Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 197, Decatur, Adams County, 20 August 1935 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
* Test Your knowledge I Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page Four ter the answers. < 1. In the Homan Catholic church, what i» a monstrance’ 3. On what island Is the town of Oyster Bay. New York? 3. Name the product, obtained by strongly heating coal out of contact with the air until the volar <tile constituents are driven off. 4. Has the United States ever been a member of the League of Nations’ 5. in which state is the city of Gulfport? 6. Who wrote "An Essay on Man?” 7. Which state is nicknamed •‘Treasure State?’’ 8. Who wrote “Stella Frlgel- i ius?"’ 9. In medical practice, what is
M»TH K TO TAXPAYKB4 OF TAX LEVIES tn tffl matter of determining ths tax fWtes f° r /*' ta '" ? ur .P. < ? I n, Before the Common Council by the City of Decatur. Adams Count?-. Indiana . ~,D !, v p r , „f the City of Decatur, Adams Notice is hereby a ven the tams satd mulri cipalliy. iTtheVr reguter meeting place, on the 3rd day of September. l»3o will consider the following budget: ■Mlt OH'* OFVKK Personal Service , 900.00 Salary i!s.t)o Contractual Service Supplies a 25.00 Office Supplies < lehk-theam HKH OFFICE Personal Service 1,200.00 Salary - 300.00 Office Supplies - - DFI’ARTMEA I- OF LAW < Hy Attorney Personal Service 600.00 Salary — - — —- - Supplies 25.00 Office Supplies _ - ~” BRrtaTwm of vißLic safety Police Personal Service 1,500.00 Salary, Chief of Police —— Supplies Supplies. Chief of Police - Personal Service 3.600.00 Salary, Regular Police Salary. Temporary Police Supplies 75 00 Police Department Supplies — Telephone - - aso'oo Police Automobile 150 00 Mileage 15u ; 00 Other operating expenses — — fire department Personal Service 110 00 Fire Chief, Salary , , n| , Regular Firemen. Salary 700 00 Volunteer Firemen, Salary • Service Contractual inn oo New Equipment 40o!ob Repairs —- 250.00 Material Supplies 250.00 Supplies - - 125 00 Insurance - -500 Telephone ....' - ot STREET DEPARTMENT Personal Service „ Street Commissioner's Salary ’• ’ Labor on Streets. Regular ........... a.boo.oi Labor on Streets, Temporary • lav.vv 6^Materi^? n,ra< ,Ua ' - I.*®®- 0 ® suppLel zzzzzz ...... <OO.OO Sidewalk Improvement : Street Trucks Operating and Repairs HEWEH DEPARTMENT Sewer Construction - ’ Sewer Repairs 300.0 CITI HIM. Service Contractual Fuel. Light and Water - 300 00 Repairs !««-*• Supplies _ - - Telephone • -usmdiai. City Hall 500.00 HEALTH DEPARTMENT Salary of members - Supplies 36.00 Contagious diseases — 150.0" TiRK DEI’ I MUM Personal Service Salary of Regular Labor - - Temporary Labor - —- « Supplies 400.0" Repairs „ Water and Light* SWIMMING POOL Supervisor’s Salary 3<ro."" Labor temporary l"0.n»» Material and supplies 2J0.0J Light. Power and Water - - - 250.00 C ITY rot .N< 31. Personal Service Councilman salaries .. —- 550.0" MfSreM. AMHOI s Printing and Legal Advertising 300.0(1 Garbage disposal . 4 •" ; Insurance .... 200.001 Public Liability and Compensation Insurance 600.00 Examination of Official Records 125.00 < .ft ; . Bo - 200.00 Municipal League _ 10.oy American Legion Decoration Day 50.00 . Bands 100.00 County Auditor ... 76.00 Miscellaneous ... .. 275.54 • Dog Pound .... 100.00 PAL 3 32.163.54 REVEN I ES DERIVED OTHER THIN Bl TAXATION Gas Tax . .. 5 iState Excise Tax . 1,500.00 Coal Unloading 1,50".00 Donation by Electric Light .i Power Dept. ... .... - 4,000.0" Donation by Water Department 1,000.00 Miscellaneous, License, Fines, Etc. 400.00 Poll Tax - 830.00 TOTAL - 3 14,490.00 ESTIMATES OF FINDS TO BE RAISED Estimates of Expenditures as above I 32,165.64 ; Less 'Estimated Revenue — Other than taxes 1 4,490.00 Anfbunty necessary to be raised by Taxation 17,675.54 . PROPOSED LEVIES Jiurtfber of Taxable Polls ... 890 Net Taxable Property 3 4,418,837.00 XleneFal Fund 17,675.54 Propped Levy on each 0100.00 .40 (rompnratlve Statement of Taaea ( oliected and To Be Collected .Collected by Levy of year 1932 3 44,120.00 .Collected by Levy of year 1933 29,676.00 .ColftTted by Levy of year 1934 19,130.00 ,Collte'cted by Levy of year 1935 17,452.00 To Be Collected by Levy of year 1036 17,675.54 Taxpayers appearing shall have she right and will be heard thereon. After' the levies have been determined, ten or more taxpayers feeling • themselves aggrieved by such levies may appeal to the State Board of Tax’.Commissioners of Indiana for further and final action thereon by • filing a petition therefor with the County Auditor not later than the •fount 11 Monday in September, 1935 and said State Board will fix a date of hearing in this County. ARTHUR R. HOLTHOUSE ,4 Mayor At+ewt: ADA» MARTIN. City Clerk-Treasurer. AUGUST “20—27 ' • ’ 1
