE THE ‘‘LOCAL’’ When you need money for any worthy purpose. Full details gladly given without any cost or obligation. Call, write or phone. |OCAL|OAN(o Phone 2-3-7 Decatur. Indiana Over Schafer Hardware Store

” DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, HIA 2f>, IftU

DELAY UTILITY CONTINUED FROM FAGB ONE Wheeler said that Ute conferees, reached a deadlock on the Cohen issue. No progress lias yet is en mode on writing the final form of the bill.. The conference today lasted less than a qquarter of in hour It was in \ secret but apparently atonaiy. The two republican hotise con--tereee, John G. Cooper of Ohio, and PeUr G. Holmes of MossachnsetU, joined Rap. George Huddleston, D., Ala., against Cohen's presence. Rayburn and Rent. Clarence Lea..

navuuill cassia ' - r —— — —. — . . - -.... A _.. .-“ ..... . ... - — : y , W HAWthorne

SYNOPSIS Karen Sire, lovely daughter of the wealthy Maurice Sire, is suspected of murder when her new Filipino servant is stabbed in the back and thrown out of the window of Sires' exclusive Park Asverue apartment. Dick Bannister, young geologist, witnessed the man's plunge from the street. He is greatly attracted to Karen and cannot conceive of her committing the crime. A valuable clasp and girdle are missing from a rare leopard skin robe belonging to Sire. The robe had followed the Filipino in his descent and was badly torn by Dick's airedale. “Bully,’* when Karen's chow. “Napoleon,” tried to take it from him. At the Sire apartment where the inquiry is being held, Captain Boyle leaves Detective “One-Armed” Toole in temporary charge and goes out. Dick finds a stiletto in the aquarium and slips it into his pocket, unnoticed by Toole. Karen is unmoved by the incident. Boyle returns and orders Karen searched. The latter slips her hand into Dick's pocket and relieves him of the dagger, dropping it into Toole’s pocket instead. Finding nothing on the girl, Boyle again leaves. Toole then reveals that he knew all about the finding of the stiletto and Karen’s planting it on him. He refrained from reporting it because he believes her innocent and, besides, he has an old score to settle with Boyle. “OneArmed" explains that, a year ago, he was on the trail of a pair of crooks, Big Jeff Whipple and his sweetheart, Brenda, vowing to lose an arm before he’d let them escape him. They did. and thereafter Boyle called him “One-Armed' Toole, also insinuating that the detective accepted a bribe from Whipple. The detective connects the so-called “Whipple Syndicate” with the present killing, claiming they were after the clasp and girdle. Toole drops the stiletto back into the aquarium. He believes Brenda will try to get it that afternoon. “She’ll want to be around when your dad gets here,” he adds mysteriously. CHAPTER VII The stiletto still reposed in the aquarium and Bannister made up his mind that so long as it remained there, with the possibility of Brenda Whipple’s appearance, he had a right and a duty to stand by. Karen’s apparent indifference to his romantic project of bagging a snow leopard disappointed him; her interest in the Orient seemed to turn chiefly on the kind of women he had met there —the beautiful Eurasians, she mentioned specifically — and Bannister was not just then in a mood for confessions. So he spoke in large and general terms of the hapless position of mixed breeds in the Far East—the males spurned by whites and yellows alike, the females a prey to both. “Poor toys of Fate!” Karen Sighed at this, "Pop has often spoken of them in the same way. They seem to have no place in an orderly world.” “Their social position,” Bannister rejoined jocularly, “is a good deal like that of mules among domestic animals. They have no pride of ancestry or hope of posterity." Toole put in a word. “Born with three strikes on ’em,” he said. “No worse off than you, Toole, ’ Bannister retorted. “You called three strikes on yourself by letting that ‘One-Armed’ stuff get your goat. It’s cooked your goose as a detective.” "Only as a New York City detective,” Toole answered grimly. “I’m going to get Jesf 1 and Branda Whipple on my own.” “Expect an assignment from Miss Sire's father?" "No—on my own, I said. How do I know where the trail will lead?” “Perhaps you’ll find that Pop planned this robbery and murder himself,” Karen thrust in with artless good humor. “Perhaps.” Toole’s lips merely framed the word—he did not utter it. Bannister and the girl watched him as he laid down his knife and patted his right arm. The rollicking spirit with which he had sat down to the feast was gone. He was in the grip of a fixation —the chase, capture and finish of the Whipples, that would make him “One-Armed" Toole no longer.

