Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 75, Decatur, Adams County, 28 March 1935 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
• "■II"' 1 1,1 1 """ ♦ Test Your Knowledge Can you answer seven of these ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. ♦ — — 1. Name the largest of the Canary Islands. 2. Who was Cyrano de Berg erac? 3. What quality of a body causes it to float in a liquid? 4. Name the largest inlet on the Atlantic coast of the U. S. 5. Who wrote, “Othello?” 6. What is humidity? 7. In which Sea is the island of Tenedes? 8. In what part of the world is the disease known as beriberi prevalent? 9. Nlljne the author of “Plain Tales From the Hills ’’ 10. Which game is generally regarded as the most intellectual game of skill? NOTICE TO NON RESIDENTS in the latuiiM Clrriilt < oiifi February (IVriM. V I). mXV < name ><*. I’HU» The Mutual Benefit Life Insurance < a corporation. Plaintiff v*» Wiirtnni Richard, Edith Richard, Jims wife, EM ward N. Tonnelller, Mary .■W S’nnn«4lier. hia wife, ftosa A. la»Xfar, Ana E. LaMar, his wife, Albert ixE, S. Egly Ills wife, Tom .\Jxllbund. Tlie First ?<tate Bank, a . m p *»♦*•♦<• m, Jacob Barger, Wm. Ireifl), A’ora Irelafl, his wife. Mary E. .Steck. unmarried, William Keich* » ij, DfiundantM. Notice to Now-Krsldrwt’* *Vhe plaintiff in the a love entitled cause having filed Its complaint herein. tc<<ther with an affidavit of a competent person that the de-, fendants, William Richard and Kdlthl Richard, his wife, are non-residents I of the State of Indiana, and that the object of this action is tj foreclose a mortgage upon real estate in Adams tVninty, In the State of Indiana, described as follows, to-wit:-Commencing at the Northwest corner of the Northeast quarter of Section 13, Township 26 North. Range It East; thence running South ui the half section line 88 rode; thence East on a line parallel with the North section line SO rods, theme North on a line parallel with the East line of said Section. 88 rods, t > the North line of said Set lion; thence West on the North section line 801 rmls to the place of beginning con-I laining 44 acres, more or less. And that said defendants, William! Richard and Edith Richard, his wife! are necessary parties thereto. Now, therefore, said defendants, William Richard and Edith Richard, his wife, are hereby notified that unless they' be and appear in the Adams Circuit Court on the 24th day <of May-. 1&36. at the ctmrt house, In tike town of I»evatur, in said county and state, and answer or demur! to said omplalht, the same will be I heard and determined in their al*-i In witness whereof, I have hereun-l to set my hand, and affixed the seal of the said Court, this 28th day of March, A. D. H 3&. David D. Depp v’bik. Attains Circuit Court, j XiftfUm < . \rlnon. Howard 1. Corner, Attorney for Plaintiff. March 28. April 4-11 c \l»l»«»intment of Idminislrntor N«Mice is hereby given. That, the undersigned has been appointed Administrator of the estate of Mary N. Reiff late of Adams County, deceased. The estate is probably sol-' vent. Worley M. Reiff, Administrator I'rnchtr and l.ittrrvr. Attorney. Mai'PWtr 1935.
