Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 236, Decatur, Adams County, 5 October 1935 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Magician* Forego Crystal Clinton. lowa (U.R>—Crystal*, tea rrnunas and card* are no longer toi*:at*<i by the better magicians and clairvoyants, saiu L. R. Oaerner, St. Louis, preaident of the

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CHAPTER I THE Anastasia Beauty Salons were not officially open for appointments until nine in the morning, but the operators were required to be in at eight sharp. Nor aid the beauticians enter through the luxurious velvet and silken reception room, with its elegant chairs and its bowls of fresh flowers on self-conscious little tables. There was a shabby footmarked door behind the elevators, marked in peeling gilt letters EMPLOYES, that led into a long narrow room bordered on one side by white washbowls under dingy mirrors and on the other by green perforated steel lockers. At the door bristled a time clock. A few lumpy chintz and wicker chairs stood uninvitingly about. At-eight o’clock any morning the room sprang into life; girls rushed in and with more than ordinary viciousness pumped the long red hand of the time clock. The operators then stepped .briskly out of their own clothes into *n Anastasia uniform, hung in a paper bag on the outside of each locker and left there a few minutes earlier by the laundress. The Anastasia uniform was a tailor-made white broadcloth dress (the girls paid for them but the Salon took care of the laundering). The passionate desire of every woman at the time was to look boyish and tight brassieres flattened their breasts back so harshly that the long-waisted, short-skirted dresses in vogue in 1921 made the Anastasia beauticians look like so many leggy, white-frocked little school-gins—from the neck down! There was no loitering in the washroom because in winter the room was five degrees colder than the street and in summer it was a vapor bath. It was bitterly agreed by all that the Rileys, who owned the Anastasia chain of beauty salons, had purposely planned this fiendish discomfort to discourage lingering in the washrooms. Smoking,, was hysterically forbidden. As they dressed and changed to the white shoes and stockings that .-aampleted the outfit, there was a • wealth of colorful profanity on bc- • half of the Rileys. They had, how‘Jever, to be always on the qui vive. " One never knew when a Riley would B .pop in on them. This uncertainty . added spice and the thrill of danger • to the most innocent conversation. Twenty-five girls were now in the ' cramped, air-tight vault of a room, » washing, changing and making up their complexions with cakes of •rouge. At each door a sentry was ' posted to keep watch and warn of the approach of one of the Riley sisters, daughters of old Anastasia Riley, for whom the business was named. Fortunately, Miss Stella Riley, who was in charge of this, the Forty-fourth Street branch, could since her marriage several months ; ago be depended upon not to get in 1 ,'before ten. . There was a whole hour before the •'phone would begin its strident buzzring and the appointments to flock < .in. As soon as the girls were uni- < formed they slammed out of the < • washroom into the salon. All the “preparations for the day had to be i made in this one hour. They darted i 'back and forth along the smooth 1 Lfloor, tiled like a Roman bath. i • The salon was a splendid high- i •ceilinged room, about a hundred i "feet long and half as wide, on the ‘ fifteenth floor of the Federal Trust . Building on Forty-fourth Street at ] .Fifth Avenue. It had solid white 1 •marble slabs for dressing tables and 1 •glittering beveled mirrors. The ; room was partitioned off into isles | "of cubicles hung with black and i . white rubberized silk curtains. Each j —cubicle was a unit of glittering effi- 1 —ciency. j The manicuring tables flanked the windows and the morning sun I on the shining array of i -.scissors and files and clippers. Now . • the beauticians were stacking up i "towels and linen sheets which were • and checked out by Dolly, I "'the colored "linen” girl who was as - •heavily keyed as a warden. The 1 •seven manicurists stacked up nests •of rose-colored fluted paper dishes ; -for the finger dipping bowls and checked in their needs. These were okayed by Miss Norma, in charge of supplies, who also waited i •on the outside trade. There was yet i • to be an operator who could slip a “cake of nail polish into her pocket for the kid sister at home or filch a tube of hair cream for her own use. • From the doorway where Miss “Vemawas on guard: "Sh ... sh ... i -.not so loud. I just saw a dame who »look?<l like Frozen Face. But it ' wasn’t. Anyway, pipe down.” “ At..the mention of their common i enemy it was as if a strong wind i -gswayM them all together. No topic i •of conversation was so aggressively . * stimulating ts a discussion of the > “ Rileys. The four Riley sisters, An- i astasia Riley, the mother, and Wai- i

