Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 25, Number 74, Decatur, Adams County, 28 March 1927 — Page 2
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CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, NOTICES AND BUSINESS CARDS' , ' I ■ n... I. '■
RXBBStHHKBBSHKBMK ■ CLASSIFIED ADS « kx s x *.t xx::xx xx x x x FOR SALE FOR SALE—Hen eggs. single Con.b Reds. 10c above market price Decatur Phone 8614), 71-6 t FOR SALE bnc sow with I.' pigs, and one with ten pigs. Call 797-F. A. J. Lewton. R. R. 7. 72-3tx FORTsALE yea Fold Red row with Calf; one smooth face lard roller; W. H. McHarnes, 867-R.72-3tx FOR SALE Shrubbery, plants and trees. Prices reasonable, if interested write me for special prices. J. I’. Fox. Portland. Indiana.72-6tx Foil SALE Lunch Room and Restaurant, priced right for quick sale 111 health reason for selling. Write Box V. B. % Democrat72-3t FOR SA Lt! 2 Buggies i ouehorswagon. Good 12 inch plow. Shed. 12 x 18 Hip roof. Inquire 334 S. sth St. Fred P101he.73-3tx FOR SALE Premier electric va uum cleaner, price $lO. Phone 170. 72-3tx FOR SALE—6 Seven-Month-old Big Type Chester White male pig), lairge enough for Service. Cholera immune. Also cheap horse. H. L. Mnrp.iy Monroe, Indiana Phone 1-27 74-4tx Ft 1 R~SAI.Hr—I good top buggy. Manhau Soy Beans. Corn planter, first class condition at bargain. C. W. Bell, 1 mile east and 3% miles N. of Wa”. 74-3tX FOR SAI'E 2 stands, bed leather davenport, Victrola, library table, phone 142. 74-3tx WANTED WANTED SALESMEN Men qualified by experience and local acquaintance, particularly rural, may obtain highly profitable connection for direct selling of automobile, truck, and tractor lubrication in steel containers, shipped from state branches. We handle delivery, credits, collections. Auto required. Age limits 30-50. Straight commission advanced weekly. Write for interview. Atlas Oil, 213-233 W. Georgia, Indianapolis. 71-6tx WANTED—High school girl, age 17 wants position in home to earn board and room. Call M. F. Worthman, Phone 352.~2-3t. WANTED—To do washings. Call at 121 South 11th st. or phone 1141 72t3 aGk.NTS WANTED—S7S.OO WEEKLY. MAN OR WOMAN WANTED with ambition and industry, to distribute Rawlcigh's Household Products to steady users. Several fine openings in Decatur and nearby towns. We train and help you so you can make up to SIOO a week or more. No experience necessary. Pleasant, profitable, dignified work. Write today. W. T. Rawleigh Co., Dept. 1N2053, Freeport, 111. S-Mx MALE HELP WANTED " $50.00 A WEEK. Reliable man wanted to distribute nationally known Food Products to steady users in Decatur. ,No experience necessary. Write at once. The J. R. Watkins Company. Dept. E-6, 129-137 E. Chestnut st , Columbus,-Ohio. ■ S-Mx ....... . -or--severs, unfurnisueo rooms >i> south part cf town, prefenably. Call 248 73-3 t M ANTED —Rugs dusted and cisterns ' cleaned. Call Willard McConnehev, I phone 1162. 74»3tx| WANTED—At once. 3or 4 unfurnish-1 rooms. H. S. Michaud, phone 104, ; FOR RENT roit HEM—Front bed room, furnished, in strictly modern home, one block from court house. Plioue 170. 70-6tx FOR RENT—At 1228 W. Monroe St? Nice clean housekeeping rooms, furnished. No objection to child. 