Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 37, Decatur, Adams County, 12 February 1937 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
A PARTY FOR YOUR BOY OR GIRL? Wouldn't you like some new ideas—some novel decorations —a unique invitation—(suggestions for the party fixin’s- and above all suggestions for interesting anti amusing games—for that party you are planning for your youngster? The new BookIet—"CHILDREN 8 PARTIES" —just off the presw is filled with Just the things you will want to know in planning the i>arty you want to give your children—no matter what the occasion _•» Seed Hie coupon below, with a dime enclosed, for your copy: CLIP COUPON HERE — Kept. B-150, Washington Service Bureau, Dally Democrat, 1013 Thirteenth Street, Washington, D. C. Send my copy of the Booklet "Children’s Parties,” tor which find enclosed a dime to cover return postage and handling costs: NAME - < STREET & No. - — - — CITY ....... STATE 1 am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, Ind.
f Testliour Knowledge | . Can you answer seven ot these | I ten questions? Turn to page j Four for the answers. | 1. What was the native country of John Jacob Astor, founder ot the Astor fortune in America? 2. Name the branch of natural history that treats of reptiles. 3. Which English king was surnamed Coer de Lion? 4. Which city of the U. S. is the largest railroad center? . 5. What was the name of the paper money issued during the French Revolutionary period? 6. What does the French name Mignon mean? 7. What is the legal voting age * TODAY S COMMON ERROR * I Never say, "He is a close re- | | lation of mine;” say, “near re- |j | lation." |
First Showing New and Beautiful Spring Dresses You'll thrill this advanced showing. Lovely silk print dresses for ® J spring in figured or plain shades, everyone portraying the mode the com- J ing season. Sizes 14 to 52. “ J New Arrivals in WASH DRESSES Large Selection, New Styles and Patterns 98c and $1.98 Dry Goods Specials FOR SATURDAY 54 inch wide Wool Diess Tweeds, yard SI.OO I Dress Crepe, new plain shades, also prints, yard 50c Percale Prints "80" square quality, New patterns, yard 19c Krinkle Crepe, pastel shades for gowns, etc., yard 15c 36" Extra Heavy Outing Flannel, lights or darks, yard 17c Comforter Chailie, 36" width, good patterns, yard 13c Bleached Canton Flannel, for quilts, etc., yard 19c “Cloth of Gold” Bleached Muslin, best for quilting, yard 15c Pillow Tubing, 36 inch or 42 inch width, yard 20c j 90 inch Bleached Quilting Cloth, extra fine grade, yard 49c "Mohawk” Sheeting, 81 in. Bleached, Finest Made, yard 55c Unbleached Sheeting, 81 inch wide, Extra Heavy, yard 40c White Outing Flannel, 27 inch wide, yard 10c Part Linen Toweling, yard 10c 3 lb. Wool Mixed Comfort Batt, each 89c Niblick & Co
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“EVERYTHING’S JUST DUCKY!” By SEGAR fV4ELV, f\6lF£NCy 1 HND ' I <'/00., H€R€-\ | |7mS FRIEND, I HOPE ) ZGah Vl ™>'? e Sc KE S'OT eck - ‘di7cVSikh i stove * bit of the neck- you not J XN ( ww if n - q KITCHEN— PROM kPbOX \JOR ME. I'LL Tf\K€ J STRING AT / ASk I • / Jl TRUST VoSvE HAD — FOR you.SIR, HERE— \THE REST. SIRLU HAT I THINK V I' J DINNER— H BIT OF THE NECK- \VOU ftRE STORING/ : rd-. i k >/•-■'' W idW' t-M/iSUOI 1.,,,,,!,,/* I ■ L. „ ..''..v. /■■«.. Ur l " , 1 i.„.1 Li..,,.] Ife>t t . _<a>— a
in each state? 8. In law, what is a respondent? 9. What is divination? 10. Who wrote the comedy, "The Rivals?” o — NOTICE FARMERS — Treat your harness right. Get it oiled for 85c per double set, including collars, halters. Joe Aschliman, % south, 2% miles east Craigville. Craigville phone, 1 on 6. feb.l2-19-26-ni.sx Mrs. John D. Faust will visit in Marion, over the week-end. o writ H OF FIX Al. SETTLBMEVr OF ESTATE AO. 3SST Notice is hereby given to the creditors. heirs and legatees of Ellis HButcher, deceased, to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur Indiana, on the sth day of March. 1937, and show cause, if any, why the Final Settlement Accounts with the estate ot said decedent should not be approved; and said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and receive their distriIbutive shares. Bedford Butcher, Administrator Decatur, Indiana, Feb. 5, 1937. Feb. 12-19
