Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 159, Decatur, Adams County, 7 July 1938 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
<:OMMI*SIONBM*S CLAIMS ALLOW Kl> JULY IL ISSMMlaocllaaeuua Ft. Wayat Prt<. Co. off. hp. • J’lty of Dooatur, It., pw. . I*J< 9 citlwne Tola. Co., tel i’orn B. Blarly, <B«>. Ihire M Berniaca I'uba. h oik. hire... MOV <l. Romy Blerly. reslotra Mulhaupt Prntg. Co. ck. ex. 14.01) Hemy Blerly, do -■’» - <l. Remy Blerly, do ‘ ; 99 /Kiser * Co., d» Mary Cowan, dop. hire 9 Mary K. Tyndall, elk hire M.»» ..John W. Tyndall, poetage... IV.M Allee Lenhart, dep. hire 7J.OU Jeff Upehty, «% fees ' * K. H. Kauffman, dep. hire 7e- 99 w.Boatßeh-Chleaso, Inc, exp... »•« • Left T. Gllllg. dep. hire I I®#.® 9 Julies Brown, postage .... ®. 99 I'ullae Brown, trav. exp. ?9» 9 ’3 'alias Brown, do >11“ ' JMillae Brown, mileage 1«® 99 <3'alias Brown, bd. of prla. eS.-O IKrlek-Tyndall Co., ditch ex. 88. OS fK H. ailllom. do I ' Gerhart Schwarts, do . • ’Uunlor Uephart, do “ I>H>l Kaehr, do 9999 Frances Rlesen V.'au Z-J.awrence Baumgartner, do .. . Trank Suank. do - i'l? ■•J’headore Hague -■Jlarry Shell, do L’JI •soe Murtaugh, do ®J'® 9 W>nvld Runyon, do ’ ■John A. Hendricks, do «' 99 , 28Hugh Death, do * <• “♦Ji. G. Delnlnger, dep hire 88.88 ~JFt Wayne Blue P. & S., ex. ; >’t. Wayne Blue P. & 8.. do UJ •‘Margaret S. Myers, salary ... 86 00 •JC H Striker, sal. A post. 144.39 ''.'Haywood Pub. Co., exp »V« I. E. Archbold, salary .. «•«» 71. E. Archhold, oper. exp. . 46.8 b .'Mildred Kolueway. salary WOO ”•:. J Worthman, salary *' !* I ' Bobert J. Zwick, inquest 66.20 1 Vflmm. Print Shop, exp. J.JJ J)r. F. L. Grandstaff, salary 38.501 •ftuth High, asaeaslna -a I •*Will Winnes, do JJ.oO "Melvin Hirschy, do ... 50. 0 Moses Augsburger, Co. coinm. HO.V ►Phil Sauer, do •0-O’J □'tank Liniffer, do JO. 00 •Fiank Liniffer, comm. mllg. IJ.3® &enry B. Heller, salary 50.00 •Ed Stahly. bd. of review 120.00 A .2Tal Peterson, do — ’4-H Club & Ext. exhibits . 1200.00 k Tunneller, ditch ex ’red Braun, do 4.V0 _>hlam Rltenour. do 697.38 . Mlaofffe M Krick, do 60.00 •<M’m E. Miller, do •• J.OJ * W,.JLSchumaker, ct. house 100.00 * Mary McClure, do 35.00 •'Herman E. Tritch, do 175.1 b w .Liechty Bros., do 3.65 ■V. 8. Chemical Co., do 38.75 Tropical Pt. & Oil Co., do ... 170.58 •Carl C. Pumphrey, do 15.00 N. Ind. Pub. 8. Co., jail 11.74 ..•Decatur Pig. A- Htg. Co., do 130.00 — Decatur Democrat Co., advt. 70.31 V. 8. Chemical Co., do — 27.92 "• Berne Witness Co., do 62.75 * W. H. Zwick & Son, burial 75.00 * 8. E. Black, do 75.00 M Irene ’Byron, sanatorium 438.00 * Dr E. L. Cartwright, do 50.00 * Alva Fenstermnker, rt. of w. 80.00 * Carnuel Hall, do JI De< atur Democrat Co., do 19.30 George D. Heiser, ditch exp. 5.00 I (oiinty Infirmary ,H. P. LaFontaine, salary . 150.00 Clara LaFontaine. da 33.33 j Herbert LaFontaine, labor. 40.001 * Dorothy LaFontaine, do 37.50 * Lengerich, do 37.50 { *JTalvin Falb, do 81. JJ *Rev. It. W. Graham, op. ex. 4.0 > *iStev. Vernon Riley, do - 4.00. r ’l/ee Hardware Co., do 86.05} ‘ *Horg Meat Market, do 10.02 •ind. Institutional Indust., do 43.621 Standard Oil Co., do .... &-05 M’ash Coal A Supply Co., do .. .05 | Ashbaucher’s Tin Shop, do.. 3.10, Indian Refining Co., do 18.48 ,‘ W H. Zwick A- Son, do ‘ 3.