72-3 t FOR RENT—BO Acre farm in Blue Creek township. Inquire at Martin Thorthman or Phone 352. 74-3te-o-d. RENT—Seven7obm”house,~ fiveacres of ground, 1% miles east of city. Inquire of Mrs. J. E. Ward, Prble Phone. 74-3tx FOR RENT —a room semi modern house on N. 6th St. Suitable for Small family. Call phone 173 between 6 and 7 o'clock. Peru—Used to speeding - to a fire with the accelerator .wide open. Mor- i ris Denner, local fireman, tried the same thing in his private auto. The car overturned and Benner was slightly injured. ■ (> Get the Habit—Trade at Home, It Pays i ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ ' ROY JOHNSON. Auctioneer and Real Estate If you are in the market to buy or to sell your real estate, see me at office, Room 1, P. L. & T. Co. bldg, or phone 606. I GET RESULTS. AUCTIONEER DECATUR, INDIANA < Headquarters Chevrolet Garage Plicae 1011 Phone 125 I
EXXXXXXXX X X X X X X X X : « BUSINESS CARDS « :xxx xx x x xxxx xx x x 11. FROHNAPFEL, D.C. DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC A HEALTH SERVICE The Neurocalometer Service Will Convince You at 144 South 2nd Street. Office Phone 314 Residence 1081 Office Hours: 10-12 a.m. 1-5 6-8 pm. s. E. BLACK Funeral Director New Location, 206 S. 2nd St. Mrs. Black, Lady Attendant Calls answered promptly day or night Office phone 500 Home phone 727 FEDERAL FARM LOANS Abstracts of Title Real Estate. Plenty of Money to Loan on Government Plan. Interest Rate Reduced. October 6, 1924. See French Quinn Office—Take first stairway south of Decatur Democrat. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8 to 11:30—12:30 to 5:00 Saturday 8; 00 p. m. Telephone 135. MONEY TO LOAN An unlimited amount of 5 PER CENT m<>ney on improved real estate. FEDERAL FARM LOANS Abstracts of title to real estate. SCHURGER'S ABSTRACT OFFICE 133 S. 2nd St. 0 — ——o LOBENSTEIN & HOWER FUNERAL DIRECTORS Calls answered promptly day or night. Ambulance service. Office Phone 90 Residence Phone, Decatur, 346 Residence Phone, Monroe, 81 o — o 0 ~c> FARM MORTGAGE LOANS Planned for the advantage of the borrowing farmer. 10 year @ 5%, small com. 10 year @ 51/2%, no expense to you. 20 year @ 6%, Govt. Plan. Interest paid annually. Borrower fixes interest date. CITY PROPERTY Mortgage Loans ~Select Residcccn or T 2-? .TkeFeantUe- BsSStigs ■ Low Rate of interest. SUTTLES-EDWARDS CO. A. D. Suttles, Secy. ♦ Office 155 South 2nd St. 3 -- -0 When a full of nerve axm impulse Hows to any org a n or Sl. part of lhe body it offers natural ■ resistance to dis<loromostTea.sc. Keep the i'.’ spinal adjustments. Phone for an appointment. CHARLES & CHARLES Chiropractors Office Hours: 10 to 12—2 to 5 6:30 to 8:00 127 No. Second St. Phone 628. O 000 —000 — O PUBLIC | STENOGRAPHER Mlmmeographing and Addressing < Office Room 1, Peoples Loan & Trust Bldg Offce Phone 606-Home Phone 1171 MILDRED AKEY O —non —000 0 LEO “Dutch” EHINGER INSURANCE Fire—Tornado—Automobile We insure everything." Over Frickle’s Place Phones 2 and 104. Typewriting Stenographic Work If you have any extra typewriting or stenographic work I will be glad to do it. Phone 42 for appointment. Florence Holthouse Judge J. T. Merryman’s Law Oilice, K. of C. Bldg.
DECATUH DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MARCH 28, 1927.
MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS EAST BUFFALO LIVE.STOCK | Receipts, 4,000; shipments. 4.320; . yes'erday. receipts. 7,000; shipments, ’ ti.nsii; hog receipts, 11,000; holdovers, • 389. market slow, generally 25-35 c t lower; bulk pigs and light lights, , sl2 50 to $12.75. few, 170 to 190 lbs.. $12.251b512 35; bulk. 200 to 225 lbs.. sl2 00(11112.10; heavy weights. $ll.OO 'a $11.50; [lacking sows mostly, SIO.OO $10.50; cattle receipts, 2.250, around steady; top. $12.00 for choice 1.428pound steeds; bulk good 1100 to 1300pound kinds. $10.50(li $11.50; medium grades, all weights. $9.25(fi $10.25; bulk , medium cows, s6.soffi $7.50; bulls around $7.00; few heifers. $7.00 to $9.0(1; calves receipts, SIB.OO, active, strong, to 50 cents higher; bulk veal»i s, $15.50 to $16.00: cull and common, $10.00®512.50; sheep receipts, 7,000. around 50 cents higher; bulk wooled iambs. $16.50; clipped, $14.50 >t $15.00; cull and common wool skins ' sl2 50(o sl4 50; few aged wethers, $11; ' ( fat ewes scarce. Fort Wayne Livestock Market Pigs, 160 lbs. down $11,851 160 to 200 tbs. $11.501 200 to 225 lbs. . $11.35 225 to 250 lbs. $11.20 250 to 300 tbs. $10.60 ; 300 to 350 lbs. $10.50 i Calves ’ $8 @ $13.50 I Receipts: Hogs, 150: Calves, 200; Sheep, 50. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Wheat: May $1.33%; July $1.38’4; Sept. $1.21?%. cohi: May 71%c; July 76%c; Sept. 79’hc. Oats: May 45%c, July 44c; Sept 43c. LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET (Corrected March 28) Fowls 21c Chickens 19c Leghorn Fowls 14c Leghorn chickens 13c Geese 12? Ducks 14c Eggs, dozen 21c LOCAL GRAIN MARKET (Corrected March 28) Barley, per bushel 60c Rye, per bushel 80c New Oats (good) 37c New Yellow Corn (per 100) 70c New Yellow Corn 70c New Wheat $1.15 LOCAL GROCERS’ EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen . 21c BUTTERFAT AT STATIONS Butterfat, pound ... 46c COURT HOUSE Net Stanford Wagoner Recently, a basterdy case was filed in the circuit- court naming Sanford Wagoner, cf Monroe, as the defendant It is reported that several persons have confused that name with Stanford Wagoner, of Decatur, Stanford Wagoner, of Decatur, is not the defen- ' dant in the case. Suit On Note Filed A suit on a note, iu which judgment for $2,500 is demanded, was filed in .. —— . . ■ Will shire Ohio, against Earl W. Moser and Edward J. Ahr. Attorneys Conn, Hoke & Wright, and Clark J. Lutz are counsel for the plaintiff. Inheritance Tax Report An inheritance tax report in the 1 estate of Aaron C. Augsburger showed tne total net value ot the estate to bes7lß.oß, and no inheritance tux was , owed. Opposing Diversion Os Water. Washington, March 28. — (United Press.)—Opposing states of the Lake Michigan area today began their final drive against the diversion ot the lake’s waters into the Chicago river for sewage purposes. Representatives from Ohio and Indiana appeared before Charles Evans Hughes to give rebuttal testimony to the effect that Illinois is 'stealing' the water. mitui: or (18 11 m:i i i t:ni;vr or i:s t vrn B<>. a:nt» Notice is hereby given to the credi- | tors heirs, and legatees Matthias Miller dei-easoil to appear in the Adams (’li-.'oit Court, held at Pecatnr. Indiana, on the 2(1 day of April. r.».’7. and sh iw cause, if any. why the I'INAL SETTLEMENT ACCOI'NTS with the estate of said decedent should not lie approved: and said heirs are notified to then and their make proof of heirship, and n I ceive their distributive shares. MAItY <'. MILLEH. Executrix ■ Irccatur Indiana. March 26. 1627. I'Ted T. Schurger, Attorney March 2x A- I NOTH i: <ll I IX VI *1 ITI lIME.Vr Os EST vrE \<> g3.'M Notice is hereby given to the creditors. heirs and legatees of Thomas I- deceased, to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, Indiana. ; I.n the 27 day Os April. 1627 and sh >u eaus>-. if any. why tlie FINAL SETTLEMENT ACCOI'NTS with the estate of said decedent should not be approved and said heirs are notified to then and their make proof of heirship, ami reI celve their distributive shares. IHVI.N F. FOLEY, .Administrator Decatur'lndiana. Marell 28. 1627 I Lenhart, Heller nml Seliurger Ally March 28 A-1 II- rMKAT OF MIJHVIBTH ITUIt Notice is hereby given. That the undersigned h:— been app'iinted Athnln’strator till estate of Warren .1. Case, late of Adams County, dcieascd. The ,'State Is probably solvent. Calvin "' Case, Dessie Shell Administrator. , March IS, (627. J. W. leeple. Attorney Mar 21-25- Apr '.
