Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 93, Decatur, Adams County, 19 April 1937 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

*Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these i ten questions? Turn to page i Four for the answers. 1. for what is Sir Henry lies seiner famous? 2. In what war was the battle of Chickamauga? 3. On what river is the city of! llviltn, Germany? 4. What does perfidious mean? I 5. Who was the first woman to swim the English Channel? 6. Name the author of "Plain Tales. From the Hills”. 7. What is the last amendment | to the Constitution? 8. Name the river drains the five Great Lakes. 9. For what university degree N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined - Glasses Fitted HOURS 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135. wiM .... '

"Rich Cargoes?«S£

SYNOPSIS Aboard ship, returning from Yokohama, Allesandro (Sandy) Crewe, wealthy young scientist, inadvertently offends elderly and eccentric Colonel Carlton, by declining his invitation to visit him at his Bahama Island estate. Sandy regrets his decision when he sees a picture of the old man’s niece, Isobel, but the Colonel will not re-invite him. Undaunted, Sandy arrives in the Bahamas two months later with an elephant as a peace offering for the Colonel. Elephants have always been a weakness with the Colonel; he once mentioned to Sandy that he preferred them for travel instead of automobiles. The Colonel is delighted with the pachydermous present. Sandy’s request that he be permitted to court Isobel is granted. He finds her even more attractive than her picture. Sandy learns from Isobel that the Colonel has two children-Hester married to a portrait painter named Vinckers, and a son, James, also married. They do not get along well with the old man who settled a trust fund on them. The balance of his fortune will go to Isobel on condition that she spend six months a year on the island with him. Speaking of the elephant, Isobel says: CHAPTER IX -"He is a dear." Isobel agreed. "And so I think were you. Your real motive in doing this doesn’t fool me for a second.” "And what,” Sandy asked, "was that?” "You grew very fond of Uncle on your voyage across the Pacific. He impressed you, as he does everybody, and you really wanted to know him better and to have him for a friend. Being American and evidently very rich you chose this extraordinary way of going about it. Underneath, though, was the sincere wish to make him happy, ‘ and you have done it. If a crippled orphan in an asylum were to be given a pony and cart his joy could be .no greater. He will wake every half hour in the night to remember that he has got an elephant. He would take Mouse to bed with him • if he could. Uncle will ride round tha island like a Rajah and feel the part. You read his nature well enough to know all this. No doubt you felt also that you had thoughtlessly hurt his feelings by declining ■ hia invitation to visit him, and you wanted to make amends. Am I not fight?” She looked at Sandy, challengingly. "To a considerable extent,” he admitted. "To a full extent,” Isobel said, with decision. “So please don’t tell me that you saw my flattering por- , traits and then rushed off to buy my uncle’s good will with an elephant. *•-Offer it as a bribe to establish an f amorous lien on the portrait’s original.” “Put in that way,” Sandy said Ls? slowly, “my work sounds fearfully J: raw7*What if I were to tel] vou that -a. all the same it is the literal truth.” -C “I should say that you were a "€ fool, and that you counted on my J being one too.” “That would be unfair,” Sandy -j protested. “A more sporting de- ® cision would be to say that at sight ; of s portrait depicting what has always been my hitherto unrccogI nized ideal, I was eager to bet an -J. elephant that the portrait did not 3 lie.” "And then, admitting that to be J the case if only for the sake of ar- « gument, all you had to do was to sail down here and deliver the eleL* ph a anil get the consent of Colonel 4 Carlton to pay your suit?” - “Well, I couldn’t very well

i THIMBLE THEATER “HIDING BEHIND A WOMAN’S SKIRTS” By SEGAR • I U SHE DON’T - SEEM TO X. I I YAM Gl AD SHE IS '’X 111 YEAH. I JUS' GOT ) ~ , ——MISSUS JONES IS ME NAME-I LOOKS LIKE \ S HAVE NOBODY TO LOOK A PER TICKLER. AN’ IjJON'TT TO HELP HER / FZZ U. JL Le-a? MTriPOPEYE ON ACCOUNT OF I YAH Hls MOTHER-/ J AFTER HER-SHE’S JuS/ LET NO MAN INTO HER J ■■?>—l LA fa! FS? H-/ HE TOLD •* .GOT TO HAVE HELP'?/ ROOM,BUT , —I t-Z- UJ ■/ ME ABOUT Sr _JX< i got to ZZ 'tftfy*- T® ya, an i come fl. 3 > * l-l get in an’ J'tr • A 'ey*" Q i O \J° HELP ”5 * A U Z talk to \ <" />J^gv77\f) « L * J® ’ JsAoir J .--‘H vOhIA Y=4 >=x * •^Tr z 'x i4 J/A ~• \ J » — J. I .gSiS; / - ~ } I 'Lfl I Z) •’• Zw ~i «■ IBIWSK x z<__. * f \\ k^ z -wy-4 jJ^y— —T .. . •"' 4LI-. x T K# ? J . LdSftiffi ,w, 1«>\)....< h. -» f 9 J