«<» | jd’rank Krick, do 2 l?f» Kibilck & Co., do 16.5 b ■Martin Gilson, do 2.90 West Disinfecting Co., do 95.96 ♦Wells & Buyer, do 65.001 * D#H»tnr Bakery, do . 79.79; Welfare Fund * Faye Smith Knapp, salary.. 108.33 -Bernice Nelson, do . .. 490.00 i * Mary Schults, do - 50.00 Tele. Co., tele 5.15 * J-'aye Smith Knapp, postage 10.00 •iFaye Smith Knapp, mileage 45.50 ~ Bernice Nelson, do 20.55 MitHiaupt Prtg. Co., sup. 3.50 » Hiahwny Repair Dlatrlrt No. 1 Jingo IT. Gerke, lalbor 123.75 ..Glenn Merica, do 76.80 Bittner, do 125.00 ' »2<oyde Bowman, do 96.80 'Timer Gerke. do 33.25 Hobrock, do 63.00 D-mald Hoile, do 83.25 ; ..Robert Gerke, do 28.00, *Auffust Witte, do 1.75 | <djohn Mann, do 1.40 . v 3ltrman Miller, do .... 72.00 g«*Mclvin Miller, do 15.75 Albert Miller, do 12.251 .jNorman Stoppenhagen, do .... 1.40 **Ddgar Doehrman, do 10.50 < «Mlvin Witte, do 8.40 Buuck, do 8.40 1 RiMrirt No. 2. 8 Vleman, labor 1J5.50 F. Sauer, do 117.50! -.JR. Martin, do 117.50, «-Vaughn Liniger, do — 117.50 '■’X
JR. C. V. CONNELL Veterinarian — Office & Residence 430 No. Fifth st Phone 102.
■‘BARNEY GOOGLE LULLABY By BiUy Deßeck VVA - obleege we.,google \ Z "3® but x nwsooubts if n • 5 < jj ■ S <->'.- Zl ‘I CBN G\T TO SLEEP HG\N / f)QU .0£ B>> B> <'• ; 7 BFTER. THAT LONG NAP I jV //> nl/ ®P " “5 ® ‘llv 1 jeb had-, /f nW rSyt * Fl 'i Htu' CT Z 3 iK HOWSONIEWER- / * o °rM '<i- E- O’lPl • •4 I O\ O \«i ...,K < K gf' .u (M — 4 r;? is--. I v OQMI Mi* WL ■ X 1 -’ • ‘ n Jkl I I <<< - - >• 2SL .-> K _ 1 ** MMI—" M *~^~™————— ,i—-- 'pi !*><■. King FfU"r-' S.Jmte. tn. V-j _■ ■■., . Cn- , f .< 7~ THIMBLE THEATER SIIOWING -“WHAT'S ONE WIFE MORE OR LESS” By SEGAR r. . SA'O WHW ' THOUGHT) SWEE A SE NO ’ ETS \ l EL BE- "S. OH VOU'VE COME IT 11 A 7 v/e'Rh all —i - BBf) V ~^ T ' wi&2 ! ■ , daughter- an- hH of his harlm y /V CABOOSOJ! f J- < vCI ■ cg® A & &V ■ WJ' xCTr dBB ■—l —' ■ ifry' /
a. Lu.h., do Harold Bauer, do }« «® I „ Sol Eicher, do '-■■■■ U*-** ®IA. Sehlrack, do J*®* Henry Sauar, do ®®JJ U ® I Ralph Shady, do “ IA. Spangler, do ™ ® I John Brlte, do 9 ®- uu u Dlatrlct No. 8. u Ulmer Beer, labor ... ÜB»® John Fox. do I? » u 9 Fred l.leehty, do . . ■ I Fr. d Major, do I* 9 ? 9 David Ha beggar, do LJ» . Norman Jacoba, do }••*» J Kenneth Beer, do »«■•» ' lll.lrlet .No. 4 ' J C. Augeburger, labor bx.iiu ' Edwin Spichlger, do J Chauncy Reynolds, do H7AV 9 1 Amos Steiner, do .. 9 1 Marvin Kistler, do <“- 9 - 11 Norman Augsburger, do 0 9 -®» * I Annan Habegger. do MisrellaiifouM J Riverside Garage, op. ex... 100 * Krick Welding Shop, do jj jb Nasarens Church, do JJ I Yoder Bros, do JO.OO Mossman Yarnelle Co., do .. 21J.7J ; Jacob C. Miller, do 85.U0 ’ Luber-finer Sales Ass., do •• 3,0.» ’ The Schafer Co., do . .. 57.14 ' I National Cylinder Gas Co., do JJB ‘•Ft. Wayne P. &8. Co., do . 100,1. ’ I P. J. Daniels, do *J*6O ’ Fulton Machine Co., do o.bb I Ind. Institutional Ind., do.. JJ.BU ’ cash Coal & Supply Co., do *15..