Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 55, Decatur, Adams County, 5 March 1937 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

► _ ' 111 1 $ Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. _ 1. Name the most important seaport of Italy. 2. What popular nickname was applied to Prepldent Zachary TayDr. Eugene Fields dentist X-RAY LABORATORY Phone No. 56 127 N. 3rd st

PUBLIC SALE NOTICE OF COMMISSIONERS SALE OF REAL ESTATE OF THE LATE DANIEL P. SHOEMAKER ■ The undcrslKned cummissloner. by 0 „ n the’lSth day irClrcult court, hereby gives notice inat iie court «.f March, 1937, offer for sale at PJJ k «le, Mme 1() . 00 t house, In the City J?* from day’ t<» day thereafter until «old, the rS^ng\e^r?b7d C re n a‘ ln e“ufeln State of Indiana, to*W Qommenclng at the center section 97. township 25. myrth orange ?;' 1 e th?tue we" ISO rods. thence north S 3 rods to the place ot fbeginning, containing 83 acres ™re {e* 8 nor theast quarter the north end ot r-*M Ct Commen. lng t at corner . r n”S% tx ISSA'S SSWJ S".7S7£ i Sun south Bide of road, 13 acres on north side. BYRON G. JENKINS, Commissioner and Attorney. Over Peoples Bank, Portland. Indiana. Public Auction Uk 1 will sell at public auction at Preble, Indiana, in a Sale of Used Machinery Tuesday, March 9 — Starting 12 Noon I—l9'’7 Fordson Tractor; low gear, new governor, rebuilt and repainted; in A-l condition: 1—1923 Fordson Tractor, rebuilt a year ago, in good condition 1—1923 Fordson tractor in good running condition. 1— 8-lb international tractor, in good running condition. 1 clutch pulley for Fordson tractor. I Kingston governor. Extension rims etc. I—l 2 in. Oliver tractor plow, late model, good shape; 1- 12 inch Oliver tractoi Plow . 1 Diamond riding plow; 4 used manure spreaders in good working ordei. 1 Black Hawk corn planter, good working order: 1 Janesville coin planter 2-7 ft. disc harrows and tandems; 2- 2 section spring tooth harrows. Also New goods out of store such as stock tanks, all sizes, halters, horse collars, nails, etc. See the new Twin City tractor and cultivator on display. Come and spend the afternoon with us. TERMS—CASH. PREBLE OIL CO H. H. HlGH—Auctioneer. Public Sale As 1 am moving to a smaller farm, I will sell on what is known as the Studebaker farm, located 3'« miles east of Berne, on state road 118, or I’.i miles north and 5 miles west of Chattanooga, on TUESDAY, MARCH 9,1937 Beginning at 10 o'clock sharp (CST) the following property: HORSES—I Belgian draft stallion. No. 2169. 9 years old. sorrel and a real breeder. This is a very good horse. 1 black horse, 3 years old; 1 bay team, coming two years old; 1 sorrel team, coining two years old; 1 bay mare. 3 years old; 1 roan gelding. 3 years old. All of these are extra good horses. CATTLE —1 red cow; 1 Jersey cow with second calf, will be fresh soon: 1 Guernsey cow. to lie fresh soon; 1 Jersey heifer, to be fresh soon; 2 Red Durham heifers; 1 Guernsey bull; 1 Holstein bull, both ready for service. SHEEP—IS head of good breeding ewes. HOGS —15 head of good feeders; 2 sows with pigs; 4 tried brood sows; 3 gilts, to farrow soon; 1 male hog. POULTRY —8 head of old geese. FARMING IMPLEMENTS—I Osliorn binder. 7-foot cut; 1 hay loader"; 1 disc; 1 steel roller; 1 riding plow; 1 gang plow; 2 walking breaking plows; 1 Dodge truck: 1 buggy and harness: 2 spring tooth harrows: 1 New Idea manure spreader, like new; 3 corn cultivators: slings, hay forks and rope, all like new; 1 electric motor; scythe grinder; 1 electric Washing machine. TERMS—CASH. FRANK HAMRICK, Owner Michaud and Neuenschwander. Aucts. E. W. Baumgartner, Clerk.

