Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 80, Decatur, Adams County, 2 April 1934 — Page 2
Page Two
F CLASSIFIED 1 ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE SO acres. 4 miles soutl un No. 27. H mile east. Price for quick sale, 11.200. Mrs. Beil Kessh-r. 78-3 t FOR SALE Will have frost proo cabbage plants, April 1 and 2nd L. E. Summers, UO'J Walnut St. 79-3 FOR SALE —Brooder house 8 x U 10 rod of wire and posts. Ikai Gould at Estons Bros., 2 miles we> d WUtohlre, O T»3 FOR HALF. — Now Living Roon Sulks $45 to $l5O. Spragiu Furnttnre Co., phone 199. 80V FOR SALE Coming two year oh black mare colt. Sound. R. E Brown. Mile north and mile wes of Mquroe. 80k3t: FOR SALE 5 year old cow. par Durham and Guernsey. Fresl soon. - Chas. Thieme. ■ inilei northeast of Decatur. 80t31 FOR SALE —Red clover seed. $’ buahel; alsike seed. $8 bushel tagged. J. R. Gage. 2 miles east I'-s mile south of Monroe. 78-3 ti FOR SALE—Roan short horn bull IS months old. A good one. D W Laisure, 2 miles east. 2 miles south of Monroe. g-78-3ti FOR SALE OF TRADE—Roan coll coming yearling for good wort horse, also good Guernsey and Jer uey cow fresh. Clarence McKeat 1-4 mile west St. Paul church. 79-3 ti FOR ISALE —New and Used Pianos $35 to $225. We sell on terms Sprague Furniture Co., phone 199 80t( FOR SALE —Brown mare, goot worer. Max Thieme 7 miles north east of Decatur. 79-3ta o FOR RENT FOR RENT —3 rooms suitable foi offices. Newly decorated; plent) of light; heat and water furnished Inquire Niblick & Co. 78-31 _o WANTED MAN WANTED to supply customers with famous Watkins Pro din ts in Decatur. Business established. earnings average $25 week ly, pay starts immediately. Write J. R. Watkins Company, 250-60 N. Sth St.. Columbus. Ohio. Itx WANTED —Light hauling, ashes rubbish, etc. Prices reasonable Phone 1208. 79a6tx Livestock of all kinds. Adams County Community Sale Tuesday. 6:30 P.M. Mrs. Grisso will have truck load of trees and shrubbery. Cows. Horses, Hogs, 2 good young Chester White bears. If you hav > anything to sell bring it to this sale. alt o WE ARE still in the business of cutting hair at 15c. We guarantee to please. Give us a trial. W. A. Fonner, 415 N. 7tR st. Decatur. 78t3x o — COURTHOUSE Motion Overruled State of Indiana vs. George Yake petit larceny, motion for new trial submitted by defendant an>. over ruled. Defendant’ fiiles exception to ruling. Case Venued Ralph Wilder vs. Cora Reber and Earl Reber, partition of real estate motion for change of venue from county tiled, submitted and sustain ed. Estate Case Estate of Ellen C. Pontius, petition and schedule to determine in heritance tax filed, referred tc county assessor. Italians Climb Andes Rome.—(U.P; —A cruise of tourists tind mountain climbers from the Jtalian Alpine Club is en route tc "South America on an “Alps to An des" trip, during which they expect to climb Aconcagua, the highest 4>eak‘of the South American chain PUBLIC SALE I will sell at public auction al my residence, 2 1 2 miles east oi ■Decatur on cement road No. 16 oi 224, on Wednesday, April 4th Sale commencing at 1 P. M. The Following Articles -Dishes, jars, vacuum sweeper, bed and beddintr. feather beds, Union Chapel Church Name Quilt, chairs, stands and other articles. Implements, etc., Double wagor box; stone bed; riding breaking plow; fertilizer outfit for Blacl Hawk corn planter; 16 in. frictior clutch pulley; feed grinder; forks shovels; Carriage; horse collars; hog crates; Stewart horse clipper ,Oil drums. TERMS—CASH. Bert Wolfe Christie Bohnke, auet. Thurman Drew, clerk.