«J ' Krick-Tyndall Co., do j .... J.aO •Runyon & Son Garage, do.. 49. J& jLee Hardware Co., do 1J 0J i Indian Refining Co., do »5®.24 ’ Butler’s Garage, do ®o.4U ' 11. L. Kern Garage, do ' l -O ' Reed Feed & Supply Co., do. lb.Jo ’ W. Q. O’Neal Co., do 426.5 b Page Blackburn, do 30.00 1 Richard Hill, do 11 : ®J iGilliom Lumber Co., do -- ‘ 8 ’Agnes Nesswald, do 14.00 | Ans Tire Co., do ... , •H« <® Pittsburgh St. & Tool Co., do 29U.42 Mrs. Wm. Elsey, do 9 ? 9 Jai ixb C. Miller, do 14.»» Henry Adler, do I 9 ’ 9 August Conrad, do I 9 ’ 9 S. K. Peoples, do *'* u Dominion Signal Co., do JL}’ J. D. Adams Co., do _0l»S. < 0 R. G. Deinlnger. salary 4L»‘ W. H. Gillium, do & mlg .... 9J.84 Ralph Smitley, op. exp J.aU W. E. Anderson, do *cs» Meshberger Bros., material.... W.IZ Yost Bros., do - ’»•&» Certified this Sth day of July 1928. JOHN W. TYNDALL* Auditor Adams County. July l-i —o Legal Nollee of Publie Henrliig Notice is hereby given that the Local Alcoholic Beverage Board of Adams County, Indiana, will, at 9:00 A. M. on the 14th day of July, 11'38 at the County Commissioner's Room in Auditor's Office, Court House in the City of Decatur in said County, begin investigation of the applications of the following named persons. requesting the issue to the applicants, at the locations hereinolter set out, of the Alcoholic Beveri age Permits of the classes herelnaf--1 ter designated and will, at said time land place, receive Information conjcernlng the fitness of said applicants. and the propriety of issuing I the Permits applied for to sucli apipllcants at the premises named: I Dec Fryback. 39269, The Green Kettle, 148 No. Second Street, Decatur — Beer Retailer. Walter E. Elchar, 39270 White ■ Spot Case, 116 West Monroe Street, | Decatur — Beer and Wine lietail- | er. I Said investigation will be open to the public, and public participation ; ij requested. i n Alcoholic Beverage Commission I !■: *«( Sndiana. I JOHN F. NOONAN. Secretary | HUGH A BARNHART, Excise Administrator. June 30, July 7 o Legal Notice of Public Hearing Notice is hereby given that the ' Local Alcoholic Beverage Board of , Adams County, Indiana, will, at 9:00 : A. M. on the llth day of July, 1938 at the County Commissioner s Room in Auditor's Office, Court House in the City of Decatur in said County, begin investigation of the application of the following named person, requesting the issue to the applicant, at the location hereinafter set out, of the Alcoholic Beverage Permit of the class hereinafter designated and i will, at said time and place, receive Information eons erning the fitness of said applicant, and the propriety of Issuing the Permit applied for to such applicant at the premises nain- | ed: William H. Freitag, 39053. (Restaurant), Preble — Beer Retailer. Said investigation will he open to I the public, and public participation I Is requested. Alcoholic Beverage Commission of Indiana By: John F. Noonan, Secretary Hugh A. Barnhart, Excise Administrator. June 30 July 7 o |
- I '♦ ♦ TODAYS COMMON ERROR Futile is pronounced fiu'-til; | I' 110 t U '^ e ’‘ J 'O Refreshing Sherberts. Or-, ange and Pineapple. Green 1 Kettle.
