Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 59, Decatur, Adams County, 9 March 1936 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Canary I* Singing Tourist Fremont. No'j. —(VP)—Mr. aud Mrs. E N. MorahMd had nothing hut pru|ne tor their canary as a

Public Sale As I have decided 1 to unit fwmiug, I will offer at public auction at the Anna Lehman farm. 1 mile north. 4 miles west and % mile north of Monroe or 5 miles south und 4 miles west and ' 4 mile north ot Decatui . on FRIDAY, M ARCH 13,1936 Commencing At 10 A. M. B—HEAD OF HORSES—-8 1 Black gelding. 14 yrs. old. wt. 1700. 1 Drown mure, 13 yrs. old. in foal, wt. IJvv; 1 Buy gelding. 10 yrs. old. wt. 1C00; 1 Bai Gelding. 9 yrs. old, wt 1600 These two geldings ure lull brothers; 1 Buy mare < yrs old, wt.' 1500;’ 1 Bay mare 5 yrs. old. wt. 1450. These two are halt sisters und should make u good team. 1 Bay mare. 2 yr. old last Sept. Full sister to the 5 yr old mare. 1 Stud colt. 2 yr. old last September, light buy. 2—HEAD OF COWS—2 1 Guernsey, be fresh latter part of March; 1 Red Cow, will be fresh day ot sale. HOGS 1 Gilt with 8 pigs: 1 sow due to farrow by day of sale; 1 Gilt due to farrow first ot April; 1 spotted boar. . , • GRAIN About 250 bushels of corn and about 100 bushel of oats. MACHINERY McCormickDeering mower, like new; Turnbull wagon, steel axle, good . as new; Hay tedder; land roller; gang plow; spike tooth harrow; International corn plow; International spreader; Ohio grain drill. 12' disc; I Shunk walking, breaking plow: Osborn hay loader; End gate seeder; Deering binder. 7 ft. cut; corn planter; double shovel plow; pump jack. <ost 112; gas engine and belt; one old wagon; attachment with cutte. tor plow. TERMS—CASH. DAYTON RAUDENBUSH & SON, Owners JEFF LIECHTY Auctioneer. W. S. SMITH -Clerk. Lunch will ille served PUBLIC AUCTION 1 MODERN HOMES. 2 FARMS. 1 FACTORY Bl ILDING By order of the Adams Circuit Court in the matter of liquidation tit the Old Adams County Bank, ilach tract to be sold to the highest bidder subject to approval of the Court. Sale to be made on 'he ' premises at the place and time herein designated. On WEDNESDAY, March 11,1936 At 1:00 P. M. 2 modern homes. No. 648 Mercer Ave. in a new house. I completely modern. 3 rooms and breakfast room downstairs. 3 bedrooms and bath upstairs, full size basement, garage. No. 642 Mercer Ave. is a good modern 6 room house with 4 rooms down. 2 rooms and bath up. Full size basement. Good Majestic furnaces in both these properties. „ , _ At 2:00 P. M.— No. 128 South Third St., all modern S room house, a rooms and bath downstairs, 3 bedrooms upstairs. Extra good 3 room basement. , At 3:00 P. M,—No. 601 W. Monroe St. All modern S room house, & rooms down and 3 rooms up. large basement. Note- These properties are ajl in a good state of repair, ideal localions, all modern improvements, never Before has the home seeker in Dff&tur had an opportunity to purchase such homes at public auction. I it you are in the market for a home, or want to make a good investment attend these sales, come prepared to do business. On Thursday. March 12,1936 The following tracts will lie sold on the premises: At 10:00 A. M. —The Macy Building, formerly occupied by the Gerber Ladder Co. This ia a large tile nlock constructed building with 5 acres wf land. At 1:00 P. M.—t miles north of Decatur, what is known as t.hi runner Farm, consisting of 57% acres, good house, small barn. This is a good hx*4Uian for any one working in Decatur, looking for a small farm. It is just off U. S. Road No. 27. At 2:30 P. M. —On the premises 3%> miles Northeast of Decatur or 1 mile North and % mile East of the Dent School House. An 89 acre , farm, house, barn, outbuildings, drove well. TERMS —Each tract will be sold for cash. Clark J. Lutz. Special Representative Sale Conducted by Roy S. Johnson—Auct. Henry B. Heller —Atty. Public Sale On account of the death of my busband 1 will sell at public auc- i tion three miles north and four miles east of Berne or one mile isouth ' and one-half mile west of Salem, on THURSDAY, March 12 Beginning at 10:30 o'clock, the following property: TWO HORSES —One sorrel horse, 7 years old, weight 1.600. a real I one; one bay mare. 12 years old. weight 1.500 lbs. CATTLE. NINE HEAD One roan cow. six years old. calf by | side; one red heifer, to be fresh day of sale; one Jersey cow. four , years old. to freshen in April; one white cow. four years old, to] freshen in May; one six-year-old Jersey, calf by side; one fat heifer, two years old. two yearling heifers; one Guernsey bull, one year old. SHEEP. 17 HEAD -16 ewes, .starting to lamb; one buck, one year old. 4 HOGS —Three gilts and one tai hog. weight 250 Uns. POULTRY —8 dozen mixed chickens. FARMING IMPLEMENTS—One wagon; hay ladders; hay loader; mower: corn planter; one corn cultivator; Oliver gang plow; John | Dure sulky plow; walking plow; disc harrow; 82-spike tooth harrow; , manure spreader; one set of breeching harness and colliMys; one model I i Ford: one stock trailer: shovels, forks and hand tools. GRAIN AND HAY—2OO bushel good corn: ten ton of timothy hay; ( live ton bean hay. HOUSEHOLD GOODS Two soft coal stovo; one davenport; I one Vlctrola: one Morn's chair; two rocking chairs; seven dining I clipirs; one dining table; one drop-leitf table; kitchen cabinet: safe; iwo stands; tiiree beds and bedding; one folding bed; 25 yards of Axminster carpet: nine yards ot new rag cajpet; two pieces of linoleum; one dresser; one chiffonier; dishes and cooking utensils; one DeLaval cream separator; porch -swing; lard press; sausage | grinder; two iron kettles; two incubators; one. 125 and the other 1 300-egg capacity; one oil brooder stove and other articles too numer- : ous to mention. ' TERMS—CASH. SARAH J. HETTLER, Owner Auctioneer Jeff Lie'htv Clerk. E. W. Baumgartner Lunch will I*- served by the ,Solum Jxidies' Aid.