‘£3 THE ' fIKITCHENm H i«27. We»t®rn Newspaper Union ) I know not whtre his Islands lift their fronted palms In air, I i nly know, I cannot drift, bt- , yund Ills lore and care. V/AYS WITH SWEETBREADS RweetbroniN are perishable meat > ami in tlie worm weather of spring i comes on, will be more I plentiful. When the price is "” t l ir °l , ll , * , * ve , ' lt ‘- v U?should be frequently 1 Used. L Braised Sweetbreads. I —Place iu a baking pan ' 11 layer of new peas, ' Mpf' small carrots and new [xjtutoes; on this bed of vegetables place parboiled sweetbreads with i a few cubes of fnt sail pork. Add : enough of the stock in which the ‘ were cooked to cover the segetables. Cover tight and cook for folly minutes. Season with salt and pepper during the cooking. “ 'j In almost every method of serving sweetbreads they need the following ' preparation: Be sure that they are II fresh, as they spoil very quickly. Remove all tlie skin, fibers and tubes | without breaking the sweetbreads. Soak in cold water to keep them firm and to extract the blood. Drain and put to cook in simmering water slightly salted and with a tablespoonful of vinegar to a quart of water; simmer for twenty minutes, then plunge them into ice water to keep them firm and white. If they tire to tie baked, wrap them in a cloth and put under a weight to Hatten them. Sweetbreads in Gelatin.—Cut cooked sweetbreads into small dice, using two cupfuls. Soak a tablespoonful of gelt.tin in one-fourth of a cupful of the broth and dissolve it in one-half cupful of hot Uroth. Add the sweetbreads. < ne tablespoonful of lemon juice and salt and pepper to taste. Stand the mixture In a pan of ice water, stir frequently and as it begins to stiffen, fold in one cupful of whipped 'cream i.nd two tablespoonfuls of minced parsley. Turn into molds and chill. Serve cut into slices laid on crisp lettuce. with salad dressing. Creamed Sweetbreads. —Parboil a sweetbread, cut into one-half inch cubes or small pieces. Reheat in one cupful of white sauce and serve on toast or In patty shells, or timbale cases. Sweetbread Salad.—Cut fine cooked sweetbreads, mix with celery and t tsxoiinalse. Serve on lettuce. I 77i e J i & L rsl ■ 'c.. 1527. Western Newspaper Union.l The ones who mean to win their j stars For th® deeds they shall have wrought Won t have too many sleeping cats Atta -1 to their <rain. of - -wiinriiinr'— —Nixon Waterman COMMONPLACE DISHFS When <i small amount of meat must supply the main dish for the family It may be pieced out m in the following manner: Saked Sausage I j-82^-—With Rice. —Cut ' — ■ pork sausages into 1 IMF thin slices; butter "T^Wm■!i a bl,,<in S d'’* nn,i i till with cold boiled | rice. Moisten tire 1 rice with beef broth, gravy or beef extract, spread the sliced stfusages over lhe top and bake in a hot oven until the sausage is crisp. Kentucky Batter Corn Bread. —Take two cupfuls of corn meal, three eggs j (beat well), one teaspoonful of salt, one tnblespoonful of fat, mix with milk to a soft batt»r to pour. Pour into buttered shallop tins and bake in a hot oven. Hot Cheese Sandwiches. — F.reak open hot baking powder biscuit, spread with butter and lay In a thin slice of good flavored cheese. Cover with a hot cloth and serve quickly. With a <ii[i of tea and a dish of fruit, this • makes a nice lunch. Baked Hash.—Butter a shallow bak- | Ing pan and pile In chopped seasoned veal with a hard cooked egg or two finely chopped, season with salt, pep- i per. melted fat and a given pepper | finely chopped: wiisten with a little gravy or broth and bake until crisp. Potato Soup.—Peel one-half dozen potatoes and put to cook In boiling salted water to cover, in a saucepan put three tahlespoonfuls of butter anti when melted add two or three sliced oidons ; cook until slightly yellow, then add somo of the potato water and finish cooking. Mash the potatoes, draining off all the water over the onions and add hot milk, salt and butter with tli" onions to the potatoes. Serve unstrained, or if preferred the soup may be put through a sieve and then reheat. Chicken Custard.—Take one-half cupful of strong chicken broth, add | one-half cupful of milk, one egg, salt ' and pepper to taste. Strain into cups and bake In hot water. This'is especially good f or invalid cookery. KtW-c. I