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“HIS MASTER’S VOICE” By SEGAR / 7 POPPA’ A I <Fnw\ 1 t'GOREHI VANIV /QALO'»\ kom < WITCH CN.LWG V THAT’S I 1 PSA ) GLAD GET / g”LU.. I WOlO) ME-1 GOT TO/ PERFECTLY ) V\ \ p ) FIDDLE, [ I FOUND 1 SEMINEHTAI, I pOLO, J X^x uo R'PHT/ 'aw pplr ■■■>. wSwV\\A 1 /jeepA Kt \V<? c L icLa jWFy-vy® ~° v?r~ 'py Q>pr )W, Kiflf fewum Svf>dx«t*L !m , U-®rM rt<M» rtNft-4 .111 I .. .. ■-...: .- ~ *P P .■■■■ — - . v ~,; * ■■■ *

,I lor during the Mexican War? 3. Name the capital of North Dakota. 4. When was the first "live year plan” of Soviet Russia inaugurated? i 5. On which river in Germany Ms the city of Dresden? ,1 6. What is a bill ot sale? 7. How many brothers had • : Christopher Columbus? 8. To what city was the U. S. Naval Academy removed from An ' uapolis, for a time during the Civil I War? , , 9. Who was Jean Marc Nattier.' 10. Which country owns Greenland?

Household Scrapbook | By Roberta Lee | Tender Feet One authority says that nothing is better for tender feet than a cold foot bath, followed by a brisk rub with either alcohol or olive oil, followed by a dusting with talcum powder. Fruit Stains Camphor will remove the majority of fruit, jum. or preserve stains from white goods. Rub the camphor on the spots before laundering. Cake Baking It is better to mix cake in an earthen bowl, warming the bowl before putting in the ingredients. The warmth will facilitifte the mixing. _— o Trade in a Good Town — Decatury

pLUXURy MODELTVrcte

CHAPTER XXXVII Luana got ■ room in her old hotel over on the West side, for until the business was on a paying footing, she must economize. At three-thirty, promptly, she presented herself in the Vandaveer suite of offices on Wall Street, and shortly thereafter the contract was drawn up, signed and sealed. Luana was to have a drawing account against profits, of one hundred dollars a week. The clause set forth that the account was to start from the date of signing. She walked out into the bright sunshine, feeling as though she owned the earth. Followed days and weeks that were amazingly busy, but she loved every moment of them, even if often she was dog tired. To have one’s own business was , a vastly different matter from working for an employer! No snubs. I No snippy orders. No having to be out till all hours of the night in exotic gowns that would attract embarrassing attention. The public as yet did not know of her venture. The opening would probably be towards the end of July. An ample collection of gowns must be assembled before then. Luana worked with a will, in happy anticipation. A temporary workroom had been rented over near the East River and a competent staff had been hired. Luana spent her entire days in a cubby-hole in the workroom, at her drawing-board, or draping material on the dummies. It was fascinating work. To dream beauty, and then turn it into reality with her own hands! That was her happiness, with Jimmy three thousand miles away from her . . . But they would have a glad reunion. The only fly in the ointment was that, under the terms of the contract, not even Jimmy must know of her arrangement with Mr. Vandaveer. She had written Jimmy that she had a new and promising job. But the contract was to remain ■ profound secret. The days of summer that were crammed with exciting world happenings went by. The big water front strike was on in San Francisco. Luana had a letter from her stepfather, telling her that the National Guard had I been summoned from Los Angeles, and that he had gone with them to patrol the strike area. [ “He'll love it. He’s a born fighter.” Luana felt a wave of pride in the pluck of the old Colonel. Later, her pride was to turn to keen anxiety . . . A telegram from the Colonel’s lawyer in San Francisco informed her that he was lying unconscious in the Military Hospital there. He had sustained a head injury from a brick hurled by one of the strikers. There was some fear of a skull fracture. Mr. Vandaveer urged her to go at once. He bought a ticket for her on the fastest trans-Continental plane service. Luana arrived in America’s coolest summer city on a golden morning. She drove straight to the Presidio. Followed two days of suspense. The third morning he rallied. He opened his eyes to find her at the bedside. The X-ray examination proved to be much more satisfactory than was anticipated. Still not out of danger, there was hope of his recovery. It soothed him to have Luana there. | All day she stayed at the hospital, sleeping at night in the matron’s bungalow on the grounds, so as to be within call if anything should happen. Col. McCarthy had an excellent constitution. Progress was good. “You really must so out and get some fresh air, my child,” the kindly I head nurse told Luana, “or we shall be having you on our hands as the next patient.” Luana had friends in the many- • hilled city, notably Nancy and Jas-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1937.