do the initials J. C. D. stand? 10. What is another name for palmistry? 1. Can the President pardon anyone who has been convicted of a crime? 2. Where is the China Sea? 3. Name the instrument used ! in determining the specific gravity of liquids 4. How is 1937 written in Roman numerals? 5? Name the planetoid that ap- | proaches nearest to the earth.» 6. Whom did Jess Willard de- ! feat to win the world’s heavyI weight boxing championship? 7. Os which country is Cairo the capital? 8. Who was Lilli Lehmann? 9 Where is the island of Trinidad? 10. What is a hybrid? COURT HOUSE Ruled To Answer The defendant was called and defatted in the divorce action brought by Jim Marth against Lucile Marth.

pay my suit without, could 1?” the greatest science in the world, Sandy demanded. “And besides, I but one.” shouldn’t care to go about it in “What is that?” that way.” “Call it alchemy. The alchemy of “No,” Isobel said reflectively, “I Leva, by which the pure principle don’t suppose you could, or would, may be isolated from form and subAnd besides, I suppose that after all stance rich in its combinations.” an elephant doesn’t represent such “Do you hope to accomplish a tremendous entrance fee for the that?” Isobel asked, pampered heir to an American “Yes, by painstaking research fortune.” ‘Creative’ chemistry is a misnomer. “Yes, that, until nine years ago We never really create anything when I came back from making field We can hope merely to find what notes on high explosive and found always has been there. The form of myself heir to a stack of debts, the vehicle or container is often > Poor old Dad dropped dead in his guide. That is how your portraiti tracks when the first whistle an- directed me to yourself. A loveh nounced the Armistice, thereby let receptacle is not fashioned to hole out from facing utter ruin. I turned what is not lovely.” from chemical destriAtion to con- “It might, though,” Isobel said struction and after seven lean years "and the reverse of that. The I»cau found treasure in a test-tube.” tiful silk stockings to which yoi> “In a what?” owe your ability to purchase ele “A chemical reaction. A bright phants and yachts and emeralds am Wow * Isobel thrust out her own shapely molds for his textile fabric and looked at them reflectively.

woman paying her dinner with her Voice dropped a few pearls in my ear without knowing it. They made us both rich. I pay my debts. In two years’ time most of the women in America will be shoving their legs into the weavings of my brain. A process for preserving the strength and elasticity of silk.” Isobel looked at him, astonished. Colonel Carlton had told her nothing of Sandy’s affairs. There had been no time since his arrival. She had taken it for granted that the young man was of those who toil not, nor do they spin. It amazed her to discover that such employment was precisely his metier, this word in the French sense, exact. A loom. She thrust out her own shapely molds for his textile fabric and looked at them reflectively. Sandy’s gaze followed hers, impersonally. “A well rounded basis for high commercial endeavor, you must admit,” he said. “Props of a sort not apt to be knocked from under a fortune founded on human necessity. An Art of Peace. Chemistry is

The prosecuting attorney wan ruled to answer. Case Dismissed The foreclosure suit brought by the Saylors Motor company against Peter A. lH«w was diamissed and costs were paid. Set For Trial The following cases were eel for trial: Martin M. Shady va. Elmer H. and Ethel R. Bryan foreclosure, May 21. Roe C. Dlckernon vs. John A. Didot. damagea May 27. John 8. Falk ve estate of Mantle Erwin, claim, May 17. Case Venued By agreement of the parties Judge Hanson Mills of Jay county was appointed special judge in the, divorce action brought >by Eli C. Eng.’e against Lulu V. Engle. Defendant Dismissed in the partition suit brought by John Rich and others against Albert F. Moser and others, O, F. Gilliom was dismissed as a defendant. Real Estate Transfers Dalias Brown, Sheriff, to Mildred Coolman, in-lot 361 in Geneva for $948.95. _____