MARKETREPORTS I | DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL > AND FOREIGN MARKETS LOCAL MARKET ] Decatur, Berne, Craigvlll .Hoagland I Willshire, Ohio Corrected April 2 4 No commission and no yardage • Veals received Tuesday Weds needay Friday and Saturday 160 to 210 lbs $4.00 t ■ 210 to 250 lbs. $4.10 ’ 250 to 300 lbs. $4.00 ' | 300 to 350 lbs. $3.75 1 . 140 to 160 lbs s3.2t> 1 ' 120 to 140 lbs $2.2*5 ’ I 100 to 1211 lbs $2.00 i Roughs $2 50 Stags $1.50 ; Vealera* $6.25 • 1..im1» SB.OO ' — ■I FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK t ■ Fort Wayne, Ind.. April 2.- (U.R) ’ —Livestock: Hogs, 5 to 10c lower; 250-31*1* lbs.. ' $4 200-210 lbs., $1.30; 180-200 lbs., $4.15: 160-180 lbs., $1.06; 300i 350 lbs.. $4; 150-160 Ihs., $3.50; 140- ’ 150 Ihs . $3.25; 130-140 Ihs.. $3; 120- , 130 His.. $2.50; 100120 lbs.. $2.00. , roughs. $3; slags. $1 75. Calves. $6 50; lambs. »8.50-$9. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. ■ Wheat .86 .8584 .86*4 Corn .18*4 .5014 -52\* Oats .32*4 .32% .33 EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y., Apr. 2.—<U.PJ ; —livestock: Hogs, receipts. 1.100; holdovers, ■ none; weights above 170 lbs., fair--1 ly active, steady to 10c under Friday's average, lighter weights draggy, 10c to 25c lower, desirable 170 to 250 lbs., $4.85 to $4.90: top $5; mixed weights and plain grades $4.75; better lot 140 to 160 lbs.. $4 to $4.50; pigs and unfinished under- ’ weights. $2.75 to $4. Cattit, receipts, 1,300; steer and yearling trade less active than early, mostly strong to 25c higher; good steers, 900 ,o 1.150 lbs.. $6.50 to $8.25; bulk medium and short , feds, $5.60 to $G.25; heifers. $6.00; few rough 1.400 Ihs., steers, $5.50; little cow supply; market steady; fat cows, $3.25 to $3.50; cutter grades $1.35 to $2.50; medium bulls, $3 to $3.25. Calves, receipts 1,000; vealers ac- ■ tive. fully steady; good to choice. $7.50; common and medium. $1 to $6. Sheep, receipts. 4.500; lambs unchanged; good to choice woolskins | mostly $9.50; similar grades, shorn lambs.s7.so to $7.75 and sparingly : $8; few 50 to S7O lbs., spring lambs sl2 to $12.50. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected April 2 No. 1 New Wheat, GO lbs or better 79c No. 2 New Wheat 5S lbs 78c Old Oats 31c I New Oats 29c i First Class Yellow Corn 58c Mixed corn 5c less ■ Soy Beans 60v to 90c - o Dullness and Genius No genius ever Tins a dull child, and no dull child ever became a genius or ever will.—Albert Edward Wiggam MADE OLICKLT LOANS Small Earv Payments. Liberal Terms. Consolidate Your Bills With Us. FRANKLIN SECURITY CO. Over Schafer Hdw. Co. Phone 237 Decatur. Ind For Getter Health See Dr. H. Frohnapfel Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 311 110 So. 3rd st. Neurocalometer Service X-Ray Laboratory Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 p. m., 6 to 8 p. m. Federal Farm Loans Make application with the Adams ( ounty National i Farm Loan Ass'n., Charter No. 5152, office with the Schurger Abstract Co., 133 : South 2nd street, Decatur. Fire and windstorm insurance accepted in anv old line or Rood mutual insurance co. —————l— N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST ! Eyes Examined. Glasses Fitted HOURS; 8:30 to 11:30 12.30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135.
