Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 233, Decatur, Adams County, 2 October 1935 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Youth Held for Double Murder BS ® iX. iF'l iKIN 1 r_J_ _JHßl_j Leroy Drake Vula Hayden Leroy Drake, 19-year-old Long Beach, Cal., youth, is expected to pl t a,i temporary insanity against first degree murder charges drawn against him in connection with the death of his aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Steinhuer. They were poisoned and their bodies placed in a machine which was driven into the river, according to a confession police claim Drake made. Drake’s fiance, Vula Hayden, 21-year-old dietician, was apparently unmoved by the crim* Drake u said to have feared his relatives’ reproach at hb recent theft of an automobile.

) ♦ Test Your Knowledge !•' Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. ► - — -♦ 1. What is the Spaisish term for a range or chain of mountains? 2. Which state of the U. S. leads | in coal production? 3. Who was Sir John Hawkins? 4. How long after Easter is ; Ascension Day? 5. In Greek mythology, who LOANS Up to $300.00 INTEREST COSTS REDUCED NEARLY ONE-HALF The “LOCAL" always loans for LESS. All loans mads at less than maximum rate permitted by law. No in- „ dorsers required. You can borrow amounts up to S3OO as follows: S 50.00 now costs only SI.OO per month 100.00 now costs only $2.00 per month « 150.00 now costs only $2.50 per montn -200.00 now costs only $3.00 per month "300.00 now costs only $4.00 per month > Costs of other amounts are strictly in proportion as this new low interest .ate gov- « erns all loans. « „Full information gladly I furnished without any cost or obligation on your part. Frompt, confidential service. Come in today—find out for yourself. Special Time Plan for Farmers. lOCAL LOAN g Rhone 2-3-7 Decatur, Indiana Ts*’ Cnhpfpr Hardwarp Store

VUL. .•» Public Auction THURSDAY EVENING, OCT. 3.. 7P. M. HORSES, CATTLE, SHEEP AND HOGS 20 Good .Milch Cows, Heifers, Bulls and Feeding Cattle. Brood Sows, Feeding Shoates, Two Young Chester White Boars (immuned). Two Ponies. Chestnut Fence Posts. Miscel'aneous articles. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES E. J. AHR and FRED C. AHR—Managera. Johnson & Doehrman— Auctioneer*.

THIMBLE THEATER ’8075, THE GM6 ARC GONE® HXu QE A WHW YZZT" A CONTEST- Y6AH - CONTEST- THE GjAL UMCH \ ONE OF Y£R FUTURE < K»S<SES ME THE REST U)im/ JJUWES IS GONER UJiN A ) ujin the q- ' M each oSe M. hour SO’S \ ]V)c ) A IWN < z , PR )L / f Vt -O’ 4 i .iWi a\ /ssii I,

were naiads? 6. In which country is the an cient city of Antioch? 7. What is a corduroy road? 8. Has Abyssinia a diplomatic representative in the United States? 9. Where is the group of islands called The Hebrides? 10. How can the area of a circle be determined? COURT HOUSE Real Estat* Transfers Henry Beiberich et ux to Herman ' M. Sautbine et ux. forty acres of land in Root township, for $4,000. Martha Dettinger et al to Milton Dettinger, eighty acres of land in Kirkland twp. for SI.OO. Marriage License; Henrietta C- Lytle of Fort Wayne to Frank C- Cook, engineer. Fort Wayne. Navy Day Committee To Conduct Contest Indianapolis. Oct. 2- —(U.R)—Two trips to Washington, D. C„ and Annapolis. Md., will be awarded winners of an essay contest sponsored by the Indfana Navy Day committee, it was announced today. One Indiana high school boy and one girl will be taken on the sev-en-day tour with all expenses paid. The competition is open to students in public, private, and parochial schools. MITM E OF 4lX*b »ETTLKMENT OF B»T*TB NO. 8181 N'oti e is hereby given to tlie creditors, heirs and legatees of Katie S. Neuenschwander, deceased, to appear In the Adams Circuit Court. lield at Decatur, Indiana, on the 28th day ot Oetober, 1535, and show cause, if any. why the FINAL SETTLEMENT ACCOUNTH with the estate of satd decedent should not be approved: and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares Ernest J Stengel Administrator I'ecatur, Indiana, October 2, 1935. Xtvnrney Nathau C. Neleon Oct.

