Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 184, Decatur, Adams County, 5 August 1935 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

B e iK» Hollywood

By HARRISON CARROLL Copyrloht, 1995, King Featurtt lyMUMte, Inc. HOLLYWOOD—Studio frowns are all that is keeping several stars from competing In the Ule v e 1 and air ~~ derby. James jr Dunn w a a squelched by Fox and now Jack Warner has I —l. (Irmly forbidden ■ 3B> WK » George Brent '"I , enter." Dunn Is k y- fl Just a fledgling fl ® pilot but Brent ■» la rim e r lenced | ■ 1 '• Pll 1 a aqxjoua effort Baa Ht—■ .■>..,■■ ..i—J Vunee Breese. George Brent well-known aviator. was to act as co-pilot No wonder they call Hollywood the most fantastic place In the world. Paramount needs a trained white horse for Harold Lloyd's new comedy, •The Milky Way". They’ve searched high and low. There are plenty of white horses and plenty of trained horses, but none that fills both quantitations. So. believe it or not, the make-up department will try to peroxide a brown horse. Just heard the funniest story about Pauline Lord's dash to the coast. It seemCtbat Katharine Cornell. Guthrie McGbeue and other Broadway celebriuewyiut the actress on the Albany night b«at an route to a holiday on her Ui*«a»e farm. They had barely left when Paulins's agent dashed aboard, transferred h»r and her luggage to an airport, whose, a few minutes later, she took off tor Hollywood to replace Ruth Chatterton in Columbia's "A Feather in Her Hat”. The next morning. Miss Cornell and McClintic could hardly believe their >eyes when they received a telegram from Amarillo. Tex. “You must have put me on the wrong boat 1 Pauline." YOU Asked Me apd I'm Telling You: Dons' Cook. Milwaukee: I was born in Waco, Tex. My writing efforts began there when I was editor of thelligh school magazine called (this takes nerve) "The Daisy Chain". It's a curious world. The automobile used by General Pershing in Europe during the World war has found its way into the movies. Bill Powell will ride in it in M. G. M.'s “The Black Chamber". The car has an interesting history Cecil B. De Mille-bought it in 1520 for sls 000. - PRIZE WINNERS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE lores Beer, Monroe; Loretta Booher. Wabash; Mary Borne. Kirkland; Garnie Brandststler, Jefferson; Jaunita Buckey, Wabash; Ethel Bunner. N. St. Marys; Alvina Butler. Blue Creek; Delores Byerly. Kirkland; Eileen Ehrman, ; Kirkland; Patricia Garard, Decatur; Harriet Gilson, Decatur; Maxine Girod. St. Joe; Grace Grether. Magley; Ruth Grether, Magley; Marjorie Habegger. Berne; Nellie Hamrick, Blue Creek : Celeste Heimann, E. Wash-1 ington, Kathleen Heimann. W Washington; Margaret Hilgeman, Magley; Delores Hoblet. Blue Creek; Dorothy Hoffman. W. Washington; Dorothy Ineichen, Jefferson; Clara Klenz, W. Washington: Bernadine Laugerman, St. Joe; Teresa Lengerich, St. Joe; 7helTna Liechty, Berne; Cloe Liniger, Preble; Florence Marbach. Union, Arveda Mazelin, Monroe; Maxine Moser, Berne; Margaret Moses, Root; Joan Neering, Berne; Betty Pearson, Hartford; Glenda Rauch.