~~ ' 9 W at Is the name In northern Iluirc Steel Order J Test Your Knowledge ‘° Contracted Today | I Can you answer seven of these j What U cacao? A £ ( „ p| J teae Questions? Turn to page wim wa. Mwnrv itavia Thn, Work for iindreds of at<Hd employ I L—J th * * r,,Wer *’ al? es In the Calumet area thHsummet . .... . ... io ««•>„. ..... t,.ou *'*« assured today with announce 1 \\ hal words are attributed to 1 -■ .Lu k * an* . 1 Wil voiti. liur ouu .1 10, naHnn nwrw PnHflr nient for Moel rail* cost d Julius ( easar when struck by the *V«icn nation own# the tat irk aMftaain Brutus? I island of New Calo.lonia? 2. How many naughts are in one ♦. W'lere is the city of Kilkenny? Tim largest single order. million'.' | 5. What in the legal <erm for the °" o ' ls 3. Who wrote "Variation of Ani- surrender by one etale cr nation " Uuat < i <ag<> am mats and Plants under Domeetka- 1 to another, of a fugitive from jus- ll “' HUho*® »<•’«• comiiany of Gary. t l on? .. the? ; The rails will be rolled for the Chio x th,, it e „r ' , . , , c;igo and Erie and lllinohi Central 4 Nanit the !. Secretary of 6. Name the moat frequently used I .. l n rnsll »u i* State. letter of the English alphabet. . it r „ . . „ . , 1 The I'J.OtHI.iMWI olier represented " 5, From what German wo-dlsoiir 7. whl , was BertW Thorvaldsen? lh ., & word "Dollar" suppoeed to be de- s . tH „ a flsh? . 1 < i * 0 I depression. 5 • 9 Name the New England States. u 6. How are National Guard unite 1(l , )n what y val . <i l( | j anH . g G. — 0 |( maintained? | Blaine run for President? Mrs. Dora Akey ha-s gone to Mun II 7. Who was Euphrosyne? ' —o — eie w tere she will visit until Thurs5 8. Name iltt- r.tpital of Liihnanta Get the Habit — Trade at Home 1 ~~ BL JI r F aafl ial T / fFa > 1 i UK a i ■ sE jk a m£ a , ; r jssgfi aj* SYNOPSIS diate impression than that a casual grate you made before you knew Sailing from France to America ff'ance aft from the forward com- him. a on a. pr aboard the S.S ‘‘Navarre,” Michael panmnway entrance marked the I said he was, like you. dangerLanyard. reformed “Lone Wolf,” saturnine Jack-knife person all ous but somehow sweet, didn t L erstwhile master crook. me et. “lo™ by th««d and English Archie She played teasmg eyes in a pause ! wealthy Fay Crozier, one of his an- nowhere visible. of mock uncerlU*mty- Well if you • tique shop patrons, and her lovely , Perhaps because the wind was must know, f find him far k.s dam daughter £enno Mrs. Crozier freshening, with the sea beginning gerous than he thinks he is and shows Lanyard the famous Habs- brea k out whitecaps, Lanyard far sweeter than he wants to be burg emeralds which she bought se- found the writing-room quite with- thought I mean—very much a cretly to avoid payment of duty out its customary quota of ladies, man; ,that is to say. at heart a Lanyard’s experienced eye discov- assorted as to ages and conditions child. i ers that counterfeits have been sub- but all of one familiar frame of Lanyard gave a little quiet laugh stituted for the gems. He promises mind tritely insaribing post-cards, “If I hadn t lived so long in this to trv and retrieve the emeralds supplied gratis by the steamship, to world I might be more astonished. Lanyard suspects Maurice Parry, a presumably envious friends at home. But I have learned that there are youthful fellow-passenger, who ap- And when, after an hour or so, the women who are born manwise my pears deeply interested in Fenno. J?ng roar of the whistle drove in dear, gifted from the cradle with = The resemblance between Lanyard through his muffling concentration an insight into our hearts that is, and Maurice causes the former to ‘he news that it was noon, the ab- frankly, terrifying. wonder if they are related In a eyes which the man lifted “Nonsense. That all men are bridge game with two card sharks, saw the room otherwise empty. children is what every woman Maurice loses heavily. Lanyard . That it could conceivably matter knows.” „ ... . ioins the plavers as Parrv's part- how long he had been sitting there “And you think Maurice will ba ner, catches their opponents cheat- »>°ne naturally never entered Lana child in your hands? That you ing and threatens to expose them Yard s head. . .. , , won’t need five days more to make unless Maurice’s loss is called off u He ,hen‘ apain to his letter and him call you hard names?’ Later Lanyard tells the apprecia- had plied a lively pen for perhaps “Not two!” She deliberated, but ' tive Maurice that he can repay him fifteen minutes more when a voice with merry eyes “I don’t know. by returning Mrs Crozier’s jewels, pleasingly tuned said at his elbow: though. Maybe 111 change my mind. The youth removes the top of his “ So ‘his is where you’ve been hid- After all. sweet names are sweeter." cane only to find that Lanyard had ing! Maurice and I were looking all At this point one of the ship’s been there before him and had re- ov ££ - ~. , . . . officers poked his nose in at the placed the stolen emeralds with The reflection whieh leaped to his door, trained it like a hunting dog zircons (false gems). Maurice dis- mind—“ Maurice already, eh?”— on Lanyard, and followed it in—a cioses that he is Lanyard’s son and the normal association of ideas, trim young Frenchman with unimwhom the latter believed killed caused Lanyard, as he rose, invol- peachable manners who none the during the war. Though happy at untarily to say aloud: ‘Tenno!” To less comported himself, Lanyard the reunion Lanyard is disap- which he was quick to add: “I beg thought, most mysteriously, for all pointed to fin’d his son a thief. Mau- yo u rpa r Jom-” the world like an amateur underrice explains he was forced to steal “No, no!” the girl gayly insisted, taker -ince boyhood in order to exist. "I like it, M. Lanyard, from you.’ “Monsieur Lanyard, is it not?” Lanyard hopes his son’s interest in “It’s such an odd name and so “I am he. Is there something—" 7enno will continue, for the boy’s delightful, so utterly the only name “The Captain presents his comown good. Detective Crane, whom f or you, one finds it far from easy pliments and will be gratified if Lanyard knew from his "Lone ‘o think of you in a style more monsieur will do him the honor to Wolf" days, warns him that the formal—” consult with him—if convenient, at two gamblers he exposed are “Jack “And anyway it would be silly— once.” Knife” Anderson and “English wouldn t it?—to ‘mademoiselle or Certainly, monsieur,” Lanvard Archie." gangsters, who will seek ‘miss’a minx! Please never call me replied when an astonished wait revenge. anything but Fenno—l shall feel had been prolonged without drawcuadtfo y s 0 mueh more at ease with y°“- >r*R one word of explanation. “MadeUHAPIEK a And do sit down. I’m dying to talk." moiselle, I know, will e .-cuse me." “That reminds me: you haven’t When Lanyard had drawn up an- And gathering up his letters, he answered my question yet.” other chair he sat down, and in stuffed them in a pocket and fol“‘Question’?” grave good-nature prompted: lowed out to the landing. “The one you ducked at the start- ‘About—” “But this way, if you please,” the iff—when I asked what come over “But--of course! —about your officer objected when Lanyard, supvou to make you feel you had a call son." posing himself bidden to wait on the to rescue that punk from a couple of “You are getting on with your Captain in his quarters, made to go tinhorns who weren't doing a thing, siege of his peace of mind, aren’t out on deck. “Monsieur is expected only trying to pick up a piece of you?” Lanyard fenced to cover a in Suite 39, A Deck.” nocket-money.” disordered moment. “Considering Lanyard stared. At this Lanyard gave a slow that you have him at the stage al- “But that is Mrs. Innes Cro:'Ah!” of admiration. “And you ask ready where he can't wait to tell tier’s!” me to believe you slow-witted!” you all his secrets.” “Yes, monsieur.” “I don’t call it any great stunt to “I don’t deserve the credit, real- The officer, while still polite, put tak«*»ot*ce when you don’t run true ly.” The girl had her mother’s on a mulish look, and Lanyard to firm—atn who can mind his own trick of dimpling on those in her after another instant shrugged and business as well as you can.” good graces. “It wasn’t my rude turned to the staircase. “All the same,’ Lanyard an- trooper’s wooing that made the lad What now? And why had his : nounced, “it will amuse me more to tell al!