*~NOW SHOWING—“ROLY BOLY EYES” By SEGAR L ",cP~WHY 6E(AERaCI 7 YOUR EYES GENERM -) I \ZS\ K v-JELL,VC < JODNESS) I GOOD HEAVENS’ VMS A NOT FUNNY UJORK, JUS' \ X (nJwS'5 JronG SEEM (2 RIGHT EYE,TOO 1 . WRY, A GOOP CLEMT STPAGET V v '<r.. lMU^L p <£' RUBBED HE'S UNCONSCIOUS'HMV) YOU x 7 r— -———n~—x T\ \ A THERE'S BEEN ' <xWJ — x •<■ 1# fc , \ \'/\ \ Funny vOORK J i 'ffstT x? 1 e x'/\\ || \ c. \ X GOING ONT—--' *A X frauM fH ■ IWHIBIIW9I ■ ■< J ~, S’ ?> ,1 ~7 ■ j ' fe l I ;. ! .~ ' ......’ 1 BEZ.

I traveling companion after their roll turn from a lO.WO-mlle motor tour. ; i The bird, they reported, sang nil . i the way and oven entertained

i- «U owtaU4»UU wltfpe (hay . stopped. i ; Test Your Knowledge ’ i l Can you answer seven of these | I ten questions** Turn to page Four for the answers. ♦ ♦ 1. Who wrote Ben-Hur? 2. WjWe is Smith College for women? 3. in astronomy, what is Draco (•’the Dragon”)? 4. In which ocean arc the Chatham I mlh nds? 5. What is a spectroscope? 6. Name the greatest orator of the ancient world. 7. Where is the lowest point in the United States? 8. Who was Charles Montagu! Doughty? 9. Do alien children when adopted by American citizens become citizens of the V. S.t 10. What is a bissextile year? 1. What is the name ot the is lands off the coast of*Arabia bei longing to Britain, and forming a dependency of Aden? 2. What caused the Titantic to I sink? 3. In architecture, what is draft- \ vd masonry? 4. Who was Gavin Douglas? 5. Which city is the trade centner of the large zinc and lead fields [ of southwestern Missouri? 6. What is a dragon? MHK II OF FIN VI. SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE NO. SIINI Notice is hereby given to the creditor*, heirs and legatees of Eli D. I' or, deceased, to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur Indiana. on the 31st day of March 1936, and show cause, if any, why the FINAL SETTLEMENT ACCOUNTS with the estate of said decedent should not be approved; and I i said heirs ar- notified to then and I there make proof of heirship, and | receive their disttributive shares. ’Collis Gundy Lane, Executor | 'Decatur. Indiana. March 7, 1936 It tornr a John 1.. DeVoss. March 9-16 NOTICE OF FIN 11. SETTLEMENT I OF ESI VIE NO. .ti.Vt 1 Notice is hereby given to the ere- j i ditors. heirs and legatees of Aaron ; j Lautzenheiser. deceased, to appear I in the Adams Circuit Court, held at i Decatur. Indiana, on the3rd day of I April, 1936, and show cause, if any. \vh\ the FINAL SETTLEMENT ACCOUNTS with the estate of said de- | redent should not be approved; and said heirs are notified to then and* there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares. I Roy Lautzenheizer Administrator ' Decatur Indiana March 9. 1936. Hubert K, Met laiialian. lit*. March 9-16 No llt E OF FIX Al *lil II I .MEN I OF ESTATE NO. 3210 ’ Notice is hereby given to the * red- • itors. heirs **nd legatees of Sarah j E. Baker, deceased, to appear in the I Adams Circuit Court, held at DecaItur. Indiana, on the 30th day of March. 