I D. Cal., stood *«* Wheeler favor-' | mg Colon. President Signs Prison Goods Bill Washington, July 26 — < Vl*» ! President Roosevelt today signed hhe Sumner bill making it a federal offense to »hkp prison made goods into stat, e which forbid shipment of I or sale of such g.uxls. The nev law will extend federal ssistau-e to Staten which desire to keep prison goods out ot their j boarders. It will not affect those I which permit sale of the goods,

Bannister looked at Karen to see if Toole’s implied suspicion of her father had been taken seriously. But she remained serene. “I must go downstairs to meet Pop, ’ she said finally. "I should have gone to the flying field. Don't dare do anything that will keep me away when this mysterious person returns for the stiletto.” In a moment she was on her feet and speeding toward the door leading to the floor below. Toole signalled the serving man to remove the luncheon things. Taking his derby from the aquarium ornament he put it on and gazed into the water. “Huh!” Bannister sneered. Cant

/ sS *X > \ Wiki il IW r ■ IP/ Karen bowed to the reporter, measuring her with a swift but rnieffending eye.

you think without that old bonnet on your dome?” Toole took off the offending lid and laid it on the window sill. ‘‘Take the air, young feller,” he advised. “Nothing is going to happen for a while. Miss Sire will want to be alone with her dad and you’ll be only a kibitzer. I’m going to stick here until my own captain calls me in. Come back, in about a half hour, if you like.” Bannister strode around the room. He hated to leave. Pausing at the aquarium, he gazed down at tbe stiletto for the tenth time, then moved toward the door leading to the stairway. He had reached the middle landing when a tableau arrested him. The servants were drawn up in the wide foyer below. The butler, motionless for a moment, suddenly stepped forward and swung the heavy door inward. Bannister heard a delighted little cry. He caught a fleeting glimpse of a tall, slight man, bronzed as deeply as himself and quite as carelessly dressed, yet of singular distinction; then Karen Sire was burrowing into the newcomer's arms. Maurice Sire had arrived. But he was not alone—a woman of arresting beauty and presence had glided in at his side. Sinuous, vibrant and eager, she paused within the little circle of serving people, her brilliant eyes flashing for a moment as they fell upon Karen, only to drop demurely when the girl’s father turned. Bannister had heard from Hod that Sire’s wife was dead. A picture of this panther-like woman as Karen’s possible step-mother rose unbidden before him. Mere conjecture, of course. The fear was superseded by a thrill—could this woman be Brenda, of the Whipple Syndicate? If so, why her friendly relations with Maurice Sire? Whatever formality attached to Maurice Sire's homecoming was due entirely to the efforts of his Southampton butler, who had drilled his new town staff for the occasion. Sire himself contributed nothing to ft; he spoke familiarly to his chief functionary.- ignoring

. them fr ’in exportexcept to 1 . ( (ippoalng Ing such products into i states. . The legislation climaxed lat m larlfv nroblviiw nffnrtH tO ilA‘ •!’ 1 rounding prison manu.actu r ■ , Ther bid .:wn protests that pr in some ca.es competed with private industry. Under thehw. ’m' ernment will enforce mi< >'’ ( HlM |er which most <>« th” •»« lure d to set up standard, regard ing manufacture and sliipmem ~O^~' Trade in a Good Town - Decatur

. the others with the of a hotel guest and looking ahou. him in the mild curiosity of one entering a strange suite. “Like the place, Karen, he asked i with a caressing touch on her i shoulder. ~ . „ . , "Splendid, Daddy dear, she an- . swered, “yet I’m afraid 111 want to be away from it a long time after what has happened." He became grave. Bad as that, eh’ Well. I’ll do whatever is posi sible for the boy’s parents or de- . pendents. He was a Filipino, they I says.” She glanced toward the butler. “Yes, sir, a Filipino,” put in Mcy-

