Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 196, Decatur, Adams County, 19 August 1935 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

I , . --■ —, _ - — 4 Tsst Your Knowledge j ...» cw j ou answer aevan of these tea questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. i I—Name the capital of the State of ’tSJ i,,ia ' Mexico. >;-r4s (hte aun a stag-? was Nell Gwyn? 9~4w the sun a star? an uI 5. •"What is the name for the sateHfie of any planet? i.-a'lio named the Pacific ocean? T. J *fc’ho was William Wilkie Collins3~» iTStfoM the marriage of an aliaflFman to a woman oitizea of. thß Halted States confer American cithtjjship upon the husband? 9. «*Vltat Is a gymkhauia? is a widgeon? I.' What are the constituents of gunpowder? X,- What was the name of Lot’s wife? y*Name the capital of Uruguay 4. -rtVliat is chiromancy? 5. - Who was Samuel Taylor Coierfilge? t What does pomiform mean? 7 jA'hore is the state of Gwal- j lort~~" 8.-—What mountains lie in the; Mlß?sfcippi valley between the Missouri and the Arkansas rivers?' Name the capital of Vermont. tfr What was George Washingtorfyyi id die name? o CSfpe Town in Letter Chain fZ — p Ifysville. Kans.—(U.R>— Eugene 1 1 anjjforene Stewart of this city |1 recently received two chain letters

Public Auction THURSDAY EVENING, AUG. 22 -7 P.M. HORSES. MILCH COWS, SHEEP, BROOD SOWS AND SHOATES 200 Chestnut Fence Posts Miscellaneous articles. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES E. J. AHR and FRED C. AHR, Managers Johnson & Doehrman, Aucts. W. A. Lower. Clerk. PUBLIC SALE 5-ROOM HOUSE-5 We. the undersigned, will sell at public auction, on the premises at 646 Cleveland st.. 'Decatur. Ind., on MONDAY, AUGUST 26,1935 At 6:00 P. M. 5 room house, in good state of repair, garage, cistern, large garden spot, an ideal little home, will sell without reserve. Note: To anyone interested in buying a good home or , looking for an investment, here is another opportunity. Dbh’t pass this up. Values are increasing daily. The rent , you pay will soon buy you a home. Don't delay. Buy now. Terms—l-3 cash, 1-3 in 30 days. 1-3 in 90 days. C. H. Brokaw and Cordula Brokaw, Owners Roy S. Johnson, auct. : Public Auction 7 Room House and Household Goods At the residence of the late Sarah E. Baker. 216 South i Sth st., Decatur, Ind., on SATURDAY, AUGUST 21th Commencing at 1:30 P. M. 7 room frame house in good repair. New roof. Arcola heating plant. Small barn. Cistern. Good garden, fruit trees and flowers. Any one wanting a good home here is an opportunity. TERMS—S3OO.OO cash. Balance $15.00 per month. 6% interest. Household ’Goods Range cook stove; Kitchen cabinet: Drop leaf walnut table; several rocking chairs; Dining table and chairs; side board; Bed complete: 2 three-quarter beds complete; Antique Dresser: Oak dresser; Sewtkg Machine; two Axminster rugs 11-3x12-6; small rugs and carpets:' old fashion stands: hall tree: commode: sofa: step ladder: dishes: bed clothes; curtains; cooking utensils: small tools, and many articles too numerous to mention. . -TERMS—CASH. MRS. JOHN D. STULTS, Owner ItqjCyS. Johnsdn. Auct. W: A. LoM-er. clerk.