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“THE POOR POP KER”BY SEGAR 55 1 1 C&T 5° MAD OtA VOOR WV I Llf<€ TO CR&CKUM WS k' 60 TO WINDOW\ ARFUL*. PEOPLE IMKE TO KICK W CRAI3 HEADS AN VM / SvnocmJ”' \ / SME/ 'EM IN OCEAN*. AN’ VM JS JUST THE GUV LUHO /-=- ) OFnoPr rn Ki<K A 6WS) JUST THE GUV^ — - DO THINK. OH, I GET/ PEOP EGO KISS A ) [y k ts L so MAO’ z P&.HAHIAN M r—DO IT,ToO’.M&><., ■’-•U yssjß: JOST THE GOV UIHQ J , JaWi - I I HBHMKL2X.I j ■BfeCq
> I Acute Cory«aT 10. In which century are we now living? * COURTHOUSE Gu«rdlan«hlp The final report wai filed in the guardianship of Dori* HfaUh by the guardian. Lovina Heath Real Estate Trantfere Lillie Michaud to John Bickford inlots 513 and 514 in Decatur for <75. REPORT ITALY CONTINUED FROM FADE ONH wait for between two and three weeks after the rains — which started full force In June—have begun to subside. The Italians are expected to nttack almost simultaneously from Eritrea, their northern colony, i southward toward Addis Ababa. ' and from Somaliland, west north-
, westward toward Addie Ababa. In order to wipe out the bitter memory of their defeat ut Adowa when Ethiopian warriors cut lo pieces an Italian expeditionary force, killed or wounded 7.600 men and captured from 2.600 to 3,000, it is believed that one of the first Italian objectives will be Adowa, near the Eritrean frontier. Should the Italians advance from Somaliland, their southern colony, as they are expected to, obstacle* even greater than in the north would face them. The climate in the south is worse, the rivers feed vast swamps where fevers breed, water supplier are lacking, broad areas are covered with thorns aivl jungle like brush through which an army could only with enormous difficulty hack its path and even mechanised units would be severely impeded. British authorities believe that the Italians may attempt to conduct their campaign by building a railway into Ethiopia from the south. Realization of such an effort would require, under favorable circumstances, at least two NOTH E TO PROPERTY OWNER* To Whom It May Concern: Notice is hereby given by the Common Council of the City of Decatur, I Indiana that on the Sth day of Aug-1 ust. 1935 It approved an assessment roll showing the prlma facie assessments for the following described public improvement as authorised by the improvement resolution num-1 ed: , . . ! Said Improvement is intersected by the following named streets and alleys: Aliev running parallel with Monroe and Jackson Streets at points between Jefferson and Madison Streets, at a point between Jefferson and Monroe Streets and a point between Monroe and Jackson Streets. And intersecting Madison and Monroe Streets. And the following named streets and alleys are parallel with and within 150 feet of said improvement: First Street. Second Street at points between Jefferson Street and Jackson Street. Persons Interested in or affected by said described public improvement are hereby notified that the Common Council of said City has fixed the 3rd day of September. 193 c as a date upon which remonstran es will be received. «r heard, against the amount assessed against each I piece of property described in said I roll and will determine the question as to whether such lots or tracts of land have been or will be benefited in the amounts named on said roll, or in a greater or less sum than that named on said roll. . Said assessment roll showing saut prima facie assessments with the names >f owners and description of property subject to be assessed is on file and may be seen at the office of the Clerk-Treasurer. Common Council of the City of Decatur. Indiana. Ada Martin. Clerk-treasurer „ 0
CHESTER WHITE BRED SOW SALE 16 miles east of Ft. Wayne on the Lincoln Highway, at the Bert Marquardt farm, on August 22, 1935 At 1:00 P.M. CST. 30 head. 5 tried sows and 25 bred gilts, bred to farrow last of August, and September; 5 pure bred male hogs; 35 grade yearling ewes'- 5 pure mg oea b de hs; s.3lrpeeur bred Shropshire lambs. 3 yearlings and two 2 yr. olds. Terms--Cash. Joseph Converse!, Bert Marquardt, W. J. Rhodes, Owners. Roy S. Johnson, Auct. Decatur, Indiana. ImONEYi I to i II O AN AT NEW LOW RATESJ You can borrow up to S3OO on your own signature and security, quickly ami confidentially — through our new LOW COST personal finance plan. Also investigate our low rate AVTO 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 2-3r7 Decatur, Indiana Over Schafer Hardware Store
