Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 42, Number 52, Decatur, Adams County, 1 March 1944 — Page 3

WEDNESDAY. MARCH 1,1944.

SOCIETY'

WOMAN** C4 UB has GtwSRAt W ETIWG Mr». Bw K. Izi-tion <>t Burna uml T'-ll." al !>■ ,-,,a Msadsy ■ play. '!>:><- ®®RB| BES^H**' 1 *•’'!' ■ MS W*a. jfa «■«•: <i-l>Si-.«' ■| J !«ir BES* < haraet«-i J during ,<,n including Cur Di-xter Fr.mklin us htsae*il'-r cl»-v«-r presents ,jX W««'Mb)r>'d by a large crowd P ,a ) r M “* Roseplayed S&M *dk ! ion ’- Carmens. ' ■ a rii| "Cyrti Vai of wjs uponaocpd |,y ■"* Q. J . K"hm arid Ml- V .'nil Egjffwedif as co-chairman. the rillort busim-s* .*<•* over by Mi** Madeftli ffptbr. * report «,i* made on M[ SSwflyt:h 11,1 "'** t’ashloiied flfafffg W ■ffroiip ~f " r * '‘on:.ole nt friend** <>n Monat the *■ K Ito, ®l:|> Stiahm. wot i,f th.My, BafOS her recent marriage, ' MfMfra- Th* evening w.m spent in were W^^W 13 ’""' a '' l ‘ l •"'■ ,, b > " !l * their annual custom. ], township Home Ei olio entertained their hus--WhA S<Bkeh February meeting. at the Monmouth £Mmnnl Kymn.i-lum \ de'ictou* WtflMfc dinner wa* nerved and WMMII MMnex of bingo vere enI) Wl«en Were awarded to v.ir Mra Harold Owens Vernon the meeting '" hl " IK C!w«o Hkfr and Mr*. EaN DeW«b‘Mr. and Mix Royal Friend. MBlr* 1. I Ho ik. Mr and ■-. Mr and Mr« Wi!M- anil Mrs J C Mpiafepr and Mm .1 • ' Mose. WwPs * r *- ,<a " >> ' ) Ow, ' ,H g«® Speigel Hr and Mrs Mr* Vernon Custer. #n®l*o ph Weidb-r and Churl.* aid of ill. Final .'nr **" ‘ 11,111,1 M,,> m< ‘ el ’" 1 ?'.KT ~ JUICE RECIPE cHcks rheumatic Wain quickly from rheumatic, ar. ihrMbei neuritl. pain, try thl. >rrhome re' Ip* that dre using 'let a pa kags M Compound, a two-week Mi* It Win. a quart of the Julie of * lemon. No trouble at nil and pleas, need only 2 table-p" .nf 11. a day Aften within 4» overnight aplenare obtained If the pain. kl> leave and If you lu better, return the empty and Jtu.F.x will coat you try a. It I. »obl by your ■■nai under an absolute money- »*< fb-lranlee Hu-Kx Compound I. rei-cmtncned t.y Kohne and drug store, every-

B HAS

I It takes thousands of calls each day for Uncle Sam to successfully conduct this business of running the war. Your local telephone exchange is part of the country's vast communication system through which these calls must travel. Please remember when you call long distance to limit your J ■ calls to as short a time as posI sible. Uncle Sam will appreciate I it It’s patriotic, too.

