Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 189, Decatur, Adams County, 10 August 1935 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

WRENNEWS Mr. und Mr*. Whittington of Van Wert visited Sunday afternoon with .Mrs. F. L. Preatidge. They wen* *o com pan ted home by thair daughter Joan who has been the guest of Mtee Helen Prestidge. Miea Mabel Eddy cailad on Mm. Harry Ferry Sunday afternoon. July twenty fifth marked the fifty sixth wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. J at ph Spahr of thlsqdace. A large circle of relatives and friend* attended the funeral of Mr. A. C. Carter, which wae held in the U. B. church of Wren Saturday afternoon. Mtesea Eata Tumbles on and Frances Standfford attended the social at Calvary church Friday evening and contributed to the program with a number of vocal and guitar •selections. Mr. and Mre. Wm Hower of Barberton are guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Shilling and son Arden. Mrs. Hower is a brother Os Mrs. Shilling. Mr. and Mrs. Westrick and family -motored to Fort Wayne Sunday where they visited with friends. The Woman's Missionary society of the U. B. church met Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Lloyd Callow. • Audry Dull spent Saturday afternoon with Jeane DeVinney. Relatives of the Standiford-Faulk-ribr families will meet August 25 at the H. M. Standiford home in Wren. Mrs. Ad* Harr, Mrs. Gaddis and . little daughter of Tulsa, Okla, are visiting Mrs. Harris father, Oliver Sheets. Miss Edith Swoveland, who is employed in the Clem home spent Sunday with her mother Mrs, Della Swoveland. Misses Esta Tumbleson and Frances Standiford spent Tuesday in Fort Wayne where they rendered an audition at Station WOWO. An interesting program in charge of the ’young people was given Sun- j xlay evening at the R. W. B. church

: L AUCTION SALE *“■ I will offer for sale by public auction, MONDAY, AUGUST 12, 1935 commencing at 6:00 o'clock p. m. -*♦ the late residence of Henrietta Ray, rt Monroe, the following household goods and personal property: One garden plow; fork; shovel; lawn mower; 1 wash stand; 1 Zilresser; bookcase; 3 leg stand; wardrobe, solid walnut; wood bed, •complete with springs and mattress; 2 iron beds complete; day bed; 1h(I tick: set of chairs; 3 rocking chairs; 2 stands; bureau; Davis Stewing machine; Premier electric sweeper; porch swing; carpet; »2 corner cupboards, solid walnut; 2 clocks; healing stove; cook stove; oil stove; oven; kitchen cabinet; linoleum; small rug#; electric and llat irons, and many miscellaneous articles. , A good deal of the above is antique furniture. TERMS—CASH. THOMAS D. KERN, Executor Engle, Auctioneer Earl Souders, Clerk ■w s PAY City Light Bills NOW City Light bills for the month of July are ready and can be paid now. ] ! ■' i • ( 'I We earnestly ask you to cooperate in paying light bills as early in the month as possible as it will relieve both yourself and city hall ! ! employees of inconvenience and delay at the ! time bills are due. ! [ :; PAY BILLS AT ; I City Hall w

-THIMBLE THEATER A DAY IN THE INTEREST OF FARMING BY SEGAR r POPEYE, A LOT OF OUR \ OH, W GORSW Y , gO I VAM COMPLETELY \ [‘VAM 700 .VfiSr' e s) P ' m MEN ARE DOWN ON \ I BET THET ALL ,J g 7AM ) KkUs MF.SHEEPS GO\ I HOO 7 niSrl <0 * ■ THE BEACH WATCHING I - THAT GAL OVER ON THE M OVER TO HER o ]| r— MEANWAR* I’LL BLOW/ ,/ . Y : : W < j®r vw--,,. Wr z-xJKy i®' C A .^_^--<- z. - ■ - * -YA 'T / 11 T * ltil *’W*i L li’Mfr . \X\ ( \ \»*'.lCTa '.iJl —1- . — ,7..., , .„,,