THIMBLE THEATER SHOWING—A FELLER CAN’T SHOW PARTIALITY By SEGAR VEP, THE KISSifT CONTEST\ GLAD THE KISSING) I HERE IS THE WINNER X WINNER 7L INNER OF H AW. WHAT THE HECK! "\ " , L i a OVER-I lOiLL NOU) J CONTEST <5 OVER-CUE / OF THE FIRST PRIZE FOR\ OF THE SECOND PRIZE - , THE THIRD PRIZE - ■ y I MAY AS WELL GIVE YA J 7* T7*l PICK THE I DON’T LIKE TO HAVE YOU) BEINTHE BEST KISSER— 1 ’-vSECOND PRIZE '-S A J THIRD PRUE IS ALL PRIZES - STEP < <(DINNER J KISSING OUR future X AN’THE FIRST PRIZE J | — = r”"\KlsS ALSO < H A KISS r~T RIGHT UP, LADIESj I whatstheV < ls * wss— COME y • ’ x r/ SO’C U— ' I r r PRIZE V I tWGETH J C TH <I n F 0 £ Rlrt ) > S&gfe o .rfssj ~~ . J U Z*)?svlsF\ 1 , -I: *Ti Th c ' rKS> rs /WW? i*Y laDv //( *i/>\ \ rTvi ’ ; ; W ' X ) P S/'Xj >1 UI J *1) VA JO/ W Vis Iysa .« M i'vr Nw- > V

Mlsaiaalppl Valley Spiritualist A*l sociation. He described them as • “old fashioned.” i o Hen Like* Her Name Belle Plaine, lowa (UR) —Jenny,

ter Riley, the only man in the family i who owned the shops, were an end- . less and fertile field for gossip and , abuse. And the elopement, over a j month ago, of Stella Riley, who . ruled this branch of the chain with , a mailed fist, was still new enough . to offer rich possibilities for con- , jecture. It was common knowledge , that Jerry Leach, the husband, who was now in charge of the only Brooklyn branch of the business, had been a riding master in the Central Park Academy. Miss Stella Riley in the past had been in the habit of riding every morning and coming in in her stunning riding habit, later to change in her private

J. Y JJ <P W 1 Ub M i F-**rr**rrJ vfffrJff' 1 y Helen Schiller was noticeably lovely but with a more delicate charm tl an most of the others.

office. Now that Jerry (the girls called him the stableboy) was in charge of one of the Anastasia Salons, Stella Riley’s morning riding had ceased. "Say, d’ja notice Low English she's getting since she's married to the Stableboy?” contributed Miss Mabel, who plucked eyebrows. They giggled each in her cubicle. “They say he’* younger than her,” contributed Miss Sheila, a wideeyed,snub nosed Irish girl, quite unexpectedly beautiful. Miss Mabel, the wit, suddenly dissolved into weak laughter. She managed to gasp between shrieks that Ethel Riley’s husband (Ethel was the youngest of the Riley girls) in his uniform had looked like a boy scout. The room rang with laughter. “Say, what makes you so quiet, Helen? Why don’t you say something? You ain’t going loyal, I hope.” At this sally, the girls roared afresh. Irene Riley, the eldest sister, who was in charge of the magnificent Fifty-seventh Street Salon, had once given the girls a talk on loyalty. Later the talk had been printed and hung in the washroom. Helen Schiller was filing her nails. She laughed good-naturedly. In the roomful of pretty girls—and the Anastasia beauticians were hired not only because of their skill, but with an eye to pulchritude—Helen Schiller was noticeably lovely, but with a quieter, more delicate charm than most of the others. Before Helen had time to answer, a warning signal came from Miss Vera. “Sh . . ." Sound died suddenly. Each beautician stood at her post with a pleasant professional smile. The phone started up its incessant buzz and Miss Irma’s affected telephone voice floated in t,o them. “Anastasia’s Forty-fourth Street. Good mawning,” over and over like a litany. Miss Vera ushered in the first appointments. The Forty-fourth Street branch catered to the higher-priced business girls, secretaries, buyers, a smattering of theatrical people, and middle-class middle-aged matrons. The cream of the trade, of course, was at Fifty-seventh Street. All the big movie stars who were in town ana famous actresses and actors went there. Society people and expensive!/ dressed women *nd,