ers hastily, “not one of my own choosing—the house supplied him temporarily while I was gathering a staff. The boy, we have learned, was a student in a dental college and q casual worker. His folks livq in Manila—there will be no obliga tion—” He stopped abruptly at a slight frown from Miss Sire. Her father had turned his attention to the young woman who had entered the apartment with him. “Karen," he said, “this lady it a newspaper reporter. The house management, it seems, at the suggestion of the police, has excluded the press, and she appealed to me to take her up in the elevator with me. Met me at the curb when I got out of the car. Enterprising, wasn’t it?” Karen bowed to the reporter, measuring her with a swift but unoffending eye. What she saw was a woman past youth, yet without .a mark of her years, which might have been thirty; a well-groomed, modish figure, a strong but handsome face with an artificial smile. Her shimmering black hair was bobbed, skin old ivory, teeth even and white enough, yet with that inindefinable suggestion of skilled treatment by a dentist. “Thank you, so much, Mr. Sire.” Her tone, a little effusive, bore a trace of unfamiliar accent. “I hope Miss Sire will forgive the trickreporters sometimes must use wiles.” Karen bowed again, a little coldly. “Oh, I’m not going to ask for an interview or your picture—just an impression, you know; it’s quite unusual for one to have been so close to a remarkable tragedy. And in such a place.” Her approving eyes rolled a little as they took in the beautiful rooms. Meyers had opened the door in answer to a bell. “Captain Boyle is here, sir,” he announced. “Come in, Captain!” It was Maurice Sire who spoke; he extended his hand as Boyle entered, leading him away from the group. (To Be Continued) Copyright. I«JS. Chrlt EUtrtbuwd by Kl 0t reituro, SnidlMto, Im.

markhreports daily REPORT of local 2nd foreign markets Bradv’s Market for Decatur. Berne, Cralovllle. Hoagland and Willshire. Close at 12 Noon Corrected July 2«No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. tv IMO 120 to HO }he. » 10 140 to ISO lbsISO to 210 tbs•>lo to 250 lbs. * 0 250 to 300 SW '0 350 ILw K< ’ UKhs $6 00 S‘ass , 7 25 VeaJers . wether lambs »<■« Buck lambs a ♦ ' Yearling lambs ——— EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y„ July 26.— (U.RF-lJvestwk: Hogs. S 00; steady; desirable ISO 250 lbs., averaging 170-220 lbs., $11.15 to mostly SU.2O-$H 25 Cattle. 200; plain fed steers. $6 late Thursday;: grass steers to »<l cutter cows. $3 25-$4.50; medium bulls, $5.50-15.85. Calves. 200. vealers higher to $9.58; common auid medium. $6.00Sheep, 650; .’ambo, steady; strictly good and choice ewes and wethers, $5.75; mixed offerings, SB.OO- - FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., July 26— (U.PJ —Livestock: Hogs. 15c higher; 160-200 lbs.. $10.65; 200-225 lbs.. $10.55; 225-250 lbs.. $10.40; 250-275 lbs.. $10.25; 2,0-300 300 lbs., $10.10; 300-350 lbs., $9.90; 150-160 lbs.. $10.40 140-150 lbs., $10.15; 130 140 lbs.. $9.90; 120-1-10 lbs. $9.65; 100-120 lbs.. $9.15; roughs. $8.50; stags. $6.50._ Calves. $750; lambs, $7.75. CLEVELAND PRODUCE Cleveland, Ju'y 26.—(U.PJ ~ l>ro duce: Butter market, weak; extras, 2Sc; standards. 28c. Eggs, market firm; extra whites 25%e; extra firsts, 22c; current re ceipts, 2154 -a Poultry market steady; fowl, 18c; medium fowl, 15fsc: young ducks, 14-15 c; old ducks, 11 12c. Potatoes. Virginia. sl.Bo-$2 pet bbl.; Delaware, $1.20-81.25 per 10l lb. bag. NEW YORK PRODUCE New York, July 26. QJ.PJ —l’r°