—it was because he’s so guide so pointedly neglected to men- ( see how long it takes you to ferret proud of you, he just had to tell tion, in Fenno’s presence, just where , I out my motive unassisted.” some one or bust” it was the Captain was waiting? And with a laughing shake of his “But had the good taste to choose Granted that his discretion might head. Lanyard took himself off. He you—” be held significant only on the asI wasn’t ready to publish his relation- “Oh, I don’t say he would have sumption that he knew Fenno was ' ship to the Maurice Parry of the been so ready if I hadn’t made eyes Fay Crozier’s daughter—- | passenger-list before he had had at him! But his pride in you was The foot that Lanyard advanced i another talk with the boy and set- the compelling motive, really.” to take the first step down was artled on some tale to account for his “You make me very happy, rested by a hail from the deck manifest prosperity. And although Fenno.” “J say , old boy—half a minute ” any tale would serve as long as both “I should think you ought to be; Lanyard gave perplexed eyes to father and son told it, there was no it’s so marvelously romantic, your the detective, who was lounging in time to be lost, with Crane openly finding each other like this. And the doorway, then humored a slight sniffing already at their secret. . . when I think 1 had something to beck of Crane’s head and turned But Maurice, when again sighted do with it, that it was I who first back. > i from a distance, if still dancing at- drew your attention to him—” “Forgive me, my friend lam in tendance on Fenno Crozier, was no “Yes,” Lanyard thoughtfully as- some haste.” longer alone with her. A knot of sented, “it is true, Ido owe you “I only wanted” the American young folk had formed round her that." provokingly drew out his drawl—l deck-chair, and the boy seemed to be To undeceive her was, of course, “to ask if you had seen your son ” so high in their favor already that not to be thought of. Lanyard for “Devil take vo.H” I — the father once more forbore from all that would have been glad to ,„-,„<i y U ' i re ‘ disturbing him. know how much, and in what de posS ta coV/wVh Nothing could be more calculated tail, Maurice had told the girl Be- vn .. r IfUtpnp „ P " to ° P th to prosper the fond paternal neath the lightness of Fenno’s man- y ~ u . schemes, indeed, than such unex- ner there were intimations of an , n ‘ ‘ la 7 d any applause. I ceptional associations. entente which he found disturbing only know what I m told. I met the Lanyard accordingly cut through “And how proud you must be of y° un k ma n a while back coming out to the port deck, emerging from a him, that he not only came through y ? ur , ?‘ a ‘* roo J’L and he said he thwart-ship passageway just in an experience which wouM have was loo " ,n £ for *»’ father. ’ time to meet Messrs. Jack-knife destroyed any ordinary boy but “Many thanks.” Lanyard recomI Robinson and English Archie Bar- came through a son you needn’t be posed his countenance. “If you ' ker strolling morosely aft, and to be ashamed to own!” see him again, please tel! him I • cut dead by them. “He is fortunate to havi vou am counting on his company at For al) of Crane’s warning, the think so well of him, Fenno. Maurice luncheon.” • circumstance left no more imme- then, bears out the diagnosis of his (To Be Continued)
! THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING ‘INSIDE DOPE’’ BY SEGA® ' ./I KNOWS I LOOKS I I CAN I HELP IT IF VVE GOT 'X NOBdOY WILL KNO'W IT-\ P-SST. MISTER. ~"x f ————— — ■■ 11 ~ r EFFEMNIMATE, A SENSE OF HUMOR? I LIKE A PUT ON MOOR CLOTHES \ VANRIPPLE, I FEELS P 0 / (OF COURSE/ ' ? BUT YA HADN'T TO LAUGH-BUT SERIOUSLY- AND COME DOWN-WE REJ LIKE AS IP EVER'BOO7 \ K / TIAEV CAN'T O 'mWv 4 ’ OOGHTER LAUGH- YOU'RE SHORT OF UNDERWEAR HAVING A PARTY HIN TELL I YAM OjEARIN") '’> < -* L I PtT CBN I St Xk\U‘.r THA’S OJHAT ANO ITS PERFECTLY OKA'/ r— ' ' A TEDDY- YA THINK TELL YOU RE 1 <W - PROVES YA AIN'T FORYOU TO WEAR THAT J I -JHEY KlH?.y~ ~ J , .cadSt A ! s \\\ //; GOT NO MORE z .TEDDY T . ettiket than ) r - Li A a4\ TFDDY n^'' ; •< Si m -Isr- [ JKI I /A F— -ST /\\ ■ ll \ • ,' I' ' MB n *- i in huMßa- .._ a_J )l .i rr k
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, APRIL 2, 1931.