Nearby and Yonder £ / By T. T. MAXEY / O XNXXXNXNNXNX WNU Service A City Hall Extraordinary PHILADELPHIA Is a big city. Obviously a big city hall was needed to care for Its affairs. Accordingly, work was begun In the early sevenlies, at tlie cross roads of Broad ami Market streets, on a monstrous structure which lias proved to he the most strikingly outstanding civic building In all America. Built of Massachusetts marble on a granite base. It Is rich In exterior decoration. Constructed in the form of a great hollow square, it has a very large central court. Including this court, it occupies about six and onehalf acres of ground. The design Is such that while It appears to be but four stories in height, the interior is divided into eight floors, composing some fourteen and one-half acres of floor space, which Is cut up Imo more than five hundred rooms. Its ninety foot-high walls are surmounted by entrance pavilions which are flunked by corner pavilions. A great central tower rises out of the court. This tower is ninety feet square at the base and is crowned by a thirty-seven-foot statue of William Penn—tlie founder of the city, making the maximum height, some say, about five hundred and forty-eight feet. Four giant clock dials, having minute hands eleven feet long and weighing upwards of two hundred pounds each, tell the time to passers-by. The time is kept by a master clock, said to be both vibration and temperature proof, located one hundred and forty feet below tlie dials. Penn's hat is surrounded by a row of electric lights which, ’tis claimed, are visible thirty miles away on dark nights. <©. 1927, Western Newspaper Union.) : AXNNXXSXSSX O Nearby and Yonder £ Z By T. T. MAXEY I.XXXXXXXXXXX O XMkMkMXXXXSiI WNU Servica ( Magnolia Gardens ON THE little Ashley river near, quaint old Charleston, S. C„ < (here is a twenty-four acres Magnolia garden that Is said to be tlie most' beautiful In this world. An-enrap ! lured visitor long age declared It to be ’’A garden spot so lovely it seems 1 , to have been dropped from a fairy tale.’’ Tlie magnificence and the enchantment of this fairy-like place grow with I passing years. Each March and April . ft unfolds a riotous glory of azalea, japonica and wisteria blossoms, which run the gamut of color from the most delicate shades of heliotrope and pink to the deepest shades of purple—perfuming the country roundabout These gardens are almost a cen--tury old. Part of a large and worthy estate known as Magnolia-on-the-Ash-i ley, they were so named because a | Reverend Drayton who planned them | brought to them from far-off places ■a famous azslea an J other rare plants. The flower beds are laid out with [ backgrounds of vines and shrubs, set • i ;t:;d [Bibciervii < .■'TIM 'j’Yiu'e stirM'uwra' vv, i "I , .ate seen gardens, many gardens, In ! England, in France, in Italy; I have seen what can be done in great hothouses, and on great terraces; what 1 can be done under a roof, and what < an be done in the open air with the rid of architecture and sculpture, and [ ornamented land and water, but no horticulture that I have seen devised ' by mortal man approaches the earthly enchantment of these azalea* ” <(c* 1927. Western Newspaper Union.) : ixxxxxxxxxxx o * Nearby and Yonder Z By T. T. MAXEY xy ::xxxxxxxxxxx o xxxnx\nxxxx3 WNU Servica Our Largest Telescope ON THE summit