duee: i Dressed poultry, firm; (cents per . lb.) turkeys. 19-27 c; chickens. 14 , toilers, 13%-24c; capons. 29-35 c; fowls, 12-22 c; Long Island I ducks, 12-15 c. I Live poultry duV a::d unsettled; || (cents per lb.) geese, 8-9 c; turkeys. J 12-19e; roosters. 13c; ducks. 9-12 c, || fowls, 15-18 c; chickens, IS-22C, || broilers. 15-21 C. I Butter receipts. 10,061 packages. II market weak and unsettled: cream-jI erv higher than extras. 24%-25<: l| extra 92 score. 23%-24c; first 90 to I 91 score, 23%c; first 88 to 89 score I 22-22%c; seconds, 21%-21%c; cen-j| tralized 90 score, 23%c; centralized 88 to 89 score. 22-22%: centralized 84 to 87 score. 21%-21%c. Egg receipts, 12,103 cases; market about steady; special packs, including unusual hennery selections, 2S¥j-30c; standards. 25%-26c; firsts, 24c; mediums, 23c; dirties. 22c; checks, 20-20%c. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE July Sept. Dec. MayWheat 89% .89% .90% »»% (torn . . .83% .76% .63% .66 Oats 36% .32% .33% .36 LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected July 26. No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 73c No. 2 New Wheat, 58 lbs 72c Oats, 32 lbs. test 27c Oats, 30 lbs. test 26c Soy Beans, bushel 60c No. 2 Ye’low Corn, 100 lbs $1.15 | CENTRAL SOYA MARKET No. 2 Yellow Soy Bear.s 60c Delivered to factory — : o Lowell Meyer Orchestra, Sunset, Sunday. GILLETTE TRUCK g TIRES 6 months uncondi- a tional guarantee. ■ Sec us before s _ I you ouy. 2 PORTER JtjC TIRE CO. QJP 341 Winchester street. gfek Phone 1283, S ’to

4b — — g CLASSIFIED 1 advertisements I BUSINESS ( ARh?l and notices’ FOR SALE ] FDR SALK OR TRADE near Genova. Itifi., We)l ■ *| cd. Wilt accept De<»iu r nf 7j| In part payment, a. 1j agaat. ' ..1 FOR SAIJ'I Din, upon tabfej dresser. Phone 1032 i-.J v *** 1M WANTED ' WANTED — To rent a apuitnient, close in. Box 1-M, care Democrat ofe. | ijq WANTED An wishes to do housework. '•n **ii FOR RENT FOR RENT Home, come,Madison. Inquire Marlin Gia residence. j 2S-J7-J LOST ANU FOUND FOUND Some mon> \. Ovnetg haye same by calling at AH Seville home, Decatur. R. 5.

Indiana Salesman B Killed By Tr* Seed. O . July ■ Up, H Berger. 36. a Ga d .ea man. was kill <1 w struck by \\ train at a er."-:-us b. re on 1’ S Mr. and Mrs. v. Dayton. hit< h b. with Berg, r at tit- ■ • , ~p at. Mr-. An-. injuries to h T ■ was not injured. S Berger wa.s idetc a, j found in -Jis pock, »iu h that his wit ', who a \l sv.yM Wis.. be notif <1 State Salaries B Will Be Kevistß Indianup li-« It-I -"-!!■ General revision "• ■ salary ech'siuu - « ■ live next month, ibl ■■■ 'I I' nan. slate bud-’’'' I .i.tnuaß e(i>tnday. $ * *]■ Th) revision«i« - * to nr.ke saiari, - r ’a "W tp<>se paid f'r si.-nila' in )■ ' x ute industry. Biei,a - .1 K Reductions will I - . many instances. •' oihbe increased. Th n-1 v'J;' a decrease. Br ann n •’-I m Rvtekms wil lati tai-MO employes first and ■ tinpkyes of elate .' tsjns. I

« NY Al. ’j White Shoe I CLEANER B Cleans and V- ’ tens ■ Canvas. Kid. Linen I and Buck Shoes I 25c I Holthousc I o d-’ l "- USED CARS ARE CHEAPER AT THOMPSON < HLV. O’not MANY LEFTMAKE YOUR PICK tARL • N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined. Glasses HOURS': 8:30 to 11:30 12 t 0 6 ” Saturdays, 8:00 ;>■ Telopbone Are You Looking For An Investment I have for sale i P ro ? fr ' ty in Decatur that I belie is the best invests “’ will pay the hist anything that I ban* ' found. This is safe and * cure and to the man ing for an investment ', will pay you a 4j U L, that is worth consider • See me for particular'’communications w i held in strict confidenceRoy Johnson Auctioneer Peoples Loan & Trust Watch This Space for Exceptional buyin Real Estate-