Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 66, Decatur, Adams County, 18 March 1935 — Page 2

Page Two

FLOWER GARDENS If you are looking forward to beautiful flowers from your own garden this coming summer. now i* the time to prepare. Our Washington Bureau has ready for yon a bulletin on FLOWER GARDENS. telling all about when and where to plant flowers, hedges and vines. It toils about perennials and annuals, spring-flowering bulbs, liliee. ferns, evergreens, shrubs, about planting and fertilising, mid all the things you want to know. Fill out the coupon below and send for it: CI.IP COUPON BELOW Dept. 339. Washington Bureau. DAILY DEMOCRAT, 1013 Thirteenth St.. NW., Washington, D- C. I want a copy of the bulletin FLOWER GARDENS, and enclose herewith live cents in coin (earefully wrapped), or uncancelled U. 8. postage stamps, to edver return postage and handling cons: NA M E STREET and No. - • (21TY state I am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat. Decatur, lud.

k Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of thesa ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. 1. In classical mythology, who was Charon? 2. In which state is Mount Whitney? 3. In which state is the city of Bellingham? 4. Who wrote. "The Vicar of Wakefield?" 5. Who was Richard Hovey? 6. Where is Buckingham Palace? 7. What is Chartreuse, and what is the derivation of the name? S. What is the Spanish name for donkey? 9. Who was called "The Beloved Disciple?" 10. When does the vernal equinox occur? 1. Name the fifth wife of King Henry VIH of England. 2. In the military establishment, what does G. H. Q. stand for? 3. Name the Chief Justice who presided over the iinpea-hment trial of President Andrew Johnson. 41. Who was the author of "A Forest Hymn? 5. What docs the Hebrew word ‘'ben" mean? 6. Os which state is Santa i'c the capital? 7. Who was the inventor of the sewing machine? S.' .Who erected the Temple at

Horse Sale At LA FONTAINE. INDIANA WEDNESDAY, March 20, 1935 Sale starts at 12 o’clock sharp. WE HAVE ONE HUNDRED HEAD OF HORSES. If you wish to buy we have the horse, if you want to sell, bring your horse, we have the buyer. A horse for everybody. C. W. Speicher and Charles Reeg PUBLIC SALE Oii account of poor health, I will sell al public auction at my farm, 2 miles south and 1 niijes west of Decatur, second farm east of Wasliinglon Church, on WEDNESDAY, March 20, 1935 Commencing at 12 noon. — HORSES — Bay mare. 7 yr. old, wt. 1700 tbs., sound, well bnoke and an outtdanding mare, in foal; Bay marc, 16 yr. old, sound, an extra good mare. wt. 1700 tbs. in foal; Bay mare 12 yrs. old, wt. 1700 !bs„ sound, in foal. These mares all good workers. — CATTLE — Guernesy cow, 7 yr. old. be fresh April 2nd, will give 50 lbs. per day; Guernsey cow. be fresh April sth, will give 6 gal. per day; Holstein cow, 5 yr. old, be fresh May Ist. 1 Chester White Brood Sow' due to farrow April 6. 8 head of Good Feeding Shoates. 9 loins of Mixed Hay. — IMPLEMENTS — Turnbull wagop, 3*,- in. good as new; 2 farm wagons; binder; hay loader; mower: tedder; hay rake; good cultipacker; single disc. 7 on side; Oliver Sulky breaking plow; walking breaking plow; grain drill with fertilizer attachments; corn cutter; cultivator; Blackhawk corn planter; Niseo manure spreader; spike tooth harrow; spring tooth harrow: 2 double set& breeching harness; many articles too numerous to mention. TERMS- CASH. MELVIN M ALLONEE, Owner Hoy S. Johnson. Auctioneer. ’ VV. A. Lower, Clerk.