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“THE COURT JESTER” BY SEGAR VIHY YOU LOOK V l GOT TAt' 1 PjUST sf>i< U)HEN IDORRY) f TOPR DO FUNUY FACE -X 1/ YOU NO LAUGH’.J '< V a R LIKE YOU LOOK ND ICTIPATfON GET QAD—" TROUBLE-7 MAKE SU)EET PAL LAUGH-) ( HAH‘. I FiX — / I (WW&OUS. ARF*. ARF‘ iNO HAPPY? T? ALOES- HUMPHPT- POOcY < , HOLD YOU LIKE THIS / \T° ftß V° QES V < S f®5S. \W. TO AR, YA Do ME k -~'r^- x 7 lYftM SAO- TO YOU FROM ME" > \ONE? YOU LAUGH, HAH?) FACE r'"' (kOOK) <_ -=- isO MUCH GOOD? f \J7AM ißkeO \be happy, you sAvvyy "" '' «T? "j»r ««k T ■? Js—££r a v«B> ■Ob j ' Ik HSk -Am Bmm Bak Ji MBM ML & i KHr u K 3 r" K \ i K -3| 1 Mt--, 1 - 1 xJB B ■ a '■ b I RinMB&MHOS@L— I ' C ■-•~ < -Zj

. from Cape Town, South Africa. | Each letter contained six pence in J British money orders and were ■. mailed June 21. o , ITALY FLATLY » CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ’da he chajice that Great Britain may find some way to exert the i tremendous influence of the etnj pire In the interest of peace. In addition Adolf Hitler of Germany has a chance In cooperation with France or Britain, or both, to , take a stand which might alter the entire course of events. : Mussolini broke up the threepower negotiations here of France, Britain and Italy yesterday when i he curtly rejeoted a French-Brit-ish plan for peace and in failing !io offer an alternative proposal, 'left no basis for talk of anything but war. The three power conference started Friday, it was to last ten days or more. A French-British plan which would have given Italy virtual control of Ethiopia through economic, territorial and political concessions, was submitted to Mussolini Friday night. All day Saturday, the French ■and British waited for his reply, j Yesterday morning Baron Pompeo ! Alois!, chief Italian delegate, conferred with Premier Lava. 1 . Then Anthony Eden and Sir Robent Xansittart of Britain talked to Laval. i At 3:30 p. ni. the Uhree delegations conferred. Aloisl during bis conference told the French and British delegates [that Italy rejeoted their proposals and had nothing to offer but Mussolini's previous demand for absolute domination of Ethiopia, politically and militarily.

SIX SLIGHTLY HURT IN CRASH 1 Autos Collide At Road Intersection Mile South Os Decatur Six priwons were slightly Injured in an automobile collision nt the lnt< rc'ction of V. 8. highway 27 and I lie extension of 13th street one mile south of Decatur, Saturday noon. A car driven by W. L. Foreman of east of Bcßrne with Mr. Foreman's grandson. Richard as a passenger. approached from the south on 27 when an automobile coming on U. S. highway 27 on the extension of Winchester atneet made the turn to the left at Chick's place. The Foreman car wwe forced to the east side of the road and going through the intersection, struck an automobile occupied by Dr. E. P. Houk of Portland, ibis wife and son and an unidentified person. The Houk automobile was parked on the drive at th? Schnepp filling station. None of the occupants of either car was seriously injured although all received numerous cuts and bruises. Both of the automobiles were damaged and neither was insured. —_o Coal Measure Passage Brings Market Break New York. Aug. 19.—<U.R>—Passage of the Guffey coal bill by the house today brought heavy selling, into it he stock market. Traders dumped stocks in fear the whole must legislation program would go through congress. Prices broke as much as two points. Tickers were : four minutes late. o— NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIE* In the matter of determining the Tax Rates for certain purposes by the Civil Town of Monroe, Adams County Indiana. Before the Board •of Trustees. Notice is hereby given the Taxpayers of the Civil Town of Monroe. Adams County, Indiana, that tne| proper legal officers of said munici- I pality, at their regular meeting place on the 3rd day of September. 1*35,1 will consider the following budget: Salaries I 275.00 | Police Dept. 70.001 Fire Dept. Expense & supplies 200.00 Buildings repair & supplies 150.00 Legal Services 50.00 Health Officer .... 35.00 Officials Bond 30.00 Office Sup. & Exp. 40.00 Miscellaneous 156.4 H) Estimate* »»$ I'uuila to he Raised Estimates of Expenditures as above $1906.94 Less Estimated Revenue, other than taxation 407.52 Amount necessary to be raised by taxation . I 599.32 Pro ported Letien Net Taxable property $166,480.00 General Fund 599.32 Proposed Levy on each SIOO.OO .36 (<» an partitive Statement of Taxes 4'olleeied and to he Collerted Collected by levy of year 1933 604.63 Collected by levy of year 1934 561.92 Collected by levy of year(l93s 560.03 To be Collected by levy of year 1936 599.32 Taxpayers appearing shall have the right and will be heard thereon After the tax levies have been determined, ten or more taxpayers feeling themselves aggrieved by such levies may appeal to the State Board of Tax C >mmissioners of Indiana for further and final action thereon by filing a petition therefor with the County Auditor not later than the fourth Monday In Septeml»er 1935 and said State Board will fix a date of hearing in this County. Dated this 16th day of August 1935 Martin L. Hoffman Otho Lobensteln A. D. Crist Board of Trustees Attest: Earl L. Sauders, Clerk. Aug. 19-26 O Trade in a Good Town — Decatur MONEY TO LOAN AT NEW LOW RATES You can borrow up to S3OO on your own signature ami security, quickly and confidentially— through our new LOW COST personal finance plan. Also investigate our low rate AU’i'O 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(°' Phone 2-3-7 Decatur, Indiana Over Schafer Hardware Store