In Wren. Reginald Clifton whio re-1 cently graduated from the school | for the blind In Columbus, gave an interesting talk. Choosing as his subject "Making a living or making J a life.” Miss Edna M. Lautsenheisar. ac- . compand'd by 'her ooasin* Misses . Maxine Suhm and Mtrgarst Stucky all of Fort Wayne spent Sunday with her parents Mr. and Mr*. Sidney Lautaeinheteer. Misses L»autzenheiaer and Stucky are student® at the Warner beauty college in Fart Wayne. I Mr. and Mrs. Donald George, eon Stanley and daughter Bitty Jane, i . have returned to their home in i . Soldiers Grove, Wisconsin, after' epending a week In the Jesse Dull home in Wren. Mia* George la a ( sister of Mrs. Dull. Doyt Calhan, who is employed in Fort Wayne spent Sunday with his 1 parentis. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Callan. | Miss Viola Dull of Fort Wayne i spent a few days with her parents . Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Dull. Wren Grange A meeting of Wren Grange was I held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.' G. M. Standiford and daughter Frances, Monday evening of last week. After a business session a short musical program was given. Regalia purchased by the Grange was then presented by O. M. Stewart. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Kerns and Harold Claypool of Wetgel grange. The next meeting will be August 19 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Shilling and son Arden. The following program hae been arranged. Song from Patman: Bud and Bloom. Rollcall: My favorite vegetable. Violin solo, Rolf McWilliams. Work 1 like best on the farm Floyd Myers. Report of recent trip to Washington D. C. Frances Standiford. Special music orchestra Stunts Mr. and Mrs. 0. M. Stewart. Refreshments. ————— o- 1 — Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

SCOUTS TO EDIT JAMBOREE DAILY Washington. •— (U.R) — A tabloid newspaper with a circuitaion estimated at 50,000 daily will be published by Boy Scout editors at the first National Boy Scout Jamboree here. August 21-30. The "Jamboree Journal" will be edited entirely by Boy Scouts and their leaders who are members of Boy Scout Press Clubs, it was ani nonneed. AP have had some exper- ! fence in journalism either through . the publication of Scout newspapers or working for scholastic publications or community newspapers. In addition, there will be Ifcout photographers and cartoonlists. While the Janlboree opens Aug. 21. the first issue of the daily will .report the arrival of the Jamboree contingents and last minute preparations for the formal opening. Ths "Jamboree Journal" will be printed in Washington. It will go to press shortly before midnight and will be distributed to the 28 sectional camps before breakfast. Each section comprises 34 troops, and each troop consists of 33 Boy Scouts and three adult leaders. In addition to the copies sold to those participating in the Jamboree, the paper is providing subscriptions for Scouts and Scouters throughout the nation, who could not take part -In the Jamboree. It is also planned to circulate the paper at hotels in Washington. The "Jamboree Journal" plans to omit the news of the world, leaving that to regular newspapers in Washington. It will, however, endeavor to carry as much news of the Jamboree as is possible. The Scout journal will contain the complete daily programs, cartoons and sketches, special Jamboree comic strips, and special feature articles. The paper will also carry advertising. The twelfth and final daily edition will be published the morning of Aug. 31, containing full reports of the national grand pageant and the national grand closing exercises. o*Many Reunions Scheduled For Summer Months « Sunday, August 11 Fruchte family reunion, Sunset park, east of Decatur. Nineteenth annual reunion of Hutker family, Lakeside park, Fort Wayne. Indiana. Tenth annual Steele reunion, Sunset park. Rettig and Roehm reunion, Sunset park, east of Decatur. Feasel-Ruby reunion, Legion MeI mortal Park, Decatur. Twenty first annual Tumbleson I family Aunion, Hanna-Nuttman park, Decatur. Twelfth annual Durbin family re- | union, Legion Memorial Park, Decatur. Annual reunion of Hitchcock fa- : mily, Watt, Ohio. Sunday, August 18 Butler family reunion, Sunset I .park, east of Decatur. I Fifth annual Weldy reunion, Mr. I and Mrs. Elton Rupright, three ! miles north and two and one half I i miles west of Preble. Salem M. E. church homecoming I Blue Creek township. Annual Weldy reunion, Elton I Rupright home. Crist reunion. Huntington. Twentieth annual Limeetall-Mar-I tin reunion, Peter Helmrich home, i one half mile west of Magley. August 18—Hacaman and Korteni ber. Hakes reunion, Legion Memorial I Park, Decatur, Sunday, August 25. Bhing>er Reunion, Sun Set park, ' Sunday August 25. Meyer family fifth reunion, SunI set ipark, rain or shine. oi DEVICE TO CUT COSTS OF PLANE TESTS CREATED — I CULVER CITY, Cal. <U.R)—Costly wind tunnel equipment for te<sti ing airplane wing sections may be I eliminated by a new method de- . signed here by David Davis, inventor. Comprising a wing section mounted above a speeding automobile, and a 40-tuhc manometer within the car, the new device

DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1«35.

obtains readings of airflow and drag by means of pressure gauges connected to small orifices on the | wing surface. A pictorial account of the tests Is obtained on a sensitised chart held securely against the gauges of the manometer. Distribution of air currants and lift and resistance caused by wing sections are measured by the new device, which Davis declares is nearing perfection after two years of secret experimentation. Result* obtained in numerous tests are said to be as satisfactory as those conducted with scale models in wind tunnels. Navy officers and Department of Commerce officials have witnessed demonstrations of the new

—. « . I ■■ ' t hio.- n dm Chris 1

CHAPTER XXII Karen sprang to her feet, her lithe young body quivering, her face illumined under its golden nimbus of hair. Her eyes became iridescent stars; she seemed to melt away from flesh and change to a being without substance. “.4 homeland for the disinherit ed!" she cried, “A hope for the hopeless! Do you laugh at that? ’ The -captain's mouth fell open; the outburst bewildered him. Karen Sire was no longer a girl, no longer the coddled child of a Croesus father. The new evangel seemed to have come to her suddenly as a vital message. To Anderson it had been the mere vaporing of a Levantine spell-binder. “Oh, come back to earth! he expostulated. “All this stuff is juat simply the patter of a demagoguea mouthful of nothing. I think likely this fellow Whipple has his hand in it.” Karen stared at him. And Prince Jura Bai —was he in it. she asked. Captain Anderson became nervous. “I’m not fully informed on the personnel of this racket, he evaded. "But, as I say, you must keep away from Alexandria while it’s in process. Your father’s orders are unmistakable on that point. When Karen caught the word “racket” her head went up suddenly. “Are these people being exploited for money?” she asked in evident dismay. Anderson merely shrugged. “Isn’t it usual for these prophets to fix a certain date for fulfillment say, for example, the time when those poor people will meet their, queen?" Karen persisted. “Oh, that’s all fixed! Its about the first of October by our calendar, less than a month away. That s whv I'm telling you Alexandria won’t be a safe place for a young ladv from now on. Dismiss that idea from your head—get off at Gibraltar and go home to your father. He'll be worried about you. “Where is Mr. Whipple?” Karen asked abruptly. “He hasn’t shown himself since we started." “And he won’t until we reach Alexandria,” Anderson replied. “Whipple has orders to keep close to his stateroom. He has the choice of obeying or going to the brig. He's a prisoner by request of two governments—British and American ’* The Captain leaned over her. He became impressive. “You are to be guarded night and day, sleeping and waking.” , , "I don’t seem to be in a very much better position than Mr. Whipple, "You are the ward of a sea lord—that is, myself. It hurts me terribly to say this, Miss Sire, but my orders are plain. You are like a princess incog on board this ship, shielded from intrusion, yet hampered in your own movements.” “A princess incog l ." Karen laughed. “Well, I’d rather be that desert queen leading those poor people you told me about." Karen’s light vein deserted her instantly when Captain Anderson left her. Geoffrey Whipple under arrest! Toole’s doings, of course. Undoubtedly. Whipple was on board to recover the precious parchments she had abstracted from his folioBut if Captain Anderson thought, as apparently he did think, that she would submit to being caged like a pigeon and sent home from Gibraltar he was vastly mistaken. The bulk of her funds, however, were in the purser’s rafe with the documents; the Captain, no doubt, would have the money transferred with her to a New York bound ship. The story of the strange prophet who was gathering followers for a hegira to southern Asia was not a mere bogey tale to frighten her av.-ay from Alexandria, Karen felt. Did the Captain suspect—had her father told him by wireless—that she, herself, was the mysterious sprig of royalty who was to come out of nowhere and magically create a homeland for a disinherited people? What was the whole story contained within those age-worn parchments? Only a part of the