NOTICE OF PBTWI«»N TO ShILI. I REAL IMITATE •>r«*ate < «»•» »®- »»» In the Circuit lour! of Adami, County, Indiana. September Term Oliver V. Dilllua Executor of Estate of Georar W. Mlllrr, l>ec«»»«il vn. Nelli* B. Carpenter et al. To Nettle carpenter and Emerson Carpenter, her hueband; Mary Schwenk and Rueeel Fhwenk. her hueband; Samuel A. Miller and Knima Miller, hie wife. Ton are severally herehv notified that the above named petitioner ax Uxi-eutor of the estate aforeaaid, haa, filed tn the Circuit Court of Adame County. Indiana, a petition. maklnK you defendant* thereto, and praying therein for an order and decree of Raid Court authorising the eale of certain Real Batata belonging to the estate of said decedent, and in eald petition described. to make assets for the payment of the debts and liabilities of said estate, and has also filed an affidavit averlng therein that you and each of you are non-residents of the Slate of Indiana, or that your residence Is unknown and that you are necessary parties to said proceedlnKS. and that said petition, so filed and which Is now pending Is > set for hearing In said Circuit Court) at the Court Hohuse In Decatur, Ind-1 1 iana on the 20th day of November ] 19*5. Witness, the Clerk and seal of said I Court, this 13th day of September , 1915 David D. Depp, Clerk Adame Circuit Court. , Xathea C. Neleoa, Attorney. Sept. 11-21 Oct. * I | VPPOI.ATMEAT OF EXECLTOH Notice Is hereby given. That the undersigned has been appointed Exe- I I cutor of the Estate of Emily W il- i i Rams, late of Adams County, deceased. The Estate is probably solvent. _ j Roscoe D. Wheat, Executor’ Sept. 24( 1935 Sept. 35 Oct. 3-9:1 NOTICE OF IVSOI.VEX V In the t<Ui»i t Ireiilt Court So. 3083 In the matter of the estate of Edward Bultemeyer deceased. Notice Is hereby given that upon petition filed in said court by Lena Bultemeyer, administratrix of said estate, setting up the Insufficiency of the estate of said decedent to pay the debts and liabilities thereof, the Judge of said Court did in the 29 day of April 1935, find said eslate to be probably insolvent, and order the same to be settled accordingly. The creditors of said estate are there--1 fore hereby notified of such insolI vency, and required to file their claims against said estate for allowance. . , , , Witness, the Clerk and seal of said Court,, at Decatur, Indiana, this -4th day of September 1935. David D. Depp, clerk. Sept. 25, Oct » .. "0 ! notice for bids for m ppi.iks yOHCOIXTV INFIHMAHS | Notice is hereby given that the I Board of Commissioners of Adams I County. Indiana, will receive bids I for supplies to be used and furnishI ed for the maintenance of the County Infirmary for the three months beI ginning October 1. 1935. i Bids to be received October 8,1 H». Requisition now on file in the office of the Auditor of Adams C unty. John W. Tyndall Auditor Adams County ———— ROY S. JOHNSON AUCTIONEER Office. Room 9 Peoples Loan & Trust Bldg. < Phones 104 and 1022 Decatur, Indiana I’ Oct. 4—Ralph Clark, Trustee. Fisher & Harris Grocery. Oct. s—Perry M. Barker, Thorn1 town. Ind. Duroc hogs. Oct. B—Porter & Spillers. 6 mile north of I nion City. Registered Guernsey cattle. Oct. 10— Decatur Riverside Community Sale. 1 Oct. 11.—Ira Elzey. adinr. Sale of Homer Elzey property at Monroe. Oct. 11— Chattanooga stock sale. Oct. 12—Louis Kolb A Sons. I Oxford, Ohio. Duroc hogs Oct. 15 — Boyd Schonfcwiler. I Sheldon. 111. Duroc hogs. Oct. 17—Stewart & Kline. Camden. Ohio. Duroc hogs. Oct. 18—Bruce Pullen. Liberty. i Ind. Duroc hogs. "Claim Your Sale Date Early" 1 My service includes looking j after every detail of your sale and ' 1 more dollars for you the day of mnr SPRAGUE OFFERS American Beauty Washers. ■ $29.95 to $59.95. .Mangle Irons, $59.95. i RCA and Emerson Radius S2O *0 $79.95. $2 down and ?1 a week. SPRAGUE FURNITURE CO. 152 S. 2nd st. Phone 199 NOW SHOWING—“A [DOPEVt.'u PEOPLE OP S SPiNRM.HOVft.OBdW TO THIS CONTeST- HERE’S THERE ftRE 10.950 GftkSTHERE ftRE ' 3b5 DAYS IN LmJ / ft ' [7fttAO Ten / ’ 1 LZ HOURS TO SsBJ-t? ft OJORKING/X/ „ 7 . DftY- / PM V. ( '•> .0 3