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, AUGUST 19,193 ).

'LARGEST BLIMP I ADDED TO AM . I Washington.— (U.fi) — A tactical training airship, faster, larger and better-equipped than those now In! army service, has been comp’eted' by the Air Corps at Scott Field, ■ 111., and wil Ibe test d soon. The Scott Field station Is the only place equipped to erect, test, alter and deflate lighter-than-ai-r- --' craft now In use by the Air Corps. “The main advantages of this > new ship over the older ones are its higher speed and bigger capacity," said Lieut. Col. Frank M. Kennedy, air corps commanding officer of Scott Field, wheti he visited Washington. Built at Cost of $200.0C0 The new ship, which will be ;

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CHAPTER XXIX Abbe Bergere left the room I •nd presently reappeared with a jug and three glasses. These he set upon a table. “You’ve dropped down from the sky on the tenth anniversary of my exile here," he explained amiably. “This liquor is my own make—an ancient prerogative of monks. I distilled it from berries and seeds gathered in the ! small oasis below us.” The Abbe filled the glasses. Bannister and Toole lifted the rs •nd gazed through the golden, transparent liquid. Dick offered a toast lor the occasion—the Abbe’s anniversary—and the three drank. A sparkling smile illuminated the Abbe's face as he watched the reaction of his guests. Bannister’s »yes rolled upward while Too'e's tongue sought the inner recesses of his mouth to retrieve a lingering drop. Abbe Bergere hastily refilled the glasses. Karen Sire was the inspiration for the next libation. “From the time I was twentyfive," the Abbe rambled on, “I have been a member of a monastic order pledged to human service and the spread of Christian teachings. My physical peculiarities, as ; ou might ' imagine, were accompanied by certain inhibitions. No man likes to be regarded as a freak. Seclusion is the obvious refuge from ridicule. So I assumed tasks that kept me I out of the sight of men. That is how I met Maurice Sire twelve years ago." Toole and Bannister listened eagerly as the Abbe continued: “Sire had heard of me through the curator of the British Museum, for whom I had done some work deciphering ancient scripts. He came to our monastery in the south of France with parchments that had been in his family for hundreds of years. In the mass were writings indicating that ar. effort had been made to give continuity to a legal claim upon the great valley that lies below this mountain.” ' Bannister thrust in a word. “That i was the grant of land made by i Ghenghis Khan to his loyal white ' paladins, wasn’t it?” “Exactly. And this grant had subsequently been approved by Kubla Khan and a number of his successors. At a much later date it had been ratified at Peking when the old Tartar regime passed out." “Were you able to make a good case for Sire?” Bannister asked. The Abbe laughed. “That wasn't what he wanted. A* that time, he didn’t care about the Sire Depression. It was, and still is, a parched strip of deep lowland about one hundred miles long and forty wide. Just how any considerable number of w’hite men managed to live there he couldn’t understand.” “What did he want then?” Toole interjected. “Well, the documents told about a continued warfare between the white settlers in the valley and the \ upland Tartars. The yellow men i finally drove the whites out but after a few years ihe invaders , couldn’t find grazing for a goat. It seems that the whites had changed I the course of the mountain stream so that it ran underground and dis- , appeared in the bowels of the earth. Without water the valley became sterile. But even that significant fact didn’t interest Sire at the time.” “Where did his interest lie?” Bannister asked. The Abbe laughed silently. I' “Sire had become obsessed with ‘ the notion that his own ancestors were not the original white settlers who had won the land by their services for Genghis Khan. He had an idea that his stock was that of the conquering Tartars and that, therefore. he was not a pure white man. i And he’s not sure of it yet.” “Tuh!" ejaculated Toole, “I I thought so, but what of it?” ! Bannister did not take the state- . mint so lightly. “At that time, | twelve years ago,” said Dick slowly, “Karen Sira was eight years old.’