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, Al GV ST 2(), 1935.
yean, it it e»tixuatod. But once aceomplißhed it would assure Italian victory. LOCALS Mra. Ruth Hiatt and sons, Billy and Jack, and Mie.-Betty Weber rotliraed to Weet Palm Beach, Florida. utter a visit of two months with with Mm. Hfatt’a mother. Mie. J. 8. Bowers and other relative*. Mr. and Mrs. C. O. France of Gary visited In Decatur a ahort time this morning enroute to Huntington to attend the funeral of J. Fred France. The firing of shot gune was heard
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CHAPTER XXX Bannister cupped his ears and listened. Borne to his senses on a hardly perceptible breeze came something like a distant scream. Bully barked, not too loudly. Again the listener heard the cry—this time nearer and more unmistakable. Many a night in the Canadian Rockies he had heard such a sound —the distant screech of a catamount “A snow leopard!” Dick picked up his gun and tore down the pass that led to the levels below. Bully trailed at first and then took the lead. The cry was repeated at intervals, each time growing nearer. “He's out stalking," Bannister guessed aloud. “Hope he’ll pick up Bully's scent and come after him.” And that apparently, is what happened. Dick and his dog had reached a wide bulge in the natural path where a high wall of rock formed an amphitheater. On the top of this, on the far side, the hunter saw his quarry. Framed in a golden halo by the moonlight, erect on all fours and with tail lashing defiance, a magnificent snow leopard confronted him. Bannister had raised his gun when something happened to stay his hand. It was the plaintive little cry of a leopard kitten, almost under his feet. “That’s the mother upon the ledge,” he muttered. “She’s trying to steer me away from her bairn. Game creature! I won’t shoot her. Anyway, it’s the male I’m after.” At the sound of his own voice, Dick became aware that he was not in the habitual mood of a hunter. He backed away from the whimpering kitten, laughing at Bully’s furious rebuke. “Karen wouldn’t like it, old boy,” he said. “She’d think more about ; the empty cradle than the royal robe.” At the approach of man and dog, Bannister conjectured, the male cat had slunk away to a place of safety, leaving the female to fight alone for her cub. For an hour he wound down the rocky passes, Bully following what Dick surmised to be the scent of the male. Finally the dog came to a baffled halt "He’s got him!” yelled Bannister. He crouched and moved toward the airedale, gun in readiness for a quick shot. Bully's barking had dwindled to a futile whimper. His tail was erect and bristling as he ran back and forth on the ledge, glaring downward. Dick crept cautiously to the edge of the rock and peered over. Below him in the darkness his eyes picked up a rippling glint and he heard the soft sound of water. “I’m sure the brute’s down there,” he muttered. “Bully never makes a mistake." He tore up some dried grass and fashioned it into a ball to make a flare. Poising the ball on the edge of the ledge he dropped a lighted match into it and kicked it down. An instant later Bannister fired. The walls of the canyon sent back a hundred swift echoes, pierced by a long wailing cry. Then came a heavy splash in the water, followed by a savage, spitting gurgle. The flare died down to a mesh of : red embers. Bannister groaned. "This infernal stream sucked him down into a cavern. Well, I’m after him.” He plunged down into the dark water. I The hunter spirit had prevailed against caution. He had leaped into a swift, shallow stream running underground through the mouth of a cavern. He hoped to find a secure foothold near its sides. But this was not an easy quest, Bannister sank, rose again and found himself in the grip of a strong current. Looking upward, he saw what he thought was his last glimpse of the stars. In a moment he was enveloped in stygian darkness, the lashing water roaring in his ears. Far along in the depths, a wild, gurgling scream split the air. Something hard scraped his hand; he grasped It while still clinging to his gun. Behind him a patch of light glowed like an amethyst—the small mouth of the cavern through which both he and the snow leopard had been carried by the current. At the point where he was holding fast, the hard rock had diverted the stream to an angle. The wounded