C7 ' PUBLIC AUCTION! FRIDAY, March 29, 1935 — 12 O’Clock Horses. Milch Cows, Heifers. Bulls. Sheep. Brood Sows and Feeding Shoats 2 Electric Washing Machines. 1 Washing Machine, power i attachment. Miscellaneous articles. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES E. J. AHR &. CO., Managers Johnson & Doehrman. auctioneers. Public Auction ... ■ 1 will sell -at public auction at my farm. 6 miles south of Fort Wayne on the corner of Furgeson and Thiele Road; l'_. miles east of JJrookside Country Club, on * SATURDAY, March 30th, 1935 " Commencing at 12 o’clock noon « 12—HEAD OF HOLSTEIN CATTLE—I 2 * Registered Holstein. 3 yr. old. heifer calf by side; Holstein. 5 yr. Sold. Tresh by day of sale; Holstein. 2 yr. old. fresh now: Registered -Holstein. 4 yr. old. milking 5 gal. ]er day; Holstein. 10 yr. old. an 8 ; al. cow ; Registered Holstein. 7 yr. old. milking 5Vs gal; Holstein & •'Guernsey K yr. old. milking 4 gal: 3 yearling Holstein heifers: one 2 g.’’r. old Holstein heifer; Holstein bull. 7 mo. old, registered. This is an herd of Holstein cattle, high producers and well bred. -HORSES—Roan colt coming 2 in May, broke, make a real horse; Bay x: HHlth Jlfbutll. 2'®td”&c brood sows farrow Apr. 1; Auto trailer; riding breaking plow; “hog fountain: Endgate setter; 2 small grain drills; 1 horse drill plantBcki todfnj; cultivator; Reo truck and other articles too numerous to gjndMlon., "TERMS—CASH J. W. PHAREIS & SON, Owners *IUJV<nS. JOHNSON—Auctioneer
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► FOUR PERSONS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE mobile* previously eelzed by the trio. The outlier victims said , th,-’, had not been mistreated. Hale, the tank cashier, was recovering from a bullet wound in the side inflicted by the bandits when he met them with a burst of shotgun fire as they strode into the bank. His fire frustrated the holdup men and they fled without any loot. COUNTY BOARDS 1 CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONK latlon of the Sunday closing section of the la wwill result In revocation of permits without renewals. Many reporte of dpen violations, .specially tn border-line counties, have been received by Fry Under terms of the law. retail establish--1 mente must Imlt sales between 2 A. M„ Sunday and 6 A. M. Monday. Indianapolis. Ind. Marcih 28 —(I 1’ —Unless membena of th estote alcostraighten out the law. citizens of 19 Indiana counties are Ifkely to have difficulty in obtaining liquor under the new control, it was diectvered today. The law provides tl»it local hearing boarite chall be set up in each county to pa&s on applications for liquor licenses. Recommendations of the local boards will be submittJ ed to the state commission. One member :f each county board i is to be on excise commission official. one is to be appointed by the county commissioners ajid the third is to be the mayor of the largest city in the county. However, there are 19 counties which do n't hav-a cities. They are Martiu, Newton, Ohio, Orange Owen Parke, Pulaski. Ripley, Scott. Starke. Union. Warren. Washington | Brown. Crawford, Franklin. Harri- | son and Hendrick-. The largest settlement in each of these counties in a town and therefore, under provision,; of the act, it would a-p. ear imp ssible to organize >» hearing t>oard. Wisconsin’s Last G. A. R. Manitowoc, Wis. —>U.P) —Charles I Frederick William Riek. 88, CentI erville, who ran away at the age of 15 to join the Union forces, today is the last Civil War survivor in Manitowoc county. Riek is an acci If* Ahi lire looking for bargains in clothing, attend the , C. I). Teeple closing out auction 7:00 p. m. Saturday, March 30. Roy S. Johnson. auctioneer.