I method which the Inventor dej dares will cut wind tunnel costs one-fiftieth. ... ' -o- — — Hay Truck Spraads Fire ' Stevens Point. Wls. (U.RF A. L. Laskowski was an unprofitable cus1 tomer of a gasoline station here 1 when he drove in with about a • ton and » half of on hl " <ru ' k 1 ' tipped over a pump which ignited i 1 from short circuiting its electric | wires. Hastening away Laskowski, tipped oven another pump which helped feed the fire. , I - i i 1 "O' 1 It’a Chicken Picking or Elea ■! Tiffin. O. (U.R> — Friends who' testified a Tiffin man "couldn,ti stand" chicken feathers and it, “hurt his hands" to pluck them | couldn’t get him Jmck on the

scrolls had been deciphered by f . Abbe Bergere. her father’s “spin- i 5 tnal agent” in that strange land ( , beyond the Himalayas. ‘ Karen had expected to make her way quietly to the very spot der scribed in the ancient writings, to visit Abbe Bergere on his lonely . mountain and learn the whole * truth from him. What then might ’ befall remained in the lap of the ■ gods. But how was she to escape the P net her father had flung across the ( Atlantic? Could she persuade him , to relent, now that Whipple was j safely in charge? Probably not. Suppose she managed to escape. . What could she do without funds? Her father held the purse-strings f . and he certainly would not finance v this hoity-toity adventure of hers. t In a stroll about the deck, Karen ; Sire encountered Kinnaird Clark, i the first officer. During their stay g in the roadstead he had lingered I below decks, keeping a look-out on ' three Greek deportees. “You can’t tell when these fellows will pop overboard and swim for it,” he exi plained. “Fugitives from justice . naturally have no yearning for : repatriation.” . He found Miss Sire only mildly i interested in this. “Wonder if I ’ couldn’t have Mr. Whipple for din- | ner?” she asked. “How will you have him—i boiled or roasted?” Clark laughed. “That fellow is in my charge, too —he’s an international racketeeer. I wouldn’t permit him to sit at a table with you even if he had legirons on him." “Yet he seemed to enjoy complete , liberty in New York.” Clark became mysterious. “They got something on him since he boarded this ship,” he said cautiously “His valet is under detention with him.” A shadow fell between them. A little brown man, with his right V arm in a sling, was standing a fejv v feet away. From the look on his b face he might have been a fiend n paroled from perdition for some s mission that no mortal man could u be found to undertake. a “Back aft and stay there!” fi snapped Clark. f The little man started away, his a head turning as if on a pivot to survey Karen Sire. Even in the p bright sunlight some dark terror b seemed to radiate from him. h “Whipple’s valet,” said Clark c when the fellow had disappeared. V Karen Sire had been ready to make any reasonable concession to Whipple if only he would satisfy Q her curiosity regarding the scrolls n she had taken from his portfolio and why the unfortunate Prince sacrificed his life in an effort to a get the leopard robe and the girdle. |, A partial translation of the a documents had been made in t French—with all its fine-spun nu- 0 ances, never an easy tongue for her to master. Aided by a bi-lingual v dictionary she had managed to get 0 the gist of some passages. In her locked and guarded room, , Karen picked up the written re- . suits of her labored efforts. She ' found some meaning and coherence ? in this: J "And for the white pris- C oners who had become his 1 paladins and fought under his ' banner against the T urhs, c Genghis Khan did give in fee 8 simple the mountain walled = valley of Sira, that they might keep pure the blood of their ' fathers and not mix with the Mongol. For so great of heart < was the Emperor of All Men I 1 that he yielded bach their pride of race as a thing t worthy to be held sacred. i And with their women they t did enter this valley, driving i herds of horses, of asses, of 1 goats. . . 1 Here followed what probably j was an account of the upbuilding j I of a pastoral kingdom extending , over a period of two centuries. j > Karen’s lexicon yielded little to i I enlighten her on this writing. In- i deed, it was only her generous in- i ■ fusion of imagination that enabled i her to give form to the first pas- > sago. Yet another vagrant para-