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“A PAIN IN THE NECK” ’ BY SEGAR uiusi.HF ftM!) IT AIM T) Z'UF. ONLM \l IWOOLfXtT MINT) 11" ROTj HE’LL \ /«E NEITHER A /&’//.! r sTEp'\" UUW'’’ o -’ u OT GOING TO FUaHTWM,) i ! NECK ABOUT Ef&HT ISO BAD BROKE IT I THE POPPiN’OF ’ HUR-T VHE GIV6S ME )Z z 1 ) bit /(IpiTH VOOR BROKEN NECK*, j? 7 / INCHES-M'/GOSH' IN TtUO J NECK BONES ’ SOML -< A PAIN IN < s 7U J COURSE NOT-1 VAM VOU CAN I LIVE IvJTH ■£ /"Sk PLACES/ J C, '('74// \ 'T7 *ft62<Uo-NER FIGHT HIM f Jlf-jL L I A BROKEN NECK* s§‘ w 7 -x’S'A tWww Mjh /Z ~ acyV-y/ Ul I!| 1 W: — ®a : JBs BbTuTv / v — I tac. \ • I k. I n 12) 13) <( > Y*- v u»l IV 37&

Jerusalem? 9. In which ocean are the Chatham Islands? 10. In which territory of the U. S. is the city of Ketchikan? o Tiny Girl Rescues Doll SAN ANTONIO, Tex. <U.R>— Her home iu flames, five-year-old Beatrice Barolco couldn’t bear to think of leaving her doll to perish She ran back into the house and seized her doll, whose drees already was in flames. Beatrice was uninjured. SALE CALENDAR Mar. 19-Stotler, Knott & Ervin 1 mi. west of Willshire, Road 527. Mar. 20 — Melvin Mallouee. 2 miles south and 1% miles west of Decatur. Marell 26—J. Rumple & Son, 4 miles east, 2 miles south and % miles east of Berne, 2 miles south of Road No. 118. Mar. 21—A. B. Showalter, 3 mi. so. of Convoy Road No. 49. Mar. 22—Decatur A. Chattanooga stock sale. Mar. 23—Elmer Tiicker, 2 properties on Oak street. Mar. 25 —Art Merriman, Zanesville. Ind. Horse sale. Mar. 27—Cloyd E. Stover. 3 mi. west and 1 mile south of Rockford, Ohio. Mar. 28 —Nathan Nelson. % mile east, '» mile south of Geneva. Mar. 29—Decatur and Chattanooge community sale.

TIBETAN GOO IS IN MUSEUM Chicago — (UP) — Lamo. whose fliune hair and necklaoe of miniature human <skulls once inspired fearful offerings of grain and prayer rolte from ancient Tibetans, now atm da in the Field Museum. The "Eye of Wtedom” in the center cf hta forehtstd. which according Io legend seea into the future and back into the past, glares at other treasures iu the museums Orlen ml collection. Yanta, Tibetan god of death, was the first mortal to die, certain Hin-1 due believed. He subscqueuly was mode one of the two rulers of the next world, according to the faith, with hta co-regent, the god Varuna. His image was worshiped for centuries iu India and. hta "powers lati-r became known in Tibet. A totable statue of Yama recently was presented to the museum. The five-foot figure of lacquered papier mache and wood was the gift of William E- Hague, of Chicago. The statue, a tiger’s skin draped about its loine. stands on a hollow pedenttal. Tibetans, according to ancient customs, placed inside the pedestal small Jars of grain, magic books, prayer rolls and other objects in the hope of bringing Hie sorii 1: or in wr.irriM, 01 i < 01 via < 01 m 11. Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Adams County. Ind., that a special meeting of the Adams County Council of said county will be held al Hie Auditor’s office in the Court House at Ueeatur Indiana, at S o’clock A. M >n Friday, March -» at which time and place tiie said coum il will consider mid make it they ileeui advisable, the following special appropriations tor the county offices and institutions. t<>wil: Public Health Nuvnes, Supplies mid expenses W* Court House Matron, salary 120.00 C unity Agent, adding machine I Irene Byron Sanatorium I"' 1 """ County Infirmary. Boiler . H2f?oo County Assessor, Books.and - stationery ... Clerk. Deputy Hire l.>0.»« Clerk Fees anil Costs payable out of Co Treasury 200.00 W: N*=?s.^'i ighwa> .’-"-io expense <;*• Current Charges Curreiit Obligations 2I * 1 ‘ Pi -pern s nr.0.00 Health Commissioner, Deputy .<*oo Health Commissioner. operating _ Expense* 16(.00 Deputy Clerk, 1033 salary 100.00 Taxpayers appearing shall have the right to be heard thereon; after said appropriations shall Jh# made, ten or more taxpayers feeling themselves aggrieved by such appropriations may appeal to the Stale Board of Tax mi in issi oners for further and final action thereon, by filing their petition therefor with the County Auditor, within the time fixed hy law. ami the state board will fix a date of hearing in this countyr JOHN W. TYNHALL Auditor Adams .County March 18-35 0 notice to non residents iii iter Circuit Court I'rteruary lerui, IWKL Complaint No. 13113 THE STATE OP INDIANA ADAMSCtHNTY The Federal faind Dank of Louisville vs. Otis F. Kirtiey etal. Now conies the plaintiff, by Arthur Vogle'vede attorney, and files its complaint herein, together with an affidavit of nun-residence, that said defendants Byron Hoy Hunt, Margaret Bund Hunt are not residents of the Slate <»f Indiana; that said action is fur Foreclosure us mortgage and appointment of r< ■ iver and that said non-residents defendants are necessary parties thereto.. Notice is therefore hereby given; said Defendants, last named, that unless they be ami appear un the 37th day of the next term of the \dains Circuit .Court, to l»e holtbun on May b A. D. IWS, al the Coih4 House in Decatur in said County ami State, and answer or demur to suiu t Qiiipluint, the sa’ine will be heard and determined hi their absence. Witness my name and the Seal said Court, affixed at Decatur, Indiana this 16th day us March A. D. 1835. DAVID D. DEPP, Clerk Meh 18-35 Apr. 1Appointment of Administratrix Notice i* hereby given. That the undersigned has been appointed Administratrix of the estate us Lamont Broughton, late of Adams County, deceased. The estate is probably solvent. Dora O. Broughton. Administratrix llictiorn, Gordon :inil EdrH, %tt>s« Mar I, I'J"5 March I-11-1S B W iFcai ty (he celebrated B Simnwns line of Beds, B Springs anil M’Htresses. H Simmons line is known the M world over. Be sure to see H the Simmons, before you buy. SPRAGUE Furniture Co. Phone 199