NOTH i: OF < OMMHMOMM* MAMS OF HEAL EM’ATI! Notice it hereby given that the. undersltnmt .Tames T Merryman. 1 Commlaatoner of the Adams Circuit Court, appointed to well real estate in the partition cause of Marion Tuber, et ux. vermis Nancy E. Bowman,l ct al. in all respect® agreeable to the! order of th** court for the aale of real estat*' in the above entitled cause, al the office of said Commissioner, In the lxnights of t'olumbuft Building In the «ttv of I»e< Htur. liidjariH, on SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 1’385 between the no him of ten A. M. and four I*. M of snld day, will offer for mhlc. at private sale, for not Mms than the appraisement, and free of I All liens except taxes for the year 1835, payable In the year 1836. the following described real relate in Adame County, Indiana, ao ordered Mold by said court and <h s<rlho<l as; follows, to-wit:- The East halt of tin Northeast quarter of Section 25 In Townaliip 2" North, Range 13 East, containing <B2 acres more or less. One third cash In hand. One third in one year and One third In two years. provided purchaser may pay all cSah. if he ao desires. l>eferred to be evidenced by promlaory notes on the usual] blank Bank form and bearing 6% L interest from day of sale and pay-j ments thereof secured by a first' mortgage on said real estate. In the event said real estate should not be sold on said date the said sale | will bo continued from day to day without further notice until said I real estate shall have been sold. James T Merryman Commissioner March 7-14-21-28 - O-"' %rroi vi’MU.A r or i tor N ‘tic.- is hereby giv< n. That the undersigned has been appointed Ex-1 ecutor of the Estate of Rudolph Steury late of Adams e’ounty. deceased. The Estate is probably solvent. Noah D. Schwarts. Executor C. 1.. Mailers Uturse> March 20. 1935 March 21-28 A-4| Join the Easter Parade with a smart coat, suit or dress just brought back 1 from market. — E. E. Gass Store. o ( sHKniFF xvi.i: In the XilnttiM < irruH < wort. Mate Os Indiana. < anne X«». 15.11.3 First Joint Sto.-k Bank ofj < Fort Wayne vs. Albert S. Zucrcher,l Vercna Zuerchvi, hi* wife. I , By virtue of an order of sale to| ' me directed and delivered from the! Clerk of Atlants Circuit Court in the i 1 above entitled cause, I have levied' 1 upon and wil It-xp -♦ to sale by Pub- i ] lie Auction at the <’ourt house door,' | cast entrance, first floor in said 1 I’ounty, between the hours of 10:00! . o’clock A. M.. ami 4 o'clock P. M. on ' Saturday the 13th day of April 1 A. I». 1935, the rents and pro- 1 fits for a term not exceeding seven j : • ■ follow ng Reel Estate to-wit: The South half of the Southeast * - >» i ■ ■ ••i - i i <»a n - ] Fourteen (14) Juist, containing j eighty (80) a< i ts. im»re or less; i 1 Als«> part of tlu- Southwest Quar- 2 ter of the Southwest Quarter of Sec-' tion four (4» Township Twenty-five ] <25) North. Range Fourteen <l4l . East described As follows Com- 1 menelng at the Southwest corner ■ 1 1 seventy-one (71 > rial* and Fourteen ] »14> links; thence eaj«t seventy ] three (73) rods and Two (2) links; . theme in a southwesterly direction! ’ parallel with the Grand Rapids and ■ Indiana Railroad, Seventy one i7l)i rods and twenty-seven (2?) links;! thence west sixty-seven «67) rods;, I and one (1» link to the pla< • of be-1 . i ginning, containing twenty nine I a>l Seventy-five Hundredths (29.75) < I acres, more or less, in Adams Coun- 1 ty, Indiana. ] And on failure to realize there- • from the full amount of th* judgment ' and interest thereon and costs. I will ' at the same time and in the manner I aforesaid offer for sale the fee ; simple of the above described real ( estate. Taken as the property of Albert S. Zuercher, Verona Zuercher, his wife at the suit of First Joint Stock Land Bank of Fort Wayne. 