gold moidores may be often the containers of very ugly legs. And conversely you may find very beautiful and shapely legs in cheap cotton stockings with an ugly pattern and shade of dye.” “That is because divine creations that have their origin in love and beauty do not cheek with human inventions of which the motive is sordid gain. In my own case I merely adapt one beautiful natural creation, which is silk, to the necessities of another natural creation beautiful 11 conception, which is legs. If these hove become subsequently distorted. it is not the fault of the Origir al mold. I make the container for what presumably is beautiful.” “And get paid an awful lot of money for your labor of love ind beauty,” Isobel observed. “Still and all, it’s gratifying to know that you came all the way to try to buy nie with the product of your own brain instead of with what you had got for nothing from somebody else.” (To be continued! fopyritht by Mr*. Oenry C Rowland DUlrlbuMd by Kin* FMlurai Ina

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY. APRIL 19, 1937.

I JoJhn W. Tyndall, trustee, to Dannie Sipe et ux, in-lots G'4-15 in Homewood for |l. r Carnuel Steiner et ux to Thurman t Schug. 80 acres In Monroe twp. for I si. Liela Huckriede, Receiver, to Cora Boring, in-Jot 1018 In Decatur r for 11. Lulu V. Engle to Myerl Ogg, inr lota 13 to 16 in Belmont Park for ’ $L Albert Lehrman et ux to Jesse W. ■ Rice et ux, 1 acre in Washington twp. for 81. NAZIS CHANGE i (CONTINVro FROM PAQW ONW) , I him. A concise official news agency report of a speech at Munich last night by Dr. Njalmar Schacht, president of the Reichsliank and minister of economics, disclosed ’ the decision to alter the four year plan. Addressing the Bavarian merchants’ organization. Schacht, one 1 of Europe's leading financiers and a chief power on the conservative side of the Nazi regime, said that he had taken certain decisions which assured the easing of the situation as regards raw materials. These decisions, he said, were taken in "complete agreement with Col-Gen Hermann Goering as head of the four year plan.” “The raw material restrictions have now surpassed their peak," Cchacht said. "Our food situation has shown that we can not become independent of foreign imports within a calculable time “This is one of the reasons why I am raising the colonial issue again and again. Colonies under German administration, with German currency, would bring extraordinary alleviations." It was believed that the decisions to which Schact referred concerned modification of the socalled "new plan” under which irnSTATE OF IX DI ATA UEPAKTVII'.XT OF STATE XuauM G. Mueller, secretary ~f Slatv Form X«. SO TO ALL TO WHOM THESE PRESENTS SHALL CMOE. GREETING: 1. August G. Mueller, Secretary of State of the State of Indiana, hereby certify that the ADAMS COUNTY INVESTMENT COMPANY has this day filed in the office of the Secretary of State of the State of Indiana the properly signed and attested consents, statements and papers required by Cection 24 of an Act entitled: An ACT CONCERNING THE ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF CORPORATIONS FOR PROFIT' approved February 28th, 1921. And I further certify that such written consents, statements and ipapers so filed as aforesaid, show that said company and the officers thereof have compiled with the provisions of said Section 24 and that said corporation is now in process ’ "of dissolution. In Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the' seal of the State of Indiana, at the Citv of Indianapolis, this 15th day of April, 1937. August G. Mueller. Secretary of State By Joseph O. Hoffmann. Deputy. (SEAL) April 19-26 M-3 - -o 1 ■— NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS. .. Notice is hereby given that Monday. May 3. 1937 will be the last day to pay your Spring Installment of taxes. The county treasurer’s office will be open from 8 A. M. to 4 P.M.. during the tax paying season. All taxes not paid by that time will become delinquent and an 8% penalty will be added, an additional 5% will be added for each year tax remalne unpaid from first Monav in November in the year the delinquency; occurred. Those who have bought or' sold property and wish a division of taxes are asked tc come in at once. Call on the Auditor for errors and any reductions. The Treasurer can make no corrections. The Treasurer will not be responsible for the penalty of delinquent taxes resulting from the ommission, of tax-payers to state definitely on 1 what property the desire to pay, in whose name it may be found. In what township or corporation it is situated. Persons owing delinquent taxes should pay them at once, the law is such that there is no option left for the Treasurer but enforce the collection of delinquent taxes. County orders will not be paid to anyone owing delinquent taxes. All I persons are warned against them. Particular attention. If you pay taxes in more than one township mention the fact to the Treasurer also see that your receipts call for all your real estate and personal pro I perty. In making Inquiries of the Treasurer regarding taxes to insure re-: ply do not fail to include return postage. JEFF LIECHTY Treasurer Adams County. Indiana. Anvil 2 to M»v 2 We wish to publicly thank Rev. Franklin for his co-operation and part in our program, and his con-( gregation for the use of their , church for our Recital. Also the parents of our students , for the lovely basket of roses. Signed: A. J. GRICE FRANK GRICE Os the Grice Conservatory of Strings.

