Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 48, Decatur, Adams County, 25 February 1936 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

COURT HOUSE C«ae Dismissed Th in'-nt <ttlt of Uviu An- <|< ix>ii u kii lnnt Homer Fisher wm tliKiuituivd and tit* cost 'Paid. Appearance Filed in tii<' oil of th old National Hunk and Trust ton.puny for the . ollct'iioii of a note from thu American Security Co., an appearance wan filed for the plaintiff by A. D Vnvcnaw. attorney. Found for Plaintiff In Un- atilt of Frank Mann for a quiet tltl' aralnat John Allbangh. and others, the proof of the publication of the notice of non-residence was filed- All defendants called and defaulted. The court found for the pl iltrtiff and ordered hl* title to real estate Quieted frfom all defendants. Appearance Filed In the foreclosure suit of the Der.artni'nt of Financial Institutions. in th" liquidation of the Old Adams County bunk. a«alnst .Mary C. Hollhouse, and others, appeaernce was filed by Nat

—■ " ' "* ' Public Auction FRIDAY, February 28 ... 10 A. M. 30 - HORSES - 30 Brood Mares. Colts and General Purpose Horses. Good Milch Cows, Heifers and Bulls. Sheep and Hous. 100 bushel Good Oats. Miscellaneous articles. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES E. J. AHR and FRED C. Ahr—Managers Johnson a Doehrman, auctioneers. , ~ 1 Public Sale \s I have rented my farm. I will sell at public auction. 3 miles west of Monroeville on Cement pavement, on TUESDAY, March 10,1936 Commencing at 12 noon 2 HEAD OF HORSES—Biack gelding, 9 yrs. old. sound, wt. 180 C Its.; Sorrel Gelding, 10 yr. old, wt. 1700 lbs., ar. extra good work team. FARMING IMPLEMENTS McCormick Deering 7 ft. binder, new; McCormick-Deering side delivery, new: McCormick-Deering cylinder loader, new: Nisco manure spreader like new: Hoosier 10 disc grain drill, good: Turnbull 3'j in. rkein wagon, good; Emerson mower; Janesville corn planter; Gale corn plow, riding: Oliver 14 in. riding breaking plow: Case 13 in. walking plow; spring tooth harrow: wood frame spike tooth harrow; tingle disc 6on side; bar roller: low iron wheel wagon: flat bottom hay ladder, 16 ft; triple wagon box: set lot bunks: double set breech■rg harness; collars; many articles too numerous to mention. TERMS—CASH. B. F. BARFELL, Owner Huy S. Johnson. Auct. Monroeville Hank. Clerk. Lunch wiL be served. PUBLIC SALE Having quit farming. I will sell at public auction on what is known a Mrs. 11. F. t'ostell's farm, 2'-j miles west of Decatur or 2 miles easl , of Peterson on Decatur anti Peterson road, on THURSDAY, February 27, 1936 commencing at 12 o'clock noon, the following described property: 2—HEAD OF HORSES—2 Large flay mare. !i yean:, old. extra good worker; Bay mare about 'l7 years old. blind, but hard to beat for work. 4—HEAD OF CATTLE—4 Large Durham and Jersey 5 yrs. old, freshen middle of April; . Red Jersey, 6 yrs. old, freshen March 3rd; Guernsey, 4 yrs. old. fresh. f -\ll llicsc cows are extra good milk cows. Large Red Durham heifer, fnwh about June. POULTRY—About 3 dozen Wyandotte and also some Leghorn*. I — IMPLEMENTS — Exira good Empire grain drill, paint like new; John Deere corn planter, good.condition: Milwaukee binder nnd mower: Thomas hay nailer; Joint Deere riding plow and walking plow; horse disc; solid •oiler; 2 corn cultivators, one a Willie fjale; OsHum hay tedder; one nan corn sled; 2 wagons; hay ladder and rack combined: spike and pring sooth harrow, each two sections; 4% h.p. gasoline engine, Fairtanks & Morris; hay rake: 2 sets of harness. — MISCELLANEOUS — (hie all steel corn snetler. for hand or power; 2 A hog houses; mini iixii. extra solid timber and good soles; float; 23 new Milwaukee nmler guards. No. S. N. 27. never been used; 6 tine grapple fork; tank 1 'eater: Chevrolet 1926 sedan, driven 1.500 mites since rebored; New ■uifilorhtm size guitw with music lesson certificate. Many other mall articles too numeroiH to mention. TERMS -CASH. MRS. JAMES MCCULLOUGH, Owner Jeff Liechty, Auctioneer. Frank Arnold, Clerk.