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TRIMBLE THEATER “ A BAG, A BONE AND A HANK 0F HAIR” BY SEGAR X DREAM HAG COME TRDE^—FI ADMITS ft ' "X “ I’ll |TGOt TO FOOL THE ANGRi/J l/» k i C . u/nMCNI |Nj ~ __ /\ VAM KING AH' ABSOLUKE OICTIPATOR COUNTRY WITHOUT] J MOG UJIGHI6 HOWLIN VJt WMnI WOMEH, ZT) M ‘ _ (OF ANEW COUNTRY BUT I STAN’S ON r \I a I OJTSIDE -I GOT U)E WON’T WORK [J] O&Ss r-2 /£jß) k MIE BALCONV AN LOOKS OUT OVER) OF A COUNTRY- 7*»IJ? ££ \ A CITS OF UNHAPPY MEN-_JZ I GOT TO MAKE .i. , J ME PW.IPkES J? / / WITHOUT WlVtO! Q . \ UNHAPPY ON ACCOUNT OF 'EM'THINW. r—//T AN BEA VJUEH VllH Wf U/FfV Z L__ IB rS7 <c... ..^. g•' /Wjr woßßs.we wish wooing, R\ P W - /—|R IP7 8 Ei— — - I AAtA A - z —SM(( - , 5 e \ ■ “" <s ec*- ‘ c ™ e,, ““>-i»'>'“ r- “ d MMaWMSttHMaliylrMiWeßffi ■»- — z-. i .r.TTS. —Li’.i-sjs/yiiaSarja Xl 815 .1. i«^ km >—wia«. t / .<l,l /T

He had a new body put on it. Later, he, too, sold the car After year*. It now turn* up as the property of Lew Shlrpser. a local legionnaire. Hearing the voice of Claudette Colbert was too much for a fan la ! White Plains, N Y. Recently the Columbia studio re- | ceived a 3.000-mlle long distance call . for the star. She was on the set. making a scene for "She Married Her Boss' 1 , but the telephone girl remembered the Incident of Jean Harlow and the Arkansas sorority and put the call through. Whin Claudette answered, there was the sound of a great commotion at the other end of the wire. A voice cried: ‘‘l've got her. I've got her!" More commotion and then silence. The unknown admirer never did find his voice again. What Hollywood director became suspicious of loiterers on the beach at Malibu and summoned the law? And here's the laugh! Reluctantly, they identified themselves as private detectives seeking divorce evidence at a certain house on the beach HOLLYWOOD TICKER-TAPE— Since she has been quarantined for scarlet fever. Arline Judge has received a present every day from Wesley Ruggles, Wic ?W<l Hut hasn't been allowed to ■KT -aSB TOUCH a single 'ni one. A nurse Mg J brings them to gg? m thc Joor - lets hcr J see them and ■■■ - AA takes them away. ■Ugg; B 8 . . . The first Jf- * wB bridge sess i on .