TEMPTING AND DELICIOUS If yon have nn ambition to place before your family “““•‘'“[’J ' tempting deaaerta in the form of pies, tarts and pastries, you will n i in the new Booklet prepared by our Washington Service Bureau ■ exactly the suggestions and recipes you need The PIES AND PASTRIES Booklet contains recipes and complete lust ructions for making pie crust and pastry and ueaily one hundred different kinds of pies, tarts and party pastries: some you never heard of. and all of them delicious concoctioua guaranteed to make the mouth water. Send the coupon below, with a dime enclosed, for your copy • CLIP COUPON HERE Dept. B-155, Washington Service Bureau. Daily Democrat, 1013 Thirteenth Street. Washington. D. C. I want the new Booklet PIES AND PASTRIES, and enclose n dime (carefully wrapped) to cover return postage and handling costs: NAME | STREET and No. - - ----- CITY STATE ----------------- ' I am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, Ind.

porta were reduced drastically. Thus the new policy would prim arily tend to inereaso foreign trade. Schacht's mention of agreement with Goering was an Important point. Goering was delegated by Hitler to use his tremendous energy in leading the fight to impose national sacrifices in the interest of self-sufficiency. It was he who was quoted as saying that Germany needed canuou more than butter. What is regarded as an admission that Germany can not within a measurable time make herself independent of other nations came as a surprise. But there have been many disclosures of the difficulties of making the country selfsufficient. It is emphasized, not only by Nazis but by impartial observers, that Germany is not facing an actual shortage of food People are not hungry. But difficulties are shown by such announcements as that yesterday on the number of pigs in the country. On March 3 there were 22.6(H).000 pigs as compared with 25,600.000 last December The number, however, is 6.6 per cent higher than last year. But prospects for the more distant future are not good The number of sows, the statement showed, dropped 16 per cent below last year. The drop in the number of pigs is caused by the ban on grain as fodder. WELFARE HEADS (CO NT INUED FR(»M PAGE nNE) win 8. Smith, member of the national labor relations board; Arthur J. Altmeyeu chairman, and

PROTECT! Moths ruined more clothes than fire destroyed in 1936. Protect your Winter Garments with our complete Sanitex Service. 1. Our cleaning kills moths and moth larvae. 2. Garments are delivered in beautiful Sanitex Storage Bags—Clean, Dust Free, Moth Free, Cedarized. yREE?*' NO EXTRA CHARGE For THIS SERVICE. BE SURE--BE SAFE Call us for Genuine Sanitex Service Sheets Bros. CLEANERS Phone 359. We call for and deliver.

Frank Bane, executive director of the social security board. i 1 MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS — Furniture repaired, upholstered or lefinlshed ' at the Decatur Upholstering Shop. “ 145 S. Second St. Phone 420. Also used furniture. 70-30 t > c WANTED ■ WANTED—To clean wall paper and walls. Window washing and cisi tern cleaning Houses washed f Phone 210. Frank Straub. 87-326 ■ OPPORTUNITY open in Decatur for ambitious man or woman as ■ distributor world famous Watkins t Products. Hustler can make s2o I up first week. Steady, pleasant. independent future. Customers established Financing help Write J. R. Watkins Co., Columbus. Ohio. 1 5-12-19 ' WANTED—Boy, eighteen years or over, tor store work. Apply J- J. Newberry Co. 93-3tx WANTED — Washing and housecleaning. Call phone number 1241 Prices reasonable. 93-20tx _ __ ___ ' WANTED—Experienced Waitress. Wayne (Hotel Coffee Shop. Jap ’ Jones. Mgr. Fort Wayne. Indiana. 93-a3t i 0 LOST AND FOUND LOST—Tan leather suede Jacket, Saturday morning, in or north of Decatur, Reward. Address box 84 in care of Democrat. 93-k‘it Cedric Voglewede, state editor of the New Sentinel. Fort Wayne. I spent the week-end in Decatur.