Outstanding Movie Stars Are Nominated Hollywood, Mar. S.—HU.R) —Holly-1 wood rates "The Great Ziegfeld as its best work of 1936, and Luise : Rainer and Paul Muni us its out ' standing performers. The selections of the 800 mem bers of the academy of motion picture arts and sciences were announced last night at the annual dinner. Miss Rainer won the gold statuette for her work in “The Great Zelgfeld,” and Muni for his performance in “The Story of Louis Pasteur.” The latter story won a ' double honor for the authors, Sher ; Idan Glbney and Pierre Collins, who were acclaimed for the best | original and screen play of the' year.

per Payne. This was the young couple who had eloped to Yuma, Arizona, and who, in a double ceremony that included Luana (under her real name of Elizabeth Harmon) and Gerald Bruton, had been united in wedlock by the “marrying judge of Yuma.” Each day, Nancy had come to the hospital, and was continually on the telephone with Luana. A new, greatly improved Nancy, entirely happy in her shiny little new flat that commanded a wonderful view of the bay. As a bride, Nancy bad entirely succumbed to the spell of her Jasper—the same Jasper she had laughed at, and snubbed, and jollied along as a suitor! “Flirts make the best wives,” Jasper had assured Luana, with a twinkle. “Darling, my flirting days are done,” smiled Nancy. The erstwhile butterfly had turned into a model housekeeper, whose world circled round Jasper within the four walls of her modest little home that was as neat as a new pin. Nancy’s own fingers had made the gay chintz curtains that hung at the windows, the pillows that covered divan and settee. Nancy went to market every morning in the shiny coupe her startled parents had given her for a wedding present. Nancy did the cooking, leaving only the cleaning of the apartment and the washing of dishes to the little maid who came in daily. “It seems so terribly unfair that I should be so awfully happy in my marriage, and that yours should have turned out so badly,” she told her friend as they skimmed in the little coupe through Golden Gate Park. “I could cry when I think it was I who urged you to it, darling! A thousand times I’ve regretted it for you!” Her eyes filled. “Will you ever forgive me?” “Os course I do, Nancy. Goodness me. I was no child! I was vain and flighty and silly. And I paid for my flightiness." “And you say you got an annulment? That the brute was married already? Well, that simplifies matters.” Luana briefly told her of the interrupted honeymoon — that the honeymoon hadn’t even begun when the “bridegroom” was arrested in San Diego . . .! “It was in the I<os Angeles papers—about your eloping with him —but somehow your name never did get into the papers here in connection with him or his arrest,” Nancy now told her. She added: “Be sure I didn’t breathe it to a soul, and Jasper kept absolutely mum. We went to Yosemite for our honeymoon, and directly after that, he got a job in a bank here, and here we live.” Luana explained her change of name, and told all about her New York experiences, “You're a brick. My, you’ve got courage!” Nancy declared admiringly. She added: “But I shall always cal! you Elizabeth, not Luana.” The Colonel was so improved next day that Luana accepted Nancy’s invitation to stay at their flat. Nancy would drive her to and from the hospital, and certainly it would be much pleasanter to occupy the shiny little guest-bedroom in her friends’ home than be in the matron’s bungalow, kind as the busy matron was. Mr. Vandaveer sent a lengthy night-letter to her, to the effect that she must remain in San Francisco till her stepfather was well on the mend. After her weeks of intensive work in the appalling heat and humidity of New York City, the cool breezes of the city on the ocean would set her up and strengthen her for the even harder work that was to come on her return. The strike came to an end and the water front was no longer a danger zone. Luana revelled in roaming round Chinatown with its spices of the Orient, its enchanting shops where she could buy wonderful kimonos and embroidered coats and robes for her own not-so-distant opening. She