(&>'*’* between Chico ’ T Marx and George , Arline Judge s. Kaufman and Hunt Stromberg and Phil Berg has been postponed ... It is Georgia Stone who esedrts Isabel Jewell to the late spots now. They were at the King's club together and very gay not so long ago. . . . Dick Foran is taking himself seriously as a western star. He has sold his yacht. . . Margaret Lindsay was along when Janet Gaynor sailed for Honolulu. The two girls are warm friends. . . . Olive Del Ruth is back in town and planning parties. . . . And Ted Healy is spending hie nights in the hospital receiving treatment for the gash he got on his head in that auto accident. DID YOU KNOW— That Will Rogers' mother wanted him to be a Mctbedist preacher? N. St. Marys; Frances Ray. S. St. | Marys: Agnes Reed. Decatur; Marjorie Reynolds. Hartford; Jeanette Rumschlag. E. Washington; Mildred Rumschlag, E. Washington; Kathryn Runkle, Jefferson; Ruth Mary Smith, S. St. Marys; Melba Smitley, Jefferson; Ethel Sommers. Wabash; Rose i Stanley, Decatur; Madeline Steiner. Hartford; i Anibx Stolp, Preble; Kathryn Teeple, S. St. Marys; Hilda Thieme, Union; Cleo Wall, Jefferson; Norma Wefel, Preble; Iva Zureher, Monroe. Clothing 111 Donnabelle Arnold, W. Washington; Mary E. Arnold, W. Washington; Nadina Bargar, Kirkland; Irene Beer, Berne; Jaunita Bowman, Decatur; Portia Burk- ! head, Monroe; Martha Butcher, Jefferson; Elaine Christy, Jefferson; Betty Clark, N. St. Marys; Leona Dormseif, Root; Irene Dro, Berne; Fern Dubach, Hartford; , Cleona Elston, Root; Natie Fennig, Wabash; Mary Fruechte, Magley; Betty Garner, Mt. Pleasant; Rose Mary Huffman, Decatur; Ola B. Kistler, Hartford; Betty Alice Krugh, Decatur; Linda Marbach. Decatur; Leoni Marhenke, St. Johns; Maye Manlier, N. St. Marys; Boneta Miller. N. St. Marys; Ruby Miller. Decatur; Virginia Miller, Berne; Mary Rabbitt, Root; Dortha Ray, Monroe; Pauline Rupel, Wabash; Luella Scheumann. St. John; Agnes Schultz, W. Washington; Virginia Schwartz. Monroe; Dorothy Shanks, Hartford; Mildred Shifferly. N. St. Marys; Harriet Teeter, Wabash; Dorothy Werling, Preble; Idabelle Worthman. Mag- ! ley. Clothing IV Dorothy Adler. W. Washington; Ruth Borne, Kirkland; Bertilene Braun. Berne; Eloise Christy, Jefferson; Irene Cline, Wabash; Alice Cook, Mt. Pleasant; Doris iFricke, Monroe; Marcia Garner, | Mt. Pleasant; Iris Hebble, Mt.

