Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 107, Decatur, Adams County, 5 May 1937 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

> —-—♦ i Test Your Knowledge Can you an*wor seven of these ten questionsr Turn to page Four for the answers. 1. Name the three states of the 1 Union smallest In area. 2. Who »an Giovanni Prati? 3 What is the name for the dally rise and fall of waters of the oceansT 4. Name the large university located at New' Haven. Conn. 5. Which President of the U. S. 1 first occupied the White House in , WANTED Ilags, Magazines, Newspapers. Scrap Iron. Old Auto Radiators. Batteries. Clipper. Brass. Aluminum, and all grades of scrap metals. We buy hides, wool, sheep pelts, the year round. The Maier Hide & Fur Co. 710 W. Monroe st. Phone 442 ; MORRIS PLAN LOANS Comakers Chattels Automobiles SB.OO per SIOO per year New Cars financed $6.00 per SIOO per year Repayable monthly. The Suttles-Edwards Co. Representatives.

LOTS FOR SALE M No. 19 ’ Ideal single building lot, 44 by 98. on Jefferson at 7th street. This Jpt is located in the heart of Decatur's residential section and affords «asy access to schools, churches and shopping center. Improvments Include sewerage, sidewalks and paved streets. No. 1 "*?52 Mercer Avenue .lot 40 by 14S. This fine lot is on fully Improved street and offers a desirable sight for that home you have been planning. SPECIAL We can also furnish a number of desirable lots in Decatur's new Homewood Addition. These lots are just north of Nuttman Avenue on 11th arid 12th street. If you are looking for a location on which to build a home, or for a safe investment that will be sure to become of greater value, see these lots at once. See us for lots in South and West part of Decatur. All properties have been priced to sell with terms that are reasonable. OLD ADAMS COUNTY BANK Corner 2nd and Monroe Sts. PUBLIC AUCTION FRIDAY, MAY 7- -12 Noon HORSES — CATTLE — SHEEP — HOGS No miscellaneous articles will be sold in the afternoon. SPECIAL NOTICE! —at 7:3d p. m. Friday, the sale of Miscellaneous Articles, consisting of Farm Machinery, Household Goods, 300 Chestnut Fence Posts, etc. will be sold. SPECIAL AUCTION OF EVERGREENS AND NURSERY STOCK FRIDAY NIGHT, MAY 7- -7 P. M. This stock will include Evergreens such as. Pyramid, Globe. American and Siberian Arltorvitae. and Biota Aureanauua. and Junipers such as Irish. Prostrate. Horzontalis. Phfitzer. Savin. And Spruces such as Hill. Norway. Oriental, and Colorado Blue and various types of Ejergreeus too numerous to mention. Shrubbery, such as Van llouttie. Aswhony Waterer Spirea. Goldenbell, Red and White Snowberry. Red ami Japanese Barberry and various other shrubs Also, some fine I’Jttlt Trees, such as Peach. Apple. Cherry and Plum, several varieties of each Also Grapes and some very good soft Maple shade trees. Weeping Willow. Lombardy Poplar and Red Bud. ■“This .stock is consigned from the PLEASANT VIEW NL'RSERIES. iffi Ohio. This nursery has been doing business in Decatur for the PiMfa 3-years and needs no recommendation whatsoever. This stock is Gweerrtihetit inspected, A-l grade and Northern Grown. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES E. J. Ahr and Fred C. Ahr, Mgrs. Auctioneers— Doehrman and Gorrell.

THLMBLE WEAtER NOW SHOWING—‘‘WATER BABY’’ “ By SEG A R EZaRENT YOU TIREO? ) X IT'S NICE OUT *^ 3 &V THIS LAKE WILL 86 " BATH! 1 A_==ZZ~ fIOE mB6 & COUPLAVI FUM I HARDLY RNO'U I AIKJ'T - KyEAN OtONT^' x TRAMPS. BUT WERE J YOU'ANO YOU ORDER I A JW- > W IT? GEE -I’D GO OVER ©chino . EVER HEAR. OF TAkinl GONER 6c GUEAN< ME to TAKE A BATHWHERE ARE LIKE TQ LIVE OUT A fWMJ Ke PEEL kA BATH? Jnc/nhpcTX TRAHPS-M ,HU RATE YOU TO MY W? a ~ W®® ®ggX~ teiPXg, W<l rasMi r 2/“•* 4/ feaitw 7 NOWS \ d&L • Z 'f^'i . W<V' - SH 'U.U ~g "viKC— ' £-•■■— A-. <T/7,,.,, - . ■ .MW , n.iu ~, , I