1 Said sale will be made without any' ' relief whatever from valuation or ( appraisement laws. DALLA3 BROWN. Sheriff i Adams County, Indiana. 1 C. 1.. Walters, Attorney Manh 11-21-28 < Q MIF.HII I-”’* «<tlE In the Idama < Mate of Indinnn. < au*r \o. Department of Financial Institutions of the State of Indiana in the matter of liquidation of the Peoples lamn and Trust Company. by Clark J. Lutz, Special Representative vs. Simeon J. Hain, et al. By virtue of an order of sale to me ! directed and delivered from the Clerk of Adams Circuit Court in the above; entitled cause. I have levied upon ami will expose to sale by Public! Auction at the Court House door,! east entrance. First floor in said’ I County, Ix'twecn the hours «»f 10:00o’clork A M ami !:<»« o’<-lock P. MJ on Saturday, the 13th day of April A. D. 1935, the rents and profits for. a term not exceeding seven years of the following Real Estate to-wit: j f’vmmencing at the southeast cor-1 ncr of Inlot number two hundrel seventy-f<>ur < 274) in (he town (now! City) of Decatur, thence running’ West along the line of said lot forty! i 10) feet, thence north parallel with) Front Street ninety-nine (99) feet, them-e < ast parallel with Monroe street forty ‘ »«) feet ttSMire south with Front Street ninety-nine (»9) feet to the place of the beginning, in Adams County. Indiana. And on failure to realize there-1 from the full amount of the judg-| merit and interest thereon and costs, I will at tlie siifoc time and in the] manner aforesaid offer for sale the) fee simple of the above described I real estate. Taken as the property of] Simeon J. Hain, et al at the suit of Department of Finan» ial Inktltu-J tions of the State of Indiana by ejark J. Lutz, special Representa-I live. - I Sai<l sale will be made without] any relied wlwitever from valuation or appraisement laws. DALLAS BROWN, Sheriff Adams County, Indiana i I HER MIA 11. MtERS, \Hornr> Marc h 14-21-28
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Till HSDAY. MARCH 28, H>,i.».
START MOVE TO CONTINUED FROM PAOE ONE I ~rir — - ' 1 J Whlt<» House •eeretary Marvin , | Mclntyre front the yacht Noor--1 ntanal in southern'waters. Both Harry L. Hopkins uinl, Rexford Guy Tujwell, nieationml i for prominent plana in the whrkrellef set-tip. have eoiiMressioiuil erititw who would oppose any plan , to give them broad powers in I dispensing the money. Neither Hopkins, as emergent ,v I relief administrator, nor Tugwell. ■ as under-secrotary of agrienlture, ■ ! has shown the friendliness that I eongressnten and senators like in | those from whom they are seek-. ing jobs for constituents. An administration inspired statement that Mr. Roosevelt in-1 tended to take personal charge of | the relief fund was put into cir- | c ulation in hopes of quieting rei eentmeat against Hopkins and ’Pugwell. The strategy had been success- j ful in the past. A house group. I angered at public works admints-j
"The Cold Finger Curse’l by EDWIN DIAL TOR-CEA-SON
CHAPTER XXXIII Montigny passed hint the paper and Valcour read the item greedily. He did not like it at all. The few worda it contained were pitched tn a eery ironical key. “Tt is an outrage," eaid Valcour gloomily. “They have me charged with disorderly conduct and resisting an officer, when all I intended was a harmless public protest Was the thing I did any worse, Captain, than haranguing a ntob in Union Square—a thing they permit every ' day?” “Only technically worse, I sup- ■ pose. What 1 wish to know, Mr. ■ Valcour, is why, when you have 1 twice been under the suspicion of 1 the police recently, you £re foolhardy enough to invite arrest in 1 this manner.” , “Twice?” repeated Valcour, startled. “Only bnce, sir. You don’t ' mean that they thought I had any- ' thing to do with the—the Elder- ’ bank case, do you?” “Everyone in your house is under ’ •uspicion. If I were you, Valcour, 1 should steer clear of the police. ' They often have an ugly way of 1 looking at things. Did you burn all ' your paintings?” 