Pleasant; Rachel Heltnrlch, Magley, Helen Uneichen, Jefferson; Irene Kaehr, Monroe; Dorothea Kraner, Wabash; Jaunita Lehman, W. Washington; Ireta Longenberger, Monroe; Loreta R°«« Lose, E. Washington; .Marguerite Michaud, Berne; Clara Morgan. Decatur; Margaret Poling. W. Washington; Rosanna Rauch, N. St. Marys; Batty Robinson, N. St. Marys; ' Monica Schmitt, Decatur; Mar- , garet Smith. Decatur. Clothing V Allee Jane Archbold. Decatur: Esther Baumgartner, Decatur: Avonel Beihold, Root; Elizabeth Beihold, Root; Vera Beihold, Root; Elva Boring, Decatur; Eileen Byerly. Kirkland; Mary Cline, Wabash; Doloris Dailey. Jefferson; Marjorie Dilling, Preble; Alice Drake, Decatur; Helen Hirschy, W. Washington; Miriam Hoffman. Preble; Ruth Ineichen. Jefferson; Audrey Johnson, Decatur: Eleanor Johnson, Root; Kathleen Kerney, Jefferson; Mary Koos, N. St. Marys; Tarriet Kunkel, Root; Bernita Lytle, Root; Beatrice Mathys, Wabash; Wilma Miller, Decatur; Catherine Mosser, Jefferson; Alice Reinhard. W. Washington; Vera E. Schwartz, Monroe tiwp.; Jesse Smith. Decatur; Leona Smith, Decatur; Betty Sprunger, Monroe; Elma June Wynn. Root; Pauline Yoes. Wabash. Baking I Louise M. Bristol. Root; Cleol.t BBrunner, Jefferson; Esther Bulmahn, St. Johns; Delores Byerly, Kirkland; Deloris Dailey, Jefferson; Ellen Draper. Mt. Pleasant; Irene Draper. Mt. Pleasant; Wanda Jean Garner, Mt. Pleasant; Doris Belle Jones, Mt. Pleasant; Evelyn Kleinz, W. Washington; Carmen Lehman. Berne; Lois Lehman, Berne; Irene Marhenke, St. Johns; Bernice Mathys, Wabash; Mary McGill, W. Washington; Evelyn Schroeder, St. Johns; Olga Schueler. Preble; Esther Sommer, Wabash; Hilda Thieme, Union; Faye Tumbleson. Jefferson; Norma J. Tumbleson; Root; Cleo Wall, Jefferson; Leona Wefel, Preble; Norma Wefel. Preble; Dorothy Werling, Preble; Genevieve Willhof. Jefferson. Baking II Alice G. Baker, St. Joe; Hilda Bultemeier. St. Johns; Gladine Butcher, Jefferson; Alice Cook. Mt. Pleasant; Irene Fasnaugh. W. Washington; Betty Garner. Mt. Pleasant; Miriam Hoffman. Preble Helen Ineichen. Jefferson; Kathleen Kenney. Jefferson; Helen Kohne, St. Joe; Edna Lautzem heieer. Blue Creek; Cloe Liniger. Preble; Beatrice Mathys. Wabash; Catherine Mosser, Jefferson; Margaret Smith, Berne; Hazel Yake, Kirkland; Pauline Yoss, Wabash; Vivian M. Myers, Berne. Baking 111 Marjorie Dilling, Preble; Helen Heimann; W. Washington; Sanna Kunkel, Root; Carolyn Musselman, Berne; Isaibelle Worthman, Magley. Baking IV Eloise Christy, Jefferson; Iris Hebble, Mt. Pleasant; Marcia Garner, Mt. Pleasant. Baking V Elma June Wynn, Root. Food I Patricia Garard. Decatur; Miriam Hoffman, Preble; Elinor Silliman, Monroe. Food II Alvina Butler, Blue Creek; Marjorie Dilling, Preble; Ruth Habegger, Berne; Sauna Kunkel. Root; Margaret Poling, W. Washington; Gretchen Sprunger, Berne; Wanita. Sprunger, Berne; Eileen Stuckey, Berne. Food 111 Pollyanne Lehman, W. Washington; Elma June Wynn, Root. Food V Alice Jane Archbold. Decatur. Health I Martha Butcher, Jefferson; Josephine Daniels. Decatur; Doris Fricke, Monroe; Marcella Scherry, Magley; Elinor Silleman. Monroe; Darrel Wagner. Monroe; Idabelle Worthman. Magley. Health II Dorothy Adl-er, W. Washington: Maxine Beavers. Berne; Celeste Heimann. E. Washington; Mary M. Heimann, E. Washington: Eleanor Hirechy, W. Washington; Jaunita Lehman, W. Washington; Lorna Meyer, E. Washington; Marie Meyer, E. Washington; Wilma Miller, Decatur; Mary Ellen Parrish, Berne; Margaret

