Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 228, Decatur, Adams County, 26 September 1935 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

XtXHCB OF SALK OF HEAL ESTATE In the Adam* ClreiiH Court. ('auor Ao. Ut*i In the Haller of lhe Liquidation of Old Mam* Lounfy Hnuk By virtue of and in accordance with an order of the Adam* Circuit . Court duly made and entered of rec* 1 ord In the above < auae. The Depart-I inant qf Financial laatllutloM, of the State of Indiana. In the matter of the liquidation of Old Adam" County Bank, will offer for sale at public auction at the east door of the court bouse in the city of Decatur, Indiana, on the 17th day of October 1 193 S al o'clock A M., th* followinir described tracts of real salats towft; • Tract No. 1. The southeast quarter 1 Os the northeast quarter of Section nineteen <IS) Township twentyseven J 37) North of liange fourteen 1 <l4> Hast, except therefrom a small I tract out of the northeast corner thereof, being eight (8) rods east and . ] weiit and ru4* north nnu south. t Known ns part of Andrews Farm I • Tract No. i. The northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of Section ' nineteen (19) Township twenty-I seven >ill North of Range fourteen ■ (14) East, except twenty (20) feet. In width off of the entire south alde| ; thereof. . (Known as part of Andrews farm)'. Tract No. 3. The southeast quarter, of the southeast quarter of Section || nineteen (19) Township twentyseven (27) North of Range fourteen j (|4) Elast. < (Known as part of Andrews farm) i Tract No. I. All that part of the 1 ■west half of the northwest quarter 1 of Section twenty (20) Township,1 twenty-seven (27) North of Range 1 fourteen (HI East, more partkul-l 1 arly described as follows Beginning JT the- south-west corner thereof. I Ihaace north along the west llneh seventy-five (75) rods, thence in a. 1 northeasterly direction t > a point on 11 the east line of said west half of the I 1 northwest quarter, which point is. sHity ($()) rods south of the north- , MHd corner thereof, thence south I 1 along tpe east line of said west half 1 of the northwest quarter one hund- , red (TOO) rods to the southeast cor- a »«r of said tract, thesice west eighty , (SO) rods to the place of beginning.' containing forty-six (44) acres more , oy less." | : (Known as part of Andrews farm* fTraCt No. 5. Commencing at a point i fifteen (IS) feet north of the south-'1 west eWrner of the southwest quar- 1 1 t.j ofOe. tlon twenty (20) in Town- < ship tawnty-seven (27) North of 1 iXnge- Sourteen (14) East, thence 1 north -elong the west line of said 1 section forty (40> rods, thence east: 1 eighty (SO) rods to the east line of , | ttw west iialf of the southwest quar- ■ , tdW-of araid section thence south j alwng”Hid line forty (10) rods., 1 tliawce west eighty (80) rods to the , place Os beginning. containing , ’WTntg-VO) acres more or less. (JSfown as part of Andrews farm); , 3sae««o. 4 The southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 1 twenty (20) in Township twenty- I se'Veii.Uf) North of Range fourteen < (fll Hast ■ 1 (Knows as part of Andrews farm), JCract No 7. Commencing forty feit west of the northeast corner of InJot nffmber eighty-seven (87) of , the oTtgdnal plat of the town I now ci«vi of Decatur, running thence west sewentefcn (17) feet, thence south slaty-six (66) feet to the sßiith line Os said lot. thence east seventeen feet, thence north sixty-eix (AS) feet to the place of beginning. Also, commencing at a point on the north line of Inlot number eightysig .(46) as the same is designated oic the original plat of the town (now city) of Decatur. Adams Cqunty, Indiana, forty (49) feet west I of, the northeast corner of said Inlot number eighty-six (86), thence running south parallel with the east line of said Inlot number eighty-six (sg') twenty-six (26) feet. _thence

IS PRAGUE OFFERS Hoosier Kitchen Cabinets and Breakfast Sets, Simmons Beds, Mattresses, and Springs. Ax- , minster Rugs from the Looms of Mohawk, Gold Seal Congoleum Rugs, and American Beau- ' ty Washers, RCA Radios, all ; nationally known merchandise at prices and terms you can afford to pay. SPRAGUE FURNITURE CO. 152 S. 2nd st. Phone 199 , i.