More Home Mortgages Reported Insured Jndlanapolis, Ind., Feb 12 —(UP) —An (increase of 310 per cent last yeaMn the volume of mortgages accepted front Indian’* savivna. Gliding and loan associations for insurance by the federal housing administration was reported here* by Stewart McDonald, FHA administrator, t
I'Luxußy model%&]
CLaPTED XVIII If Yvonne thought Luana foolish in wasting her golden opportunities, at the other end of the category she placed the admirable Mrs. Joel Vandaveer. "Ah, to be married to a millionaire, and also have the ’andsome lover I Ees she not clev-aire?” “She does not look too happy, in spite of the millions and the tine clothes and the trips to Europe," Luana observed. She ignored mention of Ramon. Indeed, the young Spaniard no longer came to the shop with Mrs. Vandaveer. Probably there had been a quarrel of some kind. On a certain Friday in early April, when daffodils and freesia and narcissi were blooming jauntily in the flower-shops, and the sidewalk cases doin£ a brisk business under their striped umbrellas, Luana waited outside the House of Quackenbush on Fifth Avenue at twenty minutes of six for Jimmy Randolph, who had arranged to meet her at the closing of the shop. But he was not there. She strolled northward and back again. She was a little annoyed at Jimmy’s lack of punctuality, since it was awkward to be kept waiting on the pavement. Rather undignified, in fact. The girls were trooping out of the building. Yvonne appeared with Armand. Luana would wait no longer. A Washington Square bus had pulled up beside her. She hastily climbed aboard. Arrived at the apartment, she thought she had perhaps been hasty? But it would teach Jimmy a lesson. He would follow her here. Neither he nor rhe had a telephone, which was a little awkward when there were delays like this. But time slipped by, and no j Jimmy. “Perhaps I have offended him?” But she would make amends. She would have a dainty supper waiting for him when he arrived, Yvonne having an engagement to dine elsewhere with her Armand. She opened a can of cold salmon, garnished it with lettuce leaves and thin sliced cucumber and parsley, and put it in the ice-box to chill. She stuffed tomatoes with a succulent mixture of green peppers and spring onions and pimento, and set them alongside the dish of salmon, against Jimmy’s arrival. It was growing very dusk now. She switched on a light. Twentyfive minutes of seven! Switching off the light, Luana had a bright idea. She would take a leaf out of Jimmy’s book and climb over the roofs and surprise him in his studio, apologizing for not having waited longer for him, since probably he was offended with her now. She knew where his attic was located. Her heart sank a little when she saw no golden patch of light in the big, sloping window set in the roof. It was open. There was a funny little ladder usually set under it leading to the model's stand or platform in five short steps. She would ! climb down and wait for Jimmy’s return ... surprise him. As she neared the window she heard the sound of his voice. He had a charming, well-modulated voice. He was talking to someone. Luana halted, listening. Came a woman’s voice, low and caressing. Blood rushed tc Luana’s face. It couldn’t be? What business had “she” here in Jimmy’s studio, without even the lights turned on? Could it be possible? Luana crept nearer . . . The woman was Mrs. Joel Vandaveer. Luana crept back over the roofs to her apartment, full of trembling indignation mixed with a feeling that was entirely new to her, and painfully disturbing. With all her heart, she resented Mrs. Vandaveer being in Jimmy’s studio. So it was she who had detained him, made him break his appointment! Or perhaps Jimmy himself had invited her, forgetting all about his engagement with Luana, or ignoring it? Now, she had humiliated herself by spying on them I If they had seen her peering through the skylight window, she told herself she would have died of humiliation, would never have gotten over it.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1937.