FERA rolls. County Renci H p Boulboulle dropped the man because ho was "too busy working. for the FERA" to take a sl--a--week job hj* a chicken picker. Glaaa Supports Elephant Toledo. O. (U.R> -<T“" 80 B ‘ ron “ It has been used as a diving board and to support an elephant la being manufactured n Toledo. Th! i latest product ot the flat Kla»» in ’ dustrv Is Identical in its chemical 'composition to ordinary glass. It is known as tampered, or heattreated glass. Wasps Blamgd for Error Poplar Bluff. Mo., — <UP>— 1 Hillte. centerfielder, chased a fly ' into a colony of wasps. One of the insects climbed up his trouaera leg.

graph had not wholly eluded her uncertain grasp. Freely translated (with abundant guessing and interpretation) it read: "Thus the king, false to the oath of his forebears, did bring back to the valleys captives of his forays. And there were Turks among them, and East Indians and T artars. Their women did become concubines of the white men in the Sira valley and they did beget a brood without pride es race, without honorable tradition and lacking in vision for the future." It was this passage that macle Karen Sire’s heart stand still. It was light upon this that she hopeo to draw from Geoffrey Whipple in her effort “to have him for dinner." Was she herself of the despised origin? Again she stumbled on through her painfully transcribed script: "And the absconding king did flee from the wrath of those who yet had blue eyes and hair of gold and he did become a freebooter of the desert beyond the Sira valley, making strong the passes to the domain and plundering all caravans that sought to make peaceful trade with the kingdom ha had betrayed. They named him the ’Scourge of Tibet' and did call down upon his head the wroth of God. But in His Eternal Eye the time was not ripe for the man and women with blue eyes and golden hair. The ‘Scourge of Tibet' did engulf them and take their herds and with fire and sword did make of their land a desert. Who was this absconding king? Was the desert scourge the man of whom her great-grandfather had boasted? She turned to a parchment sheet that showed the least sign of age but which remained untranslated. This scroll was abundantly decorated with curious figures, among them (and most frequently recurring) a snow leopard, colored in faded pigments. Here, Karen felt sure, lay the prophecy. Somewhere within this baffling scroll dwelt the secret of her own ancestry. Whatever it contained was known to Brenda Whipple; it was known to Geoffrey Whipple; it had been known to Jura Bai; it was known to the fanatical rabble now gathering from the four corners of the earth to occupy the Sira Valley. But it was not known to her. Did her father know? Was he ashamed of it? Even in her superficial study of anthropology at school, Karen had learned that much of this talk about “pure white stock” was historic hokum. She knew the dubious origin of many northern European peoples. Further, she understood, vhat few actually know anything of their own grandparents. Why, then, had she erected this bogey barrier against herself? Why had she permitted Bannister to beat his hands in vain against its adamant walls? Simply this: the remoteness of it all had been dispelled by the harsh words of Brenda Whipple. Even yet, Karen was not sure that the dimness of centuries had obliterated the bar sinister . . . Whom did the “absconding king” take to wife when he fled to the desert? Who were his sons and the sons of his sons? Tartars all? And did they come down to any recent generation as wild desert men? Was there a pigtail, a slant eye and a yellow face grinningly alive in the family during her father’s time and her own? Bannister! He was a white man with ideals and a fixed code to rule his life. Would he find out when too late, that there might be something abhorrent in the girl to whom he had offered his love? Y es, she must go on now—on on to the Sira (Sire) Valley; even if she went with the squalid caravans and ate camel’s meat and drank rank water from goatskins. (To Be Continued) CoMTtaht, 1f35, Chri» Wawthom« Distributed by Hint Feature* Syndicate. Ine