Public Auction I will sell at public auction at my residence, 335 South sth street. Decatur, on FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27th Commencing at 1 o’clock P. M. All of my household goods, consisting of: 3 piece Overstufted living room suite, new; Axminster rug, 9x12 new; beautiful walnut dining room suite, new; Axminster rug, 9x12, good; Crosley 5 tube electric radio radio stand; walnut occasional table; electric floor lamp and table lamp; Heatrola heating stove, like new; 1 lied complete; dresser? 9x12 congoleum rug, new; breakfast table and chairs: new porcelain top kitchen table; range cook stove, enamel finish, good; Hoover electric sweeper, bought new last spring; sewing machine; electric washer, good; lawn mower; many small articles too numerous to mention. J TERMS—CASH. ROY CHILCOTE, Owner Roy S. Johnson, Auct.

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“QUIT YA TICKLIN’!” By SEGAR T7~| rz VTJ 1 If D*cnPMOR:\ /A'" i-usi CaW & <W rfftl EiEQS; ( V> *** *** I LIZ.WV Z X *■*««*» - *• i®-«6 »- iO ——*• . - ■gj*. I r rr l l i<r L.«JES)'rT--»rs c * , w c— *•*’*'■ , “‘’"* J—W * |, “' &r “'"*^ 4

west parallel with the north line ;of said inlot number clghty-six (86) seventeen (17) feet, thence > north parallel with the east Una of i said Inlot number eighty-six (86) I twenty-six (26) feet to the north 1 line of said Inlot number cighty-slx I (86) thence east on the north line lot said Inlot number eighty s x (84), seventeen (17) feet to the place M I beginning,the same being a said Inlot number *lshly-*lk <B*l <s* aforesaii including a 4 ” Vi* 1 ? driveway eight <B' feet wide off of the south side of said real estate from Third Street to the alley pn the east side of said inlot number eighty-1 six (86) ((Known as Burdge Barber Shop Building.) Tract No. 8. (a) Commencing at a point 181 feet south pt • stone in tile center of the public highway 18 chains and-81 links east at a stone at the northwest c >rner of the southwest quarter of Section thirty-four (34) Township twenty-eight t.B > North. Range fourteen 14) E-ast. tn Adams County, Indiana, thence running west 4 chains Io links, thence south 5 chains 49 links, thenoe east 4 chains 91 h links to the west line of the right of way of the Cincinnati Richmond and Fort Wayne Railroad. thence north along the west line of said right of way to the center of said public highway, thence west 3 chains and 50 links to the place of beginning., containing 3.50 acres more or less. lb) Also, commencing at a stone in the center of the public highway 1208.46 feet east of a stone at tne northwest corner of the southwest quarter of Section thirty-four (34) in Township twenty-eight (28) North of Range fourteen (14) East, thence running west 161.80 feel,-J?** 1 '? south 181 feet, thence east 348 feet to the west riglit of way line of the Cincinnati, Richmond and roit Wayne Railway Company (Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad Company). theme north along the west line of said right of way 189.8 feet to the center of the public highway, thence west 195.03 feet to the place of beginning containing 1 59 and also including all the rights, title and Interests of the grantors herein in or to the side track or spur now located along the east line of said tract of real estate. (Known as Macy Conveyor Bldg ' Tract No. 9. Commencing at a point on the west line of Second Street in Decatur, which point is sixty-six (66) feet and ten (19) inches north of the southeast corner of Inlot number sixty-two tt>-) in the Original Plat of the town, now city, of Decatur, thence north along the west line of Second Street nineteen (19) feet and ten (10) Inches to the center of the partition walls, thence west parallel with Madison Street in the center of said partition wall one hundred thirty-two (13-) feet to the alley, thence south along the east line of said alley nineteen (19) feet and ten (10) inches to a point sixty-six (66) feet and ten (10) inches north of the southwest corner of Inlot number sixty-three (83) in the Original Plat of said town of Decatur, thence east parallel with Madison Street through the center of the partition wall to the place of beginning. (Known as Pumphrey Building) TERMS OF SALE Ea-h tract will be sold for Cash, for not less than full appraised value, free of liens, except special assessments and eAcept the taxes for the year 1935 due and payable in 1936; the purchasers of tracts No. 1. 2. 3,4, 5 or 6 will be entitled to the land lord's share of standing or growing crops on such tracts at time of sale Bids will be considered for each separate tract or for any combination of any two or more tracts; appraisements may be examined at i the office of the Clerk of the Adams 1 Circuit Court, or at the Old Adams County Bank, or at the special representative s office, or the office ot the attorney In the event said real estate or any portion thereof should I not be sold on day of sale, the undersigned may thereafter, at the said i Old Adams County Bank, in Decatur, Indiana after said unsold portion of said peal estate for sale at private ’ sale from day to day until sold; All ! sales to be subject to the approval 1 of the Adams Circuit Court. i Department of Financial Institui tions of the State of Indiana By—- — Clark J Lutz. Special Representative Henry B. Heller, Attorney Sept 26 Oct 3-19 PRESTDENTTO CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ior White House naval aide; Col. Edwin M. Watson, senior military aide: Capt. Ros* T. Mclntire. White House physician. This group will accompany him on his panomau cruise. As far as the coast he will have with him Keith Morgan. Warm Springs, Ga.. Official; Turner Bat-