( Washington ? 6. Name the most eminent Italian goldsmith of the high Renale- | sauce. 7. On what river is the city of Covington. Ky.7 8. How much does it cost to send a letter to Iraq? 9. Where are the Cayman < Islands? 10. In Tennyson’s "Idylls of t the King." who was Enid? NOTH K or IOIIVIOWM H S S4I.E OF HHU ESTATB Notice I. hereby given that the undersigned < onimi.sioner appoiuted by the Adams Circuit Court, of Adams County. State of Indiana, at the April 1U.37 Term of .aid Court in a cause for partition of real •»- . late tor which this action wa»l brought wherein Edward F. Barling, is plaintiff and Francis Colcliln, el-1 .1 are defendants and which is cause' No. 13624 on the Civil Docket of said - Court by authority of said Court will) offer for sale at private sale to the' highest and best bidder al the Law i Office of Frucht* & Lltterer In the Morrison Hb.k at No. 144 South Second Street in the City of Decatur. j Adams County. Stale of Indiana, on • Saturday, the lath day of May. 1937, between the hours of ten o’clock A M and tour o’clock F. M. of said day and it not sold on said day the same will be continued and offered . for sale between the hours of each succeeding day thereafter until the same is sold, the following describ-, . d real estate in Adams County Is the State of Indiana, to-wit; The southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of Section eight <S> in township twenty-seven til) north range fourteen (14* east together with a right to use a strip f ground twenty iJr.) feet in width: off of and along the south side of the south west quarter of the south west quarter of Section eight (S) township twenty-seven (27) north range fourteen (14) east to be used as a driveway only and appurtenant to the real estate herein conveyed only; the owner or owners of the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of said section eight <») shall have a right to use said driveway at any and all times as a driveway only. AU of the aforesaid described real estate will be sold free of all liens; TERMS OF SALE;One third vash on the day of sale, one third in nine I months and one third in eighteen months from the date of sale; the purchaser must execute his notes for deferred payments waiving valuation and appraisement laws with six percent Interest from date, said notes to be secured by purchaser executing a first mortgage on the premises sold. Pun baser may pay all ash if desired. Such sale shall be made subject to the approval of the Adams Circuit Court and will not be sold for less than the full appraised value there-'f as specified in the or-| der of said Court. Ferd L. Litterer, Commissioner Froehte A Litterer. Attorney.. May 5-12-1.)

TRAFFIC LIGHT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ON®) along Monroe etreet will be replac- ■ ed as eoon as the weather permit).' A contract between the city and the Auburn Nurwery company l<> furnish flowers. o-natneut*l Hees and flowers for the east wide of the city plant grounds was approved by I the council The nursery is to furnish 18 Mugho pine*. 18 Swedish Junipers, 9 Pfltzer Junipers. 400 Aumur river privet, 1800 perennial rock plant*. 10 climbing rose* and p’ant same. The contract ie for *443 > and includes all the ground south of the center walk and east of the! plant. The north wide of the grounds ■is now being beautified. The lawn ,

r ■■■■■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ Drapes ■ Rugs • Curtains Sheets Bros. • CLEANERS Phone 359 ■ 2-hour service |