I known as the TC-14, cost about $200,000. In many respects it is I like the TC-13 airship at Langley ,' Field, Va. The TC-14 Is of the internal susI pension, closed car type. It has a | volume of 367.000 cubic feet. The i TC-13 has a volume 7,000 cubic: ! feet hiss. The TC-14 is 226 feet long; the 'older airship. 232.25 feet. Both i have the same maximum diameter,, 54 feet. The maximum speed of the new ship is more than 80 miles per hour. The TC-13 cannot go faster than 75. Both hare a 2.600 mile cruising range and a 1.340-gallon fuel capa-1 city. Radio Equipment Improved The radio equipment of the new ship Is a considerable improvement over that of the TC-13. The trans-! mitter Is equipped with a dynamotor. tuning units, control boxes and junction boxes. The receiver has

I Her father probably was thinking of I her. He wanted to be in a position to give her a clean bill in case any question arose affecting her ancestry. These things still count a great deal in the United States where quadroons and octaroons sometimes marry into white families by keeping their real origin secret” “You’ve hit upon it,” admitted Abbe Bergere. “Do you, personally, know Geoffrey Whipple?” Bannister inquired. “I do—and Brenda. I was in Alexandria —my single extended absence from this place—trying to clear up some mystifying details of these old parchments when I met them. Fine people, I thought at the time. But I have learned since that they are adventurers of the most dangerous type. They made every effort to gain possession of the documents on the pretense of helping me and would have succeeded out for one fact--1 had only one of the parchments with me. They managed to get that.” The talk drifted to more general channels. “What’s the idea of staying up here at this elevation —it must be eight or ten thousand feet above sea level, isn’t it?” Bannister asked, i “I go down at intervals and work i the patch,” said the Abbe, “but the rarified air is necessary to my life. 1 I was an invalid when I came here. I Look at my chest now!” The dwarf’s torso indeed was I magnificent ’ “I guess a man's got to breathe deeper up here to make up for lack 1 of density in the air. This place j would make a great white plague 1 camp; in fact I’ve interested Sire i in such a project. He promised to i turn his hand to it after he popu- ' lates the valley and establishes a i transportation system.” “How does he expect to reclaim 1 the valley?" • “By the same simple method that I will enable you to enjoy a shower • bath in a few minutes,” the Abbe an- ' swered. “Os course, he’ll work on I a larger scale. That's why a thousand laborers are on their way to 1 the valley. It is even possible that 1 Sire may find the lost river that ortce kept this land fertile —the I river which those ancient whites diverted underground to thwart ’ their Tartar conquerors.” 1 “Has he had engineers here study- 1 ing this project?” 1 “He has, but they didn’t come to 1 my place. Men who call themselves scientists, hunters and travellers 1 have been snooping around the valley at intervals for the last three or four years. The possibilities of the place are known to more than one group. It may be that Whipple has actually discovered away to bring the water back to its original bed. Or it may be that he has discovered valuable minerals.” “Or both,” conjectured Bannister. “Or ’both," the Abbe agreed. “Now then, I want you gentlemen to get under a shower. It is ice cold, I warn you. It comes from the mountain tops in little trickles. I’ve diverted some of them to this hut. When you find what becomes of the rest, the secret of the lost river will be yours.” While Toole was taking his shower. Bannister told the Abbe of his promise to shoot a snow leopard for Karen. “Quite romantic,” the Abbe commented, “and practical, too. A pair of the brutes have been making live miserable for me. Only last week the male made a raid on the yak shed and killed one of my finest animals. You should have seen that leopard, Mr. Bannister! He was big as a tiger, only more ghost-like. It would take a hardier soul than mine to follow him in the dark. The natives of this territory hold him in superstitious reverence. By tradition he may be killed only by royal mandate," “I’m here with such a mandate,” Bannister laughed. “It's a long way from Park Avenue, New York, to the slopaa of the Himalayas, but a ' shot at this ghostly brute will more