Three Sentenced For Assaulting Cripple Bloomington, Ind., Mar. 5.—<U.R) | —Wainer Mercer, 26, Robert Seay, ‘ 23 and Basil Wade, 22, Bloomington I youths found guilty ot assault and I battery on Erie R. Schneider, crip- | pled Indiana Univerity student, toi day were under sentence of 60 days each at Indiana state farm. The trio was sentenced last night after a Monroe circuit court jury found them guilty. Schneid er had testltled the men attacked Notice My office will be closed until Monday morning. Dr. C. C. Rayl

loved the mystery in Chinatown with its great paper lanterns and gilded balconies and dragons, and its slant-eyed inhabitants. She loved the Chinese restaurants with their succulent dishes and queer sweetmeats. When Nancy was busy, and her stepfather resting, she would take long rides up and down hill on the tiny cable cars. Fishermen’s Wharf intrigued her, and Harbor Fish Grotto. She would eat shrimps fresh out of the ocean, and revel in the tarry smells of ships and fishing, revel in the forest of masts and spars along the water front, with the gulls flying and crying, giving one such a sense of adventure, of just being about to set forth to the far corners of the globe. The romance and tradition of San Francisco seeped through her blood, making her heart sing with joy. Even the gray fogs were dramatic — like something out of Limehouse, or a mystery story. And she was never tired of watching the little boats ply to and fro across the blue waters, with their musical notes of warning, or listening to the surge of the ocean on the beach. With Nancy and Jasper of an evening, she would dine in the quaintest little restaurants that were flavored with old Italy, Germany or Spain. Next morning, she would tell the Colonel all about them, and he would come back at her with reminiscence of the Bohemian restaurants of his own young manhood. Coppa’s, Sanguinetti’s, Solari's, and the Trovatore. “One had real food then in San Francisco! Those were the days!” he would tell her. “The Monkey House” had been a great place then, with monkeys climbing and chattering over the grape arbors as men drank their steins of beer of a leisurely Sunday. Luana told him about Chou-Chou. She had left Chou-Chou with one of the girls in the workroom who had taken a great fancy to the tiny monkey. But she did not mention Jimmy, to whom Chou-Chou had so quaintly introduced her! “San Francisco must have beea even more fascinating when the cobbled streets ran straight down to the wooden piers! When three-masters and four-masters sailed through the Golden Gate . . . when the gold rush was on . . . tell me about it," she would draw out the Colonel, who was nothing loath to satisfy her. He told her of the gold rush, of Spanish rancheros and Franciscan priests. He had been brought up in San Francisco and, as a very young child, remembered the prairie schooners coming into the city. He told her of the wooden sidewalks, and the crowds of horse thieves These were the days of hoopskirts and gay bonnets and elegance! Os the earthquake, too, he told her, and of that April morning just after sun-up when the world crashed about his ears. But even then, there was a queer gaiety and a vivid sense of living zestfully, what with the refugee camps and the levelling of class distinctions, and the new camaraderie. Never before had the Colonel and Luana been so close to each other. It was a heart-warming experience. He even said to her one morning, a look of wistfulness in the blue eyes that used to be so sharp: “Why don’t you come home, Elizabeth?" (He could never get used to the name Luana.) "Not to the orange grove, but to San Francisco. I’d like to live here.” “I may one day ... after I’ve made Sood ... I have to make good first, addy ... I’d like to live here . . She felt touched, and choky. He really wanted her. Was lonely. Nancy’s happiness made her envious. If it had been Jimmy and she, now, in that darling little apartment looking down on the ships and the blue waters . .. The Angelus bells brought tears to her eyes, they were so beautiful. She would wander along the Emi bacadero, looking longingly at the i ships from France. (To Be Continued) I •BpyrUht, King FaatuiM ByndlcaU. Im