- an educated hen belonging to John Carl, a farmer, like* her name and her bo** so well that she lays eggs inscribed with "J.” The einbossed letter 1* perfectly formed on some eggs. Carl report*.

r on occasion, certain frowsy women • to whom Irene Riley gurgled “Lady I this” or “Lady that. Occasionally i a man (usually an actor) came to • Forty-fourth Street for a hair wash i by the famous Anastasia Method i (which included fresh rose petals in the last water—a Riley touch). The swish of water in the basins, the thick scent of creams, powders, polishes. The whine of the dryers; the hiss and sizzle of steam. The soft hum of conversation and from the desk the singsong voice of Miss Irma: “Anastasia’s Forty-fourth Street. Good mawn-ing.” The beauticians were no longer living, breathing girls; they were

smiling, efficient robots yes-ing and no-ing breathlessly at the proper intervals—washing, rubbing, manicuring, marcelling, at fever speed, because the Riley's had “timed” every job and appointments were made in scientific intervals that allowed for no procrastination or prolonged discussion. It was work, work. Quickly, efficiently, carefully and smoothly. Fingers flew; soap suds frothed; nails filed into pyramids, ovals, circles. “Long or short, Madam ?” “Water too hot ?” “Broad waves or narrow ones?” Fresh linen, fresh paper cups for sudsy water. Green Venetian blinds discreetly lowered to prevent a glare in Madam's eyes.. . At ten-thirty a faint stir as Miss Stella Riley, in a faultless tailleur, swept in, her wide-set cold-blue eyes taking in every detail of the scene. She nodded briefly to the swathed and becreamed customers, who regarded her as curiously and enviously as did the operators. She had a magnificent carriage, tall, aggressively erect, with the easy stride and swing of the athlete. She stepped through the reception room, passed the affected Miss Irma who whinnied into the phone, into her private office with Miss Riley engraved on a silver nameplate beneath a silver carved horse’s head, , which was used as a knocker. A wave of silence followed her progress, but as the door of her office closed behind her, it broke like foam | follows a wave on a sandy beach. “My Lord, you’d think she was Queen of England.” "What glorious skin.. “I think she’s homely. Big Polak type.” "My cousin knows the family well. My dear, they’re worth millions.” “Not they, my dear. Oh, no. That’s Walter Riley, the son. He's , the sole owner of the shops, I tell > you. The sisters work for him." Said Miss Nettie, rubbing salve | into the scalp before her with steely fingertips, “Oh. hoy, is he stunning! But he’s worse than the girl*. Never notices any of us. They treat us like we was dirt. Why, if we meet them in the street they don't notice us. They don’t even greet you in the elevator. That's the Rileys for you!” (To Be Continued) r rpyrich' 1934. ta JuiMn Dtftrtbu’.M Mtef FtMtrei d/nil9«te.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1935.

B , ♦ 11 Test Your Knowledge s d Can you answer seven of these e ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. - *— <• 1. What is the name of the alloy ! of copper with tin? 2. How should a woman **• | cupies the chair at a meeting be , addressed? j 3. Who was the inventor of the Harvey Steel Process? 4. Where is Antioch College? 5. What is the medical term for destructive changes involving the spinal cord* 6. Who is the author of the poem "Simon the Cyrenlan Speaks?"