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“THE INSIDE‘DOPE’.” By SEGAR j7"l [• WWTS TO S X f'WE’UE FOOLED WOUND s . I * x X=>> f c \ V, \O jX * r <>\ OtCvxt I k - X* *> ? t J I B?. Ji \“ x paHiPfe w,Ommi m&v ■ w X' l1 ''’k ''•■ •> --A a I f ** sa>Bfc *—— i i -i «,

A. and Mary C. Holthoustv- Ruled to answer. Appearance was filed by John L. DeVnaa for Yager Bro* Ruled to answer. Estate Case* In the estate of John M. Frtaiuger i Wm. N Ballou, special judge, dedined further jurtadiction. The will of Arubell Sipe wax proI bated an ( | ordered 'Placed on record In the estate of Peter Baumgartner a petition wae filed by the ad- , mlntatrator for authority to settle the estate us inaovent. So ordered nnd the notice ordered- \ petition was filed by Rufus Hlrachy in the ewtate of Susanna Hlrachy to determine the inheritance tax. Referred to the county assessor. Final Report Filed The guardian of Franclle. Wayne. Ruth, Marquerlte. Harland nnd Th. odorr Burger Hied the final re.port. The report was examined and approted. and the guardian diechrged und the truat terminatedApplication Filed In the petition for parttition .suit of Eva Heding. and others, against

I application was filed by Mary Ann I Johnson sot an order directing the county clerk to pay her money on 'deposit, and the court ordered the ] ths < lerk to pay her In the eum of • 1135.27. held by the clerk. Case Dismissed The suit of W. 8. Smith ogalnml • Adolph Batt man to net aside fraitde- . lent mortgage nd conveyance waa ' | dtanitaaed and the costs paid Mora Specific Complaint la the claim of Sam 'Chit right against the eatate of Albe ; Miltachler a motion was filed to i .ake the ] complaint more epectflc. The 'alm against the eatate wax for $1,592 ua lowing to Um plaintiff for carpenter nd ' >i work. .plaaterlhK. etc. — o In Loving Memory In memory of my beloved sister 1 .Merle Lee Robinoon who entered ] into eternal rest February 28, 1935. Sad and sudden was the call Os one we dearly loved It was a bitter grief, a ehock severe To part with one we loved so dear, Merle little thought when leaving home. She would return no more , That she alone in death would sleep I And leave ua here to mourn Sadly miseed by her stater — Stella Lee Meyer Itx o o ♦ Test Your Knowledge I Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. ♦ * 1 What Is metaphysics? 2. Who was Henry Austin Dobson? 3. What is another name for a sage hare? 4. Who invented the phonograph? 5 Name the oldest city in the ROY S. JOHNSON AUCTIONEER Offic». Room 9 Peoples Loot & Trust Bldg. Phones 104 and 1022 Decatur, Indiana Feb. 26—R. W. Hovarter, 4 mi. north of Decatur. Closing out sale. Feb. 2?—Bert Marquardt, 4 mi. north of Monroeville, Chester White Hogs. Feb. 27 —Bert Marquardt, north of Monroeville on Lincoln highway. Hog sale. Feb. 28 — Decatur Riverside Stock Sale. Feb. 29—Win. Steva. Wapakoneta, Ohio. Fair Grounds, Short Horn Cattle. Mar. 2— Wni. Eichenanr. 3’4 , mile south of Rockford. 0.. clos- . Ing out sale. Mar. 2 —Henry Take. 5 mi. west, 2 1 , mile south of Decatur. \ mile north of Kirkland high school. Maj-. 3—D. J. Barkley, 2% mile south of Monroeville. Mar. 4 —David Hollinger, I'4 ml.' i south of Monroe on No. 27. Mar. s—Shaadt5 —Shaadt and Yahn, 1 mi. west of Ohio City. Mar. 6—Decatur Riverside Sale. Mar. 7—-Dewey Plumley. I’, ml. south, 1% mile wist of Dixon. Mar. 10—B. F. Rarfell. 3 mile west of Monroeville on cement • road. “Claim Your Gale Date Early” My service includes looking after every detail of your sale and . more dollars tr.p yon the day of your auction. I dSBMBBBBBBBBMBB PUBLIC SALE | 40 Head of Pure Bred Chester White Sowsand Gills Thursday, Feb. 27 At 1 P. M. This is our 15th annual saie. Will be held under cover on the Bert Marquardt farm. 3 miles North of Monroeville, Ind.. 19 miles west of Van Wert. 16 miles east of Fort Wayne, on U. S. No. 30. Offering consists of 5 tried so s and 35 bred gilts. Monroeville Chester White Breeders Assn. Roy S. Johnson, Auct. Levi P. Moore, Field Man.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. IT-BIM ABY 25, 1936.