CLUB CALENDAR •ocitty Deadline, 11 A. M. Phontu 1000 — 1001 Wednesday Red Cross Sewing Center, American I-eg ion Home, tp. m. Historical club. Mrs. Vaughn Millikan, 2:30 p. m. Ever Ready Class, Mrs, Bowen. 7:30 p. m. Shakerpeare Club, Mrs. Jesse Sut’on. Jr.. 2:30 p. m. Thursday Cnlon Prayer Service, ground floor Public Library, 7:30 p. m. • Zion Evangelical and Reformed Heidelberg claws, church social rooms, 7:30 p. in. First Vnited Brethren ladles Aid. Mrs Hulyert Gilpen, 120 S. Thirteenth, 7:3u p. m. Naxarene Missionary society, parsonage, 104 N. Eighth, 7:30 p m. Women of the Moose. Moose Home 7:30 p. m. Church of G<»d Missionary Society. Mrs. Emery Hawkins, all day. Methodist Sunday School party, church social rooms. 3:30 p. tn. Union Chapel Ladies Aid, Church Parsonage, 1:30 p m. Salnm Evangelical and Reformed Ladles Aid. Parish Hal), all day. Evangelical Missionary Society, church parlors, 2 p. m. Pleasant Dale Indies Aid, church parlors, all day. Christian church Indies Aid. Mrs. Everett Hutker, 7:30 p. m. Nuttman Avenue U. B. church W M.A.. Mrs. Howard Raver, 7 p. m. Friday First U. B. Work and Win class, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Howel. 7:30 p. m. Women of the Moose public party. Moose Home, 3:30 p. m. Red Cross Knitting Center, American Legion Home, 1 p. m. First United Brethren Vklpry Class, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bohnke, 7:30 p. m. Pocahontas Lodge. Red Mm Hall, 7:30 p. m. Nuttman Avenue U. B church Y.P.M.B. class. Miss Lob Ann Troutner, 7:30 p. m. Saturday American Legion Dance and Entertainment, Legion Home, 10 y m. Sunday Hobo Methodist W. S. C. 8., Parsonage. 7:30 p. m. Monday •Pythian Sister Temple. K. of P. home. 7:30 p. m. Music Department of Woman's eltsb, Mm W P. Hehrock, 7:45 I>. m. the home of Mrs. Hilbert Oilpen on Thursday evening at seven-thlriy o'clock. Mm. W. P. Sobrock Will be hostess to the Music liepartment of woman's ciitti Monday evening at seven forty five o'clock Miss Eleanor Reppert is the chairman of the program and the nnslstlng committee is Mrs. H. W Thompson, Mrs. F. H. Willard and Mrs, Ed Engeler. LINCOLN P. T. A. TO HAVE PROGRAM The annual Foundation program of the Lincoln P. T A. will be presented at the Lincoln s.-hoo' Friday afternoon at two thirty o'clock. A preview of the operetta, ' Rip Van Winkle.” to be presented by the pupils of the «A and 611 classes on March 10. by permission of the Raymond A. Hoffman Co. Chicago, will open the program. The gnomes

■with whom Rip Von Winkle epent his twenty years will present a part of their ail, and .the Dutv h children will give a dunce, "Tulips in Holland.” •ißu’m, Candles, Burn." a candlelighting playlet in memory of those founders in whose hearts the earliest spark of P. T. A was born,, will be given by a group of memtbers. Those taking part In the play will be Miss Rosamond Gould. Mrs. Fells Maier. 'Mrs. Moses. Mrs. Klrehenbauer, Mrs. Clarence Smith. ■Miss Edith Stolt, Mrs. Royal Friend. Miss Georgia Foughty. Mrs. Atto Beehler, Mrs. Chet Reynolds. i.Mrs. Alger. Mrs. Glen Manlier and Mio. Eural Rose. A silver tea will be held following the program. Mrs. Niland Ochsenrider and her committee will have charge. A nursery for small children will •be conducted during the program. The Literature Department of woman's club wiH meet at the home of Mrs. O. L. Vance Monday < venIng at aeven forty five o'clock. The program chairman is Mm. H. B. Heller, and the assisting committee is Mils Eliaaitieth Petenson, Mr«. G. L. Brayton and Mrs. I-eo Kirsch. o, . . — LOCALS Dr. Richard Parrish le attending to business in Indianapolis today. Scottish Rite members will meet at the Masonic hall here Thursday evening to start plans for organising a Scottish Rite club. Cal E. Peterson will have charge. •Mrs. J. 11. Heller entertained her bridge club Tuesday afternoon at her home at 326 Winchester street Lieut. Paul H. MoConnel) of Fort Wayne, reported mlosing over Europe- seven months ago, has arrived in the state* and will lie home in a few days for a visit with hla paren'a. He telephoned them last evening. Mrs. Raymond Kohne. who has ibeen recuperating from an operation performed two weeks ago. la setting along nicely. It is reported, and espected to lesutne her work at the drug store in a f«w day*. Dick Burdg han returned from a trip to Dayton. Ohio where he looked over the Rose Latwn Poultry Farm* managed by Mr Tibbal, who lias a flock of S.oo<* Tom Barron White Leghorn chickens. Imported from England. Dick also visited hia

COLDSs FIGHT MISERY I where you feel K-rub ft C throat, chest and back with time-tested W Vapoßub Today’s Pattern S9OBO fS YL *C>Y y sizes K WK LtT n 12-20 p> VX 3042 lAsl'L) f BSfw '1 W \ iW,| ■ fl Vl t\ ftvr W f\r V'H ■ci* *■ I I