— SYNOPSIS Luxurious to the nth degree of commercial splendor were the establishments of the Anastasia Beauty Salons, but dreary and unkempt were the locker quarters of the operator*, who dressed and "made-up" for business in whitewashed. barn-like rooms. In one room, as they rouged their cheeks and donned their fresh, starched white uniform*, the girl* talked ... talked chiefly about the Riley sister*. who managed each of the Anastasia Salons, and about Walter Riley, theit brother and the owner of the salons. Among the operators was one who stood out from the rest—Helen Schiller. She was pretty, smart and very personable and took little part in the gossip of the other*. CHAPTER II Helen Schiller was an expert manicurist. It was her specialty in the age of specialization, which was just dawning in beauty parlors. As many as fourteen pairs of hands passed under her skillful fingers daily. She had regulars, of course who were, for the half hour they sat with her over the manicuring table, intimate friends. She was a sympathetic and warm listener and many of them poured their woes and triumphs into her ears in weekly instalments. All her customers, almost without exception, talked about the Rileys. The Rileys were “Prominent Women.” They were written up in magazine articles. (Miss Ginsberg, the publicity writer, got one hundred and fifty dollars a week.) They gave beauty interviews and syndicated a daily beauty guide article in the newspapers. They acted as judges in the beauty contests that were beginning to sweep the country and, of course, their fortune was magnified with each telling. I Helen liked to think her own thoughts and a silent appointment was a rare blessing. She had never worked anywhere else than for the Anastasia chain, coming right from the manicuring academy in Brooklyn. She had had only one more year to graduate from high school, but the war had brought her education to an abrupt close. Her father had been an “enemy alien.” He was German—poetic German—so German in tradition that after twenty years in America he had still been an unnaturalized “foreigner.” Crossquestioned by the Registration Board during the war, the little man saw red. He burst out into a torrent of indignation and outraged pride. He would undoubtedly have been clamped off to jail for it, but in his rage he burst a blood vessel. Mrs. Schiller, an apple-faced little hausfrau. was stunned by her husband’s death. The two girls, Helen and Belle, were in high school. Helen had only a year more to graduate. It had been Adolph’s ambition to make school teachers of them. Mrs. Schiller had only one talent that she could turn into money, her cooking. She cooked for private parties and catered at small weddings and engagement receptions, but flu took her down in one week and the two girls, orphaned in a month, found themselves bewildered and penniless. A cousin, Tante Freda Havemayer, took them in. Helen, of course, had to leave high school, but Belle, who was only thirteen, was in the first year and she stayed on. The quickest trade Helen could learn to enable her to support herself and Belle, it turned out, was manicuring. ■ . After a black month of job hunting, Helen came to the Thirtyi fourth Street Anastasia, then in | charge of Irene Riley. The Anastasia salons never took beginners, : but Irene was attracted by Helen’s beauty and when Helen burst out that she couldn’t get a job because she was German, Irene was sympathetic. The Rileys, too, had had the : r war troubles. Helen became the highest paid beautician outside of the Fiftyseventh Street girls, hitting the fifty mark practically every week. She dressed well and had a reasonable I number of dates. She didn’t go around with the girls in the shop outside of hours, but there were her cousins in Brooklyn, and now that Belle was grown up they were inseparable friends. They saw all the best shows from the top of the house and went to frat dances and to the nicer dancehalls. The war, financial independence and the general moral loosening up which was the result of the peace without victory had completely 1 emancipated most girls. It was the era of the flapper and the dawn of

7. What is the commercial name for the dried, broken kernel of cocoanut. from which cocoanut oil 1* extracted by boiling and pressing? 8. Where is I’nited States paper r money printed? 9. Name the Carthaginian general, the son-in law of Hamllcar Barca. i 10. How long does it take the. sun to rotate on its axis? o Loot Confined To "P*nti**" Independence. Mo. (U.R) —Police, were puzzled after an unidentified 16-year old youth stole 5 dozen pairs of women's "panties" from a department store. Desk Srgt. Hor-

the glorification of bad manners, f It was smart to be bold. Petting - came into its own as the national a pastime among the young. But Helen Schiller eould not be f drawn into the maelstrom. Three 1 years of freedom could not counter- - act the sheltered girlhood and childs hood Helen had had. Liquor made i her sick. She went once on a party 1 with two girls from the salon. Helen . was through with wild parties after . that experience. • The next day the girls were polite r in their inquiries about her health, r They never asked her again. . It was a cold, dismal Monday i morning in November. The girls i

t PIK > 'V/ $ - IE HP I wRI B BjulLik </l 1 ctk . & Kt / k ' 1 V m i Walter Riley stood behind her in the doorway watching.