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MARCH 18. 1935.

[god to life an double it to answer their pniyers. ! ————o —— Pilot DuPont Gave Ice Skaters Thrill Wilmington. Del. —, (Ui’i — A Felix DuPont Jr„ graduate of Army Air Corps School, guve lee sk<it4ni at the Roopes Reservoir, near here a genuine thrill. DuPont, eager to iiuiiguiiite "ice plane-ing" brought hta eltip down on th? frozen reiserw 4r. and as h? taxied around the lake Ete skaters held on to the tail of the ship. The Ice was frozen eight inches thick. Aged Fodder Fattened Up Nebraska Cattle Elwood—Neb. —(VP) —Cattle of Walter Dawson, tanner near here, are growing fat ami eleek on 60 tons of fodder stored In a silo since 1919. Drought destruction last year

"Tilt Cold f Inger Curse" by EDWIN DIAL TORwGEPwSON

CHAPTER XXIV St. Gregory Valeour, the painter, had been summoned from his studio to undergo the same high-handed treatment “How about Roger Duane?” demanded Runkel. “He was barefooted last night Are you going to let him get by with that? Aren't you going to cut his toe-nails?” 1 “Hush, idiot!” commanded June Kirkman. 1 “Barefooted!” said Montigny quickly. “Muis otrif” “All done.” announced Inspector McEniry presently. "Sorry we can’t ! tell you why this is being done. It's 1 a new wrinkle we scientific detectives have.” “You won’t hold it against us, ; will you,” pleaded Jimmy Kirkman • solicitously, “if our records show 1 up a bit untidy? You won’t print 1 these things in the paper, or anything?” 1 “We won’t even hang ’em in the ! rogues’ gallery.” “They’d be hang-nails then,” said 1 Fritz Runkel morosely. “Is that all now. Captain?” in- : quired the Inspector “Shall I send * this young lady down to the Tombs , now, te work on Duane and Thur- . ber?” 1 “If you please.” Montigny looked , about gravely. “I should like to have '