1936, and show cause, if any, ' ;wh> the FINAL SETTLEMENT AC- i I COUNTS with the estate of said de- • i cedent not be approved, and said heirs are notified to then and | there make proof of heirship, and | receive their distributive shares . C. L. Walters. Executor Dc<autr. Indiana. March 7th, 1936 < . 1.. U alters, Attorney Man | FLASH! B American Beauty Washfl ers,. . $29.95 to $89.95 K $3 down. sl.lO per week Grand and Studio ® Pianos igS $25 down. $1.50 per wk. SPRAGUE I FURNITURE CO. B 152 S. 2nd st. Phone 199 SPRAGUE OFFERS Living Room Suites. (22 suites on floor) 3 - 8 piece Dining Room Suites in Walnut $75 ea. Bed Room Suites. (12 suites on floor) Wilton and Axminster Rugs .... $20.50 to 865 See us before you buy. SPRAGUE FURNITURE CO. 152 S. Second st. Phone 1&9 ..

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY MARCH 9. 1930.

7. Name the capital 01 Illinois. 8. Wliat la a carnivorous aai[itia I ? 9. From which airport did Col. Lindergh lake off for hie famous iiolo flight to Faria? to in which state ih the city of Dothan? ——-• fa — ■■■!) ■' "i. Market* At A Glance Btovks: irregular in quiet trading; aircraft shares strong. Bauds: lower; U. 8. government easy. Curb stocks: generally lower, but improved from morning lows. Chicago stocks: irregulax.

4/ CHARLES GRANT 'S

SYNOPSIS Young and pretty Cathleen McCarthy, secretary to the wealthy Jasper Ingram, attracts her employer’s son Seward. Realizing the difference in their social positions, Cathleen discourages Seward’s attentions, but he is persistent and she finally makes an appointment with him. He presents her with an expensive bracelet which Cathleen plans to return, but the gift disappears from her dresser. Marian Alspaugh. frivolous wife, of Homer Alspaugh, Ingram’s confidential secretary, becomes infatuated with the Marques d’Alhues. She buys a new car to impress the Marques, and the first time she takes him out in it they have an accident and the car is destroyed. Alspaugh speculates with Ingram s money to try and meet his wifeys extravagances. Joe. Cathleen s ne’er-do-well brother, reluctantly admits pawning the bracelet for S3OO. Joe's new job as collector for Ingram gives him too much leisure. CHAPTER XVII As the day wore on. the business of asking poor people for money palled on Joe and the call of the old life sounded insistently in his It was easy to con'nnce himself he already had done a good day’s work and late in the afternoon he sought out the place where the gang most frequently assembled. Entering the speakeasy, he sat down and called for a high-ball. Vergiie Butti, boss of the gang, was holding a low-toned conference with a couple of his lieutenants, and he threw Joe a nod of welcome and a curt word. Butti, an unprepossessing individual, had small eyes set close to a fiat nose, and an eggshaped head rising between muscular shoulders. He liked to boast, unnecessarily, that he was hardboiled. His former girl. Gemma, had once wise-cracked about the toughness of his face. That pleased