dynamotor coil units. The airship Has a six-position interphone The TC-14 has a sub-cloud observation car, which is operated by windlass in the control car and driven by power rake-off from the Martin engine. The army has three airships at I Scott Field and two at Langley Field. They are all non rigid aircraft The Langley field airship squadron has made an enviable record in tactical training and operations. With their new airship the squadron at Scott Field TX expected to approach the 1-angley Field squadj run s performance record. RIGHT NOW—Yoa can get the newest in 193« Radio—at all Gamble Stores and at sensationally low pricea. All-Wate 7-Tube Coni sole, I34JB—Mantel Set, »n.PS. Battery Sets, Complete. $11.95 np. Small down payment—sl2s weekly. Hugo Claussen. Owner.

than repay me for the tripl" Toole thrust his head from under the shower and shouted: “And Whipple is coming here, too. I lost my ‘arm’ in Centre Street and I m going to find it here.” Abbe Bergere smiled at these vanities. Perhaps he was thinking of his own higher mission, and of the lonely man who came out of the desert to herald the King of Kings. Toole and Bannister spent the next day threading the natural paths, made by atone slides, that connected the plateau upon which the hut stood with those of the lower elevation. Bleakness and desolation were everywhere—scanty fibre grass, starved tamerisks and an occasional thornwood bush. The landscape would make an excellent camouflage for an animal marked in the half tones of a snow leopard but they found no trace of one. Although Bully ranged far, he always came back baffled and irritable. The leopard was a creature of the night. The Abbe busied himself gathering hampers of berries and seeds far below them. At night he brewed mash for the still to make fuel for the plane motor—Karen’s car. they were calling it now. They watched for hours as his gnome-like figura flitted about the fire, his aspect so little a thing of earth that they felt themselves transported to another world. In this way, ‘days sped by with Bannister’s agony of suspense over the fate of Karen Sire growing hourly. Three nights he had spent in lonely ravines with Bully, vainly seeking some trace of a snow leopard. It had been his hopa that Karen would arrive safely with Whipple as Abbe Bergere had predicted, that he would have the pleasure of seeing Toole “put the basket” over Whipple while he, himself, triumphantly displayed a leopard pelt to Karen. Brenda, to his mind, had already become a vanished factor in the whole equation of mystery, murder, and high plans of empire. It was close to midnight on the tenth day since their arrival that Bannister felt an acute intuition that something was stirring. It was one of those mystic messages that eome to hunters and fishermen and are accepted as “hunches." He acted upon it. Toole and the Abbe were asleep but Bully was alert the moment his master's feet touched the floor. Bannister gingerly lowered hie heavy boots and his clothes through the opened window and motioned the airedale outside, fearing that a whimper might disturb the others. Selecting his favorite run from the rack, he tipped the sight with luminous paint, a trick to insure more accurate fire in the darkness. Stepping outside, he gathered up his outfit and withdrew from the hut to dress. Bully knew his own part and kept silent. The moon was at full—round and radiant as a night sun in its cool effulgence. About three hundred yards from the hut a tall shelf of rock flared outward from the face of the plateau. It had occurred to Bannister that this great wall diverted sounds from the ravines in the mountain-side below. He had made up his mind to keep vigil there nightly until he heard the cry of a wild beast. For an hour he sat in silence, his back to the cliff and his eyes roaming over the ghostly landscape. With ears at the alert angle and muzzle turned upward. Bully ranged the precipice, pausing occas onally »nd making a silhouette as motionless as that of a stone dog. From one of these silent tableaux Bannister at length heard a low growl. Then another, more Intense, more insistent. Bully ran to him in a tremor of eagerness. (To Be Continued) Cnpyrlght, l»„ Ctai, Hswlbora, Diitrtbtfted by King VaatarM Brndicat* Ttx