a talk, privately, with Mr. Valeour. I am interested in art. Perhaps he will invite us to his studio to see his work.” “Please do come down,”exclaimed Valeour with alacrity. “Sell the Inspector a sunset, why don’t you?” suggested Douglas Coultney. a “He’ll be good if he does.”growled McEniry. “Now you people can go down to see the District Attorney or anybody you wish. I hope you have luck, but I don’t see how you’re going to. It looks worse and worse for your friend Thurber, every step we take.” “Don’t worry,” admonished Marjorie Clarken sweetly. “That is, ' don’t worry about him. Worry about ' yourself. Inspector.” The Inspector looked a bit perplexed as he descended to the basement with Montigny and Valeour. “Now what did the sassy little scoundrel mean by that!” he muttered. St. Gregory Valeour told them all about Art, from the standpoint of a Genius struggling for recognition. He turned on the lights the better to exhibit his paintings, most of which were bleary watercolors. “Rather dark—don’t you find it so—for studio work?’’ suggested Montigny. “Ah, yes,” said Valeour dolorously, “but I simply cannot afford a lighter studio, and that's the truth. The rents they charge—really, you have no conception—atrocious!” “But you get good prices, I dare say, when you do se'l your paintings.” “Oh. yes, sometimes over a hundred dollars. The Art Mart—you know the shop, over on Eighth Street —sold one for me at that price once. They had one of my best pictures on display in their window for months — Goldfish Surrounded by Blue, I call it. By the way—” He hurried to a front window. “Yes. they’ve gone, too bad. Mr. Coultney has some of my best pictures up in his apartment, and I keep forgetting to get them —I left them there for some friends of his to see. But you can see them later.” “Ah. yes. Now, on another subject, Mr. Valeour—” Montigny questioned him closely regarding events of the previous evening. Valeour tdld everything ?uite as he had told it to Sergeant larden. He seemed very eager to help. “You were in the front of your studio here last night, near the street windows, and you saw Mr. Glenn Thurber pass by your win-

t' throughout this region forced tarj nieM to find new feeds tor livestock this winter. A desperate 1 shortage of feed forced Dawson to ■, re-opeu thx> silo be h.*d filled 16 I yours ago. 1 o Vermont Town Ready For 1936 ■ Brattleboro, VL-CU.R) >»*'“ " I won't be without heat next whiter, ' ! because it already is preparing for II 19M. Edvard B. Barrowa, retired Heoal dealer, gave to HVattloboro all i the Hees on hta 200 acres of land ''' The trees will be cut down and '■ hauled to the town yards, where they will he turned Into fuel for s the town Welfare department next winter. The trees will yield about 1,000 cords of hard wood. o > Speaker Byrns* Gavel Is 800 Years Old ti 'Washington — (UP) - The new > gavel with which Speaker Joseph Barns will pound for order ta 84)0 ; yeans old. r The gavel and lix.k are mode of

dows and enter this house while you were here—but you did not see him come out again?” “No, sir. I did not." "And you did not hear him use the public telephone in the hall upstairs?” "No, sir.” "You think you should have been able to hear him?” “Why, yes, sir, it seems to me I should.” Inspector McEniry interrupted with a suggestion. “Let’s test it I’ll go up and phone Nbbley again— I want to hurry him up. You stay in here and see if you can hear me.” McEniry put his proposal into action. Montigny and Valeour, in the front of the basement studio, heard a distinct murmur of the Inspector’s tones, but could not distinguish the words. “I certainly did not hear him last night, though,” declared Valeour nervously. “Os eourse, he might not have talked as loud as the Inspector.” • “No. We may so assume," said Montigny drily. “Have you ever been in Mr. Thurber’s apartment?” Valcour’s eyes shifted. “Oh, yes. There have been parties up there— I have called on him once or twice.” "Very well, Mr. Valeour, I shall bid you good-day.” Afrtniiemxr (tin nrlicl rxllvr