United Stats*. 6. Which Is the highest mountain psak on the North Ameiuav conun ent? 7. hi whi h utat > was Franklin Pierce, fourteenth President of the United States' born? 8. What i« the Pi'iitalwh? 9. In what year did Robert Fulton first xtvaiuioat navigate the Hudson to Albany? to. Who Invented the newtng machine? HOCHMI'TH St KE (CONT INUKD FROM validate Whited's tc-itlmony the extradition and subsequent trial]

*M6re?'& Money' S by CHARLES GRAffT

SYNOPSIS Success ctowned every venture of Jasper Ingram, wealthy promoter. Millions were at his disposal much io the envy of Hornet Alspeugh. his confidential secretary. who has all he can do to meet mertgage payments and the golddigging demands of his flirtatious wife, Marian. Cithleen McCarthy, beautiful young stenographer, substitutes for Ingram’s secretary while the latter is on vacation. Visiting her husband's office. Laura Ingram meets Marian Alspaugh and, realizing she is the type who can wheedle money out of men, asks Marian to be cigarette girl at a charity garden party. Laura had been a middle-class girl and marriage to Ingram represented security; to Ingram, his wife was the coolly selected instrument for a purpose he had at heart. CHAPTER IV Turninc into their own drive. Jasper and Laura saw their son walking across the lawn accompanied by a girl whom Laura identified as “the little acting personnamed Martin, cr something like tk « t ” "He seems Interested," Ingram •aicL The way Seward walked, the way he tilted his face to the girl, it would not have been plainer, had be wo'Tt a collar and chain, that he was Arline Martin’s captive. "I do hope everything will go off well,” Arline was saying. "It will mean so much to me if I can have I a real success.” “Os course you’ll be a success. I thought you were perfectly great in your rehearsal just now. h's a fine play, and I think the whole thing is going to be a knockout. I know it is!” “It's sweet of you to be so encouraging,” she murmured. “Anyway it's helped a lot to see the grounds and all the arrangements, ut having you the only member of the family at home, was a bit of luck for me. It's a wonderful spot for an outdoor performance, a sort of natural amphitheatre, isn’t it?” “I don’t know about the natural part es it. I believe this v~hole place has been landscaped within an inch of its life. I was awfully glad to show you around, Miss Martin. I wish there was something else I could do—anything I could do, really. You’ll let me know if there is, won’t you?” She nodded her lovely head. She was almost as pretty as she appeared to Seward’s dazzled eyes. Beyond the harmony of delicate, well modeled features and appealing curves, beyond the charm of youthful coloring heightened to brilliance by the skilful use of make-up, was the almost starting beauty of her eyes, gray-blue as the depth of Arctic water and the low sun shining through it. "You can clap, tomorrow,’’ she told him. Their progress, slow as Seward had tried to make it, had brought them to her waiting car. I “I snail rely on you to be my personal claque. You know how it’s done, don't you? Wait till the rest ; of the audii :ice is letting up a little and then come in strong—you can i nearly always start them up all over again!” “I sure will,” Seward promised. I "But it won’t be necessary. You’ll i wow ’em. without any help from me!" Arline gave the handsome boy I her best smile as she slid behind the wheel of her roadster. He was Jasper Ingram's son and therefcre i a conquest of some importance. For . Arline Martin was on the make. Beneath the softness and grace of her exterior, she was as ruthlessly ambitious as Ingram himself. Whoever served her purposes was made I use of, whoever was not useful, she discarded. Her temperament made her honestly nervous about her success in the chief elou of a society vaudeville. < A clever young actress, not long a professional, she was used to the exaggerated acclaim of her friendr and shrewd enough to discount their enthusiasm. Yet, if , oven half of what they raid was 1 true, thera •ught to baa future for her.