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, AVGI S i ■>, 193.).

Poling, W. Washington; Avonel Beihold. Root; Resale Gene Stein i er. Berne. Health 111 Helen Hirechy, W. Washington Agnes Schultz. W. Washington: Mary C. Schultz, W. Washington. Canning I Eleanor Hirschy. W. Washington; Clara Klenz, W. Washington; Ruby Miller. Decatur. Wilma Miller. Decatur; Esther Sommer, Wa buh; Hilda Thieme. Union; Leona Wefel. Preble; Norina Wefel, Preble; Dorothy Werling. Preble, Betty Jane White, Blue Creek. Canning 111 Donna Belle Arnold. W. Wash-

EflEz 7^7 — Chris j

CHAPTER XVII “When Miss Sire comes back,” resumed the detective, “she’ll dress for dinner. That’ll be in the Rose Room at seven o’clock, according to what she told the maid while she was standing outside Jeff Whipple's door.” “Was the transom open?” Bannister demanded. Toole nodded. “Miss Sire probably was talking at him but he didn't know it. Just as she was getting into the elevator the big lobster stuck his head out of the door to get an eyeful. He’ll be in the Rose Room himself at seven.” "Then what?” “I’ll go into his room and take the stuff he stole front Sire. In the meantime, you’d better go down and meet the girl in the park. Tell her, if you like, that I learned that she had come back to New York in her own plane; that I followed her here from the Nev; York Yacht Club.” “Toole, you're a wizard!” Bannister exclaimed. How did you find out that she was coming back?” “If the plane came back one of the stewards was to phone me. Well, it did. I don’t look so much like a wizard now, do I? Jeff probably phoned Sire from here; that’s likely the way his daughter found out that he was in this hotel.” "What plan do you think Miss Sire has in mind?” asked Bannister, eager to learn as much as possible before he joined her in the park. “She doesn’t intend to be in the Rose Room at seven, but she expects Jeff Whipple to be there.” The detective laughed silently. When Bannister had gone Toole went to the window and looked down, finally picking up the lady with the red chow. A policeman was talking to her and gesticulating. "Giving her the gate on account of the dog,” Toole conjectured. “Ah, there’s Bannister now!” For a few minutes more the detective remained motionless and silent, then a prolonged whistle escaped him. • “She’s thrown him down—won’t talk to him!” Another long pause. “They’re both heading back for lhe hotel but taking different paths. She's bound to play a lone hand in this game. Huh! and she told me that she’d work with the One-Armed Syndicate!" In Bannister’s flurry over the discovery that Karen was occupying a room next to Jeff Whipple’s he had neglected to ask Toole what further he had learned of the murdered prince—Jura Bai. It was just as well. For once the dark warrens of the underworld had failed the detective; even the stool pigeons who specialized in international cases were at sea. But he did learn that Matt Boyle was making a “hush” job of it, that the State Department at Washington was investigating through its agents in New York, and that Maurice Sire had withdrawn into the shadows. Toole removed his coat and derby, replacing them with the porter’s jacket and cap. Picking up Bannister’s bag, he shambled into the corridor, augmenting his disguise by a stooping posture and a general vacuity of expression that sat easily upon his heavy features. Bannister was first to emerge from an elevator; he brushed past his co-worker without a sign of recognition and entered the room, leaving a sulphurous trail of mutterings in his wake. He came out again almost immediately, probably having observed the presence of Toole’s derby and coat and the absence of the porter’s cap and blouse. The detective, bent slightly, was shuffling toward the elevator shafts. Dick was about to hail him when a car stopped and Karen Sire (without the chow, this time) stepped out and walked rapidly toward her apartment. Bannister flattened himself within the embrasure of hia own door until he heard a bang down the corridor. Peering out, he saw no sign of Toole. “Wonder if he’s gone in with her?” he muttered. His own experience with Karen Sire in the park had paralyzed him. First she had seemed surprised, then irritated, and finally had become haughty. Her attitude and manner, more than anything she said (she had scarcely 1 spoken • dozen words to him) were

I ington; Mary E. Arnold, n I Washington; Vera L. Beihold. I Root; Rachael Helinrloh. Magley., Helou Hirschy. W. Washington; Linda Marbach. Decatur; Pauline I Yoss. Wabash. Canning 111 i Miriam Hoffman. Preble; Beatrice Mathys, Wabash. Canning IV Marjorie Dilling. Preble. Room Improvement ! Nadine Barger, Kirkland. Mary Cline. Waba*h; Wanda J. Neadstine, Blue Creek; Flossie Gene l l&teiner, Berne; Maxine Steiner. Berne; Edith Stuckey. Berne; Harriet Teeter. Wabash; Betty

capable of only one construction—- » she regarded him as an annoying „ intruder. ... . ... ® Why had she treated him in this cavalier fashion? Was the onus on ° him or did it lodge within herself? , After all, there had been a saving grace mixed with her apparent hostility; a certain wistfulness, a seeming desire not to give him pain, contributed some emollient to his t lacerated sensibilities. , Poor Bannister! How was he to ' guess the quirk that guided Karen n Sire? With a hundred distracted B conjectures radiating from his brain, he had never once, even remotely, thrust out in the right direction. What relief thc absurd truth

fit* i i i v lil/i /will e hnMllliil I >1 '■ I.J r ' fiSßellllllV lulrr'H ijl’r II e 5K 'll Till '•t i 1 Ka W/7 //^ ! 'f ‘ H i ww Mil lliifc IrWL v/k Karen Sire stepped out and walked rapidly toward her apartment.