"Rich Cargoes££z£

e CHAPTER XXIII It was a stage luncheon. A scene ♦n which actors of ordinary antecedents are cast for the parts of the Continental countess, the famous painter and sportsman, the aristocratic but unregenerate son of ths noble earl and his presumably featherheaded but well-born wife, the daughter of impoverished nobility perhaps, and compelled by family urgencies to make the best of a bad job. That was it Sandy felt that he had completely encircled the idea and having done this, he proceeded silently to absorb what he had got. The analogy he felt to be exact. These people were acting parts of characters that they were not, had been doing so right along and playing their roles extremely well. But their dramatization was that of actors who by their talents have risen from the lower classes and have therefore no actual background of good breeding, no innate elegance to draw from. One feels this on the stage at times, that the whole scene, the different roles do not ring true, and Sandy got it now. He got more, that they were Sowing weary of their parts or at the tension of the situation was making these more difficult. Slight lapses became more frequent, slips and vulgarisms that were not indelicacies got past But this. Sandy reflected, should not be. Whatever their moral fiber the associations of the Colonel’s children must have been of the best. He himself rang true, supported his pose of Grand Seigneur. The Colonel would have seen to it that his children’s early associations in school and out were never vulgar, common, whatever their morale. Vinckers, as the scion of an old New Amsterdam Dutch family, might have become a wrong one in his knocking about the world, but good birth and breeding would still nave been in evidence, and he could scarcely have sunk to attempted assassination. Fiavia, distinctly pretty and of well rounded shapeliness, had probably been on the stage at some time, Sandy thought. Her voice, inflections and mannerisms seemed artificial, did not ring true! As the most colorless of the four her antecedents would be ths hardest to place. She might be the bad girl of a good family or the good girl of a bad one. It was impossible to tell about a young woman like that caught up in vicious company. One thing alone was evident, that her upbringing and associations had not been aristocratic. A suspicion held previously in /elution became now a precipitate in Sandy’s mind. These four people were impostors. They were not at all what ths Colonel had described them to be. Hester was not his daughter, nor was Jarvis his son. Vinckers could not possibly be the portrait painter of that name, nor was Fiavia genuine. They were a mob of frauds, a mob of crooks perhaps come there for purposes of blackmail and extortion. They might be worse, dangerous criminals of uiternaXional activities. Certainly Vinckers had revealed himself a potential assassin. Sandy felt sick. The query that came on this revelation was more disturbing than the discovery itself. How much did Isobel know about them? Was she aware of the true character or rather the lack of true character of these people? Sandy was sure that there had been no question in her mind of the identities assumed on their arrival, eg

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1937.

; iw being terraced In three elevations and the program under way is ex- | peeled to make the »!te ono of the i beauty spots in town. An ordinance regulating the dlgr--1 Ing up of Improved *treet* and making a cliarge to replace the street lin its original shape, was referred to the ordinance committee. A five dollar fee Is piotpoaed for the. I first square feet of a street dug up 1 for sewer, gas or water lines. The offer to donate 12 feet of ground running from South Seventh | street east to the alley, between i the Henry Dellinger and N. A. Bix- j ler properties was acce.pted by the board aud approved by the council. Hillas were allowed and the meeting adjourned. o TO LET BIDS ■<<OyTtKVBP FROM PAGE ONE) 1937 session of the state general assembly as unconstitutional. It has been pointed out that legal action can still be taken to prevent or delay the project while a decision W obtained from the state supreme court on the constitution ality of the act declared uuconstitional by Judge Kister. The act was passed to apply particularly to this project However, unless attorneys are