him. Gemma and all other girls were out of his life now; he married Pia Roselli. And their first baby was a boy, ridiculously like Vergiie. and he became such a grateful husband, such a doting father, that, there was no crime he would not commit to procure money for his family. Nevertheless, the jilted Gemma still met him on terms of great familiarity, an'’, frequently tossed him genial insults, which he took with grinning good nature. Though she had never been in love with him. she liked to feel that she was in his good graces—a highly commendable ambition in their circle. Gemma was looked upon now as Joe’s girl. He thought she was a good scout, but something of a golddigger. She always wanted money. She was sitting at a table by herself. when Joe came in and he joined her. She was a little lit already. a condition that always made her childishly affectionate, and now she rubbed her face against his coatsleeve and stroked his cheek. She had a black bang down to her eyebrows, a chalk-white sac til the powder was rubbed off. when it became a muddy olive —rather coarse regular features and full, ' orange-smeared lips. When she . kissed and hugged in earnest, it was. Joe knew, like bucking a mild discharge of lightning. "Take the lady’s order,” he said grandly. Kearney, who had been talking to Butti. came across the room and dropped down beside them. "Want to sit in a little game?” he suggested. “Your games are too stiff for me,” Joe said, keeping his new leaf i turned down hard. "I only came in for a drink. I been working all dav. On the up and up, too.” “Oh yeah?’' sneered the other, “Sunday-school line, hey?” “Aw, cut it, Kearney. It’s all right for you and Tony to do what you damn please. You birds arc on your own; you can take a chance, i I’ve got my folks to think about, living right here like they uo. I got to go straight.” Kearney’s laugh had a jeer in it. ■ What they payin’ you for this work you’re at, sap?” “Thirty iron men every Friday,” said Joe. “Migod, all of that! Well, everybody to his taste, but you gotta

Cail inoiw). % us 151 Foreign exchange: rates recover i nearly half. Cotton, unchanged to 4 points i lower. Grains: lower; May wheat 99c, off 1. Chicago livestock: hogs steady | 'to strong; cuttie. sheep steady t<> weak. Rubber: 10 points lower. Q Toledo, O.— (U.R) — Iron paving plates, said to lie virtually »ki«l . proof and wear-resisting, will be manufactured in a plant being constructed by the Interlude Iron, 1 Company here.

expect a ridre’ when the gang gets an earful of this. You making thirty bucks, and working for it! You coulda made four, five hundred just taking a little ride with us and doing like you’re told,” said Kearney. “Not me. Once, was enough. "Would you listen to that! Got cold feet from that little bit of shooting, hey? Never touched us neither. Bull was so far behind, his bullet wouldn’t a dented one of our tires.” "Cold feet nothing! 1 am t afraid of a rod. But there's no percentage in getting bumped off. The swag ain’t worth it. Why, hell, I ’’ said Joe. “Where Butti figures a dope like you would be any use to us, I den't know,” Kearney mused aloud. ' Utting in on Joe’s defence. “Maybe he thinks you look honest, and you making thirty a week. Now me—” He pulled out a thick roll of bills

• ffi? r- i J?'7 JKJJM Gemma was looked upon now as Joe’s girl.

and flipped it under Joe’s nose. “I’ll tell Butti what you say. Carmine, his brother, come to town yesterday, and him and Gemma sure hit it off. Pop, like that. You’d never think he was Butti’s brother. Just a kid. slick-looking like a movie actor. Well, s’long, buddy—” Now was the time to get out, Joe thought, and he signalled to Tony for the check. But Gemma had gone to sleep and leaned against him with her head on his shoulder. “You’ll have to help me spread this kid out somewhere,” he said to Tony. As they struggled with the girl, Butti rose and came to their assistance. The three carried her into a back room and laid her on a bench with a cushion under her head. She stretched, elevated her knees and turned over, revealing a pair of shapely legs. “When she comes to, give her a pick-me-up and let me know,” Butti ordered Tony. "I’ll be upstairs, with my brother.” Your brother, hey, thought Joe—the brother that took a shine to Gemma. ... “I guess after all I’ll come up for a little while,” he said aloud. You can pass every time, unless you have good cards, he figured. You can stay in a game a long time on a little money that way. He’d stick around; keep an eye on Gemma. That wouldn’t mean he was with this bunch in their rackets. * * * All that day Cathleen worked