airly this morning, near the east corporate limit*. Investigation ®rov•d that squirrel ihunlera were busy along the river, killing fox squirrels, perched in the trees. o—' ——— LOCAL SCOUTS CONTINUED FROM PAOK ONH old and new uiuseum, and the aircraft building The scoula will be taken lo New York City Friday evening and will be lodged at the Tuft hotel. Saturday will be devoted to an allday trip on the Hudson river. Special bu»e« will be brought : into use Sunday for an ali-day tour of the outstanding
leopard, no doubt, had followed the same course. A bark sounded from the mouth of the cave. Bully had found footing on the slope of the and was on his way to help his master. Another bark—then a plunge. The dog had taken to the water. An instant later a wet, hairy mass was flung violently against Bannister’s body and he felt Bully’s strained panting. In that black pit, with a torrent raging past an insecure refuge, the dog stood by, his cold nose and hot tongue seeking Dick's face, an almost human note permeating his eager whimperings. Hou DRSMde • • • Like a round window in a crypt, the purple eye of the cavern gradually grew brighter. It was dawn. Again the leopard screeched, this time in the full-throated cadences of an animal no longer in the water. Accustomed as they were to Bannister’s night prowling with Bully, neither Toole nor Abbe Bergere were alarmed at his absence when they awoke. It had been the Abbe’s practice to spend hours on the lookout for caravans, sweeping the vast yellow bowl beneath his hut with glasses. Farly that morning Toole , heard a shout and rushed to the dwarf’s side. i "Something moving around the < bend and up toward the valley,” the i Abbe said. “Look!” i It was a long time before Toole’s i glasses picked up the thin dark line ■ that the keener vision of the dwarf > had discerned. Through the clear < sunlit air he could see a faint, mov- 1 ing thing—long, dark, tenuous. In i the total absence of humidity he j finally was able to pick up details—the measured tread of four tall camels making the pace for a caravan. f To the rear were dimly blurred j things, probably horses or pack f mules. 1 “Any way to identify the outfit?” Toole asked. i “I can’t identify them,” the Abbe answered, “and that’s what makes , me sure I know who they are.” , The paradox was not cleared when j he added: “The regular traders do ; not travel in that fashion, nor have ( they ever appeared at this time of ( the year. Besides, these men are off | the trail that leads to the village of j the hill people further east To cut into that trail now it would be nec- 1 essary for them to go buck at least , twenty miles. Finally, they are on j the uplands, following an old scar j left by an avalanche. In other words, they are taking a path that | will lead them right into my little garden patch two thousand feet be- 1 low.” < “Who are they ? ” Toole demanded impatiently. “Geoffrey Whipple and a small band of picked men,” the Abbe answered calmly. “You’re guessing!” ejaculated “One-Armed” Toole hopefully. “I never guess,” the dwarf answered. “I have plenty of time to reason things out. Whipple is a fugitive from justice. If he did the ordinary thing—that is, attempt to en- ' ter the valley through the better 1 known eastern pass—he might be • arrested. He probably knows that you two gentlemen are here with me. , His whole scheme is in peril while you are alive. And, you know, he has a deadly personal score to settle ' with Mr. Bannister." j Toole drew a notch In his belt and > took off his derby. “There's only one . path leading to this shelf of the t mountain?” he asked. » The dwarf nodded. “When I j bought the yaks from an Armenian trader two years ago it took him two j days to get them up here. At some r points the road is a steep, rocky , chute, easily defended. Besides, t Sire’s caravan ought to be here int side of a week.” “We'll stay right here,” Toole t thrust in hastily. “When Bannister , comes back we’ll fix up some plan . to nail Whipple and get Miss Sire ; out of his hands —if she is still > alive.” f “As the crow flies—if a crow could » exist in this bleak country—the i Whipple outfit is twenty miles away i at this moment," the Abbe contint ued. “The actual traveling distance , is twenty-five miles further. While ‘ we’re waiting for Mr. Bannister we 1 can let boulders loose in the narrow