would have given him — what a laugh! How glad he would have been to tell her of his own descent from Pocahontas! But on all this, darkness still enveloped him. His brother Hod, he reflected, would have told him, with a cruelty begotten of kindness, that he was simply making an a?s of himself; that Karen Sire had shown a momentary interest in him simply because he had been thrown picturesquely in her way; that her true and permanent interest lay with people of her own sphere. Again the shadow of the murdered Prince obtruded itself; the newspapers had said that he was a man of fabulous wealth. With a savage kick, Bannister hurled back the lid of his trunk. He gazed down at the assortment of rough but useful things that made up his own kit. He was in a mood for violence. A pair of heavy laced boots, with soles fully a half inch thick, caught his eye. They fascinated him; more than once those boots (the right one, particularly) had served him in the sudden execution of a sentence imposed by himself. They had been his law in camp. Bannister pulled off his shees and drew on the boots. Bully came nearer to him, wagging his tail but manifesting a truculence that was full of meaning to his master. “I’m going to do it. Bully,” said Dick grimly, “but you’re out of this particular little exploit. Anyway, you never did like skunks or rattlesnakes. It’s a skunk that I’m after now.” He laced the boots deliberately, an occasional chuckle escaping him. A thought had come that filled him with unholy glee. Karen Sire had refused to permit his intervention between herself and Big Jeff Whipple; the headstrong girl was determined to pit her feminine arts against a man who would break their silken filaments as a shark goes through the meshes of a min-

Room improvement II | 0- — “ Teeter Orchestra To Stage Dances Hal Ti-eter’a orchwtra will held LX every ni,bt ' Free Street Fair at the Japatree. garden, looa-ed In th. budding occupied several years ago b> FH 1 er and Harris g'oorry on South Sei- | and street. The rooms have !>•«»« re-deconH-(.d with a false . eilmgof evergreen

. n ow net. And, in this threshing t about, heaven only knew what mig..t happen to the girl. *• , i Yes, Jeff Whipple was his meat, i Bannister stood up, his new ac- ’ coutrement giving him a sense or • restored self respect. Bully, he remarked, "the last time I used • these boots as instruments of justice . was on a mule packer down in Peru i —remember that, don t you. Bully, of course, wagged assent. > Whatever the expedition, he was i for it. But Bannister waved the I airedale back and started toward ; the door. t Before he touched the knob. Toole . thrust it open from the outside and i stepped into the room with his fin-

! ger to his lips. “Jeff is stirrin’ around next door,” he cautioned. It was not until Bannister’s heavy heels crunched the floor at the edge of the carpet that Toole looked down. “Why the boots?” he demanded. Bannister felt like a schoolboy trapped in some wild prank. Yet he faced the ordeal honestly. “I’ve been figuring this thing out, Toole,” he said, “and the only way I can see to handle this situation adequately is kick Whipple down the corridor to the elevator. That kind of a rebuke would have a beautiful finality about it. And it wouldn’t prevent Sire from going ahead in his own way. Why waste finesse on a critter like Jeff?” Toole knew, as every man knows, that baffled love often finds an outlet in curious channels of assininity. He met the situation in that spirit. “Take off them boots, you big lobster!” he ordered, purposely dropping into the coarsest form of speech that he could bring to his tongue. “Where do you think vou are, anyway? This is one of the most aristocratic dumps in New York. If you tried any rough stuff here, a radio fleet would be on top of us in no time.” Bannister wavered, swinging his right foot like a pendulum. “I just left Miss Sire,” the detective went on, “and she dropped a few words that ought to give you comfort. You’re not in Dutch with her; she has something on her mind —a secret she can’t bear to let us know. It seems that this guy who was killed was a maverick prince of a country in Asia that was scuttled by a cousin of his great grandfather—er something like that. Sha doesn’t know the hook-up betweeg this bird and the leopard robe, or just where the Whipple Syndicate horns in. She wants to learn about that first—see?” (To Be Continued) Copyrlotit. less. Chrl> gs-ihmw ntitributtd by Mini ItMlurM Vblhoti, tne.