1 “Oh, no, sir. Only two or three. It was not really a large fire—merely a gesture. I was desperate. ' sir, I was in need of money. I had not been able even to pay my telephone bill, and only yesteday I 1 might have made a sale if the com- 1 pany had not discontinued my service.” “So? Row was that?" “Why, this shop on Eighth Street —the Art Mart—tried to telephone me. They had had an inquiry. Some one who had seen my Goldfish Surrounded by Blue in their window ■ had come back, perhaps to buy it But they could not get me on the telephone. They sent around a messenger. late in the afternoon, and I at once let them have my Goldfish and four other pictures, my best ones. But this morning they told me the customer had not returned. He had bought something else. It was heartbreaking. I was miserably discouraged—l had one of those terrible fits of despondency to which every true artist is a prey.” “Very disheartening.” said Montigny.® “Did the telephone people take away your instrument when they disconnected it?” “Oh. no. They merely discontinued service." “When they restore service you must ask them to give you a new mouthpiece. The old one is broken.” Valcour’s eyes widened. “Why, Captain! It is positively uncanny, the way you notice and remember such little details. Why, yes, the mouthpiece is broken. I have a new one somewhere, but I forgot to put it on. But what’s the use?” he added disconsolately. “It looks now as though I’ll never be able to afford a telephone agai i. AU my friends have deserted me.” “No one offers to bail you out?” “No one. I sent a message to Roger Duane, but I have heard nothI ing from him. He’s a success now— I understand he has been offered a big contract—but he can’t remember his old friends. And I put him where he is, too.” Valcour’s tone was bitter. “I was the one who got him in with Mrs. Elderbank — I stage-managed him, I pushed him i up.” “Indeed? T did not know that He iis very ungrateful. And your i friends at Two-Sixty-Eight?” “It docs look like Jimmy Kirkman or Mr. Coultney would help me out, doesn’t it?” bemoaned Valcour. I“They don’t seem to care whether I stay m jail definitely or not." “Well, you are having your publicity," encouraged him. “Perhaps it will make you famous. Perhaps your pictures will sell. This Goldfish you sent to the art shop—that, I believe, is your masterpiece?”
DO YOU STEP ON HER TOES? Can you dunce easily and dancefloor? do partners avoid you at a dame, or a ' i utting in l>eeaur<e you dance divinely. lin LEARN I our Washington Bureau has iead> for yo " *!" 11 ’ ( n , lnip | e ING TO DANCE. Illustrated with diagrams and <<>nUi > ng st inatnn lion- including all Xdv applied It written simply, practically. »nd the 1< - ■ u I you are interested In learumg to dame, oi IK rtUt lhv I j.m, or learning variations of the modern popular dances, till out the . coupon below and Dept. 330, Washington Bureau. DAILY DEMOCRAT. 1013 Thirteenth St.. NW.. Washington. D. C. 1 want u copy of th- illustrated bulletin Lh<\RNlN‘< TO JIANt E. ' and eneiol h-n xvlth five «nta tn coin tcarefu y wrapped), or ‘ postage stamps, to cover return postage and handling costs. NA M E I STREET and No. ; dTY STATU l am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat. Decatur, Ind.
trator Harold Ickes, was quieted by assurances the President w’ould have complete charge ot the work-relief program. Dewpite efforts to keep the work-relief bill out of’pork-barrel’