1 "In financing home mortgages in Indiana, these associations had 792 | loans totalling >2.377,122 accepted for insurance through Dec. 31, 1936, as compared with a total of 164 mortgages accepted as of Dec 31 ! 1935, amounting to >579,662," McDonald sr'd .. ... He atao pointed out that evidence of new construction activity was shown by the fact that 19 per cent of the associations’ volume of mort-
Colonel McCarthy’s admonition , against making herself cheap came back to her in full force. At every I crisis of her life—and to her, this was an important one, flinging as it did a new light on Jimmy and the woman who, in a sense, considered herself Luana’s patroness—- ' the words of her stepfather (old fogey that he was, but didn’t he know the world?) reminded her forcibly, reluctantly, of his innate wisdom. To Jimmy, considering the manner of their meeting, Luana could well be classified as a “pick-up” ... The vulgarly of the term gave it force and body. In her humiliation she told herself that that was exactly what she was in the eyes of Jimmy Randolph. A z oman with the prestige and name and wealth of Mrs. Joel Vandaveer might stoop to conquer, and get away with it But not a penniless girl from nowhere, minus family, and with a cloud over her name, so that she had been practically compelled to change it Added to her humiliation, her sense of cheapness, was another and even more powerful emotion. She hated the sight of Mrs. Vandaveer sitting there alone in the fast deepening twilight with Jimmy! A jealous pain filled her, twisted like a live thing in her bosom. Never had Luana known a feeling of that sort in all her nineteen years. It came like an avalanche. Tears burned in her throat and stung her eyes and made her heart swell so that it seemed as though her chest would burst with it. She had looked on Jimmy—fool that she was—as her own possession. He had had no women friends in all New York till that night he had pursued Chou-Chou, the monkey, over the roof tops and into her apartment, and they had had their supper together. The extenuating circumstances of his attack of faintness or giddiness on that occasion she ignored. She told herself that as like as not he had done it on purpose, to gain sympathy or a drink. She had fallen for his “act,” like the silly greenhorn she was. Jimmy had never once invited her to his studio, but at this very moment he was entertaining Lorraine Vandaveer there. Lorraine of the strange fascination and the unplumbable poise. Lorraine in an exquisite jade gown that enhanced her red-haired, white-skinned beauty, and brought out the depth and color of her green eyes that were curiously slanting under the thick black lashes. Lorraine was a woman of the world, practised with men, endowed with a faculty of setting them at their ease while subtly flattering them. Hadn’t Luana seen her with Ramon, with her husband, with Mr. Quackenbush, even with Armand at the shop? Wasn’t her cleverness with men obvious and real? A part of the sorcery of the woman? At her cocktail party, hadn’t Luana found Lorraine alone with Jimmy In the conservatory? She had been willing to leave all her other guests to make headw’ay with the handsomest young man at her party. “What a charming woman Mrs. Vandaveer is!” Jimmy had remarked to Luana as they left the penthouse together. She had felt a little pang, then, but it was nothing to what she was now experiencing. Mrs. Vandaveer had come to shabby Elizabeth street, to seek out Jimmy. For a woman whose every hour was booked with an endless round of engagements, this meant one thing . . . that she was attracted to the young architect 1 Ramon had got his congt. Was this the reason? Luana clenched her hands so that the knuckles stood out whitely. The realization had come to her of what Jimmy meant to her . . . what, in the weeks of their friendship, he had grown to mean. But she had no right to think of Jimmy as anything more than a friend ... because of that ceremony in Yuma, Arizona I She sank down on the chintz-cov-ered divan that was her bed at night, staring stonily ahead of her into the deep twilight. What would Jimmy say to her were he to learn that she had a “husband” (save the wordl) In
i gages was advanced tor the liiuiu- ! ing of new homes. I .— o • ■' Accident Fosters Idea i Cleveland —(UP)- Three years I ago William Naylon caugh* his neck ■ In the loops of a basement clothes- ■ Huv- ■unu lauded on the flour ia a > tangle of freshTy-laurdered clothing, i Now he's the owner of the Rotito Manufacturing Company, makers ot clothesline supports.