grumbled and snapped at one another. A few minutes after eight Helen came in, her gray eyes soft as rain. She wore a tan, belted, military raincoat and a small, tan, rubberized hat. Her escaping ash-blond hair and darker long lashes were beaded with raindrops. She sang softly as she pulled her abbreviated one-piece dress over her head and stood shivering ; .n her chemise. “Do I hear you actually singing, Helen Schiller?” declared Selma Gully. “Ohl Selina, I saw such a grand show Saturday night .hat I’m still singing the song. I saw Marilyn Miller in 'Sally,’ at th? New Amsterdam. Oh, she’s wonderful. And the music. Listen.” In a thin, quavering little soprano she sang the air. “Isn’t it catchy? It’s just ringing in my ears ail the time.” Helen wriggled into her white dress. As she flew back and forth between her table and the supply room, she hummed. “How was the dancing? I like the dancing tn a musical better than the singing.” “Oh, marvelous. I guess Marilyn Miller is the best dancer on the stage. She does a dance, something like this. Look.” The girls were through their chores now. Helen stepped out into the cleared space in front of the manicuring tables and did a few tentative steps. “Swell! Atta girl, Helen. Some stepper! I didn’t know it was in you.” Helen laughed gleefully. “I wish I could dance on my toes the way she does. Then she does a step something like this. Sort of a cakewalk.” She strutted across the cleared space, her eyes rolling stiffly in her head. All the girls now were singing and beating time with their feet. So intent were they all that Miss

ace B Joues was at a loss to explain the probable motive. ——., o —— Msmmouth's Bone* Found Aurora. Neb. (U.R>~William C. Siever, Aurora farmer, found the fossilized bone* of a mammoth in fairly good condition In a hill near bls home. The mammoth had been , dead approximately 40,000 years. o ——— Old Lost Coin* R*e*v*red Mlllis. Mass (U.R>—Wreckers paid the New York. New Haven A Hart ,ford Railroad »15 for an old sta tlon. During the razing they found J 9 in small change which apparently had slipped down a crack at the ticket office window.

Vera at the door forgot her vigil, and without warning Walter Riley stood behind her in th* doorway, watching. His first impulse was to smile at the charming little figure strutting in the center of the room. He knew her by sight—even knew her name was Schiller. Then he remembered the Riley discipline. He was in a dilemna. He was too sensitive to clear his throat and make hi* presence known. So he slipped out and then came in again banging the door to the reception room. Miss Vera now saw him. She gave a long piercing whistle and when Walter came through to his sister’s office the salon was quiet, the girls busy at their cubicles. He looked neither in A

to the right nor to the left, but went directly into Stella’s office. He closed the door behind him and took off his great eoat. Stella’s office was ■ small drawing room—in the best West End Avenue manner; luxurious Chinese rug, needlepoint chairs, tabourets, carved figure lamps. In the center of the room there was a carved mahogany desk and in the corner a simple stenographer’s desk. No one was in yet Walter consulted his wrist watch. It was ten minutes to nine. Stella’s secretary wasn’t due till nine. He sat down uneasily on the edge of Stella’s desk. Ought he tell Stella about the dancing outside or should he talk to the Schiller girl himself? It wouldn’t do to let discipline become lax. Still, the salon wasn't officially opened. The girls could really do what they liked these fewminutes that they were free. But dancing was out of order. He frowned. He was a slim, tall, dark, nervous looking chap, immaculately groomed in contrasting dark blue and snowy white linen. His black hair was combed back from his rather low, square forehead. The scalp line was a white path through the thick blue-black hair. He had a small mustache that he habitually gnawed with his strong white teeth. He had a harassed air, but this only made his dark, rather somber face more attractive. He had a full wifie mouth and his rare smile was unexpectedly charming. Walter Riley’s father had been Irish, his mother Polish. The fusion of these two strains had, curiously enough, produced in Walter a typA that was more French or Spanish than either Irish or Polish. He had a steel-like frame and he moved < with a quick, tense efficiency. (To Be Continued)

MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL ’’ AND FOREIGN MARKETS n I ' Brady’* Market for Decatur, Bern*, 1 Cralgvlll*. Hoagland and Wlllahir*. Clo** at 12 Noon. Corrected October 5. 1 No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. 1 —■ — -'IOO to 120 lbs. $ 8.45 i 120 to 140 Iba. 8.70 i 140 to 160 lbs 9.55 • s 160 to 190 lbs 10.20 I 190 to 230 lbs 10.50 230 to 270 lb* 10.30 ' 270 to 300 lbs 10 20 300 to 350 lbs. 10.10 Roughs 9.00 Stags 7.25 Vealers 10.00 Ewe and wether lambs 8.25 Buck iambs 7.25 Yearling lamb* 4.00 FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Frt Wayne, Ind., Oct. S.—(U.R) —Produce: Hogs, 2bc higher; 225-250 Tt»s., >11; 250-275 lbs., $10.95; 275-300 Ibe.. $10.85; 200-225 lbs., $10.90; ; 180-200 lbs., $10.85; 160-180 lb*.. $10.75; 300-350 lbs., $10.60; 150-160 Ills., $10.65, 140-150 lb*., $10.40; 130-140 lbs, $9.90; 120-130 lbs., $9.65; 110-120 lbs., $9.40; 100-110 lbs.. $9.15; roughs, $9.50; s’ags, $7.75. Calves, $10.50; lambs. $8.76. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected October 5. No. 1 New Wheat. 60 lb*, or better jgc No. 2 New Wheat. 58 lbs 97c oats go to 25c Toy* Beans, bushel 60c No. 2 Yellow Corn, 100 lbs SI.OB — r ... 48c CENTRAL SOYA MARKET Soys Beane, bushel 80c Delivered to factary o Fortune Told and Taken Webster. Mass. Menderville. 91, had his "fortune" told —and taken. A woman "blessed" his money and told him not to look at it for several hours. When he counted it, he found $2.30 missing. • « Hobby Grow* Into Industry Sh.nandcah. la. (U.R) — Pottery mce wan a hobby with Mrs. Suean .’ield Conrad. Now it has become an industry. She had begun manu- , factureing pottery buttons and I buckles from varicolored lowa clays. — 11 o NOTICE! I will not be in my office Oct. 8,9, 10, due to the meeting of the State Medical Association. Dr. Ben Duke. o XOTICE OF SALE OF HE 11. KSIATE Bl ItEIEIVEH The undersigned. Receiver in Cause No. 20880, in the Jay Circuit C urt, State Ex Rel Luther F. Syuon». Bank Cooimiseloner ve. Far ner* and Merchants Bank of Bryant. Indiana, hereby give* notice that by virtue of nn order of th Jay Circuit Court, she will at the oour of one o'clock P. M. of the 14th day of October. 1935, at the east door of the court house, at Decatur, Adam* County, Indiana, land from day to day thereafter until sold), offer for sale at public sale, the fjjiowini described real estate, in the city of Decatur, Adams County, State of Indiana, to-wlt: "Inl .t No. 1018 in E. Burt Lenhart Commissioner Subdivision of Oatlot 24 In the Southern Addition of the town (now city) of Decatur, Indlana. Also all that part of Outlot 18 in the city of Decatur. Adams County, Indiana, described as follows: Commencing on Hie soutli side of the Chicago and Erie Railroad at a point 50 feet soutli of tile soutli line of right-of-way of said railroad, on the east line of the first alley east ’f and running parallel witli Winchester Street; thence east 50 feet parallel with said rlgtit-of-way thence south to Hie north line of Oak Street, thence West along th» north line of Oak Street to the east line of said alley: thence north along the east linn of said alley to the place of beginning." Said sale will be made subject to the approval of said court, for not less than two-ihirds of tile full appraised value of said real eslate, and on the following terms and conditions: At least one-third of the purchase money cash In hand, the balance in two equal installments, payable not to exceed six and nine months, evidenced by note* of the purchaser, bearing seven per cent interest from date, waiving relief, providing for attorneys fee* and secured by mortgage on the real estate sold. Said real estate shall hr sold free from all city, county and state taxes for the year 1934, payable- in 1935 and all prior taxes that are now a lien upon said real eat ate. the purchaser ’ taking it subject to the taxes of 1935 payable in 1936 and any special assessment made against said real estate. I.EILA Ht’CKERIEDE Receiver for the Farmer* and Merchants State Bank of Bryant, Ind. Charles E. Sehnnria, attorney | . Sept. 14-21.28 Ors. 5 GILLETT TRUCK TIRES at Special Prices. Six Months unconditional < • 1 guarantee. PORTER TIRE CO. j 341 Winchester St. •>