1 Mould be thrown Into court. Then 11 the main hope of now extradition 1 pr<K»»«-<Unira would rest on Hoch ' mutli tli' 1 witness beat able to J place the German cnrpnnter at the > I Keene. "I i«l<-ntlfi<Hl lliiiiptmunn t« th’’ trial mid I am piepared to do so I again a« any time or place. Ho b- ,' intitli told liio non in la*. "He i wax the man whn stopped In the ditch nt Hie aide of the house I here. He had a liuld 'r itrapped on hi* automobile.’* I’lutnp pointed from the sale of tho two story brown shlngHl ; house to the roadside less than 80 feet awny. "Haiirtar.snn got sturlt In that j ditch, right where those rabbit

i To appodr under Mrs. IngramSi e patronage, gave her, by far, the i- best opportunity to parade her tali- ent she had ever had, sot the Inr grams weie not merely rich but !• also decidedly influential in prot fessional circles. Everyone knew I- that Jasper Ingram was interested s in music and the theater. He contributed largely to operatic and - non-com.n-rcial theater endowy tnents. Who knew but she might - interest him? If she played well, a anything might happen. b» » • a Marian Alspaugh had good cards i, and good partners that same after- ' t noon. Her winnings, of course, she . 1 had to leave behind her for charity, ' - but she still had her hundred dol- I - Jars. Naturally she would tell < r Homer she had been cleaned out. I i She drove home in high spirits, I

(IBM '', *jir WA f ■]■ Ho -lIP "I do hope everything will go off well,” Arline was saying. “It will mean so much to me if I can have a real success."

her way taking her past the long eight-foot wall of the Ingram estate, G rangefields. Passing the wrought-iron gates she took her eyes from the read, drove slowly, and explored all there was to be seen of green velvet lawn, rhododendrons bordering the drive, rosi • trellises and planned tree-group-ings, a flash of steel that was a glimpse of an artificial lake, and one gable of the distant house. Marion had never been inside those gates, but soon she would know the secret beauties of those guarded grounds! On the other side of the village, the unfashionable side, lived the Alspaugh®. Marian hud known no better when she urged Homer to buy that house. She had supposed that, sinee the town was smart, any part of it must be al! right. Now she was dissatisfied. They should have bougdit a place on the water front or at leaM near the Country Club. . . . “And what would be the point in that, seeing we've never hern asked to join the Club " her husband would inquire. Marian raved at the dumbness of men. “Don’t you see, that's exactly why we’ve never been asked? We live in the wrong section. If we haven’t enough money to live where the real people live, it's up to you 1 to make more money! Y'ou didn't marry * hausfrau, satisfied to dig in a gard-n and meet you when vou i come out on the 5.17. .1 could be • somebody in thiß town if you'd give me a chance.”

11 track* art- on the anow—about one iHa every 10 motorists du. Youaae I the culvert wan built ala fowl too > far to thia aid*. >'op tHockmuth’ • asked him if lie w.Mited any h< lp- | ii<<’it lu-lped so many in there. But . | Hauptmann bluahod and stepped , on the auis. That pulled him out . all light” HmTiniuth. p« ciin* through hla ' glaaxos, aald he luul no ’inclination •'to dlacnaa the cnee farther. 11 "I'm ull done,” he said. "I said I what I luul to aay at the trial." "And what If the governor Invite* you to attlimit to re-examlna- ' tlon us he did Whited?" The old man stroked his white beard. Fbr a moment he appeared to be ready to answer. Then

But tonight as »he arove the car into the garage she wan almoat cheerful. Even if she did live on the wrong aide of the village, it wouldn’t be easy for the Country Club crowd to ignore her after it met her at Mr*. Jasper H. Ingram’s! She went into the pink hou«e and into the living-room where Homer relaxed in one of the over-stuffed chains, eat listening to the radio. AH the furniture in the room was dressed in summer covers of flowered cretonne. On a refectory table, back of the davenport, were -sesf-tred papers and magazine! dealing with talking pictures. Copies of Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar added an intellectual note. Other furniture included occasional tables and chairs, two bridge lamps, and a bowl of flowers—that