“It is so considered," admitted Valcour gravely. “I must go around and see it. I must be going now, Mr. Valcour. Some day—under different circum- ; stances, I hope—we must have a long chat about Art" “Thank you so much. Captain ' Montigny. For a detective you are immensely human.” I Montigny upon leaving the jail I hurried downtown to Two-Sixty- i Eight Waverley Place.. He found 1 Jimmy Kirkman at home, hard at 1 work. Jimmy was not wearing a ; smock, but the badge of his profession was an old pair of w hite duck < pants smeared with innumerable pigments. i “Why, how now. Captain?" Jim- < my greeted him. “More manicures ?” i “I wish,” said Montigny quickly, i "a key to the basement studio, that 1 of Mr. Valcour. He is, as you know, I in jail on a minor charge. I wish to search his rooms, but I do not wish < him to know that I have done so. I ' wish to search the entire house, with ’ the exception of your floor. If you cannot or will not let me have the : keys, of course, I shall have to pro- i cure a warrant and proceed in that ; manner.” “Keys? Os course you may have the keys.” exclaimed Jimmy. ’’Things looking bad for that little snipe Valeour ?” Montigny made a deprecatory gesture. "Merely a routine procedure, Mr. Kirkman. There is no one upstairs?” “No. Fritz Runkel—Thurber’s occasional room-mate, you know—is up at Woodstock. Mr. Coultney is out.” Jimmy found the duplicate keys where his wife, wbo was away at present, customarily kept them. They hung on a prominent nail in the butler’s pantry, and each key was tagged. “Most tenants put on new locks when they move in,” Jimmy explained, “but we have to have duplicate keys because there is a maid who does the cleaning for all apartments.” “So I understood,” observed Montigny. “And an unauthorized person, perhaps desiring one of these keys, might appropriate it, have a duplicate made, and unobtrusively put it back, might he not?” Jimmy looked perturbed. “Well, I don’t know about that My wife and I are here practically all the time.” “But you entertain ? ” “Oh, yes, we have a gang here occasionally for a party,” Jimmy admitted dubiously. Montigny took the keys and proceeded first to the basement He was busy for half an hour conducting a systemdlie search of Valcour’s apartment. He took down numerous pictures that were hung upon and stacked against the walls, and examined them, front and back. He inspected the unused telephone with its broken mouthpiece. He could find nowhere the new mouthpiece which Valcour had said he had. In Douglas W. Coultney’s apartment on the second floor Montigny . found little to attract him, though he searched thoroughly, even in the bathroom. There was. however, , upon the glass shelf beneath Coult- . ney’s shaving mirror, an item that interested Montigny. It was a ring r set with an Egyptian scarab, the ( carved stone encased in a framework of gold and hinged in the man- ( ner of a locket, so that both the ob- . verse and reverse sides of the beetle could be inspected. On the flat nether side were inscriptions which fixed 1 the date and dynasty of the scarab. > “Amenophis,” muttered Mon- ■ tigny. 1 He placed the ring carefully in an envelope and pocketed it. He repaired then to Glenn Thur- !. ber’s apartment on the top floor, but i. forbore to do any searching there, s Instead he used Thurber’s telephone -for a consultation with Inspector ’’ McEniry. -* i ii*, i n.— ii ,
polities, sporadic attsittpis to use it as a vehicle tor jobs have cropped up. The experience of congressmen has shown such forays will get no peconragement from either Hopkins or Tima<ll