Montigny left the artist abruptly and joined McEniry in the hall upstairs. “All set,” said the Inspector. “Nobley will be around very soon with the whole outfit In the meantime we might look around upstairs in Thurber’s apartment, eh?—and later go over to Merriam's place?” “I shall be pleased,” said Montigny. June Kirkman, who had not accompanied the others downtown, had a duplicate key to the apartment occupied by Thurber and shared by Fritz Runkel when the latter was in town. “Fritz spends most of his time up at Woodstock, in the Catskills.” June explained in answer to Montigny’s questions. “At the artists' colony there.” The Canadian wanted all the information she could give him in respect to Runkel, and when she had gone back into her apartment Inspector McEniry remarked upon it: “You seem to suspect everybody just a little, don’t you. Captain?" Montigny shrugged. “I admire the Napoleonic Code—the accused is guilty until proven innocent In this case I accuse them all.” The Captain roved about in Thurber’s rooms as he talked, inspecting everything but touching nothing. “You have searched this place no doubt Inspector?” “Why, I told Darden to do so, when he had the chance. This fellow Runkel is staying here, and I didn’t see any special reason for putting him out.” Montigny examined Glenn Thurber’s telephone. “From this instrument the call was made," he mused aloud. “Captain Nobley looked for finger-prints, of course?” “Sure. Ha found Thurber’s and this fellow Runkel's. He’s not here much, but of course he has used that phone whenever he wanted to.” “Ah, yes, of course.” Montigny jotted down the serial number on the instrument. He unscrewed the cap of the receiver, lifted off the sensitive plate, found another factory number within. "Ah, yes, of course,” he repeated absently, restoring the receiver cap. “Alors, let ua look in the gentleman’s bathroom. Perhaps we shall . find there—collodion.” They found collodion, in the medicine cabinet, though it was not so labeled. It was a one ounce bottle , of a preparation called Renew-skin, which was recommended for cuts . and abrasions. Montigny smelled of . iL “Collodion, of course," he ob- ■ served. “Ether and gun-cotton. A

'Aaubo wood from El Mow Fort | San Juan. P R. The hardnoo of the 9 wood, tho Speiker noted, increawd j ‘ with age. J The fort was erected In 1594, and Col. O. R Cole, commandant of the Omeriean troops t»iere, retlmnted , Hue wood wa* 406 years old at that .11 timeCave Caltbrltita Hair Cutz I Boston.—oUD HWU Edwards, vetorun barber at a Boston hotel. J has cut the hair of scores of cele--1 brltiea. including the late President Charles W. Eliot and Preeii’ dent-emaritus A. larwrence Lowell t of Harvard University, ami severt al members of the Roosevelt fam- • iiy- ___ Strangled by Woodlift OREGON CITV, Ore. ftJ.R) — I I Harvey Ernest Wallis, 55, wus get- ' ting up the evening’s supply of wood in the woodlift. The holt i slipped from its place, the wood- ) lift dropped and the rope tangled about his neck, strangling him to ! death . —

i fairly new bettie—and already half i gone.” McEniry examined it grimly. “It begins to look like you’re right,” he ■ observed. “And I’m right—l’ve been • right, all along.” “Let us mount then to the roof. Shall we?” suggested Montigny. i “Yes, and I’ll take this bottle along with me.” Montigny found nothing on the roof, nor did he seem to expect a specific find. Ho was more interested in peering over the rear parapets us the row of old residences comprising the block. “Odd, isn’t it,” he observed irrelevantly to McEniry, “that in an age when individualism supposedly was paramount—the good old ‘free’ Victorian days—they seemed to strive to build all residences exactly alike ? These splendid homes are as much alike ns packing cases. Yet today, when we grumble of being standardized, mechanized, east in a mold—why, every person builds a home as much unlike his neighbor's as possible.” “Yeah?” grunted McEniry, fretting a bit. “I never thought of it that way. Don't see anything new, do you, Captain?” Montigny measured distances with his eye. He stood behind chimneys and peered forth at the side,

he crouched behind parapets. He stopped on the roof of Two-Sixty, the house in which Price Merriam lived, and peered ever at the rear. “The cord, I observe, has been cut off,” he commented. “Only a small piece left dangling at the shutter i hook.” “Yes, they had to have a piece of the cord so they could trace it,” said McEniry, “and I told them not to cut the other end—it shows where . something was tied to it. The rest ■ of it is inside. Merriam is at a hoI tel, and we have a man on post i there. We could go down through the trap here, if you like.” ; The skylight trap door was latched fast from within, but an in- ; terval of rapping on the reinforced glass presently got a rise out of iL The head and shoulders of a policeman, pistol in hand, appeared in the aperture. ' lhe—oh, it's you, Inspec- • tor! Want to come down? Just a : minute, sir.” ’ McEniry laughed. “Didn’t mean to throw a scare into you.” i infernal quiet in this bouse, said the policeman. “I i haven t heard a pin drop for hours.” Montigny went at once to the rear 1 window of Merriam’s apartment near which the long cord had been > suspended. The severed line still > lay carelessly coiled on the floor where Darden had left it ’ . l W A th your Permission, Inspector, • I shall unhook the end of the small i remaining piece of cord,” said Monr tigny. “Go to it. No finger-prints to ■ spoil on that” i , Montigny leaned out and carefully detached the dangling piece without untying the knot. “The thought occurred to me on the roof,” ’ he said, “that some one lassoed tha ’ hook, possibly from above. Y’ou see c —a simple slip-knot, Inspector.” “You're not going to tell me a landsman did it,” said McEniry with a grin, “because it is not a sailor’s ‘ knot?” “It is certainly not that It is an elementary slip-knot, which no . sailor or cowboy would be proud of. 1 But the point I wish to make is, In- • specter, that if anyone making the 1 cerd fast from this window, standing within the apartment, had intended for it to support at the other - end a hag containing eight hundred ’ and fifty thousand dollars’ worth of s valuables, he would not have tied a , simple slip-knot. Now, would he’” J Montigny slipped out the knot with ' a very slight tug. (To Be Continued) Cnerrtrtt. IH<. br n. Twjotmi L OiftributM by King Fiwmut— Ina.