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 193.>.

NEW METHOD OF i CONTINt’gn FROM * AWB ONE lug in the blood, had the power of destroying the proteins which cause the cloudiness of the lens | in cataract. There are a number of microbes, known as the proteolytic microorganism. which secrete eatyiies capable of destroying proteins They include bacillus histolyticus. the cause of gas gangiTliP. It occurred to Dr. Cornell that if this bacillus were grown on the protein from cataract, it would secrete only the enzyme needed to destroy this protein. Experiments. Dr . Connell reports. confirmed his reasoning. It was at this point that be determined to turn his attention to can-1 eer. He began his experiments I with mice. His technique was as follows: small amounts of cancer tiitue from mice were placed in a test tube containing a salt solution A pure culture of the bacil-. lus was then added. At the end of six days, the cancer cells had been destroyed. He then filtered off the remaining liquid which he reasoned should con- 1 tain the enzyme produced by the bacillus. It is this solution which 11 he named "ensol " 1■ The solution was then injected I into cancerous mice and ft was found that the cancer tissue was i

?(AST/N7O EDEN n

CHAPTER XXX "Briefly,” s*id Linda, “you want a man as much like yourself as is humanly possible.” He gave her a quizzical look. "How did you guess?'* “Call it female intuition. You have just described Jerome, Dr. Van Dieman." “Jerome?” “Y’es. Lieutenant Crain. Ever since we landed on this island I’ve been playing Eve. But I couldn’t make him play up to me as Adam. He wouldn’t break into your beautiful chests and he wouldn’t, sample the Forbidden Fruit. I had to trick him into doing that. . . . “I’ll tell you about it later. What you have said is more important just now—to you as well as to us.” “What I just said. . . ?” “About wanting a man to reslace5 lace you, while you're in Holland, erome can do that. He has all points, Spanish and everything. He was a gentleman by nature and birth and tradition long before they made him an officer and a gentleman by Act of Congress. If he hadn't been, we’d be just another Ad«m and Eve. But he wouldn’t fall for any Garden of Eden because we had nowhere to go from here.” Dr. Van Dieman looked puzzled. “I do not understand. It is natural that you two should have fallen in love, living here so intimately. It is also natural that since you are well bred young people you should have desired t® preserve your self-re-spect. But I do not see what you mean by saying that this young man protected you both from temptation because there was no place for vou to go from here.” Linda said with the candor of the modern girl: “Jerome turned down the Garden of Eden idea because we can’t marry when we get back where we belong.” “Zo ... and why not?” “Because both our fortunes have stopped being that thing,” Linda said. “The good old dividends are washed out. We’re both flat. He had resigned his Navy commission last year to start a boat-building business. Now he is a gentleman of leisure. Leisure is all he’s got.” “Aeh . . . now I begin to understand. How noble . . “Gosh, Doctor, don’t call it that I” Jerome said disgustedly. “It was just plain common sense.” “You are right, my boy. Just plain common sense. If there is anything more noble than plain common sense you stick to in face of great temptation, then I have still to find it out.” Dr. Van Dieman’s pure English was enriching itself a little under stress of his very human emotion. He stroked his silvery beard. “Now I see it all. Let us go aboard and breakfast. Then we can talk. You have been such good children. You have been much better as Adam and Eve. And now I think maybe I shall be a sort of agent of God.” He seemed to be turning this idea in his mind, as if weighing any possible charge of blasphemy. Then he said: “Why not? In the life of every man he is given some time a chance to be that.... All that is any good in any man is that part of nim which is a part of God." He nodded to himself. “Which is all the more reason for giving the God that is in us a good time, when it can be done honestly.” “That’s tha trouble,” Linda said.