her previous contacts with them. But he felt now that she had penetrated the disguise even earlier than he had done and that she had forced from her uncle the admission that they were frauds. Dinner was finished smoothly enough and they went out onto the terrace for coffee. Sandy led Isobel to the end of the terrace, a concrete structure awninged for a space by the big door, and with a parapet supported by moulded pillars. “The actors in this farce are more distinct,” he said, “but the plot still obscure." As he spoke there came from somewhere back in the trees a soft but heavy sound, like a muffled padding. Sandy peered in that direction and it seemed to him some moving opacity bulked up against the darker background. “What’s that?” Sandy asked. “I’ve sent Mike on Mouse to tell Uncle what happened a little while ago.” "That the pig-dog had snapped?” “Yes. I heard that shot. I know what it was.” “What else do you know, Isobel?” “What you learned tonight at dinner. I saw it in your face." “It’s not your fault. How long have you known that they were frauds?—a band of crooks?” “I began to think something was wrong- when Uncle disappeared. Vinckers had been missing. He came in just after Mouse got back and sty first thought was that he’d followed Uncle and murdered him. Then from the way they took it I began to get the right of it. Hester and Jarvis are no more his son and daughter than they are yours. Uncle is a gentleman whatever else he may or may not have been. They are scum—canaille. Especially Jarvis. Hester shows some signs of breeding. I’m horribly worried about you, Sandy.” “You needn’t be. I’ve spiked his guns. Let’s string along with them until we learn just what their game may be.” They strolled back to where the others were seated. Vinckers was discussing the Colonel’s forecasts of the development of the Bahamas. “Not to loony as one might think,” he said. “For semitropic climate this is hard to beat. Got Florida faded and money could do anything with these cays and islands. It’s merely a question of transportation and air craft is solving that for such localities as this just as automobiles opened up the hinterland for big private estates. The Colonel has vision. We’ve got to hand him that.” “ ‘Has’ or had?” Sandy asked. “Oh, come,” Vinckers said, "what’s the use of stalling? We all know he’s not drowned or shark bait” “It would serve him jolly well right,” said Jarvis in the affected drawl that was sometimes attenuated to a Cockney whine, “if we shot his blooming elephant.” "That,” said Isobel, “would take quite a lot of shooting. Her voice was hard, metallic. “Oh, come,” Jarvis said, “one bullet in the right place would do the trick.” “Quite true,” Isobel retorted. “For Mouse.” The implication was obvious, that other bullets would be finding marks were such an act attempted. Isobel went on evenly. “That’s the sort of thing you’d do, Jarvis. But let me tell you that you’d take less of a chance to walk into the middle of a wild herd and start potting.”

employ'd by the romonstrators. no such action can be taken. _o —— Scotland Yard To Reduce London. <U.R> Scotland Yard is to be reduced, but only In weight. Sir Norman Kendal, chief of the criminal investigation department, remarked about the growing obesity of the C. I- D. with the result that a program of morning sett-ing-up exercises has been devised for more than 150 detectives. o Trad* in a Good Town — O*c»tur "I _

Farr-Way CLEANERS TIRE REPAIR Anywhere within city limits 35c PORTER TIRE CO. Phon* 1289 341 Winchester st. Distributors of Gillette Tires.

“Just what do you mean. Cousin dear?” “She means,” Sandy said quietly, “that no such act would be permitted. Isobel is mistress here and while her servants have seen fit, to decamp for some silly reason I’ve got a perfectly good crew to carry on her orders.” “Oh, let’s not wrangle,” Hester said. She raised her beautiful bare arms. “Family rows are always the worst. This is going to work out all right, children. I’m going to bed. It has been a hectic day and night Come on Vinck. You look all in. If you snore tonight I’ll strangle you in your sleep.” “All right. Away guests. Hope Mouse is securely moored.” Hester rose. She wore a high decollete of a clinging cut that seemed to unclothe rather than clothe a sumptuous figure that was also slender. Sandy wondered a little that such a woman should not occupy a more conspicuous position, be on the stage or the fiance of some multi-wnillionaire instead of mated to such an apparently hand to mouth adventurer as Vinckers. She had youth, beauty, dramatic ability and the evening of her arrival she had sung a few snatches of songs exhibiting a voice that was rich and powerful and evidently trained, Russian folk songs in that tongue he thought. Her talents seemed wasted as a blackmailer though of course the stake sh* played for might be a high one, Vinckers merely an accessory to be discarded when she got what she was after. They said goodnight pleasantly enough, Isobel and Sandy remaining on the terrace. It was a still and lovely night, with the stars so close and softly bright through the fine purple haze that the eye could almost determine them as sphcricle. Isobel, resting her head on the back of her big wicker chair, which rolled like a breaking wave, stared up at them and said; — “A baby would reach up for those stars, then fall asleep and dream that it held one in its hand. I have done the same. I’m afraid.” “Are you referring to your diamonds and emeralds and things?” Sandy asked. “No. I believe them to be still safe enough in Uncle's keeping. I was thinking of you.” i “That is very sweet, but you needn't worry. I can be a shooting star if need arises, which isn’t going to happen. This is a cheap crowd of frauds. I now believe that i Vinckers’ shot from the mangroves was a silly attempt to scare me off.” “I wasn’t thinking of that,” Isobel said, “but of poor darling Uncle. It looks now as if this lovely four- , some had come here to blackmail him. Also, as if that might have been their source of livelihood for a number of years past.” “Even if that were so,” Sandy I said, “how can it affect your hold on that dim star you are so kind i as to liken me?” “I didn’t say that it was dim, old i Santy Claus. But the point is this, i If this flock of vampires have been bleeding Uncle all this time, then i their blackmail must be something . pretty stiff. Up to now he has evidently been able to meet their demands. But now the fact of his trying to stage a disappearance looks . as if he had got to the end of his : rope. The bitter end.” "Admitting all that to be true,” Sandy said, “need it prevent our marriage?” (To be continued) frpyrtcht by Mffl Hhnrjr C ILwMM IMBUibutod DJ King F«euir«® Sjmdtcatß. int