of Mount Wilson, near Pasadena. Calif., at nn elevation of 5.704 feet above sea level, where the percentage of clear sky is exceptionally high, tlie Mount Wilson observatory—one of the largest Institutions for astronomical work In the world —was built. Its mission is “to . study the structure of tlie universe and the evolution of celestial bodies, i with primary reference to the sun." I Here the-blggest-of-all telescopes Is In use throughout every clear night. The refracting surface Is a glass mir- | cor 100 inches in diameter, almost 13 I inches thick and' weighing 9.000 pounds, which required years to grind, shape, test, polish and silver. It Is held In a skeleton tube 11 feet in diameter and 40 feet long. The movable’ part* of tills telescope weigh nearly 100 tons, rest on a massive concrete pier, covered by a steel dome 100 feet high and 100 feet In diameter, the upper portion of which weighs about 700 tons and rotates so that the roof opening may face any section of the sky. About 40 electric motors and some 17 miles of wiring take care of the movements of the letesco[ie. The light-collecting power of tilts instrument is said to be 250.000 times greater than that of tlie human eye. This makes possible tlie photographing of the faintest stars and brings to the photographic plate no fewer than ino.fWi.noo stars which, it Is claimed, no other telescope esn reach. (©, 1927. Western Newspaper Union.)
WINS PENNANT : Mrs. A drain Lenhart’s School Wins Honor The district school in Washington township which la tuught by Mrs. Adrian Lenhart, of this city, was one ot the two schools in Adams county to win a pennant for successful participation in the national health crusade put on by the Indiana division ot the National Tuberculosis Association, it was learned today. Last Saturday, the Daily Democrat carried a story announcing that the parochial school of the Amish chureh in Monroe township was the only scliogl to win this honor. In addition to the pennant awarded to each of the two schools, each pupil received a pin. A pennant was awarded to each ot the two rooms in tlie parochial school. The health crusade lasted for twelve weeks, during which time each scholar wes required to do fifty-four “health chores” per week. These “health chores" included certain physical exercises, drinking four glasses of water per day, brushing their teeth twice daily, sleeping with a window open, etc. " Attorneys In Libel Suit Enjraije In Heated Battle Cumt Room, Detroit, Mich., jfarch 28 —(United Press)—The Ford-Sapiro libel trial took its noon adjournment today in the midst of another brawl of attorneys and with the question of a postponement or even a mistrial
~ -■ — ' . ■ - ■ —NO. 165— BANK STATEMENT REPORT OF THE FINANCIAL CONDITION OF THE PEOPLES LOAN AND TRUST COMPANY at Decatur, in the State of Indiana, at the close of its business on March 23, 1927. M. KIRSCH President H. M. GILLIG Vice-President W. A. LOWER Secretary F. B. HITE Ass't Secretary RESOURCES LIABILITIES Loans jind discounts $395,690.48 Capital stock —paid in $ 50,000.(W Overdrafts 100.49 10.0W.W U. S. Govt Securities 500.00 u p _ Other bonds, securities, etc. 1.000.00 Undivided Profits —Net 2,742.53 Banking house 16.7W.00 nd depoFhs $201 . 852 S 6 Furniture and fixtures 4.46a.25 Other real estate owned 16,730.00 Demand certiflDue from trust companies cates 172.033.6 S banks and bankers 27.315.43 Savings deposits 44,665.22 Cash on hand 15,036.71 Certified chwkß 149.35 Cash items . 3,849.34 Cash Short 34.94 418 ’ 7# ! Total ...._ $481,442.64, Total $481.44..t>4 State of Indiana. County of Adams, ss: I. W. A. Lower, secretary of the Peoples Loan and Trust company. •Decatur, Indiana, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true. W. A. Lower. Secretary. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 28 day of Marell. 