prison? That the very name he called her by was an assumed one? Jimmy so honest, so straightforward, who loathed deceit in any form? , . But was he honest and true, as he appeared? Why had he broken his engagement with her that evening, to entertain Mrs. Vandaveer. a married woman, alone in his studio? “She walked in on him. She surprised him. He was too much of a gentleman to show her the door. She made excuses for Jimmy. It was not his fault. Knowing how important a customer she was and that ehe had entertained both him and Luana, and had been instrumental in getting her her present position, Jimmy had thought it expedient as well as courteous to receive her. He would explain it all to Luana later. But time went on, and no Jimmy. The French clock on the mantelpiece chimed. Luana went to the ice-box and got out her supper. But appetite had gone. She ate a very little, put the remainder back into the ice-box. It would come in handy later, when Jimmy appeared. But why humble herself by waiting? She was no Patient Griselda! Let Jimmy find the apartment empty and in darkness, and think that it was she who had broken the engagement, going straight from the shop to a rendezvous with someone else! Wild horses would never drag out of her the fact that she had spied on Jimmy and his caller! Then see if he mentioned Mrs. Vandaveer and her unconventional visit to his studio? Put his straightforwardness to a test? Luana started at the sound of footsteps coming up the stairs that led from the street. Hastily she switched the light off. Let Jimmy knock! Let him go away, disappointed! Yvonne’s shrill voice came through the transom over the door. “Mon Dieu, I cannot find my key, Armand. Go down to the janeetor. He will let us in.” So it was not Jimmy. It was the French girl and her sweetheart who expected her to be gone . . . Luana opened the door to them. Yvonne made startled eyes at her. “Ma foi, you here?” she exclaimed ungraciously. “You tell me thees morning you have an appointment?” “I have. I’m leaving directly.” “Come in, Armand.” Yvonne seemed relieved. Luana went into the cupboard in the bathroom where her things were kept. She put on her hat and coat and gloves. On her way out through the living room, Armand, who was alone in the room for a minute, blocked her passage. He said, in a voice that was purposely low, so that Yvonne in the bedroom might not overhear him: “You are cruel, Miss Waters. You always go out when I come in. I ask you, is that fair?” "Certainly it is. I have an engagement,” replied Luana tartly. She hated the way Armand looked at her, loathed the touch of his soft, womanish hands, his perfumed hair. “Be kind. I’m mad about you,” he whispered. “Have dinner with me tomorrow night? The Stafford Walk at seven o'clock?” His furtive eyes went from her to the open door of Yvonne’s bedroom, as though warning her to be silent. What a sneak he was! Shaking her head in refusal, she pushed past him just before the suspicious and jealous Yvonne appeared in the doorway. The moment Luana had gone, the French girl spat out: “What were yon just asking her?” Armand smiled blandly albeit soothingly. Yvonne was a hell-cat! “I was telling her the boss wants her to be at the opening luncheon of the St. Regal Roof tomorrow at one sharp. She’s to wear the new plaid taffetas we’ve adapted from Lanvin. She's to lunch with the press agent.” But Yvonne was not satisfied. She ' knew the little weaknesses of her Armand. They had an argument It was interrupted by a knock on the outer door. “Sst! Do not open. It may be Luana come back. I don't want her,” whispered Yvonne sulkily. It had not been Luana, however, but Jimmy Randolph, who finally went away. Thereafter ensued two hours of Armand’s best endeavors before Yvonne was restored to normalcy. (To Be Continued) CwrrlSbt, lilt, King SuturM SyndlnlU, Im.