LIFETIME JOP” By SEGAR if YOU K\ss EACH one“V ’ (UlEkk - kIM(X S T*\R€E 10950 ' gals rr ujouuo 0 t S§OTRKE THREE YEARS J l 1/ 111 II X r f / I iGm' •"«•<» nrfm rr)w*« . H i 'l f • j v <^ c ~v ss K-rurv.J zzz y i • w '•» i,fl. ■

YOUR “BRIDE’S BOOK” IS RELADY Wedding etiquette anTTustoms. mvtolkmib bride's cheat, suggestions on honeymoon ’[“**'.* boo k The Dally lion is contained In the n#w 19.090 word BRIDE b BOOK, tm uaw Democrat's Washington ‘“ f ormatlon Bureau has prtpaied t YOUR COPY IS READY AND WAITING. W rap up a dime, aim mall with the coupon below. CLIP COl PON HERE . „ , Dept. 8-120, Daily Democrat * Washington Information Bureau, 1013 Thirteenth Street, Washington, D. C. For the enclosed dime, please mail me a copy of the BRIDE S BOOK AT ONCE. NAM E STREET and No. CITY STATE I am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat. Decatur, lud. i .. -—

practically dissolved away, the can- : cers becoming smaller and softer. Nftt he turned to human pa--1 ttents, patients who had been given up as hopeless. Thia Hine the ensol was manufactured by putting bits of human cancer in the test tube and adding th# bacillus. The Journal carries the report of 30 of these cases. Discussing these cases in an editorial. the Journal says, “the first two presented spectacular improvement, most of the others showed good through less striking results, and in some few no benefit was derived. “In justice to Dr. Connell it should be stated that his cases