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS Brady's Market for Decatur, Berne, Craigville, Hoagland and Willshire. C lose at 12 Noou Corrected March 18. No commission and no yardage Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. 100 to 130 lbs - $6.75 120 to 140 lbs $7.05 140 to 160 Has - $7 86 140 to 190 Hta - 18.70 190 to 250 Hta - $8.90 260 to 300 Iba $8.75 300 to 350 llm - W-46 Roughs - $7.50 Slags 1 5 -* 6 Veata »9 «0 Ewe and wether lambs $7.50 Buck, laiubs - $6.50 CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Muy July Sept. Wheat ■ 91 -88% Corn ... .76% .72% .70 Oats ‘2% -37% -MX NEW YORK PRODUCE New York, Mar. 18.-(U-RHBro-duce: Ddessed poultry, tirm; turkeys, 20-30 c; chickens. 14-28 c: broilers. 18-31 c; capons. 27-34 c: fowls, 1523c; Long Island ducks. 18%-20e. Live poultry, steady; geese, 0913c: turkeys. 19-28 c; roosters. 14c: ducks, 11-l’c; fowls, 20-22 c; chick ens, 15-24 c; capons. 26-28 c; broilers, 10-24 c. Butter, receipts, 5.164 packages: market weaker, closing steady; creamery higher than extras. 29% ■ 30%c; extra 92 score. 20%c; first 90 to 91 score. 29 , 4-29%c; first 89 score, 29c; ccntralizwl 90 score. 29%c; centralized 89 score, 29c. Eggs, receipts, 19.700 cases; maiket unsettled; special packs, including unusual hennery selections 33*24%c; standards, 22-24%c; firsts 20%-21%c; seconds, 20%c; mediums. 2()%-20%c; dirties. 20c; checks, 19c; storage pucks, 22c. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y., Mar. 18.— (U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, receipts. 2,200; active strong to 5c and occasionally 10< over Friday; bulk desirable 160-250 lbs., averaging 190-210 lbs.. $9.65$9.75; few butchers, $9.85; 150-180 lbs., $9-s9j6o; pigs and underweight downward to $8 Cattle, receipts, 1.500; steer and yearling trade slow; catchy; un evenly weak to 50c under last Monday; choice steers and yearlings, $13.25; good, $lO-412.50; medium and mixed yearlings, $8.50-$ 10.25; fleshy cows, $5.50-$6.25; low cutter and cutter. $2.75-14.75; medium bulls, $5.35-15.75. Calves, receipts. 650; better grade vealers, active, 50c higher, $10.50 down. Sheep, receipts, 3,500; laiubs active; generally 50c higher; good to choice, 49-89.10; few 80-lb, weights, $9.25: medium and mixed weights. SS-SB.GS; shorn lambs, $7.50-48; fat ewes. $6 down. CLEVELAND PRODDCE Cleveland, Mar. 18— (U.R) —Produce : Butter, market steady; extra, 34c; standards, 34c. EJtgs, market steady; extra white 29%c; current receipts. 20c. Poultry market, steady: fowls under 6 lbs., 20c; over 5 lbs., 19c; ducks, young. 2i-25e; ducks old, 20c. Potatoes. Maine, sl-41 10 per I*Wlb. hag; Ohio mostly, 70-75 c; New York. 80c; Florida, $1.90-$2 per bushel. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, liul. Mar. 18.—<U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, 10-20 C higher; 200-250 Tl>s.. $9.15: 250-300 lbs., $9; 300-350 lbs., $8.70: 180-200 lbs., $9.05; 160-180 lbs., $8.95; 150-160 lbs., $8.50; 14015u lbs., $8; 130-140 lbs., $7.75; 12C--130 lbs., $7.25; 100-120 lbs., $6.75; roughs, $7.75; stags, $5.50. Calves. $9.50; laiubs. $8.25. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected March 18. No. 1 New Wheat. 60 lbs. or better BJ5c No. 2 New Wheat (58 lbs.) 82c Oats, 32 lbs. test 44c Oats, 30 lbs. lest 43e Soy Beaus, bushel SI.OO No. 2 Yellow Corn, 100 lbs. $L"<) CENTRAL SOYA MARKET No. 2 Yellow Soy Beans SI.OO Delivered to factory. GILLETTE g J Super Traction j TRACTOR TIRES | For all makes of Tractors. I | Sec them at — 2 PORTER TIRE CO. 341 Winchester SL Phone 1289 .