miscellaneous _ I MISCELLANEOUS -Furniture ■ epaired,upholstered or '■efini'died ut the Decatur Uphove. Ing Shop. 222 S Second St. Phone 4.0. AJm ! used^funilture^( paired, upholstered or refinishtd at the Decatur Upholstering Shop. 222 3. Second St. Phone COOPERATE with nature. Chiropractice adjustments are simply that. If youre not well, consult Dr. Roy Andress, 315 N. 4th St. Phone 256 i■ i ■ WANTED WANTED — Salesman for wire fence, roofing and paint. Cash Coal & Supply. 3t5 1 :1 WANTED— Housekeeper. Between ages of 25-30 preferred. Must be able to stay nights. Two«in family. State salary. Box EFK. % Democrat. 3‘t.lx WANTED — Loans on improved farms; Eastern money; long terms; low rates. French Quinn. 262 w&f ts WANTED- SALESMEN HUSTLER WANTED to Introduce, supply demand for Rawleigh necessities in Bluffton. Good routes open nearby. Rawleigh Methods get business. No selling experience needed. We supply sales, advertising literature—all you need Profits should increase every month. Low prices; good values, complete service. Rawleigh's, Dept. INB-112-63Z. Freeport, 111., or see A. J. Zelt, 108 N. Bth St., Decatur, Indiana. 4-11 Trade In a Good Town — Decatur
SALE CALENDAR Roy S. Johnson Auctioneer ( Decatur, Ind.
Claim your sale date early as 1 am booking sales every day. Feb. 13—C. W. Allen, 2 miles West and Vt -mile South of Ossian, closing out. Feb. 15—Frank Morton, 1 mile East of Poe on Winchester road, closing out. Feb. 16—Mrs. Clara Weir, 1 mile ’ North of Haviland, Ohio on No. 127, closing out. Feb. 17 —Clint Haa t. Vs mile East of Jefferson high school, closing. out. Feb. 17—William Bradley. 1 mi. West of Tipton, Ohio on State I road No. 114, Carl Bartlett, auct. Feb. 18 —Otto Kuhn, miles South and 1 mile East of Convoy, Ohio, closing out. Feb. 19—Decatur Riverside Stock Sale. Feb. 20—Ralph Etzler 2% mile South of Monroeville, closing out. Feb. 22—Louis Vorrel I>, mile East of Zulu, closing out. Feb. 23 —Frank Orr, 3 mile North of Celina on No. 127, closing out. Feb. 24—Herbert Bultemeier, 3 mile Southeast of Poe, closing out. j Feb. 25—Homer Mills, 3 miles North and Vs mile East of Bluffton, large stock sale. Feb. 26 —Decatur Riverside Stock Sale. Feb. 27 —Bert Marquaj-dt on Lincoln Highway, North of Monroeville. Registered Chester White Bred Sow eale. Mar. I—Jim Dutton, Mendon, O. Farm Implements. Mar. 2—Joe McDaffee, 1 mile South of LaOtto on No. 3. Mar. 4 — Paul Bobay & Son. 1 mile West ajid 1 mile North Nine ■ Mile House, closing out. Mar. s—Decatur Riverside i Stock Sale. Mar. 6—Otto Huebner, Monroe- ; ville, closing out Dairy Herd. Maj-. B—Austin8 —Austin McMichaels and William Mauller, 5 miles east of Decatur on the Piqua road. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined • Glasses Fitted HOURS 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 6:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 136.