MARIAN MARTIN

The deep yoke flatters a young face and lends piquant charm la this willowy waisted frock Pattern hOW> In a gaily printed cotton It makes you look eheerfn' ar springtime Itself A delight trout the sewing angle, too. For even a beginner It’s easy Pattern POM comes in sties it. 14. 14. Id 20; M » H « M 40. 42. SIM Id takes 2% yards. JS Inch; h yard coot rani . This pattern, together with a needlework pattern of useful and decorative motifs for linens and garments. TWENTY CENTS Send TWENTY CENTS la colas for these patterns to Decatur Dally Democrat. Pattern Dept. 144 N. JeEersoa St. Chicago W. HL Write plainly MEE. NAME. ADDRESS. STYLE NUMBER. TEN CENTS more brings onr IM4 Marian Martin Spring Pat tern Book. New. easyto-make styles Free Pattern printed la book

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

★ WITH* t Sajlllj.

Over London In a Buggy Umdon. Eng., H<j. European Theater of Operations. Mar. 1American soldiers accustomed to a high speed mechanised army, are relaxing in I-ondon by taking horse and buggy touts sponsored by the American Red Cross. The trips take them, in a leisurely fashion, to the Houses of parliament, Westminster Abbey, Whitehall, the blitzed area around St. Paul's Calhedra) and other points of world famous Interest. Among those who made a recent tour of the city was M/Sgt. Herbert A. Buerger of Decatur Ind. Lieut. Fred H. Voglewede la located somewhere In Indi.i, where the bears run -wild and get mean xome times, where the natives drink a liquor made from pine tree sap that make* them crazy and frequently blind* them, and where it takes t hree moat Im to get a newspaper from home. Fred says, "things are going fine, not half as bad as I thought it would be, gutes we can get used to any thing hut hope wo don't have to walk back from here for it's a long stretch'*. "The lieutenant is an old newsboy of the lially Demiocrat. Pfc. Ixrrenz C Thieme Is spending a furlough with relatives and friend* in this city lb- I* attached to the 344th Air Base Sqd ; N.C.A A B , Wlli||ngton. 99. Del. Captain James C. Stephen* of New Haven. Conn., arrived here sister. Merle Burdg at Wright Field, and through her was given a pass that provided ueveral interesting hours. He saw various types of plant* and other war apparatus. Including the B-19, largest freight plane in the world. 'Mr. and Mm. R. A. Stuckey are opening their John's seed store again and will be located ’hl* year in the larman building formerly occupied by the People's restaurant A large stock has been installed ant| they will noon Ire ready far business with those Interested In gardening. Henry Rumple, of Berne, ha* purchased the 16-head “elect herd of Aberdeen Agnus cattle from Dr. Floyd L. Grandstaff of this city, now a captain in the U. S. air force. »

rißehindtheftenerSL

By HARRISON CARROLL ■lag Faatares SysSl'ato Writer HOJ-LYWOOD.—Now that Paulette Goddard has arrived In Africa, it can ba told that her baggage, when aha left here, consisted of a wicker basket

i with fiv* pounds of clothes. Paulette was planning to knock 1 the boys for a loop with bra and short outfits and quite a few dresses, not one of which Wt below her sht’rely knees. She was going to | wear her hair in pig-talla with flowers for ora-

Harris*" Carroll

amenta Iler entertainment repertoire included both songs snd dances and Paramount gave her permission to uae a comedy routine aha did with Sonny Tufts In “1 Love a Soldier.” In the same unit are Bill Gurgen. Ketuian Wynn and Andy Arcari. the accordionist who accompanied Gary Cooper w the South Pacific Errol Flynn sponsored a room tn a nearby hospital and. If what I hoar is true, the one they chose for him is going to cause plenty of laughs among his pair Those two doctors courting Leslie Brooks will be grieved to hear that Mott William F. Middt*<lorf. a Detroit boy. now w No 1 man in her Ufa They met on i bond tour. Such a protest from fare bkeUt M-G-M planning to kiP Wattle Beery again la -Gold Town" that the script Is being re-written to let hkr.i escape with only serious wmrato. Something has to happen to him ’ecsuse bee a stage coach cobber in Jw picture Artie Shaw's medical discharge to now uWciaL He's expected here to a t-w myo ... Pale say George Raft bulked at a needed toneilectomy tai New Tort because be wu' d to arrive in Hollywood bes-. Amita Granville left on her tot. ... Donald O'Conner is in a Twas air fems training camps .. Ada ramesDi *4ams Comedian