192,. (seal) Dorothy Walters, Notary Public. My cohnnission expires October 20. 1930. REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE NATIONAL BANK AT DECATUR, IN THE STATE OF INDIANA, AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS ON MARCH 23. 1927 \ RESOURCES Loans and discounts, including rediscounts, acceptances banks, and foreign bills of exchange or drafts, sold w-ith indorsement of this bank (except those shown in Item 1-b) . . $702.193.6.. ~ Total loaus ’ i24»W Overdrafts, unsecured U. S. Government securities owned: Deposited to secure circulation (U.S. bonds par value)sloo,ooo.mt All other United States Government securities (including premiums, if any) 4,600.0 b Total •(-, 748 tut Other bonds, stocks, securities, etc., owned ''-'ssnofl Furniture and fixtures iVG’fil Real estate owned other than banking house . .. 'r s f. Lawful reserve with Federal Reserve Bank hi Hl Cash in vault and amount due from national banks 1 '’■ B Checks on other hanks in the same city or town as reporting bank _. (other than Item 12) Total of items 9. 10. 11, 12 and 13 $108,517.62 Redemption fund with U.S. Treasurer and due from U.S. Treasurer Other assets, if any Total $1,020,828.37 LIABILITIES Capital Stock paid in Undivided profits $ 3,277.58 Reserve for depreciation 600.00 $3,877.58 . s --- )S Less' current expenses paM Circulating notes outstanding . Amount due to state banks, bankersand trust companies " Cashier's checks outstanding Total of items 24, 25, 26. 27 nn<i2B $34,756.38 Demand deposits (o'her than bank deposits) subject to Reserve (deposits payable within 30 days): „->.tsi!64 Individual deposits subject to cheek "' J '' Total of demand deposits (other than bank deposits (subject, to Reserve, Items 29, 30. 31, 32, 33 and 34 . .$252,480.61 Time Deposits subject to Reserve (payable after 30 days, or subject to 30 days or more notice, afad postal savings): .ay 921.8:! Certificates of deposit (other than for money borrowed) i ss'ij Other time deposits lUjm- • Total of time deposits subject to Reserve, Items 35, 36, 37 and 38 $509.713.7, Total $1,020,828.3" State of Indiana. County of Adams, ss: ~ I. T. F. Graliker, cashier of the above-named bank, do »olo»*n ' ‘hat the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and Mii«T. F. GRALIKER, €«!»*• Subscribed and sworn to before me this 28th day of March. P3tURCILE AMSPAUGH CHASE, Notary My commission expires April 30, 1929. , C. A. DUGAN. DANIEL SPRANG. J. W. VIZARD. Jgr t Directors.
foremost in the minds us aU At the morning session ' Hanley of Ford counsel had g , notice of a motion for a mtotrl ’** case revised pleadings us lbe * already tentatively a(:ceptp(] court were definitely IKd( . . the If a mistrial is denied, a conth ancc for a Week may be asked * was learned, or for even a I ' period, to permit revision ot theT deuce to be offered by the det CB The court is expected to rule nn the acceptance of the new pie a d ln , perhaps on the mistrial motion | at „ lu the day. Granting of « mi " would end the present proceeding and the case would have to 8t ‘ over again. Natives Fire On Two U.S. Marines In Nicaragua Washington, March 28. — ( u al|( , d Pre”" ‘-Two American marines pt trolling the Leon district in Nicaragm were fired upon yesterday by f our natives, who dropped their arms and fled when the marines returned the fire. Admiral Julian Latimer, commondare of the United States ’spechi service squadron, reported today to the navy department. Latimer reported also that on March 25 a marine corps plane flying between Derio and Matagalpa was tbed upon and hit by natives, who escaped. Latimer did not say whether the plane was damaged. o— — Martinsville — Annuoncement was made here that the Henry Airtight Weatherstrip company will’ move its plant here from Crawfordsville.