Driven Misjudge Judge Coral Gables, Fla.-(UP)-Four motorists wish they had known the date of City Judge Phillip E., Paine'S birthday Un Ins last birth
STOLEN GOD* MARSHALL-
• fHAPTFR XX There were hundreds of these nkturff! color In her cheeks and -Andri comes first" with me, Jars, dotting the tops of a circle of glanced iff after nty father. If father is in- hills. Carved out of solid white But Chambon scarcely volved in this thing at all, it is with marble, many of them were eight her, h ® ’] e red at for the honest motives. Whatever Andrd feet tall, and all in perfect line and ad f X ?"vs was even more S’ b ft.Y:is?.' , oSs: l 'a! , s » a. both ” hollowed and shaped them, what but we have met before, bt. Pierre “How can 1 promise that? I’m had been their use, and why they said a ® ht not the law. I didn’t come here to now stood empty, scoured by wind started- „ g make arrests, only to restore the and rain, the French rulers of the your face " as Emerald Buddha, but if Chambon province did not pretend to guess. I v,» ,n s™“' fa .. b j goes too far, his safety will pass If the Laotians knew, the tale was in out of my hands.’’ told only in the joss-house, where vited me to his villa for dinner, a t “Then I’d better go to the yellow gods sat smiling, and was you were just t him now-and warn him.’’ She never whispered in a white man. pleasure 7°“, merey.” For he had decided to lay carved likeness of a skeleton, sug- peared at the table for dessert. A all his cards face up, trusting every- gesting that it had once held human hope she is better now. thing to Virginia’s inherent fineness bones. Griffin made the guess that “Some better thank you but she and high heart. these were the sepulchers of the old has retired to her old home in Cor He went on with gathering power. Laotian kings and their families, sica..’ .i.rind te “But I honestly believe that his best Ned saw Pu-Bow furtively salaam- V irgin a gasped and started tr chance is for you to let me go ahead ing to one of the jars, and even speak, then stared hard at her in my disguise and do my best to Chambon, fanatical antiquary that plate. Until this very instant, she rave him from himself. He won’t he was, walked among them with a had thought Chambon s mother was giv- up his undertaking, at any kind of glory on his handsome face. dead. He had never told her so in warning or request from you. You Traveling slowly, before sundown so many words, but certainly his know that ’’ they were in sight of the ancient manner had implied it. Still she did not make a sound Laotian capital, Chieng-khuang. As “She was a Mademoiselle Vahnca or give a sign. late as two centuries ago, its power if I remember right, St Pierrt “He’ll only cover up the tracks and glory had seemed as secure and went on. “Oddly enough, there is a I’ve uncovered, and go ahead,” Ned everla?ting as its royal dynasty, the Valinco River, not far from here, went on in low tones. “Other men “Lords of Life.* Its fortifications Perhaps you shculd find out if it will take his trail, and in the end ran for miles across the fertile was named in honor of one of your hell pay the price. And this is in fields. At least a hundred large pa- mother’s ancestors.’’ addition to the plain right-and- godas gave it the favor of Lord “It’s not an unusual name, in wrong of the thing—your duty to Buddha. Ambassadors came bear- Corsica,” Chambon answered, eashelp me stop a great crime against ing gifts half across the world, from ily. a nation and a king.” the palaces of the Manchus, from The talk soon veered, and Griffin Blunt words I If he had sized her the wild courts of the Burmese told the governor of his experience up wrong, they would spoil every- Kings, from the last of the Mogul with the Khas. thing. But as he watched, hardly Emperors beyond the Bay of Ben- “What a strange notion—that Vidaring to hope, her blue eyes brim- gal. Its caravans brought the comte’s visit to the country would med full, her hand fell gently on his. wealth of all the Indies to heap at its restore the Laos kingdom and send “I’ll keep your secret—for the shrines and at the foot of its ivory the Khas back to slavery!” St present.” throne. Pierre marveled. There came an ache in his arms, Then something happened—some- Virginia resolved to play boldly an imperious hunger on his lips. If thing terrifying and unkaown. The the cards Ned had put in her hand, he could only hold her close, and try Pali writings of the tale were lost; "Our interpreter, T’Fan thought to tell her what her faith and help only the yellow-robed priests hinted that the Emerald Buddha might be would mean to a lonely sou! like his at it in ritual and allegory. Anyway, somehow involved,” she said calmly, . . . but nearing footsteps sounded when the French came, in 1893, the with only a passing glitter in her on the trail. He had scarcely time kings were fugitives and their pal- eyes. to regain his countenance b?fore aces fallen; the hundred temples “The return of