uid robbed him near the university campus Jan. 12, 1936. ‘ The case was delayed eight 'times before trial was begun. miscellaneous I I —— I MISCELLANEOUS —Furniture ra-i paired, upholstered or refinished ' at the Decatur Upholstering Shop, 222 S. Second St. Phone 420. Also , used furniture. 26k.>t't 1 SINGER SEWING MACHINES — New and Used. Repairs for all I 1 makes. See the new Singer Vac-J ! uum cleaner. Write for service or demonstration. Special this week only we will repair any make sewI ing machine in your home lor fl. | G L. Timniis, care Democrat. 51t6x DON'T FORGET to attend the sale of used implements at the Preble Oil Co., Tuesday, March 55-3tx Julius Haugk for dynamite. 52t5x SHERIFF SALE In The Vlaiim Circuit *J!‘ e of I ■klliiiiii. >umber 13.0 X, The l-'erteial iJinii Bank of Louisville a body corporate vs. Adams A. Reef. Ruth Reef, his wife, Harley J. l Reef. Ella Reef, his wife, Eloise JButcher, Paul Butcher .her husband S. Daniel Reef, Mabel Reef, his wife. Bv virtue of an order of sale to me directed and delivered from the Clerk of tile Adams Circuit Court in j the above entitled cause, I have levied upon and will expose to sale by public auction at the Court House door, east entrance, first floor, in said County, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M. and 4 o’clock P. Mon Wednesday the 31st day ot March A. D. 1937, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years ot the following Real Estate to-Wit: The north half (&) of the north west quarter (U) of section sixteen (16) in township twenty five (25) north, range fifteen (15) east, containing eighty (M 0 acres, more or less in Adams County, and State of Indiana; and on failure to realize therefrom the full amount of the judgment and interest thereon and costs, I will at the same time and In the manner aforesaid offer for sale the fee simple of the above described Real Estate. Taken as the property Adams A. Reef, Ruth Reef, his wife, Harley J. Reef, Ella Reef, his wife, Eloise J. Butcher, Paul Butcher her husband. S. Daniel Reef, Mabel Reef, his wife at the suit of the The Federal Land Bank of Louisville, a body corporate. Said sale will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or appraisement laws The purchaser at said sale is hereby restricted from selling or encumbering said real estate without the further order of the District Court of the United States, for the Northern District of Indiana, Fort Wayne Division. Dallas Brown, Sheriff Adams County. Lenhart, Heller and >ehurgrr. Ittya. Feb. M< h. -'-12

SALE CALENDAR Roy S. Johnson Auctioneer Decatur, Ind.

Claim your sale date early as I am booking sales every day. Maj. B—Austin8 —Austin McMichaels and William Mauller, 5 miles east of Decatur on the Piqua road. Mar. 9 —l. A. Mattax, mile South of Wren, Ohio, closing out sale. Mar. 10 —Hinton. Smalley and Becher, 5 mile South. 2 mile East I of Willshire, Registered Holstein Cattle. Mar. 12—Mrs. John Dailey, mile North of Tocsin, closing out sale. Mar. 13 —George Ehrman, I’-i miles north and ’a east of Kirkland high school. Mar. 13—Marlon L. Fox. North Washingtbn st., Van Wert, Ohio, . closing out farm sale. Mar. 15—Doyle Allison, 1 mile West and 2 mile South of Edger-' town, Hampshire Hog sale. Mar. 16 Asa McMillen, % mile South of Pleasant Mills, closing out sale. Mar. 17 —George Scott, first farm East of Boston, closing out sale. Mar. 19 —Roebuck Gardens. East of Ft. Wayne, closing out sale. ■ ■■■■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ I ' ■ WHAT IS IT? ■ i -