yesterday afternoon. He is a pilot in the army air force and has recently returned to the states after 15 months of combat flying in the African theater of war. Hl* marriage to Miss Barbara Jr-ane Duke of this city will take place Sunday. NEW AMERICAN (Continued From Page 1) mainland. British Indian soldiers are hunting down the last Jap units trapped in the Arakan area n. Burma. The enemy plainly is worried. A. BBC correspondent reports from New Delhi that the Japs are enforcing compulsory evacuation of their chief cities. And radio Tokyo reveals that Premier Tojo ha. completed hl* re-vamping of th, navy. Naval command will he retained in the cabinet, which assumed temporary control last week. o—. — Alleged Arsonist Attempts Suicide Hospital Attendant Fails In Attempt Logansport, Ind. Mar. I.—lUPl - The woman charged with starting recent lx>ganeport state hospital flres attempted to end her life last night. The attempted suicide 1s revealed by Cass county sheriff Harold Smith. He says Mrs. Alleen Ott, a hospital attendant, took an overdose of sleeping powder. However, her condition Is not serious and she remains In jail Smith believes that she concealed a bottle containing the powder in her coat lining. The action delayed her trip to Indianapolis for further lie detector tests. In the meantime, police resumed questioning her husband. Janies, also a hospital attendant, who Is held as an accessory. Ho fur. he denies any connection with the flres. He and Mrs. OH have been held under 110,000 bond slnc» yesterday. Mrs. Otto admits starting last week's hospital Are In the women's ward. But she denies other hospital flres a* well as blazes In Birdseye and Evansville, Ind., Toledo, 0., and Weston, W. Va. The woman has Implicated another attendant. Mrs Alma DeGraw, in con nectiou with the Are. The later declares she is Innocent and has volunteerod to take the He detector test In Indianapolis. Two president, Jefferson and John Quincy Adams, were elected to office by congress, having failed previously to poll a majority of the electoral votes.

Billy de Wolfe and Miriam Sterne, Sammy Kay s glamor secretary ... I*at Biddle (shea Rita Hayworths ex-confidante) and her Ice cream manufacturing groom. Oscar H. Hougen, have parted already after only three weeks of marriage. . . . Doria Duane, of Ken Murray's “Blackouts.'* becomes Mrs. Jerry Riley on July 24, the day after his divorce becomes final. Flyers at Dalhart, Tex., have Invited Lynn Bari to personally christen the Flying Fortress to be named In her honor. She makes the trip as soon as she can get time off from “Sweet and Lowdown." Against doctors' orders. Bob Hope got up out of bed to do the old-age sequence in “Road to Utopia." They had to put aluminum dye on his hair which made it bad because the stuff takes five washings to cleanse Incidentally. Bob says this was the first time he'd been sick in bed for IS years. When the electricity was off wring the storm. Lucille Ball, her brother, her sister-in-law. a family friena and two 14-week-old tables had to live in the kitchen, the only room in the hcuse they coulo keep warm Deanna Durbin's sister, Mrs Edith Heckman, had to come to the studio twice a day to sterilise her baby's bottles In Deanna's •ceasing room HOLLYWOOD HI JINKS Lnfae Rainer, who won two academy iwards for emotional acting, has been singing and dancing for soldier* in Africa . . . Come summer and Jinx Fsiseuburg will do a series of plr.ys In Spanish with the Padua Hills players. . . Hollywood's sympathy goes to Screenwriter Tedwell Chapman over the death of his father. Hamann Chapman. In Louisville. Ky. The elder Chapman was a London theatrical producer and was well known In thia country as a designer of stage nets .. . ZaaZaa Hilton, pretty meter of Eva Gaber. will have a try at acting. . . . The lad who gave Hannah Williams the real rush was Ted Howard He was at the Clover Club the last four nights of her engagement. . . . Singer Danny O'Neil showing the town to five of hM old shipmates on the Lexington