MARKETREPORTS DAILY RSPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS Brady'S Market for Decatur, Barno, Cralgvllle, Hoagland « nd Willshire. Cloao at II Noon Corrected August 19. No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. 100 to 130 .’bs- » 9 " 5 120 <o 140 lbs 140 to 160 lbs J® 160 to 190 lbs 190 to 230 1b511.50 230 to 270 lbs- JI-*® 270 to 309 lbs U-*® 300 to 350 lbs 10 9 ® Vealers »’ *** Ewe and wether lambs »-00 Buck lambs 7 -®° Yearling lambi — < B ® FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Aug. 19. —<U.R) —Livestock; Hogs, steady; 200-225 lbs.. $11.60; UO-200 .lbs.. $11.50; 225-250 lbs., $11.50; 250-275 lbs.. $11.30; 275-300 lbs, $11.15; 300-350 lbs.. $10.90; 150-160 lbs.. $10.50; 140-150 lbs.. $10.25; 130-140 lbs., $10; 130-130 $9.75; 100-120 lbs., $9 50; roughs, $9.50; stags. $7.75. Calves, $9; lambs, $8.50. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y., Aug 19.— (U.R>— Livestock; Hogs. 2,400; few rather plain 180-230 lbs., sold $11.90-$12.15. Cartie, 1,700; choice 900-1,250-lb. steers. $13.35$ 12.50; bulk good steers and yearlings, $10.60-$l 1.75; fat rough steers, $lO.lO-210.50; common to medium steers and heifers. $5.50-$7.25. Ca'ves, 600; vealers weak; good to choice, $10.50. Sheep, 1,300; lambs higher; good to choice leniently sorted, $9.50; few $9.75. Cleveland Produce Live poultry firm. Heavy fowl 19-20; medium fowl 18-19; ducks 5 lbs. up 14-15; ducks smell 12. Butter steady. Extras 28Lj. in tubs standards 28. Eggs steady, extra whites 29c doz. Extra firsts 25Li. Current receipts 23H. Potatoes, 100 lb. bags Delaware and New Jersey $1.15; Ohio $1; Pennsylvania sl-1.05; Delaware barrels $1.75. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Sept. Dec. May Wheat 85% .87% .88% Corn 73% .55 .56% Oats .25% .27 .30 NEW YORK PRODUCE New York, Aug. 19 —ttj.PJ—Produce: Dressed poultry, steady to firm; (cents per lb.l turkeys, 18-31 c; chickens, 14-28%c; broilers, 14%34c; capons, 29-35 c; fowls, 12-22 %c; Long Island ducks. 12-15e. Live poultry, dull; (cents per lb.) geese, 8-9 c; iturkeys, 12-19 c; roosters, 14-15 c; ducks. 9-12 c; fowls 14-21 c; chickens, 22-24 c; broilers. 13-24 c. Butter receipts, 7,286 packages; market steady;; creamery higher than extras. 25%-26%c; extra 92 score. 25%c; firsts. 90 <o 91 score. 24%-25c; first 88 to 89 score, 23%c; seconds, 22-22%c; centralized 90 score, 24%-24%c; centralized 88 to 89 score. 23%-23%c; centralized 84 to 87 score. 22-23% c. Egg receipts. 10,751 cases; market Irregular; special packs, including unusuaj hennery selections 28-31 %c; standards. 27%c; firsts, 25%c; mediums. 24%c; dirties, 24 %c; checks, 20-22 %c. s LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected August 19. No. 1 New Wheat, 60 Iba. or better 75c No. 2 New Wheat, 58 lbs 74c Oats, 32 lbs. test 23c Oats. 30 lbs. test 21c Soy Beans, bushel 50 io 60c No. 2 Yellow Corn, 100 lbs. SI.OB Rye ... 40c : CENTRAL SOYA MARKET No. 2 Yellow Boy Beans 60c Delivered to factory u o Dan Roop and family of Blue Cre?k township were shoppers here Saturday. ' e GILLETTE TRUCK TIRES 6 months uncondltlonal guarantee, See us before you ouy, * A * 4 PORTER tak TIRE CO. UpF 341 Winchester street, Phono 1289. WML