"Well then, we shall see. I ought t to be sailing on the next of our vess seis for Rotterdam. All that keep* me is this matter of finding the right man to replace me . • permanently, if he makes good. As I have said it is a case of finding a square peg for 1 a square hole, but not one that fits 1 too snugly for • little play. “Now put »w«y the wedding dress, my dear, and see what you • can find in the way of clothes . . . , no, you may put the wedding dress , in a valise you will find there in the eloset and bring it with you. It has never been worn . . . but that is something I am not yet ready to talk about even after forty years. Perhaps vou may soon wear it happily, and then I shall tell you. Close the house as you found it and come down to the beach and we shall get under weigh for San Cristobal.” He went out and started back toward the ravine. Jerome and Linda looked after him, then at each other. “This,” said Jerome, “is my idea of a good conduct bonus cashed ahead of time and the discount waived.” “And that,’’ said Linda, looking after the big white figure, radiant in the morning sunlight, “is my idea of God in human form.” The big macaw had fluttered after the Master. Then, as if resenting his departure to leave these aliens on the property, it flew back to its branch. “Well, what in blazes do you want?” it screeched. “Get a new line, Cockv,” Jerome advised. “Thsre’s nothing in the hot place you squawk about that interests us in the ieast. What we want is right here—in heaven.” • • » Ten days later the new PanCaribbean Agent General of the Van Dieman Lines said to the captain of the smart cabin cruiser: “You are to set the Senora and myself ashore, Mateo, and return for us in a week. Then we shall go to the port of your sainted namesake and take up our official duties as per order of Doctor Van Dieman.” “But Senor,” Mateo protested, “you and the Senora should have at least a cook.” “No, amigo mio, we prefer to be entirely alone. If we bore each other there arc always the gorillas.” Mateo crossed himself. “They are not Christians, Senor.. “How do vou know. Mateo?” Linda asked. She had not yet changed the wedding dress in which she had gone directly from the church to the yacht, about five hours earlier in the day, at San Cristobal. “Perhaps they are angels in disguise.” Again the yacht captain crossed himself. “Por Dios, Senora, in that case the disguise at least is good. Still, it is possible. Do they not guard the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil? But sueh things are not for me to talk about.” Jerome and Linda stepped ashore. The boat shoved off the beach and went back to the smart expresscruiser. She blew three blasts in salute, dipped her colors, and headed for the port of San Mateo. Jerome picked up a suitcase and started across the beach for the mouth of the ravine. Linda walked beside him. As they entered the cool shaded tunnel of the trees she stopped. “Wait a moment, Jerry. I can’t risk tearing this lovely thing.”

■ were of the desperate kind, those regarded as beyond the help of surgery or radiation. Consequently, his apparently successful results should be given a higher rating than they might seem to deserve at first sight. Even with a cure which could properly be termed, specific, no doubt many cases of severity and in the late stages would not respond “The degree of amelioration which he has obtained is distinctly encouraging and clearly demands that lus work be continued.'' IVANTED— Good, clean, big Rajrs, suitable for cleaning machinery. Will pay 4c lb. Dwatur Daily Democrat

- BY -—--I f HENR.YC.* ROWLAND

t She slipped out of the priceless - lace wedding dress, folded it cares fully over her arm. then said. “All t right, let’s go. Now I'm back where , I belong.” t “You’re where you belong? ne r agreed, “but not back there. It’s i for the first time. In all your hitherto questing life.” > “But I've always belonged to you, i Jerry.” “True, but the title was only i signed, sealed and delivered this i morning in San Mateo. Dr. Van ■ Dieman was right. I could never i have graduated from the intensive : course he’s put me through in the past ten days if we’d been married , on landing.” “No,” she admitted. ‘You’d have been what my college psychology ‘prof’ called a split consciousness.” “Yes, and it would have just about torn me in two. Now I've got a whole week with nothing to think about but you. Then we'll go aboard the cruiser and start on a Caribbean cruise that will be about as much like the one we took aboard Tommy’s yacht as working in a vineyard is like enjoying the champagne it produces.” She said nappily: ‘Back again in Eden, with the Lord’s permission to eat all of the fruit of the tree we want. And when I say the Lord, I don’t mean Doctor Van Dieman, though we have his, too.” “That,” said Jerome, “is probably what was meant for Adam and Eve if they’d obeyed the Law.” “You’re to thank for that, Jerry. All the same it seems odd that so much should depend on signing our names to a paper before the U. S. Consul. And afterwards, watching Tommy and hia crowd lapping up champagne.” “Tommy did his job of giving you away like a gentleman and sportsman. Never thought the old stock market pirate had so much Lord Chesterfield about him.” Linda was listening but not to this eulogy of Tommy. Her head was aslant and as Jerome stopped speaking he heard from somewhere back in the jungle the cry that had appalled them when first it had struck on their startled ears. “They know we’re back,” Linda said, “but somehow the Racketeer's yell sounds differently.” “It is different,” said Jerome. “All the cussedness gone out of it. More like a welcome.” “It is a welcome. The poor old things have missed us. Ana they’re pleased to have us back. Fancy Jerry, being welcomed on your honeymoon by a family of gorillas!” “And liking it. All th* game. I think we’d still better leave th* Forbidden Fruit alone.” “Well, perhaps,” she admitted. All I really wanted was to see wh*4 it was like.” “We've done that thing. And you know what the Big Chief told us about its properties. According to the tribe of natives where he found it. .. .” “We’ll find out about that, too,” she laughed and started to splash up the bed of the brook. They came to the natural dam. As they mounted it a voice that seemed now, like that of the Racketeer, to have lost it* unpleasant hostility cried jovially; “Well, what in blazes do you want?” “What do you think, Cocky?” Linda cried. THE END. CorTTUht. 1133. Ktef Fwurei Im.

MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL ANO FOREIGN MARKETS Brady'* Market for Dacatur, Barn*. Craigvllle, Hoagland and Wlllehire. Clo*e st 12 Noon. Corrected October 2. No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday. Wednesday. Friday, and Saturday. 100 to 120 lbs * 8.20 IM to 140 lb*- 8.45 140 to 160 lb# 9.30 160 to 190 lbs 9.95 , 190 to 230 lbs — 10.25 230 to 270 1b5...„ 10.05 1 270 to 300 lbs. 9.85 300 to 350 lbs 8.85 Roughs 8.50 Stags *.<s Vealers 9.50 Ewe and wether lambs 8.00 Buck lambs 7.00 Yearling lambs — 4.00 CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE llec. May July Wheat 51.05 51 03% -95% Corn 6014 .59% .60% Oats 28% .29% .29% EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y., Oct. 2 —(U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, 500; lower; desirable 150220 lbs., averaging 180-200 lbs.. 511.25-511 35; 120-150 lbs.. 510.50511; plainer kinds. 150-230 lbs., 510.75-51110 Cattle, 100; cows unchanged: low cutter and cutler grades, 53.5054.65. Calves, 100; steady; bulk good to choice, 511. Sheep, 700; steady; rather leniently sorted. 59.25-59.50; medium and mixed offerings. 58.25-79. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, lud., Oct. 2.—flU?> —Livestock Hogs, 15-30 c higher; 225-250 lbs., 510.50; 250-275 lbs., 510.45; 275300 lbs.. 510.35; 200-225 io*.. «xv.-«v; 180-200 lbs., 510.35; 160-180 lbs.. 510.30; 300-350 IM., 51030; 150160 lbs., 510.15; 140-150 lbs., 59.90; 130-140 lbs., 59.40; 120-130 lbs., 59.15; 110120 lbs.. 58.90; 100-110 lbs., 58.65; roughs, IST stags, 57.25. Calves, 59.50; lamias, 58.25. CLEVELAND PRODUCE Cleveland, 0., Oct. 2. —(U.R.’ —Produce: Butter market, firm; extras, 30c; standards. 29%c. Eggs, market firm; extra whites. 32c; current receipts, 25c; pullets. j 21c - Live poultry, weak; colored fowl heavy. 22c; ducks, 5 lbs. and up. 18e; small, 15c. Potatoes (100-lb. bagst Maine, *1.25; New Jersey, 51.25; Ohio and Wisconsin, 51-51-20; Idaho, $1.8551.90. NEW YORK PRODUCE New York, Oct. 2.— (U.R) —Proi duce: Dressed poultry (cents per lb.) steady; turkeys. 16-31 c; chickens. 17-28 c; broilers. 17%-Jlc; fowls,-13-25c; Long Island ducks. 16%-18c. Live poultry (cents per lb. I steady to firmer; geese, 1915 c; turkeys, 18-30 c; roosters, 16c; ducks. 10-17e; fowls. 16-24 c; chick ens. 15-26 c. Eggs, receipts. 19.724 cases; mar ket firmer; special packs, including unusual hennery selections. 3435c; standards, 28-28%c; firsts, 3737%e; mediums. 25-25%c; dirties. 25-25%c; checks, 21-23 c; refrigerated special tax. 27-28 c: refrigerated standard, 26%-2«%c; refrigerated standard, 26%-26%c. Butter, receipts, 10,001 packages; market fair; creamery higher than extras. 3714-38 c; extra 92 score. 27c; first 90 to 91 score, 2»%-36%c; first 88 to 89 score, seconds, 34-24%c; centralized 90 score. 36%c; centralized 88 to 8!) score, 25-25%c; centralized 84 to 87 score, 24-34%c. — LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected October 2. No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 93c No. 2 New Wheat, 58 lbs 93c Vats. 20 to 25c Soys Beans, bushel 69c No. 2 Yellow Corn, 100 lbs 51.08 Rye 45c CENTRAL SOYA MARKET Soys Beaus, bushel 60e Delivered to tactary GILLETT I TRUCK TIRES at Special Price*. Six Month* J unconditional » ♦ J guarantee. PORTER TIRE CO. 4 341 Winchester 6L *