China’s Aviation Boom Aided by America | . - ;, i i " I I Eagles | Al I aw Z* * a ■ ■Jp* if Ca.pt Frank Hawks !>■— Lead QunAs J Nowhere in the world is aviation enjoying such a boom as it is tn China today. The 1- that re«ful invasion of Manchuria and Jthol was due to Nippon a command of the air a.« . net vaßie of the airplane, both as a military arm and as a means of transportation. Gen. >.i (Jnanx KjM former President of the Republic, and Marshal Chang Hseuh-Liang. former war lord : Manchunt|H I nwving spirits behind the av.ation boom. America » the ? T "f dollars worth of planes and equipment has been sold U China by U. b. manutaitur “ tenchinn v<-ung China to fly. Captain Frank Hawks, noted U. S. speed : recently <WiM
I ' ■WHAT IS L W E WITHOUT A . Dahlias as Bedding Annuals
j — WITNESS HY&RID DAHLIAS ACE EXCELLENT FOR BEDDING AHO bORDEBS.GeOWINGABOUT I Although the modern large-flow-1 ering dahlia is distinctly American i in origin and development. Euro-1 pean growers, particularly those' in England, have accomplished • much in making this flower family more versatile. Attention has re- I cently bet n given toward grow ing ; it downward in rtature and size ' of bloom, the success of which : has given us a dahlia suitable for . bedding which has most of the brilliancy of its more pretentions relative, and has the added advan- i tagc ot easy culture. ' The Coltness hybrid was the I forerunner of this series of minia- I ture dahlias, and is now well! known, and as easily grown in the I amateur garden as the zinnia. It I . gives an early bloom even when I planted as late as May 1, with a l wealth of blooms In a long color I range, making it x very practical I garden flower. | Great improvement through se- I lection has been made in the brig- I inal Coltness dahlia. Today it I rivals the zinnia as a bedding I flower, with more refined and I ornamental foliage. Its free bloom-4 1 ing habit, also, makes If desirable. I 1 Quilled types, resembling the ear- I tus dahlia, are to be found in the | Coltness strain. 1 1 The Coltness dahlias grow n from
seed are a valuable addition to any ' garden inasmuch as root slips of | favorite colors in a long range' may be saved, as with the larger I types, and kept over winter to be. planted again in the spring. Once I started from seed, they may always be saved for an all-summer j display the following scas bn . I Th< ir single blooms arc from 2 to ■ 4 indies in diameter, and with | their good stems they make excellent subjects for cutting. When aced is planted indoors I early in the spring, th giant-flow-ered dahlias may be grown for! the garden. This is the wav new i varieties are found, and who| knows, you might be the lucky person to discover some outstand-' ing addition to this beautiful family. In any event, you will have,
LIVE STOCK SALE I ZANESVILLE. INDIANA ■ WEDNESDAY. APRIL I. 1* 1 I Commencing at 12:00 sharp ■ 35 HEAD OF HORSES—AI! Young Mares from 3to 5 yeatj ABOUT 15 HEAD OF CATTLE—Some cows i t fresh mO heifers just right to turn on grass. H FARM IMPLEMENTS—Sumy Plow. Disk. Si ► Tocth UM This is my last sale this spring. B TERMS—CASH. ■ Arthur Merriman, Ownß Roy Johnson, amt. H I NOTICE-- | Starting April 3— Decatur I M at the Nickel Plate Stock Yard' I | BRADY BROS. I MW ill receive hojjs daily, lainibs and '< ' 9i'lie.-iday. Wednesday, I riday anti Sihi'd " ’tlr-'-wB : Phone 301 I SF » 1
1 a v.ilaabb ... J I ing th.- 1... Grow ... oik- .... I 9 Jan- slicin'. Hi. y Ido . , J ill.'tll »i. ■ . ■ proud of. B Pw o Box Drowned I In Ri'crSaJ lAllderson . The heli ..f hnus one of I -a ’ ■» I White Ku. ii ur iirn-gjfl was r.-i. '-.ly hour sear.-h. B N > t il. “I- holy <<■ hat i. drag;:. ''‘''**9 were drow r, wB up.:/ ,| S,. "'AtB Louis Gi of la*B fotin i th>- mi In.y. yrfM I dragging in ■ '■ ■ ■ ..< m J Sheridan Man I Dies OflJ Indi map.-. :-nl.. April M Moses Bark ian.M Iby a hoi... fam aH I died In a h.- . a! here !«■ IHe suffen-; a tan<l «'ilj