InterMt In New York. Sunday evening, the scouts will be taken on a personally conducted tour ot the NBC studios. A special show will be kl»« n the scouts at Radio City at noon Monday. The ’P* o ** l . tr, ‘“ ? depart from New York Monday evening, arriving in rort W»F B0 Tuesday morning at 9:3G o clock, central standard time. -O THREE INDIANA CONTINUED FltOM PAGE O- NK the plane. . , . Gov. Puu! V. McNutt of Indiana asked the cooperation of the Governors of Wyoming. Colorado and Montana In the search.
places below. That will make out defense easier.” “How many men do you figure art in that bunch down there?” the de tective asked. * “Probably not more than eight ot ten. No doubt they had a rendez vous with Whipple s lost army, but of course, they have no way o! knowing what has happened to th< men —God pity the lost souls! Anc now that I think of it, it is extremely likely that the rendezvous would be made at the very spot where these men are in camp There’s a water hole, or possibly a running stream in that neighborhood. It is always from that direction that I hear night cries—the cries of wild beasts.” "Certainly Whipple would knot* that a good water supply was necessary for the army he sent on ahead of him,” Toole observed. “Whipple knows this country,'' the Abbe answered, “and this country knows him. .There are men who live by travelling across these dangerous barrens who have a reason for hating him. He played one scurvy trick that I know of myself.” Toole was interested. “What was that?” he asked. “I’m afraid you’ll be inclined to see only the funny side of it,” the Abbe answered reluctantly, “but, anyway, it was this: A small party of American scientists, under heavy native escort and with a fine lot of imported camels, crossed the desert two years ago and camped on the spot where that little caravan is stopping now. Whipple and a trio of desert bandits made friends with them and learned of their mission—a survey of the Great Sire Depression.” "Backed by Sire himself?” “Probably. At any rate Whipple and his accomplices disappeared from the camp one night with considerable booty, including four horses—a capital offense.” “What is there funny about that?” asked Toole. The Abbe himself could hardly suppress a grin. “Before they ran away,” he explained, “Whipple and his accomplices made pursuit impossible by weaving dried strips of sponge into the camel fodder—it comes in ropes, you know. So, when the camels drank their fill after feeding they swelled up and—” A howl from Toole interrupted the Abbe’s tale. “The camels got underslung humps!” he sputtered. But an instant later the veteran New York sleuth became grave. “Whst do you think Jeff and his little playmates would do if they took Bannister alive?” he asked. The detective had never forgotten the look on Jeff Whipple's face the night in the hotel wnen Bannister kicked him with those boots which might have been made for Primo Camera. The Abbe merely shrugged but his expression was one of pained apprehension. “I’m homesick for Little Old New York,” Toole said. “There’s never much mystery about a man’s finish there. If he doesn’t die of pneumonia, or something like that, an automobile runs over him. In the dark, he’s apt to mistake a one-eyed milk truck for a motorcycle and in daylight his business might take him to Columbus Circle.” Abbe Bergere humored him. “No sand storms, no desert witches, no invisible wild beasts in that town, eh?” “Os course,” Toole continued, reverting to Whipple, “I’d like to nail the big fellow and bring him back to New York. But I know it would i never do to let Bannister fall into 1 Jeff’s hands. I’m getting anxious ' about the boy.” ' “Well you might be,” tha Abbe > replied. “I must get Whippie before he gets Dick,” Toole said, half aloud. ! Abbe Bergere looked at him curiously. “Don’t do anything rash,” he 1 said. "Bannister and Bully will • surely be back before nightfall. Be--1 sides, anything you do now might imperil Miss Sire. I feel sure that 1 she is with Whipple’s caravan and ! that it is his intention to bring her r to this hut and try w cajole or force ■ her into a marriage. It is his only 1 salvation." (To Be Continued) Copyright. lISS, Chria Bawtherm r Dlstrtbuui by Kin« FeatutM Syndicate. Ina.
MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS Brady’s Market for Decatur, Borne, Cralflvllla, Hoagland and Willshire. Close at 11 Noon Corrected August 20. No commission and no yardageVeals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. 100 to 120 lbs - 120 to 140 lbs ’ 140 to 160 lbs 160 to 190 lbs J‘-20 190 to 230 lbs H 230 to 270 lbs 11 270 to 300 Iba 300 to 350 lbs - 10 R 0 Stags - ’ 7 28 Vealers - ’ ™ Ewe and wether lambs ••<’o Buck lambs — 7 ®'" Yearling lambs 4 50 CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Sept. Dec. May Wheat *7* .89% .91% Corn -74% -65% -5’% Oats 26% .27% .30% CLEVELAND PRODUCE Cleveland, Aug. 20. — (U.R) —Pfoduce: Butter, steady; extras, 28%c in tubs; standards. 28c. Eggs, steady; extra white, 29c; extra firsts, 25%c; current receipts 23%c. , , Heavy fowl. 20c; medium fowl, 18-19 c; ducks. 5 lbs. up, 16c; ducks small, 12c; Potatoes, 100-lb. bags. Delaware and New Jersey. $1.05-31.10; Ohio, $1; Pennsylvania. sl-$1.05; Virginia barrels. $1.40-11.50. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y„ Aug. 20.— (U.K)—Livestock: Hogs, receipts, 200: dull and lower; desirable 160-250 lbs., averaging 180-220 lbs., $13.15; sparingly, $12.25; mixed weights and plainer quality, $11.60-sl2. Cattle, receipts. 75: cows steady; low cutter and cutter. $3.5<)-$4.85; few plain lightweight grass steers and heifers. $5.50-$6.50. Calves, 50; vealers steady to weak. sll down. Sheep, 100; lambs steady at recent advance, good to choice ewes and wethers quoted, $9.50-$9 <5, medium and mixed offering including ducks sold, $8.50-$9.25.
FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Aug. 20.—(U.PJ —Livestock: Hogs, 10-25 c lower; 200-225 lbs., $11.50; lbs.. $11.40; 160-200 lbs.. 111.35; 250-275 lbs.. $11.20; 275-300 lbs.. $11.05; 300450 lbs., $10.80; 150-160 lbs.. $10.35; 140-150 lbs.. $10; 130-140 lbs., $2.75; 120130 lbs.. $9.50; 100-120 lbs., $9.25; roughs. $9.50; stags, $7.75. Calves. $9; lambs, $8.50. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected August 20. No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better - ?5c No. 2 New Wheat, 58 lbs. 74c Oats-18 to 21c Soy Beans, bushel 50 to 60c No. 2 Yellow Corn, 100 lbs. SI.OB Rye CENTRAL SOYA MARKET No. 2 Yellow Soy Beans— 60c Delivered *•> factory Guffey Coal Bill Provokes Debate Washington, Aug. 20—(UP) —A I motion for senate consideration of the Fuffey coal bill stirred sharp debate today on anti-trust laws. The motion to take up the bill, parsed yesterday by the house, was made by senator M. M. Neely, D., West Virginia. Senator .Millard Tydings. D., Mary bind, jumped to hta feet and asked: “Does this bill repeal the antitrust laws’” "It does,” interposed Senator William E. Borah, R., Idaho, .before either Neely or Senator Joseph Guffey, author of the nie>ieure, could reply. o FARMERS ATTENTION: Corn and hay will be cheap this fall. Why not feed cattle and make a profit? ■ We have some choice white faced 1 steer calves for sale. See them on a farm near Liberty Center. Phone, write or visit Roy L. Mossburg, Liberty Center, Indiana. 193-stx
GILLETTE TRUCK TIRES 6 months uncondl- XTT tional guarantee. See us before > you ouy. 2 PORTER TIRE CO. KJSf 341 Winchester street. sBsK Phone 1289.