| tie, asietant secretary of labor; White House secretaries Stephen T. : HUrly and Marvin H. Mclntyre; Miss Marguerite Lehand. personal ;secretary, and Mie# Grace Tully, member of the White House evecutlve #taff, r-ee-e— 0 —— — Town Earns Romance Title Hampton Beach, N. H. — <U.R) — Hampton Beach has earned the title I "Land of Romance.” During the I past summer no less than SO secret 1 marriage# have been recorded by Town Clerk William Brown oOldest Boy Scout Retires New Plymouth. New Zealand. — (U.R) — Major F. W. Candford. 83, who, it Is said, is the oldest Boy Scout in the world, has resigned his appointment as New Zealand headquarters commissioner for training. Despite his age. he will remain a scoutmaster. Q Prized Signatures In Museum Juneau. Alaska. — (U.PJ —On the register of the Alaska Territor Museum. page 445. dated Aug. 8, are scrawled three names which make the page a prised document in territorial history. The signatures are; Will Rogers, Wiley Post and Joe Crosaon. o Boy Spends Year In “Lung” Spokane. Wash. —<U.R>— Fred Betlach. IS. victim of infantile paralysis. is rounding out a year in a mechanical breathing appartus. Young Betlach. the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gus Betlach, is now able to spend more than half his time out of the ‘‘lung.” Trade Buggy Auto For New Car Woodbine, 11l. —<U.R> —An ancient, high-wheeled, hard-rubber tired, buggy-style automobile was traded by Albert Hartwig, prominent business man. for a new automobile. Hartwig had owned the old twocylinder machine for 25 years.

Aged Trio Re-united Marlboro, Mass. —(UP) — Two sisters and a brother whose ages total 220 years were re-united here. They are Mrs. Leander Dupont. 72, of this city, Mrs. Marion Fugere, 78, of Westboro and Angus Landry, 70, of Sydney. N. S. NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT STATE OF INDIANA SS ADAMS CIRCUIT COURT Isobel Myers v». Dale E. Myers The Plaintiff in the above entitled cause having filed her complaint therein together with the affidavit (hat the defendant la a non-resident of the State of Indiana: Now therefore. Dale H. Myers defendent in the above entitled cause, is hereby notified that unless he be and appear on the 15th day of November. ISZS at the court house in the City of Decatur in said county and state to answer or demur to said complaint, the said will be heard and determined in his absence. In witness hereof 1 hereunto set my hand and seal this 11th day of dept. 1435. David D. Depp. Clerk of Adams Circuit Court Herman Myere, Atty.

ROY S. JOHNSON AUCTIONEER Office, Room 9 Peoples Loan A Trust Bldg. Phones 104 and 1022 Decatur, Indiana Oct. I—Paul Hertel. 4 miles south of Van Wert, Ohio. Cgttle Bale. "Claim Your Sale Date Early” My service includes looking after every detail of your sale and more dollars for you the day of your auction. 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 tow 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(° Phone 3-8-7 Decatur, Indiana Over Schafer Hardware Store

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY. SEPTEMBR 26,11)35.