Only 80 Congressmen Show Up For Dinner _____ v Company Head Hits Renegotiation Law 'Washington, March 1 tl'Pi— Mtont Wo congressmen actually showed up at the Jack an.l Heintz chicken dinner laet nigh- Every senator and representative in in Washington wa« Invite-1 to the party, held at a leading Washington bote). But many who accepted apparently went secretaries to repreaa&t them. The two coowiu-ni of an Ohio aircraft parts company paid |3io a plate. And when the dinner was over, one partner. William H. Jack, devivered an attack on the r-n<go-tla t lon law Jack pointed out that although his aircraft plant did a 323,00 .000 business In 1942. It ended up 16,000 In the red Then Jack went on to say, ‘‘thl* year we will do a 1150.000.000 bunities*. If the renegotiation board board takes all our profit, a* it did last year, we will have o rescind our promote of job,* for returning uervlcunen.” o Zion Reformed The second mid-week la-nten service will be held in the Zion Evangelical and Reformed church this evening at 7:3 • p. m. The pastor, Rev. William <'. Feller, will apeak on: 'N'aiapha*. the Religious Formaliwt.” Special nutate will ho presented by Mrs. B. F. Shroyer. AH member* and friends, as well as the public are Invited to attend. o MARINE HEAD (Continued From Pasts D shall not do that Vandegraft made this stat«-ment at the opening tally of the American Red Cross campaign to raise 320D.000.U00. He urged the American propio Io support the campaign. pointing to the great services of the lied Cross In all. dating the sufferings of American lighting men on all battlefronts And secretary of navy Knos warned that the government would have to step In and finance Red Cross activities If 'he campaign falls to reach Its goal. But Knot expressed confidence that the goal would In- reached ■ "O " 1 • DECLARES LEND(Contlnued From Psge I) can Chinn become tin- great land base from which we can strike at the hem I of Japan.” And. he went on to ay: "Only If we continue to help arm the airmen, the soldier* and the sailors of llriialli can they play Iheir full part in the Invasions Income.'*

1 f«lp W B»*UK ft The firat official release o f the accident 101 l for 1t»43 was given me by the National Safety Council and h'-re it is: Killed 94.5<H» li. met'd 9 "no.itoo Co*. 45.00 ".'hkl.lKMl. That was Hie toll exactr d from America In the war year ot 1941 not by bullet* on the battle front but by accidental on the home ff •>. It is reported that the tim- lost during the year through accidents o worker*, on and iff the Job was equivalent to a complete shut down for an entire year of war plants employing a total of 15. ’<•« workers Think that over. Mo-a figurro next week. tf — — ■- — The Panama v was opened to commerce Au*a«t 15. 1914. and the first vessel to pass through it was the gov< rumenl craft Ancon with an official party aboard «■■■■■■■■■■■■■■» * - • ll— —— RHEUMATICS! Cjmt to Kohne Drug Store for REINER S KINO L the medicine your -’tends are all talkie ’.»M*t for RHEUMATh Arthritis, Neuritis. L- aago Free Pamphlet. KOHNE DRUG STORE FOR SALE sfcxll—Manila Second Sheets Sic Ream 418X11—14 th White True writer Paper — He Ream SHili-N 1b White Typewriter Paper —1 11 Ream *HIIO-14 ff» White Typewriter Paper —1 24) Seam 4%114—2v Ib. White Typewriter Paper —• 1 48 Ream Hfixll-M 1b White Mimeograph Paper — IM Ream Decatur Daily Democrat 104 Nertl Secend Street

U. S. PUBLIC DEBT PER 1914 IMO im 1041 1044 gg K«in*»r IteMsreb BY the end of the present fiscal year the public debt of the United States will reach an estimated 3135.000.000.000 This Is an astronomical figure far beyond the conception of the individual What it means to him is shown in the chart above aa compared with other years since 1914 In compiling the per capita debt for any year, growth in population has been considered

NEW ARGENTINA iCooilsmU Srio Fa*a D Genera) Ramirez survived crisis after crisis. Ramirez broke relation* with the Axis powers. And it looked a*, if he would try to bring Argentina < loser to the Allied camp But the army men behind the government began to split into factions over this question. And last week, a clique of ultra nationalistic officers struck suddenly and forced

WORK WITH NAVY MEN I J fl fl '