Classified, Business Cards, Notices

* RATES On* Time—Minimum charge of j 25c for 20 word* or !••*. Over 20 word*. I!4c per word Two Times—Minimum charg* of 40c for 20 word* or les*. Over 20 word* 2c per word for th* two timaaThr*e Tlmah—Minimum charge of 50c for art) word* or lew. | Over 20 words 2'/ic per wor<l ■ for th* thr*e time*. i Card* of Thank* 35c | Obituaries and ver*** *I.OO FOR SALE ' FOR SAI.E—A full line of nursery stock Buy your tree* freshly dug land succeed. Rive-side Nursery. Four tniles west of Berne. S4-36t : FOR SALE—Cane davenport, chair to match *B.OO. Commodes *2.50 up. Lauudry stove *3.00 up. Frank Young, 110 Jefferson street, Decatur. a99-tf. BAUMGARTNER'S High Quality Blood-tested Baby Chicks. Closely selected, fine matings. Eighteen breeds. Also hatching turkey eggs by a special electric incubator. Price reasonable. Baumgartner Hatchery. 6 miles west, 3 mile south Monroe. Craigviile phone. Route 4, Bluffton. 45 M W F ts

FOR SALE—7S pedigreed cockrels Tom Baron's strain, from high record hens. Christ Knipstein. route 1. 105g6tx FOR SALE —Narraganeette Turkey eggs. *1 per setting illegw). Also Boy* bicycle in good condition. Ernest Longenberger. Craigvilie phone 15 on 7- R No. 1 M-5-7x FOR SALE —Garden and flower plants. Early Putatoe*. William Strahm. 339 No. 9th street. Phone 1231. luTK.Jtx FOR SALE—Used five burner o‘l range. ga** and electric washers, coal range. Decatur Hatchery, Maytag Dealer, James Kitchen, salesman. b)7g3t FOR SALE —Used Furniture. Living Room Suite fair condition., *25 00. Short leather Davenport, *5. i Short Davenport and chair, uphalst-' ered in velour, *B.OO. Sprague Furnl-1 Phone Co., 152 South Second St., Phone 199. 107k3t FOR SALE—Used Rugs. One 9xl-’ Axmineter rug, One 9x12 Wilton Rug. Used for window display only ■ no reasonable cash offer will be re- \ fused. See theee ruga before you I buy! Sprague Furniture Co.. 152 i South Second St.. Phone 199- 107k3t FOR SALE—One Hot-Point Elec- j trie , range. i-5. Seventy five , pound capacity porcelain lined ic® : box. For quick sale. Stults Home j Equipment. 107-11 — FOR SALE—Early Yellow resist ' ant 52 day cabbages. Wilt-resist-; am tomatoes; early yam plants. M. Meibers. 1127 W. Monroe. 106-2 t FOR SALE — Guernsey bull, one-: year old. Good qlover hay. Phone 8624. C. W. Moser. 106-3tx FOR SALE — Studebaker coupe ■ Motor, tires and paint like new i Privately owned. Sell reasonable I for cash, or consider small trade i Phone 156. 105(3 I FOR SALE —Four row McCormick Deering beet cultivator and riding lifter. E. L. Ford. 3% miles south, 3 miles east Monroe. FOR SALE- -77 acres, good buildings. excellent soil, wonderful location on main highway near j Butter, electricity, owned by nonresident. Spring possession. Price attractive for quick sale, terms. I Further particulars inquire D. O.; Horton, Bryan, Ohio. 105-3tx i FOR SALE — Singer sewing ma chines and vacuum cleaners, new and used. Repairs tor all makes. Hemstitching while you waiL Com- ( plete selection Nuns boilproof embroidery floss. Stamped goods. Marc-Saul Shop, 303 W. Monroe. Phone 737. 101-30tx FOR SALE—Seed Corn. Try Rupert’s late or early seed. Guaranteed to grow. Wm. Ruppert Moaroe. 69-ts Watches Once Small Clocks Watches originally v-ere small j clocks and were worn hung from j the girdle because they were too j large for the pocket.