and draped with The floor I i ha. been reflnUhed. . markeTreports daily rrport of local and foreign markrtr Brady’s Msrket for Daoatur, Berne, Craigvills. Hoagland and Willshire. Close at 12 Noon Corrected August 5. No commission and no yardageVeals received Tuesday. Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. 100 to 120 lbs - W. 40 120 to 140 lbs —— ,0 00 140 to l«0 lbs. 1° «0 : 160 to 210 lbs. 1100 I 210 to 250 lbs j 260 to 300 lbs 10-30 300 to 350 lbs - 10-10 Roughs - £8.50 Veaiers T”-" 5 Ewe and wother lambs - 67.50 Buck lambs 88 50 Yearling lambs —- EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. 5 <U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, receipts. 1.500; active, and higher; bulk desirable 160-250 lbs., averaging 180-220 lbs., $11.75-611.85, plainer kinds, 61170 downward, to $11.50; 120-160 lbs., and 250-300 lbs.. sll-611.50. Cattle, receipts. 2ftv; steers and yearlings higher; supply light; strictly good to choice 950-lb. yearlings, $11.50; heifers. $10.50; good steers, 1,100-1.300 lbs., $10.25$10.75; fleshly grassers, SB-$9.50; grass heifers. $8.50; p’ainer descriptions downward to $6.25: cows and hulls higher, low cutter and cutter cows, $3.65-65; fleshy offerings .to $6; medium bulls, $5.50$5.85. Calves, receipts 450; veaiers unchanged, $lO down. Sheep, receipts. 1.600! lambs strong; ewes and wethers, $9.00$9.25; mixed lots. $8.50-68.75; medium al, d bucks, SB-$8.25. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Sept. Dec. Mar. Wheat 91% -96>q Corn - 77% .61% -62% Oats 31 .32% .35 NEW YORK PRODUCE New York, Aug. S.—(U.PJ — Produce; Dressed poultry, steady; (cents per lb.) turkeys, 19-27 c; chickens, 14-31 c; broilers. 14-24 c; capons. 2935c; fowls. 12-22%c; Long Island ducks, 12-15 c. Live poultry, steady; (cents per lb.) geese. 8-9 c; roosters, 13-14 c; ducks. 9-12 c; fowls, 16-20 c; chickens, 19-23 c; broilers, 16-21 c. Butter, receipts, 7,824 packages; market steady: creamery higher than extras. 24%-25%; extra 92 score, 24%c; first 90 to 91 scort?. 23%-24c; first 88 to 89 score. 22c; seconds. 21%-22’ 4 c: centralized 90 score, 23%c; centralized 88 to 891 score, 22%-23%c; centralized 84 to 87 score, 21%-22%c. Eggs, receipts, 11,534 cases; market firm; special packs, including unusual hennery selections. 27-30 %c; standards, 26%e; firsts, 25c; mediums, 23%c; dirties, 22%c; checks, 21-21 %c. FORT WAYNE LIVESTOCK Fort Wayne, Ind.. Aug. 5.—<U.R) —Livestock: Hogs, 35-50 c higher; 160-200 lbs., $11.35; 200-225 lbs., $11.25; 225-250 lbs.. $11.10; 250-275 lbs.. $10,901 275300 lbs.. $10.75; 300-350 lbs.. $10.50; 150-160 lbs., $10.85; 140-150 lbs., $10.60; 130-140 .’bs„ $10.35; 120-130 lbs.. $10.10: 100-120 lbs.. $9.75; roughs. $9: stags. $7. Calves. $9; lambs, $8.25. CLEVELAND PRODUCE Cleveland, Aug. 5. — (U.K) — Produce: Butter market, weak; extras, 27 %c; standards. 28c. Eggs, market steady; extra whites, 27c; extra firsts, 23c; current receipts, 22c. Live poultry market, steady; heavy fowls, 19c; medium fowl. 18c; leghorn fowl. 14-15 c; ducks, young. 1415 c; ducks, old, 1112 c; broilers, rock. 3% lbs., and up, 21c; colored broilers, 3 lbs., and up. 1719c; co’ored broilers. 2% lbs., and up. 17-19 c; small, 14c. Potatoes, Virginia, $1.50-$1.75 per ■bble.; Delaware, sl-sl.lO per 100lb. bag. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected August 5„ * ■»"— I- I — No. 1 New Wheat, 60 Iba. or better 78c No. 2 New Wheat, 58 lbs 77c Oats, 32 lbs. test 27c Oats, 30 lbs. test 26c Soy Beans, bushel 60c No. 2 Yellow Corn. 100 lbs $1.12 Rye 40c CENTRAL SOYA MARKET No. 2 Yellow Soy Beans 60c Delivered to factory N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Ey,e» Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS; 8-30 to 11:30 12:30 to 6:00 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135.