* Test Your knowledge Can you answer seven ot these ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. » , 1. What Is the letter postage l rale to Alaska and Hawaii? 3 Name the channel through ; which the waters of the James, , Nansemond and Elizabeth rivers j pass into Chesapeake Bay. I 3. What body of water encircles I the North Pole? < 4. What is the name for a dead body preserved by the ancient: Egyptian or other method of em-i balming? 5. Where is the boundary line j between Ohio and West Virginia? j 6. Who was John Constable? s T. Where was John Brown hang- 1

[Qr/ZvTi? £den_ | |

CHAPTER XXV The captain alone hung on to hi* courage, and to his carbine. He threw the weapon to his ghoudler. Before he could aim and lire Jerome dived at him from behind, football fashion. As they went down together the carbine was sent spinning aside. Jerome grabbed at the butt of the revolver slung in its holster and wrenched it out. Something warned him that if Papa Gorilla were to be wounded all of them would be torn tn fragments. Maddened by thisiudden violence, Papa Gorilla was seized by a sudden frenzy. He waddled forward clumsily on his short thick bowed legs, not very fast but still roaring. He came to where Linda lay, too terror paralyzed to scramble up. His enormous hands fastened on her knee and shoulder. With no P er * ceptible effort he tossed her about twenty feet up on to the thatched roof of the verandah. Still advancing, he came to where the captain and Jerome lay on the ground. They had separated. Neither of them moved. They lay breathless, watching the monster. Jerome had secured the captain s revolver but he did not attempt to shoot. Something in the ponderous deliberation of the enormous brute seamed to indicate a dazed uncertainty as to its next act. Jerome was hoping that it might stop, stare and growl, then turn and make off into the jungle with the same curious sheepishness that it had shown the day when it had come upon them close to the Tree of the Forbidden Fruit. Instead, the gorilla reached down and took the captain by an ankle. Still the man did not stir nor make a sound. The gorilla took the other ankle. He appeared then to pause as if to reflect. Odd little rumbles came from his profundity of chest. It struck Jerome ridiculously, considering the terror of the situation, that Papa Gorilla was grumbling at some distasteful duty he felt called on to perform, and much inclined to ’ h Suddenly, and with the same coordinated lightness with which he had tossed Linda to a point of comparative safety. Papa Gorl “ a heaved back and swung the captain round his head. Jerome expected to see the man shattered on the earth. Instead, Papa Gorilla loosed his hold in full swing. The captain splashed out into the poolJerome sat up and began to recite The Rhyme of the Nancy Bell. The big animal turned and stared at him thoughtfully. Jerrfme started on the second verse, us.ng care about his diction. Papa Gorilla s close set eyes rolled *h° u L then roved along the edge of the jungle. The Deb, flanking him as usual, crouched and begun to scratch her bosom. He paid no.attention to her. His alert eyes had picxed out the opaque form of the Racketeer, crouching in the thicket Papa Gorilla eave a roar and started tor him. It was as if he had sought and found a pretext. There was a sudden rush and scurry, a prodigious crashing of stiff foliage, and the perfunctory chase took itself off. The captain had clambered on hu feet and was standing in water chest deep. He was swearing soft y to himself. Jerome called to him in a lew voice: ‘ Run for the beach before he comes back I Hurry, or you BF The captain came wading toward him “I hear some others ever there. Repeat your eharm, senor, for the love of heaven . . . “It was not a charm but the story of a shipwrecked sailor who devoured a boat’s crew of survivors. It annears to calm them.’ , Linda called from her thatched perch: “Tell that picture pirate I am going to scream. He saw what happened when I screamed before. Jerome translated, then added. “These giants believe that she is Senora Eve.” He was not quite sure about the correctness of this title but it seemed better than Mat!o“Santa Maria, but they are right. She is beautiful as the dawn. Tell her not to ocrea™, senor. • go.