• CLASSIFIED® advertisemSM i business [ AND NOTicSW loksalFw OCTOBER room suites, 3 . lliWe M 13 living room suites up; 7 kitchen cabinet., kitchen range,. {32 up ? 4 springs, $5,5.. , I|i; :5 eutn rugs. $3.95 up . s heaters. 121 up, 12 Axml S2O lip; waflhpr line washer. sw. All n)n ’« 1 and ."W door Store open evenip*. ■ key &Co . M.mroe [ nd ' FARMS FOR SALE - Xo 9 acres in Monroe be bought M a bargain acres in Monroe :nw n ,h:p 18 acre* with (I)ltaw tlo W room* Small i> arn » i!h and bins for wheat Splendid soil, real the price See the J A Realty Co Munroe, hid. FOR SALE - Find truck with two , et s excellent me | lallll . ai dual gear. A re.,; | lM q or call Ray H an t a at the Garage at Vnlon City, i nd FOR SALE Albert Fox 3 mile. 1% miles south of Monroe, all FOR SALE — Reasonably priced. southwest of 11.. a t ur t zell & Son. FOR SALE— Vsed like new; 5 burner oil built on oven, good priced very f a-nab’e. & Co.. Monroe. Ind ]B|| _LOST LOST—Black Fhone 1081. — Oil Strike in Mme c<at:ttiH Nelson II C U P ~Tl’-•>«!■ a rich atriki in a mine be playing cut 1. viv«| mt'-qtH the Beverdeil m ning ramp here. More than 159 tons valued at about have taken from th' BeaverdeHlfl ington mine in :!:• past :•» _ ■ NOTICE TO TAIPtTM B Notice is her* hj mven ’.lai da*y, November 4. 1 . 9 last day t<» pay your Fall ment of taxes. T - county er’s office will Lt <>pen frots 4 p. m. d irine the tax payingiM son. AH taxes nnt paid b.\ tn.QM . ill become <!• iintpicnt and aIH penalty will l»p added Alrg at the rate of S' will be from the date delinquency paid. Those who navr hoigtitorß property and wish t > a divium •.axes are asked t ■•o’ne in at oil Cal! on the Audimr (or errwifl any reductions '1 • irtasureri ..ake no corrections. The Treasurer wilt not be rwj sible for the p< ".alty of deHijj axes resulting the nr.fflisa jf tax-payers t .-tate defmw! .vhat property, tho desire to M ,n whose name it may be rpoHi vhat township or < orporatiea H situated. J Persons owing delinquent W should pay th*m at once, the such that there is no opti n lens the Treasurer but ehforce thecwl .ion of delinquent taxes. t j The annual salt of d’-Wj lands ami lots « I '.ake second Monday m I’elnusrs »* 19:00 A. M. , , . County orders w.l rut. b ' 1™". anyone owing ,|, Ic uinm persons are w.i I K st No receipts o: ■ ks win "J after expiration •■' tune- ‘* T _ depository la« ■ I'"''”' surer to make tie ' 'l* P 0 * 1 • , Particular alia ' "' n 1 e taxes in more than '> ni - 10 ™ mention the fa. t f the Tr** also see that ' pl , „4i all your real estate iml I* property. fthpTrt In making " - "''Lftl uror regarding p. do not fail to m-lude return ■ :lKe ' JOII.\ WECIITW Treasurer Adams » FREE! To The First 48 Customers AN ALUMINUM COD* 1 POT GIVEN A" A ’ With Each CHANGE OF OIF and ‘ GREASE job. These Coffee I’ots * to $3.85 at Fisher & Han" store. First Come-f irst Hurry! or call for appoint menl ’ THOMPSON CHEVROLET (0 N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETR |ST Eye* Examined, Gl*««* F ' HOURS: 8:30 to 11:30 12 ;3(l Saturdays, 8:0 ® J’ °' Tnlenhone