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS Brady's Market for Decatur, Berne, i Cralgvllle, Hoagland and Willshire. Close at 12 Noon. Corrected April 19. No commission and no yardage. Veals received every day. 100 to 120 lbs. $7.70 i 120 to 140 lbs 7.90 140 To 160 lbs. 8.90 l(»0 to 180 lbs 9.40 180 to 260 lbs 9.60 i 260 to 300 lbs 9.60 300 to 350 lbs 9.20 350 lbs., and up 8.80 Roughs 8.50 | Stags .'. ..... 7.25 Vealers 9.75 Ewe and wether lambs 11.75 Buck lambs 10.75 Yearling lambs 6.00 CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE I May July Sept.' Wheat $1.35% $1.21% $1.18% Corn, New . 1.27% 117% .1.08% Gid 1.25% 1.16% Oats 49% .45% .41% INDIANAPOLIS LIVESTOCK ( Hog receipts, 6,000; holdovers, 300; compared with Saturday: weights above 160 lbs., 10c higher; underweights and pigs, steady, top $10.25; sows steady to strong, I $9.16-89.65; top. $9.75; 160-180 lbs., $10.05; 180-200 lbs., $10.10; 200-210 lbs., $10.15; 210-225 lbs., $10.20; 225-250 lbs., $10.25; 250-300 lbs., i $10.20; 300-325 lbs., $10.15; 325-350 lbs., $10.10; 350-400 lbs.. $10.05; | 155-160 lbs., $9.65; 150-155 lbs., $9.40; 140-160 lbs., $9.15; 130-140 lbs., $8.90: 129-130 lbs., $8.65; 110120 lbs., $8.40; 100-110 lbs., $8.15. Cattle, 1,200; calves, 500; all classes fully active; steers and heifers steady to strong; cows , fully steady; most sales steers and yearlings, $9-$10.50; odd head, sll-: sl2; early top heifers, $10.15; bulk : $9-$9.60; some held around $10.25; I common and medium beef cows, $5.50-$6.50; cutter grades, $4.00$5.25; good cows. $6.75-$7.50; bulls , steady at $6.50 down; vealers 50c lower than Friday's best time, good to choice, $lO-$10.50; medium, $8- : $9. Sheep, 500; supply practically limited to double deck of exper- , imentally fed 91-11). clipped lambs, at $11.25; fully 25c higher than last week's close. , FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind., Apr. 19.—<U.R) —Livestock: Hogs. 540 c higher; 225-250 lbs.J $10; 250-275 lbs., $9.95; 200-225 lbs., $9.85; 180-200 lbs., $9.80; 275300 lbs., $9.80; 300-350 lbs.. $9.60; 160-180 lbs.. $9.75; 156-160 lbs., $9.35; 140-150 lbs., $9.10; 130-140 lbs., $8.75; 120-130 N)S., $8.50; 100120 lbs., $8.25. Roughs, $8.75; stags, $7.75. Calves. $10.50; laiub», sl2. Cleveland Produce Claveland. (April 19 — (UP) — Produce Butter: Unsettled; estraj 34%, extra firsts 21%, current receipts 20%. Live poultry; steady; hens, heavy--21. ducks; young 6 and up 20, small 17. old 14. Potatoes: 100 lb. baks, U. S. No. 1 Idaho $2.85-3.59; Ohio No. 1 $1.90215, some $2.25; ma:ne $2.40-2.50 lb. bag; Florida Hastings $6-6.25 bbl; Texas 50 lb sacks $2; Florida $2.152.25 bushel. East Buffalo Livestock East Buffalo, April 19—(UP) — Hogs: receipts 2600; 5c higher; good and choice 160-250 lbs. averaging 185-220 lbs. 10.55-10.60; Comparable 140-160 lbs. 9.50-10.25; Pigs and underweights 8.60-9-25. Cattle: receipts 2500; steady; good steers and yearlings $10.5012.00; not many above 11.50; yearlinsg heifers $10.50-10.85; medium steens an dheifers 9.00-10.25; fleshy cows 6.00-6-50; low cutter an<( cutI ter cows 4.26-5.60. ; LOCAL GRAIN MARKET BURK ELEVATUR CO. Corrected April 19. No. 1 Wheat. 60 lbs. or better $1.26 No. 3 Wheat, etc 1-25 Oats 50c Soya Beans, No. 2 Yellow 1.60 New No. 4 Yellow Corn $1 to 1.73 Rye ‘ 90c I 1 CENTRAL SOYA CO. “ Soya Beans. No. 2 Yellow V FUEL WOOD In the face of Risiitg Fuel Prices, why not take advantage of our present Lowprice, Large-quantity proposition for your Spring, Summer and Fall Fuel needs? Special inducements to cash, quantity customers within a 20 mile radius of Decatur. We deliver thirteen cord loads. See us immediately on this money-saving, limited-time offer. Adams County Lumber Co. Ear! D. Colter.