. Teammates form d a protective, circle while Hillte danced out of the I coufiuing clothing. Hadid not catch the fly. MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL ANO FOREIGN MARKETS Brady's Market for Decatur, Berne, Cralgvllle, Hoagland and Willshire, Close at 12 Noon Corrected August 10 No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. 100 to 120 lbs * 9 !i0 120 to 140 lbs 10 <0 140 to 160 lbs 10 00 160 to 210 lbs 11 210 to 250 lbs 11 - 20 250 to 300 lbs. t 0.70 300 to 350 lbs Roughs Stags - * T, ®° Vealers Ewe and wether lambs — 17-75 Buck lambs Yearling lambs — —— t East Buffalo Livestock Hogs, 200; nothing done on late arrivals, undertone sharply lower, weeks trade 75c to 21 higher, desirable 180 to 225 lbs., $12.65, highest in six years. Cattle. 150; all grade steers and yearlings 50c to 21 higher early in week, minor losses toward close; strictly good to choice yearlings $11.50, most good steers and yearlings $10.25 to $10.75, fat grassens $8 to $0.50. Plain steers and heifers $6.50 to $7.75. Flesny cows $5.15 to $5.75; cutters $3.50 to $1.85; medium bulls $5.25 to $5.60. Calves 100; vealers closed SI.OO oyer last week, $ll.OO down. Sheep 700. lambe, steady at week’s 25c advance, good to choice ewes and wether lumbs $9-9.25. Ewes fully 50c higher, better grades $4.25. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind.. Aug. 10. —(U.R) — Hogs, steady 4o 25c lower; 160200 lbs., $11.65: 200-225 lbs.. $11.55; 225-250 lbs., $11.40; 250-275 lbs., $11.20; 275-300 lbs., $11.05; 300-350 lbs., $10.80; 150-160 lbs., $11; 140150 lbs.. $10.75; 130-140 lbs... $10.50; 120-130 lbs. $10.25; 100-120 lbs., $10; roughs, $9.50; stags, $7.75; calves, $9.50; lambs, $8.25. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected August 10 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 79c No. 2 New Wheat, 58 lbs 78c Oats, 32 lbs. test 24c Oats, 30 lbs. tetst 23c Soy Beans, bushel . 50 to 60c No. 2 Yellow Corn, 100 lbs $1.12 Rye 40c CENTRAL SOYA MARKET , (No. 2 Yellow Soy Beans 60c Delivered to factory 0 Old Coin Unearthed Eastham, Mass. — (U.R) —While plowing his garden, Arthur Morey unearthed a coin probably lost by some early pioneer. Dated 1720, it was inscribed with the words “Ca.rlos IV.” On the reverse side were the royal crest and the word ' “Hispaniola." o ■— - - Baby Born in Manger Barnesville. O.— (U.R.' —As in the story of the Christ Child, a son was ■ born in a stable to Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Sonners, transients. They ! took possession of an unoccupied . stall at the race track, where the child was delivered without medical attention. Towns-peoplc supplied food and clothing. , —o Meanest Thief at Work Again Concord. N. H. (U.RJConcord's . nomination for the meanest thief i goes to the man who stole especial--1 ly-filed glasses of Wi’liam Canty, 1 55, partially blind and jobless. Sprague offers Simmons Beds. ■ Springs and Mattresses, Studio Couches at t prices you can afford to pay, SPRAGUE F URNITURE CO. 152 S. Second St. Phone 199 I N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyea Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS. 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to b.OO Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135.