CLASSIFIED ~V advbrtisement® BUSINESS CAR!® * AND NOTICES®’ FOR SALIT FOR SALE—Augim piece living room lounge chair. sin, suite, $29, spring fln e(1 $10; kitchen cabins, m JU fast sets, $9. 9x12 $22; 9x12 congoleuin rug oil stoves wltth ovens $22: electric Washers, $39.' line washers. $72; 1 Rnul l r ' with each 9x12 rug. Company, Monroe, Ituhana. evenings. FOR. SALE—I 2 $35 to SBS; 6 bedroom $42.50 to SBS; 30 to $39.50. Many ot'n. 1 our store. Sprague pany, 152 South Seioinl „t > 199. ' FOR SALE- Model A truck and Fordson tractor. F.ryan. Monmouth plione ■jß FOR SAI I feed grinder; 14 in. plow, sulky plow and Frank Wrecking to. w ■ FOR SALE—Red Polled heifer calf by side. Also pups. See Harlo Mann. ■ -'Bl —— — FOR SALE —Tomato-s ,n containers. 6o ( a hueiie] i Trout Farm. FOR SALE —Twente mon siurk of Honsier ' densely of Bluftton h,. 1 purchased imni»-dtat. b Care ot Democrat. — o FOR KENT I I FOR RENT block from bus;n-> h . • - place, bathroom. ■ ■ 1 two eastern.-, douf - ision at once. Inquire A I) S ; Agt. B WANTED J WANTED — Respeer.ible lady alone wishes one or 3 unfurnished room- ■ ■ keeping. Address Ella M-nrue
WANTED — 3 or 4 room ment; partly furnished. 1 _■ National organization will reliable man. m. < hani. ailyH dined, now employed, m Air Conditioning and El-< «ri< ■ frigeration expert Ex.-fllem H I ortunity. Write giviiu age, <)■ pation. Utilities Eng Inst.. M care of Democrat. UM LOST AND FOUNM LOST —Man's navy blue all bathing suit, trimmed in whfl Lost near creamery. Finder ■ turn to this office. H*4fl o — ■ BRING YOUR TROUBLfI TO MRS. FILMORB If you are troubled by busufl or personal affairs of your liffl is wise to consult a psychic er who gives reliable and advice and who will help fl solve your problem, no mfl how difficult. Different trim ■ others; gives advice on all If worried over business rhaufl | love, mairiage. sepal ation. frieifl ■enemiee. and health. 1 will fl you how to overcome them fl you if your friends tire true ■ false, who to trust. rs the one fl love is true, give yon the inltfl of your enemies. I don’t guessß things or hint them to you; I fl them so you can nndersUfl True born reader. Satisfacfl assured. Special readings, fl 10-8:30. Sunday 10-4. All Welcofl 233 N. Fourth st. Decfl Phone 112. | 0 —— | *Many Reunions Scheduled For I Summer Monthl ♦ — ' Sunday August 25 Annual Tindall family reunit Fair Grounds at Van Wert, Ohio Fry and Yost reunion Ho meyer’s Grove, northwest of tur. Staniford-Fulkner reunion, t Standiford home. Davison reunion, Davison r ° ers home one mile west of Toc« Eighth annual Johnson reutu Nathan Johnson home. Stryk«. Meyer family fifth reunion, set tpark, rain or shine. Sunday September 1 Roop family reunion. La’ u Park, Fort W T ayne. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eye* Examined, Glasses F'‘tl HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 13:30 to 6 Saturdays, 8:00 P- ®- Telephone 135.