\OTUE OF FINAL * K r. ! . c l , E ' ,K ' l or KMI'-irn N. 31«3 Notice is hertby glwn to •? e JTnrv Is:ig, ami xhow cause, if the Filial Heltlcment Accounts with hS U"uc of said decedent should r.ot be approved: and ant; heir" al I notified to then and thrie man : proof of heirship, and receive their i distributive ahares. Caroline Fruchte. executrix lieeatur. Indiana. March i, I»3 # - 1 '"xuM. 9-16 ■ ■ —-u— —— WANTED—Good, clean, big Rags, suitable for cleaning machinery. Wili pay 4c lb Decatur Dailv Democrat

nervously, afraid Seward Ingram might call at the office. He did not come, however, and had she followed the activities of the fashionable world, she would have known better than to expect him. for he was riding that afternoon in a Westchester Horse Show. Fortunately Jasper Ingram kept her so busy that she had little leisure to contemplate her personal problem, whicn, whenever she studied it, seemed to grow constantly more hopeless and desperate. Concentrating on word signs, fitting the edges of paper and carbon sheet into her typewriter, she felt disaster hovering near, finding relief only in the activity that kept thought in abeyance. Her head ached and her fingers were slow and lacking their usual dexterity, but she could not afford to make a mistake, for tremendously important deals were on hand. Mr. Ingram walked the room while

dictating to her, and she had learned what that nervous concentration meant. At noon Osgood, the banker, called and she was turned out of the private office w hile the two men were closeted together for an hour. At three, there was a directors’ meeting in the big ova! board room. Cathleen was asked to wait in the private office until Ingram returned. She was given meanwhile, some special work to do including verifications from the files in Alspaugh's charge. As Cathleen went in to get a fih she needed, Alspaugh looked up to say, “I guess I’ll have to keep you late tonight, Miss McCarthy. AU right with you?” "Why—yes—” she answered, not too eagerly. Then at that instant a wild hope was born in her mind. If Mr. Alspaugh could be persuaded to help her! He had always beep friendly. Occasionally a little over-familiar, perhaps, but that, she thought, was merely a mannerism. for Tie had not really been objectionable on the two previous ocI easions when he had taken her to 1 dinner. Evidently he regarded her as a valuable employe. He knew that she was getting forty dollars a week, and that Mr. Ingram was satisfied with her work, so that even if the office staff would have to be cut down, as every one now ]expected, she almost certainly 1 would be retained. (To Be Continued) (■'•pyriglit. 193 . d JLing Feaiurf S. nihcgte. Inc,