CLASSIFIED ■( advertisement®’ BUSINESS ( AR|>J|. AND NOTICES WJ FOR SALE | Here are some real hot Gamble's managers have r jß| for their Aug. 2nd to i7 th ~*3 2 gal. 100% Penn. Oil, gal. tractor grade I’mn. ineL i steel drum and tax. **su.sn, plete Ford "A" & chev. $ lining sets, 59c; Rebuilt Pings, 13c each, tube 7c; 1011 b. Axle grease, piece end wrench set, Hugo Claussen, owner. ! FOR SALE—Tan In good condition. 46. Monroe. j FOR SALE—2 used manure spreaders; trie motors; 6 cultipai k< is hoes. Seo the mwl'i'Hl you buy. (Taigville i;..., , FOR SAI ,E- Refr ge eondition. Low priee i nr Phone 307.FOR SALE — Cooking and 50 cents. Trick.- , route 5. Phone 869-11. LOST AND FOUXM LOST —Three keys cn nug er please return ii. l»e H office. tg STRAYED Kemah pc?.< has several scars on ! a< k. 1 Bumper. Notify Mrs. Kay R. 3 and receive reward. is LOST Gnu n v r M. engraved on b.u k lid Fj please return to IFnincrat ward. 18$ WANTED J WANTED Unl'uii :-h-■' ■ < six room house or small a mom for two adults ; j Write Box 201. Itei.ui; Wanted—LADlES NOTh F? B Stahlhut of Laura Heautv 9 Fort Wayne, will he at Bid 3 Beauty Shop Wedn. i.r. \ i 11. Cail ll'B'l for .i j WELL KNOWN (h . - <uiCH turer will select young men. m. i hat a for spocializeil ■ramma ii \ ’ ditioning anil lb fr:la'i.-n Those chosen w:P be tieal exporiom ■■ umb .gfl vision o’ which so .v. ■ . For detailed -n ' fully giving age. pi.-hi ’ ment. phone ami c. .\ddress Box li II • • • -—-—-—o — — - nm * Test Your hnewk'dgH I Can you answer c ven cl lii-wB ten questions? Turn to I Four for the answers. uXt • s 1. Where is th" H"-■: 2. What is the rm.tr.' of the ’ier clock used by the (hecks 'Romans? 'i 3. Is a pair of twins m■■ •children? ’j 4. Who pr scribed b ’ tan calendar? 'I 5. Who wrote "White pany?” B 6. Which state is "Show Me” state? JB 7. Name the author of ’he ’ I “The Green Goddee- " ' 8. Name the countv ..ratß| • Cuyahoga county, Ohio. 9. In which country are M 1 cities of Bruges and '■ ’ |B 10. Name the soul | the Windward Islands, West Indies. Bi 0 Bw Murals Adorn Jewish Chicago.—(U R) T. ii ’■ fl ' resenting the T< n 1 " K the first ever to up?’ 11 vvi: ’ Jewish church, will mb ■ 'hr "BH of a newlv compb • here. Jewish law l ! < 1,11 of images, ami the c been strictly ent'ore-’d ages. B Vault Defies Expert M West Plains. Mo. 'UT. Little. St. Loiii'. sat" ' " ed three days and »•' ■ ""‘■"'’'B open the 18,000-pound " ■’> »W safe In the West Plain- B bank borrowed mom ’ " ’“''B business until fund. I"'" 1 ' reserve banks in Si>rui.:"eM M St. Louis I i GILLETTE TRUCK tires 6 months unconditlonal guarantee. ‘JS Sec us before | t ■■ you ouy- lAB PORTER TIRE CO. 341 Winchester itreeG KM Phone 1-c? g Jg