the Emerald Chambon himself pushed Ui-jugh lay in ruin; the fortifications were Buddha would set Laos on fire,” St. the vines. * mere grassy mounds hardly distin- Pierre said thoughtfully. “The SiaThe Vicomte glanced from one to guishable from the natural hills; mese confiscated it from a temple in the other. One wave of color sped and the great, the eternal city, lord Chieng Mai, once part of Laos, and across his handsome face, then ran of a hundred cities, reduced to a before then it was supposed to have back; his eyes lighted once, like mere town under Siamese rule. stood for centuries in some other scimitars in the sun, then went out “But it does not matter any unknown Laotian temple. But ii like blown lamps. He smiled faintly, more,” Ned said after he had re- wouldn’t restore the kingdom or en“So here you are Virginia," he counted the legend to Virginia. "The slave the Khas. France wants no said with a gaiety grotesquely cut kings are dead. The Siamese have such political dynamite in the provof keeprirg with that smile. “You our Emerald Buddha. The French ince, and would simply return the are holding up the whole caravan, have come to stay, rt is all forgot- image to Bangkok." T’Fan, you must have been telling ten.” \ irginia put down these last senher something very interesting” ‘‘l venture sorr • of your people fences in a mental note-book to re-“Heaven-Born is most kind, tolis- haven’t forgotten,"’ Chambon said, port later to Ned. ten to T’Fan’s poor words,” Ned and Ned marveled at the glitter of ".’ust the same, I’d like to talk | answered imperturbably. his eyes. to ahis T’Fan,” St. Pierre continued. Virginia took time to draw or.e They drove into wiiat was left of “He may know more than he lets long, steadying breath. "They were the city. The French governor, a on.” very good words. T’Fan: I’ll hear dark man named St. Pierre, wel- An Annamese servant in uniform the rest some other time.” corned the visitors, and made them spoke rapidly in French in the govThe cars were loaded and ready comfortable in the big, rambling ernor’s ear. to start Five miles up the road they guest bungalow. “Lord, the man is outside now, would strike the open savannahs of “Tonight you shall dine with mA,” waiting with lanterns to guide your interior Laos, and all danger of am- St. Pierre told them. “And tomor- guests back to the bungalow. And bush by the Kha savages would be row you shall see the Car* of the Nokka, Madame’s maid, is there over. In the meantic.*, Ned sug- Million Buddhas, once the -.oly-of- also.” gested that Chambon ride in one of holies of the Laotians and still one “Perhaps, Excellency, you should the rear cars and stay out of sight, of the greatest wonders of the talk to him tomorrow, at your lei“I do not think the little jungle world.” sure,” Chambon broke in. “And Virtnen will attack in daylight,” Ned During U* unpacking, Ned man- gj n ia—send word to Nokka to go said. “Yet they may fly an arrow aged to s->ai a quiet word with Vir- back to her.quarters and stay there from the brush beside the road. ‘Bet- ginia. jjer old bones will take fever from ter the rice-pot in a hovel, than a “Are you going to Le just ar. on- the night air, and we do not desire funeral with many drums.’” looker, or will you ,ezd a hand"” a sick servant in our party.” "That's right, Andre,” Griffin “I’m going to help you all I can.” 'a • broke in. You lay low till we’re out And how lovely she looked, with »‘ an;l she saw t J h f yl i ng ’ of Kha country.” little red cloud in each cheek. not de X L b ° n But there was no sign of the little “Oh. you only knew—” Nokka No dnnht Bp savages along the road and in a few “What shall Ido first?” she broke the e’ovprnor wnnia cp th minutes they were on the open pla- W, calmly. „4 S ant; Xb teau. Even so, Ned found it hard to “Get the keys of the room where the mo ther of an nut l/u/h 6 * 3 believe that they had seen the last Chambon has stored the curios, and ‘ ’ bacon. lof the Khas. bring them to me after the dinner 1 his was mysterious and sinister The highland they were crossing party. We’re going to look for F noug j’ and ~ e , need not oo ' c now was once the rich heart of Laos, something.” beyond, over his shoulder, to the The wild prairie still bore the traces In his native garb, Ned could not forml ® S3 shadow of some darker, of old dikes; vestiges of dnee- be invited to the governor’s table 7 10^. t ® rrlf >’ ln J mystery, beginning thronged cities dotted the plains, but he had told Virginia everything’, ta th icken under the lamp. ProbI and at every little crossroads stood a and she looked and listened in his ably . ll wa3 only a fi S m ent of her , ruined pagoda. At noon they left place. Griffin had never seen her own tancy l , I the road to visit the Hills of the eyes so bright, or could recall when (Jo be continued.) White Jars. - ' she had looked, au tavala. with a hich r , , b ’ J* 11 "”
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, .lI'LY 7, 1938.