market reports daily report of local and foreign markets Brady’s Market for Decatur, Berne, Craigville, Hoagland and Willshire. Closed at 12 Noon. Corrected February 12. No commission and no yardage Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday. Friday and Saturday. 100 to* 120 lbs - 18-20 120 to 140 lbs U M 140 to 160 lbs 040 j 160 to 180 lbs .. 9.95 180 to 230 lbs — 10.10 230 to 260 lbs - 10.00 260 to 300 lbs 0.70 300 to 350 lbs 0.50 350 lbs. and up 0.30 Roughs *-00 Stags -7 00 Vealers 10-26 Ewe and wether lambs 10.00 Buck lambs - -0 00 Yearling lambs 4.50 - INDIANAPOLIS LIVE STOCK Indianapolis, Ind., Feb. 12 —(UR) i—Livestock: Hogs, 5.000; holdovers, 140; market steady to 15c higher; bulk 160180 lbs.. 810.41 V 180-200 lbs., >10.50; , 200-210 lbs., >10.55; 210-225 lbs., >10.50; 225-235 lbs.. >10.40; 235-250 lbs.. >10.35; 250-260 lbs., >10.30; j 260-275 lbs.. >10.20; 275-285 lbs., >10.10; 285-300 lbs.. >10.05; 300-325 lbs., >10; 328-350 lbs., >9.90; 350-. 400 lbs., >9 SO; 155-160 lbs., >10; 150-155 lbs.. >9.75; 140-150 lbs.. >9.50; 110-140 lbs., >9.25; 120-130 lbs., >9; 110-120 lbs., >8.75; 100-110 lbs., >8.50; sows. 10c higher; bulk,, ,>9.10-19.60; top. >9.75. Cattle, 600; veals, 600; all classes steady; steers mostly >7.60-’ $8.50; heifers, >7->8.50; common 1 , and medium beef cows, >5-35.75; ! cutter grades. >2.75->3.75; top sausage bulls, >6.50; veals steady; bulk good and choice, >lO->10.50. Sheep, 2,500; lambs generally steady; good and choice native and ted western lambs, >10.25->10.50, ewes, 50c higher, selling mostly at >5-15.75; top, >6. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., Feb. 12 — (U.R>—Livestock: Hogs, 1,600; holdovers, 500; fairly active to all Interests; generally steady; bulk good and choice 180-240 lbs., >10.75; few selections held *10.85; trucked-in. $10.60 down; 2'i'a-lb. butchers, $10.50; 125-120 lb. pigs and underweights. mostly rather plain qual--1 ity, >9.50->10; packing sows, >9.26$9.50; rough strong weight sows, >9. . Cattle, 150; cows and bulls fully low cutter and cutter cows >3.75 >4.75; fleshy off e. mgs to >5.75; medium bulls, >5.85>6.25; common light weights, 35-35.50; bidding fully steady on medium I steers. Calves, 250; vealers, active, firm, | good to choice, >11.50. Sheep, 500; lambs scarce, active to local killers; steady, good and choice ewes and wethers, >10.75 :to mainly >11; medium and mixed 'grades, >9.75->10.50. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Feb. 12. —(U.R) , ‘ —Livestock: Hogs, steady, 200-225 lbs., >10.20; 225-250 lbs., >10.10; 180-200 lbs., $10.10; 250-275 lbs., >9.95; 160-180 . lbs., 310; 275-300 lbs., >9.8'0; 300- . 350 lbs., >9.«S; 150-160 lbs., >9.65; , 140-150 lbs., >9.40; 130-140 lbs., >9.05; 120-130 lbs., >8.80; 100-120 lbs.. 38.55. Roughs, >8.75; stags, >7.25. . Calves, >10.50; lambs, >10.25. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET BURK ELEVATOR CO. Corrected February 12. No. 1 Wheat, 60 lbs. or better >1.31 No. 2 Wheat, 58 lbs 1.30 Oats 60c I Soya Beans, No. 2 Yellow 1.47 f New No. 4 Yellow Corn >1 to 1.40 Rye 90c CENTRAL SOYA CO. Soya Beans, No. 2 Ye110w..„._... 1.47 o Medicine's Success Decried London, —(UP) —The success of science and medicine, in prolonging the life of "weaklings." is threaten- ’ ing the future of civilization. Lord i Dawson declared in an address at Buy's Medical School. ’ ——— USED CARS Bargain Priced Used Cars 1929 Ford A Coach 1930 Marquette Sedan 1928 Hudson Sedan 1928 Essex Sedan 1928 Niash Sedan 1929 Chrysler Roadster P. KIRSCH & SON Ist & Monroe st. 1o years your local dealer.