l WANTED WANTED — Washing and housei cleaning. Call phone number 1241 Price* reasonable. 93-20tx Wanted: — Nice clean rags suitable for cleaning machinery. Underwear, curtains, silks Will pay 1c per lb. Daily Democrat Co. : WANTED Man who is not afraid to climb. Charles Hower, Markle, Ind. Markle phone 22 II 105g3tx WANTED- Housecleaning or any kind of work by middle-aged lady. 710 Nuttman ave. between ; 7 a.m aud 7 pm. 105t3x eod WANTED TO RENT Four or five unfnrnishod rooms, immediately, Phone Roop’s Restaurant. 106-3tx MISCELLANEOUS 'OLD ESTABLISHED FIRM Needs roofing and siding salesmen in Michigan, Indiana aud I Ohio, to sell iu city and country. Must have car. Earn *l.0o<) to *5.000 per year depending upon ability. Sheriff-Goslin Roofing Co . Battle Creek. Mich 28-5-12 x

ANYONE DESIRING transportation to California call 993, Decatur. Leaving Decatur May 8. > MISCELLANEOUS — Furniture repaired, upholstered or refinished at the Decatur Upholstering Shop. 145 S. Second St. Phone 420. Also used furniture. 105-30 t FREE! if excess acid causes you Stomach Ulcers, Gas Pains, indigestion, Heartburn, GET free ; sample doctor's prescription. Vdga. at Ilolthouse Drug Co MONEY TO LOAN On good farms. 5 to 20 years. 4*j to 5%. Quick service. Also have ' clients for several good farms. 6» to 120 acres for cash. Enz, Enz & Hipsher, Inc. J 4. East Cor. Clinton aud Berry Fort Wayne. LOST AND FOUND LOST — Large white Collie, answers to name of "Trixie.” Phone H-96655 or write 324 E. DeWald ! St., Ft. Wayne. Reward. 106-6tx o Don't forget the sale of Shrubbery Friday eve at the Decatur Riverside Sales. VOTt< K Os BAI.E OF s< HOOL Fl Ml PItOPERTIES Notice is hereby given. That pursuant to the laws of the Slate of the Auditor ot AUdius bounty, Indiana, will offer at pub-! It- sale at the east door of the Court House, to the highest bidder, at not less than the appraised value, at iv.DO o’clock A. M on the 22nd day of May, 1937, the following described property heretofore bought in for the School Fund: Inlot number two hundred nine (2091 in the First Addition to the town, now City, of Decatur, Appraised at 12200U.UU. Also on the same day at 10 30 o'ckn k A. AL at the east door of the Court House, will offer at public sale the following described tract of School Fund land t »-wit: The south half of the following' described real estate towit: Commencing in the center of the publihighway, which is two hundred and ninety five (295) feet west of the southeast «orner of the east half of the southwest quarter of section three township twenty seven (27) north, range fourteen (14) east Thence running west twenty (2«>J» rods an«i seventeen (17) links to the Cincinnati, Richmond an<| Fort Wayne Kail road known also as the Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad Them e north the line of said railroad one hundred and forty three i!43» feet; Thence east parallel with the line of said section, about twenty four ( 24i rods to the center of the public highway on the east side thereof; thence in a southwesterly direction in the center of said public highway to the place of beginning all in Adams County, Indiana. Appraised at |2VO.O<». Said sale will be made agreeable to an order of the Hoard of Commissioners of said county and upon the following terms: One third, cash in hand, and the balance in four equal installments due in one, two, three and four years respectively from day of sale, bearing interest at six per cent per annum, payable in advance, said deferred payments to be secured by first mortgage on the real estate sold. Witness my hand thia 21st day of April, I»3*. John W. Tyndall, Auditor of Adams County. Indiana. April 21 May 5 FUEL WOOD In the face of Rising 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. Adam's County Lumber Co. Earl D. Colter. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eye* Examined • Giant * Fitted Saturday*, 8:00 p. m. . Taleohon* 135. ' HOURS S;3O to 11:80 12:80 to 6:00 <