Bl SI NESS CarM| l’"lk at M , M :.< . M B 1t... ——_±2R_sale I SA, - K Slate Uge<l ua j ■ l ' l 1 'hl 'I .I’ ln;„. ;i B S j‘- K O')< Model io aM ’ Jta) H FOR SALE-Ts f f J')-ev Byron Whr.tr of Plnmant MiIU. FOR volt. Ala U miles m.ribwf s > (1[ C. Mack.. FIRST QUALITY ChSB uud 7c. Hatching 2e nB Buchanan E:,,tric Hc.tsrß mihs -.Hifii h J FOR SALE or sow. Also n (l<x! ■ garden )»<1 <>r flowed jB Kltsoii, R 2, IhM-alur. B FOR. SALE — Enzniei b range, used 2 months. M able. lin ( ui. ■at Hl Westj st. Dan Neireitei. 1 FOR >AI.E-I’un maple pound test. S22J galluß. ] Founei 515 w Maghsoa. J, I FOR SALE l’"rt.,!,:t Ikxije for heavy belt work. I 878-K. wanted" Wan’. I ' \5 .8 y-fICE, Stahlti i r of Laura Beaatj Fort W>,yne. will be at fit Shop \\ .■ ■ -da>. March f 128(1 for .ipp -itm< WANTED—GirI for general work. No washing. Rde required. t\ I ite IIXII. u q Democrat. • WANTED—To rent 5 or I house in or near Decatur. 1 to Box T. R in care of the I crat office. Decatur. AT YOUR Service when .1 of a carpenter. Will at your work. Rooliiij of d| Ira Bodie, phone 691. WANTED—\\ ek un farnj fenced. Eupa Meeki, H« ville. Hoi ' WANTED Eer < xpeii rads electrical rt pail's call Jta Miller, phone 625. Mental Manufacturers Service. Radio Service. 226 N. 7U MAN WANTED-Suppif a era with famous Watkta ducts in Decatur. Business! lishcd. ..iriiinu average IS! ly, pay starts immediately, i J. K. Watkins Co.. ?SMJ| St.. Colunibu: Ohio. , WANTED- I want three M local tea and collet rwM Ing up to $42.50 a week. K» tai or experience needed I* l be willing to K' v » Pi«” ’ service to approx, ft lll furnish everything producers. Write AlDwt I 7080 Monmoi.tli. CiucilMUl FOR FOR RENT — Eight room k with garden pale' l - Jll(i * lights. Res|>onsiWe paries need applyvjlle Phon, or Decatur i* LOST AND FOljj LOST —Several pieces rs uni kitchen ware * e ' p ' in the wrong car Fifth and Sixth 6 Finder I lei<-< phone U>.ST - rptawn FrW* bilks U. E. Cramer. Le»ie« ! - Get the Habit - For Better Healtb Dr H. FrohnapW Licensed Pnone 3i< OffiCe 6° U m 6°« B|l> 1 to 6 p- m " ’ Neurocafonte**' Ser x .Ray nTaBIS I'® 1 '® qPTOMETR |ST Eyes Examined, G |lrte ' !WU 7.'. # wk« S:3 " ‘days 6 ° Saturdaj* » Telephone