advertiseZMl OCTOBER roon. S u ltf . s , 3 . p)we 13 IlviuK | ()om suites up. 7 k chen cabinot,,' kiUh. n rangH, | 32 springs, r, up eum rugs. »1.55 tip- s iiaa'.is fji U p, ], , u line wash,-!- }li ., A;1 guaranty. ald , door 5t,,,.. np „ n ~ I k,, y *'' M ro-', Ind Duio, male hog $25. 2-tr-i litter « hlle each Y< arlmg i) ur h aia weight 70u 11.,,, pGuernsey weight price s’.s. H p. Farm. ' . BABY gr Beaufif’l! ruiGi.i Piano ilik. .«n balan.. first letter Quick ,• sary. E... alas x-uaMg Adjuster. .Maui Stem son. Indiana. BM FOR SALE-- I'sed like built on good & Co.. Moto n, Iml MB FOR SALE Leghorn pulhts. Tni strain John Steffen, 1 FOR SALE 14 double \ illg ew- I'-.- .Mj; h K-. FOR SALT -J Marion 4. Box FOR SALEused six months Priced able for qn;. k sale Five or iuqiii: . f.-.aj WANTED wants;: (Mr* a man t : k by tte Meiie Si:-. . ' ■ WANTED ;■. uAT xteuiJMfr 2in family. Box FOR RENT g: FOR RENT A s M su house. ..." la' -eu FOR RENT square Irom Ixi-ino-D. Suttles, agent. —.—_ - —■ Kidnaping ' ’ctim E Gives Testiw® Mexico. Mo Ort Isaac Dee K- ■ .h'--St. Louis pin - and t.diM a bizarre kidau; .u 1? testified in the M o T. Muench. i ha:a. .i sch the crane. t.:a: ■ ed past hks to • a iiotel day party -• ■ • ’ abduction. The stale e-.oiu.it by l'r. ostimony to t lim n U'--’ ' '"'“M cuilt up by pi-vi ' it- iota™ that the red ian>d S’ man was the o>n-..i kidnap plot. H Few Arms Shipped s Out By GoverniM® Washington, o-t. United States has .-hiPli* 1 * negligable quantity of »rtM« i munitions to Italy tln” n ß. , ~r and none . , put. according 1" M iort figures mm.e P'"’ lic ’■ ■tate departnn-it* '

■ SATIONAL 8 nRMI* KI bl ' Ei ' 1 I S 20 Living K"" n ’ ■ factor* pr' ,es J $29.51 Ho 5135.00 I SPRAGUE ■ furniture S TuRE K n A <U P h ° ne ■ 152 S. 2nd St. N. A. BIXLER optometry Eyea Examined. Glass*! F IIOUB S : tOto6.* 8:30 to 11=3'’ I‘ 2o ‘ | Saturdays. 8 NJ' “■ Tnlpohono