needed to be changed. The room was exactly like a million other rooms in American homes. Except for a couple of bright-jacketed novels frern a rental library, there was not a book in evidence, nor indeed, barring the cook-book in the kitchen, was there another in the house. Marian switched off the radio and dropped down on the davenport. “What shall 1 wear tomorrow?” she demanded. “That Dutch outfit I had last year?” “That was cute,” Homer said. “Sort of tea-roomy, though. . . . Maybe, I could get a Columbine costume, have the skirt mostly ribbons and short, show my legs as we used to. . .” She said, “it wonld be all right to wear a summer dress. If I could run into town first thing in the morning and find something terribly chic and really good, maybe all those rich women would think more of me.” Mindful of his pocket-book, Alspaugh again voted for the Dutch costume. “No, the more I think of it, the more 1 feel a grande dame effect is what I should try lor—meeting all those Country Club people for the first time at Mrs. Ingram’s. . . . Considering how important it is, I guess you’ll have to let me have some more money, Homer! I saw a dress in a Fifth Avenue Store the other day, perfectly plain georgette in dull pink, with the new sleeves and a high neckline ” fTo Be Continued) Coprr'zht. 1131. »> Mint FMlurt, S ndfeMt. Im.

Ihe ahrugged hla aliuulders, scoop ed away a shovelful of slush and walked into the houac. MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS I Brady'i Market for Decatur. Berne. Cralgvllle, Hoagland and Wiltshire. Cloae at 12 Noen. Corrected February 35. No commission nnd no yardugc Venls received Tuesday, Wed uisday, Friday and Saturday. 100 to 120 lb* $ 9.10 IM to 140 lb* . 9 30 HO to 180 lb* 9 79 180 to 230 lbs 10 to 230 to 270 lb*. ........................ 9.70 270 to 300 lbs 9.50 300 to 35u lbs. 9.30 Roughs 8.25 Stags 8 25 I Vealers 10.00 Ewe and wether lambs 9.25 Buck lan4>* 8.25 Yearling lambs 5.00 INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK hidianapolta. Ind . Feb. 25. (U.R) —Livestock: Hogs. 3.000; holdovers. 911; mostly steady, 15c lower; some weighty liutchers, 1015 c hight-i : 160-225 lbs. 210.40-310.50; 225 275 lbs. 210.tM10.35; 275 lbs., up. 29 75210.15; 130-160 lbs.. 29.75-210.25: 100-130 lbs . 29-29-50; packing sows 28.75-29.50. Cattle. 1,800; calves, 600; lildd nig unevenly lower on steers: Tiulk I to sell under 28; few heifers about | steady, 27.25 down; cows steady io weak; beef cows, 25-26.50; low cutter and cutter cows. 23 50-4.75; vealers steady. 211 down. Sheep, 3,000; few other lamb sales up to 210; mostly bid under that figure indicating lower market; slaughter sheep. 23.50-25. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat 9914 -SO .89% Corn 60% .6O’-s .60% I Oats .28% .28% .28%] EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y., Feb. 25. — ] (U.R) —Livestock: Hogs. 600; lower, desirable 170220 lbs . 210.90-211; 280 300 lbs., butchers, 219.15-210.25; psicking: sows, 29.25-29 50. Cattle, receipts. 100; good 1.075-1 lb. steers, barely steady. 28.75; | 1 cows and bulls draggy. around 25< I lower; low cutter and cutter cows. 1 24 25-25.25. Calves, receipts, 150; vealers slow at recent decline; good to choice, 212. Sheep, receipts. 400: iambs fully i steady; good to choice ewes and wethers. tlO.ti; medium ami mixed grades, $9.50-210. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne. Ind., Feb. 25. (U.R) —Livestock • Hogs, steady: 160-180 lbs.. 210.45; | 180-200 lbs., 210.35; 200-22 S 1b5..1 210.25; 225-250 lbs , $10.15; 250-275 lbs . $10; 275-300 lbs.. $!».95; 300 350 lbs., $9.60; 140-160 lbs.. $10.10; 120-140 lbs.. $9.80; 100-120 lbs.. $9.65. Cattle, steady; roughs, $8.45; stags, $6.70; calves. $11; lambs. $9.50. steady. Corrected February 25. No. 1 New Wheat, 60 iba. or better jijc No. 2 New Wheat, 58 lbs file ] Oats -jo to 22c] Good Dry No. 2 Yel. Soy Beans 72c | New No. 4 yellow corn. 100 lbs 53 to 68c Rye 45c CENTRAL SOYA MARKET Dry No. 2 Yellow Soy Beans . 72c (Delivered to factory) Fanners Are Robbed By Five Masked Men Anderson. Ind.. Feb. 25 (U.R) Frank Robinett ».nd Floyd Ogle, farmers, reported to police today they were rolxbed of approximately $450 last night by five masked men in an lAitomobile. According to the victims, they arrived in Anderson” too late to deosit the money in the bank. They later were accosted by the bandits, who look $371 from Robinett and $75 from Ogle. —7!" ° I’ICKREL —25 c lb. Hume Private Money To Loan On improved Real Estate City or Farm. Reasonable Interest Rates. I’he Sch Urger Abstract t o. N. A. BIXLER i OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS 8;30 to 11:30 12,30 t 0 & ; oo Salutdays, 8;oo p. m. Telephone 135. I