|day. with four cases docketed, Paine announced he expected to J dismiss charges in each case because of the anuiveraary. But the I four defendants had chosen not t»
, [appear and their bonds were fori; felted. —oLoot Makes Jail Dinner ! Miami Fhi. <U.R> Failure of !•<■
lOENT-ADS
.♦ RATES I One Time—Minimum charge of 2Sc for 20 words or lees. Over 20 words, 1 '/<c per word Two Times—Minimum charge | C f 40c for 20 word, or lewOver 20 word. 2c per word for the two time.. Three .Ime.—Minimum ch.rg of 50c for 20 word, or lewOver 20 word. 2J4c per word for the three time*. I Card, of Thank. - Obituaries and ver.e.— | Open rate-dl.play advertising I 35c p.r column Inch. FOR SALE FOR SALE — 4 used gasoline range ; stoves at bargains, used ‘.roner,: good riding breaking plow. Decatur Hatchery. FOR SALE — Three-day-old calf, i Theodore Thieme, Phone 719-A.' Call in evening. 15 ‘ 3IX
' FOR SALE—Lot on Mercer Ave.. , south of rail road on west side _ lof street. Call or write E. W. Mey- F ers. 319 Citizens Trust Building. J Fort Wayne, Indiana. Phone A. j 1312 157-6tx ■ — ■ FOR SALE —Two rabbit hutches. in good condition. Sold cheap. I > Fred Colchin, 403 Fornax St. ] 157- - , , i FOR SALE — Used furniture:. i stoves and pianos; studio couch- j es, ranges, buffets, oil stove, sew- , ing machines. This merchandise . will sell cheap as we need the , money. Sprague Furniture Co. ; 158FOR SALE —Special this week J 1,000 White Rock. 1,000 Barred I . Rock chicks at bargains. Some j ! started. Decatur Hatchery. 158-3 t I FOR SALE —Used tires and tubes. Cheap. Fogle Service Station. 334 N. Second. 158-3 t I FOR SALE—Good 9x12 rug. F. V. ’ Mills, 343 Mercer Ave. 159-3tx i MUST SELL AT ONCE Small Baby Grand Piano, with bench, on ac- [ ' count of customer being unable to . ■ complete payments. Will transfer 1 (this account for $138.70. payable $S per month to responsible party. Please give reference and we will advise where piano may be seen. i Address box 512 care Democrat. j 159-3 t I USE IDEAL Electric Fencers, j Guaranteed results. Price installed. 110 vt. model $12.50; i> vt. Battery model $15.50. Call or write ; E. M. Rice, agent. 418 E. Water St.. Berni'. Ind.. Phone 389. 159-121 x FOR SALE —We still have two; small motors and a couple hundred feet of pipe left. Also steam I ; radiators, boiler, stoker and pipe fittings at half price. Dick Burdg. . 159-
FOR SALE —Visible gasoline pump with hose. Fred Foster, Monroe, Ind. 159-3tx o One Man Killed In Auto-Truck Crash Lowell, Ind., July 7—(UP)—FunI eral services were being arranged i today for T. W. Keefe, 55, of Veedersburg, who was killed instantly in an automobile-truck collision on i U. S. Highway 41, two miles south of here yesterday. The driver of the truck, whose ; name was not learned, escaped injury. it was reported. The vehicles I collided head-on, according to po- | lice. . i lice to catch a chicken thief pro- ‘ vidcd an exceptional treat for j prisoners in city jail here. The (Negro, pursued by police, dropped i his loot —ll young chickens, all dead and dressed for cooking. Of- | flcials sent the chickens to the city I jail kitchen.