He told McEniry where he wax “I wish,” he Mid. “to detack thia telephone and take it around to the nearest branch office of the company—l believe it is on lower Broadway.” “Yeah ? What’s up ?" queried the Inspector. “Merely a theory I am pursuing. I should like also to obtain all factory numbers appearing on all parts of the telephone instrument from Mrs. Elderbank’e bedroom — you have it there at headquarters. Could you do that for me ?" “Absolutely. In a jiffy. Hold connection.” Montigny held connection, smoking placidly, until the numbers were called out to him. Then he thanked McEniry, hung up his receiver, snipped the telephone wire, wrapped the instrument in paper and left the apartment. A taxicab took him to the brntich office of the telephone company, where he made known his identity to the manager. This gentleman, one of the brisk and efficient type that corporations breed for executiveship, knew ail about the telephone business. Montigny unwrapped the instrument he carried and explained his mission. “I wish to ask the impossible, sir,” said Montigny cheerfully. “I wish you to tell me whether this mouthpiece belongs properly to this telephone—whether it was the mouthpiece furnished originally with the instrument, or whether it is a new one lately attached, say within the past week or two. Also whether the mouthpiece of another telephone, of which I have the serial numbers here, properly belongs to that instrument.” The manager smiled. “Now you have given me a job sure enough,” he admitted. He unscrewed the mouthpiece carefully, using, at Montigny’s suggestion, a sheet of clean paper so that his finger-tips would not touch the article. He got out a small read- ' ing glass and examined it minutely, j “These mouthpieces, Captain, are manufactured by the million,” he said; “for the new dial phones as well as the older type. They are standard equipment, identical in size, shape and style—” “And chemical composition?” inquired Montigny. "Is there any variation there ?” The manager shook his head. “None, I am afraid. I shall have to make some inquiries to determine that, but I think they are all of the same composition. Meanwhile, there is a small hope. This mouthpiece, yon may have noticed, has a tiny star embossed in the center of the perforated circle. On the other side i it has the almost microscopic figl ures, ‘4’ and ‘H.’ ” “Yes, I so observed. And the 1 mouthpiece on the other telephone I i referred to has no star but an asl terisk, and the very small figures, i *B’ and ‘3.* ” “Y’es, those are factory serial designations. They may denote, roughr ly, the time of manufacture, perhaps ‘ the year or the number reckoned in ■ thousands or hundreds of thou- ’ sands. We may check those num- ’ bers with the serial number of th* telephone as a whole and the num- > bers of its parts, and thus we may b« 6 able to learn—l am not promising, mind you—whether that mouthpiece was put on the instrument when it " was first Assembled, or whether it is • a new mouthpiece, which any subl scriber may have for the asking. It 1 is the most breakable part of the '• telephone, you know. Achildknceke over the instrument—the only thing n broken is the mouth.” “And that is precisely what I wish .. to learn,” said Montigny eagerly, t “Whether it is a new mouthpiece—and how new.” (To Be Continued) r CnpjntUL IS3«. hy Edwin D Tor«-rM> PlitHMiud bj Kins FMtwm Ssndlntn. li*
MARKETREPORTS daily report of local AND FOREIGN MARKETS I*■ HWII — Brady’a Market for Decatur. Berne, • Cralfvllle. Hoagland and Willshire. * Close at 12 Noun .i - - - ' a t'orn i Ind March 28 No conmiisslbn and n<> yardage Veals received Tuesday, Wed- • uesday. Friday, end Saturday. H»0 to 120 !?>» |6.001 1 130 to 140 lbs 86.90 HU to m n>». $7.7“ 1 • 160 to ISO lb* 1866 1 190 to 250 lbs 88.75 250 to 300 lbs. *8.60 1 300 to 350 lbs 88.30 1 Roughs $7.5) Stags - -- —2<-75h Veals $' o>|, Ewe and wether lambs 87.25 Buck lambs — $6.25 ‘. ]l FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind.. Mar. 28. —<U.P) ( > Livestock: Hogs, steady to 10c lower;220- 1 250 lbs.. $8.»o; 250 SOo lbs . 