CLASSIFIED ■f ADVHRTISE.MENt®V BUSINESS CARIBc ♦ AND NOTICES FOB SALE JK FOR SALE - August p!-' Piece living room amte/Hc lounge chair. $10; 3.|,| p ,„ ■ suite. $29; spring filled $10; kitchen cablndft, si« fast sets so. »xi 2 ,, XIn | nlg ’ t $22; 9x12 congoleum rug oil stoves wit th ovpn 8 $22; electric washers line washers. $72, i small r«^K al with each 9x12 rug. »< Company, Monroe, Indiana. evenings. FOR SALK- 12 livin $35 to SBS; 6 bedroom $42.90 to SBS; 30 mattresses, 1 to $39 50 Many oth. i our store. Sprague Furniture pany, 152 South Seiond st pH 22 J:-' FOR SALE^ModiKAlTTon'^ftj 1 truck and Fordson tiactor. Bryan. Monmouth ph.. !1( . FOR SALE OR TRADe"^B® i ‘ Studebaker sedan with six wheels with fair tin s. \Vill^W s! or trade for small car. good condition. See Walter doth, 521 S. sth st., city. FOR BALE—Sorrel old, weighs 1700 ibgood worker. Ora Wiiit 16 miles west of Decatur. FOR SALE —Large cutgladii^^E 1 many varieties and George Rush, Monmouth. FOR SALE -Serni-trailenFti^^B 91 feed grinder 14 tn. plow, sulky plow and Frank Wrecking Co.. W st. FOR SALE- Red Polled heifer calf by side. Also pups. See Harlo Mann. 1’ J FOR SALE—mon stock of Ho. sior Milk denser? of Bluffum purchased fmmodiitolv Care of Democrat FOR SALE—Austin E. Water st.. Berne, Ind 9 FOR REM FOR RENT —Furnished P ; furnished rooms. Inquire at North Seventh. FOR RENT Down ->airs suitable for dentist or get t office purposes. 127 North st. W. J. Kuhnle FOR RENT Mmi-rn block from Innsm-'s- i-»oi >n place, bathroon '' two cisterns, il" . aS sion at once. Inquire A P Agt. 195 S WANTED ■< WANTED — Respectable cdeH lady alone wishes one or unfurnished rooms for light keeping. Address Ella Monroe. WANTED — 3 or 4 room ment; partly ■Curnished. CwO. M FEMALE HELP A. ;ive chit® or Sunday school worker to religious canvas Position months, na’ary $75. Gi'e and 'phone. Box "C W'' care Demoirai. MALE HELP WANTED -M»n J woman wanted to -nppi. < mers with famous Watkins ducts in Decatur Uu.-lness Itehed, earnings average weekly, pay starts Write J. R Walkin'-250-62 N. stli st.. C. OIMi National organization will reliable man. mechanically dined, now employed. > Air Conditioning and Electric frigeration expert. Excellent portunity. Write giving agepation. Utilities Eng Inst.. care of Democrat. lw« —• o— JH FARMERS ATTENTP >N < yn hay will be cheap this tall. not feed cattle and make a We have some choice white steer calves for sale. See oh a farm near Liberty Phone, write or visit Roy L. buTg, Liberty Center, Indiana ■! LOST AND FOUNoB LOST—Man's navy blue all bathing suit, trimmed in Ixast near creamery. Fin % f ® turn to this office. N. A. BIXLER I OPTOMETRIST ■ Eyes Examined, Glass®* HOURS: S to 11:30 12:30 to 5W » Saturdays, 8.00 p. I t Telephone 135. g