MARKETREPORTS' DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS Brady’s Market for Decatur, Berne, 4 Crelgvllle, Hoegland and Willshirs. Closed at 12 Noon. Corrected March 5. No commission and no yardage Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday. Friday and Saturday. 100 to 120 lbs. SB.IO 120 to 140 lbs ■■ 8.20 140 lo 160 lbs 9.30 n;o to 180 lbs •II 180 to 230 lbs 10.00 230 to 260 lbs 8.90 ■ 260 to 300 lbs.. ..._ 9.60 • 300 to 350 lbs 0.40 350 lbs. and up 9.10 I Roughs 8.50 < Stags 6.75 • I Vealers 9.W j Ewe and wether lambs 10.75 Buck lambs 9.75 Yearling lambs 4.50 i l! INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK , Indianapolis, Ind., Mar. S.—KU.RJ --Livestock: Hog receipts, 5,000; holdovers. 130; market 160 lbs., up. 10c high er; underweights steady; bulk 160180 lbs.. J 10.40; 180-200 lbs., 510.45; 200-210 lbs., 310.50; 210-225 lbs., $10.45; 225-235 lbs., 310.40; 235-250 lbs.. 310.35; 250 260 lbs., 310.30; 260-275 lbs., 310.25; 275-285 lbs.. $10.20; 285-300 lbs., $10.15; 300-i 325 lbs., $10.05; 325-350 lbs., $10; | 350-400 lbs.. $9.90; 155-160 lbs., $10; 150-155 lbs.. $9.75; 140-150 lbs., $9.50; 130-140 lbs., $9.25; 120-130 ; lbs., $9; 110-120 lbs.. $8.75; 100-110 . lbs.. $8.50; packing sows, 10c high ■ er; bulk, $9.25-39.60; top, $9.75. Cattle, 500; calves, 400; cows ac- • tive and strong; other classes in ' limited supply, but fully steady; i steers and yearlings, SB-$9.75; ’ heifers, SB-$9; common to meilium I beet cows, $5.25-36.25; cutters ' mostly $4-$5; top sausage bulls, ' $6.25; veals steady to strong; good and cnoice, $lO-$10.50. Sheep, 500; market strong to 15c i higher with only odd lots on sale; ' few choice natives, $11.50; best . westerns, $11.55. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK i East Buffalo, N. Y., Mar. 5. —(U.PJ j —livestock:

Hogs, receipts, 900; bulk good and choice 160-230 lbs., averaging around 200 lbs., $10.85; few 190 lbs., $10.90; 220-*uO-lb. butchers. : $10.60-$10.75. Cattle, receipts, 250; firm; beef | cows, $6.50; fleshy offerings. $5.75$6; low cutter and cutter cows, $4$5; medium bulls, $6. Calves, receipts, 325; vealers,t 50-75 c higher; good and choice, sll- - , Sheep, receipts, 500; lambs active, strong to 25c over Thursday's full advance, good and choice ewes i and wethers, 96 lbs., down, sl2; I 105 lbs., $1.75; odd packages medium and mixed grades, $10.75- ■ $11.50; yearlings. $9.50; aged ewes to $6.50. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat . $1.35’4 sll7 $1.13% Corn, New.. 1.07% 1.02% .96% Old.. 1.05% .99% Oats 46% .42% .40% FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Mar. 5.—<U.R) j —Livestock: Hogs, steady; 200-225 lbs., $10.25; 325-250 lbs., $10.15; 180-200 lbs., $10.25; 250-275 lbs., $10; 160-180 $10.05; 275-300 lbs., $9.85; 300-350 lbs., $9.70; 150-160 lbs., $9.60; 140j 150 lbs., $9.25; 130-140 lbs., $9; 1120-130 lbs., >8.75; 100-120 lbs., ! $8.50. I LOCAL GRAIN MARKET BURK ELEVATOR CO. Corrected March 5. No. 1 Wheat, 60 lbs. or better $1.29 No. 2 Wheat, etc 1.28 Oats 46c Soya Beans, No. 2 Yellow 1.40 New No. 4 Yellow Corn $1 to $1.40 I Rye 90c I . CENTRAL SOYA CO. | Soya Beaus, No. 2 Yellow 1.40 | a 1 WANTED I WANTED Experienced glove makers. Call Mrs. Dick Burrell I at Phone 511. 54k3tx I WANTED — Middle aged lady to I make home with and care for two | aged ladles. State Experience and • wages wanted. Address Box “Z” % Democrat. 45-ts WANTED — Loans on improved farms; Eastern money; long terms; low rates. French Quinn. 262 w&f ts I o FOR RENT FOR RENT —7 acres of ground for cash rent. Inquire 1306 W r . Monroe or phone 805. 54-3tx tO7t RENT—One car garage.. Inquire of Carl Gerber. 55-2 t N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined • Glassea Fitted HOURS i 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8.00 p. m. Telephone 135,

20 words, p c of 40c for 20 wo"? K Over 20 wordi ? c the two times P r Over 20 words 2> for the three times P SAi.E MH FUK SAI ' K i s. sou street. care of tlii.-. — Fl'll SAI.K i; FOR SALE t Wi) — I'-.O Miv. . the , ~ Craigvill.- Garak- ' 1 FOR SALE ■; .. . n s--11 A.- ■ : FOR SALE h. 1 ' tail. Henry Bulmahn. FOR SALE Mix, ,1 of Preble. S'uky Phone WillshiiH FOR SALE I ~| I Decatur. EOll for sale t' ■ t - ■ ' EAk ' M ' ■ 'HH Good ■ ■y - Co. Monroe. 1:4 FOR SALE t and 3 yr. April. Good , • - H 1 5 years obi. < alt Durham row. t ■ - March. Tv., v 1 out Habogger I Davison. Deca: > mile east ot Mo:.: read ’ FOR SALE-Clio k- ■■ “>- poults from cull' d floiks ■ chicks. 7c; leg! ' '‘i l - [hatching. 2c p. r ■-- i!i "‘ [ fl| Hatchery, four m i-s - »i’h Jj shire, state roadlll' 1 BAUMGARTNERS High Blood-tested I: 1 ! ; ' 8 ly selected, fill' 1 c breeds. Also b,i’* mug 0 eggs by a special » or. Price reasouabb BauniM c ner Hatchery, G mil's " ■ south Monroe. Craigvill*' Route 4, Bluffton. °;FOR SALE—Span of mules; isl old colt, white main and 2-yr. old colts. Ib-nry Hockeffl« B j on John C- Houk farm. 1 of Williams 1 FOR SALE Guernsey cow. t>, old, be fresh March 1"o ler, mile south of Sale ™ 3t ß I -— *■ j FOR SALE—4B acre farm, , f lights, 6 room house. I"" 1 ' ■ 4 outbuildings, l' a miles el „ Possession this month. ■ 1 ■ jif you want this larm. - s "‘ ■ . i Johnson or Jim Andrews. V I 101. I j FOR SALE 80 acre lal ' nl ' of Decatur, good land. M R ■ roof barn, good house, el*'i • ■ r -1 available, x $6200. See Roy S. Johnson o, • Andrevj<__Pb£22_2lL———" - It FOR SALE -Blackfoot Grimm ? salsa seed. 99.96% I""'®' [germination. Bill Gritfh s. two, Decatur. FOR SALE -.Three fresh® 1 with calves by side. Also i electric, De Laval Be P aia ' e L te r S i Giuter, half mile east ot t 1 Trade In a Good Town— D ee *