ed? S. Name the method ot suicide permitted to offenders ot the noble class in feudal Japan 9. What is the religious affili- ■ ation of Senator Huey P Long.' 10. Who was Frank A. Munsey? Apple Tree Blooms Twice Independence, Mo.— (U.R> —Local horticulturists are marveling at William T. Dodson’s apple tree that, is working overtime. After bear- j Inga 10-bushel crop, the tree put forth a full supply of new blossoms. 1 1 . «HI - New Boat Faces Long Tri# Omaha, Neb - (U.R) — The new Missouri river Inspection boat, the Sergeant Pryor, expected here about Oct. 1, will have to steam 1.100 miles before reaching here. '

He waded out and went down the stream before the darkness should be complete in the heavy shade. Jerome got up. “Hurt?” he asked Linda. “No. Papa tossed me up here as gently as Dad’s farmer used to toss me on to the hay cart when I was a little girl.” “He wanted to protect you.” “Yes. The old boy's fond of me. He did precisely what Mama Goril did the other day when the Racketeer got temperamental with her. She tossed the baby into a high fork, then took after him.” “Well, Papa’s fits of temper are brief. Because he can’t remember what it’s all about, perhaps. We are probably rid of those hombres. It doesn’t matter, as they have left their guns.” He walked to the edge of the roof and lifted Linda down. “Fancy

(.'lmp? - i Va MW Jj Tar I “You couldn’t drive those spigs back here with th* shambok and the gorillas keep away for hours after a flare-up,” Jerome said.

tossing a rugged gal like you up on to a roof.” He told her then what he had learned from the reward seekers. “We don’t want Tommy to pay any reward for us, Linda. The sooner we get to San Cristobal the better.” “Who owns this plaee?” “They didn’t say. Only that it had an evil reputation.” “Well, it will have a worse one now.” She laughed. “And I’d rather not think what ours is apt to be.”

“That’s the least of our cares right now. Thia skipper is going to San Cristobal and report, that he has located us here held captive by a regiment of wild giant apes, and claim the reward. The quarantine ought to be lifted by this time, and Tommy will mobilize a relief expedition. “We don’t want that,” she said decidedly. “It would make us look like a pair of dubs.” “Yes." Jerome agreed, "and the Sunday supplements would have full page illustrations of you as The Gorilla’s Bride.” “Rather less of a social asset than a write-up in the role of Eve,” she admitted. "We had better be on our way.” “No question. As soon as it gets light enough we’ll drag the dory down, put sense stores s» her, and

It Is under construction at Du buque. La., approximately 300 miles northeast. -o - Markets At A Glance Stocks steady at fractions to a point under previous close. Bonds irregularly lower. Curb stocks irregiffkriy lower. Chicago stocks irregular. Call money l « to 1 P e P cent. Foreign exchange: dollar flrm. Grains: wheat unchanged to H cent lower; corn to 1H cents , higher. Chicago livestock: sheep weak: cattle steady to strong; hogs weak. I Cotton 1 to 3 points lower Rubber 12 to 15 points higher. I Silver: bar at New York unchanged at «5H cents.

shove off. Hl get the mat and ri the sail. When the breeze com* it will be fair and we ought t make San Cristobal in twenty-sou hours." “Let’s see what’s in the ehesti Clothes are important since w don’t want the sort of publicit you’ve mentioned.” “Time enough in the morning. W had better get some sleep." “Safe . . .?" “Safer than ever. You couldn' drive those spigs back here witl the shambok, and the gorillas kee? away for hours after a flare-up.” “The more I see of gorillas,” Lfn da said, “the more I’m convince) that Man never had such worth: ancestry.” “In the body of a Titan, Papi Gorilla has the soul of a poet Hi would rather listen to verse thai destroy a Pan American.”