/./ BOUFFONT • •/• FOR HOS,IRY \ *J * ProlonJ the origins! sheer beauty of your battery... j o keep colon dear and fresh. Cleanse m soepless, self’*\X c* » ,Ml "8 B « w,bnt °“' ck **"•• J ' rt ‘ * ,tw *" d k /ft* *« «**«<’ ** d< *’- '“b 10 \ *** <j4in(,| f scented On< w *® u ' W4,S bow< *’ * does tlx Pdlrt of hote- A eonth's supply for... .ft ft coMtiiMthtAsr racxn with tacn nostur pwcnam wmu ova wmr i*»f« SMITH DRUG CO. _ SALE CALENDAR MAR. 2—FRED DICKUB, Huntertown. Ind., Llvo Stock sale. ROY JOHNSON Auct. MAR 2 MRS. LILLIAN ATZ. 4 mile* south of Berne on State Road 2. then •* inilr west. Livestock and farm equipment. Jell Liechty. auctioneer MAR 3 NOAH YOOER. 3 mile* Soulhwejt of Ney. Ohio. Well Improved 80 Acre Farm J. F. fianmann. Auctioneer MAR 3—o. A. EDOY, « miles north of Convoy. Ohio and then W mile east, or 5 miler south of Payne. Ohio on road No. 49 then m miler east ROY JOHNSON. au< t MAR 4- O. P. WHITAKER. 2 mile* north. % mile west of Wren Ohio; one mile south of road 224 on state line then % mile east. Roy 8. Johnson, auctioneer. M\R I—JAMES E. RIKER. Complete line of Good Restaurant Equipment. Willshire. Ohio. J. F. Sanmann, auctioneer. MAR 6 RICHARD BLEEKE. 7 miles northeast of Ihwatui or 3 miles north ol road 224 on road lot and 3 mile* east. Christ Bohnke. auc'ioneet MAR 9 CLARENCE VINING, Celina. Ohio Admr'a sale of Land and personal property ROY JOHNSON. Auct. Public Sale COMPLETE CLOSING OUT SALE. I have sold my farm and will sell at Public Auction C miles North of Convoy. Ohio and then mile East, or 5 mile* South of Payne, Ohio on Road No 49 them IH miles East Friday, March 3, 1944 Commencing at 10:30 A. M Prompt MULES— Oa« span of brown mule*, age 14 yrs., weight 2400. a good •pan of work mules and very gentle 9—HEAD OF CATTLE—9 Holstein cow 8 milking a good flow; Black cow S. due Aug ISth; Red cow I. due Aug 14th: Brown Swiss first calf heifer: Brindle heifer with first «alf by side. Roan yearling heifer; <P»od roan bull coming 2 yrs old. It«-«1 fall bull calf, Red fall heifer calf POULTRY—I 4 White Rock Laying Hens FEED—ISO Wayne oats, sultatil. for seed. 30 bales oats straw. IMPLEMENTS Mc-Deering 10 ft tractor disc, used two seasona; Mc-Deerlng three bottom 12“ tractor plows u*ed two season*. J. Deere two bottom 12" fractal plow; Mc-Deering 7 ft power trac’or mower, like new. can be u*ed with any tractor. Me Deering rotary hoe. like new. Mc-Deering corn planter with fertiliser attachment and tongue truck A IM rod wire. 4 section wo-*d frame spike tooth harrow, used two seasons; .McDiriing hty loads., first class condition. Me Deering side delivery rake: M<-Deering manure spreader, good. Hoosier 12 bole grain drill, goed. J Deere double cylinder web bay loader, first class. Riding cultivator; Four row rdinig beet (or beam cultivator with all attachments. On- long length clover seed roller; land roller. Deering & ft. mower; lilt' 14'' breaking plow. Oood rubber tiro wagon with gondola bed. S'<-el tire wagon 3S Inch good; good two wheel trailer with atock ruck. IH<* hand corn abelter. like new. Cowboy tank heater; 2 iron kettle*. Lard press, grindstone. Block a tackle; Oil drums. 45 galtoa Marathon mot-’r oil. 5 ba-he|* little red clover seed, small tools of all kind* some Household Furniture, and many article* 100 numerous to meat b>n TRUCK 1934 V-« Ford truck short wheel base 4 new 10 ply tiroa on rear wheels. On* new I ply tire In froot. Owe good recap tiro la front and spare all good Truck has grain bed TERMS- -CASH G. A. EDDY, Owner Hoy 8 Johnson—Auet O C. Lehman Clest Hot laasb will ba served

PAGE THREE

President Ralhirc-z to resign In favor of hl* vice-president, General . Farrril. The behind-the-scenes leader in the Farrell government Is said to tie Colonel Perun, head of the socalled colonels' clique. Last night, the new cabinet held its first meeting. And reports uy the meeting broke up In a violent debate. Do not miwi the Men’s Meeting Thursdat 7:30 p.m. (■round floor Library.

Beware Coughs from common coldt II Will WIWWfIPII WffWW That Hang On CreomulAlon relieves promptly because It goes right to ths seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid natura to sooths and heal raw. tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes Tell your druggist to sen you n bottle of Creomubdon with the undemanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION «jr Coughs, Ch*** Colds. Bronchitis