a ."' Bl SIXKSS ( j . "b '"II.;' ® RATES 20 words, I', c of «c for 20 XT Ch *O ."two nX 2C -WOver 20 words Ji c ” for the three ti m .’ Pe ' »l Cards of Thanks _. IQK SAIL W’ FOU SAIJ: ' »"' '”ur trces; Four iiii!(t. w. -i u s ‘ 'Uildn.,A l l '" 1 ' 1 - - al I’lucd to .-II >f snij Giner Holland, jp. w „ n Portland. Ind , — UOR SAl.i: •“■''t drill Homer Arnold till-, R, 2. I l amviii, |lh()|1( , ' FOR SALE b,, ' ul ' f aall kl " ll ‘ " ■ aim .-helion Fuinitu,. 15 , s s Phone 199. FOR SALE Early ('abb^'^^K B !(><■ doz. 1.. !■;. Summer* Walnut St. FOR SALE - I^edhvhig , and !)\IJ \V:::. „ n! . ' 'di ' S. Second Si. 1",,,;,,. I'jj. FOR SALE I' and o (’. A U edF() R SALE Good 7 I '' Al 11 .■■“'ii®®. «. ■■ :j:i>» Wtx-( End !' FOR SALE Phone “«) FOR SALE Battery roe phone . \V :;3!) N Ninth I’ltoti. 12:11. . — 1 .' pounds. I'. it. 4 .nr. |.-| Hi s\ I ahn.x-i I..hi' ard ■ ■ N. 2'-- miles north Te.viu. ' Et Ik S '-eh 4 heavy i" »■ truck <: .mi. 0.1 .I-1: I bare >Avti. five bath tub T.. ' ' ' 1 shot gun. 1'...:. ■ Sbilts, -e. ' I ' ■ 1 01; .- L " " trie and Gas. I louvers Coal .1- . i l - 1 ’ 1 kCI . r I'h.me IIL. tW FOR SALE best of imiimveniellts. 3 - west of !'• .o' l' TI" is an'Wg - home. Tlu I ’>'l 'hat is li« I find. Cail R"> I'll®' •>' •)■"> V-.. ■ """ FOR ■''ALL ■ ■■ .'.da 111 lb. '■ -- ■■ ■ FOR SALL " bl and fresh ■o« . alt'by side. Thieim '1 , . _______ FOR SALE I- • utr,.' ity clucks and turkey Special J ' vV leghorn co.lo ' <«" '’ " I your ord» 3 r n<>w t' ,r ay ■ beeatur Ha'' I’ 1 ’ o '"' "' sW » FOR SALE I j range, flat ’"I 1 - l |l( l u,re ’ Russell Street. ■ For Sale ,H| Duplex s rooms on buck '» near South Ward sehw • • Mercantile Bblu. "" J <3.750 and .gar.i-te bldg. 01 I $4,81)0.00. A. I) Suttles • for SALE -Libra'')' Ta®J® ' '“'kJ ■ j Easy washei Al H|J ■(cream eeparatoi v'--on S'. _—■— BAUMGARTNERS Righ <’3® ’ Flood t-tP'd !< i y selec ed. fin" : | breeds. Also H. -1' <• • eggs by a spc< ial ' or. Price re.is""'' 1 b ; wp , ( 3 B ileß . nor Hatchery. « , south Monr... ( . "P' u ptM Route I. Bluff* oll u FOR SALE -Seed c 'of“- “ ert's late or early Ito grow, Wm.