“Yes. All he did was to ’pan’ him. After putting me out of harm’s way. Let’s hope the Racketeer may get like that when he grows up.” She said presently when they were both on their beds of fern: “I’m not so frantic to get back to all the rotten worries, Jerry . . .“ “No more am I. Only for being rescued like a Sunday pienicker I’d rather stick on indefinitely.” “So would I. No telephone, no radio, no silly parties . . . not even bill*." “You never had to worry about them.” “Starting about six months ago, I’ve had enough worry about bills to last me for the rest of my life." “Until you marry," he interrupted. “And take on a large new set of tiresome futilities. Tedious guests and caller* iaeking tn the tact of the Gorilla family . . . long stuffy dinner* after the way we go out and gather a basketful of eggs and another of fruit . . . hour* at th* dressmakers after skipping around next to naked.” He interrupted: “And tangoing with a diplomatic attache after being tossed lightly on to * roof by ■ Central African emigre . . .” (To Be Continued) eoMsu*. 153*. strig Fwtaiw iyndieatM, ise.

MARKET REPORTS daily report of local AND FOREIGN MARKETS Brady's Market far Dooatur, Berns. Craigville, Hoagland and Willshire. Close et n Noon. Corrected St ptember 2«. N'o commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday. Wednesday. Friday, and Saturday100 to 120 lbs 88 95 120 to 180 lbs *-20 140 to ISO lbs 10.05 ISO to 190 lbs 190 to 230 lbs U.OO 230 to 270 lbs 20.80 870 to 300 lha. — 20 50 300 to 350 lb*. 10.40 Roughs — Bv o Stags J 2 * Vealers ...... -— 0-K Ewe and wether lambs 8 50 Buck lambs —- 7 50 Yearling lambs — 4.00 CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Sept. Dec. May Wheat »8% .98>4 .98 Corn .84% .594* -58 Oats 29% .28% 25% NEW YORK PRODUCE

New York. Sept. 26. —fll.R) —Produce : Dressed poultry, firm: (cents per lb.) turkeys, 14-31 c: chickens. 1728c: broilers. 17%-30c; fowls, 14 %-36%c; Long Island ducks, 16%18c. Live poultry steady to Irm (cents per lb.) geese. 10-15 c; turkeys, 2030c; roosters, 16c; ducks. 11-20 c; fowls, 16-23 c; chickens, 18-28 c. Butter, receipts, 11,051 packages, market steady: creamery higher than extras, 26%-27%c; evtra, 92 score, 26%c; firsts. 90 to 91 score, 26-26%c; firsts, 88 to 89 score. 24 5 25%c; seconds, 23%-24%; centralized, 90 score. 26c; centralized 88 to 89 score, 24% 25 %c; centralized 84 to 87 score. 23%-24%c. Eggs, receipts. 15.953 cases: mar ket unsettled: special packs, including unusual hennery selections, 29% 34c; standards. 28%-29c, firsts 26%-27c; mediums. 25-25%c; dirties, 25-25%c; checks, 21-jflc; refrigerated special tax, 27%-28%c; refrigerated standard, 26%-27c; refrigerated first. 26-26%c; refrigerated medium. 25c; refrigerated dirties. 25c: refrigerated checks, 21 I %c. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y.. Sept. 25.— <U.B -Livestock: Hogs, 300; steady; (Testable ISO--235 lbs., averaging 180-315 lbs., $12.10-812.25; few 225 Ib. natives, $12.35; somewhat plainer offerings, $11.75-sl2. Cattle, 200; steady; low cutter and cutter cows. $3.75-$4.85; medium bulls, 55.25-55.40. Calves, 25; vealers, unchanged. sll down. Sheep. 300; lambs steady; medium a flit mixed, $9.25-$10; ewes and wethers quoted to $10.50, FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Sept. 26. —(U.R> —Livestock: Hogs, 20-25 c lower; 225-350 lbs., $11.50; 250-375 lbs * $11.40; 275-300 lbs.. $11.30; 200-235 lbs., $11.45; 180-200 lbs.. $11.35; 160-180 lbs.. $11.25; 800-350 lbs.. $11.10; 150-160 lbs., $11; 140-150 Ills., $10.76; 130140 lb*.. $10.25; 120-13r»Tb»., $10; 110-120 lbs., $9.75: 100-110 lbs.. $9.50; roughs. $9.50; stags. $7.75. Calves, $9.50; lambs, $9.