HURRY! HURRY! SATURDAY FINAL DAY for this Special. ORIENTAL WALNUT DINING ROOM SUITE Butt Walnut Inlays, extension table, buffet, oak drawer interiors, host chair, five straight chairs. $69 Phone 61
, miscellaneous CALL FRANK BURGER to move dead Stock. Will pay tor Uve ; li()l . sl .s. Day or night .erviee. 1 hone . i piled. Hailey Roop SiO-A. 152-tt I NOTICE Parlor suites recovered. We re-cover and repair anything. We buy and sell furniture. DecaUpholster., Phone 420 145 South Second St. 155 30t .Q— ’ WANTED WANTED — Plumbing and heating sales and * ?r vice. 1’ B. Hebble. 222 South 2nd ; street. Phone 363 from in. to •"> p. m. WANTED — Light work and odd j jobs. Phone 9«8. 738 Mercer Avenue. 159-3tx FOR RENT
FOR KENT—Five room all-modern house; hardwood floors, furnace. Dyonis Schmitt. Phone 79. 159 3t FOR RENT — Modern house on Mercer avenue. Phone 383. 159-3tx FOR RENT — Uptown, modern apartment, suitable for 1 or 2. Also garage. Mrs. W. J. Kuhnle, 127 N. Third St. 159 3tx FOR RENT—Modern 8 room home opposite new high school building on Third street. Modern 6 room home on Fifth street between Madison and Jefferson Streets. A. D. Suttles, agent. 159-k3t o * Test Your Knowledge | ; Can you answer seven of these | ten questions? Turn to page j Four for the answers. » ♦ 1. Name the colors in a rainbow. [ 2. Where did the Allied and Geri man delegatee sign the Treaty of 1 Peace after the World War? i 3. Os which state is Harry W. I Nice the Governor? 4 How many centimeters are in I I meter? 5. What is the nickname f.ir Montana? 6. is the moon enveloped in atmosphere? 7. What is the species classification of lobsters? 8. Who won the recent French j hard-court tennis singles championi ship? 9. Name the fourth ranking state | in area in the U. S. , 10. Name the last letter of the ' Greek alphabet. COURT HOUSE Mariage Licenses Paul Hawk, Berne farmer to Delores Fickert. Berne.
Filmore Disnian. Lima. Ohio laborer to Bessie Gilbert, Decatur. John Teynor, Bucyrus, Ohio highway employe to Ada Mae Mathews, Decatur. Paul Custer, lima, Ohio caremaker to Mary Routson, Decatur. Charles Deltsch, Findlay, Ohio oil treater to Helen Tate, Decatur factory employee. Peter J. Neuenschwander, Berne harness shop merchant to Mary Ann Norr, Berne seamstress —o . Stay Os Execution Is Refused Killers Indianapolis. July 7—(U.R) The Indiana supreme court today refused a stay of execution for Hugh Marshall, Jr., and Vurtis Neal, scheduled to die in the electric chair tonight for the murder of an Indianapolis druggist. Their attorneys said they would appeal to Gov. M. Clifford Townsend for the stay on the basis of a writ of error petition filed in Shelby circuit court today.
' i'll -E PUBLIC HI. t RING FORM MJ. |OR I ai > ’fr r « b y given that the V I in, A]'"holi. Beverage Board of . Adani. aunty. l n d| ana win at 9:00 A. he ,? th rtß y "f July l»»s at ' A’iditor , « t Offt” nn J, lsßioner 8 Koom ln <■ 'v 1 o,f *■' Court House in the i t‘L ’ e ,'' alar in said County, beor 'the f,i ot ll,e application questing i,r hK n! ‘ me,, P«r»on«, reJ. ,iJ*L 11 0 wue t 0 ,h e applicant, of iu °A l i at J?" hereinafter set out. < f thL Alcoholic Beverage Permit i ana „iii hereinafter designated reive i, / 8a d ~me an<l place, Tei.ers , f l a atl °" conc «rnlng the fitnrletv ■| d “Pl’ilcant. and the profur to L.'Y" ns t,le Permit applied mine? nX aPPIi ' anE the prePiac°e7 e ioßE i,< il u ,‘ r ' “ ,4 ® 3 - (Haw>y» Retailer n ® erne —Beer the a imb!'ie ,!S ! lC i ati ' J " "’ lll be °P en to iI» requested d PUbHc Participation 'tndiana hv V7 era »e commission of j Indiana by John F Nnonan l Hugh A Barnhart 1 " | Excise Administrator —
N - A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined . Glasses Fitted . HOURS 8:30 to 11:30 1 2 .30 to 5:00 Saturdays. 3:00 p. m . Telephone 135.