Ah .\ERTI&L '""in xorii'g _ I'Qit S4i r >"« wu: ... -J Junulhaiis, Wain,,.** ' ' ant moi? «’« hale o„ p 7** «M<’' d right ’ or electric wn,h rr . ?' “P • , ' 11 ' Ih i Hlur Hatchery ' STOMACH t’Uri- , ** INDIGiaBTION vlSt X’ !|For qukk relief get , , of I tlgu. a doc tor', 11 111 * lt,ll l ) ottae Drug ( * FOR SALE s., I v ■ *” *u* Hue New und used i 1 chine* a* tow as ss«,' i pairing ail makes, > chine checked toi i •owing. Hemsthchiur";;. > wait. Singer ' <ilf ' Sl '" l> - Cllkks. Mod,! lU>(W ’ roe, Ind. , FOH SALE -4hM wagon, good s. t T. H. Golduer. 3h mile, , | Monroe. . FOII S.tLE T , Model T. ,, . I tlon. See Put Miller, | FOR SALE-Sun. n; « : .T •M.n and up. pryj pressing and repsiriig, 1 Muihuid. Taiioi ; | FOR SALE ’ | Evangelical church. I Otis E. Shifferly, R R ; ] FOR SALE Hl- ~, , I vacuum cleaner. Be , arf , . this before making vo»r i (purchase. Singer Sewist s ' representative. Vita i;s Phone *.125. FOR SALE Startc.i ,hj J one to three weeks old it i prices. Book your ord»r» s late delivery. Decatar Ha ] phone 497. .Monroe st. I FOR SALE -P. A 0. Li>-> tier 14 inch tractor pin, I condition. Charles F. Bar! II mile south. 3% east ts 1 Reuc-ouaJ'!' . , ; | FOR SALE Model T Fort gas range: 1 piece hwkn 112. Phone 756. RECEIVED 1 I modern bed room nlta, 1 i room suitr-s. mattresan it attractive price?. Op<n os ( Stui key & Co.. Monroe, lai | WANTED ■WANTED TO BUY Seesi I Combination coal and gai ' Muut be in good condition C 4 C. J Wanted LADIES N’OTItK' Stahlhut of Lvura Beatty Fort Wayne, will b<- at Ba Beauty Shop Tuesday. Man Call 12S0 foi apiiointnienu. WANTED TO Bl Y—Good « liand heavy IraJiy -tiollere phoue 751. WANTED Harness i'>oil. flhard Bultenieier, phone •' 20 on 23. J | WANTED TO BORROW « secured by a Hrsl nwflßfl ]an 80 acre farm. Addnss BM care Democrat. LOST AND FOIN -— LOST—Small long-haiial « with injured left front !■?■ ami while markings. lie»'«»] I'll 6 FOR RENX, FOR RENT—Two si Wi"S " la strictly modern h«\ garage. Phone 561. street. NoricE i win !"■ regularly and will care of all my old and »'■» '« era. Mrs. He!" 1 J" 1 t . orn er First and a “ Phone 816. Mark- N Al AMai’ 0 Stock?: i""'' 1 in 'i'"'"’ -1 ing sim- '] Bonds: lower and J I dirk stocks: 'I III ' 1 a Tl Chicago stocks: ® r - r tO, Call money: %»I % J Dollar: firmer agm .J Coll.m; 1t"" 9 Grains: wheat urn lli ” 1 '" 1 r . KuliH' I •' 1 Tile conditio 11 of A'*" Port Wayii' ' "“' C ‘ r L is of tins city, i rei cal and li,Ue ' Kal)lliu her recovery. Mrs patient at St- JoJh '. Mrs .! bbe ta the urotte o Ellittger and a sisLose of th* B