| CLASSIFIED BUSINESS CARdM # AND NOTH |. ;s W) WANTED f MAN or woman customers with fain,,,!. Products In Decatur. !1u W esUbliuhed. earning., awr.,/. 1 ® weekly, pay BtartH Write J. R. Walias c 250-62 N. sth st . Cohnnhu,. (l fl lost and Forx® LOST One $5 somewhere bet «... , ~l |n and Knapp Hdw c,, Finder please ~, Kahle. 3 mtle> east ~r Piqua road. " edr rem fl FOR RENT — modern ex, ept fu. na,,. I ( W of St. Mary's and W.,i h!II H. Graham Co. —o— _ * _ Test Your Knowledg® Can you answer - -vpn f ten questions’ Turn to | Four for the * fl 1. Wlrnt docn ths word mean? 2. In which group o f islands is Minorca'’ 3. Who was Clio’ ■■ 4. What is < it. uit 5. Who was the !• adltlg in the motion pistm,.. j ( flB thc Waterfront?' 6. What is the official for the grange? 7. During whi, hl' - ministration did Ring scandal p.iur' ■■ 8. What is anotii,)- paui.. the minor planets? SB 9. What is a . ooc.p.dn.sßH 10. What wa., , dhara" HS — " ■ iHi Alleged Killers ■ Waive Jury Chicago. Aug ■ oj.pi C Dunkel and Fveh, stwh. fi| 1 ejs. waived a jiin ■ os., agreed to go before Judge i. t!,. The two are sdoeu. d wrh »■ degree lion i . ■ Ervin J. I.ajig « was found in .< cemetery soul!. ■ I ■■ Seek Collection ■■ A suit fur a lio.s been filed able, Sept mber _. psi tHe I )aiii I 0 WHEN attend::.her to get that . at 515 W Madison A. ner, Prop. To the 0ff:,.,! tors and .<1! "t • Matter of th- -'• Adams County H. .s. Indiana: . You and ea< !i "te notified that p .i- i. .- ~;i made and enteied Adams Cir-nit f County. State < cause there pen-l : - Matter of the 1. \ Adams County B.' H,1>20, upon tii- 1 the Department tutions f t:>. the Matter of said Old Adam* v Bars field a suppleme. ■■ stockholder's Im. being supplem, :,' Current Report "t 'I" of Financial In-'.' "" . dation of said ' alt receipts and .1 dlts and chars, s ■ ‘ count. You ar-> 7 the ...uii has 1.v.l ■ '. ' K day of Septemb. > and date when ' " and determine anv "' • W ing which m:o report acid will t'-<- ' ‘°Dated at !>.■ 1!l1 ' lleurj H. 11.11.-r. ~ For Better Health See K Dr 11. Frohnapfe® Licensed Chiropractor and B< Naturopath ■ Phone 311 Office Hours. 10 t 0 12 3 *■ 1 to 5 p- m.. 6 to 3 P- m E Neurocalomctcr service B X-Ray Laboratory. GILLETTE TRUCK B TIRES B 6 months um "d'tinnal guarantee. See us before c you POR TE R JMfl TIKE CO. 34t Winchr .tcr | Phone 128?.