busixekSßM * One Time— m for M rt 20 words, 1>/ 4C per Two W W 0* 40c for 20 word. Cl Over 20 word, 2e ... ” the two time, P Over 20 word, 2 ” three tim “- FOR SALF K FOR SALE-;) each, on rang ( . s , sure stoves. j' rank .. 1 Jefferson et. ’ I SALE - 1 getting r.-u.ly fo r v ‘ ordep now. g,.t thp , n want them, p in ,, dalt . “ Decatur. Phone 433. > -for SALE house, tarn. en house. 12x14 brood.. mile south and mi le Decatur. Phone 863-C. ■ FOR SALE—Two 1 good spring,- r <ow young heif. rs V p-; ani , 1 mile west and 1, mile tPleasant Mills, Ind. IOR SALE 16 for good work horse, c. llivan. Phone 894 K. SPECIAL - lOon te chicks. 4-H' ton , iay ' old Huge. Mod.; rrv “ Indiana. ' , bO R SALP. Used I suites. Used kit-hen list'd beds. „. an ,j Monroe. Ind. Just Reeeivro • of Studio .. ■_. to s4ll Also card tiklih - >1 • J:.'.' Furniture Co., i Phone 199. 'for SALE — li'-nei'al Joe Kehrn. Tocsin. Ind. FOR SALE panel truck. \ ton. v: tion. Cheap, if Inh.'ll A. Lewton, pli. 7IC-E ern house; ’ ern houee. with .t.. : » one 9 room K ■ EOR SALE S-"!' "1.-'r 8 years old. «- ighs 1 y.«! mare in Lui: ' old Bay hc-t sc - v a ' 1,600. All good farm horset rated at con:-: ■ Adams streets. West Ei. . i.:.7 FOR SALE ■ s ~«• Wayne, well improved, . house, good laud p-r i acres 7 mi. from lh<atur. ,120 acres 4 mi. frmn I'- a'ur. I >SO per acre. 4u acres near roeville. fair imprioenieuil land. >3.500. Monee ■ loan os proved farms at 1. . Have ‘ ers for Decatur property and I located lots Roy E Decatur. Ind. Ov<: Morris feb. ' FOR SALE —2" head of sleejß ’ 1 and 3 yr. old. due to larot>M«B April. Good ones. Holstein c(B ; . 5 yeare old, calf by side. B • Durham cow. 4 years old. f’«tß 1 March. Two year old Roaneß 1 out Habegger horse Marcdß Davison, Decatur, route 6. tfl mile east of Monroe, mad Sat. Tn. 1 U ' FOR SALE—4 good sized filtsß farrow March 1; 1 Gueflß ' cow, fresh with heifer 1 aide, an extra good cow; Po»B s I China, and a Duroc Male IWB c ' nice thrifty white shoaU, a« ■ 7 lb. each; 1 choice Hereford 9 Bull—H. P. Schmitt Stodt WB 8 qB 100 acres B 7 An excellent opportunity w B a farm at low figure and your own buildings. IDOacresß f be Bold for cash. Write K ■ e Knowlton, Freeport. ■ 2 3 4 10 11 12 18 » 20 23J8 t FOR SALE —Furniture and B Living room suites >•' ' J ■ room suites 345; Mattress'* J Coil bed springs >4.98, 1 minster rugs >19.85; I ruga >3.98. We sell a. , cause we sell cheap. _ ■ ■ Furniture Co., phone 1 • J Second st. ' FOR SALE - 50 Spring Mattresses. b J platform Springs made ( b ' 'of famous Beautyres • "1 >5.00 trade-in ue springs or mattress. Spr« J Dlture Co., 152 b. ! phono 199. FOR SALE -Bay mare. - 1 JI old Sorrel colts, 2 f" 1 ' 1 sows with pigs. Fliom Why not select your spjjj suit, coat or dress ? no put in lay-a-way-I ‘ Gass Store.