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL and foreign markets Brady's Market for Decatur, Berne, Craigville, Ho»o l * n!1 and Willshire. Close at 12 Noon. Corrected March 9. No commission and no yardage. Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday. Friday and Saturday. 100 to ItO Ibc. $ 9.35 120 to 140 lbs..„ 9.55 140 to 160 lbs 10.10 160 to 230 lh» 10.50 230 to 270 lbs 10.00 270 to 300 lbs «... 9 80 300 to t 350 lbs 9.60 Roughs — 8 25 Stags 6.25 Vealera 9 'm Kwe and wether lambs.. 9.00 Buck lambs 8.00 Yearling lambs 4.50 FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Hogs'lsc higher; 160-180 lbs. 10.75; 180-200 lbs. 10.65; 200-225 Ibe. 10.55; 225-250 lbs. 10.45; 250275 lbs. 10.30; 275-300 lbs. 10.20; 300-350 U». 9.95; 140-160 lbs. 10.35; 120-160 lbs. 10.15; 100-120 lbs. 9.85. Roughs 8.50, steady; stags 6.75, steady. Calves 9.00. &0c higher; Lambs 9.25, steady. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., Mar. 9. —(U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, receipts. 1,800; active, strong; bulk desirable 160-250 lbs., averaging 240 lbs., down. sll-11.10; somewhat plainer kinds off $10.7510.90; few 260-285 lbs., butchers, $10.50-110.75; pigs and underweights, $10.50-810 90; packing sows. $9.25-$9.50. Cattle, receipts, 1.500; holdovers 75; steers, yearlings, active, high- • er; good to choice yearlings. $9.60-; $10; good steers. $8.5049.25: mix ed and short feds. $7 2548; including Canadians around $8 and below; mixed heifers, $6.6046.85; cows and bulls, steady; fleshy cows, $545.50; low cutter and cutter cows, $3.7544.75; medium bulls $5.5046. Calves, receipts, 750; vealers. active, firm; good to choice mainly. $lO. Sheep, receipts, 3,000; lambs active, strong; good to choice ewes I and wethers mainly $10.25; top, | $10.35; medium and mixed grades] scarce. $9.2549.75; aged ewes, fed I westerns. $6.10; general run, $4.25$5.50. INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK Indianapolis, Mar. 9. (U.R) Livestock: Hogs, 3,500; holdovers, 103; ISO--275, mostly 10c higher; heavier and lighter offerings mostly steady; 160-225 lbs.. $10.75410.85; 225-260 lbs.. $10.4541070; 260-300 lbs.. $10.10410.35; 300-400 lbs., $9.5049.90; 130-160 lbs.. $9.75-j $10.25; 100-130 11*.. $949.50; packing sows, mostly, $8.7549.25. Calves, weaker, to lower; two loads of steers, $11; others mostly $6.50-$8.25; steers and heifers around steady; early heifer sales. $7 down; bulk beef cows early, $5$6; best held higher; low and cutter cows, $3.5044.50; vealers steady, $9 down. Sheep. 1400; choice fed western lambs, mostly 15c lower; good to choice’fed lambs, $9.5049.85; mostly native lambs downward from $9.50; slaughter sheep, $345. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat .... 98% 88% 87% Corn 60% 60% 60% Oats 27% 27% 27% Corrected March 9. No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 94c No. 2 New Wheat. 58 lbs. 93c Oats ao to 22c Good Dry No. 2 Yet. Soy Beans 70c New No. 4 yellow corn, 100 lbs 53 to 68c Rys 45c CENTRAL SOYA MARKET Dry No. 2 Yellow Soy Bi ans 70c (Delivered to factory) New Book on Arrangements for Gardeners "Flower Arrangement.” by F. F. Rockwell and Esther C. Grayson (Macmillan) is not just another garden hook, but one which deals with an intangible art in a moet practical manner. Valuable to ajl flower lovers, it is particularly suited to the garden dull member whose arrangements have missed blue ribbons. The authors treat their subject as a true form o' artistic expression, and do so in a. manner which makes their ideas immediately useful to the amateur. The slraightforward statement of principles of design and coinposition. even in the case of the deliiale Japanese floral art. is under■stajidalilc and practical to all gardeners. The volume illustrates ,principles with many helpful halftones and line drawings. It’s discussions on flower containers a part of arrtiiigemeiits is ititeresling and clear. o New Coats, Dresses and >Suits brought back from the market.—E. F. Gass store.

Al,v EimsSSf hVSIXESS S ♦ ASi ’ W|(®| U...v WUJM-, ■ “OUSE FOH " 111 L I'.iib '-7, SV7 ® ra,lK '’ ; ' d G '" "a Wi F;.. I*oll SALE i"' . ’ .* 1* OK SALE — I'-aiisK !!• : v. .. WB southwix-t of Monrui. •■’OR SAI-E 'I-31 : . I:,. BS 4OR SALE 1 Stan S*' * :: , ■ j; , FOR SAl.i'. ilmiioi: -Hl breeds. Bi. luiiji: BH Wilisie: ' . „ . Road I' WANTED Mj so, h.il!.-, - . - >x 1 ’BH MALE -ELP 9 pta.iej ravi N' WAX'!'FI 1 apartni- u' Ploiiv BH MALE W !!.!.:■< willii;- * k .J ■ '• u, -- I * ■ * ■ ■ 'inpl"'--'. — si'al'i 1,, 1.. , , I’i' l ' ll ' ' Hll ~... j.j, u i. ■ I'K iei place -|.i ,<■ jug. Phon-- !'"■ Monroe. IK WANTED Ki'l.' two ' Wilf. 1: ■ -Jb* WANTED ' i-epresi ni 1- -a’ 111 exp'*r!‘ U'** ' s f'B| mission and > > experiem c ami stri'd Bov 235. Dail.' ifino'' l *' 1 I OR FOR RENT -t'ouii'iy east of Monroe, .to 1 <B| Il Slice- JS for ItliST ''^ hl r " ulll M good ba.rn ami dC,l ’ s will red-■( mW. B electric 1ml"" “/■ KE of i >.*eal v -B ' I connecting »•<»<> • dose in. T.*l'*l-I"'"'' - ' _B LOST AM' tg LOST -Black doc license No. > 'b'""'" Alll o I’- 1 ' LOST Trail. '' ■’’> All, ' | llewi'id La«n"" , Elm St N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyeß Examined HOURS 8:30 to H-30 12 ;3 ° ° Saturdays. 8;00 P* Telephone “ •