CLEVELAND PRODUCE Cleveland, Sept. 26—(UP)—Butter steady. Extras .39. Stds .29. Egge weak. Extra whilst .32. Current recta .25. Live poutry weak, catered fowl heavy .22. ducks 5 Ibts. op. 18. small 15. Potatoes 100 lb baks N. J. $1.25. Ohio and Wise. $1.0041.30. Idaho $1.7541.85. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected September 26. No. 1 New Wheat, 60 Iba. or better 89c No. 2 New Wheat. 58 lbs 88c Oatslß to 24c Soy Beaus, bushel 50 to 60c No. 2 Yeiiow Corn, 100 lbs. .. SI.OB Rye 40c CENTRAL SOYA MARKET New crop beans 55c Old Crop Soy Beans 60c Delivered to fact4ry GILLETT TRUCK TIRES at Special Prises. ■ Six Mentha ■ Jr unconditional ■« • J guarantee. PORTER TIRE CO. 341 Winchester St,

SKs>| AM) NOTICES I for 8 FOR SALE1 living room lU ite, slls-589; 1 lhis K roon) \""« ul«r price W- J 75. j iim ’ suite, regular pries InoJS Stuckey *ul Company, Store open evenings. ’ ... 11 FOR SALE Cabbage tor kruu pound. Ernest LongeaJ Craigvili* nhone. 1 mile » M . ' % mile south Magley. ...J! FOR SALE—Ladies Hat*. j m , eeived new shipmsat o( tai; Price* reasonable, Maude A a rimai). 332 Booth 4th Rt. jjj FOR SALE —Canaries. gmtMtg singers. Also females. Call 1 North Eleventh street. Pf» 1163.. wyj -- ’(..1 FOR SALE — Goodyear l!,(, | ply truck tire, like new. Rq, onable. Also pop corn. Oik Bcheiner. phone 881 G. 2J7*jg FOR SALE —1924 Internatio**; truck, 1927 Ford truck ami a semi-trailer. Frank Wreekinj % W. Monroe St. 224-lt! FOR SALE — Good cheap mare, weight 1450, bred, of yearling well mated colts » and gelding. C. C. Abbott. Ick west of Pleasant Mills. 228G1'.e4s FOR SALE — Semi-moderi k«w and garage, north Fifth g Phone 499 or inquire 42! Men* Ave. iiiWs

fob sale—r.*»3 M only 4.090 miles. Floyd Craigvilk plume, iinaur FOR SALE South lend range; also shor’ .■ a’her “ port. A l condition. Cheap cash Sprague FOR SALE — Pears ! ] eating, preserving; W .ae cents per bushel Meiben, West Monroe FOR SALE Shropshire 54 miles southwest of J. C. Baltxell | FOR SALE—Piano Cheap if en at once. Mrs H L Preble Preble pimm U WANTED KWANTED — Cisterns m clean. 'B | barrels saved. Walls scniM down Price reasonable and 204 Max K!“ WANTED—GirI for general i«K» ■ work. No laundering. StaUß j work. Address Box 11' WANTED— Experienced girl, '*■ f able for genera' Give references ' East Fort Wayne. Ind. MAN WANTED for Ra’l'tf Route of 800 families. Write day. Rawleigh. I'-! 1 ' Freeport, 111. WANTED—LADIES > g Stahlhut of Lauta Beauty M Fort Wayne will I" s' Becker* Beauty Shop Tuesday. ('' B t Call 1250 lorapp ~ WANTED— Good. dean,Jjßk Rags, suitable for cleanigß machinery. W* paj. [ c * I Decatur Daily Democrat ■ LOST AND FOVND.B 1 ' LOST-Pair gold rimmed ‘‘l*' I ** about Hept. 6. Reward. to this office. " ■ Unwieldy "C.rr.ney" ■ In ancient t'yprun. copp«» r™ K< sPRA c, V E B OFFERS B American Beauty . I Washers f29.9-’ 10 ■ I RCA and Emerson | Radios *m*s® K Kitchen Cabinets >’ • ■ Living Room *“ ltes *’S. I $2 down and $2 P er ianoS , I Studio and Grand g s F R A G I’ E t I Furniture Company | 151 6. Second 6t. Pho" e H N, A. BIXLER I OPTOMETRIST I Eye* Examined. Gla»«» F " I hours m s w H;3O 13:30 10 ' | Saturday*. B®®’• m I Telephone g