88.75: 300-250 lbs.. $8.45; 180-20® lbs., 18.80; 160 180 lbs.. $8.70: 150-160 1' lbs., $8.50; 140-150 lbs.. $8; 180-140 > lbs.. 27.76; 120-130 lbs.. $7.25; 100 ' 120 lbs., $6.75; roughs, $7.75; stage.! $5.50. Calves. $9.50; lambs, $7.75. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y.. Mar. 28. - 'U.R) - - LI restock: Hog 50; odds and ends steady,' $9-$9.25; desirable 180-240 lbs.. quoted 88.40-88.60. Cattle, 350; mainly cows; steady to strong; low cutters and cutter. $2 50-84.25; few heifers. $6.50; med- ; luni bulls, $5.50. Calves. 100; vealcrs slow, weak; I good to choice, $9.50; some held at, $lO. Sheep, 50; holdovers. 2<“>; noth-i ing dotie on lambs; quality rather j plain; medium to choicv eligible. I $7 50-$8.50. CHKAGO GRAIN CLOSE Muy July Sept. Wheat .94 M -’2% »2 Corn .78-18 .73*u 69V< ■ Oats .41% -»8 -$7% | NEW YORK PRODUCE New York. .Mar. 28.— (U.PJ -Pro- { duce; Dressed poultry, firm; turkeys. iO-Mc; chickens, 16-30 C; broilers. 18 29c; capons. 27-34 c; fowls. 15’a 23Aic; Long Island ducks, 19’»- > 20c. Live poultry, firm; geese. 7-llc: turkeys. 18-28 c; roosters. 13< : docks. 1117 c; towls, 21-23 c: chick-' ens, 15-26 c; capons. 19-2S< ; broilers. 12-25 c. Egg receipts. 15,868 cases; mat j ket firm; special packs including! unusual hennery selections, 23A* j 25%c; standards. 23’rc; firsts, i 121%-22c; seconds. 21c: mediums. |2l-21*ac; dirties, 20-21< ; checks.] 119*<i-20c; storage packs, 22%e. 1 Butter receipts, 8,330 package**l s market firmer; creamery higher - than extras. 33’4-24c; extra 82 j score, 328i-S3c; first 90 to 81 scon 32’s-32’1< : first 8!t score. 32c; centralized. 90 score, 32'4c; centralized 89 score, 32c. CLEVELAND PRODUCE < 'leveland. Mar. 28. — (U.PJ - I’ l *** duce; Butter, market firm; extras. 3614 c; standards, StLic. Eggs, market firm; extra white, 20e; current receipts, 18$4c. Poultry, market steady: fowls tin der 6 lbs.. 22c; ducks, young, 24 25c; ducks, old. 20c. Potatoes. Maine. $1 sl.lO per ISOlb. bag; Ohio mostly. 70-75 C; New York. 8m; Florida. $2.00-»2.10 per bushel. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected March 28 No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better No. 2 New Wheat (58 lit**.). 83>: Oats. 32 lbs. test 44c Oats, 30 lbs. test -*3< Soy Beans, bushel .. ... .. SI.OO No. 2 Yellow Corn. I*M Ute. ■ SLO3 CENTRAL SOYA MARKET No. 2 Yellow Soy Beans . SI.OO Delivered to factory. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST ’ Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS: 8;30 to 11.30 12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. tn. 4 Telephone 135. 'i==r ’ TRACTOR TIRES I For all makes of ■"’nt T ractora. g 1 See them at — / PORTER JLk TIRE CO. • 341 Winchester St. Phone 1289 BSw
X|,U KTNPMr JMI l:l x iMf I 1 - ■ I ’ *(“47 ■ — - - ’’''ll ' ■ 1.. ,lu ’■w ~ C ■■ J (Un- R a3l ISMS ’' ! - ■;• 't-Msi 1 '1 ; :• .: ■ Rue T||||| gM| 1 2 ohl* Medium Weight Kap -■■it i; . ■ - -bH '•'Hi 1 SIZ« ' ■'■ ■ ’'"■’’mi pin.11 ; 5 M 9xl“ .'A< h ; \ ii ". ar et'- T”-' . Hit; SV ■ ! "! liar’dlO I .>11,1'11.• : : " ■!*' ■ — ... 1. . FOR S j Grami P’ ; *" Ll ‘ ia nevkli Si .. l;.rui'.w« Phone I’''.' M 1 picul' “i t.mSa- 3 $2.00 p.-r 1-0 lb»r.H Ki" - _ ~~ 1 fl for S\l S ■■ piano, in 1 sacrifi<c f"i 'inick sale SRM Furniture < . ihone I- • 9 -— • FOR SAl.h earlv lii-.li ■ hn.lu.i tHN.'I -TH f '" ,df,r 11 J husbe! <■. dies. A I grsu hnciis" seed. B.oh ' 1 *- I<,ur , alfalfa. John >l. jml.. Craigvd'-' ph-’nf' ~~ WA.usD WANTED -1 “3 Maaufa.wn '- . t . d LOST ANO FOlj£ lul . |23 W> ’' rt 1 jiiniMW! State l..me .'ix.catur. ' i-’ivi- mil Peanut In Baby's Lu»H - was remov .t m " a((ef ,i months old stdul . « ( L J] __ . "T Mar. 29” Decatur noogc community «« -n i W. I > b " *hd Mal ■ ■ ; Port "" ‘ j mile south Th jute I I I I’ - "' _ ;| Spring SugP* II I I presses I SHEETS BROS