AND Br.dy . Markets ~ Si J Clom « 12 CotTevlsd May No ‘‘>U>IU ISS ;. Ja Vais 1"V to lite Itfc Kd 120 to 14u lb, K 4 ii“ to iso to ISO to 220 lbs. 22“ to :!od 11,, -WH to ib ß 35“ lbs , .md up IjKßaj Stags — Veal.-is Ewe ami w-iher Uni,. I’.u. k lambs ffi|| Clipped l.unus Yea; ling lauibs SB CHICAGO GRAIN Ma x Jui, *!-”■) e.t’,|H ° atS "‘i INDIANAPOLIS

hid 1.. 1 . ; -Livestock. Hog . jniH) 21C; w. mliis d |„, V( . higher; lt.ii Ids , A illg sows, shady; *10.15; I'“.-.., |i, s . }IQ 21“ lbs.. 2;,,-.-, :ilj 225-235 lbs,. 11“ 2“: >.■< lbs . lbs . 273:;i»i ibs. 3““-::2.'> ib< ~, 35“ 4““ lbs., *9..5; la'. 1.. lbs., i) j..; lbs . 2.’.; b. lb. ibs fS; TH lbs.. 11..-12.. !hs.. 11“ lbs.. *9.6“: top. ,;j Iro| Cattb . 1 .alves. > • ally s' Jly ; bld - 25, II- -s Jiir; . -L *l2 *11; !■ a up Io eoiiin.i-ii b«! J a SulH V. ahis . ul.i *9.50*10. H She. p. < nou.-li iiohM sal.- to niak- a mark-.-'. ew.-s st'-ady e-p <d kinds and $! ::ppei ■ FORT WAYNE LIVEST»B Fort Wayne. Ind.. Maj >-.■ j— Livestock: 9 Hogs. steady; 22a2a4 IM *10.15; 25V 27.’> lb.-. Sb!4(J lbs.. *1"; Im.-2'mi lh>. ht (J 3““ lbs.. I’.i'i lb!..Wj 160-1 M) lbs.. 15"! i» isl *9.55; 140 150 lbs.. »SW; lbs.. #«.95: 12“ 13“ lbs.. S<5;W 120 lbs.. *8.45. H Rcegh.-', * x 75; «tas«. 11V ’ Calves. *'.'.s“; lambs. *llsl CLEVELAND PROWCi Cleveland. <' . May duce: Butter, marker unsettled: 33tje; standards. 22',c Eggs, market unsettled. S grade. 21c: xtr.i firsts. W;« rent receipts. Ibe. Live poultry, market « hens, heavy. 17c, medium, | leghorn, heavy. l'<: leghorn.l* 16c; ducks, young. 6 lbs, all i 17e; small, 14c: old, K’c. , Potatoes. 1““ ll'. bags. V. 51 1. Idaho. *3 *3.25; Ohio » *1.75-82: Maine, mostly L Texas. 50 lbs. sa< k. »ashed, t *2.10; Florida. It'O-lb. bag. 8 *3.25; California, long «■ *2.25 50-lb. bag. local grain market BURK ELEVATOR CO. Corrected May 5. No. I Wheat. 6“ lbs. or bettetl ! No. 2 Wheat, etc.Dale Soya Beans. No. - Yellow New No. 4 Yulluw Corn I 0 Rye - central soya co. i Soya Beans, No. 2 Yelio* Markets At A fnan« Steaks tower in dull Bonds higher ■»'I 11 1 Curb stocks irregularly . Chicago stocks irregularis ! exchange French franc recovmo I early toss. Chicago livestock: Hop •” ’ caMle steady to *e**steady to strong. Cotton 5 to 7 points Ifc Grains higher. Rubber 10 to 21 P“ i,lls Silver bar at Ne* ' ol 45L, C“l|!s fitv notice I will he out "J Friday noon to >unflJ- « Palmer Eicher,