MARKETM DAILY REPORT OFiJ AND FOREIGN marS —■ — Brady’s Market f or Crslgvllle, Ho.gl ind Clossd at U — ■— Corrected July , ■ No commission and no n Veals received everjJ 100 to 120 lbs. 120 to 150 lbs. 150 to 225 lbs. 225 to 250 lbs ”1 250 to 275 lbs 275 to 300 lbs. 300 to 350 lbs 350 lbs., and up Roughs Stags Vealers Spring lambs Spring buck lambs ......jj Yearlings EAST East Buffalo, N. Y , Ju|.; —Livestock: Hogs, 100; trucked | u| lbs., 15-20 c higher. and choice 180-210 lbs.., quoted. $10.15. Cattle, 100; steady; and heifers. $7.15; mediua $6.25-16.50; plain and i cows. $5.50-$6.35; cutter i $4.10-$5.25. Calves, 100; vealers, gn, down. Sheep, 100; spring lamj changed; medium to good, ing strong weight bucks # and wether selections w $10; fat ewes $4 down. FORT WAYNE LIVESTJ Fort Wayne, Ind., July; —Livestock: Hogs, steady to 10c higkg 200 lbs., $9.60; 200-220 IH 160-180 lbs.. $9.55; 22M11 $9.30; 240-260 lbs. $9.05; I lbs., $8.85; 280-300 lbs.. |!5 326 lbs.. $8.50; 325-350 Ibs.j 140-160 lbs., $9.25: 12W4 $8.75; 100-120 lbs.. sß.tt. Roughs, $7; stags. $6. Calves. $9; lambs, $8.50; d lambs, $6. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOS July Sept, Wheat 71 .721 s ; Corn 57% .59,4' Oats .27% 26% CLEVELAND PRODLCI Butter: firm; extra 304.1 ards 29.
Eggs: firm: extra grade 22. extra first 20. current 1 Ift’-a. ordinary first 17'?. . Live poultry: weak: bend 19; ducks: fancy Gand up H age run 12. Muscova andssi Potatoes: Virginia WhM 1.70; California Whites S bag of 100 lbs : Ohio 0 $1.65; Virginia Whites 11 bbl.; North Carolina $26“ INDIANAPOLIS LIVES!! Hog receipts 6."00. holdn Market steady to 2t> centsi 160-260 lbs. J9.20-9.Sd: 25H J 5.55-9.35; 300-400 Tbs. ti! 100-160 lbs. JS.SO-9.50. Sol steady, mostly $7.25-5.!5. Cattle 1.200. calves 7M. and cows strong to 25 cent*: heifers strong; strictly choice steers $10.75-11.35, steers mostly $9.50-10-loads of heifers $9 50-10.95, beef cows $7-7.50; vealeril higher, top $9 st' Sheep 1,200. Spring lambi Bulk better grades W slaughter ewes steady H down. LOCAL GRAIN MARKE BURK ELEVATOR W Corrected July ' Prices to be paid tenwtb No. 1 Wheat, 60 lbs., or beta No. 2 Wheat, etcNew No. 2 Oats j Yellow Corn New No. 2 Soy Beans Rye - CENTRAL SOYA CONew No. 2 Soy Beans 0 — " MARKETS AT A GLAH Stocks higher in acti'f 11 Bonds higher and fan! U. S. governments mW*Curb stocks higher Chicago stocks highet Call money 1 per ce ‘ n ! Foreign exchange in relation to the dollar . Cotton futures barely « Grains in Chicago: * corn firm. . Chicago livestock: IWF lar: cattle strong: sheep Rubber futures easy. Silver unchanged in ■ at 42% cents a STATE TO (CONTINUED Fr.OMj22> Beech Grove to sell ■ 2. She did not see the struggle with s' l but that she hud S> et '■ j In the front room when - at the home.
